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                  <text>88 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG THE RivER

LIVING

Handcrafting quilts, a growing
art in the Bend Area, Cl

~ · If

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X. I I

you have a question or a ·comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Ga,ston Gazette. P.O.

c: ·''''

I

BliSCil

•·-..1 1-fll ..~

Race: Sylvania 300
Where : New Ha.mpsh ~re Inter·
national Speedway, Loudon
(1.058
miles), · 300
laps/ 317 .4 miles.
When: Sunday, Sept. 19
Last year's winner: Jimmie

Busch ran out of gas w1th just
over seven laps remain1ng in
the Nextel Cup regular·sea·
son finale in Richmond. The
Owensboro, Ky., native won
for the .first time since June
19, 2000, and no one ever

Johnso.n

picked a better time to shine.

· Qualllyln&amp; recoid: Ryan New- By winning , Mayfield moved
man , Dodge, 133.357
mph, into ninth place in the Nextel
'
Sept. 12, 2003.
·
Cup points standings and will
Race record : Jeff Burton, be only 40 points behind the
Ford, 117.134 mph, July 13, new points leader, Jeff Gor·
1997.
don, entering next week's
Last week: Nothing could be race in Loudon, N.H. Mark
finer than Jeremy Mayfield's Martin, Mayfield and Ryan
clutch performance in the Newman earned the final
Chevy Rock &amp; Roll 400. May- three slots in the playoffs.
field in he rited the lead and Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished
earned a slot in NASCAR's second and Gordon took the
10·race playoff when . Kurt points lead by taking third .

·u n

1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

Race: Stacker 200 Present- Race: Sylvania 200 ·
:~
Where: New Hampsh~re Inter· : '-'·'
Where: Dover (Del.) lnterna· national Speedway. Loudon
t1ona1 Speedway (1.0 miles), (1.058
miles),
200
200 laps/miles.
laps/211.6 miles.
When: Saturday, Sept. 25
When: Saturday, Sept. 18
Last year's winner: Brian Laat year's winner: Jimmy
Vickers
Spencer
Qualifying record: Joe Ne· Qualifying record: Jason Lef·
mechek, Chevrolet, 156.747 fler, Dodge, 128.424 mph,
mph, May 31, 2003.
July 19, 2002.
,
Race record: Dale Earnhardt Race record: Jack Sprague,'
Jr., Chevrolet, 130.152·mph, Chevrolet, 109.244 mph , .
July 21, 2001. ·
. May 30, 1998.'
Last week: Chevrolet dr~ver Last week: Ted Musgrave. in
Robby Gordon won fo r the a Dodge, won at Richmond
first time in the Busch Se· International R'a~eway on
r~es, edging Casey Atwood
Sept. 9.
· on Sept. 10 at Richmond. In·
ternational Raceway.

No. 17

{It

. ~.

Offs.

iolost In all the controversy was
!he fact that Mike Bliss, rarely a
• oompetilor In the Cup ranks, fin( tslled a ~reer-lligh fourth in the
(:heYy Rock &amp; Roll400.
~How about Carl Edwards? Because NASCAR requires a regis·
· i tratlon· process, Edwards will
, I ~r officially be a rookie, but
• he's now competed in four races
~ -~finished In the top 10 in
,., ('tllr.e of them. If NASCAR reset
'L' tile standings for all the posi5. '· !jolt$,... and not just the top 10
~-of- Edwllrlls might be the driver
h u(ljiilsll Uih In the points.
•·. • Jemie- McMurray missed .the
o,;~-l!l'r~ 1li 15 points, and he .
~. •!led 2~ pcilnts deducted earlier ·
•&gt;· In thit season for a rear wind~),shl~ld that failed \o clear
· •l'fMSGAR's inspection process.
~~Wl'!l" Bobby Labonte's team
. ~Cil!Wchief Michael McSwain
tjf:;.. ftl11d .him, in fact - it proba'
'! ~ lilY eost Labonte a,shot at the
'j&lt;i clllmtlionshlp.
.
.lo ~ d)e 10th-place driver to
"-·flaw this, wellk In New Hamp- .
t~ .llltlre. -llyarr Newman has. never
~-- fiilled to f!hlsh In the tlljl10 in a
elthat track. · .

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If you're one to handicap the "Chase ' ')
for the Nextel Cup," dol)'t count out
the driver who won the champi&lt;mship
a year ago.
A popular misconception is the idea
that the champion is going to·be the
driver who wins four or five of the
last 10 races. Winning multiple races
probably won't result in a champi. onship if that driver, whoever he is,
falls out early in two of those races. A
more likely champion is a driver who
manages to finish consistently well
down the stretch.
Kenseth has proved his ability to
stay out trouble, bide his time and arrive at or near the front of the pack
late in races. The Cambridge, Wis., natiye reminds many long,lime observers of the great David Pearson,
who won lOS races and three championships during his career.
"That's definitely a big compli·
John Clark/NASCAR This Week
ment," said Kenseth. "Whenever
someb()jj.y compares you to somebody Matt Kenseth, last years points champion, Is a prime contender for this years title even
who ha\ done such great things, though the rules have changed.
somebody who is a legend and was
one of the best around, it's definitely
a huge compliment. You've just got to parison to stars like Jeff Gordon, Dale don't really fe~l any different than I
felt at this time last year. I definitely
keep that all in check and concentrate Earnhardt Jr., and Tony Stewart.
"It hasn't changed my life at all day had a sense of accomplishment after
on trying to do it every week , but
whenever you do get a compliment . to day, what I enjoy doin'g, what I the year was over last year and we
like that, it definitely makes you feel don't enjoy doing, how we act or how won the championship, but after that
we live our life or any of that stuff," we're tryipg to do it again this year
good.
"When I started racing, I tried to said Kenseth, 32. "It hasn't really and trying to go out and do good this
'base my style on Mark Martin. He changed any of that or how wt: ap- year. This sport is so funny. The
taught me a lot when I came here and proach racing or what our goals are . thing that everybody remembers, eswhen I started racing in the Busch Se- and our aspirations and hopes. It has- pecially me, is your last race, and
·when things aren't going exactly as
ries and got to know him. He taught n't really changed that.
. "The only thing that's maybe you planned, you're thinking more
me a lot on what was tbe·rigbt thing to
do and what wasn't the right thing to changed a little bit is that I'm maybe about bow to get the thing turned.
do - things to do on the track and off a little bit more recognizable in pub- around and how to get the thing betthe track. I tried to soak in as much of ,Jic, where you have more people ter more so than you're thinking
that as I could and tried to act like coming up to you in certain places . . about bow great things went for you
Maybe a little bit more media atten- last year."
that the best I could."
Being the reigning champion· has tion on us or maybe expectations beContact Monte Dutton at
been relatively painless for Kenseth, ing a little bit higher from our fans
or
sp~nsorsthings
like
that
....
I
hmd4858@peoplepc.com
who still flies under the radar in com·

~tnT

ANn WHO S "'OT

Valley

• Georgia beats
Marshall. See Page 81
• Bonds reactres 700.
See Page 81
• NASCAR"Weekend.
See Page 84·5
• Gallia Academy tops
Point Pleasant. See
Page 81
• Swilching sides for
Browns, Cowboys. See
Page 83
·

IIH WI I,,.

v

DEW~LT POWER TOOLS FORD

When handicapping the 'Chase,' don't forget 'about Ken seth

:-&gt; t. :.!,) • \. ol. :1M. No. --

:\I iddl&lt;•po1·1 • ( ;allipoli' • S&lt;•ph·m hn 1&lt;1. :!oo.t

New U.S. 33 opening set f~r October Galli_a .

SPORTS

flllll

'·

l'olli&lt;TO) •

'

E
R

Jimmy
Spencer

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

I

Ohill \ ·a II&lt;') l'uhli~hi ng ( o.

·ect by Y.J. Stinger

NEXTEL CUP SERIES,

..

,

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

s
·a
ago.. ·
.Confusing? .
PrlliiatJ.Iv .. : but also e~citing ..
• ~Five 0111 oftlle tco'l()posltions
· In the. points' standiQgS changed
at Richmond ..That ·"faS remark: able. Thariks to the regrouping
~t tile top,'that's likely to ha;r
pen llllSIO:In New Hampshire.
. .,: A.S It ~· out. every driver In
the top 10 has won at least one
race. That would have seemed
unlikely a week ago. And, of
course, Jeremy Mayfield basically raced himself into the play-

'

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IN '11-U:c SPOTI.IGI-tT

MATT KENSETH

Bo~

2005 Nissan Pathfinder, Dl

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Dale
Jarrett

/.•

· 0BOUARIES
New Hampshire wa1 flrlt
of the new wave of track•
When New Hampshire International SpeedWay hosted its first Cup
race, on July 12, 1993, it marked the
first major NASCAR visit to a relatively new track since the late 1960s,
when Talladega, Dover, Michigan and
the defunct Texas World Speedway•
joined the circuit. Other tracks Phoenix, Watkins . Glen, lnflneon
Raceway - joined the circuit before
Loudon, but they had all been in op
eration long before NASCAR·s arrival.
NHIS, a 1.D58·mile, relatively flat
oval, was built on the site of a former
motorcycle road cir~uit. It became
the northern most outpost on the
NASCAR circuit. '

I

POMEROY - · The U.S 33 Athens to
Darwin connector will open to traffic in
mid-October. according IO the latest
report from Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT).
Earlier it had been announced that the
new highway would .open in late
September, bHt ODOT spokesperson
Stephanie Filson said Friday progress
has been delayed by rain.
"Rain · prevents !he workers ffon1
painting the lines on the highway and

B~ CHARLENE HDEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'•

Jimmy Spencer
vs. Dale Jarrett
A lap dbwn at the time, Jarrett
needed ·a caution flag to get his lap .
back lap because the leaders pitted
under green and he hadQ't. When
Spencer spun after a tap from Jar·
rett's Ford, the yellow ftag came out.
Now, whether that wa s a calculated
move, only Jarrett knows. But that's
the way it looked .
NASCAR This' Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: 'What JNe·re
seeing here is added heat between
the haves and the have·nots. Jarrett
was having a rough nigh t and was
de.sperately trying to work his way
back to the front. Spencer was in his
way. Expect more of this in the final ·
10 races. although Jarrett won't be
1n the playoffs.·

I -" N

that's much of what remains to be '
· done." said Filson.
She again cautioned.motorists to be alert
to the altered traffi.;: patlem at the junction
of U.S. 33 and Ohio 681 in Darwin.
. "Traffic is' required IO slop at thatjunct1on," she said . "While U.S. 33 traffic
now uses the newly constructed bridge
when traveling the route, the passing
lanes in both directions are closed just
east of the pattern change, and motori sts
are advised to exercise extreme caution
when approaching the area."
Meanwhile. ODOT has announced .
that 681 will close for culvert replace-

menls in two separate locations.
·. The first project.will close about 0.25
miles east of the Ohio 692 intersection
beginning Monday, Sept. 27. weather
permitting.
Filson said motorists are advised to
use the following detour: 692 to Ohio
684 to Ohio 124 to U.S. 33 back to 681 .
The tirst culvert replacement is scheduled for completion Oct. II.
The second project will close around
three miles west .of the U.S. 33 intersection beginning Oct. 12, weather per-

cont1 nues
watch 0 n
rt' ve r Ieve I
•

.

BY KEVIN KEU.Y
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM, ·

GALLIPOLIS - Heavy
rainfall that was the calli ng
card of Hu rricane Iva n as it
passed through the Ohio
Please see U.S. 33, Afi
Valley ended just before· 7.
. p.m. Friday. but the worries
may · not be over for those in
Gallia County living near
tlood-prone areas.
Three to five inches of rain
fell most of the day Friday,
closing numerous roads and
making travel tricky for
motorists. But with as much
advance warning of heavy
·rain as people received
beforehand, Galli a County 91-1 was not swamped with as
many emergency calls as
expected.
·
"There were not too many
of the kind you'd think we'd
get," said 9-1-1 Director
Steve Wilson. "Most roads
that were !loaded have gone·
down again.:·
·
Although no emergency
was declared Friday by the
Gallia Countv commissioners, the couniy's Emergency
Operation s Center (EOC)
was activated just in case,
Wilson said.
·
Numerous area football
.... . '
games were rescheduled,
except for the GallipolisPoint Pleasant contest. which
continued as scheduled at
Memorial Field.
. In Gilllia County, the
Gallia-Meig s Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported thai as of late Friday afternoon, high water had closed
(David Harris/photo) state routes 554 between
· Porter and Cheshire. 325 at
Laurel Cliff Road near Pomeroy was one of numerous roads in Meigs County closed by high Vinton and 160 at the interwater Friday afternoon. By evening, the water began to recede bnnging a sigh of relief to near- section with Jack son Pike .
by homeowners.
·
'
Sections of state routes that
·Burlingham on Route 33 receded SatunJay and that highway is now open ..
Please see River, AS

River crest estimate raised

~

;~:!·'·

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH ,
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Alma E. Lawhorn
• James E. Ritchie
• Frederick Goebel
• Yvonne Baird
• Dustin R. Musser
• Teresa L Holbrook
• Dorothy M. Hutchinson
• Jessie E Spicer
• William Whitlock
• C. !=lichard Crow
• Clarice M. Erwin

POMEROY - The Ohio
River was (ising 4/10 of a
foot an hour at 4:30 p.m .
Saturday afternoon and prediction of a crest was
changed to 50 feet at 2 a.m.
Monday
morning
at
Pomeroy. according to a
report from the Racine
Locks and Dam.
The gau·ge on
the
Pomeroy lot showed water
at 46 feet Saturday after- ·
noon. II takes 46.5 feet to
put water over Main Street
at the intersection of Main
and Sycamore Streets, and
· about 49 · feel for water to
begin flowing into businesses.
Merchants were busy late
Saturday afternoon preparing for· the flood waters to
come. In several stores the
process of removing merchandise from low shelving
has already begun.
Meanwhile, several roads
remain closed in Meigs
County. They include State
·Route 248 near Keno; State
Route 124 at. Langsville, in
the Racine/Antiquity area,
and betweeh Long Bottom
and Reedsville; and Stale
Route 7. ar Chester. Water at

'

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Local hunter survives four-wheeler wreck Emancipation Celebration queen
BY TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

II "'!- t.

. Here'1 your chance
to be on • cereal box
Ever wanted to be on a cereal
box? Honey Nut Cheerios will be giving someone that opportunity and
encouraging people to live a healthi·
er lifestyle in the process. The 'heart
healthy" person who can best an·
swer the question, "How I Lowered
My Cholesterol" will appear on a spe.
cial-edition Honey Nut Cheerios box,
which will be unveiled in February at
Daytona. Search entrants will submit
stories that detail how they have lowered their cholesterol and made a
commitment to a healthier lifestyle
at IIWW.honeynutcheeriols.com.

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INDEX
4

&amp; Sup·ply
Co·.

SI!CfiONS -

24 PAGES

:Around Town
Celebrations

A3
C4

:Ctassifieds .
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
:Region

03

:Sports
;Weather

insert

A4
As
A2
B1
A6

; © 0004 Ohio VoDey PuiJIIoiJiq Co.

555 Park 'st • Middleport

.._ Roger Toney has done a lot of hunting In his
75 years, and says this Is the best deer he
ever took. He's recuperating in his home on
Baum Addition Road from a four-'!Yheeler accident. but says he',ll be back hunting as soon
'!S he is able. (Tim Maloney/photo) ,

POMEROY- Sherman While feared the worst
He'd seen Roger Toney's truck in his driveway when he got home from work .
Nothing unusual about that. Toney hunts for
squirrel all the time on White's farm.
But when he got back from skeet shooting
that Sept. I night, Toney's truck was still
there . Then, be knew somethins was wrong.
"I knew he was up on the h11lside somewhere," White said.
For years, Toney had been the best friend
of While's father, Nev. until he passed away
three years ago.
.
·
"Roger is about as close to a dad as I've
got now," he said.
As he organized a search party, While's mind
raced. Could Toney have had a hi:an attack? Was
he pasSed out somewhere? Was he still alive?
He was.
Toney had wrecked his four-wheeler, and
was pinned beneath it. Try as he might, he
could not set himself out. Shouting for help
until his vmce went hoarse, nobody lleard him.
"It was just a freitk accident." Toney said.
"I wasn't riding crazy or anything. There
was a branch, about three inches th1ck, layin¥. across tl'le rat h.
'I thought co11ld so over it. I hit the
branch, and I gave 11 a ltttle more power. and
Pl~se

-Wreck. Afi

University of Rio Grande sophomore Carlesha Chambers was ·
crowned Emancipation Queen Saturday at the Emancipation
Celebration held at Mt. Carmel Baptist Church in Bidwell.
Chambers. a member of the Redwomen basketball te~m. won a
$500 scholarship from' URG. The decision of moving this weekend's celebration to Mt. Carmel Baptist Church came after heavy
rains Friday flooded the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. Festivities
wjll continue throughout the day today. (ian McNemar/ photo)

992-6611
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252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

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106 North Second.Ave. • Mlddlepo'r t, OH

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PageA2 .

FARM'

DOWN ON THE

Sunday, Septemb~r 19,

Meigs County·calendar

Fann Bureau, OLC team to select top neighbor Livestock sales
l)uilding. This is a win/win
NEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
situation for all rum! residents
and country dwellers- farmGALLIPOLIS -The Ohio ers and nori-farmers."
,farm ·Bureau Federation and
The award will feature
Ohio Livestock Coalition local, regional and state levels
have teamed· up to create and of recognition. Local recipisponsor "The Neighbor of the. ents will be selected,
Year Award", for 2004-05.
announced and recognized by
· The new award program county Farm Bureau organiwill recognize the efforts zations during National Farm
neighbors - farmers and City Week in November, and
non-farming ryral ~esidents advance to regional competi- have made in Ohio's coun- tion,, where OFBF will select
IJ'yside to positjvely develop winners in each category.
and enhance rural relationTci qualify, the rural resident
ships and communications.
(noncfarmer, country dweller)
Additionally, it will also candidate must live in an
serve to· increase awareness
about how rural neighbors unincorporated area of the
and residents can adopt and county and abide by the code
follow suggested practices in of practices for rural residents
a. positive manner that bene- and country dwellers as
fits their community and spelled out in OLC's "It Takes
neighborhood. ·
Two to be a Good Neighbor"
"Being a good neighbor guidelines, which are posted
means being responsible, on lhe OLC's website at
courteous and respectful of www.OhioLivesiock.org.
others. Being respectful of
The farmer candidate must
private property and the need be a livestock, (dairy, beef,
fm farmers t,!) safeguard their ,sheep. swine or poultry) probusiness help preserve the ducer and abide by the cope
rural landscape that everyone of practices for farmers as
enjoys," said David White, described by the guidelines,
OLC's executive director.
which provides the following
"Both farmers and' non- tips for being a good . neighfarmers should take the initia- bor:
·
tive to get to know their
Rural residents and ~;ounneighbors."
he
added. ·try dwellers:
"Knowing your neighbors
• Keep. your property clean
and letting them get to know and trim. The vast majority of
you will speed-up the new farmers and rural residents
relationships you will be take pride in keeping their
STAPF IIIJIOIIT

homesites presentable. Be a neighboring residences to
good neighbor and do your odors.
GALLIPOLIS - The following results are from the Sept.
share.
• Take the time to explain 15 auction 111 United Producers. lnc.
• Keep your pets and other what you, do and why. FQr
·Feeder Cattle
domestic animals restricted to example, spreading manure
Heifers
Ml and Ll
Steers
your property. The open land on cropland recycles nutrients
95-129
275-415
l 05-136
may be a temptation to let and puts the manure to proyour animals run loose, which ductive use. Find out what
95-109
425-525
. 105-120
may cause crop damage and your neighbor does for a pro88-98
550-625
98-114
put livestock under stress.
fession as well.
650-725
88-96
94-105
• Keep your trash in a cov• Explain why, at planting
90-100
80-90
750-850
erect. enclosed receprocle. and harvest · time s, farmers
Cows
Refuse that blows ·onto an · inust work late into the night
active farm ·Can cause serious and on weekends. If neigh- .. ·Well Muscled/Fleshed: 50-55
Medium/Lean: 48-54
threats to crops, livestock and bors know there are environThin/Light: 20-40
farm machinery and equip· mental benefits to applying
ment.
manure and performing
Blllls: 58-67
• If you have a question tillage when soil and planting
Back to the Farm
about a farming or agricultur- windows are optimal, they
Cow/Calf Pairs $530-925; Bred Cows ' $250-715; Baby
al practice, talk to a farmer. may be more understanding:
Calves $60-240;.Goats $24-91; Lambs $69-100; Hogs $38.50As you discuss your .needs
• Take opportunities to eduwith them, you will gain an cate. Consider hosting an 5.6
understanding of the agricul- open house or picnic for this . Upcoming specials:
Replacement brood cow sale, I p.m. Wednesday, Sept 22.
ture business. The goal is to purpose. Invite the neighbors
find ·satisfying resolutions to over to see a newborn animaL
For more information. call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
any issue that may arise.
Explore if there's a way that DeWayn'e. at (740) 3'39-0241, or visit the Web site at
• Don't' assume that farm- you can help the. neighbor's www.uproducers.com
land is open and available for kids with a class project.
your off-road vehicle or even
• Be helpful. For example,
•• MUST SELL..
for walking, any more than when it snows, dig out your
Shade River: River Front Camping Lot NOW ONLY
your own backyard ·is open · neighbors if you have·a snow$6,900!!
for others to access without plow.
.
Crystal Lake: Beautiful Wooded 5 acre Homesite. 2 miles:
permission.
• Share with n~ighbors that
from Ohio River boat ramp NOW ONLY $19,900. 15 acres
Livestock fanners:
animals require attention and
on 25 acre private lake. NOW ONLY $39,500
• Avoid applying manure on care 24 hours a day, regardOwner Financing Available!
weekends whenever possible. less of holidays and weekCall for Free Maps
Ask' neighbor to let you know ends.
800-213~8365
when . a fresh application of
To obtain an award applica- .
manure may infringe on tion ·Or additional informati'on
entertainment plans. Weekend about the program, contact
'application of manure should the Gallia County Farm
target fields that least expose Bureau at (800) 777-9226.

WASHINGTON (AP) Farmers Bill and Vickie
Thomas find in Columbus.
what they'll never see at
home : a million potential
.customers a year at the North
Market. It's that traffic level
that has allowed them to keep
their family farm.
"It·gives us a so-&lt;:alled store
where there's lots of people,"
said 11u~rnas, who grows
apples, peaches, plums and
blueberries at his farm in Philo,
about an hour east of Columbus.
"When you sit out here at the
farm and wait for them to come,
it just doesn't happen," he said.
"Farmers markets are what's
keeping small farmers alive."
As farmers markets · rnany older than 100 years increase in popularity, they
need repairs that cashstrapped cities and smalltime producers can't afford,
farmers artd market owners
say.
.
U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a
Toledo Democnit, wants to
create a federal program that
would spend $50 million a
year to refurbish and build
markets.
·
·
"The survival of family
farmers in our country is
~oing to depend on their abi.llty to f!larket · to the consumers, most of which live in
the suburbs ,and cities," said
Kaptur, a former urban planner who.serves on the House
Appropriations subcommittee for agriculture.
·
Kaptur's proposal has
bipartisart support and could
be included m the next farm
bill, which lawmakers will
begin work on next year.
Government .money for
farmers market repairs or
co'nstruction projects isn't
available for cities larger than
50,000 people.
The number of markets
nationwide grew 7!1 percent
between 1994 and 2002,
according to the U.S.
Agriculture
Department.
More than 3,100 are operat~
ing, including nearly roo in
Ohio:
Donita Anderson has started four markets in the
Cleveland area since 1995
.and Sl!YS she has requests
from 25 other northeas
Ohio cities that want to
markets.
"Our farmers sell
everywhere
they
,
Anderson said of the North
Union Farmers Markets in
. Shaker Heights, Lakewood,
Ohnsted Falls and Parma.
Ron Paul, who leads an
effon in Portland, Ore., to
build a year-round, indoor
marker, said a seasonal farmers market ~as · thrived in the
city for 10 years. That has
propelled a desire among
community leaders to build a
permanent bazaar.
•
"We are just absolutely crying for an increase in federal
assistance for this," said Paul,
a former chef and restaurateur.

The
Portland
Public
Market would be housed in a
renovated historic building
that would offer a variety of
food-related products from
fresh produce to cooking
utensils. Paul estimates it
would cost about $15 million
to complete.
A permanent market open
daily would allow farmers to
sell more produce and give
customers better hours to
visit, he said.
Other farmers market directors say the proposed federal
assistance, which would
come from grants, loans or
loan guarantees, would help
pay for repairs or upl'rades
that would help revitalize
urban areas or allow farmers
to sell more products.
"On the outside, our market
looks really nice, but ·on-the
inside, it ·really has a lot of
things that need to be done
like pipes and roof repairs,"
said Eileen Nowak, president
of the board of directors for
the Broadway Farmers.
Market in Buffalo, N.Y.
The 116:year-old market,
located in a poor neighborhood that was originally settled by the Polis.h, attracts
300,000 people during the
two weeks leading ·up to
Easter. Nowak envisions the
market becoming a bustling
attraction for area residents
during the rest of the year.
"We . feel that without the
market thriving, the neighborhood won't thrive," she ·
said. "We've got So much
potential, but unfortunately,
money is an issue." .
Dan Madigan, executive
director of the Farmers
Market Association of
Toledo, said his annual budget for operating expenses,
advertising and repairs comes
from the $400-a-year rental
fee . it charges 50 members.
That doesn't leave any
money for upgrades.
"We want to install radiant
· heating to allow the farmers
to continue selling through
the winter," Madigan said of
the 172-year-old market. "We
also have some plans in place
to change the market configuration and ease parking con. cems, ut right now there
resources."
Meanwhile, demand for
fresh produce grows among
consumers.
A study last year from Ohio
State University's agriculture ·
research and development
center found that 81 percent of
Ohioans, when given a choice,
preferred locally grown foods.
One-fifth of the survey
respondents shopped freQuently at farmers markets and onehalf did so occasionally.
USDA research conftrms
that the demand for organic
products also is growing
nationally, especially at urban
markets and in communities
near universities or other ~n­
ters for higher education ..

Monday, Sept. 20
RACINE _ A recessed
meeting of Racine Village
Council will be held at 7 p.m.
at the municipal building. .

'

Veterans of the Civil War and
the Maj . Daniel McCook
Circle Ladies of the GAR.
will sponsor a Civil war presentation at 7:30 p.rn . . at the
.Riverbend Arts Council in
Middleport. Gregg Pittehger of
Columbus will speak and give
a slide . presentation on
. Andrew's Raid of the Civil
War, better known as the Grear
Locomotive Chase whi&lt;.:h
occurred in Georgia.and resulted in the first Congressional
Medal of Honor to be given to
a Jackson County. Ohio soldier.
CHESTER .
Chester
Coiuncil 323, Daughters of
An1enca,
·
7 ·p.m. at th e hall
· ·.
Silent.auc.tion will be held along
with practice for inspection.
MIDDLEPORT - A specia]
meeting
of .the
Middleport Lodge 363 F &amp;
. AM for work in the Ma'ster
Mason degree will take place
at 7:30 p.m. A ll Masons are
invited. Refreshments to foi low meeting.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Tony MatTis of the Pomeroy
Chur&lt;.:h or Christ will speak
al 2 p.m. He will be showing
pictures and ielling about his
tour of duly in Iraq as a chaplain. There wi 11 be 'special
music by the Zimi Choir.

...

MONrH

......

No

:Gallia County calendar .
:community
events

Downtown Jackson, Ohio
CARNIVAL RIDES
GAMES
FOOD
DISPLAYS
CONTESTS
CRAFTS
QUILT SHOW
LAWNMOWER RACE
CAR SHOW ON SATURDAY

FUN~

"The Guardians"
Gospel Music
9pm Wednesday

Sugar Fuzz
Thursday
7:30pm

KENTUCKY
HEADHUNTERS .
8:30pm Friday

0

two Wednesday at 1:00 p.m.
. AIUI7:45

p.m.

11tursday at 1o:oo a.m.

Tile Grand Finale Parade
at 7:45p.m.
The Largest Lighted
Parade in ,Ohio!-.,,..
I~

OAK HILL
BANKS ·
Bllllklng in Your Besl fnteral

740-286-2171

700 East Main' Street
·Jackson, Ohio

1-aoo-'1oo-s1so

OHIO VALLEY BANK
S5()-$300 OFF Original Price ~
\ Selecteel Bridal Gowns
. ''

'

Sunday, Sept. 19
GALLIPOLIS Doll,
·bear and toy show, I p.m. - 4
:p. m. at Our House Museum.
:
Monday,Sept.20
· GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
:county Deputy Sheriff's
Association meeting, ~ p.m.
Gallia County Courthouse.
GALLIPOLIS
:Huntington Grange 731 will
:hold its regular meeting at
'7:30 p.m. with potluck
refreshments to follow. ·
Thesday, Sept. 21
. : CHESHIRE Gallia:Meigs Community Action
;Agency will hold a home
·buyer education class for
:anyone interested in learning
more about purch·asing a
home, 5:30 p.m. at the
:cheshire office. For more
:information, call (740) 367:734 1 or (740) 992-6629, ext.
· ·II to register.
. : GALLIPOLIS - Christian
· :women's Club will meet,
noon, for lunch at Holiday
Inn, Speaker Ma·ry Louisa
Rimback, former owner of
:bed an'd breakfast. Call Barb
:Epling at (740) 446-1516 for
·reservations.
·
Wednesday, Sept. 22
. GALLPOLIS __: Meeting
of the board of trustees of
Clay Chapel
Cemetery
:Association, 10 a.m. at Christ
:u nited Methodist .Church.
:Public invited.
Saturday, Sept. 25
.
· GALLIPOLIS - ' Doll ,
bear and toy show, I0 a.m. - 4
.p.m. at Our House Museum.
: ARABIA - Hog roast
·benefit for Louise Mannon,
:I I a.m., at C&amp;C Grocery,
:ohio 141. Date changed sue
:to inclement weather.
VINTON
Vinton
Masonic Lodge #13,1 annual
.spaghetti supper to recogmze

1

275

ATHENS

(Mroi&amp;

175 Wat Ulllon

S..urdty by Appoimmcnl

.

(740) 446-7619 .

'.

p ,--• :t •• ,....-"lll,. · C I

~ ~~~..._..,.,

'

i

41' • • ) .,4#P f

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

s.....t

0pm NOA.• Fri. 8: 30-~pm

fFOin I'IMI Offl«)

Optn Mon. - Thurs. 8:31)..5pm

,_.~

Richelle
Blankenship

(740) 286-1430

Main Street Jacl&lt;son, OH

1--------------,-----------....:.-------.. . . . . . . . --,- ,. .,

••ketBeg!

Thcnpy Bkll I

Second Annut

-.-

(740) 594-3$71

69-140. Lns An.~eles. CA 91~){)&lt;1.

1
·

.

$

at 25 Vanco Rd., Gallipolis,
OH 45631.
GALLIPOLIS - Get well
cards may be sent to Jesse
White, at n3 State Route
588 : Gallipolis : Ohio. 45631.
White · and h.1s wtfe alsQ
recently celebrated the1r 30th
anniversary.

Email Ad4r-• - WIIHull I .

INSTANT MESSAGING · ~M. MS! oodYoboo
hH LIVI Technical Support!
Immediate Auou: www:ltKalnet.com
-:-- : : : - - Plus

~SS
""., mo"'

Surlupto

IT'S N
.

TOO lATE!!
Classes Begin
October 4th

·

7

1:10,3:10,7:10 &amp; 9:10
MR. 3000 (PF13)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
PAPARAZZI (PG13) ·
9:00
HERO (PGf~)
1:15, 3:15 &amp; 7:15
CELLULAR (PG13)
1:10, 3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10
RESIDENT EVIL: APOCALYPSE

Sx faster!

(R) 1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30
WITHOUT A PADDLE (PG13)
1:15,3:15, 7:15 &amp; 9:15

7th Annual

Girls
Time Out

.
'
I

Please join us at our special program
for mothers, daughters, grandmothers,
sisters. and all the spec;:ial women
in our lives!

Sunday, September 26, 2004
2:00- 3:00 PM - Program
3:00 - 4:30 PM - Health Fair

.Holzer Medicai .Center
Education &amp; Conference Center
'

Featured speakers:
Lauren Kelsey Hall
Miss Ohio USA 2004

Rhonda L. .Moore, RN, BSN·
Ohio Department of Health

"Food Disorders"

Karen Stocker: RD, LD
·HMC N'utrition Services Department

Rick Stocker, LPTA, CProT

Also... skits by PRIDE of River Valley
•
and South Gallia PRIDE.

.
anti Msdlcll lqulpment
.lor buying my 111114

Open TIIH., Wed , ThuB. I :J0..5pm

GAI.UPOYS

GALLIPOLIS - . Get well
cards can be sent to Virginia
Killin at Arbors Nursing
Home, 170 Pinecre~t Dr.,
Gallipolis, OH 4563 I, Rooni
20JA.
WATERLOO
Irene
Roberts will celebrate her
89th birthday Sept. 17. Cards
may be sent to her at 836
Campground Rd., Waterloo,
OH 45688.
BIDWELL Kathryn
,Snyder celebrated her 84th
birthday Sept. 15. Cards may
be sent to her at Holzer
Senior Care, 380 Colonial
Dr., Bidwell, OH 45614.
Gf\LLIPOLIS
Ella
Belle McDonald will celebrate ·her 90th birthday Sept.
I8. Cards may be sent to her

. FaJDlly Oxygen

131 Huron Strttt

43~ 1/,

Card showers

fllank You

JACKSON
t).k()rp, l'by~

community service and auc-·
tion to benefit. American
Cancer Society, 6 p.m. ·
Monday, Sept.· 27
KANAUGA - Democrat
party Meet the. Candidates
and annual ch1h supper, 7 .
p.m .• Am Vets building at rhe
mtersection of 735 and
Burnette Road.
Thesday, Sept. 28
GALLIPOLIS . - Gallia
County Health Department
will provide extended hours
at 499 Jackson Pike, for those
wishing to obtain a free food
handler's card for Gallia
County's upcoming events.
TB skin tests will be given
from 4 - 6 p.m. The health
department will also have
extended hours from 4- 6
p.m:: Sept. 30 to read the skin
tests.
Thursday, Sept. 30
'GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia
County Health Department,
499 Jackson Pike will have
extended hours from 4- 6
p.m., Sept. 30 to read TB skin
tests.
·

All. are welcome! Dress is casual. Refreshments will be served.
For more information, please call Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446·5679 or log onto www.holier.org

·

R
MEDICAL CENTER

.'

---~~-r'""""---..,.._...,.,..,.,,...,.....,,.. .

.

--.· ---.------- - .,

•

---~,-

•

-

£11·

11 '\i'II:OearAhiJ\:COm or P:U Bm

"Build Your Pyramid"

etark's Book &amp; Bible ; DILES HE.\RI\(; CE\TER
•

·Phillips. Wrir~ Dmr AhhY

Holzer Medical Therapy Center

l·!AIS-21&amp;3-'J'335

Good things for
God's people.

[rw/ilc.J

~n~fe~~nla?n~1~~~~J

I

.Ul Main Street •• ~Jack.,

286-5286 , Toll

Dear Abbr ;, 11 rineir hr
Ahi~ail Wm iJw~n. u/.\o I..J/0\I'i l
as Jnmne Phillip.1. on.! '"''
fimndnl In lwr mmhn: Paulinl'

Other events

wr~·

September 21·24, 2004

enough to hah) .,it. Haw'"') ot
you tried to gel him prole"ional help'' Lt,lep 10 1hc J:&gt;&lt;:dnuncian and do no1 leave lhc chiiJren alone with 1hi' f.'\~'' man.
Better to be -~ate 1han wnY.

c·h h
'
UrC SerVICeS

Birthdays

Jackson County

2004

Happy little family has
everything but marriage

Clubs and
.organizations

' 64~11~

SEVENOTY
BLOCKS OF

Sunday, September ~9,

DEAR ABBY: ''Alex" and I
have been 10gether for alrmst eight
years. We fove ea:h other and'
recently had our first baby. Our litMIDDLEPORT - A spe.
tle
family gets &lt;~oog grelli exoept
cial ·meeting of ,Middleport
for
one
thing. I'd like to be manied,
Village Council will be held
and
Alex
is ~'set ~nit it He
Dear
Sunday, Sept. 19 . says he wantS
at 4 p.ll). Monday for the purto "be w1th" me forAbby
RACINE - The Gracemen ever, and his aversioo to marriage
pose of awarding the bid for
will
be
singing
at
the
First
street paving.
has oothing to do with me.
Raptisl Church at 7 p.m.
Thesday, Sept. 21
I think it's important for
C\-IESTER - The Passion our daughter to have a trndiCHESHIRE- The Gallia
Meigs Community Action
of the Christ will be shown at tional family. I love Alex with mother's basement. He has
Agency Board of Directors
6 p.m. at the Chester Church all my heart, and I hate hav- not held a job for more than
will meet
at
5
p
.111. in the
of the Nazarene.
in g to accepl that we may 15 years and never leaves·the
Ches h.tre officc.
Monday, Sept. 20
never be married. I have nouse except for. the rare
- RUTLAND Rutland
CHESTER - Missionary dreamed about being married occasion when he goes out to
Village Council will meet. in
buy pizza. He does not dale
Dana Harding will .speak at ever since I was a little girL
Have you any ideas on how I and hasn't for as long as I
the Counci l room at the
lhe Chester Church of the
Ci vii
Center;
Rutland
Nazarene at 7 p.m. She was caneithercopewithneverbeinga have known him . He has
Meetings have been changed
assigned by the Church of the bride or convince Alex to chan~e heard voices and has told all
tQ the third Tuesdav of each
Nazarene as a missionary to his mind? ·- IN AN "ALTAR'- of us that he runs an o1 l com. . pany ffom the basement.
month .
. ·
Swaziland in 1979 and her CATION IN Pi&lt;!OENIX
DEAR
IN:
Counseling
may
l have two children whom I do
Thursday, Sept. 23
· current
responsibilities
help
you
to
cepe,
but
there
are
not
want to be alone with Charles
POMEROY - A meeting
include serving as a teacher solid reasons why your boyfriend - ever.
I have expressed this to
for the presentation and disin 1he Bible Cpllege in Sitek. should change his mind. When my husband,
and i.t has gotten
cussion of the Ohio Health
children
arrive,
it's
time
to
be
back
to
my
sister-iA-Iaw.
who
Care act to initiate a petition
practical.
A
marriage
certificate
is
insists
01arles
"wouldn't
hurt
a
campaign Will be held at 7
more than just apiece of paper. It fly.'' Our &lt;.:hildren's pediatrician
p.m. at the Pomeroy Public
entitles couples to certam legal agrees with me. This has caused
.Tuesday,
Sept.
21
Library.
Presented
by
Sunday, Sept. 19
POMEROY - The Meigs protections such as the right of a rift in the frunily.
Southeastern Ohio SPAN,
Should I hold my ground or
RACINE - The Oocar and County Health Department inheritance, the ability to hold
with Bob Smiddie , 698- Charles Reed Hysell reunion
title
to
community
property,
rrive
in to the majonty'! -- ANX3415, and Linda Dye, 698- will be held at 12:30 p.m. at wil l · offer evening c'linic health insumnce benefits, and fous MOTHER IN' OHIO
· hours from 4 to 7 p.m. for
6050, lis the presenters.!
. Star Mill Park. Take a dessert immunizations. blood pires- when you are olper, Social . .DEAR ANXIOUS MOTHER: Charles appears to be menor covereu dish. There will sure checks, WIC and prena- Security and pension benefits.
If
something
were
to
happen
tall )I ill ancl delusional. and
be white elephant sale after tal services. head I ice
to Alex, with no marriage cer- · whtle he should be treated with
the dinner .
scxreenings, and to . answer tilicate, you would be left with kindness and respect, he does
RACINE - The Gideon heahh related questions.
nothing -- and that includes a not appear to be responsible
Roush reuinion will be held at
voice
in ·his medical treatment
Monday, Sept. 20
Star Mill. Park in Racine.
or
even
a claim to his body.
CHESTER Pomeroy Dinner will be served at l p.m.
DEAR ABBY: My bwtherSPRING
VALLEY
CINEMA
Chapter 186, Order of the . POMEROY
Zion ..
_
11 1 rJ\111 ,
in-law,
''Charles."
lives
in
his
Eastern Star, will meet . at Church on Harri sonvi ll e,
Monday, Sept. 20
446-4J24
11~1 IA(~':&gt;O~ PIKE
7:30 p.m·. at the Chester Route 143, will be celebrat:
Barbara Sargent will
FRI9117/04 • THURS 9123104
:lodge hall.
ing its annual homecoming. observe her 85ih birthday
Box Office Opens @
:
Thesday, Sept; 21
Sunday school is at 9:30a.m. Monday. Carris ma.y be sent .
6:30PM Nightly &amp; 12!30 pm
· For Sat &amp; Sun Matinees ,
: MIDDLEPORT - Brooks- worship hour at 10:30 a.m.; to her at 39760 Sumner ~~~~==
-Grant Camp Sons of Union potluck dinner at 12 :30 p.m. Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. I
Acc•osl
SKY CAPTAIN (PG)

'

1

•

.Public meetings

COUNTRYTYME

Farmers markets say
they need help for repairs

AROUND TOWN

iunba~ Uttmt- ~&amp;tntintl

2004

PageA3

Sponsored by the HMC Community Health and .
Wellness Department
This program is supported by the Women 's Health Section.
Bureau of Health Promotion and Risk Reduction,
Ohio' Depar:tment of Heallh. f\HEC, Gallipolis BPW,
and the Gallia·County Medical Society

�.,

OPINION

~ iuwp lamfl -6rnttntl

825 Third Aven1111 • Geiii~U•1 2_h'2

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 441N008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley
Publishing
.. Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

I

KctYin Kelly
Managing Editor

Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
3()() words. All leiters are subject to editing and must 6e
signed and include address and telephone number. No ·
unsigned /elfers will be published. Letters should be in good

taste. addressing iss;.us, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the conof the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. editorial board,
unless otherwise noted.

,,..,·us

s

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Sept. 19, the 263rd day ~?f 2004. There
' are 103 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 19, 1777, during the Revolutionary War,
American· soldiers won the first Battle of Saratoga.
On this date :
In 1796, President Washington's farewell address was
published. ·
·
In 1881, the 20th president of the United States, James A.
Garfield, died of wpunds inflicted by an assassin.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in New York and
charged with the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh infant.
In 1945, Nazi propagandist William Joyce, known as
. "Lord Haw-Haw," was sentenced to death by a British court.
In 1955, President Juan Peron of Argentina was ousted
after a revolt by the army and navy ..
In 1957: the United States conducted its. first underground
nuclear test, in the Nevada desert.
In 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev reacted angrily
during a visit to Los Angeles upon being told that, for secu. rity reasons, he wouldn 't be allowed to visit Disneyland.
. In 1960, Cuban leader Fidel Castro, in New York to visit
the United Nations, angrily checked out of the Shelburne
Hotel in a dispute with the management.
In 1984, Britain and China completed a draft agreement on
. transferring Hong Kong from .British to Chinese rule by
.
. 1997.
· . In 1985, the Mexico City area ~s struck by the first of
. two devastating quakes that claimed some 6,000 lives.
Ten years ago: U.S. troops peacefully entered Haiti .. to
enforce the return_of exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Five years ago: German ·voters handed Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder's governing Social Democrats a humiliating
defeat in eleetions in the easiern state of Saxony, giving it
just 11 percent of the votes.
One year ago: Former Hurricane Isabel rac~p from
Virginia to Canada, delivering far less rain than expected but
leaving millions without power. Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein's defense minister, Sultan Hashim Ahmad, surrendered to U.S. forces.
Today's Binhdays: Author Roger Angell is 84. Rhythm
and blues musician Billy Ward is 83. Former Defense
Secretary Harold Brown is 77. Actress Rosemary Harris is
74. Actor Adam \vest is'74. Actor David McCallum .is 71.
Singer-songwriter Paul Williams is 64. Singer Bill Medley is
· : 64. Singer Sylvia Tyson (Ian and Sylvia) is 64. Golfer Jane
Blalock is 59. Singer David Bromberg is 59. Actor Randolph
Mantooth is 59. Singer Freda Payne is 59. Rock singer-musi-cian Lol Creme (tocc) is 57. Actor Jeremy Irons is 56.
Actress Twiggy Lawson is 55. T.V. personality Joan Lunden
is 54. Singer-producer Daniel Lanois is ·53. Actor Scott
Colomby is 52. Musician-producer Nile Rodgers is 52.
Singer-actor Rex Smith is 49. Actor Kevin Hooks is 46.
Actress Carolyn McCormick is 45. Country singer Jeff Bates
is 41. Country singer Trisha Yearwood is' 40. Actress-comedian Cheri Oteri is 39. News anchor Soledad O'Brien is 38.
Rhythm and blues singer Espraronza Griffin is 35. Actress
Sanaa Lathan is 33. Rock singer A. Jay Popoff (Lit) is 31.
Comedian Jimmy Fallon is 30. Rapper Eamon is 21. Actor
Kevin Zegers is 20.
Thought for Today: "There is no such thing as conversatioq. It is an illusion. There are intersecting monologues, that
is all." - Dame Rebecca West, Irish-born novelist (18921983).

~unbap

'QCimes -j,entinel

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accunde. If,you know Of an error in 3
siOfY, please call one of bur newsrooms.

Our 0111n numborlare:
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Our 1=111111 eddrr" ..:
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Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
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SubiCrlptlon RIIH
By carrier or motor """"

· Dnemonlh ....... . ....... 'll.57
One por .... , ., .... , . ·.. '114.40
. Daily .... " .............. '1.25
Subacrllero allould-remit in advance
• direct to the Gafflpolla Deity Trtllune.
No subocll!)tlon l1f mall ponnitted in
areas where home carrier servk:e is
avoilallte. Senior discounts available.
One-time application necessary.

'
Mall SubKrlplion
fntllde County
13Weel&lt;s...... .......... '3o.15
26 Weel&lt;s. " " . " " " " " '60.00
52 Weeks. " .. " . " " . " '11 8.60

Outllde County
13 Weel&lt;s .. " .. " " " .. . . '50.05
26 Weeks ... ..... " ... " '100.10
52 Weel&lt;s. " " " " " " " '200.20

Sunday, September 19,

The terrible trnth about terror

·6unba!' ttlmH -6mtintl

Diane Hill
Controller

PageA4

What are we to make of
the New York Times
describing terrorist Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi as a
"Jordanian militant"? I mean
this guy is one of the most
vicious al Qaeda thugs in the
world; right now he's behind
much of the violence in Iraq
and has been .active in the
worldwide terror network
since at least 1990.
On June 17 of this year, a
U.S. intelligence official
provided my researcher Nate
Fredman with. the following
information: In early 2000,
Zarqawi · · traveled
to
Afghanistan to assume a
leadership position in an al.
Qaeda training camp. There,
he and his associates trained
·other terrorists how to develop and distribute "toxins."
Zarqawi stayed in · the A I
Qaeda area until war broke
out after Sept. II , 200 I. He
actively fought against U.S.
forces and was wounded .
After the coliapse of the
Taliban ,- he fled to !rim and
then traveled to Iraq, where
his wounded leg was treated .
in a hospital run by Uday
Hussein.
• In the summer of 2002.
' Zarqawi went to Northern
Iraq to train terrorists withthe group Ansar al'lslam,

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$1AR·-,t:~Ee:.li-"1'1--

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis ..

~unbav ~1mrs-~rntmrl• Page As

Obituaries

.'

like the one the USA 2002 to meet with leaders of
launched against Iraq. By Hezbollah, another lethal
denying Zarqawi was an al terror group. The terro[ism
Qaeda guy, the liberal media fraternity is small but detercan falsely claim Saddam mined. These . guys know
had nothing to do with a! and often help one another.
Bill
Qaeda.
·
That's what's happening in .
O'Reilly
And · secondly. the anti- Iraq right now. With foreign
Bush press believes that ter- terrorists infiltrating into
rorism is the president's that country through Iran
strongest issue . So keeping
which is · affiliated with al · the very real danger of coor- and Syria, Iraq has become
Qaeda. After the United , dinated terror down is a the battleground for worldStates invaded Iraq. Zarqawi good political strategy for wide terror, and that's why
went ·underground to orga- those who want to see .the struggle is so important. ·
nize resistance. The CIA . President John K~rry.
And 'zarqawi is right in the
believes Zarqawi personally
That's why the al Qaeda middle of it.
beheaded American hos!age 'relationshfp with the brutal
So let's call worldwide terNicholas Berg, and there is Chechen terrorists was ror what it is: a fanatical
now a $25 million bounty on · muted . .Both Russian and confederation
bent · em
his head.
U.S. intelligence say al destroying a variety of tarU.S . intelligence officials Qaeda is deeply involved gets including the USA .
say there is no question that with training and funding the • Zarqawi; the Chechen
Zarqawi is.as·sociated withal Chechen killers. But yoli" killers, and all the other fasQaeda, but to the New York wouldn't know much about cist barbarians aren'r mili Times he is a "Jordanian that by reading many tants or freedom fighters .
militant." That seems to be a American
newspapers, The~ are all part of the terror
described
the club? and the duty 0 ( an
rather benign description of which
a vicious terrorist · killer, Chechen child murderers as American president is to
doe~n't it?
"insurgents" or, yes, "mili- somehow render them
The reason the Times and tants."
some other liberal media · The truth is that terrorists defeated. And the duty of the
operation-s continue to 'do seek one another out and press is to tell it like it is.
downplay Zarqawi and, cooperate. The IRA , for
Veteran TV news awhor
indeed, the entire worldwide example, used PLO training Bill 0 'Reilly is host of the
terror· threat, is twofold : facilities in Nonh Africa and Fox News sbow "The
First, the liberal press does the Middle East. And O'Reilly Factor" and author
not want another pre-emp- Zarqawi himself traveled to of the book "Who,. Looking
tive strike against terrorists Lebanon in the summer of Out For You~"

tvOJI.'\"H

Sunday, September 19. 2004

2004

Alma E.

.25. !937, he was the son of and seven grandchildren. I 0 Monday. Sept. 20, 2004. ai
Born ·oct. 23. 1963 in colorful phrases.
the late Lawrence and Cora great-grandchildren and two the church, with the Re v.
Survivor,.- include his three
Pensacola, Fla .. he was the
Nease Ritchie.
step-great-grandchildren.
Jamie Jefferson oftkiatino. son or Delores Phillips children: Charles Richard Jr.
He was a custodian for 20
He was preceded in death Burial will follow in the
Whitlock of Syracuse and the of Columbus, Candace c.
Alma E. Lawhorn , 76. of years for Peoples Bank in by his wife, Mary Jane Hambrick
Cemetery at late William Owen Whitlock Fenner of Wilmington and
Bidwell, went home to be Pomeroy and the Meigs Goebel ; sons-in-law. George Southside.
·, In addition to his mother: Carol
R.
Ru ssell
of
wtth her Lord Thursday County Sheriffs Department. Mead and Roger Rose; his
lhe family wishes to he is_ survived by two sisters, Columbus. He was also sur. Sept. 16. 2004, · at Holze; He was a U.S. Air Force vet- parents; two brothers, Frank . ex lend heartfelt thanks to Joe
Jenmfer Lynn Whitlock . of vived by his two nephews;
Medical Center.
eran of six years in the and Bill; and a sister, .
Plantz,
who
by
marriage.
was
Cambndge
and
L1sa Judge Frederick W. Crow 111
She _was born July 2!. Strategic Ait Command.
Madeline.
her brother-in-law for over (Charles) Nolan of Shade.
. an .Carson Crow, both of
1928, 10 Buena Vista, Va. ,
Surviving are his wife,
Services will be noon 40 yea rs. but by choice . has
~lso surviVIng IS a n1ece, Me1gs County. Surviving is
and married Richard H Margaret; two . sons, Brian Monday, Sept. 20, 2004, at
Lawhorn on Sept. 22, 1945 . (Angie) Burkhammet of the Sacred Heart Church , been a refuge through the Tnna Hershber~er and. three also his niece of Linda Crow
at Buena Vista.
' 'Racine, and Ronnie (Candy) wnh the Rev. Father Walter storm. Also. heanfelt thanks nephews: Charlte McKmney, Beegle of Wonhington and
go to Sally Roac h, Vicki Joshua Whttlock and Charhe many great nieces and
· He preceded hef in death Burkhammer of Middlepon; E.
Heinz
officiating. Pear,son
and
Sherry
on Feb. 9, 1996.
two grandsons, Christopher ..Interment
will
be at McCormick, who have gone Nolan III. Several aunts. nephew~.. He will truly - be
uncles. cousms and tnends missed.
.
She is survived · by five Burkhammer of Syracuse, Coolville. Visitati on will be
above a~d beyond the call or also sur.:i ye.
.
In
lieu
of
flowers,
contri budaughters and one son Peggy and Rusty Capehart of held..at the church from I0: 15 .duty to give her personal
ln
addttJon
I?
h1s
father,
he
tions
may
be
made
to
Neal of Marmaroneck N y · Pomeroy; .two granddaugh- to 11:45 a.m. Monday.
care,
and
Myrna
Coob
from
was preceded m death by his Hospice Memorial Fund, c/o
Camlyn Dusty of · Ro~ky ters , JeSSica Ca:pehart of
Armngement s are by the
grand)larents: . HCR
Manor
Care
. Pomt,
N.C.,
Barbara Racine, and Olivia Poling of Ewing Funeral Home at Avon Park, Fla .. who becan'le . maternal .
in
November
a
chemi
angel
and
Elizabeth
Foundation
,
333
N.
Summit
Charles
(Douglas)
.Johnson
of Racme; and a great-grand- Pomeroy.
of 2003.
Phllhps and paternal grand- Street,. P.O. Box 10086
Gallipoli s. Ohio, .Marilyn son, Austm Hart of Racine.
Arrangements are by the parents, Carl and Ann · Toledo, Ohio 43699- 0086~
He ~s also survived by a sis- ·
(Mike) Neal of Wilmington ,
Deal Funeral Home of Point Hubbard.
.
..
Online condolences may be
N.C.. Deborah Chevalier of ter, Rita Berry of Lexington
Pleasant , W.Va.
Funeral serv1ces wtll be at sem to www.l'isherfuneral Galli pol is, and Ted· Lawhorn Ohio ; a brother Robert
Please visit deal fh @c har- . l p.m. Mond~y; Sept. 20. in homes.com.
(Floren tina Russell and son Ritchie of Belpre; .;net severter.nel to send e-mail condo- the Cremeens Funeral Home
- and al nieces and nephew's.
Nichol as ) of Ga11·tpo11s;
Yvonne
Dabney
Baird,
59,
·
lences
to the family.
1n addition to his parents,
in Racine. lnternmen't will be
· seven g ran dc h'ld
t ren, Chris h· e was
of
Southside,
W.Va
..
p,·
s•ed
1
preceded
in
death
by
a
,
in
the Letan Falls Cemetery.
(Joann) Nea I o f. Harrison, b h
away
Friday,
Sept
.
.
17,
2004,
Friends may call from 5-7
N· y., Tammy (S tuart) Levine . ·rot er, Lawrence
· A. Ritchie·' at the home of her daughter.
Clarice M. Erwin, 87, of
p.m.
Sunday at the Cremeens
'd
N
y
Sisters,
Maxine
Durst
and
She was born Nov. 25,
of 0 ceansr .e, . ., Jackie pauline Darneron; three
Middlepon passed away on
Funeral Home.
DusI Y of Roc ky PoinL N.C., b h
·
.1944,
in
Raleigh
County,
Sept.
18 at Overbrook Center
B D
r· R
rot ers-m-law,
William
en . usty o ocky . Point, Berry, Roben Durst and John W.Va., daughter of the late
in
Middleport.
Dustin Ray Musser, 22, of
Jenmfer (Steve) Coughenour Darneron; and a niece and Edward · Early Smith and Belle Glade, Fla., passed
She was born on Marc h 17
Freda Asbury Smith.
.
of Wilmington, N.C., Andrea
191
7 in Langesville, daugh:
N I f W'l ·
two nephews.
away Wednesday. Sep1. 8.
Charles Richard Crow. 83, ter of the late Floyd and
She was a hom~maker, and 2004, at Belle Glade, Fla.
ea o
' mmgton , and
Graveside services will be
Syrac.use passed awav Grace McKnight Miller.
Ashley
Hopkins
of conducteo at the convenience was a member of the Pleasant
Musser was born July 17, of
Columbus, Ohio; two o-realf
View Church in Gallr'pol 1's'
S~pt 17 .
'
Friday.
. For many years, she gave
"
o the family. There will be
d h'ld
1982 m Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.,
was
born
on
Feb.
Rirhaid
gran c 1 ren, Sarah Levine no calling hours. Interment Ferry, W.Va. · .
lessons. she was a
piano
and Carson Neal; a Brother· w1-11 be at the Browning
In addition to her parents, to Robert (Bob) Musser. of · 2, 1921 _i n Pomeroy. He was · me_mher of the Literary Club
re d yRoberts of Buen'a cemetery at Portland.
she was preceded in death by Belle Glade, and Sharon the son uf Judge Frederick W. and the Meigs County
.Alf
.
VISla, a.; a sister, Doris
the father of her children, "Karr" Watson, of Daytona Cmw and Maud S. Owens Hu(llane Society. She was a
Sl 1 f v· I
Arrangements are by the
Beach, Fla. He was a
age o me and, N.J.; spe- Cremeens Funeral Home at George Osswood Dabney; grecnskeeper at Belle Glade Crow. Richard attended The member of the · Middleport
cia!
caregiver,
Beverly Racine.
and
two
sisters,
Iris
Ohio State University. where Church of Chnst. where she
Watterson; and family friend
Whittington and Shirley City Golf Course.
Besides his parents , he is he played football under was the organist for 30 years
Jacqueline Jones .
'
Plantz.
Coach Francis Schmidt, then and she was a member of the
Mrs . Lawhorn was precedShe is survived by her bus- survived by two sisters. transferred
to
Ohio Homebuilders Class·.
Alicia Parker, of Tennessee:
ed in death by her parents; a
band, the Rev. Charles Lee . and
University
prior
to
World
In addition to her parents,
Savanah Watson, of
son-m-law, Thomas Neal; a
UV.:
Baird of Southside; two
War
II
.
During
the
war,
he
she
was preceded in death by
sister, Catherine Rogers; and ·
daughters and sons-in-law, Daytona Beach ; and a broth- served 111 the European her husband, Chester Erwin·
a special Friend, Rita Payne.
REE_DSVILLE.
-Ellen Dabney and Terry er, John Watson of Daytona Theater as a motorcycle her brothers, Don and Cari
Servrces will be 1 p.m. Frede!1ck Baldwm Goepel, "Topper" Spry of Kenova, Beach. Also. grandparents courier . for General George Miller: her sisters: Helen
Monday, Sept. 20, 2004, at · 99, of 41342 ~tate Route 7, . W.Va., and Pamel_a Dabney Don and Delma Karr Patton and also served in the Bulin and Blanch Brown: and
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Reedsville; d1ed Thursday, ani:! Stephen Hinkle of Middlepon; and Robert E: Asiati-c- Pacific Theater.
her sister, in-law, Helen
Roberta
·Musser.
Home Vinton Chapel, with Sept. 17,2004 at the home of Lesage, W.Va.; a grand- and
After
the
w,ir.
he
moved
to
Hood.
the Rev. Ronnie Lemley offi- his_ longtime caretaker, daughter and grandson-in- Pomeroy; great-grandmoth- Warren , where he met and
She is survived by her sons
Opal
Williams,
cmtmg. Bunal will follow in Shirley Jones.
law, Brooke and · Ryan ers
married
Ruth
Jane
Bolz.
He
Michael
(Judy) Erwin of
Vinton Memorial Park .
Born Nov. 22, 1904 at Rayburn of Huntington , Gallipolis: Glennis Musser, lived there until 1966, when Florence. S.C. and Don
and
Dorothy
Friends may call at the Manetta, he was the son of W.Va.; al)d a grandson, Cody Rutland;
he moved back to Meigs (Cathy) Erwin of Middleport;
Cree'ch ; Rutland. Several County.
chapel , 208 Main St., Vinton, Frank A. Goebel and Evelyn Hinkle of Lesage. .
.
. her grandchildren: · Scott
on from 6 to 8. p.m. Sunday, Baldwm Goebel..
.. She is also survived by a aunts and uncles with two
He was vice president of Ke~in , Matthew and Meli ss;;
Sept. 19, 2004.
·
1-le worked as fmance man- Sister and brother-in-law nieces and a nephew.
BolL
-Weir Insurance Co. in Erwin and Amy Perrin: II
Memorial services will be
Condolences can be e- ager for many years at the Linda and Eddie Manders·oi·
Warren from 1947 - ' 1981,
, mailed to www.timeformem- Beasley and Matthews Ford · Cowmbils, Ohio; and three Sunday, Sept. 19, 2004, at 2 when he retire'd to care for his grandchildren; sisters,in-law:
ory.com/mm or mccoy- Dealership m Athens. He ~as brothers and sisters-in-law, p.m. at the Rutland Church of beloved wife ·who precede Maxine' Miller and Irene
Hendricks; brothers- in-law :
a graduate of Ca~JSIUS H1gh Edward and Shirley Smith of God .. with Pastor Robert E. him in death in 1986.
moore@charter.net.
John
Erwin and Dexter
School, a Jesun all-boys Strawsburg, Va., Ronnie Musser officiating. Burial
He
was
a
member
of
Elks
Erwin:
sisters-in-law:
school in Bl!ffalo, N.Y.: and · Smith of Albertson, N.C., and will . follow at Rutland Lodge 195 in Warren for 56
Maxine Brown and Julia
was a graduate of Marietta Roben and Jackie Smith of Cemetery, Rutland.
years an;:! a member of Davidson: and several nieces
College in 1928 with Phi West Milton, Ohio.
Americart' Legion Post 39 in and nephew's.
Friends may pay their
Beta Kappa honors. He was a
Pomeroy for 60 years.
,
Servtces will be held at II
member of the Sacred Heart respec'ts at the Pleasant View ·
Richard
will
surely
be
RACINE
- James Church.
a.m.
Tuesday
at
the
Church in Gallipolis Ferry,
remembered for jumping off Middleport Church of Christ.
Edward Ritchie, 67, of
HJe is survived by two where she will be kept comthe. Pomeroy bridge as a boy Officiating will be AI
Racine, passed away at 10:50 daughters, Marth&amp; Mead of pany by her loved ones from
William
"Bill"
Whitlock,
on
a bet, for flying his private Hartson and burial will be in
a.m. Thursday, Sept. 16, Winchester, Va., and Mary 6 p.m. ·Sunday, Sept. 19,
40,
of
Syracuse
pa~sed away
plane
under the bridge as an Riverview Cemetery. Friends ·
2004, at Holzer Medical Rose of Lumberton, N.J.; a 2004, until the time of serat
1~:20 p.m. Friday, Sept. adult and for teaching his
Center in Gallipolis.
may call from 2 - 4 p.m .
son, Frederick "Fritz" and vices.
17,
m
the
Holzer
Medical
African
Grey
Parrot
·
Monday
at Fisher Funeral
. Born in Ponland on April Nadine Goebel of Reedsville;
Services will be II a.m. Center in Gallipolis.
"Hector," many unique and Home.

Liwhom

Yvonne Dabney

' Baird

Clarice M. Erwin

. Du_stin Ray
Musser

C. Richard Crow

Frederick
BaldWI"n· ,._A.bel

James Edward
Ritchie

Deaths

'

The new media culture
We· don't know yet if the
documents . uncovered by
CBS about President Bush's
National Guard service are
Cokle
real or fake. We do know
and
Steve.n
- that the CBS .report and its
aftermath have illuminated
Roberts
prqfoupd changes in the
media culture and the way
Americans receiv!l information. .
The good news is that institution vitally imponant
mainstream media giants are to the health of democracy
more accountable than ever is being diminished.
for the accuracy of their · No matter how shaky CBS
reponing .. Countless critics, looks right now, its repon on
or "bloggers," om there in Bush's guard service was
cyberspace are dissecting subject. to intense vetting by
every detail of every story. squads of producers, factWithin minutes of broadcast checkers
and lawyers .
or publication - asthe CBS Bloggers operate on a far
episode demonstrates - · lower standard of accu~
they are pouncing on possi- and authenticity. ·
ble mistl\kes and demanding
Moreover, these bloggers corrections.
- and their first cousins on
In · our view, journalists 24-hour-news cable chanwho can't stand that son of nels - have introduced a
scrutiny are in the wrong whole new set of journalistic
.business. When Dan Rather values. In many cases, advoof CBS derides his Web crit- cacy has replaced analysis.
ics as "partisan political The notion of a verifiable,
operatives" · he's missing a' value-neutral ·account of
key point about this new reality is dismi ssed as oldmedia environment.
fashioned.
As
Tom
Even if many bloggers do Rosenstiel of the Project for
have partisan agendas, they Excellence in Journalism
can't be dismissed with an wrote in The Washington
imperious wave of The Post: "What is lost with "the
Anchorman's hand. The ti.me passing of network TV ... is
when CBS could simply say the journalism of veri fica"trust us" is long gone.
tion. It is gradually yielding
The bad news is that place to a journalislll' of
.
mainstream outlets like CBS assenion."
play a critical role in the
To grasp the nature of thts
civic life of the nation . new media culture, type the
While bloggers are now words "Dan Rather CBS"
crowing about how they ··· into your favorite Web
"took down" · Rather, an search engine . Up pops a

blizzard of homegrown
from
Useless
sites,
Knowledge
and
Townhall.c6m to GOPUSA
and Renew America. There's
no more graphic illustration
of what's been called "the
democratization of information," · and even us oldschool, old-media types find
this array of choices healthy
and refreshing.
The days when The New
York Times (Steve's paper
for · 25 years) or ABC
(Cokie's network. since the
mid-'80s) set t1Je information agend_a, and insulated
themselves from criticism,
are over. Michael Hussey,
writing on the Web site
_eTalkinghead.com, put it
this way: "In the information . age, when news and
data flows to tens, thousands, or potentially millions of discerning citizens
at the click pf a mouse, getling away with a· lie is intinitely more challenging than
it ever was. Cheats, liars and
media monopolies beware."
He's right, and that's a big
plus. But just because CBS
- or The New York Times
or ABC- 'makes a mistake,
that doesn't make them less
useful, or the Web more
trustworthy. · In general,
blogs are far less · re!iable
than mainstream outlets.
Bloggers like to say that in
the "self-corre~ting" .culture
of cyberspace they catch
each other's errors, - and
there's some truth to that.
But recall the cautionary tale
of Web icon Matt Drudge,

who was hired and then
frred by Fox News· because
pe brought "Internet values"
to television. Drudge brags
that he's right 80 percent of
the time. But by any calculation of J·ournalistic Pthics,
that's: not nearly " good
enough, even on cable.
Despite Drudge's TV
demise, bloggers and their
cable kinfolk share a domi· nant trait: they appeal mainly to people who already
· agree . with them. Look at
how Fox commanded a larger audience than _the broadcast networks for this year's
Republican convention.
Technology
expands
choices, but it also allows
viewers - and voters -- to
screen out information that
contradicts their existing
· prejudices. And \\'hen discordant data does make it
through that filter, folks get
irascible. It's · stunning how .
often people will hear the
same broadcast, or read the
same column, and · then
berate us fm being too liberal'or too conservatiye. Same
words, v~ry !lifferent reactions, depending on the bias
of the audience,
At)lerica's free press is
tooted in the tradition that
professional journalists here
don't identify with a faction
or an ideology. In the cur'rent rush to celebrltte the'
glorie~ of.the "blogosphere,".
the virtues of independence .
and fairness should not be
forgotten . They are still
ess~ntial to a well-informed
democracy.

William
Whitlock

·River·

Teresa Lynn

ttolbrodlt

'

-

Services for Teresa . Lynn
Holbrook, 43, Waterloo,
who died Tuesday, Sept. 14,
2004, will be held at I p,m.
Sunday at Gallia Baptist
Church.
Burial will be in the
Gallia Baptist Cemetery.
Visitation was held fror,n 4-8
Saturday at the
p.m.
Kuhner-Lewis
Funeral
Home, Oak Hill:

Dorothy May.
Hutdunson
Services for Dorothy May
. Hutchinson, 82, Blackfork,

from Page A'1

.

who died Wedn,esday, Sept. '
15, 2004, will be 2 p.m. closed but later reopened
. Sunday at Union Baptist included 141, 218 and 775.
Church.
· · Throughout the day, county
Burial will be · in the roads that were closed ·Union Baptist Cemetery. with some reor.ening -·
Visitation was held fro'm 4-8 included Cora M1ll, German
p.m. . Saturday at the Hollow, Starcher, Bulaville
Kuhner-Lewis
Funeral Pike, Graham School, Teens
Run, Corn, Mitchell. Nebo,
Home, Oak Hill.
Mill Creek, Sun Valley Drive,
Ravencrest Drive, BuhlMorton and Story's Run.
With drier conditions pre'
dicted
for the weekend, high
Jessie F. Spicer, 79,
water
will
recede, but people
Henderson, W.Va., died
Saturday, Sept. 18, 2004, at will be · watching \he Ohio
River, predicted to crest in
his resii:lence. ·
Pomeroy
at 47.5 feet at 8
Burial will take pla~e at
p.m. Sunday, according to the
the convenience of the family and is under the direc,
tion of the Wilcoxen Funeral
'.
Home. There will be no visitillion or funeral service..

Jessie F. Spicer ·

U.S. Army
Cprps of
Engineers.
The crest at Point Pleasant,
W.Va., ts expected at 40.8
feet early Monday, and 45.5
feet at the Robert C. Byrd
Locks and Dam between 6
and 7 a.m. Monday.
Corps officials cautioned
that
predictions are to change
.
before the new week begins.
.Friday's rain came as·' the
area had finished absorbing·5
or more inches of rain from
Hurricane Frances, which
found its way into the Ohio
Valley on Sept. 80fficials in Mason County,
W.Va., activated their EOC at
8 a.m. Friday, the same time
Gov. Bob Wise declared a
state of emergency in anticipation of problems caused by
the rainfall.
·

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

·. ProUd tQ._Iie afliJI1~~urlife..· ·

l.

'

1192-5479

. _

~av~n~w.,2Qd,

P"'/lk.,.
INSLRANCE PLUS
AGENCIES,
INC.
'
.
114 Court Pomeroy
7.(e

~ P~

.

992-6677

10:00 a.m.
Sept. 25, 2004

Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER
113 W, 2nd Street ·

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. _ _

A.uto- Oll'rrers lnsura.n&lt;·e

www.mydailytribune.com

. We Help You
Weather Every Storm. .

A Hom•

should photograph their damage and be prepared to submit
the photos if needed.
Null said there is no guarantee that assistance will be
available, but all residential
and business damage should
be reponed. Damage should
also be reported to to the
ow_ner's should be reponed to
·the owner's respective insurance carriers.
The Gallia EMA office is
open Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.
.

Gallipolis Daily_Tribune
Subscribe today • 446-2342

' Sub!JCTibe today • 446-2342

!i! 3 W~hin&amp;!£_n ~- . _

Voluntary evacuations were
requested for residents in the
Kingtown area of Point
· Pleasant and in Henderson, but
emergency personnel reported
that as of l&lt;ite Friday afternoon,
no one had -left their homes.
Gallia County Emergency
Management
Aoency
Director C. Michael Nt~li -has
asked that Oallia businesses
and residents with any floodrelated damage · contact the
EMA office in the counhousc
at 441-2036. ·
For residents with damage.
the damage must have been
done to a residential structure. Damage to barns. outbuildings or other type structures do not qualify for assistance. Submissions will be
evaluated for the possibility
,o f seekmg state or federal
assistance.
Any business with damage
should contact the EMA
oftite. ,
.
Person s having damage

C
.

Nollonwlde•lnr.urance &amp;

Financial Serv1c:es

NaDOI'IWIOI II 011 Yout Side'

I

Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and
Affiliated Companies, Home Office: Columbus,
OH 43215-2220 HOt 11100
,1

·Slllline·Lanes
1037 State Route 7N

446-3362

�!'

PageA6

WEATHER

6unbap tttme•·6tnttntl

Local Stocks
ACI - 34 .67
,AIEP- 32.81
Akzo- 34 .52
Ashland Inc. - 5':1.89
AT&amp;T -15.69
BLI- 12.95 ·
Bob Evans _: 27.18
BorgWarner - 43.22
Champion - 3.92
•
Charming Shops- 7. 26
City Holding - 32 .33
Col - 36.97
DG -- 20.23
DuPont - 42.60
Federal Mogul - .21
USB - 29.23
Gannett - 86.21
General Eleclric - 34.14
GKNLY - 4
Harley Davidson - 60.39
Kmart - 87.65
Kroger - I 5.68
ltd. - 21 .81
NSC - 29.44
Oak Hill Financial - 34.40
OVB - 31.50
BBT - 40 .24.
Peoples - 25.66
Pepsico - 49 .72
Premier - 9.10
Rockwell - 39.22
Rocky Boots- 17.31
AD Shell- 52.13
SBC -26.49
Sears- 40.31
Wai-Mart- 52 .50
Wendy's - ·35.80
Worthington- 20.74
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes
the previous day's
transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advasf Inc. of Gallipolis.

•

Sunday, September 19
Morning: "J:emperatures
will climb from 48 to 64 by
late this morning. Skies will
be sunny with 5 to.10 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Afternoon: Temperatures
will stay near 68' with
today's high of 70 occurring around 4:00pm. Skies
will be sunny with 5. to 10
MPH winds from the north-

Wreck
from PageA1
.

"

that thing just reared up and·
came over backwards."
The four-wheeler lay on
Toney 's right leg. He looked
at his watch. It was 5 p.m.
"I wasn't realiX worried,"
r Toney said. ' I thought
Shemum would see my truck
there: I 'forgot it w~~bis day
to go.tJ:ap sbootmg. ,
Toney, a 75-year-old man,
lay trapped beneath the fourwheeler for five hours.
·
. "I could just about tilt it up,
· but I couldn't. I tried to d1g
out, but I couldn't."
When White returned
home at about l 0 p.m. and
saw Toney's truck, he called
neighbors Donnie Smith,
Mark Smith, Ryan Bates and
Aaron Davis, and quickly
formed a search party.
Within 15 minutes, they found
Toney. He was cold and thirs~.
Two of the men took off therr
shirts and placed them over him.
Then, they carried him and took ·
him to a flatbed truck, which
carried him out of the woods and
to a Lifeflillht helicopter.
After a few days m the hospital, . Toney was back at his
home on Baum Addition
Road. He's got a bad chemical
burn on his le-g from the ga~o­
line, a sprained shoulder, and a
voice that's still a little raspy.
. Other than ttiat, he's fine.
And he says he' ll get right
back on his four-wheeler, as
I
.. '
soon as he is able .
· "Sure I will," he said. "You
might as well, if you want to do
''
something, go ahead and do it."
~ hunting is 10f1$ .ago
~into Torey's psycre and
ediic. He grew up ma little town
15 miles outside of Beckley,

east.
Evening: Temperatures
will fall from 65 early this
or
evening to 52. Skies will be
clear with 5 MPH winds
from the northeast.
Overnight: Temperatures
will decline from 51 to .
today's low of 45 by
6:00am. Skies will be· clear
from PageA1
with 5 MPH winds from the
r10rtheast.
mitting. The suggested
detour to follow is 692 to 684
to Ohio 143 to 124 to U.S. 33
W.Va, and all~ hunter ate bet- back to 81. The second proter than everybody else back then. ject is scheduled for compleAlso, Toney has been hurt tion Oct. .26, weather permitfar worse - on hunting trips. ting.
He broke hi's neck about 30
Still closed is Ohio 338,
years ago whenl he was in a about three-quarters of a. mile
car wreck on the way to hunt
from
the
deer., He's also had &lt;1 triple upriver
Ravenswood
Bridge.
bypass, an appendix operaThe highway remains
tion, gall blaaaer surgery and
closed
as a result of a slip that
a shoulder operation.
has
displaced
pavement in
White said Toney can hunt
on his property as long as he the vicinity. Just when it will
wants to. In fact, he said when reopen has not been de.ter·
his dad got ol~. and couldn't ~I~ined, Filson said.
walk very far anymore, he
She gave this suggested
built a turkey stand for him. He . detour for area motorists :
would drive his father out to
the stand, and drive him back. take U.S. 33 (Ravenswood
"If I have to do that for Connector) to 12.4, then
back to 338.
Roger. I will," he said.

Bl

Inside

Sunday, September 19,2004

Prep Scoreboard, Page B2
Bengals, Browns game previews, Page B3
NASCAR Weekend, Page 84

Proud to be apart of your life.

We would like to apologize for
any inconvenience in the
CANCELLATION of -the
Health Fair &amp; Cruise-In
that was scheduled for
Saturday. September 18.
These events may be rescheduled
at a later date. .

Sunday, September 19,2004

Devils run
over Point

-The OVP

How They Fared

G

1. Ironton (4-0)
DEF. BOYD CouNTY (KY.), 56·6

. 2. Parkersburg South (4-0)
OEF. MARIETIA, 45·0

IIOLDR

3. Cabell Midland (2-G)

WvngateGALLIPOLIS
Ul'ilif'

4. Hul)tlngton, W.Va. (3·0)

fsst.&lt;fNi

AT PARKERSBURG, PPO
.

AT CAPITAL,

PPD

4. Jackson (3-G)

MEDICAL CENTER
Community Heal!~ &amp; Wellness

PLAYED loNDON SAT, N/A

&lt;

6. Wllllamatown (3-G)
FUVEO WHEE!JNG CENT: SAT.

Culli'l/1111/l\_.

7. Wheelersburg (2: 1)
OEF, HiLLSBORO,

30-0

8. Winfield (3-1)
LOST TO WAYNE, 36.o0

9. Portsmouth (2·1)
PLAYED' NELSONVILLE~ YORK SAT.

10. Chillicothe (3-1)
DEF. 0LENTANOY UBERTY, 40.36

10. Trimble (3-G) -

PLAYED WAHAMA LATE SAT.

U.S."33

Prep Schedule
Home with large building
with seven rooms, 3
bedrooms and bath. The
building can be used for
multiple businesses. It is
loaded with tools,
. electrical, plumbing,
woodworking, metal
work, etc. It has been
used for many things. It
also has telephone, water,
n!&gt;thr,•nm
a
at least $15,000.worth of
tools, !'arts &amp; supplies. Located approximately 1 mi. ·from Holzer
Hospital on Bulaville Pk. 1 acre plus &amp; house. Asking $79,000
for buildings ·and land. $10,000 for tools, Will sell with or .
without tools. Call 446-2232, 446-0390 or 446-3348.
·
Seriou!llnquiries

and a score.
Nat han Moore had 59
yards on 13 carries to lead
ALLIPOLIS _ It Point (2-2), ~hich suffered
, , .
tiS second ~trat gh tl o s s.
wasn t JUSt a game - - Down by one and the sec. tt was the only game._ onds ticking , away just
. Wah m~st area teams before half, Gallia Academy
etther playmg on Thursday was down 7-6, but had the
or Sunday because of the ball deep into Point territory.
With no time outs and just
remnants of what was once a
Category 5 Hurncane Ivan, a little over 10 seconds ·
Gallia
Academy-Point remaining, the ball was on
Pleasant was one of only two the Point 3 on third-and" games being plared i~ all of goal. Winters ran the ball to
Southeastern Oh10 Fnday.
the one for the Devils, but
The storm forced some was stopped short.
games to be . moved up to
The Gallia Academy
Thursday, whtle others to be offense was forced to hurry
pushed back to Saturday.
for one last play before the
:·1 was _glad to get it in," _ second quarter ended.
said Galli&lt;\ Acade,my head
Just as the fimil second
coach Matt Bokovitz. "If we went off the clock, Haggerty
didn' t play it toni ght took the snap and went down
(Friday), I don't know when the right side, reaching for
we' d be able to play it and the goal line and scoring
we'd probabl y wouldn't before he went out of
have been playing it at home . bounds.
if we waited until (Saturday · "We thought we had mannight).
aged that pretty well," said
Each team took advantage Bokovitz.
first-quarter
That sparked the Blue
of
key
turnovers,
a nd
Gallia Devils going into the half.
Academy scored as time
'\I don't know how close it
ex pired at the half as the was ," said Point Pleasant
Blue Devils went on to'a 20- head coach Steve Safford .
"I' ll have to look a.t it (on
7 win over the Big Blacks.
Gallia Academy out- game !tim). I dtdn t · thmk
rushed the Big Blacks, 235 - they got the snap off. ].
.I00. in the annual "Battle of thought the clock ran out
the Bridge".
before they got the ~ ?ap off,
Sophomore Austin King but I may ,be wrong . _
led the Blue Devils (2-2) on
It ~asn t unttllater m the
the ground with II carries thtr~ quarter when the Blue
for 79 yards. Also for Gallia Devtls gamed some breathquarterback mg-r9om.
,
Academy,
Jaymes Haggerty had 14 carPomt Pleasant had the ball
ries for 71 yards and touch- on Its ow n 18 wtth thtrd -anddowns and Dustin Winters
Gallia Academy's Austin King ruos over Point Pleasant defenders during the Blue Devils' 20-7
Please see Dewlls, B:Z
had 59 ·yards on 13 carries
win over the Big Blacks Friday at Memorial Field. (Brad Sherman)
BY BUTCH C::OOPER

bcooper@mydailytribune.com

Monday's Games
Volleyball

Gallia Academy at Fairland
Athens at River Valley
Chesapeake at OVC
Go II

Chesapeake at Gallia Academy
TVC Ohio at Alexander
•

Tues&lt;!ay:s Games
Volleyball

Coal Grove at South Gallia
Meigs at Trimble
Vinton County at Eastern ·
Belpre at Southern
OVC at Ironton St. Joe
Soccer

Jackson at Gallia Academy
OVC at Ironton St. Joe
Golf

TVC Hocking at Miller
WedneiKiay'a Games
Volleyball

Gallia Academy, South. Gallia at
Eastern Tri-Match
GoII

Deer Hunter's
Country ·

Got

Have you

Purpose?

Must See
No Mobile Home Tax
80ft. Mobile Home
converted to Real Estate.
Solid Foundation
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
Hardwood Floors, New
Heat Pump, House Doors &amp; Windows, Large Swimming Pool,
Front &amp; Rear Deck, Eavespout; Double Garage w/Eleetric Door,.
Large Storage Building, Levell Acre Plus, Prices Below
Appraisal. 5 niiles South of Rio Grande University.
740-446-1127

What on Earth am I here for?
Rick Warren answers that
question in his book
The Purpose Driven Life.
Join us Saturday, Sept. 25th
for the National
Kick-Off/Simulcast of:

HOUSE
For
Sale:

Please contact the church office to
register by

Wednesday, September 22 . ·
Child care provided.
Two locations and times:

,-------------------9:00 ••••

1

First Southem Baptist Church :
· . 41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-6779

I

Thank You

I

Dr. Nick Robinson
at

I

_,

ivww.fsb(pcuneroy.c

L--------------------J

•Back to Health
Chiropractic"

3 Bedroom, 21/2 Bath, Brick Ho11ne
in nice neighborhood, attached 1
car garage, updated kitchen w/new
cabinets and tile floor, fireplace,
beautiful view of field from
back door.
$114,900
Call 740-594-4131
For more information.

Gallia Academy at Ports. Clay

College Schedule
Wednesday's Game
Soccer

1

.

5:00 p.m.

•

'

south Gallia-

.

1

1

game cancelled
MERCERVILLE - South
Gallia's varsily football game
at Symmes Valley has been
cancelled.
The game was orginially
scheduled for Friday, but postponed to Saturday before .
being called off. The game
will not be rescheduled.
The Rebels' junior varsily
game at home against Eastern
Monday will still be played. '

Autopsy results
inconclusive in
BGSU death
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
An autopsy did not
reveal the cause of death for a
State
Bowling
Green
University football pl~yer
who died Wednesday.
Aaron Richardson, an . 18-·
year-old freshman from
Sandusky, ran . half-speed
sprints for 10 minutes and
complained of calf cramps.
He left the field.with an assistant ooach and wenl to the
locker room. He later became
!Jnresponsive and was pro- .
nounced dead · at Wood
County Hospital.
(AP) -

..

I
I

1

WWft.middleportdnm:b.oq '

1

1
.

I
I
'I

·--------------------•

Associated Press
ATHENS, Ga. - The Georgia defense,
made up for another lackluster offensive
showing, holding Marshall to seven . first
downs in .the third-ranked Bulldogs' 13-3
GEORGIA
vs. MARSHALL
victory on Saturday.
Marshall (0-3), which· held No. 9 Ohio
1] ·
]
. State to 79 yards rushing in a 24-2Jioss last · - - - - - - - - - - - - week, shut down a Georgia running game
Freshman Thomas Browti finally began to
that was without its top two backs. The
wear
down the Marshall defense as the
Bulld~s (3-0) had 41 carries for 146 yards,
Bulldogs held the ball mosi of the fourth'
most coming late in the game.
quarter.
Brown had 18 carries for 8 1 yards.
After Georgia lost projected starter Kregg
hopes to have Ware back when it
Georgia
Lumpkin to a season-ending knee injury on
plays
host
to
LSU on Oct. 2.
the first day of pract.ice, Danny Ware sufMarshall has lost its first three games for
fered a bruised lung in last week's 20-16 win
the
first time in school his10ry.
·
at South Carolina.
Held
to
13
yards
rushing
in
the
first
half,
Tyson Browning started Saturday and was
led
I
0-3
at
halftime
thanks
to
an
IIGeorgia
'mostly ineffective. ahd Michael Cooper's
Marshall's Kevin Atkins (5) misses a t&lt;tckle on Georgia tight end playing time was limited by a bruised thigh
Please see Herd. Bl
he suffered in the third quarter.- ·
Martrez Milner during the first half Saturday. (AP)
•

Bonds joins Hank AarOn and the Babe

•

.

'

"

Francisco's' 4-1 victory over San. Diego on Friday .
Associated Press
night, leading the Giants io their sixth straight win in
the opener of their final nine-game homestand.
SAN FRANCISCO _ As Barry Bo~ds' numbers
With a 392-foot solo shot to left-center, Bonds
rise, the words to describe them become -less ade- became the first new member of the 700 club in 31
quate. When the slugger hit his ?DOth homer, only years, joining Babe Ruth and Hank Aaroh~
daughter Aisha could sum up the history and majesly
Bonds was happy to do it at home in front of godof the blast.
father Willie Mays and his adoring fans, but he
"M dad· the be t 1
"th _ ear ld 'd
claims he still can' t believe what he's doing to basey
ts
s p ayer, e 5 Y --o saJ ·
ball 's record books.
Bonds connected tn the third inning of San ._ "ifs just unbelievable," Bonds Said. "You really
BY GREG BEACHAM

.

\

'

.

can't put it into words to be in a class with those two
great players. It's like yqu're dreaming and you' re
not dreaming. It's unbelievable, it's unreal."
.
Bonds' 42nd ho!ller of the season is another steppingstone in the 40-year--old's march toward Ruth's
once-unthinkable 714 and Aaron's imposing 755.
Bonds hasn't been slowed by age, steroid suspicions
or the collective fear of pitchers and managers walking him with record freqtfency.
·
.
Please see Bonds, B:Z

DUE TO -INCLEMENT
WEATHER·
.
THE -PLEASANT VALLE\' HOSPITAL
ANNUAL FALL SCRAMBLE HAS BEEN
CHANGED TO FRIDA\', SEPTEMBER 24, ·2004.

."

'·

'

437 Main Street
Middleport, OH 45760. 740-992-2914
.

• BY CHARLES 0DUM

Sy~mesvaney

.:

: Middleport Church of Christ
.

2004

Dogs shake off Herd

..

Charleston (W.Va.) at Rio Grande

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

buying my

College Football

I

'

.

.Lunch at noon. Shotgun start at 1 p.m. Teams are still being accepted through advance registration.
•
For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

. ·''

�..

- .'

,,

Pom~roy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 19, 2004
Pomeroy·· Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 19,

Prep S-coreboard
, Clarksville Clinton· Massie 35, MI. Orab
Lucas 28, MI. Blanchard Riverdale o
Western Brown 6
Lyndhurst Bfush 22, Stow 14
Clayton Northmont 48. Piqua 12
Macedonia Nordon1a 16. Rav"3nna 12 •
Cle. Benedictine 34, Fremont Ross 26
Magnoli a
Sandy
Valley
18,
Point Pleasant 7 0 0 0 7
'
C
ie.
Collinwood
14,
Cle.
John
Marshall
Newc9merstown
13
Gattis Acad. 6 , 6 B
20
12
~
Mantua Crestwood J6, Peninsula
Cle. E. Tech 30, Cle. Rhodes 12
Woodridge 17
Scaring oummary
Cle. S. 30, Cle. Lincoln-west 14
Maple Hts. 31, Cle. Hts. 0
Firat Quarter
Maria Stein Marion Local 28, Rockford
Clyde 13, Sandusky Perkins 12
PP -James Casto 10 run (Justin
Col. Crawford 13, Buckeye Cent 7, OT
Parkway 6
1
,
Lee kick) 5:48. ·
Coldwater 49, Dublin Jerome 0
Marion Harding 37, Cols ..St. Charles 13
Cols. Beechcrott 40, Cols. Linden 6
Marion Pleasant 63 , Galion Northmor
GA- Jaymes Haggerty 4 run (pass
Cole. Bexle~ 35, Heath 28
12
·
failed) :41.
Cols. Brookhaven 49, Cols. Centennial
Marysville ,21, Groveport 0
·
Second Quarter
12 ·
Massillon Jackson 13, Uniontown Lake
GA - Haggerty 1 run (pass failed)
Cols. peSales 23. Kettering Alter 16
10
1
1
:00,
Cola. Eastmoor 37, Cols. Briggs 11
M,assillon Washington 36, Findlay 16
Third Quarter
Cols. Hamilton Twp, 29, Canal
Maumee 24, Whllel'1ouse Anthony
Winchester 14
Wayne 0
.
.
GA- Dustin Winters 1 run (Justin
Mayfield 29, Cuyahoga Falls 7
Saunders pass from Haggerty) 4 •34. · Cols. Hartley 13, Spencerville 0
Cols. lndependence 47, Cola. S. 12
McDonald 33, ·lakeside Danbury 8
Cola. Northland 30, Cols. E. 12
Mech~nicsburg 27. N. Lewisburg Tliad
pp
GA
Col's. Ready 48; Franklin Hpights 0
22
'
First Downs
10
' 15
Cols. W. 33, Cohs. Africentric 6
M'edina Buckeye 28. Vermilion 7
Rushes·yards .• 36-100 46·235
· ·cols. Watterson 35, Reynoldsburg 14
Mentor 36, Charddn 24
Cdls. Whetstone 26, Cols. Mifflin 18
Middlefi eld Cardinal 36, Wicldlffe 27
Passing yards 37
29
Columbiana 70, Salineville Southern 6 ..
Middletown Fenwick 36 1 Day. Stebbins
137'
Total yards
264
Columbiana
Crestview
34
,
Lisbon
6
29
Comp.att-int
2·10·1 5-12·1
Columbus Grove 30, lima Cent. Cath . 0
Mineral Ridge . 9, New' Middletown
1·0
Fumbles·lost
2·2
Copley 41 , Norton 6
Spring. o
5-35
PeniiKies·yards 2·10
Covington 42, New Paris National Trail
Mogadore 19, Windham 8
Punts-avg.
2·30.5
3'33.0
12
Mogadori Field 23, Streetsboro 8
Danville 42, FredericktoWn 0
..
Monroevllf&amp; 50~ Ashland Mapleton 0
Day. Belmont 22, Cin. Shrader .16.
Montpeller-35, Swanton 6
Individual Statlotlco
Day, Carroll 41. Orlorcl Talawanda 21 ·
Morral R l~ge(jale 21', Richwood N.
Rualltng: PP-Nathan Moore 13·59,
Day. Chamlnad_e.Jullenne 49, 1:-!amlhon Union 14
Newt Mattox 13-26, Jona1han Say·re . Badin
36
Mt. Gilead 37, Cardington· Lincoin 14
4·21, James Casto 6(·6).
Day. Meadowdale 24, Cin. Western Hills ·
N. Baltimore 13, Carey 0
GA-Austin King · 11· 79, Jaymes 1.3
. N, Can. Hoover ?1, Youngs. Boardman 0
Haggerty 14·71, Dustin Winters 13·
Oay...Oakwood 28, New Lebanon Dixie 6
N. Jackson Jackson·MIIton" 28. Berlin
Defiance Tinora 2. Haviland Wayne Center Western Reserve 7
59, Todd Saunders 6·15, Jason Norlh
Trace 0
·
.
N. l:.ima S. Range. 48, Lowellville 6
1-7, Seth Haner 1·4.
DeGraff Riverside 50, Ridgeway
N. Olmsted 16, Westlake 14
8
·
~
Napoleon 43, Bryan 6
Pll.. tng: PP--James Casto 1·7-1· Ridgemont
Delaware Buckeye Valley 33, Marion
Navarre
Fairless
10,
ZoarVille
24. Jus1in Sheline 1.:!·0·13.
Elgin 27, OT
•
Tuscarawas Valley 7, OT
GA-Jayrt)es Haggerty 5·12·1·29.
Delphos St. JaM 's 25,· Minster 0
New Albany 28, Whitehall· Yearling 7
Delta 42', Wauseon 7
N~~ Carlisle Tecumseh 55, Spring .
Oola Hardin Northern 32, McComb 30
Greenan 1
·
Receiving: PP-Seth Beckner 1-24,
Dover 43, Jefferson Area 8
New Philadelphia 61, Uhrictisville
Jus1in Smith 1·13.
Dublin Coffman 35 , Newark 10
Claymont o
GA...:.Jason North 1·16, Shaphan
Dublin Scioto 20, Hilliard Darby 0
Newark ticking Valley 27, Gahanna·
Robinson 1-10, Austi.n King 2-2, Jeff
E. Cle. Shaw 21, Lakewood 0
Cols. AcademY 7
· Payton 1-1 .
Eastlake N: 51, Akr. Kenmo re 0
Northwood 52. Lima Perry 8
Eaton 21, Carlisi$ 7
Norwalk St. Paul 53, Plymouth 12
Ohio HIGh Sdtool FOOtball Scores . Elmore Woodmore 35, Kansas Lakota 7
On~ar,io 26, Bucyrus Wynford 0
Friday'• R•aulta ·
Elyria Cath . 40, Ashtabula Edgewood 7
Orange 43, Newbury 13
Akr, Coventry 31, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA
Euclid 3, Cle. VASJ 0, OT
Orrville 21, Bellville Clear Fork 0
14
Fairborn 52, W. Carrollton 33 ·
Painesville Harvey 6, Youngs_Woodrow
~~~. El~!:e :kr2~: 6 Chesterland w.
Findlay Liberty-Ber;ton 38, Arlington 6 · Wllaon 2
Geauga
.
Finneytown 20, Cin. lndlan HUI17
Painesville Riverside 26, Ashtabula
10
lakeside 8
Frankfort Adena 45, Piketon' 8
tkr. Manchester 29, Massillon Tuslaw
Fremont St Joseph 29, Tiffin Calvert~ 6
Pandora-Gilboa 56, Vanlue 7
2
Gallipolis Gsliia 20, Point Pleasant . ParkersbUrg (W.Va.) S. 45, Marietta 0
AIIIance 2CI1 , Salem 20
(W.Va.) 7 ,
Parma Valley Forge 39, Middleburg Hts ..
Amanda· earcraek 23, Ashville Teays
Garfield Hts. 38, Akr. N. 0
Midpark t 4
Val~ 11
Garrettsville Garfield 49, Atwater
Pataskala Watkins Memorial &lt;41, Mt.
Amher&amp;t·Staele 17, Olmsted Falls 7
waterloo o
·
Vernon 14
Andover Pymatuning . Valley 8, Orwell
Gatas Mills Gilmour 35·, Independence
Pemberville Eastwood 49, Bloomdale
Gra.n d Valley 6
6
·
Elmwood 24
Anna 35, Bradford 12
Germantown
Valley
View
44.
Perry 49, Conneaut 14
Arc;an.um 21, Union City MissiSsinewa Middletown Madison 0
Perrysburg 23, Holland Sprin.g. te, OT
Valley 8
Goshen 34, Cln. NW 18
Pk:kerington Cent 27, Sandusky 14
Archbold 25, Metamora Evergreen 6
Gran11llle 19, Hebron lakewood 12
Pickerington N. 21, Delaware ~4 Ashland 16, Madison 14
·
Greensburg Green 35.'Medlna Highland
Plain City Jonathan Alder 48,
Ashland Crestview 13; Collins Western 17
·
washington C.H. 12
Reserve 8
Greenwich S. Cent 39, N~w London 7 ·
Richmond Hta. 52, Columbia 18 ,
Aurora 34, 'ltrrtland 0
Hamler Patrick Henry 24, Liberty Center
Rocky River Lutheran W. 38, Brooklyn
Avon2~GrattonM idview21
12
· 12
.
, AVOn-Lake 47, Rocky River 7
Hilliard Davidson 41, Grove· City Cent.
Rootstown 31 , Ra\lenna SE 28
1
Ba800m Hopewell-Loudon 29, A11ica Crossing o ·
Saltsburg (Pa.) Klskl 14, Cols.
Seneca E. 0
.
Hubbard 26, Newton Falls 0
Crusaders 0
Batavia 21, Blanchester 0
Huber Hts. Wayne 24, Spring. S. 14
Sherwood Fairview 47, Antwerp 10
Bay 'Village Bay 40 , Fairview Park ·· Hudson 10. Solon 0
SidneY Lehman Cath . 64, Tal. Ottawa
Fairview 14
Huron 31 , Oak Harbor 7
Hills 20
Bellbrook 30, Day. Northridge 6 •
Jeromesville Hillsdale 17, W. Salem NW
Sparta Highland 34, Caledonia Ai\ler
Bellevue 67, Galion 20
16 ·
·
ValleY 14
Berea 35, Medina 21
Johnstown Northridge 21 , Utica 0
Spring. Cath. Cent 32, Spring. N,E 13 ·
Bowling Green 28, Sylvania Northview
Johnstown-Monroe 42, Loudonville 21
Spring. Shawnee 13, Spring. Kenton
20 ·
Kenton 15, Celina 14
. Ridge 7
Brecksville 17, Parma Sr. 7
Kettering Fairmont 29 : Spring. N. 28
Springboro 42, Franklin 14
Brookville 28, Mitton-Union 7
Kings Mills Kiflbs 16, Wilmington 7
St. Henry 20, New Bremen 14
Brunswick 34, North Royalton 18
LaGrange Keystone 27; Oberlin Q
St. Marys Memorial 20, Ottawa:·
Burton Berkshire 26, Geneva 14
Lakewood St. Edward 61, Akr. Central- Glandorf 7
Can. Cent. Cath. 40, Wooster Triway 7
Hower 6
St. Paris Graham 31 , Tlpp City
Can. McKinley 10, Can. GlenOak 0
Lancaster 49, Cots. Westland 35
Tippecanoe 20
Can. S. 48. Akr. Spring. 6
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 24, Baltimore
Stror.gsville 28. N. Ridgeville e
Canal Fulton NW 26, Beloit W. Branch Liberty Union o
.
StrUthers 19, Canip~en ~emorial 12
12
Laavinsburg, LaBree 26, Bfookfield 12
Sugar Grove Berne Union 14,
Castalia Margaretta 42, Milarl Edison 19
. Lebanon 49. Lamon+Monroe o
Grandview 7
Cedarville 31, S. Charleston SE 0
Lees Creek E. Clinton 38, New
Summit $tation licking Hts. 16,
Centerburg 28, Howard E. Knox 20
Richmond 14
··
Millersport 13
centerville 41, Trotwoocj.Madison 21
Leipsic 21 , Cary-Rawson 0
Sylvania Southview 21, Rossford 7
Chagrin Falls Kenston 9, Kent
Lewis Center Olentangy 21, Sunbury
Tallmadge 33, Richfield Revere 27, 2
Roosevelt 7
Big Walnut 19
OT
Chillicothe 40, Olentangy Liberty 36 .
Lewisburg Tri ~ County North 41 , W.
Tiffin Columbian 51, Fostoria ·o
Chillicothe Zane Trace 20 , Williamsport Alexandria Twin Valley ,S. 7
Tipp City Belhel28. Ansonia 7
WeStfall13' ·
Lewistown Indian Lake 48, Casstown
Tol. Bowsher 28, To\. Rogers 0
Cin. Colerain 49, Cin. Sycamore 0
Miami E. 7
Tol. Christian 58, Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. o
.Cin. Elder 21 , Indianapolis (Ind .) Bishop
Lexington 4B, Mansfield Sr. 25
Tot Scan 46, Tol. llbbey a
Chatard 15 .
Lima Bath 28. Elida 0
Tot. St. Francis 17, Oregon Clay ~4
Cin .. LaSalle 44, Gahanna 14
Lisbon Beaver Local 14, E, liverpool o 1, T.o1. St . Joh ns
' 1".... T•O·
1 "-"
~~t · Ca.
th 1o
C in. St. Xavier 47, Westerville N. 10
Lockland 36 , Gin. Christian 6
Tol. Whitmer 42,Tol. Start 7
Cin. Taft 36, Day. Jefferson 18·
London Madison Plains 27, Greenlield
Tol. Woodward 21, Tol. Waite ·7
Cln. Winton Woods 28. Cin. Anderson McClain 8
Tonlolijlny Otsego 52. Gibsonburg 7
12
.
Lorain Brookside 49 . Lorain Clearview
Trenton Edgewooq 18, Miamisburg ~2.
Cird~ille 16, Lancaster Fairfield Union
20
OT
6
Lorain Southview 23, Lorain Admiral
Troy 28, Sidney ,14
'Circleville Logan Elm 24, Bloom-Carroll . King 8
·
.
Troy Christian ·38 , MilfOrd Center
. ,12
Louisville ~5. Alliance Marlington 0
Fairbanks 14

Gallla Academy 20,
Point Pleasant 7

o -

1

Devils

•

'

Wellington 34, Oberlin Firelaf'llds o
Westerville S 21, Grove City 14 OT
Willard 6, Shelby 0
•
Willi~msbu rg 16, Clermont NE ~3
Willoughby S. 13, Bedford o
Wooster 42, Millersburg w. Holmes o
· Worthington Kilbourne 2~, Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh Jesuit ~4
Xenia 30, Beavercreek 13
Youngs. Austintown -Fitch 20, Massillon
Perry 0
Young.s. Chaney 22. Canfield 21, OT
, Youngs. liberty 24. Warren ChampJon 0
Youngs. Ray~n 34, Lima s ·r. 7
Thursday's Reaults
Coat
Grove DawsoO-Bryant 40,
Portsmouth Sciotovl lle 19 .
.
Greenup County, Ky. 57, South Point'-6
Ironton 56, Cannonsburg, Ky,, 7
p

W.Va. high echool scores
Friday's Raault•
Bridgeport 22, liberty Harrison 8
Gallipolis, Ohio 20, Point Pleasant 7
Lincoln 14, Lewis County 6
Morgantown 41, East Fairmont 6
Mount Hope 38, Gilmer County 0
Parkersburg South 45. Marietta, Ohio 0 ·
RoQert C, Byrd li4, Philip. Barbour 6 .
Shady Spring 36, Independence 0 ·
University 28, Elkins o·
· Frtday'a Postponement•
Berkeley Springs at Northern Gahett,
Md., ppd to Sat
,
.
Boonsboro,, Md. at Hedgesville, ppd to
Mon.
Braxton County ·at Ritchie County, .PPd
to Nov. 5
Buckeye Local, Ohio at Oak Glen, ppd
to Sat
Burch at Hannan, ppd.
Cabell Midland at Parkersburg, ppd
Clay County at CalhOun County, ppQ to
Sat
·
Doddridge County. at Wirt County, ppd
to Mon .
Edison Local. Ohio at Brooke, ppd to
Sat.
-·
Fairland, Ohio at Tolsia, ppd to Sat.
Gilbert at Duval, ppd. Oct. 22
Gratton at Magnolia, ppd to Sat.
Hamlin at Guyan Valley. ppd to Mon.
Hannibal
River,
Ohio at Tyler
Consolidated, ppQ to Mon.
Herbert Hoover at Bluefield, ppd to Oct.

'22
Hundred at Clay-Battelle, ppd. to Sat.
Huntington at Capital, ppd
Madonna at Paden City, ppd.
Musselman at James WOod, Va., ppd to
Sat.
Nitro at Rlpley, ppd to Nov. 5
PiKeView at Big Creek, ppd to Mon .
Ravenswood at Logan, ppd to Sat.
.Richwood at Midland Trail, ppd.
River, Ohio at Tyler Consolidated, ppd.
South Harrison at Bishop. Donahue, ppd
Valley Fayette at Van , ppd. to Sat.
Valley Wetzel at Tygarts Va lley, ppd. to
Mon.
Wahama at Glouster Trimble, Ohio, ppd
to Sat .
Weir at Indian Creek, Ohio. ppd.
Wheeling Central at Williamstown, ppd
to Sat.
·
,
Wheeling Park at Cambridge, Ohio, ppd
to Sat

Thursday'• Results
· Buffalo 47, Fay&amp;ttaville 0
Riverside 26. Princeton 20
Meadow Bridge 55, Montcalm 13
M~rtinsburg 52, Hampshire 7
·Spring Valley 35, Hurricane 21
Matewan 29, Man 12
TUcker County 41 , Pendelton 12
Wayne 36, Wintield 0
Frankfort 35, Williamsport, Md., 0
George Washington 30, St. Albans 0
Fairmont Santor 22, Preston 7
Poca 41. Oak Hill 0 ,
Sherman 28, Iaeger 6

SCott 7, Westside o
James Monroe 48, Greenbrier East 13
Wyoming East 45, Summers County 21
Jefferson 32, Woodrow Wilson 26

'

I

I

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II

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Members of the 2004 Gallia Academy Athletic Hall of Fame
induction class were honored prior to the Blue Devils' foot·
ball game against Point Pleasant Friday. The class was officially inducted at a banquet on Saturday. (Brad Sherrnan)

Top 25 College Football
'

'

WVU gets·past
Terps in OJ
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP)- Rasheed MltrShall threw
a 7-yard touchdown pass to Chris
Henry in overtime to lift No. 7
West Vrrginia to a 19-16 victory
over No. 21 Maryland on
Saturday.
West Virginia moved to 3-D for
the first time since 1996.
Maryland (2·1) suffered its first
loss to the Mountaineers under
coach Ralph Friedgen. ·
Friedgen and the Terps faced a
fourth-and-short in the first overtime possession, · but played it
safe and sent out kicker Nick
.Novak
After Novak kicked a 33yarder to make it 16-13, Marshall
took over for West VIrginia.
He had a pair of 5-yard runs,
then found Hemy' on a slant pattern over the middle on third
down for the winner. With John
Denver's "Cou.ntry Roads"~·
ing over the stadium louds
-

ers, the Mountaineer players
stayed on the field for seveml
minutes to celebrate their first
win over Maryland in five tries.

No·. 4 Miami 48,
Louisiana Tech 0
At Miami, Frank Gore and
"JYrone Moss combined for three
touchdowns, leading No. 4
Miami to a 48-D victory over
Louisiana Tech on Saturday. ,
The Hurricanes, coming off a
huge win aJ!ainst in-state and
conference nval Aorida State,
certainly didn't have a letdown.
This WliS a beat down.
Gore ran 12 times for 61 yards
and scored a touchdown early in
the third quarter before ·sitting
out much of the second half
Moss had 69 yards on seven carries and scored twice in the first
quarter.

corr

••·•s20,900

I

i

'b

9

°

.......... .

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• - ......................

I

~.~.~~.~.~1,·7,995

18

~~~ Fas~rrm":;,;;::,~~9oo

rod:

GALLIA AUTO SALES

t

•

;More troubles await Dolphins
on Sunday night in Cincinnati
·
.,question. It's a tough one. I guess the pa,st
bearing down on Florida. . .
Associated Press
The season opener agamsrTennessee would show that the .one-quarterback
was moved up a day to avoid any entan- system works."
·
CINCINNATI_ - . Ricky, Charley. glements ,with Ivan. The weather was
The angst ami iodecision sound awfulFrances. Ivan. Smce the end of last sea- fine last Saturday, but the Dolphins were ly familiar in Cincin nati , where the
;son, the Miami Dolphins have gotten ·to ·not - a team record-tying 14 penalties · Bengals are trying tu pull out of their 13.know trouble on a first-name basis,
. and a halfttme quarterback sw1tch to A.J . . year rut Carson Palmer's performance in,_
: More awaits this weekend in Feeley.
h.1s fi rst NFL start prov1ded the latest evi·Cincinnati
"We've had some issues," coach Dave dence that, things are finally headed in the
·
Carson. Chad. Rudi. And· yes, even Wannstedt sa1d, m a hu~e understate- right direction.
what's left of Ivan.
,
ment. "All teams have the1r share during
The Bengal s have a few, uh, issues of
When will it all end?
ttle course of the season. It just seems like their own, of course. The defe nse was
_ "We've had so many things hapoen to ours have all come kind of three days bulldozed during a 31-241oss to the Jets.
· US , we ' re just kind qf expecting it.'' line- ·after the last"
·
Rudi John son had a fumble returned for a
The two main issues Sunday will .be touchdown. And injuries highlighted the
:backer ZachThomas said. "It goes on
·and on, the trouble we' ve had.
whether Feeley can hold h1s own 1n hi s lack of depth at vital positions.
"Yo~'ve got to look past all of that. ·If first start and whether anybody can run
They can' t afford to have their ninth 0you wm, it squashes all. of that: If you the ball for more than a yard or two at a 2 start since 1991 ,
lose, they keep bringing it up."
time.
,
"I don't want. to say this is a must-win,
,A loss on Sunday night agaiMt •Jhe
The Dolphms gave up a second-round but it's needed," receiver Chad Johnson
:Cmcmnal! Bengals (0-1) would turn the pi~k for Feeley, who got a five-year, $18 said. "The importance of this game is,
:talk towardhis!ory. Miami.hasn ' topene~ null10n contract but watched Jay Fiedler No. I, winning, and No .' 2, showing ,
.a season 0-2 stnce 1988, the last ume It start last Sat~rd ay a~ain st Tennessee. eyerybody why we're back on (Sunday
:had ~ losing season.
_
Two first-half mte rcept1ons prompted the mght). We want to show the whole world
Thmk that might come up a few times? abrupt switch to Feeley. who finished otT that we're not the same Bengals .. You
"To go 0-2 .- that hasn't happened the 17-7 loss.
can·r make fun of us no more."
around here it\ a long time," cornerback
"It 's just an exciting time," said Feeley,
That distinction is fast reverting to the
.Sam Madison said. "And I don 't see it who hasn"t slatted since h e.w~s a backup Dolphins, who are becoming the team
:happening any time soon."
·
With Ph!ladelph1a tn 2002. 'It s what you · that ,can't see m to get out of its own way
. These Dolphins might be up to it. ask for as a player, a chance to get to play. or disaster's path.
:They've already set a franchise standard That's what I've been given here ,"
The Dolphins missed Ivan, which
for turmoil and tribulation.
He hasn't bee~ given . much to work slowed and stayed offshore last weekend.
It started over the winter, when Dan with. The Dolphins' running ganie aver- Its remn ants were blowing into the
Marino decided to join the front office aged only 3.3 yards per carry - a num- Cincinnati area as the Dolphins packed
and bnng glory back to the franchise . ber that won ' t get many wins. Lamar for the trip nurth .
•
Gordon, acq uired in a trade·· the week
Worse, another· one-name threat ,Twenty-two days later, he quit
: Cornerstone running . back Ricky . before the Gpener, had only J2 yards on Jeanne -. was lmking out over open
·Williams left a week before training 12 carnes.
water. providing one more distraction as
camp, leaving more misery behind.
And, if things don' t go so well, the players left home.
Then the hurricanes blew in.
Wannstedt . might consider switching
"Yuu worry about your families when
Nine players stayed behind when the quarterbacks agam.
you're out of town, and then you have to
Dolpl!i~ s played their final preseason
··1 don 't know," Fee ley said; whe11 (change) your schedule and doing that
game m New Orleans with Hurricane asked about the Importance ot settling on can be di stracting." Thomas said. ·
frances - the successor to Charley - one passer. "I 'really can' t answer yo ur
So far, it's the ~tory of their season.

',

CHEVROLET

•

.

'

7 40-446-3672

350 VB, T-Tops, Leather,
Auto

1997 Ford FlSO 4X4

Switching sides for Browns, Cowboys
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

Associated Press
IRVING , Texas - This has
been one of the longest weeks
" for coach Bill Parcells, . the
week after a season-opening
Joss.
Parcells realizes Dallas is
just one of 16 teams that started the season with a Joss. But
that didn't · ease his own
anguish or keep him from
wondering if the Cowboys
will even win a game.
"It's a tough week It's not
milch, fun , and you do wonder;" Parcell s said. "Right
now. we 've ~ot some probIeins here wtth injuries and
personnel and everything. It
hasn't been comforting."
Neither is looking at the
next opponent: Cleveland, a
team that started its week with
a victory party at new quarterback Jeff Garcia's home.
· 1'he Browns won their ftrst
:season opener since the.ir
:rebirth in 1999. - ·
: "It's one of those things
·Where you have to have a
:short-tenn memory," Garcia
said. "We're on to the next
fight.' We're anxious. We're
excited."
: For the first time since
: 1994, the . Browns play
.Sunday in Dallas, where . the
:cowboys are an NFL-best 32· 12-1 in home openers.
· When Cleveland last played
there a decade ago; Butch
:D.avis and ·Dave Campo were
:coaching for the Cowboys,
·and Vinny Testaver&lt;1e was the
:Browns quarterback. They've
·
'all ·switched sides.
As usual, Parcells isn't wor-

Factory

Bonds

'

'

Bv JO£ KAY

But, turnabout is fair play.
Brett Jones recovered a
Point fumble on the Big
Blacks' 28-yard · line, setting
from Page 81
up the ftrSt of two Haggerty
touchdowns.
five. Big Blacks' qu;pterback
"Turnovers ·were key for
James Casto, though, was
us;" said Safford. "We
sacked back on the 4- yard
stopped ourselves several
line by Kory Cox to force
times.''
Point to punt from deep in its
Boko~itz was pleased to
leather, Factory, 3rd Seat,
own temtory.
·
return.
to the win- column
ape/Bose Sound
4X4, 4 Door, Factory Warranty
Gallia Academy Was. able to
at
,
after
suffering
losses
start its following dflve on the
Wheelersburg and Ironton the
Point 39 after a 35-yard punt.
•2-:,:J
past couple of weeks.
A 15-yard run by King, an
··1r•feels a lot better to win
11-yard run by Haggerty and
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said
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Saunders put tl)e ball on the
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,., A· CD r.r. C . .,0 995
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Wo
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'03 Ch
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4v4
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southeastern Ohio Friday,
'02 Chevy ICab L5 47,000 Miles, 4X4, .
,
evy
azer "'' ··············.···" ,
Winters to punch it. A twoParkersburg South defeated
,
"IZ 995 04 GMC Envoy 4X4 ........................... $20,500
point conversion pass from
1ioWI.ng Pkg.......................................
'
jJ
I
'04 Ch ' I
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'
Marietta,
45-D.
Haggerty to Justin Saunders
99
Chrysler
Town
&amp;
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LXi
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·
·
eY'f
mpa
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·············
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put the Blue Devils ·on top,
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to
the road this Friday as the
2()..7.
Cheyy venture Ext
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04 N1ssan Altima 23,000 miles, Loaded..........
Blue Devils face Chillicothe.
· Point Pleasant only got into
Loaded
Rear
Air
........................................................... $ 16,400
Point Pleasant will also be
the red zone once in the sec'
'04
Chevy
Malibu Classic 19,000 Miles, 4
away, traveling to Winfield. ·
Was Sl4,500............................. NOW $13,900
Doo
$10 495
'01 Honda Odyssey Rear Ait; Low Miles,
·,
r .................................,...............
•
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'
.~ssure on .the Dodgers, who lead the Giants by . '03 Chrysler Town &amp; Country Ltd Facto
, ····..··-;·············...................................... ~9,795
2/, games ,m the NL West. Third-place San
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Diego lost another chance to make up ground,
95
falling 6~, games behind 4Js Angeles. ·
'01 Chrysl•r Town &amp; Country Ltd Loaded. •00 j;;p·(J;;~~k~·~;;d~·4x4;··i:~~~/
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Rookie Noah Lowry pitched 6 2-3 strong
'04 Expedition XLT 414 Rear Air, Jrd Secit. , ........................-;·······.. ····:................... " •''
Yet Bonds still clings to the hope of adding a qmings to remain unbeaten in the majors. But
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World Series title to fiis accompfislunents~ and Bonds dominated yet another night at San
'04 GMC Yukon 414 Jrd Seat, Rear Air. , , . wasSI 6,JOO.......~------··---·......... NOW$15,995
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115 000 '04Ch Sbrb. X d
still play and still contribute," he said. "I just . got to work quickly back home: Instead of
don't want to get satisfied, get too caught up _ dunking another homer in the kayak-infested 'O:t
'04
into it all. IUgbt now, 1 -'ly want to focus on waters of McCove).- Cove, Bonds went to the
'O:t ~nd Cherokee Lorado, 4X4,
. ....,.orer po •c 414 I 2,000
·
opposite field on an 0-1 slider from Jake Peavy.
"'6,
..
,__
·It
7.400
Miles
...........................................~ ...$19,995
comp1,.,;"ft my ctltller and, "'-full
~
IRIIa ................~................
,
World Series." '""~"' y, conung · "The good thing is I get to sleep no\V and stop
back
As Bonds rounded second base, the Giants 'having nightmares about this," Bonds said.
lanoched ~and an elaborate fireworks
Bonds' homer of the season increased San
disptay from the scoreboard and light towers in Francisco's lead to 4-0. He has hit 79 homers
Center field. He pointed skywaro as lie crossed . against San Diego - 18 more than any other
bomc p•-- then took a curtain call to a 'oyous opponent - but manager Bruce Bochy
standing~alioo.
J
promised to pitch tO the slugger' if game condiWith the victory, San Francisco also kept lions dictated it during the key three-game
series.

I

and half.
"In the second half, weren't
able to establish anything,"
said Safford. "Field position
played a big ·part and
(Haggerty) killed us. We just
could not contain him. We
just can't prepare for that kind
of kid and we can't practice
for it.
.
"He's quick and mobile.
The last two weeks in a row ·
(including a 21-0 loss at
Magnolia), quarterbacks that
have been mobile like thai
have hurt us."
In the first half, Point had
gained momentum.
With Gallia Academy driving the ball inside Point
domain, ·Garrett Watterson
picked off a Haggerty · pass
and returned it 46 yards to the
Gallia 19.
· ·
· Three plays later, Casto
took it in from 1'0-yards out as
Point Pleasant struck first.

0

~unba!' t::tml'S ·~rnhitrl • Page B3

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National Football League

Honorees

Twinsburg Chamberlin ,24, Barberton 14
·Upper
Arlington
27,
Thomas
Worthington 20
.
Upper Sandusky 56, Norwalk 10
Urbana 42, Spring. NW 12
Van Wert 12, Wapakoneta o
Vandalia Butler 45, GreenvillE! 21
Versailles 40. Ft. Recovery 0
,
Vienna Mathews 25, ·Fairport Harbor
Harding o·
W. Chester Lak.ota W 21, Fairfield 6
W. Jefferson 39. Bethel-Tate 7
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 12, Tuscarawas
Cent. Cath. 7
W. Llberty·Satem 49 , Jamestown "'
G reeneview 7
Wads'NOrth 27, Lodi Cloverleaf 6
Warr~n Howland 7, Poland Seminary 0
Warren JFK 54, Genoa 14
Warrensville Hts. 50, Akr. Firestone 7
Wash i nt~ton C.H. Miami Trace 51 ,
Westerville Cent. 36
·
Waynestield·Goshen 55, Yellow Springs

'

2004

'

.
'

Herd
trom~B1

play, 67 -yard' touchdown
drive in the first quarter.
· Cooper vaulted over the line
~for 3 yards on a fourth-and-!
: play from ,the Marshall 17 to
:keep the drive alive. Cooper
. scoied from the 2 following a
12-yard pass from David
, Greene to Fred Gibson.
. Marshall gained S7' yards
·
fi
·on its trSt play from scrim" ~ mage when Stan Hill faked a
, :handoff and passed to an
:open Emanuel Spann. A pass
·interference call against
Georgia cornerback Tim
Jennings two plays later
_pushed Marshall to the 6, but
-Hill was sacked on third.
:down and Marshall took a 3-D
:lead on a 33"yard field goal
:by Jan O'Connor.
After Georgia's touchdown
drive ' the Bulldogs added a '

Suggs, the running back who
ried about sentimentalitv. rate'·
He 's con ce rned about hi s
Parcell s won ' t make that · missed the opener because of
determination after just one a neck stinger. Plus, Garcia
team.
should be settled in at quarterRichie Anderson. the team 's game :
The
Co,vboys
also
I~,J
s
t
their
back .
third-down back, and offenlast
season,
·
then
.
After spending five seasons
opener
sive linemen Andre Gurode
in
San Francisco, Garcia said
responded
with
a
tive-game
and Tyson Walter all came out
of the season opener with winning streak. They went on he was very nervous hefore
sprained knees. Gtirode is the to win I0 games and get back his Browns debut - a 20-3
most likely to miss the ·game, to the playoffs after three win over Baltimore in which
and would be replaced by straight 5-11 ' seasons under he passed for a touchdown
Camp&lt;i.
and ran for another.
·
Walter - · if he's healthy.
the
Cowboys
certain··It
was
one
of
those
things
While
If Anderson isn' t availab.le,
rookie Julius Jones would be ly don' t want to start 0-2; they . where. I do put a lot of presa candidate to take over some are careful to avoid labeling sure on myself. The expecta· tions of the fans in Cleveland
of his duties. , But Jone s Week 2 a must win.
"It'
s
too
early
in
the
season
are high and they 'deserve Jo
missed the opener.- and the
to
say
that,
but
it"s
pretty
dang
have , those," Garcia said. "I
last exhibition game- with a
tight
end
Dan
wanted
to go in and show the
close,"
. bruised rib. ·
Testaverde. the 40-year-old Campbell said. " I don't want fans and the city of Cleveland
quarterback, threw for a to go to Washington on a that I am going to give my all
league-high 355 yards in hi s Monday night .0-2. Ju st being · for· this team and that is why I
Dalla s debut. But Parcell s · 0-2 petiod is bad. It sure · am so hard on this team. I am
be nice to win this."
not going to settle for medioc doesn'tlike throwing 50 pass- would
Cievcland, meanwhile, is rity out of myself or my teames. especially when the spread riding, high after a rare open: mates. I strive to be as good as
offense they used takes runmg wm .
possible."
ning back Eddie George out
The Browns may get a
So far, he's undefeated in
of play.
·
boost
with
the
.return
of
Lee
Cleveland.
And the defense that was
top ranked in the league last
year gave up 415 yards and
,struggled all day. Even with
the addition of pass-rushing
e 0 d Marcellus Wiley, . the
Cowboys got no pressure on
Daunte Culpepper and provided no help for their suspect
'
secondary in a 35-17 loss at
Minnesota..
1111}
"I'm not wondering any
less than I did (last year). I do
have more confidence in the
ability of the people that I
have," Parcells satd . . "What
was a certain way may have
changed a little bit and you
just have to get a feel for that
and see· if your judgment
abou_t those things is accu-

VB, Auto Trans., t.ow Miles

1999 Mazda B-3000 X-Cab

.,,
....

........

..,
,,
,..
..., . . t• ,.,._,
'

,.,,.

B·lflleel
BIIIBIIIIIJ Front Blld

33-yafd field goai by Andy
Bailey to ~ap 1 an 82-y.ard
drive that began at the1r 3.
Greene hit freshman A.J .
Bryant for 34 yards on the
drive.
Brownin~ lost a fumble that
M
11 th
h
gave ars a
e ball at t e
Georgia II in the third quarter, but the Bulldogs defense
kept the Herd off the scorebo~~e carries .liy Earl
Charles gained 9 yards, setting up a fourth-and-I at the
2, Under pressure, Hill rolled
to his right and threw the ball
at receiver Brad Bates' feet,
ending the drive.
. A 33-yard pass· from
Greene to tight end Leonard
Pope on the first play of the
founh quarter moved Georgia '
to the Marshall 31 and helped
set up a 29-yard fielddoal by·
Bailey for a 13-3 . eorgia
lead:
.
B .1
,
, ru_ey . was w•de left. on a
45-yard . field goal mtdway
· through the fourth quarter.

.

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Special

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�PageB4

NASCAR WEEKEND
No clear favorite in championship chase
6unbap li~ ·6tntintl

Sunday, Septembu 19,

2004

open.
Aside from Gordon and
Newman, the rest of the field
inc! udes Johnson,
Dale
CHARLOTTE, N.C.- Jeff Earnhardt Jr., Tony Stewart,
~ordon think~ there are flav.:s Matt Kenseth, Elliott Sadler,
m N;\SCAR s new champ•- Kurt Busch, Mark Martin and
onsh1p . format and Ryan , Jeremy Mayfield.
Ne~man still · loathe~ the
The Las Vegas oddsmakers
list Gordon as the . 9-5
enure system.
favorite . With four series titles
Too bad for both of them.
T~e h~al ID-race chase already, Gordon has the ~post
begms th1s weekend at New experience in racing for a
HamJish•re, and the champmn championship.
He leads the series this year
at the end will need a decent
strategy, expenence and a in poles (6) and wins (5) and
whole lot of, luck.
is a streaky driver. When he
NASCAR s fmt Chase for gets hot, he' s capable of
the Nextel ~u~ starts as a putting together a series of
dead-heat, w1th JUSt 45 points
.
separating first-place Gordon w~!hind him is Johnson, who
from IO~h-place N~wman . was the most dominant driver
The ~tandmgs can be JUmbled for much of the s~ason. With a
m.~ smgle race: .
huge lead in the points in'
Everyb~y . IS 10 the same August·, his team began to
boat now. I.t sAustwho gets.to experiment a little bit and it
be a SUrviVOr, Newman Said.
h d thr
A !'ttl
thing
can
take
you
backfirc:d:
,
J
ohnson
a . ee
1
~Y
_
~ny
person,
a
little
DNFs
m
August.
that
f31sed
0
debris, bad luck. I don't think quPelsllonhs al~k ult his d~trbeablllbtly.
us, e 1 e y won
a e
1't' · ht "
· . ~~!.;an has consistently to turn to Gordon for- he~p
•. been NASCAR's biggest crit- over the next two .months. H1s
ic of the system, which was fnend,_ mentor and te~mma~e
· :ado ted this season after will hkely be keepmg hts
•ajmgst 25 years of a fonnat secrets to h1mself, leavmg
'that rewarded consistency.
Johnson to fig~re o~t how ~~
. . Under the new structure, wm a champtonshtp on h•s
· one bad race, broken part or own.
.
accident can instantly _elimiJohnsp~ 1s more concerned
:nate a driver from contention. with staymg out of trouble.
: That's what Gordon doesn' t
"I think w~ ha~e a great
:like.
chance, bll:t wtth thts new fo~- Because the 10 eligible dri- m~t, I think Lady Luck ts.
· t th e gomg
to
yourk
.
d have
• , hto be
'd on
"I th'
vers wt'II compete agams
m
. entire 43-car field , under the. stde to o 11, e sa~. .
.same scoring system used for one ?,NF and you re out of
~every race, Gordon is co~- ...!Jick.
. . , .
· cerned about how other driEa_rnh.u:dt SJarts .m thtrd,
·vers can affect the chase.
chasmll hts fi_rst senes chamJimmy pwnshtp. H1s father won
. For example,
. Spencer caused a wreck last seven tttles ~n~r the old for: weekend that heavily dam- mat, but Jumor ts a long way
aged Jimmie Johnson's car. a:war from that level.
.
H1s Dale ~arnhardt Inc.
Spencer is not a contender;
Johnson is, and he ended up team lags ~h!nd, ~e rest . of
-finishing 36th in the race and the compellt1on m many
-earning just 60 points for the areas, particularly engmeer·
in~, and went through a slump
event.
· Should that happen in the t~ts seas~n where they had a
· chase, he'll almost certainly dtfficult tlllle·co_rrecllng probteam
. ·be eliminated from title con- ~ems. . Occasional
mak~s,
'tention.
mfighung,
also
• "I could go from leading the NASCJ.\R s most Powlar ~n­
.:r.oints right now and very eas· ver an •ffy bet to wm the title.
:lly finish lOth in these.,stand- .But Earnhardt has snapped
·ings," Gordon satd, and f. bts slu~p and feels confident
-don't know if anybody in that about hts chances.
"If you look back over the
position would think that's
: really fair.
las! three or four years, we
·- "I wish we were on our own fimsh better at the end of the
:point system ... where .it didn't season," he slli;d. "'Heel pr~t­
~rnatter where you firushed as ty good about 11. I thtnk we re
long as you finished behind going to a couple of tracks we
: guys that you were racing in run good at.''
.
Stewart, the 2002 . senes
the points, then you basically
got the points right behind -champion, also runs well at
them."
the end of the year and has
· But there's no changing it victories on seven of the finai
·now, and the race is wide 10 tracks. 1\vo more wins
Associated Press

'

'
BY HANK
KRuz, JR.

.

points standings:

this season - winning four-straight poles and .three
champion ship chase quick ly. The four-time series
champion can also handle the pressure of a t'itle run .

three races."

• • •

DRIVE_R: Ellion Sadler
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,025
HOMETOWN: Emporia, Va.
AGE: 29
CAR: No. 38 M&amp;M's Ford
CREW CHIEF: Todd Parrou
KEY 2004 STATS: 2 wins. 6 lop 5s, 10 1op lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: 20th t2001)
OUTLOOK: The intunsislency 1ha1 plagued him
in past years is gone, and Sadler has prqven he can
run with the leaders every week. Hi s easygoing ani -·

tude will keep him loose during the chase. bu1 a ten·
dency to gel into on-crack trouble could end his
hopes.
HE SAID IT: "I can't waillo gel Ihe playoff sys-

HE SA ID IT: "We're excited about these las11wo tem started.
etforts , and we're going to put out the same effort
we've been doing every weekend for the ne)\t 10
weeks. If that doesn ' t get it done. then the other
guys can have it. "

• • •
DRIVER: Jimmie Johnson

ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,045
HOMETOWN: El Cajon, Calif.
AGE: 28. will be 29 on Sepl. f7
CAR: No. 48 Lowe's Chevrolet
CREW.CHIEF: Chad Knaus ,
KEY 2004 STATS: 4 wins, 15 top 5s, 16 lop I Os
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISij: 2nd (2003)
OUTLOOK: The most dom;nating driver in the
series u11til his young Hendrick Motorsports team

fell on hard times in August with lhree·slraighl
DNFs. Inexperience could keep Johnson from his
first title.

Top ten NASCAR drivers , front row from left, Jeremy Mayfield, Kurt Busch , Mark Martin , Ryan Newman, top row from left, Matt
Ken seth , Dale Earnhardt Jr. , Jeff Gordon, Jimmy Jphnson Tony ?tewart and Ell1ot Sadler pose for a photo Fnday Sept. 17. 2004
at New Hampshire lnternatinal Speedway in Loudon, N.H. The ten will start a 10 race playoff for the Nextel cup Championship,
starting Sunday, Sept. 19, with the Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire International Speedway. (AP)
might be enough for-.the title. owner Jack Roush . that 2005
Kenseth, who bored every- will likely be his final season.
one last year en route to his
After using a strong secondfirst championship, could use half push to become eligible
the same consistent strategy for the chase. Martin can relax
to win in the new system. His and focus on the title.
tendency to score top lQ fin- · "We've been under intense
Martin · said .
ishes, not pushing too hal'd for' pressure ,"
the victory and avoiding trou-· "We've performed at the top
ble that costs him valuable of our game with near zero
points , could give him siring margin for error. Now we can
of solid fimshes that would go out and just run our race
give him the title.
and hopefully win this chamSadler is the darkhorse pionship."
behind a much-improved
Mayfield is a longsl)ot. even
Robert Yates racing team. He though he raced his way in by
hasn't been out of the top 10 winning his first event in
in the standings all year and · more than four years to vault
has two victories.
five spots in the standings.
Racing in the best equipBut he can't be counted out
car
owner
Ray
ment of his career and with an with
expeiienced crew chief in Evernham on his side.
Todd Parrott, he's capable of Evemham won three titles as
stunning everyone and sneak- Gordon's, crew chief. ,
Rounding out ·the coning away with the title. .
"! can't wait t? g~t the play- tenders is Newman, who bareoffs started. I thmk we have a ly squeaked in. Although he's
great chance to win the cham, the Jongshot at 15- 1 odds in
pionship," he said.
Las Vegas, Newman led the
Busch is also a darkhorse series with eight victQries and
based on his ability to put II pole s last year.
red-hot streaks together. He
The final I0 races will be,
won three of the final five chronologically, at New
races of the 2002 season; and Hampshire (one rnile); Dover,
could run the tables that way DeL (one mile) ; Talladega,
Ala. (2.66-miles, with restric- ·
again.
Martin, his Roush Racing tor plates); Kansas City (1.5
teammate, is the clear senti- miles); Charlotte ( 1.5 miles);
Martinsville, Va. (1, mile);
mental favorite.
He's got four runner-up Atlanta (1.5 miles) ; Phoenix
championship finishes and (one mile); Darlington, S.C,
folir thirds, but zero titles. At ( !.366 miles) and Homestead45 yearS old, he's told car Miami ( 1.5 miles).

a

'

no matter what," Martin said were rooting for him.
Qf crew chief Pat Tryson and · "lt really means a lot when
Associated Press
the No. 6 team for Roush the guys in the garage §ive
.
' Racin.~I. Even if Martin hadn't you that kind of respect, ·· he
', In the days leadmg up t,o made 11 into the final . ! 0, he said. "There were a lot of drithe la~t rae~ of ~A~CAR s said, ''I know in my heart that vers that came up to me on
champtonship 'l~altfymg cut- this was a tealll that Saturday ni~ht to offer their
- off, tts top racmg c~ud- should've been in the top five coqgratulauons · on what
·
geon was an . ang0:1sh, if things would have gone we've done."
wracked,,
sleep-depnved better for us. It sure beats
Among them was Roush
.mess.
what we had last year."
teammate Matt Kenseth, 'the
· Mark Martin, arguably the
Martin finished -l7th in defending series champion,
-best stock car racer ·never to points last year, orlly the sec- who laughed about how it
win NASCAR's top title, was ond time in the last .15 sea- seemed Martin had worried
· in danger of beinl! left out of sons he's been outside the top for naught.
this Y.etharhi·~ c~seth1f lCuhck was • 10.
"He was so stressed out ail
· -n't w1
mm e
evro1et · 1n 10 of those seasons, he week. To watch him it was
-400
at
Richmond fmlshed in the top five with kind of cute in a way, even
:International Raceway.
four seconds, including 2002, though he's o~ got a co~s.le
: But then Martin did what and four thirds.
.
of xears left," enseth sru .
.·he does as well as anyone Now, the new points race · • I think he's really the
· saved his car, and his that beg1ns Sunday in New darkhorse. He's been running
; chances, w~th a dazzlil!g 360- Hampshire is a chance to put so good the last few months,
:. d~gr~e ~pm to av01d ~e behind him a blown engme and Wl!tching him at
· ;rught s b1~gest wreck, staymg and 43rd,_place run in the sea- Michigan, even sitting in the
~in contentton and out of ~u- • son-operung Daytona 500, as car after he passed me, I was
=bte to earn a f!fth-place fimsh well as one other DNF and a like a race fan, watching and
~and a spot m the, 1.0-race · raft of bad luck that made his cheering him on because I
last chance to make the chase haven't seen him run like that
-chase f~r NASCAR s tl~le.
for four or five years." .
Now tt's the other drivers' com~letely exhausting.
: turn to worry.
"It s been the hardest thing
Headin'g into this weekend,
: "Mark's · in,"
JimJDie I've ever done in my life,'' he Martin is eighth in points, but
·-Johnson, who is No.2 in the said.
his four top-5 finishes in the
:points race, said this week
Following the "race, Martin last five races stand as the
:when he was asked about planned to fly his family best in the series ..
-other drivers he's concerned · home 10 Florida, hopiD,I!
Mart~n. 45! clalllls the_past
. -about in the top 10. "Mark's against hope that two hum- champtonshtp near-DUsses
· got a lot of momentum on his canes hadn't done too much don't bother him now, l!ut he
· side." ·
damage, and to sleep, putting also knows this m_ay be the
:· Not just momentum, but the tension behind him and best chance be has at the cup.·
:also a determination to show gearing up for the chase.
"We kno~ that ~e'':.e co~e
:that even · though his team
First, there were thank yous a long way, he srud, but tt s
~needed all 26 races to secure that needed to be said, not a whole new se~n now. We
· . . :a spot, it belongs in the raee. orlly to the fans and his team, can't rest on anything and we
: "It is a top five race team, but also ·to the drivers who sure can't let up."
'

A glance at the 10 drivers competing in

of six races- he cou ld wrap up NASCAR's first

·The chase is on for
·NASCAR's top curmudgeon
'

·THE -CHAMPIONSHIP RACE
NASCAR's Chase for lhe Ne&lt;lel Cup, in order of

What is the Chase for
.the Championship?
CHARLOTIE, N.C. (AP) - NASCAR implemented a new
system for crowning its Nextel Cup series champion after
abandoning the traditional pomts system used smce 1975.
The 1O·race, playoff system begins Sunday at New
Hampshire.
How the champion Will be decided :
WHAT IS IT: A 1O·race shoolout, called "NASCAR 's Chase
for the Nextel Cup Champion" that covers the final 10 events
of the 36-race .schedule . .
WHO'S ELIGIBLE: All 43 teams raced as usual over the first
26 events of the year. The top 10 in the' standings after last
Saturday's raoe at Richmond, and anyone . else within 400
points of the leader, were eligible.
Only · 10 drivers met the criteria: ,Jeff Gordon. Jimmie
Johnson Dale Earnhardt Jr., Tony Stewart, Matt Kenseth·,
Elliott S~dler, Kurt Busch, Mark Martin, Jeremy Mayfield and
Ryan Newman . ·
..
WHAT HAPPENS: The 10 drivers are the only ones eligible
to race for the championship. Their point ·totals· were reset in
five-point increments, with Gordon, the leader, getting 5,050
points. Second-place gets 5,04'5 points and down the line to
1Oth place Newman, who has 5,005.
·
·
They will race as· usual under the same scoring system used
all year: A win earns 180 points, a last-place finish gets 34
points. Five-point bonuses are given .to any driver who leads a
lap, and an additional five-point bonus is awarded for leading
the most laps in a' race.
.
The points earned after each of the 10 events will be added
to each of the eligible drivers' totals, and the champ1on w111 be
crowned after the se.ason finale at Homestead, Fla ., on Nov.
21 '
WHAT'S AT 'STAKE: Aside from the Nextel Cup title, each
driver in the top 10 will be paid a minimum of $1 million from
the points fund. The champion will get at least $5 million . ·
WHAT'S LEFT: The remaining 33 drivers in the field still ·
have something to race fclr- 11th place. NASCAR has gu;u·
antee(,f a $1 million payout to the 11th driver as incentive for
the rest of the field . That driver will also be invited to the sea·
son-ending awards ,ceremony in New York, which has traditionally included only the top 10 drivers.

·

My pit crew is as good as anybody on
pit road. My crew chief is the winningest one in 1hc
garage . We 're looki ng at it like we're the favorites

going imo chis thing." '

• • •

DRIVER: Kurt Busch
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5.020
HOMETOWN: Las Vegas, N,ev.
AGE: 26
CAR: No. 97 Sharpie Ford
CREW CHIEF: Jimmy Fennig
KEY 2004 STATS: 2 wins, 4·lop 5s, 12 1op lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: 3rd (2002)
OUTLOOK: Often in che center of controversy
for ofT-crack problems, re's kepi-a low profile,chis

your side to do it. One DNF, and yo u're out of

DRIVER: Mark Martin
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,015
HOMETOWN: Bales ville, Ark.
AGE: 45
CAR: No.6 Viagra Ford
CREW CHIEF: Pal Tryson
KEY 2004 STATS: I Win. 7 lop 5s, II lop lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: 2nd ( 1990,
'94, '98, 2002)
'
OUTLQOK: Used a strong second-half push 10

• • •

he's the overwhelming fan favorite to win the title.
But inconsistency and occasional infighting .among

his Dale Eamhardl Inc. crew inay hold him back. .
HE SAID IT: "If you look back over the lase
' three or fou r years, we tinish better at the end of the
season. We have a histOl)' of running better at the

• • •

DRIVER: Tony Stewarl
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5;035
HOMETOWN: Rushville, Ind.
AGE: 33
CAR: No. 20 Home Depol Chevrolel
CREW CHIEF: Greg Zipadelli
KEY 2004 STATS: 2 wins, 9 lop 5s, 13 cop lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: IS1 (2002)
OUTLOOK: Stewart is historically al his best al
· the end of the season - .he's won at seven of the
· !ina I 10 ·tracks - but is also hi s own worst enemy.
His temper oflen gets the best of him , and one
blowup could take Slew art out of contention.

cjualify for the chase, then udmitl(!d getting in was
the most difficult thing he 's ever done. A four-lime
runner-up for the series title, he's the sentimental
choice to finally win a championship.
HE SAID IT: "At least Ihe pressure's off. I juSI

don't recall having to fight as hard as Pal and I have
had to fight, justlo get into somelhing. We just didn't want to be excluded. Now we're in."

• • •

DRIVER: Jeremy Mayfield
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,010
HOMETOWN: Owensboro, Ky.
AGE: 35.
CAR: No. 19 Dodge Dcalers/UAW Dodge
CREW CHIEF: Kenny Francis
KEY 2004 STATS: I Win. 4 1op 5s. 10 top IDs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: lllh (1999)
OUTI,OOK: Raced his way inlo the chase in Ihe
final qualifying event by winning for lhe firs! time
in over four years. Would be conside red a longs hot ·
for title if not for car owner Ray Evernham, who

won lhree lilies as crew chief for Jeff Gordon.
HE SAID IT: "We've gm not only momentum,
but the 19 team just won their first race·. A lot 0f

HE SAID IT: "Here's Ihe morale of the story:
guys on that team have never been to Victory Lant:!.
The next tOraces is· lhe same 10 races thai we had . Now all chose guys know what it's all aboul. I feel
lase year. You go Io the trac k, you race and you gel
like it was the turning point of th3.t race team, probapoims for il. When it's over with, they'll tell us
bly che biggest turning poi01 ever." ' ·

• • •

exactlY where we finished in the points. ''

• • •
DRIVER: Mall Kenselh
•

ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS• 5,D30
HOMETOWN: Cambridge, Wis.
AGE: 32 '
'
CAR: No. 17 DeWall Tools Ford
CREW CHIEF: Robbie Rei ser
KEY 2004 STATS: 2 wins, 7 top 5s, 15 lop lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: t sc (2003)
OUTLOOK: Used consistency 10 win the Iille
las t season in a non-eVentful ~n, panially causing
NASCAR to ch ange lhe ~.:hampionship fonnat. His
tem;lcncy to stay out of trouble and finish in the top

I0 each week could lead to a lille under bolh sys- .
terns.

STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune.com
'VINTON - The River
· Valley seventh grade volleyball team defeated Ohio
Valley Christian, 25-10, 2516.
. Shauna Beaver led the
Raiders (3-3) with 15 points,
wh ile Marisa Marcum tallied
10 points.
'Jenna Ward and Brianna

Smith each had three points to 15)
lead the Defenders .
Natasha Adkins had &gt;e ven
River Valley is at Jackson points for the Rebels, while
Monday.
Kayla Nance contributed with
six points and Amanda Hager
had five kill s. .
South Gallia
The South Gallia seventh
junior netters
grade team also won in three
games, 20-25, 25-15. I 5- I3.
sweep Southern
Rachel Stanley had 17
MERCERVILLE - .The poinh for the Rebeb and
South Ga llia eighth-grade vol- Sammi Hammo nd I 0.
leyba ll
team
defeated
No statistics were available
Southern ( 14-25, 25-2 1, '17- for Southern.

E-mail us:_sports@mydailytribune.com

• • •

last third of the season, so I feel pretty good aboul
it."

River Valley seventh
graders beat ave

,HE SAID IT: "Any place lhac;s fasl , we've gol 10
polish up on. We've gollhings on our plate. Now
.it's a matter of execut ing the proper way."

· DRIVER: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,040
HOMETOWN: Kannapolis. N.C.
AGE: 29
CAR: No. 8 Budweiser Chevrolet
CREW CHIEF: Tony Eury
KEY 2004 STATS: 4 wins, 12 top Ss. 141op lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: 3rd (2003)
OUTLOOK: NASCAR's mosl'po'pular driver,

.Local Sports Briefs

year that 's made him a quiet favorite . When Busch
gets hot, he's capable of winning every weekend.

HE SAID IT: "!chink we've got a great chance.
With Chis new formal. Lady Luck has go110 be on
luck."

i;lunbav irnnl'!i -i;lrutmr! • Page Bs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

\

DRIVER: Jeff Gordon
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5.050
HOMETOWN: Vallejo, Calif.
AGE: 33 .
CAR: No. 24 DuPonl Chevrolel
CREW CHIEF: Robbie Loomis
KEY 21104 STATS: 5 wins. II lop 5s. 17 lop lOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: Ist (1995,
'97. '98. 2001)
OUTLOOK: If Gordon gelS hoi like he did early

BY JENNA FRYER

•

•

Sunday, September 19, 2004

DRIVER: Ryan Newman
ADJUSTED CHASE POINTS: 5,005
HOMETOWN: South Bend, Ind . .
AGE: 26
CAR: No. 12 ALLTEL Dodge
CREW CHIEF: Matt Borland
KEY 2004 STATS: I win. 9 cop 5s, 12 lop IOs
BEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINISH: 6th (2002,
'03)
OUTLOOK: An outspoken critic of the new
poinls sys1em, he barely made it ip. Now eligible,
his fast qualifying runs and mastery. of the intermediate tracks cou ld loft him to the top·.

HE SAID IT: "We' ll gel our guns polished up·for
the fast 10 faces and do what we have to do as a
team to stay focused and take the right race cars to

HE SAID IT: "I lhink lhe guy who wins lhis
thing is going 10 be the guy who can run fourth,
che right race craeks and make lhe right calls." ·
fifth , six1h, seventh every week and doesn't have
any DNFs. I don'tthink il's going to be lhe guy who
-Complied by JENNA F;RYER
wins two or three r:lces ~nd drqps .out of two or ·
AP Motorsports Writer

Rain puts 10 title contenders
:up fronrat New Hampshire·
LOUDON, N.H. (AP)- It Kenseth; Elliott Sadler, July
· : was an inauspicious start to the race winner Kurt Busch, Mark
10-race
playoff
for Martin, Jeremy Mayfield and
NASCAR's Nextel Cup cham- Ryan Newman.
pionship with rain washing out
Newman had won three of
: qualifymg Friday at New the past four poles here -los. Hampshire
International ing out only in July 2002
: Speedway.
·
when qualifying also was
: Only 16 cars ran laps on to rained out. But the "Rocket
the 1.058-mile oval before rain Ma11," 'who has five poles this
began falling. NA.SCAR offi- _season and 23 in just 107 Cup
cials waited more than an hour races, had not made it onto the
before·decidin9 to set the line- track Friday before the rain
· up for Sundays Sylvania 300 began.
: mostly by car-owner points. . Gordon, who leads the
: Jantie McMurray was the series with six -poles, doesn't
· fastest of the drivers who did get credit for this one. But
run, turning a Iaf 'o f 131.975 that's fine with him because
mph. But he wil start lith in he gets to start the race up
the 43-car field.
.
front and has a virtual lock on
. The 10 drivers who quali- the five-point bonus for lead. fled to compete under ing at least one lap and a good
: NASCAR's onew champi- shot at the five-point bonus
: onship format will start ahead for leading the most laps.
··of McMurray. Series leader "I felt like we had a top-five
Jeff Gordon, seeking his fifth car today, but we didn't have
title, and teammate and run- anything for .Ryan Newman,"
. ner-up Jimmie JohnSon have Gordon said. "He's in a whole
· the front row.
other category.'~
· "This is great because it
Newman would have loved
: allows us to pick a great pit to take a run at -another pole
: stall and it ~tves us a great here.
· starting :eosition," Gordon said
"We could have used this
of his gtft pole.
for sure," said Newman, who
The. rest of the top 10, ail has been the 'loudest critic of
. separafed in increments of the !lew po~nts system. "Track
• five points for the first race of poslllon ts always more
: the title chase, will line up tmportant at this track and
'the
Hendrick · Martinsville than it is any: behind
: Motorsports teammates . Dale where else .. lt's ail about bein_g
Earnhardt Jr. will start third, flat, and the flatter the track IS
followed b,Y Tony Stewart, the.more important track posi'reigning senes champion Matt tion becomes." ,

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'.

I'

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, Septeltlber 19,

2004

Cl

Winfield·archer bags .750-pound black hear
· BY

JOHN McCoY

For the Associajed Press

'

WINHELD, W.Va. - Dave
Moye 's ftrst bear hunt turned
out to be a memorable one.
Not only did he kill a bear. he
-bagged what authorities believe
to be the largest one ever taken
in Canada's Ontario province.
.
And he did it with a bow.
"I've done a lot of bowhunting, but I never figured I'd do
anything like this," says Moye,
a 40-year-old lawyer from
Winfield.
Moye. his father and his
·brother traveled to Emo,
Ontario, Aug. 15 for what
promised to be a weeklong hunt
for Ontario's plentiful black
bears. ·
· "We got there at 3 o·clock in
the afternoon, and the outfitter
rushed us right out to our
stands," Moye says. "We
weren't expecting that •. but we
were happy to go."
,
The outfitter ·set the three
hunters up in a 60-square-mile

tract of thickly overgrown ered that a good sign.
clear-cuts.
''If you have a really active
"The visibility is so minimal bait-station, it 's usually because
- 20 to 30 yards at most - there are a lot of smaller bears
t!Iat you have to hunt over using it," he says. "I fil;lured the
bait."' Moye says. "'The bait sta- lack of activity was a sign that a
tions are set in small clearings. bi~ bear1was keeping everyThe outfitter told us thai the thmg else scared away."
really big male bears usually
Moye was right. At 7 p.m., he
don't approach the bait sites heard 11 bear began circling the
until right at dark. If they sinell bait.
.
anything unusual. they'fl stay
'The bear didn7t make much
out of ran ge until weir after noi se." Moye says. ''Every ·
dark." .
j
once in awhile I'd hear a twig
The outfittf r's prediction snap, about 25 or 30 yards
came true. A big bear came away in the underbrush."
calling just as dusk turned to
EJ1pecting the- bruin to
dark. but M9ye. couldn't see approach the bait from the side,
well enough to take the shot.
Moye was shocked to see it
"I figured I could let it go appear on a rock ledge just I0
because it was so early i'n the yards away- at eye level.
week," he says.
. " It stood there for what
Moye wanted to hum at the seemed like-an eternity, probasame station the next d'!)', but bly a good 10 minutes," Moye
the outfitter a~signed him a dif- recalls. "That's a long time for
ferent stand. He reached it at 2 an .animal to stan\j. still. He
p.m. and started waiting:
looked straight at me at least
The afternoon dragged slow- twice. Then he scented me and
ly by with no evidence that any started walking away."
bears were going to show up.
Moye had one fleeting
Oddly enough, Moye consid- chance at a shot, and he took it.

Golf

Americans wake .up
on D~y 2 of·Ryder Cup
BY

Sergio Garcia and Lee
Westwood. The Europeans
had two chances to win, but
BLOOMFIELD TOWN- Garcia missed an 8-footer for
.
birdie at the 17th and
SHIP,
Mich.
" The Westwood watched a 12-footAmericans
at
the Ryder.finally
Cup. showed up er slide by at the final hole.
Playing with passion and
"~~. get ·a half- P~,int \S
pride that was missing the first . grea . DIMarco smd._ That s
. day, the United States sent their two powerhouses. I thmk
Oakland Hills into a "USA! they we~~ figunng they had
USA!" frenzy by rallying that one..
against the Europeans on
Spe~mg of powerhouses,
Saturday.
Europe s Cohn Montgomene
: Europe collected 6 112 an? Padrmg Hamngton were
points from eight matches dealt their first defeat. of this
Friday, the most overwhelm- Ryder Cup after wmnmg two
. ing margin by either,team after matches on Fnday .- mcludihe opening day since the cur- mg a tone-sett_mg victory over
.
rent format 'was put ·in place a Woods and Mickelson.
Quarter-century ago.
Davis Love Ill and Stewart
• It was a different stmy on Ctnk knocked off the
Day 2.
·
European juggernaut 3 and 2.
The Americans won a cou- Cmk chn~h~d II by smkt~g a
pie of better-ball matches and 25-foot birdie from the fnnge
.
halved another before losing to at No. 16.
the most unheralded European
Montgomene sat. out the
team in the final match of the afternoon, endrng . his record
rtmrning. Paul Casey sank a 3- streak of 30 straight Ryder
footer for par at the I 8th, giv- Cup matches .that began m
i'ng him and David Howell a 1- 1991 .
.
· .
.
up victory over Jim Furyk and
Everythmg was different at
Chad Campbell.
.
Oakland Hills.
: Europe still held an 8-4 lead
It was.
and sunny, ~e
)leading 10 alternate-shot sky a bnlhant blue -. a stnkthatches in the afternoon.
mg contrast to the chill, wmd
: "I feel great.'' U.S. captain andcloudsofthefirstday. The
Hal Sutton said. "We let it slip crowd . of 38.0?0 was much
away a little bit at the end, but more timsterous than tt was on
we played great andJ'm proud Fnda~. spurrmg on the
of them "
Amencan team.
• At l~ast the U.S. team
"Sergio ha~ to .~tep_ awa,y
stemmed the tide of what three or four times, DIMarco
;,ppeared 10 be a European ~aid, urgml\ the crowd to
keep tt up" m the aft~rnoon.
rout.
"It was either put up or shut
S~tton chas.tised his team
up today" . American Chris Fnday_ mght, t~!ng blame tor
DiMarco ~aid.
.
the pa~flngs - there was no
Tiger Woods, smiling more karma ~ but telhng hts playin the ftrst couple of holes than ers th~t . ~hey had to _take
did ali day on Friday was responsibility for their timid
1 1
rill
bl ' 'th play.
e ear Y more co orta e WI
As if · to drive his point
Chris Riley as a partner than h
·
Phil Mickelson. The Woods- orne,
Sutton
benc~ed
Riley pairing cruised 10 a 4- Mtckelson for ~he mornmg
and-3 win over Darren Clarke ~atches, choosmg to rely
and Ian Poulter.
Dm~tead on R}'der Cup rookies
• The Americans salvaged tM_arco, Riley and Campbell.
another half-point when
Mickelson was already a tarDiMarco and 50-year-old Jay get for changmg equtpm~nt
Haas halved their match with last week and then not playmg
the course the final two days
PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press

Thank You
Bi II :md Btenda f-lood
fot buying my

.2004·Matket !-log.

Roben Shuttleworth in 1993.
''The outfitters are saying
this looks like a. 23-inch skull
to them; more or less," Moye
says. "The Ontario record is
just 207/16."
Moye says his bear's size
helped him to counter the. ribbing he took from his father
and brother on the way to the
hunt.
"They both were planning to
hunt with rifles, and they gave
me a hard time about hunting
with a bow," he says. "Dad
ended up taking a 350-pound
sow and my brother took a
small sow. I guess I ended up
having the last laugh."
And, quite possibly, a bear
for the record books.
(1o1m McCoy is an outdoors
writer for the Charleston
(W.Va.) Daily Mail.)

..n ., . n

~ .

fllukY811
MlkeudSbnm

,,,,...,.

and SIM fal and
At:t:Hntlllg IDI

f'llukYDU
llvlden's
Farm Eqalpmllilt
lor purchasing
my Markat Steer
at tbe Ballla Co.
• Fair.

,,., ,., .IID4
M11ketfog.

Rivet Vqlley
All-~tqr~

of practice. He sure didn't help
himself by hitting one tee shot
that nearly struck his wife,
then blowing any chance of
gaining a crucial point with his .
final drive that struck an out.
of-bounds •,ence, •.orcmg
Woods to take a one-stroke
penalty.
Mickelson was reduced to
the role of spectator in the
morning, cheering on his
teammates as they chopped
into the European lead. Lefty
came over to hug the Haas
after the 50-year-old sank a
birdie putt at No. 5.
"This is' sure making me feel
good," Mickelson said.
He wasn't feeling so good
after Friday's debacle.
"! didn't sleep. It was brutal," Mickelson said. "I looked
at some of the pictures and I
was so tight.'.'
Mickelson was back on the
course in the afternoon, teaming with David Toms for a
match against Miguel Angel
Jimenez and Thomas Level.
The rest of the lineup: Clarke
and Westwood vs. Haas and .
DiMarco; Garcia and Luke
Donald vs. Furyk and Fred
Funk; and Harrington and Paul
McGinley vs. Love and
Woods.
European captain Bernhard
Langer d~cided to rest the 41year-old Montgomerie, whose
career record dropped to 18-85- stiU the best winning percentage of any European.
"It doesn't matter who gets
the points as long as we ~e~
them,"
Monty
said.
"Individual Ryder Cup records
mean nothing to me at all. It's
a team event."
Montgomerie had warned
that his team couldn't rest
easy. He brought up 1999,
.when the Europeans led 6-2
. after the first day and J0-6
after the second, only to fall
victim to the greatest come·
back in Ryder Cup history.
"We got off to a good stan,"
Monigomerie
cautioned.
"That's all it is."
The ~mericans we~ making
that pomt on Day 2. .

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I

1
••

i,

. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- · Jockeys at Mountaineer
Race TntCk. 'in Chester aie con·
sidering sitting out Friday's
taces to protest insurance and
safety ~tandards in the aftermath of one rider's paralyzation, guild officials said.
, About 3~ jockeys who regularly ride at Mountaineer were
slated to meet with guild officials Friday, said Alben Fiss,
vice president of the Monrovia,
Calif.-based Jockeys' Guild.
"They are obviously . very
upset that Gary Birzer· is not
be;ing taken care of by the race
lrack, by the owner or by the
trainer," Fiss said.
Trnck spokeswoman Tamara
Pettit said Friday that
Mountaineer wasn't aware of
the guild's concerns. ·
'"This is the first we have
heard of it," Pettit said. "No representative from ·the jockeys

guild has · contacted our man- tax revenues from the industry
agement."
·
without taking care to ensure
· Birzer, 28, was paralyzed in a the jockep are ~iven proper
July 20 racing accident at the coverage,' Fiss said.
track. His spinal cord was sevThe Mountaineer jockeys
ered when his horse tripped and hoping to call attention to the
another horse fell on top of him. issue are meeting with a guild
He is now strugglin~ with how attorney to learn about the pos·
to pay fqr rehabilttative ser- . sible consequences of not riding
vices.
Friday. .
.
Since the accident. Delegate
"Unfortunately, Mountaineer
-Joe DeLong, D-HancocR, has Race Track has demonstrated
been trying to help the Weir:ton historically that they do not put
resident obtain Medicaid cover- up with wl!at they would call
age. Acute rehabilitation ser-· insubordination," Fiss said.
vrces are not covered by
The track has encouraged
Medicaid for anyone. over the owners and trainers to carry
age of 21 in West Vtrginia as state workers· compensation
they are in neighboring _Ohio insurance on the jockeys to
and Pennsylvania.
insure against injury while rid. Most jockeys are considered in?,, Petttt said.
independent contractors and are
'Mountaineer has no role in
not offered health insurance by that strUcture because they are
race trac~.
· .
all independent contractors,"
"It's a blanket indictment she said. "It is an issue between
against the ~tare for accepting the horsemen and the jockeys."
'

;

"The bear moved through an ont.o the back of a heavy-duty
opening in the underbrush four-wheeler. The outfitter's
about 25 yards away. I aimed scales would only register 500
just behind the bear's shoulder ·pounds, so the bear had to be
and let the arrow go."
weighed in sections. The final
The arrow's white fletching tally: 780 pounds.
disappeared into the bear's
"That's the outfitter's estiglossy black hide iri a perfect mate," Moye says. ''I'm being
SpOt. The big bruin whirled and conservative by saying it was
cmshed off into the brush.
750."
.
Moye waited 30 minutes
The bear reponedly is the
before he began looking for the largest, both by body weight
bear. He found it lying dead and by skull measurements,
against a tree, 45 yards from ever taken in the province.
the clearing.
:Moye currently is waiting out
"I knew he was big bec.ause I the required 60-day drying
couldn 't move him. In fact, it period to see · how high the
was alii could dq just to move skull's measurements rank on
his head," Moye says.
the Pope &amp; Young Club's list
When the outfitter arrived, of big-game bowhunting
he asked the excited hunter -records.
·.
how big he thought the bear . The world record is 23 3116
might be:
.
inches, killed in Mendocino
"I didn't want to overesti- County, Calif., by hunter
mate, so !.told him maybe 500
pounds," Moye says. "He ·
seemed shocked at that, but it, L~'fl.~~':{j
turned out that the bear was
even bigger."
It took seven strong men
three tries to lift the big bruin

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Sunday, September

2004

Handcraftl_ng quilts,' a growing art in the Bend Area
Offering warmth as a.cover and in home ,decor
BY CHARLENE HOEFI.ICH
,HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

'1/Y

POMEROY - With foreign-made quilt s tumbling
from department store
shelves and" catalog pages
~verywhere you look, one
might . assume
that
American-made handcrafted quilts are a thing of the .
past.
Not so here in Meigs
County. ·Lots of quilting is
going on. However, the purpose . and focus have
changed somewhat.
No longer are quilts made
exclusiyely to be us.ed as
covers for warmth.
. Today they are also made These quilts made by Crystal Glaze Arnold, left, and Mildred
·for use in giving warmth in Hudson were first place winners in the scrap quilts category of
an artistic and aesthetic the Moda Challenge contest sponsored by The Fabric Shop of
way to home decorating , Pomeroy. They have now been entered In the Moda national
creatively displayed on contest where prizes range from $1.500 to $250. Hudson's
racks and furniture · a,nd quilt was in the log cabin design in beige and browns, while
Arnolds was in a star pattern in vivid colors. (Charlene
used as wall hangings.
·
· Once considered only Hoeflichjphoto)
suitable for country decor,
quilts have now moved to
the forefront in decorating
homes of traditional and
contemporary style, given
the right design and texture.
Now · widely recognized
as a relaxing and rewarding
nobby, quilters consist not
only of a mature generation, but encompass young
married women, ev\;_n some
teenagers.
Meigs County has several
longtime active quilting
groups who have for many
years been using their skills ·
to raise money for their
churches and other organizations. Tbey 'quilt the
pieced tops made by others
for a price.
· Through the year's as
and more . women went to
work, the Interest in and
lime for learning how to
make quilts declined. But in
the past several years it has
e.xperienced a comeback . .
Today classes are offered
by businesses and individuals for beginners as well as
experienced quilters who
want to perfect their skills .
Shows are held to display
their work and contests are Regulars with the ForE\St Run quilters, from the.left around the
held to encourage quality table, are Mary Nease, Mary Bell Warner, Edie Sisson, Wilma
work.
Reiber, Carolyn Evans. and Marcia Arnold. Others who regularGrandmothers are taking ly quilt with the group are Jane Harris and Rosemary Keller.
time. to teach quilting to The money raised by quilting other people's quilts is used for
their grandchildren. Scout church improvements and projects. (Charle·ne Hoeflich/photo)
troops have added quilting
to their badge work, and . the $1,000 they recently members didn't get into
Meigs · quilting until they were
to
the
numerous individuals are gave
adults, several learned as
but there every day creating Cooperative Parish .
As
for
Kathleen
and
Mary
children.
Edie Sisson said
}nemories for their children
11nd ··grandchildren with Kathryn, Thursday quilting her mother always had a
jlifts of their handmade · sessions became a part of · quilt in a frame and she
their routine long ago would sit down after school
quilts.
of
them
sometimes
and add stitches.
long
before
either
: .Things have changed
Other -dedicated church
since Stephen Foster wrote quilted. Their mothers were
of
the
same
group
members
who are a part of
members
about Aunt Dinah's quilting
at
the
same
church
and
as
the
Forest
Run quilters and
:parties and "seeing Nellie
J:!ome as the bright stars children they attended · tiave beeri for years are
j;liltered and,the pale moon quilting bees regularly. not Wilma Reiber, ·Marcia
always at the church Arnold , Carolyn Salser,
shone."
But here in Meigs because it was too costly to Mary Bell Warner, Mary
I:ounty the pioneer skill of heat up the building in Neme, Rosemary Keller,
:fine quilting remains alive those earlier days, but and Jane Harris
While members usually
;-- a relaxing and popular sometimes at the homes of
bring their lunch in a paper
pastime for women, even members.
"I
remember
as
a
cbild
bag .for their II :30 break ,
some men~ who take up
their needles to create beau- riding on the seat beside my sometimes things take a
1iful quilts some destined to mother in the buggy to get social turn and they .have
wherever the quilting was potlucks to cele,brate a spebecome family heirlooms.
taking
. place.
Mother · cia! occasion, like the birth'
; It was in tne early 1900s
always
brought
along
feed day of a member.
)hat the Forest' Run Church
Several reflected on the
:!JUilters organized to raise for ,the horse," said Mary
Kathryn.
early
years when quilting
money for their church. The
· So it's easy to see why was done mostly for local
group is still active today.
the
two hang right in there. residents at a penny a yard
: Among the members are
)Cathleen Scott who will They grew up thinking that with the owner providing
J;eiebnlte her 99th .bitthday Thursdays were for quilt- the thread.
Now quilting . is done
pn Oct. 6; and Mary ing, just like Mondays were
fo(
·
mostly
for people away
for
washing,
Tuesdays
-Kathryn Roush, 93. Almost
ironing,
etc.
from
here
and today it costs
every Thursday you'll find
"I never miss," said more to have it done.
lhem quilting in the base~who is also "There's always a long
Kathleen,
)neill of tlie small country
):burch frqm 8 o'clock in pianist for the church and waiting list." said Marcia,
!he morning until 2 in the has been since she turned who admits she has an
17 - that's 82 years.
. "obsession" when it comes
efternoon.
Mary Kathryn who also to quilting.
: T~ey' ve been doing that
As the quilters worked, ·
has
a near perfect record,
l'or years as members of the
iroup dedicated to raising says she comes "not only to ~hey laughed a lot and '
pleasa ntries
)lloney through guilting quilt for her church, but to exchange4
see
her
friends
.
and
get·
the
which
was
proof
enough to
pther. people's quilts to pay
for some of the expenses news," She stressed that it's this onlooker that ' here was
. end improvements to their not a "gossiping group, but a group about which Mark
church, as well as to raise ·one concerned about oth- Twain was talking when he
' said. "Play is work a body
}Doney ta contribute to ers."
While several of the is not obliged to do."
)::ommunity programs, like

·"" '~'"''''"

Kathleen Scott, who will be 99 on Oct. 6, and Mary Kathryn Roush, 93. seldom miss a
Thursday quilting session at the Forest Run Church. They started going to the church quilting
sessions with their mothers in the early 1900's and they're still going. (Charlene
Hoeflich/photo)

mn,,.,.,--

,..

Quilts are being used more and more as accessories in home decoration. Here Mildred Hudson
displays quilts of the flying g~ese, grandma 's fan. and radiant star patterns on an old wooden
ladder in her living room. At the base is a log cabin designed quilt. Hudson , who made all of
the quilts, holds one in the Trip Arou.nd the World design. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photo)

Grandmothers teaching their granddaughters to quilt is not at all uncommon in Meigs County.
Here April Smith of Pomeroy, who expressed concern that quilting might become a lost art,
works with four of her granddaughters. all in the process of making quilts. They are from the
left, Maggie Smith, Olivia Cleek, Hannah Cleek, and Mollie Smith. Her other granddaughter, Amy
Smith, now in law school, made a quilt several years ago. (Charlene Hoeflich/photo)

�.
•

·6unbap lim~ ·ienttnel ·

YOUR HOMETOWN·

COMMUNITY CORNER
Don't be surprised if Oprah
Winfrey makes a visit to
Pomeroy. ·
,
Viclci Hanson is persistent
and she's working on getting
her here as a part of the
Charlene
"Oprah comes to my small
town" program.
Hoeflich
Several weeks ago as Vicki
was looking through a list of
Oprah's upcoming programs.
she spotted the small town
program and decided to give their small town. She thinks
·
h
· h 1
II · h
tt a shot.
at nug t pay we Wit
She Sen.t ·a· n e-mat' l l't'rst twhomever
makes the selecexpounding on the attributes tion.
of Pomeroy and the beautiful
Meanwhile, Vicki says
· Bend area, gave them some · · she ' ll play the waiting game ·
websites to visit, and asked to and think positive. She's sure
be considered for a visit. Oprah will want to come to
Nothing happened · for a our small town.
month, and then she got a call
asking for a video, "six minIf you know what a Texas
utes or less," it said.
·
Hold 'em Poker Tqumameni
Vicki jumped right on it . is and would like to particisoliciting h~lp from ~oger pate in one, the . Meigs
and Mary Gtlmore who have . County
·Chamber
of'
been taking videos of events Commerce invites you -to
here for years, and sent it off reserve your seat npw. The
a few days ago with colorful tournament is limited to 60
brochures and other reading players.
material about Pomeroy and
It will take place Thursday,
surrounding communities. · · 6 to II p.m., as· an opener for
It included pictures of the the ~temwheel Riverfest at
river, the courthouse, the the Pomeroy Fire Department
Ohio River Bear Company in on Butternut and will continMiddleport and pictures and ue Friday starting at 6 p.m.
brief interv.iews with Vanessa until a winner is declared.
and Jorma at the Fur Peace Prizes wi II go to first, second
. Ranch, and George and Mary and third .
Morris who live in a house on
To reserve your seat call
Lincoln Hill w,hich is the Chamber office, 992rumored to be a pah· of the 5005. Food and beverages
old underground railroad sys- will be available both
evemngs.
tem here.
With that all done, Vicki is
There 's never a dull
now asking that locals go to
oprah.com , and send a mes- moment at the Meigs County
sage inviting Oprah to visit Senior Center, what with not

only providing an extensive
program of services to
.~eniors,
but raising the
money to keep everything
afloat in this day of state and
federal funding cuts.
Plans are well underway
for a Make a Difference Day
event (Oct. 23) at the Center
to include fund raising activities like an auction and bake
·shle.
Now I know that's a month
away, but I bring it to your
attention now because donations are needed. There's not
a better cause.
The money .made from the
event will be designated for
the local match on a new van
and for the annual Christmas
project of remembering
sen iors who live alone and
are without local relatives.
You can help make a difference.
Kenny
and
Arlene
Williams who grew up in
Meigs County and migrated
to Arizona where they spent
28 years before teturning
"home" are now . planning
another move - back to
Arizona. They returned · to
Meigs County four years ag6,
had some special time with
his mother, Helen Williams,
be.tore she died, and have
now decided they need to
move back there to be near
their kids.
Don't forget that an art
show is going on at the old
Chester Courthouse museum
this weekend. The exhibit
wiLl remain in place all next
week.

Education on SBS has proven to work
BY JtLL Cox ·
'SPECIAL TO THE TIMES SENTINEL

I
I

I recently attended a
workshop in which the presenter was discussing the
importance of educating
individuals about ' Shaken
Baby Syndrome. The hope
. is that education will lead to
the prevention of this form
of child abuse.
,
Shaken Baby Syndrome
(SBS) occurs when ·an
infant or young child is
shaken vigorously. Infants
three to six months of age
are the most frequent victims; however, toddlers are
also at risk due to the frustration that comes with
potty training and eating
issues.
Among infants and children that experience abuse,
head trauma is the most frequent cause of permanent
·dam~ge or death and shaking accounts for a significant number of these case~ .
Shaking is especially dangerous to infants and young
children because their neck
. muscles are weak and brain
tissue is exceptionally frag·
ile.
When a baby is shaken,
the brain bounces back and
forth within the/.skqll causing . bruising, ·bleeding and
swelling inside the baby's
brain. At this age c;ven
minor shaking or "rough
play" .can be harmful as
well.•
Educating
individuals
abqut S BS can be a matter

of life and death . Statistic.s burped? Does the baby need
from Prevent Child Abuse his diaper changed? Is the
Ohio show that one out of baby too hot or too cold?
· four ilabies who are shaken· Does the baby have a fever
dies as a result of being or seem to be in pain from
shaken. Other injuries that an earache, teething, a ra~h .
are sustained as a result !)f etc? Does the baby need to
being shaken include: Brain suck? Does the baby need
damage, speech and learn- to feel close to or comforted
ing disabilities, spinal by you? Is the baby overinjury . and paralysis, cere- tired or overstimulated?
bra] palsy, seizures, hearing Does the baby just need to
loss. partial or total blind- cry? Remember, crying is a
ness, and/or broken bones baby \ . way of communicatand dislocations.
ing. ·
The presenter for the
Tht: second point a parworkshop I attended gave ent or caretaker should
us three basic points that know is that it is perfectly
every new mom; parent, fine to walk away and take
caretaker,
grandparent, · a break. Caring for a crying
aunt, Uncle, etc., should infant can be. very frustratknow.
ing at times. If you have
The first thing one tried everything and the
should know when taking baby continues to cry. gencare of a baby is that babies tly place the baby on his
cry. This seems elementary; back in a crib and walk into
however, there is often so another room for 15 minmuch·.talk about the joys, of utes.
parenting that we forget to
·Thirdly, every parent cir .
tell parents that they can • caretaker needs to know
expect their baby to cry a that it is never okay to
. total of one to two hours or shake a baby. It is okay to
more a day.. If the parent or let your baby cry when &amp;e
caretaker knows what to auempts to comfort him
expect, then he or she will have been exhausted; bow·
be better equipped to handle ever, it is not okay to shake
.the challenges of parenting. your baby.
It is always helpful to
Shaking a baby can be
knqw that we are not alone deadly.
.
in our struggles. One of the
For more informaUon. or
biggest challenges is trying questions regarding Shaken
to figure out why the baby Baby Syndrome, contact the
is crying. Some helpful · Gallia County
Health
ql\estjons a parent or care- Department at 44 I -2950.
taker can ask himself or
(Jill Cox is employed
herself include; is the baby with the · Gallia County
hungry or need to be Health Department). ·

PageC2

·iunba~ lime• -&amp;entinel

Sunday, September 19, 2004

BY

JAMES SANDS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

One of the largest political
rallies were held in southeastern Ohio .took place on !)ct.
29, 1940, just ·outside
Jackson , when some 100,000
~ople gathered to liear presIdential candidate Wendell
Willkie.
It was the fourth and last
time that Willlcie would visit
Ohio that year. A similar type
of rally at Jackson held in
192Q propelled Warren G.
Harding to the presidency.
Accqrding to. the Gallia
Times, a reporter for the
paper had counted about
I ,000 cars .traveling along
what .is now U.S. 35 from
Gallia County to Jackson
County to the . rally. Others
came to Jackson from "Old
Gallia" by other routes,
putting the number of
Gallians at the rally to some
6,000 to 7,000.
· The Times stated, "during
the program there was a constant flow of people into the
grounds, on foot and in cars.
Thousands were in automobiles caught in the traffic congestion for miles outside of
Jackson - and many of them
never did get to the scene."
Willkie 's most memorable .
line from his speech, given
with a weakened voice from
constant campaigning, was
"Won't you help me?" · He
also asked repeatedly, "Won't
you join me?" At the end of
his speech, in staccato-like
fashion, Willkie repeated the
word "help."
Just a few days before
Willkie's appearance in
Jackson, he had appeared on
.the cover of Time magazine.
He seemed to be picking up.
steam as some pollsters were
saying that by the .end of
October, with just a few days
until the election, Willkie had
drawn even with Roosevelt,
'.

Some had put him in the lead.'
It was,interesting that many
of the crowd in Jackson tpat
day were wearing a button
that said, "We don't want
Eleanor," referring to the fact
that some said Eleanor
Roosevelt was the power
behind the presidency.
An ad appearing in the
Gallia Times two days after
Willkie's speech in Jackson
stated that Roosevelt had led
the country down eight of the
13 steps toward .dictatorship.
The char.t lis ted Germany,
Russia, Italy and Japan as
completing the 13 steps.
It stated that the U.S. had
already .taken the following
steps toward dictatorship:
"Concentrated
. power,
ruinous taxes, unbalanced
budget. cheap money, too
much borrowing, planned
economy, huge debt and a
conscripted army." The ad
stated that the five steps that
remained before the U.S.
became a dictatorship were
"controlled press, controlled
radio, rationalized industry,
regimented farms and regimented labor."
The .ad stated, ''A vote
against a third term is a vote
to stop these last five fatal
steps.' Underneath this statement were li.sted all of the
Republican candidates Who
were running in Gallia
County in 1940.
In many ways, Willkie was
an unusual presidential candidate on the Republican
ticket. Up until 1939, Willkie
had · been a Democrat. Many
of his ideas were way ahead
of his time and angered many
of both parties. Willkie was
the first presidential candidate since before World War I
to favor equal rights. for
women, a national health system, civil rights legislation to
protect minorities and a foreign policy that kept America
involved with the world .
.

BY RON BERTHEL

vaudeville's Roy and Arthur
and was on the road even
when he was home. When his
,;It's Not Easy Bein' Me: A father was·n.' t touring, he
·Lifetime. of No Respect But stayed in Manhattan, where
·Plenty of Sex and Drugs." By· young Jacob would go by
Rodney
Dangerfield. subway twice a year for a
HarperCollins 270 Pages. perfunctory visit with his
$25.95.
father.
WI10
.J&gt;arental attention wasn't
•
.
says
' Rodney overflowing at home, either.
Dangerfield gets no respect?
· "Rodney . is, without a Dangerfield writes that his
doubt, as funny as a carbon- mother never showed him
based life form can be," any signs of affection, never
writes Jim Carrev in his fore- complimented him or celeword to Dangeri'ield's mem- brated his birthday "I guess
oir, "It's Not Easy Bein' Me: that's why I went into show
:A Lifetime of No Respect business - to get some
.But Plenty of Sex and love," he writes. "1 wanted
· people to tell me I was good, ·
Drug .S."
In his book. the twitchv, tell me I'm okay." . ·
bug-eyed comic whose catch
Dangerfield's show busi- ·
phrase "1 gel no respect" has ness: .career had two phases.
helped him earn the respect During the first phase, he was
.of coll eag ues' and brought Jackie Roy. He quit at 28.
pleasure to fans, describes {"To give you an idea or how
.how, &lt;It middle . age. he well I was doing at the time I
became a show business star. quit, I was the only one who
But at the beginning of the knew I quit.") He married,
story of his 80-plus years is a and went into the aluminu{llJonely childhood, and toward siding business ..
the end are several surgeries · But 12 years in aluminum
and ongoing health problems. couldn't tarnish the luster of
, Dangerfield was born · performing. so Jackie Roy · as·
Rodney
Jacob Cohen in 1921 and · reborn
lived in the borough of Dangerfield; a name a clubQueens in New York, with owner created for him his mother and various rela- went ·back doing standup
tives, including an older sis- while keeping his day job.
ter, and a Swedish carpenter
"I get no respect" liecame
named Mack, ·who later his "shtick," evolved from
.became his uncle through his earlier "Nothing goes
marnage.
right" with inspiration from
Young · Jacob had show "The Godfather.'' In the midbusiness in his veins. Hi s 1960s came the first of many
_father was the Roy half of appearances on "The ~d

From 1919 to 1940, the U.S.
basically followed an isolationist foreign policr
Willkie was born m a small .
town in Indiana. Both he and
hi s wife were lawyers. In
1933. Willkie had moved to
New York, where he became
the head of a huge electric
conglomerate.. It was his
opposition to ·· Roosevelt's
plan for the government to
build the electric infrastructure in Tennessee and other
places that propelled Willkie
to national attention.
Willkie believed tha't the
free enterprise system was
being short-circuited with the
government entering the
electric marketplace as a pro- .
ducer. Willkie's piece in
Fortune magazine gave him
great prominence in early
· 1940 and Draft Willkie clubs
sprang up all over the li.S.
He won the nomination on
the sixth ballot.
In late October, the Dunn
Poll even predicted a win for
Willkie. While Dunn got the
Gallia vote right, as it was
7,384 for Willkie and 3,812
for Roosevelt; nationwide, it
was 27 million for Roosevelt
to 22 million for Willkie. The
electoral vote was 449 to 82.
Willkie's greatest service to
his country came after the
election of ·1940. It was
Willkie·
and
Eleanor
Roosevell who helped to
establish the famed Freedom
House, which has been a
great advocate for freedom
and democracy around the
world for the past 60 plus
years. In 1943 , Willkie 's
book "One World" became a ·
bestseller. In it, Willkie
argued for global cooperation
in the solving of disputes.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
investigation leads Scarpetta
Fans of Patricia Cornwell's back to her old headquarters ·
Kay Scarpetta mysteries won't and a creepy former employ' .be disappointed by her latest ee - Edgar Allan Pogue novel, "Trace," which returns who has a thing for corpses.
Scarpetta to Richmond, Va.,
Characteristically. Marino
where she'd been fired live lands himself in trouble, as
years earlier from her job as the
state's chief medical examiner. does Lucy, who's recently
Also figuring prominently opened an office in Los '
Meanwhile,
'into the plot are Scarpetta's Angeles.
Scarpena's
relationship
with
lover. Benton Wesley, a forensic
Benton
is
on
rocky
ground.
;psychologist; her old friend and
There 's the U$ual verbal
.colleague, fot111Cr police officer
Pete Marino; and her niece,
Lucy, who runs her own highly
successful private-eye firm.
It's a bittersweet trip filled
with memories for Scarpetta,
who is living In South
• Florida, where she works as a
.private forensic consultant.
She's been asked to help
solve the case of a 14-yearold girl found . dead in her
.own bed. The teen appears to
have died of natural causes,
-but · questions linger. Her

'(James Sands is a special
correspondent for the Sunday
Times-Sentinel. HP can be
contacted by writing to 1040
Militar y Road, Zanesville.
Ohio 43701.)

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HARDCOVER FICTION
I. "Trace" by Patricia Cornwell (Putnam)
2. "The Da Vinci Code" by Dan Brown
(Doubleday)
3. "Jonathan Strange &amp; Mr. Norrell" by
Susanna Clarke (Bloomsbury)
4. "The Five People You Meet in Heaven"
by Mitch Alborn (Hyperion)
,
5. "The Rule of Fou'r'' by Ian Caldwell and
Dustin Thqmason (Dial)
6. "Skinny Dip", by Carl Hiaasen (Knopf)
7. "Murder List" by Julie Garwood
(Ballantine)
·
8. "Tanequil: High Druid of Shannara" by
Terry Brooks (Del Rey)
9. "Angels &amp; Demons" by Dan Brown (Atria)
10. "Sammy's Hill" by Kristin Gore (Miramax)

John E. O'Neill, Jerome R. Corsi (Regnery)
2. "The South Beach Diet'' by Arthur .
A~atston (Rodale Press)
·3. "American Soldier" by Gen. Tommy
Franks
with
Malcolm
McConnell
(Regan Books)
4. "The Purpose-Driven Life" by Rick
Warren (Zondervan)
5. "My Life" by Bill Clin'ton (Knopf)
6. "Bushworld: Enteral Your Ow.n Risk" by
Maureen Dowd (Putnam)
7. ''Confessions of·an Heiress: A Tonguein-Chic Peek Behind the Pose" by Paris
Hilton (Fireside)
8. "Eats, Shoots &amp; Leaves" by Lynne Truss
(Gotham)
9. "Skywrit ing : A Life Out of the Blue" by
Jane Pauley (Random House)
10. "Treachery·: How America 's Friends
and Foes are Secretly Arming Our Enemies"
by Bill Gertz (Crown Forum)

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knew. "

jousting between Scarpetta
and Marino, who has, at long
last. started to pay attention
to his health .
"I'm a Rorida boy now. On
the South Beach Diet," he says
cheerfully w~en Scarpetta tells
him how fit he looks. He arrives
in Richmond, with Scarpetta,
wearing black cargo pants,
black J?:Oiice boots, a black
vinyl jacket and an LAPD baseball cap (a present from Lucy).

l I :00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m ..... Chili Cookoff- Winners announced at4:00 p.m. -- Sponsored by VfW of Ma.wn -WV
12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m ...... Myron Duffield ''King of the Calliope'' (Calliope playins 15 to 10 minutes on the hour) Sponsored by Budweiser
12:00 p.tn. -12:30 p.m.... Mark Wood Fun Show - Comedy Magic Show- Sponsored by Budwt:iser
12: J~ · p , m .' - 12:45 p.m ... Rock N Country Cloggers ·- Sporl sored by Budwei~er
.
12:30 p.m.- 2:30 p.m ..... Mouk Wood Fun Show - Strolling throughout the crowd with balloon sculpturing and rope
spinning ·:
1:00 p.m. Sternwheel Beat Cruise
1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m....... High Country -Sponsored by Budweiser
2:30p. m.- 3-30 p.m .......Warner Road -·Sponsored by Budweiser
3:00p. m. S1ernwhee.l Boal Cruise
4:00p.m. - 5:00 p.m ...... .Joey Wilcoxon .- Sponsored by Budweiser
4:00p.m. Rubber Ducky Derby- SMnsored by Pomeroy Mere hams Assn.
5;00 p.m. Stemwheel Boat Cruise
5:30p.m. • Captai n's Dinner - Eagles Club- S~Xln«~red by Meigs Eagles 217 1
5:30p.m. - 6:30 p.m ...... 1Wilhout Papers- Sponsored by Budweiser
6:45p.m.- 7JO p.m .......Men's Sexy Leg Contest
7:30p.m. - 8;30 p.m.. ..... Mudfork Blues Band- Sponsored by Budweiser
8:00p.m. -10:00 p..m ...... Stemwheel Boat Fireworks Cruise
9:00p.m. Fireworks- Sponsored by Pomeroy Riverfest Comminee
. 9:00p.m. - 10:30 p.m. Barny· Sponsored by Budweiser

Thursclay. Friday &amp; Saturday Events;
Luncheon and Crafts at the Trinity Church, various raffles sponsored by the Riverfcst Committee wi~h drawing~ to lx-

held Satutday evening

Saturday Events;
Bicycleffricycle decorating contest immediately following the parade sponwred by the Meigs Cuunly To uri ~ m
Meigs in Motion 5K Fun Walk. Pomeroy Walking Path. Registration at 10.00 a.m. on Park.ing Lot at end of "'alk path. f1rst
100 participants will receive a free T -Shirt Any questions contact Andrew Brumf)eld. Meigs Couniy Health Depanmcnt
1740) 992 -6626

Pomeroy library- West Main Streel, Pomeroy, II :00 a.m. to I :00 p.m., Bounce. House. Slide Character Anist and Free
Balloons, Also, free refreshments of lemonade and popcorn from 10:00 a.m. to 2.00 p.m.

ALL EVENTS TO TAKE PLACE ON THE POMEROY PARKING LOT AND
AMPHITHEATER UNLESS OTHERWISE NQTED
SCHEDULE IS SUBJECT TO CHANCE

·Hbrsedtawl'\ t"arria~e rides, pre:fl\~s("er~ tt&gt;ur, t"atered ~t&gt;l'l"est"jle dil'\1'\er

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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BEST SELLERS

(Jta[~ ~ the ~'\'er
SCHEDULE"OF EVENTS
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2004

Sternwhee[ Cl\!,'\'er ~est.

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Sunday,' September 19,

Sullivan
Show"
and
Dangerfield had arrived.
Dangerfield appeared often
also on "The Dean Martin
Show" - 28 times,· to be
exact- but met Martin only
once. TV viewers saw the
two 111en sitting at a table and
chatting. But, Dangerfield
expl\tins. all was not as it
seemed:
For seven consecutive
Sundays, he writes, "I flew
from New York to California,
NONFICTION/GENERAL
wt:;nt into an empty studio, sat
I. "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat
down at that table by myself
and did four skits while talk- Veterans Speak Out Agai,nst John Kerry" by
ing to an empty chair. Later,
the crew filled in shots of the
audience laughing, and they
tilled in Dean Martin, too.''
Dangertield is frank when
he discusses his drinking
problem (a way to "self-medicate'' hi s depression); and
his cocaine usc, which
"makes you db stupid
,.f\""/ 0-;{
things," including the time he
Septemberf
snorted foot powder that he
Thursday, September 23''
~
had mistaken for coke.
6.00 p.m. Openmg Ceremony hy Pomeroy Amencan Leg10n
~ 2Jrd, 24th, ,
Scallcred throughout are
6:30 p·.m. Fire Truck Parade
'S"
plenty of Dangerfield's one7:00 p:m. 9:00p.m . ...... Ted &amp; lisa· Sponsored by Budweiser
and 25th ~ ·
liners ("When I was a kid, my
yo-yo. it never came back").
Friday; September 24th
There are also dozens of
I:00 ·p.m. • I :30 p.m· Meigs High School Band &amp; Flag Corp. -Sponsored by Budwe ise r
photos
of
Dangerfield
3:00p.m. Stern wheel Boat Cruise
throughout the years, and
5:00 p.m Stern wheel Boat Cruise
6:00p.m 7:30p.m. Paul Docffinger ~ Sponsored by Budweiser
images of people who
7:00p.m. Stern wheel Boat Cruise
touched his life, including
8:00p.
m. - 9:00 p.m...:... Biitzk.rieg - Spomored hy Budwei~er
Elvis
Presley,
Robin
9:00p.m. Stem wheel Boat Cruise
Williams, President Clinton,
9:30 p.ril. - l I:00 p.m-.... "ELVlS" Impersonator Dwight lce1lhower- Sponsored by Fanner.!! Bank. &amp; Saving.., Company
and aluminum-siding colSaturday, September 25th
league
Joe
.fAncis,
I 0:00a.m Parade
Dangerfield's best ~nd and
II
:00 a.m.- I :00 p.m ..... Line Thruwing Contest (~ ign- up begins &lt;H I I .00 a.m.) - Sponsored by Indiana Michigan Power
"the funniest guy I ever

Scarpetta returns home in Cornwell's latest thriller

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ON THE BOOKSHELF

Rodney D~ngerfield earns
some ·respect with a memoir

Willkie's southeastern Ohio
stop drew 100,000 people

PageC3

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Stop by for a.

In Gallipolis next to TSC * 446-4417

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\bkeal/cher:kspayabletotlreP/ea;anJ ValleyHospilal F01odlrio/r. Masterr:ardandVtsarrealsoa.'Cf!/Xdl ·
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CELEBRATIONS

· iunbar lim,. -iPentind
Arnott-Giblin
Engagement

SYRACUSE - ' The parents of Erica Ryanne Leigh
Arnott and Michael William
their
Giblin
announce
engat~ement and approaching
marnage.
.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of John Arnott of
New • Haven, W.Va., and ·
Jenna Arnott of Syracuse.
She is the granddaughter of
Betty Curfman of Syracuse
and the late C.W. Curfman of
Syracuse, and the late
. William and Helen Arnott of
Letart Falls.
'
Erica is a 1998 graduate of
Southern High School and is
a student at Columbus State.
She is employed by Plastic
Surgery
Reconstructive
Associates of Columbus.
Tlie prospective groom is
the son of Pete and Judy
Giblin of Strongwille, and
the grandson of Delores
Downs of Cleveland.
·
He is a 1996 graduate of
Strongsville High School. He
attended the Oh io State
:· university where he studied
architecture ·and graduated
· from €olumbus State with a
· degree in construction management. He is the owner of
' MWG Remodeling and
Erica Arnott and
Wood Working in Columbus.
. The wedding wi II be held Club of Sunbury. The out-on Saturday. Sept. 18, at the door garden .ceremony will
Bent Tree Golf and Country be oft'iciated by Ma1jorie

_Nida-Haney
:engagement
· Lindsay Kay Nida and
Benjamin Michael Haney are
· announcing their engagement
and upcoming marriage .
The bride-elect is the &lt;laughter
: of James H. Nida and Kay E.
: Nida of Gallipolis. She is the .
:granddaughter of John H. Roush
of Gallipolis. She is a 2001 graduate of River Valley High
School and will graduate from
the University of Rio Grande in
: 2006. She is currently employed
:at Captain D's in Gallipolis.
: The prospective bridegroom is the son of Kim
. Haney and Sharron Lynn
: Haney of Bidwell. He is the
: grandson of Bernard and
Hope King of Bidwell. He is
: a 1999 graduate of River
. Valley High School and is
currently employed by .
Captain D's in Gallipolis.
The ·wedding is set for Aug.
6, 2005 at Sandhill Church of
Christ of Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Thomas 50th
•
anmversary
GALLIPOLIS - Wendell
and Lois Thomas were married Sept. 19, 1954 at the
First
Baptist
Church,
Gallipolis by the Rev.
Howard Green.
· They are the parents of two
sons, four grandchildren and
two step-grandchildren: Son',
David (Peggy) Thomas of
Westerville, Ohio; grandson,
Andrew Thomas, a recent
: graduate
of
De Vry
~ University,
now
of
Columbus; granddaughter,
Sara,
attending
Ohio
· University at Athens; step: grandson Erik Fields of
: J31oreoce, SC; step-grandson
: John Fields of Delaware,
: Ohio; son, Gregory (Susan ~
1bomas of Livermore, Calif.;
· grandson, Jonadtao, anending the University of
: California at Davis, Calif.;
: granddaughter,
Andrea,
: allending Cal Poly University
: at San Luis Obispo, Calif.

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Sunday, September 19,

MIDDLEPORT
Longtime Meigs County
school teacher and principal
Earl Kni ght will celebrate his
I OOth birthday on Saturday,
· Oct. 2.
An open house, hosted by
his dau~hter Sue Haley and
her fam1ly will be held from
noon to 2 p.m. at the Knight
residence, 827 Beech St. ,
Middleport. A light buffet
wi II be served.
Born on Oct. 2, 1904, Mr.
Knight has lived his • entire
life in Meigs County. He
started teaching in a oneroom schoolhouse in Chester.
After three years there, he
taught one year in Pomeroy.
'After finishing ·his education
· at both Ohio and Rio Grande
'Universities in 1940 he
moved to Middleport where
he ,taught, 'coached, and
served as principal until his
retirement in 1964.

Michael Giblin
Butler. D.D. A cocktail reception will follow in the country club.

VEGETARIAN COOKING

Won ton cups with whipped
cheese and.roasted pepper

.

Earl Knight

Following his retirement he
t&amp;ught six years at Wahama
High 'School in Mason
County, W.Va.
In 1935 Mr. Knight married
Kathryn Wil'son who died in
1998. The couple had one

daughter, Sue. who married
Ron Halley and .they have a
daughter Paige and a son and
daughter-in-law. Brad and
Katie, and two grandchildren.
Savannah and Mason.

Cox-Tipton
wedding

M ERCERVILLE
Michael Caleb Tipton and
Mande Jane Cox were m~t­
ried on Oct. I, 2003 in
Louisa, Ky. On July I0, 2004
they shared a formal wedding
ceremony with their family
and friends.
The couple was the first to
have a wedding ceremony in
the
new
Mercerville
Missionary Baptist Church.
The ceremony was ·officiated by Pastor Matthew Henry.
The bride is the daughter pf
Loren and Jane Ann Cox of
Crown City and the granddaughter· of Ran ford ·"Pete"
and Ella Mae Cox and Joy
and the late Bobby Clary,
also of Crown City. She is a
"2003 graduate of South
Gallia High School and was
Miss Gallia County 2003.
The groom is the son of
Mike Tipton of Gallipolis
and Lia Bane of Cheshire.
He is the grandson of
Virginia and the late Harvey ·
Tipton of Gallipolis and
Marika Lucas. and Tibor
Lucas, both of Columbus. He
is a 200 I graduate of River
Valley High School and is
currently enlisted in the US
Marine Corps as a scout
Undsay Kay Nlda and Benjamin Michael Haney
sniper.
.
Mande was escorted down
the aisle by her father. She
wore a white satin gown,
designed by Venus. It was a
sleeveless high-necked lace
bodice enhanced with beaded
re.embroidered lace. · The
skirt was also made of satin
· as well as the train. It was
adorned with lace motifs and
a lace hem.
The bride carried a cascading arm bouquet of white
· calla lilies, red and ivory
roses, red Asiatic lilies,
stephan at is ·and lily-of-thevalley with ivory trailing.
Kayla McGuire, friend of
the bride, was · the maid-ofhonor. Lexie Clary, cousin of
'the bride, was a junior bridesmaid. The bridesmaids were
Kate Saunders and Latasha
Ousley, both friends of the
bride and groom. Tbe flower
girl was Mallison Comer,
cousin of the bride. The
bride's party wore red floorlength gowns accented in silMt and Mrs. Wendell Thomas
ver. They carried smaller .
Wendell retired from Ohio of service. lbey celebrdted bouquets that matrhed the
Valley Bank after 44 years their 50th anniversary with bride 's. Mallison · wore a
and still serves on their board
white satin tea-length gown
of directors; Lois retired.from their children on a Caribbean adorned with pearls· and a
beaded lace veil. She carried
Holzer Clinic after 30 years Cruise.

CONCORD, N.H. (A,P) Fancy is fine, b~t nothing
fussy.
'
· That's my feeling about
most food, but party food in
. particular. When company is
coming there simply isn ' t
time or energy to . pamper
your food and negotiate with
finicky ingredients that must
· be treated just so.
That"s the difference
between being a host and
being a caterer.
Typically, I' m happy to let
my ~uests graze on rustic
starters, such as a block of
quality Parmesan cheese
accompanied by balsamic
vinegar and wheat crackers , a
chunk of feta drizzled with
honey, or a bowl of hummus
and fresh flatbread.
But as I recently prepared
. for a party for 30, I found
myself facing an intellectual
: incongruity. Generally, the
more peopJe·· J entertain, the
,' more rustic (which generally
means easy) my menu
becotnes.
This time I found myself
: wanting something with bit
: more pizazz. But for 30 people?
Inspiration hit while reading a fbodie magazine, which
included a beautiful appetizer
of baby shrimp sauteed-with
finely diced vegetables
: served in tiny edible cups
made from won ton wrappers
that had been baked in minimuffin tins.
It seemocl like a great idea,
and a .completely impractical
: one. Who wants to take the
time to dice half a dozen different vegetables and saute
them with baby shrimp? And
then there's still the question
of ho·w to keep them at the
temperature for serving.
The won ton cups idea,
. however. was a keeper. It was
just a matter of what to put in
them .

a

Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Tipton
a basket trimmed in red
accents made by her mother,
Tammie.
The groom wore his United
States Marine Corps dress
blue
military
uniform.
Caleb's best man was ~ his
brother, Kyle W. Tipton. The
groomsmen
were
Jake
Richie, friend of the groom,
BJ Cox, brother of the bride,
and Brandon George, friend
of the groom. The men wore
na~y blue tuxedos with white

satin ties and vests. Brandon
also wore his United States
Marine Corps dress blue military uniform. Ringbearer
was MontgomeiJI Grey,
cousin of the groom: He wore
a navy blue tuxedo as well.
A reception immediately
followed the ceremony at
South Gallia High School.
The couple · reside in
Jackson vi lie, NC while the
gr~m is stationed at Lamp
Lejuene.

For me, the winning filling
was a· sour-cream and creamcheese blend. I liked the idea
of a creamy filling, partly for
its texture contrast to the
crunchy won ton, but also for
the ease of assembly: The
mixture could be piped into
the shells from a plastic bag.
For flavor I started with
fresh chives , a natural for
sour cream. These added
attractive green specks as ·
well as · a mellow onion flavor. Then I added hot pepper ·
sauce, another nice contrast
to the cool creams.
Though the cream-cheese
and sour-cream ' mixture
could be combined by hand, I
tossed my batch in a standing
mixer ·and used the whisk
attachment to beat it until
light and fluffy. Then I trans. ferred it to a zip-lock plastic
bag, ready for piping.
Baking the won tons 'was
easy. I used the smaller of
two varieties available. at' my
grocer. I spritzed the muffin
tins with olive oil. then molded a won ten into each cup
and gave another sprit of oil.
There was some overlap on
the edges, but that's fine.
Because I don't have 100
mini-muffin tins ·(my target
number to allow each guest
three), I baked the won tons
in batches, which worked
well since they crisp up
quickly. And, as with the
cheese filliog, I did this step
the night before.
The trick to preparing the
won tons ahead of time (but
no more than 24 hours) is to
let them cool completely.
then gently place them in zipIQck plastic bags. Do not
refrigerate, as this will make
·
them soft.
But a cup of cheese isn' t
quite enough. For color and
flavor, I placed a thin strip of
roasted red pepper across the
base of each cup so that it

came up the side . The cheese
was piped over part of the
pepper.
.
For a final llourish - and
bit of flavor - I set a single
caper and thin slice of seallion atop each mound of
cheese. a bright green contrust to the red pepper and
White cheese.
The result was a delicious
and. appealing appetizer. And
the best part~ Thirty minutes
before the party, I was able to
assemble about 100 of the
cups in ab.out 10 minutes.
With everything prepped
ahead, it really was that easy.
If you bake the won tons
just before preparing, be sure
tp let them cool completely
before piping in the cheese.

Won Ton Cups
With Whipped
Cheese and
Roasted Pepper
(Preparation 30 minutes)
Olive oil cooking spray
36 small won ton wrappers
(roughly 2 inches square)
I cup cream cheese (set at
room temperature for about
10 minutes) ·
1/2 cup sour cream
I tablespoon line Iy mi need
fresh chives
1/2 teaspoon hot pepper
sauce (or more according to
taste)
Pinch each. of salt and
freshly ground black pepper
I to 2 roasted red peppers.
jarred, packed in vinegar
36 capers, drained
I scallion. sliced into thin
rounds
·
Preheat oven to 400 F.
Lightly spray mini-muffin
tins with olive oil. Press one
won ton wrapper into each
muflin cup. Spray again with
olive oil. being S!lre to lightly
mist the edges Of each won

.
·eoming Thu~ay ..,

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Shrimp With Lemon,
Mint and Goat Cheese

(Total time 30 minutes)
I tabl es poon olive oil
6 small garlic cloves, minced
2 1/4 pounds peeled and
de veined large shrimp
I cup frozen~ peas, thawed
3/4 cup th1nly sliced green
onions
1/4 wp mirin
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
I teaspoon grated lemon rind
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 plum tomatoes, diced
1/2 cup chopped fresh mint
1/2 cup (2 ounces) crumbled goat cheese
Heat oil in a large nonstick
skillet over medium-high heat.
Add garlic; saute I mmute or
until browned. Add shrimp:
cook I to 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Add pea~. green onions.
mirin, lemon juice and rind, salt

Bu~

Year3

!/2 cu p fre,h orange ju ice
I teaspoon grated orange rind
. 2 tablespoons &gt;vhite wine .
vmegar
I tables poon ol ive oil
2 tablespoons honey
I tab lespoon chopped fresh

tarra gon

Two H-o u nee packa ges
qu artered hutton mu shr0om s
1/2 teaspoon salt
I /-l teaspoon pepper

Comhi ne all inQrcdients and
let stand 20 minutes before
serving. stirring occasionall y.

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IVIarinated Mushrooms

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returns and.access,to your

Crisis

and tomatoes; cook 8 minutes.or
until shrimp are done.
Top each serv ing with 4
teaspou1i s mi nt and 4 tea-.
spoons goat cheese.
Makes 6 servi ngs.
· Nutrition information per 1cup serving : 286 cal.. 7. I g fat
(2 7 g ' atu ra ted), 40.3 pro.,
II .S ~ carhu.. 2.6 g fiber. 33 7
~E diol. . {)()() mg sodium.

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Shrimp with lemon,
mint and goat cheese

You're invited to enjoy rhis 1mpo rranr
series in a comfortable home setnng in
your neighborhood. Each' of the six weekly
video lessons is led by Pasto r Greg Scorr. By
participating in a 40 Days of Purpose gro up,
you '11 recei ve a free copy of The Purpose Driven ·
Life and a personal study guide.We invite you
to join us - there's no cost o r commitment ~o
participate.

Withdrawal options
Night Cooking ·
dietician Angie Rhodes

,

ton. Bake until edges just
begin to lightly brown, about
4 minutes.
Gently remove the won
tons from the muffin ' tin .
They should be quite firin
and will not lose their shape.
Set aside to cool, about 5
minutes. Repeat in batches as
necessary until all won tons
are baked and cooled.
While the won · tons bake.
whisk together (preferably
with an electric mixer) the
cream cheese. sour cream.
chives, hot pep·per sauce, salt
and pepper. Mixture should
be light and fluffy.
Spoon the mixture into a
medium zip-lock plastic bag.
Try to get as much of the
cheese as possible into one
comer of.the bag.' Press ·out
any air and zip closed. Set
aside .
Slice the red pepper into 36
thin strips about I to 2 inches
long.
Arrange the won ton cups'
on a single surface. Set a strip
of red pepper into each cup.
arranging it so one end comes
up the side of the cup and
dangles over a bit.
Use scissors to cut a 1/4inch triangle from the corner
of the plastic bag of·cheese.
Hold the bag with two hands
and apply slow, even pressure. The cheese should come
out in a thick, smooth stream.
Pipe about 1/2 tablespoon
of cheese into each cup . .
Top each cup with I cape'r
and several slices of scallion .
Won ton cups can be refrigerated, uncovered, for up to 30
minutes before serving.
Makes 36 won ton cups.
enllugh for 12 people.

Sunday, September 19,

BEGINNING SOON IN A
HOME NEAR YOU!

~esoday

Subio n'be Ulday • ~2342

Page Cs

IN·THE KITCHEN

6unbap QI:tmt' ·itnttntl

2004

Celebration to
mark Earl
Knight's 1OOth
birthday

ProJI!l to be apart ofyour life.

!

!.

PageC4

____--..:..__ _ _----;-,- --

�..
.

.

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PageC6

MOVIES

·"unbap lim~ -6entinel

Sunday, Septembet 19, 2004

At the Movies: ~sky Captain
and the World of Tomorrow'
BY CHRISTY LEMIRE
ASSOCIA1ED PRESS

From the looks of it, "Sky
Captain and the World of
Tomorrow" could have been ·
a dazzling success or a dizzying failure.
. It'~ actually a bit of both an ambitious if highly derivative mix of live actors and
digital technology, of futuristic sci-fi fantasy and oldscbool Hollywood adventure.
: There's nothing else like it,
110 for that reason alone it's
~orth seeing. Yet pieces of it
are just like · every movie
you've ever seen.
· For the first 10 minutes or so,
"Sky Captain" [s an absolute
visual marvel, evocatively
· tecallinl! the look of German
expressiOnism from the 1920s
~ ftlm nair from the '40s
with its soaring skyscrapers
and severe camera angles, its
dramatic lighting and deep.
shadows. Like "Far From
Heaven," the faithful recreation
Qf those weepy female ' melodramas from the 1950s, "Sky
Captain" truly makes you feel
~ times that you are watching a
tilm from a bygone era.
: Intrepid
newspa~er
reporter
Polly
Perkms
(Gwyneth Paltrow) is searching for clues to the disappearances of several worldwide
scieJitists (the moment she
steps into the lobby of Radio
City Music Hall to meet a
source is wondrous) when
giant ·robots·invade from the
skies above New York City
and stomp destructively
through the streets.
.
(Paltrow certainly looks the
part,' with her flawless flaxen
locks, porcelain skin and girlreporter get-up of raincoat
and fedora, · which Stella
McCartney designed for her.
Then she opens her mouth
and out crawls the · sarcastic .

Dl

&amp;unbap tltimef -&amp;entinel

INSIDE

~ouse of the week, Page 02

'

At the Movies: 'Wimbledon'
Bv CHRISTY LEMIRE

Evert), Lizzie shrilly challenges every bad call. And
Peter finds himself performA wise philosopher once . ing better than anyone f,igsaid, "Love means never hav' ured - himself included ing to say you're ·sorry." Or thanks to the inspiration he
maybe that was Ali MacGraw. derives from this unexpected
den in the clouds, which is run
In "Wimbledon," Kirsten relationship. · Even Peter's ·
by another old flame of Joe's, Dunst says, ."Love means / agent (Jon Favreau, drawing
Capt. Francesca "Franky" nothing in tennis - . zero." ; laughs ·despite playing a
C:ook (Angelina Jolie, wear- Not quite as memorable a i cliche) wants him back.
ing a baffling eye patch that line. but that's what poses for ; But-Lizzie's pushy stage father
actually manages to distract philosophy in this by-the- . (Sam Neill} wants her to stay
·· attention . from her famous numbers romantic cornedy awayJromPererandstayfocused
lips). It is physically impossi- set in the tennis world.
ori the tournament Prediciably,
ble to avoid laughing out loud
The ever-effervecent Dunst the scriptfromAdiun Brooks and
when the action stops and the and co-star Paul ·Bettany are · husband-and-wife team Jennifer
frame centers on Jolie barking sufficiently likable together, fllickett and
Levin inserts
out in her fake British accent, and the . banter often has the the dad as an obstacle to the bud" Alert
the . amphibious deft, swift pacing of a champi- ding romance (he'll later have a
squadron!" And that probably onship match- though it usu- reluctant change of heart, natch),
wasn't the intended effect.
ally involves Bettany and along with cocky American Jake
The film is also overloaded, someone else, like Nikolaj Hammond (Austin Nichols),
with references to "The Coster-Waldau, who plays. his who competes with Peter.cifi and
Wizard of Oz" - . to which practice partner, or James offthecounforLizzie'sattention.
''Wimbledon" comes from
first-time
writer-director M~Avoy, who plays his brother.
Kerry Conran says he's payPreviously a supporting the producers of "Four
ing tribute ·- including a figure in films including "A Weddmgs and a Funeral,"
metallic version of those men· Knight's Tale;: "A Beautiful "Notting Hill," "Bridget
acing flying monkeys and a Mjnd;' and "Master and Jones's Diary" and . the
giant, electronic rendering of Commander: The Far Side of upcoming sequel "Bridget
a scientist's head that resem- the World,... Bettany proves Jones: The. Edge of Reason,"
bles the great and powerful himself an . engaging leading so it has a tried-and-true, wry
Oz. The result seems stale, man -and upstages the top- sense of British humor.
billed Dunst in the process.
Jt
was
shot
during .
rather tban sweetly reverent.
If you know the back story
Bettany plays fading tennis Wtrilbledon last year, which .
of "Sky Captain," though, its star Peter Colt, who ·was . gives the film a sense of realism
collapse after such a promis- ranked II th in the world near- and immediacy. It also helps
ing start makes sense. The ly a decade .ago but now has that the Ion~. )ean Bettany looks ·
basis for the film was a siX· slipped to No. 119. He's on like a tenrus pro, even though
minute video that Conran ere- . the verge of retiring and tak- he'd never really played the
ated on his computer, which ing a job as a tennis instructor game before. And Bettany
combined classic images of at a posh English club, but plays his character with an easy
the Empire State Building first he must compete as a balance of self•deprecating
from 1939 with the ·kind of wild card in his final fortnight. charm and newfound swagger.
daring, swee~ing effects
In a p.ainfully cute ~ne, he
Some of the matches are
runs into Lizzie Bradbury staged spectacularly (with the
you'd seem a vtdeo game.
Once the story leaves New · (Dunst}- a bad-girl American help of CGI), especially the
York, ·~sky Captain" meanderS atherfirstWimbledon-when men's final, which featuresho~lessly,. veering between _ he walks in on her shower after you. guessed it -. our · hero,
senous. acuon sequences and amix-upatthehotelfrontdesk. Peter, versus the msufferable
borderline camp. Conran seems Unbelievably, not only is Jake." We could have done withto want·~ both ways, both tonal~ Lizzie not embarrassed about out repeated use of the ball- :
ly and vtS!!ally, but never fully being caught in the nude, she cam effect, though, in which
. actually fmds herself flirting the camera seems to swoop
succeeds etther way.
·
do\vn like ·'I searing serve and
''Sky Captain and the with him. ·
World of Tomorrow," a
Director Richard Loncraine's smack the grass with a thwack.
Paramount Pictures release, movie only truly gets going
"Wimbledon," a Universal
is rated PG for sequences of once match play begins.
. Pictures release, is rated PG- ·
stylized sci-fi violence and
Like a female Jolln 13 for language, sexuality
brief mild language. Running McEnroe (though McEnroe and partial ·nudity. Running
time: 107 minutes. 1\vo and a himself shows up as an time: 100 minutes. Two and a
half stars out of four.
announcer alongside Chris half stars out of four,
ASSOCIATED PRESS

J

Sunday, September 19, 2004

•

"

'·

Mrux

"Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow" director Kerry
Conran and cast member Bai Ling pose together at the premiere of the film at Grauman's Chinese Theater in Los
Angeles, Tuesday. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
voice of a California girl -. · a
But onceJoe and Polly leave
jarring anachronism and a New York to continue their
real surprise, given Paltrow 's investigation (and preven~. the
adeptness at accents.)
worl.d from being destroyed),
After scampering - away · "Sky Captain" becomes an
from the onslaught with her "Indiana Jones" wannabe hair and her blood-red lip- the trilogy itself an homage to
stick intact, Polly seeks the decades-old adventure flicks
help of .a former love, ~he · -complete with cutesy quips
dashing aviator Capt. H. from Law for comic relief at
Joseph Sullivan or "Sky the most cataclysmic times.
Captain" (Jude Law, looking
They trek to the Himalayas
typically sexy in a ..leather and Shangri-La before landbomber jacket).
ing on an aircraft carrier hid-

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Beltone·

. Big changes come to Nissan's long-running Pathfinder sport
.
utility vehicle this autumn. .
The new, third-generation Pathfinder is restyled and ·Jaeger
than its Jlredecessor- enough so it can accommodate a firstever third-row seat for a maximum passenger count of seven.
The 2005 Pathfinder's Y6 engine is larger with a 4-liter displacen~ent, and produces more power. Indeed, the 270 horsepower of
riew Pathfinder is more than the. horsepower in
the Ford Explorer with either Y6 or Y8 engine.
The · new Pathfinder also has rugged body-on-frame construction, rides on· a new platform with independent rear suspension· and offers features never before available on this
vehicle, including hill descent controL '
·
Starting manufacturer's suggested retail price,· including
destination chatge, hadn't been announced but is expected to
be 3f0Und $28,000. Competitors include the 2005 Honda Pilot
SUY, which has a starting MSRP of $27,865, and the Ford
j, EKplcJrer, which starts at more than $27.000 for a 2005 model
V6 and 2WD. Note that all Pilots come standard with
four-wheel-drive, while the Pathfinder is available in 2WD
.
.and4WD.
.
There are four versions of Pathfinder for ' 05: XE, SE, OR
(for off-road) and' LE. The SE and LE are expected t? be the
·
.most popular models.
New styling gives the Pathfinder a front end that's similar to
the look of Nissan's full-size pickup truck , the Titan&lt;
But traditional Pathfinder styling cues remain, such as the
second-row door handles that are. up by the window pillars.
The ride is much more compliant and far less truckish than
before as the suspension is updated with front and rear independent double-wishbone configurations, front an&lt;l., rear.
Indeed, as I sat in the front and second-row seats·, the test
Pathfinder SE 4WD managed road bumps admtrably and
without jostling passengers.
· · .
.
But there is a different ride quality, depending on whether a
passenger is sitting in the comfortable front row or the more
confining ihird row.. Sining way in the back, I felt several road
bumps come through as jolts, and the attendant vibrations
made me wonder about potential carsickness episodes back
there. . · .
The thind seat is meant as an "occasional" seat, Nissan officials said, noting that SUVs with three rows of seats now
account for 40 percent of the sales in the mid-size segment.
The Pathfmder's third row seatin~, like the Pilot's,.is standard
on every model, while it's an opuon on some Explorers.
Legroom and headroom back there typically are com~
. mised somewhat. For example, the new Path.fmder .provides
40 inches of front headroom, compared with 41.9 inches in ·
the Pilot, but headroom in the Pathfinder's !hind row falls to
36.7 inches. This compares with 38.9 inches in the Pilot.
Legroom way in the rearrnost ~ats of the. Pathfinder falls to
.28.1 inches, which is among the smallest tn the segment. In
comparison, the Pilot has 30.2 inches and ·the Explorer has
34.9 inches.
'

2005 Nissan Pathfinder by the ·numbers
THE

PRESS

BASE PRICE: Estimated $27500 for base XE 2WD; $29,500
. XE 4WD: $30,000 for SE 2WD; $32,000 for SE 4WD.
AS TESTED: $33,375. ·
'TYPE: Front,-engine, four-wheel-drive, seven-passenger,
mid-size sport utility vehicle.
ENGINE: 4-liter. double overhead cam V6.
MILEAGE: Estimated 15 mpg (city), 21 mpg (highway).

TOP SPEED: NA.
LENGTH! 187.6 inches.
''
WliEELBASE: 112.2 inches.
CURB WT.: 4,693 po~nds .
· BUILT AT: Sm:yrna. Tenn.
OPTIONS: Comfort pack age (includes dual-zone air cot;~ditioning, power
adjustable pedals, rear air conditioning, automatic day/night
rearview mirror, leather steering wheel and shift knob
and silver painted center cluster) estimated $800,.
DESTINATION CHARGE: Estimated $575 .

PIRse see Nlssan. Dl
.).

Huring 4-id Center
1312 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
'

AssociATED

~--

- - ----

-----•

'

�'

HOUSE OF THE WEEK
AP

HOUSE

OF

THE

THE COVENTRY COnAGE. Ernpty-n .... ,. or tholt Just •tatting to fill their n..t wiU\ lttcl• onn wltl lind tht Ctw.,ltry appullng. Tht modlll
IIID .. ettonltblt to bulkl •• • &amp;ttrttr or .Mcond hon•• ytt It h•il big-hom• t..tu.-...
·

By DAVID BRADLEY
For AP Weekly Features
t a time when energy cosl$ , land prices
ern:! construction budgets Induce "sticker
shock~ for many homeownet'8, ri's nice to ~ee
e oottage hOt"'''e that won't COst 'an arm and
a leg to bi.Jikl or ~lntelo.
·

A

APWB~1761S

a cozy little single floor hollllt

that will keEip building and energy use co&amp;ts

low. witho.ul sacrificing creature oorrlorts.
The CoVent!)' has 1hree nicely tl.zed'and
apppinted bedrooms The ma"s~r suite Is
qurte large with dual closets and Is tucked to
the rear of the home.

.

" ..

'

llHI!Iner Comments
•
"'don't think home bulktlng Is always abOut big hOUS$. ln many reg100s , lend prices and
construction costa are l'llgh. and many peopl&amp; JUSt don't need a lot of surplus •pace. This
~ plan has a nice sl:)ll&amp; and a fun&lt;;tionel floor plan that will work for many famihes
And It wltl kst~tp buHcllng costa in check " -John Guy
'
Ef,IIINIItd Cost of C'onstructtoi.
(~~)

$150,480.$114,240
$133,056. $152 064
$140,97&amp;. $161,566
$134,640. $148,896
$152,064.$166,320

Northeast
Southeaat
Midwest
Northwest
Southwe&amp;!

ConstrucHon Gloasary
Subcontractor Bond -A written document from a
.eulxontraCior gyaranteeing p&amp;l'fom'llnce dttiec:on~
and payment 9f all labor. materials , equipment and
seM::e bills 9SlUX:i.ated wilt\ the subcontmc:t agreement,

APWB - 176

;:.~

:J
I'JINI~~

• · • · &gt;&lt; I .••

The L-Shape kitchen featUres a cooking
island and the dining area ,is just stepe away.
Take 11 few more' ateps to French doors that
swing Inward from the rear covered porth a· great spot for grilling or ffi9mlng col'fee.
The all~purpose great room has a ventlest
!it:ep,ce and,plenty of spact~ to spread out.
The designer h&amp;' specified compot~lte
planks ftX the exterior. This will reduce

flllllintenance,. ~you instal any o1 the new
strains of low-maintenance windows, th!s
horne wtl! be a breeze when It comes to
upkeep.

'
APWB-176
Details
~

Architectural style:

Cottage
tao Total square feet,
one floor: 1.584
• Gll'lge:· Tw!Xar
(optional}
• Overal wklth: .t5 ft.
depth: 43 fl. 8 in.
tao Recommended lot
a~; 70ft. wide 11 100
ft . deep
• Main celHng height;
8 ft
II&gt; Ridge height: 20ft. ·
Bin. 7/12 roof pitch

Pomeroy • Middleport •. Gallipolis, OH •

Sunday, September 19, 2004

'Qrrtbune - Sentinel -

4-liter V6 generates a maxi- and without a problem.
mum 210 horses and 254 footHill descent control, which
pounds of torque at 3,700 rpm, has been available on Land
while the 4.6-litel' V8 in the Rovers and BMW's X5 SUV, i~
from PageD1
Explorer is capable of 239 new to the Pathfmder and elecTo accommodate the new horsepower and 282 foot- · tronically manages the vehicle
reannost ·seating, Nissan offi- pounds of. to~ue at 4,000 rpm. speed on steep declines to keep
Nissan, whtch produces its • the driver in controL There's
cials
lengthened
the new
4-liter V6 at ari engine also a nifty hill start assisi
Pathtinder about 5 inches. But
plant in Decherd, Tenn., plans which keeps the' vehicle from
they said . Pathfinder buyers
didn \want 'a too-much larger on · using the engine in its rolling backward on steep hillS
up&lt;:oming, redesigned Frontier - even on city streets - as the
vehicle. Thus, the Pathfinder's pickup
and Xterra SUV, too.
driver's foot moves from the
187 .6-inch length from
Fuel economy isn't likely, brake pedal to the accelerator.
bumper to bumper is less than to be the best in the new
the 189-inch-long Explorer. . Pathfinder, however. Indeed,
Safety is upgraded, too, a~
But the Pathfinder's turning cir- the previous Pathfinder's V6, all 2005 Pathfinders come
cle of at least 39.2 feet is more than with less performance, was Standard with tire pressure
the 38 feet of the Pilot and the 36.8 rated at only 15 miles a gal- monitor, antilotk brakes:.
feet of the Explorer. Power from lon in city drivin,g and 19 electronic brake distribution
the enlarged Nissan VQ engine mpg on the highway when and three-point safety belts
oomes on strongly and smoothly installed in a 4WD model.
for all seven seats. Side curand is mated to a standard fiveThe '05 Pathfinder interior tain airbags that extend to
speed automatic transmission.
is all new, with a steering protect riders in all three
·Shift points are managed so wheel and large, easy-to-grab rows of seats are available. .
well, they're not really ventilation knobs.that are like
Additionally. this is the;
noticeable much of the time, those in the Titan. Gauges, first Pathfinder to have a towand passing other vehicles with a soft orange accent, are ing capacity of 6,000 pounds.
and merging into traffic are easy to ' read, and there are
This also is the lirst Pathfinder
accomplished without fuss. handles galore inside to help to be built in the United States,
The engine also has strong, passengers get in and · out. I not Japan. The new a~sembly
confident sounds when the enjoyed the Bose audio sys- point is in Smyrna, Tenn.
vehiCle is accelerating.
tem but noticed that people
Officials look for annual
Maximum 270 horsepower climbing .into the third-row .
comes with the use of premi- seats must walk over uneven, sales ·of tlie new Pathfinder to
be in the 60,000 range, and 70 ,
um unleaded ga~oline, but a carpeted area on the floor.
percent of the sales are expect- ·
Nissan official said the
A noteworthy mention goes ed to be four-wheel-drive modengine can use regular, too, to a new, hidden storage box
albeit with a decline of some in the · floor under the els. The target buyer is 37,.
5 to 6 liorsepower and a Pathfinder's second-row seats years old, married with young
slight drop in the rated 291 where valuables might be children; and annual household
foot-pounds of torque at stored while a driver goes out income around $80,000.
The . National Highway
4,000 rpm. Note that some 80 for a hike in the mountains.
percent of the torque is avail- There's also a nice, washable Traffic Safety Administration
. does not provide crash test
able in a rev range that many cargo area material in back.
for
the
new
drivers use in city traffic,
The . Pathfmder, after all, is :ratings
Pathfinder,
and
there
have
which is under 2,000 rpm.
quite capable for activities in
The Pilot's 3.5-liter V6 pro- rugged terrain. For example, the been no safety recalls.
duces a mw\imum 255 horses tester waded through muddy
Because tb: 2005 Pathfinder is
and 250 foot-pounds of torque ditches and climbed sloppY hill- new, Consumer Reports magazine
at 4,~00 rpm. The Explorer's . sides with steady detemunation does not provide a reliability rating.

~

Bedrooll"d: 3

~

Baths: 2

• La1.1ndry: mlin hwtl
• WW.dcwa: dQuble
hung
• Extark:lr material:
brtck and painted
oompostte planka
~ Fqundatlon: alab
on grade
• 2 ln . x 6 In, 11Ud
ptelior walla
• Roof material:
flberglatl ahlnglaa
• Attic: yes

For a etudy plan of this houte, tend $5 to
House Of the Week, P.O. Box' 1562, New
Vork, NV 101t6.t562, coli (8771 228-2954.
or order online at APHouiMOfthewMk.com.
Be sure f:-, Include the plan number. For
downtoa'dlble etudy pJene tnd conatruction
bluei)flnll of Houoe or tho
before Ap!il
200~, tee www.hou .. oftheweek.com.

-k

8 Hb":se"'iweek

In One Week With Us
REACH · OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Or

I·

Beware home improvement TV
Home improvement and do-it.yourself television shows should be ·
viewed for their entertainment value
and as a means to gather ideas that ·
might inspire.your next home project.

l&lt;MI
Wild Well bar
llltng down
22 Rolld d1arge

18
19
21

Find a room's primary
focal point when empty,
such as a large bay
fireplace and redesign

around that

•

· Great Lakes

let or Iron

120
124

lalveat Blatt
33 fldlllng deapot
35 Wrltar- Grey

__..-----...J
Think "outside the box" and
believe that anything 18 possible.
·

125
125

38 Low-down rpj
37 Cll1l\ m stan
38 Clldt 101' loga
40 Throb
41 The Buckeye State
42 Horilrs' jOimoy
44 One "' lhe Jack8qns
-IS Volley

47 Nan8te
51 Repeat out loud
52F~

10percent

tV

60 Toward flo ldun!
.62 Wcman o1 rantc

·-------,J

131 -Baines Johnlcn
133 Soiled food '
135 Row
138 Mgry
137 Aaoclatlon
ollla'ns
138 CltylnGermany

allll

If there ever was a time for
. composting, it is now. · .
Backyards are overflowing
with old plant material, stuff
once
foolishly
called
"gafbage:" old stems, ·leaves,
and flowers from the .garden;
kitchen trimmings; leaves
from trees.
A bit of modern-day aichemy transfonns all this material into rich, dark humus;
which really i~ like gold for
the garden. With all ibis
material available at once,
the compost pile grows rapidly, becOming like an amorphous animal with its innards
generating armth. The heat
can be sufficient to kill
insects or diseases fed to the
pile along with the ·plant

materiaJ.

.

Rip out weed• and add
, them to thQ 'mellil)g pot of
Yei!tatlon ·- the heat will
muff life from them also.

99 Insensible itate

·102 Aroane
104 Join

34 Plao::e ol business
38 Brealhlng organ
37 -$ysl8m

39 Tardy
40 ~gadget
42 Make trMqull

with drugs
43 Slnwdneaa
44Ned~l&lt;Ct5S
45 'lntotma
.
46 Wake-up device
(2 wda.)
48 Perpetualy

I

105 More agreeable

cam

113 · ~

118 Greetcilland
119 Evasive~ ·
121 CQI¥boy's rope

122 Sa

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

123 lnJnded
125 Bodily struclure .

~esome bug
1rJ~I

126

133 A I8Q0018

134 Snake

73 ComiiOI

57 Female rt1atiYt
59 Wotn~
6t Be qulett

In COI1i'ltCtiCUI

75 Ptaytng t:llll
78~

53 Apar1menta,

Onct 1 : raecl
81
Mexico
83 Bill*
34 Marine plant
65 Gilt for a dad
87 inllnta

but within sight
66 $\well

Brttish sl)lo

64 Distant

"*' "'

74 Rllted piallotm

se Range"'_,......
se Mallirfaltot dolla8

84 S1cipl,lllll

· 86 She (Fr.)

quickly. Cinder blocks . are
another possibility, as are straw
bales which, as they rot, can be
added to new piles. )Vood
makes a nice enclosure, ,either
permanently joined or else
notched Lincoln-log style to
grow and shrink with the growing and shrinking compost pile.
Pay some attention to ()ow
you feed your compost,
imagining that it. really IS an
animal, which, like other animals, needs air, water,' and
food. Provide air by making
sure the pile is tlufft Balance
out dense matenals with
fluffier ones and doni pile
materials higher than five."
Water, if necessary, and feed
your compost anything .that
was once or is living, excepi for
fa materials and kitty litter.
fret over providing
exact! y ideal conditions ·for
your composting animal. No
matter what you do, youll
eventually end up with compost.

DVNEGV

Guatchng .1.(

AngBI!: · ~

ChildCllt!! :::~
Cllnt1!t ·

Farni1y Senior C;1re

Due· to Agency's growth local
Home Health Agen&lt;;y is seeking
CNA's, STNA's and Home
Health Aides
Experience Preferred, but will
provide training.

u:s.

· Help Wanted

·Help Wanted .

The Area Agency on Aging District7, Inc.

has the following two positions available i" n
their. Rjo Grande Office;
'ASSESSOR/CASE MANAGER
with the PASSPORT program to provide

horne assessmen,t of needs , schedule

ODH/RYAN WHITE CASE MANAGER
to case manage individuals. and their family
members, living with HIV. Assist clients in

accessing
services;
problem
solving;
panicipate in grant writing; public speaking
required. Must be an Ohio Licensed Social
Worker with two years experience .
BENEFITS: Solary $,3 1,000, retirement plan
(403-B), health, dental, vision plan s, life
insurance, paid vacation, sick. and personal
leave, CEU's.

l

•

--

with

reimbursement

at

Submit Resume. Proof of Licensure, and
References
by 4:30 p.m. on September 24. 2004
to
Joyce Shong, Human Resources Director .
Area Acency on Aging District 7, Inc.

F32 URG, PO Box 500,
Rio Grande, OH 45674
e .. mail : jshong@aaa7.org
An EEO/ AA Employer

'f

.•

in·

for frail elderly. Must be Ohio licensed
Registered Nurse or Licensed Social Worker,
with a minimum of one ~ear experience.

Travel required
.375/m'ile.

·----- l'l

.I

You may send a resume to
P.O. Box 707
G!!.llipolis, Ohio 45631
No phone calls please!

in~ home

services, case manage home- based services

aoo

1.

mstrumentall controls (high·
iy Preferred), electrical or
mechanic expenence.
•Proficient co;,puter !:ik:ills.
•Mu st possess and maintain
a valid dnver's license.
•Promote and work with others in a team environment.
•Corri'petent orEtl and written
co mmumcatipn skills.
• Prelorm repetiti-Je and non·
r ~p~tlt i ve phys ical du!le ~
requ1nng . lifting, push/pull,
stretching ,, bending, ·climb·
1rlg , and working 1n award
pqsitions lifting , push1ng .
and/or • pulling reqUires a
m1nimum ability ol 50
pounds.
•Work rotating shi fts, week·
ends. be on·call, accept call ·
outs and work overt1me
• Provide coverage and
sha re on call duty for other
operating technicians.
•Abilty to read and mterpret
technical manuals and draw ·
ings and detect, diagnose
and "repair ,equipment · mal·

ar.TWireleSS

-

'

Holzer Senior Care Center,
bed lon'g-term nursing
facility has openings for Fulltime and Part-time STNA's.
11 providing quality care iri a
friendly, t1ome-like atmosphere is what you're looking
lor, give us a catt a!
(740)446·5001 or come see
us iri person at 3BO Colonial
Dr , Bidwell, Ohio.

a. 70

The Ravenswood Care
Center ~ 1 t 3 Washmgton
St.. Ravenswood . WV is
Accepting Applications For
All Positions. In OrdEir To
Update Our Files If You Are
A Reliable Person With
Compassion &amp; Team Spirit
Come Join Us! Applicants
May Apply, Mon-Sun 9·4
Many Benefits Available.
References ReqUi red

Overbrook Rehabil itation
Come jom the caring people Center is current!~ accepting
applications for a N1ghl Shift
ol
'
. (7p·7a) AN Supervisor. If
you are interested, please
· come m and fill out an appli·
cation at 333 Page Street,
Middleport . EOE
opening, must have excel·
An equal opportunity employer)
.
Communication
Experie~ced Roofing Crews
lent driving record, apply at
needed
Ftonda 's
Lifestyle Furniture, 856 3rd.
10
Specialists
Rockspririgs Rehabilitation
Ave, GalhpOiis, 9-5 no phone
Hurncane
Area
Top
Pay Call
(Retail Sates)
Center IS took:ing for dedicatDavid@ 1-772-567-0559
calls please.
ed compassionate State
Tested Nursing Assistants Full lime Frbnl' Desk Clerk.
Sell AT&amp;T Wireless products
Drive
Competitive wages, health.
and
services
at
our
Apply in person ·Holiday Inn,
and dental benefits, and 577 St'. At. 7N No phone·
Gallipolis location, make
CLASS A COL
401 K available. We take
· DRIVERS
outbound calls to Increase
calls please.
pride. in otJr home and resi customer traffic, and main·
NEW PAY SCALE
functions .
dents and need, great team
ta1n knowledge of competi·
•Earn b91ween 45 ·50K '
· • Understand cause anc
players to jo1n us If you have
tion and customer needs.
•Min. 2 years exp.
Dynegy ·prov1des electriCity effect in plant processes and
these qualifications please
Requires 1-2 _
years' sales
•Home Time on Weekends
natural gas and natural gas predit:tive plant mamte ·
apply
to: Rockspring s
experience, e)(cellent. com·
•$500 SlgnrOn bonUS
liquids
to
custome'rs nance.
Rehabilitation Center, 36759
mumcation ··and decision·
•Start at 36 ·cpm
throughout
the
United •Must be multi-ta'sk oriente d
Rocksprings
Road,
1 makirig skills; high school
•95% No touch freight
States.
We
are
seek1ng
to fill with ability to make expect 1
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
diploma or GED; and ability . Sales ...
•NO FORCED NYC
me
following
position
tn our !IOus appropriate decisions
Extendicars
Health
to work flexible hours.
Are you looking fo r a· new Serv1ces, Inc. 1s an equal Rolling Hills Generating LLP to non-routine plant opera! ·
.Call 800--652·2~82 for more
Powerplant In Wilkesville· ing situations.
Move faSt, and make things career with an unlimited oppo(tunity employer that Township, Ohio. '
Info .
•Train other employees 111
encourages·
workplace
opportunity
fOr
advance·
happen tor your customers
Drivers
efficient and safe operation
diversity. M/F ON
and your team everyday, ment?
O&amp;M LEVEL 2
of facil1ty.
· ~pp l y online at attwlre·
WANTED •
· less.comljobe, or stop by Would you like to be recog- Fresenius Medical Care.
duties as
• All other
COMPANY DRIVERS &amp;
our sfo re at 2145 Eastern nlzed as a professional global leader in diiilys1s care The qualitied candidate w111 assigned
OWNER OPERATORS
operations.
Avenue , Gallipolis. . OH salesperson 1n· one 0 f the ~urrently has a~ open ~i- co mplete
2 yrs. OTR E)(p., 6 mos.
cOufltry's highest paid occu- !ton .for a part t1me MSW 1n inSpection, aQd malnte45631.
11atQed
patlons?
·
' our·Gallipolls,.OH jaci!rty. We nance of all equipment and
Clean MVR
·
offer competitive salaries, systems, 1nternal and exterHonest, .Dependable
Help Wanted ,
· It so, our salespeople earn education reimbursement, nat. . ' to meet dispaich
Dr1vers!!
an e)(ce ttent inCome and 401 K and health ana dental requirements and ana1n
REWARD!! II
enjoy the benefits of working insurance. If Interested optimal plan1 performance
Home Time 8 out ol 10 '
with a successful and pro· please contf!Ct the Clinical as ' directed and det1ned by
EOE
Qresslve dealership
Manager at 740-441·9300. management.
Additional
weekends
An
equal
opportunity responsibilities
include
$750 weekly guarantee
Health Benefits &amp; 401 K
RADIOLOGY
If you're CU(renlly a profes- employer.
actively engaging In plani
I!NEW!I
TECHNOU)GIST CT
sional in automobile sales or
systems and functiona l
010 Avg , $1 .16/rril
POSITION
if you're serious abOut a new . The Meigs Soil and Water assignment
stewardship
luel surcharge/fuel
career .arid are looking lor District is taking applicatiOns program, completing all
d'
t
for
an
Education associated recOrds, regulaB~scoul~ts,s
Seeking ARRT registered the training and ·guidance C 0 o rd in at or I DiStrIct tory, planning , budgets, preNow Accep~ing
PLENTY'o" FP FR.EIGHT
technologist for run time' that are essential for long- Technician, ApplicatiOns and ventive, correctiVe and cap;.
'
.
.
.
pos,·t,·on. Pr,·mar,·ly for CT term success- we'd like to JOb opportunity announce- tal projects for assigned sys·
Applications
11 s the Righi' Place
'
.
w•·th
o
·
pportun,
·
ty
to
work
·
,
n
talk
to
you.
'I
bl
1
th
ments are ava1 a e a
e terns and functions as well
. Head Teacher.
and theng ht t 1me 1or you to ' MAl
Ult
d
Call H&amp;W Trucking
. o_r
rasoun , as we 11 :
Meigs SWCD Office, by as actively par!ICJpating in
$6.00 an hour
for Honest Answers
Expenence . prefe~red, ~ut Please, atop in for an inter- phoning (740)992·4282 or . the sell-directing work team'
f·&amp;Q0-8 2 &amp;~lS&amp;O
~mployer w1ll prov1~e tratn- VIBW.
E · - M a i 1 i n g program, safety program.
Assistant
www h&amp;Wtrucklng'. com
109 toward certification.
N ~ North
D d
opal dyer@oh nBcdnet net . training and development
- - - - -- " - - c - ·Great .opportunity working ·
orus
up 0 ge Applications are due b~ . program.
Teacher
Farmers Bank is seeking a w1th new e.quipment in a
· Chrysler Jeep
4PM, October 4.
$5.50 an hour
lende1 for the Gallipolis mar- hospit~l-based
radiology
REQUIRED
lnfoCision Mar)agement
Instructors Needed
k:et . Qualified applicant will department. FrJendly team~
For
Corp. is currently
Medical
Transcription , OUALIFJCATIONS:
_have an assoc1ate degree or , oriented atmosphere that
lor
·
Medical
Terminology,
accepting
applications
information
a m1nimurn of three years supports
independenCE~,
Full· Time Dayshift
Bu$l ness Law, Fmancial •High school Diploma or
lending e.~pe rienc e or equiv- continued education. and
call·
positions (8a·5p)
lnvestmenls,
and Word Equivalent required
alent combina tion of educa· professional development
•Minimum
of
tw·o
years
Qualified
applicants
should
.
Processing
Instructors
t1on .and e)(perience. Must Interested
candidates,
740-388-8671
be highly 'motivated . and please inquire ·at (740)592· be stable, highly motivated needed for morning classes
individuals with good com- beginn 1ng Oct. 4. Please
possess good verbal and 9483 and send resume to:
Help Wanted ·
Help Wanted
send resume to: Gallipolis
munication skills.
written
communlcallon
Radiology Associates of
·
We offer a full benef1ts
Career
College,
1176
skills. Competit1v~ salary
Athens
package ,and 40~K.
JaCkson Pike, Gallipolis, OH
and benefits package comPO Box 2608
No
previous
experience
is
·
45631 or fax 740-446-4124.
mensura te with experience.
Athens. OH 45701
necessary. We are the
Interested individuals send
Fax· (740)592-9396.
professional difference in
Mechanic No exper req'd ,
resume to PO Box 808,
teleservices and need great MIF. Age i 8·34 Good pay.
Paramedics
,
&amp;
EMT's
Gallipolis,
OH
45631·.
teani players to join us!
excellent'
benefit s,
Member FDIC and Equal needed. Apply at 1354
1-877-463-6247 ext 2458 Education
opportunities.
Jackso_n Pike, Gallipolis.
Opportunity Employer.
Or apply online
Call
87Ht5·2536 AN
www. inloc1sion.com
ARMY OF ONE
Army.
' Help Wanted
Help Wanted

lrBrilu.

~nt

STNA'S NEEDED

Part-time position .(20 hours
per week) assisting project
coo rdinator in the collection
of research data and per·
tOrmirig
interviews
of
research subjects for the
Comprehensive
Cancer
Center within The Ohio
State University. Minimum
Requirements: high school
graduate or equivalent, non·
tobacco. user and holder of
current valid Ohio Driver's
License is required ; basic
co mputer skill needed' and
local travel required within
area surrounding counties.
Must have accpss to vehicle
on daily basis. Rate of pay
up to $~ 1.00 .per hour.
Please apply online at
www.jobsatosu.com or fax
resume to 6~4-293-6190 .
For further mformation
please call1·877-304 CARE
(2273). · The Ohio State
University IS a., equal opportumty/affirmative
action
employer. Qualified women,
minorities, Vietnam era vet_erans, and individuals with
disabilities are encouraged
to apply.
. :.

,.,,llal,.,..,
'"" """"'"'

82~

99Walliway

rno:::::::=:-1
lrL.o.0_IIELP_·.W·ANilll--' rno:::::::=:-1
~~

ResearCh Interviewer~
Region 3

.rsu CAN,

In nurlc
80 Widen

95Wrrxrfy

WORK
TO WIN

IJDPWANIID

IUIUIIJ

In a hal

76 Prophets .
79 Wl1l\ no kly,

92 VlftrllgiOOI
941!111

Caregiver for elderly couple Retail
n~eded one day a week, S~t
'ahd .Sun. 9ar'n till 2pm
Other days as needed
Personal care needs and
light housekeeping. Pays
well, Written references
requi red. Call (304)882· ·
3640
You have drive. The Impulse
to achieve. So why se111e for
Cargo
Van
Qrlver. a career that 'doesn't inspire
Requirements:. COL's. with you? At AT&amp;T Wireless, you
Hazmat , clean
driving can find the challenge ~ou're
record and must pass physi- ·looking for. YOOr ideas, your
cal and drug test. Previous coilfide nce, your smartsover the road driv1ng experi- they all play into it. Because
ence preferred . (740)446- that's what it means to be
6688 or (7401339-4221.
part of a winning, team. And
'
DellveryNV8rehOuse person you wouldn't have it any
needed, f}JII lime, immediate other way.

110

ABenBI

70 EJu:avate

720isput8

Old Plotvilln

r::!!::::::Hio HnPWA&gt;~n:o 11

Or

' 4x4's For Sale ...... :............ :--.......................... 725
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Announcemant ............................................ 030
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304Antlquea ........................................................530
675-14.29 . ·
Apartments for Rent ............ .'••. ,........ ;.,, ...... 440 '
u1 1ng or e u ure
'A uction and Flea MarkeL ...................'! ... .... OBO
' Bob Sullivan
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... ; 7&amp;0
catech@ zooninternet, n ~t
· Auto Repalr ....................... : ......................... 770
1·877-239:7945
, Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Drivers: Regional Tanker Co.
·
· 550 · has new business; COL-A
Building Supplies .....:..................................
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
w/2 yrs. tracto r·trai ler e ~P.·
Excellent
Pay/Bene 1ts.
BuSiness Opportunity................................. 210
Business Training ............................... : ....... 140
Martin Transport. (866 &gt;293•
7435
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..........·................. 790
Camping Equipment ...•.••.. .. .••.••• .•..•.....•..•.•.. 780
Cards ol Thanks ................ .......................... 010
H I W
t d
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
e P an e
, Electrlcai/Re1rlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ............................. ,, .......... ,., ....... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms lor Ren1. ................ ........... :............ .:..430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ,... ,........ ,, .; , ........ .,•,....................... 490
For Sale .................................c...................... 565
: For Sale .or Trade ..; .......... c........................c.. 590
. Fruils &amp; Vegetables ..................... c............... 580
• Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
FOOD SERVICE WORKER
: General Haullng ..................................... :..... 850 ·
ELIGIBILITY LIST
'
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ...... :, .. ,.................................. :...... 050
Ohio~ University Human Resources i~urrently
Hay &amp; Grain ........ .......... .. ........... ...................640
accepting applications for casual FOOD
Help Wanted .................................................110
. SERVICE WORKERS in Dining Services.
• Home lmprovements ...................................810
lOB D!JTIES: Assist in the production of
At Snap-on our dealers COOle trcm
· Homes tor Sale .................. : ......................... 310
high
quality, food
products by using
Household Goods ....................................... 510
a Yarie~ of backgrounds . .But
standardized
·
reoipes
and
following
• Houses lor Rent .......................................... 4t0 ·
ollel!lerafoonerlead'or,allorr&lt;y,
In Memoriam ................ :............................... 020
departmental
and
Health
Department
aeaetar)', homemaker or retailer.
Insurance ........... :......................................... 130
guidelines. Performs other related duties as
th8y have been able to build
Lewn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 880
ass
igned.
e successful bUsiness fo r
Llveatock .............................................,,. ...:... 830
QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum of three '(3)
them!leiYBS.And SOCCil you! Start
Lost and Found ...................................... :.... 060
making vour own rules. Wttn our ,· months instilUtional or commercial cookjng
Lola l Acreaga ............................................ 350
experience, highly preferred. Possesses ~basic
llillllllPOI!Ild •1'011-&lt;1
• : Mtacetlaneoua ........... ;........................... .......170
that's
been
salllno
ttsatt
tor
rhore
knowledge of methods, materials · and
Mlacetlaneoua MerchandiH....................... 540
!han 80 Year1. )00 CM do ~ f'*'&gt;'
.. Mobile Home Repalr...... ..............................B80
equipment used in ' large volume cooking to
the lnd'ependence, pride and
• Mobile HomHior Rent .......: ....................... 420
include sailitation and· safety practices. Must
Mobile HomHior Sate ............................... 320
tr8edom ot being your own bOSS.
be able to life up to 50 pounds and cork on a
• Money to Loan ....................................., ....... 220
cOncrete floor.
Applicants must have an
If
you
are
looking
fOf
that
rare
Motorcyctea &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
established pattern of good work habits and
-""!ylliatmall:l1esbesl-of·
Mualcallnatrumenta ..........................c........ 570
pc;rformance as well as meet Occupational
class products, prcvan t&gt;usln,;,
Peraonata ..................................................... o05
' Medical
Standards
for
Petalor Sala ................................................ 560
mtegles
ooompanylhato· Health
Plumbing • Heatlng.................................... 820
drtven todeliYer, take a new W. · postedlclassifica1ion. Starting salary is $8 ,89
• Proteaslonat Sarvlcee ................................. 230
at the Snap-on organ.lzauon. If
per hour. Hours of work will vary and will ~
' Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapalr ..................,,........... 160
tntertlted plelll cont1ct:
scheduled as needed.
Real Eatata Wanted ................. ...;................ 380
Tool1 Compilny LLC,
APPLICATION DEAD!.!NE:
Schoola tnatructlon..................................... tso
Mlh M!lglerl, 4t 01~
OCTOBER I. 2004
Seed , Plant&amp; Fartltlzer .. c........................... 650
._-,llrlllon,MAOI5111;
Applications may be obtained at University
Slluatlona Wanted ..............................,........ 120
(501) 838·mt; E·moll:
Space lor Ranl.. ........................................... 480
Human Resource.•. 169 West Union Strec~
Sporting Goods ....................., ..................... 520
Athens. Ohio 45701 • between 8:00 a.m. ·act
, SUV'alor $ale ..............................................720
· . 5:00 p.m . Monday through Friday. Due to
A--FmtchiHII
Truckalor Sale ............................................ 715
• bullntll l'lqlllring
limited space, appljcatjo'ns may · not be
Upholstery ................................................... 870
mDMtllry lnnatmut
completed
jn the o«ice. ApplicatioOs rnus.t be
Vans For Sllte ........................................ .......730
returned
to
Human Resources no later than
wanted to Buy ...:: ........................................ 0110
Sl'lap·on Md Snap·on fo001
are lrll!lemarii.B of ' '
5'()() p m friday October L
If you have
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supptles .................. 620
Snap-on lncO(J)Ofated.
Wanted To 00 .............................................. 180
questions. please feel . free to e~mail
Wanted to Rent ...................... :..................... 470
sheppard@ ohio edu or call 740·593·0312.
~'%
Yard 51111- Galllpolla ....................................072
www.snapon .com
Ohio University is an Equal Opportunity I
" Yard Slle-Pomeroy/Middle ....... ........;......... 074
&lt;# . , , WI
Affinnadve ~cdon Employer
• Yard Sale-Pl. Pteaaant ............., .................. 076

1

49 Fibber

50 'My Fair_.
5t Celteln wines

A

RJR N' WEEKLY FEATURES

15 - -caae ec:enarto
16 Equdy.
t7 T,.,_,ent

r.·....·......

(2wdo)

30 EJect
32 Sartard of ftowers

t3 Encoooltred

52titk
53 .Maltt pointS
54 Unlvelaily

78

If you were to do just one
thing to make a good compost pile, it would be · tliis:
Have some sort of bin to
enclose it. A bin keeps everything looking tidy, retains
heat and moisture, and makes
the materialless'accessiblc to
animals. The minimum size
for a compost bin, sufficient
· to generate heat, is one cubic
. yard, or 3-by-3-by-3 feet.
· . You need access to the. bin,
both to add materials initially
and, later, to remove the fmished compost, so make it
three-sided. Better still, make it
'four-sided, with one side
removable; or make it so that
the sides get built up or down as
you add or take away material.
Construct more than one
bin and you can-be feeding
one while the innards of one
or more others are C90king. ·
All sorts of materials have
been Uled in the construction of
compost bins. Fencing is cbeap
and~)' to use, but~ ~n­
al WJthm usually clries out too

11 Lenalhe alngtr
t2 Hid blltl

Bellow
86hiCistooct
ttl Holy- (abbr.)
86 Fumllh
69 Smelt

90

. LEE REICH

Slnt-PIII ,

~ "·
r

97 Nevertheless

• suli!tla!PtiQn .

128
129 Extend

. n-·Mopn

Nurture
your
compost
'animal'
...

10

YAIID SAt.t:Pmtmov/MillOI.E

____, '

i .·

94 Esllmatfon
.

Or

Half Austra,llan Shepherd Estate Sale, Raci ne Ohio
half Brittany puppies to give 103 4th Street. St!lte Route
ADOPTION : A loving cou- away to good home only. 124. September 24-25
pie wou ld like to adopt your (740)44!3·8;318, 1740}446· 8AM-6PM. Furniture, appl!·
newborn . .Will provida a 1865.
ances, tools, collectibles,
.home filled wfth joy, happi-, ·
ness, financial security and - - - - - - - .a great educa1ion. Feel con- To good home·female pet rat
·fident 1n knowing because of 304-576-3080
I,____
·your brave decision your ~=-;;..;.;;:,;.;;..
RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
baby cou ld lao~ forward to a
WJ. AND
brtg ht and wonderful fu.ture. ~~---FiiliOUNOiiii-_.1 BARN At 7, South. 5 miles
E)(penses paid. Call toll free
below the Dam. EVERY
1·866·731-7825. Barbara $100.00 Reward Missing SATURDAY
@
6pm
and Michael
since September 3rd. Male ~7:.,::4:::0~2;;:56~·;:69::;8:;;9;..__..,.'- - ,
.
Beagle mix, Reddish brOwn,
W -\NTtD
.Truck For Sale by Bid 1989 gold, and white. neutered
·
;Chev S-1 .0 4x4, 'Odom9fer Lost
In ·MeiQS.
Co. L.~-·liiDiiiiBii;uv:.;.-_.,1
broken ·mlleage unknown . Skinner/West Shade Rd
Can be seen at Mason· area . Family pet, Please 5 Cochan Hehs &amp; 5 Silky
or
County PSD office 1?1 return no questions asked Hens {304)937-3348
(304)937,2705
Camden Avenue,. Pomt (?40)985-4492
Pleasant , WV
25550
between the hours of 9am to - - - - - - - - Absolute Top Dollar U.S
.Spm M/F. Submit bid in writ~ Beagle found on Little Kyger Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs, U.S
ing to the above address no Rd . Call (740)367-7287.
Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop,
later than 5pm September
Second
Avenue.
30 ,2004. This vehicle is sold - - - - - - - - 151
•as 1s" and •where Is". Found Behind National Gallipolis , 740-446-2842 .
MCPSD.makes no warranty, Guard Armory small brown
I \11'1 0' 'II '\I
express or implies, as to the ml)(ed • Lab. very friendly
Sl· It I II' LS
condition of description ' q l (304)675-4339
the vehiGte. or its fitness for,
1110
any use or purpose. Any -------~
ib:tPWANJ'ED
~rat statement or represen- Found- black &amp; while kitten
"'tation by any representative w/pink flea collar, Mulberry .'
$200 Sign on Bonus!
. j)f MCPSD, changing or sup- Ave , (740)992-2090, 7401Jiementing the cond ition 992·6524
Call for sometl1mg you
lhereof, is unauthorized and
believe in and make great ·
shall confer no right upon
Lost White Spitz since
money doing it!
the Bidder or Purchaser
Sunday on Hambrick Rd.
$50 Reward (304)576·2292
Recruit Volunteers and
~
GIVEAWAY '
accept dona11ons for the
Nation's leading Non-Profit
Lost- black &amp; tan miniature
organizations!.
"1 year old female Black Lab. Pincher, male, In Crew Rd.
Or
J::_a_ll-"17_40_)2_4_5_·5_4_66_.....,.__ . area, Sept 1st, black cottar
Help meruit new mefnbers
3 male puppieS, 11. weeks w/tags, answers to Duke,
to jo1n the NAAI
old, . Border · CollieJHuskie Reward, (7401992·7005
Call today for an
...
m_i•..,.(~74..,o..,)9..,4..,9·..,2..,1M~--YARD SALE _.l
appointment
$-6 Kittens, 1 male, 4 female .
1-877-463-6247 ext. 2~5r
' ..~all(740)367·5095 .
.
Or
Apply online
Free Kittens to good Home 1 ~,n
www.lnfocislon.com
"'black, 1 gray &amp; brown
l'riendly (3q4)675·7077
$250 to $500 a week
Fnendly k1tt1es. Litter tra1nod, MOVING·? piece bedroom Will train to work at home
'· ins1de only! Variety of colors. set with Kingsize mattress &amp;
Helping the U S
Caii(7A01446-3897.'
box springs $395, will sell Government l1le HUD/FHA
pieces separately. Sorey
nlortgage refunds
Golden Relriever-German loveseat $175. Dining table No expenence necessary
-Ghepherd female puppy
·
all wood 4'x6' tr-undel
legs
. can. ~.on Free
])eeds a cou ntry home Very
·
h
6
h
·
$195
&amp; muc h
Wlt
c Blrs
1-866-537-2907
"'oving, beautiful &amp;' smart. more. Call (.740)367.0868 if ----~~--]7401388-8655.
your looking for something. An Excellent way to earn
..-----------' - - - - - - , money. The New ~von .
Cafl Manlyn 304·882-2645'

lie Trap

114 Be a success,
ultlmotely (2 wds.)
11 5 Dutl surface
116 Eechtw
117 Factors In heredity

CXII1Ciullion .

• AP

4 81111

5 Poor grade
6 Ollheaea
7 Martini fnit
8 Sit lot a painter
9 Dllllkald

19 Dell meal
20 Layered pastry
22 Ktltle
.
28 Blue color

71Men

designer touch.

2 Sayklg
3 Al..,.ran ·

t 4 Min at lilt plllplt

65

chaap and easy

The devil

107 Evening meal
1011 Jhliland,tonnerty
tto
112 Joke

· 63 Showy alllre

col01'8fora

1

butlnelamln
KrntotGIIMt
Cllltllngt
Morole
Get even lot
f'lellwlt 1111811
Deed dud&lt;
Hadablta
I.Uical ~

111111111k71'onalow_
... (abbr.)

56 Delcloo. Clf1nk

· the power of
paint. Before
going white or
beige again,
ccnelcler vibrant

Sk&gt;btlan

muelciiii)'IOOoll

140 Pro'llcit food
and Clf1nk
141 Let Utal1dl
t42 Towanllhe left.

57 Steliljolnt

underestimate

.

t 39 Pubtlol1lng

53 AmUai"""
55 By way Oi'
56llltngout

Do nOt

Wilt. Min

108 Molt
108 R\Jb rmooth
1011
on flo Job
110 F1giQ of spoech
111 QPeratlc prince
113 Dimon
114 Aoot
1t5 f'l&gt;wtl1ul

118

31

Improvement reality TV shows.

.

. 11 g

28 -and klcklng
29 W~urit

Vlewera can learn a lot from home
The golden 80.1 o rule remove everything,
lose moat of It and only
bring back the very beet

'26 One "' lhe

v

103 Fla1llntcl bc:tlt

1~

nm.

23LIIdng
24 Plant blllllt
25 MoiW1tlln ridge

window or a dramatic

101 t.lelulna"'

4

'

87 Foodfleh
88 Eattem servant
89 Uvtr NCrttlon
91 GICup of rinall
93 Afllcan antelOpe

DOWN

100 -IIOda

...,_

To Place
m::rtbune
Sentinel
. ~egtster
Your Ad,
446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740)
Fax To
446-3008
Fax To (740) 992-2157
Fax To
675-5234

I ONTHEHOUSE~COM I
1 Pllll CIIIIIUd pn
6 Swaba
10 Chew rdBIIy
15 WWit seMcewomen

ititer

C •ll.._. Cn u111y. OH

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

Pleasant, WV

CLASSIFIED

Nissan

WEEK

Modest size makes for affordable building

Il

.P ageD2

Hetp wanted

Help Wanted

LOAN
PROFESSIONALS
Farmer• Bank Ia ••eking a
lender for the Oalllpolla mar·
ket. Qualified applicant• :wm·
have an aaaoclate degree or a
minimum of three yeera tendIng experience or equivalent
combination of education •nd
experl•nce. Muat b• highly
motivated and posses• good
verblil and written
·
communication akltla.
Compatlttve salary and beneflta package commensurate
with experience•
PI•••• -nd resume to:
Fermer• Bank
.P.O. Box 80S·
Oalllpola, OH 45831

IFBjFarmersBank

....

, • • • , &amp; Savings Company

I

�'

-. Page 04 •
116
•

1

&amp;aubq Ctma-&amp;mttnd

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

'

~WANJil) 1 ~,t__,:;:~ONE:,;Lo~AN•"'•_.~' riO

DESIRED
QUALIFICATIONS

·caSh! Cash! 3:C:·3SOK any
purpose Good/Bad credtt.

l

1-866·306·1337
"Minimum one year related
~~AL
experie"9t.
~_.1( • n...~
• Power plant operational
experience. instrumental/
cont Is ele.:t
dl
A. Country Crattsman Furn.
1
mec::nbt '"'"'~~~ an or Slripprng, Aelintsh &amp; Repair
.......,..... nces
·Get ready tor Holidays 1O"'o
•Power plant matntenance off Stnp &amp; Refinish ot ·your
expenence including main- Chairs Call743-1100
tenance skins, trol.Jbleshoot- - - - - - - - - ' ing, preventative mamte- Highfield Studios Now taknance, and predictive main- rng Students classes to
tenance programs
begrn Oct 4 for Pottery.
• Developed . mstrumenta- begrnners class Man &amp;
tions and electronic control Thurs 6-9 tor Basic Drawrng
troubleshooting and repatr class, Sat Mornrngs 9-12
skills
Beginning Oct 2 tor 6 weeks
•A techntcai engineering or call 743-3870 for details
related degree
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
This position offer a compet- · No Fee Unless We Win•
itive bas&amp; salary and bonus
1·888·582·334S
opportunity, plus benefits/
In \I I .., I \II
'401(k) pacl&lt;age To apply lor
ltus position , please vtsit our
Website at www ctvoeay com 10
HOMES

j

Sunday, September 19, 2004

1r

H~!ES

FORSAU:
150 FORECLOSED
HOMES Solllng•At
AUCTION

Check Out Thla Local
Honte:

74 Ce!lar S!rnt.

t\'I"TENTION!
GET YOUR LOAN TO

BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOMEI
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME LOANS•
NEW PURCHASES!
REFINANCES

Galliool!s
3BR. I .S BA, 1958 Sq. Ft.
Home Solllnu OnSito

SO DOWN/ SO DOWN

Wed., Oct. 13 0 12:30 pm
Local Agent: David

IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES

Wiseman, Whleman Real
Estate, 74()..446-3644

OPEN HOUSE Sal.&amp;' Sun
Oct.2&amp;3: tto3pm

Broker Co-Op Invited!

Vtew Photo &amp; Auction
Terms at
www.hudaonandmar~

shall.com

CASH OUTI HOME

..

WELCOME•

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800-37D-496S
CALL TODAY
.• STAFFED BY U.S.
I ETERANS

'

MB S263

r
I
~:r c~r~~is~~~::r!2!:. L,---fUR~;iS;;:.w;~--,;J. ~nG~:~~/':~·~:7~~~

HUDSON &amp; MARSHALL ol
Taus

1r

' I IH H I..,

sale- By Owner- 10x50
Bruner Land
3 be&lt;lroom on SR 160, close 1 bedroom apt. utilities Apphca!IOns 1Je1ng taken for
Mob1le Home (Vmdale} Has
(740)441-1492
lo hoopilal, ~rna dep &amp; included $450 month, $300 very clean 1 bedroom tn
been remodeled, new hot
$500 holds your lott
reference
Redecorated deposit. Call {740)992·2274. country settrng yet close to
water tank lumace 3 yrs
inside
.
town Washer. dryer. stove.
old llOIN plumbrng on rent· Melgt CO. Chester, Bashan 4 bedroom farm house on 1BR partially furnished, all fr)dge 1nctuded Water and
ed 101 Only 1nterested par- Ad. 17 acres along Shade AI. 35 with bwldlngs, new, sllilatie for 1 pe~n or .Qarbage 1nciuded Total elec·
1•es call (740)446-8002: R1ver S28.000. Near OhiO $500/mo dep. &amp; reference. a couple, no pets 7 minutes tnc with AC. Tenant pay elec~740)388-9241. .
A1ver + Forked lakes, nrce Call at1er 5pm (740)645· trom town ar¥:1 A10 Grande. tric $300 deposit. $375 per
14 acres $22,500! Tuppers6-~1S__7_ _ _ _ _ __ S5751month, all utilities month No pets. No smokPlwns. 3 acres $18,000 or ~
740-245-1984 ing 740446-2205 01 740·
Make 2 payments. mow in 4 tO acres $19,900, co. watet. 3 BA, 2 112 baths. river VIew included.
740-645-4848.
446-9585 ask for V1rgima.
years on no1e (304)736Oanvrlle 5 or 7 acres $8,250! bnck. home , references and 2 bedroom apts. 1o minutes
3409 .
depqsit required., No pets..
from Holzer Hospital. BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Gallla CO. Kyger, hunters 16 Call 74()....4.46-4404 am-740$460/month. Pets allowed, MENTS
AT
BUDGET
New Oakwqod mega store or 18 wooded q,cres your 24S.1513pm--no calls after
stor~ag~
unrts avarlable PRICES AT JACKSON
leatunng
Homes
by choice
$17,5001 Rio ~9pm!::::·------~ (740)441 -1184 or (740)441· ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Oakwo9d, Fleetwood &amp; Grande, Mobley Ad 8 acres A Foreck&gt;sed Home
0194.
Drrve from $344 to $442
Gries One stop shoppmg S22,oo6t Vinton , Dodrill Ad. Only $8 ,9001 This HOme
Walk
to shop 8 movres Call
only at Oakwood Homes o{ 5 wooded acres $14,500, Must Sell! for hstings call1 - 2 bedroom, stove, retngera.- 740·446-2568
Equal
tor furnished . $150 deposit,
~arbolJrsvtlle WV (304)736- co. water
800-366·9783 ex b838
3409
$275 rent 34 1/2 Smithers Housrng Opportunrty
More parcels available at HOUSE FOR RENT: 3 Slreel. Call (740)446-9061 - - - - - - - . Clean Ground Floor 2br.
Next to new 2000 Redman each k&gt;catton. We'll gtadty bdrm. 1 bath, LA w/FP. 2-car
carport.
quiet
location,
edge 2 ?r 3 bedroom apartment rn WID Hook-up Ref Dep No
16X8o , 3 bedroom/2 bath. send you maps to explore of town $550/
&amp; S550 Middleport,
no
pets, Pets (304)675-5162
'
wtyl sidinglsrngle root fully each· site Owner tinancrng
· You paymoall utilities · (740)992·5858
sac.
dep
loaded. $27,900 00 Can w1th shght markup. We buy
Call (740)446-36441or tnto. Basement Apt- Bulaville Pk CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
help w•th delivery. Ask for land'
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
N&gt;kk&gt; (740)38S·9948
Nice house- 3 BR, 1.5 baths 2 eo, 1 bam ssootmo + Townhouse
apartments,
I ~ I '\ I \I . _
Good klcatlon. Close to has- $600 sec. dep. Uhlitles and/or small houses FOR
included
except
trash.
SAVE-SAVE -SAVE
p!lal. $650 rent wl$650 sec.
References
reqwred RENT Call (740)441 · 1111
Stod&lt;: l'nodels at old prrces,
dep You pay all utilities (740)446·3644
for application &amp; rnfo rmatlOn
2005 models arnv1ng Now.
HOL5F.S
References
required.
Cole's Mobtle Homes. L---roli~,:;REm::::;;,:,._.J ~(7~4~0):;;44~6-;..;:;3644;;;;;;.;'~-~
Auction _
Auction
15266 u s 50 East. Athens,
M
u· ~......
Ohto 45701 , (740)592-1972 0% Down Payomenl even
, ~RENT~
"Where You Get Your with less than perfect credn __
,
Money's Worth ~
Easy qualifying Own don't
t:14n
rent
Local
company. 2 bedroom, Uke new central
r-...
8U,1Nt~
Mortgage locators 740- _•_"_;·1_
74_D.:.)44-6-_2_oo_3_ __
AND BUil,UINC.S
992-7321
3 bedroom tra1tar In
_ _ _ _...:._____ Syracuse No pets No smok·
Old Rt. 35 in Gallipolis
For Sale Established Piua 1 bedroom house rn
rng. No alcohol (740)992&amp; Drrve In business rn the Galttpolis
$350/month 5888
Auction Rescheduled from
Chesapeake. Ohto area deposit required (740)44 1Friday, September 17
Call 740 388-9327.
1184
Mobile home tor rent
$350.00
(740)742-Q703
Lars&amp;
to
2 bedroom, Pomeroy, $400
A&lt;.'KJ.~\GE
a month plus depostt,
For more information call
(740)992·017S
0 97 acre burld•ng lot on
Grandview Ave near County 2t)r house for rent, 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. startrng
Fairgrounds.' Nrce netghbor· $350/month, water and at $290/month, daposrt
hood, all utUittes except trash paid, no pets Depostt required No peis. WD
sewer $10,000 (304)489· and reference rQqurred . hookup. (740)441-1184
Auction
Auction
(740)388·1100
1363
1 and 2 bedroom apart3 bedroom house Water fur· ments, furmshact and unfur1 acre of land wrth septiC, ntshed, no pets, s4so
secunty deposit
electnc and water on month, $400 deposit Calt nished,
required . no pets, 740-992Shepherd Lane Vtnton (740)245·S064
2218
(740)368-83 18
For

r10

All real "tate advertising
11'57- 1966-0576
job l&gt;lle O&amp;M T~hnlc&gt;an
g
""'(2) 3 bedroom houses lor
S00-4
In this newspaper Is
1•
41 - 401
.oynegy &gt;S an Equal sa 1e 2 baths 1rreplaces. on
autJtect to the Federal
Opportumty Employer
ac reage Call (740)709- 3 bedroom, lull basement. .Fair Housing Act of 1968
1166
gara'ge, approx 1 acre ol which m•kes it illegal to.
We Believe In People
adwertlse "any
land, 5 miles from town on
.. www.DYNEGY.COM
0% Down Payment even
preference, limitation or
SA
7
@ F1ve Po1nts. call
wtth less than perfect credtt
dlserlminailon based on
race, color, religion, sex
Easy qualttymg. Own don't 740-416-0768 or 304-882familial status or national
rent
Local
company 2299
SmJATIONS
cuigtn, Of any Intention to
Mortgage Locators 740· 3 Bedroom. Hud Home
W!\NruJ .
make any such
992-7321
$14,000 Won't lastr more
preferef'ee,
limitation or
Will sit
wrth elderly J% UVft'rf
pas Homes avatlablet tor ltsllngs
discrimination."
8()().366-9783 •• 1797
rble on this 3 bedroom.
Oay/Nrght. Weekdays/week- alh, modern home on 1
3br, Bnck Home Sunroom
Thts newspaper will not
ends have references. Many
cres. newly refinrshed r &amp; extra large 2 Car Garage
knowingly accept
740
94
~~~ expenence ( ) g.: 001, central arr. hea
adverttsements for real
Full
Basement,
Sll
on
acre
estate
whtch is in
ump. basement, convrent
l:iO
St'HOOtS
y located 1 5 mr tes ot lot rn New Haven He1ghts In violatton of the taw. Our
New Haven (304)882-2230
readert are tterebr
50 &amp; only 5 minute
L,--~--ucnoN~--.,.1 ~oute
rom Tuppers Pla ins, 5 bedroom , 11 /2 bath
Informed that all
dwellings advf!!l:rtised In
Gallipolis Career College !Approximately $8SO.o( house for sale Pomeroy, 314
thiS newspaper are
(Careers Close To Home) ~.onthly payment. Cal acre, 314 remodeled, 0%
available on an equal
i"'hris
or
Robbie
a
Call Today' 7.40-446-4367.
down possible, payment
opportu 111ty bases.
740)667-3041
1·800-214-04S2
approx. $425 00 month no ~::::::::::::::~
www galtipoh::sC&lt;I.16ercolll:lge corn
New Ltstmg for sale or rent iaona~ contract (740 )208 - Ranch style home 1 1/2
AccreclJied Member Accrftdllmg
Courd k:u lndepvndent Collages '" Mason WV mantJiactured
mrles from Ato Grande on
alld Sct\ools 12748
1560 sq . FT on 80x200 A Affordable 2-Bedroom Cherry Rrdge Ad Call
fenced lOt 3br 2balh, LA, Home. Everythmg new (740)24S·S102.
Shotokan Karate Classes DR , Kit, 3 seasoned glass PoSSible no Money down to
Monday &amp; Thursday begin- , pprch.
$68 500
or qualtfy1ng Buyers (304)674- fl20 MOBILE HOMI:S
nrng• September 13th, 6:00 $425/month plus last month _s_1_11_ _ _ _ _ __
FOHSALE
A4ctlon
Auction
For Sale Acreage Me•gs
PM
€arleton School, "rent, no pels, Ref requtred House 3 Bedroom t 112
Syracuse, Ohto Fortnforma- (304)773-9181 or (304)7731986, 14x65 Clayton. Good ·counly 82 acres. woods
"on
contacl Kanny Toll&gt;vet 5040
Bath Heat Pump, new
11
and hlllsrde Great lor recre- * * * * * * * * * * * * *
''
Sieve - - - - - - - - - Carpet, Wrndows &amp; Roof, condition Must sell Call atiOn
1740)985-3994
and
hunting.
.
~
·
h
S
N
1740)446·0368.
PUBLIC AUCTION
Kempton (740)667-3039
3 bedroom brtck front Arver Vrew 12 '1.mrt t o - - -- - -- - - $99.500.00 Call (740)742Ranch. Newer roof, vmyl, Money Down to qualrfyrng 1992 Southern Elrte Mobile 2637
*
Sand
Hill Rd, Pt. Pleasa n t,
*
170
MISCFlLANfo::OlJS
heat
pump,
Smrths Buyer $425/month wAy Aent Home 16x70. 2 bedroom 2
*Sat., September 25 1 O:OO .a.m. *
.
. Cabmets, 1 car garage pn- (304)675-2749
bath, some applrances. Ni ce le,el 1o1 SOX190 on *
Real Estate
*
vale lane olf SA 160, 1 8 Homes from $10.000!. $9,900. Call 1740)949-2011
H1gh
St
1
n
Middleport.
All
•
Htgh School Junrors, acres, $92,000 (740)388- Forclosure. VA Hud lor ltsthookups. ou1 of flood plain *
200 longaberger Baskets
*
Senrors and Pr10r Servrce 8676.
"
rng 1·800 749-8106 ex 1709 2000 Clayton 16x80, 3br,
Prrce
reduced
to
$22.ooo
Furniture
Miscellaneous
you can !iy vacant poSitions
2ba, Arr 'Must See $14,900
*Directions; Off Rt. 62 m Ndrth Pt. Pleasanr
in the West Vtrgrnra Army
(304)590-1321 or 1304)636 Phone {740)992-2782
Auction
Auction
take Sand Hill Road and go 4.8 miles to sale*
Natrona! Guard. 11 you are
3812
Pnme lot 5 wooded acres
between the ages of 17-35
~tte. Wah.:h for signs.
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom on Buckeye Hills Great
REAL ESTATE; 9 room houseor have priOr mrlrtary servmobile homes startrng at homesite, $27,500 Call
ice, you won't want to pass'
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, )jvmg room,*
$270 per month , Call 740- 740-645-29SO or 740·388- *dmmg room. kitc hen, utrlity rt)om, separate*
th1s up. For Opportunl!res rn
Items for donation and consignment for 992·2167
9649
your area. call 304-675garage w/storage space. Stts on .35 acres,*
the
annual auction, sponsored by . the
5837
* ctty ultliues Deed book 257, page 552. Will
United Methodist
Men's group of
* sell with confmnalton. Fur' appoi ntment to *
Auction
Auction
WfiiiTED 74' PEOPLE
view call 675-6479 or 674-3531 .
*
Carmel/Sutton, Bethany (Dorcas), and
we Pay Your
* BASKET CO!.!,ECTION: Approx 200'
Morning
Star
Churches.
All
proceeds
will
SCASH REWARDS$
Longaberger Baskets collected since 1984,
go to serve children in need in Meigs
For the We1ght you Lose
some nrc hard to find Collector Club*
In 30 Days
County at Christmas time.
Oaskets.
Call Tracy 740-441-1982
Auction
will
be
held
at
the
*FURNITURE/MISCELLANEOUS;
*
1800)201-0832
Larry Circle Farm
3 p1ece Walnut hedmom sui te, queen size*
www tamousnutrrtron.com
bed wlbrass headboard, llorar sofa, 2
carmel Road
occ:.lsJOnal
chaJTS, Walnut dmeue w/6 chairs.
on Saturday, October 2, 2004
WORK FROM HOME
dressmg table, chma cupboard, ful1 SIZe *
at 10 a.m.
Home Based Bust ness
hand made qu11t, storage chest, mght sland,
Earn $200-$500 Prr
*lamps, pictures, glassware, kJtchen utlhly
Earn $2,000 and up Fff
cabmet 'on castOrs. twm bed, Shirley Temple*
Dan Smith- AUctioneer
Paid Vacations, Bonuses
pitcher, mustaChe cup, 14' alummum
(Items consigned at 200/o)
740-441-1984
t:xtension ladder, alummum step ladder, *
888·540-8097
To consign or donate items, call any of
*battery charger. wheel tiarrow. hand tools,*
Auction
www workatcasa com
·
2-Story Home
the following :
car ramp.s, rod and reels plus more not*
hsted.
on 3/4 acre w/2-car garage
Jim Cunningham 949-2328,
WANIED
*
Lunch Available.
*
Salem Center, OH (Meigs County)
Dale Hart 949-2656,
TERMS' cash or check day of sale w11h *
To Do
'
Roy'Van Meter 949-2514, or
* poSitive
ID.
Real
Estate:
10%
REAL ESTAtE: Two story country 'home,
Babysitting, Companron . for
Keith White 247-4601
quiet area, on nice lot with 2-car detached *nonrefundable down payment reqmred on*
elderly,
housekeeping.
p10perty with balance due in 30 days With*
garage located between Wilkesville and
Donated and consigned items will be
Saturdays and Sundays
delivery of deed.
Langsvi)le
on
Rt.
124.
Motivated
seller
picked up the week before the sale.
(304)895-3723
between
Call for an appointment.
*
SALE CONDUCTED BY
*
Spm and 9pm
WINTER AUCTION SERVICE
*
DIREcriONS: From Rt. 32 exit on Rt. 160 *
AUCTIONEER; EDWIN WINTER #334 *
Georges Portable Sawmill,
through
Wilkesville
to
Rl.
124·
before
Auction
Auction
(304) 273-3447
don't haul your togs to the
Langsville, from Pomeroy-Rt 7, take Rl. 124 *
It
fludlon Center on
mill jusl call 304-67S·1957
through Rutland about 14 miles to Salem * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Center,
beside
Pick-n-Shovel
Store,
watch
Public Auction
House cleaning- Gatlrpohs,
Auction
Auction
for signs.
Pheshlre area Multiple
Sat.Sept.25,2004
FURNITURE: Wal. Blind door co1ne 1
years expenence Have refSHAMROCK
AUCTION
SERVICE
cupboard
all anginal, bcauliful Vtcl. oa ~ cvl.
erences. $10/hr.. Call after
IO:OOA.M.
AUGIONEER/REALTOR:
sec. bookcase, wal Sheriton pic safe w/tins.
Spm (740)446-7899
To Satisfying_a landlord 's. lein
John Patrick "Pat" Sheridan
fancy oak side board w/Bombay Sides carved
Wood's Extra Care for your
OhioReaiEstateAuctions.com
all over, 48" oak roll top desk w/nu scd panels,
on unit #41 &amp; unit #65 of Daniel Fink
Loved one Prtvate roomEmail;
ShamrockAuction
@aol.com
cherry
Sheriton chest w/graduatcd drawers
bath, 3 hot me81s. Phone
and
Deana
Voyles.
Located
at
Hill's
WEB:
www.shamrock-auctions.com
must
see!!
Oak flatwall cabJ ncl wlspoon
(740)388-0118
PH; 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122
carvjng. Viet . wardrobe, oak dotigh cnbiner,
Self Storage at 29670 Bash!ln Rd.
Brunswick oak Viclrola Mode) 11 7, round
Racine,' Ohio ..
tiger oak table w/massive claw fe~t &amp; fancy
Auction
Auction
pedestal. 4 greal oak ma1thing chatrs. oak
"Misc."
Accepting applications tor
ladies C roll top desk, early I drawer 1able.
care qt elderly In my home.
wal.
slan1 front sec. w/wing griffen feel , .Jg .
Fishing
gear,
tool
boxes,
'jewelry
box,
Private rooms, nU1rltious
fancy hi boy w/mirror. oak 2 pc . parlor suile.
meal panntng, 24 hour care
camping gear, misc. boat parts, lots of
Victrola, Victor talkmg machrne quaner sown'
with 20 years of experience.
Fancy
19~0's
wal.
DR
suite,
8am-3PM 740·446-7855
rare oak Longcria chest w/m1rror, mah.
tools, cookware, VHS tapes, furniture,
' 4
9
740-448-4300
oak curve glass china, M.T. dresser, 4 pc.
Withrow sec. bookcase, mah .· sec.
misc. household items, suits, dress
1940's 'waJ. BR sui te, oak Viet. lamp table,
booltcase wlbubble glass, lg. mah. sec. side by
cherry coffee table, RCA 19" color remote TV,
w/Mother Pearl inlay, Napanee oak
shirts, bags of clothes, unifonn overchair, s1ool, platform rocker, 5 pc . maple
lkitcl1en cabinet, 6 pc. mah . 1win BR SOI1edinette set, fancy iron bed, wardrobe, sewing
alls, wooden shoe shine kit, shoe
fron1 s1gned J.V. Vanseiver comp., 6 pc.
mach me, rocker, Kelvinator' atr conditioner1
1930's BR su11e, 8 pc. DR 'suite, Viet
molds &amp; lots lots more.
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
Westinghouse Upright Freezer, Emerso)l
early 2 drawer blanket chest w/brackcl
eo vondlng ....,hlnoo/
microwave,
20.7
C.f
Frigidaire
refrigerator
li11e
feet,
oak stacking file system, lg. bulcher
Owner-Hill's Storage
•xc.IINit toc.Uone
new, Whtrlpool heavy dUly washer &amp; dryer,
block,
round oak tables, oak chairs, lg. oak 38"
1)1 for St 0,65
Dan Smith-auctioneer
porch swing &amp; more.
regulator
clock, super 32" rcgula1or J Wall
I00-2~tf2
clock
w/rosewood
ca~e. Hedstrom racer peddle
Cash Posi1ive LD.
GLASSWARE &amp; MISC. Sev.. pes. Blenko
car&amp; more.
Ins Herringbone vase, green &amp; pmk
Abooluto Goldmlnol 80
I
depression
bowls • goblets &amp; etc., milk glass,
vending machlnealexcauenl
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION
GLASSWARE &amp; .COLLECTIBLES: Lg.
punch
bowl , stemware, Corning ware,
location• all for $10,995.
amount of American Fostona~ glasses, plates,
(800)234-8982.
canning Jars, blue &amp; white stoneware pitcher
goblets, bowl, cups 70 pes .. Fire King, McCoy,
w/deer, brown stoneware pitcher w/grapes,
Cobalt, Occupied Japan, Fenlon, 5 C ' Bubble
ABSOLUTELY ALL CASH
crocks
oil lamps. lamps, linens, doilies,
90 VENDING MACHINES
Gum machine, milk hollies Bluefield WV, lg.
Tupperware, meat grinder, old boxes, Manin
WITH LOCATIONS ALL
cut glass vase. baskets, &amp; other glassware,
kegs, Dirt Devil Deluxe Sweeper, wooden
FOR $9,995. CALL MR
linens, sm. wooden coffee gnnder, adv. signs,
hobby horse &amp; more.
FOX 800-914·9980
fancy decorated 2 ga. John Geyer Pomeroy,
stone jar, plus much more not Jis1ed.
Huddle House- everyone
TOOLS &amp; MISC.: Sev... hand tools, push
llulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders,
know• a house Is a great
plows,
alum.
ext
ladder,
Troy
Bill
Pony
Rear
Dump Trucks '
. lnveetmentr
Franchise
UCTIONEERS NOTE: Super nice
Tme Tiller, 1320 Cub Cade1 Lawn Tractor.
· opportunity. Build-to--suite,
most in original Onish, don't millS
Train in Ohio ·
: available In Gallipolis, Ohio.
ltbiiJ
Ollt.
GUN: Springfield NOD. 15- 22 single shot
Next Class: Septemoor 27th
• · Put our 40 yeart or experl·
nne
' ence &amp; aale growth to work
National Certification
tor youl . contact ' us at
Financial Assistance
www.hucldlehOuse.cotn or
&lt;

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LEMLEY'S ANTIQUE
A0CTION

==-------

-----

l

*

*
**

"WANTED" ·

FOR SALE

(740) 388-8115

wv

I

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Friday. Septembet' 24

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*
*

.*
**
**
*
*
*
*

Sunday, September 19,2004

*

*
*

ANTIQUE

AUCTION
ne

lrvmg. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at VIllage
Manor . and
Rivers1de
Apartments In MiddlepOrt
From $295-$444 Call 740992-5064 Equal Housmg
Opportunities.

HP Pavilion MX 70, Monrtor
with Speakars1 HP DeskJet
845C
Printer,
HP
OeskWriler 600 Keyboard
1304)675·6633
-------JET
AERATION MOTORS
New 1 bedroom apt Phone Repa1red New &amp; Reburl1 tn
(740)446-3736
Stock. Call Ron Evans, t·
800-537-9528.
New 2 bedroom Np pets,
00 8
$4()()
month S375 00 ::::-::c------depoSil (740)992-4119
STEEL
• ask NEW AND U•EO
•
for Marge
Steel Beam~ P1pe Rebar
For Concrete. Angle,
New 2 bedroom wrth Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
a11ached
garage. Grating
For
Drains,
$400/month, no pets, Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
deposit
&amp;
references Scrap Metals Open Monday,
required (740)446-2801
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
61'8CIOUS

One bedroom apartment. .
no pets, .m Pomeroy
(740)992·5858
One bedroom garage apartment . ktlchen furnrshed
$400, (740)992-3623
Twin Rivers Tower ts acceptmg applrcahons for wa1trng
Irs! for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartment,
call 675-6679
EHO
,,
WAN'I'ED

mRmr

LOOkrng tor 2to3 Bedroom
House for rent Between Pt
Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis Ferry

-Good Used Apptrances,
Recond111oned
and
·· ,Guaranteed.
Washers,
· Dryers, Ranges, and
RefngeratOts, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Sl .. (740)446-7398
Goott used Starn Master
carpet &amp; pad. Aprox 60 yds
Call (740)682-7060
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohto
(740)446-7444 1-877-830·
9162 Free Estimates , Easy
flnanctng, 90 days same as
cash Vosa/ Masler Card .
Onve- a- little save alot
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388 For sale,
re·co ndltronec:J.. automat 1c
washers &amp; dryers, refngerators, gas and electric
ranges, air condrtioners, and
wnnger washers Will · do
repairs on major brands m
shop or at your home

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L__,!~~f:;:;,...J

6 ft grass trnish mower, - - - - - - - heavy duty. Brand new. CaU 2000 Ford Explorer exc.

CLASSIFIEDS!

HOME
lMPROVEMEI'(I'S

2000 Dodge Neon , air, 1996 Suzuki Side Kick Auto,
57,000 mrtes $2,600 080 atr, covt hare! lop, excellent
(740)256·1233.
condition, low miles $4,000.

For Sale , Poplar Lumber
BASEMENT
sheelrng boards .45 per
WATERPROOFING
,(740)256-6890.
board ft ,Hardwood mulCh Public Notice
Unconditional hfetrme guar- $20 per Blct (740)992·5965
antee local references fur1997 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat. nished. Established 1975 .
PUBLIC NOTICE
114K, Qlack, leather interior. Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
The estimated tiudgel
cJd ptaver. $9 ,200 OBO, 0870, Rogers Basement
lor 2005 lor Ga!lla
Waterproofing
1740)992-2932
County will be open

(740)367-7927 leave mos- condition, blaCWgrey intertor,
sage
4 wheel drive, 98,000 mtles.
$9,950 (740)446-6754 .
J- 2030, Oeutz-8006, Four
Bottom Plow, NH Hay·Head -89_C_h-ry-s-le_r_L_o_bo-r~on-G-T,
HayWagoo, NH HayB1ne, JD s1200 (304)882-2644
48·Loader.
JO-Mower -~-----(304)882-3459
91 Dodge Spirit 4 cyl .. auto. 2000 Dodge Dakota Sport,
C
4x4. club cab. , CD, 51 ,000
John Deere 34 hopper,
mtles, · L G.. lilt Tonneau
New Idea 272 Cutdit1oner good 160,000, very well cover, V-8, auto. $12,900,
(304)895-3506 or (304)895- mamtarned.' $1 ,200
1
3362
owner
(740)256-1619 call (740)992·2459 or 304882·3407
(740)446-4172
Model 782 New Holland
Forage Harvester wtth 36" 2 92 BUick ~ega!, $t ,OOO.OO. 93 N1ssan Pathfinder needs
row corn head Model now 2000 Pontiac Grand AM SE, ·
transmrss10n, $ 1,500 00. 96
~~~~d::.m-4 ~%a~lose;. Hay head New Holland crop $6•700 00 ca 11 (7 40 )992 _ Toyota
4-Aunner nrce
Sunday (740 )446-7300
carrrer 8 silage wagon &amp; 2136
$6,900 DO Call (740)992·
Gehl s1tage wagon All are in
2136 '
Pole Barn 30x50x10FT good condition·&amp;ftald ready 98 Dodge Caravan, a1r, runs
$5,995 rnctudes Parnted ~(7;,;4;0)::;2;:;4S:.,·;;:504:;;;.7;..._ _.., good, $2 ,300 080. Call
(740)256-9031.
Metal, Plans, lnstructron
Book, Slider. Free Delivery
LIVESTOCK
FOR SALE
1937)559-8385
~
-------2002
Bu1ck
Century-Specral 200t Dodge Caravan.
Upgraded queen-size mat- 3 Nanny Goats. 2.Wh1te,' 1 Edition Color-Light Sanddrift 101 .700 mrtes $5,900 00
tress for a camper, $50, Black 2yrs old never been Metallic Mrleage-52.000 Call 740 992-2126
(740)742-2321
bred $80 each (304)937- miles. lntenor-cloth seats.
_ ...:.__ _ _ _ __
2705
loaded-concert sound sys- ~.w.;;.;,;,;;;,;;,iiiiiiiilo-_.J
WHITES'S METAL
~------ tem II EMceptronally clean .,
OETECTORS
Alp1ne Buck Krd, 4 t/2 car Call Mrke Brown
02 Suzuki Savage 650
Ron Allison
months old. great sire (740)446-0925.
motorcycle,
low mrles,
prospect $75
588 Watson Road
(304)67S- - - - - - - - - $2400, treadmill . $150,
ardwell , Ohio
1608
Sale 1986 Samurar Suzuki (740)992·6084
(740)446-4336
4-WD
27 mpg very good
For
Sale
Miniature
condition
$1,000.00 1986
Donkeys. (740)446-1158.
BUl!lliNG
Dodge
Ram
250 Van, 318 1985 Honda Shadow 500,
SU1'1'1.IDi
Registered
purebred automahc. very good condl· great cond1t1on, new trres
limousine, 10-cows, a- ttan. $400 DO (740)742-1123 $1,800. (740)379-2601
calves. 1· bull. (740)446TRuctls
7380 after Spm.
!'OR SALE
2002 Yamaha Road Star
t H \ \.., l't ~~ ~ I \I I( 1\
warner noocc $7.500
1980 Chell 4x4 314 ton 1304)882·8290
ALTI't}';
Garage door. overhead,
Crate Motor, very low miles.
12'Wx10'H Metal. Call
!'OR SALE
A/C 3 200 (304)576-2927
(74012 ~6- 1267
evenings
2003 LTZ 400 all Skid
after 7pm.
$5001 Pollee Impounds! 1996 314 Ton Dodge Ram PIB.tes, white Brothers Pipe.
PbiS
Carsrrrucks/SUV"s
from 2500 SLT, Starnless Tnm $4,000 (304)S76-2668
S
$500 Honda's, Chevys, Package, Ext Cab. 8Ft bed,
BoATS &amp; MumRS
L._ _.,;;,I'OiiiRiiiiilliALEiiii-rl Jeeps &amp; moral for-tistlngs 360 VB, Auto 6-lnch Sky
!'OR SALE
'
800·366-9813 ex V717
"
Jacker Suspensron u, ,, Till
1 male, 1 female miniature
Wheel, CrUise, Cass PW.
Fox Terrier, register stock 1993 Dodge Shadow, 1973 Power Loaded
98 Ba'sestream boat, 99
(nO papers), $~50 each: free Che11y Nova Both $1,900 Ranch King 145 HP 42 • Mercury 150 HP motor. 97
kittens, (740)378-6437
(304)675-6633
·
Aquatraller, has cover
tnch,
Rld1ng
Mower $8,900.00 740 992-2136
AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab t998 Chevy S-10 Blazer LS. (304)882·3108
puppres. Shots, wormed &amp; Loaded, 4.3 Automatic - - - - - - - CAMPERS &amp;
dew claws removed. $300- 80,000mll $6,800.{304)675· 76 Chevy Truck Good L--M,;o&lt;JrORIOii;;;;,iiHiOoliMESiiiillo'
S350 (7.40)441 .o1ao.
:5::82=9:.__ _ _ _ _ _ Condillon (304)675-154S
--:...,.----S\Ws
1978 Yellow Stone 24ft
AKC Blorld Lab pups. Shots, 1999 Bonne,11rlle
68K
good condition, new tires.
wormed .(740)441-0013 or $5.295; 1997 GMC 1500 SL ~---I'O:;:R~SIIi\LEiliil-,..1 $2,500. (740)379-2601 .
1740)441-7333.
· pick-up, 135K $3,895; 199S
.:_..:__ _ _ _~- Grand-Am 20 99K $t ,995. 3 t 994·Chevrolet Suburban
AKC Great Dane puppy months/3000 mile war- Three seats, all leather. 2002 Hornet 27'; 2003
Female 4 months old, $300. rantles
EquiJi)ped for trailer towing Starcratt
29',
1978
Call (740)446-D184.
COOK MOTORS
Can be seen at 136 First Yellowstone 24
2002
328 JACKSON PIKE
Ave , Gallipolis, OhiO. Phone Hornet 35', 1992 Coleman
CKC Jac~ Russell Terriers,
(740~446 0103
(740)446-2561.
' ·
Pop-up 1740)446-Q800
$125 each . (740)256-1652

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS!

_u __ _

Ohio 45631 , beginning Fnday, October
1, 2004. Courthouse
hours are 7;30 AM to
4;30 PM.
GoUla
County
Commissioners
September 19, 2004

FOR SALE
1998 10- passenger
Dodge
Maxi-van
w/WIC Ult &amp; AIC ,
83,000 mi. Sealed bids
must be submiHed to
Senior Citizen Center,
• St. Rt. 160, POBox
441, Glps .. OH , by
Sepl. 28. Bids open
noon 10/t. Center
reserves right to
accept or reject any or
all bids.
Sep1ember 17, 19, 20 ,
2004

Auction

Auction

for jlublic inspection

In the Gallla County
Courthouse, Audttor's
Office ,

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Saturday, October 2.
Great Gallipolis Ferry Location!
Close to Beale School
Nice family home featuring 3 BR, 1BA,
lR,
FR,
Kitchen,
Dining · area,
Den/Game Room (could be 4th BR),
2 car. attached garage.

r

ANn~

Jack Russell puppy, maJe , 8
weeks old has ~ st shots
bean wormed, ta1l docked.
Pure bred No papers,
Buy or sell Riverine $17S DO (740)698·047S
Antrques, 1124 East Matn
on SA 124 E.' Pomeroy, 74().. Labrador Retriever pups
992-2526 Russ Moore, AKC, excellent hunters,
$250-black, $350-yellow.
com
MtsrnuANEO!N www.steolepolntinglabs
(740)256-6172
MERCHANDISE
Aat Terrier pupj..Jres. born
$TV's lrom S101, DVD- August 3rd, all female very
Piayers,
Vrdeo-Games, cute, shots, dew claws
Computers, Ectl now avail· removed (740)742-1703
able for info call 800-366·
Schnauzer, mrm8.ture AKC
9850 ex M655
male puppies Salt &amp; /pep1998 W9ber Horse Tra1ter per $150 00 each. Shel1ies
38' wlshowtim9 conversion puppies AKC mate-Blue
3 horse !ratter w!full trvtng Merle, $150.00 each.
quarters. Excellent condi· (740)696-1085
tlon $25,995 00 call Harold 7U
MUSICAL
(7 40)36S· 787 t
~ INsrRUMENfS
Antique CouCh $125, 250
Gal. Fuel Orl Tank $50, 6ft For Sale Old upright pieM
Displll)' Case $75 (304)675- 740 992·S888
1536
FRUITS&amp;
o u scoun ue
VF.GETABLES
Grand Opening Sale
op quality, warranties, Potatoes, 50# $10 .00
Milton, wv. Flea Marke Kenebec and Red Pontiac
Section
C. Fndays, Monday- Saturday 8 OOAMaturdays and Sundays. 5·00PM 65002 State Route
606 922·7185
124 Reedsville

r

Announcements

Under $70,000
call

Janey Collins
for details.

·

ERA TOWN AND COUNTRY .

J REAL ESTATE BROKER
1911·Jefferson Blvd.

Point Pleasant

304-675-6884
www.eratownandcountry.com
Announcements

Announcements

U·Sior

Announcements

REAL ESTATE SELLS AT 11:00 AM:
Two story 4-BR home w/2 baths, large master
BR w/walk in closet, new ly remodeled,
enclosed screened back porch, full basement,
on nice lot with 2-car garage locate d across
the highway from Little Hock ing Elementary
School between Belpre and Coo lvtlle on Rt
7/50. lERMS: SOLD with owner's consent·
10% down payment day of auction· with
balance due at closing on or before
11/02/04. Financmg should be secured prior
to auction day. Selfs As !s - Inspections are
the responsibi lity of the interested buyer. Call
Pat for appomtment to see the home.

PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
STARTS AT IO:OOAM
ANTIQUE~

&amp; COLLECTIBLES Copper app le
butter kettle on stand w/stirrer, 4-drawer
wood file cab1net, oak library table, 2-oak
dressers, S1nger lreadle sew1ng machme, 2old quilts tn rough condition, ·2-old steamer
trunks, coal bucket, o ld newspapers (lew
from 1940s), old Huffy electric mower, draw
kn1fe, ant1que meat sl1cer, glass Lance cracker •
jar, wash boards, some crocks, old rhinestone
shoe clips, 1776-1976 Colonial States
Bicenten-nial Commemo rative Spoon
Collection on wall shell display by
Internationa l Silver Company, collection of 10
reproduction porcelain dolls, rubber Kewpte
doll, 1997 '&amp; 1998 Holiday Barb1e Dolls in
boxes (never opened).
.
HOUSEHOLD
FURNISHINGS
&amp;
MISCELLANEOUS quilt rack, cedar chest, 6·

French Provincial style din1ng chairs, hlde· a-

Private Treaty Sale-

Sept. 25,

~004

at the farm
Initial bids close at 2:00pm

5x10's, 10x10's,
10'x15's, 10x20's
3 miles west of Centemiry
at the junction of 141'
&amp;775

Gallipolis ,

Little Hocking, OH (Washington County)

lis

j

Public Notice

10 steers • 5 show heifers
Calves sired by: Hotmail, Mojo, Godfather, Heat Seeker,
DeBull, Big Money, Wide Track, Reflector son, and
·
El Nino son
Check out updated pidures at showsteers.com &amp;
clubcalves.com
OWe also have 30, mostly AI sired, cows lor sale bred to
Hotmail, Mossy Oak. MoJo, Bounty Hunl3r, Wide Track son
Jim, Debbie &amp; Clark
Thurman, Ohio
740·245-9315

bed sofa, end tab les, lamps, severa l
occasronal cha1rs, Lazy Boy retltner, vibrator
rocker recliner, book sh~f. office chair, small
ki)chen appliances,. dishes, pots, pans, etc.,
Adm~ral dryer, owl collection, exerciSer, SlimCam video recorder, radios, cameras,
Chnstmas decorat 1ons, crafts &amp; supplies,
collector tin cans, several framed prints, 2brooder h eate rs, grinder, motors, stab ilizer
bars, and other items.
DIRECTIONS: From Rt 7/50 between Belpre
and Coolville, tt&gt;rn on Federal Road (County
Road 26), across from L1ttle Hockmg
Elementary School , third house on the right
#30B, watch lor signs. TERMS: Cash or check
w/positive 1.0. Checks over S I 000 must have
bank authortzation of funds available. Food
will be available. Not responsible for loss or
accidents.
OWNERS; Cecil &amp; Velma Stewart
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUGIONEER/REALTOR.
John Patrick "Pat" Sheridan
'" ~ OhioReaiEstateAuctionsxom

m

Ryan &amp; Betl1 Fowble
Thurman, Ohio.

Ema1l: ShamrockAuct10n@aol.com
WEB : www.shamrock-auctions.com
PH : 740· 592· 4310 or 800·419· 9122

€

w.u.

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
446-2342.992-2155.675-1333
MOLLOHAN
CARPET
Quality at a low CO(&gt;I.
Berber $5.95/yard,
Vinyl $4.95/yard,
Laminate $1.19/sq. ft.
Drive a little Save a lot.
446-7444
1996 Silverado 93K $7 ,500
1995 XLT 150·Ford 4x4, 100K,
garage kept, ex. condition
$7,300
740-245-5697

Ueavy Equipment
Operator

BASKET BINGO
Fundraiser G.C . Starz

"'

.

NG CO recommends lha
do bu~neso wllh
you know, and NOT

end money througtl th
all until you have investi
ated the offe

High Maintenance
(formerly Headquarters)
Beauty Salon
Merle Norman Cosmetics
Tue~days special1 0% discount
on Senior Citizens make-up.
·so% on selected items
Come in lor' a demo today
313 Thir9 Ave .
446-2673

&amp; MUSIC

Noon-?

GOD'S NET
260 Mulberry

Middleport, OH
(Thurs) Sept ;l3, 2004
Doors Open 5:00 p.m.

Great Christmas Gift?
Wall Murals

BASKET GAMES
Sept. 23
7:00 Pill
VFW 134 3rd Ave.
$20 lor 20 games
Proceeds for Veterans Liv1ng in
Veterans Hospitals
Sponsored by French Colony
Chapter Daughters of the
Amencan Revolution

Canvas Paintings
Call Today!
Art By Elaine
(304) 675-6850

Convenience/Grocery
Store For Sale
Located on Crab Creek Rd.

'
in Gallipolis Ferry. Includes
all fixtures, equipment

&amp;

gas pump. ll'lventory not
included. Unlimited

Attention River Valley Raider and
Athens Bull God Fans!
5th Annual Homecoming

possibilities. 2 . 11 acres
allows for growth . Price
Reduced to $114,900 . .

Concessions Available

Friday, Sept. 24th

BIJnch Company Realtors,

5:30 pm - 7:00 pm at

Bobby Muncy, Realtor.

River Valley High School

For more information call

$5.00 per person
Menu: Roasted Pork, Soup
Beans, Cloe Slaw, Cornbread,
Desserts &amp; Beverages!

(740) 367-D299

violence call 446-6752 or
1 -800-942-9577

3rd &amp; Pomeroy St., Mason, WV
304-773-5300 afler 7 :00pm.

Sept. 25, 2004

Glow Bowling Red Pin bowling

F~re

740-~92-2403 unlll 5:00pm

House on Ma1n Street
Menu
f1oasted Hog, Baked Beans. Cole
Slaw, Roll &amp; Drinks
$5 .00 meal and $2 00 sandWICh

League &amp; Open Bowl1ng ava1lable
Man Youth, Thurs Mixed. Fn
M1xed s till have opemngs
Pool - Food - Games

BASKET GAMES
Sept. 30 at 6 .00
Gallipolis Elks
$20 for 20 games
Proceeds benefit
abused/neglected children 1~
Galha County/Christmas Fund
Sponsored by Gallia Counly Children

Do you have a loved
one in a nursing home?
Call On The Serv1ces Of

Serv1ce

UTILE BLUE
SOCCER CLINIC
K·6
Thurs Sepl. 23
· 5:30 • 7 .00
sign ups begin at 5 :00
Mcintyre Park
InstructiOn, by ~ GAHS Soccer
Players and Coach Hayden Jones
Cost $5.00

ESTATE
PLANNING
PARALEGAL
'
SERVICES
Advocates for Senior

liv1ng
Call T.QDAY toll-free

(866) 734-8401
to schedule your FREE
1·hour ,consultation~
"Let us stand for you-

Offered by Prudential

Dock Inn Poker Run
Ride for Gallco Workshop
Saturday, Sept. 25, 2004
Registration 10:30- 12 :00

www.Equipment-School.com

03-07-1676T

I

,,
I

•

Where

&amp;

Games Begin 6:00 pm

serves victims of domestic

' Associated Training Services
2323 Performance Pkwy
Columbus, OH 43207

Looking Ahead For A

HOG ROAST

Serenity House

800-383-7364

Need A Change?

It'S Fun!'
Pomeroy/Mason Lanes
Bowl

TUPPERS PLAINS FIR,E
DEPARTMENT. INC .
4:00- 8:00p.m
at lhe

~. get-me.to./artbyela1ne . com

American Legion

Training For Employment

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

HOG ROAST

September 19th

Redecorating?

I

(BOO) Be8-5700

Chicken BBQ

,

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

Sunday, September 19,2004

HOLZER
CLINIC
N~ws that matters to you a~d

.

your family from HoJzer Clinic.

Your Child Is.At Risk
"Today, the health of young people - and
the adults they become - is critically
linked to the health-related behaviors
they choose to adopt. A limited number
of behaviors contribute markedly to
today's major killers.
These behaviors, often established during youth, include: tobacco use;
unhealthy dietary habits; inadequate
physical activity; alcohol and other drug
use; risky sexual behaviors (S~'!xti~liy
transmitted Diseases/HIV, unintended
pregnancies); and other behaviors leading to violence and unintentionfll
injuries." (CDC, Youth Risk Behavior
Surveillance System)

YOUTH AGED 10-24 YEAR.S

tant! I hope they will shock both parents
and students.

• Other Causes
11%

• Motor Vehicle
Crash

the end result will be that parextra attention to their child
they are doing, and that kids
twice about what they and
their friends do. These numbers represent OHIO kids!
The following pie charts show what
,causes death for the younger population
and how dramatically it changes after
age 24. The choices a. child makes
NOW are what can kill them now, while
for an adult, it is usually the consequences of behavior or life style choices
that will eventually do them in.

OSuicide ·
o Other Injury
•Homicide
30%

ADULTS AGED 25 YEARS
AND OLDER
• Cardiovascular
Disease

6%4%

Normally I try and avoid putting in too
many 'numbers/statistics when I write an
informative article, even though I
· believe that numbers are your friends
and can give a lot of information with
minimal space. The problem with numbers is that, typicalfy, people's eyes start
to glaze over and they skip over them.
However, these numbers are too impor-

• Other Causes

r I Cancer
DCOPD
• Diats'etes

27%

The OHIO 2003 Youth R.isk Behavior Sur\rey indicated for High School Students:
INTENTIONAL lf\/Jl'R./ES AND VIOLENCE

CCOUSE

15% Rarely or never wore safety belts
23% Rode with drinking driver during past month
12% Carried a weapon during the past month
32% Were in a physical fight during the past year
12% Attempted suicide during the past year

55% Have tried cigarette smoking
22% Smoked cigarettes during the past month
II% Smoked &gt; 20. days during past month
8% Used smokeless tobacco during past month
14% Smoked cigars during .the past month

YSICAL ACTIVITY
42% Drank alcohol during the past month
27% Reported episodic heavy drinking past month
21% Used marijuana during past month
8% Have used cocaine
II% Have used inhalants

32% rartiCipated in insufficient vigorous physical
activity
·
59% Were not enrolled in physical education class
68% Did not attend physical education class daily

VERWEIGHT
.
.
13% Are at risk for becoming overweight (students who were at or above
· the 85th percentile but below the 95th percentile for Body Mass
Index by age and sex)
14% Are Overweight (students who were at or above .the 95th percentile
for Body Mass Index by age and sex)

STATE-OF-THE-ART
SERVICES
CLOSE TO HOME

4~6'.5474

oming Soon

~HoLZER C••tufor

CANCER CARE

'

-·-- --

'

-------:---

.'

---,

I

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