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'
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt,
WV

Page 86 • 6aturba!' 'Otimri -6rntinrl

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_Saturday, October 1~, 2002

BETTY

NEA Cro .. word Pu:nle
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PHI~LIP

ACROSS

ALDER

42Crue
43 Mellow
44 POlar

1 Qlel
4 Mu.al

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l'lll TOO 5nff TO
El\ERCI!&gt;E illl!&gt; IIIORNINf:r.

I'LL Ill/liT UIITIL TOIIilRROIIJ.

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11\U';GI..E~ HINE CLei.lCHEO
IJP E'JEI\l MORE. . . . .

. TOMOII.ROUJ, WHEN
0
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liND c;o fOR II II.)IILr&lt;.!

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COMPLETE LETHAM-'1 •••

IT WAS COMPOSED EIV
ELLEN ZWILICII WJ.lO,
· INCIDENTALLY, JUST
AAPI'ENS TO BE

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· FRANK &amp; EARNEST
NUMI~Il 51~
~IS 8/l~AIC.

IS" ON

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SOUPTONUTZ

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4
22 Fomocl orco 5
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18 Ad38 Yaung chop
committee 41 UUie or
21 Two
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dawn
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31 Pole
8 Currler'l
211 ApllrodHI'I 41
33 Sllngy
partner
child
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27 Time lOng
34 Ualaloiuenl 10 Mlner'o
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37 Sterlllzos
cook
32 Oxford
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40 Dromouat
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35 Powerful
21 Hovt the flu

Not looking

600D 601N6, ELLEN

TKI:&gt;I~ P.... F~OZ.E.i'&lt; DINNU::I.

Nvrtll

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DOWN

rider

THE BORN LOSER
~(:,(.J\DY5! I Tf-\OUGI-\T YOU ~1'.10""''

PIU
PIU

THE GRIZZWELLS

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~'(,"i\-1\CO 50U? TASTES

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Bilek marl&lt;
Proal -.1 :

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E--r~-v~~~...,..,~~N

While going over the credit card
bills from a trip we had taken, I
. . . .
heard my husband mutter,
"People want a change on their
r-~--K-E_O_C_H_Y_..,,~~:~.tion along with a lot of-··· :

I 1I I
7

18 O Complolt

tho chuckle quotod
by filling In the mluing warda
you dovolcp from atop No. 3 bolcw.

@ PRINT

NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

.

ARLO&amp;

(AP)

l

Contractor see

payment

Harry Leffle's $5,921 bill, month-old unpaid bill and to
and that the Meigs County · ask them to authorize payCommissioners are responsi- ment. Both Leffle and
bl~ for it, anyway. On . Trussell maintain that it is
8Y BRIAN J. REED
Thursday, the commission- the commissioners' responsiStaff writer
ers refused to pay the bill, bility to · pay it, because it
saying !hey didn't"enter into relates to repairs to a countyPOMEROY
Nine a contract with Leffle and owned building.
months after making repairs are, therefore, not responsiLeffle repaired toilet and
to the Meigs County Jail, a ble for the charges.
basin fiXtures in the jail. and local contractor continues to
Harry Leffle, owner of made other repairs mandated
wait for payment.
Can-Do Maintenance, met by a jail inspector, before the
Sheriff Ralph Trussell with the commissioners jail was reopened to prisonmaintains he is unable io pay Thursday to discuss his nine- ers in January. Leffle said he

Defense agency
hails area ·. · .
mans heroism
BY BRIAN

Weather
High: 50s, Low: 30s
Details, A2
'' .·.,

: a·. ~... ·.

· Ou

Free

immunizations
GALLIPOLIS Free
immunizations will be provided by the Gallia County
Health Department from 4 to
6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 17 at
the health department, 499
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a . parent or legal
~uardiail, and bring a current
Immunization record with
. them.
Also, the WIC office will
see clients by appointment
during the evenmg hours.
Aqditional services, such as
blood pressure checks and
pregnancy tests, will be
offered during the evening
· hours at the health department.

Index
· Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby ,
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

C2
03-6
insert
C8
A4
AS
A3
Bl·6
A2

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Cc.

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after the wet stuff Jet up, the public
responded. '
· ''T~ats getting along great w!th~ui ·
the 1111n, ' Farm.Manager~ay McK.innts!l'
said.Saturday afternoon. "The ground is
dry and th.~ vendors are· happy. We're
pleased With the support from the community."
.
Attendance figures from · Friday
wetel)'t available, but organizers wg
satisfied with Saturday's crowd, w,itrl

.

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'

' ' . IUO :OR:ANDE .,....:.., the ·rain s.topped,
. . -Ill!' clouds' flatted ail(l SU.I!$IDne lna(le .fit.. ful W!pe;fumce.s_· til, ~ow.' ~tteodance to
surge "Satlir,c!ay, at:'tiie \Boi&gt;,Evans •Faim
, Festjvlll.
, .. "l-' '
·
Rain _Friday ~nt" farin staff scurrying
to put 'down straw- ~~J~d gravel to make
'Jl~ssage th.tOugh ·the festival grounds
easier, but 'aS the'. ground~ slow!~
dri.ed,
I!~~

_,

.' '

Mason EMS pushes -locator signs
same residence all her life, director of Mason co·unty
and being a widow for EMS. "It · uses city-style
Staff writer
many years, certain cliores addressing,"
Blake said that the Post
have been neglected over
POINT PLEASANT
Office
started sending out
time.
One
of
those
is
having
The
. scenario is a frighten- visible signage on her resi- letters to all Mason County
mg one .
residents last week concernA 68-year-old woman is dence.
ing the addressing system.
Mason
County
experiencing chest pains Emergency Services offers - Each numbered sign is parand calls 9-1-1 for help. an affordable way to make ticular to a certain house on
After making the call, she sure this never happens. By a certain road, making it
falls 10 the floor and passes using the 9-1-1 locatable ·easier for location purposes.
out ftom the excruciating address signs - which are
"They' II have 12 months
pain.
.~
to
convert from the old
completely voluntary The ambulance - crew is individuals can assure that address to 9-1-1 addres.sdispatched to the remote they can get help when they ing," Blake added. "The
~reen signs have contrastlocation, and they frantical- need it.
"mg
white letters and numly search for ihe correct
"The
County
address . Precious time Commission voted a couple bers and come in two sizes.
clicks off the clock. The years ago addressing the The cost for a large sign is
woman has lived at the project," said Chuck Blake,
Please see Signs. AS
BY DAN HERMES

-

IT &gt;'&lt;o A(l~T iD£,o. ...

A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory field.

_(740) 446-5919
'

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____

,...

_,._

· 2,321 shelter nights, logged
I ,2 14 hours in case manageStaff writer
ment and made 475 trips to
POINT PLEASANT - · doctor's offices and other
First a job is lost. Then, bills related services.
Thompson said that 87 perstart piling up and a bottle of
cent
of the shelter population
pills or alcoho) helps to make
the problems go away - .suffers from some form of
temporarily. An eviction mental illness and that .
notice follows and before the approximately 50 perceQi
person knows it, he is home- suffer from substance abuse.
Children usually make up
less.
Cindy Thompson , program one-third of the population at
coordinator for the Mason the shelter.
"We're seeing a lot of preCounty Homeless.. _ Shelter,
scription
drug abuse riow,"·
knows all too well of that
said
Thompson,
who has
scenario.
"Eleven out of 12 months" worked at the shelter since
last year we were full," 1997. "This shelter is not a
Thompson said about the 12- union or city mission. On
person capacity shelter. "And occasion we get a transient,
that's not counting our out- but this is not a flophouse.
reach people. We get 25 to 30 · People who want to use this
people a month come in and as a flophouse don't stay too
we have a waiting list all the long. We have a lot of rules."
The shelter is funded by
time. One leaves and another
$60,000
annually from -the
comes in ."
Last year the shelter pro' state, $16,000 from an emervided 5,923 meals, provided
Please see Shelter, AS

Friday/ October 25 • 7:30 am · 4:00pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

For more information, or to register, call Sanely ~core at
10·12.

Homeless shelter
lends·a helping hand
Bv

' ~H He Bob EYans. AS

Please see Wallace, A5

DAN HERMES

.

Respiratory _Fall Symposium

1
•

J"!M

MIDDLEPORT - ."After
witnessing the attack on the
rr-~..-:--=-..,..., Pen tag o n
oli Sept. II
a
t
Pentagon
Heliport
F i r e
Station.
A I a n
Wallace,
M a r _k
'S kipper
and Dennis ·
Wallace
You n g
jumped
onto · burning Foam Truck
161 to call the Fort Myer
Emergency
Operations
Center and immediately
began rhcuing trapped people from windows and the
corridor entrance."
"Without hesitation, they
rescued 15 occupants and

assisted other fire teams
saving people until they
were ordered to seek treatment
for
their
own
injuries." ·
That's
the
U.S.
Department of Defense's
description
of
Alan
Wallace's heroism on Sept.
11, 200 I, and that, of his
partners, Skipper
and
Young, and why the three
men were honored in August
with
the
Defense .
De,partment
Emergency
Service's · 200 I Heroism
Award.
Wallace, a Middleport
native, and his· partners,
received their awards at an
annual banquet in · Kansas
City, Mo., and Wallace
brought that and other honors he has received since the
day of. the terrorist attacks
home to Mi~dleport last
week, to share them with his

.- Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 2nd Annual

I

t======~~~~=j' ~AV~!&gt;

J. REED

Staff writer

Details. AS.

.

charged the fixtures on his situation between the compersonal credit card, after missioners and the sheriff
being assured by Trussell does not change the fact that .
that he would be paid for the the work was performed and
new fixtures . and his labor. the !;&gt;ill has not been paid.~'
"Anything that's going on
He said he has received parbetween
(you) and the shertial payment through the
iff
is
immaterial,"
Leffle
county auditor, but that over
"It's a county-owned
half of the bill remains . said.
building and you have uninunpaid.
cumbered funds to pay this
"I want it to be publicly bill."
known that this money has
Leffle referred to a
still not been paid," Leffle
said Thursday. "The political
Pluse see Jail, AS

•

Alexander May, 88
Mary Jane Landrum, 83
Nelson E. Jarvis, 62
Kevin L Hickel, 26

SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
.
Lender- WindY- Vault - Coldly -ONE DAY

f

'

Deaths

v/HEU [ fli1'lTHE.Aroor A
CORDWn 1'110~, I 1)11X.GHT

0

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Story, A6

One cutie was trying to cheer her depressed friend .
'The best thing abut the future," she lectured, "is that .it
comes only ONE DAY at. a time." ·

JANIS

.

.

=,'

'---'--.1.--'-·---1.-.1..--1

This is the aerial scene near
Cedar Grove, Wis., where
more than two dozen vehicles were involved in an accident on Interstate 43. More
than 30 vehicles crashed on
the foggy interstate, killing at
least nine people and injuring more than 30 others.

s1.25. Vol. 37, No. 35

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pl Pleasant • October ll, 2002

Repairs to Meigs
jail still not paid

4 Sections - 14 PaJII

r

~
~
!ITAI,I IN CHARACTER,
· GA.R FISt;P

middle
niiM

- ~==~R~~y~=M:E~~
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GARFIELD

CouiiiiU'I

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li? . . - - - - -

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Newsmaker

Today's deal feaRabbH'o
tures the winners of
loot
lllel
-this year's Cavendish
Hove •
Calcutta Pairs, Bobby
mart~
Levin and Steve WeRtoerved
instein, who also won
in 1999.
After South opened
one no-trump (15-17
points), North's twospade response was a
transfer bid showing·
clubs. (Two no~trump
would have been the
response with long
diamonds. Also, if
·you use major-suit
but riot minor-suit
transfers, I think you
should play that responder s Immediate
jumps to three of a
rni nor are si gn-offs. ·
With a good hand and
a long minor, start
with · Stayman, thim
rebid in your suit on
· round two. which is
game-forcing.)
Against three clubs,
CELEBRITY CIPHER ,,
Weinstein (West) led
.. ~·
by L~ls Campos ..
a diamond, Levin
Celebrlly Cipher cryptograms are created from quotallona by lamouo
people, put and present. Each lenarln 1118 cipher stands lor another.
winning with the ace
Today's clur~: X equals K
arid returning a diamond to declarer's
"W Y I Y
AFYD
LM
0 Z D P.
king. If South had
ruffed his rem(!ining
w z J y XFDDYT
ESSTUMY,
F
diamond in · the
dummy and called for
I
PWZGX
MSR
X F T D.
F p the club jack, running
it if East plays low,
w z J y L,FDDYT
F
ISRATG'P
he .could have got
home. However,
F p •"
- . SETYG
0 ZDW
South continued with
the ace and another
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "All literature is a footnote to Faust. " .
I have no Idea whall.mean by that. •- WOOdy Allen
trump, hoping that eitber they would break ·
3-2 or that West
would .have a singleton honor. Here, ·
I
though, Levin won
with the club queen
and shifted to the
heart king.
Now · declarer
couldn't succeed. If
he won the trick,
West would gj:t in
with the heart queen
and give East abe art
ruff. And if South
ducked this trick, he
would lose two
hearts, along wi\h one
diamond and two
Clubs.
Only five. pairs out .
of 29 did better than
Levin and Weinstein
on this deal.
Finally, note that to
defeat the contract
even when declarer
plays double-dummy .
(knowing where all
52 cards lie), East
WOlD
must not win the first . r;~~:t:~v SctrR4UlA-~£tfS'~ GAM I
trick! The curious - - - - - , - - liltti loy CLAY A. ,QLLAN --~--­
may work out the .O R1crrgn;e I1H1r5 cf th•
fcur ac:rcmbled word• b•·
vartous possibilities -i.
lew tc form four Jlmple words.
1' m out of space.
HOGRUT
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2

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GREt&gt;.l,

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18 Oreuy-

Mymo _;_

_Openln11lead: t 10

PEANUTS ·
TillS NEXT Piece IS
A CONCERTO FOR. !=LUTE
AND OROIESTRA ...

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Deller: South

REMOtl AA
fiTtl£!.5 PlAN F~ILUII.E :
l.lfllillAIIERIN6 BEUof

Fallen heroes
honored, A6

sa "Yucld"
57 Scrub
sa TodN

14 F....,
wine
15 Dltpot
18 Say In fun
17 Small fry

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title
12 Import car 54 Vlgocle ond
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Fortaa
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about painting, Cl

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tQ L017S

INSIDE

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52 Hew~

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explorer

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Dif.fer_ence

www.holzer.org

•

�Ohio · ·West

6unbap lflld -6tntintl

Sunday, Oct.13

•. ····.,-·.··-·---.· .··]
[......••......
. .~~~-~~--!~. _!_~~~~-~.

MARIETIA. Ohio (AP) - .A former
Glouster policeman w~o police said
held nearly 30 law enforcement officers
at bay for six hours before surrendering
last month has pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges.
David Parker, 45, of Beverly pleaded
guilty to one count each of domestic
violence and viol:uing a temporary protection order last week in Marietta
Municipal Court.
Judge Milt Nuzum sentenced llim to

..

INO.

KY.

PageAl
Sunday. October 13. 1001

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360 days in jail, with 270 days suspend- home earlier in the day. The couple's
ed, two years· probation and a $270.50 two children were in school.
Authorities said the couple is separatfine . Parker is serving the remaining 90
ed bur not divorced. Jodi Parker
days in the Washington County Jail.
Police had evacuated nearby homes obtained a civil protection court order in
during the Sept. 16 standoff at Parker's May that barred her husband from comwife's home. A deputy whom Parke.r ing within 250 yards of her.
But Parker forced his 'l'ay inside that
knew coaxed him to emerge, and he was
morning,
chased her upstairs, pulled a
quickly surrou nde~ by members of the
special response team of the shotgun from under a bed and said he
was going to kill himself before she
Washington County sheriff's office.
•,
Parker's wife, Jodi, had !led from the escaped, his wife told police.

~

BIG BEND

~
~

WE ACCEPT OHIO EBT CARD
WE ACCEPT WIC VOUCHERS
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

NO TAX ON FOOD ITEMS

:W.VA.

0 2002 Acc\JWoalher, Inc.

OPI;N SAM- 9PM MON - SAT
. SUNDAYS 10AM. 7PM
~2-2891

STOC

West Virginia weather
Sunday, Oct. 13

PA.

Ohio Valley Bane ·corp
continues earnings growth

Heating assistance

begins ·Nov. 1

'

CHESHIRE Gallia lance once per heating sea- revised annually. A ll o wabl~
Meigs Community Action .; son to low income house- annual income for a one-perAgency's Emergency HEAP · holds while defraying the son household is $13,290;
Prpgram
begins Nov. I. and high cost of home heating. two persons, $ 17 ,910; three
.
.
will continue through March Regular HEAP pays a por- persons, $22.530; four perGALLIPOLIS, Ohio expel1Stltotaled $,14.935,000 in
The allowance for loan losses
31 , 2003, announced Sandra · !'ion of eligible households' , sons, $27 ,150; live person s,
Ohio Valley Bane Corp report- 2002,
an
increase. of stood at 1.25 percent of total
Edwards, CAA's Emergency winter heating bill s.
.
$3 1,770; and six persons.
ed consolidated net earnings for $1, 123,()()(), or 8.1 percent, l'oans at Sept. 30, which includServices Division. director.
The amoun! of assistance $36,390.
·
· the quarter ended Sept. 30 of compared to $13,812,000 the ed a specific allocation of
c;AA will start taking ·calls is determined by total
Hou seholds with more
· ~I ,410,000, representing an prev1ous year.
for
appointments
on household income, the num- than six members should
$450,000 for the commercial
mcrease of 15.6 percent over·
Salaries and employee bene- line mentioned above, should a
Monday, Oct. '28, at 8 a.m.
ber of people i'n the house- add ' an additional $4.620 tu
fits, OVBC's largest noninterest loss becorne reality.
. the prior year.
HEAP provides · financial hold and .the type of heating the yearly income.
Earnings per share for ·the expense, grew $628,000 or 8.5
heating assistance for the . fuel used. The income
Both Emergency HEAP
The 1.25 percent allowance
third quarter of 2002 were 41 percent for the first nine months for lOan losses for Sept. 30
area's neediest residents, guidelines for both pro- and Regular HEAP applicacents, up 17.I percent from the of 2002, as compared to the compares to 1.21 percent at
who may be on a fixed . grams are the same. ·
tions can be completed at the
35 cents earned the third quarter same.time period in 200 I.
income
or
among
the
workHowever,
Regular
HEAP
Gallia
CAA HEA'P Office,
Sept, 30, 2001, and to 1.23perof 200 I. ·
.
The increase was related to cent at year end 200 I.
ing poor.
requires .the previou s 12 420 Silver Bridge . Plaza ,
For the nine months ended annual merit increases, incenhelps.
senior
citimonths'
income, while the Gallipoli s or the Meigs
HEAP
Management has increased
. Sept. 30, consolidated net eain- live-based compensation and
zens
and
families
with
chilpast
three
months' income is CAA HEAP Office at 1369
ratio of allowance to total
ings were $4,014,000, up 15.3 the rising cost of medical insur- the
.
dren
avoid
the
choice
..
of
acceptable
for Emergency Powell St.. Middleport.
loans based on an increase in
percent
compared
to ance. Impacting the 2002 year"heating or eating.''
12
·
HEAP The -month period
App I'1cat1ons
Will be taken
$3,482,000 a year ago. to-date results was the .ch~e­ nonperforming !dans and the
"People who need help or three-month period for by appointment from 8:30 to
Eamings per share were $1.16 off of fraudulent checks dunng continued uncertainty of ecoshould
choose HEAP," the test is determined from · ' II a.m. and from 12:30 10 3
forthefii'Sininemonthsof2002 the second quarter, with the nomic conditions.
1·
Edwards said.
Most of rhe HEAP reci~i - date of app •cation making it p.1h ., Monday 1hrough
While management is ·com:versus $1 last year, an increase impact net of recoveric;s being
possible for some with Thursday.
: of 16 percent. ·
$389,000 on other noninterest fortable that the allowance for
ents
are
our
neighbors
w
o
decreased
income during
This year, CAA is still
loan losses. is adequate to
. Strong net interest income expense.
,
are
living
on
fixed
income
or
·
these
periods
ro
qualify
later
operati,
ng under the appointgrowth continues to drive
The remaining noninterest absorb future losses illherent in
working for low wages. · in the program.
ment system to apply tor
OVBC's double-di,Pt earnings expense categories . have the loan portfolio, management
Examples of these type Emergency HEAP. Call992They are the elderly .or sin ,
· growth. For the rune months • increased minimally from is prepared to increase the
gle parent household and situations could occur from 2222 (Meigs Couniy) and
: ended Sept. 30, net interest 200 I. For the third quarter of allowance should ~ economic
our disabled. HEAP gives layoff, strike, retirement, 446-1018 (Gallia County) to
:income improved $2,859,000; 2002, noninterest expense conditions dictate.
them the extra help they disability or death of a . schedule an appointment.
Total
assets
increased
totaled · $4,752,000,
up
:or 16.8 percent over last year.
need to make it through spouse or household memThe toll-free number for
Ohio winters. ·
The increase in net interest $173,000 or 3.8 percent com- $60,181,000, o~ 9.5 percent
Emergency HEAP pro- ber. Documentation verify- Regular HEAP inquiries is
. income was the result of a pared to the same time period from year end 200 I to reach
vides assistance to house- ing income m'usl be provid- 1-800-282-0880. For the
: decline in total interest expense last year. .
.
$695,180.000 at Sept. 30, 2002.
holds that have had utilities ed when applying for HEAP. he·a·ring impaired with u
·of $2,793.000. or 15.1 percent,
OVBC's e(ficiency mtio con- Driving asset growth WaS an
·
.
disconnected,
face the threat Also, a copy of the appli- telecommun ication device
: versus relatively no change in tinues to improve driven by rev- · increase in total loans of
of
disconnection·
or have 10 cant's recent electric bill is for the deaf (TDD), I ~800·total interest income due to enue growth (net interest $5 I,906,000, or 10.2 percent
required.
686-1557. For further inforstrong loan growth.
income plus
noninterest from year end.
The following income lev- marion, contact the Cheshire
days or less supply of bulk
· For the third quarter of 2002, income) of 15.5 percen~ versus
For the frrst nine months of
fuel.
· shou ld off1'ce at 367-7341 or 992• The program allows a one- e1s by. house hold s1ze
:net interest income increased total expense growth of 8.1 per- 2002, loan growth has exceedtime payment of up to $ 175 be used to determine eligi- 6629, the Gallia County
. $745,000, or 12.2 percent over tent. The efficiency ratio was ed management's expectations,
per heating season to restore bility. These income guide- office at 446-1018. and. the
:·the prior year third quarter.
61 percent for the nine months particularly in commercial real
or
retain home heating ser- lines represent the 150 per- Meigs County oftice at 992: The company's net ·interest ending Sept. 30, as compared to estate and indirect autonx:ibile'
.
vices.
For propane imd fuel cent calculation and are 2222.
income has benefited from the 65 percent the prior year.
lending. Funding came primaroil clients,. the payment was .-::~--------------.;.....----,
current interest mle environFor the first nine months of ily from deposits which
up
. ment and is rellected in the net 2002, the company's provision $50,773,000, or 11.1 percent
recently increased to $275
because of the increase in
·
·
.
:interest · margin,
which for loan · losses increased from Dec. 31, 2001..
fuel prices. ..,,. .
Undet New Ownership
; improved to 4.36 percent for $1 ,330,000 over.the same time
A significant portion of the
Homeowners
or
renters
·
~
- - - - - - - - o~ - - - - - - - - - •
· the first nine months of 2002 .period last year in relation to an deposit growth occurred in .
may
qualify
if
rheir
tot;~!
:
$
0~~:: $
0~~:
· from 4.28 percent the prior mcrease in net charge-offs of
NOW
accounts
and
time
'
household income is at or
•wrmAC20.00PURI'UA'I[ •'WITUA OjO,OOPURI'UAS[ I
year.
$1 ;239,000.
.
below 150 percent of feder'- _.:. -·- ____ , '- ________ _
Providing additional revenue
Nonperforrning loans at Sept. deposits.
"We are pleased with the
al poverty guidelines.
growth was an increase of 30, 2002, stood at $9,216,000,
third
quarter
results
which
proEmergency
HEAP
$368,000,or9.8percentinnon- · compared to $7,036,000 at
duced
double
digit
earnings
income
eligibility
can
he for
: interest income, which totaled Sept. 30, 2001, and $6,310,000
growth,"
said
OVBC
President
the past three or 12 months.
; $4,118,000 for the nine months at year end. · The increase in
and
Chief
Executive
Officer
Those
not 'l,ualifying on
·ended Sept. 30, as compared to nonperfonning loims was the
Jeff
Smith.
three
months
income are
:$3,150,000 for the same time result of a single commercial .
"Strong
revenue
growth
.
and
asked
to
present
their full 12 ·
period last year
. . line w!rlchis ,jp the proce.ss of
months' mcome to see if eli·
For the three months ended colle(.'t1on.
.
· .expense control .continues \O
gib!lity can be met on that
·Sept. 30, 2002, noninterest
The commercial line repre· make Ohio Valley a more effibasts. .
income increased $152,000 Sellted .79 percent of total loans. cient company, which is reflectThe Regular HEAP pro. over theprlor year third quarter. Nonperfonning loans as a per- ed in shareholder value as
gram
offers heating assis; Income from deposit and loan centage of total loans were I .64 return on equity improved to
' service fees, as well as bank· percent for the quarter ending 11.33 percent for the first nine
•
: owned life insurance, provided Sept. 30, compared to I .42 per- months of 2002 from 10.35 per. a majority of the growth. On a cent at Sept. 30, 2001. and I .24 cent the same time period last
: year-tO"date basis; 11oninterest percent at year end 2001.
year," he added.
ENGRAVABLE GIFTS
Gifts from Paul Davies Jewelers
.
I
will become even.more special

Szec·hu·an House
2.00

•

Cloudy

Showers T·ttorma

Rain

Flurritl

Snow

Family ·
Fresh Pork

Ice

•

Rain expected all day.
Weather Forecast

Today ... Turnin~ · cooler.
Mostly cloudy w1th a chance
of showers in the morning ... Then partly cloudy.
Temperatures falling into the
upper 50s. ·Northwest winds
· I0 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
: 30percent.
·
: Tonight ... Mostly
clear.
· Lows in the mid 30s. North
. winds 5 to 10 mph.

Extended Forecast
Columbus
day ... Cool
despite sunshine. Highs in
: the upper 50s..North-winds 5
: to I 0 mph becoming east
· early in the afternoon.

Monday
night ... Mostly
clear..Lows in the upper 30s.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy.
· Highs near 60.
·
Tuesday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows near 40.
Wednesday; .. Partly cloudy. ·.
Highs near 60.
Thursday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the upper 30s artd
highs near 60.
Friday ... Partly . cloudy.
Lows near 40 and highs in
. the lower 60s.
·
Saturday... Partly . cloudy.
Lows near 40 and highs in
the lower 60s.

·chicken
. Leg .
Quarters
¢

Sirloin

Chops

$"'"49

Lb.

~eked

Sausage

Lb .

McDaniels

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. ~ CHESHIRE
Sandra
:Edwards, Emergency Services
:Division director of Gallia: Meigs Community Action
Agency, announced that CAA
has distributed 150 air condi~ tioners to eligible clients of the
2002 Emergency HEAP
:Summer Codling Program.
: The program began June I
:and ended on Aug; 31.
· . Although there will be no
more assistance with air conditioners, incqme-eligible persons may still take advantage
·of utility bill payments during
:this period, Edwards.said.
: Eligible · applicants· mist
· make an appomtment with the
: Cheshire oftice and meet one

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One
Ono

Published every Sunday, 825 Third
L - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - J l. .

m..t~ #1Wiflll, 'PtlmeHhj

will

By carrier or motor rauta

•

utility

of the following:
·
in the Cheshire office by call• An eligible household with ·ing367-7341 forGalliaCounty
a mernber who is 60 or older and 992-6629 for Meigs
can receive one payment for County. Eligible clients must
electric bill up to the "current bring:
·
responsibility," but not to . • Proof of incoine (income at
exceed· $175. (No disconnect or below ISO% of the federal
required}.
· poverty guidelines).
·
. • An income eligible house• Narnes, birthdates and
hold with a disconnect notice is Social Segurity numbers of all
. eligible to receive one payment household members.
for electric bill up to the "cur• Electric bills. You must
rent responsibility," but not to bring docum~ntation·. or you
exceed $175. ·
not be ass1sted. ·
·
1f $175 ·is not sufficient to · Edwards said applications
restore/maintain service, docu- will be taken Monday ~ugh'
mentation of the clienf co-pay- Thursday from 8:30a.m. to II
ment must be provided for the a.mc and I to 3:30 p.m. No
client flies.
applications will be taken on
Appointments can be made Fnday. .

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�Opinion

•

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. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RUTLAND - Nelson E.
Jarvis, 62, of Rutland, died
Satllrday, October 12, 2002,
at his residence.
.
He was born September II,
1940, in Wolf Summit, West
Virginia, son of the late
Hayes Lucas Jarvis and
Beatrice Buel Hin Jarvis.
He was a veteran of the
l,J.S. Army. He was formerly
empl~ye~
at. KomatsuAmenca m Galton. .
He ts survt.ved by da';lghters and sons-1~-Iaw, .Mehnda
Ann and Btll . Gtbbs of
Rutland, and Mt~helle and
Mike Lear of Galton; grandchildren, Zach
Gibbs of
Rutland, and Mlchael and
Derek Lear of Galion; brothers, Frank . Jarvis and Judy
Harvey of Crestline, Jerry
Jarvis of Galion, and Charles
Jarvis of Salem, West
Virginia; a sister, Betty Aoyd
of Clarksburg, West Virgima;
an\1 a special longtime friend,
Sue Stevens of Galion.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, three brothers
and two sisters.
At his request, there will be
no calling hours and no
funeral
service.
Arrangements are by Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the
Meigs County Humane
Society, P.O. .Box 682,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
- Paid notice

•

Andrew Carter
Asst. Managing Editor
'

I

Lerrers /{)the editor ar&lt;' welcome. n. n should be less than
]()() words. .41/ /elfers are m bjecr 10 etliting and must be
signefl and 'include nddn'ss unci telephone number.- No
unsigned ferrer.•· will be,;,,b/ished. Lerren should be in good
rasre. addre .f .dng

i .'ISlll'S.

not penoonaUties.

Tir e opinions exp rt~.ned in the column below are the con - ·
semus nf rht• Ohio V.tller Publishing Co.:,· editorial board,
1mles.\· uthenrise m )lec/.

NATIONAL VIEW

Glitch
Election problems still
cmifront cfficials in Florida

HERMES' VIEW

Organize and repeal the no Sunday hunting law

• The Tampa (Fla.) Tribune, on .former .felons and
election reform: In an effor.t to purge Florida voting lists
of ex-felon s who had registered illegally, !II least ·1,1 00
eligible voters were wrongly purged from the rolls
before the 2000 election. Many of them had no criminal
record and were shocked when they showed up to vote
and were told they couldn't.
Although Florida election officials contended they had
the problem under control with a new datatiase, in June
the U.~ . Justice Department ordered the state t.o delay
any purges of suspected felons from local voter lists. As
a result, many ex-felons who registered .to vote without
getting the proper clearance voted in the Sept. 10 primary, and the order may well extend to November's general election . ...
The reasons for the order could be related to complaints registered earlier this year by some elections
supervisors that they received inaccurate lists from the ·
Florida Department of Law ·Enforcement on felons wish. ing to vote. These rolls consistently carried names of
people who had been arrested, some for misdemeanors,
but not convicted of anything.
Additionally, the Executive Office of Civil Rights,
which is supposed to have t~e names of those who have
the right to vote, cannot verify on a regular basis who is
eligible and who is not. Those are some of the many
glitches that need fixing.
.

POMEROY - Alexander
"Tooie" May, 88, of Hysell
Run Road, Pomeroy, died
. Friday, October II, 2002, at
Overbrook _ Center
in
Middleport.
He was bornMarch 19,
1914 in Cabin Creek, West
Virginia, son of · the late
Harkless and Virgie Harris
May.
· He was a coal miner and a
laborer, and anended Hysell
Run Holiness Church.
Surviving are a daughter
and son-in-law, Marjorie and
Victor Cremeans of Bucyrus;
a son and daughter-in-law,
Larry and Phyllis May of
Pomeroy; three grandchildren, Charles (Mary) Knopp
of Pomeroy, the R~v. Steven
(Joyce)
Cremeans . of
Orwigsburg, . Pennsylvania,
and Susan (John)•Lower of
Bucyrus; eight great-grandchildren; and several nieces

~ an:e~S~~i~ ~.:C~;:h~ was

Today is Sunday, Oct. 13, the 286th day of 2002. There are
79 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On Oct. 13, 1792, the cornerstone of the executive mansion,
later known as the White House, was laid during a ceremony
in the District of Columbia.
On this date.:
In A.D. 54, Roman emperor Claudius I died, after being poisoned by his wife, Agrippina.
·
.
In 1775, the U.S . Navy had its origins as the iContinental
Congress ordered the construction of a naval fleet.
.
In 1843, the Jewish organiiation B'nai B'rith was founded
in New York City.
In 1845, Texas ratified a state constitution.
In 1943, Italy declared war on Germany, its one-time Axis
partner.
In 1944, American troops entered Aachen, Germany.
In 1960, Richard M. Nixon aQd John F. Kennedy participat·
ed in the third televised debate of their presidential campa1gn.
In. 1962, "Who's Afr;~id of Virginia Woolf?," by Edward
Albee, opened on Broadway.
In 1974, longtime televi sion host Ed Sullivan died in New
York City at ·age 72.
In 1981 , voters in Egypt participated in a referendum to
elect Vice President Hosni Mubarak the new president, one
week after the assassination of Anwar Sadat.
Ten years ago: Vice President Dan Quayle, Sen. AI Gore
and retired Adm. James B. Stockdale clashed in a freewheeling vice-presidential debate in Atlanta.
Five years ago: A jet-powered car driven by British Royal
Air Force pilot Andy Green streaked across Nevada's Black
Rock Desert at speeds topping 764 mph, faster than the speed
of sound. However, the car couldn't complete two runs within the 60 minutes required by record-keepers. (Green officially broke the record t\\IO days later.) In Quebec, Canada, 43
senior citizens and a bus driver were killed when the bus
plunged into a ravine.
One year ago: Ukraine's defense minister and air defense
chief offe red to resign, conceding that the military was
involved in the explosion of a Russian airliner over the Black
Sea Oct. 4 ti)at ki lied 78 people.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Nipsey Russell is 78. Lady
Thatcher, former British prime mini ster, is 77. Playwright
Frank D. Gilroy is 77. Gospel singer Shirley Caesar is 64.
Actress Melinda Dillon is 63. Singer-musician Paul Simon is
6 1. Actress Pamela Tiffin is 60. Mu sician Robert Lamm
(Chict!go) is 58. Actor Den10nd Wil son is 56. Country singer
Lacy J. Dalton is 56. Singer-musician Sammy Hagar is 55. ·
Actor John Lone· is 50. Model Beverly Johnson is 50. Writer'
producer Chris Carter ("The X-Fites") is 45. Actor Reggie
Theus is 45. Singer Marie Osmond is 43. Actress Kelly
Preston is 40. Country singer John Wigg ins is 40. Actress
Ti sha Campbell -Martin is 34. Olympic silver-medal figure
skater Nancy Kerrigan i' 33. Country singer Rheti Akins is
33. Rock musician Jan Van Sichem Jun iqr (K's Choice) is 30.
Singer Ashtinti is 22.
~
Thought for Today: ''Children are the true connoisseurs·. ·
What's precious to them has no pri ce - only value.'' - Bel
Kaufman, America n author and educator.,
····- ·r --····· - ~-

preceded in death by his wife,
Beatrice May; and by a sister
and a half brother.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Monday, October 14, 2002, at
Hysell Run Holiness Church,
with Pastor James Keesee
and the Rev. Steven
Cremeans officiating. Burial
will follow ·at . Miles
Cemetery in Rutland. Friends
may call at the Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland
from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday,
October 13, 2002.
Memorial .contributions
may be made. to the Hysell
Run
Holiness
Church
Building Fund 32SS4 Hysell ·
R R d p'
.
un . oa ' omeroy, 0 llio
45769·
~ Paid notice .

Mary Jane
Land111m
WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE Mary Jane
Cunningham Landrum, 83, of
Washington Court House,
formerly of Greenfield, died
Saturday, Octpber 12, 2002,
at Auburn Manor in
Washington Court House.
She was born June 19,
1919, in Good Hope, daughter of the late Leroy Ford and
Myrtle Kinnamon Long.
· Surviving are three sons
and two daughters-in-law,
Jim and Linda Cunningham
of Racine, John Cunningham
of Sabina, and Roger and
Sandy
Cunningham of
Greenfield; a daughter and
son-in-law, Vickie June and
David Neal of London; 10
grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren and six greatgrandchildren; a sister,
Virginia
Wildman . of
Washington Court House;
and several nieces and
nephews.
. Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
frrst husband, James Ernest
Cunningham, in 1964; her
second husband, James
William Landrum, in 1988;
and three sisters, Beatrice
Cox, Bertha Smith and Effie
Forsha.
Graveside services .will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday,
October IS, 2002, at the
Greenfield Cemetery in
Greenfield, with Rev; Robert
Linter officiating. Friends ·.
may call at the Mlitray-Fettro
Funeral Home in Oreenfield
on Tuesday, October IS,
2002; from noon until 2 p.m.

. - Ptild IIOticl

·Deaths

BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

'

'

Alexander ~ .

TODAY IN HISTORY

Services will be 11 a.m.
Monday In White Funeral
Home, Coolville, · wltb the
MARYSVILLE .:.... Kevin .
L. Hickel, 28, Marysville, Rev. Teresa Waldeck officlat·
died Thursday, Oct. 10, 2002, ing. ·' Burial will be In
in Grant Riverside Hospital, Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Columbus. •
He is survived by his wife, from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
Sunday.
·
Zondre Dye HickeL

Kevin L·Hickel

KILPATRICK'S. VIEW

Court wisely •stays out of tangle in Torricelli ..case

-.t

Jail

'

Bv JAMES J.

KILPATRICK

"The better part of valor," said
Falstaff, "is discretion." On Monday the
Supreme Court affrrrned the philosopher's {fll;dent opiniqn .,without a murmur o dtssent. The court refused to
enter the thickets of politics in New
Jersey.
It was a good decision, soundly based
upon (1) the law, OJ the facts, and (3)
the certain consequences of intervention. The incident demonstrates that the
nine justices, like · other mortals, are
capable of learning by experience. The
name of fotmer senator Frank
Lautenberg, a Democrat, will appear
next month on the New Jersey ballot.
Re~ublicans are unhappy, but that is
thetr natural destiny. They will recover.
The chronology is important. By midSeptember it was politically apparent
that New Jersey 's·Sen. Robert Torricelli
was in deep trouble. The Senate had
rebuked him for accepting inappropriate
gifts. His favorable ratings had dropped
by 30 points. The gentleman is known
to reporters ·as Bob the Torch, but his
fuse had beco.me depressingly damp. On
Monday, Sept. 30, he announced his
withdrawal from the race.
Thi!; was 35 days before the general
election of Nov. 5. Under New Jersey
law, a replacement candidate must be
chosen "not later than ·the 48th day"
before a general election. On the face of
it, the Democrats appeared to be
unhorsed, but the law is not always what
it seems. By Oct. 3, the Democratic
state committee was back in the saddle
again. The New Jersey Supreme Court
ruled 7-0 that the statute should be "liberally construed." The court's construction was about as
I libe,al .as liberal con-

..... ..._ _, .. ......

struction can get, but no matter. Frank
La';lt,enberg ~as become ·the Torch's
leg:ttimate hetr.
In its unsigned opinion, the New
Jersey. court concluded . that two interests would be served by permitting the
Democratic comminee to name a substi·
lute: The voters would have a full
choice, and the election could yet be
handled in an orderly fashion. The court
further .concluded "that the equitable
relief sought herein is not inconsistent
with the precedents of this court and the
terms of the statute and that the court
should invoke its equitable powers in
favor of a full and farr ballot. choice for
the voterS of New Jersey." · ·
The Republican candidate, Douglas
Forrester, rushed into the U.S. Supreme
Court last Thursday with his party's
petition for emergencJ&gt;; relief. His principal argumenr"tested in Article 1,
Section Four, of the u.s. Constitution. It
decrees .that the manner of holding senatorial elections shall be pres·cribed in
each state "by the.Jegislature thereof."
Here, he complained, the state's highest
court had usurped the power delegated
to the legislature.
Further still, the Republicans' contenped that fed.eral law requires that absentee ballots 'be mailed m plenty of time
for them to be returned before an election. There would ·not be time to print
revised ballots. Besides, it would be
"fundamentally unfair"
if the
Democratic state comminee were
authorized to name. a pinch-hitter. The
committee would usurp the power of
New Jersey Democrats to n'ame their
choice in a Democratic primary. Such
Republican .solicitude must truly be
admired.
.

~

..

-

• •

\

. The . Republicans' argu;ti~nts might
have.prevailed if it were not for the rules
of the U.S. Supreme Court. The court
hates to be hurried. A petitioner who,
seeks an emergency "stay" must:
demonstrate "that irreparable harm is ·
likely to result from the denial of
stay." In a 1983 case, Justice Harry .
Blackmun emphasized the importance;
of this requirement: Without frrst estab-.
lishing irreparable harm - such as the .
execution of a prisoner under a death~
sentence---:- .the merits of an emergency:
. petition will not even be considered. 1
In this case, the Republicans could not i
demonstrate that their nominee would 1
fti ·
· bl h
· d d
su er trrepara e arm, or m ee , any
harm at all. His name would remain on.
the ball6t. Voters who wished to choose ·
him for the Torricelli seat would be free1
to do so. What was he griping about? !
The: Supreme Court's prder on~
Monday, impassively denying the'
Republicans' petition, will surely be'
compared to the court's active role in
the presidential election of 2000. There • .
the high court overturned a ruling of·4
Florida's Supreme Court that · would
have permitted a selective recount .of.
ballots in contested areas. The effHCt ·
was' to award Florida's electoral votes to ·
George W. Bush. A Secondary effect :
was to bring down upon the court's head '
a hurricane of abuse.
:
I. believe the high court acted properly :I·
in Bush '&lt;· Gore - this was a presiden- :
tial case of far greater magnitude than a :
senatorial election - but the court has :
not yet recovered from the injury it sus- '
tained. One such hurricane is enough.
(James J. Kilpatrick is a columnist for
Universal Press Syndicate.)
·,;
.,.

.

·' -,, ' t1.. , ......... . ..... - · ~ ....... ~ .... . ; ....

from PapAl ·
$27,348 unincumbered balance in the county's contract repairs line item,
which is used to pay utilities and other · buildingrelated expenses. Leffle
said his next step would be
the filing of a civil complaint, but Commissioner ·
Jim Sheets said the commissioners will not
the
bill because they i not
authorize the work.
"We didn't enter into a
contract with you to begin '
with," Sheets said, "and
.unless the sheriff pays for
the work from his own budget, he has no authority ·to
enter into a contract for any
work on the jail."
Sheets also denied authorizing the work, as Leffle
said he had been told.
"If there was work to be

a: ..

...

'•

-- -

sa;

done, the sheriff should
have· asked for an estimate
and provided us with a list
of needed reJ?airs."
Trussell satd Friday there .
was no choice. but to order
the repairs so the jail could
be re-opened, at least as a
holding-facility.
"The only other option I
would have had, other than
ordering the work, would
ha:ve been to close the jail,"
TrusseU said, · ·~and that
would have cost the county
far more in the long run."
· The county pays $40 per
day, under contract, to
.
house prisoners Ill the
Noble County Jail, and $55
per day to house them in the
Regional
Jail
in
Nelsonville.

Life Holllf Car Buslllels

7'e ~ Aelc1 iZ' r"'
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

992-6677

~

-

Blake, who resides there.
"I've had electric and
cable turned off because
someone up the street with
from Page AI
the same address didn't pay
their bill," Blake said with a
$6 and a small one is $4. If laugh.
you are elderly, the local fu:e . The money from sign
departments have offere(J.to sales ~oes back into the
come out and help mount county s general fund so
the signs in the correct man- · that more signs can be
ner.
made. Similar sign kits can
"This allows law enforce- also be . purchased at local
ment and EMS crews to eas- stores and cost approximateily locate residences,"Biake ly $11.
said. "I'm not trying to tell
"This program is imporanyone what to do, but this tant to responders," Blake
is great for loCating a struc- added. "Our goal is to get as
ture. This sign makes it maily out in the coun~ as
much, mu&lt;;h easier to find a we can. They are pernussiresidence. UPS, FedEx, the ble to use in the city also.
utility companies, cable Whether they use locator
repairmen, they are all signs or not, county ordibehind this."
·
nance states they have to
The signage program has have a house number with at
been ongoing for many least foilr-inch letters in con·
years in seveial states and trasting colors.
offers people living in _the · "Wi:'ll answer any ques·
country a way to ensure that tfons they have regarding
emergency and service per· . addressing ?r the best
sonnel can locate homes method of display for the
when needed.
signs," Blake added.
The town of Mason has
For more information on
agreed to change its address- the program, call 675-9911.
ing standard, according to

·Signs

•

Wallace
flam PapAl

mother, Faye Wallace, and
his childhood neighbors
and friends. (He afso did
some squirrel hunting
while he was back home.)
Wallace and his partners received the U.S.
Army's 2001 Heroism
Award and Medal of
. Valor, which qualified
them for the . D.O.D . .
award. Since his role in
the rescue of Pentagon
emfloyees a year ago,
Wa lace has received
numerous
commendations and awards, including a commendation from
U.S . Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucasville,
which
Strickland presented to
Wallace at a Pomeroy
memorial service for victims of the attacks, an
award.froiT! the Arlington
County, Va. Chamber of
Commerce for valour, the
Aircraft Rescue and

----------EE HEARING TESTS

1

Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by

1·

1

HEARING AID CENTER I .

131

lo

I

I

I
I C.ll Toll FrM
polntment. I
I The tntt will bl g!DD by a Lletnllcl Httrlng Aid Sp!!illlltt. I
· Anyone who 1)11 trouble hNrlng or underltlndlng
I
I convsrMtlon.ls !nvitld to have a fBEE hearing teat to - If .
IIIIIs problem can be helplcll · Brlnglhll coupon with you for I
FREE Hli!BING TEST, 1 S75.00 value.
I
I UMWA.your
UAW. ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
1.

.

WALK·INS WELCOME

L...---------'· -------·- --------

Firefightlng
Working
Group Heroism Award,
and the Dean K. Phillips
'Award for Public Service
from
the
Vietnam
Veterans of America
Chapter 227 in Northern
Virginia.
"That's the one I'm
probably proudest of,"
Wallace said, sitting in
his mother's living room
last week.
Wallace is a veteran of
the Vietnam Conflict. He
sustained minor burns
and scrapes on Sept . .11,
but was back to work the
next day.

We worked with one mentally ill man in the .:ommunity who is living in his own
apartment
now. Prestera has
ftam Pap A1 .
been doing the case management, but he comes hack
gency shelter grant, $2,000 to see us. do some laundry,
from the Mason County and eat a meal. We consider
Commission and $1 ,000 that a success story when
from the city of Point th.
b k d lk
Pleasant. But the real reason useX cqme ac an ta . 10
the shelter is still in operaAnd according to the .
lion comes from the com- recidivism rate, it's workmuni~
support, which .
·
accor mg to Thompson has mg.
"Last year we had only
been unmeasureable.
''The community support about 5 percent duplicated
is why we're still' in opera- residents,"
Thompson
added.
"Whatever
we are
lion," · Thompson said.
"When I came here we had a doing here is ~eeping them
budget of $15,000. The from returning."
.
churches and community
On Oct. 30 at 9 a.m. at the
have been a great asset."
Mason County Courthouse
The shelter helps clients Annex, a meeting will be.
conducted
by
the
'd
1 enl!'fY needs 1hro.ugh ·case · Jackson/Mason
Homele ss.
· management. A master service plan is developed to Coalition. Jackson County 's
help with mental health or homeless shelter "N ew
substance abuse counseling, Beginnings" is based out of
basic living skills such as Ripley
and
togethe r,
managing money, and edu- Thompson hopes . they can
·cational needs.
qualify for a HUD grant that
Residents have daily would benefi t both shelters.
chores and do. all the cook"Anyone in the- commun iin§ and cleaning.
ty is invit ed to attend ,"
· 'Our staff will lend a hand Thompson said. "We' re
with cookin$ at times," focusing on .mental health
Thompson satd. "The men and substance abuse to idengenerally cook better than .tify those people and start
the women. I've always getting them the help they
&amp;
need."
.ound th at f unny. "
Thompson and her staff of
Donati ons to the shelter
four full-time employees are alway s app rec iated .
and one part-timer help resi- Items such as clean ing supdents get the resources they plies clean sheets and piI-·
need to become functional lowcases, food and monc in society again.
. tary don ations are welcome.
"We had a single mom
;'The food is to harid out. with two daughters who . baskets and we are wi ll ing
stayed with us for six · to accept anything people in
weeks," Thompson said. the comm unity wanl to
"She's · working full-time donate." Thompson add,•d.
now and has been reunited
For more information, call
with the children's father. the shelter at 675-1 124.

Shelter

936 SR I 60 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Telephone: 740-446-9620
Accepting Aetna and all payor sources affiliated with .
Pleasant Valley Hospital and Holz~r Medical Center

GERALD E. VALLEE, M.D.
BALUSAMY SUBBIAH, M.D.

NICHOLAS V. LANDRY, D.O.
FAMILY MEDICINE SERVICES

COUPON

I~- TM
Auto· Owners Insurance

and I saw some of the
homemade musical instruments, which were very
imr.ressive.
ft'0111PipA1
' We're getting to know
Ohio,"
added. "We've
parked vehicles stretching been in heCleveland
II
back toward the farm's his- . years and my wife isforfrom
toric village, and nearly 700 Oklahoma originally, but
RV s and campers pat:ked in we· really haven't seen that
the fteld on the opposite much of southeastern
side of Ohio Route 588.
Ohio."
The festival, a celebration
Melissa
Caruso
of
of farm and home-based Bellbrook, a Dayton sublife, crafts and skills, annu- urb, was another ftrSt"time
ally draws thousands to visitor making a one-day
Gallia and surrounding sojourn with her daughter
counties, some of them Paige, and was similarly
day-trippers and many enchanted with the event.
more staying for the festi"I got a flyer on a placeval's three-day run.
mat when we stopped at a · Paige Caruso , a young visitor to the 32nd Bob Evans Farm
Demonstrations ranged Bob Evans restaurant on Festival from the Dayton suburb of Bellbrook , made friends
from log rolling, sorghum our way to Virginia," she with
Hagar, who was brought to the event by Ron Smith of
making and equestrian said about how she discovPlymouth , Ohio, near Tiffin. Festival attendance increased
skills to square dancing ered the festival's e~is­
·
due to dry Wf!ather Saturday.
tractors and horseshoe tence.
pitching.
"It's great. I like all the through the the university bound s,' ' he said . " It mn Continuous entertainment different vendors because women's club and other . tinually gets bi gger and betfrom musical groups and there isn't any duplication, activities. ·
ter. Even if the weather didcloggers can be viewed on and I like all ofthe different
"It's fun, as long as it n't cooperate. peop le are
separate stages, in addition demonstrators,"
Caruso doesn' t rain," she said.
having a good ti me ."
to numerous crafters and . added.
Showers were in the foreFrazee is a transporiation
vendors showing and sell- .. Nearby, Bill and Eileen cast for Sunday until after- supervisor for Bob Evan s
ing their wares.
.
Stitt were busy working in noon,
promptin g Farms Inc. and was doing
The fes\iva! concludes its the popcorn booth operated McKinniss to wonder if hi s part at the fe stiv al by
32nd run today. Gates are by the farm, an activtty they Saturday's crowd was hop- assisti ng wit h parki ng. He
open at 9 a.m. and dose at 5 found occasionally frantic . 'ing it could get at least a said he's been 10 "quite J
p.m. Admission is $3 and but fun to do.
.
one-day break to attend the few" of the past festival s.
parking is free.
"I don't have a whole lot festival.
"I'd hate to ' ay how
Some . of Saturday's of time to think about it.
" I don't know if people many," he said. "When I
crowd were discovering the There seems to be a run on .are anticipating bad weath- ·started with the company. it
event for the first tinie, such popcorn," said Bill Stitt, a er on SunCilay, but they' re wa s th e second fe sti va l.
as Phil and Christina faculty member at the here," he said.
Now ii' s the J2nd.
Higgins of Cleveland, who University of Rio Grande,
'Tm just amazed · at the
Kirk Frazee of Gallipolis,
were spending a long week- as he worked the popcorn who's seen the festi val license plates you seen on
end in the area.
maker.
evolve from its early days, the cars." he added . "New
"It's beautiful," · Phil
Eileen Stitt, who also was gratified with the Jersey. Minn esota and
Higgins said about the fes- teaches at Rio Grande, has response.
· Nebraska, from al l ov ~ r the
tival. "I love the demonstra- been involved with the fes"It's grown leaps and ·country."
tions, there are great crafts tival for a number of years, .

Bob Evans

. E. ,..
•-rvts
Nelson

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea..nt, WV

Obituaries

HI.••MYNAME
IS GEORGE&amp;
I CHASE
EVIL·OOEI?S.

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio.

Sun~, October 13, 2002

Page A4.

I

1. Pediatrics and Adolescent Medldne
2. GynecOIOSY/Pap smears, birth 'eontrol &amp; teenage
manaaement
3. Prevendve medicine, adulllgerlatrlc _
4. Osteopathic manlpuladon medldne
(Employment, sports &amp; other Injury rehabWiatlon)
5. Weight rontrol &amp; choleiterol management, blood

p.-ute, diabetes, etc.

.

INTERNAL MEDICINE &amp;
PULMONARY DISEASE

THOMAS P. PRICE, M.D.
OFFICE GYNECOLOGY

GENE H. ABELS, M.D.
CARDIO &amp; INTERNAL MEDICINE

6. Pre-employment, D,O.T., sports/school &amp; general

physical elllllllS
·
7. Minor surgeries, skin tumors &amp; moles, suturing &amp;

lacendon care

ADULTS AND PEDIATRICS PATI ENTS
SEEN SAME DAY IF POSSIRLE

ON SITE FOR OUR PATIENTS' CONVENIENCE:
1. . Complete Lab
2. Maminc~~rams
3. Pap Smears
4. X-ray

S.
6.
7.
8.

\]ltrusound ·
Cardiac stress testing/monitors
Lung Testing (PFT's)
DEXA Bone Density Scans

..

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~-~
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.
Sunday, October 13, 2002
.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpqlls • Point Pkt8sant

Horrific scene of fire,
wreckage described by officers
at scene of deadly crash .
SHEBOYGAN ,
Wi s. in the trunk of one vehicle
(AP) - Authorities strug· exploded possibly starting
gled Saturday with the or adding to ' the blaze
aftermath of a fie ry 38· fueled by gasol ine, diesel
vehicle highw ay pil¢up that f.uel, oil and debris·.
The State Patrol planned
left I people dead. some of
them burned beyond recog· to recon struct the accident
to try to determine. exactly
nition.
While some rel a tives what happened, but it won't
be easy. said spokeswoman
&lt;1&gt; were contacted friday in
the hours after the crash. Nancy Olig . She said most
authorities had not released of the vehicles appeared to
an y name s of victims have been hit three or four
Saturday morning. Official s times.
On Saturday, I 0 pink and
said they might have to use
DNA to ide ntify the vic· white flowers were placed
on a hill overlooking the
· tims.
The . Wiscon s in State crash site where debris
Patrol was investigating remained along the roadwhat caused the morning way, including headlamps,
ru sh hour crash on foggy a boot and a charred pair of
Interstate 43 ..just west of blue jean s.
"We' re really pretty much
Lake Michigan . Thirty-six
people were injured, seven shell-shocked," said Todd
criti call y and one serious ly. Behlin~. whose brother
Officials said driver error. Eric, dted in the accident.
going too fast for the weath· He said the sheriff' s department notified the family
er. figured in the wreck.
A portable propane tank Friday.

o·

Michael York rests his head by a photo
of his father, New York City firefighter
Raymond York during a memorial service at New York's Madison · Square
Garden honoring FONY members lost in
the line of duty over the past two years.
(AP)

NEW YORK (AP) - Thousands of
fuefighters from around the world
packed Madison SQ!Illre Garden and the
SIIITOIInding streets Saturday for a solemn
memorial ceremony to honor 356 city
firefighters killed in the line of duty 343 of them at the World Trade Center.
Many in the audience of 25,000 inside
and 30,000 watching on television
screens outside the aren11 cried quiedy as
piCtures· of the firefighters sll!iled from
the screens, some shown in crisp fonnal
uniforms, others in wedding tuxedos and
many holding children.
. "'They went beyond professionalism,
and carried with them the strength and
courage that remind the nation of the gal·
lant heroes ·of our past," Mayor Michael
Bloomberg said. "Even though they are
no longer among us they continue to
lead"
Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
reminded the audience that despite the
great sadness surrounding the day, those

•

ML8: Cards, Angels win, Page 82
'Canes survive 'Noles, Page 83
WVU, OU win on Saturday, Page 84
Scoreboard, Ptlge 85
Outdoors, Page 86

who were lost would not want their families and friends to dwell on their grieving.
.
·~y died to protect people, they diecl
to protect life ... and I think they woula·
want you, the people that they loved, tii
more forward, to be brave," he said. "Our
.mourning will live until we die, their
:
heroism Will live forever."
As the fmal name was read in a roll call
of those being honored, the arena erupteil
into a five-minute standing ovation. • ::;
"I lost a lot of friends and it's almost t(
year but the hurt doesn't go away," said
Brooklyn firefighter Todd Bilgore.
keeps hurting."
· ..;
·T he memorial began with thousands of
firefighters, led by color guards, bag,:
pipers and drummers from the Fir!l:
Department of New York, marching ill~
heavy rain up Eighth Avenue.
Amid the procession, 356 fuefighte~
some from as far away as Japan · anU:
Australia, each carried an American fl~
representing ail FDNY member lost ill:
the line of duty since October 2000.. ::
' .

Sunday, October 1:J, ]00] .

Hill 64th at
D-Ill state golf

toumament
COLUMBUS
Southern's Jordan Hill
shot a 169 to finish 64th in
the Division III state golf
championships Friday and
Saturday at Ohio State
University's Gray Course.
Hill , Southern's first participant in the state golf
tq,urnament in school his·
tory, shot an 86 during
play Friday on the 5,849·
yard, par-70 course, then
came back with an 83 on
Saturday. He fired 40 on
.the back nine each day.
Jason Kokrak of Warren
JFK won the Division III
' individual championship,
shooting 6-under par, 134
to edge te&amp;mmate Colin
Clemente by two strokes.
Lima Central Catholic
beat Warren JFK, the 200 I
state champion, by 13
strokes to capture the team
title, 583-596.
Waterford and Trimble ·
finished eighth and 12th,
respectively. The Wildcats
shot 631,
while
the
Tomcats fired a 647.
Trimble's No~ Barret
lied for ninth in ihe indi·
: vidual standings with a 6·
· over par, 146.

·uu

I

Tri-County briefs
Crashes reported

able before presstime .

Trucking meeting

provider of fleet insurance
to the trucking industry.
Wheaton will discuss how
fleet insurance rates are set,
tlie criteria used to determine rates, and what com·
panies can .do to contain or
reduce premiums.
. For more information,
contact Sgt. Steve Belyus at
740-286-4141. or email at
Sbelyus@ DPS.state.oh.us.

GALLIPOLIS Two
s ingle-vehicle
accidents
GALLIPOLIS - A staff
were under investigation by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the member for U.S . Rep. Ted
State . Highway
Patrol Strickland will seek input
from those atten~ing the
Saturday night.
· Troopers and Gallipolis next trucktng tndustry
volunteer firefighters were meeting Wednesday, · O.ct.
called to the intersection -of 16 at the Gallia-Meigs Post ·
Ohio Route 735 and Burnett of the State Highway
GALLIPOLIS
Ro.ad in Kanauga at 7:07 Patrol, ~96 Jackson Pike,
p.m. for a two-vehicle colli· Galhpohs.
' 'Matthew
Beaver
of
sion. It was not immediate·
Sponsored by the patr?l, Gallipolis has entered one
.
ly · known if there were these regular meettngs dis·
cuss
evolving
state
and
fedhead
of
_m_
arket
lamb
tn
the
injuries in the crash.
era!
regulations
that
affect'
sheep
diVISion
of
the.
29th
The patrol and emergency
annual . North A.mencan
personnel were also called commerce.
Lavestock
Strickland staff member lnternattonal
to the Medical Plaza on
&lt;!'~.AIL.E).
·
Christy
Lynch
will
report
Exposition
Ohio Route 160 " near
on
issues
and
concerns
The
exposmon
IS
Nov.
9·
Gallipolis at 8 p.m. when
the building was reportedly expressed at the meeting to ' 22 at the Kentucky Fair &amp;
Center
in
struck by
a vehicle. the congressman ·(or his Exposition
Louisville.
Unofficial reports indicated . revieW and response .
Keynote speaker at the
The NAILE. is produced
there were no injuries in the
meetmg
is
Ed
Wheaton
of
by
Kentucky and the
crash.
•
Great
West
Casualty
Kentucky
State Fair Board.
Details on both accidents
were not immediately avail· , Insurance . Co., a major

To compete

This is the aerial scene near Cedar Grove. "Wis., where more ·
than two dozen vehicles were involved in an accident on
Interstate 43. More than 30 vehicles crashed on the foggy
interstate, killing at least nine people and injuring more than
30 others, the sheriff said. Rescue workers picking through
the burned, tangled pile of vehicles may find more victims,
Sheboygan County Sheriff Loni Koenig said. (AP)

Inside:

Tens of thousands attend memorial
N.Y. firefighters tionored

•

Plan sale

'

.I

...41 :
··~

RACINE
Thi:;
Methodist Men of Southe~
Charge will hold a consign~
ment sale at · I 0 a . m~
Saturday, Nov. 2 at th~
Dorcas Bethany UniteO;
Methodist Church, twl'i
m·i les east of Racine mi
Ohio Route 124.
:';
They are accepting items
for consignment with 2d
percent of the sale price
going io the group.
:
No item is too big or .toq
small. Dan and Donn4
Smith will' serve as auction"
eer and clerk of the salei
Those with items for con•
signment are asked to call
Larry Circle, 949-2021';
Roy V:anMeter, 949-2541 ;
Dick Sterrett, 949·0032, or
· Dan Smith, 949-2033, as ·
soon as possible, so item.&amp;
can be advertised.
All proceeds of the sale
will be used by the
Methodist Men's Group f!!r
projects within · Meigs
County.

.

.

·Marshall 66, Buffalo 21

Cross Country

Herd
buries

CiAHS, RVHS

Bulls
.Bv BuTcH CooPER
Staff writer

excel at
distrid meet
Staff report

Chris Lester finished 21st
in 19: 11.54. Kyle Hively
came in 37th place with a
LOGAN, Ohio - Gallia time of 20 :23.91, and
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Academy
and River Valley Jamie Ehman finished ·39th
,psed
Byron .· Leftwich
will
be in 20:.26.42 to . round out
Saturday's game against
well-repre- the top five runners for
Buffalo as a chance to solidsented at RVHS .
ify his place on the NCAA ·
n e x t · "Our boys accomplished
passing list.
w e e k · s what we set out to for the
The Bulls defense could
only watch in awe.
Division II year•." RVHS head coach
Leftwich, who entered the
region a I Ed Sayre · said. ·~we've
game 32nd all-time passing
cross coun- been on a m,ission to get to
in the NCAA, leaped 11
try champi- regionals and do something
spots to 21st. · passmg the
on s hi p s that no team in River
likes of Florida's Shane
thanks to Valley history has ever
Matthews,
Daunte
Wiseman
solid per· done in any sport. They
Culpepper
of
Central
formances held on today and got out.
Florida,
BYU's
Jim
in the dis- We didn't run our best
McMahon and a lfttle-known
trict meet race, but . we ran w.e ll
passer from Stanford named
Saturday at enough today to get out.
John Elway.
Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich throws to a receiver
h
e We really ran hard."
t
The Marshall signal-caller against Buffalo during the first half Saturday at Marshall
N a zare n e
On the girls' side, . River
had 447 yards on 28-of-35 Stadium in Huntington, W.Va. (AP)
C a 111, p Valley 's Sally Attar and
passing and four touchdowns
Grounds in Kelsey Hollingsworth set
- all in the first half - as that everybody's been wait; 3-0 MAC East) led 52-0 at
Logan.
personal records en ·route
Marshall blasted Buffalo, ing for," said Leftwich. "We halftime, scoring on every
The
Blue
to
becoming the first
didn't mean to come out and offensive poss·ession and
66-21.
Angel
ieam
Raider
girls to qualify for
For his efforts, Leftwich throw the ball as many times once on a fumble recovery.
C. Roush
will make the
regional
champi·
got the entire second half off as we did.
''The first half is the best
its
II
th
onships.
Attar
finished
to rest for Marshall's next
"We just made the plays.
half of football we've played
straight
13th
in
22:25.4.
I game against Troy State.
We were just clicking."
appearance Hollingsworth came in
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
· Please see Herd. B4
"This is the Marshall team . The Thundering Herd (4·1,
in
the , 15th in 22:37.52.
Valley ·Christian beat out
region a I
Attar 's time is fifth-best ·
Adams County Christian
Saturday, 15-1, 15·1, to
after fin· in River Valley history, ·
ishing run- while
Hollingsworth
advance to the ACSI
nerup
to recorded the sixth-best
regional volleyball final.
n
em
e
s
i
s time in ·RVHS history
The match started off
Athens ori Saturday .
quickly as the Defenders
Saturday.
Emily Lawson placed
powered through the first
D. Roush
T
h
e 29th for the Raiders, fin·
game.
Bulldogs ishing in 24:21.88.
OVC kept the win in the
took
the
Kelly Ireland set a per·
fam.V,y _.dlu:ing.. the se,~QD\l ·'
team title sonal record, fitishirig in
game · dff · the ]lowe'tflil
with
38 25:04.56 to take 33rd
serves of sisters Hannah
P
o
i
n
t
s
. place. Her time is IOth-best.
and Sarah Burleson as the
GAHS was in River Valley history.
pair claimed all 15 points
back
Krystal Adkins came in
five
pf the game.
with 43 .
48th with a time of
Hannah Burleson finS
a
r
a
27:34.86.
Kayla Adkins
ished with . 15 points.
Wiseman,
rounded
out
the list of
Hallie Carter added 12, and
the defend- Raiders competing in the
Sarah Burleson had three.
Attar
ing
region· district, finishing 57th with
ave also defeated
al champi· a time of 31:30 .
.Mountain View Christian
on,
won
her
first
district
The Raiders · finished
and Teays Valley Christian
title
after
finishing
second
sixth
in the team standings.
in a tri-match Thursday
last season. 'Her time of Circleville also won the
night. The Defenders took
18:39.37 was two minutes girls' meet with 19 points.
Mountain View in two, 1~ ­
·faster
than Riley Stewart of Fairfield Union was second
l, 15-4, and· the Teays
Athen·s, who completed the with 85. Sheridan placed
Valley match went to three
3.1-mile
course
in third with 110 and Westfall
games, ll-1~, 15"12, 15-4.
20:48 .59.
,
was fourth with 113.
Senior Kelsey · Salisbury
Jackie
Wamsley
and
·
Despite finishing fifth in
lead the squad with II
Charity Peoples of GAHS the team standings with
·points
while
Hannah
also
finished in the top 15. 127 points, Meigs did not
Burleson had 10.
Wamsley's
time
wa s have any runners qualify
1
22:21.17, good for lOth. for the regional. Shannon
Peoples finished II th . in Soulsby came closest for
22:32.Q2.
the Marauders, finishing in
. Lindsay Caldwell ( 17th, 17th place with a time of
23:01.62), Niki Mc.Kinniss 22:40.93.· Emily .Story
(18th, 23:05.75) and Kari came in 18th with a time of
Adkins (19th, 23:08.07) 23:08.45. Andrea Burdette
Ohio State freshman tailback Maurice Clarett (13) steps behind blocking back Michael
GALLIPOLIS
. The
also
finished in the top 20 placed 25th with a time of
Jenkins (;12) in front of San Jose State defender Trestin ·George (34) in the first quarter .
Gallia Academy eighth-grade
for GAHS . Tiffany Sanders 23 :53 .93. Heathe Hysell
Satu,nday ln. Columbus. San Jose's To(ly Aickin (49) defends on the play. (AP)
volleyball team won its final
placed 26th with a time of came in 34th, finishing in
game of t11e season with a .!524:14.06.
25:11.64. Ashley Savage
9, 15-10 decision over
"I felt like my girls went finished 41st in 26:06.9.
Marietta.
out "llQSS ran really hard,"
Gallia Academy's boys
. Ivy Hurt and Leslie Niday
GAHS llead coach Penny missed qualifying for their
led the Blue Angels (8·4)
Roush said: "It's been back lOth straight regional, fin·
with seven points each.
. COLUMBUS (AP)- No. Krenzel completed 11 of 14 pletions and completion per·
and forth between us and ishing fifth in the team
5 Ohio State didn't need any passes for 241 yards and also centage.
Athens all year. I think standings with 135 points.
Hill, who tried to get his
help to beat San Jose State. had TD passes of 40 yards to
we've beaten 'them twice
Senior Daniel Roush
The Spartans obliged, any· Mike Jenkins and 37 yards to team out of this game in the
and they've beaten us qualified for his fourth
spring, pulled Rislqv soon
way.
· Chris Vance.
twice. They beat us today, consecutive regional . meet
Freshman Maurice Claret!
Clarett and Krenzel went after he set the records. Hill
but next week I guess we'll by finishing sixth. His tim.e
scored three touchdowns and to the sideline . midway said before the gam~ that he
try and see if we can be the was. l8 : 14.13 .
Craig Krenzel .threw three through the third quarter ·regretted having to travel
Senior Andrew Woodyard
ones that beat them. I felt
TD. passes as the Buckeye·s after the Buckeyes (7-0) cross country 19 play a non·
GALLIPOLIS -The 0 .0:
set a personal in his last race
they did a good job."
used a balanced attack to scored 31 unanswered points conference game and risk
Mcintyre Park District is now
River Valley 's boys made for GAHS, finishing with a
injury in the middle of the
San
Jose
to
build
a
41
-7
lead
.
beat
mistake-prone
history Saturday, becoming time of 19:23.0 I 'to claim
. accepting registrations for
State 50· 7 Saturday.
Claret! lost three fumbles Western Athletic Conference
the
first team in school his· 24th .place.
men 's and women's adult
San Jose State (4-3) came last week in a win at season .
.volleyball leagues for ages 18
tory
to earn a berth in a · M au Canady came in
San Jose State '(4-3) had
into
the
game
leading
the
Northwestern
and
clashed
on
regional competition . Chris 29th with a time of
and up.
nation in takeaways with 24, the sideline with his position zero rushing yards on 13
Roush
led the Raiders, fin- 19 :42 .86. Lyle Richards
The men will play Tuesday
but Ohio State had one coac.h. Thi s week he got the attempts - · the fewest numishing third in the meet placed 47th with a time of
,eyenings and the women will
ber of carries ever against
turnover while the Spartans message.
with a time of 11:45 .28.
21- :24.8. Josh Parsons came
pla,Y . Monday evenings. All
·
lost four fumbles to turn the
"The coach told me to pro· Ohio State.
River Valley placed in 52nd with a time of
g~es will be played at the
"We've been stopping the
gamt' into a rout.
teet .the ball. My teammates
fourth
in the team stand- 22:51.88. Robert Elliott
GDC Activity Center..
·run
all
.
year,"
free
safety
"You don't have many told''tne to protect that ball,"
Donnie Nickey said. "But I
ing s with I 07 points. placed 53rd with a time of
Players must form their
opportunities to play the No:· Cl.at'ett said. "Th:ll was it."
never
thought
I'd
see
a
game
"'
Circleville
won the district 23 : 11.46. Heath Patrick
own team with a cost of $125
5 team in the country. You · The game was played
where
the
opponent
had
zero
with
41
poi'nls.
Unioto was came in 62nd with a tirne
per team. Deadline for regis·
have to be perfect," San.Jose before a crowd of I 04,892,
d s. ..
yar
.
second with 49 al)d of25:22.17.
tration is Oct. 28. .
1
State coach Fitz Hill . said. Ule largest ever to see a game
Claret!,
who
has
15
touch·
Westfall
placed third with
The regional champi·
. Open practice will be held
"And we were far ff9m pi(r· at Ohio Stadium.
.
downs
in
six
games
he
103.
onships will be run next
Oct. 21-.21 and 28-29 from
feet."
· ., : ,
. · ,, · .San JosecState quarterhac~
missed
one
after
having
knee
placed
seventh
Saturday at Lancaster High
Meigs
.7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Games
Claret!, who fi\lishe4 with Sc'ott Rislov, passing on
surgery
gave
the
School. The boys' race
with 188 po ints.
will begin Nov. 4. .
132 yards on 18 carries, almost every snap, complet· Buckeyes a quick lead 'on a
Jeremy
Wolfe
placed
begins at II :50 a.m. The
For more information, con- . scored on runs of I and 5 ed 36 of 44 passes for 265 !-yard plunge on Ohio
lith
with
a
'time
of
girls'
race starts at 2:10
yards and caught a 7-yard yards and a touchdown, set·
tact Mark .Danner at
18:33 .86 for the Raiders. p.m.
Please see osu, 14
TD pass from KrenzeL ting school records for com446:4612, ext. 256.

.OVC advances
to regional

I:

Ohio State 50, San Jose State 7

Gallia Academy
8th grade
netters win

Buckeyes bomb Spartans

OOMPD

volleyball
registration

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Page 82
Sunday. Odober 1J, 1001

Angels take 3-1 lead over Minnesota in ALCS
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Sixteen years later, the Angels
are once again jus.t one · win
away from their first World
Series.
Rookie John Lackey outpitched Brad Radke with
seven shutout innings, Troy
Glaus broke up a scoreless tie
with a go-ahead single in the
seventh and Anaheim beat the
Minnesota
Twins
7-1
Saturday night for a 3-1 lead
in the AL championship
series.
It was another electric night
at · Edison Field, with the
crowd of 44,830 nearly all in
red. Fans banged their inflat,
able plastic Thunder Stix
from start to finish, waved
their stuffed "rally monkeys"
and even were feathery halos
on their heads.
: "One cloud aw!!y," read one
hope-tilled sign' behind the
Twins' dugout.
For 42 years, the theme of
this franchise has been
"Heaven Can . Wait," with
·painful memories lingering
from 1986, when Donnie
Moore and the Angels had a
3-1 lead over Basion in the
ALCS and were one strike
away from advancing to the'
World Series that founding
owner Gene Autry had
dreamed of for decades.
Kevin Appier. can end the
waiting Sunday when he
starts against Joe Mays, the

pitcher he lost to in the opener at the Metrodome.
Both starters were remarkably efficient on a cool, gi'dy
night, with Lackey 'holding
the Twins to three singles in
seven innipgs. striking out
seven, walking nirie and not
letting a runner past first base.
Radke, who beat Oakland
in Games I and 5 of the first
round, allowed just two hits
in the first six innings. went
to just one 2-0 count and didn't go to three balls on any
batters.
Darin Erstad singled leading off the seventh, becoming
Anaheim's third runner of the
game, and when he broke for
second on a ste_al attempt,
Minnesota's defense
. cracked
.
again.
Catcher
A.J.
Pieczynski's throw bounced
into center for·the Twins' seventh error of the postseason.
and Erstad took third.
Francisco
. Rodriguez,
Anaheim's 20-year-old rookie sensation, gave up a bloop
double to Doug Mientkiewicz
leading off the eighth, then
struck out Dustan Mohr, gave
up a grounder to second that
advanced the runner to third,
then fanned pinch-hitter-Brad
Kielty.
Ben Weber finished the six- ·Anaheim Angels' pinch runner Alex Ochoa, left, slides across the plate and past Twins catcher A.J. Pierzynskl to score. the
hitter, giving up an RBI single team's second run in the seventh inning of Game 4 of the American League Championship Series in Anaheim, Calif., Saturday.
to David Ortiz.
(AP)
~

cardinals·_scrape by.against
Giants in NLCS game 3
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
· - The St. Louis Cardinals
held · the San Francisco
:Giants at bay - barely.
: Three St. Louis homers
that just cleared the wall
behind Barry Bonds in left
field overcame his own
prodigious
shot
Into
McCovey Cove and gave the
:Cardinals a 5-4 victory
·, Saturday that cut San
Francisco's lead to 2-1 in the
NL championsh.ip series.
Mike Matheny and Jim
Edmonds hit solo homers
that helped St. Louis shake
off some early jitters and
take a 4- riead. Eli Marrero
. then connected for a
tiebreaking shot in the sixth
inning in St. Louis' first atbat after Bonds' blast.
The Cardinals then pre~e rved the narrow lead with
clutch relief, pitching out of
a bases-loaded, one-out jam
in the seventh. Jason

Isringhausen . worked the
ninth fot;&lt;the save, pitching
around a one-out walk to
Bonds.
The most exciting moment
came in the fifth, when
Bonds walked to the plate
with two runners· on and the
Giants trailing 4-1.
After taking a first-pitch
ball from winning pitcher
Chuck Finley, Bonds connected with hi.s maple bat,
hitting a drive to right field.
He tossed his bat aside and
raised his arms to the sky as
the ball sailed into San
Francisco Bay for the first
splash homer in postseason
history.
After Marrero's homer
down the left-field line gave
the Cardinals the lead, they
didn't let Bonds beat them
his next time up. walking
him intentionally with a runner on second base.
Benito Santiago (hen hit a

slow roller under Dave
Vers:s' glove for an infield
single to load the bases.
Veres struck out Reggie
Sanders and . Steve Kline
retired J .T. Snow on a
groundout - the third time
the Giants left the bases
loaded.
San Francisco stranded a
runner on second in the
eighth inningand left II runners overall.
· •
Both teams looked discombobulated . early with
wild throws, miscommunications and blunders in the
field leading to early runs.
Finley overcame two mis ~
plays in the first. Shonstop
Edgar Renteria committed
an error and Fernando Vina
forgot to cover second base
on a force.
Game 4 is Sunday with
San
Francisco's · Livan
Hernandez pitching against
Andy Benes :

.
·

St. Louis Cardinals' Eli Marrero hits a solo home run against the San Francisco Giants in the
sixth inning of.game 3 of the NLCS in San Francisco. Saturday. At left are Giants catcher Benito
Santiago and homeplate umpire D(lle Scott. (AP)

:Little guys send baseball's high-rollers home...
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -

The high-rollers already are
back home. This year's baseball
playoffs are for the little guys.
. None of the four teams left
: competing for spots in the World
Series has a payroll among tbe
top eight in the major leagues,
according to figures compiled by
the commissioner's office.
Five of the eight highest
spenders didn't even make the
:playoffs, a stark contrast to
the last few years. when

spending meant winning.
So much for commissioner
Bud Selig's argument that
only the big-bucks teams can
win. The Twins, Angels,
Cardinals and Giants used a
combination of smart trades,
wise spending, team · chemistry and cheap homegrown
talent to advance to the league
championship series.
.
"The A's, the Angels, smallmarket Twins, we went out
there and showed people that

'DO Jeep
.cherokee

we can get to the playoffs and
we can ·compete;'' Minnesota
center fielder Torii Hunter said.
The biggest is Minnesota, which
is No. 27 among· the 30 ~jor
league reams in spending with a
$41.3 million payroll, ilcconling to .
figures based on Aug. 31 rosters,
which include salaries, and promted shares of All-Star and signing
bonuses. Anaheim, the Twins'
opponent in lhe American League
championship series, is 15th at
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·

~oles field-goal
MIAMI (AP) - Wide left.
Can you believe it?
Top-ranked · Miami was
helped by yet another last.second missed field goal by
.No. 9 Florida State, hanging
:On for a 28-27 victory
:Saturday over the Seminoles
;to extend the nation 's longest
:winning streak to 28 games.
·. For the fourth time since
. ' 1991 in this glorious rivalry,
the Seminoles failed to connect on what would have been
.a g~e-changing j'ield goal.
:But unlike the first three that
:were wide · right, Xavier
:Beitia's 43-yard attempt went
·in the other direction.
: Until the final minutes,
Florida State (5,2) had outplayed the defending national
.champions, but now finds itself
:out of the national title chase.
:Miami (6-0) was pounded by
-the running of Greg Jones :who had 189 yards and a touchdown - and was penalized 14
·times for 109 yards.
: But Ken Dorsey bounced
:back from what would have
;been the worst game of his
·career by leading the
:Hurricanes to a pair of fourth;quarter touchdowns as they
Tallied from ·a 27-14 deficit . ..
: Dorsey completed 20 &amp;" 45
:passes for 362 yards and two 1Us.
No. 2 OKLAHOMA 35,
No. 3 TEXAS 24
DALLAS (AP)- Quentin
Griffin ran for 248 yards and
scored two touchdowns -on
. :Un alert recovery of a team;mate's fumble, then a 17;:yarder that sealed the secondoranked Sooners' 35-24 victory
:Over No. 3 Texas on Saturday.
: Quarterback Nate Hybl
. ;threw four interceptions, and
: .Texas turned three of them
:into points, taking _·~~ · '17-11
:lead midway the third· quarter.
• But the Longhorns (5-1, 1-1
:Big 12) did little right after
:that, and the Sooners did little
:wrong. • ·
· OkJahoma (6-0, 2-0) scored
· :24 unanswered points to con:tinue. their recent dominance
)n the series.
· • Both quarterbacks strug1lied, as Hybl finished 12-of:29 for 131 yards, while Texas'
'Chris Simms was 12-of-26 for
·156 yards with three intercep:tions and four sacks.
·No. 6 GEORtltA 18,
No. 10 TENNESSEE 13
ATHENS, Ga. (AP)- The
Georgia
:Sixth-ranked
:Bulldogs took advantage of
;an injury to Tennessee quar·terback Casey Clausen and
then held ·up against a furious
comeback to beat the I Othnnked Volunteers 18-13
Saturday.
The Bulldogs (6-0, 3~0
.:SEC) extended their best start
~ince ' !982, but not without
'Some nervous moments at the
:Cnd.
; Tennessee (4-2, 1-2), which
:went most of the game With
·third-stringer James Banks
'filling for Clausen, scored two
:touchdowns in the fourth
;quarter to make it close.
"Tennessee had nearlr half its
:344 yards in the fina period.
: Georgia recovered an
'onside kick, and Tony Milton
broke off a 25-yard run 'on
:fourth-and-2 to clinch the vic:tory.
.
• David Greene was 22-of-37
:for 232 yards for the
·Bulldogs, including seven
:Passes for 112 yards to
.Terrence Edwards.
:No. 7 OREIION 31, UCLA 30
: PASADENA, Calif. (AP)
·-· Jason Fife threw two
iouchdowns, including the
:game-winner on the first play
:of the fourth quarter, as sev~nth-ranked Oregon rallied to
~eat UCLA 31-30 Saturday
~nd remain undefeated at 6-0.
; Trailin¥, 31-30, the Bruins'
Chris Gnffith attempted a 46:yard field. goal that ~a! led
:.Wide left wtth 1·:54 remammg.
• Oregon (2-0 Pac-10) has
1
PacThe Bruins racked up 477
:total yards to Oregon's 383.
: UCLA quarterback . Cory
:J&gt;aus was 17 -of- 31 for 316
ards and three tou~hdowns,
. Ut also thre w three mtercep''ions. Sophomore · Cra•g
,.
jlragg scored two touchdowns
11nd had nine catches for 230
~ards. ·
: Bruin freshman Tyler Ebell
:gained 119 yards on 26 carjli.es.
.
. Paus and Bragg connected
:to give UCLA ~ ~0-24 lead
'With 7:28 remammg m the

~

Sate Begins Frlaay Oct. ·ll fl
Runs through Thursaay, Oct. l.T

I

&lt;w:~l)n-T'hur 9:30-6; Fri 9:30-8; Sat 9:30-5 Closed Sunday

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~unbap 'a::itlt£5-~rntinr!o

Pomeroy o Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio o Point Pleasant, WV

nighbnares continue against Miami

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third, but Griffith 's extra- no interceptions. Bryant
point attempt was blocked.
Johnson caught seven passes
for 13 8 yards and a TD. Larry
No. 8 NOTRE DAME 14,
Johnson ran for 78. yards and
aTD.
PITTSBURGH 6
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)
-· Carlyle Holiday threw an
No. 14 N.C. STATE 34,
II-yard touchdown pass to
NORTH CAROUN~ 17
Arnaz Battle in the second. CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)
quarter as No. 8 Notre Dame -"
Arrri tackles haven 't
beat Pittsburgh 14-6 Saturday. stopped stat freshman T.A.
The Fighting Irish (6-0) Mc.Lendon so far in 2002. "
produced just one more Neither did a broken right
touchdown, Ryan Grant's 1- wrist Saturday.
yard run in the fourth quarter
McLendon, play in~ with ·a
after the Irish defense forced a cast to help protect hts injury,
turnover at the Pitt 12-yard ran for a season-high 164
line.
·
yards and two touchdowns as
The Panthers (5-2) gained 14th-ranke&lt;l North Carolina
402 yards, compared with a State remained unbeaten with
season-low 185 yards for the a 34-17 victory over North
Irish. Notre Dame had only 40 Carolina.
yards rushing on 32 carries.
· He has 12 rushing touchPitt's offense moved the downs this season, matching
ball but couldn't finish its dri- the N.C. State freshman record
ves. Notre Dame's defense set in 1975 by Ted Brown.
again came up with big plays
The win gave N.C. State (7when it had to, finishing with 0, 2-0 ACC) its second-best
eight sacks and forcing three start in ttl years of football.
turnovers.
The Wolfpack began 8-0 in
Holiday finished 16-of-25 · 1967, when Amato was a
for 145 yards with one inter- senior linebacker under the
ception.
·
direction of Lou Holtz.
Rod Rutherford was 19-ofJosh Brown added 88 yards
43 passing for Pittsburgh for rushing and a TD as the
313 yards with one intercep- :Wolfpack scored 27 "unan- Florida State's Chris Rlx goes up and over the Miami defense Saturday during second-half
tion and a fumble.
swered points in the second action at the Orange Bowl In Miami. Rix left the game for one play"(AP)
half to nail down the key win
No. 12 WASHINIITON ST. 36, with a season-high 258 yards · ~ week after giving up 483 Bloomington. Wiseonsin' had- fourth quarter.
STANFORD 11
on !~e.-ground.
. , yards in a 35-31 loss at n't lost at Indiana since 1992.
Manning was 14-of-19 with
STANFORD, Calif. (AP)
Phthp Rivers, the nalion s Colorado, the Wildcats were
an interception and tied the
- Jason Gesset passed for top-rated passer, threw a TD solid on defense and occa· ARKANSAS 38,
scl\ool record for career
297 yards and threw two of pass and had a !-yard sneak . sionally
spectacular on
touchdown
passes with 43,
No. 24 AUBURN 17
his three touchdown passes to for another, but he was held to offense against the Cowboys
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - It sharing the mark with
Jonathan Smith as No. 12 170 yards passing.
(2-4, 0-2).
seemed like everyone trying Romaro Miller. Manning's
Washington
State
beat
to tackle Fred Talley was run- fathe·r, Archie, threw 31
Stanford 36-11 Saturday.
··
No. 17 IOWA 44,
No. 22 WASHINII"(ON 32,
touchdowns in hi s · stellar
ning in slow motion.
· · Jerome Riley had nine
MtCHIIIAN Sr. 16
Talley ran for 241 yards, career at Ole Mi ss.
ARIZONA 28
receptions for 173 yards and a
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) SEATTLE (AP) - Reggie including an 80-yard .score,
score as the Cougars .(6-1, 3-0 Brad Banks threw two touch- Williams thought it was just an and Arkansas racked up 426
Plc-1 0) rolled to their fourth down passes, Jermelle Lewis ordinary day. His performance, yards rushing to overwhelm
straight victory. After com- returned a kickoff 94 yards for thou~h , was extraordinary.
24th-ranked ·Auburn · 38- 17
pleting 17 of 23 passes another score and No. 17
Willial)ls caught three Saturday.
despite his constantly sore Iowa intercepted, three passes touchdown passes, including
His 241 yards were the most
ribs, Gesser sat out most of in a 44-16 victory over the game-wmner on an SO- ever given up by Auburn. The
the fourth
quarter ·in Michigan State on Saturday. yard play from Cody Pickett previous high was 233; '.bY
Washington State's biggest
The Hawkeyes (6-1, 3-0 with 2:03 remaining, as No. Alabama's Bobby Marlow in
victory over Stanford since Big Ten), who entered 'the 22 Washington beat Arizona 1951.
. •
1961.
game ranked !16th in the 32-28 on Saturday.
The Razorbacks (3-2, 1-2
Jermaine Green rushed for a nation in pass defense, limited
Williams caught eight pass- SEC) looked fresh enough
42-yard TD less than four record-setting
receiver es for 184 yards and the after a six-dVenime loss at
minutes into the game, bowl- Charles Rogers to five catches Huskies (4-2, 1-1 Pac-10) ral- Tennessee, just as coach
ing over Cardinal safety Colin and ended his NCAA record lied for the third straight year Houston Nutt had predicted
Branch in an appropriate streak of 14 straight games to beat Arizona and came during the week..
image for Washington State's with a TD catch.
Tally
spearheaded
back from a loss last week to
overwhelming performance.
Michigan State (3-3, 1-1) California that ended their 17- Arkansas' first 400-yard rushThe Cougars ·led 23-0 at half- was. held to 186 yards passing. game home wiiming streak. ·ing game since the team
time and the Cardinal (1-4, 0Bank's threw two scoring
The Huskies, trailing 28-26, gained 412 against LSU iQ
2) never threatened in a passes to C.J. Jones and the forced a punt and took over at 1994. Talley's 241 yards was
sparsely attended game at Haw keyes
answered their own 20 with 2:20 the second-best performance
'02 Buick LeSabre
St;mford Stadium.
·
Michigan State's opening remaining. On · the second in school ·history, behind ' Lt. Sandrlft. well equipped
Jason David had two inter- scoring drive with 44 points. play, Williams slipped under Dickey Morton's 271.
Was ·
ceptions for the Cougars,
Fred Russell, ranked fourth the Arizona defense, caught
Auburn (4-2, 2-1) had not
whose defense was markedly in the nation in rushing, ran an 8-yard pass from Pickett given up more than 350 yards
improved after allowing 93 for 75 yards and a ,score, and and outran Clay Hardt. and since LSU piled up 377 live
pomts in their last three Nate Kaeding kicked three Sean K~el down the left side- years ago. The Tigers hadn't
games. Washington State shut field goals, exiending his line.
allowed a 200-yard rusher
since Cecil Collins gained
down Stanford's -aggressive streak to 17 sl.raight.
232 in the same game.
passing offense, and the puntINDIANA 32,
coverage team got the
No. '19 KANSAS Sr. 44,
No. 23 WtscoNStN 29
school's first safety in nearly
OKLAHOMA Sr. 9
BLOOMINGTON,
Ind .
No. 25 MISSISSIPPI 52,
II StJecial purchase ' 26.240
two years. .
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) . (AP) - Gibran Hamdan 's
ARK~NSAS Sr. 17 .
- 'Ell Roberson won the best game gave Indiana one of
OXFORD, Miss. (AP) - A
No. 13 MICHIGAN 27,
starting quarterback job with its most impressive com~; back week after upsetting Florida,
his legs. He's holding onto it victories. .
.
Mississippi didn't have a let1 No. 15 PENN Sr 24, OT
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) with his throwing arm.
Hamdan threw three of his down or get caught looking
-Chris Perry's 3-yard touch- • Roberson 's touchdown runs four touchdown passes in the ahead to its game against
down run in overtime gave covered I yard in the third ·final 16 minutes to rally the Alabama next week .
'02 Buick Regal
No. 13 Michigan a 27-24 win quarter and 10 yards in the Hoosiers ' from a 19-point
Eli Manning threw for 290
3800
V6, leather mleriur.
over No. 15 Penn State on fourth . His TO passes went deficit for a 32-29 upset of yards and three touchdowns
Saturday. •
for 36 yards in the first quar- No. 23 Wisconsin.
to lead No. 25 Ole Miss over
loaded
The Wolverines (5-I; 2-0 ter to Taco Wallace, who fin- . Hamdan easily turned in the Arkansas State 52-17 · on .
From
'
Big Ten) won their sixth ished with 101 yard.s on four best performance in his four Saturday. .
· ,.
. straight over the Nittany catches, . and 47 yards to career starts. He completed 24
The Rebels (5-I ), ranked
Lions (4-2, 1-2), who hadn't James Terry for the Wildcats' of 36 passes for 310 yards and for the first tinie in two years ·
lost that many games in a row final ·score.
four touchdowns - the most and coming off an upset of
to any team in more than 70
Wallace's touchdown catch by a Hoosier quarterback Florida, had an easy time with
;r&lt;&gt;ntl Am
years.
·
was impressive. He. made a since Antwaan Randle El on the Indians (4-4).
. Nittany
Lions . kicker leaping grab in double cover- Oct. 31, 1999- including the
Ole Miss is 18-1-2 against
4 In Stock -Well Equipped
Robbie Gould - .who missed age, then sprinted the final 10 game-winner with 2:16 to go. Arkansas Stale and have won
an extra point and a field goal yards for a 12-0 lead.
The Hoosiers (3-3, 1-1 Big the last 10 by an average of
in regulation _ missed a 23Roberson completed 9 of 17 Ten) beat ·a ranked opponent more than 20 points per game .
yard field goal in overtime. passes for 202 Jards and an for the first time since Oct.
The Rebels didn't punt But Michigan was called for mterception an ran for 96 21, 2000, a 51-43 victory over . though they did commit four
offsides, and Gould took yards on 17 cames before No. 22 Minnesota, and also turnovers · - and outgained
advantage of the opportunity · being 1.ifted for former starter snapped the Badgers three- the Indians 508-264. Manning
'02 Grand Prix
with a 20-yard kick to put . Marc Dunn midway through game winning streak in got to sit out most of the
Only
8000 to 13,000 miles
Penn State ahead 24-21.
the fourth quarter.
''
"2" in s1ock
·John Navarre was 27-of-41
Darren Sproles rushed for
for 244 yards with no inter- 130 yards on 1&amp; carries for
· Save- Like
ceptions and two TD passes to Kansas State (5-l, 1-1 Big
Brayton Edwards.
.12), including a jukjng, twistpen ·eSS With
Zack Mills was 19-of-31 for mg 38·yard TD run m the first
264 yards with two TDs and quarter for a 6·0 lead.

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Page 83

Top 25 college football

~o) ~e~~~s \~-~· r~~.

·oo
Chevv Mallllu
I 1111. II, IICbiV WIIIIIIJ

Gallipolis Store Only

(740) 441·9010 •

Sunday, Oct~r 13, 2002

•

�.

.
•

.WVU rolls over
thing . to us today that
Maryland did to us." ·
Rutgers (1-5, 0-2) did very
little on .offense in losing a
record 17th straight conference
game. The Scarlet Knights got
six ftrst downs and 20 yards
rushing on.25 carries.
'
"Our .defense has been
ridiculed for giving up big
plays," said defensive lineJ)lan Tim Love, who gave
West Virginia a 2-0 lead by
tackling quarterback Ted
Trump in the end zone in the
first quarter. "Last week we
were ridiculed for giving up
big plays. So I think today,
coming out and dominating ts
huge for this defense."
Rasheed Marshall threw a
touchdown pass and ran for
another and safety Angel
Estrada scored on a 43-yard
interception return as the
Mountaineers beat Rutgers
for the eighth straight time.
Todd James added a . 37,
yard field goal and backup
quarterback Danny Embick
th~ew a 14-yard touchdown
pass to.Ryan Thomas.
Rutgers' conference losing
streak is tlle longest sin.ce the B!g
East began rolfnd,robm play m
1993. Temple lost 26 in a row
before the round-robin fol1lllll.
The loss was somewhai disappointing for Rutgers, which
shutout Army 44-0 and .then
played ·. two very competitive
games in losing to Pittsburgh 3nd
Tennessee. The Scarlet Knights
led Tennessee at halftime.
"We thought we were tum,
ing the corner and we were

PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) - .
Playing Rutgers not only
brought another big game from
West Virginia halfback Avon
Coboume, it produced the first
shutout by the Mountaineers
defense since 1997.
Coboume ran lOr 133 yards 3nd
a touchdown 3nd West Virginia's
defense scored twice, tOrced five
turnovers 3nd limited Rutgers to
90 yards in total offense in a 40-0
victoty Saturday.
It marked t~ e fourth straight
year that Cobourne has rushed
for I00 yarps against Rutgers,
making him the first back in
the conference to do that
against the same school.
"We won, so that 's the onLy
thing l ca re ahout," said
Cobourne. who came into the
game leading the nati on with
a I 52.2 yard average. "That's
an added bonus, so that's the
only thing I care about. l'n1
more prou\1 we won the game.
· We won four games which is
more than we won last year."
The shutout was the first for
the Mountaineers (4·2, 1-0
Big East) since a 48-0 win
·over Rutgers five seasons
ago, and it came on the heels
of a disappointing 48-17-loss
to Maryland last week.
"Last weekend. they ran the
ball on us a loi and threw
' "d sa f ety
some passes, " sm
· Jermaine Thax ton, who set up
Cobourne's 5·yard touchdown with the first of his two .
interceptions. "We had to
come out today and let them
(Rutgers) know that they
weren 't going to do the same

Herd.
from PageB1
since I' ve been here on all
sides of the ball," said Pruett.
"I feel that . when we click
like that, we're pretty good.''
Marshall led 21-0 at the
end of the first quarter as
Leftwich threw a pair of
touchdown passes to Josh
Davis, a 63-yard . play on
Marshall 's first drive of the
game. and Darius Watts,
along with a Brandon Carey
one-yard TD run.
·
·
Watts ,finished with 102
· yards on six receptions, while
three other Herd receivers
nearly fini shed with 100-plus
yardage, David with four
catches for 9~ yards. Denero .
Marriott with 91 yards on six
·receptions and Curtis Jones
with 89 yards on five catches.
" If I could've went back in,
then they would' vc -all had
over a hundred yards ... then I
would've apologized to
(Buffalo's) coach," : said
Leftwich.

Iluffalo's best opportl!nity
to .score in the first half, and
keep in the game, came on a
drive that began late . in the
first quarter.
·
Bulls' quarterback Randell
Secj&lt;y drove his ~am down
th~ field and, with the assistance of 'a pass interference
penalty, put the ball on the
. Mpshall 10-yard line.
.
But, Buffalo.went for it. on
a fourth down and one early
in the second quarter and was
stopped by the Herd defense
leaving the Bulls scoreless.
Marshall added salt to
Buffalo's wounds on the fol,
lowing drive with another
touchdown pass by Leftwich
to Watts, this one from 20yards out.
On Marshall's next drive,
Curtis Head set a career and
Marshall Stadium record
with a 53-yard field goalas
the Herd took a 31-0 lead. ·
That's the kind of night it was
as everything seemed to go
right for the Thundering Herd.
"Byron was hot and . the
line really protected well for
him," said Pruett, who for the ·
second time this year sat out .

I

Scoreboard

Bobcats crush ·
EMU for first ·win .
ATHENS, Ohio· (AP) . - .
Chad Brinker rushed for 127
yards and tied a school record
with four touchdowns to lead
Ohio to a 55~27 victory over
Eastern
Michigan
on
Saturday. ·
, Fred Ray completed 7-of,9
passes for 132 yards and two
touchdowns for the Bobcats
(2,5, 2-1 Mid,American
Conference) in his firSt start of
the season. Starting quarter,
back Dontrell Jackson sat out
with a foot injury.
. Troy Edwards was 20-of,34
for 289 yards with three
touchdowns and two interceptions for the Eagles (34, 1-2).
C.R. Roberson .had touchdown catches of. 26 and 12
yards on his only . receptions
for Eastern Michigan. Kevin
.
.
.
West Virginia running back Avon Cobouine, righ~. eludes the Walter caught I 0 passes for
grasp of Rutgers linebacker Gary Brackett during the first half 128 yards, and Ime Akpan ran
Saturday at Rutgers Stadium in Piscataway, N.J. (AP)
'

Pro Football

"

for 121 yards and a TD for tht,
Eagles.
Ohio scored touchdowns on
all six of its possessions in ·th~
first half to take a41-131ea&lt;J;
Brinker had II S yards rush-'
ing and TD runs of 3, 7 and I
yard before halftime. He alsq
had an g,yard TD run in the; ·
third quarter. .
~.
Justm Roush, .a graduate of
Mei~s High School, had 1~· .
cames for 57 yards.
-~
Ray 's 47-yard touchdowlj:
to Stafford Owens in the first
quarter was the Bobcats' frrst
scoring pass of the season..
Ray also threw .a f-yard TD
pass to D.T. Boon and .scored'
on a 1-yard run, both in the
second quarter.
The Bobcats hadn't scoreg· ·
at least 55 points since a 63 ~
15 victory over Northlmf
illinois in 1976.

expecting a lot of things," Iead to 9,0 early in the second
Rutgers defense tackle Will · quarter when Marshall .threw
Burnett said. "1. don't think a 12-yard touchdown pass to
we' re shellshocked, but this is Phil Braxtonc
OXFORD, .Ohio (AP) a wake-up call. We're not as
Thaxton.'s interception three Michael Turner rushed for 222
good as we thought we were." plays later gave West Virginia yards and five touchdowns .as
While the 40-point margin the ball at the Rutgers 18. Northern Illinois beat Miami
of victory was big, it wasn't Cobourne of Cheery Hill, of Ohio 48A 1 Saturday
as bad as . a year ago when N.J., carried ·three straight · despite a record,setting perfor,
West Virginia set a conference times, scoring from the 5,yard mance by RedHawks quarter,
record for points in an 80-7 line on the third carry.
back Ben Roethlisberger.
win over Rutgersc
Marshall capped a !)..play, SO- · Turner scored on runs of
The Mountaineers didn't get yard chive to stmt the stlCOIXt half 73, 31 ·and 15 yards in a
on lbe' scoreboard until Love with a 6--yard run and West seven-minute span of the sectackled Trump after the Rutgers VIrginia coasted the rest of the way. ond half to help the Huskies
quarterback mishandled a low
Estrada and Thomas scored (4·3, 3,0 Mid,American
snap from his 8-yard line.
in the fourth quarter against a Conference)"r!llly from a 27,
After forcing Rutgers to tired Rutgers defense, which 7 deficit to a 27,aJI tie.
punt from its own end zone; only gave up 332 yards despite . Josh Haldi threw a 25,yard
West Virginia stretched the being on the field for 37:55.
touchdown pass to Dan

osu

from PageB1

State's first possession.
"Maurice likes to get into
the end zone, there's no question about i.t," Tressel said.
"He knows how ·to do that."
''It wasn't the record,"
After the Spartans puUed to
added Leftwich . "I hate 10"7 on Rislov 's 9-yard scorstanding on the sidelines. If ing pass to Charles Pauley in
we wanted the record, then the second quarter, San Jose
we could've went out there State turned the ball over on
and got the record."
fumbles on its next four p6s,
Buffalo (1,6, 0,3) finally sessions. -The Buckeyes
got on the scoreboard in the turned three of them into
closing seconds of the thirtl
quarter as tailback A:aroit
Leeper ran the ball up the
middle for a 17 -yard TD run."'
But, that was 'the lorie
bright spot for the visitors
from New York.
On the ground, Wilbur
Hargrove led the Herd with
153 yards rushing in the sec'
ond half, including a touchdown.
Marshall only had 50 'yards
rushing in the entire fll'st half.

touchdowns. ·
·"When · the takeaways
began, and the -defense start,
· ed !mocking the · ball loose,
your could see the tide of the
game change," Ohio State
coach Jim Tressel said.
Krenzel completed . passes
of 14 yards to Vance and 17
yards to Jenkins, then found a
diving Vance over the middle
fo( theJ7-yard score to cap a
68-yard, 56-second drive.
"It's been frustrating to us to
have so . many big,play guys
outside and not be able ·to
throw the ball with any amount
of success," Krenzel said.
. '7oday it came together." ·

Austin Paay 40, Buller 23
No.6 Maulllon WUhington l7·1) beat 7. Norwalk ............... ........337·319- 656
Bowling Green 46, Cent Mlclllgon 35
CloMI. Llncoln·West 54-6.
8. Ponamoulh Weat ........329-331 - 660
No.7 Brunswick 16·0) beat North 9.-lrdorl Crl&lt;. ~....333-329- 662
Colora&lt;to 53, Kanou 29
National Football League
Ra;alton 28-7.
10. Sandusky Perklns ......326-340- 666
Oay1on 52. Valporaloo 3
No.8 Gahanna Lincoln (7-1) lost to 11. Canton C. C&amp;th , ..... :...33().341 - 671
Dral&lt;a
49,
"Mlany.
N.
V.
42,
20T
o\FC
Plekerlngton 35-14.
t2. Spflld. Kenton Ridge ..341·351- 692
E. Ullnols 25. E. Ksn1uc1&lt;y 24
Eut
11ndlvtdual .corw
No.9 Dublin Coffman (7·1) beat
Illinois
38.
Purdue
31,
or
w L T Pet PF Pit
WeateNIIIa
North
45-14.
1.
Kyle
Coeonis, Maysv!He.... 7!H3 - 148
Indiana 32, Wloconlln 29
Miaml ..............4 1 0 .800 156 98
No.10 Cin. A~rson (B-0) beat Amelja 2. Joe Frustacl, Aqulnas ..... 77~74 -151
Indiana St 23. SW MIIISOUri 81. 20. or
New England ...3 2 0 .600 142 106
48-0.
3. John Zaller, NOCL .......... 75-n- 152
Iowa 44, Michigan Sl 18
Bullalo ............2 3 0 .400 163 180
4. JeaseYoung.lligWalnut79-75-154
DIVISION H
NY Jats ......... 1 4 0 .200 75 162
Iowa St. 31, Texas Tech 17
No.1 Day. Chamlnade-Julienne (8-0) beat 4. Chad Corroll. Bexley....... n-77- 154
South
Kansas St 44. OldahOma St. 9
Sidney Lehman Cothollc 41· 17.
4. Nick KiJSCh, Indian Crk ... n.n -154
w L T Pot PF . Pit
Michigan 27, Penn 51. 24. OT
No.2 Louisville (~·0) beal Akron 7. Todd Brown. Norwai~ ...... !J0.75 - 155
Indianapolis ....3 1 0 .75() 92 70 - ' N. Illinois 48, Mlamlj0111o) 41
7. Man Bruck, Cin . Wyo...... 78-77 -155 ·
Spnngtield 61·13.
JackSonville ....3 1 0 .7SO 104 72
No.3 T&lt;&gt; . Cent. Calh, (8.Q) beal T&lt;&gt;. Start 7. F'utler Johnson, Unlv...... 75-80 - 155
Nebraska 24, Mlsaourl 13
Houston........ .. 1 3 0 .2SO 42 92
34-21 .
10. Tt8VIs~. PIIrlclna ... 79-77 - 15e
Notre Dame 14, Pill8ilurgh 8
Tennessee ...... 1 4 0 .200 107 159
11 .JRAIDilllr.t-irtv.tlH&lt; _77-80-157
No.4 Conlield (8.Q) beat Salem 35-28.
Ohio 55, e. Michigan 27
No.5 Kings Mills Kings (8·0) beat
North
Ohio St. SO, San Jose St 7
w L T Pet PF Pit
Wilmington
41-7.
.
DIVISKIN II
S. Illinois 42, N. Iowa 13
~ltimore ........2
No.6 Tol. St. ·Francis (7· 1) beat Tol.
Tum ICONJa
2 0 .500 67 79
lblado
37,
Ball
St
17
1. Lima Control Cath ......299-284 - 583
C-and .......2 3 0 .400 124 117
Bowshor27.0.
UCF 31, W. Michigan V
Plttsllurgh ....... 1 3 0 .2SO 76 106
No.7 Trotwood-Madison t7 ·1) lost to 2. Warren JFK. ................ 304-292 - 596
w_Illinois 22, Illinois
St. 17
3. Mant111eld St Peter'e ... 297-300 - 597
Ctnclnnati ....,..0 5 0 .ooo 44 147
Vandalia Butler 34-33.
SOUTH .
No.8 Loveland (8.Q) beat Morrow U1tla 4. Gahanna Col. Aead .... 306-284- 800
Alabama A&amp;M 25. Tennel888 Sl21
5. Laneaslsr Fisher Cath.... 306-303 - 611
Mloml 31.0.
w LTPctPFPA
e. DeGraff Alverslde .......310.304- 614
No.~ Cola. Broolchaven (7·1) beat Cola.
Appalachian 81. 18, Furman 15
Oakland ... .... ...4 0 0 1.00 162 90
7. Kalida ... .............. ......... 321-305 - 626
lhHtohcn&gt;ft 20-12.
llernl9r ......... ' ..4 1 0 .BOO 124 96
Arkansas 38. Atibum 17
No.to Macedonia Nordonia (8-0) beat 8. Waterfonl .. :.................316·315- 631
San Diego .... .04 1 0 .BOO 111 64
Bethune-Cookman 49. Delaware 51. 7
9. Cln . Country Oey ........321-311 - 632
KansasCity ....3 2 0 .600 171 156
Charieston Southern 21, Bavannoh St. 3 Lyndhurst Brush 28-0.
10. Delphos St. John's .....318-317- 835
DIVISION Ill
NFC
'
Gardner-Webb 38, Elan 27
No.1 Mr. Hoban (7·1) lo.st to Cuya. Falls 11. Gates Mills Gilmour ... 316-322 - 638
Eut
Georgetown, D.c . 25, Dlwklaon 21
12. GtausterTrimble ......... 322-325- 647
Walsh Jesu~ 111-14.
w LTPctPFPA
Georgia 18, Tennessee 13
lndiYklual ecoru
·
No.2 Akr. Buchtel (8·0) beat Ak•on
N.Y. Glanls .....3 2 0 .$oo 76 61
Georgia Southern 41, W. Carolina 24
1. Jason Kokrak. JFK ......... 6HI7 -134
Firestone 51..0.
li'hlladelphia ...:3 2 0 .600 165 92
Hampton 49, Bowie St. 0
No:3 Newarl&lt; Licking Vallay (8.0) beat 2. Colin Clemente, JFK ...... 69-87 - 138
Washington ... ,2 2 0 .500 79 94
Howard 28, Flottcla MM 24
3.JoefloMW:I1,SIYieC!IIL.. 68·71-139
London
35-12.
Dallas .............2 3 0 .400 74 107
Jad&lt;sonvllle St 28. Sam H.ouaton 51. 22
Na.4 Germantown Valley View (8..:0) beat 4. Andy Connell, Lima Cath...76-85 - 141
South
4.1bm BaJir9!r. St. Petol's .•.. Jl8.73 -141
Eaton 35-0.
lSU 36. Florida 7
w LTPctPFPA
6. Alex Wenzel, Tol. Chr...... 71·71 -142
No.5
Hubbard
(8-0)
beat
Warren
louisiana-Monroe
34,
Idaho
14
Clew Orleans ..4 1 0 .BOO 143 116
7. Ql&gt;Kiulo!tS~SE.. 71·72 -143
Cltan1llon 35-14.
.
. Marshall66. Bul1alo 21
. Tampa Bay .. .. .4 I 0 .BOO 126 53
Amett, ~C&amp;lh. .... 73-72 - 145
No.6 Cola.• DeSales (6-2) losl to Cin.
Miami 28, Florida 8t~ 27
Garollna ... :......3 2 0 .600 89 61
RlattSclnn:Mr,Mei-L ... 72·74 -148
Moeller
35·14.
Mldcle
Tennessee
21
,
Yanderbilt
20
~anta ............1
3 0 .2SO 83 74
Na.7 Cte. Benedictine (7-1) beat Youngs. 9. Paul Mar&amp;hall, Lima Colh.•.74·72 - 146
MisslaslpJ&gt; 52. Arkansas St 17
Nonll
9. Clll'ia Robenson. FlillrrM .... 70.76 - 149
Mooney 24-21.
w L T Pet PF Pit
Mississippi St. 11, Troy St. 8
No.8 Oak Hamor (8-0) bea1 Sandusky 9. Noah Barrett, Trimble ...... 70.76- 146
G•een Bay ......4 . 1 0 .800 145 135
Morehead St. 40, St. Jo~'e, Ind. 7
64. Jordan Hil. Southern ..•.. 86-83 -169
Parlclns 35-21 .
Clt~go .......... 2
3 0 .400 112 132
Morgan St 30, N. Carolina A&amp;T 13
No.9 Urbano (8.0) beat New Carlisle
Detroit. ............1 3 0 .2SO 85 136
Murray St. 31 , Tennessee Tech 14
Tecumseh 39·18.
·
Mlnnesota.......o 4 0 .000 99 141
N.C. State 34. North Carolina 17
No.10 SteubenVille (7-1) beat Bullalo
W.lt
S. Carolina St. 35, Nor1olk St. 9
(N.Y.) St. Joseph's 28-0.
WLTPctPFPA
DIVISION IV
SE Missouri so; Tenn.·Martln 35
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP
. SM Ft&gt;V'&lt;ii!IXL.3 1 0 .7!;0 87 80
No.1 Coldwater (8-0) beat Versailles 28· ·
SoU1h Camllna 18, Kantuoky 12
SERIES
Arizona .......,•.. 3 2 0 .BOO 99 87
14.
.
South Floiida 16, Southern Mise. t3
Anwtcan t..aogua
~a111L ......... 1 3 ' 0 .2SO 84 87
•
No.2
PortslnilU1h
(7·1)
lost
to
Gallipolis
Soulhern U. 19, MV~\,116
Tueacloy, Ocl8
St. Louis .........0 5 0 .000 74 125
Gallla Aead. 28·12.
Stephen F.Aus11n 17, Nk:ltolla St14
· ..
Sundoy'a Gamn
Minnesota 2, Anahekn 1
No.3 Now Lexlnglon (8·0) bea1 Now
The Citadel 26. ETSU.7
BUffalo at HQuston., 1 p.m.
Wodnaaday, Ocl 8
Concord John Glenn 28-19.
.Camllna at Dallas, 1 p.m.
Tulane 35. Clnclnna~ 17
Anaheim 6, Minnesota 3
No.4 Akr. Mandleoter (8.0) beet Cuya.
Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
· UAB 51, Houolon 34
FJidey, Ocl11
Fala CVCA 35.0.
1
• Baltimore at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
VMI27, Wofford 18
No.5 Coshocton (8-Q) beat Onad. ln.dian
1 New Orleans at.WasNngton, 1 p.m.
S.lllnlay, Ocl12
VIrginia 22, Clemson 17
Vallay 45·21 .
.
Green Bay at Naw England. 1 p.m.
Anaheim 7. Mlnneoota 1, Anaheim leads
W. Kentucky 56, Fla. lntorna~onal 7
No.8 Ottawa·Cllandort (8-0) beat
,.Detroit at Mtnnesota, 1 p.m.
sarles 3-1
\
Dellanee 26.0.
Wake Forost 38, Duko 10
-Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Sundey, Ocl13
No.7 Martins Feny 18.0) beat Pelnesvlllo
Youngstown
St.
24,_
Florida
Atlantic
17
- Cl..,.land at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Mlnneeota (Maya 4·8) .at Anaheim
Harvey 34-14.
SOLITttWEIT
' Oakland at StLouis. 4:15p.m.
(Ap)&gt;ar .14·12~ p.m. (Fox)
No.8
Kettering
Alter
(7·1)
beat
Hammon
Alcorn St 33, Prairie VIew 13
Jacksonville al: Tennessee, 4:15p.m.
oy, Ocl18
'
Roso 28-0.
Boise Sl 52, TUlsa 24
· • Kan818 City at San Diogo, 4:15 p.m.
Anaheim at Minnesota. 8:19p.m •• " nee·
No.9 Archbl&gt;d (7·1) loat to Hamler
Oklahoma 35. TBi&lt;aa 2&gt;1
· : Miami at Denver, 8:30 p.m .
essery (Fox)
.
.. '
Patrick Henry 34-o.
Texas A&amp;M 41, BaylorO
_Open: N.Y. Jets. Arizona, PhlladeiRhla,
Wednoaday, Oct. 1e
No.1 oln&gt;nton (8-1) Is Idle.
Ch~go
'
Anaheim at Minnesota, 8:19p.m., It nee·
FAR WEST
DIVISIONV
Monday'• G1me
Colorado St. 44, Wyoming 36
No.1 Marion Pleasant (8.Q) beat Sparta esaary (Fox)
.san Francisco at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Idaho Sl 18, Montana 51. 14
Highland 49.().
·
,
·
Sunday, Oct. 20
NaUon~ILequa
New Mexico 25, UNLV 18 ·
No.2 Woodstleld Monroe Cent. (8-0) beat
• Carolina at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Yleclneeday, Oct. a
Barnesville 27-12.
·
Oregon 31 , UCLA30
San Francisco 9, St. Louis 6·
'·Jacksonvlne at Ba"lmore, 1 p.m. ·
No.3 Smithville (8-0) beat Dallon 21·19.
San Diego St. 36, Utah H
Thurodly, Ocl1 0
Ch~go at Detroit. f p.m.
•
No.4
Dalphoe
St
John's
(8·2)
lost
to
Southern Gal 30, C&amp;tlfornla 28
· Denver at Kansas City, 1 p.m. .
san
F1'8nclsco
4, St. Louts 1
Marla Stein l.1arlon Local 14·7. .
Washington 32. Arizona 28.
. Bullalo at Miami, 1 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 12
No.5
Dallon
(7·1)
losttaSm~hvlle 21-19. .
Waehlng1on 51. 36, Stantord 11
St. Louis 5, San Francisco 4, San
S~ Francisco at New Orleans, 1 p.m. "\
N'o.6 Mlddle11eld Cardinal (8·0) beat
'-Minnesota at New York Jets, 1 p.m.
Francisco leads series 2-1
Burton Berkshire 30-7.
Ohio Collage Football Score•
Sunday, Ocl13
: .sealtle at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
N0.7 Amanda-Ciearcreek .(7-1) beat
-Houston at Cleveland, 4:05p.m.
St. LoUis (Benes 5-4) at San Francisco
. · Sltutaoy•o GllntM
Clrclevllla logan Elm 21-o.
•
•San Diego at Oakland. 4:05p.m .
eonrw...ncau&amp;A
No.8 Barnesvlle (7·1) lost to Woodsfield (Hernandez 12·16), 7:55 p:m. (Fox)
Mondey, Oct. 14
·. Dallas at Anzona, 4:.15 p.m.
Tulane 35 Cincinnati 17
Monroe Central 27-12.
St. Louis (Morris 17-9) at San Francisco
· Washington at Green Bay•. 4;15 p.m.
MldoAmartcan eonrwr.nca
No.9. CastaNa Margaretta (6·2) lost to
(Rueter .14-8). 8:19p.m. (Fox)
Tampa Say at Philadelphia, 4:15p.m.
Bowling Green 45, Cont. Michigan 35
Sandusky St. Mary 24·22 .
Wodneaday, Ocl11
Open Date: Onoinnatl, New England,
N. llllnols 48, Miami. Oltlo 41
·
No.10 Cln. Hils Chrlsllan Acid . (8.Q)
San
Francisco
at St. Louis, '4:19p.m., If
N.Y. Giants, Tennessee
.
Ohio 55, E. Michigan 27
.
beat Cln. Landmarl&lt; Christian 55-6.
neceseary (Fox)
Mondoy, Oct. 21
Toledo 37, Ball St. 17
DIVISION VI
Thuradoy, Oct. 17
_Indianapolis at Pittsl;lurgh, 9 p.m.
. a...1 u.m tntorcoltegtatt
No.1 Marla Stein Marion Local (7·1) beat
San Francisco at St. Louis, 8:19 p.m., If
Ashland 27. Mercyhurst 20
Delphos
51.
John's
14-7.
'
SaglnaiN Valley St. 89, Findlay 7
No.2 Oanvlll~ . (8-Q) beat Fredericktown necessary (Fox)
' -ndCont.47·26.
Andereon 41 , Bluffton 17
No.3 Columbus Grove (6·0) beat
Hanowr 57; Defiance 35
Delphos J~;~fferson 57-6.
.
: . ABIID~!~I!4 P~BB Top 25_
Moun1 St. JosePh 23, Manchester 17
No.4 Mogadore 17·1) " beat Streetsboro
Mld-ltatn
49·6.
'
NBA
Haw They Flrod
Geneva 17. Malone 10
No.5 Strasburg-Franklin .· (8-0) Ileal
How the top 25 teams In The Associaled
Tri·State 22, Walsh 0
. EASTERN CONFERENCE
Bowerstown COnotton·valley 49· 12.
Press' co llege football poll.fared this week:
Urbana 28, Taylor 21
AHanUc Dlvlelon
No.6 Lowollvlllo (8.Q) beat Mineral Ridge
No. 1 Miami (6·0) beat No.9 Florida Stm8-o,.
North Cot11 eo.-teo
W
L Pet;
OB
54·18.
28·27. N!l'd: at Wes1 Virginia, Oct. 26. .
'Allegheny 56, Hlnlm 0
No.7 Dola Hardin Nort110m (8.0) beat Boalon ......... ...... ..2
0 1.00
No. 2 Clklehoma (6·0) bea1 No. 3 Texas . Danlaon 41, Kenyon 7
"·-·v.n Buren 41-6.
New Jersey..........2 . 0 1.00
35-2... Next: vs. No. 11 Iowa Slate,
Ohio Wea.teyan 21, Earlham 14
No.8 Covington (8·0) beat Bradford 33·0. Washington ......... 1
0 1.00
.5
Salllrday.
Wabash 49, Wittenberg 43. OT
No.9 Cory-Rawson (8-0) beat Vanlue 45' Miaml ................... 1
2 .333
1.5
7.
New York ............. 1
2 .333
1.5
'No.3 Texas (5·1) 1os1 to No.2 Oklahoma
Wooster 49 ~1:,"~~0
N0.1
0
Mechanicsburg
(8·0)
beat
Orlando
...............
1
2 .333
1.5
35-24. Next: at No. 19 Kansas State, . Baldwin-Wallace 48, Ohio Northern 41
Springfield Northeastern 13-7.
Phlladelphla ......... o
2 .ooo
2
Saturday.
.
Cap"al 35 onerbaln 3
Central
Dlvlalon
.-No. 4 VIrginia Tech ~6-0) beat Boston · John Carr01146, Marietta 0 ·
WLPetGB
College 28-23. Thursday. Next vs. Rutgers:
Mount Union 61; Heidelberg 0
Detroit... ............... 2
o .UlO
Muskingum 21, Wilmington 13
'"turday.
lndiana .................2
1 · .667
.5
•. No. 5 Ohio State (7·0) beal San Jose
Plo,_r '""-"
Chicago ............, .. 1
1 .500
1
Major League Soccer
&amp;tate 50·7. Next: at No. 23 Wisconsin,
·Dayton 52, Valparaiso 3
Milwaukee ........... 1
1 .500
1
$aturday.
Non-conlorence
New Orleans ....... 1
1 .500
1
(Stodlng In pa,..n1hoooo)
• No. 6 Georgia (8·0) beat No. 10
Akron 49. Liberty 21 ·
Atlanta ............ .....1
2 .333
t.!f
· Quanertl"al•
.
~nessee 18-10. Next: vs . Vanderblh,
Case Reserve 42, Maryville, Tenn. 13
Clevelsnd .............O
2 .000
2
(Flrot to ftvo polnto. Thne polnto far
~a1urday
.
Ohio Sl. 50, San Jose St. 7 .
Toronto ................0
2 .000
2
victory,
one
point
lor
tlo.)
·
Tiffin 49, Gannon 48
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
} No. 7 Oregon (8-0) beat UCLA 31 •30 ·
Youngstown St 24 Fla. Atlantic 17
Colorado (5) va. D.lllao (4)
Mldwe•t Dlvlalan
ext: vs. Arizona State, Saturday.
'
Wedneodoy, Sept. 25
WLPctGB
,.;.No. a Notre Dame (6.0) del. Pittsburgh WVIAC
Callas 4, Colorado 2
·
Mlnnesota
......
......
2
0 1.00 ·
. l4·6. Next at No. 21 Air Foree, Saturday.
Salllnlay, Sapt. 28 :
Slturday'o Gamea
Houatoo .......... :.... 1
0 1.00 ' .5
' :No. 9 Florida State (5·2) lost to . No. 1
Colorado
1, Dallas 0
Shepherd 27, fairmont St. 7
Dallas ...... ............ 2
1 .667
.5
(ilaml 28-27. Next: vs. Na. 8 Notre Dame,
--day,
Oct.
2
.West Llber1y 47, W.Va. Wesleyan 37
San Antonio ......... 1
1 .500 'I I! I 1
Colorado
1,
Dallas
1,
tie,
Colorado
wins
0.1.26.
'
Glenville 34. Concord 12
Memphls .............. 1
2 .333
1.5
tiebreaker 1.0 and sarles 7-41«'No. tO Tennessee (4·2) lost to No. 6
WVU Tech 35, W.VIrglnla St. 14
Uteh ..................... 1
2 .333
1.5
QOOrgial8·10. Next vs. Alabam~. Oct. 26.
K•oao City (8) vs, Loo Angoleo (1)
Denver .......... .. ..... O
1 .000
1.5
" No. 11lowaSiatt(8·1)beaiTexasTech
·
Wodnooday, Sept. 25
.
Pacific Olvlolon
~- 17. Next: at No.2 Oklahoma. Sa1urday.
Loa Angales 3, KanBBs City 2, OT
W
L
Pet
GB
'!iN o. 12 Washington State (6·1) beat
.
Saturdoy, Sapt, 28
Portland ................ 3
0 1.00
$'tanlord 36·11. Next at Arizona. Oct. 26.
1
Kansas City 4. Los Angeles1
L.A. Clippers ........2
1 .667
Weal VIrginia
,
•f&gt;lo. 13 Michigan (5·1) beat !'lo.- 15 Penn
1.5
·
WednHday, Oct. 2
Golden State ....... 1
1 .500
Saturday'• G•m•• •
1.5
"ate 27-24. OT. Next at Purdue. Sa1urday. · Bellaire, Ohio 18, Brooke 13
Los Angeles .5, Kansas Cily 2, Los L.A: Lakn ..... ..... 1
1 .500
1.5
Angei"Winsserles6-3
. PhoeniM ............... 1
1 .500
o.No. 14 North Carolina Stale (7.0) beat
Gauley Bridge 48, Montcalm 34
Sacranienlo ......... 1
1 .500
1.5
l!orth carolina 34-17. Next: vs. Duke,
Keyser 27, Musselman o
Seanle .......... ....... o
3 .ooo
3
· Columb•ll (e) vo. S.n Jooo (3)
Madonna 47, Bishop Oqnahue 14
~turday,
Frlday'o
Gamao
Wodneodoy,
Bapt.
25
' f&gt;io. 15 Penn Stat~ (4-2) lost Ia No. 13
Minnesota 90, Miami 85
Columbus .2, San.Jose 1
!illchigan 27·24.
OT. Next : vs. Ohio
New Jersey 97, Phoenix 93
Solunlay, Sapt. 21
.
Northwestern, Saturday.
8aturd.,'l o.na
Chloago
87, TQ1t&gt;n1o 79
Columbus
2,
San
Jose
1,
Columbus
wtns
ONo. 16 Florida (4-3) lost to No. 18 LSU
Akr. Buchtel 51. Akr. Flrealone 0
Milwaukee 84, Dallas 77
series 6.0
·
·7. Nexl: vs. No. 24 Autum. Saturday.
Akr. Gartleld 31, Akr. Centra~Hower6
L.A. takers 95, Memphis 87
No. 17 Iowa (6·1) beat Michigan Slate
Ashland Crestview 14, Norwalk St. Peul7
Chlcego (7) vo. Englond (2)
L.A. Clippers 119, Seattle 1'18~ 20T
~ 16. Next at Indiana, Saturday.
Baifi6rldge Paint Valley sl(};t~Ak:hmond
Th -" Sept _
. Portland 103, Golden State 88
Dale SE 0
&lt;I' ·
·
u,~ay,
· •v
Slturdey'l G1me1
" No. 18 LSU (5·1) beat No. 16 Florida 36·
B8achwood 3D. Rleh!nllnd Hts. t 5
New England 2. Chicago 0
Miami 82, Orlando 81
·, ~
~NNexi: 1v9s. SKou1h carosllnlaat,esat(u5rd1ay). beat Bellaire 18. Wellsburg Brooke (W. Va.)13 Ch'··~ 2. NSuewnday,EngSaplandt.129
PhoeniK 94, New York 87
a.
ansas
•
Bethlehem Coth. (Pe.) 31 . Cln. SU&lt;avler
~••
Indiana 88, Atlanta 84
Oklahoma Stale 44·9. Nexl: vs. No. 3 21
· .
Wodneodly, Oct. 2
Denver vs. I,..A. Lakers ~~ Oklahoma City,
texas, Saturday.
·
ChardDn NDCL :22, Parma Padua , New England 2, Chicago 0, New England
6:30p.m.
N.o. 20 Southern California (4·2) beat Franciscan o
·
wins series 6-3
San Antonio vs.. New Or1eans at Blloxi,
aUfornla 30-28. Next: vs. No. 22
Cln. Harmony 30, Day. Jefferson Twp. 16 .
S.mmnala
Miss., 6:30p.m.
-.hlngton, saturday.
·
Cln.-McNicholas 28. Hamilton Badin 13
jFirot to tlvo pol!llo)
Golden State at sacramento, 10 p.m.
&lt;No. 21 Air force (5·0) vs. Brigham Young.
Cln. MI. Heal1hy 10, Day. Ounber 8
Colorado (S) va. Lo• Angeloo (1)
Sunday'• Oamn
Next vs. No. a Notre Dame, Saturday.
Cin. Summit Country . Day 48, Upper
Slturday, OCt. 5
Philadelphia at Toronto, 6 p.m.
20
: No. 22W~shington (4-2) beat Ai'izona 32- Scioto Valley
•·
Los Angeles 4. Coloradq 0
Memphis et L.A. Clippers. 9 p.m.
28. Next: at No. 20 Southern CallfQrnla,
Cle. Benedictine 24, Youngs. Mooney 2,
Wtd ld OCt 9
25
~turdey.
·
E~~rd~· Ignatius • Lakewood St. Los·Angeles 1. ~olo:o 0, ·Los Angeles Washlng1o~Mlindiy'oGamaa
at P~lladelphla. 7 p.m..
~No : 23 Wisconsin (5-~) lost to hldiana 32·
Day. Belmont 43 , Cln. Schroder Paldela 0 wins series 6.0
Phoonlx at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Golden State at Portland, 10 p.m.
~ · Next: vs, No. 5 Ohio State, Saturday.
Johnstown Northridge 20, Zanesville
dNo. 24 Auburn (4·2) Joel to Arkansas .36· Rosecrans 12
Columbuo (e) vo.- England (2)•
Memphis at Saanle. 10 p.m.
Next: al No. 16 Florida. Slilurdey.
·
·Masslilon Tuslaw 49, Southington
SUndoy, Oct. e
,-No. 25 Mississippi (5·1) beat .ArkenBBs Chalkar 20
Columbus 0, New England o. 11e
State 52·17. Next: at Alabama. Saturday.
Newark Cath . 24, Steubenville Cath: • New Engla~~~~b~O'
::
Cent. 21
s.turday, OCt. 12
L.
Seturdey'e Oamll'
Parma Hta. Holy Name 22, Mentor lake
COlumbus 2. New Engtand 2, tie, New .
NHL Prel8&amp;10n
':,1
EAST
Cath. 9
~Canlalus 30, La Salle 27
. Sandusky St. Mary 24, Caotalla . England wins serlee 5·2
Frldoy'o Gamao
Carolina 5, Atlanta 3 ·
ent. Connecticut St. 28. St. Francia, P.a. . Margaretts 22
MLS Cup 2002
·Straeburg-Franklln
49,
Boweraton
Washington 5, Nashville 4
ConoHon Valley 12
Suftd8y, Oct. 20
Montreal 4, N.Y. A angers 1
At FoxbOro, Maoo.
"'frtmouth 20. Yale 17
Tol. Rogers 36 • TaL Libbey 8
Minnesota 5, Boston 1
;;oe1awa10 23, James Madl110n 10
Warrsn Harding 38 , Can. McKinley 7
Los Angoles vs. New England. 1:30 p.m.
Dallas 4, Anaheim 2
.Ouquesne 14, St. Patefa 3
Wellsville 28, Bellaire St. John
18
loturday'e Gamae
.Jalrffeld 15, lona 12
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 54,
Buffalo 8, Montreal 1
c:Fordhanl 24. Brown 17
.
Portsmouth NO 6
Florida s. Allanla 4. OT
I:&gt;Harvord 52, Cornell 23
·
Zansavllle 45, Ursuline · (Ontario,
Ottawa 2. Toronto 1
Boya Stale Golf Reaulla
~oly Croai 24. 51. Mary's, Cal. 22
Conoda) 26
Waahlngton 2•.~ .Y. Islanders 1
Pittsburgh 8. N.Y. Aangora 0
·::Lafayette 28, Columbia 21
COLUMBUS lAP) - Flrot·round ,.oulll
Tampa Bay 5, Carolina 1
~arlst2B. st. John'a, NY 22
Ohio AP Polla
from tha boyl Division II and Ol.vlalon Ill
Nsw Jersey 3, Columbus '2
•:Mauochuoet1a 20, Maine to
HowThey '"rod
atate golf tournamenta.The Olvle!on 11 tour· · Mlnnooota 2, St. Louis 2. llo
• Monmouth, N.J. 14, Stony Brook 9
Edmonton 3, Naohvlllo 2
$ ow Hompshlre 20, Richmond 111
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How tho lop namenl wso plavod on the 7,141·yerd, par·
Oallu at P'hoenlx., late·
oiNorlheoolarn 38, Rhodlloland 13
1oamo In tha - y Alooolatod P,.u 72 Ohio State University Scerlal Courae.
San Jose at Vancouver, late
!'Princeton 14, Colgate 1o
otota high ochool foolbaH dkl this Wftkend: The Clvlelon 111 townamenlwu played on
tho 5,849-yard. par·70,. Ohio State Gray
Philadelphia at Calgary, late
'
DIVISION I ·
•;R~ 17. Novy 10
No.1 Warren Hlrdlng (8.0) blat Canton Couree.
·
Detroit at loa Angalea, late ·
~cu 48, Army ,27
McKinley 38-7.
.
Bunday'oGamaa
DIVISION II
![omple17, SyrJcuae1 8
No.2 UlkiWood St. .Edward (7·1 ) loll to
,...mecoree
Buffalo at Chloago. 8 p.m.
De1rolt at Anaheim; 9 p.m.
1. Sunbury Big Wolnut... .317·315 .- 632
~ll&gt;WIOn23, Lehigh 19
Clovo. St.lgna~ul 2JI.2.
2. Columbus Boxley ....... .321·318 -637
Monday's G:amea
OWagnor 29, Robe~ Morrie 0
No.3 Bolon (8.0) blat Moyllald 38·13.
Phoenix al C&lt;&gt;umbua, 7 p.m .
"Weet VIrginia 40, Rutg811 0
No.4 Cln. Elder (7·1)bllt Cln. UISalla 3. Chardon NOCL ........... 319·3t8 -837
PIHaburgh al Toronto, 7:30p.m.
4. Hunting Vall. Unlv........ 313·331 - 844
21H9.
•
.
: w1111am &amp; Mary 18, Hototra 3
Boston at Colorado, 9 p.m.
~
MIDWEST
No.5 Dublin Soloto (8·0) beat Lewis 5. Hllloboro..............., ..... .319·328- 645
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
8. Cln. Wyomlng ....... .......322·328 - 850
t Akron'49, Llber1)'.21
Conter.Oientangy 28·14 ..

-t

,4t

LY SPECIALS
Gallipolis Hometown Dealer

GENE JOHNSON
CHEVROLET
7 40-446-3672
.
CMIVY
WILLII.ntlll"

a_,

N. Illinois ·tops ~Miami ~

Leftwich before he was able
to set a single-game school
record.
Michael Payton holds the
record of 493 yards passing
against the Virginia Military
Institute in 1991.
"He wanted it," said Pruett.
"He'd like to have it, but he's
such a class "kid, he under,
stands."
·

g;,unbap mimrs' .g;,rntinrl o Page 85

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

'

College Football

Rutgers again

: Sunday, Octo~r 13, 2002

Sunday, October 13, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Baseball

Sheldon with 1l :09 remaininr•
to put Northern ll!inois ahemi
34-27. •
After the RedHawks (4-3,
2, I) tied it with 4:36 left on a
12-yard TD pass from
Roethlisberger to Jason
Branch, the Huskies responded with two touchdowns to
take the lead for good.
Roethlisberger, who had
three · interceptions, finished ·
41 ,of,61 for 525 yards;·
breaking his own MAC
record for completions in a
game and his school record
for yards passing in a game.

Mike Nugent, who kicked
a 29-yard field goal on the
Buckeyes' frrst possession of
the half, kicked three field ·
goals · to
tie
Vlade
Janakievski 's Ohio State
· record of 15 in a tow. .
··
Ohio State rushed 49 times.
. for 212 yards and amassed 56'Z
yards of total offense. Scotf
· McMullen · relieved Krenzel
and hit 8 of 9 passes for 114
yards to give the Buckeyes 355
yards through the air. . .
Hill looked at those num,
bers lind the Spartans' four.
turnovers and shook his head.
"The way we beat· people:
we were beat today," he said:

College Football

•

7-. .

Basketball

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Soccer

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1997 Cadillac Oeville ......... .......$10,900
1999 Forcj Taurus ........ ............... $8,900
1997 Olds Cutlass ...................... $7,990
1994 Chevy Caprice ..... :............. $6,990
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1998 Buick ParkAvenue ............ $8,900
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT LS .... $13,900
1998 Chevy Lumlna ...................$6,990
2002 Grand Am GT.. .. :............. $16,900

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1999 Chevy Blazer 2 Door ... :... $13,900
1997 Ford Expedition ...............$11,900
2001 Dodge Ram Pickup ......... $14,900
1997 Chevy Subu[ban ............. $15,900

2002 Cadillac Escalade ........... $30,900
1999 Chev Silverado Elcl Cab 4x4 .$19,900
1996 GMC Sonoma ................... $5,850
2000 Chevy Tracker ......... .......... $7,990

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740-992-6614 • 1,;.888-DON-TATE

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Dear Abby, Page C6

...

Of ATVs and common sense Much ado about Sunday hunting
Just read through-this newspeople killed - almost 19 a
paper, or tum on the evening
year. ATVs are so popular in
news, and you' II see plenty of
West Virginia that legislators
things to worry about: ranare apparently afnrid to propose
dom sniper killings, West Nile
even the mildest ATV regulavirus, child abductions, you
liD
lions including banning ATVs
name it. Hazards and threats
Freeman from publiC highways and .
lurk around every comer.
requiring · helmetS for ·children
Yet something 'that is
operating ATVs.
IN THE OPEN
Ohio does have some restricinvolved in numerous deaths
and injuries is lurking inside·
timis on ATVs, but not many.
many barns and garages in
For instance, in Ohio it is illegal
southeastern Ohio arid West
Read owners manuals care- to operate ATV's on any limited
Virginia: ATVs.
fully.
II'! access · highway except for
ATVs, more commonly
ATVs are not made for mul- emergencies, on state-owned
called four-wheelers. are a tiple riders. Never carry any- property except in designated
common sight in rural areas .one else on the ATV.
areas, along or on railroad
of America, and youngsters Any added attachments · h f
t tran
often without helmets or adult affect the stability, operating ng ts-Q -way, or 0
sport
·
·
f
f
1
and
brak
·
ng
of
the
•
'
T
V.
anyfrrearm,
boworotherimple1
superviSion -'- are o ten ree o
...,
c
h t'
th t ·
·
·
h
Just
because
an
attachment
ment
,or
un
mg
not
h
operate t em. sometimes wtt
n1 ded d
1 a ISased
deadly consequences.
is available .doesn't mean that u oa
an secure Yenc
·
.
1
d
'
t
can
be
used
Wl.thout
You
occasionally
see
'the
F1rst. an:t not: oppose to 1
rc
h 1
·h
four-wheelers. As a hunter, I'll increasing your risk of being group 0 'our-w ee ers wtt
be the first to admit that these injured.
the strapped on ice chests full
•'TV on of beer. Bear
in mind that not
f arm workh orses are h an dy . Do not Operate the .-..
·
and safe, if operated properly, streets, highways or paved only is this stupid, but in Ohio
yet ATVs are often misused ... roads.
it is illegal to operate a fourwith predictable consequences.
Inspection: Are tires and wheeler under the influence
It's kind of like the arguments wheels in good .condition? of drugs or alcohol on public
against guns; most ftrearms are Are controls and cable opera- lands. It is possible for the
never misused, but the actions . tiona!? Does the chain have courts to ·suspend one's driof a few criminals make it hard proper slack and is it lubricat- vers license if found operatfor the rest of us law-abiding ed? Is riding gear (including a ing an ATV while under the
hunters and citizens. I'd rather helmet) available and worn? inlluence. You 1luiy also be
take a deer out of the woods on
Some landowners, including subject to tines, lawyer fees
a four-wheeler than by drag- those who have · their own and possible jail time.
ging it out any day.
ATYs, consider ATV's to be a
On tlie other hand, Ohio
Rather, my point here is to plague. There are numerous does allow ATV users to operget hunters, parents and other reports of trespassing, cutting ate off and alon·gside a street or
ATV users to think a little bit fences, riding on private prop- road for limited distances from
about ATV safety.
erty with out permission. the point of unloading to the
I was talking with ·someone Furthermore there are environ- point of the intended operating
recently about ATV's, and mental concerns, damage to pathway, to operate on the
made the point that kids here streams,.causing erosion, damor shoulder of a road
in Meigs County are very aging new seedling'S and plant- when the terrain permits such
rarely killed by firearms: it's ings, and riding on reclaimed operation to be undertaken
ATYs and vehicles that kill strip mines, exposing the sub- safely and without the necessiour youngsters, or - to be soil to the elements and caus- ty of entering any traffic lane,
more specific - often the rnis- ing additional ero.sion. I~ addi- to cross a highway whenever
use of ATV 's and vehicles.
lion, 11 1s next to 1mposs1ble to the crossing can be made safeIt seems thatATYs are every- catch the offenders.
ly and will not interfere with
where; unfortunately reported
Agam, th1s 1s .not. the. fault 'the movement of traffic in any
cases of seriou s injury and of the ATV, wh1ch IS ·s1mply direction, and provided the
deat)l have increased along another tool, yet the fault of operator yields the right-ofwith their increased use.
1rrespons1ble operators.
. way to any approaching traffic.
1 can easily recall several
Part of the problel!l may bee
Again, I am not opposed 10 the
ATV fatalities in Meigs that many ATV operators hav use of four-wheelers but I do
County alone.
the att1tude that they can go encourage people to' use them
The ATV Safety Institute. anywhere on the1r veh1cles.
'b
linl
·offers the following ATV Even ATV commercials and responst ly. Use a e common
safety advice: An ATV is advertisements appear to furc sense, JUSt because your ATV
not a toy. Children should not ther this ima~e, showing the will take you anywhere, do you
be permitted to operate ATVs ATV's climbmg over rocks, have any busmess gomg there m
without specialized training throwing dirt, splashing the frrst place?
.
Rememl;&gt;er, first ume hunters
and then they should be through etreams and barreling
allowed to only operate an through mud holes. Plus, · I are re9uined to take a hunter
ATV of an appropriate size.
notice that ATV's are getting educauon course; there are no
ATVs with an engine size of bigger and bigger, boasting such re_qmrements for ATV
70cc tp 90cc should be operat- four-wheel drive and automat- users.lt1s up to parents to make
ed by people at least 12 years ic transmissions. Perhaps the sure their youngsters know how
. of age. ATVs with an engine biggest problem with ATV's is to properly use and respect
size of greater than 90cc that they are capable of taking four-wheelers before they
should only be operated by people to rlaces ~here tliey bec~me just anoth~r statist.ic ..
peopleatleastl6yearsofage. have nobusmessgomg.
(l1m Freeman 1s a Wildlife
Wear appropriate riding gear:
ATVs have not been kind to specialist with the Meigs Soil
DOT-, Snell ANSI-approved West Virginians. Between 1997 and Water
Conservation
helmet, g9ggles, gloves, over- and 2001, West Virginia had District. He can be contacted
the-ankle boots, long-sleeve the ni!tioo's highest per capita weelaiays at 740-992-4282 or at ·
shirt and long pants.
ATV-rei'iited death rate, with 93 jimfreemnn@oh.nacdnet.org.)

J'

berm

(

-

___

.:__

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--

of West Vtrginia are not organized and the W.Va. Farm
Bureau and other anti-hunting
groups are. Plain and simple.
I get the feeling that some
Dan
people feel that if you outlaw
you can make
Hermes something,
people do things the way .
"You" see fit, such as attend. ing church.
OUTDOORS
Wrong, wrong, wrong. You
see, spirituality and religion
are on different sides of the
in my book. Spirituality .
m~oThe rural values of West river
is
God-driven,
religion is
Virginia
are
shining man-made. People
can
through," said Charles
attend all the churches they
Wilfong of the West Virginia want, but if they don't act
Farm Bureau said. "People like Christians, they' 11 never
want to go to. their churches be Christians, no matter how
and walk along their hills on many hours they log in.
Sundays without worrying
I choose to pray and worabout hunters or listening to ship my God in a certain way,
gunshots."
and one of those ways ts
The key words there are while I'm out in the woods or
"go to their churches ... "
on the water being absolutely
. Now, 1 was raised a flabbergasted each and every .
Catholic and went to church time at the ·wonderful w0rld
each and every Sunday dur- God has 'so graciously
ing my entire upbringing, bestowed upon us.
but on more than a few
You see, for me it isn't
occasions I'd step out and about the killing. It's about
kill a deer or bag a few seeing all of God's work ih
squirrels when services its natural environment, from
were over. 1 have never shot the flowers, insects and trees,
anyone walking through the to the . squirrels scampering
hills of Michigan or have in the. tree tops to ~ buck
never run into many people slowly moving across a
who objected to the occa- ridgetop. It's all of God'"!
sional sound of a gunshot. work, just as he intended. •
Another argument regardHunters need to wake up
ing the issue comes from ani- an fight to repeal this ridicu~
mal rights groups. They feel lous law. If they don't, the
that wild animals "need a next thing you know, peopfe
day of rest."
You've got to be kidding · may never want to h~ar thil
sound Of gunshots while they.
·me.
In West Virginia, the 'issue are walking through the hills~
(Dan Hermes is a writei
is handled on a county-bycounty basis. In the May 14 for the Point Pleasanl
election, voters in 35 counties Register. You can reach him
rebuked the effort to restore· at 304-675-1333 or via ~­
Sunday huritin~ . Why? mail at dherllies@mydai;
·.;
Because hunters m the state lyregister.com.)

UP t'HE WRONG

AT

STARTING
AT

For those large
jobs. Digs 8" wide
STARTING &amp; 4' deep.

- .,

AT

- wv~
--

R2080

Perday

Per day

l"·'rl~

t

f"· - ·:::--~~ - ':f'

r•&gt;;,t:' ..: .. ~!\.· "~·-

1187 JEEP GIWID CHEROKEEI1il753 sport - · ..$11 ,+ill
20110 JIEP CHEROKEE 11- 4x4. sport-· ...$13,l00
11!111 GMC JIMMV 110110 4x4 ..... .. ............$12,1!0
1187GMCJIIIIIV 11012H•&lt;. rod,'llr ...... .. .. .$10,115
11!111 CHEVY BUZJ!R 4ll4 11m8 sport wheels ...... $7485
1tMCHEVYBWERt1ote34x4,auto,alr ...... ..S7915
1911119UZUKil-IO 11014114x4, Hops .......... .$11185
.

4X4 TRUCKS -

4X4 TRUCKS

198tCHEVYK·1500.X.t10875supar catl ...... .. $21,135

20110FOADF-1504l411-S!rptrcab,green . .. .. $21,120
1M FORD F·150 CX4 t10131 SL418rcab, lariateblue .S21,1110
20110TOYOTATACOMAI101214x4.SIIPI!cab ...... $11~16

~~a'

rent
.cent

Thomas

J"

.bQUt
•

antan.~
•

•

.

.

'

'

TRUCK~ -

...

.' 326

1MVW BUGGLSt10H3AMIFMicassette . •..•.. .$13,185

2001 FORO MUSTANG 11051• 26,000 miles . . . . . .. $1•,•1&amp;

21101 Fllf!D MUSTANG whle, sport """"'' ... .1.. ..112,185

_*258

2001 SATURN 4 dr, dark cherry, 26,000 miles ... ... $12;M
2000 DOOOE AVENGER ES l105061eather ~IS . . .$13;185

._

:2a1
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11111M£11CURY COUGAR 110141 BUnrool .. .... . .. $12,1195
191111 PONTIAC ~R!IIRD 1101111ow miO. ....-f/1 . .S10,1!111
11!111 HONDA CMC LX 110731 oport wheels ....... $12,450
200111AZDA PROTEGE LX 110745 25,1100 flilea ... $12.t21
21101 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 1~1100 mileo . ...... ..... ,$1H5
11111 HOHDAACCORD LX 11030436,1100 milea .... 111,111
1187 HONDA CIVIC LX 110718 aull., PW, PL . ... .. 110,41$
2000CttEVY ClVALER Z-2.C 11081tblack, euto . .. $11,865

.'201
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'14$

' 1.38
""

111BTOYOTACliiAY110712whife, auto ...... . .. $11,150

_'.3~7
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:ZOOOFORDESCORTI10132 26,000miles .. . .... .$10,1&amp;0
19111FORD TA.URUSit08tl red, air, auto ...·..-...... SM60
1187 MERCURY COUGAR KR7110738 cruise .......$8110
20110 Fllf!D ;zx2 ESCORT 11011_033,1100 ml~s .......$8111
1111 CHRYSLER CIRRUS f107H auto. air .. •... .... $8111
11111FORDESCORTLXf1072t~ue ....... ., .... $8111

1
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2001 DODGE GR. CARAVAN SPORT" 110687 34K mi.S11,1H

1299

1

2]3
tm
1

259

'229
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'1.
-' 216

20110 OLDS INrRIGUE GLS 1107111eal11ersoam ... .$16,1111
2001 CHEVY IMPALA 110714 rod, power soa~ .. . ..115,11115
20110 BUICK PARK AVENUE 110151 Uhra ••.•... . •117,845
1187 BUICK RIVIERA 110375 'looded' ..... . ......113,185
11118 CHEVY CAIIARO 110120 sport-· . ......115,11115

'1.

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.'2§1
'D
: 231)
Ul'
1228
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'1.

....

1199

' 199

....
1199
....
1191
....

'1J4
'1ft

_1j1J
'1ft.
-'177

11111 PONTIAC GRAIID PAill10170 sportwheeo .. 111,150
2001 DODGE NEON 110711 4 cylinder, auto., air .. . .$t1,5a6 -,.. -,11
21101 CHEVY CAVALIER 1107t7 :!0.1100 milas, rod ...$10,_, 11]5
1111 MAZDA MILLENIA 110744 •. . ... ... . . ••... .. .$8111 '1~
1187PONTIACGRAIIDPAIXGT110173 oJr ........$1110 1169
111119ATURN SC2110710 3rd door, auto, oJr .......$10,181 . . .
11111 NlsSAN SENTRA GlE 110718 rod, auto, sir . . .$10,111 ' 165
11111 DODGE INmEPID ES 1\0150 aut~ all .. .. ..110,185 . . . .

TRUPKS

...

"'"'~ ~,· • .,,.,~1&gt;,;!t{(tf~:Jn!

21101 PONTIAC GRAND All SEI1074127,1100 miO. .$14,1530 .
21101SATURNL2GOIIOI2522.000- .. ...... .. $14,495
20021UICK CENTURY 27,1100 miles . . . ... .... ... $14,1!0
191111 CHEVY CAMARD i10171 Uli, truiBe . ......... $12,150 .._.
200210A OPTIMA 20,000 .,;1es .. ... .... ...... ..113,150 .!214

_1218
...

21JOOCHEVYC-15011110141 ~loy wheels ..........$17,415
11!111FORDF1!0SUPERCABI1on3VB ... .... ..11MIO
20110 FORD f-110 PT 11GlQ3 28,1100 miles ....... .. $17,185
20110DODGE DAKOTAX.CABI1071121,1100 mles .I1U30
2001 FORDRANGERI1GSIIIsupercab .... ....... $1U15
20110 GMC SONOMA SUPER CABI11M11120,1100 mi.. .$14,11115
20110CHEVY SILVERAD0110147 C·1500, rod ..... $1~160
11111GMCSOHOMAI1072128,1100flilea ......... $14,160
11111FORDRANGER9PORTI10110XLT ..
. .$11,085

---

..... ";:'.'l..:o:q •· ·#'

21101 CHRYSLER SEBRING 110112 22,000 mlos .. .115,885
21101 DODGE IIITIIEP1D 110122 31.000mlle8 ...... .$15,445
21101 DODOE IIITIIEP10 110123 :!0.000 millS .. .. .. .$11,445

~'3.58

...
20110 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4 CLUB CAB11010hlr .. $17,91111 1285
2000FORORAHGIRI1044t._cab .. ....... .. $17,91111 "m
1181DOOG£RAII150011-4x4,V8 ......... .$11,160 · 1269
1M FORD RAHOER SUPER CAB 1111167 36K rrl .. .$11,160 . . .
1MFORDRA~j(J!Rft0740 4X4!jl0rt .......... $15,160 _'2§7
11H FORDRANGER9PLASH4X4110402._,..cab .$11,185 ' Q

1i87DODGEGRANDCARAVAN110750 . .. ........17850
CARS - C ARS - CARS
2001 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS 11 On4 air ..111,185

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11187 FORD C()ljVER!IIOH YAH 110772 Bcylinder ...$14,11115 .. 'm
11118 CHEVY VENTUREI10113 van .. ...... .. ....$1t11115 1239
' 191111FORDC()IjY.YANI10110VB.caplalnc!lal~ ..$11,110 . . _
11!111 CHEVY VEHTURU1Dm van, El&lt;IOndod ... . .11G.II5 . ' 17J
11!111 CHRYSLER TOWN l COUN7RY VAN 1111741 aull , ..18750 'ttl
11!111 DODGE GR. CARAVAN 110n4109,1100 mil" ...$1¥0 -'139

~280

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200o FORD F-150 1101014&gt;2 ..... .. ........... .$11,185

Per day

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1tiiSIJBARU,OUTBACK LEGACY 110155 321&lt; mi . .$17,595
2000~DEXPLOREAt101424Jt4,txl.le ....... . .$17,585
11181 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT 110W VS engine .. $14,1t5
1M SUBARU FORESTER. 110747 301&lt; .,;1es . ... .. $15,185
2002 CHEVY TRACKER 4X4 110153 9K mles, air ... $15,385

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20110 JEEP CHEIIOKEEI10747 4•4. cnisa ........$18,1311
20oo CHEVY BWER LT 110747 4x4, auto ..... ...$17,135 .'290
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ROllER

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.

b£ liARICINC:l
'TREE

Sunday, Odober 1l, 2002

.

••• Vou 'L.L !

S UVS - BUYS - BUYS
1111 OUC SUBURBAN 11.0805 4x4, V8 . ..........122,115
2G02 JEEP UBERTY 1111110 blue, 14,000 nileS .....$21,135
1111 DODGE DURANGO 110780 al!tO, V8, 3rd sea! ..$11,735
2002 FORD ESCAP£110174 16K fTiO.. a~o .. .. .. .120,500

Fishing Report
Tycoon
Lake
(Gallia
· County) -Water condition is
clear and at normal pool.
Fishing for sunfish is good
right now in all areas of the
lake with most success being
near the fishing pier. Anglers
are using ·wax worms or minnows fished at four foot depths.
Sunfish Creek (Monroe
County) - Water conditions
are dear and a little low with
temperature
around
62
degrees. A few nice smallmouth bass are being caught in
the deeper pools on minnows.
Lake' Logan (Hockmg
County) -This lake continues to provide excellent bass
fishing as the water temperatures drop. Boat anglers are
most successful when using
top water lures." If temperatures continue to fall, saugeye
fishing should take off at this
lake within the week or two.
Ohio River ~ fo nglers on
the Ohio River are fishing the
shorelines during the early
morning and late evening
with buzzbaits, crankbaits
and jigs to catch small mouth,
largemouth and spotted bass.
Minnow-and grub-tipped jigs
along deeper shore areas are
working for saugeye, sauger,
white bass and hybr\d striped
bass. Catfish are bemg taken
throughout the rfver while
using chicken liver and nightcraw lers. Fishing near the
· lock and dam areas with minnow,, , jerk!1aits 3.1)d spoons
will provide catch11s of white
bass , hybrid striped bass,
sauger, saugeye and black .
bass. Catfish can be caught in
these areas while using Clut
baits, chicken liver and nightcrawlers.

Last Sunday, I thought I'd
get in a few hours of squirrel
hunting before having to
cover the last day of the
Battle Days festivities. I had
worked on Saturday, the season opener for sqt,~irrel, so I
didn 't get a chance to get out.
As I tied on my bootS; I suddenly realized that I wouldn't
be hunting on this .day either.
When a person moves
from one state to another,
there are many things that
he/she has to readjust to. One
of the more ridiculous things
I've had to come to terms
with
is "No Sunday
Hunting!"
..
No hunting on Sunday.
The first question that comes
to mind is, why?
Back when the pilgrims
ruled this world, several
"Blue Laws" were put on the
books and one of those was
no hunting on Sunday, due to
the Puritan day of worship.
l'd like to think we've gotten
a little smarter than back
then, but I guess not.
Take the hunter who works
five, maybe six days a week,
Monday through Saturday.
He's out of luc~ to enjoy the
great outdoors, something
that many individuals choose
to partake in. Now, if. the
whole world was shut dowil
on Sundays, then maybe I
could understand the law.
But you can do most everything else on Sunday, include
buying . a case of beer.
Businesses are free to be
open, boat ramps and ·waterways are open; you can fish,
canoe and go trail riding, but
you can't hunt. Itjustflat-out
doesn't make any sense.
Here's a quote from a
staunch opponent to Sunday
hunting that absolutely kills

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Celebrations

iunbap limH ·itntind

Sunday, Octqber 1:S,- 2002

Sausage and peppers with
Pannesan cheese grits · ·

Weddings

Finnicum-Tennant ·
'

HARTFORD, W.Va. Jennifer Finnicum and Lenny
Tennant were united in marriage July 20, 2002, . at
, Father's House Church in ·
. Hartford. ·
· The bride's parents are ·
Mike and Karen Finnicum of
Mason; W.Va. She is the
granddaughter of Clyde and
Dorothy Fields of Harftord
and Frank Finnicum of Point
Pleasant.
The groom's is the son of
Lennie and Rhonda Tennant
of Letart. He is the grandson
of Buck and Mary Jane
Tennant of Letart and Phyllis
Mr•.&amp; Mro. Lenny Tennant
Braden of New Haven.
Huii ng Greene, uncle of the groom and Joe Finnicum,
bride and Mike Finnicum, brother of the bride. D.J.
father of the bride performed Gibbs and Robert Zerkle,
the double ring ceremony. cousins of the groom were
The bride was escorted by .the ring bearers.
Ashley Sallaz was the
her father. Music was providguest book attendance and
ed by Sharon Hawley.
Brandi Dye, cousin of the flaylee Young, cousin of the
bride .was the maid of honor groom distributed burgundy
and bridesmaids were Kara and white bird seed roses.
Following the wedding cerSayre and Kylie S,ayre. Junior
bridesmaids were Kaula emony, a reception was conYoung and Kaitlyn Zerkle, ducted at the Bend Area
Comrriunity Center in New
cousins of the groom.
Michael Young; cousin of Haven.
The couple honeymooned
the groom was the best man
and the groomsmen were in Pigeon Forge and now
David Tennant, brother of the reside in Letart.

Green-Hughes
FRAZIERS
BOTIOM,
W.Va. - Amy Denise Green
and Michael David Hughes
were married Aug. I0, 2002, at
the Mt. Zion Baptist Church.
Amy is the daughter of
James and Carolyn Green.
Her
grandparents
are
Herschel and Rosa Shank of
Ashton and Fred and Bernice
Green of Point Pleasant.
Michael's parents are Jack
and Mary Hughes and his
grandparents are Jack and
Wanda Hughes, all of Logan.
The Rev. Robert Johnson
officiated over the marriage
ceremony. Music was provided
by Tina Green, the bride's aunt.
The scripture reader was
Richard Green, uncle of the
bride. Alesia Green, the bride's
aunt, was the wedding coordinator. The guest book attendant
· was Angela Lloyd and program
attendant wa~ Julie Hughes.
The bride was escorted by
her father. Matron of honor
was friend, Christina Davis.
Leanne Hughes, sister of the
groom, was a bridesmaid.
Best Man was Mark
l:lughes, brother of the
groom. Shawn Hughes,
cousin of the groom, was a
groomsman. Ushers were
Brian Galford and Andy

Mr. &amp; Mro. Mtcluoet Hu.....

Price, friends of the groom.
A reception was conducted
at the church fellowship hall. .
Amy is a graduate of
Marshall University with a
degree in finance. She · is
employed
with
the
Department of Veterans
Affairs as a 'veteran's service
representative.
Michael is a graduate of
Marshall University with a
degree in political science. He
is employed at Applied Card
Systems as a research analyst.
The couple spent their honeymoon in Virginia Beach
and now reside in Milton.

..

Anniversaries

Gooderham-Bostic
JACKSON, Ohio
Crystal Gooderham aild
Mark (Derric'k) Bostic were
married Sept. 21, 2002,at the
. Winery at Camba, in Jackson,
Ohio.
·
The bride is the daughter of
E.
Gooderham,
James
Mercerville, and Debra L.
Gooderham, Vinton. She is a .
1999 Graduate of GAHS and
BHCC. She is currently·
employed at Fantastic Sams,
Gallipolis. ·
The groom is the son of
Mark and Lori Bostic,
Gallipolis. He is a 2000
Graduate of GAHS and is
currently employed at Wal- .
Mart in Gallipolis. As a member of the West Virginia
National Guard, he is also a
heavywheeled
vehicle
mechanic.
Pastor Gerald Warner of
Victory , Baptist Church in
Crown City performed the
double-ring ceremony.
Tabatha L. Gooderham,
sister of the bride, served as·
the Matron of Honor, while
Kristine Bostic, sister of the
groom,
served
as
a
Bridesmaid.
J.J. Slone served as the best
man and Matt Bush served as

Mr. &amp; Mro. Mark ao.tlc

a groomsman. They also
served as ushers before and .
after the ceremony along ·
with Christopher Brown,
cousin of the bride.
Ellie, Katie ' and Maggie
Bostic, cousins of the groom,
and.Jerinifer Mitchell, cousin ·
of the bride, served as flower
girls. Gary Mitchell II servfd
as the ring bearer.
1
The happy newlyweds took
a 2-day honeymoon trip to
the Ravenswood Castle, m
Logan.
The couple resides m
Mercerville.

&lt; ·Apple and Raisin Almond Crisp is a delectable and seasonal way to use apples. In this case,
~ .green apples, such as Granny Smiths, are baked in a version of the familiar fruit crisp, easily
·. made with raisins and an almond topping. (AP)
·

.: ~Add

apples to your dessert
·_. menu·s and everyooe:'s happy _

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
er ] tablespoon flour, sugar, ] drained (see note)
Apples are always in season. teaspoon cinnamon, and a
~2 cup cinnamon-flavored or
Here are some options for the pinch of salt. Sprinkle over · other raisins
· · cook when there's a dessert apples and set aside.
·
Optional:
Fat-free or
slot on the menu waiting to be
Grate the almond paste into reduced-fat vanilla ice cream;
filled: ·
a medium bowl. Add the frozen yogurt; or fat-free
• Hand yow hungry people a ·remaining flour and cinna- caramel ice-cream topping
crisp, fresh apple to bite into.
mon, oats, brown sugar and
Preheat oven to 400 F.
• Take some green apples butter. Using a pastry cutter, or Lightly spray 13-by,9-inch
(such as Granny Smiths), peel . 2 knives, cut in the butter until · glass baking dish withcook.i}lg
and core them and bake them mixture has the texture of spray.
in · a version of the familiar small crumbs.
To make topping: In medi~~.
fruit crisp, easily made with
Drain the raisins and add to urn 'bowl, combine wheat
No Uollr.d
•
,......, I
:raisins IUI~art alntond topping. apples. Toss together to mix germ, brown sugar, pecans,
·• 1 • Wll.~!t'· @le pre~$es, take well. Top with almond-oat flour and cinnamon; mix well.
TOTAL INTERNET soft-M11e col
! •Spiced cann,ed apples, add a mixture and bake for about 45 Stir in butter; mix well. Set
makes
connecting fast &amp;eosy'
,. ;banana or two, plus a topping minutes, until apples bubble aside: For filling, toss bananas
.~:of pecans, wheat germ and and top turns a dark golden with lemon juice in .baking
FIVE email boxes, Webmail, '
?·brown su~B!' topping . for color. If the crisp browns too dish; stir.in apples and raisins.
.;. another vanalion on theCJJsp. quickJy,IO&lt;&gt;Sely tent the top of Spoon wheat-germ mixture
Instant Messaging and morel
!· Apple an1Umlsin Abnond the crisp (but do not wrap) evenly over fruit mixture.
••
;. C-risp
· . .:.."'.: . ". . ..., "
with aluminum foil. Cool for
Bake 18 to 20 minutes or IUnl!!!!.llll!! Access • Sign Up Online
~
(Preparatt91) ~ 5· ··mimi!~s. 15 miimtes befo~ serving.
until topping is golden brown
www.localnet.com
\ b.aking time 45 minutes)
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
and fruit mixture is bubbly.
~
~
I cup raisiriS · ·
(Recipe from Andre Prost, Cool slightly. Serve warm or
;;, 6 large (3, .pounds) .Granny Inc., Odense Almond Paste) · at room teroperatw:e, with ice
~ Smith apples '..
·
cream and caramel tapping, if
• I tablespoon plus•; t ·· cup
Banana Apple Crisp
desired.
·
•'· ;fl~ur
.
· .. . .
(Preparation .and cooking
Makes 10 servings.
~. /,,cup sugar
.. · - · · time about 30 minutes)
• · --N~·For'tbe fmltcans pie. l ~2 teaspoons cinnamon
For lhe topping:
spiced apple pieces, you may
Pmch ofsalt
i, cup wheat germ, any fla- substitute two 15-&lt;&gt;unce cans
'' 7-ounce package almond vor
sliced apples ((not canned
· paste
i: cup firmly packed brown apple-pie filling), dr:;rined and
· I cup ~pick-coo)dng oats
su~ar .
coarsely chopped; add i, teai: cup hght brown sugar
/, cup . chopped toasted spoon ground cinnamon to the
I stick (8 tablespoons) soft pecans
filling. You can find cannel!
butter, cut into small pieces
i, cup all-purpose flour
apples in either the canned
.•.. Prehe'littOYeii-tii :i&gt;1.5.F...:... :-::~ .;:. '.i.::.fei!Spooh ~ ground cinna- fruit or baking aisle at the
;~ ; Place'.'iai'SlilSlifa :·sauCl!);an ,nion": . _ •.:.' .
. · ,
supermarket.
,Z:and just. tliirely cover with ' 4 rap)espoons stick butte(or
Nutrition information per
i :water. Bri)lg to a boil 3Jicl. .turn . margarine, nielted
serving: 230 cal., 8 g total fat
... .off heat.;Cover and set asJde.
For the filling:
(3.5 g saturated fat), lO mg ·
;: Peel, ·core and s)ice apples
.j flllh·rii,; bananas, peeled chol., 55 mg sodium, 40 g
::;nto ·i.. mch pieces~J&gt;Iai:ii:-ID;:·~ :an1 sliced' ~inch thick_ . ,,
carbo., 3 g dietary fiber, 3 g
%•2-quart.c:ll'ssel:ole..d!Sb~or..d®Jl' -:~ l ,ta~~sli{!QI1'1emon JUtc;;e·;
pro.
! :OOwl tlUit iS':O~fm&gt;Of. ;._ • ~: , ·~ Fo,ur;' 8-Q\lnce cans ·; pje- (Recipe from Kretschm~r·s
~ : In a ~~~~l'. bowl·
rni"
Wheat Germ)
'i•
,
,. tpgethc .·'spiced' apple'' pieces, · well
•

Engagements

Wolfe 50th

Donohew 50th

BELPRE,
Ohio
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Melvin Donohew
Howard and ·Jean Wolfe of
and ()pal Conger were mar928 Main Street, Belpre, forried· dct. 17, 1952, at the
merly of Meigs County, will
home of ·the Rev. Armor
observe their , 50th wedding
Sayre in Cottageville, W.Va.
anniversary Oct. 19.
Melvin is the .son of
An open reception honorCharles and· Mamie Miller
ing the couple will be held
Donohew and Opal is the
from 2 to 6 p.m. Saiurday at
daughter of Lawrence and
the Masonic Lodge building,
Mary Riggs Conger. The
1411 Putnam Howe Drive in
bride and groom were honBelpre.
ored·with a wedding dinner at
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe have a
.the home of the bride's pardaughter Debra Ewing of
ents.
·
Belpre, and a son and daughThe Donohew's have spent
_
ter-in-law. . Richard ~nd
their entire married life
Elizabeth Wolfe of Hickory,
together farming, enjoying
Mr. A Mro. Melvin Oonohew
N. C. They also have two
Iife ·and providing for their
grandchildren,
Kelly and
Evans. They have twelve
family.
Ashley
Pari
nell
of
Belpre.
. Melvin and Opal have six grandchildren and three
Wolferetired from Dupont
children, Richard Donohew great-grandchildren.
in
1992 after working there·
The children are honoring ·
of Evans, Pam Wandling of
Point Pleasant, Sandy Keefer their parents with a reception for 36 years.
of Leon, Tim Donohew of at the Baden Community ·
Leon, Doug Donohew of Building, Saturday, Oct. 19,
Evans and Jason Donohew of 2002, from 4 to 6 p.m.

Cummins-Riffle

Mr. &amp; Mro. Howard Wolfe

Bill and Jan Bigger
will entertain at lhe
reception. · The couple
request s that guests not
bring gifts.

RACINE, Ohio- Monte J.
. Riffle and Jennifer J.
Cummins will be married Oct.
19, 2002. at the Chapel in the
Glades in Gatlinburg, Ten.n.
Cummins is the daughter of
Todd and Peggy Cummins of
Racine. She 1s a 1996 graduate of Southern High School
and a 2001 graduate of the
University of · Rio Grande.
There, she received her bachelor's. degree of science in
elementary education. She is
currently employed with
Meigs Local Schools and is a
kindergarten te&lt;tcher at
Rutland Elementary.
Her fiance is the son of the
late Donald Carroll Ri'ffle
and Joyce and Jim Smith of
South Webster. He is a 1991
graduate of South Webster
High School, and is currently

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio Carl and Eileen Searls celebrated their 60th wedding
· anniversary on Oct. 7.
.
They · were married in
Gallipolis in 1942 and have two
daughters Calista Searls of
Middleport and Myrna (Jerry)
·Custer of Minersville, a son, Keith
(Carolyn) Searls of Badbwy, and
four grnndchildren.
They also have four grandchildren, David Custer of
Minersville, Aleasha Wells of ·
Missouri, Amy Purkey of
Cheshire and. Debby Davis of
Middleport, and six grandchildren.

Monte Rlllle &amp; Jennifer Cummins

employed with Plumbers and
Pipe Fitters Union Local 168.
The couple was engaged in ·
May. They will reside in
Racine.

See Page 01

"

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Did you ever wonder why your eye doctor puts drops in
your eyes? Most people have. Sometimes, the drops simply
help with a pressure measurement. Other times, they're
used to dilate the eyes. But why? A diiation allows a more
complete view of the back of the eye, the retina. It doe~ this
by causing the pupil, the black space in the center of your
iris, to become larger. Thus, a wider view is permitted for
the doctor.
,
Most doctors dilate your eyes when there is a suspicious
symptom or underlying disease. Certain symptoms, like
seeing flashes or sparkles of light, may be a sign of a tear at
the back of the eye. A dilation allows a more peripheral
view of the retina. Diseases, like diabetes, can cause
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Easy Corn Salad
(Preparation 5 minutes,
chilling time IS minutes)
Two 11-ounce cans white
shoepeg corn, drained .
2 green onions, chopped
i, cup Italian dressing
2 tablespoons lime juice
i, teaspoon ground cumin
Combine all in~redients,
and chill for· IS mmutes.

....

Mum's the word

Mr. &amp; Mro. CaH Sea~•

Parmesan cheese.
Makes 4 servings.
Parmesan Cheese Grits
(Preparation S minutes,
cooking time S minutes)
I cup grits
4 cups water
'f, teaspoon salt
I tablespoon butter or
margarine
S-ounce package shredded Parmesan cheese
Cook grits according to
package directions, using 4
cups water. Stir in salt, butter and Parmesan cheese.
Makes 4 servings.
(Recipes credited to
Adelyne
Smith,
of
Duimville, Ky.)

..5

i

New business feature ...

Searls 60th

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Sausage and Peppers
Sausages are a favorite with Parmesan Cheese
everywhere, easy on the ·Grits
budget, and a great way to
(Preparation 15 minutes,
get dinner on the table in . cooking time 15 minutes)
minutes without sacrific19-ounce package sweet
ing flavor.
Italian sausage
.
"In the South, we're
3 red, yellow or green bell
always looking for an peppers, cut into strips ·
excuse to eat sausages,"
I large sweet onion, cut in
says Jan Moon, who works half and thinly sliced
..
in the test kitchens of
2 garlic cloves, minced
Southern Living magaI .to 2 teaspoons · Italian
zine, in a feature in the seasoning
October issue. "We can
i, teaspoon garlic powder
argue ov!!r our favorite
l teaspoon salt
brands," she says, "but the
~' teaspoon pepper
variety of flavors, from
Parmesan Cheese Grits
mild and sweet to bold and
Optional garnish: shredspicy, are sure to suit any ded Parmesan cheese
taste." And for healthier
Remove sausage casings,
options, there are reduced- and discard. In a large skilfat or turkey varieties.
let over medium-high heat,
Serve this hearty recipe cook sausage, peppers ,
with crusty French bread, onion , garlic, seasoning ,
fruit salad, or easy corn garlic powder, salt and pepsalad, and supper is ready per, stirring until sausage
in about half an hour. You crumbles and is no longer
can also double the recipe pink, and vegetables are
and freeze one amount to tender.
Serve
over
serve, for a no-cooking Parmesan Cheese Grits.
meal on - a really busy G&amp;rnish, if desired, with
weeknight

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PageC4

6unbap lillld -ientintl

Britney S~rs' kid sister makes her .Qllim
bid for stardom with Nickelodeo~
&lt;

•

t.

"they were actually really
I,.OS ANGELES (AP) Jamie Lynn Spears is look- nice. I thOught they were
ing for the show business going to be these serious
equivalent of lightning people. But they were 'a lot
striking twice, if not exact- of fun ."
It .didn't hurt, the others
ly in the same place.
"I'll probably do a lot of say, that Jamie Lynn was
acting first, then go to willing .to jump nght into
singing," says the preco- scenes that included dous.cious kid sister of pop star ing her with egg yolk and
Britney Spears.
. tossing her into trash bins:
"But I am going to defi- Soon she was engaging in
nitely sing someday,': she the cast's seemingly endadds after a brief moment less stream of offstage banof reflection. "So when I ter.
"I was expecting somedo start singing, buy my
one who was going to be a
album!"
For now, the youngest of little kiddish, kind of
three Spears siblings (the immature," says Lyons, 15.
: Greg "Opie " Hughes , left. and Anthony Cumia, former cooldest
is a brother, Bryan), "But what we got was
: hosts of WNEW-FM 's once popular afternoon drive-time prosays she has her hands full someone who could relate
: gram the "Opie and Anthony Show, · stand at the board in . balancing school and her and talk: and just mess
this file photo in New York. Radio industry veterans believe
responsibilities ,as the· around with us on our
DJs are getting more cautious with their words and more
youngest cast member of level."
the comedy-variety show
"iamie has the maturity
aware of their actions since the crackdown on crass behavlevel
of, like, a 15-year"All
That"
(Saturdays,
8
: ior. Hughes and Cumia lost their jobs resulting from a stunt
old, which is awesome,"
p.m. Eastern).
: in New York . City's St. Patrick's Cathedral that. caused the
Brummet adds.
· ·
"Saturday
Night
A
sort
of
: Cathol ic Leagu~. a 350,000-member group, to call for the
High pratse indeed, .
Live" for kids, "All That"
· FCC to ya nk WNEW's broadcast license .. (AP)
Jamie
Lynn
is in its. eighth season on which
Nickelodeon; Jamie Lynn acknowledges with a shy
joins a veteran cast of nod of her head; it's one of
actors· who are an averag.e the few times the diminuof 4 years older than her.
tive chatterbox is quiet.
It was a slightly awkward Usually she's full of stoadjustment for the stick- ries, particularly about
thin !!-year-old from school and her home in
Kentwood, La., who looks Louisiana. ·
NEW YORK (AP) - It's Anthony off the air speaks
"You know how everylike a younger, skinnier
become a cliched formula for itself.
version of her 20-year-old body says thingy-mahfor radio success : bad taste
There are other signs of
jig?" she asks . "I could
·superstar sister.
equals good . ratings. No change in the broadcasting
But having wrapped a swear I made that up.
outra2e seemed too outra- ·business.
season of new episodes EVerybody says it, from
Infinity's Howard Stern,
geou s if the Arbitron numthat began airing in Kentwood to California to
bers were up - until lately. longtime king of · morning
September, · all concerned New York, and I'm telling
This month , a Phoenix drive time radio, has
say Jamie Lynn fit right you, l made it up. I said it .
di sc jockey was dismissed become so frustrated by the
into what she acknowl- one day, and the next day
after an offensive call to the constant censoring of his
edges was her first substan- the whole school was sayLouis show that he's promised to
widow of St.
tial acting jo!l. Earlier this ing. it."
Cardinal s pitcher Darryl
· d'
h h'
She'd like to be as big a
year, she made a brief
Kile. The firing cafne just quit ra tow en ts contract
star.
as her sister, she says,
appearance
as
a
younger
weeks after a pair ·of New expires in three years.
version of her sister in but she really doesn't think
York shock jocks · were
What's going on?
"Crossroads,"
Spears' film of Spears as a famous per- ·
dumped for encouraging
"In Americ.an culture,
·
done a son.
debut,
and
she's
listeners to have sex in we're constantly deciding
"She's
just
her,"
Jamie
·
of
commercials.
handful
church.
where the lines are," Taylor
. . ,
"At first I was too scared Lynn says, adding that her
Me the days of "anything said. "Somebody is offend' '
'
·
·· · ...
to act in front of these peo- sisfer gave her tips on makgoes" radio gone? Does FM ed by just about everyple, so I was real shy," says ing it in show bus~ness Jamie Spears, younger sibling of superstar Britn~y Spears,
now stand for "fire me"?
'thing."
Jamie Lynn, gesturing after she'd auditioned and takes a break from taping on the Nickelolf~on st;t,of ~All That"
Perhaps. Radio industry
When they are, they often
toward castmates Shane won a spot on "All Tha:t.". in the Hollywood area of Lt;~s Ang~l~s. ~~ars, ytho said she's
veterans believe DJs are reach out for the ·Federal
"She diO, yeah, I'm sure planning to act first. the'n get into singing, is looking for.. the
Lyons
and
Chelsea
getting more cautious with c 0 m m u n i c a t i 0 n s
Brummet . as the three she di!],'' she says, (Jying to s~o~ business equivalent of lightning to strike twice, if not
the\r words and more aware ~ Cpmmisslon. .. .... .. ~·. t .....
unwind on a couch "lia-¢k-' · recall ·the -ad'Yic~:M'Bnt 'l qUite e'xactly In the same ·place. (AP)
·
.·! ·
of their actions since the
The FCC. in the first half
don ' t len ow what she said
· ·
stage.
cmckdown on crass behav- of thi s year, received 383 '
"But then," she ad'ds, now."
tor.
complaints from around the
. "For the stations and the country about indecent
shows that do those kind of radio . broadcasts, said
stunts, there certainly has spokeswoman Rosemarie
been a re-examination of Kimball ,
conscience, attitudes and
It has also fined a half- .
gu.jdelines." said Scott dozen
stations
since
Shannon, morning show January, for questionable
host at WPLJ-FM and one
of radio's most influential material that included a rap
. song called ,"Smell My
programmers.
Tom Taylor, editor of the Finger" and a tasteless joke
NEW YORK (AP) tenure, although its C!Jmpetrade publication Inside involving a baby and a
butcher
knife.
NBC's top-rated "Today" titian _with "Good_M&lt;ii1J!Vg · ,,
Radio, has heard the same
Among
those
.
fined
.show
is replacing its top Amenca" has become more· .
thing .in conversations with
Jorma
executive,
Jonathan Wald, spirited. The ABC show"has ·
$21,000
for
three
instances
disc jockeys.
Kaukoiiell' &amp; Blue
amid
reports
of
behind-the.
become
more
aggressive
'in'
of
indecent
radio
;
WNEW's
"They ' re ·becoming more
Country .
scenes friction, according to bookings, and~ broadcast
careful ,"
Taylor
said. Opie and Anthony. Their
11Tickett $221n Advanl-e
"There's a thing in their show was canceled after the · an NBC executive who from the Pe tagon last
$25 At Door
spoke on the condition of month for Se t. II comLeague,
a
't•'
heads, the self-cen soring Catholic
' . . 0/lld
anonymity.
memorations.
350,000-member
group,
thing: ' Should I do that?"'
Tm.,lkotl .. Bllld:hrn
A former producer at the
The "Today" show this
That thing comes too late called for the FCC to yank
,., A.llinillf Mtmorial
competing ABC show, week canceled anchor Matt
. for some.
.
WNEW's broadcast license.
-Aruliloriwm
Greg "Opie" Hughes and
Once O&amp;A disappeared, . "Good Morning America," Lauer 's trip to Cuba, saying
OH
is one of the top candidates the
government
had ·
Anthony Cumia kicked off so did , the protester's.
· Roy Booli Binder
to replace Wald.
reneged on a promised
. this bour of broadcast intro- demand for the station to
Wald, former producer of interview with President
Jorma &amp; Michael
spection with an August forfeit its license. ·
NBC's ."Nightl'y News," Fidel Castro. The interview
stunt that grounded their
Falzarano
Stupid OJ tricks are noth~ined the morning show in went to ABC's Barbara
nationally syndicated after- ing new. In 1993, a San
ay 2001 ; replacing the Walters,
and "GMA''
noon show.
7:20" 9:20
Francisco station reached a
highly
regarded
Jeff
Zucker,
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:aD &amp; 3:20
The duo , ba sed at $1.5 million settlement in a
who was promoted to presi- showed excerpts.
.
STARRING GOLDIE HAWN
WNEW-FM in New York, lawsuit filed by drivers
dent of NBC entertainment.
In the season that ended
I SUSAN SARANDON
broadcast the play-by-play stuck on a Bay Area bridge
There were reports of last month, "Today" aver~
of a couple allegedly hav - by a radio stunt. And in
grumbling from the troops aged 6.1 million viewers in
ing sex in St. Patrick's 1999, Washington DJ Doug
almost from the beginning. the morning, up 2 percent
01\H Nt•twn lk S.n,· ll i t L TV
Cathedral. The .couple was "Greaseman" Tracht was
USA Today reported this from tht; year before. "Good
arre sted ; Opie and Anthony
summer that "Today" Morning America" averfired after a racially in'sen1
were se nt packing .
anchor Katie Co uric angrily ·aged 4.6 million, up II per:
ve
crack
during
his
siti
Thi s month, Phoenix di sc
confronted Wald when cent.
·
jockey Beau Duran dialed show.
Diane
Sawyer
got
an
ABC's
"These people understand
up Flynn Kile . barely three
exclusive interview with a
their
jobs to be creating
months after she buried her
rescued
Pennsylvania
hu sband. The widow . was attention ," Taylor said.
miner,
instead
of NBC:
staying a t a local hotel dur- "And that 's what they're
The
"Today"
ratings preing the Cardinals-Arizona paid to do . But they're not
eminence
hasn't
been chalpaid to lose their station's
Diamondbac ks series.
lenged
during
Wald's
"You' re hot," the OJ told license and create legal
..
the mother of three . "Are problems,''
·you goi ng to the game
Get a FREE DIS1HNelw9&lt;k;digltal •.
today?''
satellite TV S)Otem (MSRP 1149) and ••
When Kile said she was,
FREE Standard Professooallnstallation , ,
Duran asked, "Do you have
'(MSRP 1199). Thars a Sl48 value! Add a '
a date?"
Duran ended up without a
1econd rece~er for only S49.99. 1ust
COVERS ·
. date , and without a job.
· subscnbe to America's Top 50 package for
15 FT. .. .. ... ....... .. $26.99
"He ·s one of a cl ass of
only 122.99 per month.
18
FT... ... ........... $32 .99
guy s that go over the edge,"
24 FT. ........... .. ... $52 .99
Cardinal s manager Tony
Amooiu's Top SO lncludti't-;jli;;*-tt;;;;;ti.;d;;i,l;d;:
16X32 .. .. ... .... .. ... $53 .99
LaRus sa said . " Mayhe this
ESPN: M1V; TNT, Cartoon Netwcn, Oi.!Covery Olannej
18X36 .. :.... ....... .. $63.99
I
will res train a few guy's like
20X40 ............ .... $74 .99
that.''
15X3 oval ........ $47 :99
Hi s fee ling was shared at
Infini ty
Broadcas tin g
owner of 180 radi o stati o n ~
in 22 state s, in cludin g
WNEW. Spoke sman Dan a
McCl in tock said the com- .
pa ny 's Augus,t dec i,; ion to
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00
yan k shoc k jocks Opie ana

:Are the days of "anything
:goes" radio gone?

NBC c:hanges top .

executive at·'Today' · · .
show despite ratings lead

j

·'I

(

..

,.

I

j· I

•••

v.,,.,,,
'

j

•1' 1

'Punch drunk
love': One
frog storm ·
·after another
(AP) - I love Paul Thomas
Anderson's movies. I loved
"Boogie Nights." I Joyed
"Magnolia" - thought it was
the best movie of 1999. Even
. the frog storm, which many
decried as pretentious, was OK
with me; by then, he'd won me
over.
. . Three years later, Anderson's
eagerly awaited "Punch-Drunk
Love" is like one frog storm
after another. Audacious and
: disjointed, yet strangely beauti- ful, it asks us to make several
; leaps of faith, but doesn't really
. reward us for our perseverance. ·
: Anderson does, however,
· draw from Adam Sandler the
: most surprising, moving work
: we've ever seen from the
: coinedian. It's enough to make
you forget dlat Sandler has
buih a career on movies that
rely on overheated bulldogs
and children's urinary habits
·for cheap, easy laughs.
.
. Here, he's cast aside his
: us~al quirks: the high-pitched
· votoe that drops to a gravelly
growl, the nervous shuffiesJ!:,l',
the funny little songs about his
mother
and
Hanukkah.
Anderson made for him a com: plex character, and Sandler
· made him complete human
: being.
•
: The star of "Little Nicky"
: and "Bi~ Daddy" may seem an
· odd chOice to play the lead in a
romantic comedy, but then
again, "Punch-Drunk Love"
isn't exactly romantic. And it
· isn't exactly a comedy, either.
It's hard to describe what it is.
. It could be a psychedi:lic take
. on the Technicolor films of the
: 1940s and '50s; it could just be
:the story of a /PlY who buys a
-bunch of pudding. Either way,
it's much shorter and lighter
than previous films from
Anderson, who, at just 32, has
made his name with long, emo.tionally draining roller-coaster
'rides.
· Sandler stars a5 Barry Egan,
who sells custom plumbing
supplies from a nondescript
warehotise in the San Fernando
. Valley, the settiQg__ of all of
.: Anderson's films, (The plunger
-with dice on the handle is a
:huge hit in L.as Vegas.)
: Barry figures out a way to
:raek up 1.25 million fteQuent
flyer miles from buyin¥ $:!,000
worth of Healthy Ch01ce pudding cups - something a reallife person did .
Not that Barry ever flies anywhere - but he could, if he
wanted to get away from his
seven sisters, whose· years of
nagging and smothering have
rendered him a social misfit
Shy almost to the point of
paralysis most times, he flies
mto inexplicable fits of rage at
others .,"Punch-Drunk Love " a
Columbia Pictures release, is
I rated R for strong langua~e,
including a scene of sexual dialogue. Running time: 95 min. utes. Two and a half stars out of
four.

Sund.y, October 1J, 2002

At the Movies:

'White.Oleander'
(AP) - Alison Lohman · "I couldn't understand the
really is as good as you've beginning until I got to the
heard.
end," Lohman's character,
As the star of "White . Astrid, says in a wistful early
Oleander," the .23-year-old voireover.
actress gets top billing over
Her uncompromising moth- ·
Michelle Pfeiffer, Robin er, Ingrid (played by Pfeiffer),
Wright Penn and Renee advises her. "Loneliness is the
Zellweger - actresses with hlllllJlll coildition. No one is
much more collective eKperi- ever going to fill that spare," ·
enoe aiJd marquee value - . and "Love humiliates you.
and she matches their poise Hatred cradles you."
and sttength, scene for scene.
Between 15 and 18, Asttid
In other actresses' hands, bounces between foster
the material might have gotten . homes after her bohemian
mired in the melodrama of a • anist mother kills her own
Lifetime network-style made- boyfriend (Ingrid mixes him
for-1V movie. But their per- a drink for him that contains
fonnances- with supporting · oleander, a flower that creates
work from Patrick Fugit, Cole its own poison for proteCtion,
Hauser and NOah Wyle hence the title.)
raise "White Oleander'' to a
The film frankly depicts
level that's far more tolerable; how a daughter comes to realand often moving.
ize her mother isn't perfect,
At times, though, the film and how devastating it can be .
reaches for a poetry that to ftnd out thar the woman
eludes its grasp. In adapting who raised you is flawed,.
Janet Fitch's novel o( the even dangerous.
same name (a May 1999
''WhiteOleander,"·awamer
Oprah book club selection), Bros. relea~e, is rated PG-13
screenwriter Mary Agnes for mature thematic elements
Donaghue (who also wrote concerning
dysfunctional
"Beaches") may have been · relationships; drug ~ontent,
too faithful. Words that clang language, sexuality and via- (L to r) Renee Zellweger and Michelle pfeiffer in Warner Bros. Pictures character-based drama,
to the ear probably looked bet- lence. Running time: II 0 min- White Oleander. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures)
.
ter on the page.
utes. Three stars out of four.

.

•

j '

~erri is one busy la~y. That's why she
the importance of planning for ·the
So when Sherri aecided co seek advice on
............... planning for her family's future, she met
,with a financial planning expert.
•

,...~.....u-"'~.."',l;FU servtces expert
located at Peoples Bank. ·

'

.

. Pokemon:
:~Good •or bad?
Pokemon is back in movie
theaters, and if you're a big
fan or a little kid, that's probably good news. For the rest
of us, it's a yawn.
Too bad, because its imme.diate
· predecessor , "Pokemon 3 The Movie" could capture ·even the most
skeptical grownup's heart
with its lushly rendered backgrounds and imaginative
creatures. It was just fun to .
watch.
Pokemon, of course, are
creatures that battle each
other under the direction of
human trainers - often for
sport, sometimes for .real.
The new show featurc!s a
Pokemon · called Celebi, cute
but powerful. Among other
things, it can travel through
time.
Trouble is, the whole
adventure seems to last a lot
longer than the 76 minutes it
really occupies on the screen.
"Pokemon 4ever," rated G,
is from Miramax Films. It .
was directed by Jim Malone
and produced by Kathy
· Borland, from a screenplay
~Y Michael Haigneyt- .Two
stars (out &lt;?f four).
i

i'

'·

Page CS

At the -movies·

·6unbap lillld -6entinrl

2002

- --+- ·--'-------- ----~ - . - --

'

.

'
WE'RE NOT JUST PEOPLE WORKING AT A BANK. WE'RE PEOPLE JUST iiKE YOU WORKING AT A BANK.
When it comes to Sherri's family, she understands the importance of having a trustworthy and experienced team looking after
their financial needs. That'~ why she rurned to a financial service representative located at Peoples Bank. Because Peoples Bank
provides a 'wide range of products and services that goes beyond traditional banks. Sherri should know. She works at Peoples.
When you approach banking like you'd want it to be done, you come up with a lot more than just a bank. Because life
•

•

demands more than merely checks and deposits. How do we know what kinds of things matter and can help the most ?
Because the people who work here are no different than the people who don't.
'

Every Bank Has_ Assets. We Named f)urs' After The Most Important One.

www.peoplesbancorp.com

'.

Peoples
Bank
.

1-800-374-6123

. CONSUMER/COMMERCIAL/INSURANCE• /INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT*/TRUSTS' /FINANCIAL PLANNING' /R~TIREMENT PLANS'
.,
'Not FDIC Insured. No Bank Guaramee. May Lose Value.

I
-

'

�•.

•

Sunday, October 13,2002

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

Inside:

6unbap t!times -6entinel

Classified ads, Pages D3-6

Stepmom's job gets harder
without husband's support
DEAR ABBY: I am a 44year-old woman who married "Barry" two years ago.
He was a widower with two
·small bo;Ys. now 8 and I I.
I marned Barry with the
hope and understan4ing I
could help to raise t!Jese
cl!ildren, but he now seems
ttl resent my efforts. For
ADVICE
example, he has made comments referring to himself
as no longer being the pri- www.stepfam.org, with a
mary disCiplinarian by link to a speCial si te for
telling me , "''m glad you ' re stepmothers at www.steptothe bad guy now."
gether.org. The phone numHe constantly accuses me ber is (800) 735-0329.
of aski ng too much of the
DEAR ABBY: My older
boys. Abby, I expect them sister, age 77, has been wid to clean their room and the owed for eight years.
bathroom they use. Barry
She met a man from
also objects when I correct church whom she dates; it' s
the kids' eating habits and the first time she has dated
manners - like reminding si nce being widowed. They
them not to interrupt w.hen · spend some va&lt;;ation time
two ad ults are talking . .
together and go on weekend
Unfortunately, my hus - trips .
band's attitude is beginning
He tells her he will never
to rub off o.n the oldest boy, marry. She thinks someday
who sometimes takes on a she can change his mind.
negative attitude when I ask We know that he also sees a
him to do a chore - or any- younger woman. He denies
thing, for that matter.
it - and my sister believes
Am I fighting a losing him. He has broken off with
battle? Any suggestions you her twice, and she keeps
have would be helpful. - · running back to him.
FEELING ALONE IN
I want her to be happy,
NORTH CAROLINA
She has dyed her gray hair
DEAR
FEELING to an awful-looking brown
ALONE: Without your and acts like a teenager. I
husband's support, you are have tried to talk to her, but
_. · fighting a losing battle of she doesn ' t listen. Her
" bait and switch ." Your health isn't good. · What
. requests seem reasonable to should I do? - WORRIED
me ; however, the WAY you ·SISTER
are teaching the boys may
DEAR WORRIED SISneed an adjustment to make TER: Be supportive and ·
it more palatable. Family loving and let your sister
counseling could be helpful live her own life. Whatever
to all of you.
'hi s intentions. it appears
The
Stepfamily that this man from church
Association of America is has given your sister someanother terrific resour~e thing to live for. Since her
because more than 50 per·- health isn't good, let her
cent of families today are enjoy the time she has.
blended
families. She's hurting no one, and
Membership is $40 a year, she may be stronger than ·
but the association offers you think.
support groups, retreats,
P.S . If the romance ends
Web sites, and access to badly, be supportive, bite
have issues addressed with your tongue, and DON'T
counselors. Find it or\ the say, " I told you so."
Internet
at:

Dear

Abby

'Life with

Bon~i~':

NEW YORK (AP) - On
her new sitcom, Bonnie
Hunt glories in a frenzied
composure, an agitated
calm . Playing Chicago's
busiest wife, mother and
local talk-show host, she
hurt)es through life outpaced
by its demands - but no
less amused.
Hunt's longtime fans will
realize that Bonnie Molloy,
the blond, fresh-faced heroine of ABC's "Life with
Bonnie" (airing Tuesdays 9
p.m. EDT), has a striking
si milarity to TV reporter
Bonnie Kelly of ."The
Bonl).ie Hunt Show" and to
would -be actress Bonnie
Kennedy of "The Building"
two short-lived past
series that charmed the
viewers there just weren't
enough of
But this time things are
different. Besides critics'

Busy, harried·and charming

raves, Hunt IS snaring
healthy ratings; . already
"Life with Bonnie" is
renewed for the full season.
"As far as television goes,
it feels like the best combination for me as an actress
and writer," Hunt (who handles both duties. as well as
producing) said recently,
even before getting ABC's
happy news.
Hunt has enjoyed solid
success in films such as
"Jerry
Maguire,''
the
"Beethoven" comedies and
(as director-writer-actress)
her much-praised romance .
" Return to Me," which
starred David Duchovny and
Minnie Driver.
She also was courted for
another shot at TV - as
host of a daily talk show.
"But I love storytellin~
and working with actors, '
she says. "So I thought, what

if I played a talk-show host input from the so-called
in a sitcom? Then we could "Chicago connection" improvise the talk-show her family. The sixth of
part, and I could also have seven children from a workthe family life that I love to ing-class neighborhood near
Wrigley Field, she remains
write about."
Better yet, this Chicago close to her mom and sibgal could be reunited with lings. They trelp account for
longtime chums, some of her authenticity - and help
whom go back to her Second · her maintain it.
"My family meets on
City improv days. They
include Holly Wortell (the Sunday nights to brainstorm
"talk show's" makeup anist ideas, then fax them to me,"
who gives first priority to she says. "The ringing of the
·her own makeuf) and Don doorbell and cleaning up the
Lake (who wil appear as living room - · that was
various "guests" on the "talk theirs. And when the squirrel
show," besides serving. as gets loose in the house Hunt's real-life co-producer, that really happened to us,
too."
co-writer and best friend).
"If you can have kindness
Mean)Niiile, Sunday nights
and talent surrounding you, in Santa Monica, where .
you've succeeded," sums up · Hunt lives with her investHunt, who can say things mem -banker husband, John
like that without sounding Murphy, she arranges flowcorny.
ers to take everyone at work
She also gets valuable . Monday morning.

•

"Anytime minutes are like calories:
nobody wants to count them."

~Painting

free-hand drawings of flowers and fruit, scenic 'a nd
Americana desigm. some
personalized, some with
Page Cl ·
messages.
But it's going to yard .
there's plenty of inventory
and lots of variety for both sales and picking up pieces
of junk which she can turn
shows," explains Sharon.
" That's why the house into something nice that
really gets her excited.
looks this way."
Something
new
for
While Sharon has demonstrated at Bob Evans for Sharon this year is painting
several
years
while on bottles. While she says
employed by another local she's never considered herartist, this is the first time self an ecologist, she does ·
she has taken creations from like to recycle and is always
her own
home . shop, looking around to . find
Ri vertown Artwork by
somebody's tras.h that she
Sharon.
can
turn int9 a treasure Her sister, Cindy Machir, ·
also an artist, drove in from things like frosted wine botConnecticut with a van full ~les , wine cooler containers
of pretty things and joined and even glass water bother sister down there. The tles. She spray paints the
two hav'e been working on bottles a neutral or pale
similar projects for several color, or if they're frosted
years and then getting uses. them as they are, and
together for shows . They'll then with acrylic paint puts
both be at the Brookfield · on a lighthouse, a still life,
show.
Everything from decorat- ·or a scemc.
Sharon is now into the
ed wine bottles to wash
tubs, from pails to pottery, popular faux finishes on
from trays to toys, from many of her pieces, particueveryday to holiday themed larly the buckets and tub s.
wall hangings and favors , is New to. her product line this
included in Sharon's stock.
year is a Homestead bucket,
Coming
from
an ''on which she hand paints
artsy/crafty family, it was a the original home of Bob
natural for the sisters to and Jewell Evans down on
wind up in some creative
the farm. It is a feature item
· endeavor. ·
For
Sharon ,
who at the Bob Ev·a ns Farm
describes pamung as her Festival this weekend .
Sharon says her special
pass ion, it all started when
she was I I and submitted a order busine ss is expanding.
pencil sketch in one of those Her biggest one came at
"Can You Draw This" con- Christmas time last year
tests. The letter she received when an ornament · she
was encouraging and she designed featuring a · paintbegan working with char- ing of the . Homtlstead was
coal, then acrylics.
se lected by the Bob Evans
Beco.ming a beautician
Farms corporate office for a
gave her a creative outlet,
party
favor. She was combut after many years of
stylinq; hair, she decided to mi ss ioned to hand paint 400
lay as1de her shears and take of them for the holiday
f
I.
.
even
_
up a paint brush.
With the business expandShe did art work in a
. friend' s shop for a few years ing., Sharon and her husband
before starting her own Mike have purchased a lot
home business.
adjacent to their hoJTie and
Tole painting on flower will be building an addition
pots, bucket s, watering
for an art .studio.
cans, wooden crates, tin
Until it's finished, Sharon
cans, slates and special persays
she ' ll just continue as
so nal pieces are among
Sharon 's favorite things to she has for the past several
years -· "find a flat place to
do .
She also like s to create put my stuff, sit down and
onc-of-a-kind treasures with paint."

from

•

Your plan

includes~

Business
INVESTING

Third quarter rough
for stock funds
BY DIAN .VwovtcH

(Within the U.S. Diversified
Equity Funds category are all
types of large-, medium- and
small-cap
funds, Standard &amp;
There's no way to sugarcoat
it: The third quarter of 2002 Poor's 500 funds, equity
income funds and Specialty
was an ugly one.
Diversified Equiry funds.)
How ugly was it? Try the
For .those keeping track, only ·
worst since 1987.
Mutual-fund investors have 89 of the more than 10,000
had little. to cheer about this equity funds tracked posted
year. With the average stock positive returns for the third
quarter.
·
fund down 17.5 percent during
It's no secret that the reasons
the third quarter alono, equity behind the market's perforshareholders have seen the mance are tied to the worries of
average perfonnance of stock war with Iraq, scandals on Wall
funds fall more than 25 petcent Street, disappointing earnings .
this year.
reports and investors who are
Investors could lee! the car- both tired of seeing the value
nage in almost all types of of their fund accounts chopped
stock fund categories. In the and fearful about investing.
third quarter, nearly nine out of That being said, at current marevery lO Lipper equity classifi- ket levels, there are plenty of
cations posted double-digit investment opportunities, even
losses. Three of those experi- though the level of risk- parencing the biggest drops are: ticularly risk that's event driScience and Technology funds, ven - is high.
off more than 26 percent; Latin
Now, with the third quarter
American funds, down more behind us, and September's
than 23 percent; and European showing in the Dow Jones
· Region funds, off 22.7 percent Industrial Average the worst
,, Funds that lost the least over September since 1937, what
the past 13 weeks (ending lies ahead? Though no one
Sept. 30) included Balanced knows for sure, history shows
Target Maturity funds, down us that there is a seasonality to
Ll J percent; Gold Oriented the market's performance. The
funds, off 3.75 percent on aver- November-through-April periage; Health and Biotechnology od has been brighter than the
funds , down 8.91 percent; and May-through"December timeReal Estate funds, off 8.9 per- frame has. And the last quarter
cent.
of the year generally turns in
Of Lipper's 41 different more positive returns that ihe
equity classifications, the only other three.
one to advance was the
According to The Wall Street
Specialty
Diversification Journal, the Dow Jones
Equity fund group. That's the Industrial Average has shown
category containing frinds that positive returns about 71 pershort the market and those that cent of the time in the fourth ·
are market neutral. Funds in quarter ov~r the past 82 years.
this grouping were up on aver- Since the crash of 1987, fourthage more than 3 percent
quarter results have been up in
.: . Lcioking.at..the 15 fund types · 12 of the past 14 years.
•
that make up the U .S.
Let's hope this year that that
Diversified Equity Funds' per- fourth-quarter upward trend
formance, you ' ll find the aver- . continues.
age fund down 17.17 percent,
(Dian Vujovich is a nationalwhich is the second-worst ly syndicated mutual fund
quarter for this group since the columnist, author and publishcrash of !987. The last two er of an ·educational mutual
quarters' performances have fund Web site: www.allaboutbeen the worst since 1974. ftmds.com.)
Newspaper En1erprise Associa1ion

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Ensuring healthy,
hardy bulbs
Do you want tulip, daffodil,
lily, crocus· and hyacinth
blooms next spring? Now is
the time to plant those bulbs!
Whether you prefer drifts of
blooms or more formal
designs, proper planning and
placement of bulbs will
mcrease their beauty next
spring..
_•
In general, bulbs need to be
planted in well-drained soils.
· Most of our spring flowering
bulbs have il pointed end and it
flat area. The pointed end of
the bulb should be planted up
towards the sky. Plant the bulb
with soil at least three times
the height of the bulb, i.e., a
daffodil bulb two inches tall
should be planted at least six
inches deep. Water in your
bulb plantings. This prevents
air pockets which prevent root
development while the moisture initiates the development
of roots. Do not fertilize your
new planting. Wait to fertilize
until the early spring just as
the tips of leaves are .emerging
and again just after flowering
with low nitrogen and high
potassium and phosphorous
fertilizer like 5-I 0- I 0, 6-1212, or 6-24-24. Apply at the
. rate of three pounds per I 00
square feet of area.
Tulips, crocus and lilies may
be bothered by mice, chipmunks or squirrels during the
winter. . Protect susceptible
bulbs by placing them into
quarter-inch wire mesh screen
baskets. Bulbs like daffodils.

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Genef81 1-Wdware. 102 E. COllege St.,
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P11one otter va~CI on two-year consumer serv1ce agreements ot S.O and higher. Rebates only apply to the Motorola V120. Alrllme offer valid on two-year
consumer service plans ol S3S and higher. Otter expires upon rate plan change. Promotional phone subject to cha~. Night and WMkend mlnutee ara
valid Monday · Fnelay 9 pm to 5:59 am and all day Saturday and Sunday. Un~mlt&amp;d n~ and weekend ~utes are only valld In U.S. Cellula,. licensed
markets. $25 activation fee applies. Roaming char9ftS, lees and other !bas m&amp;y ·~- Other
and restrictions may apply. USF chilJea of $.52
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·
· I
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ddiVt.·l

Sunday, October 13, 2002

y

Hal

Kneen
GUEST VIEW
or hyacinths are poisonous,
thus are left alone. Watch out
for deer and rabbits eating off
spring foliage and blooms.
You may have to be prepared
to fence these hungry creatures out. Check out our
extension fact sheet #1237,
"Growing. Hardy Bulbs" for
more information.

•••
Have you had your soil tested for the basic plant nutrients, like potassium, phosphorous, calcium, magnesium and
soil pH? Whether you raise a
garden, pasture or field crops,
a soil test every three years
will help you assess the nutrient availability to the plants
you grow. You may be able to
· save money by applying just
the nutrients lacking in your
soil. In addition, you may
minimize nutrient pollution
run-off onto the, surrounding
environment through better
monitoring of your soil nutrients.
.
,
Soil tests are based on a representational sample of the
lilease see KnHR, Dl

Have a business news item?
Give us a call at (740) 446-1341, ext. 1l
••

1•888•BUY·USCC
uscellular.com

Shirley Stobart, owner of Stobart's Greenhouse and Farm Market on Ohio Route 124, checks on her thousands of
mums. (Kris Dotson)

·Market 'lights up road with mums
so far so good," John added.
al flowers like mums."
The Stobarts also offer pumpkins,
So what's it like to raise !1,000
gourds, fresh vegetables and other mums?
"We get our unrooted cuttings in
flowers.
OMEROY, Ohio - Recent
The flower and plant business runs May," John said. "They' re about 1.5
travelers along Ohio. Route in John 's family as his mom, Velma, inches tall when we start. As soon as
124 near the Racine/Syrdcuse was one of the first- (J!lOple to start they ' re rooted we pinch once in .June
line might have noticed a growing and selling flowers in this and then again in July, constantly ferbright colorful patchwork quilt on the area more than 20 years ago.
tilize, then start h,arvesting the first of
hillside made of mums .
September."
..
·
John's sister, Sue Rice, is also in t!Je
Shirley and John Stobart, owners of business. She owns Sue's Greenhouse
The Stobarts hand-water the plants
Stobart's . Greenhouse and Farm ori Morningstar ~oad and focuses until they are pinched twice then they
Market., opened their family-owned more on perennials and shrubs.
are grown on drip irrigation.
and . operated wholes'!le and .retail
"That process took us two weeks to
"We really haven't decided for sure,
business in mid-September,
but I thi.nk our next project will be do 6,000 'plants," Shirley said.
Shirley's children , Sasha, Willie · Christmas trees, beginning in
If you purchase some of these big
and Michael Collins, also pitch in.
beautiful
flowers, Shirley said the key
November," Shirley said. ·"In the
.
The family has sold 9 ,000 mums spring, we'll have bedding plants and to their longevity is watering.
"They take a lot of water because
.over the past month and· only have hanging baskets. We ' re also looking
2,000 left, ~nd John anticipates them for apples and will continue selling they are potted and have a light soil,"
she said. "Once they ' re planted you
being gone by this weekend.
pumpkins until then." '
still
have to keep watering. them every .
"We've been doing. our greenhouse
On the Stobart · family farm they
'
day
until they take root, about a week
on Yellowbush Road since 1989 and have three acres of mums, and raise
or
two
.."
wanted to move our sales closer to the all sorts of Vegetables like tomatoes,
Stobart's Greenhouse and Farm
highway and main roads," Shirley peppers,
cabbage,
cauliflower,
Market
is open 9 a.m , to 7 p.m.
said. " Right now we're concentrating onions, potatoes- you name it.
Monday
through Saturday, and frofll
our wholesale and retail sales on all
"It's a lot of hard work and you
noon
to
6,p.m.
on Sunday.
sorts of plants and flowers - season- have to woiTy about the weather, but
BY KRIS DOTSON

Staff writer

P

Make new friends, but keep the old
A popular song says to " make new
friends, but keep the old. One is silver
and the other gold ." Friends really are
treasures - more so even than gold
or si,lver. Some friends ~e so impor-.
tant to us that become " part of the
family," otien . because of the length
of time of that friendship. Others
enter later in life, but become treasured for the role they play, even
OUEST VIEW
though the time of that friendship
may be shorter.
Everybody needs \friends . The
important role that a good friend other and feeting that each person is
plays does not diminish with age. In valued for himself or herself, not for
fact, friendship provides i~timacy, some out side motive. True friends
fun, new experiences and remforce- share and &lt;.:on fide in each other.
The way we develop friends can
·menl of self-worth. Whether person
is married or single, with or withotit change throughout our lives. When
children, young or old, friendships our kids · are in school, we often
are an essential relationship. Friends become friends with other parents. At
help us mana~e stress, see persp&lt;:ctive work, 1ve develop work friendships ..
in our lives, mtroduce us to .d1lferent We may become friends with someideas and cultures, and challenge our one that we meet in a social club,
class or ori a sports team. When the
thinking.
Friendships are often based on com- kids leave home, many parents find
mon interests or doing things togeth- that ihey have more free time in the
er. Friends can be the same age. evenin gs to pursue their own interyounger; or older. They Gan be the ests , and make new friends while
·
·
same sex or the opposite sex, some- doing that.
It's
important
not
to
think
of rela. one of a different cultural or religious
background, The key to building a . tion ships with children, even adult
friendship i~ developing. trus! in each ones, as your only source of friends . .

Becky

Collins

a

•

--'¥

I
,.

(Becky .Collins is Gallia County's
Extemion agent for family and consumer sciences!comnumity developmenr, Ohio State University.)

•

,
,I

Relationships with adult children are
important but do not replace companionship with other adults. A close
friend can help relieve the depression
and loneliness that may · come with
retirement or widowhood. As with
any other meaningful relationship,
starting and continuing a friendship
takes work. Both parties must be able
to give the time and effort necessary
if the friendship is to develop.
Friendships develop as individuals
share themselves and their life experiences. Be open to sharing feelings,
memories, dreams and disappointments. Perhaps taking a class or
working on a project together will
help a friendship develop, and
remember that it fakes time for feelings to grow.
As l:mth people get to know each
other, their interests . . values, and
experience~ will become woven into
the friendship. Regardless of your
age, keep trying to develop fl'iendships by nurturin g the ones you
already cherish and developing relationships with new friends.

";

'

•

�Sunday, October 13,2002
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

'

High School, Phillips and
her husband. Larry, have a
daughter. The family resides ·
in Jackson.
Action Finance is part of
JACKSON - Area resiOak
Hill Financial, parent
CHESHIRE
Two
d e n t
. - - - - - - - . Steven W. firm of Oak Hill Banks.
employees of Ohio Valley
Newberry
Electric Corp.'s ·&lt; Kyger
has been
Creek Plant have received
named loan
their anniversary awards for
administra35 years of service to the
tion coorcompany.
dinator for
GALLIPOLIS Amy
They are Harold C.
Oak Hill Bowman-Moore, Edward Roush,
a maintenance
Banks .~ He Jones
representative in supervisor, and Earl · F.
will
be Gallipolis, . was recently Mayo,
maintenance
based
at invited to share her expertise mechanic"B.
the bank's in business management
Roush joined the compaadministrative office in with less experienced invest- ny on Sept. 12, 1967, as a
Jackson and will work with ment representatives.
laborer in the labor departSenior Vice President and
The event, called Business ment. In 1971, he transSenior Lender John Cornett, Development
Workshop, ferred to the maintenance
a Gallipolis native.
was hosted· by Goldman department, where he proA 22-year banking veter- Sachs and Edward Jones.
gressed through the vartous
an, Newberry has spent sev"It was an honor" to be · maintenance mechanic claseral years m lending and invited to the workshop," sifications.
credit administration .
Bowman-Moore said. "As so
In 1995, he was promoted
"We are very lucky to have many people helped me in ·to a maintenance supervisor.
Steve as a member of our the early years of building ·
Roush and his wtfe, Sue,
commercial lending team," my business, I am grateful to reside in Rutland.
said Cornett. "His back- be able to share my insights
Mayo jOined-the company
ground and years of experi- into · the challenges and on Oct. 2, 1967, as a laborer
ence will make him an asset rewards of helpin~ Edward in the labor department. In
to our commercial customers Jones' clients achteve their 1972, he transferred to the
in Galli polis as well as our financial goals."
.maintenance department as
other markets."
Bowman-Moore,.
an a . maintenance helper and
Newberry holds ·an associ- investment representative
ate degree in business man- for two years, led discus- was promoted to a mainteagement and accounting sions on business manage- nance mechanic-C that
from Gallipolis Business ment from her experience. same year.
In 1973, he was promoted
College ; He and his wife, · She · also met · with investto"
a maintenance mechanicKaren, have three children ment . representatives indiand a grandchild. They vidually .to answer questions B.
He and his wjfe, Vada,
reside in Vinton.
about her approach to workreside
in Bidwell.
ing with chents face-to-face
and
implementing
the
Edward Jones philosophy.
employ~e
.JACKSON - Michelle L.
The
Business
RIO GRANDE - Keith
Phillips has Development Workshop is
Jeffers,
a Disabled Veterans·
joined pan of the firm's commitAction rrlent to each investment rep- Outreach Program (DYOP)
specialist in the Rio Grande
Finance resentative's education.
of
the · Ohio
office
Co. as vice
Department of Jobs and
president
Family
Services,
was
and branch
ODJFS
employee
August's
administraCHESHIRE - T. Jeffr~y
·
tor.
Kessel has been promoted of the month.
He was ·recently recogA veteran from performance engineer
of
the to semor performance engi- · nized by state officials and
Phillips
financial neer at Ohio Valley Electric co-workers at the office.
industry, Corp.'s Kyger Creek Plant,
Jeffers was nominated for
Phillips spent more than 13 Plant Manager .. Ralph E. being a team player and for
years with CitiFinancial. She Amburgey announced.
caring about his customers.
managed that company's
The promotion was effec- His efforts go beyond the
offices in Gallipolis, Athens, tive Sept. 13.
office, and in the communiChillicothe and Waverly
Kessel joined OVEC in ty, he is president of the
before
joining
Action 1984 as a laborer in the labor Gallia County Veterans
Finance in early September. department, ln 1989, he Service Commission, a
In her new position, she transferred to the mai nte- member of the Disabled
will oversee branch opera- nance department, where he American
Veterans
tions and personnel for progressed to a maintenance Association,
American
Action Finance offices in mechanic-S in 1994. In Legion, AMVETS, Gallia.
Circleville,
Gallipolis, . 1997, he was promoted to an County
Veterans
Portsmouth, associate engineer in the per- Association and Vietnam
Jackson,
WellsiOl! and West Union.
Veterans of America.
formance department.
"We are pleased to get
He is the commander of
A graduate of West
someone with Michelle's Virginia .
Post
4464
tn
Institute
of VFW
experience to lead our Technology with a bachelor Gallipolis.
branches," said Robert H. of sc ience degree in electriJr. addition to being
Huchison, president and cal engineering, Kessel ·is named e mployee of the
chief executive - officer. also a graduate of Hocking month, Jeffers is currently
''With her extensive knowl- College with an associate's the DVOP . of the Year for ·
edge of lending and focus on degree in electronics tech- the Disabled American
customer service, she will be
Veterans Association . He
a real asset to all of the nology.
was also last year's DVOP
He
and
his
wife,
Kristie,
Action Finance offices."
of
the Year for the American
imd
two
daughters
reside
at
A graduate of Jackson
330 Juuiper Lane, Gallipolis. Veterans., State of Ohio.

Newberry

Anniversary
awards

joins bank

Attends
workshop

Added to staH

Top

Wins promotion

reauitnlent and funclraising
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio In a joint announcement by
Thomas. E. Tope, President
CEO,
Holzer
and
Consolidated
Health
Systems, and LaMar Wyse,
President and CEO, Holzer
Medical Center, Thomas R.
Gooch has been. named
Director of Physician
Recruitment for Holzer
Consolidated · Health
Systems and Executive
Vice President of the
Holzer Foundation for TriState Healthcare.
A native of Gallipolis,
Ohio, Gooch is a graduate
of Bowling Green State
University,
where
he
earned his Bachelor of
Science degree in Business
Administration/Pre-Law, ·
and a graduate of The West
of
Virginia
College
Graduate Studies, where he
received a Master of
Science in Engineering
Management.
. Gooch has served for the
past thirteen years in a vari-

Bv JAMES

ety
of
"Tom
Wyse
added,
leadership brings qualities that will
capacities enhance our management
the team and strengthen our
for
Hol~er role as a regional health
C l i·n i c , system in Southeastern
I n c . , Ohio and parts of, West
including Virginia. "
"I am very happy to be a
Human
Relations part of the Holzer Health
Director, Systems team," Gooch
Gooch
"Hopefully,
my .
and most said.
recentt'y as
Physici;m effort&amp; will help grow and ·
improve the health and
Relations Director.
He has been involved wellness of both our syswith the Gallia County tem and the communities
Chamber of Commerce and we 'serve."
Consolidated
the Gallia County Safety • Holzer
Council, as well as various Health Systems includes
local church boards, com- Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, Holzer Medical
mittees, and ministries.
Center-Jackson,
Holzer
"Tom has an established
Senior
Care
Center,
Holzer
track record of successful
physician recruitment. In · Home Care and Holzer
addition, his energy . and Hospice. Serving the comself initiative will drive our munity since I 909, Holzer
Health
goals for community sup- Consolidated
port of new services such Systems continues to grow,
as advanced treatment for meeting the hea)thcare
cancer and heart disease," needs of the Southeastern
said Tope.
Ohio Area.
r---=~--,

• ••

Upon the discovery of a building or improvement that has
been constructed but of which the county auditor has not been
notified as required by this section, the county auditor shal l
appraise it and place it upon the lax list and duplicate at its
taxable value, together with a penalty equal to fifty percent of
the amount of taxes that would have been charged against the
building
or improvement from the date of construction to-the
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
·date of, discovery had the county auditor .been notified of its
Coumy
Agriculture
&amp;
Narural Resources Agef!l, • construction as required by this section. '"
'
0/!io
State
Univerliity
Exteruion.)
The county, auditor, or his deputy, within reasonable hours,
may enter and fully examine all buildings and and improvements that are either liable to or exempt from taxation.by Title
LVII. (57) of the Revised Code.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

LARRY M. BETZ
GALLIA COUNTY AUDITOR
(7i0) '44614612
(

more windows than walls, here and
in the morning room section of the

Laundry appliances are close at
hand in a gOQ.!I-sized utility room

Window shuttef5 and horizontal kitchen as well. French doors that complete with a deep sink. You can
wood siding give a rnnch-style look flank the fireplace offer patio ac-. do your hand washing here, and
to the Glenwood, and a governor's cess, and another French door in the clean up after doing yard work or
· cupola at the apex of the garage roof morning room serves the same "func- auto repair. Direct access to the gaadds to the charm. This compact tion .
rage is 'also handy for bringing in
home is ideal for a young family or
Standing at the kitchen sink. you groceries, especially during stOnns
empty nesters needing less spaCe face into the living room. The raised and after dark.
than in the past.
eating bar that tims tbis peninsular · A vaulted ceiling adds volume
A covered porch spans most of counter is handy for snacking or to the Glenwood's master suite.
the front fa~ade. If desired, it could chatting with people .
Amenities here . include .
be enclosed, providing a safe out-

who are working in

door play area for toddlers or small the kitchen . Counters
dogs.
and storage cabinets,
Ent~ring,

you step into a vaulted
and spacious open area with the din-

ing room up front and the living
room at the rear. The back wall is

Glenwood

PlAN 42·015
including a pantry. . t~ing Area 1552 sq.h.
are arrayed along Gitrage
443 sq.h.
three walls; appli· Oimemiom 62"8"x38'4"
ances are built in.
1000 SERIES

two-section bathroom.

Two more bedrooms and
another bathroom are on
the opposite side of the
house.
For a review plan, in-

cluding scaled
floor plans, eleva.
tions, section and
artist's conception,
send $25 to Asso·
ciated Designs,
I tOO Jacob! Dr.,
Eugene, OR 97402.

Vaul1ed

x11' 3~

direct acCess to the patio,
a walk -in closet, and a

M••••r Sul1e
16' X 14'

Please specify the
Glenwood 42·0 15
Vaul1ed
Dining
12' X 14'

Bedroom
10' )( 11'3"

0891~&amp;,

and include a return address when
ordering. A cataGarage
20'9 ' )( 20'8"

c 2002 Assoctated

Covered

Inc.

Poreh

log featuring more
than 350 home
plans is available
for SIS. For more ·
information, call

then the distance in the new
one. If they compare exactly,
you have a spout match and
an easy in stallation that
should be sea mless. Spout di ameter is rarely a problem.
If you've looked for several
days and can' t find a threaded
spout to fit, consider replacing the pipe til at comes out of
the wall . Caution here : At tempting the removal of thi s
nipple can often result in bro.ken pipes in the wall and a
plumbing nightmare. Whenever we. attempt the removal
of a threaded nipple at a wall
connection we begin with a
brief prayer. By altering the
length of the nipple, you can
use any size spout that' s
available. Our advice is to
find the right spout and leave
the nipple alone. Slip spouts
are slightly less difficult toremove and replace - no
threads to clean, no pipe-joint
compound - but t.here is the
problem of size here, too. TtJe
end of the wall pipe must fit
into a rubber gasket near the
front of the spout. The gasket
seals the connection between
the pipe and the spout. Therefore, ihe replacement spout
needs to be the same size as
the original. Again, the dis- .
tance from· the end of the
spout to the location of ihe
gasket sHo uld be measured
and compared in the old and
new units . .
By the way, our friend replaced the spout. We knew
she could do it. You can, tO&lt;i.
For more home improvement tips and information
visit our Web site at
www .onthehouse.com.

•••
Readers can ·mail questions
to: On the House, APNewsFeatures, 50 Rockefeller
Plaza, New York, NY l 0020.

(800) 634-0123.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
:i Hql.iday

decorating: Celebrate

;:av CAROL McGARVEY

the seating ·may not face the
fireplace. Come autumn, it's
more appropriate to face the
·fireplace and a new perspective is gained.
Here are some easy ways to
let your home take the aura of
·autumn:
• Fill glass canning jars
with dried heaps and legumes·
from the grocery store. Gro 11 p
kick-starl'toroom-fresh~ning warm-colored candles on a ta'
ble for instant glow. Be sure
projects and Ideas.
As summer fades, it ' s time not 10 leave candles unatto pull out quilts and comfort- tended .
, While cool and ..clean is
ers. It' s time to build a warm
nest for the cool weather right for summer. add some
ahe.ad. Autumn is one of the layers with comforters and
eaSiest. seasons to absorb, be- quilts and some texture with
cause Its palette of reds, yel- tapestry and needlepoint pillows, . greens and browns ts lows.
c?mforll?g and mellow. Be• Neutral , colors for an
st~es, It s. easy .to liecorate autunin backdrop don't have
Wllh nature- leaves, gourds, to be dull. Pattern and texture
pumpkms and btttersweet.. .. -and a tou ch of bright color
.. Textures from ~ood ~ra1ns, add to the comfortable feel of
..·pottery, wheat and ndtan fall.
.
: corn help showcase the abun• Turn gourds into candle~ dant harvest. Candles dts- holders by cutting off the top,
·. played m cutout gourds. are cleaning out the center with
. good ways to mark the sea- an ice cream scoop and set.· son, as are vases of dned pods ting the candle in the hollow,
~ or hy?rangea from the garden. secured with florist's day.
~ Ltghtmg a fire adds .the. glow Decorate with berries, pods
• and removes the chtll m the and leaves.
:"air.
• Fill a pottery or earthen' Sometimes it's as easy as ware bowl with autumn's best
· flip-flopping the furniture ar- apples. Trim with colorful
: rangement. Part of the year, leaves for a natural center-

;:emER HOMES
.•AND GARDENS BOOKS
·FORAPwEEKLYFEATURES
.. Do you ftnd you change
:your attitude when the seasons change? You look at
things differently and your
mood makes note of the tran. sit ion. So can your home, The
.change of seasons can gtve a

Dave Siders talks with the first customer of the newly
opened Siders'. Jewelers on Main Street in Point Pleasant.
(Chris ·Myers Cozza)
employees were: Mayor Ed
Woomer,
City
Clerk
Marilyn
McDaniel ,
Carolyn Harris of the Main

Street merchants organizac
tion, and Judy Hensley, coowner of Victoria's Prom
and Bridal Boutique.

Go to the movies ... but read about
them first on page CS in the Tempo section.

i&gt;unbap ttimt' -i&gt;entinel

costing over $2,000.; entry for examination.

Ohio Fair Bureau members, the annual Meigs
County meeting will be held ·
at 7:09 p.m., Oct. 22 at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
Ticke!S are required. Cost is
$5.50 per person amd may be
obtained from Farm Bureau
members and the Meigs .
County Farm Bureau office
at Hayes Realty, 992-2403.
See you there!

0

Vaulled
Living
15"10" X 18'

§ 5713.17 Duty to notify county auditor of improvement

To enable the county auditor to determine the value and
location of buildings and other improvements, any person, .
other than a railroad company or a public utility whose real
property is valued for taxation by the lax commissioner, that .
constructs any building or other improvement costing more
than two thousand dollars upon any lot or land within a.township or municipal corporation not havi ng a system. of building
registration and inspection shall notify the county auditor of
the county within which such land or lot is located that the
building or 'improvement has been completed or is in process
of construction. The notice shall be in writing. shall contain an
estimate of the cost of the building or improvement, shall
describe the lot or land and its ownership in a manner reasonably calculated to allow the county audit or to identify the lot or
tract of land on the tax list and -shall be"served upon the
county auditor not later than· sixty days after construction of
the building or improvement has commenced.

By Asso&lt;iated Designs

10'

Building Notice

soil in question. The random
sampling technique is vital to
the value of the soil test.
~elve to . 15 places within
each field or garden should
be sampled, then mixed
together to achieve a random
composite of the soil being
tested. Air dry•the soil sample. do not dry using artificial
heat. A minimum of two cups
per sample is needed for testing. Our office accepts soil
samples and will send them
off to a s9il laboratory for a
fee of $9. Many fertilizer and
seed companies also offer to
test soils, so check them out.

.

Bedroom

ATI'f.;NTION CONTRACTORS &amp; HOME OWNERS
Avoid a 50% penalty each year

from Page D1

Glenwood boasts economy and good.looks

www.odihornepans.com

'

'

with this one.
For installation, clean the
area thoroughly an(! perform
A friend recently called and the above in reverse. With a
mentioned that the trip lever threaded connection you will
on her tub spout wasn' t work- also want to clean the threads
ing. She said she couldn' t get on the nipple coming out of
the shower to work and the wall with a wire brush.
wanted to know how to Then apply either pipe-joint
change the spout, We sug- ·compound or Teflon tape. We
gested that she first try clean- prefer the Teflon tape for two
ing her shower head . If it was reasons :
• It is cleaner and less
clogged, the trip lever might
not be the culprit. We told messy to work with than pipehere to put vinegar in aplastic joint compound.
• The spout connection is
bag and ·Surround the head
with the liquid-filled bag for not high pressure. Even when
24 hours. Since we knew it the ,shower diverter is in the
could be either the shower spout, the connection still is
head or the tub spout. we J!OI high pressure.
went over spout replacement
Finally, make sure that the
area where the spout joins the
with her.
When it comes to home wall is properly sealed with
maintenance, changing a tub plumber's putty and-or tub
spout ts about as stmple as 11 caulk.
gets. The variables related to
Another point: Because the
tnstallation are limited to two Iub spout is not a high-presbasic configurations:
sure connection, installation
• Threaded connection type should involve gentle force
• Slip connection type
when reconnecttng. With a
Determine which configura- tub spout, your intention
tion you have in your tub, should be to achieve a clean,
well posiiioned installation.
then proceed.
A threaded connection is Water leaks won't occur.
just that - where the spout
Tub-spout tips : Although
screws on to a threaded pipe there are only two kinds of
that protrudes from the wall. tub-spout types (threaded and
No locks, no latches and no slip) there are several "sizes"
other gtzmos to worry about. ' (lengths) in each group. This
Stmr,ly tmn the .spout coun- 1s where your patience is imterc ockwtse Wtth: enough portant. Not "every store carforce., and remov'l w~ll ~cur. ries every length .in each type.
A shp connectton ts dtffer- When we refer to size, we do
ent. Here you will need to not mean the overall length of
find a set screw at the under- the spout. Whereas two difstde of the spout near the wall ferent spouts might be t!le
end. The set screw ts usually same overall length, they
an Allen head, and recessed. might be quite different. ·InThe tnck here ts to loosen the side the spout ts where di. set screw. Turn . the Alan mens ions need ·to be comscrew counterclockwise sev- pared. The threads on a
era! turns- all the way out if threaded spout begin at a ceryou , like - and "slip·: the . lain distance from the back
spol!t off the pire that comes · edge of the spout. Measure
out of the wal . No threads the distance in your old spout,
AND MORRIS CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Siders' Jewelers opens on Main Street
POINT
PLEASANT,
W. Va,. - Dave and JoAnne
Siders have opened a new
jewelry store, Siders'
Jewelers, on Main Street in
Point Pleasant.
Dave Siders, son of
Harry Siders, h_as helped
his father manage his jew- ·
elry store for 25 years, but
this is his first endeavor as
a small business owner.
"I saw the need and the
.opportunity to provide
Potnt Pleasant and the sur~ounding area with a quali-.
ty jewelry store,'' said
Siders. ''I' m really excited
about our new store and
what we have to offer perspective customers."
Siders is . a gemologist
and also will repair jewelry
at the new store.
He and his wife will
work in the store as well as
manage and . operate it.
Wanda Warren and Vickie
Harmon are also employees. ·
Those attending the ribbon-cutting ceremon~, in
addition to the Siders and

&amp;unbap tn:imel · i&gt;entinrl • Page 03

Replacing a tub spout

HMC assigns Gooch to lead physician

Personnel notes

Kneen

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, October 13,2002

piece.
1 Pursue
• Nestle a chunky candle in
6 Spaghetti , macaroni,
etc.
the middle of a clean glass
11 Treaties
salad. punch or trifle bowl.
16 Coup d"Fill in around it with apples or
20 Inflexible
21 Russian writer small fruits. If you wisb, use a
Chekhov
short candle and elevate it on
22 TV's "Ka te &amp; - "
an aluminum can, surrounded
23 Manservant
25 Mountain ridge
by the fruits.
26 ·Spacious ·
• No fireplace? No matter.
27 Bow or Barton
28 Peace goddess
Gather candles on a tray to
29 Wallet item
lightfor an effective &amp;low. .
30 Aborigine
· • Bring out your baskets to
32 Pierced with a spit
34 Neighbor ·of Gan.
display books, linens and flat(abbr.)
ware . The texture will be
35 Punta del pleasing.
37 E.~ecavati on
38 Pennants ,
• For tabletop displays, mix
39 Apartment occupant
items of various textures. Be 41 Become swollen '
sure to include rough and
43 Gravish brown
44 Think
smooth, shiny and dtill . Show 46
Eccentric one
off ceramic birds or sheep.
49 Vestige
• .Use textured fabrics to 50 tegendary stories
(2 wds.)
add the look of warmth on ta- 54 SI1Jiing
foam
bletops and side tables. To 55 Lively
\ mix patterns easily, stay with 56 Magnnude
57· Legal wrong
one color and add a stripe or 58
Period.
mini-pattern that coordinates 59 Stone
th~t sparks
60 Where Seoul is
with the main print.
.
61 The subwav in Paris
• Browse flea markets and 62
Actress - .
tag sales for interesting castLollobrigida
offs to hold pillows or books 64 Movie (slang)
65 Cried like a crow
or tools. Bring in a piece of 66
Prlce -!ixing group
architectural salvage for a 67 High cards
68 Wrinkle
new focal point in the house.
69 Removed the rind
...
70 Work at
Better Homes and Gardens 71 Poem
Decorating Year-Round · 72 Board
74 Raised to the 11'1 ird
(Meredith ·Books), $29.95.
power

~ Avoiding ·drainage problems

&gt;

:8v MoRRIS

CANYOUSAYTHE
SAME
.
.
ABOUT YOUR MONEY1?
.

Dianna Lawson, financiaf advisor
Raymond James Financial Servicos

You work hard every day to secure your future - and your
Investments should too. We can help with a thorough review of
your portfolio, and an educated, experienced eecond opinion
on your financial plan. Call today at (740)1192-2133 or atop by
our office at Court &amp; Second streets, Pomeroy.

I

RAYMOND,JAMF£
EINMQA! §!§BYIQI§I !NQ

Finln!MI
!!!d!Moftt DMIIm
W•Mtll •
NA.~ I .IPC

I

~

·

· . the floor that slopes improp• AND JAMES CAREY
. erly is the correct solution .
:FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
First, trim the wallboard an
, Q . Anne asks: We added a inch or so away from the floor
·garage to our house two years so that it cannot get wet from
:ago. The c'oncrete floor of the the puddling. Next, drill quar' garage is slanted slightly so ter-mch holes every few
· that when we pull our cars in i'nches between the floor and
. during snow season ot during· the mudsill (the horizontal
: the rainy season the wat~r that bottom piece of wood at the
, drips off the car pools t!l one bottom of the wall) so that
: spot. Unfortunately. the place water can drain through it.
: where it pools is right up Spray inside the holes with
:·against a hori z?ntal piece . of
· the wood frammg for an m. side. wall. The framing board
: is sitting directly on the con. crete, and it is sheet-rocked. I
: am very fearful of this board
: rotting and subsequ~ntly h!lv: ing to be replaced. I m feeling
· if I dea.l wi.th the problem
: now, I will minimize any fu. ture qisaster! My questipn is,
· should I drill a channel tor the
· water to run out? I don't
· know how it would drain onto
: our new driveway effectively,
: without creating a whole new
: problem . . ·
: A. You are correct. Contin. ued exposure to moisture and
· water will eventually rot the
. wood in the wall and the wallboard. The fix we suggest
. might do the trick. However.
: it should be "noted that re: placement of the portion of

ACROSS

Copper Green or some other
product that contams .copper
napthanate - a pesttctde and
w?od preservattve. It also
mtght be a good tdea to add ·
venul,auon to your garage. Atr
can help to evaporate the
motsture ~~ the sum?ler. If the
holes don t clog Wtlh dtrt or
tce (OUshould be ft~e . Also,
don t drtll the holes tl the outstde pen meter ts n_ot somewhat lower than the mstde.

75 Teaching group
77 little island

BO Work unil
61 ·Park&gt;r
62 Wildpig
63 French cleric
87 Violent disagreement

99 Exploded
90 Trick
91 School dance, for
sho~

92 Enamel
93 - and kicking
94· Grain for grinding
95 Sphere
96 Troubles
97 Spouse
,
98 Write a certain wav
99 Annulled.
' 102 Car-engine parts
105 Nuts
106 Orator ,....
·101 River In France
108 Run off·to marry
109 More mature.
110 Subject considered
113 Cut
114 Remove, in printing
115 Lean
119 Sherbel
120 Easilv damaged
123 Where champagne Is
made
I 25 Earth (prefix)
126 Of the kidneys
128 Adjust
129 Conductor's stick
130 Edgar- Poe ,
132 Waar awav
133 Stupid
134 Caper
135 Antlered animal
136 Thin nail
137 Dinner guest
t 38 Boutique
139 Leopard features

DOWN
1 Wooden container

Charters
Emissary
Perch
Perfect place
Not complete
7 Consecrate with oil .
8 Kitchen item

2
3
4
5
6

9 Big book

10 Every
11 Bundle
12 Assert without proof
13 Talons
14 Grow weary

15

Scor~h

19
24

Uptighl
Sallydrop

16· Obvious .
17 Stickv substance
18 Alaskan Indian

31 Soap plant

32
33
36

38
40
42

.
Smootn and slippery
Estrada orSatie
Recedes from the
flood
.
Banquet
Tidier
- veg;1s

43 Edge ·44 Seeped

45
· 46
47
48
49

~ Not g ui l ty ,~

e.g.
Last Greek letler
Column order·
Eddy or Allman
Instant

81 Court proceedings
82 Like seawater
84 Cre.ek
85 Carried
86 Glowin g coal
88 Be emphatic

· 89 Raucous sound
90 Booby or Nobel
93 Prayer ending
94 Chart
98 Ordinal)' language
· 99 Higher
100 Born (Fr.)

101
103
104
105
106

Pub game item
Annoyed
Terrible
Rattling sound
Make quiet

lOB Go by

109 Fre·nch painter

110 Wet ground

'

H1 Sour
112 Male singing voice
1t 3 Barely su fficient
114 As above
·
· 116 Ice dwelling
117 Fewest
118 Musica l sounds
121 Put cargo aboard
122 Notion
t23 Desire
124 Sweet potatoes •
127 Oklahoma city
129 ...:.... -relief
131 Cut (with "oH")

50 Discharged
51 Jackpot game
52 Went wrong
53 Pilfered
55 Flash on and oft

56 Scattered seed
59 Throw
60 Carpenter or

Valentine
61 WiN ie - of baseball
63 Snake
·
64 Fiery signal

65

Henry- Lodge

66 Kent or Gable

69 Throb

70 Factory

73 Took oH
· 74 Whittle
75 Land near the sea
76 Plant fluid
77 Savory jelly
78 WMre Venice Is

'.

.

79 Warbling sound

Answer on Page DB

----------------·-~ ~------~

I.

•

�2002

ter

~rtbune-

SentinelCLAS 'S IFIED

groduolo dogteo 111
montof hMIIh relar.d llefd
•knOWledge of counaa!; lng IOchnlqueo and psycho.. pathology, possesskm of
• one of the tollowlng provider
: qualifications
required:
: LSW, PC, PCC, USW.

: rector, Tri.COunty Mental
.. Health a.nd Counseling tralfers, and decks. Call
: Services. Inc•• 313 112 W. 441-4238 ask tor Ron or
Main Street, McArthur, Ohio leave message.
::.=.::::=:!.:'---~
45652. EOE.
Will wool&lt; for elderly nighis,
weekends.
. a~ refer·

•---:--':::-==---·
MIS TECHNICIAN

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER·285,000 PROSPECTs·
PL
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Your Ad,

Call Today...

,. Fterbrm troublelhootlng,
: maintenance, and enhance-• mont of a point of sale rag·
. ister and •TWgl•tory system
• In centnll ofllce and 111JIIIple

&amp;...-..

(740) 44&amp;-3008

·.

Or Fax To

.Jon._

(304) 675-5234

~

HOW TO- WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Sllould Include Tllese Items
To Help Get Response ...

~74

\'\'\Ill '\1 I \ II '\ I\

r

PERsoNALs

I

YARIJSAU:·
PoMEROV/MIDill.E

r

~ ~~~

1.~-ooiliiiiiilii.iiiiiiiiiitr

r
.- *-

,
AUCTION
Every Friday @6:30 Angie's
Flea MarKet' 333 Mechanic
Street Pomeroy, Ohio Call
For Information: 992-9734

Total Li quidation! AMES
Store Fixtures &amp; Equi p.
Cheap l Open to public.
1000's
of
items
for
(740)992 - biz/home! "See ad in Misc.
for Sale.H

GIVEAWAY

Fr ee puppies,
9229

Free to good ho mes. 7 ·
week old puppies' Playful &amp;
Fluffy. Gentle &amp; loyal in nature. Never a better family
pet or companion . Call
(740)245-9372 evemngs, or
(740)4 41-4863 anytime.

r

%~

"'~-------_.!
Absolute TQp Dollar: U.S.
Silver, Gold Coins. Proofsets,
Di amo nds,
Gold
Rings,
U.S · Cutr'ency,M.T.S. Co1n Shop, 151 Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 740446-2842.
Web PV Plus Unit Should
be cOmpatible wtth HP 670

1\11'11&gt;1\11 \I
Puppies· 1 male. 1 female .
mom- full blooded Irish Set· '
...,, In It 1"
ter, dad- believed to be ~:-------.,
black Lab, shots, wormed, 3 It tO
months old, to good homes
HElJ1 WANrEJ&gt;
onlji,(?40)992-132B
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~

FOUND

Metgs Motel, needs House
Keeper 992·55 31

Older Brown Male Dog Lost Driver
UP TO $2500 SIGN-ON
In · Syrac use. Collar with
BONUSIII
tags.~up pe r AI. 124"
992·2307
.
·Company Drivers earn up
to 35 cp m plus bonus- plenYARDS.\l.E
ty of miles, good home-time
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·Owner Operators earn up
""
YARD SM.t:·
!o 85 cpm plus bonus- lease
GAU.JI'QLJS
purchase plans available!
We serv1ce 010 trucks &amp;
85 Dodge D1ploma1, $500 sell discount parts!
OBO. New ,,tires. eve rything
BOYD BROS .
work s. Can be seen at
800-543-8923
291 0 Birch Avenue. Call
www.boydbros.com
(304)675 -7682
EOE

r

IN MEMORY

Monday-Friday for Insertion

In Next Day•s Paper
sundlay In-Column: 1:.0 0 p.m.
Sunday• Pap111r

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Description • Include A Price • Avokl Abbrevletlonl
• Include Phone Number And Addres1 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D1y1

POUCIES: Ohio Vtllty Publishing rwenn the rlghl to dt. ~ or c:anctltny tid 11 any tlmt. Enon mlllt bl rtpCM1ed on thl ftrat
Trlbune-Stntlnei-Reglat. will bl r.eponalble·tor no more thin the cott or tt. 1pac. occupltd by the tnor tnd onty the tim lnllftiOn.
1
·•ny lou or expenu 11'111 raun• from lht puiMicatlon or omluion or anldvertltemtnl Correction will be mldt In the flrtt available edlflon.· • Box n:~:.:::. l
,,.. llw1y1 conftdlntlll. • Current rltt Clrd lppllu, • All Nil lltltl advertlumtntt are tubject to thl ftcltql Ffllr Houtlng Act of 1968. • Thla n
only help
odo
EOE o1ondordo, W. will not knowingly IICOipl ony odvortlolnt In vlollllon of tho low.

WI-

-g

IN MEI\IIORY

In loving memorr of our
,,:ecious loved one

Whitnee Rae Chapman
1-14-82 . 10-13-2000

~~ ·:r·

.

rno:::::::::::l rno:::::::=i ~ rno:::::::=i ~ rno:::::::=i ~

~~~~~~~
Arcadia Nursing Cenler :
Is now accepting AN's, or
LPNs, applications. Avaifa·
ble positions are Part· Time
3- 11 shift We have new
starting wages tor our ANa.
We offer excellent benefits
that include Health lnsurance, 401K, Lite Insurance;
compelive wages and oppo rt unities for advancemen! If you are a team
player who enjoys working
with the elderly, please apply in person between 9-4
or call. Susan Winland, AN.
Director of Nursing.
Arc adia Nursing Center
Easi Main Street
Coolville, Ohio
{740.667-3156)
EOE·MIFIH/DV
Are you intereS1ed in be·
coming a State Tested
Nurse Aide ? If you would
like an exciting. rewarding
career in health care, we
have the answer for you.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
is offering a nurse aide
class. It w111 begin October
21st. You must apply thll
weak in person at Scenic
HillS. Contact Amber Campbell or Jayne Darling.
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shi•ley Speirs. 304675-1429.
--~----- ·

lntoCision
Management
Corp. Is seeking lndlvlduafs
for entry-level management
to add to our team at the
.Gall.laallltocatlon . Resp(,nsibllltles Include :
*Managing a team of 10 to
20 people.
*Monitoring calls
quality
*Knowledge ot clients and
calf center programs
*Report writing
Qualified candidates mutt
have a B8chelors degree.
strong interpersonal, communication, and leadership
skills.

KVC Behavioral Healthcare
Point Pleasant, WV. Therapis1 needed. Must have a
Mas1ers degree and a WV
social. work license or LPG.
Salary is $28,000. + DOE
Family Service Specialist
..Case Management Need·
ed• must have bachelors
lnfoCision offers monthly degree &amp; have a WV social
bonusei and excellent ben- work license pay stans
S10.57 hourly. KVC pro·
efits Including health, 401 K, vides in-home and foster
paid hoUdays and vacation.
care serV'ices to children
If you would like to and families. KVC offers exIncluding
contribute to our success at cellent training,
lntoCiwlgn In Gwl!lpol!w, LPC supervision, and benefi-ls. Send resume to HR
send your re~ume to:
Dept.. 200 Bradlord St.,
Charleston, 'IN 25301 . Call
fnfoCiston Management
800-835·5277 Fax: 347Corp.
9728. E·mail : wvhr@ kvc.Ofg
Ann: Sam Gaskel
EOE
325 Springslde Dr.
Akron. OH 44333
HELP WANTED
Or email to:
HROirector 0 lnfoCislon.com
Visit qur web site at:
lnloCisiorl.com

HELP WANTED

i

"

Jewelry Salesperson FT/PT.
Mu,t. be de~l"'dabl~. outgo1ng1 enjoy working with the
public &amp; have excellent
math skills. Apply at Acqulsitions , . 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. No· phone calls
please.
·"'

ror

Cominunity Action is ~f*'
:::
=-:;_·______
ln.g temporary lnta~ .81Ua· Meigs community
Atde to work with E~er~en- Action Agency is seeking a
cy Prpgrams. OrgamzatiO~- temporary RecordS clerk.
al sk1fls, co~puter expe.n· Position will require a de·
ence, and abthty to dea1 · w1th .~ pendable, accurate, detailed
person.s of various so0f6e· oriented person with experico~omlc. backgro~nds . Valid ence In Microsoft Office 'and
Drwers license, h1gh_ school typing skills of 4o wpm . Firgrad uate or .eqUivalent. lng records will be a large
Send re~f1!e wrth three (3) part of the · position . High
references to Mrs. Edwards, Schoof diploma or GEO wllh
Gaflia Meigs C.A.A.. 80 1 ~ N 2 years office e~tperlence
State Route 7, Cheshtre, required . Applications with
45 20
OH
~
by 10118102 · resumes will be accepted
GMCAA IS EOE.
until 4:00pm on October 1B,
Domino's Now Hiring all lo- 2002 at the Cheshire office.
ca tions Pt. Pleasant! Gailip- GMCAA is an Equal Opporolis, Eleanor. Safe drivers. tunlly Employer.
must be 18. Apply in perSon
Help wanted caring lor the
at locations.
elderly, Darst Group Ha~e.
Local Bar &amp; Grill seek1ng now paying minimum wage,
waitress/ bartender tar day- new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amshit1 (10:30-5pm) Must be 5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmreliable. honest and have 7am, call 740-992·5023 .
prio r waitress experience.
great pay and good tips. Hiring an e~~:per i enced cook,
Call (740)441 -9371 or apply evenings &amp; weekends. Apin person at 42 Court Street, ply in person at the careterla
at the Universi ty of Aio
Gallipolis
Gre.nde. For more informsFull/ Part-time COL drivers, lion call (740)245·5660.
good pay, insurance. 401k,
vacation and home eve- Need 7 ladies to sell Avon.
n~ogs. Call (7 40)286-1463
(740)446-3358
HE.L P WANTED

II

~

Stop working a dead end Job!
Start building a successful caree.r l

,

McClure's Restau.ranl now
hiring all 3 locations, full or
part·tlme, pick up appliesUon at kx:ation &amp; bring back ·
between
9:3oam
&amp;
10:00am, Monday lhru Saturday.

UAGENnY
NEEDED!,!ENTAL HEALTH •
plasma donors, earn $50 to
PROFESSIONAL
S60 per week tor ' 2 or 3 Excellent opportunity for ,a
hours weekty. Call Bio Life qualified .mental health p~­
Plasma . Service, 740.592· tessi ooal to jgln a multi~6651 .
clplinary team;n a commllnity mental heallh setting.
Truck Drive,.,, lmmediaie · Thi s 40 hour position p~ol'llre, class A COL required, vldes the opportunity to deexcellent· pay, experience liver outp~Uent counseling!
P_TIPTA 1!'\d o_TICOTA
required. Earn up to $1 ,000. case managefllent to multiPAN Opponunitiesfl!f
Truck Drtvera, Immediate per waek.Cai1304-675-4005 need children, adolescer,ts
·
hire, daas A·COL required.
and their families. Previews
Progressive Step Rehab excellent pay, experience
experience .workin g wj!h
Services has exciting PAN required . Earn up to
youth a ptus. , .
opportunhles for )he!'8J)ists $1,000. per WMk.Call 304·
.
,
and assistants in Gallipolis. 675-4005
M1niroum acceptable qualifi·
See what Progresslve Step
has to offer:
AUCTION
AUCTION
AUCTION
·Organized, dynamic inhouse rehab teams
•Nice facilities in great
locaUons
•
·EMperieilced. frlendl)' and
professional staff
·Excellent PAN rates
Please call Andre. Miller,
Staffing Coordinator,
at
1-866-563-6130 ,
fax
(614)923-3802 or email
reslme to:
AmillerO Extendicare.com

HELP WANTED

Caring People...
The
"SENIOR CARE CENTER

Difference
1/ ol·l'/ '

..,r . ll/•lf ( •11'1 ( , ·llfll

/\ (1/1/'l'lllf\ If d111~' rlfl

\dmini,lraliH· '"~""'·I&lt;' B.'i'
/Ill'

flllli/tll/1 "'

Nurst.• \lanagt.•r
\larl&lt;r!!CIIH'III I · \)lei H ' IHT Pn·l'tTI T I I

· . If interested, please call
Martie Short at
1-740-446-5001
8 am- 4:30pm . Monday through Friday
Holzer Senior Care Center offers competitive
wmpensation in a friendly. professional
atmosphere that sllpports yo11r growth and
development. ·
An Equal Oppommity Employer

HELP WANTED

Ta• Preparers needed.
Must have good solid basic
knowledge.
Applications
and Interviews on Tuesday
&amp; Wednesday, 10 to 3.
DanTa:.c Inc., 1828 Eastern
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.

IMPORTANT
AUCTION

EOE

HELP WANTED

aring People ...
The

•U .t(, 1 '

l0C41ted at the fludlon Center on Rt. 33 In lliiSOR, WU. We hilUe moved
the contents from this beautiful Uldorlan heme aut of ll'llnawha
rounty In Hugheston, W.U.. and will be se!Ung tile following. ·
ITEM O F SPEC IAL INTERE ST- 1829 German Brble
FURNITU.RE
Fancy 4 pc. walnul poster B.A. suite, fancy 2 pc. oak hi head •
board B.A . suite, marble top Viet. . sideboard ; e ;uly walnul
plantation desk, 3 pc. Viet .. parlor suite, Viet. sofa, 2 pc. M.T.
wal . Viet .. B . A . Suite , lg. spinet desk, wal. dresser, r()und oak
table w/lg. clawfeet, Viet.. tables, Victorian rockers, M .T.
commode, Brunswick Victrola; wicker sofa· table lamp· rocker
&amp; chair, 2 pc. Viet. . slant front secretary, sev. M .T. tables , cedar
chest , press back platlorm oak rocker, bench , 30's wardrobe,
clawfool organs stool, fern stands; and much more.
. GLASSWARE
Collection of beautiful decorated bowls German &amp; others.
collection of small pitchers, collection of shaving mugsmustache cups &amp; scuttle mugs- German &amp; others, 8 p . setting
of Jackson china , Bavaria plates- cake plate &amp; others, Green
Depression, Pink Depression water set, Alighen wash bowl,
Spode tower pitcher, Jim Beam bottll!S- Mountaineer &amp; Coal
Miner &amp; other, McCoy heri •&amp; chickens·, P.S. Germany, cut glass
bowls, bowl wlrosas : compotes, Northwood Carnival, Butter
dish, cheese dish German, German bisquet jar, beautiful oil
lamp , Aladdin oil lamp (Brass), stone jars. early blue &amp; white
stoneware pitcher, Buffalo pottery, Weller vase, very lg. planter
&amp; rnuch more.
·
AMERICAN FOSTORIA
112 gal. straight ice lip pitcher, 1/2 gal. jug- 3 Pintice lip jug/ ·
pitcher· 3 pint jug (Boudoir pitcher)· Barrel sugar wlcover-pint
cereal pitcher - 2 handled sugar &amp; c over - 9 112 ounce lg . ·
creamer - 5&amp; 7 ounce oil cruets· covered butter dish· Lemon
dish wlcover- Marmalade wlcover.&amp; glass spo o ns- shrimp and
dip bowl, Tom &amp; Jerry footed fruit bowl- t 8 inch 3 3/4 gal.
punch bowl on lg. low toot stand w/lamp w l marblebase,
covered mustard w l glass spoon, two jam
wlcover and tray covered candy jar· round butter · w/cpver, sm . wedding bowl
wlcover, 4 112 inch jelly w/cover • 3 part 6 sided candy box
wlcover- syrup w/nlckelplated metal .t cip •and attached handle·
syrup wlmetal cover wlbakellte handle," salt &amp; pepper Shakers
w/chromed metal · tops and tray - cookie jar, pickel/jam jar
wlglass cover- lunch tray w/glass center handle plus more.

Ne verforgotten. Precious memories
foret ·er lin ger and a!ll'ays loved by
you r fami ly and your many .friends.
God Bless;

Full-time shifts with oyertime available

SENIOR CARE CENTER

Difference

Part-time shifts with full benefits
Paid !raining· no experience necessary

IN MEMORY

IN MEMqRY

In

Memory of

Oliver
Stover

CALL
1-8n-463-6247 'ext. 2455

Sadly

missed

by

Wife, Opal
and Family

•

or stop by
242 3rd Avenue

pc 1111111

• "Clood orol lnd written lkllla
: "Cetall and gool orltnr.d

1
w

tnterested persons should -3-Bed--roo-m-ntw-ly_re_mod-_
eled, in Middleport, calf Tom
Anderson after 5 p.m:

complete a JOb application,
which can be obtained · at
any CJ!Iio Vsllay Benk locs• tlon or from our website,
www.ovbc.com . Appliesttons must be returned no
tater than October 25, 2002.
EOE

If inlensttd, please call
Manie Short al
1-740-446-5001
8um - 4:30pm . Monday through Frid-.y

Gallipolis, Ohio

Holzer Senior Care Cef/fer offers competitive

lnfoCislori Management Corporation

.cqmpensation in a f riendly, pmfessjo,nal

Tile Pr9fesslonal Difference!

arinosphere tl1at supports your Rrowth ami
dtm•lopmenr. An Equal
Employer.

1861 58

b~:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION COMPANV
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
773-SlSS OR 773-5447
OWNER: DON BALLARD
Terms Cash or Check wlih to. No buvers Premium. Out
of state bu~ers must ha-ve bank letter of credit.

Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry,
(304)675-5332

s

sq.ft. of living area. Custom
built kitchen &amp; bath cabinets
from Smiths. Sits on s. 112
acres with pond with 301140
detached garage. 4 miles
from Holzer Hospital on
160. A real buy at $289,000.
Recruiter, at 1·866·368· Calf to see. (740)446-2927
7620. Fax: 813-926-11874. •---~-.....- - ,
Emall:
BcarlsonOExtendlcsre.com
·
EOE

Progressive Step Rehab Is
kl
p 1 cad
~~~ ~gjoi:~ur ~~-~u~~ ra.
hab teaml Part·tlmel full·
Jlme opportunity and PAN
hours available. Please con·
tact Be1h Carlson, Therapy

G)
=·

'\!.... .

Eltendlca"' Hwltlt
Servlce1, Inc.

All rul ..tN.tv..;ltlng
In 11111 MWaptptr 11
11.1bject to the F....-.1
F.Jr Hou.:tng Act of 1968
which mekn ltltlepl to
advertiM "any
preterence, limitation or
dltcrlmln1tlon biNd on
race, color, religion., MX
flmlllaiiUdUI or national
origin, or anw Intention to
m~~ke any such ·

PSYCHIATRIC AIDES
Prestera Center is looking
for an upbeat Individual to
:Work one-on -one with a
~l al needs consumer in
the Mason County area.
Some of the responsibilities
include helping the consumer with dally living skills, accompanying on doctor vispreference, Umftltion ot:
df~~erlmlnatlon."
Its, and helping the consumer to be more Independent.
Thll newtpll~r will not
High school dlpioma or
knowingly accapt .
GEO and a valid drivers liadYit11Hmtntl tor rw•l
Cense are required. II you
ntllt. which Is In
wou!d like the opportunity to
vktt..lon of the law. Our
have a positive effect on
ruder• .,. he,.bw
aomeone's life, visit our
tnforrrtei:l that •II
website
at
dwelling• advtrllnd In
Www.prestera.org tor an apthf• new8pt~per are
avallabla on an equal
plication or mail resume/ apopportunity ba ....
plication to: ·
PRESTERA CENTER
House for sale in Porter,
HR/Uason Psych Aide
1600 sq. ft . 3 BR. 2 balh.
P.O. Box 806S
(740)441-4705 Priced 10 sell
Charleston, WV 2570:5

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carpet. 3 ton AJC, skirting, 2br. References &amp; Deposit.
Must
selll
$15 ,000. No Pets. (304)675-5162
(740)38&amp;-0436 after 5pm, or
3 bedroom home, Minersleave message.
viHe, Ohio. river view. no
2 trailer lor sale on 1 acre pels, reter~nce s required,
lot, $36 ,000. Nice rental . $450 month, call (7 40)992·
(740)446.0118 Call for de- 6ffi after 5pm.
.
tails.
3br. House located In Ma·
2000 14 X 70 Clayton 3BR . son, W'JI. $495. + Utllttles.
28th. Appliances , Porches, No Pets. (304)773-5681
skirting, like new, must go
$19,995.00, 74().992-()()78
5 rooms &amp; bath, 5o Olive ~I,
New 2003 14x70 3 Br f 26th $325 mo. 1740)446-3945

\11 1&lt;1 II \'\ llf " i

r'"--------,.1
iO. HOUSEIIOUI
GooDs:

VAN DRIVER
Full-time position requlr8d
transporting consumers to
and from medical appoint·
menta In the Mason County,
WV area. Must be able to
maintain accurate reports,
and be able to assist con·
sumers off and on van as
needed. Required HS diploma or ClEO, aale drlvlnt ••
cord and knowledge of local
routes. Apply in person or
mall to:
PRESTERA CENTER
HR!Mason Van Driver
Hunllngton, WV 25705
EOEIM

PUBLIC NOTICE

.2 Almond frost free relriger·
ators, $75 each; White Ken·
0101e washer. $65; Rapper
Dryer, $60; Almond Whi•l·
pool washer &amp; dryer set,
$150. Calf after 6pm,
(740)44&amp;9066

Laroe selection of Fiber Qptjcs·
Angels, Dolphins, Eagles, Bears and More.
Amerjcan Tool Exchange tools· Drill khs,
Grinder Kits, Bolt Cutter, 2'1• Circular saw,
3 pc Tool Kits, Dolleys,
55 pc. tool kits, Sanders, and cordless
power tools, Knives, Swords, Dolls, Doll
and much, much morel
AUCTION

'

. AUCTION

SPORTS CARD AUCTION
SATURDAY. OCT 19 I O:OOA .M
Th e Cord Oo&gt;c • Tuppers rtcun s. Oh1o

REAL ESTATE

NOTICE TO THE CENERAL PUBLIC

FEDERAL JOB ELIGmiLI1Y
Cmtr Dewlopmtnl Procrom
. Pr!pm Now I Somt Pll!ilioD.I

LAW !NFORCEMENT

1

(GS-1897).\irporl Srnm/CUliOms

(FV-18011 Air MarWMmDiiplioo
(GS.()Bl) Securily/Pri'" Guo:d
(GS.()B))

PoliOfl""''"r&amp;&lt;nff

(GS0n) Fillgerpri&lt;t/CIIIU!ioos
(GS.o25) 1'1d I!Jnger!BailiffF&lt;denl
Ag•11&amp; M"'

GENERAL &amp;ADMINISTRATIVE
(0S·33l) Compuor Opcra&lt;or
(GS-lll) Mail &amp; Ftk Clerk
iGS-986) Mo1ioiLI.egll Cieri
(GS-318) Sernlary!lt"''"io&lt;ill '
iGS·Illl) Food S&lt;rvi&lt;e Worlrr
(05·186) 500&amp;1S&lt;ITictAsil
iGS-2123) Mol« VtiUck ~nl~

wrth Startrng Pay of 514 · 520/ hr.

Sliding Glass Door •Garden Tub

En1r1 Lnd &amp; Full 1111td Pll!itloD.I •Aaa: 11 to 65

M11.1t Bt US Clti:tll, Comicud FtloiiS MayNot Apply

ForNotioool Hvtrrtland ~ruriry PoJitiOIIS
Tollloo ll ,..CI«I Horr i.oclodu &amp;.Is..., lllltriol! .
Jell Eligi~iry For Those Who Compk• Cwr 1J&lt;,tloplf&lt;11 Pmjnm
Galllpollo ca..., CatlotO ·
(CorHro CIOH To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
1-600-214-0452, •
Rogm-o5-12748.

176

MtOU.ANroUi

1

•Wonted·
~UR

oomoont lo cU1 &amp;
papo.wood, lor Info DOll

(740)742-0528 ..... "'""'

loge.

.

Ill IIINUI'E CLASS OWTATION

Admlall1troil By: Iiiii&lt; Notloool Tnlol'l Stntct,ln&lt;.
(No C11Js 10 tbt College! lnflxmllion wiU be pmeo&lt;td in·pOI!Oil
Only 10 lhott "'" • wnd Clw Oritolllioo)

A&lt; GALLIPOLIS CAREER COLLEGE

1176Jocl!on Pike, Gallipolis
Spring Val~y Plaza, Sui•lll

Friday, Odobor 18th ONLY!
l:lltpll or 6:00pm
- N o l'hcto Cob

No LIIIAnm

Lirilld

B&lt;irl "' INo ChillW1

$1000 Walmart Gift Card Included
lnteraeCtlon of US

33 &amp;

SR

595

Just South of Logan
M·F

'

1992 Chrwsler ,Imperial,
good condi11on, S1500;
1993 Dodge Dynas&lt;y, gOOd
condrtion. $1 400 (740)3792366

FRuns&amp;

1995 Chevy f500 V-11 Vor·
teE. new tires, nice rims, be·
dra•ls $4 ,500. (3{r,t)675 For sale- red potatoes. 7973 alter 5pm.
1740)376-6291
1996 Grand Am ; 4 door,
I \In I 't l'l'l II '
$2995; 1995 Grand Asn GT,
,\11\l-.111\ "
2 door. $3695: 1993 BuiCk
Century, $1295. 12 others
1n stock. we take trades.
COOK MOTORS (740)4460103
970 Case Tractor with cat( - - - - - - - - 1998 Buick Century, V-6.
86HP, good condition. ltitlcrulse, CO, and good
7•_o_l3_7_9-_2_366-'--- ·condition , 71 ,000+ miles...
_s7_ooo_._l_
lntem1tlon1f Cub Low $8500. (304)682-2640

VEGEI'ABLI'S

Boy. 5 foot belly mower. 1998 Chev. Caviler Blue aulast hnch. $1850: (740)858- to. AJc Cruise 4 dr. AM/FM
6016
Cass. new tires. new battery, 74,000-miles $3,500.
992-SB60

r

1998 Ford Contour SE. automatic.
sunroof. CD. One
Fair calve&amp;- A·l sired, Heat
owner.
$5500.
Neg.
Seeker plus Who Made
Who, black &amp; halter broken, (304)576-2331 Leave Mos·
sage.
(740)667:6637
: - - - - - . , . - - - - 2000 Chevy Cavalier only
Reg . Black Angus bulls, 29,000 miles. 2 door, white
yearNt:~gs &amp; okklr bk&gt;odlines 5-spsed · and AIC. $0,995.
N ~r EXT., Alta Fullbaclc; &amp; (740)446·2927
Widespread gentle guaran2001 Mitsubishl Eclipse RS
· - $IOOO. 304 "372 "2389 16k rTJL, alloy whls, theft
R
egistered Angus Bul[s, roc,. 5spd, cdllill. (304)n35235 or (304)675.0226
Two Wea nlinn colts, by
•
65 ChAUU Impala ConvenlAPHA stud. Sunny's Calico
,. '
Bar foaled Aprl1 2002 ble. t.~echaniCBIIy excellent.
· Complete. car. Great drlwr.
·
$450.· Each or $800:. both. ,.,ood 10 restore. s 5,ooo
Very nice conklrmalion, well u1740)256•6936
,
grown. (3041675- 3117
.
.
77 Chevy 4x4; 86 Dodge
·
Ram van . 360 motor, tinted
windpws. $750 OBO; 89
Podge Dynas&lt;y, $1500
Excellent com silage Stand- OBO. (740)256-6333
lng , del ivered or stored.
92 Z·24 Chevy Cavalier,
(740)379-2161
good condition, 135;000
I I(\ '\-. l 't II ( I \ I j( 1\
miles, (740)367-0394

(740)28&amp;-14~

r:J:L]

~

SAI..E

94 Honda Accord Ex,
122,000 miles, good condition. $4500 (740)446-8239

99 Flrebird, silver, V-6, 5speed , tilt/cruise, Air, CO,
.PS, ABS-brakes, dual air·
bags, 4011: miles. 2 years lett
on exlend&amp;d warranty. New
80,000 M. radials. StO,OOO.
t966 Dodge Charger, lacto- (304)895·3662
ry FIT 440, $5500 OBO.
Cars fJOm $500, pollee im·
(740)245-5067
. .
pounds tor salel For listing
1985 Pontiac Perisianne 1-800-719-3001 ext. 3901
305
Automatic
motor
w/ overdrive, corvett'e rally
whe~ls , has Jensen CD
player. power seats, air
shocks., 1987 Pontiac Sa- 1966 F-350 Welding Rig
fari Statlonwagon 307 auto· Lincoln Welder. $4,000.
m8tlc motor w/overdrive, (304)675-4975
power windows &amp; seat, lett
front fender has dent but 1983 Ford 150. 6 ' cylinder,
runs good .. 1986 Chevy ce~· .4WO. runs good, $f,550.
lebnly 4dr. V-6, auto, ovor- (740)446-4999
drive, needs windshield · &amp; 1990 Dodge Pick-up, 2WO,
both driver side windows. 110,000 miles, $16bo OBO.
Auns good, 2 new front (740)256~1675
tires. $1 ,000. OBO. For all
3.(304)89S.3408
67 Chevrolet 1 Ton dump
truck. $1500. Calf Howard
1986 Otcls Cutlass Supreme (740)245-9356
Broughan,
V-8,
$500,
95 Ford Ranger XLT, Ex(740)992- f 949
tended cab, 4114, 6 cylinder,
1991 Buick Rivera. Burgun· 5-speed, 158K, $5,000.
dyl Burgundy- leather int,eri- (740)710.0866
or. Loaded, keyless entry. ~.::~;..;;:~-::---,
150K, excellent condition,
~AWDsiiB
&amp;
$2495. (740)441-1826
...

1965 Mustang Hard top
Straight 6cyl., 3-speed, new
paint, new custom rims &amp;
tires. Looks Sharp;-$5900.
(304)576-3130

r

r

1992 Chevrolet Lumina Euro, 4 door Sedan, (740)446- 1986 Jeep Cherokee 4x:C,
rebuilt transmission, rebuilt
3479
front end.~food body and
88 Jeep Cherokse ~ .euto, 6- tires, needs engine ,or re-cyllnder, runs gbod, $1350. built $1200. (740)446-7928
(740)441-9610
REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

-=========-=====~~~
r

OFFICE

992-2259
E. Main 'street

Henry E. Clelanst.

tWo

REAL ESTATE

t

05

Pomeroy, OH

Appliances: Reconditioned
Washers, Oryers,t Ranges,
Only $995. down and only
$189.86 per month: Call 7 rooms , 2 bath, Gallipolis. Refrigrators, Up To ' 90 Days
No pets, water paid , $550 Guaranteed! . We Sell New
Nikki, (740) 385·7671
month, deposit &amp; reference. May1ag Appliances, French
New Manager's Special , (740)388-1100
Cily Moytag. 740-446-7795.
new 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, reduced to only Large,
story, three bed· Corner dining .set, $100;
$27,900 delivered and set room house at 653 Second Washer &amp; dryer, $200 set.
up. You . save over $6,000 Avenue, Gallipolis (near Li· Microwave, $40 ; Set of te·
including underpinning , an- brary) $800 per month with ble lamps, $40. Cub C8.det
chors, vapor barrier, 1 set fi- $800 deposit req uired No riding mower. (740)256·
berglass steps, 20' of utility pets. Water included in rent f045
lines under home, all instal- (n o other utilities) . Six
led, One only, Coles's Mer months lease requlred.l Fireplace Insert, good con·
bile Homes, U.S. 50 East, (740)44&amp;-7323 (Ubrary) for dition, twin tans, $300.
Athens, Ohio 45701
more Information.
(740)367-7300
PUBLIC NOTICE

.

Rotweiler puppies k&gt;r sale;
Mother and Father on premises. Will be ready November 7. 1740)268·1636

608

8:30-8, Sat 9-8, Clp1ed Sun

Toll-Free 1·866-460·3958

I

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m

EOEIAA

Loader gun
·
cat signed Sam Colt 113897 "'uat Seal!

Auction Conducted

3 Bedroom with garage on
approximately 1 acre On

==.:;,..:==----

·P,o. Bo• 8069

AUCTIONEER NOTE: A VERY OUTSTANDING AUCTION
ONE OF THE BEST WE'VE HAikEVERYTHING IS READY
FOR YOUR SHOP OR HOME.

_

992 3348 _____
:.:::.:::=.

3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch
· Occupolllonol Thtraplot · style, open floor house plan,
12,!100 Slg~n Bonuo . covered front porch. Side
sundeck, approx 1 mile from
Artors ot Golllpolls In Gol- town on State Route 588.
lpotls, OH Is ~king a part Built in 1998 on 1.2 acres.
to full-time OTR to join our (740)983-(1730 or (7401446·
rehab teaml Excellent pay &amp; 6161 .
benefits to Include m&amp;Qical.
dental. dlsablllly, 40fK and 3br. ~anch, Gallipolis, Mill
morel PRN opportunities for Creek Road; Brick Front,
all dlsdpNnes. For consider· new vinyl siding, new mol,
ation, please contact: Beth s79 ,000. Call after 5pm.
carlson, Therapy Recruiter, (304)675-5038
at: 1-866·368-7620; fax:
4 br., lr. &amp; dr., 2 baths, 1/2
813-926-6874 or email:
basement, lg. kitchen wllots
- Boar'IIOn Oixtendicare.com
of cupboards , ale-fan &amp;
EOE
heal, water softener. new
EOE
windows. lg. front porch
Elrtendlca,. Heelth
overlooking ~ver, Will ~n. Sorvlcoo, Inc.
Sider &lt;redo, 1740)992·9012
-~-'--.,.---- Beautiful custom buill home
,- !!-'&gt;- Longuoge
with 3 large Bedrooms, 2Palhologiat
112 baths, large family room
with fireplaCe . All brick with
1500 Sign-ori Banua
wrap around porches. 3,200

Colt Muzzle

Dated

nutes Jrom Halzers, Ohio.
(304)675-2364

, vancement.

r

so

We offer a generous bef'l&amp;$89,000, 3 bedroom, 1·112
~ 11111 pooklge Including 401 k
bath, 2 car garage, 10 m.,_
retirement and career ad~

GUN .:".

Call today to start your career w~h one of

James
1918 - 1992

COLLECTIBLES
Early wooden butter molds, queen miniature cook stove , cast
iron banks· pig &amp; others, match holders dog boot ·scraper, one ·
pound coffee mill #1 080 challenger, hook rugs, early student .
lamp, Pennzoll sign , pictures &amp; prints - Julian Dupre t 882
signed print· Pine landing by Wallace Nulli~g- sev. Russell
prints , Robert Woods print by Hyde price and more.

Friendly, professional atmosphere

the fastest growing lnduslries in the areal

•

pot

WE OFFER:
$500 sign -on bonus
Up to $7/hour +bonuses

i

' _.. me

'

Tolal Uquidalion! AME S
Store Fix tu res &amp; Equip.
Why wait? Start meeting Cheap! Open to public.
Oh1o singles to night call toll 1ooo·s
ot
items
fo r
free 1·800·766-2623 ext b1z!home! See ad in "Misc.
1621 .
for Sate.M
.

C· 1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
for sale, Chester Townshi p,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to: Th e Daily
Sentinel. PO Bmc 729-20,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Includes Free Yard ·Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 ,Days · ·
o-w•er 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
"'u'=- Must Be Prepaid ·

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

7
( 40) 949 -2252 call ~ 28 Cedar Street,' can be Phone (30ol)675-191 t attar Whirlpool washer. $95; Ken- burner, (740)949-2375
nlngs or l~ave message.
used tor office or small res·
more dryer, $95; Kenmore
Foreclosed SW on 2 · acre taurant. {740)256-6661
.
APAinMmrs
electric range. $95: Caloric Total Liquicfationf AMES
1ract, $500 down to qualified
Lors &amp;
I
gas range, Wh ite, $150; Store FixllJres &amp; Equip. Disbuyers. Call (740)446-3570
fOR RENr
Kenmore frost hoe, while, ploy Shelving, Shopping
tor a quid( sale.
L---AiiCRF.AiiiiiiiiiGiiE-_.1.
refrigerator, StSO; upright Carts, Storage SHef~tlng ,
_...:.;.:_:..:.::.::____ ..,
· 1 and 2 bedroom apart- freezer,
t.taytag Balers, Garment RackS, Of.
125 ;
Land home package$. No 112 sere lot on Tycoon Lake ments, turnished and untur- washer! dryer set, $27s: tice/Breakroom Furniture ,
payments while uncler con- w/12x60Trailer$16,500.00
nished, sec:urjty deposit re· Sofa.
7s; Dresser with Safes, Showcases, Rolling
slruction.
Lillie
or no now $13,500.00
qulred, no pels, 740-992- mirror, $?5; Nice solkj wood Ladders. More. Cheap I
down payment required . (740) 247·1100
2218.
~-side
stands
wl' lh 'O pen to public. Make offer17.(0\AA.ct.
1,/VU
,....,-3218
draw.&amp;, $40 each. Skaggs ers on 1000's of noms 0
Middleport house tor sate15 acres more or less. Lo- 1 br. apt for rent $100. sac. Appliances, 76 Vine Street, 150+ loeallons/11 states, in·
bedrooms, large kitchen, cated on Green valley dep.&amp;$300. a mon. all util. 740
7398
elude Athens Ott 765 E.
dinning room, bath &amp; 112., 2 OriYB, State .Route 160, 5 included 304-67"5.3654
nr'"-~---...., ~~ StWV
. (740S) 5RI93-55/Rob-98,
1
car garage, large 1encec1 In minutes from Holzer. Will
AN11QuE';
uvwvf!Y
:U
back yard, windows, sldng sell in part or whcHa Cs.ll for 1 fu rnisl had + 1 urifu rntshed .
ert C Byrd Dr. (304) 252·
&amp; roof all IeoS tllan 1 yr. old,. details. (740)441Hlf 18
apt, c ose 10 grocery in ,
6548. Call 16
687-8269
seH furnished Of unfumlstt- - - - - - - - - - downtown
Gallipolis. Buy or sell. Riverine Antt· for taxed location fist or visit
eel, call (7&lt;40)9S2:-64Q7 any- 2 &amp; 5 acres hOme sites, (740)446-1158
ques, 1124 East Main on www.nrel.com. (800) 61J.
time, It no answer leave Eastern Local School DisSA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 6865, 10% Buyera P'remimessage.
trlct, utilities available, ap- 3 Bedroom Appartment.No ~ 992·2626. Russ Moore, um.
•
Pels992-5858 .
--------proved road, sorru7 no trailownet'.
Na.u 2000 - ft home 1
Waterfine Special: 3/4 200
ow
~
•
ers, (740) 985-3595
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMl&lt;niLANmlsMFllOIANDl'lE PSI $21 .00 Per 100; 1' 200
minutes from Hospital.
liE~
aT BUDGET. PRI·
C
"''""' ''"
PSI $35.00 ·Per 1oo; All
S5S,OOO . CES AT JACKSON ES·
Brass Compression Fittings
and garane foundation. - - - - - - - - - TATES, 52 Westwood Drive 11740 Case Skid Loader, · In Stock.
•
from •""7 to $383 ·w lk 10
Price below
appraisal.
BruMf unci
-·
· a
$3500. (740)643.a;oe
R0H EVANS ENTERPFII$"'40"'• ....
7•" ..1·14shop &amp; movies. Call 740ES Jackson Ohio 1-800'' r-""'-~.
~
•&amp;
«6·2568. Equal Housing
·
.".'S '
' .
3 ~1$ in Mound Hill beme- 537 ~
Peaco, Quite, Private Coun~
nnn...rtun:t..·.
re· ry .... M sell best p,~
Molgo Co.· Danville, 5 or 7 """" "'
· M_,
•
~.
try Living wl1h Spacious acres 59 .9001 Allred, 22
Call (740)446-2158 eveFurnished 2 Rooms and 1
VIew 2 mile· from ROU1. 7
·
acres of fields , woods, bor·
n ngs.
Bath, Upstairs, Clean, Refand 33 . on Yost Road Ra
'
'
~ ders Shade River $23,000.
COOL DOWN, central .4Jr
cine, Oh. 2.5 Acres sur· Can Rd. 11 acres $21,000 erences and Deposit Ae· Conditioners and Heat" BlOck, brick, sewer- pipes,
rounds lt\ls horne whlc~ of· or 5 acras wllh beautiful old qulred. No Pels. 1740)446- Pumps. 11 you dOnl call us win-., lintels, etc. Claude
15 19
fera 3br/2bs, hardwood barna, S2S,OOOI
we both loae. Free 8111• Winters, Rio Orand•. OH
floora, · large rooms, new
-::n-:-1- -1,-1- . , . - - - - mateo. (740"" . . .308 and Call 7..0:246--512~ . .
'lOll rae ous 1v ng . 1 and 2
~~
kl1c.h- · dining room 11 lng
-··
' v
Clollla Co.· Near locks +
1-600-29Hl098.
room plus full basement dam, 33 acres $29,900. Vln- bed.room apartments at VII·
~
with garage, 30'x36' newer ton, Dodrill Ad., nice level !age Manor and Riverside DIRECTV,
two TV hook·
outbuilding with concrete 13 acres, 523 ,000 or 8 =:~~-~~~!~~! up, order here and earn·
floot ond overolzed garage 80,.0 with barns, $20,000I
$$$, 800-263-2640.
AKC Bassatt Hound pup·
doors, concrete driveway, Ala Grande, 9 acres with 992·5~. Equal Housing Electric BaM Board Heat· plea. ·Vet checked. Tr1. col·
Tuppero·Pialns-Cheller beautiful view, $23,000 . _o_ppo_n_u_nl_ti•-•~
· - - - - era, Electric range &amp; rofrlg .. or. $200. each. 1304)5762126
Water. 5139•000 Owner Fi· Kyger !5 acres, $10,!)00 or Modern 1 BA apartment. Hot water heater, breaker
nanclnt to qualified buyer&amp;. 33 ocree. $29,5001
(740)446.0390..
box wlbraaksra, well lank, ~::-:::--=:--:-::--.,.Additional aereogo ovallo·
: - - - : : : - - - - - - - well pump, win-.. Much AKC Blue riCk Beagle pupble. 17401992-5072
More parcels avallabla. Call Now Taking App llcallons- More. (304)675-3686
py's and started dog's, Dla·
PRICE REDUCED. 3 bed- now for maps and other list- 35 West 2 Bedroom Townmond bloodline; excellent
room, 2 bath Brick Ranch ingsl Owner flnanctng whh house Apartments, includes Electric cook stove excellent gun dOgs, .$,100 to $175,
on 1.5 flat acres, newer car· slight property markup.
Water
Sewage, Trash, condition. Sears sewing rna· (740)742-2728
chine w/cablnet dining room
pet, doors an appliances, :-::-:-:-:::--:---:::-:-::---::':- $350/Mo., 740-4-46-0008.
suite, table wneal &amp; 5 chairs Lab Puppys ~C Chocolate
full baaemen1 (partially fin- MOFINtNCl
STAR
ES·
&amp; china hutch. 2 8018 01 odd &amp; Black Excellenl Hunllng
!shed), 2 car garage, Rt 33 TATES- 3 to 6 acre lois icr One bedroom, upstairs
above
New
Haven. cated at Bashan Road &amp; apartment (partiafty furnish· chairs,
knick-neck self, Stod&lt;· $250.00 (740) 643·
~1304;,;;,;;l:,:ll6:;2:..·38=9-'-7--,.-- Morningstar Roads, Aac ine, ed) at 651 Second Avenue, small lee maker, feg. queen 128
-=Oh. Pric&amp;d from $25,000 to Gallipolis. $350 ):ler month size high poster bed. 112
Rent . 3 Br house in Pomei'·
wh ite ffiQI bed. (304)675- ·Large breed Rottweiler, very
$39,000. All have road plus $350 deposit. Water &amp;
good tempered, 7 weeks
oy, 4 sale or rent $375 . per frontage, Tuppers Plains- tras h 1nd uuvu
"-" (no other utll - 7274
old, 2 males , 2 females
month plus deposit (740) C hester Water, COunty Ap· It1
'es 1nc luded ·1n rent1. Na Fisher Price Harley Motor- ~oo.oo each 304
. • n3·5873
698-6783
.
~
proved Building Lots. Faa- pets. Six month lease re- cycle, good condition, only
Wanted! GOOd credit cus- turing a 6.6 acre lot $29,000 qulred. C"ll {740)446·7323 $75,
battery
Included . Maltese pups- Purebred,
tamers to purchase new and a 5 acre k»t $25,000. (librAry) for more informs- Please call (740)256-6407 AKC registered. Avallabie
home wlland. SO down to Owner Financing to quail· lion.
leave message. ·
OctOber 16. 3 males. Makes
qualified customers. 1·5 tied buyers (740)992-5072.
the perfect pet fO r all. Call
acre
tracts
available.
n .... ~. E'roowo._,
Tara Townhouse Apart· For sale- 12 wooden win- (740)446-7454 leave mes(740)446 3093
fti!ALL!UJ\n:.
ments, Very Spacious, 2 dews, $100 (double hung) sage.
~WAN11!D
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1 (740)446-o693
------~1!2 Bait!, Newly Carpeted,
Purebr.8d COCker Spaniel
Will pay top dollar for prime Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa- Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; Puppys. Males, 2 Black, 1
land. New home builde r. tla, Stan S3751Mo. No Pets. Repairs. Problems? Need Blonde,
Vet
Checked.
I740\AAR.3Q93
Lease Plus Security Deposit Tuned? Call The Plano Or. Wormed, 8 weeks Ld, very
12x60 3 bedroom w/cla,
r-v
740-446-4525
Requ ired, Days: 740-446· c.;..:;.,;..;;...=:....---- nicell $130. each, cafi i·74Qwasher &amp; dryer, stove,
$5,495 • 74o- 992 _21 g7 ·
~;=::;;;::::::=:, 3461 ; Evenings: 740·367· lndeper'ldent Herl&gt;alife Dis- 441-4462 8 to 5 p.m.
0502.
•tributor, Call For Product Or
1984 two aooroom Mobile
u~ ~
Opportunily. (740)441-1982 Rat Terrier puppys 6wks old
·Home, 2 full baths. catherial
~
JET
tails docked wormed, .
ceilings 8•f2 Deck, Nice "---'fORIIiiioiiRENriiii--,.1 Twin Rivera Tower lor eld·
AERATION MOTORS
.$100. (304)675-7946
'
H o me. New Fur nan c e.
erly/ disabled.
Repaired, NeW &amp; Rebu ilt tn RatJ Fox Terrier pups, 8
~$8:::•:::500=.9::8::5-c:98=31:....,___ 1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Now accepting applications Stock. Call Ron E'lans, .I ·
k
d S 0 6
-,
Sabre two •·"room, 1 Homes From $199/Mo., 4% for 1 br, all utilities paid
wee s 01 · 5 ; eagle
990
uuu
Down. 30 Years at 8.5% HUD
800-537-9528.
mixed pups, Freel 8 weeks
bath Mobile Home many ex-ass isted , carpeted
o(d. (740)645-2599
tras. Must be moved. APR. For listings. 80Q-319- apartment. rent is 30% ol
-------$8 ,800 OBO (740 ) 992 _ 3323 Ext. 1709.
your adjusted income call Kilchen cabinets solid wood Rottweifer puppies, born
9fi74 ·
304-675 -6679 between 8· with butcher block tops, gas 8/11 /02, 100% purebred
" - ' - - - - - - - - 2. 3•. and 4 Bedrooms unites 4:30 pm w&amp;ekdays.EHO
stove top &amp; side oven, alec· (not registered) tail docked,
1993 Mobile home, 14x56, available. Pomeroy/MiddleSPA
tric stove, oak kitchen table dewc laws
remOIIed ,
2 bedroom, 1 bath, all appN - port/Racine •••a lmmedla&lt;e
fOR~
&amp; chairs.(304)675-2535
wormed. excellenl lempera7200
740 388
ances. $
· (
)
• occupancy. Hud approved L,~--oiiiiiiiiiiiiii-r Lincoln Plpliner welder, ment 3 males, $1()().-$150,
9900
immediate occupancy pels
.
$2200. 304-675-4975
(740)992-0932
Mobile home lot, ta.kes 121994 Oakwood 14x70, 2 allow, no deposit option.
14" 16 wldes. $100 deposit,
BR, 2 full baths, newly 1-B()()-340-8614
AUCTION
painted ln1erlor. Newer LR -----~--· $ 125 monlh. 1740)446-0175

I

INOT1CEI
OHIO V:ALLEY PUBLISH·
: Windows NIT and DOS.
lNG CO. recommends that
Good CK'Q8nlzatlon skills
do busi
· ~.~ . W-HI work directty
you
ness with peopte
·.,_,hoed of corporato opera- you know. and NOT 10 send
Baud In Point Plftas. money thrOugh lhe.mail until
• ent, WIJ. Sencfresume and
you have lnvestigat~ the
: Alary requirements to:
offering.
ao a -&gt;
• Fruth, Inc., r . DUA 332 '
Start Your Business To• -· 1~--··nt wv 25.."
•·
p·
s
• rvtn ,.._ •
""""'· ~y... nme hOpping Cen·
· s:;n:.Humon .Rooou......
lor Space Ava ilable AI Affordable Rate. 2 Nice E)I8Cutive Offices. Newly ReCillo Volloy Bani&lt; lo now ac· modeled. Spring Valley Pia. 8H(740"••-•••1
; cop1lng opptlcaliono lor the ... C
,.....,.~ ·
• pool1lon of .,...,. 01*0101
~SE!Mwi
.
=11 our OYB Annex in Gllllp.o
I
• ofla. Applleltlona should
following quailTURNED DOWN ON
tie•:
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
"Fut. olflclont worka r
No Fee Untesa We Win!
"Conoldoroblo &lt;act
H!88-582-3345
with customers
•
"Oood loltphone and
It! \I I .., I \ II

Oead'tire4
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. -to 5:00p.-m.

019oimJNny~

' retail store locations. Work·

l\egt~ter

992-2157

or Fax To

t'O

•ing knowledge il'lYOMng

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
or Fax To

VUI,.,_,

.:

Sentinel

~ -6mttnd•

Chl\deare available In down- Country Home with 11-1/2 Must Sell- factory mistake, 2 bedroom mobile home Good Used Appliance$, Re- NEW AND USED STEEL
town """-· private pay acres. 314br. 2ba., 2 Car· 2002 3 BA- 2 SIA. Will sacrl- and 2 acre lot. Very, very conditioned and Guaran- Sleet Beams, Pipe Rebar
only, providing 24 hr. serv- Garage, abQ&lt;.Ie ground pool, fice, many extras, very nice. nice. no pets, located in teed. Washers, Dryers. For Concrete, Angle, Chanice, call (7401992·5827 lor Handcrafted kJ1Chen cabi· Save $8,900.00. (304)736· Rodney. OH. (740)446- Ranges, anct Refrigerators, ne1, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
more intormation.
nets. Oft Leon Baden Rd. 3888. 1-888·736-3332.
1409
Some start at $95. Skaggs For Oratns, Driveways &amp;
(304).458-1580
Applioncts, 76 Vine St . Walkwll~ . L&amp;L ~-· Met·
Georges Sawmill,
,.
~· ..
don1 haul your ~ to the For"We h""" appr011imately 10 3 BR, 2 Bill. wid, cia - exc. (740)&gt;146-7398
sis Open Monday. Tueoday.
-..
sale
by
owner
2
BR
.,
liv·
w~·-·"&amp;
Friday,
Sam·
•75-1957
used homes for under condition. Reterences reml.ll J'ust can~·
oAI"r"V
•
ing room, kit, dining room,
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark 4 30pm Closed Th -"
ba
$2,000, call1..aoo-837·3238 quired $400.00 f mth. w/ &amp;e·
:
.
u,M.Iay,
• Benefits Include: health ,
Top to Bottom Cleaning
th and utility, panial base- for into.
curity deposit call (740) 992- Chapel Road, Poner. Otlio. Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday.
dental, vision. paid vacation, Service, prolossiooal, resl- menl, paUb and front porch, ~
(740)446-7444 1-en-1130- 1740)446-7300
4017 after 6 p.m.
. paid holidays, 401 k ..tire-' dential, ~cleaning, also little over 112 acre, 3 car oa~
9162, Free Estimates, Easy
• men1 plan, and more. Send ard &amp; gutter, at an aftorda· rage, in Bashan clo~ to
AND n
.
...
~..-...
-:----:-:--:---financing, 90 clays same as
Y
.ou~
..
Sears preform cross walk
. : resume and letter of Interest ble price. rr4Q)OIY.I-2979
new
highway going In,
u a·~- 2 ~room lrBller. cash. Visa/ Master Card .
' '
.,.,."
t-"&gt;o
m _
,..
LIVI,I
treadmill, like new; bottle
• 10: Judith smith, PH.D., Di·
Will pressure. wash houses, -..;Kt,OOO.OO
Building tor rent. located at $275. + $275. Deposit. Drive- a- little save aiQI_
gas wall vendess heater; 3

Collla ......,., 011

~rtbune

wv

Pt.

.,..tions:

'

To Place

OH •

1.

(

Jr.

BROKER

•HOMES
• APPRAISALS
• FARMS
• COMMERCIAL
•RENTALS
Cleland •
AUCTION

G)
,__
LENDER

992-2259

AUCTION

�p

Page D6 • 6tWq 1tbnal·6mtind

r•

Ir rWr: Ir rw: Itil

r~

2001 Chevy Siilleraoo Ex 96 Dodge G"'n Ca•a.,.n.
Cab. Quad Cab, loaded, $3495; 99 Dodge Caravan,
red, new tires, 27,000 miles. $4495; 95 Ford Windstar
must sael $19 ,500 OBO. Van, $2595; 96 Fon:l Explor{740}441-1547
er. $5495; 98 CheVy S- 10
Biazer, $7295; 95 Mitsubishi
Montero suv. $4595; 89
Toyota Ex Cab 4114 auto
$2595. B&amp;O Auto 'sales:
----. - - Highway 160N. (740)-44692 Dodge ConverstOO Van, 6865
, owner, lots 01 ~ parts

$2,500.304~75-66

93

Sunday, October 13, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • G.allipolis, OH • Pt.. Pleasant, WV

It AA~:

MmulcrlUS

99 Jeep Saha•a. 33.000 2000 400EX. •uns g•eat. LoiS ol ch"'""', smaU l&gt;od&lt;
miles- new tires, lots of lOOks great. $3500 080. ChiN. intake carb, scoop, &amp;
chrome. Hard &amp; sofr top. (740)441-1716
more, (740)742-3805 eveGarage kapt, excallent connings.

r

r

IMI'IIOVDitNJ!!
BASEMENT

WA~R~
dition. $17,0CXl negotlat»e.
Uncooditionallifetime guar2001 . Harley De~ Su{740)256-1021
CMous &amp;
antee. Local references furperglide, .2,500 !lllies, some
rtloJuR lbDS
nished. Established 1975.
extras, l1ke new. $12,500. ...._
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446(7..0)446-3854 or. (?40)339- ~ 1984 Camper Coachman: .. 0870, Rogers BaSement
1913
32 ft. perfect for perment Waterproofing.
campln site. , Priced reason2002 Kawasaki Prairie V- able good condition!
650 4x4. 1200 miles. Ex· (7.0) 985-4293
e&amp;C Geneml Home Mainla·
tended warranty ~ntil 4·
nence- Painting, vinyt ski2005. 20001b wam·wtnch at·
inn carpen~n~ dOOrS winrl&lt;el · 57 500
1989 Jaco Designed Series ~-~~ ·
''"1•
•
ter ma
t1res
.
. new 3Sft.,Sth.Wheei,Goose
dowS, baths, mobile home
will selt for $5,900. Call
.
repair and more For free
·
( 304 uu:~., 3622 0 (304)6 74 camper, new awn1ng, new
,...._r
- retrigator, 8 lot of extras, e)(- estimate call Chet, 740--9923566
cetlent QOndition.
6323..
(740) 591-6055 o• 367-7221
98 Honda Valkyrie, 1700

I

neck

miles. Lots of extras. $9500.
•
Gatage kept, like new, Deer Hunters Special!
(740)256-1021

I,..,

o~ ··:rs &amp; M~

v•~

DUA

··

FOR SAu:

I

2000 Wive Yamaha Wave
runner, GP 1200R, 155hp,
40 hours, like new/ trailer.
$6500. (740)367:0012 .

1971 Cobra 21 Ft. Trailer
..
'
g~ cond1t1on, no leaks
$1,750.00 Leaw Message
(740) ~

94 2063

,.,-------

Su~rior Home •
Malf'lten~nce
We do au .repairs on homes
. .d &amp; . u1 C
try
ms• e_ a . arpen •

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Gallia Soccer Club's
' BASKET BINGO,
Featuring
Longaberge~ Baskets
Saturday,
November 2, 2002
6:30 pm at the
Elks' Lodge
408 1/2 Second Ave. Gallipolis.
Tickets available at Wood
Realty
.
.
32 Locust Street
Or by calling 740·379·2932
Cost $20 tor 20 games.
Not Sponsore~ ~.the Lo~geb~rg_er Co.

· Gallia County Republican
FALL RALLY
Thursday, October 17th
6:00pm
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Free to the public

OPEN HOUSE
To celebrate ·BOth Birthday ·
Glendon "Cap" Evans
Gallipolis Shrine Club
· October 19, 2002
2 to 5 pm
No gifts please

Afraid to open .
the statement on
r.,
your stock market
· account?
Invest with us.
We've never lost a penny
lor our clients.

I·

Euo1ucAIJ
RD1uGERA11oN .

. Residential or commercial
wiring, new service or repairs. MaS1er Licensed etectrician. Ridenour Elittrlcat,
WV000306, 304-675-1786.

MLB playoffs, Bl

426 Second Ave.
Oct 19 7:30pm •
$10 advance
$12 at the door
Info: 740-446-2787
Looking for a
·better interest rate
on your savings
without risking your

Raffle Tickets

principal?
Fully insured by
A rated insurance
I
•
compan1es
Ronnie Lynch

We Are Moving!

Places To Go
Travel Agency

is lor you.
Berber Carpet

is moving to

$5.95 .
Vinyl flooring $4.95
. 446-7444
starting at

Bv

·

Weather

Plaza

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

1-800-447-8235

For More Info...

Agency!

seeking waitress/bartl'!nder
lor day shift.

Watch For Us!

(10:30 am· 5:00pm)
Must be reliable, honest and
have prior waitress experience . .
Great pay and good tips.
Call 441·9371
or apply in person at
42 Court St, Gallipolis ·

446-8235
1·800~447·8235

Scenic Hills will be having our
ALZHEIMER'S
SUPPORT GROUP
meeting on
October 21st at 6:00pm
here at Scenic Hills. Light
refreshments will be .s~;~rved. ·
Anyone who is interested in
attending please call
Mary ~rrdwood or Kelly Bryant
at 740.446· 7150
l;lershey Kisses tor sale

AKC CHOC. LABS
6-male 3-lemale
Parents on premises W/pedigrees
Born 9/9/02
· $400.00
740· 742·3802

.ATTENTION .
FARMERS
We now have Ag
Lime
CALDWELL&amp;
SONS

High: 60s, Low: 40s
Detlills,Al

Family Insurance

Local Bar and Grill

Outreach

dinner planned

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

POMEROY - There' will
be a mission outreach dinner
at the Poq~eroy United
Methodist
· -.j;hurch
Wednesday. Serving will be.
from·4:30 to 6 p.m. The public is invited to attend.

Are the rates getting too
expensive on your
Plan C or Plan F?
Check out the rates
on our Plan D.

Open on
election d,ay

Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will be open regular hours, 8
· a.m. to 4 p.m. on Election
Day Thesday, Nov. 5.

446-8235
1·800·447•8235

Republicans to
have dinner

245-5316

GUN SHOOT

POMERO¥ - The Meigs
County Republican Party
will have its annual bean
dinner 6 p.m. Oct. 21 at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Donations will be'.taken.

Sunday, October 13
Rutland Gun Club .··
3 Money Matches
Pattern Slug x $100.00
on ·each match. Plus
regular matches.
Everyone welcome.

all

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick.l: 0·5·4
Pick 4: o-9·9·9
Buckeye 5: 6·14·15·20·25
Pick l nigl!t: 1·4·4 ·
Pick 4 night: 1·7·5·8

446·2342 •.992·2156 • 675·1333

on sale now

W.VA.
Daily l: 4·9-5
Daily 4: 0-1-2·6
Cash 25: 3·7·15·16·18·24

Index
2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Co mit's
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

II

AS
B3·4

BS
AS
A4
A3
A3
Bl ·3
A2

c 2002 Ohio Valley Publ~hing Co.

•

I' O I N I l.Llhlt. ,\L

Immerse yourself in all the pleasures of a
European Spa. Experience the latest in spa
thf'rapies and treatments. A llow trained hands
to m~ssage away the remnants of a hard day of
goH or just the cares of the- world, as you relax
in luxury. Experience the popular Hot Rocks
treatment1 Vichy shower,. anti-aging facials or
give yours~lf a work-out in the cardiovascular
workout room. Give yourself over to all the

•

luxury offered in the new 20,000 square foot
spa at MARRI0rr'S GRAND HOTELGou::
RESORT AND SPA, part of the Resort Division
of tbe ROBERT TRENT }ONES GOLF TRAIL.
Enjoy golf at the resort Lakewood Courses or at
nearby championsbip Magnolia Grove courses.
For Spa .reservations call251.990.6385. For · '
g~lf and bote! packages at The Grand or any•
wbere on the Trail, call800.257.3465.

.

'

Plans for the Meigs County
homecoming, a part of the
observance of Ohio's bicentennial, was announced for .
May 10 at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Margaret
Parker, president, noted that a
marker honoring the late
General James Hartinger, a:
native of Middleport, purchased with legacy funds
from the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission, will be dedicat·
ed at I p.m. on Nov. 11, in the
American Legion Park local·
ed on Mill Street in
Middleport.
A second marker to be ded·
icated this year will honor Dr.
George Huntington who is
credited with discovering
Huntington's Chorea while,
practicing in Meigs. County.
A date or location for !hat
monument
,JNas··
not
announced
. Members discussed a pas·
sible expansion of the muse·
urn building and Parker noted
that an architect is being con·
tacted to . develop· plans.
Efforts are being made to get
a grant through Rep. John
Carey, she said.
A !lag was presented to the
Society by Anna Cleland on
behalf of Retum Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of .
the American Revolution.
Trustees re-elected for
three-year tcnns were Joyce
Davis, Howard
Frarik,
Charlene Hoeflich, Rae
-Reynolds Moore, Robert
Wingett, and Marilyn Wolfe.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

1128 Spring Valley

The Lynch Agency

446-8235

Galli a County Council on Aging
ATIENTION
REGISTERED NURSE
Style Station Hair Salon
Registered Nurse needed with
305 Upper ·River Rd . Gallipolis, OH
valid state credentials and mini·
mum of two years applicable
NEEOS!
"""' experience. Full time, flexible 40
hours per week. Must be willing to
Nail Technician
travel within county to provide
Call or Stop in
assessment of homecare con·
sumer and supervision of agency
4.46-2753 • 446·2754
personnel.
Deadline lor applications to be
submitted: October 16, 2002
Annual Turkey Shoot
Equal opportunity employer
Gallia County
'Gun Club
Sunday, Nov. 3, 2002

MOLLOHAN
·cARPET

made .
The search was called off when a
search. dog was unable to find any
trace of Lewis in the area surrounding the lake.
At press time, Trussell said he did
not yet know the circumstances surrounding Lewis ' disappearance. He
said deputies would be talking to
him later today to determine what
happened.

Historical Society
holds 12oth . ,
annual ·meeting ·

Seats inspected

Alic;e Flanagan, 89
Sandra Lances, 47 ·
Detlills~ A3 ·

Next to American

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Trussell said deputies and firefight ·
ers searched the area near
Reedsville until 4 a.m. today.
Authorities were planning to drag
Forked Run Lake today in search of
Lewis, who was camping at Fork ed
Run park while deer hunting,
Trussell said.
Authorities began .searching the
lake area with a dog shortly after
the missing person report was

For Giant Savings

ARIEL Theatre

Ronnie Lynch

•

Deaths

Insurance Plus Agency
will be closed Oct. 18th and
will reopen at previous
location 417 Second Ave.
Oct. 21.

· Real Band-Real theatre

,

• •
ISSIn man
Run. State Park over the weekend
was found alive Monday morning.
Deputies aild firefighters with the
Olive Township Volunteer Fire
Department conducted a night-long
search late Sunday and early today
Bv BRIAN J. REED
for Michael K. Lewi s of the
StaH writer
Cleveland area.
Lewis hl!d been reported missing
REEDSVILLE - A Cleveland by a female companion.
man reported missing at Forked
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph

Nice pop-up camper. Excel· 11--::"-.....-.~

ELVIS

You winterize your car...
Don't forget to winterize
your trees.
Call
Tree Care Specialist
at 446-2015 or
1-866-4DR-TREE

\Nhars inside

Deputies searched
East Fork State Park
until 4 a,m. today

BULLETIN BOARD

..

Meigs County's Hometown Newspaper

plumbtng. yard work. etc.
(740)441.!)113.

lent coMition. Sleeps Si)(,
$700 060. (740)441.()694 ~

foot fishing boat, EUleellent
condition, motor &amp; trailer in·
eluded. S2000 OBO. Call
(740)441-8299
be for~
11am.

Amateur (Ham)
Radio Classes .
Leam 5· wpm Morse Coqe
Class Begins October 15
Tuesday Evenings
7:00·9:00 pm
Basement Meeting Room
Gallia County 911 Center
Call 446·4193 or 245·9432
Sponsored by the Mid·Ohio
Valley Amateur Radio Club

NASCAR: Rookie wins at Concord, 81

I~

POMEROY ·The story of
the · tri·
"umph and
tragedie s
in the 125year history of the
University
of
Rio
Grande
was presented by
Dr. Ivan
Tribe
Tribe at last
week's
I 20th annual meeting of the
Meigs County Historical
Society.
Tribe talked about the
.founding of the cqllege· by
Trooper Shawn Cunningham and Sgt. Chad Neai" of the 'Gallla-Melgs Post of the Ohio State
· Baptists· in 1·876 and its pro,
Highway Patrol inspect a car seat during a voluntary child restraint inspection at Don Tate . gression .over more than a
Motors in P.omeroy Saturday. Troopers assisted inspectors certified by the federal government
century into the educational
in inspecting child restraints and identifying possible safety problems. (Brian. J. Reed)
institution it is today. He
along with Abby Gail
Goodnite wrote a book titled
"Rio Grande from Baptists to
Bevo to the Bell Tower"
which was displayed at the
meeting.
Reports were given on various activities over the past
year including a day camp
for children and Heritage
Day, Ohio Bicentennial activBALl, Indonesia (AP) Many of the victims were school in Jakarta closed as a
ities, and the annual reenact·
Indonesia's defense minister tourists from Australia, as well precaution.
ment of the.. battle of
In Washington, President
blamed al-Qaida and its as
from
Britain,
the
Buffington Island.
extremist allies on Monday Netherlands,
· France, Bush condemned the attack
as
"a
cowardly
act
designed
Keith Ashley reported that
for the massive bomb attack Germany
and Ecuador.
a bill is in the U.S . House of
that killed more than I 80 pe'o- Indonesians were also among to create terror and chaos"
and offered U.S . help in
Representatives which if
pie at a nightclub on the resort the dead.
passed could provide funding
1sland of Bali.
. Two Americans were killed, findi~g the .perpetrators ..
Fearing that terronsts·
for the preservation of endan"We are sure al-Qaida is the U.S. State Department
gered battle!ields such as
here," Matori Abdul Djalil · said, and three others were could str.ike again, thou Buffington Island. ·
. said after a Cabinet meeting in among more than 300 people sands of stunned tourists ·
Jakarta. ''The Bali bomb blast injured. Dozens of foreigners thronged Bali's airport, des.perately looking for flights .
. is linked to al-Qaida with the remained unaccounted for.
cooperation of local terrorAmong the · missing was Many vacationers camped
· ists."
Jake Young , a former overnight-on beaches, shunThe leader of Jemaah University of Nebraska foot· ning built-up areas in case
lslamiyah, a group linked to ball player who had been of more attacks.
"We just want to go back
Osama bin Laden's terror net- workmg as an attorney in
to
our families," said
work, denied involvement and Hong Kon g for a. London·
implicated the United States. based firm. The 34,year-old Carima Sebba, 26, from the
• The defense minister 's was traveling in Bali with Netherlands. "I' m scared, I
statement was the first time his rugby team, and .had not won't be back for a long
that a top government official contacted hi s family since time."
As stocks tumbled .in
had implicated al-Qaida in the blast.
Jakarta
by more than 9 ·perSaturday's attack, the worst of
"We're clil)ging to a thin
ce
nt
Monday
and the
its kind worldwide since the ray .o f hope that he' s going
Indonesian
rupi
ah
also took
Sept. 11 attacks in America. to be found alive," hi s
Until now, police investiga- father, Jacob Young,. said a dive .against the U.S. dol·
tors have said they had few Sunday
night
from lar, many worried about a ·
long-term
decline
in ~
clues and no suspects in the Midland, Texas.
tourism,
one
of
Indonesia's
blasts that tore through the
The U.S. ·Embassy in
Kuta Beach nightclub district. Jakarta, often the target of top industries.
More than 5 million forFBI and Australian detec- bomb threats, ordered all
eigners
visited lndones.ia in.
tives joined the hunt for the nonessential
staff and
2001.
They
inject about $5
killers while forensic experts dependents
to
leave
painstakingly tried to identify Indonesia, the world's most billion into th e economy
Anna Cleland on behalf of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
bodies. Indonesian govern- populous Muslim country. each year.
Daughters of the American Revolution, presents a flag to
No
one
claimed
responsiment officials said 181 people
A bomb threat shut down
Margaret Parker, president. at the 120th annual meeting of
had died, though hospital the embassy's club for a
the
Meigs County Historical Society. (Charlene Hoeflich)
workers put the tlgure at 188. second day. The .Australian
Pleue SH Bill, Al

Bali official blames bombing on
ai-Qaida; US embassy evacuated

Allen

Men

FREE Prostate Screening
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Saturday, October 1 9, ~002
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•

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~

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•

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-'·

.,

'

•'

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