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                  <text>•

88 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG THE RivER

LI\1NG

New product offers oxygen
'boost' to patients, dealer, Cl

Race: MBNA America 400
Where: Dover (Del.) International Speedway (1.0 miles),
400 laps/miles.
When: Sunday, Sept, 26
Last year's winner: Ryan

'"

lished his credentials as a

dangerous ·wild card" by
dominating the first round of
NASCAR's race-offs. The victory lifted Busch from eighth
to a tie with third-place finisher Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the
Newman
Qualltylne record : Jeremy radica lly revised Nextel Cup
N\ayfield. Dodge. 161.522 points system. If the system
been the same as a year earmph, June 4, 2004.
Race record: Mark Martin, lier - or a week earlier - for
Ford , 132.719 mph,. Sept. that matter. the victory would
have lifted Busch from sev·
21.1997.
.
Last week: Kurt Bus.ch com- enth to fifth, and he would
pleted a sweep at New trail Jeff Gordon by 254
Hampshire by Winning the points instead of leading him
Sylvania 300. his thi!tl victory by oine in the . brave. new
of the season. Busch, who world,.
f1nished seventh in the regular-season points. estab·

CIIM1SMA" TRUCI\

Race: Stacker 200 Presented by v.;. Stinger
Where: Dover (Del.) International Speedwoy (1.0 miles).
200 laps/miles.
Wilen: Saturday. Sept. 25
L&amp;Jt year's wl.nner: Brian
Vlokers
Qualllylne record : Joe Nemechek, Chevrolet, 156.747
mph, May 31, 2003.
Race record: !!late Earnhardt
Jr. , Chevrolet, 130.152 mph,
May _30, 1998.
Laot week: Chevrolet driver
Robby Gordon won for the
first time in the Busch Series, edging Casey Atwood
on Sept. 10 at Richmond International Raceway.

Race: Las Vegas 350
Where: Las Vegas Motor
Speedway (1.5 miles). 233
la ps/350 miles.
When: Saturday, Sept. 25

&lt;lhio

••

l'onw.-o; • 'liddl.-p•..-t • (;allipoli' • Septemhn :!h. ~mq

Bv TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Low-income fainilies
who were affected by last week's flood·
ing may apply for up to $1,500 in disaster assistance money at the Jobs and
Family Services office in Middleport.
To be eligibl e, a family must
include a minor child or pre gn~ nt
woman, and have evidence of eco·
nomic need.
Elderly and disabled individuals
who are not eligible for this Temporary

Assistance for Needy ·Families
(TANF) may be eligible for one-time
cash assis1ance of up to $750:
the
Meigs
County
Also,
Ministerial Association, in a cooperative effort with the Cooperative
Parish, is offering to help flood victims wi th cleanup.
·
The Rev. Jonathan Noble said anyone who may need help cleaning
their home may apply for help al the
Mulberry Community Center.
"We' ll try to get assistance to them
as quickly as possible," Noble said ..

There are plemy of cleaning kit&gt;
available
at
the
Mtilberry
Community Center. a&gt; the Red Cross
delivered 5.!&gt;0 Wednesday.
Donations to the flood relief effort
may be made at Farmers Bank and
Home National Bank .
In Racine, where several re,idents
lost everything they owned. Mayor
Scott Hill welcomed the news about
the TANF money.
"lt"s bound to help a little bit ... he
said. "Some;: of these people lost
everything, and th is wil l help them

Kelly named OVP
managing editor

v

FORD

E

s
Robby
Gordon

u

s

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Grell
Biffle

Robby Gordon

vs. Greg Biffle .
An appare~t retaliatory move by
Robby Gordon - NASCAR penalized .
him two laps- touched· off a crash
tha t eliminated from contention
championship contenders Jeremy
Mayfield and Tony Stewart. "The '31
car' (Gordon) spun us on purpose ."
said Greg Biffle. "That's just the way
it goes. I guess. It's Just tough that
people have to do that ki nd of stuff. I
got into him by accident early In the
race. and he came back and spun us
out on purpose and took two of the
guys In the points race out. I feel bad ·
for those guys."
·
NASCAR Thlt Week't Monte
Dutton et•eo hl1 take: "Stay tuned.
Incidents like this 'are almost inevitably going to happen, and the
stakes are much higher fo r those
who see title hopes ruined.'
·

Veteran driver has
finished second in
points race twice
By Monte D~on
NASCAR This Week
Mark Martin's bid for the Nextel
Cup championship is much more than
. a 10-race series. It's the continuation
of a lifelong quest.
Four times Martin has finished sec·
ond in NAS CAR 's points standings. A
new system played a direct role in
Martin's being able to take one more
shot at the ultimate glory that has
thus far eluded him.
After the Brickyard 400 on Aug. 8,
the 45-year-old Martin was 12~ points
out of lOth place. During the next five
races, he meticulously worked his
wa~ up to eighth, thus qualifying for
NASCAR's "Chase for the Nextel
Cup."
"It was probably the hardest thing
I've ever done," said Martin. "We
spotted really good teams a lot of
points, and it took about everything
we had to 'get ourselves back in posi·
lion to be in this thing. I know that we
still have our work cut out for us and
. it's by no means over, but there is no
way the next 10 races will be any ·
more difficult than the last 10 were."
Martin .finished in the top five four
times in the final five regular-season
races, making him a legitimate c.on·
tender for the championship.
"We've been under intense pres·
sure," said Martin. "We tested like
crazy and haven't been home hardly
at all. We've performed at the top of
our game with near zero margin for
error, and I know that it's taken a lot
from them (his team). However, now
we can go out and just run our race
and hopefully win this championship."
Mart.in's gallant drive to the title did ·
not go unnoticed among his peers.

Valley

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Orlan J. Stewart
• Beverly A. Perkins
• Rosemary Hysell

· Member&lt;s of the Ohio National Guard's 1193rd unit spent Friday clearing flood debris in
downtown Pomeroy. Their commanding officer. Maj. Steve Fleischman, said they will likely
remain In Meigs County until debris has been removed from Racine , Reedsville and other
areas hard hit by last weekend's flood- probably Wednesday. (Brian J. Reed/photo)
·

Guard to remain until Wednesday

lEGENDS AND LORE

Gordon 11M clear
advantage In 'race-offs'
At the 10 tracks included in
NASCAR's "race-offs; Jeff Gordon
has won 31 times during his career,
almost twice as many as any other
. driver. Mark Martin is the only other
driver.in double fjgures with 16 vict&lt;&gt;ries at those tracks. Tony Stewart is

BY BRIAN

INSIDE
• Down on the Farm See
PageA2 ·
• Community calendars
See Page A3 '.

have seiJen.

the media who have came up apd told
me that 'although they have to be ob·
jective,' that they sure were hoping
that we made the chase, as well."
.Few racers have commanded as
much respect as Martin over his lo_ng
career.
"I've always tried to do things the
right way, " Martin said. ''We've al- ·
ways tried to race everyone as clean
as possible and treat people the way
that we like being treated, so it's just
rewarding when people get behind
you and respect you for that."

Contact Monte Dutton
hmd4858@peoplepc.com ·

at

YOUR TURN
t.ETT;;RS CRO'~' ,J~._·P QE,f.O£OS

WEATIIER

Dear NASCAR Thll Week,

I

don't believe it will help. Wife says
to wrne anyway, so here goes . In a
lot of sma ll-town cable markets
(the cable companies) will not carry
FX. so any time the race is on FX, we
are out of luck .... Because money Is
NASCAR's only care. I may stop
watching if they put more of them on
· FX .... I' m not the only one around
here that fee ls that way. Keep it up,
NASCAR , and say goodbye to your
fans.
Ervin Bier
Perry, Okla.
Actually, the cable network carryin·g races during the second halt of
ihe season is TNT, not FX. The contracts are in place, and this won't
change in the near future. All we can
tell you is to call your local cable system and ask ro add TNT and FX.

&amp; Sup-ply
Co.
·

REED

POMEROY
Ohio
National Guard troops are
expected to remain in Meigs
County
until at least
Wednesday, assisting villages
in the massi:ve cleanup of debris
from last week's tlooding.
Maj. Steve Fleischman of
Toledo, the commanding-officer of the 22 National Guard
troops who arrived in
Pomeroy on Wednesday, said
the men and women from the
1193rd
Bailey
Bridge
National Guard unit of
Cincinnati will likely slay here
until all debris is removed
from Pomeroy, Rutland,
Racine and Reedsville, where
tlooding from Hurricane Ivan
hit hardest.
.
Their
primary
task,

th ird with nine victories, and Jimmie

John Clark/NASCAR This Week
Mark Martin, who has been fCicing on the major NASCAR circuit since 1981, has never
won a points championship but has finished second four times. He's hoping the 'Chase for
the Nextel Cup' format gives him one last shot -at the elusive title.
·

J.

BREED@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM

Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. each

"It really means a lot to you when
the guys in the garage give you that
kind of respect," he said. ''We had to
bust our tails to get to where we are,
and it makes it that much more spe- ·
cia! when those around you take no·
tice of that. There were alot of driv·
ers that came up to me ... to offer
their congratulations on what we've
done. Now these are guys that we
compete bard against every week and people that we're going to do every·
thing we can to beat .... and they still
show that kind of respect for you, and
it just means a lot to get that from
your peers.
"I've even hac! several members of

get back on their fw ...
Al,o. Hil l said h~ wantedJo rea»ure
residem&gt; tha t allte'l' on the l'iilage's
water wells have c·11mc back n e ~ative
for &lt;.:ontamination from tile flood .
ln. Pomeroy. Mayor John Mu sser
said he would ant icipate several' residenb could be nefi t from the TA!\'F
money . .(n addition to flooding the
downtown bu sine;s di strict. the re mnants of Hurricane I van also cau;ed
floodin~ in the Brick Street area.
"Sel'eral fa milies -were affected ...
Mu"er 'aid .

FEUD OF THE W.EEK

R

penalized
two laps for
But Gordon did-

$1.25 • \"ul. :JH, No. -H

Agency, clergy offer .help to flood·victi.ms

• Marauders slay
Dragons. See Page 81
• Ea$tern tops Eagles.
See Page 81
• Southern tames
Wildcats. See Page 81
• NASCAA Weekend.
See Page 85

'

No. 6 VIAGRA

\all.-; l'uhli,hin~ l o.

SPORTS

Gaughan
. ·
Qualifying record: David
Starr, Chevrolet. .163.112
mph, Oct. 12. 2002.
Race record : Diivid Sta rr.
Chevrolet, 135.394 mph. ,
Oct. 13, 2002.
Last week: Travis KvapM, in a
Toyota. won the Sylvania 200
at New Hampshire International Speedway on Sept. 18.

NEXTEL CUP SERIES,

MARK MARTIN

tmt

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Last year's winner: Brendan .

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

'

un a

. "' If you have a question or a t:omment, write: NASCAR This Week, r,to The G~ston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, fi!C 28053
HUSCt~ St:H~t~ S

Behind the Wheel, Dl

Oetlllto on Paee A6

received from Bedford,
Chester, Lebanon , Letart;
Rutland , Salisbury and
Scipio townships, with only
Letart reporting no signiti cant tlood damage.
The other townships and
the county's five villages ,
have yet to report. estimated
damages to the EM A.
"They just have n't had
time because they're still
busy trying to clean up,"
Byer said Friday.
Byer said at least 45 homes
sustained "major damage" in
the flood, but the county mu st
wait for a federal declaration
of disaster from Pre sident
Bush before any financial
assistance can be made available to either homeowners or
small business owners who
lost fixture s or inventory.

Kevin Kelly

in Goshen , N.Y. Kelly graduated from Ohio University
with a hachelor'' degree in
journalism in 1980.
He joined the Tribune staff
that September as a reporter
and continu ed with the
Tribune until Ju ly 1985. He
returned to Gallipolis in
March 1986, and later spent
6-1/2 years in the com muni ty
relatio ns office at the
Universi ty of Rio Gra nde/Rio
Grande Commu nity Coll ege.
kelly returned to the
Tribune ;is a news edi tor in
January 1994. Since May_
2003, he has been news edi tor of the Register.
Hi s ot her newspaper expe-

Piease see Kelly, AS

Homecoming queen

Open auditions for Ariel Junior Theater

INDEX

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

4 SECilONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town
• Ce1ebrations
.Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

Flei schman said, is the
removal of brush and river
debris, and destroyed fumishings from . hom~ s and businesses flooded last weekend.
The troops · are being
housed in the Meigs Motel,
and are eatii1g meal s provided Ul)der contract by Millie's
Restaurant in Bradbury.
Many of the guardsmen nao,:e
only recently returned from
duty in the Middle East,
including FleiS&lt;:hman, who
has been in Afghanistan.
Emergency Management
Agency Director Robert
Byer expects flood damage
to public infrastructure._
including roads, bridges and
culverts 1 to "easily" reach $1
million, he said Friday.
Reports of damage to public p.roperty have been

GAL,LIPOLIS - A 16year veteran of the Ohio
Val'ley Publishing Co. has
been named managing editor
of its three newspapers,
Publi sher Jim Freeland
announced.
Kevin Kelly 's appointment ·
. became effective in the past
week, Freeland said .
.
Ohio Valley Publi shing ,
owned
by
Heartland
Publi cations si nce May 2004.
publi shes the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, The Daily Sentinel
in Pomeroy, the Poi nt
Pleasant (W.Va.) Register and
the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
"It's my goa l to continue
the good work done by our
three newspapers in providing our readers with local
news," Kelly said . "Loca l
news is the li feb lood of
newspapers in our area and
that 's what I want to be our
focus."
''Kevin brings a good deal
of experience in this area to
the table, and having been
associated with all of our
newspapers. he underst&lt;ind s
tile communities and their
needs," Freeland said. ··1
believe he will be a good lit
for our publications."
A 1975 graduate of John S.
Burke -Catholic High School

A3
C4
D3
insert

A4
As
'

A2
B1
A6

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publlahina Co•

GALLIPOLIS - Adul t
and child actors are needed
for several upcoming production to be presented at
the Morris and Dorothy
Haskin' s Ariel Thea[er.
These projects will be produced by the Ariel Junior
Theater, a new divi sion of
theatrical performances for
children and families .
Audition s will be held
from 5:30 p.m . • 8 p.m.

Tuesday at the Ariel Theater.
Children will audition from
5:30p.m. - 7 p.m. and adults
will audition from 7 p.m. - 8
p.m.
Children should be pre·
pared to read the poem,
"The Dnigon of GriMly
Grun" by Shel Silverstein.
Adults will be asked to read
the poems, "The Pirate" al so
by Silve~stein and 'The
Raven" by Edgar Allen Poe.
Both "Sil verstein poems can
be found in the book, "A
Light in the Attic." Copies

of ,these· poems ca n be
obtained by contactin g the
Ariel Theater for those wishing to prepare in advance.
The Ari.el Junior Theater's
upcoming proj ects include.
"The
Best
Christnias
Pageant Ever" and others as
well as productions for·
school-age audiei!Ces.
.
For more information on
these aud ition s, weekly
after-school acting classes
and upcoming events, please
contact the Ariel Theater at
(740) 446·2787.

Kristina Naylor was crowned Homecoming Queen at halftime
during River Valley High Schoo l's homecoming game against
Athens Friday night. Naylor. a senior at RVHS. was escorted by
Chase Davis . (ian McNemar/ photo)

. 555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611

Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Compony

v • .., bJrBaok;r,,._
252 'Upper River .Rd.
Gallip~lis, Ol:t

Member FDIC

'
~-----------~-----------------------------------------i

•

..

�•

DoWN oN THE FARM

iuabal' ~im~ ·6tutfntl

MEIGs. EXTENSION coR.NER

When In doubt .th ~ow It out

I Tax

1'

Has your garden been
flooded? Remember to discard any fruit or vegetablt:
that has been under water.
They may have become contaminated with fungus and
bacteria. Squash and pumpkins may appear to have survived untouched however.
disease organisms may enter
the fruit via the stem and thus
enter into the seed cavity.
If in doubt, throw it out!

•••

Are you seeing the occasional lady 'beetle as you
work outside jn the yard?
Now is the time to prepare
for the reappearance of the
Multicolored Asian Lady
Beetle (Harmonia axyridis).
Cooler temperatures and
the lirst frosts set in motion
the ·migration of the ad ult
Multicolored Asian LadyBeetles from their summer
tree top homes into their winter accommodations. our
homes.
Remember that lady beetles prefer light-colored. conspicuous objects, such as
white buildings. Large numbers wi 11 congregate on the
south and west facing expoc
sures, especially in the late
afternoon. As one lady beetle
lands, it emits a chemical cue

'

Hal

Kneen

(pheromones) which attract
other lady beetles to congregate nearby.
The best management of
this pest is to prevent the beetle from seeking your home
as an·overwintering site. Seal
cracks and crevices with a
· good quality silicone or si licone latex caulk 3fOUnd windows, doors and a!lic roof
line . Install screens (20-mesh
maximum) over all ·vents .·
Replace or repair damaged
door and window screen s.
Install tight fitting door
swee ps and a rubber seal
around the garage door.
Some homeowners may
want to apply exterior pesticides or have a professional
apply them. Efficacy and
residual effect tests· have
been conducted ·and the Ohio
State University Extension

.
entomology staff suggest that
lambda-cy halothrin (available only to professional
applicators). deltamethrin
and bifenthrin have the
longest control efficacy after
78 hours.
Second applications' are
suggested after 21 days .
Other pyrethroid pesticides
had some immediate effect in
killing the lady beetles, but
weni not long lasting .
Camphor cakes or crystals
have been used by some
homeowners successfully.
when placed near tbe doors
and windows.
Black light trapping and
vacuuming are still suggested
for containing lady beetles
once they have entered the
home. For further information, visit our website
www.ohioline.org
under
Home Yard and Garden
Factsheet,
subsectionEntomology. or call the
Extension office at 992-6696
for a copy of fact sheet I 030.
"Multico lored Asian Lady
B'eetle.''
(Hal Knee11 is the Meigs
Couitty Agriculture and
Natural Resources educator,
Ohio
State
University
£:{tension. )

Sunday, September 26,2004 ·

credits offered for planting trees

Public meeting
set Wednesday

dtlys
•

you!

I

Sundak~~rentinel
7

2342

,.,.-------------------------:.------~-~ -··~·

•

Sunday, Sept. 26
Thesda)'. Sept. 28
POMEROY - Calvery
ATHENS - o· Blene"
Pilgrim Chapel on RT 143 Memorial
Ho,pita l in
will ho't a revival at 10 a.m. Athens will offer a breast antl 7 p.m. through Oct. 3. feedi ng da ...... ·fur expec- tant
All other service, are at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Ken Thompson mol hers from I :30 to 3:30
from MO and ' ingers. Rev. p.m .. at the Birth Center in
Char les McKenzie. pas tor. 'the lower le\el conference
Everyone weh;ome.
room . Michele Biuulc,I&lt;&gt;lle .
bourd certi fied lac·tatiOII
consultant. will lead the

Other events

c ia""' in 1opi c... incluJi n~

Thursday, Sept. 30
advantages·of hreaqfec dtn~
MIDDLEPORT - Meig' for mother and chi lu. anaioBasic lll} of the bre;ht. ph) sioloCounty
Adult
Literacy Euucation program gy of bea stfee Liin g.. and
plans open hou ses at its main1enance anJ manageMiddleport and Brauburv ment advice for working
ABLE cen ters. from 9 a.ni.
until noon at_ Middleport mothe rs. The cia'&gt; i' free.
Library
and
Braubury For more information cal l
Learning Center. Meet 592 -9364.
instructors. v i~,~,·· !earning
materials and cla»roo ms
and ask que stion of staff.
Macle Easy!
Information is available bv
Unlimited Auessl
ca lling 992-6930 or 992-5808.

Internet

'9,-·95 .........~::.H

NolJtiliCMI

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992-6677

Stewart, Lang
at Rocksprings

Reh abilitation Center in
Pomeroy -on Thesday, Sept.
28, at I 0:30 a.m.
They will speak on issues
. in the area and the upcoming election. The public is
invited to attend. Light
refreshments will be served.

•

Park board
meets Thursday
GALLIPOLIS
The ·
September meeting of the
0.0. Mclntyr,e Park District
Board of Commissioners is
noon Thursday, Sept. 30, in ·
the park district offi~e in the
Gallia County Courthouse.
For more information
about · ·park activities and
events, visit the Web site at
www. gall ianet .net/gallia/par
k_di strict.htm

There is still time to register for
FALL QUARTER!!
Qualified buyers onlr- Monthly payment is $13.89 for every $t,ooo you finan ce. Example down payment au,w
Some customers wit not qualify. Take delivery by 9/30/04. See dealer for details

Call Today
446-4367 or 1-800-214-0452

Gulll~lls Career CoUeoe
"Carem Qoat 1oBfJI"t"

Web Address:
.www:galllpollscareercollege.com
·

Email:

·

Oh1o

ins trucl!onoJ

Gran/ Dead/me
October I st

gcc@galtlpotlscarearcollaga.com

Spring Vallev Plaza • Gallipolis, Ohio

GodBtess

America

135 Pine St. •
160 • GalliPOlis. Ohio
(1401 446-2532
"Your family owned and operated Truck Center"

We have special low-rates and favorable terms for fiood victims.
There are no closing costs or fees of any kind. .
This assistance is available for both consumers and businesses.
Just call us for all the detailsI
,_

I'

I

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
ba • LLNE&gt;
.A.. .A.. :J

Member FDIC

Mason

Tuppers Plains.

Pomeroy

Gallipolis

773.6400

985.3385

992.2136

446.2265

Stop by for a .
FREE deck orCards!

Proof of~ damage may be required jn order to qualify for special rate and term&gt;. Loans subject to
credrt i!pproval ill1d availability. O~er available rot a lmred orne only:
,
·

... . .

.-

~ ·· -

•

..

•

MIN '"d lah~

~

For I 00 year$, Farmers Bank has always been here to
help you~ If you have suffered property damage due to
the recent flooding, you can count on usl

Farmers Bank is in great shape following the fiood,
and we want our neighbors to be. tool

AI~

F'" LIVE Tf!chnica/ Support)

AT

GALLIPOLIS
The
ROCKSPRINGS - State
Chickamauga
Watershed Rep. Jimmy Stewart and
Conservancy District has candidate Pat Lang will be
scheduled an informational at
the
Rocksprings
meeting for 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. '29, in the
• meeting room of the C.H.
McKenzie
Agricultural
Center, Ill Jackson Pike;
Gallipolis.
The public is welcome to
attend. For more information, call 446-6173.

Feeder calves need help getting started
When it comes to boosting
the health pro~pects of newly
received stocker cattle, simple hope is not a good strategy.
Although that may seem
straightforWard, one of the
most common mistakes some
beef prOducers make is waiting for a health wreck to
occur before considering how
to prevent or manage it:
You have to be prepared to
receive stocker cattle, have a
good home ready for them.
While that certainly means
such things as having facilities up to snuff and maintaining a solid foundation of
nutrition and health protocol,
starting l!tockers has as much
to do with basic animal husbandry as anything .
First, you have to undo the
stress that has occurred to the
calves, and that doesn't come
out of a needle. 'Instead, it
comes from making the com•
mitment to spending time
evaluating the calves, getting
to know them and vice versa.
It mean·s watching cattle
close enough to identify the
calf that won' t go to water
before it becomes dehydrated, or finding the three head
the others are keeping away
from the feed bunk before a
lack of nutrition adds even

2004

Support Groups

·. Local Briefs·

COUNTRYTYME

·name implies, the cattle are
treated as a group rather than
as individuals, and all are
treated before they show dinical signs of Bovine
Respiratory Disease (BRD).
More of them stay on feed,
and gain is the name of the
game.
After all, weight is what
you're marketing.
.
In sum, there's added
value in managing stocker
cattle on more of an individ- '
ual basis. Often times, we
. make the mistake in this busi- .
ness of looking at individual
groups of cattle, rather than
considering the individuals
that comprise a group of cattie.
It is the indi\liduals that get
sick and die. ·Therefore, it is
the individuals thai narrow or
widen the profit margin .

Public meetings Revivals

Church services

are

more stress to their·systems.
. Incidentally, letting water
trickle into a full water tank
helps new arrivals find the
water and encourages them_to
drink. Move new cattle to the
bunk to show it to them, and
then put some hay on the
grnund if cattle are reluctant
to begin eating from the bunk.
Cattle in receiving pens
should have a minimum of 18
inches of bunk space per
head.
In addition, it's surprising
how just a little bedding straw, stalks or the like will reduce the ·amount of
fence walking by bawling
calves.
Also, especially for longhau l lightweights, metaphy!axis, or pro-active treatmen!
of "high-risk" cattle upon
arrival, pays its way. As the

Community
events

Clubs and
organizations

November election to shape agriculture

RoBERT PAWELEK
osu EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

Meigs County calendar

Card showers

Florida cotton·farmers lose ·
crop to Ivan, peanuts still viable

Sunday, September 26,

Gallia County calendar

p.m., Sept. 30 to read the skin Founders' Day celebration,
tests. ·
noon-5 p.m., in the Gallipolis
EWJNG'IDN - American City Park. with games, music
Monday, Sept. 27
Legion Post 161. '1:30 p.m .. and food.
POMEROY - The office
Sunday, Sept. 26
Ewington Academy. All
GALLiPOLIS 0 .0 .
of
Vital Statistics at the
GALLIPOLIS Doll, members urged to attend.
Mcintyre Park District will
County
Health
Meigs
RIO GRANDE - Open hold it's annual Fall Hike at
bear and toy show, I p.m .. 4
p.m. at Our House Museum. Gate Garden Club, installa- Raccoon Creek County Park . Departmt:,nt will be closed
GALLII'OLIS Uni ty tion dinner, 6 p.m .. Wild Call Vicki at (740) 446-4612 from nron to 4 p.m. normal
Walk sponsored by Gallia Horse Cafe in Pomeroy. Meet to schedule a reservation for business hours will resume at
8 a.m. Tuesday.
·County churches, 7:30 p.m., at the Ohio ¥alley Bank at the hike.
starting at Grace United Rio Grande at 5 p.m.
POMEROY - Veterans
Methodist Church and finish-Thursday, Sept. 30
Service Commission will
ing at St. Louis Catholic
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
meet at 9 a.m. at the office.
Church. Refresh1nents will be County Health Department ,
17·Meinorial Drive.
served·. Bring a flashlight. ' 499 Jackson Pike will have
GALLIPOLIS - Get well
POMEROY _· The Meigs
CHESH IRE _
Glory extended hours from 4- 6 cards can be sent to Virginia Co. Library regular board
Sheets and Fowler reunion, p .m .. Sept. 30 to read TB skin HKillin at Arb?rs Nursing meeting will be held at 3
Kyger Creek Clubhouse. tests.
orne, 170 Pinecrest Dr. , p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
Friday, Oct. 1
Gallipolis. OH 4563 1, Room
Dinner at noon.
NELSONVILLE
BIDWELL - Set-up for 201A .
Hocking Hill s Arti st &amp; Bidwell-Porter Elementery · GALLIPOLIS - Get well
Craftsmen Association is Fall Carnival from 8 a.m. - 8 cards may be sent to Jesse
have their 33rd ann ual cnlft p.m . Friends, family and any- White, at · 923 State Route
show from II a.m .. 5 p.m. Olle who needs comm unity 588. Gallipoli s. Ohio 45631.
Monday, Sept. 27
Over 30 artists will be pre- service hours is invited _to White and his wife also
POMEROY - The Ohsent. Admission is free.
. help.
recently c~lebra ted their 30th
Kan
Coin Club will meet at 7
Monday, Sept. 27
Saturday, Oct. 2
anniversary.
at the Pomeroy Librarv.
p.m.
BidwellGALLIPOLIS - Ellabelle
KANAUGA - Democrat · . BIDWELL party Meet the Candidates Porter
Elementery
Fall McDonald ce lebrated her Final plans will be made for
·
and ann ual chili supper, 7 CarniVal fund raise r from 5 - birthday on Sept, 18. Cards the Oct. 17 coin show.
Thesday, Sept. 28
p.m., Am Vets building at the 8 p.m. Auction begins at 8 may be sent to her at 25
Intersection of 735 and p.m. Community invited.
Vanco Road. Gallipolis, Ohio
RACINE - Regular meetBurnette Road.
Sunday, Oct. 3
45631.
mg
of
Racine
Area
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
CADMus · Annual
GALLIPOLIS - Goldie Con'imiJnity Organization will
· Count y Veterans Association. Cadmus High/Grade School Williams will be celebrating be held at 6:30 p.m Memhers
7 p.m .. American Legion Post reunion, State Route 141. her 84th birthday on Sept. 24. and special guests will meet at
27, McCormick Road. Dinner Meal catered, dinner at 12:30 Cards may be sent to her at 22 Gino's in Mason, W Va.
at 6 p.m. .
a.m.
Safford Road. Gallipolis,
l\:'londay, Oct. 4
. Ohio 45631. ·
Thesday, Sept. 28
BIDWELL - PTO meetBIDWELL - River Valley · . GALLIPOLIS - Belva
ing to. plan for Fall Carnival Junior High's boosters meet- Stewart will celebrate her
Sunday, Sept. 26 ·
3:30 p.m . at Bidwell-Porter ing has been rescheduled to 95th birthday on Sept. 29th.
POMEROY
- 1l1e Eagle
Elementery. All community 3 :30 p.m. at Bidwell-Porter Curds may be sent to her at
volunteers who can help, Elementary School.
3983
Addison
Pike, Ridge Community Church will
have a noon picnic m the church.
please attend. Refreshments.
Saturday, Oct. 9 .
Gallipoli s, OH. 45631
Those in need of community
GALLIPOLIS Ohio
CROWN
CITY- Card It will be a carry-in dinner.
service hours are welcome. Valley Symphony will per- shower for Viola Mooney
Call Debbie at (740) 446- form their show, entitled who will be 102 on Oct. 2nd.
245 1 for more information.
"America the Beautiful," at 8 Cards can be sent to her at
GALLIPOLIS Gallia p . m. at the Ariel Theatre. 370 Mercerville Rd Crown
County Health Department Tickets can be purchased at · City, Oh 45623.
will provide extended hours Tawney's Jewelers, the Purple · E-mail commw1itj&gt; calenat 499 Jackson Pike, for those Turtle, Oak Hill Banks and dar items to news@mydaiwishing to obtain a free food from I - 4 p.m . at the _Ariel lytribune.com.
. Fax
handl er's card for Gallia Theatre box office or call amwuncements to 446-3008.
County's upcoming events. (740) 446-2787 to reserve ' Mail items to 825 Third Ave.,
TB sk in tests will be given tickets. Box office opens at 7 Gallipoli;·,
OH
45631.
from 4 - 6 p.m. · The health p.m. day of show. '
Announcements may also be
department will also have
Saturday, Oct. 16
dropped off at the Tribune
extended hours from 4- 6
GALLIPOLIS
office.

COLUMBUS
.
seedling s. labor and tools. . Selecting the proper type
Landowners .who create a site preparation and deprecia- of tree for a particular toeaforest on. their property _are lion on eqmpment assocmted tion and soil chamcteristie is
eligible for a direct deduction with tree planting.
. essential for a successful
from their federal taxes th1s
"lnvestmg m forests IS planting . OQNR service
year, accordmg t() the OhiO good busmess and goOd lor foresters are available to help
Department of . Natural the envuonment," Dorka . d
- h · o
Resources (ODNR).
said, ''But forestry is a long- ian owners m c ,00~111!' the
"By planting trees, an indi- term investment and these ng_ht tree' lor _the1r p.1rt•cular
vidual can enjoy 8 10 percent Lax-saving options help indi- obJeC~Ives.· This assistance IS
tax credit on the cost of their victuals to get started."
. especmlly recommended for
effort s." said John Dbrka, ·
More information about plantings in excess of three
chief of the ODNR Division the tax-saving program can acre~.
of Forestry. "That means be found online at the U.S.
Since state reforestation
property owners spending Forest Service's web site: efforts began more than 80
$2,000 to establish a wood- www.fs.fed.us/sPI7coo
years ago, ODNR foresters
land could directly deduct · State foresters can assist in have planted more than a
$200 frotn the amount of fed- establishing forests through one-half billion trees in Ohio:
era! taxes they owe."
advice offered by on-site conFor availabilit'y. of various
In addition to the tax cred- · sultations with state service
it. landowners can deduct up foresters and through the safe tree species and their prices.
to 95 percent of cenain refor- of seedlings from the or for a list of service forester
office locations hy county
estation expenses over an Marietta Tree Nursery.
eight-year·period.
.
ODNR is the largest pro- 'and telephone numbers. conCosts that the Internal ducer of tree seedlings in the tact the ODNR Division of
Revenue Service approves state. producing more than 3 Forestry toll free at (877)
for the reforestation tax cred- million trees each year for 691-8733 or online at ohiodit include: The purchase of reforestation efforts.
nr.com.

CHUMUCKLA, Fla. (AP) are a very small part of the
He ha.s no idea how much
- Farmer Copeland Griswold state's farm economy. Peanuts _of a financial hit it will be.
started over once before, after are a $35 million a year crop
Holland lost about 4,000
back-to-back hurricanes Erin in Florida, bringing . in less pounds of peanuts that were
and Opal destroyed his crops money- than even peppers or already harvested because
nine years ago. He just fin- potatoes. Florida's cotton pro- they either blew away in
ished paying off the refinanc- duction is eve·n less important Ivan's winds or they were in
ing loan from that disaster to the national market, worth coolers that have been withwhen
along came Ivan.
$22 million, less than one per- out electricity for a week.
GALLIA EXTENSION COMMENTS
Like many, of his neigh- cent of U.S. prOduction.
That's a $2.600 loss. He's
bors, Griswold thinks he' II
But to hundreds of farmers also got equipment to repair
be able to salvage some of in a few counties along the to get back in business.
his peanut crop- much of it
But he 's optimistic aboul
depend a lot on what comes was still in the ground. But Alabama border, it is their
The next farm bill is schedlivelihoOd
and
their
life.
most'
of his peanuts, · which
uled to begin taking shape
· out
of
hearings
in he winces when asked about
still
haven
't been harvested.
Bruce
Holland's
family
has
next year. What will it look
Washington and across the his 1,500 acres of cotton.
He was planning to harvest
been on his Hollandtown
like ? The o utcome of the
country. While there is gener"You might as well say 97 farm for more than I 00 them this weekend, although
November presidential and
al agreement · not to change percent of it's gone," he says.
years, growing peanuts, cot- he's not exactly sure what
congressional elections will
the present farm bill dlll'ing
"I' m getting too old to ton and watermelon. In he' II find.
·
-Robert
be a major determining fac- ·
its seven-year life, there may work out million .dollar
recent years, he's ·started a
He 's ·optimistic that he 's
tor.
Whoever is president
Pawelek
well be changes.
debts," .said Gri'swold, who is rmidside retail outlet selling
already had a few customer~
will determine who · the
The farm community will 75 and starting his second
that
peculiar
North
Florida
stop by hi s out-of-the-way
Secretary of Agriculture will
be asked for input as to prior- week without' power.
delicacy,
boiled
peanuts.
farm asking it' he had peanuts
be.
ities. The current farm bill
Small farmers have a tough
"Boiled peanuts in the for sale. He doesn ' t yet, but
The elections will also
was written in the belief that enough time when winds
detennine who will control have a fi ght on our hands.
South,
it's a big thing," said hopes to soon. And he thinks
programs were · WTO-com- over 100 mph don't blow
the Senate as well as leader- Holland,
who has been grow- the nearby town of Jay will
This year's appropriations pliant. This case has many away their crops and' destroy
ship in the House. Beyond did not have pay ment limita- potential adverse conse- their equipment. While many ing peanuts hi s whole life.
hold its annual peanut festithat, mon'ey wi 11 be a key tions targeted in the House. quences for agriculture, and
The
cotton
is
gone
val
the first weekend in
people in the northwest corconsideration. When the last The Senate has not taken it many people question how ner of Florida have had their " another hardship in a series October.
·farm bill was developed, we up. However, according to much the WTO and its defin- lives interrupted by Hurricune of tough years.
"We need to," · Holland
were very fortunate to have a US News and World Report, itions will atfect farm bill Ivan and their homes dam"It's pretty bad," ·Holland said, saying th e festival
Treasury surplus. There was individual senators have been
aged, those who depend on said. "The cotton is laying on would help boost the morale
- support by those in Congress questioning the agriculture legi slation.
of the area farmers .
Among concerns about the crops will suffer lasting the ground ."
who were sympathetic to sector on the payment limita- WTO
framework agreement adversity, losing a good piece .
agriculture ·after tt had come tions issue.
'' MUST SELL"
is its reported requirement for of a year's .income.
through several years of ecoShada
Rlvar:
Riv~r
Front Camping Lot NOW ONLY
Cotton is not · the only a 20 percent reduction in · "We have lost 100 percent
nomic crisis.
S6,90011
stepchild in agriculture, with domestic farm supports. It's a of the cotton 'crop," Travis
This time around, there
Cryttlll
!.aka:
Beautiful
Wooded
5 acre Homesite. 2 miles
any number of opponents
indications that agriculture lined up to take potshots· at lot like the farm bill: The Kelly, the USDA . Farm
from
Ohio
River
boat
ramp
NOW
ONLY 519,900. 15 acres
may have a big bull's-eye farm programs. For e~tamp!e, devil Is in the details. There Servtces Agency rel'resentaon 25 acre private lake NOW ON LV $39,500
painted on it In tenns of fund- com and sugar are being tar- will be many questions about tive in Milton, told Gov. Jcb
Owner Financing Available!
mg. Some members of geted with obesity issues. what the outcome of this Bush when he. visited shortly
Call for Free Maps
after Ivan blew through.
agreement will be.
Congress don't feel agricul- Opponents
claim . that
800·113·8355
This Is a blg picture frame- "The agricultural economy in
• ture should be supported as it because farm programs have
·ts, especially when it comes made food so cheap, they are work. Future discussions will this county and the surroundto the Issue of payment limi- a factor In making Americans bring out the details, and ing counties is de-.:astated,"
The cotton, peanuts and
tations. Others look at too fat. This has been played . we'll have to judge it on what
pecan
trees grown in this area
Brazil's
World
Trade · up In t~e national med1a, and we learn as we go 'along. At
Organization
complaint there have been a number of this point, at lc.ast they're
thinktng about
making
about support for American conferences on the subject.
progress.
cotton growers and ask,
It's just one of many pres(Robert Pawelek is the
''These supports aren't fair-. sures we will see coming
why are we doing this for down !he pike. How the new OSU Extension educator in
agnculture?"
f3lll) bill will look will also Agriculture and Natural
So, we in agriculture may
Resources for Gallia County.)

Bv

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

PageA2

eopLounger.'l
'

In Gallipolis next to TSC * 446-4417

�OPINION
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('740) 446-2342 • FAX (740)

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~.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Diane Hill

Kevin kelly

Qontroller

Managing Editor

Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should be les.1 than
300 words. All /elfers are subject to editing and must be
signed and inch•de address and telephone number. No
un.&lt;igned letters will be published. 'Letters should be ·in good
rasre; addressing· issues. nor personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the consensus of 1he Ohio Valley Publishing L ·, '· s editorial board,
unless orhenvise n01ed.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, S~pt. 26, the 270th day of 2004. There are
96 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 26, 1960, the first
televised debate between presidential candidates John F.
Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon took place in Chicago.
On this date: In 1777, British troops occupied Philadelphia
during the American Revolution .
· In 1789, Th9mas Jefferson was appointed America's first
· secretary of state.
.
In I 898, American composer George Gershwin was born in
Brooklyn, N.Y.
In 1914, th,e Federal Trade Commission was established.
In 1950, United Nations troops recaptured the South Korean
capital of Seoul from the North Koreans.
In 1952, philosopher George Santayana died in Rome at age
88.
.
: In 1955, following word that President Eisenhower had suf: fered a heart. attack, the N~w York Stock Exchange saw its
worst price decline since 1929.
·
In I 957, the musical 'West Side Story' .opened on
Broadway.
. In 1986, William H. Rehnquist was sworn in as the 16th
: chief justice of the United States, while Antonio Scalia joined
· the Supreme Court as its 103rd member.
: In 1991; four men and four women began a two-year stay
· inside a sealed-off structure in Oracle, Arit .., · called
'Biosphere Two.' They emerged from the Biosphere on this.·
date in 1993.
: Ten years. ago: Addressing the U.N. General Assembly,
: President Clinton announced he had lifted most U.S. simc: tions against Haiti, and urged other nations to follow suit. Jury
selection began iil Los Angeles for the murder trial of OJ.
Simpson. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell declared
health care reform dead for the session.

PageA4
Sunday, September 26,

Sunday, September 26,

Ortan J. Stewart

like the Mexican border. · sitting in front of me. l asked
Back elevators were taken, I the president very short
was perused by at least a questions about very precise
dozen Secret Service agents, things: his ' National . Guard
and everything was bullet- service, the Swift Boat ads,
Bill
Iraq and Iran, the Mexican
proof except my questions.
O'Reilly
The president, himself. is border, Jacques Chirac, the
a different man than the one fairness of the press and how
I interviewed four years ago. his faith · in God influences
Back then as the governor of . his decisions.
views, but you si mply can- Texas, he was more casual in
Most of the time Mr. Bush
_not tell a sitti ng president his language, both body and was direct and to the point.
that you, the interviewer, verbal. He carried himself A few times he was evasive.
know more than he daes. w_ith authority in 2000, but He )'IUS, however, intensely
That would make you look now he seems to be aware focused, and so was I, except
like a moron. So open con- that he is a life-and-death for one sc·cret lapse. In the
frontation goes right out the decision maker, and that middle of my talk with the
. . '
wmdow. ·
awesome responsibility has president. my. mind flashed
Also, the tone of your seeped into his persona. He's back for just a second to my
questions must be respectful. very aware of his position in . childhood in Levittown,
Although I asked everything life.
N.Y. The most powerful man Mr. Bush was much more on earth was answering my
I wanted to ask and there
were no restrictions in the busincs~like
this •time questions. Who ' woulda
interview, my queries were around. He kept the chitchat thunk it?
posed less aggressively than short and seemed anxious to
(Veteran 7V news anchor
usual. l was direct, but sub- answer the questions. I Bill O'Reilly is host of the
dued. anoth_e r departure for believe he likes the joust Fox News show 'The O'Reilly ·
me. By ttie way, I never when he thinks the playing Factor' and author of the
show my questions to any- field is fair. 1 gave him a "book 'Who's Looking Out
one in advance, and that rule_ sq uare deal last time around For You?' To find out more
time, and he remembered.
applied to the president.
about Bill O'Reilly, and read
A TV interview is far dif- features by other Creators
Security is massive for
every presidential appear- ferent than a print one in the Syndicate writers and carance. To even get to the sense that facial expressions toonists, visit the Creators
interview room in a New and posture play a key roll. Syndicate web page . at ·
. York City hotel, I had to go My job is to break down the www.creators.com .. This colthrough hoops that make image and give viewers a umn originates on th'e .. ,Web
U.S. airport security look glimpse at the real person site www.bi/loreil/y.com.)

Orlan J. Stewart, 5S, Middleport, Ohio, passed away Sept:
23, 2004 , at The .Arbors in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Born Nov. 26. 1945, in Jackson County, W.Va., he was the
son of the late Thomas H. and Dessie Boyer Stewart.
He was a veteran of the Vietnam Wac and was employed as
a laborer at Foote Mineral.
·
· . lnaddition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two
mfant SiSters; and two brothers, Ronald B. and Gary 'L.
Stewart.
·
·
'He is survived by two brothers, Edwin H. and Thomas H.
Stewart; a_nd two special friends, Dottie Turner and Ellis
Myers.
Services will be I p.m . Monday, Sept. 27, 2004, at Meigs
Memory Garden Chapel, with Lamar 0' Bryant otiiciating.
M~litary graveside rites will be conducted by the Mason VFW
Post 9926.
·
·
Friends may call one hour pi-ior to services at the cemetery
chapel:
.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral
Hohle, Middleport.

Beverly A. Perkins
Beverly Ann Perkins, 66, of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Saturday
morning Sept. 25, 2004, at her residence.
Born Feb. 16, 1938, she was the daughter of the late Paul
and Jean Robin son.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a
brother, Russell.
·
She is survived by her husband, Robert W. Perkins; four
children, Jennifer Sexmour, Robert, Steven and Daniel
Perkins; eight grandchildren; four brothers, Jeffrey, Gregory,
· Dwight, and Dr.. Dane Robin son.
·
A memorial service is planned and will be announced at a
later date. There will be no visitation.
In lieu of !lowers, memorial donations · may be made to
Holzer Hospice, I00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Arrangements are under the direction of Waugh-Halley·
Wood .Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
Condolences may be e-mailed to the family at www.timeformemory.com/whw.

Deaths
Rosemary Hysell
Rosemary Hysell , 63, of Middleport, Ohio, passed away
Friday, Sept. 24, 2004, at St. Mary's Medical Center,
Huntington, W.Va.
.
·
.
·
'
Arrangements are incomplete; once finalized will be
announced by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, Ohio.

IN

DEEPER

Correction
The western square dancing
and line dancing "Fun Night"
will be held at 7 p.m:
Tuesday, Sept. 28 and 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 5 at the Wagon

•

~Moderately Confused

CLINIC..

'Hout fishing a blooping good time

Utfmes -~enttnel

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POMEROY - When most
adults hear the word "immunization," they think of their
children instead of thinking
about them set ves.
National
Adult
Immuni zation
Awareness
Week is Sept. 26 through
Oct. 2. Adults should be
aware of immunizations that
can protect them for vaccinepreventable illnesses .
There are three vaccines
routinely gi~ e n to adults:
Tetanus-Diptheria
(Td).
Hepatiti s B and Measles
Mumps Rubella (MMR ). ·
After the recent flooding,
Tetanus shots are in high
demand. Tetanus or "lockjaw," as it is commonly
called, results from coming
into cont ac t with .something
that is tainted with the
tetanus bacte ria. Any form of
penetration of the skin can
result in tetanus, fOf example,
a rusty nail, a splinter, a tin y Pat Thoma of Pomeroy, who had
pinprick or scratch.
Tetanus shot from Meigs County
Tetanus cannot be spread · toms at all or feel sick. They
by, person-to-person contact. can give the virus to other
Tetanu s-Dipth eria booster people witoout knowing it.

~~~~~ IOh~~!~ abn~ :~c~\~~~

free of charge at the Meigs
County Health Department.
Hepatiti s 8, a serious .
viral, liver disease can be
prevented by a series of three
Hepatiti s B injections over a
period of six months.
Hepatiti s B is a disease that is
spread by contact with bodily
fluids , for example, blood.
semen, vaginal fluid and sa liva (spit).
Infection with Hepatitis B
results in jaundi ce (yell owi ng
of the skin And eyes), fever:
nausea and vomiting, swollen
glands, joint pain, dark urine,
skin rash, feeling very tired.
weight loss, mid liver pain.
Some people who contract .
Hepatiti s B have no symp- ·

The Meigs County HealttJ
Department provides the
adult Hepatiti s B vaccine for
a charge or $55 each and can
he billed to Medic~id if a
card is presented.
The measles, mumps and
rubella vaccine (MMR) coYers these diseases that are
highly contagious and are
spread by air or by dire ct
contact with respiratory
drople ts suc h as sneezing.
coughing or contact with
mucous secretion s. Both
health care workers and day~are providers arc at greater
risk than the general population for th ese diseases.
Colleg~ students also are at
higher risk qecause of the
large concentration of sus-

"Y·

..... SubKripllon
lnelcle County

13 Weelcl.............. • . '30.15

Ohio Valley Publlllhlng Co.
26 Weelcl. · · · · .... .• ..... '60.00
Published eveoy sunday, 825 Third 52 Weelcl.·• . • , ...... . •.. '118.80
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 4~631. ·
Periodical postage · paid at
OutUio Counly
Galllpofle.
·
•••••r: The Anoclated Prese, 13Weelcl. ............... '60.05
the
West
Virginia
Press 26 Weeb.. ' . . .......... '100.10
Auoci!lltion, · and the
Ohio 52 Weeb... .. ... : . ... .. '200.20

There comes a time when ·
had better eat it!'
got a citation for not having
a man must go · into the
But with 'fly casting,' you_ my fishing license with me.
wilderness and face one of
wade into the river and Really. I left the license back
Mankind's oldest, and most
attempt to place a 'fly' • a in the car. The Idaho Fish
feared, enemies: trout.
· furry. little hook thingy and Game official who cited
For me, that time came
Dave
weighing slightly less than a me was very polite, and so
recently in Idaho, where I go
Barry
hydrogen atom - on top of · was I, because he was wearevery summer. Many people
the water right where . the ing a sidearm. I. considered
think Idaho is nothing but
trout are blooping. You do a~king him if I could borrow
potato farms, but nothing
ll)is by waving your fishing it to shoot a trout, but there's
could be farther from the
Susanne had me and Ron rod back and forth, using the probably some rule· against
rhythm,
as THAT, too. As the day wore
truth: There are also beet Ungerman (ha ha!) put on following
farms.
rubber waders, which ,serve explained to us (I am not on, our efforts • 'CO-ca CONo, seriously, Idaho is a two important purposes: (I) . making this up) by Susanne: la: CO-ca CO-la' - took on
beautiful state that offers - to They cause your legs. to 'CO-ca CO-la, CO-ca co.· an air of desperation,
quote Emerson • ' nature out sweat; and (2) they make Ia.' On your third CO-la, you because it was becoming
the bazooty.' This includes you look like Nerd Boy from point your arm forward, and clear ·that Susanne, a true
many rivers and·streams that the Planet Dork. Then we the 'fly.' in a perfect irnita- professional, was NOT
allegectty teem with trout. I hiked through roughly 83 lion of nature, lands on your going to let us leave until we
say 'allegedly' because until miles of aromatic muck to a head. Or sometimes it fonns caught a blooping fish. So
recently I never saw an actu· spot on the Wood River that itself into a snarl that cannot ·you can imagine how bloopal trout, teeming or other- . literally throbbed with trout. be untangl~ without the aid ing happy we were when
wise. People were always I of course did not see them, · of a chainsaw AND a Ron (Ungerman) fi'nally
pointing at the water and but I did see a lot of bloop- flamethrower.
. managed to haul in a trout. It
saying, 'Look! Trout!' But I ing on the water surface,
At least that's what kept was not a large trout. It was '
saw nothing. I wondered if which Susanne assured us . happening to me and my the length of a standard
these people were like that was caused by trout. ·
friend Roo Ungennan. (Yes! Cheeto. But it WAS a trout,
creepy little boy in' the
But there was' a problem. 'Ungerman!') We stood dammit, and it meant we
movie 'The Sixth Sense' To catch trout, you have to there for hours, waving our could stop. ·
who had the supernatural engage in 'fly casting,' a rods .and going CO-ca COLater. Ron and I agreed
ability to see trout.
kind of fishing that is very Ia, but most of the time we that it had been a lot of fun
Any\vay, on this Idaho trip challenging, and here I ljlll were . not getting our flies and we would deftnitely
mY. friend Ron Ungennan • using 'challenging' in the anywhere near the blooping. . never do it again. So lo any
and 'Ungerman' is NOT a sense of 'idiotic.' When I The trout were laughing so trout ·reading this column, I
funny name, so let's not was a boy, I fished with a hard at us that they .c onsid· say: You are safe from us.
drzw un!lue attention to it · worm on a hook, and. it . ered evolving legs so they And to the Idaho Fish and
persuaded me to go trout always warted, and I will could crawl onto land and Game Department, I say:
fishing. We purchased fish- . tell you why: Fish are not catch their breath.
You'll never lake me alive.
ing licenses and hired a rocket scientists. lbey see a
But Susanne was a good
(Dave ,Barry is a humor
guide named Susanne, who worm, and in their tiny teacher, and very patient, columnist for the Miami
is German but promi~ us brains they think: 'Huh! This and finally, just when I Herald. Write to him do 77ie
that she would not he too is something I have never thought I ·would never ever Miami Herald, One Herald
strict.
I . .
before underwalef! I catch a trout, it happened: I Pilllll. Miami, FL33132. )

ceptible persons. A series of
two MMR vaccines are need- .
ed , to protect a person from
these diseases.
The Meigs County Health
Department offers the MMR
vaccine for a charge of $50
per shot, which can he billed
to Medicaid if a card is presented.
Shot clinics are held every
Tuesday at the health depa11ment. Clinic hours on the
first Tuesday of each month
are from I to 7. p.m., and ones
held on the third Tuesday of.
each month are 9 to II a.m.
and I to 7 p.m.
Clinics on the remain ing
Tuesdays of each month are 9
to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m.
Appointments on days other
than Tuesday ca n be made if
necessary.
A donation for the vacci ne

is' appreciated, but no one will
be turned away due to the
inability to pay. Please bring
shot record. !f available, and
·Medicaid card if applicabl.e.
For further information on
adu lt vaccines and the-i r
avai labil ity. contact the
Meigs · Coun ty
Health
Department at 992-6626.

Airlines began canceling
fli ghts at· airports in Miami
and Fort Lauderdale, which
were . planning to close,
stranding some · passe ngers.
Authorities urged stormweary resi\lents not to
become complacent and to
speed up plans to secure their
property and evacuate if necessar,Y before the weather
detenoraled.
'
"I can't imagine someone
not takin~ this seriously after
the last s1x weeks," Gov. Jeb
Bush said Saturday.
In Fort Pierce, where
Frances buttered and flooded
homes all lllong the waterfront, Bob Gorman and his
family began packing up
three cars to evacuate -just
a few day s after they returned
to their damaged· home .
Frances sent water rushing
into their. hou se. tore apart
their dock an&lt;;! left their walls
covered with mold.

r
_
e
•

Kelly

WE HAVE CHANGED

OUR NAME
.,.............. Cbarch .

Btzell -

.. ...

Calama•Uy Clnucb

We are an old church with a new name with
the same fun~tal Bible teaching of Gbcfs
Holy Word. Come out and visit us...We hope
you can develop your personal Relationship
with the Lord Jesus Quist!
Sunday School 9:30AM
Morning Worship !0:45PM

seen

· Evening Service 7:00PM
Thlllliday Bible Study 7:00PM

. Pa.rtor Larry Lem/e.v We/conies Everyone!

•

•

recently helped clean up flood waters from her church. receives a
Health Department nurse Barbara Vujaklija. (Beth Sergentjphoto)

Three million Floridians urged
to evacuate because of Jeanne

Provisional ballots .could
pose Election Day problems

THROAT

Tribune, 825 Third
Gallipolis, OH 45631 :

Wheeler's Hall on Summit
Street in Jackson. This is a
correction from Thursday 's
edition of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERG'ENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP)
Gas stations and busi nesses
- Hurricane Jeanne intensi- were boarded up and deserted
fied and moved faster loward Saturday afternoon along
Florida's
Atlantic
coast U.S. I, a main artery along
Saturday, sending residents· Florida's Atlantic Coast. The
scrambling to shutter their usually busy road was mostly
homes and stock up on disas- devoid of cars.
ter supplies. Three million
"! can imagine a lot of peopeople were urged to evacuate. ple here this morning started
COLUMBUS (AP)
Similar lawsuits have been
The storm, packing winds freaking out," said Lynn
Provisional ballots could be filed in Colorado and
near
115.mph, is expected to Tarrington of Lake Worth.
the hanging chads of the 2004 · Missouri·. A lawsuit in Florida
hit Florida late Saturday or "Yesterday I wus hoping we
presidential election. say crit· was rejected this week. ·
early
Sunday. It would be the wouldn't lose power again
1cs of Ohio's guidelines · for
Ohio is one of 29 states that
fourth
hurricane to slum the and now I' m hoping l have a
· will not count provisional
handling those votes. ·
this
season, u scenario house left when I come blick."
state
Secrellll'y of Stare Kenneth . ballots cast in the · wrong
unmatched
since 1886 when
Tarrington was leaving her
Blackwell ~tly ~ued adirec- precinct, said Dan Seligson,
home near the water in Palm
live to CQW1ty electfon officials editor of electionline.org, a four storms hit Texas.
Jeanne strengthened off the Beach County, an area wal- .
saying they are allowed to count nonpartisan Web site covercoast into a Category 3 storm, loped by Hurricane Frances
provisional ballots only from vot· ing voting procedures.
en who go to the cott~Uing
Ohio luiS had provisional bal- but Jack Beven, a hUlTj~ane three weeks ago.
localion for their home
.
toting for more than a decade, specialist at the Nau6nal
"We've all been thinking,
Black well has ordered that · mostly to accol1llll0date resi- Hurricane Center in Miami, 'This really can't come at us
if residents go . to th_e wrong dents who moved· but did not warned that a Category 4 storm again.' Now that it's just a
precinct, poll- workers must update their voter registration. with winds of at least 131 mph few hours away, everyone is
find their correct precinct and Such ballots are not counted for "is not out of the question."
being forced to take it seritell them where to go, · 10 days while election workers
Jeanne, churning across the ously. I've stopped laughing _
Blackwell's spokesman Carlo verify voter eligibility.
·northern
Bahamas, was about it at this point." said
LoParo said. They .also may
But after election problems poised to strike some areas of Jean McArthur. Of West Palm
cast provisional. ballots at were magnified _by the close Florida ravaged by earlier Beach, who was buying suptheir county election board.
2000 _pres1denual race hum canes. The storm ·s outer plies at a Wai-Mart. She had
Provisional voting allows includtng eligible voters edges were already dropping bags full of water, batteries,
properly gistered voters to wrongly being turned away . rain and kicking up winds flashlights and snacks.
cast ballots even when their from the f)olls - Congress
Many residents. who awoke
names don 't appear on regis- passed the Help America along Florida's east coast .
to
forecasts that the storm had
Saturday
afternoon
.
. tration rolls because they Vote Att in 2002.
become
stronger and could hit
From
Melbourne
south
to
Part of that act requires
moved or they were'left off.
" It has a potential of being a states that did not have rrovi- West Palm Beach. la w sooner. frantically gathered .
very big issue. and how we trnm s10nal votmg to adopt 11 for enforcement took to the radio supplies at the last minute
and how we prepare for it will voters who believe they are airwaves. saying that anyone before stores closed. Traffic
dictate how we handle the situa- properly . registered. That who was outside their homes on highways was heavier than
lion," said Michael SciOitifl!l, !l'lo~~ ~ir yote to be counted after a 6 p.m. curfew would normal as people headed out
of tiarm ·s way.
president
of
the
Ohio 1f elig1b1hty 1s confumed later. end up in jail.
' Association of Election Officials
Cnlics argue that on a busy
and director of the Mahooing Election Day with potentially
Kelly will be replaced as
County elections boan1.
'long lines, harried poll workers
news editor at the Register by
The key will be educating may not follow through or votpoll •workers and voters ers may nor have the time or
Chri&gt;tine Myer&gt; Cozza. who
before the election about the transportation to go e!sewhere.
from PageA1
· has been lifestyle editor there
Critics wooy tiD: with ~ ri
process, Sciortino said.
since July 2002 .
The Ohio Voter Protection thousinls ri oow vcters •egJSiet·
Kelly and his wife Beth
Project,acmlitionri'\OOng. ~fOIIhisliill'seJertim~vtt­ rience' includes stints as a have been married since July
gJOOps. is 001= a laMIIIliO ers 'Mlll't koow a-be !Did their~;«· reporter with the Logan
challenge B
's direaive rea polling place. .Also, JDUID (Ohio) Daily News and a 1998 and reside in Vinton.
editor
at
the His wife 1s Vinton· s fiscal
before d~ Nov. 2 e1eaion, jiOject tnamifs ni polling ~l'i copy
officer.
aoomey &amp;31 Graysm said ·
lnw dalged sm:z, ps ~ Parkersburg (W.Va.) N~.ws.

EYE,
EAR&amp;:

~unbap

'

Obituaries

•

IN

i;&gt;unba!' ~imr9' -i;&gt;rntmrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
'

2004

President Bush enters the no spin zone
President Bush doesn't
really like the press, and
with good reaSon. The media
'gotcha game' has been elevate!l to almost hysterical
levels, and any mistake or
misstatement by a president
is front-page news. Would
you want to walk a high wire
every day?
· So the president rarely
gives in-depth interviews,
and his press conferences are
held to a minimum. One on
one, Mr. Bush is an engaging
guy, but it's tough to be
·relaxed when every word
you say is parsed and dissected. Unlike Bill Clinton,
George W. Bush does not
seek personal approval, at
least not openly. Mr. Clinton
loves adoratioo, Mr.. Bush is
much more private in his
presentalion.
Therefore, I approached
my 30-minute interview
with the president cautious. 'ty. I kept my presence low
key, which is a tremendous
departure for me. Ther~ are
certain rules that have to be
followed when talking with
the most powerful. man in
the world, and I respected
the guidelines.
For example, I am known
for confrontational inter-

2004

1

STANLEY SAUNDERS ·

M-O NUMENTS

Custom desig11ed
&amp; lettered for your
loved ones. .
Many samples
011 Display
Call for an appointment.
New Owners: Lloyd Danner - 446-4999
David Tawney- 446-1615

352 THIRD AVENUE • GALLIPOLIS, OH

FRIW2~·THURS~

Box Office Opens @
6:30PM Nightly &amp; 12:30 pm
For Sal &amp; Sun Matinees

.

Tt!E1=0RGOTTEN (PGI3)
'1:00, 3:00 7:00 &amp; 9:00
SKY CAPTAIN (PG)
1:10, 3:10,7:10 &amp; 9:10
MR. 3000 (PG13)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20

CELLULAR (PG13)
1:10,3:10. 7:t0&amp;9:10
RESIOENT EVIL: ·
APOCALYPSE (R)
, :30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30

WITHOUT A PADOLE (PG13)
1:1 5,3:15, 7:15 &amp; 9:15

Fish For Pond Stocking
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday,

October 6th
Gallipolis •The Feed Stop·
4:00 ·5:00PM, Phone 740-446-3333
'w"'.fark~&gt;fl •hf.trntc0m

.

ToPlace .\nOrder Call The Store i \I.N ,1; CJii i -\t~l-~f- ~61 5

FARLEY &amp; FARLEY FISH FARM
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

• Pr~·' ·•-·'··----~~--r--e~_.~~~~~~mr~. .~~------------~----------------------~-----------·----------~-----------------:------~

�..

.PageA6

OHIO

6unbap ltm~ -6entintl

Sunday,

S~ptember 26,2004

Holzer Center for Cancer
Care announces official logo
GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer Center for Cancer Cl!fe
announces the launch of the
otliciallogo for the new center.
The warm blue color in the
logo was chosen to represent
healing and soothing. while
the "sprout" artwork signifies
the healing garden that will be
incorporated ·i'n the eenter as a
restful and peaceful spot for
patients and their families.
The logo will be used in
advertisements, including billboards, televi sion, newspaper

and promotional materials.
The new Cancer Center is a
joint venture between Holzer
Medical Center and Holzer
Clinic . Featured will be state-ofthe art health cm-e and complete
cancer ew-e under one building.
The facility wi ll be community .owrted by Holzer
Consolidated Health Svstems
(HCHS). with space leased to
Holzer Clini c and Holzer
Medical Center. who are joint
partners on the advanced cancer care ·project.

The Cancer Center will be
rmmaged by Holzer Clinic and
staffed by physicians and SU(r
poning staff, mcluding medical
oncologist Khawaja Hamid,
MD. ra&lt;;Jiation oncologist
Subhash Khosla, MD, and
medical oncologist James
Ungerleider, MD, who will also
·serve as the medical director. . ·
Construction for the new
cancer center is scheduled to
be completed in December
2004, w1th the ofticial opening in early spring 2005 ..

Local Stocks

Keep a
check on
your local
weather
Sunday,

Septemb~r

26

Morning: Temp&lt;;ratures will
fall from 53 early this morning to the low for the day of
52 at HlOam as they rise back
to 67 late morning. Skies will
be mostly sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the north turning
from the northeast as the

morning progresses.
Afternoon: Temperatures
will ri se from 70 early afternoon to the-high for the ·day of
73 at 4:00pm as they drop
back down to 71 later this
afternoon. Skies will be mostly sunny with 5 MPH winds
from the nOJ1heast.
Evening: Temperatures will

decline from 66 early this
evening to 56. Skies will
range from mostly clear to
partly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Overnight: Temperatures
will stay near 54. Skies will
be partly cloudy to mostly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the northeast.

ACI - 34.94
AEP - 32.37
Akzo - 34 .77
Ashland Inc. - 54.90
AT&amp;T - 14.70
BLI - 12.58
Bob Evans - 27.15
BorgW.arner ·- 42.88
Champion - 3.95
Charming Shops - 7.08
City Holding - 32.30
Col - 36.62
DG -20 .30
DuPoni - 41 .78
Federal Mogul - .19
USB - . 28 .59
Gannett - 84.39
General Electric - 33.41
GKNLY - 3. 85
J:larley Davidson - 59 .39
Kmart - 86 .30
Kroger t 5.53
Ltd. - 21.91
NSC .- 29.39
Oa~ Hill Financial 35:20
OVB- 31.56
BBT - 39.18
Peoples - 25.10
Pepsico - 48.32
Premier 9.51
Rockwell - 37.71
Rocky Boots - 17.71
RD Shell - 50.51
SBC - 26 .05
Sears - 40.10
Wai·Mart - 52.81
Wendy's - 32.94
Worthington - 20.52

October I, 2004
Before and During the Game
Athletic Boosters' Food Booth
Come early for the game and enjoy a wonderful meal.
It will be served until it is gone. All of our regular menu
items will also be served.
WHERE? The Athletic Boosters' Food Booth
WHY? To help offset the cost of replacing equipment.
because of the flooding this past year.
Compliments ol
R. V.and Trailer
;&gt;~; Arn•nr1.•, Jessic.a &amp;Allison Mrr:l1••
Bob Evans Restamant
The Down Under Restaurant
R&amp; C Packing
Norris Northup Dodge

All GABS Athletes
Thank You!

Barbaqae
Cole Slaw,
Baked Buns Bllrlllk

. Only'S. 110

Do11atio11s
also welcomed.
.

Rio HOF to Induct two more, Page B2

Chillicothe shuts out Devils, Page B3
Local Sports Roundup, Page 84
NASCAR Weekend, Page 85

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Wahama skins
Bison, 29·15
MASON, W.Ya.-A pairof
back-to-back determined drives ill the final quarter lifted
the Wahama White Falcons
. past a persistent Buffalo Bison
team Friday evening by a 2915 margin before a large
turnout at the Bend Area
school.
Wahama pulled away from
the Bisons with two Jeshua
Branch scoring runs in the
fourth quarter to come away
with its founh straight . win
with one loss on the 2004 grid
season. Buffalo came int6 the
neighboring rivalry unbeaten
a)ld ranked third in Class A circles and lost its first contest in
four tries this year.
The White Falcons put
together successive sconng
drives in the final minutes to
extend its slim 1.6-15 lead to
claim its second consecutive
win in as many weeks over an
unbeaten foe.
.
Wahama marched 66 yards
in eight plays with Branch
. capping off the series with a 3yard burst into the middle with
8:03 remaining before the
hard-hitting senior finished off
a 50-yard, five play possession
with an 8-yard gallop with
4:00 left to seal the victory.
Wahama lost three of four
fumbles on the night but the
Falcon secondary helped to
overcame that by picking off
three Joey Tolley 'passes. The
Bisons put the ball on the turf
six times but managed to
recover all six of its miscues
during the hard-hitting outing.
· Branch finished the contest
as the game's leading ground
gainer with 133 yards in just
. 13 carries while running mate
Johnny Barton added Ill
yards in 21 tries. Branch
totaled 95 yards in the second
half with Barton collecting 80
yards during the final 24. minutes.

Without Harris,
Huskies still win

Bob Robinson, volunteer at God's Net Youth Ministries. examines the memorial bricks that will
be permanently placed around the foundation of the Mulberry Community Center. (Beth
Sergefll/photo)

Memorial bricks to benefit
God's Net Youth Ministries
BY Bmt SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

facing is repairing the roof.
In order to raise more
funds they are selling memoPOMEROY
Pastor rial bricks which will be
Keith Radar felt that young placed around the foundation
people were moving away . of the old , Pomeroy
from the church and decided Elementary School. The
10 do something about it.
school is npw the Mulberry
He founded God's Net Community Center . which
Youth Ministries which is an will house God's Net.
·
pttJianization . that supports
The memorial bricks are
children that would otherwise .engraved
with . names,
fall through the cracJcs of churches and businesses.
society. The group provides
clothing, hot nleals, counsel- They can. be purchased
Methodist
ing; tutoring and a gener~ through any
Church
located
in
Pomeroy
Concern for a child's well
being. ·Recently, they distrib- and throughout most of
pted free school supplies that Meigs County.
Bob Robinson has been a
were donated by area churchpastor for years and helped
es and businesses.
the first food pantry
organize
Ten years ago God's Net
in
Meigs
County. Between
purchased the old Pomeroy
Elementary School for one · delivering sermons he volundollar and have been exten- teers his time at God's Net
Sively renovating the build- Youth Ministries.
"I think it will be nice .for
ing with donations and
the
kids to look down and see
fundraisers. Presently. one of
the major expenses they are the names of the people who

made it possible to establish
God's Net new home with
donations," said Robinson.
Robinson says !.!Je difference in the k.ids after they
arrive at God's Net is amazing due in part because they
realize they have found a
suppon system within the
organization.
When the memorial bricks
· are laid out end to end on the
Mulberry
Community
Center's sidewalk all denominl!uions are placed alon~ide
one another. Catholics are
next to Methodists who are
sharing space . with the
Pomeroy Hi!!h School &lt;;:lass
of 1954.
The diversity of the bricks
visually represents · how
God's Net thrives on incorpo. rating various denominations .
and remaining nonjudgmen,
tal about who needs and
want~ to volunteer their help
to the organization.

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DEKALB, Ill. (AP) Garrett Wolfe
replaced
injured starter A.J. Harris and
ran for a career-high 202
yards and three touchdowns
to lead Northern Illinois to a
34-17 victory over Bowling
Green on Friday night.
Harris sprained his left
ankle late in the second quar. ter. He had 46 yards and one
touchdown on 13 carries.
Wolfe, who finished the
first half with minus-2 yards
rushing, carried the ball 31
times.
Chris Nednick's 25-yard
field goal gave the Huskies
(2-2, 1•0 Mid-American
Conference) a I0-7 lead early
in the third quarter. Wolfe
then added scoring runs of 42
and 21 yards as Northern
lllinois went up 24-10.
Wolfe carried 14 times for
75 yards to lead the Huskies
on a 16-play, 81-yard drive,
which he capped off with an
8-yard touchdown run that
made · it 31-10 with 6:07
remaining.
Phil Horvath was 16-of-23
for 191 yards for Northern
Illinois.
Omar Jacobs was 29-of-42
for 275 yards for Bowling .
Green (1-2. 0-1). His 1-yard
touchdown run on the opening drive gave the Falcons a
7-0 lead.
·

Truex wins
Busch race

'

OVER 60 YEARS!

BELlONE THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN HEARING AIDS!
WE'RE GROWING, CALL FOR EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES.

'•

'

Bl

Inside

DOVER, Del. (AP)
Points leader Martin Truex Jr.
bided his time, took tl!e lead
with 12 laps to go and drove
to an easy victory in the
NASCAR Buscb series race
Saturday
at
Dover
International Speedway.
The win in the Stacker 200
. was the fifth of the year for
Truex, tying him with rookie
Kyle Busch and Greg Biffle
for the most on the circuit. It
also was the .fifth in the
career of Truex and increased
his. points lead over Busch to
152 after 27 of 34 races.
"Wmning at Dover means
everything to nle," said
·Truex. a native of Mayetta,
N.J. "I've §Ot a lot of fans in
the. stands.'

Meig$ 36, Fairland 24

Eastern·20,
Belpre 0

Eastern
wins battle
of Eagles
Bv BurcH

CooPER

bcooper@mydailytribune.com
BELPRE - Perhaps its overtime road
win at Green sparked Eastern more than
many realized.
The Eastern Eagles had a pretty good
offensive day. and even better defense , in'
their 20~0 win over Belpre
Friday in int erdivisional
aqion,.
When Eastern got the
ball for the first time, tre
visiting Eagles quickly
struck.
Only two plays into
Eastern's opening drive ,
Ken Amsbary
L~~~r£.j quarterback
found Pl1il Pierce, who
'
scampered down the sideAmsbary
line for a 53 -yard touchdowu.
. Less than four minutes
later. Eastern went on the
attack again as Bryan
Mine ar ran th e ball in
from 21-yards out to put
the road team on top, I 40.
Minear had 12 carries
for 81 vards. Meanwhile,
Pierce · see med to be
everywhere on offense as
he had 34 yards ru shing
on nine carries for Eastern
(3-2).

Meigs,quarterback Eric Cullums (10) fights through the Fairland defense during the Marauders ' 36-24 win
· over the Dragons Friday. (I an Mqf)lemar)
·

Meigs slays Dragons
BY BRYAN WALTERS

bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
POMEROY - The football
cliche is that the offense scores the
points, and the defense detennines
the outcome.
The sanle could be said for the
Meigs gridiron team Friday night
. after a convincing 36-24 victory
over the Fairland Dragons ( 1-4) at
Bob Roberts Field.
The Marauders (4-l) outgained
the potent Dragons' offensive attack
459-383 in total yards and received

a season-best 224-yard rushing
effort from tailback Jared Casey en
route to the fourth consecutive
Meigs' win of the young season.
However it was the defense, particularly in the second quarter. that
opened the door for Meigs to tum a
6-0 deficit into a 22-6 halftime
advantage.
Atlerwards, Meigs coach Mike
Chancey was pleased with how well
his defense responded to the tall task
of slowing dowri quarterback
Michael Hill and Fairland.
.
"I thought we played .well defensively. We knew they had some

skilled players that fit their scheme
and that they were going to have
some success offensively." commented Chancey. "We talked about
trying to contain them and making
plays when we had to. I was proud
of our kids effort."
Hill entered Friday night avera~­
ing just over 250 yards per game m
passing. but the Meigs detense held
him in check most of the evening.
MHS surrendered 240 yards
through the air. but allowed just 26
in the tirst half.
Please see Meigs, Bl

· Amsbary
had
two
touchdown passes on 6'
·of-10 in the air and 101
yards. Pierce caught four
of those passes for 83
yards.
Belpre I 3-2) was led by
Matt Alloway. who had 12
carries for KI yards and
Minear
Luke No lan. who was I0for-21 pass ing for 74 yards and an inter- ·
ception.
Eastern addeo to its lead in the third as
Amsbary hit Bryce Honaker for an Ityard TD pa ss less than a minute into the
second half. .
·
From there. the Eastern ·defense helped
·preserve the win by keeping Belpre out of
·
"..\.
the endzone.
Both Eastern and Belpre open prlry in
respective division play this Friday.
Eastern play s host to defending Tri-Yalley
Conference Hockin g Division champs
Trimble. while Belpre tra\·eJs to Alexander
. in Ohio Di visio n play.

Athens 28, River Vall~y 14

Bulldqgs bite Raiders
BY BuTcH CooPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

CHESHIRE _ The opportunities
were the(e, but River Valley just could
not take advantage of them.
The Raiders were unable to conven on
two second-~alfred zone appearances,
and Athens ptcked off three passes 10 the
fo~rth q4aner as the Bulldogs won .
Fnday, 28-14.
.
.
1Jle loss ~as the fourth strrught for the
~ders, whtle Athens recorded tts ftrst
w~ of the season.
.
.
When we got tow~s the g?al hne,
they (Athens) were rollm$ the dtce more
, and blitzing and 'stuff," satd River Valley

head ceach Gregg Dee I.
"We find ways of putting ourselves in
a bind.",
River Valley ( 1-4) was only down by a
touchdown towards the end of the third
quarter when a 57-yard run by Chris·
Ed d
th R ·d
h Ah
war s put e · 31 ers on t e t ens
25
8ack-to-back 7-yard runs by Charley
Niben and Edwards put the ball on the
II, but the Raiders were unable to get .
the ball in the endzone.
·
Edwards led all rushers on the evening
with 130 yards on 15 carries with a
touchdown.
River Valley quarterback . Bryan
•
The Athens defense wraps up River Va lley's Chris Edwards (12). during
Plu~ see Ra~. Bl
the Ra iders' 28-14 loss to the Bulldogs. (ian McNemar)

·"

Southern 30, Hannan 6

Tornadoes blow down Wildcats for second win
BY ScoTT WOI.IE
Sports correspondent

\

RACINE . _ Behind sern·or driven
offense from Jake Nea'ie and Derek
Teaford, the Southern Tornadoes rolled
to !heir secood win of the season, a 306 tilt over~ Hannan Wildcats.
Southern unproves to 2-3 overall and
Hannan falls to 0-4
· , 66 ards
the '
Soothern comp1.1ed
t ·y. . on
ground on 48 cannes divv1ed up

between ten different rushers. Jesse
McKnight led the way ina 9-101 night
as he continued to gain confidence in
his running game, while Butch
Mamhout was 15-60, and Ryan
Donaldson was 7,56, also with a good
rushing game.
Others rushing and contributing to
the Southern win were Derek Teafond,
Dennis Adk.ins, Josh Pam, CQdy
patterson, Anthon y Shamb ·111. Chris
Tucker. and Wes Riflle.
Southern added 47 yards in the air,

led by the passing of Derek Teaford and
receiving of Jake Nease . Nea&gt;e. the
agile, but burly tight end pulled in three
catches for 28 yards, and Josh Pape was
1-19. Southern totaled 313 total yards
offensively.
.
Marnhout also had nearly I00 allpurpose yards including the interception rerum and a 27-yard kick off
rerum.
Hannan was led by Gilben Smith
who was 8-46. while Ala)l Dye rushed
ten times for 38 yards in part of a

Wildcat offense that netted 78 \'ardS on
the ground and 28 in the air· on two
catches to Dillon Sabolsky. Hannan
had I06 yards total ollense. Dye also
had over 50 all-purpose ya'h:ls including
a 21 yard return to stan the game. Luke
Edmunds also had sew'al key running
plavs.
The 2ilme started in such a fashion
that it appeared to be Jake Nease Night
at Adams Memorial field . Nease played .

PINse see 'Does, Bl

�..
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

•

Sunday, September 26, ioo4

BY MARK

WtWAMS

Special to the TimEili&gt;-Sentinel

1
'

RIO GRANDE - The University
of Rio Grande is pleased to announce
the induction of two fanner outstanding athletes as the latest members of
the Rio Gr&lt;111de Athletic Hall of Fame. ·
Ann Marie Hynes-Miskell and Scott
Wenger will be inducted as the 75th
and 76th members of the hall of fame
in "ceremonies, Nov. 12-13 at the Rio
Grande campus.
Hynes-Miskell (Class of 1998) came
to Rio Gmnde from Ireland and made
an indelible mark in cross country and
tmck and field. She lettered 12 times,
four each in cross country, indoor tmck
and outdoor tmck and was named AllAmerican 11 times.
. Hynes-Miskell set three individual
URG school records in both indoor
and outdoor tmck. She set the standard
in the 800-meters (2:20.64), the !,ODOmeters (3:02:74) and the 5,000-meters

(17:09.84) during the indoor season.
Hynes-Miskell added outdoor records
in the 3.000 (9:47.45), 5,000
(17:07.83) and the 10.000 (35:41.32).
She was also a member of the indoor
record-holding 4x800-meter relay
teams and the distance medley.
She captained both the cross country
and tmck and field teams her junior
and senior sea~ons .
She climaxed her career at Rio winning both the regional championship
and the national chan1pionship in the
IO,OOO~meters . Hynes-Miskell was
Rio's tirst ever individual national
champion.
She anchored the cross country
squad that finished eighth and 12th
respectively. in the NAIA final rankings and was a key component for the
1997Mid-Ohio Conference Champion
cross country squad.
"She is just a tremendous young
lady," said Rio Gr&lt;111de Head Tmck and
Cross Country Coach Bob Willey.
'The idea of her legacy is unbeliev-

able."
,
"She came in, from the git-go ahd
was a very solid. high quality athlete,"
Willey added. "She just did a remarkable job, she was something to be reckoned with, that's for sure."
Wiltey said the highlight of her
career was obviously when she captured the individual national championship. ''It was very, very ·exciting, I
can still to this day remember, they
were announcing her the winner as she
rounded the top of the qtrve down the
backstretch."
. "She came over and gave me hug
and said 'that's for you, coach and I.
~aid no' , ·'.that's for you'," he added.
Wenger (Class of 1997) was the
mainstay ofttJe men's team during the
same time period. The West Libelty
native also won 12 letters m both cross
country and tra.:k.
· ·
Wenger is ·the school record holder
in the indoor 5,000-meter run (14:55).
He was a part of the distance medley
team that holds the top mark and

4x:800-meter relay t~am that possesses ·
the outdoor record. He was AllConference three times in both cross
and ·track and claimed a regional
championship his senior year.
Wen~er ran in II NAJA National
ChampiOnship Meets and eamed' AIIAmerican honors six times.
He captained the cross country and
tmck squads in his senior season.
"Here was a youn'g man that ran
very well his senior year at the state
championships and we felt very fortunate that he chose Rio Grande,"
Willey recalled. "He was a big, strong
runner again something to be reckoned with."
"He worked hard and had some outstanding times as a treshman and all
the way through,"· Willey added.
"We'd go to the national championships and people knew exactly who

the best distance nmners in the nation.
"I remember he ran one road race
after college, a 5,000, and he ended up
running a 14:41 , that's real good,'~
Wi Hey 5aid.
:
Willey is happy the two, who were.
here at the same time, can jlO into the
hall of fame together. "That s the pleasure of coaching both the 'men's and
woinen's team together," he said. "The·
men and women come together as
almost brothers ;md sisters."
·
"For them to be going in together. (
know it's got to be exciting for them,
and it's very exciting Jor me as a coach
to see that happen ,'' he added. 'Tm
happy that they're both going to be
able to here for the hall of fame indue~

How They Fared
DEF. P.WL BLAZER (KY.),

DEF. GREENBRIER EAST,

4. Jackson (5-Q)

OEF. FRANKLIN HEIGHTS, 61-33
DEF. CALHOUN COUNTY,

Raiders

'Does.
fromPageB1
a crucial role in at least three of
Southern's
scores
and
anchored the offense for the
game's first score.
.
· The first score came at the
8:05 mark of the first quarter
when Derek Teaford rolled
right oiJ the play-action pass to
complete a 21
touchdown
reception to J
Nease. Ryan
Chapman added the PAT kick
to giVe SHS a 7-0 lead
A huge turnover by Southern
set up the first Hannan score
when junior Lawrence Rice
blocked the SHS punt and
returned it 17 yards to the
SoUthern eight yard line. Four
pla:ys later, quartetback Gilbert
Snuth ran a bootleg off right
end for. al5-yard touchdown
run. Lester atte~ a fake
' kick, and the CII5UIIIII PAT nm
.failed for a 7-6 score at the

;ern

':03 mart. ·
With 3:49 left before the
half, \liJ Jake Neue one-handed a !!lill IDirBI from quanerback Derek 'l'tafonl ancfhauled
it In for an eiaht yazd touch-

down JJiay. After a rouaJ!ina
the kicker call on the flrit
Southern ldck IUelllP. for the
PAT. Southern p&lt;ilfed a fake
kick aiUIIIIPL Ollanerblck
Teaford received tfie IIIIP and
tired over the line 10 Neue far
the two-point convenion ·and a

IS-6 SHS lead. Southern sustained a 16-play !!rive for the

score.

On ·the ensuing kick, #42
Steven Lambert mmbled 55
yards on the return to the SHS
. 36 yard line, where Jake Nc:ase
saved a touchdown for the
Tornadoes with a great tackle.
Lambert who already had over
twenty yards rushing later left
the game wjth an injury, taking
some punch from the Hannan
· offense.
.
Hannan drove to within the
fifteen yard line on the
Lambert set-up play, but came
up shon oo four downs. ~
two clubs traded possessions,
but carne. up empty. The
Wildcats bled a fake field goal
and went for the six points, but
the pass was knocked down
incomplete and the score stood
15-6 at the half.
At halftime both the Hannan
Wtldcat band and Southern
M~~thing Tornadoes executed
outstanding
performances
much 10 11\e approval of the
tarae crowd in attendance.
· Southern went three plays
and out on its rant pos&amp;enion
al'ler the intenninion. but
TerrY Bell came up with huae
fumble recovm- for tile
Tornadoes on Hannan's fant
play of the second half. Three
Jllays later Derek Teaford had a
three yard mea1t Into the end
zone for Southern's third
touchdown, then ran a quanerback keeper oft' the play-action
for the two point conversion,
#

the score 23-6 Southern at the
7:42 mark.
At the 3:20 mark of the third
frame, Butch Marnhout
snagged a qucik pass from
Hannan quarterback Gilbert
Smith and ran it 20 yards into
the endzone for the Southern
· score: A Ryan Chapman kick .
made it 30-6. That play was set
up by a third down, quick-kick
by Jake Nease, who punted the
ball down to the Hannan nine
yard line.
The Marnhout interception
was the' fust play from scrimmage -after tbe kick. Jon
McDaniel had a couple big
tacldes for the Tornadoes Co aid
bi_g stops in t1_Je secood ,half.
Likewtse, Darin Teaford had
many, big stops and led the
SHS defense with 9 tacldes,
while McDaniel, Dennis
Adkins and Jesse McKnight
each ended with five stops.
D=k Teaford had an inter~oo and fumble recovery
for Southern. Terry Bell had a
fumble recovery for the
Tornadoes and Weston Counts
a stop for negative y~.
Kyle McK_eever ana Chlis
Tucker joined aeniors Nease, ·
McDanfel, and Teaford as
helDinalead SHS to the win.
Rannan'a Luke Edmunds
had a sac~ and Lawrence Rice
a fumble recovery. .
Terry Bell had a fumble
,recovey for the Tomadoea.
Southern hosts Federal
Hocking tis Friday. and
Hannan plays Wtrt CoUnty.

'

24·6

6. Wayne (5-o)
DEF. SISSONVILLE, 31-5

7. Portsmouth (4-1)

DEF. WASH. CooRT HOUSE,

48-6

· 7. Wahama (5·0)

9. Wheelersburg (4-1)

Miller rallies to keep
South Gallia winless

49-7

5. Wllllainstown (4-o)

DEF. BUFFALO,

Meigs

34-6

3. Huntington, W.Ya. (HI)

Willey summed up their career and
their credentials tor this pre stigiou~
honor. "Scott and Marie, it's a nD-"
he was."
bminer, they belong in th~ hall of fame, .
Wenger continued to run after col- you mention Rio Grande and distance
lege, competing and competing well in running, you always remember Ann
numerous road races against some of Marie and Scott," he said.
re?session at the 21 with 8:08
ft in the contest.
.
M~igs managed to ride the
strength of its offense,l?articularly its big offensive lme and
steady dose of smash-mouth
football.
· The Mamuders ran off just
under six minuics of time on a
11-play drive that was capped
off by a Cullums' 4-yard scaring run for a 36-18 lead with
2:09 remaining.
Hill marched Fairland down
for one tina! scoring drive,
when he added the final points
with a 5-yard.run .
"I thought it was a heck of a
football game," said Chancey.
"You have to give Fairland
credit, they have some athletes
that can make plays."
Hill finished the evening
with 49 rushing yards to go
with his passing effort, and
received a solid 94-yard rushing effort from Fuller in the
loss. Cardwell led the Dragons
in receiving .with a pair of
catches for 77 yards.
.
Outside of the consistent
defensive performance, the
Marauder offense was also
reliable.
Casey,. who had 112 yards at
halftime, also had 112 yards in
the final two periods that
allowed Meigs to keep possession and march most of that
valuable clock away in the
contest.
"I thought )ared ran the ball
we. II and ran the ball h!Jfd, and
. I thought our offenstve · Ime
blocked pretty well. I thought
. it was a good team victol)(,"
said Chapcey.
Eric Cull urns· finished with
91 . yards passing, and
VanMeter had three catches for
75 yards for Meigs in the victory.
.
The Marauders now turn
their focus to TVC Ohio play
when the Wellston Rockets
invade Bob Roberts Field this
Friday.

BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

1. Ironton (5-0)
2. Parkersburg South (4-1)
LOST TO PARKERSBURG , 38-6

29-15

DEF MINFORD, 56-7

10. Chillicothe

(4-1)

.

. CHILLICOTHE
Chillicothe's shut out over
Gallia Academy Friday was
more impressive than the
final score indicated. ·
The Cavaliers held the Blue
Devils to 73 total yards on
offense in their 17-0 win .
It was the fourth-straight
win for Chillicothe (4-1).
The Blue Devils (2-3)
offensively "were . led by
Jaymes Ha~gerty, who was Sof-19 passmg for 47 yards.
but threw a pair of intercep-

OEF. GALLIA AcADEMY, 17-Q

tions.
Au~tin

King had two re~ep- ·
tions for 30 yards, while Todd
Saunders ran for 20 yards on
four carries.
Chillicothe was led by quarterback Clint Austin wnh 147
yards on I 0-of-18 passi ng and
a touchdown. Austin also ran
for a score.
Matt Weaver had seven carries for 77 yards for the Cavs,
while Quenton Upshaw had
six catches for 76 yards.
Austin's touchdown run
came in the first quat1er 011 a
three-yard carry.
During that same quarter,
Gallia Academy was held to

:rum

Chesapeake
Coal Grove
Fai~and

Q'iC

All

o-o
o-o
o-o
. o-o
o-o
o-o

~2

3-2
t-4

Sunday, September 2.6, 2.004

Athens 28, River Valley 14
Athens
R1ver Valley

6 t5
14 0

0
0

7 0 -

28
t4

s

s

A •
First Downs
Rushes-ya rds
f'Jassing yards
Total yards

Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost

Penalties-yard s
Punts-~vg .

RV
t3
46·t69
' 57
246
1-1 O· t
3-2
4-35
3·40.0

to
35 ·t 35

118
253
t 0-28- 4
3·0
t -0
1·30.0

. Individual Statistics
Rushing : Athens-Chris Stalder 22·
t02 , Mitch Spires t7-56 , Phillip
Hewitt 6-32, Adam Harris 3(- t ). ·
RV-Chris Edwards t 5· t30; Charley
Nibert 9-17 , Arthur Writesel 2-4,
Scotty Hunt t·t , Bryan Morrow 8(·
t7).

. PaSsing; Alt1ens-Adam Harris 1-

BY BRAD SHERMAN

10- t -57.
RV-Bryan Morrow t0·2 8-4-tt8 .

River Valley
HI
Rock Hill
t-4
South Point
1-4
Friday's Games
·Athens 28, River Valley 14
Chesapeake 45, Warren 6
Meigs 34, Fail'land 26
Vinton County 19. Coal Grove 0
Wellston 23, Rock Hill 6
South Point 35, Northwest 28

Southern 30, Hannan 6

6 0 0 0 6
7 8 t5 0 - 30
Scoring aummary
Firat Quarter
H
A- -Chris Carpinelli 22 block, punt
return (kick failed) 9:06 .
Ftrst Down:;
10
8
RV-G hris Edwards 1 run (Dernck
Ru shing yard s
78
266
Sm1th kick) 5:30.
Passing yards
48
28
. t06
RV-M ichael McGhee 5 pass from
Total yards
3t3
Bryan Morrow (Smith kick) :25 .
Comp-att-i nt
4-7·0
2·B·t
Second Quarter
Fumbles-lost
2· 1
2-0
A-Mitch Spires t r·uri (Ch ris Stalder Penalties-yards
t0·48
9-80
run) 6: t5 .
4-32
3-24
Punts-avg.
A-Phillip Hewitt 57 pass from
I
•
Adam Harris (Jared Wrer kick) :40.
Individual Statistics
Fourth Quarter
Rushing: H - Ala n Dye 10-38
A.:.Hewill 36 INT return (Wren kick) I - Jes se McKn1ght 9·1 Ot
.
5:25 .

Point slips past Generals·
sports@ mydailyregister.com

Kimes t-16

Hannan
Southern

minus-6 yards offensively.
The Cavaliers added three
more points just before halftime as Michael Perri booted
a 41-yard field goal with two
seconds left on the clock. The Chillicothe offen~e
added some insurance tor its
defense i'n the third when
Austin met up with Upshaw
for a 24-yard touchdown pass.
Gallia Academy will return
home thi s Friday as the Blue
Devils play host to Athens iii
a Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League opener.
Chillicothe
entertains
Grove City in Ohio Capital
Conference play.
.

ovc

PageB3

Prep Boxscores

Cavaliers .shut down
Blue Devil offen.se

tion."

tage with 4:23 left until the
half.
·On Fairland's next drive,
Meigs forced Hill into his third
. from Page 81
interception of the half when
Aaron Story stole the ball and
And the signs wete present gave the Marauders possession
early on that the Meigs defense at the MHS . 41 with 3:3 7
was ready for the challenge.
showing on the clock.
Fairland's opening drive saw
· Meigs knew it would have
Hill hit a pair of shllrt passes to one more opportunity to points
_
· STAFF REPORT ,
Falcons the three, possession edge.
,
sports@ mydailytribune.com
But in the second half, the Rebels made set up a third-and-three at the · on the boards off of a turnover,
sonie progress against the MHS defense Dragons, 35, when Josh and did exactly that with its
Kimes picked off Hill's third
drive.
The
MERCERVILLE ·_ The.; South Galli a . when Jonathan W~lls f?und _Stev_e Pelfrey attempt and ran the ball back to following
Marauders
chewed
up
3:27
on
football team fell to 0-4 on the season with a ;-v•th a 15-ya_rd sconng pass wtth 9.43 show- midfield.
a l~pla&gt;', 54-yard drive that
tng m. the thud quarter.
28-6 loss to Miller Friday night.
The Marauders following resulted m a 23-yard field goal
The Falcons (1-4) rallied around a 21-0 . lrwm had a 30-yard touchdown catc~ late drive stalled at the Fairland 20,
by Josh Buzzard:
halftime advantage to claim their first victo- tn the th1rd to round out the game sconng.
and the Dragons ltnveiled its
Bu~zard's kick gave Meigs a
ry of the season.
.
South Galha ~as l~mlled to 67 yards of high-powered offense in an
22-6 halftime advantage.
MHS ·opened the scoring in the first with a total offense, whtle Mtller amassed 366 total unconventional manner.
Fairland remained feisty in
A-IS ran the ball five straight · the second half, and its tenaci10-play, 77-yard drive that was capped off yards.
. .
.
.
by a 12-yard run by Zach Osborn with 4:19
Mauro fimshed the game w1th !54 ~ards , tjmes against a pass coverage ty paid-off at the 4:56 mark in
while Jordan Gottke paced Miller wllh _56 defense and marched 80 &gt;'ards the third period. Facing a
showing on the clock.
Miller added to its lead in the second yards on 21 totes. Irwm led the Falcons wtth in I :24 for the only score m the fourth-and-goal at the three,
opening quarter. A-23-yard run Hill found Wes Ripley on a
frame when Curt Mauro punched in a 2-yard four c~tche~ for 54 yards..
.
run with 9:28 remaining until halftime for a
No tnd!Vldual stats were avatlable for by Adam Fuller gave Fairland short out pattern to ,pull FHS
its only lead of the evening at back within !0 with · 4:56
14-0 advantage.
South Gallia at release time.
.
6-0.
.showing on the clock.'
J.R. · Irwin hauled in a hail mary touchThe Rebels take on Buffalo Putnam Frrday
After exchanging possesMeigs was forced to punt on
down catch at the halftime buzzer to give the at Mercerville.
··
sions to start the second frame, its following drive, but the
Meigs regained possession at Dragons fumbled the kick.
its .own 36. The Marauders
and 10, he recorded his third interception with used a six-play dtive, capried Brad Ramsburg came up with
a little over a minute remaining to secure the by a 35-yard touchdown run the loose ball and gave Meigs
possession at the FHS 18.
win for the Bulldogs.
·
.
by Josh Buzzard, to claim a 7- ·. Casey carried for paydirt
Athens opened the scoring early in the first 61ead with 8:08 left until halffrom PageB1
two ·plays later from 16 yards
quarter as Kurt Roberts blocked a Raider punt time.
out
and handed Meigs a com·and Chris Carpinelli recovered it 22-yards for
Fairland faced a critical fortable
Morrow was 10-of-28 passing for 118 yards, the score.
29-12 edge.
third-and-five on the following
but threw four interceptions, three .to Athens'
Fairland made one last surge
"Our defense made some big things hap- drive, but J.D. Adams thwarted
Phillip Hewitt in the fourth quarter.
early
in the fourth, when Hill
pen, including the punt block and we moved
Athens (l-4) was led on the ground by the ball well offensively well at times," said the Dragons' momentum with found Tmvis Cardwell on the
a big sack that dropped Hill for other end of a 50-y~ scroing
Chris Stalder with 22 carries for 102 yards Athens head coach Cory Miller.
an eight-yard loss and forced pass to put the Metgs lead to
and Mitch Spires had 17 carries for 56 yards
The Raiders bounced back later in the open- FHS to _punt.
and a TD.
29-18 wtth I0: 18 remaining.
A mmute-and-a half-later,
Early in the fourth, Edwards recovered a ing quarter with a !-yard TD run by Edwards
The Dmgons executed an
a 5-yard pass from Morrow to McGhe~ .
Meigs took control of the onside kick to perfection on
Bulldog fumble on the Athens· 28, giving the and
A pair of Athens' scores in the second quar- momentum and made it 13-6
Raiders another chance to tie the game.
the next play and took over
including a· 57-yard . pass from Adam when
quarterback
Eric possession at their own 38On the frrst play after the fumble, Edwards ter,
Harris to Hewitt with 40 seconds le(t in the Cullums went deep past two
ran the ball to the six.
first half, put the Bulldogs up 21-14 at the defenders to find Eric ,yard line.
River Valley., though, was pushed back to
Facing a third-and-goal at its
VanMeter for a 43-yard score own three, Fairland's last gasp
the 15 after a pair of fumbles recovered by the break.
"I am happy for our coaches and players,"
. Raiders. Two incomplete pa.sses later and said Miller on his team's first win of the sea- at5:13.
at a comeback took a big shot
plays
later,
Cullums
·Three
Athens got the ball back, surviving yet anoth- son. "They earned tonight's victory. ·lt is nice
when Eddie Fife dropped Hill
picked off a Hill pass at the for a 17-yard loss. Fairland
er scare.
to see them get rewarded for all the hard work FHS 38 and returned it back to
The nail in the coffin came midY•ay through they have been putting in."
didri't score on the next play
the endzone for a 19-6 advan- and the Marauders retamed
the fourth as the Raiders were trying to get
· River Valley opens play in the_Ohio Valley
another drive started,
Conference
this Friday as the Raiders travel
· On the Raider 33, Hewin pi&lt;;ked off a pass
to
Coal
Grove.
attd returned it for the score to make it a 28"We've got to look at it as 0-0," said Dee!.
14game.
·
"We've
got to get better, obviously. Last year
The Raiders, though, weren~t ·completely
we
were
5-0 going into the league. I told the
out of the game.
kids (last ye;tr) in the locker room (at
A 27-yard pass to Derrick Smith, who finished wtth four receptions for 59 'yards, and Southern) this doesn't mean a thing."
"All five teams in the league, we think, are
another 27 yard pass to Michael McGhee teams
we can play with."
gave the Raiders the ball on the Athens 22.
Athens
begins Southeastern Ohio Athletic
· Hewitt, though, struck again as, on third
League. play ~t Gallia Academy.

Chillicothe 17, Gallia Academy 0

The OVP

.

·pREP FOOTBALL

iunba~ ltm~ -6enttnel

Rio adds two more to Athletics Hall of Fame:

.I

Passing : H - JR . Smith 2-5- t 28.
Adam Lester 0·3·0 0
S- Derek Teaford 4·7·0 47
Receiving: H _: Dillon Sabolsky 228 .
S - Jake Nease 3·28, Josh Pape t ·
t9 . .

Chillicothe 17,
Gallla Academy 0
Gallia Acad .
Chillicothe

0
7

0
3

0
7

0 0 -

0
t7

Scoring summary
First Quarter
C-Clint Au Stin 3 run (M1chale Pem
kiCk) 4:34.
Second Quarter
C-Perri 4t FG . :o2.
Third Quarter
C-Quenton Upsha w 24 pass from
Austin (Pem kick) 6:3 3.

Receiving: Athens- Phillip ('ewitt t ·
Team Stalis.tlcs
WINFIELD
Point
57 .
Not avail.able
Pleasant's M &amp; M boys were
RV- Derrick Smith 4·59. Michael
wrapped up for most ,of
McGhee 3·34, Arthur Write sel 3·25.
Individual Statistics
Frida~·s game - but ditl not
Rushing: GA- Todd Saunders 4·20 .
Meigs 36, Fairland 24
melt tn the fourth quarter.
C-Mall weaver 7-77, Kevin Bass 15Fairland
6 0 8 .12 - 24
42, Brenlon Davidson 6-26.
Nathan Moore's one-yard
Meigs
o 22 7 7 - 36
touchdown plunge gave Point
Passing: GA-Jaymes Haggerty 5Pleasant the lead with I :02
Scoring summary
tS -2-4 7. Shaphan·Robinson t -3-0·4 .
remaining, then . his Big
First Quarter
C-Cfmt AuStin t0 -t9-0·t47 .
F-Adam Fuller 23 run (ki ck tailed)
Blacks held ·on for a 15-12
6:37
I Receiving : GA- Aushn King 2-30
.Cardinal Conference football
Second Quarter ·
I
C--:-:Ouenlon Upshaw 6· 76, Kevin
victory over Winfield.
M'-Jared Casey 35 run (Eric
Bass 3-65.
SEQ
All .
:rum
Poitll Pleasant improved to
Cullums kick) 8:08 .
M-:-Edc VanMeler 43 pass from
Jackson
0-0
5-0 2-0 in the conference, meanCullums (k1ck blocked)5 :t-3 .
while .snapping a two-game
Eastern 20, Belpre 0
Gallia Academy
o-o 2-3 losing
~utlums 38 yard interception
streak. Winfield is now
Eastern
14 0 6 0 - 20
return (pass failed) 4 23.
Athens
o-o 1-4 1-2 after losing its second
Belpre
0 0 0 0 - .0
M'-Josh Buzzard 23 field goat :tO.
LOgan
o-o 1-4 straight in the Cardinal; both
Third Quarter
Scoring summary
F-Wes Ripley 3 pass from Michael
teams
are
3-2
overall.
Marietta
o-o t-4
First Quarter
Hill (pass failed) 4 :56.
Moore, along with backE-Phil
Pierce
53 pass from Ken
Warren
M-Casey t6 run '(Buzzard kick)
o-o 1-4 field running mate Newton
Amsbary
(k.ick
fa
iled) 8:3t..
8:08.
Friday's Games
E-Bry~
n
Minear
27 run (M inear
Mattox:, carried the load on
Fourth Ouorter
run) 4:59
the
final
nine-play
scoring
·
F-Travis
Cardwell
50
pas
s
from
Hill
Chillicothe 17, Gallia Academy 0
Third Quarter
(pass tailed) 10: 18.
drive, which lasted four minAthens 28, River Valley 14
E-Bryce
Honaker
11 pass from
M-Cul1u ms 2 run (BUzz.ard kick)
utes and spanned 45 yards.
Amsbary (k1ck failed) tt 04.
Jackson 61 , Franklin Heights 33
2:09.
.
Point Pleasant coach Steve
Dublin Jerome 12, Marietta 0
F-Hilt 4 run (kick failed) :17 .
Safford
called his senior duo's
Chesapeake 45, Warren 6
E
B
fourth-quarter performance
Gahanna Lincoln 35, Logan 14
Firs1
Downs
13
9
F
·M
one of the best he has seen in
Rushes-yards
36·t22 37- t 09
First Downs
t3
t9
his 30 years at the school.
74 .
Passing yards
tOt
Rushes-yard s
26- t4 3 56·368
"They were running posTotal
yards
223
183
Passi'ng yards
240
9t
Ohio Division
sessed, there 's no question in .
Comp-att-int
t 0·23·2
6·10·0
459
Total yards
383
Fumbles·fost
3-0
5-2
my
mind
about
it,"
·said
the
4-t6·1
Comp-att-int
t
5·36·3
Illlm
r&amp; All
Penalties-yards , 2·9
6·56
Fumbles· lost
t·t
6·3
coach. 'They took it
Meigs
o-o 4-1 veteran
Point
Pleasant's
Brandon
Warner
(13) scores the twO:point conver· Penalties-yards 8·68
Punts-avg.
9·30.8 3-37 .6
6-50
upon their shoulders, they
5·33.6
3·~ t
Vinton County
o-o 4-1 were
going to get that ball in sion in front of Winfit:ld's Jarrod Anderson after his Big Blacks Punts-avg.
Individual Statistics
scored
the
go-ahead
touchdown
Friday
at
Winfield.
(Brad
Sherman)
.
Wellston
o-o +1 the end zone. There was just
Individual Statistics
Rushing : E- Bryan Minear t2-8t .
no denying them - they too~ The kicking portion of spe- the remainder of the game. Rushing: Fairland- Adam Fuller ts- Phil Pierce 9·34 . Chris Myers 3- tB.
Alexander
o-o 3-2 over
94. Michael Hill1t -49 .
. · B-Mal\ Alloway t 2-8t . Dust1n
~.nd everybody else cia! teams was again sound but that ended after a botched
o-o 3-2 caught fire with their efforts." for
J3elpre
Meigs-Jared Casey 31·224, Eric Adams 20·29.
Point Pleasant as well. hook-and -ladder gave the Cullums t0-50. Josh Buzzard 7-46.
Nelsonviie- Yor1&lt;
o-o 2-3 · Mattox finished as the Justin Lee, who is yet to miss ball away vi.a a fumble.
· Shawn Day 4-30 , David Poole 4- 18.
Passing: E- Ken Amsbary ,6-10.-0tOt .
game's leading rusher with an extra point kick, converted
.
'
Hocking Division
Point Pleasant's victory sets
I00 yards on 13 carries while his seventh PA.T of the season up a meeting between the .Passing: Fairland- Michael Hill 15- B-Luke Nolan 10-21· 1· 74. Duslin
r&amp; All Moore added 63 on 16 totes.
IHm
36-3·240.
Adams 0·2 +0 .
Ned Park averaged 35.5 Cardinal Conference's only Meig
s- Eric Cullums 4- 16- 1-91 .
Trimble
o-o 3-2 Their combined rushing total and
two unbeaten teams next
yards over his four punts.
Receiving: E- Ph 1l Pie rce 4·83 .
Eastern
o-o 3-2 was greater than the team's "We think the kicking game week at Wayne (5-0. 3-0 Receiving : . Fairland- Travis Bryce Honaker 1:.11, Chris Myers 1yard~ of total offense.
•
Cardwell 2·77, Sam Huff 4·63, Todd 7
and field position is very Cardinal).
Southern
o-o 2-3 155"We
turned what was a rel- important and that's why we. Winfield is idle this Friday, Maynard 2.·45 , We s Rip ley 3-32 .. B- Brandon, Smith 2-30, Alex Earley
Adam Fuller 4·23 . ·
o-o 1-3 atively miserable perfor- spend time on it," Safford but plays_ at Grafton Oct. 8.
2-25 , Josh Harvey 2·27 . Matt Litty I·
waterford
Meig s ~ Er ic VanMeter 3-75 . Josh
t 2.
Federal Hocking
o-o 1-4 mance offensively into a great added.
win," admitted Safford "It
Miller
o-o 1-4 didn't
Following Riffle's score, r:~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~:=::::::::::::::::=:::====:-1
look like it was going Winfield
drove all the way to
Friday's GarMS
to happen."
the Big Black two-yard line
Meigs 34, Fail1and 26
Safford's club ran jl)St 16 on its next possession before
Eastern 20. Belpre 0
plays in the first half and 25 costly penalties and a
~m 30, Hannan 6
through the first thr~ quar- turnover allowed the Mason
Yonton County 19, Coal Gf0\/9 0
ters, but did control the ball Countians to take. a 7-6 lead
Miller 28, South Gallia 6
,more than nine minutes in the into halftime.
Fooeral Hocking 18, Alexander 9
fourth quarter.
A delay of game, illegal
:rrimbte 19, Nelsonville-York 13
Winfield nearly doubled its procedure. and holding penalguests offensively, as it ty backed the Generals all the
!Nellston 23, Rock Hilt 6
amassed ·290 yards total. way back to the 22-yard line,
Saturday'• Game
Quarterback T.L. Asbury where they faced a 3rd-andf'ari&lt;msburg Cath. at Waterford
completed half of his 22 pass goal. Asbury floated a pass
attempts for 147 yards and a near the goal line where Seth
Caldlllll All touchdown. Rece1ver Wayne Beckner came away with the
Pritt caught eight balls for 116 interception.
·
'
3-0
5-0
'!'11¥'8
yards.
Garrett Watterson led the
'
2-0 3-2
Point Pleasant
Jarrod Anderson led a bal- Point Pleasant defense with
1-2 3-2 anced General running game I0 tackles .followed by Riffle
Winfield
'
1-3 with 53 yards. .Brett Paul~:y with 9.5. Bobby Errett had a
1-3
Sissonville
added 45 while Asbury solo sack while Kevin
. .
0-1 1-3 gained 48 yards and his Hudnall and John Hipes comHelbert Hoo\ler
. bined on another.
poca
0-1 1-3 team's first touchdown.
·
The Big Bl~cks' only other
Winfield reclaimed the lead ·
~·a.n­
score came vta spectal teams on its first drive of the second
Pcint PleaSant 15, Wll'lfietd 12
when Travis Riffle returned a half. Point Pleasant sophoWf¥'8 31, Sissonville 6
kick-off
92 yards for a touch- more quarterback James
1-iefbert Hoo\ler 35, Clay Counly 8
down.
Casto threw an interception
s.lunMy'l o.me
Riffle's return also provided on the first !?lay of the third
Mag;ooa 81 Poca. tate
an immediate answer for quarter, whtch set up the
Example: 2004 Sun.fire- Price $11,427'1. 72 montlls = $158.71 per mo11tll!
Wnfield's first score.
Generals' score.
Others
After Asbury capped a I 0"I think James Casto had
play second quarter drive his moments tonight in there'
with a 3-yard touchdown at quarterback," said Safford.
kee_PCr. the Point Pleasant "He made some · rookie misWaha/118
jumor kick returner found a takes, but then he made some
Symmes Valley
seam down the sideline and big plays too."
outran
the covemge team to · Casto was making only' his
Oak Hill
the end zone.
second-ever ··Start under cen- ·
. ~
"That was a designed ter; He completed one pass
~Galia
0-4
return," explained Safford. for .15 yards.
Frldly's o.n"We have worked on that, and . Winfield capped a 10-play
•
it is a big weapon for us - we drive with a 23-yard touchMiler 28, South Galia 6
had
·a couple big punt returns down pass from Asbury to
W8hllrl-. 29, Bullalo 15
too:'
Pritt. which made the score
Souttwn 30, Haman 6
The winners piled up ' 182 12-7. The Generals were on! y
lrortDn 34, PaU ~(Ky.) 7
return yards total.
·
abfe to sustairi one other drive
Symmes V811eJ 34, Oak HI 0

SEOAL

TVC

STARTING THIS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28

·cardinal

72 0

.0 :. ..- FiNANCING

on all remaining 2004 Pontiacs &amp; !!~~!~·

.

....•

,..::..

e~IQ""

. c·~~

-·

I

•

..

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 26,2004

iunbap ~imt~ -itntintl

National Football League

Local Sports Briefs

Palmer gets to
see another side
of Ray Lewis

Raiders third at Ohio Vall.ey
Conference golf meet

.

• BY JOE KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI - Moments
after they met, Carson Palmer
dropped into the push-up position so Ray Lewis could rest his
stocking feet .on the middle of
his back.
· As cameras rolled, the
Heisman Trophy quarterback
became a footstool for the
NFL's · most dominant linebacker, who was treating him
like a rookie as part of the
script.
Palmer was about to become
the first overall pick in the 2003
draft. Lewis was making the
ofibeat commercial for a video
~arne company to refurbish his
· unage.
· They hit it off.
"He was great," Palmer said.
"He's funny. He's an intense
guy on and off the field."
Palmer has no idea just how
intense. He'll learn Sunday.
Instead of restins; JUs feet on
the Bengals' startmg quarterback,- the Ravens' All-Pro linebacker would rather dig his
shoulder pads into his ribs- or
maybe return one of his passes
for points.
"'Illis time he'll be coming at
me," Palmer said, intrigued by
the thought.
How painfully they meet will
help decide how their reunion
tuJ'ns out. A pair of 1-1 teams
know they need to keep their
second-year quarterbacks out of
. harm's way to have a chance to
win.
·
·
For Baltimore, that means
making sure Kyle Boller doesn't have another meltdown like
the one last year at Paul Brown
Stadium, where he fumbled
. twice and threw an ·interception
that set up a 34-26 Bengals win.

'

I.

For Cincinnati, it means making sure Lewis and Co. don't
get clean shots at Palmer, who
was sacked ftve times and
threw an interception during· a
16-13 win over Miami on
Sunday night.
It could very well come down
to which young quarterback
flinches first- or wmces most.
And the defenses know it.
"I think you always look for'
ward to it, for a lot of.different
reasons," Lewis said. "When
you have the veteran-type
defense that we have, we can
give him a lot of differeot looks
and make him think a little bit.
We're definitely ~oing to _try to
put pressure on htm."
Few teams do it better than
the Ravens, who delight in tormenting newcomers. Last
Sunday, th ey t00 k advantage 0 f
Ben
Roethlisherger,
Pittsburgh•s rookie quarterback.
Roethlisberger took over
when Tommy Maddox hurt his
elbow in the second half and
threw two interceptions that
sealed Baltimore's 30-13 win.
Palmer has more time in the
leas;ue - he sat and watched
dunng his rookie season _ but
only two games of experience.
He spent a good qeal of the off·season watching film of · the
Ravens' defense, learning each
player's role.
Studying it is one · thing.
Staring it down is another.
"It's tough playing a!lainst
this defense, especially tf he
gets down and has to stage a
comeback," cornerback Deion
Sanders said. 'That's goin~ to
be a lot of pressure on him nght
now.
"He's young, being conserva·
tive with the offense and trying
to make his correct reads, doing
little things and not trying to
accomplish too much. That's

going to be tough for any quarterback, · not just Carson
Palmer."
·.
The same goes for Boller,
who has a few more starts to his
credit, but is still taking baby
steps in his development- and
the Bengals know it.
After a horrid opener against
the Jets, the Bengals' defense
blitzed inexperienced Dolphins
quarterback A.J. Feeley and
pressured him ~nto game-turnmg mtstakes. Lmebacker Bnan
Simmons returned an interceP.tion 50 yards for Cincinnatl's
only touchdown, taking advantage of Feeley's sense of
urgency to make a play.
"From tilm, we saw that he
likes to stare down the receiver,
so I just read the quarterback,"
s·munonssat.
'd .
·
Both defenses will have a few
· ks
tnc and a lot of blitzes ready
Sunday.
"Conventional thinking is,
'He's a young guy, let's blitz
him,:" Ravens coach Brian
Billick said. "Our philosophy is,
'0ld, young, it .doesn't matter.
Let's blitz him.'
"There are certain things
you're going to test a young
player with that you mi~t be
more cautious . with agamst a
veteran. But we're not going to
be imprudent about it."
There's a good chance at
· some point Palmer will get
reacquainted with his footstool
buddy. When they shot the
commercial last year, Palmer
hadn't yet been drafted by the
Bengals.
Lewis left him with somethirig to think about.
·
"I think he said something
about, 'You'll have to face me
twice a year if you go there,"'
Palmer recalled. "But he's a
classy guy."

The boys junior high team was fo11rth, led
by Timmy Huffman, who finished 20th.

. STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
GALueous -The River valley golf
~~;:}e~~~~h~~e:~ird ;~t the Ohio Va,lley
The Raiders; with a 379, finished behind
Chesapeake (335), which won the league
title for the second-straight year, and South
Point (339). Rock Hill was fourth.
P.J. Rase was top medalist with a 77,
while teammate Trent Finley and South
Point's Justin Lewis each shot 80,
River Valley's Randall ShaJTett was fQurth
with an 81. _
Also for the Raiders, Craig Barker shot
101, Justin Nolan (103), Bruce Stout (103)
and Joe Hager (109). '

Blue Devils beat Raiders
. in ninth~g~ade game

CHESHIRE - Keeping aliv.e the last of
the in county football rivalries, the Gallia
Academy ninth grade football team defeated
River Valley, 14-12 .
.
Blue Devil tailback Chris McCoy got the
scoring started in the .first series from scrimmage, when he took a hand off righl, busted
through the line and cut outside for a score
that was over 50 yards long.
The Raiders answered right back with a
score of their own .
The Devils came back and scored on their
next possession with McCoy again punching it in for the Devils. The two-point try by
McCoy was good as he took it around left
end . The scoring drive was kept alive on
CHILLICOTHE - The Gallia Academy third and long with a Jeff Golden to Nick
golf team defeated Chillicothe in a dual Stevens pass that resulted in a first down.
The Devils led 14-12 at the half.
match, 174-189. .
'
Gallia
Academy travels to Ironton
. Greg Russell was medalist for the Blue
Thursday.
Devils with a 39.
Also ~or Gallia Academy, Matt Wiseman
and Tyler Houck each shot 44 and Andy Noe
47. Kyle Hunter and Travis Stout each shot
51 and Keegan Angel 63.
Nathan Martin led the Cavaliers with' a 46.
POMEROY - Aaron Cordell rushed for
162 yards in 14 carries and added three
touchdowns as the Meigs eighth grade football team defeated Nelsonville 26-6.
Cordell scored on runs of eight, 70 and 23
yards.
Corey Hutton added 37 yards on the
JACKSON - The "Gallia Academy' girls
cross country team finished seventh at the ground including a 15 yard touchdown run
for the Marauders.
..
,
Jackson Invitational.
,
Quarterback
Clay
Bolin
passed
for
nine
Warren was first with 60 points, followed
yards and added a two point conversion run.
by Athens (66) and Zane Trace (67).
Carol Fahmy .waS the top runner for the Mason Metts led the Meigs defense that
Blue Angels, finishing 16th with a time of held the Buckeyes to 116 total yards.
23:16.
1
Also for Gallia Academy, Lindsay
Caldwell (25:11) was 37th, followed by
Tiffany Sanders (41st, 25:40), Jessica Willet
(57th, 27:48), Hannah Roush (65th, 28:59)
,
and Danielle Sanders (78th, 30:38).
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia· Academy
On the boys ·side for Gallia Academy, ninth grade volleyball team defeated
Shane Plantz (19:53) was 24th, followed by Jackson, 25-16, 25-3.
Katie Taylor had nine points for the Bille
Chris Canaday (46th, 20:98) and Eric Hill
(92nd, 24:33). ·
Angels (7-2), while Lindsey Niday and
The Gallia Academy girls won the junior Lauren Saunders each tallied seven points.
high meet, led by Lauren Adkins (12:28)
with a first place showing., her fifth straight
(E-mail us- your sports news to
of the ye3f. Lee Ann Townsend was third sport.1®mydailytribune.com, or fax it to
and Andrea Wiseman ninth.
446-3008.)

Gallia Academy
golfers beat' Chillicothe

Meigs eighth grade
boys pound Bucks

Angels compete at
Jackson Invitational

Angel ninth-grade
netters defeat Jackson ·

Browns injuries and
Garcia concern Giants
BY TOM CANAVAN

Associated Press
_EALooSTkinRgUTHEdownRFOtheCRD!ev'e!Nand.J.
· Browns'l~ngthy injury report, it
would be easy for the New York

~'to~~~~Jee~~da

Four Br:owns starters, includ-

ing rookie tight end Kellen
Winslow and defensive end
Courtney Brown, are out, and
both starting comerbac~ are
questionable for Sunday's game
· at Giants Stadium.
· Can anyone say, "Letdown?"
That's the biggest conoem for
. the Giants (1-1) coming off a
20-14 win over W:~
n thai
· ,_,__
gave Tom Coughlin
hin his . t .reg·
......-season coac g wm smce
. taking over the team in January.
. "I don't think we need to be
: reminded of anything after
. going 4-12 last year," , Giants
veteran receiver Ike Hilliard
said. "We are hungry for wins,
: whether the team we are playing
: is banged up or they have all
· their weapons."
: Nevertheless, Hilliai-d and
· other Giants veterans-have made
a point iO refu:sh everyone's
memory about last~ear and to
. point out that Je Garcia is
: ~uarterbacking the Browns (1: ).
: What's important ,.about last

year is that there were a couple
of games the Giants s.hould have
won under similar circumstances ·and dido 't. The most
obvious was against Atlanta.
The Falcons came to Giants
Stadium without quarterback
'Michael Vick and crushed New
York 27-7 with Kurt Kittner at
·the helm.
Seeing Garcia at quarterback
for Cleveland is a little scarier.
The last time he went againSt
New York, he ralliCd the San
Francisco 49ers from a 38-14
second-half deficit to a 39-38
win in the first rolmd of the
playoffs in 2002.
"How can you forget !halT'
Giants safety Shaun Williams
said. "It was the second bi~t
· ptayor
1a ff hisrory, t•s
corneback 10
definitely sorilething you don't
forget about."
Garcia
ft
·
probably eels like ~
has something to prove after hitting 8 of 27 passes for 71 yards
and three interceptions in a 19-'
12 loss to Dallas last weekend.
His 0.0 rating marked only the
fifth time since
_ 1970thataquar•-'---k
that bad.
"'"""' was
·~ took P.~ l~t weekendtsreallynotmdicallveofmc
-as a qtll!l!e1'baclc nor of this
team and the character thai this
team has as far as the offense is
concerned," Garcia said.
Bro\vns. cornerback Daylon
McCutcheon, who is battling a

broken finger, predicted that
Garcia will rebound.
"I rode on the bus next to him
after the game and he was
alreadv ready," McCutcheon
said. •(He was like, 'Man.' He
wanted to get back on the prac·
tice field and go out there and
have a better aame. I think he'll
go out there wtth fire and I think
he'll go out there and play well."
Garcia will be facing a.
defense thai seemingly foupd ·
itself IIISt weekend against
Washington. New York forced
seven turnovers, its most in a
non-strike game since 1986.
Linebacker Barrett Green
scored on a fumble return .and
Kurt Warner and the offense
added 10 points after two of the
other turnovers.
_
However, the offense left
points on the field with an ane·
mic running g~ ~ a couple
of passes thai JUSt mtSSed.
Warner, who was 22 of 33 for
232 ,Yards. said no one is overlooking the Browns, especially
sinoe their defense has allowed
an average of only II pom''ts. ·
. "You never want to be in a
place where Y.OU get a false
sense of secunty when somebody has been injured," Warner
said. "I have been on so many
teams where a syperstar or two
g~ hurt and the team plays bet·
ter than they had up to thai point
with those guys."
·

STAFF REPORT
aportsOmydallytrlbune.com

After.struggling with the excessive rainfall
and humid conditions this spring/summer the
OVAA finished up the season.
: ' There were 13 boys "B-ball" (minor league)
-teams this year.
: The regular season standings are listed :as
: follows:
'
Ftnt place - Green2 (head coach William
, Powers); second place - Gallipolis2 (head
coach Kevin Eastman); third place - Rio
. Grande (head coach Jane Brandeberry); fourth

I

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place - Hannan Trace (head coach Jeff
Sloan); fifth place - Southwestern ·(bead
coac(l Jerrod Bll!'ber); sixth place c- Bidwell! '
(head coach Don Mays); seventh place - ·
Green! (head coach Russ Layne); eighth
place - Ou Hill (head coach Billy Potter);
ninth place - Vinton (head coach Billy
!-larless); I Oth plaee - Gallipolis 3 (head
coach Steve Hawkins); . I Hit place Gallipolis l (head coach Stephen Henry); 12th
place - Bidwell2 (head coach Larry Carter);
13th place - Addaville (head coach Bub
Williams). ·
Season tournaments were hosted by
Southwestern.

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NASCAR WEEKEND

PageBs
Sunday,September 26, 2004

Earnhardt on top after first round of·Chase
•

much, because we still have a long
Headed into Dover. there are seven more re;pect than I ·nonnally get. con;ecutiw race' becau'c ' the pain
way to go. But it sure beats being any- viable championship contenders. Eamhardt &gt;aid. "Some guys aren' t from hi' bum' w;b 'o intethe. and hi'
where else in the standings."
Trailin,g the leaders are: Jeff Gordon. going to c;hange . You could -paint team struggled to create setu p&gt; he was
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -.
Dale
The flmt round of NASCAR's 10- Man Kenseth. Jimmie Johnson. , the&gt;;e walls hlack. and there are some m mfonable with .
Eamhardt Jr. is back on top Of the driver, JOcrace playoffs didn 't pro- Ell ion Sadler. Mark. Martin. ·then guys that wouldn't know the di tTer· · B\ the ''an of Au 2u,1. hi' sea,on
ence . But ,ome of the guys out ther. "a; in ,e, ere jeopardy. He was
potnts standmgs for -the first time in duce any major shakeups in the stand- Stcwan. Newman and Mayfield.
But bad luck striking th;ee con- know what's going on. They know Jod.ed into a 'POl in the champithree months. How long he can stay ings after the first round.
tcnders
in one event has created jiners who is in the Chase. and I think they onsh ip chase. but didn 't consider hinv
. there remains tp be seen..
. .
Busch was the big mover, vaulting
among
some
of the other candidates. give you respect for that, I gue&gt;S. self a legitilllate contender.
. NASCAR's most popular driver seven spots to the top after winning at
"It 's survival. anything can hap- Some guys don"t."
Hi&gt; win at Bri,tol changed that.
· moved' into a tie with Kurt Busch for New . Hampshire
International
pen,"
Johnson
said.
"You've
got
guys
The
re•ult
was
a
perce
ived
"
II 'taned to grow rig ht ·at the
the series lead in NASCAR's nel.\- Speedway,
·
out
there
and
everybody
has
their
own
increased
intensity.
Eamhardt
said.
Bristol.
win. Wh~n mv Jegs weren't
championship format. His four victoThree drivers saw their champiagenda
and
everybody
is
trying
hard.
But
he
admits
he's
been
a
little
on
'
f
eeling
too
good. I reail\' didn 't walll
ries 1o Busch's three give Earnhardt onship hopes hindered: Tony Stewart
the edge in a tiebreaker, but it doesn't and Jeremy Mayfield - casualties in It's just no fun when somebody that edge since hi s Aug. 2~ wi n at Bristol. to be - in the rae&lt;' car. That worried
: really matter.
a wreck intentionally caused by. isn't in the points banle makes a mis- which snapped a six-week slump for me." he ,aiel. "But we got through the
summer and we111 back to Bri,tul anJ
Under thi s system, the standings Robby Gordon and Ryan take and take's everybody out. but him.
that's
the
risk
you
take."
After
opening
the
season
with
a
won that race. We had such a gooJ
can !lip in a single race and Eamhardt Newman, who was done in by a
Although E&lt;m1hardt stayed out of Daytona)()() victory. Earnhardt added · weel-.end wi nni n~ the Busch race and
· could eastl y be in IOth following blown ~ngine.
. .
trouble
at New Hampshi re. he saw on two more wins by early May that put the Cup race. it ~~·a, instantly a huge
Sm1day"s race in Dover Del
. Stewart plu~meted four spots to
several
occasions
how quickl y the car him on top of the points , landings. jump in contidence .
"It's kt.nd (Jl- mce
· 1o be
' 1ea·'ct.mg the etghth,
124
behmd
the
N
· pomts
·
d
- leaders.
· Ot
"We're . in a · streak where we' re
points again. even though I'd prefer to
t;,wma~ ts mnth, an Maylteld I h. ne xt to him can make one slight mO)'C But he lost the lead by June. and bums
that
could
instantl
y
,lake
him
out
of
he
suffered
when
he
crashed
while
going
to fi ni, h thi' 'eason out prett y
~
b
It'..
E
h
d
I
don
t
thmk
any
of
us
are
gomg
to
.
be Up the ' " Y myse '
1
am
ar
t
11·
"
St
·
'd
"Th·
·
the
hum.
.
pructici11g
for
a
non-NASCAR
race
spectacularly.
and hopefully with the
. : said: 'To lead the points tliis early in ge mu tgans,
ewart sm . . ,tt s
people
I
was
around
raced
me
harmed
the
No.
R
Chevrolet
team.·
championship.
I reall y feel like we
'·
'
The
the Chase probably_ doe . 't . th t . probab_ly gomg to take us out of the
.
. sn mean a champJOnshtp."
. with maybe a minimal amount of
Eamhardt needed a relief dri ver in can win it."
BY JENNA FRYER

Associated Press

.Competing . .. Mayfield wins pole in Dover
~e
team mates 'stIll
.work together
• t•tI h
In I e C ase
I he points thai were taken away "I think
can win again.'' .
from us last week."
Ne\V'man , who (ell 136
Maytield said a top stwling points off the pace, is not conDOVER, Del. _ Jeremy spotonanarrowandtreacher- cemedabouthis engine.
Maytield-won the pole in qual- ous tri1ck such &lt;,IS Dover is
·'We realize what haplx;!'ed.
extremely valuable.
and we fixed the thmg. he
ifying Friday at Dover
"Hopefully, that's going to said.
lntemational
Speedway. keep us out of trouble," he said.
A surprising third in qualifyfh'~:in~er~~~~ ~~n~a~edre~i~ " You have a Jx:~ter shot to stay ing was rookie Brian Vickers.
.
. h
. h out of a wreck.
He dJd II 111 a backup car after
champtons111 P opes 111 t e
Maytield s~id the leadership crashing in practice. His
.
Nextel Cup series~
f
R E
h
Ch
, ,
M f ld
hd I
o car owner ay vem am
evro1et went 1·' 8 --' 46 .
ay te
eras e
ast and the motivation of the team
"We didn't get it back to
Sunday at New Hampshire help him stay confident.
where the first one was, but we
after Robby Gordon intention.
''If we were going to quit we got it cl6S)l.'' he said. "When I
ally spun Greg Bi ffie. A titmsh could have done that before saw the guys working as hard
of 35th left Mayfield 142 R' I
d" l
'd
th
I
h'
·
points behind co-leaders Kltrt
IC 11110n ' le Sat .
as ey were saw t IS commg.
Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr. . Mayfield got hi s only victory
"] was just hoping for a solid
of the season there two weeks starting spot. But we wound up
after the first of I 0 races
. ago, and that got him into the with a great starting spot."
·
among the top I 0 cIlampt- top J0. ·
Elliott Sadler, sixth in the
on ship contenders.
Busch. . who won the points race, was foutlh-fastest
But Mayfield won't curse his Sylvania 300, qualified 13th in a Ford at 158.249.
bad luck.
Friday. Eamhardt wound up _ Michael Waltrip, and t'oi·mer
"We kind of ]ike being the
, h
'd "W ,
16th on the 43-car ~rid.
series champions Bobby
un derdog, c Sat .
e rc
"I was happy With the first Labonte and Rusty Wallace .
going to fight it out to the end." lap.- but on the second we got held down the next three
On Sunday, he won't qualify pretty loose," Earnhardt said. sports. Reigning series chamas anything but the favorite in ''Sometimes it's like tunning pion and top- I 0 racer Matt
the MBNA4;00 after taking the
~
across railroad tracks."
Kenseth was next.
pole with ea~e. He go! around
Ryan Newman. aloo unlucky
Jim1i1ie Johnson. also in the
The Monster Mile at 159.405 in New Hampshire, where he championship chase, qual illed
mph, giying him a qualifying blew an engine late in the ntce. ninth, . followed by Jamie
sweep this year on the high- . was second-fastest. His Dodge McMumty.
banked concrete oval.
k
got around the track at
Chase participant Mar .
"Any time you ha~e a race 159.018.
Martin , who won here lor the .
track you run pretty gocid at
"We'll J·ust have to see what fourth time in June. goes from
you 're COnfident," he said.
we .can make the thing do in the 12th spot. Jeff Gordon, also
"Now we've just got to go Out race trim," said Newman, who a four-time Dover winner will
and win the race and get back won both .races here last year. stmt 21 st.

BY DICK BR.INSTER

Associated Press

:
·
:

_

.

BY MillE HARRIS

·. rookie
Carl
Edwards:
"We've done that the I ast
few years since, as a company, we had a terrible year in
In ari age of multicar teams
200
I."
dominating
NASCAR 's
: Nextel Cup series, it isn't' Fou,r-time series champion
; surprising that half the ·field Gordon and . Johnson; who
' for the new I 0-man. I0-race has only been in Cup races
for three years , have not
· champion ship flayoff fea - faced the struggles the
tures two sets o teammates .
Kurt Busch, Matt Kenseth Roush drivers did, but they
and Mark Martin drive for are equally free with their
: Roush · Racing, while Jeff information sharing.
"Our teams work the way
: Gordon and Jimmie Johnson
they
work and this is really
: are.
with
Hendrick
the
only
way we know to go
: Motorsports.
about it," said Gordon,
There would seem to be a whose Cup teeymmates also
: delicate balance when team- include Terry Labonte and
. mates compete against each rookie Brian Vickers.
other on the racetrack, partic"During the . week. the
ularly when it's for a title. guys
in the shop sometimes
: How much information do
don't
know whose car
; you share? How much help they even
are working on,"
: do you offer on or off the Gordon added. "When we
· track 7
get to the racetrack, it's an
· According . to the drivers open-book
policy of infor. involved, there 's no problem mation. We know what every
· at all .
Hendrick car has underneath
• "We're going to work
; together six days out of the it."When we' re on the race·
:week and we 're going to race track, we're competitors. We
· on the seventh ," said Busch want one of us to win this
after he and Kenseth finished champtons
· · h'tp. But, as. f'ar as
. 1-2 last Sunday in Round sharing information as to
: One of the playoff at New what the cars are doing, I
· Hampshire
International d • h' k h •
·
: Speedway. "I definitely think on t t 10 t at s ever gomg
to change because I' m going
:teammates will help.
to help him to confirm what
· 'We"ve got three cars in the I'm r;loing and vice versa. It
final chase for the Cup and I helps both of us out and
· think we've done an excel- · helps both of our cars go
lent job as a team balancing faster."
· the different characters and
Going into Round Two of
: the different ways of creating the title showdown, Sunday
:a seiUp for each driver."
at Dover, Del., Busch is. in a
: Until the last 10 ·years or first-place tie with Dale
[·so, it would have been virtu- Earnhardt Jr.. just ahead of
: ally unthinkable for teams Gordon ,
Kenseth
and
and drivers to share inform a- Johnson. Behind them are
: tion. Racing was a fraternity Elliott Sadler, Martin, Tony
· filled with secrets and with Stewart, Ryan Newman and
: competitors trying to get a Jeremy Mayfield.
: leg up on everyone else.
Each of them has at least
: "We never sh&lt;tred nothing one teammate, though none
: if we could help it," said of the others are involved in
lon~time stock car king the
championship . . And
Richard Petty; who won teammates aren't always a
. seven championships and big help. ·
- 200 races in a career that
At
New
Hampshire,
: ended in 1992. " It was hard Earnhardt was upset with
: enough to stay ahead of the · DEI teammate Michael
: competition for •even a httle Waltrip for racing Junior
: while without telling some- hard late in the race when
body else what you were Earnhardt, who finished
. doing.
third, was trying to catch
: "And nobody really want-· Kenseth.
"I was upset by it,"
: ed teammates much."
: Now, just about everybody Earnhardt sat d. "I'm sure
· has at least one teammate, Michael didn't mean any: and It's considered a plus by thing by it. I'm sure he was
most.
,
just trying to race and 'do
"There aren ' t a lot of what you do; I needed a little
-· : secrets anymore, anywa~," help there and I expected to
:said Chad Knaus, crew chtef get a little and I didn't get
·for Johnson . "The teams all any."
··
: work too close together in
When· that situation was
: the garage, and we stay at mentioned to team owner
: the same hotels. and eat in Jack Roush, he replied that
the same restaurants and he hopes there wll be noth·
. people move from team to lng like that gol ng on among
: team. Information gets hla drivers, whom he expects
·
1o race each other - and
• uround ."
: . Still, how much do you everyone else - hard and
• share with your teammate clean.
: when you're trying to beat
"There's no expectation
that anybody wins or that
them?
\
"We share all our lnformu- anybody would (lUll over for
: tlon at Roush." said Kenseth, anybody else," Roush said.
: whose Cup teammates also "I just hope thai none of the
include Greg Biffle and guys take one another out."
Associated Press

,.,

l

;

I

'I

•

I

\

i

'

•.
I'

.

.

MBNA America 400 ·

syThoA~::~!\ec~Prooo

Alter Friday qualllylng; race
Sunday
At Dover ':;:.:::.emotional
Dovar, Del.

, 119 ) Ja~:~)~:1:~ 1 ~ .o':ge

2.(12) Ryan Newman, Dodge
3. (251 BrianViCkers Chevrolet
4. (381 Elliott Sadler, Ford
s. ll51 Michael Waltrip, Chevro)et
6. (18) Bobby LatonJe. Chevrolet
7· 121Rusty Wallace. Dodge
a. (171 Matt Kenserh. Ford
9. (48) Jimmie Johnson. Chevrolet
1o. (42) Jamie McMurray, Oodga
11 .(88)DaleJarrett. Ford
12. (6) Mark Martin, Ford
13. (97) Kurt .Busch, Ford
14-(21J Ricky Rudd. Ford
15 (99) Carl Edwards, Ford
ts. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr.. Chevrolet
17. (O) Ward Burton, ChevroleJ
18. (10) Scott Riggs Chevrolet

~~: grk~;:~ ~~~~~Fg;,~ge

2'-1241Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet
22.(32) BobbyHamillon Jr, Chevrolet
23. (20) Tony Stewarl. Chevrolet
24. (01) Joe Nemeche&lt;. Chevrolet
25.ln) Brendan Gaughan Dodge

~~:

~~-~~~~ ~~=rt~nugn~~rfn~o~~;~

35. (37) Kevin Lapage. Dodge
36. 141 Jimmy Spencer, Chevrolet
37. (51) TonyRaines, Chevrolet
38. (51 Tarry Labonte, Chevrolet
39· (SOl Jeff Fuller. Dodge
40. (09) Joe Aultman. Dodge
41 . (98) Geoffrey Bodine, Ford
42 · 189) Morgan Shepherd
43. (72) Kirk snetmerdine. Ford

'

D.

c::.::;:,_AN AMERDW.R:wt.UTIW

Gallipolis Hometown Dealer

GENE JOHNSON
CHEVROLET
.7 40-446-3672

"Call us for
thl ~1St .
deals and

service"

(!;\~;~~~.~~-a~~dga

2B. (43) Jeff G•ean:Dodga ·
29. (221 Scott Wimmer Dodge
30. (291 Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet
31. (491 Ken Sch111dar. Dodge
32 (31) RobbyGordon. Chavrolel

I

0

·

�OUTDOORS

6unbap li.- -ientind

w-

Weekly Ohio·fishing report

allUMBUS. Ol1io (APl - The weeki';
fioNng ,...,., pruyidod by lt1o DMsion ol
of 1t1o ~ Department of Natural

ctosety related species. known as a r.edear
sunfish. often average 9 to 12 rnches
Pmmrll$. JJ9S. and maQ90t5 are good barts

Resources.

Pundet500 lake jGeauga County) Ba:ss saes range from 9 to 12 •nches.
Al.lbbef worms or mght crawters WOlk well.

C'ENTRAL OHIO

oe... c... Lak8 (Madison. Fayene. .and

~•

flY counties) - FIStl woody areas
ttwooghout the lake using a jtg or rnnnow
euspended by a bobber. Remember that
crappie from Deer Creek Lake must be
nine inct\eS ·or longer to keep Channel
catfish can be caught in the upper end of
the lake using chiCken livet, night crawlers.
shrimp or other cut bait. late_in the month.
saugeye can ~ caught after dark on the
dam using crank baits.
Hargus Creek Lake {Pickaway County)
- Areas around the island and shoreline ·
areas that haw submerged stn.JCiures Or
aquatic vegetation are good places lo f1sh
kM' largemouth bass. Use soft plastiC ba1ts
and liYe bait during the morn1ng and early
evening. TOOre •s a 15-mch mm1mum
length limit for · largemouth •n Hargus
Creek Lake. Use traditional baits such as
night crawlers and chicken livers fist1ed
akmg the bottom when seeking channel
catfish. Bluegills may be taken on small
worms and larval baits from most · shore·
line areas. Electric motors only.
NORTIIWEST OHIO
Pleasant Hill Aes~ rvo1r (Rich land
County) - For crappie, anglers are usmg
· mmnows fished under slip bObbers 1n
water down near the dam. Channel Catfish
up to 20 pounds are being caught on shad
or minnows and drifting in a rboat. Catch
some saug&amp;ye on by dr11t lishmg the shad
or minnows.
Clear Fork Reservoir (Richland County)
-Crappie fishing has been very good late
In the afternoon until dusk. Fish with minnows along the weed beds near the sa1l
bOat dub. Clear Fork is also eKcellent to
catch largemoultl baSs and muskie. ·
Char1es Mill Reservo1r (Richland County)
- Fish tor channel catfish from shore and
boa!. Shrimp or cut baits have worked the
best. Boat a.nglqrs should fish for hybrid
stripped bass or t~rgem9uth bass. For
largemouth bass, fish the structure near
the shoreline, and for hybrid stripped bass
,
drift the deep water.
K!lld8er Reservoir (Wyandot County) Walteye ~ 5 to ~ 8 inches are hitting on
night crawlers or teaches fished around
th~ lslands. Perch colored crank bai ts
have also b&amp;en successful.
Van Wert Reservoir No. 2 (Van Wert
County) - Smattmoutt1 bass are hitting a
variety of baits. Try casting lures or night
crawlers along the north dike.
NORTHEAST OHIO
La Due Reservoir {Geauga County) Bass measuring i2 to 151nches will hit on
spinner baits, rubber worms , or crank baits
while walleye are biting on weight forward
spinners and small jigs with night crawlers.
Electric motors only.
Mogadore Reservoir ·(Portage County)
- Bluegill average about 7 inches. but a

Bluegill &amp;-plus rnches are bltrng on magQOtS, red worms. or wax worms. Hundreds
of catchable rainbOw trout will be stocicecr

DALLAS (AP) - Lance
Armstronll 's
management .
agency saJd it provided clean
drug test results more than a
month ago to a company withholding a $5 milhon bonus
owed Armstrong for winning a .
record sixth straight Tour de
·
France.
"Lance has made it unambiguously clear that he does
not use, nor has he ever used,
performance-enhancing
drugs," said a statement issued
Friday night by Capital Sports
and Entertainment, the Austin,
Texas-based agency that manages Armstrong's U.S, Postal
Cycling Team. 'The baseless
\lfld mean-spirited doping allegations agaJnst Lance are not
supported by any facts."
lri refusing to release the
money, . SC~ Promotions Inc.
of Dallas has cited allegation~
in a French book that
Armstrong used performanceenhancing drugs and said the
company needs to investigate .
the claims by reviewing
Armstrong's medical records.
Chris Compton, an attorney
for SCA, told The Associated
Press on Thursday, "We've
iequested (drug) test results to
llisprove the allegations - ·
clean test results that should be
easily attainable."
B.ut Friday's statement refut~d what the management
agency labeled "SCA's disingenuous and · self-serving
quote."
"SCA is not interested in
valid arid authenticated 'testing
results,"' the statement said,
clairniri_g it provided that documentatiOn to SCA in midAugust.
.
Rather, SCA has demanded
''every medical record and
medical provider of Mr.
Armstrong; his complete medical history; all records of all
Armstrong's
past
bonus,
llwards; and all contracts"
!nvolving Armstrong and a
number of individuals and
entities, the statement said.
: A telephone message seekjng a respOnse from SCA was
not immediately returned
Friday night.
SCA points to doping allegations contained in "L.A.
Confidential, the Secrets · of
Lance Armstrong," published
jn June by La Martiniere.
Armstrong has denounced the
. book's claims as "absolutely
untrue" and launched defamation lawsuits against the pubUsher and autliors.
I

Cl

2004

Wood
ducks
anchor
I
d
k
ear
y
uc
season
~·=.~ ,=:.;:~~:: :~~~~~ ..
. . .
. .

stagE! as the resutt ol heatiy ra•ns thiS past
weekend Unsafe travel conditiOnS andtor

road

closmgs

•n

most areas is prevalent

·

ckls•f\95.
belo1e
travetlng.reports• and road
Chec;t( local
coodibon

BY JciHN McCov

rn thrs lake near the Thanksgrvmg holiday
SOUTHWEST OHIO

Associated Press
C HARLESTON . W.Va. When
West
Virl!inia 's
hunters )·enture atleld~Ot t. I
to open ihe duck season.
most of them will have one
species on their minds:
:Wood ducks .
'Td estimate that 75 percent or more of the ducks
harveste&lt;i early in the season
are wood ducks." says Steve
Wilson. waterfowl biologi st
for the state Division of
Natural Resources.
"At that time . of year,
hunters will take a few teal , a
few mallards and maybe a
few birds from some other
species. but mo$t of the·
action is for wood ducks.''
The main reason for thin
harvest-rate disparity is the
sheer number of wood ducks
available to Mountain State
sportsmen.
"Woodies are definitely
our most abundant waterfow l species." Wilson says.
The tree- loving little d.ucks
are right at home on West

,cattered thro ughout the
property. Sportsmen who
visit Green Bottom must
sio n in at the WMA's office
be"fore proceeding into the
nea rby duck swamp.
Though some hunters prefer to decoy wood ducks as
they fly from one area to
another. Wilson says floating
and jump shooting are the
most popular techniques.
.. Ir you really know the
stream you're floating. you
can actually do both,'' he
sltys. " You ·can lloat along
and !lush up the occasional
bird. then park the canoe and .
hike overland to a likely spot
and do some junip-shoottng .
This year's duck season
will be divided into two segments. Throughout most of
West Virginia. the early segment will run Oct 1-16 and
the _late segment will run
Dec. 9-Jan. 3 I.
In the mountain counties,
designated ··zone 2" by
DNR officia ls, the early segment will run Oct 1-30 and
the late segment will run
Dec. 23-Jan. 31.

Virginia's waterways. mo't
of which are framed by tall
timber.
"Any area that has a lake. a
river or a s low-moving
stream is likely to have :wood
ducks." Wilso n says. "Ju st
about ·any st ream you can
lloat a ca noe dow n will have
at least a few of them ."
The most popular places t&lt;&gt;
hunt woodie s are Mason
County's McClintic Wildlife
Management Area, Cabell
County 's Green Bottom
WMA. Greenbrier County's
Meadow
River
WMA.
Taylor County's Pleasants
'creek ·WMA and Tucker
County's Canaan Valley
National Wildlife Refuge.
"Those are all large wetland ..:omplexes. and they
have good wood duck populations:· Wilson says. ·
· In fact early season hunting ai McClintic and Green
Bottom is so popular DNR
officials must make special
arrangements to accommodate the den\and .
Hunters at McClintic must
apply in advance for places
in the 22 permanent blint.ls

E-mail us your outdoors neWs:

sports@mydailytribune.com

·-·-----------

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Sunday, September 26,

1

to the bOrder •ndud•ng the northwest reef area Dnft1ng mayfty r1gs and trolling
spoons or worm harnesses produce the
East Fork lake (Clerrnont County) most fish The best yellow patCh fishmg
Crappre are beang caught usmg live mm- has been west ol wesl reE"f near North
nows or 1132-ounce jrgs wrth plastic char- Bass Island and around C and 0 cans Of
treuse-colOred tubes hpped W•th a Jrve the Camp Perry finng 'flnge. F1sh JUSt off
mrnnow or crawe Ms made by Berkley. the bOHom us1ng perch spreaders lipped
Largemouth bass are t&gt;erng caught using with sh•ners Smatlmouth bass fish1ng
plastiC worms or spinner baris~ Cast in lO should 1mprove as temperatures begm
areas near woody debns. undercut banks, dropping and hsh move nec!f· shore. The
and submerged trees and brush. Keep the best smallmouth basS hsh1ng has been
bart greater than 12 teet deep. Use a No. arouhd the Bass Islands. Kelleys Island ·
3-srte&lt;:l hOok. Texas ugged plashC worms and Sandusky Bay.
are workrng well around sul:lmerged strucCentral Bas1n - The be~t walleye fiSh·
tures
1ng has been southeast of the sandbar.· 8
Grana Lake St Marys (Mercer and to 10 m1Jes north ol Ashtabula m 70 to 73
• Augla1ze counties) - Crapp1e are be1ng feel of water. arld 10 m1les northwest ol
caught by anglers usmg live minnows are Conneaut 1n 70 feet of waler. Trolling ·.
· ball Cast !rom a boat near the east bank 'M)rm harnesses usu1g d1psy d1vers and
and second beach area on the north stde. trolhng crank b811s us1ng wireline ha~
Keep the ba1t four 1nches ott ot th8 bOuom produced the best catches. Yellow perch
or live to si w feet deep. Channel catfish fishing has been best wilhin 2 fT1iles of
are be1ng caught using a long-shanked Lorain, east of the middle of the sandbar.
hook ba1tsd .\ •th cut shad. shrim'p. or 2 to 3 m1tes north of Fairport Harbor in 50
mght crawler~ Use a No. 8. 1!0. or ~ feet of water. 3 to 4 miles north of
long·shank.ed hook.
Cleveland in 40 to. 53 teet of water, and 3
miles north of Gen8\la 1n 50 feet of water.
Patnt Creek L8ke (Highland County) Bluegill and sunt1sh are bemg caught by A perch spreader tipped with shiners. is
anglers using earthworms. wax worms : the .most popular set up. Tl:le bast smalfrubb'Br sp1ders. or red worms as bait. moulh bass fishing has been around
Choose arl1f1ciallures colored pink. Use a · Ruggles Reel Tube ;iQs have been the
No. 6 long·shanked hook. Channel catfish most prod uctive lures. While bass have
are be1ng caught by anglers using craw· been caughl by anglers usir;~g shiners or
dads. cut ba1t. or n~ght crawlers as bait. agitators w1th 11gs along the Cleveland
StiU·IISh m the area beneath the dam . lakefront and Eastlake areas in 30 to 50
Largemou th bass are being caught by teet of water.
anglers usmg JIQS witt1 night crawlers. jigs
OHIO RIVER
Historic flooding events along the Ohio
with plastic bodies. plastic worm s. or sur·
face lures as bait. White bass are being River th is pas! weekend have r'esulted in
caught by ang lers using cran k baits. curly unSafe travel conditions. personal loss.
tails . small spmners. live minnows, and and exlensive damage in most'Ohio coun··
surface lUres Choose white or chartreuse ties. According to 8n advisOry issued by
for artilicial lures. Crappie are being . the ODNR Division cf Watercraft. recrecaught by anglers using wax worms. curly ational t&gt;oaters are advised to stay off any
tails. or Jive minnows as bait. ChoOse · rivers or streams that may be near or
chartrfiuse or pumpkinseed for artificial above flood stage. Avoid driving or .walk- ·
lures.
ing across flooded roadways and bridges
Rush Run Lake (Preble Countyt ~ due to the risk of injury and drowning.
Blueg1ll and suntish are beil'fg caught by Check local reports for those areas wh1ch
anglers usmg wax worms, crickets, _or may be accessible
mealworms as bait Crickets are the besl
choice. Largemou th bass are being
Tip of the Week
caught by anglers using crank baits
The ODNR Division of Watercraft has
(Cfawfish colored). spinner baits (white or issued a watercraft advisory. Heavy reins,
chartreuse) , top water baits (baby bass or remnants of Hurricane Ivan, have caused
trag colored} , live minnows, surtace pop· flooding on some inland lakes. Streams.
pers. or plast1c worms as bait. Work the a~d rivers. Some inland lakes may experibaits off of lhe poi nts and dam area of the ence temporary closure of boat launch
lake.
ramps . Higher lake levels· also may pro·
SOUTH~AST OHIO
duce navigational 1'\azards such as float·
Wildlife Officers throughout southeast· ing debris. Check local road closings and
ern Oh1o are advising that lakes, streams , other reports before traveling to your
and rivers have beeJl at or above flood favorile fishing spot.

Armstrong's
management
agency says
it provided
clean results

PageB6

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HIIWOOI.COII JOIIWOOI.COII JOIIWOOI.COII IIOIIWOOI.COII HIIWODI.CM IIOIIWODJ.COII JOIIWOOD.COM

.....

Announce ..
For.. &amp;
General
Mot:ora
Lhnlt:o..
Thne
OfferI

Sunday, September 26, 2004

New product Qffers oxygen 'boost'·to patients, dealer
BY KEVIN KEllv ·
KKELLYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
For
those on respiratory thempy,
carrying an oxygen tank with
them everywhere they go has
been a cumbersome hut necessary fact of life.
That's all changed with the
introduction of the Helios
personal oxygen system, a
lightweight, rel11lable oxygen supply system people
can wear with a waist pack ,
allowing them the use of
their hands and additional
mobility when out and
about.
"It's been a blessing to
active oxygen patients," said
Randy Marnhout, owner of
Gallipolis-based Prescription
Oxygen, which now markets.
the Helios system, manufactured by Puritan Bennett of
Pleasanton, Calif., as part of
its focus on service to respiratory patients.
"It's for patients who are
very active, and the nice
thing is, they can have a
refill cylinder delivered to
the home and the patients
can refill at home. It takes
about 45 seconds . It's safe
and effective," Marnhout
said.
The portability of the
Helios system is another
plus, he said, especially for ·
patients who want to be
active but may be self-conscious about having to carry
an oxygen tank with them.
"I think its's wonderful."
client Louis Rossi of Point
Pleasant said. "It doesn't
keep me . from doing my
- work or walking." .
Dave Watson of Syracuse,
Ohio, another Prescription
Oxygen customer, ~greed. ·
"It's veiy convenient," he

"We've probably gained 40 through Friday. Its phone
new patients in the past six number is (740) 441-0202 or
weeks who are either new or (800) 364-0115.
switching from other compaPrescription Oxygetl opernies."
ated in Point Pleasant until
2002. · when
"When
decided to February
become an authorized Hefios Marnhout moved the busidealer, I didn'tjust order five ness to the Woodland
or I 0 units, but multiple Centers complex across from
units to let people know I'm Holzer Medical Center. The
·fully stocked to meet the business now has a full-time
need," ·he added.
respiratory therapi st.
That's a feature of the
" It's worked out reall y
business that instills pride in well," Marnhout .said. "The
Marnhout , who along with biggest thing I want to
hi s eight employees contract emphasize is that we try to
with a .full-time answering take care of our patients 24
service for their oxygen hours a day, seven days a
clients in addition to regular· week."
Marnhout
cred its
his
business hoJl~1 .Qf 8:30 a.m.
until 4:30 p.h'l'. Monday involvement in ·the health
.h

care field to hi s mother.
Kathleen. a registered nurse
and longtime admini strator
at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
The Mason County native
said he started working in
the field in the early 1980s as
a high school senior.
"I've been around health
care all my life and all
aspects of patient care have
come from her," Marnhout
said. "We have a tremendously experienced and qualified staff. They ' re down
home people, but they ·are
professional and courteous
and will go the extra mile to

take care of our patient s.
'They
have
made
Prescription Oxygen the success it is today," he addet.l.
.Marnhout noted that service techntci&lt;ms Rick Rardin
and Dave McDade have
completed liquid oxygen
school at the Puritan-Bennett
plant in lndianapoli' to better serve the business's cu stomers.
Marnhout and his wife
Tina · reside in Bidwell and
have four children : BJ ., 19;
Butch, 15: Abigail, 8; and
Lauryn. 4:

Mason-bo.rn author draws on life, r.t!gion for his novels
.

BY KEVIN KELLY

;~~

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17,999

Clb XLT

said. 'The system last longer
than a regular bottle tank.
It's easier to maneuver and
light to carry."
The system weighs 3-1/2
pounds when full and fasts
10 hours on a setting of 2, In
case of a power failure, the
cylinder has the capability to
provide 17 days of oxygen.
The addition of the Helios
system
to
Presc ription
Oxygen has prompted an
increase in business, testimony to its growing popularity
among respiratory patients.
"It's been a tremendous
boost io the company," said
Marnhout, who bought the
bl!.sine~s. {rpm his brotbllJ
Mike in February !994.

Louis Rossi of Point Pleasant right, wearing his Heltos liquid
oxygen supply system, chats with Rick Rardin, service technician for Prescription Oxygen , where Rossi receives rus Hellos
system. Hellos has been touted for the ease of movement it
creates for respiratory patients. (Kevin Kelly/ photo)

..

KKELLYCPMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

5

Randy Marnhout, far left, owner of Prescription Oxygen, stands wi~ three of his clients now
using the Helios portable liquid oxygen supply outside his business. From left are Carolyn
Wilson of Point Pleasant. who switched to Prescription Oxygen from another company, Louis
Rossi of Point Pleasant and Dave Watson of Syracuse, Ohio. At far right is service technician
Rick Rardin . (Kevin Kelly/photo)

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130 E.ITATE IT., ATIIIS, 011111
SeleslhliiMIII-3668

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CIIVII'Ul I - •fiiii'IAC I CAIIWC

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oollolnvonlory but .. n bollllllllnod. In moalcom, we will be oblola.ltx:olo a olmllor vohlclt 111 comporobto prtc1.
oo to tho Ioyer at limo ol doiiVIry, lf oppllcoblo.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - . We.s t Columbia
native
William
Yno
Winebrenner never gave a
thought to writing as a
career until he started
telling acquaintances .stories about growing up in
Appalachia and his work
experiences when he left
Mason County.
In 1990, an academic
friend of hi·s heard some of
his stories about the lives
Qf men who build utility
lines and systems and
encouraged him to commit
them to · paper and show
him the. results.
"I showed him a few
chapters and after reading
. them, he told me, ' It's got
· to
be
published,"'
Winebrenner said. "That's
what started me."
The experience led to his
first book, "The Wood
Walkers," in 1992. Four
volumes later, t~e 71-year- ·
old Winebrenner is writing
or planning more .novel s
and non-fiction about what
he knows best.
A scan of his output
reveals the author's diversity, wtiich has won him a
listing in "Who's Who in
America for Historical
Fiction" and a nomination
for international writer of
the year for 2003 by the
International Biographical
Centre
of. Cambridge,
England.
. Such recognlt!on has .
arisen from his books not
only appearing in major
. American bookstores, but
also being bought and read
in England and Germany not bad for someone who
publishes and distributes
his works from his home in.
Stockport, Ohio.
Winebrenner
said he
spent the first 27 years of
his life in Mason County,
and then worked for 30
years following line con-

.

.

(both 1998) and "A Place
of Evil'' (-1999), all drawn
-~···
from experience or historical fact about life in
Appalachia .
··smoke in the Vallei'
dealt with an 1860s coal
strike in the Perry Cmtnty,
Ohio, mining town · of New
Straitsville. where stories
of mines catching fire ant.l
burning for years are st ill
heard .
The strike depicted in the
·novel.actually occurred and
its aftermath reverberated
over
the
generations,
Winebrenner said.
"Boy, did I open up a can
of worm s with that," he
said. "People knew what
happened, but they would
only whisper about· it. I met
a man who ktiew all about
. it in 1962, and he told me
· the story."
"A Place of Evil," drawn
from actual events , deal s
with the takeover of a West
Virginra. mountain town by
a cult. But if pre ssed for hi s
favorite, Winebrenner will
tell you it' s "From Out of
the Forest." set in Mason
County 's pioneering days.
." It 's the best I've done,''
he said. "It has Tecumseh
and
it's
about
Point
Pleasant when it had only
I 0 to 15 cabins."
"From Out of the Fore.q ··
spins the story of Ann a
Potts, who survive s an
Indian massacre that wipet.l
out · her family only to go
insane, be taken in by . the
natives and eventually
return to Point Pleasant ,
looking for the daughter.
killed many years before.
"They conti.nue to hear
her
cries and sc-reams ,"
Wlillam Yno Winebrenner pauses as he prepares to autograph a copy of one of his books
recently. The West Columbia native began writing oearly 15 years ago and has produced five Winebrenner said. " Her
apparition ha s been seen as
novels, with another one on the way. (Kevin Kelly)
recentl y" as a year. ago."
struction from Maine to met along the way. "The Henry Fonda and Pat
Disillusioned with pubO'Brien
.
Wood
Walkers
,"
lishers
and
contract;,
lllinois before becoming a
Reception to his inaugur- Winebrenner
Winebrenner said in his
wireman for firehouses .
said
he
effort
led
to learned enough about printIn that time ·he picked up promotional material, i.s the al
a number of experiences first story abou~ th e experi- "Narrowbackin'" ( 199.7) . ing. binding and marketing
and stories from co-work- enc.e s of linemen si nc e the "Smoke in the Valley" and to do it himself and take his
ers, friends and people he 1937 film "Slim" with ':From Out of the, Forest" worh to a wider audience.

\

\

The
recognit io n he '~
received both nationally
and overseas is gratifying.
but Winebrenner in sists it
hasn't changed him .
" I'm still a common
man ," he said. ··1 don ' t
think it will affect me . I
think anyone can write.
'lJ' m really thankful that I
have been blessed with thi s .
talent , e., peciall y when it
came
la te
in
life ."
Winebrenner added.
It take s Winebrenner,
who mostly signs his books
as " William Yno," about
two years .to produce a new
volume . This past summer,
he expe~ts hi s latest novel,
'The Last Deer Hunt," to
be available for his readers.
And when not lecturing
to various organizations,
Win ebrenner . is petlning a
biography of his great·grandfathcr, pioneering sur geon and Civil War veteran .
Dr. William VanMeter.
Winebrenner said movie
producers have
shown
interest in his work . and if
there's one he 'd' like to see
filmet.l, it would be "From
Out of the Forest.''
" It 's about history right
here.:· he said while attending Civil War Days at the
We·s t Virginia State Farm
Mu se um
last
weekend.
·· Everyone
ha s
their
dreams . Whether they come
true or not. you never
know:'
The author hopes t'o
return to Mason County as
a permanent resident in the
near futur e.
··It will happen eventuaily,"
Winebrenner said.
''I've never fou·nd people
anywhere as great as they .
are in West Virginia."
(Editor\. 11ote : To order
copiei o( Win ebrenner's
books. HTite to Valley ,
Enterpriies, .2300 S. Stale
Route 37n. Stockport, Ohio
4378 7. Hi s We b address is
1\W\1'. mo&gt;booki.com
and
his · ·
,}. mail
is
ynvbpoh@ ya hqp. com)

- --~-------------------~----~--~--------~~---- ---...l.-------~-'-----.JL_~-----------1---------::--~-·-----

•

)..1

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�iunbap lt.- ·itntintl

YoUR·HOMETOWN.

PageC2
Sunday, Se~tember

26, 2004

What to look for on 401 (k) statement Gallipolis Theater played host
If you have a 401 (k) J?lan
.
retirement goals will largely
where you work. consider
depend on your asset anocayourself fortunate, because
tion - the mix if investments
your401(k).offersyouagreat
you've chosen to fund your
way to bw.ld resources. for
plan. Your statement should
April
have some type of graphic
reurement. Your earnm~s
Rice
representation - . possibly in
grow on a tax-deferred bas1s,
and your pre-tax contnbupte charts- showmg .you how
u~ns lower yo~r annual tax
your money is spread among
th~ various options: Pay close
bill. Plus, you ve l'robably
got
a
good
chotce
ot
mvestauention
ment options
. to this picture
. •
·.
. d h
because 11 can change wtthB k
u(kt) ~ep m mm } atf a look for:
.out you really being aware of
ts 1 arge 1y a se 1 •
Account summaries
. F
'f
f
4ol
d"
,
It.
or ex amp 1e, I one o
~:n~~~ thai 1~~s; ~~eJ.~~~~ ~:;f~~i~;e~endo~~ldi~;db~~~ your ·stock-based .accounts
of what's going on . . As a ance of your individual h&amp;s grown substanl!ally pver
40l(k)owner. you're respon- accounts over the statement the years, youroverali40I(k)
sihle for several things. First, cycle. This section gives you portfolio rna~ now . be more
you need to decide how much a "snapshot" of how your heavtly wetghted toward
10 contribute to your plan.
investments performed over gr~~th strn::ks than you had
Next. you're in charge of the past statement cycle. typ- ongmally mtended. If that
picking your own invest- ically a quarter or a month.
happens, you may need to
Investment summary - In rtalance .. f
. '
If
. ments from those available.
And finally, you ' ll need to this . section, you'll find
?an 111 ormation ·
periodically review your descriptions of how your you ve taken ou,t a loan from
401 (k) holdings and make individual . holdings have you 40 1(k), you II find all the
adjustments as needed in done over time. Your state- key data her· how much you
·n y'our
borrowed, what interest rate
response
.
. to Changes. l .
ment may include annualized
,
.
dh
h
hfe or changes t(.) the mvest- ·total returns over various you, re pa~~n~ ~ ow muc
ments themselves. In short, time periods, such as one, yoBu ve pa~ acl ·
.
Y paymg
c
ose
attentiOn
when it comes to managing three, five and ten years. This
'
t t
t
your 40l(k) you've got a lot long-term perspective can be I0 what s on yours a emen s,
of obligatio~s.
valuable 10 you, especially if you'll find it easier to ' sueFortunately, you can get you're concerned about a cessfully manage your40l(k)
lan. So, the next time you
Some help through an drop in your balance from P
extremely useful tool - your last quarter's. or last month's get a stljtement, take ~close
401(k) statement. Many peo- . statement. While this past look , and, if you need to,
pie just look at their state- performance does nllt guar- take action .on what you see..
ments to check on their cur- an tee or predict future results,
April E. Rice is an
rent balance. And, of course, it can still give you an idea of Investment representative
it is important to know how how your accounts have done with
Edward
Jones
much you've got. But don't in various economic environ- Investments, located at 990A
stof there - your statement is ments.
· Second Ave in Gallipolis,
ful of information that can
Asset
allocation
phone is 740-441-9441.
prove helpful to you in run- Ultimately, your 401(k)'s Edward Jones has been servmng your 40l(k).
.
..
ability to help you meet your ing individual investors since
)-!ere are a few thmgs to
1871, member 51PC.
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Coordinated school health programs
improve learning·capability . ·
.
If children aren't healthy
they cannot learn, and if they
9annot learn, they will never
be healthy.
Children who are hungry,
sick, troubled or depressed
cannot function well in the
classroom. Although . school
administrators .and other
decision makers understand
that health and learning go
hand in hand, many still need
to be convinced that school
health programs must be a
priority to ensure that chi!- .
dren are alert and ready to
·
learn.
The percentage of school·
age children age 6 to II that
are overweight more than
doubled between the late
1970s and 2000, rising from
6.5 percent to 15.3 percent.
The percent of overweight
adolescents ages 12 to 19
tripled front 5 percent to 15.5
percent ·during the same time
period.
Lack of ,physical activity,
as well as dietary factors,
such as the typical vending
machine fare of chocolate
bars, sodas and chips contribute to an estimated
, 300,000 deaths in the United
States each year (McGinnis
&amp; Foege, 1993 ).
Because of statistics like
these, school systems and

Janet
Johnson

communities across the
nation are recognizing the
need to address studenti'
health needs. Schools are .
uniquely positioned to teach
children and young adults the
benefits associated with regutar h · 1 t' 't
11
p ystca ac lVI Y as we
as proper nutrition because
they serve nearly all children
arid have the facilities and
equipment readily available.
Many school districts
across Ohio have adopted a
model called' ·a "coordinated
school health program." A
coordinated school health
program consists of eight
components. These com{'O·
nents incorporate educatiOn
for lifelong health living,
nutritious meals, policies that.
support a positive psychosocial and hazard-free environment, involvement of families and communities in promoting the well-being of

young people, opportunities
for staff members to improve
their own well-being and services .that prevent or treat
mental and physical health
conditions that interfere with
learning.
In a true coordinated
school health program, these
eight components interact as
a unified system. Every parent wants their child to do
well in school. Colleges and
universities want productive,
well prepared. applicants who
are serious about their
futures. Businesses want
well-trained,
motivated
workers.· Communities want
young people to succeed.
Healthy; happy children are
productive learners, able to
develop the skills necessary
to make positive health decl·
sions for the ·rest of their
lives. Information on "coor·
dinilted school health programs" is available at the ·
Gallia
County
Health
Department, located at 499
Jackson Pike or by calling
441-2950 between the hours
of Sam to 4pm Monday
through Friday.
(Janet Johnson, RN, is
coordinator
of
the
Cardiovascular
Health
Project with the Gallia
County Health Department.)

Meeting his neighbors,·one siren at a time

'·

'
Michael Perry
has written
a nonfiction account of his
experience as a fireman and
EMS in his small Wisconsin
town in "Population 485:
Meeting· Your Neighbors
One Siren at a Time."
He rerurned home after
tniveling and writing for 10
years. He figured the best
way · to become part of the
neighborhood again• was to
be a volunteer fireman.
He writes of his admiralion and respect for his fellow workers. A lot of what
they do is 'dirty and dangerous and disturbing. He
writes of finding suicides, .
accident victims of the difficulty of distan~ing oneself
from the deaths he sees. He
· obviously loves the job. He
is somewhat a "good old
boy," with a "Thank God
I'm
a country
boy"
demeanor.
He speaks with fondness
of his little town and how it
is changing. It reminds me
, of how milch . we dislike
change sometimes and want
our town to stay the same.
He says, "If you can find a
way to strike a balance
between ignoring the past
and clinging to it, maybe

Beverly
Gettles

just recognize the past, then
I guess you've got something."
Unpretentious, sinc.Cre and
observant, Perry tell~ of his
two brothers and the1r many
years of bachelorhood. The
youngest brother finally
does get married to a wonderful girl, only to lose her_ a
few wee~s later m a. trag1c
auro acc1dent, to wh1ch all
three. ~rothers get the call.
Th1s book leads us to consider the difficulty of being
on call 24 hours a day to
clean up the worst messes
humans can mak~. How ~o
these;, fol~s deal With the vrchms. ~lth tenderness and
~.mpass1~n, and to regard
IS service as a neces~ary
and
noble
occupatiOn.
Than~s. H~nk, for recommendmg this book to me.

I tried · to slog through
"The Winter Queen" by
Boris Akunin, translated
from Russian. The cover
touted the author as the
· "Russian Ian Fleming." It
.should have stopped after
the first 20 pages! It only
got worse!
. The stocy begins with a
young man shooting himself
in front of. horrified witness- .
es in a park. The young
detective, Erast Fandorin,
investigates and finds a complicate international plot. Set
in Czarist Russia. the. story
jumps from Moscow (which
I visited in 1971 under the
control the \':ommunists) to
St. Petersburg (a city I have
always longed to visit) and
London (never been there
·
either).
Of course, · ·the story
includes a cast of ·weird and·
unpronounceable Russian
characters, a beautiful girl,
and many close·calls for the
hero.
I would rather read the
. new offerings by Patricia
Cornwell, Sue Grafton,
or ,
James
Patterson
Stephanie Evanovich. I just
may do that when I am in
the mood for a m¥stery!

•

"

K•1nca1
. •d 1n
• 1930S

t 0 8 radley

According to a biography by
Loyaj
Jones,
" Bradley
Kincaid was the first artist to
One of the largest' crowds become a radio star using
at the Gallipolis Theater in almost entirely authentic folk
the 1930s was the one that music."
camtl·out on May 26, 1932, to
The WLS Barn Dance· in
hear
Bradley
Kincaid.
The
Ch'
·
G 11 . 1.
D .1 T 'b
1cago d unng
Ihe 1920s
a 1P0 IS
at Y
n une had some other people who
quoted the theater owner, would also become big name
F d Wh 1 "Th' . h
re
ee er:
IS 1s t e
stars in later years - Gene
biggest crowd we have had in Autry, George Gobel, Red
three years."
Foley, Lulu Belle and Scotty
"At7o'clock,orafewmin- Wiseman, among others.
utes after, every seat · was
In 1929, Bradley Kincaid
taken downstairs, and in two moved to Cincinnati where
more .minutes the balcony he became part of the WLW
was filled. An hour later those radio team. It was Bradley's
in line filled tl&gt;te entrance appearances on that show
way. At 9 o'clock the line which made him so popular
extended to the curb, with in places like Gallipolis.
groups of waiters above and
Sta.ted the Daily Tribune:
below the ~ntrances. AI 9:30 "Th bo fr
th
all who had waited found K ~ k y om · e easterdn
b
'd bl
!'ken uc y mdofu~tatdns seemde
seats ut a const era e num- t e an o
nen to ra 10
ber had to be tum~d away. fans who have tuned in on his
Those who made their way to WLW program daily for a
the balcony stewed and sput- . 1ong nme
·
tered in their own juice, the
· ·
· :
b bl
. Some of .~IS favonte song~
1
empeFature, pro a Y rang- ~.ncluded, ~~~bara ~lien,,
ing from 125•375 • but !1° one . ,,Fa1r Ellen, tw
,, o ,,S isters..
left on that account. Such a
p
p 11
F
turnout is all the more surretty
o .Y·, " rog~le
.. 11 b
h
·
":'ent A-Courtm ·, Methodist
pnst g ecause · 1 ere was a P1e," and "Old JoeCIB!'k."·lt
double matinee, which drew a was estimated that JUSt m one
fair-sized crowd."
month-Kincaid would receive
Most . people today would 50,000 letters from his fans.
wonder, .!'Who was Bradley The kind of songs that
Kincaid and why was he so Bradley sang, accompanied
popular that he had to do four by his "hound dawg" guitar,
shows in one day to accom- were part of a heritage handmodate the crowd?" His popu- ed down to him by word of
larity probably is a result of mouth from generations of
the growing influence of radio, Kentuckians.
·
especially among rural people.
Bradley Kincaid was born
•
in Garrard County, Ky., and
'
attended school in Berea. His
education was interrupted by
his service in the OS Army in
World War L Finally, at the
age of 26, Bradley got what
today.would be a high school
.
diploma and went off 10
Chicago 19 work and attend
George Williams College.
About 1924, the WLS Barn
Dance in Chicago invited a · ,
quartet that Kincaid was in to
•
sing on that radio program. In
due time, Kincaid appeared
alone singing old mountain
ballads like "Barbara Allen." ·
WLS was owned by Sears
and Roebuck then, and t11e
statiqn was designed by them
.
for a rural audience. ·
By 1929, Kincaid's book
"My Favorite Mountain
Old-Time
Ballads
and
Songs," had gone through six .
printings and ·had sold
110,000 copies. ·· He had
recorded 62 songs on 19 dif·
ferent ' labels by 1929.
BY JAMES SANDS

·SPECIAL TO

T~E TIMES.SENTINEL

1

The guitar got its na me, by
the way, because Bradley's
father had sold a fox chasing
hound dog to an old man in
exchange for a guitar.
Kincaid came back to this
area several times. He said he
· the·
proba bl y appeared 111
Marietta and Parkersburg
h
1
area more t an any .p ace in
the country. During World
War n, he was a part of the
traveling Boone County
Jamboree sent out by WLW.
that also included Grandp~
Jones, Merle Travis · and the
Delmore Brothers.
·
The Jamboree was in
Gallipolis on a few occasions. After he left WLW.
about 1933, Kincaid was on
stations
in
Pittsburgh;
B
sh
d
d
oston,
c enecta Y an
New York City before returning to Cincinnati in the early
t940s. In 1944, he went to
the Grand Ole Opry. But.
about 1950, when drums and
·
steel guitars came into coun·
try music at WSM in
Nashville, Bradley left performing to buy a radio station .
in Springfield, Ohio. He did
do some recordings in . th~
1960s and 1970s and occasionaily performed at hi s &lt;I!'
record store in Springfield:
He lived into his 90s.
(James Sands is a special
correspondent for the Sunday
Times -Sentinel. He can be
contacted by writing to 1040
Militarv Road, Zanesville,
Ohio 4J701 .)

.-------"'!!'"oil!!'.;.__________
'

· days.• wllb·. you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
' ' 740-446-2342
•,

t~

'

For 100 ~~ Fatnwers Bank has a.Wa1s been here to
help you. If you have suffered property damage due to
the recent flooding, you can count on us!
We hav~speciallew rates and favorable terms for ftood victims.
There are no closing co~ or fees of any Kind.
This assistance is available for both consumers and businesses.
Just call us for all the detailsl
,,

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and we want our neighbors to be. tool

-----

'

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) series.
,
Wendy and Tinkerbell.
The. new series "Clubhouse"
" If an audience doe sn't
"He 's just a kid who loves
- about a teenager Who's a believe the baseball, they baseball, was introduced to it
batboy for a major league don't believe the world. And by his father," the 15-yearteam - may use sports as a if they don't believe the old actor says of his characmetaphor for life. but the world, they don't believe the ter. "And baseball is what
· pr-oducers know the action characters. And if they don't keeps alive for Pete memomi the fteld still has to look believe the characters, they ries of his dad. Baseball is
authentic.
don't care," says Topolsky, . Pete's dad basically."
That was fairly easy to pull whose
previous credits
Despite such layering, the
off in the pilot ... in which · include the coming-of-age producers in sist the show
Dodger Stadium served as series "The Wonder . Years" isn't an overly selll imental
the stand:in for the . fictional and "Party of Five."
peak behind the scenes of the
New York Empires' ballpark.
"C lubhouse," from Aaron professional .game, but neiBut . subsequent episodes Spelling's · production com- thei is it .a sen~ation~lized
have to rely on a home plate pany, premieres 8 p.m. EDT expose.
constructed on a turntable on Sunday on CBS, then moves
"We are not ' Playmakers.'
a studio set, occasional trips \O its regular Tuesday 9 p.m. We don't want to be
10 a small college field at\d
timeslot on Sept. 28.
' Piay makers,"' says Cerone,
computer generated graphics.
Dean Cain' (Clark Kent in referring to the short-lived
Executive producer Ken "Lois and Clark: The New
Topol sky slips a tape into the Adventures
Superman ")
video machine ' in his office. plays Conrad · Dean ,' the
It · illustrates how at-bat Empire's slick superstar.
footage, shot with a few · Christopher Lloyd, who won
actors ~gainst a green screen, two Emmys for his role on
can be digitally enhanced t.o "Taxi ," is 'Lou Russo. the
place cheering - or booing irascible equipment manager.
.- crowds in the stands. · Jeremy Sumpter, who played
Daniel Cerone, the show's the title role in last year's
head writer and another feature film "Peter Pan," is
executive producer, concedes the batboy, Pete Young. Ma~e
there were "a lot of sleepless Winningham is his mother,
night s" in the weeks before Lynne: who has raised Pete
they saw how well such vir- and his sister alone since
. tual reality worked.
their father left years ago.
"The technology is just at
Sumptefs face still retains
the . point · where special its_ lost-boy
sweetness,
effects are not being used so · though he has grown a tad
much 10 do the extraordinary since he flew around with
but the ordinary," Cerone ·
says. "I would argue that this
series, even three years ago,
couldn't have been done
. Jeremy Sumpter, who plays the batboy for a major league team . without actually going. to a
in the new CBS series "Clubhouse," poses for a photo ouring regtuhlathr ballpadrk afnd fillm&amp; 11
. .
· WI
ousan s o extras a
· 1
d 1 · ' 1
a break from f1 lmmg on the set Aug. 25, ·2004, ·in Los Angeles. f.
(AP Photo/ ReecJ Saxon)
·
. manCJa .. an
og1sttca
' improbability for a TV ·

~

Metnber FDIC

................
UU%1
M1son

Tuppers Plains

773.6400

9853385

.

Pomeroy

Gallipolis

992.2136

4462265

2004

ESPN drama serie&gt; about the
seamier aspect&gt; of pro football. "But on the other hand
we do want to ·:-how the
baseball world a' it exi,t&gt;,''
says Cerone.
In the pilot epi,qde, steroid
use is a major plot point. In
another epi,ode. there are
cigars . porn maga~:ines and
beer in the cl ubh ou'e where
the batboys are unsupervised.
"We are just p(e,enting a
reality. But the !lip 'ide is
that in each episode we are a
focusing on the boy\ character alld ... that the re are ·consequence, to actions ... 'aY'
Cerone.

F••'sBank

IDIImying my lllf

_
UPN's new teen detective is no Nancy Drew·
: SAN DIEGO (AP) cave. We want our episodes to
lVhen Rob Thomas, creator feel real," says Thomas.
lmd executive producer of the . Veronica Mars doesn't go
new UPN series "Veronica looking for action-packed
Mars," first dreamed up the adventure like the teenage
teen detective series, the . heroine from those detective
main character was male.
novels first published -in the
: He can't quite remember 1930s. Rather, she helps
Jhe moment he thought "This solye the problems of her
:would be better if it was a community that arise from a
girl," as he developed the TV clash of cultures and conflict. 6cript. But he knows why.
ing moral values.
. •
"I think a noir piece told
On a recent evening in La
from a female point of view Jolla, the "Veronica Mars"
is more interesting and cast :and crew occupy the
unique," says Thomas.
lobby of a luxury hotel.
The series premieres 9 p.m.
Several guests, not immeEDT Sept. 22 before moving diately aware that cameras
to its regular 9 p.m. Tuesday are rolling, seem startled by
the hubbub Mars (Kristen
limeslot Sept. 2K
Veronica Mars is a smart, Bell) and her dad (Enrico
bold high school student on a Colantoni) are causing at the
mission to undercover the reception desk as they try to
truth about th~ dark side of obtain billing information
the wealthy seaside commu- that inay solve a crime.
nity of Neptune , Calif.
Bell says she's thrilled to
When her father Keith was play "a female character with
the local sheriff, she was part grit, not just a sappy ingenue
pfthe popular crowd and dated ... The root of her is such
!I wealthy boy. Then came strength of character."
The 24-year-old Bell's
murder and scandal, and the
Mars family became outsiders. credits include the lead role
: Dad runs a struggling pri- as the dau~hter of a drug
vate investigation agency, . addict in the Lifetime movie
where Veronica helps out "Gracie's Choice" and , the
after school. Her alcoholic young girl in the Los Angeles
!not her has left. She's been Opera production of "A Liule
Jhe victim of date rape. She's . Night Music."
·
definitely no Nancy Drew. · "Kristen is legitimately a
"Nanc)' Drew is about finding smart girl and it really comes
the hidden jewels in .the haunted across,"
Thomas
says.

,
,
,
"
•
"••
,
f'&gt;

..

"Vero.ni'ca has to play deadsmart. She's not a big girl and
you are never going to see
scenes of her literally kicking
ass like on 'Alias,' so it's all
,about being wily and clever
and sharp."
Earlier this day, a seaside
neighborhood of expensive
homes was the location for
an action sequence featuring
guest star Paris HilJon.
·
As local kids watch with
fascination, a posse of motorcycles roar round a comer,
headed up by series regular
Weevil (Francis Capra, "It's
A Wonderful Life" director
Frank· Capra's great-grandson)- an unlikely Mars ally.
Revving their engines, the
leather-clad bikers face off
with a red Jeep full of rich
. kids who . were apparently
connected to a crime. A scuffie ensued, reflecting that
constant clash of cultures and
values
that
surrounds
"Veronica Mars."
"Veronica stands for what's
true and good, and integrity."
says Jason Dohring, who
plays Logan Echolls, the
most seemingly self-satisfied
of the rich kids.
lbornas emphasizes that this
drama of "haves and havenots'' needed a cast that was different from the cute, non-tlm:atening young actors traditionally
found in TV teen series.

~-

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t e ........ all,. .hah!lll...... &amp;at&amp;r will .. ..
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appreciation · for the generous support
recei,ved · during the recent Ohio River
flooding to each of the following:

The Racine Fire Department
The Village of Racine
Home National Bank Employees
and family members
It ~s very heart warming to see the
willingness . and team spirit displayed by
these individuals. Their time and efforts are
very greatly appreciated.
We are proud to be part of such a
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~unday,

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.C~l,brptihg special

F8

ONTHETUBE

iunba~ !imt! -i.entinel

PageC3

I

•

!Raeine

•

1-10-9-19-2210

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1-IV-992-6.1.1.1

�iunba, lim~ ·itntintl

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

Sunday, September 26,2004

'·

iunbap Ottmt~ -itnttntl

IN THE KITCHEN

:Sausage rolls with onions and
peppers, baked french fries and churros

John and Betty Johnson

Johnsons note anniversary
John and Betty Johnson are
wishing to give God the glory
for their 39 years of marriage.
which · they . celeb~ated
Saturday. Sept 25.
They were married in
Oakland Co~nty, Mich. , on
Sept.. 25 , 1965. John is
~mployed by Gallipolis City

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tipton

Cox-Tipton wedding _
Michael Caleb Tipton and beaded lace veiL She carried
Mande Jane Cox were mar- a basket trimmed in red
ried cin October I st, 2003 in accents made by her mother,
· Louisa, Kentucky. On July Tammie.
10, 2004 the two had a forThe groom wore his United
· mal wedding ceremony that States · Marine Corp. dress
was shared with their family blue Military uniform .
and friends. They were the Caleb's best man was his
frrst couple to have their cer. brother Kyle W. Tipton. The
emony
in
the
new Groomsmen were · Jake
~ Mercerville
Missionary Richie, friend of the groom,
Baptist Church and it was B.l Co~. brother of the bride
. performed . by
Pastor · and Brandon George, friend
Matthew Henry.
of the groom. The men wore
The bride is the daughter of navy blue tuxedo's with
Loren and Jane Ann Cox of white satin ties and vest.
Crown City, Ohio and the Brandon also wore his United
. granddaughter of Ranford States Marine Corp. dress
"Pete" and Ella Mae Cox and blue military uniform. The
.Joy and the late Bobby Clary men wore red roses in their
also of Crown City.
lapels. The Ring Bearer was
. The groom is the son of Montgomery Grey, cousin of
Mike Tipton of Gallipolis and the groom. He wore a navy
Lia Barte of Cheshire. He is blue tuxedo as welL
: the grandson of Virginia and
The guest book was attend- ·
the late Harvey Tipton of ed by Mande's aunt and uncle
Gallipolis and Marika Lukacs Jack and . Mimi Slone. Chris
and Tibor Lukacs both of ·Fitch and Michelle Saunders
Columbus.
performed 3 solo's for the
Mande was ·escorted down couple during the ceremony.
the aisle by. her father. She The wedding and reception
wore a white satin gown was coordinated by Melvin
designed by Venus. It was a Biars of Aoral Fashions.
· sleeveless high necked lace
The reception immediately
bodice enhanced With beaded followed at the South Gallia
: reembroided lace. The skirt High School. The food was
: was also made of satin as catered by Kim Betz Ratliff
: well as the train. It was of The Bake Shop. Music
adorned with lace motifs and · was played by Tom Payne of
"WBYG" Radio Station. The
a lace hem.
· The bride carried a cascad- groom tossed the garter mid it
ing . arm bouquet of- white was caught by his cousin,
Grey
of
calla lillies, red and ivory Montgomery
roses, red asaitic Lillies, Columbus, Ohio. The bride
Stephanotis, and Lilly of the tossed two bouquets. ORe
Valley with ivory' trailing.
was caught by her cousin,
Kayla McGuire, friend of · Sarah Clary and the other
the bride, was the Maid of was caught by Jasmine
Honor. Lexie Clary, cousin of Waugh, Friend of the bride.
the bride, was a Jr. .Brides Both girls are froin Crown
Maid. The Bridesmaids were City, Ohio.
Kate Saunders and Latasha
The bride is a 2003 gradu. Ousley, both friends of the ate of South Gallia High
: bride and groom. The flower School and the former "Miss
· girl was Mattison Corner, Gallia County 20(13". The
cousin of the bride. The groom is a 2001 graduate of
brides party wore red floor River Valley High School
length gowns accented in sil- and is currently· enlisted in
ver. They carried smaller the United States Marine
: bouquets that matched the Corp. as a Scout Sniper. The
·brides. Mattison wore a white couple reside in Jacksonville,
: satin . tea · length gown North Carolina while he is
· adorned with pearls and a staiioped at Camp ~juene.

David Hapney and Lindsay Kingery

PROUD TO ·BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Kingery-Hapney engagement

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Donalcj
Kingery of Crown City, Ohio
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Lindsay
Kingery, to David · Hapn'ey,
son of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dave
Hapney of Bidwell, Ohio.
Lindsay is a 2001 graduate
of Gallia Academy High
School and received her associate's
degree
in
Banking/Finance
from
Marshall University in May
2003 . She will receive her
Regents B. A. degree from
Marshall University in May
2005. Lindsay is currently

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St!bscribe todily •·446-2342
www.rnydailytribune.com

employed at The Orthopedic
Institute of Pt. Pleasant in Pt.
Pleasant, West Virginia.
David is a 1997 graduate of
River Valley High School
·and enlisted in the United ·
States Army in July 1997.
David is a Staff Sergent and
is currently stationed at Fort
Campbell, . Kentucky; He
resides in Clarkesville,
Tennessee.
The couple will be married
on November 27, 2004 at The
First Church of God in
Gallipoli s, Ohio by Pastbr
Paul Voss.

Let the good times roll!
GUESS WHERE WE'VE BEEN
NOW??? NOT TO THE MOON BUT
THAT MIGHT BE APOSSIBILITY SOME
DAY WE VISITED THE AIR FORCE
MUSEUM IN . DAYTON . OH .. LAST
MONTH AFTER ENJOYING A PERFORMANCE OF "FIDDLER ON
THE ROOF" AT THE LACOMEDIA DINNER THEATRE. SO
MANY FANTASTIC THINGS ON DISPLAY AT THE MUSEUMMADE A WONDERFUL DAY OUTING.
WE JUST RETURNED FROM A 12 DAY LAND AND CRUISE TO
ALASKA ALSO LAST MONTH . WE HAD GREAT WEATHER .
LIKE THE FALL WEATHER WE ARE ENJOYiNG NOW WE FLEW
FROM CINCINNATI TO FAIRBANKS, ALASKA AND FOR FOUR
DAYS WE TOURED BY MOTORCOACH , TRAIN AND
RIVERBOAT A SCHOOLBUS TOOK US ON AN 8 HOUR TRIP
THROUGHOUT DENALI NATIONAL PARK- WITH STOPS FOR
HOT CHOCOLATE. WE SAW SEVERAL CARABOU . SHEEP.
EAGLES, ETC AND EVEN A BEAR. THE SCENERY IS
BEAUTIFUL AND THE MOUNTAIN GLACIERS WERE
AWESOME. ONE MORNING WE TOURED BY TRAIN,
ENJOYING THE DOME GLASS TOP FOR GREAT VIEWING AND
PICTURE TAKING. WE WERE SERVED A GREAT BREAKFAST
OF EGGS AND REINDEER SAUSAGE- A SPECIAL TREAT AND
VERY GOOD. A RlVERBOA'J: PADDLEWHEELER TOOK US
ALONG THE RIVER TO VIEW DOG SLEIJ TRAINING GROUNDS,
A SALMON FISHING SPOT AND AN AUTHENTIC VILLAGE.
WE ARRIVED IN ANCHORAGE, TRANSFERRED TO SEWARD
AND BOARDED OUR BEAUTIFUL CELEBRITY CRUISESHIP,
THE DELUXE LINE OF ROYAL CARIBBEAN. WHILE CRUISING
WE VISITED PORTS OF CALL INCLUDING JUNEAU. SKAGWAY,
KETCHIKAN , AND OTHER PLACES OF INTEREST AS A GROUP
WE ATTENDED A SALMON BAKE ALONG A STREAM WHERE
THE SALMON WERE SWIMMING UPSTREAM TO SPAWN . AS
THE MUSIC "ALMOST HEAVEN'.' WAS PLAYED IN OUR HONOR
WE. ENJOYED A FEAST OF SALMON, RIBS , AND CHICKEN
GRILLED OVER AN OPEN FIRE. WE FINISHED OFF WITH
MARSHMALLOWS llfAT WE ROASTED OVER THE CAMPFIRE.
OUR SEVEN DAY CRUISE TOOK US UP CLOSE AND
PERSONAL WITH THE BEAUTIFUL GLACIERS. AND MORE
WONDERFUL SCENERY · A GREAT TRIP AND OUR
FISHERMEN GARLAND BECHTLE ANI) RON CLAY HAD THEIR
CATCH SHIPPED HOME FOR ALL OF US TO ENJOY MANY
THANKS, GUYS. WE WEREN'T SO LUCKY IN PANNING
GOLD, BUT WE GOT ENOUGH GOLD TO MAKE JEWELRY.
NEXT MONTH WE WILL BE LEAVING FOR OUR BRANSON IN
THE FALL TRIP WITH OVERNIGHTS IN ST. LOUIS THERE AND
BACK. WE HAVE RESERVATIONS FOR THREE GREAT SHOWS,
ANDY WILLIAMS WITH ANN MARGARET, SHOJI TABUCifl,
AND MICKEY GILLEY. A l.UNCHEON/SHOW ON THE
SHO',VBOAT BRANSON BELLE. A CITY AND LAKE TOUR ON
'1lfE DUCKS", LOTS OF SHOPPING AND OTHER SURPRISES,
MAKE THIS A GREAT FALL GET·A-WAY. THE MIDWEST IS
BEAUTIFUL THIS TIME OF YEAR.
WE HAVE ANOTHER DAY TRIP NOV. 12 TO THE LACOMEDIA
DINNER THEATRE FOR A CHRISTMAS PRODUCf!ON AND A
SUPER CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY TRIP TO THE OPRYVAND
HOTEL IN NASHVILLE FOR A COUNTRY CHRISTMAS. THREE
NIGHTS AT THE HOTEL WILL INCLUDE THE WONDERRJL
CRAFT AND ANTIQUE SHOW AT THE HOTEL, ADMISSION TO
THE· COUNTRY CHRISTMAS PRODUCTION AT THE
J!EAUTIFUL ACUFF THEATRE, ADMISSION TO THE GRAND
OLE OPRY. THE FANTASY ON ICE. THE GENERAL JACKSON
SHOWBOAT LUNCHEON CRUISE AND SHOW, DINNER AT
SHADOWBROOK, A TUDOR MANSION DECORATED ·FOR THE
HOLIDAYS, A SHOW AND DINNER ~T THE HOTEL, A VISIT TO
LONG HOLLOW WINERY, A CITY TOUR AND MUCH. MUCH
MORE. WE HAVE 53 TRAVFURS REGISTERED FOR THE TRIP
AND A WAmNG UST. I WILL ALSO BE REPEATING THE SAME
TRIP THE WEEK BEFORE FOR OUR CHARLESTON AREA
BANKERS.
WE HAVE HAD A GREAT TRAVEL YEAR A.IIID ARE LOOKING
RIRWARD TO 2005 WITH TOURS BEING CONSIDERED FOR A
MEXICAN RIVERIA CR UISE DEPARTING FROM LA. IN
JANUARY. ATRIPio IRELAND IN MARCH, A NEW YORK VISIT
IN JUNE. AN OUTDOOR DRAMA THIS SUMMER, A
WONDERFUL TRIP TO ITALY IN OCTOBER, ANOTHER HAWAD
CRUISE IN THE FALL. A VISIT TO THE BILTMORE FOR
CHRISTMAS 2005 AND MANY. MANY OTI{ER •DAY,
OVERNIGHT, AND SEVERAL DAY TOURS AS WELL OH. YES.
HOW ABOUT ANOTHER GREAT MOTORCOACH TOUR OUT'
WFST, Wlllf VISITS TO YElLOWSTONE AND THE WYOMING
RODEO'! LET ME KNOW IF ANY OF THESE MIGHT INTEREST
YOU AND roGETHER WE Wll..L KEEP -THE GOOD mtES
ROUING. ·;
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Subscribe today • 446-2342

Plain '- Carved

Schools as a mechanic . Betty
is employed by GaJ!ia
County Local Schools as an .
educational aide .
They have three · childrel):
John Jr., Grady (Vera) and
Shad (Miranda) Johnspn, all
of Crown City, and six grandchildren.

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Peoples Oloicc: Travel.
City Nilhonal Bank

CONCORD, N.H. (A P) Vegetarians can 't help but
feel a little left out at the
state fair.
Granted, one doesn 't frequent the fair expecting
healthy fare. Still, it's easy to
suffer a few pangs as those
around you inhale hot dogs
and · cheeseburgers and
french . fries · and Italian
sausages crapled in buns
slathered with onions and
peppers.
And don't even talk about
the desserts, though the fun. nel cakes and fried dough
and ice cream and soda floats
and cotton candy and fudge
and candy apples and sugarcoated pretzels all sound
.. mighty fine.
·
.
No question, fairs are for
· fun, and· food with philosophy (as some have come to
call vegetarian options) isn 't
likely to appear alongside
those luscious items anv time
soon. · But it doesn't ·mean
vegetarians can't have fair
food, too .
We just · have to have our
fairs at home.
Coming up with fair-worthy food for vegetarian sensibilities was . easier than I
expected, in part because
: there now are some q'uite
. excellent soy sausages on the
market.
Though 1 initially hesitated
to .use a prepared product, I
wanted to keep the' fun in fair
food. It's bad enough vegetarians have to prepare their
· · own; we at least shouldn't
have to )'lork hard doing it.
The .rest was equally easy.
To add a virtually invisible
healthfulness to the · whole
.affair, 1 opted for wholewheat sausage buns from the
· grocer. The onions and pe'p: pers required the only real
: work, if sauteing a few vegetables counts as work.
To give my sausage roll
more oomph. I tossed a bit of
Cheddar cheese in with the
onions and peppers during
the final minute of cooking. I
· also slathered the bun with a
: spicy whole-grain mustard. ·
· When sauteing the onions
.and peppers, I went heavy on
the oil 111 an effort to replicate the .s·ometirnes greasy
. goodness of the real dish.
. The amount of oil could be
· · cut in half for those seeking a
: lighter approach.
: For the fries, I went back
to an old standby - oven
fries. It's hard to beat these
: "fries" for taste and ease of
: preparation. Cut potatoes
· mto thin rounds or long
: sticks, coat with olive oil,
season, then bake until crisp.
To give the fries a bit more
. flavor, I added paprika and

P~geCs

cumin to the mix.
· The easiest technique for
making oven fries calls for
the most utilitarian of
kitchen tools - ·a large ziplock plastic ]jag.
Cut the potatoes as desi red.
Place the potatoes, oil, salt,
pepper and any additional
seasonings in the plastic bag,
seal and shake until everything is coated. Empty the
bag right' on the baking sheet.
I liked the idea of fried
dough for dessert, but couldn't bring -myself to throw
what amounts to pancake
batter in a cauldron of oil.
Let's add some class - not
to mention a bit of flavor.
F-or that I turned to a treat I
was taught by my highschool Spanish teacher churros. These small blobs of
fried dough are crispier than
most American fried dough
and have more flavor, thanks
to cinnamon.

Soy Sausage
Rolls With
Onions and
Peppers
(Preparation 15 minutes)
4 tablespoons olive oil
I large yellow onion, cut
into thin slices
! large green bell pepper,,·
seeded and cut into thin
slices
4 large soy sausages
1/4 cup shredded Cheddar
cheese (or soy alternative)
4 whole-wheat sausage or
hot dog buns
Mustard
Heat a large heavy skillet
over a medium-high flame .
Add the oil and heat for 30
seconds. Add the onion and
pepper slices and saute until
limp, about 5 minutes.
Push the onions and peppers to one side of the skillet.
Add the soy sausages and
cook until browned on the
outside and heated through,
according to package directions.
During the fimil minute of
cooking, tili the onions and
peppers wi cheese.
th
Split each bun down e
center and spread mustard
over the length of them.
Place a layer of onions and
peppers evenly over each,
then top with a sausage.
·Serve immediately.
Makes 4 servings.

Oven Fries
(Preparation 50 minutes)
2 tablespoons extra-virgin
olive oil

Sunday, September 26 ; 2004

Mango-curry chicken salad

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRES S
because it's low in calorie s
Thi s chicken salad features and fat and adds nu trients,
2 teaspoons paprika
fresh , unprocessed ingredi- including ca lcium and pro-.
1 teaspoon cumin
ents
in a substantial but low- tein .
1/2 teaspoon freshly
·
fat
dish
with a spicy-fruity
ground black pepper
·
''Plus. you can really dress
4 large potatoes, cut into flavor. The recipe , developed up the flavor by stirring your
by chef K ~v in Millonzi for favorite spices into the yogurt
thin rounds or long sticks
the
3-A-Day of Dairy pro- like I' ve done with the
Kosher or coarse sea salt
Preheat oven to 425 F. gram, has another virtue - it curry," he adds.
Lightly oil a baking • sheet takes only ' about 20 minutes
to make. once you have
with olive. oiL
grilled
the chicken. .
..
In a large plastic bag, com·
;'The
distinct
taSte'
of
curry
bine paprika, cumin and pepper; shake bag lightly to combined with the sweet
combine the se ingredients. mango really brightens this
(Preparation time 20 mi'nAdd the potatoes, close the salad, · and the tangy yogurt utes)
·
nicely complement s these
bag and shake to coat.
3/4
cup
plain, nonfat
Spread the potatoes on the bold flavors ," says Millonzi , yogurt
baking sheet. Season lightly executive chef-owner of
I teaspoon curry powder
with salt and bake 40 min- Restau rant Prov and Atomic
2
1/2 cups 1/2-inch pieces
utes, turning once, until Catering, in Providence, R.I. grilled skinle ss, .boneless
browned and crisp. Salt to "A simple recipe like thi s can
be really impre ss ive and still chicken breast (ab.out 4 to 5
taste, if needed.
chicken breas t halves)
healthy."
Makes 4 servings.
1/4 cup cubed mango
He points out that nonfat or
low-fat yogurt is a good base
I cup . dried. sweetened
for any tuna or chicken salad cranberries

1/4 cup coar,ely chopped
walnuts
1/3 cup Mozza rella cheese.
cut into small t: ube;, (about 2
ounces)
In a medium bowl. blend
yog urt and curry with a
whisk. Stir in chicken,
mango. cranberrie;,, walnut s
and' Moz zare lla and mix well.
Serve on lettuce leaves if
de sired.·
·
Makes 4 servi ngs.
Nutritional info7·mation per
servi ng: 350 ca l.. I 0 g total
fat (3 g saturated). 80 mg
chol.. 160 mg sodium , 34 g
pro.. 32 g carbo .. 2 g dietary·
fiber.
·
(.Recipe from chef Kevin
Mill onzi for 3-A-Da y of
Dairy.)

Mango-Curry
Chicken Salad

Churros

(Preparation 30 minutes)
2 teasugar,

sp~o~~p

~Ius

For more information and
recipe' on the Web:
http://www.3aday.org

b

Grilled 1am chops with Provencal dressing

2 teaspoons ground cinnaBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. : 1n a foo d processor.
saJads an d. pasta, fits h, pou Jtry dresstng
mon
If you are looking fur a and meat dishes. and vegcta· pulse the anchovy fillet s with
ItI teaspoon coarse kosher tasty main dish for dinner bl es.
t he smas hed gar1·1c an d t he
sa
.that'you can have on the table
lemo n ju1 ce until fine ly
I cup whole milk
in about 20 minutes, you can
minced . Add the olive oil and
. 1/4 cup ( 1/2 stick) unsalt- hardly do better than opt for
process the anchovy mixture
ed butter
this recipe for grilled baby
until smooth. Add the
I cup all-purpose flour
lamb chops topped with a
chopped olives. thyme and
4 large eggs
Provencal dressing.
rosemary and pu Jse 1o blend.
3 cups canola oil (for fryAnchovie s and olives are
Se~son the Provencal dressing)
.
among the flavors evoking
ing lightl y with salt and pepIn a small bowl, whisk Provence in· the recip~ . creatper and reserve.
together I cup sugar, cinna- ed by chef-restaurateur
(Total coo king time 20
Light a gri ll or preheat a
mon and 1/2 teaspoon salt. Terrance Brennan. It' s one of minutes)
cast-iron gri ll pan. Season the
Set aside.
a collection of some ISO
2 large anchovy fillets
lamb chops generously with
Combine the milk, butter recipes in "Food &amp; Wine
I small garlic clove. salt and pepper. Grill the
and remaining sugar and salt · Fast" (American Express smashed
.
Jamb chops over high heat.
in a heavy medium saucepan. Publishing Co., $9.99 paper- . ·I tablespoon fresh lemon turning them once. until they
Bring to a boil, stirring until back), all drawn from Food &amp; JUICe
are browned all over. about 7
the sugar dissolves and the Wine magazine and a variety
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive minutes for medium-rare
butter melts. Reduce heat to of distinguished contributors oil
meat. Transfer the lamb
medium-low.
to it.
6 Kalamata or Nicoise chops to a large serving platAdd the flour and stir vig"Fast" in this cookbook 's olives, pitted and coarsely ter, spoon the Provencal
orously with a wooden spoon definition is 30 ·minutes' chopped
dressing on•top and serve .
until a shiny dough mass preparalion and cooking time
1/2 teaspoon very finely
Make s 4 servings.
forms. about 1 minute. .
or less, for item s ranging chopped thyme
(Recipe
hy
Terrance
Transfer the dough to large ·from the strawberry lemon1/4 teaspoon very finely Brennan from "Food &amp; Wine
bowL Cool for 5 minutes. · ade and blood-orange cosmo chopped rosemary
Fast:· American Express
Using an electric mixer. in the drinks and hors d'oeuSalt and freshly gro und Publishing Co ., $9.95 paperbeat in the eggs, one at a vres section, to blackberry- pepper
back. Al so available on the
time. Continue beating until cream cheese tortilla blintzes
Twelve 4-ounce baby lamb Web:
a smooth, shiny, sticky paste in the desserts chapter. In rib chops
http://www.foodandwine .c
forms.
between are plenty of soups,
To make the . Provencal om)
Heat the oil in large', heavy . - - , . . . - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
skillet over medium flame to
350 F.
.
· Working in batches, spoon
batter into a pastry or plastic
bag fitted with large slar piping tiP.. Pipe the bauer mto
'
hot 01 1 in three 1/2- to 4inch-long ribbons.
Fry the ct1urtos until brown
and cooked through the center, about 2 minutes per side.
Transfer to paper towels to
drain excess oil. Cool 5 minutes, then toss in cinnamon
sugar tn coat. Serve warm.
Makes 6 servings.

Grilled lamb .
ChopS With
Provencal
0
•
resslng

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.Page -C6

MOVIES

iunba, ttimH -ientinel

Sunday; September 26,

House of the Wet!k, Page D2

2004

Dl

&amp;unbap Ott me• -6entiatl

INSIDE

At the Movies: 'Shaun of the Dead'
BY CHRISTY LEMIRE

the aisle causes Shaun to
slip . and slide . He leaves
money on the counter before
There's a fantastic, lengthy walking out and returning
tracking shot at the begi nning home.
of "Shaun of the Dead" that 's
It' s that kind of comedy that
representative of the film 's makes "Shaun of the Dead" a
sly humor. Actuall y, it hap- rare successful hybrid. Similar
penstwice.
to ·~ An· American Werewolf in
The first t ime. slac ker London" (1981 ), it's ·a horror
Shaun "(Simon Pegg) walks movie that 's funny, intelligent
out the front gate of his sub- - and. yes - honific, and
urban London flat, runs into a seamlessly so. And like
panhandler who begs for George A Romero' s 1968 cult
spare change, walks across .classic. "Night of the Li.ving
the street and stumbles over Dead" and its sequel ·:Dawn of
the curb. Then he enters a . the Dead,'' ·sources 'of great
convenience store, wanders inspiration for Pegg and direcdown an aisle, opens a refrig- · t()r Edgar Wright, who coc;rator and pulls out a can of wrote the script. it has a certain
soda; he leaves some money irresistible B-movje charm.
on the counter before walk"Shaun of the Dead" is also
ing out and reiUrning home.
incredibly self-aware in its
·The second time happens hipness, especially · in iis
·the next morning. Zombies mu sic selection, but not
have
begun
invading obnoxiously so . "Ghost
Shaun's quiet little 'hood Town" by The Specials plays
but he's · too cluel ess to in the film's beginning .
notice. He goes through the While Shaun is flipping
same routine, only this time channel s on the ·telly and
the zombified panhandler . ignoring breaking news
staggers toward him with reports of destruction and
glazed eyes, groaning for carnage, he runs across
spare chal)ge . The street Morrissey, The Smiths' lead
Shaun -crosses and the ·curb singer, crooning, "Panic on
. he stumbles over are teem- 'the streets of London .. .. "
ing with trash, smashed cars
Possibly the most obscure
and some more of the of all: The electronic party
undead. Once he enters the anthem playing as Shaun
convenience store, bloody rides the bus to his dead-end
hand prints stain the glass job. which you ' ve probably
refrigerator door and a pud- heard at every professional
dle of something gooey in sporting event in the past
Ill' ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

.

'

couple of years but don ' t
know the name of, is called
"Zombie Nation."
These little details and others add up in ways that aren't
Clear from the outset. Shaun's
fat b est friend and flatmate,
· Ed (a slovenly, scene-stealing
Nick Frost), ll!zes around all
day and occasionally sells
pot, but he mo.stly plays
video games in which he has
to shoot bad guys. This Skill
. becomes helpful later.
Wright layers subtle tension
builders - an incessantly
.ringing phone, an increasing
number 9f emergency sirens,
. the sound of a driver laying
on his horn - but even when
things start looking bad,
"Shaun of the Dead" never
takes itself too seriously.
Back to the music for a
moment: In a laugh·out-loud
. sequence, Shaun and Ed
defend themselves from zombies in· the backyard by
throwing
albums
from
Shaun ' s collec.t ion · at their
heads. But they l:lo it selectively: Flinging Dire Straits
or Sade in the name of survival is acceptable, but not an
original pressing of New
Order's "Blue Monday."
·
After holding off the zombies with a cricket bat, Shaun
eventually holes up at his
favorite pub with Ed, his
mum (Penelope Wilton), a
couple of friends and his exgirlfriend,
Liz
(Kate

Sunday, September 26, 2004

/

. . . ., GIJ r

. producer gives hi'm the sense of humor. So is neatly
chance to make his dream everything Joan Cusack says
picture, "Arizona," a· tear- as a .crass, brash movie projerker about a woman dying ducer who explains the busiof cancer in the desen, which ness to Joe .
is based on his own sister.
"I'm a huge fan of law
Except the movie is :being enforcement," she tells him
shot in Providence, R.I. And in all earnestness. "I used to
it's not really a ,movie at all. date the black guy on 'Hill
Steven is actually a pawn · Street Blues."'
·
in a federal mob sting. And
.Tile .. actress . playing
the "producer" is an FBI' Steven'S' sister, Emily French
agent named Joe Devine (Toni Collette, fabulous in a
(Alec
Baldwin,
who's rare role as a femme fatale),
smarmily manipulative in a wants to revive her career,
way that recalls his work in which . has spiraled into B"Glengarry Glen Ross").
movies and rehab. So she
Joe has aspirations of his gladly supplies a urine samown: being as successful as ple in the middle of a restauhis brother (Ray Liotta), rant to show Steven and Joe
who's head of the· FBI. He that she's clean.
could also use a JISYChologiThe FBI a11ent shooting
cal boost followmg the sui- surveillance Vldeo behind a
· cide of his beloved Border · glass .i n Steven' s hotel room
collie, who .flung herself into aspires to be a cinematograthe hot tub because Joe was pher;
out of town working too
Even Joe's bosses; initially
much.
·
skeptical about the movie-asThe joke is just one exam- sting-operation idea, read the
pie of the film's often surreal script and show up with

"COUNTUFALL FESTIVAL.,
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electronic stability co ntro l. stan- .

~~~o~~aning ?~~~:9 C:,ri:~; :~::~c~hr~~~ o~~~

It
.
ranges
2S the freeway one rainy ilight.
.
lllPS on the
·. .The sy~tem promptly reacted to slow the car
·~:
M~:t&lt;Mi ,¥ ' "
mpg for the
1 ~eun_e headtd m the Fight' di rection. Only a s it kicked
'.I FOR'IIf4ASSqCW'EDPRU$
.••
All300s have automatic
· , ~p ;did I-sense that I had been headed for trouble.
·. ·
· . ·
.
· ··-~~... or five-speeds, depending .on the
· ' . St~in~ this fall , the 300 also is available with alla. role in a rap. inusic video, Chrysler's .,.mated to.
wheel drive .
·
i' sedal1 generated a buzz before it even went
Riders fin&amp;.a sq,rprisingly roomy interior in the
The ride in the' 300 · is exemplary. There's no
.
'· .
.
300.
·
· '' ""' .
. · · . · bounciness or roughne ss. ! didn ' t even feel vibrations
and strong; sales - .continue for
Indeed, no other Clu):~I~r -· • pot even a ChrYsler as the suspension in the test car soaked up road
!,argo;, fol!l'-doot car with a . minivan - has .the lengthy; 10-foot-long wheelbase bumps nicely. ·
.
·
,~~~~:~: su'gtestedft:OO!.~c~ •.includ- that .the 300 has, stretching f{om the ,cen!fr ~(one
On occasion, I heard noise ·as the car passed over
!'ii
f:!(,13,9,20. , '.iff
, , whe~I to the center of the other wheel on one stde of expansion cracks on the highway, but r didn ' t feel
the most talked ab~t' car m · ' the car.
.
·
.
any impact. The long wheelbase helps smooth o~t ·
•Gary Dilfs-", Chryslt;r Group
This allows for an an\azing 40.2 inches of rear-seat this kind of thing.
sales, sai( last month after legroom and compares with t~e 134.9. inches in the
, The 300's independent front suspension uses an A
haq posted three strmght large Toyota Avalon
whtcltstans at more than arm and lateral and diagonal lower links with coil .
'
' ·
$26,500, and the
in the· Mercury Grand springs over shock absorbers. The back has a "v"- ·
Marquis full-size ·
2005 Grand Marquis link, independent setup.
starts at
Tires have a substantial amount of sidewall, which
3~:~~&lt;X);~~~~~a:,~~
Note
overall, bumper- appears to help in providing the compliant ride quality.
f.
ll car enthusiast mag- to-bumptlr
SIJdans that are
."mobs!ter.iJJ
' a pil\stripe,_" are • often
Pleese see Chrysler, Dl .

. , . ·• :1., ,: " ·
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· ~~· 1
5

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(Left to right) Ed (Nick Frost) and Shaun (Simon Pegg) let nothing stand in their way as they go
forth .on a zombie killing spree to save the; day in Edgar Wrights "Shaun of the Dead." (AP
Ptioto;Rogue Pictures)

Ashfield) - · who was sick of . The pasty, scruffy Pegg
always going to said pub, one shows a surprising amount of
of the many reasons she · range for the unlikely hero of
dumpyd the selfish, useless a zombie flick. By the end,
Shaun . Once things get when devastating events are
worse, and the movie tl\kes a taking place · all around him
gory, dramatic turn, you get and he ' s forced to show
to know the characters and unexpected bravery and leadlike them enough to truly ership, you actually feel as if
you ' ve watched a transforcare about their fate .

mation - not just someone
going from dead to undead,
but going from dead to alive.
" Shatin of the Dead," a
Rogue Pictures release, i~
rated R for zombie violence/gore and lan~uage.
Running time: 97 mmutes.
Three antl a half stars out of
four.

notes. (They suggest adding
a high-speed motorcycle
chase to spice things up.)
And many of the visual
gags work, such as the suggestion ·during
location
scoutiog that a storage shed
could stand in for a· Hopi
Indian cave in the Grand

••

: ·ANN

and it wasn 't even that novel
Canyon .
But on . the whole, 'The a concept in the first place. .
Last Sho(' is never nearly as
"The Last Shot,"
a
insightful as "The Player," or Touchstone Pictures release,
as biting as "Wag the Dog."
And.the idea that everyone is is rated R for language and .
sexual
content.
after something - whether some
it's being a star or a power · Running time: I00 minutes,
broker - gets old pretty fast, Two stars out of four.

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Afthe Movies: 'The Last Shot'
· (AP) The first thing to say
about 'The Last Shot": The
Hollywood satire does get
several big laughs from indi·
vidual lines and ideas.
The next thing you should
know: . Screenwriter Jeff
Nathanson ("Catch Me If
· You Can"), directing for the
first time as well as writing
the script, doesn't say much
that's new about the land of
the fake and fickle.
Based on a true story, the
film follows wannabe director Steven Schats (Matthew
·Broderick, always comfonable playing boyish and vulnerable ), a sad sack who
bides his time tearing tickets
Chinese
at . Grauman's
Theater and running a kennel
for celebrities' pets, the barking of which infuriates his
would-be actress girlfriend
(a vol'luile, very un:"AIIy
McBeal"-like
Calista
Flockhan).
Steven thinks ·he's finall'y
getting his big break when a

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. •

1

New board1ng school teaches ovetwe1ght
kids the ABC's of weight control
Bv BILEN MESFIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

In the .UnitedREEDLEY,
Calif.
Required exercise at 7 a.m . . States, about a third
sharp. No personal televisions or computers. A cafete- of young people are
ria bereft of potato chips and
ove1Weight or
candy . bars but full of goodfor-yau vegetables.
obese.. . Experts say
Mal Mahedy's new school
has tons of rules that other fat children face low
teens would find intolerable.
But Mal. . 16, embraces the
self-esteem and are
lengthy list of do's and don'ts.
She hopes it will finally help
more likely to be
her overcome the one problem she says has plagued her
targeted by bullies. ·

since she was 10 - her
weight.
The 5-foot-8, . 285-pound
teenager started her junior
year this September at the ·
Academ y of the Sierras, a
new yearlong therapeutic
boarding school for overweight adolescents.
"This is definitely the last
resort before surgery," M'al
, said.
The school combines a
strict eating . plan . and a
ramped -up activity schedule
with counseling and college
prep courses to attack students' problems from several
angles. And, students say,. it
all happens in a supportive
atmosphere, without the
taunting and teasing that
made life hard for them in·
other sc hools ..
The academy, which has
just a dozen students but
expects 25 by year's end, is
billing itself as the ultimate
solution · for teens like Mal,
whose ranks have swollen in
recent decades. A May report
by The International Obesity
Task Force estimated that 10
percent, or 155 million, of
kids worldwide between 5
and 17 are too heavy. Almost
45 million of them are obese,
which generally means 30
percent or more over ideal
weight.
In the Onited States, about
a third of young people are
overweight or'obese, and dia·
bete s is on the rise, too.
Experts say fat children face
low·se!f-esteem and are more
likely to be targeted by bullies.
Private schools and summer camps are trying to offer
healthier meals. The Sierras'
founders say its first-of-akind, comprehensive program will reach . beyond
short-term weight loss to
alter students' lifestyles. ·
"We're almost making them
professors of successful
weight loss," said Molly
Carmel, the school's deputy
c!inical director.
A .spokeswoman with tbe
National Association of
Independent Schools, an
umbrella of 1,200 day and
boarding schools, said she
was not aware of any similar
programs. Neither was the

National Association of
Therapeutic Schools and
Programs, geared toward
kids with emotional or
behavioral problems.
Ryan Craig, the academy's
chief. said the parent company. Aspen Education Group,
has poured · $5 million into
renovating the 68-acre campus, a former psychiatric hospital near the Sierra Nevada.
It has a staff- of 25 and can
handle 70 students. Further
renovation will make room
for up to' l50.
The school is designed for
large students' special needs.
Dorms have steel beds and
solid chairs, toilets are
attached to the walls and a
digital scale can weigh up to
800 pounds.
Aimed primarily at 13- to
18-year-olds who are more
than 30 pounds overweight,
the school costs a hefty
$5,500 a month. That can put
the Sierras academy out of
reach for many ch'ildren who
might need it most.
According
to
Gail
Woodward-Lopez, associate
director of U.C. Berkeley's
Center for Weight and
Health, many overweight
kids are from low-income
households and tend to be·
c.hildren of color. .
i Aware of the financial hur- ·
cjle, Craig said the school
hopes to offer scholarships in
s'ix mont~tudents can
a/so appl~or loans.
;Mal's parents, who sent her
to this town southeast of
Fresno from Naples, Fla., are
paying mostly out of pocket,
with health insurance covering around a third of the cost.
"They just want me to lose
the weight so I can have a
better life," Mal said, taking a
J;reak recently from a daylong orientation held in the
sweltering San Joaquin
Valley heat.
The school's inaugural
class has kids from across the
country, ranging from 80 to
250 pounds overweight;
among them is a boy who
weighs about 500 pounds.
Wearing pedometers to
help count their daily steps,
seven students began the

morning with a two-mile.
walk. After a short lecture,
the recreati~n director told
them it was time for another
short walk· to jolt . them
awake.
"Oh, God," groaned Terry
Henry, already the class
clown.
The rigorous sc hedule is
designed to jump-start a
sedentary lifestyle that has
turned kids into 3-year-olds
when it comes to activity,
said clinic' ! director Daniel
Kirschenbaum.
"At home, I just sit around
and eat a lot," said Jamie
Schleifer, 15 , who had unsuccessfully tried Curves, a fitness center. and the Atkins
diet to whittle her 5-foot-two,
207 -pound frame.
,
Students' days are meticulously mapped out from 6:45
a.m. to II p.m., with activities in the morning and the
evening . . They get three
meals and two snacks a day,
and food options come in two
categories:
They can eat limited portions, up to I ,200 calories, of
·"controlled" foods, such as
potato pancakes and smoked
salmon. They can have their
fill of "uncontrolled" foods as
long they record them in their
diaries.
The menu also favors diet
soda over fruit juice - "We
eat our calories, we don't
drink our calories," said
Craig. The diet .is low on fat
and high on protein.
Academics are also tied to
weight
loss.
Electives
include culinary arts and fundamelitals of the body, and
there's a greenhouse where ·
students can grow vegetables, learning how food gets
"from seed to table," Craig
said.
There's no doubt that such
a controlled program will
make
shedding
weight
inevitable, but the question
looms as to what will happen
when students return home,
even though school officials
say they plan extensive follow-up.
"Once they leave this structured environment, they are
going to head back into the
world that all of us live in,"
said Berkeley's WoodwardLopez.
·
The school's first class reveled in being among likebodied peers. During an icebreaking activity, a staff
member playfully threw a
succession of tennis balls to
Terry Henry.
"I told you I wasn't coordinated," he said when he
dropped one, using a wellworn tone intended to ward
off barbs.
There weren't any barbs, •
and no one laughed. Another
series of balls came his way,
and this time, he caught them
aiL

Chrysler

'great American
car," it's built in a factory in

Ontario, Canaclll, and some

$75,000.

~PageD1
The ride · in the 300 is
There's
no
exemplary.
bounciness or roughness. I
didn't even feel vibrations as
the suspension in the test car
sOaked up road bumps nicely.
·On occasion, I heard noise
as tbe car passed over expansion cracks on the highway,
but I didn't feel any impact.
The long wheelbase helps
sm.ooth out this kind of thipg.
The 300's independent
~ · front suspension uses an A
arm and lateral and diagonal
lower links with coil springs
over shock absorbers. The
back has a five-linlt. independent setup.
Tues have a substantial
amount of sidewall, which
to bel .
vidin
~liant to
g
Steering in the
is rackand-pinion with good enough
on-center feel tliat a driver
doesn't need to adjust the
steering all the time. But it's
accompanied by a · mainstream feel, rather than a
crispness in its response.

ride J!iity.
3lX)

While

~sler

the 300 as

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advertises

f

~ ~t

m:ribune - Sentinel
CLAS 'S IFIED

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Walking·
mi
ht
kee
mind
.
.
.

sharp, war off Alz eimer's:
Bv LINDSEY TANNER
AP MEDICAL WRITER.

CHICAGO • The health
benefits of regular walking
may include helping prevent
mental
decline
and
Alzheimer's
disease,
research in patients aged 70
and up has found, bolstering
'evidence that exercise needn't be strenuous to be good
for you.
There's plenty of evide nee that mental exercise,
such ,a s crossworq puzzles
and reading, may reduce
Aizheimer's risks, but previous s tudies on brain beriefits from physical exercise had conflicting results.
The new findings , contained in two studies, clarify how much' exercise
might be beneficial and are
goed news for older people
who wan( Ia avoid me.ntal
decline but "·don't like
doing all 1hat awful,
sweaty stuff," said Bill
Thies, vice president for
medical and sc ientific
affairs of the Alzheimer's
Association.
"This just says, ' Go for a
walk'" and bolsters evidence
that what'.s good for the heart
may be good for the brain,
said Thies, who was not
involved in the research.
"Keep eating your veggies,

too" could be another mantra, participanls weren't asked
according to a Dutch study, " how long they 'd engaged
showing that Europeans ages in the ac tivities.
70 to 90 . who·. ate a
One. of the exercise studies
Mediterranean-style diet rich involved 2,257 retired meri
in fruits, vegetables, fish ·and in Hawaii ages 71 to 9J:
olive oil had . a 23 percent Those who walked less thari
lower risk of death during a a quarter-mile a day were
10-year follow-up than those almosi twice as likely to
with less healthy eating develop Alzheimer's or other
_habits.
forms of dementia as men
A 65 percent lower mortal- who walked more than two
ity risk was found in those miles daily.
who
combined
the
Walking was "prQbabl y
Mediterranean-style diet with representative of· a lifetime
three other healthy habits _ .behavior" for most of the
moderate alcohol use, no men, given Hawaii's exersmoking and a ·half hour or dse-friendly climate, said
more per day of physical University of Virginia biot;
activity, including walking..
statistiFian Robert Abbott;
Tile studies . appear in the. lead author.
·
Wednesday' s Journal of the
A similar study, involving
American
Medical 16,466 female nurses ages
Association.
70 to 81, found that · even
"This study is important women who walked
because it is often thought leisurely I 1/2 hours a weeJ,;
that diet, alcohol, physical did better on tests of mental
activity and smoking doesn't function than less active
matter anymore in old age;" women.
· said nutrition researcher
"We were a bit surprised
Kim
Knoops
of The that something so modest as
Netherlands' · Wageningen walking would be associated
University, who led the diet with apparent cognitive bene:
study.
fits ," said study author.
While
the
studies Jennifer Weuve, a Harvard
involved older patients, School of Public Health
they don't answer whether researcher.
adopting healthy habits - - - - - - - - - late in life has · the same
On the Net:
benefits as a lifetime of
lAMA:
healthy . behavior, since
http://www.jama.com

SUN.DAY PUZZLER
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YARD Sr.I.E

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YAROSALE·
GAU.II'Ut.L~

s,g yard sale. Sat. Oct. 2. 8·
s .. 520 Bell Run Rd olt
Skidmore Ad. Toots, dishes,·
some antiques. lots of misc.
at
97
Moving
Sale
Honeysuckle
Drive
in
Addison CANCELLED TILL
NEXT WEEKEND. Friday
October 1st thrv Su nday
Oclober 3rd. due to illness.

Depot Street, Rulland. Sepl
Hunting"" Dog found in the
"4 month old puppy, mixed Co r nsta l~ area . Red in 27 lhrough Oct 1st, baby to
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nice
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Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................•... 760
. 1\UtO Repair ..................................................
· Autos for Sale ..... :........................................ 710
· Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ sso
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunffy .................................21 o
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanka .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerllllon ............ ;.................. 840
· Equipment lor Rent.. .........:...................., .... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment,......................................... 610
Forma lor Rent ............................................. 430

insurance/Clerk
Agent . Part time . tax preparers
'Send Resume to PO Box needed lor busy tax office.
26. Point Pleasant, WV Pomeroy location. We will
train . Computer
25550
skills
· required. Send resume to:
Carpenters wanted set - - . , . - - - - - - - The Daily Sentinel. PO Box
Pof)tS &amp; Tru sses for Pole Ui11e
John's
Citgo, 729·13
Pomeroy, Ohio
Barns, some Tra11el reqUired Centenary, now accepting 45'769
•
call (937)716-147,
appllcaiions for the following
-------~ positions: Full time ~xperi·
Dala~l\118 Coordinator
anced Deli Clerk; Full time
Cashier:
Part
time
.
Duties Involve keying Dell/cashier. Taking applica- -------~
retall price Information tions Mon-Frl at location .
or
Medication
PT/L PN
Into
a
d$t&amp;baae. ·
Technician
Desired,
Information Includes mer· . - - - - - - - - Fle)(ibilily
Required.
chandlse unit price, Item MAIN STREET JEWELRY Interested Applicants May
descrlpHon, quantity, pur· looking for 8 eligible people. Apply Daily. Mon.-Fri . 9amchase
ordert,
data Must be sales oriented . 5pm, Ravenswood Care
changee, new vendor Small inVestment (740)742· center, 1113 washington
Information. Must have 2418.
St. Ra11en swood , WV,
good visual and mental
References
Required ,
cDDrdinatiDn, be able to
key accurately end wllh
production apeed, have
working knowledge of
Microsoft
word
and

.

84 Gndlng
98 On ... umitol
98 W«ry
100 Eldlcll c:tblt

102~.r.
103

Microsoft Office. Send
resume
end
salary
requirements to: TSC-24
200 Main St., Pt. Pleasant,
WV 25550
.
DeliveryIWereholise person
needed. fu ll .time, lhlmediata
opening, musl have excel·
lent driving record, apply at
Lifestyle Furniture. 856 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis. 9·5 no phone
calls please.
Drive
CLASS A COL

DRIVERS

NEW PAY SCALE

1 877 4

plloo.

FTIPT.

100%

.,,,
,,,,,,

Satlafactlon · guar•ntud.
· Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Col 11702)133·4888
Sll\ler and Gold Coins. hou,.}

(24

- ...

I::~===~=

22"

- . -.!like·-"""'

~::::;'q

:.730

Vane For Se'-.............................................
Wantildlo Buy ............................................. OIIO
Wenlid to Buy· Farm SUppllee .................. 620
wented To 00 .....:.....................,.................. 180
Warned to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Slife- Oalllpoifa....................................072
Yard Sele-f'omeroy/Middle .........................074

• Diroct deposN wkly

setnements

• tw.. No Touch Freight
1100)23-4-1178 &lt;501 or
MIH7H844 opt 2
AVON! All Areas! To Suy or

SaH. Shirley Spoan;, 304·
•L.:Y::•::rd:.:SI=Ie:..:PI~.P.;IH::.:IIIft;::::I:;;
.. ·:;;·":;;"·,;_·",;_'",;_'":;;":;;"':;;"',;_'",;_'"_:;
0_76:...J 675·1429.•

on her birtlulay
jseptembtr 25, /949
j Mom_, we iolle and
, mtss you\very
1

b;~~~~~;.;d
Cindy
_;;;;_....;;;;;;=;;.,I

Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Cenler is looking for dedicated compassionate ' S1&lt;1 1e
Tested Nursing Assrstants.
Competihve wages , heallh
and dental bene tits. and
401 K a11a1lable We ta ke
pride in our home and residents and need grea t team
playerS 10 join us It you have
these qualif1cat1ons please
apply
to : ·Rocksprmgs
Rehabilitation Cenler, 36759
Rocksprings
Road ,
Ohio
45769.
Pomeroy.
Extendicare
Heal th
Services, Inc. is an equal
opportu.nity employer that
encourages
workplace
diversity. M/F ON

WANTED: Pos111on avail·
able to ass1st individuals
wilh mental re)firda!IOn •n
Me1gs County. Hours. 3·
I 2:30pm Mon!Tues : 3·12pm
Wed . Mus I ha11e high school
drpfoma/GED, vahd dn11er's
license, three years good
drilling experience and adaqu8te automohrle 1nsurance.
.$7.00/hr. Send resume to :
Buckeye
Community
Services PO Box 604 ,
Jackson . OH
45640.
Oeadl111 e fur applicants :
1011104
Pre-employmen t
drug
testmg.
EQUal
Opportunily Employer.

150

S(lll•&gt;l~'i
IN,-Il!Ul'llON

Hrgh
School
Junrors.
Semors and Pnor Sery1ce
you can 1111 vacanl posrhons
rn the We s1 V1rQ1n1a Army
N1lt1onal Guard . It you are
between lhe ages of 17·35
or have pnor mrlita ry serv·
1ce. you won "! wanl lo pass
lhrs up For Opportunrlres 11'1
your area, call: 304-6?5·

5837
Seeking 39 People

Locally
who wanllo earn money
while losing weighl showing
others how

1740)4.4 1-1992,
FR.EE SAMPLES
www.tamousnulrllion com

180

WA~,n&gt;

7

~Earn between 45-SOK
•Min. 2 years exp.
•t:iome Time on Weekends
Yard/Mov1ng Sale-Saturday •$500 sign-on bonus
·
Sept 25 8:00 a.m. to t:OO •S"fart at 36 cpm
p.m. 306 15th Sl. Mo11lng , •95% No touch freight
must sell.
Great things , •NO FORCED NYC
great prices ·· Funliture,
appliances . clothing , home Call 800-652~2362 for more
decor Pleasa note 11me-t1il into.
1;00
Dn\lers; Regional Tanker Co.
has new business; COL-A
w/2 yrs . tractor-trall er ,exp. -P-ar-am-edic-,-&amp;--E-M_T'_s
Excellent
Pay/Benefits, n"eeded. Apply at 1354
RIVERSIDE
AUCT ION Martin Transport, (866)293· Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
BARN Rt. 7 South, 5 miles 7435
below the Dam . EVERY
Help Wanted ·
SATURDAY
@
6pm. Earn $600. WEEKLY Of
morit.
Procaetlng our
740 251!·6989.
mail from home. Genuine
W-INT'IlJ
opportunity. FREE eup-

a

Uphollll8ry .:................................................. 870

~ IISCfl .LANH )l'S

To Do
Gall!polis Career College
c
Limited
time
ONLY
{Ca eers Close To Home)
(740)446-3358. First 5 to call
Call Today! 740·446-4367 . Certrfied Ch1ldcaro Provrder
Sales .•.
has cpenrngs Morr-Fri 6am·
receives a gift.
1·800·21 4·0452
6pm Pr111ate· pay accepted
www
!liiiiiP;Ot,scareercollege
C1Jm
- - , - - - - - - - - ~------- Are you looking tor a new
Acc oGU Member Accoeo.Ji tony L1nk accept9d call (304)675·
RADIOLOGY
career
with
an
unhm1
ted
Need a job?
Coun~r 111depenaent C.OIIagss 4679 ask·for Sarah
TECHNOLOGIST CT
opportunity lor advLJnce· 8nd ~chools 127411
We are hiring!
ment?
You could earn up to
POSinON,
170 'I
·
For all your Home Protects .
$8/hr plus bonuses
""--"•I•SI•
'I.,
·:I.,.I..,AN.,~.,:~•ll•lS.,.I and' Repairs. Early, late. brg
Seeking ARRT registe1 ed Would you like to be recog ·
We also otter paid training,
•
or small. call the Handyman
technologist for full lima nized as a professional
holidays, and vacations.
· Full 0 ~ pa,rt time shifts
position. Primarily for CT salesperson in one Ot lhe Royal Oak membership for (740)446·0422
with opportunity to work In country's highesl paid occu· sale, great deal $700, - - - - - - - available
(304)874.4169
George s Portable Sawm1 li.
MAl or Ultrasound, as ·well. pations?
,
don't halll your logs to the
. • ~;~~~~8~~1. 2454 Experience preferred. but
millJtiSt ca l1 304·675-1957.
employer will prO\'ide train· If SO, our salespeople earn
- - - - - - - - ing toward certification. an excellent income and
Housecleanmg $10 a Hr.
Nursing Assistant Classes Great opportunity working enjoy the benefits of workrng
(740)446·3385
.
beginning October 4, 20, with new equipment in a with a successful and pro2004 thru October 20,2004. ·hospilal-based · radiology gressive dealership.
11 you enjoy elderly people department. Friendly teamHelp Wanted
Help Wan1ed
and want 10 become a mem - oriented atmosphere that II you 're ser1ous about a new
1nuepen
•
dence. careef and are looking lor
oar ot our health care team , supper t&gt;
please slop by Rocksprings continued education, and the training and guidaf)ce
Rehabilitation Center at professional de\lelopmen1. that are e~sential for long36759 Rocksprings Road, Interested
candidates , term success- we 'd llk\1 to
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill please inquire al (740)592- talk to you.
out an application for the 9483 and send resume to :
·
Radiology Associates of
Please . slop in for an interclasses.
Pk&lt;~~ant Valky . Ho-.pi la l Homt' Mt dical
view
E)(tendicare
Health
Athens
Equip nk~nl b ~..:um.'l lll ~ &lt;Kl'L'pti ng I'CSUillL'" for
Services, Inc. is an equal
PO BoJ~; 2608
Norris Northup Dodge
opportunity employer that
Athens, OH 45701
full tinll·: Day ~ hirt . Rc!'lpiratur)· Therapist.
Chrysler Jeep
encourages
Workplace
Fa)(: (740)592·9396.
or Certified Respirator_,. Therapist . ~1 ·u~t h~
diversity. M/F ON
" grLJtluatt: uf an anpnnetl R L'~ pi ra tory

....

101 WOIIIllp

170

Make SO% selling Allon . · E.O.E.

For Lea.. .................................................. ,.• 480
For Sate ....................,................................... 58&amp;
Proofseis, Gold Rings, u.s.
· For Slle or Trade ......................................... 590 · Currency.·M.T.S. Coin Shop. ExperleflCed Roofing Crewa
in
Florida's
: Fruita &amp; V.tableo ..................................... 580
151
Second
Avenua, needed
Hurricane Area Top Flay Call
Gallipolis, 740.~46-2842 .
. Fumtehed Roome ........................................450
David 0 1·772·587-0559
: O.neret Haullng.................................,.........850
Olveawey .....................................................040 · Land In Gailla Counly.
Happy Ada ....................................................050
Wooos end hills flna Will do Full time Front Deak Clerk.
Appty In peraon Holiday inn,
Hoy, &amp; Oraln ..................................................MO
dozer work for property.
577 Si. Ri. 7N. No phone
He p Wonted ................................................. 110
1740)388-8228.
calla pleaae.
,.,. I
'&amp;
· Home lmprovemente...................................810
I \ 11 ' 111) \11 '- I
: HomH lor Sale ...................................,........ 310
' I It\ It I ...,
. lnfoCislon
Menagement IAti,..,-onclt~illlli10111'0ttrn
, HouMhoid Ooodo ....................................... 510
m;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ COrp. It currently accepting a variety of _baclgrOUncll. 8ut
: HOUHIIOf' Aent .................;........................ 410
116
., applltationa for Full· Time
In Mimotlam ................................................ 020
•
Hl:u&gt; WAN11iD • Doyohlft pooltlo~• (8~·5p).
1
..__ _ _ _ _ __. Qualified applicants should
· lneurance ................................., ................... 130
Lawn &amp; Oerden Equipment;....................... 1180
5250 to $500 a week
be stable,·· highly mottvatecl l•ho:::.:!'':!:~;:: lor
LlvHtock................................... :..................830
lndlvlduale with good com· 1t
bf
Will train to work a1 home
Loll and Found ............................:.............. 080
munlc&amp;Hon
skilla.
Wa
ott.r
a
Helping the U.S.
Lota AcrHge ............................................ 350
Govemment tile HUD/FHA
· MloceltaMOua .............................................. 170
401K.
No prtviOUI
lkperl·
full benatltl
package
and
mortgage refunds
· : MtoceltaMOua Merchandlu.......................540
ence neceaaary. We are the
lllelfforii'IOf'l
No e•penence necessary
· Mobile Home Aepafr ....................................aeo
prafsssfonal dlflersncs in
yQJca't 00111 &amp;;7t
Call ToW Fr"
: Mobile Hoinea1ot Rant ............................... 420
teltservlcea and need great
Independence, pride and
1-866·537-2907
· Mobl'- HomHior Slfe ................................320
team players 10 join Uti freeOOmOibelnQ'f'IUOWI"'boa
Money 10 Loan ............................:.............:..
candidates,
An Excel\ent•way , to earn Interested
please call 1-Bn-483-6247 If 100 are looking for tnet'rara
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Whaelere .......................... 740
money. The New Avon .
Mualcat lnotrumenta ................................... 570
Call Marilyn 304-882·2645 ext. 1901 or apply online ~hl:mald1asbell-d­
Peraonala ..... :............................................... oos
www.iofpdajpn oom
claaoproducta,...,..""'*ATTN. Owner Operator&amp;
· Peta for Sale ................................................ 580
ltratsgfeo ano a-- 1!181 o
McC•In Trtn•port.
· Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
an established Ree(er
Pro!Holonal Servlcee .................................:no
In Memory
st Ifill Snap·oo OfQartization. H
·company, is currently hiring
· Aedlo TV &amp; CB Aepalr ...............................180
lntarntld
p1NII contlct
Owner o.,9rator&amp;:.
· ANI Eotata Wanted ..................................... 380
Snip-on- Compony w:.
••st.1
8
per
G•Uon••
Schoolo lnetruC11on.....................................150
Mlko llllglor1, 41 Old
Locked In Futl Prtce
Sled , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
~--~MAml1~t
•90e/ml.loadedl
sse
empty
Sltultlont Wanted .......................................120
Fu: [501)13f.7721; E·""ll;
Space lot Rent ............................................. 480
•2800·3000 mi{wt(
F'wrtnct Marie
. Sporting Goodo ........................................... 520
~
• Paid BobtAIVCBigo Ins.
· SUV'olor Sele ............................................720
Spirts
A • " ane kMcNie 11
• Paid platesltollslpermitA
· Trucka lot Slle ............................................ 715

115 llll a.. ....
115 KDiiniiiiiMI olllnnil

liEu• WANn:n

.
or ~.~e u1ure
Bob Sullivan
catech@ :zoonlnternet ,net
1·877·239-7945
tjullo~ng

. .Pr. PLEASANT

lUBUY

110
HELP WAN'Il:ll

YARIJSALE·

Farm1 for Sale ..................... .".•. ."................... 330 ·

81 llllhtgi\IMillr
83 Food,._,

110 lhd

Husky/· Golden
Retriever m1x, 1 112
old.
ADOPTION: A loving COU· Call
(740)388·9665
or
pie would like to adopt your 1740)388·0575.
newborn . Will pro11ide ~
home l1lled with joy, happi·
l.u;rAND
ness, financial security and
FOUNII
a great education. Feel con·
tident in know1ng betause of
your brave decision your $ 100.00 Reward M1ss1ng
baby could look forward to a since September 3rd. Male
·bright and wonderful future . Beagle mix, Reddish brown,
Expenses paid. Call toll free gojd and whi)e, neutered.
Co.
in
Meigs
1-866-731-7825. Barbara Lost
Skinner/Wes t Shade Ad
and Michael
area. Family pet. please

no

62~

85

1 Siberian

eo

=-------.,

.

~

ANNUUNCEMI:"'S

GIVEAWAY

tJi

Now you can have borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
lr1'
Borders $3.00/per ad
.
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

POLICIES: Ohio V•U.y Publishing rea•rves the right to edit, reject. or cancel any ad at any lima. Error&amp; muat be report•d on the tlr•l day of
will be ,.apon•lble for no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the ,lrll inur'tlon. We
1
any loea or ••pan .. that ruulte Prom the publication or omlaalon of an advertisement Correction will t. made In the flr•t av11ilable edition . • Box number
are alwev- ~:ontldential. • Current rate card apPUea. • All res! estate edvertlaement&amp; araavbject to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1958. • Thle nowopo 1
help wantltd ad• meeting EOE atandardL We will not knowingly accept any advertlalngln violation of the law.
'

· • Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Indude complete
Oe5crlptlon • Inc;lude A Prlc;e • Avoid Abbrevl•tlon•
• Include Phone Number And Addres• When Needed
• Ads _S hould Run 7 D•vs

i
·
l : r

137 Coolu certain way

1~~~~

r

r

\\\01 \(I \II '\l"i

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sunday,•

• All ads musl b.e prepaid"

Sat-Sun . Baby and housereturn no questions asked.
hold Items. Tupperware ,
:Sale October 1st, t Oam· (740)985-4492 ·
qlshes. fu rniture, more. 2
8pm Krodel Club-House.
mtles below dam on right.
Pt.Pie asant,
Jewelry, Dark Brindle Mix , while ·
Baskets ,
Indian patch under chin . Found Xard sale 24 ·~ 6. Knick
Decorations. Fabric. Toys, 2miles out Rt62 off Rt2 con- kna cks ,
clothes .
Off
Plclures,
Chnslmas tact Animal Shelter.
E11er9reen 10 9/1 0 Hemlock
Decorations, Flowers &amp;
Rd .
much Misc.
Golden Retriever found 1n
74
YAIUl SAL[the Pt Pleasant. Gallipolis
I'&lt;lMEROY/MmiJLE
~
GIVt:A\\!\\'
Ferry area l304)675-6023

109 Moral phiooophy
111 Polnlld llldl
112 Couch
113 Bll1ly enough
115 Bu!y

Kindld
In llie

. Successful AdsShould Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

DisPlay Ads

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
.In Next Day's Paper
Sund~y In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

Mondav thru Friday
8:00 a.m. ~o 5:00 p~m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Oead~ire.s-

word Ads

c--------

wabiled feet

.It 8
120
123
125
130
132
. 134

In One Week With Us
'REACH .OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS
R AD NOW ONLINE

,.•

a

80 Edl*bUb

20 percent of its parts reportSixty percent are expected
edly are from Chrysler's par- to be men, 73 percent marent
com[111tty,
Daimler ried, and nearly half in proChrysler of Germany.
fessionallman.agerial jobs.
Despite· its size, the.300 is
The company won't disnol offered with a front bench close its sales expectations.
seat, so maximum passenger
Because the 300 is new,
count'is five.
·
· Consumer Reports does not
The middle person in the list reliability data.
back seat of the 300 has to
The National Highway
contend with a rather large
hump in the floor, courtesy of Traffic Safety Administration
gives the 300 five out of five
the rear-drive setup.
1be interior of the test car stars. for driver and passenger
was quite quiet, save for wind · protection in a frontal crash
noise that emanated from the test.
The car received five out of
front at highway speeds when
five
stars for protecting rearI was traveling into the wind,
and for an intermittent rilttle seat• passengers in a side
crash but only four out of five
in the dashboard.
The 'trunk lid wouldn't stars for front-seat protection
close initially, either. It in the same test.
turned · out the , emergency .
On the market since spring,
~lease handle inside was the 2005 300 already has
striking the trunk latch .a nd been the subject of three safehad to be ftxed in place.
ty recalls, ranging from 21
Dilts said the 300 "is cars that were recalled ·
attracting customers across because missi.pg welds could
all demo~phic segments."
cause rear seat belt anchors
Even hip hop artist Snoop
child seat mchars to. give
Dogg called the automakir .or
way
to 20,060 cars recalled
this year to get a car. The 300
because
battery cable fastenhas already appeared in
music video by flipper SO ers might become loose and
cause a fue.
Cent.
A final note: Dodge sells a
Chrysler officials, howev2005
vehicle that uses the
er, targeted a brOader group
of buyers between 40 and 54 same rear-drive platform as
years of age, with median the 300. 1be Dodge Magnum
household
income
of is a large wagon md starts at

6unbap a::t~~tH -6mttntl • Page 03

OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

PageD2

·--'"'"-

Snlj&gt;o&lt;o
""' SMo-Mof'""'
.. tr1d!n\nl
Snap................

www.snapon com
. . ,, ~'tl
'$

,_,

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

automobile insurance. 'S7.00nu. Send rt'! Sume

Thcrapi:-.t program . Mlh l he r~o·gi,t c re d antl
lict•n:o.cd in 1he !-.late:-. Ql WV and Ohio. One nr
ty. ·( l yt:a r~ of experience i:-. prcfem:J .
Excellent salary. holidaJ'-. hea lth in"'urancc
~inglc/ family plan, dental plan. li fe imurancc.
vacation ,·long-tcrm c.Ji~ahllity and retireme nt .
Send resumes to :
Pleasan1 Valley Hospital
% Human Resources

to: Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45MO. Deadline . lor

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

applicants: 1011/0&lt;i. Prc-e mpl uy oncnl drug
'
testing.
Equal Opportunily Employer

1304) 675-4340
AA/EOE

WANTED:

Position

available

to

a~:-, i~t

individuals with mental retardation in Meigs
County. HOurs: 3- I 2:30 pm Monffue!'.; 3- 12
pm
Wed. Musl
have
high
school
diploma/GED, valid driver 's license. three
years good driving experience and adequate

Help Wanted
HelpWantld

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Professional Sales Reprsentative

p
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Posting Date: September 14,2004
Penout Advising Coach Corps ~oordl.nutor
ne UnlvenltJ of ·Rfo Grande annou'nces an open·
ln1 for 1 part•tlme posldon for a Personal Ad,•islng
Coodi Corps CoordliUtor.
lteportln1 to tho Dlro&lt;tor of the CARS · Cenler,
thiJ peoon wltlldmlnlmr a prolram or lntrusl•e
odmlng ror academically at-rjlk •ludenu enteoing
tho ftrst fcrm of their nrst year •• tho unlvenlly of
Rio Grande/Rio Gt'llndo, Communfly Collfl•· The
PAC Coonllnotor Is respomlble for enli&gt;llng,
training and supporting Rio Grande faculty, sta.fT
and administrators who ~olunteer to servt &amp;.'i
Pononal Admit~~~ C""!'hts.

nls 12 month position requires an individual that
..~ be nexlbif with working hours and be •••u.
obi• ror days, ovenJnas or possibly weekends.
Quallftcatlons lac:lude excellent organlulional and
interpe~nal skill, commibnent to bdpina stu•
dents Aleteed. F'revious uperience working with
post secondary ed~~e~~tion students is prderred. ,

lnttrtsted ~ndldates should send a letter of Inter·
tsllnd resUmt bero~ the deadline of October 14,
2804. Retul1\6 .tU bt rniewed as re«h·ed,
Ms. PbyiUs ~lason, SPHR
Dlndor of Human Resources
Uni,.rsity 01' Rio Grand•
P.O. B.,. 500
Rio Grondr. OH 45674

Join the leader ln Automotive
Sales In Southern Ohio
Training ... Two weal&lt; initial &amp;·orientaiion
classes with continued ongoing tra1ning .
Management. .. The b'es1 management
team in the area to assist you in' sales. ·
Salee Support... Supe rior sales support.
including a lull or part time sales assistant
once you 've reached elite status in sales.
Compensatlon ... Commission , bonuses ,
including all expense paid vacations 10 the
top producers each year in elite status .
Berieflts ... Reach eli1e sta1us and work
your own hours . Unlimited income
po1ential.
If you're t11ed of working for someone .
who isn'1 work.ing !or you. send your last
12 months of sales history· and all
employment history of the last 10 years to
Norris Northup Podge , P.O . box 300 ,
Gallipolis. Ohio 45561. Al l replies are
str~ctly confidential. No calls .

email pnwon @rio.edu
Fn 740-245-4909

EEOIAA Employer, \\'omen and Minorities art
ono:ouraged to apply.
l!"'~U"IIIf

of Rio G.-... and I&amp; G..-.nM

ComMunlt~

( -~~~~

$22,495.
f

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t

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�•

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • P1. Pleasant, WV

r ~~~ Ir

~

WANI!D
To Do

1667 Single-wide. 3

·awe

(740)4~6-

GETYOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME'
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME,LOANSt

Will ell with elderly
Day/Night Weekdays/Week·
tnds Have references
Many years of

eJ~tperktnce

(740)94!#-2543
· Wood's EKtra Care lor your
• Loved one

Pnvate roombath, 3 hot meals Phone

(740)388-Q118

.-.uuv.&amp;"~

tUK RENT

Make 2 payments. move 1n 4
on note (304)736·
0% Down Payment and
3409
fmanc1ng available With
Average
New Oakwood mega store approved credit
credl l quahf1es you If down
teatunng
Homes
by
Oakwood . Fleetwood &amp; payment has kept you f rom
Giles One stop shoppmg buy1ng, lh1s 1s your chance
only at Oakwood -Homes of to own your own ho~ . If
BarboursVIlle WV {304)736- you have a down payment
but would like to conserw it,
3409
we otter low down payment
Next to new 2000 Redma[l programs also. Great Inter16X80 . 3 bedroom/2 bath, est rates' Loca l comp11.ny
Locators
\llnyl Siding/single roof fu lly Mortg age
lo~ded
$27,900 00 Can (740)992·7321
help w1th delive ry Ask for - - - - - - - Nikki (740)385-9948
1 bedroom house $250/mo
2 bedroom M use $350/mo
N1ce 14X52 94 Flem1 ng, 2 4 bedroom M use $4 ~01 mo
bedroom, sh1ngle roof. l ot Depos11s negotiable
iOOX120
1n
Syracuse t 4x65 mobile home e\lery(740)992·5888
thmg Included, excellent
condition , $4 000 (740)446·

-SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

dlscr lmlnaUon.'

S t oc~

estate which Ia in
violation ot the law Our
reader~ are he reby
Informed that all
dwellin gs advertlaed In
thla newspaper are
available on an itqt.lal
opportunity bat~••

Ch airs Galt 743 -1100

14 4 ac res 25 mmu tes from water, electnc1ty conc rete
13 m1t es from
Highfield Stud1os Now tak- Ath ens
Pomeroy
or floors
$173.500
lng Student s cl asses to Gallipolis Al exan der e&gt;r Buffalo/Kenna
begm Oct 4 lor Pottery, Me1gs Schools $115,000. 443 745·7784
4 _ _ __
0 1:_
6_
98_-_
35_0_
~17_4_

beginners class Mon &amp;
Lars&amp;
Thurs 5-9 for Basi c Drawmg Hom es from $1o 0001,
ACRRoi.GE
class, Sat Mornm gs 9- 12 Forclosure, VA Hud for hsiBeginnmg Oct 2 for 6 weeks 1ng 1-800-749-8106 ex 1709 0 97 acre bu1ldmg lot on
eaii743-3B70 lor deta1ls
Grandview Ave near County

I~

House 3 Be droom 1 1/2 Fairgrounds N1ce neighbor Bath Heat Pump, new hood all ut1ht1es except
Carpet, Windows &amp; Roof , sewer $1 0 ,000 (304)489·
R1ver V1ew 12 Sm1th St No 1363
Money Down to qualifying
Buyer $425/month why Rent
Bruner Land

I \I I .., I \II

(304)675-2749

(740)441·1492

One

new custom built home
28x56 on 4 5 ac res m/1,
~$85, 000 O ne 1 1/2 SIOry
(2) 3 bedroom houses for home &amp; 3 bay garage wtlh
sale 2 baths, fi replaces. on an apartment above Both
acreage Call (740) 709- for
$11 5, 000
OBO

1166

(740)388-8273

0% Down

Payment and
financi ng available w1th
Ave1 age
approved credit

credit qualifies you If

i

MOBFOILERSHALEOMI'll

150 FORECLOSED

HOMES Selling At
AUCTION

Shade

bedroom, 2 bath, some furnlture &amp; appliances $8 ,500
Call {740)245-9040.
-------1989 3 bedroom. 2 bath
14x70 Completely remod~
eled ms1da 740·256·1526 or
740·645·0446
1992 Southern Elite Mobile
Home 16x70 2 bedroom 2
Oath, some appl1ances

1993
Mans10 n
Mo bile
Home-14X60 2 bed room, 1
bath, total el ectnc, good
• cond1t10n, central a 1r, stove ,
refrige rator and m1crowa\le
mcluded
S8·.soo

74 Cedlr Street.
Y,!!!polls
3BR,1.5 BA,1958 Sq. Ft. (740)949-9016
Local Agent: David

oo.

Auction

OPEN HOUSE Sat. &amp; Sun ..
Oct 2 &amp;3; 1 to 3 pm

View Photo &amp; Auction
Terms at

www.hudeonandm•r·
ehall.com

HUDSON I MARSHALL ol
T1111

BCJ Hudoon 157·1999·7961
In Alaoc. w/ Ed Clreen RE.
•57-1966-()576

1-8CI0-44 1·9401

River

Cash

car anact1ed garage, plus
two large outbui ldings
Blacktop driveway, many

OIIITU- $129,000 wilh 713
.ere lot, or $159,000 with an

llddlllonal 3.485 acres olllal
IJOUnd. Very close to town ,
on Spruce St extension

call (740)591-Q437 anytime.
For Sale or Rent.

~

3

btcii"'OOTT, 2 bath home on

2.18 acres. 25
Athena,
GalliPolis.

minutes from
Pomeroy
or
Ale)Cander o,r

Meigs SchoOls. $93,000.
(740)698-3504.

..
••

P os 1ti\le

"Not res

ID

Auction

rt "

Auction

ESTATE

Ch~rming German Brick
2 Car Gar~Je wfOpener

Hou}ehold

llus., Ort 71h 3:00 PM
154 Hm Street, CA:uUJO, Ol1o

•

*

Well
main-!
tamed
home
that's
never :
lacked attent1on ConSISU •

*

eat -in

kitchen
w/
abundant cabinetry, built-in

range,

re;lS, •&amp;~y ~

18', "ide commercial and other size doors
available. For a different size or style door to be

added to litis auction call (614) 837-4710.
Door lnstalladon,Avallable

BriniTruckorTnU!er
Open for Prtview 2 Hn. Befort AuctiorL
All Sales Final &amp; Sold "As Is"
Terms: Cash, c!Jarge card and check wltlt S.S.
number I. D., 10% buyen premium will be
charged. Tax wiU be charged, unless you have

vendors number. All doon must be removed lhn.
after compkdon ol aurtioiL

OWNER: SHOFF DOOR CO.
AUCTIONEER: lACK GOODBAR

Saturday, October 2, 2004 at I O:OOAM
Moodispaugh Auction Home
Torch, Ohio
Location:From Pomrroy follow Rt.7 North through
CoolviUr, Ohio to Co. Rd. ft3, tum ri2hl and Pltase
Follow· Signs To Auelion Houst.
£w:ni1.w:l.;_ Wt~lnut Drop rronl !iel:~tary wlbuuk caw top.
Oak S«retan hookca.o;e, v.lanut roll desk. mahg. higha111l
bed wJ matChing dresser, m&amp;hg. china. mission oak hall
strl. mission oak s1deboard, oak m1ntle 111 /mirror, oak lin

top ice bor.:, oak baktn cupboard. oak dr)' sink, oak Ratwall cupboard. cherry gentleman's ('htst wlbirdeyl! front.
ch errv blanket box, oak &amp; walnul slepback l'upboard s.. 6
draw'er spool cablnrl, oak lO drawer Index card cabinet
w/rolled front, 2 Jpc. parlor sets, viet. rolled arm sora,
morris thalr, sq &amp; rd oak table, se1 or 4 &amp; 6 oak thaln,
uak &amp; "alnut ht¥hbuy &amp; dressen wfmirron, iron &amp;
brass Mds &amp; night stands, 011k &amp; walnut wash!!itands, oak
&amp; muhg. library tables. lamp &amp; clr tables, orKUD stool.
hall trft , chairs. rocker;,;, metal 3 door ke bo" old wtcker,
'
ml..c:. painled furniture &amp; lots more.
~Prim . glass doort'd corner cupboard, pie &amp;
jMWter cupboard, 1800's mama bed,tmd lots more.
(ilwwart &amp; rotten; Fenton, lmpcnal, Carnmd ,
Fostoria, Blenko, Dtopresslon, ladUe. Smhh, Crystal,
China &amp; d.:. McCo), Watt, Am. Bisque, Chlillkwan~.
cdoktt jars &amp; lots more.
M.ixJ_ Joe St. Clair t&amp;ble lamp, sel of chil war horse
namei1 push-pull loy car, Marx, A.m. Fl} t r traim, R.R.
memo.. antique rugs, clocks. sleigh bells, art d('(:o lighting
wfshadi:S, hall mirron, quilts, linens, pictures, frames,
(wateN"Oior &amp; etc.), baskets. wco:ll huckeiS, wood wash
boards. wood bowls, brass kellle, ironware, enamelware.
adl'. dove-tail boxes, paperwork. books, bultons , blue
jars, toys. radios, and tots more.
Coill!i : Silver doll1:1rs, 112 dollars, qrts, dimes, mckels,

FOR SALE

2-Story Home
on 3/4 acre w/2-car garage
Salem Center, OH (Meigs County)

&amp; pennies.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This is somewhut a parttal
hslina of a large and ,•ery nke collethon, come out and
enJov lhe day, there will be something for everyone.

MOtiDISPAUGH AUCTIONEERING SERVICES
AlK'tioneers: Btll Moodispaugh: Ohio Lit. #76~3. W.V.
Lie.# 1388 &amp; Todd Moodispaugh: Ohio Lie. #0000107
Licensed and bonded In ra,or of th e Slates
Ohio and WV.
TERMS; Cash or aood check w/proper I.D. We do not
acttpl trtdtl cards wtan R% premium. Not responsible
for loss of property. Annou~Kements dpy of salt take ·
prec~ence of printed material or online material.

•

Good rtfreshments provided.
For inronmttion:(740) 667-0644 or (740) 989-262J
Viewing dn will be friday, Oct. 1, f'rom 10.00 lo 5:00pm.
Chec:k out Our website: (wl\w.moodlspaugh.com) for lots
or great pictures or Item&amp; to be sold.
Thank You ror your attendance!

*
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AUCTIONEER/REALTOR:
lohn Patrick "Pat" Sheridan
OhioReaiEstateAuctions.com
r1] Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com
lr:!J WEB: www.shamrock-auctions.com
" PH: 740·592·4310 or 800-419·9122
Auction

Auction

Auction

~m01 K. Cu~~ A~-

STA(7~~J7'5~m~l

C
Proudly'SorvlnRYou Since 1960

~

::="OIItf
rill

Auc1lon

Goods.

, october 7th
3:00 PM
m Street a tllk:otlte, Ohio

!•

!
Nice Splndle· Back Plank Btm Rocker: :
Cherry Ped. Claw-Foot Fern/lamp Stand; MahoJ.. *

3-Drawer Dresser w/Oak WishbOne Mirror: (:.l.) :
,.. Wall Mirrorsb
· Cherry Wash Stand (one dr }; Ma~
ho~o Sin~le r . China Cab.; Tread[e Sewtng Ma:-chine; (S Oak chatrs, I dr Stand; IO..dr. Oak :
+ chest w Ca..rvlnP-; Stack Glass Door Bookcase;

*

*

*
*
• M.nde Clotks: Comet Bock &amp; Flat T!'l' Trunks; !
! Many Oil Patntinp; Oak Sp1ndle Back Grandfather *
* Roc;ker; Sq OaK lamP. Table; Sa. Oak Stand; *
: N'c• White Stencil ed Hoos1er Krtchen Cabmet, :
• Collec.dbles· Chalkware Frog Doorstop; Figurines : *
* Costume

jewelry; Rar:co Electrifled Oil Lamp ; :

.: Shirley T emp-le Mug; Salt Glazed Mlx lnt Bowfs ; *
* Glassware &amp; Pottery: Hall. F1re Kmg. McCoy, H ull , :
! Salt Glued Stone. Jars &amp; Jugs; Stemware; Stone *
• Batter Bowls, Old Ucense Prates; Blue &amp; Clear *"

: Cannln2

l~n . Victorian Mirror &amp; Brush Set; N1ce
llOO's p ictur e postcard CollectiOn Album ;
• 1874 Gallia County Adas &amp; Other G~llia Coufl9'
: collectibles : BaldWin Spinet Plano &amp; Bench:

* early

:

*
:
*
• Wurl1aer Beark: Organ.
*
• fliCDU:'1t• IL HouH)ool~: Bookcase Heodbo&gt;rd !
: UC {Uiti: like neWROckir Recliner; {2) Hide-A- *
• Bed , Solu, End Tobles, Rd Maple Dinette w/~ •
: Chairs; Color TV w/ Remote; Portable Color TV: !

· • Mlcrow:ave. Frlgldolre Relrlg.. Moytog H.D. •
* 'Washer &amp; Dryer, Pots, Pans" Many Kitchen &amp; :
: Household lti!:ms ; lawn Bey t"ush Mower; 8-Ft. *
1t Aluminum Step Ladder
*
: Personal Prop. T#rms: Cash or ckeck wJ 10 at !

* time of sa~; sold as-is, where-is, no warranties or *
d~r: of sale, Mary Trotter :
: Estate RCn.. #2004-E-0239, Ted Trotter &amp; Julie *
*Taylor, Executors
*
! STANLEY A SON, INC. l740) 775·3330 !

* guarantees.i.....remova.l

•

Proudly Servlna'Vou'Since 1960

•

*
**
*t'

www.stanleyandiOn.com

:

: ~

'.::2:.'!e~.
II~ CAl. M~E
r a R.nl t:5t~t• Brol.er

***
~~Realto'*'
•*
Uu J W•llman. AucbOOMr
S.dl Woruelt.
: IT'S HAMMBI 1W£I IT'S HAIMIIR 1W£I !
'***********************************,.,

.

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCnON

•
:

•
·

j

CO. 5 disc changer. AIC. tacsunroof, new 1997 Fon::t F-150 Lanat, ext
fll4llllos. Shots. &amp; tires. powe• seats. $7.500. cab. Slep-sotle. """· oordbon. o4-wheeldrive. $12.000.
dew claws ~ ~ (740)388-a228.
740--367-n62 or 740-367·
$350 (740)o041-Q130.
_ _:___.:___ _ _ _ 2000 Dodge Neon, air. 7'272
AKC Lab Puppies 3 Black. 1 57.000 ,...._ $2,600 0B0
;
S2so oac11 ca11 638- .:.(7_40.:.)256__,_m_.___
2000 Ford Explorer exc 2000 OQdge a-ta Sport

pets. Vrte St. . {740)446-7398

AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab tory· power

being takOfl

cal (740)992-2459
&amp; wormed 740-988ultlla bOma11 ohiO- 200 1 Dodge caravan Sport 882-3407
m11es-- n,960, 57,500. 2001
hllts.net

Shots
408 1

ing 740--446 -2205 or 740- Thompsons Appitance &amp;
; 446-9585 ask tor V1rginra
Aepatr--675-7388 . For sale.
re-c-ondt1JOned au tomatiC
• Basament Apt:- Bulav111e Pk washers &amp; dryers, refngera; 2 eo. 1 bath . S6001mo + tors. gas and electriC
• 5600 sec. dep Ut1ht1es rar.ges, a 1r cooditioners, and
Included ell:cept trash wnnger wasl1 ers.
1u do
requ1red. repans 00 ITIBJOf brands 10
Re ferences
(740)446·3644
shOp or at your ltomo.

i

3299

L,------..J

Full blooded St

~

AssociatedTraining Services

2323 Perl'ormance Pkwy

SxlO's, lOxlO's,
lO';dS' s, 10x20' s
3 miles west of Centenary
at the junction of 141
&amp; 775

Columbus, OH 43207
www.Equipment-School.com

I·

South&amp;m Auto Safes

03-07-1676T

@

Second Ave

1995 Dodge Ram Van. 314
Equal Festival , Point Pleasant, www steelepomtlngtabs.com
Ph. (740)446-8554
ton. 130 450 m11es. $1 ,000
740 _446•2568
Housing Opportunity
Oct 2. I 0·3. 2004, Info. (740)256-6t,n
as IS Can be seen at th e
(7401992-soea
2003 Dodge Neon, 4 cyl Gathpobs Daily Tnbune. For
Old Enghsn sheepdog pups, auto, 11 ,000 mtles, CtUtSe, more mtormaUon call
· CONVENIENnY LOCATlovable. sh aggy dogs , fi~t M, AIC, 57,000 (740~ 1· (740)446-2342 ask lot Paul
- - - - - -- ; ED &amp; AFFOROABLEI
Rtve rme shot &amp; wormed, price $250, 0337 or (740)645-61 53
, Townhous e
apartmenls, Buy or se ll
An!ques,
1124
East
Ma1n :ca:;11:.;1;:_740
.::::1985-=..:9823=:___ 91 Dodge Spun 4 cyl , auto,
· andlo~ small house&amp; FOR
on
SA
1
24
E
Pomeroy.
740UKC
Reg1stered Engli sh cold atr Ru ns and looks 1995 Ford W1ndstar GL
RENT Call (740)441-1 11 1
Russ Moore, Coonhound Pupptes, 6wks good. 160,0QQ, very w ell Dual atr, new motor very
fo r applicatiOn &amp; 1nlormahon 992·2526
owner
old , F ~rst Shots &amp; Wormed maintained
S1 ,200
1 (;lean. htgh m11eage, $2,600
Garage Apt 1 bdrm, 1 bath.
(304)576-3076
owner
(740)2 ~ 1 6·1 9 Call (740}446-1082
Gas
heat
$2 75
mo

r

800-383-7364

4x4, miles 10 1,357, $6,295, Bars. set up for Goose Neck
99
Olds Ale ro 4 door. mites- Hitch
$25,000
Ftrm
Bernard

. ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 10 $442. Anhque Bottle Show, West AKC, excellent hunters,
Wal k to shop &amp; ~~es Call Vlrg1n1a State Fa rm. Fall $250-bladl: .
$3SO.:yellow

(740)446·3481

Train in Ohio
Next Class: September 27th
National CertifiCation
Fmancial Assistance

llUIJI)Ies lor sale, $200. Call 103.463 $4.500: 96 c11ev "&lt;30'
r)5;.;.7.;.
6-32
~59~--.,
Sllvora!loOl&lt;t. cabZ·71, 4x4,
(740)379-2605
VANi
~
~..:.:!::.::.:::::=---­ 350 automatic. high m1les.
labll8dor Retneve r pu ps ss.995.
F011 SALE
. ~

ANI1QUE;

Mlso:t.IANEOl!l

D·Stor

Dump Trucks

304-

r

An~

Training For Employment
Bulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders,

Cl&gt;ov Cav LS · 4 door ---.,--:,---AKC Min Dacl'lshund pup- $5.900. miles- 053 007. 99 2000 F350 Supe• Ou1y 7 3
pies,
Black
&amp;
Ta n, Pontiac Monlana ext Van. Diesel. 43,000 miles, Dually,
malellemale. 1s1 shots &amp; miles· 097.927. $6,295, 4x4 , extT8 dean , Stai~
wormed by Vet (30')895- Nice!; 98 ChEN Blazer LT Steel Brush Guard &amp; Nurf

w

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
UENTS AT BUDGET
. PRICES AT JACKSON

or

Announcements

Heavy Equipment
Operator ·

condition. auto.

i&lt;Jr Moltol\an Caopet 202 Clark
very c~!lln 1 bedroom 10 Chapel Rood, Forter, ONo.
country settrng yet dose to (740)446-7«&lt; t-Bn-830town washer, dryer, stove. 9162. F'll8 E5timates, Easy
frktge Included Water and financtn-g , 90 days same as
garbage included Total elec· f;aSh. VtsaJ Master Card.
A KC labradOr RetrieYers cordbon, blaekfgray 1ntenor, 4x4, dub cab. 'CD, SUllO
bic with AC Tenant pay elec· Dnve- a- little save atot
Pa rents
f~eldfwatertowt 4 wheel drive. 98,000 miles. m1tes. L C • tilt, Tonneau
triC $300 depos1t, $375 per
cover. v.&amp;. auto. $12,900,
lratned. Very family orienlud $9,950. (740)4-46-6764
month No pets. No Smok-

: ApplicatiOnS

I

~

'

(740~6-4 172

l\1ERa1ANDJS[ •
l
~ 95 Gao Metro Looks great 2000 ford Wtndstar LX ,
Grac1ous h\l tng 1 and 2 bed- 1998 Weber Horse Tra1ler
need motor, 43 mpg. $550 PW.
Extra
Door
: roo m apartments at Village 38' wJshowttme conversion Alverez s stnng Bass brand OBO C811 (740)645-6018
91 ,000/mlies
$6 ,900

. Mano r

an d

Rivers1de 3 horse· tl'8ller wltull liv1ng new condition

(740)446-

• Apartments tn Middleport quarters Excellent condi· 9709
: From $295-$444 Call 740- lton $25,99500 call Harold - - - - - - -992·5064 Equal Housmg (740)365-7671
Story·&amp; Clark Ptano, $850
OpportuM 1es

Lowery Organ (electric) With
Gema $250 740-245-5428

New 1 bedroom apt Phone

Exerctse Btke $15, L1ke new
SITIIth C orona Deville 700
: One bedroom aparlment , EIOCi fiC Typewnter $20,
Te~as I nstrumenl Sc1entlfic
• no
pets . In Pomeroy,

; (740)446·3736

'

Ca~ulotor

: (740)992·5858
One bedroom garage 8partment, kitchen f urmshed,

5400, (740)992·3823

• for 2BR . 3BR

&amp;

4BA ,

Applicat ions
are
taken
Monday thru Fnday, from

9 00 AM.-4 P.M Office Is

Presano
1270 Laptop .._
OR TRADE
Computer, Windows 98, 2
Hard Dnve s C. 282GB, D Will Trade Climber-Tree
1 20GB McAfee Virus &amp;:an, Stand tor any type ot
160
MB ot Ram 30 Hunting Items of EqualProcessor
Free Printer Value (304)937-3348 or
Carrying Case and Software
wlpurchase $300 call 458 •
I \I \ \I "' I 1'1'1 11..,
19971or more Information
,\ I I \ I "' ll u 1'-

r op

. Phone No is (304)675-5806 '
• EH O
Townh ouse

Hot Tub Discount uuneo.

qu8hty, warranties,
WV. Flea Marke
p action
C
Friday s,
~aturdays and Sundays

Aparlments, Very SpaciOus.
JET
2 Bedroom s, 2 Floors. CA, 1
AERATION MOTORS
1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted ,
Adult Po ol &amp; Baby Pool , Repa1red , New &amp; Aebwlt In
Patio, Start $385/ Mo No
S1ock. CaU Ron Evans. 1Pets, Lease Plu s Secunty 800-537-9528
Deposit ReqUired, . Days.
- 740-446-3481' e'venmgs·
•
•
:
.

I

I

itS

51 ,275 (304)674-()()92

2000
Harley
Davrson
1990 Chev. 1 ton pick up · .. Sportster 883 Hugger Lots
Clean &amp; 'nice truck Call 740- ot extras. Day s 740-645441-0941 or 740.645·5946. 3248, evenmgs after 6 30pm
1996 Chevy Silverado club
cab Leather, 93K, $7 200

OBO (74012"5-5697·

740·256·6589
_2_00_2- -Ho_n_:.d_a_4_0_0_E_X

1999 Chevy 1 ton w1th 11 ft. Excellent condrt10n Call
utility bed, weld er, air com- 740-256·152 6 or 740.645pressor 740-256-1 526 or 0446

740-645-0446.

~~lion.

606)922·7185. __-'1
uao;_,,_..,..-,

__~

goorl. $2·300 OBO Call r~4WM~U£&lt;i/
_ __,
·~
.
0(7r:;40p:;;l2;;;56-;;,;;903:;;1;...
~~~
~
1991 BMW KLT 100. 1 000

"---titiiiiitiiiiiiii.-

Grand Opening Sale

Localed at 11 51 Evergreen
Dnve Pomt Pleasant . WV

: Ta ra

$20, Compaq

(304)675-4014
98 Dodge Cara\lan, air runs iii::~~.;.;.;.;_

Wurlitzer P1ano Excellent
CC less lt\an 25,000: actua l
co ndition
$900
Call
1978-0odge Tr~ . use&amp; no miles, $5.200 (740)256·
(740)446·2684
6796
a::.;;.;,.;;;.;.;~---, 011, new Transmission, ru ns
great,
Toppe
r
m
cludeQ
[
FOil SAu:

o

•, Pleasan t Valley Apartme nt
: Are now lakmg Applications

aN Ford wiGrater 5 ft blade
$2 ,800 9N Ford wJ 5 ft
Brush Hog, $2,800, Ford
w/ 5 It Brush hog

2003 Wolvenne 4•4 , Brand
New.

Ramps

mcluded

54,000 (304)675-3613

r M~c!s

aoo

L.-------,J

1

--------

The Valley

Apts located 1n
Mason has openmgs for 2
bd and 3 bd Apphcat10 ns
will
be
acce pted
on
Tuesclay's only from 9·3 at
501 Sh awnee Trml , Pt
Pleasant WV 675-4900
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity

Auction

r

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional ilfetJme guarantee. Local references fu rni shed. Established 1975

Call

24 Hrs (740) 446·

0870 , Rogers

SPAO:
FOR RENT

Basement

Waterproofing .
1993 F ·150 XLT supercab
4x4, 5.0 Iller wfalr, cruis e, ttlt - - - - - - - whee l, ps, pw pi, wlflber- For Sale: Poplar Lumber
glass topper, $ 5 , ~ 00 OBO, sheeting boards 45 pe r
board ft Hardwood mulch -

17401742 "2957

$20 per Bkt (740)992·5965

BULLETIN .BOARD

Wm J. fannlf\ jr. IJohn J. St_.art.

.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Twin size canopy bed,
size water bed, dresser, white chest, make-up
""'"'" ' wooden kitchen cabinet.
stand, bar &amp; 2 stools, ·•entenainmenl ·"""''"•
shelf, end tables, tables,
beautiful Belarus whtte ptano wlbench,
cradle, file cabmet, utility cabmet, sev. pes,
lawn fumtture, Westinghouse 5000 BTU air
conditioner, Kenmore washer &amp; dryer hke new
&amp; more.

Ted Trotter &amp;Iuiie T!r.f,r· Exec.'s

W'riJ&amp;F~~~~""W".:lf ~

!

no

(740)992-5858

Rt &amp;l'lfif ffiaSIII, WU. Due Ia Inclement
1~~,=~er Ibis sale wu rescheduled fram
I~
18.

Mory_ Trottar Elute RCPC #20Qoi-E.Q239,

~ntiue:i * Household

000

(740)388-11997.

L--..iiroRiiiiiiiiSAI.Eiiliiil.-,.1 Eacelief1t

Relrig&amp;nllors, Some ..U. al
S95 Skaggs At&gt;flllancas. 76

. 5463

llltln1 fn fYturw Crdt ... or visit our web stte at
www.stanleyandson.com for details.

•

2 or 3 bedroom apartment'"'
Mtddleport .

Sale lllllllfll.lo the Ruction Center located on

H•n!l' M Swollf,_YI ~-W.~A~-~ IWI

CLASSIFIEDS!

eot&gt;-

wtlerior. loaded, ...,.lent .dihOn
$6,700
t:OIIIibolt (740)388-Qt98 or (740~45-5697.

ii!li-.;.;;;.;;.;;;=:.;.;;...;...._ _, -- - - - - - - -

Boat &amp; Camper Storage
Mason County Fatr·Grounds
· $6 00/per-Foot. Sal &amp; Mon
; durmg Oct 9am-5pm other
. t1mes by Appt (304)675·

lnl.
Perronol Proptl'fY

'fo.

tOOK. -

5

6anbQ ~·6adiul• Page 05

bidder

ot 6 PM:
offered frl!e &amp; cll!ar prior
to closln&amp;; taxes prorated to dosing; close by
11-7·2004; no contlna:en·
c!es i!:XIst regard1ne pur·
chaser obtalnlna: flnanc·

•

spood.

4a4 ,

- . brid&lt;. -

740-367-0502

adja· •

above $25,000

,

(800~27m

L S . - moorvool.-

Fon1 150 XLT

pipes. - - - - - - - - o4c. Claude 1997 - G&lt;and AM GT. - - - - - - - 2 bedroom. s1ove ...~nge,.. Good Used Applianc:os. wn-. Rio Grande. OH ulling S2.200 (30')5 6- 1997 Fon1 F-150 q~ Larial.
7
• .,. furnished $150 de!&gt;&lt;&gt;oll Reconditioned
ana Cal740-245-5121
3076
114K. b&amp;ac*. aaatner W'derior,
• $275 rent :M M! Smittto.. Guarant.Jed
WaShers,
cld - $9.200 000.
• Slreet can (740)«6-9061
Dl'fOrs.
Ranges, and
l'ns
1999
Ntsun Ouest. (740)992·2932

or

.5..tJ PM

Mon. Oct. 4th
Real Estate Terms Sells to the

! 154
! Antiques;

hatdware. 8x7,9x7, 10x8,10xl0,12xll,l4'16'

house, 3 drawer oak cash rcgtster stand,'

cent UT rm
w!pantry,
living rm, bedrm wldoset, bedrm wldbl closet &amp;
adjacent computer rm or nurserY., full bath' w/
shower over tub; 2nd level could be finished for
additional use, Clean cellar basement w/concrete
floor; updated gas furnace wlspace guard air
cleaner, central air, 2 car garage wJdoor opener &amp;

i•

Go North To Fairgrounds.
Able C.H.I. Clopay, Hllll.'l and Shoff garage door
sections, U2hp Genie and commercial garage door
oPeu,ers. Approx. 100 garage'"doon will be ofl'tred
in this auction, one sided steel and insulated doon,
several Insulated doors w/sunbunt glass tops.
track, sprin1 trim, 300' hanging metal and door

Auction

Antique Auction

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

AUCTION

of

740-388-8115
NEXT SAlf"{JCT.f5 VERY NICE ANTIQUE
AUCTION. WATCH PAPER FOR AD!!

and olhe;r dtshes Copper hmler, oak r ocking

Auction

01!1'

AucUon

AUCTIONEER:
LESLIE A. LEMLEY

30X50, &lt;0X80. 50X150
Cen a.-! Aor

or (740)'141- $275 Pt-. 740-2"5-5428

(740~1-1184

for signs.

SeNs to the Hghnt lllddtr Abtm $25,()001
Antiques

apanmont.
call 675-6679
EHO

McCoy. Shawnee Red Ruby S1oneware

knchen utenstl'.i, Gn swold sklll el s U S A, cast
tron teakettle, other ironware. 1957 Baby
Barn ey doll. 1964 112 Mustang dtecast
Auctioneer:
Finis " Ike'' Isaac
740-388-8741 or 388·8880
10 am 1o 2pm

-

997·~
---i;;_
~-Cario
_.l 1996
10 ~ ~ L.s-STEE-~~-~:,:,:::::,_.,1 1,1-

frorn
Holzer
Hosp.tal
$160/monlh l'o&gt;ts . . __ Colleo tabkl With 2 ond
storgage uOI!s available. tables. glass lOpS. Ve&lt;y -

Antiques, Collectibles,
Furniture, Glassware,
Mise: Smalls

Auction

REAL ESTATE: Two story country home,
quiet area, on mce lot with 2-car detached
garage located between Wilkesville and
Langsville on Rt 124. Motivated seller ·
Call for an appo1nt"!ent
DIRECJIONS: From Rt 32 exit on Rt 160
through Wilkesville to Rt 124 before
Langsville, from Pomeroy-Rt. 7, take Rt 124
through Rutland about 14 miles to Salem
Center, beside Pick·n-Shovel Store, watch

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••!
! '!ROTTER ESTATE AlJC'IlC)N

(Jr. Fair Rldg.)
Take Rt. 33 (West or68l) lo Union Rd.,

~-

2 bedroom -

log applicabOns lor wading

list 1or Hud-subsized, 1- bf,

jelly cupboards, dough boJ~ , farm tabll', drop lear table,

Refr~s hment s

nsible for acc1dents or loss of ro

Auc11an

Held At: Athens Co. Fairgrounds, Athens, Ohio

board ga mes 1960's &amp; 1970 's.

Auction

IT'S HAMMill THI 'IT'S HAMMill TWEI

.\nnual (;aragl' Door
\ udion

wtth claw tet:t and curve glass. assortment of
beer stgn'lltghts and cloc ks, large assonmcm of

~

Call Dale Hart 949-2656 - lim Cunm ngham
949-2328, Kenh Whnc 247-4601 or
Roy VanMeter 949-2524

. Friday Oct. 22 @ 6:30 PM
3474 Moriah Rd., Oak Hill
4YR Old, 4 Bed, 2 Bath Home on
10 Acres. Min Bid Only $89,900.
Open House Sunday
9/26 2-4 pm;
Thursday 9/30 6:30-8 pm;
Sunday 1013 2-4 pm. For more
Information call: '1

Auction

Antique and Collectible~
SiliUrday. October Znd lnD pm
~ Coms. V-mckles, Kennedy half
dollars. Walkmg Ltberty Half Dollar. Barber
Quarters. Wheal and Ind ian Hello Pennies and
others. Oak Jell y cabmet. round oak !ab le. p1pe
bed wlspnngs and mil s. Oak china cabinet

lWin Rivefs T.- Is atx:ei&gt;t·

Frtuy Oc:t. 1, 6:30 PM
Lemley's Auction Bam
8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old
Rt.35) G•lllpolls, Ohio

1br. Studio Apt very dean,
lum!Shed $325. • Depos"
(30')675-2970
Auction

.....

I

AUCTION

utlltties

lsadc's Auction House

Auction

ground pool. Ian , ptckup- Truck load???
Will take conStgnments &amp; donations day of
auctmn
Dan Smith· Auctioneer

Auction

Wednesday, September 29, 5:30 P.M.

House for sale by owner 4+
bedlooml, 2.5 baths, large
coul)lry kHchen, 1.5 story 2·

1n

table, wood JOinter, saw, ne w m box ab o ve

Call C lifford Realtors 7 40446-7702

$58,000 OBO, (740)206·

5111

house

Deere Handmade baby cove r. 1 1/4# pe an u t !
butter Jars, bag cell phones, wood luythc on

complete k1tchen. $165,000

windows, rJa, furnace sid'tng, porch , Insulation 3/4
remoOeled, no land contract

Buyers (304)674-

NICe house- 3 BR, 1 5 baths
Good tocat1on Close to hos-

Commercial bUilding plus
1 5 acres 'm G reen Twp
Central heat &amp; a1r, bath and

garage, appro:x 1 acre of
land, 5 miles from town on

q&lt;~allt;lng

Call (740)446·3644 lor tnlo.

AUC11on

deposit. cau (7401992-227•

Auction

~

;;;;;;;;;;;;.;::;::;;;;ir::;;;;;..:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Included. S450 month , S300

c ha1r, 3 cush1 o n couc h . rm sc. kid s toys, Jo hn

a

3 bedroom, full basement,

A Affordable 2-Bedroom
Home, Everythmg ne w.
Poselble no Money ~own lo

1 bedroom apt.

project
M1 sc. Items- Alread y cons1gned &amp; d o nated .
1985 IH school bu s 9 ltter V8 diesel. 5 speed
&amp; atr brakes. J23 Nl com p1cker. 1000 BU
w1re corn crib , 30" PTO hay o r g rain elevator.
h giam elevator, gravity bed wagon, couch &amp;

$18,500

acreo, $92,000 (740)368·
6676

7060

It

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
---Bu!rol;~-

--~----~

I••~

pets. (7401992-3194 221 8

740-416-1354

Donations &amp; Consig nments
Aucunn to rund the Chri stmas for K1ds

REAL ESTATE
AUCTION

Auc11on

tnSide
Of

yearl y

thei r

Cheaper than dirt, 5 or 7
acres
$8 ,250
outside
Aut1and1
Ga1U1 Co. A1o G rande 8
$22,9001
Kyger,
acres
hunters 16 or 1 woodecl
acres your choiCe $17,5001
VInton , Dodrrll Rd 5 wooded
acres $14,500, co water
More parcels ava1 lable at
each location We'll gladly
send you maps to explore
each site Owner fmancmg
whh slight markup We buy
lar'ldl

brick trorlt
Ranch . Nawer roof, vinyl,
heat
pump,
Smiths
Cabtnets, , ear garage, prt~
vate lane off SA 160, 1.8

(town), 314 acre, new-roof,

carport, quiet location. edge
of town $550/mo &amp; $550
sec dep You pay all uttllties

Sat_u rday, October 2, 2004
10:00 a.m.
Located on Carmel Rd . Take St Rt. JJ toward
Racine. OH 10 Co. Rd 28 Bashan Rd. lo
Carmel Rd . Watch for auction s1gns to L arr y
Circle Farm. The U.M. men's group w1ll hold

3 ' beclroom

SR 7 0 Five Points, call
740·416-Q766 or 304-6622266
5 bedroom house Pomeroy

Street, $350 plus deposit, no required. no pets. 740-992·

PUBLIC AUCTION

Wl•m•n, Wlnman Real
Eetate, 740-446-3644

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

~

Home Selling OnSHa

Wid., OcL 13 0 12:30 pm

Gallipolis Farry (740)446·
3481
HOUSE FOR RENL 3
bdrm, 1 ba th , LA w/FP, 2-car

Auction

I

59,900 Call (740)949-2011

Check Out This Local
Home:

$500 Holds you loti

Meigs Co. Near Ohto R1ver
+ Forked Run , many tracts
to ,choose from great for
recreation or bu1idmg, pnced
ngh tl Tuppers Plams, 20
acres $25,000 or 10 acres
$ 19,900 , co water Chester,
• Bashan Ad 7 acres on

down 1987 t4:x70 mob1le home. 3

, payment has 1-tept you from
buying, this Is your chance
to own your own home If
you have a down payment
but would like to conserve 1t
we oHer low down payment
programs also Great Interest rates! Local company
Mortgage
Locators
(740)992·7321 .

Oed foom

~

Putn am Fa rm an d 3BR
Stnpp1ng, Rel1msh &amp; Repa1r ~::::::::::::~ Ho use
2BA. basement,
Get ready for Holidays 10°/o For Sale or Re nt New 4 new rooflturance central air,
off Stnp &amp; Refin1sh of your Oedroom, 2 bS.th home on 43 acres, fenced, barn With

,.

(740)24 S-S064
3 bedroom, 1 bath, Mason.
wv. Remolded, gas heat.
CfA. $450 DO/month plus
depoSit
(740)698-7002
(,7·:.:
40
::1~5_:90-4:.::_1~2::3_ _;__
Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths w f
basement V 1ew of nver
Cntrl
AJC
$ 700
mo

Pital. $650 renl w/$650 sec
Cole's
Mob1le
Homes, Galhpo!1 s
$350/month dep You pay all utilities
15266 US 50 Easl, Athens , deposit requi red (740)441 - References
requ1red
0hi0 4 5701, (740)592-1972, 11 84
(740)446-3644
"Where You Ge t Your
Money's Worth~

advertiMmenta tor real

A Country Craftsman Furn

n1shed, no pets
$450
month, $400 depostl Call

4854

models at old pnces,
2005 models arnvrng Now, 1

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept

or call (:;04)675- 1181

740-441Hl189
3 bedroom house. Water fut-

Yea rs

race, color, religion, ae•
famlllalat•tus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmi11tlon or

www u p ro fltf~rs t. coml d e a l

re moc:Mied

lle_s_:_c_a_ll_l7_4_o_)4_•_6--8_oo_2_
: L.'o-..Oiiuliio-iiiii
·~.--. .. ~sec=-depos=.:::.,t::a::.nd_"'_le_r•_nces_.
~(740)388-9241

dl1crlmlnatlon bued on

Your Personal Treasure Map
In ternet
Pro fits
to

bedroom,

Mobite ttotne for rent '"
from Holzer $400 mo plus VInton . Reterencel cteposi1
reQUired . No pets ?..o-.4466865 or 740-446 -6 t 89
No pets. 74Q-446-6865 or

ed lot Only tnterested par-

In this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
F1ir Housing Act of 1968
which m•k.. lt Illegal to
advertl•e "any
preference, llmlt1tlon or

NG CO recommends tha
u do busmess w1th pea
le you know. and NOT t
end mon ey throug h lh
a1l until yo u have 1nvesh
ated the offenn

~=

(740~6-9961.

Musl have Ref. No dogs, 2

mobile hOmes slanlng at - - - - - - - - $100 depOSit, $250 • rnonlh mobile home. aM In monts. lumlshed and unlur$270 per monlh. can 740- Land on Mc:Co&lt;mic:i&lt; Ao 2 Call (30')675-1429
Mkldlapon, 645 Broadway nlsned, securlly dopostt

All real estate • dvertlslng

.,
"'
HID VALLEY. PUBLISH

It

S99,500 oo can (74017•2· 2br 1 tr.! mHes out ol Town.

MB 5263

· ABSOLUTELVAll CASH
90 VENDING MACHINES
WITH LOCATIONS ALL
. FOR$9,995 CALL MR
FOX BQ0-914·9960

~=

bed·

For sale or rent- 2 bedroom 2637

UNITED SE CURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800-37CH965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

740-44 6-7855

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We' Wml
1-888·582-3345

Ir ~;~~ It

.!:::r

NEW PURCHASES/
992-2167
large lots 1f2 acre each 3
bedroom
hOme
In
REFINANCES
(more
or
less) Electric and Middleport. $400 OOimonlh.
SO DOWN/ SO DOWN
Fo r sale- By Owner· 1Ox50
water on one suitable for ptus deposit and utilitit s.
CASH OUT/ HOM E
Mobile !-;orne {Vindale) Has
ng or mobrle home. References
required
IMPROVEMENTS NO been remodeled, new hot buildi
(7401992~164
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES water tank furnace 3 yrs &lt;7401367·7886. ·
I\ I ' I \I "
WELCOME•
old. new plumbing, oo rent3 bedroom hQuse 4 miles

"C&lt;:epllng applications for
care ol J5lderly m my home
· Private rooms , nut nt1ous
meal planning, 24 hour care
• with 20 yearS or e~o:per1ence
8am-3 PM

It'

For Sele. Acreoge Me&gt;gs 2 story Cotomal 3 bdrm 1 14x70 3 bedroom. 15 balh. 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt starting Huge -n. 3 bedroom. 1
room , 1 bath all electric, County 82 acres woods batt'~ Gas heal Cnut AJC CIA, no peta, $450 &amp; at $290/month . depostt bath, dining, storage. aprox
good conctltlon, must be and hiiiStde Great tor recre- $600 mo {740)446-3o481.
deposit Can {740)446-482~ required No peta WO 2,500 sq ft No petslsmok.....,.~~- (740'"
ong, $61 o.
Call Kelly
moved Cali (740}44 1.0034 . at1on
and
huntmg
'""""'...,...
,.......1·11••
go,.

. Jim's Carpentry &amp; Small

• Landacaplng. Call

A~~

6

446-2342.992-2155.675-1333

MOLLOHAN

CARPET

· Quality at a low cost
Berber $5.95/yard,
Vinyl $4.95/yard,
Laminate $1.19/sq. ft.
Drive a little Save a lot.
446·7444

GLASSWARE &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: Pink
Depresswn dishes, plus other glassware,
cabbage patch dolls, old coffee grinder,
kerosene heater, Selmer clarinet, bikes, screen
house, we1ght bench &amp; weights, Christmas

The Bears Dan &amp; Bee Hive
408 Main St.
Point Pleasant ·
ins1de the Mason Jar
new shipment has arrived
· Sepl bear of the month
u Bee Happy $10.00
Longaberger purses. Amish tin
barn stars,
fall &amp; Chnstmas decor.

Priced to Sell · ·
1994 Kenworth T-600
350 Cat ~eady to work
740-388-8161

arm sa w , Craft sman

10"

table saw, Craftsman

1/2 H P. band saw, Della 12" drill press, 3 ton
floor Jack. Crallsman 5 H.P. 25 gal au
compresser, ramps. w et/dry

v ac, c ross cut saw,

Craftsman be lt sander, drop cords, Extde
battery charger 200 AMP. sev. Sk1hl saws.
dnlls, Crafrsman circular saw,

router,

Werner

Serenity House

ladder, alum ext ladder, CrnftSJTtan blower,
C raftsm an , weed eater , MTD S HP , sn o w
b low er , lawn cart, lawn &amp; garden tools,
Murray II HP 38" cut law~ traclor &amp; more.
TRUCK: 1991 Chevy S· IO
speed

Trqc~

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 ot
1-800·942·9577

2.8 · 5
Longabergsr Holiday
OPEN HOUSE
Debbie Grueser,
40324 Goldrldge Rd .. Pomeroy
Sept 26 2:00 • 6:00
Door prizes
992·3844

AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This is a 'great'
auc tio n ,.. House was loaded from top to
bottom. This· is only a parttal ltsting . Loaded
w11h Tools· Tools. tools!
AUCTION CONDUCTED BV

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66
773·5447 OR 'll3·5Z85
Owners: Kent &amp; Sandra Pancake
TERMS-CASH OR CHECK WITH 10.

. 1----------------..1
J

Emarl: ~hamrockAuction @ aol.coin
www.shamrock·auctions.com
740·592·4310 or 800·419·9122

1--1--.J-~IEB:

·I'

"Fundraiser for Special
Needs Kids"
HUGE YARD SALE
Brand name adult &amp; kids clothing,
toys, misc. items, tools)

First Baptist Church
of Pomeroy
East Main Street
Fri·. Oct. 1 (1 0·4)
Sat. Oct. 2 (10·4)
All proceeds ga to H.O.P.E.
Intervention
5·Star Drivers Training has
moved from 2 Commerce
Drive to 512 Second Avenue
Gallipolis.
Ph 441·0553 I 446·1523.·
Cell 645~6029
Price $179
New Class Oct. 4 5·9 m

Chili Supper
September 27. 2004
6 :00PM
AMVETS Kanauga
Guest Speakers,
Entertainment, Auction
Bear Run Road will ba closed
at the intersection of State
Route 7 Monday Morning
September 27th for a culvert
installation between the hours
8:00 am and 12:00 pm . The
Clay Township Trustees will
·hold their final Budget hearing
on October 4 at 6 :00 pm at
the Clay 'Township Hall for the
year 2005.
Clay Towr.ship Trustees
Wanda Waugh, Clerk

decora110ns, CB radio, &amp; more.
TOOLS: 3 Craftsman stack tool boxes.
Craft sman hand tool s, Craftsman I 0" radial

Meet the Democratic
Party Candidates

'

RIG-HT LAYNE
DRIVING SCHOOL
New Class

October 4, 2004
Mon.· Fri.
4:00.8:00

(740) 44 1'-9970

Gallipolis Elks Lodge

BINGO
Friday, Oct. 1

6:30pm
Special Game
80 players pay $100.00 per
Game
Special G'ames available
BASKET GAMES
Sept 30 at 6 :00
Galltpolis Elks
$20 for 20 games
Proceeds benelit
abused/neglected children 1n
Gal11a County/Christmas Fund
Sponsored by Gallia Counly Children
Service
NRA Concealed Pistol Classes
October 2nd &amp; 9th
$7? .00
7 40·992·9444
Cell740·416-1311

Cornerstone Construction
Residential • Commercial
Roofing, Sld1ng, Remodeling,
Elactrlcal. Plumbing
749 Blazer Rd . Gallipolis ·
.
7 40·367·0536

Meet the Candidates
The
Meigs
. County
Republican Party will host a
meet the candidates rally at
the
Dave
Diles
Park,
Middleport
Thursday, Sl;pt. 30th
between 11 :30 to 1 :00 pm
Free hot dogs and drinks
will be setVed
The pubjtc is 1nv1ted .

HIGH MAINTENANCE
BEAUTY SALON
formerly Headquarters

Homecoming Special
Updo· Makeup · Polish
nails and toes $50.00
Introducing Nicole Burman
She inv1tes her forme r customers
and fnends to JOin her
Wa lk ins Welcome
313 Third Ave.

446-2673
Sunshine Video
in Rio Grande
has gone out of business
We still have 342 DVD 's
and various rental supplies.
For mare information call
245·5382 or 645·6061 .
We will sell all DVD's to
one buyer only, at th is time.

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'

HOUSE OF THE·WEEK

PageD6
Sunday, September 26, 2oo.i

In keeping with the Southern style, the front porch is adorned with pillars and a subtle arch above
the front entrance welcoming owners and visitors alike. (AP Photo/AP House of the Week)

-

with carefree living space
omeowners will appreciate relaxing on
the vast front porch of plan APWB177, as well as the large patio space at
the rear of the home perfect for entertaining.
In keeping with the Southern style, the front
porch is adorned with pillars and a subtle arch
. above the front entrance welcoming owners
·
· ·
and visitors alike.
The great room is sequestered at the rear of
the home for privacy and has ready access to ·
the patio through a french door. A cozy breakfast nook with a snack bar flanks the great
room. The kitchen features an island cook
top, abundant cabinets and a large pantry
area. The dining room is in perfect reach of
the kitchen.
·
Owners will relish the large mud room off
of the garage entrance. This room is all-purpose, featuring a built-in storage bench, coat
closet, sink and laundry area.
The master suite is positioned at the front of
the home, separated from the additional bedrooiiJs. The master bath with dual sinks,
, whirlpool and large walk-in closet will provide •additional pampering at the end of the
day.
Bedrooms 2 and 3 share a full bath with
dual .sinks, and each has its own walk-in closet. The fourth bedroom has access to a third
full bath and could also serve as a study or
· home office area

H

Ordering Information:

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1'10 CAB GABAGI

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For a $5 study plan of this house call 1-877228-2954, send a check to AP House of the
Week, P.O. Box 1562, New York, NY 101161562, or order by credit card at
www.APHouseoftheweek.com. Be sure to
include the plan number.

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Below:The great room is sequestered at the rear of
the home for privacy and has ready access to the
patio through a french door. A cozy breakfast nook
with a snack bar flanks the great room. The kitchen·
fet;~tures an island cook top, abundant cabinets and
a large pantry area. The dining room is in perfect
reach of the kitchen. (AP Photo/AP House of the
Week)

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See Dealer for Details.
• WAC· THUI\IDERBIRD NOT INCLUDED.

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IMIICUI,Y
J\ LINCOLN
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• "1-800-212-5118
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