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                  <text>SPORIS

INSIDE

Big Blue bounces
Dukes 19-7 Bl

MONEY

Another hit
for Pixar, C6

Tales from
the front line, D1

•

tmes

1.25

5

GALLlA

MEIGS

••

-Fair

Deputies:

plan
tops
.ballot

threaten
secu

•

BY KEVIN KEu.v
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFf

GALLIPOLIS - A onequarter of 1 percent increase
Gallia .County's sales tax
to fund relocation of the
junior fairgrounds and build
a communityI convention
):enter is on the ballot in all
36 of the county's voting
precincts in Tuesday's election.
· · !Uces for school board,
township trustees and village council seats will also
be decided in various
· precincts. Polls open at 6:30
a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m.
· Elections Director Jeff
!ialley said the polling location for two precincts is different. Green 1 and 3, which
formerly voted at Rodney
Community Building, will
cast ballots at the Gallia
County Service Center, 499
~ Jactkson Pike, home .pf the
co)Jnty health dep-:u-nn_ent.
Backers of the new fairgrounds, set behind the curre'lt campgrounds, are looking to the move to eliminate
a flooding risk at the current
site, and allow expansion.
The convention center
would house year-round
activities, proponents said.
The increase, if approved,
will last fur a maximum of
20 years and raise $5 million
of the estimated $6 million
for the project.
"When.we celebrated the
fair's 50th anniversary, our
slogan was 'look back, move
fOrward;" said former fair
board
director · Kail
Burleson, who's seen three
generations of his family
involved with the fair and its
expansion.
"We can't move forward
at the present location, so
we definitely need the new
jairgrounds site;• he added.
Renewal of fire protection levies are sought in two
townships - three-tenths

rn

. . . . .. ' ..'
'

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, . _ ... Gill.., A2

THE SANG FAMILY
,

,

.

,

. 6enttml
C!assifieds
Comics
Editorials
Entertainment
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks

I

L-R: Beau~ John, Brad &amp; Brian - (Not Pictured) Brent

.,

A standin~m-i»rily crowd
watched Oallia Academy win
the Division Ill, Region 11
quarterfinals Friday at Memorial Field. The Blue Devils beat
Marlington 19-7 to advance to
the semifinals, where they will
play John Glenn High School
of New Concord. (Bryan Long,
Doug Shipley photos)
Details, Bl-2

02-Z
insert
A4
C6-7
A6
Bl-8

OJ

POMEROY- "This is no time for MeiS' County to
be without adequate law enforcement protection?'
Deputy Sheriff' Bill Gilkey spoke fur deputies with the
MeiS' County Sheriff's Office Friday, saying that a
threat of layoffi received Friday fiom the county commissioners is also a threat to the public saf~
Gilkey was recently elected
president of the Ohio Patrolmen's Benevolent Association
local union.
Commissioners Jeff Thornton, Mick . Davenport and Jim
Sheets delivered a letter to Sheriff Ralph ThlsseU Friday, advis)ng .that, based on current
approptiations, the ~panment
would be unable to make the
payroU which started Saturday. :
Truuell
Trussell was not in the office
on Friday due to minor surgery,
and not available to comment on the letter. In his
absence, his deputies have interpreted the letter as an
official layoff notice.
Davenport said the letter is not a layoff notice, but a :
reminder to Trussell that payroll funds have been deplet- :
ed.
"The letter is not a layoff notice," Davenport said. "The
commissioners don't have the authority to lay off
deputies. Only the department ·head can do that. It is,

PIMH ... Leyoffl, A2

Local offices,. levies lead Tuesday's ballot in Meigs
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY - MeiS' County voters will elect township trustees . and
members of village council and local
school board on Tuesday.
!,.
Candidates for township trustee, are:
Bedford, Robert f Hawk, Ronald' L.
Wood; Chester, Blair Windon, Nan
Holter; Columbia, Don Cheadle,

Low: 301
Details, AS

tltfmd-

{

BY BRIAN J. RnD
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

Hlp: SOl

ToUy's

...

Commissioners warn that
salary fond is depleted

Gall Ia
Academy
linebacker
Nick
Merole Is

, not ready
to stop
playing yet.

81
c 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co. ·

Granville C. Stout, Curtis A. Johnson; Jr., Steve Lambert, Charles Williamson;
Four members are to be elected to
Lebanon, Keith E. Fitch, Timothy D.
Salem, H. Dannie Lambert, Keith Middleport Village Council, but only
Lawrence, John R. Krider, Charles R. Hypes, jack L. Ervin; Salisbury, Bill three candidates will appear on the balLaWrence, Lawrence H. Hayman; Spann, Edward W. Durst, Bernard D. . lot: Roger L. Manley. Robert M. PoolLetart, Dave Graham, Bob Morris;
Gilkey; Scipio, Robert L. Jewell, Kevin er and Kathy Scott.
Five candidates, Todd Norton, Larry
Olive, jackie L. Westfall, Jerry L. Payne, Philip ,!.. Erwin, Bobby W.Vance;
Wehrung,
Jackie R. We~, George L.
Larkins, Michael Haytmn, Garry Bow- Sutton, Roy f VanMeter, Kenneth R.
Wright and Todd Norton, have filed for
man Jr., Brian Keith Bailey, William R. Guinther, Grover Salser Jr.
Osborne; Orange, Roger Ritchie, John
Two trustees are to be elected in each the four open seats on Pomeroy Village
A. Rankin; Rutland, Charles D. Barrett township.
PI- ... M8lp. A2

Contractor progresses on U.S. :33 upgrade
Bv TONY M.

WCH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFf

DARWIN - Construction continues
on the relocation of U.S. 33 between
Darwin and Athens as heavy equipment
clears the way for the eventual highway
connector.

Like lumbering giants, equipment
rumbles over the hilly terrain, removing
tons of soil and rock in an effort to clear
the way for a six-mile stretch of Super II

highway between Darwin and Alexander
Township Road 68,just north of Shade.
William Stanforth, Ohio Department
of Transportation project engineer, said
crews for Smith and Johnson Construction Co. are busy with the first of two
phases that will ultimately link Athens
and Darwin with a limited access twolane highway constructed on a four-lane
right-of-way.
ODOT' plans to build the additional

two lanes in the future.
"Everything is moving along quite
smoothly and there have been no significant problems," said Stanforth.
"We are currently involved in a blasting operation that requires the removal
of massive boulders and tons of soil;' he
added.
"We'll continue our earth-moving
PINH . . .

u.s. 33, A2

Look for lhe Holzer Medical Center Communily Heallh and Wellness Department allhe

7th Annual Health Fair ancl Flu Shot Glnlc
sponsored by the fv\eigs Counly Council on Aging, Inc., and
the HMC Communily Health and Wellness Department

t
LINCOLN
AMIRICAN

LUXURY

@)

9· 11 AMancl 1 ·3PM

Melg• Multlpurpo.. Senior Center In Pomeroy

Men:ury
Lll... \.1,..

IN

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Friday, Noveml,er 9

www.holzer.org

Public invited! For more information, call
992·2161

YOUR

OWN t..AN.

,.,

·I'

. '!

'.

'

�-

Pege.U•• '~

~offs .
ltwa ..... A1

however, a warning that funds
are depleted."
"lf (Trussell) needs more
money, we'll be happy to work
with him to see if we can find
additional funds within his
department's budget. If it's
there, we'D do what we can,
but I don't think it's there."
Davenport said if deputies
continue to work pa&lt;t the 14day period •peci6ed in the letter, the cornmisoionen will be
obligated to pay their wages,
but would do so by depleting
aU ofTru...,ll's other line items
firSt.
The commissionen could
also be required to borrow0
against future tax revenue.
Davenport said the budget
commission notified TrusseD in
March that cuts in ~pending
would be necessary to avoid a
year-end payroll deficit.
"We notified (frussell) that
he would be out of money in
his payroll fund by Nov. 7 if
spending continued at the current level," Davenport Silid.
"The spending has continued,
and we were close."
Deputies said that the commissioners under-appropriated
the salary fund for the department in January, and are now
unfairly passing the responsibility for the financial crunch
onto the sheriff.
"If the commissioner.; had
appropriated what we needed
to begin with, and what the
sheriff had requested when he
took office, there wouldn't be a
problem," Deputy Scott

Meigs
fnHnPageA1
Council.
In Rutland, Ralph Bale•,
Danny Davis, Marie L. Birchfield and Ralph E. Searls are
candida~ for .the four positions on Village Council.
Donna Peterson, l'dlichael R.
'{anMeter, l'!ric D. Cunningham, Eber Pickens Jr., and Jeffrey L..Bable are candidates for
Syracuse Village Council. Fo\!t
memben Will -be elected.
Lee S. ~' ia. a candlda~e
Cor Racine .Bqanl of Pubhc
Main, and R9bert E, Beeale,
Joteph L. Evant, David H.
$pincer, Henry W. Bentz and
Charlotte L. Wamtley are can·
didatea for Racine Village
CauncU, where four teat! are
open.
No candidate filed for Rutland mayor, and no candidates
filed for the CWO seats open on
the Syracuse Board of Public
Afl'ain or the open seat• on
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs.
Two members will be elected to the Meigs Local Board of
Education. Candidates are
Scott Walton, Ron Logan,
Cathy Morris, James Soulsby
and Wayne E. Davis.
In Eastern Local, where two
members will be elected to the'
board, candidates are Roger
Willford, Howard Caldwell
and J. Greg Bailey.
Three members of the
Southern Local Board of Education are to be elected, but
only two candidates, T. Ron
Cammarata and Don P. Smith,
will appear on the ballot.
Keith C. Andrews, Mabel R.

Trussell said.
Deputy Trussell said Sheriff
james Soulsby spent $380,000
on salaries last year, but the
commissioners appropriated
only $340,000 this year, crearing a deficit even before negotiated pay raises were consideted.
"This is not the sheriff's fault
under any circumstances,"
Gilkey said.
"There's never been an
administration work harder to
stay with a budget, bur the
commissioners keep curting
that budget."
'
Davenport denied that the
board has cut Tru...,u·, budget
this year, and said that saving.
in housing costs this year were
transferred to line items other
than payroll at the sheriff's
request.
Davenport said the conunissioners plan to meet with
TrusseD at their Thursday
meeting to review his budget
and to consider a remedy to
the deficit problem.
.
The fact remams, Gilkey
said, that the need for law
enforcement is greater than
ever.
"Now, at a time when citizens rely more than ever on
law enforcement, there may
not be anyone here to answer
their calls;' Gilkey said. "People
are being encouraged to be
very alert to what's happening
in the community, and to
report anything suspicious.
They are doing that, and we
want them to.
"People in the county are
going to support us, and we
want to be there for them. This
is not the time to lay off law
enforcement officen:•

Burton, Fred Davis, Charles H.
Mansfield, C. Dale Sinclair and
Stephen W Thomas are candidates for three seats on Alexander Local School District.
John Depoy is the single
candidate for the at-large seat
on the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center Board,
and f'iichael.'n Scruble .the Cl!ldidate fi:om Southern Local
School Bisttict'on the !&gt;them- '
Meig. ESC Board,.,, · &lt;
In addition to the countywide half-mill replacement
levy for the MeiS! County
Thberculo1i1 Oflice, and the
1.6-mill continuins levy far
the Me!p Board of Mental
Retardation and Dmlopmenta! DllabUltiet, a number of
township and vWase Ievie• will
be decided on The!day:
• Olive 'Ibwn1hlp, one-mill,
tlve year, renewal, cemetury
maintenance;
1 Rutland Township, onemill, tlve year, replacement,
cemetery maintenance;
1 Racine VIllage, two mills,
five years, replacement, current
expenses;
• Pomeroy Village, one mill,
five years, additional tax, maintaining and operating cemeteries;
• Rutland Village, one mill,
five years, renewal, current
expenses;
• Sutton Township, replacement, 0.4 mill for .five years,
cemetery maintenance;
~ Syracuse Village, one mill,
five years, replacement, current
expenses;
• Middleport Village, renewal, three mills, five years, current expenses;
• Letart Township, renewal,
one mill, five years, cemetery

Correction Polley
Our rflain OOII(:em in allatoriH is to bt
accurate. JC you know of an error In 1
story, call the newsroom at (740) 446·
2341 or Pomeroy: (740) 991·2155. We will
check your intormation and make 1
corrtrtion It wamntal.
Newa Departrnenls
Galli poll a

The main number Ia 446-2342.
Department extenUoos are:
Maua1111 Editor_ ... ,_,_,.,_Ext. 118
Clly I'AUtur ••___,,_,,,.,.., .. Ext. Ul
LlfestJie.-.......- ....- ......._.Ext.llO
Spurts._ ,,_.,,_, __ ............... Exl.l2l
News ................ ._........................ Ex1.119
To S.nd E-Mail

gallribune@eurekanel.com
New• Department
Pomeroy
· The main number 15 992·2155.
Department extensions are:
General Managn ..,.. ,_,.,,_,.. ExL 1101
News .:"................. _ ......._...... ExL 1102
......................... .. ................ or Ext 1106

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Company. SW!nd clau posta,e !Mid at Glillpolis,

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POSTMASTER: Send lddreu ~onution1 1o The

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MAILSUBSCRIPnONS
Inside G11l11 County

••

'

Gallia

ftm,...Al .
of a rnill in Addison and 2 mill.!
in Guyan, each for five years.
In Gallipolis, attention is
focused on the outcome of the
race for three seats on the City
Comniission, a normally placid
election heightened by controversy surrounding the commission's decision against recognizing a city workers' union
local and resignations fiom the
fire department earlier this
year.
Incumbent commissioners
Dr. Gene l'{: Abels, Robert L.
Marchi and Celestisie M. Skinner are in the running, and are
opposed by Sam Davis, Caroll
K. Snowden and Douglas J.
Wetherholt.
Gallia County Local Schools
voters are looking toward a
race for tliree seats on the
board of education.
Incumbents Mel Carter,
Fred J. Dee! and John L. Payne
are seeking reelection, and are
opposed by former board
member John P. Davis II of
Patriot and first-time candidate
Sheila A. Regan of Bidwell.
For Gallipolis Board of Education, incumbents Lynn
AngeU-Queen and Dr. Timothy V. Kyger are also seeking

reelection.

Neither

Harrison
Margaret
Adkins, Delbart Cisco, Randy
L. Cox, Carl Uoyd Randolph
and Kmneth Swain.
Huntington -James Allen
Casto, Jessie J. Collins, Clyde T.
Donahue, Jeffrey A. Harder,
Lawson McCoy, Bill L. Pettie,
Roger Shadwick and Melvin
L. Brown.
Morgan - Clarence R.
Hash, Ronald Justus, Samuel
0. Kemper and Edward

are

opposed.
Terry A. Halley is running
unopposed for District 4 in
Gallia County on the GalliaVinton Educational Service
Center Governing B'oard.
Stephen D. Saunders and
Penny Justice are vying for the
District 6 seat on the board,
also representing Gallia.
Voten in all t 5 townships
will select two trustees, with
several townships boasting
multiple candidate&lt;!. They
. include:
Addison Ed Clonch,
Robert Rothgeb and Fred F.
Burnett.
Cheshire - William E.
Curfinan Jr., Denver 0 . Curtis;
Wayne W Oxyer, J.D. Taylor
and Michael R. Conkle.
Clay - Paul D. Porrer, Ray
Slone and jerry L. Haner.
Gallipolis - Gary T. Bane,
Clyde D. Burnett and Jess
Davis.
Green - Lewis R. Miller,
Tom Pasquale, Tom F. Woodward and Lonnie Boggs.
Greenfield - Henry M.
Bartels, Charles E. Chambers
Jr., Robert E. Miller, Roy
McCarty, James Mac Potter,
Henry D. Sheline and Daniel
A. Taylor.
Guyan - Roy L. Jones,
Manvil C. Swain, Roger A.
Watson and Tim D. Caldwell.

Mullins.

In Gallia's five villages, lll&gt;ters
will choose no more than fo.ur
candidates fur council seo:ts.
These include:
CenterVille - Virginia Ann
Daniels, Eugene T .. Layron,
Connie J. Miller and Robert
H. Terry.
Cheshire - Herbert Lee
Clarke, Rmuld L. Hanunond,
John S. fbrrison, Rhonda l.
Lucas and James R . Neal. .
Crown City - l':lul Dillon,
Keith Dunt, Shawn Halley,
Mike Klinger and Vickie L.

Ohio - Todd M. Bowen,
.
Harold Wayne Brumfield, u~.
Vinton
Charles
Conley,
Mike Daines, Raymond E.
Gibson, James D. Green, Frank .Flem Meade and ~uel G.
Mooney, Herman Ray Simms Sowards Jr.
Rio Grande - Robert W
and Steven T. Watson.
Allen,
Robert C. Blue, Diaie
Petry -James C. Blair, Jim
L. Duke, Larty A. Fallon, Dou- Neff Clark, Stephanie Kernptr,
glas E. Miller and Jeffiey A. Michelle L. Miller, Mark E.
Pope; for an unexpired term Neal II and Patty Weatherholt.
In Centerville, David W.
ending Dec. 31, 2003, Betty
House
is running tQ fill 4n
Davies and Mark Hager.
Raccoon - Carlos C. Cald- unexpired term as clerk. Lana].
well, John Coffee and Dwight Lane is also on the ballot to fill
the reJllaiuder of an unexpired·
Rees.
term
as Crown City's clerk,
Springfield -. James A.
Thevenir, Holzer Gregory, and Curtis Clark is the sole
candidate for a sea~ on Rio
Mike Hager and Frank Kllby.
Walnut - Barbara Bolyard. Grande's Board of Public •
Wanda .Hively and Richard L. Affairs.
Ingles.

VOTE FOR

.Addison Township Tnu&amp;tee

Fred F. Burnett:
Honest &amp; Able To Continue
Smart Township Government
Your Vote Will Be Greatly Appreciated
Palcl (pr 11r """'dldate, 890 Ban!ett Road, Qalllpoll8, Olda

vote For

Tom Woodward
Green Township

MOVING DIRT - Dump trucks, dozers and shovels continue
removing enormous sections of earth during construction on
the first phase of the relocation of U.S. 33 between oa·rwin
and Athens. (Tony M. Leach photo)

u.s~

TRUSTEE
Your full tline trustee
Your vote will be greatty appreciated

33

framPapAl
efforts until harsher we~ther
sets in. When that happens, we
will besin to focus our attention on other aapects of the
project," he aaid.
Stanforth talc! the completion date for the project's tlrat
phue !1 June 2004, ancl that
the aecond phase waa recently
told to Smith and Johnson.
Cost of the tlnt phase ia
$33.3 ·million.
The Athen1-Darwin project
is part of the larger "Capital
which
also
Corridor,"
includes the Ravenswood
Connector and bypasses at
Nelsonville and Lancaster.
Construction at Lancaster
and the Ravenswood Connector are also under way.

IJ Wtt ks...................................................... j 17J0

26 WNk s....................................................... SS3.82
S1 Weeks....................................................$105.56
Rites Outside G•llll C&lt;Nnt)'
13 ·Wtek11..................................... ...............$29.2S
26 Weela....................................................... S56.68
52 W«U...............................
.. .. $109.72

•

at

PapA3
No'llnllw4,2MI

'. Officials scramble to protect'transportation links from terrorists
WASHINGTON (AP) - From
the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco to the Holland Thnnel in New
York, st3te officials - sctUnbling to
!"crease security -on a vulner.able
national highway system eYen as they
acknowledge they can't ~feguard
'eiiUY structure.
', "It is very hard to absolutely protect
Mrytbing;• said Tony Kane, director
?f engineering and technical services

·u.s.
I'

foe the American AssOCiation of State western University's Transportation
Highway and Transportation Officials. Center. "That's- important to the
"What we're trying to do a get to ... American economy and the Amerithe mCMt critical structures."
can society.""
Oflicials and '?'J&gt;C'rts worry about
Transportation officials - trying to
'
damage to the integrity
of the trans- strike a balance between security and
portation system that a major strike keeping the traffic !lowing. Hourlong
on any of scores of bridges or tunnels backups resulted when the Port
could.cause.
. Authority of New York and New Jer"They represent mobility," said sey started checking every truck
Aaron GeDman, a professor a~ North- entering the Lincoln Tunnel ~ the

pound front
of Kabul hard

~ · DEH

MESKIN,
U.S. jets
-pounded · the liont north of
:Xabu) night and day S:iturday,
·elating opposition commanders, who said the bombardment was doing just what it
should: weaken Taliban
,defenses of the capital.
· Opposition forces, meanwhile, claimed to be gaining
~und at Afghanistan's other
icey fi:ont, outside the Talibanheld northern stronghold of
:Mazar-e-Shatif.
; And in Washington, the
:Pentagon confirmed · it had
'ost an unmanned Predator EQUIPMENT CHECK - A pilot checks his Harrier jet on the
deck of the USS Pelellu in the Arabian Sea Saturday.
&gt;PY plane aver Afghanistan. It flight
(AP Photo/Nicholas Kamm, pool)
~enied the Taliban had
~owned either the drone or a
Mir Rahman, deputy ning fOrward. He is not afulid
U.S. helicopter rhat went brigade commander at the to lose his life. He knows he
down overnight, blaming bad fi:ont-line Bagram district, said will go to heaven;' jamal said
weather in both incidents.
·the aintrikes have "weakened in Kabul.
:At the fiont outside Kabul, the Taliban;• taking out 40
Anti-Taliban troops say they
lJ.S. jets started th.e latest in artillery pieces and t 0 tanks in . hope to march on Kabul in
~ of powerful strikes befOre the past week.
the few weeks left before
~ and kept up into the .
But Rahman said even heaVy ~now comes.
~ Opposition forces said the harsher U.S. attacks were
Wakeel, · the 19-year-old
jea hit Taliban tanks and a Tal· needed against what opposi- fighter, said Saturday he and
illan headquarteR village on a lion forces say is a reinforced his comrades were given new
hillside overlooKing the nliban front line outside guns the previous day, and
shoma!i PWn.
Kabul. The Taliban have sent told to keep them handy for
:"Don't be afraid!" opposi- in about 1,100 reinfurtements any call to fight. "We're 100
tion 6gbter Agba Shirin cried in recent days. and. hidden. " percent ready;'Wakeel said.
at the roar of v.vplanes and their tanks in pits, Rahmait
The northern alliance. lost
tie thud of · bombs at the said.
Kabul, and power, to the Talfibnt. "'The 'Thliban will be
Another commander,Abdul iban in 1996. Fighting two
riinning soon, with their tut- Ralmun, said he had inter- yean Iacer deprived them of
lins under theit arms."
cepted Talibait radio commu- their northern base, Mazar·e:"It is good that God has nications indicating 600 addi- Sharif, and cut key supply
sent this fate to the Taliban:' tiona! Arab and Pakistani lines fi:om neighboring
~d another fighter, 19-year- fighters had taken up hiding Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
c4d Abdul Wakeel.
places in tunnels behind the · Saturday,
opposition
: opposition force leaden fiont lines in the Qarabagh spokesman Nadeem Ashraf
~d praise SatUrday for the district.
claimed northern alliance
intensifying U.S. air strikes - · Despite the heavy air fighters ·had taken control of
.Pr weeks of criticizing what assaults, Taliban Information Agopruk district, moving
had been more selective U.S. Minister Qatradullah Jamal them to within 30 miles
insisted that Taliban morale southwest of Mazar-e-Sharif ·
bOmbing.
&gt;'We are happy. It is vety remained high at the fionts,
Opposition
spokesman
elrective;• said Bisrnillah and that most of U.S. bombs Ashraf Nadeem said U.S. jets'
Khan, an oppoSition com- were hitting behind 'Thliban mounted "continuous bomb$nder coordinating fOrces ·at lines.
ing" Saturday in Samangan
"But even if a Taliban dies, province 40 miles east of
tfro pn:Mnces in the area of
his friend is behind him run- Mazar-e-Sharif
t:Oe Kabul fiont.

..Atghanistan (AP) -

Sept. t t attackS.
"We're trying the best we can to
balance the needs of the tra\'ding
public with ·the need to have
enhanced security;' Pott Authority
spokesman Steve Coleman said.
Officials also say they need help to
stop an attack before it happens.
'If we don't haw all those capabilities, we are rapidly developing them:•
said Robert Gallamore, director, of the

NEW YORK (AP) -The
most serious charges were.
dropped Saturday against 10
firefighters who tangled with
police as they protested at the
World Trade Center disaster
site about changes in the handling of the recovery effort.
Hundreds of firefighters
marched past police manning
barricades around ground zero
on Friday, some scuftling with
'the officers, in a protest of the
mayor's decision to scale back
. the number of people searching for victims in the wreckage
of the trade center.
Once inside the cordoned
off area, the firefighter.; held a
moment of silence. Kevin Gallagher, president of the Uniformed Firefighter.;' Association, spoke to the crowd fiom
atop a muddy bulldozer decorated with an American tlag.
"Let's bring our brothers
back to our families, where
they should be;' he shouted.
The protest came after
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
announced a new poky limiting the number of firefighten
working at the site to 25 at a
time. He s:iid the high number
of workers digging aniid heavy
equiprpent had become
increasingly dangerous.
"We were given very, very
strong advice that this site was
a disaster waiting to ~ppen;•
Giuliani ·said. "Our concern
has to be for the lives of the
people who are working there
now.
But firefighters said more
than 200 of their comrades are
still buried in the rubble and
they want enough firefighters
on the scene to recover the
remains and treat them with
dignity.
"We don't want to find .
remains in the Fresh Kills landfill," said Capt. Peter Gorman,
president of the Unifo'tmed
Fire Officers Association,
speaking at a news conference.

rsu-piimli'
1
.Little p~ss 1n
• search for source .car
I
h
was •
4»1 anthrax that
N.y. woman ;.~,~~;:sCiJJI

J&gt;!~ttern

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PEAL If rou HAVE"'T QIV'" DO" WOOP
A CHA"CEI ..• TH&amp; AIISWER IS
rout&gt;OH'Tr

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• ...,,.,.., ...,,.AUTOMOTIVE
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RSIJ'If.SOIJIII8AF~ .. wndtl•tiii.C.

.

'

•

.

of previous cases. But
federal health experts warned
the nation to expect more disease cases during the anthraxliy-mail crisis.
. : In Washington, Treasury
Department officials isolated a
suspicious letter and sent It for
testing. The letter bore the
same Trenton, NJ., postmark as
anthrax-laced mail delivered in
New York and Washington.
Officials said the address was

...
r,

•
"

appropriate precautions. Look
carefully at your mail .before
.ng 1·t • tell your doctor 1f
0 peru
you believe you may have been
exposed to anthrax," he said.
Ahthrax tests at the Morgan
Processing and Di•tribution
Center in Manhattan found
evidence of bacteria spores on
six mail-sorting machines and
in a dust-removing machine.
The plant processes 12.5 million pieces of mail daily. Officials of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention recommended 60-day courses of
antibiotics 'for some worken at
the mail center.
In Kansas City, the Stamp
Fulfillment Center was closed
after the CDC confirmed discovery of two microscopic
patches of anthrax spores on a
trash container.

..••••••••

••••••••111~1111111111

RE-ELECT

JERRY L. HANER
FOR

CLAY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE APPRECIATED
Paid For By The Candidate
117M St. Rt. 75, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

..

.

..

"You wouldn'i excavate a
cemetery or sacred burial
ground like that. Why would
you do that with 5,000 citizens
of this country buried down
th ere.)"
.
Friday's scene was a sharp
change fi:om the mood of
unity and cooperation that the
city had seen since Sept. 1 t,
with police and firefighters
working shoulder to shoulder
and everyone rallying around
Giuliani and the authorities.
five police officers were
injured during the protest,
Commissioner Bernard Kerik
said.

--=-

114 Carat tdw•

$295

.

Ask about our Rrl'ilnl
&amp; Gift ideas for your
wtddblg fH1111 We cart latlp make
ceremony artd rect!ption
complete.

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•

: WASHINGTON (AP) also handwritten. Similar
New patches of anthrax spores envelopes were recovered fiom
were confirmed at widely sep- Sen. Tom Daschle's office in
~ted postal facilities - sort- Washington and from Tom
iftg machines in New York Brokaw's office at NBC.
C:ity and a stamp store in
"We have no indication that
~ City, Mo. and the it is dangerous in any way. but
!(umber of anthrax infections we're having it tested;' said
ftom bioterrorism rose to t 7.
Treasury Department spokes: Investigaton reported little woman Michele Davis, ·
pogress Friday in efforts to
President 'Bush, in his .most.
e:ocplain how a New York hos- extensive public comments on
p,ital worker, unconnected anthrax to date, called the cases
vrith mail-handling activities, "a second wave of terrorist
cOntracted respiratory anthrax, attacks upon our country."
0. disease , requiting contact hi his weekly radio address,
With a large number of spores. he said the government is
Kathy T. Nguyen died of the working to swiftly test post
dise.S. this week.
offices and other sites for
: A previously unexplained . spores and reassured Americans
~ew Jersey case~ of skin that the odds of receiving a
a)lthrax was linked to a mail piece of tainted mail are "very
box, which officials said was "a low:•
gpod sign" because it fit the
"But still, people should take

Northwestern center. "By the time a
specific threat is determined, we will
haw $1.11'prisingly good capabilities to
address them.''
The nation's vital structures spanning aver or Wider riven haw attracted terrorists before. In October 1995,
10 Mwlims Wl!nl convicted of a plot
to blow up the George Washington
Bridge and the Holland and Lincoln
tunnels in New York.

Firefighters arrested
following protest ·

'

Blue Devils
looking for
bus donations
GALLIPOLIS Several
Blue Devil football fans are
trying to raise money to charter a bus to take the team to
the Division III, Region 11
semifinals.
Early repo~ts indicate the ·
game will be played in either
Athens or Lancaster.
Attorney Brent Saunders
estimates the cost to charter a
bus at $700. If you would like
to pitch in, contact Saunders at
446-1652 or 446-1119.
Saunden also said any donations to help charter a bus to
take fans to the game w~uld be
.appreciated.

.

-.iun:b~~t t!inus·
. jeutiacel

maintenance.

6unbap -Gtimtf 6entinel
Reader Services

Sunday, November 4, 2001

Galllpolla, Ohio -

Vote For

John P.
Davis II

I HANDWASH I Gallia County School Board
I
I
Paid For By Candidate John P. Davis,
I EutomAvenue,Galllpoiii,Oblo
I 435 Richard
(A&lt;noa from McDonaldo)
Rosd, Patriot, OH 45658, (740) 379-2185
.
(740) 441·9:193
L _ ==1o1.suN~ _ .J
WITH couPoN

1---------------------l

What's happened to Fair &amp; Open
Government in Gallipolis?
I~A.(~'I':

Citizens are no longer allowed to speak at public
City meetings without requesting permission in
¥atlWK.
.
The City Administration no longer recognizes the
right of City workers to have a union.

J1JlC'I': The City Manager abolished the City workers'

union because we are "no longer a citY," yet his
own budget gives him an extra $3,000 per year to
be the "City Health Commissioner."
J1J.l.C'I': The Gallipolis City Manager makes $65,000 per

year; that's more than, the Mayor of Huntington,
West Virginia, a city 10 times larger than ours.
It's time to bring back Fairness and Fiscal Responsibility
to City Government. On Tuesday, November 6th, vote for

Marchi, Snowden, Wetherholt
for the Gallipolis City Commission.
Not authorized by any candidate or an)' candid•te committee.
Paid for by Ohio AFSCME United , Ron Malone, Treaaurer, 6110$ Oak Creek Drive, Columbu1, OH 43:129

�•

PageA4

Opinion

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Galllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio

Point Plaaaant, W.Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Charlea W. Govey
Publisher
Lllny&amp;oyer

.Advenlelng Marwger

Dlllne K8y Hill
Controller

lMkrt toG dl.r ..,_.,.. wfta.w. .,.9 ~ H kt• ,._ J(JJI ..,._ AllldUn
... 111bj«f,. Militt, . . ..,., . . . . . •11411tt1Wt llllllnl• ~ ldqNHu ........
No •IUlpft lmns WI H l*tiWirl lAtins 1'"'-lil N ill pDtl 111$, IIMN:u'-1

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,...,.U., Co. '!r ~ ~ •
I'JJIJIMwU•IUJid

.u,

NATIONAL VIEW

US., UN, have opportunity
to stabilize Afghanistan
• The Clarion-Ledger, Jack•on, Miss., 011 the Afglla11
dilemma: News of intensified U.S. bombing north of the
Mghanistan capital of Kabul poses the question: What. if Kabul
falls to the Northern Alliance's anti-Tali ban forces?
Since the U.S. attacks began Oct. 7, neither the alliance nor
America has acknowledged any pact.
The alliance doesn't claim U.S. allegiance because it doesn't
want to be seen as being propped up by an outside force;
America hasn't because in some respects the alliance is as questionable as the Tali ban (including allegations of civil rights violations, terrorism and drug sales).
B.och the alliance (composed of independent war lords with
no governing authority) and America, though, find themselves
together on one issue: both target the Tali ban.
Some have wondered if the alliance takes Kabul if there
would be any difference for the people of Afghanistan.
Here is where the United Nations could play a key role ....
If the alliance takes Kabul, there could be an opportunity for
the United Nations to step in with a peace-keeping force to
usher in a more representative, stable goVernment.
Although President Bush has rejected "nation building;' as he
calls ii;last week the State Department's Richard Haass met in
Rome with Mohammad Zahir Shah, 86, the king deposed in
1974, reportedly to discuss returning.
The war in Mghanistan is a long way from being resolved,
particularly the focus of the campaign: eradicating those·
responsible for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
But it is possible that in addition co removing terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden, a better situation for the people of
Mghanistan will result.

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Nov. 4, the 308th day of 2001. There are 57
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in His~ry:
On Nov. 4, 1979, the Iranian hostage crisis began as militants
stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. For some of the hostages, it
was the sl:art of 444 days of captivity.
On this date:
In 1842, Abraham Lincoln married Mary Todd in Springfield,

Ill.
In 1880, the first cash register was patented by James and John
Ritty of Dayton, Ohio.
In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleveland was elected to his first
term as president, defeating Republican James G. Blaine.
In '1922, the entrance to King Tutankhan1en's tomb was discovered
in Egypt.
•
In 1939, the United States modified its neutrality stance in
World War II, allowing "cash and carry" purchases of arms by bel·
. • IigerenL~. a policy favoring Britain and France.
In 1942, during World War II, Axis forces retreated from El
Alamein in North Africa in a major victory for British forces commanded
by Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery.
•
•
In 1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president, defeating
•
Democrat Adlai Stevenson.
·
In 1956, Soviet troops moved in tu crush the Hungarian Revolution.
In 1980, Ronald Reagan won the White House as he defeated
President Carter by a strong margin. ·
In 1995, Israeli Prime Miriister Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated
by a right-wing Israeli minutes after attending a festive peace rally.
Ten yeats ago: Ronald Reagan opened his presidential library in
Simi Valley, Calif., with a dedication ceremony attended by President Bush and former presidents Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford and
Richard. Ni.xon - the first-eYer gathering of five U.S. chief executives.
Five years a!!:o: On the last day of campaigning before Election
Day, Pre.sident Clinton appealed for a second term by taking credit for a revived economy, wl1ile Republican Bob Dole warned of
mounting Clinton ethical questions.
. One year ago: Yugoslavia's parliament approved the country's
first conmmnist-free govermnent in more chan half a c&lt;&gt;ntury.
President Clinton vetoed a bill chat would have criminalized the
leaking of government secrets.
Today's Birthdays: Former CBS news anchorman .Walter
Cronkite is 85. Actor Art Carney is 83. Actress. Doris Roberts is
·11. Actress Loretta Swit is 64. Rhythm-and-blues singer H~rry
Elston (Friend~ of Distinction) is63. Blues singer Dclb~rt McClin- .
ton is 61. First Lady Laura Bush is 55. Actress Markie Post is 51.
Pianist Yanni is 47. Rock singer-musician Chris Difford (Squeeze)
is 47. Country singer Kim Forester (The Forester Sisters) is 41.
Actor Ralph Macchio is 40. Actor Matthew McConaughey is 32.
Rapper-producer Puff Daddy (Sean "PuffY" Combs) is 32.
Rhyihm-a nd-blues singer Shawn Rivera (Az Yet) is 30.
Thought for Today: "I could prove God statistically. Take the
human body alone- the chances that all the functions of an jndividual woui&lt;Jjust happen is a statistical monstrosity:'- GeQrge H .
Gallup, American pollster (1901-1984).

.

Appreciation voiced
Dear Editor:
We, as members of che Gallipolis Fire
Department, are concerned about the
misinformation that has been distributed to the voters.
According to
literature that. has been sent out, it
would appear that we have been mistreated.
Nothing could be further from the
truth. The current city commission and
the city manager have been very supportive of the department and its membership morale is at an all-time high
within the department.
Currently, a new fire truck has been
ordered and is slated for delivery sometime in April 2002. Alro, ground has
been broken on the new fire station and
work is in progress for the site preparation.
·
Thanks to the overwhelming support
of the voters in the city of Gallipolis
who have made these projects a reality
and are deeply appreciated by the
department.
Bob DonnaUy, Farrell Miller,
Kenny Cremeens, Brad Roae,
Eric Steger, Brian Wood,
Aaron Beaver, Dwain Beaver,
J im Johnson,,Kenny Deckard,
Richard Long, Rob Northup,
Mike Null
Gallipolis FD

they tried to get them removed? It
wouldn't solve the problem, but it could
help make it safer until we get a new
fairgrounds.
Now concerning the new fairgrounds, I'm having a little problem
with the $5 million price tag stuck on
it. Can't we build this thing cheaper
than that? I admit chat 1 haven't read
everything put in the paper and I
haveo't went to all of the meetings.
I do agree that ic is needed, but 1 have
too many unanswered questions to vote
yes. When we got the levy for the courthouse paid for, did it come off the sales
taX or is it still on? Correct me if I'm
wrong. but I think it is still on our sales
caxes. Is this levy going to be the same
way?
Maybe my fa~ts are wrong that I have
put in this letter and if chey are, please
correct me. But I still can't voce yes on
a S5 million price tag for a fairgrounds
and community center.
Chris Wellington
Bidwell

Urging your support

ing, sneezing, shouting, singing and
doing other things of this nature.
Anyone can breathe these germs into
their lungs. Many people have the TB
germ in their bodies, but their immune
system keeps the germ trapped. Sometimes, wben in a weakened condition,
for one reason or another, the germ can
break away and you have the tuberculosis disease.
This disease not only stays in your
lungs but migrates to other organs in
your body, such as your kidneys, the
brain, the spine and lymphati~ system.
No organ is ·exempt. When diagnosed.
you must seek medical attention and
needed medication or the disease could
be fatal.
The local TB office is located in the
Multipurpose Building on Mulberry
Heights. This office gets no funding
from state or federal funds nor from the
Meigs County Health Department.
Please vote for the passage of the TB
Levy on Nov. 6, or Meigs County will
once again lose more health care,
because this office will not have funds
with which to operate.
Maxine Little
Middleport

Dear Editor:
We are writing to urge the people of
Meigs County to support the one-half
mill.,..
• .8 . 1evy on ,~...~ov. 6 .
Two letters have been recently pubDear Editor:
. lished 'that, for whatever reason,
With the upcoming election upon us,
attempted to link the services provided I feel that we have too much political
by the Tuberculosis Clinic to the Meigs maneuvering · from one family in ·the
County Health Departmeiu. These let- Meigs Local Schools.
ters grossly misrepresented the facts and
At present, within Meigs High
we
feel
the
record
should
be
set
straight.
School,
we have five employees from
Dear Editor:
We are trying. to make a decision There is absolutely no connection the same family. Still another member is
about how to vote in the booth this between the two previously named the Athletic Boosters president, master
of ceremonies at sports banquet, and the
coming Election Day concerning the organizations.
The
Meigs
County
Tuberculosis
Clinannouncer
of the queen at our last
sales cax issues for the moving of the
fairgrounds. We are like most of you ic is a completely separate organization, homecoming game.
We now are facing the Nov. 6 ele~tion
when it affects our hard-earned dollars, governed by a separate board appointed
but we have given this issue a lot of by ihe Meigs County commissioners in which he is attempting to serve as
thought and have come to the conclu- and separately funded by a one-half mill another family member within the
sion that we must support it for several levy first passed by the Meigs County school and is running for a board memvoters many years ago.
· ber position. One position of the school
reasons.
There is still much to be done in the board is already filled by none other
We have been involved in 4"H and
area
of tuberculosis within the county. than his son-in-law. For lack of a better
FFA for 35 years as members, advisors,
spectators, board members, parents and TB is not totally eradicated, but only word, or maybe. it is the best word, shaD
grandparents. We know that these orga- controlled by early detection through we call this attempted arrangement
nizations have meant a lot to our fami- skin testing and other services provided tacky? ·
by the clinic.
.
In Webster's Dictionary, "democracy"
ly and will for years to come.
We feel the actions or deeds of one is defined as "a form of government in
The one thing that we do fear, and
group
should not affect the funding of which the supreme power is vested in
have for years, is what would happen if
we ever have the rriisforrune of seeing a another, anymore than yilu would want the people and exercised directly by
the actions of another individual work- them or by their elected agents under a
storm during the fair and what tragedy
would occur. We are afraid we might ing on another job to affect you finan- free electoral system."
Nepotism - favoritism for family
suffer the loss of many wonderfitl pro-• cial income.
If
you
are
satisfied
by
the
.many
free
members - I feel, in many ways, many
jects, but more terrifying could be the
services
the
clinic
has
provided
over
the
of which have not been addressed, charloss of friends and family members.
years,
then
please
do
not
let
these
seracterizes
our current situation and is not
·. We are sure there are many of you
vices
go
the
way
of
so
many
other
bensynonymous with democracy.
have who have witnessed the flooding
eficial things we have lost for lack of
Please remember this when voting for
chat has happened many rimes at the
support.
our school board members and let's
fairgrounds, and are aware of what a
lloyd and Anna Blackwood make this more of a democracy as
scary event this would be if it happened
Pomeroy opposed to a family reunion.
during the fair.
Barbara Williams
It is just a matter of time until our
Middleport
luck runs out, and this tragedy happens.
We feel ihis would probably put an end
Dear Editor:
to 'a great tradition with many years of
My name is Kathy .Cumings. The
hard work and loyal devotion pf many
Meigs
County Tuberculosis Office was
Dear Editor:
volunteers. ·We strongly feel that if this
proposal does not pass this election, that practically home to me for nearly 18 . Mr. Buckley states it's the finishing
it will take a disaster to make the people years, as I had the fortunate opportuni- . touch, the icing on the cake if they get
pull together and support what it takes ty to·work there. Throughout that time, their new building. Well, if they and the
I m~t so many residents of Meigs Coun- others (with !~vies on the ballot) get
to move the fairgrounds.
Let's not wait for a tragedy to hap- ty and got to know many of our patients what they want, th·e families of Meigs
County won't have a cake.
pen, and then say we "could have or well.
The free services the office provides
I can't believe they want to burden
should have" prevented this when we
have the opportunity to prevent it now. helps so many people who otherwise people of Meigs Local for 20 years with
The moving of the fairgrounds will would not be able to obtain the much- a 2.67-mill bond issue, not to mention
benefit the community in many ways needed health care to fight TB. The TD the..others who want money.
besides the fair. It will allow a place to office provides free chest X-rays, lab and · With unemployment at almost 10 ·
hold many other special events and medi~ation to its patients. In my years of percent, the mines closing and a large
attract business and growth opportuni. workmg at the TB office, I have seen portion of residents on Social Security,
many times when the patient's medica- some of which has $300 in medication
ties to Gallia County and Gallipolis .
lf you look at the cost to the average tion bill alone was close to $500 a bills, property owners' don't have an
. endless supply of money. We just get by
family, it is very minimal, ac 25 cents per month.
The
TB
Office
operates
solely
on
- most are making payments on their
$100.We think this is a small investment
to give our children and grandchildren money from the TB levy. Many people homes, raising families.
Have you ever heard of tightening
the opportunity to be involved in good m Me1gs County are under the op1mon
organizations like 4-H, FFA and Scouts. that the TB office is part of the Meigs your belt? 1 am sure mos.t local school
We would like to challenge ·anyone County Health Department, which is and government employees aren't hurtwho wants to improve growth opportu- not the case. The TB offic~ has operated ing because they have insurance and
nities for our county and city, and who solely from its own levy since the early never had to pay $6.50 for .~ Cipro
' ·
have or has had any connection with 1950s, and has 1ts own board, not the tablet.
Believe me, they haven't told you that
the fair, and youth of Gallia Cotmty, to health .department bo~rd, and the TB
go to the polls and vote in support of office IS not affiliated m any way With with state permission, they can put an
this worthwhile, and long overdue pro~ the recent smokmg ban that was income tax on · everyone in the school
approved by the Board of Health . .
district, not just property owners.
ject.
I
ask
that
you
support
the
Metgs
My son lives in a county where it's in
Wayne and Jane Jividen
Mark and Dreama Jividen County Tuberculosis levy on Nov. 6. I effect and even though he is retired, he
have seen the m~ny services the TB had to pay almost $300 income tax to
Gallipolis
Office provtdes to Me1gs County reS!- the school. Is that our next big surprise?
dents and can assure you that they will
We have a much worse problem with
·be really miSsed.
our health care since our hospital was
On Nov. 6, please support the Tuber- bungled and given away. If we didn't
Dear Editor:
.
culosiS levy.
have EMS, we would have nothing. Our
I have been hearing a lot about the
Kathy Cumings concerns should be for them, the fire
new fairgrounds on a local radio station.
SyractiSe department and health .
It sounds to me like they &lt;1re trying to
I would like to see our commissioners
scare a yes vote out of me by talking
working on trying to get our hospital
about flooding all the · time and how
back.
dangerous it is when it rains.
In the
The building would benefit only a
early '80s, a hydrology study was done
Dear Editor:
few while health care would be for all
and the two culverts behind Fruth's
TB, short for tuberculosis. 1 had this who don't have other means. I am lucky
Pharmacy were a b9ttleneck and a large disease back .in the 1960s, and it was to have insurance covering me. Chilcontributing factor in th.e flash flooding sure a scary disease for me my husband dren don't need to be deprived at home
and our two young sons. TB is spread by for a building.
of the fairgrounds. :
If the fair board members didn't tiny germs that can float in the air and
Dorothy Rowlands
know, they should; have. Why have.n 't may be sprayed into the air by co ughPomeroy

Jury acquits white officer
on Charge in custody deall1
CINCINNATI (AP) - A jury on Friday
cleared a white police officer of charges that he
a.&lt;saulted a black man who died while in custody.
Juran deliberated two hours before acquitting officer Patrick Caton of a misdemeanor
assault charge in the death of Roger Owensby
Jr. last November.
It was the third acquittal in two recent cases
involving white officers in the deaths of black
men.
Caton, 35, who had faced up to six months
in jail if convicted, was the second officer
charged in Owensby's death.
On Tuesday. a jury acquitted offic.er Robert
Jorg of misdemeanor assault and was unable to
reach a verdict on a felony charge of involuntary manslaughter, resulting in a mistrial.
- Hamilton County Prosecutor Michael Allen
said he does not expeq to decide until next
week whether to retry Jorg on the felony.

Understands importance

No cake lc:ft

Not yet convinced

Supports levy

•

t

In September, another white officer, Stephen
Roach, was acquitted in the fatal shooting of
an unarmed black 111.111 that led to three nights
of rioting in the city in April.
"He is relieved. This has been pending for a
year," said Caron's attorney. Merlyn · Shiverdecker. "This was the first time for him to tell
his ,tory, in the courtroon1."
Tears came to Caton\; eyes, and his wife,
Christine, gave him a hug after they heard the
verdict from the eight jurors. The trial laSted
eight days.
Caton, a Cincinnati officer since 1997, has
been confined to duty at a police lot for
impounded vehicles and remains on that status.
Jorg, by contrast, has been suspended without
pay since January because he was charged with
a felony offense.
.
Owensby's parents, Brenda and Roger
Owensby Sr., left the courtroom withour
commenting to reporters.

Sunday. November 4. 2001

Cool, clear conditions
forecast for the region

Re-Elect

to 65.West wind 5 to 10 mph.
The National Weather SerSunday
night.. . Pardy
vice says a high pressure sys- cloudy. Lows 35 to 39. Northtem centered over Illinois and · west wind 5 to I0 mph.
moving toward eastern KenMonday... Mostly
sunny.
tucky will keep skies mostly Highs in the lower 50s.
dear in the region through
Monday nighc...Clear. Lows
Sunday. High and low tem- in the lower 30s.
peratures will continue to
Extended forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly
cool down:
clear.
A cold front bearing down Highs in the mid 50s.
behind the controlling high
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
pressure will move into the Lows in the mid 30s and
area by early next week, highs in ihe lower 60s.
·. bringing a few more clouds
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
and falling temperatures.
chance of showers during the
Sunrise Sunday will be at night. Lows in the upper 30s
7:04a.m.
and highs in the lower 60s.
Weather forecast:
Friday... Partly cloudy with
Sunday... Suimy
early, a chance of showers. Lows
becoming partly cloudy dur- near 40 and highs in the mid
ing the afternoon. Highs 60 50s.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Robert
Rothgeb
Addison Township
· Trustee
Experienced- Dedicated
Will continue to keep
progress ofyour
township moving
/o.rward.
Paid for by the candidate,
1500 Brick School Road,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

VOTE FOR

BUCKEYE NEWS BRIEFS

Too much power

Opportunity for growth

Page AS

Ohio

SUndlly. Nevemhr "· 2001

No bonus for

naiional NAACP officials said.

retirees

Action releases
infonnation

CLEVELAND . (AP) - A
large public pension fund is
telling more than 100,000
retirees that they won'i get
their customary "13th check"
this year.
Since 1980, !he State Teachers Retirement System has
• paid more than $700 million in
supplemental benefits checks
that arrive in mid-December.
Th~ average check is for about
$500.
This year, the poor showing
of the nation's financial markets, especially after the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, means that
check will not come.
The system's executive
llirector, Herb Dyer, said the
• fund's health is intact.

LONNIE BOGGS

spokeswoman for the Columbus post office. "It is strictly a

police officer.
The lawsuit filed Thursday in
precaution."
the 1Oth Ohio District Court
Test results are expected next of Appeals said the p&lt;&gt;lice division has repeatedly denied the
week.
newspaper's requests for the
information in the shooting
Oct. 16 of Karlos Shammar
Davis.
Police have said oflicer Bret
COLUMBUS (AP) . - A Bodell shot Davis, 26, after
former state welfare depart- Davis pulled a gun on him in a
ment director was sentenced parking lot at an apartment
on Friday " to 300 hours of complex while Bodell was
community service for having working a security detail.
•
an illegal interest in a public
contract.
Arnold Tompkiru faced up
to one year in jail and a $2,000
fine after pleading guilty in
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
September to improperly
regional
agency plans a S519
steering' state welfare contracts
to Accenture, a consulting million project to build 40
company for which he later miles of tunnels and sewen to
worked. He also pleaded guilty redhce the amount of raw
sewage going into Lake Erie.
. to violating state ethics laws.
The project announced
Judge John Bessey of
Thursday
will alleviate probFranklin County Common
Pleas Court said Tompkins will lems caused by heavy · rains
help an Ohio Supreme Court overwhelming sewer lines
committee develop a comput- before the sewage can flow to a
er system that counties could treatment plant.
"This will continue the
use to integrate infofmarion
improvements
we've seen in
collected by courts, polic~,
prosecutors and ocher legal water quality," said Betsy Yingling of the Northeast Ohio
agencies.
"It is a very difficult concept Regional Sewer District.
to achieve;• said Bessey, who is
chairman of the Task Force on
Auto- Owner&amp; lnaurance
Technology for the Court.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Young Ohio men will have
information about them forwarded directly the federal
Selective Service System under
a bill that Gov. Bob Taft signed
on Friday.
·
The law requires the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles to
send information it gathers to
the Selective Service.
The measure is designed to
help ensure that rJ'Oung
Ohioans comply witli te&lt;reral
law. Failing to register .,r
Selective Service, which provides a base of names for the
currently idle military draft,
could mean a loss of federal aid
for colleges and other programs ..
~rbesatven
Th.e bill's sponsor, Republi' '
can David Goodman of Bexley, introduced the bill while a
CLEVELAND (AP)
member of the House and
George Forbes temporarily promoted ic in the Senate after
was reinstated as president of his appointment to that chamthe Cleveland branch of the ber last month. ·
NAACP after a judge issued a
partial ruling in a lawsuit
brought by the local unit of the
civil rights organization.
Cuyahoga County ComCOLUMBUS (AP) - The
mon Pleas Judge Richard J.
city's
main post office was
McMonagle granted a request
Friday for an order putting checked for anthrax on Friday.
Forbes back in charge of tile the first of four distribution
branch at least until Monday, centers in Ohio to be examwhen another hearing is · ined as part of a random,
COLUMBUS (AP) -The
nationwide test of postal facili•
scheduled.
Columbus
Dispatch has sued
The national NAACP board ties.
cowe have no reason to the city to obtain the names
ou;ted Forbes and some of the
branch's board members for believe anything will be and statements of wimesses to a
..not attending a mandatory found;' said Melody Rurik, a fatal shooting by an off-duty
one-hour training course that
covers NAACP rules and
•
VOTE FOR
bylaws. Hundreds of NAACP
branch officials also were
- removed for the same reason.
Forbes has said he did not
FOR
attend the course because he ·
was receiving treatment for SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
prostate cancer. He did not
attend any of three sessions
Your Support Appreciated
., conducted in Ohio 'between
l'llid Fot By The Candidate
January and June or sessions
Mike
HaJet,
3391
Mt Olive Rd., Bldwell, OIMo 45614
offered in 1997 and 1999,

Court sentences

FOR

GREEN TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
HONEST &amp; EXPERIENCED
Paid For

Tompkins

l

temporary role

Post office

sautinizecl

Agency tackles.

By The candidate

Lonnie Bogga, 825 JaCkson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563'

RE-ELECT
Sutton Township Trustee .

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

Your Support Would Be Appreciated

· pollution

llfe Home Car Busln~

Newspaper sues "' ..,. -p,u , A ~ •

for records

MIKE HAGER

TttE GOLD WinG ROAD RIDER'S, CttAPTER C·Z WOULD
LIKE TO TttflnK TttE FOLLOWinG BUSinESS'S FOR

F'J&amp;~!. \'b'&amp;~~E~~m~s0,2f ~~~r~R~~ -rr~s

FUnCTIOn AnD OOR ACJCTIOn IS USED TO PURC"ASE
TOY'S AnD GIFTS FOR OCJR SEniOR"S fiT C"RISTMAS.
GENE JOHNSON
KROGER COMPANY
EASTMAN FOOD LAND
WISEMAN AGENCY
FANTASTIC SAM'S
DAILEY TIRES
BOB EVANS, RIO GRANDE
RIO GRANDE MINJ.MART
G &amp; C GROCERY
BERNADINE'S
EBLIN'S D.P.
CENTRAL SUPPLY
PARTS BARN
'
NAPA
EMPIRE
DAIRY QUEEN
AUTO ZONE
B &amp; E SHOE REPAIR
FOXES PIZZA DEN/RUTLAND
BOWMANS MEDICAL SUPPLY

KARAT PATCH
FARMER'S BANK
REMO'S
TAWNEY JEWELER'S
NORRIS DODGE
TURNPIKE FORD
CARMICHAEL FARMS&gt;
TACO BELL
JOHNSON'S MKT.
RIO FRIENDLY MART
ROGER MORGAN
CORBIN/SNYDER FURN.
, REBECCA'S
ALCOVE BOOK STORE
MITCH'S GREENHOUSE
GOLDEN CQRRAL
IMAGE'GALLERY
HARRY SIDERS,
MISS PAULA'S
HOLZER CLINIC

MOOSE LODGE
O'DELL LUMBER!fRU VALUE
FIRST STAR BANK
D &amp; L FAMILY R. V.
SMITH BUICK
BOB EVANS, RT. 7
MCDONALDS
KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
SOUTHEASTERN EQUIPMENT
JIVIDEN'S TRACTOR SALES
PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
OHIO VALLEY BANK
LOROBI'S PIZZA
CAPTAIN D'S
SUBWAY
FRUTH'S/JACKSON PIKE
MCCLURES FAMILY RES.
DERIFIELD JEWELERS
WILLIS FUNERAL HOME

THfi"KS fiGfll" FO~t YOOR SUPPORT- DICK/BEY FEllY
CHfiPTE~t DlltECTOit'S PfiT &amp; MERIDITH DfiVIS, fiSS'T. C.D.'s
'.

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

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~

F '

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If

I

Sundlly, No'..mber 4, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

For area woman, this coming
Saturday is a 'day of hope'

Obituaries
Taaaac:e 1'erry' Brewer
~IDDLEPORT -Terrance Kelly "Terry" Brewer, 45, of
: Middleport, died Friday, Nowmber 2, 2001, at his midence.
·He W3S born January 31, 1956, in Mason, West ViqJind, son
of Mary "Pooch" Brewer, and the late James L. Brewer.
• He is surviwd by his mother, Mary "Pooch" Brewer of Mid. dleport; two daughters, Melissa Brewer of Middleport, and
Kellt Brewer of Chillicothe; sisters and brothers-in-law, Judi
· and Ron Cowan of Middleport, and Marybeth and Vaughan
· M1tcheU of M~ddleport; a brother, Jimmy Brewer, and special
&amp;1end, Dale R.ifDe, of Shephetdstown, West Virginia; nephrws,
Ryan and Sam Cowan of Hollywood, California; a niece, Bre
Mitchell of Middleport; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was pitceded in death by his father, James L. Brewer; a
brother, Michael Lee Brewer; maternal grandp:irents, Kelly and
Hazel Gilmore; paternal grandparents, Leslie and Gladys Brewer; and his step-grandmother, Pernie Brewer.
·
Graveside services will be 1 p.m. on Sunday, November 4,
2001, at R.iverview Cemetery. Officioting will be the Rev.
Mork Morrow.
There will be no calling hours. Arnngements art by FisherAcree Funeral Home In Middleport.

Stella Smith Gibson
; GALLIPOLIS -:- Stella Smith Gibson, 99, of Gallipolis, died
:Friday, November 2, 2001, at Arbors of Gallipolis.
She was born October 30, 1902, in Pike County, Kentucky,
daughter of the late Claude! Smith and Ella Casde Stnith.
She was a homemaker, and a member of the Regular Baptist
Church in Beaver, Ohio.
In addition to her porents, she was preceded in death by her
first husband, Sterling Mullins, on January 31, 1925; a son, Ear-te J. Mullins Jr.; a sister, Virgie Mullins; two brothers, Wilson
Smith and Earlie Smith; and • half-brother,John L. Bowliilg.
She married Kit Gibson on April17, 1934, in Pike County,
Kentucky, and he survives, along· with a daughter, Ethel Mae
'Potter of Michigan; a son, George Kermit Mullins of Ansted,
:West Virginia; a granddaughter raised in the home, Teresa Gail
'Mullins of Gallipolis; three half-sisters, Alpha Ratliff ofToledo,
Myrde Ratliff ofToledo, and Mary Delpha Litde ofPerrysburg;
and 15 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren and several
great-great-grandchildren.
Services will be 1 p.m. on Monday, November 5, 2001, in
Willis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Paris and Monnie Tackett
officiating. Burial will be in Ohio Valley Memory Gordens.
Friends may call ot the funeral home on Sunday, November 4,
200l,..from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Leo A. sawyers
CHESHIRE - Leo A. Sawyers, 77, of Cheshire, died Friday,
'fl'ovember 2, 2001, at his residence.
·
He was born Febl'l!•ry 4, 1924, in Huntington, West Virginia,
son of the late Granville Sawyers.and Lydia Walker Sawyers. ·
He W3S a self-employed car dealer.
He is survived by his wife, L11cille Mills Sawyers of Cheshire;
two .daughters, Sharon Elliott of Athens, and Carol Robertson
of Pomeroy; • sister an!l brother-in-law, Arleen and Tom Mee
of Detroit, Michigan; a brother-in-law, Elvin Legg of'Point
Pleasant, West Virginia; grandchildren, Kimberly Elliott of
· Colllffibus, Rex Gorslene of Columbus, Wesley Gorslene of
Mi~eport, Motthew Sawyers ofWorner Robins, Georgia; and
Amy Moore of Glouster; and greot-g;.mdchildren, Brook
Gorslene, Kaidan M111ford, Devin Mulford.. Beau Gorslene,
Tiffany Mytko, Shana Gorslene, Cheyenne Gorslene, Zack
Gorslene and Kensie Moore.
: In addition to his porents, he was preceded in death by a son,
Daryl Leo Sowyers; two sister$, Ann Legg and Ruby Riley; and
a brother, Everett Sawyers.
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, November 5, 2001, in
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport. Officiating will be
the Rev. S. Craig Furtick. B11rial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday,'
November 4, 2001, from 6-8 p.m.
Memorial contrib11tions may be made to Holzer Hospice
Meigs County Branch, 115 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769.

Hope is an expectation of
CHESAPEAKE- Elemuel'Jim" Haynes, 81, Chesapeake, something good, and for
died Friday, Nov. 2, 2001, in St. Mary's Hospital; Huntinj!ton, Melanie Arnold Daniels, Satllr- ·
day is her" day of hope:'
W.Va.
A benefit has been planned
Born Dec. 24, 1919, son of the late Christopher Columbus
1~_
;~~ ' ,.
and Sara Ann Cook Haynes, he was a retired mechonic from for Melanie, a victim of Reftex
Sympathetic Dystrophy SynHez Ward Buick, and a U.S. Army v.:te11111 ofWorld Wor II.
Surviving are a son, Walter Lee lbynes of South Carolina; a drome (RSD), at the Middledaughter, Stephanie Hazinski of Huntington; two stepdaugh- port Chwch of Christ Family
COMMUNITY
ten, Laura Mae Brealtiron of Gallipolis, and Fpnces L. New- Life Center.
To raise money for her
man of Proctorville; and numerous grandchildren and greatmedical expenses, dlere will be groups and other organizagrandchildren.
He was- also preceded in deoth by his wife, Daisy Mae Schae- a craft and bake sale, a "hope" tions, even employees of the
fer Haynes; two brothers, Walter Lee and Rufus Hoynes; and a wolk-a-thon, and an afiemoon Meigs County Coutthouse, are
of- entertairuilent Chad Dod- filling boxes.
sister, Aossie Mae Hoynes.
.
There ore three categories
son,
Dona Johnson, the church
Services Will be 2 p.m. Sunday in H.U Funeral Home, Proctorville, with Pastor Sammy Cook officiating. Burial will be in choir, and Amy Perrin will be for boys and girb- 2 to 4 yeor
olds, 5 to 9 year olds, and 10 to
Rome Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sun- among the enteitainen.
A longtime friend, S11san 14 yeor olds. The boxes can be
day, one hour prior to services.
Cochran of Cottageville, cardboard or pbstic, can be
W.Va., who has helped plan the wrapped or not, but must be
event called to ask that we labeled as to age group and
VINTON - Jirntnie Gerit Parker, 54, Vinton, died Friday, invite you to 'join the fun and gender. It is also requested that
$5 be sent ;Uong to cOver ship- \
Nov. 2, 200 I, at his residence.
make a difference."
Born Dec. 17, 1946, in Logan, W.Va., son of the late Orville
Melanie is now in need of ping expenses.
The shoe boxe! must be at
and Honna Frazier Parker, he retired in 1988 &amp;om AS&amp;R AJu- treatment fora spinal tumor, in
minum Smelting Co., Painesville.
oddition to the constant care the collection center - . that's
S11rviving ore three sons, Jimmie Parker Jr. of Cleveland, · and medications she requires to the office at Bob's Market -·
Mike Parker of Lexington, Ky., and Jimmy Parker of Bidwell; a alleviate the severe pain and by Nov. 15. Now get packing.
daughter, Tina Parker of Dayton; eight grandchildren; and a sis- nousea ofRSD.
Tuesday is Election Day and
ter, Wanda Gunno of Cleveland.
· The da11ghter ·of Dan and
we
all need to get out and vote.
He was ·also preceded in death by four sisters and four broth- Pat Arnold and wife of Ed
If you're even thinking about
ers.
Daniels has been sick for about
going to the polls, think
not
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in McCoy-Moore F11neral 10 years now. Susan ond other
Home, Vinton. Burial will be in the Parker family cemetery friends of Melanie have decid- again.
Consider carefully these
near Vinton. Friends may call ot the funeral home from 6-8 ed it's time she had a "day of
three
issues -the 20-year,
p.m. Sunday.
·
hope."
,
If you would like to con- 2.67-tnill bond issue for a new
·
tribute to the evenc, just call sports complex at Meigs High
Kathryn Johnson at 992-5195 .SChool, an additional 1.6 tnill
MARION - Lita Lee Walter Smith, 65, Marion, died Fri- or Tina Hosken at 992-6077. continuing levy for ·Carleton '
"They'U be happy to heor from School and Meigs Industries,
4ay, Nov. 2, 2001, other residente.
and the replacement five yeor
Born April 1, 1936, daughter of the late Lewis A. and Lillian you.
half-tnill levy for operation of
E. Miller Walter, she was employed by A&amp;P Tea Co. for 21
years, and retired as an LPN from Arbors Nursing Home in
Operation Christmas Child, the Meigs Co11ntyTuberculosis
Delowore in Jonuary 2001.
a project ofS.maritan's Purse, a Clinic.
Remember, every vote
She was a 1954 graduate ofWaldo High School, and gradu- nonprofit Christian relief orgocounts
and only those who
ated from Tri-Rivers Nurses Training in 1991. She attended the nization, is in full swing in the
vote have license to complain
Church of Christ in Christian Union.
Bend orea.
it's .U over. ·
afiei
She .was also preceded in death by her husbond, Franklin H.
For several years now, Anna
(Char/em Hoif/ich is g&lt;nm~t
Smith, on Sept.1 , 1997;a brother,JornesA.Walter; and two sis- Barnitz of Mason has choired
manager
&lt;fThe Daily Smtinel in
ters, Mary Ann Yvoskis and Donna Morie Walter.
·
the collection efforts here. The
Surviving are a daughter, Lisa L. Smith ofPittsburgh, Pa.; four shoe boxes filled with gifts for Pomeruy.)
sisters, Dorlene Maurer of Central Point, Ore., Barbara Null of disodvantaged children around
Gallipolis, Ruth (Michael) Gr-iffin of Buder, and Jeanne the world have been looded
(Robert) B11rns ofWaldo; a brother, John (J11die) Walter of St. into a Bob's Morket truck and
Louis, Mo.; and several ni~ces ond nephews.
taken to Huntington for shipServices will be 11 a.m. Monday in Denzer-Farison-Hot- m~nt to the ogency.
tinger Funeral Home, Marion, with the Rev. David L. Glauner .
Last .yeor, April Smith of
• Sleep A,'nea
officiating. Burial will be .in Marion Cemetery. Friends may call Pomeroy helped her grandEquipment
at the funeral home from 2-6 p.m. S11nday,
·
· children fill boxes and found it
• Home Oxygen
Memorial contributions can be made to Church of Christ in such a satisfying thing that she's
• Portable Oxygen
Christion Union or Qu.Uty ofLife Hospice.
more involved than ever this
yeor. In fact, she wants to chal• Overnight Pulse ·
lenge every grandporent in the
Oximetry ·
Bend to porticipote. Scouting
• Hospital B4:ds

•r .....

__

•••

Uta Walter Smith

•••

BOWMAN 'S

•

Home care Month

• Wheel Chal'rs
• Bathroom Aides

REELECT

Ray Slone

24Hour ·
· Emergency Service
Medicare • Medicaid

Clay Township
Trustee

(740) 446-7283
1-800-458-6844

Your Vote Is Apprecllted
Paid lor by the c.ndldatlo Roy
Slone1106 Teono Run Ad.
Crown City, Ohio 45823

70 Pine Street,

GaiHpolis, Ohio

available
RACINE - God's Clothing Parish, an annex of the
Coopentive Parish Clothing
Shop. has winter clothing available. Th~ shop is open from 11
a.m. until 2 p.m., Tuesday
through Friday.

FIVE POINTS- Freddie J.
Sinlmons, 73, 43240 Po~
Pike, Po~, was cited for
failure to yield by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highvny Patrol following • two-car
accident Friday at the intersection of Ohio 7 and County
Road 53 (Wipple).
Troopers said Simmons
attempted to enter 7 from CR
26 (Flatwoods) at 10:25 a.m.
and collided with a cor driven
by Roland P. Lidel, 79, New
Haven, W.Va., that was northbound on 7.
Damage to both can was
moderate.

Re-Elect

To close

Endonements
made

.I

Warrant
executed

Scouts canvas

PVH granted
rate inuease

Board to meet

.

LARRY.A. FALLON

PERRY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE .

Variety show

Your Vote Support Will Be Appreciated

Ta VOlin In 1111111. LICIIIIIIriDI

P11n dinner

.:Snlmu,

lolrcl mlltln1

8Y KEviN KIUY

Your Vote Appreciated

TIMESSENTINEL STAFF

Paid For By The Candidate • TIL\NK YOU
. . . COUll • 127 Jlftft r.....terr ltoMI. cu.bln, Oblo 4HJO

JIM ROGERS &amp;: ASSOCIATES
r/I(QI(6/a/cft1'11-/ee.t &amp; tr4'~0.1(U .
ATHENS- LOGAN - POMEROY
Jim Rogers and Associates is pleased to

r

· announce the addition of a Licensed
· ASsociate to the Pomeroy office:

REELECT

CLYDE D. BURNETT

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

&amp;:

COUPON

'

GARY T. BANE
GALLIPOLIS TOWNSHIP 'l'RUS'l'BBS

1
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by ,
1
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1 · 131
1o
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TU.EI!DAY, NOV. IS, 2001
I
·
40) 441-1744•&amp;to4
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I Call Toll Free -800-8 5285 or an m Ita appointment
I The 1!!1• will be given by 1 Llc!nttcl Hurlnq Aid Spul11!1t. I
Anyone who hll troubll hearing dr uncllrltlndlng
I
I converlllllon If lnv!Wd to h1ve 1 fBE.E htlrlnglltl to - If
1thle problem ctn be helpedl iring thll coupon with you lor I
your FREE HE6RING TEst 1 $75.00 VIIUI.
I
I UMWA. UAW. ARMCO,·wALK·INS
AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WELCOME
..

'._1· ·,

. Will TAD: PRIDS IN TO

TOIINSHII' HIGIIWAY SYSTJ:II
WI: HAVII PROVIDBD 8IITOW »lD ICS UIIOVAL
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li'LBASJ: VO'l'J:
YOUR V0'1'J: OJ' COHPIDINCI APii'RICIA'l'J:D
..U

Melissa was born and raised In Melg_s County and
attended Meigs High School and Rio Grande College. She
has been married to John Collins for the past three years and
they have a little girl, Elizabeth, who Is two. Both John and
Melissa are Farm Bureau members and are local resldenls.
Melissa Is currently available at the ·Pomeroy omce on
Hiland Rd. to handle all of your Insurance needs. Please feel
free to stop by and see Melissa and welcome her to the
Nationwide family.

rw br' u.. oatidal• eur r • .._ ,.oa .. ~. . . .a.
lall~ll•.

.

MeUm R. Collins

~,.

• •• ,1

phone number on the back of
the photo and send to: Point .
Pleasant Register Photo Con:
test, 200 Main St., Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Ali entries
must be received no later than
4 p.m., Friday.
This year, the Register is also
giving residents the opportunity to share their birthdays and
anni.ersaries on the calendor.

Benefit event

with Gallipolis folloV\fing tal

Cheshire Township
TRUSTEE

fi&gt;-

Ru dink

FOP extends benefit packa

.MIKE CONKLE

~

Calendar pldo
cleldUne nears

ELECT

COLUMBUS (AP) the b11dget plan if the \toliday is
Gallla County commissioners recently proclaimed November
House Speoker Larry House- removed, Householder said.
holder on Friday worned Gov.
"The decision to enact this 2001 National Home Care Month. Representatives from 'Holzer
Bob Tafi that a plan to provide two-doy holidoy is backed by Home care, Holzer Hospice·and Holzer E:xtr(\ Care attended the
Issuing of the proclamation at the Gallla County Court House.
Ohioans a two-day sales tax testimony from consumers and Seated Is County Commissioner Casby "Skip" Meadows 111. who
holidoy is "non-negotiable."
business groups that also signs the official proclamation. Standing, from left, are, Sharon
. Householder announced the believe it will enco11rage Shull, RN, Patient Care cOOI'dlnator, Holzer Hospice; Kelll Tem!2)es cax holiday Monday as Ohioons to return to stores, pleton, Bereavement Ccoordlnator, Holzer Hospice; VIcki Nottingpart of the House GOP's bud- shops, malls and downtown ham, RN, clinical manager of Holzer Extra Care; Connie Carleton,
get plan. Taft's proposal ·co centers of commerce;• House- RN, BSN, director, Holzer Home Care of Holzer Medical canter;
bridge a $) .5 billion budget holder said.
and county commissioners Shirley Angel and Bill Davis. For lnfor·
deficit, released two weeks ago,
Eorlier Friday, Tafi said he is metlon about home care or hospice services, call Holzer Home
.did not include the holiday.
studying the proposal but Care -of Holzer Medical Center et 44&amp;5301; Holzer Extra Care at
• "The enactment of the sales sticking by his budget plan, . 44&amp;9560; or Holzer Hospice at 446-5074.
tax holiday for Ohio con- which does not include the
sumers is non-negotiable by concept.
House Republicans;' House"We're not toking a firm
holder said in a letter sent 'I&gt; position one way or the other,
fellow Republican nft bte except that we embrace ·our ·
Friday afternoon.
plan,"Taft said."We believe our
The House , won't 1upport plan is the best one:'

•'

Cloll•lnc

a 9.0 percent increase
cal year 2001.

GALLIPOLIS - John Gee
Black Historical Center will
present aVeterans Day program
POINT PLEASANT Nov. 10 at 1 p.m. at the center The Point Pleasant Register is
on Pine Street.
' POMEROY Meigs
looking for the dozen best
Organizers said the program photos of Mason County peoCounty Tuberculosis Office
. is dedicated to and in appreci- ple, places or evenu to be
will close at noon on Tuesday
ation of .eter:ms of all wors.
for Election Day, and re-open
placed in a special Yeor 2002
The Rev. Gene Armstrong calendar.
at 8 a.m. on Wednesday.
will be chaplain and Christian
Ali amateUr photographers
Scott is in chorge of music, and 18 and over are invited to subWe have served this
the men's chorus fiom Black- mit their best photos. Twelve
community ror over
POMEROY - Represenfork Union Baptist Church pictures will be chosen, one
- RUTLAND Leading tatives of Amercan Federation
68 years with quaUty
will present selections to the representing eoch month, to be
Creek Conservancy's District of State, County and Mllnici. saviup aad friendly
audience.
used for the calendor, which
office will be closed at noon on pal Employees Ohio CouncilS
personal service. We
Additionally.
the
center
is
will be inserted in the Regis· Tuesday. Emergencies can be and Ohio Association of Public
are still here IUld eager
open Monday and Tuesday of ter. A cover photo also will be
, handled by dialing 740-742- School Employees/AFSCME
to continue serving
this week fiom I0 a.m. until 2 selected.
_2597.
you. Come In aad see
Local 4,AFL-CIO through the
p.m., and ag:lin on Nov. 19
Photographers will hove
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
our merchaDdlle at
AFSCME United committee
from 10 a.m. until2 p.m.
their photo displayed under the
County
Health
Department
~ Advisory
great saviup on.••
have endorsed James Soulsby
chosen month, as well as their
and Cathy Morris as candidates will offer an inlluenzo vaCcinaname and town. For example,
Watches
, RACINE - T11ppers Plains- for Meigs Local Board of Edu- tiQn clinic at Gallia County
Januory's
calendor
photo
might
Chester Water District has lift,.. cation.
14k Gold Chains
Senior Resource Center on
MERCERVILLE - A ben- be of children sledding;
.eel a boil advisory for cusMonday
from
9-11
o.m.,
not
ot
Black Hills Gold
"These candidates, we
.tomen who received a_ hand- believe, will best serve the the Gallia Co11nty Service efit sing and dinner for Bethle- August~ might be a scene &amp;om
Wedding Bands
delivered notice on · MitcheB interest of their school districts Center, as reported in Friday's hem Chun:h, off Ohio 218 on the Mason County F:lir; and
Diamond Clllllers
Road, Bowman's Run Rood, and the needs of the employees Tribune.
· Rocky Fork Road, is Nov. 10 December's tnight be of a local
starting
at
11
o.m.
at
South
farm blanketed in snow.
Eilppment Rlnp
Pine Grove Road, Salser Road, in the district," said Tony VerAccording to guidelines
Gallia
High
School.
Runners-up
also
will
be
Ohio 124 and Riefer Road.
CharmS
nell. regional director of Local issued by the Ohio DepartSpecial
singing
is
slated
by
chosen
for
each
month
artd
Results of an Oct. 31 sample 4.
ment of Health, the vaccine
Llpters 111111 IDOft!
'show water to be safe for conwill only be available to resi- New City Singers, Singen for will be published in the regular
Tawney Jewelers
swnption.
dents 65 or older and persons Christ, Logue Family. Marrum newspaper.
Fanilly.
Hormony
Grass,
BethTo
submit
photographs,
G2 Second Avenue
with chronic diseases at the
O.lllpolll, OH
and
Johnson
FornilehemTrio
write your name, oddress and
RACINE So11thern time.
The vaccine is offered at no ly.
· Jllnior Girl Scouts will canv35
Donations will be appreciathomes in Racine for food out-of-pocket expense to resi- ed. Money will be used for
VOTE FOR
donations after school on dents. Clients with Medicare building a new ch11rch.
, POMEROY -A Pomeroy Monday. Information is avail- Part B should present their
SHEILA A. REGAN
,_man was incarcerated by
card
at
the
time
of
service.
able by calling 992-2668.
FOR
,deputies bst week following
Influenza vaccine is availoble
the ·execution of seorch wor- ·
every day, 8-11 :30 o.m. and 1GALLIA COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD
rants and the seizure of mari3:30 p.m., at the health departi juana and automatic weopons.
740-446·7345
RACINE Southern ment to residents who meet
POINT 'PLEASANT Sheriff Ralph Trussell
the
above
guidelines.
For
more
Your Support W'Jil Be Apprecialed
Local Boord of Education will
The West Virginio Health Core
reported that his office
in(ormation,
call
the
nursing
"Caring
for and understanding your children"
meet in special session on Nov.
Authority has approved for
received a security a1orm call
department
at
441-2950.
Paid For sy,..,. ea.-..
12 ot 8 p.m. in the So11therri
for a home on Bunker Hill
Influenza vaccine will also be Pleasant Valley Aospitol an
Shell• A. A.n. 54 Po&lt;llr Road, llldwell, Ohio 45614
·Rood, and when deputies. High School cafeteria, to fill ·• offered at two locations this increase in its non-governvacancy on the school board
arrived, they found marijuana
week, also to those 65 or older mental average chorge per disRE-ELECT
created by a resignotion.
charge.
; under grow lights in a building
diseases:
or
with
chronic
The term of this office will
The increase will go fiom
:adjacent to the home of be through Dec. 31,2003.Any
• Thursday - Cheshire vil$5,243.25,
projected actual in
.George Hunter Jr., 42, and his resident of the Southern Local lage offices, I :30-3 p.m.
wife, Donna.
• Friday Centenary fiscaJ. yeor 2001, to $5,623.06
School
District
and
•
registered
for fiscal year 2002, a 7.24 perAfter the seorch warrant' was
voter is eligible to fill ~e TownhoiiSe, 9-10:30 a.m.
FOR
cent increase. The average
;secured, dep11ties seized the
vocancy.
charge per dischorge is com~tants and a number of
Those who wish to be conputed by dividing the total
~;including an au'toinatsi~d for the ~ancy sqopld
1" rj11e: Deputies also discov..,, s11btnit a letter of interest II! GALLIPOLIS - Gallia antount of ac11te non-gov.ern:ertd wrwillance cameras on . James Lawrence, Nperinten- Academy High School Madri- mental inpatient revenue by
&amp;
the total number of acute non"
:the property. .
gal
Variety
Show
is
Nov.
9
and
,_,,,.,C!Miill,llly!fllloo,1\1111111 lllll. l'lilolilllolllll
dent, P.O. Box 176, Racine,
governmental discharge~, and is
: A second search warnnt,
·1
0
at
8
p.m.
each
eveniniJ
in
Ohio 45771. Letten mull be in
:'obtained through 1111i1tance
GAHS
auditorium, the average amount that nonLawrence'• po11e11ion by 3 the
:&amp;om the Bureau of Alcohol,
dependlns on the outcome of' pmnmental patiena will pay ·
p.m. Frida)\
for a 1tay In the ho1pital.
;1bbacco and Flrur1111, reaulted
the GAHS football playol!i.
The hospital relU.Ceated an
:1n the diacovery of' addidollll
Tlckell are S6, and S3 for
avel'll'
charp per
harp of'
includlnllmnl Nlly
children 12 and under.
$5,709.60, an 8.89 percent
:auto1111tlc weapona,
RACINEJUclne United Preachool children are admit- lncreue over !ilcu year 2001.
11
• DurlnJ the aearch, Georp MethodlatWomen wUl have an ted &amp;ee.
11
In addition, the authority
:Hunter jr. ll'rived In a Chmo- Election Day dinner on 'IUIIapproved
an lncrllae In the
let Bluer, and allepdly day, beslnninl at 11 a.m ..
non-aovernmental
averase
attempted to tin .but wu Lunch and dinner wiU bel
charge
per
outpatient
vi1it
apprehended, TnuseU llid.
RIO GRANDE - Rio
1erved and will Include 1oup.
Loaded !irear1111 and ammu- ·sandwichet, chicken and noo-· Grande Board ofPubllc Main' from S343.26, projected actllal
nition were reprotedly al1o diet and pie. Those who with regular monthly meetins it in !ileal year 2001, to 1362.74
in liscal year 2002, a 5.67 per1
found in the vehicle.
to carry out should bring their Thesday at 6 p.m. in the Rio cent . increase. The hospital
Hunter Will charged in
G11111dCM11nicipal Building.
process.
own containen.
Meigs County Court and
The meeting is open to the requested an average charge
per o11tpatient visit of$374.14,
jailed.
public.

Offkedosed

Jimmie Gerit Parker

Householder warns Taft not
to reject sales tax holiday·

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

POMEROY Meigs
County Courthouse will close
at noon on Tuesday for Election Day.

Charlene
.liP' Hoeflich

"

L

To close

GALLIPOLIS - Contract
reopener disc11ssions between
,the city and the union repre:senting its 12 police officers
:and detective have brought an
:extension of wages and bene:fits for a two-year period.
• The action stemmed from
·discussions between City
:Manoger E.V. Clarke Jr. and
:Michael Fulks, president of
'the Fnternol Order of
Police/Ohio Labor Coul)cil
for G'a!lipolis.
"It was very productive,
0
"
very q11ick and benefical to all
concerned;' said Fulks.
;' FOP's three-year contract
, with the city was due to
: expire this year, but it and_the
:city agre~d to an extensiOn,
, with reopeners on wages and
: insurance, in light of Gallipo! lis' population shortfall in the
2000 Census.
· The extension continues
-~ ' the city's commitment in the
· ; 1998 contract on benefits and
'' woges, soid Fulks.
Fulks believes the one-to·
, one bargaining led to a swift
conclusion.
1

33105 HILAND ROAD , SUITE I • POMEROY, OHIO • 45769
PHONE: 740/992·2318 OR 888/445·9426 • FAX: 740/992-6892

"Our word is good. The
verbol agreement makes it
work;' soid Clarke. "It was •
continuation of the economic
package from the previous
contract."
"We've
always
been
11pfront and things went
well," Fulks said. "! want to
thank the city for the rela-

tionship we've had and will
continue to have. I want to
thank the ~icy manager and
the city commission for
working with us."
As to what will be done
when the extension ends in
2003, Fulks soid "we'll cross
that bridge when come to it."

. James
Casto
ror

Huntington
Townshio
Trustee
Nd(IIM'b)'tht~lllattJ-Cato,
P.O. Box Jl, VIIIIDn, OWD...-

Meigs Board of Education
• Graduated from Meigs High School
• An Associate Degree in
Political Science of-Corrections
• Received a certificate for
Board of Education seminar

-Your Support Will Be Greatly
Appreciated
Thank You

Paid for by coodldoto Calhy Morris, 33320 S~ R~ JJ, Pomeroy, Ohio

· " James "Jim" Soulsby

Paid lor by candidate, 117 Union Ave . Pomeroy, Oti

'What's happened to Fair &amp; Open
Government in Gallipolis?
FAC'I': Citizens are no longer allowed to speak at public
City meetings without requesting permission in

VOTE FOR

CATHY MORRIS

. I teke this opportunity to announce mv
cendldlcy tor sell an the Boerd of Education.
I heue no 81 to &amp;rind" nor em 1••out to get"
envone. mv sole purpose Is to work with the
superintendent, other board memben end steff
to ensure eech student has the opportunity to
recelue quality education. Elch employee In
the dlsb1ct Is en Integral pert of thll
Decisions will heue to be made that, at times,
may be unpopular. Each one I make will haue
the best Interest of aur students, staff end
dlstl1ct In mind.
Past experience In both the fteld of labor· and·
management will, hapefully, be 1 plus In
understanding concerns and Issues that may
al1se.
Your support will be deeply appreciated.

writin".
I~AC'I':

The City Administration no longer recognizes the
right of City workers to have a union.
I~A(~'I': The City Manager abolished the City workers'
union because we are "no longer a city," yet his
own budget gives him an extra $3,000 per year to
" be the "City Health Commissioner."
I~A(~'I':

The Gallipolis City Manager makes $65,000 per
year; that's more than the Mayor of Huntington,
West Virginia, a city 10 times larger than ours.

It' s time to bring back Fairness and Fiscal Responsibility
to City Government. On Tuesday, November 6th, vote for

Marchi, Snowden, Wetherholt
for the Gallipolis City Commission.
Not aulhori:tod by a ny candidate or any candidate committee.
Paid for by Ohio AFSC ME United . R on Malone , Trea s urer, 6 805 O ak C reek Drive. Co lumbus, O H 43229

•
•

',

"

I'
•

I
I

�-

•

•••
•

Inside:
The playoffs in pictures, Page B2
AII-SEOAL volleyball, Page B3
More bears in Ohio, Page B7

Page 81
SunUy. NoveMII 1r 4. 2001

DIVISION Ill, REGION 11 PLAYOFFS

SUNOO''s

. HIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn

'

...

Lewis

-..

BEDEVILED

Dlvt.lon Ul, Region 11

~
No. 3 Gallla Academy 19, No. 6

Merola not
ready to stop
playing yet

Alliance Ma~ington 7
No. 4 Canal Futton l'jW22, No. 5
Thornville Sheridan 21, OT
No. 8 Col6. DeSales 38, No. 1
Steubenville 8
f,lo. 2 New Concord John Glenn
21, No. 7 Hebron Lakewood 3
'Frldly'l Mmiflnll QIIIYIM

Gallla Academy vs. New ·Con·
cord John Glenn
Canal
Fulton· NW
vs.
Steubenville
'Location lo be detstminfJd later.
Dlvllllon VI, Region 23

s.tunt.y giiiYIM
No. 7 Eastern at No. 2 Trimble,
late
No. 8 Wellsville at No. t Newark
Catholic, lata
No. 5 Strasburg-Franklin at No.
4 Shadyside, late
No. 6 Datton at No. 3 Danville,
late

RVHS banquet

announced

CHESHIRE - The River
Valley High School athletic
. boosters have announced that
their fall sports banquet will
be held November 13 at 6:30
p.m. at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
· This year's event will be
catered. Anybody planning to
attend, other than the athletes,
must 'make. reservations by
November 9 at the high
so;hool. The cost per person is
$6. !"' •
The boosters are paying for
the athletes' and coaches'
meals.
l'brmo~ .information, c.all ·•
the high sthool at 367-73 77.

llllnl smelt
Purdue. 38·13
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(AP) - Kurt Kittner threw
for 299 yards, Brandon Lloyd
caught six passes for 112 yards
and Illinois returned two
interceptions for touchdowns
as the No. 21 lllini beat No.
20 Purdue 38-13 Saturday.
The lllini (7-1, 4-1 Big Ten)
handed the Boilermakers just
their fourth Joss at Ross-Ade
Stadium since 1997 and first
since losing to Wisconsin on
Nov. 6, 1999.
Kittner, the Big Ten's leader
in passing and touchdown
passes, finished 15-for-34
with (our interceptions and
two touchdowns.
He needed only 1:45 co
move che Illini on a 65-yard
drive culminating on a 1-yard
scoring run by Antoineo
Davis to put them ahead 17' 13 midway through the third
quarter.
This was the first time in
the 79-garne history of the
series both teams were
ranked.

Badgers rip

Hawkeyes, 34-28 ·
MADISON, Wis. (AP)
Wisconsin found a way to
help its beleaguered defense:
\cee.p it off the field.
The Badgers did it by using
their two 1,000-yard performers, wide receiver Lee
Evans and tailback Anthony
Davis, who led Wisconsin to a
·;~4-28 victory over Iowa on
:Saturday.
· Evans caught seven passes
for 175 yards and moved
within 72 yards of the Big
Ten's single season receiving
record of 1,435 set by Ohio
State's David Boston in 1998.
And Davis rushed 36 times
for 132 yards as the Badgers
(5-S, 3-3 Big Ten) kept alive
their bowl hopes. They have
to beat Michigan and Minnesota to earn a sixth straight
'bowl berth.

OFF TO THE RACES - Galli a Academy tailback Bobby Jones breaks free on an 89-yard catch-and·
run late In the third quarter during Friday's 19-7 playoff victory over Marllngton. The Blue Devils play
John Glenn (New Concord) In the .semifinals. (Doug Shipley photo)
•·

On to the
R • nal ·
Semifinals

I

PI,H- .._..,. BZ

Perry's fast ,

Bfue Devils burn M 'gton
1-9- 7 .behind big~play attack
um made history tonight

BY R. SHAwN Llwls
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS - Big piays
made the difference Friday for
Gallia Academy as the Blue D.V.:
ils beat Marlington 19-7 in the
Division III, Region 11 quarterfinals .
Gallia Academy (9-2) scored
on plays of 34, 84 and 89 yards to '
rrotch its first-ever home playotT,
win.
Senior wideout Josh Perry,
who ran free in the Dukes' secondary all night.- WliS on the
receiving end of Big Play No. I.
Perry caught a 34-yard bomb
fiom senior quarterback David
Brodeur with 6:14 to play in the
· first quarter.
Clayton Saunders' point-after
made the score 7-0.
Marlington (7-4) answered late

- the first home playoff
win in the history of
Gallia Academy. "
OAHS head coach

a...nt saunder•

L--==..::...-u
in the second quarter when
senior quarterback Derek Carlile
hit senior fullback Josh White on
a screen pass to the right at the
Blue Devils' 15. White ran over
two would-be tacklers and then
propelled himself into the end
zone fiom the 4, hurdling three
defenders.
Weyand's PAT knotted the
score at 7-7.The two teams traded possessions to end the first

It's often said the best defense is a good offense.
At Gallia Academy, the inverse of the statement is also
true.
The Blue Devils' defense continues to gel, and is
showing signs of becoming as powerful as any of Gallia
Academy's many offensive weapons.
· Coach Brent Saunders knew he had
a good defense before the year start.
"I would consider defense to be the ,
strength of this team;' Saunders said in
a preseason interview.
But probably nowhere,in his wildest
dreams did Saunders think his. defense
would be this good.
Wish? Maybe. Pray? Definitely.
Think? Uh. uh.
Merola
Gallia Academy pitched five shutouts
during the regular season and held an explosive Marlington squad to seven points Friday during the Division Ill, Region 11 squad.
The statistics are remarkable considering the Blue
Devils were without a healthy Nick Merola much of the
season. Last year's leading tackler began the 2001 campaign with a bad back and saw limited action in the
early going.
·
"Ever since he got hurt, it really brought me down,"

half.
The
determined
Dukes
launched a 13-play drive to start
the second half. Using an all-run
attack featuring White and Brent
Fox, Marlington marched 54
yards before the drive stalled on
fourth-and-2.
Gallia Academy's Mick Sibley
stopped White at the Blue Devils'

PIHH 1H Devils, BJ

and makes
the ·big plays
BY DAN POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

Coming into Friday's Division Ill, :
Region II football quarter- ·
final between Gallia Academy and Alliance Marlingto~,
nobody doubted that Blue
Devil receiver Josh Perry. was
fast.
Afier all, how do you hide .
a guy who won the Division :
I Southeast District 200- ·
meter tide last track season7.
How do you hide i guy who:
has been known to make the
big play catch all season for
the Blue Devils?
You don't; you go to him
early and often, which is
what Gallia Academy quarterback David Brodeur did
in Friday's 19-7 win over the
Dukes.
JOih Perry
"We didn't think that they
could handle me on the deep
passes," said the senior speedster.
GALLIPOLIS -

PIUH 1H Perry, 84

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Penn State handles So. Miss.

IN THERE -Penn State's Omar Easy, left, escapes Southern
Mississippi defenders for an 11·yard touchdown run Saturday.
(AP)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)- Resurgent
Mills completed 23 of 33 passes for 280
Penn State won its third straight game Satur- yards, iying the school freshman yardage passday, beating Southern Mississippi 38-20 as ing record 'he set last week against Ohio State.
Zack Mills threw two touchdown passes and · He's 98.- of- 174 for 1,260 yards this season,
ran for another TD.
breaking Penn State's freshman record of
Penn State's Joe Paterno extended ' his 1,037 set by Todd Blackledge in 1980.
record for career wins by a major-college
With nine ,seconds left in the first half,
coach with No. 325 - two more than Bear Mills' pass to the end zone bounced high off
Bryant.
the hands of the intended r~ceiver, but Bryant
The Nittany Lions opened the season 0-4,
·
Johnson caught the deflection to give Penn
the worst start in school history, before build- State a 24 _7 halftime lead.
ing their current winning streak by beating
Northwestern and Ohio State.
Mills followed that up with a 42-yard
'1\gainst Southern ,Miss (4-3), Penn State touchdown pass to Tony Johnson on the first
scored 21 points in a little over two minutes possession of the second half.
·
bridging the end of the first half and the start
Southern Mississippi's Dawayne Woods carof the second, including a touchdown off a ried 21 times for 126 yards and all three ofhis
deflected pass and another off a blocked punt. team's tou chdowns.

�Page 82 • itunllllp 11imff-ittnlinrl

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

.

lur*y, Nov. 4, 2001 '

Sund8y, NO't 4. 2001

PREP SCOREBOARD

P·R EP VOLLEYBALL

Division Ill, Region 11 Quarterfinals - Gallia Academy 19. Marlington 7

,.

Area trio named
1
to
AII-SEOAL
team
':
••

:• UNDATED -Three Gal- and Southeast District cham:1ia County atheletes have pion Lady Bl!ildogs.
:been named to the 2001 AllJackson head coach Sue
SEOAL vol- Jackson, whose lronladies
leybaU'team. .were the only SEOAL team
Gallia
to defeat Athens, was named
Academy
Coach of the Year.
senior aetter
2001 All-SEOAL volleyball
Brianna
' team
Johnson and
Athens-Lindsey Marx, sr.
junior mid- OH; · Liz Howerth, jr.
die
hitter OH/MH; Jenna Kostival, jr.
S.
Chelsea
, • Johnton
Gooch repGallia Academy-Brianna
~·
resented the Johnson, sr, S; Chelsea
~ :r--..--....., Blue Angels, Gooch,jr. MH.
while River Jackson-Jessica Veach,jr. S.
Valley junior
Logan-Mallory Shaw, sr.
middle hitter MH/OH.
Nicole
Marietta-Karla Brammer,
Watkins was sr. DS/OH
the
lone
River
VaHey-Nicole
Lady Raider . Watkins,jr. MH.
selected.
· Warren-Stacie Shrider, so.
Athens and MH; Amber Horner, jr. S;
Warren each Lindsey Kau£man,jr. 0H.
Gooch
had
three
MVP - Lindsey Marx,
playen
Athens
selected.
Coach of the Year - Sue
Athens was Jackson,Jackson
Final League Standings
led by senior
outside hitter
Athens. ·...... . .. 11-1
Lindsey
Warren .. .. . .... . lp-2
Gallia Academy . . . .. 7-5
Marx, who
also earned
Jackson ..... . .. . . 7-5
league MVP
Logan . . .. . . . . .. . 3-9
honors for
Marietta . . . . . . . . . 3-9
•••
the league
River Valley ... . .. 1-11

(74), blocksMarlington defenders Friday at Memorial Reid. (Bryan Long)
BOnOM LEFT -Galli a Academy's Nathan Klskls (80) and
Aaron Burnette (64) tackle Marllngton~s Brian Bosu Friday durIng Division Ill, Region 11 playoff action . at Memorial Reid.

(Bryan Long)
TOP LEFT- Galli a Academy's Donnie Johnson eyes the .hole

••
,.

Friday as he flelds a punt on his own 16. Eighty-four yards
later, Johnson had the Blue Devils' third touchdown. (OVP)

I

6unaap Cimn -ittntf~~tl• Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

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DIVI-1
AYOf1 Lakt 37, Olmltod fetiO 0
Chardo&lt;l 21 , Looo ....... I
an. McNk:bclu se, ctn. Mt. Healthy 1'
Cote. 81 rthcroft 7 , Coli. w.lnut Ridge e
Colt. W.ftfltOII 21 . eo- 0
Day. carror1 11, St. a.mao~ Aogo&lt; 11ocon 1 s
a.til-18. lola..,_ 10
Gr- 37, -Howland I
LoxlngiOn 21 . Matys¥111o 7
Carlillo T..,....., 21, coro. l~ldeooao
Plquo 21 , Trenton Edgowood 0
Tol. c.m. can.. 21, ... 10
Tot. St. Froncll :W, Bedford 7

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CIW'e,-Dolploao Ill. JGM'a 31. Oolploao
~..~Mny Cenlo&lt;
Alhland

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Columblll 0
h l l l . -.... 7
- - F - I l l . . . . , _ , 27, OT
SldMy ~ 117, - C o l o . Acodomy 21
Smlthtl.. 11, AIMnde Cttii'O'I'Mk 12

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Akr. Hobon 27, a.ta1t W. llranch 0

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lluohlng: Marllnglon - JoohWhlte19-62, Bront FO&gt;C 11 ·

43, Brian Bosu 1llr43, Oelek C8lllle 4-{-30)
.
Ganla Acadomy - Bobby Jones 13-57, l)o SJmmont &amp;14, Oovkl8rodeuo3-(· 141, Nick Aeecl 3-12, Cla&lt;M Sounclera 1-1 , Ardra Golgor H ·11
Puolng: Marlinglon - Doook catlilo e-e.o'-88
Gollla
Oovkl Brodotlr 4-10-G-138

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- n g : Mallnglon - Jooh White 3-26, Brant Fox 2·

19, Dietz 1-52.

Gallla Acoclemy - Bobby Jones i-89: Jooll Pony 1-:W,
Cole lloagolly 1-9, Andre Geiger 1-6.

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Botlovu. 36, St. lkl)'&gt; Memootol 21

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8ulhlla 14, Vllloy Fayetlo 12

canal Fulton NW 22, Thclllwllo
21 , OT
a.Stltt 36, s • e u &lt;laiiiJI(&gt;III Galli&amp; 18, Alllonco M.rllngton 7
Hubbard 28, Mantua CrelhwOOd 21

Gbrt 1111. OcMna 20
Grallon 22, South Harrloon 0

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Willoughby South 30. Allton _.., 6

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BIIPCII 22, Tug Yllily a
Cameron 48, Notre Pomo 12

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Medina Highland 21 , Oak Houbor 20

Menlor Lake ca1h. 35, Clo. BoMdlcllne 17
New Concord John Glenn 21. Hebron Lakewood 3
New Richmond 42, HamiHon Roa 38
Poland Seminary , 7, Chesterland W. Geauga 10
Sunbury Blg Walnut 41 , Upper Sandusky 6
Washington C.H. 39, Cln. Indian Hill 31
Willard 27. Bellefontaine 7
.
DIYISIOH V
Bedford Chanal34, Gates Mills Hawken 1•
Cln. N. CoUegtt"H11141 , Chllllcotha,Zane Trace 10

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Iaeger 4t, Man 28

Mount VIew 38, Jamet Monroe 32
Paden Clly 47, BllhOp Donahuo 0
Par1(eraburg Cat~IC 36, MaPonna 8
Parkeraburg SOuth 7 . Muuelman 6
Princeton 21 , Capital 7
Tol•la 27, Matewan 18
WhHIIng Por1&lt; 23, Weir 6
.
Woodrow Wlloon 44, Wyoming Eaot I

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CENTER RIGHT- Gallia's Bobby Jones is escorted on the run
by Andre Geiger (10) and· a host of Blue Devils. (Bryan Long)

::

SUndlly's Gimes

Philadelphia at Arizona,
: ; Dallas 'at N.Y. Giants, 1 4:05 p.m.
:~.m.
·
Cleveland at Chicago,
~= Carolina at Miami, 1 p.m.
4:15 p.m.
r• New England at Atlanta, 1 Seattle at Washington, 4:15

BOnOM RIGHT- Galli a Academy Coach Brent Saunders ral-

lies his defensive troops Friday against Marlington. (Doug
Shipley)

•
:p.m.

BOnOM CENTER- Gallia Academy's Nick Reed holds on to

p.m.

; : Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 1·

Kansas City at San Diego,
:~
....m.
4:15p.m.
'
•' Tampa Bay at Grean Bay, 1
N.Y. Jets at New Or1eans,
p.m.
8:30 p.m.
•: .Jacksonville at Tenn818H,
Open: Cincinnati, Min·

the ball with both hands as the Blue Devils run out the clock
Friday against Marlington. (Bryan Long)

~ p.m.'f""''""· , , t ,b...,~. ~· }111:1. Bt..LI;K,II~ ,, ~ ,;
~:· lnd"napolls at' Buflalo, 1
Mondly's ~- .
.p.m.
,.

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Detroit
at San Francisco,.
r
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.Denver at Oaklaod, 9 p.m.

2001 Ext. LS

!::4:05p.m.

DeVJ•Is
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Lewis
from Pap II
fellow senior Nick Reed
said. "He's been my best
friend since fifth grade."
Merola's back may have
had him down, it didn't put
him out. The senior began a
slow healing process, and by
mid-season he was nearing
100 percent.
"My back is fine now," he
1 said. "It was better by the
Jackson game."
But just a~ his back healed,
Merola, dubbed the team's
"silent leader" by senior
lineman
Matt Weaver,
sprained his ankle against
Marietta.
Still Merola wouldn't succumb.
He kept plugging away
and working his way back.
As his health improved, so
did the Blue Devils' defensive fortunes.
"When he came back, it
was like , a big burden was
lifted off our shoulders,''
Reed said.
As for Merola, he just
keep! Oll keeping On.
I
"It feels great," he said Friday after winning the right
to extend his football career
by another game.

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The senior had several key
tackles and was part of a
defensive . unit. that logged
four sacks and forced five
fumbles .
For Merola and his teammates, there was a lot of
motivation to notch the
school's first-ever home
playoff win.
"I just couldn't imagine
having to turn our stuff in
on Monday and not being
able to play football again ."
The resilient linebacker,
who also played guard Friday night, will lead the Blue
Devils' defense onto the
field of battle again this Fri-

day against John Glenn.
He's not 100 percent, but
there's no doubt he's giving
100 percent.
·"(The ankle) still hurts,"
he said, "but I can play with
it."

Here's hoping Merola gets
even healthier and doesn't
have to worry about turning

in his equipment for at least
a few 'more weeks.
''I'm glad he's back," Reed
said.
And so are Blue Devil fans
everywhere.
(R,. Shawn Lewis is managillg editor of Ohio Valley Publishillg Co. E-mail him at
slewis@mydailytrih1me.com)

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Congratulations,
Mike Sergent
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Mike Sergent
· has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
October.
18~ 8Eaatern Ave.
Oalllpollt, OH
448·3872

I

lllllfiii,IIIUI

at the Blue Devils'16,dodged
a Pukes'
defender at his 20
.
and then took it to the house.
~·
Pap II
Jones' conversion run
::
attempt ~ stopped at the .
•: 17, about a half-yard short Marlington 1, making the
· : :)Jf the fint down.
t 9-7.
'•: The. stalled .drive ·pSQved a score
"We know we're a big-play ·'
t111rning ppint in the game.
olfense;• G,AHS Coach Brent
: ; "At that point, we weren't Saunden said. "We proved it
j~pset about it.'' MHS Coach . again tonight."
., .
,:Srian Spicc;r said. "That
Spicer backed up Saunders'
;.always plays a little bit of a stattment.
;~art mentally in the long run,
"It came down to their type
; ~ut our kids were still pretty of game versus our type of
'good.
game," Spicer said. "You can't
;• "We did exactly what we really . say that it wasn't any:\onnred to do: Drive the baD ·thing anybody didn't expect. ·
:3own fhe field. We didn't get
"The two big plays. I told
lhe score, but we still felt our kids, 'It could come down
·k!&gt;od. 'ijey, we're down here to big plays.' We knew • it
:aefensive\y.' 1\vo plays we •' would come down to big
·)macked them for los5es, then plays.'' '.
:J}tey came up with the big
In addition to Sibley's sack,
:play. ·
·
Kiskis shared two sacks with
:: "We were doing what we Reed and one with Beau
;)aid we wanted to do at half- Harrison.
Auto
Tonneau Co•ver.
:pme. The kids really executed
"That's almost as many
:Teally Well except for that one (sacks) as we had aU year,"
:play."
. Saun~ers grinned. "The
:• Enter Big Play No. 2.
defense really stepped up and
. :: On thifd-and-16 from his did it aU night.
;l1, senior tailback Bobby
"We made history tonight
;Jones caught a screen pass and - the first home playoff win
:.-ambled 89 yards to paydirt, in the history of GaUia Acad;l&gt;erry .leveled a Marlington emy."
.
•l!efender at the 50 to free
Reed also recovered two
:,ones in a meandering run fumbles, and Cole Haggerty
•lhat started on the left sideline.. recovered a loose ball. The
;)nd ended up in the right Blue Devils forced five fum:J;orner of the end zone.
bles.
:; Dustin Hall's point~after
Offensively, Jones finished
:pounced off the right upright with 13 carries for 57 yards, in - t-----...;.;
:to make the score 12-7 at the addition to his 89-yard catch.
""'S!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!E!!!!!!!!!!!!ES!
:~:47 rrtark:
·
- Brodeur was 4-of-1 0 passing
=
:. The Dukes appeared poi$ed for 138 yards and two touchCHEVROLET --- - - - OLDSMOBILE
~o answer as Michael Prather downs.
:1:eturned Tom Bose's kickoff
Placekicker/lineman Clay;~o the Gallipolis 48.
ton Sa1,1nders injured his knee
:: However, the Blue Devils' late in the first quarter. His
; ~efense, which logged four status for next week's regional
• 'Gallipolis' Hometown o,aler · •
;4acks, forced a punting situa- semifinal is unknown. ·
The Blue Devils wilf face
:lion after Sibley sacked Carlile
fl'or a 10-yard loss, and Nathan John Glenn (New Concord) ,
·Xiskis and Nick Reed which won 21-3 Friday over
I
;)topped ~hite: .
Lakewood .Hebron.
;: Cue B1g Play No. 3.
That game will be played at
,. Gallia Academy's Donnie a neutral site to be announced
WI\LIIYHIU"
:johnson .6elded Knepp's punt later by the OHSAA.

11....-

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Sunday, Nov. 4, 2001

Pomeroy • MlddlepcKt • Galllpoll•, Ohio • Point Pleetant. WV

P9 84 • iounllap G:lmrs-iotntintl

Pomeroy • Mlddl!port • Gallipolis, Ofllo • Point Pleaunt, WV

5
PITTSBURGH (AP) - They . are the
defending Super Bowl champions. yet the Baltimore Ravens are looking up at the Pittsburgh
Steelers in the sa:andings.
From all the talking down they are doing,
though, it would seem the Ravens consider the
Steelers to be - invoking the words Pittsburgh's ue Flowers used recently to describe
Tampa Bay- merely paper champions.
Baltimore (4-3) trails Pittsburgh (5-t) by I
1/2 games going into Sunday's game at Heinz
Field, but it is obvious the Ravens still believe
the road to the AFC Central championship
runs through Baltimore.
The Ravens won't even concede that, by
winning five in a IQW, Pittsburgh has become
the division;s team 'to beat.
.
"They're lhe te,am we have to beat on Sunday," tight end Shannon Sharpe said. "There's
still a lot offootballleft to be played. We'll see:•
Linebacker Ray Lewis dismisses the Ravens'
slow start, pointing out they were 5-4 after losing to Pittsburgh 9-7 last year, but didn't lose
again.
"It's just another game in our division, that's
it," Lewis said. "We've been through this before.
This is a football team that truly knows we play
our best football in November and December.
This team is hungry just to get to that part of
the season."\
The Steelers have emulate\! the Ravens by
building around a top-ranked defense that has
been close to dominating, especially at linebacker; a top-ranked running game; and a quartetback (Kardell Stewart) who doesn't throw

Perry
- hum Page B1 · .

conn~cL

While the tandem
ed on just one of their
attempts, a 34-yarder on a
waggle play with Perry on the
post pattern in the first quarter, Perry spent most ' of the
night running freely throughout the Dukes' secondary.
And although Perry was
behind the safeties and corners on several incomplete
balls, he doesn't let the misses
bother him. Like a great home
..,run hitter, he says that he just
'goes back to the huddle and
plans to- "Just to try harder
next time and hopefully con-

for big yardage, but is making few mistakes.
"The Steelers are on a roll, they're not -turning the ball over and they're running it down
after down," the Ravens' Tony Siragusa said.
"But I don't think they are built to stop the run
like we are, You need a team with bulk, size and

speed."
jerome Bettis averages I 02 yards per game,
but the Ravens haven't allowed a tOO-yard
rusher in 44 games, shutting down Bettis four
times during that stretch. Bettis was held below
I 00 yards for the first time in five games, but
scored twice Monday in a 34-7 victory over
Tennessee.
"I Wduld hope they would run him;' Lewis
said of Bettis, whose last I DO-yard game against
Baltimore was Nov. 9, 1997.''1 think we get up
for those kind of games."
Bettis declined to get involved ·in all the
back-and-forth talk that emanates between
locker rooms before such a game, choosing
instead to praise the Ravens.
"They don't do it with a lot of bells and
whistles;• Betris said. "They do it the old-fashioned way. They line up, they knock you in the
mouth and they make you not want to run the
ball."
Coach Bill Cowher, however, seems very
eager to do encdy that as the. SteeletJ go for
their first six-game winning strealc since they
won eight in a row in 1995.
"We are playing the best team in the league a
year ago," Cowher said. "They won it all. We
want to see where we Sta!)d in regard to those

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EMiiiiiiiii!D -

The
football
Tornadoes
and the 1973 SVK. team, whO shared the • . ~- record In schOol history at 7-3, were honored
last ·..eeiWIIld at the Southern vs. Eastern Game durif'C Prescription Oxygen NWJt The following
players returned for the reunion. Pictured are, front, k, Scott Wolfe, John Salser, Jay Hill, Jerry
JOhnson, Buddy Ervin. Back-Larry Wilcoxen. Mike Nease, Dennis Hawk, Mitch Nease. Nick lhle,
Pam Carter; Stephanie Ash, Ron Hill, Rhonda Roberts, Verne Ord, Mike Codner, and Tim Hill.

0

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teams."

ne~t on them."
Dukes coach Brian Spicer
knew that the Devils would
go for the big play.
"You can't really say th~t it
wasn't anything anybody didn't expect,'' he said. "We knew
it would come down to big
plays."
Perry also played a big part
in another of the game's
biggest plays, an .89-yard
reception for a touchdown on
a screen play by halfback
Bobby Jones. After scooping
up the low pass fi:om Brodeur
and getting a key block from
' tackle Ben Doolittle at the left
sideline, Jones cut back into
the field,
At around the 50-yard line,
Perry, obvi&lt;;msly out. in front

of the play . because of his
speed, made a key block to
spring Jones into the clear.
"I made a block downfield
to seal the touchdown, and he
just ran it from there," he
modestly said about the play
which gave the Blue Devils a
· lead which they didn't relinquish.
While Perry, Jones, and
Donnie
Johnson
(who
returned a Marlington punt
· 84 yards for a ~core in the
third quarter) demonstrated ·
the Devils' edge over the
Dukes in speed, Perry doesn't
believe that the advantage is a .
fluke.
·
"I think we can match up
speed with anybody in the
state," he said.

Metro

Front Row: Ryan Carter, Kaleb Eldridge, Kelsey Johnson, Nathan Bowman, J.P.
:tindeman, John Russell, Brody Blankenship, Aaron Beaver, Andrew Holcomb
Back Row: Assistant Coach Kenny Coughenour, ·Nathan Gordon, Gabe Jenkins,
Mike Jenks, Adam Holcomb~ Cody Smith, Brian Gordon, Chad Mourning, Andy
Blankenship, Head Coach BiD Burleson

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ALLEY

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�Pomeroy •lllddi111Dft • ~IIDol'-. Ohio • Point Ptunnt, WV

SWMieyl Nov. 4. 2001

struggkd to makr races. When
"It's unbeli""-lble what a difN' SPORIS WRI1£R
the JaU!t&gt; wnm\ Ibm ~he fermce a saong temt is," Mike
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) was temporarily replaced in the said. "For the first time in a long
:-- For most of their adult lives, car.
time, when I give the car some
Kenny, meanwhile, went to gas, it moves. When I tum the
· Mike and Kenny Wallace
watched with envy .:u their old- the season-opening Daytona steering whee~ it go&lt;!S in the
est brother became a NASCAR 500 in February without a right direction. AD of a sudden,

~...,
· - · ·1"· shared in his inv
-, -~1
••,,

sponsor, driving for a first-year
team operating on a race-tobut never his success. While race basis. The sponsor 6nally
Rusty Wallace became one of came but the dollan only tem· ~.toP stock. car drivers. his two porarily kept the shop doors
sibling&lt; struggled m bad ndeo open. It ·w..sn't long before the
with low-budget teams.
team folded and 38-year-old
. Not anymore. For the first Kenny was out of a job.
tune, all the Wallace brothers are
Just when things looked the
driving _for top Winston Cup .wrst, they got better.
• teams With ~ equal shot at VICSteve Park. was injured in
to~! Sunday m the Pop Secret September in . a crash during a
MiCI'OW:IVe 400.
Busch series race and Dale
"It's pretty neat because for a Earnhardt Inc. needed a 6D-in
long time people have been say- driver while Park. healfd from
~my brothers couldn't~· his injuries. Kenny got the call
said 45-year-old Rusty. Well, and the chance to drive the No.
here theY are in strong rides and 1 Chevrolet for the rest of the
they're proving they can drive season.
the heck out 'of a que. It makes
Jeremy Mayfield was 6red by
~:.r a little bit more special Penske Racing at the beginning
of October, and Mike didn\
. It wasn't how ~ne planned hesitate to leave his struggling
J!, but unusual mcumstan~e team to ,take over Roger
have turned what started as ltUS- Penskes No. 12 Ford as a teamerable years fo~ two of the.Wal- · mat~ to Rusty..
,
lace brothers .mto the b1ggest
The 6D-in jobs put Rusty\
chances of the~r careers.
brothers in top-notCh equip~ 42, started the season ment and gave them the chance
drivmg for a low-level team that to run up fiont with him.

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car.

prove I can drive a race

Mike did that last week. finishing a =m--best second.
Kmny, meanwhile, has run
well for DEI - aD duee of his
rop-10 finishes this season have
come while he's been in Parks

car.

Afief

yea15 of being consid-

ered the two Wallace brothers
who couldn't driVI; Kenny and
Mike are suddenly proving their
critics wrong.
"I think we've upset the apple
cart," Kenny said."People always
want to say it's the dr;..,r, but
the fact of the matter is that
Jeremy Mayfield got out of that
car and my brother is doing five
times as good .:u Jeremy.
"It's really neat for drlWn like
Mike and myself who have
never gotten in good race cars.
When you get in a·bad race car,
people question your. ability." .
For years people were questioning the ability of the
younger two brothers as Rusty
won a Winston Cup champi-

onship and 54 races.
But they never got the chance
Rusty was given. As the eldest
son, mosr· of the family
resources went into his areer as

.

enough for Mike. He and Rusty be short-!Md.
were never that close, so Mike
Kmny will be out of the DEI
sort of went his separate ~ as car when Park. comes back. and
he tried to 6nd his ground."
Ibm's no guarantee Penskt will
Mike has finally found it, and continue to field the No. 12
he started out on Midwest .:u luck would have it, he's found next season. But if he does,
tracks. There was litde tflont:y it alongside Rwty. The relation- Mike has as good a shot as any:.
left ~ for Mike and none at ship lxtwecn Mike and Rusty is one to bnd the full..time ride. •
all for Kenny. the ymmgest.
closer than it has ever been,
So there is litde time for the
So Mike was on his own try- enohling Rusty to finally find Wallaces to enjoy the heady
ing to make it and Kmny was the teainmare he never bad in times right now. Mike and
forced to ~ on Rustys cars, Mayfield.
Kenny are instead keeping. their
never even getting a chance to
"I really enjoy .wrk.ing with foot on the gas and hoping for
m;..,,
Mike and alongside him," Rusty the best.
"We weren \ wealthy, so I was said "But it means more to me
"Gosh, I'd like for things to
encouraged to help Rusty with to just ~ him in a position to Work. out for them;· Rusty said'
his career:' Kenny said. "That P"""' he has the talent I always "Both their deals are temporary:
was great and that was 6ne with knew he did."
right now, but they've been dri-'
me. I got to hang around Rusty
Even though things ~uldu't ving the wheels off the last rew
and share in his success.
be hetter right now for the , weeks and !hat should open a
"But that wasn't good three brothers, they are sure to bunch of doors for them."
'\

pointiUindings:
July 22 - New England 300, l.ouclon,

N.H. (Dolo Janott)
Juty 2g -

Ponnoylvenla 500,

LoniJ

Pond. (Bobby~)
Aug. 5 - Bricl&lt;yanl 400, 1-.apotll.
(Jeff-)
Aug. 12 - Global CIOIIing at the Glen,
Walkins Glen, N.Y. (Jet! Gordon)
-,. Aug. 19 - Pepol .000, Blooklyn, Mich.
,Sterling Mallin)
Aug. 25 - Shaople 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(Tony-)
.
Sept. 2 - Southem 500, Darlington,
S.C. (Ward Burton)
Sept. 8 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400,

Ridwnand, Va. (Ricky Rudd)
Sept. 23 - MBNA Col Rlpkatl Jr. 400,
eo-. Dol. (Dolo Earnhardt Jr.)
Sept. 30 -Protection One 400, Kansu
City, l&lt;on. (Jeff Gordon)
del. 7 - UAW-GM Cualty 500, CCJn.
cord, N.C. (Stoning Malin) .
Oct. 14 - Qid Dominion 500, Mar·

(Dele Eaml\lrdt Jr.)

c-

Oct. 28 ·Auto 500,
Avondale, Ariz. (Jeff Burton)
Nov. 4 - Pop - .. . ~.
Aodclngham, N.C.
Nov. 11 "- Ponnzoll 400, - M d ,

--np

Fla.
.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Homplon, Ga.
Nov. 23- New Hompohl.. 300,l.ouclon.
1. Jeff Gordon, 4,682.
2. Ricky Audd, 4,282.
3. Tony Stewart, 4,188.
4. Dele Jtmott. 4, 138.

5. Stoning Manln, 4,101.
8. Auoly Woitaoe, 4,027.
7. Dolo Eamhardt, Jr.. 3,877.
8. Bobby Lobonlo, 3,11211.
8.
3,818.

Kevineu-.

10. Jot!
3,174.
11. Mali&lt; Mlltin, 3,703; •

12. Johnny - · 3,1183.
. 13. Matt t&lt;MlMih, 3.414.
14. Jimmy Splncor, 3,424.

15. Bill Elllol, 3,383.
18. 17.

Burton, 3,380,
3,274.

Bobby-·

PA

18. -~.3,221 .

18. Jtny-.3.141 .

20. ENiott Sadler, 3,125.

La-.

21. Ricky em..... 3,07&amp;.
22. Torry
2,1122.
23. Stove Palll, 2,858.
24. Oavolllenoy, 2,857.
25. Kutt Buoch, 2,838. .
28. Mlohaol Woltrlp, 2,751.
"n. Pmlloy, 2,743.
28. Jtnmy Mayfield, 2,851 .
211.
2,841.
30. JaM Androtti, 2,857.
31.
- -· 2,8211.
32. Todd-.,2,118.
32..... .... 2,590.

34. S1acy COmpton. 2,4113.
35. Wlllaco, 2;;j48.
38. Ron Homaday, 2,181.
. 37~ Laltlor, 2,133.
31."kooin ~. 2,101.

38. !lichlir, 2,028.
40. Bucklhal Jonea, 1,725.

. UP!*

•••
•

.

.u- RCIId

~~~Difirst.
,~

800•446..()842

II

Gllllpolle, Ohio

. rn•~r on

_,.,..a •••da -.a am

Owner Mike NOithuD .

liMN

.

LEWISBURG, Ohio (AP)
- Myself and another outolloor writer canoeing the
•Pymatuming Creek in north- ·
~ast Ohio were trying to
entice smallmouth bass a few
years ago, when one of my jigs
.hung up on a branch jutting
out fiom the shore.
. Maneuvering the canoe
~lose to shore to free the jig,
my parmer suddenly cried
out, "Holy Cow, that's a bear
track.!
Looking at the indentation
in the muddy creek bank. I
knew the medium dog-sized
print in the mud was indeed a
bear track., based on examining
tracks after two encounters
with black. bears, one in
Michigan and one in Vermont.
But, bears in Ohio?
' Since 1993, when the Ohio
pivision of Natural Resources
~gan investigating and track.~g reported bear sighting~, the
~umbers have risen liom 25 to
ttore than 66 last year, spread ited Ohio prior to settlement
of the region, unregulated
Over 31 counties.
quoting
and the extensive
~ "The number of bears in
cfeforestation by the midJ&gt;hio has almost tripled since
t 993, and that's probably a 1800s significantly reduced the
state's bear population.
~onservative estimate," said
Beaey that remained were
t:Jave Swanson, an ODNR
shot or trapped to protect live'ivildlife biologist.
stock
and crops.
: Although black. bears inhabBy 1850, black bears were
''

BEASTLY - Thi• black bears
enjoys the sunshine In this
undated file photo. These
Michigan bears are the same
species and size of the bears
which are becoming more
common in Ohio. (AP file)

considered nonexistent in
Ohio, Swanson said.
However, occasional reports
of their presence, particularly
in south-central and southeastern Ohio, persisted and, in
1973, included a report of a
female with cubs.
In 1999, there was a sighting
of a bear bounding across the

Cambridge Country Club.
The same . year, a bear was
killed by a vehicle on U.S.
Route 52 in Scioto County.
Most of the bear reports
received are believed to be of
one-year-old anirruls that have
migrated from Pennsylvania
and West Virginia, where sizeable bear populations exist.
. There are about 8,000 black
bears in West Virginia and up
to 10,000 in Pennsylvania.
Even with the growth of the
species' population in Ohio,
the chances of seeing a black
bear are slim and the chances
of being attacked are even less
likely.
"Black bears are not territorial toward people and are
usually afraid of being
attacked. These bears are not
prone to bite people," said Dr.
Lynn Rogers, a wildlife .
research biologist now retired
from the U.S. Forest Service.
Black. bears are a protected
species in Ohio and injuring
or killing one is a violation of

~1181'

Pete Sollllt'VUie

..._Toem: AI Dllnt I I I I I - .lallft .... _ . Jaellllll -....., ........

•

will hibernate until next
March or April. The chances
of spotting a bear are best right
before and after these times.
Almosi all the bear sightings
in Ohio have been in the eastern part of the state with
majority of sightings being in
the counties bordering Pennsylvania and West Virginia .
However, bears were sighted
in Highland, Crawford and
Erie counties last year.
Next spring when Ohio's
bear are leaving their dens,
watch the wooded areas or
the muddy creek banks for
the animals themselves or
tracks.

Ohio wildlife law..
An adult black bear can
weigh between ISO and 600
pounds. Males average 300
pounds, while the smaller
females average around 175.
Males, when standing upright,
measure between 5 and 6 feet
tall. Females, typical of mammals, are smaller, measuring 4
to 5 feet.
On all fours, most adult
black bears are between 2 and
3 feet at the shoulder. Prints
from a black. bear's fiont paw
are about 6 inches wide.
The bears seek a den each
year, usually between now and
mid-December where

.......

All major
receivers
Van 4 Truck 4 Car Accessories
Sun visors 4 Vent visors
Bug Shields 4 Aluminum Tool
Boxes
Running Boards 4 Tonneau Covers
Custom Wheels 4 Tires
Batteries 4 Radiators

!• HUNTINGTON,

~EB.
Northup

CUoy-.

phio's bear population growing with migration

W.Va. ~ hunting accidents
•
·tncrease across state

Winston Cup Standings and Results
The 2001 NASCAR- C&lt;lp- tinllllllt, Va. (Ricky~)
Oct. 21 -EASporlo500, ~Ala.
u1e (win""'" In . . - - 1 and dlfvar

Sun&amp;ly. Novenaber 4, 2001

•
•

·now·in top ride!

BY JaM FinD

Page 87

Outdeion

.

Jmtbq 'V!imts- ieutiutl

·NASCAR

Three Wallace

....~

245 Maddy Cemetery Road

W.Va.
A year ago,West Virginia had ,,
0\P) - Hunting season is in 53 total hunting incidents,
4ill swing across the state and including IS fatalities. That
4le "hunting incident" list is sounds horrible. But those
~~~owing.
numbers are misleading.
11 You can hunt deer with a
Sow, or you can take squirrel
i!d turkey with firearms. You
tim also break limbs, backs,
:C:cks or ribs by falling out of
'ltree stand, or 1uffer a gunshot
w&gt;und - sometimes from .
~ur own weapon or as a result
a shot from another hunter.
"We've had 15 hunting jncident&gt; reported this year;' said
FREETUR~Y
~·Tim Colepun, a conservaFEAST .
don officer with the West Virw/ Purchau ,cil
~nia Division of Natural
Any Vehicle!
~esources. "Among those are
five self-inflicted gunshot
~unds. We've also had three
funters injured in tree stand

Gallipolis, Ohio • Owner: Paul Roberts

(740) 446-9177

•

qr
!

'

j •

I

I
I

---

aCcidents."

l Unfortunately, Coleman says

~cidents involving hunters~w and gun and tree
st~ds have been on the

••

. .,

.
TV's, They Are
Models Such As Griz~ly, Raptors, Big Be~r, And Banshees
And 81 Bears 2 Wheel Dnve
~ .·
Bll BY.Re 400

.Bur a YAMAHA ATV
and yiiii'JI be Hukill

...
Ill

till£

IIYI

660111APTOI

iJ.crease the past three years .
( 'In 1998 and 99 (West Virg1nia) had seven hunters
ji!jured in accidents involving
tree stands," Coleman said.
~rior to that it Was more like
Qne or two a year."
&lt;&gt;
~ Coleman, DNR's hunter
education coordinator, has
s0me advice for deer hunters.
·' "Forge[ the homemade

C..aUtr 110092
I
.. . .. .
Cutlal 110093 AT AC Tilt Cne Cu1 2dr...........,...... .
Monte Carlot JOOP'7 Lealher At Ac Tilt Cne
Am 110011 Red V6
110117A Red AlAe PW Pl111t Cne ...............&gt;'J!I&gt;f
Au..
PW.I'I. Pwl

nnen.

¥

..

I I - 111000 Ml1 BOFW 6oyo:l
Tnoo: I 10251 PW PI, Spn Whlo

..

...

'"

"

Club Cab tlcnt3 4x4 V8 Eng

siufr," Coleman said, concern. ' · tree stands. "F'trst of all,
· 101g
they're exposed to the Weather
*ar-around so they rot and
down. Secondly, some felll)ws may not know what
they're doing."
Many hunters have gone to
the portable manufactured tree
stands, which, if used properly
and with the proper safety
equipment, are quite trustwor-

..

AnVfm'CD At Ac Tilt
Xh Black vi Ens .............................. l9950

."

Clen llOlll Green AI Ac tilt

Ml1 Cne, 2dr...........
lif11179 Yellow 2300) Mls BOPW

I8000Mb

Row Beauties

19915 M,(MX) Mit fi&lt;Jnnula V1 Low

4a;4 tliZTI XII l7000 Mls BOFW. ..
9t Font ....... Xlt4dl101!1!111000 Mto BOFW ............ ..
9t lbf... 4ll4 110164.\ Blldc lopd AC
CIA Sport Whl1.....~ ................................................................. 1

19936 Gm:n At Ac Tilt Cruise

P9 Cbe.- 8-IOSc 4a4 110141 At A~ Till Crsc 3po Dr
PW PI, AmlfmiCD Spn Whls M ofl'road pkg ........................ .
99 GMC k1500 Xcabflt240 Sprt Wlll14a:4 Sll At Ac Till
Cne PW PI Pwr Lth Scau ............. ~.................... "' ............ r.... 20725
J7 Ftrd Fl50tm54.~;4 VB At Ar. I' bed 3.51 V8

Ac Tilt Cruise PW PL

thy.

Get aWarn
(a $400 value) for

."Something we've noticed,"
Coleman said, "is that people
are using the right stand, but
are picking the wrong tree.
The gripping mechanism for
many of those stands are
designed to work better on
trees with rugged bark. For
it)stance, hunters should shy
away from a slick-bark tree
like a beech or an ironwood."
DNR information indicates
that hunters are using safety
straps, but may be selecting the
· wrong type.
. "Tho many hunten are still
using the old strap that fastens
a!lound the individuals stOmach (or chest)," Coleman said.
"We recommend using a har-,

BOFW

' 110189- 31000 Mls BOFW
99 CbeVJ S·IOExtt.ab LS
Spn Wrl1 Ac Can .................................................. ...... .. ...... .
9t Fonl ....... 4llll10tt7.J9000 Mls BOFW ... .

..
CountouriP830A Burgundy At At lilt Cn, Pwr
... , . . .

..........

91 Ford F·J.!OilfnS'P ............... ..

.. 1\SO

.......

While Auto PW&amp;L Sprt 1111

.

.. .

'
." "
...
Lx 19957 3S,CJOI) Ml1 At Ac 1111 Cne 5 Spd

"

.. . ... ... .

!118 Chev S.tOtlOOA 5spd Ac Ca.u ........................................
91 Dodp Ram 15001101931360"8 Eng Tilt Cne PW PI
Super Cab Quid C.b At Ac ..................................................... 16950
M Ford Raqer Lstl10114 Splab AI A.c ............................... B99S
t1 ford fUI ..xlflllZO Red At Ac One Owner PW PI
Sptt Wblt .............. .................................................................... 1349~ 227
N fonlltaaprSC tfMl A~ AMIFMJC111 Spn
H Ford lanaerllOttt Xcab Blac:k S1pd Ac Cu1 .................. 7493

At Ac Tilt Cn Cass Sprt Whls .......... I049S
Tilt Crse Pwr Ua1.hcr

Contour SE 110133 - 34000 Mit At Ac Tilt

Spn

IHpCbonlk•IIOUM
Su,.kl X·IIO 4d H9J3 AT AC
Chtv Bluor 110039 Red At Ac

H Ford bqerll0174 Supercab V6 AI Ac 49,000 Ml1 ......... 949l
f5 Font lllnaer S..... tiOUl Sport Whlo Reor Sllder .... ...... 499l
M Cite¥ I-101MJ3 Rod La PI!. At Ac 1111 Cou10 Allof Whlt.l99l
IN Ford FI!Uit.!OI· Bluo, VI tnS. AT. I' Bed .................... 499l

Ita'at;, i.'wd

imP,.;.
l1pd 4dr Ao ......... :.... :.. 711
&amp;lour 414 I I - 4•4 YW PI SP&lt;I Wlllt4dr AI A&lt;
"

u

'"

"

'

I

II

u

n·eal."
; 'Iry to imagine the pmsure
ypu can put on your chest or
·~mach should you fallliom a
ttee stand. That's the old-fashiqned squeeze play.

.• .

...

'•

�•

Sundey, Nov. 4, 200\

Celebrations beg~ on C2

Page Cl ::
Sunct.y. NoveMber 4. 2001

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Dear

I

Take this test
. to find out if
:your drinking
should stop

..

,

DEAR ABBY: On june 6,
.! 989, your column included

2001 ·RANGER ED&amp;E
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a test:"Ate you an alcoholic?"
I was only 27 at the time, and
the 10 questions woke me up.
I answered nine out of 10
with a yes. When I saw that
three or more yes answers
meant I had a problem,.! took
the test again. There was no
way I. could answer less than
seven with a yes.
On June 12, 1989, I walked
into DePaul Hospital for
treatment. I've been sober
ever since. Over the years,
I've told hundreds of people
about my experience and
always promised myself I
would write to thank you. KURT H.
• DEAR KURT: You're
welcome. There's an old saying, "You can lead a horse to
water, but you can't make
him drink." Obviously, ypu
were receptive to the idea
that you might have an alco"
hoi problem and willing to
do something about it. I
applaud you .for it.
For ofher readers who Jli'e
. C,q!!"efiJ.ed about.thelr ·drink. ing, I'm printinranoth~r tesr. •·
This one has .12 questions:

'

AUTO, LEATHER, MOONROOF

ARE YOU AN ALtOHOLIC?
(1) Have you ever decided
to stop dfinking for a week
or so, but lasted only a couple
of days?
(2) ·Do you wish people
would stop nagging you
about your drinking?
(3) Have you ever 'switched
one kind of drink to
· another hoping that would
keep you &amp;om getting drunk?
'. (4) Have you had a drink in
the morning during the past
: year?
: (5) Do you envy !'eople
: who can drink without get. ting into trouble?
'
• (6) Have you had problems
connected with drinking
during the past year?
(7) · Has your' drinking
; ,caused trouble at home?
: (8) Do you 'ever try to get
: extra drinks at 'a ·party
becaule you did not get
-enough to drink?
·· (9) Do you tel) yourself you
: can stop drinking any tinie
; you want, even though you
: keep getting drunk?
( 10) Have you missed days
· at work because of the drinking?
(I 1) Do you have black-

: frOm

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: (12) Have you ever felt that
your life would be better if
you did not drink?
If you answered yes to fou~
or more of these questions,
you are either an alcoholic or
on your way to becoming
one. So, now what do you
do?
For openers, look up Alcoholics Anonymous i~ the .
telephone directory. It's listed
under "A."There are no due~.
and you need not identify
y~ursdf unless you want to.
You' can also write to AA,
P.O. Box 459, Grand Central
Station, New York, NY
10163, for information.
If you need treatment, your
physician or local mental
health professionals can help
you choose among available
resources for expert, professional treatment.
Good luck and God bless
you.

$10 57700
I

•
'

A-HUNTING WE WIU. GO ••• A photograph from the 1950s shows Sam Roush, right, with three hunting buddies, their trained beagles and the reb-.
bits they caught on thls ·huntlng trip. From right are. Roush; Jack Black, Bill Rardin and Tom Rose. (Contributed photo)
·
.

"

..•

veteran hunter offirs tips
for young outsdoormen .
!
OINT
PLEASANT
- Recently
did a column
fo~ the Point
Pleasant Register conDan
cerning the years of conAdkins
fusion on how the name
of the field behind what is
OUTDOORS
now ·the Point Pleasant ~
Middle School came to
be.
· ~orne, she did express
In my searching for . concern for how children
anyone who could tell me tf!day are taught to handle
something about the man guns when hunting with
the field was named after, their parents.
The f&lt;&gt;llowing piece
I was directed to Mrs.
Samuel F. (Elsie) R~ush, a contains soll!e personal
wonderful, verbose lady thoughts from Elsie and
who lives near Central so~re pointers she ~lopes
Elementary m Point will point famili'es in the
Pleasant.
right direction in their
Upon talking with Elsie hti'hting practices and
about Marion Sanders for habits.
that column, I learned she
Wild, wonderful West
also had a background in
hunting ·- a very good Virginia and, YES, wild,
one at that - with her wonderful Mason County!
husband for 41 years.
Hunting can be a great
Although she didn't
fa111ily
sport. Every memwant to · Calk about the
~wards she has won in ber can participate. Some
or ·· the 50 years ago when I
trapsho·o ting
numerous trophies that at began hunting, very few
one time adorned their . girls took advantage of

•••

joining the male mtmbers
·of a family in hunting.
At age 19, my husband
Sam, an avid hunter,
began to teach me how to
handle a shotgun. Many
wonderful memories of
our hunts are still fresh in
my mind.
As our children came
along and reached proper
age and maturity, they
joined us an4 it betame a
competitive sport for
father, mother, two sorts
and a daughter.
My cmhpliments to the
Department of Natural
Resources
and
Mr.
Sweeney on classes for ·
youngsters in gun safety.
Not all parents enjoy
hunting as we did, and I
am sure these classes were
very helpful.
First of all, it is the
responsibility of parents
to judge when a child is
mature enough to begin.
A good rule of thumb is
about 12tyears old. Prior
to this, pellet and BB guns
are good learning tools.

Pl••·-~a

'
.
HAPPY COUPLE - Elsie Roush with her husband, Slln1,
showing off the eight squirrel• they had bagged during
one of their hunting ventures. Sam had began teaching
Elsie how to hunt shortly after they lll&amp;rried In the' late
1940s. and the two plunged througn the woods every
year for 41 years. (Contributad photo)

UKE FATHER, UKE SONS - Sam Roush with sons Matt,
left, and Sam 11. right, are seen showing off·some game
they caught. The Roush boys ·weren't allowed to begin
hunting until they were about the age of 12, and before
that time they were only allowed to use pellet and BB
guns. (Contribute$! photo)

Listen and follow your intuition
''·'

Becky
Collins
FAMILY

GALLiilous -. Today's
leading executives and athletes listeii&lt; to their in'tuition
and folldw it. So have scientists like Einstein and artists
Hke Beethoven.
Intuition is OJ;le of the keys
to their success. It's a doorway to creativity, insight and

wise decisions.
How can you tap into your
Intuition is your inner intuition? Pay attention to
sense of what is true or what your gut feelings and your
is best to .do. It's your con- hunches. Pay attention to
science. It's a deep dow!\ feel- those ideas that just hop into
ing · that informs or guides your mind. Listen to the
you. Intuition demands a whisperings of your heart. ·
quiet, receptive mind and an
Sense what your intuition
open heart.
is telling you. In small ways,

act on its signals. At first this
is a trial-and-error process. It
will probably involve making
some mistakes and learning
frQm them. Gradually, your
intuition will strengtheil and
you will become secure in,

,.

"'

I

I

I.

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Celebrations

Page a

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5HaHy. Ncw1•b1r t. 1001

.~~~Uttlt___..::,av_~_mu._.._,_tuti_·ntl_ _.:,.AI-=..:::o:::.:n=-=1 the River
.ColorfUl stories abounded in Crown City in latter 19th.century
•••
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Page C3

Sulldlly. Noven.ber 4, 1001

I

••••
··~ CROWN CITY :::

In
;•April of 1876, the Crown
;:City correspondent to the
; Gallipolis Journal wrote: "We
l feel thankful to write ofbeau; tiful weather, good. roads,
: prospects for more than half
; of a crop of peaches, commu• nity in a healthy condition,
: farmers busily prepared for
planting, and many other
, thing. which bespeak pros: perity, progress and enterprise
: for our village.
: "A photograph gallery has
: just been completed opposite
: the post office, said to alford
I the finest light of any like
establishment in Gallia Coun'Y· We have the best looking
, prdens and a singing society.
' There remains but one thing,
1•in direct opposition to a
1 pleasant society in·our villagel~that is unity of purpose in
· enc.ouraging morality, Christi3llity and all their proper
We
should
attributes.
denounce all indulgences that
tend to corrupt the morals of
·our nature." ·
• , 1876 was a tough year for
the morals of Crown City. To
·s'tart off, the town marshal
-•.was arres~ for forgery. The
· -marshal ha~ signed the name
of the town's wealthiest man,
.!Hiram Rankin, to two
promissory notes.
· He then tried t6 negotiate
Ute notes.The marshal did not
•&lt;leny forging the notes, but
said that he was not to blame
. ·as he had been led by others
to do it. The marshal refused
"to tell who the so called oth'.

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i

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Ditty wedding

Gibbs wedding

Lynn wedding

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Stephanie Lynn Harmon,
MIDDLEPORT- Lorie Beth Grimm and Patrick Joseph
DEXTER -Jessica Wheeler and Michael Lynn were"'¥daughter of Stephen and Pam RifBe of Gallipolis Ferry, and Gibbs were united in marriage on Sept. 22 at Mountain Valley ried on Aug. 4 at the Dexter Church of Christ, with Dr. Dick
James Edward Ditty lll, son of Jim and Jenny Ditty of Canal Wedding Chapel in Pigeon Forge, Tenn.
Damron of Kentucky Christian College officiating.
'
Winchester, Ohio, were united in marriage on July 21,2001 at
The bride is the daughter of Kenneth and Cynthia Wheeler
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Grimm
the Fi11t Church of God in Point Pleasant.
of Mason, and the groom is the son of Mrs. Patricia Gibbs of of Dexter, and the granddaughter of Archie and Aundene
Pastor Carl Swisher and Pastor Jim Ditty officiated the dou- Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Gibbs of New Haven, W. . Wheeler ofDexter, and the late Marion and Carlena Van Meter
ble ring ceremony.
Va.
of Middleport.
·
'
The church was l'lecoraied with pale yellow and periwinkle
An open reception will be held honoring .the couple on
The groom is the son of Russell and Darlene Lynn ofBurch
roses and rulle bows. A unity candle was placed at the altar, Nov. 11, from 2-4 p.m: at the ' Middleport Church of Christ Run, Mich.
along {vjth a special memorial candle in memory of Mr. and Family Life Center.
For her wedding, the bride wore a floor length gown with a
M~. Lester Nibert, grandparents of the bride; Pete Harmon,
The couple resides in New Haven.
chapel tra,in, accented with an embroidered floral and simulatgrandfather of the bride; Paul Nibert, uncle of the bride; and
ed pearl design. She carried a bouquet of peach roses, white
Violet Darnell, great-grandmother of the groom.
calla lilies and stephanotis.
Music was provided by Dustin Mitchell and Ronnie Glenn.
She and her father, who escorted her to the altar, arrived at
Soloist was Dylan Handley, special friend of the bride.
the church in a white carriage pulled by a black percheron.
In an effort to provide our readership with current news,
Given in marriage by her father, Stephen, the bride wore a
Carrie Bomer of Illinois was maid of honor, and her other
satin and tulle princess style gown with pearl accents. Her veil the Sunday Times-Sentinel encourages submission of attendants were Angie Taylor and Sarah Houser. Flower girl was
was made by her mother and was also princess style with a weddings, anniversaries, birthdays, dub meetings and Hanna Meek, a cousin of the bride, and ringbearer was Kyle
diamond and pearl tiara around her hair. The bride's jewelry reunions as soon as possible foOowing the date of the Lynn, nephew of the groom.
consisted of amethyst jewels set in gold, a gift from her grand- event
Best man was 'JYler Johnson of Kentucky, and groomsmen
mother, Mary Harmon.
To assist in accurac.y, we suggest items be typed double- were Jesse Mitchell of Kentucky, and Jeremy Ostrum of MichiThe bride carried a bouquet of yellow roses and a mix of spaced or neatly printed.
gan.
for your convenience, you can e-mail your materials to:
periwinkle flowers. All of the wedding flowers were made by
Special music was presented by .James Russell, 'JYler and
nrenda McDowell, friend of the couple.
.
news@mjdailytrlbune.com
Rean
Johnson, and Sarah Houser with Daniel Russell at the
.
Courtpey McMillan of Point Pleasant was the maid of
news@mj'dall;register.com
p1ano.
.
honor. She wore a yellow satin dress that laced up the back, and
news@m}tdai!Yreilster.com
The outdoor reception was held at the home of Norman and
.
.
Acceptable formats for write-ups include Microsoft Word Vivian Hamilton, emceed by Dwight Icenhower, Elvis imp~­
a nec:JWace ~ven to he~ by the bnde.
Bndesma1ds.were Enn Hopson ofSouths•.de,Juhe Fowble of and plain (ASCII) text
sonator.
Ap~le. Grove,":"d Caela E~wards of Gallipolis Ferry. They wore .. ! Acceptable formats for photos include hiW!-resolution
Lynn is a graduate of Kentucky Christian , College ~d :·is
.
·
.
pefJ,winkle satm drl:sses that laced up the back and necklaces JPECis or EPS files. .
employed with the Lexington Christian Academy. The bnde~is
givm to them by the bride. The ladies all carried bouquets of
If you don't have access to a computer, simply mail your a ,enior in social work major and is also employed at the LexydloYI and periwinkle flowers.
submissions or hand deliver them to the offices of the Gal· ingtOn Christian Academy.
·
Laurah Bush of Gallipolis Ferry was the flower girl. She wore lipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or The Daily . The couple reside in Richmond, Ky,
._
a .white utin and tulle floor length dress, and had a headband Sentinel.
,
.
of white r:otes.
Please indude a daytime phone number with your subPaul Ditty of Canal Winchester was ~e best man. Other mission.
groonumen were Pem Ditty of Canal Wmchester, Ray Ru1- . All material submitted for publication Is subject to edit·
Compl~
eell ol Rutland, and Colin Cornett of Harlan, Ky., and David ing.
·
GlOWS of Georgetown, Ky. Ushers for the ceremony Weie
tilt with
Ryan Edwarda of Gallipolis Ferry and Jarrod Holman of Rutland. The ring bearer was Nick Hatfield of Gallipolis Ferry. !,he
men all wore black tuxedos with black vesb and bow ties.
The bride's mother wore a creme, yellow and tan suit. Her
1 corsage consisted of yellow roses. The grooms mother wore a
long periwinkle dress. Her corsage consisted of creme r;oses.
The reception was held after the Cefl!mony at the Point
Pleasant Youth Center. The theme was Precious Moments. The
four-tier cake, made by Sue Handley; was white with pastel
flowers and featured a Precious Moments cake topper. Reception servers·were Anna "Sappy" Handley and Patsy Frazier, special friends of the couple.
·
Guest registrars were Kelly Ann Edwards of Gallipolis Ferry
apd Tiffany Lewis of Gallipolis.
A 1999 graduate of Point Pleasant High School, the bride is
•a junior at Marshall University, majoring in elementary education. Sh~ is currendy employed by U.~. Cellular of Gallipolis.
The groom is a 1997 graduate of Taegu American High
School in South Korea. He plans to finish his degree at Hocking Technical College and is currendy employed by Wal-Mart
Peoples Bank has strengthened our insurance
of Gallipolis.
·
division through our partnership with the
After a honeymoon to Myrde Beach, the couple resides in
•
Point· Pleasant.
Lambert Agency of Pomeroy. The new

.

FOLLOW THE BIG BLUE!

r

INSIDE SPORIS:
Glllia Academy's playoff

Lambert
Insurance Agency
a division of Peoples Insurance
. is· moving!

Nlcbolu Brelldon (Biljfy the
Vampi~ Slayer) has an identical
twin brother who has wprked as
his double on the show.

Keoln Spacey (War Lnten) was
sent to mili1.111y school after he
set his sister's tree house on lire,
blit graduated from Chatswonh
High School.

headquarters will ·b'e in the Middleport office of
Peoples Bank which allows us to offer a wider
variety of services.

,
. 0 en House on
come to our P
ber 8tb

ENGAGEMENT RINGS

'from .SolitDirts tD 'Bridal
Stfs: 'for lfit largest sel«tion
of todll)l~ best stilts ·
!All value priced·
Clitcf. 115 out before you

your body.

Middleport office ofPeoples Bank, 97 North Second St,
Middleport, Ohio or call: ·
'

740-992-6661 or 740~992-6641

&amp; DESIGN

~pies

Bank

•

·'

Allen. They caught up with
him near the Hurricane
Btidge, where they demanded that Allen surrender. A
gunfight ·ensued in which
both of the detectives were
killed. Allen left his horse and
buggy and fled.
In due time, he came back
HISTORY
through Crown City, ·but
continued on to Gallipolis
ers were.
and. then Pomeroy. At the last
One episode that indirectly . place he was finally appreinvolved Crown City had to hended. Marshals took the
do with a man named Allen, · man by boat to Huntington.
who stole a horse and buggy
People were ready to lynch
in Crown Ciry. He fled the man in Huntington, but
toward Huntington, W.Va., order was · restored. For the
crossing the ferry at Proc- man's own safety, until his
torville.
trial, he was whisked away to
Next the nian was believed Winfield. It was in Putnam
to · have gone toward County where Allen had
Charleston. 1\vo Huntington killed the two detectives.
detectives went in search of Mobs again formed. After a

James

Sands

One Stop Shop
For Tanning

Beds!

HANDMADE
HOLIDAY TREASURES

FALL CRAFT SHOW

Meigs

NOVEMBER 10, 2001
Saturday, 10 am- 5 pm

POINT PLEASANT MIDDLE SCHOOL
day at high school. B~ing
vegetable and dessert.
Meat, drinks, table servic(l
provided by athletic boosters.

2312 Jackson Ave, Point Pleaaant, WV

,lar IJIB!Itlng, Mo,n ., 7;30 ,
p .m., Syracuse Village
·
Hall.

Sponsored by:

.

Mason County Community.~ducatlonal Outreach SArvico
Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club

LETART - Letart Townshp Trustees, Monday,
6:30 p.m. at office building.

•

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•

:lunday, November 4
:ADDISON - Preaching
:fervice at Addison
· rr~eewlll Baptist Church, 6
.m., with Rock B~rcus ·
reaching.

i

••
••

·~cARTHUR -15th

:~ngle Construction Co.
. il'lunlon, noon-4 p.m., Vln·
County Community
~\3\JIIdlng, Ohio 93. Bring
~vered dish. Drinks and
:fQble service provided.

·r&gt;"
••
••

Gallia
Revival at Emory Freewill
Baptist Church Nov. 1-4,

with Rev. Charles Curry
preaching, 6 p.m. nightly.

God cnress A..merica
All .Bibles 20% OFF
throlJ8hout the month of November.

j9274.
••
:tuelday,
November 6

Holzer
•Clinic Retirees, noon,
:wyngate Assisted Living
pcllity, for a light lunch at
12 p.m. For details, call
lflose Stoney at 446-3256.

••

:Wednesday, November 7
: :GALLIPOLIS- Gallia
:Qounty Board of Health, 9
:a.m., health department,
•t99 Jackson Pike.
·

We also offer a vast assortment 'ofgifts for

any occasion along with currii:ulum
materials for all Christian teaching.

'·,.•

•Revivals

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Rankin's Landing, Bay's
Landing,
Crown
Poinl
,Crown City and even Hell's
Ha,lf Acre, a name affued the
village by river boat pilots.
The latter claimed that the
sheer sided bank at the Ohio
River edge in the village
came about when the devil
reached up from the river and
took a half acre ground that
contain~d a tavern.
aam.s Sands is a special correspondent for the Sunday Tim.s&amp;ntiiJel. Ht can b&lt; contdekd by
writing to 346 Mtadow Lane,
Circltvillt, Ollio 43 11 J.)

ENTERPRISE - Heritage
Day celebration Enterprise United MethQdist
SUNDAY
Church's 127th anniverTUESDAY
RAVEN$WOOD, W.Va. sary. Services start a 9
POMEROY- Eagles
The Sumplin Valley Trio,
a.m. Potluck dinner, spe- ,.Auxiliary, 7:30 Tuesday at
!featured on Gospel Music cial music at afternoon
- the hall.
:Televi~lon, to sing, Sunprogram by The Uplifters.
~y. 7 p.m. at Second ·
ALFRED -Orange
~aptist Church In
RACINE -Worship serTownship Trustees; regu~avenawood. Refresh·
vice at Carmel United
lar meeting, Tuesday, 7
~ants following perfor·
'p,m. at the home of clerk
Methodist Church featur~ance, church located on
Ing Clark Family Singers,
Osle Follrod.
. ~=~~Ann and .Elwood 10:45 a.m. Sunday, 7:30
p.m., worship service with WEDNESDAY
•••
Pastor Wendell Stutler.
PAGEVILLE- Scipio
:TUPPERS PLAINSTownship Trustees meet;!olleyball !Janquet at
ing, Wednesday, 6:30
. MONDAY
~astem High School,
SYRACUSE - Sutton
p.m. at the Pageville Town
;grades ·1'•12, 2 p.m. Sun·
Hall.
Township Trustees, regu,,· .

tGALLI~OLIS -

for added comfort

FURNITURE

of

For additional information or to simply find
what this relationship can offer, you, contact the

FLAIR

Community ·calendar
'Is published as a free
'service to non-profit
group•
wishing
to
iinnounce 11188tlngs and
lipeclsl eventl. The cal·
.~ndar le not cleelgnecl to
prpmote 1 ealee or fun~·
' )'ill'u re I
af!y type • .
lteine are printed only ae
apace permhe and can·
not be guaranteed to be
printed a specific ·number of days.

d Novero
Tbur.s a~3'0 to 6:00 p.m.
from 4. · .
soothe

ClOwn City Methodllt Church

County that we know about.
The other one is near
Cheshire, where a river boat
carrying silver and gold coins
wrecked many years ago and
the loot was never found.
Crown
City
United
Methodist Church was built
in 1874.lt was the first church
In Crown City history. The
church was organized in 1849
and from that .date until 1874,
the people met for worship in
the home ofThomas Blake.
Crown City has probably
had more names than any
Gallia town. It has been called

LOCAL HAP.PENINGS

J'

;uonday, November 5
!CHESHIRE - TOPS
•t383 Cheshire meet at1 0
:a.m., at Cheshire United
:Methodist Church. Welgh:10 from 8:45-9:45 a.m. For
:Wiore illformallon call 367-

•All size extra roog

Jtcidt.

coverage of
Marlington

•

few days of mob rallies in the
street, the mob broke into the
jail, took the prisoner two
mil~• outside ofWinfield and
hanged him.
Perhaps the most interesting story from Crown City,
though, involved a gang
whose hideout was in the hills
just above Crown City. It
seems that a gang of river boat
pirates had made their headquarters in a cave overlooking
Crown City.This gang robbed
passengers on river boats all
up and down the Ohio Ri-:er.
Occasionally, they also robbed
the boats themselves.The loot
was taken back to their hideout near Crown City.
·At one time it was estimated that the river boat pirates
had amassed $24,000 worth
of silver, gold coins, jewelry
I
and watches. When one considers that .the Crown City
Methodist Church was built
in 187 4 for about $600, one
can appreciate how much
money $24,000 was in 1876.
The buying power of
$24,000 in 1876 would be the
equivalent in 2001 dollars of
about $3.5 million. Eventually, this gang was tracked
down. They were discovered
at their hide-out.
A big gunfight ensued and
all the pirates were killed. But
the. money was never found.
This lost treasttre is one of
two lost treasures in Gallia

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Page C4

Sunday. Novtn~ber

•r 1001

New mysteries.· With aftiend like -this, who needs enemies?
BY

RoN BE

iiiii.

ASSOCIATtD PRESS WRITtll

Running into an old friend

can be a pleasant surprise. But
it isn't for Ben Hartman.
On vacation in Switzerland,
Ben, an American in-ent
banker, crosses paths with college friend Jinuny Cav:maugh,
who promptly produces a pistol and trios to shoot him.
Why? It's a mystery to Ben,
too, in "The Sigma Protocol" (St. Martin's), the 23rd
thriller by Robert Ludlum,
who died in Man:h.
While Ben is on the run,
someone is stalking Anna
Navarro, a Justice Department
field agent investigating the
- deaths of old men with one
thing in common: CIA files
marked with the enigmatic
word "Sigma:• Ben and Artna
meet by chance and try to help
each other sort thin(!$ out and survive.
" The Sigma Protocol" is
among the latest hardcover
novels of mrstery and suspense,
which include books by Anne
Perry, Robert B. Parker, Patri...Jcia Cornwell and Stuart"
Woods.
·
In Victorian London, Perry's
Inspector William Monk investigates when two female
corpses are found in the studio
of a famous artist, in "Funeral
in · Blue" (Ballantine), No.
11 in the aeries. One of the

History~

victims is Elissa Beck,
whoae physician husband, a

is a man's school ring on a gold
In Woods' "Orchid Blue•••
chain found with the body.
(Putnam), Police Chief Holly
c:oDeague of Monk's wife
Ready for a "crime satire"? Barker '"Of Orchid Beach, Fla.,
Hester, il the_ prime lUI- That's the billing for Corn- and her steady, Jackson Oxenpact. The Monks try to save weD's "Isle of Dogs" (Put- handler, are preparing for a
the good doctor &amp;om the nam). Kay Scarpetta, the med- wedding-honeymoon
trip
hangnum'l n001a, aided by ical examiner in Cornwell's when they're interrupted by a
a family friend who hu a best-known series, has been bank robbery that becomes
c:ruah on the recent widow- put on ice for now as CornweD murder. The case is more comer.
offen this third installment in plex than it fint appears, so
Parker is famous for his 20- another series, which features Holly enlists the aid of her
plus mysteries featurlng Boston Virginia State Trooper Andy father, a former military man
private eye Spenser. However,· Brazil and his boss, Superinten- and a crack shot; a friend from
in Parker's latest whodunit, dent Judy Hammer. Brazil the Miami office of the FBI;
"Death in Paradise" (Put- takes to the Internet to foil a and Daisy, her faitltful Dobernam), the detective is Jesse garig of highway pirates. man (on sale Oct. 29).·
Stone, police chief of Paradise, Meanwhile, Tangier, an island
In other mysteries, a pair of
Mass. In this third book featur- in Ch~sapeake Bay, revolts shadowy men-for-hire have
ing Stone, he takes action after when the governor installs new adventures: Burke escapes
a "floater" is found in a lake. speed traps and orden heli- an assassination attempt in
The victim is a young girl who copters to apprehend offend- New York and flees to the West
was shot, and Stone's only clue ers.
Coast, where he takes a job

searching for a runaway teen,
in ·~Pain Management"
(KnopQ by Andrew Vachss; and
Repairman Jack gets unwanted
publicity when he subdues a
gunman in the New York subway, in "Hosts" (Forge) by F.
Paul Wilson.
In Russia, a rock star is kidnapped, a serial kiUer stalks the
Moscow subway and a police
detective rides the rails to
Siberia in search of a historical
document, in "Murder on
the
Trans-Siberian
Express" (Mysterious) by
Stuart M. Kaminsky; while in
Victorian Paris, Sherlock
Holmes and a female rival ·
detective investigate the brutal
murden of two women, in
"Chapel Noir" (Forge) by

contenders and pretenders to the throne

Otho and Galba during the mature de~h.
,
'ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Roman Empire to Napoleon
Russia was fertile groJnd for
French wtiter Honore de in the 19th century, "the prob- usurpers.The country that proBalzac said that behind every lem always faced by usurpers is duced Ivan the Terrible,
big fortune, c;rime is hiding.
that they cannot abolish their Rasputin and Stalin had many
I In · their · elegant book
own example. What they have fake czars almost indistinguish"Rebels, Pretenders &amp; Impos- done, so can othen similarly able from the real ones, at least
tors," Clive Cheesman •nd minded."
in their megalomania, madness
Jonathan Williams •dd that
In past centuries, when and penchant for bloodshed.
something similar can be said monan:hies were the prevailing Usually, they met a terrible.
about many royal dynasties. · form of government, every end, including the false czar
They "operate to cover up the nation had to deal with Dmitri, who had the backing
secret of their own, usually vio- usurpers. Some
nations, of Polish princes. After endurlent, rise to power by project- notably France, Spain and ing months of Dmitri's erratic ·
ing an image of divinely guid- Great Britain, were more sue- behavior, "a mob stormed the
ed changelessness and stability cessful than others in fending palace and lynched (him). His
from one generation to anoth- off conten~rs to the throne. In body was left lying in the
er."
other instances, the usurpen . courtyard for three days before
The main challenge to such en~d great popularity and being burnt. The ashes were
belief was represented by those some success. This was espe.: loaded into a cannon and fired
who, in their turn, used vio- cially trile of imposton, who westward towards Voland."
lence to create dy.nasties of often rode the wave of unfulNo'll( that monan:hies are
their own. But they confronted fiUed promises, injustice or pre- alrnosr anachronisms, nations,
a different dilemma. From
· 'BY MARIO SZICHMAN

not kin(!$ are pretenden of the
past. Anp so, s:iy the authors,
"the element of myth-making
tends to be particularly intense.
, Nationalist history needs to
assume that the 'people' have
an uhbroken history and a

10. 'Deck the Halla' by Mary Hlgglfll
Clark and Ca/01 Higgins Clark (Ficickat)

1. "The Klsa' by Danlelle SIMI (Otla·

r~ Correction~'

by Jonathan
-'Franzen (Fa1'111r, Strau1 &amp; Giroux)
3. "BBood and Gokl" by Mnt Rice
(Knopf)
4. , . of Ooga" by Patricia Cornwell
(Putnam)
5. 'A Ber\d In lhe Road" by Nlcholu

TRADI PAPERBACKS

1. 'Band of BrOthare" by Stephen E.
AmbiOH (TOUCII1Itona) (NF.P)
2. "Tallban: MMitant lllam, on and
Fundamentalism In Canlnll Atla' by
Ahmed R81hld. (Yale Unlverelty
Presa)
3. "Prodigal Summer" by llattara
Kl~r (HarparTrade) (F·P)
4. 'The Four Aareemenll" by Don

Sparb (Wilmer)
e. "Midnight Bayou" by N~ Roberti
(Putnam)
7. "The Baat·Lovad Poems ol
Jacqueline Kennedy 01111111" ad.
Caroline Kennedy (Hyperlon).
8. "Biaclc House" by Stephen King,
Pelar Sltaub (Random House)
8. "Seperatlon ol Por;er" by Vlnc:t

Bodanslcy (Random House)
8. "Peraonal History" liy Kalhe~ne
Graham (VInlage)
·
9. "The Blind Auaallln" by Margaret
Atwood (Anchor)
10. "LLla Strateglaa· by Phillip C.
McGrew (Hyperlon)

Miguel !'lulz (Amber-Allen)
5. 'The Red Tenr by Anita Diamant
(PICadOr)
6. "GI~ with a Pea~ Earring" by Tracy
Chevalier (Duttlln/Piurne)
Flynn (Pocket) .
·
7. "Bin Laden: The Man Who
10. "The Milford Snowmen" by Jan · Declared War on Amllllca' by Yoesel
Karon (VIking Penguin)
·
NONFJCnoHIQENERAL

1.

m- No Spin Zone" by Bill O'Rel~

ly (Broadway BooQ)
2. "The Final O,ya' by Barbara
~·

••

America's Secret War by Judith
Miller, Staphen Engelbel!l &amp; Wlllam

~·

Broad (Sirnqn &amp; Schu.ll8r)
. •,.
5. 'Jack: Straight from tho Gur by ·

JIICk Welch with John A. Byrne

1

(Warner)
~r the Table" by Art Smith

f .

®

7. '"The PrayerofJabez"byBruceH.

8. •John Adams· by David MoCul·
Iough (Simon &amp; Schueler)
9. 'Who Moved My Cheeoe?" by
Spencer Johneon (Putnam)
. 10. 'Fire" I&gt;Y Sebastian Junger (Nor·
. ton)
; MASS MARKET PAPERBACKS

.

Robert Ludlum (St. Martin's)
.
3. 'Journey" by Daniello Staal (Dell) .
4. "The Hobblr by J.R. R. Tolklen
(Del Ray)
5. "TI)8 Cavil's Code" by John Sandford (Barkley)
"Impulse" by Calheme Coulter
(Signet)
7. "Black Hawk Down· by Marl&lt; Bow·
dan (Signal)
8. "In My Wildest Dreams· by Christi·
na Dodd (Morrow)
9. 'Blue Gold" by Clive Cusslor

e.

(Pocket)

I
,I

Wlnp Grief SUpport Group
Monday, Nov. 5, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

Alzheimer's Support Group ·
Tuesday, Nov. 20, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304)67~5236,8«.1383

Blood PI' UlliN . . . . . . . .
· Wednesday, Nov. 7, 10 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304) 675-2369

Diabetic lcreenlnp
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 10 a.m.
Mason County Community Action
(304) 675-2369

It

,.

FREE

·•

•

JWWOl!.lll
AOOAVAL\111.

':
•

Dlllbetes Outpatient CIMMI

POOLS AND SPAS

: 1. "Roses Are Red' by James Patter·
son (Warner)

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

lUIDHm. CAU

1 r.u.,...olq.....lluci...,..IxncSJ~c~ ;.
"-" '' ,,, '• ''' ,, '''' '' ',,,' ,,, Ill'

WilldiiiOI'I (Multnomah)

2. "The PromelhOIJS Qecaptlon" by

.

I bay leaf
Sprig thyme, marjoram or

Choose a squash that is
heavy for its size· and has a
hanl, deep-colored rind and
smooth skin. Stay away from
those with blemishes and
moldy spots. The hard skin
protect! the creamy Oesh.
Don't discard the seeds. They
can be. roasted and salted to
inake a savory snack. Cooked
squash can be stored in the
freet.er for up to one year.
Beef Stew
in W'mter Squash
5 tablespoons olive oil
Salt, to taste
Freshly ground black peppe,r,
to taste
2 pounds beef for stew, cut
into l-inch cubes
2 medi'um or 1 large yellow
onion, diced
I stalk celery, diced
I medium carrot, peeled and
diced
~ large green bell pepper,
seeded and diced
I tabl~spoon minced garlic
1 cup red wine

rosemary

bles for 1 minute. lnc;rease heat
to high and add red wine,

3 cups beef broth
4 medium acorn squash
8 to 10 baby new potatoes,
cooked
~ cup pearl onions
~ cup sugar snap peas
Place 2 tablespoons olive oil,
1 teaspoon salt and ~ teaspoon
black pepper in a large stainless-steel bowl. Add stewing
beef and toss to coat the exterior of the meat.
Meanwhile, coat the bottom
of a large heavy pot with olive
oil and place over mediumhigh heat. Once the oil is hot,
add beef to the pot and allow it
to brow" on all sides, adding
more oil as needed. Once all
the beef is browned, reserve it
and its juices. in a bowl.
Add diced onion, celery, carrot, green pepper and garlic to
the pot; cook, stirring, on high
heat for I minute, scraping the
bottom of the pot to Cree: flavorful bits. Reduce heat to low
and continue to cook vegeta-

allowing it to reduce to a glaze
in the bottom of the pot.
Return beef to pot along
with the bay leaf and your
choice of herbs. Add the beef
broth and bring to a brief boil.
Immediately reduce heat to
low and maintain a low simmer until beef is tender, about
1 hour.
While stew is slowly cooking, prepare squash by cutting a
shaDow slice off the top of each
to make a lid; remove the seeds
and strings. Lightly rub the
inside of each squash with salt,
pepper and olive oil. Replace
lids and place on a lined baking
tray. Bake at 350 F until tender
when pricked with a knife,
· about 30 to 45 minutes. ·
Before serving stew, add
baby new potatoes, pearl
onions and sugar snap peas;
gently reheat, if necessary.
Adjust seasoning, adding salt
and pepper to taste, if needed.
Carefully ladle stew into each
squash and serve.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chicken cashew pasta is a
lively, nutritious dish you can
get together in half an hour or
less. lt combines pasta, poultry
and vegetables with the
· . appealing texture contrast of
.. nuts.
:: The recipe calls for grilled,
:: skinless chicken breast halves.
:: You may use ready cooked
:: chicken, or chicken grilled
: while the pasta cooks. (Grill
.fhicken breast· halves 4 to 5
:.. inches from medium heat, 15

to 20 minutes.)
If you prefer to serve the
dish hot, toss the freshly
cooked chicken together with
other ingredients when the
pasta is cooked. Alternatively.
you can refrigerate the dish
and serve chiDed.
Chicken Cashew Pasta
8 ounces fusilli, penne' or
other medium-size pasta
2 garlic cloves, minced
2 grilled, skinless chicken
breast halves
~~ cup sliced, dry-roasted and

salted cashews
}, cup minced, sun-dried
tomators (oil packed)
2 tablespoons sesame oil
1 teaspoon dried basil leaves
7, cup sliced fresh mushrooms
Salt to taste
Cook j&gt;asta according to
package directions; drain,
Place garlic in a large bowl.
Slice chicken into bite-size
pieces. Add cashews, sundried tomatoes, ·oil, basil,
chicken and mushrooms. Add
pasta; toss until well-coated.

Serve warm or chilled.
Makes 4 servin(!$.
Nutrition information per
serving: 357 cal .. 20 g pro., 29
g carbo., 19 g fat, 37 mg chol.,
334 mg sodium.

....e............

Well Child Clinic
Don your child need
1 wll child checkup?
C.ll ue 1131 or 441·2811 end
,... an appointment
lor our next clinic.

•

4#-ml fOl AN
APPOINTMHfT.

,.

offer a nutritious variety of vitamins and minerals.

:QUICK COOKING: Chicken Cashew Pasta

'·•·
I,

Tuesday, Nov. 13, 8 a.m. · 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center,
Aerobics Room
$50/session
(304) 6754340 ext. 2003

PROVIDING ~ENATAl ~
CAllTOOHIO , '

Beef stew served in baked
'vinter squash is ·a cook's
- !ream, simple and savory and
· · .daptable for a variety of cecaions. For diners, it's a colorful
risual treat, too, before the fint
. · nouthful is even tasted.
·
The ingredients are seasonal,
.heir combinations can be var.ed through tau and winter
· nonths. Adjust · types and
~uantities of vegetables to suit
. market availability or penonal
· . preferences.
Acorn squash, shaped likt an
• acorn with a dark green ribbed
· skin an$! orange flesh, works
. · well for this recipe. In general,
· smaller squash make great indi' vidual soup bowls, while larger
•· squash make perfect tureens.
Whether baked whole,
steame4, pureed or stuffed,
· . winter squash, whose peak sea. . son is from early tau through
. winter, provide plenty of
options and Oavon to work YUMMY - Beef stew served in- baked winter squash is a
with. Squash of any kind are cook's dream, simple and savory and adaptable for a variety
suitable for high-fiber, low- of occasions. For diners, it's a colorful visual treat, too, before
·calorie and low-fat diets; they the first satisfying mouthful is even tasted. (AP Photo/G.utco)

:LOW-FAT
COOKING: Indonesian catfish
-

CPR Training

Olaon (Regnery)
. 3.""How I Play Golf' bY llger Woods
·- f!iarner)
·
'4. 'Germs: Biological Weapons ·and

•
11'1 THE ASSOCIATtD PRESS

common ancestry."

THIS WEEK'S BEST SELLERS
HARDCOVER FlcnON

Carole Nelson Douglas.
A journalist investigates
when a body turns up in a
back yard on a private island in
Connecticut,' in "The Cold
Blue Blood" (St. Martin's) by
David Handler; and a journalist who frequently criticized
the police is murdered in
"Blood Sinister" (St. Martin's). Cynthia Harrod-Eagle~&lt;
eighth book featuring Police
Inspector Slider.
In "Past leme" (St. Martin's), William G. Tapply's 18th
book in the "Brady Coyne"
series, a woman disappean after
being questioned about the
murder of a man who had
been stalking her. And in
"Bloodroot" (Berkley) ·by
Su&lt;an Wittig-Aibert, No. 10 in
. the series has herbalist China
Bayles visiting the family plantation in Mississippi, where an
old property deed surfaces and
the man who found it disappears.
Shady doin(!$ are afoot in
"Shades of Murder" (St.
Martin's), Ann Granger's English-village tale of two elderly
sisters suspected of,poisoning a
young stranger who claimed to
be a distant relative; and in
"Killing the .Shadows'' (St.
Martin's), Val McDermid's
story about a psychology professor who tries to identify the
serial kiUer of- crime novelists!

Serve beef stew in winter squash for a visual treat · ·

Tuesday, Nov. 13, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Hartley Room
(304)6754340, 8«. 2004
AphMia Auoclatlon

a Stroke

SUpport Group
Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1 p.m.
Rehabilit!ltion Center
·
Conference Room
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

Cameo Ladles Breast Cancer
Support Group
Monday, Nov. 26, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Buxton
Conference Room
(304) 675-7997
Pleasant Valley W.llneu Center
Now Open at 8:00 a.m.
Every Saturday
(304) 67~7222

Aerobics
Mondays and Wednesdays, 6:00 p.m.
·Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center, ·
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 67~7222
Ball Room Dancing
Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m,
.Pleasant Valley Wellness Center,
Multi-purpose Room
$15 per person
Minimum of 3 couples/6 individuals
or class will be cancelled
Call for dates of classes
(304) 675-7222

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Indonesian catfish is an easy
; ; dish with Asian-style season.• ing, grilled on skewen, with
·~ no added fat and plenty oftla; vor. Cucumber' salad is a
.; refreshing choice of side dish
:' to serve with it.
:. The catfish recipe has been
·:worked out by Evelyn
; Roughton, cooking teacher
and caterer, who with her
husband Tony Roughton runs
the Crown Restaurant, Indianola, Miss., in a prime catfish-farming region.
The restaurant, founded
:. 1976, is at the back of the
; Antique MaD Ltd., which the
· Roughtons opened in 1972.
:.JI'hey also bave a mail-order
. gourmet food business, with a
smoked catfish pate as one of
their specialties.
Indonesian Catfish
16 wooden skewers
~. cup soy sauce
·'
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 teaspoon packed brown
sugar
~. teaspoon ground ginger
1 clove garlic, crushed .
4 catfish 6Uets
Soak the wooden skewers
in water and refrigerate for 1
hour. This will he! prevent
durthe wood from burn
ing cooking.
Combine the soy sauc
.
:-,vinegar, brown sugar, ging~r
: and garlic in a small bowl. Sur
well to dissolve the sugar. Set
aside.
Cut the catfish fillets,
lengthwise, into four .thin
strips. Two of the stnps w1ll be
longer than the othen. Thread
on catfish strip onto each
wooden skewer. Cover the
catfish skewers with the marinade and refrigerate for several hours.
When ready to serve, griD
the skewers for 3 minutes per
side and serve warm on a bed
of cucumber salad as a first
course or from a buffet table
with a choice of sauces.
Makes 16 small skewers.
Nutrition information per
: serving of 3 skewers: 162 cal. ,
: 17.4 g pro., 5.2 g carbo. , 8 .g
:: fat, 50 mg chol., 859 mg sodl-

·:um.

Indonesian Catfish Is an easy dish with Asian-style seasoning,
grilled on skewers using any kind of grill, that Is low In fat and
high In flavor. Cucumber Salad Is a pleasing side dish to serve
with it. (AP Photo/Catfish Institute)

2 cucumben, thinly sliced
1 onion, thinly sliced
Y, cup vinegar
i. cup water
~ teaspoon salt
I teaspoon liquid, non-sugar
sweetener
I tablespoon chopped parsley

Place the cucumbers and
onion in a glass bowl. Add the
remaining ingredients and
mix thoroughly. Refrigerate
for several hours, if possible.
This salad will hold refrigerated for several days .
Makes 6 servings.

Cucumber Salad

•

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

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our free seminar and find · out whether you're a
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appealing to millions of Americans.
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radlal1nclslons of varying lengths and depths are made on
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the eye's'strength.
If you're considering this type of surgery, take the time
learn all you can about il first. A good place to start your
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224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

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�•

••

At the Movies

•

PageC&amp;

N' MOVIE WRII EN

' NeXt to kicking off' the feaIIIR-length cartoon business
'with "Snow White:' Disney's
smartest animation move has
been its partnership with
Pixar, which produced the
"Toy Story" movies and "A
Bug's Life."
· · It's hard enough to CRate a
..Ingle big-budgeted, quality
Moon. Other studios have
gotten burned on them; le~v­
ing th.: fidd mainly to Disney Sulley (left) and Mike (right) In Dlsney/Pixar's new animated
feature, "Monsters, Inc.· Featuring the voices of John Good1111d lately, DreamWorks.
• With "Monsters, Inc~". man and Billy Crystal. (AP Photo/Disney/Pixar)
·Pixar maintains its perfect
-batting liVerage, going four- hard-boiled egg with spindly dery crab thing that runs the
_for-four with another smart, arms and legs . .
factory.
·funny, adorable animate!! ' SuUey is top scarer at MonSuUey's scare rival Randall
-world populated by endearing sters Inc., an energy company Boggs (Steve Buscemi), a
charact&lt;:n and propelled by a that collects children's screanu ~ant chameleon with an evil,'
premise· even more clever as a fuel source for the ciry of Grinchlike grin, has a foul
:(han that of"Toy Story."
.
Monstropolis.
plot to extract more bang for
Pixar continues _to hoist the • MiJce is ·SuUey's scare assis- the boos out of children. But
bar higher on computer ani- tant on the factory floor, bedlam strikes when Sulley
!nation, crafting a dazzling where conveyor cables haul in accidentally lets a little girl
itniv&lt;:rse that big-foots th&lt;: . doors ihat aUow monsters to into Monstropolis, then enlists
tamges of"Toy Story 2" from sneak out of kids' closets at Mike to help return her to
t 999 and even runs lengths night.
the human world.
ahead
of DreamWorks'
Hard times hav&lt;: struck
Nicknamed Boo by SuUey,
J'Shrek," barely half a year old. Monstropolis, though. Seems the girl is voiced by Mary
• Like th~ "Toy Story" tales, today's jaded little ones aren't Gibbs, daughter ofPixar story
!'Monsters, Inc." is a buddy as prone as their parents were artist Rob Gibbs. Her vocals
JllOVie, this time between to yelp when beasties_wander are wonderfully . precious· as
James P. "Sulley" Sullivan into their rooms. So Mons- she giggles and chatters, folt'iced by John Goodman) tropolis is in an energy crisis, lowing SuUey around calling
• 1 a horned behemoth with
facing rolling blacko'!ts.
him "Kitty."
~en and purple fur - and
"Kids these days, they just
As with Tom Hanks and
Iris pal Mike Wazowski (Bil)y don't get scared like they used Tim ADen in "Toy Story:•
Crystal), a green, one-eyed to," inoans Henry ]. Water- Goodman and Crystal's voices
heature resembling a moldy noose Oames Coburn), a spi- blend well, with Mike's whiny
'
•

schtick a nice contrast for S••lley's rumbling bass.
Unlike "Toy Story," which
had an ensemble of idiosyncratic voice talent, "Mon•ters,
Inc." is mostly a two-man
show. John Ratzeilbeq;er, veteran of Pixar's three e~er
films, liwru up "Mo~n"
briefly as the incongruoUsly
upbeat Abominable Snowman, who laments that peOple
can't caD him the Agreeable
Snowman.
Rounding out the main
cast is Mike's girlfriend Celia
Gennifer Tilly), a receptionist
with Medusa serpents' for
hair.
'
· The visuals of "Monsters,
Inc." are a wonder, each character distinct and personable,
the stunts and sight gags
canny and briskly paced.'
MonstrQpolis is an artful mirror of our world, with trim
brownstones and a factory
built at the height of baby~
boom (and child-scaring)
prosperity, now showing its
age in a slowing monster
economy,
Pixar's crowning achievement is Sulley's thick fur, one
of the hardest things to simulate on tomputer. Here,
Pixar's animators have created
a shaggy pelt so meticulous
and real that animal-rights
activists might think about
tossing fake blood on Goodman for climbing inside ' a
monster suit of genuine fur.

Directot does too much
with film on 'Tape'
... CI

itiV

F

AP ENTERT,IIINMENT WRITER

It would have b&lt;:en interesting to see "Tape" as the
one-act stage play it's bas&lt;:d
on, with the same actors Ethan H~wk&lt;:, Robert Sean
Leonard and u~ Thurman .
- playing the same parts.
The pesformances are
uniformly strong, textured
and nuanced. But directur
Richard LiOklater's fondness
for excessive &lt;:dits and swish
pans to move between
speaking characters is so
repetitive, it's nauseating, and
it undermines the dialogue's
inherent drama.
And yet "Tape" is incredibly engrossing because it is
so accessible.
Shot on digital video, the
movie takes place in real
time as three old high school
friends sit in a seedy Michigan motel room and dissect
one night 10 years ago,
when one of the two men
may have date-raped the
woman.
It couldn't be more different from Linklater~ other
movie in theaters O:ow,
"Waking Life," a hypQotic,
animated series of musings
on life, death and dreams.
And it provides a sort of
voyeuristic thrill of being a
fly on a waD as people sott
· t~rough some of the most

FIVE QUESTIONS WITH

intimate details of their
pasts.
St&lt;:phen B&lt;:lber's scRenplay, adapted from his play,
honestly ·captures some
experiences everyone can
relat&lt;: to: the awkwardness of
a reunion b&lt;:tween friends
who were once dose but
now have little in common;
the mind's willingness to
recaU &lt;:vent! selectively; the
failure · to live up to one's
potential.
Vince (Hawke) is a volun.t&lt;:er firefighter who makes
money by dealing pot to
aging hippies one of
whom is the fire chie£ He's
come to Lansing, Mich., ' to
support his old buddy, John
(Leonard), whose first film is
screening at the local film
festival .
We ·see Vince in his rundown motel room, preparing for his meeting with
John by guzzling warm
beers in a tank top and boxer
s~orts, then crumpling the
cans and hurling them across
the room.
Then John shows up, conservatively dressed and perfectly composed, and it's aU
macho, jovial
kidding
around and catching up.
But there's clearly a tension between them, and its
source doesn't take long to
surface.

•'

(The Man _Who Wasn't There' holds trn4 to Coens'form
~

BY MAn WOU'

. ,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· : Joel and Ethan Coen 's movies are rypcaDy a visual treat, so it's no surprise that
· 'The Man Who Wasn't There" - the
'. : : : rothers' most audacious entry yet 'into
i
· txistentialist film noir - casts an alluring
i
}'isual spell.
.
_,
·. • Set in ·the summer of 1949, the mov1e s
: 11arrative depends on filmic details - a
)liew from above of a man's head about
o be shav~d. a puff of cigar smoke lin: : : ering in the air.
: • : The prevailing link between them is
he odyssey into soullessness by local barber Ed Crane (Billy Bob Thornton). He
l!oes a slow fade in front of our eyes ·even
is the world around him gets ever more
compositionally rich.
The result: a peculiar, commendably
risky film that wjU leave the Coens' fans

, J'

.

t
j

'

- who've relished such offbeat films as
"0 Brother, Where ArtThou?,""The Big
Lebowski," "Barton Fink" and "Raising·
applauding the brothers'
·Arizona" continuing determination to go their
own ci'nematic way.
Starting with Ed's opening voiceover
- "yeah, I worked in a barbershop, but I
never considered myself a barber" delivered deadpan by Thornton, it's clear
that "The Man Who Wasn't There" is
staking claim to a fresh style: think of it
as film noir 'flecked throughout with a
very contemporary sense of cool.
Its emotions, accordingly, -.rise not out
' of big scenes and set pieces but from the
same measured, delil&gt;erate rhythm with
which Ed speaks. One minute, Ed is
pondering the metaphysics of hair ("it
keeps on growing," he says, , sounding
vaguely amazed); the next, he is

enmeshed in a get-rich-quick scheme
gone awry that brings Ed and wife Doris
-(Frances McDormand) close to the
abyss.
·
Infidelity and blackmail play their part,
as does a "Lolita"-ish subplot involving a
young piano prodigy (Scarlett Johansson)
- a high-school student whose diligent- ·
ly fingered Beethoven sonatas lend the
film a distinctly melancholy undertow. '
Even through ·the numerous false endings, the camtrawork keeps you alert.
The Coen brothers know their movies
- Billy Wilder's "Double lndemniry"
and Alfred Hitchcock's "Shadow of a
Doubt" are this film's most obvious
antecedents - but they also work like
painters.
Occasionally, you w:int to freeze individual frames in order, wen, to frame
titem.

Make the Change, Keep the Change!
with

Dragon Internet
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" . ; , 1-888~657~097·7 ' ' Local numbers jnch,Jde;
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'
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'
'

'K-Pax'
offers
comedic
moments
BY

DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOVIE WRITER

'
! Quiz time. "K-Pax" is:
I A. A new brand of laxative;

~-

An elite military unit, so

cwned b&lt;:cause its troops carry
~ackpacks weighing many
~os; C A mildly interesting
~ that journeys a thousand
~ghtyears or so without ever
~uite arriving anywhere.
, Hey, this is a 6lrn review.You
a1ready knaw the answer.
1 : The terra firma or'K-Pax" is
)iet another engagingly deadpan performance by Kevin
~pacey, playing a mental
P,atient who believes he's from
a: distant planet where Earth's
P.ains - and pleasures - are
~en concepts.
.
: Without . Spacey's quiet
cjlarm and wily presence, "KP,ax" would have little to hang
iCs space hehnet on. Based on
Gene Brewer's novel, the 6lrn
$kes a few smaU points about
!be rigidiry of behavioral convtntions and tl&gt;e good things
this wacky world has to offer
t~at so many of us fail to
arpreciate.
•But the movie ultimately is
al,out as insightful as E.T.
ttii!Jing the word "ouch" before
hailing a rocketship home.
"I1here's scads of dialogue with01-fl much depth, and die 61rn's
n(ltion that one of the nutcases
tt1ight be far saner thon the asy-

lum keepers is too prosaic to
seriously challenge the audience's perceptions about lite on
our little rock: ·
Spacey plays Prot, who, as
the 6lrn opens, stoops to. help a
mugged woman at Grand
Central Station and is nonetoo-constitutionally taken into
custody by police on swpicion
of being weird (Note to visiting aliens: Memorize the llill
of Rights before landing in
America).

end....,.,

,__....to

Weekly charts for the
-'nation's best-selling recorded
mwic as they appear in next
we&lt;:k's issu~ ofBill~ard mat!?. zine. Reprmted wtth pertrussian. (Platinum signifies more
.
ld·
than 1 milli.on cop1es
so ,
Gold signifies more than
500,000 copies sold.):

Got " Bid," Ulller. Arlll8.
7. "OIIIwtbl.,..,. Glnuwlna. Epic.
8. "UWI' " Up," Jl Rule (IMI. c-).
Mulder Inc.
9. "It's Been A~,' Slllnd.
Fllpo&amp;ldra.
10. "Only Time,' Enya. Reprtae.

Cas&gt;ljllgt4 2001, BPI~
Inc. iiild SoundSc:ln Inc. ·

aoO Top Allium.: Top

Collrl1bll.

•

runner. (Platinum)

8. "(Hylllld n-y),' li1lck1 Pali&lt;
Warner Bioi. (PIIIInum)
9. "8701: Ulller. Arleta.
10. "Totally Hlll2001,"- - ·

warner ElioiJ8tlldra/AIIanllc/Arllta.

Copyright 2001, BPI Communlcallona
Inc. and Scll1dScan Inc.

...ltoiW Col-.pcMWy
(Complied 1rom a nalcnal ~ ol
lllrpley llllppllecl by Broadcasl Dala
Syst8m8)
.
1. "'nnyllme,·Enya. Warner &amp;Inset.
2. '11 You're Gone." mal::hbox --.y.

Lava.

3. "Thank You," Dido. Arleta.
4. "There You'll Be,' Fllilh HI. Bioi.
5. 1 Hope You Dance," Lee Ann
Womack With Sons Of The Desert.

MCA NaotMIIe.

e. "All Or Nolting," o.Town. J.
7. 1 Want Lu;e," Ellon Jolln. 8. Tm foJ~ Thora," U..W.
!INA.
9. "'ne Mare Day," Ollmond Rio.
ArilliiNuhvlle.
10. "Follow Me,' Uncle Krada!r. Top
Dog.
llllrwb.,. Rock TNckl
(Complied from a national sample ol
airplay llllppllecl by Broadelll Dala

SV:S~ou Remind Me,' Nickel-

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2. , With You Were Here,' lllCIAbus.
lmmoi1ai/Eplc.

Bedroom Groups

3. "NNI,' P.O.O. Alllntlc.
4. 1n Till End,' Unldn Patte. wEiiol.
5. 'My Saclllloe," Cleed. Wind-up.

Surgeons, Inc.

for ari appointment.
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Systsms)
1. "How You Remind Me,' Nickel-

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baCk. Roadrunner.
2. 'My Sacrifice," Creed. Wind-up.
3. 'Gets Me Through," Ozzy
Ooboume. Epic.
4. "Fade," Stalnd. Flip.
5. "Controo,' P.- Of Mudd. fliw.
le8t/Gellarll1nteraoope.
a. 1 Willh You Wera Here,' lllCIAbus.
lmrnoriiUEplc.
7. 'Down With tile Slclcno88,' DlsIUrbed. GianUReprite.
8. "NNe." P.O.O. Allantlc.
9. "Schharn," Tool. Tool Dillectlonal.
10. "It's Been Awl'lltl," Staind.

Modem Rock n.cl&lt;l
(CotrJ&gt;IIed 1rom a national oample ol
airplay eupplled by Broadca8l Data

Sta~ing..........................

6. "Fade,' Stalnd. Flip.
7. "Controo." P.- Of Mudd. FIIW-

Ie8t/Gellarll1nllf'ICOPI.

8. "Stay Together For Tlle Kklt,'

.

llllnk·l82. MCA,
9. 'Down With The SictcnHI." 01..
Ubed. Qlani'Reprllt.

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

10. 'Smoolh Cnmlnal." Allan Ant

..

,.

ecm.

'f:r

~

rue

Rule). Epic.
.
3. "Fdln'," Alicia Kay&amp;. J.
4. 'Hero," Elll1que Iglesias. lnlar·
eoope.
5. "Tum 011 Till Light." Nelly Furtacb.

MaltMM Band. a.m. Raga.
7. "SSIVVr Sldt Up,' Nlc:lwlbllclt Roatd-

Joint l'mplant Center

2. "'nny In America," Broo1ca &amp; Dunn.
Anita ,_,..,
From," Alrfn Jck·
3 . 'Voll1e.- 1
son. Mila Nuhvlle. • .
~
l.b Thlo, Trlci&lt; Pony.

Dllvld Ball.~9. "Run," Geotge Shl MCA
Ntllhvlo.
10. •compllcaltll," CMIIyn lllwn
Jch """· Arllllt Nuhvlla.
~ 2001, BPI Communlcallona
Inc. tllld SOiniScan Inc.

B. "LJve In~ 12.18.118, Dew

The

Curb.

1. "Fanily AM." Maty J. Bliga. MCA.
2. Tm Real," JeMIIor Lopez (INI. Jl

Inc.

1

to see me as a bad guy tike in
'The Vanishing: ... I like to rniK
it up pretty good. to take -a
!SO-degree turn whenever I
can.
5. Do traits of the character)
you play find their way into
your personality?
;
Bridges: Our perception of
ourselves isn't necewrily an
accurate one. For instance, I
remember doing an interview
for 1agged Edge: where I play
kind of a sociopath, and the
interviewer asked me, 'Do you
take your work home? Are you
the kind of actor who always
stays in character?' And I said I
really didn't think of myself
that way. But my wife happened to be in the room an9
she rolled her eyes. .. . So )
guess you should be asking her
that question.

· ~~.,!,.Time," Th, MeG-.

Nuhvlla.
6. "Rklng Wllh I'IIYIII'Malone,'

5. "Pttln lal.aYI,' Ja Rule. Mulder

All AGES, All TIMES $ 4 .00

year's "The Contender."

dren tu become actors?
Bridges:You hear a lot about
kids of celebrities who say
their parents told them not to
get into it, but my dad wasn't
like that at all. I maybe wouldn 't be quite as encouraging as
my father but I wouldn't be
surprised if any of my girls
· went into it. They all show talent. ... Some of my fondest
memories of my brother and
dad are from when we're ·
working together. ,
4. How do you pick your
6lrn roles? Does your mother
watch your movies?
Bridges: My taste often conllicts with my mother. Every
time I play the president, she
likes that. A doctor, she enjoys
seeing me as a doctor. She didn't care for 'The Big Lebowski' too much. She doesn't like

l1fdlo monlloreci by Amodcaat

Bmom.• Dala Syll8ms)

~.

~~;.theiisiitlt!l~,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:.._________

counby

6. , Wtma
Aboot ,.,. ToiJII
Kaith. DreMtWorlol.

Fleilftll, (l'lllllun)
4. "Gottllltll Am6lloa.. Yattoul

information. Call today i1Rd ease

Bridges is a psychiatrist
who's treating Spacey's character, Prot, who clainu to be
from a distant planet: Bridges
&lt;:njoyed the role because_
unlike "'Starman:' he's not the
exaaterrestrial He also liked
how "K-Pax" examines his
, character's shifting priorities.
"These themes are always
wonderful for movies to
&lt;:xplore: 'What is dear to you?
What is your belief system?'
But they particularly ring true
now."
Bridges, 51, lives in Santa
Barbara, Cali£, with his wife
and their thRe daughters. He's
received four Oscar nominations, including a best-supporting nomination for last

H&lt;: first appeared on screen
as an in&amp;nt in "The Company
She Keeps;' and has 60 film
and TV roles to his credit.
1. Are we the only life forms
in the universe?
Bridges: If I were to place a
b&lt;:t, I'd say we're not alone, that
there are other life forms out
there. But I also wouldn't be
surprised if we were alone. ...
Mayb&lt;: w.:'re the only game in
town.
2. Has your life ever b&lt;:en
changed by someone you met
in passing?
Bridges: 1 run into people
like that all the time. Maybe
everyone who has done that is
from outer space. (Laughs.)
But I do run into people who
make me look into my life differently aU the time.
3. Do you want your chil-

FIIITI. New~Hoi Couniry SlngleaiiiCI 'll&gt;llcb
(Compiled from a na11one1 fiiWIIIIIe o1

(Cooloplled from. na110n1118ft1)1o ol
Illes noports OOI«Iad, IXMioplled and
provldad by ScundScln: i1ldlo
paytlata; and i8dlo .... ikited by

2. ~ Vilw,' lnGULul. lmrroarlll.
3. "A Illy Wllhaut RUI," Enya.

Declaring hinuelf an observer from the planet K-Pax,
1,000 light-years away, Prot is
delivered into the hands of
mental-ward psychiatrist Mark
Powell GelfBridges).

on

EFF BRIDGES

5. "l.olle 01 AWoman." Travlo Trill

a•t •d Hot1011: Top 10

Flydlnl.

Department,

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~(l~~l..·DMX. Rull

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'IUed on -,..rty aubMrlpiDn ,..._
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NEWYORK -As a member of one of Hollywood's
IIIO$t f:lmous acting tamilies,
J.:tfBridges grew up loving the
big screen.
Now he's become a fan of
the big picture, using a
Widelux panopmic camera to
capture
behind-the-scenes
action on his movie sets.
. Bridges began at the suggestion of Kan:n AU en, his co-star
in 1984\ "Starman." He puts
his pictures in a book that he
gives to the cast and crew.
"Each 6lm is like a little lifetime:' said Bridges, son of the ing the book is a way to be
late Uoyd Bridges and brother 'transported back to that time."
of Beau. "You get so close to
The photo book from "Kpeople for three months and Pax;', his latest 61rn, includes
then it's done, you might not shots of makeup artists shaving
ever see them again. But bliV- Kevin Spacey's beard and

Tile Bllllalrd
10

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Hlfttboro, Wilmington. w..t Union, Gl'lltnfWd, Clrdevtlft. O.lllpoHe,
I'
CH, Moearthur, Pomtroy, NelfonYIIIt, LDgtn, Polnl

Mary
a swing.
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-e. ,

· r'----------------------------------~--•

•

ment

Sunday, Ncwanhr 4, 2001

'Monsters, Inc.' another Pixar mawel

PageC7

I

7. ,,m A Su!VMlr." Rolla. MCA

Ill,

Top Cau
AiilurM
(ConljAed liun a national ~ ol
111M f8POitl cDibl:lld, compiled lllld
provided by SoundScan)
.
1. 'G~ Hltl Volt.me 111-l'm A
Survlllor," Reba McEntire. MCA
Nulwle.
•.
2. Souncilnr:k: "0
M
Thou?" Mblouly. (PIIIIm.m)
3. "Puul My CIIUI,' Tol&gt;i Kllth.
DlwmWoltcl. (Gold)
4. " ' i - ...... Marini Mallrtdt.
RCA (~lllliiYIIII). (Goldl

-·WI-.

1, "'ee'TNI Cltaul DcMTII' 11m
MoO-. Culb. (l'ldnum
•• 8of.lndlrlllk; ~

UWf,' Cwb.

~~) •ltii,"ICanny Chwoty.

INA. (l'llllull)
•. "TTit FICclc: Iiana Cold Cctur*Y
2001,"1Jeotgt . . . . llrdL

e. 1'm Alllllll' Thill,' LINitlr.
!INA.
1o. " ' i - Hltl,' Tim MoOCutb.

Copyl1ght2001, BPI~
Inc. tllld ~ Inc•

-

'
Hoi R&amp;lllllfpoltop
linlllt IIIII

'

(ConljAed from 1 nalcnal _,.,. ol

You'll never look at banking
the same way again.
'

'

..... f8POitl and rldo playlilll)

1. "Frunlly Alllllr," Miry J. Bllgo. MCA.
2. , Got " Bid," Ulller. AI1IIL
3. "01f1616IICIII,• Glnuwlna. Epic.
4 . - Thllloal," Alllylh. Bilek·

QIW\d.

5. 'llllitlme,' Maxwell. Columbia.
6. 'lMng HUp,' Jl Rule (IMI. c-).
Murder Inc.

7. "Uggy," Bu1tba Spanooc. Bell CUI.
6. "Girrs, Girls, Girls,"
Fela.

.-,.z. Roc-A·

Up,' Paley Plblo. Jive.
10. "You Gets No l.aYI," Failh Evans.
Bad Boy.
Copynght 2001, BPI Communlcalionll
Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
9. -

•

Top R&amp;loliii!HiopAitt ...
(Complied from a national fiiWIIIIIe ol
111111 f8POIIII&gt; ... Itll, COIIIPiltll and
JIIO'o'lcled by SoundScan)
1. "TTit Great Dap nl&gt;n,'
Au«

DMX.

Rydera.

2. "Pain Is l.aYI," Ja Rule. Munier

Inc.

3. "The Bluepmt,•

.-,.z. Rcfo.A.

Fela.(Pidun)
4. "8701: Ulller. Arlll8.
5. "John P. Kelly," Mr. Cheob. llnMir·

1181.
.
6. "No More Drama," Miry J. Bilge.
MCA. (Pid'un)
7. "The Dark Days, Bright Nlgt1ll 01
BuDba Spenocx,· BuDba Spanooc.
Bell CUI.
8. "Elcpar llian Team: Oilaled Peoples. ABB.
9. "AIJJkytlh," /4liittlll. ~
(Piallni.m)

10. "C-1'-&lt;l.oom: c.Murdar. TAU.
Cq&gt;yright2001, BPI~
Inc. tllld SoundScan Inc.

Hoi Rip Sir ..

(Co •tPied lrom a national aampla ol
sales repor1l Caleci6fl, IXMIIPiltll, and
PIO'ollded by SoundScan)
1. "Raiie Up,' Pel8y P-. Jive.

,.m

Your Girl.' Dana Call. ES3.
3. 'Nollllng'l Wrong," Won-G (feat
OJ Ouic:l&lt;). TNO.
4 . "Get Mo,' Shem! (lllal.lllgga Fig-

2.

gao). Daan'l Usl
5. "Buoosr,"llenniil Da MIMce. 111

A-.

The Five Star Service
Over five years ago, the people at Firstar came
history. In the next few months, Firstar will be
changing its name to U.S. Bank. But rest
- -~-.
up with a simple idea. And before long,
assured, you'll continue to get focused
that idea became so big ... so revolutionand attentive customer service from
ary ... that it cha~ged everything we
every department, every person, every
do,. The big idea? Rather than just
transaction. And that's more than a promise.
promising great service, we decided to
That's
a guarantee-The Five Star Service
hack up that goal with an actual guarantee.
Guarantee. This changes everything. ·
Now, we're ushering in a new era in our storied

6 . .......... Up In Till Nl," Ortginll p
lniiOCU:ing Hyped Up W 'onl
&amp;48Z. Weallound.
1. "How w.
Big t- BKA Pop• Radl (11181. Nouchallt•). Col-

-.

eo.·

8. 'My Lila,' Kool G Rap (IMI. G

Wile). Rawkua.
9. 'Po' Punch,' Po'- T..alj &amp;
The Treller Patte Symphony. POckat
Change.

'•

-FOIC,

�••

••
•

'-It Cl• iHI1hp 1li11tt- 6tntinrl

Sunday, Nov. 4, 2001:
•'

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

•

Family
•s• ... C1

\
listening to your inner voice.
Then you can use its guidance
to help you in making more
important decisions.
Honoring your intuition is
a skill. The more you practice,
the more skillful you become.
Within you is a wellspring of
wisdom and creativity. Beginning to deeply trust your
inner sense of what is ben to
dp in a situation can be developed over time. Try these
ideas to become more aware
of what your intuition is
telling you.
Build in a daily period of
unhurried quiet time. Let
your mind become still,
rej:eptive, open. Listen well as
your mind and heart speak to
you.
_.
Take good notes.
'···

Pause sevrral times a day:
Intuitively tune imo your
body, mind and spirit.
Can you think of a time
when you just knew you
should do something or when
you shouldn't do something
or that a particular event w.u
about to .happen, and your
intuition was right? What
feelings or signs did you
receive?
Has your intuition ever
given you a message and you
ignored it? What happened?
How did you feel when you
were doing something that
you 'just felt" you shouldn't
do?
What hinders your intuition? How can you overcome these barriers?
(&amp;cky Collins is Gallia
County~ Extension agent for
family · and
consumer
sciences/community d~lopmtnt,
Ohio State University.)

FOOD
•

Scones .make a handy
home-baked snack
I,!Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.Jf you have half an hour
i&gt;r so to spare, consider a
· ~sief stint in the kitchen,
lnldng
up a few ingredients
:'l··
you probably have at hand
and turning out a batch of
toothsome currant scones.
The following recipe
makes an updated variant of
scones, the traditional Scottish quick bread that was
originally made with oats.
This version is easy to
make, using regular wheat
. flour, yogurt and honey
· among other ingredients,
: with a touch of baking soda
: to balance the yogurt's acid. ity and keep the scones
: light.
The scones make wholesome snacking; eat them as
: they come, split th't hn . and
:spread 'th~m · with butter,
: ja~ or jelly, or tuck them in
· . a Cornet of .a lunch box. I
Currant Scones
•
(Preparation 15 minutes,
. baking time 20 minutes)
: 2 cups all-purpose flour
: 2 teaspoons baking pow· der
~. teaspoon baking soda
~. teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons butter, cut
: into pieces
: ~. cup honey
· ~. cup plain nonfat yogurt
1 egg plus 1 egg yolk

~' teaspoon

Advice
Lom Pllgt C1
Safety instructions with
these should be the same as
when they advance to· more
powerful guns. Such basics
include never point a gun at
a person even if you are sure
it is not loaded. When
beginning to hunt a lightweight shotgun such as a 20gauge with less recoil is
smarter than heavier guns.
Practice prior to hunting
season and become familiar
with the woods you're
intending to hunt.
Don't leave a beginner
alone to start. When they
begin to learn and show
responsibility, it is wise to
carry an air horn to be used
in case of an emergency.
Anyone, child or adult,
could fall or need help.
Always set a time and pla~e
to meet.
Be SJJre to get and study
game dat~s. game limits, etc.
each year as they change.
They are available when
purchasing licenses. Get
written permission for land
where you intend to hunt ..Jt
is also wise to let the
landowner know when you
will be there and where you
will be parking your vehicle.

vanilla or
almond extract
:,f .
1 cup · ~urrants
'"
1 egg white
Cinnamon sugar
Preheat oven to 375 F.
Lightly grease a baking
NEW YORK (AP) sheet.
Ameticans are showing their
In a large bowl, combine patriotism in record store!.
flour, baking powder, bak"God Bless America;' an
ing soda and salt; mix well. album featuring Celine
Cut in butter until mixture Dion's much-praised rendiresembles coarse crumbs. In tion of the song, is the
small bowl, combi!le honey, nation's best-selling all;lum,
yogurt, egg, egg yolk and according to figures released ·
vanilla; mix well. Stir in Wednesday.
currants. With fork, stir into
The disc, which Columbia
honey mixture until moist- Records touts as "a collection
ened. Turn dough onto of songs of hope, freedom
lightly floured surface; and inspiration," also includes
shape into 8-inch circle (1 Frank Sinatra's "America the
inch thick). Cut into 8
DON'T WAIT
wedges. Place . on g.reased• .
baking sheet, at least 1 inch
apart. Brush with egg
white; sprinkle with , tinna~
mon sugar. Bake at 37 5 F
for 15 to 20 minutes or
until golden brown .
Makes 8 scones.
Nutrition
information
per serving (1 scone): 267
cal., 10 g fat, 77 mg. chol.,
270 mg sodium, 39 g·
carbo., 2 g dietary fiber; 6 g
pro.

Use common sensl,. Never
shoot at anything unless it is
in plain view and you are
sure what it is. Do )lot ever
pick up game, particularly
squirrels, unless you are
absolutely sure it is dead. Do
not climb steep cliffs - it's
hard enough without trying
to do so with your gun in
hand.
Never shoot into al'quirrel
nest. We raised b~gles to
help hunt rabbits .,ecause ·
they run in a circl¢ and a
good rabbit dog will chase
them back. Ta,ke ~ stjmd and
,listen to the dogs bark. And
never shoot a sitting rabbit
- it's not sportsmanlike.
Ducks were plentif';ll in
McClintock in the 1950s.
We got a Labrador Retriever and trained it to help us
fetch the ducks once they
were shot. We never shot
ducks while they were on
the water because it's not
· sportsmanlike.
· I remember one of our
first duck . hunts We
couldn't hit them on the
wing, so we decided to go to
Point Pleasant Gun Club
and practice up for wing
shots. We got to be pretty
good and from th~n on we
could get our limit when we
went out.
When a duck fell onto th~,.
around, ,the Lab was given

the command " dead bird ever made an illegal kill. :1 seldom deer hunte~
fetch," and the dog would
always take the duck to my because I was not expen.
husband because he was her enced with rifles. The fe.;.
'
.'
trainer.
t1mes
I went I used slugs 111
One of our biggest family my shotgun. But I must te~
rules was whatever game you the deer meat in the
someone bagged they had to Mason County area is exceJ,.
clean - but I ended up lent.
•
doing the cooking. We never
It contains practically no
wasted any game.
fat and is low in cholestero'l
A,t that time we were not because they are corn fed. i ·
allowed to shoot Canada do sympathize wi'th th~
·Geese because they mate for . farmers whose gardens th~
life. It was only legal to deer demolish, though.
l
shoot them below the
I really pref,er venison t+
Kanawha River.
beef. It makes excellent
One thrilling experience burgers, chops, soup meali!•
that we had was one day in a meatloaf, chili and spaghetti
·deep hollow on Cain Ridge sauce. The only difference iQ
(off Tribble Road near
cooking is to use a little
Leon) in late October. The
cooking oil since it has no
woods
had
become
absolutely quiet with not a fat.
I am fortunate that some.
bird chirping.
·
About 20 feet in front of good friends of my husban4
me was a fallen tree and on keep me well supplied wit~
,
thaG-tree stood a bobcat star- vemson.
I started hunting at age 1~
ing straight at me. I could
have easily shot it, but I' did- At 60 I decided it was timi
n't know if it was legal to give it up - the weight
of my shotgun, huntitll
game.
It finally jumped off of the boots and heavy clothes w33
log and ran, but I never simply more than I coul4
heard its feet hit the ground. handle on long walks ana
~
That was very eerie. When I steep hills .
I
remember
the
first
got home we found out that
shooting it would have been morning not going with mt
sons I just sat down an(!
legal, but not until Nov. 1.
~
To the best of my kl)owl- . cried.
- .Submitted by Elsie Roush
edge, none of my family has

.

VACCINATE!

Recipe from the National
Honey Board.
·

Racine Volunteer
Fire Department
On SO years of service to your community

1951-2001

From
Racine Fire Department Auxiliary

'

"

Page D1
Suncbly. NovemiMr •· 1001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

AVETERAN's PERsPECTIVE

ThiJ chart slwws lww local stocks of i111erest performed last week.
Each day~ closing figures are provided by Advest ofGaJ/ipoliJ.

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.

42.85

42.24

41.911

42.48

FRI.
~-29

..

.

•

380 _st. Rt . 7 North
Calllpolls, Oh1o

~ ~~ I&lt;

&lt;::)~

'

l'

.

I

'"''

(740) 286-2101
Serving the area's
housing needs
since 1977

Model
Slnglewldes &amp;
Doublewlde

.

, •(~,Q~

(Jet. of US 35 and SR 93), Jackson, OH

DIICOIInts
On
Display

•

I,:#

•

1000 Morton Street

Fabulous

Chief recalls experience in

{740} 441 9896
J\'t

HAVE PLANE, WILL TRAVEL- Brian Colfack of Point Pleasant, W.va .• stands beside a model of the EC121 Super Con. stellatlon aircraft used during the VIetnam War campaign. Coltack, who enlisted ln 'the Navy in 1962, said the aircraft
was originally designed for commercial use, but once modified for the military, It carried 31 soldiers and was used to
gather electronic information. (Dan Adkins photo)

..

....

-d.Q MES

I

•

..

SALE

Beautii',.;I," Mariah Carey's
"Hero;• Tramaine Hawkins'
"Amazing Grace" and Pete
Seeger's "This Land Is Your
Land."
The album sold 180,984
copies in its first week to
deb• •t No. 1 on Billboard's
top
•lbum charts
An • 11 not the only patriotic Jut on the cham .
The re-release of Whitney
Houston's "fhe Star-Spangled Banner" is a best-selling
single.

,

Clossified ads, Pages D2- 7

ROCCHI'S POOL &amp; SPA

PATRIGnC HITS

Congratulations

..

•••

8Y DAN ADKINS

•

•

. .;.,·~··.

'•

".

'/•

.:;:;y

5.70

$3,500
DIICOU~

On

llnlllllr

Ranch
D&amp;W Homes sells the
Display
finest quality
Model .
manufactured homes
'
built with great service and
great prices, which represents your best housing value!
Why would you buy
anywhere else?
Stop by and check
out our 2002 Patriot
'

13.38

GALLIPOLIS If 1he
recent stock market volatility has filled you with humbug, here are a few year-end
tax ideas to help you rekin- ,
die a little holiday spirit.
Remember to consult with
your tax advisor or accountant before implementing
any .of these tax savings
'
ideas.
Let the dogs out Many people suffered stock
market losses in 2000,
whether from dives in the
dot.coms or in .resplmse to
shortfalls in some companies' projected earnings,.
Now may be time to recoup
a bit of that money by selling
off the dogs .
If you have them, you may
be able to sell enough depreciated stock to wipe out all
your taxable ca,pital gains for
the year, plus another $3,000
in regular income . if filing

-

Financing
Available
Trade-Ins
Welcome!

-

13.11

Bryce
Smith
GUEST .
VIEW
jointly, or $1,500 for single,
or married filing separately.
You will not be able to buy
.those stocks back right after
you sell them.
That's called a "wash sale"
and is disallowed under current tax laws. You 'II have to
wait 31 days or more before
buying them again. If you
have realized losses over
$3,000, consid'e r selling
enough winners to get' back
to that number because tal::-·
ing those gains will then :idd

"••• ... Sllllth. Dl '

Have a business news ltem7
•
Give us a call It (740) 446-1342. u.t. 13
I

I'·
•

''

men
your
then
mea
or

Colfack added he was worried a little about becoming a corpsman,
today's equivalent of a licensed practical nurse, but once he was submitted
to the 16-week course and studied
.chemistry.r~diology apd tnuma experiences, he said' He began to really
enjoy it.
"Once I finished that course and
was placed in a 40~bed general hospital, I began to see a whole different
side of medicine," Colfack said. "At :
that hospital the other corpsmen .and I
were able to bond with the patients
because there wasn't a large number of
them." .
Colfack stayed at that Pensacola,
Aa., hospital for a year, working his
way up to senior corpsman and even- .
tually gaining petty officer status.
·
"I had always had plans to see the
world when I enlisted, and -once I
became a petty officer it was my

.......... v....... Dt

13.15

Tax ideas ·to cheer
your holiday season

,('

models, like this . Crystal Valley -28' ·x 64' 1.664 Sq. ft.
28x68 home ·with total drywall, 5,12·roof pitch,.. 30 yr.
shingles, vinyl windows, 6 panel int. doors, real wood
trim, oak cabinets, and much more. Also available with
. r
ftat ceilings.
Let Dick or Faith get you a great
on a new home!

,.

13.10

INVESTING

-

Hours:
Mon-Frl9-7
.Sat 9-5
Sun 1-5

t the time," Colfatk said. "If
family didn't own farm land,
POINT PLEASANT,W.V:i:-After
the majority of the time that
ttavrling back and forth across the
t you had a future pumping gas
world through his endeavors ~th the
ing road work."
.
militaty during the Vietnam War cam-· _,_,dlf~o had planned to study
paign, a Point Pleasaht miiri s!iid . e jouriialism at the Univ~rsity ' of
understands fuUy what the men a
Nebraska before he developed bilaterwo.men soldiers currently fighting al pneumonia that squelched that plan,
overseas are dealing with and havr enlisted with two other friends in the
gone through .
Navy In 1?62. At that time, he said,
Brian Colfack; executive directot of there were no sigu-up incentives for
Pleasant Valley Hospital, spent most of enlistees and you weren't always guarthe 1960s involved in Vietnam in one anteed an avenue of schooling once
way or another, from being a hospital you began the term.
corpsman in San Diego, Calif., to
Once he made it through boot
. delivering telegrams to families of sol- camp, Colfack was given an aptitude
diers lost or injured in battle.
test and scored well, he said.
1'1 figured my high scores would get
Wh~n he left the U.S. Navy in the
early 1970s, Colfack had worked his me into some sort of schooling," he
way up to lieutenant commanding said. "And it did result in my being
officer.
given the opportunity to start my
"When I joined the Navy in 1962, healthcare career at Balboa.Hospital in
there were limited options for young San Diego."
TIME&amp;SENTINEL STAFF

Federal agency to focus
on places missing out on
the 'New Appalachia'
BOONEVILLE,
Ky.
(AP) When the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission formed to
help the region gain economic parity with the rest
of the nation, this distressed
mountain town was just
the kind of place·thac needed its help.
Over the past 36 years,
people here watched as-the
ARC pumped billions of
dollars into the region for
highways and economic
development projects. But
BooneVille and surrounding Owsley County got no
roads', no jobs. It remains, as
it was ·then, one of the
poorest places in the
nation.
So when the ARC meets
in eastern Kentucky later
this week to boast about
the gains it has made for
wha~ it calls the "New
Appalachia," it will also
strengthen its cornn\itment
to those places that have
been left behind.
"Clearly, our work is not
done;•
said · Duane
DeBruyne, spokesman for
the federal agency. "The
greatest part of our focus,
energy and resources now

are on the remaining distressed counties. They generally are characterized as
having the most severe terrain and being the most
sparsely populated."
Since the ARC was created in 1965, the number
of distressed counties in
Appalachia has dropped
from 218 to 118. Most are
grouped in Kentucky, West
Virginia and Tennessee.
Kentucky has 4.0, the
largest number of any
Appalachian state. West Virginia has 26; Mississippi, 13;
and Tennessee, 10.
Anticipation of help is
palpable among the 4,800
residents of Owsley County, many of whom have to
commute two hours away
to Lexington and beyond
to find jobs. Never before
has this plac~ of high ridges
an!! deep valleys been so
poised to receive federal
and state development
assistance.
' "Our ultimate aim is that
there will not be this glar. ing, concentrated pocket of
distress
in
central
Appalachia," DeBruyne
said.

P I - ... tt.lp, Dl

Mineral supplement
p.rogram Nov. 13
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallia County Cattlemen's
Association, Rio General
Hardware, Hubbard Feeds
and OSU Extension will
host a dinner meeting for
local cattle producers on
Nov. 13 on the topic of
mineral and protein supplementation of be~f cows on
pasture.
Dinner is scheduled for
6 :30 Ip.m. at t h e C .H .
McKenzie
Agricultural
Center and the program will
immediately follow. Reservations are due by this
Wednesday, or by calling
Gail or Martha at the Extension Office at 446 _7007 or
Mark at Rio Hardware at
245-9745.
Although mineral supplementation is a relatively easy
management tool, it often
does not receive the attention it deserves. The minerals
essential to cattle nutrition ·
are separated into two classes: major minerals and trace
minerals. ·.
·
The· major
min era1s
include calcium, phosp harous, magnesium, potassium,

sodium, chlorine and sulfur.
Trace minerals include iron,
iodine, .copper, manganese,
cobalt, zinc, and molybdenum and selcniUl\1.

.,

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

Two of ihe most
al imporal
tant major miner s are c cium and phosphorous, both
of which are major components of bones . Calcium is
important for nervous system and muscular function,
while deficiencies in phosphorous can delay puberty
in heifers and increase the
interval between calving and
return to escrus.
Sodium, chlorine and
magnesium, are also important because the body doesn't store them in sufficient
amounts. Daily intake of salt
·
'II
prov1'd ed ,•ree ch o1ce
WI
meet the chlorine and sodiurn requirements, which
regulate pH and water
retention. Magnesium is
needed year-round, however, is critical in the prevention of grass tetany during
times when pasture is grow-

PIRH ... By-. Dl
-1~.--

�~.Nov. 4, 2001

f'

m;ribune - Sentinel C L A 5 5 I F I E' D

imWAHJm

Ir·

HluWANII'Jl

--holp
M~F~~I11101J. ~~--

·~v:,,_ Clli.-ADIWERS:
\!""' E'l loneodiOr T-

""*'~~

·-·
• irJ

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

;)1414

5 :OuwNII(J.COm

= . . mt

1~253-S1.S

...

l\egtster

Fot

nlng,

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to S:OQ p.m.

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over is Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

AU l)llplay : 12 Noon 2
llusl ness Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday Display : 1:00
Thur~darrar Sundays

S•

20

WE Naad Vaur . - . - ..... pro•lklltl 2t Yr. Old lri'l Corn- gnorn. ~~ w yoaro

;IW.S,

t~viLI

GlWAWAY .

·

In

F,.. pupp1eo mbood oute
• 'IMdy 10 go, p40)992G:

bohlnd

Ina
Ma·

oonTc LOdge Roalno, Sat·
urdoy and Sunday, win·
- .SIN!JlES.oom
dowl, HWing machlneo,
Moolum IIIII lomlllt dog. /IV. - · mlcrowaro
lloomn . . to llhono mull glveawly. ComiOIIa· ~door, clof*1g mooh
Ill Nlol Homo N In- ble lnclools or outdoorl. mloc.

• P'II!E SEARCH!

~. 9e00 llhor( (31W)67s-a832
one!..,......,. to PO

blo

8ox 502, Cholhlre, OH

j

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FOlN)

START DAnNG TONIGHT!
HI hJ , _
l"'lble Found· lomalo
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OMANCE, ext 740-992-7075.

~.;------- ,--=---·~--:

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I1"0

lffuWANml

Privati Por:ty Ads Under $100
Words 1 Doys • Each Item Priced

Why walt? Stan meeting
Ohio slngloo tor!Qhl, cal toll
frM 1.too-786-2623 ext Chloe, 9th &amp; Main. Reward.
(304)6J5-s 114
sets,
1621

·

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.ANNol.JNcEMFNr

'

Stylist at LaMarca
Salon candace
' (Harmon) Tucker &amp; Fonda
WhHe. November Perm
special $25.and up: Facial
.-ng. manlcureo. By appolntmo~L (304)675-3040
walk troiWelcoma.
;Now

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

. Slhgie while malo aeeka
lornaieo. 25-45 for fun times
and
A 1 to p 0

ATTENTION!
12,000 WEEKLY! Mailing WORK FROM HOME
•oo broohurool Sallolac· INTERNATIONAL COMPAIAnENTIONI lift NH&lt;I tion Guaranteed! Pootaao &amp; NY IW'IDI.V EXPANDING
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BOOKLET/WILL
International Mal ~IE· Envelopol GICO, DEPT. S, TRAIN 1-801Hi85-9834
Commorco Cornpony Corn- .80X 1&gt;438, ANTIOCH, TN. www 21 ST-CENTURVHO·
plotoTralnlng/FreeBoolder 37011·1&gt;138 Start lmmodl· MEBiz.COM
1-800-225-0058
aloly.

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www........-IVJl

5450.00-11000

WEEKLY

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GIVFAWAY

~

r
Ir

YARD SAu:

~~

~

740oei2-9734 or 740-7-42- on Ml• Creek Road. lnfor-

1&gt;108.

r

matlon: (7&gt;4l1)-1052

2

monlhl
old. 3 Female. 1 male.
(740~·9582

4

YARD SALE-

PoMERoY~

I

Adorable

kittens free to a Maur1r residence Peach
good homo. lltte&lt; trained. Foil&lt; (CAI9) &amp; 33 Norlll,

(7&gt;W)843-5268.
NOll. 2nd, 3rd, k&gt;ta ol crolla,
;__..:_
_ _ _ _ _ _ . mile.
Doberman Plnshcer Puppill. 4 months old to glvo
away to a good homo. Coil

(7~~-----------In Memory

'7•.4tWU., .~ fJI

Nola Florence
Adams Brammer
Birtlu/4y Nontrtb~r 3, 1944
IJeparted this life Novelllber 15, 1987
As a M.r, Sister, Wife, and
Daughter, slie knew no equal. The
Lord took ller bome early for reasons
to us. As the days and years roll by
since her passing, we all still miss her
greatly and her upcoming birthday all
ller family will be tllinklng of her.
Deeply loved and missed by all.

I

ACEnot (Appolochltn Contor tor Economic - )
lo IIICNIIIng a VISTA W1i1Jn.
- to holp ........ ow

c:ommunlly ....,.,., tocalld In IHigl County.

Training. FREE Booklet. 1· ''Beauty Consultants•• Wo
800·892· 7485/Aich· N..O Helpl PT!Fr T111lnlng
asVouDeserve.com

Provided Paid Vacallonll

1

educator. Home Heatthl

Medical Olq)Ononce a ·pius,
Gallla-Mttlga Community Action AQ!IDC!f not required. Agency will
le accepting app!lcatlona for thiS full train. Apply In person at
time poaltlon, which will be based at 3084 ST RT 180 Gallipolis,

WANTED
Experienced
maintenance
workers,
experienced
greenhouse
manaaers and
workets needed.
Pa based
Y
on
experience.
Takino
"

applications
M Fri
on-

arrange for assessment, educational. and
remediation services to youth and adul!
customers. Position will also assist other
staff in providing a full range of
employment and training. services.
Emphasis will be on serving youth age 1421. Position will require regular reimbursed
travel in Gallla Cbunty and occasional
reimbursed travel outside Gallia County.
Position requires a four-year degree in
education, Ohio teaching certificate and a
driver's license.
To apply submit the following: resume,
completed GMCAA application form, copy
of teaching certificate. and copy of driver's
license before 4 PM, Wednesday,
November 14, 2001.
Applications may be obtai ned . and
submitted at the following locations:
O~lo DepL or Job &amp; Family Services
445 Buckeye Hills Road. Rio Grande
GMCAA Main omce
8010 Nonh State Route 7, Cheshire
GMCAA Galtla One Stop
420 Silver Bridge Plaza, Gallipolis
GMCAA Meigs Office
.
186 Mulberry Avenue. Pomeroy
Applications may be requested by phone
by calling 740-367-7342 ext. 27 or 7 40992-6629 ext. 27 before November 8.
Galtia·Meigs Community Action Agency .
Equal Opportunity Employer

110 Help Wanted

e

i

...

' Card of Thanka

I
I

7le 14·~ "

Earl
Mooney

I

Would like to
thank all who
aulated In hll
alcknen
and
death, Waulh·
Halley·Wood,
Gary
Warner, alnaer•!
VIctory BaJ)tls
Churcli and all
doctore
and
nunu
from
Holzer Hospital
and Nunlna Care.

Re•.

~1No~~

•

. ···-··

Card ofThanka

of

wish

to thonk
who
Natllowell, cards,
food, wlohos of
flllll,lnd

Pra)'lll to Ut. .
Our epeelallbankl
to Dr. Trtll1a, the
pril or lbt diemo

stall', lh• tlall' or

Hospice 1he
AmlrfcanLflloa
or Middleport,
Amerfcoa
Lelilon Post of
Racfne, ond Rev.
ond Mn. Bill
Hoblck.

c:oonllnollng

pooplt ond

Prof-.
cornpuWI ElcporlenCe
~Ired, Volun-

www.•

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relet•-

'lltM;9M"Mt. .

Athen!!&gt; Ohio 45701

592·9227

m

.MCFinanclllUbor1y.c0
UOO 111111 , , .
.

.'

JOBS \Ill to
Hiring !of

ntl LPN

HiO

HlvWANIDI

IClassifieds!

IIDIWANII'Jl

WANTED: Exp.,loncod - - - - - - - -

lor

=-~.!"'7!no., _ _ _ _~
i • (7~ 14

A POSTAL JOBS. \11110
-Spillt-lllo~S.7.578 ... _ _ __
To .....,. .._ ~ Noaotw'W1g. .._. ........ &amp; G
P IIM.alMirF......_ Aw6u;ull. ForAj4 4 • o

-

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7 ~ &amp; .... lnlo. 1..eoo-337-0l30 .... lEO: M- ..,.... ~
IL $
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. . . • I de • • comI

ILt ~II I,\
lndt.ldl. ,._\.

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a:oo.n .:; ;:oapm.
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• . 111 ....., Job

1111:,dOW. . . .

451131

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rJayl
.273-611381opi¥You'l9o iolllioriiAIIIIO 1 o1 tnonng

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LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 ST. RT. S88 (OLD RT. 35)
·GALLIPOLIS, OIUO

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po1i11Gr1 •

a

,

,

-!'"'I'Y' ~· fie. nllolgoCounlyOhtoUia~-('~'*J-•
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pklv"l.;;
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LPHW AN's nMdld b fltelcllllric home .._ C1111 tl 1 1' I ua -

eo...

'

TIUS SALE CONSISTS OF
ITEMS FROM THE
ESTATE OF THE LATE
NINA G. DENNEY OF

ploiO l· - -CIF 'IIIII lnd lloenle lnd QOOd drtW'ag . . tad
urine
,. ·
W.

~ lkl aon:l. E 71 It . . . PI!*-- Fax tD: 304-711oga. Salary. 141.001 hour. 1. . or ... 1o Po!awwlll.

•:•!!:::.:'-proper

111o ¥
ty, ~oy and ,..._
Sind ...,... to: • · •
PO b
eu-a.. W¥
11
ilrvM1 I Eft1*1y-.
•
Community Soul
PO 250M.
,..., .to 1 No IJ'N't 111
~
lncfud.lfl
~ - Box etW, Jocbon, 0H
par hour, RN'a 117 per ••
"' .s&amp;IO. D-tline: 111W01 .
10 101
hour. - ¥ ' I d .- '
tram. . . product • • -· 0..•11111 OffeNd. ,.._ ~·i ; Ita ~ h8we ex........, ...... Col Primary
Nunlng porla&gt;eo- ..... ---=~::--=~--:-:--::---data (dnowlngol " d'b· at (IOII)Ii1&amp;-2273.
Public Sale and Auction
11 111cor: ...

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~Oppooturity~

r.=;:-

·lbk for PhyiiL
Malco A Uvlngll ~ andepr

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pr:nu.ng
,
j
Is and--

KERR,omo.

HOUSEHOLD OF
LOVELY FURNISIDNGS
IN "LIKENEW''
CONDITION! ALSO
CONTENTS OF
OUTBUILDINGS AND
BARN!

iiiiiiii;ti;~"'~;;i;;!~~Miiiiiiiiii

:":.t:'

From
~.Li..:,"t,
$500'S7000mo. T.., 'tou or ·-,-c:t-"triol'"oav
&amp;.~&gt;by Stec&gt;l
lion tocto!Oiogy o r Wili *M:CIIItl IIU.con'l
:.~~~
l

-------

NOW

HIRING.

-'sa

$6
Per Hour
Full/Part Time
OFFICE

ENVIRONMENT

;..

www.BulcProllll......
110 Help Wanted
;:;:;;';;:;;"-;:';::;""';';';::-;;; _____;,.:..:;_;_;,::!:,.;:;.:::.;.::::::__ __
ANVONE CAN DO ITI
$251$75/HR-PT-FT. WORK
AT HOME· 1-8110-37.._1
www.ThlnkBigOoilars.com

&lt;IYJ.!I~!.

I u II I It I!\
I ut t t t t~ 11•1'-1!111'1
\\dill hit

Sunday

12:30-9:30
Monday-Thui1day
2:00-11:00
Friday and
Saturday

QFF

Mcmager Trainee

-.. -.

._.._::-. ~ ~H
pert- poolllon w1lh a
a
ooo•lf'allllve
-.y and
_
... _ . PioueiUld
and ltBo -

:-:Hurl.-cEno1.

ubuc . . tot.

1M Columbul Aold.. Athens. Oh

&gt;15101 . No pl1ono calls

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once

intj 401 (lc). 9erd .....,.
10 PIIA - · ~ one! oollry _ . . , _ t o:
.-atOhloVOIIyf'ui&gt;. OlkHII,_.Inc.. AIIn:
,llohlng Co., 1126 Third """'·· Human - · PO 8ox

lor ltlong -

your -

.Gallpollo.Ohlool8831 .

'Data ~ . by

eea. - ·

OH - ·

be-

n ......... 851131d Avonue,
G~!!!oll~~~oli~o.~OH.~:-::~::-:::­
Own o P.C.? Put II To

--tor

'Henderson
C

Auction enter

M.f EOE, MIFIDN. .
. . ...:: i.no..t. MEDICAIJDENTAL BILL· len!lal. Paid Training/Full
COrrc&gt;ute&lt; Roquiral.
Auction"
8.0Cl-4.~,
lNG COlli'\• NY hlllmrne- Benollla. For more lnlorma· t-IONli-NN DEPT 780
. Oilgt hOipiUI wil train, d\ale ~A '"" ..__,_ lion COli 1•888-674-9150
Thursday,
· roou.. to· 'Tho Dally Santi~ • - . - ext. 3234
Neal a J08?
.
·not, PO aO. 729-14, -~ to Prcx:eu !alma. Stswant a ca,_ In NUASNovemberS:
;Ui, Oh -1S789
. S45111f. Potenllel. Wll tntln. GOVERNMENT JOBS. lNG? Nursing Aasiatant
6·.00PM
,
PC Raquirod. Call Now! 7 WlioiWe/Pollal S40I1&lt; a y.r. Claa&amp;es
being of!
, Dental Hyvenlllll NHdod Days 1-800-935·3971 Ext Paid Tcalnlng &amp; Full Bono- olf "-· ~200
OC'8II Toy1, '-wdry (lola and
,,Poll llme. (7&gt;W)448-2409. 1219
lila. Coil TOLL·FREE lor In·~· &lt;o, compaollonate
I. II you are lots), "Cbrbtmu pill,
a caring,
' Domlno'o ,_ tal&lt;lng appll·
TillE RN POSITION. to. SUn-Frt flam· I Opm/EST. poriOn, you COUld be a part aomelhl"' for ...~i.e!
:catiOnlforMiedrtverl, Gal- ~Hill Nursing center 1-88f.329-2114 )11203
of OUR HeallhCilra Teamt
A•ctlooeer:·#Auctionec~~w-M~i~h Molden
·'"""" ono! PGrnsroy toea• lo _.,Ill appllcatlono lor Government Jobs
Contact Judy Hart, LPN, InLoa Nal
Owoor. AI"""
7 992
.' tlonoonly.
-·
7 to3
and 3 Hiring
UpTo$18.35/Hr.
structor
ct 40- OR-6800
DRIVE TOApplyln
OWN- S.IO
Pluo a
tolull11 INIIo.RN.
Groot
Benolllo,
lor 2001102
OA 740-742·2310
Slop L-~-~~~;:~l;:::;:=:=::~~;~~~~:.---J
*3116
'
~ Poy and more By Aocl&lt;lprlngo Rlhlllllla·
-l'uot sc. Paymonto .. tow
~ W8geat 1-888-728-9083Elol ao® · tionCf!nlor-!,Jal3e759
Public Sale and Auction
~-=~·=~~~~~1ltdl'1
Sc6nlc Hilla at7..,.11:00prncSr
·. ·~ ROjocll
' Cto~
·
·
· (7&gt;W)448-7150 or atop by
f&gt;Y, ~~
ou •
..,.
c..-A COL OTR Expal- and Ill out and application. Sal~ Beauty Sui&gt;PfY In Gol· pllcallonl Equol Oppoolunity
. _ ~·3 113011 or BOOllpollt 111 hiring nlllde EmpiO!'or
Encouraging
MIUC
)43-3!8 ..
FUUER BRUSH CO. Direct SaJes Citric. PIT ani)&lt; Apply Worl&lt;placo
DIYOrolty
•
..leo dllltlbutorl noode&lt;l· In Pa,_ No ~ call IEOEEWD).
)Mit~ ...,., lor CMttrnoo, No
noc-ry. p1ouo '
Amish Home
ooll
·Avon.
Coil (7~)448- Call fl00.882·7270 email ___. --=~::---=~---.-::--::----~
·
lullorlody20ool.....,. Umll·
•.
od,... only.
·
Public Sale and Auction
Poolllon

.w;

aumoN ·

In•--

................

.

.~=~·''!t
CootactUs Networ1c

.,_I*UArzx•

www.americanammunltydasslfied.cilm

SPECIAL

Y~ley Truck Driver Training
. !ill CdUion sIlk-

E-mail: carurs0141umber.com
VIsit our w.bshe It: www.Miumber.com
Equol Opportunity Employer MII'IDN

Cad•-.

SALE

'ltb ,._, 111 O.A I'Dtg'
c...lallltllllllll•4a ~s •17401 173-3916

AUCI'ION BAliN AND WE WILL BE
SELUNG INSIDE ANDOUI'51DE DAY OF SALEUit

"'NOT RltSPONSIBLI FOR ACCIDENTS .

oa LOST noPERTYl"

TUESDAY, NO,••,. .
5:30P
[f\ •

llcltH It lilt llltdlltl Cenler MilL 3311
IIU.Ia C111t
TM Fn

Weehlngton'a Reoeptlon &amp; VlrQIInla
Military lnatltuto piUI other plctufll &amp;
prlnta, wlckar potty chair, primitive
wl8h atand, iev. old trunka, cookware,
lampe, old manilla, Fluting m110hlne,
old clock, linen pflla, atono jare,
orooka, 2-30 1(111. ttone Jara, vacy lg.
ircin kattll, Cl8t Iron tendere, hanging
glaee porch Jampa &amp; much more.

Public Sale and Auction

;:.:••·········~···········•:;

•fimittiiPI fllttllg adlllltat.J Dlttliglllty

Drug Free Environment

GOOOfOOD
••••ALL ITEMS HAVE 8~ MOVED TO THE

AUOJON

or IIIOitJqel; tax~eo:'.!::~~::

Public Sale and Auction

ltll&amp; ltl7~w.Dti-S.&amp; lirii:00-4:11!Ms

.,.LICIENSitD II BONDED BY STATE OF OHIO"
CASH OR APPROVED CHECK ONLY

ESTATE

Consignments

·''•

740-245· 9868 (HOME) OR
740-245-9866 (BARN)

SAT.,Nev.17*10a00AII

From US Rl. 35, IUo Grande, O. Wke St RL 325 5 ID St. RL 141,
tum riJid 4 10 oppoox. 7 mi. Ill Coduoao, 0.
Nice Aallob .
home on .730 OC: Cllllliltina of3 bednn., li'lliq rm. kitoilw, tloll
llltb; blnlwaod lloan; bomo hoo own oeptic 4 Co. 611 1111
oaicelatwllarpl_..,..._ T..-: S2,000.00dtnmltti1Dt
of_.e; t.11nco due by
u&amp;ood he a oloor ofU1u

Tools, toys, dolls, anJels, Indian, and
knives. Very good selection to
·choose from. Come on down,
sllop for Christmas early.
Phone 992-9553, Sbop 742-0126 Jim
Regular Auction Thunday @ 6:00PM

Announcement

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY

Public Sale !Jnd Auction

So1k .. ._IIIIIMt 11••., M110 $16,GCID.GO Ill
15585 State a..tet•t.
OWo (Galla Ce.)

Monday, November 5,
6:00PM

or visit our website: ·

•

...

P1Z11rtyer
lwtw'al I wtl
~~-

90 Beech St ree t. Mid dlepo rt

1-800-821-8139

GLASS
ZENim
KENMORE
HEAVY
WASHER/DRYER (ALMOST NEW),
CITATION 15.5 CU. FT. UPRIGHT
FREEZER (REAL Nt.CE), SMALL
KITCHEN APPLIANCES, KITCHEN
GLASSWARE,
COOK'IV
MICROWAVE CART,
POTS A PANS, FIRE
MISC. KITCHEN

latn t a.t

Old Glory
Auction House

For All Your Advertising NHcls
1he Anwlcen Community

,

Routo11
GoiNpollo Ferry, WV
Fox: 7lW28-2188

. NopiiOMcolls.Apply

201111 Afl oqual _
_,., ~II...:_.._&amp;...._,~ ningo. llnooiPayiV/oAidorful
•~·,......
.....:.._ ,__"!""".;:;:'.:··
--.. ~&amp; --~
---.......... ~111 ~~r· -· --·9:30am
•~ t o
- · _, ,
_
o11y 1n . . WOo~
10:00am, ~ il1nl Sol· IIOI&gt;bytolll out an appilca·
.
urdoy.
lion todoy.
IIOCKWELL
,-------,
.
AUTOIIA110H
CioirN- - - · · -·"""
Noe..p. -FTIPT
· Data Entry IO&lt; 1oo:11 Doctora
Qo.., 1111.,• . FuiiTrainlng&amp;Cortlllcation
S11.1l0-$33.00 por hour po.
Provided.
"Large Christmas

environment. Come see Juston Sizemore,

Tuesday thru Thursday, 7am-5pm, .t::

-

FA! =I. I 'tpor ToI f5-S~
1R.
roo
.et

prat.,.:

ll1o _ . we are

S30k per y1ar, with tho possibility of earning
SSOk-SIOOk within 2-5 yoorsl College

84 LUMBER COMPANY

=

- - _.,.,. - nod. Applyi!Uiellylo Furni-

baneflll including
Cll. (~~5148 or vta~t
.......,., vocation,
uol)lr'IOniJ dlyl and 401K ilntlon tiC. e.chllot de- ,..,..,.._.._~.com
www.NI CUhTaoll.com
plorl. Wo ora pin cl I lltrga ~
ep. !:/bmal
only ploue) or •~•·-~ •--..PART TillE RN
10
111ot """"' - - por1un11y r.r ~
· Automa- .. - · · ,_ Fll 1n POiitlon at
lont
Cl_, lldvoo.-ntni
774 S,WIP.O.
8ox hiring
II 3p6ck
-~.
lui or
DaopponunltiM.
For 1111i1M1ew and
__.8
2018 Dept.
Mihtauk8e,
53201part-time
up app11ca,_ &amp; EYe,. _ 1,.,... ard lion.

pany

-

management. Manager Trainees earn S26k-

lnfoCision
Management

AC!:epting
applications:
242 Third Avenue
GaiUpolls, OH

-.clga.

Thll Is a lui ,... lliorfad ::'"tnct"=v
JXIIIIIOn one! olin II eom-

looking for a career that Includes customer
service, hlnds-on work. growing sales, and

professlonall We offer •n excellent benefits
pac.kage along with a great working

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2241

olc

84 lumber Company Is searching for Colreermlnded individuals for our Manager TrainH
Program. We want Individuals who ·· are

preferred, but not required. No cQnrtructlon
knowledge necessary. Through our paid
training, you will ~ecome an industry

..

"if:
):!'..:::.,._=..::::
por'.-rood-computor

~

Call past donors
and volunteen to
raise ru&amp;ds for
1111\lor non-proftt
organizations.

Corporation

' -..
•• ,._ ohlltl; 7om-3prn. 711rn~ 10 COII!ploi*td motl- 5prn, 3pm-tlpm, llpmIll. oloowklfll, and blllo o171in,coi740111G!'m.
-·
HOUDAY
CASHII
T o _ , . - lor S40KIS~I
- · Mull hoVI 11111 poollion, you mull k1di- ,P ._
· No
cato lha oorr~
~
one! II IIL04 traring. eodo, .., the top cl your qulred. · 1-88a-31ol-1033
...,-.. 11 and ~. raune. ~ __. your Oept.301
poyrQI ond blnliito aclmln- ...... 10.

- why
. CO\IOr
....._
aro -

.._koy2younlnlamo.....

1-eoo.311Q-1241

.
I Vwy
In:Jtlgh--.lllf·rrto41- dlponclll•
•
000
one!
-'&lt;ing _...ay lor., ax·

•

ny Nttdl Helpl S1500- 1232orvkllt ... at
4-JO
S8000IMO PTIFT Fl80 1,..
1 888 97
BS
lonnatlqn call Now!
---~=~:--:~~~=:====

nil

ABSOLUTE REAL ESTATE AUCTION

Public Sale and Auction

Immediate
Openings

ResponslbiUtias will Include prompt, courteous
customer aervlct, accurate cash control, lfficlent
operation ot lhe cash register system, cleaning and
stocking merchandiH. Promotion opportunltltl
may become available !hat would include Qanefitl.
Must tlava a hlgh' IChool' diploma or GEO and the
Ill

to work ewnlnge. and weekanda. (No work

Registered Nurses

(

'

'

(Full lime, Part lime, Per Diem)

Holzer Medical Center • Gallipolis
~a, Rehab, 4Wilt, 2West, Perliatria, Crihcol Core,

Pregmsive Care Unil and EmergenCy Deparlinent

Holzer Macllcal Canter • Jackson
Emtr9fllo/ Dlportment

~.

55 Hospital Dr.

www.SnwtWork4U.c:om

- - - - - - - - ATTENTION: .WOO. hom
Act Nowl
._. $100,000 por yoar
Be Your Own Boa From lnooml ~· For FREE
Homal Forllme 500 Compo- lniGnnolion call HIIIB-1!2 1-

We offer competitive salaries and
, excellent benenu.
For mon information pleue contact:

O'BLENESS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

ooo-s-

Help W.m.d

{1100)885-73115

lory "' 80ca"onll IWO!d.
S25.-$75ftlr. Pt.ft.
~~~=
1-800-218-75.:1
11-''7'1
lrod
·~NTIONI
WORK FROM
comm men I requ
. .P\I I~
PI!'Ooe .aelld rooume and HOME! $5001$1500 mo
two
by Friday, Port·11mo. ~ mo
November 9111. to Loa FuiHimo. Groot lor Momll
Wood, ACEnet. 84 CoJum. Free Info. an.-....AICH.
bu Road A
01110
I
I
~
45701, EOE.

I

·

_,1
per month, hllllh lnuance Eam 2nd. lncorM without
and 1 posi-MMce mew..
2nd ,lob up to

· Part time &amp; Full time
Emerpncy Department,
Medlcal.Suf81cal, &amp; ICU
Your skills and compassion are needed
to care for our patients

..

mon

- -·
CCIIIOJilkln.nll

Call
·(740) 843-1249

-

'

WOI1c F10rn Homo
•SolfljoJ-~
~-willl-ri!$2500 month pi,
101 .,. 1500paoo. S7000
Ill Ft

NURSING OPPORTUNITIES

•·

(1FT or 21'1) AN 'tou POSTAL

1118-11M'21112
·
o
u
r
11
-2-~·
• II &lt; -... -.org lor ""'*"lion, ap- .-CAi).p;. E or GROWING . 8USINESS
;£uy pre mol &gt;g. ply ., ... '"""
30 modlliiQ- NEEQS HELP• #IAIIrllrtlng; llw••Po,.. _,..
•
lopo.,&gt;AI(Iour·--- IAolloodooiE.()om.
&gt;luifld. Cal P l r j - &amp;
,_..__aM- _..,, SSZI- PT.
iDnoare D•I'C"Jl!e!Ma
1m;-"'~ Er9 S10DO-I400CWwk FT. 100,HIOO·m-P33
.._r.got~ IJicto. 1121-11531
,fxl2070
10ft ..,cAia.:Y.... tow' %1 www.drMrn2bfNa.cam
;~ iAOW WITH USI
c1 - - mtlh fur-.. H a l p - caring lor . .

AIIIIIILY AT HOMEII AnENTION·
WORK
Croltl, Toyo. - r y . FROM HOME· Moll Onlor
WOod,
5awlng, - - . NO.ct Halp lmTypng...a-t Poyl CALL 1· odlately _ . . , _ 1'1
800-785.Q380 ~~ 201 s1
f1'

•

'oNLY QUALIFIED
PEOPLE NEED
APPLY!

11"6 Hl!uWAN_JD~

HW'WANm!

(Z4M)
Raquft I _ , pi1r1r whO -

REGISTERED NURSES

I
I

•••

·

$1000 WEEK' VI p
FREE' Brochure! 800-929'rocess-..0198 or www.FreeBeaulng Mall at Hamel No Expo- tyBrociMe 00111
-loial Calll-800-755-2027.
Nocnoeryl Froo De· "GOVT POSTAL
.
JOBS"
To $18.35/hour. Free Call
$529 WEEKLY mailing let- lo• applicaton-examination
tors !rom home. Full or part· lnlormalion. Federal Hire,
time. No o•perienco neces· Full Benefits 1-.eoo-e42oary. Eaayl Any hOt!rsl Call 1659 ext. 125, 7am-10cal: 7
u.s. Dlgost 1.a 17-520.8071 days
24 hour recording.
Aggressive Home Healt~
Agency aeeki"IJ energot~.
11 0 H 1 W t d
organized Individual to act
e p an e
as community and flhyslclan

~ ~74·&lt;4&lt;

I

amauuua ......... .,....ny uuvuS 6715

Gold Supervisors &amp; Assistants.

.Help Wanted

OUEd~~~:ro;,";~:.~l:tn~itt provide and/or orphoreaq ~: ·~:1p Wanted

$ 5 Farrtlly 11101-11103,
unwanted lremt into cash, 11108-11110, 2 2110 miles

Klllens.

•amonds,

...Be Your Own

7

$Tum your nommaga &amp;

• Frea

all1·800·501·6832 (2H,..)

1300
oxt.
www.project,..,und.oom

Ringo. U.S. Curronoy,•
LOST on BulavMte Road M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·.
(Porter end) Shepherd ond Avanua, GaHipolls, 740mixed puppy, black with 448-2842.
.
while spots over eyes. 3
montha old wuring rod cot- Good uaad high quality
llr.
II ,you, pleaae
have sean call.
thla alectrlc
puppy,
1802 "lldmill 1304)875(740)367·7811 "'(740)381·
7528. Reward
B S h 1i d
Uy, 8 Or f8 8
Loot: White Cat with Clllco
I lh .
Face and Tall Female. Vann 8 .' .
col Conlenary Road. Call
CLASSIFIEOSI
(7&gt;4l1~53 PM.
Small blonde lemalo recent-

more, ep Y
· · ly had pups Found at Fla·
... 83. v.~mn. OH 45886. trock Grocery. 1304)675·
Wynter .,.....,..
2897

Vlaa &amp; ,_eroard
Cnodil or Debit Carda

0'

I

Lw______,..

(2411 .-.onAvonue)
- ....,_.., .

I

"
0

· •·

• No Tltklt~Purtbrtd Animals
Or Garagt/Yird Salts • Limit 3 Per Perton
Mall To: Ohio Volley Publishing, 825 Thtrd
Avonu1, Goillpolls,·OH t5631

'I._
r· lffuWAN11!11
_ _..l._lffu_.w.......•.m_.l'.

eo....
Between Bridge and Laurel
Hornet
11 500 A MONTH PART Worl&lt; 1 From
Rood. can (7&gt;4l1)379-2883
.
TIME ,. 500·$7 200 lull SSOOJ$ 500mo.
PT
Absolute Top OoDar: U.S. Ume 'woRK IN HOME In- $2000/S&amp;OOOmo. Fl Paid
Loot long haired caJ1co cal, Silver Gold Ccina, Prool· 1 •.,__ 1 ,.__ -~-" Vacatlonall
1·800·273·

vile, OH 45741.

you.

v--

.wWo . . - ·
•)ng lor
lhot hu

Re- 8d lmmeclatetyl cau·suN- Booldet
Licensed f66,0tllo &amp; West funds. No Experience Re- DANCE DISTRIBUTORS'
www.2analndreams.oom
VIrginia, 304·77:1-5785 Or ~ulrod. FREE lnlormation HI00-71 7-4423 EXT et. (800)949-4S81 .

SWf- sugar Daddy Found: BHulllul 10· 12 304-77:1-54-&lt;7.
35+ llf1d ~ and inlor·
-old Mala Collie- Shophenl Mix on Coni Mill Road
nANIIDB
motion to POB 103• La ......
·~
ro UY

6

:c.,n-d~gow-..
_lijiiiA~~~\ii~ lnd•• 7 • - - ~.OtriiGmupHoma. ~EOE.
,
-10-..:!:!"_...!'.:,_~minimum-. S I poowcFull-llrno,bal-

lingle&amp;~r .area. Toll- Cllelhlre, (740)446-7825 or complete auction service. HUO/FHA Mortgage

1'"" 1
9 735

lulut'l

a

. . . -4...

• No CommlrCIII Adl

Mailing
Loiters From ATTENTION: WORK FROM """"nooo1vo nlnlng, 111black Lob
18011 -~· ~,. SSSSSWEEKLYI
Star·.at• Homo. No o'P"nenco nee· HOME ISIJ0.$2,500/mo FT pond c1 ................. 1S7 18
AI 7 near pany, lull limo auctlonear, Home
PnlC8SSing 0188ry. FTIPT.· Help Need· S3,00Q.S7,000/mo FT Free
...... -·-•
Rick Pea

lr

HruWAHIUl

c.l Or
tJ..t. 1t13 Wul6:glun

plorw.,,.wlel
olllp. l.lnl- dOIIiJ1.
- - In CIOI'M'U1ily
llioniJ, lnd
11 'lgproduCe
In tool
.
, _ 1Sooking
0 _ mum ""' n ....,_ WOI1dng ll)lou!o perform
· ome· l•••d-Buslnell.
leas, HAlt public- or - - nlldl,.;lalicol 0111: ful Trolnlna. Paid
· N1llc Pi-lllor• culotlono, and old In poaduo:t
gront writing ooporlor .... IOIIOikoroqu1ro
·81W6:J.2oM I
and an ll8y ta work 'IIIWt an Auociate'l degrM In
•t:eER OPPOIITUNITYI ll1o Pl"""fld. VIII Drolllng ond ilel9l and at

• Start vCur Ads Wi th A Keyword • Includa Complete
Desc:rlptlon • Include A Prlct • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
" Include Phone Numbtr And Addrtn Whtn Ntedtd
• Adl Should Run 7 OIYI
.

~l'i!liuw3~~ l....,:::;::..;.J
.__ _ _ _ __, , . - - - - - - - Larao yllll uJe

P'"'-'·IIIQorganlU·
tht im-

·IIUIIINESS PROf'ESSK). fian. .nd·~a

f/a!"rrta!u

Dlsplav Ads

II"

A-~ForAfle. S1l35/hcu'

"
c:ooiii*A.TtiR
81'01..4)003132
Pt •• a C0r11or 1o -.g
prailct wcwdc,.. ror ,.. This oe.tgner pos111on1
Kld'o- PRIIICI- flo _ , our Ellfli*'inll doF....,. - . poo•••• lo ~-- lor
W11 be
for~ prododng 11-'*lical de-

Or'Fu Tol:~m~-~2~1~57~----::--~~~:.:=

()eo.rll1ire.r

LPN

lffuWAHmJ

:.:c!:.':~
=.f::"'..:=: ~=.:=" "":'! :.t'.!t..=.•tlcot':;
~=AIOI 1o 1o • So, 'tou-ToSooUoi....-,Tolho~.30orn- .. - . ..,.- , . _ Wo-apal~
... •
No- ........ llpmC$1' t-728-9fl83 V
I
I - - ... lion_ .... _ _
~ForAP t!"" X1105
. . -. L«aa.,._ ..,.._ birt' POII•OJ. Thll~
-_.-._.,..au(1FT Or i-n. #9.
toni 1&gt;01'
"11" IOQIIhl
$

~"'"'
Mo.acT

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
446-3008

Ellfll•i lfl

=-

..

.· ~·. t•~
.
Spiara.:IIM- lnlo/Ful Training. 1-88a~·~~~-

REACH OVER· 28S,OGD PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

c••• .

II'·

ad..Prqa:IT"""*YV"&gt;UP-Iorpoo. cu II t'
• Pllld The ... _., .. , c-..n.tor f* _. fftlftllll • ft..,.,.:-o=.'::.-m::
E«&lt;""'*flelacelliiNba -~ J.:" :=.!~ ......
PTIFT. FREE look· Col1~71-531i·11711.
- - - ' - - ~--- p 1 • - .._ g I_IIOd_to_ .._:llpm"'~ 12 ..._: Ohio~ Pltiftlg C...
n:n
&amp;n Extra CMh
lN ~fb:t.~~tion't
s;;p .:, ;;..kj' I'll , 01 w•::plu)lld ~- i)41
- ~'pm &amp;;; 125 1l*d M ..
*·
.·JIIIIOM
....biz.Al.-..w•r•.com~o Buy or S800imo
tlolidap a
~ ~ n ._ bwgi•'"' Sun.
~in:,..~
C0U::
11:30pm Mono ~
·
=' Frw of a d'IMiflQIIIO Jor St.. -..uwood. WV, 3CM- Treiner leiP(Iftlibll fM TUMday, :t» 10:!0 PMI..:w
!

In one Week With us

Sentinel

HlvWANIDI

~TnN'TION:
F - ~ 1211,000 liO,OOQiyr, 10 ll1o
1800-12,500 . . -.,.-.g_ - - .....
;n....wPT. U .DD0-17,000 .......,.iilt$1 ¥ ....... -*M M ..--lid lhe
I * ~.
FREE~ tl •• FREE- MW-duu;Lv ~. AI
.IOOKI !T. ..,.• • w...... 1..101)..201.-3 Aocklllll AIAom 5 ' you'l
·~ o.pt. 1101
reoef¥t lhl "" Ill» lnd
"'TTN: W0AK , _ EAR'! I
15C'O Pa&gt; Doyt ~hi- you il!
1tOMEJ 1500 to 11500 AI oul fannl from home.
llw _.. Q '*'
$3000 ID 11000 + No 8'Tir1eiWM TICIIIIty.
~ ~~
. . , ....7at

m;ribune

n·

6a•bp 1tiJR5- 6rntinrl • Page 03

- o r . . - . P o y l - - lllo 5
Ills
..- . .

=

TO Place
.Your Ad,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolls, Ohio Point Pleaunt, WV

If

interested,
please
contact:
\

Rolie Ward, VP of HIMIICII1 Resources ·
Holzer Medical Cenier
100 Jackson Pike

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
. ....1 (740)446·1101
ftll (740)446·1106

I .t i'I HI quip1111111 \uliton , ~
­
\iltiid, t'. \ 111\lll h\1·1 11 . ~III I I . ' \
' ,.
!ll :llll \\1
··Locolod oi 1075 Route 1150, Bidwell, Olllo. From
. ' Golllpole, Oblo, lib 51811 Rollte 35 West to
Roctaey EIIL Taro left aad folow 111..,. From
Jockooa, Ohio, like Route 35 eut to RodiiO)' nit,
tura rtptlllld IGIJolr tile sipl1bouloae mlle.

.

TBIJCK AND TRACTOR

· 1985 Ford F600 Flat bed ttud! with 104,074
: mila • hpttd ule • au (rwrve bid), White
UO tractor • cab 3957 boun dielel, Ford
· 4000 • 41'19 boun with KZ Koyker loader
:

FARM

aa-er

EOUIPMENT

' Davis manufactured Trencher Gas, 6 foot
: ~erapper blade, Rotary boe, 3Pt. Cultivators,
: Set or Corn Culli•aiOrs, 3 Pt. Potato plows, 7
' foot Keen Kuder Bush Boa, power IG-an 295 .
Welder, 5 HP Rotatlllet, Ume Spreader, 1165 '·
· . J.D. Blade, N 140 foot corn and hay elevator,
· Yard Roller, Small Sand Blaster, Waener
: Power Roller, 2 HP Saw . Born Air
: Compressor, Small Air Compressor,
Craftsman alrless paint sprayer, Grinder
Vise, Plus band tools

'

Apdlppccn Mlci Gwl cgulgmcpt • Be on time!!

•

.

~:

Dms ror tbe weother!

:
·: ;

Auc:tlon tonduded by:

Rick Pearson, AJ.lctlon Company H66
Muoa,'Wesl VII:Jinla
304-773-5447 or 304·7,73-5785
OwD&lt;n: Mike &amp; Chorine Hemphill
Ttrml! c.h orCIMdl ,.-llh ID. MU&amp;lhm bank.ltttnof-cl'l!dlt
. . . kDo1111t to .uctJon t6111p1BY

' I

by

Rftij.yett

.

.:

."t

.:,

..................~.

:~
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.""-',
- .:..-.....
.:-....
...-..........
......-....-....-....-....-....
...-..... ...-,,.....,...,.........
.'
,...:

,..:

:1

' •'

.

.

.

.

.

Mwmgrlll I
Wlnaton S.
ChurchillTh•
Llncg!n'a
Conttmpgrarlu by Mathew B. Bredyaev. Tht IU!pO!Obllt g!rll yriU. PIP«
bllck bookl· Bringing up fiJbtr by Oeo
McMwnue, 1at &amp; 3rd S.rlllbt!ort Cbrjalln11 &amp; Llt!lt B_!L_
l:lR!Id! Sev. mJcl,-k plotorlll
magazine• dated 1918 &amp; up. Scribner'•
magazines 1897 &amp; up. Fortune
magazine• &amp; National Geographic &amp;
many mort booka.

z:tr.\C:

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY ,
AUCTIONEER RICK PfARSON #66
APPR£NTIC£ AUCTIONEER Rf STEIN IR #A·201
115-Sll! or ll3-544l

TERMS: CA$11 OR CIIECK i!YIO

'

�Pwge D4 • .....~ Ci..--a.rlllilld

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galltpolla, Ohio • Point PIT EDE'It, WV

Sunday, Nov. 4, 2001

2001

.

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ottlo • Point Pleaem, WV~~==;=jii?6~u~n~ba~l'~lz:~i~m~,.~-~·itintiinirli•iiiDiS

~~~~
t
~~
1I..,r_A..
~--&amp;
.....
1L..rm~I'OII~IIoulls~RfM~~~ r ~~ "-~---....
~
3

..::· 1185 Sllytlno 14X70. 3 bod- (4) 5 aero lola IO&lt; aale
badroom- tor- 1 lnd 2 bodr.... oport· - - - - - - - - Root """"· Good ConciiK&gt;n. CJM (740)367-0129
S350/mo &amp; otoctrlc:, gas ..,..., ond unfur. Ta,. Townllouao Apart·

;,-;;;;;,.:·4'et0;~;.; 111o
o.i -

Ho Land Conncto.
(018)735-3834
'

.i

Malri

MoallloMD
a .... _
I'OIIo:J~U£

~

I
•

· 7~

2.7""'""' """"""tlrrlln. In
Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedooom. - · $2700, ptoase
Only SI9,8SO. frM Detr.,.y caM (660)563-3753, Loove
&amp; Set Up. t-MI·Q28.2126 name ard number
New 1-4x70, 3 bidtoc.n, 2 3 Partia!s olland. (:1)1)576bath. Only II1I9S down &amp; 99211

• • • - c.• c,_,

·
·-·•··
1 - Sloullz 2 bad ...... All 7 ·
-7e71
.
.. 3 If 110M,
W/0, 8a18 oovorod PQICII. Now Doublo Wldo. s1g 5
Ptr .....,I 3 Bedroom, 2
$7,5110. (3114~
eolh Freo Dellw &amp; ...
·
ry - ·
14&gt;170 3br. Trailer. $3900. up. HI88-Q28.3426
(3041488-2549
Nice 28xtl0 Double Wide
Mtting
on ranted lot in
' 18 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
Polnt Pleasant area. 2x6
8.-Fixedl. . Rato With Air And Un- walla, thermal pane wintltrpll"fug 1-eee-11:18-3426 - . . priced to lllo. C.ll
1304~875·3819 aak lor
, 11172 Grandvile trailer, 3
Ndi(iiQin, .t0011, refrigera· Aclomary.
OAKWOOD HOliES
""· SS500.(74Q)742·27110.
SUPER CENTER.

dill•••··

, 11183 Cl8yton 14x80, 3 bac::J..
. ,_, 2 balll. all llactJic,
1 'ontoondillon. $15,000
finn (740.. ••71~
, ,.._, ~,
. 1at limo t&gt;uv•,. Govom·
_ . 1oona- t&gt;uv 1o1roo &amp;
. ute- (74Q)416.3093 Oak·
wood &amp;lpo&lt;centar

Over 40 homes to Chose
loom. Olive I lillie .... a
loti Oakwood Homos of
NHro. ~'755-5885

'"'Y"9'

REDUCED
AI.Doublo Wide Dloplayo
must go. Only S9115 down.
Only at Oak-.! HOIMI of
Nhoo. (304)755-5885

28dO 3 Or 4 - - · On-

$345.00 ~ Month Single Parent Program.
8.99% Flxod lnlereot Rate, Eaorv Ftnanclng Available.
1-.-3426
•
(304)755-7191 •

Iy

r

. • $82,000 Alictng $55,000. 1881.

__

St. Rt. 33 I ncl 595 ·

Tltft MWI Pll*' wfll not
kuowh..,. accepl
............. tlfOJI'NI
...... which lain
vlolltton of thiiM, Our

uo

5% crown M
mon1tt,
1D.2S 'lll wllppi'O'Nd CNIII.

_.,

htfOinN'CII that 1fi

ctw.tnnoe IMNertiMd In
thllnewapaper.,.

--.-.

IVIItible on In 8QUII

Open: M·F 8:3()-8:00
Sat. 9:00-6:00
Closed

ACREAGE

: Backed Joana. No credit
•• · (304~755-ISM Um-; !tad Otfw.
Allumabte toano· Many
typOIIVIItablt. C.tllor d•
l8k (74Q)148 3583.
.
.. - Big 18' wide, 3 bedroom 2
• balll, eavo $5,1!5S, dellverad
• a 111 up on yctAr lot tnctud: lng lklrtlng &amp; fibarglesa
.. · atlpl. Colli Mobile Homos,
· · u.s. 50 East, Athena, Oh,

eru,.- Land
7-1·1482

RMI Estate Gene1111

REAL ESTATE

·Stt~ee 1943

Buyert.

Final Dap, Nationwide Invontory
Raducttonl

Real Eatate Gener111

RMI Elltllta a.n.r.1

I_
Government

· • 74().5112·1972.

13114~736-34011

•

ew, 1i4- (}fit At
www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

Ims&amp;

'::

: ' AmiZing First Tlnle Homo

•

&amp;t g-e~U( ~~, ~lee,a

Holly Parte Trailer on Comll
,_In lol. IIOxtOO In Ma·
oon WV. Asking $22,000.
can . (304~773·5482 or
~3041372-8592
·
Urnllocl Or Ho C-? Gov·
ommont Bonk Finance Only
AI Ookwoocl In Borboura·
ville, WO/ 304-736-3409.

111101 Co.· T-ra Ptalna.

SAt;SI, 31 woocleO acres.
- m $28,000 or 7 acres
with poll bam $23,000.
Carr Road, 8 acres with Ex·
Ira big poll born, $29.500 or
1e acr11 $23,0001 Danvlle6 acrao $10,5001 Autlard 10
acm, $8,5001
.
Oolite Co.· 011 SR 1110, 5
acres with pond $25,000.
Rio Grande, 13....,. ond ol
desdlnd, wooded $27,000.
Ct1eshlre, wooded 18 ...,.
$18,0110 or 24 11Cf81, born.
crook $31,0001 So. Gallla
11 SCIIB. $18.0001
Juat • low ol lhe poroels
available. C.ll now too:ard olhelllsllngol Owner '"
nanctng with atlgltl propeny
mark-up.

1-800-585-7101 or446-7101

. Russell
Judy J?eWill .............................. 441-0262
Tarnmoe DeWitt......................... 245-0022

Looking To &amp;y A New
Home? Don, Have Lard?
We Do!!I Hurry On~ 10 Lots
Left, 304-738-7295.
Nic8
4 acre tract near
Oa111polis· easy Ierma,
(740)446-3583

rto

Dana Atha ......................................... 379·9209

Flo-..,.,_,.

=:

WOOD
HE.Uft INC
J2 LOCUS!' S'lRFET, GAl.LII'OUS,~0 45631
.IJien c.Wool, llrokar. ~

I

Ken Morgan, Brol!er •44&amp;0971
JeaneHe Moore, · 256-1745 Palri:ia.Jioss
7~1016

Why rent? .government Included. No Pell. Non
15 Coun Street. 2 Bad· backocl toano from $490 ~ ~(7~
room~ I 1/2 baths. Kitchen down. (740~30113
h.
(740".;,_
ro;::.
wllll stove and refngoratO&lt;.
958ft"'
,....2205· Oft Street Periling, Ctoao to
MOIIILE lloMii:5
VIrginia.
Schools and Downtown
RIR Rmr
BI!AUnFUL
APAIIT·
ArM. $5951 month plua de·
MENl'll AT BUDGET PA1posit and Reference. No
.
8 T JACKSON
Peta. (740, 446 _, 926
·' 2 badroom moc;te home In E li
-,--,--'---..,.-- Mlddlaport, no pelt, 740· TATEI,
Olive
99
lrom $2117 Ia $383. Ia
2 home ..... ..
2·5039
""" &amp; · Call 74().
town, baoement. River view. 2 Boclroom ljobllo Homo. 446-25&amp;8. Equal Houllng
$4251 month; 3 badroom In Close 10 Town. (740~256- Opporluntty.
town, 1-1/2 baths. Good lo- 6574
.=c:::::::::!:,----,--,cation. $5001 month. Reier· ::::,::;__ _~--- Chrlely'1 Family LMng.
ences aoo deJKI&amp;R required. 2 Bedroom. 5 min. from 33140 Hew Lima Rd., Flut·
(740~3844.
town. $2751 month, 1250 land, Ohio, 740-742·7403.
hou
St 1 dopooll. Ablolulely No Petl. Apartmonl, hOmt and traitor
2 •·•

c

I""

52-

c

Aouf:rf~ ; •MKJ:. (740)446-9342

port, $300 a month.
7
( 4Q)992-D542.
2 could be 3 bedroom
house lor rent on 1st S1reet
In Masoro, WV. Complolefy
remodeled completely furnisl1ed. I'JI · k~chen appltances and utensils, towels,
sheets and ect. .. need noth-lng to move In but your
clothes. Close 1o all power
planta, all SCR's and consl:ruction workers welcome.
Sarlous Inquires only
pktaae, If not hOme please
leave message, (304) 173-5764.

=

- ·Call-

badooom · CoonPilot Program, Rentel'l uy lltting ~ cioN to town.
Needed. 304-736-nE.
1713 c.ntonoJy Roocl. W.
ter ond Trull Romovol InSlOp . ~nftng! $0 DOWN! dudtd. Tenanl pays Ill«No crad• okl Govt. homoo. Oto. NC and E - - l
HIII0·296-m~l06541
- · ......_.., Slove. Fo1g.
-•-

HotH:s
mRRfM

= ··I V = :

-now.

App~Wimately 3.l/1 miles ollt SR
l U Property located Oil the l'lgiM, I

e•

.

=

- - - - - - - Furlllohad Apt. 3 roomo ond
balh plus lhOwer, Down·
2 Bedroom, Fuel 011 Heat, atalre, Qean. Reference
Washer and Dryer, $3001 and Depoott Roqulrocl. No
mor~th
plua
deposit. Pets or lr1'IOUfa. (7.W)448-

(740~446-26871·:_51::9~------

2 bedroom, State Route 18. Greclout living. 1 and 2
Evergreen. '$3251 month. bedroom apenmtntt at VII(740~189
lago , Manor and Rtw.Apa-18 In Mlddloport.
2 br. trailer for rent. $300 From $278-$348. Call 740-:
month + Deposit (304}458- 992-5064. Equal Housing
2549
OpportUI"'IttN.

Now

3626 State Route

I

)NSf: past LIIIColll Pike. ,

you
need to do Is move into this
lovely brick tri·level with ~ wonderful
v111w of lhe countryside. Large formal LA
llreplace, formal DR, lower level FR,
den, 3 BRs and 3 full baths, 2+ attached
garage (currently used as a home
business, but could be easily converted
back to garage use), 26 x 36 detached
garage with 10' ceilings, in-ground pool
with privacy fence and nice patio area,
lovely landscaped 4.26 acre lot, rn/1.
Priced at $195,000 HOG

NEW LISTING! Propeny located on 160 In a
neighborhood. It offers 3 bedrooms 1
and a pool. Please call lor more
Information. 11201
Country Sitting With A Nice Homo?
looking for a home with a lot to orter.
4 bedroom 3 bath homo located on 2
acres m/1 with a 1 car attaChed
bam and doubo layered docking on tho
or tho housa. Call today and aak for HOG.
Wowl Check out thlo Capo Cod.
offers 3 bedroom. 1 1/2 bathrooms a lltUe
piece of Heaven and it's priced al only
$135,900.00 Don't pass this upl Call to

giii•loio;

11111

TakiN...:t~oc!,.,cauona-

35 Weot 2
TownhOUia Aporlmontl. lnctudll
Wattr

Sewa=, Traah,

$360/Mo., 740 4

0008.

II you ore lool!ln~-CMIII'IIth atylo

Real Eatate General

D. Wood, Broker 446-4618
Cheryl Lemley ................................. 742-3171

r ~~

'--riOr=;Htv;::tWHOI==I&gt;
l'wtnRivorT_,,_.,. I - Homo Lol Phone ~~---Gooo1----,J
copting "R*aKonolor
(304)17~
1=~
~-'*'opt.
·~· ~
lol lor '""' In 23 ~ ~.
•• .'!...-.•.;
·•
~··
- - ~ - - · -·
-...,J

- · -..fty dapOolt , . - · Very Sf' riM, 2
qulrod, no poll. 7""*2· - ....... 2 floont. CA. 1
3 llodroom · ~ 2218.
t/2 Bolh. Fully Cltpotocl,
EOH.
MldCIIfllot, $125 per month Otlhaa. 18 ptocoo tor S7.
(7"'::!:...•. : :
do!&gt;ollt. 1 ond 2 -ooon '""rt· wlio
, ••~~~. -Ho;,!!
(304)1TWe7V.
(740)1112·31114
- -: Rocondltlonocl
,..,
""" LouoPIUISacurilyllopoott
-· - · - -~- ,
•_
- ,
1
-"" menta, Dopoolt &amp; Rorer.
. ., , . Nloo loll, ,_,
- -• Ml• w""""" 0ryoro Rangot
3 or •t&gt;r. House atl ,., AP-- .nee.
HUO
Approved. Required Days· 74Q..U8. Eftldency. Bet un Town ting, wilt accommodat• Rtlfrlcpt0t., Up To 90 oavl
pllances. To&lt;al llfiOVIIIon (7401441-1518
31al ; E~: 7..,.387• ond Holztr. H o - ldlallllx80, SIOOpermonlh.caM Guallnl_,l We Soli Now
Must-· Rei. &amp; - . . .
0602 7~•o•
tor Slt&gt;glo · Dopoott. Ed ao Country Homoo, 740- Maylllg AI&gt;Pitancos. Fronch
cord must be aotld. 3 - o o m - $400
•
·
~. ~740)148·3829 oftor 992·2187.
C&lt;ty Moytag. 740-446-nes.
(304)67!HI676
Ptr month pluo dapOolt and Very - · 2·3 bedroom '"'"'
. - on 3rd ·
1n town, larue ~;;;it;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;-; Traltrlols on Jefld1o Road. CCmplalo LMng-.., F,..
Buy lrom $111\llmo.. .._, tbl, (740)247._ - . L.R, asaatmo. Rei· Small 2 _..,, lx&gt;uoo ~ Tel. 1304)195-:!MI
!\"'""· $400. (304)17~
FO&lt;OCioaurea. 4% dOwn. 30
&amp; dopooll raqulrad Ellllkl. S300 mont11, $300
yearut8.5% APR. Fo&lt;llot· 3 Roomoond Bolio. 48011vo (740) 118 3814
' dopooll. Ho poll, r o l lngs 1·800·3111-3323 oxl. so-. Ulllllllo Paid. Stove
5:00pm. - - - - - - - . . , . . . . - - - - : - - - - ITI)tj.
• ond Relrigorolor Ho Polo.
(740)3114-25«)
$475 pkJI cltpolit, Ae*enOak Hill, OH. 3 Bedroom CM Requirad. (740)&lt;t46·
3945
~51~~::::::::_ _ _ _..,....__ i;i!!!i!i~~~i!i~~~~~!!!!!!!l
Required. (740)384-5662 or Af&gt;plloattor. boln!l tskon lor
1111\111 but vary . Clean ooe·
1740)245-931!2
hoot, (74())843-55'6

I=

4 -'"'"'· 2 Ranch
lllliiNmi
Stylo. I ..,.. nv1, whll1pool,
AND BvlwiNcs
pol1ial - . . , , vlnyt llkJ.
lng wrap around deck
·
:- eto'ctrlc and gas heat: Ofllco building, Mlne!ovllle,
• County Schoola. 12 miles 600 sq. H., ale, covered
: from Gallipolis. Patriot 81'11. parking, $275/mo; trailer
S12&lt;Vmo, 814-876• Pavocl Road Apprllaad at • ; Forln1o. (74Q)I4e-8715

lrdan Crotk Estatos. 3-6
aero lots. wool ol Rio
Grande. lrom $25,900.
(740)245-5717

i'"

and c l a ; a
1\Jllil'l• a must
seel Tht
e Is on 5 acres or
land mi
so offers 5 bedrooms, 2
bathrooms and a two car garage with a wort&lt;
shop. OWNER VERY MOTIVATED TO
SELLit . Call to view 1114.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

,

Ruth Barr......................................... ,446:0722 Jim Slone..........................................¥6·9483

VIRGHM 8MITII, BROKER ............... U8 81108
GAIL BELVIUE................................ 416 12011
· TIIISH INVDER...........- ....................411-11411
JOHNNIE RUSSEU. .......................:387-GII23
DAVID 8NYDEA .... -···~···· ... ··',;•• --·--~-MSI
WILMA wtWAIISON ................ 740-lel 0031

.....

•
•

OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vtsmlrhrul•ltal•.com
I

RAISED RANCH STYLE HOMEI
Living room, dining room, kitchen,
den, famUy room, 3 bedrooms, 2

1141122 tho
' t'rom -kylld? En(oy lhe view from
your boat doCk Of bad~; deck. Ullt 1+
oc mil with a 2 BR 1 balll moblto
home/vacation camper Ia Just lhe
thing lor atreia. May be room for •
gordon. Locatld at 7183 St. AI. 7
Sooth. Rocloocodl

baths. built-In 2-car garage plus

rae.

In basement!

room,

fonnal living room

room. 3

Lolds

double

BRa, t t/2
hardwood

of-.-for
garagoo.

BeautihJI

Call

,

~

dalallflll 1402
'

.

....... , ..,,, v DELJOHTFUL HOME
a ptctura. Vetv Wilt

otono and """'" ranch
offers 3 bedrooms, walk--in
2 full balha. ch8rmng ttvtng
room wltlraplaee. Now oak - line lhe kllchan. Range. ralrtgorator.
dlohwaahlr, ond compactor all stay.
Utility room to elllra large. 211er dock
In t11o reor with 311' tnground pool.
Mony fruit t._ flowara, and
ahrube. Spnnker oyoram In lhe reor.
2 car attachod garago ond a corport.
2 ~ born building. 11-.p and
comont drtoawoyo.·A home you1 ba
proud to own. VL Smith 448-8806

can purehaao PIOPO"Y
with a few, IIHie or an the acreage.
Approx. 98 acres In all that
lncludel wood land 100. 30 x 40
bam, pood, misc. buildings. 2 story
homo lhat .wa1 oonati\ICttd 1995.
Road frontage. 12121

n

LOTII Lllllt
1ny excavating
needed! Manufactured home&amp;
wolcoma. H103

•

TWO ACRE LOT$! Rio Grande
areal Cou~ water available.
112133

Nat too Muchll Sftuatocl on a 1
acre lot, mil, ollerlng VCtA oome
privacy, good garden spot or a
gtaa1 ~ tor tile kids to play.
Home bouts a very nice
kltohan with oak cabinets, lots of

NEW PRICE 141.1100.1101 t t/2
SIOfY home lhsl has loll of TLC. 2·
3 Bedrooms, living room with
llreptaca, kltohan. 2 detached
garagealnd lOads nlOiel Must see
thla one to apprec::late. Owner
moelveted to sell, requesting an

counter apace, bar area and
pantry, all open to a dining
area/FA with vaultocl ceiling,
fOfiTIII LR, 3 BRa &amp; 2 batha, ·
..-r carpet lllrougllout. Newly
Cozad Pond Area Make Jilts
anxtou1
an offer. They
II
to go below

offer! 121 01'

I

were perfecl,
1 ·1o1 more.

8lrMI,
Ronlal

II

Tolally ..-ted
t bath home lor
t~- with 1
apartmontl
for

1121

I..OCIIIOO at 338 . Third Avl,

vtnyt
BA, comblnocl LR.OR
etoctrlc fleplooa, 1 car garega,
tront &amp; back porchao &amp; datachocl
bUilding, newar roof &amp; nice level
tot. Prlcod to sail at $40.000.

1132

this
housa boaata
a
channing formal entry, LR
w/French doc11 lndlng to
format OR. 4 BR'1, 2 ballls,
8f1Cioaed porch.• 1 car
carport w/atoraga. Prlcocl to
mova at $68,900. Cllll
Carolyn
today
for a
showing. 1101

Befo.re shopping for your New Address .. , stop by ours:

www.wisemanrealestate .com

;

!.

NEW
UlnNOI
HUNTERS
. PARADISE g,...t hunting rel""'l aet
up and ready for you! Approx. 85
acreo complato with Olinda.
toad lot and cozy cabin to warnt up
In, Flecenlty remodeled cabin
cornpttle with bath county water,
·electric and Wlaphna urvk:e In tact
Acreage 1 combination ol ciMred
and wooded land, pond and whal a
bellllllul v1ew. 12112

(Ntr lull
buement with 2 cor garage and
finished lamly room. Home sits on 2
Ac. nv1 In Hannan Trace Schools.
Juat minutes from downtown
Gallpolta. This home features a
beautlfut landscaped lawn, wood
pellet stove ·and central air. Located
just off Rock Lick Rd. on Mabie Dr.
in nice neighbolhood. Have a
garden and raise tome nowara,but
make sure to look at this. Call
Johnnie at 367.0323 today tor an
appointment.
141104 I ACRE TIIACT ol vacont
tend localod on SA 588 $7&amp;,000.00
VIrginia 446-6806

...
•·

$20,000.00 5 Acres approJC.
situated in Gallipolis. Handy
IOCSIIonl 12144
COMMERCIAL· Sycamore Street
Loca1~1 Large 2 story building with
off streal parl&lt;ing. Ideal lor lloral
shop, etc. Call for mreo details.
12041
LOT..FRONTAGE ALONG SR
160 &amp; ''aULAVILLE PIKE handy
conveni8nt locallon. Level, public
utilities .--available. Residential or
commercial. Selling below ·the
appraised value. 121-411

CONVENIENCE
OF
CITY
LIVING! 338 THIRD AV!NUEI
Nice 2 story hmo with plenty of
room to live. 4 Bedrooms, living
room, lamily room, kitchefl, foyer,
basement, off ttreer pandng.
Encloi8CI Iron! porch and morel
tOOl
.
VESt $26.9110.118 Ill the aokfng
price on thll OMI Investment or
starter property. · 2 Bedrooms,
living room, kitchen &amp; morel
"03!1 SecondAva. 1213gc,
LOOK! $22,000.00 will buy you
this smaller 2 beclroom home and
Ioiii Situated In the city ot
Gallipolis! Can't hardly find em
any cheaper! 12139c
$55,0110 MUST SELL! PLUS
SELLER QJVINO TO BUYER
$1,0110 TOWARD CLOSING
COSTSI Whol 1 daall Corne
check out thla 3 btdroom, 2 bath
home wllh Florida room, large
aiz&amp;d living room &amp; dining area,
rear deck, delaehed 2 car garage
and ·
morel
IMMEDIATE
. POSSESSION! t2060

38112 SA 124.. $79.000 3.29

home. Living room. dining """"·
kitchen 3 badroom.t, 2 baths. 2
Car d8tlchocl garage. Lovatv
pond. fruit , _ &amp; banloo. Leta go

..•••

CHEAP CHEAP I $21 :000.001
lnVHtmtnVItarter... Rancl'l elyle
hOme... lftuated at 738 Main
badroom.t. equlppocl

-.2

kitchen, living room, bathll2121

MIDDLEPORT. Older home with
charm and great k&gt;catlon near
echool, grocery, elc. Lots of room
here for the family. Give Cheryl a
call for mOf'e details. 12110

\

'
. I

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
NEW Ll&amp;nNII 1H7 MOBILE
HOME ON RENTED LOll
Excellent opportunity to own your
own horne. This 1997 Clayton
home Is In e~tcellent condition. 3
Bedrooms, 2 balha, nica sized
kitchen and living room area. All set
up on a reasonably prtced rented
lot. Calltodayl On~ $22,500.00.

room, garden tub, Fl
LA,
cathedral ceiWngs, covered deck.
above ground pool, · cellar wl
building, storage shed, 3 car
detached
garage,
blacktop
driveway, fenced lot. 2.2 acres miL
Appotntmenl only.
•'

• J ~~

,
' '''l"
~:'1'

..;...

"'mlly? Well we have tile ldoel
2 bedrooms and a bath. II sate on
m/1. Located right In tho hoar1 of
~rc..,,llle . Thill h&lt;lma le prioocl to sell. Call
view 1182 $30,000.00
. ~~f.;";~IO~~~ LO.C ATlONlll LOCATIONlll

:E

Owner moving

FOR RIAL
Newly -NI 4
2
batho wlhugo
kllchon and Smlltl Oak
, Family nn. laundfy rm.,
deck. t 5 acres nv1
2 fiShing pondo. Thlo II a
tocallon lllst otters privacy.
Twp. VlS «6-6806
FOR &amp;ALE ON SR 588- 5
$40,000

••
•

.' .

PWSI
HOME·
BUILDINGS Old fashion charm
with modem convenle~ In lhla o4 •
BR. 2 story homo, 2 balh5,
(whlripool tub~. Lovely equipped
kMamlty rm ccmbo w/hardwoocl
'lloorJ, cherry cabinets. Enloy
viewing 111e country trom evorv
won&lt;fow, Formal dining rm &amp; LM
WlbNmed callings. Porch .&amp; patio
72 ACRES of beautiful rolling lind.
F»eature. woods &amp; some timber,
pond &amp; mineral rights. Largo bam
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 446-6808

'
•r

comforta

an

Looking for lond In • nice location? Just a
low mllas out or Gallipolis (Groen Twp.), wa
have 2-acra lracts to 6-acre tracts MIL.
County water also available. There are soma
restrictions. Call and ask for 12022.
Wa have several 5 acre plul traota
avallabll for building that dr..m home. All
your utilities are avanable and each lot
road frontage. Restricted. Near Holzer
Hospital. Ask 1or 12028. ·

NOOtl HOME I
tNVESTIIENT 128 x 130 Bulavllle
Pk. 3 beo:lrm, 3 bath living quanera.
Also 18' x 32' garago plus 30' x 20
building 112 ac. of land. good I
loc. Priced to sell. VLS

Thla 1989 modular has 3 boclroorns, 21/2
&amp; built-In bookahalveo. A nice open kltchen
Some new carpet, drywall, wallpaper &amp;
48 x 12 back deck &amp; medium size pole
all 111ta ·on t!pproX. 1'/oacres.
ASKING $85,0110
POMEROV • 3 bedroom home with 1ront siHing porch on a quiet strset with
ldk:hen Uvtng room &amp; one balhroom. Has a nice small badtyard.
'
ASKING $1:1\500.

14038 Co'M'MiE'Rc:W:

NOoiO GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY Two hOmes plus an extra lot Live In one, rent the other to pay your

•

many

LOTS LOTS AND MORE LOTS Six tots in
WaHer'o HUI Subdivision. All six toto lor just
,501).00 12018

MCI1g
COMMERCIAL
LOT· Oliva &amp; 3rd. 27fi8 eq, ft. nv1. City
Jackson 'Pk. Ga'lllpolla, OH Corner water, sewer &amp; gas. All Inventory
lot with great potential.
available too. Owner wanta action!

mortgage. PrleedJo aale. Cell Wilma today tor a showing.

the

convanlencaa of llvtngln town in thla 1
story home wllll 2 bedrooms
a
Soma comforts Include a stroll th~~~
parte, shopping or going to the or
the aohoo!a are within walking distance.
mere Information en this home. Give A11en
call. Ask lor 1172

, this will

13382
llld CONVENIENCE STORE FDA
IIALI!. New atarm system. &amp;tiding
bull to state code. continuous
operation ~nee t 988. Price Includes
1.-!0fY. Cell Johnnie 367.0323 or

FOR A DDITIONAL LI STINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALl OR STOP 8Y FOR A
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'
,

ac~s comes along with thls ranch

Bedrooms, 2 Baths, = a
home.
Kitchen wleotlng area, fo
I dlnng

14Qt7 Locatod 313 Ml C.rmot
Rd. 3 bedroom, 2 balh5, CEDAR
I
CONTEMPORARY HOME Oak
-~
'
'
ki1chen, ce~amk: tile ln kitchen &amp;
baths. NEW CARPET through out,
114037 DELIOHTFUL HOME Ctoan netural docor. 5 ACRES MIL
comlonable- PLUS Income Located $105,000. Trish
on SR 160. 4 Bedrma, 2 bathS,
1PPf0X. 31-4 of an acre. I.Ne on 1st
ftoor &amp; rent tower level tor $400.00
mo. would make 1 good Mother-InLaw Suite. Income can Mlp you

NOT TO IIG-.NOT TO SMALLI Just the In between size on this home situated at 1028 Second Ave. 3 BR, 2
bath&amp;, family rqom, living room, basement, covered front porch and more! t2138A

MEIGS COUNTY

14036

'

out

LOTS OF STYLE Foyer
open to spacious formal living
room and dining area, step-saving
kitchen, family room with lireplace,
oversized master bedroom with
patio area lhat leads to lnground
pool. master bath. 3 additional
bedrooms and bath, Ap~;~ro)!. 2
acres, concrete circular cfriv&amp;. To
much to mention In this ad can for
an appointment. 12050

NEW LilTING! REEDSVILLE •
Approximately 1 aero camping alta.
1 floating dock, includocltn sate. 8
h right of woy to ~vor to dock alto.
Three camper hookups, 3 electric
lites. septic &amp; water on she. Use
as a personal ,:amp or rent the
camp sites out. ASKINO P3,1100

·&lt;1'~~

-

own

SHII21JO

j

THISIIII

Bedroom 2 bath ranch

Henry ·
Sherrl L. ·Hart.................................. 7 42·2357
.Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6~ 91
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce ............. 992·2259

Now bullneoo??? Thla commorclol
building ll,looldng lor 1 new buol,.ll
fill ite 1760 sql. h. Located on the edge
town . Call for more inlormallon. Ask

15012.
NEW LISTl'NGI This home offers 3
bedrooms. 1.5 Baths and s Large Metal
Building. Located an .8 or an aores on Hill
Orivo. Calland ask about 1204
you ere looking for lnWIItmtnt propeny wt
h1\oo ••varol to otter. C.llllftd Ilk tor Allen •

1.:=
'

'

••

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Po.lnt Pluunt, wv

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c:orr-. loliJoOhld
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,._ Sow. Call (304)675- 11188 Cadiloc CiiMUilon
Rctoolor P\ollpy, mall, 11 11186 LAIVU1 •go.
Roconlly Painted. NMdi
, _ Old, dog box. choir,
mooor
worlt.
1350.
eluding Hooolgard. tmoocop. ;::r, fOod$
Hu
111
"No~Lm!srocK
(740)«6-3ir14
olla&lt;
:30pm
.,;
5
1ortoo.. IT ·go,
lor, Fronlline, - I FREE
· 1~ 080 ·
•·
SHIPPING Onlor online 1*1· ~)441-08150 (Diys),
www.Potcaro
_. RX.com 1· (740)441-8858 (Evoningo) 18.,..,., old D - bo-iM 11188 • dclol ChOvy ClvoIQ0.844.1.c27.
UKC Rat T - pupo - . Polnl FWv--;,. Sci•~ llor, $800. Coil (304)882·
3003 """' tlpm.
11, 11 olloiHomo o.-. S1!50. caon Firm. tello Ooo a.r. Loc Sonmon ll'od

C.mollaugoi\JSA PETCARERX.COM

- · F -, - · l ' - Flogo ow 371h you. Som up 10 50% on ALL p o t lind - ; Vety Good Mulor Sa-.. collcona and IIUplllloo, In-

'fs

~. $75. (740)-141·

1121

,

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Air fotc:e Rotilod.

Aloo

S.tellitoo

:z.:.=--:-:-:~:---- Sotei/SOfVieoll~otoltotlon
Couch a -r. 001, se.oo • 100 ChonHi&lt;IMI&gt;oolo chMI,- bod, -by Sanc:lrvtllo WV Poet

=

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(740~742

0::: ~. (304)273.56S5

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Fat Soloo: A-ionod
- . ~~ryeoo illld Nfrlll- . Thooo.,..• Appli..... 3407 Jockaon A.,._
'""· (304)(175-7388.
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(740)441-744.. 1

FIH e~~... ~
81 ••
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flnoncino, 90 doyo umo II
c:eoll. Vloal Coni.
Olive- a- li1ae uvo Now Rolyoon !58 114Wll71
112L - t e pone double

:.·~~ ~ -=7~ on ~~~1~ S1200

o1octrtc goolumaHo E-.cy Hoot
l'unopo, looll.wtng ~
Fl· FrH worronly
i111C1

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COMPUTERS: WE
NANCE DELL COMPUT· '**-·
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~oct c~1
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A Homo Grown RodPhono (304)875-2745 A~

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81 EiiCOr1 Wooon LX, For Sale- 111118 T9Y"f.. 1 ton

$1500. 88 LTS Topaz,
$1200. 99 Yolo wogon Golf,
$750. (700)388-9908
81 ..._. y _ , and Ito
• bNulyl Air lido, auto light
~· ~~m3 or
17
)446'

_.Slit -

Flllbojl w1
plate, 45.000 -.1 nolloo,
- 00, ,_ tirtl, $3500.
(740)446-78n

r

4-WIJs

&amp; oldOr 1500 ChOvy pick-Ill'

toctond eat&gt;, (304)6TU32S.
f,1;,:00::;·~....,--::-~:-'::-"
1Wo P235 15 Inch llrH,
130. Two P205 14 inch
. Uoa,$20. (740)3117-7729

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HoME
~

CIIJioo &amp; tilt $2300 ...-40.7 now porta,
't&lt;ISO 17 124 -4282
1888 s-10 Bluer 4WD. AT, L...,;iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiorl
98 Muolang Puoplo, 47,000 PW, now cyflndorl,
1888-AocordLX·aoo-- good oonditlon now11Cntl&gt;do - - ·
UHWMT
tomotic, rune good. iool&lt;l $8400., 3 ol- tlnoi ,_.lltemotor.' good rubber, WATIRPIIOOI'IIG
groot $2000, 304-4175-28117 Clllforoort pricOO. (304)675- $1 800. OBO (304)675- Unconditional gull·

-

2 Colto. 5 ......,. Old. Gontlo. (740)256.1781
Bayquorter_rnote ....
Ualnod. 12 yro. old. II
month Old gotcling. Frlon&lt;ly
hillier b&lt;oklo. Both AOHA

oeo' (740)84213;

~rtt

1892 llodgo
reglatered, eeH bolh for m11ea auto .,,

wit

eao. Loovo -.go.

133 000 4154
'1M

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For SaJe. (2) 11114 Monte !9118 ~
f•l50~,111900cty,• 08CIIt70• 24 1-.M
~7 ~78
-~- ~ SS· (I) lor porte. (I) •IP. •X4, runs..-.
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12,300 neg 740-742·7243 NNI''M ,..,:,•..;,

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1011 638

ol ~ electric furnaces In: .Ready Nellembtr 1st.
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glas&amp;- eluding hi efficiency l'leat $325. No Sunday calls. bed more 8 188 $5 000
~ s, and PLlll'fJ systems. Wa oarry a. (740)246-5368
• N~ Holland ~~5 9"'Ha~:
.
complete
line ol Mobile
.
•
hQme P8111 &amp; accenorlts AKC registered . miniature blne $10,500., New Holland
MJ!iCFJIANEOIB BENNETT'S HEATING.: Pincher puppies, black &amp; 258Rako$3,4DO.,NowHOI·
COOLING 17101441-8411 tan, 8 wooko old, $200, land 130 140 Bu Sprucier
L.~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1. or ·1.-.a72_.,
(740)742.0010.
S5,200.,Naw Holland 185
,
217 Bu Sprootlor Hyd ondgSO DOWN HOMES NO www.-.-nnoll
- - Shepllard pupa, ala tendem axle 18,500.,

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CREDIT OKf HUD, VA
FHA. Call lor Uotlngo
'· ~~S01·1m E.\19818
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1982 Ford Granada. excellenl · Running CondiUon
Body and InteriOr In FatiCondltion, $650 . (740)~
"iAI"

,c14.::26::__ _ _ _ __
•1986 Dodge 31 1- v- 8 ,.,.
10 ·pw Tl" .. ~..1
11
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bod. N.C. Truck. Looks and
NI!W AND USED I'UA- NSDR. Cunwnt ,_, re- Now Holllnd 3108 Slurry ~~j37g.~·
$I 800
NANCEI FOR tALEI Wo oorde, S70, (740)8411-2.128 Sprooder t37o goi ta""om ~=~~~~~=:-r
lnolalt; FrH -Eitimtlel, "_..oc.ogoo'\Mvo ''111111&lt;1. • • • Uioc$9,800., All NOif .Hoi• 1887

rou.donl can

ua, We both Cocker Spanltl ~leal land

o11o'

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credit

2888

required.

Phonec 1-800-7111-1657.

38 months or cash rebate.

·

'

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740-446-0008 740--:f4l·llll
•
evauomoo@zoomnet.nel · w.vw•• e1'8JI'II-In~•or·e.c~o•d

Overlook rQIIInt countrr'

Joe A. Moore-Broker 441·1616
~arah L. Evene-Moore, Broker.441·1616
Patricia Haya- 448-3884 Cera Ca-y-245·9430 .
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990
· Candace
448-7412
NEW LISTING • COUNTKY LIVING AT IT'S
BESTI 100 year old home completely updated wilh

all the comroru ror the list century. 'OYer 2:200
square feet of ApiCiOUI livina. Main noor Jncluda
modem ki1Chen wlbftolcfut bor, walk-ia poa11:y onti
fint floor' lauodry w/half hllh. Open floor Plan
includes a 'rut room w/ massive hetrth and
fiRlplacc. dimna area a library wlboobhelvea. Mlin
level features imported wood p1nelina. beamed

=~'!J'• Berber carpeL Open slalrcasc leads to
story With three Iarxe bedrooms, full balh and
.......•k, ·,i,n ,1iine•nl'"c!l'o;~set:. Let someone else make your
with the adjoinina two bedroom
feet of living space with
laundry room and

1 11

Vlctorten Dn 5 Acrao.

adomocl with tooortlwood
IQIId . wood doore,

llteptace

i)r;ijjfti con como 1ruo1

on&lt;l 8' whirlpool tuto, tho

''PI""·
Buutiful aenino. otocked porld

owner haa spared no

Secluded and conveniently

-.800

home real a on 7.5 gorgtoua
acres and has a stocked pond,

located, thlo lovely 4 BR 3 BA

and privet• wooded backyard.

24 ' 32 mttol building, 2 c:er

ROY JONES ROAD- A flve year old ranch wtth
over 2000 square leal. Has a big kiiChen, IMng
room, and main bedroom. 2 more average
sized bedrooms, and 2 balho. A really nice.
back porch and a newer front dtlck. All of ihis
oittlng on
acres app!Ol&lt;lmately.
•
$110,01111.00

SW

attaahad garage, wrap around
J)orc.h and a beautifully
landscap&amp;d yercl. With ceramic

tHo ontriwaye, Bruee tooordwood
lloortng, on&lt;llntrioltely teld brick
aldowaikl, lhto oupeob homo hoo
dlllll covered. can for an
on
from

Formol i

remodeled kllohan,
2 oar
anachecl and 2 car detached

Qaragea. A i&lt;frgo dfnlnglfamliy
room addition with working

flraplace and - I n ponoh.

-=~c.==-=~'
BR 2 BA. livtno room, family townl Ono ollho ....
Plua a

,111' ''"'"
room/office
huge metal · lEST oered lor hOntlll
bulll:llng thllt an be UHd ·for a areel Hug• living room
home buslneaa located near the master bedroom overlooking the
iu ~~u~:O:ol SR 180 &amp; SA 554. Ohio River. Thla horne lo a rore
S·
flnCI wlth manY u"niqut features
Including beautiful hardwood
floora, trlm, crown molding end
pOcket doora. aeaullfully
laneltcaped tot that runs all the

now to oee tho BEITI

1 bath. This hOme has a fenced

In backvard, with a big carpon,
nice level lot and much more.
$88,900.00.

for

.yot~r

•ne In lho qulot vlttogo of
VInton. Two story hOme with tree
shaded yard bordering beautiful
Raccoon creek. 3-4 BA. 2 BA,
office and modem kitchen.

$88.900.

YOU

Tnia homo

many extraa 3 bedroom, 1 bath,

· LR, FA oat-in kltenon. ocreonod
in poroh. $88,000.00

.._UIIon.

!f.

==.,

11

lS'

*•-

f:

·

1

way to the river. You've 188n the
ret, echedule your appointment

1138 Don't mill thle one On
Klneon DriH. 3 large bedrooms

r.::~~~:~~~

..-·
COUN1Y CIIA
l'limoclollng OCcurring R
:
LI!OISLATION
occonllng to tho NIM elnvoalmont ORDINANCE outllnacl In t11o ORC Cowtclllllal ...Uan
• · AN
• ...............
Section 371117 Tho annual lnapocuon of
~.......... •'""'
• •
tho pt0pert1oa within
SECtiONB 3735.ts roaultl
of
tho tile .dlllrlot for wlllch
THROUGH 3731.70 OF nogotlollon
u
·... THE OHID REVISED lpprovod by thla an oxompllon hao
:; COOl!, ESTABUSHING Council Will be all In been gronted uncltr
In
, AND DESCRIBING writing
1 Section 3731.17 ollho
;;; THE BOUNDAAII!S OF Community
OIIC. Tho council
COMMUNITY
Rolnvootmont ahall olao hoar
REINVESTMENT AREA Ag,_nlu outllnacl IPPIIII
undar
:;; IN THE C()UNTY OF .In ORC Section ~~·o~~O~~ha
,., OALLIA
AND 3736.171.
Council 11onby 11.,',. DI!SIONATING
A (A)Twolve(12)yooora and clelormlnaa thot
-• HOUIINO OFFICER (nogoUalod • up to 12 Ill formal action a
: ~ TO ADMINISTER THE yeara) lor oxlallng to tile
;;, PROGRAM
AND lndualrlll · facllltloa olthi~Onll...::.-:
~ CREAT 1 N G
A ohall be negotl- on takon In on opan
1 cou-by-caH blolo mooting of thlo
• COMMUNITY
: AEINVI!STUENT
In
ldYanca
of Council that all
or dollberationa of thll
- HOUSING COUNCIL conotructlon
. . AN 0
A . TAX - l i n g occurring. Council end of Ill
:·,;.: INCENTIVES REVIEW (B) Flltoon (15) commln•a, If any,
, . . . (nagotlatod • up which roaulted In
.,., COUNCIL
.: ., WHEREAS, lha to 15 yoara) lor n,w fonnol action woro
0 F lnduatrlal lacllltloa taken In meotlnga
0B0 ARD
COMMISSIONERS of lhall be negotl- on opan to tho public 1n
the County of GALLIA • coiHiy..,... boOla full compllllflce with
t-nafllr
In
advance
of tha oppllooblo logll
.r Commllllonara"l
conllNcUon
NqUI-II,
"' cloolroa to r,urauo ell OCCUrring.
Including ·Saotlon
_.: rueonab a
and II
ramodollng 121.22olthoORC
... loglllmato lnconllvo qua111111 lor on 11oo11on 11· Thaithlo
~ mooauroll to 111111 IXIIIIpllon, durtngt!W ordinance ihall 11111
• and ··· ancoura,a period
of
tho lflwcl lnd Ill ~nlorce
.;. devalopmant
n exomptlon,. the dollar from and 1fler ihe
... apoolllo 1,.0 of tho amount of lhl • - pertoclllo•ad
. ~ Couft!Y of G11111 lhat lncrooaa In morket by land and upon
·' havo no enJoyed Ylluo of tho llruclure oonllrlllotlon by tho
·~ rolnvoatmanl from •hall be exempt from Dlraotor ·
of
•· romoclollng or now ,.., property taxoUon. Development of lhl
~ . conllnlctlon;
II now conatruotlon flndlnga In thlo
• WHEREAS, a aurvoy qualllloa lor on
' of houalng (111 exemption, during tho Sactlon 12: The
• Exhibit A)oa requlrad parlod
of
tho b 0 a 1 d
01
¥bY Ohio Revlucl C - oxampllon
tho Commloalonoro Ia
• (OAC) Soctlon 3736.11 otruclure ahall not be horotw directed and
· hal been propol'lld far conalclol'lld to be an authcirlud to potlllon
, tho oroa to bllncludecl lmprovamont on the tho Director of
' In lhl propoaod land on whJch It II Dovolopmont
to
~. Springfield Townohlp located for
tho confirm tho flndlnga
'" Community
· purpou of roal contalnld witHin thla
;, RIIIIVIIIment Aru:
property 11-n.
R-lutlon.
-• WHEREAS, the Section 5: All PAllED: Moy tO,
malntananco
ol lnclullrlllllfOieollaro 2001
• xla II n II
and roqull'lld to comply October 30, 2001
conatructlon of naw with . lha
IIIII N o - 4 2001
otructuroo In ouch application · In
'
•
~ araa would oorvo to NqUII'III1IIftla of ORC
•. oncourog1 economic Section 3731.172 (C) __P_u,_,b,_,ll,_,c..,N;,:ot.;.l.:.ce;;__
,.. atablllly, molnhlln roal and tho loco! annual
""property valuoa, ond monitoring 1M of ona
Thl Vlllaga ol
taonarato . now percent ollllo amount ~~:.~·~port
Ia
employment ,
of taxoa exempted ·--.
•opportunlllll; and
u-r lhl ag,..mont· oppllcot one end
"" WHEREAS, the a minimum of $51111 up
lor · a
::remocltllng oloxlatlng .to a maximum of
:'•tructuroo or the $251111 am..lly.
auperlnllnlllnL
~·conatructlon of now . Section e: To ,AppiiCIIII mUll have a
• 'atructu 111 In tho admlnlatar
and Clli11 I Wator and
i:.Sprlngllald townohlp lmplamont
tho WMhlwater Trwtm;nl
"'Commurilly
provlalona of thla Plont
Operator
~ Roi!I·Yiotmenl Aroa Ordlnanca, Alloclotl Llcanae. lndlvlduill
t,'conatltutoo 1 public DII'IICior "' tho 011111 · ;hall be roeponalb~
~· riurpoao lor wlllch'roll county Coml!lunlty lor tho complete
l•~~~:oporty oxomptlona lm~
opuallo,n
and .
~~Mioy bt'lai.nled
· Corp·or1tlon, · 11 maintenance' Of ' ffto'•··•
Now thertlo .., be 11 doolgnatad ao tho Yllago'l Watar end
• · orctatnld bY tile board Houolng Officer •• Wli-ter T!eolu: : or commlaalonera of cteacrl- In loctlona Plan)l Including but
" Gallla c 11unly .Ohio 3731.85 'hrough not _ llmltod lp lab
' '- ·
•
' 3731~70.
• loallng, grit and
t!s..tl~n 1: The ...... Section 7: Thot a ac...-nlng, put~~plng,
t~oalgnatod 11 the "Community
· houoo11nplng,
.
" lprlngllold townohlp Rolnvealmonl A'*! grounda kaoplno,
l:communtty
Houelng Council" rocord
kooplng,
~:Ralnvoatmont Aroa lhall ba · cro1tod, repOrll, milntenanco,
•oconotlluhlo en aroa In conalatlng of two cllpoorbnenul
~!which
houolng mombaro iiiPOintoid budgeting,
and
•ofaclllltea or llructure; by tile commlaalonora. alllolonce with long
hlatorlcal Tho mfljOrtty of the rango plonnlng lor
' 'of
~:_I
111
mombero ahall lhon flcllltlea. AppiiCIUona
~,· gn cance
••• oppolnl two adclltlonll and dotallad llol of
,~pcatoct, and In which mombera 111111 be . rooponllblllllea cen be
0
11
~r!;' ~ :1*'~~ :~n~ raaldonta within tho picked w"otkP at0' lft1he
~~cllllloa hal bean 11'111. \ Torma or tha Public
1
co
:,._,.......
mombera of tho 237 Aaco Stroot,
~. llctl~· Purauant council 1h1ll bo lor Middleport, Ohio.
~o ORC • Sactlon throe yoara. An Appllcetlono mull be
"'
·
unexpired
torm lelurnacl on or boloro
o&gt;73S.ee, Springfield raoultlng from • November tt, zoot at
~ownahlp Community vocancy In 111o cilunoll 4:110 p.m. The vtllago
)ll!*nvellmont Area 11 ahell be llllocl In tha roHrvot tho right to
S'horoby oollbllahod In aome manner •• tho ••l•ct
and
all
i~ho
following lnltlll ilppolntmonl application• and to
''dncrlbod
.,. . , ·
--~
wolve lrrogulerltloa In
laprlngfleld townohlp ,_,
•- ""'lcatl
d to
• Ollila eou ... Ohio
A Tox lncontlva
a,....
on an
,nTh
sprn,...
11 ld Revlaw Council ohlll a c c • P 1
• nd
0
ng 0
b1
bll 1 h 1 d oppllcotlon, which In
1111
,~wnahlp Community
tho o Inion of tho '
tliillnvoatmonl Arel 11 purauanl to ORC Mlddl P 11 B rd f
' "' roxlm
Section 5708.15 and
apo
oa
o
(~PP 1 i ~
11, . ohall conolat of thrao Public Alfalro moy bo
;,..._!P ~ • ~·
• ..,.untltlve~ _
moet ~ctv•m.aeoua.
~;.;':.:.:" ollo:h':: ~= appointed by tho (11) 2. 4r 7, I, I, 11
)hli
Ordlnonco, commloolonoro, two
marked Exhibit B, lnd ropreHntollval of the
Public Nolle•
)ly thla rolorenco mu!'lclpel corpot'lllon,
lncorpo- hariln.
appointed by ·tho
GRANT
• Qnly lnduatrlal Munlolpol CEO with
API'LICATION
l.roportlao conaltlllnl Council concurrenca,
AVAILABLI! FOil
with tho appllcoblo 1111 county auditor or
REVIEW
ron1111 rogulotlono . dnlgnea ond a
llhln the ·cltolgnalod repliHniiiiVo oluch
CHESHIRE • Tho
mmunlty
alloctad Board of
olr~W~tmonl Al'lil will Education. The Tax Community lorvloaa
Grant
o ollglblo for Incentive Rovlaw Block
-xomptloni uncteflfill . Council lhlll. I'IIYIIW . application lor 21102,
!Program
· e n n u ell y
t h o prep a rod by tho
1-i Secll~n 3: All compllanca of ell OIIIIHIIIfll
!ilroportleolctentllloclln agraomonlo Involving Community. Action
ll! hlblt A 11 being ·tha gronllng or Agency, will be
thin tho deolgnatod ·oxompllona
lor available for rovlow ·
lnduotrlll
real botwoon Monday,
mmunlty ,
~lnvoatmont Area 1 ,.· property ,
October 21, 2001
rtllglblo for thlo lmprovomenta undor. through Thurodoy,
lo
Soollon 3735.171, of Novem• 8, 2001. ·
~lncanllve.
Thlo lha OAC and mako
A copy of lho 1
.,.propol;,l
Ia
I wrllten
·
application can Ill
"publlc/prlvahl
rocommondollona to rovlowod 11 tho
" partnarahlp lntonded tho council 11 to' C.A.A. offlco In
:to promote ond continuing, modifying Choahlro. Tho C.A.A.
!••xpand conforming or tormlnlllng oald ahould
rooelvo
i:U-In tho dealgnatld agraomant baud oommont1 on tha
• area. Aa part of tho upon 1111 perlormanco application no Jeter
~~~ r o I eo I,
t h • oflha lllt'Mmlftt.
tha!I•Novomber I,
.oommtutonarelntond aaotron a: The 2001. The oommMIII
t;1o
undoltlkl oounoll reoarvoo tha will be lorwanlid to
• aupportlng pybllo right to ,...,.111111 lhl tho Ohio Department
f lmprovamentl In tha doolgnatlon of the of Davetopmont'a
•· delllfllltld.a,... .
lprlngnald Tawnahlp Ofltn ol Community
·i leotlon 4r Within oommunltj
lirvloao.
•the
oommunlly llolnveotmont A,..
Tilt Olllla·Mtlll
~Rtlnveatmant At'Mo IIIII Deoambtr a1, C.A.A. ldmlnlttlll
•.tho p;raanhlg; ollht 1001,
(ODOD tho blook 1ren1 lor .
~~~· oxomptton on lllo lu11a 1t1 on annual Oallli 1nd M1111
'lnors11e In ·tht rtvlewl at whloh tlmo Countflt, Tho 1rent
~a111111d vel uatlon the oouncll
diiiOt provl• run•lfll for
''
•neultlng
from
the
Houetng
Olfloor
nunwoua•rvloaaiO
1·h' ' lmprovamenta to notto-ptanynaw low
lnoome ·
rut · 1 ppllclllona lor ,..tdanll.
•lf!duatrlal
l proporty and thotorm uomptlona
11
•of thON axomptlona dlacrlbed In aactlon lt t) 4. 2001
• • be nagollatld o n 3731,11 ollho ORC,
I 10
~ 0111obyo01H bllll
lactton t: The
,In
advonca
of community
::oonatrucllon
or

l

,,.,..,. BltUicbum R.olly ''S•rwitw Sou&amp;Mm 0/Uo Far 0Mr A QunerCeatury"

groat room overfooldng tho lnoround pool and pool houOI
_.1or liillertllrWog. f1511.000

:: =~Pulll~lc~No~tlce~= __P_ubl,. . ,. tc. ,~.;.;o.; .t c.:. :. ._ ==Publ~~lc~Notlcw~~=

11

~4 Second Ave., Gallipolie, Ohio 45631-0~

- - hom this peoceful hill
top. 4 BR ond 3 BA, opaclouo

I

.~ ::;=::~=====~

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 fax
amount. This notice--paid
for by Addison Township.
AnnuaiSoocer~ting

Thursday, November 8
7pm
at Rutland Civic Center
Board member elections

Forked Run
Sportsman Club

Any Ohio
Legal Deer Gun
Gallia County
Gun Club
Buck Ridge A~d
Sunday Nov. 4th
1pm-?

The Karat Patch

Up To

40°/o OFF

Sat9-5pm

Jewelry, candles, jar
toppers, and much
more!
Limited time only!

Blow Out (Clothing) Sale

BLACKBURN'S

HUNTER SAFETY COURS
Friday 6·10 pm

Woodyards Mini Mall
Buy 1 Ham gel 2nd Item of same
value haH p~ce .
NaiTIB brands not Included
675·5928

·TREE SERVICE
Top, Trim, Remove,
Stump Grinding

Firewood

Doug Miller

446-2422

For Perry Twp Trustee

• Dependable
• Fair
• Hardworking
• Responsible
The right man
for the job!
Paid for by Doug Miller, Box
57, Patriot, OH 45658 ,.

Hunters ~ 'afety
Course
November 17 &amp; 18
To register call
Noreen Saunders
(740) 446-4612

Five Star Drivers
Training
Has Moved To
2 Commerce Or.
Gallipolis .
(Behind Bob's Market)
$179.00

New Opening Special For
-One Week
Start Nov. 5

(740) 441-0553
(740) 339-0321
Gallia Performing Arts
Winter Term
Flag Class
Baton Twirling
Womans Dance Class
Patty Fellure- (740) 245-9880
or (740) 446-0526

For More
Info ...
446-2342 or
992-2156

t;

new lractore and Chllr

lg ·TV. Take on ~I (740)448-8308, 1- Full Blooded. Partinf on equipment have VALUE New
""i;oo875:3-tii:i
small monthly payments. 800'211HI0811.
Promlooo. $1!0. (740)448, BONANZA 0% financing lor Runs good.

·: Good

BULLETIN BOAR

Cl'romo """ b11S for 111811

I

VANS &amp;

~

?r8u~ndii~~Y~·~No~·~v.~4~,;200~1~;;;;;;;;;;~::::::::::P~OI=~:-:o:y::•:M~Idd~leport~~·:.!G~a~ll~lpol~l~a,~O:!h~l~o.:•!P:!!o~lnt~P~Ie~I~U~nt,~WV~~-----~·~u~n~ba!p~tl~im~rc~-~~n~tl~·n~tl.:•!P~114!ge~D!7
••
··#..

R-rtlo - , . Fruit 740-742-8327
'
Farm
APPLEI AND
.
,_.,, Now Tlrll. $1450. noodo molor ond lrono- (740)247-2881.
Rogoro Woteopooolloog.
w P&lt;1111P.
• rue Or1r lor ton11 cool mlno, IIUCH
mllel HolM Traaor Goooo Hock, (740)Ue6982
lloCh $1500. (740)448-78n
------...,24
o1 drlwwa. 1M: Iron- t1rlp or underground 10
Llzy-N 2 -.~
,
1888 Joop Cheroi&lt;H, 4
lng
, SS.DO. (740)982· 11111co lump lnd ....;.., NorUt ol Go!lpolll on COun- 87
·
~-· 1892 GIWid Prix, SE, 11-8, 1 Will IloilO
1978 whooi-Grtve, Rllll nhch, C&amp;C- HOmo M1inteo
25211
•
(740)387·7891
a~ ly Rood 48. (740)l!BB 1581. ~ ~~i:7~ditlon. NC, ~. New Forti LTD, 4dr. .Air Shocl&lt;a, 4 cyt., Auto, .......,. Palnling. Wljt lli&lt;ICOnoot
lo &amp;
rtl B:OOj&gt;m.
\llrvll'&amp; 11ony Po1olo Eaol o1
·13,000. 1(004)675- (304)67HIII4 for lnformo- Now Tlr.., Brakao, Good lng, carpentry, - . , win--amaH 1tow In vi- 120:
roco, or.
5yracuM
, '· ,
tlon and appointment to... Condition, Roody lot Doer - · ball*. . - homo
124 has Regiotered puoabre!l black
nyi$85.GoodFddingStrol:
llontloyS TV,
tumlpo &amp; rp1e
polled Lknouoln bun, 'Y'I- 1992 Plymouth Sunciance &amp;drive.
'
SaloOn. 22 M.P.G. $f500.
and....,., For 11M
$2tor $8. 36' llorm door, : :
23'
~ ~ SOC~,'~. SECURITY DISA· roo11. (7,J")8112-7::rroguo old, good ono. Salt or trodo Rod 2 1Jo0&lt; i! Aj)prox.
(740)379·21!53
"II malo call Cllet, 740-8112·
5. toad ol , . , _
•
...,
BVTV Claim llonlad? we
·
buN of equll quality olio 106 Ooo mileo •' · ~ Llvefy'a Auto Solei- 1887
~bloctdng timon, $25.
120. (740,~c·25211
· Spoclatizo In Appeoll ll'od
a few I'IQIMorod 41 5yr. old tion'
11400 7
1 Pontiac Grand- Am, $400. 1994 F-250, 4x4. Rod, 'iii:;;..':!'"_ _ _~.,
a"""" Size bod bra01 Evef)'lhlng in tho ......... lt... IQI. FREE CONSUL·
Umouoln COWl, . (740)698· attef 5:~ \, ........ 1983 Mtrcury· Lynx sw. ~~ .;;:·~· . c =
Eucniic.W
•-·• ~.~ A
'
$100. Won, talt· 1ot coli TATIOH. Banotlt TNm
2765.
- ·
I
$800. 11185 Buicl&lt; -~
. I,
rea,
•
JbliRIGERA110N
· - ~. nn ...-. ·
- . Inc Toll·l""'' 1·
$400. 1983 Goo Tracker. (740)388-9055
PuochaMd - · 1150. C11t
0111. (740)418-0198
888-838-4062.
·
Rogiaterad Ouar1or HolM 11193 Dod
'
SIOOO. 1985 Oklo Culfaos
•
1
alla&lt;5pm. (304)67s.5852 Fi-lbrSIIo $160
.
more. 18 montho old, Boy, $1700. Newii&lt;ITir
G.!i Supremo,$800. 1892Eagle .1996 Chevy Ext. Cab, 4x,, RHIOentlal or cornmon:tel
To S.K· Love INL light truc1c Loa&lt;4 (740)441-a.-1:' STEEL BUILDING: 4-Clnly
Very Gentle. Sonny 0 BAA Wo!tc Car. (740)2
Pramier, $800 . . 19118 Forti ~ ~~~~
wi~ng. ,_ ~.J" ,!!"
b
'good aha
2)25112.6, 2)150oc100, M... YANMAA YM 1500 Tr- &amp; ~ Eltood Unoo.
'
ClOwn Victoria, $800. 1880 . '
,.~
'
polro. Ma- .,....._ •-·
~=~5-lll8a pe. $40. A , _ IFor Sala. Llogt Move Nowll Soling lor Bal· _,, 3 point hltoh,l2,1!0: $1500. (304)815-6440
1983 Ford Thu rbird, Forti Mulleng, $400. 1888 M
e;r
~·.~:
Rllum
Coil.
lrlctan
.. R~'.~
17•• • '
=-:,:.:c.;,.:,.=,-..,.,.-- -· Up ~. $45. Coil once Owodt 1·800-211· Aloo now •• tintolc......,
Good cooodittooo, ~. Air, 01&lt;11 Cutlall Supreme, 17 11
WVD003Q8,_......,~ - ·
~
$95. GE (740)258-e009 or (740)2S. 11684 x-53
ltlliO crate, $850. Sltlpptnsj
HAY&amp;;
Loathe&lt;, 80,000'! 'onlloo, $800. 1988 Buicl&lt; Rogal, 2000 JHp Wrangler Sport.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Dryer, $85. Whirlpool R• 1834.
·
avll._. t.ocatod IIIII out- ~
GlwN
. 13,800.
(304Jtl7t8957 $800. 1987 Old, Ciero, 6cyl. Stp. /1/C, Cnoteo, 23k
frlgerator, $85. GE Elei;Uic: For Sale, Cloildo T- Soc&gt;
~:::,
o1 Huntavtn., AI (258)
home, (304)67S.2tlftll1~~ry J.opoz. mllel. 118,000 (304)875·
·
S:nS: cor.l35. .
LP Gao 40 g11. $160. ~~.:'"·.,.Y 118 rti• . Buclc a - oote. ......,. 1996 NIONn MaxJma auto.
t742
11114 0oc1go
1 ~no~ccc;:d~nc:
·Hot Point Wailllerl Drye; Grul&gt;b'a Pllno- Tunino &amp; (304)875-4288
.,...,..._..
balat $1.00 othor hey up 10 .air, po-moon for/1 !18,000 mot•. $400. 1884 Plymouth 85 F-150 ""'· llr, '"""" ~ S.O::on ;;.~;,,
Sot, 1300.
Nice Hot Ropolra. Prot&gt;temo? Nood Ulld kitchen -note &amp; OCT.a
NOV.
FARM : : · rcund balat 115'00 28117
mlloo ' 15'000 ' ~-4 75 ' Voya111r, $I800. l984 calll8lle, ,ltO,OOO; 88 cor tile Gallla, J.ckaon,
Point Aelrl111rator, Now Tuned? Call Tloe Plano Dr. counter1op, darll wood. EQUIPMENT SPECIALS
304-875-48811
'
DodQe B-2&amp;0 Van, $800. trailer, 18 • lull metll floor, 11e1g1 1o VI ton lolld
1300. All Ap- 740-448-4526
f700, (304)07~154
KDRR'aiii!IMCI! CEN- Now Formora Tobacco Co 1898 Pontilo Grand Prix i~~:::
(740)882·7557·
W. 1 Dl ~ 1 1 1~
0
Hlndmadodollorblbycro- Woter1inoSpecial: 3/4200
II now recei'ltng :
A/C...
Von,$12D0.1988CtooovvGMorottcYIUS
.:"r.:atl:n.
St...t. (740)448,7398
die in •"""'lent oorocltlon, PSI $21.85 Por 100; 1' 200 PHONE
(304)895·3874 ~ oole will l&gt;e Nov. 14. $9,800 (004)67~
20 Von. 11000. 1888 Forti
. from lllglblil ltnanclll
rnual .... $f00. (740)446- PSI $37.00 Pw 100· All Now Holland 7810 1octor
"""" intormotlor! oall;
' ·
· ~. 11aoo. 111110 Chelnllltutlona le within .
SfolmNG . 0198
Bruo ~Fittings llllt¥0 4wd with loodor
~
1304,16~-2428
85 EICarnino SS, Int. &amp; !ext.l~$800.18118 Ford 1996 300£)(, I3,200 OBO. lhedlllrlcltobaccme .
811
~
Gooos
• Hartly Mumo $300' -" 4 InS-.
ynlt
780
toouro :'385ew ormors
In good condition•. drljloo.
,$4DO.CIII(740J38I· Goodcondltlcnwlthfewox· publiC clfpolltory. of
.
lor$10. Open sat.~- &amp; RON EVANS ENtiRPIIII- $25.-.,Ntrri Holland 8810
. runs, . but nlodo
8303
trao. (740)378-9258
the aava mont• of
AugorRedllbolover&amp;un- -ngo. Dewl1ur11 G_,. :.Jackoon, Ohio, l-800- 4'Ml· tractor 8Dhp, rental Quality hay, $1.75 bile;=· ll3 Ca:~:r, to, Mull Sollt 1885 Hyundai
lhl dlllrlct. All
der 12 gauge, lull, mod &amp; llouoo MI. Alto. (304)8&amp;s.
9828 ,
u$2n:~houro,lullw•rranty, UmoualnbullcaH,8montl\s $1500 ~f:)992-uroo' Elantra, PS, ,. PB, PW, Air, 2001 Hanoy 883 CullOm appllclllona· ahould·
cilteet tubes, hUnted wllh 3740 leave ....... or Wutl1or Guard Diamond·
• ·• Now Holland Old, (740)1185-3810
·
'
brond now 1ranamlotal'on un· P.. ~ White, EJc1ra Cll"""'. bo
rocolved b
twice, $785; new Buchnot (304)8116-3789
.tip Truck TOOlbox. 1200 ~~~~::':io~acto; ~-~~
Wire Tie 85 Pontiac Bonneliille, der warranty. Now timing ~
$8,000. Novombar .3D, 200~
Holo lite. lor p1o1o1 or tthol- tndapondont Horballle Dt• Firm. Call (740)245-0810, valve, 118,500., Uood New
Doilvery 30,000 BCIUal miiH. ~- bell &amp; rebuilt head. Wao I )446mid llnl 10 GJMV
gun, 1200. 74D-892·0228 tributor, Call For Produot Or oveningo.
Holllnd 1725 Compact .. cAvaia· lent condition. v~. auto. llr. Asking $4200, Now Atlldng For Sole· t 988 Goldwlng S II~ Wo hi Dll1rlct
~Opportunity. (740)4'1-1982
tor Boomor oer1ea 25hp 4wd
Farm. ~~58- 1417 1 740~58- $2900, (740)2566800
GL1500- """""'Y serviced, 1: 11
~' . Ne..;
Ruger Supor Rodhawi&lt; with J
$2 DO: 23' -~·TV
SUI'I'!.ttis .
185 hours . $9,500., Uood
IIAI
""UCKS
J now Ureo and battery. Hampahlre . Avenlll
ooopo ~ng.,.. ammo Like aono, · ·
~
·
·
91 Chrysler LIBaron cion•a
$7500. (740)446-7877
'
,_, $450. (740)441-IM1 . $50.00; 5' TV,$20.00; conI
vortibte, $2,000. (740)387·
FOR SALE.
, Wollaton, 0 H 45111
crete otatea, Guido Gtrota- Block, b&lt;fc1c, - r ptpoo, Now Holtend 4830 2Wd trac0850 (740)387-7272.
Auro PARIS &amp; · jto the attention .ot
jiiil
J m1,132Butltomut.
· -.llntets,e1C.Ciaudo tor 5Shp with 7310 _ ,
ACOMili!JES • Cindy Sallaman. For
J'
AlmQvEs
JET
Wlntara, Rio Gtando, OH 887 hours
91 Oynuty, grill condition, 89 GMC S.fa~. very well
IUrthor InformatiOn
AERATION MOTORS
cai740-24S.St21.
$14,900., ~
Oil changod ragularly. Good
$3&amp;00, 1740 1742' Budgll ..,_ Tranomto- Clll740o314 2184 ext.
Repaired, Now &amp; Robult In
tractor 2wd 42hp 1 owner $0 DOWN CARS! POLICE tiru. St~p o1 chrome at
.
llono AI Types, Aocfl8 To 28. .
Buotefa Antlqueo Now Stook. Call Ron E-. 1·
Plm:
J $8,800., Uoed Forti 4510 IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI ilklol.740
Mua1 drive to opprecl· , For Silo- 1888 Ford F150 Over 10,000 Tranom-o, ·
~· ~
';;',;: 800-537-ms.
·
~
tractor 52hP 2wd AOPS HONDA'S;
CHEVY'S, ate. 1 1379- 8081
300 8 cyt., auto, $1850: Trano1or c ..... 740-245·· November 4. 21101
1W
C~rninal
R-~-)
largo
pump
$9,800.,
Uood
JEEP'S
LOW
/IS
$29/MO
(740)448-78n
5677, Cell: 339-37tl5.
,
hind •
8
-~
c
NH'L-555SkldSteerloader
F R'
.
Buy&amp; Settl (304)675-1248 Motel lhahlft, $10; WOtk AK
Coltio pupploo, 82'
buckat &amp; pallott lorl&lt;o 24 MO.'S 0198
. %. 0
- - - - - - - - t&gt;enchtl $50; Now imogular ublolwhlte, .... wtoltoo $9,900., Uaod O.utz 4008 LISTINGS. CALL 1·800·
Real Eatate General
Buy or aaK. R - Anti· )una, S2.00; Door caa1ng Ol&lt;/pedigroa, normal oy11, :lwd tractor 40hp Ropo and 451-oD50 ext. C-9812
;~;=~==~~~~==::=:::
quos, 1124 Eaot Main on $300·Colloollwon- $400up,(740)698·1085.
c•~
~
ho
.
1 ·~
SR 124 e. Pomeroy, 740- · '
•
•
---••
ura 1979 Jeep CJ5 will trade for
992·2528. Ruaa Moore, $30. (7o40)992 2529
AKC Golder')/ Retriever $7,500., Used John Deere 4-wtleeler of equal value. or
owner.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS Pupa, Biondo and Gclden. 310A Backhoe &amp; Loader oate for $3000. Call Roloer1
- - - - - - - - lntoilhorm &amp; Coleman 1111 Pareote on premiiM $9,500., John Qoere Gator Neal (304)875-6540
ConorW

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

1

j

=

Cholt $40 Cooco 120. Call P40)11112-3452

SUnct.y, Nov. 4, 2001

SOUTH SECOND AVE • A 1'/• s1ory frame
home wllh 3 bedrooms. 1 balh, a fronl porch,
and an enclosed rear porch. Does need some
work.
$11,000.00
DOTTIE TURNER, 8roker........992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 949·2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING.........949·2131
BETTY JO COLLINS.................949·2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ................... 992·3056
QFFICE ...................................... 992·2888

Fall is one of the most wonderful times of the year in Alabama. So come
.· telebrate the crisp days and postcard sunsets on the RoBERT TRENT JONES
GOLF TRAIL. With eight sites and
378 cha.mpionship holes·across the
state, there's one within driving
range of wherever you are.
And, now is agreat time to plan
atrip to Alabama to see the
"new" GRAND HOTEL, part of the
Resort Division of the Trail. Now ·
undergoing a$30 million
renovation, The Grand Hotel is
., ~ecoming even grander.
,.Call today for tee times
'and·hotel reservations. Fall is
a.Grand time on the Trail.
ALABAMA'S

Ro.JERT1kE
UOLF

POINT CLEAR

C?/uuttt ~Aarr!g!l.

mov

.GOlf ClUB

800.848.4444
· www.rtjgolf.co'm

800.144.8833
www. marriotgrand. com
v

�.-... Dl• 6nNp ctimet ·6tnlintl

EASTERN'S PLAYOFF RUN ENDS AT TRIMBLE. 81

•
~. Nov. 4, 2001:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gllllpolla, Ohio • Point Pia aunt, WV
tt

Smith
. . . . . D1
nothing to your current tax
bill.

Support your favorite
charities - Gift1ng securi. ties is becoming a popular
way to help non-profit
organizations. Appreciated
stock may aUow you to provide a benefit to your chosen non-profit while gaining a-tax benefit for yourself
at a bargain price. Your tax
advisor can tell you more
about the adV:Intages of this
kind of donation.
Cash contributions are
both deductible' and ,a ppreciated, but you can also
deduct non-cash contributions, including clothing
and other household goods,
based on the value at the
time of the -contribution. Be
sure to get a detailed
receipt, as additional information must be provided if
your total non-cash contributions exceed 150,0.
Also, if you claim a value
of $5,000 or more for noncash gifts other than marketable securities, a full
written appraisal is generally required. Remember that
a wtitten receipt is required
for all contributions of $250
or more.
Mlllrlmize "above-thetine" deductions - Certain reductions to your
adjusted gross income, or
AGI, are often called
"above-the-line" deductions . They are an important
tax planning tool because
you can take them 'in addition to the standard deduction or itemized deductions. AGI determines your
eligibility
for
various
deductions, exemptions and
credits.
As you '11 see, certain
retirement plan contributions are "above-the-line"
deductions which reduce
your AGI. Other outlays
which might lower your
AGI include certain moving
expenses, self-employment
· tax, · part of your self- '
employed health insurance,
etc. Your accountant or tax
advisor can guide you.
Contribute to your
retirement plan -To the
extent possible, you should
generally maximize your
contributions
to
your
retirement
plans . The
deductions for contributions to traditional IRAs,
· simplified employee pensions (SEPs) and Keogh
plans fall "above-the-line"
of your Adjusted Gross
Income, so you can take
them in addition to your
standard or itemized deduc't ions.
Also, all IRA, SEP and

of 1964 and making his first diers to inform them that Colfack. said he developed ~
Keogh plan earnings accumulate tax-deferr~d. as do
trip iqto South Vietnam. ·
their son 1!.2d either been losi interest in the adminislrati~
"From 1964 to 1967, the or seriously injured in battle. side ofhealthcare and pursue4
earnings under qualified
entire war changed," Colfack
"It wasn't every day that I a b2chelor ·of science degree
pension, profit-sharing and
fN•PageDI ·
said.
"We
went
from
being
had to visit families, but there in Health c.re A.dministra~
401 (k) plans. That will
advison to this effon to actu- were several a week, usually;• lion at G~ w.sbingtolf
mean another tax advantage opportunity;' he said.
al participants."
'
From
Rorida,
Colfack
University in Washington:
Colfack said.
down the road since you,
Colfack added that in the
FoUowing his year deliver- D.C.
:
presumably, will be in a found himself in Yokosuka,
spring
Japan,
in
19i
4,
at
Faireconof
1965,
U.S.
Marines
ing the news to the families,
He graduated in 19n wid)
lower tax bracket wher you
ron-One,
wh
.,
'
he
worked
as·
,
q
ttering
DaNang,
an
began
highest
honors. From there h¢
Colfack
was
sent
back
to
Vietstart taking payouts from
a
medic
wi&lt;h
a
top-secret
area
of
North
Vietnam
where
nam during Christmas time went on to attain his master of
your retirement plan .
gaththe
medical
facility
he
was
squadron
responsible
for
of 1969 where he worked one science degree in .Wnage.
Takes breaks In a
aboard
a
coastal ment, with an emphasis in
bunch In some cases, ering electronic data from stationed was located. During year
North
Vietnam
and
China.
his
stint
in
North
Vietnam,
in
minesweeper aircraft before financial management, fiom
you 111ight want to apply a ,
which
he
actually
spent
time
"By
1964,
things
had
reaUy
becoming a medical service Monterey, Calif., in 1979. '
bunching strategy to certain
in
the
air
aboard
one
started
heating
up
in
Southof
the
corps officer, which meant he
Colfack is a Diplomate
deductions to increase the
east Asia;' Colfack said.
ECM
:rircraft,
Colfack
said
he
with
the American CoUege of
wasn't going to be moved
total deductible amount .
At about the same time, began to develop a whole back and forth anymore.
Healthcare Executives and.J
Determine whether this
Colfack's commanding officer new appreciation on life after
"It was a good move for member of the JCAHQ
year's miscellaneous deduchad asked for a volunteer to having a few dose calls with me, because it meant stabili- Accreditation Task Force fQt
tions will exceed the IRS
train in the area of electronic the opposition flying into ty," Colfack said. "It also Small and rural Hospitals and
deduction
threshold
recognizance, so while he was U.S. territory.
meant getting out of Viet- a past member of the Ameri~
(remember, if you itemiz~
"When you watch death
still working from the healthcan Hospital · Associatio.i
nam."
such deductions, you are
care side of the campaign, he walk up on you on radar in a
!
Once back in the states, Governing Council.
allowed to deduct only the ,
was also spending his nights matter of minutes, it chlmges
amount that exceeds 2 per- training in the area of Elec- things all the way around. It's
•
cent of AGI).
tronic Count~r Measures a very harrowing experience,"
supplements should contaitt ,
If they do exceed the (ECM).
. Colfack said, adding that
.
18-25 percent salt, 9-12 pert,
threshold, it is probably a
Part of this trammg eventually the North Vietcent calcium, 6-9 perce~
good idea to ' extend sub- required him to go through namese became aware of how
phosphorous, with a calciUI1l
· ftomPapDI
scriptions to professional the escape and eV:ISiVe regi- the U.S. troops were gatherto phosphorods ratio betweeO
journals, pay union or pro- ment, which meant be and ing information and watching ing quickly and is magnesium 1:1 and 2:1.
!
fessional dues, enroll ~nd others were taken. to a remote them, and began using deficient.
Magnesium levels should ~
pay tuition for job-related location that was surrounded counter maneuvers.
Copper and selenium are boos~ed to 11-13 percent
courses, etc., in calendar by other naval officers dressed
FoUowing his three yean in two trace minerals that are during times of lush pastunt
year 2000. Generally, the as Chinese Communist sol- Vietnam, Colfack was trans- likely to be deficient in beef growth. Most mineral tnixeS
strategy is to bunch your diers. Col&amp;ck and his group ferred back to the U.S. to a cattle rations. Soils in our area provide adequate levels cif
deductiol)s in alternate were supposed to escape this Navy and Marine Corps are deficient in selenium, as is most trac~ minerals. Althoug! :
years in order to exceed the area without being captured training center in Lorain, much of the southeast, there- general mixes usually inclu~
AGI percentage limitations by these "soldiers."
Ohio. At Lorain, Colfack fore su(lplementation is nec- copper, it may not be enoug)J:
that might otherwise preColfack also was submitted spent the next year a5 a Casu- essary to prevent problems, to compensate ful)y for the
vent your deducting such to one week in a prisoner of alty Assistance Calls Officer, such ai white muscle disease deficiencies in this area.
costs. This approach also war compound before being which meant he was responsi- in newborn calves.
To learh more about minLocal
studies
conducted
in
eral
supplementation and ,
applies to medical (subject given his wings in September ble for visiting families of solthe early 1990s concluded sources, RSVP by Wednesday
to a 7.5 percent limit) and
that our forages are also dif- for the producers' ·meeting
certain other deductions, so
"There's not much work ferent in copper, which can scheduled for Nov. 13, or call
ask your tax advisor if this
here;· she said. "I wish some- · cause symptoms that mimic ihe OSU Extension Office
strategy ' is right for you.
.fescue toxicity, · including and request a fact sheet oil
thing
could be done."
Get extra credit mineral supplementation.
·
Ramos, a veteran industrial reduced conception rate.
fromPageD1
Dependent care credit - If
Providing
a
free
choice
L
Byrnts
is
Galli•
aennifer
recruiter from Columbus,
you are caring for a disabled
Nearly
50
percent
of
4,800
Miss.,
said the county is ready mineral is usually the most County~ Extension agent
dependent or spouse, or if
residents
in
Owsley
County
to reap economic rewards. In effective way to ensure daily agriculture and ~~t~lural ~soun:e~
you have a child under the ·
:
age of 13, and 'you pay , live in poverty, according to the preparation, the industrial intake. In general, mineral Ohio State University.)
1
•
someone to care for that Kentucky Appalachian Com- authority has built two buildmission.
Per
capita
income
here
ings in its . industrial park.
dependent so you can work,
Vote For ,
is
$10,474.
That's
far
poorer
They're
awaiting companies
the dependent care credit
may allow you to deduct as •than the Appal:ichian portion that want to relocate or
much as $720 if you have of Kentucky as a whole, where expand.
Residents have united to disone qualifying individual, 26 percent of the residents live
in poverty and where per capi- cuss measures they can take to
or $1,440 if you have more
ta income is $14,168.
address the economic probthan one qualifying individ"No matter , what demo- lems, said MoUy Turner, a
ual. The tax credit ranges
grophic or economic pm6le retired teacher who . heads the
from 20 percent to, 30 per)'(Mt look at, Owsley County Owsley Coulky-Actioo Team, a
cent of ,care expenses,
•'
has persistendy ranked as one citizens group that brainstorms
depending on your AGI.
hid for by coodklote J011 DI.U, 3Jl Spraee Street. C •: M, '*'&gt;
of the poorest CO!Jnties not
Look for ple!lsant aur- only in the state but in the ways to improve the local
•
prl•e• - You may be sur- nation;' said Ewell Balltrip,
prised at the variety of tax director of. the Kentucky
breaks available to you. Appalachian Commission. "It
Those mentioned here has been a persistent problem."
could be just the beginnil;tg.
Owsley County isn't asking
Some of these suggestions for much, said Susan Ramos,
must be acted upon by the executive director of the of the
end of the year, others may Booneville-Owsley County
be able to wait until closer Industrial Authority.
to tax filing time; Consult
"We need more jobs," she
with your accountant or tax said. "We don't want urban
advisor if you have ques- sprawl, ·but we want enough
tions, or for more specific jobs for our ·people to earn a
info,rmation and advice.,
living wage and good insur(Bryce Smith is an invest- ance."
ment executive with Smith
Betty Smith, 67, has three
Partners at Advtst Inc: in its children who left Booneville to
Gallipolis office.)
find work.

Melp County"s

Ubrary board opens bids for addition
BY 8Rwt J, REED

are included for bid alternates,
including a metal roof, specialty glass,
POMEROY Lou Morgan a canopy, wood fencing and cabiBuilders of Sandyville, W.Va., is the
netry.
apparent low bidder on the construcOther bidders were Concrete
tion of an extensive addition planned
for the Meigs County District Public Contractors Plus, Inc., Wheelersburg,
Library.
wtth a base btd .of 1778,419, and
Bids were opened Friday after- , Wesam Construcnon Co., Pomeroy,
noon during a meeting of the library wtth a base bid of $1,037,182.
system's board of trustees.
The board tabled bids on the proThe Morgan firm's base bid for the ject so the project architects, Burgess
project is $589,700. Additional costs &amp; Niple of Columbus, can review
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Bymes

BY CHARlENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - A
Pomeroy
man
who had the distinction of capturing the last Confederate flag before the Appomattox surrender ending the
Civil War, has been selected
for induction into the Ohio
Veterans Hall of Fame.
Charles Schorn, a U.S.
Army Civil War veteran and
recipient of the Cong~S!ion­
al Medal of Honor, is one of
20 veterai)S who will be honored this year.
Gov. Bob Taft wiD induct
the class of 2d01 in a 11 a.m.
Thursday ceremony at Veterans Memorial in Columbus.
The Ohio Veterans Hall of
Fame was established in 1992
as a way to recognize Ohio
veierans for the service they

•

JESS DAVIS

'21
'I I Bonnevilles
"3" In stock. White with graphite
cloth bucket seats. Low mUes.

A Rate .Changer CD from Farmers Bank

will only go up
in value, Hcan't go down and that's guaranteed and lnaurecl by the FDIC.
Unlike the stock market, a Farmers Bank Rate Changer CD is a safe and sure
way lo invest for the future. You can call in, once for a 3 year, CD and twice for
a 5 year CD and we'll bump you up to lhe 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 investmenl 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 tenns. Penalty for aa~y wllhdrawal.
Fanners Bank directors, office~. employees and their families are not eligible.

Member FDIC

Wi.n a 111 000 CD lrom
Farmers Bank
~ ·~
live on the
If&gt;
ra·d ·o on

Dec. J.4!

Enter to win at any Farmers
Bank Location.
,,

••

'0 I Sunfire 2 Dr.
O'nly 9,000 lbw miks; Alllomade, A.C, CD Plsytr

*I
GMC Yukon SLT ~...~~
Only 23,000 low mUes,
Leather Interior, 5.7 V-8, Rear AC

TOW PACKAGE
'97 Le Sabre Custom
or Limited

Your Choice! Both I owners.
QUAUTY CARS/!
NtUA $10,900

"8" Ptogram cars in stock.
Low mUes, loaded with options.

?-•12 900
'0 I Le Sabres
"5" In stock. Loaded with options.
·, GM Factory Program Cars

'I 900
'99 Grand Prix

"3" To Choose From:
2 Door, 1 owners, In stock,
Good Colors, Red, Silver &amp; Dark

LOW MILES '
Olds Bravada
Dark Red with Graphite hather
interior, EXTRA CLEAN, Shows TLC

~.

'96 GMC Sonoma

Annual health
fa slated
for Friday
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I -'

•lil't!e n'"',;....u..,.....__ ..._

._..._

~.o&lt;.f''

~

There will be no charge tpr~
any of the screenings Or.
other services offered, excel!!' ·
the flu shots which wiD be
given by the Meigs County :
Health Department.
. .
Seniors' without Medicate
or Medicaid cards will be'
asked to pay SS (or the va~-:
cme.
H olzer Medical Ceni~r
will be doing the cholesterOl. :
and blood sugar testing, and
Karr Audiology will l;)e

Temple demolished

.'

INDUCTED -Charles Schorn
of Pomeroy who captured the
last Confederate flag before
Appi&gt;mattox will
inducted
Into the Ohio Veterans Hall of
Fame Thursday in Columbus.
After the Civil War ended and
Schorn returned to Pomeroy,
he opened a barber shop on
Main Street operating it until
his death in 1915.

Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, which has
hugged the
hillside behind
the Meigs
County Court·
house for a .
century, was
burned by
'Pomeroy VOlunteer Flrefight·
ers on Satur- ·
day morning. :
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

be

..

MARKER - Agovernment marke~ denoting Charles Schorn as a Congressional Medal of Honor
winner has been erected In Sacr~ Heart Cemetery In Pomeroy.

~----~'------------------------------------------------------------

Sentinel
15-u--12Psps

ealendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
. Sports

Weather

Anthrax found on package
in N.Y. mayor's'offic~.
.

Hlp: 50s

Today'•

L-:10.
Details, A3

WASHINGTON (AP) - A videotape that NBC sent as a' courtesy to the
New York mayor's office WO$ found to
be contaminated with small traces of
an\hrax. Workers in Washington were
preparing to fumigate a Senate office
building to kill any lingering anthrax
spores.
•
I ~ New York, hea)th.; ,investigators
renewed ' their search for,, clues to
exp,la(p how a. woman with no postal

Lotteries

A2

OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 7.(}-1; Pick 4; Q-1·1-1

BS

5uplr LalaD: 1-1().25-32-33-41
A4 lllcMr: o-Hi·9·6·3
A3 W.VA.
B1.3.6 Dely 3: 6-6-5 o.Hy 4: 8-4-6-1

A3

C 2001 Ohio Volley Publlshintl Co.

...

..

.
Nove111ber
'

. In

,

I

.1

,$ji. , \,

~

•· ,

&lt;.·

I

,

I

connection was fatall y infected with
inhaled anthrax.
And tests uncovered small traces of
anthrax in a Veterans Affairs hospital
here, but officials said it was unlikely
any patients were affected.
Officials a~ the Mayo C lin ic in
Rochester, Minn. , were preparing to
announce the dis covery of a new DNA
test to quickly identify specimens conta•t~inated with anthrax.

O n Capitol Hill, workers prepared to
sterilize the an thrax-contaminated Hart
Senate Office Building with chlorin&lt;(
dioxide gas, but the Longworth Hou~e
Office Building was reopening Monday ,
for the first time sin ce Oct. 17.
Capitol Police l..t. Dan Nichols said
all portions of the building will be open;
except for three sealed-off rooms where:

Ple•se see Anthrax. A!J

'

Is National

HoSpice Month

Observance of' lhi~ special monlh, Holzer. Hospice will provide FREE screenings at

WaiMart In Maton
' Tuestlt!;, Nove•ber 6 • 12 Noon • 2 PM ·
Chdtsterol, Glucose and Blood Press·ure Screenings

Senior Citizen's

'

POMEROY -Wellness is
ageless, and for those who
may be getting older, the
annual health fair at the
Senior Citizens Center Friday is an opportunity to
Jearn more about healthy
lifestyles.
The fair will be held from
9 - 11 a.m. and I-) p.m.
under sponsorship of the
Meigs County Council on
Aging. and Holzer Medical
Center Community Health doing hearing screening IJy
an~ Wellness Department.
appointment only (call 99~A variety of literature on , 2161).There is no charge for
wellness in addition tb any of the screenings.
Ber!Jal Sage Tea Co .. will
screenings for · choleste.rol
and. bleod'' sugar, hearing be there; to give ~ 9f
tests; facial and hand mas- teas and 'talk about the me4sages, and fitness evaluations icinal effects.
including use pf the equipOthet agencies taking part
ment, will be available to in the healtjt fair are Holzer
those who attend Friday's Medical Center Rehab
event.
Unit, Meigs County Cancer
Emphasis of the program Initiative and Rocksprings
will be op preventive care , Rehabilitation Center.

' . .....
- ,...,... .U,,.,,,
' ,

Gallipolis Township Trustee.

Emerald Green with
Taupe Leather Interior

nine months. during which the
library will remain open to patrons. It
is scheduled for completion in September 2002.
Present at the opening were
Library Director Kristi Eblin, Board
President Douglas Litde, who conducted the meeting, and trustees-Pat
Holter, Sue McGuire, Bruce May
and Maureen H ennessy, who was
recently appointed to the board to
replace Blakeslee.

'

for

'01 GrandAMs

planned for the basement-area conferen ce rooms, and an enclosed play
area and an expanded parking lot are
included in the exterior plans.
The addition, which will be built
on land donated to the board by th e
late Dr. Hugh M. Davis, will be
named in honor of long-time board
member Charles E. Blakeslee, who
resigned his position effective Oct.
31.
Construction is expected to take

Civil War veteran tapped·for Hall of Fame

Help

'II Park Avenue

the bids and talk with bidders. The
board expects to act on the bids early
next week.
The addition will be financed
through the board's building fund,
and will house additional reading
areas, a children's area. room for
stacks, and a computer laboratory.
Existing space will be used for stacks,
a circulation area and expanded
offices for library administration.
Extensive renovations also · are

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