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The Daily Sentinel • Page B8

Friday, September 2, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG TilE R1VER
House of the Week&gt;
Home features an arbor for
dinner - and romance, D1

From market to mission:
Catholic chapel serves migrant community,

,
BIG TEN STANDINGS
Big Ten
Team&amp;
W l Pel.
Iowa
7 1 .875
M19higan
7 1 .875
WISCOnsin 6 2 .750
N'westem 5 3 .625
OhiO State 4 4 · .500
Purdue
4 4 .500
Mich. State 4 4 .500
M1nnesota 3 5 .375
Penn State 2 6 .250
Illinois , · 1 7 .125
Indiana
1 7 .125

Overall
W L Pel.
10 2 .833
9 3 .750
9 3 .750
6 ·6 .500 •
8 4 .667
7 5 .583
5 7 .417
7 5 .583
4 7 .364
3 p_ .273
3 8 .273

AROUND THE BIG TEN
Bowling Green
at Wisconsin

/ .

Wisconsin's Camp Randall Sta dium has undergone a $109 million
renovatJori. But the Badgers' football_
team does not have nearly so solid a
foundation. Many people are pre dicting SGSU will walk out of 5aturday'sgame.wtth 1ts third win in 1ts last
Jive match ups against Big Ten tepms.
Quarterback Omar Jacobs I4,002
ya rds pass1ng. 41 tou chdown
passes and only four interceptions
last season) leads a high-energy
Bowl 1ng Green offense. The Falcons averaged 44.3 points and
· 506 yards a game last season.
Jacobs and rece1vers Charles
Sharon (66 catches for 1.070 yards.
15 touchdowns) and Steve Sanders
(55 catches. 984 yards) will match
up w1th a W1sconsin defense that
has only four retum1ng starters and
one retum1ng defensive back.
Jacobs made h1s first college start ·
when BGSU played at Oklahoma
last year. so he is not concemed
abcut play1ng in front of 80.000
fans 1n the legendary rowdy atmosphere of Camp Randall.
"Every team is ecual. We see nobcdy as b1gger than another, so if
1ve're playing a 1-AA school or a Big
Ten or Big 12 school. we tJeat everybody the same," Jacobs said.

Ohio University
at Northwestern
.

Former Nebraska coach Frank
Sol1ch landed at Ohio UniVErsity because of an 1ntersect1on ofh1gh expectations and h1gh hopes.
The Bobcats hired him With the
hope he could revive a program
that has had only two winning seasons s1nce 1982. They were able to
hrre h1m because, even though Nebraska won nine games his final
season in 2003, that didn't meet
the mammoth expectations Comhuskers fans have every year.
Don't blame Northwestern coach
Randy Walker if he has unpleasant
ftashbacks when he sees Solich on
Saturday. The last time the two
coached against each other, Nebraska pounded Northwestern 6617 in the 2000 Alamo BowL

Other games
Thursday

Minnesota at Tulsa
Friday

lnd1ana at Central Michigan
Saturday

Rutgers at IllinoiS
Ball State at Iowa
Northern Illinois at Michigan
Kent State at Michigan State
South Rorida at Penn State

OSU TEAM I f&amp;DERS
Passing Yards .

Interceptions

Z'Mck

Youboty

1.209

Rushing Yards

Ross

475

4

Tackles

Hawk

141

Receptions ·

Tackles for loss

HOlmes 551769
.Touchdowns
8
Ginn

Schlegel

Seasoned Zwick ready for anything
COLUMBUS- The college

game moves so much faster.
Almost every high school
player who gets to college
tells you the same t hing.
Justin Zwick learned that
even before he got to Ohio
State.'
'the junior qllarterback
from M assillon was being
asked if he could start right
away when he signed with
Ohio State three years ago.
Tbat didn't happen and he
was red-shirted. Last season,
when he finally did become
the starter, there might have
been a rush to judgment on
his abilities.

job . Then Smith slammed
that door on his own throwJim
ing hand by taking money
Naveau
·
frorh a booster.
That
gave
Zwick
the
chance
The Lima News.
to start and help Ohio State to
jnaveau@timanews.com
a 33-7 win over Oklahoma
419-993-2087
State in the Alamo Bowl. It
Only six starts into his caalso made him the starter for
. r eer, many,of the same people Saturday's opener against
who couldn't wait for him to
Miami University while Smith
get to Ohio State were ready
serves the second game of a
to pull the plug. There were
two-game suspension.
rumors he was investigating
He appears to be a calmer,
a transfer.
wiser, more relaxed Justin ·
A shoulder injury he.sufZwick than he was a year ago.
fered against I owa opened the
But, like everyone else ex· ·
door for Troy Smith to grab
ceLt maybe coach Jim Tresthe starting quarterback 's"
se , he admits he doesn't

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio \ ' all&lt;·~ l'uhlishin~-: ( o.

guy going out and playing Sat·
know if this will be a quick
trip in and out of the starting urday, I'm assuming my future ·
lineup or if he has the chance playing depends a lot on Saturday because we have a lot of
to settle in for a long stay.
"I'm not really worried about good guys," he said.
With a more effective oflEmse
going out and making a statement. !just want to go out and around him than he had early
play my game and get a win for last year, Zv;ick has th~ chancE:.
our team," Zwick said. ''What- to look like a different quarterback than he was then.
ever hapJ:l\!ns will happen."
He might already be a ·
If he makes good things happen, that's when things could _sa~erquarte~kabouthow
get really interesting. It will be pressure works at Ohio State.
"You know it's there but
non-stop "Troy or Justin?" and
'3ustin or Troy?" questions all you can 't worry about it. You
next week leading up to the
j ust have to go out and play
much-hyped game with Texas. your game and let those peoTressel hinted that Saturday ple talk what they want to
talk;" he said.
could be important. "If I'm a

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: MIAMI (OHIO)
.....

ON -MONDAY

•

Kudla'

4

Noon ·
Saturday Miami (Ohio)
8 p.m.
Sept. 10 Texas
3:30pm ..
Sept. 17 San Diego St.
TBA
Sept. 24 Iowa
Oct. 1
BYE WEEK
TBA
OCt. 8 @ Penn St.
TBA
Oct15 · Michigan St
TBA
Oct 22 @ Indiana
TBA
Oct 29 @ Minnesota
TBA
Nov. 5 , Illinois
TBA
Nov. 12 Northwestern
TBA
Nov. 19 @ Michigan

·-"Co;¥!gt1t lcl 2005 The uma Nem. Re-

any portiOn of thiS matenai iS prohibited Wrthout ~an:.ent ~

l'om&lt;'J 'o~ • \liddll'I&gt;OI1 • ( ;allipolis • S&lt;•pt&lt;•mht•J· -t.

:.wn:;

$1.50 • Vol. 39, No. :$:$

New ramps open on U.S. 33/SR 681

NO PAPERS

The
Gallipolis
Dally
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tribune, The Daily Sentinel . _H
_o_E_FL_'c_H_®_M_v_o_A,_Lv_s_EN
_T_IN_E_L_.c_o_M
and the Point Pleasant
POMEROY - The ramps .
Register will not be published
on
and off U.S. 33 and Ohio
Monday. Sept. 5, to allow its
681
at Darwin under · conemp l oyees to observe the
struction for the past several
Labor Day h\)liday.
Regular publication and weeks are now open to traffic.
When the Ohio Department
hours
res ume
busine ss
of Transportation (ODOT)
Tuesday, Sept. 6.
opened the ramps Thursday
evening, il marked a niilestone for a project undertaken
to alleviate safety concerns

SPORTS

• Friday's high
school football ·
·action. See Page 81

expressed by the public .
The project includes the
rel ocation of Ohio 68 1 to pass
beneath U.S. 33. which wi ll
eliminate. the need for 68 I
t~rciugh traffic to stop and ,
cross th e U.S . 33 four-lanes.
The project also includes
two new bi-directional ramps
approaching 33 from both
stdes. Last week' s opening
wi II faci 1: tate the use of these
two ramp s. but 681 th rough
traffic will not yet'be permit-

ted a~ pavement wo rk for the
underpass has not been co m·
·pleted. accord i~1g to ODOT
Di strict 10 Depu ty -Director
George M'. Collins.
He Gxplai ned that the new
ramp design will on ly allow

motori•.ts

10

make right-turn

movements when entering or
exi ting U.S. 3:1.
"'fhe project i.s not yet completed. but by opening the
ramps. we arc able to provide
better access to those residents

and businesses ;tlon g · Swre
Route 6R 1." sa id Co ll ins.
"Di rect acce" will ahq a"ist
school transpurtatioo and ·
emergency response ."
ODOT pursued the inter-·

change rec&lt;mfiguration project after seve ral traffic
crashes occurred at the intersection of 33 and 6~ I in late
October 2004.
The project was awmded to
Shelly &amp; Sands in Janumy at an
estimated cost of$2.48million.

"Aithnu~h

BY

starters on the line for the Red Hawks are
pathetic to productive the second ha~ of
new this seascn with only John Glavin
last season and the offensive l1ne got
(nine tackles fo r losses. three sacks) back.
much of the credit for that. The Buckeyes
Advantage: Ohio State
were only si&gt;&lt;th in the Big Ten in sacks allowed,
thougtt,
with
23.
Uilebackers
Quarteibacks
Center Nick Mangold and guard Rob Sims
"The best group of linebackers in college
Justin Zwick finds himself in an unusual are three-l")ar starters. Tackles Doug Datish
football"
has almost beoome a part-of A.J.
pos1tion for an Oh1o State quarterback
and Kirk Barton, guard T. J. Downing and
starting his second straight opener. The JU- backups Tim Schafer and Steve.Rehnng also Hawk, Bobby carpenter and Anthony
nm is less certa1n of being the starter in
started gannes. Freshman Alex Boone is one Schlegel's names. Hawk, a firsHeam AllAmerican, calls carpenter "a physical
the Buckeyes' second game this year than of the most highly regarded recruits but isn't
freak."
They ranked 1-2-3 in tackles on
he was a year ago.
on the two-deep listings on the depth chart. OSU's defense
last season. Sophomore
Zwick- start1ng because Troy Sm1th is
Four of Miami's linennen are veterans, led
seiVing the second game of his two-game by 6-7, 315-pound center,Todd Londo!, &gt;M1o Marcus Freeman also could be a big consuspens1on for an NCAA violation - came has two impressive numbers attached to his tributor with Mike D'Andrea out at least
to Ohio State with the reputation of a
nanne - 36 career starts and a 32-ir;;h ver· . until the end of September.
Miami has its own impressive group of
strong-anmed passer. He was 4-3 as a
\leal jump. Miami allowed 26 QB sacks.
linebackers,
led by Tema Nande, a two-time
starter but had an inconsistent season
Advantage: Ohio State .
All-Mid-American Conferenoe selection . .
w1th ·as many interceptions (six) as touchdown passes (six). He also had three fum- Receivers
Advantage: Ohio State
bles and struggled with accuracy and conSantonio Holmes (55 catches, 769
Defensive backs
sistency. He made a nice comeback with a yards, 7 touchdowns) was overshadowed
Cornerback Ashton Youbc!J: had a teamstrong game in th·e Alamo Bowl and might by Ted Ginn Jr.'s amazing second half of
the season. But, going back to 2003, he
h1gh four InterceptiOns for Oh1o State last .
have eamed points by playing the last
season. Nate Salley 1s a b1g h1tter who 1s
had a streak of catching two touchdown
·three quarters with a hamstring injUly:
passes in four of e1ght games before teams · faster than most
St. Henry's Todd Boeckman, a reosh1rt
began double-teaming him earty last year.
22fe0-pound
freshman, also is expected to get some
Ginn. Holmes, Roy Hall and Tony Gonza- sa t1es.
play1ng time for OSU.
M1ami's Josh Betts, the son of an Ohio
lez can all bum defenders with their speed, E T~
State season ticket-holder, threw for
which ranges from incredible to deceptr..oe.
vere WI 11
3.495 yards and 23 touchdowns last sea- Tight end Ryan Hamby has good hands btit J)r&lt;lbatlo/
son. He completeq 60 percent of his
OSU seldom throws his way.
start at
passes but threw 14 interceptions.
Miami's Ryne Robinson led the team
the
Advantage: Even
with 64 catches for 932 yards last season,
but he oould take a back seat to Martin
Running blcks
Nance. th1s fall. Nance @&lt;lbbed 90 passes
Both teams w111 start small. speedy
for 1,498 yards and 11 touchdowns in
-- backS whose stat1stics last season were
2003 but saw his 2004 season end after
not overwhelming. Sophomore Anton1o
five games because of a knee injury.
PittJman (5-foot-11, 195 pounds) ran for
Advantage: Ohio State
381 yards for OSU. M1ami sophomore
Defensive line
Brandon Murphy (5-8, 189) gained 248
Getting a be,tter pass rush 1s a
yards a year ago but had six plays of 20
priority for OSU this season. It
yards or more in 4 7 carries.
tied for fourth in the Big Ten in
Brandon Schnittker, a oonverted full- .
quarterback sacks with 24, btl\
back, could be Used as a change-of-paoe
ruriner at tailback for Ohio State. The 250- the Buckeyes were as close to
last (13) as they were to first ·
pound Schnittker has carried the football
(35). Defensive end Mike Kudla
five t1mes 1n 31 career games. Freshman
led the way with only four
Maurice Wells and redshirt freshman Erik
sacks. Tackle Quinn Pitcock
Haw could see some playmg time.
(7.5
tackles for losses, 2
Advantage: Even
sacks) is probably the
Offensive line ·
·standout of the group ..
..
Three of the four
Ohio State's running game went fran)

(S&lt;Je gmpltic

Advantage: Ohio State

Special tea1115

Advantage: Ohio State

Yleekly Buckeye
Brain Busters

Jim Naveau's
'Player of the Week

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Shirley Belt
.• Dean S. Brown
• Robert E. Burris
• Thomas A Buttrick
• Mary Jane Gibbs
• Herbert 'Dan' Rollins
• Calvin Q. Sheets
• Agatha Pauline Spencer
• James Yonts

WEATHER

How many victories di
seasons as Miami of 0

Say what?

Woody Hayes have in two
's coach in 1949-50?

,I

,
ks gained more than
100 yards the ,last tir1)~~ami .and Ohio State
.
played 1n 20001 ..l'o were they?

TwO Ohio State f\Jnnmg

K - Josh Huston
Huston. of Findlay. has battled througtt
lnJunes tO beCOme QSU's kicker Ill hiS sixth
year as a Buckeye_Each v.eek one player
'Mil be honored based on performance.

'V"'if.

..

How many years W@!I,,Qhio State coach J1m
Tressel·an assis ntcoach at Miami?

Answers:

1- 14 2. Derek Combs and Jonathan Wells 3. Two

"We've got a lot of guys
who can get it done, guys
, who would be Ted Ginns
on other teams."
-Rob Sims, OSC lin eman

' days until kickoff

SECTIONS -

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports

Weather

24 PAGFS

A3

Ct
D Section
insert

A4

As
A2,A6

B Section
A6

· © 2005 Ohio Volley Publishina Co.

CHILDS
MUIJ!NFARMMUSSER
INSURANCE
• HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION
198 EAST SECOND ST. • POMEROY. OH

6~0

Nicole Fields/ photo

Students at ry1ason County's Roosevelt Elemen tary School are seen wo rking on the "Letter Plu s
Two " project , one of i! number of hurricane relief initiatives star ted in the area this week.

BY PAUL DARST

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

THURMAN For the
past two summers. the sou nds
survivors.
·
of children have heen absent
These items incl ude rcl!dy· from Camp Francis Asbury.
to-el!t food , bottl ed water..
The approximately 337diapers lind baby formulll acrc ca mp. l ocated on Tyn
Items that .w ill meet the direct Rhos Road nca r Rio Grande,
need or peoplem who lost used to host youngsters from
their homes and li ve lihood to · area ch urc hes . until the
the hurricane.
Uni ted Me thndiq Ch urch,
The box was set up in th e Wes tern Ohio Conference.
park Friday in th e hope thm which owns the camp. closed
enou gh donations can be it in December 2003.
Loca l ministers whose consh ipped o ut by the middle
of th is , wee k. Monetary - gre~ations used to send k1ds
donations ca n also be sub- there have tried 10 pursuade
mitted to the Faith Lutheran the conference to re-open the
site. but are increasing ly co nPlease see Relief, Al
cerned that a decision has not
ye t bee11 made .'
" Hopei'ully. they are go ing
lo ge t it opened back up."
said the Rev. Doug Stockton
of Grace United Methodist in
"There are a lot of
Gallipolis.
take care of the community."
reople
in
our co ngregation
In a ' specia l press conferwho
ure
concerned."
.
.ence Friday commemorating
The land for the c" mp was
the oc casi on. Gallipoli s City
donated
10 th e U nited
Comm ission Presi dent Dow
Method
ist
Church in 1'159
Saunders
presented
lnfoCision wi th a proclama- by Boh anti Jewel l Evans.
tion co mmending the compa- Th e Western Conference
·deci ded to close the camp
ny on its achi eve ment.
The - em pl oyees of the because of tt s' sma ll size,
Ga llipolis call center were said .Indy Oats. camp directhanked wi th special th;m ks tor for the conference.
'' It was·a ve ry s1nall camp."
· ·go ing to those who have been
Oats
said. " It was not seeing
an integral part of the success
that
mmt
y folks. there fore it
o f the location in the past five
was closed."
·
years. The empl oyees are Bill
Oats sai d lhat Bishop Bruce
Please see lnfoCision, Al Robert Ough has appointed a
task force to stuJv what to do
wi lh the· c'amp . cine ,_,ption is
Ill re -open the c &lt;~ mp . Another
is sel l in~ the lan d. he said.
K eeping th e ca mp open
Ritchie. David L . Shee ts. appears un likely since there
James
Eugene
Wat so n. is another one in tl:te region
James A. Watson: Rut land. - Camp Otterbein in Logan.
Robert ·
L.
Ilirchfield.
"We can ei ther haYe an
C harles D . Barrett. Jr.. Stn·e enormous capital i1westment
R. Lambert .
to keep tii'O camps open. or ,
Salem, H. Dannie Lambert. II'C can c·onso l1datc our
R. Keith Oi ler, Cec il L. resources ... said Tom Slack,
Stacy; Salisbury. Bill. Spaun. communi&lt;:atit&gt;ns director for
.Manning K . Roush. Oscar T. I the Western Ohit' Conference.
Smith;
Snpto.
Tammy 1 By wmb111111~ lhc operaAndrus. Ro ger CotterilL litH~&gt; of 1he tll'o\mall camps,
Kevin W. Payne. Roher! · . lhc church
pnn·ide a largButcher: Sutton , Jern• L. I er. bc•ttcr nne. Slac·k 'aid.
Ha) man. Carl Sa lser. Ed11 ard , But th•ll i, ,mall consolaE. Gibbs. Larry C. Smith.
lion tn ""ne loca l minis_ters.

INFO(ISION CELEBRATES FIVE YEARS
ny. " We' re going to be here
for a long time. We have
root s here and we wi ll continGALLIPOLIS Labor ue to grow."
Day weekend means much to
The com pan y moved to
many here in the area. •
Gallipolis in 2000 and started
For lnfoCisi on, its a -cele- with 50 empl oyees. Today.
brati on of the firth year of its th e co mpany boa'sts 225
co mmitment to Gallipolis employees and i s still cont in and the support it has gonen uing to expand .
" In tim es when companies
from th e town.
" We just really appreciate are shutting down and movthe support we· ve gotte n ing out. we're growing up and
from the community," said moving up," said Gallipolis .
Steve Brubaker. senior vice- Call Center M anager Bill y
president of wrporate affairs ·Porter. " I think they (the stafl)
for the Akron based compa- are really excited.''
BY IAN McNEMAR
IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE. COM

ln foCis ion has 23 ca ll ce nters at 13 loca tion s in Ohio.
Pen nsy l vania
and
Wes t
Virginia . employing 3000
peop le.
"Econo mi c development is
dmllengin g to .small comm unilies across Ohio and th e
nati on," said Ga llia Coun ty
CIC member Dick Northup.
who was instrumental in
sec uri ng the call center co mpany in Galli'p oli s fi ve years
ago . "We need more companies like InfoCi sion because
they take care of tile employces and they do their part to

C.T Chapm an. Jr. with·

Windon,
A lan
Holter:
Columbia:
Paul
D.
Carter.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM drew his appl ica tion for ca ndidacy for trustee of Sutton Donald Cheadl e. Granville
Stou t; Lebanon, Thon1as E.
POM.EROY - The M eigs Township due '·to a new job.
County Board of Elections
The only write-i n candidate Allen . Donald R, Dailey.
recently certified the ballot remains Victor C. Young, Ill · John R. Krider. Lawrence H.
for the Nov. 8 general elec- . for Pom eroy Village Council. Hayman. Bob Sellers. Garry
ti on with a few changes that Young currently serves on the Smi th , Patri ck M . 'Belt:
include three candidate s that Meigs Local School District Letart. Bob Morris. Dave
Graham, Bab L. Wood. .
were not certified and one Board of Education.
OliiVe, Jackie L.Wcs tfall.
. Other . candidates, issu es
candidate who withdrew.
Rob
ert Headley. Carl P.
and
levies
on
the
ballot
are:
Philip· Ewrin and James
Barringer,
William
R.
Township trustees
Randall Hill who filed for
trustee of Scipio Township. and · The foll owing candidates Osborne; Olive Township
Kenneth Guinther who filed for have been certi fied for town - Clerk (unexpired term ending March J I . 200R). Sari E.
trustee of Sutton Township ship trustee races:
Bedford, Robert F. Hawk . Pu tman-Su ule, L aurie H .
were not cenitied due to lack of
Orange.
Roge r
Ronald Wood ; Chester. Blair Barber:
signatures required.
Bv BETH SERGENT

INDEX
4

Pal'.e A2)

November general election updates for Meigs

Details on Page A6

.Michigan vs.
Ohio State

011

of camp
concerns
ministers

KEVI~ KELLY

GALLIPOLIS Loca l
respon.se
to devastation
~a u sed by Hurricane Katrin a
in Louisiiina and Mi ssissipp i
picked up steam as the week
came to an end.
A trac tor-trailer box· lla'
been . ~e t up by Foster Sales
and Delivery Inc . in the
Gal li po lis City Park for
receipt of non-perishable
items needed by hurricane

other ocmerback spot and Dante Whitner 'M il
be at the other safety.
Freshmen Jamario O'Neal and Malcolrr]
Jenk1ns could play significant roles.
M1ami has three retuming starters 1n the
defensive backfield, with comert\ack Darrell Hunter (4.28 1n the 40-yard dash) as
the leader. He had two interceptions and
three tackles for loss last year.

Ted Ginn Jr. had eight touchdowns 1n 59
touches of the football last season. Four of
those came on punt returns.
The. most special player on the special
teams the last three years - even more
than Ginn - might have been kicker Mike
Nugent, though. He made 65 of 74 field
goals the last three seasons.
The Buckeyes wi II have a new kicker
(Josh Huston). a new punter (A.J. Tra. passo) a new long snapper (Drew Norman) and new holder (Trapasso).
Miami has its own version of Ginn with
~e Robinson, who has retumed five punts
for scores 1n his career. He also led the MidAmencan Conferenoe in stolen bases on
the RedHawl&lt;s baseball team last spring.

o ri ~inal

federal safet) specifications';'
ODOT heard man y e&lt;i nccrns
frum · the publi c re garding
s,1kt y in this location." sa id
Collins. "We responded with
a prol ectth at w ill rclll&lt;)IC the
need for any mmorist to
crms four-lane · traffic on
U.S. :1:1 . This will certainlv
improv~ safe.ty and mobility
at thi s site ."

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIB UNE.COM

A look at the key matchups in the game
between OhiO State and M1ami (Ohio) in
the·season opener for beth teams Saturday at Ohio Stadium: ·
'

lhe

inte r~eUJoli dc..,ign · ml1 all

Groups·mobilize hurricane relief efforts Future

10.5

OSU SCHEDULE

Of

.

Sacks

•last year's ~aders and B1g Ten Standings

prodUCtiOn of all

.

tme

un

An inside look ·at this week's game

• Tht! lima NewS

I

Please see Election, A2

,.,lll

Please see Camp, Al

�'

iunblp lim~ -6mtinel

'

REGIONAL

.

U.S. 33/SR 681 IN1ERCHANGE
·

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PageA2,

'.

Sunday, September 4,

They provide adult-supervised ami says that 1f couples are
child care for preschool-aged having
problems.
each .
children . More information spouse must take a look at
about MOPS is available on what they can change to
the·Internet at www.mops.org. improve their marriage. .
MOPS will host Angie
'~:he marriage meeting will
Juniper on Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. focus on. "Understanding
She and her husband, Sam, The Differences Between
are .premarital counselors Women 's Needs And Men's
from Christ Temple Church, . Needs." Thi s ·special session
· Huntington, W Va. The of MOPS is open to women
Junipers have been married of any age. To aid in the
for I 0 years. She is .a mar- hosting process please call
riage counselor with New the church office to reserve
Hope Christian Counseling your space at 245-9518.

Relief

Go~d Samaritan Fund, P.O.
Box 30 1.. Jackson, Ohio
45640.
U.S. 33 and S.R•.681
Also on Friday, a shipment
of
non-perishables collected
Interchange
by Rio Grande Church of
Christ and the Light group at
Ohio Department of Transporatlon
the University of Rio .
This schematic des ign shows the interchange on and off U.S. 33 and Ohio 681. The ramps are Grande/Rio
Grande
open for ri ght hand turns only. ThroUgh traffic on 681 will be added once underpass pavement "&lt;::ommunity College was
is completed.
trucked by church volunteers

·Election

• Salem
Township,
a
replacement of I mill for the
purpose of tire protection for
fi l(e years.
• Syracuse Village. an additional tax of 2 mills for police
protection for ti ve y,ars.
• Rutland Village, a renewal of a tax of 2 mills for the
purpose of current expenses
for five years.
• Southern Local School
District. an additional tax of
1.5 mills for the purpose of
permanent Improvements for
three years.
• Pomeroy
Village,
a
renewal of a tax of 2 mills for
the purpose of fire protection
.
for five years.
• Pomeroy . Village,
a
renewal of a tax of I mill for
the purpose of current
expenses for five years.
• Pomeroy
Village , a
renewal of a tax of I mill for
the purpose of maintaining
and . operating cemeteries for
five years.
• Meigs
County
Tuberculosis levy for . onehalf mill for providing care,
maintenance, treatment and
establi sh an acceptable home
treatment plan for the resi·
dents of Meigs County who
are sutfering from active TB ,

Democratic; James Sisson ,
Independent;
Victor
'(oung Ill , write-in.
Syracu se Village Council:
from PageA1
Mike Jacks, Michael R.
VanMeter.
Boards of Education
Syracuse Village Board of ·
Meigs Local Board of
Eulll:atipn : Wayne E. Davis. Public Affairs, Gordon
Clarence E. Evans-. Ron Winebrenner.
Syracuse Village Mayor
Logan. Scott Walton .
(Unexpired term ending Dec.
Southern Local Board of
31. 2007): Eric Cunningham,
Euucation : Thomas Ron Donna Peterson .
Cammarata, Peggy S. Gibbs, . Rutland Village Council: L.
Ri.:hard B. Hill, Don P. Dean Harris.
Smith.
Levies
Eastern Local Board of
• Rutland Town ship, a
Education: John R: Russell. replacement of I mill for the
Howard Caldwell, Greg purpose of fire procction for
Bailey.
live years.
Villages
• Lebanon · Township. a
Middleport Village Council . replacement of I mill for the
(four to be elected): Shawn purpose of maintaining and
Rice. Bernard D. Gilkey. · operating cemeteries h1r five
Fennan E. Moore. Sandra years.
.
Fultl Brown. Republicans:
• Racine Village , a replace· Jeffrey
0.
Peckham, ment of 2 mills for the pur- ·
Democratic : Kathy Scott, pose of current expenses for
Roberl M. Pooler, Jean Craig, five. years.
Independents.
• Columbia Township, a
l&gt;omeroy Village Council replacement of I mill for the
(live): George F. Stewart, Jr.. purpose of fire protectiqn for
Shawn Arnott. Vicki A. live years.
Hanson. Bria·n C. Young,
• Middleport Village, an
Republicans:
William additional tax of 1.5 mills for
Barnhart, William Todd the purpose of current
Norton. Mary McAngus, . e~penses for five years . ..

from Page A1
•"People in this church are
upset and concerned." said
the Rev. Sharon Courneen.
pastor of Simpson Chapel
and . Trinity
United
Methodist churche s. "It
app.cars that we have no say
in what 's going on. Nobody
seems 10 care aboulthe children of this ar.ea." ·
The length of time· it has
t.aken the conference to make
ii decision about 'what to d·o
with the property is another
· concern. Courneen said.
The decision to close the
camp was made in August
2003 , said Evelyn Kirkhart.
who lives in the area and is
concerned about· the camp.
The church decon secrated the
camp in December 2003.

c:

Efforts to save Camp Asbury
started before it closed.
"It started even before
that," she. said. "We told
them, if it's · a inaner of
money, we would buy it and
lease it back to them. I'm not
a Methodist. My motivation
is personaL I certainly feel .
bad for the children ."
The Western 'Conference's
task force that was appointed
to exami.ne the issue has no
deadline for making a recommendation. Oats said.
"A decision could be made
within the next year," he said.
The
Western
Ohio
Conference has 1, 185 .congregations and.abilut 235,000
members in 58 counties,
Slack said. Church officials
need to make a decision that
will benefit the most people
possible. he said.
Although Camp Asbury
was small, its contribution to
the community was huge.

said the Rev. John Jackson,
pastor of Faith Lutheran
Church in Jackson. People of
different denominations regularly useu the camp when it
was open, he said.
"I am a community
activist," Jackson said.
"Those of us who have been
working on thb are very concerned about what this does
to our community."
Jackson said the conference·wants to take money out
of Gallia County and put it
into another community.
Ohio
The
Western
Conference
Board
of
Trustees oversees the camp,
Oats said. The task force will
listen to concerned parties
about the matter, and make a
recommendation to them.
In the meantime, area children will have to attend ·area
camps run by other church
denominations. or make the
drive to Logan .

r -------------------0

lnfoCision
. from Page A1

I
I
I
I

1

'TKE

MEA'T

Barcus. Tina · Craig. Kelli
Dewitt, Heather Holley, Bev
·Jackson. Anna Jones, Angel
Kirk , Jeromy M&lt;.:Carty. Patty
Metzger, Jan Nolan. Kerry
Nourse . Bill Rice and Betty
Weernes.
The Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association is proud to
The .Gallipoli s call center
present the "French City Chili Fesr cook-off to be held on
handles roughly 10,000 calls
·Saiurday. September 17, 2005 in the beautiful Gallipolis
daily in two shifts running
from 8 a.m. - ·II p.m.
City Part&lt;. This fun-filled day will also include
Founded
111
. 1982,
entertainment, chili eating contest, hot pepper eating
InfoCi sion
Management
and.pr\ze n;JOney totaling $1,000.00 and MUCH MOREll
Corporation is the world's
WE ARE RECRUITING YOUR TEAM TO PARTICIPATE'!
third largest privately · held
teleservice company. They
___ Yes, I would like more. information about the French
are a leading provider of
City Chilifest!
inbound and outbound marContact Name :- - - - - - - - -- - - - - keting for nonprotit. religious
Business/Group: - -- -- -- - - -- - - : - - and political organizations.
Address: -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - ; - - - ' - I
Through a combination
high -quality call s and .cutrin g
Phone:
:
edge technology. lnfoCision
Return by mailing to:
Gall~polis Retail Merchants Assodotion
·•
Attention : Lorie Neal
·'
I
consi stently , delivers . the
I
6
State
Street
highest poss ible rd urn on
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·
.I
investment for both fundrai s·
L _ ~ .:_m~l!o~ ~~e~ ~ ln~al@ga~a~~tyo~ _ ~~ ~:?::'~
ing and 'commercial clients.

tsoN\\

fRf~(H ((T'Y (N1lL' fffT

,.

J

for five years.
• A resolution passed by the
Meigs
·
County
Commissioners to place a
monthly charge of fifty cents
per telephone access line,
starting April I, 2006, for the
purpose of establishing and
maintaining a 9-1-1 system to
be voted on by the voters.
• Shall the sale of beet,
wine and mixed beverages be
permitted
by
Roai:lside
Hotspot, L.L.C. doing busi'
ness as The Hot Spot, in
'Lebanon Township, operating a carryout and conve- ·
nience store''
• Shall the sale of beer,
wine and mixed beverages be
permitted for' sale on Sunday
between the hours of I p.m .
and midnight at.the Roadside
Hotspot. L.L.C., doing business as the Hot Spot be permitted?

M~igs

Community
events

W.Va. · Supresta U.S. LLC recreation building.
monthly
Community
GALLIPOLIS - Family of
Advisory Panel, 7 p.m. The the late Harry and Murlie
public is invited to attend.
Drummond reunion will be
Wednesday, Sept. 7
. Su11day, Sept. 4
held at the Church of God
PROCTORVILLE - Rose
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Shelterhouse on LeGrande
family reunion for descen- County Board of Health, 9 Boulevard. Meal begins at I
dams nf William Rose and a.m., conference room of the p.m .. bring a covered dish.
wives Mary Adkins and Gallia
Co'unty
Service Fishing, horseshoes and door
Winit'red Neal, Lawrence Center, 499 Jackson Pike.
priL.es. For information, contact
. County Fairgrounds in the old
Thursday, Sept. 8
Larry Drummond at 446-2811 .
roadside park shelter. Covered
RIO GRANDE - River
RIO
GRANDE
dish meal begin s at noon. For Valley Organic Food Co-op Evans!Pennyfare Supermarket
infor111ation, conta~l Maria will meet a\ the Fellowship reunion, basket lunch will be
Farley at (3114) 741- 1950.
Hall of Simpson Chapel served at I p.m. al Bob Evans
GALLIPOLIS
80th United Methodist Church. For Farm Shclterhouse No. 2,
annual Samuel Lewis reunion infonnation, call 245-5464.
Canoe Livery Road. For inforat Bluebird Shelrerhouse.
. Friday, Sept. 9
mation, call446-4289.
0.0. Mdntyre P :~rk . Meal - -GALLIPOLIS
begins at I p.m., I 'Ilowing a Southeastern Ohio Home
church service hy the Rev. Educators annual fall kickJerry Lewis at 10:30 a.m., also off potluck. 6 p.m .. Raccoon
BIDWELL
Nellie
at the shclterhouse. Family Creek County Park Cardinal
Watson
celebrated
her
95th
members are asked to bring in Shelter. Anyone wanting
birthday
on
Aug.
31.
Cards
· old photos of past reunions or more information or wanting
miscellaneou s items to share. to join the group may attend. may be sent to her at Room
138, Holzer Senior Care
NORTHUP -· Descendants
Saturday, Sept. 10
Center,
380 Colonial Drive,
of Henry "Doc" and Angeline
GALLIPOLIS - Family
Cremeans
annual and friends are having a fam- . Bidwell. Ohio 45614.
Tope
CROWN CITY - Leslie
reunion at Northup Baptist ily dinner for the late Lyla B.
Stapleton
will be celebrating
Church Shelter. Basket lunch and Arne! Cooney Waugh at
will he served at I p.m.
Raccoon Creek Countv Park her 80th birthday on Sep\. 6.
THURMAN - Richards Bobwhite Shelter froni noon Cards may be sent to her at
reunion ut Tyn Rhos Church. until dark . Bring covered 837 Kings Chapel Road,
Basket dinner at noon. For dish.· Everyone welcome . Crown City, Ohio 45623.
· information. contact Virginia '·Bring old photos of past din- . GALLIPOLIS -A get well
card shower for Bethany Hope
. Harder. secretary. at 388-8616. ners, if available .
GALLIPOLIS - Sanders
BIDWELL - Descendants Spaun. I0, is being held. Cards
family reunion. First. Church ·of C[lristopher and Nettie may be sent to her at Children's
of
God
Shelterhouse. Burns reunion at 1191 Clark Hospital, 700 Children's Drive,
LeGrande Boulevard.
Chapel Road at noon. Bring Columbus, Ohio 43205.
GALLIPOLIS
your favorite dish.
Monday, Sept. 5
Marguerite Moore Hineman
. GALLIPOLIS
Red
Sunday, Sept. 1l .
celebrated her 93rd birthday
Cross blood drive at St.
GALLIPOLIS
Peter's Episcopal Church, 541 Montgomery reunion, 10 on Sept. I. Cards may be sent
Second Ave .. 9 a.m. to I p.m. a.m. until 3 p.m., Raccoon to her at 427 Third Ave.,
Tuesday, Sept. 6
. Creek County Park Wild Gallipolis, Ohio 4.563 I.
GALLIPOLIS · Del
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Turkey Shelter I. Food,
Gingerich will celebrate his
Clinic Retirees. II :30 a.m. , at games and prizes.
the Holiday Inn to carpool to
CROWN
CITY
80th birthday on Sept. 2.
the Wild Horse in Pomeroy Stapleton reunion. family of Cards may be sent to him at
for lunch at noon.
Carl . and Louie Stapleton, . 197
Greenbriar
St.,
GALLIPOLIS . FERRY. 12:30 p.m .. Kings Chapel Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.

I

from Page A1

Camp

Gallia •County calendar

MOPS set to kick off 2005-06 season

RODNEY - Mothers of
Preschoolers (MOPS) will
kick off its 2005-06 season
Tuesday, Sept. 6 at 10 a.m. at
Rodney Pike Church of God.
This year' s theme is.
''Shine Like The Stars In The
Universe."
MOPS is a special .ptace
mothers of preschoolers can
come, to be refreshed and
inspired. They will make new
friendships and discover smart
approaches to tackling the
challenges of motherhood.

AROUND TOWN

iunba~ limtg -itntintl

2005

to Cookeville, Tenn ., for has been set up ·by Jacob's
pick-up by a tractor-trailer Well Ministries of New
that will be taking the items Haven. W.Va.. at Bob 's
to Louis'lana.
Market and Greenhouses Inc.
The trip is in respon se to a in Gallipolis. .
Louisiana church's plea for
An effort is also focusing
food and water that had ru·n on the n~eds of children
it in the disaster-struck caught in the hurricane's
Pastor
Ja~on
region,
aftermath by encouraging
Ridgeway said.
Rio Grande Church . of people to send one-gallon
Christ is continuing to col- Ziploc-type plastic bags con·
lect donations for hurricane taining a personal letter, a
relief and has received the small stufl'ed animal or a
use of a tractor-trailer and small ball, and a book that
gas from a trucking company can be dropped off at Bob's
to make trips to the area, Market.
Ridgeway said.
It's known as the "Letter
Donations will continue to . Plus Two" project.
.,
.be accepted by the church by
Another organization to
contacting Ridgeway at the contact to submit relief
church , 245-9130, or at 3S8- items is Samaritan 's Purse,
-0352.
Frankfin
The items are being deliv- organized by
ered to a church in McComb, Graham , son of noted evanMiss., for distribution . to gelist Billy Graham. More
hurricane victims. No cloth- information is available at
ing or furnture will be its Web site, www.samari tanspurse.org or by calling
accepted.
A drop-off for relief items (800) 665~2843.

Card shower

Local Briefs
Benefit set
for Sept. 9

OPEN LETTER TO A THIEF
Last week I got an e-mail from my next door neighbor informing
me that my house . near Crown City ' had been broken into and
among other things two TV's were stolen. This letter is to the
lowlife scumbag that chose to violate my property and indeed my
life.· I only hope someone is familiar with your activities, who can
read, shares it with you. I seriously doubt if a cretin like you can
do so.
I grew up in Gallia County, leaving there at the age of 17 and for
the past 40 years have been gainfully employed.
Employment...now there's a novel concept and one that I'm sure
escapes your .comprehension. S_tealing property from others. is
much easier than working. For almost 30 years I was a law
enforcement officer in one of the most crime ridden areas on the
east c.oast. I have dealt with garbage such as you most of my adult
life.
Last year I b.uilt a home on my property with the intention of
retiring and returning to Gallia County. However, for the past
several months I have been in the Middle East working for a
Department of Defense contractor managing a program training
Iraqi Police Officers. I helieve my activities here will help make a
difference in Iraq as well as this region of the world, and will
therefore make the United States safer and more secure. At the
time I received my neighbor's e-mail I was an occupant of the AlSadeer Hotel in Baghdad. This particular hotel has been targeted
by suicide bombers twice dufing the past five months. Twelve
people died in those attacks and scores were injured. Many of
those who lost their li_ves were employed by the same company
that employs me. Further, on that day that you broke into my
home, I learned that one of our employees who was working with
Iraqi polipe had been blown to bits when a suicide bomber entered
a dining facility at an Iraqi police staiion. In addition to his death, a
number of'Iraqi police officers were killed and another of our
, employees sustained life threatening injuries. Your timing was
impeccable; the news of your endeavor was just what I needed.
I wiU return in the near future to my home in Gallia County. The
honest, hard working people there, ,like my good neighbors, far
outnumber lowlifes such as you. I can only hope thflt you are
brought to justice,. and at some future time I'm sure you will
In
the meantime, hel'p yourself to the rest of my property;· in your
haste you left some nice things behind. In my current situation, I
remain at the mercy of dirtbags like you.
Lari-y Garrett

Sunday, September·4,

2005

County calendar

Public nieetings
Monday, Sept. 5
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Tru stees, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall.
LETART .
Letart
Township Trustees wiU meet
at noon at the office building.
Tuesday, Sept. 6
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. ,
Rutland Fire Swtion .
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council , 6:30 p.m.,
council chambers.
Orange
ALFRED
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m.
at the home o ~ Ossie Follrod.

tion call (304) 773-91'JI.
health. vi tal &gt;lati stic,, general
Tuesday, Sept. 6
health-related
que , tion s.
MIDDLEPORT ·
an swcreu. Call 992-6626 .
Middleport Lodge 363.
F&amp;AM. 7:30 p.m., Masonic
Temple. Refreshments. , ·
CHESTER - Daughter'
Sunday, Sept. 4
of America. 7:30 p.m. on
POMEROY
Audra Well
Sept. 6 at Masonic Building. will ob,crve her- %th
hirthdav
Silent auction and practice ·Sept. 4. Cards may be sent 10
for inspection .
her al· DaN Pri vate Care
Home. 3.116.1 Chiluren 's Home
Road. Pomerny. Ohio -l:'\761/.

Birthdays

Reunions

Sunday, Sept. 4
MASON. WVa. - ,\rmual
Johnson . family reunion. I
p.m.. Mason City Park . Take
a covered uisl1 and item for
'the auction.

Clubs and
organizations ..
Monday, Sept. 5
MASON, W.Va. - · VFW
first Labor Day picnic, noon
to 4 p.m. There will be hamburgers and hot dogs. as well
as games and activities for
children and adults. Public
invited. For more informa-

Other events

Church events
Sunday, Sept. 4
POMEROY -- Revi val
~e r v i c e . . at Cal \' &amp;) Pil grim
Chapel. Ohi o 14.'. 7:30 p.m.
throu gh SunJay. E\a llg li.., l i:-.
Rev . Earl New to11 . Src.: ial
:, ulglllg. ·

Tuesday, Sept. 6
Sunday. Sept. .I I
,POMEROY
Meigs
RA CINE - The annual
·County H ~ ahh Department Harve" Fe stival will be held
evening clinic hours from 4 al the S1. John l.urhcran
p.m. to 6 p m. Childhood and Church , 33-14 1 Pine Grme
adult immunization . blood Road , Racine . Wnr,hi p will
pressure I sugar asse ssments , . be al I 0 a.m. with a 'pccial
WIC, preqatal services, head mu~i c presentation at 11 a.m .
lice screening. environmental and a potluck dinner at 1ioon.

God
Bless
America

• Executive Office •
tentionally omitted from the
cutlines for the photos.
·

Intersection
change made

PORTER - A benetit for
Gallia County sheriff's
Deputy Bryan . Seagraves.
who was. injured in a racing
RUTLAND- Ohio 124 in
accident earlier this year, will Rutland at the intersection of
" be held at Hook Mountain County Road 16 has been
starting at 6 p.m .. Friday. reduced to one lane for
. Sept. 9.
bridge replacement.
Hook Mo;&gt;Untain can be · One lane of two-way traffic
reached by taking Ohio 554 is being maintained by use of
e~st from Porter .toward temporary
signa.Is.
Cheshire, one mile on the Completion date is Sept. 30.
right. Watch for signs. ·
Live music will be provided by the Laramie Roush
Band and more. There will
also be food, games for the
kids and door prizes.
For more information, contact. Angie's Pizza at 388CRESTVIEW, Fla.
9969 .
Word has been received here
, that Eleanor Kloes and her
companion, George Ingles,
who moved to Gulfport,
Miss
.. in the spring, are tine
GALLIPOLIS
The
HolZer. Health Systems following the hurricane.
The two heeded the warnemployees honored with sering
to leave Gulfport before
vice awards in photos that
appeared
in
Friday's the hurricane hit. They left
Gallipolis Daily Tribune have with only a change of clothes,
worked for Holzer Health went to a hotel in Crestview,
Fla .. and are still there.
System' for five years.
Janet Dickens. daughter of
That information was unin-

Former
residents safe ·
in Florida

Clarification

Kloes, e-mailed The Daily
Sentinel and asked a notice of
their safety be published.

VSO transport
shortened

,..,

, I ~-

.........

I

7

71Jlrl~

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Veterans Service
Office has announced that
due to the cost, VSO trans~'Healthcare in Your
porta!ion will be cut in half
.beginning Sept. 12. ·
Own Backyard"
The new schedule is as follows:
· • Huntin~ton Veterans
PI'IM'!fiM fQr &lt;;hUdhlrtb
Affairs Med1cal Center Sundly, September 41rom 2:00 pm · 6:00pm. Holur Medical Center f;dUc&amp;tlon &amp; Conference Center. Call
On Tuesdays of each week.
(740) .we-5o30 1o ragioler or for more Information.
· ·
• Chillicothe Veterans
Hptgr Hgap!so Qlnntr with Fdenda • Ga!111 Cpuntv
Affairs Medical Center Thuroday,
September 8 at 6:00 pm at the GOlden Corral in Gallipolis. For more Information, calllocelly at
On Wednesdays of each
(740) oW6·5074 or loll-free at 1-800·500-4850.
week.
These cuts are being impleCpmmynlty Cpffto
mented now to try to make
Frtdoy, September 9 from 8:00 am'- 9;00 am in the HMC Educalion &amp; Conference Center. ·Holzer Medical ·
the VSO budget last until the
Center invites all to an !nlom1al and ongoing community coffee promoting conversation between area leaders In
end of the year. Veterans that
business, community service, education, gOVI!mmenl and privale enterprise. Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy
use this transpqrtation system · Services Department. For more informalion, please call (740] 446·5053.
·
·
are urged to reschedule their
Sen!gr §Jpo
,
.
appointments to compl'y with
Friday,
S.ptembor
9
at
the
Scioto
County
Fairgrounds
in
Lucasvll~,
OhiO. The Expo Is an event of lhe Area
this change.
Ag9ncy,(mAging District 7. Holzer Health Systems , including Holzer Medical Center, Holzer Medical Center·
Also, if veterans need to
Jacl&lt;son, Holzer Senior Cera Center and Holzer Wyngale of Gallipolis and Jackson. are proud Ia be Platinum
ride transports, notify the
Spons0111 'of the even(. For more lnformalion , call 1·8011-582·7277.
'
VSO at least 24 hours in
.
.
advance.
~~ PlMW' ya.liagnOJta Fpotbtll .
·
, .
·
For information, contact
Fildey, S.ptelnber 8. 7:30.pm Kick-Off. Holzer Hea~h Systems will be at the Point Pleasanl vs. Magnolia
the VSO at 446-2005.
game at the llalclln Point Pleilsanl passing out free water lo fans as they enter lhe gale .
,~.

·,')

GrwHtperwd'e, LyMht9dlllallooo l auncb

Sundrly, Sep!Mibtr 11 at 11 :00 am at Holter Wyngate ; Jacksoo . located ar 101 Markham Drive in Jackson.
Ohio. Please jOtn ua as we kick·off National Assisted Living Week. For more informat1on, please call (740) 286-

8715.

IHebetet suWtrt·arpup lin O.tllpoll*l
8~, ~r

11 from 2:00pm· 4:00pm in the Holzer Medical Cenl ~r French

SOO

Room. Call

, (1411).
440 5110 to register
or for more information.
. .
.

Thank you'
Farmers Bank
for purcha!)ing my
2005 Market Hog at the
Gallia Co. Jr. Fair
Christa Martin

..

Qlrt 1M

ltlf:M•n•SII!DIIJt C!antl (Gall!pgl!a)

Seplenlber12, 13 and 14 from 9:00am until 12 Noon in the Hospilai's French 500 Room Call (7401446-5080

for purchasing my
2005 Market Hog at the
· Gallia Co. Jr. Fair
Court11ey Roach

r8gi$ter'br for more information. Please have a prescription from you'r physician to attend.

"He*..

Ctottr fgr Cgmprehont!vt Weight Lpss Supopd Group
·
,
Mondly, September 12 from 10:30 am until11 :30 am in the Holzer Medical Center Educatiorl &amp; Confere.nce
Center. Room
An additional support group meeting will also be held at 6:30 pm for those who are unable to
alleod ihe rooming session. For more information, please call (740) 44~-5825 .

AB.

lwplctl Wolght boao lpfgrma'ienal Muting fin Gall!polisl
Mondly, September 12 from 5:30pm - 6:30pm . Holzer Medica l Center Education &amp; Conference Center Room
C. If you are contempiS]ting gastric bypass surgery, You are encouraged t o attend th1 s informational session to
team about weight IOS!I surgery at the Holzer Center for Comprehensive Weight Loss A suppor1 group of the
Center begins after the informational meeting at 6:30 pm where potential pahents can hear testimo nials fr?m
patients who have had the surgery. For more information . please call {7 4 0) 446-~925

·.

Paronts Who Hayg bpst a Child Sypgort Group
Monday, September 12 at 7:00pm , New Life Lutheran. Church on Jackson P1kc 111 Gall1poi1S Open to the
public. Facilitated by Nancy Childs a nd Jackie Kea tle)l. "you are interested in attending, pJease call prior to
the meeting. Fo r more informatio n: call Nai'lcy Ch ilds at (740) 446-5446 tday ) or (740) 446-4066 (even1ngJ.

Jackie Keailey al (740] 446·2700. or the Lutheran Church at (740) 446-4889

be.

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

Page.A3

, Wf WOUlD ALSO LIKE TO "THANK" All
WHO MAKE THE FAIR POSSIBLE, AND All
SUPPORT THE GALL/A CO. FAIR.

•

�•l

"""
'

OPINION

6unbap Qt:tme~ ·&amp;tnttnel

i&gt;unba~

Qttmtl-&amp;tttthttl

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

{j lfer,\ ro On• l'tlitor arc ~ ·t'!t~mw. Th er .\ lmuld be less than
300 ~1 onh AI! /ellen Wl' st1hit!1 t to n.liting and musr be
\ignni and include mldH'.~ -' rm•l fl'{ephone number. No
ull .\l~m:d /cm' n wt!l ln.: puh!Bfwrl. l .t•tter.\ .\·hould be in good
lmJe. mhln\\ .W I !:f. t.\\IH''· 11or JU' f\olwlilies.

TODAY. IN HI,STORY
Today " Stlllday. Sept. 4. the ~.J7th day·ot 2005. There a're
II g dav' lei! Ill the ye ar.
l'lxla.y\ ll tghligl;t 111 HJStOr): On Sept. 4, 1781 , Los
A n~ek~ w'" i'Pundcd by Spantsh &gt;ettlcrs.
·
On thi .&lt;date: In I XXX. George Ea,tman received a pat~nt for
hi ' roll-t'illll catnera. and regt,tercd hi' trademark : Kodak.
ln. 1X'-1:1. En~li&gt;h .tut!JOr B~at1 i.x Potter first told the story of
Peter R.obhit ,;, the form of .1 "'picture letter"' to Noel Moore,
I he son of Potter 's fnrmer govcrne-..s.

In 1917. the American ex pedit ionary force in France suffered its ft r&lt;t fatalui es in World War I.
In I94-l. tlunng World War II , British troops entered
Antwerp. lkl gium .
In 1951'. Pre"dcnt Truman addressed · the nation from the
Japane'e pl'ace .treaty conference in San Francisco in the first
live. coa~I - I&lt;H.: oa~t televi..,inn broa&lt;.ICi.tSt.

In I'J57. Ark.tn,.ts Gm . Orval Fauhus called out the
Nation:tl Gu.trd to prevent ntne bla..:k students from entering
Central High Seltool 111 Little Rock.
In I&lt;J57 . Ford Motor Co. began se l-ling its ill-fated Edsel.
In 1967. Mtcht gan Gov. George Romney told a TV interview he 'll undergone a ''hrainwa&gt;hing"' by U.S. officials during a I%5 vts11 to Vicuwm - a comment that damaged
Romney's bid i'o1 the Republican presidential nomination .
In 1'!71, an Alaska Airl ines jet crashed near Juneau, killing
Ill peopk
In I&lt;JX-l, Canada's Pro~ressive Conservatives, led by Brian
· Mulronev. \\ On a lambiide victory in general elections over .
the Liberal Party of Prime Minister John N. Turner.
Ten years ago: The fo urth World Conference on Wo!'len
opened in BeiJing with more than 4,750 delegates from 181
· countries. Attorney William Kunstler, who spoke out for the
politically unpopular in a controversial career, -died in New
York at age 76
'
·
Five years ago: Frcm:h investigators announced that a stray
length of metal which had gashed a tire of a supersonic
Concorde. le01d ing to a fuel tank fire and the plane's fatal
crush the pre\lous July, probably came from a Continental
Atrlines plane t h ~ t had taken off on the same runwax four
minute s earliet.
One year ago: Slow-moving Hurricane Frances snapped
power lines and wbipped the Atlantic coast with winds over
90 mph as it neared Flnnda. A shaken President Vladimir
Putin made a rare and candid admission of Russian weakness
after more than 330 peopl e were killed in a hostage-taking at
a southern school.
Today's Birthdays: ABC Radio commentator Paul Harvey is
87. A:ctres&gt; Muzi Gaynor \S 74. Singer Merald "'Bubba"
Kntght (Gladys Knight &amp; The Pips) is 63. Actress Jennifer
Salt is f&gt; I Goiter Tom Watson is 5fi. Rhythm-and-blues musician Ronald LaPread is 55 Actress Judith lvey is 54. Rock
musician Marttn Chambers (TI1e Pretenders) is 54. Actress
Khandi Alexander is 48. Actor-comedian Damon Wayans is
45 . Rock musician Kim Thaytl ts -+5 . Aetor Noah Taylor is 36.
Actress lone Skye " 34. R-hythm-and-blues singer Richard
Wingo (Jagged Edge) is 30. Actor Wes Bentley is 27. Singer
Dan Mtller (" Making the Band"' ) ts 25. Singer Beyonce
· Knowles is 24.
·
Thmtght tor Today· "I am one or the people who love the
wh y or thtngs.'' - Catherine the Great, Russian czarina
( 1729" 1796)

•

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EDITOR
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Sunday, September 4, 2005

%&gt;unblt~'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

a:tmr!i -%&gt;rntinrl • Page As

Sunday, September 4, 2005

Obituaries.

Going to .extremes
Hurricane Katrina wiped
out "Camp Ca~ey" and that
could be a good or a bad
thing, depending on your
point of view. The storm
diverted attention from
Bill
Cindy Sheehan's anti-war
O'Reilly
protest in Crawford, Texas
and caused President Bush
to ditch his vacation and
high-tail
it
back
to
Washington where, reports Army SPC Casey Sheehan.
say, Ms. Sheehan will fol- was killed in Iraq during a
low.
, fierce firefight. He was
Like the T~rri ·Schiavo awarded the Bronze Star
controversy a few months posthumously.
ago, the Cindy Sheehan saga
On June 17, 2004. Ms.
contains some peril for ideo- Sheeha·n and her husband
logues, even though they Patrie~ met with President
might not know it. Smart Bush. A week later she
conservatives realized that speaks kindly about the
fanatical rantings about the President with a reporler
health of Ms. Schiavo and from a Vacaville, California
criticism of a Florida judge newspaper.
who appeared to be upholdOn July 12. 2004. Cindy
ing the law were risky. When Sheehan begins working
the autopsy was finally made with the anti-Iraq war group
public and proved Terri "Families Speak Out."
Schiavo had no chance to ' On September 9, 2004, she
reco:ver, the image of conser- is quoted by The San
vatives did, indeed, sustain Francisco Chronicle as saysome damage.
ing: "Our only goal is to
Now the same scenario is have people understand the
playing out on the left in the human cost of war."
Cindy Sheehan circus.
Three weeks .later, howevPerceptive liberals know the er, Cindy Sheehan takes a
woman is an extremist who sharp left turn and begins to
is being used by the radical attack President Bush perleft to bludgeon the Bush sonally. On October 3, she ,is
administration.
Ms. quoted in The Washington
Sheehan may be sympathet- Post as saying, "( My son)
ic on the surface, hut under- died for someone who
neath she- is a committed wouldn'·t even tight for his
far-left individual who country."
Sheehan then begins to
believes the USA is a force
lend her votce to ads
for evil in the world.
Let's look at Cindy financed by the far left
"MoveOn.org" organization.
Sheehan's resume.
On April 4, 2004, her son, and her protest becomes

more strident. She hegins
showing up at Bush events.
calling the President a vari ety of nasty names .
As 2005 ·begins, Cindy
Sheehan introduce s a new
orgamzatton called ''Gold
Star Families for Peace."
She begi!lS to question why
Barbara and Jenna Bush are
not in Iraq , and is quoted on
t'he
far-left
website ,
AfterNet. as saying that
American children are hcing
killed or maimed for "a
series oC. lies, mistakes and
miscalculations."
On March 22. 2005. Ms .
Sheehan ups the ante furth~r
and is quoted on another rad ical
left
website ,
TruthOut.org, as say ing:
"Casey was sent to Iraq to be
killed by the .same pack of
cowards and murderers who
'
so valiantly and · tirelessly
· fought for the right for Ms .
Schiavo to live' "
On Ap ril 27, 2005. Ms.
Sheehan appear; at a rally to
support convickd terrorist ,
supporter Lynn Stew.u·t and
says that beca~se the USA
has nuclear weapons. it has
no right to tell Iran it cmi't
have them. Cindy Sheehan
also goc' on to «ty that
Israel
is
··occupying"
Palestine.
By now a full blown radical. Cindy Sheehan is incorporated ttlto the far-left
media madiine and begin.s
tunmg up for her Crawford,
Texas demonstratton by
telling vanous TV interviewers that the U.S. military is in Iraq "killing innocent people ."'

In early August, Sheehan
begins informing the press
that in surgents in Iraq are
actually "'freedom fighters."
And that the murderous terrorist acts are justified,
because of, the "occupa·
tion" by the USA . Her
protest
outside
t~e
President 's ranch draws
hu ge media notice, but few
report on her indeasingly
radical ideology.
On August 8th. I chronicle
Ctndy Sheehan's left-wi ng
cunt.tct , and her actual statem,·nts about America on my
t ~kv"io n and radio 'progran" SJ1e replies that "The
O'Rcil l\ Factor · is an
obs,·cnii) to the truth and to
humanity."
· By the end of August ,
three newspapers, The New
York Times. The San
Franctsco Chronicle. and
Tl1c Baltimore Sun had
printed that I called Ms .
Sheehan 's actions ''treasonoLts ." All three papers
agreed to retract that false
a"ertion. but .clearly Ms .
Sheehan and her allies were
angry at me ·for my expositton of them.
My hunch is that Cindy
Sheehan
has . peaked.
However, liberals would be
wi&gt;e to understand that any
future partnenng up with
Ms. Sheehan and her committed mdical pals will not
advance their cause in mainstream America. which has
rejected extremtsm for 230
years. Cindy Sheehan is now
actually a danger to the moderate lelt in this country.
Somebody tell them .

Herbert Daniei,.Dan· Rollins

He was born on Dec. 18. 1925, in Kanawha Co., W.Va., son
of the late Oscar and Pearly (Bland ) Buttrick . Thomas was
married to Phyllis Johnson Buttrick in 1966 and she survives.
Herbert Daniel "Dan"
Mr. Buttrick was retied for the Gallipolts Stale Institute.
Rollin s, 63, of Gallipolis.
He is preceded in death by his parents. sister,, Bessie
Ohio, went home to be with
.
Connolly
and a son, To11)my Buttrick and a chi ld in infancy.
, the Lord on Saturday, Sept. 3,
Surviviog are his wtfe, Phyllis Buttrick of Gallipolis; chil2005 at his residence.
dren,
Roger Jluttrick of Gallipohs. Jim Buttrick of Crown
Dan was retired from the
City,
john
( Vicky) Buurick of Cia llipo!i,, Herman (Sandy)
,Southern
Ohio
Coal
Blttlrick. of Gallipoli s Ferry W.Va .. Randy BITHfick of
Company; a member of the
Columbus,
Danny Buttri ck. Mtckey Buttri ck. Dianna Sue
, French Cily Baptist Church;
Buttnck
of
Georgia , Thomas (Laurie) Buttrick o( Jackson,
. Eureka Masonic Lodge #4\16,
and Sherry (Larry) Mayse of Gallipolis, 25 grandchildren arid
and a U.S. Navy Veteran .
,
Tim Maloney/ photo
2
1
great-grandchildren,
.several
nieces,
nephews.
s ist ers~ in ­
: He was born on July 20,
Odie Nob.le was back to work Thursday afternoon after return·
law and brothers-in-law.
,1942 in Cottageville, W.Va ..
Services will' be on I p.m. Tuesday. Sept. f&gt;, 2005, at the mg home from New Orleans. Noble and hts wife were in New
son of the late Doug and
Orleans during Hurricane Katnna.
Willis
Funeral
Home
with
Pastor
Rick
-Barcus
officiating.
:Waunita Virginia Hughes
Burial. will follow at the Ohio Valley Memory Garden &gt;.
~ Rollin s.
Friends
may call at the funeral home 6-8 p.m. Monday. Sept.
. . Dan was preceded in death
5,
2005.
'
, , by his parents, a son Ronald
Pallbearers will be Ja&gt;on Spaulding. John Spaulding. Bulgy
.. Eugene Rollins in infancy in Herbert Daniel 'Dan' Rollins John son, Clarence John son, Lenville Johnson , and Dean
1972 ; and by hi s in-laws
Barcus. Honorary pallbearers. Mike Johnson and Bryan
,Dowie and Bonnie Williams.
Johnson .
BY TiM MALONEY
another hurri cane." Noble
Surviving are his wife, Helen Williams Rollins. whom he
In lieu of !lowers contribu tions can be made to the Willis TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER COM s~ i d. "Th,tl was nw fiN. and
, )llarriecl on .luQe 27, 1964; a son Edward "Ed" Daniel (Kathy) Funeral Home in Thomas Buttri ck's mu11e.
it wi ll 'he n\ y la,t. .. '
. Rollins of Marion, Ohio; " daughter Brandi Lea (Lamar
Please visit www.willi&gt;funeralhome.com to send c-matl
POINT
PLEASANT.
W
Va
.
AfterwarJ. the Nohlcs wonDavis) Rollins of Columbus, Ohio; five grandchildren, condolences .
Odte
Nohle
wa&gt;
hack
1n
dered
how they wo uld get
Kaitlynn, Daniel, Erin, Brandon, and Trent Rollins; a brother
hi&gt; fam tlwr spot Thursda y home. For two da ys they tried
·Dbn Rollins of Point Pleasant ,: W.Va.; and a sister Judy
afternoon, watering the fl ow- . to find a flt ght. r-111ally. they
(Danny Lee) Gibson of Sissonville. W.Va.; two nieces, Wendy
er' in front of th e Po1nt lound a small plane that
Rollins and Beth Rollins; a nephew Timothy Gibson.
Pleasant Foodland
would be fl ying out ol an air.Services will be II a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2005. at the
Shirley Belt, 80, of Long Botto.m, Ohio, dtcd ·Sept. 2, 2005.
Never was he so glad to he port tn Jefferson vtlle. La.
, French City Bapti st Church with Rev. Mark Williams and in.Rav~n swood Village Center in Raven ~ wood, y.t.Va.
tl1ere.
T.hey drove three holll·, 10 a
Rev. Don Rollin~ ofticiating. Burial will follow in the
She was a member of St. John Lutheran Church.
Noble and hts wile, Anna . hotel near the atrport. and got
Providence Cemetery. Friends may call 6-8 p.m. Tuesday,
She was born Nov. 16, 1924. in St. Clair Shores, Mich., a were visiting thetr daughter, on the plane ltrst thing
Sept. 6, 2005 , at Willi s Funeral Home. There will be a daughter of the late George Brown and Magdalina Wallman Sharon Smith, in New Wednesday morning.
Masonic -Service on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. by the Eureka Brown.
Orlean s when Hurricane
"'Boy, were we glad." he said.
· Masonic Lodge. '
. In additi(m to her_parents , she was preceded 111 death by her Katrina hit. l, uck ily, she ltves
After a stopover in
Please visit www.willisfunemlhome .com to send email con- husband, Homer, in 2002.
tn a netghborhood in the Tenne&gt;see. the Nobles !lew
dolences.
Survtvors include her son, Patrick Belt and his wife. northern secuon of the ctty into Co lumbu, , where they
Christine, of Long Bottom; . gra nddaughters. Rebecca thal si t s nn hi gher ground.
were picked up liy 1heir soli.
Flaugher and her husband. Jonathan, of Cleveland and
Also of good fort une was Otis Jr. He drove them back to
Rachael Belt of Sheffield Lake, Ohio; grandson, Jeffrey Belt the so ltd bnck construction ol Point Pleasant. and they arrived
of Long Bottom; great-grandchildren, Emily, Connick and s'mtth 's house. whtch weath- home at 3:30 p m Wedne,day.
Dean S. Brown. age 65, of South Street. Jackson, passed Noah Reed, and Darby Lundberg, all of Shetfield Lake.
er~d the I '\.'\-ntph winds ot
A ltfelong rest dent. Noble
away Thursday, Sept. I, 2005.
Services will be at I I am . Tuesday. Sept. 6, 2005 ,' in Roush the hurricane.
satd
lmle old Potnt Pleasant
He was born April 2, 1940. in Columbus, to the late Paul Funeral Home in Ravenswood with the Rev. Jame' Brady
··,Tree limbs were lalltn g never looked so good.
and Laura (Allard) Brown.
officiating. Burial will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery m and huting the root - boom, ..
"'Oh. it'&gt; beautiful ," he said
He graduated from South High School in Columbus, and 'Letat1 Falls. Ohto. Friemls may visit lhc funeral home 6-H Noble said. "She's ~ot a unod " It sure is ntce tn see those
obtained his BS degree in secondary education in 1965 from p.m. Monday, Sept. 5, 2005. Fnends may expre." their con- roof. that's all I can\ ay ..~
\Ve st Y1rgin1 a mountams ..
Rio Grande College and a MA degree from Ohio. State dolences to the Belt tamily at rou&gt;h lus2000 @yahoo.com
The Nobles had grm~ to New
Wednesday evenmg. Noble
-University in 1969.
Orlean&gt; on Aug. 14 lor a twn- we nt to Foodland to get some
He was a high school social studies teacher with the
weck visn, and were schedLtlecl grocenes. and received a warm
Cincinnati Public. Schools from 1965 to 1966, and was with
to lly out last Sunday.
greetmg from hts relt eved cothe University_of Rio Grande from 1966 to 2005 as director of
"We kept calling th e airport worker&gt;. On Thur&gt;clay. he was
Mary Jane Gibbs, 66, of Parker&gt;burg, W. Va passed away on and they kept telling us that back to work.
admissions, dean of students, vice president of student services, vice president of institutional advancement and enroll- Aug. 31. 20Q5, at lhe Camden-Clark Memorial Ho,pital.
we would be ready tn go ... he
"I fee I sorry for those ,peoShe
was
born
Feb.
6.
1939.
in
Pomeroy.
a
daughter
of
the
ment management.
,
said. "When we got there. all ple down th ere." he said.
He was a member of Christ United Church, Fraternal Order late William und Margaret Collins Etchingcr.
of th'C !lights were can..:ckd. "'The y' re gotng through a lot
"It was heartbreakin u."
Mary graduated from Pomeroy Hi gh School and the
of Archon, Rotary and Masons.
of pam."
Noble
called
his
d~w
ght~
r
·
Camden-Clark
Me
monal
Hospital
Sc
hool
of
Nursing.
She
., , "He was a man that looked at every day as if the sun was
Noble applaLidcd local hurretired in 2004 from Worthington Manor Care Center where and told her 'to come hack . It riean e rcltcf effort,.
shining and the birds were singing."
took her 15 mmutes to get . "'I think that 's great,"' he
He is survived by his wife, Petrea (Parsons) Brown ; daugh- she was the director or nursing.
there, but It took all day to dnvc s.tid. "They need all the· help
·
Mary
is
survived
by
two
sons.
Doyle
(Deni)
Gibbs
and
ter, Annette (Mark) Ward of Gallipolis; and snn, Jason
(Christie) Brown of Cincinnati; grandchild~en , Jessica, Randy (Faith) Gibbs; grandsons Nick and Gage; granddaugh- back to her house. Once there, they l'llll get."
Brooke and Blake; brother, Ken (Rita) Brown of ters Olivia Rose Gibbs and Sydnie Trevathan; two sisters, the family wa' in store fo r the
Reynoldsburg; sister-in-law, Beverly Brown of Dayton ; and Nancy Hubbard and Linda Collins: one brother. John Wtlliam scarie't night of their lives.
,Eichinger; one sister-in-law, Ruth (Lavina) Scott; several . "'I never want to go through
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his p;uents, he is preceded in death by a nieces, nephew s and her canine companion , Ru sty.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in· death by her
brother, Ronald Brown.
Services will be II a.m. Monday, Sept. 5, 2005, at Christ husband, Jack Gibbs, in 2003.
Services will be at 3 p.m. on Sunday at the Leavttt Funeral
United Methodist Church, Jackson, with the Rev. Daie Lykins
Home,
Parkersburg, with Rev. Mike Goff officiating. Burial
officiating. Burial will follow in' Wheelersburg Memorial Burial
Gardens. Friends may call at the Eisnaugle-Lewis Funeral will follow at Sunset Memory Gardens. Visitation was from 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral home.
Home in Jackson from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. Sept. 4, 2005.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Red
In lieu of flowers. the family has requested memorial contributions be made in Dean's memory to Christ United Methodtst Cross, 220 8th Street, Parkersburg, 2610 I, or Humane Society
Church, 150 Portsmouth St., Jackson, Ohio 45640, or to the of Parkersburg, 29th and Poplar Streets, Parkersburg. 2610 I.
Online register book at www.LeavittFuneraiHome.com.
• lnatanl Mea!BQing • KHP your buddy Ustl
,University of Rio Grande, in care of the Office .of Institutional
•
10 1-ITIIIIIddrttJII wlttl Wtbma lll
Advancement, Box 500, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
• FREE ieehnlc:al Support
Condolences may be e-mailed to the family at www.e-k• Cuttom Start Page - News, Weather~ morel
lewisfuneral.com.

Area man home after
surviving hurricane

Shirley Belt

.Dean 5. Brown

Mary Jane Gibbs

'

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"'

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---j!~f

Sit and listen to Uncle Dave
Summer
vacation
is
almost over, so today Uncle
Dave has a special back-toschool "pep talk" for you
young people, starting with
these heartfelt words of
encouragement: HA HA HA
·YOU HAVE TO GO BACK
TO SCHOOL AND UNCLE
DAVE DOESN 'T NEENER
NEENER NEENER.
Seriously, young people, I
have some impcirtant backto-school advtce for you,
and I can boil it down to four
simple words: "Study Your
Mathematics."
I say this in light of a
recent alarming Associated .
Press story stating that three
out of every four highschool students - nearly 50
percent leave school
without an adequate understanding of mathematics.
Frankly, I am not surprised.
"How," I am constantly asking myself, "can we expect
today's young . people to
understand
mathematics
when so many of them can't
even point tl)eir baseball
caps in the right direction ?"
.I am constantly seeing
·young people with the bills
of their baseball caps pointmg backward. This makes
no se nse, young people! If
you examine your cap closely, you will note that it has a
piece sticking out the front,
called a "bill." The purpose
of the bill i'S'to keep sun off
your face, which, unless
your parents did a great
many drugs in the '60s (Ask
them about it!), is located on
the FRONT of your head .
Wearing your cap backward
is like wearing sunglasses on
the back of your head, or
wearing a hearing aid in
your nose. (Perhaps you

Dav~

Barry

young people are doing this
also. Uncle Dave doesn't
want to know.)
So · to summarize what
we've learned: "FRONT of
cap goes on FRONT of head ."'
Got it, young people''
Let's all strive to do better in
the coming ·school year!
But also we need to think
about getting these math
scores up. A shoc~ing number of you young people are
unable to solve even basic
math problems, such as (he
following:
A customer walks it\to a
fast-food restaurant. orders
two hamburgers costing $2 ·
apiece , then hands you a $5
bill. How much change
should you give him?
a. $2
'·
b.$3
c. None, because the question doesn'J say you WORK
there. You could just take the
money and run away.
The correct answer. of
course, ,is that you should
give the customer: d.
Whatever the computerized
cash register says. even if.
it's $154.789.62 .
You young people must
learn to handle ba'sic mathematical concepts such as this
if you hope to ever become a
smug and complacent older
. person such as niysel f. I was
fortunate enough to receive
an excel lent mathematical

Deaths

foundation as a member of some university professors
the Class of 196.5 Billion have received a $6 million
Years Ago at Pleasantville federal grant to develop new
High SchooL where I stud- ways to teach. math to hi~h­
ied math under Mr. Solin. school students. The prokswho. in my se nior year. sors know thi s will be a chalattempted to teach Lts calcu- lenge. One of them is quoted
Ius (from the ancient Greek as saying: 'There is a menwords "'calc," meaning_"the tality in thi·&gt; country that
study ot,". a~td "ulus," mean- mathematics is somethtng a
ing "something that only Mr. few nerds out there do and if
Solin cou ld understand") .
you don't understand matheMr. Solin was an excellent niatics, it's OK - you don 't
teacher, and although the need it."'
subject matter was dry, he
This is a bad mentality.
was able to keep the class' young people. There's oathattention riveted on him ing "nerdy" about mathefrom the moment the· bell · matics. · Contrary to their
rang until the moment , sev-· image as a bunch of out-of-it
era! minutes later. when a huge-b utted Far-Side-prolarge girh' gym class walked fessor dweebs who spend all
past the classroom wi ndows, day stanng at incomprehenevery smgle day. ca4&gt; ing the sible symbols on a blackheads of us male student s to board while piles of dandruff
rotate \)() mathema tica l form around their ankles.
degrees in uni son, like elves today's top mathematicians
in a motori zed Chri stmas are in fact a group of excityard display. But ,during ing. dynamic and glamorous
tho&gt;e brief periods when we individuals who are working
were faci ng Mr. Solin. we to solve some of the most
received a solid fou ndation fascinating and challenging
in mathematics. learning problems facing the human
many important mathemati- race today ("Let's · see. at
cal concepts that we still use $2.\18 api'ece, with a $6 miltn our professional lives as
lion federal grant , we could
employees of top U.S. cor- buy..
WHOA'
That's •
porations. A good example ts 2,013,422 .82 , POCKET
the mathematical concept or PROTECTORS '"') .
"'9," which we use almost
So come on. young peadaily to bbtain an outside pie! Get in on the act ion'
line on our corporate tele- Work hard in math this year.
phones so t~ at we can order and remember thi&gt; : If some
Chinese food. place bet .s, · muscle-bound Neanderthal
call 1-900-BOSOMS , . and bullies corner . you in the
perform al l of the other vital bathroom and call you a
employee functi ons that "nerd." you just look them
make our economy what it is strai ght in the eye and say.
today.
··oh YEAH '' Why don't you
You young people deserve big jerks . LET GO! HEY!
to ha ve the same advantages. DON'T PUT MY HEAD IN
which is why I wa, so THE TOILET! HEY!"' And
pleased to note in the tell them that goes double
Assoct atcu Pre" ;tory that for your Uncle Dave.
•

James Yonts

ju$1'3 m0/'8

Robert·E. Burris

&lt;

James Yonts. 73, of Vinton. passed away Thursday: Sept. I,
2005 , at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
He was born Oct. 24, 1931. in Neon, Ky., son of the late
'McKinley and Ruth Kidd Yonts.
,
'
A U.S. Army veteran, James is survived by his wife, Patricia
Peace Yonts. ' ·
·
.
He is also survived by eight daughters. Nina Yonts of
Cleveland, Amy Lynn Baker of Cleveland. Mona Russo of
Cleveland. Jennifer 'Bays of Vinton, Melinda Mullins ol
Bidwell, Melissa Bogg&gt; of Rio Grande, Karen Durham of
· Hamden, and Dianna Free of North Carolina ; two sisters,
Vivia German of Florida. and Mona Bentley of Michigan;
three brothers, Clark. Donald. and David Yonts of Neon. Ky.;
and 17 grandchilren ·and one great-grandchild .
He was preceded in death by daughter, Dinah Pnce. in 1992.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday, Sept. 4, 2005. at the
'' McCoy -Moore Funeral Home, 208 Main St., Vinton, wtth
James Harless officiating. Burial will follow on Jones Road in
' Vinton. Visitation was held in the funeral home on Saturday,
Sept. 3, 2005 , from 5 to 8 p.m.
· .A flag presentation will be conducted by American Legion
' Post No. 161. Vinton .
.
Condolences can be e-mailed to mccoymoore @chartcr.net
or www.timeformemory.com/mm.

lhomas A. Buttrick
Thomas A. Buttrick. 79. of Gallipolis, passed away on
Friday. Sept, 2, 2005 . at the Holzer Medical Center.
'

c::;:6xlaster!J

Memorial and military servtces for Robert E. Burris, 58,
Mason, W.Va., who died Thursday. Sept. I. 2005, at the
Veterans Administration Medical Cen ter. wll be held at I p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 6, at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in
Mason.
Pastor Anthony Toler will officiate.

1:15,3:15, 7:15&amp; 9:15
l{c hGb lc Internet Access S m ce 1994

Calvin D. Sheets
Calvin D. Sheet&gt;. 58, Wellston, died Thursday. Sept . I.
,2005. at Edgewood Manor Nursing Facility, Wellston.
.Services are under the dtrect ion of the McWilliams Funeral
Home, Welbton .

Agatha Pauline Spencer
Agatha Pauline Spencer. 84. of Point Pleasant died Sept. 2, .

_o0s.

?

.

Funeral will be II a.m. at the Deal funeral Home on Sept 7,
2005. Friends may call6 to 9 p.m. nn Tuesday. Burial Will be
in the New Lone Oak cemetery Point Plea,.mt.

. [Zilch : Zippo . Nada. Nothing.)

That's what will be left
of the blood supply ••
if no one answers
this call for help.
.
'

All blood types are oeeded daily.
Currently, many blood types are at cnltcally low
levels. And , wtlh the start ot summer, blood supplies
could decli ne even further Your help ts needed
now and in lhe upcoming months to ensure
that no patient need wtll evergo unmet.
Please answer th1s call for help .
PLEASE GIV:E BLOOD!

When 1t comes to buying

insurance most people
are lookmg for an expert

who tan. give them the
advice they need

That •s why ca lhng
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance
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CALL TODAY

(740) 59J-6688
We're grateful for the
opp~rtun•ty to help.

Please Donate Blood at:

St. Peter's Episcopal Church
541 Second Ave., Gallipolis

Reed &amp; Baur lnsuran'e

Agency

'

2097 E State St. Suite B
Athens, OH 45701
pd itlon @reedbaur.com

Mon., Sept 51h • 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Red Cross T-shirt to each presenting donor!

We're ·also on the Web!
VV~MV.reedbaur. com

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•

For more information
calli -800-GIVE LIFE or
visit www.redcrosslife.org

�,.
I

''

REGIONAL

6unbap lime• ·itntintl

Pechiney contract approved by urtion members in second vote
BY KELLEY SCHOONOVER

Health care and wages
were points of contention.
Dean said there ha~ been
"some anxiety" for retirees
who have retired since January
2003, and those who will retire
before the current contract
expires, because of changes in
accounting practices.
"But we as an international
always put every effort forth .
to bargain on behalf of those
individuals ..." he said. "and
will continue to do so in the
20 I0 negotiations."
There is a guarantee in the
·new agreement, Dean said,
that retirees will not have to
pay toward the cost of their
health care until Jan. 20 II , no
matter how much such costs .
escalate.
The newly ratified contract, which expires May 31,
2010, is retroactive to June I,
Dean said.
·

Aug. 26 and submitted a 48ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
hour intent to strike notice.
Then Gov. Joe Manchin
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va.- stepped in and ·encouraged
Union employees of Pechiney management
at
the
Rolled Products have approved Ravenswood aluminum plant
a new contract, after voting a to keep the offer on the table
second time on the proposal.
a little longer and asked the
In a vote that ended at mid- union to hold a second vote.
-' night on Friday, members of
Dean said many union
the United Steelworkers Local members may not have been
5668 approved the contract by aware before the first vote
a 470-to-305 margin.
that it was a strike vote, and
"We're glad that it was rat- credits the · media coverage
ified." Tim Dean , West and the governor 's inv(ilveVirginia sub-district director ment for alerling them of
of \he Unite(! Steelworkers of "what we were faced with."
America, said Sarurday. "We
Negotiations began i~ April
think it was imponant for the to try to reach an agreement
community and for the before the May 31 expiration
employees there to be able to of the previous contract.
continue
working. · and Following the advice of a
International believes it's a federal mediator, management and union officials
good agreement.·· ·
agreed
to extend the deadline
The union had rejc,ted the
proposa l during a vote on to allow for more bargaining ..

Sunday
Forecast for Sunday, Sept. 4
·

Toledo•
53" I 77'

0

Mansfield •
52" 176"

·...

*Columbus
54' I 77'

Cincinnati
•54° 181 "

0

Portsmouth •
~lBO'

0'

.

,! .

t

1

,.

~

'

'

II

;t· {,..',:
'l':

' KY.

F;r......_ . Cloudy ~

C--)
Partly

g........_

·Cloudy .,..,__.,

. ~

11

T
. hunder· ~ Flurries '~
storms
.
~~

~

ShO~ers -~

For the Record
Highway Patrol
KANAUGA - Larry F.
Mayse, 53, 175 Om &lt;~r Ave.,
Gallipolis, was cited on three
charges by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the Slate Highway
Patrol following a two-vehicle accident Thursday at the
intersection of Omar Avenue
and Ohio 7 in Kanauga.
Troopers said Mayse was
eastbound on Omar at 7:05
p.m. when he failed to stop at .
the stop sign and collided with
a tractor-trailer driven by Je.,.Y
L. Preston, 57, Kenova, W.Va.,
that was southbound· on 7.
The crash caused disabling
damage to Mayse's pickup
truck, and there was no damage
to the rig, owned by Heiner's
Bakery, Huntington, W.Va.
Mayse was cited for oper-

•••• •

Rain

•

•

Snow

loe

~

~

'

ating ,; vehicle &gt;Under the
influence, driving under suspension and .failure to yield
from a stop s1gn.

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by
Gallipolis City Police on Friday
was Joe A. Drummond, 41 ;
2849 White Road, Gallipolis;
for disorderly conduct.
'

Southeastern Ohio Edition

HOW THEY FARED

Enroll now and get FREE Tuition .•

Team
1. Ironton {2-0)
BEAT SouTH POINT

27 Sycamore Street

Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-0303

62· 7

Wheelersburg (1-1)

2.

LOST TO GAlliA ACAD£MY 37-30

3. Gallia Academy {2-0)

BEAT WH!OELERSBURG 37-30
4. Portsmouth {1-1)
Losito PORTSMOUTH Wm 35·32
5. Miami Trace {1-1)
loST TO HARMONY 35-28 OT

6. NeiS&lt;lnville-Yorl&lt; {2-0)

V.iw:v 44-6
logan Elm {2-0)

. BEAT RIVER

7.

HS.R BL,OCK'

BEAT WESTFALL 2!1-12
{2-0)
. BEAT NORTHWEST 49-0
9. Trimble (2-0)
BEAT ALEXANDER 26-6

8. Valley

10. Chillicothe {0-2)

Lost TO LOGAN 29-23

•valid a_t panlcipating locations only. Void where
prohib1ted . Fees for course matenals may ~pply
Enrollment 1n or completion of tile H&amp;R Bhxk

Income Tax Course is neither an offer nor guarantl"t:
of employment . 0 2005 H&amp;R Block Ser.. kes, Inc.

OVP SchEdulE
GALLIPOLIS- A schedule of upcorwng coHege

and high sc:l1ool varsity SJ)Orting El\lenfs involving
l68ms from Gallla, Meigs and Mason counties . ,

Volleyl&gt;all
Southern at Nelsonville-York, 5:55 p.m.
'
Golf
R:Jca at Pt P~asa111 (Hdden V~le'i), 4:30p.m. .
D'ft'dgy'B QDOl@B
Crosa Country
Gallipolis Invitational at Rio Grande, 4:30
p.m.
VoliOyball
South Ga llia.M'eUston at Ohio Valley
Christian. 6 p.m.
Fairland at River VaHey, 5:30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Warren. 5:15p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Vinton County, 6 p.m.

01111Soccor
HuntingtOn St. Joe a1 Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
TVC Hoddng at ArioMiead, 4:30p.m. '
River Valay at Cho9c1peake, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Bllffalo (Deer Run), 4 p.m.
South Gallia al Gaftia Academy (Cliffside).
4:30p.m.

Wedneedgy'a Q8Dlt8
VolteyllOII
Southern at South Gallia, 5:55p.m.
Sherman al Hannan, 6 p.m.

MARKET HOG

Golf
Ironton, River Valley at Meigs (Riverside),
4:30p.m.
Women's CoUege Soccer
Sha"Nnoo stale at Rio Grande, 5 p,m
Thuraday) games
V&lt;illeybotl
Southern at Eastern, 5:55 p.m.
Alexandef at Meigs, 6 p.m:
River Valley at ChesapeaKe, ·S;:xl p.m.
South Gallia at Haman, 5:30p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.

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. • Jackson - Inside .Kroger- 288-4100
• New Boston - Next To Wai-Mart • 488-0000
• PortSmouth • Inside Kroger - 355-1 1 1 1
• Russ~ll, KY- Inside Kroger- .808-32e~1101

Am.azing tt.Jrttaround: Devils beat the

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'~Burg

BY BRAD SHERMAN

held to five after imermission.
The defensive \lops 'r lso sparked
the offense, which scored 31 second
half points to help the Rlue. Dev ils
. GALLIPOLIS Not every remain perfect on I he season at 2-0,
"Storey" has a happy ending. but Although still early in the season,
Friday's final 'hapter read perfectly the win will ,he huge as far as the .
to Gallia Academy.
postseason is concerned.
· Wheelersburg quarterback John
·'It's going to be a poims bonanza,
S)orey ran wild - that was until .1 think," said Bokovitz. "I don' t
halftime adjustments shut him down know if'Wheelershurg will get beat
and allowed the Blue Devil s to rally again ."
from a 16-point qeticit and beat
The Pirates. a perennial powerWheelerburg 37 -30 Friday at house in southeastern Ohio, is otlto
Memorial Field.
a rare 0-2 start. They also lost a
· Storey ran·· for 145 yards in the heanbreakin g 7-6 decision at
first half as Wheelersburg buill a 22- .Ironton a week ago.
.. It 's pretty satisfying to bear
6 lead at the break, but Ga lli a
Academy duck taped the defen se Wheelershurg. whenevec you beat
and found away to neutralize he and them ," Bokovitz stated. ·
a potent Pirate running game .
While jubilant about his team's
"We kind of snatched the momen - incredible 'come-from-behind victotum from them by· slopping their ry. the fourth-yea r mentor was more
running game," explained Gallia concerned about the b1gger picture,
' !hough.
Academy coach Man Bok&lt;&gt;vit~. .
After giving up 2.67 yards on the
·Tvegot some mixed emotions,"
Brad Sherman/photo ground in the first half, Bokovitz\
he admmed. "We went 1nto the seaGallla Academy's Jayme Haggerty avoids the tackle of Wheelersburg's Blaike defense al lowed just RO more the
remainder of the game. Storey was
Please see Devils, Bl
Smith (23) during Friday's game at Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Meigs
mashes
Athens

Nelsonville-York 44 I River Valley 6

Bucks
defeat
Raiders

BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

GoH

TVC 0111&gt; aLI;ranljln Vi'/!&lt;!Jf. 4 30_p.m.

FOR BUYINGMY
2005

~r..:or:1 ,·b•dc /\·-.·~'"'"'··· ··· ·

Sunday, September 4, 2005

Mondly's 9'mtl

Bellone's "hidden hearing aid" Is now digitally programmable!

IV1r. Rescue

Southern falls to 0-2, Page 84
Outdoors, Page 86

Enjoy doing your t.axE's, rlevrlop tax-saving
strategies, even become a tax professional. *
BilingyaJ students encouraged to enroll.

Felsz

··

Football standings, Page 82
ZT slatm Eastern, Page 84

.l fiJ

Carll Wallen

P!i-111

Bl

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

Thank you
·OVB

...t

Point Pleasant 19, Sissonville 0
Wahama 14, Federal Hocking 7
Hannan at Montcalm, late Sat.

.City Police

Soccer

-

-

&amp;unba!' .OUmtl·&amp;entinel
..

Redmon beal No. 4 AUM

Gallia Academy at Marietta. 5 p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.

Monday night through
Tuesday night... Ciear. Lows
in the mid 50s. Highs in the .
lower 80s.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Wednesday night through
Friday ... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the upper 50s. Highs in the
lower 80s.

For A l.irnitcd Time, Yo11r

Inside: ·

R. O' Donnell, 47, Fnn Worth,
Texas. criminal trespass: and
Jonni K. Davis. 24, 316 Swan
Creek Road, Crown City, failure to appear-bail.

Sheriff's Office
GALLIPOLIS - Lodged
in the Galli a County Jail by
sheriff's deplllies on Friday
were Lacey W. Wolford, 20,
2565 Keystone Road, Vinton ,
for domestic violence; John

Meigs 47, Athens 27
Symmes Valley 28, Southern 6
Zane Trace 67, Eastern 0
'

Weather Underground • A.P

Sunday... Su nny. Highs in
the lower 80s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday night... Clear. Lows
in the mid 50s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph · in the
evening ... Becoming light und
variable.
lAbor day... Sunny. Highs
in the lower 80s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.

Galli a Academy 37, Wheelersburg 30
South Gallia 20, Green 7
Nelsonvill_e·Yol'k 44, River Valley 6

'

Details at: 1·800-HRBLOCK or
hrblock.com/taxcourses

ACI- 63.15 '
Peoples - 28.61
AEP- 37.72
Pepsico - 54.65
Premier - 13.30
Akzo --- 41.60
Rockwell - 52.16
Ashland Inc. - 59.28
Rocky Boots - 29.61
AT&amp;T-19.54
RD Shell - 65.87
BLI- U.20
SBC23.87
Bob Evans - 23.18
Sears - 131.63
BorgWarner - 58.23
Wa~Mart - 44 ..55
Champion - 4.25
Charming Shops - U.54 Wendy's - 46.19
· Worthington - 18.37
City Holding - 36.58
Dally stock reports are
Col- 46.78
the
4 p.m. closing quotes
DG -18.19
of the previous day's
DuPont - 38.85
transactions, provided by
Federal Mogul - .44
Smith Partners at Advest
USB- 29.75 .
Inc. of Gallipolis.
Gannett - 72.35
General Electric - 33.33
GKNLY- 5.35
Harley Davidson - 48.80
JPM- 34.11 .
Kroger - 19.9~
Ltd.- 20.79
NSC- 36.06
Oak Hill Financial 30.67
OVB- 25.15
BBT-40.51

Clly/Reglon
Low I High temps

Friday Night High School Football ·ScorEs

Sunday, September 4, 2005

Local Stocks

Local Weather

r liC~

¥ageA6

GROWING, CALl FOR EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES.

Soccer
·
South Point at Ohio VEllley ChriStian, 5 p.m.
·
Qlr1s Soccer
Point Pleasant at Winfiek:t, 7 p.m.
Golf
South Gania at Point Pleasant (Hidden
vaJie'l). 4:30 pm.
Galia Academy at Portsmouth, 4:30p.m.•
TVC Ohio at Hidden Hills, 4:30 p.m.
TVC Hocking at Brass Ring, 4;30 p.m.

Sports Briefs

Frosb Blue Devils
beat Athens, 26-16
THE PLAINS The
. Gallia Academy Blue Devil
freshmen football team
defeated 'the Athens Bulldogs
26- 16 Thursday.
'
The visiting Blue Devils
dominated the' game defen.sively, giving up the last
score in the last minute of the
game.
Scoring for the Blue Devils
were Bryan White on a I0yard ru1i , Evpn Wood on a 17yard touchdown pass from
Beau Whaley. Tyler Grimm .
scored a I0-yard TD run; and
a 30-yard pass from Whaley.
Defensively, the Devils
recovered two fumbles, both
by White, and had two interceptions, one from Cody
Ward, and one by White.
The team plays next
Thursday at Memorial field
verses Warren.

Contact Information
~ax

-1740) 446·3008

E-mall- sports@ mydailysentlnel.com

Sports stan
Brad Sherman, SporJa Edltor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bshe rman@ mydaifytribUne .com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext . 23
bwalters 0 mydailytribune .com

lerry Crum, Sport• Wrlttr
($04)675·1333, ext . 19
kKumCmyda ilyreglster.com

•

THE PLAINS ~ Meigs
SI?Oiled Athens a 21-'20
halftime lead, but the
Marauders stormed back
in the second half to post
a 47-27 win.
.. The first half ·both
teams traded &gt;cores, but
the second half' was all
Meigs. The lone Athens
second ·half score was on
the games fi nal play.
Jared Cas~y and David
Poole combined for 289
yards on the ground. And
sophomore quarterback
Aaron Story, in hi s first
varsity ·sta rt passed for
two scores and ran for a
third in leading . the
Marauders to their first
win of the youn~ season.
Athens received the
openin~
ki ckoff and
drove·nght down the field
to lake the early lead.
Zach Catania pulled in a
20 yard pass from Chri s ·
Carpinelli for the score

BY

Please see Meigs, Bl

.,

Rebels
continue
fast start

.

CHESHIRE
Rive.r
. Valley's ea rl y winning streak
came to an ·end Friday at the
hands of the Nelsonville- York
Buckeyes, who won -14-6 .
Oddlv, th e final score was
only l~o point.s off from their .
victory over ·the Raiders last
year (46-61 .
"Nelsonvi lle has bee n a playoff team for the past two
years. " said Ri,er Valley coach
Gregg Dee I . "We knew going
in that Nel sonville is just a bette r football team th&lt;in us and
we knew that . we just had to
play perfect in order for us to
win. and ob vim1.sl y that just
diJn ' t happen. "
,
It was the second win in as
many games for NelsonvilleYork, while the Raiders fell to.
1- 1 on the yo ung season.
River Valley received the
opening kick-oil hut qui,kly
lost control of lhe ball to
Ne lsonville- York. who led 130 at lhe end of the first quarter.
River Valley mnde 88 of their
208 totul rushing yard~ during
the second quarter but were
Please see Raiders. Bl

.•• i •••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••

•·

~• f -:.-)ed ~f)ftball Tf)tll-llt:.I IIJ4• I •~
•

.•

All proceeds benefit the Mason Co(m(v Special Ozvmpic:r;

:

BY lARRY CRUM
'

Please see Rebels, B4

lan McNemar/photo

An assortment of RVHS players bring 'down Nelsonville-York's Bear Lewis (42) in the first
quart(;lr Friday..

u;:RuM@MYDAILYREGIST.ER.COM

FRANKLIN FURNACE
- When a team has a historical win, sometimes the
hype
and
attention
received affects the team's
performance later down
the road - that's just not
the case for South Gallia.
The Rebels (2-0) followed up last week's
impressive gridiron victory
with a 20-7 win over
Green ( 1-1) Friday night.
South Gallia's wiu came
from a balanced attack of
rushing and passing, while
the defense worked to limit
the powerful Bobcat rush-.
ing attack.
Quarterback
Seth
Williamson led the Rebels

RANDALL FULKS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

: .·Saturday, Sep~nibel'IO, 2005·
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:

I I I I I I I I I o I I I I I I I 1 .1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . 0 I I I I I I I I o I I 0 o I o 0 o o o I I I I I

'•

\

�Page J3.2

PREP FOOTBALL
Friday 's Boxscores

Expanded Glance
Southeaetern Ohio Athletic League
ALL
SEOAL '
W.l PF PA
W·l PF PA
2.() 65 -36
Gatlia Academy
0·0 000 000
Jnc ~son
1-1
17
o-o 000 000
30
1.1 29 30
Logan
o-o 000 000
Athens
0-0 000 000
0·2 48 86
Marietta
0-2 20 73
0-0 000 000
Warren
0·2 21 60
0·0 000 000
Frldlly'l gemet
Meigs 47, Athens 27
Gallia Academy 37. 'Burg 30
Waverly 17, JaCkson 16
Logan 29, Ch1llicotl1e 23
Cambridge 41 . Marietta 13
l-"lhilo 40, Vincent Warren 14

Coal Grove
River Vall ey

AocMHill
South Point
Chosapeake
Fairland

NextAthef1s at Alexander

Ironton at Gallia Academy
Jackson at Vinton County
PICkenngloo North at Logan
Warren at Fort Frye
Marietta at Canton Glenoak {5at.)

Ohio Valley Conference
ovc
W-l PF PA
W·~
1.1
0·0 000 000
0-0 000 000
1-1
0-0 000 000
1-1
0-0 000 000
0-0 000 000
0-2
0-0 000 000
0-2

,.,

Friday's gamtt
Wayne 44 , Chesapeake 6
Coal Grove 28. Fairview 24
Winh ekl 34. Fa1rland 14
Nelsonv1Ue 44. Riwr Valley 6
Rock HI! 40. Vi nton County 14
Ironton 62. Soi..Jih Point 7

All
PF PA
42 60
64
36
62 21
28 ' 68
26 71
20
82

Ned Week

Chesapeake at Symmes VaiiSy
Fairland at SheiOon Clark
River Valley at Me1gs
Rock Hill at Oak,Hill
WeHston at South Po1 nt
Coal Grove is IDLE

TVC

W·l PF PA .
0·0 000 000
0·0 000 000
0-0 000 000
0-0 . 000 000
0-0 000 000
0-0 000 000

Nelsonv111 e-York
Belpre
Alexander
Me1gs
Wellston
Vinton Coun ty

Hocking Division
PF ' PA
. W-l

0-0
0·0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

Trimble
Waterford
Easter n
Federal Hocking
Miller
Southern

Friday's games
Trimble 26, Alexander-6
Meigs 47, Athens 27
Nelsorwille 44 , River Valley 6
Rock Hill 40, Vinton County 14
Wellston 20, Minford 15
Zane Trace 67 . Eastern 0
Wahama 14, Federal H()d(ing 7
• Newscomerstown13, Miller 12 OT
Symmes valley 28, Southern 6
Watef1ofd 21 , Frontier 20
BElpre at Fort Frye (late -Sat.)

Poca
Pt Pleasant
He r ~rt Hoover
Wayne
Logan
Winlleld
Sissonville

000 000
000 000
000 000
000 000
boo 000 .
000 000

ALL
PF
B3
~0
32
53
20
20

PA
27
7
26
55
29
61

W·l
1.1
0·2
0-2
0·2
0-2

PF
39
35
13
12

PA
6
53
121
46
39
35

-2-D

59

6·

· · Next Week
Athens at Ale)(ander
Belpre at Williamstown
River Valley at Meigs
Nelsonville-York at Fairfield Union
Jackson at Vinton County
Wellston at South Point
Wahama at Eastern
Park. Catholic at Fac:teral Hocking
Miller at Green
Trimble ai-.Southeastern
Col. Harvest at Waterford
Southern at South Gallia (Sat.)

Cardinal Conference
CAROINAL
W·l PF PA
1-0 0 0
1-0 19 0
0·0 0 0
0·0 0 0
0·0 0 0
0·0 0 0
0·2 6 40

Friday's game•
Point Pleasant t 9, SissOnville 0
Hertert Hoover 46, Roane Co. 6
Johnson Central 69, Logan 40
_Wayne 44, Chesapeake 6
Winfield 34, Fairland 14
Ravenswood 14. Poca 10

W·l
2-0
1-0
1-1
1·1
1-1
0-2

All
PF
31 .
31
75
71

W·L
1-1
1-1
2·0
2·0
1.1 52
1.1 34
0·2 8

PA
20.
31
25
6
79
24
40

Nex!Wiolc
f.Aa~¥Jolla at Point F'18asant
Wayne at Herbert Hoover

Poca at Logan
Sissonville at Winlield

Non-League
All
W·l PF PA
2-0 74 42
1.1 31 31
0·1 0 40

South Gellia
Wahama
Hannan

Frlday'a games
Wahama 14, Federal Hocking 7
South Gallia 20. Green 7
,Hannan at Monlealm {late Sat.)

Meigs

Wehama at Eastern
Bishop DonahJe at Hannan (Sat.)
Southam at South Gallia {Sat.)

successive three and outs to
turn lhe game around. After
the first defensive slop,
Story hit Buaard in the
Jtom Page Bl
righl corner of the end zone
for a I0 yard pass : Casey ran
capping a II play. RI yard
drive, Chri s Bunch added for the extra points mid a 34·
21 Meigs lead.
the extra points for the 7-0
Three plays after the next
lead .
stop,
Poole raced through a
It
ditln"t
take
the
big
hole
on the right side on
Maralldcrs long to tie the
game up, Jared Casey the line 53 yards for the
received the squib kick and score, The pass was no good
.went straight up the middle but Meigs held a 40-21 lead.
The Bulldogs drove to the
79 ycmJs for the s.:ore. Josh
Bu zzard added the extra maroon and gold 23 yard
points and tie the game at 7- line. but Josh "Kimes picked
off a Carpinelli pass at lhe
all with 6:55 remaining in
goal line to end the thrcljL
the period ,
·
,
Once again At'hens put Meigs th~n drove to the
Bulldog II , bul Story lost a
together an impressive drive ' yard on fourth down.
to retake the lead. Chris
But two plays after a short
Stalder dove in from the Athens punt out of the end
three after a II play 85 yard zone. Poole raced in from 18 .
drive . B.unch made it 14·7 yard out Casey added the
with 2:51 remaining .
extra points and with 1-:41
Blll on ce again, Meigs left Meigs was on top 47-27 .
came ri ght back . When
Athens scored on the
Story ran an option .around games final play when Bob
right
end . and
rm:ed Gregory scored from 15
untou.:hcd 61 yards for the yards out to close out the
score. Buzzard tied the game.
score a1 14 wi1h I : 15 left in
"I'm proud of the ki~s
the period .
effort. " Marauder coach
Athens dro ve ~6 yards for Mike Chancey said after the
a score at the 2:42 mark of conlesL "Give Athens credthe
half when ·· Chris it. . they are a · good team .
Thompso n lunged over from Over all it was a good hard
the · three. Bunch added the fought win ,"
'points after to make it 2 1Casey led Meigs with 166
14 .
· yards m 19 carncs, Poole
Meigs n1t the lead to o ne added · 123 in I 0 and Story
at the half whe n Story hit added 80 in I 0 carries·, Slory
Buzzard ove'r the middle on was five of seven in the air
fourth an 12. Buzzard won a with an interception and two
foot race into the left corner - scores. B~zzard pulled in
of the endzone for the score two for 42 yards , both
with just 5.9 seconds left scores to lead Meigs. Eric
Buzzanj's ex tra point kick VanMeter added ·two for 15
was blocked, and Jos h yards and Casey one for 16.
injured his ankle on the
Stalder led Athens 'with
play. But he wa; able to 172 yards in 21. carrie s,
come bac k into the co ntest Mitch Spfres added 8 1 in I~
near the end of the third . carrie s. Carpinelli
was
·
·
period.
seven of 14 in the air with
Meig; drove right down two interception s. Jake
and scored to start the third Anderson caught three for
period. when Casey scored . 56 yarps and Zach Catania
from ci ~ lit yard; out. the two for 35 .
extra p01nts we re no good,
Meigs is now 1- 1 on th e
but Meigs had thei r fir st season and will return home
lead of the nig ht at with nex t week to pl ay Ri ver
7:57 left in the period at 2fl · Vall ey. Athens fell to 0-2
2L
and will play Alexander
The Marauder defe nse ne x't , Saturday at Oh io
held ihe Bulldogs 10 two Universit y's Peden Stadium .

'

'

-- ----------- ---

Symmes Valley 28,
Southern 6
Symmes
0 15 13 0 - 28
Southern
0 0 0 6-. 6
Scoring oummory
Second Quortor

' Scoring aummary
First Quarter

,
GA-Jayme Haggerty 85 pass from . SV-Oerek Carpenter t run
Jeff Golden (kick failed), 10:38
(Meadows run) 8:24
W-John S1oray 69 run {kick tailed) SV-Carpenter 4 run (Meadows
9:05
kick) 1:06
W-Brandon While 9 run {While run)
Third Quarter
:45
SV-Seth Sanders 1 run (Meadows
kick) 6 :34
Second Quarter
W-Siorey 16 run {Siorey run) 7:58 SV-Ma1l Owens 30 run (kick tailed)
Third Quarter
:oo ·
Fourth Quarter
GA-Dustin Win1ers 2 run {pass
5-Bu1ch Marnhou1 2 run (kick
tailed) 9:24
failed) 2:55
GA-Winters 22 run (kick tailed)
6:37

Fourth Quarter
GA-Winters 2 rim (Joe Esmaeili
kick) 11:43
W-White 1 run {Siorey run) 9:58
.GA-Hagger1y 6 run (pass tailed)
2:08
GA-Haggerty 18 run {kick tailed)
1:33
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing· yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
FumtHes-lost
Penalties-yards
Punts-avg .

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards

Total yards

Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost

Penalties-yards
Punts-avg.

13
46·347

51
398
4·13·1
5· t
5·35
3·33

Individual Statlatlca
.
Ruahlng: W-John Storey 16·150,
Brandon White 18·t40, Kailyb
Burgess 5·25; Chris Pyles 3·13 , .
Brandon Jackson 2-11 , Jordan Clark

2-8.
GA- Dustin Winters 13-108 ; Jayme

Hagger1y 12-90, Seth Haner 6·t6,
Todd Saunders 1·9, Jeff Golden 3·(3).

Passing: W-John Storey 4·13·1 51 .
GA-Jeff Golden 5-14·1 166, Jayme
Haggerty 1·2:0 1.
Rscelvlng: W- Draw Spradlin 2·33,
Kailyb Burgess 2-18

sv
s
20
tO
41 ·386 31·220
20
8
376
163
2·3·1 4·8·2
2·3
4·5
14·137 6·55
2-43
2·36

GA
Individual Statlatlcs
13
_
Rushing:
SV- Matt Owens 13-167,
35·220
John
Wiseman
7·85, Derek
167
Carpenter
t3·58,
Seth
Sanders 6·48,
387
Chris
Capper
2·(-8).
6·16·1
S-Butch Marnhout 17·1 01 , Jesse
4·0
McKnight I0·36, Ryan Donaldson 2·
7·40
4,
Ryan Chapman 2·3.
2·33

W•

Tri·Valley Conference
Ohio Division

Gallla Academy 37,
W.heelersburg 30
'Burg
14 8 0 8 - 30
Gallipolis
6 0 t2 19 - 37

-

'

GA-Jayme Haggerty 4·165, Dustin
Winters 1-1 , Justin Saunders 1-1.

South Gallla 20, Green 7
So. Gallia
6 8 6 0 - 20
Green
7 0 0 07

FH

w

10
34-t16 38·95 ..
8
123
124
218
1·7:3 9·25·0
1·1
5·4
4·34
2·42
6

Passing yards
Total yards
kick) 2:24
Comp-all-lnl
5-Bernie Fulks 24 run (run tall) :09 . Fumbles-lost
Second Quarler
Penalties-yards
5-Dustin McCombs 20 pass from
Seth Williamson (William'son run} :16
Individual Statistics
Third Quarlar
·
Rushing: FH- Tyler Jarvis 19-106,
5-Derrick Beaver paSs from
Chaz Driggs 5-.8. Brandon Barnhart
Williamson (pass lail)6: 11
5·7, Adam Tate 2·2, A.J. Smith 3·(·7).
W- Kris Gibbs 9-53, Nathan Stafford
13·31, Derek Veazy 5·14, Juslln Bell
s
G
First Downs
13
16
2·3, Brandon Fowler 5·(·2), Brenton
Rushes-yards
Clark 4·(·4),
29·153 3!,152
Passing yards
44
143
, Total yards
296
196
Paaalng: FH- Chaz Drlgg~ 1-4·1 e,
Comp-att-int
B· 14-0 6·11-2
AJ. Smith 0·3·2 0.
t-{)
Fumbles-lost
1-0
W- Brenton Clark 9·25.() 123,
P8nalties-yards 5-45
3·30
Receiving: FH- Tyler Chadwell 1·8,
· Individual Statlottco
W- Chase Ord 4·66, Brandon
Ruohtng: 5-Bornle Fulks I 1·100, Fowler 1-18, Krls Gibbs 1-16, Derek
Curl Waugh 12-44, Seth Williamson Vaazy 1-14, Nathan Stafford 1·9,
2·8, Derllck Beaver 3·3, Dewey
Cantrell 1·(·2).
• Point Pleasant 19, G-Mark Castro 23·98,. Dustin
Sissonville 0
Williams -10·37. Derek Lewis 3·12, Point
13 ·s o 0-19
John Buller 1·5,
Sissonville ' 0 0 0 0 - 0
G-Dustin Williams 14 run (Castro

Paaolng: 5-Seth Williamson 8·14.()

Scoring summary
Flrot Quarter
G-Derek Lewis 6·11·2 44.
PP-Brandon Warner 27 run (kick
tailed) 3'02
Receiving: S- Dustin McCombs 5· PP-James Casto 1 run (Patrick
103, Derrick Beaver 2·24.
Holland kick) :33
G-John Butler 2-24, Dustin Williams
Second Quarter
PP-Warner 61 run (pess tailed) 6:46
4·20
~

143.

•d
R81 ers

The fourth quarter went
relatively uneventfully with
Iiule yardage gained by
either team and the ball
switching hands almost

from Page 81

0

still_outshone by Nelsonville- -- ev~[rh :~~f/~~lt~ry a~sured,
-sentor David Jolley wtlh his N Isonville began switching
.
,
79 yard carry mto the end . e
zone, scoring the fourth m many of the1r _younger
touchdown for Nelsonville, team members to g•,ve them
1he biggest play of the night , a go at the evemng s game,
with 11 :37 left on the first creatln$ _somethmg of a
half clock .
slandstlllm the act10n of lhe
Nel sonville
led
the
Raide rs 37-0at the half:
River Valley scored its
first and only touchdown
three minutes into the second hlllf when the Raiders
fou ght the ir way past the 10
yard line and senior Chri s
Edwards
brushed
past
Nelsonville and into the end
zone . A two point conver-'
sion was attempted but
failed ,
•
Less lhan two minutes
later, the Buckeyes scored
their final points of the
evening when Jolley found
pay dirt for a second time .
Jay Edwards tacked on the
point after to round out the
scoring.

F irst

Downs

Rushes-yards
Passing yards
To1at yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost

- ----------

pp

s

9

7

8

104

51-198 30·(·9)
206
1-6.()
0·0

ga;r;· 10 p.m., a jubilant
noise emanated across the
field from the Nelsonville
side , piercin g the cool
autumn air and announcing
that vi ctory had been
achieved over River Valley
for yet another year.
Next week, River Valley
travels l&lt;r Meigs for their
first road game of the season . " Meigs is a very good
team ; ' we probably . figure
that th ey will be a lot like
Nelsonville · York, because
both teams might lake lhe
(TVC)
league championship," said Dee!.
,
"Next week doesn"t get a
whole lot• easier for us. but
we ' ve gotta go back and

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"

Ohio Football Scores
Ohio High School Foolball Scorn
Frlct.y '1 Aftul•
Akr. N. 27, Cle. John Marshall 0
Akr. NOf1h 27, Cit. John Marshall 0
Akr. SVSM 38 , Chardon NDCL 6
AIUance 37 , Niles McKinley 21
Amherst 21 , Grafton Mi&lt;Mew 7
Anna 35, Tipp City Bethel 0
Appl9- Cree k Wayn edale 35 , Na varre
Fal rle~ 2
Arcanum 76, New Parts National Trail 6
Ashland 18, Beii8Yti8 7
Ashland Crestview 49, Lbudonvllla 26
Ashtabula Lakeside 35, Cle. E. Tech 14
A&amp;h\11118 Teays Valley 14, Hebron Lakewood
6
Attica Seneca E. 55, ~lymoiJih 0
Atwaler Walarloo 48. Alliance MarllngtO[I 7
Aurora 58, Crestwood 20
Aurora SS, Mentua Crestwood 20
Avon 31 , WellingtOn 7
A\IOn Lake SB, Cie. S. 0
Balnbrldi)S Paint Valley 22, Cots. W. t4
· Barberton 30, Akr. E. 0
Baacom Hop~eii·Loudon 38·, Kansa&amp;
Lakota
Beallsville 31 , Bowerston Conotton Valley 0
Beavercreek 27 , Falr'born 21
·
Bedford 30, Macedonia Nordonla .(:9
Bell aire 34 , Glen ·Data (W.Va .) John
Marshall13
· Bellaire Sl . John 21, Strasburg·Franklln 13
Be!l elonta lne Benjamin logan 41 , Ft. ,
loramie 17
BeiMIIe Clear Fork 49, Fredericktown 21
Bloomdale ElmWOOd 28. Port Clinton 25
BllJffton 25, Ada 7
Bowling Green 26, Fostoria 22
Bradford 28, A"son la 6
Brooklyn 21, Orange 14
Brunswick 34, Lakewood 7
Bryan 23, Archbold 21
Bucyrus Wyntord 24 , Sycamore Mohawk
14
.Burton Berkshli e 48 , Ast11atlula Edgewood

- -----

RV
35·397 52·208
144
58
541
266
4·18·0
4-8·0
2·2
1·1
1·1 0
2·15
N

Rushes-yards

Individual Stattotlco
Ruohlng: PP-Brandon Warner 9104, Jarod Slouller 10-41 , James
Casto t 0·31, Travis Rillle 5·28,
Edward Johnson t-9, Nathaniel Roub
2·9, Tyler Granl 2·4,
S- Johnson Edens 7-21, Chris
Boggess 5·7, Josh Shamblin 1·(-4),
Timmy DeBarr 1-(·13), Myles Henson
16+22).
Paoatng: PP-James Casto 1-6·0 8.
S- Myles Henson 9·19·0 104.

Passing yards
Total_yards
Comp·att·lnt
Fumbles-lost

Pen~ltii\S·yards

· lndtvlduel Statistics
Rushing: N- Davld Jolley 7-150, Jay
Edwards 8·1 06, Bear Lewis 6·62,
Josh Hodgson 1-40, Nick North 2-12,
Joe Shrnetzer 2-t 1, Michael Barrick
3·10, Jon McCulloch t·3,. Patrick
Norway 1_- t, Patrick Taggart1·0, .
RV- Chns Edwards 19·75, Zak Deal
2·28, Michael Cordeit 4-27, Tyler
Racolvlng: PP- Wilt Stone 1·8.
S- Josh Shamblin ·3-30, Chris Canaday 3·27, Scott ,1-junt 1·24 ,
Boggess 2·29, Timmy Debar 2-23, Jordan Noel 6·20, Se1h Lucas 1·4,
Jerrod Roberts 1·3, Sean Sands 1·3,
· Eric Myers 2-22.
Ryan Henry 2·1 , Bryan Morrow 4·1 .
Meigs 47, Athens 27
Meigs
14 6· 14 13 - 47 Passing: N--Jay Edwards ,4·7·0 98,
Athens
14 14, 0 6 - 27 Michael Barrick 0-1-0 0
RV- Bryan Morrow 2·13·0 25, Chris
Edwards
1·2 20, Michael Cordell1.f.
Scoring summary
o
13,
Clayton
Curnette 1·0·0 0, Jasso
Ftrot Quortor
A-Zach Catania 20 pass from Chris Thompson t·O·O0.
Carpinelli {Chris Bunch kick) 7:I3.
Receiving: N- David Jolley 1·38,
M-Jared Casey 79 kick return '
Joe Schmelzetr 1-32, Josh .Hodgson
(Josh Buzzard kick) 6:55
A-Chris Stalder 3 run (Bunch kick) 1-61 , Bear Lewis 1·13,
RV- Bryan Cordell 1·20, Michael
2:51 .
Cordell
1·13, Ryan Henry 1·7, lan
M- Aaron Story 63 run (Buzzard
Lewis 1-4.
kick) 1:15.
'

e

32
Byesville Meadowbrook 24, Barnesville 21
Cambridge 41 , Marietta 13
Csn. Cent. Cath. 21 , Massillon Pe rry 20.
OT
Can. McKinley 56, Waterdown , Ontario 8
Cardington-lincoln 34, R~I'1WOOd N. Union

. Zane Trace 67, Easiern 0
Eastern
0 0 0 0 - 0'
Zane Trace 2t t7 15 14 - 67

6
Carey 21, MI. Blanchard Riverdale 7
Carlisle 42, Preble Sl'1awnee 15
Centerburg 40, Sugar" Grove Berne Union

Scoring oummary
Firat Quarler
ZT -Cody 'Lawhorn 52 run (Cody
Williams kickl 10:38

7

Brod Sharman/photo
Gallia Academy's Chris McCoy, left fends off a Wheelersburg tackler during a kickoff return
'Friday at Memoria l Field.

ZT - Brandyn Street 37 interception

return (Williams kick) 9:10
61 punl return (Williams
kick) 6:45

ZT -Street

Devils

The Devils scored twice in on the very next play with
the third to get back into the an 18-yard run that rounded
game. both on runs by out the scoring .
Dustin Winters, who fin·
Hag·g erty caught four
from Page Bl
ished with I 08 yards and passes for 165 yards and
als'o added 90 yards on the
three touchdowns.
son thinking w~ could play
Hi
s
third
score,
a
plunge
ground.
defense a ce11ain way, and
Wheelersburg still had
so far we haven'.t been able from two yards .out to start
the
fourth
quarter,
gave
the
I
:40
to try and moun I a
10 play" it a11d I'm kind .of
Blue
Devils
the
lead.
Joe
potential
tying touchdown
di sappo inted in that fact.
Esmaeili"s extra. point . the . drive. but it stalled al mid·
, "We ' re going to find . a
way to stop the run, ~orne · only point afler touchdown field as Jared Burnett sacked
the entire night for Giillia Storey as time expired.
heck or high water, we play
Academy. made it 25-22.
Studenls stormed the field ilt
another team (next week)
Wheele rsburg answered celebration.
that's going to try and run it on the ensuing possession
Gallia Ac:~demy held the
down our throat s.'"
with its only points of the lead briefly in the first quarThat lcHm is Ironton. half, a short five play, 70- ter as Golden connected
which wmcs -to Gallipolis yard drive keyed hy White' s with Haggerty on an !!5-yard
with I 0 straight victories in ·so-yard ·run. White , who ran pitch and catch on the
the seri es.
for 140 yards total, also fin· Devils" first possession. The
Ne xl w~ek"s encounter ishetl the drive by scoring sophomore Golden threw
with th e Fighting Tigers from a yard out and added a for 166 yards with a touch·
was - mad e all the more two-point conversion run.
down and a pick .
inlere sting thanks to the · But Gallia Academy capi Wheelersburg scqred 22
Gallian s· second half turn - tali zed on a pair of turnovers · unanswered points, howev-.
around Friday. as now both late to complete an amazing - er. as Storey ran for two
teams will en1er the gati1e comeback .
touchdowns and White for
undefeated.
Brad Caudill recovered a one .
Of Wheelersburg\ 80- Wheelersburg
fup1ble,
Storey broke free on a 69y&lt;~rd second half rushing
which
set up
Gallia yard scoring mn around lhe
total ." most of \hose came on Academy\ go-ahead touch- left end with 9:05 lefl in lhe
a 50-yard run hy Brandon down . , The Blue Devils first quarter. Then White
White . hut that was in the negotiated a shurl 30-yard ' scored from nine_ yards out
fourth quarter - the third lield and Jayme Haggerty late in that opening period
stanza tut&lt;~lly belonged . to capped the drive on a six· on a nine-yard scamper.
th e t&gt;lu e and white . ·
yard run . by diving over a
Storey gave the ' Burg a
··we
(stopped host
of
Wheelersburg commanding lead whert he
dragged a host to Gallia
Wheelersburg). I thihk defenders at the ~oal line .
Then already leading 3 1- Academy defenders into the
·three -and -out three times
in -a-row. and scored two 30. the Devil s- ~ot the ball end zone on a physk:~f 16·
touchdown s."'
Bokovitz back when Winters snared a yard touchdown run with
said ahout his club's third .Storey pass for .an intercep- eight minutes left in the
tion. Haggerty scored agam opening half.
. qua rter s!a.rt.

Second Quarter

ZT - Williams 30 field goal t2 00
ZT - Chance Sowers 14 run

(Williams kick) 7:02
·
ZT - Lawhorn 8 run (Williams kick)
4:10

Third Quarter
Lawhorn 9 run (Zach Roll run)
10:15
.
ZT - Chris King 3 run (Williams kick)
·tndlvldual Statlottcs
Ruohlng: M~ared Casey 19·166, 28.6
David Poole 11)·123, Aaron Story I0·
Fourth Quarter
80, Brandon Ftsher 3·15, Josh
ZT -

ZT - Brian Crabtree 1 run (Williams

Buzzard 1-8.

A-Chris Stalder 21-172; ·-Milch kick) 8:23
Spires 15·81, Chris Thompson 7·53, ZT - Beau Dailey 1 run (Williams
Bob Gregory 2·19, Chris Carpinelli kick) 4:12
4(·17).
E
ZT
7
17
First
downs
Paulng: M-Aaron Story 5·7·1 73.
Rushes-yards
39-89 37-232
·A- Chris Carpinelli 7·14·2 125
Passing yards
fa
187
t07
4t9
Receiving: M~osh Buzzard 2·42, Total yards
4-9- 1' 10-11·0
Eric VanMeter 2-15, Jar,ed Casey 1- Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
0·0
2·0
16.
4·25
A-Jake Anderson 3 - 56 , Zach Penalties-yards 8·48
Catania 2-35, Mlch Spires 1-20,

Stalder 1·14,

Chris

Nelsonville-York 44,
River Valley 6
Nelsonville 13 24 7 0 - 44
River Valley 0 0 6 0- 6
Scoring sUmmary

Terry Durst 8-40 ,

Chadd Whrtlalch t2-35, (#5) 3-13,

Jordari"Pierce

11-3, Action Facemyer

2·2 , Cody Gerlach 2·1, Bryce
Honaker 1-(·5),
_
ZT - Cody Lawhorn 7·84, Justin
Miller 5-57, Chris King 6-34 , Chance

Sowers 3·20, Brandon Stephens 518, Dale McCullough 2 - 10, Brian
Crabtree 3-7. Ben Haynes 1-". Zach

First Quarter
N-Bear Lewis 4 run (kick tailed)
7:43.
N-Jay Edwards 5 run (Jay Edwards .

kick) 5:.05.
·

Individual Stallatlcs

Rushing: ~ -

Roll 3·0, Beau Dailey 2·0.

Passing: E - Jordan Pierce 4·9+
18 ZT - Zach Roll 10·11·0·132,
Beau Dailey 2-2-0·55

Second Quarter

N-David Jolley 79 run (Edwards
kick) It :35
N-Jay Edwards lield goal 7:5a
N-Jay Hodgson 61 pass from
Edwards (Edwards kick) 5:53

Receiving: E -

Terry Durst 2·9,

Bryce Honaker t-11, Cody Gerlach
1-(·2), ZT - Ben Haynes 4·76,, Mike
Pacinda 2·22, Chris George 1·38,
Matt Harrington I·26, Justin Shifflet
1-25.

N-Joe Smetzer 33 pass from

Edwards (Edwards kick) 2:32
Third Quarter

co.rrect our mistakes. We got
beat lonighl, bul we still saw
a lot of good lhings out of
our kids thai we liked.
"Our goal right now with
so many young kids is just
to continue lo gel belter
every week , whether we win
or lose. just get belter ill
what we ' re doing :·

Subscribe today.

446-2342

HEALTH AND
LIFE
CALL JERRY

.-

14

Clayton Northmont 42, Cin. LaSalle 7
Cle. JFK 18 : Bedford Chane113
Cle. VASJ 20, Jefferson 0
Clyde 7. Tiffin Columbian 0
Co ldwater 38, Maria Stein Marion Local ?
Cols. Beechcroft 21 , Cols, St. Charles 6
Cots. Be)( ley 35, London 21
Cots, Centennial 13, Belmont Union Local
7, OT
Cols. Crusaders 42 , Cin. Christian 7
Cots. E. 20 , Cols. S. t4
Cots_ Fran'klln Hts. 34, Whitel'1 aii, Ye arling
14
Cots. linden 42, Co ts. Alrfcentric 12
Cols Mifflin 26 , WesleNille N. 11
Cots. Northland 35, Cots. Walnut Ridge 6
Cots. Ready 24. Cots. Marion-Franklin 22.
Cols. Watterson 27, Pickerington N. t 3
Cots. Whetstone 48, Cots. Brigg s 20 ,
ColUmbuS Gro\le 18, Lafayette All en E. 0
Convoy Crestview'43, Defiance Tinora 13
Coplay 41, Akr Cent. -Hower 12
Cortland Lakeview 14 , Co nneaut 0
Cory·Aawson 35 , Arcadia 7
Coshocton 14 . W. Laluyette Ridgewood 7
Covington 40, lewisburg Tri-Coun ty North
7
,
Creston Norwayne 55. Lowellville 6
Cuyahoga 'Falls CVCA 28, Woodridge 20
Day. Meadowdale 23. Day. Col. While 20
Day. Northndge 3.2, Day. Christian 6
Day. Oakwood 25, Day. Stebbins 6
Dehance 29, Wapakon.eta 14
DeGraff Ai\lerside 12. N. Law1sburg Triad 6
Delaware Buckeye Valley 7, Mt _Gilead o
Delphos S1. John's 7. St. Henry 3
Della 41, Metamora Evergreen 8
Dole Hardin Northern 2 t ; Arllngton 0
Do\ler 29, Orrville 22 . OT

Buckeye Cent . 20.

Norton 26, Akr Kenmore 23
Old w ashtngton Buckeye Tra 1t26. Ca ldwell

9

Olmsted Falls 42 . Garlield Hts. 28
Oregon Stntch 42, Fostona St Wendel In 14
Orwell Grand ~alley 39. Ashtabula Sts.
John &amp; Paut7
Ottawa-Glandorf 38, Kenton 20
Parma Hts Holy Name 14. Akr. Hoban 13
Parma Normandy 10, Brecksville 0
Par me Valley Forge 35 Berea 14
Pembe r\IIIIC Eastwood 35.' Maumee 27 ·
Ph1lo 40, Vrm:ent Warren 14
P1Ckenngton Cent. 29. Canal Winchester 0
Pla 1n C 1ty Jonathan Alder 48 , Cots
Hamilton Twp 18
Pome roy Meig~ 47. Athens 27
Por tsmouth Sc101ov111e 14. Cots Harvest

Green 34, Akr. Spring. 7
Greenfield McClain 28, Richmond Da le SE
p,ep 7
21
, ,
' Greem11 11e 28, Tlpp City Tippecanoe 21
Portsmouth W 35, Po •tsmouth 32
Greenwich s. Cent 35, Z anesville
Powell Olentangy Libert',' 28 . Galloway
Rosecrans o
Westland 27 20T
Grove CitY 2 1, Worthington Kilbourne 20.
Raven na 35. Tw1nsb~rg 14
OT
Ravenna SE 36. Newton Falls 6
Groveport-M adison 24 , Pa tas kala Watk1ns
Reynoldsburg 3~. L1mti Sr 6
Memorial 6
R1chlietd Revere 22 . N. Royalto n 7
Har:nler Patrick Henry 48, Swa nton 0
R1"man 28 . Sugarcreek Garaway .1 4
Han nibal Al\ler 21 . New Mar tinsville
Rockford Parkway 30, Ft Recovery 7
(W.Va.) Magnolia 20, OT
Rossford 10 . Oak Harbor 7
Haviland Wayne Trace 37 . Delph os
Salem 42, Hanoverton Umted 8 ,
Jefferson t9
Sanclusky Perk1ns 3-4. LaGrange Keystone
Heath 32 , Delaware 16
t2
Hilliard Da rby 28. G ro\le City Cent.
Shaclys 1oe 19, Woodsfield Monroe cent. 0
Cross1 ng 0
Hilliard Davidson 34. Mason 10 '
Shawnee 2 4. W. Ca rrolltrJn 21
Hillsboro 30, Cin . Finntlytown o
SheHield Brooksldt~51 , Lutheran Ea st 0
Hilltop 34, Antwerp 20
Shelby 28. Le)(1ngton 0
Holland Spring, 26 , Tot. Bows her 12
Sherwood Fanv1ew 42. Elmore Woqdmore
Howard E. Knoll 44. Crestline 21
22
Hub9r Ht s. Wayne 2S. Fair1 ield 27
S1dfley 28 Bellefontaine 14 .
Hudson 30, Pa lne sv1lle Riverside 7
Sidney Lenman 14. New Bremen 13
Huron 38, Norwalk 14
Srnithv1Ue 4 I. Wooster Triway 7
Ironton 62 , S. Po lnl 7
Solon 33, Med1na o
Jeromesville Hillsdale 35, Lucas 14
Sporta Highland 26. Morral A1dQBda•e 19
JoM stown-M onro e
4 1.
Chillicothe
Spencarv1lle 33. Pauld!ng 22
Huntington 6
Spring Cath Cent. 28, Danvrlle 14
Kenston 21 . Chardon 7
Spr 1ng N 13. Hamilton 9
Kent Roosevelt 20, Stow 0
Spr 1ng. Shawnee 24 ,
carrollton 21
Kettering Alter 2 4. Bellbroo k 10
Springboro 35 _Cin. Sycamore 13
Ki ngs Mills Kings 29. O xford Tolawanda 19
La ncasle r Fairfield Union 40. Baltimore . St. ClairSville 13, Wintersville Indian Creek
Ubert y Union 15
:
0
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 67. Bloom-Carroll
Sl . Marys Memonal 32 Celtna 20
35
Steubenv rlle 36. WAs l11ngton {O.C) Dunbar
Leav ittsburg LaB rae 47, Vtenna Math ews 0 19.
•
l ebanon 25 . Campbel l County. Ky. 12
S!reetsboro 42 Akr F1restone 7
l ees Creek E Clinton 2 1, Goshen 6
Sunbur·f Big Waln ut 73 . Jamestown
l ei psic 12. McComb?
Greenev1ew 0
Le mon·Monroe 49, Midd letown Madison 7
Sylvania hl orHw lew 29. To I Wa1!t' 12
Lewi s Center Ol"lnlangy 13. Tharnas
Tallmadge 38. Ak r Ellet 14
Worthington 0
Thompson Ledgemom 37 Newbury 28
Lewistown Indian Lake 35, Sp r1ng . Kenton
Thornvlllf! Sher1dnn 26 . New Le1w1gton o
Ridge 9
Tol . Chnslian 2o1 HolgH!e 6
liberty Center 42. Montpe lier l A
Tol Ottawa Hills 22 . Deliance Ayersv 111e 14
lima Cen t Cnth 37, Hicksville 6
tockland 35. Yellow Spnngs 19
Tol . Rogers 12. Sylvania' Southview 8
Lod1 Cloverl eaf 3. Youngs Rayen o
Tal Sco" 27, Tol. Stan 23
· Logan 29, Ch tllicothe 23
To!. St John's 20. Cols DuSaiGs 17
Lora1n Adm1ral Kin g 21. E . Cle. Shaw 12
Tontogany Otsego 45. Perrystlurg i
Lou1s ville 35. Mansfield Mildison 13
Trenton Edgewood 21. Hamilton Ross 7
Lucasville Valley 49. Sc1oto McDermott NW · Troy 34. 'sprmg_S. 26
•
0
TroY Chns t1an 35. Day. Jefferson 26
Madison 28, Geneva 0
Un ian Ci ty Miss1ss1nawa Valley 34. W.
Malvern ·34, Se.lineville Southern 21
Alexandna Twm Valley S. 0
Manslield Sr. 16, Sandusky 14
Uniontown Lake 27 Youngs Wilson o
Maple Hts . 27. Cuyahoga Falls Walsh
Upper Arlin gton 52. Cols Independence 8
Jesui1 7
Upper SandusKy 35. BucyrlJS 28 . OT
Marioi-1 Elgin 35. Gallon Northmor 6
Urbana 20. Spnng. NE 14
Marion PleaSa nt 17. Marion R1ve r Valley 14
UtiCA &lt;l t . Granville 27
Massill On Jackson 35. Lancaster 14
Vnn Buren 4 1, Vanlue 0
Ma ssill on Tuslaw 9. Da lton 6
Van Wert 33 . Lima Bath 13
McConnelsville Morgan 41, Zanesville
Maysville 14
Vandali a Butler 33. New Carlis le Tecumseh
McDonald 20. W1ndharn 6
13'
Mec han iCSburg 35, FranKfort AdenR 12
Verm1hon 29. Lora1n Ctearview 0
Mentor 26 , Youngs. U'rsulme 19
Versa1l les -l7 M1nster 13
Miamisbur g 28. Kettering Fai rmont 27
W Jefferson 4 1. M1llersport 0
Middlefield
Car dinal
1f:l.
Andover
W Uberty-Sa lem 24. Spnng NW 6
Pym atLinl ng Valley 16
w. Salem NW 7. Su thvan Black A1 ver 0
Middletown 21, Cle Hts. t4
Wadsworth 28. Cuyahoga Falls t1
Middle town Fenw1 ck 24, H&lt;imilton Badin 17
Wahama. W Va . 14 . Stewart Federal
Milford Center Fa1rt:lanks 33 . S. Charl eston Hockmg 7
SE 20
w aterford 21. New MatamOras Front1er 20
MillbtJry Lake 41 , Northwoocl 6
w avefly l 7. Jackson 16
Miller sburg W. Hol mes 27. Warsaw River
Wayneslield-Goshen SO. Lima Perry 12
View 26
Weirt on {W va ) we1r 44. caa 1.z Hamson
Mitton-Un1 on 15, Casstown M1am1 E. 12
Cent t
2
Mogadore 28. N. Jackson Jackson-M1Iton 6
Mo[}adore Field 2 1, Can Timken 7
Wellsburg (W. Va.) Brooke 28. Rayland
Monroe 49, Middletown M adiSOn 7
Buckey e Locai 'O
MI. Orab .western Brown 50 . Blanchester
Wellston 20 Mn1 lord 15
30
Westerv:lle S 38 Tot Wh1tmer 0
N. Baltimore 58. Lakes1de Danbury 0 .
Whiteford . M1ch 44 G1t1sonb!1rg 13
N. Can Hoover 38, Wash1ngton (D.C.)
WhitehOuse Anthony Wayne 35 . Oregon
Calv1n Coolidge 18
Clay 28
'
N_College Hill 21. N Bend Taylor 7
Wtllard 49 Ontar1o 6
N. R1 dg6v1 11e 35, Tot. L1tlbey 0
. Willoughby s 211 . May1teld 21
. N. Rob1nson Col. Crawlard 26. Galion 1 1
W111 ow Wood Symmes Ve~lley 28. Racme
Napoleon 20. Wauseon 6
Southern G
Nelsonville-York 44 . Cheshire R1ve r Calley
Wtlmmgton 14 _Aeadn'g 0
6
wooster 41 . Mt vernon t4
New Alba ny 42. Surnrmt 'Station LICktng . Xenia 26 . PIQua 14
HIS t4
Youngs ClHISitan 14 . Frwport Hurbo r
New Concord John Glenn 29. Dresden Tr1·
Valley 0
Hard,ng 6
' New Lebanon D11M 26. Ham11ton New
Youn gs t lberty 48. Cte E 6
M1amt 6
Zanesv1lle W Musk1ngum t9." Crooksv111e
NeW London31. Oberhn Ft telanus t 3
14
New Ph iladelphlfl 36 Carrolllon 12
ZoarV1 Ue
Tust: arawas
V(lll cy
33 .
New Aich mono 35, Clermont NE 15
Gnadenhutter"l !ndra11 Valley 21

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Ashland Mapleton 0
NewarK 3-ll, Zanes11llle 10
Newark L1dung Valley 34-. Johnstown
Northndge 0

PLEASANT VALLEY HosPITAL ~NNUAL FALL ScRAMBLE
• Sunday, September 18, 2005

Life Home Car Business

2005
JY!aJrket Steer

Centerville 21, Cin. Princeton, 17
Chagrin Falls 57, Fa1rview Park Fairview 0
Chaowlin Falls Kenston 21 . Chard on .7
Chesterland W. GealJg a t6, Lyndhurst
Brush 7
Chillicothe Unloto 49, Oak Hlll21
Chillicothe Zane Trace 67. Reedsville
Eastern 0
Cln. Anderson 34, Milford 0
Cln . C'"luntry Day 40, South Decatur 13
Cin . Deer Park 53, Cin. Summit 6
Cln _Harmony 35, Washington C H. Miami
Trace 28, OT
Cin. Hills Chri stian 13, Cin. Madeira 12
Cin . Indian Hilt48 , Beii811U9. Ky. 20
Cin . Lockland 38, Yellow Springs 113
Cin. McNicholas 21 , Loveland 7
Cin . MI. Healthy 33, Cin . Shroder Paideia 0
Cin. NW 27, Batavia Amahs 6
Cin . Oak Hllls 56. Cin. Western Hilts 6
Cin. PtJrcell Marian 34, Cin. Norwood 27
Cin. Turpin 41 , Walnut Hills 0
Cin. Winton Woods 38, W. Chestsr Lakola
W. 10
Cln . Withrow 47, Cin. Aiken 6
Cln . Wyomi ng 19, St. Pa ns Graham 14
Circleville 30, Washington C.H. 0 ·
Clrcle11ille logan Elm 28, Williamsport
Westfall 12
·
Clark&amp;\lille Clinlon-Mass ie 23, Wa~.nesv ille

Dublin Jerome 2 1, Westerville C~nt 7
Dublm Sc1o!o 49, Marys111 lle 13
E. Can. 19, Magnolia Sandy Valley 14
Ea stlake N 31, Midpark 14
Ealan 48, Brookville 9
Elida 19, Lima Shawn ee 1S
Elyria 49, Lora1n Southview 6
Elyria Cath 74, Cle. Cenl Cath 0
Euclid 21, Slrongsv1tle 15
FinciiSy 14, Dublm Collman 12
Franklin 10. Morrow Little M1a!ll1 6
Fremonl Ross 20. Tal. Cent Cath 14
Gahanna 31 , Marion Harding 3
Garrensvill e Garfiek:l 27. Warren ChampiOn
13
Gates Mills Goshen 2 1, Lees Creek E
Clinton 6
•
Genoa 35. Tot WOOdward 34
Germantown Va lley View 32. St. Bernard
Roger Bacon 26, OT
Glouste r Trimble 26 . Albany AleJ&lt;ander 6
Grandview Hts. 35, Londo n Madison Pla1ns

All proceeds go to .the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation

Auto-Owners Insurance

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for buying my

. Siiluttblll' 'l!rnnl'!i -$5lrntiurl • Page 83

'

2005

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joint replacement, we offer office hours at:
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Our next clinic date is Friday, Sept. 16.
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f

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallip1Jiis

N-Davld Jolley 5 run (Edwards
kick) 6:48
RV-Chris Edwards 5 run (run
tailed) 9:t 3

Paaotng: SV- Chris Capper f.4·t 8,
Second Quarter
S- Ryan Chapman 4·8·2 20.
A-chris Thompson 4 run (Bunch
kick) 2:42.
'
Receiving: SV- Man Owens 1·8,
M-Buzzard 32 pass from Story
S- Josh Pape 3·10, · Ryan '(kick tailed) :05
Donaldson 1-10..
Third Quarter
M-Casey 8 run (run tailed) 7:57
Wahama 14,
M-Buzzard 10 pass from Story
(Casey
run) 1:51
Federal Hocking 7 ,
Fourth Quarter
Fed Hock
0 o 7 0- 7
Poole 53 run (pass failed)
Wahama
7 7 0 0- t4 1M-David
1:51
'
M-Poole
te
run
(Casey
kick) 1:41 .
Scoring summary
A-Bob
Gregory
15
run
(no
point
Firat Quarter
attempted
0:00,
W-Juslin Bell t run (Derek Veazy
M
A
kick)
First Downs
19
22
Second Quarter
Rushes-yards
40-354 48·300
W-chase Ord 25 interception
Passing
yards
127
69
(Veazy kick)
Total yards
423
427
Third Quarter
Comp·att·int
5·7·1
7·14·1
FH- Chaz Driggs 4 run·(Cody Stout Fumbles-lost
2· I
2·0
kick)
Penalties-yards 4·40
7-70
First. Downs
Rushes-yards

Scoring summary
First Quarter

Sunday, Septe'm ber 4,

Sunday, September 4, 2005

"·

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' 'II , .IGolferD:
'it Hmtli«~&gt;:
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Make all checks payable tol ht; : ; ,
Pleasant Vql/ey Hosp1tal Foundation. · I I (

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and send with payment to: '
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COMMUNITY RELATIONS

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2520 VALLEY DRIVE
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·I

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-- -

I I GRAND TOTAL:
L-- - - -------------- - ~

�..
Page B4 • ilunbap 'Or:ttnru -&amp;entinel

Sunday, September 4,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2005

Zane Trace wallops Eastern, 67-0 Synunes Valley
runs past Southern

Sunday, September'4,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2005

No. 5 Rio Grande 3

I

No. 4 Auburn Montgomery 2

BY BRYAN WALTERS

,

:Fed Hock turns over win to Wahama
pass offerings while Clay was going on and stepped in of .the fight they had in them ."
Roush recovered two Jumbles and did the job for us.'
· Ord later gave Wahama a
---------~ . and Kameron Sayre and Kris
Early in the game Wahama 14-0 edge with 3:49 remaining
Gibbs recovering one apiece to had several chances at break· in the half when he snatched a
Senior pace the Bend Area defense. ing the game open but failed to Federal Hocking pass attempt
STEWART : defensiv ~ back Chase ' Ord The huge Falcon defensive put the ball in the end zone. out of the air and raced 25
: intercepteu three passes. effort limited the Lancers to The White Falcons drove 57 yards for the Bend Area teams
:- retllming one for what ulti· just 124 yards in total offense yards .in II plays to take an second score of the evening.
: matel y hecame the winning and helped offset an ineffec- early lead with Justin Bell Veazy tacked on the PAT to
touchdown. anu the Wahama tive WHS offensive effon. .· . bulhng his way in from a yard give WHS a two touchdown
White Falcon uefense forced
Wahama totaled 218 offen- away with I :46 left in the halftime lead.
• seven
Federal
Hockin~ sive yards with Brenton Clark opening period. Derek Veazy
The Lancers began its come·
: tumu vers Friday evening as once again leading the way knocked down the first of two back effort on its first posses·
· coach Ed Cromley \ Bend with 123 yards through the air. successful point after kicks fol· sion of the second half by
Area grid II d ;iimed its lirst Clark connected on nine of 25 lowing Bell's scoring plunge marching 62.yards in six plays.
: win of the 2(Nl'i season tollow· passes and for the second .to give Wahama a 7..() ad\!an- Jarvis was the workhorse dur· ing a I~- 7 vrct&lt;'t'y over the straight week had several aeri· tage.
•
ing the series but it was Chaz
Lancers.
als dropped. Ord was the
Early in the second petiod Driggs who covered the tina!
: The Beml Area defense · &lt;&gt;ames leading receiver with the Falcons were denied four yards on a busted play for
came up hig in the second half four catches for 66 yards while another touchdown when a 34 the touchdown. Cody Stout ·
whrlc the Falcons offense Kris Gibbs tallied 53 yards in yard field goal attempt by the booted the point after to cut the
stumbled throughout the nine carries on the ground for Lancers was blocked by the Falcons lead to 14-7 with 7:12
m&lt;tiority of the ~S minute grid the White Falcons.
WHS · interior · line. Clay left in the third period.
contest. Wahama talli~d two
Tyler Jarvis, the Lancers Roush picked up the loose
Federal Hocking threatened
first half Jouchdowns for a 14- running back. Jed Federal pigskin and , raced some 65 on several more occasions
0 ed2e before weathering a Hocking with 106 yards in 19 yards for an apparent touch· throughout the remainder of
securld half uprising hy the tiies.
down but an inadvenent offi· the contest but Wahama came
h,Jst t~am in iL~ home opener.
"Our defense really played cial's whistle negated the scor· up the big defensive stop or
The win "as the lirst of the well for us tonight.' veteran ing opponunity.
created a turnover to preserve
year for the Mason County WHS coach Ed Cromley said
"f think that call was a huge the lead. Late in the game the
gridder' fo llowing ;t season followin~ the hard fought win. factor in the game" CromleY. interior of the Falcons defenopen ing loss to Williamstown ''We hao a Jot of people get stated. "If the official doesn t sive line stopped Jarvis just
"hile
Federal
Hoc:king banged up tonight and tftat blow the play dead we go up two inches short of a first
dropped it&gt; ,econd outing of forced '" mto playing a lot of by two touchdowns and J down on the Bend Area 21
the yuung 2005 season.
players at different positions, believe they start looking yard line to essentially seal the
Ord picked off three Lance~ The kids paid attention to what down their nose and loose a lot WHS triumph:
BY GARY CLARK

SPORTS COR RE SPONDENT

Derek Carpenter cashed in on .
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
the · dive play through t~e
Tornado
defense .
KY,le
Meadows lined up for the ext!-a
RACINE - Compiling a point kick. but once again a bhd
potent 376-yard attack and 20 snap went hi~h and through the
first downs, the Symmes Valley place holder s hands. Meadoi,Vs
Vikings evened their record at · recovered and ran it in for t~Je
1- 1 with a 28-6 non-league two point conversion, the score
over the Southern Tornadoes 8-0 Symme~ Valley.
Friday · night at Adams
At the I :06 mark immediate·
Memorial Field in Racine. ly before the half, Carpenter
once again hit paydirt on a four
Southern drop!JC?d to 0-2. .
· In boxing, one refers to the yard run up the middle with
"ole one-two punch," but the Meadows adding the PAT Ieick,
Vikings ftad a solid "one-two· the score now 15-0 Symmes
three punch," possessing the Valley.
·
luxury of three quality backs in
At the halfway pomt,
Matt Owens, Derek Carpenter, Southern 's Butch Marnhout l~d
and John Wiseman. Add Chris
Capper and Seth Sanders to the the Tornadoes with seven Cl)f·
. , d .
II f' .
ries _for 39 yards, followed ~y
m1x an tl spe s o .ensive McKnight ,('5-1 1), Donaldson
power.
(2·4), and Ryan Chapman (,J.
Owens, a 11eet footed senior, 3) s
y 11
h
r_ambled 13 times for 167 yards
· ymmes a ey slats at 1 e
intermission
had
John ·
an~ ~ touchdown .. _John Wiseman (6-84) leading its
W1~man -:as w~ll on his :way solid pack of backs Next was
to a 100-yard gmne when he Matt Owens (6-47), Seth
le(t the .game With an ankle ' Saunders (3-34) and Derek
InJUry wrth 7:30 lett m the thtrd Carpenter (I0-50).
quarter. Derek Carpenter was
·
f ·
·
IJ-58. and Saunders was 6-48. . Wtth 6:37 le t m, the th1rd
• b·
.
,
penod,
Symmes
Seth
. Southern s nght spot c,une Saunders burst through the line
m the form of a n Improvmg on a one-yard plunge with
offense that was led by Butch Meadows adding the kick for a
Marnhout. Mamhout cracked 22 0 . · Th 1
.
the 100-y:trd mark with a 17· score: e Pay capped ,1
for-101
yard ,
game . . 14-play dnve that ama~sed 78
Additionally, MarnhoLtt had yards.
. _ ,
104 yards on kick-off or punt
Two plays later Southern
returns, pushing him over the fumbled the ball away at the ,
200-yard mmk for the game in Tornado 8-yard hne . Followmg
overall yardage .
two strarght penalties, Wes
Jesse McKnight was respon· R~Jtle prck~u off a Chns
sible for several Southern first Capper pass ,md Southern once
downs, hammering out 36 agam took over at the 35 yard
yards on I0 carnes. Ryan lm7.
Donaldson caught a pass for 10
Southern plugged away
yards, and Josh Pape caught toward three, lrrst downs o~ rts
three for 10 yards. Ryan next possess ron, but on a hrst·
Chapman did the passing tor and-ten sr~uatron around the. 30.
Southern.
Southern s Ch_apman . I! red
Untimely mi stakes left de~p and had hrs puss p1,cked ·
Southern in shambles. Two oft by Krn Shrpley. Shrpley
times an interception and fum- then put together a 31-yanl
ble inside its 20 took away pos· receplron return, however. u
sible Southem scores. a fumble ~~:~onal foul brought the b;1ll
set up Symmes Valley in scor- back to the SV 30. ,
. ing position, and a penalty took
After a first down p1ck-up on
away a Tornado score. How the set up play, a 43-yard run .
manv wa~ s can ye shoot thy· by Owen s, Owens htmself
self In the foot. Let ye count thy scr~mbled back agamst the
ways.
grmn lor a 30-yard touchdown .
Southern's defense was deli· fl!n. Meadows EP ktck was
cately frail for the first six mxcd and Symmes Valley kd
plays,'allowing Symmes Valley 28-0 as lime ran out m the third
three lirst downs and 61 yards. quaner.
The Vikes punched the ball
At the 2:55 mark of the
inside the 15 yard line. Twice founh quarter, Southern sus·
against Green Southern met tained an 80-vard drive that
that challenoe last week, imd was completed.with a two-yard ·
once again ifHS had dcj·a vous, l:lutch
Marnhout
run.
stoppitlg · Symme' Va ley on Marnhout anu McKnight were
three downs &lt;md forcing the the set-up men on the d1ive,
Vikings to go lor a field goaL along with a drive-propelling .
On the field goal attempt the I0 yard pass completion from
snap went hign and. forced the Chapman to Ryan Donaldson .
place holc;ler to inadvertently The kick was void, but
down the ball with Southem Southern was on the board' at
taking over on downs.
28-6.
On Southern's second play
Both clubs substituted freely
from ·scrimmage, Marnhout in the waning portions of the
broke a run off-tackle for 68 game.
Mike Brown and Buddy
yards, and despite being well
out in front of the defense, had Young had sacks, while Matt
one of his blockers blocked a Lehew. and Teddy Brown had
Viking in the back, recalling fumble recoveries. Darin
the touchdown all the \\·ay back Teaford.
McKnight: and
to the 50 yard line.
Weston Counts had several big
After two fruitless posses- defensi ve plays . for ·the
sions by both club&gt;. the score T~1rnadoes . Symmes' Brice
stood 0-0 at the end of the tirst Sexton had a fumble recovery
period. .
and a sack. Kin Shipley had
At the 8:24 mark of the sec· two interceptions for Symmes.
ond quarter, Symmes Valley
Southern goes to South
completed a 41 -yard drive and Gallia next Saturdav to face the
to the goal line in five plays. Rebels.
·
BY

•

SCOTT WoLFE

. : BY MARK

from Page Bl
t~ most of their swripg. step·
Ping .up drastically from last
week's 1-for-3 13 yard per·
formance. to shine tht s week
in an 8-for-14. I ~ 3 yard and .
two touchdown show.
Helping Williamson put up
hi s numbe rs was Rebel
receiver Dustin McCombs.
who
cau~h t
five · of
William")n·~ eight pas,es foi.
103 yard' dnd a touchdown .
The other to!Jc hdown P~"
wa' to Derrick Beaver._?ho
fini,hed the ewning with 40
yards on three receptions .
The ni~ht \\3' not all m
S.u uth G:rllia\ fl,or ho\\ever.
After tw&lt;' 'tai led po,ses·
· 'ions each. the Rebels lin~lly
managed to move the ball in
·the miudle of (he liN quarter,
but afte r a couple big first
d&lt;mn,. their dri,·e again'
'tailed. anu 'lhe) were fo rced
tn punt.
On the South Gallia punt.
Green m;ina~cd to take the
ball 60 )'"rd 'c &lt;lll th~ return ID
'et up their lirst score of the
nrght . Bobcat Mark Ca,tro. a
5- 11 D'\ pound 'en ior run· ·
ning back . led the dri,·e mak·
in!! powtrfnl rUJh . Jrat!ging.

South Gallia players down
the tield as he did all evening.
Castro's power running set '
up ;1 14-yard sweep by the
speedy Du stin Williams for
the first score of the night to
give the home team an early
7-0 lead .
·
The duo of Castro and
Williams provided most of
the yardage for the Bobcats
on· the"evening, with Castro,
who ran 23 times for 98
b aki
,. h 1 ·
yards. re ng " 1g 0 es 111
the South Gallia line and providing big blocks for the
quick Williams, who managed 10 carries for 37 yards
and a score.
South Galli a took little time
to answ~r. coming right back
wit h a little over two minutes
le ft in the first . quarter. It
lookeu like the drive would
be halted when a backward
pass, \Vas fumbled, setting up ,
a 3rd and II ; but the Rebels '
would step up to the chal·
k nge.
Williams answered the call
wi th a huge 21 -yard pass for
the firs t down. setting up a
34-yarJ run the very next
play by Bcmie Fulk.; to give
South Galli a its first points of
the game and, followi ng the
failed two point conversion,
left the Rebels down 7-6 'to
end the tirst.
Bolh ll!ams would again

trade possessions before
South Gallia managed anoth- .
er scoring drive late in the
second quarter. While Castro
continued his power running
for Green, it wasn't enough to
get them much needed first
downs, allowing the Rebels to
take over with two minutes
left in the half.
And what a two minutes it
was.
South Gallia opened its
possession deep in its ' end
after being pinned by a Green
punt. Helping dig the Rebels
out of a hole, Cun Waugh ran
15 yards on the first ,play of
the drive to get the Rebels ou ~
of the shadow of the goal
post.
•
A few plays later: the
Rebels went for a 4th and one
and would up gaining nine
yards on a Williamson pass.
After gaining the ftrst down,
lhe Rebels again stalled out
and were facing another
fourth down play wheri half
of the lighis in the stadium
went off.
After a brief delay, the two
teams decided to finish the
half with 26 second remain·
ing and South Gallia facing a
fourth and three. ln the dark·
ness, Williamson completed
another big pass for 28 yards '
to give the Rebels the first
down.

The clock continued to
wind down and, two pt'ays
later, Williamson launched a
20-yard pass high in the cor·
ner of the end zone where
McCombs leaped over the
defender to give South Gallia
the seven point lead follow- .
ing the two point conversion.
, Followi.ng half· time, the
Bobcats entered the field ·prepared to get back in the ball
game but quickly found
themselves in an even deeper
hole.
Green received the kickoff
and didn't manage to make it
far before .Beaver .intercepted
a Derek Lewis pass to give
South Gallia the ball with
excellent tield position.
The
Rebels
quickly
marched down the tielcj with
big plays on the ground and
through the air leading up to
Williamson's second touch·
down .'throw of the night , a
24-yard pass to Beaver. the
same man who caught the
interception to set up the
drive .
Following the ki ckoff;
Green again went to work this
time setting up the longest
drive of the night, a near ten
minute dri ve which made it
inside the five yard line.
The Bobcats used both
Williams and Castro to move
down the field : along witt.\ a

couple of passes from Lewis
to Williams and John Butler.
The drive made it all the way
down to the five yard line following an impressive run
from Castro who got past the
line of scrimmage and pulle'd
South Gallia players along as
he rumbled close to the goal
line. ·
1
But the Rebels proved to
stron g when,' on a third and
goal pl~y. Lewis was sacked.
.around the I0. yard line by
Corey Willis. setting up a
failed fourth down attempt.
Althouh Lewis struggled on
a couple of big plays. he did .
manage to go 6-for-11 with

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

44 yards on the day . while
running for 12.
While Green battled
through the next possessions. a Lewis interception
by Waugh ended the day for
the Bobcats and put . the
'game in the hands of the
Rebel s as they moved on to
their seconJ straight victo·
ry. .
.
South Gallia will try to
make it three straight next
week as they travel to
Southern next Saturday.
During the g.ame, a ceremo· .
ny ho noring the 1980
Southwestern football team
will take place.

Rio produces strong
showing in first meet

WILLIAMS

~PECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEt

(McArthu r.
OH) ,
55th
(3-1:16.851. munded out the·
· &gt;coring for the Red men.
Other Rcdmcn res ults:
PORTSMO UTH - The
Ch
ri '
Peavey.
56th
University of Ri o Gra nde
Jordan
men 's Cross Country team (34:26.45 J and
Cu
nningham
.
62nd
began the 2005 season with
an outstanding effort. fi ni sh- rJ6:29.nOJ
The men's race consisted
. ing 2nd, at the Shawnee State of 86 run ner,.
•
Invitational on Friday afte rnoon . There were e ight
On the women\ side Ri o
Grande did not po" a team
teams competing.
The Redmen• sc ored 7-'t score "' only fn nr runn ers
points, fini shing only behind co mpeted in the ra ce.
: e host school. Shawnee Shannon Sou \,by was the
fi ni sher
for
the
State. whd is ranked 22 nd in top
th e NA IA Top 25 pre-season Redwomcn . Soulsbv. crossed
the li ne .in 39th position with
ratin g.
Senior and tea m lead er a time of 23 : 17JO over the
Brad Gilders was the top fin - 3. !-m il e course .
Othc:r Redwo men res ults: ·
i., her for Rio Grande . Gi lders
Bi
lli e
Rnb in,o n.
46th
plated 12th overa.Jl · with a
time of 29:07. 10 over the S- (2:l.4Y.35i: Kri sta Susi. 56th
mile 'course . Newcomers (::!4:4H.25 1 and Nicholet
Paul Webb (Mansfi eld. OH ) McKin niss. 60th (25:23 70).
NA JA pre-seaso n No. 9
was 16th with a time of
· 29:2UO, Cory Culbertson Cedarville was th e women's
was 17th (29: 23 .10) and wim)er. totaling 18 points.
Phillip Web b was 18th
There we re nine full teams
(29 :23.60).
and 83 towl runners in the
wom en's race.
Hangc
crossed
the
Denni s
finish line in 27th place with
Rio Grande will head to
a tin1e of 30: 19.45. Chase the Qu een Cit y to compete in
Smith was 35th· (31 : 13.60) th e . Xavier InvitationaL
a~d
Troy
Howdyshell September I0.
BY MARK

WiLLIAMS

SP(CIAL TO THt TIMES·SENTINE.L

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
so ftb all program is bringing back the winter indoor
softball league for a third
eonsecutl ve year. The
2006
Winter
Indoor
Softball League runs from
January 8-February 19 at
the Lyne Center on · the
campu s of the University
of Rio Grande .
All games will be. either
sev('n innings or I hour
and 15 minutes . ·All players will be in the batting
order unless a· player
chooses not to hiL All hit:
ters will start with
J. J
count.
Ohio
High
Schoo'!
Athleti c
Association
(OHSAA) rules will be
followed with the excep·
lion of the re-entry rule.
There is a possibility that
the league may employ an
unlimited re-entry into the
game on defense .
The teams will be
coached by members of
the Rio Grande softball
team and will consist of 10
players, with eight on
defense.
,
Players will be issued a
T-shirt, but must provide
the remainder of their uni·
form . .
All games wi.ll be played
on Sunday afternoons.
The deadline for signup
is November 19.
For additional information or to register contact
Rio Grande head· softball
coach David Pyles at (740)
245-7490 or (304) 675or
e-mail:
7492
dpyles@rio.edu or contact
graduate assistant Denita
Robinson at (740) 245·
7490 or e-mail: robin·
son@cora.rio.edu.

u

tan McNemarlphoto

·Rio Grande's Guy Heywood (14) fires a pass away from Auburn Montgomery goal keeper Bjarki
Gudmundsson (28) Friday at'Evan Davis Field.

·Rio downs No. 4AUM
two goals from mid-fielder
Hjor,tur Hjartarsson. Johann
Hreidersson
ass1sted
RIO GRANDE _. In a Hjartarsson on the goal on
·. match-up that had a national an impreosive 2-on-1 ~reak
at the net.
tournament feel, two NAIA
Ti'le score remained dead,., powerhouses slugged it out locked at J.J at the end of
on the pitch at Evan Davis
Field as No. 5 Rio Grande th e. first half.
AUM grabbed the lead
edged No. 4 Auburn! and the momentum in the
: MontgomerY. 3-2 in over·
minute
on
time in the tirst game of the 73rd
2005 Rio Grande Soccer Hjartarsson 's second goal.
· ast Rio
Invitational on Frid.ay after· lie banged the balk/:
oalkeeper
Andy
oore on
g
noon.
, · Junior mid-fielder Conar a rebounded penalty kick.
Dawson knocked home the
Dawson hooked up with
game winner in the final freshman defensive back
. minute of the first extra ses· Kyle Segebart to tie the
sion on a penalty kick to score..
give Rio Grande (2·0) a sec·
Rio missed a chance to
ond straight overtime vi~to· win the game in regulation
ry. Dawson's game-witiner when Heywood had a shot
was his second goal of the stopped with 30 seconds
game. He tied the score at 2· remaining.
2 in the 82nd minute.
The game looked destined
Rio got the. scoring started to go td a seco nd overtime
in the 13th minute on a when Dawson was fouled
beautiful strike from sopho- and drilled home the penalty
more·
forward
Guy · kick for the win.
Heywood ., Heywood hit a
" Very good game. " Rio
. cross shot just outside the · Grande head coach Scott
box from the right side and Morri ssey.
''Certainly
.. the ball hit in the upper left natiOna.! tournament-type
.corner of the net just over cal rber.
the out-stretched hand of
"I felt like. in the first half,
AUM goalkeeper Bjarki we opened up very quickly
Gudmundsson. Senior mid- with some great chances.
· fielder ·Ben Calion assisted great scoring opportunities."
Heywood on the goal.
Morn sse~ added. "The goal·
Auburn-Montgomery ( J. keep"!F for AUM was tan·
l) tied the score at l - 1 in the ta strc.
.
. 37th minute on the first · of
Morrissey felt the substi·
BY MARK

WILLIAMS

SPECIAL To THE TIMES·SENTINEL

tutions he made in the first
half took away from the
early
momentum
the
Redmen ·had established.
"We scored a goal and about
the 30-mi nute mark of th e
game when I made some
substitutions and it proved
1 f
" M ·
cost y or us,
ornssey
said. ''I nstead of maintain·
ing our momentum, we
d
d
f
rapped, an mqments a ter
the
substitution s
they
scored!'
"Thln 's my fault, J·ust a
poor decision on ·my part to
sub off at that point in time."
, Morrissey liked the way
hi s club fought back in the
second halL "We came out
in the second half and I
thought , without question
really played well ," he said.
" We had good possessions
and created great scoring
opportunities ...
Rio Grande had four players go down with injury and
junior Benn Hughes will
likely miss some time with a
badly _twisted ankle. "A coupie ol guys got some really
tou gh shots to th.e thi gh and
Benn Hugh~s twr ~ ted hrs
ankle and he s probably out
of commission. but we've
got to bounce back and got
to be ready to play tomor·
row."
Rio was back in action on
Saturday. closrng out the
weekend wrth a match-up
versus Bryan Cnllege .

.......••.•......••

,.

Thank You

Thank You ·

GilMORE'S
TAXIDERMY

Bowman-

CHESTEB VOL FIRE DEPT. WILL
HOLD THE ANNUAL CHICKEN/RIBS
BBQ AND HOMEMADE ICE CREAM,
S~RVING WILL BE AT 11 :30 AM
PARADE LINE UP AT 1:00 PM
PIE AND CAKES WOULD BE
.. APPRECIATED.
ELMER NEWELL
740·985-3537

-j

- - · - - - · - - - - --·

Moore
for buying
my 2005

for buying
my2005
GaiDa County
Market Hog

Gallia

County
,Market Hog
I

· : TRAVIS
I ROUSH

1••••••••••••••••••••••.;-;;;=~

1) Health Questionnaire: You may fill out the health questionnaire online
at our website, www.cBhealthproject.org. This is the fastest and easiest way to initiate
the process. If you don't have the ability to complete the questionnaire online, you
may pick up a copy erther at the Brookmar office at 417 Grand Park Drive, Suite
201 in Vienna, or at one of our testing sites. You may then take the questionnaire
home, fill it out, and drop it off at the testing site nearest you or the Brook mar office.

2) Appoinbnent Scheduling: Alter you have submitted your cdmpleted

survey, either on our website or by dropping it off at one of our locations , you

will be contacted by a Brookmar representative to set up an .
appointment tot you at one of our testing sites..Do not call us
·
·
for an appointment, we will call you. .

: Devils win-quad at Fairgreens
three golfe~ and. did not reg·
ister a SCOre.
. Greg Russell added a 40 for
WELLSTO,N _ Andy Noe the w.inne;s: w?ile Kyle
" won medalist honors and led Hunters 4- and a A8 from
Gallia Academy to a quad Tra~u s Stout ~ounded out
match golf victory· Thursday Galha Academy s score.
•·at Fairgreens Country Club.
Craig Jagers also had a
· Noe shot a two-over par 38 gOod round, the second best
as the Blue Devils amassed a at the day, for the . Rmde~s .
168 team score. Host Jared Marcum followed with
Wellston's A ·team was two a 42 and Justin Nolan and
' stokes back at 170. followed Bruce Stout carded 45 and 47
by River Valley (172) , respectively.
Fairland ( 191 ) and Wellston B
Jonathan Wells was the low
, (196). South Gallia had only scorer for . South Gallia,
BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN@MVDAlLYTRlBUNE.COM

recording a 43 . Kevan
Johnson had ,a .round of 54
and Jacob Watson a 7L
In other local scores that did
not count toward team totals.
Gallia Academy's Kamal
Dayal shot a 49 &lt;ind Matthew
Baird and David. Elkins fired
67 and 68 respectively for
GA's B squad .
Gallia Academv returns to
league play Tuesday at Brass
Ring in Logan. River Valley
goes to Chesapeake on
Thursday. while South Gallia
plays at Hidden Valley.

·:~Southern moves
"' .
'

1

'

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

'

; GLOUSTER - Southern
· ~at league leader Trimble on
'.its own golf course Thursday.
, :and moved to within a point
:·or the Tri· Valley Conference
: :Hocking Division lead.
:, Bryan Harris shot a 34 to
, win medalist honors and led
'three Tornadoes with sub-40
' · rounds. Patrick Johnson was
: next · wiih a 36 and Brad
~Crouch carded 38. Josh Smith

closer to Hocking lead

added a 42 to round out the
wioning · 150 teani score.
Twelve shots back with a
I62 were the Tomcats, who
now have 18 points toward
the league title ; they lost
ground to Southern, however.
which upped its total to 17.
Eastern, which remained in
third place in the league, was
also third on Thursday with a
tally of 166. Michael Owen
led .the way with a 3 7 for the
Eagles, while Evan Dunn shot
a 41, Ryan Nave a 43 and
Kyle Edwards ,rounded out

the scoring with 45 .
Mille[ was fourth at the
match with 179 followed by
Waterford ( 194) and Federal
Hocking (204).
Other local scores that did
not count toward team totals
were Southern 's Alex Hawley
with a 49 and John Bentz with
a 50. Jake Warner and Nathan
Carroll carded 49 and 50
respectively for Eastern.
The Hocking · Division
resumes· play Tuesday at
Arrowhead.

.

eligibility by bringing 6fficial documentation proving your residence/water usage for at
least one calendar year. For example, bring a utility bill from January at 2002 and
January of 2003, or bring a 2003 Tax statement You must prove that you

consumed water from public or private sources within the six
affected water districts for at least one calendar year PRIOR TO
December 3, 2004.
•

4) On-site review:

When you come to your appointment al a mobile testing
site, a nurse will review your questionnaire with you and verify you r eligibility to
participate. When you successfully complete this step: you are eligible to be paid $t50.

5) Blood Testing: Once your on-srte r~iew is complete, you may choose to
have your blood tested. You will not be tested for drug use, HJV, or sexually transmrlted
diseases. Your privacy will be strictly ,guarded throughout the information and blood
screening process. Alter having your blood drawf). you will be paid $400 • ($150 is
for the heanh questionnaire and $250 is for blood testing.) Absolutely no blood

testing will be done on children ages 2 and under, and testing on ·
ages 6 and under is strongly discouraged.
· ·

.....- ----------------------------------------

LABOR DAY SEPT. 5, 2005

Amy

.3) Validation of eligibility: You are responsible for validating your
Prep Golf

RebeIs

.

'

s~ftballleague

BWALTERS@MYDAllYTRlBUNE.COM

KINNIKIN NICK - Zane
Trace needed jusi four plays
and I :27 of first quarter dock
to ~co re against Eastern .during the opening drive of
Friday night's football con·
test at ZTHS.
When the host Pioneers.
finally got the chance for a
fifth pl ay from scrimmage a
little over four minutes later,
thei'r edge had already ballooned to 2 1 points.
That overwhelming start
served as an appeti ze r of
things to come during the ·
Eagles. 67-0 week two los'
to the Red and Blue in north· ,
· eastern Chi llicotllc.
The Green and White sur·
rendered 4'19 yards of total
offense . .includin;; 232 on the
ground, and allo wed scores
Bryan Wa\ler81photo
on i\ punt re turn and &lt;ill interEastern 's Cory Shaffer (3) leads teammates Zach Moore (66) and Terry Durst, right, into
ception.
.
forcipg
Zane Trace punt returner Brandyn Street (25) out of bounds during the first quarter
The guest:-. also gave up
· 187 ymds through the air on of Friday's contest at Kinnikinnick. Eastern lost 67-0.
I0-of-11 pa"ing . guiding the released a pass directly into jaunt to increase the margin totes.
way for I 7 Pioneer first the hands of ZTHS defender to 38 headed into halftime.
Pierce finished the contest
downs in the triumph.
·l:lrandyn Street, who returned
4-of-9
passing for .18 yards,
Lawhorn capped his game·
In cont r &lt;~st. EHS (0-2) the pick 37 yards to paydirt high 84~yard rushing effort with Bryce Honaker serving,
mustered just seven firs t for a 14-0 lead at the 9: l 0 with his third score of the as the top receiver with one
. downs and ·I07 v&lt;~rds of total mark.
night, this time from nine catch for I ) ·yards.
. offense in the contes t, with
Roll finished the night 10·
Terry Durst gave EHS a• yards out at I0: 15 of the third
89 o f those yards coming 10-yard gai n on its following quarter.
ofII with 132 yards through
.
from 39 attempts on the J"DssessioQ, but a three-and·
the
air for Zane Trace, while .
Quarterback Zach Roll
ground.
·
our· led to a punt that was scrambled for a successful Ben Haynes led five different
Tl1c ni ght. how~ver, clearly returned 6 I yards by Street
targets with four grabs for 76
belonged to Zan~ Trac~ ( 1-I). for a 2.1-point Pioneer edge. two-point converSion for a yards.
46-0 lead .
which was op~ning its 2005
Punter Brandon Goeglein
The hosts forced another
The lead intlated to'53 after served as a bright spot for
home \c hcd ule aft er winrling Eagle punt with 3:33 left in
the school's first outri ght the open ing frame , and pro- Chris King scored from three EHS with nine unblocked
Scimo ' Valley Conference ceeded to · go on an eight· yards out just before the start attempts. while the hosts did
championship .
not punt once during the con·
play. 34-yard drive that net· of the final 12 minutes.
A pair of one-yard runs test. Williams finished the
Cody Law horn .started the ted a successful 30-yard field
scoring frenzy in the first goal from Cody Williams to from Brian ·Crabtree and kicking night with II points
Beau Dailey rounded out the for Zane Trace.
quart er wrth a 5~-yard run to start the second quarter.
paydin at the IO:JR mark. '
· Eastern will make its 2005
Chance Sowers ~ave the Pioneer scoring.
Durst
led
the
Eagles
·in
On Eastern ·s ensuing drive hosts a 3 \-0 lead following
home debut at East Shade
facing a third-and-seven at its his J4:yard scoring run at rushing with 40 yards on River Stadium this Friday
own ·nine yard line. junior 7:02 in the seconp, and eight carries, while Chadd when it hosts Wahama. Kick·
quarterback Jordan i&gt;ierce Lawhorn added an eight yard Whitlatch added 35 on 12 off js slated for 7:30p.m.

·College Cross Country ·

Rio to host
winter indoor

Route 95 South.
behind Tebay Dairy.

Belpre-little Hocking
Stone Rd., off Washington Blvd ..
behind Comerslone Healthcare.

Now Open!

Now Open! .

Lubeck

..

Pomeroy &amp; ·
Tuppers Plains •
Chester
92 Memorial Drive.
Pomeroy OH.

Now Open!

Mason County
326 Ohio River Road
At 62 North
(next to Exxon)
Point Pleasant, WV.

Opens Sept 8th

CS .HEALTH
I,I~C)J I:CT
Conducted by

BRQOKMAR, INC

417 Grand Park Drive: Vienna, WV 26105 • 1-800·551'-7658 • wwwc8healthproject.org

�Page B6 • $§Junbap m:illltS-&amp;entinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 4,

2005

Point earns first wm·at Sissonville
BY ANDY lAYTON
SPORTS CORR ESPONDENT

SISSONVILLE -. The
Point Pleasant Big Blacks
have had a lot 'of success in
the last four meetings against
the Sissonville Indians . and
that success continued on
Friday night with a 19-0
Cardinal Conference victory
in .Si ssonville.
Senior Brandon Warner
led the way to victory with
l 04 yards on just nine ~ar­
ries. with two touchdowns.
"Defensively, it was a
much better effort tonight."
said Point Pleasant coach
Steve Safford.' "Offensively,
I think with the field -conditions both teams struggled
· throughout the first hal f. Our
,inability to move the ball on
'the ground or throw. we just
seemed to be out of sync a
little bit."
The field conditions that
Safford spoke of were a big
fac tor in this game. with an
extremely soggy and muddy
field for both teams. The Big
Blacks were able to put the
conditions behind them. and
deliver a shutout victory.
· ''[ t~ot1ght in the second
half we did a lillie bit beller.
We got back into our shotgun/wing-! offense 'and we
were able to move the b&lt;ill a
little more consistently at
that point. Overall, it's stil l. a
win even though it was ugly:
I don't think we are nearly as
good of a football team as I
think we can be though."
Point Pleasant. n&gt;ming ott
of a 31 - 12 loss to the Ripley
Vikings last week. was des. perate for the week two win,
not to mention the opening
conference game. to get it
back on track for a hopefulplayoff berth . .
Only one player sat out the
game for the Big Blacks,
senior Bobby Errett, while

senior Seth Beckner returned
to the secondary and had a
fine game, nearly intercepting two passes.
Sissonville, coming off of
a 2 l -6 loss to Poca last week,
was not ·able to · gain any
momentum on offense. They
had three turnovers for the
game, all lost f umbles, and
aile crucial error at the end.of
the first half that resulted in
an eventual Point Pleasant
touchdown .
. The first Point Pleasant
score came off of a 27-yard
run by Brandon Warner with
j ust three minutes remaining
in the first half. Warner had a
good run · to the outside
where he was en'countered
by a few Sissonville defenders. but quickly shed them
off and ritn his way to his
first rushing touchdown of
the season. The PAT attempt
by Patrick Holland was
blocked. and Point was up 60.
The other points of the second half would not be scored
until the final minute of the
half. With around two minutes left in the half, Point
Pleasant punted and downed
the ball on the Sissonville
one yard line. After a three
and out, Sissonville was
forced to punt. The siJap was
either bad or the punter
Myles Henson fumbled the
ball. and was forced to run
out of bounds at the two yard
line. giving Point Pleasant an
extremely short field with
just a minute left in the half.
James Casto ran the ball in
on a quarterback sneak on
the second play and the game
was now l 2-0. Holland made
the PAT to make the score
13-0.
The lone Point touchdown
of the second half sealed the
de!ll for the Big Blacks victory. Brandon Warner shed
tackles again, and then bust-

ed the Sissonville secondazy
for a 6 l -yard touchdovyn
with just seven minutes
remaining in the game.
Overall. the Big Blacks
gained 206 yards of offense,
with l 98 · coming on the
gr.ound and six yards threw
the air. Sissonville gained
just 93 yards of total offense,
with negative l l on the
ground, and l 04 passing.
Junior James Casto started ·
the game for the Big B-lacks
at quarterback, replacing ·
Warner who moved to tailback. Casto threw just six
pass attempts tonight , completing one of those for eight
yards with no interceptions
and
no
touchdowns .
Sissonville junior Myles
Henson threw l 9 passes,
completed nine of those for
I04 yards, with no touchdowns and no interceptions.
· Warner led the rushing
attack for Point with I 04
yards on just nine carries,
with two touchdowns. Jatod
Stouffer had ten rushes for
41 yards, Casto had ten for
3 l yards with one touchdown, Travis Riffle had five
carries for 28 yards.,
Sissonville was led in
rushing by Jonson Edens
with se~en carries . for 21
yards. Chris Boggess, who
was the leading rusher in last
year's game against Point,
was held to just seven yards
on five carries.
Will Slone caught the only
Point Pleasant pass of the
day for an eight yard gain.
Josh
Shamblin
led
Sissonville with three catches for 30 yards.
· The Big Blacks. now L· l,
will face the 1- l Magnolia
Blue E;agles next Friday
night for a non-conference
home-opener, the first of
four home games. Point
Pleasant lost this game 2 l -0
last
season
in· New

Team

m:

. EVANSTON,
(AP) . Brett Ba.'ilinez threw two touchdown passes to Shaun Herbert
and ran for another - all in the
first half - · a.~ Northwestern
rolled to a big lead Saturday
and routed Ohio 38-14. spoiling Frank Solich 's return to college coaching.
Basanez's '3-yard TD r\ln
with 13 seconds left in the second ' quarter after the Wildcats
had recovered a fumbled kickoff !lave Northwestern a 31 -7
haltume lead .
Ba.~anez completed 27-of-37
passes for 353 yards - -the
fourth 300-yard passing game
of hi s career- and was 19-of26 for 255 yards by the half. He
played just one _series of the
fourth quarter before being
replaced.
Solich wa.~ fired after the
2003 season al Nebraska.
despite a 9-3 record and 58-19
mark in six years. His debut
with the BobcatJ; showed how
far the program must come
after j ust two winning sea.~ons
smce l982.
On a warm ' Saturday· afternoon in fro nt of a half-filled
stadium at Ryan Field.
Northwestern may also have
found their running back for the

GREENBRIER

2. Wayne

EAST

44{)

(2-0)

BEAT CHESAPEAKE 44-6
3. Cabell Midland (1-1)
LosT To RIPLEY 34-0
4. Williamstown (2-0)
BEAT TYLER CONSOLIO.TED 25-24
S. Capital (1-11
.
loST TOW. W ILSON 24-14
8.

Buffalo (2-0)

.

BEAT Dum 40-8
7. Parkersburg South (2-0)
BEAT ARCHBISHOP CUALEY 4g;14

8.

N~ro (2-0)
BEAT G. WASHINGTON

26-15
9. Herbert Hoover (2·0)
BEAT RoANE CouNTY 46-6
10. Riverside (0-1)
BEAT HURRICANE 14-13 OT

Martinsville.
Sissonville, now 0-2, will
travel to Winfield, 1-1, for a
Cardinal Conference game.
Winfield won that game 13-3
last season in Sissonville.

Buckeyes beat.RedHawks
two late touchdowns against also had five catches.
substitutes.
The Buckeyes scored on
Ohio State harassed Miami their only two possessions of
quarterback Josh Betts all day. the first quarter, taking the
sacking him five times a total opening kickoff and driving 74
of 41 yards in losses. The yards in 12 plays for a quick
RedHawks netted just 48 yards lead on Zwick's 20-yard scaron 30 rushes. · '
ing pass to Santonio Holmes.
Whitner's TD came seconds Josh Huston later added a 20-after he made a major mistake. yard field goal after a drive died
On a Miami punt from deep in at the Miami 3.
the end zone, he knocked down
Zwick, who was starting
punter Jacob Richardson to because Troy Smith was servgive the RedHawks a. first ing the second game of a tw.0 .
down. On the next play.
Whitner leaped to get the inside game suspension for accepting
edge on receiver Josh Williams $500 from a team booster.
and picked off Bens · throw to Smith led the Buckeyes to wins
go untouched for the score.
in four of their last five regularThat made it 20-0 at the half season games in 2004 after
and gave the Buckeyes more Zwick and Ohio State's offense
than enough breathing room had stuttered to a 3-3 start
with their defense throttling the which included an 0--3 mark in
RedHawks.
the Big Ten -· only the second
Ginn streaked to four punt- time that had happened since
hd
1943.
return touc owns .a year ago
Srru'th w1_11 be avaJ
· ']able 'or
to set Ohio State and Big Ten
''
records. He was bottled up by next week's showdown with
Miami as Ohio State spread its No. 2 Texas, likely opening up
passes around to Santonio a wild week of speculation
Holmes , . Anthony Gonzalez about the looming quarterback
and Roy Hall - each of whom .. controversy.

Solich erabegins
with
a
loss
-

Parkersburg (2-0)

EltAT

College Football

COLUMBUS (AP)-Donte
Whitner made up for a gaffe
with a, 26-yard interception
return for a touchdown on the
nextJ\ay as No. 6 Ohio State
tune up for Texas by beating
Miami (Ohio) 34-14 on
Saturday.
The Buckeyes host the second-ranked Longhorns ne.xt
Saturday night at Ohio
Stadium. That game has dominated water-cooler discussions
and radio talk shows around the
state for weeks.
Ohio State's players. however, said they were not -looking
pa.'t ·Miami - and they played
like it.
Justin Zwick completed 17of-23 passes for !55 yards and
a touchdown with one interception, tailback Antonio Pittman
gained I00 yards on l 4 carries
and Ted Ginn Jr. had five catches.for 75 yards and a .score.
The Buckeyes defense - led
by linebackers A.J . Hawk,
Anthony Schlegel and Bobby
Carpenter - never let the
RedHawks inside the 'Ohio
State 34 until Miami scored

Sports Briefs

future.
half.
With Terrell Jordan out with · It got worse for the BobcatJ;
a hamstri ng injury and after when Scott Mayle fumbled the
Saturday 's starter Brandon ensuing kickoff and NU kicker
Roberson hurt his ankle in the Joel Howells remvered. A
first quarter.: fre shman Tyrell ·quick 29-yard drive capped by
Sutton - Mr. Football in Ohio Basanez's TD run gave the
in 2004 - took over.
Wildca!s their commanding
He gained 104 yards on 17 lead.
·
carries with a pair of TD runs; Ohio just missed getting a
including a 20-yarder late in the momentum booster on the final
third quarter that made it 38-7. play ' of the half when Mayle
He also had a !'7-yard scoring took a 58-yard pass from
run to wrap up an 88-yard drive Everson but ·was tackled on 2in the second quarter that put yard line by Marquii:e Cole as
the Wildcats ahead 17-0.
time expired. .
The Wildcats' Barry Cofield
The Bobcats made it 38-14
then recovere,d a fumble by with !0:541eft on Everson's 4Oh10 quarterback Austen yard run at the end of a 68-yard
Everson, and 'Northwestern drive.
hoped to build on its big lead.
Basanez threw an [ 1-yard
aut when Ba.~anez rolled out touchdown pass to Herbert for
on the option and tried to pitch a !0--0 lead m the second quarthe ball to Jonathan Fields, ier, capping an eight-play, 76Dian Byrum stole the ball in yard drive that got a brg lift
mid-air and rae¢ 62 yards foe a from a pass interference call on
touchdown to get the Bobcats the Bobcats' T.J. Wright.
back in the game at 17-7 with
Basanez's 50-yard pass to
5:38 1eft in the half.
Kim Thompson and a personal
But Bazanez regrouped foul on Oh10 put 'the ball at the
quickly, completing six passes Bobcats' 4 in the first quarter.
in a 74-yard drive with Herbert After two running plays failed
. battling Tony Ward and coming to gain a yard, Basanez's pass
up with deflection in the end to ihe end zone was broken up
zone- for· the 18-yard score and and Northwestern had to settle
a 24.7 le;.~d with I :24 left in the for Howells' 22~yard field goal.

·;

Fall Youth Soccer Adult and yo1;1th
Leagues Forming tennis lessons
0.0.
GALLIPOLIS
Mcintyre Park D.istrict is
now taking "registration s for
Fall Youth Soccer L~agucs.
Leagues are open to all area

1.

Cl

- - -- I.Punbap -Utimes -6enttuel

--~------~--------------~
- --------~
- ~--=-~==~~~~~~
---

children in grades kindergarten through sixth grade .
Leagu es are Kindergarten,
Division I {1st and 2nd
grades), Division 2 (3rd and
4th grades), and Division 3
(5th and 6th grades).
·
All games will be played
· at the Raccoon Creek
County Park on Saturday
mornings and Tuesday
and/or Thursday evenings:
Registration deadline is
September 8. There is a late
fee for registering after \hat
date . No registration s will ·
be accepted after September
13 . .
For more information call
the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District at 740-446-4612
ext. 256. Anyone interested
in coaching or officiating
should also contact the Park
District office as soon as
possible.

GALLIPOLIS
0.0.
Mcintyre Park District will
be holdin g tenni s lessons at
the Raccoo n Creek County
Park for both youth . and
adults on Saturday mornings
beginning September 10
through October 1. Youth
lessons will be from 10 until
11 a.m ., adult lessons frpm
11 a.m. until noon .
For more informatio'n call
the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District at 740-4464612 ext.
256.

'

Sunday, September 4, 2005

From

mar et

to. •
ffilSSIOO

0 .0 . MciNTYRE PARK DISTRICT
Coed Softball Standings
TEAM
W
Waugh Trucking
5
Vinton Baptist
5
Edison Equipment
4
Cream Puffs
4
Pleasant Valley Hospital
4
1
Riverview Productions
Gallipolis Career College ' 1
State Highway Patrol D-9 0 ·

Catholic _chapel

RESULTS :
Gallipolis Career College over Ohio
State Patrol 0·9 19·5
Vinton
Baptist over
Riverview
Productions 14-1 1
Cream P'ults over Edison Equipment 9-

serves migrant
community

8

Pleasant Valley Hospital over Waugh
Trucking 14·5

I

DeFranels, Steubenville Register/ photo

'

Aformer roadside market is now a Catholic mission church , serving hundreds of Mexican migrant workers from area produce farms .
Here, Bishop R. Daniel Conlon of the Diocese of Steubenville celebrates. Mass with workers and members of the Sacred Heart pansh.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

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"01 FORD RANGER 4X4 FLARE SIDE 4 OR 112587 SUPER CAB4 OR XLT PW Pl. CD SPRT'NHLSAT AC..__
"01 GMC SONOMA SUPER CAB 112591 ZR2.U:C3RD AT ACTI..TmsE PWLSPRTWHLSQJ.. ___....... --..... _ ..
IIOFORD F1504X4 SUPER CAB liLT 112845AT AC 11LT CASE PW PLSPRT WHLSCD.._____ ..................... _,

$16.495
$15.900
Sl4.900
$14.600
116.100
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118 FORD F150 FLAReSIOE 4X4. 112793--~--·---------------·-·-·--·----------·--------···-·----·---·--·----------· S13.300
99 DODGE RAM 4X4 012912 REG CAB AT AC 11LT CRSE PW PL ....... ____ ________________________________________________ s12.895.

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05 DODGE MAGNUM 1121Q2 AT AI; n.TCRSE PW Pl ~,cxx~-.s BOFW--~:....-------·--·········'--· I I9.500

ORTLAND- What was once
The Rev. Jim Couts of the
a roadside produce market in Appalachian Food Network, a retired
rural Meigs County has Lutheran pastor, first approached Heinz
become a mission church serving hun- about the need for Spanish Mass for the
dreds of · Mexican migrant workers, workers - 99 percent of whom, Heinz
eager to. practice the Roman Catholic estimates, are of the Catholic faith.
The founding of Our Lady of
faith in their native language.
Those workers, who toil in the fields Guadalupe Mission is timely. Just a few
planting, harvesting and packing toma- weeks after he assumed the papacy, and
toes, sweet corn, peppers and other as the Portland mission began, Pope
Ohio River produce; are expected to Benedict XVI made mention · of the
remain in Meigs County through the need for ministry 'to migrants in his
weekly Angelus address.
early autumn.
Our Lady of Guadalupe Mission
"My thoughts go to those who are far
began its ministry in June under the from their homeland and often also from
leadership of the Rev. Walter Heinz, their families," the Pope said from St.
pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Peter's Square. "I hope they will always
Pomeroy. II is a ministry uniting clergy · meet receptive friends and hearts on
and laity in service to others. Parish their path who are capable of supporting
priests from counties surrounding . them in the difficulties of every &lt;jay."
Meigs ·County and thraughout the
The Holy Father made his appeal on
Diocese of Steubenville have joined behalf of migrant workers when recalltogether to celebrate Mass' at the mis- ing that )une I marked the I OOth
sion church" .on Sunday evening~. and anniversary of the death of Blessed
members of the local Catholic parish Giovanni Battista Scalabrini, an Italian
have also lent their support and talents. bishop who dedicated his life to min:
including several ladies who have i'stry to migrant workers and was
named their patron.
served as translators.
Rev. Heinz named the mission in
Bishop R. Daniel Conlon of the
honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the Diocese of Steubenville said the diopatroness of Mexico. who appeared to a cese has made other efforts to reach out
Catholic convert. Juan Diego. in 153 '-. to migrant worker:s. but said Sacred
"Other than the name of Jesus. Our Heart parish is the first to actually offer
Lady of Guadalupe is the most signifi- Mass in "the field." Bishop Conlon C\!1·
cant name for a chapel for these ebrated Mass with the workers .and
Mexican workers." Heinz said .
members of the Pomeroy parish at the
Heinz has enlisted the help of the mission chapel on Aug. 21.
Rev. Regis Schlick of Sacred Heart
" I think we've just become aware of
Church in Point Pleasant. W.Va .. and the presence of this community of farm
St. John's Church in Mason, W.Va., the workers and we're only beginning to
Rev. William Myers of St. Loui s assess how to help them," Conlon said .
Church ih Gallipolis, the Rev. David "I think it's providential that this group
Huffman of St. Ambrose Church in of migrant farm workers is in Meigs
Porterfield, and the Rev. Paul Hrezo of County because Father Heinz has such
Si. Benedict Church in Cambridge in proven compassion for ttie poor and
sharing the duties of celebrant.
those on the margins of society."
· North American Union Sister of Our
".These workers appreciate any effort
Lady of Charity Francisca Aguillon of of the local community to accept them
Carrollton has even taken to the fields and help them," Conlon said. "They
- literally - to extend a warm invita- operate under difficult circumstances. l
tion to the Sunday evening services, hope mY]Jrese.nce and any ministry the
and has taken an active rple in assisting church can offer will give them faith
and encouragement."
at the Mass.

Above: Bishop R. Dan iel
Conlon and North American
Union Sister of Our Lady of
Charity Francisca Aguillon, far
left. are pictured with some
of the migrant workers who
celebrate Mass at Our Lady
of Guadalupe Mission Chapel
at Portland.
DeFrancls, Steubenville

Register/ photo
Left: Sister Francisca
Aguli llon joins one of the
Mexica ~ migrant workers in
mus 1c at Mass at Our Lady·
of Gu·adtupe Mission Chapel.
Robe•t Beog1ej photo

5297

05 CHEV CAYAI.ER !1121185 4 DR 21.000 MIS BOfW AC CD---- - - · - - · - - - -- --·-----.. 113.300 $199
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011 CHEV IMMLA REDI12850 23,llllllMlS Al AC TLTCIISE PWPL
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$210

05 PONTlAC GRAND AM GT 2 DR n2797 AT AC n.T 01SE PW Pl. CD SPRTWI«..S 1t,IDl MLS BOFW- - · - I 16.685
05 FORD FOCUS ZX4 SE t127fill19,000 MLS BOfW AT AC llLT CRSE PW PL CD SPATWHLS
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16 •• 95
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03 FORD

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03 FORD MUSTANG 1121D4 5 SPO VIi PW PLAC PWR SEAlS a&gt; SPAT WtLS __ ._•.- ....... _..... - ................................ $12 , tt5
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112.320

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$299
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s

DeFrancls . Steubenville Register/ photo

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2004 ·2005 eo mo. at S -49APR. 66mo a16 09 APR , 72 mo. ove1 15.000 m1kts at 6 39 APR. 2003 60 mo a1 5 89 APR. 66 mos 6 69 .APR.
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1998 48 mo. 7 09APA ,See Sa.lesrMn tor datU&amp; As loW as 5 C ~ APA '

8~1111

J. Reed/ photO

Spanish-speaking members of the Sacred Heart parish in Pomeroy, including Ann Porter, Margie Lawson and Judith
Smedley, have. taken on the task of translating the Mass into Spanish. Here. Porter and Sacred Hea·rt Pastor Rev.
Walter Hei~go over the Mass readings prior to one of the services at Our Lady of ~uadalupe Mission Chapel.
,.

r'

I

Bishop•R. Daniel Conlon of the Catholic D1ocese of Steubenville is
pictured at Our Lady of Guadalupe MissiOn Chapel m Portland with
the Rev. Walter Heinz of the Sacred Heart Church 1n Pomeroy and
North American Union Sisler of Our Lady of Chant~ Franci.sca
Aguillon of Carrollton. "
·
·
'

,'

�Page~2_

YoUR-HoMETOWN
BY JAMES SANDS

One mans commitment to hurricane relief
We· re all concerned ·about
the ,-ictims of Hurricane
Katrina. but how many of us
arc doing anything about it'1
One group concerned
enough to do somet hing is
Charlene
CD Baby. one of the largest
Hoeflich
distributors of independent
music. The agency has invited all its arti sts to donate all
, the profits from the' sale of
their CDs to th~ . American
Red Cross Hurricane Relief on Re lief ( UMCOR).
Because of the high cost of
Effort.
transponation
and the poor
Meigs natil'e Jared Sheets.
who man\- of -vuu know as road conditions. Keith Rader.
parish director, as~ed that at
friend . musiL·ian and physithis time only monetary
cian. said Sundell' ni~ht as the donations be given. He also
hurrii:anc ,~· ~p.; mO\· i1~g towanJ
advised that long term volunNew Orleans that he put on teer teams are being orgahi s "New Orlean.&lt; Blues" T- nized to go into Louisiana
shirt. said a prayer and went . sometime in the future when
to bed.
assistance can be given to
Then as he saw hts worst resettling:
fears unfolding decided his
For now. Rader suggests
band. Mudfork Blues. should gifts to UMCOR and notes
join in CD Baby's -relief that the money can be desigeffort s. Hundreds of hands, nated for a recovery in a spedozens of the blues ,ge nre. cific reg ion . The online
have resp'onded to the call.
addre" i ~ www.methodistreInformation on CD Baby's li d.o rg (phone 1-800-554effort is on its Web p&lt;ige , 8583) or checks i:an be
http :1 lwww.cdbaby.com/grou mailed directly to UMCOR.
plredcro". Of course. you P.O. Box 9068. New York.
can also order Mudfork Blues NY 10087-906R. If you
CD from www.rnudfork - wollld like more information
blues.com which then directs on relief effo11s which being
folks to its CD Baby page, planned locally, now or
Either way. it's all going to sometime in the fuwre. just
the Red Cross.
call the Meigs Cooperative
Parish.
Locally, the Meigs United
Methodi st
Cooperative
There are ,many needs and
P&lt;trish is coordinating efforts Meig \ County is- not without
.for relief through ' the its share.
Lutheran Soci;d Services, the
A hotshot truck for the
home-delivered
meals proCatholic Relief and the
United Methodist Committee gram of the Meigs County

...

...

In 1922. the editor of the '
Gallia Times came up with
what he thought was an origCouncil is desperately need- inal idea. He told people to
ed. Pan of the funds are pro- take their old automobile
vided through government tires, tie a rope around them
agencies. \&gt;ut a match has to and fasten the rope to a tree
)&gt;e rai sed locally. Then there 's bough. You then would have
the need (or money to cover a ''dandy swing" for the kid:
the increased cost of gas and die s. "It only takes one
regular mai.ntenance.
length of rope as against two
Sometimes it's not easy to for a seat swing, and the tire
come up with the amount is much' harder to fall out of."
needed. Since last year's While the material for
auction to benefit the nutri- sw ings was abundant, the
tion program fo r the home- number of good old sturdy
bound elderly and handi- "swing style trees" was
capped was such a success. declining .'
.
the agency is going tq' try it
By 1931 , historian P.T.
again tpis year as its Make a Wall was trying to find the
Difference Day program on largest tree left in Gallipolis .
Saturday. Oct. 22.
After several weeKs of
The process of gathering searching, he concluded that
up suitable items to auction the biggest tree in town was
off is alreaqy underway. The in front of 527 Founh Ave.
Senior Center folks have There was an elm there that
arranged _to have a limited measured 20 feet around at
number of items picked up, 54 inches LIP from the
just call 992-2161, or they gi-ound, which is how trees
can be sfropped off at the were measured back then. If
you had measured the tree
center.
down
closer to the roots, it
Contributions will benetit _
more than 200 residents who would have measured 5 or 6
daily depend on .that hot meal feet more.
In front of a house at I006
without which they might not
· be able to continue living in First Ave. wa·s a tree that
measured 18 feet and 6 inchtheir ·own home.
es
in circumference and one
'While the center has its
at
92 Court St. that meaown needs , the seniors are
not without compassion for sured 18 feet. Other large
the victims of Hurricane trees in the 1830s could be
Katrina. A local relief fund found in front of the
has been started with dona- Episcopal Church and one at
tions from individual s and Holzer Hospital, then locatorganizations and contacts ed at First and Cedar. The
only large tree that we have
a~e being made to connect
with a senior agency to dis- seen pictured was the one in
front of the Episcopal
burse the money.
(Charlene Hoeflich is general manager of The Daily
Sentinel ill Pomeroy.)

Bv Jtu Cox, LSW
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
D~PARTMENT

breakfast every day, ·usually
cereal and fruit Only 4 percent reponed never eating
b,reakfast. _ _
• Weighing yourself regularly. Nearly half of the mempers weigh themselves at
least once a day, and nearly a
third weigh t~emselves at
least once a week.
• Maintaining consistent
eating patterns. More successful members of the reg.
istry tended to keep their eating patterns consistent, even
on weekends and holidays.
• Catching slips quickly.
Nearly everyone occasionall~ ·
regains weight they've lost,
but more successful "losers"
acted quickly to lose a regained pound or two before it
became a bigger problem.
(Becky Nesbitt is tile
Gallia Coullty Extension
Educator, family and COilsumer sciences/community
developme11t and chair, Ollio
State U11iversity.)
·

Satellite tracks -_smash hit in space

·THANKf
YOU f

BOB EVANS FARMS

~

15' ................. ... .... '929
18 ' ....... : .............. ' 1079
24 ' ..................... .' 1259
15X30 Oval ...... '1779

HOLIDAYPOO
29 73 'ledtl'lotll ld I 11urdinglt~ll
~: lO · l100 .,_ _, • t :lO ·

a

•••
I

for buying my

It

2005
Market Hog

..c

..

TYlER BUlliON

NELSONVILLE
Osteopathic
' Heritage
Appalachian Ohio Giving, in Foundation of Nelsonville
an effort to raise philanthrop- said, "Storytelling has beerr a
ic awareness in Appalachian long-cherished tradition, preOhio, is hosting the Third serving the history of generaAnnual
Stories
of tions of people who have
Philanthropy Luncheon.
called this region home .
The
Foundation
for Utilizing this tradition, we
Ohio, _the are celebrating the generous
.. Appalac hian
Osteopathic
Heritage spirit of thqse in our commuFoundation --of Nelsonville, nities who so willingly share
the Muskingum County their time, talents, and
_ Community Foundation. and resources . with others to
OSU Extension, as four of the shape our communities. The
partnering organizations in Osteopathic
Heritage
Appalachian Ohio Giving, are Foundation of Nelsonville is
proud to accept' nominations proud to be a'sponsor for the
of outstanding philanthropists Third Annual Stories of
in Appalachian Ohio.
Philanthropy Luncheon."
The selected nominees will
Nominations are being
be recognized at the Third accepted to honor _people
of who have dedicated generous
Annual
_Stories
Philanthropy Luncheon and in amounts of time, energy and
the third edition of the "Stories resources to charitable causes
· of Philanthropy" commemora- atid community improvement
tive booklet, given to all lun- effons in Appalachian Ohio. _
cheon attendees.
Nomination - forms are
on-line
at
The ' Third Annual Stories · available
of Philanthropy Luncheon www.appalachianohio .org,
will be held Monday, Oct. I 0, www.osteopathicheritage.org
2005. at the Brass Ring Golf and ~ww. mccf.o rg or you
Club in Logan at II :30 a.m. may call Christine Cugliari of
Schooler
Family
Outstanding philanthropists the
from throughout · the region Foundation at (740) 622will be present as well as 5371 for more information.
To llDminate a person or
; Appalachian Ohio Giving
: partner organizations. Further family from your community,
information and reservations . return the completed nominafor the luncheon are available tion form by Sept. 9, 2005. to
by contacting David Mitzel Appalachian Ohio Giving, in
of the Muskingum County care .of the Foundation for
Community Foundation at Appalachian Ohio, P.O. 'Box
456, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764.
: (7-10) 453-5192.
Terri Donlin Huesman, Completed forms can also _be
director of programs for the faxed to (740) 753-3333.

'

yotl answer yes .to any of the
following questions. you
should have your child tested.
Does your child ...
I) Live in or regularly 'visit
a house built before 1950'
2) Live in or visit a house
that has peeling, chipping,
dusting or chalking paint?
3) Live in or visit a house
built before '978 with recent ,
ongoing, or planned renovation/remodeling?
4) Have a sibling or .play. mate that has or did have lead
poisoning?
5) Frequently come into
contact with an adult who has
hobby or works with lead?
Examples:
Construction,
welding, pottery, painting ,
stained glass windows. and
casting ammunition.
If you have any questions
or concerns or would like to
schedule an appoimmenr for
our Women's Health Cli;ric.
please comact rhe Gal/ia
Counr\· Health Departmelll ar
446-8538.

a

jackson Hewitt
for purchasing
iny2005
Market Hog
.....-!""-.-.

Josh Bec:k
Ready for lbe world
4-H Club

MAGAZINE

IRDIE

Saturday, Sept 3

fvleig:~

7.:00 p.m.

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

It may not have been a
giant leap for mankind. but it
was an awfully bi(: step taken
by .
astronaut
Bruce
McCandless. _
On Feb. 7, 1984, he ventured out of the space shuttle
Challenger to become the
first person to fly freely in
space. not tethered to a craft.
Strapped into a jet pack,
McCandless traveled more
than 300 feet from the mother ship. with the Eanh ISO
nautical miles beneath him.
Inside tlie shuttle. Robert
Gibson peered through a
Hasselblad camera lens. •
"Holy smokes," Gibson
recalls thinking, "what an
image thi s is. "
Today. the photograph
that Gibson took is as astonishing as ever, ranking
NASA's
mostamong
requested
images.
McCandless ca ll s it "an
kon for human triumph

ElL·mentary

SL•hoot

Sunday, Sept 4
2:00 pm &amp; 7:00 pm

St. Rt. 124

Rutland. OH

Tickets availahlc at
Pomeroy :

Bank

Dan\,

&amp; Lohse

Middkport
P~ortcs

Bank

Store

Ohio River Bear Co.
Ma.'iO !l '

Bank
For more info:

Farml'r~

286-5522

992-6759

i

"'•
-~ewu.si'ARM: "Bo&amp;ewu.si'ARM:,

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

Leslie Lilly, president and
chief executive officer of the
Thank You
Foundaiion for Appalachian
Ohio said, •· A goal of
Appalacl)ian Ohio Giving is to build greater public aware- .
ness of and appreciation for
for buying
the power of philanthropy to
bring positive change to our
my 2005
region. The people who
make. .the most difference in
our communities rarely get ·
the recognition they deserve, _,...,..,_!lil
Seth
so ,we would like to take the
Woodward
time to honor them during
Triangle
4-H
this luncheon on Oct. I 0. We
are grateful for the opportunity to thank those who give of
themselves tO strengthen our
communities.,
Appalachian Ohio Giving
is a Partnership between Ohio
State University Extension
and grantmakers serving the
region. The g9al is to help
build stronger communities
through an increase in the
region 's
philan\hropic
resources.
"Ohio State University is
one of the collaborating agencies with Appalachia Ohio
Giving providing the educational component to the program. Our mission is to help
people of region Appalachia to
learn the values and satisfactions of philanthropy. The local
community benefits from sharing of financial resources
which provides for community
improvement for a better place
to live, work and play." says
Jim Helt. OSU Extension
Development otlicer.
Is ynur score card full of h igh nun1 her~? When ir c~._, m es rn L o lr~._l iJ L "Cl'Ii n ~. high~._·r nurnhT""

Former astronaut recalls being footloose and flyirig free

BYE

Swt~h!.!r

the week-long course. During
For more information on _
the program , th~re was also a ihe course, on the Cardigan
Wels~ writing contest for the
Club, or on the Madog Center -·
students.
· for Wel sh Studies at Rio
- Jilg said that many people Grande, call Jilg or Jindra at
worked hard to make the (800) 282-7201. For addi course a success, and he said tional information on the
Jindra was one of the key wide variety of academic and
people for the program .
professional
programs
"If it wasn't for her, it offered by R!o Grande, log
never would have happened," onto
www.no.edu
Jilg.said.
&lt;http://www.rio.edu&gt;.

Bob Evans
Farms

MARKET HOG

are definitely nn[ par 'for {h e cnur~c anJ 111&lt;1\·l~e irhliLdh'f~ ,1f .,t·ri,Ht~ h c;dth pn l l•le1n~

Book by Michal' I Ste\\. an - Mu:.ic It~ Chari~ ~ Strou..e - Ly~ic' hy l.ee Adams

Farmer~

Submitted ptwto

Participants in the 29th Cwrs Cymraeg Yr Afon Fawr, a Welsh lan-guage course taught at the Univers ity ·af R1o. Grande / Rio Grande
Community College in Ju ly, are gathered fo r a group photo.
·

_Call for nominations to recognize philanthropists

Bv SMITHSONIAN

M iddt,cport Dept.

•

-

8) Prenatal care.
9) Referrals as needed.
STD screenings. HIY testing and counseling will also
be provided to male clients or
panners of our female clients.
All of our services are offered
on a sliding fee sc ale.
Medicaid · and private insurance will also be accepted.
Under our Child and
Family Health Services
(CFHS) grant, we will be
focusing on lead screenings
and obesity in children as
well as continuing to provide
free pregnancy testing. We
hope to reduce the percentage
of children
who
are
over/underweight in Gallia
County. We will be holding
meetings wi{h those who
work with childr~n and providing education to encourage healthy food choices and
increased physical activity
for children.
The federal government
requires that all children covered by Medicaid receive a
screening blood lead test at
12 and 24 months of age. If
you have a child who is
between the ages of 3 and 6
yearo, old, he should have a
lead test if there is no documentation that the child previously had a blood lead test.
Lead tests can be drawn during any well child or sick,
care visit at the child's appropriate age.
There are some other factors to determine if a child is
at risk for lead poisoning . If

2005

RIO GRANDE - Nearly taught during the week, with
80 people frolJl throughout the biggest level being the
_ the United States and Canada class for beginners. Jindra
recently came to the added that she took that
University of Rio Grande/Rio beginners class, and she
Grande Community College learned a lot_
for a course on the Welsh lanThroughout the week, sevgmtge and culture.
eral speakers gave presentaOn July 17-;l4, Rio tions and the students also
Grande hosted · the 29th went on trips in the area.
annual Cwrs Cymraeg Yr One of the tours included a
Afon Fawr. which is a Welsh . trip on .the Welsh Scenic
language course for people Byway, a stop at the Tyn
1'/llh all level s of fluency in Rhos Church (a Welsh
Welsh. Some students attend church ,built in 1851 which is
the annual conference who still used for special ser.cannot speak Welsh at all, vices) and a · visit to the
· while many of the students Welsh-American Heritage
are fluent.
Mu seum in Oak Hill.
The annual event is pre"Tyn Rhps was the highsented by the Cymdeithas light of the trip," Jindra said.
Madog, the Welsh Studies "We opened the church, and a
lnsticute . in North America student sat down at the organ
Inc., a tax-exempt, non-profit and played Welsh hymns."
· organization dedicated to
Around 65 people took the
helping North _ Americans trip, and they began singing
learn, use and· enjoy · the the old hymns in Welsh .
Welsh language.
"I had tears in my eyes. It
Locally. the course was was reminiscent of the early
sponsored by the Madog settlers that attended . that
Center for Welsh Studies at church." Jindra said.
· Rio Grande and the Cardigan
The students enjoyed learnClub .
ing about all of the local
"The week went really Welsh history, and ~hey were
well,'' said Tim Jilg, director . surprised that there was so
of the Madog Center.
much of it.
Both students and instrucOne of the speakers durtors enjoyed the conference .
ing the week was Cynog
Jeanne Jindra, president of Prys, a Rio Grande student
the Cardigiln Club, said that who is from Wales. Prys
she received numerous posi.- discussed Welsh politics
tive comments about the and the culture. and the stu-.
course .
dents really enjoyed his pre"Basically. tl'tey loved the sentation.
runil atmosphere and they
Dewi Hughes, another Rio
loved _the campus," Jindra Grande student from Wales,
said.
sang Welsh songs and led a
Six levels of Welsh were musical program at the end of

Church. In some of the old Rocchi family grew fig trees
postcards from about 1910, in the back of 231 Second
that tree almost obscures the Ave. In the 1950s. there were
seven of these trees that had
church in tl\e photo.
Speaking of obscuring the been brought to Gallipolis
church. the hickory tree that from Texas about 1942.
stood in front of the Little During the big snow in
Kyger Christian Church for November of 1950, small
many years at _one time- ani_mal s ate the bark off the
( 1955) was ~onsidered the 'fig trees . and killed them.
largest hickory tree in Ohio. The trees came up again
It was a shellbark hickory . from the roots and after
that was about 12 feet couple of years tiegan to
around with a height of 130 bear again.
These fig trees bore two
feet and a spread of 115 feet
crops,
one in July and one in
at the top.
In 195S. the largest oak tree Septetnber. The Rocchis
in Ohio was 20 feet, box would can the figs in heavy
elder at 18 feet , white ash syrup. Figs· are one of the
18:5 feet , honey locust 14.4 few trees in the world that do
feet, and cottonwood at 26 not produce' a bloom. The_
feeL The famous Rathbone. fruit if left on the tree sepa· elm in Marietta was 26 feet in rate into four parts. forming a
son of blossom.
circumference.
In 2005 , Gallia county
In 1934, the largest white
oak tree in Ohio was found has the largest Ohio black
near Cheshire in the Morton oak at 2 I .5 feet in circumwoods and it was 22 feet ference and 70 feet high ,
around. There was also a the largest catalpa at 22 feet
white oak on Georges Oreek around and 69 feet in
· that was 20 feet around. It height. and the largest
was estimated that I ,000 feet southern red oak at 14.6
of lumber could be produced .. feet around apd 70 feet
from that one tree. Gallia high. Athens cou11ty has
also
had
the
largest. seven record trees (white
sycamore tree in O~io in oak, ptiwpaw. silverbell,
1934 and that was 27 feet sweetgum. red hickory,
around and f'ound on the eastern white pine and
Frank Daniel farm on the pacific silver fir.) By the
Campaign
Creek
near way the largest tree in Ohio
today .is · a syca more in
Addison.
For many years, Gallipolis Ashland County that is 35
had one of the largest feet in circumference and
cypress trees in O!Jio. It was 129 feet tall .
(James Sallds is a special
planted on the lawn of
-correspolldelll
for
the
Holzer Hospital. In 1955, the
tree was well over I 00. years Sullday Times-Se~~tillel. He
call be comacted by writillg
of age.
to
1040 Military · Road,
Speaking of unusual trees
in Ohio. for some years the Zallesvil/e, Ohio 43701.)

I want to introduce to you a·
few new things we are doing
at the Gallia County Health
Department.
In July. the Gallia County
Health · Department was
Bec~y
awarded a grant from the
Women 's Health Services
Nesbitt
(WHS) Program of the Ohio
Department
of
Health
(ODH). Through this grant, .
our goal is to ensure that
those Ohio women who are
moderate intensity for an
uninsured or underinsured
average of an hour a day.
will
have access to medical
• Adhering to a low-calorie,
care that includes comprelow-fat diet. The average
hensive medical examinacalorie intake reported by
tions and screenings.
registry members was 1,38 I
We will be holding
calories a day, with 24 perWomen's
Health clinics
cent of calories from fat.
twice a month. on the first
However, researchers said
and
third Wednesdays of the
that such self-repons are usumonth. The followi'ng serally underestimated, and .
vices will be offered:
believe most panicipimts are
I) Pelvic (Pap) exams and
actually eating closer to
lab
testing.
1.800 calories a day.
2) Breast exams and patient·
•· Eating breakfast. More education
of breast cancer.
th im three-quarters uf registry
3) Screening for cervical
participants reported eating
cancer.
4) Screening and treatment
for Sexually Transmitted
Di seases (STDs) and HIV
scree ning.
comet's inner makeup.
may r,eveal if its core is
Bv SM.ITHSONIAN
5) Limited voluntary
Astronomers
·
have
long
slushy
or
solid
rock
and
ice.
choi ce of binh controllconMAGAZINE
regarded comets as time &lt;:ap- says Gary Melnick. the prin- traceptives, including abstiFOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
sules that might harbor clues cipal investigator for the nence and natural family
When NASA steerep . its from the creation of the solar Harvard-Smith sonian satel- planning.
Deep Impact probe into a syst~m roughly -1.5 bi Ilion li te . "Everything we know _ 6) Patient education and
comet on July 4. capturing year&gt; ago. That' s largely about the larger solar system pre-pregnancy counseling on
imaginations worldwide with because the streaking bodies we learn by sitting back and the dangers of smoking. alcoa spectacular crash. a six- of dust. rock and ice have letting it come to us." he tells hol and drug use during pregyear-old
Harvard- presumably not been affected Smithsonian magaLine. "Tnis Qancy.
.
.
Smithsonian sateliite taken by the enormous geological. was a rare occasion when we
7) . Education on sexual
out of hibernation just for the climatic and other forces that · human beings could go out coercion and violence in relaoccasion had a front row tick- ha,·e transformed moons and and touch a celestial object.'' tionships.
et to the event, the first time planets such as Eanh.
NASA' s Deep Impact
scient.ists engineered a col liprob,e. an 820-pound copper
sion with a heavenly body,
The sate ll ite. from the missile about the size of a
Harvard-Smithsonian Center washing machine. was fired
for
Astrophysics .
111 from an unmanned spaceCambridge. Mass .. was one craft . A day later, it crashed
of several instrument's in into the Tempel I comet,
space that. along with which is about half the size of
ground-based ones. moni - Manhattan and orbits ihe sun .
tored the cornet before. dur- e'·~ry 5.5 years. ·
ing and after the tiery colli- _ Analysis of the resulting
debri s and chemical reactions
s ian ~ intended _to _probe the

ABOVI GIOUND

Srmday, September 4, 2005

Women's health clinics set at health-department

What works/or weight loss
Weight loss cycles can· be
fru strating. can' t they·&gt; There
alwa~s seems to be a special
event on the horizon where
you ·"treat" yourself to a
heavy meal , complete with
dessen. or -goaze an entire day
on high-calorie snacks.
' Scientists are taking a
close look at what works and
what doesn ' t wlien 1t comes
to losing weight and keeping
'it off. RecentlY. researchers
examined strategies of more
than 4,000 people enrolled
in · the National Wei'ght
Re gistry
Control
(http://www.nwcr.ws/). who
nave lost at least 30 pounds
and have kept it off for at
least a year. In the July 2005
issue of the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
they revealed techniques that
seem to work:
• Getting plenty of physical
activity. The most successful
weight losses came in people
who exercised with at least

COMMUNI1'Y
Sunday, September 4,
Rio Grande hosts the 29th Cwrs
aeg Yr Mon ·F awr

_:tunbap lime•~itntinel -

Tracing the last large trees found in Gallipolis

- COMMUNITY (ORNER-

PageC3

•

-:--· • -•

- -

'

-

w• ,____,.,_ -

·

over gravit)l or triumph over degr.ee in electrical enginature ." But the picture is neering. he sp~nt nearly 18
atso poignant in that the years wor!;.ing Earthbound
boundless optimism it cap- posts. including ground, totured has been tempered by . space radio communication s
at Mi ss ion Control in
tragedies and dead ends".
McCandless
_joined · Hou&gt;ton . And he helped
astronaut
corps
in mastermind the jet pack
NASA's
1966 and served 24 years. A dev ice. or manned maneuNavy aviator with a master 's vering unit (l\1MU).
p•••••--•--••••••••-~------

ThankYou

Undejohn
(Saunders
Insurance Agency)
for purchasing my 2005
Market Steer
&amp;.My

Reserve
I
I
I

.

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technology. This test' tnr ( ntnna ry Jrtny di ~L·a:;l' llll'i_b ll tl&lt; th~._· :-~ mt·IIJ !lt &lt;11 l';lklfl ~.-": ltt ,ll) m
the ar~c~ies of the he-&lt;l ~t. It cu~ he\11 d·~ t t...'rr m nc \\'ht.·th~._·r ~' r n.,r hi!.trr ~.h ~~·, J -&lt;L' 1... prl''\·m
IPng bet,lre r~C(lg ni za ble · ~ymrtum :o~ d~._~ ,- d ,)p. Thi . . fl •'n -in,·.bi \·12 t~.· . . t 1.. f''&lt;l·rnk...,, . 111 ~ l Ltb· ...
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tht· fo llmnn_i! ri sk fact t~ rs

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•HOLLY CANADAY
.

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• ~c.&gt;..k·nrary lif~s ty lc

C&lt;1ll (740) 592 -9483 Morklay rhr.._'ttl!h F nJ . 1~ ~1.'1\\ ' L'L'll ~ , LI\1 .m.. l-4 p 11 1. t t~ r Ill• 111.:
mf,mnati un l1 T h ) schedu It' a !... :trJia L ::-..::~ lTi n~ ~,· ;... . mHn. 111' •n, ~~ l\ "l&gt;..~.m r~· 1 vr r. d
is nut requtred.

CarJirte scoring exrtmin:rti11ns are }"'Crl~ lftllt\.l .tt ( "'' P,k-nL·:-:-' R.tJH ,J.~!-!\' ,lrh l :.t . :d K;J] Im.t!21 1H.: .•
department at tht." Castrup Center in tht' ll'Blcnc"' \k\ llc .J! P;n J.. .'t ),,r ~.._pi ; d!lh.''-l't.lil
in\'it t'S you to taken cl\l:Ol't lnnk a r a\h'anl'L'll ~l l &lt;l).!ll•"'tr~.: Jtll&lt;~!.!nH.: . 1~ \\'l' llll'. l"Llrc 1nlt.:T\ '"'" ~
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O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
"''
o:/_, -;o, ,
L.u.....':~j "'e'-r l.-UC&lt;.~,u.Gi w~*"'
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•

CELEBRATIONS

iunba~ Wtme~-ienttnd

.

Page C4

"

ON·THE BOOKSHELF

Sunday, September-4, 2005

Page C_S
Sunday, September 4, 2005

Martha Washington: An American Life Publishers weekly best-sellers

.
Veral Byrd and Darla Jean Cline

CLI NE-l:3YRD
ENGAGEMENT

,,., . .

RACir-..'E - Jim and Ma rga rei Cline of B e~erly. formerly of
Racine. and Wi lli am and Viole! Byrd M Ha1elgrecn. W.Va..
announce the t'll!.!&lt;t i!.C.I llC IH anti upcoming wcddmg of their
daughter ami son .'D:irla Jean Cline of Beverly and Vera I Byrd
of Pcnn,bon&gt;. W.Va .
·
.
'
The bride-elect i' a 1979 gradua!e of Fo n Frye H tgll_School
and a llJH -1. ~ radu a l e of .Mounl Vern on Na1arcne Un1versny.
majorint! in ~hor_tll' ~c~_ . &gt;.IJOmic ~. _Sht:- i~ emrloyed at Manella
Memorial Ho . . plt:d 111 !nod -: crvJ ces_.~
. .
,
.
Her fian ce· is a llJ75 gradualc ol Harnsnlle (\li_. Va.) High
School ami is em ployed a1 the Simonton Windows ot
Elknhom. W.Va .
. An open chu rd1 weddi ng wi ll he held ai .J :30 p.m. on
Saturday. Ol"t . I, ~ 005 , a! th e w,Jicrt ord Church ot !he
Na!a rc iic in Waterford. A rece ption will l ollow a! !he
Be, crly/Wa!crford Squad bui lding, Fourth S1rce1, Beverly.
Af!er !heir honeymoo n, the co uple plans to restdc m Beverly.

''"

'

Joshua Myers and Robin Holbrook

HOLBROOK-MYERS
ENGAGEMENT
SCOTTOWN - Rohin .Suzann Holbrook and Joshua Eugene ,
Myer' are announcing !heir engagemc1~ and UJX:&lt;&gt;~nin g ma1Tiagc.
The bridc-clccl 1s tile d~ughter ot (,ary and Carolyn Spiller
of Huntington. W.Va. She is lhe granddau¥hter of the late
Thomas W. and Leaena C. Hmd1man ot K1Us H1ll, and the
late Randolph and Doll y Holhrook of Chesapeake.
,.
She is a 199K graduate ot Symmes Valley H1gh School. and
graduated from Marshall Univasily _in May 2005 with a b&lt;_Ich ~ ­
lor of science degree in nursmg. She IS employed 1n the Ped1atnc
Intensive Care Unit at CJbcll Huntmg!nn Hospi!al , Huntmgton .
The prospeuive ·hridcgroom is the son of Jcne and Sherry
Myers or Scnnown. He is rhe grandson of Ronnie and Nancy
Myers and !he I:Ite Francis Myers. and Otis and Slmley Green ,
all of Crown City.
He is a 199H &lt;&gt;i·aJuate of Symmes Valley High School, and
a 2002 gradL&gt;at; of the University of Rio Grande with a bachelor's degree in environmental science. He 1s employed by
Triad Environmenwl Consulting, Huntington.
·
The wedding will be· Saturday. Sept. 10. 2005 . al6 :30 p.m .
in the G:dlipoli s Cily Park. Incase of inclement weather, the
ceremony will be held at Grace United Method 1st Church .
.
.

·Aaron Bowersock and Jessica Roush

ROUSH-BOW -ERSOCK
ENGAGEMENT
POMEROY - Jessica Rou sh uf l'omeroy. and Adro)I
Bowersock of Rutland will he· married a! i2 :.l0 p .lll . l)ll
Saturday, ScpL 17. 200\ at the Kutldnd rrcewill llapt_i&gt;l
Church , 44 Salem St .. Rutland .
.
The hridc -elcc·t is til~ daughlci_. 1&gt;f Roge r and Kath y Rnush
r)f Pomeroy. and the granddaughter of Charlotte ll yscll. an~l
the late Nathan Hysell 'u1d the l;~le Charlc' :llld Ode" a Rnu sh.
She i' a 2002 g radual~ of Mcip High Sc·hool_ and al_lenu 'ed Hocking College for nc!workm g syste111 s trainin g. Sh e Is
currentl y employed hy Spc c i&lt;~ll y llnob as a nciW&lt;&gt;rk
admi11i~ t rator .
,
·
Her fi:mce is the son of .laiia Sick of Rullaml :1nd Todd
Bowersock of Li.ma. He is the gr:Inclson of !he Rev. Dav id dlld
.Lu ll.:! \Vi sl' tnan or .Ru LlanU. He i.. : al~o (I g. radU iltC ol Hm.: klnr
Cnllcge li&gt;r nct workin~ system' :md is cuncntl y e111ployed hy
CSSI ds a nel wurk tedmie·ian.
A pr iY:~tc rcce,ption will be l!c·IJ al J,:3llp .m.

When you think of Martha
Washington, the picture that
probably comes to mind is
ihe portrait by Gilbert Stuart
of a stout old woman weaming a cap over her white
curl s. I chose the new bi&lt;'lgraphy, Martha Washington, An
American Life, by Patricia
',Brady at Bossard because of
the attractive portrait on the
cover.
, Because Martha destroyed
the letters between her and
her illustrious husband, there
is not much information
about her except through her
family and friends. She wan
born Marlha Dandridge, in
New Kent County, Va. Her
father was the O\\'ner of a
small (500 acre) tobacco
plantation. She was the eldest
of eight children trained in
domestic arts to manage a
household. While still a
teenager, she married John
Parke Cuslis from a wealthy
family who owned 300
slaves. John was 20 years her
senior. His father was a cantankerous old man who did
not want his son to marry
Martha . She went herself to
see the fattier, and he was
impressed by her character
and courage.
. The marriage produced
four chilqren in quick succession. The two oldest died al
ages two and four. Her husband died when she was 26,
and she was left wi.th a plan. tation to run and two young
children t,o raise . At this
point she met George
Washinglon, who had been a
swveyor and soldier and was
6-foot-2, handsome and dignified, athletic. powerful aiid
a good dancer. He was a few
months younger and it seems
·there was mutual admiration
at first meeting.
At their wedding on June 6.
1759, Martha wore a deep
yellow brocade dress with
purple satin shoes. She
ordered clothes and supplies,
candies and exotic foods

Beverly
Gettles

resembles that of Rose
Neal Boortz and John
HARDCOVER FICTION
Koontz &amp; Ed Gorman
Kennedy, who also bore ,so
Linder
(Regan
Books
)
•
(Bantam
)
many family deaths with
1. "The Historian" by
•your-Best
Life
Now:
7
5.
8 . "The Constant Gardener"
grace and dignity.
Elizabeth Kostova (Little,
Steps
to
Living
at
Your
John le Carre (Scribner)
George and Martha never
Brown)
Full
Potential"
by
Joel
9. "Lost City " by Clive
had children. He had small2. "The Da Vinci Code" by
Osteen
(Warner
Faith)
Cuss ler with Paul
pox as an adolescent , which
Dan Brown (Do ubleday)
·
6.
·Freakonomics
'
by
Kemprecos (Berkley)
may have cau sed sterility.
3. "Point Blank" by Catherine
Steven
D.
Levitt,
Stephen
The trouble between the
Coulter (Putnam)
TRADE PAPERBACKS
J. Dubner (WIIiiilfll Morrow)
colonie s and Great Britian
4. "Lifeguard" by James
· 7. "100 People Who Are
started with taxes. "George
1. "The Kite Runner" by
Patterson and Andrew
Screwing Up America " by
never sought leadership, but
Khaled Hossei ni
Gross (Little , Brown)
Bernard Goldberg
he was indispensable to the
(Riverhe ad)
5. "Chi ll FactoF" by Sandra
(HarperColl lns)
Revolution and the new
2. "Why Do Men "Have
Brown (Simon &amp;. Schuster)
B.
"New
Rules"
by
Bill
country. Marlha was indisNipples?" by Mark Leyner
6. "Undomestic Goddess"
Maher (Rodale)
pensable to his happiness,
·and Bil ly Goldberg. M.D.
: by Sophie Kinsella (Dial)
9. "He 's Just Not That Into
and she followed him into th e
7~ "The Interruption of .
(Three Rivers Press)
You "' by Greg Behrendt,
field during the war, spend: Everything" by Terry
3 . ""The Secret Life of Bees"
Li z Tuccillo (Simon
ing every winter making · a
McMil lan (Viking)
by Sue Monk Kidd
Spotlight Entertainment)
8; "Van ish" by Tesshome for him, wherever he
, (Pengu in)
Gerritsen (Ballantine)
and the troops found them4 . · The Cufious Incident of
MASS MARKET
9. "Tyrannosaur Canyon" by
. selves. She was a perfect
the Dog in the Night-Time "'
PAPERBACKS
Douglas Preston (Forge)
hostess, efficient and graby Mark Haddon (Vintage)
,.
cious. She was intelligent and
1."Angels &amp; Demons " by
5 . "The Book of Sudoku 1 "'
NONFICTION/GENERAL
observant, and vitally interDan Brown (Pocket) ·
by Michael Mepham
ested in all of the experiences
2. "White Hot" by Sandra
(Ove rlook Press)
1. "Natural Cures "They "
6.
"Wicked" by Gregory
she had. It is a pity she did
Brown
(Pocket)
Don't Want You to Know
3. "The Rule of Four" by Jan
Maguire (RegaoBoo ks)
not write her memoirs, but
About" by Kevin Trudeau
Caldwell
and
Dustin
7.
"The Sout h Beach Diet"
her strength was in being the
(Alliance Publishing)
Thomason (Dell)
perfect wife and the exemby Ar thur Agatston. M.D.
2. "1776" by David
(St. Ma rt in' s)
4. "Trace'" by Patricia
plary first First Lady.
McCullough (Simon &amp;
Cornwell (Berkley)
8. "My Sister"s Kee per"' tiy
When her husband died
Schuster) ·
·Jodi Picou it (Was hington
after nearly 40 years of mar:3. "The World Is Flat: A Brief 5. "Deception Point'' by Dan
Brown
(Pocket)
Square, Press)
Histo.ry of the Twenty-first
riage. she moved out of their
6 . "The Wedding" by
Century" by Thom as L.
9 . "The Tipping Poi nt: How
bedroom into a small . third
Friedman
.
(Farrar.
Straus
Nicholas
Sparks
(Warner)
Little Things Can Make a
tloor room. She was so
and Giroux)
·
7. "Frankenstein: Book 2
Big Difference'" by Malcol.m
crushed. she was unable to
4. "The Fair Tax Book'' by
City of Nighr by Dean
Gladwel l (Bac k Bay )
walk. in his funeral procession . Mart!la died just short
of her 70th birthday. sur- ,••..•..•.••.............
rounded by her _grandchil- 1Thank You AEP
·
dren.
I Gavin Plant for
Martha hacl a wonderful : purchsing my
attitude. She said, "I am
2005
determined to be cheerful and I
happy in whatever situation I 1 Market Hog.
may be.· The greater pan of 1 Special thanks
Is Still
our happiness or misery
:
to
Charles
depends on our dispositions
Enrolling Students
and not upon our circum Smith ,.,.. "'"

from London. She had man·aged her estate well after her
husband died.
She · and George expected
to be colonial Virginia
planters throughout thei~ lifetime . They both loved Mount
Vernon and farming. She
took her own furniture to
Mount Vernon - 24 pairs of
sheets, 54 tablecloihs, 99
napkins and towels. She also
brought 40 slaves who
belonged to her as heir to
John Custis. She had never
been more than 20 miles
from lhe house where she
was born.
Later, George went to the
House of Burgesses in
Williamsburg, and she and
her children , ages 4 and 3,
stayed there with him. It was
the social center of the
colony. They hired a Scotch
tutor who oversaw the children's education for II years.
At age 12, daughler Patsy had
a seizure which indicated
·epilepsy. untreatable at that
time. S)je died when she was
17. Son Jacky was sent to
boarding school. He was
never much of a student,
which dismayed his stepfather. He eventually went to
school in Annapolis. He fell
in love at -age 18 and married
Nelly Calvert. They had fi'lur.
children. Martha and Nelly · stances.".
Sh~ has long lived in the
became lifelong friends. It
was said of Jack that "he shadow of · her famou s
never took hold of anything spouse, but she is equally
in his life . except Nelly deserving ·of our admiration.
Calverl." Jack died at age 26 . This book helps put her life
of typhus, so Martha outlived in perspective, emph~sizing
all of her children, as well as her vital role in supporting .
all of her seven siblings.
her husband in our struggle to
For pure trag~dy, her life become a nation.

.

RNER. VALLEY ·
CHRISTIAN -ACADEMY

1
1

I
I
I

for the

K4 &amp; KS-12

Opportunity

Classes Start Sept. 6
Call 992-3662, 992-3824 or 992-3592
For Information

: ASHlff
I

SWARTZ

I•••••••••••••••• -••,.-,,.~;-;;;-,

.'Double Tap' both disappoints and elates

Mr. and Mrs. Rob "Woodward

Bv MARCUS ELIASON

SAUNDERSWOODWARD WEDDING

ASSOCIAT&lt;D PRESS WRITER

----------

"Double Tap." By Steve
Martini. Putnam. 432 Pages,

GALLIPOLIS - Mariah Constance Saunders and Robert
Fox Woodward were united in m:1rriage June II , 2005. at the
groom 's family farm on State ·RoUic 141.
: The bride is the dau ghter of Steve and Darla Saunders of
:Bidwell, while 1he groom's parenl s arc Tom and Jackie
·Woodward of Gallipolis. ..
·
,
: Mariah wore a strapless , champa~ne dress with ivory_ lace
· overlay and carried a hOU&lt;.JUCt ol Wildllowers .. McKmsey
. McPherson . sister of the bride. served as matron of honor. and
Mr.' and Mrs. Jason McPherson
maid of honor was Morgan Woodward , sister of the groom
Bridesmaids were Rachel Naylor, Sarah Russell and Erica
·
.Mulholand. friend' of the bride.
: The bridal parl y \vore desert chor:ll chi ffon dresses and car-riec.l wild tlower hou&lt;juet s. Jamie S1 ~ge r. tlower g1rl, wore a
long sleeveless empire wai st champagne clress With an Ivory
overlay bodice and a wreath of wild tlo~ ers in her hair. .
PATRIOT- McKinsey Elkn ·saunders anc.l Ja, on Timothy
Besl man was Josh Bod1mer. lnend ol the groom . Servmg. McPherson were united in a private wcduing'ccrcmony April
as groornsmeR were Gahe Sauntlcr., , brother of the bride , 9, 2005 , a! Faith Baptist [::hurch.
.
.
.Mike Fowler, Nick Loti and Ken yon Commmgs. all ln c nd ~ of
The bride's parents ~re Stc\·e and Darla Saunders ot
:the groom . Lane Downey. cou,in of th ~ bride , served "' n_ng Bidwell. Mary McPher""n and the late Bill McPhcrson ·ol
bearer. They wore black lU Xedo.s With light grey_ vests and ltes Patrioi arc parents of the '.groo!":
.
,
wilh wildllower b&lt;)Uionnicres. Ushers were Bnan Cromwell
The Rev. James Lusher ofllciotcd at the dnuble rmg cereanc.l Jamie Vanek.
mon Y: A reception follo:wed for family and friends aL the
.
· Mu sic was provided by Judy Burdell on !he pi ;~no anti Dave Gallipolis Shrine Cluti:
The bride wore a white satin A: linc llnor lenglh dress and rarPerine:. uncle of the hride. "'loist. Tl\c gue sts enJoyed an oul door bulle! reception and dancin g after the ceremon y. The riecl a bouqucl of red tulips and yellow roses. Mariah Saunders
follr-ti Crcd red velvet cak e with i\'ory ici ng wa\ alTCnled wllh ~cr vc'tl her ~ i ~ t e r as maid of honor and wore :.t ret.! sallll drc ...,~ .
I
coral w·, and wild tlower.s. The c;1ke w'" made and served by The best man was Tim Knepper. friend of the groom .
The co uple hone ymooned in Fldt·idu and Tcnness';'c . They
Karen Shav. of Bidwell
Wedd in l.! t! lJC ~ h wL·re reg i ~ t.e red hy Mor}.! all Yolln g anJ . now rc\idc nn Boggs Road 111 Patnnt.
Meoan D&lt;ll11ietL cousins of !he bride. The wedding couple were
u~ h~red out 1he lane vi ilh spark lers for a ' park ling send-niT.
.They enjoyed th'cir honey moon in Jac: ksnn Hole , Wyo .. and
Yellowstone Nalional Park . Mr. and ~)r, _ Rob Wr,odward
reside in Wheelcrshurg.
,,

·SAUNDERSMCPHERSON WEDDING

Friends see the best in you.
. (Usually within weeks.)

o .:~ • o td ,nJ

'!'" ··' ·

".t'"T

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Pratt

WHEELEIZ-PRATT
WEDDING
BIDWELL -- Mar!ha B. Whee ler and Keith E. Prall were
uni ted in marriagl.! on Aug. 2). 2005 . Til e douhlc rin g l'l' n:-

mon y lnuk place in CJtlell , hur~. K y. ·
.
.
·
Marilla 1' a 1 1 J 1J~ ~ raduatc ol H:um'm Ht gh S..:hool. She"
the dau ~lllcruJ" Cn~'l y n ami Pau l ',' I'.J .-- Wibon uf Lc" Igll.
W. V:1.. and Gem· Wheeler of ll&lt;unl in. W.Va. She e" II JTC IItl y I'
cmpluyed hy Wai-Man i11 Gall i j~&lt;&gt; li ,_
.
Ke ith i.s a 1911-i &lt;&gt;radLiatc ol Ohio Val le y l"hri stJall Schnnl .
He i' t,he ' "n uf d 'e·1'ry and C:Ir&lt;&gt;l ) n l'rall of lli c.l"c.ll. He· i.s
employed by Red's Kullcn (iar a~c in Kid '"' l.i.
The cou ple will res ide in Bidwell.

Steve Martini writes firstrate legal thrillers. His plotting is expert, his characters
vivid and alive. His courtroom scenes are- rich and
·credible, and so are his villains .
His hero, Paul Madriani,
makes a likable and convincing David among the goliaths
of crime, corporations and
·
government.
In ·short, Martini usually
delivers a mean page-turner.
All the more reason, then,
to ·lament that his latest.
"Double Tap." i's a disappointment. But only as a
thriller, for it contains something else that is so unexpected and moving that the book
deserves to be recommended
anyway.
Madelyn Chapman is a
vivacious, Ferrari-driving .
art-collecting titan of the
California software industry
who. walks into her home
one day and is shot to death.
· The suspect is Em1hano
Ruiz, a mysterious ex-military man who had been
doing security work tor
Chapman, had an affair with
her and then was dumped.
He is accused of having
ki lied her out of jealousy.
· Madriani takes the case.
and soon starts picking
threads that seem to lead
toward the extensive business
Chapman's company was
doing with the U.S. government. Madriani comes to

, ,~

•• , . ,."'II!~...- .. ., ,i. :,. , • ·... 1· uo h•;

.Keeping Gallia,
Meigs &amp;Mason

infonned

1!-.: f'OY1'1't too ~mM•' """ ". I'

-

- - --

/Jrn

\', (J(JIJ/.,. ·•tt&lt;&gt;..,_r~Jw,i,/~ - - - - -

(304) 273-9500

L

W'Jinw \r
K.lll' mWIHlJ . \X'V 2(,1(,·1
\II~

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..

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&lt;

Sunday "runes-Sentinel

(304) 927-4500

Galia •

\..'!0 )..l.tHl :\rrr.:C"I
"'r~emC' r . WV

2"'2..,6

Madriani-Martini 's Uncle
Evo is alone worth ihe price
of the book.
Evo fought in the Korean
· War and came back a nervous wreck consumed by
survivor guilt and the torment Of electric s,hock therapy. Incapable of functioning
as a normal member of society, he is one of the walking
wounded, his once-happy
·features replaced by "the
thousand-yard stare .,, my
uncle's undeviating expression. the haunted look that
for decades was Eva's deathlike gaze ."
Much of Evo's life is told ·
from the perspective of a bOy
remembering his uncle sining
in the family living room.
silent and gazing into space.
"At times I could not heir but
look at him in fascination and
fright until my father would
gently call my name and
shake his head. a message
that this w'1s not polite ."
Each time Martini returns
to Evo, the man's pain and
helplessness reveal them selves anew and in greater
depth . Evo' _s story doesn"!
take up much or the novel.
but it fe els like a story
Marlini has been waiting a
long time to tell.
Why now"' Perhaps· the
war in Iraq was the catalyst .
The elegiac final page of
"Double Tap'" makes us feel
how real and how dreadful
the con s equen c~' nf the
Korean War were for this
American famil y.

Thank You

' ,.,,.

...,•... ··". """' ' .... ;...~ ....
.......... ,.,, '" ... ' """ ''" . ' "''"'
•. ,, ,

...

$26.95.

believe his dient is innocent
and that the rea) reason
Chapman was killed was her
resistance to the government's using her software to
wire itself into ihe private life
of every American citizen.
His problem is Ruiz's relicence about his military past,
and the iceberg of evidence ·
· threatening to sink his reticent client.
At this point the reader has
begun to savor the expe~ta­
tion of quintessential Martini :
Madriani ihe knight in shining armor riding fbrlh to slay
the dragon's of bureaucratic
malfeasance. Except that
somehow it doesn 't come off
this time.
Sure, the author re-creates
courtroom procedure with his
usual expertise. The problem
is the procedure - too much
of it: long witness interrogations establishing sizes of
bullets,
their
technical
dimensions. their way of
"fragmenting, the wounds
they cause. and so on and so
on until the reader is skimming frantically to the end of
the chapter. The denouement
is unsatisfactory, and there's
something
unconvincing
about the revelation of the
villain's identity.
And yet. ...
.
Martini is a very fme
writer, period . Just read !he
opening chapter of ''Critical
Mass" with its heart-stop- ·
ping description of a ship in
a storm. And in "Double
Tap," a subplot about
·

l' '

~2342

~· 992-2155

Mason • 67!&gt;1333

.....

Jackson Hewitt tax Services
for purchasing our

2005 Market Steers
at the GalUa Co. Jr. Fair
. Andrew Shong
Sundance Kids 4-H

Michael Shong
Gallipolis FFA

WyngateGALLIPOLIS
J '

�-iuntiap limes -ientinel

- ENTERTAINMENT

Page C6

-

Sunday, September 4, 2005

•

'

Down on tHe Farm; Page_02
Gardening, Page D6

LOCAL ARTIST'S WORK C
REPRESENTED IN SHOW

AP Photo

Th iS undated publ icity photo, released by ABC. shows
Jaq uel ine Obradors and Freddie Prinze Jr. in a scene from the
network's new half-hour comedy series· "Freddie ," which premieres at 8:30 p.m ., EDT on Oct. as part of ABC's fall lineup.

'Lost' and found: Fall TV
season banks on sci-fi, n1ystery

nize new talent. Criteria for
CHARLESTON, W.Va. The Avampato Discovery submissions were that the artMuseum at the Clay Ce.nter work was original and had not
will exhibit the biennial juried before been exhibited in
exhibition 2005 Appalachian Charleston, and that the artist
Corridors from Sept. I0 be 18 yellfs of age and reside
through Nov. 13. From the in the Appalachian re~ion .
''The juried exhibit ton promore than 864 works entered,
juror Faith Ringgold has sele~t­ vides an important venue to
showcase artwork that might
ed 79 works from 63 artists.
' Local artist Kevin Lyles is not have been considered for
represented in this exhibition a museum exhibition," said
with his piece, "Book of Glass." Ric Ambrose, curator and
"It is exciting to be involved . deputy director of exhibitions
in this exhibition.that highlights for the. museum. "It also
the best work from artists in offers recognition and exposure to both emerging and
Appalachia," said Lyles.
Kevin Lyles is a professor established artists."
Serving as juror of this year's
of art at the University of Rio
exhibition
is African American
Grande. There he teaches
sculpture, ceramics, design, · artist Faith Ringgold. .An
drawing and art history. acclaimed painter, mixed
media sq.tlptor and writer,
Beside~ an educator he considers. himself a sculptor and Ringgold is best known for her
frequently exhibits his work signature "story quilts" that
both regionally and nationally. combine narrative paintings
Appalachian Corridors was with quilted borders and text.
Ringgold is also a noted
created as a way for the .
author
of 12 children's books,
Avampato
Discovery
Museum to provide a meeting including Tar Beach. -In a
ground for artists and public juror's statement, Ringgold
alike to exchange ideas, dis- outlined what she was lookcover new work, and recog- ing for from the artists who

best-perfo n)ling new series
of· Jast year. was a challenge
to copy (although suburbanLOS
ANGELES
set "Close to Home" may
There's a network conspiracy owe it at least a tip of the
afoot and vinver&gt; are the tar- hat ). But its serialized storyget. The &lt;: unning fall scheme : telling proved that not every
show has to be a crime drama
Keep 'em gues ~ in g.
Enigmas and eerie threats that jumps from mayhem to
pervade many of the 11 new verdict in one hour.
TV series.. with str~nge creaWhich doesn't mean the
tures ahove ground and time-honored genre has been
underwater and se·crets and · oveflooked. with ."Bones"
unsolved death s amon~ and "Killer Instinct," both ·
friends. Even an innocent~ Fox. and CBS ' "Criminal .
looking sitcom turnS out to Minds" and "Close to Home"
hold a romantic puzzle.
among those joining primeThat doesn't count reality time 's law enforcement teani.
TV 's biggest mystery: How
A total of 19 dramas are
Martha Stewart wil l hreak the bowing. Reality has been
news to contestants hounccd pushed to the back burner,
from her "The Apprenti&lt;.:e'" with just two new entries
spinoff - a doily embrpi- (Stewart's
and
"Three
dered with "Unemployed." . Wishes," a dream-fulfillment
maybe? --,. and the reception series with singer Amy
the ex-jailbird will get as a Grant, both on NBC) schedreborn TV star.
uled.
It doesn't take a master
Most network shows are
mixologist to figure out why kicking off ihe week of Sept.
the 2005-06 broadcast season 19. Fox, maneuvering around
has cryptic ingredients. Last its major league baseball
year 's hit s. ·'Lost" and broadcasts in October, began
"Des perate
Housewives'' earlier with the premiere of
provided evidence that view- it s much-buzzed-about jail
ers enjoy their shows with a house drama "Prison Break."
twist, no.t straight up. and a
Comedie s could ·provide a
, side of mortal danger.
respite from the doom and
The spooky. otherworldly gloom if networks manage to
elements of "Lost," about hit the audience's funnybone.
plane crash survivors oh an CBS' "Two a Half Men" is
island bustling with karsome the only successful sitcom to .
oddities. were a clear influ- debut in the past five seasons
ence on networks always but 10 new comedies will try
eager to :capitalize. or over- to beat the odds.
dose, on new finds.
UPN's "Everybody Hates
Although "CS I" and other Chris.'' produced and narratcrime dramas remained rat- ed by comedian Chris Rock,
ings heavyweights last sea- has generated the loudc:st
son, hints of viewer fati gue chatter. CBS ' "How I Met
with procedurals have begun Your Mother," the sitcom
to emerge from online chatter with a plot twist in the first
and elsewhere. said Stacey episode, also picked _up
. Lynn Koerner of the favorable early attention ,
Initiative media agency.
along with NBC's quirky
"What you're seeing i·s the "My Name is Earl."
, drama genre, which has, been
One potential comfort facdominant, needing to di versi- tor in the coming season:
fy. Unfortunately. they've all actors who have already
diversified into science lie· earned audience affection. A
tion." Koerner said .
number of stars of past shows
Seizing on the supernatural and a handful from the big
elements of "Lost.' ' she said. screen are making a bid for
"I think the creati ve folks in new or renewed TV success.
Hollywood just took that off
···It's so hard to break.
into the nth degree. and said. through (with viewers). ·
'Let's do something reall y Maybe you get to set an
sci-fi aQd see how that impression for a moment,"
said analyst Carroll. "If it's a
goes." '
.
Examples 0
ABC' s familiar face; that reinforces
"Invasion" · suggest s that ' what you're trying to say."
So say hello, again. to Neil
aliens are among us and
stealthily claiming Earth . In Patrick Harris ("Doogie
WB 's "SupernaturaL" two Howser. M.D." to "How I
· .'brothers fight varied evil Met Your Mother'' ), Henry
forces while searching for Winkler ("Happy Days'' to
their missing ·dad. Sea crea- "Out of Practice"), Jennifer
tures are a puzzle and possi- Love Hewitt ("Party of Five"
ble
threat
in
NBC' s to ·'Ghost Whisperer" ),
"Surface.''
while CBS' Charle s S. Dutton ·("Roc" to
'Threshold" finds an alien ''Threshold") and Mandy
spacecraft and global menace Patinkin ("Chicago Hope" to
in the Atlantic. ABC's "'Night '"Crimi.nal Minds'" ) among
Stalker." ,a remake of the others. , From the movies:
I 970s cult fave. hunts thin~ s Denni s H(/ppcr, Donald
Sutherland and (at midseathat go bump in the night. A pre vious s~ i-fi tlood was son. in "Emily's Reasons
created by the success of Why Not" on ABC ) Heather
"The X-Files ' in the 1990s. Graham .
Some network schedules
noted anal yst Bill Carroll of
KatL Televi sion. The show&lt; are far · less recognizable.
They' re juggling shows and
were mostly quick flops.
Even an '•intimate relation- time slots to maximize the
ship drama is fraught with odds of success for new
dark periL the kind that goes · shows or. maybe, punch a
way behind,giving the correct hole in compe!itors' lineups.
WB is the most acttve,
answer to . "Does this make
me
look fat?" Fox's including the shift of veteran'
"Reunion'' follo ws six high · series "Small ville" and
school friends from a small "Eve rwood" to Thursday.
tow n from 1986 through two Tu esday has goiten a
decades. with the death of makeove r at ABC, while
one' and the question of the UPN is moving "WWE
kill er identit y'' hanging over Smackdown ~ .. to Friday to
make room for "Everybody
it all,_
Then
there's
ABC's Hates Chri s'' on Thursday. a
"Comm ander in Chief. " a lucrati ve night for ad verti sfantasy adventure in the mg .
Will networks be able to
world of politics: A wonian
beco me' president of the keep viewers from switching
to cable. or turning the TV off
United States.
The di stiuctive vo ice of eniireJy1 That's the ultimate
''De,perate Ho usewives." the. mystery.
Bv LYNN ELBER

AP TELEVISION WRil ER

•

__,..

ThankYou :
Jackson Hewitt

Tax Services
for purchasing
my

·Thank You

Paul Dean
&amp;..
jean Niday
.for
my,
2005' ·
Fair Hog

2005

entered the competition:
"I am looking to fee_! the
artist's passion coming through
the work. An artist must have
the courage to express his/her
own unique vision, and to communicate ideas and experi- ences, which demonstrate skill
in handling the media. I want to
be infom1ed, stunned if you
will, by the imagery in the
work. I want to see the artists
lake charge of their communication as if there is no other way
but THIS. I am looking for the
rare, the stunning and the new
in whatever genres. When I lind
it I want others to see -it too."
Ringgold surveyed 864
entries from 459 artists. Only
79 of those entries from 63
arti"sts were selected. In addition, · Ringgold will award
$20,000 in prize money to
selected artists and the
Avampato
Discovery
Museum will also offer
$5 ,000 in purchase awards.
Winners will be announced
at the exhibition 's opening
reception and preview for
museum members, artists and
media representatives. The
..: ........................ "' ,..
~

. . . . . . . . ....."
~

•
THANK YOU
•
•
• KAY B. MICHAEl

•
•. FOR PURCHASING
•
MY2005.
FAIR STEER

.

reception is Friday, Sept. 9,
from 6 to 8 p.m.
2005
Appalachian
Corridors is sponsored by
Peyton Law Finn. Peyton Law
Firm has contributed gener"
·ously to numerous museum
programs and exhibitions and
has been a leader in supporting
the arts throughout the region.
Additional linancial support is
provided by Fund for the Arts
and the West Virginia Division
of Culture and History, and the
National Endowment for the
Arts, with approval from the
West Virginia Commission on
the Arts.
,
The Avampatn Discovery
Museum is open Wednesday
through Saturday from I 0
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday
from noon to 5 p.m. General
admission starts at $6.50 for
adults, $5 . children and
seniors and fre e for museum
members. For more information , call the museum at (304)
561-3575 or visit the museum's Web site at www.avam. patod i scove rymu seu m.org
&lt;http :I lw w w. a v am pa todi scoverymuseum.org/&gt;.

~

•
•
. ••

for Purchasing
My
2005
Fair Hog

•

••
•
•
••

•

Ashley

DREW
STEGER

Oagg

!•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~ """ • • • • • • • • • .. •

•'
AI

Dl

INSIDE

Sunday, September 4, 2005

ottha
Hom_e,features an arbor for din1H. 1

Ask the
Carey

(AP) Treat your .
guests to an intimate dinner in the romantic arbor
of this home, plan DRU2160 by the Homestore
Bv MORRIS AND
Plans and Publications
JAMES CAREY .
Designers' Network. The
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATU RE'S
floor plan covers .1,191
square feet ofliving space.
Q: I ha ve a northern expoThe enchanting arbor is
sure to the front of my house. It
easily accessed ~hrough
does not get direc t sun .... I
·
·
have black streaks and a slight
sliding glass doors in the
green color (moss'') . I recall
roomy eat-in kitchen, so
vou talkin -g about runni rin
a
your· stove-to-table dis"
0
strip
of
copper
under
the
top
tance is a short walk. The ·
ridge and the rain causes a
nearby dining room
chemi caJ ·rea.:tion to help with
merges with the living
thi s problem . Could you pkase
room for an easy segue to
explain this again. how much
copper to ex pose. how is it to
after-dinner conversabe secured. and should I do
tion. A bay window adds a
something to the roof beforecozy touch to this room,
hand (pO\ver wash with bleach)
which is crowned by a
or w.ill this take care of the
cathedral ceiling.
problem 0 - Bw1 Murray
Two bedrooms make up
A: A ziric or COflper strip
the sleeping wing in the
that it attached to th e roof just
below the hip or ri dge can be
rear of the home. The
found in the roofin e secti6n of
larger of the two rooms
most hardware sto;es or home
has corner windows and a
centers . The product can also
wide closet. Both rooms
be found at most roofing supshare a full hall bath,
ply companie s.
where a pair of sinks offer
Q: I live in a 35-year-old
a time-saving solution to
house that has forced-air furnace pipes covered with·
rushed mornings. There's
asbestos
. There are no breaks
also a raised tub and a
' AP Photos
in
the
asbestos.
but I wonder
separate, oversized show- In this photo provided ·by Homestore Plans and Publications Designers Network, a cantilevered bay, topped by a arched winif I can cover them (wearing a
duw, dresses up this home for a truly charming look.
er.
mask) with duct tape? Beatrice
A: No! Whatever you do,
don ' t apply unnece ssary
_press ure to your asbesto scovered du cts by attempting
BEDRM
Bedrooms:
2
to tape seal them. If you can
BEDRM
9'-0'' X12'-0"
pinch pieces of the material
11'·0" X!4'·~·
Baths: I
"
loose with your fin gers , your
Main iloor: I, 191 ,,q. ft.
asbestos is "friable" and has
Total living area:
signiticant potential. for dan1.191 sq. ft.
ger. Wearing a mask won' t
Standard basement:
help - the particles are too
1,191
sq.
fl.
small
. Asbestos abatement
In this photo provided by
people
seal off the entire area
'
Exterior
wall
framing:
••
:t Homestore Plans and ·
where work will occur. wear
2x6
, Publications Designers
ARBOR
self-contained
respirat ing
DINING RM
KITCHEN
~ Network, a bay window
Foundation options:
8'-(J' )( 1.3'-0'
11~o·
x
10·-o·
apparatu
s.
and
filter-vacuum
12'-8" X13'·8"
adds a cozy touch to the
Standard basement
the area prior to considering
10'-0" ~ral
living room, which is
the job complete
crowned by a cathedral
A downloadable study plan of this house,
Actually. if your pipe insuceiling.
lation
is not friable. chances
including general infonnation on building
are you ma y not have a probcosts and financing, is available at
LIVING RM
lem at all. We are advised that
http://www.houseoftheweek.com. To receive a
17'· 0" X12'·0'
nonfriable asbestos is best
12'·:3" ~rat cle
study plan by mail, send $10 plus local sales'tax
!eli undisturbed .
To he s r~re rhm you are safe.
to House of the Week, P.O. Box 75488, St. Paul,
hare
a11 air rnr · l'"'frmned.
MN 55]75-0488, orcall .(866) 772-1013. Be sure
For more ill/{n"lllarioll 011 all
to reference the plan number. To view huna.1pecrs of your prohlmr condreds of home designs, visit our Web site at
r.acr rl1e Consumer Pmducrs
Saferr Cmnm i.-Iioll ar (800)
http://wwwJJouseoftheweek.com.
J-------~31'-6"--,------.1

Brothers

DRU-2160 DETAILS

Located in the O'Bieness Medical Park, the Castrop Center represents the O'Bieness Health System's
commitment to progressive caring for our community. The largest single project of a four-phase
expansion plan, t,he Castrop Center provides convenient access to a variety of medical· services.

First Floor

Third Floor

• Athens Surgery Center

• Athens Pathology
Scott A. Jenkinson, D.b .
Nili Urieli, D.O . '

'• Eye Physicians and Surgeons of Athens, Inc.
Craig H. Dodrill, M.D.
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, M.D.
• O'Bieness Laboratory Satellite
• O'Bieness Patient Registration Satellite
• O'Bieness Radiology and Imaging Services
B.o ne Density
CT Scan
· Mammography
MRI
~

0'8/eness Rehabi!itation Center
Physical Therapy
Speech Therapy

• Lung Diseases, Sleep Medicine
Christopher S. Ryckman, fVI .D., F.C.C.P.
• Family Medicine
Linda B. Tome ; D.O.
• General Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt, M.D., FAC.S .
• Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine
Andrew R. Murry, M.D .
• Internal Medicine
Paul E. Cadamagnani, D.O.

• American Cancer ·s ociety Patient Navigator
Coleen Y. Dietsch-Krubl

• MidOhio. Cardiology and Vascular Consultants
lucy La Perna , D.O ., R.V.T.
David R. Richards, D.O ., F A.C.C. , F.A S. E.
Mitchell J. Silver. D 0 .. F A.C. C.
John F Tugaoen, MD , F. A. C. (.

• Internal Medicine, Gastroenterology .
Steveri G. Carin Jr.. D.O.

• Neurology
Gary E. Cording ley, M.D., Ph. D , F.AAN .

• Mountain View Bone and Joint Clinic
Steven M. Miller. M.D .

• O'Bieness Dermatology Clinic
John P. Hibler, D.O. ·
Ty 0 . Hanson, D.O., Resident
J. Michael Ho lsinger, D.O . Reside nt

Second Floor

• River Rose Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Jane E.. Broecker, M.D.
Michael J. Clark, D.O.
J;lck M. Ramey, D.O.

• Otorhinolaryngology (Ear. Nose, and Throat)
Michael W. Tome, D.O.
• Podiatry
, EarlL. Driggs, D.P.M. .

'·

Coming in September!·
• Athens Cancer Center- Radiation Oncology
Aaron 0 . Williams. M.D.

• Oncology Hematology .Cons_u ltants
. of Southeastern Ohio
Utpal Bhanja, M.D. and Husain Rasheed. M.D.

.

CASTROP CENTER
O'Bienrss Medl(.ll P.1rk

75 Hosp1tal Dr

Athens, OH

638-2772.

Remodel overspending: 'While you're at it .... '
that specifies a change or contractors who suggest the
group of changes that the . three Ps of remodeling: planFOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
'· owner and the contractor ning, planning, and planning.
- - - - - - - - - - mutually agree upon.
Many people mistakenly
A change here or there is believe thar planning begins
he end of yet another
summer is in sight. It's certainly to be expected with with a floor plan and ends
a time when vacations most any remodel. no matter when the ink is dry on the
well
planned. contract. Actually, it is ·the
become mere memories, kids how
head back to school and Unfortunately, one while- period (rom the creation of
home once again becomes you 're-at-it too many can .the floor plan to the final
the object of much attention. trigger big delays and major preparation of the contract
In· fact, after spring, fall is overspending. You may end that is the most crucial time
the second most popular sea- up scrambling for cash to pay in the planning process. lt,is.
son 10 remodel, as folks scur- for the job and wondering if • during this time that any
ry to complete a much-need- your home· will ever be · back questions, generalizations or
ed kitchen or bath remodel in to normal. Worse yet, you confusion must be honed and
time for holiday entertaining. may spend too much money, resolved to ensure. a successEvery homeowner. who making your investment ful remodeling advemure.
For instance, the comract
ventures into the world of nearly impossible to recoup.
for your new kitchen remodLook at change orders home remodeling or repair
..must come to respect - and. and the "while you're at it'' el may include labor to
when possible, avoid - four phrase - as remodeling install a new ceramic tile
along
with
an
little words: "While you· re at credit cards. In fact, you can floor
best
understand
the
potential
allowance
for,
tile
.
Budget
it."
'
Uttering these potentially danger for any project-in- allowances are frequemly
explosive words can wreak progress if you simply used for items that have yet
havoc, bust budgets. and turn exchange the word change to be chosen .such as applionce straightforward remod- (in change order) to cparge ances, tile, plumbing fixlures,
and
flooring.
eling projects into monstrous order.
Change • orders cause .Remember that an allowance
catastrophes.
The context in -which these delays, overspending, com- should never be arbitrary and
words are spoken is wh~l munication difficulties, arid a sho.uld always be accompamakes them dangerous. host of other problems that nied by a sample of what can
Typically, homeowners say can make an already difficult be purchased within the
these words to their contrac- experience virtually unbear- value being allowed.
Unprofessional contractors
tor when requesting more able.
Life would be a whole lot often include unrealistically
work - "While you' re at it.
why don 't you add a sky- . simpler , for all parties . if low allowances. Their philight '" In the construction change orders didn't enter losophy is that' their pricing
industry, thi s request is the scheme of things; most is then lower, which gives
known as a change order - · reputable contractors that we them an edge in getting the
two more words you must know would be very happy if job. Sadly, after they have
come to respect - a written they never had to do a the job, they typically bury
addendum to · the contract change order. They are the the consumer with change
JAMES AND
MORRIS CAREY
BY

T

orders for upgrades.
Allowance items can count
for a good chunk of a project.
so make absolutely sure that
you are satisfied with the
appearance and quality of the
prOducts being used to establish the allowance. If you
don't, you have broken one
of the fundamental rules of
good planning and are headed down a dangerous path.
The comractor who suggests making decisions after
the job has begun is committing one of remodelin g's
greatest crimes . Often . in
order to generate qui ck cash.
he suggests tHat the job be
started ri ght away. When
queried about tinish selections. he invariabl y-responds
by suggesting that they can
be "made along the way.''
Avoid this contractor like the
plague.
Whenever possible, make
all selections before your
remodeling project begins.
This way. the contractor has
a head start on ordering
material and
supplies ,
which contribute s to an
orderly. on time. and inbudget project. Finding out
- before your job begins
· - that the kitchen tile you
want takes eight weeks to
get is far easier than scrambling around looking for an
·alternative or, worse yet.
stoppin g the project for
eight weeks.
Having the informati"on in

.......

While remodeling your hOme or buSiness try and stlc:k to yotJr
OrignaJ plans as often as you can Ullering the words "l!&lt;hile ·re
at h.. ." and beginning to make modificabons and add-ons. usually

vou

means a change order to builders and the resuns can cost .,.00 ·
vast JMnounts more.

Make sure to-oo -.ct 8llelyone inlooiYed in the change: w•Lb.
plumbet. electrician. Mehilect etc. Make sun1 ~ VOU'nllllllJinll
more - everyoae knowa the plan.

advance gives you ample time
to make choices without being
under tremendous pressure.
And. if necessary. you.can wait
to begin the project until all of
the tinishe~ thai

)'ll U

kitchen. 'o ,·ou may as well
ha\·e what ·\"ou want .
Far more home imprm·emeW · tips wul ;,{formatiorr,
1·isir our 1\ i•h sire at

want are '-- lrttp :llh·h·\r.ourltelwust' .com
or cal/u., or (800) 737-2474

available for prompt irbtallation. After alL you don't often
remodel a hathroom or vour

&lt;T&lt;'JT Smurdar. 9 a.m. w I
'"'"· EDT

I

�.

'

&amp;unba, ltmtt·ltttttlttl

-DOWN ON THE- FARM

EXTENSION (ORNER
It's time clean up those weed patches
BY

especial ly nitrogen. The
cover crop's root system and
Are your vegetable gardens above-ground foliage pro~
and fields finished harvested vides organic matter for our
for the year? Now is the time soil's microbe population .
to clean up perennial weed .Plant rye, perennial ryegrass.
patches and plant ~over common ryegrass or combinops.
nation of vetch with rye or
Dock, dandelions, Johnson sweet clover with ryegrass.
grass, Bermuda grass. and · Winter barley may be planted .
quack grass are just some uf a little later 'in midthe perennial weeds that September and winter 'wheat
applied glyphusate (Round- during the first week of
Up) herbicide proJuct.s may Octuber after the Hessian tly·
control if applied qLt ick ly to free date. If you can leave the
actively grow ing weeds. cover crop for more th an one
Glysop hate tran\locates from season, try growing alfa lfa or
the leaves whe re it is applied· a combi nation of perennial
throughout the plan!. thus ryegrass with clover.
Many commerc ial growers
killing the enti re plant from
the root system to the leaf 's are able to disk or pl ow their
growing lip.
fields in late wi nter or early
After seve ral J ay\. · you spring in the well-drained
. may disk or pluw th e weeds soils located. along the Ohio
· under and plant a cover crop Ri ver. Hcavtcr day soils
found in the upl and regio ns
in your garden or fi eld .
Cover cri)ps are import ant of Meigs County will find
· to prevent so iI erosion and to that ~over ~ropped ground
recapture potenti al leachable may delay planting of early
nutrients found in our soil s. · cool season crops in the
HAL KNEEN

ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA• COUNTY

Tips on.ensuring
cattle have feed

The days leading up to the
GALLIPOLIS - The
end of Augmt brought wel drou ght might be broken.
come re lief to our par~hed
but li vestock feed is still
pastures. tha nks to remnants
short .
of Hu rrit:ane K&lt;l trin&lt;l. The
Most livestock producers
rains gave us our fi rst thorin our area are short on
ough soaking of the su tnmer.
winte r hay supplies. A few
An estimated .l inches to 4
mana ge mcnl tips to see
inches of ra in tell acroS&lt; the
callle through next ~ int e r:
area last week, according to
• There is still time 10
the
Natio nal
Weather
supplement depleted pasService. Rainfall associated
tures by planting winter
with the hurricane ave ntged
rye. A recent check with
Southern States at Point
3.18 inches across Gallia
Pleasant (jUOtes an SOCount y. and was "the most
pound
bag at $ 10. Sew at a
. organtzed rain pattern" that
depth of I inch at a rate of
moved across the Ohio
~Oto IOOibs perac re.
Valley so far this . su mmer.
• Deworm cattle after the
said Sam M~Neil. meteorolofirst
frost· to improve rumigist at the weather service's
nation .
Wilmirgton office.
• Rath~ r than buying
Some storms this .summer
expensive hay to teed to
deposi ted more rain in spots.
the cow herd . co nsider
with some reports as high as
limit-feeding corn and a
six inches. but were far more
commercial suppl ement
limi ted in their coverage .
with limited amounts of
Average rainfall for Gallia
hay.
Cou'nty is diffi cult to deter• Corn grain is the least
mine. si nce there is no "offi .
ex pensive harvested feed
cial" custodian. The repo11s I
per unit of di gestible energet are fro m area farmers.
gy avai lable to cattle producers in Ohio. Hay has
From those re ports I take an
onl y about half the energy
averctge. ( I don ' t keep a ra in
V·alue (caloriesi as corn
gauge myself. Every time I
gram .
· .
buy one. it quits raining.)
•
Take
3-4
days adjust in~
K&lt;Hrina was expected to ·
up
the
corn
and
decreasing
push August's rainfall total
above the monthl y itvcrage of hay to the 3-4 pound I~ vel.
3.59 inches in Gallia Count y
area. making it the first inche s below normal 111
month si nce March with southeas t Ohio. With the
leaves · on • niany soybean
aQove-a' verag~ prel:ipitation.
Prec ipitation from April . I plants already yellowing as
through Sunday was 5.54 they mature. the rains came

· too late to add much value to
Ohio's top crop, sa id Jim
Ohio
State
Beuerlein,
University professor and
agronomist who-· researches
soybeans and small' grains.
Had it fa llen earlier,
Katrina 's soaker probably
would have benefited up to
75 percent of Ohio's soy bean
crop, increasing yields 5 percent to I 0 percent, Beuerlein
said. Instead, Beuerlein estimated le" than 5 percent of
the c rop statewide would
margi nally benefit from the
moisture.
Beuerl e(n' still ex pects the
state's soy bean crop to be at
or slightly above average.
Soybeans produced $984.
million in cash receipts in
2003 in Ohio. Gallia
· County's
share
was
$413.000.
The hurricane had barges
carrying agricultural commodities from Ohio and other
states at a standstill on the
Mi ssissippi Rive r last week.
Ohio
AgriBusiness
Association. Pre sident and
CEO Gary King estimated 25
percent to 30 percent of
· Ohio 's 'farm prpduct tra ve ls
by way of the Mississippi .
"Frankly, it's hard to tell
what will happen," King said.
"The river. when it 's high,
can cieate a probl em, and
damage to receiving and
exporting terminal s would
create a problem as well."
Grain prices are likely to ri se
and may affect loJCal prices.
Barges were unable to unload
at Cincinnati. thereby reducing suppl y.

Mad.:cow disease had intriguing origins: Lancet
BY

ROBERT

W.

PAWELEK

OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

A paper published last
week in a Briti sh medical
journal. The Lan~et. was ·
cited as claiming that the epidemic of '·mad-cow disea'e
that struck Europe origin ated
in exports of ani mal feed and
bones from South ;\sia that
included human remain s
scavenged from the Ganges.
The story adds that the controversial hypothesis. pub-

lished in one of the world's remains from partly-burned
most prestigious m e di ~:a l corpses thai fl oated down the
journals, is made by' a pair of Ganges after Hindu funerals .
Bri ti sh experts in health and and whic h may have carried
vete rinary science.
Cre ut zfeldt-Jakob disease
They say they have strong (CJD). the cousin of 6ovine
but ·circ um stantial ev idence spongiform encephalopathy
that the cri sis was in it iated (BSE). as mad-cow disease is
hy bones and animal part s called. The paper is authored
exported· to Britain from the by Alan Colchester. a profeswb-cmiti nent from
the sor of medi cine and health
1950s to the 1970s, eit her as sciences at the Uni versity of.
animal feed or as raw mater- Kent, and Nancy Colchester,
ial for processing into feed of the College of Medicine
and Veterinary Medicine at
and fertilize r.
Th~ se ·exports included
the University of Edinburgh.

The Sunday Times-Sen,tinel
Subscribe today • 446-2342

rr

Back To The Farm:

21 Coolulu1tocale
22 Bmadcut pot1lcn
23 Fine~ .

24-rod
25 Bar loaaiY
211 Faeadi .
27 Raloh
28 Dul surtace
29 Letter aftet zeta

Upcoming specials:
Fifty preconditioned heifers, all shots, mostly black, all
open, Sept. 7.
,
,
For more information, call. Brad at (740) 584-4$21 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Vi sit the Web·. site at
www.uproducers.com

THE WORK OPPORTUNITY CENTER
Located at 848 Third Avenue

OPEN HOUSE
SEPTEMBER 7, 2005
1:00 P.M. TO 3 :00 P.M.
The center is responsible for providing services to
.employers, and job seekers that was. previously provided by the Ohio Department of Employment
Services, located at Rio Grande, Ohio. The purpose
of the Open House is to provide' information on
services and to introduce center staff responsible for
providing the services. All area employers are
encouraged to attend. For more information please
call 740-44.6-3222.

:~ r~'"'"
49 Bteakfast faro

52 African antelope

54 Not very oftan at all
56 A Great Lake
60 Sllol1ly
61 Oisa&gt;urage
62 CamatiOn colo!
63WRicU:k

65 Edae
66 Ricn c:ak8
67 51018, fol611ort

104 Cllltam

105 Exlmlnl che&lt;riclly
107 l'a'lllon
' 108 Sllndlrde

140 Wosh lgt'y in wator
t 42 Century plant
144 Ultimate
145 Holy one
t47 Caper
148 Broth818 and sons
149 t.ll8icalpusage.

fol611ort

150

Onilna!y language

1$1 F t52 Jet
153 Compooillon
t 54 Ptrtonnod .

68 W~sticl&lt;
68 Kind o(mask

or meter

70 NatNe of (lllfhl
71 Travtfon
72 ·Delicate fabric
73 Cly of contampt

7Aqua-

8 Smoll
9 Salve
10 Plltll of land

11 l'llhh
12 Something dlvortlng
13 Gene by
t4 ABAmam.
t5 lOOdonlze!lS
16 City In India
17 Nolghbof of Can.
18Caremor1oo
19 VIgorous fight
20=and
Chnslmas
30 That gin
31 lubricate
33 Pilot
36 Religious picture
37 Domand payment
39 Help
40 Plus
· 43 Growths of hair

44

Woathercock

46 Kind
48 Snally fish
49 Revealed

50 Cordial flavoring
51 Body .. Olbit
53 Old Instrument

54 Beget
65 CitytnNebroska
57 Stormed

~~Ford

89 Season·
90 Paved aurface
91 Klil\t or Spacey

92FUout

93 ()ld.fa)Noned
96 Cards hltd
97 Royooldeor
Bachltacrl
10 t Showy flower
102 Gteat German

.100 Ship lrtoold

107 Cravat
108 Bowling game
109 -1M line
112 Drain deanar
113 Cushion
114 Spot on a card
'116 Consequence

118
- ·
120 Clltnder
Cigar resi&lt;lle
121 Pink COlor
122 Think .
·123 Flve{prellx)
125 V8[pBilt
127 Far too heavy
129 Poet T.S. 130 Parfume
ceromoniaUy
131 Dete&amp;ted
134 CelebratiOn
136 Tiny colonists
137 -avis
138 Surt&amp;it
141 Family member.
for short
143 Cdleen
144 Old cry ot disgust

145 Spring

146 CUilled line

61 DecoratJve mat
62 Treaty

84 Ciralars
66 HociJs.pocus

76 Plf1lcUars
78 Tho greatlf pot1lcn
79 -garmanl
80 Caalro ol Cuba
81 Frigid
82 SlOW

87 Fatse lace
68 1"1"18on

72 Crazy
13 ·- Free•

75-

n

83-and84 Hot and Padno
85 Schooll001n

noc:esaity
88Too

89 Pem or Connery
90 Made atong joumev

Foals poorly
78 Pole on a shill
79 .leiS or Uots, e.g.
82 Arlthmotic word
83 Animal grOUf)
84 Zodiac si90

851nelljMlllSIVe

86 Silger Lena-

87 Woll.tlanglng
88CIIerub

..

Georgia mounts fight against cogan grass, a weed worse than kudzu
BY ELLIOTT MINOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CAMILLA, Ga. - Cogon
grass, a pushy Asian weed
that
has
overwhe lmed
forests. wildli fe and even
primitive cultures, has established a beachhead in
Georgia, where officials
have formed a task iorce to
stamp it out, or at least stop
its spread.
Producing seeds that can
blow up to 15 miles in rhe
wind, Cogon grass has the
potential to be far more of a
scourge than kudzu , anOther
Asian invader known as
"the vine that · ate the
South." Kudzu has spread to
7 million acres, forming
dense thickets that can

envelop trees. road signs, . scientists as one word
even houses.
.
"cogongrass"- has displaced
Experts warn that given African nomads · and taken
enough time. Cogon grass over clearings that Asian forcould turn the Southeast into est dwellers have used for cena biological desert a turies to grow crops.
. gra~sy savanna devoid .of all
Cogon grass slipped into
the United States through the
native species.
"It' s a much more horrific , port at r.:obile, Ala., as packinvader · than kudzu ever · ing material in 1912. A native
was.'·' said the ·u.s. Forest of southeastern Asia, it
Service 's Jim Miller, who has thrives in shade or sun, in
studied both weeds and has poo-r or rich soil.
seen Cpgon devastation firstIt has spread to every conti. hand in Malaysia and Africa. nent except Antarctica, occu"No other plant has trans- pying about 1.2 billion acres
formed cu ltures and produc- worldwide. Asia alone has
tions on more continents than lost about 500 million acres
to Cogan's hostile takeover,
Cogan grass."
Ranked among the world's and the infestation continues
I0 most dangerous weeds, to spread to another 370,000
. Cogon grass- also spelled by acres eaclr year, experts said.

..

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD . NOW ONLINE
.
To Place
UCribune
~egister
Sentinel
Your Ad, (7 40} 446-23'42 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
.

Oeatl~irw

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 :00 p . m.

All Dl•play : 12 Noon 2

Monday-Prlday tor Insertion

Bu•ln~ss

In Next Day•• Paper
~~~::Y•.,!I,~n-Column : 1 : 00 p.m .

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1.:00

·. F

S'md•lts Paper

Successrul Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Deac;rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrua When Needed
• Adti
Run 7 Di!iys

rI

GIVFAWAV

Ir

While

shorthaired female
cat. 2 yrs. old, spaye d. shots,
SWM Middle aged Non inside only, only cat in
Smoker, Drug. Alcohol Free. household. (740)446-2700
Seeking SWF 40-50 honest
caring Petite w/ sa me
J...u..l' AND
. ,
Mor als
Smoker Ok, no .
FOUNil
Head Games. Send Photo, ..__ _ _ _ _ _...
Phone-Numbe r to OJ Rt2
Box 940 Point Pl easant. WV Found all black Sia me se cat
with cream &amp; brown kitten
25550
iir~-----...., wllh perfect mar~int;~s .
GIVEAWA\'
Spring Valley. (740)446·

r

' - - - - - - - " " ' 448 8
·
2 Female Kittens to good
Homfl only (304 )882-2523
leave message

YAltD SALE·
GAUJPOI.JS

1st time yard sale, Sept.
2nd-Sept
5th.
. 3213
Centerpoint Rd .(740)3799530. Lots of toddler girls,
mens, womens clothes. kids
toys, beds , misc. items.
Everything cheap

Sep t. 2,3,&amp;5. · 4 Fam ily ya rd
sale. 1 mile all At. 7 on 124
1st house on Ba tley Run
Road.
•·

::-----c---:-September 9 and 10 at
35961 Rocksp rin gs Rd . ,
Pomeroy. TV, Bath Tub,
Sink, Household Items, and
More!
------~-

Yard Sale neKt to Me1gs and
-H u
_g_e_ 3
_ fa_m_il_
y - y-ard
_s_ale. Gallia .•. road(Route
7) .
Clothes(many) !rom .25 to
$ 1.00. Many other things.
Wednesd ay to Satu rday
_IS_e:_
pt_.7_·1_0_1.____

Classrc grey tabby female.
Spayed . shots . inside only, 2
yrs .
old,
shonhai red.
(740)446·2700.

Huge yard sale ! ir s! and last
o f Se&lt;\SOn . _9-2 thru 9:8.
10544 Stale Route 141 .
last moving sale: lns1de19635 State At. 554, 9/39/4 , Sat. &amp; Sun. 9-6. Antique
·
· h'me,
d resser, sewmg
m ac
·
k
bed , was her &amp;
p 1ano. tds
d rye r, ta bl es, " go 11 c1ub s.
toys, boo ks, Christmas tree
&amp; dec ., mjsc

Free Kittens. Call: 740-9492188
Giveaway to good home
female Cal ico cal, 1yr. old.
spa~·ed .
Call
Linda
(740)441-9347.
-------Found: Older Yorkie at the
pound, wearing .collar. To
identify call (740)441-0490.

Siberi an Husky puppies. Will
be rea dy 9/8/05 Free lo
good home (740)388-9125

Multi family yard sale. Sept .
7th&amp;8th. Toddler girts, teen
boys, womens clothes, toys,
housewares. old trunk. too
much to list. 11158 At . 141

L,------_.1
t:m~"':":...,;"'!':'

17b

__..,

YARn SALE·
Pr. PU:.ASAVI'

r

Stull

\\'~\NTJo.lJ

il:(G~aroge~l"':":_"'!':'___, ·--·m-BiiUIIi'-_.r
074

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale .. :......... ...................... _........... 725
Anno.uncemenL ........................................... 030
Antiques ...... ................................................. 530
Apartments for Rent ........................., .. _...... 440
Auction and Flea Market... o..,......................080
Auto Part s &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos for Sale .........., ................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Bulldin~ Supplies .......................: ................ sso
Busmess and Buildings .......................... ;... 340
Business Opportunlty.................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .........:................. 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190

no

ElectrlcaURefrigeratlon ...... ......... .......... , ..... 840

Equ ipment for Renl. .................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms for Rq nt... ............................... ... ...... ..430
Farms for Sata .............. ~...................... ......... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sate ........................................................ 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetablee .....................................580
FUrnished Rooms .........................................450
General Haullng ....................................:......850
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 11 0
Home tmprovements ...................................8t 0
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 3t0
Household Gooda .......... ::........................... 5t0
Houses for Rent ..................... .. ..... .......... ... . 410
In Meffioriam ....... : •..•••-. ................................. 020
Insurance ... ...............,....................... ··-····-···130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 860
livestock ......................................................630
Lost and Found ........................... ................ 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ......................... .;.................. 350
Miscellanaous..............................., .............. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse .......................540
Mobile Home Repair ..:.................................860
Mobile Homos lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate ................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wh8fllers ..........................740
Muslcallnstruments ................................... 570
Pets· for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ....................................820
Professional Servlces ..........................c......230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wented ..................................... 360
Schools ln&amp;tructlon ................................. -... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .;............................ 850
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent:............................................460
Sporting Goode ......,..,.................................. 520
SUV's for Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ....................o............................... 87D
Vans For Sale .......................... _........ -...........730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 160
wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Gatllpolls....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomoroy/Middle .........................074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant.................... :........... 076

Thur8day for Sundaya'Pooperd

yARD SALF.·

'""tEROu'""mht.E

Absolute Top Dolla,(j: U.S.
J""Vl\o
•llnll.IIJ
St.lver and Gold Coi ns.
Proofsets . Gold Rings , Pre4 Family sale . Sept. 8 &amp; 9. 5 1935
U.S.
Currency,
mi les out 325 Danville. Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Furniture, TV, Baby items, &amp; Coin Shop. 151 Socond
Clothing all sizes.
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740·4 46284.2 .
CQrport Sale!
T hursday,
September a.
Lee resi- Real- Estate Wanted-Local
d ence Tyree Blvd .. Racine . pe rson looking for a home to
Nice Winter Clothing &amp; Lots buy. All cash . . Meigs or
Gallia No double-wide or
of Miscellaneous.
modular. 740--416-3130
Huge 5 Family .Garage Sale.
I \11 ' 1 0\ \II \ I
Sept . 6 &amp; 7 . 8:00·4 :00.
"'I H\ H I "'
Evans, 52 54 4 Bald Knob
Stiversville Road. Portland . l':'ll:-"_ _ _ _ _.,

'-------.,.1
110

Huge yard sale to benefit
Hill side Baptist Bu s Ministry.
Clothes, light pictures , muzzle loader, craf1 supplies.
computers windo ws 98 6
pentim Ill. stackable ' chairs
f rom school, and Poodle
Puppies. Bake Sale Thur. &amp;
Fri. wilh free coffee. lots
more •nside and out. 1DO's
ot items located off ol 33
four lane on Co Ad . 19

POLICIES: Oh io Valley Publlehlng re1ervea the right to edi t, reject, or ·cancelany ad alany hme . Errors must be reported on tile first da~ of publication and the
Trlbune-S.ntinei•Rtgteter will be rupone lble tor 110 more than the coel of the epace occupied by the error and on ly the lira\ insert1oO. We shall not be liable for
any losa or expenae that '"ulta from the publication Of' omlseion ol an advert ieement. Conaction will be made in the fi11t availabl., edition. • Bo~ number ada
are ahuya confidential. • Current rate card appliaa. • All real a1tate advertietmente are subject to the Faderlll F'air Houeing Act ol 1968 • Th1s newspaper
accepte only help wantMt ada
I ~OE etandarda. We will not knowingly lilccept any advet"tial ng In violation of the law.

110
Hf:t.l' WA, ·n :u
Are you looking for a change
in you r nursing? Full-time or
Part-time AN needed ' for
growing
home
health
agency Flexible scheduling.
competitive wages w1th be neltts. Ca ll toll lree 1·866368-1100

LE~RN

TO
DRIVE
'NO EKPERIENCE NECESS ARY
'FULL-TIME CLASSES
• COL TRAINING

Ath ens Medical Lab Is tooking for an individual whose
primary job will be working
rejected claims, ICD·9 and
Medical Terminology a plus
Par t-lime position to start
but cou ld WenttJal ly_be full time.

' FINANCI"' G AVo\ILA9 LE
'JOe PLACEME.Nr

' ENROLliNG NOW

ALLIANCE
TR.ACl"OR-TAA ILEA
TRAINING CENTERS

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Sp~:~ars, 304675· 1429
'

WYTHEVILLE, VA

1-800-334-1203
www. all~ancl racto traller ~om

1
'--====="'--'

1

HF1P WAJVTED

Cook Ne~ded

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cratts,
wood ite ms.
To $ SO/ wk

4

Materials provided.
Free information pkg. 24Hr.
Garage Sale. 904 Fourth
801 -42 8-4649
Street. New H aven. Turn ------~AMERICA"S NUMBER ONE
right al lhe Tennis .Court.
o.
2 &amp; 3. A nt ·~que sacra- HOME BUILDER IS seeking
· ~pt.
a career min deel, organized
tary &amp; Library table , !urni1
1
b
h
and
energeti c person to s~ll
lure. too s, too
ox, orne
.
h•gh-tickel products and
Interior items &amp; etc .
serv1ces . Perseverance and
Yard Sale 25 14 MI. Vernon strong work ethic are o ur
Ave. Saturday Sept-3rd &amp; keys to making $75K or
Mon Sept·51h 8-5 Lots ol

Appalachian Tire is look1ng
tor a ' General Serv1ce
Person. Stop by our location @ 426 Viand St. Pt
Pleas. for a Applic"at ion

An E;~~;cellent way to earn Drivers·
Regional
Opport unities
Available'
money. The New Avon.
Call Mafilyn 304-882·2645
Weekly home time &amp; bene lits. Sta·rt your future now!
Gallipolis Career Co llege is Werner Enterprises, (BOOpresently
seeking
an 346 ·2818) e,xl. 447

.,------c::----

-========

~

V

• Deliver to reta il stores m
OH. PA. Upslat~ NY
•H ome every other weeke nd
. •RE!quires CDL·A
COL grads welcome
·Open Sul'lday 800-8 30-38 34
www.xpressdrivers.com

Help Wanted

H u~pi t a l

is cu rrentl y

accepting res umes fm a Medical ~~~cord
Transcriptioni ~ l. Kcg istcrcd Health
Informati on Tcdmic ian prL'i"L'JTl'lL O tll' 10
three ye ars or mcd ic . ll tra nscription
ex.pcricJ H..:t:. Minimum speed or 60 word ...
per minu te.

Exce llent sa lary. holtdays. hea lth
insurance si ngle/fam il y plan. dcnl ;.:t l plan.
life ins uran ce. \"aca ti on. long -t.:·rm

.di&gt;ahility and retirement.
Se nd res um es to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital.
clo Human Rt:sources.
2520 Valley Drive ,
Point Pleasant, WV 255511
(3114 i 675·4340
www.pva lley.org

AA/EOE

Ori'llers

,

EPES TRANSPORT
We value our employees
Home Every Weekend
********'"'"'***
Company Drivers
Solosf!cams we have
Another Pay Increase
beginning 9/1 for you. call for more info.
1 Yr. Exp. &amp; Good MVR required
**********
Owner Operators
*Pay Increase
No NYC or Cahada
.88/mile UE (Beginning 9/ 11
Paid Base Plates
Paid Liability insurance
Paid Fuel Taxes
Paid Fuel Surcharges
Medical &amp; Disability Benofits
Available thru True Choice
Exc.ellcnt Pay Pkg for Dedicated
Containers
Lease Purchase
Late Modei .Equipment 33 Month Zero
Out

1-800-948-6766
epestransport.com

LICE'IJSEO SOC IAL

Drtvers Earn up to 150 K!
W8rncr Elllerprises hinng
learns dcd1cated Mid-West
accolmt Weekl y home tu11e .
no t0uch "tre•ght' B00-3 4628 Ul e ~1 447

WORKER
Over brO(") k get porl·ta t•or.
Ce nter IS nnw ;:,r:r:pr. ttnq
re swne::. I01 t11e ~OS1t1on o'
Dtrector ":~! Soc1 a1 Serv1ce&lt;.
The qualil1ej caM da ti,;!
mus t be a -I.SW 1los·sessn1o.1
fl t run ~ v8 1bal 31ld .,.... r,l! en
CO'llmun1cal•on
s ~ dts
Medtca•d . Med•care an u
MDS knowiPdQ0 tong te rn;
care c ~ pertl3nce prefeneu
but not requ•red Ouahf•etr
candtdates
may
se nd
resumes 10 Charla RrownMcGulm
AN
t. NHA .
Ad fTlmtstraior J3J Page
Street. Middleporl. Qf)i"/J
457130. EOE

DRIVERS URGENT

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FREE TRAININC: \"'D JOR PLACEMENT

Home Health Aide/
Homemaker Training
Program
'1"111 /tru Agency 11n Agl11g Is seeldng
dynamh: lndlllldwlls who lit&amp; 180/dng to
enter the bulb t:ate arena.
The AAA is curre1.1t,ly accepting·
applications for their Home Health
)l.i&lt;).e/Homel)laker Tmining Program.
The program is of no cost to th e
participants. Upon graduating·.
participant V{ill be assisted with
job placement.
For more information contact
the Area Agency on Agi ng at
740-374-9436 or 1-800-33!-2644
A1r E qual Oppo rtun ity Em~litJ .ver.

t!!

,..,

&amp;...!r.ryt Hilk . HodJne Valley
.:, .....~li~t~. l........,. i/ .J.'''' '

I&lt;·''''''''' •

1!. (m~

,.,..,. :\r,·:•

\ ~, ;' r \

1111

\ ~ m~

~

' '' " '

Help Wanted ·

1J" o

'

• J',

Help Wanted

....--- BRANCH MANAGER -...,
Help Wanted

Join the SJ H Heart Tean1!

Help Wanted

EMT pos1t1ons ava•l able " '
Hunlmgtor. .·. VJV
arfi!a
FT PT
Startmg
pav
SB 50 hr
Contact M1t.. e
Malhcny a t i30-IJS26·578U
or 1:10~1~25 ~'l1 •

FLATBED
Owner Operators
Drivers Needed:
Hfluling FOl"
COL Drivers Willing tO drtve
DE DICATED CUS TOME RS
for local ready·rnlx·concrete
In Ashland , KV Area
company. Expenence IS
.GREAT PAY
preferred but not necessary.·
100 ~'u Fuel Surcharge
Driv er must be willin g to do
No Force Dispatch
pre-ma111ter]ance on IILJC~.s
CDlA1 6 rnos . eKp
&amp; equ•pment. yard work &amp;
CALL TOOAV!
other miscellaneo us chorl,:!s.
866 -713-27"78
Expenence operating eqUip
menl &amp; DKira skills sud' .as
welding a plu s
Cal l (304]937-3410
Help Wanted
,
---~-~---

MEDICAL RECORD
TRANSCRIPTIONIST

Plcasunt Va lley

Hn .I' WA ' ' IFil

week

•Top dri ver s earn S75K
plus per year

f!elp Wanted ·

An established business in
Gallipolis IS looKing for on e
high ly moltvated salesper·
son wtlh a strong work ethic
10 101n ou r company. Ate you ·
looking .for ful l-time work?
Ar~ you looking tor a perma·
nent fu,ll-tim e pos 1tion? Are
you interested in unlimited
earnings
pote ntial?
All
replies win be kept 1n stnct
confidence . Send
you r
resUme to CLA Box 569 , clo
Gallipolis Tribune. PO Box
469, Gallipolis, OH 4563 1 ·

110
HEI.I' WA:OO'n:ll

Drivers· COL-A. Ja c~ 8 .
Kelley Inc. Co. &amp; owner operat OI
teams
needed '
Dedicated runs. lop pay. Call
• Hard work 8 great payoif
• Fleet average IS $1 .200 per Now• Steve Orady toll tree
988-647-5451

6 Hours per day, Monday F1iday. day Shift On ly, no
.evenings or weekends. Paid
benefits include vac ation ,
sick
&amp;
holiday
pay.
E)(per 1ence helpi~.JI or we wtll
train you . AP.PIY In person to
Ruth Rice or call (3 04)6.75·
2369 . Mason county Action
Group. Inc
(Pt. Pleasant Dri ..·ers
Senior Center) 10·1 2nd
5 Need e d for Regional
st reet. Pt. Pleasant WV.
Ru ns! One yr tanker or 2 yr
EOE,M/F,A/A
n exp. req. TOP PAY PLUS
-Fo_r_a-hm-il-ed-t-im_e_m_a-ke-5-0°Vo BONUSES.

(740)446·3599.

110

Ori v'er
DEDICATED ACCOUNT'
• $2,000 Sign-on Bonus

more ir) the first full year. Full selling Avon. Call (7 40)446- MARTIN TRAN SPORT
beneftls mcluding matching 3358
865-293- 7435.
401 K. Fax
confidential
resume to Sales Position at

Instructor who can teach - - - - - - - Microsoft Office classes. A
Help Wanted
mmim um ol a bachelor's
degree
is
requi red .
School unitorms, toddler to Interested candidates can
adult clothi ng, houSewares. tax or email theil resumes to
kmck·khacks.
466 Main 446-4124 or jdanlckl@ga llipoliscareercollege.com
Stre13t, A4,tland.

Help Wanted

VISA

il

Days Prior To

YARV SAl.E·
POMEROY/MtOOLE

Yard sale Satu rday Sept .
H
WV
10 h N
t · ew
aven,
a.,
Hts..
Antique
Huge sale- Sept.5th. 1.5 H.,en
Stone
Jarsmiles
down
Rl.
7, Furniture,
Chur r]s, PloWs, -Hundre ds
· Long aberger, clothes, toys.
ol Too ls and much more. 5
Too mu ch to lisll
Nice G un~.

Personals ........... ........... .... ..... ..... : ................ 005

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

~r:::;;;::;;:=~

Name brand girls- LTDZ.
t,.EI, Tommy. Home In terior,
toots , many misc . ite ms.
Saturday and Monday. 9-2,
2205 Gra h am Sch
, oo I Ad · 4
112 miles out SA 141.

Black/while
shorthaired
female
Spayed.
shots.
indoor on ly. (740)446-2700

Several ktltens . longhaired.
var 1ous co lors , 4 ma. old.
· (740)446-2700.
---'----.,..-

74
YARD SALE

•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

. • All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Word Ads ·

I;IOW IQ WRITE AN AD

c~

103L~

of lh8 50s

74 Moonin riQge

95 En111u!liast

Entice~

128 Oratoon
t 32 Unclose, poo1fcaly
t33 Distant
134 Desert In Asia
I35 Make Qry ttirsly
139 Grassland

42 Chedc
44 Head covering

94 StalliOn

=·

t26~

~:~~.

In One Week _With Us

Gallipolis, Ohio will be hosting an

108Lbllllll'
' t 10 Mlldcan rnootr
' t 11 Joined by troety
113 Ship of·1482
t14 Veamod
115 Hair goo
117 So far
t 18 Sharp tooth
119 OTrwnt
t 21 'Beverly Hll8 ,...·
t24 Party

JO -and soul
31 Kii"&gt;
32 Seize
34 Sunrnor
on the Seine
35RI&lt;IWII .
38 Potato state
40 Vast regiOn

..,

103

Gallo, fo unt) Oi l

(

Cow/Calf Pairs $360-$1 ,000; Bred Cows $3 10-$750;
Baby Ca lves $19-$275; Goats, $32-$80: Lambs, $ 100-dn.;
Bulls, $4 1.50-$43.

102 Halrtoss

16=

~

Well Muscled/Fleshed $50-$54 Medium/Lean $45-$50;
Thin/Light $ 10-$40; Bulls $54-$66.

98 Ptltod In a 11811
99 Go wrong
100 ClofN tor cltlr1tng

6 Bobbin
1t Of lhe blahop

Morlji.O C'ounly. OH

"' ll!lse Cllnl'.

Cows-Steady

1 Alta of motiOn
2 SquMlder
3 RoN ell
4 -de Janeiro
5 Swab
6 Slrongbo•

•••
'll''....

tG~:~nttu 1-U~e

275-415# St . $100-$ 150 Hf. $95-$ 134 425-525# St.
$ 100-$ 140 Hf. $90-$ 120 550-625# St. $95-$120 HL $85$ 108 650-725# St. $90-$ 108 Hf. $80-$100 750-850 St.
$90-$ 105 Hf. $72-$90.
.

DOWN

~·

No Otw. •

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Mus of lnseets

.

~

And Mason

Feeder CaHie-Higher

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

'

Meltp, Gallia,

)

GALUPOUS- United Producers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Aug. 3 I.

adjusts to the dryer indoor
humidity level by shedding
itself of leaves. Plants carried
in earlier in the season also
resprout new lea VI'S that are
better adjusted to the lower
light level's or you r home.
•••
Che~k your vacationing
Tropical plants (i.e. African
houseplants for insc&lt;:ts and violets, orch ids, poinsettias)
diseases. It is almost time to shou ld be taken in before
bring houseplants into your nig ht temperatures go below
home ti&gt;r the winter months. 60 degrees Fahrenheit. The ir
In secticida l soaps and other root systems are sensitive to
insect itides are easier and cold, wet soils. Bring in your
safer to spray when house- amaryHis bulbs and lay them
plants are outside. Remember on their sides in the pots they
to check the houseplan t\ root grew in all summer. This dry,
system and soil. Sow bugs dormancy time of six weeks
and pill bugs may easily be initiates their flower buds. At
carri ed into your home 'i n' the the end of October you can
pot 's drain age .hole. Apply repot them, water them and
carbaryl (Sevin dust ) to ~on­ new roots will initiate. Four
to six weeks later, your
trol these pests.
Trim back the excess amaryllis should be in full
grow th of fig trees, ferns and bloom.
impatiens'before bringing the
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
plants imo the home. You County Agriculture and·
Resources
will save yourself &lt;1 lot of Natural
Ohio
State
time vacuuming up dead Educator,
leaves as yo ur hou sep lant University Extension.)

.

&amp;unbll!' t::tmr~ -6mttntl • Page 03

t!Ctiburte- .S entinel - ~egt~tcr
CLASSIFIED
We Cov.-L--r

Snnday, September 4, 2005

LIVESTOCK REPORT

spring. Homeowners may
want to spade up a small section of cover cropped garden
in the late fall to break down
the green manure &lt;:rop of
.leaves and roots.

A super soaker for our region, thanks to Katrina
BY

PageD2

.

'

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

Make a new and exciting
change to the Heart Center of
St. Joseph's Hospital!
,

1111s Is an exdtlng time to join the Heart Team
at St. Joseph's Hospital! With our recent
approval for a second Cath Lab and our
growing heart program, we are looking for
enthusiastic nurses to become St. Joseph 's
Team Members.

Cath Lab RN's
10-Hour Shifts + Call
Comprehensive Training 8 Education Program
Work with the Latest Technology 8 Equipment
Cath Lab Experience Preferred
Critical Care Experience Required ·
Excellent Benefits 8 Competitive Salary

Famttnl Bank Is seelltng aBranch Manager
for the Gallipolis, Ohio mari(eL Quahf&gt;ed a;:r
plicants should possess 11\e e)(penence, education end enthusiasm io succe'ssfuliy manage the Gallipolis oflioo and promote Farmers
.·Bn ltroughout the Sl11'011ldirg market They.
may alqleC1 the fu ll backtng of bank management in their efl011s

Ideal candidates should have a successful
backgrO\l'ld tn lero:ltng and the management
of people An assooate degree tn bustnessl

ltnance or 'a relatea field ts preferred Famtl·
tanty wrtn the Gallipolis mar;.et tS an obvoos
plus Good customer relattonshtp Skills are
essential, as are COI11muntcat101l and COI11put91
Sl&lt;llls Competrtwe salary and and excellent
benefrts package are ava.lable ~mensi.Jrate
Wllh experience

PleiN aend your resume to:
HumM ReSOUttes Department

FW811 Bank
211 W 2nd Street

St. Joseph's Hospital
Attention: Human Resources
1824 Murdoch Avenue
Parkersburg. WV 26102

304-424-4377 Fax: 304-424·4648
Apply Online: w\Nw.stjosephs-llospltal.com
SJh.nurserecrulter@HCAHealthcare.com
rtunl Em Jo er M/ F/DN
E ual

POI'r\eroy. OhiO 45769

[Fs] Farmers Bank

�•

Page 04 • 6unbap lllmes -6mttnei

r~.,.iO_Jiwo

__w_Aim'
__
JJ _.~II"o

EHTRY LEVEL
MANAGEMENT

H!lJ.I'WANil':IT

I

c

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

Looking lor 1 new career'? Pas I Qn Open ng Ct nicat The

We a e seek ng nd \1 duals
fo onley jeyol management
10 add to our g ow ng team
af tFte Glllloolfa loCal on
Team up w th tnloC son ancl
become pa of a company
•W th proven growth 25%
growth e~&lt;pected n 2005
•Who s the 3 d largest com
pany n ts nclustry
•That values s emp oyees
salar ad tu no... e s &lt;2%
•That offers pe sonat growth
oppo tun t1es by promot ng
from wth n
• That olfe s com pet 1 ve
.sa a y plus monlhly bQnus
"With bene! s package
Out es Superv se mol vate
and coach team of 8 5
mon tor performan ce cal
results 10 assure qua ty
standards are me develop
and O\lersee new strateg es
to mprove prog am sue
cess Qual f ed cand dates
must have a Bachelors
dagrae excellenl w t en
and \le bal co mun cal on
sk Its coach ng and p oblem
SQI\1 ng ab t es
nfoC son s an equa oppo
tun ty employer
Send esume o
nfoC son Management
Co p
Al n Sa Mano
250 N C evela d Mass o
Ad
Akron OH 44333

Atl1ens Me gs
C s s Educational Se v ce Cenle
We have jual what you are Stab I zat on Un 1 located n s seek ng an educat anal
looking for!
Gat pots OH Must be aote aide for Me gs County
to work sh ft wrk week Schools Must meet H ghly
ends and hot days Htgn Qualified Standard for Oh o
•up to $8/hour
A de
•Both u and pa ttlme clay Schoo g aduate or GEO Educa1 anal
equ
ed
Va
d
Dr
ve
s
Ce
I
ftcat
on
Sa
a
y
based
and e\len ng sh Its ava labte
•P a d tra n ng hO days L cense w th the ab tty to be on cert frca110n and exper
covered on Agency s Feat ence
Th s pas 1on has
vacatons
nsurance plan F rsl Ad and Board approved benet ts
•'Full benet IS package
CPA requ ed
Pos 1on letler of Interest esume
•P o ess onal atmosphere
requ es direct ca e of and references must be
c en s $6 67 pe hour Send race \led by 12 00 noon
G ve us a ca I and start your esumes to Manage of September 9 Subm t to
new ca ee today
Human
Resources John
D
Costanzo
Athens
Wood and Cente s 3086 Super ntendenl
1 877 463 6247 ext 2454 State Rou e 160 Gal pol s Me gs Educat ona Serv ce
www lnfoclslon com
On o 4553
Center PO Bo)( 684 320
1 2 E Ma n Sl Pomaov
POSTAL JOBS OH 45769
Equa
tu n
1~
S1594$2256hr now h r O pp o
ng Fo appl cat on &amp; free Emp aye P cv1 de
gave n nent ob nfo ca
A ne can Assoc of l abo
24 hrs
1 91 3 599 82 26
lndepende t
med ca y
tra nea pe sonne needed to
complete nsu ance exa ns Rocksp ngs Rehab I tal on
n Mason Coun y wv an d Center s look ng fo ded cat days a week w th students
Ga 1il and Me gs Count es n ed compass onate State and adulls wth developmen
Oh 0 Must be phlebotomy Tested Nu s ng Ass stants Ia d sab t t es mplement g
ce ted and have e abe Compel t ve wages heallh a camp ehens ve heal th and
F e)( b e and dental benal ts and delegated nurs ng p ogram
1 ans po a on
hou 5 Fax es me 0 866 401K ava1able
We taKe Must be a eg ste ed nu se
3661 037 o 9 11 a esu me prdelnou acl tyand rest cu ren tly I censed n the
Prete ed
to sa cunn ngham@ex am dens and need great team State of Oh o
payes to on us I you qual I cal ons expe enco
one co m
have these qua t ca t ons pub c health nu s ng e)(pe
please
app y
to
ence work ng w th ch ldren
house clean ng ca eg \le 2 Rockspr ngs Rehab I tat on and adults w th developmen
aile poons pe week $7 hr;;;ente 36759 Rockspr ngs ta d sab II es Send esume
Le ave msg (740 )446 3460
Road
Pome oy
Oh io by Septembe 16 2005 tQ
45769 El( end ca e Health MCBMRDD 13 0 Carleton
St eet
PO Box 307
Representative

Lead Gu ta s aso pa~ s
seek ng to on a wo k
ng ba d o to sa t on e
Ge e count y coun
ock
class c ock Ca 304)675
1451
ba s~

Ove b co k Cen e s cu ent
y accept ng app cat on s lo
a u 1me M m nls t at ve
sec e a y Compute sk lis
equ ed M c osolt Word
and Excel e~&lt;De ence p e
le red
Bene Is package
ava lab e P ea se stop by
ou off ce and comD ete an
3DP car on No phone ca s
ple a ~e
333 Page St eel
M ddlepo t OH 45760 EOE

Pa amed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed App y at 1354
JacKson P ke Gal po s

DIRECT TV 3 room wnh
T yo FREE 145 chan e s
only $39 00 per month Ask
how !o gel F"AEE HBO
MAX and horr e enle tan
men! system Cal 800 5237556 for cle!alls

Wll\TED

To Do
An of Color Inter or/el(tenor

house pa nt ng Free est
mates Cal (740)388 9950
Complete yard work and
home epa 20 years exp
Re 740)446 3682
Co mpute
Aepa
and
T oub eshoo t Web Oi:ls gn
Ne wo k ng Programm ng

150

mRSALE

Es!ab shed Bus ness fo
TURN EO DOWN ON
sale by Owne Debb e s SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Flowers N More 1722 2ncl~o Fee Unless We W n
Sl 991 Mason wv across
1 888 582 3345
from City Nat anal Bank
Wl\11"11\ 11
S ncere buyers oaly Contact
1304)173 5503 before 5pm 1310
State Cert l ed l nk after 5 call (304)882 3279
approved chtldca e has pr ce Negot able
mmed ate open ng s to
112 Pleasant Stree
~
ages 6 weeks&amp; up cal
Bedroom 1 l /2 Baths
-~.~
~.
She lly 304 675 2343 for
Fam ty Room o n ng Room
more details
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Full
Basement
Storage
NG CO recommends tha
Two
2 Do 4
B dg Gaf\age New Cent a
ou do bus ness w th peo
Dependable
A r Cond New W ndows
le you know and NOT 1
D sere e
and
1304i675 4034
end money through th
Rete ances
Homes and
a 1untl you have n\lest
3 or 4
011 ces
Ma y (740 992
at8d the oller n
74 14)
bed oom s central a r fu
basement ha d "'ood floo s
MONt'
de ached ga age Ia ge cov
10 LoAN
e ed pat o t"'nce ct bac~
.,.,...-...--,...-~ • - - - - - - - - ya rd c ose to schools Po nt
Plea san
S69 SOC
(740)709 1382

...

i

Legion Bmgo

We have
Computers!

Truck Drhcr
Training
3 \\eek CDL
Tram rn
Columbus
Next Class
Sept 19th

SCilOOI s

Gall polls Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cr~l Today 740 446 4367
t8002140452

All the Pa,ks You

Can Play

For $20 00
Starburs!

$1500 00
Lucky Ball

Fmancral Aid
Job Placement
\ssrstance

Mond IV

&amp; Wedncsd 11
Door&gt; Op~ n

800-383-7364
Assocraled
lr,unmg ~en1ccs
"''\\edt trnn111g corn

1261 Powe St M&lt;ldlepor1
3br 2ba 1630•1 FO&lt; !ocal

nfo cal Jadl

wcarsey

4 30pm

Hayes Reaf Eslalc 74().
992 2403 Till• homo will

bervo11e
Welcome'

S8Pl.,.,., llar 5 JOpm
For Tenns, Photos &amp;lrltlf! Hrr

Auchon
Announcements

Auctron

sell ON-SITE on Monday

......hufbonandmarsh~l.oom

Auctron

PUBLIC AUCflON

Sat. Sept to. zoos
10:00 AM.
Lot:a! l:d t HH 11d \ H:

l\1tddlquz1 Ol 1

\\ h..h l o 1 'i l t.: 1 11 Pu pic B nk

4135
- - - - - - ---:3BR 2 Bath homo 2lg out
but d ngs on 2 acres Call
afler 6 OOpm
( 740 ) 44 ~

Basement al Br ck
Ga age
3 b
2 t a S ng e c.a
Ga age Camp Coney A tla
1304)895 3 29

Auct1on

OR I OSl PROI'I R I)
Cash/ \pproHd Che&lt;k 011h 1

No Smokmg m Bldg
Auctron

Auctron

St eel M dd epo
45760 EOE

PUBLIC AUCTION

CENHR

1

Monday f nd(IV
7 00 am fiJ 4 10 I'"'
(7411) 446 1222

Natwnal C rrt1ficahon
Fmancral &lt;\ss1stanc~
Job Placemenl Assrstance
1\.ssocmled Tru1mng Sen1ccs

Auctron

2323 Performance Pk"'
Columbus, OH 43207

Auctron

ABSOLUTE PUBLIC AUCTION 11
Saturday September 17th
10"00 A.M.
BUILDING

11 I(! fro m th~ nteF\CLIJ 111 I SR 7
orth an I US 71" ( 1 n k trom I rma Bud 1

appro x I

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makn I
ILL ITEMS \ ILST SCLI CO~I E

PRE.P\RED TO Rl
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•

AUCTION

Nice Clean e Rm J Bedm &amp; Bath Ranch
Minimum Bid $49 000111

FAIL SEASON BEGINS
Emy Saauday Night@ 6p.m.
Sqt 10,2005

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: sto age bldg clean &amp; ready to move nto home offers
* 3 bedrms &amp; tutl bath wlshower over tub central a1
gas heat k !Chen has YoOOd cab netry w'breakfast
bar adJO n ng din ng rm &amp; 1\1 ng rm Th is home has
replacement wmdows and mostly carpeted wl
hardwood floors beneath and natu al fin sh wood
~ wcf11 throughout All th s s tuated &lt;1n appro I( 46 ac
eve shaded Kit w/co w&lt;~ler sept~&lt;: tank 100 amp
: t~lec c
..- Open Houses W&amp;ds Aug 31st &amp;-6 PM &amp;
•
Weds Sept 7th from 4 8
Rea Estate Terms M nlfTlum B d a modest S49 000
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D1shes Pots &amp; Pans lrnens A1r
Cond Fans Lrttle Tyke Toys

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Babv Items BOX LOTS

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Fumtture Love Seat Table w/4

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Cha1rs Hutch Full sz BR SUite,

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819 Screen TV Fndge Washer

&amp; Dryer Furniture Sells @ 9 p m
Very Small Listing

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p~;s~~~ ~~ ~~:'os ~~ :,~:: ~la;c;o~s

no connngenc es
Ctr; 1987 Dodge SE Diplomat gray 4 d sho&lt;Mng
135568 mles cru~e tit ~eel AC V8 a to t ans
Nlct Cl!!n Houathold G09dt Hand st tched Bon
net G rt qu It Ethan A le Early Amencan 0 nlng table
w db d op eaf w ext a leaf 7 matchiitg wndso
sp nd e bacK chars &amp; 2 pc hutch end table set
Earty Amer can broM'I upholitered niCe 3 cush on
so a Vtt match ng cha TV stand NICE Earty Amen
can cannon oa s ngle ceo su te w chest of d awer$
&amp; d esser s ng e bed wfmatch ng d esse futon
sofa ...,.,c.c er clothes hampel"!! ant1que pa nted WJSh
stand Applitncas Electnc :~eH clean no oven GE
super capa ty plus washer GE extra a ge capac ty
dryer Kenmore efr genitor freeze• miCrowave
oven toaster Dlender food processor c oek pot
can opener Eureka Boss upnght s......eeper pots.
pans. s i'Jerware everyth "9 found n the da ly use 1n
hOuseholcl 20 c61or TV dehumidifier Boom box
~ Lades b cycle Hull&lt; 5 HP rota 11 er lOOks
ke new floor J8Ck bar b-que gnl hedge tnmmer
hand IOOIS INI"f!nChes TERM S Cash or checlc paid
n fu day of sa e sold as • all s.a ~ final
Pau a L Roosh Kar~n &amp; F ed Park Sellers

Terms of Sale - CASH
n adrtan~

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S141•leyl0ll@nm•nd.COM
.,.,..~.,. S~ Rr alC•E•lk'
Mltf,._.~p
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B'"Oiw&gt;

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IT'S HAMMER TIMI!l!

J

C !J~

bath manufactured home
Completely set and ready
for mo\19 In Features bv ng
room family room and
beautiful sky Ill kllchen
DRASTICALLY REDUCEDif
Ca!f (740i446 3570
--------Used 3br Cameron $2 500
must ba moved (304)675
7783

All rMI estate adv.rtlalng
In thla new.p~p.r Ia
•ublecl to the Federal
Felr Houalng Act or 1968
which make~ lt llleg~~llo
advertlae any
pr.ference limitation or
dlecrlmlnatlan baaed on
race color religion sex
h11NIIal atatua OJ n.tlonal
origin or any Intention to
ma)l;e any auch
preferwu;:e limitation or
dla.crlmlnaUon
Thle new1paper will not
knowingly accept
advet11!_ementa ror re•l
eatlf. wl'11ch Is In
violation ot the law Our
readet"a
hereby
Informed that 11!1
dwelllnga ad\lertlaed In
thla newapaper are
avalllble on an equal
opportunity b...,

•r•

Spactous 3BR 2BA 0 /A
15x22 LR heatpump 20
mn
to
Gal pols!Ro
2 65 acres 3 100 sq H
Grande no smoking no
barn ctly water electnc
ndoor
pels
$500/mo
sept c city schools 2 miles
ncludes water (740)379
south of Ga I polls on Rt
9465
218 Prme ocaton wont
last
$55 000 se ous Two bedroom house for rent
nqw es only
(740)441 at 1549 State Route 7 nor h
7333
l740i446 9177
Bruner Land
(740)4411492
Meigs Co I Danv lie Red
H1tl Rd 18 acres $49 950
co watert Landaker Ad 5
acres wth pond $20 500
co water! Aeedsv1 1e 8
acres $16 900 co water
Tuppe s Pia ns 5 acres
$16900 co water Chester
16woodedacres$159001
Gallla Co R1o Gran d 8
acres co water $20 900
v nton Dodr 11 Ad 5 acres
$11950 co water Kyger 1G
wooded acres 17 500
109 parcels ava labia n 20

s

Iocat ons SE 01'110 Ca I for
free maps to explore each
No down payment appx
s te We II gladly f nance our
2000 sq ft cia &amp; heat 3 4
bedrooms n Pomeroy 740 parcels w lh 5% markup
For Rent Tra ler Lot 75 8
949 7004
month (304i675 4874
732
For sate 1 acre mil w th
sun porch or s tt ng oom older MH B dwell/Porter
k tchen llv ng room uhl ty area $28 000 OBO Call
room garage workshOp 3 (740)388 8702
after

s

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storage bu ldmgs Askmg i5!13;0:;pm;;;;,.--~--~
$95 500 l740i446 1211 or
RFAL ESTATE
1740i208 7117
WArmD
I Buy Homea local person
buys homes Coni denllal
Qu ck cash J m 740 992
6300 No cal s after 9

""' MOBilE HDM~

IH \1 \I ..,

mHSAIE
12x65 3BA mob le home
$3 200 OBO 1740)379 2486
or (740)379 2923
5 Homes under $10 000
W II dehver (740)3B5 7671
99 Sky! ne Ooublewtde 3b
2ba 1 85 acre
Wh tten
Ridge area Formal L1v ng
Room &amp; D n ng Room Eat n
K !chen &amp; Den w/F replace
and
Atnum
W ndows
Beaut ful Home MUST SELL
$65 000 1304)550 6368

HOIJSE'l
mRRENr
1 Bedroom House Pomeroy
$27500pusdep 740416
4906
1 bedroom house
1t
Garf eld A\le Gall pols
$300 mo (740)441 0194
(740)441 1184

2BR cottage near Porter
$350 dep $350 rent refer
ence needed Water/trash
pad No pets Call (740)388
CLEAN SWEEP SALE Lot 11 ()()
model clearance All rema n
mg 2005 s must go to make 2BR 1BA 541 Roush Lane
room lor new homes under Chesh re Oh o No pets
construct on SAVE• SAVE' $450/mo $450 depos t
SAVE OAKWOOD HOMES {740)367 7412 leave mes
GALL! POL S Ca!f l74&lt;l)446 sage
3093

3 bedroom 1 bath House on
Great Used 1994 14x'l0 3 Bud Chait n S400 Depos1t
Bedroom 2 Bath Includes $425 Month No Pets
)1eat pump Cat (740)385- (304)67§.2708
2434
3bedroom 2tullbath 21v
ngrooms
d mng
large
New 3 BR Home Only
kitchen basement la rge
$189/mo Includes ale delw
fenced backyard Southern
ery and set up (740)385
Sctwo Dstnct A\la lable
4367
Oct 1st 7 40 416 1687
NICe
Used 14~&lt;64
2 1740i753 2595
Bedroom Only $4995 Cal 3 Br house tn P'omeroy gas
{740i385 0698
heat $375 a Month $400
ne ere
o 9 ome depoSit 740 698 6783
BR 2BA LA K tchen
k&amp;BudngsAr Seea 3BR 1 5BA 2story remod
eled house Excellent toea
76 Oshel Ad
!ton n town C ose to
.STATE ROIITE 554 BID- schools No pets (740)446
WELL New 4 bedroom 2 1162
bath ma nufactured home
Features I v ng room family 3br House AC $400 a
room w1th I replace and month p us Ut In es Ref No
PelS 1304i675-4874
~ BONUS room Corner ot
Above ground pool Wllh pool House for Rent Pt Pleasant
house Ready for move n $375 1304i675 5540 or
PRICED
UNDER (304)675 4024
ask for
APPRAISAL
1740i446 Nancy Homestead Realty
3218
Broker

Free Gift
from
Mane Des1gners Salon &amp; Spa
to anyone donatrng blood In
Bennie Gooldlns name
Monday, Sept 5 at the
Episcopal Church In Gallr(Jolls
from 9-1

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MOIIILEFOR,!!_o~m;
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2
Bedroom
MH
In
M ddleporl All electr c no
ns de pets $375 oo plus
depos1t 740 992 3194

.2 Bedroom mob le home n
Rae ne
$355 00 Month
$35500 depost
1 yea
lease
No pets No ca Is
after 9PM 740:992 5039
2BR Green school dstnct
no pets Aelerence &amp; dep

s::.;32::.;5~17_4.:.0):.:3.:.67...:.06:.;3.:.2__
Beautiful rver view m
Kanauga Idea for 1 2 peapie
No pets
please
Appl cat ens being taken

Thompsons Appl ance &amp;
Repa 675 7388 Fo sa e
e cond tioned automa c
washe s &amp; 1rye s ref gera
tors
gas and electr c
anges a cond I oM s and
w nger washe s W do
repa rs on maJOr b ands n
shop or at you hOme
Used Furn tu e &amp; App anc8
S!ore 130 Bula\1 e P Ke
Gal pols OH 40° o o I at
kngmattesssets Hs 113
M S 1740)446 4782

Wa sher $125 Dye $1 25
9lectr c range $125 elrlger
ator $150 ches f eeze r
~165
Wh poo
washer d yer sel S250
couch $125 ocke ec ne
S75 loveseat $50 t table &amp;
chars $125 !able ll cha s
$40 lamps $10 each
~~------- Skaggs Appliances 76 V ne
Grac1ous lv1ng 1 and 2 bed Sl (740)446 7398
room apartments at V tlage
Manor
and
R \19 s de
SPORTING
Apar1ments n M ddleport
GOOI}')
From $295 $444 Cal 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Brownmg Sweet 16 $650
Opportun I es
Rem ng on 11 48 16ga
Modern 1 bedroom apt $250 Rem ng on 870 2ga
$265 monlh f)C udes watet W ngmaster 2b Is $350 2
Ae mngton 11 00 12ga
$200 deposit No pets
F anch 48Al 12ga $450
l740i446 3617
S&amp;W 19 357 6 brl $400
S&amp;W 29 44mag 6 br $425
Rom an an AK47 75rd d urn
4 30 d cl p $400 Oa\1 s
Apphcat1ons
are
taken 38spl derr nge
ch orne
Monday lhru Fnday f om $14{) 1740)446 2905
9 00 AM 4 P:M Otltce s
Located at 11 51 E\le gree n Rem ngton A fie Model 700
Dnve Pont Pleasant WV Cat 223 Bull Ba ell B
Lam nated
Phone No s (304)675 Pod Scope
StQck I ke new $500 F rm
5__806
__
E_H_O
_ _~-l304i675 2902
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments Very Spac ous
2 Bedrooms C/A 1 1/2
Bath
Adult Pool &amp; Baby

r

r

10 Week o d AKC Cocker
Span el Pupp es
buff
back
buff&amp;wh te
wh te&amp;black
bu ff&amp; black
Mother and Fathe on prop
Shots
wo med
e ly
dec awed
$350 00 F rm
740 992 7371

1996 Chevy Be etta V6
999 Sta Oaf So S de
automat c AiC uns looks 3FT Truck. Campe Se
good good gas m eage Con a ned F u nace S eeps
$2 200 080 17 40!441 4 C ean Good Cond on
09 4
$5 000 (304)675 4082

Jayco
Camper
2000 K a Seph a 4 doo ~00 4
29FBS Exce em Cond on
automa c 27mpg 72 000
Supe Sl de out duele d
n les good cond !tOn 5800
AKC
Basset
Hou nd n bakes fte s t es bells AC Hea (304)675 1938
Pupp es 8wks old T Co o etc uneup W I take raclo
'iiR\HI"'
$175 each (304)576 2126
Askmg
$4300
080
10
(740)44 937 8
UO\If
•
I\U•Ro\1 ,,., ~ ,~
2001 Chevy Ca\la e
cy
5 sp
g cat
mpg
BASEMENT
24 60DK
bla ck
cl ean
WATERPROOFING
AKC Reg Beag es l l'! mon S3 950 (740)37 9 2748
Uncond ona fet me gua
Pa ch $ 50 7 wks o d
an ee Loca e e ences fu
2001 Neon aulomat c a
l304 i576 2241
n shed Es tab shed 1975
cond t on ng 82 000 m le s
C&lt;~
24 H s 740 44 6
Cocker Sp an el
52 500 OBO 1740)256
0870 Roge s Baseme
Ca I (740)388 040
652
Wae poolng
Full b coded P t Bull pup
pes $75 each (740)388 2002 Olds Ale o S lve 4
door V6 CD a I powe a
8901 0 (740)388 8596
E\( \\\II\(
remo e en y 72 000 m 1es
Toy RatTe re puppes 12 $5 800 {740) 388 0332
weeks female CKC shots
D tch ng!T ench ng
S7 5 each
&amp; wo med
Sen~ 1 ce
(740)256 3168
Nor hs a ow m les
411 4 Conn e.rt a D c W lch
99 Subu ban 2WD LS
wth sx way bade Oggng
Two l te s Bea g e Pup s
packag e P 40~446 1810
Oe p n up o 56
Gas ,.
some eg stared some not
Wal e Cabe Eect c &amp;
some Lerr on&amp;W h e Good
D vo ce Sale E)( eme y
0 a n L nes 304 5 7 6 900:)
Hunt ng Bloodl ne (304)675
LulC u lous agua
3508
Fo d 8000 T ac o cal fo

r

I· \led o..;l 1'1' 1 II
.li..ll\1 ~ 10 ( 1,
10

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For Sale 1991 Dodge
Dynasty $1 400 or basi
offe (740i388 9149

FAHM
EQUIPMENT

Oo/o Financing for up o 36
months on John Dee e
Compact and 5000 Seres
li acto s w th John Deere
Cred app oval Check them
outl Ca m chael Equ pmen
lno (740) 446 :2412

-.:.•..
" .:.17_4_0:..i4_4_
1 _0_18_1_ _ _
C
B dwell area remodeled
clean 2BR 1BA $375/mo
deposit requ red no pets
(304i576 4037 after 8pm

p ce s Day (304)773 5333
Even ng (304)773 6000

15

t \ ~ID l\r Cn:itC1J
Cht. k~o\€r
~lOOOm u~ tha\l'b :m kJu tJ or .ta t
If Kl :n altl:l
hli.Jd\\ll bc
.n ~ l 1t It&gt; Nnt r e"F l" lit ft r l0 .., 1
itm t-.

TERMS,Clsh or chct l. w / po

OWN ER

Jell G•br el

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVIC[
AUCTIONEE R John f a t r ck ral Shendan
L 1censed &amp; Bonded m Oh1o &amp;: W\ Member of Ohm &amp; Nahonal
Auct onee,r s A~soc atton
\pprenllce Aucltone r KPrry Sh er1dan Boyd
Em oul Sh.JrnrockAuctton6 aol com \'\-1:.0 www s h &lt;Hf\rot:k o~uchon~ co m
ru 740 591 4310 or ~00 410 9122

A Jump

on
SAVINGS

H.! Ml: ll&lt; )'

'

Susan Weaver
L1ghtfoot
n

TRUCKS
FOR SAl E

"---riiiiiiriiiiiiiiio-.-'
1997 Ford Ra nge X T
Steps de
P ckup
bed
89 ooo M es A C co
Playe
5 speed manua
an s n ss on Ve y good
$3 200 304)675

In Memory

P'oo Pallo Start S385/Mo Buy or sell
Aver ne
No Pets
Lease Pu s Antiques 1 24 East Ma n
Securrty Deposit Required
on SR 124 E Pome oy 740 John Deere Commerc al
(740)367 7086
992 2526
Ru ss Moore Workslte
Products
Compac t E~&lt;cavato s Sk d
994 Chevy Lum na \/an 7 L= = = = = = = =
S ee s/Tracto
Loade
uns good oaks
For rent n NeVi Haven
Backhoe n s1oc1&lt; Check out seale
Announcements
newly remodeled 3 bedroom apartment
ou
en al
ales G eat good Ask ng $1 100 080
(740)441
0488
mobile home ale fully fur EHO
I 'anc ng
ava abfe
n shed nc udes d shwash
JET
Carm~ehael Equ pment Inc
AERATION MOTORS
(7401446 24 12
er w/d m c o &amp; TV cable
Aepa red New &amp; Rebu It In :._~.:._.:.__ _ _ __
hookups n all bedrooms a
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
POLE BUILDINGS
- - -- - - - - ullht1es pa d nc ud ng cab e
Any Sty e
Any S ze
$115 each per week for 2 Downtown Oft ce Space 5 800 537 9528
1997
Ply nou h
Custom Bu It to It you
Voyage Wh te 2 s d s
renters $100 each per weeK room su te $650 mo 1 room
needs
uns good
good cond
for 3 renters (330)336 5708 off ce $225/mo 2 oom
Juk1 com me c a se v ng
FREE; Esl mates
$3 500 OAO Call (740 44
or 330 464 9424
su te $250/mo Secu ty mach ne l ~e new uns
740 596 2909
07 12
mmaculate 2BA 2 bath depoSit requ red You pay grea $400 (740)446 3438
ut
t
es
All
spaces
ve
y
n
ce
mob le home for rent m he
1998 Dodge G and Ca avan
}u/1 /81/r 10113
country
$400 month Elevator Cal (740)446 3644 K a us 33 Bulb Tann ng Bed
nc ES Wh te Tan ea he quad
$700 00 740 247 2727
Sept il 1003
(614)595 7773 or (800)798 for appo n ment
sea ts rea AJC New t res
4686
landed
$6 100
080
Our allgtl vort
For lease Oft ce or reta I NEW AND USED STEEL
LIHSIU(K
1740)441 0135
Mobile ho me s tes
n spaces rl very good cond Steel Beams P pe Reba
are llll(j!fed loved
Shade t on Downtown Gall pol s Fo
Country Homes
Cone ete
Angle
a11d rhuught
1999 Chevrolet Ven\IJ e
App OK 1600 sq H eacb 1 Channel Ftat Bar Steel 16 Cha o s Cows
$130 mo (740)385 4019
Reg
E~&lt;
t
ended
Van
blue
82
000
or 2 baths Lease p ce Grat n.g
Fo
Ora n.s Cha lois Bu I 740 742 2274
llhuul t~uvduy
m tes g eat cond ton one
negot able to encou age Dr VljiWays &amp; Walkways l&amp;L 0 740 742 3065
1m e t\1omun
owne
$8500 (740)367
new
busmess
Call Scrap Metals Open Monday
I \ II \ l\ (, ,\ Nil! \ Fvt It'
7435
(740)339
3955
/Jaddv Trea5ha
Trader lot 2 5 m les out (740)446 4425 or (740)446 Tu esday Wednesday &amp;
F day 8am-4 30pm Closed $500 Demonslrat a Bonus
Ne ghborhood Ad
Call :3:.;
93:::6:__ _ _ _ __
Brrau &amp;
Thursday
Satu day
&amp; let us demo a John Dee e Z 2002 K a Sedon a Van
1740i446 1685
Terrance
T ak o X Series AI Whee 50 020 m es al Powe
Sunday (740)44 6-7300
AII\.RI1\IDm;
Slee on you awn and Loaded new T es Quad
Stee Bu ld ngs Top of th e ece ve an ext a S500 ott au Seats Sun oo CD H ch
FORRENf
lme 20x24 25x36 35x60 al eady d scounted p ces em a n ng Wa anty n ce
Pay
Only ema n ng Ba ance Lmted
tme
ole S 2 900 OBO t3041675
1 and 2 bedroom apa t
Publrc Notrce
52p3
Can
slore
or
de
ver
mmed
Ca
n
L:hael
f:qu
prnen
Pnme Commerc at Space at
ments furn shed and unfu
F nanc ng Ava abe
IN THE MEIGS COUN
mshed
secur ty depos t Spr ng Vel ey Plaza 3 000 ately
40 Mo IHHn &lt;1 r;;J
Rese
ve
You
s
Today
800
TV
COURT OF COM
requ red no pets 740 992 sq 11 Call (740)446 3481
4 WIUII filS
222
6335
ext
7000
MON
PLEAS
22 !8
POMEROY OHIO
BUIIJliN!
2 bedroom apl on SA 160
Jerry l Unbe
SUPI,II'C'i
Fully emodeled central au
Platnhff
washer/drye hookup sto\le
Vs
Block b ck sewe p pes 1965 Mustang Fastback
&amp; refr geralo
ncluded
Mary E Uribe
w ndows I ntets etc Claud e Rangoon Red ex e or black 990 Handa 250 XR Dr Defendant
S466/mo (740)441 0194
(740 ; 4411184
Wn1es R oGande OH nter or 6 cycle 3 speed a B ke
A I ong nal
Runs CASENO 05DR096
~:::.;_....:...:..:.:..::._ _ __
ad o good g ea Ask ng $950 00 740
cond t dn 1 g
Ca 1740 245 5121
LEGAL NOTICE
2 bedroom ap1 on SA 850
dr ver
Rust f ee AZ ca 4 6 541 0
Apphanco
To Mary E Uribe
Brand New Central a~r
DAVIDSON METAL
Prce $1900000
H11 s - - - - - - - -Please take notice
stove &amp; relr gerster nclud
Au omot ve Cla ss c Ca
ROOFING
that
Jerry l Unbe has
Warehouse
ed washer/dryer hookup
Restorat on &amp; Pa s l nc
18 Colors
flied a Complamt for
$7001mo 1740i441 0194
29670
Bashan
Road
30yr warranty n w t ng
0 vorce
tn
Metgs
Pre
n Henderson WV
(740)4411184
Rae ne Oh o 4577 Phone
Profess onallnsta laton
:._:::.;_.:._..:..:.:__ _ __
County
Court
of
owned app canes start ng at
740 949 2217
Webs e
Free Est mates
2 bedroom 1 bath water $75 &amp; up all under wa ranty
Common Pleas on the
994 Honda Shadow 11 00
740 596 2909
pad $350 month $350 we do serv1ce work tm all
grounds that the par
0
ag p pes e)(\ a ch ome
Caf
depos11
secu 1ty
ttes
have been sepa
99
1
BuiCk
Skyhawk
4d
Make and Models (304)6 75
(740 ,446 3481
2 500 m I~S (7 40!441
rated lor over one
4cy auto a t t 97k new 501 a te5 00
7999
year A Response to
t res b ake s
$1 0:)0
661 Thlfd Gal pol s 2 bed
K rby G6 2000 sweepe
such Comp!atnt must
\44
6
4999
0
(740)44
6
(740
room unfurmshed no pels
998 Honda 300EX oaks
Runs great atl attachments
be ftled w1thm 28
6352
Deposit &amp; ent $300 leave
Reg sle ed
good uns g eat no I ade
AKC
nclud ng shampoo attach
days
message (740)245 9595
S1 300 (740)992 56 7
&amp;
seve a
Pomeran an
ment $200 (740)367 7630
Respectfully
Ch huahuas
Apartment for rent 1 bed
Submttled by
2002
HD
Sell
a
Deuce
Mol ohan Carpet 202 C a k (304)882 2872
room located 1205 Oh o St
Frank A Lavelle Esq
many ex as nc lud ng w de
Cl'1ape Roa d Po ter Oh o
Pt Pleasant $300/month
Atlorney
for Jerry l
1 e ch orne Pyth on P pes
1740i446 7444 1 877 830 AKC reg ste ed 10 weeks
water sewage mcluded
7000 rr le s (74 0 446 28 15 Unbe
Po me an an
9~ 62 Free Est mates Easy old Fema e
1304)675 6668
Reg No 0010195
Wormed powe sea ts powe s w n
f nanc ng 90 days same as puppy Shots
LAVELLE
LAW
Rec
on
e)(c
c
ond
Honda
dows
power
doo
locks
Parhalty
HolJse
ra
ned
Modern 1 bedrooi'T) apt cash V sa/ Master Ca d
OFFICES L PA
S
700
call
(304)675
8714
$1
850
(740i446
1
f04
$300
1304)BB2
3235
ve
a
t
ttle
save
alot
D
1740)448.()390

Shop the
Classifleds!

r

•••1/R

hum lr }or me
Pia u rh em m my

mtcr ~ anm aud

tel/Itt r tire} re
fn m m e

1.11 her lime and
n " h er.
\ml lllteu she
ltlrtH w .mule
Pltu. e a lm !i l4prm
her eire( k a11d

Omar Dwayne

r

r

50% off Storewtdel
AcquiSitions
Ftne Jewelry

GALLIPOLIS SHRINE
CLUB AUCTION
September 1Oth
10 00 am
A,pprox 4 miles out Bulavl!le
Pike Vanety of Items
Refreshments Available

I · HUNTERS SAFETY &amp;
EDUCATION COURSE
Sept 10 &amp; 11
To reg1ster call
NoreBn Saunders 446 4612
Noon to 5 &amp; Noon t1ll 6
Locatron
Galha County Gun Club
MOVING YARD SALE
Sat Sept 3 &amp;
Mon Sept 5th
St Rt 218S to Mercerville
Turn right on Bur!rngton Rd

Labor Day Sept 5th

Topes Furn1tu re Gallenes
Weekly Spec1a! Baker s Rack
Verdi green /glass shelves
Reg $1455 00
Spec1al Sale Pnce $349 00'

VETERANS
APPRECIATION DAY
Last event of the
summer
.

Veterans , fam1ly

'

&amp;

Scissorhappy
Beauty Salon

guest'
12-3pm
VFW Post 4464

would lrke to welcome
Patsy Campbell and

134 3rd Ave

Heidi Hill

.

We re havrng an open house
Saint Louis Catholic Church
and the Catholic Women s
Club would like to than~
everyone who donated to our
Silent Auction and the
Communrty who attended thrs
years Parish Festival and
Spaghettr Drnner

Dancers Baton Twirlers
Fall CIBSSBS
GALLIA MEIGS
PERFORMING ARTS
Patty Fellure
(740) 245-9880 or
Cell (740) 645-3836
.

Saturday,
September 1Oth
'

from 10 2 to welcome lhem
760 1st Ave Gallipolis

446-3747
Door Pnzes &amp; Refreshments
Everyone Welcome I

•••

~(;~gmw111

!lea or Lord
p!eaH pti k a

Grr{(111

\ll r

*

.................. , .................... ••..

••

DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams tor you to buy your
home Instead of renting
100% tlnanclng
• less ttlan perfect credit
acx:epted
• Payment could be the
aame as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(740i36Nl000

REMNANT SALE
12X7 $25
MOLLOHAN CARPETS
446 7444
Dnve A Little Save A loll

•

:
•
:
:

BEAUTIFUL
APART
AT
BUDGET
DOWN PAYMENT
pro PRICES AT JACKSON
grams for you to l)uy your ESTATES 52 Westwood
home Instead of rent ng
Dr ve I om $344 to S44 2
100% flnanc ng
Walk to shOp &amp; mo\118S Cal
less ttlan perfect cred t 740 446 2568
Equa
accepted
Hous ng Oppo tun ty
Payment could be the
Clean 2 bedroom apt stove
same as rent
Mortgage
locators elr d water trash ncluded
Rent $300 depos I requ red
1740)367.()()()()
l740i446 7620 l740i44'
House for Rent n Pont 9872
P'leasant (304)675 6224
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
Houses tor ent #410 3 BA ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
1 bath $400 rent $400 dep
154 Second No pets
1740)446 4949

Now through 9/13

!
!

!
!

Attention!

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

:

:
•

THEISS ROAD VINTON

BULLETIN BOARD

:

STANLIY II 50!tLINC (740) 775-3330 :
WWW STANUYANDSOii COM
!

* ~~·
~
...,..

i.mJBss othftf arrMQemMts n madt!

!

:•

:

:164-1

ne t

te t

!
1987 Dodge Olplomat
! Ethan Allen Furniture &amp; Househo'd Goods

•

Gulhpol" 1740! 441•

It

!
!

In P1r. (710) ZSU!I9

1

JosllllodJmer \mttont:tr
oiHI ~erond

01

Rclrcshmc nts

~

!
!
*

C. onn: a d

(h\ner :\larr Sarrett
J" B AUCIIONS

~

** One noor plan frame house wfgarage plus carport &amp; *•

\

Excl:lkm l ood will hl:

I ('

Auct1on

0 I cu 1p n
S JX Ba, d ! Quc~.: n BR Utl C' ~pr Q L c~.; n BR
su IL ndudtnl.! c~ nop ) b~..:d ~ plLl t h it Hie ( a~
BR ull ~m n ' or r1 k u 12: ..., \ \ n hl'll'&gt; Lh 1
k 31 I 111 ng: ta h k Jld ( ch1 r
r I nc tnJ
~ el 1 g d J 1r
0 ! :1 ..!. CJI 1-. h.. hl: n 1 h k
Kl:lunc rl: \ 1h.rO " t\ c
K C '\
t ( r TV
SW\t.:
rd ~.:~..: nt o r
I 1
1111 L L la n C'rH
l! l: m I m p h1dc 1 huJ II!Lc ~,.h r
"l'W ne- 1 ch Jlt' h l:..tl: k and "l11e T\
Rt
h mlkd nc.::wt.:r go lf clubr.:
m t ~o.: ll 1 ~: u
1001"1
I ddcr
Vt'IC
mnd l t.X k pi er
1 I{) box ... etc 1 pu ... h
IIu.n m '" c r), :.1 HI 11ud1 m ore

DIRECTIONS I

************************************

.

www atsn schools com
03 11 16971

AM VETS

:-.

Monda, f nda y
S 00 am tiJ 4 JtJ pm
(740) 532 J/4/)

800-383-7364

GALLIPOLIS

~,;., \\hcclblTI

Auctron

LAWRENCE
COUNTY
WORKFORCE
DEVELOPM ENl
RESOURCE CENTER

Next Class Sept 19th

1

r

700amro5 JOpm
(7./0) 286 4/81

Tram m OhiO

I JUld y ),to

Pos1t1 H· I D
V

nedll e~da)

Bulldozers Backhoes Loaders Dump
lrucks, Graders Scrapers Excavators

Auction

l t'\ h

l1mrdav Tuesday
1/umday &amp; Fr~da)
8 OOam ro./ Wpm

Training For Employment

\ ln l!

Dan Sm1th Aurlumeer OU#l344
( hns Cnllroll Apprrnllce OH#0096

IACKSON COUN I\
ONE STOP

Heavy Equipment
Operator

h

n: t d 1 II Nordu.: track lksk s biC\ Lk"
l ll l:)t:h.: ~.: 1k hl uk &amp; ru r
0\\n~,.:r l d 11d Bt"t "n

AN s encouraged to app v

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

Rt 56, Athens, OH
Saturday, September 10 - 10 00 a m

!.: Ill: lit: 1.: 1 B&amp;D l ie \\ C'rul l Ill
1 1 t~.:r 1 ~~.. h u cit I v ~;c g 1 Ilk: w • ~ h 1h

Attention!

Local company offer ng "NO Brand new 3 bedroom 2 Local company offenng NO MENTS

--------~

' NOr RF SPONSIRI F. FOR \C emF I'll S

GALLI A COUNl Y
\\ORK
OI'I'OR I UN II Y

&lt;;," 11'1&gt;;11.' &amp;

M&lt;li&lt;JI( Hmrt);

4yrs old
place o 1 5 acres n coun
I y $89 900 (740) 09 1 6~

We wrll be selhng rtems from an oldfr
Galhpohs home m \lhrch the rmncr~
resrded for more than 60 years Thrs rs
our second sale from thrs home and 11111
conclude on Sept 23 &amp; 24 w1th a huge
auction of outstandmg antrques from
thrs home
Kenmore se\1 mg mach me, Ne((hl
sewmg machme, se\llng table, sWI\el
rocker w/olloman, hard rock maple
end tables, small kmck knack
IO\e seat, 3 mce early umcrrcan chest
dra\lers, earl) Amer1can dresser
\1/mrrro~ 2 color 1\ s ma(Jie mght
stand, bookshehes &amp; bookcasfs, nrce
prcturfs, ~ prmts of (, llh(Johs balld
stand (b\ Earl fope ) hlc,ll .1d1 rtems
books r,uh o.1d books &amp; collector
large collfctron of
C0\1 hov vrdco c ISsettcs, lots of
ghiSsware hand pamtcd duna Hlcnko
depressron gl.1ss, I enton Srher Crest &amp;
other Fenton, p.11tern glass (Jockd
kmvcs (f)Ok hooks hncns to mdudt
bed, bath &amp; krtchen rtems closcful of
sewrng nohons large amount of (JOts &amp;
pans, cookware utensrls &amp; llah1are,
over 200 countn \IL"Stern ~:; RPM
records, much mor{ nol hsted

Auctron

HOMF.S
tllHSALE

9759

AUC fiONEER I ESIIE \ IF 'viLE'
740 188 SJI&lt;;
I

IHJU'I 1101 J)

Sunday, September 4, 2005

~I

1401
Ceda
St
Meadowbrook
Add
3
Bed oom 1 2 Bath Co na
ot new Roof move n con
d•l on new Ca pet and
Floor ng Storage Bu•td ng
Fenced
n Back Ya d
1304i773 5254 or 1304 593

Auctron

Rutland
Amencan

Announcements

Attentron JOb seekers and
employers' The fri-County
Employment and Trarmng
S) stem of Lawrence, lackson
and Galha counties are one-stop
employment centers comnutted
to the complete assistance
of both JOb
seekers and local employers

Oh o - ' - - -- -- - Sec eta y needed loca
law
Otl ce accept ng app
Oh o Valley Home Health
Inc h r 1g Full T me AN s cal ons Legal o ce exper
Compet I ve We:~ges M leag e ence a plus bu not neces
ana oenet ts nc ua ng health smy Compute sktl s and
att tude
Apply at 1480 pro ess on al
nsu ance
Pease con ac
Jackson P ke Gall pol s o equ ect
phone o I ree 1 866 441 740 64 5 1473 (co acted
t393
Expand ng n o numbe ) dunn g bus nes s
WV hou s lo appt
Mason County WV

HolliES

SER\1CEX

Inter or El( er o
Powe
Wash ng
and
Reasonable rates
efer
ences expetenced Free
est males Call (740)742
2013 or (740)645 2638

w babys t n my Home
c ose to School &amp; Hosp tal
Re 8 ences
Ava able
1301i675 447

l~&gt;lllUUlO'

Announcements

PRO!lNliON(\1

Bu ld New Systems Restore
W ndows V us Removal
Ph on e#740 992 790 3
hllp I www geoc t es com P'lo 1,-llii-iiiriiiiiiii,;,..
! d am 32 934 Emal h ot
Get Pad to Hunt &amp; F sh
damn32934 1@yanoo com
Tu n you pa ss on nto a
Ca
Jm
Fal s Nea Let us help you bus nes s
l304i576 2707
DHK
Clean ng
&amp;
Powe wash ng We I clean
e up &amp; Gel R Done Ca I
740 985 3639 985
Announcements

Needed
Henders_on WV based ca r
er look ng lo exper enced
Class A COL D \le s
pa es
ca
n erested
(304)€75 7434

FuiTmepos l on n
Gall pols
sa 00 per hou
Wed ThL F Sat
4pm mdnght
Must be 18 yeas o olde
Have ow veh c e VOL
and a clean cr m na ecord
Expe ence n Secu ty o
law En o cement p efe ed
WePovde
PadTanng
Pa d Vacat ons
Health Benet ts otte ed
Pease cal
Mon F 1
9arr 3pn
I 800 869 8975
Cont nen tal Sec e
Se v ce Bu eau Inc
D ug Free Wo kplace
EOE

out an app cal on at 333
Page S me
M dd epo
OH EOE

l CEN SEO SOCIAL
WORKER
Ove b ook Reh ab I tat on
Genie s now ac cept ng
es mes o he po s t on of
D ecto o1 Soc al Se v ces
The qua ed cand date
mu st be a LSW po ssess ng
st ong ve bal and v. ten
com mun cat on
s~ s
Med cad Med ca e and
MDS kno w edge long e m
ca e expe ence p e 8 ed
bu no t equ red Qua fed
cand dat;s
may
send
esumes to Cha Ia 8 own
MeG e
AN
LNHA
Adm n s ator 333 Pa ge

for

Oa y

The

It

Hlil.l' WA.VI'IJJ

HEI:PWANJ'EIJ

Aas slants

Sunday, September 4, 2009

hold IJtr for
a ,.hrle
IJtwme
f !j memhermg her

ean I do
11 e1 eryday
Hur th ert \ an
milt m Ill\ hec~rl
llwt u tlf never go
H

{IMU\1

In Memory of
Susre Wea\ er
Lrghtfoot
.619/I:,J 9/3/93.
••

ae

Publrc Notrce
8 North Court Street
Second Floor
Pos1 011rc e Bo• 661
Alhens Ohro 45701
0661
(740i 593 3347
(740i 592 6656 Fa&lt; (B)
28 (9i4 11 18 25(10i
2

Pubifc Notrce
PUBLIC NOTICE
Lead ng
Creek
Conservancy D1strlct
IS
advert1s1ng
for
H~ alt h
Insurance
bid S The I S11ng of
spec1flcattons may be
picked up at the1r
off1ce at 34481 Corn
Hollow Rd Rutland
B1d s w II be accepted
unt I
October
03
2005 LCCD reserves
the nght to accept or
reJec t anv. or all btds
By The Board ol
Leadmg
Creek
Conservancy Otstnct
J
Fenton
Taylor
President
DS01464 19i4 11 1B

Artel Performtng Arts Classes
Open Regtstratton and Meet the
Instruc tors
Wed Sepl 7 @ 3 6 30 PM
SunSep111@24
Fall Classes For Students and
Adults Dance (Modern Ballet
&amp; Jazz) w th Sarah Roush
Strmg w1th Scott M tehael
Stage Makeup/Face Pamtmg wtth
K m Vance
Theatre Acttng &amp; Improvisation
w1th Joseph Wnght
Classes Beg1n Mon Sept 12th
Ltm tted space Is ava lable
Call 740-446 2787 lor morelnlo

03 Jayco Eagle
34 It filth wheel
12 sl1de out rnany extras
' 339 0218 367 7252
See at 41 32 Add1son P1ke
GallipOliS Shnne Club and
H11lbilly Clan #7 would lrke
to thank Dean Evans
Harold Montgomery Steve
McGhee Dav1d Sm1th for
the donat1on of the Hog for
our Fa ll Hog Roast to ra1se
money
for
Shnners
Hospitals

�•

PageD6

GARDENING

&amp;unba~ lim~ ·ienttnel

Snnday, September 4, ·2005

'

Hypertufa is fake- but looks old and attractive
'

Bv LEE REICti
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Hypertufa sounds like a
plant disease, but it's not; it'~
something that you . might
want to bring into your garden.
The name comes from
"tufa," a porous, light weight,
soft rock. It's easy to gouge
out a planting pocket that can
be filled with potting soil and
hens-and-chicks · or other
sedums. Let time put a patina
on the rock, let- the plants
drape out of their pockets,
and voila! - a charming little scene.
Real tufa is not readily'
availab'le, but you can easily
make hypertufa- a fake tufa
- from a mix of Portland
cement. perlite. peat moss,

'

and water. Peat moss helps
the finished rock hold moisture, perlite mak.es the rock
Iight and porous, and the
Portland cement and water
bind the whole thing together. Use this mix also to mimic
those ancient stone troughs
which the Briiish are so fond
of using as planters.
To make hypertuf~, mil( the
dry ingredients in the ratio of
two parts cement to three
parts each of perlite and sifted peat moss. Then slowly
add only enough water to
make the mix workable.
Now don a pair of rubber
gloves and start piling the
hypertufa into a rocklike
shape. If you· re creating a
trough, build it with a form.
Use boxes - or bowls, for

rou.nd plant~rs instead of
troughs - made of such
materials as cardboard, styro- .
foam, or plastic.
For a free-form outer surface, pile the hypertufa mix at
least two inches · thick over
the top and sides of a form.
For a more finished outer surface, line the inside bottom
and sides of your box or bowl
with the mix . For a finished
surface inside and out.. use
two boxes or bowls that you
can nest inside each other.
Cover everything for a day
to CtJre, then remove the
form(s) and work the semihardened surface to your liking with a coarse file or wire
brush. Drill drainage holes
with a masonry bit. Again
cover your . creation with .

plastic, and leave it covered
for two weeks to harden.
Before adding potting soi I,
leach lime from the concrete
by temporarily plugging the
holes and every day for two
weeks letting fresh water sit
in the container for a day,
then dumping it.
The planter can stay out
even in winter, so choose
plants that can take cold and
drought and have interesting
leaf colors and textures all
year round.
Besides hens-and-chicks,
other plants suitable for
hypertufa planters include
AP Photo
cerastium, thyme, carnation, In this photo provided by Lee Reich, you can easily make hyper,
rock cress, dwarf crested iris, tufa, from a mix of Portland cement, perlite, peat moss , and
and, of course, saxifrages, water. Peat moss helps the finished rock hold moisture, per·
whose very name means · lite makes the rock light and porous, and the Portland cement
"broken rocks."
and water bind the whole thing together.

.

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AP Photo

Sunflowers are a great educational tool for kids. They're easy
to plant to quick to grow. Once they stop blooming, the nutri·
tiona! seed heads dry and attract birds and other critters which
extends their "season" well into winter.

Gardens are learning labs and
sunflowers make great teaching aids
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, Ya.
Back when I was growing up,
kids would measure the
length of their summer vacations against what was happening in the family garden.
Around Memorial Day or
about the time of the class
picnic, the threat of the last
frost had passed and the
ground was warm enough for
plan.ting watermelon seeds. It
would take 80 days or so for
"Big Bertha" to reach its 40pound maturity.
·
Some of the early sweet
corn varieties would grow
knee high by the Fourth of
July. A few of the more literal-minded among us would
walk the cornrows, holding
stalks against their legs as a
blue-jean kind ofyardstick.
Back -to-school sales would
beg·in blooming along with
the sunflowers. The towering
plants were eye-catchi~g
reminders that summer was
fading fast and the buses
soon would be rolling again.
Excellent learning labs.
gardens. And great teaching
aids, sunflowers. Summers
spent hoeing: mowing and
gathering were wonderful
opportunities for backfilling
our many educational gaps.
"Horticulture is a.nice educational tool because it has so
many aspects," says Cynthia
Haynes. an extension s pecialist for ~ons umer/urban horticu lture with Iowa State
University at Ames. "It teaches science, health and nutrition, how things work and
how things change with variables . ''It provides physical
activity - some of the best
exercises including crunches
and weightlifting. It makes for
quality family time. a chance
to talk while you weed. h
inspires with its many colors
and shows how plants can be
used in landscapes and in art.
"It also dm teach you ~orne­
thing about marketing and

doing business. A young per-·
son not too far from where I
·live sells tomatoes this time of
the year. They provide a little
seed money for his college
tuition."
Sunflowers are among the
best show-and-tell aids in
nature, says Haynes, who
among other things teaches a
classroom course entitled
"Educating Youth through
Horticulture." "Sunflowers
are easy to plant and easy to
grow. They demonstrate utili.ty or how to make oil and use
the seeds for snac~s or birdfeed. They' re like most plants
in that they're biodegradable.
They improve the soil for the
next year."
Sunflowers can teach children
something
about
nature's cycles, Haynes says,
something about birth and
maturity, death and renewal.
Sunflowers are · t~ought to
have had their .beginnings in
Central America and the
American Southwest where
they were used to supplement
the dail y diet as well as for
dyes, medicines and building
materials. Credit the latterday Russians with developing
tHem into an impprtant source·
of edible oil. behind only soybeans and cottonseed.
Now they're back in their
ancestral home as a short-season agricultural crop, maturing in about 90 days. That
makes thein desirable for the
chillier dimes of the North or
for the double-cropping sys- .
tems of the South. The "confectionary crop," or about 25
percent of all U.S. sunflower
production, goes to the birdseed market or is sold as a
snack or recipe ingredient.,
Many gardeners are dis- ·
covering sunflowers by way
of several new ornamentals
on the market. While the
more traditional Ru ssian
giants can produce 20-incli
seed heads and grow I0 to 15
feet tall, some recently devel.
'oped dwarfs. show well in
. borders andcontainers.

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