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Page B8

Baseball

The Daily Sentine_l

Frldlly, Cktohr ll, 2001 ;

Gonzo not showing concem.over Mighty Mo might be biggest difference
hitting ilump in postseason ftln between YankS and the rest of the pack
PHOENIX (AP) Luis
Gonzalez carried the Arizona
Diamondback. for most of
the year. In
the . postseason,
his
teammates
have
done
most of the
heavy lifting.
In 10 postseason
games, GooGonzalez
zalez is hit. ting
.237
with two homers and five
RB!s. If he's upset about his
performance, no one can tell.
"If it's bothering me, I'm
not going to show it because
I know there are 24 other
guys that are counting on
me," he said before Thursday's workout at Bank One
BaUpark. ''I'm never going to
show frustration because I
feel my teammates look at
me and a couple of other
guys as leaders in here."
He refuses to let anything
dampen his first World Series
appearance.
"This is fun," he said. "I
reaDy haven't felt like I've
swung my bat bad. We're
winning and that's aU that
matters. That's how our
whole team is taking it."
The man teammates and
Diamondbacks fans know
simply as "Gonzo" has
become the most popular
sports figure in the Valley of
the Sun. His community
work, combined with his
affable, accessible personality
have made him universally
liked by teammates, opponents, reporters and fans.
That personality hasn 't
changed in the postseason,
despite his struggles at the
plate. He's just pleased other
people have taken up the

slack. Craig Counsell, who
usually hits in the No.2 spot
ahead of Gonzalez, batted
.381 in the NL championship
series. Steve Finley is hitting
.357 in the postseason.
"The guy in front of me hit
.400 in the last series,': Gonzalez said, "so if I'm not getting my hits, at lea.t somebody else is, and we're scoring runs and getting W's."
The Diamondbacks aren't
~coring many runs, though.
Fortunately, they don't have
to score a lot with Curt
Schilling and Randy Johnson
on the mound.
Against the New York Yankees, Arizona certainly could
use. more production from
Gonzalez, who batted .325 in
the regular season with 142
RB!s and an astonishirg 57
home runs. ·
Manager Bob Brenly credits St. Louis and Atlanta
pitchers for the way they
handled Gonzalez.
'
"They've made their pitches on Gonzo more often than
not," Brenly said. "I don't
really sense him pressing at
all. I don't sense him doing
anything differently than he's
done all year long. It's just
that consistently they have
made better pitches on him
than they did during the reg' "
u!ar season.
Keeping Gonzalez from
doing damage is a major part
of any opponent's game plan.
"That's a big factor in it,"
Brenly said. "When you look
up and down our stat sheet,
that 57 homers jumps off the
page at you. Certainly he's a
guy that they're going to
have to be very careful with."
Gonzalez is a .classic late
bloomer. After an unspectacular career with stops in
Chicago,
Houston
and

Detroit, he , •erged in his
early 30s as "'·e the game's
best hitters. He doesn't
believe he has succumbed to
the pressure that comes with
his newfound status.
"I've done all right, as long
as we're winning,'' he said .
"That's what's so much fun
about our team. If I hit .050
and we end up winning it,
that's fine. It doesn't matter
who the hero on our team is.
As long as somebody grabs
the keys to the bus and drives
it, that's all that matters."
Because he played for
Detroit, Gonzalez is one of
the handful of Diamondbacks
who knows what it's like to
play in Yankee Stadium,
although it wam 't in a World
Series. Taking his position in
left field will be an exercise
in tolerance and concentration.
"When you walk into Yankee Stadium, the fans are
right on top of you," he said.
"There's no foul territory
there. They sit right on top of
you and they let you know
that you're their house. They
let your know right when
you walk in that 'This is our
ballpark and you're not welcome here. '"
The Diamondbacks are a
tough team to hate, Gonzalez
said, but he expects the Yankee fans to manage somehow.
"We don't 'have any bad
apples on our team. We've
got a bunch of great guys," he
said. "When you run out
there and they're yelling at
you, that means they hate you
because they respect you in
some way or another. If
they're not yelling at you,
you're not doing something
right."

NEW YORK (AP) - He is one of the
thinnest players on the field at 6-foot-2 and
185 pounds, and there's not a hint of the fearsome power in his arm.
That's not the real Mariano Rivera. That's only a
part of it.
"He's got like three personalities," teammate Luis
Soja said with a laugh.
"There's the guy always
playing jokes, having fun,
not letting you sleep on a
flight. There's the guy on the
River~~
mound, he's so serious. And
he's always talking about
God to the Latin guys, ceDing us how important he is to our lives."
Rivera is the best bet in basebaU, the surest
thing this side of the 1919 World Series, saving 22 postseason games in a row.
Yet when the New York Yankees' closer is
asked how he does it, he responds that it's not
his doing.
'~My power," he said, "comes frotn the
Lord."
The balding 31-year-old right-hander who
turns white a.h and black maple into so many
splinters is the most important piece in this
latest Yankees dynasty, the primary pinstriped
player heading into !he World Series that
starts at Arizona on Saturday night.
"If you are going to look at the one guy we
depend on, it's Mariano," Paul O'Neill said.
"The world championships and the things
we've done ride on his shoulders."
New York ha. won 11 straight postseason
series, and Rivera ha. gotten the final out in
I 0 of them, shattering three of Ryan Klesko's
bats in the last inning of 1999. .
Rivera ha.n 't failed in a postseason game
since Sandy ~omar's eighth-inning homer
tied Game 4 of the 1997 division series, and
he may have pitched his most spectacular
inning ever in Game 4 against Seattle. He got
the Mariners out with a three-pitch ninth
that set up Alfonso Soriano's winning homer
in the bottom half.
When manager Joe Torre brings Rivera in
from the bullpen with a lead, New York starts
adding a victory to its record.
"You get excited and you expect it to be
over," Torre said. "You're surprised when they
get the best of him."

r--==--,

After Alomar's homer,Yankees fans worried
that Rivera would become another Mitch
Williams, unable to shake off failure. Pitching
coach Mel Stottlemyre brought it up with
Rivera the following spring .
Not to worry. Rivera's converted 167 of
188 regular-season save chances since then
and is 22-for-22 in the postseason. First batters are hitting .176 (6-for-34 with a walk).
His dominance comes from a cut fa.tbaU, a
95-mph chainsaw that bores onto the fists of
left handers, a pitch he didn't even. throw
until after he replaced John Wetteland as the
Yankees ' closer in 1997. Rivera wa. playing
around on the side with teammate Ramiro
Mendoza, experimenting. Suddenly, the baD
started darting around like a bee.
What w.. that like?
"Ask Mendoza," Rivera said, cackling.
Mendoza said the ball became too unpredictable to catch, bouncing off his glove and
body and leaving a collection of bruises.
"I don't want to play catch with him no
more,'' Mendoza said in a friendly, forceful
way. "Too much hurting."
Rivera remembered how Joe Girardi, then
the Yankees' catcher, scolded him for throw- ·
ing pitches that made him dive forward to
grab. Rivera's face develops a mischievous ·
look when he thinks about the c..k he creates
for Jorge Posada, Girardi's replacement.

2001 WORLD SERIES
\

SIIUrd8y, Oct. rr
New YOlk (Mulllioa 17-11) atAriZoiiA

(Schilling 22-6&amp;::o2 p.m.
8unday,
21
New YOlk (Pettltte 15-1 0) at Mzona(Johnson 21-6), 7:511 p.m.

•
New-

1\taa-. Oct. ao
Arizona (Anc:teftcln 4-8) It
(Cfe11111118 20-3); 8l30j(ll.

Arizona

~~:r·=
deZ 4-7), 8:23 p.m.

.

Thul'ld8Y, New. 1 .

.

.

Arlzon• at New YOlk, It neceMary,
1

8:23p.m. Satunflly, NOv. 3
New YOlk at Arizona, If necessary,
.

7:5$ PJYI·

• • Sut!daY, Nov. 4

.

New YOI1&lt; at Arizona, If 118018181Y.

7'.55 p.m.

•

••
•

SPORIS

INSIDE

TEMPO

Highlights of
Friday's _
action
begin on 81

White House
mail sanitized
in Lima, A5

\Nhat the proposed
new fairground site
may look like, Cl

•

tmes
Building owner weighs damage
JC Penney
:center still open
BY KEVIN KELLY
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS High
winds late Wednesday toppled
a portion of the third floor ·
wall of the Lynch Building in
downtown Gallipolis onto an
adjoining structure, causing
significant damage, its owner
~aid.

But JC Penney Catalogne
Center will remain open and
customers can use the rear
entrance to access the business, Sonseerhay "Sonny"
:Garnes said.
A local demolition crew
~ook off the third floor of the
Lynch Building Wednesday
afier wind loosened support
beams holding up the third
floor front. The 300 block of
Second Avenue was closed
ahd remains cut off to traffic
4ntil the building is secure.
: City Manager E. V. Clarke
Jr. said he ordered the closure
~hen it appeared winds
might cause the front to col- ·
lapse. Officials and the Lynch
Building's owners agreed to
remove the top floor to
remove the hazard. '
: Mrs. Garnes said the waU
9/llapsed around 11 p.m.,
' causing a four-foot hole in
the roof .pf, her build~nlk
whiah ·h ouses the · Plffl.t;~ey
center and the Stone Jai.
Water d&lt;!mage has ensued
and the floors are bowed, she
added, adding up to major
structural damage.
"We're not at square one as
we were, but we're pretty
close," Mrs. Garnes said.
SURVEYING THE SCENE - City officials surveyed the Lynch Building in downtown Gallipolis
But the business, which last week prior to having its unstable top floor removed. A portion of the roofs wall collapsed
onto the Garnes Building, at right, housing two businesses. (Kevin Kelly photo)
PleaseSMDam•p,A&amp;
POLICE DOGThor, a regis·
tered Belgian
Mallnois import·
·ed from the
Netherlands, Is
the newest
commissioned
pollee officer
assigned to the
recently formed
Meigs County Kg Unit. Thor's
duties include
searches and
raids, suspect
apprehension
and narcotics
detection. (Tony
M. Leach
photo)

Community rallies to ·
support K9 unit creation
BY TONY M. lEAcH

Unit.
The unit, funded entirely
POMEROY - Much like th~ough
donations,
was
the comic-book superhero · implemented in May· 2001
wtth the same name, Thor the after an investigation conpolice dog is dedicated to ducted by the Gallia-Meigs
eradicating criminal activity.
Narcotics Task Force revealed
Thor~ a registered B~lgian a serious drug problem emaMalmms Imported from the nating from within and
Netherlands, is the newest around the two -county area.
"The task force's report
cm_nmissioned police officer
aSSigned to the recently indicated that an increasing
formed Meigs County K-9
·
· TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

Brand Naw 2002 CheVy

Brand New 2002 Pontiac

Sunflre SE Coupe

~1,550*
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cassette
• Sporty Equipped!

Extended cab Pickup

Grand Am GT Coupe

~8,850* .
• V-8 Ram Air Power
• Power Windows l Locks
• Keyless Entry, Tilt l Cruise

Silverado Ext. cab 4Door 4x4

Brand New 2001. Pontiac
Montana Extended Van

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Trailblazer LS 4 DoOr 4x4

818,850* 123,950* 123,95 825,55
• V~ Power, Automatic
• Air Cond~lonlng, AMIFU Sterto
Crulss Control, Tilt Steering

• Vortac V-8 Power
• Automatic, Air Cond~lonlng
• AMIFM SIM'eo, Tltt Slalrlng

• Fully Power Equipped!
• Kay!. . Entry, Onstar
• Alum. Wheela, Tltt l CruiH

• 4200 6 Cyllndsr Engine
• 16" Alum. Wheels, Tnrlltr Hitch
• CD System, Tilt Steering

•

PleiH

K·t, Ali

Hl&amp;h: sos
L-: lOs

~·

··1.enttnel
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks ·

He

02-7
jnsert
A4
WahMle d"""'•
B1
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

...

CHIYIOLIT

Buick
It's all

Traffic
stop spurs
arrests
Alleged meth lab
ingredientsfound
in vehicle

arraignment before County
Court Judge Steve Story is
expected Monday morning.
The investigation wa. a
joint effort between Story~
office, State Highway Patrol,
Meigs . County Sheriff's
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Office, Racine manhal and
RACINE -A joint invesU.S. Drug Enforcement
tigation into a traffic stop that Agency, Story said. ·
allegedly yielded ingredients
The arrests stemmed from a
of a meth amphetamine pro- ·
traffic stop on Ohio 124 near
duction laboratory b.. resultRacine Thunday at 10:31
ed in the arrests of three area
a.m., said Lt. Richard Grau,
residents.
commander of the State
Meigs County Prosecutor
Highway Patrol's GaUia~
Pat Stoty said a charge of illegal manufacture of drugs was Meigs Post.
Grau said Trooper B.L. Call
filed Friday in Meigs County
Court against Robert T. stopped a vehicle allegedly
Schoolcraft, 38. Belpre; driven by Schoolcraft on , a
Michael W. Bai-lier, 28, Miner- traffic violation. After obtainal, W.Va.; and Candy A. Ben- ing information liom the driver and Barker, a passenger,
son, 24, Ravenswood, W.Va.
AU three' are lodged in sep- both were found to be sought
arate facilities, Story said. An
PlawH ... Arreltl. AI

•.

~s.a 1~1

committee
V&amp;te expected
Tuesday on .
health board bill
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY A bill
preventing boards of health
from passing smoking regulations like Meigs County's
smoking
ban, without
approval from local legislative authorities, will go to a
full House vote on Tuesday. ·
Senate Bill 128 passed the
House Government &lt;;:ommittee last week, and is
expected to pass the full
House next week, according
to its supporters.
Gov. Bob Taft has pledged
to veto S.B. 128, and to campaign against an override,
'which legislators also expect

to come easily.
The bill, which passed the
Ohio Senate in June, would
give village councils and
township
trustees
the
authority to pa.s any local
regulations relating to smoking and the prohibition of
smoking, taking that authority away from local health
boards.
The bill would also allow
those
local
legislative
authorities to overturn
existing regulations .. pa.sed
by health boards. A ban on
smoking in any public place
and outdoors within five
feet of a building's entrance
was approved by the Meigs
County Board of Health in
September and will go into
effect on Nov. 12.
S.B. 128 w.. sponsored by
,Sen. Lynn Watchmann, RNapoleon, and was support-

Piellse ... 5.8. 111. M

Medi cal Center, Holzer Clinic and the
GALLIPOLIS - An informational Gallia County Health. Department.
The mee ting's purpose is to give the
town meeting on anthrax will be held
Wednesday at 5:30p.m. in th e-Educa- public the opportunity to find out the
tion and Conference Center of Holz- fac ts about anthrax and ask questions
about any concerns they may have
er Medi cal Center.
The ce nter is on the ground floor of about the issue.
the hospit al's Charles E. Holzer Jr.,
On-hand to answer questions and
concerns will be Dr. Gerald Vallee,
M.D. Surgery . Center.
· The me eting is sponsored by Holz er Gallia County health commissioner,

and representatives from the 'Gallia
County Health Department and sheriff's office.
"We are co-sponsoring this informational meeting in response to the
multiple calls and requests from concerned citizens in the community,"
said Nancy B. Childs, RN, BSN,

PluM ... HMC.. Ali

5th Annual Lewis A. Sch~nlclt, MD .
Me1110rlal Cancer Symposium

• Tax09, Tags. Til&amp; F... extra. Rel!alelncluded in sale price of new vehicle Nsted where applicable. "On approved cred~. On selecled models. Not respon~ble lor ljpograplicalerrors.
Prices Good October 26111 Throoq, October 28th.
·
'

Saturday, November 3, 2001
8:00am- 12 Noon

@

gcxXl

(Pre-registration and breakfast at 7:30 am)

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp;Conference Center

www.holzer.org

I

. For more inforn;10tion, call (740) 446-5057.

•
,•

•

•

sJ.25

FROM STAFF REPORTS

"'"""'soot. -

I.

HMC wHI .host anthrax town meeting

Details, :&amp;.2

CH

A6
81-8
Dl

•

•

�I '

•

•

•
_•_wd
__at~C_i_n•_e•_·_i_e_rm_._•w______________~-~Cl~~~~~~~~~L_~-------------1s~-~~~~~·~~d~·~·~r2~·~·2~"~·
TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
lnsu111nce unit

Peoples Insurance acquired Lamben Insurance Agency in November !999. For an insurance review,
contact Lambert at 992-6641.

•OYinl
MIDDLEPORT Lambert
Insurance Division of Peoples
Insurance Agency Inc., has moved
from the Pomeroy office location
to 97 N . Second St., Mi.ddleport.
The move enhances Peoples'
client service associates' ability to
offer customen a wider array of
financial _products . and services,
Peoples Bancorp officials said.
It also offers clients' better ~ccess
to the office and convenient parkmg.
"This move .is a natural progression for the Lambert Agency," said
David Baker, president of Peoples'
Investment and Insurance Services.
"It will allow our clients the
convenience of banking and insurance products in the same place,"
he added. "Peoples Bank is a lUll
service financial center, and the
teaming up of bankers and insurance agents can only be a benefit."
Sally Lambert will remain as the
insurance agency's office manager
and licensed ~ent while assisting
clients with ihelr all their insurance needs.
Other office ·associates are Dottie
Hawkins,
assistant
manager/licensed agent, and
Claudette Haggy, administrative
assistant.

Tax Items due
GALLIPOLIS -The following
items are due to the Gallipolis Tax
Office by Wednesday:
• Third quarter 2001 city income
tax estimates.
• Third quarter 2001 city withholding tax.
• September 2001 monthly
withholding tax.
To avoid late fees, penalties and
interest, timely deposits are recommended.

Immunizations set
GALLIPOLIS Free immunizations will be .offered by the
Gallia County Health Deparltnent
on Nov. 1 fiom 4- 6 p.m. at the
health department, 499 Jackson
Pike.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian, and brlng
a current immunizatioil record
with them.
Additional services, such as
blood pressure checks a.n d pregnancy tests, will fbi:. offered during
the evening hours at the health
department.

Sunny, warmer on Sunday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Weather Service says highs Sunday will
range fiom the mid 40s to the
low 50s, with lows fiom the
mid 20s to the mid 30s.
High pressure that was over
the Dakotas . early Saturday
will begin to build into the
the region late in the day as
the low moves into the
Atlantic Ocean. The high will
dominate the area's weather
through early next week,
bringing dry conditions and a
slow warming trend.
Sunrise Sunday · will be at
6:56 a.m. EST.
W•th•r fol'lcalt:
Sunday... Mostly
sunny.

Highs near 50. North wind 5
to 10 mph.
Sunday night ... Clear. Lows
in the upper 20s.
Monday... Sunny. Highs near
60.
.
Monday night. .. Clear. Lows
in the lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly
dear.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday... Mostly dear.
Lows in the mid 40s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the upper 40s and highs in
the lower 70s.

Bush praises
companies not
laying:off workers
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush praised companies that have decided against
laying workers off during difficult economic times, saying
Friday it was "the Tight thing
to do during this national
emergency." His audience
included executives who have
cut thousands of jobs.
Bush, addressing some 200
business, technology and agricultural leaders in the White
House East Room, said his
administration was deeply
concerned about those who
have lost jobs amid the slumping economy, and he pledged
· to "take the appropriate
actions" to help them.
"I also know that some in
this room .have made a tough
economic decision by delaying

any layoffi or have chosen not
to lay off workers, and I
applaud you for that," Bush
said. "And I th~nk you for
making that decision on behalf
of the workers in America. I
believe it's the right thing to
do during this national emergency!'
Bush did not identify specific companies he was referring
to, and the White House
declined to release ; list of
those who attended.
Among those visible to
reporters was Sun Microsystems chief executive Scott
McNealy. Earlier this month
Sun lowered its ean\.ings outlook for the first quarter and
announced plans to cut its
work force by about 9 percent, ·
or nearly 3,900 jobs.

Correction Polley

Oo!r main coacern In allllorltsllto be

Nlwi 'Dtplltllltenta

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Pamcroy, Ollio Poll office.
Mnlbitn The Anoc:illed Prtu, and the Ohio
~t':llion.
: Send ldlhu comctionlto The
Sulldly-limu Scnti.ncl, Bl$ Third AYC.,
O&amp;llipolla.Ohio 4S631.
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De.,.- ii1\1lidooo an:

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Ohio.

accunte. If you k~ of an error In a
slory, &lt;til the newsroom at (740) ~
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thtek your lnformatlo• and makf a
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OIIHpctlla .

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Commanlt7 Newlplptr Hftki.IQ 1 1ftt'.
Published cmy Sunday, 125 1'hird Ave ~
Oallipoli1. Ohio, by lhc Otllo Valley Publilhlna
Company. Second dan posll&amp;e pUd II Oallipollt,
Entered 11 ~eeond e\us mailinJ matter

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...

Parenting class
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Health Department is offering a
free parenting class on Tuesday
from 6:30-8:30 p.m .
For details, or to sign up for a
class, call 446-8538 or 441-2956.

Vision clinic
GALLIPOLIS - A free vision
clinic is offered by the GaiHa
County Health Department on
Nov. 8, beginning at 8:30 a.m.
The clinic is available to county
residents aged 0-21 . For details, or
to schedule an appointment, call
441-2953. The health department
is at 499 Jackson Pike, Suite D.
An appointment is required.

Program slated
GALLIPOLIS Washington
Elementary's Veterans Day program
and poster contest is Nov. 8 at 2
p.m. AU veteran&gt; and public welcome.

Parade on tap
VINTON - Vinton's Veterans
Day parade and program is Nov.

11.
The parade forms at Vinton Elementary at 4:45 p.m. and will be
downtown by 5. A program with
light refreshments follows the
parade at the village hall.
For details, contact Mayor
Donna DeWitt at 388-8327.

BY BRIAN J. RUD
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY - "I was
looking for a dream como
true, and I got a nightmare,
instead."
Linda Wesolowski told
Meigs County commissionen Friday about the problems she has experienced
with repain to a house she
purchased through the U.S.
Department of Agriculture/Rural Development
and the county's Community · Housing Improvement
Program.
Wesolowski bought her
house near Dexter using
down payment assistance
and other subsidies, and has
experienced
subsequent
problems due, she said, ·to
inadequate inspections and
faulty repairs.
Wesolowski said she has
experienced problems with
her septic tank system, her
furnace and ducrwork, the
foundation and other structural weaknesses, all of
which surfa~ed after she
dosed on the sale.
The local CHIP has paid
for a number of repairs to
the house, some of which,
she said, were made more
than once because of poor
workmanship. Now, CHIP
and Rural Development
have refused to pay for additional repairs, although both
agencies hold mortgages on
the home.
She estimates that needed
repairs could cost in excess
of$8,000.
·
"All I want is to have my
house fixed correctly,"
Wesolowski said. "Why
would the government want

Evander
Holyfield
FAYETTEVILLE, Ga. (AP)
-Boxer Evander Holyfield is
pressing charges against a man
who allegedly plowed his car
through - the gates of Holyfield's suburban Atlanta home.
Michael D. Copeland, 39, of
Jonesboro, was charged with
criminal damage to property.
Copeland told police he
was a postal worker and
became disoriented Wednesday evening when he felt a
burning sensation on his skin,'
said Maj. Bruce Jordan of the
Fayette County sheriff's
department.

•

POMEROY - A default judgment has been issued ill Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
Beneficial Ohio Inc., against Timothy T. Klein, and others.

POMEROY -- Marriage licensVINTON - Due to mechanical es have been issued in Meigs
difficulties with the trash truck, Counry Probate Court to Brad
Vinton village cleanup day has Allen Davenport, 22, Pomeroy. and
been rescheduled to Nov. 3 from 8 Brandy Jean Graham , 18, Pomeroy;
a.m until noon.
Elmer Benjamin Parsons II, 23,
"We apologize for any inconve- · Syracuse, and Rachel Lynn Allen,
nience that this delay might cause," 19, Syracuse; and to Oris Allen
Hubbard, 80, Syracuse, and .Gladys
Mayor Donna DeWitt said.
Irene Barrett, 65, Pomeroy.

Boosters to meet
CHESHIRE River Valley
High School Athletic Boosters has
changed its meeting date to Tuesday, at 7 p.m. in the high 'school
cafeteria. All parents and supporters are urged to attend.

HMC notes
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 25 - none.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Lucas, daughter, Crown City.
(Pu,blished with permission)

Council to meet ·
RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council will meet in special session Monday at 5:30 P·'11· to .
approve a renewal tax.

Meeting sla,ed
CHESTER Chester-Shade
Historical Association will hold its
quarterly meeting on at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Chester Courthouse.
Plans will be completed for the
Christmas season open house,

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe today. ·
446-2342

to hold a mortgage on a
house that's falling apart?"
Cominissioner JeffThornton said Friday the CHIP
guidelines allow a maximum
expenditure for each house
purchased under the program, but said that he would
investigate Wesolowski's case
and.arrange a meeting with
· the agencies involved in the
tinancirii.
The board also:
• Appointed Maureen
Hennessy of Pomeroy to
serve on the Meigs County
District Public. Library
Board, to replace Charles
Blakeslee, who resigned;
• Approved transfers of
funds for the sheriff's office
and EMS;
• Accepted a bid for bituminous
materials
for
November from Asphalt
Materials Inc., Mari~tta.
• Approved payment of .
bills in the amount of
$183,006.38.
Present were Commissioners Thornton, Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets,
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

9t~ut5D~'P~

. 'Pife4tflt4,

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~"'e"-'"9 ~ ,,
~

Se,&amp;J

U.S. jets pound
JOM
QADAM,
Mpnistan (AP)- U.S.jea
pounded Taliban fiont-line
positions north of the capital
city of Kabul on Saturday in
what opposition fighten and
local people described as the
heaviest such bombardment
· of the air campaign.
Pakistan's president, meanwhile, warned that the war
in Afghanistan could become
· a "quagmire" for the United
States and its allies. l'!early
-three weeks of daily air
. attacks have failed to break
the Taliban's hold · on
· Mghanistan or enable opposition forces to make significant advances against the Taliban.
In
the
north
of
Afghanistan, U.S. jets roaring
over the opposition-held
Shomali plain swooped
·down and dropped massive
bombs in an offensive that
lasted most of the day. Gul
Agha, an opposition fighter,
said he counted more than
20 bombs, and an elderly
·local farmer, Saeed Khan,
· called it the heaviest such
·bombardment 10 date.
Tracer fire arced through
. the skies, and lou'd explo-

sions rang out. Some of the
areas Were bombed for the
fint time, residents said.
The private, Pakistanbased Afghan Islamic Press,
citing Taliban officials, said
nine people had died and 15
were hurt in those raids, but
gave no details.
Taliban lighten fired surface-to-air guns at the American warplanes and rockers
and mortars at fighters of the
opposition
movement
known as the northern
alliance. Explosions fiom all
sides rang out at the front
line at Jom Qadam, 25 miles
north of Kabul.
At the other main front
line - the strategic northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif
- the Taliban claimed Saturday to have beaten back a
new opposition ·push. The
Afghan press also reported
five opposition commanders
had been captured in that
battle and immediately
hanged.
Later, though, the ·agency
quoted a Taliban spokesman ,
Mullah Amir Khan Muttaqi,
as saying no such hangings
had taken place.

nfront

US 33 and S.R. 7 • Pomeroy, Ohio

Saturday, November 3, 2001
Door opens at 6:00p.m. $3.00 suggested
donation at the door
'
(Love offering will be received)

U.S. planes hit Red

'

READY TO FIGHT - A Taliban fighter holds an anti·tank
launcher on the Torkham. Afghanistan border with Pakistan.
(AP)

Investigators think same person sent anthrax letters
WASHINGTON (AP) Handwriting analysis and profiling are leading investigaton
to increasingly suspect that
one person wrote the three
letters contaminated with
;mthraic and that the person
·spent significant time in the
United StateS, officials say.
The officials cautioned Friday they have not identified
-specific suspects and continue
io consider a variety of theories, including that a deranged
U.S. resident with a biochemical backginund, ·a terroritt or
,
hate group, foreign country
or some· combination carried
out the attacks.
Officials said, however, there , MAIL SCARE- Tlffanl Belk of Washington drops off packages
has been no evidence or intel- · from her employer at a Fed Ex t)ffice In downtown Washington.
ligence ro connect 0sarna bin · It's too early to say how the anthrax scare will affect how we
Laden and his al-Qaida netthings from one person or business to another, but deliv·
work to the attacks and that ery professional$ predict that alternatives to enveloped mall
other extremisu are being will benefit. (AP)
considered.
Ari Fleischer fur the first time and foreign labs for people
FBI protilen have examined Friday acknowledged · the who may have had access to.
the significance of the targets
spores could easily have been the lethal bacteria and were
chosen so far - media outlets
and a Democratic politician produced in the. United States, awaiting test results to identifY
who could be despised by by a Ph.D.-level microbiolo- the specific chemical that is
ultraconservative extremists gist in a small, well-equipped believed to have been added,
to the anthrax to make it more
laboratory.
)nd isolationists.
FBI agents are scouring U.S. airborne, the officials said.
: White House spokesman

•One official said there was
evidence the . mailed anthrax
had a chemical additive. The ·
official said it wasn't known
yet ~hether the additive was
bentonite, which was used in
some biological weapons programs, or some other material.
The officials, all of .whom
are involved in the investigation, described the current
theories of the case on condition of anonymity ·and cautioned that their descriptions
provide only a snapsh0 t.
Th.ey said the three letters
known to carry anthrax have
distinct similarities.
The letters to NBC News
anchor Tom Brokaw and the
New York Post appear to be
photocopies. The formation of
the block letters on the third
letter, to Senate Majority '
Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
' in the
are similar to the !etten
Brokaw and New York Post
letters.
However, the Brokaw and
Post letters contain some !louhie-writing of the letters "A"
and ' T" that is not evident in
the Daschle letter, the officials
noted.

WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. warpbnes mistakenly
bombed Red Cross warehouses and a nearby residential area in Kabul for the second time in a month. the
Pentagon acknoWledged Friday.
In separate raids late Thursday and early Friday, F/A-18
jell dropped rwo one- ton
bombs on the Red Cross
warehouse complex, the
Defense Department said in a
statement. Two B-52 Stratafortress
bombers
each
dropped three one-ton
bombs on the same complex,
which was mistaken for a Taliban military warehouse.
During Thursday night's
attack, an FI A- lB tried to hit
the warehouse complex wi9I
a 500-pound bomb that
landed in a residential area
about 700 feet away, the Pentagon said. That bomb's guidance system may have malfunctioned, the statement
said.
The Defense Department
said that "prelin1inary indications are that the warehouses
were struck due to a human
error m the targeting
process."
"Two of the six warehouses hit had been inadvertendy
struck by U.S. aircraft on .
Oct. 16 because the Taliban
had used them previously for
storage of military equipment, and military vehicles
had been seen in the vicinir:y," the statement said.
The Red Cross reported
that no one was injured in
the latest mistaken bombing,
the Pentagon said.
· President Bush said Friday
that U.S. airstrikes are graduc

1

llafiMII'IIIl'IIIJolfiTrla 11. .

llhllllllre ,...IllIll fl88.1

21, 2001

Cross warehouses

aet

I •

SUBdiJ. 0 *'t1r

I

a

Meigs High School

PageA3

·Bush.signs anti·teiTOrism bill

ally eroding theTahban's military strength and setting the
suge for defeat of the shadowy al-Qaida terrorist network.
Bush spoke on the 20th
day of airstrikes aimed at
bringing down the radical
Islamic Taliban regime and
rooting out the al-Qaida terrorists believed to be linked
to the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.
"We're slowly but surely
'dismantling Taliban defenses,
Taliban military installations,
the Taliban command and
control structure - all aimed
at bringing the al-Qaida
criminals to justice:· the president said in a speech 10 business, trade and agricultural
leaden at the White House.
Bush urged Americans to
be patient as the U.S. military,
with support from Britain
and other allies, carries out a
carefully drawn strategy that
combines air power with less
visible special operations on
the ground.

'

Ladies
Diamond
UP Clusters
TO

1/1
OFF

Beginning November 1,
Rio Grande Community College/University of
Rio Grande will offer a "Basic Computing"
class for senior citizens 60 years of age and
older. The class meets from 6-9 p.m. in the
Bob Evans Farms School of Business
Computer Lab room 204 and will run every
Tuesday and Thursday night for three weeks.

•Learn how to operate a computer.
•Learn how to email friends and family.
Your cost is only $5.
Because the class is iimited to
22 people, sign up now

... First come, First serve.
today's sophisticated terrorists. one pen, handed it to House
WASHINGTON (AP) "We may never know what Judiciary Chairman Jim
President Bush signed an
' //'lr -~ ,., horrors our country was Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., and
(II
-·t J · / -t ... J /01 til/ .
anti-terrorism bill Ftiday that
by
the
diligent
and
spared
gives police unprecedented
distributed souvenir pens to
determined . work of our everyone else. Senate Judiciaability to search, seize, detain
police forces . .. under the ry Chairman Patrick Leahy,
or eavesdrop in their pu[Suit
most trying conditions," Bush
of possible terrorists. "This
D-Vt., too~tures from the
said. "They deserve our full
government will enforce this
support and every means of stage wi!tlhis own camera.
law with all the urgency of a
help that we can provide."
nation at war,'' he said.
Lawmakers,
concer11ed
Federal officials said they
about possible abuse of
plan to use the new powen
power, put an expiration date
right away, prompting civil
on part of it. Unless Congress
libertarians to voice anew
renews the anti-terrorism law
their concerns that cherished
before Dec. 31, 2005, th e
American freedoms will be
eavesdropping sections expire.
sacrificed in the interest of
The president, an f.m erican
safety. The American Civil
George W. Bush
llag pin on his lapel, signed
Liberties Union pledged to
sonal
freedoms
protected
by
the bill in an East Room cermonitor police actions closec
the·
Constitution.
But
given
emony along with Vi ce Presily, and scheduled a meeting
the
magnitude
of
the
Sept.
11
dent Dick C heney, homeland
with FBI Director Robert
attacks, he sai.d, the nation had security director Tom R.idge,
Mueller.
CI A
Director
"This bill goes light years little choice but to update Mueller,
beyond what is necessary to surveillance procedures "writ- George Tenet and nine mem_combat terrorism,'" said Laura ten in the era of rotary tele- bers of Congress.
He signed his name with
· Murphy, ACLU Washington phones" to better combat
: director. "While we are ourRepresentatives from the Gallia County Health Department and
: selves concerned for the
the Gallia County Sheriff's Office will be on hand.
· country's safety, we are also
concerned by the attorney
general's apparent gusto to
Sponsored by:
implement certain provisions
Scipio Township
in the bill that threaten liberHOLZER
ty." John Ashcroft, who
MEDICAL CENTER
CLIN IC
pressed hard for the bill's passage, said Thursday he would
Your full time trustee
Gallla County Health
use the new powers quickly.
Your vote wU1 be areatlt appreciated
;tl
Bush said the legislation
call (740) 446·5446
Department
..
P&lt;lid for by 1he c;md id ntc, 36995 Vnnce Ro;~d, Pomeroy, Ohio
d
"upholds an · respects. per-

I

A Rate Changer CD from Fitrniers Bank

will onty go ap·
in value, it can't go down and that's guaranteed and Inaui'ed by the FDIC. · '

.'

Unlike the stock market, a Farmers Bank Rate Changer CD is a safe and sure
way to invest for the future . .Vou can call in, once for a 3 year CD and twice fo
a 5 year CD and we'll bump you up to the higher percentage rate being paid.
Simply put, you'll make more money!
·
With a Rate Changer CD there's only one way for your Investment to go
and that's up, so call Farmers Bank now and watch your investment grow. .

Call Now. This Is a limited time offer. .
• Pomeroy 992-2136 • Gallipolis 446-2265 • Tuppers Plains 667-3161
Rate Changers CO's are in 3 and 5 year terms. Penalty for ea~y wHhdrawal .
Farmers Bank directors. officers. employees and their families are not eligible.

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Enter to win at any Farmers
Bank Location.

.

lnfor111atlonal Town Meeting
on Anthrax
Wednesday, October 31, 2001
5:30PM

Member FDIC

Win a $1,000 CD I rom
Farmers Bank
~~
live
on the
.
radio on
Dec. I4!
,,

~

Issued judg11tent

Licenses issued

.Village cleanup

Officials review ,
housing complaint

PEOPLE

6unbap .;Qthnef 6mtinel
Reader Services

No au vaccine will be given at
this date. A later date will be set to
offer au vaccine.

America at

PageAl

·

Holzer Medical Center Education &amp;Conference Center

Bobby W. Vance

All are

TRUSTEE

Welcome

For more lnformatlotl,

H8L'ER ua
l'l!i'
•

�..

PageA4

Page AS

Sunct.y, Odober H. 2001

Sunct.y. October 28, 2001

Mail intended for White House to be sanitized in Lima
COULD
'IOU QUIZ

Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Plea1141nt, W.Va.

ME (»..MV
WCA8ULARV?

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shewn Llwl8

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

LIMA (AP) - Mail from a now
closed postal facility that processed
an anthrax-laced letter will be sterilized hy a private company before
being sent back to Washington.
Ralph Stewart, a spokesman for
the U.S. Postal Service, said mail
from the Brentwood postal facility
would be sterilized at Titan Scan
Technologies, which normally specializes in medical product sterilization.
"This is being done purely as a
precautionary measure," he said. "No
one suspects that there's anything
wrong with this mail."
The first truck arrived Thursday

Managing Editor

Larry Boyer

01.-Kay HIU
Centroller '

Advertising Manager

,...._AI'....,

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art' utbft'l·t w tdiring 11rul 1111111 ~ '~"etl•ml iMift* .,..._.,., p t r ,......,
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J'llbl11hing C&lt;J. \ l'dituria/ board. IUIItn uthtf'f6is•IHII•

NATIONAL VIEW

1\vo indicted in pom case

,

Finish

•

Bipartisanship wondeiful, but ·
don't lose sight of bad proposals
• The Paducah (Ky.) Sun, on rhe biparrisan mood and congrrssiomrl lcaders:The mood of bipartisan good feeling in Washington may change soon if congressional leaders can't show
some restraint in putting together an economic stimulus package .... ·
·
The nation's 'democratic institutions and traditions are strong
enough to withstand the assaults of those who hate freedom.
Still, there's a 'danger that members of Congress will try tO
usc the events of Sept. 11 to advance pet ideas and programs
that could not withstand scrutiny under ordinary circumstances.

A bad proposal is still a bad proposal; bipartisan goodwill cannot erase the consequences of flawed programs ....
The president and Democratic and Republican leaders in
. Congress agree that some combination of tax cuts and new
spending is needed to keep the economy from falling into a
prolonged recession. Already the president has listened to the
appeals of Democrats and substantially increased spending
packages to aid New York City and the struggling airline ipdustry.
These measures were defensible, but the president should
adamantly resist, even to the point of using his veto authority,
the developing drive by Senate Democrats for massive additional spending.
· · ·
.
Bush has offered a stimulus plan that appropriately emphasizes short-term tax relief, in the form of 'rebates for lowerincome taxpayers, and other tax cuts that would give the eco~­
omy a needed boost.
House Republicans have come up with proposals 'aimed at ·
spurring job-creating business investment. In terms of wc·policy, it makes sense to balance business investment inc011tives
with consumer confidence measures.
But it' does not make sense to ·launch a rnajor·program of sOcalled infrastructure spending.

OUR READ.E RS' VIEWS
Getting radical
Dear Editor:
On Sept. 29, 2001, ground was broken
fur the new veterans home in Georgetown, Ohio, which is long overdue. In the
last two or three years, the location of such
a home has been kicked around. I guess
politics finally settled the location. At one
time we thought it would be located here
in Meil?l' County, as a very generous lady
offered to donaie the land for it. But as
always, Meil?l' County lost out.
When the new home opens in 2003, the
!!3te still won't have 'enough beds for its
llging veterans population. A Federal estimate shows a shortfall of roughly 1,300
beds by the end of the decade.
Although two more homes are to be
built in Waihington and Ross counties, if it
takes as long to get these two homes built
as the last one probably it won't be needed
as we all will be deceased.
Our governor said school funding
among other thin&amp;" come first If it hadn't
been for our vetemtS the schools would
probably be learning Japanese and Ger-

man,.

.

.

.

.~ ve~ h~me 1S more than~ commwuty p10Ject.It 11 part ofthe pronuse that
was
to vetemtS wh.en th~ went off
to fight m those lousy police acl:lons and so
called wars which we never won. Our vetemtS went overseas and fought and came
back home and fought for our benefits.
It's a shame we only have one wterans
home ~d it was built in 1~8. It is a three
hour drive for veterans m southeastern
. Ohio and it only has 727 beds. But the state
can build a sports stadiwn which does very
little fur an old soldier.
If it takes something like what happened
•
in New York and Washington to get the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
politicians'
attention anfl the vetemtS are
Tochy is Sunday, Oct. 28, the 301st day of2001.T~ere are 64
the greatest at this time, it's a sad situation.
days left in the year. A reminder: Daylight Saving Time en.ds at
2 a. m. locally. Clocks go back one hour.
But when tills is all over; the vetemtS will
· Today's Highlight in History:
be on the back burner again.
On Oct. 28, 1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act, whiCh
Our VA hospitals· are full of candidates
provided for enforcement of Prohibition, over President WIJ..
fiom the previous wars. Our lawmakers
son's veto.
S\Iould visit these hospitals and talk with
these veterans. If more of tills happened
On this date:
'.
In 1636, Harvard College was founded in Massachusetts.
maybe things would change to help our
In 1793, Eli Whitney applied for a patent for his cotton gin
veter.ms.
I have the name of being a radio¥. You
(the patent was granted the following March).
,
In 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of
bet I am, and if more people got radical and
France, was dedicated in New York Harbor hy President ClevestoOd up for what they believed in, more
land.
tfrings would get done.
In 1922,fascism came to Italy as Benito Mussolini took conDenver 0. Curtis
trol of tht· government.
Bidwell
ln 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt rededicated the Statue of Liberty on its Sllth anniversary.
.
In 1940, Italy invaded Greece during World War II.
Dear Editor:
In 1958, the Roman Catholic· patriarch ofVenice, Angelo
On Sept. 11, 2001, terrorists landed a
Giuseppe Roncalli, was elected pope; he took the .name John
murderous blow against the World Trade
XXIII.
Center
and the Pentagon. They slr\lck hard
In .1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the
against fieedom in America and around the
United States that he had ordered. the .dismantling o£ Soviet
world.
missile bases in Cuba.
·
Right away. we saw the men and women
In 1965, Pope Paul VI issued a decree absolving jews of colof our Armed Forces placed on the highest
lective guilt for the crucifixion of jesus Christ.
level of alert. American troops then
·In 1980, President Carter and Republican presidential nomdeployed to the center of the storm, set to
inee Ronald Reagan faced off in a nationally broadcast, 90strike against ihe enemies of all civilized
minute debate in Cleveland.
people.
Ten years ago: Two days before the start of a Middle East
The weeks since the attack have been
peace conference in Madrid, Spain, President George H.W.
tense. All of us grieved the dead in New
Ilush sought to lower expectations for a dramatic breakYork, in Washington and in Pennsylvania.
through, saying there was a "long, long way to go."
All of us witnessed that our world had
Five years ago: Itichard Jewell, cleared of committing the
changed and changed forever. The difficult
Olympic par~ bombing, held a news conference in Adanta In
days continue.
which he thanked his mother for standing by him and lashed
On this Veteran's Day. Americans cannot
out at reporters and investigators who had depicted him as the
deceive themselves about the glory of war.
bomber. Comedian Morey Amsterdam died in Los Angeles at
Our sons and our daughters confront the
age 81.
·
specter of worldwide terrorism. We cannot
One year ago: The party of moderate Ibrahim Rugov:~ won
ignore the fact: There is very little glory· in
Kosovo 's municipal elections. David Trimble, leader of North· war. But there is suffe;ing! There is pain!
ern Ireland's biggest Protestant party, narrowly won a crucial
There is sickness, blood and death! These
party battle, keeping alive the province's power-sh~ring govare the true human costs of war.
ernment.
Most believe that a grateful government
Today's Birthdays: Former baseball commissioner Bowie
meets all the needs of our veterans, no
Kuhn is 75 Actress Joan Plowright is 72. Actress Suzy Parker a
68. Musician-songwriter Charlie Daniels· is 65. Actress Jane
questions asked. They feel sure our nation
would never fail its veterans.
Alexander is 62. Singer Curtis Lee is 60. Actor Dennis Franz Is
Nearly three-quarters of a million veter57. Pop singer Wayne Fontana is 56. Actress Telrna Hopkins is ·
ans claims are caught up in a backlog in the
53. Olympic track and field gold medalist Bruce Jenner is 52.
Department ofVeterans Affairs.
Actress Anni ~ Potts is 49.
·
'

rna'!&lt;

TODAY IN HISTORY

Honor veterans

I'

'

..

Raina Garber
Veterans often wait years befOre their
Prevention Educator, FACTS
claims are resolved. As the veteran populaGallipolis
tion ages, many World War II and Korean
War veterans die before that happens.
. If America's citizens were mindful of
their veterans. tills conld never occur. Yet it
has been happening for yean.
Dear Editor:
I wish to thank our community for
Something must be done to help people
remember that vetemtS have sacrificed and their most generous support of the Ohio
continue to sacrifice- not only in timc.of Valley Symphony and Ariel Theatre durcrisis like this, but for aU time.
mg the recent Maestro for a Moment
Please remember on tills Veterans Day . campaign. Through the combined ef!Orts
that our nation's disabled veterans pay the . of candidates Josette Baker and Joe
price of fieedom with pain and hardship Moore, an&lt;.l our creative campaign manthat never end.
~
agers, Steve McGhee, Peggy·Evans and Ed
May you be blessed. And. in tills hour of Dachowski, we raised almost $25,000.
trial, may those blessing faD upon the UnitThe money amounts to approx:rmately
ed States of America.
25 percent of the annual operal:lng budget
M. Darby for the Ohio Valley Symphony. The gen- .
Adjutant erosity of•our Ohio River Valley in the
Unit 53, DAV Auxiliary support of the performing arts during tills
/
Bidwell time of national tragedy is most impresstve.
It has been said, "Music, in all ages,.has
inspired people with hope, kindled their
Dear Editor:
love, given a voice to their joys, cheered
Well, Meigs County, it looks bad for us. them bnto valorous deeds and soothed
We are losing jobs left and right and the tax them in times of despair ... Music is a
collectioru for the county are going down. necessaty luxury to all."
· Raising taxes isn\ the answer,We pay too
The historic Ariel Theatre is more than
many t:axes now. ·
bricks and mortar. While the backbone is .
Our government needs to send our the Ohio Valley Symphony, "it takes a vilcounties more tax doOm back fiom the lage" to ensure the Ariel's survival.
·state. I hate to say it, but cutting back on
Thank you for allowing me to be the
personnel is the only way big comp;mies Maestro for a Moment 2001. It was
do it, 50 they don't have to raise prices. indeed a great honor to represent our
Counties do it, so t:axes don't have to be community while conducting the Ohio
raised, and if elected officials don't do it, Valley Symphony while they played a
then the voters have no choice but to vote thundering rendition of"Stars and Stripes
"no" on new taxes.
Forever." God bless America.
America is taxed to the hilt, so Meigs
Dr. Alice A. Gricoski
County, let's start tightening up our belt
Gallipolis
straps now. Our only way out is jobs. Let's
all work to get evety project started we can.
My pet peeve is county water. It will turn
over and over for Meil?l' County when you
Dear Editor:
have water. Our .county has several busiI s.1w ,a picture of an ice mountain in
nesses that we don'i have that could survive Afghanistan and their rough land.
here. Let's get them and we must push for
Ninety-five percent of the time, most
more industrial sites in the county and let's things can be pro or con, or pro or antinot let our old school buildings go for strength can be weakness - weakness can
nothing.
be made strength.
Some areas have very little housing. Let's
If we were not hurting Afghanistan, the
turn some of these old school buildings · Muslim countries would not be protesting
into low-income housing · O( old age the U.S.
homes for the elderly. There is a lot of good
If they want to live in cold ice hills and
here in Meigs County. Let's wake it up for mount1ins wich little food and clothes, and
jobs. Let's get our county growing again warmth or heat, let them do it.
and our people back to work. Let's rem em- . We should keep on bombing cities, viiher elected officials, every project, no mat- !ages, military bases and terrorist camps, and
ter if it's only a sttip mine reclamatiC?njob, let the hiUs and mountains alone. We
it's tax dollars for our county. Let's go to should force them to use up all their.stockwork on new projects. It's time for elected piles of supplies.
leaders to lead.
And this most important item- give no
· Floyd Cleland one of them any kid of aid.
Rudand
Keep it up day and night for one year.
No ground troops go in.
Rex Lee Roberts
Gallipolis

· A great honor

Ellen

Leaders must lead

No help for them

Blaze guts fireman's house
CANTON (AP) - A firefighter returned from work to
find his own home burning.
Tim Bagley's two-story house is now a boarded-up shell
that. will need to be rebuilt from the ground up.
·. Bagley called 911 from a cell phone Friday morning after
arriving home to see flames shooting from a second-floor
window. As smoke alarms blared from inside, he watched
'wind-fueled flames cutting from the second floor to the
attic and blowing out the roof.
Fellow Canton firefighters arrived three minutes later. "It
'was already through the roof," said Battalio? Chief R~y
Harple. "Flames were shooting about 20 feet mto the atr.

Ex-doctor labeled a predator
CENTERVILLE (AP) - A former physician accused of
attempting to rape a patient was granted probation Friday
but was labeled a sexual predator.
, Montgomery County prosecutors said they reached a
plea agreement with rormer Dr. Dasharathram R. Nal.
.
abolu, 51.
· The woman who made the allegation against Nalabolu
died Sept. 19 of P!'eumonia.
She left behind a letter to Common Pleas Judge David A.
Gowdown. In it, she accepted probation for Nalabolu if he
surrendered his physician's license, pleaded to a sexual
offense and paid restitution for her financial losses.

Jury convicts fonner troOper
. LEBANON (AP) -A former state trooper was convict. ·ed of abducting and assaulting a female Cincinnati police
officer after an evening in a Dayton nightclub.
Richard Kelley, 36, of Batavia, was acquitted Friday by a
Warren County Common Pleas Court jury of the felony.charge of disrupting public service. He was found guilty of
·felony abduction and misdemeanor assault.
.
. .
. Judge Neal Bronson ordered a presentence mvest1gat10n
before deciding punishment, whtch could be probatton.

vice, he said.
back to Titan, he said.
Stewart said no further shipments
The three men who opened the
of mail would be made to Lima until truck will take the antibiotic Cipro
the first shipment had been sanitized, as a precaution until tests confirm
a process that likely won't be finished whether anthrax was present, said
until the middle of next week.
Dave Rosebrock, AUen County
Only the first truck was opened health comntissioner.
Friday because three workers discovRuss Decker, head of the ADen
ered openings in some of the biohazard bags used to ship the mail."Some County Emergency Management
of the mail shipment had shifted dur- Agency, said the community should
. not worry about anthrax exposure.
ing transport," Stewart said.
The truck was being moved to a
"The mail and everything else at
secure location, where the mail will this point is totally contained. I fed
be resealed in the biohazard bags, comfortable that we don't have any
Stewart said. Another truck will be bacteria being released from the
brought in to ship the resealed mail Titan plant," he said.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Ollice is starting a K-9
unit for the county. A K-9 unit is probably one of the
Qreatest assets to law enforcement.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Office is soliciting
donations for the unit. MA community service by the
community."
A donation from you would be greatly appreciated by the
Sherill'a Ollice and the community.

Tbpnking YOU in adyance
for supporting the Meigs Countv K-9 Unit.
Dan's, Valley Lumber, Vaughan's, Lowe's, Acquisitions, lngals, Kings Ace Hardware,
Keller's Excavating, R&amp;G Feed, Jeff Wamer Ins., Insurance Plus, O'Dell Lumber,
Farmers Bank, Hart's, Snouffer Fire &amp; Safety, Locker 219, Joseph Freeman, Post476,
Bernard V. Fultz, Overbrook Center. Judge Robert E Buck, Jeffers Coal Trucking &amp;
Excavating, Ken's Appliance, Swisher &amp; Lohse, ChristopherTenoglia, Little Sheets &amp;
Wamer, Scott Powell, Crows Steak House, Crow &amp; Crow, Tuppers Plains VFW 9053,
AEP Gavin, Sign Works, Trim Line, C&amp;A Auto, F&amp;S Tire, Denise Bunce, Ohio Valley
Bank, Proffits Wholesale, Twin Oaks, Kehler Business Svc., H&amp;R
Block, Don Tate Motors, Whaley's Salvage Veh. Inc., Fruth
~hannacy, Optometric Vision Center Dr. Bailes, Dr. Doug &amp;
Tonya Hunter, Wesam Const.. Forest Run Block, General Tire
Sales, MOM, ·NAPA, Wagner Hardware, Alexis Taylor Gardens,
Reeds Country Store, Racine Service Center, Searl's Marathon,
Ritchies Auto &amp; Quick Lube, ·Family Homes Inc., Jay Hall Jr.,
PDK Construction,'FEMA, Turnpike Ford, Baum Lumber, Jerry
Bibbee Motors, Walmart, Peoples Bank, Racine Home National
Balik, Lynnwood's Kennels Inc., Meigs Vet Clinic, Rings Auto,
The list above are of the businesses that have already donated.
I apologize for anyone that omitted. Any Individual Or Business
That Would Like To Donate May Do So By Making Checks
Payable To Meigs
County K-9 Unit:'EIN 31-1767625

•

· RE-ELECT

Sutton Township Trustee

-.

Roy F. VanMeter
Experienced, Willing &amp; Able To Continue
Serving As A Full-Time Trustee

Subscribe today.
446-2342

Your Support Would Be Appreciated
I'Did , ...

by,,.,.,.-.,

Roy F. \lriiM.,.r, JIJ695 MitcAtll RIHI4, Racbtt, 0/da 45nl

KATHY DUD WAITING fOR A HEART,

Think about this

Dear Editor:
With ihe recent focus on "Making a D.ifference;• and Oct. 27 being a nationally
recognized day devoted to it, I wanted to
remind everyone, you can make a difference all year round.
The Gallia-Jackson Mentoring Project
offers an opportunity to make a difference
in the life of a child. The project is designed
to provide youth, ages 6-17,a positive adult
mentor. There are many children in the
program waiting for someone t" care
about and befriend them.
It takes very little to show them you care,
but there is no way to measure how you
may affe-ct them. A phone call every week
and a couple of visits a month could help
build their self-esteem, encourage them to
do weD, and maybe prevent them from
making some bad choices.'
This is an important cause - they arc
our future.
This is just a reminder that this project i1
willing to let you make a difference
throughout the year, just call 446-7866, and
we'll get you started.

CINCINNATI (AP) Police procedures forbid
Cincinnati officers to use
choke holds on people, a prosecution witness testified Friday in the trial of a white officer accused of choking a black
man who died while in custody.
Todd Bruner, a training specialist at the Cincinnati police
academy, demonstrated in
court the restraint techniques
that officers are allowed to use.
But he said that choke holds
aren't permitted.
Under defense cross-examination, Bruner said it is difficult to .second-gueis an officer
who is reacting to quickly
changing circumstances in the
real world, rather than in a
training situation.
Bruner was the state's final
witness in Hamilton County
Common Pleas Court as prosecutors finished presenting
evidence again&amp;t Robert Jorg,
30, a seven-year police officer.
Jorg's defense then rested its
case without calling a single
witness. That means both side!
will give closing arguments to
the jury on Monday.
Jorg is charged with felony
involuntary manslaughter and
misdemeanor assault in the
Nov. 7 asphyxiation death of
Roger Owensby Jr., 29, who
died as police tackled and
jumped on him as he tried to
flee from the officers. Police
said they wanted to question
him about drug trafficking in
the area where be was
stopped.

.

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.

mail would be sanitized with radiation. Letters will be put in packages,
put on a conveyor belt and irradiated
for about five minutes, killing bacteria - including anthrax - that
might be present, he said.
It is the first time Titan has used
the process on mail, Ray said. The
process also is used to kill bacteria on
medical products and food.
"It's a well-understood, wellproven technology;· R.ay said.
The San Diego-based company
had no immediate plans to do the
work anywhere but in Lima, but did
sign an agreement Friday to provide
sanitizing systems to the Postal Ser-

Trial of two
Cincinnati·
policemen
continue

MARIETTA (AP) -Two men were indicted Friday on
accusations that they used their access to computer networks at two colleges to spread child pornography over the
Internet.
A Washington County grand jury indicted Eugene
Robert Anderson, 51, of Parkersburg, W.Va. , and Robert
Lynn Sandford, 32, of Vincent, Ohio, on a total of 201
counts. The charges include pandering obscenity involving
· a minor, promoting prostitution, unauthorized use of prop, erty, wiretapping and tampering with evidence.
Sandford is a former. Ohio University employee and
Anderson is a former Marietta College computer expert.
The men are scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday in the
Washington County Common Pleas Court, Attorney General Betty Montgomery's office said.

WE HAVE OUTGROWN
OUR PRESENT LOCATION!

No pr~judice ,.
Dear Editor:
The health department has forced a neW
law otr all of Meigs County, and if it was
about health aud our \Yell being. that is
fine, but if it was about prejudice, that is
wrong.
I've lived in Mei~ County for years, and
I am very much aware of the prejudice
here
.
Our children think they have to have: a
label to be someone, and how much we
make and where we shop makes a some;
body. And we have trained them well. ·
But if we vote down the renewal of tl)e
TB levy, we could be cutting off our no~e
to spite our face, and two wrongs do n!Jt
inake ;1 right.
·
.
With all chc evil takiug place in our
USA, we nn·d the health department and
pray we "@ all be equal there.
May God bless, and a special blessing f?r

'

So... we are moving only a short
distance, just 200 feet,
in order to serve you better.
·Effective November 26th, 2001
we will be located at:

196 East Second St.
(Old Beneficial Building)

We will continue with the quality service .
you are accustomed to receiving.

Downing Childs Mullen Musser
Insurance

·our veterans.

196 East Second

Deloris Sayre
Syracuk

•

;, ~ ~ ,..

i

night, the others arrived Friday.
There were plans to tr.msport 45
truckloads of mail - about 68 tons
- from Washington to Lima, said
james Snider, vice president of
FedEx Custom Critical, which spe•
cializes in transporting hazardous
material and was hired by the Postal
Service to handle the shipment.
Brentwood is Wasbington.'s central
mail processing facility. Two postal
workers from there died and two
others were hospitalized with
inhaled anthrax believed contracted
from mail addressed to Congress.
Gene Ray, Titan's chairman, president and chief executive, said the

I'

992.!3381

·,

�..
Sunday, Oct 28, 2001

Pomeroy • lllddl1port • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

•.World

•

Obituaries
Donald N. Bumprdner .

dog.

K-9
f•wnPapA1

Loy W1lstun Pauley

drug probl~m ~xists in our
area," said Meigs County
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Donald N. Bumgardner, 73, New
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - Loy Wriston Pauley, 76, of Sheriff Ralph E. TrusseD.
Haven, died Friday, Oct. 26, 2001, at his residence.
Parkersburg, died Friday, October 26, 2001, at St. Joseph Hos"The need for a canine unir
Bom Sept.15,1928,inJackson,Mich.,son of the late George pital in Parkenburg.
was clearly evident, however,
· J. and Lillian A. McNickle 'Bumgardner, he was a retmd operHe was born in Blair, Logan County, West Virginia, the son our department's budget was
· ator at Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.
of the late Guy and Margaret Mullens Pauley;
limited for such an endeawr,"
He was a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church, Point PleasHe was a World War II Veteran, serving in the U.S. Coast he said.
ant (W,Va.) Loyal Order of the Moose Lodge 731 and Clifton Guard. He was a member of the Rosemar Road Church of
So, to help fund the bur· (W,Va.) Masonic AF &amp; AM Chapter 23,and served several years Christ, and had worked as an electrician for Kaiser Aluminum. geoning program, Mark
on New Haven Town Council.
He also worked for Ohio Valley College before his retirement . . B"yd. K-9 Unit officer and
Surviving are his wife; Lois Ann Hart Bumgardner; three
He was an avid hunter and spom fan.
Thor's handler, said local indidaughters, Cheryl A. (Earl L.) Riley of New Haven, Vicki D.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Lillian Arburus Jarrell viduals, businesses and civic
(Terry L.) Wilson of Parkersburg, W.Va., and Linda L. Holley of Pauley of Parkenburg; his children, Cecelia Goff of Parkers- - organizations were solicited
Addison; a son, Eric N. (Elizabeth) Bumgardner of burg, Greg Pauley and his wife, Kathy, of Athens, and Becky for donations.
. Williamstown, W.Va.; nine grandchildren and two great-grand- Cronin and her husband, Patrick, of Wheeling, West Virginia; • The response was better
: children; two brothers, David L. (Shirley) Bumgardner of Mid- his beloved grandchildren, Zack Pauley and his wife, Tiffany, of than expected.
: dleport, and Larry J. (Earline) Bumgardner of Mason, W.Va.; a Belpre, Leah Durant and her husband, Brandon, of Del City,
"The reaction we received
: sister, Linda J. (Leo) Morris of Rutland; and a sister-in-law, Oklahoma, Sarah Pauley ofVienna,WestVirginia,Angela Crum was overwhelming," said
· Peggy Dee Bumgardner of Mason.
and her husband, Bruce, ofVienna, Lance. Golf and his wife, Boyd. "Residents within the
He was also preceded in death by a grandson, Matthew Stephanie, of Parkersburg, Eric Golf and his wife, Jaime, of community understood the
. Bumgardner; and two brothers, Jack and George Dean Bum- .Jackson, Michigan, and Sean Cronin and Molly . Cronin of significance of this drug prob· gardner.
Wheeling; and numerous nieces and nephews.'
lem and were quick to donate
: Services will be 1-p.m. Monday in St. Paul ,Lutheran Church,
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his ~is- what they could."
: New Haven, with the Rev. George Weireck and the Rev. David ters, Iva Waters, Adair' Wills, Frankie Meadows and Juanita
"You could say that it's a
Russell officiating. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery. Friends Young; his brothers, . Oran .Pauley, Wilmer Pauley and Leon community service funded by
may caD at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home, Mason, fiom 6-9 Pauley; and duee infant brothen.
the community," he added.
p.m. Sunday.
Services will be 10 a.m. on Monday. October· 29, 2001, at
Boyd said Thor is certified
Services will be conducted by Point Pleasant Loyal Order of Rosemar Road Church of Christ, with Dr. Keith Stotts offici- through Lynnwood Kennels,
the Moose Lodge 731 at 7 p.m. Sunday in the funeral horne.
ating. Graveside services will be' conducted at 2 p.m. on Mon- the Ohio Peace Officers
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to . day, October 29, 2001,"' Memory Gardens Cemetery in Madi- Training Council and the
·
son, West Virginia.
services Monday.
North American Police Work
The .family requests donations be made to Friends of the
Friends may call at Leavitt Funeral Home in Parkersburg on Dog Association. He is conNew Haven Library or St. Paul Lutheran Church Building Sunday, October 28,2001, from 2-8 p.m., and at the church 011 . sidered . a dual purpose police
; Fund.
Monday, October 29, 2001, one hour prior to services.
,.
Memorial contributions may be made to Ohio Valley College, 4501 College Parkway, Parkersburg, West Virginia 261 01 .

Margaret 'Quick' Cottrill

Damage

Edna W. Vanco

SYRACUSE - Margaret "Quick" Cottrill, Syracuse, died
Saturday, Oct. 27,2001, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements wiD be announced by Ewing Funeral Horne, ·
GALLIPOLIS- Edna W.Vanco, !11, of Gallipolis, died FriPomeroy.
day, October 26, 2001, in Holzer Medical Center. .
She was born October 30, 1919, in Gallia County, daughter
of the late George Ward and Eliza Chapman Ward.
She worked at the G.C. Murphy store for more than 20
LAFAYETTE, Ind. - · Earlene S. Saunders Dubea, 60, years, becoming assistant manager of the store, before leaving to
Lafayette, formerly of Gallipolis, died Sunday, Oct. 7, 2001, in join her husband, William E "Bill"Vanco, in his business,Vanco
Kindred Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind., following a brief illness.
Equipment Company, ~ere she worked as the bookkeeper.
Born Aug. 22, 1941 in Gallipolis, daughter of Mabel SaunShe was a member of Grace. United Methodist Church, a
: ders of Gallipolis, and the late Alfred Saunders, she had been a charter member, and pa~t president of the Gallipolis Emblem
. Club, and a member of the Royal Neighbors.
: resident of Lafayette since 1962.
. A graduate of Gallia Academy High School, she was the sec- .
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a
: retary qf First Church of the Nazarene at Lafayette, where she son, William ' Michael Vanco; a brother, Stanley Ward; and 'by
bad been a member and had worked since 1969. She was the four sisten, Goldie King, Crystal Broyles, Charlotte Danner and
former director of Kiddie KoUege Day Care, was chairman of Frances Ward.
the Kiddie KoUege Board, and ·was active in many church
Surviving are her husband, William F."Bill"Vanco, whom she
. activities.
married November 15, 1947; a daughter-in-law, Kim Vanco of
; Surviving in addition to her mother are her husband, Ray- Gallipolis; a granddaughter, Karen Renee Vanco of Galli.e_olis; a
: mond L. Dubea, who'm she married Oct. 14, 1961, in GaUipo- sister, Sylvia Seagraves of Gallipolis; and a niece, Charlotte Pre. lis; a daughter, Marsha (Bruce) Beatty of Collegeville, Pa.; a son, ston Chfisty o£ Circleville, who was raised in the home.'"'
: Lance (Karen) Dubea of Peoria, Ill.; four grandchildren; a sisServilllls will be 2 p.m. on Thesday, October 30, 2Q01, in
; ter, Freda (Roland) Wolf~ of Bradley, IU.; and a brother, Roger Waugh-Halley· Wood . Funeral Home, with Pastor Robert
l (Susan) Saunders of BoWie, Md . .
Ingram officiating. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cen1etery.
: · Services were held Friday, Oct. 12, 2001 at 10 a.m. in First Friends may caD at the funeral home on Monday, October 29,
: Church of the Nazarene at Lafayette, with the Rev. William 2001, from 6-9 p.m.
: Scott officiating. Burial was in Tippecanoe Memory Gardens.
--------------------.-: Arrangements were by Hippensteel Funeral Home.
: In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Kiddie -Kolbers and the American
, Can. lege.
cer
Society.
•
'
Smoking bans approved by
from Page AI
health boards in Franklin and
: POMEROY - Walid "Willie" Matt'd Zahran, 45, formerly ed by Sen. Mike Shoemaker, Delaware counties have been
thrown out, and a Lucas
: of Pomeroy, died Monday, Oct. 22, 2001, in Newborn, N.C.
D-Bournevi]Je.
County ban, which served as
· Born July 26, 1956, in Zarka, Jordan, son of Mah'd Mustafa
State Rep. John CareY, R. Zahran and Samira DaBud Zahran, he was employed as a car- Wellston, said last month he . the model for Meigs County's
: penter by Young's Carpenter Service and at Five Points Fdod would likely vote il) favor of ban, has been set aside by a
federal judge pending the dis: Shop in Pomeroy.
the bill, . because he said, he
: Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Janice L. "generally supports" legisla- . position of a lawsuit.
• Young Zahran of Pomeroy, whom he married Dec. 26, 1981; tion which gives authority to
The Meigs County ban
: two daughters, Liza Jean and Victoria Samir.. Zahran of local legislative bodies.
provides for a S100 fine
· Pomeroy; a son, Walid Victor Zahran of Pomeroy; his motherDottie Turner and Roland against violators after three'
in-law, Mary K.Young of Pomeroy; three brothers, Nibill, Kalid Eastman, both of Pomeroy, warnings. Hancock, Mahon: and 0-Mar Zahran of Zarka, Jordan; and a sister, FabBeU and Millie Duncan of Mid- ing and Muskingum counties,
; Zahran of Zarka,Jordan.
dleport, testified in favor of and the cities of Lorain, Bar: He was preceded in death by his father-in-law, Victor Young the bill on Oct._ 11. Oppo- berton, and Cincinnati, also
:J~
.
nents, besides Taft, include have bans on public smoking
Memorial services will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1, Ohio Board of Health mem- in ·place.
2001, at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev.
· . James Keesee officiating. The family will receive relatives and
: friends at the funeral home from 6 p.m. Thursday until the time
.
: of the service.
: In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be mailed to
: Fisher-Acree Funetal Home, P.O. Box 151, Middleport, Ohio
. 45760.

Earfene Saunders Dubea

Walid 'Willie' zahran

•

HMC
from ·PapA1

• CIC&lt; director. of infection
; cqntrol/ employee health at
: HMC.
_ "Our goal is to reassure
: the community by sharing
information and facts about
anthrax," she added. "We are
: prepared to handle patients
: in the unlikely event of
: exposures to biological

.

CLEVELAND (AI') -A
federal grand jury on Friday
infections. Our facility has a
issued a new indictment
strong working relationship
against U.S. · Rep. James
with local law enforcement
Traficant, alleging that he
agencies, local and state took bribes from a businesshealth departments, and our man in exchange for assisemergency medical · ser- tance in getting access to
vices, therefore our com- local railroad lines.
munity can be confident of
Troficant, who has reprean appropriate response to sented the Youngstown area
concerns.'
in Congress for 18 years,
All are welcome and had previously been indictencouraged to attend this ed on 10 counts of bribery,
educational and informa- obstructing justice and tax
tional session.
evas1on. ·
For details, call 446-5446.
The indictment adds an
7

allegation that Traficant
took bribes from James
Sabatine, 49, of Canfield,
Ohio, in the You,.;gstown
area.
Traficant did not return
calls seeking comment,
though the Democrat has
repeatedly ·maintained his
innocen c e and said the
charges are a result of misconduct by the FBI and the
U.S. attorney's office. Mes sages were left for him at his
offices in Youngstow~ and
Washington.

•

RE-ELECT
•

•
•
•
•

Tom Woodward
Green Township

TRUSTEE
Your full time trustee
Your vote will be greatly appreciated

••
•

relocated to the downtown
earlier .this year, is still in
operation and will remain in
place so "as long as we don't
Jose our customer base," she
·
added.
"I love Gallipolis and the
downtown, and our insurance
is excellent. Based on what it
costs, we are going to try and
fix it," she said.
Mrs. Garnes said the inci~
dent n1ade her "heartsick"
after the Penney center
reopened in her building on
Oct. 17. She believes a&gt;tion to
prevent the collapse should
have been taken earlier.
"The top of that building
should have been taken down
months ago," Mrs. Garnes
said.
The Lynch Building was
damaged in the Aug. 4 fire
. that closed five downtown

S.B. 118

Grand jury nands down new
charges against Traficant

•

from PageAl

LARRY A. FALLON
FOR
PERRY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
YOUR VOTE &amp; SUPPORT
WILL BE APPRECIATED
Paid For By The Candld.ote

Larcy ~· Follen, 11:161 Stale Roulcl41, Pli(rlot, OH 436!8

Arrest.
from Page AI
on warrants.

Schoolcraft was wanted in
-Washington County on an
unspecified charge, while Barker is sought by the parole
authority in Charleston, W.Va.,
Grau said.
'
Benson, another passenger,
was not sought by authorities,
Grau said.
Call requested assistance in
securing the suspects and the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office
rqponded. After the suspects

were secured, Grau said ·" it was
determined that there were the
ingredients for a meth lab in
the vehicle."
Grau said the scene was

"Thor's mastery in tracking.
searches and raids, suspect
apprehension, handler protection, and narcotic detection
has played an instrumental
part in drug eradication:· said

Boyd,
"He has participated in several felony arrests and has
even successfully performed
his duties while being in the
line of fire;• he added.
Thor participates in an
eight-dog training group that
meets twice a mouth at various locations in Ohio to work
on what Boyd calls "maintenance tr~ining." He also
appears at local schools in an
effort to make children aware
of the dangers of drug abuse.
"Thor does an excellent job
and his abilities make it easier
for us to procure important

evidence," said Trussell.
"The success of dogs like
Th0r also allows drug forfeiture money to be redistributed into other drug enforcement programs, which is an
integral part of the war on
drugs," he said_.
Those wishing to make a
donation toward the K-9
Unit can do so by calling the
. Meigs
Councy
Sheriff's
Department at 7 40-992- ·
3371.

businesses and displaced several apartment dwellers.
· Randy Breech, ·the city's
engineering consultant, said
contractor Robert Gillenwater had removed part of the
wall Wednesday before the
collapse.
The Lynches have applied
for a partial demolition per.
mit on their building, subject
to review by the Gallipolis
Historic Preservation Review
Board, Breech said.
"The Main Street Board is
going to have a meeting in
the near future to see what
can be done to help," he said. ·
"The city Wants. to be helpful to Mrs. Garnes because
she is a definite asset to .t he
downtown business community," Breech added. "As you
recall, the fire department had
its ladder truck on the scene
for us to view damage to the
Lynch Building up close.A lot
of communities won't do
that, but the city of Gallipolis

·: HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - MQtorists taking photos
_of the Marathon-Ashland Petroleum plant in Cattlettsburg,
Ky., have long been a common sight.
_ Now it's also suspicious.
, Since terrorists attacked New York and Washington, D.C .•.
, on Sept. 11, several residents have called police to report
people taking pictures of the refinery from a nearby Inter~ state 64 bridge.
·
"We can't take anything for granted anymore," Kenova
polite Dispatcher Scott Kearns says. "We can't ignore these
kind of calls. We know that people have been taking pictures
·' of the refinery for years. It's a good picture, especially when
, all of the lights are on at night.

•

Small earthquake shakes NYC

NEWYORK (AP) -A minor earthquake shook the New
York City area early Saturday, a monitor for the U.S. Geo~
logical Survey said.
A magnitude-2.6 earthquake hit under lower Manhattan
around 1:42 a.m., said Dr. John Ebel, director of the Weston
Observatory at Boston College, which monitors . seismic
activity in the Northeast.
"That's more than a tremor. That's a small earthquake,"
Ebel said.
... At first, police scrambled to determine the source as 911
calls flooded in reporting shaking buildings and a booming
· sound, said Detective Edward Reuss, a spokesman for the
·New York Police Deparanent.

Court denies stay of hearing

Ptold For By The C.odklllle
Ed Clo~ch, P.O. Box ~7.
Galli le, Ohio
1

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GREEN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

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Paid For By The Canclld.te
Lonnie Bogga.. 825 JldtiOI'I Pike, Gtlllljlallt, !)hio 45e31

S.E.A.R~C.H.

.Ministry

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I~ ™ HEARING AID CENTER I

I
1312 Eastern Avenue Gallinolls Ohio
1
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TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 2001
I
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{740) 446-1744o9to4
Call Toll Free 1·80!J..634-52651or an Immediate appointment. I
I The tests will be given by a ,Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. I
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I conversation
Is Invited to have a~ hearing test to sae if I
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NOVEMBER . 2-3-4

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THE FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET

nixes smokln1 ban

••
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70 Pine Street,
Gallipolis, Ohio

REE HEARING T......,

WASHINGTON {AP)- to keep all of the nearly operations officials just days appoint an acting CEO to
Dr. Bernadine Healy said $500 million the R"d Cross after last month's attacks.
work with Healy until she
Friday her controversial raised following the Sept.
Healy, standing beside leaves and a permanent Red
tenure as head of the Amer- 11 disasters separate from Red Cross Chairman David
Cross chief is named. Healy
ican Red Cross is ending the charity's main relief
McLaughlin, disputed a did not announce her plans.
after run-ins between the fund.
statement he made that the
One of just two medical
hard-charging heart specialIn addition, she has been
board
did
not
force
her
out
doctors ever to lead the
ist and the influential chari- unable to free the organizaof
the
job.
Red Cross, Healy's career
ty's board.
tion from a court-ordered
The board soon will has bad many bright spots.
Healy will leave at year's consent decree with the
end, after two yean in the Food and Drug Administraabout $450,000-a- year post tion over repeated violaof president and chief exec- . tions of rules designed to
utive officer of the group. ensure the safety of donated
Near tears, she said she "had blood. Although the conno choice" but to make the sent decree was in place
unexpected decision to when Healy took over the
resign, even as the relief Red Cross, the FDA fight
agency .remains heavily has escalated in recent
8571 St. Rt. 160
Porter, OH
involved in responding ,to months.
1740) 448·•72• or
the terrorist attacks.
And she has been ques1740) ···8227
"The board feh I was out tioned about the firings of
ahead of them making poli- two top Red Cross disaster
cy," she said. 'They didn't
have any more confidence ____________..,___________________.,.
1
in me."
The disputes involve, in
part, differences over how
•
the American Red Cross
GALUA
COUNTY
JUNIOR
FAIRGROUNDS
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
should handle the Israeli
branch's exclusion from
full membership in the
global Red Cross movement. Healy called her supHOURS 8A.M.T05P.M.DAILY
"FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING"
port
for
withholding
INSIDE
AND
OUTSID~
DEALER
SPACES
administrative dues to the
OUTSIDE 10' FRONTAGE S6 PER DAY
International Federation of
ANTIQUES, COLLECTABLES, NEW AND USED ITEMS
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies a "controverLAST FULL FLEA MARKET FOR 2001
sial but principled stand.~'
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATION CALL 740-24~~347 OR 740-446-4120
Healy said the board also
differed with her decision

,,day.

:• r---------~----~~~---------------------,
••
VOTE FOR
•
•

lbvr SupjHJn WIIIIU _.,,..,.

Red Cross President Healy resigns

1

BOWMAN'S
• Sleep A~nea
Equipment
• Heme Oxygen
~ Portable Oxygen
• Overnight Pulse
Oximetry
• Hospital Beds
o Wheel Chairs
o Bathroom Aides

October 21, 2001

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)- Convicted bombing con. spirator Terry Nichols lost a legal bid Friday to stop a pre" liminary hearing on whether he should be tried on state
, murder charges.
·
, . Testimony at Nichols' preliminary hearing is scheduled to
· begin on Nov. 5. Nichols, 46," is chargecl with 160 counts of
· first-degree murder for the April !9, 1995, bombing, which
killed 168 people. Oklahoma County prosecutors are seek. ing the death penalty.
• A federal jury in Denver convicted Nichols of conspiracy
- and involuntary manslaughter in the deaths of eight federal
" agents. He was sentenced to life in prison. The 160 state
1. rn~rder counts are for the other victima.
. Nichols had sought a delay until ihe Oklahoma Supreme ·
_Court ruled on hi1 defenae attorney•' request for more
., money. Judge Ray Dean Linder denied hi1 request for a stay;
, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeab did the same Pri-

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Gov. Mike Huckabee
; rejected a proposed restaurant smoking ban Friday, saying
. that while IJ.e personally opposed smoking, the state should
not infringe upon the rights of people who smoke.
.. The governor :ilso questioned whether the ban was consti-·
. tutional and said money spent fighting possible lawsuits
' could be better spent on smoking prevention efforts.
Arkansas.' Health Board voted Thursday to ban smoking in
businesses that make more than 70 percent of the money
:from food sales, citing the need to protect wwkers and
patrons.
"I feel an appointed board without direct accountability 10
the voters isn't the best vehicle to make such sweeping
. changes in the law;• Huckabee said.

(740) 446-7283
1-800-458-6844·

L

High alert taxes apndes

secured and the DEA was contacted. Agents from DEA's
regional office in Parkersburg,
W.Va., responded and determined "that all of the ingredients, except a· heat source, were
present for a meth lab."
Agents removed the materials from the car, and a DEA
hazmat team from Indiana was
called in to dispose ofthe materials.

Medicare • Medicaid

.

WASHINGTON (AP)- It's time for another American
ritual: setting the clocks back.
The qfficial hour of change is 2 a.m. Sunday, local time,
though most folks make the change before hitting the sack,
': gaining an extra hour of sleep.
,; Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta, whose
dep~rtment is in charge of the time change, issued a
. remmder that this is also a good time to change the batter' ies in smoke detectors.
Daylight-saving time returns April 7.
w•

Govem~r

Emergency Ser~ice

·

nme to fall baci, America

:·

does.~'

24 Hour

1

..

PageA7

Jim and Rachel Webster of the
disciple-making ministry,
NAVIGATORS, will be guest
speakers at the University
Rio Grande on November 2-3,
2001. The group called
S.E.A.R.C.H (Seeking Every
. Answer and Response Christ Has) will be sponsoring the miniconference. Jim and Rachel were born and schooled in North
Carolina, married in Greensboro in 1950 and have three grown
children. Jim Webster worked as a cabinet-maker and served in
the military for 8 years. Jim and Rachel became Christians at a
Biily Graham meeting in 1951. They joined the Navigators in
1966 and have been at Fort Knox, KY sirfce 1973. lim'}
strengths are Faith in the word ~nd Love for People. They
continue to work at the Fort Knox, KY military base at the
present time. The meeting times will be Friday, November 2,
2001 at 7:30p.m.~ and Saturday, November 3, 2001 at 10:00 a.m .
and 1:00 p.m. the 10:00 a.m. session will be split for men to be
with Him and the women with Rachel. All meetings will be h"ld
in the main lecture hall of the new Bob Evans Farms Hall. il1e
public is invited to attend. There is no cost For

..

.

Self-employed? Recent graduate? Newly divorced? Are you paying ·more than you can
really afford for personal health Insurance? Or ore you taking the risk of being
uninsured because you think you just .can't afford it? Call us! SuperMed One· may be the answer.
it's fast and simple. Call our toll-free number. Take a few minutes to onswer some simple
questions. If you qualify, you can be enrolled and insured within days.
.
Find out how much you can save with SuperMed One. Because Medical Mutual is the larges!
and oldest healthcare insurer in the State of Ohio- with 2.7 million members- we can offer you prrce
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ad~itional

details, please .call David G. Perry at 245-9t88 or John O'Brien
245-9266.
.

.

02001

~

I

MuNal

�Inside:
Gallia Academy-beats Point, Page 82
~hama continues to win, Page 83
Meigs, South Gallia fall, Page 84
Ohio, W.lil. prep football scores, Page 85

Page 81
Suatd!ly.

.....
==
==
=
U

SUNDAY's

I

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Football
SEOAL

SEQ All
Lbgan
7-0 10-o
Gallia Academy 6·1 8-2
Marietta
4-3 7-3
Jackson
4-3 6-4
Athens
3-4 5-5
Warren
3-4 4-6
Point Pleasant 1-5 2·7
River Valley
0·7 0·1 0
Friday's results
G. Acad. 16, P. Pleasant 0
Warren 55, River Valley 8
Logan 16, Jackson 13
Marietta 52, Athens 8

Team

TVC
Ohio Division

M

Team

All

Wellston
5·0 8-2
Nelsonville-York 4-1 6-4
Belpre
3-2 5-5
Meigs
2·3 3·7
Vinton County 1-4 1-9
Alexander
0-5 2-8
Hocking Division
Trimble
5-0 - 9~ 1
3-1 8-1
Eastern
Waterford
3-2 7-3
Southern
2-2 4-5
Federal Hocking 1·4 1·9
0-5 1-9
Miller
, Friday's results
Belpre 22, Meigs 0
- Trimble 66, Miler 24
Nelson.·York 30, Alexander 0
waterford 62, Fed.Hocking 20
~ellston 47, Vlfllon County o
Saturday's Game
Eastern at Southern, late

......... Non-league .. - ..
All

Team

Ravenswood
9-1
Wahama
7-3
Oak Hill
6-4
Ripley
6-4
South Gallia
2·8
Hannan
D-10
Fridays results
Ripley 15, Ravenswood 12
G. Valley 30, S. Gallia 8 .
Wahama 28, Wirt County 6
G. Bridge 23, Hannan 20
Sum.Co. 34, Oak Hill12

).

Davis lifts Kent

over Bobcats

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Shannon Davis returned a
fumble 95 yards for a touch. down with 4:10 remaining a.&lt;
: Kent State beat Ohio 24-14
- on Saturday.
The Bobcats (r-6, 1-4 Mid: American Conference) were
: driving for the go-ahead
touchdown after Trendale
Perkins recovered his second
fumble of the game at the
Kent State 4 with 5:34 left.
Three plays later, Ohio
quarterback Freddie Ray
fumbled and Davis scooped
up the loose ball and went the
distance.
Joe Sherrill scored on 4and 2-yard runs for the Bob, cats. Ray completed 6-of-16
; passes for 79 yards and also
: ran for 94 yards · on 18
attempts.

STATE COLLEGE, Pa .
(AP) - joe Paterno passed
Bear Bryant to become major
college football's career victory leader Saturday, with freshman Zack Mills passing for
two touchdowns in Penn
State's 29-27 victory over
Ohio State.
The win was No. 324 for
Paterno, who became Penn
State's head coach in 1966
after 15 yean as an assistant . .
Paterno came into the season just one win behind
Bryant, but was questioned·
and criticized - even by
some of the Penn State faithful - after his team started 04. H~ tied Bryant last week
with a 38-35 win at Northwestern.
After the game, in the
understated style Penn State
fans have come to expect,
Paterno praised his team,
hugged. his wife and held his
grandchildren at a ceremony
at midfield.
Mills, who came in on the
Nittany Lions' second possession after Matt Senneca started, b~ke his own freshman
passing record with 280 yards.
He completed 17 of 32 passes
and also ran for 138 yards and
a touchdown.
Down by as many as 18
points in the second half,
Penn State (2-4, 2-3 Big Ten)
took its first lead two plays
into the fourth quarter. On
the first play, Mills missed the
snap from the shotgun formation, ran back several yards to
recover the ball and still completed a 31-yard pass to RJ.
Luke. M"ills' 14-yard touchdown · pass"' t.; Eric McCoo
gave the Nittany Lions a 29TOP COACH -Penn State coach Joe Paterno, center, reacts as his team pours the Gatorade
27 lead with 14:47left.
jug on his head after Penn State beat Ohio State 29-27 giving Paterno his 324th win breakIng coach Paul "Bear" Bryant's 1-A coaching record Saturday in State College, Pa. (AP)

- --,.--!..''---- - - - - - - - - '

•

,.

No.3
Huskers
top No.2·
Sooners
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) Eric Crouch scored on a 63yard triclc. play as third-ranked
Nebraska beat No. 2 Olda;homa 20-10 Saturday.
.
Nebraska led 13-10 through
most of the second half befure
coach Frank Solich caught
Oklahoma by surprise with a
rare saay from the Huskm'
offense.
On a 6nt-and-10 from the
Nebraska 37 with 6:10 left,
wingback Thunder Collins
took a handolf around the right .
end and pitched it to freshman
Mike Stuntz, a quarterback
who is playing receiver this fall.
Stuntz lofted a perfect pass to
Crouch, who caught it around
the 40 and ran untouched to
put the Huskers up 20-10.
The Sooners (7-1, 4-1 Big
12) had just stopped Nebraska
(9-0, 5-0) on a third-and-2, but
were called for an incidental
facemask that kept the Nebraska drive going.
·
SYRACUSE 22,

No. 4 VA. TECH 14
The Syracuse Orangemel)
. scored on a punt .return and
after a turnover in the lint
quarter and ended the Virginia Tech Hokies' 16-game
,home winning streak.
Virginia Tech (6-1, 3-1), fell
behind 14-0 in the first . 7:25
and never recovered against a
'charged•up Syracuse defense.
The Orangemen allowed
Virginia Tech just 90 yards
rushing, recovered two fum- ·
bles and blocked a punt.

Andretti second in qualifying at Phoenix
AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) - john
Andretti tries to be an optimist. This
year, it hasn't been easy.
Andretti, a veteran of Indy-car racing who now is an established star in
NASCAR's Winston Cup series, has
been through a miserable year, along
with Petty Enterprises CEO and
teammate Kyle Petty and third driver
Buckshot Jones.
Qualifying has been one of the
problems all year, with the team struggling to gets its new in-house engine
program for its new Dodge I ntrepids
up to speed. Petty has failed to qualify 12 times and Andretti and Jones
once each.

"Our qualifying has beetl
horrible. J#. just got a griJ'
on what we tleed to do. "
" '

Driver John Andrettl

Even when they have made the
races, though, most of th e time,
they've started near the back.
Slowly, though , things have
improved. Last wee kend in Talladega,
all three Petty Enterprises drivers
qualifying among the top 22, with
Petty and Andretti in the top eight.
Friday,Andretti was second to rookie Casey Atwood in qualifying for the
Checker Auto Parts 500 at Phoenix

International Raceway, and both of
the other team drivers were among
th-e top 28.
"Our qualifying has been horrible,"
Andretti said. "We just got a grip on
what we need to do. This is the same
engine program we've had all year, but '
the engines are better, the cars are better and we're figuring out the tires.
"All that stuff helps. We've had real
good cars in the races. We just haven't
qualifying well and then got torn up
or blown up early or something else
bad happened. I hope we -dori't get
-torn up Sunday going into ·turn one."
Atwood, whose career now encompasses 32 races - 11 more than his

·aattle of the Bridge'

age - hustled his Dodge around the
one-mile oval at 131.296 mph,
becoming the 14th different pole
winner this season.
"It was a really good lap;' said
Atwood, who drives for the lim-year
operation of Ray Evernham. "It wasn't perfect, but it was good enough to
win the pole."
Atwood, whose best previous qualifying performance was third in
Augllst in Indianapolis, is the fourth ·
rookie to earn a start from the top
qualifying position.
He joined J.Son Leffler and Kurt
Busch - fellow Rookie of the Year

PIMH ... Anclrettl...

OVC wins second

ACSI state title

amid the blowing snow
for the decisive win.
]. P. Lindeman scored
the' game's first goal at
the 10:00 mark on ali
assist
from
Andy
Blankenship.
Nathan Bowman and
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS
Ryan Carter each added
AKRON, Ohio ·first half goals.
With an 8-1 win over
Carter added another
Jefferson County Christ- score in the second half.
ian School, the Ohio Brian Gordan added a
Valley Christian School pair of goals in the secsoccer team secured its ond half.
second ACSl Class A
Gabe Jenkins
and
state title in three years . . Kelsey Johnson closed
The Defenders had to out the scoring for
overcome a blizzard that ovc.
dumped over a half inch
Aaron Beaver, Cody
of snow on the Akron Smith, and Mike Jenks
area.
added assists .
OVC (9-5-4) jumped
David McGurn scored
out to a -3-0 lead in the the only Jefferson goal
first half before jefferson in the match's 39th
could
answer.
The minute.
Defenders. added five
Jefferson finishes at
goals in the second half 11 -9-2 .

Defenders roll
over jtfferson
County

Game called
after fighting
VAN, W.Va. (AP) -A football game between Van and
Tug Valley high schools was
called midway through the
third quarter following at least
two fights between the
schools, the Charleston Daily
' Mail reported Saturday.
Officials ended Friday's
game with about eight minutes remaining in the third
quarter,
the
newspaper
. reported.
Van won 38-6 and is now
. 9-1 , while Tug Valley's record
is 6-3.

ll,l001

TO-P 25

Lions

PIMH IH Buckeyes, 86

Othlb~r

THE HANDOFF AND THE RUN- Gallipolis quarterback Travis McKinnlss hands off to
fullback Ty Simmons (LEFT) during second-half action Friday at Point Pleasant. Meanwhile, Matt Warner (right) carries the ball for the Big Blacks. See story from the game
on 82. (Bryan Long photos)

J

j

.' ~

•

�,t·
Sunday, Oct. 2i; 2001

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

Page 82 • ilunhp 11iatll·ilmlinrl

Sunday, Oct. 21, 2001

Pomeroy •Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleeunt, WV

6•1lh.!' lrl11ttt1 -ktlnd • Page 83

Week Ten

High School Football
Blue Devils win 'Battle of the bridge' over Point White· Falcons secure playoff
spot in win over Wirt County
•

BY R. Itt "'ll L1W11
OVP WNGING EDITOR

POINT PLEASANT The
&amp;bled riwlry that is Gallia Academy
vs. Point Pleasant lived up to the legend Friday on Senior Night at
Sanden Memorial Sradium.
"We have a lot of respect for their
program;• Big Black coach Ste.., Safford said. "When we play this game.
ifs a war."

•

'..
'

I

•

I
1

This year's war W2S won• 16-0 by
the Blue Devils, who now have
, claimed three straight in the series
that ~ to 1922. The Big Blacks
maintain a slight 34-33- 5 edge overall.
Point Pleasant (2-8, 1-6 SEOhL)
appeared determined to upset playoff-bound Gallipolis (8-2, 6-1
SEOhL) from cbe get-go.
The Big Blacks surpri.ed the Blue
Devils with a reverse on the ·o pening
kickoff, and then used the shotgun
formation almost exclusively on
offense.
·
Point QB Kevin Thompson hoisted
the ball 15 times, completing four, on
a blustery night that saw his receivers
)irop several passes.
~ 11E MIDDLE- Gallipolis tight end N!llhan Klskls (80) breaks free down the middle as Point Pleasant defenders Kevin
"The cold night might have hurt us Thompson (8) and Nick Duncan (30) look to tackle him. Gallipolis won the Ohio River rivalry 16&lt;l. (Bryan Long photc))
little," Safford said. "A couple of passes went right through our hands."
tight end Nathan Kiskis on a 26-yard Reed stopped Warner in his tracks. So the fourth quarter after Nibert
· Gallia Acad~'s swarming defense catch-and-run up the middle.
Nibert punted the ball away again, pinned Gallipolis on its own two
also didn't hell? Point's cause. The
On first-and-tO fiom the Point 17, this time booting a 29-yard effort.
with a 30-yard punt.
Blue Devils fotced two fumbles and however, Big Black Nic Dalton interThe second quarter )&gt;egan with
FuHback Ty Simmons managed two
kept constant pressure on Thompson. . cepted a McKinniss toss at his one to Gallipolis on its 39, and that's when yards on first down, but Point Pleas"They did a number on us," Safford stop the drive. The poor field position Jones took over. The senior tailback ant stuffed McKinniss for no gain on
said.
created by the interception would carried twice for 35 yards, and tun- second down. The Blue Devils were
The Big Blacks' defense held its haunt Point Pleasant for the remain- back Clarke Saunders managed a yard called for illegal procedure on third
own against the vaunted Gallipolis der of the half
to give the Blue Devils a second-and- down, and the ball w:15 placed back
Point Pleasant could manage only 10 from the Point 25.
attack, intercepting Blue Devil signalon the 2.
callers three times and forcing two four yards in three plays, and Nibert
Brodeur dropped back to pass and
That's when Simmons took matfumbles.
W2S forced to· punt from deep inside found a wide-open Josh Perry in the ters into his own hands. ·
"They played us real hard," Gallipo- his end zone. A high snap almost left corner of the end zone. Perry
The junior took the ball up the
lis Coach Brent Saunden said. "Their forced Nibert into a safety. but the made a circus catch for the touch- gut and appeared to be stopped, but
defense played us surprisingly good." punter managed a line-drive 30-yard down at th~ 11:01 mark. But Clayton he dragged a host of Point defenders
The first quarter was a scoreless boot under pressure.
Saunders' point-after failed and the for a couple of yards and then broke
-,affair, although Gallipolis threatened
Brodeur replaced McKinniss, and score stood at 6-0.
free. The Big Blacks finally corcalled
on its first possession.
the Blue DeVils again had good field
And there matters remained until him after a 17-yard gain.
The Blue Devils started the night position at the Point 35. But the Big Clayton Saunders kicked !ill first field
The subsequent first down gave
on their own 12 foHowing a booming Blacks' defense held, stopping the goal with 1'8 seconds remaining.
Gallipolis
some milch-needed
Bucky Nibert punt that sailed 48 Blue Devils on four plays.
The score was set up by a Thomp- breathing room. The drive stall~d,
yards.
.:
However, Point's offense faced a son fumble at the Point 43. joel however, and Shannon Shipley was
Gallipolis ~hed down !he field, similar fa,te when it took possession· at EHiott recovered the miscue.
·
oalled on to punt the ball away.
fueled by long runs by Bobby Jones its own 30.
The second half continued to be a
The two sides traded possessions
and Donnie Jqhnson. Junior QB
Thompson called his own number defensive struggle, with both teams and turnovers throughout the
. Travis McKinniss, who started . in twice for two y~rds to start the series. trading possessions early.
remainder of the game until Blue
place of senior Davi4 Brodeur, kept On third-and-8, he hooked up with
The Big Blacks appeared to have Devils' FB Clarke Saunders broke a
the drrve alive by hooking up with Matt Warner, but Gallipolis' Nick the Blue Devils in a bad way to start 46-yarder to paydirt with 28 seconds

Fumbles costly in River Valley's 55-8 lOss to Warr¢~
BY PAUL U Pou:YN
DVP CORR&amp;SPoNDENT

I

left.
Clayton Saunders' PAT made die
fi'nal score 16-0.
•
Thompson W2S the Big Blacks' statisticalleader. He threw for 51 yards
and rushed for 32 more on 10 totes.
He also inteiUpted a pass.
:
Nic Dalton caught one ball for j_7
yards, Warner had two catches for siX
yards and Nibert snared one bill far
eight yards.
~
Point Pleasant's Andrew Dennis
carried six times for a ya~ Jes~
Nott ran once for no gain an~ Warn~
er lost seven yards on three,~arries.,
Gallipolis held the Big Blacks t.)l
76 yards of total offense. •' ~
•
I
Nick Duncan also had an interception for Point. The young Big
Blacks said good-bye to five seniors:
Warner, Dennis, Chris Ramey, Jarin
Rollins and Derek Spurlock.'
For the Blue Devils, Jones rushed
22 times for 126 yards. That figure
doesn't include two touchdown runs
for a total of 70 yards - both of
which were negated by holding
penalties.
·
~
At the half, Jones had an outside
chance to break the school's single•
season rushing record of 1 ,24~ yank
set by Heath Hutchinson in 1984&gt;.
He needed 120 yards in the second
half.
But the Big Blacks and Jones' nagging Achilles tendon would have
none of that.
"He said it tightened up on him;••
Coach Saunders said of the injury
The senior finished the regular
season with 1,147 yards.
.
Clarke Saunders carried rn\ice fcir
47 yards, and Simmons finished with
43 yards on nine totes. Th~, Blu~
Devils piled up 240 yards on ~9 car,
nes.
McKinniss went 5-of- i 1 for 6fl·
yards and two picks, and Brodeur
was 3~of-8 for 73 yards , and was
"
picked once.
Kiskis caught three balls for 8~
yards, and Perry hauled in two .for 43.
yards.
,
Reed recorded :uaak,furdte ·:Biue
Devils, and Jesle Reitmire -recovered
a fumble.
'.
i,
Gallipolis all but clin~hed a hom~
playoff game with the win; its oppol
nent should be known by late today.
"

Warren. Just : 13 later, they
had scored again, on an 89yard kickoff return by Chris
Hendricks.
River VaHey fumbled the
ball back to the Warriors,
and stopped them on third
and eight. Warren opted for
a 52-yard field goal that fell
short of the goal-line, which

CHESHIRE , Raider
fumbles and special teams
miscues, which gave Warren
good field position and led
to several touchdowns, were
costly as the River Valley
1taiders lost to Warren, 55-8
Friday.
The fumbles started early
for the Raider&amp; (0-10). After
· receiving the opening kickoff, River Valley ,went threeand-out and was for&lt;:ed to
punt. An errant : punt-snap .
left Raider punt Blake Marcum with several W,arriors ·in ,
his face, who wrestled
punter Blake Marcum down
at the Raiders' seven yardline.
Two plays later, Warren (46, 3-4 SEOhL) scored the
first of eight f\lshing touchdowns, on a six-yard run by
Justin Gum.
The Raiders managed a
first down on ~eir next possession, but wtrCJ forced to.
' . the baH
punt, giving Warren
just !hy of midfield.
Some II plays later, Gum
scored again on a ten-yard
run to stretch the Warrior1'
lead to 14-0.
River Valley's next driye
was halted by a fumble that
gave Warren the ball inside
the Raider five the first
quarter ended.
Three plays .later, Warren
added to their lead on a
three-yard sweep by Chris
.Hendricks.
The Raiders answered
with a nine-play 63 yard
drive of their own, which
· ended as the Raiders' only
score of the night, a 16 yard
pass from Raider quartFrback Joey Graham to Derrick Layton.
From then en it was all

gave RV the ball at their 20. ·
Another Raider fumble,
after a long sack, gave Warren the ball at the Raiders'
one. Aaron Coffman lengthened the Warriors' on the
foHowing play on a one-yard
plunge.
A three-and-punt for the
Raiders gave Warren the ball

at the RV 40. Four plays
later, Travis Ollom scored on
a quarterback ·sneak to give
Warren a 42-8 lead.
The Warren Local coaching staff decided that their
34 point lead was not
enough, opting · for an
onside-kick, which gave
Warren the ball at midfield

with 2:28 left in the second
quarter.
After two in~omplete passes and a pass interference on
RV, Warren rail a reverse
known as . the criss-cross,
which became a 41-yard
touchdown run for Aaron
Coffman, giving the Warriors a 49-8 halftime lead.

' Warren scored th,e it' finat
touchdown on theii" firs.t
possession ' of the s~cond
half, which was capp~d &lt;iff
by a 20-yard run by Chris'
Hendricks.
Neither team was able to
accomplish much of an
offensive attack, which lefi
the final score 55-8.

TAT~.
MOTORS~

DON

MASON - Despite spoaing visiling
W'ut County an cady fiDt period touchdown coach Ed Czmlleyi ~White
.nlcons roam!.back wid! a -wg •..:e wilh
28 lUiai1S'oWml poina iD a 28-6 win before
a spuse senior nit!bt fOllowing ar die Bend

in the game."
W:ahama t:ICb!d up 333 yards on die
_groUnd and added 43 yards through the ail:
with Jll!tin Jordan, Bradford ~ and
Brandon HanJtinson coming up big for the
Bend Area offensive. Jordan picked up 93
yards in only four carries to pace the Falcons
on the ground while Clark and Hankil1son
netted 84 yards apiece. Hankimon ran for
two scores on the evening on runs of four
~d 35 yard's with Jordan :ld4ing anolher
WHS touchdown on a 75-yard jaunt in the
final period. Gabe Lambert tallied the Falcons' first ID on the night with a one-yard
burst.
' Defensr..,ly Wahama was led by whom
else but Adam Riclcard with . nine tackles
With Shilo Staats getting credit for sewn
. stops.Aaron Faulk and Ryan MitcheH added
six tackles apiece while R.T. Roush came .
up with five. Ryan MitcheH and Aaron
Faulk each picked off a Win County pass
lwhile Anthony MitcheH rec&lt;lllel'ed a Tiger
fumble.
Wtrt County took a 6-0 first quarter lead
after recovering a fumbled punt ar the WHS
21-yard· line. Six plays later, Chris Miller
buJied in from a yard out 10 stab lhe Tigm
to an early advantage wilh 2:Z7 remaining
in •the opening ,canto. · ,
W:ahama - quick to ~ following
the ensuing kickoff after Riclwd ga.., the
White Falcons great field position with a big
kickoff return to the Tiger 45. FM: plays
later the Falcons had fcngeil. into the lead
with Gabe Lambert taking it in from a yard
out. Lambert also had die lcey play in the
45-yard drive with a juggling c:atch of a
B!lldford Cladt aerial for a 19-yard gain to
the Wut County one. lwn Cadavid put
WHs in fiont to stay with his Point after
kick to give the Bend Area team a 7-6 edge
wilh :28 remaining in the first period.
ruckard set up the Falcons next score by
barreling through the Tiger front line to
block a ptlnt. Lambert recawred the
pitpltin at the W'trt County four wh~

'

FALCONS WIN AGAIN- Wahama·s Brandon Hankinson carries the ball during the
White Falcons' 28-6 win over Wirt County Friday in Mason. (Bryan Long photo)

HankinsOn burst through the interior line
for the touchdown. Once again Cadavid's
PAT boot was on the mark andWahama led
by a 14-0 count with 4:09lefi: in the half
Anthony MitcheH recovered a Tiger fumble at the Win County 34 less than a minute
later :111d Hankinson took an option pitch
from Clark down the far sideline for a 35yard touehdown gallop. Cadavid knocked
dawn the point after to give Waharna a 216 halfiime b!Jlge.
The second half·was a defeqsiye struggle
althougll Waharna missed out on several
scoring opportuni!:ies because of penalties..
The lone score W2S a 75-yard run by Justin
Jordan early in the final · quarter with
Cadavid's eXtra point try splitting the
uprights to make it a 28-6 contest.
Waharna poe up just !59 yards offensively to the Tigers with Wut County totaling
136 yards on the ground and 23 through ~e
air. Chris Miller, the Tigers heralded junior
running back gained 92 yards in 21 carries
while Matt Romine added 31 yards in just
three tries. The Falcons limited Wirt County to a mere 37 yards in total offense during
,the final two periods.
"We controlled the second half and shut
them dawn;' Cromley said. "Early in the

game we were late getting into position on
their sweep plays and they were having
some success running the football. Once we
made the necessary adjustments and got our
kids uito the proper alignment we pretty
much closed the door he added."
WHS recerved some individual performances .that played a huge role in the games
outcome. "The pass reception by Lambert
to set up our first score was really big;' said
Cromley. "ruclcard's punt block, the early
intereeption'by Faulk and Mitchell'! fumble
rec~ were also significant plays fur us.
R.T. Roush also had several big stops on ·
their counter plays which helped our defensive effort tremendously:•
Wahaina must wait until next weekend to
discover its playoff opponent and Cromley
will put that extra practice time to good ~·
"We'll have several drills that we can work'
on to enhance our fundamentals and
improve &lt;SeVeral aspects of our game," said
Cromtey.
"The extra week before the playofiS will
also give us time to heal any nagging
injuries and p~are our younger players for
the future."
Post-season playoff action will begin on
November 9th and lOth:

w.--

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·Chieftains win SEOAL in victory over Ironmen
BY DAN Pal.cml
"Jacksot:~ is an exceHent foot"
:
OVP SPORTS STAFF
ball team and we ~- lucky to
:: JACKSON, Ohio - The come out of here- with a win."
·Logan Chieftains used the
Last week, Logan escaped a
:iame · formula they h;ld fol· · fired-up Gallia Academy by :i
:lowed all year to win their 7-0 tally. This week, the Chief: ~td uncontested SBOAL rains didn't have the win
· ):t'OWD with a 16-13 victory locked up until they were able
. • : ~er Jacldon Friday.
to secure a first down with
:: The Chieftains finished under two minutes left in the
: ~ndefeated in the league for game.
::U.e third straight year and 10Logan turned an early Jack·l) for the second time in a row son (6-4) mistake, the game's
·:by capitalizing on ~pone~t only turnover, into what may
·mistakes, not . makmg the1r have been the game's most
::0\\tn, and crisp execution.
important score.
·
:• And for the second week in
Logan's Jason Dicken recov::a row Logan had to fight for ered a bad connection on a
•
•
&gt;the win. ,
pitch play on the second jack.: "The last two gaines have son attempt from scrimmage
:been pretty tough because we at the jackson 25. The Chief:1\ave played tough opponents;' rains turned that into a one:: said Logan coach Dale Amyx. yard ~erek Harden touch-

down run at the 7:18 mark of
the first quarter into a 7-0
lead.
"I'll say every game you go
our;• said Jackson head coach
Randy Layton, "that the team
that makes the fewest mistakes
is gonna win the footbaU
game. We made one ·mistake
and they capitalized, and it
made all the difference in the
world."
Both teams finished with 16
first downs. Logan gained 284
yards and Jackson gained 261.
Both teams had long drives
in the first half which didn't

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net points. A Logan surge in
the second quarter was
chopped after 14 plays when
Austin Artbdr knocked down
a pass fiom Logan QB Alex
Penrod which was intended
for Chad Kratzenburg.
Logan was no different than
the rest of the SEOAL in its
inability to stop the Jackson
running game as cued by fullback David Swisher. The 215pound senior turned in a 137yard performance in the first
half to allow ~he lronmen to
hold a 7- 7 deadlock at the
mid way point.

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the Class Ah state tide.
Coach Dick Sturm's team
RIPLEY, W.Va.- It hap- entered the gan•e ranked
pened in 1957. It happrned third and is guaranteed of
again in 1968. Add 2001 to playing at home for the first
the list.
round of th~ playofiS.
hn
undefeated
·~ has a great
~ football team football team," noted Viking
has failed to survive the coach Frank Marino, who is
Hatchet game fur the third now 17-8 in Hatchet games.
time in th~ school's ancient "'This is a big win for our
football rivalry with Rjpley. senion and a big win for our
The Vikings (6-4) put program."
together a 15-12 Win 011er
Marino described it as one
the Red Devils (9-1) before a of the most satisfYing wins in
chilled standing room only his 25-year stint at rupley.
crowd at Memorial Stadium
"Death Valley is still Death
on Friday.
Valley."
With the victory, the
True. Ripley won four of
Vikings will put the Hatchet its five home games this seain the aophy case and sit son, losing only to powetful
back and wait. rupley Rivmide. The v~ have
entered the game ranked not lost a home game to
20th in the state and will ~since 1979.
need some . upsets over the
Brock Stotts had another
next two weekS to crack the big game for the Ripley
playoff field of 16.
offense. The senior running
Ravenswood, meanwhile, back carried 32 rimes for 148
will have a week to recover yards, including a nine-yard
before entering the hunt for touchdown run.
EXTRA STAfF

IY8MrQ·•

Area scbooL
.
. The win - die llixlh -igbt: victory for
die White Falccm md :ISIUied die Maon
·County eleven a berth in die post
en
~A pla)'ofli.W:ahama cooduded tegular
season grid acrion wid! a 7-3 mark while.
W'ut County dropped ils fifth com«UUivoe
Outing ID bfi ID 5-5 on die year.
· · "It MS a little scary when we poe them
!bar fiDt touchdown md i t - ~." - an Falcon head coach Ed Qomley tbted.
"We hadn't ll:liled in a pne in a long while
and I.wasn\ sure how we V«luud react. We
made some ~and came back to
concrol die second half which was a big key

Ripley knocks off
unbeaten Red Devils
BYMIKIIMUI

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Sunda~Oct28,2001

Sunday, Oct. 28, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleuent, WV

•

•In f0 Urth

"'1M' coRRESPONDENT

·

_,-

BY BurCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

!
1

'•
•

'

•
•

I
••

MERCERVILLE - As time went off the clock Friday night, fans at Rebel Field h:rd ro have a feeling
that, in the next couple of years, football at South Gal~
lia could be interesting.
With only three seniors graduating from this year's
squad, the Rebels celebrated senior night by giving
Guyan Valley a battle for the first three quarters of play..
But poor field position and an explosive play speUed
the end to any possible upset of the No. 18 team in the
West Virginia SSAC Class A computer racings, as the
Wildcats pulled away late, 30-8.
"I think they've come a long way," said South Gallia
head coach Donnie Saunders. "We competed weU
with a (potential) playoff team:'
The Rebels showed their improvement, trailing only
I 4-8 at halftime and 20-8 at the end of three quarters
ofplay.
·
The South Gallia defense had stopped the Wildcats
inside Rebel territory. The Rebels, though, had to start
their following drive on their own 9-yard line after the
Guyan Valley punt.
The Wildcats defense stopped Jake Workman on a
couple of losses and, on third and 16 from their~ own
3-yard line, Workman was stopped again for a loss and
a safety by Jon Kraft.
Workman ,finished with 17 carries for 61 yards to
lead the Rebels (2-8) on the ground. Zack Lee had 21
yards on five carries.
"At.20-8, we're still in striking range," said Saunders.
"That safety hurt us."
On Guyan Valley's following drive, the Wildcau put
the icing on the cake with a 41-yard run.' by Joey Maynard.
Maynard finished with 12 carries for 86 yards to lead
the Wildcat&lt; (6-4), while Lee Balsar added seven carries for 7 4 yards and Jason Vance 7 4 y:trds on siX carries.
"They (South Gallia) fought real hard against these
men," said Saunders. "They have 12 seniors on the.
· field."
A scoreless first quarter saw the Wildcats manage to
.get the ball inside South Gallia territory twice before
1
being stopped.
But, Guyan Valley wouldn't be denied for long.
A So uth Gallia punt put the boll on Rebels' 26-y:trd
Jine.Two plays later, Vance scored from 14 yards out to
open scormg.
,
On South Gallia's following drive, the Rebels were
forced to ·punt again. This time, Jason Merrick's p\lnt
was returned by Brett Hudson for 44 yards and the
score, giving th e visitors a 14- 0 advantage. ·
The R ebels finally got on the board late in the first
half wh en quarterback Josh Waugh capped a eight-p~y
drive with a 10-yard pass to Merrick for the touchdown with 32 seconds remaining until halftime.
Lee ran in th e conversion to cut the Wildcats' lead to
six at the half.
Waugh fini shed with 126 yards on 10-of-20 passing.
Both tea ms struggled in the air in the opening half,
as th ey co mbined for six interceptions; two of Hudson's inte rceptions were caught by Merrick and the
third by Workman.
Also on th e defensive side of the ball for the Rebels,
R ick Whitt recorded 10 tackles, Lee 9.5, .Brando!l
Cobu m 1even, Zeph Clary 6.5 ·and Eddie Lamphier

BELPRE -Jeremiah Reams rushed
for 178 y:trds, and Guy Earley added 131
to lead the Belpre Golden Eagles to a
22-0 win over the Meigs Marauden in
TVC football action Friday evening at
Belpre.
.
The win gives the Eagles third place in
the TVC, and drops Meigs to fourth as
both teanU went into the contest with
2-2 records in the conference. The win
also breaks a Belpre seven-game losing
streak to the Marauden.
Belpre took the short opening kic~off
and with Reams doing most of the damage went 54 y:trds in six plays for the
score. Nick Hamilton went the final 20
yards for the touchdown. Reams added
the extra points for an 8-0 :Qelpre lead
wid! 9:21 left. Reams carried three
times for 25 yards in the drive.
The Golden Eagles looked like they
were going to put points on the board
later in· the period driving to the
Marauder one yard line. But Meigs
' stopped them on two straight plays, the
hat coming when quarterback Brain
Adams fumbled on fourth down and
Kenny Z~span recovered for Meigs . .
On second down, Tyson Lee ripped
off. a 32-yard run to put Meigs out of the
shadow of their own goal posts, but the
drive stalled and Meigs was forced to
punt.
Adams scored for B·elpre at the 9:04
.mark of the second period on a one yard
run, the pass was no good for the extra
points, but the Eagles were on top 14-0.
Jeremy Roush returned tlie ensuing
kickoff 49 yards for Meigs giving the

to give Meib"' the ball at the Eagle 20.
Meigs had a chan ce to get back into
want to thank themfior tl1eir the game when they drove to the Eagle
e.Jfort, thty art all }~real kids. I one yard line, but Lee was stacked up for
a yard loss on fo urth and goal from the
really l1ate to see tile season
come to a end. But we are going one with 4:28 left in the game.
Earley broke the Marauders back four
to work with these youtlger
plays later breaking loose for a 49 y:trd
players and get them better for scamper to th e Meigs 24 . Four plays later
R oams capped off the scoring with a
next season. "
one yard run with I :45 left in the game.
Adams hit Scott Thomas with a pass for
Marauders good field position. The the extra points and give the Eagles the
Marauders drove to the 26-y:trd line, but 22-0 win.
Reams had 178 yards in 28 carries to
Kyle Hannan was sacked on fourth
lead Belpre, Earley 'added 131 in just
down to turn the ball over on downs.
Belpre looked to increase the lead on eight tries. Adams was 4-of- 13 with an
a 60-yarq scoring run by Reams, but the interception for 69 yards. Earley caught
Eagles were guilty of holding to call the three passes for .51 yards, Thomas added
play bac)t. Belpre then drov~ to the one for 18.
Tyson Lee ended his Meigs career
Marauder 20, they ran six plays inside
' with a career high 116 yards in 14 carthe Meigs 20, but came up short.
Brandon Bobb had the big Marauder ries,Jeremy Roush added 59 in 14 tries.
play a five-y:trd sack of Adams on third Kyle Hannan was 3-of-8 for 25 y:trds,
and goal from the ten. Adam was also and Roush 1-of-1 for 38. Fackler caught
called for intentional grounding on the two passes for 48 yards, Ryan Fraizer
play.
. two for 15.
Adams fourth down pass was then
"I'm proud of these seniors," Maraudpicked. off by Buzzy Fackler who er coach Mike Chancey said. "I want to
returned it 30 yards to end the threat thank them for their effort, they are all
and send the team into the locker room great kid';:! really hate to see the season
at the half with Belpre on top 14-0.
come to a end. But we are going to
Tyson Lee returned the second half work with these younger players and get
kickoff 30 yards for Meigs, and the them better for next season."
Marauders·went on a drive to the Belpr~
Seniors playing their fi.nal game for
10 yard line. But once again they came Meigs were Tyson Lee, Darrick Knapp,
up short when Hannan's fourth down Brandon Bobb, Nick McLaughlin, Evan
pass was incomplete.
. Shaw and J. P. Varin.
Belpre drove into 'Meigs territory
Belpre ends their season at 5-5 overall
once again., but fackler tackled Adams and 3-2 in the TV C. Meigs drops to 3-7
short of the first down on fourth and six and 2-3 in the conference.

Hannan unable to hold on to hafltime lead
Wildcats fall
·to Gauley
Bridge, 23-20
-th DAN ADKINS
OVP SPORTS STAFF

GAULEY BRIDGE,W.Va.julnping out to an early lead
behind a touchdown catch by
lellior John Woods, the Hannan
Wddcaa ran out of steam Friday
and.were repelled by the Gauley
. Bridge Travellers' wall of defense,

SIX .

"I'm proud of this team,'' said Saunders. ·"! would
like to have three or four of those losses back. They
worked hard all season."
The Wildcots will now wait to see if they made the.
playoffs. They needed help elsewhere to go along with . '
·
Friday's win.
Th e West Virgin ia playoffs begin on the weekend of
Nov. 8-9 as the top 16 teams in each class qualify for a '
playoff berth .

23-20.
Woods ran the first score in

&amp;om 15 yanls out on a pass fiom
junior Sticy Cooper, giving
Hannan the lead four minutes
into the game. The conversion
failed, leaving the score at 6-0.
Woods led the WildcaiS with
120 yanls rushing, while juniors
Shannon Gay and Kirk Murray
finished with 35 and 58, respecliwl)l Junior BJ. Nicely finished

wilh 14 yanls rushing. .
Gay also notched seven tack-

les, while Woods had six, senior
~randon Shull eight and freshman Cody Finley 4.
·~ohn did a great job for us

I
tOnight offensively;' said Hannan
Coach Kent Price. "He was in
the right place at the right time
on several occasions and was
making die connections · we
needed:'
Murray. who opened the game
with a 23-yard kickoff return,
posted the Wildtats' sec:Ond"score
in the first quarter; this one fiom
25 yanls out on a pass fiom
Cooper at the 4:19 mark. The
PAT failed.
G2uley Bridge, led by brothers
Jason and Jeff Skaggs, didn't see
poinl:l on the scoreboan:l until
the final minute of the" first half,
as Jason Skaggs ran the ball in
fiom 25 yards Olfter a pass fiom
junior Neal Sean. The conversion was successful, leaving the
score at 12-8 with less than a
minute remaining.
"I give them credit where it~
due:'· Price said. "This was one
helluva game that went down in
Hannan's. possession the majority
of the time, but each time the
WildcaiS would run a play.
Gauley Bridge~ defense would
push them back that much further.
"Their defense held us back a
lot in the final minutes. That's
one of the best defensive lines

Rio Grande wins Shawnee Invitational
RIO GRANDE - The third. with 81 poiniS. There
University of Rio Grande were 32 runnen in the men's
Redmen cross country ·team race.
won the Shawnee State lnvitaOn the women's side, it w:as
tiona! on Friday afternoon, the first meet this season that
scoring 24 poiniS, while the the Redwomen ran with a full
Redwomen placed · third in team. Rio was paced by ~­
their first scoring meet of the shirt freshman Heather Mace
season.
(Logan, OH). Mace won the
Sophomore Marc Littrell women's race with a time of
(Baltimore, OH) continued his 19:34. Sophomore Amanda
late seawn surge by winning Wolfe (Lancaster, OH) was secthe race with a time of 22:50. ond, 16 seconds off the pace
It was the first win for Littrell of (19:50).
his college career. Matt Boyles
(Tuppers Plain, OH) was runner-up at 22:52. Littrell and
Boyles have developed into a
potent 1-2 punch for Head
Coach Bob Willey.
Scott Littrell (Baltimore, OH)
was fifth (27:02), Derek Baker
(Gallipolis, OH) wa.&lt; seventh ·
-(27: 17), David Kerns (West
Liberty, OH) finished 10th
(27:28). Jim Robinson (Lake·view, O H) claimed 12th overall
with ·' rum· ~,f 27:37. Bryan ·
Jones (East Palestine, OH) also
ran well, finishing 17th (28:09).
Shawnee State finished second behind Rio Grande with
32 points, Columbus State was

Tiffany Fogle (Macksburg,
OH) finished 12th (22:09).
l=reshman Kristen Barnett
(South Webster, OH) was 16th
(23:07) while sophomore Carrie Reed (Minford, OH) finished 21st (27:00) in her first
collegiate race. Christen Baird
w:as 26th with a time of 28:14.
Baird, a River Valley High
School product, was also running her first ever collegiate

with 31 and Notre Dame College was second with 51.
Columbus State was fourth
with 90 points.
There were 26 runners in the

women's race.

Rio Grande will now gear up
for the American Mideast Conference Meet on November 3.
The meet will be held at the
Stanley Evans Field complex,
beginning at 10:15 with the
race.·
women's race. The men will
ShaWnee State won the meet race at 11 ·a.m.

ATTENTION CHARTER CUSTOMERS:

we've been up against all season.
The secon9 quarter saw plenty of ground work by the WildcaiS, as Woods opened up play
with a 25-yard rush through the
Travellers. Cooper and Murray
connected on a 20-yard pa«
before Gay darted straight
through the middle of the opposition on a 10-yard sprint, giving
Hannan a third first down.
Only seconds later Cooper
co11r1eaed with Gay - this time
on a 10-yatd pass that put the
Wildcats in scoring ~osition
again. Woods rushed for 15 more
yanls before Murray finally made
it across the end zone at the 4:30
mark. The conversion proved
successful on this third try, and
the Ashton gridden; led their
basiS 20-8 going into the half.
:'Both teams really put forth a
good effort,'' Price said. "But
their wall of defense seemed to
get higher and stronger as time
passed and we just couldn't get
past it."
Price added that point conversions Friday night doomed the
WildcaiS.
"We simply could not make
the conversions;' he said. "Had
·we made our conversions here
tonight, we would have walked

away with this game."
Gauley Bridge didn't light up
the scoreboard again until the
end of the third quarter as Jefli:ey
Sk.1ggs sprinted the ball in fiom
40 yards out A successful conversion put he Travellers within
range of Hannan, 20-16.
During early.· fo~-quarter
play, Gauley Bridge's Sears and
junior Jamie Click combined on
a 45-yard effort with 9:13 left to
play. Following a successfol PAT,
the Travellers led the Wildcats
23.-20.
Hannan finishes the season a
disappointing 0-10, while
Gauley Bridge posted its · third

Olllo Hlg~ lk:hool FootiNtll
Frldar'o Rnulta
Al&lt;r. Eliot tO, Akr. Konmoro 0
Akr. Hoban 18, Cots. WaHtraon 1
Akr. Mancheller 58, Akr. Covenlry
Akr. North 27, Akr. East 0

Amllerat·Steele 12, Rocky Rl\ler 0
Antonia 24, Arcanum 12
Antwerp 58, Haviland Wayne Tract

Cin. Reeding 47, Cin . Counlry Oay
t6
Cln. Roger Bacon 20. Cin. North·
west 7
Cin. St. Xavier 37, Hamilton 23
l:j~ . .11ummit Country Day 34, Oak
Htll 12 ~
Cin . Sycamore 20, Harrison 13, OT
Cin . Western Hills 34 , Cln. Walnut
Hills 7
Cin . Woodward 26, Cay. Jefferson 0
Cin . Wyoming 35, Blanchtsltr 7

~

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e

Alliance Marllngton 14, Canfield 9
Amanda·Ciearcreek 42 , Canal Wincheater 14

Maumee 28. ~nyaburg 27
Mayfield .t1 , Lyndhur8t Bruatl 0
MCCOmb « . Vanlu• 1-t
Modlno Highland 41 , Tallmadge 14
M.ntor 17, Elyria Sr. 0
Mlddletleld Cordlnal 50, Orwoll
Orand Valley 7
Middlatown 35, Llf}11 Sr. 13
Ui ..n Edi10n 10, Sandusky Perkins
7
Milford 34, Cin. Hughtl 7
Millbury Lake 30, Elmora Woodmere
12
Millersburg W. Holmes HI , Wooster
Trlway 14
Mineral Ridge 15, Vienna Mathews
8
Minatar 18, Lima Cent. Cath . 0
Mogodoro 47, Penlnoula Woodridge
0
Monlteau
(Pl.) 33 , Andover
f'rmotunlng Volloy 14
Monroewllla 20, Collin, Western
Rooerve 1~
•
MI. Gilead ,.2, Richwood N. Union
18
N. Lewisburg Triad 2!, Spring . NE
21
N. Lima S. Ronge 35, N. Jockoon
Joclcaon·Mihon tO
N. Olmsted 20. Bay Village Boy 0
N. Ridgeville 21, Modlno 0
Napoleon 21, Swanton 7
Neloonvlllti·York 30, Albany Alexan·
der 0
Now Albany .15, Mllloroport 12
Now Cortlole Tecumsoh 28, Bolle·
fontolne 10
New Concord John Glenn Ml, Oresdon Tri·Volley 0
Now Lebanon Dixie 57, Dor. North·
ridge 7
Now La•lnaton 20, Thornville Sheri·
don 14, Of
Now Mlddlatown Spring . 23,
McDonald 7
Now Pant Notional Trail 21. Union
Clly Mlaoloolnowo Valley 19
New Woohlnglon Buckeye Central
45, Croatllne 8
Newarlt Licking Volley 16, Hebron
Lakewood 0 .
,
Newcomerltown 41, W. Lafayette
Ridgewood 7
Newton Falla 21, Leavittsburg
LaBrae 27
Norwalk St. Paul 55, Now London 0
Ook Harbor 21, Port Clinton 0
· Onlorlo 39, Lucat 0
·
Oregon Clor 14, Tol. Whitmer 14
· Palneovllle Rlvaralde 19, Eolllako
N. 8
·
Parma Sr. 14, Parma Normandy 12
Pickerington 28, Lancaoter 21
Piqua 14, Clayton Northmont 11
Plymouth 41, Aohlond Mlpltton o
Plymouth 41. Ashland Mapleton 0
Poland 23, Struthera 8
Portamoulh 21, WhHieroburg 19
Ravenna SE 34, Windham 0
Richfield Ravertl14, Coplay 9
Ridgeway Rldgamonl 21, Now
Mlaml13
Rocky River Lutheran West 58,
Brooklyn 0
Rossford 10, Whitehouse Anthony
Wayn1 e
s. Charleston SE 28, Mechanics·
burg 0
Saratlsvllla Shenandoah 34, Caldwell 8

Fremont Roea 21 , Sandulky 0
Gahanna 47, Newan: 13
Gallipolis. Gallia te, Point Pteuanl
(W. Va .) 0
Garfield Hts . .t1, Yaple Hta. 8
Geneva • I , Alhtabula Edgewood 0
Germantown Valley View 35, Day.
Oakwood t3
Girard .tO, liberty 8
Glouster Trimbll86, Htmlock MUter
24
Goshen 28, Little Miami 14
Grafton Mktvlew 36, laOr•noe Key·
atone 0
Granvtll.a 39, Sugar Grove Berne
Union 6
Groen 28, Wadsworth 23
Grovli City 35, Walterville S. 34
Hamilton Badin 3B, Madeira 0
Hamler Patrick Henry
WauHOn ,.

Arcodia 23, Arlington 19
Clo . Glenvlllt 37 , Cle . S. 0
Ashland Crestvit.. .... 10, Greenwich Cle . His. Lutheran East 48 , ThompS. Cent. 7
.
. son Ledgemont 7
Ashtabula lakeside 10, Jefferson 8 Cia JFK 30. Cit . Lincotn-West 0
Attica Seneca E. 29. Fostoria Sl. Cle. Rhodes 20, Cle. Collinwood 14,
• Wendelln 0
OT
Atwater Waterloo 37, Rootstown 7
Cle . VASJ 27. Madison 0
.
Avon 28, lorain Claarview 0
Cols. Academy 70, Grandview o
Avon Lake 13 , Olmsted Falls 9
Cots . Beechcroft , 21. Pataskala.
Bainbridge
Paint Valley 24, Watkins Memorial 0 .
Wllllemsport Westfall 21
Cols. Centennial 21. Cola. Whet·
BaiUmoro Liberty Union 8, Summit stone 14
• Slation Licking Hie. 0
Cols.-cruoadera 41. Lockland 14
Bamesvllle12 , Belmont Union Local Cola. Hamilton Twp. 7, Circleville 8
8
Cols. Lindon 41, Cola. E. 8
Batavia 27, Clermont NE 7
Colo. Mifflin 80, Colo. W. 6
Bodford 34. Lorain Admiral King 26 Cots. Northland 48, Cola. Briggs 28
Bellaire St. John 14, Now Mota· Colo. Ready 17, Colo. Hartley 8
· moraa Frontier 0
Cols. S. 7, Cots. Ea1tmoor S
·Btllbroolc 42, Preble Shawnee 21
Cola. St. Charlea 37, Cln. Indian Hill
Bellevue 20, Shelby 0
20
·
' Bellville Clear Fork 44, Loudonville Cols. Walnul Ridge 33, Cols, Indo·
6
pandence 14
Bellville Clear Fork 4.4, Loudonville Columbia Stallon Columbia 46,
8
Richmond Hta. 0
.
Beloit W. Branch 28, Salem 0
Columbiana 43, Hanoverton United
Belpre 22. Pomeroy Melgo 0
6
Berea 33, Middleburg His. Midpark Columbiana Crestview 55, Sebring
12
0
Bloomdale Elmwood 11 , Tontogany Conneaut 41, Painesville Harvey 0
. Ollego 7 .
Convoy Crestview 21, Paulding 19
Bluffton 12. Columbus Grove 7
Cortland -Lakevle!' 25, Champion
24, 20T
Brecksville 21 , N. Royalton 7
Bryan 26. Metamora Evergrnn 7
Covington 21. Anna 7
•
Burton Berkahlra 6, Kirtland 0, OT
Crooksville 13, Zanesville W. MuskButler 42, Greenville o
lngum 9
:Cambridge 14, Byesville Meadow- Cuyahoga Falls 41, Barberton 7
brook tO
Cuyahoga His. 20, Beachwood 0
'Can. Coni. Cath. 23, Louisville Day. Carroll 28. Lomon·Monroe 0
~ Aquinas 16
Day. Dunbar 14, Day. Meadowdale
8
Can. S. 42, Carrollton 0
·canal Fulton NW 43. Akr. Spring . 13 Day. Trolwood·Madlson 19, Spring.
Carey 12, BaScom Hopewell- N. 14
'loudon 2 ·
Dellance Ayeravllle 14, Defiance
Carlisle 14, Middletown Madison 7
Tinora 0
Castalia Margaretta 21, Clyde 7
Delaware Buckeye Valley 26, Card·
22,
Jamestown ington 13
-cedarville
Greanevlew o
Delphos Jefferson 48, Spencerville
Centerburg 21, Johnstown North· 0
•ridge 20, 20T
Delta 48 , Montpelier 0
Centerville 17, Beavercreek 7
Dola Hardin Northern 52, CaryChagrin Falls 34, Perry 0
Rawson 7
Chesterland W. Geauga 20, Aurora Dover 28, New Philadelphia 7
7
Dublin Coffman 27, Groveport 9
.Chillicothe Zane Trace 38, Piketon Dublin Scioto 19, Reynoldsburg 14
U
E. Paleotlna 43. Salineville South·
.Cin. Anderson 50, Cin. McNicholas ern 12
1!0
. Ealon 27, W. Milton Milton·Unlon 0
'Cin. Colerain 38, Cln. La Salle 0
Elyria Calh . 48, Cia. Cent. Gath. 14
:bin. Elder 39, Cin. Oak Hills 22
Euclid 28, Lorain Southview 14
Cin. Finneylown 17, Cln. Hills Cllris· Fairfield 12, Cln. Wihton Woods 6
tlan Academy 12
Fairview Park FairView 13, Westlake
Cin. Glen Este 35, Amelia 6
0
jOin. Harmony 18, Yellow Springs Findlay 21, Fostoria 20
12, OT
Frankfort Adena 21, Chillicothe
Cln. Moeller 44, Cin. Princeton 42
Unloto 6
'Cin. N. College Hill 41, Deer P~uk Franklin Furnace Green 35, Scioto
16
McDermott NW 28

•s.

12

Hicksville 26, Holgote 8
Hilliard Darby 21, Chillicothe 18
Hiillord Davldoon 17, Worthington
Kilbourne 14·
Hubbard 28, Brool&lt;fleld 0
Hub•r Hta. Wayne 4-0, tc.tlerlng
Fairmont 14
Hudoon 28. Slow 0
Huron 44, Sandusky Sl. Mary'o 7
Ironton 20, Colo. DoSaltlo 10
Jolmotown·Monroe 20. Donvllla 14
Kent Roosevelt 13, Ravenna o
Kenton 39, Elide 7
KeHerlng Alter 38, Day. Chamlnod"
Julianne 0
.
KeHerlng Folrbom 34, ·W. Carrollton
26
Kings Mills Klnga11, Cln. Turpin 9
Lakoolda Danbury 58, Loreln Calli .
27
LakewoOd Sl. Edword 57, Clo.
Benedictine 7
Lancaoter Fairfield Union 28 ,
Bloom·Carroll 7
Lebanon 48, Oxford Talowanda 13
Leipolc 27. Flndlar Llbtrty·Banlon 7
Lewisburg Tri·Counly N. 48, Brad·
lord 14
Lexington 20, Aahland 8
Llbarty Center 15, Archbold 14
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 13, Maoon 6
Lisbon Baaver Local 21, Rlc.hinond
Edison o
Lodl Cloverloal14, Akr. Norton 7
Logan 18, Jackson 13
Lorain Brookside ·13, Oberlin Flro·
lands 7
Louisville 20, Minerva 8
Lowellville 53, Barlln Cenlor Weal·
em Reserve 7
Macedonia Nordonla :W, Twinsburg
Chamberlin 8
Mansfield Sr. 17, Mansfield Madison
9
Mantua Cieslwood 17, Mogadore
Field 18
Maria Stein Marion Local 34, New
Bremen 6
Marietta 52, Athena 8
Marion Harding 42, Vermilion 0 ·
Marion
Pleasant
58,
Morral
Ridgedale o
Marion River Valley 25, Gallon
Northmor,o
.
Marysville 26, Franklin His •. 0
Maasltlon · Jackson 20, N. Can.
Hoover 10
Massillon Perry 14, Can. GlenOak 0
Masalilon Tualaw 14, Navarre Fair·
loss 7

Shirpsvilie (Pa .) ,.2, Campbell Wilmington 33, Loveland t9
Uemoriai1.C.
woodsfield Monroe Cent. 14,
Sh•rwood Fairview 38, Edger1on 18 Beallsville 0
Sidney t , Troy 7
wooster 23, OrNillo e
Sidney lehman 50, Madison Plains Xenia 50, Spring . S . .t2, OT
0
Youngs. Boardman 30, Youngo .
Solon 12, Chagrin Filii Kenston 0
Austintown·Fitch 0
Southington Chalker 00, Ashtabula Voungs . Chaney 12. Niles McKinley
Sts . J&amp;P
7
Spring . Kenton Ridge 27, Enon Voungs . Wilson 3-t, Can. Timken 8
Greenon 13
Zanesville 27, Rayland Buckeye
Spring. NW 26, Bellefontaine Ben · Local 7
jamln Logan 20
zanesville
Maysville
21 ,
Spring . Shawnee 29, Lewistown McConnelsville Morgan 14
Indian Lake 7
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley so. E.
St. Henry .tO, Ft. Recovery 6
can. 13 .
St. Morya Memorial 17, Deliance 14
St. Paris Graham 39 , Casstown
W.Va. high achoot ICOFM
Mloml E. 7
Ftldor'o RHulto
Steubenville 27, Youngs : Aayen 6
Bridge'port 34, South Harrison 8
Stow Walah Jeault 19, Akr. SVSM Broo~e 17, Capital 1-t
12
Calhoun County 40 , Brulon County
Strasburg-Franklin 14, Sugarcreek . o
Garoway 0
Clay·Battello 49, Geibel, Po . 18
Str6etaboro
26,
Garrettavllle Cia)' county .t5 , Webster county a
Garfield 0
Fairiand, Ohio 32. Wintleld 7
Strongsville 13, Brunswick 12
Fairmont Senior 35, Eaat Fairmont o
Sunbury Big Walnut 43, Dtlawar• 6 Franktort 21 , Keyser 7
Sycamore Mohawk 7, Tiff in Calvert Galllpolla, Ohio, 16, Point Pleaaant
3
· Sylvania Northvlew 27, Sylvania Gauley Brlpge 23, Hannan 20
Southview 0
Grelton 26. Lincoln 7
Tiffin Columbian 75. Norwalk 7
Greenbrier West 42 , Pooahontaa
Tlpp Clly Bethel 34, W. Alexandria county 33
Twin Valley S. 7
Hampshire 44, Musselman o
Tlpp Clly Tippecanoe 29, Urbana 28
rb
H
c
o
35 R
Tol. Ottawa Hilla 50, Tol. Christian B · He art oovar ' oane ounty
Tol. Scott42'. Tol. Bowsher 27
Hundred 47, Hancock. Md.. 28
Hurricane 12, Logan 0
Tot. St. Francia 16, Tal. Cant. Cath. Iaeger 14 , Summera County 6
8
M
3 c•
111 8
Tot. St. John's 39, Tol. Wallo t4
James onroe 3. napmanv e
Tol. Start 20, Tol. Rogers o
Jofflrson 48 • Hodgeavlllo 6
Trenton Edgewood 7, Miamisburg 6 Lewis County IV, Robert C. Byrd 6
Troy Christian 33, Waynestleld· Magnolia 22 · Oak Glen l3
Goshen 8
Midland Trail 38 , Valley Fayette 18
Uniontown (Pa.) 28, Youngs. Urtu· Moorefield 28. Pendleton Counly 12
line 26
Morgantown 14, Unlvorslly 1
Uniontown Lake 2B , Alliance 6
Mount Hope 36, Meadow Bridge 22
Upper Arlington 28. MI. Vernon 9
Nicholas County 43, Richwood 30
·upper Sandusky 32, Gallon 26, 20T Nitro 56, St. Albans 28
Utlca·Zt, Fredericktown 17
North Marion 21, Elklna14
Van Wert22. Colina 15
Oceana 22. PlkeVIaw 8
Versailles 33, Rockford Parkway 14 Oak Hill33, Gteenbrler East1-t
Vincent warren 55, Cheshire River Paden Clly 32, Valley Wetzel 12
Valley e
Parkersburg 34, George Washing·
w. Cheater Lakola w. 42, Cln. With· ton 15
rowe
Parkersburg South 42, Tyler Con·
w. Llberly·Salam 40, Spring. solidatod 28
Catholic e
Philip Barbour 62, Liberty Har.rlson
W. Unity Hilltop 14, Edon 8
18
Wapakoneta 32, Ottawa-Glandorf Poca 28, Bluefield 17
19
Preston .t1, Buckhannon-Upshur 20
Warren Howland 13, Warren JFK 7
Princeton tO, Mount View 0
Warsaw River View 40; Philo 14
Ripley 15, Ravenswood 12
Washington C.H. 34, W. Jefferson Alveraida 33, Huntington 14
14
Shady Spring 34, Liberty Raleigh 12
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 48, Sherman 14. Scott 7
London 15
Southern Garratt, Md. 38, Tucker
Waterford 62. Stewart Federal County 0
Hocking 20
Spring Valley 53, South Charleaton
Waverly 14, Cln. Mariemont 7
0'
Wellington 82, Oberiln 7
51. Marya 53, Doddridge County 14
Wellston 47, McArthur Vinton Coun- Tolsia 20, Sissonville 17
ty 0
Van 38, Tug Valley 6
Westland 41, Waalorville N. 35
Wahama 28, Wlrt County 8
Whltehoii·Yoarllng 38, Cola. BaKley Wheeling Park 34, John Marshall I 8
21
Williamson 28, Ouval6
· Wickliffe 35, Cle. Orange 0
Williamstown 47, Ritchie Counly 8
Willard 42, Bucyrus 0
Woodrow Wilson 34, Cabell Midland
Wllliarnsburg 34, New Richmond 19 6
Willoughby S. 24. Chardon 12
Wyoming Easl28, lndependonco 12

The Fayette County school,
rumored to be consolidating
with nearby Valley High School
before the next school year,
closed out the season by honoring senion; prior to the game's
start.

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&amp;unlap lll:imei ·a.rnhnd • Page 85

OHIO, W.VA. HIGH SCHOOL FOOl BALL SCORES

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· URC 2001-12 Hoops Schedules
2001-42 Rlo M•a'• B•;t tW SdNclulo
At St. FnncU (IN) Tournament
Jp.m.
Nov.J
At St. Francis (IN) Tournament
216 p.m.
Nov. 10 At PlWlle (KY) Coli'S"
7:30 p.m.
N&lt;W. 16 lkYo Fnncis Classk
8p.m.
Nov. 17 Btovo Francis Classic
8p.m.
Nov. 20 Pilt&lt;ville (KY) Colkg&lt;
8p.m.
Nov. 24 At Cumberland (KY) Collese
6p.m.
Nov. 27 At West Virginia Wetl&lt;yan
7:30p.m.
Nov. 30 Houghton (NY) (AMC)
8 p.m.
De&lt;. I
Rob.ru Wetl&lt;yan (AMC)
8 p.m.
De&lt;. S
At Wakh (AMC)
4 p.m.
Dec.' 13 At Univ. of Charleston CI/V)
7:30p.m.
De&lt;. 15 At Mt.Vernon Naurw=:ne (AM C) 7:30p.m.
De&lt;. 18 World Harv&lt;St Coll&lt;s"
7:30p.m.
De&lt;. 22 Huntington CoD'S" (IN)
7 p.m.
Dec. 28 Newt Oliver Clasaic
8 p.m.
Dtc. 29 . Newt Oliver Clmic
4p.m.
Cedazville Univcnity (AMC)
7:30p.m.
Jan. 3
Geneva CoDes&lt; (AMC)
8 p.m.
Jan. 5
Non. Dame College (AMC)
8 p.m.
Jan. 8
8p.m.
Jan. 12 At Saint Vincent (AM C)
8p.m.
Jan. 17 Tiffin University (AMC)
4p.m.
Jan. 19 At Point Park (AM C)
At Shawnee State (AMC)
8p.m.
Jan . 22
At Ohio Dominican (AMC)
7:30p.m.
Jan . 24
At Malone ·Coll&lt;s" (AMC)
7:30p.m.
Jan. 26
At Wotld Harvat CoO'S"
7:30p.m.
Jan. 31
Feb.2
Ohio Donninican (AMC)
8p.m.
Feb.S
At Cedarville University (AMC) 7:30p.m.
Feb.9
Daemen Coll&lt;s" (AMC)
8p.m.
Feb. 12
Sh:~wnee State (AMC)
8p.m.
Feb. 16 At Urbana (AMC)
7p.m.
Nov.2

Check out Monday's Tribune and Sentinel for
Ohio footbal playoff infomation and parings

2001-0l Rio WOmoa'• Bubtboll Schodulo
Home Games in CAPS
TBA
@St. Fnncis (IN) Tournament*
Nov. 2
TBA
@St. Fnncis (IN) Tounument*
Nov. 3
6p.m.
SPALDING (KY)*
Nov. 6
2p.m.
Nov. 10 Urauline CoUese (AMq
6p.m.
Nov.l6 BEVO FRANCIS CLASSIC
6p.m.
Nov. l7 BEVO FRANCIS CLASSIC
7p.m.
Nov. 20 CENTRAL STATE (OH)
Nav. 23 @Cumberland College Tournament TBA
Nov.24 @Cumberland Coll~ge Tournament TBA
6p.m.
Nov. 27 CEDARVILLE (AMC)
6 p.m.
Nov. JO HOUGHTON (AMq
6p.m.
ROBERTS WESLEYAN (AMC)
Dec. I
7p.m.
De&lt;.4
WilBERFORCE
Walsh Uni..,.ity (AMC)
TBA
Dec.8
Dec. IS Mount Vernon Naur&lt;ne (AMC) 5:30p.m.
7 p.m.
Dec.19 SETON HILL (AMC)
2 p.m.
Dec.29 Spalding University (KY)
2p.m.
D&lt;c. JO Indiana Sourheast
6p.m.
GENEVA COLLEGE (AMC)
Jan.S
NOTRE DAME. COLLEGE (AMC) 6p.m.
Jan.8
6p.m .
Carlow
College (AMC)
.Jan. II
TBA
Saint Vincent (AMC)
Jan. 12
2p.m.
TIFFIN (AMC)
.Jan. 17
TBA
Point Park College (AMC)
Jan. 19
6p.m.
Shawnee State (AMC)
Jan. 22
Jan.23 Ohio Dominican Collese (AMC) 6p.m.
5:30p.m.
Malone College (AMC)
Jan. 26
7p.m.
Wilberforce Univenity
Jan. 29
6p.m.
OHIO DOMINICAN (AMC)
Feb.2
5:30p.m.
Cedarville University (AM C)
Feb.S
6p.m.
DAEMAN COLLEGE (AM C)
Feb.9
6p.m.
SHAWNEE
STATE
(AMC)
Feb. 12
TBA
Urbana Univenity (AMC) .
Feb. 16

·

f1omPageB1

Ohio State (4-3, 2-2) got
:to the Penn State 17 with
: 2:55 left, but Bryan Scott
:blocked the field goal try.
: Mills' first touchdown pass
came in the third . quarter
when he found Tony John: son from 26 yards out.
: But the freshman's biggest
:play might have come earlier in the third, when he
took a quarterback keeper;
leaped over a blocker,
bounced u ~ defender and
·ran 69 yards for a to• · ·", down. It was the lo
. Penn State run in more d n
two years and the longest ny
a q11arterback since 1991.
'I'he 2-point conversion

ftomPIIp 11
comp.etitors - and Ryan
Newman, who is· running a
handful of events this year
and will officially be a rookie
when he runs the full series
in 2002. Poles by four firstyear drivers is a modern era
record for NASCAR's Winston Cup Series.
"Winning a pole was not
really' one of my goals.''
Atwood said. "That was just
going to be a bonus if we did
that. My goal was to win
Rookie of the Year, and even
that was way harder than it
appeared at the start of the

year."
· Atwood

has

struggled

w.dking at a brisk pace, Dale

f;arnJwdt Jr. artfully maneu.,..

Iris woy through a thick crowd of
jims waving men:handise to be
~utogrnphed and begging him to

IX&gt;&lt;" for pictures.

! A pock of ahnost 50 people
, buddies, around the back of Jeff
(;ardon s hauler, pushing closer
1nd closer to try to grab his
attention and his signature. Flashbulbs pop and Sharpie pens are
ihoved at him as Gordon
panendy tries to accommodate CROWDED- NASCAR drf'ler Jeff Gordon, right, talks with l)'lembers of his pit crew In the highly congested garage area of the
!""'')Qne.
•• A NASCAR policy that Talladega Superspeedway In Talladega, Ala., on Oct. 20_ (AP)

fllows fans

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access to the garage
p-ea has turned the driven' time
9ut of the car into a challengo:
tJmost as big as the mes them{elves.As two of the biggest st:trs
in the sport, Earnhardt and Gotlion have seen their office space
ovmun by · the average, olten
bverzealous fan.
' "I appreciate that it's a big deal
lor a fan to come in and meet
)heir favorite driver and get an
~utograph or a pic;ture because a
lpt of times it's the opportunity
Qf a lifetime;' Gordon said "But
~ey also have to ~ that this
i.' our workplace and we're trying to do a job here."
; Sometimes that's tough, espel:ially for the top drivers who
Will fight the pedestrian traffic
~ this weekend at Phoenix
International Rae~
' Simply walking 50 yards from
tJ!e hauler to the car can alee
1evera.l minutes and requires
great skill. Three rules must be
jOIIowed: never stOp walking, be
~ful not to step on anyone,
4nd scribble your name while

The process has Earnhardt
considering hiring security help
just to go:t around
"When I'm getting ready to
go to the drivm'meeting, I need
to account fur how big the
crowd is and how long it migi!t
slow me up," he said "There~ no
such thing as I~ fOr the
meeting a few minures befure
because }'lu'd never make it on
time.There~justso many people

along the way?'
· NASCAR recognizes the
monster its popularity has created and is ~e-examining criteria
for getting a coveted garage pass.
Now, the 43 teams are given
six passes to each race to distribute as they please. Every sponsor
associated with the teams has a
list, usually made up of associates
and customers. The drivers have

in the garage area at any given
race, said NASCAR spokesman
Jim Hunter. Afier a rash of complaints following the May race in
Concord, N.C., NASCAR is
reviewing sign-in sheets at .very
race to determine exactly who
go:ts into the garages.
"It has grown increasingly difficult for a driver to walk liom
point A to point B without
being surrounded by fans looking for autographs;' he said.
NASCAR chairman Bill
. France Jr. is considering a system
that 'WOuld continue to allow
fans in the garage but limit their
access to the dri.,... One idea
would be to allow drivers to sign
autographs only at designated
times or in the area inunediately
behind their haulen.
"The spon is built on the fans
and the sponsors, so we can't tike
that away;• France said. "But I

them.
"I'd like to make a project out
of how we can make this better
without hanning what the spon
was built on."
Gordon would like that. He
has seen fans fall down trying. to
catch him and others trip over
jackstands. He's also concerned
abour hitting people with his car.
The most dango:mus time in
the gar..ge area is when the cars
are coming off the track on a
"clean&lt;Ut," when the driver has
cut the power and is coasting in
with no brakeS and little steering.
"I'm surprised we don't have
many incidents. I know I've had

(lit~,

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Point Pleasant, WV

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M' SPORTS WRITER

..
"

for everyone."

following offices:

father's

''

you.
"NASCAR
has
made
improvements with security and
ropes, but I think they can do a
better job."
Earnhardt doesn't w:mt fans
banned from the gar..ge and
doesn't want to stop acconunodating people who pay hundreds
or thousands of dollars to support him. But he would like to
see a better policing system.
"A lot of them are first-timers
in here and they don't know
which way a car is coming,
where it is corning fiom or
when practice is starting," he
s:iid ''That makes it ' dangerous

is aca:pting patien!Jl at his

follow_
ing·-in

He's tough and driven, just
like dad.
He likes to race, but loves
to win, just like dad.
Matt Martin, the 9-yearold son ofWinston Cup racer
Mark Martin, is turning laps
and turning heads at Litde
New Smyrna Speedway in
Florida. He's driving his
quarter-midget race cars
ttgainst kids nearly twice his
age and more than holding
his own.
uHe'S won quite a few,"
Mark Martin said, speaking
of 15- to 30-lap heats and
feature races in the 9-16 age
division. "And they are really,
really hard to win."
Matt has stopped keeping
track, but said he's· won about
55 races.
Quarter-midget
racing
helped spawn the driving .
careers of such stars as Jeff .
Gordon, Terry and Bobby
Labonte, and .Tony Stewart.
But Martin said even he was
surprised when his son, then
7, wanted to take a shot at
racing.
"I don't really have a burning desire for him to do what
I do," Martin said. "I have a
burning desire for him to be
good at something.
"He's my son .... I want
him to be the best at whatever he does, or at something,
because I've experienced a
litde bit of that and a taste of
what that feels like."
Matt said the decision to
pursue racing was easy.
"My dad's a race car driver
and I wanted to follow in his
· footsteps," he said:
For father and son, racing
has become the ultimate
bonding opportunity, even
though Arlene Martin would
rather her son do something
else.
"She wants me to be a
lawyer," Matt said, giggling
with his father.

4

•••••••••

Matt Martin

',

several close calls after a cleancut," Gordon said. ' You•re coming in, you can't stop the car and
people walk right in fiont of

t

you go.
],,
•
•

1

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l

52 HP Perkins DSI, Live PTO,
8x2 or 8x8 trans, Dual remotes, 011 cooled
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.,

and 21-yard return early in
the second quarter set up
Nugent' field goal, giving
.the Buckeyes a 10-6 lead.
The Nittany Lions closed
to 7-6 by the end of the first
quarter on Robbie Gould's
field goals from 23 and 46
yards.
Ohio State needed just 9
seconds to score on its. first
possession, with Bellisari
throwing a 66-yard touchdown pass to Jenkins. :

u .............

~ ~;

·,_;:.· ·;·, ·:

~ :.'·'·_:. ~ .

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their guests and the host track WQuld consider something like a
has i!S own roster ofVIPs.
one-hour period, maybe after
NASCAR tries to accomm~ the final practice, where the dridate everyone. The result ranges vers go somewhere, sit down and
from 1,500 to 2,000 extra people meet their fans and sign for

/&gt;1' SPORTS WRITER

goal. Mike Nugent's kick
gave Ohio State a 13-9 lead
going into halftime.
Freshman Robbie Gould
kicked a 46-yard field goal
- tying a first- quarter kick
as the ' longest of his career
- to bring Penn State to
10-9 with' 6:59 left in the
first half

through most of the year and · 130.93:3 and Robert Pressley
is 33rd in the points - fuur at 130.804. Bill Elliott,
Atwood's teammate, was
positions behind Andretti .with only twQ top-1 0 finish- sixth aU30.596 .
Seriell""'leadior Jeff Gordon,
es. H,e has failed to qualify for
one race and fallen out of six closing in on his fourth Winston Cup championship, was
others.
"The first half of the sea- . 14th 2t 130.142, while Ricky
son, we struggled a . lot," Rudd, a daunting 395 points
Atwood said. "The second behind Gordon with five
half, we actuaJiy picked it up. races remaining, was 21st at
We qualified third at Indy 129.786.
and ran up front there and
· we ·ran lOth at Michigan, and
that's a place I've never run
good at.
"We've just really stepped
up our program. .:. We just
haven't had the finishes to
shbw. for it:'
Jeff Burton, the defending
winner here, was third at
130.976, followed by fellow
Ford driven Rusty Wallace at

NASCAR
BY JIEIINA FRYEII

.•.

:Buckeyes

iounbap Ql:im~ ·iorntmrl • Page 87

NASCAR garage getting too busy for rnany

I

failed, leaving Ohio State
with a 27-15 lead.
The Buckeyes took their
biggest lead, 27-9, on Derek
Ross' ·interception return.
The pass skipped high off
Drummond's hands and
right to Ross, who caught it
in stride and ran untouched
itito the end zone.
Ohio State went up 20-9
two plays into the second
half wllen Jonathan Wells
found a huge hole in the
line, slipped one tackle and
.outran the Penn State secondary for a 65-yard play.
Steve Bellisari threw a 68yard pass to Michael Jenkins,
giving Ohio State' first-andgoal on th ' 1 and setting up
the final sco re of the first
half. Bu t Penn State's
defense held, forcing the
B u ckeyes to kick a field

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

I

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99 Ponlllc Sunllra Se f10275 'Green 2drA.c Stl) Trans ..
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\

i

I

�-Outdoors

Page B8
SunUy. October 21. 2001

Turkey hunters to prosper, DNR says Big
~

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- West Virginia's
turkeys are on a roll.
Last spring's excellent hatch of young turkeys,
coupled with 1999's record-setting hatch, should
ensure an abundance of birds for the fall turkey

"Ui!'re going ,,, have more counties
opm to fall hunting than at any
other time since tlte 1940s,"
WVDNR turtley biologist Jim PKk

season.

"I believe we're going to have a much higher
fall harvest this year than we had last year," says
Jim Pack, turkey biologist for the state Division
of Natural Resources . "Last year, the fall kill fell
to just 1,541. This year, I expect it to come in at
3,000 or more."
Pack cites several reasons for his optimistic
forecast.
'
"Number one, we know there are more turkeys
out there," he says. "We had that great brood year
in 1999, and we had another pretty good one this
spring. From all the indications our . field
observers are giving us, there are plenty of turkeys
to be hunted.
"Two, we know the abundance of acorns and
other turkey foods is pretty spotty this fall. The
birds will tend to concentrate in areas where food
is most abundant, and . that should make them
much easier for hunters to find."
The third reason for Pack's optimism stems
from changes in the number of counties open ·to

hunting.
"We're going to have more counties open to
fall hunting than at any other time since the
1940s," he says.
In addition to the 15 so-called "traditional" fall
turkey counties, which have remained open to
hunting down through the years, DNR officials
also allow fall hunts in counties with population
densities high enough to merit them.
When any hunters kill enough turkeys per
square mile during the spring season, they automatically trigger a subsequent fall season in. that
county.
If the kill is high enough, the fall season ·rasts a
week and is open to unlimited numbers of
hunters. If the kill falls short of that level, but still
exceeds the minimum, DNR officials restricnhe
weeklong season to a limited number of lotterydrawn license holders.
This year, hunters in .a record 38 counties will

participate in the fall season.
Fourteen of the 15 traditional counties will
host a three-week early season and a supplemental one-week season in December: Berkeley,
Grant, Greenbrier, Hampshire, Hardy, Mineral,
Monroe, Morgan, Nicholas, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Randolph, Tucker and Webster. Preston, the
other traditional county, will host a rwo-week

is a1111 .....- bullhlo "(88b rains om - Smalmooth bass anglers are noportDivision cooler ltmperatureo should help lng . . - , results will1 fish up to 18
Inches baing caught on live nilnnows.
ol Wikl~a of 111e Ohio Department o1 Na&gt; lnaeuefhocaiCII.
ural RBBOUroes.
Chagrin R'-. Grand Rlvw, and Noo- lhasa anglara are IIIIo reporting occaCENTRAL OHIO
la Craalc - Fair !0 good numbers ol sional- ol saugoye.
Pfedrnonl Lake (Belroonl Courlty) Hoover Reservoir- Saugeya can be
being · In general,
....., )usl bonealll ""' ourfaot &lt;luring the loWer portion~ ol._ IYI- are With water temperature around 82
ovanlng ilours when casting "' trolling producing filii. In the Chagrin, trout are dog"""', aaugoye acfMiy Is picf&lt;lng up.
small crank baits. Shoreline cover up 1o Daniels Pori&lt; Dam. In the Grand. SUCC888ful anglor3 ara using minnows,
a100nd lila lake pro-. good -lions fish """""' to llll Painesville Dam. Jigs, and twister talle. Srnallmouth bass
1o lal&lt;ollluegills when uailg WllC wonno, Small Jlgo ........ rnaggota. green/Ill· are hlfllng tuba lga. Boat anglero worfdng
moalwoons and larval balls "'-dod ver or bh.leldver amaH spoons such as 1l1e COY9 arMO are reporting the moot .
bal1oalll a bobbo&lt;. Largemoulll bau Utile Cleo'a Of KO
ara worl&lt;lng catcl1os.
must measure at least 12 Inches. While
Tycoon Lal&lt;o (Gallia County) bass and cr8jlplos also .,. present In
l'touant Hill R_...,r- Nice . . - AngiaB are r1lflO'IIno- ol&amp;- toffl.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-'- The week-

.-are

good numbers in this lake. Thefe is a 10
horsepower NmH.
Indian Lake- Excolienl&lt;llliJOrlunitios

w--

.

of crappies are betng taken in and

around ahorellna structure by anglers
ualng minnowll.
exist to catch saugeye in this 5,040-acre , Cl1arteo MIH - Shoreline aJructUre Is
logan County lake. Try drlH floiii'IQ ,;lila the place lo look In lllls laluo 08 wofl for
worm hamess in the Old Indian Lake bluegllla, crappies. and ,;1)111 (hyblfd of
araa and 1l1e Moundwood canal ,__ white and·~ bass). Wu _,.and
Uaa minnows and jigs around 1l1e shor• minnows .,. the ptolerred bolto. Sl\Jfl'
Mne 001181' when .-ng crappies. Night aye are ollnlng to hft In daap watar on
fishing In areas will1 good current Is pro- minnows.
ductive for anglers soaking channel cat80111'HEAST OHIO
Hocldng River (Hocking County) illah·
· NORTHWEST OHIO
Anglers are reporting excellent fishing In
Now t..oi1don Aeoervolr (Huron Couf\" the stretch of n- Enterp&lt;lae
ty) - The lake water Is cumontly 58 and Logan dUrlng ... lata afternoon
degrees and low. Anglers are tafdng yol- hourB. Water oondifloos were low and
loW perdl off !he bottom using minnows clean ,prior to this - . storms. Smalland spreadenl. Crappies 8f8 alao baing mouth bass up lo 16 lnchOB haYa bean
IBkon occasionally.
hitting on a varfaly of artlflolal "'"'"· Fly
Pond No. 6- Angtenare lllhermon .,. IIUOCOIIful using CO&lt;It rubcatohlng iaJiiemoulh Ilea on a vodoty of bor-toggod _ . . , ~ P-. and
balls a100nd IUblner;ed logs and _ . - ftloo while ffslllng under overhanging
tation.
•
· canopy. .
.
NORTHEAST OHIO
Tuscarawas, lll&gt;l&gt;e&lt; Muatclngum, and
Vermillion River - Stoatooad fishing Walhonding riYOfS (Ccehocton Cour&lt;y)

-ven

•

PageCI

•

Sundlly. OdNer 21. 2001

Biril
Dear
Abby

Thirteen nontraditional counties will host oneweek seasons without limited-permit restrictions:
Brooke, Barbour, Hancock, Harrison, Marion,
Marshall, Monongalia, Ohio, Pleasants, T:iylor,
Wirt and.Wood.
Ten nontraditional counties will host one-week
seasons for ·limited numbers of permit h,olders:
Doddridge, Gilmer, Jackson, Lewis, Masod-, Putnam, Ritchie, Summers, Upshur and Wetzel.
Pack's final teason for unbridled optimism
relates to an increase in the number of days available to hunters.
"I believe the new Sunday hunting law will
have an effect," he says. "Any time you increase
the number .o f hunting days, you generally see an
increase in the harvest. Because Sundays are
prime hunting days, I expect the increase to be
significant."

ADVICE

Jil.f&gt;man
.wants courage
to speak out
about rape

SEASONAL CATCH -

are auoc-a'ul at Jn8ll)' tnK1itiona1 perch . Fa•"ake to Conneaut In 42 to 52 feet Qf
llahlng hct lptlt8 lnclucllng the Toledo water. Smallmaufh bass fillhing remains
Shipping Channel, 1blodo Water Intake, good with beSf locations noported as 2
West Sister Island, off Ultla C«Mr Point, miloo olf Fairport 1o Geneva In 19 to 32

southwest of Green laland, Niagara
Reel, Starva llland, Ratuaanake Island,
oil Parry's Monurnont. IIOUfh ol Middle
Island, Kelleys loland and Kallaya.latand
Shoal, northeast of the Marblehead
l.lgllltoouao, olf Clldar Point and on San·
dUiky Bay.
·
AngiaB uaa lake lhlners on perm
~ llohed on Of near boltom. Molt
anglara are perd\llshlng, buloomo walleye anglara lleve caught a few largo fish
inch crapplos when fishing- minnow&amp; ·off tho Huron area. Anglors are frollmg
In water 4to 8 feet daap.
lj)OOI1I llf1d crank balls, dtfftlng weight·
Alo G - I.Jike (111111111 County)- torwam apomera, and ~ng apiMOf8
ill pooduclng u - 1 lipped with night CI'IWIIfl off boltorn
- o f !lOUt on Ice jlga Uppod with bouncers. Good ornallmouth bua fishing
wu wom~~orA-tarlall opl....,.,
contlnuot- the
SOUTHWEST OHIO
at frallllonaJ fall arnanmouth haunts like
Great Miami River (Mon!QOmory the Bass Islands Kelloyo Island and tho
•
Coordy) - Fish anywhere along the Reel COrl¥&gt;faX ·
Nota: There lo a Coast Guanf.
Great Miami Rr- for catfish. Moot successful anglers are using chicl&lt;en livers, enfon:ed oecurfly zona on the of
oMrnp, Of night crawlero. Tho boat catch- Lake Erie onoompaao~ng rcug1t1y 1 1
es are coming from baitB fished along the radius mile around IIJo Davla-Baeae
Nuclear p,_ Slatlon. The zona 11
bottom and near - - dims.
Co08ar creek Lake (Warran County) cloaed 1o all recraatlonal boat trallic. The.
- Crappies are being caught by using and lortgltudo pciirto .,. btlng
minnows for ball. Floh around the points broadcast by the Cooaf GUild on marine
radio
chaMtl
16 VHF.
or In the coves around !he laluo. Minnows
are the pratorrad baH.
Central Buln Porch fishing
LAKE ERE
romalns """' good on the Central Buln
Western - Floh01g was very when waathar condHiona atlow. Best
good laol weekend but rain and heavy locations Include 2 to 3 miles north of
winds 11111 week have llempered fillhlng. Rocl&lt;y River In 42 to 5.2 loat of water, 2 to
Excollenl yellow perdl fishing conlfnues 4 miles ncrthaast of East 72nd Straet In
when conditions a"' rlgl1t. Parch angton1 42 to SO laet of water, and 2 to 4 mllel off

eoor.r-

Celebmtions begin on C2

~eason.

OHIO fiSHING REPOII'
ly fishing AlpOI! provided by 1l1e

Inside:

-thor_....

fast of water, and 1 10 2 miles
nortl\'nor1heaSI of Conneaut In 16 to 27
fest .of wale&lt;. Anglera usa tuba jigs, shin·
era or softcraws. Note: There is a coast
Guard ...,rtty zone around the Pfirry
Nuclear Power Plant lflat lnctudea 1,000
yards trcm the shore and 1.000 yards
aut llf1d of the plant. The zone Is
clooed to all recraatlonal boat trallic.
Tune Into marino radio channel 16 VHF
tor oxacllatillKia and longitude points.
OHIO RIVER
11t1ga Counlj - Fll -penturM
d and ptioflo the
mid •ulllt atorms lf'IJI . WMJk. fllhlng
-hot on tho ri- condblona

--ly-

·

- - II Racine
and BafleVIIIo Poolo. Angloro oro
c.tchlng llolh uugar and hybrid
otrfpod bolo on mlnnowo In the tal~
-.
· 111111111 COUnty - Anglero llahlng
tho llllwllal'l of the Qalllpolle Lock

and Dom .,. cllthlng hybrid ofrlpocl
bolo on mlnnowa, twl.-11, and
- - borllet.
.
l1p of tile Week
Hypofhermia Is known as 1l1e killer of
the unprepared. Whathor fishing or huntlng, appropriatoly for weather condttions. Rememb81 to layer dotting to
acoommodate air temperatura changes.
Molt Incidents of hypothennla develop
air temperature Is batwoon 30 and
50 degrees.

Roger
Bush,
38 .
Smithers Ave., Gallipolis,
Is seen with the 22pound turkey he bagged
as Ohio turkey season
continues. The bird was
felled in Gallla County,
and has an 11-inch
beard and 1-1/2-lnch
spurs. (Bryan Long)

E-11Ulil your

outdoors ·
news to
spo_rts@mydailytribune.com

The best way
o let everyone
know.

DEAR ABBY: About six
months ago, I w.is at a friend's
house. We were drinking
. heavily, and I started getting
dizzy. so I went to lie down in
her guest bedroom. She was
already asleep.
· The next thing I knew, her
boyfriend was in there with
JOe. He started taking my
clothes off. I begged him to
stop, but he wouldn't. I was so
drunk I didn't have the
•trength to fight him off. I
begged him to leave me
Olone, but he wouldn't. He
raped me. I finally passed out
imd woke the next morning
hoping it had been a dream. It
wasn't. I was still naked and
had bruises where he had held
tny wrists.
· !left without Saying a word
and have told no one else. My
girlfriend still calls, but I hang
up. I need to tell her, but I
don't know how. I also need
lo tell my family, but I can't
because I'm afraid they will
iay I deserved it for going
over there and getting drunk.
I know I. didn't deserve what
· he did to me. It has taken me
th.is loJlll to fjgu~e .that OJJt.
. The pain has begun to fade,
but the fear of him is still
!here. Abby, please help me
find the courage to finally
speak up and tell everyone
about it.- SCARED AND

.ALONE .IN BRITTON,

PT
CRUISERS

{Mention This Ad And Get
1o/o Over Factory Invoice)
*Payments figured on
72 .mo. fixed rate loan.
Subject to credit approval.

MICH.
· DEAR SCARED AND
ALONE: The penalty for
having too much to drink
should be a nasty hangover,
.not rape. Y()u did not deserve
what happened io you. I'm
only sorry you waited so long
to speak out about the assault.
With fresh bruises and · the
evideni::e that could have been
collected at that time, you
would have had proof of your
rape, and your attacker could
have been jailed for his crime.
Also, you could have begun
therapy immediately to help
you place the blame where it
belonged - on the rapist ~nd saved ·yourself long
months of undeserved·guilt.
However, it is not too late.
\O get the counseling and
emotional support you need.
Pick up the phone and ask
l'Jnformation" for the number of the nearest rape hotline.You will find that you are
not alone and are not "guilty"
of any crime. Once you
understand that, telling your
family and the girl whose
boyfriend attacked you will
be much easier.
: DEAR ABBY: I'm in the
(loghouse with my mother.
~ast month, my daughter
(urned 21. As a gift, I planned
~ special three-day weekend
for the rwo of us.
: The problem: My mother
lives in San Diego. She's mad
ihat we didn't stay with her or
visit. Abby, there are three reasons why we didn't contact
her: She's very controlling and
demanding and would have
¢hanged all the plans we
(nade. Second, I wanted our
y;eekend to be a fatherdaughter event. Third, we sec ·
Mom several times a year
Mom's not speaking to me or
my daughter, but agreed to
lOrgive and forget if you side
with me. GENE IN
IDAHO
DEAR GENE: I'm siding
with you.

•

THE FUTURE?- This architect's rendering depicts what the Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds could look like in two years.

•
Ballot issue's bendJts to be touted
at today 's fairgrounds rally
BY KEvlw KEu.v
nMES-SENTINEL STAFF

1

ALLIPOLIS - · Opal Payne
recalls when the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds were moved
to what was then U.S. 35 west
of Gallipolis in the mid-1950s,
ere
·room enough for all of the pro.,..,t!f"!ind activities associated with the annual fair.
. •
_
-But in \l&gt;e,~,&lt;!;-plus years thaf. •~e. herhuS'band John, therr cliil&lt;lren and grandchildren
have participated in the fair, -they have seen
the facilities and use of the fairgrounds
expand to the breaking point.
"They are overflowing, and as you can
see from this year's fair, they had to bring in
tents and portable units to house all the projects:' the Vinton-area resident said. "Everything has grown:•
Providing more space for the fair - and
for the non-fair functions housed at the fairgrounds through the year - is one of the
goals of a relocation project the Gallia
County Junior Fair Board looks to accomplish if a ballot issue is approved Nov. 6.
A one-quarter of 1 pen:ent increase in
the county sales tax is expected to generate
the $5 million the board will couple with a
$1.2 million federal grant to move the fairgrounds out of the floodplain, offer more
room and build a community/ convention

ing taxable items pays.
It equals to 1 cent on $4, or $2.50 on
$1,000. If approved, the· increase lasts for a
maximum of 20 years, but if economic factors remain stable and construction costs are
lower than estimated, the board looks for the
debt to paid sooner.
Gallia's sales tax was instituted in 1981.
Voters have Jince approved increases in onequarter of a pen:ent increments to help fund
~MS and 911.
.
fhe primary goal behhid' thi~ request,
proponents said, is public safery.
"The main reason is to get the fair-

.......... Fublre.a

OLD AND NEW- The small colored area at the top l.s
the current fairgrounds. The 'larger area, more than
double the existing property, Is the proposed new fairgrounds.

center.

Those are the benefits the board and volunteers are touting today during a rally and
bonfire from 3-7 p.m. at the current fairgrounds in support of the ballot issue.
Daylight shuttle tours of the site of the
new fairgrounds and campgrounds behind ·
the current can&gt;pgrounds are planned, along
with light refreshments and entertainment.
The board is also prepared to answer
questions from the public about future plans
if the sales tax increase is successful in pas.&lt;ing.
The increase was chosen as a funding IT'S RIGHT HERE- A section of the proposed new site for the Galli a County J~nlor Fairgrounds Is pointvehicle because, as proponents have said, ed out by Fair Board Director David Mllis. A rally and bonfire supporting passage of a ballot Issue supeveryone in and out of Gallia County buy- porting fairgrounds relocation ls today. (Kevin Kelly photo)

~~~usa~,~~ S~~~:~!:~_!&gt;2~~~,~w~~~, for Saturday
Lewis A. Schmidt, M.D. Memorial
Cancer Symposium will be Saturday
from 8 am to 12:15 p.m. in Conference
Rooms A and B of the Holzer Medical
Center's Education and Conference
Center.
The Education and Conference
Center is on the ground floor of the
Charles E. Holzer Jr. M.D. Surgery
Center.
Speakers will include David E.
. Schuller, M.D., of the Ohio State University Hospital's James Cancer Center,
who will discuss head and neck cancers; W 1.lliam E. Burak J r., MD
. ., a1s o
from the James Cancer Center, who
will cover sentinel lymph nodes and
lymphatic mapping in breast cancer.
Also presen.ting are Santpal Mavi,
M.D., Holzer Medical Center/ Holzer
,

.

Who to Q111t.1ct: Judy Halley
Where; HMCs EduCational
Resource Center
How:' Ca·II 446-50S7

Clinic, who will discuss lung cancer;
and the Rev. Raafat Zaki, former valunteer chaplain at HMC, who presently is associated with Churchwide Personnel Services, whose discussion will
entail religion's effect on ca,ncer survivors' emotional recovery, as well as
compassion and communication with
the cancer patient.
'The symposium is held in memory
of Dr. Lewis A. Schmidt, who joined

where he.practiced general surgery. He
was instrumental in . developing · the
Tumor Registry and the Tumor Committee, which he chaired for several
years.
Schmidt was very active with the
Gallia County Chapter of the American Cancer Society and other civic
organizations. He also was a member
of the Coller Society, th e Gallia County Medical Society, American Medical
Association, Ohio State Medical Association, and a fellow of the American
College of Surgeons.
A complimen tary conwnen
,;
tal b rea kfast will be served at 7:30a.m., and displays also will be set up for attendees to
reVIew.
The program with start promptly at ·
8 a.m.

Lewis A. Schmidt, M.D.

.

(

�SUnday, Oct. 21, 2001

Pomeroy •

M~dllport

• Glllllpolla, Ohio Point P .....nt, WV

ioanlllap 1:1m• ·iHnlinrl• Pllge C3 .

NIIIIIM end Kathryn Simmon•

Simmons 60th
Mr. and Mrs.I F111nk NeWMme
.

Newsome 35th

Wright 20th

POMEROY - frank and JoAnne Newsome of Pomeroy
celebnted their 35th wedding anniversary on Oct. I with a trip
to Niagara falls, Canada.
They are the parents of two sons, Terry, who resides in Canton with his wife, Tammy. and cl,lildren, Drew and Cole; and
Rod who lives in Savannah, Ga., with hi! wife, Barbie, and her
daughter, Brittany Paxton.

GALLIPOLIS- Floyd and Mary Joyce (Joy) Wright of Gallipolis, observed their 20th anniversary on Oct. 26.
The Wrights exchanged vows on Oct. 26, 1981 , at BeU
Chapel in Gallipolis.The ceremony was performed by the Rev.
Everett Delaney.
The couple have two children, Ryan, 12, and Kristyn, 10.
Floyd is the son ofDonaid and Evelyn Wright. Mary Joyce is
the daughter of David Simpkins and Anna Marie Camp.

Mona Siders and Gene Wlllougllby

Mr. and MIS. Genlld WillsOn

VJ.iztson wedding ·
COOLVILLE - G~rald Mark Warson and Rhonda Kay
Koehler were married on July 11, 2001, in a private ceremony
at Faith Harvest Church in Coolville.
The double-ring ceremony was performed by Pastor Donna
Parker. Attendants for the couple were Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Parker, Tuppers Plains.
T.he bride is the daughter of Mrs. Harold (Sue) Hager of
Racine and Marcia (Kenny) King of Middleport. Watson is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Watson ofTuppers Plains.
The coup!~ reside in th~ir n~w home in Tupp~rs Plains.
He is employed by Parker Corp., Tuppers Plains. She is
employed by Emergency Medicine Physicians of Athens
County at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Several receptions hosted by family and friends, were held
honoring the couple. A delayed honeymoon is planned for a
later date.
regret that I have but one life
to lose for my country." Connecticut was also home to
Geri. Benedict Arnold, Ameri21-year-old Nathan Hale, ca's most infamous Revolu.who was born in Connecticut, tionary War tr.ril&lt;)r. Arnold was
was hanged by the British for caught plotting to hand over
spying in 1776. He is remem- the American fort at West Point
bered for ·the phrase, "I only .to the British.

Connecticut

Contrast

Siders- Willoughby engagement

Shraeder wedding

CARPENTER -The engagement and approaching marGALLIPOLIS -· Former Gallipolis resident Larae Christine
riage of Mona Siders and Kenneth "Gene"Willoughby is being Bush was united in marriage with Jeffrey Joseph Schrae&lt;ter on
announced by family members.
June 16, 2001 •. at the Church of the Holy Spirit, Gambier,'
The bride-elect is a resident ofWilkesville and is the widow 0~
.
of the late Aaron Siders. The prospective bridegroom is a resi- · The bride''s sister, Abra K. 8ush, also a Gallipolis native;
dent of Albany and is retired from Otis Elevator Co.
served as the maid of honor, and Taylor M. Wigglesworth, the
The open church wedding is planned for 6 p.m. Nov. 16, at bride's cousin, was the flower girl.
Carpenter Baptist Church, Carpenter. A reception will follow.
Larae graduated magna cQJil laude from Kenyon College in
1997, where she earned her bachelor of arts in French. literature and English. At Kenyon, she was inducted into Phi Beta
Kappa Honor Society.
·
Larae
is
a
solutions
engineering
consultant
in
Accenture's ·
In an effort to provide our · ups include Miaosoft Word and
Financial Services Division in Columbus.
readership with current news, plain {ASCII) text
The groom earned his bachelor of science degree of Pennthe Sunday Times-Sentinel
Acceptable fonnats for phoencourages submission of Wed- tos include high-resolution sylvania State University, and in 1999, he earned his master's of
din_gs, anniversaries, birthdays. JPEGs or EPS files.
business administntion from Ohio University. Jeff is currently.
dub meetings and reunions as
If you don't have access to a the new business manager for Specialty Products and Strvic~ .
soon as possible following the computer, simply mail your sub- at Nationwide Financial Services.
·
•
date of the event
miss1ons or hand deliver them
The
couple
resides
in
Colurilbus.
:
To assist in accuraty,
sug- to the offices of the Gallipolis
The bride is the daughter of Kala Sue Bush of Columbus •,
gest items be typed double- Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
spaced or neatly printed.
Register or 1he Daily Sentinel.
and is th~ granddaughter of Calvi11 W. and Lenice Wa~gh
For your ·convenience, you
Please include a daytime Crown C1ty.
.
. . \
::
can e-mail your materials to:
phone number with your sub•
-@mydallytribune.com
mission.
:~

we

-@IIIJCiail)reaister.com
-@mYdiiiiJreaister.com
Acceptable formats for write-

E NTE RTAI N ME NT
'Star Wars'
LOS ANGELES (AP)
"The Phantom Menace" has
become a record force in DVD
sales.
The DVD of "Star Wars:
Episode I - The . Phantom
Menace" set a new sales record
in its first week, with custome!'S
buying an estimated 2.2 million copies.That broke the previous record of 2 million set
just two weeks ago by "The
Mummy Returns."
Distributor 20th Century
Fox woi.tld not disclose exact
sales figures. But the studio said
Wednesday that 65 percent of
its initiat~iliipment in North
America had been boi!Bht in
the first week.
':
The tTade publication'Video
Business reported that Fox's
initial shipment of "Phantom
Meriace" DVDs totaled 3.3

ot

1'•'

All 'material submitted for
publication is subject to editing.

·:

••
•

l'oR,\L\ l. .·\ TT IR 1:
0 .7\CCI:.S.SOR I L:S

~!.~~~~an~~~!~
~ lllllllltl ~ •••, •• ,..

•••• , ••,.. 111111
Hie• ,,....,. ,,..1.1
Fill• . ~ C.ltr ~ P1r111

II-..,.~

rfi3JU~Janrv~

~

12 MONTHS BEFC~R E
YOUR WfliDJJI.IG:

I

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~

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Obkt River Pt.

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~ f~.AimQUES&amp;G!FTS

D Weddlna Speelaliata

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D Interview vendors
andhlrea

We can custom sew any gown
hom a pleture, pattem or Idea.
We allo design one of a kind
gowns for your special day.

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consultant.

0 Flo II Ienke ltldlll &amp;ordlnatlnt
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(740) 992-2284
- Many Styles
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1

Offering Gift and
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• RtctpliDIIS

Village Florist
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
1

9111nto5pm
SATUIIOAY

eom to12

GRIAT WIDDING

PHOTOGRAPHYI
· Tnut pMr ~~~~
IIIII pbottJtf'lf/ht:r
whn Ml'ft • •,

JDIU wtJ/Jint
mnno~s tU you do.

Giw IU 4 atiJ ltN/ity!

101 cAUDILL

PHOTOGRAPHY

enQCI98ment
announcement.
D Research honeymoon
options and conlad o
travel avent.

• Spedolty Cd"ll's

• Sltowers
•PiruMUCH

Best For Less

• Invitations • Napkins

i

·&gt; '"' • •n·

1

~-·

. · - . •.

•.

myth

74(1-446-1187

.

, People almost never get.
· ~owed by the earth during
~n earthquake. It's highly
}lnlikely that the earth will
open UJ&gt;, wait for people to fall
!n, and close up again. In
recorded history, it's happened
only once, to a woman in Japan
ln 1948. (It also happened to a
(ow in San Fnncisco in 1906.)
Most earthquake victims die
when buildings collapse on top '
~f them or from resultant fires.

'

Hartwell House
...,Beautiful
Picture Frames
...,Great Clocks
f'IU'ouery

...,MuchMore

740-992-7696

iWomen's rights

.

Wedding Invitations
and

Other Accessories
Serving you since 1948

Quality 9?r\nt 8/lop

•

•

l.tJcattJ in Historic DoW11toW11 Pomm1.1

'"tdr\··~

a, MaY

. - ...

l(.....ller36.

'

~
'' was
• The word ''suwagette
.ioined in 1906. It defined
~males
that
advocated
women's rights to vote, espeqially in a political election. A
. • 4ombinaiion of "suffrage" and
~; ·.

tJte feminine diminutive "ette;'

·: :: · i~ was originally a term of deri•· sjon used by opponents of
~omen's suflfage. Early advocates called themselves "suffragists."
I

t

.•..
,.

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t' . ;;·~... : . . .1: '•r.; ,.
Standard Oak ··:.
~~

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'•\&lt;

· ~ttg''

Extensi'o:rl'

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Table

Earthquake

423 Second Ave • Gallipolis

rcE====~~=====:~~~~~~~~~~~=:!~;~~~=ib Middleport. 992-3385
- ++ .,.

•Tum in complctcd clllr)l torms 10
tho Cbamberof'Commll'ce, Jncated
at 16 Slete Slnet or fax tbe Chambeut446-7031.
.
•All elltrles lllllll be received by

Sets: 'For tfie largest seler.tion
of today~ but sf)llts
all1111lut priced·
Cfitc£ us out before you
decide.

.

• Albums • Balloons

255 Mill Street

I ,· --'; ,._......___"'-'.....,.'"-'·- . ,·- ·,. _•,.·_ _.._.....,.

Ullittype: - - - - - -

'From .Solittlires tu 'Bridal

• Glassware • Candles

We feature several llnes of

Wedding ,9owns
Jfea~ieces• Veils
uxedo's
·'Bridesmaids dress
Many !Accessories

• R•ll#tUilll Dinnen

Th~

Turn yourfe•~lh
into flowers.

K&amp;L spulaUz..«s in pftAJir~g
anti your r•erta...

newspaper

,j

TUXEDO
RENTAL

LOS ANGELES (AP) - .
Nicole · Kidman and Ewan
McGregor will croon and cancan again in theaters with a
limited re-release of the glitzy
musical "Moulin Rouge."
A modest box-office hit last
summer, "Moulin Rouge" will
have a limited reissue in New
York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco starting
Nov.21 .
· The re-reiease will serve as a
lead-in to the film's hol3)fvideo debut Dec. 18 ariil"as a
reminder to voters
the
Oscars and other awards.

AGEMENT RINGS

: GALLIPOLIS - Christopher and Paula Hartshorn of Gal~polis •delebrated their anniversary Oct. 18, 2001.
: The .couple have two children, Jessica and Jake Browning of
Gallipolis.
: Christopher is employed-by Wal-Mart Supercenter, Gallipoijs, and Paula is employed by Speedo Italian Cafe. .

~ QHtu
TJrru

Service Jeweler.

Hartshorn anniversary

'

t!~· ~nncq

Your Professional

992-2054 .

•·

~·

&lt;!Clark' 5
j/ttudrp

Across from the Courthouse in
Historic Downtown Pomeroy.

0 Llaok a caterer, florbt,
pholo9 opher and
musldons.
D IIIIQin your Quest list.
0 Submit your

~ren.

(740H&lt;O·l48l

D lleC)In shoppi11CJ for

D R&amp;Qister fonriddlnv
vitts.

: They have four children, Robert (Iva) of Rutland; Carolyn
(Dick) .Cooley of Fort Myers, Fla., Linda (Richard) Bradbury
(If Columbus; and a daughter-in-law, Evelyn Sisson of Gallipolis, widow of thier late son Richard.
-: They also have six grandchildren and three great-grandchil-

FrimJiy
Swff
Di•monda-N-Gold

~dl119 budQet.

"Moulin Rouge'

II:! Ct.

• BrldalBouquols
·
• Ceaterpleces
• Corsages
SlS Off equipment renlal .

~berry &amp;xton
. Dreu Deoign

.

million, which would put firstweek sales around 2.2 million.

.

'

Flowers &amp;

• MlaiiHM ~"*- Rtqlllml

D Selectyour
attendants.
D Determine a

Sisson 60th

..

2001 Christmas Parade Entry
•A PatriotiC Christmas•

brate their 60th wedding anniversary on Nov. 1, 2001 .
: Wayne is retired from the Kyger Creek Power Plant, and
Annabelle is a retired cook from the Kyger Creek School Dis-

Deslg 11 er~sM Call the wedding professionals!

D Choose ceremony
.and reception
locations.

:, '
il.

I KYGER - Wafne and Annabell~ Sisson of Kyger yffll cele-

Plannif18 A We&lt;jdi0,8~

~

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Nathan and Kathryn Simmons
celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Oct. 7.
They were married Oct. 4, 1941.
The couple celebrated with dinner, cake and ice cream at the
home of their daughter, Donna Hart.
Helping the celebrate were daughters and sons-in-law, Brenda
and Alex Schultz and Donna 'and ·Elmer Hart; gr:mdchildren,Jeff
and Leah Buck, Kevin Hart and Natalie Schultz; Charles and
Vazie Lipcomb, Bob and Shelby Lipcomb, Dick and Ver:o Lipcomb, Gary Lipcomb, Wayne· and Joyce Scott, Ray and Beverly
Boggs, Martha and Olin Blain, Lewis and Kathy Holcomb,' and
Hunter and· Hannah Holcomb.
Unable to attend was gnnddaughter, Myra and Chad Conrad.

With 6 Windsor
Side Chairs
Vaughan-Bassett

Oak Cannonball
Josette Baker, Dr. Alice Gricoski, and Joe
1\:foore, candidates in this year's ''Maestro for
Moment" fund-rasier, thank carn~aign
managers (respectively) Steve McGh~, Dr. Ed
Dachowski and Margaret Evans andl\11 those
who together donated $24,700 to the Ohio
Valley Symphony. The Ariel Board of
Directors thank Maestro Team 2001 for the
hard work, creativity, and good fun that helped
make this year the "Best Out ofTen".

Poster Bedroom
Suite
(Full or Queen)
Beclj bed rails, triple dresser

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.. ~~ ·wltb tri·view IDI~rs &amp;. 5
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'lhe River

PapC4
Sa• d.,.. o t akw 21. 2Mt;

Paying tribute to one of the best friends he has
GALLIPOLIS - This article is
about my good &amp;iend, Morris Haskins, who lives down the block 11om
me. I go to see Morris every few
days, and even though his health is
not what it wed to be, he always
s~ms happy to see me. He ~hake~
my hand and pats it, and he is Pd to
see me, too.
Our friendship goet back a long
time.! first met Morris when !started in !he photognphy business in
1933, when a dollar wa a doUat, I
had just graduated fiom high sc:hool
and I h•d to have some decentloOking clolhes, but I couldn't alf'otd
· very much !hen.
·
I went to Haskins llc Tanner and
told Morris I had to have a pair of
trousers .. He meosured me and laid
out a nice pair of trousers that had a
price tag of$5.95.1 said,"I can't buy
·them now because I only have $3."
He said, "Come back here with me
- I wont you to rry on a pair of ,
.
mme.
I tried them on and they fit me
perfect. Morris said, "GiVe me !he $3
and you can have !hem." He sure
made me one happy young man and

j,

.

Tawney
GUESTVI;\Y
for many yean when I needed a suit
or a pair of trousen, my good friend
took care of me. He sure s,aved me a
lot of money and he got rid of a
bunch of his clothes that he did not
need anymore.
Well, I will say Morris Hoskins is
one of the best &amp;iends I ever had. He
l!os a wonderNI penonality, he never
knows a stranger and he speak5 to
everyone. He is a very wealthy man,
but he never goet around flaunting
his weallh; Morris Haskins is one of
!he nicest and friendliest people anyone could ever meet.
Marc: Sarrett, who· is a minister at
Rio Grande, hu moved in wilh
Morris and is there to help him wilh
things &amp;om '1ust being !here," to

...J

Sunday, OCtober 28
ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist .
Church, 6 p.m., with RICk Bar·
cua preaching.

Mason

(

SUNDAY, Dctoblr 28
ADDISON- Preaching MMot
at Addison Flli8WIII Baplisl
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching:
POINT PLEASANT- Mlln
Street Bapliat Churi:h 8511'1
Anniversary with Sunday
School at9:30 a.m.=al
10:30 a.m. with g1.1881
the Rev. Ea~ "Ted"
• Cov·
entd dish lunch at noon, ~
s1n!11n9 and NltoMhlp at1 p.m:

'
'I

i

POINT PLEASANT- Keith

~lng at ~ Thbetnacle

Church, 6 p.m.

WEST COLUMBIA- Sptolll
service at Salem communitY
Church, Ssseaflu Rold, e
p.m. Rev. clyde Herldllllorl,

POINT PLEASANT- Speclll
singing with The Allllea from '
Jane Lew at Golpell.JQhlllOUII
Church, Neal Road, 7 p.M.
MONDAY, Clalcar 21
SOUTHSIDE - Ch!Abl walclhl
loa8 aupporlllf'OI4), Soublile
ComrtM1lly Center, Wllrihft
5:30 to 6 p.m. loltowld 6y a
short meeting.
POINT PLEASANT -AipOhollca Anonymoue, 7:30 p.tn ••
611 VIand St. lJie llkM
lll1lrBnCe of Caley Law Ofllce.
GLENWOOD - Trtck-or·Treat
In Apple Grove, Alhlor\111d
Glenwood, 6 to 7:30 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- Muon
County Board of Eduoallon .
special meeting lor •liP! iiiiOn
_}1eering, 3 p.m., ClehlriJ Ofllce.
'

TUESDAY, Oolober 311
LETART- HELP Diet Clul,
Letart CorrmuniiY Center.
Welgh-lnltram 5:30 to 8.p.m.
followed by ahorl meeting.

I!
~

FLAmOCK- Clothing CioN!
give away IIYIIty TUIIdiy al
Good Shepherd U.M. Church.
Flatrock, 9 a.m, to 1 p.m.

I

jt
il

p.m. weigh In and meeting •t
8:30 p.m. at Trinity lin~*~
Mllhcidlll Church. For 1110111
lnlortnalfon calliS75-4574.
POINT PLEASANT:.... Shoot at
Point Pltuant aun CiullO p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- w.lghl
~. Christ Ep!loopll
Church wllh ~ In at 4:411
p.m. and 5:15p.m. ·mteting;
NEW HAVEN- New 11&amp;v.n Jr.
OUAM 175 mteting, 7 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- Point ·.
Plrara'll Chajiler Sonl allht

~rx.n Ravofullorl, 7 p.m.,
Fort Randolph~. Mlln

I'IIIDAY, Nowllllblt I · .
UPM!R GLADE - cao.p.i oancillt wllh Dclmle Sumner,
Gospel Ftllowlhlo Chuldl,
lJpptr Ollde, If p.m. For ln!Or•
l)1alfon Oi' tflrte11ont call304228-51116.
SOUTHSIDE- Jam Malon at
lhl8oulhtlcle Oomlnunlly
w. 710 10 p.m. ·

c.n-

~ga

80CJTH8l[ - Dlnol ,,
Souhldt
Center

With ..rink Bolli
...
CcullrY, 71o 10 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- Alcohollcll MonYmoue, 8 p.m.,
Polntl"llluirtl PIHbylertan
Churdi, COII18I' of 8lh and Main,
uae~doot.

KANAUGA- Dance ill.
Alnwta, 7:30 p.M.

GALLIPOLIS - Paint Creek
Bapllll Church Is celebrating Ita
1681h annlvereary, with guest
apeaker David Wltherapoo~ and
·a meal after the morning aer·
vice. Program 2 p.m.
GALUPOUS- Pine Ridge
Boys will sing at White Oak
Church, durtng momlng war·
ship. Sunday School slarta at
10 a.m. Momlng wor:shlp begins

at10:45.
GALLIPOLIS - Chrisdan
Believer~ wiN sing and Bill .
Gretne to prMch at Mlna
Chapel Miaslonary Elapllal
Church, 7 p.m.

Monclly, Ootabar 28
GALLIPOLIS - Youth gro~p for
young married couPlet and
teens WHI meet at Bell Chapel
Church, 7 p.m. Everybody wei·

come.

CHESHIRE- TOPS Ott ·
111383, Chelhlre United
-·
Melhodlll C~urch, at 10 a.m;,
with weigh-In from 8:45·9:45

•

SUNDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT- Gospel sing
II Mkjdleport Church of !he
,~rene leaturtng Pine Ridge .
Boyt, Sllnday, 6:30 p.m. .
POMEROY- Bruce Stone \viii
perform a gospel sing at !he
Hemlock Grove Chrllllan
Churcli at 11:30 a.m. on Sunday,
and at Trinity Church In
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. On Sunday.
RACINE- Carmti-SuHon UnM·
ed Melhodlll Church to flold
palrlollc holl1800fTIIng service
SUnday allhe Carmel Building
on Carmel Road. Su11day
achool, !1:30 a.m.; worship;
10:45, leaturin!l gospel and
bluegrass mus•c by 'rha
Upllftars. Potluck on hay wagon,
12:30 p.m. with meat and drlnke
provided; altemoon slngltig' and
praise service honoring veter·
ana.

ASHTON - Falllellllvll at Alh·
toil Efemlnllry School. 4 to a
p.m. n.re Will be Qainll,
turkey dltri'1.... ancthol ~
avdlblt. Entartalnmenl will be
Midway otegO. and Idle!·
lUNDAY, NIMmblr 4
ADDISON ~ Preaching l4livlce
at AlldiiOn Freewll Baplilt
ChurOh, 8 p.m., with Rick BarCUI Pf*I*IQ,

POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 VIand Sl. Use llkM
entrance ol casty LaW Ofllce,

I

THURSDAY, No'Oenlblt 1
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Senlibly) (5
I

I

•
I

•

BIDWELL-~

TUESDAY
POMEROY·- Meigs Soli and
Water Conservation Dlllrlolto
hold a lf)8Cial tneellng, Tuee., 8
p.m., at !hi office to dilcllu
personnel and Leading Craek
Watershed 111\118.

MIDDLEPORT- Dr. Michael
Panglo will speak at Abundant
Grace Church In Mlddlepon at 7
p.m on Oct. 31. Panglo has just
returned from Africa and
Nicaragua missions lrtps. Pastor
Teresa Davis Invitee the public.

ROCCHI'S POOL &amp; SPA

_

The IC!Mrti Ooto&amp;tet 11, 2001
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Collins
FAMILY

Bringing
.your goals
to 'life

BY MARIA CoDER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK -Being !he parent of
a small child is a lot like being a lifeguard by the pool. "They keep you
from doing something reckless and stupid, !hey keep you fiom running on
wet tile, and !hen they let the kids
swim," · explains child psychologist
Michael Thompson.
Thompson, co-author of "Best
Friends,Wo"t Enemies: Understanding
!he Social Lives of Chil~n" (Ballantine Books), says the notion that parents
must · supervise !heir kids at every
moment is "garbage." He says parents
full into the .ttap of wonting to protect
their children from every bad situation.
"It's difficult to watch them make
mistakes;' but children must stumble in
order to grow. .
Perhaps one of !he hardest times for
parents is when their child goes off into
the "real world" - better known as
school - and starts developing friendships ofhis or her own and dealing with
"office"- or playground- politics. ·
"Some parents are threatened by

GALLIPOLIS -We all
have dreams and desires.
Within each of us is a
longing to experience,
grow and achieve. By
nature we set goals and set
out to achieve !hem.
Doing so brings satisfaction and enables us to grow
as individuals.
. Your suc. Your sue- cess whether
UJS
at work or at
'whethtr at home
is
work or at largely
. home is determined
your
-i largely by
determined ability to set
and reach
by your
ability to goals. When
you set a
set anti
NEW YORK (AP)- It's a
goal, make
reach
dream come true for kids: getsure
it's
goals.
ting paid to play.
something
Whe11 you that
Through Oct. 31, FAO
you
·set a goal, personally
Schwartz and Hasbro are sponsoring a Play-A-Thon at FAO
malce sure feel
is
stores throughout !he country
it 'I some- important.
to raise money for Youth Serthing that Also, choose
vice
America, a resource center
you per- a goal that is
and alliance· of more than 200
:1011ally fttl manageable
organizations committed to
· is impor- and specific.
increasing the quantity and
For examtant.
quality of volunteer opportuple, suppose
,
nities for young pqople. All
'you want to eat healthier.
funds raised lhrough pledges
Choose · for your goal a
will go to charity. ·
manageable . small step: I
The concept behind the
'will eat two fresh fruits
Play-A-Thon
is similar to a
-every day for a week. Or
walk-a-thon. Children galher
perhaps you want to find
sponsors for every hour !hey
anomer job. Your goal
m.ight be: .. Whether by ~~ play wilh any toy or p~rti~pate
in any play activity.
,phone or in person, each
And while in-store activities
week I will talk with three
wind
down at the end of !he
people about newjob posmonlh, children can continue
·
.
ibilities.
gathering contributions at
· Once you have set your
home ~ or anywhere else :fgoal, think about possible ·
lhroughout the rest of the year.
::zoadblocb you migl)t run
Pledge forms can be
"into and how you will
obtained
at all FAO Schwartz
~vcrcome them. Mentally,
stores and at the FAO, Hasbro
~~ve yourself little pep
and Youth Service America
.:~: "I can do it." "I'm
Web sites. ·
. :!making good progress."
"Youth Service America
: -•·This feels great!"
wants to make service to oth: .· Bringing your goals to
ers !he common experience of
. life is a skill-The more you
every·young person in Ameri; practice, the more skillful
ca," said Steve Culbertson,
: you'll become. Remember
president of Youth Service
: -that mistakes are learning
America,
based in Washington.
: opportunities. They are
:•steppingstones to success.
;-:bon 't give up. Try lhese
; )trotegies to help build and
: -achieve your goals. ·
• ' Talk about your goal
NEW YORK (AP)- Hal: with people you respect. '
loween
is full of unexpected
: 'Tell !hem why your goal is
tricks and treats but one thing
: ilt\portant to you and how
you can count on is the holiday
: you plait to succeed. Ask if
will be back next year.
; they have suggestions for
Make the most of costumes
: you .
by thinking ahead. ·If .you're a
: ;. On a. small card, write
parent wilh more than one
: •out your goal or draw a
child, look for costumes !hat
:; picture ofit. Carry the card
will
stand the test of til)le in
with you ,or put 1t some
; place where you will see it
~ often.
. . Keep a small notebook
· where you can record your
: goal and your daily
'
: \Jrogress toward it.
' Mentally picture yourself
reaching your goal. Do this
several times a day.
If doubt or negative
: .images start to crowd in,
: immediately let them go.
: Then focus again on the
: outcome you want to hap' ·pen.

I[

MUMCIOUf'DL I . . . .

675-1311

HOLZER CLINIC
Offers

Flu Shots
for Holzer Clinic PatientS
Saturday, October 27,2001
&amp;
.

.

1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Play·A·lhon at
FAO stores ·

I'

!

:'

.
:·

(Becky Collins is G•llia
County:. Extension •gent for
family and consumer scienceslcommunity development Ohio State Univer.;ity.)
'

I•

\I I. ·

lSD St. Rt. 7 North
Ctllhpolis. 0111o

.I

. !. "

. .... . ....

l, ~

'

~."\

~

it.i' ..•

(740) 441 9896
•

On the First Floor
Internal Medicine 'Dept.
(Please bring Insurance Card)
Medical Excellence.
Local
ru

Odober21.2001

children maving away from !he home,"
says Anita Gurian, a clinical assistant
professor at New York Unive"ity's
School of Medicine and executive editor of !he NYU Child Study Center
Web site, AboutOurKids.org. Up until
elementary school, kids' base 41f activi- ·
ties and interactions are in the home
but it changes overnight once. kindergarten starts.
,
While families provide chil&lt;Jren with
closeness and a senst of intimacy,
friends provide a training ground for
problem solving. exploration and discovery, Gurian says. "Without friendships, children really are handic'IJ'ped in
terms of developing emotionally and
socially."
Bod) psychologists Wf that &amp;iends
can also provide a wonderful source of
support. Adds Gurian: "They're not a
luxury, lhey're a necessity:'
"In fi"t grade, it's important that your
mom loves you but in sixth grade it's
important !hat everyone likes you," sayS
Thompson, whose book delves into
unde"tanding the social lives of children.

Thompson says its human nature and
inevitable to pursue social status.
"We're social animals and to not be
included in a group makes you feel out
!here alone," Thompson explains. Furthermore, he adds, being cast an outsider can feel like dealh to a child.
Among his reference points for parents grappling wilh a child undergoing
social pain, he urges adults·to be good
role models. A parent is a child's first
friend, he says.
Thompson also says a child doesn't
have much control over his position on
the social ladder since uncontrollable
traits, such as physical appearance and
talent, are often !he determining factors. Although, as kids are quick to
point out to him, there's also "nice popular" and "mean popular."
Thompson also stresses there's a big
difference between not being "popular"
and not having any friends .
"It's important to realize that children
have different temperaments," adds
Gurian. They differ from other children
and !hey surely also will have a different
temperament from their parents.

Gurian suggests if your child has a
bad day - whether it's because of a
fight with a &amp;iend or a lousy test score·
- that parents help by role playing so
!hat children learn to · sift through the
problem-solving process.
Research used by Thompson break5
down the social hierarchy into percentages: an average 15 percent of children
are very popular, 45 percent are accepted, 20 percent are rated as ambiguous or
unclassifu.ble - not considered by psychologists to be at risk at risk of what
because they have at least one friend, 5
percent are neglected, 4-5 percent are
"controve"ial;' sometimes referred to
in negative terms like "dork" or "geek;'
and 10 percent are rejected.
But while parents certainly should be
aware and concerned about !heir children's social lives, Thompson also
reminds grown-ups that /hildren tend
to successfully work tliings out for
themselves.
"Their social relationships are !he air
they brealhe and the water they swim
in and they don't want adults to screw
it up."

•

FAMILY BRIEFS

Halloween Will
be back again

ATTENTION
KMART
SHOPPERS
IMturn the lov• II "!Aoo!); ~The

Becky

:

at Poplar

Banlca. Speclll alnglng NOh
night wllh Ray l'llfotlorel
CUdll. Marty ShOrt, and Ellrthen v-11. f!llmltywtU alrig on
Saturday.
.

Old Man and the Sea.• by
Ern88l Hemingway.

Saturday, November 3, 2001

Ridge Freewill B111ti*1 Chlllllh,

Oct 24-27 with ~ Bill

q 1Uterary Club, 2 p.m. Wadnea·
.day ·a tlhe'Pomiiroy Ubrart lNIIh
Bemlce carpen!tr 11 hollea.
Maxtll!l Gaskill \viii review "TTM!

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Board of Pubflo Allllra, special mMting, 1
p.m. Wednallday..

=

l

•

POMEROY - Vtltrana Strvlce
Commllalon, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
117 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. .

·counnet in the
Gallel'iV series

Community Calander Ia publhlhed .. a ..... aervloe to

. '
MIDDLEPORT...,. Middleport

CHESTER- Cht*ter•Shade
Hlllorlcel Aasoolallon quarterly 1
l!lllllng TU88Ciay, 7 p.m.,
Cheater Courthouse. Archives
COIIollfllse meeta with Dr. Clyde
Evane at 6:30 p.m.

relish; pumpkin okra stew;
roasted goose bre.st stuffed
with sage dressing and cranberry chutney, wild rice pudding,
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The and routed vegetables; sweet
"Gourmet in !he Galleries'' potato cracked com cake with
series at !he Saint Louis Art rum custard sauce:
Museum is offering further · · Dec. 7 and 18 offer !he
choices in its program of Charles Dickens dinner, folevening events !hat combine lowing a tour of English art of
art, food and music from differ- !he Dickens' period. A holiday
ent cultures around the world. fe.st v.iiU offer Scotch eggs
Each evening includes an art with · Branston relish; shrimp.
tour followed by a four-course chive and Couwold cheese tart
·meal in !he museum's cafe, on greens with red currant
wilh live entertainment in tune vinaigrette; Cornish beef postie
with the evening's theme.
with brown ale gravy and
The Nov. 2 and I 3 event~ roasted vegetables; classic plum
will focus on Colonial and· pudding wilh hatd sauce.
American Indian art. The dinDickens lunches, preceded
ncr menu will feature smoked by an art tour, will be served on
turkey beignets wilh hot apple Dec. 14 and 21.

CardSMMr
Acard shower Is baing held tor
Shirley Bosler as she cela· ·
brates her 99th birthday on Nov.
1. Carda may be san! to her at
Arbors of Gallipolis, Room 3.27,
170 Pinecrest br.. Ohio 45631.

non~ group. wlahlng to
Revival at Ewtnglon Church
an..-nce
maatlnga and .,._
Oct. 23-28, 7 p.m. Sunday, 8:30
olal
aVWIII.
The calandar Ia
p.m. nlghlly, with the Rev. Mike
·
not
deelgnaid
to p..Omola
Puckett as speaker and apeclal
NIH
or·
f
unekllaera
of any
singing by Bub and Jodi Norris.
.type, llama 1111 prlnlad aa
Revival meeting at Firat Church llfiiOII J*llllla and cannot be
guarentHct to appear. ·
of God, 109 Galflel~ Ave., Gal·

MONDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT- Ohio YalltY
Crul8de lor Chrflt meeting, 7
p.m. at the Hlalh United
Melholllst Church.

FOOD

Oepartmtnt.

Revtvala
Revival at Poplar Ridge Freewill
Blpllat Church, Ohio !54, Oct.
24-27, 7.p.m. nightly, with evangellll Bill Banke and rpeclal
singing aech night

Mags.·
•

••

llpolls, Sunday through
. Wednesday. Sunday services
wtll be 10:25 a.m. and 6 p.m., 7
p.m. during the week. Evangelist Is Charles Heater of Little
Pail11, Ky.

a.m. Information, call Janet
Thomas at 367.()274.

•

MASON - Muon Fire Oeplrt·
ment Auxiliary Ohrtatmu
Buaar, ea.m., Muon F'lre

MASON- Community Cancer POjNT PLEASANT- Speclll
Support Group, 7 p.m., Muon
..Nice~ at Oolpe!IJQhlhouae
UnReel Mfllhoclsl Church. Spe=~~·p~~ng
cial guest apeaker Sher!y Kln""'cald. All area cancer paltenla,
families and caregtwra lnvfled. · RI!VIYAUI
POINT PLEASANT- Revival
HENDERSON- Une dancing, at ~rch of Ood ol Prophecy,
22nd Slreel, Oct. 21·18 at7
Hender&amp;On Comlnll'llly Bulldp.m. nightly with Evangellll
lrig, with ihslructor Oawn Hat1bmrnlt c:ar., 01 verner, w.va.
stead. Beginner&amp; 8 p.m. and
For lrilon'n&amp;IIOrl cill Pastor Ken·
advanced 7 p.m.
nelh Blad- (304)8115-3845.
BEND AREA- Trtck-or-lteal·
ing In Hertford, Mason and New GALLIPOLIS FERRYHaven, 6 to 7 p.m.
F!IMvll at Mount Carmel
Church, Oct 21-18, with Moun!
LEON.- Trick-or·tnlallng In
tJarrntl mlnlllerl preiiChlng,
8 p.m. and Monday .
Leon, 6 to 7:30 p.m.
lurday, 7 p.tn. SpeWEDNESDAY, Dctoblr 31
~·
POINT PLEASANT- Wednet·
LEON':.... Ulon 8lptlet Church
day night Bible clubs lor
Is having a lpeaill Bible confer·
preschool up through 12th
grade, 7to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel lllCt on Ttrrorlem, Anti- Chrtat
Lighthouse Church, Neal Road. and !hi look of RevMifon by
For Information call 675-72211 Of lllllket' ~- Blna OUBiten
del. 22•28 from f to 8:30 p;m.
675-6620.

:'

GALLIPOLIS - Family fall ·
nature walk sponeorad by 0.0.
Mcintyre Park Dlslrlcl, 1 p.m.,
Elizabeth L. Evans Bird Sanctuary. Inclement weather locatiOn
Is Botsard Memorial Library.

•

•

(Longtime Gallipolis busilltSsman
Max 'Iilwney occasio11ally submits articles
to the Sunday Timos-Sentintl oil his
world trail&lt;&amp; •nd mtmoritS of Gallipolis
a~~d Galli• County.)

Gal

8lrtel.

-~.

POINT PLEASANT- Clolhklg
give away IIYIIry Tuelday. 111
a.m. to noon at Point PlliUanl
Presbylarian CI'Mirch, 8111 aJ'IIl
Main. Clothing Conlr1buiJorle
.appreciated.

taking him to the doctor. Morris'
wonderful daughter Carol, wl!o lives
in Kentucky, is in constant touch
wilh her dad and Marc, and comes
up to be with her dad very often to
take care of lhings that need to be
done.
Carol not only comes up to visit
her dad, but she organizes things, to

Page CS

Growing up is hard on children - and parents

•

•
•

Fine Baptist Church and Cedarvillo
College. In 2ddition, be has toll-;
tribured generously to !he Univeni-:
ty of Rio Grande. Thne are alsQ;
indications that he and his wife liP(
been anonymous donors· who have
helped several people.
In 1990, benefactors arranged
wilh the Ariel Cultural and Performing Arts Center to name the
theatre for Morris and Dorothy
Hoskins. The late C.H. · "Cosey"
McKenzie probably said it best
when he said, "Morris and I have
had many, many business deals
togelher, and I've alwoys said his
handshake is os good os his wotd."
According to his late wif~
Dorolhy, "Of aU the things he's
done, !he bank is his favorite." In
1989, Ohio Valley Bank c~lebrated
Moqis' 60 years of service.
Morris, a lot of people hold you in
very high regard.
God bless you, Motris Haskins.

make sure he is u comfortable now
u he has alwayr been. She is very
good It watching cmr her father.
It is so nice to haw a true &amp;iend
like Morru and I hope he can come
to my birthday party in january. He
hu not missed one for years. He is
only two yean older !han I am and I
·hope ·to have many more birthday
partiet.
I want Morris and aU my friends
to be there. I talked to world traveler Jack Hanna, formerly of the
C9lumbus Zoo, last week and he
said he Would be down in January to
put on an animal show for my birthday, like he did last year. What a great
day that . will. be, and I want my
rtriend Morris to be !here.
I believe Motris Haskim hu done
more for Gallipolis than anyone else.
I could not begin to list everything
he hu done, but I want to mention
a f.W: He w.s largely responsible for
raising $10,000 in 1939 for a new
. municipal swimrnipg pool, wii the
tint to air condition his retail store,
and is one of !he founders of Bo!:&gt;
Evans FarJJIJ Inc.
1-Je is also a big supporter of the

Max

Faml

•

II
•
'

SPORTS.

bolh quality and subject.
Also, new accessories can
transform one costume into
anolher. Slippers, great jewelry,
big ea", funny feet or a crazy
vest can create a new identity
for a trick-or-treater.
The creativity that fuels !he
best Halloween costumes
doesn't have to be turned off
on Nev. 1, either. Consider
keeping a "costume closet" so
there's always a ~omplete
wardrobe for playing dress-up
or· for at-home lheatrical productions. These activities
encourage .creative interaction
among children and teach selfexpression to kids at a young
age.

:&lt;-:..r•.

Preventing
.dnag use

WASHINGTON (AP)
The Office of National Drug
Cohtrol Policy and !he
National Football League have
teamed up in an effort to help
prevent drug use among
.(\merica's youth.
Throughout !he NFL sea-

Ill
Weight Wranglen
Invited!
.... arr •••• • - Fr~•~ OJ~~n hou~~~

llat•: OCtober 28, 2001

---··

NewS Po.
WoodDI-Sel

son, new .anti-drug public service announcements featuring
Tiki Barber of !he New York
Giants, Eddie .Gtotge of the
Teimessee Titans and Derrick
Brooks of !he Tampa Bay Buccaneers will be shown on television during games and other
NFL progranuning.
Targeting young audiences,
Barber's PSA focuses on his
"anti-drug"
football.
George is featured in an ad
aimed at parents, highlighting
!he important role his mother
played in shaping his choices
about drugs. Broob talks to
both parents and kids about the
importance of discipline and
strong family relationships.
The NFL also will feature
!he PSAs and drug prevention
information on !he league's
Web site.

TAVEti.,.OO

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•••

t

'sA Halloween Party.
· · At · ·
W~gate of Gallipolis

Wednesday, October 31st

6:00p.m.·

'limn: 10:00 a.m.

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

=-~

Send to: military personnel, friendS, or family.
Let them eiq,erienc!! "home" throJ,Jgh
photographs of beautiful Meigs County!

Entertainment
&amp;·Magic Show
Will Be Provided By .:'.
·The Mark Woods Fun Show r

Costume
Contest
at
7:00
$25 Cash Prize for Each Age Group
Ages 04 Ages 5·8 Ages 9+

We will have lots of goodies and candy for
.
everyone.
It will be a night of safe and fun activity for all
ages.
call Wyngate at

: Gallia Academy,
~- Point Pleasant
duel for regional
·- supremacy, Bl
J

•

�PageC&amp;

Page C7

:1101

Sunct.y. Odober 21. 2001

-

Bikers.' rnn agodsend for many area families
If it weren't for the tay runs of the
Meigs County Bikers Association,
many Meigs County children would
have a sparse Christmas.
Over the past 16 yean, the Bikers
h1ve raised thousands of dollars
through their runs to be spent for
toyt for disadV1nuged children.
Tomorrow, the group · will begin
compiling 11ist of the names of children to be remembered this ye1r.
Applications will be accepted at
the Meigs County Health Department, but you have to come in person. None will be uken by phone:
Deadline is Nov. 21. Parents are
reminded that they will have to
show proof of income in order to
register, so don't go in without that
information.
·
Everybody wants their kids to
have a nice Christmas and the project has been a godsend for many
families.

•••

sands of dolbn have been contributed to help the community.

•••

Donna Greene of Middleport is a

reflective."
Donna got into storytellina a couple of years ago and has that at the
top of her lilt of things to do now
that she's retired fi:om Ohio University.

storyteller and she's bubbling IM!1'
with enthusiasm for the art and
wants to share it with oihen. ,
Mark the Friday night after
So she's planning a "Telebration"
at the Pomeroy Municipal Building Thanksgiving on your calendar.
COMMUNITY
auditorium ·on Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. It's Myron Duffield will be producing
primarily for adults although chil- another variety show as a program of
Feeling good by doing good is a dren can come with their parents.
the Riverbend Arts Council.
While the show has been presentway of life for some, and ydterday
She calls herself "The Meigsican
across the ·nation thousands partici- Storyteller."
ed on two nighu in the Meigs Midpating in " Moke a Difference Day"
All of the money raised at the dle School ailclitorium for the past
felt good.
"Telebration" will go toward esub- several years, Myron opted for a sinAs their contribution to the lishing a storytelling guild in Meigs gle show this year.
national observance, members of County.'
He's hard at it, soliciting local ~l­
Burli11gham Comp, Modern WoodDonna has attended several story- ent and working out all those little
men of America, donated four books teller festivals 'as well as a few work- details which go into producing fine
to the Pomeroy Public Library.
shops with professional storytellers. enteitainment.
Modern Woodmen is a proud She says the stories d~al with "everyadvocote of volun.t eerism and giving thing and anything ranging from tall
Our belated congratulations to
as is seen year after year in their tales to life experiences, fables, and · Harold and Elizabeth Lohse of
matching fund projects where thou- rhymes, some funny, some sad, some Pomeroy. The couple celebrated

Charlene
'Hoeflich

•••

•••

\

BY lbiiiA Cooa

their 65th wedding annivenary on
Sept. 24. Heard there was quite a

party.

•• •

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"Faith HiD: Piece of My
Heart" (St. Martin's Griffin,

\

163 pages, $10.99 paperback)
by Jam&lt;:$ L. Dickerson.
' When Faith . Hill was 17,
her boyfriend broke up with
her because he thought she
was a dreamer who was going
nowhere, while he - orso he
~ought - was headed for a
~areer in major league base-

SenioJ:

Tlw $1,400 raised by the

Citizens Center bst week for victims
of the attack on Americ1 is beins
sent to a Senior Center in New,;
York. Patroru of that center are pre;;
dominantly Chinese malting it ~
nice cross-culture gesture.
•
Susan Oliver, local director, wheq
making the announcement recalle4
how seven! Centers in the sute sent
money here to help out with floo.J,i
relief.

·• • .•

·

·

\;all,
"There in the hallway of
'McLaurin Attendance Center, Sidney broke up with a
girl who would someday be
known as one of the world's
inost successful and beautiful

..

I didn't know that.
~
Lady Bugs bite and that sometime:&lt;
leads to an infection· which require's
medical treatment.
·;
1
And I just thought they we&amp;
unsightly and smelled bad.

Women," writes

The book, a quick read, follows the counrry music sur

GOOD QUALITY -In the orlglnal11x14-lnch print of this t!ger photograph, you can see every
whisker. That's because photographer Rick Sammon used a photo-quality lnl\let printer and.
photo-quality, glossy paper. Sammon also used sharpening tools In his photo-software program. (AP Photo/Rick Sammon)

BYRICKSAMAP WEEKLY FEATURES

Lately, I've noticed a trend
in digital imaging and inkjet
printing. Seems as though
many photographers, including me, are getting back to
basics. Rather than using special effects in imaging programs to create fanciful
images and pictures with an
artistic flair, they are malting
"straight" prinl&gt;. And, rather
than malting inkjet prints on
all sorts of creative papers
(canvas, silk, watercolor and so
on), they are malting prinl&gt; on
photo quality, glossy paper.
The goal of these picturetakers and picture-makers is
'iimple: they :wane to make die
sharpest, highest-quality inkjet
print.- one · th~t depicts reality. That's an admirable goal,
one that easily can be
achieved.
First, you must start with
the sharpest possible picture.
But even if your pi&lt;;ture (slide,
print or digital file) looks
sharp, ·you can make it even·
sharper. Many imaging software programs offer a sharpening feature (tool) that lets
you sharpen the image to the
point where you · can oversharpen a picture, which
makes it look too grainy. It is·
worth your time to master the
technique of sharpening. If
you get it just right, you'll get
knockout prints.
Two accessories for digitalimaging programs also can
help to make shatp inkjet
prints. Nik Sharpener lei&gt; you
sharpen pictures for specific

sizes and specific viewing distances, and Genuine Fractals
· lets you make large prints
fiom small files.
When sharpening a picture,
remember that what you see
on your computer monitor
· \12 dpi fat Mac and 96 dpi for
Windows) is not a 100 percent accurate representation
of the sharpness of the print
{due to difference in resolution). Therefore, you need to
exper!ment with sharpening
to get a desired effect. Malting
notes of sharpening settings is
a good idea.
While you have your pictufl' on your computer monitor, play with the contrast
control. By increasing the
contrast, you can increase· the
apparent sharpness of the picture.
Naturally, you need a
photo-quality inkjet printer,
one with a resolution of at
least 2400x12® dpi (dots per

inch). Canon, Epson, Lexmark
and Hewlett-Packard offer
photo-quality printers. When
choosing a printer, keep in
mind that as with everything
else in life, you get what you
pay for: the higher the cost,
the higher the image quality
- in most cases. Aha note
that as the price increases, so
does the printing speed,
which becomes increasingly
important as you increase the
number of prints you make.
Paper also makes a difference when it comes to making sharp inkjet prints. Walk
down the paper aisle of a
computer- or office-supply
store, or scroll through the
inkjet paper section of a computer accessory Web site, and
you'll see several different
types of photo paper. Look for
a high-gloss photo paper. In
addition, for long-lasting
prints, look for a heavyweight
paper.

.CoMPtmC.It ·

NEWS ·:
•'

Catch up with '
Jocal and regional
eventS, A2 · · :

~

' ~s~~· ·

CJDROPRA.alC
446-0100
lO-A Airport Road

ve a Christmas program on
. 3, 1883, which would
~ve been the ninth day of
~hristrnas.

a

,.

Meigs
.,....
i.
County
Chiropractic
Clinic
... .t.

.

~­

the

Gallipolis, Ohio
~

992-2168
963 General Hartinger Pkwy
Middleport, OH

Massage Therapist
(l;llllljlolls Dtr/y)

-

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: In the last century, such
DUngs as Christmas programs
• lfter Christmas were cominon. Maybe persons were
inore relaxed for these
~doings" after the holiday. In
fact, the. person who wrote
lhe Tick Ridge nevis com:Oented:
'~Holiday being over, the
reople ofTick are again quiet
_F.d content, having enjoyed
Jlletmelves. People have nothrg to do but chop wood and
~ed their animals:'
• Tick Ridge also had literi ry society, but a dispute arose
f~hen some of the older girls
began ripping up the writing
l)ook pages of the smaller
~iris ..
' Also that month, the J&lt;!url)al told of another historic
c!vent, maybe the first in GalUa County.
! "On the night of the fourth
inst., Mr. John Bennett
favored the young folks with a
&lt;)&gt;cia! hop at his residence.
This is the fitst event of the
!lind that h.;; occurred in this
l.hcinity for some time, and
boys living at a distance
~at somewhat excited and
l)rought too much of the
'):ritter' with them.
i "The final result was that
~orne were uken off to bed
Without supper and others led
Co a stable to cool off. We have
not learned whether they
s,'tayed with Mr. Stable all
llight or not."
: The mumps became a
:Cvere problem on Tick
Ridge in the spring of 1882.
the epidemic' lasted until
f1me of that year.
·• To our knowledge no one
that year fi:om mumps.
A Mr. Evans working in the
fields did die of pneumathat may have been
Qro·ugJo&lt; on by mumps. He left
wife and six children: People
Tick Ridge and in Centercollected money and
for Mrs. Evans to get her

·t

(Behind Burger King)

Now on Staff,..
Mark Hasseman

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with X-Ray
Complements of
Complete Care Chiropractic and
Mel9s County Chlroprodlc Clinic ·
Expiration Datr.lt-31-01

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We note that the EMIA also

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:•. CENTERVILLE - The
:'big news items on Tick Ridge
in Raccoon Township of Gal.lia County in 1882 concerned
the poor crops, schools,
churches, tragedies and the
·~otial improvement of the
'tornmunity.
· · In regard to that last item,
note several new organiza'·tians formed in 1882 . .
They included a young
folks organization put togeth- ·
er by the Ebenezer Church.
'lfhat year, the Gallipolis Journal reported of another new
project: "The
Ebenezer
M11dW Improvement Associjtion is still progressing. They
~vc ·~•eP.I::' for _ ne.w' sin.ging
books; M think their intention is to · give an entertainment about the first of'

carrying case and a swivel fj~~~==
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There's also a sund so it can
be used as a PC video-conferencing camera, ani! a macro
mode for taking snapshots at
close range of documents and
the like.
The user interface is a small
LCD panel and the various
features, including a tO-second self timer can be toggled
with a control button and the · I;::~:::...---....
shutter. ·Batteries last up to
four hours, and there's an
automatic power-off after 60
seconds.

·Sharp inkjet printers are
only afew clicks away

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Complements of
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fi:om her birth in Jackson,
Miss., to stardom in Nashville,
Tenn.
Dickerson, a former social
worker who specialized in
adoption, delves into motives
and feelings surrounding
Hill's adoption as an infant
and her search for her biological mother.
Also discussed are Hill's lint
marriage and divorce, and her
current marriage to country
singer Tim McGraw.
While the book is full of
insight and trivia about the
counrry music industry, Dickerson expresses his opinion in
a factual tone throughout.
Often, it falls upon the reader
to · separate the facts from
sutemenls that are Dickerson's interpretation of the
facts.
He writes that when · lint

husband Daniel Hill proposed
to Faith, "the only thing Faith
had going for her was her
relationship with Daniel
· Hill." Even tllough she was
unemployed at the time and
far li:om home, this was not
something Faith seems to
have exp~d about herself:
uter, Dickerson writes:
"Faith is a person who speaks
through her emotioru - her
lint refuge is always in tears
-and through her ~ctions­
where her bst refuge is usually in the badlands of defiant
behavior.1'
The book is considerate to
detail, with a discography,
awards list and bibliography.
The chapter tides 'are named
for Hill's songs and each
reflects the true essence of its
chapter. Readers learn where
songs originated, how they

were chosen and their meaning for Hill.
There are missing pieces,
though.
Hill isn't interviewed just quoted from TV appearances. and newspaper articles.
Thos&lt;;, who know her best
also are quoted li:om other
soured. The book reads more
like a college paper than an
original source.
Plus, after cataloging Hill's
sttengths and weaknesses and
her will to remain true to
herself, Dickerson offers a disappointing conclusion throwing in a cliche that perhaps works well with the
copy but counters the point.
Even so, Hill's fans are likely to cheer her documented
perseverance and applaud her
upbeat attitude in the face of
disappointment.

HAIIDCOVEII FtC110N
t . 'Midnlghl Bayou' by Nora
Robar11 (Pulnaln)
2. '1llo ol Oogo' by Potrlcil Com·
wei (Pulnam)
3. "BBood and Gold' by Anno Arc.

(Knopf)
4. "Th4o Comocliouo' by Jonatt.n
Franzen (FOIW, sva.., &amp; Glroulc)
5. 'A Bend In lhe Road' by
Nicholu 5paltct (Warner)
8. 'Black House' by St8phan King,
Peter S1nwb (Random House)
7. 'The Beat·Loved Poems of

JacqUeline Kennedy Onusll" ad.
Caroline Kennedy (Hyperlon)

e. 'Naroisaua In Chains' by Laurel!
K. Hamlltoo (Berldey)

9. 'Separation of Power" by VInce
Flynn (Pocket)
10. 'Dune: House Corrinno' by
Brian Herbort and Kevin J. Ander·

son (Bantam)

HON~ENERAL

I. 'How I Play Goll" by Tiger

Woods (Wamer)
2. 'Germs: Biological Weapons
and America's Secrel War bY'
Judith Miller, S18phen ena-~g &amp;
William Broad (Simon &amp; Schuater)
3, "The No Spin Zone' by Bill
O'Reilly (Broadway Bool&lt;a)
4. 'The Final Days' by Barbara
Olson (Regnery)
s. "The Prayer or Jlbez" by Bruce

H. Wl1dnlor1 (Mullnoniah)
8. •Jack: Stralghl lrom 111e Gur by
Jock Welch with J&lt;thn A. Byrne
(Warner)

'John-·

7.
by DoMd McCullough (Simon &amp; ~)
8. 'Wile Moved My C-?' by
Spancer Jet, . . , (PUINm)
8. 'CI08Iing Over' by Jo1w1 Edwlrd
(Jodeno Group)
10. '8odV for Ule' by Bill PhiiHpe
wilh Michael 0'01'10 (Harper
Collin&amp;)
MASS IIARK!T PAPERBACKS
1. 'Aooea Ate Red' by Jamea Pat·
larson (Warner)
2. "The Promelheue Deceplion' by
Robart Ludlum (St. Martin's)
3. 'The Devil'e C¢8' by John
Sandford (Bertdey)
4. ,rnpulae' by catherine Coulter

(Signet)
5. 'Black Hawk Down' by Mark
Bowden(Signet)
6. 'Blue Gold' by Ctlve Cussler

(Pocket)
7. 'A capital Holiday" by Janet Dailey (Zebra)
8. "Hearts in Mantis'. by Slaphen
King (Pocket)
9. 'Ghost MiJOn' by Karan Robardl
(Dell)

10. "Deck lha Halla' by Mary Hlg·
gins Clartt and carol Higgins Clark
(Pocket)

Tick Ridge community
took steps toward
improvement in 1880s

PC requirements: Pentium
processor and Windows
98/ME/2000; 32 megabytes
of RAM and at least a 16-but
color display, and a CD-ROM
drive.
· '
On
the
We~:
http:/ /www.sipix.com
'
Questions and commen~
are welcome. Send them t&lt;;&gt;
Larry Blasko, AP, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY
10020-1666. Or e~maj,l
lblasko@ap.org.

.

L.

Hean."

(Char/c,e Hoeflich is gmeral manager
ofThe Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy.) ;·

Software included with the
camera, besides a Twain driver
Digital cameras compete (standard image collection
quite handily with film cam- software) allows the user to
eras, but now there's a new edit and manipulate both still
fiont ·- a California compa- and video images. The prony has announced an inex- grams are easy to use. and
pensive digital camera as a intuitive, and while not · as
"fashion accessory."
full-featured as a professional
A "fashion accessory," it photo ecliting program, they'D
turns out, is not an accom- handle the jobs most of us
plice in committing a fashion, want done.
bui, according to a nearby
So what about picture qualyoung ·person, "something ity? Outdoor photos were
like a .scarf or jewelry that fine, with good color and
enhances your outfit." So if clarity. Indoor photos tended
your outfit will ·be enhanced to blur with camera motion as
by a $69.99 digital camera the shutter was pressed, at
that's considerably smaller least those taken under ordithan a pack of cigarettes, con- nary office lighting and pome
sider the StyleCam by SiPiX, lighting. Bottom line, as a
fnc. of Milpiw, Calif.
I
camera it's about on a par
Weighing in at 2.6 ounce!, with a non-flash disposable
the silver-and-black camet\o camera, and for outdoor shou
will uke 16 640 x 480 pixel of _(fiends, e1c., it wiJI do just
VGA images, and up to !80 ib firie.
·what's ' called "streaming snapUploading photos ~ the
shot mode" that with includ- PC is accomplished with .an
ed software can produce an included USB (universal seriAVI movie. That's in what's al bus) cable.
called CIF mode, "1\jth a resolution of 320 x 240 pixels.
It ruru on two AAA batter. ies and comes with a beldoop
BY LARRY BLASKO

Ja~es

Dickerson in his biography
"Faith Hill: Piece of My

Digital camera is more
fashionable than functional
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BEST SELLERS

How Faith Hill hit her way into the big leagues

Ir~
..

•

James
4Sands
HISTORY
through the winter.
That year, the wheat was ·
fi:ozen in early January and
again in March and it looked
like a bad year. Added to that
was the fact that !he spring of
1882 was a wet one, thus
malting it hard to get out the
cb~ crop.
The sch0ol at Tick Ridge
progressed nicely though
1882. A neighboring school
known as Alban school was
not so fortunate. It seerru that
Mr. David Alban had to discipline a boy. Charges were
brought against the teacher by
the student's father. One day
during school, Mr. Alban was
. arrested on the c;harge of
assault and battery with intent
to wound. He was tried
before Judge Shaner in Vinton
and most honorably acquirted.
The parent was not finished. He got a . petition
signed that read: ·"We the
undersigned persons are clissatisfied with Mr. Dave Alban
school and con•ider it a nuisance or no school and we
hereby notify you the directors to dismiss the school
forthwith."
Apparently, the directors
ignored the petition and
school continued on under
Alban.
The petitioners met together, but no one would serve as
a chairman to push the matter
forward. Hence the organization was adjourned sine die.
The Tick Ridge school pictured probably dates ro the
1870s. That building served as
the Tick Ridge school until
1932, when the one room
school was closed. There were
only eight pupils in the school
in 1932.
There was a Tick Ridge'
School made of logs built
.obout 1851 that served until
the 1870s.
According to the book on
Gallia's ·one room schools:
"The children played the
woods close by the schoolhouse. The teacher stayed
;with them in the woods. On
the playground was a playhouse made of small pine
logs, which the children had
built."
Tick Ridge school after
1932 was used as a storage
place.
It burned down in the early
1990s.

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·

..

The Five Star Service Guarantee.
Over five years ago, the people at Firstar came
up with a simple idea. And before long,
that idea became so big ...so revolutionary ... that it changed everything we
do. The big idea? Rather than just
promising great service, we decided to
back up tha·t goal with an acrual guarantee.
Now, we're usliering in a new era in our Storied

history. In the next few months, Firstar will be
changing its name to U.S. Bank. But rest
~
assured, you'll continue to get focused
and attentive customer service from
every department, every person, every
transaction. And that's more than a promise.
That's a guarantee-The Five Star Service
Guarantee. This changes everything.

*'
·*

ljames Sands is a special co"e·
sp&lt;mdent for the Sunday Times·
Sentinel. He can be contacted by
writing to J46 Meadow Lme,
Circleville, Ohio 4J 11J.)

Memtllr FDIC

J

"

II

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.. .

...

•

•

Pap ca.
Odollll 21,2101

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-7

GOOD READING
Twin coeds star in breezy novel Studs Terkel explores. life and afterlife
IIY

GRtm:HIN SCHWARTZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"Juno a: Juliet" (Doubleday, 270 pages, S23.95)
by Julian Gough.
Irish author Julian Gough
claims he set out to write an
"end-of-the-twentieth-century Jane Austen novel ."
But Gough didn't take the "Bridget Jones" route and

slap

u0arcy"

Before finding their own
place, they stay· with a distant cousin. Gough even
manages to make this outhouse-equipped, cramped
terrace
house
seem oddly
cozy.

SU'r-

ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER

"\Viii the Circle Be
Unbroken? ~eflections
on Death, Rebirth, and
Hunger for a Faith"
(The New Press, 407 pages,
$25.95) by Studs Terkel.

Pulitzer Prize.winning
author Studs ,Terkel has
made a distingui~hed career
out of confronting divisive
social issues. However, in
his latest book, he tackles the one issue . that
unites
everyone:
death.
In his introduction to "Will the
Circle
Be
Unbroken?"
Terkel,
89,
writes: "It is a
sweet irony that
my first book of the
twenty-first century (possibly my last) is about death."
Terkel's
Terkel had just begun this
books
book when, in December ("Working,"
1997, liis wife of 60 years, "The Good War"), his subIda, died. The loss lent a jects are everyday men and
special poignancy to his women, the "heroes of the
interviews.
ordinary." This collection of
"You may be as aston- 62 conversations contains a
ished as I was while few well-known names ~
scrounging around, to dis- Ira Glass, host of National
cover ·that we reflect on Public Radio's "All Things

names on stiff-lipped,
sideburned bachelors.
Rather, with a wink
and a warm sense of
humor, Gough created a
literary lass who spins a
romance with . enough sass ·
and bite to make its cheerful
·ending seem plausible.
."
"Juno &amp; Juliet" is the
IS.
story of identical twin sisters
The equally comwho leave home in Tipperpelling supporting cast
ary for their first year at
includes a drunken play·~The
university in Galway.
wright, a mouthy theater
The modestly beautiful
tea was actually director, a passionate literaJuliet Taylor narrates as she grand and over the course of
ture professor and another
and her twin, Juno, settle It our cousin slowly turned
pair
of misunderstood
into a flat on the docks in into a human being,
twins.
Galway, gulp down their although a very old, very
Gough turns everyday
first real taste of freedom religious human being with
and cope with the "personas llo sense of humour. That dilemmas into appealing
dramatis" of suitors beating di'dn't stop her being very glimpses into the human
condition.
a path to their door. ·
funny, it just stopped her

I
HISTORY TODAY

In 1947. cheese !ales soared
after NBC's "Kraft Television
Theatre" introduced serious

drama.
In 1948, the motorcycle
clan, Hell's Angels, ' was
formed.
· In 1949, Chic Young's
"Blondie" was the most popular comic strip in the world.

Future
fhh'll Pqe C1
grounds away from the water,"
said Mrs. Payne, referring to
the site's flooding history.
Aooding has not occurred
during the fair - except in
1995, when the week-long
event's final day was shortened
due to flooding risk- but haS
happened immediately before
and after.
. "We have been very fortunate and bl~ssed not to have
had any tragedies during the
fair," added Mrs. Payne, whose
son, John Lee Payne, is a fair
board director. "It could be
bad, with livestock and lives
damaged."
The board has emphasized
that if nothing else is done,
relocation will boost security
for all using the fairgrounds,

In 1950, the first credit card
was introduced ·through the
Diners Club.
In 1951, NBC began the
first network co"ast~to-coast
prograrnnring.

including those who rent
space at the campgroun~, also
!lated for a move to higher
campgrounds are
nice the way they are, but as
time goes along, things
ch ange," M rs. p ayne S3l"d .
Backers said building a
convention center for . use by
the community an d outs1·de
groups stands to give Gallia
.County greater visibility and
can be an economic boost.·
lt's a point on which Richard
Northup, executive vice president of the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce and
Community Improvement
Corporation, agrees.
"I think it's obvious the
fairgrounds need to be
moved, and currently there is
no place (or a large meeting to
be held," Northup said. "A
convention center would
make sense to Gallia County
residents."
The board envisions year-

Mills said the influx of spending on taxable items locally
stands to benefit agencies that
depend onfu the sales tax for
operating nds.
"Every new . thing this
building brings into Gallia
County, brings that much
more in," he said. "That in
turn is going to help the sheriff, EMS and any countyfunded program."
Mills cited the exaJ;llple of
the Great Ohio Bicycle
Adventure (GOBA), the ·
annual tour that made the
fairgrounds its starting base
last summer.
"GOBA brought ih 3,000
people who spent by all estimates around $100,000," Mills
said. "You know every one of
them spent at least $3. If we
· had multiple events like thai,"it
will benefit everyone."

~;~~

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FREE activation ($25 value)

In
1953,
27-year-old
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as
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crowned
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need something to increase
the number of people coming
to us:'
Fair Board Director David

Sunday. October 21, 2001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
TIUs chart shaws how local stock.i of inte11!st performed kut week.
Each days closing figurns are provUkd by Advert of Gallipolis.

AEP

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

43.79

43.14

42.59

43.43

42.83

39.96

4()

39.90

38.90

41.15

ArnTechiSBC

Ashland Inc.

+

18.01

+

BllnkOne

33.62

34.40

34

33.75

34.27

7M

+

Champion

. 19.23

18.78

19.09

19.05

19.14

2.56

2.60

2.SS

2.SS

2.59

4.10

City Holding

+

9.93 .

4,11
9.70

9.79

9.46

9.70

.51

Kmart

,....

18.52

64.35

64.94

SOFT SCULPTURES - New this year to the line of original
soft sculptures made by artisan Eloise Drenner are Santa
heads with painted faces and beards of processed wool.

Local artisan
brings home
festival prize!.

+

Landa End

includes 300-anytime and 1.000 night &amp; weekend minutes per month

In 1952, the first hydrogen
1
bomb was detonated on Nov.
1, and many Americans feared ~
complete annihilation.

round use of the center and
fairgrounds for acllvltles
including auto shows, conferences, rodeos and livestock
exhibitions, in addition to its
current use by local groups
and events.
"Tourism dollars are good
dollars for this area;· Northup
said. "Those are dollars not
otherwise spent in Gallia ·
County. We are a tourism-oriented area, and making Gallia
County a destination for visitors is a desirable goal."
The center's use by outside
groups fits in with the board's
argument that additional
spending will occur, boosting
sales tax receipts and paying
off the indebtedness sooner.
"I think it's the thing to
do," said Mrs. Payne. "Over in
Jackson County, they keep
growing. 1 feel like Gallia
County is at a standstill. We

Considered," novelist Kurt
Vonnegut and actress Uta
Hagen - but its core is the
nurses, paramedics, doctors,
social workers, AIDS case~
workers, clergy, undertakers
and others who deal witH
death every day. Alth6ugh
·the interviews address people's fears about death and
dying, and their belief
(or disbelieO in
the hereafter, ultimately, they focus
on celebrating life. '
Ed Reardon, whd
spent 15 years as a paramedic, says: "I think anybody who says they're not
afraid of death is kidding
themselves. ... It's something we can't possibly
understand. While we're
alive, it's hope that keeps us
going. That last laugh, that
piece of cherry pie for
today."
·
"We really don't realize
what a precious gift life is,"
says Dr. John Barrett, Chief
of the Trauma Unit at Cook
County Hospital in Chicago. "We take it for granted."
Tammy Snider, a psychiatric social worker, IS a
"hibakusha," a survivor of
the atomic bombing of
Hiroshima.

1,300 minutes
for $30 per month

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In 1946, Winston Churchill
coined the term "iron curtain" in ·a speech at Westminster College in Missouri.

death like crazy much of
our lives," he writes. "How
can we envision our life, the
one we now experie·nce,
unless we recognize that it
is finite?"
As in most
of

BY JUUI REED

from noticing the fact. We
~ad to turn a lot of)augh~
mto coughs, to the extent
that she gave us both Hacks
cough sweets ... ...
Underlying all is Juliet's
subtle jealousy ofJuno's easy
assuranc~. and her feeling of
estrangement about their
differences.
"I should probably explain
that Juno began to be beautiful around the age of fourteen and the process shows
no sign of stopping. Her
beauty
refines
and
upgrades itself constantly. At the time this story
begins, she has just
turned eighteen and
it's almost ridiculous
how beautiful she

Page 1

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

••

POMEROY - "Three times in five years is' a real
honor," said Eloise Drenner, beaming with pride as she
announced her third win in five years on her booth at
the recent Bob Evans Farm FestivaL
Drenner, who operates Weaving Stitches on Main
Street in Pomeroy, took second place in the judging of
nearly 150 booths prepared by exhibitors from several

8.90

Rocky Boot

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5

37.91

37.79

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53.04

52.61

ZUlli
13.64

13.39

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38.31

states.

In both 1997 and 1998, she was the blue ribbon win39.38

39.32

,.28

52.48

53.30

53.42

a.w

21.18

21.30

13.25

13.75

13.91

ner.
Judging is based on creative design and workmanship,
POPULAR - Scarecrows on ladders created by Eloise as well as the overall appearance of the booth, said OrenDrenner are popular sale Items at craft shows.
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s--·

GALLIPOLIS - The rapid
growth of retirement planning
options such as 401(k)s, IRAs
and variable annuities has provided an ever-increasing variety of investment choices
within each plan to save for
retirement years.
GUEST
Yet, a number of reports
VIEW
show that an alarming number
of today's investors are oblivious to the importance of asset been widely publicized by the
allocation in their retirement financial press and investment
portfolios' performance. This firms, a lot of retirement plan
despite the fact that financial participants aren't taking the
advisors and the financial press message to heart. Company
have emphasized the asset allo- stocks and guaranteed investcation decision as critical to ment contracts (GICs) still
investment selection.
compose a bulk of the assets in
Market studies published in the country's defined contrithe Financial Analysts Journal bution plans.
in 1986 and..updated recently · Company stocks and GICs
show that how dollars are allo- · roughly constitute almost twocated among stocks, bonds and thirds of all retirement plan
cash equivalents is the single
assets. Equities, the next most
n1ost important decision 'an
popular investment choice,
invescor can make.
composed less than a fifth of
In fact, according to the
the portfolios. Bonds and cash
studies, security selection and
equivalents represent the
market timing are far less
important to a portfolio's per- remainder of the assets.
At first glance, one might
formance compared to the
suspect that plans are limiting
overall asset allocation.
Although these results have
Pluse see .lily. Dl

Jay
Caldwell

Have a business news item?

50·-"'"'-·

,,

Give us a call at (740) 446-1342, ext. 13
t

SIOUX
CENTER,
Iowa (AP) - A biotech
company is looking to
farm animals for raw
materials, using almost
everything but the "moo"
and the "oink" to make
over-the-courlter ·medicines and health s';\pplements.
"We can use eyeballs
from the cow, their brains,
their pituitaries, their
intestines, their stomach,"
said
Allen
Kramer,
founder of Sioux Pharm,
a company based in
northwestern Iowa. "We
can isolate in1portant
products from · almost
every organ of the ani-

nutritio11al supplement.
The
supplement
is
designed to improve joint
flexibility in people who
suffer from osteoarthritis,
a disease that breaks down
cartilage.
There are conflicting
reports about the effectiveness of chondroitin
sulfate when used with
glucosamine, another supplement
used
for
osteoarthritis. Some medical researchers have said
there is not enough proof
to demonstrate the combination alleviates pain.
However, the National
Institute of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin
m.
a! "
Diseases, citing clinical
Sioux Pharm is one of a trials, said last year that the
handful of biotech comcombination may be
panies making pharma- effective.
ceutical breakthroughs
Unlike some companies
using livestock. The comthat rely on shellfish and
pany is also looking to
shark cartilage to produce
crops as a raw material for
the supplement, Sioux
treatments, including an
Pharm uses cow tracheas,
over-the-counter nutriwhich it purchases ·from
tional supplement made
slaughterhouses
and
from soybeans that may
help children with atten- meatpacking giants.
So . far this year, the
tion deficit disorder.
The c~mpany is one of company has used more ·
three in the country using than 7 million tons of traanimal cartilage to make chea tissue to make chonchondroitin sulfate, a
PI a • - Business, Dl
I

Beef industry reactions
to Sept. 11
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly .
seven weeks following the
events of Sept. 11, beef
industry professionals have
some fair estimates on how
the cattle market has been
affected by the enormous
changes in our country.
Dr. Bill R. McKinnon,
Extension beef specialist at
Virginia Tech, recently
shared his views though the
Ohio State· University Beef
Team Newsletter, which is
summarized in this news
column.
McKinnon begins with a
. recap of consumer reactions
to the attack, 11ighlighting
the can cell ed travel plans,
and deserci c\ n of restaurahts.
This is· signi ficant to the
beef indust~ y because 50
percent of beef is consumed
away from home. Naturally,
beef sales fall as the economy
weakens. However, sin ce
Sept. 11 , the figures have
been erratic.
Both fed and feedeJ cattle
markets dropped approximately $5.50/ cwt after the
attacks, then rebounded in
early October, and then
dropped again with the
Anthrax scare.

,,

Complicating matters are
several economic and health
issues of a global nature.
First, the fed cattle market
w "r already under pressure

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

from record high numbers
of heavy slaughter cattle,
with 6-10 pound heavier
carcass weights than in 2000.
Secondly, exports have
been down this year, because
the U.S. dollar has been
strong, making it more
expensive for other countries to purchase U.S. beef.
Finally, in the . same time
frame as the attacks, Japan
identified a dairy cow with
BSE, which
ultimately
reduced beef imports to
Japan by 10-20 percent.
In summary, Dr. McKinnon points out that the supply of feeder cattle has
dwindled, that the number
of heifers in the feed yards
are still at an all time high,
and that cow/ calf producers
still show little interest in
rebuilding their herds.
All of these factors would
cypically be good for
cow I calf produces. Howev-

Plean- Byrnes, 01

'I

�Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Sunct.y,

WV

Oct. 28, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

Iro

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center, 36759 A~

Road, ·· Pgmoioy,
45ml768
1 t' torAtt:'::EllaauaiY~
n 8 ra . q
_......,........
n1ty Employer E"""'raglng
WorkplaO. lJivarsity.
ANYONE CAN DO ITI
$251$75/HR·PT·FT. WORK

t/CALL NOW
___

__

t •888•974•JOBS

Found- State Route 124 at
Pirte Grove Rd., young male
dog, maroon with while an
breast &amp; front lege, call to

ID, (740)949·3126.

YARDSAU:

'

Card of Thanb

fWew:OtTo 1

$5000 mo. FT G·raal for
MofJ\81 Free Info. en-884RICH.
www.SmartWork4U.com

~

I

Send cover letter and detailed resume
to Formals Bonk. Attn: Human Resources
Director. P.O. Box 626, Pomeroy. Ohio
45769. Formers Bank Is on Equal Housing
Lender. Member FDIC. and Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Thank Everyone
That belped In any
way to celebnte our.

501b annlnnary. AU, .
.

(24hrs)

BUSINESS PAOFESSIO· aon 420 Viand StrHI. Pt. Pl.
NALS , WE Need Your or can (304)675:5656
Sldllsl 21 Yr. Oi&lt;llnl'l eom. Dr1v
pany Expanding! s-"11
ors
Motivated People to Have
Home-Basad-Business .
Full Training, Paid- Vaca-

· l'tbat ottended the'

party.
We etpeel1lly waul.

Hons. 888·363·2064/
-..Wiselllz4.oom

·.$7.00 per hour. Apply today

!In person at Mldoleton Ea·
11ates. 8204 Carla Drive.
Galllpollo, OH. An Equal

our

~:randdaJugbter

working

IL
We

10

far
hard with

appreciate

I
At lnfoCislon you can
earn up to $7/hr plus
weekly bonuses!

~1/ilhc•
•
•••

In Memory

We also offer a weekly
paycheck and paid
training.

In JlilnOl'J of our
Dot Jlotb11,
and CJrandmotb.11

Arline Davis.

ectober 18,tttt
How Preelouaart tht ·
nNt mtmOrta.
,•

I

---------,--:--=-

~~~~i.ii.il.li Monday-Thursday
2:00-11:00
Friday and
Saturday

,..,.

OFF
CaD past donors
and volunteers to
raise funds for
major non-profit
organizations.

Guert1nleed
avenue Per Mile
Strictly Orop &amp;
Hook FUEL
urcharge Hlghesl
In ·the Industry
Base Plale and
Pertorrnance

lnfoCislon
Management
Corporation

80Cl-388-8789

'

r·------,.1

""'"""'

Sal~ep8f'IOn: Fuil·tlme, ben- man'S, vaYd driver's license, mill just caM ~-875-1957.

efltl, retail experience refer·
red. Apply et Ufeetyle Fumllure. No phone cans. Apply
In person, 856 3rd Avenue,

hand tcola reliable trana-

portatlon a~ references re·
qulred. Local work, axcel·
lent pay for right person,
onuaos vacation. Apply at

~~:~~:1::1:

ladv811tceS available.
If you think
the desire

•
•
;• ·

••'

on •
''

\IIIII' '"IIIIIIJI I liid:_·~;~

I

lpp!i l{t\(1 lid

dl1 Jl"lt

f ll1

•
•

••

•

Construction, (740)992:5403.

877·916·9675

or review

http://www.CultlvattSuc·

top hopping
. Far All Your Adv.rtlslng Needs

T;he Amerlcln Community
Claulfted Advertlslna Network
Contact Us At . .

'1-800-821-8139
.Qr visit our website:

· ~.americancommuoltydassified.com

, I ,1, I I

cau.com

WORK FROM HOME.
$1 ,500·$8,500/MOIPT/FT.
MAIL ORDER/INTERNET
1·888:830·5334. .
www.MoneyMyWay.com
YoUr Choiceli

Cfioose

from: 2 Wk COL A training,
dleael mechanic training or
IHm how to drive bulldoz·
11'1, trackhoea and back·

hoesl Call TOOAVI 1·871:
83TRAIN

Fjjilijil!!j

Eorn Big $$$1 Buslneaa It, bankruptcy OKII 1:716·
SUpport, Your own Travel 326·1993

:,-~~~~~~~~a;~

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

=~r' Into. can '·888· I
Start ·vour Business , _
,.
,.0

Public Sale and Auction

......

We needmore
members to join tlu!
fight to protect our
2nd Amendment
right1! Cu"enlly
we are recruiting ·
members to the
NtJJional Rifle
AssocitJJion•-6nd
our emp/oyee1 get
PAID to do il.

~11CTIO~
Producers Stock Yards
Gallipolis, Ohio

nou~mber 3,

WE OFFER:

$7/hr;
Full·llme
Permanent
. Posltloqs
Medltal Benefits

401K
, Paid Tralnlna
Paid Vacation
Paid HoUdays
Friendly,
Professional
Envlronm011t
CALL NOW!

1·888-237·5342
EXT. 2311
OR stop by our
location:
242 Third Ave,
Gallipolis, 0,11

2001

starting at 10:00 a.m.
Items Llatad
Tractors, Disks, Bush hogs, Plows,
Cultivators, Manure Spreaders, Hay
Wagons, Gravity Beds, Farm Gates, 4
lt. thru . 16 fl. Corral Panels, Round
Bale Feeders, Head Chutes, Work
Chutl!, Barbed Wire, Trucks· 1985
Fon:f 4x4 • 1986 Chevy 3 Ton 4 Door
Utility: 1987 Chevy 4 Door Suburban •
1960 Leori Air Camp., Lawn Mowers·
Pusl\ and also riding.
Smaller items, to many to list.

,R.l. Salls AICIIDI SBrviCI
168 Twp. Rd. 122W. Willow Wood , Ohio
Ucensed and Bonded in Favor of ·
State of Ohio
Bob Sella
Harold Neal

740-643-0281

,

740-533-(1834

IMW Land

740:441·14$2
MoiQO Co.· Tuppera Plalnl,
SR681 , 31 """·
atr.am $28.000 or 5 acre&amp;

Kf..,
big hay

S12.000. Carr Road, 8
113,000 or 5 tiCI'8a
bema ll!e,OOOI

Danvlife. 5 ....., 110,5001
Rutland 10 acraa, $8,5001

Clallla Co.· 011 SR 160, 8
acres 121 ,000 or 5 acrw
with pond ll!S.OOO. Alo

Gra"!1e. ocono e...,.. with
pond, $t9,000. ~... 5

acr" $10,Q()l or 24 acrea
with large hay blml,
S31 ,0001 So Gallla, 31

acrn with bam + lft'Mmt,
count-; wa1er $32,0001

Just a tew or lht parceta
avallablo. Call now for mapa
lnd other listingal Owner fi.
nonclng with tllgtot praporty
mark-up.
Indian Creet~; Estates, 3-6
acre Iota, west or R'to
Orande, from $25,900.

(740)245:5747

-

'--------

LAND WANTED A FOP
SALE We buy and sell land

all other Southern Ohl~.
conlact ua ror more details.
Aolthany Und Co., Ltd.

1.aCJ0:21WHS

www.elclllnd.aom

L ki 1' B A N
.:n,,~o ~'t :.ve La~~
We.Oolll Hurry Only 10 Loll
Leh. 304:73fi.729S.
Nice 4 acre tract near
Galllpolla- easy terms,

(740)446·3583
Hl'\ 1\1 "

;;:::;::::::~

~

riG

l:lot5t8

RENr

Lw--FOR~,;;~-.,1

15 Court Street. 2 Bod·

roome. 1 1/2 batt~a. KitChen

with stove and refrigerator.
Ot1 Street Parl&lt;lng, Cloao to
SchoolS and Downtown
Area. S585l month piuO,..
poait and Reference. No
Pall (740)448-Gi28
.

- -- --

- --

prwfolonco, tlln.-.w New t4 860 ,F3 .....~ 2 bedroom homo cloao to
tllo.-don-on ~IJi· 1 .-.';"28':';,jie'' town, boHmoni. Rivervt.w,
- ootor, ro1111on, 111
p.
$421/ month; 3 bed-.. In

1111'1111181 atatu1 or netton11
origin, or any lnlenttan to
mllke
h
PII,.,..MII~~ or
dllorlmtnatlon.'"

Tlolo now 1 pMwltt not
knowlnglyiMMIM:

ldVert/HrMnta tor r111

litallwhldflttn

· - ot"'" ""'·Our
,...,. .. t.r.by
lnlormo&lt;rthatalt

crwe/llftiiT actv.rtlltd In
lhlr new...,.,..
IIHNIII* on M . . . . ,

_.,nlty.._.

New 14x70, 3 bedroom. 2 1 ~· ·1•112 baths, Good 10bath only SilOS down 1 catiOn. 55001 month. Refer·
1189.82 per month , call llflCIIa and depollt required.
Harold 740-315-4367.
(740)~3844.
233 2nd 6ve. Ccnvenlftnlto

.=

Ntw Double Wldo. 11115 Downtown 2 llodroomo 1
::h
~;:li.,llod"f'S.~ 112 Bath, Kitchen with h
up -888_
and Refrlg•rator. $490/
•

1

928

month

deposit and RaiNo Pets. (740~448·

SAVE TJME AND

SHOP Tl/E

CJASSJFJEDS ,
I

i~;;;;~~~::~~~~~~=;;;-

Public Sale and Au£11on

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, November 3
lO:OOAM

Public Sala and Auction

ANTIQUES&amp;
COLLECTIBLES
·AUCTION

Mr. and Mrs. Glbbt wants to·dean out okt&amp;tore
·bulltlln~c Located on St. RL ll4, Eiut of Riclne,

Oblo, at tbe old Sycomore Grove store building,
watch for el11ns.

' FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 6:30 PM
LEMLEY'S AUCnON BARN
8580 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT 35)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Dllhn, poll &amp;: p1111o dnpn. comforts. lamp shade,t, oU
painlin&amp; In new l'nmtt. cannlnJ jars, l dnwer chest,
bukt~St bed frame, bUndJ for 6' sUd Ina door, crlllna ran,
6'1hultel'lt 4 t5ettrk buebotlrd beaten, 3 barren chain,
TV, 5 .... n.tt tank &amp; equipment, wattr btd bull)Qtn
covered biqundy, blrbefaue arm, extrdse roklllj
machine lc. bike, decorative curtain rods, nrw Dirt Dtvll

HUNTERS!!

FOR SAI..E

LOW OR NO MONEY
DOWNI OK CREDIT! FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1:800· ~
33"0020 t 9811
~
ex .

(haln solid bottom, wooden wrlnpr, pine chttt, oak !
Jta&amp;ed table, wash board, Knul cutter, Iron potJ. coffee
artndu, old buttiH, pWih plow, old dbhH, IOOie tr.p.

A'ITENTION

HOM£S

_

day... Prime ShOpping Cantm Space Available At AI- $0 OOWN HOMES! GOV'T
fordable 'Rata. Sp'ing Valley &amp; BANK FORECLOSURES!

"Anl!gnr or Cgll«tw'a llan•"
Mlrron, !I &amp; 10 pl. milk cans, lrunk, 6 m~tthtna phw

Announcement

Help Wanted

q,:;.r::;: .:''&amp;

k.urury travel. can (304)7431.888·682·3345
.
or
1038
Give plano leasont in my
mlk
VI s-.t MASTERCAAOitl
home to btglnnel'l &amp; adullt, www,teamttartlght.co
im- NEW unseeured credit
also teach chording &amp; trans- Oritztll
cerdsll $7500 approval
posing,
If
lnltlllled Start A Travel Agoncy: GUAAANTEEDII Bod cred·

~
'"
"""
(
Plaza, Call7&lt;10·44fi.OI01 .
aary. Taka Kldo with youl mate business ""king anything 740)992:1381 or
·"
Call 1:888·478·1342 ext, toachllble 'people. Coli: I· (740)992:21179

AC2134

g.,.ll"· -·
,.p.

Qr

Do

catt itle0)5e3·3753 Leave

name .... -

"'!'· :.:::;:::.::;:,;:==---

f:•

.

Accepting
applications:
242 Third Avenue
· GaUipolls, OH

' .

EOE

'

I

j

"IIOUICbold"

forlarvlca
1&gt;at ~or &amp;ta. ~tW
for sa1a1
..twHn to a.m. a 7 p.m.
,.

-==

beth.

a

1-888-237-5342
.ext. 2241

Set- /4•u 7iD~~ea"

1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901

616-Cl8Q4
implecaohlliz
WWW.I
.com

12:30-!1:30

No Phon• Calli Plea•• .

Call for an Interview
TODAY!

.ll&lt;&gt;nn

Sunday

lnAIIW
a-IOwnao

I

Medical lnauranc. BIIIIOW. WANTED. Nuhvllle · Pro- Inc., 1403 Eutem AvtniJii, Retired Couple Will Do
Ntldld_lmrnMir'elyl Home ducer conducUng 'Audlllonl Gallipollt, (740)446-4514
House CSeanlno anc1 lntkte
Cornput8t' Needed. FREE· . Showca1e · in Nathvllle, .WarehouMI Delivery per- Ptlnllng. Pleue Can, the
Wo641to. . 1·800·21HIU Tennaoaoo. For !nformatlon son. Full·~me, benefl-. Ap. l.&amp;nlaro. (304)875:8736
o.pt. f108
Cali 1·877·553-8810. M·F ply at Utestyle Furniture. No Top To BoHom Cieanars,
Eam Extnl Caah For The 1Qarn:6pm.
phone calls. Apply on per· professional, and afford&amp;·
Holtda,y1 &amp; Beyond! $300- SPECIAL
SHOPPERS aon, 856 3rd Avenue, Gal· ble, hornea, offices, rernaJ8,
$900/ma:
PT/FT
Free NEEDED! To 51 4hlr. part· lipoils, OH.
construction and remodeling
Info/Full Training. 1-888- Umel No e•nr~~ttanca naces· wo~ From Home! 1 ......ill· cl81flng. Can do almost

''·lil.dd,·

W.'NI.oolrlnf

HouU: ~~~~~:wr::a~

l:7

Gaillpolla, OH.
EAfiN J25,IJ00.$50,0001yr, SINGERS/SONGWRITERS CMotian•o

\llllll'..! l'1hlll11lb

Previous experience helpful
.
but not necessary.
We wilt train the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting ·
professionals with the desire to earn
welt above average income.
We offer a benefit package,
including 401k, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week aild no Sundays.

•

I.A. (~_,)&amp;

l

s- e- e...r....

I

--------------Help Wanted

•

"eey1blq they all dltl.

$47,678 or more per year.
Now hiring. Futl Beneflta &amp;
Alllremenl. For Application
and Info. 1·800·337-9730
Dtpt. P-829

luii·III IH'

Employer.

I'IQ

I

opportunity 8851.
(304)773:5564AakforDon ~500·$1,~ +FI~Mw.::·
TURNED DOWN ON
employor/provldtr.
WANTED: ExperlencedGoorgea Por1oblo Sawmill, ' 1""""
· SOCIAL8EC:UPIT\II881?
Roofing &amp; Carpenter For• don~ haul your logo •to the ~~
No Fao Unl... we Wlnf
0 ';::
equal

'

0

loo
-------. king for casual part time
worl&lt;ara. Storti "'I Wf1110 Is __H_e_l.:,p_W
__
an_ted
_ __

'

POSTAL JOBS. Up to

NO Expenonce Noceaaaryl
2 Wkc.IraJLLnTin0 P~m
,. TO •u
1 Ill U5 8505

f·lira~~~:

to thank our daughter'
tor putllna It all
and

x1706

300 STUDENT DRIVERS
NEEDEDIII
Excellent Pay/ Benellts

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:

the cards and 110. we
ra:elved and everyone

logetller

Help Wanted

the only
nursing facility In Gallia County to receive
GET PAID$$$ TO LOSE ATTENTION!
a "Five Star" rating from Healthgrades, 111c.
UP TO 30/LBS. IN Worl&lt; From Homel
~A~U~A&amp;u~R:NT~EO Earn
$500:$6000/MO Is looking lor additions to it's galaxy of
"Stars". We've just completed our annual
)
60t~••••
PTIFT
H!00-425:1025
(888
~
WNN.BeCaahSman.com
survey from the Ohio Department of
. 110 Help Wanted
Health, and received a totally deliciency
lree inspeclion. We're very proud of our
lacility and very selective ol the people we
PART·TIME COLLECTOR
hire.
If ,you are a career oriented nurse or
Farmers Bonk &amp; Sovtngs Co .. Pome1oy.
Ohlo Is seeking a · port-time collector (a
nursing assistant, who genuinely believes
maximum of 35 hours per week) for Its
that quality of care is the most important
Pomeroy office. We are looking for
aspect ol a job, please come see us 'at
someone with c o llecftons e xperience,
good communication &amp; computer skllls.
380 Colonial Dr., Bidwell, OH;
Responsibilities/dulles Include but not
or 'c ell us et740-446-5001
limited to making dolly phone calls,
and ask for Eule or Martie:
preporotlon/malllng of form collection
letters. preporofton of reports. utlllzofton
of computer to facilitate dolly
~~-,,.e.ue~
responslbllltles. personal contoct wlth
An Equal Opportunity Employer
customers. filing smell clalms, osslstlng full
time collector.

Ity, call (740)992:6377 to 10.

'
~
"

-===============:;
LPO'S, SJOft'S
110

Craho Toya Jewelry
WOOd'
' Sawing'
TypinO Q,..t Payl CALL 1: r
800•7gij.0380 Ex!* 201

:.=:=-----.A.
.A.
ATTENTION I
H
YOU
TOO
CHO
Bf
ft
SJftftlH
WORK FROM HOME!

FREE Brochure! 800-929D198 or www.FreeBeautyBrochure.com
29 PEOPLE WANTED TO

I'P.I

Found· 2 !JOgs, Dachotound

r

6715.

Help Wanted

-~.:::!:;..:;;;;:.;;:,:__

BENEFITS ADAILABLE
, CaouotCaro
Pall Time Direct
,• .,..
81111
MANY SHIFTS
A leading providof o1 aorv· Make money lor Chriatmaa,
. Ice to lndMduala with Men- nit AVon. Call (740)448·
au•ILABLE
:
Reterclation and Dovel· 3358
·•R
•
·talopmon111
Dlsabllllloa Is

terestod candlclalll 8hould
submit their roaumo to:
Rocl&lt;sprlngs Rehabilitation

"lloauty Consultanl8"" We
Need Help! PTIFT Training
·- ;;;;;:;:;:::::;;;;;;;; Provided Pald Vacatlonll $500/$1500/mo pt S2500! · (And Take Advantage ol Our New Wage Scale!)

&amp; Terrier in Middleport vicin-

·•

Work
From
Home!
S500/$1500mo.
PT
$2000/$8000mo. Ft Paid
Vacatlonoll
J.B00·273·

&amp; Bena·

hlnng Ful~11mo &amp; Pal1'11me
Sate Drlvert. Apply in per-

2 temate·Minl Dachahund, 2 Home
Protelling
Bi
AT HOME-1 -800-374-8491
Opportunity
8
1/2 yra. old, no papers, HUD/FHA Moflgage Re·
z.com
w-.w.ThlnkBigDoUars.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FIMIOV.
black &amp; tan, red, to country funds . No Expe~enoe Ae- --se Your Own Boss·• ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII ""'

home; not house broken,
serious calls only, 740·992·
3265.
------Free beautiful kittens, 2
blacf&lt; (perlect for Hollow·
1 black &amp; yellow !Igor,

fits
1-800-253-5148

·

A""'IOI tyOttm ond NoW
lDrs &amp;
Byront Furnace. TWo car ·--AiiCitllAGiiiiiiiiliEjj,
' -,.J
....,_.., .B 01 "" •
·
lett. $40,000. Cal for ap. (•l 5 "'"" looa lor aale
polntn&gt;d (740)t411·7954. (7&lt;10)31!7.0tN

e

1180

-

1-888a2ot-0117

~r' ~~~,:u~ ~e:,.: r=,~':'=
675·1429

Ba-.

Frank

~•uTODAY

W"'""' f
tions.com 1-888-679-9008
""" rom EARN $2 $
ATIN:
WORK
FROM Experienced/Or Trainees
· lOO,OOO per year "
SO. 500 Per Dayl HOMEI $500 to $1500 Ovor3months
Income potential. For FREE Flit OUt fonna from home. Month. $3000 to $5000 + :Wtt1 coast Team Runa

ately.
3001tudontTruckDrlvero
Needed!
$40k/$70k Yr. Potontlall Excellent Pay/Bonelt181 Information call 1·888:821. No experience necoosory. Month PTIFT. FREE Book· Groot Milas, Pay

31+1033 capt. 001

~~~~~~~~

ATTENTION·
Home $ ·

ood Avenue, Gallipolis, 74CJ. $450.00·$ 1000 WEEKLY Admlulona and Marketing.
4:46-2842.
Mailing
Letters From Coordinator nMdtd for 100

noo~~,' boo~• and -

rl&amp; ,___ I

pa::

w;ae

Hw&gt;w.oom

CDL·ADAIVERS·.

let t-800-754-8023
www.Diz4llteltyie.e0m

I

j

r

· kilo"Mtt wfbt.ektul 1275/mo., &amp;14·871-1681

:

15 acrto &amp;
C&gt;1 Owl
, _ R&lt;l. $6?,500. com.et
.,._ 874-1e23/tl7H655 a catalog: www.Amerl· Chariot R. Smith (304)67S.
Wtl hOul claan 00 ~ conAppertl.not or call 1· 31..
0'0U11no mo......,_, oeprort·
•
2t~ 9om·5 30pm
lng ooo_,.. to-"""""' BLACKSTONE
PARA· up or mDYI almoot Ptcillc:.
3 Bedroom on Aoute 2,
peroonnol, ond r-vlng LEGAL STUDIES eon_. anylhing. Calf (740):046·
(304)67S.5332
tenant complemts. u.nr.g.r henllve affol'dlbl. Home 7804
MoNEY
In ~
3 bed!
wilt aki In 1he applie&amp;Uon, S1udy ~ lratntnO l ira
TO loAN
. caJITO:"AntJ,~~;
rent-up, and tile ,_,.Ilea· t880. Froo cotafog: 1.eoo.
~ (740)992·33411
tlon proct.. roquired by 82e:ll'228, PO BOX 701..a
Loan Available! All typos ot
.
.
HUO. Appllcantt ,.,.. have Dallaa, TX 75370 or
__......
cr.oH
wolcoma. No 1- 3br. !!argo K;o:t&gt;on &amp; Living
I high tchool diploma or ht!p'Jiwww.blael&lt;'" ootow.oo
OrfolmJNny
up front. CALL TDU. PR!! Room. 31.
totally
GED. ~ 01 HUD m
H!66·20H028
__.ed 11211 7th StrOll
~-.:"= ~~·
EARN y~ Colfego 0..
O VINOTlCEI
.
New Hovon. (304)882·3n2
lion oomputer and organ!· groa OUICKLVI Bacholor'o OHI
ALLEY PUBLISH· LOANS! LOANS! LOANII For Rtnl or Safe. Small

$t

Home. $500-$2,500/mo PT Company. 2 years eJCperi- Drivers
$3,0Cl0-$7,0001mo FT Free enca req""red. Driving Top lmrft!ldl.te Optmlngall
Booklet
•
Heavy Trucks. (740)388·
250 Student Orivera
www. 2allalndr~ama . com 9688
Neededr!h~J::~~nce?1

BOOKLET. www.lmlnsplra· ,80():949:4561.

Why wait? Start maetlng Absolute Top Dollar. U.S. Data Entry: Medical Bllling. NO ExpeMnce Neceasaryt 1232 or Vlslt us at
Call1-8n-535-117U.
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Silver, Gold Coint, Proof· Computer Required. wnr 2 Week Training Program! www.kkey2yourdreama.com
free 1-8()0.766-2623 ext sets, Dlamoncla,
Gold train. Can IOdayl 1.aBB·
CALL TODAY

1S21 .

.
tMI.

I~~Htu~!!!w.~ANJD)~~ l"a

ATTENTION: Worl&lt; From CDL Driver lor Local Trash

BOX 1438, ANTIOCH. TN. Cal. 7 Days .
37011·1-438 Start lmmedi-

ANilD

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400 brochurelf Sattafac•
lion Guaranteed! POilage &amp;
Supplies provided! Rush
Stlf·Addreaaed Stamped

Hw&gt;WANI'EII

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.Drywall.

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Rick Paoroon Auction Com: S2,0GO WEEKLY! Mailing '"CIOVT POSTAL JOBS..

FREE SEARCHI
www.SINGLES.com

9735

Hw&gt;w.oom

ConatructioniRtmodelinv nles, rnuticJr'ncMe Industry,
'Siding, "Roofing.
tcrHnprintOfl, tchoolo,
~- Oo n Nr F'" Eot• businesses, """""· etc. For

'*'

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

..

1«10-21~.

R:g ft0o05:1274&amp;
111 • Saloots
INmltJcnoN
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675-5234

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1ng 1or an~._.
ual1o mlr\Agl an i.,..idon! living houoing ~
In tho Point P1oaMnt . . ..
DutiH will lrM&gt;IYe . _.
lng OOuoina ....,, amlllglng

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Canto&lt; lo look·

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(304) 675-1333

• Include Pttone Number And Address When Needed

Clolflpolla C.. ColfoOI
,.
T~onlno •nd OP!)Arot. - - - - - - - Ot11co {lu;kfiog In Minor•
(CO-. Ctoao To._) TRI.cotJNTY CONSTRUe· Whololllo. For retaM
Ofl, :..
No~~~ ~7~c:::."/.:~
1100 oq. ft., ole. ,_.
•
cat TOCIOyl NO 118 13117, TIOH.
New dotl&gt;inO'I&gt;'-011- 7ni 6542 ·
ilwlg ,..,· dWing trod perking. coiting tan,

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l\egt!iter

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REACH OVER 285,DDD PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

va~tty

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MM. SNftJ Wtll;and Shih ~~!!'"~·
0pniE ST.
VlntDI'I
Dietreu sate
1
114 1
•
.Diffnnlill Ofttrtd. PtMae ~..
$t0,000 cuh, Great
Cal Primary Care Nurolng Go¥ommont POIIal Job&amp;
Vinyl Siding, Roof,
·II (800)518:2273. Up To lt8.3M1r.
F......,., • llodrooono. Out
All&lt; lor Pnyflla.
Hiring for 2001.1l2
ot tO"MO. Ownor ..,..
·Moloa A Llvt~ll
No Land Can1rer:ts. 31 Moii'O
From
... Working 1-72fl.9083 Ext. 2000
StrOll. (618)7:J5.3634
NOOISTOOOrroo. Tttch~ 7:30anH1 :OOpm CST
~~~--~-~::---,
Slop bV S1opl
GROWING
BUSINESS
Mollu Hor.mJ
v.ww.• '&lt;CIII ~.com
NEEDS HELP! WOrk from zatbnat Jkllla • pl._. Satary Muter'l Ooclonlt. by cor· INO CO. racornmenda that Problem Paying 8 1111? In Houae 1250. Monlh + 1200.
nw.&amp;L£
86::8,.:
7
&amp;4:28.:.;.;=,;;12:,_
_
_
....,:
Mlil-ordor/E.eom.
package
Includes
e-lanl
d
tnce
botod
Upot&gt;
you
dobuslnolsONith
Debt?
Good,
Bod,
or
no
Dopoalt.
(304)72?.331
1
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'
••22+1woek PT •···• ••· •
lion nd ~~ you knOW, and NOT to Mnd credit. s.nl&lt;ruptcy Wef. from oo...... 11
~
McClure'&amp; RH!Iuront now """"'• · ~~oil. • • • our w 1 at priOr oduCI
a •· ~ · monoyttwougf1 the mail until 000111. Cafi iOI~ F- 1"""r pm.
18 Wlcla. Only $195.00 PO&lt;
Nrt~ oil 3 ~-~ • ·"
11CIOIH4000/wlo FT. aoo. www.prllllra.org lor applj. otudy cou'". For FREE Inc you haw lnveot....ted the 496:1l4BB
For SOli 3 Bedroom · IlK F~ed lnt·~
--~ ·~"' 121-M3~!
cation, apply In person, or formation boO~at phone
'""
·
'
' ·
·PA•·Umo, Pick up appifo:a: www ~ oom
Mnd application/ rooumo to· C a - 51Ift Unive111Hy offering.
~ TD LOAII. AUTO · (304)875,1756 Rete With Air And u,.
::.~~~J:i~ ~ Hoa . Equ•-...:.
PPEITEPA CENTER . 1.80Q. 964:8315.
. ACANDY WNDINCI ,..
DI!IIT CONIOIJI)A'11011,' For OSlO by owner: N1co bi: delpinnlng 1-9211:342e
.
•
vy
.,...~...
•
Kart Hert&gt;ison
.,..
CALL (401)110:7410
homo .., t aero _,
10.0Dam, Monday thru Sat· .... NOY/11
E~ment Speciallot
Eom $801(. Wort 4• hro. z• HOUR REIPONU Chester ThrM bed
1993 18&gt;&lt;80, 3 - · 2
urclay.
hoe, Trtclttooe &amp; Do:!lr.
3375 Routt 60 E.
Ml!n? I ANI!OUi Groat l.ocetlono. $0
two
one&lt;:ar -~· both, aJr, Olhlnglo 1001. ¥1nyt
lrlinodNoand.,..
H 11rog1on, wv 25705
Down/Financing. t ·800·
~
lldlng. oloC!rlc otovo.
MEDICAUDENTAL BILL· You
tlfledcan
ln 21be days.
monty
un lOI
faml~ room wtth liroplaco, $
oar&gt;
240:8608 Exl 2403
16 ,000 nnn. EK1
. N&lt;l COMPANY has lmrne- down. Tranaponetlon , and
01/AA
For sale- MauSOleum two (FIOdda AIN 1200().051)
StllVKU
aun room. New central heel· dillon (740)446-7121
,dlala (\penlngs for People lodging avallablo. Operatoro The Athon•Molgo EdUCI· crypt._, Molgo Memo- '
lng &amp; lie system. One ""'
to Po'ociou Clalmo. $1S. areiW'odlng byl Call !Oclayl tlonal Service Conttr lo ry Gardena, $5®0, call A EatabHShod Vending $$$ CREDIT CARD PR()8. nuto off Route7, but atiH prl: 1993 Clayton t&lt;KBO, 3 blc1c
· ~· ,Potential. WIN train. 1:800 446 6660.
- ing Aclmlniatratlvo ,.... (3D4)BB2·3tl&amp;l.
Route! Earns Big $5. must LI': MS? FREE Dabl Cond· vale. (740)9BS.39B1
-... 2 both, Ill olectrk:,
PC Required. Cal Now! 7
oiotant for CurriCulum Sorv•
Mill 1:888·571.()225 EKI. dation Cut Paymantl Re. FOR ECLOSED
GOV'T porch,· P OOIIInt oondllioo1.
,Daya 1,000·935:31171 Ext Help Wlnlod caring lor tho leal to work per!:llme at tho HerbaHfe ~ Noarl 2005 (Florida Only AIN duco ·Interest. Non·Prollt. HOMESI $0 OR LOW $15.000 make offer.
1219 I
Darst Group Home, Athana Ot11co, 607 Rk:l]land or AntorestOd In proclocfo? t01n
80():288:6331 l':xt. 15.
DOWN! TAX AEPO'S &amp; (740}446:7127
Ovtrbr®k Centtr II cur· now :yl~ mirM~um wage~ Avenue, Suite 1108, A_lh· Gall TOday! We believe ,in AAA Greeting Card Route ~.goldcoaalco.oom
BANKRUPTCIES!
0t&lt; 1893 Clayton 18ll80 mobile
rant1y ~ 1 beautician ~ ~" ~IT' 3pm,lram. ens, Ohio. Oual"'f'm A 100% cllont Htla1actlon. 50 Top Storts (All Local)
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! home. 3 bo., 2. ba. asking
toworkperttlme lnthelacil· 7:' cattPf'40.£.5o23pm backg~nd In o~oco poocec 408+47·9937
St200wkly. B00·734:5064 Country Crafll...., Spoclal CAU 1·80():501·1777 .... St9,000 304·n3·5885after
lty'l beauty aalon. Candi·
•
·
dures with eJCpenence using
.
th~ Thanksglvmg. 1~ 9813.
Spm.
·date&amp; should posaeu 8 val· PROOUCTION CONTROL a PC and Mac com~ltf is Ma•rcatd (r) No Credit ACT NOWI
refinishing ano caning.
:-::::::.__ _ _ __ _
kl -··-•
logi South t
Ohl Me
requh'ed. f. bachelors de- Check, No Dtpoatt. No Work 1rom home earn (304)743· 11 00 Located be- Newly constructed, tingle 1st time buyera- Govem.. -__,.ng
caarr1QIO st
eas em
a
nu- gree with •KP&amp;rlence In adu· Bank Account Cc.hfklentfal, S450.-$4500./rncn. PT/Ft, Mind Hannan High SchoOl
&amp;tory 1600 sq. loot home ment loans- bUy loans &amp;
88
lloenee . well as liability In- facturer is looking for a Pro- caUon Is preferr&amp;d. Muat Wofkl EVJ~~rywherel $29.95 training provided 1-888-252·
Located ~0 minutes trom sala- {740)446·3093 Oak·
surence. Salary Is based ductlon
ContrOl hive lntem.. reaearch deiiVBf'B the Card. Call Now! 7127
hombl
Holzer Hospital 20 mlnurea wood &amp;pement
· on oommlsalon. Interested Planner/Schedular. Appl~ sk)lfl. 11 tljlplicant Is called (BOO)
585·5597,
.www.
zco.com CREDIT PROBLEM? CALl, 1rom Plaaoant VaMay Hospi·
er
candidates should oontacl canto ohoukl have COIIOgl ror an intorvlew, a port1&lt;11o www.qcrnollarcord.oom
COMMUTE TO . YOUR THE CIUOOIT EMPERTS. tat, off SR 160 C&gt;1 1 privata 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Qn.
tho Director o1 Marketing ot degree along with Apex
with oamp1os o1 Word and
.
DENI Be Independent . otay LICENSECliBONOED COR· 1. t/2 acre 101. 3 bedroom, ly $345.00 Par Month
Aclmlnlaoator at (740)992· tiflcatkln. Appl~ant muat EXCEL dooumentl wll be PETCARERX.COM Save homo and work lor yout10W. AECTIREMOVE
SAD 2·!/2 baths, big kltei\On 8.119% F~ed Inter_, Rate,
6472. EOE
havt atrong background In required Job Dgcd!ltiorr up to 50% on ALL pet mod~ Be· Frte· eat your own CREOIT, BANKRUPTCY. w/ook cablneto DR LR 1:888:928:3426
Part tl
...,..,.m nt lnt productive planning, JChed. Type ~~ prepare fln1i caUona and auppliea, In· hourt. Eam elCC'IIIent ln· LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS. w/gu log llreplice, c8ntrel
mobile home
me _. ....e ma e- ullng &amp; material control. dratta of COU/'181 ot atudy eluding Haartgard, lntercep- come
Get the ractl AAA RATING.
air laundry room tront 3.btdroom
ror
nance per10n, must have Must also have strong r:orn. and lqvnent projecia· foolp ""· Fror&gt;Uino, moran FREE BeaoUFroe.com
• 1:888·567:7345.
&amp; 2. 112 .,.,
to111
electriC,
oorno knowledge of eklctn· puler skills, baing able to ~- curriculum ' pro1 SHIPPING. Order onll..
Immediate po- (740)992·5858.
cal, plumbing &amp; carpentry, create reports from aocesa acts and rofeaskmal davel: www.PetC.rtRX.com
1- Eam 180.000 YEARLY ,.. Free Money Newt lfa Truer prala&amp;d at
.
2s,500. M..
(740)992.0165. ·
!Ilea. Company oflem excel· opment !,lvltloo OfllOnlzad BOO eu 1427.
pairing, NOr replacing, No repayment Gus-. offer Call (740)«6·4514
Part-lime tax preparera lent
~btlnelit
by the SeMce Center; do WHY NOT PERMANENTLY long cracklln Wlnd~lekla. Far J*'IIOOII needs, educe· from . 8·5pm,
M-F, or 98 Fleetwood, 16x80, 3
ntodod for busy tax olftc!l, ~r1are'~~m:yca: Internet and library back· REDUCE your Heating &amp; ~s:c: 1'80():828:852 3
~::;'"•r l ·f!00. 724' (740)448:3248 after~. bedroom, 2 bath, Central
Pomaro'/ location. We wtn more 0r1vo Middleport 011 ground rMN1C1t for Uj)OOIII· Coolin&amp; Bilt 40%? INSU· www.gta...;...,.nix com
'"·
Rench Style Home: lor- air, $20,000. (740)21i6o1510
train. Send ......,. to: Tho 45760 All:
UpP '
lng curriculum prolects: and LATIN House Palnt•lnox·
·
Got Cash FU111 $101):$500. or- 4 bdnn 3 bolhl 2
DallY Sentinel, PO Box729'
·
help coordinate and distrib- penatve
eaay to utel Eam a 2nd Income Without Easy QualificatiOns. Never car ·,.
o101e to hiQh Aaturnable loana· Many
13. Pomeroy, Oh 45789
The Athena-Melga Ed!JCQ· U1e reiOUrcH ~curriculum Save Hundreda ts each a 2nd J.O.B. Wcrll From Leave Homet Funds Depoe- ~tt~C:.
Oakwood DR. typll available. Cal tor deVIII Homo Ca,ro tlonal Servlco Cantor Ia projtcto. Sail!)'; Nogotlab!O. Monthl
Home.
S500·S4000 itod·Checking Account Next Gal Ol1 call ""'- 6.00 • taiW. (740)..6·3583.
ServicH ha'/a fuU·tlme tnklng an Altem~~tlve ~~~~~l~e~!a"Y:rcllnttr. 888-74B-5233
mo.IPT-FT
Cay. Loans By County 11:00 pr;.., ln good cond. w Big 16' wide, 3 badroom 2
optnlng ' ror a Phyak:al ~ T~r, OUaiHtca- COaializO--ESc- i~nrl~ www.lnsuladd.corn
www.lncomeForYou.QOm
Bank. Member FOICIEOL
central air. &amp; heat $78,000 bath, save$!, 18&amp;, delivered
Thoraptot, Mull have WV l\':.ia~ :..~'"/'~ tendon! Athona·Meig:"Edor
WANim
1:800·30().9923
1·800·397·1908.
reduced 304·727·3318
&amp; oat up on your lollnclud·
and 0111o · l'roW&gt;uo and - l i e d llblllty
. to catlonai S.rvlca Canter, 507 '
To
PEPSI/COKEJfRITO LAY •INSTANT CASH! Gat up to
lng skirting &amp; llbalglaos
oxpedontt proferrod. Con: Hrve at•nlk youth. S11ary Rlchlond Avenue, Sullo .
SNACK AND SODA VEND· $500, immediate Approval.
otops, Cotoo Mobil&amp; Homee,
tar;! Pleuant Volley Home will be baaed on training 108, Attoeno, Ohio 45701 .
' lNG ROUTE. BE YOUR No Credit Bureau Check
U.S. 50 East, Athono, 011,
tara S6rvlcee, 1D11 Viand and tJCperience. PIHH Annltrft!oo pgr!l!oe· Mon- All Kei'OIIIll wN Instal· OWN BOSS. $$ALL CASH Can 1-886-576•2274
·
74o-592-1972.
.
St., Pl Plaalant, WV 215550 IUtlmft Iotter ot in!"'"' and day, November 5, 2001 . led; repairing forted air ko~ BUSINESS$$ INCREASE www.monoyonart.com
Final Days Nationwide tn.
or ca.Y .{304)675-7400 or resume to: JohJl o. eo.tan- The AMESC 18 an Equal oeana heatara; ktwn mow- YOUR INCOME NOW,
eniOry '
Reduction!
1.80Q.~78AAIEOE
zo, Suporlnfandent, A - Opponunlty. Employer!P.,. oro; omall engines. Mike SMALL INVESTMENT/EX· NEED AN EARLV PAY·
(3().1)73&amp;:3409
POSTAL JOBS U to Mo1go Educational Sorvlca vkllf.
. (740}446:7604
CELLENT PROFITS. H!Oir CAY??
AMNII•tolo-*lnQ
• 16 35/hoU
I r Hlri~P for c-, 507 Richland AI/I:
73H233 EXT. 4503.
Up to S500 instantly by
lnthlo
Ia
UmHtd Or No Crodll? &lt;Joy.
•200.1/2""" 'p •• ,... , I nua, Sullo 108, Atheno, URGENTLY
NEEDED· Family
Man/Handyman
phonal
•-·. .
orMIInl Bonk Flnonoe Only
.._~·. No•~, ra!!'I..:Ohlc •s70t . Application plasmadO,n ors,urn$45topressura waahing, yard 8eeklngmomatoworklrorn 1-(Bn)·EARYPAY. Lief ,!~t;:.'!.":;~ At Oekwood In 6arbouq.
Full ..,..,.,.,,
·
xpe,,.,_ D dll
..
be
7 $60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly. maintenance, clean up, home as a Starlight Interne· 750005
....
vi'~ wv oan.t. 7'UI_'ll.tna
· Tollfrle i7:30am--11pm
•• ne: ,.ovem r
' catt Sera-Tee, 740·582· eel.... Free Estimates lionel Olatributor. Eam
whlehmUIIIUIIIQIIto
- ·
_... " " " -·
CST , HI88:726:9DI32001 . Tho AMESC Ia on
1otADVANCEFREEI
.. ·.,r
Wlcla
-

· In one week With us

• Start Your Adl Wi th A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prfce • A ~told Abbreviation&amp;

JbuWANI'EII

WV

OLD WASHSTAND, 19301S STAND, OLD
WOOD LOOM (1800'S), GRISWOLD 2
BURNER STOVE, PRIMITIVE WOODEN
sweeper, and lots~
CARRIER,
SESSIONS
COLUMN
-~
MANTLE
CLOCK,
SESSIONS
MANTLE
10'' R,yoble pU~~ner, wood laytbt, 39 Ford hub up &amp;
CLOCK,
ANNIVERSARY
CLOCK,
OLD
windshield, car nmp. weldlna helmut &amp;: pqlet, fi.D.
HORSE CLOCK, FANCY UNITED
artnder, motor stand, motor lnellna llollt, appi'OI. 50'
MW aJr hose, motorcycle nicks, wheel~ ror Hond•
HORSE &amp; COWBOY CLOCK, 30'S
acnerator, carptl for 72 Chtvcllc and noor ll\lts, misc.
TABLE LAMP, RARE OLD MINIATURE
belU, 100 AMP elrct. boll, I roll piHdc. mt1ll uyp
WASHBOARD, NICE COLLEcnON OF
lank &amp; rqul•tor, loU of auto t uppl.le~~ &amp; t-rb, fkhJnc
FRAMED PRINTS, EARLY WOODEN
rqulp., &amp; lots mo".
•
"MASTERPIECE"
RADIO RECEIVER,
~
191.2 l-londa. Tn11190 and I~ EnaliAh bike.
CROSLEY
RADIO
(TUBE TYPE),
BEAUTIFUL ALL · GLASS CRYSTAL
Owner · Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gibbs
CHANDELIER, EXC. BLUE ZEPHYR
LILY ROSEVILLE VASE, LOTS OF OLD
Dan Smith · Auctioneer
HAND PAINTED CHINA, CRYSTAL,
Ohio #1344 • WV #515
STANGL,
HULL &amp; HALL PCS.,
Cash • Positive ID • Refreshemenls
DEPRESSION GLASS CURRIER &amp; IVES,
~=~~~~~~~~~~~-STONEWARE, FENTON, BLUE WILLOW
• CHINA, HEAD VASE, VICTORIAN WASH
SET, MANY OLD DISHES, SHIRLEY
Public Sale and Auction
TEMPLE PLATE, 2 MINIATURE SAD
IRONS, GAS STATION OIL BOTTLE
HOLDER, RAILROAD 011,. BOTTLE,
PUiliC
PRIMITIVE HAY FORK, WOODEN
AUOION
DOUGH BOWL, GRISWOLD SKILLETS,
PATTI MOLD SET IN BOX,
GRISWOLD
Amish Home
NICE ANTIQUE TOOLS, FLEXIBLE
FLYER SLED, STONE JARS, OLD
llnat S•rter •••
• PUPPET, MARLBES, Oi.O ADV. ITI:~
PAPER ITEMS, BLUE &amp; WHITt:
GRANITE, CHENILLE, LINENSL QUILTS,
Prlpll'tJ .,
APRONS, MISC. OLD SMAL ITEMS,
OLD
KITCHEN ITEMS, OLI) BOO!(S,
(JWIIMIIw'···-··
ltlnatl
MANY
OLD TONKA , &amp; METAL
~ """"""~
SAT., Now. 17.. 10!00 AM
VEHICLES,
HOT
WHEELS
&amp;
MATCHBOX
CARS,
OLD
TRAIN
'
mANSFORMERS, FORD FOMOCO
S.lls a ... Hl1h• II..• ...... $16,000.00 Ill
CABINET, OLD SLOT CAR RACE
1!515 State Route 141, C1dm01, Olalo (Galla Co.)
;
TRACK
SETS,AIRLINE MONTGOMERY
From US Rl. 35, RloO..ndo, 0 . take S.t Rt. 325 S to St. Rl lo41,
WARD TUBE RADIO, BOX LOTS, MUCH
tum ri!lht .t 80 approx. 7 mi. to Codums, 0 .
Nic. Amish
MORE NOT LISTED YET
homo on .730 ac. Consilii~~&amp; afl bodnn., l~vill&amp; nn, kitchen, &amp;all
balh; banlwuod loan; home hu own teJIIic .t Co. wal« oil oa
AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
o nice lot wllllfliOII car praao. Terms: $2,000.00 doWIIII time
74o-388-Q823 (HOME)
of ale; bolanoe duo by 12/1712001; oflio"'d ltee .t cleor of lieu
OR
740.245-9866 (BARN)
or mottpgoa; wres p-on~od to clolinl date.
·
"LICENSED
&amp; BONDED
Freamu A M~onn Stutzma~ Owmn
BY STATE OF OHIO".
CALl fOI llOCHUIIIll
CASH/ APPROVED CHECK ONLY
GOOD FOOD
STANLJ.!~. H, IHS~--.J.~!;:*Io
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
.._,.... ,I' ==:'
ACCIDENTS OR LOST PROPERTY!"
- I......... Jr• ...,.,,
II,Awtt . o&amp;._

···-..,_

CCC:

=

\

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday,

November 3, 2001
!O:OOAM ·
1098 State Route 160
approximately 1 mile from
Gallipolis, across from
county garage .
Mr. and Mrs. WIUis Leadingham have
moved to a smaller home and are .
goln11 to sellltelllll they no longer need.
Living room suites (1 Is sofa bed), 2
love seat sofa beds, occasional chairs,
coffee and end· tables, swivel recliner,
lamps, televisions, roll top desk, white
bedroom suite, pair of twin contour
adj. beds (can be king size), other
chest and dresser with mirror, table
with 6 chairs, table with 8 chairs,
kitchen cabinet, 2 corner ca binets
(very nice), sharp microwave, small
appliance's, Ironing boards, metal
cablnei
and
shelf,
cook wa re,
glassware, set of Anchor Hocking
dishes, Ray Sliver Co. pewter Items, 2
treadle sewing machines (Minnesota &amp;
Singer), school desk, regulation · size
pool table, Kenmore washer and
dryer, G.E. no frost fridge, Mr.
Leadlneham was a well known realtor
before he retired so we have several
mise, signs pertaining to real estate,
lots of misc. smalls and tool Items, VIta
Master treadmill (used very little),
hydraulic beauty shop chair, Baldwin
Cup machine organ.

Come on ift and enjoy a good auction.
It w/JJ be outside so dress for tht
welllher. Good pdl'king and
refreshments available.

Finis "Ike" Isaac (Auctioneer)
For more lnfonnatlon, please cull
Ike &amp; Reanle (740) 388-874.1 or
(740) 388-9370 or Isaac's Feed Store
(740) 388-8880 (VIrgil)

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gll!llpolll, Ohio • Point P11111nt, WV

lkM'IdaY, Oct. 28, 2001

Sunday, Oct. 21, 2001

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

r := IriO .rfflm

lr.= :·

:
: : 'e~a':ltio':.J· ;land ,:.:s:,~
~= $2995.00 or Lea- 93 Suzu. 1993 Grand Am, 2 door,..,.
l7liO (304)e75-4t
1:10 t40 Bu ~ kl Swift, 91 CavaHer, 94 10, $2,595, 1992 Co,_, 2

- 1o•

54

. I$,200.,New Holland 185 A&amp;rOIIter Von, 93 Grand door, ...o, $1,11110; 1ft4

Cool prop. 287 Bu ~ Hyd OndO- Arn, 93 Cavalier Wogan, 115 Caoratlor, 2 door, 6 - ·

lor omaJI 0011 .... 010 flndorn ule $9 500

It' ~~ Ir r~ Ir·

Hollnd 3108 Stu,.Y
"""" ond
~ 137• gal (7&lt;10)3117-7111
aftor IXfo 18,500., AI New Hoi·
I:OII!&gt;m.
lind now tractO&lt;O lnd
·.• 1 11 ,. "--'-'·. 314 200 ~~~_nave VALUE
' '
~~ u~ financing for
PSI $l!l.ll5 "-&lt; 100: 1" 200 36 rnonlha or- r"""le.
PSI 137.00 "-&lt; 100; All
COII!plt l&gt;o Fltt/o1ga YANMAR YM 1!100 T""""',
lnSioCII.
-.3polntl-. $2.t50.
1¥AN1 llllftRPIIII- Alto. ,_ 4' n- mower,
a JldiiOn. Ohio, 1..aDI). stln 1n Q'81t, 18!0. Shipping
·
- · od ,_
•·~ OUI·
~·- a•'-~
v -. •~•
-;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;~jQ.
ol Hunfovillo, AI (256)
Uoa.._ lypl COOler, 10' n&amp;-9435 www.mavnardetong, 3 )'II. Old, very good qulprnonlcom
cor-. 111500. (740)94112700
8 Ton ..._..... bin wt1t1
LI OWNER Discharge Augor. Good
8 ~ $900 (304)875&amp; Coleman QU, 3117 5:00-7:00om, 8:00ol I. " " ' - In- 8:00pm.
eluding Ill
pwnp.IY'leml. We carry. a
cor11()iol0 linl ol ~
~
home~ &amp; ICOIIIO.- .
BENN
8 HIIAnNG 1
COOUNCI (140)441.M11 3 Roglaterod Charolalo
or ~~
Sullo. (304)875-8581

Coroica, d S """""·
7
· ! 1 0 0 - - Mlif&lt;'l.
Pomeroy. (740)992-3011 .
111112 Fo.d G..-. E-.
lint R\iMing Cond~ion.
Bocty. and Interior ln.Fair
COndition $750 (740•~
14211
'
.
.....-

Ohio 11a11oy Bri .., to&lt;- Ill' ~ Auc1ion
A 19911 ~ T_, Cor
-loW 11 10:00 am, en
11110101 AI O,hlo Volley
1oll 3rd kle.,
('..._,.,.. Ohio. Sold"' ...
1001 -..,.·• ':;
11 .
_ _ I. _ be

liar*-

--y . . .

-.oto1&gt; oano'lloo-

NIW AND USED FUR·
NANCU 1'011 IIALEI We
lnatlll, Froo EotirnaiH, H
vou doni Coli us, Wo 1-

NIW LISTING • 117 TI!OIIORA AVENUE,
CITY PROPI!RTY: Thio homo hu ..... cutb lido
appeal Hlidlt the treed drivew.y uO lalllimbcn In
dW blckaJ'ound makes' a stately ~ettins. Thia home
Ia a couple blocks front the H~IICI' S)'CaiiiiR Bruch

= 1 -=~e..a308,

and the Baptill Church. Brick 2 ltor)' featufla
21Jt13 new LR w/ kMs of Jlast and WBFP. Formal

entry, 2 BRJ on main level. Complete tiiGhtu, OR
JOd IUd room. Secoad Left~: 18.!7 ok 19114. FuiJ
finllhed bltemenl, Hup FR 2·b28, An IXtrc:ile
room 13111. Mostly all lwdwood 000&lt;1 In thlo
" -· 8reezewoy room, Florida room. Ouop. lOp
or 111e around oool. 2 ,......, buildlnp. Thil ll on .{ lou which makes loti of priv~~~:y and yard.

I

~
· .

!ID.215

you really need to
move Into thll
lovely brick trl·level with a wonderful
of the countryside. Large lormaiLR
fireplace, lonnal DR, lower level FR,
3 BRa and 3 full baths, 2+ altached
:.~~~~:( currenlly used aa a home
but could ba easily conl!8rted
to garage uaa), 26 x 36 daJactied
garage with 10' ceilings, In-ground 'JIOOI
with privacy 1ence aM nice patio area,
lovely landscaped 4.28 acre lot, m/1.
Priced at $195,000 HOO

Peralan Aru Rug never
UMd: 1110., H~W1 wing back
Floral chair never UHd

$180., Floral oouch 110011

cordtion St80. (304)675511161Mw mrmge.
Plonueoo.z_.old.1r
Monitor, Printer, Scanner
and loll ot Sollwaro, 1500.
(7&lt;10)2fl8-1426

RIIIDI!HT1AI.

Cf*Mirtat~D
run-.

AIIANA· HI E--.cy 112 +
QU
Super HI EHI·
cloncy Heal P....,. and foJr
Condltlonoro. 10 Y&amp;erand labor warranty 1 - .
COMFORT Alii HIIAllNil
AND COOUNQ
(14G)441o0114
1-4lllltllt

•

Rllfdlllllll Holftl OWMrl
~ H I - "Y 80 plus
QU tu.- Including o11
and
11octt1o QU fumaHI E~ -~
Pumpo, laeturlng Tappano
frH inCredible warranty

j

runs

wil-

Eq~ine

~tt!ou~·;::.~ :!':

3 Rocms and Bath. ~ 0t1vt
Street. Utilllleo Paid. Stove
and Ftahigarator No P•ts.
U75 plus deposit. Refer~
cas Raqulred.

3945

(740)446~

958 Clllrk Chapel Rd.

Bidwell, OhiO ~14

23 Locust St.

Galllpolla, Qhl,o ..,.

45831

I

r

amalt but very clean one
bedloom apartment. Courr
try llllftlng yet close to town.
17oll Centenaoy Road. Wa·
ter and Trash Removal Included. Tlinant poys -..
trlc. A/C and Eloctric Heat.
Waaher, Dryer, Stove, Fr1g.
Included. No Pets. Non
Smol&lt;oro Only. S300 ctepoa11, S350 month. (740)4468585 or (740)448-2205. Alk
tor VIrginia.

SBitfl

I

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~
CES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 W061wOOO Orfve
lrom $297 10 1383. WBik lo
shop &amp; movies. can 7~
446·2568. Equal Housing
OppMunlly.
Chriaty'a . · Familv Living,
33140 New Uma Ad., Rut·
land, 011io, 740-742·7403.
Apartment, home ond ..Her
rentals. Commerdal stor.front.s available for
Vacanciet now.

IMM.

Furnished small 1 bedloom
apl Upper duplex Mt Ver·
non Ave. No Pets. No
smokers. $270. + oltotrlc,
Relerences. $200. Dtpoalt
(304)675-2651

· •·

South.

I
"""' and tremo ranch
ot1e11 3 bodooomt, Wllk·ln
ciOMt. 2 ful betnfl, channing living,
room wllif'lplaco. New oak cablntlo
linlthl - · RonQo, ~rlgtralol,
dtohwunoi,
and OOIIIfiiO~ II ltflly.
Utllty'"""' I a - ..... 2111rIn tile raer With !Ill' lnti!iJund pool.

IAanv fruit
-.
-In·
and
.......
ltNUIIar
1¥'*11
tfte rser.

2 cor -.otl ~~~-and I OllpOrt
2 lfOiy 111m building. Blocldop and
11111&gt;1'1~. Ahome you'H be

1m1tt1 448 teoe

10 own,

011io. 2 -...., reterenco
required. $3001 month $300
deposit. (740)441-3tt7
Gracious living. 1 and 2
bed.-ocrn aportmonfl If VII·
lage Manor and ~­
Apartmenfl In Mlcidlopor1.
From 5278-$348. Col 740992·!5064. Equal Hou~ng
Opporhlnitieo.

:=~ ~~= 8Sehw,l3l.-~,

r•

CLASSifiEDSf

by caRing the cotleo-

lion
Department
at
(740)44~·1038. ova re·
...... 1hl right to accepV
reject •nY &amp; all bids, &amp; wlthdraw Reme tn&gt;m aate prior
to aale. Terms ol Salt:
CASH OR CERTIFIED
•C:eH!iiECi&lt;!K:.,._ _ _ __
"
Ofllo Valley 8ank Will otter
lor sale by Public Auot/on
A 1995 Chevv Monte caoo
lf9200:l
ot to:oo am. on
11110101' AI 01110 Valley
Bank 'Almex, 143 3m Ave ,
Gallipolis, Ofllo. Sold to the
l'l~st blckf:er ·~a .18_where
Ia" ~'&lt;tttout oxprailsed or lm·
plied c!"•rra~ty &amp; may bo
.... by caHing the Collec·
Uon , Department
at
(740)C4f.t038, OVS no.....0
1hl right 10 111:00p11
reltef any a an bitlo, • wlthdraW Items from sale prior
to sale. Term• ot S~le:
CASH OR CERTIFIED

iiJ.4 Second Ave., Gallipolio, Ohio 45631-0~
1.1:1 740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•
evanamoo®zoo'mnet.net

_,...

Fo,.,..rly Blac.bum Really ..S.~ Soutlaem Oltio For o.,..r A Qurter Cemury"

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441~1816
Patricia Hays- 448·3884 Cara Caaey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990
Candace
448-7412

cape
onere
baoomont, 3-4 BR and

cuatom kitchen with b"niiikiilai
nook, a large lonna! dining room,
large open family room with gas
log fireplace and a JlliSter suite
the main level.

Gt
--

STEEL BUILDING
401122-IIMii

MUST II!LL 112.110

LENDER

1-~111

OFFICE
1 yr. o l d - F011Torrler,

3
over full
buernlnl wHh 2 car (Jaraglt and
lin*lod family room. Homo olta en 2
,_., nVI In Hannen Trace Schools.
Juel mlnutH lrom downtown
GaHII)I)Iil. This home loafures a
beautltul landleaped lawn, wood
pellet stove and central air. Located
just oil Rock Llcfc Ad. on Mabie Dr.
In nice nolgllborllood. Have a
gartlln and·roiM 10mt llowllrs but
make euro to look at ltlla. · Gall
Johnnie 1t 317-o323 today lot an
appolnlmerlt.
114004 I ACIII! 'fl!ACT ol VICini
llnciiOcafld on SA 1188 175,000.00
VI/VII'II 4~1 8108

..·-.

992-2259

2 -·· old pupa,
(740)9411-308a.
Goklen Rltl'iiVIr
Pups, Blonde and &lt;lotden.
Parents
on
premlsea.
Ready November tot. 1250$325. No Sunday calla.
(740)245oli3litl

I

OUfllde and a relined c/aesy lOOk neighborhood oottfng close to
au on 2 acrea. Tutefulty townl 3 BR 2 112 BA on

AKC

Aua~atlan

decorated

4 BR and 2 112 BA, Br•ntwood Drive, oversized
;;--ii~ cic'";"ed kitchen and gas log rooms,
partially finished
"'
basement, and a two-car garage .

NEW USnNGI Located On SR t 43 just
out of Pomeroy. This !m&gt;pe~ has an
older model mobUe hoine with room
additions. Approx .. 1 acre of ground.
Water, septic and electric Is on &amp;lte. Nice
lot.
ASKING $18,000

Shepherd pups, '
NSDR. Gurrent hoatth ro001111, $70, (740)949-21 28
ownlngallPOve measaga.

1

•'"''' "''" $82,900.

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

PRICE
lpeclacular rlvtr YIIWI, 1
HCiudM wooded lot and nature
abound thle l'llled r1nch on 3
AC rn/1, With hardwood llooro,
rumodeled oak kitchen and ample
living apace enhanced by a
finished
level, thla gem
awaits

Jack Ruuell Tor~or pup,
lhotl, wormed, $100,
f/40)698-7055.
Ran Torrlor pupa. Talll
- · $100.00 (304)6757148

...,
~

""" filii 81 -:-·- ~..,. .,,..,....
with plenty

IMVt 30 x 40 bam, -

t4017 DILIGHTJIUL HOME Clean
oomforfabte. PLUS I,_.. Looatod
on SR '180. 4 Bodrmo, 2 balho,
appro~~:. :t/4 of an acre. Live on 1st
ftoor &amp; ront loWer level lor WIO.OO
· mo. would mike a ·goccl Mother·lnLiw Suitt. tncomo oan help vou
own thll 110011 home. Owner moving
out ot town. CaN to lnopeot, tnls 1'&lt;11

Garage apartment loclted
2nd Avenue, G•lllpolls,

=

U;: ·-------..,I

CHECK.

Wlnttro, Rio Grande, OH
Coll740-245-512t .

01-

Rtv. from JGW
IIIOicylnl'l Enjoy 1hl vllw fn&gt;m
your boll dock
dock. thla t +
1e rl\1 wt1t1 a a 8R 1 blth hotT'W'•-dol• aarnpet II just the
thing IM - · MIY bl room let a
garilon. ~ at 7183 St. Rt. 7

vr,-

Sl!&gt;cll..
- ate. Claudo
""'"'
wfl'ldOollo,i&gt;ICII..
llntlla,

I

Applications being taken ror

con-

a -""".-2 ·
ful
-ueo eq,
- tt., home
bttlle. rom.t dining room, klfcllon
and moral Nlclo lizod """""·
Largo lront potCh barn I oitoap and
3.2t ICrtl rl\1, 1211:1

ape-.

1WO ACRI LOTII Rio Orancto
lrMI County water IVIIIabte.

eralor

f21U

-

NIW ACRIIAGI USnNGI 84 112
lrontago,
land .and Ideal
hunting land that Is odilconl to
wayne Nlllonat Fo-. t2140
HUGI PRICI RIDUCTlONI
144,1GG.OO 18 THE NIW ASKING
PIICI on lhll one ftocr plan ronc11
ICI'OI mil with
flOmo~ta. larm

llturallld at

UKC Rat Terrier pups.
$150. CISh Firm. tall?
!lOoked mothlr • father on
.,...,..., (304)743-3308

.

I pond. 6 bedroom home that wu
construotod In 1995. Good garden
apot and 1oto ot 'along threa roado. can for
oomplete llotlng on this one. Too
much lor one little od.t2121
nov... Ranch home with 2
bedrooms, Hvlng room, dininG and
ldto'-' Plus 14 x 70 mobile homo
In oalent oondltlon, D;pr'it-iiinlo~IY,
Ulld IS a rontal. loll ot INII , _
and landlcoplng. 012:1
CONYIIIIHTLY
LOCATeD
RAIUD RANCH STYLI 1101111
LMng room, c:lnlng room, kitchtn, •
don, family room, 3 bodloomo, 2 :
blfhl, bulll·ln 2 oar plus
largo reo. room In ~~
Ctntrelalr. 0141
LOTSI Unla H any o&lt;caYaung
nsedodl Manullclurod ...loome. 12103

LOT.I'IION1'~1 ALONG Ill
180 I IULAVILLI PIKI handy
location. Llvll, public
utllltltoi aoratlab\e. -'tlal "'
CUiiWI.dat, SltllnQ beloW the
- - vatua.l2141
110 GIWIDI AIIIIAI !1CJ01nY

Nice ono SR unlumllhod

21 NtD Avenue.

Yellow Lab Puppies KC
Raotatarod $200. Each.
Ready to Gol (304)875-

Llaliri'8·
.
Quiet wooded
I home and
7.8 acres on Smoke~ Row Road.
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, beautiful
great room with woodbumer,
epaclous garage with breezeway

4o4e9

r
I

Filum&amp;
VEGEJ"AIILI!S

Rk:hards Brolflers
Farm.
APPLES
MUCH MORE. 24
North ol Gallpolls ""

NIW LtlnNG $34,800
Thla 2 Story home fealures 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, hardwood
floors, 2 flraplacaa, end much
morel Thlals aN found on a .316
acrtlo11n town.

Fruit
AND
miles
Coun-

"'

I \1/\1-.1 1'1'1 !I"

,\II\ I

-.t!l(

h

'

'

lhri"'J In town couplod with the
low malntenanc1. ol 1 brlok
horne? Como oee lhla ono atory
brtck home with hardwood lloolo,
3 BR 1 1/2 BA, lull basamant and
Pl1codtoeotl.

·,

'

1133 arona now QUALITY

I

BUILT homt on a level acre•

mill Very n~ 3 SR 2 BA home
wllh solid S panel doors. Iota of
hardwood hoor1ng, Smith custom
kitchen and 2 car sf~~;~~

3

bodooons, -~ carport.
small easy lo maintain tot. tz112

~!;

1

,fj~

&lt;!,0

I•

nc.

-I'IIICE 141,1011 1011 112 Story flOmo 11\at hiSioto of
2-3 Bodroomo, living .-ocrn with 1 1 - . kllctlln,
2 dJPrchtd QII'IOM and loltdltno~tl Mutt ... thl• one to appreciate. awn.r motivated 1o .... rtqutsdng an

•

$36,975

AND HAPPY

ol!or1121~

I

on

/\[l[)ll iON/\1 liSTINGS &amp; INFOJiMATION CA LL on S TOP BY FOfl A
Ill/ f (J(JA[ ITY IIOMFS IN COl OF~ BOOKLF rr

Cheryl Lemley

MEIGS COUNTY
NIW UITING 1117 IIOIILI
HOMI ON IIINTID ~on
opportunny 10 own vour
own flOmo. Thla t 997 Clayton
homo II In -lint condition. 3
Bedrooms, 2 1&gt;11111. nlco ailed
kltdoen and living room arse. All sat
up on a reuonal&gt;iy prloaCI rented
lot. Col toclayl Only $22,1100.00.

e-1en1

'

(

I

Call or stop by our office tor a free Quality Homes Guide in color.

__t==~
· =··_.lj

OUR WEB F'AGE IS;wWW.vlsmllhrW.Intate.oom

mo...

r

lair,

Valtof

~
.~,r

GAIL RLVILLI! ...:.............:............~••• 441 IIDI
TIIISH BNYDI!R. ...............__......441JOHNIIE RUSSELL.................- .....H7-0UI
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441WIUIA WIWAMSON ...,_.......... 740- OIIH

I:0'"
-

r------.
.
Buy, Sell Trade

LISTINGS, CALL f.800· 88 Cadillac Coupa, Baby
45f-oo50 oxl. C-9812
Blue with hall vinyl top.
- - - - - - - - LOaded, 71,000 miles. Ex1988 Pontl8c Bonneville for cetlent Condition. 13800.
-801H::!!8~2-~7!930~x:·7~8~""""1 pana. WMJ. Call (740)446- (740)441-1569
7025 aftor 6pm.

'11-11111111, aiiOKIII ............. ue 1111

..oa:

2

i

Condl:

STEEL BUILDINGS: Foctory Ovorttockodtt Must SOli
Nowt 2!1&lt;30, 30&gt;&lt;40, 40x80,
50X1ao, Save Thousands!

qr, . . ,. ~ r/,J,J a
446-8806*~:!~4

=

.om...

r

llookl

r

. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE .
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

r-

;;;u;·

Round hay balea for 88141 011io Vallay Bank 1'&lt;11 otter
• 1or sate by Public Auction
(740)696-82 11
A 1983 Buick Regal
Hay &amp; Bright Wire T1o 1876659 If 10:00 am, on
Strow Yaer 'Round Oaltvory 11110/01 At Ohio Valley
&amp; volume DIIOOUnt Avalta- Bank Annex. 143 3rd Ave..
f)OCkago. ,
bll.
Heritaga
Farm. Galipotla, Ohio. SOld to 1hl
.ENNnT I HEAnNG I (304)87s.sn4 .
h~hott bidder "u II--.,
COOUNG (140)441-1411
It" w1t11out 1 or 1mor 1~.
piled warranty &amp; may be
. - - '"n by catllng tile Collec·
16
Auros
tlon
Daportment
a1
Sit ot ful alzo box oprtnga &amp;
•
740
441
10
moarese; Super C Farmal
FOR SAul
&lt;
1 ' 38· OVS re·
fiiCfor, ganorator; 36" out· ,
HrvH the righl to acoeptl
oltlt door, truck _ . &amp;
reject any &amp; al bids, &amp; Y&lt;lh·
blcllner; maple gun cabinet; SO DOWN CAASI POLICE draw hems from sale prior
beds, lull down &amp; 112 IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI to sale. Terms ot Sale:
up wlmaltoann, (740)992• HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, CASH OR CERTIFIED
5870.
J2E4EP'SMO.'SLOWOtA9S9~~0RO, CHECK.

Modem 1 bedroom ~~~~~­
"'""'· (740)4o4&amp;0090
2 Bedroom apanment, Sy~
aou.... $320mo. plua $220
deposit (740)37fl.6ttt

Ir \~-::.: I

'92 Ofdl - · 2 door, 1a87 0o&lt;1go •••· Gooo Ohio Vllfey Sri w11 ott. Chromo bolo ""· 1998
PS. PB, PL, auiO, air, ~ . lDOQ Good. S2000 lor- by Public- &amp; 1500 Cflovy pi(:O-up
omllml-e,
$1400, 080. (740)~
A 2001 Yamaha ttOO
cob, (304)6 7H325,
(740~1-7071
10115261 at 10:00 am, on 100·
115 ......... ~- 1994 f -250, 4x4, Rod, 11110101 AI Ohio Vo/lly
-~--"""
~~ S r i - · loll 311:1 ,.,..,
- ':.....
dull (740)388-11055
. ~... Ofllo. ...... •r;aiO;;;;;;;;;;;;IIoME~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;j
Mill, liko' now
~~~.:.....-._
.. II- ~
•·---ze.ooo mltOo $!8,118$. 1886 Cloo¥y Exl. Cob, 4x4,
or •or L_ol,....._.iliii.iiil_'.....,.,:iiii;;,;:'•;..,J
(740)1411881 ·
5.7lolded,F• •·•~eCondJ. pKed warranty &amp; lniY be...,
liorl. $12,200 080. l.Mv. by c:dlng lho CollocBASEMENT
01
Graef Projocl Car. 1970 Co- U
go, w• Rolum Gal. lion
Oejlartment
WATEM'IIOOFtHQ
maro Body and I - in (740)UI 4880
(740)4fJ-1038. OVS r• Uo"'"l&lt;litloooal -- · ......_ ••• Auto
- t h o rlgi&gt;IIO III:OOpl/
, -•fur
llolh ~
~ 1996 Jooep Grand~ rajectany&amp;ol-.&amp;wilh- =E~975,
20 000 ml,.. Have 11 lose. (304)675-18111 Lsavo draw kerns !rom sate t&gt;OOr ~
4 Hro (740)
part. Jult nMcs. finW'.-d Metsege.
to aate. Terms of Sate: 0870
1 a00. 287.()576
S2000.
. (740)245-8502
·
' 88 Aotro van, 4.3, auto, new CHECt&lt;.
CASH OR CERTIFIED RogerS
•. Wllorproollng.
.
·
engine
tkas. StiiOO
Mull SOHI 1995 Hyundol (740i949o~.
' 93 Gcldwing Aspencado, C&amp;C Genen1J Homo f.talnt•
Ell- PS, PB, PW, Air,
•
Naw heimela &amp; inton:om. nenc:o- Palnllng. vtnyt oldbrand_...__,...ll5 F-150 4&lt;4, ••· ai1V'Im $9 000.(304)5 76 _3259
1~. oarponOy, - · wtnder wartonty. New timing ..-a, $10,000: 88 car
'
bllhl -

:!':: ::..

"'!"-

-

,,..,.,.m

MaroRcvaB

S2,tltl6; 1993 BulcO Cenouly
52 415
• · COOK 11010111,
(740)44e-Ot03
1993 Ni11an Sonn. 4 cyt..
5 opood, 2 Door. tt 4,000
mMs. $2000. (7«)}256- pied --·--,
.. _,
,_, by....., tho Colloc7
01
tlcn
lol8
Dopartment
Ofllo 11a11oy 8anlc wilt (740)441-1038. OVB , .
19tMI Cadillac Clmmaron. for sale"" 'N&gt;fic Auc11on h tigot to III:OOpl/
Rocontty Painted. Noedt A t996"'etw.y. ~ rojoctanyloltbido,&amp;-motor
wort.
1350. 1244075 If 10:00 am, 00 draw from t&gt;OOr
(7"0}446-367.. after 5:30pm 11110101 At Ohio Yatley to sale. Terms of Sale:
~ message.
•··"
or -ve
-~ Annex, toll 3m Ave., CASH OR CERTIFIED
Gallipolla, Ohio. SOld to tile CHECK.
1991 Cflovv Blazer Silvera· ~- •aole- whoo'o
110 350, auto, air, ve&lt;y nice, 1s wilhout lxpraosed or 1m- ifl Muolanti Porpte, 47 ·000
$4000,(740)992·7584
pllad warranty &amp; may be mlleo, · good condhlon.
_, by catting tfte Coilol&gt; $8400., 3 oofa of used Hrn
1992 Comaro, V-6, auto, lion
Depanment
al prlcn. (304)875- bell &amp; rabulh hoiOCI. ........ 16', lull rneral ftocr,
Auro PARTS &amp;
and
For ....
108,000 mlleo, good body &amp; (740"'1 1038 OVB ,. 4154
Aoking $4200 Now Alking (740)992 7557
intorlor,
grsatl $2,!100; ~the right to ooooptl
$2900.
'
.
.
ACCE!liOIUES
calf Cllal,, 740-~·1992 Camara, V-6, reject any &amp; all bido, &amp; will&gt; 97 Mazdo,low . -. A/C, 5
87 Aotro Van, 55,000am, 120,000 miles, Hops, draw Items fn&gt;n\ salo prior ~. - r aleering,
1'llvcKs
crulaa. llh, PW, PL. Are you iooltlng lor englnos
Eu!CnuCA1l
nk:ell, runs well, to sate. Terms of Sale: power btakes, SS,OO.
FOt SAut
AMIFM caueu.. dual air qr tnllLtmllllont? awe me
RD1uGERA'I'I(Jii
$2,200; fllll2 Cmnaro, V-8, CASH OR CERTIFIED (740)448-0744
~
" bags, ASS, Hall 7, like a caH et (7&lt;10~19
L-------.,1.
auto, 170,000 rnios, would CHECK
Ofllo Vllfey 8ank Y&lt;l c.ter
- · Muo1 oetll (740)370- _ __c:._:___ __
make a 110011 project car,_·
lor- Ill' Public Auction t983F·t00,110011tructo ..... 21341eavemesaage.
llllllgOI ..,_ T . . - Re-.,tlal-or coro""'ciai
runs &amp; drives, $1,200 OBO: Ohio Va/lly 8anlc
A tll99 c:twvy Cavo!W chtlnlcally, /llgll- driYatono All Typoo, Accesa To wiring, 8IMce or ,..
(740)742-23571 no .....,. lor Bile by Public Auction 11811515 If 10:00 om, on on~ to-. 1800, ~Roady tor Winter. 1817 Over 10,000 Tranamiosions, paira. t.laotor UCOnood - laavo . - g e.
A 1991 Buick Part&lt; A....,. 11110101 r•t Ohio
(740)/182-5142.
" 4• Ranger,
3" bOdv /Itt. Tranaler Claea 740-245· triciln. Ridenour EllctriOII.
-T
Standard.
Runs and LOoks
.
•
3yr.oldlluleboonl&lt;lde,OUI 1992 Plymouth Sundance. 18112380 at 10:00 om, on 8ank Annex. toll 3rd v.., 1864 lntornalionat ..,._.Great.
SZSOO
OBO. 56n,Coit. 339·3785._
WV000306.304.075-t788.
of gated Jack. $1500. Rod 2 Door Appn&gt;&lt; 11110/01 AI Ofllo Valley Galtlpollo, Ohio. Sold 10 the buo 345
anglno
(740)24s.9502
(304)578-3259
tOB,Ooo milas. Gootl
81nk Annex, I«&lt; 311:1 Ave., hiph"'- "IS II- where pillt, ru.:'- ·
Cloud g R nch Kentucky tlon. $1400. (740)446-3674 Gltlipotll, Olllo. Sold to tho II without ..or lm- (740)949·2700.
Horse Pa:
Man- :.fttr.5:30pm Of leave mearMulltenMoroRCYaB
agoment Garllfled. Now ol- go
piled warrarit( &amp; may be don
Oapartmont
at gino A/C Ul~ PS PB ,
·
~~~ng Westem .&amp; Engllah 1993 Buick Park Ave, 4 seen by callng tho COtlac- ,(7o40)44f.f038 . OVS re- 54.200. (7~)44&amp;.0744
' 1983 Harte
Da idoo
rid1ng lessons. Foals for door, lhla beaulitul car Ia a 11on
Department
11 eerYet rhe right to 80CIPIJ
'I
v
n
sale. Hora&amp; Foal training., one owner with 52,000 (740,..•1·1031. OVB te· rtjeclany &amp; an bkJ1. a wfth- 97 GMC Sonoma SLS, FLHT. ~ra-glldt. ttec.
J - Donohue (304)875- mlleo with every option, ..,.... tfte r1gM 10 oooopti dnlw Hlml from 81141 p00r 18,000 mMae, ltlng cab, bluo, 42,
mllas, IUrpack,
65311 Rt2 N. Point PleaSint. luxooy at Its - a t this low ·raject any &amp; 111 bide, &amp; witt&gt;- 10 Silo. Torma of Site: $7500, (740)992-4100 or ~ ~ 11 11 :1.':·
Horae TreHer Goooe Neck prlca, 11100, (740)992- draw i1em1 from salo pojor CASH OR CERTIFIED (740) 54HI532.
6pm
r
10 tale. TtnTtl ot Sale: CHECK.
·
N 2 ~- S1ra1 ' 8710.
87Lazy· · ·~ght
cASH oR CERTIFIED
lr~
VAN~&amp;
1
Load. Good Condition. t 1193 Dodge Dynaoty, CHECK'
99 Ponllao Grand Pt1x GT,
4-Willi
S1 800. (304)87H440
t1 700. Now Tlroo, Good
.
V-8, Auto, GO Player, Sur!- ~
.
Or
Rrgtatered Qua~er Horse WOrk car. (7&lt;10)258-6002
91 Pontiac Grand Am, aood """· 4-door, 50,000 mllea,
r
In the
mara 18 rnonthl old. Bay 8SEICo1111noSS lnt &amp;exl condition,
air,
S750, .,cellanl
condHion. t986f'1F-t50,300,~,
.•
Very 'aontlo. Sonny D BAR In good condltk.o, drives: (7o40)fi49-2700.
· f740l25Ht80
~!M~-= 110011' '
&amp; irnprosaivo Blood Unos. runo, bul ~· wcrk, Ohio
Bank wli otter
$1!100. (304)87H440
$2!100; 93 Cavalier, auto, for sale by PUlflc Auction
looks good, runs good, A 1992 Ford Touruo
RNI Eatote General
Raol Eatate General
HAY &amp;
$1!100, (740)982-6586.
1137876 If 10:00 am,""
GRAIN
•
1t/1 0101' ·/"f Ohio Volley
8ank Ann*, 1oll 3«1 Ave..
Buck a bole Bile, oquale t 999 Pontiac Grand Prix Gallipolis, phi&lt;&gt;. SOld lo the
baln 11 .00 hay up ID 4dr. V-8, auto, AIC. Very h~t bidder "as Is- where
$2.00, round bales $15.00 good conditloro. Asking II without rxpraasad or lm3Q4.175-&lt;188i
$9,800. (304)875-6440
piled ...nlnly &amp; may be

or undllogn••nd .0 -

"*·

=F.

Ir• .!~ Ir' .!~ · Ir• .

lhnbap 1J1mff -liorntmrl • Page 05

(

RIDUC~

PIIICE
MS,OOO
TIXAI ROAD••TLC to thla
home hiS had. IJitle over t acre, 3
bedrOOI'I'II, living roam, kitchen,
bath, offlcllod carpo~. EMtom
Schoololl2120
CHIIAP CHIIAPI $21,000.001
I~M~~-... Ranch

otyte

flOmo ... silullfld If 738 Moln
Slree1..2 bedroorno, equipped ·
kllc'-, living room, both/12121·

742-3171

DON'T LET BUYING OR SELLING A HOME SCARE YOU ... COME
SEE THE AGENTS AT CLELAND REALTY, INC·. WE'LL CLEAR
OUT THE COBWEBS AND MAKE THE WAY CLEAR FOR A ' .
SMOOTH DEAL. NO SKELETONS LURKING HEREII

ga~

r~TTEN TION OUR U~ VF NT ORV OF HOME S IS OISAPPfAf1 1N G Wf
Nf£ D LI STIN(,S INTFRFSTRATESAAEGOOD PEOPtl 1\.R[
BUYING WI HAVE AllY£ RS W E I~EED L!ST IN GS 1 "
1

'

Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992-2259
Sherrl L. Hart ..................................742-2357
Anna 'M. Chapman ......................... 992-2818
Kothlaon M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992-2259

I. ::~::~s ~w:ln:~h ~b=evol:
0

ltd glau, and
spacious rooms enhance the
historical flavor of this home. Add
to the modem convenience of a
workshop, large game room, and
the Hie ol lh·town living, and
this Is the ho.me of )'OUr dreamal

''

log

VISit us online at
www.hans-Moore.com
tU5

Convenient

llvlngl Nicely remodeled !Urn of

the century home. Walk to park,
school and shopping. 3·4 BA 2

112 BAS97,500.

....

�Sundey, Oct. 21. 2001

Pomeroy•

SUnday, Oct. 28, 2001

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

ESTATE .
IMTATIOH 10 liD
PI J 2'1 i1P s!11n:
ttr't::::'~lcl

Sultd blcle
i

wRI bt to

a leo

BULLETIN BOARD

AUCTION

lint parfor•tnoo ol thl

SATURDAY,

hed..,tlleO... l*tCUMd or heve -a.l!edtorlnuld

.t The 11e1t11 County lhocc •h."yrwvle de ecw•wtln_of ..
__ ,
DleLict l'ull1lc Lib,. y Ill!! tell of lloclu- paraont, flnla, tncl
• ; " dan .net
In the lower·leval .,.. • J' • .tone crt OCNJ»&gt;iZIO.
Rio actrllna Pomeroy, con..,.. . room. 211 IN nd ttr MM 1
rendering
auclt
01i1o
Watt Mlln Strttt, '--'-t:
..,¥11111 or ....,tying
ProltCI No. 28178
Poo••or, Ohio et All Blclclttt mutt lie auo11 maentlla
Qe n"ona:
lllelp County 12:00 on Frtdlly llcenMCI by lhl . _
...,.,.. . . qiiiii!Ont
ll!t1llct Public LlbNiy lhl 2nd of Novotmbtr, tncllor by lhl city 11
218-1181niiiNM tt Wllleh time all blcla · ~ut!Wbylaw 111 U,. about Doclumenhl to
01110 457t1 on hand will bt ,,., 01 the b~UIIIfltl Archl- In writing.
Owner~: Krlell publicly opened and IOCttlon
Roplrii
will ba
Eblin
tilt bid .....,unt reed
ll!ght ;, 0wrw:
tubmltltcl to til Prtma
Phone(740)112-2050 - .
Tilt OwMr raatrvtt Blddaro In writing.
Ftx: 7_
_.140
~ny blddar may the rtgllt to rtjtct any Such
wrltttn
~:
w!L1drtw hla bid prior or all Blda and to clortflcatlon allall lie
Archllact of
to bid racalpt time. rajact 1 llld not cont!darad _ . . . .
R~: llurgaa &amp; Blda will no! ba accompanltcl by the 1110 thtll biCOmt
Nlple,
returned tltor bid ~ulred bid .ateurlty pert of the ContracL
-Road
rectlpt time and bldt or by otllar data Tilt orchttoct and
Columbua, Ohio 43220 tiltH bt held binding raqulrtd by tilt Owner
wilt
bt
Phone: (814) o~st-2050 lor 30 dtyt or until bidding Documantt reapontlblt for oro!
Fax: (814) W-311111 award of contract or to reject 1 a1d ottr!flctllon.
Conttct: D1c11 Ritter within llltt Ume. lllda which It In any way Quaattona recolvod
Ablnvltltcl
racalvtd tfltr bid Incomplete
or fewer thon 3 daye
Detcrtptlon o1 Work:
rectlpt ume will not lie Irregular.
btfora Bid Opening
A. Proltct contltlt ol .opened or-~-Tax. .• 0wntr It tax• cannotlle-a - o r y additiOn of Availability oiiiiiUng ex. .pt:'
(10) 7, 14, 21, 28
approximately 2,144 Doc-:
IMuranca: Contractor
total grotl oquart · lnv- llkldtnl ...., ohtll obhlln and pay
fllot. The exterior walla obtain up to Ill'" for builders' rl .... Ste
ere steel studs with of bidding docurntll'lta other
lneur•nce
brick vanttr or mehll from lhl Melgt County ~ulrement In Projtet
aiding . Flooro are Public Library •• ol ..I.
concrete on plywood Monday. October 8,
Employment:
tub-floor on wood 2001, 11 4=00 p.m. A P,..alllng wago rolla
loloto, ond olob-on- clepoolt of $100.00 par ore requlrtcl. Blddtra
grade. Tlla roof Ia aat will lie requlrad. ohall comply with oil
wood conttructton, Dtpotlt may be In appl!ubla Slate,
with compooltlon ctoh or by chock Ftdoral and Local
thlngloo lb..o bid) peyablt 10 Burgel8 &amp; rulto, ragulallono, and
and otondlng 111m Nlplt, Lim-. Blddere ohltuttt relative to
·matol
roofing returning
tilt minority
hiring
(Ailtmahl Bid).
dooumento In good employment practices:
Bid Baals:
condition within 7
Alolgnrnont:
·
The bola for the bids doye 01 the bid Aealgnmont of thit
Ia "opan bidding" for opanlfltl Will havelhllr Contract or any part
Generol Conatructlon dtpotll retumtcl In thereof, or any Iundt
on 1 Stipulated Sum full. Ac!diUonal Projoct to
be
rocelvod
boola Including 111 Manuale moy bt thereunder by the
architectural HVAC purchettd only. at lilt contractor will bo
t
I Archllecf'a Offloe lor •
and electrical eo nonrefundlblt charge oubjoct
to
tht
lndlcotod In tlla of$71 00 opproval ollhl
Conlroct Documonto. CAVEAT: Controct Such ...lgnrnont thtll
The contract ~u!ree Document~ require 111 conhlln ·a claueo to !hi
ono lump oum bid 81
olfact that It It ogrMCI
from tllo ono Prime ddora to txamlnt the fundo to lie ptkl
and their !IIIII on
Contnoctor,
I he Ill Information In tht the alllgnoe under
Gtntrol Contractor, Contract Documenhl lhll •••lgnmenl are
who oholl Include all Thooc purchoolng oublect .to tho prior
tubcontroctor bldt In lndlvldu I shoelo of !len lor oervlcto
hlo lump oum bid.
drawing: 1 ,. ollumtcl " ndlred or matarlt!o
RtcOipt oiBidl
oiled f~o~r~l:'._
~ ::_•_ _ _ _ _ _ _

STICKS AND STONES
FIREWOOD HAS MOVED
Now localed IICIOSSfrom
Buckeye Foodland at 361
Porter Road, Bidwell
Accepting HEAP and C.A.A
446-6783 or 388-8120

10:00
'11"-NII"
',.,T.. IIIII
• ''IIIIM,11.9Telllllla . . T..
11111!1 Dlllll!nt ._ . . FIIINSIIIIL

I•

o.-:

'fARI I

-oeror.

fCJLJI~IIHJl

No Sunday Sales

PUBLIC NOTICE
At the November 6, 2001
election, residents of
Addison Township will be
voting to renew the .3
mills fire levy. This
RENEWAL levy will NOT
Increase your current tax
amount. This notice paid
for by Addison Township.

Lim--

Vote November 6th

a
Crock Mixing Bowla .,04,
Willet DleMe, eoc.
Glu, Blenko Pitcher

2

Of

W/pl!cher,

·For

Dl8ney

Denver 0. Curtis

Drinking 0...., Crockl,
Lllmps,

MIIC. Jare, M._ JIIIW,
Bell Collection a MoM I

011

Cheshire Township
Trustee

'COLL rCTIBLES &amp; I.IISC

Fire

Truck,

n.ctor,

I'MIII

SOUTH GALLIA HIGH
SCHOOL
Boosters Annual
•Spaghetti Dinner and Auction
' ' Tuesday, October 30111
· We begin serving dinner at
6:00pm
Aduhs$5.00
Children- 7-12 yrs old $3.00
Children B and under FREE
.Auction begins at 7:30

W8goM, Scoolllr,
Old 0.,_ And Plnbllll
Table, Blcyclea,

HorN,

BUill
r Sell

limes ·

Old Doll.. 18

or

ienttnel
446-2342
992·2155
675-1333

BASKET BINGO

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-95n

The Meigs High School Band

Boosters will be sponsoring a
"Basket Bingo" fundraiser on
Thursday, November 1 at 6:00
p.m. at the Middleport
American Legion, 299 Mill
Street, Middleport, OH. We
will play 21 games with one
.basket being awarded to the
winner of each game. Mu11t
use
ink
dobbers.
Refreshments will be available
for sale. Contacl band booster
committee
members
for
advance tickets· $20.00 each.

Kyger Creek Rinky Dink
will hold one more
signup for an all girls
leagu~ and one more
signup for the boys
league at Addaville
Elementary, Monday,
October 29th, 6:00 p.m.
till 7:00 p.m.

'
WINTER WONDERLAND
OF CRAFTS
'
.
November 2 &amp; 3
10:00 am to 3:00pm·
Meigs Senior Center
112 East Memorial Olive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more information call
(740) 992-2161

GRAND OPENING
Saturday, Nov..3
10:30 am - 6:00 prn
Once Again Consignmenl Shop

iunbap-

ow-.

6anllllp llimHI - ~ntintl• Page D7

Mall

PosWtl, Wlcbr
Pot (c.t Iron) Old Flat

1J•nlln
r MHto
In the

C''a'l!l!l'-"edsl
11 ~ II'

Ileal Es!ate Genenl

REAL ESTATE
Sttt.u 1943 ·

ao-.

Kaga, Wooden

Tnlps, 2-42" Alum
Awnlllg8, 2 0.. ..._..,
Elctrtc B11eboerd ..........
Chair, Motorcycle Ace., 5
1 Picture Window.
Live

•

_.!:===-----'

Pouch

F,.,_,

2
Window,

220 Volt
Beenblg
Ander-

*AUTIONEERS NOTE:
All Day Auction. Field Pllri!lng.

~~~~--~
Strati·
the one story home

II Outalcle So D - For

c:o

!totha grocery stor~ ,and other etoraa thai will
convenient. Has 2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
ccome·s equipped w!t11 kitchen appliances.
a front and raar porch. NOW $28,000.00

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY

1

\

Sorry to see them go.
Retiring Colors
Greenfield
Classic Navy
French Blue
Order now to complele your cotlacllon

Rebecca's

AC:TIONUR RICK PfiiRSON H6
AI'PII!Nnct:IIUCTIOitUR Rf STEIN II H-201
OWNERS: DIINII a RUTH DURST
WJID

a-.

A brjck and ilumlnum elCitriOr
makoa thla one 11tory home pretty much
malntenanco lrllo. Thoro Ia 3 - · 1''•
batbl, .lltld-1.~. NeMr llllngled
roof and 1 corner Ill!; oUt ol flood plain: ... ..

Lafayette Mall

354 2nd Ava.

Gallipolis

740-441-1090

FOR SALE
Nice 45 foot storage
trailers with roll·up doors,
$1,500.00 each.
(740) 446-7600
FOR SALE OR TRADE

1988 GMC 3/4 Ton 4-wheel
drive, 2,000 or trade lor
ATV.Honda 4-wheel drive,
(740) 446-7600

446-2342 or
992-2156

$12,000.00

~0~1 ~r~n

1
1
Just north
frontage llong bOth - · of
Rl. 7. 8ulklnga Include a 4 BR,
3 bdl, 2 lllory house wllh loll
of wlndowa for a great view.
Nea~y 3,000 sq. tt. in all. Plus
a 40 'I 80 six door garage, two
manufaciUred homea plua a
graat rtver view. Aclclltionally, 5
campan.. with water, electric
&amp; aewer, 3 docka and a large
launch
on the river.

wllh
Modem
Convanlencos II found In lhlo
2-etory home faalurlng foyer,
LA, DR, oat-In kltchan with
mud-room, 3-4 BAa and 2 1fl
baths. Updated IIams Include
batha, wl~ng. 2 fumacea,
I I , root and more.
to
chlnn

Qufte a looltrl Thla 1 112
alory horne off.,. """"' more
than you might Imagine.
Vaulted tongue &amp; groove
celll"'l, create a dramatic feel
In the ll~ng room &amp; loft area. 3
large BAs. 3 lull baths, eat·ln
kitchen, Maetor BA has
ftreptaca &amp; master bath ~..
will~pooltub. Ona car oaraile
'plus" has balh. COUntry
setting. Nice sized lot
$129,9001102

Conveniently locatld. Greal
location within walking distance
to downtown. Acroaa 1111 street
from a supermarket, bank and
drugslore. 2 story wit~ 3
bedrooms. I bedroom could be
downstairs for who don~
wanlstaira. 2 bolhroorna. Large
eat-In kitchen , living room, off
atreet parking. $59,900 H12

-

nome 'Oflall room . and out fer year round
lrl)oyment VIIIY nlct 3 BA
home with alergt bonus room
wllera yoo11 find yoo'll
probably spend moat of your
time. OUtaldo thero aro nn~y
two ond a half ac""' fer pure
recreation. Loclad on 11M! river
near 1111 new launch facility oo
"""""" will be a lnlp. The
land Ia flat and very .-ble.
Aloo lncludel nlct eat In
kltchon, living room, 2 bltha
and moro. Nlct t~m and
. 2-car garage.

now 11

11M! t1mo to make

I

brick
ranch
filled
with
homeowntrlhlp prldt yoore.
Olfe~ng LA with fireplace
open to dining area, cozy FR
with ftraplaoe, 3 BRa, 2 112
bdlo, over 1400 sq. ft. In
butmfnt with roc. room and
Iota ol opaoo to grow, 2 car
garage &amp; ln-groond pool, only
mlnutealrorn town. Call today ·
and make youraelf the proud
owner of thla lovely property.

+ •&lt;wiiiifi'.;
CeniiMry Rd.
home from all vilwllolnta.
you walk thoough thla home,
you'll not only app- 1111
alze of the rooms. 11M! quality
o1
maltllall
Ulld
In
conotructlon, and all 11M!
omenlllellhlt are Offered, but
also the lvablllty o1 11M! home.
Wllh over 3800 squaro laat
lloor plan, lhlrl'o pltnty ol
room, Vary comlonabll FA
wllh flrapllot, larQa roc room,
doluu nl·ln klicllon, olog
with fonnal DR and formal LA,
2 atory foyer ' and a lltOOnd
otai,...,Y that makes lifo a little
....... Tills. home Ia fonnal
anough fer diner partltt yet
caaual anough for ~
i~ng. ScnHmld ~ 2
attached plua lergt 2
detaclled.
Large,

LINCOLN STREET· Mlc!dltpbrt • A 2 slory
brick home with big atona accenta on tho
comer. There are three bedrooms, dining room,
~Kchan, 1 112 balhs, family room and a aun
room. A lull baaament, and a large garage wllh
an attached carport. Hao new carpet In some
1001111.
.
NOW $111,000.00
NI!AR PAGEVILLE • Behind Wells Cemetery
Ia thla 59.1 acrea mil that haa a reclaimed
gruay ftekf and a aecluded building alte. Moat
ol ICIIIIQO Ia woodland. Really good hunting.

LT155 Lawn Tractor

W55 Lawn Tractor ·

•13-hp engine .
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on·the·go transmission

•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission ·

1141,000.00

managoablt! yorQ.
. $339,iloo t121

JS60 Walk-Behlad Mower
• &amp;.O·hp angina
• Durable die· cast aluminum deck
, • Seven cutting heights .

t807

Sealngl This 3 BR home has a
private 4 acre oettlng. Ver; nice
home with 2 baths, large LA,
eat·ln kllchen with dining area,
I

JMC)RNIING STAR AREA • A 12X65 mobile
with 2 bedrooms. · There Is approx. 9
acres that Ilea on Court Stroet and both aides o1
Horoo Cave Road.
$22.500.00
A two elory home with 3
. One unit has 5 rooms and a bath,
4 rooms and a balh and the laat
urilt has rooms and a bath. Live In the big
apartment and renllhe other two.
·

clean and ready to move Into.
Tllla .wol decorated and COK'f
home offere 4 BAs. 3 baths,
16 x 32 In-ground pool and 2
car garage. ·The master suite
Ia approx. 848 sq. ft. with a
private den/master bath and
room olze walk-in cloatt. Sittig
on the back patio, you can
enjoy a view of deer and plna
trooo only a short dlatance
away. All o1 this and more.
located within 1 mile ol Holzer.
PRICE
REDUCED
TO
s122,eoo. t403

Large apactouo ranch
slinpllclly In a bUIIIIng
.
Over 1800 sq. ft. of living space,
lncludl"'l a largo lamlly room
with room for Ofllct, fennal DA,
eat-In kitchen, LR, 3 BRa, an&lt;l1
112 baths,
utllllylworkahop.
Conveniently located In Spring
now
Volley $112,500 t137
.
cablnltoln tho eat·ln
2 car aHacl1ed garage.
.. $23,000. t13t

www.wisemanrealestate.com
David Wlaeman, GRI, CRS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch, GRI 441-1007 Sonny Garnes 448-2707
Robert Bruce ~21 Alta Wlaeman 446-9555

(B.

'

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LOTS AND MORE LOTS Six Iota In
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• Only 8.5 lbs
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Looking for land In a nlct location? Jual a
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have 2·acre tracts to 6-acre tracta MIL.
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restrictions. Call and ask lor t2022.

40) 446·3644
I

•18-hp, V·Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
~ 48-inch mower deck • Zero-tum radi.us with power steering
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at your participating dealer today.

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Thla 2 story home haa
6 rooms; 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths and
basement. There· Is an enclosed back yard
and private drive.
$411,900.00
• Need a building lor your
Here's a business building with 2
use as one big one. Also has 4
being .two 4 rooms and bath, and 2
.-.. . --.... and bath apartments. Has had some
remodeling already done. $45,000.00

SST18 Law• Tractor

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EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike • 2 ml West of Holzer Hospital'
Gallipolis, OH 45614
·
740-446-2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304-529-3309
•

•su dootor for dotollo.

\

I'

�P8ge Dl• 6aUolp G:tmeC-ionhnrl

Bill

-

EASTERN TO FACE TRIMBLE IN PLAYOFFS., 5

Suncllly, Oct. 28, 2001

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

N.Y. Senate.~pproves
wide-ranging
'
''
gambling expansion

toasts new

•

NEW YORK (AP) When Bill Gates lat 1ched the
much-ballyhooed X'indows
95, he hailed the computer
operating system as a "major
generation shift in the PC
world."
The Microsoft chairman is
preparing for another shift as
he unveils Windows XP on
Thursday. touted as the operating system for the digital
generation that will lay the
foundation for the company's
new Internet-focused direction.
Gates is trumpeting the
release from Times Square in
New York, a departure from
the 1995 release at a lavish
carnival at company headquarters near Seattle.
He said a conversation with
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani persuaded him to keep his plans
to unveil the software in New
York, six weeks after the terrorist attacks.
"He was very clear that we
should come to New York
and do the event," the software mogul told The Associated Press in an interview this
week. "His enthusiasm made
it clear that we should go fullspeed ahead and that's what
we'n: doing."
The idea behind Windows
XP is to get consumers more
connected with better
Internet tools and features
including built-in wireless
networking support.
It 2ho offers new features
for listening to music, playing
videos, or editing and organizing digital photographs. A
new system called Windows
Messenger lets users commu-

Prize
fnnPapD1
ner. This year, her booth centerpiece was a large archway
of grapevine .decorated in a
fall motif and surrounded by
original soft sculptures ·like moose, rabbits, bear and
mowmen.
"This is the festival where I
show ·my new lines, where
people see what I make," said
the artisan.
And this year, her new line
includes ice skating snowmen, Santa heads in several
sizes with beards of wool
purchased from a woman in
Athens who shears her own ·
sheep, life-size scarecrows on
ladders, grapevine items featuring inini-lights, and a

Business
fRNIIPapD1
droitin sulfate.
The biotech company
operates on a large scale in a
' factory-sized building in
Sioux Center. Enormous
metal tanks, vats and pipes
whirr as proteins and sugars in
the animal byproducts are
extracted and made into
digestible pills.
Sioux Pharm scientists had
to design the production
process with efficiency in

..Jay
fromPIIpDI
the investment choices available to participants. However,
this is not necessarily the case.
Factors such as employee loyalty and familiarity, account
for the popularity of company
stock.
On the other hand; G(Cs
offer a fixed rate of return
with a minimum of risk, thus
making them attractive to
investors who are understandably cautious about their
retirement savings. However,
placing too much money in
GICs could limit an investor's
ability to achieve higher
returns available' from other
invesrrnents and necessary to
.achieve retirement goals.
Employees also tend to stay

ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) The stare Legislature overwhelmingly approved a bill
Wednesday night to expand
gambling in New York, with
leaden saying new revenue
sources are crucial because
of \he World Trade Center
attacks.
The measure now goes to
Gov. George Pataki for his
expected approval.
The proposal would
expand the number of Indian-run casinos in the state
from two to as many as
eight, introduce video lottery terminals at many horse
racing tracks and let New
Yorkers buy tickets to the
big-money,
multistate
Powerball lottery.
Senate Majority Leader
Joseph Bruno said the packNEW PRODUCT - Microsoft's chairman and chief sOftware architect Bill Gates, right; talks
with Michael Zorich, left, assistant marketing director of Canon USA, and Yuklakl Hashimoto,
vice president and general manager of the company's photographic products group, as Gates
visits an expo previewing Windows XP, in New York. On Thursday, Microsoft Corp. releases Windows XP. the new version of the personal computer operating system Bill Gates calls "the most
Important piece of software In the world. • (AP)
nicate instandy with others
using text, voice and video.
Srruggling manufacturers of
personal computers and related equipment - wallowing
in their first-ever year without
sales growth - pray that consumers and businesses may
have delayed purchases of
their products until the onset
ofXP. '
For users, the $99 upgrade
to XP Home is Microsoft's

best-yet stab at a user-friendly
operating system, with plugand-play support for a plethora of digital gadgets, an
emphasis on whiz-bang multimedia and an underlying
code base that is practically
crash-proof.
"It's got a lot of nice new
features. But the most important thing is that it really is a
stable operati.n g system. It
doesn't crash," said Michael

variety of angels and bears, all of the largest in Ohio. There
hand-crafted.
she· competed against more
Adding to the uniqueness than :300 crafters and artisans
of the merchandise this year to win the blue ribbon.
is personalized and individuDrenner started her artalized items painted by local work as a hobby, saw it
artist Michelle Garretson, evl'lve. into a cottage induswho works parttime at the , · try, anA then into a downshop.
town shop. She worked with
She paints the faces on the Terri Haynes at Always and
popular Sani:a heads, and ere- Forever in upper Pomeroy
ares one-of-a-kind pieces for two years before moving
using specific designs and into her own shop in the
~olors,like antique-type sleds center of town i couple of
with winter scenes and mini- years ago.
Going . to craft shows is
lighted rustic boards with
holiday designs.
Drenner's way of not only
While the Bob Evans Farm selling, but showing what she
Festival is a major show, it's sews to a lot of people. She's
just one of many in the tri- finding that many who come
state where Drenner exhibits to her booth at craft shows,
now visit her shop.
and brings back awards.
Last year, she took the top
Getting more of those regaward at the Rolling Acres ular show customers into her
Craft Show at Delaware, one shop is qne of her goals ..

Miller, editor-in-chief of PC
Magazine.
Gone are the gray taskbars
and aquamarine desktops of
Windows 95 and 98. Windows XP sports a cool blue
taskbar that underlines a desktop screen that looks suspiciously like the environs of
Microsoft headquarters in
Redmond, Wash.: a sun-dappled meadow under a sky
dotted with cottony cloudS.

age could be worth $1 bi!..,
lion annually to the stat&lt;
within the next three to fou(

years.
"We're desperate for cash.'.'
Bruno said. "Our ~enues
have fallen off a clit["
Though there was some
vocal complaints about the
new gambling ventures, the
Republican-controUed Sen_,:
ate approved the bill 52-8.
The
Democratic-run
Assembly passed the measure 92-4-1.
Many who said they we~
opposed to gambling never-;
theless voted for the measure
because legislative leaders
tied it to the allocation of
some $500 million in state
aid for such popular p~
grams as education ancl
community services.

To fit into this scenario;
producers in this area might
look at their feed supplies/
the relatively low cost of
from PageDl
purchased feed, as well as
er, because the market is their facilities. If these fac.!
reacting to the possibility of tors work together and penJ
decreased demand for beef, cil out, retaining catde for' i
and the supplies ·offed cattle few hundred pounds of gain,
through 2001 is already may be worth consideration;
high, the financial opportu(jennifer L Bymts u G&lt;tllid
nities exist for those who County~ Extension agent for
can put together light agriculture
and
natura!
weight feeder catde at lower resources, Ohio Stale Univmi·
prices.
ty.)

Bymes

"That would make it possible
for me to cut down on the ·
12 to 15 out-of-town shows
I attend every year."
And with that she issued an
invitation -"If it's a unique
decoration you're looking
fur, you can get it here." I

mind, since the company had Since then, annual sales have
strong competition from for- jumped to more than $10
eign producers of chon- million per year.
droitin, Kramer said. The priThe price ofbovine trachea
mary competitors were in has increased with it, up from
China, where large amounts 16 cents per pound in 1998 to
of the supplement were pro- roughly 75 cents this year.
duced using cheaper labor.
And the success of compa"About three or four years nies like Sioux Pharm has
ago, it was all imported," he been good news for the corsaid. "So a lot of companies ner of Iowa where the comwere wondering if we could . pany is based, since all the raw
make a U.S.-produced chon- materials - catde, pigs and
droitin cheaply:·
soybeans - can be found at
Kramer's company quickly area farms.
made its mark on the indus"Northwest Iowa has a high
try. It started selling chon- concentration of livestock ...
droitin in 1998, making cattle and pigs and chickens
$100,000 in annual sales. and turkeys;' Kramer said.
P"t ~nd never transfer their achieve superior returns, a
· balancd to other invesrrnent diversified portfolio is recom-.
·
··'
choices within their plan, mended.
even when new investment
Take the time to periodicaloptions may be added. ly review your asset allocation
Retirement planning is a decision, _preferably with the
process that needs to be peri- help of your financial adviser.
odically reviewed. This means If necessary, adjust your portupdating asset allocations and folio as your long-term .plans
taking advantage of new change; most plans allow you
invesrrnent opportunities.
to transfer your as!ets to difGiven the variety of investferent investment classes at
ment choices available, there
least once a quarter.
is almost no legitimate reason
Remember, asset allocation
to have a portfolio that is not
properly diversified. Buying is the most significant tool
company stock develops and you have of making a real difownership interest in your ference in your portfolio's
company that ·can make work performance. ·
(jay Caldwell -is a cerl!fied
financially and personally
fitlancia/ planner at Raymond
·
rewarding.
GICs can help you balance James Financial Services, 441
your portfolio with a fixed- Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
income component. Howev- 45631; 446-2125 or 1-800er, to really minimize risk and 487-2129, member NASD and
enhance your ability to SIPC.) ·

Melp County's

Council
on Aging
touts
success

set for Nov. 4
BY CHARLENE HOERJCH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - As a protective measure for domestic
animals now that one positive rab ies case has been
identified in Meigs County, a
rabies vaccination clinic has
been scheduled.
The clinic will be Nov. 4
fium noon to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs Veterinary Clinic, 247
Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy,
by David Krawsczyn and
Kelley Grueser, both doctors
of vet~rinary medicine.
Keith Little, R.S., Meigs
County's director of environmental
health, said
immunizations
will
be
administered to dogs, cats
and ferrets for $6 per animal.
The usual cost is $20, he
said.
"Sinc·e we have had a positive rabies case on Salisbury
Township, this is an excellent
opportunity to ensure the

Davenport ·
tapped board
president
Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCII
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -A report
on accomplishments over
the past year geared to better serve Meigs County's
aging population highlighted last week's annual meeting of the Meigs County
Council on Aging.
The speaker was Susan
Oliver, executive director,
who commended the staff
for dedication to their jobs
and the volunteers for their
contributions to the center
and in the community.
"We're living in a community were people really
care about each other,"
Oliver said, "and that's what
makes the difference in
what we accomplish."
She cited as a major
accomplishment
being
awarded national accreditation by the National
Council on Aging and the
Nationallnstitute of Senior
Centers. The Meigs Ce,nter
is now one of 41 senior
centers out of 15,000 in 'the
nation and one of three out
-of 45.0 ·irr the ' state \vhich
have achieved that designa. lion.
As for challenges of the
year ahead, she listed
decreased funding, adding
the state is cutting funding
by 6 percent. She spoke of
the need for more space to
carry out programs, and for
more services to the growing number of senior citizens in Meigs County who
are struggling to stay in
their own homes.
As for goals, Oliver proposed keeping the center
open one day each weekend to serve those who
cannot come on weekdays.
Accomplishments of the
past year presented by
Catherine Shenefield, president, included . retrofitting
two new trucks with existing hot and cold units for
use in the home delivered
meal program, enhancing
the fitness room by adding
more "equipment and

PleaH -

OMEROY- A
patnottc
music
video to raise funds
for victims of the
Sept. 11 attacks was
produced Sunday afternoon at
Bob Roberts Field as an observance of the 11th annual Make
a Difference Day.
Make a Difference Day was
created by USA Weekend
magazine to foster volunteerism and good deeds. Millions of Americans participate
in the annual event; the top 10
Make a Difference Day projects nationwide eam $10,000
grants.
About a hundred people,
many wearing red, white and
blue and carrying flags participated in the project sponsored
hy Roger and Mary Gilmore

SUccess, Al

HIP:IOI
L-: :JOs

Sentinel
I Sec:tlon - 10

Details, 3

Paps

Lotteries
5 OHIO

Open a Home Equity Une of Credit, bachad
by our exclusive Five Stu Service Gua1a1tee.

Calendar
Classifieds

6-7 Pldt 3: 2-o-o; Pick 4: 5-9-5-7
J.C~o!!mwic~s:------.!1.8 SUper LaiiD: 9-19-26-30-31-37
Editorials
4 KkMr. 9-1-o-2-2-5

Home improvements. Debt consolidation.

Obituaries

3 W.VA.

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with cooperation from the balloon launch.
Gilmore said parriotic scenes
Meigs County Tourism Direcwill be added to Sunday's taptor Betsy Nicodemus.
Dwight Icenhower sang ing, and the music video
"One Country: America," which will be sold for $10
written by Roger Gihnore, to with proceeds to go to benefit
open the program, which relief efforts. (Charlene Hoeincluded group singing and a flich photos)

WASHI~GTON (AP) ed PWitive for anthnx:
The department's in-house
A female New Jersey postal
worker became the nation's mailrooms ' had stopped
latest confirmed case of receiving mail from the subinhaled anthrax over the urban Landover, Md., locaweekend
as
tion several days
health officials
ago as a precauOPERATION
continued their
tion. No other
search for contaJustice facility has
mination
and
tested positive for
thousands
of
anthrax, departAmericans took
ment
spokespreventive
woman
Susan
antibiotics.
Dryden said.
Since
the
The Landover
anthrax-by-ni'ail
operation
threat
began
processes mail for
three
people
the depanment
ENDURING
have died from
and some of its
FREEDOM
the inhaled form
component
of the disease
agencies, Dryden
and four are now undergoing said, but mail for the FBI is
rrearrnent in hospitals. One not handled there.
patient has recovered suffiThe anthrax threat was
ciently to go home.
forcing the Supreme Court
Concern remains that to meet elsewhere Monday
more tainted letters are in for the first time in iis build-"
the mail stream, and the jus- ing:s 66-year history. The
tice Department announced structure was closed after
Sunday night that several anthrax was detected Friday
locations in an of!Site facility at a remote mail- handling
that handles its mail had test-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush
adrninisrration is unqer growing pressure
from lawmakers and Afghan rebel leaders to
step up its military campaign in Afghanistan
and send in ground rroops, even as key allies
. warn that increasing civilian death tolls
could undercut support for the U.S. effort.
U.S. attacks on the Afghan capital of
Kabul killed at least 13 civilians Sunday; and
warplanes returned for a second wave of

attacks later. American bombs pounded targets in the northern city ofMazar-e-Sharif,
the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar in the
south, Herat in the west and Jalalabad in .the
east, said the Afghan Islamic Press, a private
news agency.
Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf. warned last week against "excessive collateral damage" to civilians - a concern
also voiced by the leaders of China,

Attacks, Al

Malaysia and others.
But Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said
Sunday that America must unleash "all the
might of United States military power;•
including large numbers of ground rroops,
to prevail in Afghanistan .
"It's going to take a very big effort, and
probably casualties will be involved, and it
won't be accomplished through air power

PleaH see Bush, A:S

Questions about Ant~Hwx?
Want to know the facts?

Wednesday, October 31, 2001 • 5:30PM
HMC Education &amp;Conference Center
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PleaH -

Bush faces pressure to intensify campaign

lnfor111atlonal Town Meeting
on Anthrax

1'11&lt;1 1,/Y ,1,/n,.or I~J:,/Ioflll)( l iN ,f, •,/u r/t/•dtl\' r•/ /0/h'W/ I, rroo(&gt;.-r/1' 111&gt;1"·"'' &lt;'/ '
~'/ '"' \' /m,•J uf ifi •,Jtt .m· ,.fi,·u·,/ rl••••"¥h /-,.·,r.l' l:l.mk .\'..,1, 1/,·N&lt;I~·• Hl/1

safety of family pets as well as
a vital measure to prevent
the spread of the rabies virus
in this area," Litde said. ·
He said "rabies is a highly
contagious virus that affects
the central nervous system of
all mammals, including
humans. lfleft unrreated, the
disease is 100 percent fatal ....
With the number of rae-·
coons, shunks, coyotes and
bats increasing in Meigs
County, Litde said it is very
important that family pets
receive pre-exposure vac~ine
for protection, especially if
there might be interaction
with a wild animal.
The environmental health
director said that any concerns or questions about the
rabies vaccination clinic can
be directed to him .at the
County
Health
Meigs
Deparrrnent (992-6626) or
to one of the veterinarians at
the Meigs Clinic.

Search goes
on for anthrax
tainted offices

'lbdlly's

Sponsored by Holzer Medical Center, Holzer Clinic and the
Gallic County Health Deportment.

,,.,1/-, /0&lt;&lt;11&gt; H/.11 ,IPJ•/1•, )/r •/Ph'

}I

..

dinic

'~·

ME D I CAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

wWw-.holzer .org

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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24633">
              <text>October 28, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>bumgardner</name>
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      <name>dubea</name>
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    <tag tagId="681">
      <name>pauley</name>
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    <tag tagId="135">
      <name>saunders</name>
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    <tag tagId="3036">
      <name>vanco</name>
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    <tag tagId="201">
      <name>ward</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5601">
      <name>zahran</name>
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</item>
