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                  <text>hge B I• The Daily Sentinel

• MAJoR LEAGuE B ~ s E B A~L.

Twins,• baseball
await
deaston
•
•
•
cti
adion lft11Un
on
On CO.......
W•
'J
!I''

MIN NEAPOLb (AP) A Minnesota judge is considering an injunction that
.
b b II
cou ld d JSrupt ase a commi&lt;sioner Bud Selig's plan to
dump two reams before next
season.
After arguments Thursday
from lawyers from the Minnesota Twins. the team's landlord and the attorney general's office, Hennepin County
District Judge Harry Crump
said he would rule in "a couple of days." The injunction
would keep the Twins in
Minneapolis until a dispute
over their lease goes to trial.
The Metropolitan Sports
Facilities Cornntission, which
obtained
a
temporary
restraining order after baseball owners voted last week
to get rid of two unidentified
teams, expects the Twins to
play at the Metrodome in
2002.
Without
a temporary
injunction, the commission's
lawyers argued, the Twins
could be disbanded before
the conflict over the lease is
settled.
"Once the fi-anchi&lt;e takes
wing, we can't get the remedy we need," said Corey
Ayling, a lawyer for the Facilities Commission.
Montreal and Minnesota
are considered the leading
·c andidates for elimination,
with Florida, Oakland and
Tampa Bay also possibilities.
The team's lease requires it
to play in the Metrodome
through 2002. The judge
must consider whether the
Facilities Commission i&lt; likely to win a trial, whether it
would sustain irreparable
· harm if the injunction isn't
issued, whether the Twins
and baseball would be dam-·
aged, and whether the public

interest is served.
Roger Magnuson, the
lawyer who represented the
""w1' ns and Selt"g, argued that
1•
Crump would be overstepping his bounds to exten d
the order.
Acknowledging that his
own children were rooting
against him, Magnuson urged
Crump not to let emotional
arguments sway his decision.
''We all feel the hurt if the
Twins leave," Magnuson said.
But, he said, "You can't compel people to play ball."
The Twins began playing in
the Metrodome in 1982, but
haven 't been required to pay
rent for the regular season in
more than a decade.
. JSn
. ,t a d o IIar-or-cents
"ThiS
, A I"
"d dd"
h.
thing,' y mg sa1 , a mg t e
Twins are an object of civic
pride and community interest and bring national exposure to the state '
· the injuncIf Crump issues
tion, it might be impossible
to eliminate the Twins before
next year because it's unclear
when a trial would take
place. Selig wants to pick the
two teams to eliminate by the
end of November and wants
to complete the process by
Dec. 15.
The 30 ·courtroom se~ts
and the jury box w~re filled
with fans and media, and
another dozen or so people
clogged the aisles. Among
those attending were Mayor
Sharon Sayles Belton and
Clark Griffith, son of former
Twins owner Calvin Griffith.
Ayling was aided in court
by Alan Gilbert, chief deputy
of Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch, who has
threatened his own lawsuit
against baseball if the Twins
are eliminated or moved.
Ayling and Gilbert cited a

Brand New 2002 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Sedan

Friday, New. 16, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Brand New 2002 Buick
LISabre Custom Sedan

Stringer may have used dietary supplement
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)- Korey Stringer, on A teallll1l2te told team officials he saw Stringer
the morning of hi&lt; last practice with the Min- take two of the copsules before the morning

rn~ents

:;;r

THANKS
For your support in the
Letart Cemetary Levy
- Letart Trustees -

lit (/ooJ,v..u.'&amp; llulo. Sa/M

ike Bing - Owner - 27 years experience
Randy Bing- Technician - 5 years experience
Jim Bing, Technician - 12 year experience

.

Mike, Randy. and Jim
Formerly of Ford Garage in Middleport

*
*
*
:

Where is
bin Laden? A7

Thanksgiving
meal deals Cl

White Falcons
reach final four 81

With Carlson Craf.,.

Quality Print Shop
255 Mill Street • Pomeroy

992-3345

Brand New 2002 Chevy

s.sertes ZR2 Ell Cab 4x4

821,95o~

• Power Seat, Wlndoin, Locka

• V-6 Power, AMIFM Stereo

• 4300 V-6, Air Conditioning

• Remote Keyless Entry
TIH Steering, Crulee Control

• Air Conditioning
• Tilt Steering, Crul11 Control

• Keyless Entry, CD System
• Totally

Bl'lnd New 2002 Chevy .
Silverado Shorlbed 414

Brand New 2002 Silverado
Extended Cab 4 Door

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Air Conditioning
1 AWFII Sino, Tit Sleerlng

• V-6 Power, Aut011111tlc .

820,85 822,850.

Loaded!

•

tmts School board Ia

sJ.25

leader search

Gallia County
asks for assistance

education approving a resolution
asking Ohio School Boards Association to provide a list of candidates.
Board President Jon Thompson
BY KEviN KEW"
said names will be submitted to a
• TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF
committee led by board memGALLIPOLIS - The search be" John Payne and Mike Pol(or a new Gailia County Local cyn to focus on one who's right
Schools superintendent has for- for the job.
mally started with the board of
The action was taken in a spe-

cia! meeting Thursday.
"The main thing I wanted to
do in calling this meeting was to
get the superintendent search
going," Thompson said.
"OSBA will glean prospective
candidates down to a manageable
group and then have it further
strained down to one," he added.
"The candidate will be presented
to the GaUia- Vinton Educational

Service Center in hopes of ge ttin g a recommendation, and the
board will have to come back in
a meeting and act on tha t recommendation ..,
The board will make the decision on the candidate, Thompson
said. ESC, a facilitator agency for
area schools, is assisting the board
with recommendations.

• Air Cond., Locking ~~~=l
• Chrome Pkg., Till &amp;

•

BY

TONY M. lEACH
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

. RUTLAND - A Rutland man was arrested
by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department following a drug raid that netted more than 200
marij uana plants.
·
Sheriff R alph E. Trussell s.1id William "Noodles"' Hayes, 57 , was arrested Thursday after
deputies discovered a large indoor marijuana
growing operation in both an outbuilding and
a hidden room at Hayes' residence Ol) Beech
Grove Road.
. ~ ••' ~
Trussell said the raid was the result.\
t~af•I
fi e stop made earlier by the State Highway
Patrol. when an unidentified male and female
were charged with speeding, operating a motor
vehicle while intoxicated and seat belt violations.
Upon searching the suspects' vehicle, troopers found a large quantity of processed mari·
juana, Trussell said.
Both su~pects were from out of state.
Meigs coun~..deputies were dispatched to
\hCi '.lcene;'an9(1~~J:(lption received.
troin ~he two suspects, a search warrant~
• 'H;Iy!i"f -res!tlence was obtained. Pli·~·.,•
While se~rching· Hayes' home, Inore than 110

BY BRIAN J. REED .

oHn

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

· Pluse IH Anthrex. AI

200
se

'Common
sense' key
to defuse
situation
POMEROY "People
need to use· common sense"
when
concerned
about
~nthrax exposure, Meigs
County Health Commission' Norma Torres said.
er
; Meigs County Commissioners met Thursday with
'rorrest · Sanitarian
Don
Hodge, Meigs County Emergency Management Director
l3ob Byer, EMS Administrator
Oene Lyons,..VeteranS..Mell&gt;Q- ,.
~ia.l • Hospital Administrator
Bob Bowers, and Holzer
Clinic Director Diana jeff;;rs,
to d,iscuss the local protocol
for "biologic incidents" in
Meil!l' County.
·· Four Americans have died
tiQm anthrax-related· illnesses
since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, and 13 others have
been exposed to either the
iilhalation or cutaneous form
of the illness, Torres said.
The health department has
received umany calls" about
possible· anthrax, Torres said,
but is concerned that some
residents may over-react.
Some have called about possible anthrax in letters from
family, and in mass billing
mailings from credit card
companies, for example.
.
Deputy
Sheriff Scott
Trussell said Friday the sheriff's office has received similar
calls.
"That type of letter ·does
not fit the criteria for what
~he Ohio Department of

POT RAID

....... _Surch.A&amp;

ANTHRAX

Senion •••
Wh.y •ettle for the 1am.e announcementl 01 ewryone elu when
you can have your own peraonoliud invitation at an affordable
price? We have dosem ofannounc•menu arad acceuorie• to
clwo1e from. So bofo,., you pay 1hat tkpo•it and lock your.elf
into 'an onkr tlaot. you reaUy aren \ aure of. ltop in and compare
o~r price and •election. We think you'll bo slad you did/

:

q9,550* 821,950* qa,B50*

Stringer's wife, Kelci Stringer, and hi&lt; parent$
·last week said they planned to sue the Vikings
for negi_igence in hi&lt; death. They said ther.
would file the lawsuit after the NFL season
ends and seek $I 00 million in damages.
:
Asked for comment on the supplement mati
ter, James Goul d, a spo kesman ctor Ke Ict.
.
.
Press "Th
. I
Strmger, told the Pioneer
:
e tOXJco ogy report was dean and at _the end ofth_e day
that will be proven. The Vikinl!l' are graspmg at
straws and this shows how_ unsuppo
_ rtive the,Y..
tl will
be '
have been and eviden y
contmue to ..

Graduation
Celebration

*;:;~~~~***lfl~~;;~*

S.Serles Pickup

Autopsy and toxicology reports luven't been
released at the family 's request. Dr. David
Knowles, a Mankato doctor who supervises
the teams training camp, said in August they
ffi .
showed small traces of c:1 eme.
1
·d h
all supp)ements
Know es sat t en not
.
would be traceable but that the tests are com:
prehensive en~u~ to determine whether
there was any SJ~cant drug _use.
.
_
Ripped Fuels label says tt contains Ma
Huang extract (ephedn alkaloids) and guarana
extract, which produces caffeine. Caffeine can
.
act as a diuretic, meaning it increases urinabOJ!
and the loss -offluids.
•

Begin your

for by Joy.. Wbl1&lt;, C1eR. 2Jlll HW R...., RodDo, Oblo

********************
*\tit.
B1NQ'S 11'111~ RCPIIJR *

:

SPORIS

practice session on July 31, the team soun:es
that can mcteasr said.

!he

*** ·
*
*

TEMPO

Vik.i~l!l'· ~t ~ve takrn a di~ sup-

nesota
plement With

1977 rulinll involving the heart rate md blood pressure and contribute to
New York J· 1 and a 1983 dehydnnon, according to a published rq&gt;&lt;&gt;rt_case against ,\lew York VanSt: ~ul Ptoneer_Press reported tn 111
kces. When those teams tried Frtday edinons !hat the info~non came out
at an early October meenng between the
to play games outside their Vilci'
d .._
. al s-c
d
nl!l' an uoe 0 ccupatlon
a~ety an
I
regu ar
venues,
courts H a)-L D " . .
f th
•• D · - t f
·
e Ul lVlSIOO 0 . e Sta~
ep.u 1-Uaen 0
blocked t hem, saymg games Labor and Industry.
in other places would damAt the meeting, team officials said dietary
age the city's quality of life supplements were found in Stringer's locker on
and cost it money.
July 31 , OSHA spokesnun Jaines Honerman
Magnuson said those cases told the newspaper.
shouldn't apply because this
The information about the dietary suppledispute was over whether a
·
ment was unrelated to OSHA's in~tigation of
ptelaaymed.piayed, not where it Stringer's death, Honerman said. State investiki
di •
Magnuson said it was iron- gators ~ter con=ed the~i
"dnJulf ";~
ic that the public bodies were late sa ety stan
on J Y
or
Y· •
fighting to have the Twins when Strl~ger became ill.
.
deemed a public interest
The nanve of Warren, Ohio, and former
when the team has consis- Ohio State player collapsed at the team's traintently been denied taxpayer mg c_amdp. on July 31 aftertha~e andhedte~ltes
practice
m d"
temperatures
ow
sub s1"d"1es ctor a· new b aIIpark ""p
t k St . t reac
to Muoe
nkato
h
ds h . .
""'· arame ICS oo
rmgera
a
on t e. groun
t at It IS a hospital, where he died the next morning.
private business.
Team soun:es that asked to remain anony"AU of a sudden, what was mous told the Pioneer Press an empty bottle of
a private enterprise is now a a supplement called Ripped Fuel was found in
public trust," he said.
Stringer's locker at the Vikings training facility.

Paid

INSIDE

••

Pleese -

IN•THE SHADOWS - Areflghter Ron $tone
hot spots In the
of a wildfire
started Wedne.sday on Ft. Lewis Mountain near Roanoke, Va. (AP Photo/The Roanoke Times, Sam Dean) ·

Pot, AI

'

Smoke from Southern wildfires
drifting·into the tri-county region
•

I •

'

Authorities say
arson prime source
of spreading blazes

do,"Tennessee Agriculture Crime
Unit supervisor Max Thomas
said of arson ~uspects he has
interrogated. "There's not much
activity in these rural areas for
people."
More than 33,000 wildfires
FROM STAFF, WIRE RliPORTS •• .
have hit the South tllis year, the
ASHVILLE,
worst rash in nearly' a decade. In
Tenn. Ar~on
the past week alone, nearly
suspects ·
who 70,000 acres have burned in Tenstarted some l" of nessee, Kentucky, North Carolithe thousands•, of na, West Virginia, Virginia and
wildfires in the South this fall )~ll Georgia.
investigators nearly the same
The smoke from the most
story each time - they
w!t(e
recent
of these blazes has reached
.
the tri-county region, darkening
bored .
~~~
"Mosf say it's something ~ skies and making breathi11g a lit-

,,

de more difficult. The combination of the seasonal early morn"
ing fog above the Ohio River
and the smoke coming from the
south paint an eerie picture.
In tWo of the hardest-hit states
- Kentuc!&lt;y and Tennessee arson is blamed in nearly all the
bl:lli~S.

· ·

Nine people have been arrested on arson charges so far in Tennessee, where fires . this month
have burne.d 29,000 acres. killed
one firefighter and destroyed two ·
houses. Five have been.-charged in
Kentucky, which ha s seen

Plelllse see Fires. AI

MARIJUANA RAID -

Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff Scott Trussell stands beside several
marijuana plants and sections of a grow room
following a drug raid at the home of Willlal!l
Hayes in Rutland. (Tony M. Leach photo)

'

Hlp: 70s
LDW:' tos

iors advised to wakh out for Scrooges

Details, A:J

1
'

.

2001 Pontiac Sunflre ·
SE Sedan

2001 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

GL Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

LS Sedan

2001 Buick Regal
LS Sedan

~0,950* ~2,750* ~2,850* ~3,850* ~3,950* ~5,450*
• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Stereo CD Sylltem

1

PDWII Windows, Locks, Mlrro11
Automatic, Air Conditioning
CrulH Control, Tilt Steering

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seal, Windows, Locka
• CD Syatem, Till &amp; CrulH

• CD System, JIH &amp;cruise
Air Condltlonlng ·
Power Seat, Windows, Loeb

Power Seat, Wlndowl, Locka
• CD Sytlem, Aluminum
CrulH Control, Till steering

1

• 3800 V-6, CD System
• Power Sea~ Windows, Locka
• TIH Steering, CrulH Conlrol

Calendars
. Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

02-7

insert
A4
A6

_.s~p!.!.O!-';rt!;lSt__ _ _ _...Jo!B-:1-::y8

Woshlngton 01) olert, AT (AP photo)

&gt;I.S!!to.!!c~k~s'--------"Du.l

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing co.

on distracted, . stressed, and busy shop.pers," Frazier said. "Don't leave yo ur
purse in your cart and walk away, lock
your car doors, and don't leave packalles
in plain sight, put them in the trunk .
"Also, watch fat ice in the co minll
months. Se niors especiall y need to be
careful, because injuries may t;~k c longer
to heal;' he said.
'1
Frazier also brlefed•th grpup on th e
importance of keeping, ~r~c r ipt ion

&lt;2) Oldsmobile.
Ill II I IIIIIIIJIOOe'

Wednesclay, November 21
10AM·6PM
· HMC Eclucatlon &amp; Conference Center
Free t-shirt for all donors!
For more information, calll740) 446·51 ~1.

.

Please see Sefety. AI

sponJ~ed
. by the HMC Laboratory Department

CHIVROLIT

I

medications hidden and not dis cussing
them with anybody.
"Your prescription is your business, do
not tell anyon e about your prescriptions." he said. " This is especially true for
OxyContin. That drug is an epidemic in
this area. We have' had six £1tal overdoses
her·c in the last six months, five were
attributed to OxyContin.

· ·. Blood Drive

• Taxes, Tags, Tille Fees extra. Rebate Included in sale price o1 new vehicle isiOd where applica~e. "On approve&lt;! credit On selecte&lt;l ~s. Nol respoos~le lor typographicalerrora.
Prl&lt;es Good November 14th Tlwough November 18th.
'-

...

LLIPOLIS Gallipolis Poli ce
0
,er Greg Frazier met recently with
G
County Seniors and Law Enforce. Together (SALT) Council to stress
the • portance of being alert during the
holi ~ shopping ·season.
"P fase watch your purses and wallets.
At tW'i time of the year, it's important to
kee~eycs open because criminals prey

C4. 7
'

BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

\'

•

'•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�I

_i_u_•~-·~~-~-i_nus__-_i_e_rm_·,_w______________=lt~~!4C!i!I!IL_______________•!·~··~~~.~~··~~~~~~~:~.~~"~1
Wiseman Installed

Grande Fine Arts office at 1-800-282-7201, extemion 7364.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis resident Thonw E. Wiseman, CIC,
president of Gallipolis-based Wiseman Agency Inc., was recendy
irualled for a fifth ~rm as state national director for Independent
Insurance Agents of Ohio (!lAO) to repr:nent the Ohio associ2tion as a lxmd member of the national Independent Insurance
Agents Association.
During the association's 2001 annual business meeting and
Strategic Leadership Exchange, Wiseman was sworn in for a term
through October 2002.
"It is an honor to again be chosen to represent Ohio at our
national association," Wiseman said. "I look forward to helping
take both the st:aie and national association forward in an """lving global financial market and to helping agents in our state and
around the country continue to meet the daily challenges confronting all of w."
Wiseman is a past president of IIAO and recipient of numerous awards fi:om the association, including the Paul Revere Award
recognizing·the outstanding association member. He has served as
president of Gallipolis Rotary Club and as past president of both
Gallia County. Chamber of Commerce and Community
Improvement Corporation.

- Health care fair

Wallace was working as a firefighter when the jetliner attacked
the Department ofDefense headqlla{ters, and underwent surgery
last week at Mount Vernon Hospital in Arlington, Va.
. His mother, Faye Wallace of Middleport, said he plans to return
home toM~ County for Thanksgiving.
Meanwhile, cards may be sent to Wallace at P.O. Box l 087, Fort
Myer Fire Department. Arlington, Va. 22211-0087.

'

Nature PI'VItam
GALLIPOLIS - "TurkeyTalk;' a free nature program offered
by 0.0. Mcintyre Park District, has been set for Wednesday at I
p.m.ln the Switzer Room of Bossard Memorial Library.
The program will discuss domestic and wild turkeys, and
include a demonstration by Mike Whitt with Tall Oak Outdoors.
Also featured are turkey calls and a turkey craft. Free videos and
refreshments will be provided.
For reservations or more details, call the ,park district at 4464612, extension 256.

RIO GRANDE -A community health care fur Will be held
Dec. 4 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the University ofRio Grande in
the Student Center Annex, conference room C. TIW· event is
sponsored by the senior-level BSN class of students enroned in
Rio's Holzer School of Nursing.
The U.S. Navy is a co-sponsor.
BSN student Val Raharnut, R.N., is coordinating plans to bring
about 20 health care providers to the Rio Grande campus. ,
"Residents ofVinton,Jackson, Meigs and Gallia counties have
a wonderful opportunity to receive free health care services !0
prevent, improve and restore their optimal health:'
"We are pleased to have the Navy in partnenhip with the Rio
Grande health care fair this year;' said Raharnut. "Also new to the
public are several new providers. The Huntington, W.Va.-based
HealthNet Aeromedical Services, a medical helicopter flight
team, will be here to show emergency air services and chiropractic care from a Gallipolis health care service provider."
Other participating health care organization;; include: Holzer
Medical Center and Holzer Medical Clinic, University of Rio
Grande Health Care Services, American Cancer Society, Family
Addiction Co111munity Treatment Services, Pleasant Valley Hospital, Planned Parenthood, Gallia County WIC, Gallia County
Health Department, Complete Care Chiropractic, OSU Extension,Advanced Hearing Center, State Highway Patrol and Holzer Hospice.

Planbuaar
RACINE - Racine United Methodist Woonen's annual
Christtnas Bazaar is Dec. I fi:om 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The group plans a craft and bake sale, and lunch will be served.
Craft tables are available for $10. Those who wish to rent a table
should call 949-2454 or 949-2286.

Parenting dass

Plan dinner

11

Holiday meal

$39.95 for 600
anytime minutes
plus unlimited

Holiday dosinp
GALLIPOLIS -Woodland Centers Inc. will close clinic locations in Gallia,Jackson and Mei~ counties on Thursday and Friday of this week to observe the Thanksgiving holiday.
Clinics will resume ·normal operations on Nov. 26.
Emergency services can be accessed in Gallia County by calling 446-5500 or 1-800-252-5554 fi:om Jackson or Meigs counties.
Offices in the Gallipolis City Building will be closed Thursday
and Friday due to the Thanksgiving holiday, City Manager E,V.
Clarke Jr. announced.

1'

~

••

•·.rl

weekends Forever Plan.

Worship ..vice
THURMAN -A special service ofworship for Thanksgiving
has been scheduled by V~ga United Methodist Church Wednes- .
day at 7 p.m. The church is at 2243 Vega Road, Thurman.
For details, call toll-free 1-877-540-1100.

sha(eralk~

Spedal111eetlng
.
.
GALLIPOLIS -The City Commission will meet in special
session Thesday at 7 p.m. in the Gallipolis Municipal courttoom,
City Manager E.V. Clarke Jr. announced.

__

'

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\.

Apnt and enter Nokia's one

current school funding system to make it
constitutional.
State officials later estimated the cost
at $1 .2 billion ·a 'year and asked the court
to reconsider its r11ling. The court agreed
on Nov. 2.
Some of the justices who voted for the
order said they believed the remedy
would cost much less.
ChiefJustice Thomas Moyer wrote the
opinion ordering the mediation and was
supported by Justices Andy Douglas,
Paul Pfeifer and Eve Lundberg Stratton.
Those who oppose mediation are Justices francis Sweeney, Alice Robie
Resnick and Deborah Cook.
In a dissent, Cook repeated her long-

· UC faculty set sbike date

II!''

'&lt;

I.

argued assertion that the couot ha&lt; no
jurisdiction.
"Today's decision to refer this cause to
court-ord~red, court-supervised settlement proceedings continues to inject
this' court into matters beyond the scope
of the judicial function," she wrote. "The
only action that this court shquld take
- because it is the only action legitimate under law - is to dismiss the case."
The court invited Gov. Bob Taft to
participate in mediation, saying he has
"clearly conducted himself as an interested party."Tafi, who said he welcomed
the chance to resolve the case, had not
decided whether he would participate in
the talks, his office said.

chaUenge those arguments then.
The judge said he will rule on the issue next week.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Leaden of the University of Cincinnati faculty union have set a Jan. 3 deadline to go on strike if a
contract agreement with univenity officials cannot be reached.
The strike date coincides with the beginning of the university's
winter quarter.
·
'' Union officials said Friday that they are still hopeful that the difBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday.. ·Pardy cloudy. A ferences between the faculty and the administration can be
The warm weekend will chance of showers in the worked out.
give way to winter soon afternoon.
0s warm. 1 University spokesman Greg Hand questioned the timing of the
.
. thContinued
7 .
_Enough, the National Weather H tghs m e 1ower
· days pnor
· to the start of media non
·
su--''·
...e date announcement JUSt
. h CI d
Service reported.
.Monday
ntg t... ou y on Monday.
Highs in the 70s are pre- wtth a chance of showers. 1
dicted for Sunday, but a cold Lows near 30.
front · and ·increasing moisture
Extended forecast:
could take over Sunday night.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy
SPRING VALLEY (AP) -A 3-day-old infant died Friday after
Showers are more likely on with a chance of snow or rain being mauled by a dog in this southwest Ohio city, authorities
Monday, and Tuesday could showers. Highs in the lower said.
• · bring snow.
40s.
'
Maj .William Harden of the Greene County sheriff's office said
· Sunrise on Sunday is at 7:20
Wednesday... Pardy cloudy. deputies and medics were called to her home on a report of a dog
a.m.
Lows in the upper 20s and bite and found Patricia Bennett holding her baby boy, Alexander.
Weather fqrecaat:
highs 40 to 45.
The woman told officers that the baby had been in a bassinet
Sunday...Mosdy sunny with
Thanksgiving... Pardy
when it was attacked by one of the three dogs in the home - two
areas of smoke. Continued cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s German shepherds and a husky.
·
warm. Highs in the lower 70s. and highs near 50.
The child was .taken to Greene Memorial Hospital, then transLight and variable wind.
Friday...Pardy cloudy. Lows ferred to Children's Medical Center in nearby Dayton, where he
.. Sunday
night ... Partly 24 to 28 and highs in the mid was pronounced dead, said hospital spokeswoman Arundi
cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.
50s.
Venkayya Cox.
'
.
"

.
f
.-C0lder weekd ays 1n orecast

Dog 111auls ]·day-old 1nfant

Ubrary na111ed for Stokes
. WASH~NGTON (AP) - Howard University dedicated a
library Fnday named for former Rep. Louis Srokes of Ohio, a
~hampion of health care and minority issues during his 30 years
m Congress.
Stokes, 76, had wotked closely with officials at the black university during his congressional career and has continued his
involvement since retiring in 1999, the school said.
The $27 million Louis Stokes Health Sciences Library holds
400,000 books and provides 630 staff or patrons with Internetconnected desks.
. Stokes had represented Cleveland as a Democrat in Congress
smce 1969. He now is senior counsel for the Washington-based
law firm Squire, Sanders and Dempsey L.L. J&gt; and a faculty member for Case-Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

Holiday cooking tips.

TEMPO; Cl

*****
$ POMEROY $

MERCHANTS
. - - - - -.. . $cHRISTMAS*
.t.
PARADE .t.

"*"

Final argu111ents heard

MIDDLETOWN (AP) - Health officials are recommetiding
tuberculosis tests for people who have been in a local bar linked
: to one case of the disease and I 0 other cases ofTB exposure..
: Health officials say anyone who. has visited Dixie's Hillbilly
~ Heaven in the last two months should seek the test. The bar was
· closed Nov: 8 when the tuberculosis case and exposures were dis-.. covered.
,
• The Middletown Board of Health and Environment on Friday
: approved reopening the bar but said the unidentified female
patron with TB cannot enter the property until a doctor from the
Buder County TB control unit certifies that she is no longer a
~ublic health threat.
TB is a contagious disease that usually attacks the lungs, health
• officials said. It can cause weight loss, fatigue and coughing. Tuber; culosis was once the leading cause of death in the United States,
: but now it can be treated effectively with antibiotics.
\"•·
:·
,
'

Father, son found dead

$

DAYTON (AP)- Defense attorneys for a man facing execution for a slaying he says he did not commit asked a fede~ magistrate Friday to recommend that the death sentence be overturned.
,
In a filing on behalf of John W. Byrd Jr., the Ohio Public
Defender's Office said evidence presented at last week's hearing
before U.S. Magistrate Michael Merz shows that John Brewer was
the actual killer and that Byrd is guilty only of involuntary
manslaughter.
The attorneys said Brewer testified at the hearing that he - not
Byrd - stabbed Monte Tewksbury during the 1983 robbery of a
Cincinnati-area convenience store. The hearing also showed that
jailhouse informant Ronald Armstead lied when he testified during Byrd's trial that Byrd told him he was the one who killed
Tewksbury, the attorneys said.
,
But l;'rosecutors told Merz that Brewer's testimony was not
believable and that failure by the public defender's office to previously disclose several additional affidavits fi:om Brewer makes l)im
less credible.

Lawyers Seek IXCIUSI"On

CANTON (AP) -A father and son found dead Friday appear

Nokia 252c
for $9.88

RIO GRANDE -Jazz music will611 the air on the Uni.versity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande campus on Tuesday when ·the
Ri.o ·Grande Jazz Ensemble takes the stage.
The jazz concert will begin at 8 p.m. in the John W. Berry Fine
and Performing Arts Center at Rio Grande. Dr. Chris Kenney,
professor of music, l.eads the jazz ensemble.
"We play everything fi:om slow jazz to classic B-bop to modern jazz;• Kenney said. The musicians alsci play Latin styles, funk
and traditional jazz music, according to Kenney The jazz ensemble is made up of 11 music and non-music majors. Some of the
students have been playing jazz for years, while others are still
learning the finer intricacies of jazz.
·
"Some of them have never played jazz at all," Kenney said. The
ensemble comes together to make a great sound, though, and
Kenney said the audience will very much enjoy the performance.
The show features several solos and has something for everyone.
For information on the jazz ensemble concert, call the Rio

...,

',

limited time only!

Jazz concert

W. VA.

Bar patrons urged to test

weekends forever.
(

·COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Supreme Court has ordered mediation
in the state's school financing lawsuit,
hoping a neutral party can break the I 0•year-old impasse over Ohio's method of
paying for public schools.
"A majority of this court believes that
the time is ripe for the parties ... to meet
and attempt to reach settlement with the
assistance of a mediator experienced in
resolving public-policy disputes,"
·'. according to the court's order Friday.
The court recommended nine people,
' 1 including law professors, who don't live
in Ohio as possible mediaton.
'
, The court ruled in September that the
state had to spend more money on its

.1Collimtou• 144·_. I

Toy giveaway

Suncl.y.............. 2001

High Court orders mediation in lawsuit
•

Rendezvous set

GALLIPOLIS -Gallia County Veterans Service Office will be
dosed Friday, the day after Thanksgiving.

Sunday, Nov.18
forecast

RACINE - Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has
released a boil advisory issued for Wednesday in Sutton Township
for Bashan Road fi:om Morning Star Road to Ohio 124, Tackerville Road, Greenwood Cemetery Road, Oak·Grove Road to
Bowman's Run Road, Township Road 643, andTR 1061.
A sample taken Thursday is considered safe.

PageA3

\

SCHOOL FUNDING

. Ohio weather

Uft advisory

SYRACUSE - Syracuse First Church of God will have a
Christtnas toy giveaway for needy families, who have a child
through age 18 in the home.
There is no limit to the number of children who may live in
the household and qualify. Two toys will be purchased for each
McARTHUR -Vinton County Pilots and Boosten' ~cond child. Those who wish to register for the giveaway are asked t0
Deer Hunters' Rendezvous is Nov. 24, where deer hun~rs can visit the church at Second and Apple streets on Nov. 27 from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m.
scout out their hunting ground fi:om the air.
Registration is on ·a first-come, first-served basis and will not
Flights begin at the Vinton County Airport, five miles north of
McArthur on Ohio 93, at 8 a.m. and continue until 3 p.m. A begin until tO a.m. Information is available by calling thJ' church
at 992-1734 or Lee Johnson at. 304-882-2866.
country brealtfast and lunch will be served.
All proceeds are used to keep the airport open. For details, conGALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Health Department and Help
Me Grow have sla~d a free parenting class consisting of tact Nick Rupert at 740-384-2649 or the airport at 740-596infant/child CPR instruction on Nov. 29 fi:om 10 a.m.-noon and 2588.
POMEROY -Annual Bailey Christtnas dinner will be held
6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson
at Carleton Church on County Road 18 on Dec. I at 5 p.m.
Pike. Class size is limited and preregistration is required by calling
Those att~nding are asked to bring a covered dish and a gifi
446-8538 or 441-2956.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport native Alan Wallace, injured excllange gift. Women are asked to bring a woman's gift, labeled
during the Sept. 11 attack on the Pentagon, is recovering from "VYOman," men a gift marked "man," boys a gifr marked bQy" and
girls a gilt marked "girl."
surgery fur his shoulder injury.
KANAUGA - A holiday meal sponsored by Gallia County
Veterans Service Commission will b( hdd at the AMVETS
Building in Kanauga on Dec. 2 fi:om 1-3 p.m.
All Gallia County veterans and families are invited.

Office dosed

Ohio

•

• to be victims of a double homicide, police said..
:
Relatives who arrive~ to help David Bouscher celebrate his

CINCINNATI (AP)- Lawyers for a man awaiting trial on a
88th btrthday found htm and hts 57-year-o!d son, Raymond, charge he killed his high school girlfriend in 1963 argued Friday
de~d.
.
·
that prosecutors should not be allowed to use statements by wit.
The TV was on. Everything was normal- except they were nesses who are now dead.
dead;' said George Smith, 19, who is David Bouscher's grandsocq. Those statements should not be allowed as evidence because
"'~he dog woul~:t leave my grandpa's side. I had to go in ~no ·they would violate Michael Web rung's constitutional right to
bnng_ the dog out.
· nconfi:ont witnesses against him, his lawyers told Judge Patrick
• Poli~e satd the men appeared to ha~e been ~hot, but the cau~el Dinkelacker in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court. The
of thetr deaths have not been deternuned. Police have no motive lawyers declined to di.scuss details of the statements.
~ or suspect.
Prosecutors countered that at trial, they will show those documents are authentic, and the defense will have the opportunity to
.

We hove beea Ia bwr("tsl for
68 yean Ia Glllllpolla. You ep

truat 111 for value, iood quUty,

and •vlq money. Moot ll&lt;ml
we sell are cl'-&lt;ounled from
10% to 40% on dlluntJnds,
wedding bandl, watches, JOid
·chains, etc. Ch«k wlt!t us
befOR you buy for Gbrlftmas
pfts. For good quality and

saving money,llop In at

Tawney's Jewelers
and Studio
and layaway now for
Christmas.

Sunday,
November 25
LINE UP • 1:00

*
'* *
*s~1!:::/''" *
*****
PAIADII1VII OPrAT 3111*

AU Eotryt Wetc.M
Col!ln-7141 or!ln-5018

.t. lleea- our pande II
oneoltbe~

"*"

-

$

Cbrlltnw parades In

tbe area, we wiD have
two line-up amos.

Please
one of to
the
abovecllll.
numbers
ftnd your area.

Wyngate of Gallipolis
Is hosting a craft show on
December 15th from lOAM
to 2PM. $10 per space.
Limited space available.
Please contact Stephanie at

(740) 441-9633

I

. Council approves online charter school

order at home, FREE delivery

~US. Cellular

1·888·BUY·USCC
uscellular.com

TOLEDO (AP) - The
University of Toledo Charter
School Council has approved
Ohio's third online school.
The Ohio Distance &amp; Electtonic Learning Academy is a
learning program operated by

We connect with you7
mlootes are awilable Yttlile i!l
I

Akron-based White Hat Management. The school will provide computers, textbooks and
workbooks to students and
support parents who are teach~ ·
ing their children at home.
"We're very pleased With the

board's decision," said Mark
Timmig, president of White
HatVentures."We have wotked
with the board over the past six
months to make the board
comfortable with what we're
offering."

I
Announces The Opening Of Their New Location

Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, callllle newsroom
at 446·2342 or 992·2155.

News Departments
Gllllpollo

Department extentions are:
Manoglng edhor
Ext. 18
NIIWI lldltor
Ext. 23
Aulgnlng editor
Ext. 20
SpC&gt;rta

.Ext. 21

Pomoroy
Department extentions are:

•
•
•

General M.,oger
Nowa

•

..
'

Noa

Ext. t 2
Ext. 13
Ext. 14

On the web

•

www.mydallytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com

'

E·mell

:~

newsOmydallytribune.&amp;m
news 0 mydallysentlnel.com

(USPS 215-210)
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Pubhhed IMt'f ~ndeot. &amp;25 Thitd m ..
Goll;poo;.
· s.c.n.l-d...
po;d ..
Gallipolis. -Entered
as : : : : 'posraae
po;d .. - " " · Oh~. """ olfi&lt;e.
lllfllhr. The AUodeted Pml lftd the
IPI~ AssodMion.
Send lddreu corrections to
The GIHipolls D•ily Tribune, 825 Third Ave..
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

........_r:

Ohio Ntu

FOr businesses with five or more lines, please call '117-947·5729.

----550NeW---.... __ _--u.s.

I

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,(3)A) 255-3990

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S65
SUbKriben not deslrir11 to P"'f lht c.urier
lilly rtmlt in idvlnce difec:t to 5Undlf fimes5eridnel. Credft will be IPven c.rrier uch
week. No subsatptlon br mail permitted In
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~~

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County
IJ Wteks · - Gllllo
,I

East Pl*rte Shopplr'« ctr., 154 Emtt C..,

S53.82

52 WMb

1105.56

,.....,.
52 Wefts

(Dt) 622·2331
.......,_100
........... _

(Il4) 622-7191

m Beverly Pike. 0041 636-9311
17M~ Rd., Ria

...

Golllo c-ftty $29.25

• 156.68
1109.72

- ..

t.bplbln~ 6518 Mill ftl.,

MliijWIIUWti

13041 Hl-2355

MuipiiDMI

" Sliut.1 COLrt Plm. 01estn.d -

13041 591-2«10

MaapoWu

-

The&lt;:elW"""'"""" Mail.

-..

n-'Rldl Wteless I More, 3ot EW!ler,

Mlr1hGurl

a •

eel Pap~ 106 w. Mlil St,.
!llll 7s.&amp;-ano
Peoi&lt;-206-St,
13011 m-:om

Mlrthilu1

,..,

-

-

114,

At 196 East Second Street In Pomeroy
. (Formerly Beneficial Finance)

.....

{71Q456-1325
Wll-tl«t. 1556 E. Mail St, (JJ4) 465-S367
Hlltop C81!B', 2736 Sdoto lt., {740) 35S-0058
Pne F1Bl&amp;, 1233 staffonj (),, (XIol) 487·3855

-(»t)431·34SII
"'' """"Rklie ....

GRAND OPENING- OPEN · HOUSE
Friday, December 7th
Stop In For A Free Quote
Join Us In The Celebration

1016 'Hal St, (»tl 872-69U

W*Mirt 20J Will St. (Dl) 872-6290
wai-Mart, 900 W. Sl.mmlt Ave.,
(740) 947{(169

!(Q! -110.1:1141'l'I6-IRIAJ

NeW IIOMa'l ~center,
.010 lhxllls .... (7«JJ .t56-8n2

73,():)4) 363--7881

-.""' .... "'""
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OMc Plm.U E. tu00. {1MJI 213«116

WII-Mir1.. 1oowaMrt or., u&lt;~a~ ~%4
-520~-Sl. 13041 ....5890

On November 26th

_-""""·
-011&lt; ..

Will-Min, ,, ~ 1.11., (B) 265-6(0)

(:DI) 255-2158

(3)4) 324-23SS

5]7,3()

16 Weeks

ll Weeks

&lt;Wipolo

ill') 473-1126
750westemAve., (740) 70'1-4872

.,_...._

-Sl)llt-MII,\3)4)363-1181
WII-Mirl. 2145 ~ IWt.. (740) 441· 1066

WIIWM't, 13JJN, Elserh:lwer Dr~

at'M111011

sund.y
ouhalpllon .,. cam. Df molol' rOW!

stores

~~ Ellmri;:5,

118 S. .ll!frersUl St,

1304114!-7710
""' ..... . , . . . _ ~Mol,
SXI R:oaOft Avt, (lMJ 2D8755

"""'-~

....

· all Foxaoft M , (»t) 263-9£&amp;
Mlnbtf~ 10711 S.R. 139,

•

~&lt;OJ 820-2151

•

-_

...

'

Sl"ernwl ~ 501 N. Main st.
(304) 538-2371
l11e cenuw Gl'cql, Crossroads Mall.
(:1141 25$-nJ?
Pb COtllty PlrMl, 720 W. Errrnin Ave..,
(7«1) 947-7101

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�Opinion

•

PageA4
Sllllf"ny.

Nov1rhr 11. 2801

West Virginia weather

JIGODS AND GENERALS'

Sunday, Nov.ta
Aa:uWea!her· forecast for daytime conditions, low ·

Business owners: Filming costing them money

temperatures

Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleuent, W.va.

0

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

. HARPERS FERRY (AP) -As film- pensation."
mg of the Civil-War era "Gods and Genlbe $51 million movie by director Ron
erals" continues in the town~ historic dis- MaxweD is a prequel to his 1993 epic,
Diet, business owners = fighting their "Gettysburg" and stars Robert Duvall.
own war against the film aew.
lbe movie is based on the book of the
They staged a protest Friday owr lost same name by jeff Shaara. "Genysburg"
income, roadblocks, closed sidew:alks was based on "The Killer Angels" by
dogged streets, dusty mulch, blinding Shaara's father, Michael.
tights, foul language and trash, among
Donna Collinsworth, owner of three
other complaints.
businesses, said touruts who wane to visit
The handful of merchants and employ- the historic district that contains the site
ees prousring at a city intersection held of abolitionist John Brown's fuled raid on
signs that read, "Pay your own W1l'f Holly- a Union arsenal . can't get into town
•• -.......J""Do • crush
""""'
nt
small town America" because of closed roads and limited access
and "85 to 100 percent loss of business to sidew:alks.
since filming began - we demand com"We're not anti-Hollywood, but when I

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyar

Advertising Manager

Dl•ne Kay Hill
Controller

Utvrs to lh~ «filM uw wricoiiM. J'INy tluHUtt H Z.U U.... JIJfJ ....._AU ldl.r
.U We,.,..~

4111! t~tbjffl to mltblf Ollll •liSt N lip- W biMIM liMns•
lVD ~ruit•«~ lmur wUI N ,_,.. . . ,...,. sltotaM H U.

f01J4 IIUlt',

**~Nulltf

itl.lllft, rtol p«SOIIIlliiJn.

l'11t opininM uptnletl ill W taiMaM: k~mf.,.. dw CMUftiiU ofdu lJitio Wlflq
Pd/Uitillg Co. '.r HiiMiM 11o1N, ula. .,..,..,_IIDUL

llultleld

OUR VIEW

__

Dick Fisher, executive director of the Coalition of Rural and
Appalachian Schools in Ohio, made an iptere;ting observation
during an address .to southeast district county auditors more
than a week ago.
The DeRolph vs. Ohio case finding Ohio's system of funding public school education is unconstitutional, has not only
been around for 10 years but has also gone through three decisions of the state Supreme Court.
. The last ruling earlier this year put the responsibility for fixmg the problem on the Legislature, which duly included a sigmficant amount of money into the 2001-03 budget to bring
poorer school districts - namely, the ones in our region - on
a par with the wealthier systems, like Dublin and Beachwood.
Then the economy went even further south than anyone
expected and the state is finding new ways of cutting a comer.
In all fairness, that's not an easy task and the responsibility is
splitting Republican and Democratic lawmakers, and putting
GOP leadership at odds with Gov. Taft.
So, the coun said it's now willing to reconsider its decision
and the state is putting out feelers to see if all sides in the funding dispute can come to terms. AD well and good, but it appears
a healthy dose of compromise will have to be prescribed if anythmg gets done and the school funding issue is ever put to rest.
"If there's any message I can leave with you, it's that when
thh thing started, it wasn't about money." said Fisher. Rather,
he added, the fight has been about equal access to educational
opportunity - a concept, but a good one.
.
But it takes money, and how to find those dollars in a time
of shrinking revenues is the chaUenge.Actually, it's been a challenge since DeRolph was filed in Perry County and when its
predecessor actions came into the legal system.
With the economic slowdown not expected to clear up
soon, equal opportunity supporters seeking a commitment to
the concept may not get it. At best, they may extract a pledge
the state will do so when things get better. And then they have
to hope future administrations and legislatures will carry
through on the promise.
We believe everyone's in agreement that some resolution to
this lingering argument is necessary. Getting there is another
thmg. Perhaps, as State Sen. Michael Shoemaker said Friday,
finding long-term solutions is the key.
If the money isn't there now, it will be someday within thi~
decade. So plan ahead. When we get it, then we need to do that
. something everyone wants.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
You say we ll)ade a choice - yes, we
R. Ksitb Jeffen
U.S. Army veteran (Ret.)
made a choice to pay respect to our veterGallipolis
Dear Editor:
ans on Veterans Day.
Concerning the recent power outage to
I wonder if you are a veteran? If you
1,500 of AEP's customers, and why it took were, you would know what it is like to lace
31 hours to replace a single utility pole: ,
up a pair of combat boots, kiss your wife
Dear Editor:
The Tribune recendy reported the and children goodbye, and say, "I do not
I was especially struck the other day
replacement of a utility pole on Route 850 knO..V when I will be back home, but I
while reading my Bible by the words of
by AEP, and the atticle stated, "The prol&gt;- hope and pray it will be over soon."
Jesus:"
A time is coming when anyone who
!ems, which (Ron) Robinson didn't specil have many relatives and friends who
ty, may have accounted for changing pre- have served in the armed furces of our great kills you will think he is offering a service
dictions of when the power M!uld be back and free nation. One who was a POW dur- to God." Oohn 16:2) NN.
These words immediately brought to
on."
ingWorldWar II and survived death marchmind
the 6,000 people who were brutally
! was hoping that there would be more of es, another who starts each day slowly fiom
an explanation as to what these problems . carrying lead in his leg from a German and inhunianely slaughtered on Sept. 1 I by
Islamic suicide killers; but also by the more
were. As a member of the International machine gun.
Brotherhood of Elecaical Workers (Local
Hider Died to take freedom away and 55 recent incident in Pakistan.
On Oct. 28, lslanuc Jihad guruuen burst
317, Huntington, W.Va.) fur 25 years, 1 years later this .man still remembers that
know that it shouldn't take 31 hours to because he carries the pain with him 24 into a Christian church service in ·
replace a single pole.
hours a day, 365 days a year. Talk to one of Bahawalpur, Pakistan, screaming "Allah-U-·
But, I am not a lineman, nor was I on the the most respected and best-knowri.lawym Akbar" (God is great), then sprayed the·
scene of the repair.
in the state of Ohio who happens to be a congregation with AK-47 bullets, slaugh-:
So I did contact some of the linemen I Gallia County resident about the wounds tering 16 men, women and children; seri- •
have known fur many years, some of them and scars that he has, and ask him about the ously wounding another seven l:&gt;efore
exhausting their anununition.
having been on the scene to see firsthand bridge at Remagen.
A survivor reported that at one point, a. .
Many of us carry wounds that are not
what happened. This is how I discovmd
the top eight feet of the pole was the part visible, wounds that aie within and may gunman stood over a heap ofwounded and·
· that broke off, and fell down into the wires. never be known to anyone other than that dead mothers and children, repeatedly·
below it. I was also told that a temporary patticular individual and to God We are pulling the nigger, again and again, until the·
top could have been put up in two to three one nation under God and don't you try to screaming and quivering and moaning
hours; then, later, when the pole was avail- separate us or say we are not religious stopped.
In another kind of terrorism here in the
able and on site, that the entire pole replace- because we are patriotic.
ment itself should not have taken any more
What about prisoners of war, those miss- United States of America, yesterday. today
than six to eight hours.
ing in action or those ·killed in action?What and tomorrow, 4,000 tiny human babies;
The newspaper article also cited safety about the Veterans Memorial in the Cicy were, are and will be destroyed daily in the
ooncerns because of the darkness, but that Park? Have you ever visited it? Do you name of the "god of self" This will continstill shouldn't have prevented them fiom know how many of our veterans have their ue unchecked, until by the .end of the year,
having the problem solved by midday the names misspelled on that memorial or any- over 1,460,000 tiny human beings are
aborted.
,
.,
thing else about our veterans?
next day at the latest.
How can a God of justice bless a nation
Why did it take this long? I feel that a
And you said we made a choice. Many
general statement to the newspaper is not times we simply had no choice, we only did who tolerates, then legalizes this kind of.
sufficient; that AEP owes an explanation as what we thought was the right thing tq do, domestic terrorism?
Bob Murphy
to why it took 31 hours not only to the just as we did once again on that 11th hour
Vinton
1,500 of us that were affected, but also the on the 11th day of the 11th month. That h
public that rely on businesses every day, like a day to pay respect .to our wterans. That,
Brown's Market on State Route 160, fur my friend, is Veterans Day.
their daily routine.
I do not know of anywhere that it says
My question, and my fear, is: Will this be you have to have Sunday school at a pattieDear Editor:
a precursor of thin~ to come? What will ular time. Could you have adjusted your
Tht' purpose of this letter is to recognize,
happen in extremely cold weather when tin1e a few minutes ·or took a short pause congratulate, endorse and encourage qualithe conditions for repair are a lot less favor- from services and brought the children out ty education in Gallia County.
able than they were early Tuesday morning? on the sidewalk and waved and showed
In fact, the conuuunity should be aware
With many retirees in the Porter-Bidwell- them part of their heritage, their history?
of a very specific goal contained in Holzer
Wilkesville. area, if this is going to be a proO:..
There was another church not far fiom Medical Center's Strategic Plan. It deals
lem, then we should be told about it up yours that had some members come out on with "Our Jnvesttnent in Lifestyle and
front.
the sidewalk, and as, one of the veterans said Community Resources for Physician• and
One final item: My personal experiences "Thank you"- they responded with - a Employees." One of the specific 1:1ctics that
with the Columbus Southern repair crews,
you" of therr own. That truly added supports this strategy is an ongoing concern ·
and now with the AEP repair crews, have to the occasion.
W1'th our abili'ty to attract and retain quality
been fantastic. I have known them to come
We pay respect to our veterans and our personnel to the healthcare field.
in the mid4Je of the night to fix line breaks , country basically three times a year It should be obvious that when we are
that were far fiom life-threatening.Which is Memorial Day, Fourth ofJuly and Veterans recruiting staff members, physicians or other
why l don't understand why it took them Day. This year, Veterans Day fell on a Sun- members of the medical community, one of
31 hours to replace one utility pole.
day, and we paid our tribute. We did not in the first and obvious questions they ask
My thanks to the editor, and to AEP in any way mean or plan to be disrespectful about is the support and resources available
advance for their response.
toward anyone or anything. I can tell you for education for their family members.
Marc A. Stump that you can always find me at the dough- . . It is vitally imponant that we all support,
Kerr boy in the City Park in Gallipolis on those m mulllple ways. quality education. It
days just because I want to pay respect. I directly relates to the effectiveness and the
began a military career in 1968 and c 011 1 aGility to recruit quality personnel to. our
pleted it in 1995. I believe in our veterans, area. As it turns out, this is the same issue
Dear Editor:
our country and in God.
that schooIs systems face as far as recruiting
In response to "Making a Choice;' Our
How many men and women have been and retention of teachers.
Readers' Views, Sunday Times-Sentinel of taken as prisoner.; ofwar. wounded or killed When the appropriate time comes for how
Nov. 11,2001:
in action on a Sunday? Does this ever mat- the support will be demonstrated, either
You compared a softball game to a cere- ter to the enemy? No, we do not always through time or dollar comrnittnents is
mony that honored our veterans. First of all, have a choice. As you read this, I hope you vety imponant for us to all rally around ilie :
that's not a fair comparison. We as citizens think of our young men and women who notion and concept of quality.education. :
and veterans conducted a ceremony to are overseas at this vety moment, trying to
At this time of celebration of American ;
honor wterans. Our semces began and · preserve the freedom that you and the rest Education .Week, also recognize that it is a :
ended wnh prayer. We did not make a of America so much enjoy. I pray that God ·community-wide initiative to continue to ·
choice bet\veen religion and honoring vet- is watching over them.
support and endorse quality education and
erans as you tried to indicate-in your article.
I ask you to pay tribute and respe&lt;;t to our to congratulate the efforts they have done :
God gave ''' many rights and it has been veteram two or three tin1es a year. J am not in the pa;t. Also to recognize that mu~h yet :
our veterans who have fought for our rights asking anyone to be a fence rider or choose still rem:uns for us to do in the future.
•
down througli history. Yes, even your rights, anY one thing over another. Religion md All of,this is directly tied to the ability to :
too. lf 1t 1vere nor for our veterans, you veterans are part of our great and free nation recruit and retain quality people; not only in :
probably would not have the right to sound -we are both - we do both.
healthcare, but in education and other busi- .
off in the newspaper with your atticle. You
J say if you love ·your freedom, pray to nesses as well.
'
probably would not even had a newspaper God and thank our veterans, and ask for the
Thomas R. Childs •
to write a letter to.
safe return of our heroes oversea1.
Hulzer Medical Cemer ·

Explanation needed

Domestic terrorism

Promoting quality

TODAY IN HISTORY

.\

\

By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Nov. 18, the 322nd day of 200 I. There are 43
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 18, 1928, the first successful sound-synchronized animated cartoon, Walt Disney's "Steamboat Willie;· starring Mickey
Mouse, premiered in New York.
On this date:
In 1820, U.S. Navy Capt. Nathaniel B. Palmer discovered the
frozen continent ofAntarctica.
'
In 1883, 'the Uniied States and Canada adopted a system of
Standard Time zones.
·
In l 886, the 21st president of the United States, Chester A.
Arthur, died in New York at age 56.
In 1936, Germany and Italy recognized the Spanish government of Francisco Franco.
In 1949,Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers was named
the National League's Most Valuable Player.
In 1966, U.S. Roman Catholic bishops did away with the rule
against eating meat on Fridays.
In 1969, financier-diplomat Joseph P. Kennedy died in Hyannis
Port, Mass., at age 81.
In 1976, Spain's parliament approved a bill to establish a democracy after 37 years of dictatorship.
In 1978, California congressman Leo J. Ryan and four other
people were killed in Jonestown, Guyana, by members of the
People's Temple; the killings were followed by a night of mass
murder and suicide by 912 cult members.
In 1999, 12 people were killed when a bonfire under construction at Texas A&amp;M University collapsed.
Ten years ago: Shiite Muslim kidnappers i~ Lebanon freed
Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite and Thomas Sutherland, the
American dean of agriculture at the American University of ·
Beirut.
Fiw years ago: Onetime CIA station chief Harold J. Nicholson
was cl1arged with selling top secrets to the Russians for more than
$120,000. (Nicholson later pleaded guilty to espionage and was
sentenced to 23 1/2 years in prison; he was spared a life sentence
for cooperating with inwstigators.)
,
One year ago: George W. Bush's campaign fiercely attacked the
hand-recounting of votes in Aorida's presidential election, depicting a process riddled with human error and Democratic bias.

.1\rch Coal Inc. of St. Louis, the ageney announced Friday.
The company also will be required to obtain a permit from the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and a state certification and water
discharge permit from the DEPs Division ofWate&lt; Resources
before work can begin.
The DEP permit contains several requirements developed as a
HINTON (AP) -Those making their way along the Mary result of a 1999 settlement of a lawsuit against the state and federDraper Ingles Trail may soon get a chance to learn more about the al governments over the regulation of mountaintop removal minwoman the path was named for.
mg. the DEP said in a press release.
Earlier this month, the Summers County Commission
endorsed a proposed project to mark the trail in the county.
. The Summers County Historic Landmarks Commission has
proposed placing six highway markers to tell the story of Ingles, .RANSON (AP) -Jefferson Memorial Hospital would be eliwho was . abducted from her Greenbrier Valley home by the gible to receive SS million in federal funding to upgrade its emerShawnee m 1755 and taken to Ohio. She escaped and made her gency response capabilities under a bioterrorism bill passed by
.
way home by following the New River upstream in ~he dead of Congress.
wmter.
Sen.Jay ~ockefeller, D-W.Va., outlined the measure's provisions
. S~~ve Trail, president of the landmarks commission, called Ingles Fnday dunng. a roundtable discussion at Jefferson Memorial with
the female Daniel Boone."
hospual officials and representatives of the Jefferson County
Health Department.
Jefferson Memorial Chief Executive Officer John Sherwood
said .the b1ggest obstacle hospitals flee in preparing for bioterrorCHARLESTON (AP) -A coal mine permit application for a
u balancing the cost of upgrading emergency response capa738-acre surface nune near Leewood in Kanawha County has bilines with the cost of daily operations.
been approved.
.. "Th~ money pa~ is where life gets tough," Rockefeller said.
The st:lte Department of Environmental Protection on Thun- This IS a grave SJtuaUon, but having said that so are lots of
'
day approved the permit for Catenary Coal Co., a subsidiai:y of things."
Cloudy

.._.

r-..

,;;.; .

,;,:...

Snow

..

County supports trail project

.Art of compromise may enter
~esolution

..

• 2001 Accu'Nealher, Inc.

0~-·~-·

....s-, Pl Cloudy

Dealing
into school
funding
..

0

w....

Hospitals brace for biotenw ·

Princeton students in parade
PRINCETON (AP) - . Two members of the Princeton High
Sc~l Pompon Squad will stru( their stuff before a nationwide
audience on Thanksgiving Day.
Semors s;mamha Evans and Lindsay Shay will perform in the
75th Macy s Thanksgivmg Day Parade in New York City with
dancers and cheerleaders from around the country.
E~, 18, and Shay, 17, were chosen to dance in the parade after
achievmg the rank of" All Stars" througl1 a series of competitions.

DEP approves coal pennit

"rn

Re art finds science education
lac ing in the Mountain State
FAIRMONT (AP) - State
colleges an~ universities are
doing a poor job teaching basic
science, according to a repon
released Friday by the state
Higher Education Policy
Conunission.
Pre-medical students from
every public and private West
Virginia university and college
have, over the past four yean,
received below-average scores
on tests required of medical
school applicants, the commission report showed.
The study is the state's first
comparing results ofWest Virginia's graduates to those of
other states on the standardized
Medical College Admission
Test (MCAT) exam. ·
Similar to the Scholastic
Aptitude Test (SAT) for college

applicants, the MCAT test is
required for admission to yirtually all medical schools. It
ranks students in four categories: verbal reasoning, a writing sample, and physical and
biological sciences.
Of 17 state colleges and universities with at least 10 graduates taking the MCATs
between 1997 and 2000, students at only one scored above
the national average in any category. West Virginia Wesleyan
College students were slighdy
above avet:age in verbal reasoning.
Graduates from the vast
majority of state schools had
scores averaging in the bottom
quarter of both physical and
biological sciences.
"Clearly physical and bio-

logical science teaching is an
area of concern:' said Commissioner Sliawn Williams.
"This begs the question of
whether we are adequately
overcoming the insufficiencies
of our state's high school edu- .
cation in these areas."
Glenville State College PresidentThomas Powell described
the results as "disquieting." He
applauded the conunission for
the study and requested similar
reports on standardized tests for
other graduate programs,
including law and business.
"This arms us to do remedial work with both our students
and faculty members;' Powell
, said. "We need a finer-grained
picture of how we're doing. By
and large J think we'll discover
we need to do a better job."

:·thank

They made their choice

do business if I need space, I have to pay,"
Collinswonh said
. Merchant&gt; say they are forced to stay
1J1Slde therr businesses during the filming
of some shot&gt; and others have voiced concerns about tourists being chased off by
overly aggressive crew members.
Tommy Jones, owner of Mountain
House Cafe, said he's tired to being told to
get out of the way.
.
"They're really not just giving us our
space;· Jones said, adding that he usually
feeds 50 people a day on average but as of
Friday afiernoon, eight people had walked
through the door. "It's killing our business."

A

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With a Rate Changer CD there's only one way for your Investment to go
and thet'e up, so call Farmers Bank now and watch your investment grow.

Call Now. This is a limited time offer.
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Farmers Bank directors, officers, employees and their families are not eligible.

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

Mid-aftemoon crash

5
Sanford D. Bnamfleld

Pot
ftamPageAI

•

CROWN CITY - Sanford D. Brumfield. 93, Crown City,
died Saturday, Nov. 17, 2001 , at his re.idence.
Arnngemenls will be announced by Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville.

Tammy Jo Parsley
PROCTORVILLE - Tammy Jo Parsley,. 43, Proctorville,
died Friday, Nov. 16,2001, in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,
WVa.
SurViving are two daughters, Ashley Parsley and Brinany
Parsley, both of Proctorville; and a brother, Timothy Miller of
Georgia.
Services were held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, 2001, in Hall
Funeral Home, Proctorville. Burial was in Miller Cemetery.
Visitation was held in the funeral home on Saturday.
!f
Gallipolis Police Officer MiChael Fulks checked damage to one
of the vehicles involved in a three-vehicle accident Saturday
around 2 p.m. on Upper River Road at the Silver Bridge Plaza.
POMEROY - Dayton l. Phillips. 92, 133 Locust St., Pollee said Raymond J: Boles, 64, 431 Watson Road, Bidwell,
Pomeroy, died Friday, Nov. 16, 2001, in Holzer Medical Cen- was unable to slow in time and struck the rear of a car driven
by Kathy L. Hollenbaugh, 44, 1288 Upcreek Road, Bidwell. The
ter.
collision
forced her car Into the rear of a minivan driven by KenBorn Sept. 26, 1909, in Pomeroy, son of the late William and
.
neth
L
Perry,
34, 44 Country Lane, Gallipolis. Vickie Perry,' 31,
Dora Rapp Phillips, he_was retired from the Philip Spo~n Plant.
Surviving are a daughter, Joyce P. (Robert) Gnmm of also of 44 Country lane, a passenger In the minivan, com·
Columbus; a son, BarrieR. (Carol) Phillips of Endicott, N.Y.; plained of injury, but was not treated at the scene. Boles was
cited for assured clear distance. (Kevin Kelly photo}
and six grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren . .
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Irene J. Baker
Phillips; a brother, Austin Phillips; and tw&lt;?- sisters, Orella HyseD
tor, Karla Hampton, gave the
and Helena Daniels.
group an update on the emerGraveside services will noon Monday at Meigs Memory
gency beacon campaign.
Gardens, Pomeroy. Friends may call at Ewing Funeral Home,
The sheriff's department has
fhhnPapAl
'Pomeroy, on Monday from I 0 to 11 a.m.
handed out more than 150 of
"Another problem we have the beacons free of charge
to deal with around this time since the program began. The
of year is telemarketing fraud. beacons act as normal porch
These people prey on the . lighrs until the homeowner
elderly because they think they flips the switch twice, signaling
might be lonely and they the bulb to act as a beacon,
spend a lot of time talking to strobing and alerting neighbors
them, after · a while, they have and passers-by that there is an
gotten aU the information they emergency.
need for their scam, so please
Anyone wishing to receive
do not give out personal infor- an emergency beacon can conmarion such as social security tact Hampton at 446-4612.
number o-.:er the phone;' he Information and a beacon disstressed.
play will also be available soon
Gallia County sher!ff's at the Ohio Valley Bank main
deputy and TRIAD coordina- · branch on Third Av~nue.

Dayton L Phillips

Safety

Rabies dinic

marijuana plants were discovered in an outbuilding and
more than 85 plants, complete
with grow lights, were found
in a hidden room inside the
house.
"The confiscated plants
range in size from small clone
plants, five inches high, to

mature plants over five feet
toll," said TrusseD.
"Other items seized were
drug paraphernalia, including
various pipes and scales, and
several firearms ," he said.
TrusseD said Hayes 1is under
a disability from a previous
drug trafficking conviction
which prohibits him from
possessing a firearm.
Hayes is being held the Gallia County jail pending his
court appearance.

Rio Grande offers summer
2002 travel opportunities
RIO GRANDE - If you
want to see the world, the tint
stop is only a few miles away.
· That first stop is the University of Rio Grande/Rio
: Grande Community College
where the graduate program
~ off'ers trips all around the globe

• every s.ummer.

!

Rio Grande officials are cur-

! rently planning for the summer

'

2002 trips when university stu! dents, faculty and staff mem; bers, as weD as community
; -,nembers will travel to places
: such as the British Isles, Mexi• co City, New York City, New
Mexico, Atlanta, and a special
journey to historic sites from
the Civil War.
• . The trips are planned for
•• Rio Grande graduate students,
•• who are required to visit these
•
important places of the world
: ' as part of their academic pro• gram. The trips always have
I room for community mem! . ben, and off'er the chance ,for
: tours of some of the most his; toric and beautiful places in the
• world at a reduced rate.
.
The trip to the British Isles,
; for insrance, features stops in
; London and Bath, England;
: Chester, Wales; Dublin, Ireland;
:, and Edinburgh, Scotland. In
~ London, the·Rio Grande trav-.
; · elers will visit the Tower of
: . London, Westminster ;\bbey,
; • Big Ben, The British Museum,
. Buckingham Palace and St.
; _Paw 5 Cathedral. Bath, Eng-

land is Britain's most historic
spa town and features Roman
baths, Stonehenge, Avebury,
Glastonbury Abbey and a possible stop at Stratford-onAvon.
In Wales, Ireland and Scotland, the travelers will visit historic castles, churches, schools,
museums and a variety of other
places. Rio Grande Professor
Chris Kenney will lead the
trip.
.
On the trip to Mexico, the
Rio Grande group will visit
Mexico City, as well as several
other cities. Rio Grande professor Dr. Mervin Murdock
said the Mexico City trip will
give the travelers the chance to
see several well-known sites in
Mexico, as well as many places
that most tourists don't get to

Anthrax
from Pageal
Health considers a "credible
threat," Torres said.
Such credible threats, about
which residents should be concerned, include the receipt of a
letter or written note saying
that anthrax or another biological agent is present, a verbal
threat either prior to or with
delivery of a mail item, and a
visible powder or substance in
a piece of mail.
The local health department
has submitted 10 suspect samples to the Ohio Department
of Health with negative reswrs,
and last week, increased the
testing fee to S150 per sample,
in order to cover the cost of

repeated trips to Columbus by
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens announces our annual
health department staff, and to Christmas observance dedicated to the memory of your loved
curb unnll!\essary testing.
ones with a candle placed on their grave on December 2nd
If an ins~e is considered a
with a rain date of December 9th.
"credible threat," Torres said, Ph~a...e come by Ohio Valley Memory Gardens or nn out the tonn below and send to
the county will pay the cost of
us with your donation, minimum of $5 per candle.
sampling. Testing on subsunces If you are unab1e to place tho candle, Ohio Valley Memory Gardens will provide this
!itrvlce, wllb a mlnlmllm donation or S 10 per candle.
not considered a "credible
threat."

Torres is the official contact
for residents with concerns
about possible anthrax exposure, but she urged the community to keep the problem in
perspective.
"People should be concerned," Torres said, "but not
unreasonably so. It's important
to remember that there are
other health issues to be concerned about. For example,
between 15,000 and 20.000
Americans die each year from
the flu."

ENDURING
FREEDOM

SUIIUy. November Ia. :tOOl

The Taliban envoy to Pakistan
said Saturday that Osama bin
Laden has left Afghanistan and
that the Islamic militia does not
know where he went.
"Osama has left Mghanistan
with his children and his wives,
and we have no idea where he has
gone," the envoy, Abdul Salam
Zaeef, told The Associated Press at
the Chaman border-crossing
between Pakistan and Afghanistan

as he was returning to this country.
The claim cowd not be independently confirmed, and Zaeef
later told other journalists he
meant only that bin Laden was
outside areas under Taliban controL
Pentagon spokesman Glenn
Rood said the U.S. military had
no evidence bin Laden left
Mghanistan. He said the Taliban
cowd be trying to misdirect the

anistan
hunt for bin Laden to protect

him.
"Our search continues." Flood
said Saturday.
In the early days of the confrontation with the United States
over bin Laden, the Taliban variously claimed that they did not
know his whereabouts, then that
they were in contact with him
but nor controlling his movements.
Another senior Taliban official

- MuUah Najibullah, a Taliban
leader in the southeast Mghan
border town of Spinboldak said earlier Saturday that bin
Laden was alive, but said nothing
more about his status.
As U.S. troops scout a crumbling Mghanistan for the al-Qaida
leader wanted for the Sept. 11
attacks, experts have said the few
places he could try to flee to
include Iraq, Somalia and the disputed land of Kashmir, fought

over by India and Pakistan.
Perhaps bin Laden's best option
would be to try to cross the
Mghan-Pakistan border. Long·
and porous, the frontier is januned
with refugees, and Pakistan is
home to militant groups sympathetic to bin Laden and his Taliban allies.
But the terrain, especiaUy in the
north, is often treacherous and at
this time of year, the temperature
can drop below freezing.

Anthrax letter addressed to Sen. Leahy
WASHINGTON (AP) Capitol police closed two
Senate office buildings to test
for anthrax spores after investigators discovered a contaminated letter addressed to Sen.
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.
The letter was found Friday
in a batch of mail that had
been removed from congressional office buildings and
segregated. It was uncertain,
however, whether· the letter
ever reached one 'of Leahy's
two offices, said Susan Neely
of the Office of Homeland
Security.
It would be the second letter bearing anthrax known to
have been sent to Capitol
Hill.
Dr. Greg Martin, a Navy
physician who advises the
Capitol police on anthrax,
said is unlikely that anyone
was sickened by the letter.
Martin said the contaminated
letter has been out of circulation for at least five weeks and
anyone infected by it would

ON PATROL- Northern Alliance soldiers on a military truck

FSA sets tobacco

Search

Employees of the Gallia County Health Department and River
Bend Veterinary Clinic offered a rabies vaccination day Satur·
day. The Health Department and the clinic offered the shots at
$5 each with the hopes more pet owners would vaccinate their
pets. The next vaccination clinic will be in the spring. (MIIIIssla
Russell photo}

CHAMAN, Pa1cistan (AP) -

Fires

GALLIPOLIS -All tobac- on when you notifY us.
co marketing cards were
Note for this time only. If
issued to the producers that this warehouse is wrong, you
had aU their paperwork com- may change one time and still
pleted.
receive a corrected card in a
Enclosed with the market- week or less. This special proing card was a letter that indi- vision is limited to the period
Thompson said.
cated the warebeginning Nov.
During the meeting, the house
you For more infor-. 13, 2001, and
board requested Treasurer intended to sell
ending Nov. 23,
mation, contact 2001.
Sandra Foster's certification at. There is a
fhhnPapAI
and attached it to her con- new entry oA
t!Je GalliaPlease
take
"ESC, as we understand it, tract. Foster took the job Oct. the marketing
time and review
Lawrence Farm your
is structured to provide ser- 1 · after Don Holcomb card.
Located
card and
vices to school systems that resigned the post in July to just above the
Service Agency make sure this is
might not be able to aff'ord it. return to his former employ- operator name
the correct wareoffice at 111
Irs role, I think, is a system of ment with Southern Ohio there is a nurrihouse. The peochecks and balances because Coal Co.
Jackson Pike, ple that sold
ber identifYing
ultimately, we'll m-ake the . The board also approved a
the warehouse Gallipolis, Olaio under contract
decision at the local level."
resolution increasing board or
contract
last year realize
The board acted in the members' compensation to receiving
sta- 45631, or call 1- this can be a
wake of Superintendent highest level allowable by law tion.
800-391-6638 or problem, but this
Robert Lanning's Oct. 29 res- - but not effective until Jan.
Since
this
year, even those
446-8687.
ignation due to · early retire- I, 2006.
marketing card
that sell at the
ment. Charla Evans, Title I
"The reason was, nobody has this number, you cannot
warehouse cannot change
and conunu.nications director, on the board now 'will have change your warehouse withwithout contacting the office
was named interim superin- the advantage of an increase," out contacting the office for
first.
tendent a few days later.
Thompson said. "The bottom us to issue a corrected card.
For information, visit the
"We're comfortable with line is, none of \IS voted ourA change in warehouse will GaUia-Lawrence Farm Service
Mrs. Evans' ability to act on selves a raise. We were workrequire us to order a new mar- Agency office at 111 Jackson
an interim basis. We have a ing on the advice of the
keting card with the correct Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,
very capable person at · the OSBA so future board memwarehouse code. This may take or call 1-800-391-6638 or
helm until we can find the bers could take advantage of more than a month depending
446-8687.
person we're looking for," the rate."

PageA7

Taliban: bin Laden is

"They are often people
who have litde or no personal power of their own," said
Dr. Pat Nation, a criminolofrom PapAl
gist at Middle Tennessee State
115,000 acres scorched.
University. "Controlling fire
Investigators say another gives them a sense of power."
Nation's colleague, Dr. Glocommon thread links arsons.
Some suspects suggest . they ria Hamilton, agrees.
"They're typicaDy underedwere simply following in their
ucated, unmarried, unemparents' foorsreps .
"Others have told us 'My ployed. They don't have anydaddy did it, so I'm doing it, thing to fill up their day, don't
'"Thomas said. "It passes from have the demands of life the
one generation to the next, rest of us have," said Hanlilthe same as child abuse."
ton, a professor and clinical
Timothy G. Huff, a retired psychologist at the university.
arson and bombing analyst for
Crime could also be a facthe FBI, said the "like-father- tor.
In Kentucky, state police
like-son" outlook is a regional phenomenon. Mental have theorized some fires
health experts say underlying were started by marijuana
issues may be at play, includ- growers burning plots of •
ing emotional immaturity weeds and debris in preparation for spring planting.
· and feelings of inferiority.
-----------,------------

designation change

America at War

tunbav ~imta- •t•diutl

Sunday, Nov. 18,2001

patrol a street Saturday In Kabul, Afghanistan. (AP
Photo;Amir Shah)
.

:Ex- Afghan head

arrives in capital
KABUL, Afghanista.n (AP)
· · - Former Afghan president
Burhanuddin
Rabbani
' l"'turned to his former capi,· tal for the first time in five
· · years Saturday, declaring
himself the legitimate head
· of state despite promises to
· .. support the formation of a
' new, broad-based g~vern..
.
ment.
The Taliban, meanwhile,
confirmed the death of
· Osama bin Laden's military
chief, Mohammed Atef. in a
• .U.S. bombing raid three days
· ago.
· Also Saturday, anti-Taliban
· forces appeared to be gaining ground in southern
• Mghanistan, though Taliban
" representatives in Pakistan
denied a report that their
- leader, MuDah Mohammed
· Omar, had agreed 'to leave
the southern city .of Kandahar.
If Omar and the Taliban
were to flee Kl!ndahar, it
would leave the group without any major cities· under
their control and reduce the
movement to little more
than a guerrilla force in the
hills
of
southern
Mghanistan.
Rabbani, the head of the
northern alliance, has never
relinquished his claim to the

presidency, tho_ugh he has
acknowledged the international calls for a broad-based
government that would
include all of Mghanistan'~
ethnic groups.
His foreign mm!Ster,
Abdullah, told a news conference Saturday that the
northern alliance remained
committed to forming a
multiethnic government,
including the dominant
Pashtun group, "the sooner
the better." Pashtuns are
Mghanistan's largest ethnic
group, and served as the
backbone of the Taliban's .
harsh five-year regime.
Nevertheless, it appeared
that Rabbani's followers
intended to · enter such
negotiations from a positiop
of strength as the legitimate
rulers of this country.
At the same news, conference, Rabbani said that control of government ministries would revert to those
who held them before the
Taliban toppled his adrninis~
tration in 1996 - the last
time he was in Kabul.
The former leader arrived
four days after troops from
his Jamiat-e-Islami, the
largest faction in the northern alliance, captured the
city.

same.

WATCHRIL EYE - Staff Sgt. Sharon Walker stands watch near
the U.S. Cepitol Friday as National Guard troops begin patrolling
streets on the outskirts of the Capitol. (AP/Hillery Smith Ganison)
have already fallen ill.
"We have gone five weeks
and we know from experience that the first two weeks
are the most dange1:0us;" he
told reporters.
The letter was postmarked
Oct. 9 from Trenton, N.J., as
was the one sent to Senate

·Congress sends aviation
bill to the White House
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's signature on
major aviation security legislation passed by Congress'may
reassure holiday travelers that
the government is taking substantial steps to •protect them
from would-be assailants.
Immediate signs of change,
however, will be minimal.
The House and Senate,
after weeks of negotiations,
voted overwhelmingly Prid!iy
to approve a bill to put airport
screening under federal controls.
The measure also moves
toward I 00 percent inspection of checked bags and
make sure that a potential
hijacker who gers into a plane
will be stopped by air marshals in the cabin and rein-·
forced cockpit doors. '
Bush plans to sign the measure .as early as Monday.
Administration officials and .
lawmakers say they want to

send a strong signal before the
holiday traveling season to
Americans now reluctant to
fly because of safety concerns.
"Travelers will h;lVe · the
peace of mind that every step .
is being taken to improve
their safety," said House
Speaker Dennis Hastert, RIll.

Leader
Tom
Majority
Llaschle, and contains similar
handwriting,
investigators
said. One law enforcement
official, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said the return
address- a fourth-grade class
at a nonexistent school in
New Jersey - als~ was the

For investigators. it is
another piece of evidence that
may better define a wispy trail
of leads that has produced no
suspects.
The discovery came as
about 15 National Guard
trodps took up posts on streets
on the outskirts of the CJpitol and its neighboring olfke
buildings to relieve police
who have been working l?ng
hours. It was the first tim&lt;; in
three decades that armed loldiers have protected the c~plex.
•
The letter was locatedi in
one of more than 250 bartels
of unopened mail sent } to
Capitol Hill and held s,ipce
the discovery of an antry-ax
letter to Daschle, D-S.D., on
Oct. 15, the FBI said.
'
Hazardous materials specialists began sorting the
quarantined
congressional
mail earlier this week ·at · a
fa.cility in northern Virgiqia,
the FBI said.

Benefits of Regular Physical Activity'·
-------------------------------~
Helps You Feel Better

• Gives you more energy.
•••
"
• Helps In coping with stress.
i'·
• Improves your self-image• .
• Increases resistance to fatigue.
• Helps counter anxiety and depression.
• Helps you relax and feel·Jess tense.
• Improves the ability to fail asleep quickly and
sleep well.
• Provides an easy way to share an activity with
friends or family and an opportunity to meet new
friends.

Plan to incorporate physical activity into
your daily routine and elijoy the benefits it
has to offer.
•Jafonnadon oblalned from the Amerkan Hurt A.-lodon
For more Information conlact lbe. Cordlovuc:ulor Heallb Coordlaator 11
the Mel

eo. Haith 0e

========:t

i:l"1i':ii740miilc2i'i-66i'i:l26&amp;.

Candles may be picked up at the omce the week befoff the 2nd through the evening
of the lighting Service. We will light the candles betw.. n ! p.m. &amp; S:JG P.M.

Big Country 99 and WBGS the Ministry Station, K-92 The fro9,
and ESPN 1390 and Bob's Market &amp;Greenhouses, Inc.

In Memory Of:
Name of Deceased

Wishes to Thank each Business, School, Club,
Brownie &amp; Girl Scout Troop, 4-H Club, Church,
Church Groups, and Individuals that participated in:

Oate of O..tfi
Donated By

Addms
PI~IIR

m1k1 ~hec:lu !JIIr•ble to Ohio Valley ht.mvry C•rdm1 Candle Llahllnl

Operation Christmas (J1ifd ·

Ohio
Memory Gardens
. . Valley
.
1229 Neigl,borhood Rd • .
Please include any
446·9228
new address for next
WE NEED GA.LWNJUGS

' &amp;rfte Sf1oe&amp;ox SXinistt[;"

years mailing

see.
for information on .the dates
or cosrs, or to register, contact
Rio Grande by Calling 1-800282-7201,ext. 7360.

• Home Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• Sleep Disorder
Equipment
• Hospital Beds
• Wheelchairs
• Lift Chairs

Last week's stocks.

MONEY, Dl

OHIO VALLEY
MEMORIAL
GARDENS
,,
When thinking of your loved one, think of us and our
services at Ohio Valley Memorial Gardens. We otTer
personal consultations with one of our caring staff
members at your convenience. We also have a newly
completed mausoleum with immediate availability.
For more information, contact Tonya at i

(740) 446-9228

Lawson, CFS

RAYMOND JAMES
FINANCiAL SERViCES, INC .
M•rnlllr

N"IID/IIIPC

JWPeoples Investment Services
•

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•

~ dlvf•fon of Poopf••

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Court &amp; Second .Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769 • Call us at
s

740-992-2133

llle art otterlld •Ciualvely lhmugh AIIYmond ...mw FlnarM:\11 S.rvlc.., Mem~r NASDISIFJQ!, an lndependtnl brokerf&lt;!Mier, located at

~. :..1'\k. ln~tmenls ARE NOT FDIC INSURED. ARE NOT BANK DEPOSITS, NOR ARE THEY GUARANTEED BY THE FINANCIAL

INSTITUTION, SUBJECT TO RISK AND MAY I.OSE \IAL.UE .

Your participation has helped
to brighten the Christmas of

1,759 Children
throughout the world in underdeveloped and
war torn countries. May God Bless You and each box
that was
with love as it travels around the world.

�.

Nation • World

Page AI
SUnday. Navsrhr 11. 2001

AMERICAN AIRLINES 587
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Qeveland company is recalling
about 35,000 lawn tractors because their fuel tanks can crack and
leak. posing a 1m hazard.
WCI Outdoor Producu has received 76 reporu of the 2-gallon
fuel tanks on these lawn tractOrs cracking. the Consumer Product
Safety Commission said Friday. No injuries have been reported.
The recall involves lawn tractOrs sold under the brand n.unes
Poulan Pro, Weed Eater, Husqvarna and Jonsere&lt;l.
On the fender under the tractOr seat, each of the tractors has a
serial' date-. ranging fiom 110700 to 082101 -and a manufacniring ID number.

Vinas will stay in storage
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration said Friday
it will keep the government's stock of smallpox virus in case it
should be needed to develop new va~cines or tteatmena, putting
off yet again a commitment eventually to destroy it.
The virus is supposed to be held in only two locations worldwide: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta
an!l a similar facility in Russia. Many bioterrorism experu believe
that other nations, such as North Korea or Iraq, may have samples
that could be unleashed.
·
Health and Human Services Secrettry Tonuny Thompson said
he agrees with scientists who argue that the United States should
hold onto its stock in case it is needed to develop new tteatments
or a vaccine that is safer that the one that exists today.
"Until Wl!ilave developed our defenses, we must keep this lr.iller
secure but available for needed research:' he said in a statement.
"Evena of the last two months make all too clear that if smallpox
virus fell into the wrong hands, it might be deliberately unleashed.
While the chance of release of smallpox remains small, it is
nonetheless real, and we must be prepared to combat it."

Late fan causes shutdown

NEW YORK (AP)- Neither turbulence from another jet nor pressure
placed on the rudder by a desperate pilot
should have been enough to snap off the
tail of Flight 587, aviation experts said
Friday- raising the prospect that something was wrong with the plane before it
left the ground.
"!think there was a pre-existing srructural problem with the tail," said Greg
Feith, a former National Transportation
Safety Board investigator. "It was going
to fail regardless. It just so happened the
conditions were right."
The American Airlines Airbus A300
plunged into a New York neighborhood

Monday. shortly after taking off fiom
Kennedy Airpon fur the Dorninil:m
Republic. The crash lr.illed all 260 people
aboard and five more on the ground
The cause of the crash has not been
determined, but investigators have
focused on the jediner's · tail assembly,
which carne· off sometime before the
·crash.
The Federal Aviation Administntion
on Friday ordered airlines to immediately inspect the tail assemblies of their Airbus A300-600 and A310 planes. American and two cargo carriers, FedEx and
United Parcel Service, have abodt 135 of
the French-made jeis in their fleets.

an administration campaign meant to discredit the collapsing
regtme.
Mrs. Bush took over the microphone for President Bush's
weekly radio address and gave '\"hat aides said was the first such
broadcast delivered entirely by a first lady. Predecessors Nancy
Reagan and Hillary Rodham Clffi.ton had shared airtime with
their husbands.
·
.
"That regime is now in retteat across much of the coutttl); and
the people of Mghanistan, especially women, are rejoicing." Mn.
Bush said.
"Mghan women know, through hard experience, what the rest
of the world is diseovering: The brutal oppression of women is a
central goal of the terrorists."

Raid found no evidence

CRAWFORD. Texas (AP)- Laura Bush decried the Afghan
Taliban militia's "brutal oppression" of women Saturday, opening

NFL previews, Page B2-3
NASCAR: Elliott~ win, Pa~ B6
Outdoors: ln the Open, Page B7

Page 81
Sunday. NoYHiber 11.1001

Turbulence, pilot error unlikely causes

ATLANTA (AP) - In his quest to catch a flight to a college
football game, Michael S. Lasseter dashed past an airport security
checkpoint and rushed to the gate. He missed the flight - and
created hassles for travelers nationwide in the process.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - · A lawyer representing three men
The security breach at Hartsfield Atlantt International Airport whose homes were raided by the FBI this week said the searches
prompted officials to shut down the airport for four hoprs and turned up no evidence of a terrorist plot.
· evacuate about 10,000 people, delaying thousands of passengers
across the country Q!l a busy travel weekend.
"I don't think he had any criminal intent;' said James Stogner,
operations manager for the airport, the nation's busiest. "People do
imtional things - especially football fans."
Lasseter, 32, told police he had passed the security screening
when he first arrived at the airport, but rerumed to the terminal
to find his camera bag. Rather than go through security a second
time, he hurried down an up-escalator to circumvent the long
lines at the checkpoint, Atlanta polioe Maj. Marion Brooks said.

Mrs. Bush decries oppression

Inside:

The FAA said no cooclusions have
been reached about whether the tail was
related to the accident, but called the
inspections a "prudent" move.
NTSB Chairman Marion Blakey said
the frantic elforu of the pilots aboard
Flight 587 to save their plane also should
provide clues to what went wrong.
"We do know, just fiom what we can
see on the flight data recorder, that the
pilots were rrying to actively fly that
plane out of the problem," Blakey told
the Associated Press, cautioning that this
does not imply pilot error. Investigaton
have already suggested the piloa wouldn't have known the tail fin was missing.

The FBJ. still has not explained why it is investigating the men,
who all worl&lt; for the city of Chester. But attorney Anthony F. List
said they have been interrogated about their knowledge of chem- ·
.ical and biological agents.
"Bioterrorism,. Qearly that is what this is all about," List said
"But I would suggest that if they had the evidence to .charge
them, they would have done it already:'
Chester Health CommissiOJ;ter Dr. lrshad Shaikh. his brother
Dr. Masood Shaikh, city accountant Asif Kazi were questioned
again by the FBI Thursday for about four hours.
AD are Pakistan natives:

SUNrn.v's

·Rio
women
sneak
into finals

men

HIGHLIGHTS
Marshall falls
ta Kentucky
: LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Kentucky guard Keith Bogans
M.n't about to -let his teaminates sulk following a disappointing season-opening loss
to Western Kentucky.
"We had to bounce back;'
said Bogans, who had · 22
points, eight rebounds and five
assisa Friday night as the
fourth-ranked Wildcats (1-1)
beat Marshall · 90-73 in the
consolation game of the
NABC Classic. "We didn't
have any time to do anything
between last night and tonight.
Tonight we came to play. Last
night, we dido 't."
. Erik Daniels added 10 points
and Tayshaun Prince nine as
Kentucky played with much
more energy and emotion than
it did on Thursday.
The Wildcats, who had only
six assists and turned the ball
over 20 times jn their loss to
the Hilltoppers, had 20 assists ·
and only nine turnovers against
the Herd (0-2). They also
scored 31 points off 23 Marshall tornovers.
"I . thought we rebounded
the right way," Kenrucky coach
Tubby Smith said. "We came
out and played well right fiom
ihe start.
·
Tamar Slay scored 26 points
and grabbed 10 rebounds, JR.
VanHoose added 16 points and
12 rebounds, and Latece
Williams had 15 points and 10
rebounds for Marshall.

Rio Grande
beats Five Towns
in Bevo Classic

Cowboys top
Bearcats
STILLWATER, Okla. (AP)
-· Oklahoma State coach
Eddie Sutton had the perfect
description of his 'earn's
opener against Cincinnati.
"That game was a grinder,"
Sutton said after the 18thranked Cowboys began their
season with a 69-62 victory
Friday night.
The score was just 25-16 at
halftime, at which point
Cincinnati had five field goals
and twice as many turnovers.
Both offenses had a little
more success in the second·
half; but it was a night in
which the defenses had the
better of thipgs.
· Steve Logan scored 31 for
the Bearcats, who have five of
their top six scorers back from
a team that went 25-10 a year
ago. Leonard Stokes, with 12
points, was the only other
Cincinnati player in double
figures.

OVP SPORTS STAFF

OVP SPORTS STAFF

RIO
GRANDE
Despite the fact they were
dominated on the boards, the
Rio Grande men's basketball
team still prevailed.
Five Towns, N.Y., outrebounded the Redmen, 4733, but the host school pulled
out a 70- 59 win over the
Sound in the first round of
the Bevo Francis Classic Friday.
"I don't know if we're
going to have very many
clean wins for awhi]e," said
Rio Grande head coach Earl
Thomas. "(Five Towns) is
pretty athletic."
The Redmen (2-2) only
had seven offensive rebounds,
while the Sound (0-3), who
had the height advantage
over Rio Grande, pulled•
down 26.
"They've got good size,"
Thomas. "The place they
really created. problems for us
was obviously on the offensive glass. They did a awfully
good job of going to the glass
and we just did a horrible job :
keeping the ball ..
"You can't give up 26
rebounds and expect to beat
a good basketball team. We
were really lucky."
In the first half, Ri&lt;l
Grande looked solid as the
Redmen led 35-24 at the
half.
_, . ;ippj:um\!)J:ee ~~~~
- ' · ; .. Beller .l:)id ·thil:e
point goals to ·finish

MORGANTOWN (AP)
- Chr,is Moss had 22 points
and 15 rebounds while freshman Jonathan Hargett scored
16 in West Virginia's 83-57 victory over North CarolinaAsheville in their season opener Friday night.
West Virginia never trailed,
purting together a 21-2 run
over an eight-minute stretch of
the first half.
Freshman Drew Schifino
scored nine of his 12 ppints
during the run, which pushed
the lead to 39-13 with 4:23left
in the first half
North Carolina-Asheville
got aq \Clhser than · i 9 points
afterward.
• Hargett, the Big East presea.On rookie of the year, finished
with six' aisists but m;i.de seven
tqrnoveis and hit 4-of-13 3p!Jinteri.
: West I Virginia's batk-cciurt
~ressure contributed to 24
rurnovers for North Carolina~heville. West Virginia had a
44-21 edge in rebounds but hit
just 10-of-21 free throws.

BY BurCH COOP£R

BY BuTCH CooPER

PleHe ... Reclmen,

.

.

RIO GRANDE - The
Rio Grande women's basketball team grew up a little friday.
The Redwomen, who were
dressing five freshmen and a
...------, sophomore,
held on to
beat Martin
Methodist,
Tenn., 72-71
in the first
round of the
Bevo Francis
Classic Friday.
One
of
Turley
those freshman, forward Alkia Fountain,
sunk a pair of free throws
with II seconds remaining in
the game to lift the Redwomen to victory.
"We've had some growing
pains," said Rio Grande head
coach David Smalley. "I
looked out there, and at one
point we had three freshmen
on the floor.
"We're going to live and
we're going learn from those
situations and I thought our
kids did."
Fountain and Lindsay Van
Deusen each scored 11 points
for Rio, while Renee Turley
led the Redwomen (3-2)
with 15 points. Fountain also
grabbed eight rebounds.
Katie Salmon scored 16
points to lead th~ Indiaqs (~- '
3)

IN'YOUR FACE--: Rlo .Grande's Sean Plummer (20) hangs on to the rim after dunking the
bal) during the 70.59 Redmen win over Five Towns Friday. (Bryan Long)

.

.

-

~

~·

.

Rio Grande faced Cumberland, Ky. in the championship

'

,

'

Please see Redwomen, BJ

.

Judge prevents MLB from ousting Twins
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Baseball
was barred from eliminating the Min-.
nesota Twins next season when a
judge Of\ Friday ordered the '•team to
play its 2002 home schedule in the
Metrodome.
Twins owner Carl Pohlad also was
ordered not t&lt;,&gt; sell the team unless the
new owner agrees to have the team
play its 2002 home sc hedule in the
ballpark.
The decision by Hennepin Counry
District Judge Harry Seymour Crump
throws into question last week's vote
by baseball owners to eliminate two
major league teams next season.
While baseball owners didn't for·

"Tite welfare, recreatiorl,
prestige, pros11erity, trtide arrd
commerce of the people i!f the
community are at stake.''
Dlatrlct Judge Harry Seymour Crump

mally pick the teams when they met
Nov. 6, they made clear the Montreal
Expos and the Twins were the likely
candidates.
"The welfare, recreation, prestige,
prosperity, trade and commerce of the
people of the community are at stake;•
Crump wrote in his four-page decision. "The Twins brought the community' together with Homer Hankies

and Bobblehead dolls.
"The Twins are one of the few professional sports teams in town where a
family can afford to take their children
m enjoy a hot dog and peanuts and a
stadium. The vital pub~c interest, or
trust, of the 1\vins substantially out·
weighs any private interest."
Baseball and the Twins can try to
overturn the decision in the Minncso·
· ta Court of Appeals, but temporary
injunctions usually are difficult to
'remove before a trial.
Spring training starts in just three
months, making it unlikely a trial
would be over before then.
Hours after baseball o~ners voted in

favor of contraction, the Twins and
major league baseball were sued by the
Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission,
which
operates
the
Metrodome. The Twins' lease at the
ballpark runs through the 2002 season.'
Bill Lester, executive director for the
Facilities Commission, said Friday's
ruling was "tremendous news for people who want baseball to suy in Minnesota."

" It throws a significant log in front
of a runaway train," he said. "Thjs will
have many more long and torturous.
turns," he said. "!Jut this is a significant
step forward for people who love
baseball."

White Falcons

wallop Van, 40-16
That contest is being played this ·
afternoon in Oak Hill, Should MidMADISON, W.Va. Adam land Trail win, the White Falcons will
Rickard scored two touchdowns' and probably play .next F~iday night at
enjoyed his second straight 100 yard Oak Hill while a Moorefield victory.
rushing night while Bradford Clark will likely send the Bend Area team
added a pair of scoring runs as the to the Hardy County campus on SatWahama White Falcons .manhandled urday afternoon .
"We really took it to them and that
host Van by a convincing 40-16 mal"gin Friday evening to advance t6 was the difference in the game," an
sei:nifinal round action in the Class A emotionally. drained Ed Cromley
post season playoffi.
stated following the huge WHS win . .
A heroic effort on the part of th~,.- "They have two running backs that
White Falcons defensive front forced are simply fantastic. We got after
five turnovers from the Bulldogs' them defensively and forced them to
high- powered offense which proved J make mistakes and I think our hard
to be a key factor in the post-season hits was the key to wrning th e tide in
victory. The quarterfinal round tri- our favor."
umph was the first in WHS history
Wahama recovered three Van fumfor the Mason Counry gridders as , bles and picked off two Bulldog passWahama captured its eighth straight es while offensively the White Falvictory in the 2001 football season.
cons played errorless football
The Bend Area team moves on to throu'g hout th e even ing.
Ryan
meet the winner of 8th ranked Mitchell, Brandon Hankinson and
Moorefield and top rated Midland Aaron Davis recovered Van fumbles
FALCONS SOAR- Wahama's Ryan Mitchell carries the ball through the Van
Trail in next week's Class A semifinal while Anthony Mitchell and Shilo
defense Flrday night. The White Falcons defeated the Bulldogs, 40.16 In the
round of post-season playoff action.
Please see F•kons, 14
Class A quarterfinals. (Tim Tucker)
BY GARY CLARK

OVP CORRESPONDENT

&lt;\

�~Willi

De Jets soar

N.Y. Jet. It Miami

6-3

6-2

Into Miami

The Dolphi IS have lost IMMIF1 slrai!ttt
times against the Jets. The last two:
There are eight divisional
Miami blew a 17..() halftime lead a
matchups on this week's schedule
mouth ago and were ahead 30-7
of critical importance, including
alter three quarters at the
Meadowlands last year and lost 40- : the Miami Dolphins playing host
37 in overtime. The Jets, after going : to the New YolK Jets· which could
~eld a new leader in the AFC
5-3 with both the ollet IS8 and defense
ast. Miami has a seven-game
looking sluggish, had their best game
of the season last week, beating
Kansas City 27·7. 1 p.m.

Seanle

•

4-4

:

..

Buffalo's defense is allowing 4.7
yards a carry, second worst1n the
NFL. That should be good news for
Shaun Alexander, who ran for 266
yards against the Raiders last week
and Is averaging 5 yards a carry.
Worse for the Bills: Rob Johnson Is
out and Alex Van Pelt will be the
quarterback. -1 p.m.

[(~1
Atlanta at Green Bay

4-4

/'"

6-2

Nobody's really noticed, but the
Falcons are modestly hanging In on
the fringes of the playoff rece. One
reason for Green Bay's resurgence
has been the emergence of TE
Bubba Franks, last year's No. 1 draft
pick. Franks leeds Green Bay w~h
six TO catches. 1 p.m.

~

,..

5-3

2-6

Philadelphia It Dallal

The Eagles' 48-point explosion
against the Vikings may have been
an aberration although they scored
40 against the Cowboys In their first
meeting -largely on turnovers.
Dallas' defense has been decent
recently. 1 p.m.

~-~

Cleveland at Baltimore

4-4

.

6-3

All times EST.
.................. ................... , ......... ;·····
demise is injuries. The Bengals need
one more win to ensure their best
season since 1997, when they won
seven games. 1 p.m.

f.ill1
Welhlngton

4-4

1-8

5-4

Chicago at

6-2

4-4

The Beers' miracle momentum was
stowed by Green Bay last week and
a loss In Tampa might start eroding
some of the oonfidence that was built
by the 6-1 start. The Bucs, who have
started 3-4 for the past tour 1181110111,
barely avoided losing to winless
Detroit. 4:15p.m.

-

New Orlean•
4-4

Peyton Manning comes home with a
broken jaw, courtesy of a hit by
Miami's Lorenzo Brornell. He says
he'll play, but Edgerrln James won't
- he has a knee Injury that could keep
him out for the rast of the season.
The Saints' rank better on offense (7)
than defense (15). 1 p.m.

l.rJI

~J

7-1

5-4

St. Louie at New England
Drew Bledsoe is ready but Bill
· Bellchick Is sticking with Tom Brady,
who's led New England to a 5-2
record since Bledsoe was hurt. The
Rams came beck from flair bye week
to take care of Carolina easily. But
there remain doubts about Kurt
Wame~s ability to throw deep with a
bruised right thumb- he's thrown
seven interception In the last two ·
games. 8:30 p.m.

Nll1

Sari Diego at Oakland
5-4
6-2

.The Chargers' Doug Flutie threw four
Interceptions In Denver last week.
They've got a shot here If the
Oakland run defense plays like It did
last week In Seattle, when It allowed
266 yartjs to Shaun Alexander. Is
LaDalnlan Tomlinson eager for this
game? 4:05 p.m.

The Ravens have won three straight
since the Browns shocked them 2414 in Cleveland, although they were · •
'.
inches away from losing in
Tennessee Monday night. The
Jackeonvllla at Plneburgh
Browns still have their defense, but
6-2
3-5
their offense has been slowed by the
These are tha Stealers from the
•--:
· toss.of Tre Johnson, their best
successful years of Bill Cowher's
offensive lineman. 1 p.m.
tenure -Jerome Bettis carrying' the
offensive load; Kordell Stewart
making fewer mistakes and the
Tennessee at Cincinnati
defense dominating. Jacksonville
broke a five-game losing streak by
3-5
4-4
beating the Bengals last week. But
The primary cause of the ntans'

If :r-+11

...,

at Denver

The Redsklns, who are coming off
their bye week, won their last three
after losing their first five. Terrell Oevls .
is hurt again, so Mike Anderson starts
at running back for Denver with
Olandis Gary backing him up.
4:15p.m.

George Seifert had the bast winning
percentage of all time when he left
the 49ers. He's slipped markedly and
Is being asked a lot these days
whether he'll step down as coach
alter this season. Terrell Owens has
helped make the 49ers a challenger
to the Rams In the NFC West. 1 p.m.

lndlanapolle at

~

3-5

San Francisco at carolina

6-2

over heartbreak

2-6

The Lions WILL win a game this
season. But while there are a lol of
retirees in Arizona from the upper
Midwest, they may not want to see
their taam winless, even against
another squad from the NFL's lower
depths. One bright spot in Arizona's
season: David Boston, who's seconcl
in the league with 55 receptions.
4:15p.m.

Open date: Kansas City

Buffalo

1-7

0-8

losing streak against New York.

r.J
at

-

O.Dit. Albionl

~1

Monday night

~'5-4
3-5

N.Y. Giants at Minnesota
Minnesota wants revenge for the 410 loss in last season's NFC
championship game at the .
Meadowlands. Minnesota's leading
rusher is QB Daunte Culpepper. The
Vikings have allowed 29 sacks and
the Giants have 29, 15 by Michael
Strahan. 9 p.m.
- Dave Goldberg

AP

SOURCE: AssocialfKI Press

Streaking Ravens, depressed Browns meet again

I

••
•

•
:

BALTIMOR:E (Al&gt;)
Redemption, revenge and
respect - were the motivating
factors for the Cleveland
Browns when they faced the
Baltimore Ravens last month.
In the rematch Sunday, the
Browns have only one objective.
"We just need to get a win,"
coach Butch Davis said.
Outscored 114-26 by the
Ravens in the four previous
games, the Browns took over
second place in the AFC Central on Oct. 21 with a stunning
24-14 upset of the defending
Super Bowl champions.
Much has changed since that
day. .The Browns haven't won
since, and the Ravens· on Sunday will be seeking their fourth
straight victory.
The Browns (4-4) already
have more wins under firstyear coach Davis than they did
all List season, but two ·straight
overtime defeats has taken the
Juster off their impressive start.
Cleveland had a bye after
their uplifting initial victory
over Baltimore. Upon their
return, the Browns yielded two
touchdowns in the final 28 seconds of regulation in a lou at
Chicago. then blew a 9-0 lead
in a 15-12 defeat at · home
against Pittsburgh.
"They're coming off a little
frustration,'' Ravens coach
Brian Billick said. "They're at
kind of a crossroads, so they're
going to come in with that
mentality.''
In an effort to block out
frustration caused by two successive last-second defeats,

Davis has tried to stress to his over the first eight games of the
players that they've come a season."
long way fiom the 2-14 and 3Despite losses in Cincinnati
!3 seasons that preceded this and Cleveland, Baltimore (6-3)
one.
has also put a positive spin on
"When your children were its first nine games. The Ravens
ages I, 2 or 3, how many times were 5-4 at this point last seadid your kid fall down learning son and ended up ~nning the
how to walk? Thousands," · Super Bowl.
Davis said. "If every time you
Unlike Cleveland, Baltimore
didn't say,'Oh, what a good job has foupd a way to win the
you're doing! Get up, try again, close games. After losing to the
try again,' they'd never learn to ·Browns, the Ravens beat Jackwalk.
sonville 18-17, then defeated
"That's kind of where we Pittsburgh 13-10 when Steelare. It's a young football team i.n ers kicker Kris Brown missed
its third year. More positive four of five field goal tries. Last
than negatives have occurred · Monday night, Baltimore

A SIAff of over

I00 doclm in 26
specialliel provide
!llile-&lt;lf-lbwll care.

topped Tennessee 16-10 by
stuffing Titans quarterback
Steve McNair at the 1 an the
final play. ·
Was it luck, .or the product of
playoff experience?
"Baltimore just finds a way
to win. That's what Super Bowl
champs do," Cleveland cornerback Corey FuUer declared.
The facts back up that assessment. .Cleveland has been
outscorea 17-0 . in the fourth
quarter over the past two
weeks. Baltimore has outscored
the opposition 24-7 in the
fourth quarter during its threegame run.

BY DAVE Got.D8u11

The New York Jets came from 17
points behind at the half to beat
Miami 21-17 last month. That was
after overcoming a 30-7 deficit after
three quarters • year ago to beat the
Dolphins.
So, when the Jets go to Miami on
Sunday to play for first place in the
AFC East, they'D have a seven-game
. winning streak 3 .·• ••1st the Dol. phins. StiU, New York is a 6-point
underdog.
The Jets don't mind, though. All
but one of their six victories has
been ugly.
"We're the green monster that
everybody calls ugly,'' says Curtis
Martin, the Jets' MVP and a contender for the league MVP award.
"We're fine with that. As long as it's
a W, we could be the ugliest-thing
on the planet and it wouldn't make
any difference."
The Dolphins aren't the prettiest
team, either.
"
Jay Fiedler is tied for second in

~·

fromPapBl
'·

game on Saiurday.
The Redwomen led by 10 at the half and
held the Indians to only two points in the first
: · .five and·a half minutes of the second half.
Rio Grande led 44-27 at the 14:45 mark.
The visitors; though, rallied and trailed only
53-52 with around 9:15 left and led by as
many as five in the dosing minutes.
"We got up by (17 points) and we just
relaxed,'' said Smalley. "You can never relax,

$ s;,~§H $

title game and the Vikings' 48-17·
loss in Philadelphia last week.
The Vikings are 3-1 at home, but
they don't match up well with the
Giants- they can't rurr, don't stop
the run, and give up sacks.
GIANTS, 24-20
ST. LoUis (MINUS 9)
AT NEW ENGLAND
Closer than the spread
RAMS, 27-20
INDIANAPOUS (PLUS 5)
AT NEW ORLEANS
Peyton M anning comes . home
with a broken jaw and without
Edgerrin James.
SAINTS, 28-22
CHICAGO (PLUS 5)
AT TAMPA BAY
You don't get as many good
bounces on the road. ·
BUCS, 14-12
:
PHII..\DELPHIA (MINUS 7)
AT DALLAs
The Eagles' offense regresses.
Doesn't matter. ·
EAGLES, 20-3

OIIOVIllEY I
CIECI
CASHING
&amp; lOIN
211 Upper RMr Rd.

·Redmen
fromPapBl

204 W. 2n,d Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992.Q461

u......wooma

U.....CI7-

•

earlier game will be no more influential than
their victqry in Jacksonville a year ago, which
they followed up later in the season with a 3424 loss to the Jaguars in Pittsburgh.
"Coach Coughlin didn't get us fired up,"
safety Lee Flowers said. "We lost the game and

we know it. But look at us now fiom where we
were at the start of the season, and we're two
totally different teams.
"They beat us 21-3, so th\'Y can say anything
they want about that game, because they dam· inated. We didn't do anything. In his mind, he

points on the night. The
play of the guards is still a
big question mark for
Thomas and the Redmen.
•
'1ason really played well
in the first half," said
"TI'homas. "He's struggled a
little bit. He hasn't shot it
well up until tonight. Nat
Moles is getting better. He
handled pretty good pressure and only turned the
basketball over two times.
Against that kind of pressure, that's not . bad. And,
we're really limited to how
many minutes we can play

Cain Vandall, because of his"' l've been here, because I
banged up knee."
-'thought it would create
"Our guard play's getting ·· some problems fo r them·
better. We just haven't gelled " offensively, and it did," said
yet."
. Thomas. "We had to give up
Also for the Redmen, a little in order to get a litJerry Barlow led the way tie."
with 15 points, while Sean
· Rio Grande met CumberPlummer scored 12. Joe l~nd, Ky. in the champiDelaney scored eight.
onship game Saturday.
Plummer and Chris BalThe Patriots rolled over
Ienger each hauled in . eight Bluefield State "in their first
round meeting, 115-70, as
boards.
For the Sound, Dawayne . ~Jt Pats scored in doubleM.clntosh led all sco~ers. , .(~res..
· ,
w1th 16 ·p omts:
The Redmen held Five
Towns to 34 percent from
the field.
"We played more zone
tonight than any team I've
had play in the five years

Winter sports coaches:
E-mail your sports news to
sports @mydailytribune.com
sports@mydailyregister.com, or
sports@ mydail ysentinel.com

.. '

AT DENVER
· Marty Schottenheimer rarely
wins in Denver.
BRONCOS, 31-26
SAN FRANCISCO (OFF)
AT CAROLINA
This is "off" because o£ the desperate QB situation with the Panthers.
Doesn't matter.
49ER.s, 28-10
SEATTLE (MINUS 3)
AT BUFFALO
Shawn Alexander slips to 166
after 266 ..
SEAHAWKS, 31 _9
DETROIT (PLUS 1 1/2)
AT ARIZONA
When the Lions finally win (and
they wiD) it will be against a better
team.
CARDS, 22-20
• • •
LAST WEEK: 9-5-1 (spread); It 4 (straight up)
SEASON: 65-56-5 (spread) 8245 (straight up)

has the right to say they were more physical
than us -but just make sure they do that Sunday, too."
·
A Steelers victory would make them.7-2 for
the first time since 1996, when they lost three
of their final four to finish 10-6.
However, the Steelen have had less success
recently against Jacksonville than any t~ther
division opponent, losing five of six since a 3015 victory in Pittsburgh in 1998 - and even
that game later proved meaningless.
That season, the Steelers were 7-4 after beating the Jaguars but didn't win again, losing
their final five to finish 7-9 and miss the play-

offS.
"We don't like Jacksonville and they don't
like us," Flowers said. "I'm sure Tom Coughlin
is down there teDing those guys that it doesn't
matter that they're 3-5, they've got to keep
playing because you don't know what might
happen at the end of the year.
"It doem't mean anything to them that we're
6-2,just like it doesn't mean anything to us that
they'~X ·?·3. Jacksonvijle has a lot of talent, and
we know this is a big week," Flowers said.
This will be the final time the Steelers and
Jaguars play as division opponents. The Jaguars
move into the AFC South with Tennessee,
Indianapolis and expansion Houston next season, while the Steelers shift into the AFC
North with Baltimore, Cleveland and Cincinnati.

n1t in this game. To ( Martin Methodist's)
credit, they came down and they hit some big
shots."
The Redwomen held on, holding the Indians to only two points in the final three minutes of play.
"They're a (reat ball club. We knew that,"
said Smalley. "'fhey lieat a good PikeviUe team
and a good Lipdsey Wilson team. They're a
big team. That'i' the first test we've had against
anybody biggJr than us.
In the ear!l!r first round game, Shayna
Phillips scored 22 points to lead Cumberland
(2-0) over MmlrltVernon Nazarene (0-2), 7663.

'·

Point Pleuant
Proctorville
South Charlellton

TENNESSEE (PLUS 1)
AT CINCINNATI
One, as in !- yard-line, is not the
Titans' favorite number.
Make it seven.
TITANS, 20-13
ATLANTA (PLUS 10)
AT GREEN BAY
Brett Favre started his career as a
Falcon.
PACKERS, 32-13
SAN DIEGO (PLUS 9)
AT ~JU4ND
The Chargers are coming back to
the pack.
RAIDERS, 27-16
CLEVELAND (PLUS 8)
AT BALTIMORE
The Browns beat the Ravens at
home.
RAVENS, 19-5
JACKSONVILLE (PLUS 5)
AT PITTSBURGH
\'ittsburgh's win over Cleveland
was the most one-sided 15-12 overtime game ever.
STEELERS, 22-6
WASHINGTON (PLUS 8 1/2)

,'I

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

•

ctf Minnesota in last season's NFC

·~

The biggest difference in the teams is what
has happened since Sept. 9 - the Steelers (6. 2) have won five of six and lead the AFC Cen• tral, while the Jaguars (3-5) have lost five of
seven.
As a result, the Steelers are confident that

feet or back Into lifo liS quickly ·
a.r posslbk. Medical Excelknct.
Local carlnf. TM rthabllllatton
strvkts at Holt.tr ClinK:.

•

•••

NBW YoRK GIANTS (PLUs 2)
AT MINNESOTA (MONDAY)
The Giants opened as favorites.
Why? Maybe their 41-0 destruction

cal.''

-

Gallipolis
Jackson
Pomeroy

the NFL in inte.ceptions, including
one in the end zone late in the
October loss to the Jets.
,'
But that was a rarity. Ffedler is
usually at his best in game s(tuations
as he was last week, wheil ''his TD
pass to rookie Chris Chambers
,,,idway through the fourth quarter
provided the winning points in
Indianapolis.
l
The best thing going for Miami is
that two long losing streaks have
ended recently the Eagles
stopped a nine-game sli'te against
the Giants and the Raider$ beat the
Broncos for the first time1 it eight.
DOLPHINS, 19-18

•

PITTSBURGH . (AP) - The Pittsburgh
Steelers won't debate how badly they played in
their season-opening 21-3 loss to Jacksonville,
not even with Jaguars coach Tom Coughlin. ·
Coughlin talked after the Sept. 9 game about
how the Jaguars manhandled a Steelers' team
· · that prides itself on its punishing style, saying,
"There was no question who won the physical
· · battle."
The Steelers' reaction when they were
reminded of Coughlin's comme~ts? Mostly,
they had no reaction, saying that loss and their
performance in it will have no effect on Sunday's rematch in Pittsburgh.
"I don't want to take anything away liom
them because they played well and they won
. the game, but we had a few basic breakdowns
· ,_where .they scored 21 points real quick," linebacker Joey Porter said Wednesday. "As far as
pounding us, I don't feelli!ce they did that, but
· they won the game. So we look forward to
· them coming here."
Defensive end Aaron Smith said the game
·· was no more physical than any other the Steelen have played this seas,on and, "As .fa• 'as I'm "el;ar~l) . -Pittsburgh St~ter~ runll!flg ~ack_ Jerome Bettis is tackled by Cleveland Browns'
"'
(94) an!!' Bra'ilt'Boyer (52) t&lt;!Stweek. The Steeters play host to Jacksonville today
· concerned, everybody in this league is physi-· In a "lnnac:h of their earlier 21·3road loss earlier this season. (AP)

.

HOLZER
CLINIC .

•
l

Steelers say 21-3 loss at Jaguars -means nothing today

9{eecf Cash ti[[ Pagtfag? .
Stop Wishing... Ca[Lus

'

Pro
Pick'em

AP FOOTBAI.l WRITER

•

CINCINNATI (AP) -Jon ran their winning streak
Kima watched Steve McNair against the Bengals to six
get ymked down short of the games.
goal line with 0:00 showing
George has been hurt and
on the clock Monday night seems to miss blocking fuUand knew exactly what the back Lorenzo Neal, who is
Tennesste TitanS were feeling. ~tearing Corey Dillon's path in
He also knew what the. Cincinnati this time around.
Cincinnati Bengals were fa&lt;- George has yet to run for 100
ing this yards this season and the runSunday at ning game has been unreliable.
Paul
''We've shown some little
·spurts, little signs of getting
Brown
Stadium. back to where we need to be,
Tenbut we haven't had a complete
nessee's
game like last year where
wild 16-10 loss to Baltimore Eddie's really rolling and we're
- McNair's apparent touch- getting big chunks of yards,''
down was nullified by penalty tight end Frank Wycheck said.
and his final-play sneak carne
This game will be a good
up short- reminded Kitna of test of the Titans' running
his own brush with last-sec- game. McNair has a swollen
and heartbreak.
thumb and the tight ends and
Kima was Seattle's quarter- receivers
have
assorted
back in 1998 when the Jets' injuries, so the Titaru need to
Vinny Testaverde was awarded get George rolling . against a
a touchdown with 20 seconds defense that's gotten tougher
to play even though the ball up fiont.
never crossed the goal line. The
"This team does not resem- .
phantom touchdown gave the ble the Bengals team of the last
Jets a 32-31 win. bl'9ught the couple of years. This is a differNFL a step closer to reirutat- ent team,'' coach Jelf Fisher
ing instant replay, and left the said. "It's not one of those deals
deflated Seahawks out of play- it may have been in the past,
off contention.
where we could turn around
It also left them angry. They and hand the ball to Eddie for
took their frustrations out on
35 times in the game."
their next two opponents and
The Titans had•one of their
won both games. Kitna figures
h
the Titans (3 _5) will be in the best overall games of t e seasame mood.
son against Baltimqre, but
carne up less than a yafd short
Angry. Very angry.
. wm.
. Th ey
o f a season-turmng
"I've been t~ugh some- walked off the field in disbething s~ to that," Kitna
said. "Believe me, they are not lief, with heads down . .
in a fragile state right now.
By midweek, they were still
They are in a (nasty) state. smarting.
,.
That's a scary type of team to
"When you lose lil&lt;;e that, it
play.''
tends to stick with you ,"
The Benga!s (4-4) are in the George said, "There is no need
same state the Titans were last to try and hide the fact. lt
\veek. They have to win to hurts. You would be inhuman
elh9w their way into the pack if yoQ didn't reall~ caret
of playoff contenders.
· Another loss Sunday would
The scary part of the Ben- give~ the franchise · its worst
gals is that no one knows what nine-game record since 1994,
to expect fiom them. One when the Houston Oilers
week, they look like a team on went 1-9 upder Jack Pardee.
its best roD in 11 years. A week Fisher took over as head co"ach
later, they look like the old for the last six games qf a 2-14
Bungles, the NFL's worst team season.
of the past decade.
After consecutive 13-3 sea. The old Bungles had trouble sons, Fisher is trying to keep
stopping Eddie George, who his team fiom falling apart at
has had some of his biggest the midpoint.
games against them. He had a
"Either you go in the tank
career-high 36 carries for a and try to make excuses, or
season-high 181 yards in you 'an fight,'' receiver OcrCincinnati last season, when rick Mason said. "We're going
the Titans swept the series and to fight."

Personal, Pr9
Rehabilitative
Services.
At tM Holt.tr Clinic, what comes qfter
surgll)l or 111111!/ury ftl$ a.r mJJCh
aMiltton a.r your lnllial trtatiMIIt.
Tlw cUnlc't Nhabllllllliml 1111m IJ with
you throUfhout rtcovtry, star! to ftnuh.
· Tlwy call on tht latrst tqulpment and
ttehnlqult to 111 you bade on your

•

to keep hope

Gafllpole, O~fo
.,, ... IOUtll fl
the lllftr Bridge
448-2404

litunllap «&lt;na ~ uttind • Page 83

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

Jets try for eight straight against Dolphins

Titans must get

they're too thin to be more than a
fringe playoff ~r. 4:05 p.m.

NFL Week 10

SUnday, November 18, 2001

Sunday, November 1~ 2001

~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Plnnnt, WV

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•••

�Page 84 • &amp;unlJa.!l ~mrs • Lllind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Ple~Pnt,

FROM STAFF A£PORTS

GALl.IPOLIS - On November 12,
2001 Ohio Valley Christi•n School held
its Fall Sports Awards Program.
After the meal , a pot-luck sponsored
by the boosters Coach Valerie T•ylor
introduced the junior high volleyball
players.
They finished the season with a 7-4
tecord.
Coach Kenny Coughenour introduced the junior high soccer players.
They finished the season with a 6-5- ·
1 ·record and placed third in the Association of Christian Schools International Ohio State Tournament.
Coach Traci Sisson introduced the
varsity volleyball team and presented
them with their awards. Their season
record was 12- 11, which was a fine season for a rebuilding year for the girls.
Coach Bill Burleson introduced the
varsity soccer team and presented
awards. The team ended the season with
a record of 9-5-4.
For the second time in three years,
the OVCS soccer team won the Ohio OVCS AWARD WINNERS- Front row (L toR): (Volleyball) Alyssa Zlrllle Hitting Award,
Christian School Single A champi- Elizabeth Rice Integrity Award, Demara Brown Servants Award, Hallie Carter Most
onship. Another highlight of the year Ponlts, Hannah Burleson Hustle Award, Serving Percentage Award, Back Row (l to
was the announcement by Coach R): Soccer Nathan Bowman Southeast Coaches District Team-Honorable Mention,
Burleson that the soccer team was Adam Holcomb Servants Award, 2nd Team Southeast District Coaches, Cody Smith
selected by the Southeast District Intensity Award, Southeast Coaches District Team-Honorable Mention, J.P. Lindeman
Coac~ssociation for the Sports- Most Saves, Brian Gordon Most Asslts, Most Goals, 1st Team Southeast District
-'nanship Award.
· Coaches. (Submitted photo)

Falcons
from Page 81

.

Staats picked off Bulldog
passes.

"We've played in a tough
environment the past two
weeks and the enthusiasm
from our fans was great.
They're a good team and
they wore us down physically but fortunately that didn't
happen until the contest was
over."
t
Van entered . the playoff
contest averaging 41 points
per game but it was the
White Falcons who provided the scoring fireworks.
Wahama built a 26-0
advantage before the Bulldog' dented the scoring column late in the third period.
Wahama answered both Van
touchdowns on the night by
coming right back with 48
and 53 yard drives to negate
the Bulldog touchdowns.
Ryan Mitchell staked the
White Falcons to an early
lead midway through the
opening quarter on the Falcons initial possession of the
game. Mitchell scored on a
seven yard run to cap a 43
yard drive to give Wahama a
6-0 edge.
The Mason County team
threatened on two other
occasions but came away
empty
handed
before
Rickard took over late in
the half to put Wahama on
top by a I 2-0 margin.
Following a Mitchell
interception the locals drove
65 yards in five plays with
Rickard doing most of the
damage.
Rickard caught a 16 yard
pass from Bradford Clark
and added a 15 yard gain to
the Van 21 before taking it in
from 21 yards out for the
touchllown.
The PAT try failed for the
second straight time and
Wahama led by a 12-0 score
at the half.
Gabe Lambert proved to
be the workhorse as Wahama
received the second half
kickoff.
The White Falcons drove
75 yards in 10 plays with
Lambert catching a 16 yard
aerial from Clark and picking up 23 yards in the drive.
Lambert's eight yard burst
through the middle capped
the series with Ryan
Mitchell running the rwo
point conversion to give
WHS a 20-0 advantage with
7:01 left in the third period.
A short time later Hankinson fell on a Van fumble at
the Bulldog 48 and the
Wahama offensive unit .was
on the move once again.
This time it took only
three plays before Rickard
ripped off a 31 yard TD
sprint to give WHS a 26-0
lead with 5:42 reamining in
the third canto.
Van· got on the scoreboard
.

I

II

.I

Sunday, NoYH~ber 18,2001
Su.,dtly, November 18, 2001

aves holds fall sports banquet

three minutes later as Allen
Gilmour capped a 53 yard
seven play series with a four
yard run. Gilmour added
the two point conversion to
close the gap to 26-8 at the
2:36 mark .
Van attempted an onsides
kick but Wahama retained
possession and · began yet
another march deep into
Bulldog territory.
Rickard" broke at least
four tackles in picking up
25 yards to the Bulldog 23
and six plays later Clark galloped in from 10 yards out
to cap the seven play 48
yard drive. Clark also added
the conversion run as
Wahama a 34-8 advantage.
Gilmour scored what
would be Van's final touchdown with 9:07 to play on a
seven yard run with Steven
Adkins two point conversion.making it a 34-16 contest.
The White Falcon offense
wasn't quite finished yet
however
as the Mason
County squad ate up the
clock with an impressive
drive that covered 53 yards.
Clark concluded the nights
scoring with a one yard run
to make the · final tally 4016.
"I was a little concerned
prior to the opening kickoff
because I didn't think we
were mentally ready to
play," Cromley said. "We ·
seemed to be tight but once
we got on the field we
played hard for the entire
game. We needed to slow
down their running attack
and force them to throw the
football. I knew if they put
the ball in the air we would

wv

catch as many passes from
them as they would complete. We also jarred the
football loose with some
hard knocks and that proved
Ohio High School Football
to be instrumental in our
Friday's Resulta .
success.''
DIVISION II
Van ran for 228 yards on
Cols.
Watterson
28, New
the night and had only
Carlisle Tecumseh 14
seven yards through the air Green 22, Chardon 15
with Gilmour running for Tal. St. Francis 40, Avon lake
14 7 yards in 24 carries 13
while Adkins added 92 yards Vandalia-Butler 38, Gin. McNi·
on the ground in 13 tries.
cholas 32
Wahama racked up 323
DIVISION IU
yards in total offense as Bellevue 42, Sunbury Big Wal·
Rickard gained 1 to yards nut35
on I 0 carries with Hankin~ Cols. OeSales 21, New Con·
son adding 47 yards in 13 · cord John Glenn 13
Kettering Mer 2t, Bellbrook 7
tries, Lambert 39. in eight
attempts and Mitchell 38 in
nine carries.
Clark connected on five
of seven passes for 79 yards
with Rickard catching three
aerials for 52 yards and
Lambert two receptions for
27.

AII-SEOAL soccer
team announced
ATHENS Marietta,
who won the Southeast
Ohio Athletic League with
a perfect 12-0 record, dominated the coaches voting
in putting five seniors on
the AII-SEOAL soccer
team.
Their mentor, Steve
Richards, also took home
the Coach of the Y• .r hardware.
Two players from the
inaugural Gallia Academy
soccer team earned allleague honors. Junior midfielder/forward Nick Fisco
was honored by the league
coaches, as was junior
keeper Jeremy Queen.
Point Pleasant placed
'four players on the conference team in seniors Trent
Messick (keeper),Josh Holland (midfielder), Drew
Eddy (defense), and Chris
Goodnite (sweeper).
The Big Blacks finished
7-4-1 in thier first yera of
SEOAL competition.

•

•

•

..
•

Conor Hogan of Athens
was voted the league MVP
2001 AII-SEOAL Sa co or IHm
(SChool- name. year, position)
Athono - Conor Hagan, 12,
sweeper: Jon Chleebaun. 12.
center/middle; Nick Stachler,
12, center/forward.
Gollla Academy Jeremy
Queen, 11, keeper; Nick Flsco,
11. mid/forward.
Jackaor
. Patrick Booth, 12,

keeper: . . .

~.,o

Pomeroy •

S1laverri, 11,
•.

&amp;unbap ~~ &amp;ttdintl • Page 85

• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Meigs volreyball has another
succes~ful season, league title
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

striker; Eric Aldrlcll, 11, striker.
Logan - Matt Lanning, 12,
keeper; Adam Puhl, 12, for·
ward.
Mariana - Anthony V~uccio,
12. forward: Eric Brocl&lt;melr. 12,
keeper; R.J. Wynn, 12, forward;
Joel Nau. 12, mldfleldar; Justin
Arthur, 12, sweeper.
Point PIMoant - Trent Mes·
sick, 12, keeper; Josh Holland,
12, mldfielder; Drew Eddy, 12.
defense; Chris Goodnlte, 12,
mldflelder.
Warren - Shanan Gtacy, 11 ,
striker; Jared Arnotod, 12,
sweeper: Anthony Hill, 11, mid·
fielder.
MVP - Conor Hogan, Athens
Coach of tha Year - Steve
Richarde, Marietta
Flnol Sllndlngo
1. Marietta 12.(); 2. Athens 10·
2; 3. Point Pteuont 7-4-1; 4.
Jackson 4· 7·1: 5. logan 3· 7-2:
8. Warren 3·8·1; 7. Golllo
Acedemyo-11·1.

Mldd~port

The Meigs Marauder volleyball team
recently compl eted another championship season wnh their 17-4 record. The
Marauders under coach Rick Ash won
their seventh TVC title since 1990, by
nailing down the Ohio Division title.
Ash who finished his 14th season at the
helm of the Marauders had six of the top
eight players back for the season. However the two he had to replace were Ohio
Division Most Valuable Player Shannon
Price, and another All TVC selection in
Margie Bratton.
Post season honors are beginning to
come in, First team All TVC honors went
to senior outside hitter Corrie Hoover,
. junior setter Mindy Chancey and sopho-

more middle hitter Jaynee Davis, while
junior outside hitter Katie Jeffers was
named to the second team. Hoover was
also named first team All District 13,
while Chancey was named honorable
mention.
Filling out the roster was junior outside
hitter Kayte Davis, sophomore defensive
specialist Nikki Butcher, sophomore
middle hitters Chrissy Miller and Miranda Stewart and junior defensive specialists
Maria Drenner and Tirzah Dodson.
Chancey led the team in scoring with
172 points, Hoover scored 136, Butcher
added I 11 ,Jeffers 76,Jaynee Davis 76 and
Kayte Davis 50. Chancey had the high
game for the season with 18 against
Southern.
Butcher and Jaynee Davis both served

UCL.P:s Foster will
miss rest of season
over ineligibity

an excellent 99% for the season Butcher
was I 92 of 194, while Davis was 137 of
137.Jeffers was 128 of130 for 98%, while
Chancey was 240 of 247 for 97%. Hoover
and Kayte Davis both served at 93%,
Hoover was 188 of 203, while Davis was
91 of 98. AJ a team Meigs was 975 of
1009 serving for 97%.
Jaynee Davis had I 00 kills to lead the
team, followed by Hoover with 84,
Chrissy MiUer with SO and Kayte Davis
with 48.
Mindy Chancey had 126 sets to lead
the team, Jeffers added 124.
The Marauders lose only one senior in
Hoover, and with another TVC junior
varsity championship team moving up
the trend looks to continue for Rick AJh
and the Lady Marauders spikers.

wanted to emphasize that
LOS ANGELES (AP) The NCAA ruled Friday he was unhappy only with
that DeShaun Foster won't the NCAA and not
have his eligibility restored , UCLA.
Neither coach Bob Tolemeaning the star running
back wiD miss UCLA's final do nor athleric director
two regular-season games as Peter Dalis was available for
well as a bowl game if the rommenc.
T he 20th- rank ed Bruins
Bruins get an invitation.
Foster, a 6-foot-1, 215- (6-3, 3-3 Pac- 10) face
pound senior who leads the croSStown rival Southern
Pac-10 in rushing and California (S-5, 4-3) on
touchdowns, was declared Saturday at the Los Angeles
ineligible Nov. 7 after it was Coliseum, and finish the
determined he received an regular season Dec. 1
extra benefit, a violation of against Arizona State at the
NCAA rules, and he sat out Rose Bowl.
It's been reported that
UCLA's 21-20 loss to No.7
Foster, who gained 1, I 09
Oregon three days later.
The university took the yards on 216 carries in
'action a day after being told eight games to · rank fifth
by the NCAA of a possible nationally with a 138.6yard average, drove a new
violation.
UCLA and the NCAA sport-utility vehicle being
jointly investigated the leased by actor-director
matter, and the school sub- Eric LaneuviUe for several
mitted its report requesting weeks.
Toledo didn't allow Fosreinstatement of Foster's
ter
to practice or attend
eligibility on Wednesday.
The bad news came Friday team meetings after he was
declared ineligible - and
afternoon.
"I am very disappointed made it clear that decision
in the ruling today by the was punitive.
''I'm very disappointed
NCAA that makes me
ineligible to play for considering all the things
UCLA the rest of the year," we've gone through,"ToleF.oster said in a statement do said earlier in the week.
released by UCLA Friday "I can't tell you how much
night. "I believe the penal- we educate these guys, we
ty imposed is too great and talk until we're blue in the
overly severe. My family face. I'm going to continue
and I will have to assess the to ~1lk about it.
''I'll forgive him, he's part
consequences of this ruling
of
our family. You know
and what our options for
what? He's not a bad kid,
the future are."
Foster wished his team- he made a mistake. People
mates weU for the rest of make mistakes in their
the season, adding that he lives."

Scores

·Prep

Mentor lake Calh. 21, Poland
0
DIVISION V
Bedford Chanel 28, N. lima
South Range 7
.
Marion Pleasant 24, Liberty
CanterO
Sidney Lehman 34, Cin. North
College Hill 32
Woodsfield Monroe Central 6,
Smithville 0

Welt VIrginia Football .
Clasa.AAA
Second round

Friday

Parkersburg 28, University 14
Riverside 25, Woodrow Wilson
21
ClassAA
Second round
Friday
Bridgepor1 38, Wyoming East '

6

Magnolia 15, Mount View 11
Poca 42, Clay County 13
Williamstown 34, Oak Hill20
Class A
Second round

Friday
Wahama 40, Van 16
Williamson 46, Mount Hope 20

rvc OHIO DIVISION CHAMPIONS -

The Meigs Marauders recently won their ninth TVC championship since 1990 with a 17-4
record. Team members from left to right in the front row are: Katie Jeffers and Mindy Chancey, Nikki Bucther, Marla Drenner
and Tirzah Dodson , second row : Kayte Davis, Jaynee Davis. Corrie Hoover, Chrissy Miller. Not pictured is Miranda Stewart.

1

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�Page 86 • ~ (!A~Mt &amp;rutin.d

•

NASCAR
Elliott finally gets 41st victory
8v KEmt

Outdoors

Sunday, November 18, 2001

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

PARSONS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Gordon Pirkle couldn't
immediately come to the
,phone to answer a reporter's
Tum4
questions. The owner of
Dawsonville Pool Room in
north Georgia was busy
START/FINISH
doing another interview.
Winston Cup standings
NAPASOO
A victory Sunday by
Polnta
Topdnver.
hometown NASCAR driver
Site: Hampton, Ga.
Tnlc:k length: 1.5-mile quad-oval
Bill Elliott - his first in
~length: 325 laps, SOO.SJI1iles
more. chan seven years 4,524
Defending champion: JerJY Nadeau 2. Ricky Rudel
kept Pirkle busy. He spent
Qualifying record: Geoff Bodine,
·
much
of Sunday and Monday
197.478 mph, Nov. 15, 1997
4. Sterling Marlin 4,391
ringing the pool room's bell,
~ record: Bobby Labonte,
159.904 mph, Nov. 16, 1997
a tradition that began with
Elliott's first victory, in 1983.
"The phone's rung off the
hook," Pirkle said.
A
standing-room-only
crowd of about 100 people
watched the end of the race
EWon·s SUCCESS....:. Race fans (above) at the Dawsonville Pool Room In Dawsonville, Ga.,
on the pool room TV. Fans
watch Bill Elliott run in the Daytona 500, Sunday, Feb. 18. A standing-roorlKlnly crowd of
trickled in as the race at about 100 people filled the establishment, owned by Gordon Pirkle, ·on Sunday, Nov. 11.
Homestead-Miami Speedway Adam and Carrie McCall (below) make their way into the Dawsonville Pool Room in Dawneared conclusion, with sonville, Ga., Sunday, Feb. 18, 2001, as the Daytona 500 prepares to begin in Daytona
Elliott passing teammate Beach, Aa. (AP file)
Casey Atwood with five laps
to go.
"I didn't really look at him
as my teammate," Elliott said.
8v MIKE HARRIS
"It was just another obstacle
AP MOTORSPORTS WRITER
between me and the win."
Joe Ruttman, who has
When Elliott took the
been through considerable
checkered flag, Pirkle ran
adversity in more than 30
outside to do )tis duty.
years· in auto racing, never
"I rang that bell for about
had more worries than this
30 minutes," he said. "I bet
season.
tends to hide his emotions
dogs all around town were
Performance had nothing very well and approached
howling with it."
to do with it, and it wasn't the season much like he did
It's been a long road back
about lack of sponsorship or any other.
co victory lane for Elliott,
being fired - the three
First, Rottman went out .
NASCAR's most popular
most common problems for and won the Daytona driver a record 15 times.
drivers. No, Rottman was Craftsman series race before
After his victo.ry in Darhelping his wife, Peggy, deal quickly heading ba~k to his lington, S.C., 'in September
with an inoperable brain Franklin, Tenn., home to see 1994, Elliott ran his own
tumor.
what he could do to help team for the next six' years.
"We first noticed some- Peggy, by that time deeply There were flashes of the skill
thing was wrong this year . involved in researching can- that led him to the 1988
before
Daytona,"
said cer on the Internet.
Winston Cup championship, career has lasted a long time,
Ruttman, a NASCAR truck
"We wanted other opjn- but there also were tough and I just look at the amount
of friends I've made over the
series ace. "Peggy's hand- ions and we got lots of sug- times.
writing was always very gestions and ideas from
His nephew, Casey, died years.
"Winning was special just
good, but it had begun to friends and family," he said. from cancer in 1995, and
get real shaky. Then she had '"We went to specialises 2nd Elliott broke his leg a year from the fans' standpoint. I've '
trouble holding a fork.
read everything we could later in a wreck in Talladega, had so many people over the
last seven years come up and
"The one chat · really got about what was going on.
Ala.
say,
'We're with you through
me thinking was when she · "When all was said and
But Elliott's career was
came in and told me some- done, after about six rejuvenated this year with car thick and thin. We don't care
thing was wrong with her months, everyone came to owner Ray Evernham, who if you never wm another
· ~unday, November 26,
Jeep. It's a stick shift, and she the same general conclusion led Dodge's return to race."'
· from 1:00-6:00 pm
This weekend, Elliott
said it was jumping on her." - cliemotherapy."
NASCAR's top series after a
Monday, November 26,
Rottman drove it and
Rottman said he tumor 16-year absence. The team returns to his home track,
thru
found nothing wrong. When cannot be removed because won. the pole for the season- Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Saturday, December 1
he questioned his wife fur- it IS intertwined with opening Daytona 500 and Although he leads all active
drivers
with
four
poles
and
Ttl 8:00pm
ther, she said "her .foot was nerves.
had been competitive before
five
victories
at
the
track;
he
"The only thing they can Sunday's victory, Elliott's first
doing something."
hasn't won there since 1992.
The Ruttmans knew at do is keep it from getting in 226 races ..
"The olde,r you get, the . That's all right with Pirkle.
that point something was any bigger and spreading and
"I've got my hopes up," he
wrong. They had been read- hope somebody comes up harder it is to win," Elliott said. "I chink he'll do good."
ing about actor Michael J. with something new in the said. "These young guys
come in and they do things a
Fox's battle with Parkinson's meantime," he said.
way."
different
Peggy, who remains optiJisease, and that sec off some
Winston Cup
Elliott lives in Blairsville,
mistic and hopeful, is weakwarning bells.
Driver standings
"We'd seen this interview ened by the chemotherapy. about 35 miles north of his
Top 10
Points
When
he
with the guy, and he shakes," She declined to be inter- hometown.'
returned there Sunday night,
1. Jeff Gordon
4;829
Rottman said. "That's what viewed.
2. Ricky Rudd
4,524
"She doesn't have any about 50 people met him at
we thought it · might be.
3.
Tony
Stewart
4,465
the
airport
for
an
impromptu
Whatever it was, though, we problems with me talking
4.
Sterling
Marlin
4,391
knew she had to see some- about it, though," her hus- celebration of his long-await5.
Dale
Jarrett
4,336
band said. "She wants people ed 4,Jst career victory feacur- , 6. Rusty Wallace
body."
·
4,245
The first specialist the ·to know that you i:an fight ing fireworks, balloons and.
7. Dale Eamhard~ Jr., 4,213
cake.
against
things
like
this
and
8. Bobby Labonte
4,211
Ruttmans went to initially
"I guess you don't really
9. Kevin Harvlck
4,151
agreed Peggy might be in there is hope. ·
4,143
"The reports we've been know how much you affect 10. Jeff Burton
the early stages of Parkinpeople,"
Elliott
said.
"My
son's. Further examination getting are good. If the
AP
revealed the tumor, and a tumor was growing, it's close
biopsy gave them worse to her speech center and
could paralyze her right side,
news: it was malignant.
"How do you react to but her speech is fine and we
·something
like
that?" haven't seen any new sympRottman said. "How does toms. The . tumor has not
shrunk, but it has not grown.
1anybody react ,to it?"
"We're just hoping we can
Even as they began
hold
it at bay until they
absorbing the truth, the 57Are you 45 years of .age or older?
come
up
with
something
to
year-old Rottman had co
Do you have a family history of diabetes?
prepare to start his season in shrink it."
Rottman had another fine
Daytona.
Have you had unexplained weight loss?
"We thought about how season on the circuit, win· Have you delivered a baby that weighed more than nine pounds?
to deal with this, as far as the ning twice and finishing
team was concerned, and we third in the standings.
Do you complain of excessive thirst, hunger,
Racing, though, has not
decided it was best co carry
it to them;· he said. "We seemed as important since
or frequent urination?
wanted them to know what Peggy became ill. Instead of
was going on so when they his joy, getting into the cockdidn't see her at the track, pit of his Dodge ~ck has
they'd know it wasn't lack of become his refuge.
Even losing his team sponinterest."
sor
late in rhe season didn't
Kip McCord, Rottman's
team manager, appreciated have the impact it would
have in the past.
the forthrightness. ·
"Peggy's illness has cer"Joe's a class ace," McCord
said. "Everybody's been con- tainly put things in perspec- 1
cerned with Peggy's well- tive," he said. "Truly, your
being, and Joe's made it easy concern is her. Racing is
on us .. There's no hidden important but, ultimately,
agenda. He tells us what is your life is most important.
We fit racing around her
. on."
gomg
McCord .said Rottman schedule now.

Wife's illness
made Ruttman's
season tougher
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Page 87
Sund•~Novernber11,1001

As.deer gun season approaches, riflect on seasons past
As anmher gun season approaches
for Oh10 2nd West Virgini2 deer
hunters, it's interesting to consider
Ohio's 1901 deer se2son. Th2t's
• because there was no deer season in
1901.
In the year 1900, Ohio's deer herd
was unmanaged, basically because
there were very few, if any deer left in
the Buckeye State. From 1901 to
1942, Ohio's deer season was officially
dosed.
Ohio's first modern deer season
:; · occurred in 1943. Deer hunting was
• allowed in three southern Ohio coun. ties that year, and 8,500 deer permits
. were issued. Hunters killed 168 deer
: : during that season, making for a sue; ; cess ratio of approximately one deer to
:: : every 51 hunters, according to the
·: · Ohio Division ofWildlife.
,
Deer seasons were held the follow~ ing two years, but the season was

.'--

closed ;again in 1946.The most dismal
hunting year was in 1945, when only
one of 124 hunters managed to tag
one of the 62 deer killed. ln 1947, deer
hunters were allowed to hunt in eight
counties and killed a whopping 1,000
deer.
Ohio's deer season was closed several more times over the years, most
recently in 1961.
· Ohio's first statewide deer hunting
season was in 1956. Before that time,
and several times since, deer hunting
has been available in only limited
counties. In 1978, deer hunting was
open in 74 counties. Since then, however, deer hunting has been allowed
·
statewide.
Despite the reintroduction of deer
hunting in Ohio, the state's deer population has increased dramatically to
the point where biologists now estimate more than half a million deer

125,000 deer.
To illustrate the increase in the deer
harvest, consider this: in 1964, the year
I was born, hunters statewide killed
1,326 deer. Today, hunters in Meigs
and Gallia counties alone tag more
•\... .......
~:j
than three times that amount almost
every year.Of course, too much of a
good thing is not a good thing. Along
IN THE OPEN
with the increase in the deer population came more deer-vehicle collisions
now call the Buckeye State home.
and crop damage complaints, but those
The increase in population has also subjects are a topic for another colresulted in increases in the number of umn.
deer killed by hunters. In 1974, deer
As you West Virginia hunters head
hunters broke the 10,000 mark as far out Monday morning, and Ohio
as the deer harvest for the season was hunters a week later, keep in mind all
concerned. By 1988, more than the changes that have occurred in deer
100,000 deer were tagge~ by hunters. hunting over the years. One thing has
The highest harvest was recorded in · not changed, however; from the earli1995, when 179.,543 deerwere killed. est days, deer hunting has been the
More recently the number of deer focus of fellowship between friends
killed per season has hovered around and families, a proud American tradi-

~
~. ·.~·,'
~ .&lt;~

Jim
Freeman

tion passed dO\\ ..-from generation to
generation.For many young people,
their first deer hunt has served as an
important rite of passage; an memorable waypoint on the journey co
young adulthood. From metely
accompanying the hunters, to later
participation in the hunt and eventually tagging that first deer, deer hunting
has provided many precious memories
to generations of youngsters.
Remember co keep safety foremost
in your thoughts. Don't forget to wear
plenty of hunter orange, and inake
sure you plan your hunt and hunt your
plan. Also, while planning your hunt,
make plans to take along a youngster
or two.

Jim Freeman is lM wildlife specialist .for
the Mrigi Soil and l%ter Conservation
District. He can be oontacted at (740) 9924282 or at jim:fretman@oh.natdnet.otg

Bi_g Chimney man Erie shore hot spot for walleye
stitches and lues
.
t
.
t
er
.
oge
a kava
J' k
BIG CHIMNEY, W.Va. like mix of epoxy resins and
(AP) - Randy Elder's kayak fine sawdust. He then sealed
glides through the water like a the fillets with fiberglass tape
mahogany swan.
and clear resin.
Elder's paddle blades dip and
With the joints sealed and
, rise in slow motion, yet his cured, Elder was able to flip
l • graceful craft appears almost the boat over and cut the, wire
; • to coast up$tream against the stitches off flush at the hull's
: '. Kanawha River's current.
surface. After squeezing even
:;.•; It's fitting that the boac mote fillet mix into the seams,
t~ : should paddle so easily, now he overlaid the hull with a sin~- that the task of buili:ling it is gle sheet of fiberglass and sat~· firushed.
orated it with unthickened
~:,': For six weeks last spring, epoxy.
~=Elder spent most of his spare
"It makes a nice clear, glossy
~= time turning a bundle of ply- coat over the hun;· he says.
i': wood planks, copper wire and "You apply two or three more
~· · fiberglass cloth into an attrac- coats with a paint roller, and
:. tive, smooch-riding chariot to the weave of the fiberglass just
:. adventure.
disappears."
il!:. For the 37-year-old Big Though the rest of the con' . Chimney_. resident, building struction
might
sound
i•: the boat seemed to be a natur- involved, it represented the
'':a! offshoot . of one of ]tis downhill sideof the project.
;.: favorite hobbies, canoeing.
After attaching strips of fir
;: ''I'd seen wooden kayaks to the hull's inside edge and
• · advertised on a Web page, arid planing ic to match the deck .
,. I thought it might be neat to angle, Elder pushed the deck
c: build one," he says. "Then one panels down over their arched
:::day, I was out canoeing and forms and tacked them into
:.: saw ·a guy paddling a wooden place with bronze nails.
·· kayak he'd built. He let me
"From there, it ' was just a
: take a 5-minute spin in it, and matter of gluing the cockpit
coming into place, attaching
; I was hooked.
"The beauty of it really the hatches and bulkheads,
'
struck me. It was such a pretty and attaching the deck rigging
. : boat, and the idea that I might and carry handles;' Elder says
. build something that was so as if those represented menial
: functional 1- yet · looked so tasks. "Then it was time to
: darned nice - really appealed apply varnish."
· .w me."
Five coats of ultravioletThe kayak's design appealed resistant marine varnish put a
. to Elder's practical nature as high-gloss finish on the
well as his aesthetic sensibili- kayak's mahogany panels, and
ties.
ensured the light-sensitive
"I realized that buitding a epoxy's protection against
kayak would give me the free- damage from the sun.
: dom to go out onto the water
He launched the boat on
.· · without finding someone else Memorial Day weekend.
Elder says the 52-pound
to fill the other end of a
canoe," he says.
kayak cost $700 plus shipping,
Elder searched the World yet perform~ on a par with
Wide Web for kit manufactur- boats that would cost as much
•. ers.
as $2,000 if purchased pre"! basically had two choices built.
of construction, cedar-strip or
"I was thrilled as soon as I
stitch-and"glue," he says. "I sat in it," he says. "I got into
went with the easier one, the boat, and it fit like a glove.
which was the stitch-and- It turned out to be very stable
glue."
and very easy to paddle." ·
1 The kit arrived just before Elder happily spent the
the Easter weekend, and Elder summer paddling his creation
on the Elk and Kanawha
began to build.
The boat required consider- rivers, and on Woodrum Lake
,, able room to build, at least in• in Jackson County.
its initial stages. Elder began
"I even took it down to the
by gluing together the kayak's O~~er Banks o~.North Caroh~
two-part side and bottom na, he says. After all, Its
panels so that they extended a designed to be out on the
full 17 feet. Then came the . ocean. I paddled it out into
"stitching."
the connecting channel
"First I had co drill holes between Pamlico Sound and
about ~very 4 inches along the Atlantic Ocean, ,and it
both side panels 2nd both bot- handled superbly even m 3- to
.
·
tom panels;' Elder says. "Then 4-foot waves."
Because the kayak 11 roomy
I took thin copper wire and
loosely stitched the panels enough to pack 2 weeks
together. The stitches pulled worth of camping gear, Elder
the side and boaom panels in plam to take a weeklong
toward one 2nother and grad- kayak tour sometime next
ually formed the boac's . hull summer.
shape."
"I want to paddle along the
After truing the hull to barrier islands of North Carensure a straight keel and uni- olina, just camping out of the
form sides, Elder began sealing boac;• he says. "And maybe
the stitched joints with epoxy sometime do the same thing
"fillets" - a peanut butter- along the coast of Maine:'

HURON, Ohio (AP) - Fishermen
along Lake Erie's shoreline are in the fast
food business much like the hamburger
chains. Anglers have figured out that if
you find a procession of hungry cuscomers and put food where the traffic is,
the action can be nonstop.
Each fall, from Vermilion west to Sandusky, fishermen crowd piers, breakwalls, docks and jetties along the lake
trying to attract the attention· of passing
customers -in this case, walleye by the
hundreds of thousands. A migrational
phenomenon brings to the shoreline
amazing schools of big fish, which are
normally found miles from shore in the
lake's vast expanse of open water.
As these fish move from Lake Erie's
deeper, cooler central basin co the shallow waters of the western basin ,where
they will spawn in the coming spring,
they feed voraciously on clouds of shad
and minnows found crowded against the
shore. .
This is where the fishermen step in.
By casting large lures and crankbaits that
look just like the fish the wal)eye are. eating from the piers, they can intercept

some of these marauding travelers and
take advantage of their frenzied feeding.
"These fish have been scattered about
the lake all summer, and now they are
staging, grouping up in are2s where
there is feed," said Roger Knif!ht, fisheries supervisor for the Div1sion of
Wildlife at its Sandusky Research Stacion. "They'll come back to the Western
Basin in waves, and these schools of
baitfish are right in their path. If the
fishermen can intervene, this has all the
makings of one of the premier trophy
fishing opportunities in all of the Great
Lakes."
The current state record walleye, a 16pound plus fish, was taken in November
of 1999 just east of this fall hot spot, and
was likely following this familiar migracion highway when lt was hooked. Fish
caught from the piers this time of year
are significantly larger than the average
summer catch out on the lake and tend
to be primarily big females. Fish in the
10-pound class are not unusual.
"It is not uncommon to see fish up to
14 pounds," Knight said. "When the fish
are socked in against the shore and feed-

ing actively, it is not out of the ordinary
to catch six fish in six casts and have
them average eight pounds. I've seen big
fish and lots of them in 3 feet of water,
feeding like crazy with their fins sticking
out of the water like sharks."
While this .fishing is sometimes fabulous, it is not for the faint of heart.
Anglers face some of the worst of what
Lake Erie has to offer in terms of wind,
rain, sleet and snow. And there is one
other minor, miserable detail: the best
fishing is always at night.
"It seems like the nastier, the better as
far as the weather goes," said Junior
Wiley, a lifelong resident of Huron who
has been fishing the piers in the fall for
many of his 60 years. It often requires
dress suited for an Arctic exploration to
fight off the elem~nts so one can stay out
and fight the fish.
"If It's snowing and blowing and the
temperature is in the thirties, if the fish
are there, you'll get them," Wiley s;9d.
"But this isn't for everybody. A lot •of
people have never experienced cold like
you can see on that pier in the middle of
the night in late November."

20 ·01 Ya aha
Big Bear . 400 2x4

-

Blowout Sale Price
8

8,

(~o
.

Fre

88°

0

or ~atup Charge)
.

"TV• With angina alzaa of IIOoc or greater are recommandld tor u11 only by thoQ age Hi ana Older. •
Yamaha recommendlthlt all "TV r1dtra taka ., approved training couru. For ufaly and lralnlng
Information, tee your dealer or Clll thai\TV Safaty lnatMutaat 1-1100·887·2117. •IlTVa cen bl hll·
ardoua to operate. For your ufaly: alwaya avoid paved au~aoee. Naver ~da on public roada. "lwayo
w.ar a helmet, eye protection and prottctlvo clOthing: never CI"Y
paetengera: nover engage In atunl rtdO.g: riding ond elcohoVdruga don't
ml•; avoid ••caulvoapaed; and bl p•ntlculerty cerelul on dlfflcuM torraO..

I

\

�lnsidt!:
Celebrations begin on C2'
Page C1

Ram Pickup

SuiiUy. November 11,2001

Durnago

DODGE'S SPECIAL DEALS
Intrepid

Stratus

Caravan

Neon

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f'nl9ram Period

The Colleqe Graduate prooram provides a U.S. cash
allowance of $400.00 available thrauQh 9/30/02 on
the purchase or tease of an ellolbte 2002 Chrysler,
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and the Jeep Chant Cherokee Sport are excluded.
Customer must meet ellolblllty requirements. Please
see your Chrysler Dodoe or Jeep dealer for eligibility
requirements and program details.

On The Job
Eligible commercial customers may qualify for a U.S,
cash allowance of $300 or various Upftt packaoe
options, some packaves require . customer
contribution. Available throuoh 7/31/02 on the
purchase or tease of select 2002 Dodge vehicles. ·
Dodoe Minivan eX, el, eC models are excluded.
Please see your Dodge dealer for eligibility
requirements and program details. ·

Neon

10/03/.ZOOI to
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10/03/.ZOOI to
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For members of a participating Farm Bureau, an
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available thrauQh 7/31/02 on the purchase or lease of
an eligible 2002 Dodge car or truck. Dodge Minivan
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Grand Caravan Sport
Grand Caravan ES
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'

·

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Ibis Daimler ChMier orogram offers peoole with disabilities Information gbout Inee
.

Sebring

•

PUMPKIN SOUP- A hollowed-out pumpkin Is . filled with pumpkin soup for
Thanksgiving dinner, made with a recipe
In the Americ,an-lndlan tradition at the
Gatehouse Restaurant. Providence, R.I.
(f!.P Photo)

VIP Melllher81alp on every new veblele porebue
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Automoblllty Is about buying or leasing and adapting a vehicle thars exadty rioht for your lifestyle and transportation needs. When you
buy or tease any now 2000 or 2001 model Chrysler, Plymouth, Jeep, or Dodge vehicle from a partlclpcltlng dealer, Daimler Chrysler wilt
give you a coth reimbursement to help Cover the cost of Installing the adaptive drNer or passenger equipment on your vehicle. Leased
vehicles must be leased for a minimum of 12 months to be eligible, Adaptive equipment Is claimed~ equipment required by persoos with ·
a permanent disability to drive, enter, exit and/or be transported safety In a moto~ vehlde. factory optional equipment does not qualify
for reimbursement.
Conversions to full-size Dodge Ram Vans, Ram Conversion Van, Ram Waoon, CarGYOn, Grand Caravan, Chrysler Voyooer, Grand
Voyover and Town &amp; Country models may be reimbursed up to a maximum of $1,000. Conversions to all ather eligible ·chrysler,
Plymouth, Jeep, or Dodge models qualify for a maximum reimbursement· of $750. Running boards qualify for a maximum
reimbursement of $400. Atertlno devices qualify for a maximum reimbursement of $200. These reimbursements will !lOt be redu~ or
affected by any additional outside fundlno. Consult your d!!CJler for complete ellolblllty requirements.

•••

Foods of
yesteryear
have a place
on today's tqble

GRAVY TIME - Giblet gravy Is part of a
Thanksgiving dinner deriving from American-Indian traditions. (AP Photo)

are here again.

..

1\'adltlon. C8

•·*·•·•·•·•·•'•·•·· ~·····················

Town &amp; Country

Prowler

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;

For over sixty years, we've stood together In a shared
commitment to freedom. Now, we'd like to honor
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on any new Jeep vehicle. *Just show praof of current
or past military servlc:e to your local Jeep dealer, and
you'll be able to apply this $500 cash allowance
toward your purchase or tease - In addition to any
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country. Offer excludes Grand Cherokee Laredo Sport.

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To receive gift or movie tickets,
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fill out a simple form and bring it to the dealership.
FQUR MO IE TICKETs

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Get tickets that can be used to
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~~~~~~··········~~~~. . .~~····*
*

.

ANOTHER FAVORITE
Hazelnut-honey · baked
squash Is· prepared Amerl·
can-Indian style for Thanks·
giving dinner by chef Jim
Maxwell. (AP Photo/Victoria Arocho)

Visit us on the web at

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Liberty

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For current members of the National Association of
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allowance of $500 may be available throuoh
12/31/01 on the p_urchase or lease of an ellolbte 2002
Chrysler or Jeep vehicle. Minivan eX, el, eC models,
Chrysler Prowler and Jeep Grand Cherokee Sport are
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ellolblllty requlremeots and prooram details.

252 Upper River Road

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•

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Sales Team: AI Durst Neil Plefer John Saunders Joe Tillis Larry Pierce

••

' '

..

.

.

DEAR ABBY: · A year ago, I
made a horrible mistake. I ran away
from home. I am not a child - I
am a 40-year-old wife and mother.
I was unhappy with my husband
and walked away from my life. I left
everything: my kids, my clothes, and
the mementos I had collected my
entire life.
For a long time before that, I felt
unneeded and alone. My husband
talked to me mostly in irritated
tones - as if everything I said to
him was stupid or worthless. My
teen-aged sons were disrespectful or
ignored me altogether. Their father
thought it was funny and said it was
my fault. So I ran.
I have had no contact with anyone for a year. Not my kids, my
mother or any of my friends. 1 am
)onely · ~nd miserable. I suffer from
d~p"ression. 1 liad a bad case of
....

J

PUDDING FUN - Indian
pudding, an Amerlcan~nd~
an legacy to the traditional
Thanksgiving dinner is prepared by chef Jim Maxwell.
(AP Photo/ Victoria Arocho)

VJ!Oman who. ran . mfamily .yearns to return to the fold

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

800-4.46-0842

n "Spirit of the
Harvest:
North
American Indian
Cooking" (1992,
Stewart, Tabori &amp;
Chang), authors Beverly
Cox and Martin Jacobs
·offer recipes that demonstrate how the foods of
yesteryear have a place on
today's table, From that
cookbook comes this
menu which would have
pleased Indian and Pilgrim
alike, as well as their 21stcentury descendants.
Pumpkin Soup
I small pumpkin, or one
29-ounce can solid-pack
pumpkin
I to 2 tablespoons
peanut or sunflower oil (if
using fresh pumpkin)
Salt and freshly ground
black pepper, to taste
I to 3 tablespoons maplt
syrup or ·honey ·
i. to '/, teaspoon allspice
3 to 4 cups chicken or
beef broth
Garnish:
Thinly sliced green
onion tops
Chopped hazelnuts
Roasted pumpkin . or
sunflower seeds
If using a fresh pumpkin: Preheat oven to 350 F.
Place pumpkin in baking
dish and bake unci! easily
pierced with a knife, about

I

'
ROVIDENCE,
R.I. (AP) . Thanksgiving
has had a long
evolution over
the c~nturies , and that
includes the . occasional
surprise. Popcorn, for
example.
· There were no torks on
ihat first Thanksgiving .
table in 1621. Instead, the
Pilgrims and Indians shared
&lt;;ups and spoons and Used
!&gt;hl~~nd' their fingers to
eat.
. There was no cranberry
sauce, and historiarls seri9u~l.y ·'.~oubt that turkey
. "" ~ on\t.,he menu.. • ..
'When the Pilgdrns l~nd- old • a~P"r.~tllL.IW~I&lt;.. in__ . _ . : ·
1620, they saw a barren
land!cape thar se~med
lnost inhospitable. They
s~ttled into American Indl"
atl villages that had become
ghost .·towns because of
smallpox, and they planted
Gl'!lps in the Indians' abandoned fields .
·

,..... -

Recipes for
'Gobble Day'

·~

Dear

fl."

Abby
.

ADVICE

',[].:•·
~

endometriosis and large fibroi!Jj. I
am recovering from a fuU hystJrectomy.
The reason I am writing is that I
miss my fami ly. I want so much to
hug my sons and make sure they are
all right. After what I have done, I
am not sure I have that right any
longer. I don't want to cause more
upheaval in their lives. I lpve them
very much, and I know w,hat I did
· was wrong. I probably don t deserve

their forgiveness.
Maybe I should stay out of their
lives for good, but my heart aches. I
am so confused and scared - but
mostly lonely. I really need your
advice. - LOST MOTHER IN
THE MIDWEST
·
DEAR LOST: What you did
was irrational, and whether it was
triggered by your depression or a
hormonal imbalance is anybody's
guess. Before trying,to contact your
· family, I urge you to schedule 'orne
sessions with a counselor to be ;ure
you're strong enough to face what
. may lie ahead. Once you're on
firmer emotional footing, the counselor- or a clergyperson - should
mediate and facilitate the family
rl;union. I wish you the best of luck.
DEAR ABBY: I must respond to
the letter from "Stamp Out Stereoryping," who asked why patrons of

.

th e parents' "ethni c" restaurant
assume that he /she has no command of the Engli'h language.
The situation described is not
unusual. It is an example of lack of
sophistication. As Fernando Lamas
said on the Johnny Carson show
many years ago: Do not make fun of
people who speak with an accent
- they kl1ow more languages than
YOU do.
'
The other side of the coin is the
Native American man (he called "
himself an Indian) I met in Santa Fe,
N.M., a while ago. He was a graduate student at Harvard, educated

were completely fooled, and my
friend laughed all the way to the
bank.
"'&gt;
So, you never know! - TOM
H., ASHLAND, ORE.
DEAR TOM: I can say without
reservation th at the young man had
a wicked sense of humor as weU as
an astute &lt;en'e of business.
THOUGHT FOR THE
DAY:
"Oh, the kind words we give shall
in memory live; .
"And sunshine forever impart;
"L&lt;;.! us oft speak kind words to
each other;
and articulate.
uKind words are sweet tones of
During Fiesta , the town's big eel- the heart."
ebration, he would dress himself in
-Joseph L. Townsend ·(submithis "Indian outfit," speak like Tonto . ted by Emilio Caballero)
from "The Lone Ranger,'' and seU
cheap trinkets to the tourists at
Dear Abby is rvritte11 by Pauline
exorbitant prices. The customers Pllillips and dm•.~ luer ]ea1111e Phillips .

�Celebrations

..Page.Q

Celebrations

•

Su...._,, Ncwalllller 11. 2001

Ariel

Weddings

Veterans ~be
for free hunting

fishing licenses

Jaime Moya and Rachel Uttle

Jennifer Taylor and Robert Easter

Wade-Maya engagement Taylor-Easter engagement
VINTON - Gerald and
GALLIPOLIS - Wade and Cuts.
The prospective bride- Margaret Taylor of Grove City
Billie Jo Little of Gallipolis
_jlre announcing the engage- · groom is working on a are announcing the engagement of their daughter, degree in Spanish education ment of their daughter, JenRachel Little to Jaime Moya, and computer programming nifer Ann Taylor, to Robert
Matthew Easter, so n of
son·ofPauline Moya of Okla- at Marshall Universiry.
The bride's grandparents Charles and Verna Easter of
homa, and the late Hernando
are
Lee and Berry Clark of Vinton.
Moya.
.
The bride-to-be is a graduThe bride-to-be graduated ·Gallipolis, and Catherine Litof Grove City High
ate
from River Valley High tle of Cheshire.
A Dec. 8, 2001, wedding School and is currently workSchool and Huntington
will take place at Trinity ing on a degree in education
School of Beaury Culture.
at the University of Rio
She is employed by Master- United Methodist Church.

Grande. She is presently
employed as claims manager
at Sutherland Lumber Co.,
Columbus.
The groom-to-be is a graduate of River Valley High'
. School, and attended the
Universiry ofRlo Grande. He
is currently employed . by the
state of Ohio at Gallipolis
Developmental Center.
The wedding will be Sept.
7, 2002, in Grove Ciry.

''Acrylic, Oil and Pastels," fill FAC galleries
GALLIPOLIS - On display in the French Art
-colony galleries for the
month of November is the
superb artwork of Peggy Jo
Keefer and Debra Richardson in "Acrylic, Oil and Pastels." The exhibit, sponsored
by Atkinson and Jarvis, CPA
and Gene Johnson Chevrolet
will run through November
21.

Peggy Jo Keefer, of Winfield, W.Va., says her art abiliry is a God-given talent she has had no formal art
. classes or training. Keefer
gave her talent serious attention in 1988 and at the time
was using mainly charcoal as
her medium.
. "Painting and other work
was put on hold to spend
time with my children. It
wasn't until 1996 that I
picked up ·a paint brush and
again started to experiment."

The exhibit, sponsored by Atkinson aud Jarvis,
CPA and Gene Jolmson Cltevrolet will run
tltrough Novembl!l' 21.
stated Keefer.
Keefer mainly paints from
photographs, although she
has drawn/painted portraits,
animals and landscapes. To
date, Keefer has entered five
art Fompetitions and has won
four first place dbbons .;md
two second place ribbons, as
well as a purchase award.
Debra Richardson of Ona,
W.Va., will complete the duo
for the exhibit. From a young
age, Richardson says she has
been fascinated with the
structure and form of everyday objects.
11
As an adult, I strive to
bring out the magic in my
subjects representing
them in unusual groupings
with eye catching color and

lighting. I always pay special
attention tQ details," Debra
said.
Although she experimented with many techniques and
materials throughout her
training, she . is most happy
creating work in acrylic on
paper.
For the last five years, she
has received instruction from
a wonderful elderly artist and
teacher. That instruction has
paid off. She has entered and
home
numerous
taken
awards, trophies and ribbons
from regional shows for her
still life work. Her continued
· attention to detail, mixed
.with colors and subject matter, seems to grab your attention.

'

Don't miss this wonderful
duo-exhibit running through
November 21. Gallery hours
are Tuesday through Friday,
10-3 p.m. and Sunday, 1-5
p.m. AI! FAC programming is
offered through support of
the~ Ohio Arts' Cduncil.
·•·
The French Art Colony is
located at 530 First Avenue,
Gallipolis.

COLUMBUS - Many
Ohio military veterans and
certain active members of
the military are eligible to
receive free hunting and
fishing licenses, free boat
registrations and special
recreational discounts at
Ohio State Parks facilities,
according to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources.
"Ohio owes a great debt
to her veterans," Uid Sam
Speck, ODNR director.
"Providing these benefits to
our veterans who enjoy the
outdoors is one way our
state can show its gratitude
for their service."
ODNR reminds all Ohio
veterans to check on their
eligibility for discounts
before purchasing a hunting or fishing license, a
boating permit, or before
taking a camping trip to an
Ohio State Park.
Here's a list of outdoor
recreational
privileges
available to Ohio veterans:

habitat stamps, while they
are on annual furlough.
Applications for free permits are available from
Division ofWildlife district
offices ·in . Columbus,
Akron, Athens, Findlay and ·
Xenia; or by calling 1-BOOWILDLIFE.
Boat registrations
• All disabled veterans and
former prisoners of war as well as all Congressional
Medal of Honor recipients
- are eligible to apply to
the ODNR Division of
Watercraft to register thei r
watercraft free of charge.
The ODNR Division of
Watercraft has details of the
program at {toll free) 18774BOATER.
.

Ohio
state
parks,
camping discounts
• All honorably discharged Ohio veterans who
have been determined by
the Department ofVeterans
Affairs to be permanently
and totally disabled and
Hunting/fishing
who re.ceive a VA pension
licenses
or compensation are enti•
·Veterans displaying tled to camp free of charge
license plates with the in Ohio State Parks campinternational wheelchair grounds.
symbol, as well as certain
Former prisoneq of war
other permanently disabled may also camp free in Ohio
veterans, may apply for free . State Parks.
hunting and fishing licensFor
information
on
es, fur-taker permits, deer ODNR's outdoor recrepermits, wild tll!'key per- ational benefits for veter·mits and wetlands habitat ans, call the Department of
stamps from the ODNR Veterans Affairs in .Ohio at
Division ofWildlife.
1-800-827-1000.
•
' Forpter prisoners
of war may also apply for
free hunting and fishing
licenses, fur-taker permits
an'4
wetlands
habitat
stamps.
•
Active members of
the United States Armed
"Forces are not required to
purchase licenses for huntSubscribe today.
446-2342 or 992-2156
ing or fishing, or wetlands
•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL~OLKS.

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

({ar~'s rwtlcy t~tt

~nnual ~ilmas ~rn ~~nsr

. ~~oldin-Fornash
.
.

ADDISON Melinda
Sue Gooldin, daughter·of Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Gqoldin, was
united in marriage to Billyjoe
Fornash, son of Lyndia and
the late William Albert Fornash, on Saturday July 14,
· 2001 at Addison Freewill
Baptist Church. Rev. Richard
· Barcus performed the double-ring ceremony.
The wedding party included sister of the bride, Deanna
(Gooldin). Weaver, matron of
. honor; sisters of the groom,
Tonya Fornash, and Nicole
-,(Fornash) Stirling, bridesmaids; brother of the groom
Bennie Fornash, best man;
. brides' brother-in-law, Jeremy
· Weaver, groomsman; ·and
. friend of the bride and
. , ' g~om John Barcus, groomsman.
The Flower girls were
friends of the bride and
, groom, Alyssa and Maddie
·: Snpth; the ring bearer was
: Bradley (Trey) Milush. Lana
~: Chapman, cousin of the bride
: • was the pianist; Leah Baker,
: . friend of the bride performed
:: "From This Moment'' by
· • Shania Twain; Katie Barcus
and Laura Neal, both friends
of the bride, were guest book
attendants. The bride's father
• walked the her down the
aisle.
The bride wore a silhouette
traditional bridal gown With
full-skirt and chapel-length
train. The dress is made of
-\vhite, imported slipper satin.
The dress had a sweetheart
neck line embellished with
roped pearls, along with the·
short, laced sleeves also
embellished with roped
pearls. The dress had a fitted
bodice, accented in pearls ~nd
lace, with a Basque waistline,
and hemline trimmed in battenburg lace. The train was
accented with a delicate bow
completed with a rosette
with cameos and battenburg
lace. The bride wore white
satin shoes.
The bride's veil had a
• pearl-trimmed
crown.
Embellished in sequins and
' 'simulated in pearls on lace,
the base of the crown was
trimmed with rope pearls, .a
nylon pouf and a two-tiered
• fingertip-length veil. The
bride wore her hair up in
curls.
The matron of honor and
bridesmaids wore navy blue
contemporary two-piece sil• houette dresses. The top of
' each dress had a sleeveless
tank-like effect. The bottom
of the dress was a straightlined tapered skirt, completed
.• with a wrap. The dress was
• · made with imported slipper

.

SUSAN CLARK, AL~G WITH HER PARENTS
EXTEND AHEART FELT MAllON TO TH8R FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS FOR
CLARK'S RNEST SALE OF THE CHRISTMAS SEASON; GMNG YOU THE OPPORTUNITY
TO VIEW OUR MANUFACTURERS COMPLETE

Mr. and Mrs. Blllyjoe Fomaah

%1m1EST
FIUIIUI

SJgoo
MONTH
5I

SUNDAY. NOV. 25TH
SATURDAY. NOV. 24TH
11:00 A.M.-5:00P.M.
9:30 A.M.:5:00 P.M.
DUE TO THE ~ll«l RESPafSE TO
WE ARE EXTENDING THIS SN..E FOO TWO BIG
DAYS TO ACCOIIIOO\TE AU !J OLR CUSTIJ.ERS. SO, Sial SAMDAY 00 SUNDAY AND SAVE 00 ATREUtNOOOS
S8.ECTIOO Of 14K OOlD Cl\lll ~A SElECOCtl If IJI.4m JEWB.RY tfVER BEFOOl: SEEN IN THIS AREA.
SHOP 1\!iERE 'fOOl ALWAYS ASSURED TlE BEST QU,6JJIY AT THE BEST POSSlBLE PRK:E. 100 MISS THIS ONCE
AYEARS.4J.E.

•

satin to compliment the
bridal gown. The girls wore
navy blue satin shoes. All
three girls wore their hair up
·
in curls.
The groom wore a black
notch tuxedo with a white
vest, white bow tie, and white
pocket silk. The best man and
groomsmen wore a black
notch tuxedo with a black
and navy vest, black and navy
bow tie, and black and navy
pocket silk.
The ring bearer wore a
black suit with a black bow
tie. 'The flower girls were
dressed in matching w bite
tea-length · dresses with a
wide, lace waistline that ties
in a bow in the back.
The church was decorated
in navy blue, white and ~old
flowers. At the front of the ·
church was two tree candelabras and the uniry candle, ·
which was hand-made for the
couple.
The reception was held at
the Henderson Communiry
Center in Henderson,
The hall was decorated in
navy blue and white ribboris
and balloons. The cake was
magnifimonogrammed
cence, made by Susan Brandeberry friend of the
bride. The cake was decorated
with a foul)tain and floral
arrangements in navy and
white to complete the wedding attire. Servers for the
reception
were
Mary
McCurdy, aunt of the bride;
and Shirley Harmon, Nina
Mahan, Teresa lrland and
Susan Brandeberry, friends of
the bride.
The couple honeymooned
in the W.Va. mountains. They
reside

w.v-.

"ar 11, 2001

SllndiiJ, Nor

to present evening of

GALLIPOLISThe
long-awaited "Grand Opening of Bluegrass" at the Ariel
Theatre in Gallipolis is close
at hand. At 8 p.m. on Sat.,
Nov. 24, 2001, "Retrograss"
and "Open Highway" will
fulfill what's been promised
for months - a concert so
truly "blue" it would
undoubtedly
win
the
approval of those' who played
the music first: Bill Monroe,
Earl Scrugg. .and Lester Flatt.
The seed&lt; of bluegrass
were chiseled into the
Appalachian mountams during the 18th century when
people of Scottish and Irish
origins performed their folk
melodies on mandolin and
fiddle. With the addition. of
the banjo after the Civil War,
the result came to be known
as "country" music. But, it
took Kentucky ·mandolin
player Monroe to make
mountain music bluegrass. In
the 1940s he stirred into it
measures of jazz and blues
played at breakneck speed,
and with Flatt on guitar and
Scruggs on banjo - that was

bluegraS5.
· The Ariel concert will
carry the bluegrass tradition
and strongly emphasize its
acoustic nature, 'which will
be brought out in mighty
proportion by the theater's
own bell-clear "voice."
But, there's still more. Joining the bands is a dogging
group newly invented by
well-known
clogging TO PERFORM - "Retrograss" will perform
the "Grand
teacherI choreographer/perOpening of Bluegrass," Nov. 24, at the Ariel Theatre.
former Paulette Harrison of
Pomeroy. Billed as the Ariel ym~," "The Clay Hess r----------,
Theatre Cloggers and decked Band" and "Buckeye Ridge''
Advance tickets for the ENGAGEMENT RINGS
out in spanking new red,
Nov.
24 co ncert are available
white and blue costumes,
these performers of this old- for $10 each atTawney'Jewtimey dance sryle will do as elers, Rebecca's and Oak Hill
much as "Retrograss" and Banks in Gallipolis and at
"Open· Hi.ghway" to make Main Street Photography in
the opening of bluegrass at Point Pleasant, W.Va .. Tickets.
the Ariel a promise kept.
at the door are $12. For more
When the evening "ends, · information call the A'riel at 'FilJm So/itaim to 'Bridal
however, the music will only 740-446 ARTS (2787).
Sets: 'For tfie largest selection
pause. Fans will have concerts
of todoy's best styles
on Dec. 29.Jan. 19, Feb. 16, jieii·iiiice~•iiii•lliiliiDiiiiiiNIIlill
value priced .
and March 16 to look forWell Child Clinic
ward to with "Retrograss"
Doeo your child need
Cfiecfi us out before you
and the "Ariel Theatre Clogo well child checkup?
duide .
gers" at every one - joined Coll446-8538 or 441·21156 and
.
.
make on appointment
m respective order by "Idiotfor
next clinic.

au

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar Is
publlahed aa a free aervlce
to non-profit groupa wlah·
lng to announce meetings
and apaclal eventa. The
calendar Ia not deelgned to
pro mota ..111 or fund-ralaera of any type. llama are
printed only •• epace permila and cannot be guaran·
teed to be printed a specifIc number of daya.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of Education, regular meellng, 7
p.m. Monday, high school
media center.

411 Jackaan Pike, Suite D

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Order ol Eastern Star 186,
regular meeting Monday,
7:30 p_.m., Chester Masonic
Building. 25-year pins to be
awarded. Refreshments follow. Officers to wear chapter
dresses. .

SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The
Long
Bottom
United
Melhodlst Church will be
holding a hymn sing on Sunday at 7 p.m. Those attendIng are asked to bring a can
Qf food for the Cooperative
Parish's food bank.

Scissor's
Is pleased to welcome

Libby Holcomb
Nail 'leclmldan, to the staff.
Former owner or Polished
Perf(ldlons, Ubby Is now

TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
District, special meeting,
Monday, 5:30 p.m., to discuss possible litigation .

acceptlfll appointments for
her regular, as well as new,
customers. Please call for an
appointment at 441·1880.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. Monday, township building.

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 Thanksglving dinner lor all post membersandspouses.Sunday,t r-------------------~~~~~;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Fall
sports banquet, Saturday, 2
p.m. Eastern High School.
Each family bring vegetable,
dessert. Athletic Booslers to
provide meat, drinks. table
service.
·

1

POMEROY
Meigs
County Humane Society, 2
p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy Public Library. Public welcome .
MIDDLEPORT- Community Thanksgivirg Worship
sponsored by Middleporl
Ministerial
Association,
Heath United Methodist
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m. Teresa Davis to speak.
· MONDAY
POMEROY
Meigs
County Agricultural Society,
Monday, 7:30 p.m: in the
Coon Hunters Building on
lhe . Rock Springs Fairgrounds. Ele'ction of officers
will be held.

~ •''

rW

..
t n .

A _,. .Aunt eiara'a eonectlon
of Fine A.miah Thinja

"ehristmaa in the eountry"

0penHouse
Saturdll$, November 24th
0:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Aunt Clara has tkcked the hail. fi/Jed the
sleigh, trimmed the trees and now would like
to invite you to our 6th Annual Christmas
in the Country Opm House. Once again,
our fine Amish fUrniture builders from
Holmes and llilyne County, Ohio will be on .
hand to speak with our customers.
Take a few minutes . on Saturday,
November 24th from 9:00am til 5:00pm to
celebrate the beginning of the Christmas
Season. Enjoy some hot spiced cider and a
sweet Amish treat and have a day filled with
friends and fellowship at Aunt Clara's
Collection on State Route 141, Gallipolis,
Ohio.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Aunt elara'&amp; eollection
of Fine Amish Thinja

Subscribe today.

4 miles west of Gallipolis on State Route 141
740-446-0205

446-2342 or 992-2156

' .

wedding

PageC3

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'

'

�Celebrations~

PageC4
Sunday. Nonniber 11,2101-

Weddings

Patterson-Lewis wedding
_j

Palmer-Robie wedding

CHESHIRE
Amy maid of honor; and Lora and
Dawn Palmer and Raymond Michelle Palmer - bridesKeith Robie were united in maids; Alyssa Deemer marriage on October 20, flower girl; and Dayton
2001, at the Cheshire Baptist Hardway - ring bearer.
Church : Rev. Jerry Hager,
Best man was Mike Setliff.
uncl e of the bride, perGroomsmen were Shawn
formed the ceremony.
Cox and Keith Darst. Ushers
The bride is the daughter
ofDaony and Shirley Palmer were Christopher Palmer,
of Cheshire. The groom is cousin of the bride; and
the son of David and Anita Dustin Beaver, step-brother
Beaver of Gallipolis. She was to the groom.
A reception followed the
given away by her father.
Attendants were sisters of ceremony at the church. The
the bride, Christi Palmer - couple resides in Cheshire.

MIDDLEPORT - Alyson
Nicole Patterson and Timothy
Scott Lewis were united in
marriage July 21, 2001, at Middleport Church of Christ. Pastor AI Hartson performed the
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Jeffrey and Teresa Patterson of
Pomeroy. The groom is the son
of Grace and the late Daniel
Lewis of Langwille.
The mother of the brideserved as matron of honor and
bridesmaids-were Courtni Van
Meter and Shannon Thomas, ·
cousins of the bride, Chrissy
Patterson, her sister-in-law Jennifer Lambert and Stefani Pickens.
The position of best man was
left open in memory of the

No need to sacrifice style in 'winter' boots
NEW YORK (AP) Some boots are made for
walking. Others keep you
looking good - and your
toes warm - while you strut
to the car.
There is a boot out there
for every possible purpose this
season, and style and practicality are no longer mutually
exclusive.
"Boots are now the culmination of science and style,"
says Gennie Stuart, director of
product management for
Rockport. The trend for this ,.
fall and probably next is dress
boots, Stuart says, but they can
still be warm, thanks to shearling lining, and water-resistant .
because the leather is seam.Jealed.
Of course, many wearers are
attracted to boots, especially
ones with tall shafts, because

I
I

I

they can rna~ legs appear .
longer.
That sparks a chain reaction. The wearer is looking
good and feeling good, and
that boosts her _confidence,
observes Anneh Shearer,
spokeswoman for Cole-Haan,
and confidence can translate
into sexiness.
She adds: "There's also
something sexy . about the
knee. ... Wearing patterned
stockings or bare leg draws
attention to that little bit of
leg showing and that's seXy."
Top women's styles at Cole
Haan are a short-shaft, highheeled bootie, an "urban cowboyish" mid-calf boot, and
simple, riding-style boots
with tall shafts and narrow
(but not stiletto) high heels.
"Fashion" boots can be
adapted for winter-weather by

adding durable rubber outsoles that offer good traction
and · drainage, says Stuart.
Technological advances crealed water-resistant leather and
nubuck, and waterproof bqt
breathable Gore-Tex linings.
"Keeping your feet dry is
very important but keeping
them breathing is even inore
important," she ·explains,
because trapped sweat will
make feet cold.
·
Men are embracing the
stylish-yet-practical
boot
trend, too. They are being
offered a variety of styles, just
like women , so it's no longer
lumbeljack or nothing.
Also, it's acceptable in inany
offices for men to pair suits
with short dress boots, especially now that the boot styles
emulate popular shoe styles,
Shearer-says.

STYLE BRIEFS .
Add sparkle to
your w~rdrobe

The
Ovarian · Cancer
Research Fund for every T. shirt sold.
The shirts' designs were
.N EW . YORK (AP) Who better to put ·a little created by illustrator Chelsey
sparkle into your wardrobe McLaren and include "efferthan a champagne maker?
Champagne Taittinger is
introducing Bubbly Tees for
the holiday season adorned
'with Swarovsk i crystals. The
feel-good bonus is that a
· donation will be made to

vescent" sayings, including
"pop, pop, pop" and "bubble,
bubble, bubble."
Of course, the colors are
champagne-inspired: a golden yellow and a light pink.

PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.
, Subscribe today.

department at Rio Grande,
said the recitals feature students who have been studying music for years, as weU as •
students who are less experi- '
enced musicians.
·

HTo me, it's very exciting :·
for me to see all of the dif- .
ferent talents," Murdock said.
"It's such a wide range." The
Rio 'Grande students are
excellent musicians and will •
present a fine show for their :
professors and for area resi- :
dents in the audience.
For information on th ~
music department recitals:
call the music department at :
Rio Grande at 1-800-282- :

7201.

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Ingels Furniture
Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2635

tt__.,r..... ,.,._. . .
==-.......................
..................-.........
.-1111;.............................
..................
____......
...._,...._
...................... . . ....

446-2342

.l'liol .....

or
992-2156

Mr. and Mrs. John Trottar

J

i;,_. .. .._. . . ,... . . .. . _ .. IJW........U

Yoll _ _ ..._
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""_
._
_ __
,......_
. ._
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..............____...............,.....,'IIIIIIQ
_
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___
__

OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, November 25, 2001
·12 Noon ;. 5 PM
Parade at 2 PM
Santa will be in the mini park
immediately after the parade

The Pomeroy
Merchant's Association
•
•
Invites you,to celebrate

News shorts

Trotter 60th_anniversary
. GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Jol'!' Trotter cekbrated
their 60th wedding an niversary on Nov. 13.
The couple has two children, Ted and Julia. Ted lives
with his wife, Brenda,. in
Rock Hill, S.C., and Julia
lives in San Clemente, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Trotter have
three grandchildren, Bundy,

Melanie and Chris. They
have one great-grandchild,
Cody.
.·
Mr. and Mrs. Trotter taught
in Gallipolis City Schools for
many years. John taught
junior high English and Effie
taught third grade.
Mr. and Mrs. Trotter now ·
reside at Holzer Senior Care
Center.

GALLIPOLIS Let's
face it, safe turkey preparation takes time. And, time is
something many of us are
short on these days. The
Becky
good news is that there are
a number of shortcuts you
Collins
can take in preparing your
holiday turkey that don't
ADVICE
risk an outbreak of foodborne illness - one guest
you don't want at your hol- mote bacterial growth. And
remember, OSU recomiday table.
When shopping, decide mends that you bake your
what kind of turkey you stuffing separate from the
want before you go to the turkey. However, if you're a
store. If selecting a frozen stuffed-bird diehard, the
bird, keep it frozen at 0 F stuffing should be placed in
until ready to thaw for use. the turkey just prior to .
If selecting a fresh bird, ceo king.
Thawing a large turkey
make su~e you have room in
can
seem to take forever. To
· your refrigerator to store it.
If not, make arrangep1ents speed this process, thaw in a
to pick it up just before microwave oven (follow
owner's manual) or in cool
cooking. ·
Some supermarkets also (not hot) water in the sink
offer fully cooked birds . (change water every 30
Select this route only if you minutes) . Once thawed,
know the turkey will be cook or refrigerate immediprepared properly at the . ately.
One thawing shortcut not
supermarket and you can
to
take is thawing the bird
serve it · immediately upon
counter.
delivery. If your crowd is on the kitchen
This
method
promotes
the
small, consider purcha~ing
growth
of
bacteria
on
the
just part of a bird. Turkey
legs, breasts, and thighs, as surface of the bird as the
well ready-to-grill turkey inside of the turkey thaws.
Ways to save time during
fillets, are all sold separately.
One shortcut not to take the actual cooking process
is · to buy a prestuffed raw include cooking the bird in
part or in total in a
bird. When a turkey is
microwave oven, cooking
stuffed, incubatorlike conthe bird and stuffing sepa~
ditions develop in the cavirarely (saves up to an hour
ty of the turkey which pro-

GARDENER'S GUIDE

,Dig·holes for trees and shrnbs now
· (AP) -What a great time
thrive best in soils th'!ot are
M11ke your planting
of year to be outdoors! Cool
hole jrut deep enough very acidic and high in
weather is enjoyable as long
humus. At another extreme
so that the ground line are cacti, requiring slightly
as you can warm up by moving around . A good way to on the plant will· be the alkaline soils that are sandy
fan that internal fire is to dig
and low in humus.
same as it was when
holes.
Some trees and shrubs
the plaut was in the
Dig holes in which to
transplant better in the
uursery or its pot.
p!ant trees and shrubs now.
spring, but even in such cases
This time of year the soil is
it pays to dig planting holes
wually crumbly and moist. and let rain lea.:h it down to now. Take the soil out of the
Plants set in the ground now the feeder roots.
hole, put it back in, then put
will be in place and ready to
Lime or phosphorous fer- on a cover of hay or leaves to
grow next year when warm tilizers move very slowly protect the surface and mark
b]'eezes melt away winter.
down through the soil, so if the site. Come spring, pull
: No need to break yo'11r your soil needs either of back the covering and you
back digging holes. Ignore ihese materials, mix them wiU be able to pop a plant
the old gardening maxim into the planting hole. Far- into its prepared hole in less
that it's better to plant a $5 ther out,.. just spread these than five minutes.
tree in a $50 hole than vice materials on top of the soil.
versa. Make your planting By the tim e roots reach· out
hole just deep enough so that far, the lime or phostliat the ground line on the phorous will have worked its
plant will be the same as it . way down.
_/Was wl!en the plant was in .
One situatiort that does
call for digging a $50 hole, as
the nursery or its pot.
And no need to concoct well as mixing in special
fancy additives to mix with additives, is when you're
the soil in the planting hole. planting ·a tree or a shrub
Subscribe today.
Fluff up the soil -,vith peat that needs a special soil.
446-2342
moss, compost, or perlite, Rhododendron, blueberry,
or
ai1d the roots will have little and azalea, for example,
992-2156
incentive to leave the hole:
Eventually they will wrap
around, perhaps strangle,
each other.
. Also avoid putting fertilizer into any planting hole.
Most feeder roots are in the
Sunday, November 25 through
top layer of soil. so sprinkle
·Wednesday, November 28 with
fertilizer on the so il surface

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

Revival Meetings

Dr. Billy Martin

When you're looking for long-term rare, you can
count on the team of healthcare professionals at
Rocksprings Repabilitali&lt;ll'! Center to create an
atmosphere of caring and -compassion.
We're committed to helping our residents
enjoy life to the fuUest.

Make the right choi'ce.
Call today for 11 perso.nal tour.
740-992~

36759 Roclo!prlnf!S lid.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Ef""' Opr:lorltortilf Prul&gt;ide1 ofStrPir.n

"Christmas Along The .River"
You '11 find old fashioned hospitality,
friendly sales people, affordable
•
prices, and a great selection
of gift items!

~

Gellia Counhj lletlth Ileportmeal ;.
:: ~
- 'il!&lt;l&gt;
Pmol41 Clwc :
'f

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sdttJctS /co mmunjty

develop~

ment, Ohio Stale Univmity.)

FIVE PIECE
DINETTE SET
With

Pedestal Table

~PING JIU~ATAt ,;.

,

CAll TO OHIO
lltiDENTHAll
.uHS)I fOI '-H

...

1

,1.HOINT~NT.

·"

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.

(Becky Collins is Ga llia
County's Extension agent for
family · and
consumer

.

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AWAVAlABll

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T.U.,...ot!)OWII!Iud...,ual.om~ld '
0 t t I 1 I " 0 I I t I 0 1 I I I I I l f t •1 I I 0

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Wyngate of Gallipolis
A Licensed.Assisted Living Community
.
About Wyngate of Gallipolis: .
Wyngate of Gallipolis strives to serve residents by providing the highest quality services in
comfortable surroundings. We offer s~rvices that enable seniors to mainlain dignity, respect ,
independence, and privacy. We foster good relations with family, friends , and the community.
Most of all, we strive to provide quality healthcare while bringing joy and happiness into the
lives of our seniors .

Most Commonly Asked Questions About Our Assisted Living Community:
1. Do you have to be able to take care or yourself to live at Wyngate?
.
A. No. Many residents at Wyngate live completely independent while others receive complete
care. When you move to Wyngate, we complete an individualized care plan to ensure your needs
.are met and that you are only paying for services you need. Wyngate ha.s nurses on staff 24hours per day and we provide 24-hour emergency monitoring. We can provide assistance or
complete care with bathing, dressing, and grooming needs, as well as toileting and incontinence
care. We can also provide care for residents with memory impairments such a~ dementia . Our
staff can supervise and administer medications as well as special diets. Physical, Occupational,
or Speech Therapy and Hospice serVices can also be arranged as needed.
.,.

A. Yes. At Wyngate, there are no long-term lease/ rental agreements. Rent is paid on a daily or
monthly basis. Most residents have made Wyngate their permanent home, while others have
. chosen to stay for only a few days, 'weeks, and even months. Many come to Wyngate to
complete their recovery after a hospital stay or rehabilitation. They stay with us while they
complete therapy or until they are well enough to go home.
• All size extra long
for added comlort

soothe
your body.

4. Can you bring a pet to Wyngate?
A. Yes. You are welcome to keep your pet within your new apanment home.

Faith Baptist Church
3615 Jackson Pike
H~lfway

FlAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
Rt. 2, Galli !lolls Fury, \\iV

..'

""' ' .............. ' ............ ""'

turkey meat from the bone,
and promptly refrigerate
both, discarding the turkey
carcass. Be sure to store
everything in small containers so it will get back down
to a safe temperature quickly.
Leftover· turkey will keep
in the refrigerator for three
or four days (that means it
should be eaten or discarded by the Sunday or Monday after Thanksgiving) or
in .. the freezer for three to
four months. Refrigerated
stuffing and gravy as well as
leftover noodles and cooked ·
veggies should be used
within one or two days.

3. Does Wyngate provide short term or respite stays?

"I RAND NAME FUANilUAE AT DISOOUNl' PRI(:ES"I

•'

cooking time), and cooking
in an oven cooking bag or
covered roaster (reduces
cooking time by a half
hour).
CAUTION: Don't partially cook on one day and
try to finish loter, and don't
cook at a temperature less
than 300 degrees F. Both
methods are potentially
unsafe.
Serving a large turkey
dinner
requtres
forethought. Plan ahead and put
food out just before you're
ready to eat. If the serving
time is long, plan to use hot
trays or chafing dishes to
keep hot foods hot.
After dinner, play it safe
,by refrigerating everything
just after you complete the
meal. And if you served a
stuffed bird, remove the
stuffing immediately never store the stuffing in
the bird. Remove the

2. Are vehicles permllted?
·A. Yes. We encourage residents to bring their vehicles. We want our residents to maintain their
independence as long as possible.
·

•

Main difference
(AP) - The main differ' ence between stars and planets is that stars make their
own light and pbnets don't.
Planets are too small to begin
!usion in rheir cores . The
smallest size a star could be
and still shine is about 8 percent of our sun ~s mass (or, '
about 80 times more mass ive
than Jupiter, the largest of om
planets). O n the other hand , if
a star get..; roO big, 1t \·~· o uld
probably be blown apart by
the force of its own energy.
The largest known !~1rs are
100 tim es as massive as the
sun.

groom's late father. Gro&lt;imsmen were Danny Lewis and
Matt Lewis, brothers of the
groom; Aric Patterson, brother
of the bride, and Robert lewis,
uode of the groom.
The flower girl was Suzy
Cox and the ring bearer was
Colton Wade, both cousins of
the bride. Serving as ushers
were Adam Barrett, and Kristopher Van Meter, cousin of the
bride.
Pianist was Kathy Johnson
and soloist was Jessica Johnson.
Guests were registered by
Becky Smith. A reception was
held at the Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life Center.
The couple resides m
Pomeroy.

RIO GRANDE - Students at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College will
present a variety of special
musical performances over
the next few weeks.
Music department student
recitals are planned for Tuesday, Nov. 27 and Tuesday,
Dec. 4, in the John W Berry
Fine and Performing Arts
' Center at Rio Grande. Both
recitals begin at 7 p.m. and
will feature students singing
solos, and pt.ying solos on
different instruments.
All of the students in
music classes at Rio Grande
are ,:equired to perform. at
recitals as part of their courses, and area residents are
invited to attend the pefformances.
Dr. Mervin Murdock,
music professor and the
coordinator of the music

Turkey preparation shortcuts

Music dtpartmetlt
student recitals 11re
pl11nned for Tuesday,
Nov. 27 and liu~sday,
Dec. 4.

·

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Roble

SUnciiiJ. November 11. 200 I

Music students present
recitals at Rio Grande

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Lewis

Page cs

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6;s.t~7 I

between Holzer Hospital
and Bob Evans Farm
Sunday Services: I 0:45 am, 6:00 pm
Monday - Wednesday 7:00pm
Questions? Call 740-446-2607

5. Do'you have to be mobile or able to walk to live at Wyngate?
A. No. Many residenls at Wyngate use a wheelchair to get around. Our prpfessi9nal nursing staff
is readily .available to help residents in wheelchairs with transferring within their apanment as
well as other areas throughout the community. Motorized wheelchairs and scooters are also
pel'milted.
·

Fore more information, call Wyngate at.740-441·9633 aud
request a free information packet.
Feel free to stop by Wyngate any time for a·personal tour of our community.
.
"'Jngate is located at 300 Briarwood Drive, Gallipoli.1.

�Gallipolis, Ohio

SUI1CMy, November 18, 2001

;~ . ~~~~~~~7~~Y~·~N~o~ve~m~~~~,=~~2:00:1~--------------------------~G~a~ll!lpo~li•~·~O~h~lo~----------------------~~~~~~U~~!~·..,~,n~-~~~ad~mu~:·~Pa~ge~C~7

ReCent columns have drawn numerous compliments

Rio Grande's 1946 football season shone brightest in program's last years
through and won the g2.111e, 28-6.
excellent 1945 team.
RIO GRANDE - Fron1 1921
The
longest run of the day was
Nearly
I,
700
fans
turned
out
for
to 1949, Rio Grande College had
the season opener at Gallipolis, made by BiU Smith. ·
only three winning seasons tn footSmith, a Gallia Academy graduate
making it one of the Iargen crowc:b
lnlL
ever to watch a Rio 'football game. in the late 1930s, went on to Iowa,
The Redmen were 5-2 in 1931
Wilberforce won easily as they where as a &amp;e,hman on the scout
under Coach Spooner; 5-1 in 19.33
used three different units, all of team he played the role of the
· under Paul Lyne; and 5-2 in 1946
which were about equal in famous Nile IGnniclc, after whom
under Lou Sakal. They did finish at
·srrength. Fans must have gone Iowa Stadium is named.
.500 in 1921,1924 and 1925.
GUEST
COLUMNIST
Smith was injured .the next year
home so early in this game that the
From 1937 until 1943, Rio
person holding the lucky ticket for when he was slated to be the
Grande went 34 games without a
the game ball was not around at the Hawkeyes' starting fullback. He left
win. When they beat Muskingum Rio, 104-0.
Iowa to enter the service. IGnnick
Rio Grande did win two games end to claim his prize.
€allege in 1943, the Redmen
Game number 2 in 1946 was was killed during World War II.
broke the longest non-winning in 1943 and two in 1945. The colagainst
Ohio Ndrthern: Of the Smith's career at Rio Grande was
streak in college football history. lege did not field a football team in
From 1938 to 1942, Rio Grande 1944. So prospects were not great game, played in Ada, the Gallipolis unfortunately a short one.
In game 4, a long pass from
as the football program headed into Tribune wrote that the Redmen
scored a total of 58 points.
It took them .32 games to get the late 1940s. However, one thing outplayed Northern but still lost, Owen Bradford to Russ Evans and
those 58 points. Meanwhile, oppo- going for Rio was the fact that 13-7. Rio Grande had one drive a Vince Isenberg placement gave
nents scored 905 points over those many "seasoned" high school, col- stall at the Polar Bear one-yard line. Rio the 7-6 win over Marietta. It
The third game was against Rose was only the second time in histosame 32 games. When Rio Grande lege and D]ilitary players were
scored a tou chdown in 1941 coming back from the war. Herb Poly and it was homecoming. The rY that the Redmen had eyer beatagainst West. Virginia State, the Jones of Logan played his last high day opened' with a women's volley- en Marietta in football.
The fifth ganie was played in
news made all the papers. The team school game in 1938, and Bill ball game. A basket lunch was held
H
~rdgtow
of
Gallipolis
was
a
star
in
at noon. The queen in 1946 was Jackson against Lockbourne Air
had gone three years without scor1935.
Nancy Downs, and her attendants Base. Rio Grande won easily, 30-0.
ing a single· point. By the way, Rio
The
1946
Rio
schedule
opened
were Peggy Stricker and Maxine Some 1,400 fanl saw the game,
Grande lost that West Virginia State
up
with
a
big
Wilberforce
team.
Rehme.
After the game there was. a which starred co-captain John
game, 47-6.
But that was a good game com- Wilberforce, under the legendary tea, an open house and of course, Donahue ofPhiladelphia,.Pa.lt was
Rio's most lopsided win since
pared to what happened two weeks coach, "Country" Lewis, returned a the big dance.
number
of
lettermen
from
an
The football team even came 1928, when they beat Cedarville
later when Morehead "outscored"

James
Sands

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play dealt with the American dream.
Dr. Davies
selected these plays ·and
dramatists
to
·analyze
Eugene O'Neill's play entitled "Long Day's Journey
into Night," "The Glass
Menagerie by Tennessee
Williams, Arthur Miller's
classic play called "Death of
a Salesman," uThe American
Dream by Edward Albee,
and "Buried Child" by Sam
Shepard.
· Due to a need ' for an
unexpectedly early return
to Wales,' Dr. Davies will
teach the final weeks of the
course via email to enrolled
students.

FAC news

. "It is disappointing," said
Kara Lewis, director of the
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies. "She also worked
with Dr. Greg Miller, Rio
Grande professor of fine
arts, to organize the perfor-

mance· of the

play

aames Sands is a special correspondent for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
He can be contacted by writing to 346
Meadow Lane, Circleville, Ohio
43113.)

month."

~.

:!
1"t

.

Gallipolis Santa

raffled off a doll house Tudor at the close of the October exhibit, 'It's A Small World: Vol, VIII." Pictured is Hazel Druggan
accepting the dollhouse on behalf of the winner, her great·
granddaughter, Morgan Kandel of Massilon. Proceeds from the .
doll house raffle benefit the FAC and the mini·crafters.

the parent corporation of
Holzer Medical Center,
:Holzer Medical Center-Jack: son, Holzer Foundation for
Tri-State Health Care, Holz;1er Senior Care Center, Holz~ . er Vanguard, Inc., Veteran•
~! Memorial Hospital, and Oak
; : Hill Community Medical
~ :Center has announced
~i organizational changes within the system, according to
:, LaMar Wyse, Vice President
~!of Operations for HCHS.
Diana D. fisher has been
,!}named president ~nd chief
~xec\Jtive offi~er of Holzer
~Medical Center - Jackson.
~j!Fisher has been the adminis~tt.itor and chief operating
• ·officer of the facility since
August 2000. _
,
·
A native of Meigs County,
Fisher graduated from the
Ohio State University with a
~ B:s. in mi~robiology in 1971,
followed by earning a B.S. in
:; biology in 1973 from Marietta College. She went on to
~ the University of Dayton,
~ and Miami University in
! Oxford, to pursue graduate
:1 studies in microbiology.
~ After graduating from
~ OSU and before starting her
~ graduate studies, she was on
:i the laboratory staff at Holzer
~ Medical Center in Gallipolis
! as a microbiologist. In 1983,
~ she decided upon a career
.• change, and attended Xavier

r
$

Here come, I, David A. Reed, chosen and anointed, by Jesus
Christ, to guide you into all truth.
Believing :to have become the following characters: Elijah the
prophet, before the great and qreadful day of our Lord.
The prophet Moses spoke of, like unto Himself, a prophet will
our God raise up, and whosoever will not hear the words of
that prophet, shall be destroyed among the pe~ple.
The punished son, with feeble knees, and a lame condition.
The Prince of ·Peace, who must be judged, along with all
believers, to deteimine where we must spend eternity.
_ Our faith should produce good works. Jesus said, as we do:
good unto others, we have done good unto him.
Jesus said, if we love him, keep his commandm~nts, which
can be found mainly in the New Testament portion of the King
James Version of God's Word.
An adult person . can become a Christian anywhere and
anytime by praying, kneeling if possible, to God, confessing:
your sins, asking forgiveness of your sins, then accepting Jesus
Christ as Lord and Saviour! Then stating Amen!
Then God desires us, if possible, to be baptized by a minister,having our bodies placed under water, in the name of the
Father, Son, and H~ly Ghost!
Believing is an opinion, knowing is a fact. I believe in Jesus:
Christ, and blessed to know there is a God.
Let us meet in Heaven is my prayer and desire. If there is any . ·
praise for this writing may it all go to a place called Calvary.
In Jesus Name, Amen!
'

,,

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NOW $54

0

BELOW - Tlie Rlverby Mlni·Crafters of The French Art Colony

Holzer

=!

5th in the $trin.

Here Come I

ABOVE - Randy Hays of Farmers Bank presents a monetary
.donation to Mary Bea McCalla of the French Ar.t Colony. Farmers Bank is the co-sponsor of the FAC's ·A Holiday Tour," to be
held Friday, November 30, from 6:30-9:30 p.m . and Saturday,
December 1, from 1·4 p.m. This year's tour will feature five
area homes, three local businesses and a "Silent Tree/Wreath
A~ctlon." Call the FAC for ticket information, 446-3834. All FAC
programming Is offered througtt support of the Ohio Arts Coun-

GALLIPOLIS -

• ,

$ Hollda.y Greenery

Reg. $65

GUEST COLUMNIST

my brothen, sisters and mother also
went to church.! sure will alw.lys go to
church the rest of my life, because it
does something to you and it makes
you feel better.
I have attended many churches in
foreign countries on all my world travels, and what an education that was.
Most of the churches were Catholic
and some I did not know because I
could not understand their language.
But it was educational.
I have decided what to do for the
people who write to me saying they

i

;f,. University

in

Cincinnati,

where she earned her
M .H.A. in hospital and
health administration m
1985.
Before coming to Holzer
Medical
Center-Jackson,
Fisher served as an independent consultant, and was
interim executive director of
a multi-specialty physician
group at Berger Hospital in
CircleviUe.
Rhonda L. Dailey, RN,
BSN, has been named the
director of nursing for Holzer Medical Center -Jackson.
Dailey is the administrator
and director of nursing for
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy.
Aiso a native of Meigs
County, Dailey graduated
from the Ohio State University in 1974 with a bachelor
of science degree in nursing.
She has been an employee
at Veterans since 1974, beginning as a staff nurse and
holding such positions as
charge nurse, emergency
roo·m supervisor, recovery
nurse in anesthesia, director
of nursing, and vice president
of nursing. Additionally, she
has served the orga.nization as
corporate compliance officer,
rural health clinic manager,
physician recruiter, and midleyel practitioner
recruiter.
.l
.
Dailey will assume her
new responsibilities at Holzer
Medical Center -Jackson on
December 1, 2001.
Additional organizational

there might be a few mistakes in it. We
are by no means professional on writing a book, but we did our best. I hope
you will like it.
P.S. - I will be 88 in January. My
friend and traveling companion Jack
Hanna will be here Jan. 17 to put on a
show with his animals. I have been on
several world trips with Jack and have
seen many countries.
Jack has animal shows on TV often,
and he will be escorting a trip to
Antarctica Feb. .3-14. He asked me if I
wanted to go with him and I said, "Nn
thanks:' I do not like the cold weather
and I didn't want to freeze.
But Jack will have a wonderful trip.
He always does. I am very fortunate to
be a friend ofJack Hanna. He is a 'wonderful person.

are

Holzer Consolidated Health Systems
,:announces organizational changes
r!Consolidated Health S""tems

$Pillows

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
.,..,j!Bedsl

I love to attend different churches. I
·have been to · seven different county
churches and I really enjoy hearing the
sermons and meeting those nice people. Several times I have attended the
Catholic Church from S-9 a.m., then I
go to the Baptist at 10-11 a.m., and the
Methoclist from II a.m. until noon.
In other words, I enjoy attending
church and always will. My dad was a
very religious man and he saw that all

Tawney

:;.~

Throws $ Frnmes
Caodl~ $ BraS!;
Wreaths $ Omrunent.s

For more information
about the Welsh Center, call
Lewis at 1-800-282-7201,
ext. 7186.

day.

Max

enjoy my articles in the paper. I wiU decided I wanted to learn about differsend you a nice foreign coin or you ent countries in the world and get an
can come in my store and pick out education fiom traveling all over the
which coin you like. I sure have many world, biking to fureign people, and
foreign coins. Please stop in my store at see how they live and work, etC.
422 Second Ave.
What an education that was for me.
I get many letters and more people I think if I would have gone to college,
from Meigs County come in and look I would have received bad grades and
at my large photos from foreign coun- my dad would have said, "Max, put on
tries hanging on the walls, because they your work clothes. I think you can
do not know me. Many people from make good grades working in the
Gallia Coimty come in because they ,fields, milking the cows, ho&lt;!ing corn,
come in one by one and know me. But feeding the horses and cows, and
they come in groups from Meigs chopping wood for the fireplace, and
County and I try to make it interesting help your mother cook, etc. I am pretand educational as much as I can.
ty sure you will make good grades at
You
welcome just about any that."
time. !like to go to schools and show
I have had people ask me when my
my photos and talk about foreign book will be on the market. My
countries to the children.
granddaughter Tandy and I have been
I did not go to college when I grad- working on it for the past five months
uated from high school. Very few did and I ant trying to have it ready in Janbecause that was back in 1933 when a uary.
dollar was a dollar and my dad had very
What a job. My granddaughter and I
few dollars. So when I was older, I have worked many, many hours and

'.

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this

.

~.

Rio continued its winning ways
in 1946 with wins over Hiram and
the Ohio U. "B" teany They beat
Hiram 20-6 behind Rocky
DiBari's two touchdowns. They
then polished off OU i2-6. That
game was also played at Jackson
with a good crowd in attendance.
Rio Grande football teams from
1947 to 1949 (the last year for a
team) won eight games and lost 20.
But the embarrassing 69-0 loss to
Heidelberg in 1948 and the 78-14
drubbing at the hanc:b of the Student Princes the next year caused
there to be serious ·doubt among
the Rio faculty as to how competitive such a small school as Rio
could be in football . Hence football
W.s suspended before the 1950 season.

VISIT TOPES
GIFT GALLERY
Unit.Jue gifts for

:_jWelsh scholar visits University of Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE-Welsh
scholar Dr. Hazel Davies
visited the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College to
contribute her theatrical
expertise to producing "A
Child's Christmas in Wales,"
written by Welsh writer
Dylan Thomas.
It will be performed Nov.
30, at 8 p.m. in the Berry
fine and Performing Arts
Center as part of the Valley
Artist Series.
A special course offering
entitled "Wales, America
'and the Dream" attracted
Rio Grande students to
study and analyze how each

71-0.

GALLIPOLIS - I have received
many leaers about my articles that I
• · have written in the paper and thank
' ' goodness they have all been compli. _ menr.. I was afraid I would surely have
· · someone write and criticize me.
But thank goodness, I have not
'" received one yet. I received many letters from Meigs County. Also, I just
received a nice letter from Rick Barcus, who is the pastor at Addison
Freewill Baptist Church. I sure am
going to attend his church some Sun-

changes throughout the systern include Bob Bowers,
Marianne Campbell and jeff
Barnes.
Bowers, part-time administrator of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Long Term Care
Unit, will expand his assignment to a full-time status. ln.'
addition to his role at Veterans, he has served as administrator of Oak Hill Community Medical Center, which
is scheduled to close by
December 31,2001.
Marianne Campbell, executive vice president of TriState Foundation, will give
full attention to fund-raising
through Holzer Consolidated Health Systems and TriState Healthcare. Campbell,
who has also carried the role
as Holzer Medical Center's
director of communiry telations, has se~ved as the executive vice president of TriState Foundation since its
inception 25 years ago.
Jeff Barnes, vice president
of marketing and business
development, how assumes a
new title as vice president of
marketing and public affairs.
Departments now included
under Barnes' responsibility
include the hospital gilt shop,
volunteer services and inforniation center.
'
'
"These changes represent
the accomplishments of the
individuals, as well as the
strength and flexibility of
Holzer Consolidated. We are

pleased to provide growth
opportunities for the leader-

(Longti"'e Gallipolis lnl.!iness""'n Max
occasiont~l articles for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel on his uvrld tnztl!'ls
and memories of Gallipolis and Gallia
County.)

Tawney writes

Cookie • Candy Contest
Peoples Bank, Pomeroy
December 8, 1001,
beginning at 9:00 a.m.
Judging alter bank
closing on Dec. 8th•

ship of our various entities, 11

Wooden Toy Contest ·

said Wyse.

Faraaer1Baak
December IS, :1001,
Toy1 may be displayed a1

early a• Dec. ut
In bank lobby.
Judgin1 alter bank clo1ln1
on Dec. lsth.

Far mare Information call Tamml Zirkle &amp;1992-2136.

Sponsored by Pomeroy Merchants Auociation

LIFESTYLE
FURNITURE

·: r--------------------------------------------------------------

~

J
~

.•
~

GALLIA HAPPENINGS

Sunday, November 18
ADDISON - Preaching ser.• vice at Addison Freewill Baptist
:: Church, 6 p.m .. with Rick Bar: cus preaching.
•
,. POINT PLEASANT,. W.Va . ..,..
.. Bert Flora will preach at Gospel
·:Tabernacle, 6 p.m.
~

'

Road.
. Community Calendar Ia
publlehed aa a tree aervlce'to
nonprofit groupe wishing to
announce meeting• and ape;-

clal eventa. The calendar Ia
nat deelgnad to promote
aales or fund-ralaera at any
type. Items are printed .aa
apace parmlta and cannot be
guaranteed to appear.

•

l

:!

CROWN CITY - liberty
: Chapel Church will have a
·Thanksgiving dinner at noon,
!after I 0 a.m. service. Charles
• harvey will preach at 1 p.m.,
·:with Beaver family singing.

conlompontry &amp; chlldrent graupa.

Occasional chairs from *199 c.....
from 1wlv.. rockert, club chlllra, and mortt All rathlonably tallortd tnd
comtotltbl~ cuthlontd.
·

.•
;:
.:

Monday, November 19
GALLIPOLIS'- Gallia Coun·
;;.y Animal Welfare League, 7:30
•: p.m., St. Peter's Episcopal
·: Church, special speaker.
:; GALLIPOLIS...:... Gallia Coun,•ly Animal Welfare League, 7:30
·:p.m., ·St Peter's Episcopal
:: Church, special guest speaker,
:· public welcome.
'\

;. Tuesday, November 20
~ VINTON - Annual Commu·
•njty Thanksgiving Service .of
~Trinity
United · Methodist
'Church, Porter; Church of
~Christ in Christian Union,
t Ewinglon; and Fellowship
~ Chapel and Vinton Baptist
~ churches, 7 p.m., Vinton Ele•mentary School. Refreshments
~will be served following service.

.

~ GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Med~ lcal Center will provide breast·
~ feeding classes, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
~ in the French 500 Room. To
' • register, call 4-46-5030.

:•

Wednesday, November 21
~ THURMAN - Special ser~vice of worship for Thanksglv·
' lng. 7 p.m. Vega United
i~ethodist Church. 2243 Vega

SAVE 35% • 50%
Hurry in and save!
Bedroom groups from •999o••,c,.,..,.,

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D;

Facts on Farsightedness
Did you know that about one·thlrd or all Americans
lw1~arl1n~ some form of corrective eyewear are farsighted?
definition, people that are farsfghted have good vision
objects far away. But what causes farsightedness?
Hyperopia. or farsightedness. can occur when the eyeball
a shape that is longer up and down than it is front to
lbac:k. This causes Images to focus behind the retina,
nste.ao of oil the retina where it would be clear. This
Inaccuracy can easily be solved with the use of plus lenses,
lwhich helps the Image to focus on the retina. Plus lenses
are thicker In the middle than at th~ outer edges. Because
strong plus lenses are heavy and can cause one's race to
appear distorted, newer. thinner and lighter materials have
been developed which helps solve both these problems.
eye doctor can help explain a number of options
designed not only to help you see better, but also to make
look your best.

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.
224 E. Main SL Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-3279 Toll
;;;,:,.;,;3;,;;;3__- J

Recliners from•249 A•••..llonotpop••••
rtcllntrt, Chlltt,lnd high ltg etyltl thlt ofhlr genuine c::omrort at
unhtard or tavlnga.

Sofas from •499 From umoion trodllionoi to
e..y.gotng cetulllooka In 1 wldt rang• or tli.. tnd btautHul
fabrl".

·

Sleep Sofas from '599Full•nd
qu.. n tlze aletp loftt add t guttt room lnetanUy, wllh 1

dtluxe quilted lnntreprlng mattrut.

Dinettes
From 5199

�• •

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

Sunday, Nov. 18, 2001

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-7

'

•

Pa e 1
Sunday. November II. 1001

BY RON BIRTHEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Three new books will get
the attention of readers
intrigued by the Kennedy
family.
One profiles President
John F. Kennedy, another is
about first lady Jacqueline
Kennedy, and a third examines patriarch Joseph P.
Kennedy and his four sons.
But there are al~o several
new books that are not even
remotely about people
named Kennedy. Among
them are novels by Anne
Rice,V.S. Naipaul and Isabel
Allende; and nonfiction ,
including a history of London, one author's trek
through Alaska, and another's "adventures of a roving
gourmand."
In "Jack: A Life Like
No Other" (Random
House), Geoffrey Perret
taps into recently released
documents
personal
diaries, White House tapes,
family correspondence to profile JFK . Topics
include the first lady's plan
to divorce him and become
a Hollywood actress; JFK's
health problems and extramarital exploits; his plan to
withdraw from Vietnam,
and his premonition about '
his early death.

Tradition
f1omPapCI
Had it •not been for Squanto, the lone surviving Pautul!(et Indian, the Pilgrims surely
would haye starved to death.
Squanto gave them corn,
teaching them how to plant it
the Indian way: four kernels
of corn in a mound of earth
along with the head of a fish.
One year later, the Pilgrims
had their first meager harvest
and set aside a day of thanksgiving after a period of near
starvation.
Chief Massasoit of the
Wampanoags was invited to
the feast, and he brought with
him 90 braves, their faces and
OOdies painted for the celebration. It was these Indians
who searched the fields and
woodlands for the food ·need.ed for the feast.
That first Thanksgiving,
which reportedly lasted three
days, began as a breillast and
ended with a surprise.
Historians ·say the Pilgrims
and Indians dined .on roast
venison, duck, stuffed goose,
lobsters, clams, bass, watercress, ieeks, corn, bitter wild
plums and dried fruit. A wine
made from wild grapes was
served.
The surprise came when
one of the Indian braves disappeared into the woods and
returned with a bushel of
popped corn, a wondrous
new food for the Pilgrims.
The f3l"iliar image of Pilgrims and Indians feasting on
turkey for that first Thanksgiving is now believed to be a
myth. Turkeys did not become
customary Thanksgiving fare
until the 1860s. It is far more
likely the Pilgrims dined on
fish, venison and corn, thanks
to their new In4ian friends.
Some colonial records do
mention fowl being served on
that very first day of thanks.
The wild turkeys that may or
may not have been served
would have been small,
extremely tough, and most
likely spit-roasted.
Our debt to the American
Indian is gi:eat. Many classic
American dishes are of American Indian origin: Brunswick

The first lady's role in the
Kennedy administration is
explored
in
"Mn.
Kennedy: The Miuing
History of the Kennedy
Yean" (Free Press) by Barbara Learning. Also examined is their very R,ublic
marriage, a long-troubled
one of "appalling cruelty
and deep love." Sources
include eyewitness testimony, Secret Service accounis,
declassified
documents,
White House log books and
Jacqueline Kennedy's letters.
The logical follow-up to
Laurence Leamer's 1994
book
"The
Kennedy
Women" is his "The
Kennedy Men: 19011963" (Morrow), the first
of two planned volumes.
The saga starts in 1901
Boston, where Joseph P.
Kennedy was a 12-year-old
hat delivery boy, and ends in
1963 with JFK's assassination. The book traces the
senior Kennedy's relationship with his four sons: Joe
Jr., Jack, Bobby and Ted.
Materi~l is drawn from
hundreds of interviews and
fawn PapCI
various documents, including JFK secretary Evelyn I hour. Allow pumpkin to
Lincoln's private papers, cool. Slice off top and scoop
Oval Office tapes, and let- . out · seeds. Clean pumpkin ,
fibers from seeds and discard
ters ·by JFK's physicians.
fibers. Toss seeds with oil and
salt, to taste. Spread seeds on
stew, steamed lobster, dam baking • sheet and return to
chowder, chili con carne, oven for 15 to 20 minutes,
spoon bread and cranberry until crisp and golden.
sauce, to name just a few.
Reserve for garnish. Scrape
It was the Indian who gave pumpkin flesh from shell and
us the tomato and the porato. mash, or puree .jf a smoother
The corn we pop and the texture is desi'red.
peanuts we roast all came
Place fresh or canned
from the American Indian, as pumpkin in· a large saucepan
well as the pumpkins that are and season with salt, pepper,
so resplendent this time of syrup and allspice. Gradually
year.
stir in enough broth to give
American Indians from five soup a thick or thin consisdistinct areas of the United tency, as desired . Simmer
States ·gave us foods and over medium heat for about
recipes we still use today: ·
5 minutes, ·or uAtil hot.
From the Southwest, the
If desired, serve soup in
Pueblos, Papago and Hopi . small pumplcin or squash
grew . peppers and beans shells. Garnish with green ·
which they transformed into . onions, chopped hazelnuts
chili, soups, salads and barbe- and hulled pumpkin seeds.
cue sauces.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
From the Northwest, the
Tlingit, Kwakiutl and Salish
Hazelnut-Honey Baked
rribes steamed, broiled and . Squash
simmered seafood from the
3 medium-sized acorn
Pacific Ocean.
squash
From the vast Plains, the
1 cup wate~
Dakora and Cheyenne Indi6 tablespoons honey
ans roasted buffalo.
6 teaspoons hazelnut butter
From the South, the (recipe follows)
Powhatan and Cherokee
Ground allspice, to taste
tribes became famous for
Salt and freshly ground
their soups, stews and corn- black pepper (optional)
bread.
Preheat oven to 350 F.
From the East, the NarraCut squash in half and
gansett, Penobscot and Iro- remove seeds and strings.
quois steamed their dinners in Pour water into a baking dish
earthen pits, creating the first
large enough to hold the
clambakes.
squash. Place squash halves,
More than half the foods
cut side down, in pan. Bake
we eat today are foods which
for about 30 minutes, or until
the Indians cultivated: avocasquash starts to feel soft.
dos, sweet potatoes, pineapTurn squash halves over
ples, potatoes, tomatoes, pepand fill each cavity with 1
pers, pumpkins, squashes and
tabl~spoon honey and 1 teacorn. Had it not been for !he
spoon hazelnut butter. Spread
Indians, Thanksgiving as we
honey-butter mixture over
know it today might not
top edges and all over cavity.
exist.
Sprinkle lightly with allspice,
A first course, then as now,
salt and pepper. Continue
might very well be pumpkin
baking for 30 to 40 minutes,
soup: Indians at the first
until squash is nicely glazed.
Thanksgiving would have
Serve with any roast meat,
baked their pumpkins whole
in bet ·ashes. The pumpkin fowl or game.
To make hazelnut butter:
then.would have been peeled,
Chop
blanched hazelnuts or
chopped, thinned with a
game broth, and seasoned fUberts in a food processor or
with maple syrup and dried blender until a paste is
formed. Hazelnut butter is
spices.
Today we regard· Indian also available in health and
·
pudding as a dessert, often specialry food stores.

Reci~s

served ·in restaurants around
Thanksgiving and throughout
the winter. Originally, however, Indian pudding was served
as part of the main meal along
with the meat and vegetables.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
Tllis chart shows how local stocks of inlerrst performed last week.
Each day~ closing figurrs are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

AEP.

~·
: AmTechiSBC •
,·

•

Ashland Inc.

+

~AT.
' BankOne·

Bob Evans

j

'

•

i:i
Roast
Hcmey-Basted
Thrkey
1 small turkey, 10 to 12
pounds
21 tablespoons
peanut oil
•
,, teaspoon ground sage .
i, teaspoon ground allspice
Salt and freshly ground
black pepper, to taste
1 small bunch green onions
3 to 4 tablespoons honey
Garnish: Decorative string
of cranberries and bay leaves
or sage leaves (optional)
Preheat oven to 350 F.
Remove
giblets
from
turkey (reserve for gravy,
recipe follows). Rinse turkey
and pat dry. Rub inside and
out with oil. Season with
sage, allspice, salt and pepper.
Stuff neck and body cavities
with onions and truss, if
desired. Place 'ttlrke~ in roast~
ing Pi\!'· Roast, allowing 18
to 20 minutes per pound,
until juices run dear with no
hint of pink when thigh is
pierced.
During the last hour of
cooking, baste turkey 2 to 3
times with honey.
Serve with pan gravy and
garnish with decorative
string of cranberries and bay
leaves or sage leaves, if
desired.
Makes 8 to 10 servings.
Giblet Pan Gravy
Turkey neck and giblets
3 cups water
2 celery tops
. 2 green onions
Pan juices from roasted
turkey
4 teaspoons cornstarch, dissolved in 2 tablespoons cold
water
Salt and freshly gropnd
black pepper, to taste
Place neck and giblets,
except the liver, in a saucepan
with water, celery ·tops and
green onions. Chop liver and
reserve. Bring water to a boil
over medium heat. Reduce
heat and simmer over medium-low heat for about 40
minutes or until giblets are
tender. Strain broth and
reserve.
Chop cooked giblets and
combine with chopped liver.
. In the same saucepan,
bring 2 cups combined pan
juices and giblet broth to , a
boil. Stir in chopped giblets
and cornstarch-water mixture. Cook gravy over medium heat, stirring often, until
thickened. Season to taste

with salt and pepper.
Cranberry-Maple Sauce
2 cups fresh cranberries ·
1 cup maple syrup
1 cup water
i. teaspoon ground allspice
(optional)
In a saucepan, combine
cranberries, maple syrup and
water. Bring to a boil over
medium-high heat. Reduce
heat to medium-low and
cook, stirring often, for about
15 minutes, until berries have
burst and sauce has thickened. Stir in allspice, if
desired. Cool and serve at
room temperature. This sauce
is, at its best when it is made
several hours in advance ·so
that flavors will blend.
Makes 2 cups.
Indian Pudding
4 cups milk ,
1 cup maple syrup
i. cup butter

City Holding

In a saucepan over medium
heat, combine 3 cups milk
and maple syrup. Heat until
just boiling and add butter.
In a bowl, CO!IIbine cornmeal, ginger and nutmeg.
Gradually stir cornmeal mixture into hot milk. Reduce
heat to low and cook until
thickened, about 10 minutes.
Fold in currants or raisins.
Spoon mixture into a buttered 2-quart casserole. Pour
remaining milk over pudding; do not stir.
Bake pudding for 2~ hours,
or until all the milk has been
absorbed and top is golden
brown. Serve warm, topped
with vanilla ice cream, if
desired.
Makes 6 servings.
(All recipes from "Spirit of
the Harvest: North American
Indian Cooking," 1992,
, Stewart, Tabori &amp; Chang.~ ,

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{, teaspoon g.roun gmger
i. teaspoon ground nutmeg
1~ cups dried currants or
raisins
Vanilla ice cream (optional)
Preheat oven to 300 F.

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NEW DIRECTOR - Betsy Herald Nicodemus, Meigs County director of tourism and retail development, sorts through a
large selection of travel brochures located Inside the offices of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce and Tourism
Board on West Main Street In Pomeroy. (Tony M. Leach photo)
,

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Peoples

in Meigs County and it's an honor
that I am now in .a position to publiOMEROY Promotir · cize its .w onderful attribute~," said
the unique, historical qu
'\licodemus.
ties of Meigs County wl 11l•
"Statistically. W percent of the U.S.
focusing on the developmem population JS within 350 miles of
of local merchants is the main goal of Meio;s Counry," she said. "As construcnewly appointed director of Tourism tton progresses on. the counry's new
and ReWI Development, Betsy Her- road projects, accessibility will eventuald Nicodemus.
ally increase, thus providing an outlet
Nicodemus, who
resides in for our tourism -efforts."
Reedsville with her husband, Roger,
:·we have beautiful historical archiand daughter, Mallpry, was recendy tecture, "52.7 ,.miles ~f riv,e r . s.horelille,
named to the position folloWing the acres and acres of stunning landscape.
resignation of former tourism direc- and a wide range of activities for all to
tor, Karin Johnson, earlier this year.
.enjoy," she added. "Tourism is vital to
Nicodemus will now head the our county's preservation and I am
informational organization created to fully committed to advertising our
promote the historical significance, distinct characteristics on both a
points-of-interest, and festivals and regional and national level."
attractions of Meigs County.
Besides drawing tourists ro the area,
"My family and I truly enjoy living Nicodemus said promoting local busi-

E

6.11

.. ~ ~

BY TOHY M. lEACH

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6.16

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SPAS
SPAS
Wm!U

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~

GUEST
VIEW
This formula assumes a fixed
annual rate of return and the
reinvestment of all earnings.
Keep in mind that 'very few
investments offer a guaranteed
rate of return and that an
investment's past performance
does not guarantee future perfo.r mance.
,
The rul e of 72 may also be
used to show the negative
power of inflation. This may be
an especially handy tool .t o
those individuals in their
retirement years and, also, for
those approaching the retirement decision.
Using this tool, an individual
iH 1&lt;1)', D8

OIIIIIW... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ . . _ . . . . . lllollotc.--

S,,•
•
~.~~
&amp;.......

1525 Eaatem Avenue

from Ru)
ouw:co tl7.
"are ouse (Acroas
740-441-0163

'I'

Jay
Caldwell

PI..H

Have a business news Item?
Give us a call at (740) 446-2342, ext 23

•

1CF

POMEROY Are
you interested in feeding
the birds this winter?
What feed you purchase:
how you display the feed
Hal
and surrounding cover
influence what birds may
Kneen
take up residency neat
your hom e.
GUEST VIEW
Small seed, like thistle
seed,
may
attract
goldfinches, chickadee ing value added .wood
and juncoes. However, products and crafts from
small seed is not the food our native hardwoods?
The Ohio State Uniof choice for robins, blueversiry
South Center is
jays and woodpeckers,
who would prefer fruit, hosting a "Working With
Wood Workshop" at three
nuts and suet.
Some birds like blue area sites. The same workjays, grackle, mourning shop will be given on
doves and cardinals may Nov. 29 from 1:30 to 4:30
feel more comfortable p.m. at the Vinton Couneating food from ground ry Communiry Building;
feeders while other birds Dec. 5 from 9 a.m. to
like chickadees, wood- noon at OSU South Cenpeckers,
finches, ter at Piketon; and on
nuthatches and robins Dec. 6 from ·6 to 9 p.m. at
prefer raised feeders to eat OSU South Centers at
Jackson.
from.
Registration is free, but
Remember to have
ts
trees and shrubs nearby pre-registration
requested
by
Nov.
26.
for songbirds to hide in
when predatory birds and Demonstrations and the
animals are nearby. Ever- exploration of valuegreens trees also give pro- added market opportunitection from winter wind ties will be discussed as a
and precipitation. For fur- way to utilize the short,
ther specific bird feeding low value hardwood luminformation stop by our ber and manufacture a'
extension office and ask higher value-added wood
for the flyer "Favorite product.
Get an ~overview of
Foods For Feeding Birds."
how tourism and our
Are you interested in Appalachian herirage may

...

creating and manufactur-

'
J'

~

Seed and feeding
methods key in
bird feeding

The Rule of72
Winston KS, LT, LTlOO •••
$:113.781 Carton
Camel ...
, $33.80 I Carton
Basic ...
$22.221 Carton
Doral•.•
$19.88/ carton
USA
Gold...
$18.06 I carton
Swisher
Sweet LU Cigars •••
$9.99j Caftaa with $2.1)() CDUReC1 Man
Chew... .
·
$20.99 I Carton
Southern
Pride Chew.••
$11.119 t carton
Levi Garrett
Chew•..
$111.911/ Caftan
Taylor$14.98
Pride
Chew ...
I
Carton
..
H.B. Scott
Chew· ••.
810.911/ Carton
Levi Extra Chew•.•
$11.911/ cart...
Morstan Chew•••
ih.7a I Carton
Bndler Larste Can •.•
$l.i8 I Carton wttf\2.00 coupon
Bugler$1 .118
Pouch
B2GlF•..
au,. 2 Get 1 Free

. TIMES.SENTINEL

nesses is of utmost importance.
"When I approach local merchants,
my question to them is, 'How can I
help you?"'
"We must maintain the endeavors of
our local businesses because they are
the lifeblood of our communities," she
said. "When you spend money locally.
you are investing in Meigs Counry's
future."

Nicodemus said she is working on
several new projects, namely a master
calendar thar will highlight communiry events for the entire year, a new version of the 2002 Meigs County visitor
guide', presentations for national trade
shows, and a strategy that will hopefully bring new businesses to the area.
For details, contact Nicodemus at
740-992-2239, or visit the tourism
board's website at www. meigscounrytourism.com .

~· .,.l.

INVESTING

GALLIPOLIS "How
• · long will it tali.e my investment
:: will double?' ' This is a com: : mon question many may have
• : concernjng their investments
and think a calculator is needed to provide an answer.
But a calculator may not be
needed, at all. The tool to use is
called the Rule. of 72 and, best
of all, it is simple and free. This
. is how it works. If an individual has an investment, they
think it will .grow at an
assumed rate of return per
year, then simply dividing that
rate of return into 72 wiU.provide a rough estimate of the
number of years it will rake for
the investment to double in
size.
For example, let's assume an
investment is assumed to grow
at an average rate of return of
6 percent each year. Simply
divide six into 72 will give a
rough estimate that it will rake
12 years for this investment to
double (72 divided by 6 equals
. 12).

rpushes

PIMH_K_n,DI

.IiJbacco foundation
announces programs
GALLIPOLIS -

Most

reade.::s are aware that the

Southern Ohio Agricultural
and Community Develop• 1 ment
Foundation
(SOACDF) was established
late last year to provide assisrance to tobacco producers
who would like to transition
to other enterprises.
This week, I am pleased
to assist the foundation with
the announcement of their
first pilot program, the Livestock Systems Project. This
program is designed to help
tobacco producers expand
or upgrade their existing
production livestock operations by provtding grants for
capital improvements, such
as new fencing or livestock
handling facilities. This program also includes, (but is
not limited to) corrals,
chutes, gates, and head gates.
Grant recipients of the
Livestock Systems Project
will be reimbursed for up to
75 percent of a project's cost,
including labor and materials, with a maximum of
$2,500 per recipient. Prioriry will be given first to
tobacco growers and then to
quota owners.
Eligibility will be based
· upon criteria es tablish ed
within the · Foundations
Pilot Project Grant guide- .
1~.
whlt:h may be
obtained with the applications. Program description
and criteria, grant guidetines, and applications will
be. available at local Extension and FSA offices from

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW ·

Nov. 15,2001, until Jan . 15,
2002. Interested producers
and quota owners are
strongly encouraged to pick
up applications and review
the grant guidelines.
Current Soil and Water
Conservation
District
guidelines and specifications
will be used to determine
basic compliance for fencing
projects,
however
the
SOACDF
reserve s the
option to fund other fencing
projects deemed suirable by
the foundation .
SOACDF will provide
eligible applicants with
matching funds on projects
funded by SWCD or other
agencies, if the proposed
proj ec ts meet or exceed
SOACDF general guidelines. All eligible costs will
be reimbursed at project
completion and upon verification by the foundation.
The Livesto,k Systems
Project is the first of four
pilot programs. Three additional programs will be
offered in early 2002 inclu~­
ing a Livestock Genetics
Program, an Educational
PleaH- Byrnes. Dt .

'

�.

wv

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point

Sundlly, Nov. 11, 2001

O.orlllook Center. 333 RN;\Jill PAll y o u - 0 ' 0 8 1 - Col1ogo STEEL BUILDINGS: F ..... - . ........... Oh hdoyoyouwllhto-. (c.r-~ToHoma} YNoond
Sole 25x25,
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c a - for Ito ur-ning lo-IOOIO'OI)growlngond
1.al0-21«l452,
lngl on,_~ I·
nurting clauln_trl_ala«. •~
Reg~l2748 .
800-211-8594x·O
"'*"wllbogin""'**"- 1 0 - - · 430~1
1
._ 3od ond wll run '-IQh Avo., P.O 8oK 087. Galilpc&gt;- :10
r.~ ~~··
WAI'IIm
I
""''""'"'"'""
•
To
Do: niNo 14th. Applica· llo, OH "583f . 1100-48!·.
tlonl w11 bo • oojNd 11334
Do
.
lllrough Ncwaolbio 29,
BlACKSTONE
PARA- 1· l1op ill' "II I liXt F......., bon- LEGAL snJDtES Compre/IE. Conalruction
tr.llldloltoran._,. r , .... -..ell .., ..... ,... &amp;.-..1.- - ·
•••
,
«--.:tKrllleMiddln-' Nd.Afi(Jiy.LifeltyleFUI'Ti- , _ _....,
'Home
•......,."'
(7401-72 b"""" In- """· No phone Clio. Study '"1181 trlinlng roomo, drywall,--

•
•

1

1"-..-"-.-

•

tomorne.o.E.
' 1 11 ""' ~Ohio u.o...
.__,
Momory
full or pert
. wo 1ra1n ond
lumioh
- · CaH {740)4411-9228
!or- Tanva.

Ga-.

In one week With us

'([rtbune

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Sunday Display: I :00 p.m.
Thursday

for

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black &amp; whita fiberglass pig Puppies to giveaway to
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All training provided

r

Syracusa,haaalotofoenlltal va1ua ....,_, to f•
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ee
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month/PT·$4500• $7000/Wl&lt; FTI Mallorder Stan Todayl Mall Order

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cumr..au.tlnwut.£

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(6t4)898·2730
Middle Age Professional
OWM looking for Professional WF, 30-50. Respond
with letter and piclure to
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Pleasant, VN 25550

NO HUNTING
on Clarence Oshell's Farm
or Kim &amp; Kerry Walldlings
wilhoul a wntlen

permission.

ISupervisors

complela auction service. UonGuaranteediPostage&amp; 600~795-0360 Extt 201
Licensed 1186,0hli&gt; &amp; Wast Supplies provided I Rush {241ws)
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M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- 24 hOu recording
"INTERNATIONAL COMPA·
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- :.::=:..:r
NY RAPIDLY EXPA:miNG
446-2842.
SActlonsS- $$BfingSS·
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-------No Experience Necessary ATTENTION! WORK FROM

r

===·---

---November 17·24, 2001

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.:ea&amp;- 9- 0617

HOME I $500/$1500

Full-Time.

PT~t,.:

.. ,

fAIT GROWING BUillNESI NE!08 CAIHERI
6 COOKS. PART nilE.
FULL TillE. ALL IIIIFTS,
SIND RUUMI TO: 1HI!
DAILY SENTINEL, PO
BOX 72MI, POMEROY,

OH417W.

Clo•ommont-

Help Oiling for lht
-.!y, Darll Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,
, _ - : 7a.,.3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm-

H!uu-af0-0705
www.CashNowAndForever.
wwwepornad net
com
":'::::._-.,,--...,-,-- Domino's Pizza ol Point
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Sentinel, PO Box 721-8, en1. Competitive Pay &amp;
Pomeroy, Oh 457&amp;9
FleJtible Schedule. Apply in
CAREER OF»PORTUNITYI
E
am e)Ccellent 1ncome.
Easy claims processing.
Full trainlrtg. Home-Pc required. Call Physlclart &amp;
Healthcare Developments
loll-tree
t-800·772-5933
ElCt. 2070

person 420 Viand Street. Pl.
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-------Earn 51()00.$3500 Week·
lylll Processing Erwelop88!

$11.00.$33.00 pe&lt; hour po- ;;''

c.'n

mo Process Moc11cai.Cialms. No _co_m----,---

r Part-Time. $2500/SSOOO mo Experlence needed. FuiiIATTENTIONI We Need
1 O~~lllled
Great for Moms! Tr,aining. Computer Ae- EARN $25.00().$50,000iyr,
NO Trespassing or Hunting Help! Earn up to $25- _ __::~::::_::::__ _ Free Into. en-864-AICH.
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t-888-314-1033 Medical Insurance Billing,
of any kind on the Raymond $75/HR PT/FT
..AITENTIDN .. · WORK www.SmartWork4U.eom
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Needed lmmediatelyl Homo
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WBbsile 1-800·291-4883
plate Tralnini)I'Free Boot(let PT/FT Paid Vacation! MallDept. 1109
GIVEAWAY
1-80().225..0358
order/Internet 800·318-t775
110 Hel W ted

r

· Free house to be tom down,
you salvage; furniture, gu
range, relngerator end ta-

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lamps,
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p an

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_ _ _.:...:..:..,._ _ _ To

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tor Applicatlon/E)Camlnation
Information. Federal Hire,
Full Benefits 1-800-8421659 ext. 125 7am·10pm
est.

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Assemble crafts, WOCJd
Items. Material provided.

To $480+ wk.
Free Information pkg. 24 Hr.
1·801·264·5625

A JOB FOR YOUI 14 Day
COL Training! No Experi-

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Reimbursement! Financing
Available! Call Today! Operators are Standing Byl 1-

Happy 18th
Birthday

.888-645·6505.

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY

LORI
1 ~

~e• ~a~

Brenda

"1-~
.

pe ..a,r

." e'e ~a-...

Card of Thanks

7~dt~
ThefamUy of Garnett Meelu willa to thank
everybody durin5 the iUne11 and
of our
Mo1h.er and Grandmother.
For the love, praysr1 , phone calla, card•,
togeth.erns.., money, food,flowen, and aU that
vUited with Ul .

ln••

Specitd thank• to McCoy-Moore, Rev. Ron
I..mley and A!fl'ed Halley.
SilYJer• Nancy !Amt.y ond TM SUrer..
Our family that participated John and Shawn
Meehl, EddUJ Clog, RebecctJ Richter and Dan
Meeka .
Thank you ·to Holnr SeniDr care, HMC, The
pallbearer•.
Special thank. to }ean.eua, Cindy, Kay and
Wenda for preJHirins the food after the 1ervicea.
· Gad Bien All

The Garnett Meeks Family

,

.

specifications ror vendors and contractors; developin
designs that meet the· needs of manufacturing,
sanitation and maintenance departments: installing
equipment; leading aqd assisting- in start-up of ne
equipment. In. addition to providing technical
expertise to a variety of clients. this position will
develop and maintain '})lant st~ndards for sanitary
design and installation of equipment. BS 'Degree i
Mechanical, Chemical or Electrical Engineering wit
three years experience in project work is required.
Candidates meeting !he above qualifications rna
submit their resu·mes to:

lbe Pillsbury Company
Attn: H.R. Dcplll'nojEng
2403 S. Pennsylvania Ave., Wellston, OH
Fax: 740·286· 1671
EEO/AA Employer

Help Wanted
Arbors at Gallipolis
We arc the best!
We want tile best!

Ourfacility is
experiencing Srowing
pains ... We have growth
in census. We have
growt h in professional
development. We have
growth in educational
programming.
We have growth in

opportunities ...
Opporlunities for you!

IF you are the BESt
We are looking for the

STNAs The best LPNs
and RNsAND..
We have a great
opportunity for an RN
who Hkes to teach.
If you consider yourself
one or the best, come
out and talk with us.
Ask to speak with our
new seasoned Director
of Nursing Services.

Arbors at Gallipolis
Aun: Cathy M. CaM!y,
RN/CDONA
170 Plnecml Drive
7 40·446-71ll
Fax: 740.446-9088

Help Wanted

The Pillsbury Company at Well stort, Ohio has a
opening for a' Project Engineer who can manag
process and infrastructure projecis from concep
through start-up. These projects range in size up I
$5MM and include responsibility ror writing

4~92

110 Help Wanted

LPN'S, STNA'S
YOUTOOCAN BE A STAR!
(ANDTAKEADVAHTAGEOFOUR
NEWWAGESCALEI)
~

e..

SutM
~. the only nursing
facility i11 Gallia county to receive a "Five
Star" rating from HealthgradeS, Inc. is looking
for additions· to it's galaxy of "Stars". 'W_e've
just completed our annual survey from the
Ohio Department. of Health, and received a
totally deficiency free inspection. Wc;:'re very
proud of our facility and very selective of the

people we hire.
Presently we have openings for full-time
LPN, 3:00-11 :00, and. part-time 3:00·11 :00.
7A-7P, and 7p· 7 A. We also have openings for
part-time S"tate Tested Nursing Assist. 7:00~
3:00 and 3:00·11 :00. If you are a career
oriented nurse Or nursing assistant, who
genuinely believes that quality of care is the
most important aspect of a job, plea se come see
us at 380 Colonial Dr., Bidwell , OH; or call us
at 740-446-5001 and ask for Eula or Manie.

~t,"' s~.(o" t?c.u ~
An E ual 0

nunl

Em lo or

$522+/weekPT.

$1000- S40001- FT

11onopenatourSontinolof·
fico In Pornoroy. This ,.,...
lion requires OCif1lNter ~
math lltlll~, must enJoy

(304)1175-23811. MCAG 1o an
EOE, NA 1NF
'
P. , Dlom LPN.. ~...,
·~ noo;~
1!11vete duty homo care casH. aclloclule and
pay. AI out appllcation at PINNnt Volley
Homt Health StNicoa,
1011 VIand St. Pt. Ploaaant,
WV 25560, or call (304)8757400 or 1-800-7484l076 for
more lnlon'nl.tion. MIEOE
_ , . VaJ1ty Hotpltal 1o
~"14•'11.......... Mutt Sptoch '"-.:::
_ ..
-·

--------

MEDICALJDENTAL BILL·
lNG COMPANY has lmme·
dlata ep..ings lor People
10 Proceu Claims. $t5-

:::0,':"~=

(740) 949-2009 I()( fur'her

lniOI!Nltlon.
Please Hnd Inquires to
Jamea Lawrence, Supatin-

=~~..;)";o'1ri,-= ::'1~::':.0....,..

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h ·'"---·-·lola.....-•----'-···
.,,,.... ~-.co
m
All Make K - Heaters
EARN YOUR COlLEGE and Fon:od I&gt;Jr Heat""' R..
DEGREE OUICu• v, •-~ paired. Small Engine Ren.l-1 .
._..,.
pair. Free·Pick.Up and Deelora, Mutera. Doctorate, livery Available. Over 20
by corraspondouci! based years Experionco. Call Mike
upon prior education and (740)446-71104
lhon study course For
FREE Information ..;.,.,ot Alltrlyuur ...... ropalto,adphone
CAMBRIDGE ditiOnl &amp; rornodaling. 24hr
STATE UNIVERSITY 1- tr':*geoey MtVIot, senior
000.964-8316
citizens discount. 22yra.

G~D

oxp. (304)576-2065
AJ. .'a Maid WiH Clean CooMierclal DO
. . -. Over Ten yoa,.
expeliance in Housak J"
ing. For a free e&amp;timate caD:
{304)937-2926 or Emallal
-OAOL.C

ISS Is hiring 18-23 ~going
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to

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~52,000-$8 ,UUlA'mu
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Earn 180K. Wool&lt; 4 in PROFITS. 1-800-731-7233 reedy and call anytime. Toll
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·
Contact Us

1-800-821-8139
or visit our website:

Announcement

r----;:=====·:::::;;--,

www.americancommunllydassified.corn
•
·

-

:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

lloonto. Corrtact

Dtbnl Long .. -

.

Vol-

ley Hotpltal, (;104)675-4340,
lXI. 1381. MIEOE.

(740)843-1249
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSAAYI Full training provided

- ·our fJMnCiallnttituiiOn

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

tor fast mavin~ HorneBased buslnaasl You de-

1 "'"'" PAGEVILLE • Behind Wells Cemetery
Ia 1hla 59.1 acres mil that has a roclalmod

grassy field and a secluded
of aoreage is woodland.

tloh. 921).924400

www.Achlaveoreams.com

site. Mosl

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • This 2 story home has
6 rooms , 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths and
basement. Thera Is an enclosed back yard
and privale drive.
$49,900.00

Help Wanted

HRBORS

HT

GHUIPOLIS
REGISTERED NURSES
NURSING OPPORTUNITlES
Part time &amp; Fun time
Emergency Department,
Medlcai·Surglcal, &amp; ICU
Your skllls and compassli]n are needed
to care for our patients

$6·$8

O'BLENESS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

1-888-974-JOBS

;:

,.,~

DEBT CONSOUOATION'

.... .._(141) IS6 tm

::::":*'
-n:.~ VJAGRA. erc. '
troclthoaa tond backhoosl Noprov.-raq'd

FUll time
Position
llctlulty
llsslstant
11-7:30
Spedal Reeds
Unit

at 10:00 a.m. ·
LOtoato'd at 53
Rd. 10031n Aid,
Ohio. Aid Is located 17 miles North of
Ironton, Ohio on St. Rt. 141.

See

Tracton: 4000· J.D. diesel w/cob, 1972-lOlO J.D.
diesel wide front, 1968-1020 J,D, gas ""J7 rrant
ead loader, antique 1919 Farman F\2:0 on rubber.
Mar;higcn; NH 354 feed grinder, Sperry NH 451
mowl"' machine. I.H. 430 boller w/wlde pickup,
~I PTO manure spreader, 2· 14" J.D, high

Gall Hamilton
Help Wanted

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

I'~ CO

SHOPPERS

Need Financial Help'? Risk FHA. Can lor UtbogS
,,.. oppor1unily, look ,.., fuo. 1-800-501· t m' Ed 9818

or 8QiiYIIenl In oc-

cupationll , . _ from .tn
- l l o d lna1llullon. C..·

puler knowteclge in excel
word, etc., Cldl Melissa at

OHtO VALLEY PUBLISH-

HOLIDAY

408-347-11937 .
2 wk COL training,- PHENTERMINE

bochtlotlmut• of tclenco

degrH

INOT1Cft

Please call IOU free. 1-866- t 158
496-81107
IION!Y TO LOAN. AUTO

100% client satlsfecllon .

Tnortplot
io llvo yoaro
01
formal Four
education
· and

Contacif-800-319-3718 or
,(,304:::::!):::522:::::.:·7:.::0::20:::·..:'_ __
Need experienced pa~·time
office help, must have com·

$'00-$500 averydlly 1n your
tparo limo. Umltod space.
1-t58-64 l- 97 13 Ext. 400
(24 inl

blo/Good Credit.
Tofl ~
F,..·-(888) 270-2168..•••
, ft•-t • ft•-t
AAA OrMti
Card Route LOANSt ........,.. ~
,;
S~
(All
local)
Problem
PaJing Blill? In
CJoorvtt POOablo Sawmll, 60 op
Debt? Good, BOd. or no
don1 haul your logo to lht $700 wfdy. Free Info. 888- credit. Bankruptcy Wol·
miH jual call304-675-1957. 604-7684·
come. Call Toll· ,,_ 1·
see 498 !1488.

t?,::.:.a:~=-

travel, &amp; play In !he

USA. C8K Stephania M-F 1-

·--,J

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morl-

port FREE Travel WebSite!
A Estabflshed Vending Travel DiscountiiPerks. Big CREDIT PROBLEMS???
Roulal Earns Big
musl S$$1 Nomlnaf Startup Cost! Having Financial Prob*ns?
sell! 1-888-571-Q225 EJtt. 1-888-6-99-0901
Ia tt 8ad Credit, No Credit
2005 (Fk)rida Only AIN Start Your Business To- lhe problem? Wa can Help.
"20 1017)
.........._
CaB P""""" CnodH Raoour-

you
an axp.
yrs• to cara for you in your·
homo "' mine. HUSband &amp;
wile It accopled IS wall
304-875-6183
Family
Man/Handyman
prouuro waohlng yard
al t
1 '
m n enance, c ean up,
oct... Free Elllrnatu
(304)n3-5504 Aak tor Don

Call TOOAYI 1·800·058· Oaliverodln24-38H,..
u..r.td
ln 1ho 2353.
$$SPECIALS$$
.
(Ca!lf--.5858) or
WV. Contacl Dtbnl
. www.1868gotmojo.corn

-

bla--_-

,..,..,_.:.&lt;

We offer competitive salaries and
exceUent benefits.
For more Information please contact:

Full/Part Time

Do

CREDtT PllOi!LEMS. HtY- Got Call Foalll $10114!100. !~ ~E ? IRS
1 roublel
lng~putJto;u•?ll Euy &lt;biT " . . _ - - - ~·~•
Badcrd,nor:rd.DO
Loave__,F...,.Dopuo- SoMd1Put&amp;- No
bankrupcyllw-olyouo ~-B
Counly,_ :;:.•t"..::..~C,~
PJ_,.7Call,.ioMy:
0-. -no
~
~-~":'."'t_,_
PREMIERCREOITRE·
ari_-FOICIEOL ~~!!!!:~·~-.!-!!!..._ __
SOURCES, "JUllw finan. HIOD-:1117•1801.
VISA/MASTERCARD Ill
clol,..,you_,1_
NEW . . . _ . cr257-s-w.i, Sp•cl•"lng In:
INSTANT CASH1 Got up to eanltll 17m approval
peraonal, COJ..otidtllon.
S500, , _ Awova'· GUARANTEEDII Bad r:red ·
.......... rnorlgagot, auto. No Crtdlt IIIJroau &lt;:.- ~ - - 01(1! 1-716*"'hlf
home,_ ... ,
Cllll1..eM-576-227.&amp;
32s.-1983
2"~your
~ Mc0r110 &amp;AIIOEI ... www.moneymart.com
I\ I \ I I ' I \ I I
~.'". ·
Trying 10 buy a hOml lnd
JluiJNmri
I : - -... com
• :::.·~~~!;.?-,AN EARlY PAY·r
""'
10
Ol+otn.NTY
Do you noed a
or
Up to 5500 instantly by
llor.mi
~new car? Are your bilta can help you. We provide
FOR"··~
mortgages, peroonal and phone!
~---·.......
1100 Par Hooo. llorneW001J- backed up? Wacan ~. small buSinOSS 10ono with t-(877)-EARYPAY.
L~• ~
ers -1L41110 actv-. We offeo fast reliable seO\I- good ()(bod &lt;redlt Apjiroval 750005
10 DOWN HOMES NO
lng firm payt $4 for . _ Ice, end our professk&gt;nal within 48 hno. (868)362- 1st ADVANCE FREEt
CREDIT OKI HUO, VA
V'llic&amp;-mlit retriewid. makll ttaff is on hand to hefp.

Top To Bottom Ciano... ANYONE CAN DO ITI
pol · OJI, and · - - $25/$75/HR.PT·FT. WORK
ATHOME·f-«10-374-&amp;181
...;.....,nlndromodaiiJog www.Thinl&lt;l!igDolaruun
..........., (7'"~1-1 DO
-~-.. _ , _ . AmNTION: WORKFROM
(740)m·207II
HOME I Eam an exira
Wi1 Hou1
ClaM Out. l1.ot10-18,000PTIFT
-·~.com
CREATE SECOOITY WITH
EXTRA INCOME. Wool&lt;

_·;:Jac:::;:koon.::,:~OH::::_4::;5640:::~·..;~. ' .dde-,~t-.t!M , KlfOrrna·

NOW
HIRING
Per Hour

=

more possible in 58 dlys or years experience, axceHenl
less. Never Repay! Naw references, free esllmatas,
programst Free Information. rnldentlal or commercial,
1-80()..3(18-St 47
meuege, (740~2·

pall~

-

Incredible Opporturilyll No

Selling! Bonu8881 Free
Postage/Supplies! 1-888275-6950. Send SASE: BL
Marketing Box t 232989,
HOLIDAY
CASH I! Sacramento,
California
$40KJ$70 K
· n 95823-0432
year potentia www.ProciSIIngEnvelopes.

era.COL

WOgl.- BfiiJIY: Muon

7am,CIJI740-992·5023.
$45.11r. Potentlai.' Will train.
llooiiOO-aPC Required. COil Nowl 7
$836 __.... proceulng Days 1-800-935-3971 Ext
--·•
f219
mal
::.:.:_ _ _ _ _ __
c•~l No -iotiCO nood- Mt•""i BEACH BOUND!

lenllal. Paid Training/Full
1-800-480-SMSO 24 hill
Benellta. For more lnforma.
pany benatlts Including don caU 1-888-8 74-9150 Machlnilt wtlh 5 ulafl on
health Insurance, vacation, ext .,~.
1
personal days, and 401K
· ~job axperlaooo. Pay baaed
on uparience. Can ror Applan. We are part of a large GOVERNMENT
JOBS. polntment Monda"· Frida•
company that of1en1: e11CEII- WlldllfeiPoltal $40/k a year.
·
. 1
1•
lent career advancement Paid Training &amp; Full Bene- 8am· 3pm. French City Tool
opportUnities. For Interview fits. Cal TOL.l..FREE for ln. Inc. (740)448-2835
~-=--ration send a~- fo 5u F• ••- 1 ~occor
""'~
-···
· n- "· -n- ................ · McClure's Aeatauranl now
-tamnguawllyyouara f-888-329-2114 x1203
the person we are looking .
.
hiring all 3 locations. full or
lor 8 ......, with your raoume Government Postal Jobs
par1·tlme, pick up appllcato ,;j"Barker, Cl.,ulatiOn Up To S18.3Mir.
lion al,locatlon &amp; b41ng back
Director at Ohio Valley Pl.b- Hiring for 2001102
between
9:30am
lishing Co., 825 Third Ave., BenefltsJPenalo
10:001m, Monday lhru SatGallipolis, Ohio 45831.
1-888-728-9083 Ext. 2000 :urdly~;·;i;;;;;;~E;;;;,;;;-

~terreQulred.
HI00-240-1548, De!&gt;t. 926

Dlaldct ~ ~ appllcalions lor """'thute but driv·

County Action G-~ 1
Inc 1~ e - M - •
101 Sencond ~· P~rlt ~ (;;Q~~·
Atuant,
WV 25550.

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START DATING TONIGHT!
$1500
Have fun meeting eligible Yard sale itema, bulk sale, 57200/FT Work In Home In- Business, Full Training, and/or Internet. FREE
a
temational Company Needs Free Booklet. 1-888·932· Training/Support. 1-800singlet in your area. Toll· call (740)992-7537
free 1-800-ROMANCE, ext.
and a!I!Mstants. 6
6
7
9 307-0325 www.CapitaJSUC·
9735
~~-~
Training. Free Booklet.
www.thriveondreams.corn
""=ss.::.com::::.__ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - 7:30am-11 :00prn CST .
r Lnl J.T.IAIU'ItJ!ot
" ' t.nlc:MIEnglneer
Why watt? Stan meeting
w(;;;)·~~r~~dreams.com ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! ~
Be Your Own boss!
DATA ENTRY FTIPT.
GROWING BUSINESI V8rlllle
In PkJmblng and
.Ohk&gt; smgles tonlgh~ call toll
.
.
Crafts, Toys, Jawolry, Hover 9 to 5 Again
No Experlaooo Needed.
NEEDS HELPI
HVAC. Benoflla padlage of·
free 1-800-766-2623 ext Rick Pearson Auction Com· $2,000 WEEKLYI Milling Wood,
Sewing, Eam Up To
Training Provldad1
Work from home.
ftl'ld. Send resume lo:
1621.
pany, full time auctioneer, 400 brochures! Satistac· Typlng ...Great Pay! CALL 1- $SOO.S8000tmo
Medical Billing. Up lO $60K. Mall- Ofderl E· Com"''"''""'"'rco"'
PO Box 667

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•

""*be.,....._.

s

.,In

1-1!00-848-8492
"'-·$1000 WEEKLYI ~--rUOJN.O
ro~
lng Mallal Home! No expo.
mallon
please
call Lost In Vidnity of Rt 218. rtence Necessary! Free De(740)992-5023 or 740-992· Collfe· Lab Mix. Brown, tails! C811 1-800-755·2027.
While Stripe Down Nose. (24hrs)
Home! Fortune 500 Campa3324 .
::_::.::.:c...__
ny Needs Help! $1500A MONTH PART· $8000/M() PT/FT Free inRoommate Wanted to snare •ca=jjjll,:.{7;_;40_;:):;;258;;.;.,-e34;;.;.,9;.__~ $1500 $4
t
--s-~.''Ice home. tl InTIME,
,500- 57 ,200 U11 formation CaU Nowl
.."""'" - · .,.
YARD SALE
time. WORK IN HOME In· t-800-390-124t
lerested plaaaa Selld short
tematlonal Company needs www.BasieProtits.com
blo and references, e-mail
address if available IO PO

Private Party Ads Under $100

20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

I

A1 P1/Ft Stay 0 , _ . ap.
Anontlonl
COME GROW
ponunltyl Average $1000· Eam 2nd. lncomewlthOUI
WITH USI
2nd Job "'' to
S8000/mo. Flex Schedula,
We are expanding our cl...,.
Ellmlnata CommuUng &amp;
S25.·S75Jhr. Pt-Ft.
latlon staff to better urve
1-800-218-7543
Oaycare. Paid VacatJon, BoOtJr eultomere. We are lode·
nuses/Tralnlng Programs. www.Money·Oreama.com ing tor • Plf'IOI'l that~
Established lnt'l Coopera· AITENTIONI Work From ~'t.
:::;.IIOif..;,:~
t
I
o
n
wlth........u. M ha dewww.Goals2Succoss.com
Home. Up to $25 to $75/ho.
.....,... usl ve
PT/FT ""·II 0 rd /1 t ot ~-~-"~•lion bo
888-754-5430.
er nom ' , . . , _ .. -~' •
Call Now: en-283-8609
sic computer knowledge.
Acl Now!
www.beabelievef.com
This Is a full time eallrled
Be Your Own Boss From _ _..:.__:c_ _ _ _ posJtion and offans all com-

=

School

WANTED: Ex perle rtced
Part·tima Van Driver need- Roofing &amp; Carpentar Fore_. to deliver hom&amp;deliv- man's, vaJfd driVer's license.
ered rntall, 4 hours par hand toOls, reliable trans·
day, Monday through Frl- portatiOn and references ·redoy. Mull have a good driY- qulred. local work, excellng .-.,clean, neal lind lenl pay for righl P"'10n.
dtplndable.
Minimum onuses, vacetlon. Appty at

lfwoWANmJ I~~lfwo~~W.~&lt;INil'D~~~ ..,l'.'o_lfwo_.w.__ _.. .,I'.IO_.Ifwo
__w.__ _..11116 lfwoWANmJ nnolfwoWANmJ 11"6 IJwoWANml

Free . Puppies, Black Lab
mix to a good homo.
SSO reward for the rotum of (740)446-7665
. stolon pig {yard ornamanl),

L

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

r

Description • Include A Price • A'&lt;~old Abbrevletlons
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads
Run 7 Deys
·

Tht Soulhtm local

=t"vo.,

POUCIU: Ot*l v.lly P'*llt'*'t.....,.. 1M r1gN:totclt,,....,.. 01 cenoelq ad M lftY 111M. aMrt
on . . flnl
'l'rlbuM-IeftiiMI n J'
.. N I
:elbll for no moN thin thiOOM oftht . . . . 000' I
by . . lffOI' . . . . . . . . ,.,.. .,.........
anyloMort..... INI,.....t'I'CIMIMP'rNicrn"lnorom'-'Onot.,I!Ch:w....I*IC:. Col; 'nwtiiiM....,.Inthlftnt ....llibll..-.on.
. , IIWtyt, confldlnUII. • Curnnt , _ cwd ........ • All N111 ..... ac11o«tl
lie . . i1U111e01 to thl ,....... F* ftOtlllniMI of 1. . . • TNt r
.ooeptt~ only
meeltng£0! *'Idle de. w. • not knowlftlltW aoDtf1i1: MY :ld .....
vlollaon ottM-.

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•Include Complete
Shoul
d
l

.

•

tond bo available 1or 8Ched- Ohio 45n1 . SLSO It an Get your HS equivalenCy &lt;11utlng lho houos trl Equal Opportunity Employ- p!Orna with our easy homo
8:00am and 5:00pm. Mon- ar.
•
eludy course 1-lt00-569day tllroo.91 Friday. For in2183 ext 310.
len4ew c:onaideration I80d URGENTLY
NEEDED-(16
y o u r - and COYer lo1· plasma donors aam $50 to I
M~; ··~- I
10r or Anontion of Diane HHI, 180 pe&lt; wee~c' lor 2 or 3
••-.R»JANml5
Ohio Vally Publishing Co., houn1 weekly. Call Sera0!1
.
.
~k&gt;
Gallipolis, Tee, 740- 592-6651.
FREE CASHI $10.000
Cloaning 5eMcos.. IOileral

.,.

Ojsolay Ads

'

• ::."'~..::..r::·..:: =: ~~~ ~

(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342
446-3008
992-2157

I

='·tJ:3n1A......

f!'UihSt have . a
WI a but driver'a ............,_, Training
We have a part-time poet. can be arranged. Phone
PART- TtME

OFFICE P08mON

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
TO Place

Jilanbl!' 11:imn · Jilntinrl• Page 03

: t• u.uw_==i'lml';i=HI!u=w.=Apm])=:;l-;r;::::;fi::;::;;;::::.~ll;116~Mifuu..wxu=H»=J=:=;-l~liE:~~~~""::no~·m~!~l:;F;.i:16 :0r olmJNny~l ls=~,
Nm&gt;;: :l F~:::;~;::(.(w;:::::=;l-;r~f'IOI:~SoMas;;£!iSD'Ifd.;;:;:;li1r~.....
~!i'm'lm~Jl.&amp;5105
N.\L~ l

We Cove·rL-""Y
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

.I

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, Qhlo Point Pleasant, WV

55 Hospital Dr.
Athens, Ohio 45701
(740) 592-9227

clearance plows. Lily disc mower 4-14" J, D.

If,you are loo'k ing for
a great opportunity to
make some extra

'\oil·: Sonu· !.! 1111 .., 111 ongin.JI ho\t'\.
mo ... t J-! lllh .liT 16 to 100' t

money for the

110 Help Wanted

lm•ediate Job
Openings

Happy
Thanksgiving
from
InfoCision!

holidays, we have
full-time and pantime shifts available.

These positions
require no expe!"ience
&amp;. we have a paid
train;ng program.
We have openings on
the following shifls:

Physic•l ·lherapist

Part-time night shin
Mon· Th 5:00pm
10:30pm

Technologists
X·Ray·

Cardlovauular
Nuclear MedlciH
Radiation Oncology
Rosie Word, VP of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Cenler ·
100 JQckson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
PHut (7401446·1101
•ur (7401446•1106

Gobble up all
we have to
offer:

&amp;
Sun 12:30pm-9:30pm
28 hrs @ $6.00/hr.

Full-time
evening shift

7 Paid HoUdays
a Year!

Mon-Th
I :30-10:30 pm
Sun 12:30pm·9:30pm
40 hrs @ $7/hr.

Weekly Bonus!
Weekly Pay~heck!

hoy tetlder. 2 J .D. hay wagons, an~vlty bed wqon,
ulllpiiCker, 40' N.l. PTO elnator, hay el~vator
Sno Co .. 6' Arps 3 pL grader blade, 6' bush hog
pull type dual wheels, I :Z' steel drag. 3 pt. carrier,
3 pL potato plow, planl setter, .3 pt. bail carTien, 3

basement.

call740-286-5868

Mustard Auction Service
Preston Mustard, Auctioneer
Licensed Bonded State of Ohio

pt. boom pole.
·
Equlpmcpt· 1616 bu. wire crib, 3000 1al. diesel
t.nk w/pump, 200 pl., ga.• tank wlpump,

and office . Has newer ~lnyl

MORNING &amp;TAR AREA

A 12X65 mobile

home with 2 bedrooms.

There is appro)(. a

acres that lies on Coun Street and both sides of
Horso Cave Road.
$22,500.00
A

two sto ry home

with

3

Homellle &amp; Poulan chala saws, tnller, 8' Chevy
caHie rack, cattle head &amp; loading pte, 2 feed
troughs, 2-16' ptes, nttle oUer. fttd M&gt;xes, 2 hor;
feeders. cattles round &amp; square hay reeders, 3 pt.
hyd. wood splllter, rorge, an"ll, post vice, 32'
wood ed. ladder, miller, welder, blnden, pulleys,
log Chains, batlery charger, eiMt. fence Char~er,
platform scales, renee slrelchers, lalloo equip. for
cattle, cyelone seeder. SS gal, drums, draw bars,
sway bars. 28" tractor tire &amp; wheel, lawn &amp;
g11rden tools, J.D. tractor grllll020 or 2020, lacks.
tractor radio &amp; healer, elecl. fence posts, barb

vinyl siding. Has 3 apartments with a good
income. There is a part basement . One
apartment has 4 rooms and a bath, one
apartment has 3 rooms and a bath. and the
other apar1ment has 3 rooms plus 2 enclosed

wire.

porches, and a ba1h.

.llal'; SS large round Nils of mixed hlly.
Antiques: Cast iron kettles, ox yoke, wheat nadle,
push plow, 5 &amp; 10 gal. milk cans, chicken crates,
cross oul saw, horse. drawn potato plow; 3 corn
jobbers, single lrHs, portelaln warming oven,
c:obblers kit.. Crtltrn can, lanterns, sausage
grinder, bow fronl china tll!b. w/claw feel, side
board, 2 old cabinet radios, oak desk, Vldmla,
O¥alllbrary table. daw foot organ bench, pie safe,
broad ar:e, single, double &amp; S shovel plows, plus
more.
DJ.b.a:i. Seasoned CUI ftrewood 1 lohilcCO ,
snow fence, . ropes, 4·5·6 time pitc:b nrks,
bookshelves, clarlne,. window rans, porch
rumJture, wood high chair, loys &amp; games, plus

BUTTERNUT AVENUE ·A IWO story home with

$39,000.00

STREET· Middleport •

A 2 slory

home with big stone accents on the
~~~:~~~;,"There are three bedrooms , dining room ,
li
, 1 112 baths, family room and a sun
basement , and a large garage with
aHached carport. Has new carpel in some

lra&lt;&gt;ms

NOW $69,000.00

Nok; Large aucdon. All equip. &amp; etc, Is In
working ordrr and been taken c11re of with reg.
malnt., etc. Something ror everyone. DGn 't be late.
Imu.t: Ca•h or Good Check• w/proper J.D.
Refreshments.

Owaen: Mr. &amp; Mn. Everett Justice

Professional
Environment!

Toll-free
1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901

.overtime

AVaUable!
P.O. BOX 1111• M'INFOAD, OHIO 4HQ
PHONE (74G) 120-2728 or (140) 1»2721
Auctla-.: Nannm K. Allen, Broker I Aoger It AI..,
'MMI Aatlon? hll Aucllonl C.lt Alltnt Todlyl

lnfoCislon·
The PrOfeislonhl

•

and a 6 room 2 story home with 3 bedrooms,
two baths, and a 3 bay garage with a

much more,

Call today to schedule
an inlerview &amp; start
saving now for lhe
holiday s:

Difference .

For brochure and more Info:

MAIN STREET • A boautlful view ol the

Mount,al

plows, 4-16"J.D. , mounled high
clearance plows. 256 Nl hay rake, 3 pl. 7' MF
dlst, 10' Pittsburgh pull diK, J.D. 4 row planter,

Only 36days
until Christmas!

Peari ·Straet· Here's the one story home I
to the grocery store and other stores that will
ver; conv.enienl. Has 2 bedrooms, 1 bat~.
comes equipped wilh kitchen appliances .
has a front and rear porch.
NOW 528,000.00

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokar........992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING.........949-2131
BETTY JO COLLIN$ .................949-2049
BRENDA JEFFER$...................992·3058
OFFICE ...................................... 992-2886

'·

'• .

�. ... .. .

•

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'

Sunday, Nov. 18,2001

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

I'OR
..

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~

t"'~~
~~.=
1ar 2002. Spoclal low

10 DOWN
GOY'T
· lingle
&amp;BANK FOREa.OSVAEs•....., 1eoo ... 1001 ...,.,
&gt;«JJ. VA.· FHA. LOW OR LOUted 10 11om
NO MONEY OOWNI OK &gt;&lt;o1111r-. 2 0 CREOITt FOR LISTINGS' trom Aeuan. Va1ey HoepiCALL 1-800-J38.0020 .,., .... "" SA 160 on. ""'...
9811
1·1!2' acre lot. 3 bedn:w:wn,
2·112 1&gt;111\t. big kl1dlon
wl oak cabinets, OR, LR
wlgos 10!1 ~. -

r---....,---..

Gt
=

_....

in thll
Is
""--~
-..
new.p~per

F*lbooliiO""'ofl. .
whictt INtkM it llteP 10
.c:tvertl.. Many
pi6Pere.K:e, tlmlt.tion or

I

Cfiscrimlnatlon baNd on
.... colof. religion, ...
temilllll ftllbn or Mt~
origin, or
Intention to
make . . ,..ue~~
piiePih'ence, lltnlllfk)n or

.n,.

-

air,

room.

-.g_..,., , No.

::·r;

COy .. Fl
oad liomM
of p, .....
F ... 1·
666 !eS 0117

FllOI 00ya. ~
vontcwy
-"""'
front (»4}73&amp;-3401

pon:h &amp; 2-1/2 COl go-.
1 -1
I ' ~ ~Or No Clodi?Goll,.,.- al $125.500. - . ,
FlnonCO Only
otter. CaU (140)4t8-4514 AI Qekwood In 8arbourtltom 8·5pm, M·F. 00' . . . . WV 304-J'3&amp;.3&lt;108.
p~,..a-32~ after Spm.
NeYerlw.dinOOitilaaide?
ONy SSOO. DeMvera to yOur
River view. 5.9, ale. In· lot
Law
Paymon10.
ground pool, 4 ilf., linlshed HIOCHI91-8m
ba
' 2 fi ~
semen •
•-~ACOS. Now f&lt; Wlot 3 Bodroom
hugo '-'.. ( 7 ~)992·2943
Only $19,850. 'FIM
8b;92&amp;-;d;;;;
2028
Well- Maintained Brick N&amp;;;$81;;Up;;;-.7(1).'68
';-

dlaerimln.~Hon...

Thts new pape~

laundry

1t1D111

will not

.......

~tlforrNt

ntete which Ia In

YkUI~

of thllaw. OUr
rudera are Mteby
Informed tl\at 611
CIWellfnga ~Md In

thft newspapw.,.
on an equ.l
opportuniiJ buM.

ev~~llabte

....,_Bank

Ooflltori
;;;;:'2

-LAND
f7«!)44HCG

15 COurt SlrHI. 2 . Bod·
.
- · 1 1 1 2 - . - Whr _, _..,..., and iolilgoioka. -..1 loans from MilO
-Co.· Rio Gtarde.1 3 OIISiroof Paltdng.C"-10 - .. (7~~~~6 3Dfl3
VIIIDCJdM a'll. very private Scnootl and DownkJwn
.. ... 526.5110. 011 ~ ~ ~ plus do-No
~
"--. 5
·-"""" po.,... ou ,_,«ence
..... n..--;:;:.;...., 26
.Pelt. (1~)"6 ~1128 .
~ ....,..,
S27 000
5
sto:OOO! E::..._ 31
2 BR. 1 112 Baeo on 112 21&gt;1dioom- ,_,no
wilh woodl, stream . _ bam acr• of Property. $3501 ~ 1241Ym0. $100 c:tepoe.
S3f ooot
"""""· ·(1~)olol&amp;'
ly. (81~)A71~. 3617
illoiOO Co.· TUj)j)Ofl f'lainl· lluc:Qye Hi..
Con-

::::.:!.;;:;.;:

~

t-iuntefS

.

...
st,.am,

acoes.
._e,ooo or 16 acrH.
$18,000. carr Ad. 6 acr~
Sl3.ooot "' 6 acres wi1h
X~ pole bam. $30.0001
~ 5 acres $10.5001
Rutland 11 ""'"'· $11 .0001

816 Main Streel, Pl. Pl.
Compl
. etel}l Refu~lshed . 2
slory. 2 Full Balh. 3 Bed·
rooms. Large Kitchen,
Large Utlliry Room , LRJ DR/
Family Am. f\lew Cnrpet
1hroughout F/A &amp; AIC,
$79,900. (740)446·9585 or
(740)446·2205 or (740)446·
2683.

'·

FIRST nME HOME
BUYERSI
$00own.
No Cred~ Needed!
HUD, VA FHA
1-800-501·1 777 ext 9826

For sate by
tevel hOn
Chesl ~;:t

I

...

Molln..E Jlor,m; 7..o-365-7671.
Now 2002 1 ~ .,.y
~SALE
$7V9 oown I $1 55.38/mo,
L,~--oiiiiioiiiiii-_.1· Col Nlldd. (7~)366-7671.

i

14x70 ·Cia11on Toailer. 2.5
Acres, 32x40 New ga111ge.
&amp;:tntc
View
Estates.
(~)576-2635

Now Double Wide. $1g5
Per Month! 3 .Bidroom. 2
Balh. Free Oelrvwy &amp; &amp;K·
up. 1-8116-928-MZe
Nice 28x80 Doublil

16 Wide. Only S195.00 Per setting on rented

Wldf

lOt In

For Sale: 60 """"' on lho
dead end of Hysell Run
Road, excelfenl hunllng
,.._.,. and building ai1a
lor homo. Waler and eleclrio
aiiMdy ...,., s1o.ooo can
• " - · ·~ (740)992
~ ' '"""'"
•
4293·
Indian Creek Estates, 3-6
acre lots, wea1 of Ala
Gtancle, ftOm $25.900.
(140)2ol6-57'7

Amazing First Time Home
Buyers.
Government
Backed loans. No cuKJil
neected.
(304)755·5566
Llmited Offer.
Assumable loans- Many
types available. Call for de·
3563
1a11s.
•

11~)44&amp;

.

Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2
bath, save $5,155, d8!1V8fed
&amp; set up on your tot 1nc:lud·
ing skirting &amp; fiberglass
st&amp;ps, Colts Mobile Homes,
U.S. 50 East, Athens, Oh,
740·592·1 972.

Looking To Buy ,.. New
Homo? Don1 Have llnd1
We 00111 Huny Only 10 LoiS
Loft, 30H36-7295.

front Drive a lifttluv. a
loti Ookwood , _ o f
Nitro. {304)755-5885

REDUCED
All Double Wide Dlsptaya
must go. Only Sflll5 - . ,,

OnlyaiOekwoodHomelof

Moigil MemotV Gaoden•, 2
lola In Chnstus section al
t.M or statue, $450,

r

I

l...cmi &amp;
A

L.~---CRFAiililliiGE;;._,I

----.

4 acres 1 moe ott At 1 on

eagle fudge Rd., utilities
avalable and driveWay
there $20 oro Arm call
{740)992.s62o after ePm.

RENT

1

•r neflf
rcom,

two bat hs, urao-12r ga1age.
family room v. ith fireplace,
.sun room. New central heal·
ing &amp; ale system. One mi ·
nute·otf Route 7, but still prlvale. (740)985·3981
FORECLOSED
GOV'T
HOMES! SO OR LOW
OOWNI TAX REPO 'S &amp;
BANKRUPTCIES!
OK
CAEDfT! FOR LISTING!
CALL 1·800·501·1777 ext.
9813.

r ";:R:;;;
·----

:::'":..•.:.en.,.eom=_•:.nd::..:&lt;lpm::..;._ _ 0181.
...
5""""" and looge .lot8go.
New balhooom. Upgracfod

caopet lhtough- out $3501
month. Deposit Required.

~

~=any

business!
Situated on almost an
acre, with a large
parking lot Some
kitchen equipment
included. Locatioh is
everything-In the
business district! For

ke:=:"

illiNT IN G· That one
big enough? Thb
i is in the ""'"'""'·I
with almost double the
living space with a half
loft, also on almost an
acre, for only a little
more money. Priced at
$36,000!
Call us for a showing
on these cabins or ,any
of our properties.
740-992-3325
Teaford
r.; .-· oc·-;. Miller Agent

I

o'

i

ca~

N1oo 1bi'. All Eloc1tfo. Near
hit#&gt; ochool. S300 month •
Oopool1.
(~)575-3100

Buy, Sell or Trade

(~)175·5509

• Evonlngo.

ln the

NICf 2bi'. Apai1monll, ~~~
IOOrrll, fully oqulpod kl
on. Con1ra1 HooUng'Coollng,
Wllhtr I Dryer hookup.

~

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clarit
Chapel Road, Pbner, Ohio.
1740)446-7444 1·877·830·
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
linancing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Masler Card.
Drive· a-little sav&amp; alot.
New
and Used Fuonllute
S
tore below Holiday Inn,
Kanauga. We Sal! grave
monuments and vases.
Hours: Monday thru Saturday 11am· 3pm. (740)445·
4782

·

(~)882·2523

Now Taking Applications36

w.t

2 Bodroom Town-

houoo Apartmonlt, 1 -

I 51· Needs some remodeling
BR, Bath, Kil, DR $27,000
PRICE REDUCED- Now only $37,500.
lhan you expect. lR, Kn, Off.. 213 BR,

Wolst
s.wsgo Ttash
$36Q11.1o 7~ '
·•
·
JMioctLe.PORT· Park 51· Very well
Pomeooy, Noylota Run, 2 or
3 BR 1112 Balh LR DR Kit 2 car gar
3 bo'. sportmonl, wid-he, Bit,
'
' '
' '
•
O«Utlly dopooit, nolerences,
BeiWeen SR 1 &amp; 33. Really
::c:.ll::.!:f7.::.~:::)992
=.::6 ::68::6 .,.
· __
VIew. 3 BR. 3 Balh. Much
Tlklng Applications, 2 BA.
Stove, Atfrlgerator, CIA,
Price greatly reduced! 3 BA , 2
Slorage Building, Waler,
Porch . RlveNiew. Mid 60's.
Sewage, Trastl Paid. Close
Nice neighborhood· Quiet &amp;
1o wa~. No Pets. De- maintained. 4 BA, 2 bath, LA, OR. Kit·, Fam
pool!. (7~)245·5693
Gatage . Asking $88,500 but will. cor1slder
Tar• Townhouse Apart· reasonable offer.
man1s, Very Spacloua. 2 MIDDLEPORT· Peach Circle So much IO offert
Bedrooms, -2 Aoo!'1, CA, 1 BR, 2 1/2 baths, Kit, LR, DR , FA, UtiiAm, Gar.,
112 Bath, Fully carpeted, Exriellenl workmanship.
Adul POOl &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
tfo Start $365/Mo No Pets · Several investment properties to buy for rentals or
t.Mae Plus Security Oeposii
to operate as your own business. Give us a call &amp;
Required, Oaya: 740·446look at one of these today.
3481; Evenings: 740·367·

I

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CLASSIFIEDS!

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Ide~~~~.~
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COMPUTERS:

WE

fl•

tal Karat Rounc:t with .13 NANCE DELL COMPUT·
side diamond. (740)379· ~;~~V:ed::/'h ~~-~;
2798
Cod
.N
7940 ·
e
"'\.11 7
5 BoKes of what-knots, baby www.omcsolutlon.com
bed, high chair, car seat. AIWWOOd for Nle- S25 tor
1304)87 s- 2601
mixed 1 louclclood p1 fl
fll , .
WOOd for $15 I '1rud&lt;Jood,
61110 Trailer new Hitch &amp; dlacount tOt' stnlorll ,..,.
Jack. Licensed &amp; titled. ans, {740)948-0805.
$250 .. 2 Handmade gun
cabinets 1 red oak holds 13 F l - lor Solo. $150 per
guns matching looks . 1 ltUCk Load. (7~)441·94711
Birch Holds 12 guns match·
lng looks, both are made For SolO Four Tlreo, Slzo
from lour-Quarter grade 1 190 70 1~. Good Tttod $15
lumber.
$250
Each. Each ot All for $50.
(7~)~f987
(3041675·1185

1

--

I~

I

:;~;;~~;;'i;;;;;;;;

'*·

Flat Bar, Steel Qrattnil
Klndl.wood WOOd I coal For Dramt, Orlvew~
IIOW, $125, (1~)24Nllll1 ~=~~~~·r;,r&amp; Ring,
ll
w ~ ••.
$7 00 ·~ l&amp;L a..- u.'VI
ar~ rn~rowa~~e, · ~'·
--~ _.,.
$20. worila. OeSer IV Syl. all Open Mondly, Tueeclay,

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara Caaey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
Candace
446-7412

I

Spect•cular river vl•w•, 1
secluded wooded lot and
nature abound this riiiMd ranch
3 AC mil. With hardwood
remodeled oalt kitchen and
living space enflanc:ed by a
~~~~.'~."d lower level, tills gem
. $114,900.00

1114
I
one story home with 1 covered
porch Is 10 cozy! ConVenient In
town location. Lovely woodwork
throughout, central heat and air,
3-4 bedrooma. Extra large rooms!
No need to look 11nymore. This
one Is for youl $59,900

.POMEROY- 2 Bedroom home on lot
with river view. Currently used as a
rental, great home lor an investor or
nice starter hamel ASKING $22,000
·
VANDERHOOF ROAD- Jusl past
Tuppers Plains. This 1 story frame
home has vinyl siding, newer shingle
roof, 3 bedrooms, 1 fell balh &amp; 1
unflniBhed bath. Uving room with wood
buming flteplaco. Equ~ kitchen, FA.
Gas fumaca. large decking area. 3.12
acres. Nearly all mowed large yard ,
garden area. Easy access to Belpre,
Athans &amp; Pomeroy. Call for your
showing. ASKING $75,000

modular In nice country
aettlng. Extras Include master
bath, garden tub &amp; shower
combination, detached storage
building &amp; a 10 minute drive from

1122 NHd
living In ·town coupled wllh the
low maintenance of a brick
ttome? Com~ ~ee this ol'le story
brick home w1th hardwood lloors,
3 BR 1 1J2
, full basement and

home with 1 hornt buslnesal 4
BA 2 BA, living room, family
room/office p4ua a huge metal
building that can be used lor 8
home buslnell located near the
juncllon of SR 160 &amp; SR 654.
$110,000.

0

• Jus1 what you have been waiting for b ~~~~~.:
high water, ,good condltitlf1 home wlfh up 1o 4 I&gt;
basement, CIA, water softener, and yes a large front
other features.
ASKING
out•L• MINUTES FROM TOWN • This 1 story frame home' feafures 6
lrooms,, 3 bedtooma, 1 bath. Gas FA heal, vinyl siding, attached carpon,
lot of 1.34 acres. Room for a garden. Property conveniently
llocated on SR124.
ASKING $42,5DD

•burna- must
, . ~tun:tay
&amp;
ootdomakl take
In alloffot.
(1~)4.4&amp;-7300
(ToiO)He 1880

j)ICkage.
IENNETI'S HEATING I
•· COOUNO (7~o~•L9411
Sundlv. Of 1-.tn-111117.
,......,.....
www.orlb.com,1Mnnetl

Land Listin s!

RACINE Comar lot with a nice building wlfh FANG heat. CIA. sforage buil•ding1.1
newer roof, vinyl atdlng. Public water and aaptlc available. Great
maeling toom or craft Shop, you decide. Can't beallhe pncel
"14,90tl I
.
ASKING •

........................... 992. .2259

Sherrl L. Hart ..................................742·2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992-2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce ............. 992-2259

\

o...

1108 Price
1
neighborhood ~enlng close to
toWn! 3 BR 2 1/2 SA on
Brenlwood Drive, oversized
rooms ,
partially finished
basement, and a two-&lt;:ar garage
all for only $82,900,

.

.

tlf9 OWNER WANTS AN
OFFER! !!I Brand new MCtlonal
t.omel Spacious 3 BA 2 BA. with
dream kitchen, flret:~lace,
whirlpool tub, walk·ln closets In
all BA, bullt·ln hutch &amp; desk.
Land nollnciOOed. $88,000
1125 SoiHude 6 seclusion ·~ear
1 700+ acre State · Park!
Getaway r8tre(U located next to
Tycoon Lake down a tree lined
dead end road. Also ge~ a bonus
with 2 extra building lots (ncluded

~V:..60;::.. ...---...,......,..,--

i

35• 11otm door. complele
S60; Four 54• shutters, $10;
14' poreh railing witn spindlel, $25. can (740}446·
4186

... L STEEL IIUILOlNG ,
~L

~ ~

L_ _ _
FOR_'II_AU_.-rf
2 Red Healet Pups, $125
each, Black Mare, Gentle,
2.5 •ta o&lt;d. Soddll Btot&lt;e.

•

$800. (740)256-8034

AKC Golden Retriever
Pups, Parents on premises.
Roady Now. $250·$300. No
Sunday cans. 1740)245·
5358
--------AKC Registered Gold Re·
1tlevotS, $225. 1740)366·
89n

40x26 wu $7,780, now

Real Estate Qenerel

with

you'll en)oy 1he pleasing chann
and character this home
features. Eye pleasing and
e&gt;fremaly functional , the ki1Chen
featurea large center isle wllh
granite counter and lots of
cablne1 epace. Wood flooring, 9
loot ceilings and nice lrim lend a
hend to lhf ViC1orian feel. Also,
3 BR, 1 full end 2 half balha,
large LR, very nice formal DR,
largo deck and full basement
Approx. 3 acre lot with
wonderful privacy. Only 3 miles
fonn Holzer. $189.9001201

6 Months Free Lot Rent

Intersection
33 a 5~
Just South of Logan
M·F 8:30·8, Sat 9-8

Logan, Ohio 43138
R«UOI C$ •lit l&gt;t prh·•u~

unllllnler&gt;I~WII.

'\::1},;

G:t
:.or"=

I

·•citeaflon.half acrea for pure
,..,
Localed on the
the new launch
fliCIIIIy 110 acceaa will be a
snap.
land II lfal and ..ry
ueeablo. Also Includes nice
aatln kitchen, living room, 2
belha and m6re. Nice trtm and
lnlorior doora. 2·car garage.
$149,9001107

Gallipolis, Ohio
45631

14022 Watch 1hc River from your
bac:kyard? Enjoy the view from
your boat dock or back deck. this 1+
ac mil wittr a 2 BA 1 bath mobile
hOme/vacation camper ls just 1he
thing lor stress. May be room for a
garden. located at 7183 51. At. 7
South. ,Reduced!

''

U029
DELIGHTFUL HOME
Pretty as a picture. Very well
planned stono and 1ramo ranc h
home offers 3 bedrooms. walK-in
closet. 2 lull baths, charming llvmg
room wlflreplace . New oak cabinets
line the kitchen . Range, refrigerator,
dishwasher, and compactor all stay.
Utility room is extra large. 21iSr deck
in the rear with 36' inground pool.
Many fruit trees, flowers, and
shrub!:f. Sprinklf:lr system in the rear
2 car attaGhed garage and a carport.
2 story t}am building. Blacktop and
cemen1 driveways A home you'll be
proud to own. VL Smith 446-6806

·~

13375·
Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full
basement with 2 car garage and
finished family room. Home sits on 2
Ac. mil in Hannan Trace . Schools.
Just minutes from downtown
Gallipolis. This home features a
beautiful landscaped lawn, wood
pellet stove and central air. Located
just off Rock Uck Rd . on Mabie Dr.
in nice neighborhOOd. Have a
garden and raise some flowers but
make sure to look at tflis. Call
Johnnie at 367·0323 today lor an
appointment.
N4004 9 ACRE TRACT ot vacant
land located on SA 566 $75,000.00
Virginia 446·6806

BEAUTY·

,
~ :j.

•

1

.,l\1

REDUCED! ThiS floor
plan makes very QOOd use of
the 3600 square feet offered.
Formal yet casual. 2 story
foyer wlfh hardwood plus
second 'back" stairway faeds
to kitchen. Large rae room.
Comlorlable
FR wl1h
fireplace. Great kitchen.
Formal LR &amp; DR. Screened
porch . Large flal lot Much.
$329,000 t121

Hurry·Hurryl The lime Ia rtght
10 make lhla lovely family
home youra. This 2 story ludot
style home offera formal Living
Room
&amp; Dining Room,
remodeled Kitchen with bar
area &amp; dinette area open to
sunken Family room with
wood-bumlng Insert, 3 BRa, 2
112 baths, 2 car garage and
level. landscaped lol. Ptlced a

.-

"'

-

l
'~
14017 Localad 383 MI. C.rmol
Ad. 3 bedtoom, 2 balha, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME Clak
kitchen, ceramic tile In kitchen &amp;
balhs. NEW CARPET 1hrough oul,
netural decOr. 5 ACRES MIL
Income Located s~og,OOO. Trish or Dave
on SA 160. 4 Bedrms, 2 baths,
approx 3/4 of an acre. live on 1st
fl oor &amp; rent tower 18\lel for $400.00
mo. would make a good Mother·!n·
Law Suite. Income can help you
own this good home. Owner moving
out of town. Call to inspect, this will

c•r•d for,
brick
, conveniently
located on White Road I 3 SA 2
BA with many updates, 2 car
garage, large level lot , Priced to ·
seH $84,900.

I
home In OrHn Township on
..... mill 3 BA 2 112 BA, newer I
carpet and abO\Ie ground pool.
Priced to sell at $72,900.

COMMERCIAL • LOT·
Jackson Pk. Gallipolis, OH Corner
lol with great potenllal.

v

Spacoo? Then lhls
offers approx. 4 acres,
1900 sq. ft. of living area
featuring formal LR and OR
with fireplace, kitchen with
eating area open to FA, 4 BRs
and 3 full baths !lituated in a
lovely country setting in the Rio
Grande · area.
Priced
at
$95,000. 1025

"GIVE IT AWAY" Rambling
Stone A1nch with lots c
character
and
spar
Beautilul
woodw1
outstanding flagstone
hardwood floors. 4 e r
baths, large LA with fire( u,
formal OR, eal-ln kltchc ·· FR
with lots of bookshelves
doors 10 oaniall11l

:~~~

Potential With A Great VIew
is what you will find wflen you
view the property located at 5
&amp; 7 Court Street Main home
offers large LA, OR , ,3 BAs
. '" . . ..
and 1 1/2 baths plus small
. ".
'\~ eHiciency unll with 3 room
and a bath. Could easily be
convened to a single family
home. 2 car detached garage
with deep lot and off street
parking. Priced at $90,000.
MoyiiOrry Atmoopherol Uvo
t224
within walking distance of 3
cornmunlly parks, public boal
ramp
tennis court Large
fta1 101 with 2 exua lots
available. This 3 BA home Is
perfect for starters and small
families. LR, eat-In kllchen &amp;
large utility room. One car
J
detached garage. Priced at
PRIVACY
W I T H
$59,900, ll'a easy to afford for
NEIGHBORS111 Sesl of bolh
mosl pockelboolcs. •206
worlds. Brick ranch located on
SA 588 offers over 2000 sq. ft.
of living space. Ouallty
constructed with 3 BAs.2
baths, large living room,
formal dining, eat In kitchen &amp;
family room. Oak trim &amp; some
hardwood floors . Over 4 acrea
with natural privacy sceeens,
but neighbors nearby.
Mkldleporl· Add
story
51g9,aoo 1105
portfolio· Log
I
batfl , LFI, lormal DR and
wl1h one 1 bedroom and one 2
I kitchen . Conveniently
bedroom *"-rtmenf AND a log
at 716 Third A\lenue.
enlcloncy apartment $65 ,000
AHordably priced at $18,500
1121
1231

--:

ana

GALLIPOLIS • Home loa"'"'"
SA, and 1 bath with cuetom
cabinets In kitchen, very large lot
that has potential lor &amp;eVeral
opttons, let us shOw
this horne
with grea110Catlon

14018

NEW LIS.TINIGII
detail was
construction.
woodwork
throughout.
Fantastic Kitchen. Great floor
plan allows for large living
room, formal ·dinlng, eat-In
kitchen, family room and
upstain; sitting a1ea. 4 BRs,
2.5 baths. Private. Close to
town. $214,900

ht11ngl This 3 BR homa has a
private 4 acre sanlng. Very nice
home wlfh 2 baths, largo LR ,
eat-In kitchen with dining area,
vaulted ceilings and more . Also,
has a privata deck. Priced
aftordably al $89.900. 1201

r.~~~!~

14030PLUSI
ACRES·
BUIL,DINGS Old lashion charm
with modern convenience in thie 4
BR. 2 story hOme, 2 baths,
{whirlpool tub). Lovely· equipped
kitllamlly rm combo w/hardwood
lloms, cherry cabinets. Enjoy
viewing the counlry from every
wondow. Formal dining rm &amp; LM
wlbeamed ceilings. Porch &amp; patio
· 12 ACRES of beautifu l rolling land.
P11 slure, woods &amp; some Umber,
J.XHid &amp; m1n&lt;Jral ngnts. large barn
/!. bUtld1ngs. Celli VLS 446·6~06

Former1y
used
as
a
restaurant, It Is well sul1ed lor
office space, apartments or a
mldure. Approx . 5600 sq. ft .
plus full basement. Beautiful
woodwortc, high ceilings , great
· location. 1111

IIChooleyalsm. 1607

STORE FOR
SALE. New 41iarm system. Building
built to state c:ode. Continuous
operation since 1S86. Price includes
in\len1ory. Call Johnnie 367 ·0323 or
446·6806.

ml11
one on
Klneon Drive. 3 large bedrooms
1 balh. Thls home has a fenced
l~ backyard, with a big carport,
mce
I lot and much more.

r.

around ;904 has wonderful
charm and limitless potential.

11111 Propo&lt;ty...walt cated for
brick rii1Ch olfertng 3 BRs. 2
112 bafhl, LR open to dining
area, FR, over 1400 1q. ft,
basement, 3. llr~aces, 2 car
garage, In-ground pool, 4 1/2
acrea, m/1, located only
minutes from town In ttte~ clty

Bedrooms, 2 Baths, ~anch home.
Kitchen w/eatlng area, formal dlmg
toom, garden lib. Fl,.place In LR,
Calhodraf ceilings, oovetOCI deck,
above ground pool, collar wl
building,. E~otoraga ahBd, 3 car
deiached
garage,
blacldop
driveway, fenced lot. 2.2 acres mil.
Appointment only.

,, "

lo Stay•••This cha,rmir.tg
2 story brick In town will be
hard to leave. Features not
seen very often include
beveled glass doors, fancy
trim , tile roof &amp; much, much
more . lots of room, especially
lnthe huge family room. Also
Includes formal living room,
formal dining, eat In kitchen,
basement and anic. 3 BAs 1
)12. bath, super sized lot with
on-ground jlOOI. $189,000 t213
~ ~
~
.~

nice 3 BR
bonua room
find you'll
most of your
lhere are nearty

40) 385-4367

Real Estate General

rr~ ·

large kllchen. dining area, LA
and 3 baths. Huge walk-oul
basement per1ect tor FR. Large
deck, pa~~ &amp; , .7 acre lot with
great ultllty. 2 car attached
garage plus 2 car detached.
$,50,0001114

18~lh~~~ir:,
for cooking, to
the 11
cl.aw fool bathlub,

·or

Position, P.O. Rox 1033,

BARGAIN·

VIsit us online at www.Evans·Moora.cam

SuwuF.s
--

=~

for Sale· 2 used lOft. ga·
rage doors. (740~6--9485

I

j

l=tl

4 BA home with Beautiful brick structure built

numagcnwnt. l'rlor successful
cunuuisslom:dloulcs or
numagcmcnl '~ "peril'ncc . Musl
honj!st a nd lmrdworkln.:. Slop in
or send resume to:

958 Clark Chapel Ad
Bidwell. Ohio 45614

"145

' :•,. ·qttoml

~~Qr::x~oy·

v...

REAL ESTATE

or

13367 Large
1n town, new
tool 1999, 4 SR. 2.5 SA, 2 cat
garage,
vinyl
siding,
nice
nelgl'!borhood. Needs'some TLC but
priced righl at S79 1900

IJ/tWt tJnd
Whllt.wu were looklny
,
for?
. CIIIIIIS we 111M lllll/tJI
mcJtW l/stlllfll fD ChOON

ALL STEEL SLOGS.
Up to 60 % oH1 40x50,

13,960. 1-800-292.(1111.

Real Eatetl General

~~h4
446•6806* Branch
Office
23 Locusl Sf.

1130
bUill 3 BR 3 BA
on 2 private acrea
from town. Formal
2 car
ramodeled kltctten.
attschld and 2 car detached
garagea. A large dlnlnglfamlly
room addition with working
fireplace and acreenedoln porch,

11 Dille: Vscsnl Lot on 2nd ovo. Prime Locallon $8MOO
ll.1l!IZ .Commorclol Properly! I 45 acres m/1 nefr Rkl Grande.
W9- VACANT LANDI One acre m/1 on 2 road fronlogeal Nice
location. Priced below $20,0001
UQAl· 8.125 Acroo m/lln
n townohlp $59,900.
!~·12· 1• ocre1 m/1 ovttlooklng Ohio Vllfoy.
~· 80 acres mil near Rio Grande.
mn, 263 acral m/1 off of S1a1o Rou1a 211
lliU- LOTSI Frontage on SA 554 and Woodomlll Rd.
Reslrictlona. $12,500 each.
~.
t2CKI5· Vec:1nt Land· 85 acres on Hidden Valley Dr., lola of road
lrontage.
1124- 3 acre building loll North Gallla Eslales. $39,900.

and
tltCtr1C gu turN·
HI Eflk:foncy Heal
~umps, featuring Tappa.ns
Free Incredible warrant)'

;:a11ec:"33~~~~ ~=~~~.

.

This 2 Slory home features 3
badrooms, 1 bath, hardwood
floors, 2 fireplaces, and much
morel This Is all found on a .315
lot In town.

~.:r:!:..
~~:

BUILDING MATERIALS

St.ee 1943

Stable Company &amp; ownership since
1%9,,big city income in a scenic
wonderland area, 40ik, paid vacations,
holidays, and insurance. #1 selling line
homes in USA. Nn Sunday work.
Sales can have 4 1/2 to 5 days workweek.
Over 50 available homesites.

n/
0t1
.._.,11'~ ~-

Fo~rly Blar:lcbum Re«_
lty "SertJit'8 Soutlum1 Oltio For Ot:~r A Quarter Century'•

.~~!;','

s.. •.., ... -

Real E11tate General

We OtTer

4 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0i
740-446-0008 7 40-441-llll
•

~, • .,
'

..

USA Ak -

We are across from the new Super
Walmart In Logan, an area of
tremendous growth.

e~-~~~

. . .·,:

E•c:.

'*
IIAUru:.;

-w
NANcU

You Nu..-1

1~

TAA.ILERS·

In Sales &amp; Management

·

MIDDLEPORT· OLIVER STREET
• This 5 year old 28x4e Dulch
housing home features 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, garden lub,
skylights, newer carpet, porch,
deck, melal carport &amp; sforage
building. Home has gas heal, CIA,
equipped kitchen, sidewalks &amp;
beautiful landscaped 125x50 lol.
Home has been very well
maintained, Ownerrelocaling ...
ASKING $65,000

PUP

POSITIOJ\S WITII
POTENTIAL

--~===============---J

ranch In a . pteCtful
nttlng cion to work, school
1103 New Built Two Story and play. Beautifully landscaped
Country Vlctorien On 5 Acrea. seftlng, open floor plan with large
Lavisflly adorned with hardwood farnily~~'ing room combination
flooring , solid wood doors,
fireplace and 6' whirlpool tub, the
owner has spared no expense .
I
setting, stocked t:~ond
wooded backyard.

Camollll

..... .
•
• sewer pipit$.
DWNEIII ~""" ~- con..,,
_,.,. nru 0 0 T ap. windows, hnt..s, etc Claude
&amp; Coleman Qll, fni'I ..Kon $9.00 a ' :: proved r/vp doof cheaP. Ph: Wfn1ers, Rio Granda, OH
' " " - In- 100 Channoll. Br Sam 1100-452-1856 Ert 312l.ori. Call740-245·5121 .

Saoovo&lt;ll
RetitOCI. By SOCIAl. SECURITY DISA·
~ wv Poet Olflce
(304)273-6855
· BILITV C!a1m Oerved? We
Speol.alize In ~ and
PETCAAEAX.COM Save ~- FRBeEEnoCfi~~eUalm
·
1
up to 50% on AU pet fMdi.
'' """
'
cations and auppllet, In- Sefvicft, Inc. ToU-free: 1·
www.
'
w
ckldlng HMr1QIId, I'*'CeP- 886-836-4052
AND UIEO
tor, Frontline, rnoretl FREE Wat.,-tirw Special:. 314 200
FOR
SHIPPING. Oodor online PSI Sl!1 .95 Pot 100; I• 200
Install, Fret Eatlmatll, If ==~;;.~)(.com
,_ PSI $37.00 Per ~ 00; All
)UU don1 Col uo, Wo Btus COtnptassion Fillings
looset (740}448·6308, 1In Stock.
800·291-oo96.
- - - - - - - - RON EVANS ENTERPRfS.
Refrigerator &amp; gas range El Jackson, Ohio, 1·800·
NEW ANO U8ED. STEEL $125, 17~)7~2-2757.
537-9528
StHI BMms. Plpt Reber
For Concf'lle, Mgle. ~ RelldsnUIJ HOme OWners
BUU.lliNG

soli'S or over $60,000 In

LENDER

.Qriginal Atm

~

oil &amp; chodi"11 hi d'eloit;c;y hN1
~W earry 0
oomploto Hno of Mobile
haml .,.ns &amp; w c II~..W.
HNNm"l HUnNG l
COOLI«&lt; (740,........11
or 1~
ot'Vfl 00114
.et

Desire to nuakt O\'Cr $.10,000 In

Gt
·--

5

51

I

I

R1111l E11tate General

'
evanamoo@zoomnet.net

Henry

.

t6x8o, $100 per moo1h,
Ed at Country Homes, 740·
992·2167.
.
Tratler space_for r~ , S~ 20
per roonlh, In M!n~rSVIIIe;
600 ~. 11 office butkjmg, ale
&amp; cooling fan , $275 pet
monlh, (614)876·166 1

1:~~~:::~~~~~~

Real Estate General

REDUCED • POMEROY • A
1 story frame home In a nice
nelgttborhood . II includes living
room, equipped eat·ln kitchen,
bedroom, bath &amp; an enclosed front
sitting porch. This home also
Includes a full basement with an
equipped summer kitchen, 3/4 bath
&amp; a 1 car garage. This all sits on a
. ~ 0+ acre lot. Owner may consider
offetS.
REDUCED TO $15,500

I

RENT

Ntce lots. quiet country set·
ling will accommodat

badn;om apartmenta at VMlogo IAonoo and -..c1e
Apartmenls in Middloport '"C'·.olllfn'l
F10tn Sl!78-S3ol8. COif 740e92·50&amp;4. Equal Housing

Ooyllmo,

FOR

~

Several Russ1an Mibtary Rif· 2 apaees al the Mlmof)'
lfos With ammo. $65- $130. Gaodonl (Woman 01 "" Goubb'l Plano- T...lng '
Appliances Racondit!Onecl US Brand 'Mth Bayonet. Wen), $315.. call {7.0)446- Repairs. Problerne? N.d
2893
Washeos. DoyBtS, Ranges, (1~~1622
Tuned? Col Tho Piono Dr.
Refngtalo.., Up To 90 Day.
7-5
200
Guatanleodl We Sell , _
• ~~
..... .
Ufl,
Maytsg Appliances Ftench
~" "''""
$125: kilche&lt;1 cablnol. Hanly M1.mo S3 00 MCI1 4
c1ty Maytag, 740-44e,.7795 ---white, $90; small meta~ lor 110. ap.n Sat. 8-6pm. &amp;
wardrOO., $30; {740)ii2· '"••IOL Dewhur.l GreenFor Sale· Aecond tlioned Buy or11i*· EAtv&amp;OOe _Anti· 5503.
house Mt Mo. (31l4)895he
d
ques,
4 ast Mam on
3140 IHve me sege or
was rs, ryers and refng- SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- 8' pool table. l"llltl, lticka. t304}815-37ll
·
:;:::s~~~ Appli· 992·2526 Russ MOOfe, baits, rKt, etc. Excettent
nuo. (~)675-~
Ave· owner
~ition,2681$800, Call "';;ji;;;;;;;;j;;!'j:j;;;t;;;;;:r;;:
.
Sue's SoleclabiO$ on lho "r (1-)olol&amp;lidopoudont 011Hot_ po101 Washer, $95. in Middleport. Dolls, glassAf'fol c'lbl1 • Convenient tributor, CaH For Product Or
WhiOipoot Dtyet, $95. GE wate, Aladd;n manlels, and
WOLFF TANNING IIEOS Clppor1unj1y. (7~)«f-198:!
Aefngerator, $95. Hoi point more. (740)992-()298
Low Monthly tnvestmtntl
JET
Elect Range, $95. Whirl·
Homo DtllvfltY
AERATION t.40TOAS
pool Refrigerator. Uke New,
Mlsoll.ANF..otJi
FREE ColorC.talog
St 75. Foeezet, Uptighl.
MEJK..'HAN!liSE
CAll Today lo800-71lo()f 56 Aepoked, &amp; RoOOllt In
512~.
Skaggs Appliances. •
www.np.estan.com
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
76 v 1ne ST (740)446. 7398
.
800-5;!.7·9528.

Real Estate General

(7~)388-9194

Lasher Road. Mostly
approx. 3·5 acres.
A ''""'"v is necessary,
lancf we have the cS1ii 'n;atcl
from the local surveyor.
Excellent count1y hom I!
site at only $17 ,5 00.

I

V•ry nice, 2·3 bedroom
apartmenLIA, In IOWn, .large
k~chtn. • $500/mo. Ref·
efencN &amp; d&amp;POtil riQI.J tred.
1740)446-3644
SPACE

.....
IIOIU · - lor looM.

0502,70446-0101.

Mound Hill Comotety, $325
II. (7~)992·0175.
each or all 4 for $1.000.

RIJTLAND- Building
site on North end of

We've got your hunt i
location this year!
log cahin on I
an :lcre, beautiful red
oak interior with walnut
i located nn Ihe
of a 2600 acre pub Iic
hunti ng area. Also
nearby, a fisherman 's
paradise! Trout stocked
3/4 mile lake. How
about that for
convenience? And the
Gun club within a
stone's lhrow!
ONLY $28,000!

1~1875-8679 .

7-t0-742-7403.

~-and,_

I

1 &amp; 2 BR E - au
~·
Hoot, WID Hoollup, N1ar
Buy '""" 1 1-mo., Holztr. 1285 1o $378 Ptr
FortcloiUre&amp;, 4'% down, 30 month PIUI Uttlltllt LMM
yeata at 8.5% APR. For llaF and 'Oopoa~ Atqulrtd
~J~ . I-800·319-3323 '"" · (T~)olol&amp;-2857 ·
•
·
Houoe. lor Ren~ 2 8odltiDIII 1 and 2 bedroom lljllrt·
Ooposil and Rei.....,.. No men1S, fumlshod ~nd unfut·
Pill. (7~)olol&amp;-1279
nlshod, uc:utlly- ,.
:-:---:-.:...,---- qultOCI, no poll, 740-mHouM IO&lt; Rent 3 BA, 1 2216.
Balh. $5001 mot\1!1 plut lJtil.
!tie• and Deposit 17~)245~~·,:·
9020
"""""'· HUO"'.\PPtovod:
Now Haven- 38R houoo in (7~)«1-1519
town, just remodeled, new
caopet, pain!, nice yatd and fbi'. Very Clun, Avolone car detached g~rage. Dec. 1st. Now taki~ Appll~
No Pets, W'Ould consider a cationl. (~)675-49 5
lease lo own. $375. pat 2 BA Ap1 Newly Romod·
mo~tl1(,~)882Secmlty De- el&amp;d. stoVe, Refrigerator
po~l. ,
·224l
Fumlshod. All Ullltln Paid.
Pilot Program, Renters 48; Olive St. $475/ mo.
Needed, 304-736-7295.
(740)446--3945
·&amp; 1 bl:
In
STOP
RENTING!
SO 2 br.
Point
· apt
DOWN! No credit okl Govt. ~leasant
dep. required
homes.
, ·800·296· 40-448-2200

Kood
SR 33. F\t'-:1\cnt
Amcric&lt;1n Dream!
Wh at a deal at only
$7,500

Living.

Umo Rd .. Rut·

Ir
j

now ac-

ooptong appilcaloans '"'
I BR. HUO oubSldized epl.
for ekJt+1V and disabled.
EOH .

::::::::!::-,: - - - - -

(103)451-2591

U l:-~f... o:

t

0

4 Cemetery Lots for Sale- 2 bedroom, Middleport,
$325 per month plus depos·

is exactly what
doctor ordered!! Close
10 town, secluded -17
acres 1)f l''onctland'i.
abundrm! \\ ith wildlife!

homesite tor y(l ur piece

Twin RivtH' TOW8I'I

.:._c.__ _ _ __.:._ _

SR 124 • HARRIS· MAPLE GROVE
SUBDIVISION • OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE • Approximately 2 acto
lois. Greal camp;ng lots. Callloday
lor more details.

Il

land. ONo.

on

House For Sata
6 Room House in Pt. Pleasant on 2 lots . Fenced In
Yard.
$29,000,
Call
(304)675-6 188 and teave
message.

I

enn::n. (740)992.0165.

· No poll. lllau1iiUI R'- Vllw kiOII .:::::::::.::::::.:.::
OliPOIIunlllel. _ _ __
For 1 Or 2 f'loPio, Rei....,. llogo 2 BR Apt. V«y Nice.
3 BR houM In "'""'"""" coo, Dlposit. No Poll. Foo- :.:No:..:..;
""'"=.·..:f7:..~::::)olol&amp;-:::.::36::144::·~ 11nohi1&lt;!Cieite?
Call (7~)448-0655 be- ttr Tl'lllot' POti&lt;. 7 - 1 ·
I'

I·

H~

FUR

Flmlly

Chrioly'1
331~ -

14x70 mobile
fO actM, 15 min.
not1h of Pomeroy, $425 mo.
p1uo dopooit &amp; utllilloo, Tunor Reaf1y 7«1-9112·2666.

homo

.

r•o

---~.~~~~·:..!::=
.
==----

.,.,...~::.:-=-•·':-..,---:c--::--

(7~~~
,.,..
.. + -

::=====:::
m

R 1Estel G.0erel

......__..IAIIu

bedi1XJIII,

(140)992-?687.
Nitro. (304)755-5885
.
Smgle Parent Program. Nice
4 acre tract near
Easy Financing Available. Galllpolil- easy tetms,
(~)755-719f
(740)446-3583
OWN LAND IN THE NEXT
lksNEI1i
ANDBviLDINcs • CENTRAL AMERICAN VA~
CATION HOT SPOT! Zero
Down, Zero Interest. Only
Office building in Minera· $100 per month. Limited Of.
ville, 600 &amp;Q. n .• ale. COY· ter. Call 1-866-230·9311 or
urad partl;ing, calling fan, visit
•
$275/mo., 814-876-168:1.
www.nlcaraguaparadise.co 7774 K65 41

r

AT JACK-· EITATES. 5 2 · - on..,
hOm $29710$383. WllkiO
ehOP 1 rnortW C11 7..0.
448-2MI. E~ Houoing

!:.0==='---- :::;::._______

NiCe bi·

lWI'\N'
.,,~"'

,

Just I lew o4 the patt*s $4501 month. Rel..-.nct
o v . -. Col,_ lor mapa and Depoal1 Aoqultod .
Ranct&gt;, 3 Bodrooms. 2 112- 14•70. 3 l&gt;ldiwn, 2 lncf -llslilgsl Owner fi. (7~)31111-8371
BaillS in qulol nelg11bof· bllh. , Oniy S995 down &amp; nllnClng wilh sligh1 ~
hood. (740)&lt;WU-{)203 lo $1119.62/monlh. Col Chotyl, ~·
3 be&lt;ftOOm 1iOUM, $500

21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular HarcMd 74().38S-9948
t (~)634-2596 ot Office
'
·
1~731·90 11 ).
1991 Mansion 14K70, 3
.:.::::..:.::.c...::::.:..cc...___ bedroom excollent condl·
3 Bedroom on Route 2, lion, call Kavena, (740)385(~)675-5332
9948.
3 bedroom, 1' bath with lsi lime buyers- Govern·
large liv1ngroom. new gas ment loans· buy loans &amp;
appliances and al,c, upstairs sale· (740)446·3093 Oak·
comptetelv
renovated, wOOd Supercenter
$37,500 {740)992-4485.
28•60 3 Ot 4 Badi00111, On·
· 3br. · Home Full~ Remod- ly $345.00 Par Month
elect. Ready to Move inl 8.99% FIKed Interest Rate,
$39,000. 211 7th 51 NH. 1·868·928-MZe

5 room houoo Potnt Pleas·
ant. with lot. 2 car garage·..
1 112 bath. $43,000. Family
Relocating (304)675-n41

car-

c:es

Goor

6unbap Q!:imrl' ·i&gt;rnllnrl • Page 05

Pomeroy • Middleport • GalllpoHa, Ohio • Point Pleaant, WV

I irr=o;;;;;:;HotN==llOI=.ll==
1

Notth 3rd, Uiddtepor1, 1
bedroom furnished apartmon1, 00 pelt. deposit &amp; .....

~un:L~PA.:: ~----------:----

2 t.droom, new carport, Vacancill now.
OIJ'4WNd polio W&lt;J 213 bi'. in Ha- no pofa, f7~i9vz·2181
• Fumished Apt. 3 moms and
ven. Store witNn wdUng
·
battl plus ahower, Down·
distance. $300 rnonlh + 2br. 2 bath, Mobile Home ataifs, Qean. Reference
$200. Deposit. (~)882· for rent. Sa11aftao Ad. and Doposit RequltOCI. No
S652
$300. mon11i1y p1u1 0epo1i1. Pelt o r -.... (T~)ol-4a·
(~)882·2537
1518
3 8odooom 2 Balh, Slow,
Rofrigotalot, VfltY Nk:e, Animal Ia..,. wonlod, 2 G•-• living. 1 and 2

31 ter.

Month, 8.99% Fixed lnteresl Poln1 Plellunt ••· 2K8
Aate With Air And Un· walls thermal pane win·
10.5 Acres with 1999 Flee!· derptnning 1·888·928-3426 CSOWS: priced to lilt. Cltl Laru- comer building lot
WOOd Modular Home Near 1970 Champion 12 xoo 2 (:MM)87~·3889 alk for with 205' Ohio River front·
Gallipolis. Eveellent Condi· bedrooms. $3,000 080. ~-==•~ry"-.- - - - - age, elevalian shot, sur·
tion. Private, Country Set· Call (304)675·2470
OAKWOOD HOMU
veyed, appraised, serious
tlng. Stocked Pond. Addi·
fnqulriol only, s~.ooo
tional 7.5 Acres Available. 1985 SkyHne 14x70, 3 bedSUPER.CENTER.
(30ol)882-3736 before 5pm.
C811 Janel! Call al Century room. Good Condilion. CaU Ol8f 40 homes to diMe

1~)882 -3772
=..:..c.:..c...c:..:.:::....____

II.--·

':."!

SR 1581

lb&amp; I

r

r ~~

I

r~IO~f~~~~~~'~r·~I'Oil~lb&amp;~SALE~~' t ~~ 1r~~A~~~~~~ "-e.... II!Jt!;u-lttM--~' ri8 ~ 1r

Sunday, Nov. 18, 2001

~~:i;

140016
HOME
I
INVESTMENT 128 &gt; 130 E I
Pk. 3 bedrm, 3 bath Jiving quartel'l.
A!so 1a· x 32' garage plus 30' x 2D
building 112 ac. of land . good I
Joe. Priced to sell. VLS

I

a lot
money! Okf&lt;lr
condition fea1Url11g
dining area or
I
as a den/FA, cozy ""'neo1,
BAs, 1 bath 1 nice above
ground pool (Juot In limo Ia
enjoy the upoomlng aummer
days) tocatod on .88 of an
acre, m/1, and priced 10 1111 a1
ooly $S9,500. fi1D
Outotondlng homo olloo
localod In tho clfy, ye1 woodod
&amp; prlvafe ... Localad allhf end
of Bastianl Drive. 14·1!5 acres
be ourveyed wlfh gradual
road already exca~ated to
building sltea. 3 to 4 good
slles. Priced al $159,1100 lt33

Before shopping for your New Address ... stop by ours:

www.wisemanrealestate.com
14036

Olive &amp; Std.
sq. ft. m/1. Clly
water, sewer &amp; gas. All Inventory
a\lallable too. Owner wants actlonl

t4040 GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY Two homes plus an e•1ra lot Live in one, rent the other to pe.v your
mortgage. Price~ to sale. Call W lma 1oday lor a showing.
,

David Wileman, GRI, CRS Broker 446·9555
Carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garne1 446-2707
Robert Bruce 448'-0621 Rita Wl111man 446-9555

[B.
lll•••o-

40) 446.::3644

I

�Pomeroy • Middleport • GalllpoUa, Ohio • Point PleiiNnt, WV

SuncMy, New. 11, 2001

..

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

cr~1

ioun~a~ ~tmr&amp; · iornttnrl •

BULLETIN BOARD

BLACKBURN'S
TREE SERVICE

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M . FRIDAY 446-2342 OR 992-2155

Top, Trim, Remove,
Stump Grinding

FOR SALE
Located in Crown City. But very
private. 14 x 65 special buiH
mobile horne. Sets on 75 x 150
beautWul landscaped fenced In
lol. 24 x 38 garage 8x12 utilily
building. Why pay rent when
you can own.
740·256-1222 lor full de!ails.

Firewood
446-2422

:r

Bluegrass Grand Opening
Ariel Theatre
Nov. 24 at 8 p.m.
$10 advance, $12 al the door
Tickels at Tawney Jewelers
Rebecca's and Oak Hill Banks

-..I I~\ It I '

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Unconditional lifetime guar-

~ , nished . Established 1$75.
"·, call 2• Hrs. (740) 446:. i 0870,
1·800-287-()576.
--:: Rogers Waterproofing.

lffHJD
JI.&amp;UTI
INC
32 LOCUST sruF:T, GALLIPOIJS, ~10 456.ll

ATIENTION GRAFTERS!!
Guiding Hand School is
having a CRAFT SHOW
On the day of the
CHRISTMAS PARADE.
December 1, 2001
9am • 5 pm.
If you are interested in setting
up a table to sell your crafts
please call367·7371.
Each table is $20.00

•

•

~ C.Wood, Bruker •~523

• : C&amp;C General Home Mainte-

Ken Motgll, Broker· 44&amp;m71
Jeanette Moore,- 25&amp;-1745
Patrk:ia
740-446-1066

: nence- Painting, vinyl Sid·
.. : ing, carpentry, doors, win• - .. batho, mobile home
: ' repair and more. For free

...
·-

estimate call Chel, 740-9926323.

~: r~~~
Residential Of commercial
wiring, new S&amp;rvice or re: pall'l. Muter Licensed alec• ~ tric!an. Ridenour Electrical,

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER

LOTS FOR SALE BY OWNER

Brook-view Subdivision
Brookview Subdivision Is located two
miles soutb of Gallipolis, wltb twelve lots
of 2 to 5 acres of rolllna land near Green
Elementary School and the site of the
future Gallla Academy Hlah School and
athletic nelds. Pendl111 road pavemenL
AEP power and Gallla County Rural
Water are available. On-site sewage.
Covenances goverd tbe style aad value
of construction aad a homeowner's
association will be fonned. Englaeerlag
and design services are availllble from
the developer. Property Is priced from
$15,000 to $65,000, Call 740-446-6630
aner7

I \1{\1 "I 1'1'1 II"
,\ ! I\ I " I I I( h

350 Brookview Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio
Loca•w on Mt. Carmel
on approximately 1 acre ol land. This
bedrocm, 2 bath home has over 1400
feet of living space. Also has a
attached garage Please call and ask

1206.

usnNO· Property locatad on. tOO In a
neighborhood. It otfera 3 bedrooms bath
a pool. Please call for more lnformaun.

'•
''.
• ATTORNEY
·...l'. DISCIPLINE

•.

~ • · On October 24,
2001,
JUDGE
WILLIAM 8. MEDLEY
.of Oalllpollo, Ohio,
Attorney Reglotratlon
No. 0031001, Wll
,PUblicly raprfmonded
by the Supreme
Court ol Ohio. Sea

.

'the Supreme Court'•

·doclolon
In
;Dioclpllnory Counaal
v. Medley (2001 ), 93
Ohio St.3d 474, lor

•

.......__

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

ww.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

Buck Ridge Road

Sunday
November 1eth
1 pm-?

The Lynch Agency

St. Rt.

568 Rio Grande

HUNTERS
SAFETY COURSE
NOV. 24 &amp; 2!;&gt;
Noon - 5 &amp; Noon - 6
To register call
Noreen Saunders

OPEN HOUSE
AI WILLA'S Bll3LE
BOOKSTORE
Wednesday, Nov. 21st
Friday, Nov. 23rd
Prize Drawing each hour!
Great sales on Bibles, Framed
art, much more.
Join us for refreshments and
great fellowship.
Come see our "Snowing"
Chrislmas Tree

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

.

446-8235

Regain your strength! Come
join our Stretching class • Free
Tuesdays 5:00pm
Presbyterian Church
Barb Epling facil~ator 446·1516

Woodyards Mini Mall
407 Main Sl. Pl. Pleasant
Just received a new load ol home
shopping TV merchandise.
Justin lime for Chrislmas
675·5928

'

~

446-2342
or 992-2156

5 ft or Smaller 12 ft bath tub
In Excellent Condition. Call

interest with one

Ronnie Lynch

__. (~

For More
Info...

Russell D. Wood, Broker 446-4618
Judy DeWitt .............................. 441-0262
Lemley ................................. 742-3
Tapunie DeWill.......................... 245-0022
.
11m Slone ...... ............. ,......................446-9483

4.25°/o

• After one year you can
walk away or reinvest

_ ..

•November 11, 21, 25,
2001

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

446-4612

Any Ohio Legal
Deer Gun
GALLIA COUNTY
GUN CLUB

• $5000 minimum

Home Decorating
OPEN HOUSE
•
Sat. Nov. 24
8 am • 5 pm
Gloria Oilar 31645 St. Rt. 325
Langsville, OH 457 41
~

740-245-5007

SLUG SHOOT

year maturity .
• Principal is guaranteed

Th,ank you Kanauga
Sportsmans Club for buying
my 2001 Market Hog.
Terra Porter
Eno-SaHor

Limited nme
Call now

675-5833

So hurry in today!!

992-5500

Only$39.95

Available at
WILLA'S BIBLE BOOKSTORE
416 Main St.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

311 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
or
1743 Centenary Rd., Gallipolis,
Offer Good
November 14·21, 2001

634 E. Main St. Pomeroy

.l.nlonnatlon.

Also, new 4' finish mower,
still in crate, $850. Shipping
available. Located just out·
side ol Huntsville, AJ (256)
n&amp;-9435 www.maynarde-

SPECIAL
CARE

446-1276

(additional

YANMAA YM 1500 Tractor,
diesel, 3 point hitch, $2,150.

Discount available at:

61 Vine St. Gallipolis

~

1-800-942-9577

Get ready for the
HOLIDAY SEASON
Advent Candles
Advent Wreatbs,
Drip protectors &amp; Sanctuary
Candles

O'DELL LUMBER

Public Notice
....;......;..;.__

'•

Located In Brookvlew Subdlvlalon, just.
two miles soutb or GaiUpolla orr or St. Rt.
141 In tbe Green School dlatrlct. 4 acres
wltb a small pond. Two story, all brick,
lritb full buemenl and 3 car garaee. 4
bedrooms, 3.511atlu, and walk-In closets
tbroughout. Two heal pumps, Anderson
windows, and dlme111loaal Shingles. 3200
o.f. plus 1900 s.r. buement. Interior Is
ready for nntsbes, nxtures, and trim.
Gallla Rural Wala' and AEP power.
Subdlvlaloa covenaaces, Homeowner's
P&lt;,.':ldl!!l road pavement.

_____

...'·..' •

Fall Special!! One Week Only!!
All Sweaters
$1.50 off Regular price

Deer Slugs $2.29 5/pk
Winchester &amp; Remington

• : WV000306, 304-87!&gt;1786.

•

Holiday Portrait Special
1· 8x10 &amp; 16 wallets

Slug Shoot .

Special!!

. • antee. Local rele.-ences fur.

CLIFFSIDE GOLF
Winter Rates
$20 w/cart

Serenity House
se'Ves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or

Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Every Sunday at noon until
~
n

Page 07

Greg at (740)446·2282

8am- 5pm.

NEW PRICE $48,1100.001 1 1/2
Story home that has lots of TLC.

2·3 Bedrooms, living room with
fireplace, kitchen, 2 detached
garages and loads mort! Must
see this one to appreciate.
Owner motivated to 1811,
requeatlng an otter! 12101

r
S10 each. (740)36Hl166

•

••
'.

Square bales was $2 .00
now S1.50. Round Bales
was $15. now $10 . 1 mile

on Rl. 2 N. (304675·4869

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw, Year'Aound Delivery
&amp; Volume Discount Available.
Heritage
Farm. ·

(304)675-5724.

II{\ '\\ 1' 0 1~ I \ II()'\

r

iO

~

..
••.
~:
• ••

RAISED RANCH STYLE HOMEI

4x5 Round Bales of Hay.

NEW
· LISTING!
37
KINDLEWOOD DRIVE... slts,1hls

Included. Addavllle/RVHS t2158

That Is what the owners gave to
this 2 story home conveniently
located In town! 3 B&amp;drooma, 2 full

FORSALE

•• •
'' ·•

••
••

baths, living room, kitchen, front
porch, rear deck, detached garage
and more1•2121

HUNTERS

PARADISE

great

CONVENIENCE
OF
CITY
UVINGI 338 THIRD AYENUEI
Nice 2 SIOf'l hOmO with plenty of
room to live. 4 Bedrooms, living
room, family room,· kitchen, foyer,
basement, off street par1dng.
Enclosed front porch and moro!
tOOl

LOOKING FOR A FIXER·
UPPER? $39,900.00 Is tho aaklng
price for this 4 bedroom ranch
home situated on appro)! .. 45 aore
lot LMng room,2 car attached
garage. Use your Imagination on
this one .. .immediate possession!
Hurry! 12156

a~d

•••
••
r,,I

fireplact, dinin&amp; 1te11 a library wlbookshelvea. Mam
level features imported wood paneling, beamed
ceilings, Berber carpet Open stalrcuc leads to
second story with th~ large hcdrooma, full bath and
waJk-in linen closet. lei someone el9e make your
mor11~1• J"Y'"'-~' with the adjoinins two bedroom
feel of living apace with

..".'.
·~ I

.

! i.
••
\.

.

,

.I

,'

..
t.

• 15 hp engine

• Automatic transmission

'

• 42-inch convertiblo mower deck

••

~;
r.

"·

II N~w LISTING •

~ ·'

••
.••
..

LIKE AN OLD SHOE olfen

ruhloned comfort, ror a happy tomorrOw.
2 stOf')' located on 600 block of 4th Avenue. 2
BR on main level, 3rd bedroom on 2nd level. LiviniJ
rOom, dinin~ room, modern klrchen wf pantry.
Bea11liful anginal woodwork &amp; doors . Detached
gmge.
PLUS A ONE BEDROOM APT
UPSTAIRS. LR, kirchen &amp; bath w/ ouuidc
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT. NO. 3:15

•• '

GT235llwn and Ga*• Tractor

1:

F'RICL

,,
..,•••..
~:

1-H DUC [ 0'

~.
~

,

••
ol

r:

~ ~

Green

Elementary

R..lter/Owned. Only $17,500.

School.

NO. 305

Four (4) • Five acre 1110n&gt; or

More acreage could be
frontage. Call for more

NEW LISTING ·IT'.S A STEAL!!!

1995 Neon, AJC, Tllt, 5
speed. 109,000 miles,

S26so oeo. (740)256-1233

WHAT CAN YOU BUY FOR $45,11007
A cozy home in the cily, al~t new roof, vinyl

siding, furnace and central a1r, cook top and oven.

97 Fold Thunderbird, load-

3 Bedrooms, 21h baths, screened in back porch.

Utility building and • large bock yard PLUS
.AGREATBUY!
NO. JJO

!.::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
\

U(255lawn Tr1ctor

'
'''

Township,

ed, (740)446-4241

2 0 0 2

I .

•

IClt,aato It olll Rigid In Townl Close to It Alii
is with In walking dlatance to
I shc1ppl1ng and mora. If your looking for lond
may be for you. Give Allen a

.-....

I

NOTHING RUNS LIKE

www.JohnDaere.com

112030.

'

New bualnooo??? Thlo· commercial
building Is looking lor o new buofnoao
fill its 1760 sq/. II. Located on the edge

~L

i:·•
it:••
•

~·

town . Call for m-ore information. Ask
•r~~ loaklng for lnveetmtnt property
hlv• MVer~l to ofttr, C.lllnd aU for Alltn.
Wo .,. olwoyo gild to help you •II or buy

If you

property. Rontol property lo.ollluv•ollobiO.
Glvt Ul I Cllll, WI

I

i

Offer ends ;ebruary 28, 2002. 51Jbltcl to apprGY«&lt; credit on John Oetre Credit Rewlvln&amp; Plan, for non-c~merclal use only. No down payment required . Af\er promotlon!ll pertod, fina nce char&amp;e
APR · Otne• opeelal rates and term may~ tvellab!e, lncludln&amp;lnstallment flnencln1 aoo nnaru:lnl for commercial u~e. Available at partlclpatlnJ de1!en.
will bellIn to 1ccru•• ....
·

'

If

~

DEERE

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

1

85012.

A

Carmichael•s Farm &amp;Lawn, Inc.

..
&lt;

~·

•1B·hp engine
• Automatic transmission
• 48·inCh convertible mower deck

Hurry in today
and Save!

.,••

WINDING CROSSROADS· Good
site located on Pleasant Hill Road,

7am-3pm.

1,

, '' '

li••

Ing $2.000. (304)882·3203

J U N E

J'

1994 Chevy Capric4: Equipped with Polk:e package_.
LTZ Engine. Actual miles
. 122.260. May be seen at
New Haven City Hall. Ask-

l

NOW$1999

:

'.

room, laundry room and

hunting retreat se1 up and ready
tor you! Appro)l. ·es acres complete
with tree stands, feed lot and cozy
cabin to warm up ln. Recently
remodeled cabin complete with
bath county water, electric and
telephne service In tact. Acreage a
combination of cleared and
wooded land, pond and what a
beautiful view. 121.52
LOOK! $22,000.00 will buy you
this smaller 2 bedroom home and
lotsl Situated , In the city of
Gallipollal can't hardly find em any
cheaper! JJ2139c

I

LT133 Lawn Tractor
•13-hp, overhead-valve engine
• 5-speed, shift·on·ths·gotransmission
• 38-inch mower dock
• More than 9 allachments availabfe

•,; I.

first floor laundcy w/half bath. Open floor plan

.Includes a srcat room w/ massive hearth

U N T

'••••..

NEW LISTING • COUNTRY LIVING AT IT'S
IESTl 100 year old home completely updated with
all the comforu for die 21st century, Over 2200
square feet of apacioualiviniJ. Main floor includes
modem kilchen wlbreakfut bar, wllk-in pantry and

maintain. Plus 45' x 25' building

AUIOi

"~'
•' .
•• •
r'
'

Living room, dining room, kitchen,
family room, 3 bedrooms, 2
built·ln 2 car garage plus
rec. room in baeemenll

roomy brick/redwood
stded
home wtlh living room, dining
area, kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 "'
baths, family room, den, 2 car
attached
garage.
Spacious
rooms . 2 lots total approx . .41
acre that Is level &amp; easy to

No Interest No Payments

'• .

...

0050-21-1i775

�,

cost-atlter tapped to head
troubkMI NASA and .its space station program

.

Kneen

prestigious space-race days of the I 960s
and had a background in public administration.
·
"It's what the White House thinks
NASA needs," Logsdon said. He predicted O'Keefe's nomination will not
be welcome news to people living in
space-center communities lil&lt;e Cape
Canaveral, Houston and Huntsville, Ala.
"It's more than jobs. It's a way oflif~."
Logsdon said. "If you look at the report,
.what it really is saying is that the human
space flight culture that's developed
fiom the days of Apollo is dysfunction-

mended, for the near future, sticking to
a ·three-person crew rather than the
seven-person team .originally envisioned -· despite the hit to scientific
research.
Rep. Sherwood Boehler!, R-N.Y.,
chairman of the House Science Committee, called , O'Keefe "a superb
choice" and expressed confidence 'he
would get the international space sta- '
lion back on tracl... "Sean O'Keefe is the
right man at the right time for this job;'
Boehler! said.
,
John Logsdon, director of the . Space
Pohc~ Institute at George Washmgton
University, said O'Keefe's profile is most
lli~~~

Webb, who ruled
NASA during the

Topics include production,
grazing, genetics, predator
control, sheep scrapie disease
and the sheep industry's relationship with the government. Pre-registration is
requested by Nov. 23 with
fees of $30 per adult and S20
per student.
Registtation forms available
for pickup at the Meigs
County Extension Office,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

faumPapDl
be used to market value added
wood products. Learn how to
handle wood as a raw material to be crafted· into a salable
item.
Exchange ideas in a round
table fashion with other
woodworkers, small sawmill
owners and crafters. Call for
more information by contacting Sara Gurney at P.O. Box
958, Standpipe Road, Jack• son,· Ohio 45640, ·286-2177,
e-mail gurney. 1O@osu.edu.

...

Take a short ride .this afternoon from 1-4 p.m. to the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Building located on
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
to view the efforts of the
Meigs County's Garden
Clubs as they have their
annual holiday show, "Christmas Cheer." Admission is free
and the public is welcome.

...

Are you interested in raising
sheep on the farm or as a 4-H
or fFA project? Plan to attend
· the 2001 Buckeye Shepherds
Symposium on Nov. 30 and
(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
Dec. 1 at the Radisson ·Extension agent for agriculture
Columbus Airport, 1375 N. and natural resources, Ohio State
Cassady Ave., Columbus.
University.)

Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat whose
disttict includes Cape Canaveral, said
NASA could use O'Keefe's expertise in
fixing financial problems.
"However, Mr. O'Keefe is coming
from the White House budget office,
where bean counters have a history of
'calling the shots' and micromanaging
NASA's programs," Nelson said. "In my
opinion, the head of our space agency
must be a visionary, someone able to set
lofty goals and inspire our nation's
research and exploration in outer
space."
Before becoming OMB deputy director in March, O'Keefe was a professor of
business and government policy at Syracuse Ul!iversity.
In 1992, O'Keefe was appointed secretary of the Navy, having previously
served on Cheney's Pentagon management team and also on the staff of the
Senate Appropriations Committee.
. He earned his bachelor's degree from
Loyola University and a master's degree
in public administration from Syracuse
University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, where he eventually returned to teach.
At least a handful ·of others were
approached about becoming . NASA
administrator, including a retired fourstar general. But each of the men
declined.
•1

NEW YORK (AP) Internet stock guru Henry
Blodge!, who gained fame
predicting the rise in ·Amazon.com shares and notoriety when the dot-corns
crashed, is taking a reported
S2 million buyout from
Merrill Lynch.
"I kind of felt it was time ·
for the next chapter, and
Merrill made it easy to do
that," Blodget said Thursday.
Blodget accepted a generous separation package, but
declined to comment on a
New York Times report that
his buyout is worth nearly ·
$2 million.
Earlier, Merrill Lynch
spokeswoman
Susan
McCabe stressed he had not
been pressured to resign in
th'e wake of the tech-stock
meltdown.
Blodget, 35, wants to finish buol&lt; he's been working on about the Internet
·revalution and the companies he covered as an anaIyst, including Netscape
Communications Corp. and
AOL Time Warner Inc.
Recently married, he
wants to spend more time
with his ·wife. After he finishes the book, Blodget
said, he would like to wort&lt;
for a hedge fund.
Blodget became a darling
to investors after he predicted
that
shares
of
Amazon .com would soar to
$400 in 1998. At the time,
the Seattle-based e-tailer's

a

stock was around $240 a
share, but did eventually
surpass $400 a share, helped
by his recommendation.
But as the Internet bubble burst, he took criticism
about his stock picl&lt;s,
including Pets.com and
tToys, both of which failed
without ever turning a
profit.
Blodget defended his
picl&lt;s, saying he always
warned
conservative
investors that they shouldn't
buy the stocks and that
aggressive investors should
only own a few.
"The
downside
was
greater than I expected, but
it was always · possible;'
Blodget said.
His bullish forecasts also ·
brought some legal· trouble
to his firm.
In July, Merrill Lynch
agreed to pay a former
client $400,000 to setde
allegations that he was misled by overly bullish
research.by Blodget, as well
as information provided by
his broker at the Wall Street
powerhouse.
In an arbitration case filed
in March with the New
York Stock Exchange,
Debasis Kanjilal claimed he
lost about $518,000 in the
Internet stocl&lt; lnfospace
Inc. because Blodget had
kept a "buy" recommendation on the stock as Merrill
Lynch brokered a deal to
get another Web company
bought by lnfospace.

I

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS!
'

Fall is one of the most wonderful times of the year in Alabama. So come
celebrate the crisp days and postcard sunsets on the RoBERT TRENT JoNES
·GoLF TRAIL. With eight sites and
378 cha,npionship holes across the
state, there's one within driving
range of. wherever you are.
And, now is a great time to plan
atrip. to Alaliama to see the
new" GRAND HOTEL, part of the
Resort Division of the Trail. Now
undergoing a $30 million
renovation, The Grand Hotel is
becoming even grander.
Cull today for tee times
and hotel reservations. Fall is
a Grand time on the Trail.
11

Sheep . producers -. There
will be a meeting on ewe
health during gestation on
Nov. 26, beginning at 7 p.m.
at the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural Center. The guest
speaker will be Roger High,
OSU E'xtension sheep specialist.

....es
faomPapxx
Assistance Program, and a
Farmland Preservation Program. Additional information
: regarding these 3 programs
' will be released as soon as it
becomes available.

aennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
County~ Extension agent for
agriculture and natural resourceS,
Ohio State University.)

Ag news

future will increase at a rate of
5 percent per year. Using the
rule of 72, simply dividing
five into 72 will provide a
rough estimate that the individual's cost of living will
double in 14 to 15 years (12
divided by 5 equals 14.4).
Of course, this article is no
substitute for a careful consideration of all the advantages
and disadvantages of an
investment .strategy to meet
your goals. Before implementing a significant investment strategy, consider consulting your financial advisor.

Jay
flom Page Dl

•

can estimate the number of
years it will take for his or her
cost of living to double. Or
put another way, how long
· before an individual's pur. chasing power is cut in half. '
For example, let's assume an
individual is retired and forecasts.an inflation rate of 5 percent per year. An inflation
rate, in general terms, is the
rate of increase in the prices
,of goods and services individuals purchase '?ver .til"e.
Forecasting an inflation rate
of 5 percent means the individual is assuming the prices
of the goods and services he
or she will P.urchase in the

aay Caldwell is certified financi41 'planner at Raymond James
Financial Services, 441 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, 446-2125 or
1-800-487-2129,
member
NASD and SIPC.)
'

MARSHALL RUMBLES OVER OHIO, 81

Melp County's

al."

NEW WDER - Undated file photo of
Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget Sean O'Keefe who will
be named as administrator of NASA.
Republican· congressional aides said
that President Bush planned to name
O'Keefe to' the NASA job this week and
that O'Keefe has told associates of his
plans to leave OMB.(AP Photo) •

Sunda~No~18,2001

Internet stock guru Henry
Blodget takes $2 million ·
buyout from Merrill Lynch

A

CAPE CANA\. ' tAL. Fla. (AP) Th~ Whit~ Hous~ .. as chos~n a budget
official known for relendess cost-cutting to head NASA and halt space station overspending at the t~ubled
agency.
President Bush nominated Sean
O'Keefe, d~puty director of the Office
of Management and Budget, to the top
job at the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration on Wednesday. He
must be confirmed by the Senate.
The 45-year-old O'Keefe served as
Navy secretary for Bush's father and also
worked for Vice President Dick Cheney,
when Cheney was defense secretary in
the 1990s. O 'Keefe was renowned for
his budget cutting at the Pentagon and
took pride in a coffee cup decorated
with a "Grim Reaper" logo.
He replaces NASA Administrator
Daniel Goldin, who is stepping down
this weekend after a record 9 112 years
in the post.
"The president has nominated a man
of intelligence, energy and deep integrity," outgoing NASA administrator
Daniel Goldin said Wednesday evening.
"I wish Sean well."
In his current job, O'Keefe told the
House Science Committee last week
that NASA is badly in need of new
leadership, even though he thought it
had been well-served by Goldin, who
spent a record 9 112 years in the post.
O'Keefe was particularly critical of
NASA's cost overruns in the international space station program, estimated
in the billions and lambasted by an
independent task force earlier this
month.
"The administration recognizes the
importance of getting the right leaders
in place as soon as possible," O'Keefe
said, "and I am personally engaged in
· making sure that happens."
O'Keefe joined the task force in calling for major changes. The task force
suggested that NASA reduce its space
station work force, cut back on the
. number of shuttle flights to the outpost,
• extend station crew stays. It also recom-

•

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Ple•ant, wv

Pege Dl• ioanlla!' IEimrt ·6ttUintl

...

Hoanetown News,.per

Trussell: Nov. 30 is deputies~ last day
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Sheriff Ralp.h
Trussell gave employees a revised
layoff notice Friday, advising them
Nov. 30 will be their last day.
Meanwhile, deputies continue an
informational picket on the steps of
·the Meigs Count)' Courthouse, in
part to encourage support for a half-

percent sales tax hike for sheriff's
office operations.
" I am able to grant this extension
because additional funds will be
received from law enforcen1ent
funds to allow all employees to work
(until then);'Trussell's letter said.
Trussell earlier gave his employees
a layoff notice citing Nov. 16 as their
last day, after county commissioners

informed him his payroll line item
had been emptied.
Commissioners approved a number of ttansfers in funds from other
sheriff's line items on Nov. 8, allowing Trussell to maintain full operations for another pay period.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton said
Thursday the receipt of sales tax and
personal property tax revenue this

week will "probably" make it possible to meet the final2001 payroll for
the deputi es estimated at
$16,500.
The commissioners effectively
refused last week to impose a halfpercent sales tax increase to help
fund the sheriff's operations, as
Trussell and the deputies' union
have asked, but will likely put the
'
'

increase on the May ballot.
The estimated $500,000 which
would be generated from the taX
increase could be used to fund
salaries, supplies, cruiser maintenance and operation of a new jail.
Trussell said earlier this month, as
well as relieving the burden on the
general fund for sheriff's operations.

'

Support·group honors war efforts
BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL STAFf

ItACINE - The village
here is awash in red, white
and blue as Operation Enduring freedom Support Group
members continue their
· ongoing mission of garnering
support for our nation's serViCe men and women.
from telephone poles to
park benches, patrioticthemed decorations can be
found throughout much of
(he communi!)' in a massive
public display of support for
the thousands of men and
women in the U.S armed
forces.
· "Everything you see around
here is red, white and blue
and we're not finished yei,"
Said support group member
Linda Diddle, as she helped
with the positioning of a
·~cod Bless America" sign
'!long Main Street.
"We did the same thing
during Operation Desert
S,t orm .aDd. ·
·
·
reaction wa1 truly amazing,"
she said. "We're very proud of
our service men and women
and we will always stand united with them."
Group member Kay Warden said sign-up sheets have
been placed in local churches,
businesses and communi!)'
organizations thro'!ghout the
county so short messages of
support can be .recorded and
later sent to troops either stationed state side or deployed
abroad.
Warden said the group is
coUecting
non-perishable
items,' such as writing tablets,
toothpaste, sweetened powder
drink mixes, batteries, and
chewing gum for eventual.
distribution to the soldiers.
"These messages, including
local newspaper clippings, and
the non-perishable items will
hopefully boost the moral of
our soldiers and let them
know we're thinking of
them,''. said Diddle.
SUPPORT GROUP - Members of the Operation Enduring Freedom Support Group in Racine
"We feel all military people, hang a patriotic sign along Mail] ~treet in an effort to garner support for the service men and
women Involved with our nation's war on terrorism. (Tony M. Leach photo)
,
Please 1ft Support. AJ

Hlp: lOs
Low:oiOs

Today'•

Sentinel
:a
s.ctton• - n

Calendar
Classifieds
Comks
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Pllps

A5

Details, A2

Lotteries
OHIO

B2-4 Pick J: Q-6.4; Pldt 4: 6-2-3·8
B5 SUper l.cJIIo: 2-7-15'-2440-43
A4 Kidler: 6-1·5-2.(}6
A3 W.VA.

Bl.3
A2

Daily J: 248 Daily 4: 3-8-6-2
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Jobless rates reveal
decline·in Gallia, Meigs
,~. FRoM AP, STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY Without
exception, unemployment in
area counties dropped in
October, prompting state officials to proclaim that terror
· h ad not
attac· ks on An1enca
affected Ohio's production

capacity.
Gallia Count)' saw a seventenths of a percent drop in joblessness from September's rate
of 5.2 percent to 4.5 m Octo• ber. Meigs Counry was at 7.8
percent last month, a I perce nt

Pleese see Jobless, A31

TalentRewe
slated for
Friday ni
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

MIDDLEPORT - Sixcy
local residents will sing,
dance and play musical
instruments in a variety
show Friday in the Meigs
Middle School auditorium.
"Variecy" is the theme of
the 8 p.m. 2001 Riverben'd
Talent Revue produced and
directed by Myron Duffield.
Tickets are on sale at
Swisher and Lohse and
Hartwell House in Pomeroy,
and the Middleport Department Store and the Ohio
River Bear Co. ·in Middleport. They also will be availabl~ at the door.
· Preshow music will be
presented by the Big Bend
Community Band directed

If YOtfll COIHC Whet time: 8 p.m.

v.tlere: ~ Middle
School auditotium.
want tidtels1: Tickets are
on sale at Swisher and
Lohse and Hartwell House
in Pomeroy, and the
Middleport Department
Store aitd the Ohio Bear
Co. in Middleport They are
also available at the door.
by Roger Williams.
Sue · Maison will open the
show with a rousing rendition of the "Star Spangled
Banner," the firM' of several
·patriotic selections included
in the lineup of 32 numbers.

PlelllelftRevue,AJ

PRACTICE TIME - A feature of the 2001 Rlverbend Talent
Revue will be a tap routine by the Little Ladles to "Ain't She
Sweet." They are McKayla Barrett, Taylor Tucker. Ashley Carey,
Cassidy Tucker, Jessi Meadows, Emma Perrin, .and Chelsle
Knopp. Mallory Nloodemus also will be dancing with the group
taught by Rae Gwiadowsky and Tom Dooley. (Brian Reed photo)

Power outage spells late papers
GALLIPOLIS - More than 6,200 American Electric
Power customers along th e 'Ohio River were without power
this morning after a transformer problem ' at the Addison
substation, said A£)&gt; spokesman Ron Robinson.
· Areas affected incfiided . l:lidwell, Cheshire, Kanauga and
Gallipolis.
~
.
The Daily Sentinel IS prin~ir&gt; .G:tllipolis, and the delay is
responsible for the late arrival of today's newspaper.
"Hopefully, everyth ing is' back to normal,'' Managing Editor R. Shawn Lewis said. 'To morrow 's paper should arrive
on your do,orstep at its regularly scheduled time."
For delivery problems, call 992-2155.

BlOod D..ive
sponsored by the HMC Laboratory Deportment
POINT CLEAR

C?//vuut ~A\arrlott.
RESORT &amp;
GOLF CLUB

800.949.4444
www. rtjgolf. com
'

'

800.544.9933
www. marriotgrand. com
•'

"

Weclnesclay, November 21
'
10AM·6PM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
Free t-shirt for all donors!
For more information, call(740) 446-5171.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

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