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                  <text>Friday. July 21. 2006

www.mydaily sent inel.com

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

Meigs' economy goes
from underdog to favorite, Cl

Flavors of the Week:
How to defeat the barbecue doldrums, Dl

,
ON THE TUBE •

Ult

.,. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR Thrs Week. C/O The Ga ston Gazette,
OtliUlSMAN fftUCK

· ~nla500,

• Race : Penns)'lvan1a 500
• Whe,.. Pocono Raceway. Long
Pond. Pa. (2 5 1111les). 200

t'~ p.m., &amp;!nday

............
~ .. 250,

~:30 p.m .. Saturdal'

,' nlf

·II&gt; Some fans are upset at
fiiASCAA welcoming foreign driY.
in addition to the entry of
forl!iCn manufacturer Toyota ~
b&lt;rt, honestly, how could artyOne
bar the door to Juan Pablo Mor&gt;toye and others?
1&gt; ~isn't Wfllfll for a fan to hope
eomeone with his own bac!l·
~nd does well. Wbal't wrong
Is to limit the OO&lt;l11l8lltlon only to
those IMth the same bocl&lt;ground.

ers -

11&gt; NASCAA officials are, of

laps/500 m;les.

0

· '

• When: Sunday. July 23
• Last year's winner: Kurt Busch

• Qualifying record: Kasey Kahne.
Oodge.172.533 mph , June 11,
2004
• Race record: Rusly Wallace.
Ford. 144.892 mph . July 2\. 1996
• Last week: Kyle Busch won the
leno• 300 because he had a fast
car. and when the sun d1pped and
the laps began to wind down, not
very many could sa~ thm. A war Of
aHnhon? The latest Nextel Cup
race at New Hampshire lntematiofl·
al Spee&lt;t.vay was rnore hke a war ol
contrition . When 1t was over, most
of those m the garage area were
son y: sorry for w1ecking someone
else, sorry for mess1ng up, sorry for

runnmg ol.lt of gas and, 1n some
·Cases. just plain sorry. It wasn't
enough to be fast. Nm was it
enough not to make mtstakes. The
dnvers who made the mrsta keS cfe.
Clded thts race. drld the ones left at
the end were those luck)' enough
not 10 be on t he receivmg end of
those m1stakes. With 50 laps to go.
the highest-finishing former New
Hampshtre wmner was erghth-place
Jrmmre Johnson. With 71 taps r&amp;
rnatning. the from four consrsted of

Clint Bow,-er. ElliOtt Sadler. Jeremy
Mayfield and Scott Riggs, none of
whom had even carne close to winning a race thrs year. Th us did tt1~

race become Busch's for the picking. The comedy of errors forced
the race to run eight extra laps. No
Cup race has ever gone 0\/ertime

tt1at long smce the rule was implemented in 2004.

1 Race : Goody's 250
• Race: Power Srrc he
1 Where: Martrnslldle
200
(Va .i (.52G miles:. 250
• Where : lndi aoopolls
laps/ :1 ::s 1. 52 P1i1C~
R:'lceway Park, Cler
1\Yhen: S.:ltu'C:.:l), July 22 . nronl. Ind. (.686 mt.),
1 Last yea r·s winner:
200 laps/ 137.2 rn•les.
First "itrie5 rJ·~e rJI ; "1tS 1 When ; Fnday. Aug. 4 .
track since 199.1 .
a last ret1r'1 winner:
a~reconi :Jnnrny Oenms Setzer
Hensley. Buick. 92.77 4
• QualilyinC record : Joe
mph, Oct. 30. 1987
Ruttman , Doctge,
· • Race 18Cord: No pre- 111.843 mph. Aug. 2.
vious races al th is dis-

2000.

tance. Harry Gant averoged 78.637 mph in a
BuicK 1n a 20D-Iap race·
on Oct. 27, 1991.
al.a$t week : Carl Ed·

• Race record; Greg
61Hie. Ford, 88 .704
mph , Aug. 5. 1999.
a Laot - k: Jack
Sprague. in a Toyota.

wards, in a Ford. won

won for t he 26th t ime

the New England 200
at New Hampshire In·
ternational Speedway.

pl1 is Motorsports Park.

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio

• Lancaster eliminates
Post128. See Page B1

v

No. 5 KELLOGG'S CHEVROLET

E

Newman

• Third-place Jeff Burton JS pos1·
tiooed solidly to make the
Chase. and yet he still hasn't
won tt race this year. He and
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

I

'

11&gt; k's certainly

polntsfor88
consecutive

races.

1&gt; Wloo'l not - Kurt Busch's
striMII of five straight top-10 fir&gt;
Ishee oame to an end .... T(lny •
Sl-rt has fallen from secood
to 11th In points in a span of

·-·

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hi1 toke: ~ N ewman
sa1d h1s car was faster and Stewart
should've let him go. Stewart said
the same thing had been true in reverse earlier, anel Newman raced h!m
hard . The two sounded like kids argumg on a pl_ayground.~

·

,.. Lenox 300 winner Kyle Bttsch
moved from eighth to four th in
the standings. bU1 at thi s point.
the only two drivers wrth some
sense of postseason security
are Jimmie Johnson and Mat~
Kenseth .

has been in
the top 10 In

s

Kyle Busch, Shown here durtRg driver Introductions lor the Ne.ttel AII·Siar Challenge at Lowe's Motor Speedway near Charlotte, _N.C., Is.
showing signs ol maturity, even at age 21. He's In fourth place In the Nextel Cup points race.

The New Hampshire race was a
rally killer for Kurt Busch and
the two drtvers who fell four po
sitions in the points stand ings,
Stewart and Dale Earnhardt Jr.

races . ... Jimmie Johnson

in
Aluminum
plant
Ravenswood on day-to-day
contract extension s as
agreed to by the ~ompany
and union.
Thompson has suid that a
work stoppage would be
devastating to Cemury
Aluminum , which is tinall y
enJoyrng some success.
" ! sorely hope it does not
come to that," he said .
Thompson said that ihe
company had made a fair
offer to the union. whose

Despite victory, Busch knows checkered flag is months away
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
LO UDON , N.H. - Kyle Bu sch,
younger brother of a Nextcl Cup
champion , is becoming a star in his
own right. A victory in the Lenox 300
was the thit·d of Rusch's career, which
becomes quite a bit more impressive
when one fact or s in that Kyle only
turned 21 on May 2.
This young native of Las .Vegas
drives the No . S Kellogg's Chevrolet
for Hendrick Motorsports. The num ber has an impressive history. Busch's
predecessor, Terry Labonte. won a
championship in 1996. ·
The victory left Kyle fourth in the
Nextel Cup points standings, !ra iling
onl y tea mma te Jimmie Johnson, exchamp Matt Kenseth and Jeff Rur-

ton Demonstrating his maturity, . brother, who saw his own uphill rally
though, Kyle talked about how fleet- slow in New Hampshire. A 381h.pJace
ing success can be as drivers jockey finish left Kurt Busch ]4th in the
for position in the stretch drive lead- points standings, 206 out of the top 10
- ing up io the Chase for the Nextel and 319 behind his brother.
· Cup .
Success? Potential championship'
"The biggest thing with the win is, Kyle Busch takes it all in stride.
yes, it's great, it's cool and all that," he
"It's not too bad," he said. ''It's just
said, "but the difference between like I've raced anywhere else.
fourlh and l(Jth, I mean, is just so darn
"I've been able to work with a lot of
people
over the year{&gt;. It's all about
close that this week we went from
eighth to fourth, and next week we trying to learn and create a relation·
slrip with that other person.... I've
could go from fourth to J21h.
"We need to _just keep rolling like made some mistakes, but I'm willing
we arc here. The past three weeks to learn from those, and get over
we've had a third, a second anct ·a first. those and keep going down the road."
The road? Busch ho.pes it's the one
I guess I have to win to get a TV interview, so, hey, if that's what it takes, that leads to the championship.
that's what I'll do."
'
Contact Monte Dutton
Kyle Rusch likes a camera and amiat hmduttonSO@aol.com
· crophone almost as much as his older

FAN T I P S

·

'St. Dale' a fitting tribute
to sport's fallen hero
Sharyn McCrumb 's ' St. Dale'
!Kensington Books. $251 has been
aut since 2005, but
il's still on bookSM !ves and worth
read1ng if only for
Its msight 1nto the
devotiOn of NASCAR
fans. It's a novel
based an the gath'
ering together of a
group of fan s for a.
bus tour. the Dale
· Earnh ardt Memorial
Pilgrimage. Directly 1t's a fictional tale
of miracles and compassion . Indirect·
ly, 1t's a tribute to one of NASCAR 's
fallen heroes.

• YOUR TURN

·

· lETTERS fROM OUR READERS ·

Wllat In the world'la a
'Menard,' anyway?

I

am an avid NASCAR fan. 1 see a
sponsor called "Menards" on the
ca(S. I have been trying to figure out
what a '' Menard" is.

). Somei'MI
'ake Hopatcong, N.J.

• \ ol. -tO. :'l:o . :.!h

leaders contend it does not
adequately reflect soaring
pri ces in the aluminum
market.
The union objeds to wha!
they say are proposed cuts in
health. care. Thompson said
the company is requesting a
cha'nge that would allow
them to save $600.000 a year,
for a total of $2 .1 million
over the life of the contract.
The change would involve

Please see Century, Al

.Country,
gospel
highlight
fair shows

Stewart

The se two supposed friends
clashed on the track during the
lenox 300. ancl the result was costly
for Stewart, who fell aut of the tap 10
1n Nextel Cup points for the first tim e
si nce the fo urth race of the season.
"I've started l o learn to race him like
he races me," said Stewart, ·and he
doesn't give anybody a break so I
wasn't going to give him a break .~
Newman's react ion? ~ H e (St ewart)
got tne raw end of th e deal. It did n't
do us any favors, but he sure didn't
tiye up to what he preaches."

.., H&amp;re's the supreme irony, In
this great Tony Stewart fall fro ~n
grace, practically none of 1t is directly his fault. Everyth1ng that
went right for the re•gning champion in 2005 is going terribly
wrong in 2006.

In the top 15
In 13 straight

they wanted us to make
decisions for them," he said .
" It works a lot better that
way, and that right has been
taken away from them. "
Ballots have been mailed
from the international
United Steelworkers office
in Pittsburgh . Union members must return the ballot s
to .the Pittsburgh post ot1ice
by 9 a.m . July 28.
The votes will be counted
that day. Until then, work is
continuing at the Century

Ryan Newman
n. Tony Stewart

1&gt; Roush President Geoff Smith
tried to quantify the task facing
Montoya by lil&lt;ening the difference between Formula One and
NASCAR to the difference between a tractor and an F-16
fighter plane.

II&gt;Wioo'ohot

Manager Ron
Plant
Thompson said the workers
deserved the right to vote on
the contract offer.
"I am very pleased that our
people are going to have the
. opportunity to vote on their
futures," Thompson said.
Eli Morris, spokesman for
the Local 5668 negotiating
team, said the deci sion of
the mediator was an injustice to the union.
"The people elected this
negotiating team because

u

In e Jack Roush-owned Ford.
and noted Canadian road racer
. Petrick Camentier was In New
Hampshire looking for a Busch
Setift! ride.

. - Jeff Burton
has finished

BY TiM MALONEY

TMALONE Y@MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

s

herd, 19, made his Craftsman
Trucl&lt; Sarles debut at Memphis

WHO'S HOT
AND WHO ' S NOT

s 1. ;;o

Ballots-are in the mail at Century Aluminum •

R

1&gt; Cenedlen driver Peter 51\ep-

too soon for Stewartie panic . He's just 11 points
out of the top 10, and there are
seVen races until the Chase be·
gins.

l'onll· r·o~ • \l idtllqlln·t • (,:~Jiipoli' • . lui~ :!;I. :.!OOh

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
~ Voti-ng is under way at
the Century Aluminum
plant in Raven swood, much
to the chagrin of the union
and delight of management.
A federal mediator ruled
last week that a vote be held
among the 580 members of
Local 5568-04 on what the
company called its "last ,
best and final otfer."

in the senes at Mem-

arrival of MantO!". not to mention the potential arrival of Danica Petrick.

points has won a race th1s year.

\'aile~ l'uhJi,hiug l o.

SPORTS

course, &amp;iddy.at the Imminent

Merk Martin are the only wmless
driVers in the current top 10.
"No one oU1s1de the top 14 in

•

f'OCONO OAIA

· FEUD OF THE WEEK •

KYLE BUSCH

tm.e

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

·,

OBITUARIES .
Page AS _
• Allan Gibson
• John E. Neuser
• Ernest E. Sheesley
• James W. Weeks

INSIDE
• 4-H annual style show
winners announced.
See PageA2
• For the Record.
•
Michelle Miller/ photo
SeePageA3
Work has begun on the new, 7.000 square foot restaurant behind the Super 8 Motet in Gallipolis. ·The owner. ·Dr. David K.
• Local Briefs.
Smith , expects the restaurant to be open by the end of this year.
·
See Page AS
• Slow recovery under
way in St. Louis area
after damaging
BY MICHELLE MtLLER
"We have traveled and sampled
The restaurant will have a bri ck
MMI
LLER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
storms, triple-digit heal
many different restaurants and menus decor and stucco tinish.
and have not found the right fit for
The entire structure will be over
See Page AS
GALLIPOLIS ~ Steaks. according Gallipolis ." Smith said.
7.000 s4uare feet and will include the
• Village addresses
to Dr. David K. Smith, will be the spe"Either our market was not of the restaurant, an outdoor patio and a bancialty CJf his new restaurant which is correct size, our demographics did not quet room for meetings, reception s
school building
scheduled to open in the latter months fit, or th&lt;: company was not strong and other functions. The interior will
vandalism. See Page A6 · of
2006.
enough for me to pw:tner with ," he carry a sports theme in the bar area.
• Ohio and nation could
Work has begun on the restaurant, added. "Realizing this, I set out to ere- · Smith said he's put a Jot of time and
located behind the Super 8 Motel on ate what I think will be successful and thought ' into the type of restaurant,
· face shortage of
Upper River Road .
provide a · good family atmos.phere, what it will. serve and the decor to
substance abuse
The independent restaurant will offer serve good food and be a real asset to ensure it and Gallipolis are a fit.
counselors. See Page A6 a variety of American foods, including the community."
"Everyone has been very helpful

new

WEATIIER

\

HellO, Lalie Hop(i lcang! Mernuds is

a home Jmprovement;hardware
chain based in Eau Claire. Wis.

seafood and ribs, at a mid-range cost.
Currently. lunches are expected to
cost between $4 and· $8 and dinners
between $8 and $12.
Consultants from Cincinnati assi sted Smith in the design of the structure,
as well as the equipping of both the
restaurant and the kitchen.
A local team is preparing the menu
item s and design . •

Despite announcing the beginning
constntction. Smith will release the
restaurant's name at a later date.
Local restaurant managers David
Rice and Jeff Nelson have been working with Smith on the design. construction and operation of the restaurant and will carry over as parr of t-he
new restaurani 's managerial staff
when it open s.

and supportive and I would especially
like to thank the voters in the City
Precinct 5 and everyone on my team
as we continue to progress toward
having a nice restaurant in our community." Smith said.
A local option question to allow
liquor sale at the restaurant was
approved by the precinct 's voters last
November.

Coalition forms to fight juvenile drug -abuse
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

Details on Page A6

POMEROY ~

INDEX
4 SECfiONS- 24 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Around Town
-..::' AJ
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D Section
insert
Comics
Editorials
A4
Movies
cs
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2
B Section
Sports
Weather
A6
'© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publl!!!hing Co.

After three meetings. the
Meigs County Community Coalition has
officially been christened to ti ght juvenile
dru g abuse and educate the public about
the probl em as well as any solution s.
Last week around 40 people took part in
a community forum at the Mulberry
' Community Center to discuss the impacl
of drugs on the youth of Meigs County.
At the meeting, Middleport Police Officer
Jeff Miller said gone are the days when officers only had to worry about the kid caught
with the occasional joint. Both Miller and
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Proffitt said
that the current trend among young people
are prescription pill abuse and snle s.
Inhalants are also providing a cheap high.
Proffitt said his deuartment offers a five
panel dru g screen for parents who wish to
have thci'r children tested. The d'rug screen
Beth Sergent/photo · is free and can be confidentially obtained
Around 40 people discussed the problem of juvenile drug abuse in Meigs by callin g the Pomeroy Police Department
County and what can be done. Out of this meeting came the newly-formed at 992-6411 . .
Me igs County Community Coalition.
Please
Coalition,' Al

.'

------~-·-

•J

I

see

GALLIPOLIS
Country and gospel are two
musical styles that seem to
go along with the theme of a
fair: Both are well-represented in the line-up of
entertainment for the ·57th
annual Gallia County Junior
Fair that begins July 31.
Grammy Award-winning
Kentucky
Headhunters
will bring
their driving·
sound to the
fair's main
stage on the
fair's
last
evening on
Saturday,
Aug. 5, with
one show at
$:30 p.m.
Aaron Tippin brings his
country arti stry with him
when he appears Thursday,
Aug. 3 at 8:30 p.m.
Nationally-known gospel
stars the · Dove Brothers
Quartet take the stage at
8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Aug. I
for Religious and Senior
Citizens Night.
~
Rounding out the slate df
entertainers are Rhonda
Vincent on ·wednesday,
Aug. 2 at 8:30 p.m.,.and th~
Joe Freeman Band on
Friday. Aug. 4 at 8:30 p.m.

Please see Fair. Al

Sam Goody
closing jolts
staff, patrons
Bv Joy KocMouo
JKOCMOU D@MVDAILYTRIBUNE .COM •

GALLIPOLIS "It'S
really sad," said Brandy
Jeffery s, third key manager
at Sam Goody in Gallipolis,
as she packed boxes with
merchandise. "This is the
end of an era."
·
The ·store will close its
doors for good on Monday,
leaving patrons to shop else·
where for music, movies,
games and aci:essories.
·
After being purchased by
Transworld Entertainment
early thi s year. the business
continued to 'operate under
the Sam Goody name until
management was told July
I!i the store will close.
"We were on edge since
Chri stmas, becau se we
weren't sure of the state of
the company, or · where
things were going," said lim
McFarland. assistant mruiag·
er. "Then. when Transworld
bought it we all breathed a
sigh of relief. Now. just tl)ree
months later. out of the blue
they're closing the store."
"I went from having a
full -time joh to no job at

Please see Closlnc. Al

j

I

�PageA2

REGIONAL

Sunday, July 23,

2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

4-H annual style show winners announced

thi ., was a freak thing'? Tied Up Overnight
Dear Tied Up: You did the
Dear Annie: I have been right thing tu cooperate.
seething fur two weeks over You had no way of knowing
an incident that happened to if this man had a gun, a
me in a sportswear shop knife or an accomplice. We
where I work part time.
called the Chicago Police
I' m a 19-year-o ld female Department and were told it
college student in a smal l does not advocate citizens
northeastern town. I was putting themselves in a
preparing to close the shop position where their safety
one evening when a man wi ll be compromised . You
entered and announced a were very lucky.
•
robbery. He had an obviIt's actually healthy that
ously fake· gun, but we you are angry rather than
have a rule to cooperate in afraid, but it is pointless to
a holdup. so I gave him the be reckless. If 5.u want to
$130 we had on hand. He continue workt
in that
then took oui a fl im sy shop, ask the ow cr if you
shoe lace and said he can have an earlier shift
would tic my hands. It aod promise Mom that you
seemed ridiculous , but !let will phone before you
him tie my wrists behind leave so· she is reassured
my back just so he would about your safety . . Also.
leave. I figured it would call your local police
take me 30 seconds to department and ask if they
break loose.
have a support group for
Instead of leaving. how- victims of crime. or conever. the robber took a huge tact the National Center for
roll of dttct tape from hi s Victims
of
Crime
pocket and, before I could (ncvc .org) at I-ROO-FYI react, I was gagged and CALL ( 1-800-394-22:• 5).
bound· from my shoulders to
Dear Annie: A few
my ankles like a mummy. months ago, my family had
He left me lying on the floor a surprise birthday party for
of the backroom .totally me. In a card from an aunt
trussed up. The .owner of the and uncle, there was a note
shop found me in the morn- explaining 'that a gift certifiing, taped up and exhausted cate was in the mail to a
from ·squirming.
store in my area.
The ordeal made me more
I have not re&lt;eeived that
furious than frightened. certitlcatc and am wonderbecause I had stupidly , ing what the proper next
allowed myself to be tied up step should be. Should I call
without any resistance. Now them and let them know it
I have an added problem. has nm arrived? Do I write a
My mother is insisting I quit thank-you note anyway?
my job.
What is the proper etiquette
I love working in that in a situation like this? _ ,
shop, and I'm not the least Party Girl.
·
bit afraid. only angry at
Dear Party Girl: Writ.e the
myself for being such a note anyway, thanking your
dunce. How can I get my aunt and uncle for their genmother to tmderstand .that erosity and say ing you look
BY KATHY MITCHELL

HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

AND MARCY SUGAR

P\=&gt;MEROY Everytbing from
dre*s-up outfits to lounging garments
were modeled by 4-H club member&gt;
at the annual style show staged
Thursday night in the Courthou'c
annex conference room packed witb
families and friends .
·The event concluded witb the
announcement of grand and rescn·c
champions and those receiving honorable mention in the judging which
uccuHed in the atiernoon. Judges were
Peggy Crane of Middleport. Marcia
Arnold of Pomeroy. and Mary
Roedi~ger of Athens.
.
For those who mis~ed the 'tvle show. 11
will be repeated at the Meigs County Fair
at 2 p.m. Wednesday on the htll stage.
This ycar:s theme for the revue, which
included more than 50 -l-H members,
was "Get Fired Up with Junior Fair.··
Taking top award., with projects in
their respective categor ie s were
· these 4-Hers:
"Clothes for High School and
College" - Tina Drake. grand champion; Becky Rader, reserve champion.
Accessories for Teens: Autumn
Trussell. grand champion: Rebecca
Donohu~: reserve champion.
.
"Ready Let's Sew" - Shandi
Beaver. grand · champion : Kelsey
Myers. reserve champion: Haleigh
Bush. Desirae Cundiff and Mallory
Nicodemus. honorable mention.
"Fun With Clothes·· Halev
Bisse ll, grand champion; Katie Keller,
reserve champion; Amber Davidson
and Sarah Turner, honorable mention.
"Sew For Others" Nicole
Moodispaugh,
grand champion;
Savannah Hawley, reserve champion.
"Joyful Jumper" - Keri Lawrence,
grand champion.
"Act ive Sportswear" Kayte
Lawrence, grand champion .
"Dress-up Outfit" Heaven
Westfall , grand champion; Kerry
Prunty, reserve champion: Tina Prunty.
honorable mention.
·
"Lounging Apparel" - Cheyenne
Beaver, grand champion; Kristin Fick.
reserve champion.
"Tops for Tweens" - Cheyenne
Beaver, grand champion; Nicole
Moodispaugh and Autumn Trussell co- .
reserve champions.
"Sportswear For Spectators" . Audrionna Pullins; .grand champion.
"Clothing for Middle School" Brenna Holter, grand champion; Tori
Goble, reserve champion; Nicole
Prunty, honorable mention.
,
"Frugal Fashions" - Tyler Lee,
grand champion; Heaven Westfall,
reserve champion; Lindsey Houser,
honoral11e mention.
"It's Time for Clothing Intermediate"
- Janae Boyles, grand champion;
Haler Perdas, reserve champton.
"It s Time for Clothing Advanced"
- Lindsay Houser. grand champion.

:coalition .

Joy Kocmoud/photo

Employees at Sam Goody in Gallipolis &gt;yere shoGked when
they found out last week that the store will be closed permanently this Monday. From left are Ryan Duffy, Brandy
Jefferys, Tim McFarland. and Rachel Allinder ..
uncensored music/' said
Erika Seether of Gallipolis.
''I'm shocked. I'm really
shocked. Why would they
from PageA1
. ?"
d0 t hIS.
"It's really sad to see
all," said Ryan Duffy, who
·
Gallipolis
losing so many
has worked at Sam Goody
since September of last businesses all the time,"
said McFarland. "It's unforyear. "It's a big leap."
tunate
that we live in an area
The merchandise and managers will be transferred to where people are unable to
other stores, leaving employ- buy the things they wanna
ees Iike Dufl'y and Rachel · .get. We as employees are
Allinder to seek other options. upset over the loss, but the
Now customers will have to town is losing more because
travel to other cities or usc the this store has been a mainInternet to get uncensored stay here for over a decade."
"This is the only place you
music and unrated movies.
can
buy cool things, now you
. "There goes the only bookstore in town," said John have to drive to Barbf!ursville,
Wolfe of Gallipolis, who has Atliens or Chillicothe to get
shopped at the store since it music," said Jefferys. "It's teropened. "Now I can only go rible to see the store go
to other ~tores that cut things because we all had such a
out. We're losing everything good time together. The custo censorship. Eminem with- tomers like to come in and talk
out the cuss words isn't to us about music and just
Eminem anymore."
hang out. Now that's all over."
"It's upsetting, because
For more injormatio11,
now there's no place to buy call (740) 441·0744.

Closing

,

Chanene Hoeftlch/photos

Grand champions in their respective categories of clothing projects were from the
left, Tyler Lee, Heaven Westfall, Lindsey Houser, Audrioinna Pullins, Kayte
Lawrence. Brenna Holter, Janae Boyles and Tina Drake.

Other . 4-Hers achieving grand champion ratings were from the left, front.
Shandi Beaver, Haley Bissell, Taylor Chevalier whose sun dress was made by
Nicole Moodispaugh , back right, Keri Lawrence, Autumn Trussell and Cheyene
Beaver, back left.
Reserve champions
were from the left,
front, Tori Goble, .
Savannah Hawley
with her sewing project for Courtney
Atzgerald, Autumn
Trussell and Katie
Keller; and back,
Kelsey Myers,
Heaven Westfall,
Kerry Prunty,
Rebecca Rader,
Nicole Moodlspaugh,
Haley Perdas and
Kristin Flck.

Adkins said unfortunately
the parents that really need
to be reached .were not at
meetings such as the one
from P~ge A1
held last week.
In order to reach these
Middleport Mayor Sandy
parents
and the young peolannarelli , who also attended the meeting, expressed . ple of the county. the coaliher frustration with the drug tion decided to reach out
tnto the community by
problem currently plaguing putting a booth at the fair
her village as well as the and contacting local service
entire county. lannarelli felt agencies about its existence.
it was crucial to involve the Other ideas bounc:ed around
parents in the juvenile drug we.re placing information in
problem.
church bulletins and setting
"Getting parents engaged up a display at local sportis the most difficult thing 10 ing and schoo l events.
do," said Ron Adkins of the
Adkins said he would
G a IIi a-Jackson-Meigs check on any grant funding
Board of Alcohol. Drug that may be available to perAddiction, Mental Health haps ~ssist the group in
Services (BADAMHS).
direct mailings to promote

the cause and the education juveniles.
"That was too much for our
of juvenile substance abuse .
Joining educators, health community," Powell said.
recovery personnel, law
"We're here to strengthen
enforcement and court offi- our community by helping
cials were also teens who our parents and youth,"
sat in on the discussion.
Taylor added.
Denise Martin, also of the
The next coalition meetboard of ADAMHS. noted ing will be at 7 p.m. at the
this by saying, "I'd like to Mulberry
Communi.ty
see more youth involved. ·Center and will consist of a
Kids have more ideas than Power Point presentation by
we do and if we make them the Ohio Bureau of
the heart of this movement Criminal Investigation on
we' II see changes."
methamphetamine.
Meigs County Probate
There is also a separate
and Juvenile Judge Scott town hall meeting on the
Powell reiterated what problem of drug abuse at
prompted group founder 7:30p.m. on Thursday, July
Fenton Taylor to form the 27 in the Masonic Temple
gro up, and that was six headquarters
of
the
cocaine cases in a two- Riverbend Arts Council . in
month period for local Middleport.

Century

Fair
from PageA1
The Kentucky Headhunters
can trace their roots back to
the late I 960s when when
brothers Richard and Fred
Young and their cousins,
Anthony Kenney and Greg
Martin, formed a group called
Itchy Brother that for 16 years
developed a unique blend of
roadhouse blues, rock and
country music.
The Youngs and Martin
joined forces in 1985 with
Ricky Lee and Doug Phelps
to create the Kentucky
Headhunters, whose first
album, Pickin' on Nashville,
sold over 2 million copies and
netted a Graminy. Successive
albums and individual tunes
have kept the group at the
forefront of the music scene.
Tippin, a performer since
the 1970s, came up in the
country world the hard way,
· playing in hanky tonks at
night and working a factory
job by day until his songwriting efforts won recognition in Nashville.
Turning to performing
again in the 1990s, Tippin
created a string of hits in
"My Blue Angel," "That'sAs
Close As I'll Get 10 Loving
You" and "I Wouldn't Have
It Any Other Way."
.
"l'm a very lucky man,"
Tippin recently · said. "I've
been fortunate enough to
have written some songs that
had have, an impact on peo-

pie. After all the years of
doing this, what means most
of all to me is to have written ·
a song and hearing people
s a~, 'Hey man, that's neat."'
Bluegrass artist Rhonda
Vincent is a musician looking to change the perceptions about the form with a
contemporary slam.
She said she and her
group The Rage "are trying
to let the world know that
you can play bluegrass and
be on the cutting edge."
. Ragin' Live is the latest CD
produced by Vincent and The
Rage in their transformation
of bluegrass into a modem
manifestation of Vincent's
roots in the Missouri hills ,
The Joe Freeman Band is
also bringing a bluegrass
sound with its performance
at the fair's main stage.
The Dove Brothers Quartet,
one of southern gospel's
·most-awarded such groups,
recently welcomed back Eric
Dove following a brief hiatus
in which he was spelled by
lopgtime friend Lance Jeffrey.
The quartet is also returning to the studio to record
_two new projects, its first
since the release of its noteworthy single "Anything
But Ordinary ... Everything
But Typical."
General admission to the
fair, which includes the
shows, is $7. A season pass
is $20, while chi ldren under
2 are admitted free. Senior
citizen and Golden Buckeye
Card admission is free only
on Tuesday.

employees choosing in-network health care providers.
The final offer also
inclLtdes a $1,000 lump sum ·
signing bonus, and general
. wage increases in each year
of the 42-month contract.
The hourly raises would be
60 percent this year. 55
cents in 2007. 50 cents in
2008 and 25 cents in 2009.
"We think we ha ve made
a fair · contract offer."
Thompson said.
,
Morris said members uf
Local 5568 made a sacrifi ce
by extending the 1999 contract in 2002 when times
were bad, and the company
is not returning the favor
when time ~ are good.
Even though the five-mall
negotiating team does not
believe the current offer is
good- enough for a vote.
Morris said he will make no
predictions about how the
vote might come.
·
"You never know what a
person will do with .a hallot
in their hand.'' he suid.

•

CORNWELL CENTER
for Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care

• Physician offices for cardiology,
vascular medicine, endocrinology
and diabetology

r.

• Cardiac and vascular testing
• Peripheral artery disease rehabilitation

Reunions

Youth events

Sheriff's Office
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallia County Sheriff's
Department responded to 2
incidents, I unruly juvenile
offense, and I arson from
Wednesday to Thursday.

GALLIPOLIS - . Cited
by Gallipolis City Police on
Thursday were Jeffrey
Pri chard: 41, Ashland. Ky.;
expired validation st icker,
and Benjamin Dolin, 24,
Huntington. W.Va .. expired
validation sticker.

Fire

• Diabetes education
• Clinical research

GALLIPOLIS - At 4:32
p.m.
Thursday,
the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department responded to a
· structure fire at 202
Greentree Road. Gallipolis.
The single-wide trailer

Community
events

Card shower

to: Annie:, Mailbox, PO.
Box 11/U':IO, Chicago, IL
60611. To find ota more
about Annie\ Mailbox, and
.read features b\' other
Creators Svndicati' writers
and cartoonists, visit th e
'Creators Syndicate Web
paf?e at www.creators.com.

will have vacation Bible
school July 24-28, 6 to 8:30
p.m. Theme will be Trading
Paces. For more information call 992-1734.
REEDSVILLE - Vacation
Bible school will be held at
the Eden United Brethren
Church at Reedsville through
July 28, 6 to 8:30 pJn. Theme
is "Son Treasure Island" with
the week to f~ature music,
games, snacks and activities
all part of a treasure hunting
island adventure.

~icken

WI

T

6,ut

'fiooate !)inner
ttr Currg Out

Tltlrsda!llull 2111111m tu
'
Mldllllpln MISIIIC T1•1111
- .
IIAIIIIIII
. Cll'l!lllt lnllrs Clll
$6.00 912-5331@ hit
MIIIIICIIIIII
CbiCIIII &amp;..IIIIIs, BillA IIIII, Clll SIIW, Rll &amp; CIIII
$6J8 SJIIIIIId lllllnlllnvlll Ellllll S11r

Birthdays
Wednesday, .July 26
MIDDLEPORT -. Dori'
Wilt will observe -her 86th
birthday on July 26. Cards
may be sent to her at 333
Page St.. Overbrook Center,
Middleport , Ohio 45760

• FREE Tec1'1n1cal Support

Ide! E•prusl

- ----~

(surf up to 6X faslerl
~----jw i'Jirno

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Rr. lrable lnt r.r nr. t

A ccr ~ '&gt; S III Lt

1 1 14

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
Diabetg Self-Management Classes - In

Jackson

(7401446-5971.

Freedom From Smoking - Session 7 - Celebration - In GautpoUs
Monday, July 24 'at 6:00 pm at the HMC Tobacco Prevention Center, located at
2881 Jackson Pike in Gallipolis Session Seven will cover relapse prevention and
graduation from the prog ram Registration for this program Is currently closed.
Those who are pre-registered are welcome to attend. For more information about
upcoming Freedom From Smoking classes. ca ll (740) 446-5940.
Jackson Senior Screenings -In Jackson

was fully involved and the alarm at Holzer Medical
roof was collapsing . when Center. I00 Jackson Pike,
the fire department arrived. Gallipolis, and at 8S7 p.m.
According to · the fire Thursday to a fal se alarm at
report .and &lt;t report by the Scenic Hill s, 311 Buck
Gallia County S,heriff' s Ridge Road. Bidwell.
Department , Greg
W.
Young allegedly started the
fire and reft•sed to leave the
burnin·g structure. Young
CHESTER - Perry L.
was finally coaxed from the Shuey, 75, address unknown.
trailer by John Young, was cited for failure 10 conaccording to the report. .
trol bv the Gallia-Mei~s Post
It was reported by the fire · of th~ State ' Highway~ Patrol
department that Greg Young in a one-car accident . on
had burns on his hands and Thursday at I0:30p.m.
cuts on his legs. According
According to the repon.
to the sheriff's. department Shuey was headed southreport . Greg Young wa' bound on Township Road
transported to Athens for 115 (Shumway), drove off
treatment.
·the right side of the roadway.
The GVFD also respo11ded struck an embankment, overto a repon of a lanker truck . turned. and came to rest on
leaking an itnknown sub- the left edge of the roadway.
stance at 2:05p.m. on U.S. 35
Shuey was transported to
westbound just west of the St.
Joseph 's Hospit&lt;~l ,
Silver Bridge Plaza. No evi- Parkersburg, W.Va .. by the
Meigs Cmmty EMS. The
dence of a leak was found .
At 4:32 p.m. Thursday, the vehicle be, ctrove had di sGVFD responded to a false . abli ng damage.

Highway Patrol

COMING SOON: ·

'

Low-risk diagnostic cardiac and vascular
catheterization laboratory

• FREE Satup Solt.lare
• SAVE 11\011 when .,ou

• No Cfeclil card reqUired!
, 1(1 f.meil Addr&amp;SSBi

July 24, 25 and 26 (Monday - Wednesday) from 4 00 pm - 7:00 pm at Holzer Medical
Center - Jackson in the Community Education Room, located just inside the Main,
Entrance of the Hospital. For more information, please call (7.110) 39$-8500 or

For the Record

• Cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation
• Diabetes and endocrine disease .
diagnosis and treatment

Church events

Sunday, .July 23
MIDDLEPORT - Kevin
Spencer and Friends will be
. in concert at 6:30 p.m. at the
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Monday, July 24
Church.
located south of
POMEROY Meigs
on Route 7.
Middleport
County Ikes' Picnic, 6:30p.m., ·
Monday, July 24
lkes' Farm, bring covered
POMEROY
- The First
dish. drinks and table fare.
Southern Baptist Church
will host its vacation Bible
school from 6-9 p.m. begin ning today through July 28.
Tuesday, July 25
SYRACUSE- The First
TUPPERS PLAINS Church of God at Syracuse

City Police

Our Comprehensil!e
Regional Center:

from Page A1

Monday, July 24
RACINE Southen'l
Band Boosters, 7 p.m. in the
high school band room to
make plans for fair and football season. All band parents
and suppo.rters welcome.

Eastern Youth Football
League sign-ups for football
players and cheerleaders,
from 6 to 8 p.m. July 25 and
July 27, and 9 to II a.m.
July 29 at the high school
football field.

2006

Church. ages 4 through 6th City, Ohio 45623 .
grade with Pastor Mark
GALLIPOLIS - Faye
forward to receiving the gift
Williams.
Rees will celebrate her 94th
curd. If they haven't actualSunday, July 30
birthday on July 21: Cards
ly sent it, this will remind
GALLIPOLIS The may be sent to her at Holzer
Monday, .July 24
them. If they have, your
Watson
and
McComas
fam300
Assisted
Living.
GALLIPOLIS
note will prompt them to Planning scS&gt;ion for Gallia ily reunion will take place Briarwood
Drive;
call the store 10 check on the Academy High School Class from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
delay. Beyond that, there is of 1957 50th reunion, 6 p.m. , Raccoon Creek Park Shelter
GALLIPOLIS
nothing you can do. Happy ' patio of St. Louis Catholic House #I . Dinner at I p.m. Estivaun Matthews will celbelated birthday.
Church. For information, For more information , call ebrate her 88th birthday on
Dear Ann1e: I rea lly didn't contact Molly Plymale at 446-1211.
Aug. 5. Cards may be sent
like the headline above your -l46-12 14, Shirley Graham
WELLSTON - Nichols to her at 1097 Sunset Drive.
column on an abusive hus- at 446-1 304. or Celestine· reun ion at Pine Hill Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
band. using the term Skinner at 446-3237 .
Sheltcrhouse; Lake Alma.
GALLIPOLIS - Ruh y
"Hubby." While we all
Carry-in dinner at 12 :3 0 McGhee will celebrate her
Tuesday, July 25
know "hubby" is short for
PATRIOT
Four p.m . Bring a covered dish, '92nd birthday on Aug . 22.
husband, it is commonly Wheels for Fun and Safety own table service and drink. Cards may be sent to her at
used as a term of endear- 4-H Club, 6 p.m. , at the For information. contac:t Holzer- Wyngate,
300
ment. It belittles the abuse home of the advi sors, John Wayne Nichols at (937) Briarwood ·
Drive.
by making it sound cute. and Marcia Shriver.
448-2 909 . or e-mail to Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Please don't use that in your
BLACKLICK- Get-well
EWINGTON- American wayfnic I@ hotmai I. com.
headlines again. Sue Legion
Post.161 will meet at
cards
may be sent to Loma
Down South
7:30 p.m. at Ewington
Clary at 2028 Be lange Drive,
Dear Sue : Thank vou for Academy. Final plans for the
Blacklick, Ohio 43004.
giving us an opportunity to Aug. 5 Vinton Bean Dinner .
GALLIPOLIS The
CHESH
IRE
Luther
explain something to our will be discussed. All mem"Mayor
of
Mill
Creek".
will
Amos will be turning 7S.
read~rs. who occasionally
bers
urged
to
attend.
Please send card., to Box celebrate her 85th birthday on
complain to us about the
RIO GRANDE - Open 1631 Turkey RLm Road. Aug. 6. Cards may be sent to
tit les above our column. We Gate Garden Club will have
her at 3259 Mill Creek Road.
Cheshire, Ohio. 45620.
do not write the headlines
6:30
p.m.
:
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 .
a
potluck
picnic
,
GALLIPOLIS - A getand titles. They are provid- at the park on Lake Drive.
E-mail ciJmmunity calenwell card shower is ·being
ed by your local newspaper.
Thursday,
July
26
dar
items to kkel/y @mydaiheld
for
Brenda
Brumfield.
Most of the time , they do an·
GALLIPOLIS
Free
lytribune.com.
Fax
Cards can be sent to her at
outstanding job. but somelegal
assistance
to
senior
annou11cements
1o
446times one will rub readers citizens at the Gallia Cmtnty Arbors of Gallipolis. 170
the wrong way. Folks. if this Senior Resource Center by Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, 3008. Mail items to 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
happens to you. please let Attorney Joe Brockwell Ohio 45631.
45631.
Annou/tcements
THURMAN
A
get-well
your local newspaper know. starting at 10:30 a.m .. Legal
They want to keep you advice on wills, family mat- crud shower is planned for may also be dropped off at
Josine Moses. Cards can be the Tribune office.
happy.
ters.
estates
.
and
money
sent to Josine Moses. P.O. Box
Annie:~ Mailhox is \ ~Titten
Please
sc
hedule
an
matters.
44, Thunnwt, Ohio 456~5.
b\' K(l/h\' Mitchell and
appointment
by
calling
the
CROWN CITY - Eva
Marcv s~~:~ar. longtime edicenter
at
446-7000.
Mooney
will be celebrating
tors qj' rhe An11 umders colSaturday,
July
29
her
82nd
birthday. Cards
umn. Please e·mail \'Oitl'
GALLIPOLIS
B.lock
be
sent
to 1284
·
can
questions to wmiesfflailbox@comcasr..net, or write party at French City Baptist Hamilton Road, . Crown

Meigs County calendar.
Clubs and
organizations

Sunday, July 23,

Gallia County calendar

Robbery victim angry, but safe and sound

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

iunbap ltme&amp; -ientind

.

Tuesday, July 25 from 10:00 am- 12 Noon at the Jackson Senior Center, located at
25 Mound Street in Jackson, Ohio. For more information, call (7.110) 395-8500.
Freedom From Smoking - Session 2 -wanting to Quit- ja Pomecov
Tuesday, July 25 at 6:00 pm at the Metgs County Council on Aging and Senior .
CitizE!ns Center at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio. Session Two will cover
coping with urges and making a plan. For more informatton about this seven.-session
series developed by the American Lung Association , call (740) 446-5940.

Oak Hill Senior Screenings - in Qak HIU, OH
.
Thursday, July 27 from 10:00 am · 11 :30 am at the Oak Hill Senior Center, located at
115 Glen Cove in Oak Hill , Ohio. Free non-fasting cholesterol, glucose and t&gt;tood pressure
screenings will be provided . For more information , call (740) 395-8500.
Community Coffee - In GaWpoUs
Friday, July 28 frtim 8:00 am - 9:00 am in the HMC Education and Conference Center.
Holzer Medical Center invites all to an informal and ongoing community coffee promoting
convers;ltion between area leaders in business, community service, education ,
government and private 'enterprise_Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy Services
Department For more information. please call (740) 446-5053 .

.

Family Night at Holzer's Assisted Living FacilitY -In Gallipolis
Friday, July 28 at 5:00 pm at Hoizet's Assisted Living Community, located at
300 Briarwood Drive. For more. information. call (740) 441 -9633 .
Ga!lla County Jynlor Fajr • in Gallipolis

July 31 - August 5 at the Gallia County Fairgrounds Look for the Holzer Medical Center
Wellness wagon as they provide free screenings and health information during the Fair.
Schedules will be posted daily. For more information, please call the HMC Community
Health and Wellness Department at (740) 446-5679.

-..... jACKSON -

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We·can he lp you create a plan fo r your future and retirement years.

Call us today and discover why we are leaders in plannrng for life.
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· We Never Close... Your Health is that

•,

�OPINION

6unbap t!ttmes -ientind

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740)"446·3008
www.mydallytribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

·Letten; ro 1/w editor an' 1rl'lnmte. Tiler sl~ould be less
them 300 a•ords. All ft'llt!r.&lt;i are subjtYI w ~·tlithtg mul must
he siKnl!d om/ include addrl!.u and Jelepiume monber. No
unsigned leuers will be puhfislwd. l .l'ffl'F.\' slwuld be in
good taste, addressing ;,\·.mes. not personalities.

TODAY IN . HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Jt1iy 23. the 204th clay of 2006. There
are 161 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History : On July 23, 1886. New York
saloonkeeper Steve Brodie claimed to have made a daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East River.
On this date: In 1885, Uly,ses S. Grant. the 18th president
of the United States, died in Mmmt McGregor. N.Y.. at age 63.
In 1892, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia was born.
In 1904, by some accounts. the ice cream cone was
invented by Charles E. Menches during the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition in St. Louis.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary issued an ultimatum to Serbia
following the killing of Archduke Francis Ferdinand by a
Serb assassin: the dispute le&lt;Jto World War I.
·
In 1945, French Marshal Henri· Petain, who had headed
the Vichy government during World War II, went on trial,
charged with treason . (He was ,·ondemned to death, but his
sentence was commuted.)
·
In 1951 , Henri Petain died in pri&gt;oll.
In 1952, Egyptian military nfficers led by Gamal Abdei'
Nasser overthrew King Farouk I.
In 1967, rioting that cl;timed some 4J lives erupted in Detroit.
In 1977, a JUry in Washington convicted 12 Hanafi
Muslims of charges stemming from the hostage siege at
three buildings the previous March.
In 1986, Britain\ Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at
Westminster Abbey in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.)
Ten years ago: At the Atlanta Olympics. Kerri Strug made
a heroic final vault despite torn ligaments in her left ankle as
the U.S. women gymnasts clinched their first-ever Olympic
team gold medal. The Senate passed a welfare overhaul bill.
Five years ago: Pope John Pau l If urged President Bush
in their first meeting. held at Castel Gandolfo, Italy, to bar
creation of human embryos for medical research.
Indonesian 'national assembly ousted President
. Abdurahman Wahid, electing Megawuti Sukarnoputri as
' head of state. Negotiators from 17R nations rescued the
1997 Kyoto Protocol after marathon talks in Bonn,
Germany. Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Eudora Welty died
in Jackson, Miss .. at age 92.
.
One year ago: Multiple bomb blasts in the Egyptian Red
Sea resort of Sharm ei-Sheik killed at least 64 people.
London police acknowledged that Jean Charles de
Menezes, the man they'd sbot and killed 011 a subway car
in front of horrified commuters, had nothing to do with
· recent bombings on the city's trimsit system. Accordionist
Myron Floren died in Los Angeles County at age R5.
Today's Birthdays:· Actress Gloria DeHaven is 81. Actor
Calvert DeForest is 78. Supreme: Coun Justice Anthony M.
Kennedy is 70. Radio personality Don lmus is 66. Actor
Larry Manctti is 59. Rock musician Blair Thornton
(Bachman Turner Overdrive) is 56. Actor Woody Harrelson
is 45. Rock musician Manin Gore (Depeche Mode) is 45.
Actor Eriq Lasalle is 44. Rock musician Slash is 41. Actor
Philip Seymour Hoffman is 39. Rock musician Nick Menza
is 38. Model-actress Stephanie Seymour is 38. Actress
Charisma Canpenter is 36. Rhythm-and-blues singer Sam
Watters is 36. Country singer Alison Krauss is 35. Actorcomedian Marlon Wayans is 34. Actor Omar Epps is 33.
Baseball player Nomar Garciaparra is 33. Country musician
David Pichette (E merson Drive) is 29. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Michelle Williams is 26. Actor Daniel Radcliffe is 17.
Thought for Today: "To be proud and inaccessible is to
be timid and weak." - . Jean Baptiste Massillon. French
clergyman (1663-1742).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thn• should be
less than 300 w/Jrds. All letters are subje(·r tQ editing,
must be. signed, and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leiters
should be in good taste, addressi11g issues, not per. soilafities. Letters of tfwllks fO organi:atioll.\' and individuals will not be accepted ji1r publicmion.

~unbap \lri'meg -~entinel
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Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, please call one of our newsrooms!
'•

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'·

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.,

'

'Sunday, July 23,

I

While
millions
of
Americans are enjoying the
summer, taking nice trips
and relaxing on th~ sand,
the leaders . of Hezbollah
are also enjoying the season. From their sanctuary
in Iran, the terrorists have
· announced that they are
armed and ready for World
War Ill. Taking a cue from
President Bush, the killers
are gleefully 'trotting out
the taunt: "Bring it ont"
So now we have aiQaeda and Hezbollah
threatening
to
kill
Americans, and what are
many Americans doing
about it? Playing politics or
ignoring t~e situation,
that's what.
Instead of presenting a
united front to the world,
the USA is bickering over
the "rights" of captured terror suspects, war strategy
in Iraq, and whether it's
bad for newspapers to alert
terrorists about top secret
investigations· designed to
stop them from murdering
people.
When are· we all going to
wake up'! I mean, what is it

Obituaries

Bill
O'Reilly

going to take for "we the
people" to understand tlte
goal of the terrorists'' There
is no fl:asoning with this
group, 110 negotiating with
them. They hate Jews and
Ameril'an' and, in general,
all mm-Muslims. They
want to cause · as much
destruction as pos sible.
They are loving this recent
•violence in the Middle East
which they, alone, started.
Are you hearing me, San
Francisco?
Immediately after 9/11 ,
the vast majority of
Americans were engaged
in the terror war. We wanted ·strong leaders who
would right that terrible
wrong. We demanded
action, justice for the murders of three thousand

Americans. We didn't care
to hear Phil Donahue say
the invasion of Afghanistan
was wrong. We condemned
of
lonpy
University
Colorado professor Ward
Churchill for comparing
the 9/11 victims to Nazis.
The American public was
in a fighting mood.
No longer.
Now we are weary of this
unending, complicated ter·ror war business . We ~ re
besieged with misinformalion·' spit out to us by ideologues on both sides who
seek to use the terror war to
advance a political agenda.
We are exhaust~.
But that is no excuse,
because we are also in
grave danger. Iran is the
primary threat. That country is enjoying the death
and destruction it s terror
proxies arc causing, and
desperately wants to up the
ante by dcvclopi11g a
nuclear weapon.
The sad truth is thitt apami sg uided
thetic and
Americans are actually
helping
the
fanatical
Iranian leaders as well as

Allan Gibson

· the terror killers themselves. Every political divi sion in this country is
cheered on by our enemies.
They believe the American
people are selfish and
weak, a group more interested in foolish entertainment and blind ideology
in
aggressively.
than
defending itself.
The · Germans
and
Japanese made the same
calculation in the 1940's.
and they were wrong. But
Ho Chi Minh was right
when he 'aid America .
would not pay the price in·
Vietnam .
So who· s correct now·&gt;
Will Americans pay the
painful price to win the war
on terror? · Or w iII we
retreat to our BlackBerrys
and iPod~ and . video
games'&gt; Will we continue to
allpw partisan politics to
divert attention from the
real ·threat, or will we
demand that our, leaders
win the conflict?
In the summer of 2006.
that is the hot· question.
And, at this point, there is
no clear answer.

James Woodrow Weeks

Emest E. Sheesley .

John E. Neuser

Local Briefs
Correction
GALLIPOLIS -A con. cert and worship service
staged by the musical
group Father Me Kenzie on
Thursday in the Gallipoiis
City Park was not part of
the Gospel in the Park
series, as reported in
Friday's Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.
Gospel in the Park is held
in the park most Friday
nights during the summer
under the sponsorship of the
Tri-County
Gospel
Homecoming
Concert
Executive Committee, consisting . of the Revs. Rick
Barcus, Carl Ward and
R;md y Parsons.
More information on
Gospel in the Park is available from Barcus at 3677063.

•

· '7:tahler®dispatch com

Beware of sheep droppings
Dave
Barry

•
• Early in the morning of
Oct. R, 1991 , Mrs. Florence
A. Snegg, of Uvula, Mich. ,
was having an extremely
vivid dream in which her
son. Russell , was involved
in a terrible automobile
accident. Suddenly, she
was awakened by the ringing of her telepho'fte. On
the line was a Missouri
state trooper, calling long
distance to remind Mrs.
Snegg that she had never
had children.
• On the afternoon ·of
March
13,
1993.
Winchester B. Fleen, of
Toad Sphincter. Ark., was
abducted . by hostile, largebrained beings who drilled ·
holes in his head, probed
him with giant needles. ·
pumped chemicals into hi'
body, took samples of his
organs and removed most
of his bodily fluids before
they found OLit that he did
not have health in surance.
at which point they
released him back into the
hospital waiting room.
• On the morning of July
3, 1994, 7-year-old Jason
Toastwanker fell off his tricycle, hit his head .&lt;md was
knocked out. When he
regained consciousness, he
spoke to his parents in fluent German. This did not
surprise them, because they
were German' and this
happened in Germany.
What surprised them was
that before the accident he
had cleaned Lip his room
'

'

without being asked.
• Lasi Feb. 12, Thelma
Crumpet-Scone of New
York City purchased a
Whopper at Burger King.
When she started to eat it.
she bit her own finger.
causing a painful red mark
for
several
minutes.
Incredibly, she decided that
th is was totally her fault.
and she did not sue anybody.
· Impossible, you say·'
Perhaps so, but all of these
incidents, along with hundreds more that have not
occurred to me yet, have
been thoroughly documented by the ·Jn stitu·te for
Documenting
Things
Thoroughly.
The lesson is this: Berore
you say something is
''impossible.'' you would
be wise to remember the
old s~ymg: "Truth is
stranger than fiction, especially,when ' truth' is being
defined by the O.J .
Simp,on defense t~am."
And thus, when yoLt consider the New Zealand treesheep article, th~ question
you must ask yourself is,
"How can {, keeping an
open mind. best explain
what happened?"
The answer is, "Read the
rest of the article, you
moron."
It turns out that the sheep
had fal len from a he Iicopter. The pilot had been
transporting - I am not
making up this quote"some c:wes that had died
from sleepy sickness." and
the wire that was holding
the sheep under the hClicopter broke .
Incredibly. tJ1e pilot had
been warned about thi, the
nigl1t before in a telephone
call from a Missouri state
trooper.
. No. I made that last ·part

up. But the rest of the story
is true. which raises the following alarming questions
. for those who live in, or
plan to visit. Ne'Y Zealand:
• Is it a comm~n· practice
there to transport deceased
sheep via helicopter'?
• If one of these sheep
were to land on you, would
you get "sleepy sickness"?
• What about Mad Cow
Disease?
For the record, tree sheep
are not the only bizarre
phenomenon to occur lately in New Zealand.
I nave here a document,
sent in ~y alert reader Gretf
Collins, stating that a
researcher in New Zealand
has discovered a new,
improved method for growing tomatoes hydroponically. ("Hydroponically" comes
from the Greek words
"hydro," meaning " a," and
"ponically," meaning "way
of growing tomatoes.'')
According to the dontment, the researcher has
found that he gets excellent
results when he grows the
tomatoes in .. . brassiere~ I
am not making this up.
This leads to still more
questions, including:
·• Does thi s give new.
meaning to the expJ;,ession,"Gct a load of those'tomatoes"?
• Would it be· tasteless to
make a joke here about
growing zucchini in athletic supporters?
• What about Mad
Tomato Disease?
There 's probably nothing
to worry about, but until we
get some answers, I think ·
everybody should panic for
a :while and then get some
sleep. I myself am suddenly feeling very sleepy, so
I'm just going to put my
head down and
Moo.

Speakers set
CRbWN CITY - Paul
Stinson will speak at the II
a.m. services and Jimmy
Sims w111 speak at the 7
p.m. ser~ices today at Good
Hope Church.

No cause
for outage
GALLIPOLIS - Power
to · around 400 American
Electric Power customers in
the Gallipolis area was

•

interrupted for about 50
.minutes Friday.
Power went off around
4:25 p.m. and was restored
at 5:15. No cause for the
outage was ..given, and an
AEP spokesperson said it
was u·nJikely- there would
be one if crews were
unable to determine the
cause.
A thunderstorm passed
north of the city when
power went off, but it was
not known if it had a part in
the outage.

Church has
new pastor
ANGEL -· Bailey Chapel
Church on Ohio 218
announces its new pastor,
the Rev. Charles E. Curry of
Gallipolis.
Everyone is invited to
attend services at the
church, which are Sunday ·at
10 a. in. and 6 p.m., and
Wednesday at 7 p.m.

Sign-up for
camping due
POMEROY Those
planning to camp at the fairgrounds .during the Meigs
County Fair' are to sign up,
pay and pick their spot at
the secretary's office on
Saturday, Aug. 5.
Earlier camping registra-

tions will not be accepted,
advises Debbie Watson,
who also notes that the ·
camping fee does not
include entry onto the
grounds.
She emphasized that no
campers can be spotted
before ·noon on Sunday,
Aug. 13, and must be
removed by noon on the following Sunday.

Immunization
clinic• Tuesday
POMEROY
The
Meigs County
Health
Department will hold a
childhood immunization
. clinic from 9 to II a.m. and
I to 3 p.m. on. Tuesday.
B'ring shot records, medical cards if applicable. A $5
donation appreciated but
not required.

Basket bingo
MIDDLEPORT - A benefit basket event for Jimmy
Gilkey will be held at 6:30
p.m. on Thursday, July 27 at
the
Middleport
Fire
.
Department.
Advance tickets are $20.
The kitchen wi II be open
with three specials. Call
Jane at 992-3934 for more
information.

Slow recovery under way in St. Louis area
after damaging storms, triple-digit heat
Bv JIM SALTER

ty. Ameren Corp. was being 42-year-old dump truck drihelped by utility workers ver from High Ridge died
borrowed from other com- when the wind blew a steel
ST. LOU1S - The heat panies, working around the box onto him.
was down and the skies were clock to get the lights back
The storm hit many areas
clear, but Kim Beck could on. All told, about 3,000 that were spared by the bigonly laugh when asked workers
were fanning ger one on Wednesday. On
Saturday whether things were throughout the region.
the Illinois side of the
slowing down at the Salvation
Emergency rooms were Mississippi River, thou Army shelter she manages in swamped with those who sands were withour power,
rely on power for oxygen and Gov. Rod Blagojevich
suburban St. Louis.
declared several counties
"Far from it," Beck said. and other medical needs.
Hundreds remained in state disaster areas.
"We had 95 people spend the
··we're pretty confident
night last night. It may not be shelters set up by the
hot, but they don't have American Red Cross, while there were some tornadoes
there,"
National
power. Here they get the others were sti ll at some of over
Weather
Servic~
meteorolothe
dozens
of
"cooling
cencreature comfons - . they can
eat, they can watch TV, some ters" set up around the gist Jim Sicveking said.
In Arkansas. a young boy
are even doing their laundry." region. At Beck's Salvation
The shelter was just one Army Family Haven. many was injured when winds blew
spot where the city's weath- overnight guests came direct- over a travel trailer, trapping
er-battered citizens found a .ly from hospitals. Some were him underneath. Baxter
Sheriff
John
haven as the region began in wheelchairs, and a few . County
were
Alzheimer's
patients
.·
Montgomery
said.
Chainsaws
recovering from a week that
"It's sad when you' re still were used to cut him free.
brought I 00-degree heat
President Bush on Friday
not
feeling your best and
and one of the worst storms
approved
Mi,souri's request
ever to hit the area, fol- you have to go 'to an emerfor an expedited disaster
lowed by another big thun" gency she lter," Beck said.
been
declaration,
which mobiThe
weather
has
derstorm Friday.
lizes
the
Federai
.Emergency
St.
Louisblamed
for
four
The forecast was free of
any immediate problematic area deaths. Elderly people M anagemem Agen&lt;:y and
weather. Weeke.nd highs in St. Louis and De Soto provides federal fund·ing for
were expected to be in the died in homes where the air debris removal and other
conditioners lost power; an emergency needs. Members
80s with little humidity.
Still, it was expected to be East St. Louis man died of the Mi ssouri National
early next week before after coming in contact with Guard were helping with
power was restored - by a downed power line: and a cleanup.
midday Saturday, about
437,000 homes ·and businesses still lacked electrici·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER •

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II
I

'

,Israel opens blockade to
allow shiploads of aid into
Lebanon; Lebanese flee north

Allan D. Gibson, 56, husband of Sabra, father of Grant
James Woodrow Week s 91, of Bidwell pa&gt;Sed away on
35,000 refugees · from the
BY LEE KEATH
'a•id Drew, and ,on of Virginia and the late James Gibson, Friday, July 21. 2006 at Scenic Hills Nursing and
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER
south,
Mayor Ahduipassed away on Saturday, July 8, 2006.
Rehabilitation Center in Bidwell after an extended illness.
Rahm:ln ai -Bizri said.
Allan was a 28-year employee of Borden Inc., and was
He was born on October 15. 1914 to the late William and
BEIRUT. Lebanon
A constant stream of cars
currently controller at Tri-State Sterling Trucks Inc.
Tliera Midcalf Weeks. He was a factory worker and then With fears of a humanitari- flowed down the main
A gathering of family and friends to celebrate Allan's life worked for the Chesire Township .
an cri,is growing, Israel street. Vegetable markets
will be held from I to 2 p.m . on Sunday, July 23, 2006, at · In addition to hi s parents, he was preceded in death by his opened up it s blockade of were open only for several
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home, with his wife, Eileen Weeks.
Lebanon\ ports to allow hours before their day' s
eulogy at 2 p.m.
He is survived by children, Jani ce (Edward) Pettit, the first shiploads of aid· to supplies ran out amid the
In lieu of tlowers, memorial contributions may be made Bidwell, Ohio, Jerry Weeks, California, Ohio. Thera arrive, and tens of thou- rush to stock up.
to' a charity of choice.
(Tom) McGee, California, Ohio, II grandchildren, 13 sands of Lebanese fled
''I'm afraid a disaster is
great grandchildren, four great great grandchildren, and north to escape Israeli going to happen with all
four sisters.
army incur,ions.
these refugees. There's no
Services will be held at II a.m. on Monday, July 24.
In Beirut, a steady stream aid, not from other nations.
2006 at the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with Rev.
Ernest E. Sheesley. 77, of Gallipolis, died Wednesday James Fisher officiating. Burial to follow in the Kyger of foreign national s lined up not from Lebanon," said aiSaturday to board ships and Biai. who has been sleepevening, July 19, 2006, at Holzer Medical Center.
Cemetery. Vi sitation will be from 6-~ p.m. on Sunday, July planes that would take them ing in his office for days.
He was born on July 2'!, 1928, in Lower Burrell , Pa. He was 23, at the funeral home.
away from the violence.
The Sidon area has
th!! son of the late Clayton and Elizabeth l Minhinett Sheesley.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralSome
35
,000
Lebanese
largely
been spared Israeli ·
Ernie was a graduate of the University of Hard Knocks . homes.eom.
filled the southem port town bombardment in recent
He worked as a food service director for over 40 years. He
, of Sidon as they &gt;earched davs. but a wave of bombalso owned and ope(ated Sheesley's Restaurant in Shelocta,
for a place to stay .or ·a way ings early. ·in the Israeli
Pa., for 14 years. The last 'everal years he was an employto get farther north. With the offensive shattered the
ee of Galli a Auto Sales.
town of I00.000 unable to 111ain roads in and out of
He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church . in
John E. Neuser, 87, of Corona, Calif., passed away on absorb more refugees, many · the
city. Sidon is about
Gallipolis. He was an active member of the Gallipolis Shrine Thursday, July 20, 2006 at Pleasant Care Assisted Living in families
were joining hal fw«y bet ween Beirut
Club, and the Shrine Clown unit. He also was instrumental Corona.
. · Palestinians in .a refugee and the port of Tyre , which
in starting the Shrine Klown unit in Elkins, W.Va., before
John was born on May 5. 1919 in Archbald, Pa., the son camp.
i&gt; the biggest city south of
moving to Gallipolis. He was also a member ,of the Kentucky of the late John E. Neuser, Sr. and Mary Ruddy Neuser. He
Israel lifted its sea block- the Litani River and has
Colonels. Ernie also dearly loved hunting and fishing.
was a retired Insurance Claim Adjustor for Auto Club, and ade Friday after Israel' ., burne the brunt uf severe
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his was a former policeman in Baltimore, Md., before living in U.N. Ambassador Dan Israeli strike s.
twin brother, Edward Sheesley.
California. He was a football enthusiast, and also enjoyed Gillerman said his country
Refugees have been fillHe is survived by his wife, Carolyn Ann Hanshaw tishing. John served his country during World War II, serv- would open a humanitarian ing schools in Sidon for
Sheesley. who he married on Jan. '21 , 1967, in New ing in the U.S. Army.
.
corridor for food, medicine . days - and by Friday they
Kensington, Pa. Also surviving him are four children,
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by and other supplies.
were fuII. So the southern
Timothy (Eiana) Sheesley of Tennessee, Janice (Larry) one son, Tljomas Neuser, and one brother, Walter
A Greek warship carry- Lebanese joined Palestinian
Miney of Latrobe, Pa., Ray (Nora) Schau of Marietta, and Neuser.
ing 22 tons of humanitari- refugees in the nearhy camp
Roy (Jo) Schau of Marietta; eight grandchildren and fou~
He is surviv~!d by his wife, Margaret "Margie" Strait an suppli es arrived Friday of Ain Hilweh. moving into
great-grandchildren: a sister, Aletha Frantz of Neuser whom he married on April 4, 1982; one daugh- in
Beirut.
followed schools .in the camp.
ter, Susan (Brian) Hare of Pomona, Calif.; two sisters, Saturday by another with Palestinians were supp lying
Pennsylvania; and a brother, Bill Sheesley of Florida.
Services were held at 2 p.m. Saturday, JuJ.y 22, 2006, at Jayne Marie (Jack) Walker of Myrtle Beach, S.C .. and 14 tons of supplies, the them with whatever blanthe . Waugh-Halley- Wood Funeral Home, with, Rev. Tim Betty Keefe of Stratford , Conn.; a sister-in-law Jean Greek Foreign Mini,try kets and foam mattresses
Louma officiating. Burial followed at Riverview Cemetery Neuser of Stratford, Conn., and several nieces ·and said. An Italian navy ship they could spare.
in Williamstown, W.Va. Visitation was held in the funeral nephews.
was expected Sunday.
Others tried to go north.
Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10 a.m. on
home on Friday, July 21, 2006, from 4 to 8 p.m ..
It was unclear how the The main coastal highway
Masonic services were conducted at 8 p.m. on Friday at ·. Tuesday, July 25, 2006 at the St. Louis Catholic Church supplies would get to isolat- has been cut and bridges
with Msgr. William Myers officiating. Burial will fol - ed towns and villages in t~ e destroyed - as ha' the .
the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the low in the Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may cal l from south - the center of the parallel, older SidonShriners Hospitals for Children, 3229 Burnet Ave., ' 6-8 p.m. on Monday, July 24, at Willis Funeral Home. war zone - where main Beirut route - forcing
Devotion Prayers will be at 8 p.m. on Monday at the_ routes and many side roads cars w make their way up
Cincinnati, Ohio 45229-3095.
A ·Special thank you to the doctors, nurses, administni- funeral home.
through the mountains have winding roads into the
Pallbearers will be Danny Sheets, Willard Sheets, Tom been cut off by Israe li Shouf mountains.
tors, hou~ekeeping and all other staff members for the lovSheets . and William Strait; Honorary Pallbearer will be airstrikes . Missiles and
ing care you provided our family.
Israel has blockaded the
Pallbearers were David Mink, Don Mink, Wendell Haner, Willard Sheets.
artillery continue to fall in ports since it s offensive
Roger Puckett, Mark Neal and Charles Stover.
Full military honors will be given at the cemetery by vol- the area, making the roads against Lebanon began after
Honorary pallbearers were Tom Pasquale, Charles unteers of area veteran lodges.
still dangerous.
the July 12 capture of two
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
Sidon, 20 miles south of Israeli
soldiers
by
Meadows, Lawrence Theiss, Hobe Foster and Ike Kinghting.
Beirut, has swe lled with Hezbollah guerrillas.
To send condolences, visit www.timeformemory.com/whw. condolences .

THE UI..TIMATE MU(.T/-TASf&lt;ER ...

Call me paranoid, but my
first reaction, upon learning abou t the dead sheep
being found in treetops in
New Zealand; was that
so~e thing unusual was
gotng on.
I found out about this
thanks to alert reader
Steven Moe, who sent me
an article from The Press of
Christchurch, concerning
'~the discovery of several
dead sheep high in the trees
of Tunniclitle Forest."
Right away, ' I said to
myself, "Hmm."
I base this statement on
the well-known fact that
sheep are not tree-dwelling
Zoologically,
animals.
sheep are classifiea in the
same · family as cows:
Animals that Stand Around
and Poop.
On very rare occasions, a
single sheep or cow will
climb a tree in an effort to
escape a fierce natural
·predator such as a wolf or
(around
lunchtime)
Luciano Pavarotti.
But the article in the New
Zealand newspaper states
that "four or five decomposing sheep were high i.t
the branches." That is too
many sheep to be explained
by natural causes.
Which leads us to the
obVious explanation. namely, supernatural causes.
I realize ttiat many of you
laugh at stories of the paranormal. "Ha ha," you say.
But the truth is that the
world is full of strange phenomena that cannot be
explained by the laws of
logic or science. Dennis
Rodman is only one example.
There are many other
documented cases of baffling supernatural occurren ces. Consider these
examples:

$$&gt;unbav \!;:tmrs-~rnttnrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2006

Sunday, July 23, 2006

The wake up call

6unba~ Qr:tme~ -6entfnel

Diane Hill
Controller

Pagei\4

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OHIO

Sunday, July 23, 2906

Village addresses school building vandalism
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

.

BREED@MVOAILYSENTINEL COM

MIDDLEPORT - They
were once hubs of learning,
but in recent months. the
former Meigs
Middle
School and the Central
Building behind it have
become hubs of vandalism
and criminal activity.
Now scarred with spray·
painted graffiti and broken
windows. the buildings
have remained vacant since
the Meigs Local Board of
Education gave them to the
Village of Middleport when
the school district's new
buildings were completed.
At last week's meeting.
Middleport Village Council
discussed security measures
designed to secure the build·
ings from trespassers and
vanda ls who have targeted
the building since they were
vacated. The vi II age plans to

board up windows and doorways to the buildings. and
Police Chief Bruce Swift
said Friday the police
department is monitoring
the properties closely to prevent further vandalism.
In June, six juveniles
were charged with criminal
trespassing at the middle
school building. They were
charged after witnesses
reported a call about trespassers inside the building.
Broken windows have made
the building r~latively easy
to enter, and inside, damage
caused by vandals and
skateboarders has become
extensive. Swift said.
"Vacant buildings like
these are e'asy and attractive
targets for vandals," Swift
said.
Since assuming ownership
of the buildings. the village
has been unable to develop.
the properties in a construe-

tive manner, and a proposed
sale by sealed bids early this
year brought no offers.
"The buildings are the
property of the village. and
anyone caught in the buildings or doing damage to the
property will be prosecuted," Swift said when the six
juveniles. were first charged.
Since that time, the village has taken no additional
steps to dispose of the property. Two modular classroom units on the middle
school property were sold
over a year ago, but were
never claimed by the buyer.
They. too, have been vandalized.
The village also owns the
former elementary school
on Pearl Street, and has
made preliminary plans to
build a new jail and village
hall there. No funds have
been secured for the necessary construction.

Inside

6uuba~

Local Sports, Page B2
Outdoor.;, Page B3
NASCAR Weekend, Page B4
Scoreboard, Page B6

Sunday, July 23, 2006
EIGHTH DISTRICT AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL TOURNAME!'\T

Lane

•

BY BRYAN WALTERS

.•• .J. '

. ·'

~ r ·"'

"'

·~

Brian J. Reed/photo

The entrance to the auditorium at the former Meigs Middle School building shows signs of
vandalism at the building. The village plans to board up the old school building in hopes of
stopping damage to the building.

Ohio and nation could face shortage
of substance abuse counselors

Days Until
High School
Football
season!!!

OVPseeks
football writers

for addicts. Frohnapfel
Hasson said. Addiction can
lead to crime, higher health
insurance c.osts and lower
workplace producti.vity.
NAADAC has been trying
to fight the shortage for severa l years, Mikell said.
They've encouraged members of the association to
recruit young employees and
have lobbied federal lawmakers for increased funding as well as loan forgiveness for graduate students.
Federal support for health
profession programs has
decreased, which affects
drug and alcohol counselors' salaries, said Robert
Morrison, spokesman for
the National Association of
State Alcohol/Drug Abuse
Directors.
Frohnapfel Hasson does•J't think it's just a money
issue that keeps young professionals away. Children
are raised to think that drug
and alcohol abusers are
unable to be helped and are
best avoided, she said.
''People look at this field
and they think, I don't want
to spend the rest of m~ life
dealing with . addicts,' she
said.
She thinks the key to
improving the situation is
for organizations that offer
counseling to start behaving
as businesses by providing
adequate salaries, offering
to
tuition
assistance
employees and setting up
mentoring
relationships
between
experienced
staffers and newcomers.

· GALLIPOLIS Ohio
Valley Publishing is currentlv
seeking stringers to help
cover hi,gh school footbalf
games thts fall.
Understanding of the game
of lootball, passable writing
skills, ability to keep accurate
statistics and basic computer
word processing skills are
required.
. No travel outside the tricounty ·area (Gallia. Meigs,
Mason) will be necessary for
this temporary position.
All those interested should
contact Brad Sherman, OVP
Sports Editor, at (740) 4462342 ext. 33. If there is na
answer, leave a message along
with your contact information.
Writing samples can be emailed to bsherman@mydailytribune.com ; faxed to 1740-446-3008; or dropped off
at one,. of our three locations:
Gallipolis (825 3rd Ave.).
Point Pleasant (200 Main St.)
and Pomeroy ( Ill Court St.) .

PICKERINGTON
Feeney Bennett had the start
it wanted agai nst top-seeded
Lancaster Friday at the
District 8 American Legion
Baseball Tournament. just
not the desired finish.
Post 128 jumped out to an
early 1-0 lead in the top of
the first, but a pair of offensive explosions during the
second and fourth frames
enabled Post II to score I0
consecutive runs en route to
a 12-2. eight inning victory
• in the losers bracket final at
Pickerington Central High
School.
.
Lancaster. whtch lost to
third-seededFeeney Benneu
m Its openmg tournament
game by a 13- 11 count,
struck revenge Friday by
having I0 different players
pound out 17 hits in the triumph.
Ten of those safeties came
during those two big innings
for Post II. Six hits led to
. six runs in the second, while
four more hits in the fourth
gave Lancaster a 10-1
advantage headed into the
llfth.
.
Both teams exchanged
runs in the seventh to make
it 11 -2. then Ethan Hayek
provided the game-winning
heroics when his one-out
single in the eighth plated
Shawn Blankenship from
Bryan Walters/photo
second base to sec ure the
Feeney Bennett's Cory Shaffer rounds third and heads· for home during the seventh in ning mercy rule win.
Post 11 (3 1-13 ) now
of ~riday's Eighth District American Legion baseball tournament

OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1

Bv JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS
a.m.)

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)
Fax-; H40·446-300B
E·mall- sports@mydailytribune.com
Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor1740)448·2342, ext 33
bsherman@ mydailytribune .com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, 'Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
Ierum@ mydaily register.com

Sunday ... Partly cloudy.
Thesday night through
Hi ghs in the lower 80s. Wednesday nighl ...Partly
Nortltwest winds 5 to I0 cloudy. Lows in the mid
mph,
60s. Highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday night ... Mostly
Thursday and Thursday
clear. Lows in the upper uighl. ..Partly cloudy with a
50s. North winds 5 to I0 chance of showers and thunmph.
derstorms. Highs in the mid
· Monday... Mostly sunny. 80s. Low~ in the mid · 60s.
Highs in the mid 80s. East · Chance of rain'40 percent.
winds around 5 mph.
Friday... Mostly cloudy
Monday night and with a chance of showers
Thesday... Mostly
clear. and thunderstorms. Highs in
Lows in the mid 60s. Highs the mid 80s. Chance of rain
in the mid 80s.
50 .Percent.

a

PleaseseePost128,B5 :

CINCINNATI Ken
Griffey · Jr. dramatically
ended his slump at the
expense of a . closer who ·
finds things getting worse
every time he gets to the
mound.
Griffey's
bases-loaded
single in the bottom of the
ninth inning se nt the
Cincinnati Reds to a 6-5 victory Friday ·night over the
Milwaukee Brewers, who
overcame a nearly threehour rain .delay at ·the outset

but couldn 't handle another
meltdown by their closer.
The Brewers took a 5-3
lead . into the ninth. but
Derrick Turnbow (4-7)
couldn't throw a strike,
helping the Reds rally for
their sixth victory in their
eight games since the All, ·
Star break.
.
"Wow," Griffey said. "It's
been a long day. I' m glad it's
over with .',
This one ended at I : 15
a.m. EDT, with a few thousand fans in the stands and

Please see Reds,

Cincinnati Reds' Ken
Griffey Jr. (3) is
mobbed after hitting a
bases-loades single off
Milwaukee Brewers _
reliever Dana Eveland :
to drive in the winning
runs in the bottom of
the ninth inning of a
baseball game Friday,
July 21, 2006, in
Cincinnati . Cincinnati
won 6-5.
AP

as

photo

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Local Stocks

'
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Ltd.- 23.92
NSC- 46.37
Oak Hill Financial - 25.35
OVB- 25.20
8BT -41.97
Peoples - 28,02
Pepsico - 62.76
Premier - 14.90
Rockwell - 65.83
Rocky Boots - 10.75
Sears - 136.56
Wa~Mart - 43.72
Wendy's - 58.01
Worthington - 18.93
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Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

advances to the District 8
tinals on Saturday, where
second-seeded and unbeaten
Pickerington awaits . .Feeney
Bennett concludes its season
with a 14-21 overall mark.
Post 128 came out swi ng:
ing against Lancaster starter
Ryan Curry in the first. as
Luke Haislop delivered a
two-out double to give· the
visitors a runner in scoring
position.
Terry Ourst delivered a
single to left three pitches
later, plating Haislop for a I•
0 Feeney Bennett advantage .
Feeney Bennett starter
Austin Dunfee took that
early lead ·and quickly
retired the first two batters
.h e faced. Cory Cook had
two-o ut· single, but wa$
stranded as Post I 28 main"
tained its one-run edge. ·
Then from innings two
thro~gh five, Curry silenced
Feeney's early momentum
by allowing no runs, two
hits and a walk over a spari
of 15 hitters.
·
And Lancaster's offenst;
responded at the same time.
With two outs in the bottom of .the second inning;
Lancaster rallied with a dou'
ble. a walk and five consec:
utive singles to quickly take '
a 6' I lead.
.
:
Then in the'fourth, singles
by Cullan Anderson and J.J;
Wright gave Lancaster two
runners in scoring position
with one away.
·

Junior's walk-off single lifts Reds ·over Brewers ·

CoNTAcrUs

Local Weather

ACI- 32.07
AEP-35.31
Akzo - '51. 78
Ashland Inc. - 64.22
BLI-15.74
Bob Evans - 27
BorgWarner .,... 58.42
CENX -30.95
Champion - 6. 88
Charming Shops - 10.10
City Holding - 35.64
Col- 53:89
DG -13.11
DuPont - 40.01
Federal Mogul - .37
USB- 31.81
Gannett - 52.47
General Electric -32.25
GKNLY- 4.70
Hariey Davidson - 52.90
JPM - 43.15

eliminates Post 128
swmERS@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.coM

SPORTS BRIEFS

COLUMBUS (AP) Many drug and alcohol
counselors acrdss Ohio are
nearing retirement age and
there may not .be enough
interested young professionals to replace them, accord. ing to those in the field.
The average age of drug
and alcohol counselors ·in
Ohio is 50, and most of
them plan to .retire over the
next ten years, said Stacey
Frohnapfel Hasson, spokeswoman . for the Oh·io
Department of Alcohol and
Drug Addiction Services.
Nationally. 80 percent of
alcohol and drug counselors
are between 40 and 50,
according to NAADAC ..
The
Association
for
Addiction Professionals.
An entry-level counselor
can expect to make between
$16,000 and $25,000 a year
and many young professionals leave to pursue other
careers, said Shirley Mikell .
. NAADAC deputy director.
"Within a .year or two,
they're leaving the field
because the money isn't
good enough to stuy," she
said. Even though the field
is 62 percent female. it still
loses more young men than
young women, and Mikell
said she believes it's primarily due to salary.
"You've got to be crazy
like we were to stay all
these years." said Mikell.
who has. worked in the lield
for 34 years.
Fewer counselors result in
less service to those in need,
and that's not just a problem

Bl

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�iunba~

PageB2

OCAL SPORTS
grade school football camp Sports Briefs

limes -ienttnel

Sunday, July 23,

iunba~

2006

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Youth Football League
will have sign-ups for football players and cheerleaders
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Jul y 27 and ·9 to II a.m. on July 29 at
the high school football tield. Sign-ups wi ll be for students
in grades 3-6.· Exceptions will be made for students who
weigh 55 pounds or more.
The student 's birth certificate and physical are required
before first practice. A sign-up fee of $35 will be collected.
·
Information is available at 667-3316.

·Gallia Academy crowns open gym champs
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C OM

GALLIPOLIS
The
2006 Gallia Academy hnys
basketball open gym fin ished with foLir champi onships for the 7-8 grade
and the 9-12 grade div is ions.
Ethan Moore won every
title in the 7-8 grade group.
He was the individual free
throw ( 16-of-20), 3- poin t
( 12-of-20) champion and
defeated Cody Billings for

the 1-on- I ..---...---, R u m I e y squad along with Allie
ti tle.
He
made 19- . Troester and. Kyle Din,gess.
·was also 011.
of-20 chari- , A total of 32 players parthe wi nning
ty
tosses
and na(led a ticipated in the conte.sts and
3-on-3
dozen
3- more than 60 players in
~ 4uaLI al ong
pointers to grades 7-12 participated
with · Drew
Yourlg.
win those during the 28 day s of open
Bryant
c h a m p i - gy m, which wrapped up on
Bokovi 11
unships. Jul y 19.
and Jacob
Meanwhile
Haggerty
Rumley
Pri zes were donat\!d by
Lively.
Ha gge rty
In the 9-12 grade division. defeated Shawn Thompson Larobi s Pizza, Powerade,
David Rumley and Jay me to win 1-on- 1 honors and Subway, Dairy Queen and
Hagl(e rty had big da ys. was part of a winning 3-on-3 the Shake Shoppe.

Ciallia Academy runners attend camp

~

Big Bend football sign-ups set
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend Youth football and cheerleading sign-ups for all schools and teams will be held
Saturday, July 22, at the Middleport Football Stadium from
I0 a.m. to 2 p.m.
.
Football/Cheer Camp will begin on Monday, July 31.
For more information call Roger at 742~2623, Angie at
992-9059 or Chrissy at 992-3183,

Lake Alma Beach Party in Wellston ·
WELLSTON - Final plans have been announced for the
lOth annual Lake Alma Beach Party to be held Saturday,
August 5. Lake Alma is located one mile north of Well ston
on State Route 349.
·
.
·Activities for the entire family will include games for the
kids, baby contests, entertainment, 3-on-3 basketball, an
individual triathalon, boat ride s, a kids treasure hunt, a sand
castle contest, 4-on-4 coed beach volleyball, cornhole,
horseshoes and shuffle board tournaments and much more.
For more information contact the Lake Alma State Park
office at (740) 384-44 74 .

GA football to hold parents meeting
GALLIPOLIS.- There will be a parents/players meeting
for all Gallia Academy students in grades 9-12 that are
interested in playing football this 2006 season.
The meeting is scheduled forTue s,Jay. July 25 in the high
school auditorium at 7 p.m. At)east one parent needs to be
in· attendance with their child at the meeting .
Team rules, practice and training policies will be the pri mary topics of this meeting.

Tomcats win championships
I

'

I

,
Submitted photo

Gallia Academy High School and junior high cross country runners recently attended the
Moorehead State Camp on July 9-14. Pictured from left are Peyton Adkins, Kelsey
Pasquale, Lauren Adkins , LeeAnn Townsend, All ie Saunders and Genna Baker.

Submllled photo

The Tuppers Plains Tomcats won the Big Bend Pee Wee Boys League championship with a
perfect 13·0 finish to the 2006 regular season. The Tomcats also took home first place in
the league tournament. Members of the undefeated ball club are Latham Bissell, Austin
Ross, Benji Sampson, Garrett Caldwell, Dylan Milam, Aust1n Bailey, Tristan Goodnite, Chase
Cook, Jack Kuhn , Tyler Barber and Nick Burke. The Tomcats were coached by Jeremy Barber,
with Jeff Bissell, Tony Sampson, Keith Cook and Brian Bailey serving as assistants.

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Submitted photo

Racine Southern Tornadoes- In front from left are Zach Ash. JR Hupp, Jake Hunter and
Greg Jenkins. In back are coach Ray VanMeter. Michael Man uel, Chris Holter, Alex Hawley,
Anthony Shamblin , Patrick Johnson, Nick Buc k, Ryan Chapma n, coach Tom Wo.o ds and
coach Virgil Di ll.

Big Bend Pony holds tourney
5TAFF ·REPORT

Leugue Jul y 7-9 at Racine Star Mill Park.
The round-robin tournament was won by
the Rucine Southern Tornadoes with the
RACINE .- The Big Bend Sr. Pony Middleport Red s fini shin g in seco nd
tournament was hosted by Rac ine Youth place.
SPORTS@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

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"'"'

04 TOYOTA TACOMA X-CAB PRE-RUNNER"-"'"'00- -.. 'fiiU ... ~--ATIICULOPMCPt.MIUID111.111
02 FORD RANGER SUPER CABI1-AT .. 1LT CIIIICO II'!!TWHLIW ..m&gt;20 ....._. _______.__ $UI5
00 ~HEVY &amp;10 tt3410 "LS" AllOYWHLS BI!D UN!R VI AT AC TlLT c;RUII! C~ IPA RATIO at waG
S10.4ti
i9 FORD F150 SUPER CAB f13311111 ,00D MI.IIM"UI CAIATACTLTCRIPWPLaJIPRT'Mf.. TOOfi!Jl!PARATID 11..0 Sli ,IWS
w~h down payment of 51Q95 cash or !r&amp;dl· pluatu and tHie.
2005·2006 65mo at 6.25 APR , 71mo. at 1.50 APR,72 mot 11 t\.7!5 1pr, n mo· 6.75 APR, 2004 86 mea. 6.25APA , 72 mo e.n . 75 mom
B.39 APA , 2003 !18 mo. 6.75. 12 mos 8.30 .t.PFI, 2002 86 mol6.75 APR. 72 mo a\8.30 APR. 2001 60 moa 6.75APA. 72 moli a 30 APR

Payments figured

Middleport Reds- In front from left are Cody Davidson, Cody Laudermilt, Frankie Stewart,
Jeremy Smith and Matt Imboden . Ill back are coach Dave Boyd. coach Pat Martin. Steven
Hudson, Kyle Kinnan. Dave Poole. Nathania! Davis. Jared McKinney and coach Donnie
Whan.
'

This member of the doo
family is very adaptable. abl~
to live close to humans and in
all types of habitat, &lt;md it is
this capability that sometimes
leads to conllicts between
coyotes and humims ... pmticularl y w1th hvestock Tanner~.
Here at the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation· Disuict I
occasionally get calls from
people wanting to know what
to "do about" the coyotes they
see or hear howling around
their homes and farms. The
sound frightens some people,
and makes them afraid for
their personal safety as well as
the safety of their children or
grandchildren and small pets.
Coyotes are about as bi~ as a
medium-sized dog With a
bushy tail with a black tip.
Contrary to popular belief,
they were not intentionally
relocated to Ohio, but gradually moved in on their own as
the forests · were cleared.
Coyotes can now be fo und in
most of the eastern United
States.
As far as the question of
what "to do" about the coyotes is concemed, my most
common lmswer is "nothing,"
Statistically, as humans, you
and your children have far
more to fear from your neighbors· free-roaming dogs than
you do from coyotes. But your
pets? Well, that may be a totally different story. which l will
get to later.
In southeastern Ohio, coyotes and dogs alike will occasionally attack or kill livestock. If you have an animal
you think may have been
killed by a coyote, your first
action should be to call your
count}' dog warden who will
examme ihe carcass in an
attempt to determine the. a.::tual cause of death.
Don't move or dispo'\1! of
the carcass. treat tl1e carcass
and the scene of the attack like
a crime scene. Cover the carcass with a tarp or piece of
plywood if scavengers are a
concern.
Don't automatiCally assume
that the animal was killed by a
coyote, even if there are coyote tracks present; it is possible that the animal died from
other ca u~s . and was later fed
upon by a coyote. The presence of tracks alone does not
mean a coyote killed it; coyotes are also scavengers and
will happily feed on a carcass.
Bear in mind that there are
many ways livestock can die
including starvation and exposure, internal parasites, bacterial and viral diseases, pregnancy diseases, " hardware"
diseases caused by eating
nails, wire or other metal
objects, bloat, suffocation,
pOisonous plants and bad
feed, accidental ingestion of
man-mad~ chemicals, lightning and snake bite to name a
few.
Any animal dying from the
above causes could likely be
fed upon by a coyote, with the
animal's owner immediately
jumping to the conclusion th.at
"the coyote killed it" due to
the presence of tracks or signs
that the carcass was fed upon.
Sometimes an investigator
can learn a lot just by examin-

2000 60 moe 6 75 APR , 72 mos 8 30 APR. 1999 • 72 mos 8.30APR . See Salesman lor d@\lill. No payments 1112006 w/selact landers

approval

Sunday, July 23,

2006

The American
Bass Anglers will
again flood into
Gal lipolis for a
One-Day Super
Tournament this
Sunday.

In the
Open

Submitted photo

Sun Freeman
ing the "scene of the crime."
For instance, the aliennath
of a dog attack will often give
the impression that the attacker was engaged in vicious
play ; .animals attacked by
dogs may ex hibit bite marks
all over their bodies, be ran
into gates. fe nce., and pens,
and exhausted. Many times
the carcasses will not be fed
upon, and the victim(s) of the
attack may even still be ali ve
bur terribly mutilated.
On the other hand, a cal f or
lamb killed by a coyote may
exhibit tooth marks around the
neck. throat or head with the
carcass left lying on its
spread-eagle on its back and
·the internal organs eaten. The
biggest difference is that for
dogs. an attack is viewed as
play; but when a coyote
attacks it is to get a meal.
Sometimes coyotes carry off
their victims; then the question becomes "Was the antmal
actually preyed upon , or could
it have been stolen?"
Unless they are actually
causing problems, sometimes
the best option is to do nothing; for the most part coyotes
are content to remain out of
sight and out of mind, living
around the fringes of human
activity, perhaps helping to
thin out the population of
fawns, woodchucks, rats,
voles and the occasional bam
cat. Coyotes are very territorial, and a coyote that 1sn't causing problems may be replaced
by one with a taste tor your
livestock. But if you really
feel the need to do something.
doi1't allow small pets to roam
tree and don't umntentionall y
feed the coyotes by l eav i~ g
out your dog food or improp- .
erly disposing of your
garbage.
If you have livestock, practice good animal husbandry
by keeping animals in a safe,
secure location as close to the
bam as practicable, and consider using guard animals like
trained dogs, donkeys or llamas to guard your livestock.
Don 't give the coyotes a taste
for beef, lamb or ham by
improperly disposing of car.casses.
Also, covotes can be hunted·
or trapped.legally in Ohio, so
that may be also be an option,
and help reinforce their fear of
humans; but remember that
coyotes as a species have survived countless attempts at
e~terrnination, so the chances
of completely eradicati ng
them from yo ur neighborhood
are slim to none.
(Jim Freeman is wildlife specialist for rile Meigs Soil and
Water ConservaTion Disrricr.
He can he rmched weekdays
a/ (740) 992-4282 or ·ar
jin1jreeman @oh.nacdne/.ne/)

.Gallipolis welcomes American Bass Anglers.
BY MICHELLE MILLER

According to Bob Hood, executive
director of the Convention and Visi tors
Bureau, ttround 75 anglers ure expectGALLIPOLIS - The American ed to compete for the first place prize
·
Bass Anglers are floodi ng into of $1000.
Gallipolis again for another One-Day
The "shoot off ' will begin at 6 a.m.
Sup.er Tournament on Sunday.
on Sunday and weigh-i n wiII be arottnd
The event is presented by the Gallia 3 p.m . The public is encouraged to
Cou ntv Convention and Visitors atte nd · the· weigh -in which will be
Bureau and ·sponsored by AEP Gavin located at the Public Access /\rca
Plant, the City of Gallipolis, and the located on First Ave.
french Art Co lony.
The American Ba" Anglers wa'
The pre-regi stration meeting which formed in 1975 by military bas s
includes a reception and special enter- anglers and was originally named the
tainmen t will be held for the visiting Military Bass . Anglers Association .
anglers on Saturd ay, Jul y 22 from 5 The tournament trail was limi ted to
p.m. to 8 p.m. at the French Art military personnel until the early 90's.
Colony.
· In 2000, Morris Sheehan bought the
MMILLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

org.an iLation and renamed it American
Bass Anglers.
America n l3a,s Angle rs is the ·
largest tournament trail . ded icated to
the weekenJ an~ler. according to the
o rgan iJa tlon \ web~ ite
ran ba~~ i.u1 g krs.com.

WW\V . ~meri ­

The entry kc i' $55. For more
inlorm HIIOn con lact Barry Davis at
(61-l) ~)5-n06 ur at bdavis@americanbassanglers.com. Information can
al so be found by calling the ABA
national headqua rters at (888) 203 6222.
Thi s tourn ament is an ABA qualify ing event and sanctioned Triton Gold
event.

Weekly Ohio ·Fishing Report
COLUMBUS (AP)- The weekly fiShing
report provided by the D1v1sion of Wildlife
ot the Ohio Departmenl or Natural
Resources.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
Lake Rupert (Vinton County) Anglers reported catfiSh in the one-to
lwo-pound range being caught from
shore usmg live bait I night crawlers) and
shrimp. Crcipp ie and bluegill are blling
wax worms . meatworm s, and night
crawlers fished under a bobber.
La rgemouth bass have been caught
using spinner baits or ;1g heads w1tll a
twister ta il.
Lake Hope (Vinton County) -Angler

success lor largemouth bass has been
e)Ccellent when fi shi ng shorelines in the
lale evening unt il early morning hotJrs

Try black plastic worms, motor oil-colored
tube lures, or pearl to white crank balls
Dillon Lake (Muskingum County) Anglers have been catching black. bass
close to the shorel ine near the marina on
green plastic worms. Sunfish rn the live to
seven-inch range have been biting on
worms frshed under a bobber near the
conc ret e outflow structure.

OHIO RIVER
Belmont County - Recent rainfall has
caused wa1er level s to rise and llow ~te
to increase along th e river. Temperatures
were in the high 70s over the past weekend. Anglers are the most succe ssful
when fishing at the confluence of sma ller
waterways into the Ohro River and the fail
waters of the Pike Island Dam . Catfish as
well as hybrid striped bass have been hit·
ling on chicken livers ltshed ltght-fine on
the bottom . Anglers fishing for white bass
have been using small spinner balls or
jiQs and twisters.
Monroe CoUnty -Water temperatures·
were rn the mid 70s and water levels are
slightly hrgh and flow is increased
Flathead catfrsh as well as drum have
been hittrng cut baits. chrcken liver, and
night crawlers fished on the bottom_ For
small mouth bass try tube baits or crank
baits . Hybrid striped bass have been
caught using a jig arid twiste r ti pp ed with
a minnow
Gallia County - Tll (l River has ' been

higll and muddy, weekend trsh ing activity
was minimal due to recent rarnlall and
river condi tions.
CENTRAL OHIO
Alum Creek Lake (Delawar!t Count'j)
- Mus~ellunge anglers locus mosl of
!herr effort between Cheshire Causeway
and the dam by trolling deep·diving fou r
to erght-rnch crank baits at depths ot
about 12 to 16 fe et Smatlmoutt\ bass
populations are ew:panding and offer good
fishrng action along the deeper points and
drop-otfs. To catch saugeye try jigs with a
small piece of night crawler fished on the
bottom. Crank baits fished a11 2 to 16 1eet
are exce llent at sun up and sun down.
Channel catfish can weigh as much as 20
pounds and are very numerous at Alum.
Fresh gizzard shad works welt lor catfish
bait. but prepared stink baits, chicken
liver. and nighl crawlers will also work
fine .
Hargus Creek Lake (Pickaway
County) -A dense population of largemouth bass measuring erght to 13·inches. with some larger. can be found at thrs
lake of 132 acres near Circlevil f~ .
Shoreline areas near the dam. islands.
and east shore are good places to try.
Also. try fishi ng along the points with
drop-offs using crank baits, spmner barfs
and tubes. Fishi ng with tradit1onal balls
for catfish can be productive and most
fish range frOm 12 to 22 .inches. Crappte
can be tound on drop·olfs near wood , use
minnows or jigs. A fair population of six to
seven·rnch bluegrll ard large redear sun·
fish can- be caught using ni gh t crawlers
and larval barts suspended by a bobber
This lake allows only electric mo tors.
NORTHWEST OHIO
Van Wert Reservoir No. 1 (Van Wert
County) - Channel catfisR are llittinQ
well on chicken liver and nigh t crawlers
fished on the bottom. Afternoons are pro ducing the best catches. Crappie are also
being ca ught in the afternoons by fishing
minnows and wax worms under a bobber
Set the bait seven to ten feet below the
bobber. Bluegill are being caught In good
numbers in tile afternoons. Wax worms
and nigl1t crawlers fished under a bobber
is the 1,est bet. Til e northwe st corner of

tile reservorr rs a great spot.
SOUTHWEST OHIO
Oxbow Lake (Defiance County ) Seven Mile (Preble County)
Largemouth bass are being caught 1n Smallmoutll bass are being caught by
good numbers 1n the afternoons Night anglers using artificial soh craws and real
crawlers fislled under a bobber or cran~ soh craws . Lead headed jigs tipped with
barts being cast and reeled in are working ' a curly tail or other soft bart. Tile best
great. The east side ot th e lake is pro· color choices are black and green or
ducirig the best results, Bluegill are bei ng pumpkinseed. Cast into tile ripple areas
taken by lrshing minnows or nrgllt where they merge witll a pool.
crawlers Uf1der a bobber during the alter·
East Fork (Clermont County) noons. The east side of the la~e is good Largemouth bass are being ca ught by
lor these as well. Crappie are being ang lers using plastic worms , banded
caught on night crawle rs fished under a
crank bai ts, or top water baits such as
bobber du ring the afternoons. The west
buzz baits. Best times are early in the
side of the lake rs best for them.
Monroeville Reservoir (Huron Cgunty) morning and late in the evening. Cast
- Blu egill in the four-to six·i nch range along tile points. buck brus h, banks and
are betng tak:en on wax worms and red .rn the areas with submerged trees or
worms fished under a light bobber. brush . Jig Ihe worm on the bottom and
Anywhere on tile res.ervoir is good and Keep lhe shrners or minnows moving iri
the top two to three feet of water. Channel
anytime during the day or night.
New London Reservoir (Huron catfish are berng caught by anglers using
County) - Smallmouth bass in the mrnnows or chicken liver as bait. Larger
eight-to 13-inch range are being caught In channel catfish are being caught on the:
the mornings and afternoons_ Spinners night crawlers. Nitro worms (green night
and crank baits are wo rking the best crawlers) . or chicken livers_ Use a No_8,
Anywhere is good. Boat anglers are hav- 110. or 2/0 long-shank.ed hook. Keep tha
rng good success- casting toward the · bait along the bottom and near any rock
shoreline. Channel catllsll are being wall and at least 18 teet deep. Bluegill are
taken on the bottom usin g nrght crawlers. hitting on mealworms, wax worms. or red
After dark on the nortll bank is the best.
worms.. Keep the bait un·cter a bobber and
NORTHEAST OHIO
aboul two to fiv e feet c:taep . Cast anyWellington South Reservoir (Lorain where aro und the docks. standing wood .
County)- Channel catfish are biting on or downed trees .. Hybrid striped bass are
chicken livers near the bo ttom of this being caught by anglers trolling near the
small . 21-acre lake . Shore ang ler s are main beach , campground beacll. and the
recommended to cast as far from shore flat near the Army Corp ramp. Top water
as possible f()r besl results Wellington plugs. cnrcken liver. or trolltng large deep
South Reservoir is local eel on Jones drrvmg r.ra nk baits that resemble shad
Road , three-quan ers of d r1rlt· ,\Jest of (lr( r;rovrng successful lor catching goodSIZed hybnd strrped bass.
state Route 58. Eler::trrc motors onlv
Deer Creek Reservoir (Stark County)
- Largemoutll bass 12 lo 15-inc hes or
more in srze have been hrttrng on sprnne r On the Net:
http .llwww.ohtodnr comlwildlifelfishing/lr
barts at the 314-acre lake . Boa I anglers
eportlohiOweekly.fltm
are most suct:esslul trshrng near the
creek channel, but stiiHishing trom snore
To view the predicted weather forecast
provides good results . Channel catfish
Lake
Erie
visit:
are alsci biting on dou9h balls, chicken liv· l or
h tt p .1/ wea the r. noaa. gb v l cgiers, and stink baits near tile bottom early
in the morning and late in the evei'1ing
bml fmtbltn .pl?fileforecasts/marine/gre at ·
. Electric motors only.
-lakes I lalfez 160.txt

Soil survey of Gallia
County available on CD
Hanselmann added that by
2007. the division would like
COLUMBUS - A new to have soil survey infomladigitized soil survey of GaJlia tion available in the same forCounty that allows for easy mat for all 88 Ohio counties.
access to infonnation about So far this information is
soils and other natural and cul- available for 54 counties.
tural resources is now availThe soil project is part of a
able on compact disc, accord- nationwide Soil Survev
ing to the Ohio Depanment of Geographic . · Database ·
Natural Resources. 1lle CD's Initiative managed by the
user-friendly
Geographic Natural
Resource
Information Systems software Conservation Service. The
is compatible with most home service, The Ohio State
or oftice computers.
University School of Natural
The program, which will be Resources, and ODNR are
particularly useful to farmers cooperating on the project
and de velopers, opens w1th a with help from the Ohio
map of Gallia County. Users · Department of Transponation.
can simply click on the data U.S. ·Forest Service, county
they would like to see; includ- soil &amp; water conservation dising aerial photography, roads, tricts, and other local agencies.
,towns, slopes. dramage, sot!
Gallia. County's computertypes, and crop yields. The ized soil survey intom1ation is ·
program then redraws the map ceriitied. Tht&gt; CD, which
with the selected mtomlalton. oilers numy advanta&amp;es over
"This tool gives a broad pnnted sml survey&gt;. 1s avmlview of soil conditions for able through tl\e Gallia Coumv
planning purposes,'' . said Soil cUld Water Conservation
David Hanselmann. chtef ot District at 740-446-6173.
the ODNR Division of Soil
For timlwr in(onnwion
and Water Conservation. " lt is comac·1· Tilll Gabe1; ODNR
a land-Use planning tool so Soil and \\olua Consen·mion,
development and fanning c:.u/ al 6J..I-2n5-6680 or Jane
be done in a way that is envi- Bewluml. ODNR Media
ron mentally responsible."
Rdario11s.- &lt;11 n1-1-265-6860

BY lliE OHIO DNR

06 CHEV COLORADO 4X4 CREW CABt~!:W&amp;P'WPlATACTI.TttRPW PLW'AT-.s 1a,oooMUIOFWEPII.IW"E02211111'Q
05 FORO F150 SC 4X4 113493 TLT CRUISE XLT PW pt. 23«0 MIL.ES AT AC EPA RATED 18 MPG .... N.N·-·-"·"•"N"'""'"'
05 DODGE RAM 4X4 QUAD CAB 11321152!1,00Ci aa.980FW.x.IATAClli.T CftSEPW PLCD!,.ARATEOI!,.AR.lTlD 17 MPO •..
05 ,DODGE DAKOTA QUAD CAB 4X4 01327831,000ML.S BOFW EPA RATED IOMPG .................................:
04 FORD F250 SC m471 XLT 4X4 Sl'l' WHL.S 25000 Ml.ES BOFW AT AC nLT CR~ EPA RATED 19 MPG
04 DODGE RAM 1500 113453-ATACTILTCFIUISI!CDPW Pl.SLTQUAOC.I.e4X4ALLOVWHLS EPARATE0115MPG ..........
04 OODG£ DAKOTA CLUB CAB SPORT f1llniii!CUtl~COXIUW)IOfCIW 'Kavu.r,c;arauii!IP'-.s !N.IU.ttD11WG
03 FORD F150tt1:W1orus.c.nLT,CRUIBE,PWPL P SEAraEo Lt4ER,comu vaAT ACXLTEPARAT!D tiMPO .......,..
03 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4 t13371 CRUISE PWPL.W.O'I'WHL.S4.7 f:NO 81.T4J(4AT,;:. TILTEPAAAli:D17Mf'G
03 FORD RANGER 4X4 SUPER CAB.,,., 21,0DOYI.I80FWATACTI..TCA&amp;EPWIII.Mn'WIUCOENRAT!011MPG
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02 CHEVY S10ZR2 4X411341&gt;1XTCAIAC ""PLIPOIITI.. OA10020MPO..........................................: ............
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01.90DGE RAM 1500113&lt;224lUOO!'.fiOADCD Tli.TCRUIBU 8P!!DAC81'TW11L81!l'AAAT!D 17MPG...........
01 DODGE RAM 4X4 QUAD CABt~-ATACTLTCMIIIIfiWI'I.POII'T.,.ILI&amp;TI"I.IAMRIIATCDmunon~oWG ...:. ....
01 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 4X4111taitiOIIATCOIMTWIUfOW.(IXi.T404XU.4'1tATAC TI.lc::l'luMii'WI'I.W.IU.QO H..O
01 FORD F1110 4X4 SC 1113401CLT AC VI PW PLCDI~RTWHLIIPARATID 11 MPQ,.,,,.,.,,,.,.,..,,,.,.,,..,,..,.
00 FORD RANGER 4X4 REG CAB 01311115SPDXLTqpAC'!1~TCRSISPRTW11L81!DUN!R ..............
00 CHEVY K1 1100 4X4 1134180 AT AC I ' I!IID VIIPA RATIO 11 MPG...................................................................
00 DODGE RAM QUADCAB4lt401327UTACnLTCRSIPWPLIPRTWHLSIPARATID17MPG..........
118 DODGE RAM 1tl004lt4SPORT013121ATAC'!1LTCRSIPWPL81'RTWHLIIPARATID 17MPG .......

OUTDOORS

Ol:tmes -ienttnel

Like them or not, the coyote
most likely is here to stay

Eastern Youth football sign-ups

2006 GAWPOLIS GRADE SCHOOL FOOTBALL CAMPERS - Pictured above are 61 fourth, fifth , sixth, seventh and eighth grade
football campers who completed the four-day event Thursday afternoon on Memorial Reid. In front from left are Teran Barnitz,
Matt Donnally. Tanner Few, Colton Skidmore, Phil Hollingshead. Jordan Jackson, Logan Few. Seth Atkins, Reid Eastman, Logan
Allison, Matt Bokovitz, Nathan Taylor, Noah Moore. Dalton Green, Blade Eblin and Winston Wade. Patrick Cook, not pictured. In
second row are varsity student coaches Rusty Ferguson and Jeff Golden, Luke Pullins, Briggs Shoemaker, Mark Allen, Caleb
Campbell, Seth James, Jacob Shockey: Jeremy W1lson. Brett Bokovitz, Copy Call, T. Jay McCalla, Brae Roach, Joel Craft and var,sity student coaches Phil Bokovitz and Jake Duty. In third row are Andrew Young, Nick Saunders, Cody Riffie, Caleb Craft, Travis
Potter, Chase Caldwell, Stephen Atkins. Sebastian Shock, Andrew Shang, Brandon Barr, Joel Johnston, Frank Goff, Bryant
Boklilvitz, Brandon Taylor. Layne Roberts , Chase Coen, Casey Lawrence, Joseph Jarvis and Sidney Saunders. in fourth row are J.
D. Nelson, David Faro, Ethan Moore. Jo~eph Jenkins, Josh Saunders, Cody Billings, Russell Dennison, Codie Lloyd, Joseph
Rnnicum, Vinc~nt Browning, Tyler Eastman. Jared Golden, Austin Wilson, Corey Straight and Casey Denbow. Assisting Coach Matt
Bokovitz were Rick Howell. Jim Niday, Steve Patterson. Rusty Ferguson, Jeff Golden, Phil Bokovitz and Jake Duty.
·

PageB3 ·

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446-2282

�iunbap lime~ ·itntintl

Childress

NASCAR WEEKEND

•..••....•.....·• ...
-~-._...._.

Fotlowlng 111ce 19 of 36

For the first two vears of

NASCAR ·s Chase· for the
Nextel Cup championship.
RCR was little more than
an observer. w!lh Ke\·in
Harvick, the 'team's marquis driver, failing 10 qu alify for the IO-man. I O-race
playoff.
But thanks 10 some maj\&gt;r
persunnel moves within the
team, a lot of determination
and a renewed excitement,
it looks like RCR is back.
Heading into the Cup
race this Sunday in Pocono,
just seven races from the
start of the Chase, Jeff
Burton is third in the points
. and Harvick is eighth. Even
rookie Clint Bowver is having a solid season and is
16th in the standings.
· "You've always got to be
happy when you make any
of
progress."
kind
Childress said. "We know
we've got a lot more we've
got to accomplish to get the
teams and the cars to where
we want to be to win consistently and be in the top
five consistently. And that's

from PageBl

Wkl

the Brewers expecting an
entirely different outcome.
Instead, Turnbow blew
his f1fth straight save opporwmty by giving up a leadoff
smgle to Brandon Phillips,
then loading the bases with
one out on a p&lt;lir of fourpitch walks. At that point, .
manager Ned Yost had· seen
enough .
He brought in left-hander
Dana Eveland, who has one
career
save.
Eveland
walked Javier Valentin to
force in a run. and the
slumping Griffey - 0-for13 since his single last
Sunday - hit one into the
gap in left-center that the
discouraged outfielders did. n't bother to chase.
There was no point.
"All I had to do was get a
ball in the air and hit a sacrifice fly to tie it,'' Gritley
said. "I just ·hit it in the
gap."
It was the final straw for
Yost, who plans to take
Turnbow out of the closer's
role for now.
"He's really fighting himself," Yost said. "We 'll give
him a break."
Turnbow didn' t object
when told of Yost's plans.
"I feel confident, but I' m
not making confident pitches·," Turnbow said. "I've
. got to find it. They haven't
talked to me about it. I' II
understand. I don't want to
cost the team games."
Gary Majewski (4-3),
acquired in an eight-player
trade with Washington a
week ago, pitched the ninth
for his first win with

Points Top 10
RkDrlver
l . Jimmie Johnson 2 ,789 19

PRESS

Richard Childress never
got to the poim where he
hated coming to the race
track, but there were times
in the past five years when
he rather would have been
hunting or fishing.
Since his longtime driver
and friend Dale Earnhardt
was killed in a crash during
the 200 I Daytona 500.
Richard Childre&gt;S Racing,
once considered one of the
elite teams in NASCAR,
has · struggled just to be
competitive.
" I hated seeing the faces
in the race shop:· said
Childress, who won six
championships
with
Earnhardt as his driver.
"Nobody was smiling .
"We just couldn't find the
right combination of people
and equipment. IL was
tough on everybody on our
team because we were used
to winning races and winning championships and.
all of a sudden. it wasn't
happening."
.

Reds

~

IIEXTEl Cup Series

" BY MIKE HARRIS
~SSOCIATEO

•

Sunday, July 23. 2096

2. Matt Kense1h

2,721

18

3. Jeff Burton
4 . Kyle Busch

2.478
2,455

10
15

5. Mark Martin

2,451

6. Kasey Kahne

2,445

18
18

7.0aleEamhardtJr. 2,428

8. Ke~Jin

Harvie~

2.408
2,342
2,342

9. JeW Gordon
(lie) Greg Biffle

18
13
14
3

AP

SOURCE: NASCAA

BUSCH SERIES

photo
NASCAR drivers for Richard Childress, Clint Bowyer, (07) and Kevin Harvick, (29) practice Saturday July 15, at New
Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, N.H.
what you've got to have to Harvick, who gave RCR its - - - - - - NEXTEL CUP - - - - - only Cup victory of the searun for a championship .
·· But the· improvements son early this year in
Long Pond, Pa.,
Distance: 500 miles. 200 laps
·alone that we've made in Phoenix . ·'We've made a lot
Pocono
International
Raceway
._
2.5-mtle triangular oval
of
strides:but
we've
got
to
our aero program &gt;. our
II&gt;
14 degrees banking in turn 1;
to
make
progress.
continue
Schedule: Friday, qualifying
CIH!.ine~. our cars. our chas8
degrees
in turn 2; 6 degrees
(Speed Channel; 3:30p.m.):
si&lt; personnel. it's been a It 's down to small thing s
Sunday, race (TNT, 1 30 p.m.) inturn3
'
4-"'
pleasure to &gt;it back and now. We ' ve come a long
wicty
in
a
short
amount
of
Last year:
watch all these guys and
Roush Racing won bolh Pocono
ladies do their jobs and get time . I think we ' re pretty
races last year when Carl
·
these teams up and running. close."
Edwards
and
Kurt
Busch
won
Childress , Harvick and
And the smiles are a lot
the Pocono 500 and
Bowyer· all give a lot of
bigger. So it's fun. '"
Pennsylvania soo
One big question. heading credit for 'the new attitude
respec1ively.
into this season was - and the improved results
Next race:
whether Harvick , the driver - to veteran racer Burton,
Allstate 400,
stepped
into who joined the team midwho
'
Aug. 6,
Earnhardt 's big shoes in way through the 2004 sealndian~polis
200 I . wou Id stick around son.
"Everybody at RCR has
for the resurgence. He spent
TURNS
much of the past two sea- played a role , but Jeff has
sons complaining about played a big role · in the
said
souRCE: NeJCtel cup
team's lack of success and i mpro':'ement,"
appeared ready to walk Bowyer, who bears a
resemblance to Burton, a really good job and every- couple of bad races before
away.
Harvick would have been both on and off the track. body else thinks you ' re the Chase could ruin a lot
a free tigen t after this sea- "He has a lot of experience lousy," he added. "You of good things that have
son and he ce1'tainly would and he came from a sue- leave the racetrack feeling happened this year. Sttll.
have bee1r a target for the cessful team over at Roush like you got all there was, he grinned when asked
new Toyota teams entering (Racing). 1 think he 's· but )IOU finished 16th ~nd , how big it would be for
Cup in 2007. But, after see- brought a lot to the table, a y9u JUSt can 't get anythmg RCR to have two dnvers 111
the playoff.
ing the direction RCR was lot of ideas, a lot of input done.
on
where
we
need
to
be,
"
But,
now,
we
have
revis" It would be huge,"
headed late last season and
ea rly this year, Harvick where we need to change. ited and rebuilt every part Cl1ildress said .. "We ' ve
signed a multiyear contract And Richard listened to of our program , everything been 111 a rebutld1ng mode,
from marketing and mer- a growt h mode , since
extens ion - perhaps the him . .
Burton , the elder states- chandising to shock ex per- 200 I.
most signi ficant evidence
man
of the RCR drivers at tise and chassis and bodies.
"We're still not over the
that Chi Idress has turned it
39,
said,
"The
big
thing
is,
For
the
most
part,
we've
loss
of Dal,e. We never will
around.
we
have
faster
cars.
seen
improvements
in
be,
but
11 s one of those
" We ' re not all the way
"When you have a 16th- every area."
things you've jus~ got to
where w.e need to be with
place
car,
you
finish
lith
Childress
is
a
realist,
work past, an,d were makour cars and engines and
and
you
think
you
've done though. He knows that a mg progress.'
things like that ," said

Driver standings
Top 10 drivers
t. Kevin Harvick
2. Carl Edwards
3. Clint Bowyer
4. Denny Hamlin
5. J.J. Veley
6. Greg Biffle
7. • Paul Menard
8. Kyle Busch
9. Johnny Sauter'
10. KennyWallace

AP

Pennsvlvanla 500

Points
3,092
2,784
2,705
2,667
2,636
2,398
2,373
2,31 t
2,220
2,140

CRAFTSMAN
TRUCK SERIES
Driver standings
Top 10 drivers
1. Todd Bodine
2 David Reutimann
3
Jehnny Benson
4.
Rick Crawford
5. Ted Musgrave
6. Ron Hornaday
7. Jack Sprague
8. David Starr
9. Terry Co.ok
10. Dennis Setzer

Points
2.161
2,044
1,998
1,930
1,913
1,905
1,898
1,872
1,864
t .835
AP

2006NASCAR
Nextel Cup schedule
July 23 - Pennsyl\lania 500, Long
Pond, Pa.
Aug. 6- Allstate 400 at the Brickyard,
Indianapolis
Aug_ 13- TBA, Wat~lns Glen, N.Y.
. Aug. 20 - GFS Marketplace 400,
Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug ~ 26- Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. 3 - Sony HO 500. Fontana,
Sept. 9 - Chevy Rock &amp; Roll 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 17- Sylvania 300, Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 24- Dover (Del.) 400
Oct 1 - BaQquet 400, Kansas Cjty,
Kan.
Oct. 8 - UAW-Ford 500, Talladega,
Ala.
Oct. 14 - Bank of America 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. ~ - Subway 500, Martinsville,

Va.

• Actual low, no-haggle pricos
• Com plate features
. • Actual Vehicle Photos ·

·

Oct. 29- Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500,
Hampton, Ga.
Nov. 5 - Dickies 500, Fort Worth,
Texas
Nov. 12 - Checker Aufo Parts 500,
Avondale, Ari z.
No~. 19- Ford 400, Home stead, Fla.

Taylor.Team proud sponsors of:

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Cook delivered a 1woRBI double to the right tield
gap for an 8-1 advantage.
Collin Miller walked with
two away, then both Cook
and Miller scored when
Kyle Stoughton legged out
a triple for a I0-1 cushion.
Curry finally ran·into control problenis in the top of
the sixth, walking the bases
loaded after retiring the first
two batters.
Feeney Bennett, however,
left th e bags full when
Curry induced a strikeout in
the next at-bat.
Post 128 tinally found its
offense ·again during the
seventh, when Cory Shaffer
led off the inning with a
double to right field .
Matt Mooney sing led one
batter later, plating Shaffer
to cut the deficit to 10-2.
Then in Lancaster's· half
Bryan Walters/photo
of the seventh, Chaz Mohler Feeney Bennett manager Chris Stewart, right, discusses a
delivered a two-out single. call with an umpire during the seventh inning.
Wright followed with an
double, plating Mohler for provided the other Post 128 Swinehart , Justin Miller
hils .
and Chaz Gibson provided
an 11-2 edge.
·
with
the oth er safeties.
Dunfee
was
saddled
Feeney Bennett committhe
loss,
allowing
10
Curry, who worked ~ix
ted back-to-back errors in
earned
runs
and
II
hits
innings
and allowed just an
the eighth, putting the winning run 180-feet from over hi s four innings of earned run o.n four hits.
work. Dunfee also fanned was the winning pitcher.
home plate .
"two
and walked two in the Curry struck out five and
With Blankenship at secsetback.
walked four.
·
ond and K.B. Justus at first,
VanMeter worked 3.1
Blankenship entered· in
Hayek delivered his pinchinnings of relief. surrender- the seventh. working t.wo
hit heroics .
Feeney J3:ennett managed ing an earned run. a walk innings and allowing an
earned tun· and four hits.
eight hits in the setback, and six hits .
Wright and Cook paced . Blankenship fanned three
with Haislop, Mooney and
Shaffer leading the way Lancaster with three hits and did not issue a free pass.
while
Mohler. Post 128 100 000 10 - 2 8 2
with two apiece. Mooney each,
had two singles, while both Stoughton and Anderson Post 11
060 400 11 12 17 0
Haislop and Shaffer had a provided two apiece in the Austin Dunfee, Eric VanMeter (5) and
Luke Ha1slop. Ryan Curry, Shawn
pair of doubles.
Wll1.
Blankenship (7) and Kyle Stoughton.
Durst and Eric VanMeter
Hayek , Curry. Dane WP- Curry LP- Ounlee.

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Post 128

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Rookie Haml~n on pole at Pocono

BEST DEAtS EVER ON YOUR
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was uncharacteristically
off-target after the long
delay. Ramirez gave up five
runs and a career-high II
hits in only five innings .
Damian Miller snapped
an 0-for-15 slump wllh a
single in his first at-bat,
then doubled home a run
the next time up. A two-run
double by Gabe Gross
made it 5-0 in the fifth
inning .
Cincinnati 's Rich Aurilia
had a single off Capuano
that extended his hitting
streak to a career-high 14
games, matching Felipe
Lopez fpr the longest hy a
Reds rl ~y,· r thi s season.
Lopez went to \':ash !ngton
in that eight-player tr.Je.
Prince Fielder was hit by
a pitch and singled,
extending his hitting streak
to eight games. The first
baseman is 13-for-27 during the first seven games of
the Brewers' nine-game
trip.
Notes: Brewers RF
Geoff Jenkins turned 32 on
Friday. He went 1-for-4 . ...
Capuano is 6-for,42 with
two RB!s and 22 strikeouts .... SS Royce Clayton
has hit in all six games
since he came to the Reds
in the eight-piayer deal
with Washington. ... RHP
Joe Mays is scheduled to
start Saturday, ending his
long layoff. Mays, the
Reds' fifth staner, hasn't
pitched since July 6. Mays
has made three starts thi s
season, going 1-0 with an
8.82 ERA .... Only standing-room tickets are left for
Saturday's game, which
will ·be Cincinnati's fourth
home sellout this season.
The Reds are 0-3 before a
full house.

Page 85

Calif

~

LONG POND, Pa . Denny
Rookie
driver
Hamlin, who won for the
first time two months ago at
Pocono Raceway, looks to
be in good shape for a
repeat this weekend al the
2.5 mile track as he sits on
the
pole
for
the
Pennsylvania 500.
Hamlin rounded the track
with a time of 52.995 at
169.82 mph to ed.ge las t
weeks pole sitter. Ryan
Newman, by .I 28 seconds.
Four time winner Kasey
Kahne will start third while
teammates Brian Vickers
.
AP phbto
and Jeff Gordon round Otll NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin claims the pole with 169.827
the top five .
mph during this qualifying lap for Pennsylvania 500 at
Jeff Burton, who is ·con- . Pocono Raceway in Long Pond , Pa., Friday.
tinuing to have an incredible
Elliott Sadler, who repon·turnaround season sitting Pocono.
Tony Stewart will start ed this week that he was
third in points, will start in
sixth in front of brothers 13th , points leader Jimmit leaving Robert Yates Racing
Kun and Kyle Busch, with Johnson will roll off I5th and will likely take over the
Scott Riggs and Joe and Dale Earnhardt Jr. will No. 19 Dodge vacated by
Nemechek rounding out the begin Sunday's race from Jeremy Mayfield.. starts
25th.
top I 0 starting g rid at the 26th position.

Cincinnati, which pulled
off its second early morning
comeback in three days .
The Reds overcame a 4-0
deficit and a 2-hour, 23minute rain delay on
Wednesday, rallying to beat
the Mets 7-4 in a game that
ended at 12:28 a.m.
"We're pretty good after
midnight," manager Jerry
Narron said. "I didn't know
we were this good after I
a.m. though . It was nice to
see (Griffey) get that hit. I
sure didn·' t want to play
until 3 a.m."
A thunderstorm and lingering rdin delayed the stan
by 2 hours, 55 minutes the type of interruption that
can knock a pitcher out of
whack. But Brewers All Star starter Chris Capuano
was sharp from · his longawaited first pitch - a
s trike that Ryan Freel
grounded right back to him.
The left-hander limited
the Reds to six hits, including Jason LaRue's solo
homer
and
Edwin
·two-run
Encarnacion's
shot, before leaving with
two-outs in the seventh and
a 5-3 lead. He walked two
and struck out four, a major
improvement over his last
outing.
.
Capuano was coming off
the worst of his 20 starts, an
8-1 loss at Arizona last
Sunday in which he gave up
eight runs in only 3 2-3
innings. The drubbing
ended his streak of five
wins.
At that point, it was up to ·
Turnbow to finish it off. He
couldn't, throwing only six
strikes out of 17 pitches.
The light-hitting Capuano
added a run-scoring single
off Elizardo Ramirez, who

~unbavl!::mtr5 -$$rntmrl •

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, July 23, 2006

competition

closing in

PageB4

•

Mort ·Thur. a::n.m.apm
Fri. 8:30am-6pm

Sat. 8:30am·5pm
Sun Cloud

Service Hours
Mon.·Fri. 7:30am-5pm
Sal. 911m·5pm

Sun. Clooed

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DODGE CIAIGEI

lAYLORTEAM
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PageB6

•

Sunday, July 23,

lf&gt;unba!' ~tmes -~entintl

2006

'

Cl

AROUND THE DIAMOND
,..,,.,_, .._

Nollon.ll Leogua
Eaat DIYialon
WL

Florida ................ .43 ... 52 ... .453 ... 14&gt;
41 . .. 56 ..... 423 . . .H 'h

=~sio~-

....... ...

..... .... . ............W . . .L .... .Pet .. ..GB
SL Louis ... ... . ........54 .. .41 .....568 . . .
Clnclnrlati .. .. . .. .. .. .51 . 46
. 526 ...4
Houston . . .... ·.• .. . .. . .46 .. 51
.. 474 . .. 9
Milwaukee ..... .... . .. . .413
.51
...474 . . .9
Chicago . . .. . ... , . .. ... . .37 , .. 58
... 389 . .. 17
PittSburgh . . .
, ... . .. .. 35 ...63 .. ... 357 . .. 20~
West Division
...... .-...... .'.W ... L ..... Pet .. .. GB
San Diego .. . ... ... .....so . ·.. 46 .....521 ... San Francisco ..... . . . ... so ...47 .....515 .. .~
Arizona ................49 ... 47 ..... 510
.. 1
los Angeles
... . ....47 .. 50 . ....485
.. 3~
Colorado .
. . . ..45 . .50 . ....474 .. .4~
Sund•Y'I Gamet
Pittsburgh at Florida, t :05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Wash ington, 1:05 p.m.
Houston at N.Y. Mets, 1:.10 p.m .
Milwaukee at Cincinnati,_1:15 p.m.
San Diego at San FranCISCO, 4:05p.m.
St. Louis at·l.A. Dodgers, 4:10p.m.
Coloraclo at Arizona, 4:40p.m.
A.danta at Philadelphia, a:OS p.m.

PRo BASKETBALL
Women's National
Baaketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pet
GB
16 6 .727
Connecticut
15 7 .682 1
Detroit
Indiana
15 8 .652 1'1
Wash ington
12 11 .522 4'1
Charlotte
7
16 .304 9'l
New York
4
1a .182 12
Chicago
3
19 .136 13
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pet
GB
Los Angeles
19 6 .760
Sacramento
15 8 .652 3
Houston
14 11 .560 5
San Antonio
11 12 47a 7
Seattle
11 12 .47a 7
10 12 .455 7 '~
Phoenix
t4 364 9 ',
Minnesota

a

Thursday's Games
Charlotte 86. Seattle 72
Sacramento 71, New York 62
Connecticut 86. Chicago 72
Houston 7a. Minnesota 55
Friday's Games
Detroit 73. Los Angeles 59
Washington 80. San Antonio 77
Saturday's Games
Phoen1x at Charlotte, late
Los Angeles at IQdiana. late
Chicago at Detroit, rate
Seattle at New York, late
Sacramento at Minnesota, late
Connecticut at San Antonio, late
Sunday'a Game
Seattle at Washington, 6 p.m

-

PctGB

Now Yorll ....... ....... .58 .. .38 .....604 .. .
AUanto .
.. ......... .45 ... 51 ..... 469 ... 13
Philadelphia .. ...... ....44 ... 50 ..... 486 .. .13

Major Leaeue BaMb•ll

Dlortalon
W
L
~
08
•.. 38 .... 621 ... ... 39 .....585 ... 3 1k
... 42 .....563 ... 5\

Boston •...•. . .•. . . . •• .58
New Volt&lt; ..•..... • . . ....5ei
Toronto .......... ... ...54
Baltimore ......... .... ..44

... 54 .....449 ... 18~

Tampa say ......... .. ..40 ... 57 ... ..412 .. .20
-Central Divil6on

...... .... . ... .. .... . .W .. .L .....Pet ....GB
Detroit ' ..... . ... . .... . .85 . ..31
Chicago ............ . ...158 ...37
Minnusota . ..... • . : ... . .56 . ....0
Claveland .......... . ... 42 ...53
Kanaas City .. .. ..... .. .. 34 ...82

.. . .. 877 ••...... 611 ...e~

. .... 579 ... 9,.

..... 442 .. .22~
..... 354 ...31

West Division

.. . .. ............. .. . .W ...L ..... Pot ....GB
...48 .. . .. 521 ...

Oakland .......... , .. ..50
Texas .. : . .. . . . . • .. .. ..50
Los Angeles .. .. ........48
5aattla ............. . .. 45

.. .47 . . ..515 .. .)_.

...48 ..... 500 .. 2
...51 . . ..489 .. .5

TOOAY'I- LIIICMII LIADIIII
IIATIOIW. LIAQI.
IIAnllthl FSOnciiN. ~ • .388: Gan:iopMa, Lao
Angolaa, .337; ~. - _ .3311; ~ra. - ·
.331; Pujolo, St. Loulo. .330; -..St. Louio, .328; Hollldoy,
Colordl, .327.
~. Phltodolphio, n; flloyeo. New Vorl!, n :
HoAM1Iru. F1ortda. 73; l!eltrln, New Vorl&lt;, 73: - ·
~... 72; WMicl, MlC" at.Kee, 70; ~. St. Louft,
811

RUIIS-Sizornoro, Cleveland, 76: Thome, Chloogo, 74:
!Suzuki, Seattle, 72: Hafner, CloYOiand, 71: DOrtlz,.
ao.ton, 70; Dimon, New York. 68; Swlaher, Oakland, 67;

5111/.,~8'3"·~W~New'e8:~
7• ~~::...811.;.~1&lt;.:· ~~~z~.:S~n~il~~i'hOme,
New
· ~·•·

:

·~·· •• -•••· · - '~"' '"'

•..,...

HOWII'd, Philadelphia, 78: CeLoa, Milwaukee, 78.
ttmi-Uttoy, Philadelphia, 120; Holliday. Colorado, 118:
FSOnchoZ, Pittsburgh, 118; Eckatoln. St. Louls,117; Wright,
New York, 115; Reyes, New York, 114; MICabral'll, Ftol1da,
112: Renteria, AUanta. 112.
HOME RUNe u-.......... Phll""""'"la 31 Do ow. St Lo-.la

~··

-.,... '

: ' ..,.....,

·

-·

31: Dunn, Cincrnnau, 3Q; ASortano, W81hington, 30• CoLao,
Mllwtukae, 27: l!ellran, Now York, 27: s a - . HOUlton,

25.

STOLEN BASE~oyeo. New YOrk, 40: Pierre, Chicago,
38: HoRIImiraz. - · 27: I\Sorllno, watmgtpn, 26:

'

1

a~8:Fiellf0Ho~~a~RES-Re-signed

D
Henrik Tailfnder to a multiyear contract.
CAROLINA HURRICANE&amp;-Signad F
Mike AngelldiS: to a three-year entry-level
contract and D nm Conboy and C Scqtt
Kelman to one-year contracts.
·
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKET&amp;-Signed
D Jamie Pushor and C Janne
Haugtonen to a one-year contracts.
EDMONTON OILERS-Re-signect F
Jarret Stoll to a two-year contract.
Signed D Tom Gilbert to a two-year con-

GA tract.
NASHVILLE PREDAlORS--Re·~gnad
16
F Jardin Tootoo to a two-year contract
24
and 0 Sheldon Brookbank and F Ramzi
26
25 , Abid to one-year co ntracts.
NEW YORK ISLANDER5-Signed 0
25
Rick Berry to a one-year contract.
27
~HOENIX COYOT~S-$igned C Mike
GA Z~go:man1s to a two-year contract ar'ld G
24 ' David LeNeveu to a one-year tontract.
PITISBUAGH PENGU~Ns-Ae-signed
21
25 · F Colby Armstrpng. S1gned D Wade
25
Skolney.
23 ! WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Re--signed '
LW Ben Clymer to a three-year contract
24
1 and LW Pete Vandermeer.
· t f
·
.
COLLEGE
NOTE : Th ree po1n
s or VIctory, one
UCLA A
d
·h K "
point for tie
- gree 1o terms WI!
a"
·
Dorrell, tootball coach, on a new seven- \-..
year contract and Ben Howland, men 's
Wednesday's Game
basketball coach , on a new five-year
New York 2, Columbus 0
contract.
Thureday's Game
CD Chi-vas USA 3, Colorado 3. tie
Saturday's Games ·
Los Angeles at Columbus, late
Kansas City at New York, late
Front~r League
o:c. United at Chicago. late
Eastern Dlvlalon
New England at Houston, late
W L Pet. GB
FC Dallas at Real Salt Lake, late
Chillicothe
32 17 .653
Wedne~ay, July 26
33 19 .635 I~
Traverse City
CD Chives USA at Real Salt Lake. 9 I Washington
28 23 .549 5
p.m
29 24 .547 5
Kalamazoo
Houston at Colorado, 9:30 p.m
I
Florence
21 32 .396 13
Saturday, July 29
Westem Division
Colorado at FC Dallas. 7 p.m.
WLPct.GB
Columbus at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Rockford
29 24 .547
New York at Houston, a:30 p.m ..
Evansville
24 27 .471 4
New England at Kansas City, 8:30p.m.
Gateway
22 2B .440 5'1
D.C. United at Real Sal! Lake, 9 p.m.
Windy City
23 30 .434 6
River City
17 34 .333 11

Gl...,bl,
York, 77: VGuorroro, Loa Angoloo, 78.
Ht'I'8-1Suzukl, Seattle, 141: MYoung. Toxaa. 128;
Tejada, saHirnoni, !24; Jeter, New York, 121: Mauar,
~nMSOta, 120; VGuerraro, Los Angeles, 118; Sizemore,

Cleveland, 117; Loretta, BostoA, 111.
,
HOM• IIUNB-DOrtlz, Boston, 33; Thome, Chicago, 32;
Ha1nor, ClaYeland, 28; Glambl, l'lew York, 28; MRamlrez,
Boet
on, .,.
.,.. : Morneau, Mlnnesota, 25; Glaue, ,;oronto, 25;
Dye, Chicago, 25,
STOLEN IA8EII-Flgglna. Loo Angeloo, 37; Crawford.
Tampa Boy, 32: !Suzuki, SoaHio, 32: CPaneraon,
Blltlmoro, 31: Podltdnlk. Chicago. 29: BRobarta,

l006 111M SI.VEUDj)

l006 111M SI.Y!UDO

EXIEMIED W 4WO
Wrlopoooioo.lio ~

Ill 1011 EXIEiili!U W
lll ...... " " " - ... toolo

Friday's Gamea
Chillicothe at Gateway, ppd., power fail·
ure
Florence 3. Windy City o
River City at Evansville, ppd ., rain
Traverse City 8, Rockford 1
WashinQton 6. Kalamazoo' 2
Saturday's G•maa
Chillicothe at Gateway, 1st game
Chillicothe at Gateway, 2nd game
Florence at Windy· City
River City at Evansville, 181 game
River City at Evansvilte1 2nd game
Rockford at Traverse City
Washington at Kalamazoo
Sunday's Games
Evansville at Chillicothe
Florence at Washington
Kalamazoo at Rockford
Traverse City at River City
Windy (::lty at Gateway

lntornatlonal League ·
North Division
WL Pct.GB
Rochester
58 44 .569
Scranton
54 45 .545 2 ~
Ottawa
51 51
7
Friday's Sportl! Transaetiona
Buffalo
50 50 .500 7
BASEBALL
Pawtucket .
48 50 .490 8
MaJor Laagua Baseball
Syracuse .
46 55 .455 11 \
MLB- Suspended
Los
Arigelas
South Division
Dodgers first base coach Mariano
WL
Pct.GB
Ou~an lor two games a~d.fined hi~ an , Charlotte
62 36 .633 un~1sclosed ?mount lor ~1s mappropnate
Durham
46 53 .465 16'1,
· ac_t1ons d_unng a July 17 game at Richmond
' 36 61 .384 24 ~
Anzona.
Nor1olk
37 62 .374 25 ~;
.
American teague
West Divtaion
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Purchased
WL . Pct.GB
the contract of 38 Fernando Tatis from Louisv 1ne
55 44 .556 Ottawa of the IL. Sent INF-OF Howie Indianapolis
54 44 .551 ...
Clark outright to Ottawa.
r Toledo
53 47 .530 2',
CLEVELAND INDIANs-Recalled RHP Columbus
44 54 .449 10\
Jason Dav1s from Bulfalo of the ll.
Agreed to t~rms with LHP David Hutl, 38
Friday 's Games
Wes Hodges and RHP Kyle Harper
t Toledo 4, Durham 3
KANSAS CITY FiOYAL5-Piaced OF 1 Richmond 8. Indianapolis 4
Reggie Sanders on the 15-day DL.
LOUI~ville 5, Rochester 1
Flecalled AHP Runelvys Hernandez trom
Ottawa 6, Nor1olk 4
Omaha of the PCL.
Columbus 4, Pawtucket 1, 1st game
National league
Columbus 9, Pawtucket 1, 2nd -game
HOUSTON ASTROS-Qptloned LHP
Charlotte 4, ScrantonWilkes-Barre 2
Wandy .Rodriguez to. Round Rock ot the
Buffalo 5, Syracuse 0
PCL. Called up RHP Matt Albers from
Saturday's Games
Corpus Christie of the Texas League.
Durham at Toledo
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Purchased the
Indianapolis at Richmond
contract of INF Justin Leone from
Louisville at Rochester
Portland of thu PCL. Optioned RHP Mike
Nor1olk at Ottawa
Thompson .and RHP Brian Sweeney lo
Pawtucket at Columbus
Portland. Recalled OF Terrmel Sledge
Pawtucket at Columbus
from Portland.
ScrantonWilkes·Barre at Charlotte
BASKETBALL
Syracuse at Buffalo
National Basketball Association
Sunday's Games
SAN ANTONIO SPURS- Signed C
Durham at Toledo
Jackte Buller!
Indianapolis at Richmond
FOOTBALL
Louis\lllle at Rochester
National Football Leaguu
Norfolk at OnaWa
BALTIMORE RAVENS- Agreed to
Pawtucket at Columbus
terms wtth OL Chris Chester. CB David
Scranton Wilkes-Barre at Charlotte
• P1ttman, S Dawan Landry and LB Ryan
Syracuse at Buff-alo

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'-

ome

¥eigs' economy goes
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.w.

.MINOR LEAGUES

1

I

Chicago, 81: Morneau,

Mlnneoota, 78: Hainer, Cleveland, 78; Ibanez, Seattle, 78:

A.opoz, Waohln(I!On, 24: Furcal, Loe Angoloo, 24:
DRoborto. San Diogo. 24.
PITCHING (11 Du'llant~Wtbb, Arizona, 11~ •. 786, · S.ltimore, 2,6: J4iter, Ntw York. 20.
2.61: TGia.tne, Now Yortc. 11-3, .786, 3.52: CZamb,.,.,,
PITCHING (11 Dlc:lolono)-Halladay, Toronto, 12·2,
Chicago, 10.3, .~. 3.11: Penny, Loa Angetoo, tiH, .714, .857. 3.08: Llrlono, Mlnnoaota, 11·2, .846, 1.94;
3.22: Cerpenttr, St. Loull. 11-4, .892, 2.83: Treclllet, Now Contreras, Chicago, 9-2, .818, 3.43; Sctlllllng, Booton , 12Yortc. 9-4, .892, 4.811: Clpuano, Milwaukee, tG-5.. 867, 3.49: 3, .800, 3.50; ESantana, Los Angola&amp;, 11· 3, . 786, 4.03:
Olaen, FlOrida, 8-4,
4.0t: CYoung. San Diogo, H. Mu..rno, Now York, 11· 3, .788, 3.39; Rogers, Detroit, 11 ·
3, .786, 3 .97.
.
.867, 3.59.

Suntlay'aGimae
Oakland at Detroit, t :05 p.m.
Minnesota at Cit-leland, 1:05 p .m.
N.Y. YankeeS at Toronto. 1:07 p.m.
Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Texas at ChicagO While Sox, 2:05p.m.
L.A. Angels at Kanaao CHy, 2:t0 p.m.
Boston at Seatl~. 4:05p.m.
/"

Snnday, July 23; 2006

Toxao, .328; Dye , Chicago, .324; VGuorroro,

Loa Angotoo, .~.

CLEVELAND BROWNS-Waived OL
Jermial Ashley. DB Blake Farris, DB
Willie Hughley and OL Pete McMahon.·
KANSAS CIT'Y CHIEFS-Signed S
Bernard Pollard.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed WR Devin
Arorhashodu to a tour-year contract .
MINNESOTA VIKINGS---Released CB
R.J . Cobbs. WR Barrick Nealy, WA Kyle
Smith and OT Albert Stinson.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS- Signed
DL Le Kevin Smith.
NEW YORK GIANTS--Placed OT Jal
Lewis on the reserve-re tired list. Waived
DB Trevi.s Co ley and LB Kavis Coley.
NEW YORK- JETS-Signed S Eric
Smith and QB Brad Smith.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-claimed T
Jeff Roehl off waivers from the New
England Patriots. Released T Dejuan ·
SKinner.
PITISBURGH STEELEA&amp;-Signed
DE Orien Harris and TE Charles Davis to
multiyear contracts.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Signed
DL Julian Jenkins. CB Justin Phinisee ..
Released RB Andre Hall, S Jahmile
Addae
HOCKEY
National Hockey Le•gue
BOSTON BRUINS-Agreed to terms
• with D Wade Brookbank, D Jason York

Major League Soccer
Eastern Conference
W L T Pts GF
D.C. United
13 1 5 44 36
New England
6 6 6 24 24
Kansas City
6 10 2 20 21
Chicago
5 7 5 20 23
4 6 B 20 21
New York
Columbus
4 9 6 18 15
Western Conference
w L T Pts GF
1o 5 3 33 30
FC Dallas
a 3 6 JO 2a
Houston
7 6 4 25 23
Cplorado
CO Chi-vas USA 8 6 7 25 29
s 10 4 19 15
Los Angeles
4
9 4 16 20
Real Salt Lake

NASCAR NEXTEL CUP
Driver Standings
1. Jimmie Johnson, 2, 789
2. Matt Kenseth. 2,721
3. Je" Burton. 2..478
4. Kyle Busct1 , 2.455
5. Mar~ Martin. 2.451
6. Kasey Kahne, 2,445
7. Dale Earnhardt. Jr .. 2,428
8. Kevin Harvick, 2.408
9. Jeff Gordon, 2,342
(tie) Greg Biffle, 2,342
11 Tony St~art, 2,331
12. Denny Hamlin, 2,324
13. Carr Edwards , 2,196
14. Kurt Busch, 2,136
15. Casay Mears, 2,091
16. Clint Bowyer, 2,024
17. Jamie McMUrray, 1,9a5
18. Brian Vickers, 1,974
19. Ryan Newman , 1,966
20. Elliott Sadler. 1,963

IAa-,

LaCasse on three-year contrads.

PRo SoccER

NASCAR

TODAY'I- LIAGIII LIADERS
AIIIIUCAN LEAGUE
IATTJHG41auor, IAinneaota, .381; !Suzuki, Seattle,
.3-45; Jator, New YorJ&lt;. .339; Rloo, Toronto, .330;

P

OMEROY - .
To futur~ project work estimateverything· there is a ed within its county line.
season and for Meigs The bulk of' Ihis figure is
Countv after seasons of eco· derived from the investnomic· hardship, especially ments
proposed
by
in its industrialized sector, American Electric Power
the tide is turning along the for
its
Integrated
Ohio ·River it its favor.
Combined
Gasification
Not since those bygone ·Cycle power plant in
days of salt companies, coal Lebanon Township, and
mines, dye factories and its American
Municipal
own beer brewery has Power-O hio 's coal-fired
Meigs County seen a resur· power plant in Letart Falls .
ge nce in major economic
The following is a status
development. Since those report on some major eco· bygone days of the 19th and nomic development projects
early 20th centuries, Meigs proposed for the county.
County\ industrial legacy
AEP's IGCC
has langui:;hed, leaving
Power Plant
"Every indicator is AEP's
behind on Iy memories and
traces of old buildings worn plans are still to build at the
down to ske letons of brick Great Bend site," Varnadoe
and mortar where factorie s said . '"With every project
once thrived .
there are hurdles."
Today, the county is faced
That hurdle for AEP has
with the possibility of not been the issue of cost recovone, not two, but three pro- ery with the Public Utilities
posed power plants as well Commission of Ohio for
as the expansion of the costs associated with buildof
Rio . itig the state-of-the-art
University
Grande/Rio
Grande plant. Varnadoe said cur'
Community · College, the rently, the PUCO has
resurgence of coal mining requested more definitive
and the pussibility of a new numbers in terms of cost
emergency care center.
recovery from AEP. which
So. \vhy is· all thi s activity the COIT!piiny is now compilhappening now ?
tng.
Meigs County Economic
In a statement released
Development . Director this week to The Daily
Perry Varnadoe attributes Sentinel
specifically
the growth to the southeast addressing the JGCC plant,
Ohio work ethic, evidenced the company said: "AEP
by the tenacity of the area's Ohio's IGCC ·COntractors
small businesses. as well as . are currently working on the
efforts to expand county front end engineering and
infrastructure in the form of design (FEED) study for the
new sc hools , highways, proposed plant' in Meigs
sewer and water lines, the County. The company
new $56 millimi Pomeroy expects the study to be com·
Mason Bridge, etc.
pleted by late November. At
Meigs
County that time, AEP Ohio will
Commissioner .
Mick file with the PUCO for cost
Davenport agreed with recovery to build and operVarnadoe and added that ate the plant in Meigs
this boom in economic County. AEP' Ohio will
development was .happen- build the plant if it obtains
ing because people in both cost ·recovery from the
the public and private sector PUCO."
pul their egos a~ide and
The , statement
also
started working together to included the following
quote from Kevin E.
improve the county.
"We're all on the same Wqlker, AEP Ohio president
page now, speaking with and chief operating ofticer:
one voice," Davenpprt said. "We need the generating
Another reason for this capacity provided by the
economic boom, accord.ing IGCC plant to meet our
to Davenport. is Varnadoe obligation as an electricity
linking the county with state provider of last resort for
offices.
our Ohio customers. We are
"Perry is our point per- moving forward on all
son," Davenport said, say- fronts in our effort to site
ing Varnadoe had put a face and build the IGCC plant in
on. the economic develop- Ohio. We are hopeful that
ment in the psyches of both the PUCO will render a
stnte officials and entrepre· · timely and favorable decineurs .
sion so that construction can
Meigs County now has begin sometime next :year."
more announced investment
AEP's .IGGC plant is
than any other county in expected to cost around $1
Ohio and comes in at num- billiop, bring in hundreds of
ber two on a li st of 20 coun, construction jobs
and
ties in the Great Lakes employ around I00 permaRegion in terms of industri- nent workers. If the plant
al project spending.
comes to Meigs County, it's
Varnadoe said Meigs has tentatively scheduled to go
·around $2.5 billion worth of online by 2010. .

Courtoay of AEP Ohio

The following is a conceptual rendering of American Electric Power 's Integrated Gasification Combrned Cycle power plant
such as the one proposed for both Meigs County and Mason County, W.Va .' Which plant will go on live first remains the $1
billionquestion.
·
,. ,

AMP-Ohio Station
The proposed $1.5 billion
coal-fired power plant for
Letart Falls that is referred
to as the "flagship" · of
AMP-Ohio's operatron is
one step closer to existence
thanks to the recent tiling of
an .air ~ermit' application
Ohio
with
the
Environmental Protection
Agency.
Courtesy of URG/ RGCC
The air-permit-to-install Ground is scheduled to be broken this fall for the University of Rio Grande / Rio Grande
application was a milestone Community 'college's expansion in Meigs County. It is ambitiously (and tentatively) schedand begins the process for uled to launch in the fall or 2007 in Rocksprings along Ohio 7 and U.S. 33 near Meigs High
obtaining an air pennit for School. This artist's rendering of t11e faci.lity shows there is room to grow.
the ' I ,000 megawatt power ·
generating plant expected to and area ~esidents, tha t supcover a laroer
Rio expansion
lerritorv• than
b
begin construction in 2008 port was clearly evident and
With a ground breaki ng those across the river.
and to go on-line in 2012. demonstrates that we made scheduled for this fa ll the
However. don't expect the
Until ground is broken the ri ght de cision when University
of
Rio project here to be moving
expect AMP-Ohio to be choosing Meigs County · as Grande/Rio
Grande until the end of the year
our
preferred
site
.
We
look
consumed with filings a.nd
Community College is while the company focuses
permit applications.
forward to a long and pro- ambitiou sly (and tentative- on its Mason County operaIn a statement released ductive relationship."
ly) scheduled to launch its tion . So. the rumors of
this week to The Daily
FuturcGcn
Meigs Center in the fall of Gatling's processing plant
The $1 billion FulureGen 2007 in Rockspri ngs along on Yellowbush Road out·
Sent,inel, AMP-Ohio officials said the project will plant proposed for Lebanon Ohio 7 and US :13 near side of Racine and its conbring in 600 construction Township is one of two site·s Meigs High School.
veyor belt leading to the
The I 3,000 sq uare- fo ot river will ha ve to wait a litjobs to the region and in Ohio and one of 12 sites
employ approximately 150 in the nation vy ing for the facility will have eight lie longer to be contirmed.
people to operate the facili- experimental facility. The classrooms each wi th a
Emergency care center
ty as well as bring more other Ohio site is located in capacity to seat 25 to 30 stuA core issue in rega rds to
than $20 million to the local Tuscarawas County:
dents. These classrooms infrastructure that must be
· That li st is due to ge t will have removabl e walls addressed
economy.
is
Meigs
event
smaller
on
Tuesday
·
to
accommodate
even
more
The statement went on to
County's lack of an emerreiterate, "The plant will and if Meigs is on ti1at new of a student population or ge ncy ·L·are center. accord·
utilize the latest in proven list. representatives from the gathering. Th·e admini&lt;tra- ing to Davenport.
technology to minimi ze the county will be attending a tion is also leaving room on
"Assu ming we recei\e the
environmental impact and meeting Aug. 1·2 in the property for lit eral grow th we anticipate we'll
allow the use of a fuel blend Pittsburgh 10 clarify th e expansion once the facility need updated emergency
. next stage of the process. becomes established.
that inoludes Ohio coal."
.serv ices." Davenport said,
The
other
hot
contenders
for
Offered on the campu s pointing out whal represenare
extremely
"We
pleased with the sup port the plant (besides Ohio) had will be cOllege classes for t&lt;llives of power plants have
received
from
Meigs been identified by some as associate as well as bache- . pointed out lo him on severlor's degrees. distance al occasions.
County since announcing Illinois and Texas.
The FutureGen plant will learning
and
high
the preferred site for our
Core drillings have been
plimt last October," the be used as a template for school/college dual credit done on property at the
statement went on to say. near-zero-emission wal- courses. Included in the cur- intersectiori of Ohio 7 and
"During meetings with local based power plants around riculum will be .a special- U.S. 33 for such a facility.
officials, business leaders the world and would possi- ized course for students According to Davenport, the
bly set the stan~ard for wishing to work in power coumy has an option on the
commercial ventures into plants.
land until January though it
this type of technology.
Return of coal minin~
has not taken that option yef.
FutureGen is a joint project
Both
Varnadoe
mid The county has been in talks
of the U.S. Depanmc111 of Davenport confirm there is with O'Bieness Memorial
Energy and the FutureGen booming interest in reviving Hospital to be a pan of the
Industrial Alliance. a non- coal mining in Melg ~ projecr.
profit consonium of some of County and nor jusr in the
So much activity is going
the largest coal pmducers and usual places. sucl1 as Salem on that the Meigs County
users , in the world. · The Township. Apparently, there Office
of
Economic
FutureGen plam is expected is imeresr co unrywide . Development . is financing
to ureate more than 100 full- though no mining ,Permits an economic imp&lt;tet wrdy
time research and facility · have been filed as of last · from Ohio State University
jobs, approximately I ,000 week.
to give the county a more
construction jubs, and
Earlier this year. -Gatling accunJic picture of how it
increased university research. Mineral LLC of Beckley, will be affected by the
Varnadoe said even if W.Va.. contirmed to The recent boom in business.
Meigs doesn 't receive the Daily Seminel its plans to
"We' re a prelty hot place
plant, the research that has · mine coal from reserves pur- right now." Varnadoe said
been done by the state on chased ·from AEP in Df the tlurry of economic
the site can be used to mar- Lebanon, Lctw1 and Sutton pro)ni~e ~urruunding the
' ket the property for future townships. Gatling al"' owrb county.
power plant activity.
coal reserves fond on 17.000
Pulling his ·own take on
A final decision on the acres in Mason County. West Virginia's new slogan
FulurcGctl plant is cxpcded W.Va.. and plans to mine "We· re Open for Business,"
in September 2007 . The coal there. though a company Davenport said of Meigs.
Courteor of AMP.Ohlo
This conceptual rendering of. American Municipal Power-Ohio's American Municipal Power plant is expected to be oper- spoke&lt;pcrson
said
the "Hey. we· re wide open ·for
a4!J nal in ~0 I~ .
reserves in Meigs County businc"...
Generating Station shows how the $1.5 billion plant may look in Letart Falls in 2012.

�•

iunba~ limes ·itntinel

YOUR HOMETOWN

Second chance behind athletes medals
- announces a new rhythm
and blues festival to take
place in Meigs County.
The festival is being
sponsored by the Foothills
Music Foundation, which
Chl!lrlene was founded to promote
Hoeflich awareness of local and
regional music and art in the
foothills region of rural
southeastern Ohio. The
organizets have scheduled
money which doesn't go their first Foothills Rhythm
into the bricks. goes toward and Blues Festival for Aug.
helping the cost of operat- 26 at the Side Hill Farm out
ing the center's program of by Mudfork Creek, which is
a ways out County Road 17,
helping the less fortunate.
too
far
from
The 4-by-8 inch bricks in not
Harrisonville:
dark red are $50, the 4-byIt's a free event (dona8 inch bricks in light red
arc · $100, and tlje 8-by-8 tions will be accepted and
inch stone ones are $250. appreciated) and there's free
The smaller bricks are lim- tent camping on site. The
ited to two lines with 17 gates open at I p.m., the fun
characters on each line, begins at 3.with five bands
while the large stones will playing, and it all shuts
accommodate four lines of down just after midnight.
•••
17 characters each·.
In just about five weeks,
This is a nice way to
remember a family member students will be back in
or display a church or busi- school and they may be in
ness name while contribut- for some surprises in bevering to such a worthy com- age choices.
There will be more milk,
munity program.
juice, sports drinks and
•••
An e-mail from Jared water options, and less carSheets. - you know, the bonated soft drinks. That's
doctor by day, the musician because the state set new
in Mudfork Blues by night guidelines released in May.

But ihey are not the same
for everyone . For elementary students, the only
choices will be bottled
water, lowfat and non-fat
milk, and I00 percent juice
without added sugar. In middle schools the same choices
will be offered but the quantities allowed will be more,
while in high school, sport
drinks, light juices, and zero
or low calorie soft drinks
will be available.
The emphasis is on providing in-school beverages
which provide more nutrition and less calories, all to
the benefit of making children healthier.
· ·

•••

Wednesday was national
motorcyCle and scuoter
"ride t0 work day," but
looking around town I didn't see a single employee
'lffiving on a bike. The goal
of the observance was to
stress -safety issues of bike
riding while . at the same
time emphasize the practical side- it costs less to fill
the tank and you can get
many more miles. Gatta get
myself a scooter.
(Charlene Hoeflich is
general manager of The
Daily
Sentinel
in
Pomeroy.)

Transporting goods by flatboat a risky proposition
BY JAMES SANDS

In 191.5, James Brown
the
remembered
for
Gallipolis Bulletin newspaper a trip that he had made
to New Orleans on a tlatboat · some 56 years earlier
in his life.
"On the IOth of March,
1859, i.n company with a
number of other men and
boys from Gallipolis, I left
Point
Pleasant,
West
Virginia, which was then
Old Virginia, on a pair of
boats loaded with cannel
coal from the Coal River,
Virginia, destinatiol) being
New Orleans. In those days
there being poor markets
for coal in Cincinnati, it
was deemed best 10 take the
coal to New Orleans, where
it was reshipped on sailing
vessels for the Eastern
M.arket. There being no
railroads through .the country at that time, it was necessary to take it this roundabout way."
There were railroads in
the country, but none came
to Gallipolis until 1880 and
to get to New Orleans, one
would have had to unload
the coal numerous times.
On the tlatboat were 16
men , which included the
captain and pilot John
Myers. One historian has
written about flatboating
to New Orleans : "They
slept on the deck where
they worked, ate plain
bread and meat with

whiskey to wash it down, · ed meant, ·beans and coffee,
and took time off for a with neither sugar or milk,
dance and re·vel at the the greater part of the time."
sparse settlements where (Brown)
they might tie up and wait
In the old Ohio History
for a rise in the water or to magazine the author says,
load more cargo. In warm ''These boats were often
weather, they worked called
' broad
horns·
Stripped to (he waist and because the stern was not
soon were fit to pass for sharp, nor even rounded,
Indians. They let their but square. They were made
beards grow, and by the to float in the manner of a
end of the long voyage raft of logs. These boats
probably resembled a gang usually were about 100 feet
of pirates."
long, 18 feet wide, and 8
Browll told that the flat- . feet deep, drawing when
boats were propelled by loaded about 4 feet of water.
great oars or paddles on the Such a crafl could carry a
sides and both ends.
cargo of 350,000 l'ounds."
Flat\Joats somettmes. travBrown said they picked
up two more coal boats in eled at only about 3 miles an.
Cincinnati. At Louisville, hour and when one figures
there was not enough water they made the trip to New
on the Falls to float all four Orleans in 31 days that they
boats over. So they broke were moving almost 24
the four boats apart. They hours a day. Many a flatboat
procured a special Falls was wrecked on the way
pilot who was able to navi- south and the crew had to
gate the two lightest boats walk overland back home
over the Falls. The two and would not be paid for
heavier boats were taken their troubles. They were
through the canal around only paid when the boats
the falls, which was a very were delivered to the destination.
tedious process.
"On this trip we went
Besides coal, also shipped
through some v.ery severe south were wheat, tlour,'
storms and several times apples, cider, corn, salt
with great difficulty suc- pork, potatoes, whiskey,
ceeded in landing the boats cider, glassware and pottery.
but off-times with a great
Brown writes in his piece
deal of water in them, some- that after having arrived in
times nece ssitating long New Orleans and being
hours of pumping before we paid, the crew went immecould proceed . Our food diately to the French
was of the coarsest, cheap- Market for a good meal.
est quality, hard bread, salt- They boarded the steam-

boat "Switzerland" for the
trip north, but since that
boat did not leave for 3
days, they slept on board at
night and during the day
enjoyed
touring
the
Crescent City.
At Memphis, fellow
Gallipolitan
Martin
Vanden booked pas sage
with several barrels of
oranges. He paid the flatboatmen to sort through
the oranges daily making
sure that those turning rotten· were tossed overboard.
For their labor, the men
were given all the speckled
oranges they could eat.
Vanden owned a store in
Gallipolis and had personally gone south to buy
items not grown in Ohio.
The return trip upriver by
steamboat took II days.
Brown states, "The eating
was very good:"
(James Sands is a special
correspondent for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to 1040 Military Road,
Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)

vary depending on what
PUBLIC HE.~LTH NURSE
grade the child is in . Male
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
students should have a color
perception test completed
Do you know that vision by the first grade since 5 to
disorders are the fourth 8 percent of males are color
most common disability in defici'ent.
the U.S. and the most prevaSome · signs and symplent handicapping condition toms that your child· may
in childhood? Good vision have a vision problem are
is essential for proper phys- crosse d eyes, eyes that tu'rn
ical development and ed u- in, out or move indepencational progress in grow- · dently. There a~e also some
ing ,children. Early detection behavi0'ral indicators of
of visual problems provides possible vision problem s
the be't opportunity . for suc h as dislike or avoideffecti ve. inexpensive treat- ance of close work, or
ment. There are many chi 1- placing head close to a
dren sitting in thel.tiliissroom boot&lt; or desk when reading
who don 't know they have a or writing. You may also
vision problem.
notice excessive blinking
Nearly 47,300 Ohio or rubbing of the eyes,
preschool children (I in 20) using a finger to guide eyes
have a vision disorder such when reading, poor eyeas amblyopia (lazy eye) or hand coordination with
strabismus (c rossed eyes) things like throwing or
that can lead to loss of catchi ng a ball. tying
vision. The statistics are shoes , or buttoning clothhigher fur Ohio's "hool- ing. However, you may not
aged chi ldren with nearly notice any of the above.
465,000 ( I in 4 1 having a symptoms but your ch ild
vision problem.
may
comp lain
of
The Ohio Department of headaches, dizzin~ss. burnHealth requires that chil- ing or itching of the eyes,
dren be screened by the. blurred or double vision.
schoo l nurse at grades K, I ,
If you suspect your child
3, 5. 7 and 9 for vision prob- may have. a vision problem .
letm. The tests required . or your ch ild complains

about any of the above mentioned symptoms notify
your child's pediatrician.
The Pf:diatrician may see
the chtld and/or refer to an
optometrist or ophthalmologist.
What if you don ' t have
vision insurance to cover
the cost of an eye exam and
possible glasses? You will
be glad to know the Ohio
Department of Health holds
f re.e vision clinics in many
of the state's 88 counties.
The child will be seen by an
optometrist and given a prescription for eyeglasses if
needed. If eyeglasses are
needed and the child meets
certnin income criteria, they
may be eligible for a
Prevent Blindness Ohio
vo~cher to cover the cost of
eyeglasses.
In Gallia County, the clinics are usually held in the
fall, winter and spring. The
next clinic will be Oct. 26,
2006. To schedule an
appointment or for more
information, call the Gallia
County Health Department
at (740) 441 -2950. ·
Resources:
Ohio
Department of Health and
American Acadeiny of
Ophthalmology.

ATHENS (AP) - Most
of the 37 Ohio University
engineering
graduates
accused of plagiarizing
part s of their master's
degree research projects
have agreed to rewrite their
. reports, the school said
Thursday.
Twenty of the graduates
who received letters last
month from the school
informing them that copied
sections of their theses had
been discovered opted to
revise the questioned portions rather than appeal.
By agreeing to rewrite
their theses. the graduates
have acknowledged their
projects contained "problems," spokesman Jack
Jeffery said. Those terms
were included in a letter
sent to the students.
Two former student s will
challenge the .allegation ·
before a hearing board.
Graduates were also
given the option of giving
up their degrees, which no
one has done.
Thirteen graduates did not
reply by July 14 - the
deadline university lawyer
John Burns set in his June
30 letter. Most of those live
abroad and will be given
until the end of July to
answer, Jeffery said.
Another two remain
u'ncertain. about how they
wi II respond, he said.
Jeffery said the board
expects to review aud ·
decide on all37 cases by the
end of the fall quarter in
November. Rewritten theses
should also be l:Ompleted by

Is you r

November, he said.
The university\ investi·
gation began in 2004 after
Tom Matrka, then a gradu·
ate
student
in
the
Department of Mechanical
En~ineering, told school
offtcials about suspected
plagiari sm he found while
revtewing master's theses in
a university library:
A committee appointed
in March by Provost Kathy
Krendl reportep that rampant and flagrant plagiarism occurred in the pro·
gram for more than 20
years. The committee recommended in May that
department Chairman Jay
Gunasekera and one other
profes sor be fired.
Gunasekera has since
stepped down as chairman.
He remains a professor but
has been stripped of hi s
role as a graduate student
adviser. He has hired a
lawyer to fight allegations
that he allowed the cheat·
ing to happen .
John
Marshall,
Gunasekera's lawyer. has
maintained his client was
not at fault. What the university is calling plagiarism
was students copying information leading up to their
research, he said last month.
"None of the so-called
plagiarism had anything to
do with the originality of the
resea rch," Marshall said.
Jeffery said much the same
Thursday. The university has
only found plagiarized material in introductory chapters
to the 37 theses, not in
research results. he said.

Diabetes not
controlled?

M~'ttO;~in? ~

.~

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ot Mlllonnln (Gtucophag..)tortha tut
2 monlbs or more, you may be eligible
to participate In a clinical research study
· testing an Investigational drug tor patients
with Type 2 Olabetes.
Qllllmld plrllclplnfl may receive
medical care and study medication at no
cost.
You may be compensated for your time ·
and travel.
This study is being conducted at Holzer
Clinic.

~
Bringin(l you clinical
research study opportunities. ·

.

"

o tB·BO years old
o Olagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes
o Currently taking Metformln
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o Must.be taking at lea~ 1500mg
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o Metformin is NOT working
tor you
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about this and other studies.

7404467601
or call foll·ftee 1·877-45·STUDY
researc hsol utionscorp.com

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Career technical
training on slate at Rio
RIO GRANDE - When work he doc' in the cla,;the Univen.ity of Rio room. At the same time, he
Grande/Rio
Grande is able to teach his own stuCommunity College held its dents at the Pike Countv
graduation ceremonies ear- Joint Vocational Sehoul
lier this summer. it included while he is in the program.
the first graduate of a rela"Students in this program
tively new program .
really get on-the-job experiRio Grande offers an ence , while they are receivassociate's degree program ing training here at Rio
111
Career
Tcl'ilnic'al Grande," McQueen said.
Traini~g. and the first gradAs long as people have
uate . of tl1e program . Lee the expert training in these
Thompsou. received his professional and vocational
degree in May.
areas, they can enter the
Dr. Phyllis McQueen, program and begin teaching
head of teacher education at in area schools where there
Rio Grande, explained that arc openings , McQueen
the
Career
Technical explained.
Training program gives
"We teach them about
people who have worked in how to work as instructors
technical fields such as a~to and to become good teachrepairs or cosmetology an ·ers." McQueen said .
opportunity to work as
The state of Ohio has
teacher~
in
vm:alional in cre ased the certification
schools.
requirements for teachers in
Rio Grande offer' a short , these area.,, '1nd the Rio
27-hour progr;un that these Grande program allows the
teachers can take before teachers to meet all uf the
GALLIPOLIS The
they begin teaching to pre- qual ificati uns.
Ciallia
County
Junior
Fair
pare them for working in
The teachers take the 27
Youth
Board
has
been
busy
the cla"room .' The stud-ents hours of classes in the sumin this program can also go mer before the schuol year ·preparin g for the upcoming
on to earn their associate's begins. :md then they can Gallia County Junior Fair,
·
which opens on July 31.
de~rees in career tech nical begin teaching in the fall
The
youth
board
is
selling
trallling. all while teal·hing and also work towards their
in the schools.
associate's degree s. Rio the First Edition Collector
Thompson · worked as an Grande works with students Basket commemorating the
auto mechanic, hut &lt;ilso in this prograin, and in all of Gallia County Fair. A limitwanted to teach, so he its programs. in order to ed number of baskets will
entered the Rio Grande pro- meet the challenging sched- be made with each being
numbered individually.
gram.
Thompson
first ules of students.
worked . his way through the
By enteri ng the Career · Proceeds of this basket
27 -hour program and then Technical Trainin g pro- will go to support !he youth
completed hi s associate's gram. students can set them- board and half of the prodegree while teaching at the selves up for an entirely ceeds w111 go the Sarah
Pike County Joint Vocational . new
career, j ust
as Waugh Support Fund. Sarah
is a member of the youth
School. Now, he is conrinu- Thompson did .
ing on with his education and
'' He 's very enthusiastic board whQ is battling cancer
working towarcfs his bache- and has been an excellent at this time.
The ba skets are being
lor's degree.
student," McQueen said.
"It's really exciting," "We are all very proud of made bv the Am erican
Traditions Basket Co. The
McQu een 'said about the him.''
work th'at Thompson is
For nwre information on basket features a green and
doing. "This has opened a the
Career
Technical' white cottage weave and
lot of doors for him."
Trainii1g prograni at Rio wood handle.The price is
Thomps&lt;;m is an excellent Grande, call the Btmce $43 and includes the protecstudent at Rio Grande, and School of Education at I - tor and the liner. See any
youth board member to
his teachers rave about the 800-282"7201.
order your basket or contact
the advisor, Mary Dee!, at
388-9858. Checks need to
be made out to the Gallia
County Agricultural Society
and payment is needed with
the order.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. are looking for people who
The youth board is also
(AP)- Kanawha County is might be interested in own- holding the first annual
recycling enough discarded ing a pile - or two - or Gallia County Junior Fair
glass every day to make one three of sand.
Checrleading Competition.
enormous - and quite colA selling price has not Invitations were sent out to
been set, but the plant is all of the surrounding
orful - sandbox.
A glass pulveri zer instailed accepting offers, Taylor said. schools in several counties
in April at the Slack Street
Though pulverized glass to advisors. If you did not
recycling plant produces is new to the area\ market, receive your invitation. conabout 12,000 pounds of sili· Tim Daily. director of the tact Mary at the above numcone sand daily, said plant Solid Waste Authority, said ber.
supervisor Darrell Taylor.
its uses in the private and
The competition will be
And the mound is getting commercial sector are held on Monday, July 31,
so big that county officials numerous .
with the registt'ation begin-

Gallla County Jun.lor Fair Youth Board

Youth board offers basket fund-raiser, .cheerleading contest

.Kanawha seeks buyers for
colorful sand made from glass

~

PageC3

..__...OMMUNITY

iunbap t!tlmes -ient!ntl

Gallla County Junior Fair Arst Edition Collector Basket

ning at 9 a.m. and the competition beginning at I0
a.m. Committees h'ave been
formed for he Iping the fair
board out the week of the
fair. The youth have been
working hard at preparing
informational posters for
the exhibitors who need
help.
When checking in your
project on Sunday, just look
for any youth board mem·
ber in the bright safety
green shirt and they can
help you with any ques-

tions. The members of the
youth board will . also be
helping with the various
shows and checking in of
animals. Their other shirt
color for this year is
turquoise, so look for them
at the fair.
The youth board is
formed each fall and consist
of youth members that are
15 years of age or older.
Applications are sent out
each year or will be available at the Extension Office
in November. It is a very

rewarding group that strives
to learn leadership, responsibility and dedication to the
youth of the county.
Members of the Gallia
County Junior Fair Youth
Board for 2006 include :
Kaitlin Angell,
Aaron
Angles, Blake Arnott, Matt
Beaver,
Dane
Black,
Kristine Bostic. Holly
Canaday, Brittany Carr, Jon
Casto, Kala Cisler. Kri stin
Clark, Lehanna Craft, Leah
Cummons, Kevin Daines,
Adrianne Eastman, Brittany
Elliott, Megan Ferguson,
Alex Gardner, Jill Graham,
Amy
Haffelt,
Kristen
Halley, Matt · Hemphill,
Tyler Holcomb, Hannah
Houchens, Katie Hubble,
Craig James, Jesse James,
Kevan Johnson, Laura
Kelley. Kris Lloyd, Eli
Maher, Brea Martin, Travis
Massie, Shaun Meeks,
Lyle
Audrey
Morris,
Richards , Hannah Roush,
Danielle Sanders, Justin
Saunders, Courtney Swain,
Abbey Thompson, Andrea
VanMeter, Curt Waugh,
Sarah Waugh, Megan Wise,
Heather Withee, Jessica
Woodward, Morgan Young.
AI ternates include: Adam
Massie, Bridget Suver,
Anna Donnally, Andrew
Dyer, Sam Shawver, Jesse
Robinson, Aaron Phillips,
Kayla Payne, Samantha
Northup, Kari Mcfann and
Megan Foster.
•

7\II.Y 14-lt e Ttl£ FAIIlGIOUl4DS
' MII.IS WEST OF IUPI.EY · 'OnAG,VILI.£
Daily admission $6 (ages 2•): Season Pass - adult (age 12+) $25, youth (age 2-11) $10
Cornivol opens 6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. · 1 p.m. Sot. • Cost included in daily admission.

~

Detecting vision problems in children
Bv GWEN McGRAW, RN

\

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Most students accused of
plagiarism will rewrite theses

COMMUNITY: CO-RNER
It's always nice to know
about the achievements of
those who have overcome
major obstacles or health
problems. So it was good to
hear that Morgan Mathews
of Pomeroy had won two
medals at the recent U.S.
TransRlant
Games
in
Louisville, Ky.
This young woman who
got her second chance at life
in February 200 I when she
had a liver transplant.
earned the sil ver medal in
her age group in table tennis, and the bronze medal in
her age group in badminton .
Morgan was one of more
than I .200 athletes, all solid
organ recipients, ce lebrating
the gift of life at the
Transplant Games.
•••
If you didn't get around to
ordering
an
engraved
memorial , family or business brick fur the sidewalk
at the Mulberry Community
Center when they were sold
a year or so ago, you now
have another opportunity.
They are on sale again
because there are more sidewalks to bccumpleted .
The center is hoping to
sell I00 more bricks by
Sept. 30. Cost of the bricks
range from $50 to $250 and

PageC2

At Jim Walter Homes, we have expandetl our financing options

O'Bieness Memorial Hospiral's

to help you builtl the home of your dreams.

Resident Physicians offer
comprehensive family medical care

Tl.~ Savannah

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jean Retto~. D.O.

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Showmanship
!'p.m....:.............. 4-H &amp;FFA Horse
Show [Western)'
2 p.m .............. Btef Showmanshop
7 p.m ................ Demolrtron Qerby
at pull track
9p.m.... Powder Puff Demo Derby
at pull frock

· Open 'Monday - Friday

l&lt;.e:nneth Hamby. D.O.

12all f,,r !fPIIt i11 ~k• nw ;~l'l"'in tnwnl

f 'i'/lJ~~~(!)?~
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Barba~ SinJt'~ 0.0.

Call (740) 566-4925
for an appointment. ·
Same day appointments available.

8:30a.m ....4-H &amp;FFAfeeder Prg Show &amp;Mori&lt;et Sw&lt;iie Judgrng
Ip.m....... :................. 4·H &amp;FFA Horse Show (Enghsh)'
2p.m ....................... 4-H &amp;FFA Replacement Heifer Show
4:30p.m ........................:.........4-H &amp;FF~ Mori&lt;et Slur Show
6:30p.m .......... Tractor Pull/Farm Tractors at pull irack

1\tbtcu Hu~ton , 0.0

Aon:l Wright. D.O.

o';ii'iiN'iss

f&amp;

HEAlTH SYSTEM

Wade Keller. D.O.
Hr'Wi• tlt."~'N\1 •:. nlttv &gt;fX:It!d!! wutionr. t11ik1f'l'! (l; r&lt;ltx'hltt.rll&gt;ar'l 1 tl!~ l pat-! rl (}I ~l wldrlf r! Of1;.rlt1!,1' ~ ;hlu ~Y~ k1d ~ t&lt;.l:',cl!ll)i"l)
f t..f~ I t• I'Jl •! ~HXl 1..1 t·'lt•t:f ~~.11-r .l t!Gf'!t- .tlli'J J,;l,.r!,. •, tb]Ud l(t i h.r t!JI.' •lliJ r1'1' ~'&lt;,·1 1 1ft ;;\!II{! i(!!;l•.:.i• l llll''ll,~} U\ llJ~tJJ4
f,)•U,. I!t!\WAI:(•· fk ~··u. '1'1' I r,t,yt~l!&lt;J r•tl•l'fonbtt•' I

11 a.m .. ............... .....................Marketi.ivestock Sale

8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

. /'rougl. W..h.,r Morlgag&lt;' ( ~"''P""l'
~· ..·

~

8a.m... 4-H &amp;FFA Market &amp;Meat
Goot Showmai\Ship &amp;Show 4p.m....................... Open Youth Horse Show {21 &amp;under)' ·
10:30 a.m..........4-H &amp;FFA Shup 6:30p.m . ............................................................ Mud Bog

. 444 West Union St.
Suite E • Athens, Ohio
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8 p.m. • DARYLE SINGLETARY

1i~fl'm

•
•

9a.m.......:.....
2p.m . ... Pet Parade at show arena
6 p.m ...... Yo~th Fun Horse Show•
6:30p.m .... Ope~ &amp;Jr. Cottle Show
7p.m....................... ATV Drag Race

8:00a.m ............... 4-H &amp;FFA ~abbit
ShowmanShip &amp;Show
Market Rabbit Show
3:30 p.m...........:...... 4·H &amp;FFA Swi ~~e
Showmonship (In!.. Jr. &amp;Sr.) ·
6 p.m..... .... Open Youth Horse Show•
7:30 p.n1 ......... ......... ATV Motor Cross
at pull track

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•An ridcM undlr

._..._...~....~...~

~

:

7 p.m. · GOSPELAIRES
8:45 p m • ONE ACCORD
•1

9o.m.... Open Do&lt;ry Goat Show
&amp;Pee Wee Showmanshrp:
M•noature Horse Show':
Horse &amp;Pony Pull'
11:30 a.m............ Ladies Leod Line
Sheep Show
11:30 p.m............. 4·H/FFA &amp;Open
Slieep Show
1·3 p.m . .................. Youth Freid Day
2p.m....... .... .. English &amp;Western
Horse Show'
4p.m.....
. ........... 4-wheel drove pu ll at pull frock
6p.m.
. ..................................Pie Aucr.on
7 p.m. .... ... _... Ch1pB•ngo. 4-wheel dr&lt;Ve truck pull
9p.m............... Semrpulls: Youth Dance· ~J Tom Marlow

Zi. portklpatift9 in tba hor'lc skowt-, m\ISt wear o h&amp;lmct.

!Jm~Cit:;ftnlt\JH315JUf.

�iunba~

CELEBRATIONS

limes -ienhnel

•

PageC4

ON THE BooKsHELF

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Library services offer wealth of data

Nell Nelson and Amy Varney

VARNEY-NELSON
ENGAGEMENT
LONG BOTTOM - Terry and Faith Varney of Long
Bottom announce 1he engage ment and approaching marriage of their daughter. Am y \llaric V;trne y. to Neil Matthew
Nelson, son of Jennin~' and Donna Ncl,on of Coolville.
The bride-elect grac'fu:itcd fi·,,n Southem Hig h School in
1998 and is employed at Falllil y DPilar in Athens. Her
fiance graduated with the 1997 class at Federal Hocking
High School and is employed wi th Athens County Racing.
The wedding will be an event nf 5:30•p.m. on Saturday,
July 29, 20()6. at the Ohio Univmity Inn.

Llnzle Nottingham and Craig Hughes

·NOTTINGHAMHUGHES
ENGAGEMENT
RACINE - Ed and Vicki Notlingham of Racine
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Linzie Lee Nottingham, to Craig Alan
Hughes of Ottawa. He is the son of Donna Smith Kenton,
and Alan Hughes of St. Petersburg, Fla.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Meigs High School and
works at Calvary Manor while attending Ohio State
University-Lima, studying middle childhood education.
Her tiance is a graduate ofOttawa/Glandord High School
and is employed at Steel Technology in Ottawa.
An August wedding is being planned.

Barry Gilmore and Jayna Reimer

REIMERGILMORE
ENGAGEMENT
WALWORTH, Wis. - Jayna Lynn Reimer of Capron.
Ill .. and Barry Joseph Gilmore of Walworth, Wis. , .
announce their engagement
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Arnold Reimer of
Capron and Annette Bounds of Rockford. Ill . She is a 2005
graduate of North Boone High School. She is presently
employed atthe Video Gallery in Walworth.
The groom is the son of Joe and Linda Gilmore of
Walworth. Wis. He is a 2004 graduate of Big Foot High
School and is attending UW- Whitewater majoring in multi·
media. He is currently employed at Pick 'n' Save in Walworth.
The ?room is the grandson of Gardner and Patricia Wehrung
of Racme, and the late Elza and Evelyn Gilmore of Pomeroy.
The couple will be married Saturday. Aug. 5. 2006, in
Rockford, Ill. ·

WOOD-WOLFE
ENGAGEMENT

RUTLAND - · Charlc&gt; R. "Bob" &lt;U1d JoAnn Moles Eads
will observe their 50ih wedding annivcr,ary on Friday.
The couple was married 011 July 2K. 1~56. in a private
EAST LETART- Carrie Ann. Wood and Anthony Todd
ceremony at the home of the bride 's family. Sherman and
Dimple,. Moles, on Camphclb Creek in Charleston. W.Va. Wolfe announce their engagement and approaching marriage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of David and Sally
Jack Eads and Barbara Mole' v.:crc the allendant s.
Mr. Eads served in the U.S. Navy. lie was employeJ at Gloeckner of East Letart. She is a 1992 graduate of
the Ohio Valley Electric Cu.\ Kyger Creek Plant ·for 40 Southern High School. She is also a 2006 graduate of the
years, retiring in 1995. At the Rutland Chur,·h of God . he University of Rio Grande with a bachelor's degree in
taught Sunday School fot 35 year' ;md served in various English and journalism.
.
other ministries. His mother w;ts a homemaker and cared
The prospective groom is the son of Tom and Rose Wolfe
for their two children. Cindy .In and Rohbi.e (deceased). of Long Bottom , and Shirley and Roger Lude of Syracuse.
They have one grandson. r\an111 Krauller.
He is a 1989 graduate of Southern High School and a 1992
Mr. and Mrs~ Eads have been very ac:tivc in the c&lt;immu- graduate of Hocking College with an associate's degree in
nity, serving as volunteer l' rncrgciK' Y mL·dil:al tcdmicians. telecommunications and broadcasting.
and past Rutland Village Council members. ·
· The open church wedding will be .2 p.m. or\ Saturday,
They have lived fur :\0 years in Rutland and currently July 29. 2006, at the Racine United Methodist Church. The
reside at I74 Salem St.
reception will follow in the church fellowship hall.

CALDWELL-LEE
WEDDING
· GALLIPOLIS - Robert ·E. Lee and Cassy C. Caldwell
were married on'Saturday. June 17, 2006. The ceremony t90k
place at the Rodney Church of God, followed by the reception, which was held at the Elks Club in downtown Gallipolis.
Robert is the son of Nancy and the late Larry Lee . He is
employt'd with Bob Evans Farms Inc. as a general manager.
Cassy is the daughter of Carl Sword and Patty
Lindamood. She is currently a student in the Holzer School
of Nursing at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
·
Rob and Cassy would like to thank everyone for their
prayers, cards and gifts. A special thanks to everyone who
came out to spend with us this special day.

Bv RON BERTHEL

KOLB-SHAVER
ENGAGEMENT
COLUMBUS- Nancy Kolb and Robert Shaver Jr. are
announcing their engagement and upcoming marriage. ·
The bride-elect is the daughter of Kennetl1 and Elaine
Kolb of Eaton, Ohio. She is a graduate of Preble Shawnee
High School and Ohio State University. She is employed as
executive assistant to U.S. Rep. Patrick Tiberi of Columbus.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Robert and Linda
Shaver of Gallipolis. He is a graduate of River Valley High ·
School and Ohio University. He .is employed as an engineering
work coordinator for American Elox:tric-Power in Columb~ts.
The wedding will be Saturday, Aug. 12, 2006, at
Northwest Bible Church in Hilliard:

Open reception slated
POMEROY .- An open reception for the reGently married
·Roger and Sherrie Ziegler will be held from noon to 3 p:m.
on Saturday, July 29, 2006, at the home of Mildred Ziegler,
42654 State Route 681. Cake and beverage will be served. ·

-

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18' ROUND-' 1175
24' ROUND-' 1355
12'124' OVAl - ' 1679
15'130' OVAl -'1879

See Sunday Puzzle on 20

over cancer. Links to cancer ble subject databases and
would refer to cancer treat- · locally trained staff. The
ment centers around the point of the story - after
world - and in our own reading an article . in the
town . Trying to filter newspaper, c.ontact your
through a million refen!n(es local library for more iofop
is beyond most people's mation about anything
ability and interest. Those whi ch peaked your interest.
The public library - a
with more specific questions would be referred to place where learning grows .
For more information :
one of the library 's many in·
Consumer
health complete .
hou se books or to.one of the
through
more sttbject specific data- Available
ba'~' online. Individuals OPLINit's not about the
thron ghout Ohio have bike. By Lance Armstrong
acce&gt;s to · onlmr database s Lance Armstrong: the race
his
availabl e through OPLIN of
t www.oplin .org ).
Iifewww.letour. fr/index us.h
Individuals throughout tml.
(Betty Clarkson is direc·
Ohio also have access to a
tor
of the Dr. Samuel L.
·
trained reference librarian
dedicated to online research Bossard Memorial Library,
in the Know it Now service 7 Spruce St., Gallipolis,
offered through the 'State 446-READ. The library is
open
Monday
Library cit: Ohio, also linked open
through Friday from 8 a.m.
throL1gh OPLIN.
Public libraries through- until 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9
out Ohio add to the OPLIN a.m. until 5 p.m.; and
and Know it Now services Sunday, I to 6 p.m.
by offering locally accessi- •ww w.bossard.lib.oh.us.)

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Robert Shaver Jr. and Nancy Kolb
Carrie WC!od and Anthony Wolfe

II Sports Section would
generate an entirely new reference interview and result.
A quick Google search
resulted in over I million
hits on his name combined
with ''tour de france."
Patrons would be led to
updates on the' race itself.
facts about bicycling, maps
of the geographical areas
involved, information about
the individual and information about joint replacement.
References to Lance
Armstrong would lead to
biographical information
about the man, his victories
in the r~ces , and his victory

vastly different lives

Whodunit fans can bone up on the latest mysteries

Charles and Jo Ann Eads

EADS
ANNIVERSARY

Betty
Clarkson

...

Readers of mystery and
suspense fiction have plenty
to chew on th.is month with
such titles as "Break No
Bones," "Bones of the
Barbary Coast" and "Bones
To Pick."
But - and inake no bones
about it - there's a variety
of other new hardwver
whodunits, by writers
including Ruth Rendell,
No~a Roberts and James
Lee Burke.
."Break
No
Bones"
(Scribner) is Kathy Reichs'
ninth
book· featuring
Temperance Brennan, who,
like Reichs, is a forensic
anthropologist. In this outing,
Brennan
is
in the
mountains,
she
Charleston, S.C., on a tem- observes from a distance
potar'y teaching assignment as .a man knocks .a woman
at . the university. On an to the ground and stranexpedition with her students gles her. When the police
to an American Indian bur- arrive, however, they find
ial ground, she discovers a . no sign of a struggle and
fresh skeleton among the no sign that anyone was
ancient bones.
even at the site. With the
Bones belonging to a help of a local mystery
victim of the 1906 San writer, Reece searches for
Francisco earthquake and the truth.
fire are discovered in the
"Pegasus Descending"
foundation of a fine · (Simon &amp; Schuster) is
Victorian house in "Bones Burke's 15th novel about
of the Barbary Coast" detective Dave Robicheaux,
(Bloomsbury),
Daniel whose . problems arrive
Hecht's third book about when Trish, the only off.
paranormal investigator · spring of Robicheaux's forCree Black. No one knows mer buddy, comes to the
the skeleton's identity or town of New Iberia, La.
how it wound up in the Robicheaux had witnessed
foundation of the house, the murder of the girl's
but Cree finds some clues father 25 years earlier.
in a local woman's centu- Suspected but never convicted was Whitey Bruxal, a
ry-old diary.
Mystery readers might . gangster to whom the vicalso pick "Bones To .Pick" tim was in serious debt.
(Kensington),
Carolyn Now, Trish is apparently
Haines' sixth book featur- seeking revenge by passing
ing Mississippi private eye bad bills in Bruxal's casiSarah Booth Delaney. nos.
Among other
When the body of a young
new 'mysteries:
woman is found in a cotton
In "The Traitor" (St.
field- she was suffocated
by being held face-down Martin's Press) by Stephen
in the ground - the vic- Coonts, Jake Grafton, now
tim's
brother
hires . the CIA's chief operative
Delaney to find the killer. in Europe, tries to perWhat
Delaney
finds suade French intelligence
share
information
beforehand is a slew of to
suspects, enemies the vic- they're collectin·g from a
tim had made from her secret agent working within ai-Qaida.
recent tell-all book.
. A veteran FBI agent who
Chief Inspector . Wexford
interrogates
suspected terof the fictional English
town of Kingsmarkham lias rori~ts at the detention centwo murder investigations ter at Guantanamo Bay is
on his to-do list in "End in assigned to investigate
Tears" (Crown), the 20th in when·the body of a U.S. solRendell's series. An elderly dier washes up on Cuban
woman motorist has been soil in "The Prisoner of
killed by a concrete slab Guantanamo" (Knopf) by
dropped from an overpass Dan Fesperman.
In Bill Pronzini 's "The
and a teenage girl has been
Crimes
of Jordan Wise"
bludgeoned to death . The
murders seem unrelated (Walker), an unassuming
unti I Wexford learns •that San Francisco accountant
~he teenager had been dri- . assumes he has committed
ving behind the older vic- the perfect crime when he
tim in a similar car, provid- flees to the Virgin Islands
ing somewhat "concrete" .with the small fortune he
evidence that the younger has embezzled .
In Cancun, Mexico, two
.woman was the intended
young couples on vacation
victim.
A woman witnesses a become lost in the jungle as
they search for a missing
murder- or does she? in Roberts' "Angels Fall" companion who had set out
(Putnam). On the ruA from for remote Mayan ruins in
a harrowing experience in "The Ruins'' (Knopf) by
.
Boston, Reece Gilmore is Scott Smith.
The
imminent
birth
of
her
stalled by car trouble m ·
baby
doesn't
keep
second
Al)gel 's Fist, Wyo., where
she decides to settle Arizona sheriff Joanna
brletly. While hiking in · Brady from investigating

Bones

'

To

Pick

CA RO LYN

H,,I N ES
AP Photos

the murder and mutilation
of an ex-con and the brutal
attack of a female officer in
"Dead Wrong" (Morrow),
J .A. Jance's 12th book in
the series.
Married to her job, it
seems; is San Francisco pri·
vate eye Sharon McCone,
who spends her honeymoon
investigating the 22-yearold disappearance of an
artist who was last seen on
her way to the coast for a
in
day
of
painting
"Vanishing
Point"
(Mysterious Press), Marcia
Muller's 24th McCone
installment.
British police detectives
Harpur and lies are assigned
to protect a stool pigeon
whose tip helped police disrupt a major rqbbery in
"Wolves
of Memory"
(Norton) by Bill James; and
in London, . information
found on an assassinated aiQaida agcn t leads Israeli
intelligence to believe that
an attack OA the Vatican is
imminent
in
"The
Messenger" (Putnam) by
Daniel Silva.
· In ''Ptoof Positive"
(HarperCollins) by Phillip
Margolin , an attorney sus pects the forensic evidence being used against
two clients had been tam-

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Two young women,

READ MORE ABOUT IT
Stream of consciousnes;
-the way most of us think.
one thought leading to
another. It i&gt;a cnusc of fru stration with young and old
friends who can't seem to
"stick to the point" in their
stories or questions. It i'
also the reason behind the
phenomenal success of the
World Wide Web and its
hyperlinked connections.
Twenty years ago, an anide in the local new;paper
might prompt a question of a
librarian- something about ·
Aoyd Landis, for example.
A librarian's answer would
be- "There aren't currently
any books written about Mr.
Landis, but we might be able
to search magazine articles
to see if we can 1ind any·
thing about his bicycling ·
activities in the Tour de
France. Let me show you
how to use the microfilm ... "
In today's library, an anide like the one appearing in
the Gallipolis Tribune's July

PageCs

pered with.
In a quiet . town in
Norway, police connect two
· seemingly unrelated events,
a teenager's disappearance
and a purse-snatching that
resulted in .a death, in
"When the Devil Holds the
Candle" (Harcourt) by
Karin Fossum.
Professional hit man and
ardent philatelist John
Keller stamps out victims
while contemplating retirement in · "Hit Parade"
(Morrow),
Lawrence
Block's third book about the
New York-based killer-forhire. ··

For some people, high
school was the happiest
time of their lives. For others. it was pure torture. For
most, it was somewhere in
between. Curtis Sittcnfeld
has written Prep, a novel
about Lee Fiora from South
Bend, Ind., who attends a
boarding school outside of
Boston. At Ault School she
is one of the "mild, boring,
peripheral girls." Smart and
accomplished back home .
she does poorly academically and even worse socially.
She has gone there on
scholarship, and most of the
students are much wealthier.
She says, "money was
everywhere on campus, but
it was usually invisible."
· She develops a crush· on a
star basketball player. Cross
Sugerman, who rescues her
when she faints in a mall.
Her parents arrive in a beat- .
up Datsun and attend parents'
weekend, which
becomes a disaster as her
father embarrasses her and
she acts like a brat.
In her senior year,
Sugerman begins to visit
· Lee in her dorm room after
hours, but never acknow ledges her in public. Lee
agoni·z es over everything,
which can become a bit trying after the first 300 pages.
However, this novel is
extremely true to life for
adolescents and those who
have been. One especially
poignant incident involves
the students' sending flowers to one another for·
Valentine's Day. Lee gets
two. one from her roommate and one from a freshman who has tutored her in
math. That might not seem
so bad, but compared to
Aspeth Montgomery, · the
most popular girl in the
class, who gets about two
dozen.. it becomes agonizing.
Lee Fiora narrates the
story when she is 24 and
looking back on her high
school days. She was a selfconscious outsider at Ault
School, but she never considered leaving. We meet a
number of stereotypical students . - the blonde girl
"about whom rock songs
are written," the "achin~ly
earnest" young English
teacher just out of college.
the alienated gay student,
the kind black guy there as a

Beverly
Gettles

rotic than Holden Caulfield.
The characters are believable, and my high school,
though public. c.pntained a
lot of the same characters.
and ! can identify with a lot
of Lee's feelings. Maybe
you can too.
The Alchemisr :, Daug!rler
by Katharine McMahon is
about
another
young
woman trying to find her
place in &gt;l&gt;&lt;.:iety. It is 1727
and Emilie Selden is 19.
She has been cloistered
si.nce birth' hy her widowed
father at Selden Manor during the English Age of
Reason. Selden is a great
admirer of Sir Isaac
Newton. and he travels to
London for meetings of the
Royal Society.
Emilie is. groomed by her
father to be a perfect person,
and he educates her in the
rituals of alchemy in the
near solitude of their estate.
There is a mystery regarding her mother, whom no
one ever mentions. but the
room in which sbe die&lt;,! is
maintained as though she is
still its occupant.
Two young men appear
on the scene: Thomas
Shales, who is a clergyman
and natural philosopher
who angers Emilie's· father
by rejecting alchemy in
favor of the scientific
Robert ·
method,
and
Aislabie.
a handsome
London adventurer trying to
gain access to Mr. Selden's
secrets for profit. Emilie
falls for Aislabie, becomes
pregnant, and marries him.
She soon discovers why he
married her.
London is portrayed as
dirty and c·onfusing. Emilie
becomes her own independent person through bitter
expenenee . One review
calls this a "classic fair&gt;'
tale." and I will agree that It
does have some of those
elements. It is a satisfying
story with a worthy heroine.

''token."

This was nearly a plotless
novel, somewhat similar to
The Catcher in the Rye.
except Lee is a bit less neu-

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�PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Celebrity label pioneer Jaclyn Smith mines the home front
&amp;unba:p ~imes -ienttnd
BY LYNN ELBER
AP TELEVISION WAll ER

LOS
ANGELES
Before Jennifer Lnpe1
began hawkin g frocks anti
perfume,
before Sean
"Diddy" Cnmlh and his
Sean John thread.' . bcrore
Kathv Ireland led the
charge · into sup,rmodcl
merchamJi'sin!:!. thl're wa~
Jaclyn Smith. "
TWo Uentt.les ago. capital izing on her "Charlie's
Angels"
fame.
Smith
signed a deal for a Kman
clothing
line.
Gi 1 en
Smith's image '" the ekgant Angel on th~ TV
series. it wa~ ~een a~ ruugh ly akin to Posh Spice ma,rryin g a pro bowler instc&lt;td
of a glam ~occer -;tar.
"At the time. p ~oplc said.
'Don' t do Kmart.· But
something in my head sa id.
'Yes, I want to it."' S'mith
recalled . Amonp tlwsc
against the idea her "as
cosmetics
maker ~lax
Fador, which didn't ll'iish
the idea of its pitchwoman
attached to sub-couture
clothing.
But the I'!H5 panncrsl1ip
betwee n Sniith and Knwn
proved lucrative for both .
with her line a mainstay lor
the . retail cha i11 .\ince it.'
introduction.
" I don't have to defend it
anymore. One hundred milli on women are wearing

(the clothes) and it's bee n
phenomenally successful."
Smith sa id . Annu"l sales
have reac hed as hi~h a~
$600 million, 'accoruing to
the actress-entrepreneur.
She was "a historical pioneer in the celebrity branJ
business," saitl Michael
Levine. a Hollywood publicist and autlHJr or "A
Branded World." While she
didn 't aYtain pop icon statu;.
he 'aid. Smith was abk to
offer a "whole,ome. middle
of America brand ...
But as celebrities who rol -

I'm from Houston. It just family membeC', .,treets thi' and coiled my facts,
'ecmed tn tit," she said. " I she's lived on or. with an cduL·atc Ill\ self.''
Among· her corporate
think U\&gt;d has a plan for us: element of Hollywoou glit My ~ids were grown up and ter. character., and roks duties arc pcr"'nal appearit was. ·Let's challenge her she's played on TV. it~clud­ ances to meet potential cusin another area ....
ing Jacqueline Bou\ i~r tomer~ . On a rccenl visir to
Hawaii
she
promoted
If Km;~ rt shoppers were KenneLly.
In the end. it\ the goods .laclvlt Smith Home ;\1 a
wooed by Smith's look s
&lt;tlonc with her low-priced that counts mr;rc than mdiiarv ba\l! ~tore. ' !111011!!
clotl1ing. furniture shopper., celebrity (:lout, said licens - the rciailers carrying he'r
furniture. and gave pep
might feel equally ardem ing expert flrochstein .
"The name will help you tulks to salespeople.
ah011t her Los Angeles
Her memorable first in- ·
IH&gt;liSC . Fillet! with to-d ie- get nnto the sales lloor, bu t
store
·appearunce for Max
ahnut
for antiques . .it's impecca- ultimately • it 's
hl\ decorated down to th e wfJCther ... they see it. in the f·aclor. at a Bloomingdale's
la:.t detail, including deli- case of furni tu re,. as ;omc- in f\cw York. came at the
calC hand wwels in tlte thing they want in their lictght .or her "Char lie's
home." he said . ."It 's not An ~ d&lt;' Ltmc.
powd~:r room.
"lh~y had a stampede
(When this visitor as~cd like the name ')aclyn
Smith'
is
scrawled
all
o1cr
and
had to. Utke me out."
to usc the bathroom .
she recalled. These days.
Smith prov'ed her hospital- the couch."
Smi th sounds cunfitlent pe&lt;lple stil l show up with
itv : She hurried ahead to
m~akc everything was per- her home furnishings. a st ep dolls and lunch pails from
up in price from her Kman 'her I'!76-H I tenure as Kelly
fect. It was.)
Just as she insi sted on apparel, wi ll be equally Garrett on the rlu rfy detecbeing ,ui int egral part of well-receiwd. She\ consid- tive series.
AP Photo
'·Pcopk who are tru e fans
the Kmart design and mar- ering cosmeti cs and jewelry
Actress Jaclyn Smith sits on one of her signature sofas at keting team, Smith said , lines as her next ventures.
are shaking. cryinl? ... it's
the Navy Exct1ange in Pearl Harbor. Hawaii , Saturday, June she has a direct hand in
Has she· surprised herself very emot ional. lr \ .not sign
17 . Smith made an appearance in Pearl Harbor to introduce her new home rurnishings. with her business acumen ·'
and move on," she said. Her
her home furnishi ngs line, which includes upholstered and She works with manufac"l was brought up with a admirers must think time
wood furn iture, bedding and fabric.
turers and invites them to sense of investment. of has stood still for Smith,
• her home to understand being W t.\ e with· your who at 5R looks virtually
lt&gt;wcd Iter became virtual
"My goal is to be a whole- her taste.
money. in a conservative unchanged. her hair still
mngh,merates, Smith kept home resource ," she said.
A further Smith touch: way. So. with that. I truly glossy brown and her figure
her commercial interests ''We're on our way and Sofa styles are named after question why am I doing Angels-trim.
narrow. She was balancing almost there." motherhood and acting (TV
She's among a growing
projects inducting "Rage of number of famous · nan\es
An~els'' and "The Bourne
to move into home furnish ,
'
Identi ty") with her retail ings. Even the cachet of
responsibilities.
late greats such as Ernest
"There was ne ver a lull: Hemingway
and
Kmart. mdvies. miniseries. HLtmphrey Bogart is being
kids in scltOol. Homework mined for home decor
was harder than all of it.'' Jines.
said
Marty
sa id Smith. Her children. Brochstein , executive ediwith ex- husband Tony tor of The Licensing Letter.
Ric:hmond. are Gaston, 24,
Jaclyn
Smith
daughter Spencer International, formed four
and
Autos
Great Rales , Awesome Tenm · Fast Service
Margaret, 20.
years ago as she launched
In recent years, however. her new ventures, has partMotorcycles
~ -tb!.C,..,c;;Q!!L_ _ __
Smith started branching out ners
including
Largo
Recreational Vehicles
~Pomer o y 99 2·2136
in'a big way - or in, with International of Houston
Boats
'Tupper!.
PloJns 985-3395
bclyn Smith Home goods and Hickory .Hill Furniture
.•GatttpotJS
446-BANK
ATVs
including upholstered and " Corp. of Valdese, N.C.
~Milson 7 7 3-6400
wood furniture and fabric .
It was Largo president
Farm Tractors
~ Point Pleasant 674-8200
Rugs. fine art reproduc- Glenn Wakefield who first
'
' '~'u''- '\'•S~- ·, ·· ;i ,l•'td &lt;JI)e.'~ t"-.)t &lt;'Pi) _1 ::) 'f;'t ,..,,..,y ·''9 )-')'~- i' :YJ.t(l' •') ·
!C:;~-r 1 ~
tions. lamps and more also approached Smith.
t (;-.~ "-~~·"'' .&lt;t ~;r; !.:-~ -.A S ! :;o ·~-·:.;..:, ·f:'&lt;1 ~- .• ~.1,'&lt;-.'~:: •· · , , •rJ • ',_,:;, "'~-. :' '·':&gt;! -"
.•
are av:tilable or planned.
" He was from Houston.

.

·, ;),-If/

,;, ) •

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Down on the Farm, Page 02
Gardening, Page D6

Sunday, July 23, 2006

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,.~. . r .,. . - . ,_
.· I . . : ,.._: I
BY MOLLY GORDY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW YORK Hey
there, you with the barbecue: Are you suffering from
the Seven-Week Itch ?
It happens to the best of
us. Memorial Day arrives.
you can't wail to grill hot
dogs and hamburgers,
chicken and ribs. By
Independence Day, you're
staving off boredom by
grilling steaks. shrimp,
swordtish, onions, zucchini
and pineapple.
By mid-July, you've hit
th~ wall. There are seven
more weeks until Labor
Day, it 's too hot to cook
indoors,
and
you've
exhausted all your favorite
menus. No mere marinade
can save you from the barbecue doldrums.
Do not despair.
With a dollop of daring.
this can become the most
exciting and delicious part
of the outdoor season. You
can grill pizzas or oysters,
tofu or watermelon - even
ice cream. Best of all, you
can cook each of these dishes within minutes, without
working up a sweat or
neglecting your guests.
For starters, you could do
as the Deen family does in
Savannah, Ga., and grill
some oysters. Food TV star
Paula Deen. who owns anti
runs Lady and Sons .restaurant with her boys Bobby
anJ Jamie, likes to serve
them with an elegant
lemon-dill sauce.
But Jamie says he prerers
the way his Uncle Bubba
makes them across town at
Bubba's Oyster House. ·
"You can do la-di-da, but
this is just the opposite,"
says Jaime, whose new TV
show with brother Bob,
"Road Trip," premiered on
Food Network in early July.
"These are Lowcountry
fire-roasted oysters that you
drink with beer, not champagne .~'

PRE-OWNED VEHICLES

Dl

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Unlike his sister Paula's,
Bubba's recipe for gri lled
oysters has never been writ. ten down, his nephew says.
"'You just take off the top
of the shell and put 'em
directly over the honest part
. of the grill and pour some
gar Iic butter on ·em and a
little Parmesan · cheese,"
Jamie Dean advises.
, "'Some oft he garlic butler
will drip onto the fire, and
the tlames will leap up
around the oyster and crisp
up the cheese. As soon as
that happens - about 2 to 3
minutes - you just' take it
off the grill and take a fork
to the cheese-crusted oyster
and a piece of bread to mop
up all those buttery juices.
Hoo-boy. it 's good!
. "1' m not usually an oyster
fan, but I could eat'these all
day long."
If you're looking. for lowfat rather than Lowcountry,
you could follow the lead of
Corinne . Trang.
the
Vietnamese- A me rica n
cookbook author whose I0minute recipe for grilled
tofu with ginger-soy sauce
is enough to make even the·
most devoted carnivore turn
,vegetarian.
"Firm tofu , when grilled,
i&gt; turned into something
completely new," the NewYork based Trang writes in
her latest hook. "The Asian
Grill" (Chmnide, 2006.
$22.95).
"Grilling makes the tofu
cakes )"Oilderfully crisp on
the outside and tender on
the inside.''
For the main course, nothing could be finer than the
famous grill ed pizza recipe
invented at AI Forno
Res taurant in Providence,
Owners
Johanne
R.I.
Killeen and George Germon
struggled for weeks to perfect the 8-minute te'chnique
in 1980 in the mistaken
belief piaas were cooked

this way in Italy.
r-~~::;;;;-::~-;;~=::-;;;;:;-:----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::====:::::::=:::=:::::;::::1
By. the time they discov- .
ered that Italians use woodburning ovens, their signature dish had attracted ·a
huge following that endures
The jo/lowinfi recipe will make
to this day.
enough dough for four !l-inch pizzas.
AI Forno's executive chef
Each pizza will sen&gt;e 4 as an appetizBrian Kingsford warns that
er or 1 as a m&lt;~ill course. You can use
you can't grill a great pizza
any combinalion of fresh herbs for
on a gas grill, which can't
this exceptionally delicious pizza. AI
heat higher than 550 F. He
Forno
executive
chef Brian
advises hardwood or charKinKsford:5 latest version uses a
coal fired to its maximum
"Simon and Garjimkel" combinatim1
heat of I ,200 F.
of parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme.
"The secret of success is
low moisture - if the crust
6 ounces Pi7.za Dough (recipe foldoesn't
crisp quickly
lows)
enough, the pizza will be
1/4 cup virgin olive oil
soggy," he says. The AI
1 teaspoon minced fresh .garlic
Forno chef uses hardwood
1/2 cup mixed chopped fresh
briquets that have a moisherbs of your choice (3 or 4 differ·
ture content of only 3 perent kinds)
cent, and Italian fontina
1/2 cup loosely packed shredded
cheese. which has a lower
Italian fontina cheese
moisture content than moz2 tablespoons rreshly grated
zarella.
Pecorino Romano
For the salad, take your
1 scallion, sliced lengthwise into
cue from Daniel Humm of
paper-thin strips
Eleven Madison Park restau6 tablespoons Pizza Sauce
rant in Manhattan. The
(recipe follows)
Swiss chef tirst tasted grilled ·
Prepare a hot charcoal tire, setting
watermelon at a tapas bar in
the gri II rack 3 to 4 inches above the
Barcelona, Spain. He liked it
coals.
.
.
AP Photos
so much that he added it to
On a large, oiled. inverted baking Brian Kingsford, execut1ve chef at AI Forno in Providence, ·R.I., adds sliced
the menu at his previous
sheet; spread and flatten the pizza scallion to the pizza he 's gritted, before serving it at the restaurant, Saturday,
restaurant, Campton Place in
dough with yo4r hands into a I0- to June .24.
San Francisco. where it
12-inch freeform circle, 118-inch
proved so ·popular that he
thick. Do not make a lip. You may about 6 to 8 minutes. Remove from
When the dough is smooth and
brought the recipe with him
end up with a rectangle: the shape is fire, spri nkle with the scallion and shiny, tran sfer it to ,a bowl that has
to New York.
unimportant, but do take care to serve at once.
been bru s h~d with olive oil. To preFor an elegant presentaMakes I to 2 servings as main vent a skin from forming . brush the
maintain an even thickness.
tion , Humm uses a cookie
top of the dough with additional
When the tire is very hot. use your course, 3 or 4 as an appetizer.
cutter to cut the grilled
olive oil. cover the bowl with plastic
fingertips to lift the dough gently by
watermelon into rounds and
\\(rap, and let rise in a warm place,
the two corners closest to you, and
~zza
tops it with cylinders of red,
away
from drafts. until double in
drape it onto the grill. Catch the
yellow and green tomato
bulk.
90
minutes to 2 hours .
loose edge on the grill tirst and guide
(For one pizza)
that he extracts using an
'Punch down the dough and knead
the remaining edge into place over
One envelope (2 112 teaspoons)
apple corer. The structure
once more. Let the dough rise again
the tire. Within a minute the dough active dry yeast
sits on a pool of vibrant
for about 40 mi'nutes. Punch down
will puff slightly, the underside will
1 cup warm water
green dressing made in the·
the
dough. If it is sticky, knead in a
stiffen, and grill marks will appear.
I teaspoon sugar
blender from olive oil. fresh
bit more flour.
Using tongs. immediately tlip the
2 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
basil and balsamic vinegar.
crust over, onto the coolest part of
1/4 cup johnnycake meal or fineTo avoid mushiness, "I
the grill. Quickly brush the grilled ground white cornmeal
cook 'the watermelon only
surface lightly with olive oil. Scatter
3 tablespoons whole-wheat nour
on one side for less than two
the herbs, garlic,and cheeses over the
I tablespoon virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons virgin olive oil
minutes -just long enough
dough, and spoon dollops of the
2
l/2
to
3
1/2
cups
unbleached
I tenspoon minced rresh garlic
to give it grill marks and a
tomato sauce over the cheese. DO white flour
12 Italian plum tomatoes,
smoky taste," Humm says.
NOT cover the entire surface of the
peeled,
seeded and chopped
Dissolve
the
yeast
in
the
warm
Rick Browne, who hosts
pizza with sauce, or it will become water with the sugar.
I
teaspoon
knsher salt
the PBS TV series Barbecue
soggy. Finally, drizzle the pizza wiih
After
5
minutes,
stir
in
the
salt.
Heat
the
olive
oi l in a heavy saute
America, also found inspiI to 2 tablespoons of olive oil.
johnnycake meal , whole-wheat !lour pan. Add the .garlic. and saute -until
ration for exotic grilling
Slide the pizza back toward the hot and oil.
golden. Add the tomatoes and cook
while dining out. "I saw a
coals, but not direct-ly over them.
add
the
while
flour.
stirover
moderate heal. stirring frequentGradually
baked Alaska once at a ·
Using tongs, rotate the pizza fre- ring with a wooden spoon until a stiff ly. lor about I0 minutes, or until the
restaurant in Ponland, Ore. ,
quently. so that different sections dough has formed. Place the. dough sauce hegins to thicken. Add the salt.
and I thought 'How do they
receive high heat: check the under- on a !loured board. and knead it tor Set aside until ready to use. The sauce
do that?''' the Vancouver,
side
often to see that it is not burn- several minutes. adding only enough may be cooled to room temperature,
Wash.. resident recalls .
ing.
The
pizza is done when the top additiona,l flour to keep the dough covered, and refrigerated for up to 4
"And then I thought ,
is bubbly and the cheese melted. from sticking.
days, or frozen for up to 2 weeks.
' Wait a minute! I could do
that on the grill!"'
Browne's original recipe,
published in hi s 2003 book
"Grilling America" (Harper
Collins, $25.95), proved too •.
messy, as it called for slicing
the ice cream and cutting
through crisp meringue with
1 large pound cake,
a serrated knife. His current frozen
version calls unabashedly
3 square ice cream bars
for using processed foods, (no sticks), hard
for the simple reason that
12 to 16 egg whites
':They're a perfect tit!"
1 teaspoon cream of tar"No slicing, no didng, no tar
leaking, no crumbling," he
1 cup granulated sugar
says. "I just put one ingrediRaspberry and apricot
ent on top of the other, and jams
five minutes later I take it
Chocolate sprinkles
off the grill and everyone
1 wooden plank, 12-bysays 'Wow!'"
12-by-1-inch thick, soaked
in hot water
Before he turned barbeHeavy-duty aluminum
·cue king, Rick Browne was foil to wrap plank
an AP photoifra pher. For
8-ounce jar chocolate
that sentimental reason, he fudge sauce or caramel
has agreed to share his sauce or other topping of
politically incorrect ·yet your choice
surefire secret for making
Electric knife (for best
In this photo provided by Rick Browne, Rick's Barbecued Ice Cream is cu t into sections
this new, improved version results)
·
of his signature dessert.
Fresh mint leaves for showi~g the layers of cake. ice cream, jam a'l,d mering~e from which the dessert is made.
"If you use the giant Sara garnish
Lee
poundcake
and
Get a good hot tire (500 F the egg white,_ Put in bring the meringue all the icc cream with an electric
Klondike ice cream bars, plus) going in a kettle grill refrigerator.
way down to touch ihe roil knire (much preferred way)
Working quickly. \vrap all around cake. (If vnu or, if vou don't have one.
it's a perfect fit," he con- or smoker. If you use chartides. "You just lay three of coal in a kettle grill mound the wet plank in the foil. Cut leave any ga ps th e ·il:c usc a ·very sharp serrated
the bars on top of the ca.ke it in two piles on either side frozen pound cake in half cream may · melt and ,poi I knife that you dip into hot
and there's no gaps or leaks of the cooker, leaving the horizontally. and lay one the desser-t.) Place the plank water between slices. Slide
- plus you get an automat- middle of the grill open. If half on the foil . Spread rasp- on the center of the grill in slices (•nto plates onto
ic and even layer of choco- using a gas grill, tu(n on all berry jam on top of the the cooker.
which yo u have spOOI]ed u
late sauce."
pound cake half. Place the,
Check after 2 minutes and generous pool of chocolate
burners to high.
(Browne particularly recWhip the egg whites, ice cream bars on the jam- as soon as you see the peaks or caramel sauce. or both.
ommends the Peppermint cream of tartar. and sugar covered pound cake Sll they of meringue brown remove Garnish sauce with fre ;h
Patty flavor bars, or the into a stiff meringue so that exactly cover th e surface. the dessert from the cooker. mint leaves. ·shake more
~ainbow. which he says
when you pull beaters away Place th e other piece of This will take only a few sprinkles over meringue and
"looks especially nice when sharp points stand up in the , pound cake on top of th e ice minutes with a very. hot fire. :-;ervc.
you cut into it becau se meringue . At the last cream, and cover with apri 1 Slide the cake off the plank
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
there 's a layer each of minute add a generous cot jam. Completely cover and onto a chilled serving
(Adapted .fium
Rick
chocolate,
vanilla and amount of chocolate sprin- the cake on all side' with platter. Cut vertical slices Brmt·ne 's \1 ' \\ ' H '.horbc•nu•u ~
strawberry ice cream.")
kles and quickly fold into meringue, being · ~urc to through meringllc. cake and meri co. CO'fl )
/ .

Grilled Pizza With
Fresh Summer Herbs

Dough

Pizza Sauce

Rick's Barbecued
Ice Cream (aka
'Grilled Alaska')

...

�iunbap ltme~·ientinei

DOwN' ON THE FARM

USDA backs grants competition program
WASHINGTON - The
Appalachian
Re gional
Commission (ARC) and the
U.S.
Department
of
Agriculture
(USDA)
announced their support for
a grants competition program th is week to promote
value added agricultural
development · in
eight
Appalachian states.
Supportin~
the
Sustainable- Community .
Innovation (SCI) grants
competition sponsored by
the
Sustainable
Agricultural and Research
(SARE) program and the
Rural
. Southern
Center
Development
(S RDC ) is part of ARC's
overall . effort to promote
asset-based
economic
development in the region,
which also includes boosting export and · trade of
Appalachia's wood products, more effectively utilizing regional renewable
and non-renewable energy
resources through ARC's
energy blueprint, and creating gateway communities.
Non-profit organizations,
local governments, farm
cooperatives, educational
institutions, and local and
regional development organizations are all eligible to
ap_ply for the grants.
Communities throughout
the South have used funding

from previous SCI grant&lt;
for such activities as follds
&lt;afety training for Kentud 1
farmers. business planniP~!
to help Georgia fa1m
women start a marketing
cooperative, and e~trepre­
neurship training for limited
111
resource
farmers
Alabama.
ARC and USDA are each
awarding $100,0()0 to the
total roo! of $200,000 that·
will be made available for
this grants competition.
"ARC is pleased to part·
ner in thi s endeavor with
USDA to-add value to the
region's agricultural assets
and increase job opportunities," said ARC federal co·
chair Anne Pope. "USDA
has a proven record of success in advancing agricultural development and
working together we can
do more to address. the
challenges facing
the
Region in the new global
economy."
Kentucky Gov. Ernie
Fletcher, ARC states' cochair.
noted
that
"Appalachia is a region rich
in natural resources and
agricultural opportunities.
This grants competition will
serve as an encouragement
to utilize those assets more
creatively. Both the producers and consumers of agricultural products will bene-

tit from the results."
Alabama,
Georgia,
Kentucky,
Mississippi,
North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and
Virginia are eligible to
compete in this grants
competition.
The
remaining
Appalachian • States of
Maryland, New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and
West Virginia will be eligible to participate in a similiu grants competition to
.be announced later this
summer.
The SCI call for proposals
is
available
at
http://www.southernsare.ug
a.edu/callpage.htm.
Proposals must be submitted through an online
template by Nov. 28, 2006.
Maximum awards are
$50,000. · Awards will be
announced in early 2007.
There will be a session at
the ARC annual conference,
Oct. 11-12, in Pikeville,
'Ky. , about this grant oppor- ·.
tunity. Registration information about the annual
conference will be available
as
of July
3I
at
http://www.arc.gov/index .d
o?nodeld=31
For more information
about ARC's Asset Based .
Development
Initiative,
please
visit
www.arc.gov/abd

Growers report stronger prices
and unusually swe~t peaches
Bv ELLIOTT MINOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FORT VALLEY, Ga.
Geot'gia and South Carolina
report strong
grower&lt;
demand and decent prices
for their 2006 peach crops,
and consumers may even
find the fruit sweeter than
usual because of weeks of
hot, dry weather.
"We've had a phenomenal-tasting peach and excellent quality due to the dry
summer," said Bobby Lane,
vice president of Lane
Packing Co. of Fort Valley,
one or Georgia's major producers.
The higher prices and
stronger demand are linked
in part to problems with
in
the
peach
crop
California, which produces
approximately 60 percent
of the nation's peaches,
according to the California
Tree Fruit Agreement, a
marketing body.
California's warm winter
and cool, wet spring are
expected to cut the state's
production to 380,000 tons,
2 I percent less than in 2005,
according to the U.S.
Agricultural
Statistics
Service.
South
Carolina
and

PageD2

Georgia - nicknamed the Georgia peaches are cons isPeach State- usually vie for . tently exceeding that level
second and third place in pro- this year, said Kathy Taylor,
duction behind California.
the University of Georgia's
Dry weather tends to peach specialist.
increase the sugar concen"Consumers may be able
tration in fruits such as to notice that Georgia
peaches, making them peaches are a little sweeter,"
sweeter and more flavorful. she said.
South Carolina's crop,
With a tighter supply
reduced by freezing temper- nationwide, the average
atures and frost iq the spring price fpr a ton of peaches
and later by hail, IS expected soared to $819 last month,
to total 60,000 tons this year, $223 more than in the aver20 'percent less than in 2005, age price in June 2005, the ·
the statistics service said.
statistics service said.
"Yes, we had a crop
"Georgia's a little short,
reduction," said Martin South Carolina's a little
Eubanks, a senior commodi- short, California had a real
ty merchandiser with the different spring," said AI
South Carolina Department Pearson of Fort Valley's Big
of Agriculture. " But as the 6 Farm, another major proseason has worn on with the ducer. "Combined, it's just
drier weather, the eating been a shorter supply of
quality of fruit has been out- peaches.
standing. We still have a
Georgia's .harvest began
good volume of fruit for in early June and will conconsumers and the eating tinue until about the third
quality has been very good." week of August. South
The drought reduced the Carolina's season began a
anticipated
sjze
of little later and runs through
. Georgia's crop, but still the mid-September. ·
state should produce 42,000
The shorter peach supply
tons, 5 per cent more than shouldn't have much impact
last year, the statistics ser· on consumers, Eubanks said.
vice said.
"·It's still a good value for
Peach brokers prefer fruit the consumer and hopefully
with a total sugar content of the farmer is also able to
more than I2 percent, and . make a little money," he said.

Researchers hope to foster fish farming in Georgia
Bv ELLIOTT MINOR

"Aquaculture is a viable future."
alternative type of agriculDuncan said tish harvest,
Duncan
said. ing from the oceans is at a
ture."
FORT VALLEY, Ga.
''There's no doubt there will ma.ximum and fisheries that
The gurgling tanks in Pat ' be an increasing demand for · are depleted are unlikely to
Duncan's greenhouses are seafood now and in the recover.
tilled with colorful fish and
lush
water
hyacinths.
Nearby, herbs are growing,
sustained by the tanks'
nutrient-laden water.
Duncan is an aquaculture
specialist and hopes her tish
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market
production research at Fort
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Valley State U!Jiversity will
Wednesdny, July 19.
·
provide Georgia . farmers
with an alternate source of
income. And with the latest
compac.t recirculating · sys·
275-415# St. $100-$164 Hf. $100-$144 425-525# St.
terns costing as $1 ,000 to
$100-$140
Hf. $95-$125 550-625# St. $95-$'127 Hf.
$2,000, fi&gt;h farming can be
$90-$110
650-725#
St. $90-$122 Hf. $90-$105 750-850
an option for just about anySt. $85-$102 Hf. $80-$95.
one, from Atlanta condo
dwellers to plantation owners.
"We're here to help
Georgians with any type of
Well Muscled/Fleshed $48-$55 Medium/Lean $44aquacultural systems they
$47;.
set up, ~hether it's in
Thin/Light $1 0-$30; Bulls $52-$66.
ponds, raceways, recirculatmg systems or in cages,''
Duncan said.
Duncan's push for aquaCow/Calf Pairs $625-$1 ,250; Bred Cows $290-$875;
culture comes at a · time
Baby
Calves $5-$250; Goats, $15·$125; Lambs, $90when demand for fresh and
dn. ; Hogs, $42-dn.
saltwater shrimp, catfish and
tilapia, all of which can be
produced in Georgia, has
increasing.
U.S.
been
R'eplacement brood cow sale, Wednesday, July 26 at
seafood
consumption
12:30 p.m.
climbed three straight years
before hitting a record 4.8
For more information , call .Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-024 1. Visit the Web site at
billion pounqs in 2004, lhe
www.uproducers.com
·
latest year for which government statistics are ~lva ilabl e.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

,.

•.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

·CLASSIFIED

EXTENSION CORNER

.............
.w .eov•

And"-eon
Coul1tl• Uke

Rainfall adversely affects garden fruits
BY HAL KNEEN •

Hold 'the rain! Several
commercial growers and
homeowners have been
adversely affected by last
week 's heavy rainfall.
Buckeye rot and gray wall
on tom .uoes, as well as fruit
rot on peppers have been
prevalent on bare groundgrown vegetables.
Buckeye rot appears on
maturing tomatoes as a firm
leathery rot with broad
irregular concentric zones
of light and dark. brown. It is
a phytophthora fungus
spore that gets splashed up
from soil onto maturing
fruit. Commercial growers
may usc protective fungicides like Ridomil Gold.
Quadris, Tanos and Gavil to
prevent infections, but they
are not curatives.
Unfortunately, homeown·
ers can not obtain these
products so they must use
other crop management
techniques. Mulching (plastic, paper, straw) around the
plants prevents splashing up
of spores · onto fruit. This
explains why less fruit damage is found in plastic
mulched beds.
'
Crop rotation' helps both
the homeowner and commercial grower as less disease
spores are present to affect
new fruit when weather conditions are right. Reduce
water on the surface of toma-

NoOrte

.... Can!

day trip in Ohio? Take a ride
with the family to the
Gateway Garden Jubilee
from 9 a.m. to I p.m. on
Aug. 5, in Springfield. Clark
County Master Gardeners,
under the auspices of Ohio
State University Extension,
have planted and cared for
an extensive garden next to
the Clark County Extension
Office located at 4400
Gateway Blvd., Springfield
(exit 59 otT Interstate 70).
Spend a couple · hours,
reviewing and takmg pictures
of hundreds of varieties of
annual flowers. perennials,
herbs and vines. Discover an
idea or two in· developing a
heritage "kitchen" garden, a
children's garden and container garden combinations.
Some trial research plots on
new vegetables and turfgrass
will also be on display.
Mini-workshops, garden
tours. children's crafts and
games and entertainment
will also be available. This
program is free and open to
the public.
Within a half hour's drive
are local attractions to finish
the day's enjoyment such as
the Wright Patterson · Air
Force Museum or Young's
Dairy Barn (homemade ice
cream).
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs .
County Agriculture and
Natural
Resources :
Extension Educator,. Ohio .
State University Extension.)

toes, as free- flowing water is
necessary for the penetration
of the fungus spores into the
fruit. Instead of overhead
irrigation. use trickle irrigation. Reduce insect damage
and growth cracks which
provide disease spore entries ·
mto the fruit.
The second disease showing up is gray wall. This
physiological condition prevents tomato fruit from
ripening uniformly. High
soil moisture and humidity
influence the uptake of
nitrogen arld potassium in
maturing fruit. In addition,
temperature fluctuation s
and soi I compaction seem to
accentuate the uneven
ripening. lncreasing potassi um and decreasing nitrogen appears to reduce gray
wall if excessive soil moi sture can be controlled
through raised beds, plastic
mulch and irrigation.
Even with all the problems. the Ohio River-gro)Vn
tomatoes taste much better
than most tomatoes purchased this winter and
spring. Enjoy them while
they are available. When
you purchase locally grown
vegetables from a roadside
stand or the neighborhood
grocery sto,e, the agriculture community thanks you
for supporting yo~r local
farm families.

•••

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6 Younger
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8 Make !he aatuain·
lara. of
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10 ConY!lMI VIP

127

30 lllertine

Tha1gn

t28 Peel
129 Backbone
131 Go by
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138 "The Cantertuy - •
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141 Sudsy drink
1&lt;12 Defted a blow

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32 Wralh

:w Extra tires

36 Accepted
':fl Yearn to have
39 MlqH gertJS
40Picked
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43 Clear and bright
44 Motif
45 Function

94 Smile coyly
96 Mrs. ·l&lt;r.be
97 Adjustable chair

)oWe will not knowing
Y accept any adver
lsement in vlolatio

99~

l,:i~ll~he;;iiila~w.i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii!.l
\'\'-.;OI '\lC 1 \II

r

122 vner

-,-K-rtt-en-,-2-~-,,-,-m-a-le-,,-1
Brw male, 1 Calico,
old {304)675-5313

t33 Snake

female. 140-742·2380

134 Depot (abbr.)

48Elcpert
48 Amlno 49 Like a lot

•

home. Call: 740-696-1290.
Free ki ttens to good home,
Calico and black one. Call

_17_40_J4_4_6_
·•~"-7_.- : : - Free krttens, 2545 Bulaville
Pike. (7401446. 3009 .
-------Free to good home. good
watch dog but not good with
little children. Calt (740)446·
41F.
- - ' - - - -- Golden
Full

:e:in

74 Astonish
76Feed afire
79 Money earned
80 Wooi&lt;er in a casinc

85 Not pos:

87 Deboled
90 (;dtege tOUrM (allllr.)
92 Rill

Approved
Home
only
English Coon Hound ··Red
Tick" young male, hunts
(304)675-5576
::------,-Free Kittens to a · good

7D
72 Reliance .

63Duratlon
84 Dl$paraglng relllllllc

aweeKs

6 mon th old Mixed BalCer

59 British le~
81 Penl
63 Belief
84 Clly In WISCOnSin
66 ProWIB vOih weapons

V~goal

GJ\'t.:.·\W1\Y

1.5yr old Rotweiler mix to
·. good home preferably in
~ountry Gobd wlk1ds aPd
other ammals Needs room
to run. (740)591-91 16.

t23 FO!'d or Fonda
125 Farm strudura
126 Wan
130 Sl&lt;llet
132 Throw in a CUIVO

53 Throb
54 Mild Dutch chetlse
57 Giayish brown

81 Bini SQII1d

\rs

L.o~-------'

LJ1&lt;1ng

116 Glacial ridge
117 River to !he North Sea
11 BWorker ur&lt;lefgroond
119 Hard wood
t2t Guide In a !heater

50 Pitchot'
51 Hardens
52 LOIKl sec:urilv

"1.1&gt;1
Allar constellation

newspape

ccepls only hel
anted ads meetin
OE standards.

Duplicate

93 Sporty car

115

22 Leave high and dry

28 Straf9G

&gt;This

102 Competitions
104 GiPSY- t.aa
t 05 Greek 1aner
107 Oval nul
109 Rescue
tt 0 Witch dot:tor
112 Broadcast
t 13 Tlmbe!lard
1t 4 Cat lllat h&lt;JniS

11 Sweater Site
t2 Certain voles
13 Caviar
14 Big sotamandet 12
wds&lt;h:Y
15 Parade display
16 - -luncll
t7 Arab chlel (vat.)
t 9 Dumped a killer
20

91

car

pplles.

86 Siil up
89 Aqualic bod

4 Pllpe's name
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120 Hurry
124 On ID ay llr1d
125 Warning signal
126 Zahn or Alldul

&gt;Current rate

82 t.tanfes

Retriever and a Collie bo th
. dogs have papers. can
(740)645-3212.
- - - ' - - : - - : : -- Perennial Cat Shelter

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Feeder Cattle-Steady

I'm Ben . I'm yellow and
while,
declawed
and
neutered. I need a home.
inside only. (740)645-7275

1

.. 0

70

~

YARD SALE

ARIJ
Po~1ERt&gt;V/I\1tnm. E

Yard Sale Across from
Mason Fire Departmen t
Clothes, furniture. Kitche n
Items, Great for college stu·
dents Fri. July 21st and Sat
22nd 8:00-??

House on left Bud Chattrn
Road. Baby items, boys and
girls clothes. Pool table.
Furn1ture. Weight Bench

AUL110N A.NB

F) .EA MARKET

'--ioiiiiiiillliiiiiiiiiiio.
Cross Creek Auctrun Bllffalo
th 1s week Ron Pnce. Air
Conditioned Building We
gladly accept Visa and
Master Card (304)937-2118
or {304 )550- 1616
Ste hen Re&gt;ed

lrc~

1639

\VANTI&lt;:f)
TO Bl iY ·

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C
-----·-~

1740)446·2436.

•

Assistant
ROCK·
REHAB .

STOP

_

1

iJ;.

.. o

10

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Hn.P WANim

MACHINISTS
Immediate Day and Evening
shift position lor CNC and
Manual Machinists .
Pay
based on exper~ence and
qualifications
Must have
own hand tools. We ol1er

Day Care Center accepting
applications tor part time
child
care
workers.
Applicants must have a high
school diploma. at leas t 2
years experience in a child
care center or e)(perience as
a home provider licensed by
the state. Qualified applicants please send resu me
1o Cara Hall Day Care, INC
P.O Box 393 Middleport. OH
45760. NO PHONE CALLS
PLEASE

Cal l 7 days a weeK
666·804-9242 .
www.transportamerica.com
~,

'c 'f 'r 'r ;'("'r 'c ·.'r 'r .l
,'r 'r .'r 'r 'r ~·r -h~
;'r 'r .'r 'r ~

Drivers: FREE Health Ins I
Bonuses &amp; Home-Timel
Regional Loads.
1yr Tractor Trt. Exp Aeq

MARTIN TRANSPORT
866-293-7435

'r'r~ .'r'r'r'r ~'r

Dom1no's Pizzrt Now H1rinq ------~~
Sate
Drivers.
Poin-t EXP.
OH and WV Coal

Please fa)( resume to Beth
Jackson atl -866·451 -0261
AEP is ar Equal Opporlun1ty
Employer MI FIDlV

• ~-&lt;0 EXPERIEI&gt;.CE NECFSSAI"IY
• F'..ILL·li~.I E CLASSES
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ALLIANCE

TRACTOR· TRA IL ER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE . VA

1-800-334-1203

Help Wanted

DEPUTY DIRECTOR
POSITION'
Area Agency orf' Aging announces the
availability of full lime Deputy Director
position. The success ful applicaht will
l~ · responsibiC for monitoring and

overseeing the doy to day operations of
th~

Arc,\ Agency on Aging.
Qualifications: Bachelor's Degree in
Busines~
AdminiStr&lt;ttion,
Business
Management, Public Administration,
Accounting or Related Field . A
minimum of two (2) yeo:lrs ~x perience in
managt&gt;ment. A minimum of three (3)
years experience in a cornhin.1tion of
gr~ntsmanship, government accounting
and · rt•ports or a.n equivule nt of
education, tr&lt;1ining and experie'nce.
Base Salary: $30,377.00. Excellent fringe
benefit po.Kkag~. Resume mut~t include
three (3) profcssio n.11 rcfcrl'nces. N~
phone calls. Resuml'" will bl' dCCt&gt;pted
un til thl' pu-.itinn is filled by a
qualified pers0n.
f
Send
resun\e
to: B11 ckeyt·
Hil1sHocking Valley H.t~gional Dc\·elopment

District
Attl'ntilm: jt&gt;nny t\1dvlahon
D~J?uty Director Position

f'.O. Bo' 52U
Reno, Ohio -15773
;\n Equc!l Opportunity Emt-"lloyrr

.
Company prov ides lodg1ng,

transporratron,
and
P6rDiem. AVERAGE starting wage with cost of benefits included is $205.00 per
field day worked, with a
chance to advance up to
$263 00 per field day
worked . We provide paid
training and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS.
Pre·
Employment DRUG TEST
and a valid Driver's li cense
is requirar;l. ClasS A CDL 1s
a plus, but not required .
Send worK history and day
time phone number to

·Pay commensura1e with
expenence
·work in Gallipolis Ferry, WV
until Sep-06
"If willing to travel , perm
empl avail
"Mechanical,
Hydrauli-c.
Supervisory, Oredg1ng background a plus
TECHNICIAN TRAINEE .
"Class A or B COL a plus
PO. BOX 565, MARIETTA,

OHIO 45750

EOE

Mus\ have less than 6 points little Caesars now hiring. All
on drivers lie. lor perm levels of Mgmt E;t:perience
employ.
needed
Advancement
opportunities available. Mail
Call Bob at
resume to PO Box 689
800-860-7378
P!OC!orvitle, OH 45669 or
Metropolitan Environmental laiC to (740)886-7425
Servrces. Inc. 5055 Nike Dr.
Local conven1encc s'lore
Hill iard, OH 43026
accepting applications for
Fax: 6t4-77 1·2761
St01e
Manager.
olfjce@metenyjro~com
Convenience slor;e experi-

Miners needed!
Send
resume to Dav1d Stanley
Consultants, Coal Miner,
152 Roush Crrcle, Fairr_nont.
WV 26554 or Fax to 304- Heallhcare Serv1ces Group
534·3917 or go to DSC- the nation's largest prov1der
of laundry and housekeep·
LLC .corn to apply Online.
1ng services for long term
Expertence Rapid Growth. care is currently seekmg

----

Help Wanted

FILTER PRESS
OPERATORS NEEDED
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
S!RVICES COMPANY
Join a stable and successful
sludge dewatering company

Refrigerated Carrier based
As · a fast, reliable , always·
in Canton. OH is looking tor
on , cable Internet service.
OTR Class A COL drivers 1Q
Aap1d Cable is currently
haul loads out of Jackson ,
looking
for
a Cable
00 . --~~ffiol
Technician in the Gallipolis
- - - - - - - - experience &amp; clean MVR.
:1nd Sullen areas.
Wanted To· Buy. Charles
Drckens' Books. Phone-· •$500 Sign On Bonus
304-675 -6499
•40 cents/miles· all miles
weekly pay
I \11'1 0\ \II .\ I
•Late model Frelghtllner lnsta!ICJ!Techniclan
Sl· R\ I&lt; I ~
Con.dos
Experience with installation
1:'11:'::0:"------., •95% no touch freight
of ~able TV to include instal·
Hn J' \\'ANTEll
•Hqspltaflzatlon and 401 K
lations, upgmdes, reconnect
, - - - - - - - · •Hometlme on weekends
downgrades and d1sconnects. Pre·wi1es. post-wires
100WORKERS NEEDED 1·800·652·2362
and aparlment I"&gt;OIC 1nstalla Assemble crafts,
Oriv€r
lion also halplul . Must poswood items.
sess ability ro troubleshoot
Flatbed
To $48Qiwk
and tepilrr from tap to TV.
Owner
Operators
Materials provrded
Must possess valid driver's
Free Information pkg. 24Hr . •Avg St.77 gross-loaded
ltcense and have satisfacto·
mile
801·428·-1649
ry driving record. Strong
•Avg. S.38pm fuel
commumca_tion and cussurcharge
Amerrcan Electric Power
tomer service skills ari:l
•$500 Orientation Pay
essential.
•lnswance Available
AEP has openings in the Pt.
• Flatbed Trailers Av&lt;~itable
Pleasant and
Pomeroy
6 mo OTR exp. requir~g
arerts lor entry lever line
• Ask at:out our Dedicated
Mechanics.
!:W) i dhr@raoidc~
Runs
fQ.IIJt2ns putje_s; Perlorm
866·713-2778
Falc: 303-697-2217
all types of work Involved
No experience'?
wi.th
the
instalfntion .
Catl B00-913-2776
rearrangement,
ma1nte· www.malonecontractors.c www.rapldcallfe.com
nance. operation , remova l
om
and inspec1ion of electrica l· - - - - - - - - EOE
transmissi!)n and distribution Help Wanted Bartender &amp; - - - - - - - facilities.
•
Waitress Contact Moose Experienced Carpenter to
Ex p e rJ..ut..UtLW....o..Lk lodge 73111 call (304)675· work on mobile home.
Requ.lremeots ·
High 1880 or apply in Person
Phone (740}446: 7039

School education. 40 hours
per week with over1ime and
travel as required . Must suecessfutly complete placement exercises and ha\18 the
ability to obtain commercial
driver's license. Must r"eside
withm 30 mrnutes safe dm:e
distance of the reporting
headquarters .
Starting
salary is $14.96/hr.
AEP offers a competitive
. benefits package.

POSTAL JOBS

LEARN . Start building for
your future now by joining
Disputing Your Payr
$ 15·67 ·$26 · 191hr now hir- our Professional Team and
Venfy Your Pay at Trip End ing. For application and free learn lhe sk,' lls to become a
For Faster, Sure Pay
governeme"t job . 1
.
,,
rn o, ca 11 H''gh Pressure Clean,·ng
•Home Time Optrons to F1t Ame&lt;,·can Assoc o1 Labo• 1
·
' · Maintenance Te chnician. All
9 3,- 599· 8042 · 24/hrs. emp. positions require weekly
~~~:a~e~~~s
,e'r
.
TRAVEL ou (51·d e o1 Oh 10,
•BCBS Insurance

281 2.

Call (740 )645·7747.

Lost:
Female
Bluelick
Coonhound in area o!
AVHS . $100 Reward. Call

at

' - - - - - - - · Pleasant ,
Gallipolts
&amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply in
Absolute Top D0flar: US
Person
Silver and Gold Coins - - -- - - - - Proofsets, Gold Rrn gs, Pre·· DRIVE
1935
U.S.
Currency.
Solitaire Dramonds- M.T.S
Best Driving Job
Coin Shop, 151 Second 1
Available
AVenue , Gall 1po1 1s. 740-446·

AVON! All Areasl To Bu~ or
Sell
Shrrley Spears. 304·
Found: Male smoky -colored
675· 1429
Terrier mix with a curled ta1l
on the 100 block of 2nd Avn.

Upcoming specials:

Therapy
Opening
SPRINGS

- - - - - - - - insurance. Vacation. P&lt;Jid
Yard Sale Monday, July Hol1days, and Retirement.
24th, &amp; Tu~sday 25th. 5th Phone 1-304-743-1705

ty (304)675·2535

Rottwe11er
Black
lost:
approx 1201bs. Last ~ocn o"
Smith Ridge Road 1n Long
Bottom (Portland ar ea)
FAMILY PET! REWARD
$200.00! 740-843-5437

1
,0

HllJ' WANI'Ul

li
Shiiiin,;;;e~~-~---, We1mer "" 800·395· 5000
YARn SAU~·
x8578.
•New 0/0p Pay Package
J&gt;t ~ PU:As.\NT
CNC AND MANUAL

Calf Marilyn 304·B82·2645
'
Found: Bicycle call to rdent1·

Lost in Middleport.on Beech
Street. Jul ~ 4th, Small
Shihtzu. Reward ." Go to 207
Beoch Street or. catl 740·
992·1079

" All ads must be prepaid*

110

Garage· Sale . 24th-25111. Inpatient .
Ou1patient.
BEAUTIFUL
Harry Holler residence. lots Pedialn"ts.
of Perenmals
Ra1 n or Therapy gym1 Call Jennifer

An E~cellent way to earn
.__ _ _ _ _ __. money. The N~w Avon.

Back To The Farm:

auslne••
Publication
Sund•y Dl•play: 1:00
Thur•day for sunday•'~''~---

How you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per od
Graphics SO¢ for smoll
$1.00 for large

HuJ' W.INTEU

HELP \\'A,'VJ'Eil

;7:.=~=;:=~
L,Ce•,•tif•le•d-•Oc•c•u•pa•U•on,..Ial "'
o•,,•_.•,----- ·-F•E•D•E•R•A_l_,..I L,LA•BO-R.ER_E.AR•N-A•S•YO_.IU ~;;::;:::~ ~:;;;;;;:;~
• Y SAu:I
lil

Losr
ANtl
FoUND

r Cows-Steady

1:00 p.m.
for ln••.rtlon
In Nex.t Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Co lumn: 1:00 p.rn .
Friday For Sundays Paper
ln ~Col urnn :

Monday ~Frl day

HEu• WAl\'ll:u

•
1

675-5234

Wprd Ads

Monday thru Friday
s:oo a.IT1. to 5:00 p.m.
*POLICIES*

(304) 675-1333
YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dally

short
fJ7 Competent

2 Dugout

~egi~ter

Sentinel

992-2156
Call Today••• (7 40~ 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

84 Condi1ion
86 Degree r1lclpienl. lor

3 Of bees

\!rribune

To Place

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

,

ence
preferred.
Send
resume to: Resume 105 Alta
Street,
Marieua,
Ohio

_•s_7_so_.:::c---::--~

laundry and houseKeeping
managers 1n the Gallipolis
area.· If you want to grow
with an established publicly
held company fax resume
to: 614-577-0125.

Locat Electrical Orstributor
seeKing a part time drill8r.
must be 2! ye"rs old with a
valid drivers license. Send
resume to HR Dept. •250
12th Si. west Hunt 1ngton,
25704

HIRING local individual for
residential
CONSTRUCTION.
Starting
pay
$7.50/hr.
Transpor tation
possibl,y l:J.vailabte
4161771. Between 8.00AM &amp;
5:00PM.
-------Join lhe Avon team Local
Corporate training. Call
(740)379-9422 to start today
tor only $10.

Local last paced bus1ness
needing Office Manage r.
Must be friendly and work
well with the public. Able to
multi task and manage
stress is a must. also must
have good telephone skills
and compu ter knowledge .
Send resume to CLA Box
5.1.8., clo Gallipolis Tribune,
PO Box 469, Gallipolis, OH
A5631.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

wv

MOTIVATED

Make a p!tterence In
the Lives of Children

INDIVIDUALS

v

rou can earn up 1o
••Lr ~. ak
II
;poo-n vy m rng ca s
tor the nation's f9adinQ
non-p rofit organiza·
·m'""u
-• d rng
liOns

Network Direct, Inc. rs
a 35 year old privately
owned natiO("Ial market_n1g firm ana we now
lrncl 11 necessary to

St. Jude Children's
Research .Hosphal

e)(pa 11d our 8)(flcutive
sAles force
We are look1ng for
ambitrous, energ etrc.
se!t mo!rvated individuals who love lo travel . II
you can uphold a
strong ethical pract1ce
in sale. and effectively
present our company
to small groups of collegiate uppe_r cl;issmen
this will be the career
of a lifetime. We hB.ve
an unlimited support
stall with no cold calling or tracking down
leads . leads Star1ing
salary is ·80K lo 130K.

If you start train ing
during the rnonth o1
July you will also earn
a $$$200 Sign On
Bonus SSS
Day and Evening Shift
Positions available
immediately.
Apply Today!

1-Sn-463·6247

ext. 1931
www.lntoCislon.com

Heath Cole

MEDt HOME HEALTH

(913)706·2254 .

AGENCY
HAS OPENING FOR
"""PRN AN'S'"'"

ASSISTANT
MANAGERS

Make calls you
believe 1n'
Call on behalf of the·
National Rifle
Assocla11on
and help protect our
21"1d Amendment rights!
Paid vacations. paid
holidays end paid
training. Full benef1ts
package and 401-K
Call tod ay to schedule
an interview.

1-l!n-463-6247
ext. 2301
S1an now to earn a
5200 Hlrtog Bonual
Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. hiring for Occlipationaf
Therapist.
and Speech
Therapist.
Competitive
Wages and Mileage. Apply
at 1480 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, or 2415 Jackson
Avenue, Po1nt Pleasant. WV
or phone toll free 1·866- 441 1393.

$28 PER HOURI
$42 PER VISIT
Call Judie Reese. AN , C.
Clinrcal Manager at
(740)441-1779 or 1-800·
481-6334 .

Announcements

Announcements

ATTENTION!

WANTED
Full-t1me
licensed Practical Nurse for
a commuMy group home 101
people with MR! DO m
Bidwell. Hours 9am-5pm M·
F. 'current LPN licensl3 and
Pharmacology cerlilicatlon
req uired. Salary: $10.50/hr.
EICceflf!nt benelits pacKage
including
Heafth/Delltaf
Insurance and paid leave
lime. Pre-employment drug
tes.ting. Send · resume to:
Buckeye
Community
Serv1ces , PO 80IC 604,
JacKson,
OH
45640.
Deadline fo r applications·
7125106. Equal Opportunity
Employer.

SEOEMS District and the University
of Rio Grande is currently accepting
applications for its upcoming
Emergency Medical Technician Basic
and Paramedic training program. Both
programs will begin Fall semester at
the University of Rio Grande.
For additional information contact
the SEOEMS District Training
Department at 740-446-9840 ext.
216.

College Credit/Financial Aid Available
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

FREE TRAINING AND JOB PLACEMENT
Home Health Aide/Homemaker Training

Candidate&lt; With prev. orc"rent experience as department,
asmtant or store manage&lt; mamid to b1g box retailer are
encourage&lt;l1o app~. As an EOE, TSC values diversrtv. '
We are al2 billion fortune I000 company w1th

over 600 stores i~ 34 states, the number one retailer
1n our f~eld w1th excellent advancement

Now Hiring! ·
40 hours a week
$200 Hiring Bonuet
Up 10 $8/hour +
bonuses

Part time retail sales posi·
tion avBilable at Ohio Valley
W1reless Pomeroy. Contact Responsible , Reliable Child
740·992-2020 to schedule Ca1e needed . must Have
References and transportarntervrew.
tion Call (304)674-4636

Help Wanted

OPPOR TU NITY IS KNOCKING

L.------

...
Hu.P WA~Till
1
.

potencial.

Whv not have it all going(or you?
II agreat opportunity with an established, dynam1c
and growmg company sounds good to you,
apply in personal the store:

Program
To Be Held M
The Mulberry Commrmiry Center
Pomeroy,OH
The Area Agency nn .A.gi ng i~ nmc-nti y aL:c~pting :rppl ic:Jtinns for their
Home He;.dth Aid~/ Homl!ln:d..l'r Tm i111n!! Prot!ralll. The program io.,
FREE to the parti c 1pu11h . l"piln tr,ldu.runp . pan icip:mt will hl'
a~-.i"ll.'d \\ Il l! jt l ~ pl,ll"l'llk'lll l "u t"l l\ll l\' llllr l i·nw ion ~·!l lltaLl till'
-\rL'd : \ ~ L'I I L" } \• ll .-~ ~ 111 ~ :u 1-l'l[l{l-

n I -~ h-f-L

:\n l ·.qu:rl Oppmu1111t ~ l ·n 1ph1)l'r
To ~ ~.:hc dtlk' an 1nt~n il.'\1 L'dl l M r: i~ ~ Sl'llll'l" C'e mcr al 7-UJ -991-2 161.

['lB.I
Tractor Supply Company

600 Silver Bridge Plaza, Route 7
Gallipolis Oli 45631 · 740·441·8949
Help Wanted

Sening Athem. HN:kmg. Me if!~ . /l.lonn.~e. Murgan . Nobk. l'err;. ~nd Washi ngton Counlr~

Help Wanted ,

Now accepting applications for
supermarket positions. Senior
Citizens Jnd school age welcome.
All positions needed including

Help Wanted

Vascular Lab Assistant/Vascular
Technologist

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED

Help Wanted

Join lht·

\'a" ·rrlar

HOSP!T.'\1"..

Lrh

al

&lt;~ .;_!1"11\\lllt! rq~ \onal

O'HLEI\ESS MEMORIAL
ho~pilallocatcd in the colkge

town ofAthCn:-.. Ohio. Th e ~UIXC'-,,fu l LdtKiillate .will he a h igh

school graduale \\ ilb \ a~l.." u! a.r training required. Maintain
current stalll&gt; as Basic Cardiac Life Suppon provider.

meat

Main,tain Continuing Medical Education (CME) credits for

positions, cake decorators, delibakery clerks, grocery and produce
positions. Local opportunities.
Also a~cepting applications for
MAINTENANCE POSITION.
benefit
package:
Excellent

Intersocicml Commission fur the Accreditation of Vascular

cashiers,

vacat~ons,

service

clerks,

insurance program;

profit sharing program, etc.
Se11d Resume To:
OHIO VALLEY
SUPERMARKETS, Inc.
ilba EASTMAN'S FOOD LANDS
P.O. Box 769, Gallipolis, OH 45631
· An Equal Opportunity Employer

Laburuturic&gt; (ICAVC) Computer skill&gt; required . Possess
knowledge of vascular anatomy, physiology, pathology and
medical term inology. The Lab Assistant perfonns general
clerical duties and performs vascular testing as well as duties
requested by the Tedm1cal Director. Excellent salary mid
bcnetits package. For more information please contact.
Human Resources
55 Hospital Dr.
0' Bh·nt·..,.., \ 1cmnrhtl Hn~pital
llht·ll&gt;, I)H ~S7lll
"'" w.oblenes.s .org
Phone: (740) 592-9221
Fax: (740) 592-9444
EOE

�(

Page 04 • 6unba!' G:lmti 6entintl

r'o

,Jh:uo Wi\N'Illl

I

110

II ~JJ· w\N If "

Sunday July 23 2006

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis OH • pt•• Pleasant WV

'

110

Hw

WA~1}])

reo

WA,1lJ)

lollo

1e

'

1ra

HoMC&gt;
FOR SAtE

HOMES
FOR SALE

Iro

'

Iro

HoMES
FOR SAJ.E

'

Ira

HOMES
FORSAJ.E

'

HOMES

~"OR SAJ.E

n Pal ot 3 BR new k Iehan New Bg 4 Bed oom Wak,
A hans Me gs WANTED PoSl on avp lab e Ae able &amp; trust wo thy 2 homes to sa e close to 4 bed oom 2 bath double
A.Hentlonl
Ohio Va ey Home Hea th The
nc h ng fo Pa tTme and Educat ona Se v ce Cen er to ass s nd v1duals w th house c ean ng Excellerl town c ty schools 1 3 bed ga age pool 2 acres Loca, company offe ng NO cablne s new furnace AC n C ose s F ep ace Panfty

Ms a pas o ope g lo
an ED Teache to the SEMS
Ate ave Schoo)
n
Me~gs Coun y o he 2006
School
Yea
2007
App ca s must be ce
ed 1censed
as
an
nle vent on Spec a ST o be
elg be
to
get
a
Supp emental l cc,se Th s
Parts Salespe son wanted pas o s a 9 month con
Compute expe ence and ac w th Boa d app oved
Sa a v w ne
know edge of fa m equ p bene t s
Sa a y based v ti!~pe ence ant1
ment p ele ed
neQOI able depend g on ce I cat on ace a d ng 1o
Hea r sa a y s hedue SuOm 1 et
tc ot r~t e es t o John
0
Cos
a n zo
Supt~
endent
At hens
Me
!}S
Educa
ana
Se Me
v ce
Cente 320 2 East

Fu I T me CNA STNA.
CHHA PCA Compel ve
Wa!Jes and Bene! Is nclud
ng heath nsu ance and
M teage Apply at 1480
Jackson P ke Ga po s o
2415 Jackson Avenue Pont
Pleasant WV o phone oU
free 1 866 44 1393

n enta
etardat on at a elerences a11a lab e Free room ranch 2. baths newly
emodeled alec heal CIA
o oup u ne n 8 dwell 35 as mates 040)256 6147
ely water
1 s 8d n "pm Sun 2 \Opm
1 o dar 3 bedroom
12
I 1\ \\I I \I
Man fu Wed Must have
bath
a
ge
tam
ty
oom
gas
h o schoo d p omaiGED ..,,...-.,..----.,
heat &amp; cook ng
CJA
a d d ver s I cense and 10
BUSINtS)
(740)446 3907 (4t9)565
lh ea yea s good d v ng
0PrUKt11Nfl1
4137
ence S7 25/h P a
emp oyment Drug Test ng I
-------Se d esume to Buckeye
•NOTICE•
3 bedroom nouse
n
Commun ty Serv cas PO OHIO VALLEY PUBL SH
Pome oy Off ma n oad
Box 604 Jackson OH lNG CO ecommends Ave vrew $26 000 1 740
45640 o e rna I o lru'IK: that you do bus ness w h 99 2 2593
my® yahoo com Dead ne peop e you know and
lo
app cants
7 26 06
NOT o se nd mone y
Equal
Opportun ty
though he mall un I you
Emp oye
have n11est gated he
oHer ng
150
S&lt; 1-MJOI..'oi

e~per

~==~~~==~

( llON
..__ _IN~TRl
___
_ _,..

S eel Pome oy OH 45769

C ass
Ju Y Oh 0 wv Aug 5 2006
3 2006 The AMESC sa 575 OO
9 OOam VFW
Eq I
Oppo tun Y Mason wv Ph 740)643
Emp aye P ov de
5555
App cat on Dead ne

r

Sbd FORECLOSURE Must
Se I $33 000 For shngs
800 391 5228 ext F254

**'IIOTICF**
Bor ow Sma I Contact
the Oho Dvson of
F nanc at
ln st tut on s
0 I ce ol Consumer
Alta s BEFORE you ef
nance you home or
obla n a loan BEWARE
of equesls fo any Ia ge
advance payments o
fees o nsurance Call the
Off ce o
Consumer
Alia s tol f ee at 666
276 0003 to lea n f the
mortgage

THE I.R.S.
Income Tax Course

pas
han ss ap efe
t O month
rna ICS
ed con
Th s
tract w th Board app oved
benef Is
Salary w I be
based on tra n ng and expe
nence Subm t lette o te
est to John D Costanzo
Super ntendent
Alllens
Mo gs Educa anal Serv ce

P.!~~.....~'!'-.....
We are no~ ac cept na
app ~at ons to pa t me
Ma 1oom
help!? s
App can ts nus h&lt;1ve
val d cense To app y
stop by
e Ga 1po s
Da y bune Ga po s
Oh 0 45631

n

LeC!I

v F

hovv to prepa e 1:a)( r-eturnor;;

e&gt;e ble

dass sc hed ' es

,...... T a ned n st uctors

.,....

E~pl

.Jre ca eer opportun ties.,

AAA MODULAR ranch
models $55 838 M dwest
Homes (740)828 2750

3 100 Sq Ft Cape Code
4BA 4bath 40 x5D B eve
dec:k that wraps around 27
above g ound poo
fu I
basement 2 5 ca ga age
lots of eK as 1 acre Aver
Valley School D1st ct t5
m nu es f(om Gal pol s
Mus see to apprec ate
ONLY $250 000 (Neg) Must
See Call (740 367 0126

Mason Co Rebel A dge Ad
2 m las om Hannan H1gh
School 3 bed/ 2 bath 3 ca
garage
L v ng
AM
F replace 2 ac Land L ved
n 2 months $20 000 down
Owne
w II
F nance
(304)562 5840 (304)552
0756

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

Associated Training Serv1ces
2323 Performance Pkwy
Columbus OH 43207

www eqUipment school com
T

Real Estate

garden

tools lots of m sc carpcnte tools sr1all
showc 1St! household h mtture dt!iplay
Otgantzcr fans color TV 3? n ftreplacc
&lt;lcreo system Wtlh H !rack record player
\\all deCl r lot of m1sc sm It)( Is 1997
whne truck (no lnle)

nucrowave

step

c rcular s tw w /casc carpel paddmg Plu s
lots ot mtst'

to nms

Auctioneer Joe 1\rrmgton
ltc 1462
Wanda Neal Owner
Nul respor stble for lost or stolen property
Lunch avatlablc

Auction

PUBLIC

AUCTION
Saturday,

2605 Garfield Ave
Point Pleasant, WV

liappy 12th
B~ttnday

Property to be sold As Is

3 BR 1 bath

approx

10:00

Where Is

1 012 sq It

Questions Call Dave at Peoples Bank

888 376 3192 ext 5

.s!n:mnon
Love, Morn,
Auni

Real Estate

S!nQtl

2 3 Pc

B R Sutle Wardrobe Gun Cabmel
Round Oak Table Rope 1\vt&lt;l Table
Tables Rockers Plus More Fumtlure To Be
Ptcked Up I g Amount Of Glassware 2
Pe s Rose\ tile Pollery Stone Jars Jugs
Crm:ks I g SelectiOn Of Ant1que Qu11ts
Old Ptclt re Frames Ktrby Sweeper Mtlk
Cans Iron Kdtlc Anuque Shmgle Cuner 2

fatnlly

Real Estate

Located at the nuctlon Center on Rt 62 n
of mason WU Will be selling the Estate
Of Curtis Connolly along with 2 other
partial estates
HOUSEHOLD

Real Estate

Real Estate

1'&lt;119""4 L. S..utl. ~
·-· 446-6806
'Re4t &amp;4ta.te
Branch Off ce
956 Clark Chape Rd
Btdwell Oh to 45614

23 Locust St
Gall pol s Oh o 45631

Sunday July 23 2006

2 00 unt1l 5 00
39

Apple Butler Kenles &amp; Much More
TOOLS&amp;MISC
Loads Of Hand Tools Tool Boxes Chams
Oxy Accl Hose &amp; Gu tge s L g Saw
Blades Gnndmg Wheel Cross Cut Saws
Hyd Jacks Lg Wooden Tool Box Maktla
Cham Saw &amp; Other&lt; Green M tchtne Weed
Etter Vec.:tc r Xhe Push Weed E Her
Crtfbman Blo\\er Seurs A1r Compressor
L g Harness Makers Bench Troy Buth 8

Location

&amp; 41 Netl Ave Gallipolis, OH 45631

Hostess Jennifer DeWIH Realtor

H p Rear Ttne Ttller Conltnenltl 30 Ton
Press Conttnenttl 4000 Eng1 e Hotsl &amp;
Much More
TRACTOR
M F 50 TRACTOR (GASJ

2407

WV

Pomt Pleasant
Property to be sold As Is

2 BR

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
RICK PEARSON AUCTION
co. #66

Lmcoln Ave

1 bath approx

Wh ere Is

904

sq

ft

304 713 5441 OR 304 ll3·5l85

Questions Ca ll pave at Peoples Bank

888 376 3192

ex t

5

Don t m1ss out o n lht s o pp ortun l y '

lc

1r 1l I I l

\\ ww am:ttonllp

..:om

Tetm cas h or check w tih II)

House

•

: 2 3 Bedroom•
:

&amp; Bath

i
:

15 Greenhouses
Saturday
August 12 2006

:

12 00 Noon

:

REAL ESTATE
SELLS FIRST

:

l .

1SG Peters Cave Rd

Patrtot OH

fl2l'

:
;
:

:
:
:
:
:
:
:

House for Sale n Sy acuse
wo bed oom w th bath
allached ga age and base
ment An estate sale
$70 000 Phone [740)992
3690
Auction

!

14x70 mob le home 3BR
2ba w th large expando
new sta nless steel appl
ances completely emod
e ad $9 500 (740)388
0010

tnd 11 dual y to the H ghest 8 Ode Aft eqUIPPecl w
fumactts fans elttcu cal plugs &amp; lights. to heat &amp;
coo Computem:ed rtrgal10n systems &amp; fert llze
systems Greenhouses &amp; term house have th row
ove sw tches for bacttup generator syste n ~
lor detailed greenhouse systems 90 Days to
ernove App OK nventory o be sold to nclude.
new- tray plug ex1 actor tlowet racks w board ng
d rt; Oagged fert IZ.er 27 ooo mum pans 4 000
baskets 10 000 to 12 000 flats &amp; t ays lor cult ngs •
foam fo c.ull ngs Terms fgr G eenhouse3 Cash/ :
check at t me of sale ~o days to emo'ole at sates :
hna sOld as s no efunds rerms fo Real Estate :
$90 000 m n mvm b d $10 000 down at time of:
auct on balance &amp; possess on at clos ng by :
9 2 2006 new s.uf"lley prov ded oy seller offe ed :
free &amp; dear p OJ o ClOSing taMes pro ated to !
cos )9 no cant gene es
GaIa Co Deed Vol :
369 Pg 627 V ew Day gl t Hours or Ca I Cut1 s :
E 1on Owner {740) 256 9247 or (740) 645 0870 ;
CALL FOR DETAILS &amp; BROCHURE Ill !
STANLEY &amp; SON INC
(740) 775 3330
WWW STANLEYANOSON COM
!

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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Auction

Auction

OHIO UNIVERSITY
SURPLUS I(UCTION
Athens, OH
Saturday, July 29 - 9 00 a m
Oh o Un verstly surplus tems w II be sod al public auctton NOl'E
Each quarter ts a completely new balch of surplus tems lo be sold
ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD AS IS/NO GUARANTEE &amp; NO RETURNS
V s 1 the WEB s te for a complete lisl ng www oh ou edu/surplus
click on Surplus InformatiOn then Surplus Inventory n Slock Items
Photos of the sa Iboat vehtc es and olher tlems can be v ewea on
lhe OU Web Stte
Prevtew lhe week before
call 740-593 0463
!rom 8 DO 4 00 for further nformatton OIRECTIONS Rl 33/50 10
Athens to Rt 682 ext go through lighl al R chland Avenue turn left
at The Rtdges and follow stgns lo Butldtng 9 SALE ORDER
Compulers pr nters lechnology eqwpmenl wtll be sold f rst
beg nn ng at 9 00 a m unt I f ntshed Sa Iboat and Veh cles wtll be
sold at Noon
SAILBOAT 1979 0 Day 30 Sloop Rtgged Satlboat w/15 hp Yanmar
tnboard d esel ongtnal sa Is 6 berths slreel cradle ncluded Toe ratl
has been st tpped &amp; reva mshed needs retnslalled
Buyer ts
respons ble for removal or paymenl for dock rent Docked on Lake
Erte
VEHICLES &amp; MOTORCYCLES 1996 Ford Taurus (20 655 mtles)
1994 Ford Aerostar (80 187m les) 1990 Pord Club Wagon (104 563
m les)
1967 Dodge Van (49 141 m les)
2 Honda CM400A
Hondamattc motorcycles (251h Amencan Anntversary)
TOOLS/EQUIPMENT Rockwell/Della stogie phase Un Plane Walker
Tumer wood/metal 2 hp Lathe Mach ne South Bend Prec son
Lalhe 4 Hoba~ Welders lnslron Un versal Mode 1122 Tesltng
lnstrumenl NTSC color SYNC &amp; lest stgnal generator Marathon
electnc 3 phase 15 hp Motor Baldor lndustr al molar HP 400e AC
voltmeler EMO model M 55 B o med cal tnslrum ent Taktrontx
Osctlloscope small compressor lank Arv n 1320 healers double
Incubator Fotoflat dry mounla n press Tuckerman au1ocoll malor
APPLIANCES 200 a r condtt oners (6 8 000 BTUs) Sun Server 250
Hoi Potnt d shwasher stove RC Cola lreezer Hoba~ 2 dr sla nles6
steel freezer large Harr s Lab type freezer large SS freezers SS
cooktng hood Emco Rolat onal Molder oven Pedestal comparator &amp;
measurtng mach ne Wh rlpool gas stove Wh rlpoo freezer Sears
refr gerator L tton mtcrowave T tan popcorn mach ne
COMPUTERS &amp; TECHNOLOGY EQUIPMENT 150+ Computers &amp;
3 Laptops Box of mtsc computer parts &amp; fax modems BC450 &amp;
APC battery backups 130+ Pr nters 6 Cop ers 14 Fax Mach toes
10+ Scanners 10+ TVs 20+ VCRNHS players 10+ Typewrters
Camcorders vtdeo recorders monttors Panasomc v deo cameras
20+ pro(ectors several pro(ectton screens Sonar one step cameras
Polaro d mtn portratt camera wibox of f lm roll f lm transport machme
HP 2500 cp plotter Stmplex slamper ltme puncher large shredder
lamtnators calculators Soundcraft speaker system CD players
cordless m crophone set studto m xer
OFFICE &amp; HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS wood bookshelf wlsl d ng
doors large ltbrary bookshelf wood wardrobe melal shelv ng untts
woOd &amp; metal storage cab nels 10+ vert cal &amp; hor zontal metal f le
cabtnels metal f le box metal ca~s metal money box wood
pod ums lots of offtce desk cha rs 175 meta fold ng chatrs
cushtoned chars 15 art draw ng desks 25 melal &amp; wood desks
several lamps 6 sofa/loveseals drafttng &amp; draw ng lables 30+ wood
&amp; melal tables fyptng slands &amp; computer !abies
MISCELLANEOUS 16 secttons of 4 xB pes of melal stage w /step•
&amp; ratls 78 melal roll up door several metal &amp; wood doors 28 4 ft
lluorescent ltght f xtures 70+ bull elm &amp; peg boards 45+ m rrors 3 pc
melal loveseat &amp; tabes pat o set sel of 4 melal cabtnel base un Is
w/double s nks 10 H counler top 500+ meta bed frames large
locker metal trash cans
TERMS Cash or check w/postltve I D Masler Card &amp; V sa Cred 1
Cards accepted Checks over $1000 must have bank author zat on
of funds ava lable Foo~ w II be ava lable Nol respons ble for loss or

ace dents
OWNER Ohto Untverslty
WEB www ohlou edu
Search Surplus- Ctlck on Campus Servtces Moving &amp; Surplus
Surplus Inventory for Public- Vtew All or Spectflc Category
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER John Patrtck Pat Shertdan
APPRENTICE AUCTIONEERS Kerry Shertdan Boyd &amp; Brent
Kmg
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded tn Ohto &amp; WV- Member of Ohto &amp; National
Auctioneer s Association
Email ShamrockAuctton@aol com WEB www shamrock

MOilii.E HoMC&gt;

·-oiFORiiiitiSiiiiAiiiii.E-_.J

• or I vestock ope at on w new y fenced f elds

:
:
:
:
:
:
:

landacker or L1mberger
Ads $16 9001 Red Htl Rd 8
acre~ $2t 5001 Tuppers
P alns 5 acres $t5 950
Aeedsv lie n ce 13 acres
h gh + dry $20 5001
Hemlock Grove Cook Rd 5
ac as $21 500 Gallla Co
Kyger 16 wooded acres
$t6 500 A1o Grande 8
acres $17 500' V nlon
Shephe d Lane 12 acres
S23 500 co water! Ca 1
(740)441 1492 for free maps

o
THREE bedroom TWO
bath Overs za 2 Ca
Garage Storage Bldg
newe ca pet and roof 112
acre level lot Well rna n
ta ned Home
$95 000
Vme Street RACJNE 740
949 801 o.

! ~~~S: P~~~: c~ G~~e:
: houses compete w/heat venb at ol"l &amp; spnn~o.: er
! system Heres a property suted ror catt e hO se

l

ptpe

ladder 24 5 cham an compressot 150 PSI
refnger 11 lr gallons of p 1 nt
1 r ho ~es

Auction

:

WHOLE!

!
!

Chevy exlended cab 4x4 !ruck (exlrt n ce)

buv n quanttttcs )OU \o\oOn t want
Terms Cash or gm d check

1/, Story

l

Offtce lurnuure Off C&lt; ftle c tbtnel I tmp &lt;
1.:{ ffe~
11ble s
1 ew
r.: ushmn
glide r
Cr 01tsman tool s Amtsh Double s~&gt;. m g set 6

sweepers

l
!

LEVEL LOT
1 75 Acres Mason Co WV
C ty Water &amp; Sewer
ElectriC and Gas Ava table
Great lot for Mob le Home
or New Construct on
S11 000
(304)295 9090

Riverfront property for sale
by owner 2 lots w th 2 story
house bu1 t n 1880 &amp;
campe Located m v llage of
Crown C ty on 4 Ma n St
$70 000 I rm Ca 1(740)593
6t53

Ga I po 1s Ferry 3 Bedroom
1 1 2 Bath 2 Ca Garage
Wood floors
F replace
Maple K tchen 304)675
2364

Henderson W Va

lawn fum lure

92t Acre

~ w:~~~gA~a:

!

July 29, 2006
9 30am

old wmdnull

••
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:

Pr ced to sam Very n ce
3BA bath upstmrs lu
n shod 1 BA ap downsta s
funtuesloe nrea ca ot
on side Al on 1 2 ac lot at
130 Bulav lie P ke Gall pol s
OH Call to see (740)446
4782
Aoadwth2Aces 3bed
rooms 2 baths garage
enclosed breezeway Pool
and Spa Inc uded
$83 500
Call 740 992
4001

Elliott Auction

i ~~~=rtu~e~rt r~udnddt ~~~1e greV:~~~:sre~~ea~

PUBLIC AUCTION

fl

f;,K

For sale by owne 3 bed
room ranch home 3 p us
acres Pe e s Cave Ad
Walnut Twp A tached large
2 bay garage/wo kshop Full
bath vng oomwthbult n
wal unt ktchen wth ots of
sto age spac ous d1n ng/ut I
ty oom unf n shed base
men 2 ba ns woodshed
$59 900 Call (740)441
7644

Auction

403 Chestnut St

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
i ~~ HAMMER TrME

l

134ac es with nee Cnder
block 2 bay Ga age su t
able for small Busmess on
Peasant
Ridge
Ad
Gallipo s Fer y Owner Will
I nance Wllh t0°o Down
[304)776 5322
--------

MeigS Co F ve acres on
Ranch Style Home Yost

•

Tratn 1n Oh1o
-Nat1onal Cerllftcat1on
F1nanctal Assistance
- Job Placement Asststance
800-559-6096

Auction

Auction

:
(Goltla Co )
: Option 11J1
92 Acre Fa m
: SOLD AS A WHOlE w

Bulldozers, Backhoes,
Loaders, Dump Trucks,
Graders, Scrapers,
Excavators

1

ac as 3 m nules f orr
Ho zer town o 35 Mus
Se T ade o Best OHe
740)388 8228

Auctton

:

Flea nwrkcl dcakr Tht&lt; ts a sale for you to
Real Estale

This newspaper w n not
know ngly accept
advan sements fOJ real
estate which Ia n
v olat on of the law Our
eaders are hereby
lnfofmed that all
dwellings advert sed m
this new&amp;paper are
avalable on an equal
opportunity bases

B acklop Drive P vate 2

n Syracusa 4 Bd 2 Bath
Newly emode ed all elec
c Country sett ng w th 8 g
yardlt ees and shrubs $765
Nee 3bed oom 2bath 1 'Month Ca 1740 643 5264
story gas eplace AC n c~
Mason 3 d Stre61 2 BA 1 1 at lawn not qulle an acre
ba g eat starle home o n ce covered po ch arge
nves\ment
property bu ld ng nc uded that coulc
Pruden a Bunch Realtors be used lor a bus ness o
Bobby Muncy
Rea lo workshop Loca ed 1 m It:
1740)709 0299 0 (304)525 1 om new Ga a Co toea
set oo s 740)388 0301
776 t

subl~t

Tra1n1ng For Employment

computer

.JACKSON liJllllU®
lJ~~~~~~~~~~~;;~"=J

In lhla newspaper It
lo the Federtl
Fair Houtlng Act of 1968
which makes It llegal to
td..,.rtlae any
p elerence llmltat on or
discrimination baHd 011
race color retlg on sex
tamll al atalus ar national
or g n or any Intent on to
make any such
preference lmltat on or
dlscrtm nation

new p umb ng Ia ge ot Cal
(740)446 0781 or (304)675
2329

!

bender wtth accessones battery Lh rgcr s
I rge commen: II f&lt;m Sn p on tool box 2
ltfts automattc I fttng unn engmc analyzer

"1-740-446-8"178
Reg sler by Aug 25

All real estate ed..,.rtlalng

HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR

Wtlh reserve

CLASSES START SOON,
CALL TODAY!

Cen1er 320 1 2 East Man ~~~~~~~~
St eel Pome oy OH 45769 ..
Apphcat on Dead ne Ju y
31 2006 The AMESC san
Equal
Oppo tun 1y
Employer P ov1de
The
Athens Me gs
Educal anal Se v ce Cente
has a posit on ope ng o a
MD Teacher for Sou he n
E ementa y (Me gs Coun y)
for the 2006 2007 Schoo
Year App can s must be
carl I ed I censed
lnterven on Spec a st o be
elgbe
o
get
a
Supplementall cense Th s
pos on s a 9 month con
t act w th Board app oved
benefts
Sa a y wit be
based on eMper ence and
cart I cat on acco d ng to
sale y schedule Subm t let
te of nteres to John 0
Costanzo Supe n endent
Athens Me gs Educa ana
Serv ce Cente 320 t 2
East Man S eet Pomeroy
OH 45769
App cat on
Deadhne
July 31 2006
The AME SC s an
0 p p 0
t J.J
Employe P ov de

acres approM t 900 sq tt 3
bdr 2 baths 2 car ga age
maste bt:J s 28x24 w h a
tacuzz lub $125 000 Vew
onl ne
at
orvb com
17 40)448 7029

~===l:n:Lo::AN::;

·-------,J

v

5 year old Colonml on 3

Mo~rv

TuckD ves
Oh o Based Sma Truck n4,1 Gallipolis Career College
(Ca ee s Close To Home)
Con pany
look ng
lo
liecto Ta e d vers w h Cal Today 740 446 4367
R&amp;J TRUCKING
1 800 214 0452
11a bed expe ence $600 o
Leadmg The Way S900 ake 1 orne aile axes
R&amp;J li uck ng now H ng at Home eve y weekend and
~;a mP weekdays de ve ng
our New Haven WV
to OH KY VA &amp; WV
Term nat Fo Reg anal
1330)527 2789
Hau s Dump DIV 1 yea
OTR
VACANCY
verfabe exp
ANNOONCEMENT '
Cat 1 800 462 9365 ask m
Kent
The Gall a So I and Wa e
Res CareiM ddle on Estates Conse 11at on 0 st ct cu
Commun y Co ege can
wl be hrng a lulltm e etytasapos 1rn ava
he p
tor
Edu ca t on
Adm n st at ve pos 1011 Mus ab e
Ca I I BOO 282 7201 o og
be prot c ent n Mlc osof Coo d nato
on to www o edu
Wo d
and
beet
\V \NUJl
PH.OFK"iSIO!\Al
Appl cat ons w II be taken at The lul me pos I on s o 100
p
ov
de
eade
sh
p
devel
To
Do
Sf R\'lU~
6204CalaDrve 800400
op ng a d cond uct ng he '--itoollllilllliioo-MF
Res Ca e s an Equa Gal a SWCD co se vat on Ce I ed
Ca e
Ch d
TURNED DOWN ON
educa on and pub c n o
Opp01tun ty
Efl ploys
Now
P ov der
Has SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
m&lt;~ onpoga s asd eGted
FMDN
Open ngs C ose o r 1e gs
No Fee Unless We W n
bv the Boa d of Supe "so s
Elen enta y Play G ound
I 888 582 3345
The
Athens Me gs
BAll Cou 1 La ge Aec
IU \I I \I \II
Educat ona Serv ce Ce te M num q a cat ons ae Roon and Mea s P ov (led i;::;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
has an open ng Ia a an Assoc a ~ deg cc r1 such Cu cn t Open ngs Seven
HOME.'i\
10
nepeaton
Homeless
La son Case elds as
Days
w+:
740
992
2329
I'OR
S&lt;\.l E
Manager Past on equ e Fo est y W ld c Na u a
Resou
ces
o
Ed
ca
on
ments h gh schoo d p oma
o equ val en (deg ee n Bas G conp 1e sk s ae
16 S Park Dr 5b 2ba 2
educat on human SP. v ce eq ed E&gt;:ce ent o ;1 and
s o y b Ievel deck above
fed o educat anal a de w rten commLn C&lt;ll on sk I s
g ound poo cal 304 675
permit p eferred) good com a eeq J ed
7608 aile 5pn
mun cat on &amp; compu e
skit s expe ence NO k ng
COUNTRY LIVING
w1th soc at agenc es and o pos t on w
By Ow ie 2 aces new
Me
ssa
s
Dayca
e
now
\fl ale
homeless lam es n Me gs Ga a So
en o ng ages o e a d up ranch 4 bd ms 2 Oaths n
Co re able transportal on Conse v:11o D f;f c Off ce
d y nat stage ass than 1 y
Ga pas Oho Sa g ageya d opay n meas t om Ga po s $74 500
w1th p oot o nsu ance and
~
ov
led
seve
days
a
know edge of Me gs Co sa a v depe ds upon educa
Ow e F nanc ng (740 489
&gt;oee k 740 992 0070
add essJtocat ons Th s s a t on and e&gt;:pe ence Be e 1
9146
g ant unded pos t on 32 packag e ncluded
hrs pe week) w th no bene
Announcements
Its
Letle of ne asl A va d d ve 5 ce nse s
A backg ound
resume and refere ces equ ed
must be ece ved by 2 00 check and secu y clea
be equ ed A
noon July 31 Subm o anc: e '
John
0
Costanzo mo e Cl ~ a led ob desc p
SHOULDN•T BE THE
Supe ntendent
Athens t on and &lt;:~IJP ca o a '"
ONLY
ONE MAKING
pon
eques
Me gs Educat ona Se v ce ava abe
MONEY
FROM TAXES!
Cane P:O Box 684 320 Quest ons may be d ected
10 Jenn1te Ha son 0 st c
Take the Jackson Hevv1tt"
Manage at 4-16 6t73
Cpmp eted appl cat on and
esu ne w tl
eie ence~
must be ece vod at the
Ds cl Of ce at
1
has a pos t on open ng fo Jac:kson P Ke S rt e 569
an
Educat ona Ga po s OH 4 63 1 by
Dagno s can to wok n Au gus 8 2006 at 4 30 PM
Me~gs County Schools fo
the 2006 2007 School Yea lnte v ews lo the pos t on
App cants must have a w be ten a ve y srheduteo
Bachelors
Deg ee to Aug s 24 and Augus
EKper ence and/o
a n ng 25 2006
work ng w th ch ld en n edu
cat on psycho ogy mathe

Easte n School D1st cl DOWN PAYMENT p o
740 992 3465 after 5 00 PM grams lor you to buy you
home nstead of en! ng
5 Room House With Bath 3 100°ofnancng
tots $35 000 Leon a ea
Less than perfecl credit
Phone (304)674 0132
accepted
Payment could be the
same as rent
Mo tgage
locators
(740)367 0000

NO DOWN PAYMENT evan
with less tt1an perfect c:red t
1s ;:~va table on this 3 bed
room t bath home n
M ddleport Corne lot v nyt
s dmg I eptace n 1v ng
room good ca pet t e f oor
n k !chen French doors
open to master bedroom
JaCUZZI tub off street park
ng Paymenl around $550
pe month 740 367 7129

16x60 tra ter 2bdrm

www bwnerland com

CONSTRUCTION WORK
EAS 5 bedroom house ldr
rent n New Haven $300 00
month pbr person or
$100 00 per week 304 882
3200
House for ent
740 992 5858

Ot&gt;Po&lt;tun t es

No Pets

House tor rent Wd be avail
able July 15th Newly renovated n ce qu et ne gt1bo
hOOd Can show on notice
The Tan Shak cal (740)446
7425 tor an appt

New 2 bedroom hOU 'iB n
Gall poll s Clean and com
fortable Centra a launr:l y
oom also New 1 Bedroom
House Call tor deta Is
(740)44t 0194 or (740)44
184
Nice 3 bed oom on 160 bg
yard 3 m es from Holzer
$SOO plus deposit (740144
0489
-------Small house fo rent m
M ddleport $400 00 plus
dep
Cal 740 992 3823
Available August 1st
...;;

1

vs« ~jr~.~•~FOR.;;;:: "RENT;;H~~-_....,
L'UUDIL&amp;'.

We

vl?.u:.::l

1nancel
~----~.,---,­

Mobile Home or Bu1ldmg lot
to Sale n Middleport 66 X
1 7 level ot with garage
located at South Th rd
Street 416 1354 or 992
394

Grac ous I vlng 1 and 2 bed
room apa tments at V1 age
Mana
and
R vers de
Apartmen s n M ddleport
F om $295 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng

Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment n the country
New carpet &amp; cab nels
fres1'1ty pa1nled &amp; decora1ed
WID hookup Beaut ful coun
I y setting Must see to
epp ec ate
$399/mo
(614)595 7773 o I 800
798 4686

d eam ktchen wfall appl
ances
12xt6 covered
porch plus shed Rented
and near Green (740)339
3429

MER~~

1500 watt Mobil generator
4cy gas or propane good
lor erne gency back up or
constructiOns wo K $2 BOO
GE et gerato 6 months
old I eezer on bottom looks
new $350 (740 367 7025

2 bedroom no pels 8 mt es No

Pets
Lease Plus
AERATION MOTORS
from A o 5 m from Secur ty Deposit Requ1red Repa1red New &amp; Rebu II In
Centenary (740)379 2540
(740)367 7086
Stock Cal Ron Evans
800 537 9528
2 bedroom wateutrash paid
Tw n A \lers Tower Is accept
near Porter NO PETS
ng apphcat ons for wa 1ng
Refe ence deposit requ red
1st for Hud subslzed 1 br love seat &amp; 2 cha rs Celery
$325/mo (740)388 1100
apartment ca I 675 6679 green w/p nk &amp; be ge
..
2BR large I -v ngroom wash Equa Hous ng Oppo tun ly 1304)675 6968
room po ch w1tt1 awning - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - Need to sell your home? storage bu !ding AJC very
Val ey V ew Apartments
NEW AND USED STEEL
late on payments d vorce n ce no pels In Gal po s Now accept ng appl cal ons s eel Beams P pe Rebar
JOb transfer or a death? I (74 o) 44 6 2o03 (7 40) 44 6
for 1 o 2 bedroom
Fo
Cone eta
Angle
can buy you home All cash 1409
apar1ments
Channel Flat Bar S eel
and qutck dosng 740-416 - - - - - - - - Apply at offce
Grating
Fo
D a ns
3 30
3 Bd and 2 Bd
Mob le
800 St At 325
D veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Homes both 1 12 bath
Thurman Oh 0
Scrap Meta s Open Monday
Pomeroy Area Call 740
(419)526 466
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
243 561 t
~~
TDD#
Fr day 8am-4 30pm Closed
HoUSES
::...::..::~~----14 95260466
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
FOR RENr
_
Cl!lr'"_":':"'_ _...., Su day (740)44&amp;-7300

r_•RFAL•WIIIM'fllltiiiEsrlitiiiit~TE-·

®_,

rl 0

t979 Bayview 3BR wl 112
Baths
and
Expando
Current lot rent $15 pe
month
All app ances
ncluded
$5 900/0BO
(304)593 1567 o (304)675
5785
-------t992 lndes 3 bedroom 2
balh 14x80 2 po ct1es W/0
$t2 000
Must
move
(740)645 16t6 or after 5pm
(304)576 2892

Buy or se I
Rver ne
An IQues
124 ~ast Man
on SA t24 E Pome oy 74Q992 2526 Russ Moore G a-vely
Tractor
dual
owner
wheels Brush Hog Side e
iri:i!r'"!Ml-;c~-----.,~ Bar Mower Rotary Pow
extra motor $800 to a I
(304)675 4514

1 Fl 3BA LA DR den
Fam A ga age 2 ba ns pn
vate dnve $700 (740)441
0514
::-:-:-::-:-~::-----:-~
2 Bd 1 Bath Pomeroy N ce
cond ton $450 00 740
843 5264

i

Fo ant N1ce 2 bed oom
mobile home n Country
Homes $325 + depos I
(740)385 4019

-'-'-'----2BA home V nton St $375
mo + sec dep You pay ut II
tes Gas heat (740)446
c36:._4 :._4_______
2BA house Garf eld Ave

::_:.:::_:.:.__:_:.c:.:__ __

FORSP~~~-1

--------Queen size Mattress Box

il:rr-L-IVI!SIOCK---.,
3 Horses 8 yrs old Rag
Standa d
bred
Ma e
$1 000
11yrs old eg
Ouarte Mae $1 200 7y s
Standa d b ed Ma e $800
(304)675 4514
Qual ty horse and I vestock
tra1le s now ava able al
Carmtchae Equ pment New
deale
for Valley and
Kleferbu It
Ho sa
and
L vestock T a e s Many
opt ons available steel alu
m num dress ng rooms I v
mgquarters ~740)44624t2
Reg sterad
Charola s
Year ng Bull $t 200 born

,J

riO

r

PElS
FOR SAtE

6 M n atu e Dachshunds f st '---titiiiitiiiiiil;;._.l
shots &amp; wormed eady to go $500 POLICE MPOUNDS'
07 22 06 304 593 3820
Ca s/Trucks from $500 For
1st ngs eoo :,\91 5227 •390t

·---UUUL&lt;&gt;ii i i i--,J ---------

axeo

ss

i

r

Beagle pups lui blooded
02 Chevy Cavahe 4 d
came f om good stock 6 auto a r CO good cond
weeks o d
p 1ce $35 tion $4 500 740)446 1663
(304)862 2563

Boston Terriers 2 males 2
femaes 11 weeks Brnde
and wh te $200 no papers
(7401379 2467
- - - - - -- CKC Jack Russell puppies
S x weeks old Shots and
wo med Ia Is docked $100
each 740 256 3168

:C::-K-:cG-:-M::-,n::-a-tur,--a~Pm-sc-:h-e
Ready to Go Back'Tan
RecVTan &amp; Creamrran Call
(740)388 8788
One S amese Seal Poml
K tten Beaut lui color ng
740 992 3216
-::-:c--:---~-:----:

•Ch huahua male !my all
shots
• Teacup Yot* e Poo female
baby dol face
5 mo
(740)446-9428

- - - -- -

rs

TRucKS

FORSAJ.E

t993 Dodge Shadow 4cyl
2 2L automat c May need
fuel pump Askmg $350 Call
(740)709 672~ please leave
message

Steps de
Sporty
Red Call fo deta Is 740
992 639£

s0

V1nyl 13 2 w1de
Berber 13 6 w1de
Mollohan Carpet
76 V1ne 446-7444

Bedroom

near Holzer

2 bath

$650 /mo

i

Library Saaled bids
200 t Dodge 4x4 D esel will be accepted until
73 100 m las exce lent con August7
d1ton $19000 740 339 2006
0355
Deborah L Sounders

V615 speed power doo
ocks wmdows m1 rors
AM FM stereo wth cassette

Yo ksh e Te e female
puppy beau1 fut baby doll
face Sweet as can be ess
than Sibs 10 months old
CKC Reg ste ed $700
(740)742 2603
(740)256 1245
even ngs
1!1:1"'--:=----:~"""'1 and weekends
99 Chevy Ast o Convers on
F'Runs &amp;
Van EMcellent cond ton
V ..::Cf":TAHI J&lt;')l
2002 Monte Ca to pace ca loaded TV VCR capta ns
'--llitiiiitiiiltiiiliotto_.l Exce lent cond 1on loaded seats tow ng package
Black Be es call for Pnce 1984 39 1f2 ft Ty Brook Asking
$7 300
Call
and Ava lab I ty (304)895 frameless du!Tll I a ler 1983 (740)367 0622
3930
015 Dodge Ram p ckup
(740)448 8783
luxury
Van
Chevy
Excellent
cond ton
Runs good but needs work mechan c owned travel n
Co d
AC
$800 OBO sty e must see $5 900 or
best offe 446 9961
(304)675 8200 aha 5pm

I

Trash pck up $15/ month
Guaranteed on t1me pick up

deposit no smok1ng or pets
1ns1de house

740 645 3836 740 245 9880

Tuppers Pla1ns
Subway
acceptmg applications

Tuesday, July 25th
from 9 am - noon
No CallsApply 1n person only

auctions com
PH 740 592 43tO or BOO 4t9 9122

--'--

•

Call today 256 6702 or 256 8106
If you get 3 frtends to s gn up
get a month FREE!

Check Out Our Pre owned
campers

&amp; boats

Palomino

hfthwheels truck travel

&amp;

popup campers Pontoons
and boats com1ng soonl

Twin R1vers Manna
412 SR 7 North
740-446-6700

Public Notice

Clerk Treasurer
Gallla Counly District
Library
Boord
of

Trustees
July 21 23 28
Augusl6 2006

30

Public Nottce

PUBLIC NOTICE
Larry Oearnell 390
Blue
Lake
Drive
Gallipolis OH 45631

has

a

requested

Variance
Hearing
from
the
Gallla
County
Floodplain
Appeals Board The
hearing has been
scheduled
for
Thursday August 3
2006 all 0 OOam In the
second floor meeting

room of the Gallla
County Courthouse
All Interested parties

are encouraged to
attend
July 23 2006

r-:A::=n:no~u:n:c~e:m~en:t~s=:~=A~n:n~o~u:n:c:e:me~n~ts~
Nohce for Early Pubhc Revtew Of
A Proposal to Support Achvthes

m

and compact dsc trp
a 100 Year Floodplatn
odometer achomete a r
/
cond l&gt;on ng 111 stee ng
And Or Wetland
1998 0 ds Della 68 h1gh wheel c use control t nted July 21 2006
To All tnterested Agenc1es Group!i and
m les $2 500 (740)682 glass clock ntervat w pers
n aps I ghts step bumpe
Individuals
7512 (even ngs)
sl d ng rear w ndow bed The Calha County Commtss onl?rs have
1999 Geo Met o $2 900
I ne ant lock b akes dr ver conducted an envtronmental rev ew for the
999 Toyota Corolla $4 200 and passenger side al bag
FY 2006 ED Revolv1ng Loan Fund ProJects
1999 Taurus $3 700
a rbag on oft sw tch tool usmg these CDUG funds to make repaus to
2001 St atus $4 900
the ex1shng Hohday Hills sewer treatment
boK 2 ecewer 20+ MPG
1997 S10 $2 900
plant
$16 900 (740)256 9034
Th1s nottce requ~red by Sect on 2(aH4) of
We
have 3 Satu ns
Executive Order 11988 for floodplams and
Sunf res 2 Grand Ams
by Secl!on (bJ of Execuhve Order 11990 for
Vans 4x4 Chevy 3 veh cles
wetlands and mplemented by HUD
fo $1 600 each F eb d
Regulations found al 24 CFR 50 4(bl for any
and others 3 monlhsl3 000
HUD achons that tS wtlhtn and/or affects a
m le warranty
floodplam or wetlands As currently
Cook Motors
proposed the prOJed s1te w1JI mcludl' areas
326 Jackson P ke
99 Chevy S lverado extend
des1gnated as floodplain md wetland
(740)448 0103
ed cab 4x4 LS low mileage
The Call1a County CommiSSIOners
2000 Hyund a Sonata auto VB exce lent st1ape Ask ng alternat111es regardrng sponsorsh1p of the
Ph
(740)245
achon would be
mahc CD payer 40 50 $10 200
1 Approval as proposed 2 D sapproval
MPG Runs rJ eat S3 500 5946 Ce I (740)645 3743
3 Approval only 1f all Improvements are
OBO (740)388 8228
For Sate 1994 Jeep Grand located outs1de of tht' floodplam and
2002 Mercury Mountameer Cherokee
t979 Fo d F wetland
Loaded w th on y 48 000 150 740 742 t508
4 Approval of the equiValent proJect s1de
located oulstde of the flood·plam and
m1les
VANS
wetland and
2002 Fo d l ghtlng F150
5 Approval onl) 1f nD f11l ts added nf the
FOR SALE
p ck up 30 000 m les Call

SIMS TRASH SERVICE
plus

02 W ldcat 2711 5th whee
side out Look and make
olle Call (740)245 9109
(740)44 I 7832

2004 Oodge DaKota 4x4
26000 mles
$13500
(740)645 4473 2003 Log cab n camper
Dayt me
oven ng (7401388 9804
sleeps 6 B and new
(740)446 8783
97 Chevy 4 wo ext cab
w 3 d door Vortec 350 auto
mat1c very n ce runs goOd
Public Notice
$5 800 OBO [217)318 1829
or (304)576 2762
Public Notice
The Board of Trustees
For Sale
987 Truck ol the Gallla County
Lar er F 5 4 WHL DR
District
Library/Or
Auto Good Body New
Samuel L
Parts Runs Good Asking Bossard
Memorial
S2750 00 740 992 4025
Library Is accepting
proposals for carpet
4X4
lng for the
'"---itFiiORiitiS;;ALE--.,J 12 000 sq H library at
7
Spruce
St1eet
1990 7 3 d esel 5 speed Gallipolis
Request
4x4 150 000 m1les $4 700 lor
(740)388 8358
proposal
speclflca
tlons are available at
1999 Chevy Slverado 4WD tho circulation desk of
PU 65000 mles 53 VB Bossard
all opt ons short bed w th Library
7
Spruce
topper Exce lent Condition Street
Galllpoll~
$11 000 (740)645 0626
Ohio 45631
Sealed
bids must be
1999 Dodge Dakota 4 WO clearly written and
V6 Magnum Auto 92 500 typed and submitted
m es loaded excel ent con lo Betty Clarkson
d&gt;11on $7 700 (304)882 Library
2655
Director
Bossard

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
3

CAMPtltS&amp;
MOIURHOMES

t995 Ford li udc.

1973 WJ Super Beet e 95% 2003 Toyota Tacoma 4K4
restored to o gtna $6 500
Ex1endad cab TAD SRS
Ph (740)44676t6
package 44 000 m les
-:-:::~::-:--:::----:---;--:­

2000
Shape
Honda
Clutch
A.skng
2620

(740)245 0045
ce 1 -'='8~7=-(304......;)_59~3~5~2~
32--..,
(740)208 0028
Fi
- - -- - - - - BoATS &amp; MOillRS
Rome Auto Salet
..__ _;,Hiiii)RiiiSiiALFiiii-~
(740)441 9544
Fo sale 2 man boat w1th
01 Grand Pr x GT $5 200
e ectnc anchor used 3 1mes
98 Cad I ac Sev111e $5800
$400 4 5 HP gas eng ne
97 Venture $2 200
tanK attached $450 Phone
97 F 150 4M4 S4 850
740 44t 6299
98S 10$3800
97 Caval erS t 395
Auro PAJUS &amp;
97 Caval er Z 24 $3 000
Aa::FN;ORIES
79 CJ7 $2 000
00 Alero $3 200
T ansm ss ons all ypes
99 Ranger 4x4 $4 100
to que converte s ransler
96 Blaze $2 600
cases
used auto pa ts
97 Wrangle $5900
(740)845 7400 (740)245
7677

BULLETIN BOARD
Sale

I( I ..,

HOlliE
Ji\ti'ROvt:r.IENlS
CR250R
Great
Garage Kept New
BASEMENT
P s onlr ngs
New
WATERPROOFING
Kbb ve ue of $2 600
$1 900 Call 416 Uncondl! onal lie me guar
an ee local ale en oes fur
n shed Establ shed 975
96 Geo Metro automa!K; 50 -:-:--:--:----------,--, Call 24 H s (740} 446
MPG runs great $1 800 2002 Yamaha Vsta
t 00 0870 Rogers Basemen
OBO (740)388 6228
ClaSSIC 5 500 m las black Wate proofing
new cond I on leathe bags
50mpg $5 000 (740)245
Bos Class c Cas
t988 24 Caval er convert 5934
1b e 1993 AS Caval er con
vert be l99t Ford Mustang - - - - -- - 50 V8 convetbe 1997 Herey Davdson 2003
Olds Cutlass 200 Suzuk 1 Anmve sary W de G de
250 street b ke 750 actual 9 500 m 1es ke new many
m as Othe to choose 1 om ex as S 6 000 (740 441

2002 Olds Alero tee g een
Awesome ca
Under
21 000 m !Qs V6
3 4l
engine Runs great Ask ng
$7 000 Ca I after 6pm
(740)992 1090

1990 Sun~ d

6/22/05 g eel depos I on
Spr ngs excellent condll on med urn Ira me s ze and
$160 1940 s Pmcela n Top ready or b eed ng contact
Trader space ava lab a at
La ry Lepor1(304)675 231t
Table $40 (304)675 1431
Perk Lane Mob le Home
or Tony Leport (304)675
Court Certain rest cl ons
3105
STEEL BUILDINGS
740 446 3994
I I l l \ , \ t,\IWI ' Iilii!
2 steel bu !dings for sale
al HUGE DISCOUNT One
FOR LEASE
C aftsman mower 18 HP
s e 25x32 to be used as a
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _
Kohler motor 44 nch cut
DISPLAY Bu d ng Call
$700
(740)682 7512
Now 1 800-222 6335
1500 2200 sq ft newly en
ext 6000
ovated p me bus ness
nr..N

Mobla Home stes lo up to
16x80 m Country Homes
(740)385 4019
space on busy downtown
2000 t6x80 Clayton Vny
(:~~~~----, corne Gall polls (740)709
S d1ng Sh1ngle Roof Hea $460 rent &amp; sec dep 3BA
~FOR~~~
1690
Pump New tarpet 6 othe house
LeGrande Blvd
IU'.rll
homes on let Call fo $600 rent Lsec dep You
Prclng
1740)3B 8 oooo pay utlites Lease &amp; rater
t and 2 bed com apart
HOUSEHOIJ)
days
(740)388 8017 ences ecflltred (740 )4 46 ments furn st1ed and unfur
,...r&gt;.r"o&lt;'oe'
even ngs (740)794 0460 3644 for apphcat on
n shed secur ty depos1t
eel (740)6456t50-cel
2b $275 plus u11tes no equlred no pets 740992
w game room Pets
Ret &amp; Oepos1t 22t8
2007 2
Only 9 995 includes i 99 c(3:.:04.::1:;6:.:75:._-48:..::_7:._4_ _~:::: - - - , - - - - - -- _
1 Bedroom Apartment All
delve Y &amp; set up Cat 3
Bd
House
HUD Utllt es Included
$350
Appliance
!740)385 2434
app oved $350M Owet on monttJ near downtown P01nt
91 B eezewood 14x70 3 dead end street Call after Pleasant (304)360 0 63
Warehouse
bed oom 1 bath total alec 740 992 3314 after 6 30 PM
n Henders0n WV
Pre
luc Cal(740)2566687
3 bedoom 2 bath 15 mn
owned
App
ances
slart
ng
ranch
u
es
to
Gal
pol
siA10
'
'
'
R
AAA MODULA
G d
l $400/m 0 1BA apt n Sp ng Valley at $75 &amp; up all unde
modes $55 836 Midwest ran e no pes
w D hookups HUO/PAC
waler ncluded (740)379
Warranty also have recon
Homes 1740)828 2750
9445
acceptetl Call (740)446
d t oned B g Screen TV s
08341(740)339 0362
Greal used 3BA home only ~---::--:--j bed oom 2 bath nea - - - ' - - ' - - - - - by Ron s TV 1304)675$9 995 W II help w lh del v Holzer
$ 6SO/mo
plus BEAUTIFUL
APART 7999
ery Call (740)385 7671
depos 1 No pets no 6 mok MENTS
AT
BUDGET
LAND &amp; HDME PACK ng n house (740)245 PRICES AT JACKSON -N-ew-:-S::-ofa-&amp;Lo_ve_s_e_ai-84::-00ESTATES 52 Westwood
AGES. tst hme buyers &amp; ,9-880-::-('-7-40_.:)_64_5_38-:c-36--:- Drive from $344 to $442 Sofa &amp; Cha
$350
FHA
Midwest
Homes 3 4 BR home Geo Creek Walk to shop &amp; moves Call Reel ne $200 Open 9am
1740 &gt;628 2750
Ad Non Smok1ng renlal 740 446 2568
Equal 3pm Sat Mollohan s 202
C ark Ct1ape Road Po ter
MobieHomeforsale 14X $600/mo sec dep Call
Oho
{
74013880173
70 good cond 1on Wit set (740)446 3644
:._:.:.:._:::._:.::::.:_~::.__- (740 )448 7444
' - - ' - - - - - : : - - Brand new 2 Bed oom
on land coni act 740 992 3bd HUD home Buy tor Apa tments Washer d yer - - - - - - - 5858
S15 900~ Fo L sl ngs 801- nookup stove refr gerator Tt1ompsons App ance &amp;
391 5226 JC1709
nc uded
Repa 675 7388 For sale
-:-:----:-----:--:----:~ Also ava table un ts Slate re cond 1oned automat c
Mans on p ce
new ca pet cenlra a r al ga age a 1app 1ances close Route 160 Ca I for de1a Is washers &amp; drye s ef gera
gas and etec1r c
elect c musl be moved to Holzer Hasp a $750 (740)441 0194 0 (740)44t tors
t164
anges a r cond1t oners and
~304.,-5_5_2_8_7s.
_ _ _-:-_ month (740)44t-0310
wr nge washers W 11 do
Construction Workera
repa rs on mAIO b ands n
4BR house lor rent on State
2 bed oom fu y turn1shed
shop or al your home
Aoute 7S $650 mo plus
nc udmg Washer Dryer
dep Ca 1 (740)446 3644 fo
Ref gerator &amp; S ove all utI
---~--::--::-:cnlo
UseCI Furmtu e Sto e 130
NEW
SINGLEWIOE - - ' - - - - - - - il es pa d 2 occupants $100
Bulav lie P ke Stop by
$~2 572 M dwest Homes
per week pe pe son 3
Attention!
(740)446 4782 Ga 1po s
(740)828 2750
Local company offer ng NO occupants $85 pe son per
OH Hrs tt 3 (M F)
week
n
Po
n
Pleasant
DOWN PAYMENT pro
NEW
SINGLEWIDE
g ams tor you to buy you (304)593 3542
SPOKilN&lt;.
$22 572 M dwes1 Homes
home Instead of en! ng
(740)828 2750
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT ~---Gooiiiiiiiiiiia;--~
00% Inane ng
'
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Less tt1an perfect cred I
REPO S &amp; USED I om
Townhouse
apa tments Brown ng A Bolt Medal! on
$1 900 down
M dwesl aCC91JI&amp;d
andlo small houses FOR Model 270 Callbe A f e wth
Payment could be the
Homes (740)828 2750
RENT Call (740)441 1111 Leopod 3 5 10x Va X3
same as rent
lor appbcat on &amp; Information Scope very n ce out! t n
LO'ls&amp;
Mougage
Locate s
new cond ton w 11 sac 1ce
ACRFAG~
(740)367 0000
Furms1'1ed apt 3 ooms &amp; $600 call (304)77 3 5958
bath upsta rs clean no
Rae ne (1n town) 4 Br 2 ful
pets Aefldepos 1 requ red
116 aces SandhI Ad
Aemmgton 1167 wth scope
baths CIA Water Garbage
(740)448 1519
ready for dave opment Call
fu ly nffled ba re B ac1 mot
nctucted
$500 dep
304)675 6039 I no answer
$500 per Month references
apt Ike new Pad $900 wd sell
leave message
to $500 (740)367 7574
740 949 2217

r

Have some haul ng to clo?
Carm chael
Equ pmenl
you source for qual ty
goosened&lt;s dumps and ut
11 es Your deale ru Pr05 ar
and load Tral 1 ales
(740)446 2412

----=---

o

I~\

4WHD:Ul!S

John Dee e tO fl No T1l Dr I
Femal e BaKe fo Sate to
rent
Carm chael
Large 1 ced oom apt down $t 75 DO o Best Offer EQu pment (740)446 2412
town Ga pu ~ nowly e o Th ee ~arre ls of Kerosene
vawd .2nc1 nor $375 "'ll. o sa e Ca 1 740 992 3457 John Deere M nl Excavator
c aclo Loader Backhoal
pus utlta Cat .l f!S al
("40)446 1989
oo I condtt on Kenmore Sk d Stee s Carm chee
11\ae. e &amp; Drye tor par Equ pmant (740)448 2412
- - - -- EJf c e ty $100 DO Fve lootvnyl nat New John Dee e Compacts
Apartment Ret &amp; Oep reQ ural color Porch Sw ng w th and 5000 Se es Ut I ty lrac
cush ons and cha ns $50 00 tors @0% Fixed for 36
No Pets 304-675 5162
740 949 2490
months throug1'1 John
North 3rd Ave M ddlepo 1
2 bed oom
turn shed Grave y needs Tune Up Deere Cred t Carm chae
740 446 24 U
depos t &amp; prev ous ental $250 Gas F e~lace nse t Equ pment ( 1
efe ences equi ed No whalltm newmboK Quality Jot1n Deere Hay
pets (740)992 0165
$400 Chest F eezer 20 cu Equipment for less round
ft R g da1re good cond1t on balers square balers &amp;
Tara
Townhouse $100 Cannng as&amp;equp- mower cond hones @4 7"ttl
Apartments Very Spac ous ment make offer (304)882 Fixed tor 46 months 1t1rough
2 Bedrooms CIA t 1 2 2655
John
Deere
Cred t
Carm chael
Equ pment
Bath
Adult Pool &amp; Baby
(740)446 2412
Pool Pat o Start $425/Mo
JET

!;==;:;;;=:,

2ba

'I

MmORcvLusl

ANilQUE'i

BINGO HALL
FOR RENT
Thursdays &amp; Sundays
W1th Type 1 and Type 2
License
K1tchen Will be open

Eagles Club
992-9976 or 992-2652

floodph. nand wetland areas
Add1honal tnformahon on the proposal may

b{

be obtatned
contacttng Karen Sprague
Env1ronmenla Rev1ew Off1cer at (740) 446
4612 at the followmg addre ss Calha County
Courthouse 18 Locust Street Rm 1292
Galhpohs Ohto 45631
Wnllen comments on the proposal may be
submitted w1thm 15 d ays of the concurrent
pubhcahons and d1s s~ rn natwn of th1 s
nohce Comments ca n be rece1ved through
August 7 2006 (Note th1s date ts a 15 day
comment pertod starhng from the day after
publa:ahon)

�iunba~. ~times -ientind

Page 1&gt;6

GARDENING

•

Saudis
ask ·B ush
•
to mtervene to
stop violence in
the Mideast, A2

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Mullen receives
award,Aa

•

WAVE PEI'UNIAS JUST GET UP AND GROW. AND GROW.
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET. Va. - If
petunia ropularity '"" the
' stuff or &gt;.how bit. then you
might see head lines like
these domimning all the trade
papers: "Wave Draws Raves:
Becoming a Flower Famil y·
Fave." Or '·Petun ia Powers
Way to TojJ of Pew I Parade."
Over-the-top theatrics to be
sure. but the boldfill'c assertions would be lrue.
"We're entering our I I th
summer with the Wa ve series
of petunias ami we probably
can claim I0 percent of the
market:· said Ben Walraven.
director of sales a11d marketing for Pao American Sceu
Co.. West Chicago. Ill.
" It 's one of the few plant
brands that people come in
(to stores.) and ask for:·
Wal raven said. "No matter
how green or black your
thumb, you'll have succc&gt;S
wit h it."
Four vigorous cultivars
comprise the Wave se rie s of
petunias: Tidal Wave. Easy
Wave, Double Wave and the
original Wave.
Each comes in the tradi tional petunia co lors. which
means shades running from
cherry to purple. si lver 'to
pink and a hunch in
between. There '1rc two
dozen colors in all.
Use detenn ines which
variety or varieties gardeners might choo . . e. The origi nal Wave petunia. for a;u11plc. is a low-grc)\ving llowcr.
It quickly carpets large sections of ground. The Tidal
Wave is climber. capable
of covering fences nr tre llises to a height of three feet.
Many gardcnc" sp~e the
flowers closel y toge ther.
creating a. profuse and longblooming hedge.

a

They need to be fed more frequently than regular pelllnias,
every 10 to I~ days. usi ng an
all-purpose le L1iflzer_ That's
especially important if
they're grown in containers.
Water them regularly or
tnough that they won 't dry
out.
Extra nutrition aside,
Wa ve pelllnias require less
mait1tenance than tbeir
more ordinary cousins. Take
deadheading spent blooms,
for ins tance.
-~ You don't have to deadhead the Wave," Walraven
said . "They put out so many
· !lowers and grow so fast
that if you have some old
bl ossoms dying. the new
blosso'ms will cover them
up. They always look fresh
and beautiful."
This vigorous group of
llowers is a good match for
busy or weekend gardeners
who don't have the time to
nur s~
thin gs
along,
Walraven said.
"They ' re bulletproof. Abo
very disease-tolerant. Even
if you garden in diflicult
conditions,
vou don't have
AP Photo
The Wave series of petunias are vigorous, long-blooming varitals that can dominate flower beds with thetr speedy growth. to spend a· lot of energy
Use them also to blanket walls , cascade over pots and climb fences or arbors. Plant them closely together and for a pro- putting pesticides on them."
No wonuer they're botlo at
fuse. colorful ' hedge' of flowers.
the"garden store box office. ·
Th e Ea'y Wave has use the Wave . Regular 'petu- traditional petunias. What spre11d so -much. you get
Oil the Net:
nias don't trail that well.
moundin ~ tendencies. makthe y got was a very vigor· good value for your investFor
111ore
ahnut petunias
ing il a._ good choice for
"Some of the Wave ous plant with tremendous ment. Wave varieties witt
S(reenin g the unsightly legs 'pread three to fo ur feet , disease resistance and cover five six or seven times and perunia fii'OH'ill!(, look
of roses or other long- like a blanket. You can 't do weather tolerance."
as much ground as the regu- 10 1his Nwional Garden
limbed perennials. The that with regular petunias."
Bureau
Weh
'ire:
Problems often develop lar pet1u1ias."
Double Wave ii what you Wave petunias were devel- when petunias are grown in
One of rhe major reasims hiip:llii'li H '. ngh. ol:~lgarden­
might expect - a "semi- oped after seeking out their coot, wet climates. They why petunias - any petu- i ng Ifill· t- sh e e ls!i 11 de x. c/i11.
douhle bloom" with a great genetic roots. "About 15 don't display well when nias - cu·e so popular in Tap Facl Sheets, choose
deal 'o f cye:appea l when years ago. a bunch of breed- soggy or ·after a good rain American gardens is the Flo1rers and then find
placcu in landscapes or pots. ers - mostly out of Japan although the Wave series length of their growing sea- Pellmias,
·
"Al l tend to work better if - went back t&lt;i where wild doesn't seem bothered by son. These standout annuals
Or· look to the Wave sire:
they're in sun. like regLLiar petunias were native. to that, Walraven said.
bloom continuously from II 1 1 p : !! 1r II' II' . n· a v e -·
pet11ni,as, but yoll can use central South America,"
"Plant them where they 'II early spring until the weather r£t'\ ' ('. ~.·omit ;dal wave. aspx.
tl1em dilferentlv." Walraven Walraven said. "They found get about six hours of full sun turns cold again in autumn.
•••
said. "I r you hav~ a walt and some originals and returned a day and if you do get some
You cw1 comacl Dean
Like athletes seated around
yo u want something to cas- · th em to their labs. They tm1 gh weather, the plants will a training table, Wave petu- Fosd1ck
at
cade over that wall. you can started crossing th.em with bounce back. Because they nias have huge appetites. dea11[i1.1di1 k @Ill' tscape.11e/.

-.~..~!' ~ ~4i• We can make your headaches a tiring of the pas,r.

'~.!!
~

i\IONJl,\Y, .JIII.Y :q, 2oo6

fill CENTS • Vol.:;;; . No . :!:l&lt;J

"'"'"·rnydail),cntind.tum

SPORTS
• Local man wins ABA
fishing toumament.
See Page B1

Byers-Hill sworn in as auditor

1

..~~~~. ·Do you have headaches?

;_

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'•:

···.;~;~...

Call Dr. Nick Robinson at
Back to Hea!th Chiropractic today! ·

740.446.7460

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charles 'Pinto' Haley

INSIDE
• Saddam hospitalized
on hunger strike, being
fed through tube.
See Page A2
• Car bombs in
Baghdad, Kirkuk kill more
than 60 as prime minister
leaves for U.S.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness to offer
health screenings.
See Page A3
• O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital to offer
breastfeeding class.
SeePageA3
• July donation to Earl
Neff Pediatric Fund.
SeePageA3
• Millers hold reunion.
SeePageA3
• Sharon's condition
worsens, but former aides
say no immediate danger
to his life. See Page AS
• Wave of kidnappings
hils Haiti, leaves both
foreigners and locals in
fear. See Page AS

WEATIIER

Brian J. Reed/plloto
.

SubmHed photo

Salty Gloeckner, right, talks about tea time and customs' of serving tea In a Chester-Shade
Days program. She was assisted by her daughter, Carrie Ann Wood.

TEA TIME COMES TO LIFE
AT (HESTER CELEBRATION
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - The origin
of tea dates back to the
Chinese emperor Shen
Nung, described as a fastidious man who insisted on
having his water boiled
before drinking it.
The story goes that some
camellia leaves accidentally
fell into the hot water, the
emperor drank some, loved
the taste, and before long
tea became a popular beverage in China.
That story and more were
told by Sally Gloeckner in a
program at Chester-Shade
Days on tea and the early
customs of serving.
Centuries passed and as
trade opened with the west,
tea was brought to Europe.
It was the English, however, that made tea time so
important and elaborate,

said Gloeckner. adding that
"initially ,only the wealthy
could afford tea, but it
slowly became more affordable, reaching the height of
popularity
during
the
Victorian Era."
Gloeckner credited 1he
Duchess of Bedford with
the afternoon tea. " In the
late 19th century it was customary to have dinner
served late leaving a large
gap between meals. The
Duchess began drinking a
pot of tea and partaking of
li'ght refreshments each
afternoon. She eventually
invited friends and it soon
became a fashionable custom," she explained.
"When it comes to planning a tea," Gloeckner said
"it is all about the details''
S)le listed several elements
essential to hosting a good
tea. "Taking tea whether
you, have two or more is a

time for retlection, conversation, enjoyment and a
release from the everyday
stress of life," she said.
"Several hallmarks of a
lea include t1owers, the presentation of the table, visual
appeal and of course, tea.
When there is a guest
speaker, the tea and food
are always served first. The .
comfort of your guests is
the main priority of the
host. The speaker may
begin after everyone has·
been served and offered
seconds."
Gloeckner also stressed
the use of real table cloths.
glass dishes and china tea
cups. She suggested offering punch along with the
tea, but advi sed 'against
serving
sherbet-based
punches. and suggested
instead using a subtle punch
so as not to take away from
the taste of the food offered .

Shall we gather at the river
Details on Page A&amp;

83-4

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Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

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Obituaries
Sports
Weather

TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

A3

Classifieds .

Submitted photo

The Racine Volunteer Fire Department recently opened up
the firehouse to students in Carleton Preschool as part of
their Summer Fun Days program. While at Station Two the
students were shown all the equipment used by the fire
department, Racine Police Department and Meigs EMS
Medic Two. This included getting up close and personal with
the new fire boat, police cruiser and Meigs EMS ambulance.
"This is a great program for these children and we're more
than happy that they asked us to visit our station. It's an
honor to know we made a child happy," said Matt Smith, volunteer firefighter with Racine. Assisting Smith during the
Summer Fun Days visit were Timmy Sand, John Acree, J.P.
Varian and Curtis Jones.

BY TtM MALONEY

12 PAGii.S

Calendars

Racine Fire Department
welcomes Carleton preschoolers

Ballots are in the mail
at Century Aluminmn

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Meigs County Probate and Juvenile Judge L Scott Powell_,
administered the oath of office. to Meigs· County Auditor
Mary Byer-Hill Friday. Byer-Hill , pictured with her daughter,
Molly Ann, assumed office earlier this month, but took the
official oath before family and friends in Powell's chambers.

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valle)' PubiLOjhing Co.

RAVENSWOOD. W.Va.
- Voting is under way at
the Century Aluminum plant
in Ravenswood, much to the
chagrin of the union . and
delight of. management.
A federal mediator ruled
last week that a vote be held
among the 580 members of
Beth Sergent(photo
Local 5568-04 on what the
A large .crowd recently gathered at the river to hear the sounds of Southern Gospel music company called its "last.
as performed by Mark Bishop and the Dixie Melody Boys during the "Gospel on the River" best ami fina l offer."
event sponsored by the First Southern Baptist Church of Pomeroy. Since the good Lord was
Ron
Plant
Managei·
willin' the river didn't rise and the concert was able to take place in the ampl1itheater to Thompson said the workers
ckscrveJ the ri ght to \'otc on
accommodate people of all ages.

•

the contract offer.
"I am very pleased that
our people are going to have
the opportunity to vote on
their futures ," Thompson
said.
Eli Morris, spokesman for
the Local 5668 negotiating
team. said the decision of
the mediator was an injustice to the union .
"The people elected this
negotiatmg team because
they wanted us to make
decision~ for them," he said.
" It works a lot better that

Please see Ballots, AS

'

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