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Friday, !June ~· 2005

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 88 • Jhe Dally Sentinel

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ALONG 'FHE RivER

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. Local art o·n display: ·
French Art Colony announces
PUrchase AWard winners, Cl

. .

·. House of the Week: Classic exterior features
Palladian window, Dl

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tf

tm
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PLEASE

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• American Legion .
baseball. See Page 81

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·A DRIVE-R •••
THAT'S ;\ . -~·f:'~~
PLAN! .

SAFE THIS
4TH OF -

&gt;c.

JULY

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SPORTS

DESIGNATil.

DRIVE

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KENO!" .
..........:...-------..,~

RUTLAND·

RACINE JULY 4TH

4th of July Schedule

CELEBRATION
Monday,.July 4th, 2005

..~~

Middleport, Ohio ·

The Shoe Place
·&amp; Locker219
992-56i7
Midd

ort Ohio

Parade line-up-Southern High
School
9:45 Flag Raising-Post 602
10:00 Parade
11:00 Chicken Bar-B-Que (Firehouse)
3:00 Farm Antique Club Tractor Pull
3:00 Patriotic Program .
4:00 Big Bend Cloggers
,
4:45 . Parade Winners Announced
5:00 RACO Frog Jump
5:00 Last Chancz Band
· Southern High School Band and
· Southern Elementary Star Search
Winners will perform between
the Band Shows
6:00 Kiddie Tractor Pull
8:00 Craig Harrison (Music)
·
10:00 Fireworks ·

K&amp;C Jewelers

Downing-Childs~Mullen­

.Pomeroy, Ohio

992~2955

Fisher

Fruth ·pharmacy

Pomeroy

·92-54

•

.- 992-6491
Middleport, Ohio

.
Details 011 Peio A6

me at na
i=Dii' Bank.
----949-2210

•

BY

PAUL DARsT

POARST@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

the Court of Common Pleas,
_the growth is mostly because
of the criminal docket, Judge
Dean Evans said.
"The overall case load is ·
certainly Increasing. but not
at the same rate as the criminal case load" Evans said.
.Common Pleas Court han:
dies felony and civil cases
for Galli a County.
Evans said that in 2001 ,
this court handled .130
criminal indictments. By .

·Syracuse

992-6333

Farmers Bank ·,

"Your Bank.For Life-~'
PDIHI'Ii 11111111111 T...pen Plllll IIIII

992-2136 441-2265

681·3161

n3·6411

-

2004, that increased to 196 'felony ca~es, misdemeanor
- · a 50 perce·m increase in cases and civil di sputes not
four years.
exceeding $15,000. ·
That trend is continuing
As or May 2005, her court
this year, he said. As or May, handled 66 felony cases,
his court handled 115 cases. five rpor~ than by May of
If that pace contin11es, last year; 740 mi sdemeanor
Evans '
docket
could criminal cases. one more
approach 300 cases thi s year. than by May" or last _year;
It is a somewhat different and . 2,084 misdemeanor
story in municipal court, traffic cases, 366 fewer tluin
however, Judge Margaret · May' 2004. '
Evans said. Her court hanShe attributed the noticedles preliminary hearings for able drop in traffic cases to

.

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lan McNemarjphotos.

Keyla Johnson was named 2005 River Recreatiqn -Festival Queen Friday evening at the festival in the Gallipolis City Park,
Johnson is flanked to the far left by Kristin Brandeberry, third runner·up, Brittany Mowery, first runner-up, and to the far right
by Holly Canaday, fourth runner-up; and Miranda Merry, second runner-up.

Johnson crowned
River Rec Queen,
Miss Congeniality
"

BY IAN McNEMAR
IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Kayla Johnson, Gallia
Academy High School senior and daughter of
Kevin and Ronda Johnson of Gallipolis, was
crowned 2005 River Recreation Festival
Queen and was also voted Miss Congeniality
by fellow queen contestants Friday during the
40th annual fe~tival in !he Gallipolis City Park.
Johnson hesitated with slight disbelief when
-she was announced as this year's queen. ·
·Thank you so much," she said, smiling, to
judges from the stage. She happily thanked the
Please see Queen. Al

A pleased Kayla Johnson holds her crown as 2004 Queen Ashley Caldwell
attaches a sash, naming Kayla the 2005 River Recreation Festival Queen
Friday evening in the Gallipolis City Park .

EPA to.reassess human dange,r of CS
BY BRIAN ' J. REED

Chester, Ohio

..~Racine

Pomeroy, Ohio

MiddlepQrt

WEATIIER

985-3301
'

sher
hse
Pharmacy

f,

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Bcium Lumber

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Middleport, Ohio

Fune·r al Home

• Baby Tot Sparkler
winners named at festival.
SeePageA2
• DOD report challenges
USAF plans for 130th. _
SeePageA2
• Fireworks set for
Centerville. See Page A3
. • School board meets
Tuesday. See Page A3
• MRIDD Boatel sla~s
meeting. See Page A3
• Emergency summer
cooling-program
continu~;~s. See Page AS
• Missing Idaho girl
found at Coeur d'Alene
· restaurant; brother feared
dead.
Page AS
• Festival names Little
Mr. and Miss Firecracker.
SeePage AS

·Pomeroy, Ohio -

Ohio

\ 'nl. :Jl). :\o. :.LJ.

Stale Highway Patrol . officers i., 6umg more warnings
. and fewer ticket&gt; for lesser
1
offen,es.
. Al\hough the criminal
docket in municipal court is
down so far thi s year, the
overall number of cases is
about the same. Margaret
··rrv71ti"s said. That is because
civil filings through her
coun have increa ~ed signifi·
-Please see Courts, Al

Honoring
veterans
festival's
theme·

see

992-21.55

992-6687

•

Increasing case load puts strain on courts

·INSIDE

The Daily Sentinel ··

· Insurance

Pomeroy, Ohio

Q~ality Print Shop
992-3345

'·

Brogan Warner

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SI ..)U

Page AS
• John W. Duncan
• Dempsey Roger O'DeU
• Harley David Wells

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

'1iddlt·por·l• (,allipoli~oo • .Jul~ :~. :.!ou:;

Bv IAN McNEMAR

·Attorneys
992-5132

rt, Ohio

Musserlnsurance
992-3381
.

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IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Crow&amp;Crow

992-2635

Pom

Pcmu:ru\ •

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9:15

Ingels Radio Shack,
&amp;Jewelry ·
Midd

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ALL ACTIVITIES AT STAR MILL PARK
EXCEPT PARADE AND BAR-B-QUE.

992-6611
.
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For Craft Spaces'Call
Call Maxine Rose at
Home National Bank 949-1210

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply

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GALLIPOLIS - On most
days, the staff in the Gallia
County · Clerk of Courts
office don't have a lot of
free time.
That is common for most
staffs· in offices associated
with the county court system
lately. During the past couple
of years, the case load has
inGreased tremendously, In

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Saturday, July 2nd, 2005
9:00 a.m ... :...Parade Line-up
10:00 ............ Parade
Noon ............. announcement of p~rade
. .
wmners
noon- 2:00 pm local entertainment
.
1:00 - ............. bmgo starts
2:00 _pm - s:oo pm Karaoke
2:00 pm ......... kiddy game start, balloon
toss, egg race, and more,
an by the Rutland
Nazarene Church, prizes
awarded to the. winner
.1:oopm - 11 :oo pm Nashville
recording artist
Sharp

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()hiu \alit ·~ Puhli ... hing( u.

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Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

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Meanwhile, the C8 Health
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Project. funded through a
class action lawsuit settlePOMEROY - Members ment between DuPont and
Environmental · customers in affected -water
of .. an
Protection Agen.cy advisory districts. plans informational
board have deemed the public meetings later this
chemical C8, which has been month to discuss the effe~ts
identified in four local water of the chemical in local
supplies, a ··likely · carcino· water. supplies.
gen:· and recommends that
One of those meetings will
7 to !I
on
the EPA conduct additiOJlal be held
the effects of the chemical.

carcinogenicity,
another from 7 to '9 on July human
15 at Meigs High School.
based on animal studies.
The
Mason
County
In a draft report released last
(W.Va.) public water supply week, the majority of memhas tested positive for C8, as ~ hers on an EPA scientific ad vihave the Tuppe~s .Plains· sory bOard that reviewed the
Chester . ..yater Dtstn,ct and report concluded that C8 is
the mumctpal water suppltes ''likely" 10 be carcinogenic to
or Pomeroy and Syracuse.
humans and that the EPA
The EPA' said earlier this should 'conduct cancer risk
year that tis draft nsk assess- · assessments for a variety of
ment of
rtluorooctanotc tumors found in mire and rats.

•

24 PAGES

Lions Club hopes to continue flag decoration

Around Town _
A3
The word "'organization"
BY .BETH SERGENT
Celebrations
C4
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENnNEL~COM
may imply ·a large number
Classifieds
D Section
of people, but in fact there
••
PQMEROY
Did
you
are
around four members in
insert
. Comics
ever notice that -American the Pomeroy/Middleport
Editorials ·
A4
· flags are ' always out on Lions Club that keep the tr,a·
Movies
A3
major holidays ·in.' down - ditions alive. '
·
town
Pomeroy ?
The
With dwindl'ing member·
. .Obituaries
AS
Pomeroy/Middleport
Lions
ship,
it .becomes more and
A2
Regional
Club notices because it's the more difficult )o find the
B Section _ organization that puts them . maripower to place the 65
Sports "" ·
Weather ·
A6
· on display for eight holi · flags downtown, but still the
tradition continues - a tradays a year,
© aoos Oht~ Valley Publtshi!lll Co .

GALLIPOLIS - - Men,
women , children and families
tilled the Gallipolis City Park
Friday for the opening day of
the 40th · annual River
Recreation Festival and more
importantly, to remember the
true reason for the occasion
- to begin the celebration of
the birth of the 'United States
of America.
Gallia·Coumy Chamber of
Commerce President Ryan
Sm'ith introduced Jenny
Dyer. who delivered the
national anthem .
Smith also introduced patri·
otic speaker Keith Jeffers,
pres.ident of Oallia County
YeJ_(lfans Service Commission
and U.S. Army veteran.
Jeffers retired in 1995 from
the military with .just over 25
years or service, including
services in Vietnam, Korea
and Germany.
Jeffers instilled upon the
crowd three points: lhe rea·
son to celebrate, the right to
celebrate and the responsibil·
ity to celebmte.
'There is nostalgia about
the Fou rth ()f',July - cook·
outs. ice creatn, parades, the
displaying of our ·flag and
wearing of patriotic clothing.: ·
and firework s." he said. "I
.would like you to think of
thqse who gave us the right to
celebrate, those who preserved our freedoms through
the years and who continue at
this very moment to preserve
tho se rights and ' freedoms.
Think of the sacrit1ces made
in the past, the present and
those sacrifices yet to be
made in the future by these
young men and women who
are inh&lt;trm's way today: ·
''Those visions that were
established
by
the
Declaration of Independence
are ·never dying and they
continue to light the way for
us as we face the challenges
that the future may bring,"
he added. ''Now is the time
•
to stand united' as .a nation
and support our troo~s. our
ideal s and oar pre'sidenl.
Let's not be driven apart by
our differences. but work at
our individual responsibility
wi thout regard · to who we.

Plea~s;e~s;ee~cia.~Alii-=~~it~l7,o~rd~e~r~tl~wTt~..~.e~c~a~n~~~--

·INDEX
4 SI!CfJONS -

dition that most people take ing it one or the best-kept
for granted.
secrets in the county.
"That's why we haven't
In fact , in Meigs Coupty.
quit," Lions · Club ;Vice the Lions Club has donated
President Bruce · -.Teaford 35 park benches, contributed
, sa itl. "If we would stop. peo- thousands of dollars in llood
pie would be unh~ppy. We relief, ·sponsored 1wo dogs
sure don't do it for the that ha\(&amp; become seeing-eye
glory." •
.
guides. r\'furbished the
The Lions Club is a ser- pavilion at Beech Grove
vice organization ihat often Cemetery and provided t~e
does not share in the lime•
light or its good deeds. mak• Please see Club, Al
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honof an&lt;t pay tribute to
great- country, our own
United States of America." ·
Jeffer' \vas joined by Lauren
SchmolL 2004 Miss Gallia
County and 2005 grdduate ·or
River Valley High School. She
is the daughter of James and
Deborah Schmoll of Cheshire,
and has been in volved in
National Honor Society, Beta
Club. Drama Club. Ke y Club, .
An Club. French Club and
w~s one of six co-valedictorians at the RVHS grad!Jatlon
ceremon1es.
· Pl,ase see Veterans; Al

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PDARSTii'MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - · Proud
parents paraded their little
ones onto the. stage for the
Baby Tot Sparkler ·contest
Saturday morning ai 1he
.Gallipolis · River Recreation
·
Festival .
One boy and one girl were
•' chosen in each of I0 cate,
gories.
~
~ t

Some babie" calmly

in

Paul Dorsi/photo
Sharlene Hanimond holds her son, Brayden; on stage during
dur1ng the Baby Tot Sparkler contest.. Brayden won first place
in the 13·15 month old category.
'
7-9 months ·
19-23 months .
Girl : Abiga il Marxen: Boy:
Girl: Grace Canaday; Boy:
Ethan Tipple.
Cade Saunders.
10-12 months
·
2 years old Girl: Madie Rose: Boy
Girl: Savannah Morrow;
Isaac Clarv.
Boy: Joel Bryan.
t3-JS~nmnths
3 years old
Girl: Grace Meyn: Boy:
Girl: Megan Rose Bailey;
Brayden Hammond.
Boy: Samuel L. Stewart.
16-18 months
4 years old
· · ~ i r l : Jerah Ju stice: Boy':
Girl: Adrianna Pgwell ;
Bryant Cremeans.
Boy: Caleb Henry. ..

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putting a strain 'on them. The
staff in the office of Clef.k of
Courts Noreen Saunders have
their hands full, she said.
"We get every piece of
paper filed through the court
system,_" Saunders said . "We
are tremendously bu sy, espe-·
cially with criminal tilings."
Saunders' ' office ·services
the common pleas court and
the Fourth District Court of •
Appeals, she said. That is in
addition to her office's other
duties, which include operating the county 's title and reg ~ ·
'istrar otftc_~:s, and more.
The court workloa'll has
increased so much that
Sal!nders has requested more
help.
"I've been asking fo r one
more staff member, but I've
not been successful ," she
said.
,
Despite the growing work~
loads, however, each staff is
working hard and getting tile
job dorie. Saunders, Adkins
and both judges had high
praise for the way their staffs
are handling the additional
toil.
"We handle it pretty well,"
Adkins said. "We can get
things done quickly."
The burgeoning docket has
become a labor of love for
Dean Evans.
"I like the job," he said.
"We'll take .what ever time· is
'necessary to do it."

visited the Senior Citizens me. I am a dedicated person
Center and worked with Key and I enjoy a good chalClub on a cancer benefit and lenge."
..
Toy Town .
Page A1
Miranda .was sponsored in
Kayla was sponsored in the the pageant by Mike and
CHARLESTON, W.Va. iss ued by the group that also fundin g rather than reducing
pageant
by Sassy Scissors . Brenda Fortner.
(A PJ - The U.S. Air Force mentions Ellsworth Air Force excess infrastructure." ·
judges as her sash, displayiqg
and
Riverfront
Honda .
Third
runner-up was
cont ends it will save money Base in South Dakota, Grand
The Defense Department her achievemeQt, was draped
First
-runner-up
was
Kri
stin
Brandebel'Ty,
daughby stri pping the West Forks Air Force . Base in wants to move the L~Oth 's around her by 2004 Ri ver
Brittany
Mowery,
daughter
of
ter of Roger and Susa11
Vi rginia Ai r National Guard's ' North Dakotit and other facil- planes ·to Pope Air Force Recreation Festival Queen
Lori
Rice
and
Ed
Mowery
of
.
Brandeberry, of Gallipolis,
!30th Airlift. Wing of its ities slated for closure.
Base near FaY,e t~ev ill e, N.C. , Ashley Caldwell.
Patriot,
and
a
senior
at
South
and
a senior at Gallia
"There is no consistency in · where they would ' be paired
planes, but a team of analysts
· "My family is my brick- ·Gallia Hi$h School.
Academy High School this
hired by the U.S. Defense approach taken in capacJty wi th eight other C- 130s from bone ... They always want
She is mvolved with post- fall.
D~partmem has cone Iuded .analv sis.
USAF· defines Pittsburgh's 9 llth Ai rlift you to shine," she said, when
In school, she is very active
the opposite.
· capacity based on the differ- Wing to form a 16-plane unit. asked who had intluenced her. secondary options this. fall
Qubbed the '.' R ~d Team," ence
between
ac tual
The niove is part of a life the most and why during with the University of Rio in , Key Club, Madrigals,
Grande and SGHS.
..
the panel of former top gov- squadron size and optimum Pentagon plan to close 33 the fi nal interview on stage.
National Honor Society, stuShe
is
an
'SEOAL
Regional
ernment offic ials found that squadron size," the . team major bases and downsize 29
dent Gouncil and a Hugh
At GAHS, Kayla is a memremov ing the eight C-130 · wrote in its re port , dated others in an effort to save ber of National Honor Scholars participant, a Hugh O'Brian
Leadership
Leadership ·Ambassador, among others.
Hercules turboprops fro m April 18. .
$48.8 bil lion over 20 vears Society, the Madriga ls, con- O'Brian
Charleston's Yeager Airport
The Red Team concluded .. and al'so promote cooperation cert and-symphonic choir and Conference ·Participant and
She was spon sored in the
would cost $39.7 million that the Air Force is using the among the Army, Navy, Air the musicals_"Wi zard of Oz," has been listed on the pageant by her parents.
National Honor roll for math
over the next 20 yea rs, in part ' Base
Realignment
and Force and Marine Corps.
Fourth runner-up was
"The Sound of Music," and English, among others.
because Yeager charges the Closure
·· Commission
The nine-member commis- "Brigadoon" and "Bye, Bye ·
Holly·
Canaday, daughter of
Brittany_was sponsored in
Air Guard $ 1-a-year lease for process. which aims to sion has begun reviewing the Birdie."
Patrick
and Betsy Canaday of
the pageant by Tamara
its base there.
streamline military opera- P,ntagon's plan, issued in
Rio
Grande,
and a senior at
She is also involved with
Those costs will onl y tions and cut costs, "only to May, ahd must send a final Key Club, and the volleyball · Mowery, Bob Hobbs, Hilda Gallia Academy High School
and • Raym'ond Saunders,
increase after · 20 years, move aircraft ana gain MIL- list to the White House and team.
Mike
and Faye Warren and in the fall .
according to, a white paper CON (military construction) Congress thi s fall.
She will be participating in
Her assoc1allon
with Avon.
,
school-related extracurricular
Second runner-up~ was the post-secondary options ·
gave praise to the hard work of parade was held Saturday activities has gotten her Miranda Merry, daughter of program in the fall for the
the festival committee and the evening, and rising ·country involved in the commqnity as Mike and Tina Merry of second year.
chamber of commerce for the artist Miranda Lambert round- well.
Through post-secondary
Thurman, and a senior at
planning of this year's festival. . ed oui the day's activities with
from Page A1
She has been active .in South Gallia High School options, Holly ts currently
· After the success of the first a show on the main sta!;e.·
working towqrd her bacheChristmas caroling at nursing this fall .
Schmoll spoke of the day, McKinniss anticipates
Today, the festival will host homes with the GAHS
She said her . involvement lor's degree in nursing and
respect that all veterans, past "more of the same" great days numerous local and national Madrigals. Also, she has been in different activities · at has been listed on the honors
to follow through July 4.
gos pel performers.
and present, deserve.
a vacation Bible school school "allow me to work on dean's list
"The first day has gone
Praise and worship in the teacher, parii'cipated in my leadership skills and
"Celebrating our veterans is
Holly Was sponsored in the
If
great,"
he
said.
"Crowds
have
park
begins
at
I
0
a.m.
and
.
A
.
.
.
Rehab/
Awareness
Day
at
allow
me
to
be
a
role
modeL
pageant
by
Saunders
~e Iebratmg .~enca 111 ttSe
been good. The weather was lasts until II :30 a.m. Gospel Holzer Medical Center, 4-H, My education is important to Insurance.
and no Am~rtcan shoul~ ever nice. Everybody's worked performances begin followforge t _thaL. ~she sat d. They ~og•tJb&gt;r
""' .J"'i~
•";~·.-, ~·~"·'"
·r. ~ng
th~'"nr'";
n .,._
o~r '.' ·: ""
"a~
"
\ .... ,._ jo
~
6.::\
~._. 6 .... u,....
,
,_ u v ..,,"P
.........
are the ptcture of what the · What more could you ask for?" last until I0 p.m.
Umted States. was founded
Saturday was Kids Day at
Duck adop ti ons are still
on, and what tl was meant to the festi val, sponsored·by the available for the Duck-tona
be. Each and every one of us Wiseman Agency. The Baby 5000 duck race,· which will
ts .~ere because of them. .
Tot Sparkler and Little Miss happen at noon Monday.
A split the pot drawing, .basMy questton to you ts th ts: and Mr. Firecracker co ntests
How will you give back all were held, in addition to the ket bingo, talent show, a raffle
that you ow~ to our veterans?" first Junior Miss contest and drawing, kids games . and
At the close of cere\)1onies, numerous chi'ldren 's activi- many live music performances
River · Recreation 'Festival ties in the park.
will fill Monday before the
The Independence Day fireworks at 10 p.m.
Chairman Ray McKinniss

Public meetings

ca

from Page,A1
Lust year, the EPA accused
DuPont of fai ling to report
information over two decades
·about the potential environ·
menta) and human health
risk's of PFOA. DuPont has
set as ide $15 million to settle
the allegatiohs. Du Pont has
agreed to pay $107 million to
se(tle' a class-action lawsuit
hy residents 'fhO claimed that
CX
from ' DuP.;mt's
Washington Works plant .. in
Parkershurg. W.Va .. contaminated their water supp lies.
much as

resolv e the case. but has
denied wrongcjoin g and said
it settled to avoid the time
and cost of litigati&lt;)n. It has
also consiste ntly denied aqy
danger to humans from exposure lu the chemical, which is
used in the manufacture of
Tetlon and hundreds of other
product s.
The chem ical co n)pany
declined comment on the
'advisory group\ report, but
said in a prepared statement
that human health. and toxicology studies suggest that
C8 exposure does not cause
cancer in hum ans and does
not po»e a health risk to the
general-public.

'

caused bY. C8 even ii1 workers who have . signific:an tl y
higher exposure levels than ,
the general population." the
compan y said.
The company also said data
trom its employee hea lth stud- ·
ies and those conducted by
J M, whkh stopped manufacturing · PFOA ·in 200Q,
··de:o;erve !!realer cunsideralion
in the EPA's final nsk ·assessmen t rather than relying solely on an imal testing models."
Last month. a federal grand .
jury in' Was hington . subpoe"
naed DuPont docu ment s
related to ' PFO( including
sumc that the company previ.ously provided to the EPA for

Open 1t1 ·
lhe
'Publici

Chester Commons • Chester, Ohlo

july 12-16, 2005

History Comes Jllive!
. · The Roaring Twenties

.

Daytime youth &amp; adult workshops
. i11jo see-www.meigscou11tytourism.com

'

Spe&lt;ilit Thank You
·
/ to The Following C hautauqua Sponsors
A

Club-·
fro111 Page A1

.

. stainle&gt;s steel .sign tl\at spelh
out "Meigs ·County" on th~
front"of the courthouse. ·
Already this year. the club
has· provided 35 cycgla"cs
&lt;1nd paid for the initial eye
ex(lm f0r less fortunate Meigs
County residents.
Teaford "firmly believes''
that to lose an organization
like the Lions Pub sould

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·Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the fire station.

Reunions

Galha County calendar
Community
events

Wednesday, July 6
. Friday, July 9
GALLIPOLIS - In place
GALLIPOLIS
90th
of its regular meeting, . the birthday party [qr Margaret
P~rkinson Support Oroup Blazer, I to 3 p.m. ; Grace
Sunday, July 3
wtll meet at noon for a United Methodist Church,
t:: HE SH_IRE
Davis . potluck lunch, hot dogs and No presents please.
Sunday, July 17
reunion , I p.m .. Kyger Creek iced tea provided. Location is
Clubhouse.
769 Ce ntenary Road . For
GALLIPOLIS
M'.J .
GALLiPOLIS ·
- ~ information, call446-0808 or Clary family reunion, I 0 a.m. ·
until dark, Raccoon Creek
Preparation. for Childbirth, 2 • 446-0697.
County
Park Wild Turkey
to 6 p.m., Hol zer Medical
GALLIPOLIS - Order
Center
Education
and meeting of the River Valley Shelter# I.
Con ference Center, Roo.m Organic Food Co-op, 7
Wednesday, July 20
AB.
p.m., Bossard Memorial
GALLIPOLIS - Colonial
Hou se
GALLIPOLIS - Special Library. For information, Days at ~. Our
Museum, for girls aged I 0
patriotic service at the Furst call 245-5464.
.
Church of God, 109 Garfield
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia and up, I0 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Ave., starting at 10:25" a.m. County Board of Health, 9 Crafts, games, costumes and
Community service person- a. m., conference room of the · lunch. For reservation s, call
nel and veterans will ' be rec- Gallia
County Service 446-0568.
ognized. For information, Center.
· Saturday, July 30
Friday, July 8
GALLIPOLIS First
.ca ll 446-4404.
' CHESHIRE--Thompson- . GALLIPOLIS - The Our ~nnual Alexander Clark
Beeson reunion, noon , Little House Museum will be hold-- Barcus family reunion, 9 a.m.
Kyger
Congregational ing &amp; Civil War Hi story day until 6 p.m:, Raccoon Creek
for boys, ages 9-12, at the County Park. Contact person
Church. Potluck.
museum. It will encompass is Wendell A. Lucas at e-mail
.
Monday, July 4
history lessqns from history I ucas wa@ ohiohi lis . com,
GALLIPOLIS
teacher
Gene 1-luffman and phone 367-0622. Every
American ...Legion Post 27,
First Annual 4th of July reenactments . The history Barcus and relation to the
Cookout, from 4 to 6 p.m. at day will be from I0 a.m.-2 name invited to attend.
the post, 1839 , McCormick · p.m. A sack lunch is retj_uired . Contact him if planning to
Road·. For veterans and their Pre-register by Wednesday, attend to reserve table space
families .
July 6. Contact the Our and parking.
House Museum for registraE-mail community calen·
Thesday, July 5
-dar items ro kkelly@mydai· ·
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer tion at 446-0586,
Clinic Retirees will meet at
Rodney lytribune.com.
Fax
RODNEY
'
Methodist announcements to 446·
noon in the lobby of the United
Holzer Center for Cancer Community Center/Youth 3008. Mail . items to 825
Care for an escorted tour of Center open for youth aged Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
the facilit y, followed by 10 to 19, 7 to 10 p.m. Adult 45631. Announcements may
lunch at I p.m. at the supervi.~io n is provided. also b!!. dropped off at. the
Admission is free.
Holiday Inn .
Tribun~ office.

Local Briefs

DEAR ABBY: A~ far back as
I can remember, my family has
been in turmoil over spousal
abuse, bitter sibling rivalries.
and worse. Not surprisingly, I·
entered into a relationship with
Dear
an abuser. My father's advice: •
"Go back, take your beating, .
Abby
and give that baby a home'"
Years later, after issues of
childhood sex ual abuse ca me
up, I made a near total break.
I have spent years in therapy, your description of them. your
learv·ing to protect. myself · famil y could serve as pmtcr
and lny child.
moueis fur uysfunciion. If von
My family · worshi·ps th e feel. the need to pay yl1ur
god of respectabil ity and respects, as far as I'm conpublic appearances. Despite cerned, yuu and your daughter
years of spousal abuse , tl)y can visit }1er grave the followmother has supported my· ing day. I see no reason to set
father completely.
yourse lf up for any further
· When J)ad was 11ear death: I demonsli ations ol hostilit y.
made a hnal vtstt wtth my 7DEAR ABBY: I'm a senior
·year-old daughter and a suppon · in high schooL the oldest of
person. Abby,. as my daughter . three children My t4-year-o!J
played her v1ohq for '_'Grandpa." br~llher: "Ad.un:· is c.tusing our
he exposed htm~ll to her. I whole family grief. My pw·cnts
attended hts funeral for my can no lonoer control him and
mother's sake - another mis- th~y're lost as to what to du:
·take. My daughter was snubbed Although Adam is still in junior
by her cousms and I W!L' verbal- • high. he swys out until new·ly
ly attacked by an aunt.
. . midni~ht almost every night.
In recent years, I limited our
Dad and Mom Ton1mute,
contact with my fami ly. two hours to work ft ve day s a
Mother's health is now failing, week. They're-physica ll y and
and she's in severe pain. I wish ' emotionall y ti re.d from \\;orryher no more suffering, but the in g and waiting for him every
situation hasn't changed. Do night. Adam threatetis to hurt
yo'u think J·should attend her us'physically because he's the
funeral, ·or mourn privately for strongest person in the famil y.
her passing? - WANTS TO He won't li sten to any of us
DO WHAT'S RIGHT
and becomes furious if we ask
DEAR WANTS: Do what is
right for you and your daughter, and discuss the ramificatlons of attending your moth·
er's funeral wi\h your therapi st..
Funerals s?metimes bring o~t
the worst 111 people, and from

•

wh~re he spent the day. I'm
writing thi' on behalf of my ·.parents, b~ause it hut1s me to
see the pain my brother i'
causing them . - WORRIED
SISTER IN SAN JOSE
DEAR WORRIED SIS TER : Your brother's behayior
is a cry I:Or help. 11·., esse.ntial
that your parents stop ignoring it · and as~e rt thcmsch es.
Mo&gt;t ci tie&gt; have a em-few for
youth, anu y&lt;'lltr br\)thei may
be break in~ the law.
Yuu r- pa1~1Jl~ ·m.:uJ tu linJ uut
whether his problem is anger.
urug,, h&lt;mging with the wrong
crowd, emotional problems. etc .
Ope uf them may have 'to cut
ba~k on working /~ommuting
lt&gt;r a while to as.,urc thm· he ~an
get counseling and ~upcn · is ion . ..

Under no cirl·um stancc :-,

'hou ld illlimidation or ,·Jblencc be tolerated. Please t ~IJ
yuur parenh to L'" n'l'lt their
UOCI OI' for rckrraJ to a lilCillai
health professi&lt;)nal for yo ur
brot h~ r, and poosible famil)
counseling for all of you.
. Dear Abby i., written bJ'

A~igail

Van Buren, al.w
known as .leanne Phillips, and
was founded by her ·mother. .
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DewAhby.com
or IW. Box 69440, . I.m
A-ilgeles, (A 90069.

Box OHice Opens @6:30PM Nighlly
&amp; 12:30PM for Wed- Sun Matinees
NOW SHOWING SUMMER

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SiQn Up Online ! www.LocaiNet. com

992-6677

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"

HEALTH SYSTEMS

Starting Now (Stroke Education Program)

•
Grove,

Fireworks set
for Centerville

8 (Sy mmes Creek Road) is. Coal
South Point,
Chesapeake, Proctorville and
now open to ttaffic.
The project was. delayed Crown City. "Crews are
last fall and winter due to expected to begin work next
CENTERV ILLE - For the incleme nt weather, which week to clean off the hillside
first tim~ in--a-f-ew y~rs~a:eQro!!tractors to halt con- led_ges:_ and remove ' debris
Centerville will have a fire- struct10n of the structure that from the ditches at 12 loca: works show at dark on is situated at the 2.64-mile tions along U.S. 52 and state
marker on Symme s Creek Route 7," said.Fry. "This work
: Monday, July 11.
An ice cream social will be Road, JUSt east of the route's is a safety precaution that is
held at the corner of Vinton junction with CR 5 (Elkins. routinely taken in order to preand 'state weets along Ohio Creek Road). al)d three miles vent rock and other materials
·from ending up on the road279 with ice cream, cake, north of Ohio 141 near Aid.
hamburgers and hot dogs.
"Bad weather throughout the way and creating' a potential
A waterball ftght with local area last year·affected many of hazard to ·motorists."
Motori sts may encounter
: fire departments will be held the projects: an? this. one was
·at 4 p.m. on July 4 at the old no exception,' satd ·Ohto temporary del ays where
: Centerv ille
Elementary Department of Transportation . cxews are working along the
building. Registration will be District 9 Deputy Director routes as lane restrictions will
at 3 p.m. A
Harry Fry. "We realize the be in place in the immediate
For inftlJ'mation, contact impact such delays can have construction zones. Ohio 7
Ann .Daniel s at 245-5635.
on local .motorists, so we .. traffic will be maintained in
appreciate the public's cooper- one lane with the use of nagation and patience as this pro- gers, and U.S. 52 traffic will
. jeer ·was completed."
·
be maintained in at least one
Boone
Co Ieman lane in each direction; the
Construction of Portsmouth four-lane highway 's eastwas contracted by the depart- bound lanes sh9uld not be
GALLIPOLI S
Galli poli s City BcJard of ment to replaCe the bridge, affected throughout this. pro: Education wi ll meet in spe- and although it Wft~ sched- ject as it is expected that two
' : cial session at 5 p.m . Tuesday uled for completion Nov. 30, lanes of traffic will be main· in the administration build- 2004, the bridge WAS sched- tained at all ti mes.
Alan Stone Co. was•awarduled to be reopened Friday,
ing, 61 State St., Gallipolis.
ed a contract in the amount of
The board will consider July I, by about' 5 p.m..
$221,887.75 to complete the '
accepting emp loyee resignaproject, and ·- all work is
. tions and ,employment of perscheduled to be completed by
: sonnel.
Sept. 30, 2005.
·

School board
meets Tuesday

'Every Monday- Friday from 3:00pm · 4:00pm. Holzer Medical Center Inpatient Rehab Unit on
the Hosp1tat's Fifth Floor. Call (740) 446-5070 for more lnforma~on .

River •Recreation Festival
The Community Health and Wellness Department's Wellness Wagon will be in the Gallipolis City
Park providing free health screenings and health informat ion during lhe River Recreation Festival.
Schedules ..wba~ted da1ly. Far more information, please .contact .Bonnie McFarland at (740)
44&amp;-5679.
.
J

Preparation for Childbirth

.

.

Sunday, July 3 from 2:00 pm -6:00 pm. Holz~r Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center.
Call (740) 446-5030 to regisier or for more information.

Holzer Hospice Dinner with Friends • Meigs County
Thursday, July 7 at 6:00 pm at Bob Evans Restaurant in Mason, West Virginia. For more
information, call toll free atl-800-500-4850:
·
·

CommunitY Coffee
Friday, July 8 from 8:00am- 9:00 am in the HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Holzer Med ical
Center invites alllo an informal and ongoing community coffee promoting conversation between
area leadeFs in business, community service. education, governmenl and private enterprise
Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy Services Department. For more info11'nation, please call (740)
446-5053.
.
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FACiS Fishing Eveni

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Relay for Life Penny Sale an~ Spaghetti Dinner
Saturday, July 9 at 5:00pm al Holzer Wyngate'Jackson, located at t 01 Markham Drive in Jackson.
Ohio. Great sale items such as L0 ng!lberger Baskets and much more. $5.00 lor Adults: '$2 50 for
children.' All proceeds benefit R~lay lor ~ife. For more information, please call (740) 286-8785.
~\\I

'

500

Friday July 15 • 6 pm
• Qmununlty Picnic

Bank &amp; Sav mgs
Ht.llllC National Bank

G&amp;W

Plastics &amp; Supplies

&amp;..Concert

Downmg Childs Mu llen Musser Ins.·

• Bring your Lawncha1r
&amp;.. COvered Dl$h

Appliancl.! Man
.
Bamn True Value Lumber &amp; Hardwar(.'
DV Wchcr Cnn..,truc'ti t.m

Xi Gamrntt

.•

Ep~ilun - Beta Sigmct
Hill'" Class •~: Car'~

Fi :-.ha's Funaal Home 1
Ft~lll'V Benneu Pn:-.1 128
· MiJdi ~:Port Am'Crican Leg1un

Meigs Cou.nty Library
t\'Uima\1

Nora Kelly

Marv B a.... ~\\dl

Li.'ah t\rl1a u!:!h
Wild

H or~c

Cafe

~

Phi Sorority

Powell's Foodfair
Pomeroy Sa\C il Lot

.

Friday, July 8 from 11:00 am - 3:00pm afBQ~ Evans Farms in Rlo .GrMde.· The Family Addictron
Community Treatment Services (FACTS)/ NeVI A~ernatives will be hosting th1s fish1ng event tor
youth ages 6 and,up. Please bring your .own pole, but call if this is a problem. To register, or for
more information, please call FACTS/New Mernatives at (740) 44&amp;-7866 or (740) 28&amp;-1589.
Parents
• '
. must sign a. release for' participation.

Merchants Association
Peoples ·

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___:.__-_·:: :Su:.: :;nd: ;apy ~·J:.:.:~; _:~Y! .' .:~
.,: 0 : : !5

Years' offamily turmoil a]use wounds that will never heal

Projects slated
for US 52, Rt. 7

' ' Me•£~ Cuuqty Tuuri~m
M e i £~ County Chamber uf Commerce
MillJicpon Comrnuntty A ssocmtion

· Fanner~

"

'Parkiltf .

Character Portrayals of: July 12-Henry Ford
July 13-Babe Ruth • July 14-Zora Neale Hurston
July 15-Jobn Dillinger • July 16th-Zelda Fit:zgerald

on 'to
only hurt the residents of
Thl! 65 American !lags w,i.ll
Metgs County This is why once. again be display on July
the club is reaching out to the 4 in Pomeroy from:Auto
community for new members Zone to Pmvell 's FotJdfair
so that it cari carry on tradi - beginnin;! at 7 a.m. Tiley wUI
lions like placing tlags in be removed at 5 p.m .
Pomeroy.
If you 're interested iii join- ·
Pomeroy resident Vic ing the Lions Club, members
Young recently joined the •meet at noon for a meeting ·
Lions Cluh and although· and lunch ·every second and
he'd alwa ys noticed the holi - four.th &gt;Vedne.siJay at the .
throu ghou t Meigs Senior Center, or you
day . flag s
Pomeroy. he never rcalilcd can call Teaford at g92-J325.
Membership is open to bmh
who put them out.
"If they stopped putt ing the men :md women who wish to
flag ' nut, people would make a difference in their
notice," Young.said .
· c*rt_munity. ·

1R££

CHAUTAUQUA

'

Clubs and
organizations.

Veterans

HIO

·;...:,.:;:n:::.._·..:,1=-'-=o=-·WN.....:._:
' . -=·=·:..___ _

pictures and other genealogy
items for display.
•
RACINE - Reunion of
Monday, July 4
the
Charles and·· Fannie
&lt;I SY RACUSE Sutton
family will be held at
Beaver
Township _Trustees regular
Star Mill Park in Racine:
meetmg, 6 p.m., Syracuse
Lunch at 121:30 p.m. Take a
Village Hall .
·
covered
dish.
Thesday, July 5
Thesday, July 5 ·
Sunday, July 10
RUTLAND - Rutl and
MIDDLEPORT
~
POMEROY
Annual
Township Trustees 5 p.m.
Middleport
Community
reunion
of
relatives
of
Daniel
budget he:iring, regular meet- Association, 8:30 a.m.,
and Phoebe Lovett and
ing to fol low.
Peoples ~ank .
William and . Mary Lovett
WedQesday, July 6
will be held at I p.m. at the
Scipio
PAGEVI'LLE Zion Church of Christ, Route
Township Trustees regular
143. Some surnames i.nclude
, meeting will be at 6:30 p.m.
July
9
'
Lovett,
Slacks, Bush, Boyd,
Saturday;
at Paigeville Town Hall.
PC?MEROY -. The _annual· Goldsberry and
Riffle.
- Orange
ALFRED
Township ·Trustees, public reumon of relatives. of Edgar Potluck. Pictures will be
hearing on 2006 budget, fol- . and Addie Reed Blake will be taken . Pictures and · genealolowed by regul~r meeting, held at noon at the Zion , gy items displayed. An auc7:30p.m., at the home o'(.the Church of Christ on Route lion will be held and ' those
•. clerk, Osie Follrod.
143. Meat will be furnished, attending are asked to take an
ALBANX - · Columbia the rest of meal potluck. Take item for the auction :

from

r

_, U· N
. .::
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Meigs County calendar

,

Queen

1RU

_&amp;_un_ba....;.~_~_iin_t-:-j._,_en_tln-:-,e_r--~~;,...;,;\;:;;;;:;:;;;..lt.;:.;;.O.::..

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\

too-common theme, jAdklns
said.
"A lot off, them ate possession
cases," he said. "Some
from PageA1
are traffi cking ·and some
theft."
cantly from last year.
··
Even most theft cases these
• As of May 2003, civH til·
·
·
· ·
day ~ are related to drugs.
mgs m mumctpa 1court are up Adkins said thai people doA't
by 315 over May of last year. steal to feed their families
She attributes that largely to anymore. They steal to feed
the state of the economy.
. their drug habits.
•·we -have a lot of collec- . . Dean Evans estimates that"
tions suits tiled here," she at least . 50 percent of the.
said,
cases over which he preside~
As a result, the workload in '.involve drugs in ·one way or
he court has remained ahour another. He said that percentthe same, she said. As of May age might be as high as 65 or
2005, muoicipal court heard 7.0 percent.
4,094 cases ~ both criminal . There ·likely are multipte
and civi l. That is 68 fewer reasons for the increase in
than by May 2004.
• criminal cases, he said.
That could quickly change,
"Whether there . is more
she said. ·
'
'
crime, better' law enforceThe tren(i toward a record- ment or more a'l'areness, 1~
setting year it) common pleas don't know," Dean Evans
court .doesn't appear to be said. "It's probably a little bit
ready to end any t·ime soon, of everything."
Gallia County Prosecutor Jeff
Area law enforcement
Adkins said.
·
agencies from Ohio. West
"We ha ve a 'grand jury . Virginia and the fede~al govcoming up," he said. '·We' ll ernment recently conducted a
probably have 3.0 or 40 cases multi-state crime blitz resultout of that."
ing ip 141 arrests, Despite the
Adk in s' offi ce files all incr~ased .
workload,
felony cases within the coun- Margaret Evans said such
ty and filin gs for juvenile operations are necessary.
court, he said . He also serves
"I like . sweeps like that
as
counsel . for Gallia one," she said. "I know it
'County's 15 townships.
"- makes more~ work for alf of
The kinds of criminal cases us, but we need to do it."
his office file s runs the
Court staffs are coping with
.gamut, but .drugs are an all- the growing caseload, but it is

DOD report challenges USAF plans ·for 130th

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SumJay, July 3, 2005

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PAUL DARST

their parent 's arrns,_see ing,
ly in awe of the large crowd
that had gathered on First
Avenue. Others used tl\e
opportunity to take a nap.
A few decided to use their
~ ~ime on ·stage to show off a
little by wavi ng to people in
the crowd or dancing.
Babies had to be dressed in
swimsuits or· diape rs. Many
wore red, white and blue out.fits. for the oc~as ion. .
Out-of-town judges were
used for the event. They
se l ~cted fi rst, second and
third place winners in each
category. Boys and girls wlre
judged separately.
·
More than 100 babies were.
registered for this yea r's
event.
~.:_ -' the winners· are:
0-3 mo.nths
· Gi rl: Jacquelyn Harrison:
Boy: Matthew Meyn.
4-6 months
Girl: Abigail Beaver: Boy
Trae R:ussell.
.

· ~ageA2_.

REGIONAL

Baby Tot Sparkler Winners named at festival.

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_Saturday Jl:lly 16-Parade
• Old Time Ball Game '
by The J.aiiy Diamonds
·Sanctioned Volkswak
• Harmonica Workshop &amp;..
Concert&amp;.. Olamp1onshlp
. ·CMIWar Ball
'

Fun for the entire family!
. Info see. www.lneigscountytou.rlsm.com

ng
' GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
· . County Board of Mental
.. Retardation/Developmental
: Disabilitie s will meet in spe: cial
session at noon
Wednesday, July. 6. at 577
Ohio 7 North, Gallipolis.

Road open
to traffic
; AID - After nearly a year
' of- construction, -the bndge
over Symmes Creek, in
Lawrence ' County has been
completed, and County Road
'
'
' ..

.

are in place for a bench and
ditch cleaning project on U.S .
52 and Ohio 7 in Lawrence
RIO
GRANDE;
Coonty, and crews are set to
Rerservations are due for the
begin in the coming week . .
·to
Ohio Fun Group of Rio Grande High ·
According
Department of Transportation School Scheduled for Saturday,
District 9 Deputy Director July '16 at the University of Rio
Hany Fry, work is tentatively · Grande Student Center Annex
set to begin Tu~sday. July 5, Conference Room C.
Contact Patty., Forgey, Box
at the variou.s sections along
163, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
both ,outes.
,
The ·project will extend or call 245-5484 after 5 p.m. ·
.
from just east of . the during the wee~ .
The group will also be·han- .
Lawrence-Scioto county 'line
on U.S . 52 to just south of the · oring the 50th 'anniversary·of
Lawrence-Gallia county line the 1954-55 bOys basketball
on Ohio 7, in·the general areas team during its dinner that
of Hanging Rock, ,Jronton. evening.

Room Call

due for·dinner

H zer Health
System~ .wishes .

. you a.safe,
healtfJy and
fun July ~th!_
'

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OPINION

·iunbap limes -ientfnel
~

....

~

4}..

i&gt;unba~. m:ime~ -&amp;entirttl
82S Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446~2342 • FAX (740) 446·3008
'
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing CQ.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Diane Hill

Kevin Kelly ·

Controller

Managing Editor

f~eJt£'rS to tfte editor art

1

II

T/,;, .\funfld be fe.\'S t/W11

e/cnme.

300 H'ord:, All ·fl'ft('I"S arc Jlfh)£'Cf IV edlling ami nm.H ~Je
.Hgned and mclude alh/re\ ,\ wu( telt·phom' numher. No
Wl .\'ignn;J Jel/en 1n/l bt&gt; fJ!I!J/i)/red Lt'IIers ,,/wufd lw in ~on,d
wste, addreu·mg t.nud, 1wt pt&gt;nonalitit:~ .

VIEW

READER'S

Appa_
lled
Park no place far rides
Dear Editor:

.

.

The Fourth of July is upon us. I drove down past the park
yesterday and was &lt;addeneu . .
I am completely appalled ;It the big mechanically rides that
are silltng msidc the park are.t.
I do not li ke to see these mt"tal monsters on the grass .
Years ago. you weren't even allowed to play whiffle ball
with yo ur children. or throw frisbees in the park Wllh!JUl
being s10pped by the poltce and told to go home . NOW, we
dnve cars. la rge trucks and the se monsters on to the main
part of the park. The noise and' the fumes of th e engines
are .tnno ying
I have heard all of the 'argumcnts about the ·money it brings
in. but there has to he a better way of doing this t~an pulling
them m the park .
How about down on Jhe riverbank? The boaters don't spend
tll.tl much monn. or if it b goLJd enough to put in front of the
houses on State. why not put them down Fir&gt;~ Avenue'· in front
of those houses a lso·&gt; It see ms on ly fitting that all should share
the noise and fumes. not just a couple.
Or even better. bloc k off Second Avenue and Court Street
arou'nd the park. That would at least spre~d the inconvenience all around . .1 have an even better solution: don't bring
them in at all.
The River Recreation Jul y Fourth Celebration at one
__time was exac tly thm : We had boar shows and programs
that filled the park and we didn ' t have to have amusement
rides. It was a time for sharing with your family. The art,
music and fellowship m the park was enough. 1 bet you
that if you spent the money tHat is being paid for liability
msurance on good clean activities in the park. there would
be as much attendance.
Last year, I attendecl the Fourth of July festivities at P.oinl
Ple;tsant. They had boat rides and music ~II day l01ig on
their waterfront amphitheater. Not one amusement ride was
there and the amphitheater was full most all of the ,time. The
activities were all live entertainment, w ith local groups that
gave great shows , everyone that came and w·ent enjoyed
themselves.
It wasn't about money and what big name entertainment can
be bought and brought here. It was wh,alesome, enjoyab1e and
free from nmse anu smell. A:s limg as you keep spending
money for · amusement rides. you will be ·trying to one up
yourselves each year.
The park is not the place for the rides, leave that to the fair,
where there ~' proper room .
-~
- .
• '
Get·creatJVe and do something nice. support your local talent. Make it enjoyable for everyone.

. Cheryl E11yart
Gallipo/i~·

..

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PageA4

..

Culture War.if th.e Worlds ,
So there I am watching
Steven Spielberg's "War of
the Worlds" with a bunch of
swells al. the movie's premiere in N~w York City. The
' film is a sci-11 extravaganza
where Spielberg takes the
basic premise of the 1898
H.G . Wells novel, borrows
free ly from ,hi.s previous suspense films- "Jaws" and
"Jurassic Park,"- and creates
a ·special effects bonanza
that is bound to please ~
mass audience hungry for
thrills and chills.
But, early on in ll)_e mov (e,
something stranger than
gross-looking aliens chas ing
. humans • all over the place
emerges. A rather populist
political subtext takes shape
that is somewhat surpri sing,
comi·ng from a Ho.llywood ·
insider like Spielberg. ·'War
of the Worlds'' parallels the
atta.;:k on 9/11.
Narrator Morgan Freeman
opens things up by suiting
that force.s with "envious
eyes" have targeted earth• )ings for destruction. They
simply want the planet for

•.

2005

Obituaries
.
David Wells

Harley Wells died m the
Broadway Manor Health Care
Center in Muskogee, Okla.,
on June 29, 2005, at 9~ years
of age . . .
. . He was· born Aug. 9, 1906.
tO the Georges Creek: area
close to Crown City, Ohio to
. Franklin Monroe and Ca;rie
Ann Bevan Wells.
·
A few yeats later, the family moved to Gallipolis. Ohio.
to operate a small' dairy farm.
By age 12 he was delivering
milk with a horse and wag'ln.
He was a ·manager of the
first Evans Grocery in
Gallipolis and later owned
and operated his own grocery .
store, the Central Market, in ·
Harley David Wells
the late 1930s. After health
problem s, he sold the store and moved with his family to
Columbus. Ohtn, to work at Curtiss-Wright as a foreman helpmg to make airplane eng ine parts.
.
• Later, he bought , and managed a trailer park m Circleville.
Ohto, and 11 grew ~~ be a very successfu l enterprise. He
rettred from that busmess to travel with the Carriage Royal
Travel Club and enJOY traveling. His travels wtth tne Carriage
Royal Travel Club took him to many states in the United
States and to Canada. He managed the suppl y tratler fo r the
ralites and became the rioht-hand man as well as a good
-.. 11:-·-·..· friend of the· president of the company that manufactured ·
Carriage Royal trailers ·
_
Harley eventually became president of the national travel
club. an honor of which he was very prourl.
,
Harley married Hele n Lloyd in 1924, and the y"celebrated 61
years together before she pas.sed away in 1985. l-Ie married
Ruth · Lough in 1986 and she preceded him in death in 1993.
He will be greatly missed by four chtldrcn. Ei leen Wolff and
husband Bill of Columbia. Mo.. Charlen~ Jo ·Pruden of
Muskogee. Okla .. Robert Wells and wife Sue c1f Wellston
Ohio. and Merrill Wells and wife Bunny of Gahanna, Ohio:·
grandchildren. David Scott Dowell and wife Nancy. Linda
Beth Dowell, Thomas Dowell and wife Laura, Mike Wells
and w1fe Penny, Bob Pruden and wife Delores. Beth Tt1cker
and husband Larry: stster-in-law Marilyn Lloyd Donaldson;
14 great-grandchildren and three ·great -great-grandchildren.
and many nieces and nephews.
·
Harley was predeceased by his parent,s; a brother, Haskell :
...and two ststers , Irene McClaskey and Lillian Jaworski.
A memorial servic'e will be ·held at tile Willis Funeral Home
in Gallipolis. Ohio, time and date to be announced later.
' In lieu 'of flowers, donations in his memDry may be sent to
St. Paul United Methodist Church in Muskogee, Okla.

Dempsey Roger O'Dell

You don ~t wanna know what's under his hood
-

-

'

I may be 51 years old.
but, dar-n it. I'm still a
"rock and roll kind of animal." So when a friend
named Gene offered me
some tickets to a Beach
Dave
Boy s concert , I JUmped at
Barry
the chance. As a result , I
strained · my back and had
to lie down for six day s.
But after the pain sub. sided I was very excited. giving voice to the fantasy
because I'm a huge Beach · of every pimple-speckled
Boys fan. I'll never forget male at Harold C. Crittenden
the first time I saw them in Junior High. We LUSTBD
person, back in 1964, at a for Pt;Jsi-Traction! Whatever
fanta stic concert in New 11 was~
I !'!lill ;...uow uB tht' \N i.) J'J:-,
York .. . Wait, 11u, it was
to
all ~he Beach Boys" car
Philadelphia., and it might
have been 1967 . And come songs. When 1:m dnvmg .
lo think of it. it wasn' t The · and the radio plays "Shut
Beach Boys; it was the Bee Down.'' whJCh i' abotn a
Gees. Or maybe the Turtles. drag race. I smg along at the
ll was definitely a plural top of my ltmgs : "He's hnt
name. Although ·now that I with ram inductwn. but n·,
think of it, I'm not 100 per- understood : I go t a ftld ·
injected engine sittin' under
cen.t sure I waS'there.But never · mind the my hood ... The truth •s that I
details. The ·point is -that have no idea what kmd of
I've loved the Beach Boys' · engine I have sill in· unUcr
music since WAYYY back my · hood. I could have a

Beethoven's
Fifth
' Symphdny (actual lync:
'' Dum dum dum DUM'' ) I
wanted to scream at the TV
screen: "A tltrnwble is NOT
A MUSICAL INSli'RU -

strong. "Shufllecl" is more
accurate. Because the Beach
Boys have gotten older, too
Although some of them
apparentl y have gotten
YOUNGER. A couple of the
o nes I saw definitely lu1d not
been born yet · wh~n they
made their tlrst re cord. • .
But evei1 though some of
the older Beach Boys cotlld
enter the Ernest Hemingway
Look-altke Con test. they
stil l SOUND like the Beach
Buys ." and · that was all that ·
mattered Withm IS mmutes
the crowd was on its feet (jt
woll iJ hu ·~~ b~cn on its feet
· sooner, but 11 has to be care- .
ful " ith iis back). The Beach
Boys sang a medley of the1r
car songs. and I sang right
along with theJi1. aJ.ld when,
:together, we sang ·the techm' cal part of ·'Litt le Deuce
Coupe" ("She's ported and
relieved, and she ·s stroked
and bored") there was gen- .
uinc ~;motion in my voice.
But without questton the
highlight
came when
the
.
.

school , and America was there. Bu.t the Beach Bo ~s ·
happy and carefree because . sti ll make me feel like Mr
the Civil War was fina ll y Stud Piston.
over:! went through puberAnd the Beach Boys•were
ty with the Beach Boys (not not just limited to car
LITERALLY. of course; we . songs . They took on the
all had s~parate rooms). important soc ial issues. too.
Their songs expressed ' a in songs such , as " Be True
• !lew kina of feeling that was To Your School'' (actu.tl
surnng qeep withtn the · lyric: "Rah rah rah n\h ' is
bowels of my loins: a feel - 'boom bai{" J and ...1 Get
irig of vulnerability. of ten- Around" (;tctual lyric :_''I'm
derness, and t- yes - of a real !Jool head!· I'm
.makin ' real good brea ~!"l.
sexual desire. ) .
Forcars, lmeari. When the
They don't make mu , ir
Beach Boys sang. "She's like. that these d&lt;~ ys. In fact.
real fine, my 409. my four- ~ometimes the y don ' t even
speed. dual -qu~d,~ Posi- make MUSIC. I &gt;aw a TV
Traction 409," tlf{y were show recentl y where111 a

APPLIANCE. like a toa ster- o\en~ Or lln "ac:ccH·dion~"
So. OK. I'm too old to
;tpprcnatc " hip -hop." But'
I'm smack dah in the middle
of "the Beach Boys ' dcmograpi1J c. to judge from the
crowd lit th e co nce rt · I
attl·ndcu. Many of us' are
grayer rhan we once were.
anU our loins arc larger. .But
"c still know ht&gt;w to "party
heart) .. We had our cellphone rin ger -.. -..el on
.. ' i hri.ttc ··-ant.J were ready to
ROCK AND ROLL when
the Beach Boy s stormed
ont&lt;! the stage .
·
~OK. "stormeu·: i' a lmlc

older. folks in our
.also the young pe.(lple
thctr late 40s - ,
together to sing '· Barbara
Ann." all of us united for the
· moment by our inabili)y lo .
remember th'(t Qne verse that .
goes somethi ng like.
"Tried Betty Sue
Did ,JheJloogaloo
• \~W6'"the zoo
And I s&lt;iw a tiger poo"
It was a great night. An1:1
even thou gh I clidn 't gel
home untd alml)st 10:20
,p.m.. I was so 'exCi ted' that· I
stayed awake until almost
10:27 . 'Round- ·round get
' arpund, I get armuld.

gr0up _ of J ip-hop"· Db
competed to see who was
the hest at making sounds

with a record turntable .
They'd put the needle on a
record . then they'd spin the
turntable forwaru and backward vioknt ly.. thereby creating uni4u~. by which I
mean ugly. noi&gt;es. I used to
do tlut when I was 7, and
my 1110111 ~auld yell.
"STOP FOOt:!NG WITH
THE RECORD PLAYER'"
Bui the se guys were SERI·
OUS: they had exprcssrons
of intense concentrati on on
lheit f.t ce~. ~~~ ihuugh it i.ook
v.,st

arti~tic

'\kll lt o sin)Uidte

the sound o( ueranged
··squirrel s fighttng in ' :an
ampltfier. A p;mel of JUdges
looked
on.
frowning
thoughtfu ll y. as though they
were ·

li s~e nin g

.

to

Dempsey Roger O'Dell. 57. of Gallipolis. passed away
Thursuay, June 30. 2005, at his residence.
He was born Sept. 24, 1947, in Gallipolis, son of Dempsey
Isaac and Mary Frances Mollahan O'Dell.
He was married to Carla Harmon O'Del l, ~tnd she survtves h•m .
He was a welder for over 40 years, wrfh 20 of those years at
0-Kan Manne Repait.
·
·
He is survived by his wife, Carla,O'Dell.of Gallipolis; two
sons, Jeremy (Tammy) O'Dell and John O' Dell, both of
Gallipolis; four grandchildren, Logan. Haley, Allorah and
Shelby; one step-gra~dehild , Cory; his father, Dempsey Isaac
O' Dell of Sprmgfield; two sisters. Mary Catherine (Jim)
Harmon of Gallipolis, and Chiis Compton of Springfield; two
, brothers, Danny (Bonnie) 0' Dell of Troy, Ohio, and John
(Cheryl) O'Dell of Spnngfield; and several nieces aitd
nephews.
·
Preceding him in death are his mother, Mary Frances
O'Dell, and a brother, David O'Dell.
A time of remembrance will be held on Sunday, July 3,
2005, at 3 p.m. al tbe O'Dell home at 1441 Safford School
Road, Gallipolis.
·
In lieu of flow_ers, please consider ·a donation to the family
in care of Carla O'Dell, 1441 Saffprd School Road, Gallipolis.
Ohto 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to se nd e-mail

coodo!ences.

John W. Duncan
~

John W. Ouncan, 73, of Vinton , passed away on Friday. Jul y
I, 2005 at his residence.
He was born on January 13, 1932, in Porter, Ohio, to the late
Lave and Ruby Jewell Duncan. He was a self-employed watch
maker and a former member on the Masoni c Lodge while ~e
lived in Arizona.
Surviving are his s i ~ ter Frances and her husband. Charles
Miller, of Rio Grande. Ohio. three brother, . Denni ~ Dimcan of
Thomasville, Ga. , Bryant Duncan. of Porter. Ohio. and Jesse
Duncan, of Evergreen, Ohio. Alsl! surviving are several neices
and nephews.
·
He 'was preceeded in death by his pafcnts. a son. John
Robert Duncan. and a brother, Calvin Duncan.
Graveside services will be held on Tuesday. Jul y 5. 2005 ·at
II a.m. at the Vinton Memorial Park 111 Vinton. Oh10, under'
the direction of th" Rev. Calvi.n Minni s.
Please visit www.willisfuneralholl)e.com to se nd e: mail
condolences.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
Sunday

Page As

Em~rg~pcy . s~mmer cooli~g prog~:am continues

Ha~ey

UNFORTUNATELY, Wf'Vf HAD TO .
.LOWER OUR RECRUITING STANDARV~.

~unbil!' ~inmi -~rntinrl •

Pomeroy • Middleport.• Gallipolis

'

wing , right·wing thing Worlds" acmaliy rellects the
going on. Tom Cnlise cruis- view
of
everyqay
es along without much Americans. rather than a few
.point -of-v1cw other than to Beverly Hill s pinheads. I
save hi s kids from the alien liked the movie for that. ·
Bill
killers. Spielberg is not
In the end. the aliens are
Michael Moore His aim " actuJIIy collfronted by God.
O'Reilly
to entertain and to mak ~ a if you can believe it. Another
.- f~w a subtle points th at Ju huge d,cparture from ,the
not intrude on the suspense. Hollywood playbook. I'm
By the way. Spielberg is not .goin'g to dent the susthemselves No one ts safe. right : history shows that ·pense and tell yo u more, but
.no turget off limits.'Civil1ans occupy in g arm1es cann01 ti•ust me, the ACLU will not
are routinely.uestroye,d with~ win in the long run .
like the film's cuno1us1on.
out reason or rational explaThis is the first poSt-9/1 1
The uownsiue to ·'War of
nation . Sound like anyone mm ie I've seen th;n is actu- the Worlds" ts that it's kind ·
. WJt · know'' Osam;t some- &lt;JIIy inlluenced by the death of loopy in ih execution of
and destruction \'isitcd upon the storv lme . The special
body''
The actual first wave alien · us by the Islamic ki llers. It .. etlecls ;, ve rshadow ·everyattack comes from the sky. was clear lo me that Steven thing and the resol.ution of
just as 9/1 1 did . Then it's a . Sp1clherg is feed oil about tpe basic plvt would make
grind-it-out process as the wlul the terrorists "rc doing. . Me Welles shudder. But you
invaders stalk humans . HIS vtcw IS · rellecled by might like the lone of the
Some of us-tight back. son~ C!·Luse's teenage son who fil m. and if you crunch
of us run .
desper;ltely wanh to con - enough' popcorn you might
At one point in the movie , front the &lt;ili~ns and kill even swallow the thesis that '·
one of the characters makes th em. Th~ boy seethes with Tom Crui se and his 11-yearthe point that an occupying ange• thniugh&lt;lut the film old daughte·r .1re able to walk
army can never wm. Iraq bccathe of the alien barbari ~ from New Jersey .to Boston
reference'' Sure it is.
ty. Good l&lt;.u· him
without changing clothes.
The messages in the film .
So this isn't the usual
Strange things happe n
however. are not overtly Hollywood cheap shmlefti.st when aliens invade. Even in
political. There js no left - prop&lt;~ganda. "War of the Hol.lywood.

'

•

Sunday, July 3, ·2·oos

•

Sunday, July 3,

fied by medical documentatio n from a medical profe_ssional will be qualilied to
CHESH IRE Gallia- rece1ve the following: I. One
Meigs Community Action air conditioner. providing
Agency is currently assisting they did not receive one in
eligible customers with the the last three years (2002.
2005 Emergency HEAP 2003. 2004), and may receive
Summer Cooling Prograni .
Sandra
- Edwards one payment for a current
Emergeitcy-Ser~ices Divisio~ e.lectric bill or PIPP. whichevdirector, said the program er is more , but not to exceed
(No
di"onnect
began on June I and will run $175.
-required
).
2.
If
they
do not
until Aug. 31 or until the
qualify for an air conditioner,
funds ·are depleted.
lnc'o me eligible persons they may still receive ·one
must make an appointment · payment for the electric bi ll
and will be aS&gt;isted as per the . as described above .
• An income el• gible hou sefollowing guidelines.
hold
wi th a member who is
• An income el igible household with a member who has 60 or older is eligib le to
a current 'respiratory dis- receive Hne payment for elec'
ease/breathing disorder ve ri- tric bill up to the current bill
.

STAFf REPORT

'\ NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

,

.

,

B'f NICHOLAS K.
GERANIOS

man apartment butldtng ·next
door. said she had not seen
Duncan for several n10nths
police stopped by looking for
him . she s.1id
··He · 't'~med normal.''
Haugen sai d She said she

AS.SOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho
- More than six weeks afrer
she disappeared from a home
where family members were
was not a\vaH.! that he \\.' a'-1· i.!
bludgeoned to death. an 8rcgi slereu 'ex oflcndcr when
year-old gi rl was found safe
sh~ first inorcd 1!1. hut found
Saturday, sha ri ng a meal with
.out later from nciQhbors She
a registered sex offender at a ·
s;qd he kept Ill hi;i1scl f.
Denny's re&gt;taurant in her
Ru ztsb 'aid police were
hometown.
.
doing qu.trtcr ly checks on
Shasta Groene was being
Duncan.
reunited with her father, btlt
"The c·al l from ld.il10 "'"a •
her . 9-yeaJ-old
brother,
surprise to us:· Ru11 ska said.
Dylan. remained mt ssi ng ·and
Duncan \va:-. convu.:ted 111
was feared dead, Kootenai
1980 ol raping a 14-ycar-old
County Sheriff's Capt. Ben
hov 111 \Va\hin~ r on -..tate
Wolfmger sa id .
· "hen he was 16 '
"Our li1JtJal information "
Lasl Jul y. ht• wa' accused of
that he may be deceased."
moksting a6 .. yea r~old hoy at a
Woltinger said. adding that
sch ool
,pL.tygi ound
111
officials were contin uing the
Minnesota He had been
search for him.
released hv Becker Countv.·
Jose ph Edward· Duncan Ill.
M 11111 .• autlionucs tn April on
a registered sex offender from
$15.lXKI honu and ordered to
Fargo. N.D., -.yas arrestetl and
. &gt;tay in touch wi th a probation
charged with kidnapping. He
agent In May. authont\6 -..aid
,
, AP Photo
was being he!P without bonu.
they were ..,eeking Dunl'arl on a
and Wolfinger sa id more In th1s undated family photo prov•ded by Kootenai County warrant afte1 'hc failed to uu so.
Shenff's Office, Shasta Groene 1s shown. The 8-year-old girl
charges were posstble.
Becke.r County Attorney
who
disappeared with her brother s ix_weeks ago from a home
Duncan, 42. had an outstmidr fami ly members were bludgeoned to death was Joseph Evans dtd not Immemg warrant for failmg to regis- where the1
r,
ly return a call Saturday
ter as a htgh-risk iex offender found Saturd&lt;&gt;y ar a Den ny's restaurant in th e same town diate
seeking
co mmen t
and was facino charges ol where they grew up.
Minnesot.t has - moved to
' g a 6-year-old
"
molesttn
boy in Kraus said. "We are hopeful sc1ence, and made the de;ni"'s
crack
uown on 'ex offenders
Minnesota. He was released on they can find Dylan. We· re li st. When he moved to
since
slaying of college
bail in April, just weeks before very happy thos·e folks at Fargo, murc than 300 people 'studentthe
Dru Sjodin across the
the children disappeared.
Denny's recognized her and attended a community notifi- state line iri North Dakota. A
Shasta was spotted by a that they found her·&lt;
cation meeting.
~
sex offender from. Minnesota
waitress early Saturday just
Dylan·and 'Shasta had been
Kerstin
Haugen.
who
lives
is accused in the slaymg.
miles from the home "here missing si nce at least May
her mother, older brother and 16. when sheriff's deputies
mother's boyfriend were dis- responded to their rural home·
covered bound and blud- after a neighbor reported that
geoned to death on Ma~ 16.
dogs ·were barking and the
Amber Dean, 24, sa td she door of one vehicle was open
thought she recognized the
no one was in sight.
girl eating onion rings, butThe
found the
cheese sticks and chicken bound deputies
bodies
of
Brenda
strips with an older man.
40,
Slade
Groene,
Groene,
Shasta's picture has been
'
posted around town and 13, and Mark McKenzie , 37.
French City Mall Would Like To Welcome
The victims were bound and
show.n in the media .
The Country Cupbo11rd
" It clicked in my brain that .then bludgeoned to death .
Inveslig&lt;l!ors
had
inter. (Located on second floor)
she looks familiar," she said.
yiewed
hundreds
of
people,
Dean tned to keep the pair
OPEN for. Business
at the re staurant longer by searched through 800 tons of
~Sunday,~July 3rd, 20_!l5
giving the gi rl crayons. color- {rash and fielded more "'"'" -~
NEW LOCATION- ONLY 5 BLOCKS FROM OLD LOCATION
ing paper and a mask from 2,000 llps It was not known
.
whether
Duncan
had
a
conthe movie "Madagascar:· and
84llnd Ave
nection with the victims.
offering the girl dessert. '
Gallipo.lis, Ohio • 740-446-9010
"We do n't '11ave any idea
"] was try ing to figure out a
way to keep them there so the who D'uncan is. other than a·
Over 70 Parking Spaces
office rs would have time to very. very sick individual. Sick
and stupid Ill guto a Denny's
Acces~ible from Jrd Ave, use rear entrance
get there:· she said.
· It was. not yet known where at 2 a.m. with a child,"· Bob
• Wreaths • Candles • Primitive Pictures • Americana • Floral
the girl had spent the past six Price. Shasta Groene's paterSwags &amp; Arrangements • Wooden Signs ;Victorian
weeks. She was being mter- nal · uncle. said by telephone
Collectibles· Grapevine Trees· Garden Arch • Piliows
vtewed at a medical center from Tacoma. Wash.
• Blankets • Swings • Rockers • Amish &amp; Mennonite
Police were seeki ng a warbut appeared physical ly well.
Furntture &amp; More • Antique Glassware
''She 's a littl e gt rl." rantt&lt;&gt; search a stolen red Jeep
• Antique Fyrn1ture &amp; Kttchenware
Wolfinger said. "Obv iously that offictals said Duncan had
"Open Mon-Sat 10-6_: Sun 1-5
she's been through a pretty been drivmg. In Fargo. o lltcers
we
re
secllring
Duncan's
traumatic time."
Tom
KrauS.
.Brenda apartment in a nei ghborhood
Groene·.s great-unc le in where a number cif Nort h
Dakota State Uni ve rsity stuWhilt::i'i~h. Munt.. said f.m:~ ily
members were elated bv the den ts liw. po lice Sgt.
news of Shasta's retuni and Shannon RtlZiska "mi.
Duncan. whose criminal
hoping that Dylan also would
hi
story
u.nes back to 19KO.
be found alive.
"Obviously. we were very enrolled .at the um -.;e rsity m
,excited they found Shasta ... 2000. n,1ajoring in cOJ_nputer .

.

:Jrench City .

Jtntique &amp; era~ ~ll

The
Joint. Implant Center

Earn an MBA degree thalmeets the
needs of werking professionals by

course work in a manage-

·GALLIA COUNTY WORK
OPPORTUNIT.Y CENTER
MEMBER OF THE TAI ·COUNT,Y EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING SYSTE M

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'

PROVIDING SERVICES
TO
,
JOBS SEEKERS

EMPLOYERS

Creation of job orders
I A&lt;:ce1ss to pooi .of potentiai'Job
applicants
Pre-employment screening
Pre-employment Jesting
Interviewing accommodations
'

Job placement
Career counselmg
Work related suppon.ve serv•ces
Internet access lor job' search
Resume prepatatio~. ·

.

848 Third Ave.• G1111ipolis, OH • 740-446-3222

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.,

Missing Idaho
girl
found at Coeur d'Alene.restaurant; brother. feared dead ·
.
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Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

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or PIPP1 wh•chever is more. mematimf or . you will nut be
but not to exceed $175 . (No assisted.
.
diSconnect required).
Annual inwme eligibi lity
Appointments can he made lor one person in the housefor the following week .by hold isS 14J55: two persons ,
calling between the hours or $19.245: three persons;·
X- II :30 a.m. every Friday. $24.135:
I!Jur
persons.
Telephone numbers are 367- · $29.025.
five
persons ,
734 1 for Gallia County and $33.915. and six persons.
992-6629 for Meig' County. ·S38,X05. For households with
Eligihle clients must bring : more !han six members. add
. I. Proof of income (income S4.890 per member.
at ur below 150 percent of
Edwards sm d that · appliGa·
the federa l piwerty gui9e- t1ons wil l be taken Monday
lines) (See below)
through Thu1 "sday fr0111 8'30
2. Names. sirlhuates and to II a.m and I. to 3 p.m. ' in
Social Security numbers of · CAA's Gall"' Office, 859
all household me1hbers.
Third Ave .. Gallipolis. und
l Electric bills.
the C11eshtrc Offtce. 8010
4. Medical ce rtificate if Ohio 7 North , Cheshire.
appllClible . (Air conditioners
1\o · applicali.ons will be
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For initial evaluations or follow-up vis1ls for total
jo1nt replacement, we offer. .office hours-'at:
3554 U.s . Route 60 East .
Barboursville, WV .

Our next clinic date is Friday, July 15. ,
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790.
: for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement

PMBA FEATURES
• 22-Monlh . Program
• Evening Classes
• Weekend Residencies

[NFORMATJON NIGHT
Thursday, July 7 , 2005 • 7:00p .m
University
of Rio Grande· Bob Evans Farms Hall - Room118
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iunba, G:imef ·itntind

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kedmen Baseball, B2

Sunday,Jtdy3,2005

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Inside:

Bl·

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...

closes

· Schuler
out productive career·
inks Grrlen's Bk)\xnfield
·

Also:

NASCAR, Page 83
Outdoors, Page B4
Local Sports, Pages BS-6

Sunday, July 3, 2005··

.

Sqndai, July 3
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Morning (7 a.m.-~oon)
There is· a slight chance of
It should be .a cloudy morn- seeing a light rain shower. ' ·
inll. Temperatur~s will climb Temperatures will hold steady
from 68 to 79 by late th1s .
. . .
morning. Winds will be s around 82. Sk1es Will range .
MPH from the east turning _ from mostly sunny to cloudy
from the southeast as the with 5 MPH winds from the
southeast.
morning progresses .
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A~J!i_tf1. 1f.cr~i.1 11: t~jtg)xl

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&amp;~ ~YlXP1!Jrtfli~ rtli1.6~i1_:~

A nightmarish inning for Post 128
·Troy tallies 11

runs.during .
fourth inning

Local Stocks

PIQII D.,..,/pholo

Little Mr. and Miss Firecracker 2005 were crowned" during the River Recreation Festival Saturda'y. Pictured, from left, are:
Second Mate Tyler Blackburn. First Mate M ic ha ~l Todd Alan Grover, Little Mr. Firecracker Layne Fitch , Little Miss· Firecracker
Sara Bailey, First Attendant Darian Miller and Second Attendant Lexie Johnson . Kayla Johnson , 2005 River Recreation Festival
queen. is seated
.. in ·back.
"

Festival names·
Little Mr. and·Miss Firecracker
.
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BY PAUL

,,

DARST

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUN E.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Little
Mr. · and Mi ss Firecracker
2005 were named Saturday
at the Rive r Recreati on
Festival in Gall i poli ~. .
Sara Bail ey, of Crown
City, and Layne Fitch of
Bidwell were crowned as
part of Kids Day at the 40th
annual festivaL ·
Bailey is the daug~ter of
Andra Bailey of Crown
City, and Al an Bai ley of
Columbus. Fitch is the son
of Chris and Tracy Fitch of
Bidwell. Each received a
$50 sav ings bond, a crow n,

trophy and sash. which they
received on stage from 2005
River Recreation Fest iva l
Queen Kayla Johnson. and
last year's Li tt le · Mi ss
Firecracker
. Madison
Maynard.
The panel · of judges al so
se lected two runners-up for
the boys and the g.irls .
Tyler Blackburn. son of
Meli ssa Blackburn . of
Ga ll ipolis. wa s named
Mate,
while
Seco nd
Michad Todd Alan Grover.
so n of Jody and Todd
Grover. of Patri ot. was
chose as First Mate.
Second Attcndant,.f.or the
gi rl s was Lexie John so n.

...

daughter of Kirk and Tina
John son of Crown City.
First attendant was Darian
Miller, daughter of David
and Melinda Miller of
Gallipolis.
The winners were chosen
from a ·field of nearly 28
girl s and 15 boys. Each
co ntes tant took center stage
to answer a few ,questions,
asked by master of cere-.
monies Bob Hood .
·
Each boy and girl was
given a ·chance to tell a little
. about thei r favori te parts of
the festival, their hobbies,
tfie ir fam ilies or their pets.
During hi s interview .
Fit ch · talked about hi s

favorite NASCAR driver,
Dale Earnhart Jr., and how
much he enjoys praying
baseball. He also performed hi s rendition of the
so ng, "Swingin"' for the
crowd.
Bailey was ex.cited about
winning the title, but it was·
n't her first. She was Little
Miss Gallia County (or
2003, her mother said. She
is the third girl to hold both
titles. Bailey was looking
forward to riding in the July
4 parade Saturday evening,
and the other duties . that
come With her crown .

NSC- 31.45
ACI- S5.03
AEP-36.86
Oak Hill Financial Akzo-40.11
29.45
OVB25.70
Ashland Inc .. - 60.15
BBT- 40.15
AT&amp;T- 19.19.
· · Peoples - 27.04
BLI-13.12
Bob Evans- 23.47
Pepsico - 53.51 •
Borg\Yarner - 53.95
Premier - 12.58
Rockwell
- 49.05 ·
Champion - 4.21
Charming SIK.Jps ..- 9.33
.Rocky Boots - 29.84
City Holding - 36.78
RD Shell - 66.01
Col- 47.24
SBC- 23.93.
DG -20.41
Sears -151.75
Wal-Mart - 48.28 ,
DuPont - 42.83
Wendy's ~ 47.64
Federal Mogul - .86
USB- 29.07
Worthington - 15.70
Gannett - 71.89
.General Electric - 34.73 Dally .stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
GKNLY -4.67
Harley Davidson - 49.78 of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
JPM- 35.06
Smith Partners at Advest
Kroger - 18.86
Ltd • ..;_ 21.38
Inc. of Gallipolis.

• c

SV'BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MY0AILYTRIBUNE .COM

Sports· BriEfs

OVPseeking
football stringers
Ohio Valley Publishing is
currently seeking s tringer~
to help cover high school
football games this fall.
Applicants . must have a·
strong a·nderstanding of
football, the ability to keep
accurate statistics and basic·
word processing computer
skill s.
Some travel may be nee. essary; willin.,gness to cover
a variety of teams and -previous writing experience iue
plusses.
· ·
All
those . interested
should
contact
Brad
Sherman, OVP Sports
Editor at (740) 446-2342
ext. 33. If there is no

PROUD ·TO.BE APART OF YOUR LIFE. ~· .
Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

.
Subscribe

ALBANY - For Feeney Bennett
Post 128, the fourth inni ng was like a
·bad dream that wouldn ' t end . But it
was more like a walk in the park for
Troy Post 43, 1iterally.
Troy sent 15 batters, nearly half of
Wh1ch drew walks, to the plate during .
the p1votal fourth frame - scoring all
its runs in an Il - l victory at the Athens
July Fourth American Legion Baseball
Classic Friday.
The • bizarre game, pl ayed at
Alexander Hi gh School, was called
after five innings via the mercy rule.
After tossing three hitless innings,

.

today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

Please see Nightmare, Bl

.

Athens July 4 Tournament
Friday's results
Zanesville 7 , Beverly-Lowell 6
·
Ohio Valley 9, f\thens a
Troy 11 , Feeney Bennett 1. 5 inn.
Fremont 4, Mentor I
Fremoni 14, Ohio Valley 4, 5 inn.
Troy 5, Beverly-lowell 1
Saturday's games
Beverly-Lowell 6, Feeney Bennett 1
Athens 5, Fremont2
Troy v. Zanesville, late
Mentor v. Ohio Valley, late
Zanesville v. Feen ey Bennett . late
AthenS v. Mentor. late

· answer, ~· leave,.~a message

'

along with your contact
information.
Writing samples can be
se nt to bsherman@mydailytribune.com; faxed to 1740-446-3008; or dropped
off at .our Gallipolis otlice
at 825 3rd Ave ..

.

Good hearin-g should

South Gallia
holding ym,1th
football camp

be effortless
Otlcon Tago redeftnea what Ia possible
in litld-pr(u•d buarill!! ~" by
combining th~se advanced features:
• llrtlficiullnlcllignncn
• Automatic Directionality
• Noise Monagement
• OpenEnr Awustk11

1•

Olicrm 'lttgo providou bottor
listening experiepce by incorporating
"·
'n

,,

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•lote-of·lhe-•rl hiloring toc.hnology in
" moro olfurdoble mid·pric.d
lnslrllmont. Tego uaet tn advanced
b")'Sh&gt;m t:nllud Orn:isiunMakcr. to
consta.iltly adjust the hearing aid to
tho most uppropr;ato ~W~lli ngs at nll
times, outomotically. There is no need
to fufl8 with tinv buttons or switches,
Otir:on T%'11 doe~ it nil .for ymt;mnki n~
good bearing BS elfortle1111 as it should be.

'

-J

for more Information about this
remarkable new he~rtna solution. ·

GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON

ATIIENS

435'/, S«ood Arenue

232 Hll'OII Slrltl

r15 West Union Strcel

{lie""' t.... "'"' Offi"l
~~Moo..

ThuB. K:J0.3pm

4tn Tues., WC&gt;l ,Thuri.K:io-3pm

~~ M011. -Fri. 8JiSpm
Salllliky byAppointment

(740)51~

(74t) 59'1-3571

!M•:G~• fb) ~ Tbmp)

(748) 446-7619

MERCERVILLE - South
Gal]ia will hold a youth fooJball camp July 7-8 from 6
p.m. until 8
p.m.
both
days. ·
The camp is
for those in ·
grades 4-8
and registration . begins
p.m.
5:45
Thursday.
.
For more information , contact Justy Burleson at (740)
245-5805. '

Cliffside Ladies
complete another
week of golf play
GA,LLIPOLIS
. The
Clitlside Women's golf tour
has completed· another week
of. play at the tough course.
The 18.-hole league played
on Wednesday, .' June 29 saw
Mary Ann Bickar take low
"gross honors and Dindy
Staley and Jackie Knighl
both grabbing low putt tallies.
Also on the day.
Bickar po.sted a

• .CALLNOW

Bldt I

The outing scheduled for
June 30 was rained out.
Contact Information
E-mil!- sportsOmydailysentlnel.com

Sport• Staff

B...S Shtnmm, Sport• Edllor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33

bshern:mn 0 mydailytrlbune.com

Bryan Wtlttre, Sporttl Writer
t740) 446-2342: ext. 23
bwaltersOmydallytribune.com ·-

l.llrry Crum, &amp;porta Wrlt1r
(304) 675-lJ:l:l, ext. 19
Ierum 0 mydailyreglster.Com

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:roday'a gemea.
National 1 vs. Al'(lerican 4, 3 p.m.lf
Amer1can 2 v. National 3. 3 p.m."
National 2 Y. American 3•.3 p.m.@
American 1 v. National 4. 7 p.m.II'

·'

Monday 's gamea
N1-A4 winner 11. A2·N3 winner, 9 a.m.Ill
N2·A3 winner v. A1·N4 winner, 9 a.m."
Championsllip. 1 p.m. BoO Wren Stadium
• - at Alexander High School
# - al A'tllens High School
@ - at Dalton Field ·

Brad Sherman/photo

Post 128's Matt Mooney rounds third to score his team's lone. ru n during the first inning of Friday's 11-11oss to
Troy at the Athens' Post 21 July Fourth Classic . Troy scored all its runs in the fourth inning.
_

Zanesville gains .•
controversial win

American League - Athens, Fremont, Mentor and
Ohio Valley
National League - Beverly-Lowell. Feeney Bennett.
Troy and Zane'svill~
•

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PUTTING FOR PIGSK-INS

Bv BRAD SHERMAN

July Fourth
Zanesville's Jerod ·Classic Roundup

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ALBANY Yakubik used heads-up base running to score the winnmg run during a controversial ,7-6 victory
over Beverly-Lowell at the Athens
July Founh American Legion
B;tseball Classic Friday.
With the score knotted 6-6 in the
seventh inning and runners at the
· ·corners, Zanesville's Shawn
Forsythe tried to steal second.
Beverly pitcher Alex Hayes
attempted to pick him off at socond, where ifiere was coilfticting
calls by the umpires.
. Forsythe was fmally ruled safe,
but in the confusion, Yakubik
sprinted borne to end .the game.
Forsythe had a pair of smgles to
paoe ZanesviHe while Josh Barrera
tripledatid levi Smith doubled.
Jordan Thornhill had three siogles for Beverly.
.
Barrera, who threw only one
pitch, earned the pitching win
while Hayes went the distance in
.

A

1
L gl
B
b 11
mer can e pn ase a
Fremont 4, Mentor I ·
ATHENS Alex Black
tossed a. complete game fo.urh1tter tor Freino nt. wh1 ch
crui sed to a 4-1 win over
Mentor.
The Mentor duo of starter
Brian Koch and Tom Eva nko
allowed just five hits total in the
losing effort. ' Koch took th e
loss.
Ryan Smith singled twice for
Fremont. Tom Bayer paced .
Mentor with two"singles as well.
Fremont 14, 0. Valley 4(5 inn.)
•ALBANY - Fremont scored
early and often as it won an easy
14-4 .decision over Ohio Valley.
,Ryan Smith, Bryant Ruiz, Cody
Myers, T.J. Goft and Adam Grof
all had multiple hits for Fremont.
which pouniled out 13 for the .

. times for Ohio Valley.

Ohio Valley 9, Athens 8
THE PLAJNS - Ohio Valley
"p.ut th~ stops on an Athens seventh-inning rJ.IIy to capture a 9-8
win over the tournament hosts:
Jordon Turner doubled twice for
"Ohio Valley, while teammate Chris
Jeffers added two singles.
Athens actually out-hit its opponent 11 -7, b.ut committed two
more errors. T6ny Costanzo had a
pair of doubles, Nick Springer
ooubled and singled while Greg
. Poston and Brandon aainhart also
logged·multiple hits in the loss.
Ryan Highman earned the win
and Jay OTat picked up a save.
Brad Grimm was the losmg hurler.

Tfoy 5, Lowell I
THE PLAINS
David
Hammond homered, singled and
drove in three runs as Troy beat
Beverly-Lowell 5-1.
·
Troy scored four crf its ruris In
the first inning.
Tyler Engle doub_led and singled
for Bevelrlv/
Winneti&lt;Jick Kirk and Andrew
Ford combined on a four- hitter for
the winners. Austin Wallace went
all seven innings for the loss. ,
Sportswriter Trim Meuers in
Athe11s contriburecj. to this repo&lt;t.

_
.
Larry Crumlphoto
Coaches, players and a6mioistrators from Galli a Academy, as we ll as many others,
took to Cliffside Golf Course Friday in a fun!!ra iser goif scr~mb l e to benefit"the footpall Blue Devil' program . Money ra ised will go toward equipmerrt. camps and, other
various expenses the team wil l incur during the season. It was the third annual
event at Cliffside, which is. held every July 4 weekend. There we re 11 $!l00 sponsers of the event with a rrumber of other $125 sponsets . Former Gall! a Academy •
assistant and current Oak Hill basketball coach Gary Harrison is pictured above on
the left, attempting a long putt from the edge of the 18th gre!!n .
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Page 82 • •unbap ilr:itne6 -illtntinrl

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Sunday, Jti1y '3, 2005

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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three man teams. ""
The winning score of 59 was
recorded by Wes Peterson, Curtis
Grubbs,
Bill Pethel ~nd · Lew
1. Willis Korb 142.0; 2. Oary Minton 135.0; 3. Mlck Winebrenner .129.0; 4. Earl Johnaon 127.0; 5.
HasKel Jones 123.5; 6. Ru9s Holand 119.0; 7. Tom Fisher 118.. 5: 8. Harvey Blain 118.0; 9. Paul
Gilliand.
Somerville J 17.0; 1o. Tom Nunnery 116.0; 11. Russ WiJOd 114.5; 12. Dave Jacoby 114.0; 13. Mac
A three way tie existed for second
McCarty 113.5; 14. (tie) .Rondal Browning and Lew Gilland 112.5 ; 16. (tie ) Jack FoK artd W.&amp; Peterson
107.5; 18. Paul Lanham 104,0; 19. (tie) Bob Oliver end Jim Curtnlngham 102.5: 21 . Dewey Smith
place
between the teams of Mick
100.5: 2~ Cecil Mlntbn 99.0; 23. Clark t?reene 98.0_;24 . Dana Winebrenner 97.0; 2.5. (tit) Harley FUce
Winebrenner,
Dick Dugan, Pat
.and Cra1g Barnes 9 6.5; 27. (tie) Ken Whited, Don W ilson and Ralph Sayre 95.5; 30. Curthil Grubb 9!i.O;
31. (tie) Claude Proflitt and Bin Yoho 92.0; 33. Gene Gra¥ 90 .0; 34. (tie) Dick Dugan ar;_ld Chuck Yeager
Williamson and Jack Fox; the squad
87.5;. 36. Don Fields 85.5; 3~. Chuck Stanley 84 .0
;.
.
,
of Cecil Minton, Chick Conley,
Herman Knapp and Clark •Greene;
Tuesday afrernoon . That total this )'Car. A total of 17 points were and the threesome of.Gary Minton,
marched rhe league record sel earlier available with 15 foursomes and two Fred Smith and Paul Lanham.

Senior Men's League ~tandings

SPORTS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON. W.Va. - Willis Korb
has lost two-thirds of his lead due to
• his summer vacation. Gary Minton
of Gallipolis has climbed ' up the
leaderboard to within seven points
ofKorb's 142 point total.
In third place with '129 points is
Mlck Winebrenner of Racine.
A total oi· 66 players were in attendance . for the near I00 degree

NATIONAL
BRIEFS ..

RedmEn Roundup

-

Baseball

Rio jriks Green's
Ryan BlooWJeld

Cycling
Armstrong starts
strong in first stage
NOIRM,OUTIER-EN ·
L'ILl'!. France (AP) . Lance Armstrong had an
impressive start to his final
Tour de France, finishing
second Saturday in the opening stage.
•
Armstrong. bidding for his
seventh straight Tour victory
before he retires;· finished 2
seconds behind fellow
·American David Zabriskie
on the I !.S-mile course in
western ··France. Annstrong
overtook one of his main
rivals, Jan Ullrich. even
though the Gemnan started
one minute ahead of hi in.

Roddick to meet
Federer in men's
Wimbledon final ·

lan McNamar/OVP tile

Rio Grande's Kris Schuler rounds third and heads for home in a game against Urbana durin~ his senior season ,

Schuler's productive
Redmen career ends
.

.

WIMBLEDON, England
(AP) - With a rain-mterrupted victory helped by a
BY MARK WILLIAMS ·
His best season· was in· 2004 when he set
lucky bounce, Andy Roddick
SPECIAl TO THE TIM ESSEN TINEl
career best.S in games played (48), batting averearned a Wimbledon final
age (.328), hits (41), runs scored (18), doubles
r~match . against two-time
RIO GRANDE _ Productive. left handed (I 0) and RBI 130). He also clubbed two home
champion Roger Federer.
Roddick reached match bats are diflicult to come by. The Universiry. of ru1is.
schu1er p1ayed lour
·
seasons and was ·a part
point by ·hitting a· forehand Rio Grande R:cdmcn aascbaH-tenA,~:~i!lllavet&lt;J
of
one
oTThe
most
drrunat1c
return that kissed the net cord replace one of its' most productive lefr-handed hisrory of college baseball. turnarounds in tile'
twice before landing for a bats with the loss of Kris Schuler to graduation.
Prior to arriving on the Rio Grande campus
winner, and he then hit a 130
Schuler, a nat1 ve ot Lucasville, where he in 2001-02 r.he Redmen had an abysmal 7-47mph service winner to beat played tor h1s father (the le~endary Dean · 1 record the vear before: As a treshman
Thomas Johansson 6-7 (6), Schuler) had plenty ot productive at-bats ti1r · (2002). Schuler was a pan of a team. that tin6-2, 7-6 (10), 7-6 (5) the Redmen. espec1ally the last two seasons. ished 28-26 &lt;md nearly made the post-season.
Saturday.
.
He .sp1lt lime between th1rd base and des1gnat- . "He played in three regional tournaments
Federer, the top-ranked ~d h1tter dunn~ h1s career as well as spec1ahz- and . was. a part ·of drastic turnaround,"
Swiss who defeated Roddick
Ill pmch-hlllmg.,
.
. Warnimont said. '"That's an outstanding
in last year's fmal, advanced mgSchu'ler.
hkc many.semors, stepped up late 111 achicvemenr."
·
to Sunday's final by beatin
the
year
while
the
Reqme:1
were.
making
a
push
For
his
career,
Schuler
played in 128 games
.Ueyton Hewitt on Friday.·
tor,
the.
post-season.
He
trnr
shed
\he
2005 sea- and batted a respectable .288 (8!Hor-305). He
Federer needs one more vicn With a . 298 battmg avemgc (25-tor-X4) score'd 50 runs. ripped 2,2 doubles, four home
tOry to join Pete Sampras and so,
w1Lh e1ght doubles. 16 RBI and 12 runs scored. runs and drove in 65 runs.
·
· Bjorn Borg as the only men
"Schuler
crunc
on
late
i~
rhe
year,"
said
Rio
Schuler
majored
in
Physical
Education.
since 1936 to win three conGrande head ctlach .Brad Warnimont. "He real,
Kris is the sun of Dean and Kris Schuler of
secutive Wimbledon titles.
ly provided greatle&lt;idership."
·
Lucasville.

Nightmare
. from Page Bl ·
·feeney Benn~tt pitching surre ndered seven free passes
and five hits during the
marathon fourth. Thirty-nine
of the 61 pitches were balls,
and four runs alone were
·
walked-in.
pitcher Mike Davi ~

.

••

I

. RIO GRANDE· - The
University of Rio Gran9e
•
Redmen baseball l?rogram
once again tapped mto the
rich talent · of southeastern
Ohio with
the signing
of
Green
H i g h
S c h o o 1.' s ly extremely proud of Ryan,"
R . y a n Schoupe said. "He's been a
Bloomfield gieat asset to this communily,
to a national this school and definitely our
letter
of program."
intent.
"We. know he 's going to be
Bloomfield there at the. University of Rio
Bloomfield is the second Grande and it' s going to be a
district play- situation , in which he can
er of the ye,ar to sign with the thrive," .Schoupe added.
Redmen this ,recruiting sea- ' "They have high expectations
son. He was also the Southern for him and he's going to be
Ohio Conference Division I extremely
and
deeply
Player of the Year. He made missed."
first team All-SOC I as a , Schoupe is fond· of
junior after achieving second ·Bloomfield's attitude , as a
team honors as a freshman player and a person. "I like
and sophomore. ·
the consistency with his attiThe righthander was 9-0 tude , never does he have a
this season on the mound with bad day," .he said. "He really
a I .79 ERA for. the Bobcats. brings that to every aspect of
In 57 innings he allowed only his life and it really trans(ers
·49 hits . Bloomfield also to other people.
"He displays great leaderplayed shortstop and cenrerfield for Green. He batted
.330 with two horrie runs and ship and a grear example that
18 RBl h'l
·
keeps everybody upbeat,"
w 1 e servmg as the Shoupe added. "That's his
captain of the. team. · .
great attribute." ·
Blooll'\field also played two
Rio Grande head coach
years of basketball.
Bloomfield is@so a strong Brad Wurnimont added
student . He was vice-presi- anothe.r quality player from
dent of the National Honor the surrounding area, which is
Society.
one of the goals he has for the
The newest Rio recruit is program. "Our goal is to get
excited about his chance to the best kids our of southeast
play collegiately. ''I'm just Ohio and we've gottwo dis,
really excited that I can play rrhict, plarers of the year and
at the nexf level," Bloomfield t at s unportant to us,"
s.aid. "To have the confidence Warnimont said. "In Ryan we
thai everybody has in me too, feel he is a dual -role guy, he
it's makes it a whole lot easi- had a · great year on the
er to go to the next level.
mourid, 9;0. and he put up
"I'm really excited to go som~ oulstanding ·numbers."
play," Bloomfield added. "I
"Offensively, he' s a guy
. think jr will be a great thing who played some centerfield
for the school here, because .i}:i weii as shor1s!op."
not many people have si~ned Warnimonl added. "So he has
to ·play sports, espec 1ally some versatility.
baseball, it's just really cool , 1 "His best years are going to
think." ·
be ahead of him , he has great
Bloomfieid explained what leadership skills on the
the key factors were in his mound and we're going to try
decision to play for the to get him strange~ in the
Redmen. "I just really liked weight room, the velocity is
the atmosphere and I know going to come along with
they have a strong baseball · maybe a little more power
team and it's something I with the bat." .
.
. knew I w.anted to be a part
He plans to major in Social
of."
Science.
· Green head coach Dave
Ryan is the son of Kevin
Schoupe was pleased for · Bloomfield and .Lee Ann
Bloomfield. "We're obvious- Packard.

E-mail us your localspc'llts news:

last eight games. The team
also won it 's second game of
the tournament later that
afternoon. 5-1, over Beverly
Lowell..
Post 128, which fell to 1410 overall. had no other game
scheduled on Friday in the·
round-robi n formal.
. Cupps had two s,i ngles in
the inning to pace the Troy
bats. Andrew Li ghtfoot
:added an infield single.
Feeney Be'nnett had 'ust

sporls@myd~ily5e~nel.com
..

,

doubled in h1s team 's lone
trouble in the
After run in the first inning- scorgiving up four runs, the left- ing the speedy Mart Mooney,
hander was relieved . by
Brandon Fackler, who fared who had beat out an infield
and stole second to set
no better. Troy tacked · on single
up
the
seven more tallies before the ' FB 's RBI.
other two safeties
third out w'as finally recordto Austin Kin g and
belonged
ed.
TYler
Clagg,
who each had
Frosty Brown's Post 43 identical-looking
bloop sinclub also came through with . j!les that fell in front of a divtimely hits ; Matt Smith
smacked' a two-run . double, mg Kri s Naeleigh in left
while Josh Cupps and Ryari field.
Pierce each added two,run
Troy 11, Feeney Bennett 1
singles. _
· Post 128 1 o o o .o• - 1 4 1
It was much:needed win Post43 000 (It) X - 1151
Brad Sherman/photo
Mi~e Dav1s. Brandon ·FacKier (4) and Luke
for Troy (23- 12), whieh won He1
Feeney Bennett's, Jeremy Blackston barehands a ground ball
slop. Troy Mercer and A.J. Bush. WP ...J
for onl,Ythe second time in its Troy Mercer. LP- Mike Davis.
before making the throw
to first.
· ·.
'

a

..

BY JENNA FRYER

.,

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa.Fans have resorted to giving
Jeff Gordon good luck charms,
anyth.ing to help him break his
stx-week slump and gel him
back into NASCAR's Chase for
the Championship. ,
., At an autograph ·session in
: Michigan last month, he was
flooded with trinkets and personal items. One man even
(lainted a horseshoe · to match
Gordon's rflinbow-colored car.
'They are coming in pretty
strong," he said. "It's great to
have the support of our fans that
we do ahd know that, even.
though they are frustmted like
· they are, they are 'still supporting us and knowing that. we. are
gomg to get .back on track and .
trymg to help us any way that he
..

·

·

•

•1

•
I

NEXTEl Cup Series·
Following race 16 ol36

Top

Rk Driver

Polnlo

Wlno

5e

1. Greg ,8lftle

2,280

5

8

2,228

.2

7

2,07.3

0

1
5

.2 . Jimmie Johnson

3.
4.
5.
.6.

Ello1t 8aL1t«

! '

Tony Stewa_
rt

2,052

~,

Mtlrl&lt; MMin·
Rusty Wallace

• 7, ~Newnoln
8. Kurt Busch

9.' C811Ectwartte
10. Jamie McMurray

2,022. · • · .. o ~

· s·, .a.

2,013

0'

3

1,884

0

4·

1,978

1 • 5

d,IM!3

2

,&amp;

1,923

0

3

....

Top • Wko Prev. In
101 top 10
rink
' 10 •
15
2
11
16
1
~ 1.
3
' 14
8
6
,'
14
5
12
8
' 7' .
12
8
8
15
9
10
·4
6
11
6

e

I.

Addtiionol cho"!plonohlp-polnt oernoro •
1,410; 31. Jeff Green 1·,409; 32. Kyle
Petty 1,401 ; 33. Mike Bliss 1,393:
34. Scon Wimmer 1,282; 35. Mike
Wallace 1,158; 36 . Jason Leffler
1,070; 37. Bobby HamiHon Jr. 968;
38. Robby Gordon 822; 39. Kevin
Lepage 803: 4() . Terry Labonte 520:
41. Hermie Sadler 487: 42. Johnny
Sauter 418: 43. Bill Ellloff 361·: 44 .
Bons Said 334: 45 . Martin Truex Jr.
312:46 . Mike Garvey,256: 47.
StaQion Barrett 244: 48. John
~&gt;;ndretti 225; 49. Jimmy Spencer
213: 50 . Mike Skinner 211

n : Jeremy Mayfield 1,902; 12. Dale
Jarrett 1,870; 13. Kevin Marvlck
1,855: 14. Jeff Gordon 1,936; 15.
Mk:hae1Wallrifl1,827; 16.JeffBunon ,
1,761 ; 17. Joe Nemechek 1,722; 18. '
Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1,707: 19. Kyle
Busch 1,695; 20. Mall Kenseth
1,652; 21. Kasey Kahne1,640; 22.
· Scott Riggs 1,5-47: 23. Bnan Vickers
1,545; 24. Sl~rting Martin 1,524: 25.
Casey' Mears 1,511; 26. Bobby
Labonle 1,507 : 27. Dave Blaney
1,466; 28. Ken Schrader 1,420; 29.
Travis Kvapll1,413; 30. Ricky Rudd

The four-time series champion has dropped from second to
14th in the standings.the past six ·
weeks. With just I0 races left to
qualify tor NASCAR's 10-race
AP
· playoff series. Gordon is in dan- SOURCE : 'NASCAR
ger of being· shut out of the
But not even 'that rin~ing as strong as·an~ team out there,"
competition.
.
endorsement
could convmce Gordon said. 'We've just got to
Will it actually happen? Well, Gordon that he's
a lock to make get things going in the right
he's only 14 pointsa~ay from the Chase.
direction and make some g(lod
the qualitYing cutoff mark "This is the Nextel Cup series decisions.
hardly far enough back to be
"We haven 't really lost confi'
considered out of it. And he and it's tough," he said. "Just dence. That's still there. The
because
we:ve
won
foui
chamraces Saturday night at Daytona
attitude of the guys is as good as
International Speedway, where pionships, there is no guarantee, it can' ·be under· the circumhe's taken over as the master of especially when you've had stances. l don't think we've
restrictor-plate racing: Gordon some of the issues we've had." panicked or have lost control.
Gordon started the season
has won tour of the past five
with a dominating win in the We're just trying to put those
plare races and two in a row.
behind us and learn from them
And he has at least one sup- Daytona 500, then scored two and go to the next oile."
porter who sri! I believes Gordon more victories to emerge as a _Daytona is the place Gordon
will be a contender at the end of legitimate threat to win his fifth must get on the gas and get back
the se&lt;tson: During a conference Cup title.
near the top of the standings.
call with reporters earlier this · But since finishing sixth at With II victories on the 2.5week, NASCAR chairman Darlington two months ago, mile superspeedway, Gordon
Brian Fram:e broke in for a final Gordon has five finishes of 30th · comes to . the Pepsi 400 as the
· remark' before Gordon hung up. 'or worse. It looked as if he was driver to beat.
·
"All of this business that Jeff going to right the ship last ' 'This is a good weekend for
Gordon is not going to be in weekend at the road course in us;" he said. ''I'm d~finitely
the Top I0 and all of those Sonoma, Calif., where he stan, looking forward to Daytona and
things .. di bet by the time we ed from the pole. But a blown hoping that one of these weekget 10 September. he'll not transmission took him out of ends, it's going to ~et turned
only be in lhe Top 10, ~e'll contention and he ended up .around. If it aoesn t happen,
1'
· probably be a favonte to wm 11 33rd.
then yuu just put your best foot
all,'' France said.
"l feel like we're as goOd and forwatd and go to the next one."

·

AP photo

NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon waves to fans as he walks through the garage area Thursday at
Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach , Fla ..The NASCAR Nextel Cup Peps1400 was
ran Saturqay night.
·

New attitude overcoming .
frustrating start. for Stewart
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pepsl400

1

NEXTEL

Tony Stewart has been
noticeably quieter and
I&gt; Tri..,val. 2.5 miles
calmer this season despite a
I&gt; 31 degrees ·
series of fru strations that in
bank1ng in tums
, other years might have set
I&gt; 18 degrees
off NASCAR's sometimes
in tri-av.al
bad boy.
Distance: 400
After finally breaking
miles/160 laps .
through' last Sunday irl
Setoedule:
Sonoma, Calif , for hi s first
Saturday,
Juty 2
· win sin&lt;;e la si August,
(NBC, TNT. 7 p.m.)
Stewart acknowledged he is
0
disappointed in the way
things have gone in 2005 SOURCE ' NASCAR .
despite the fact that he is ·difference.
fourth in the season points· "We've simplified it,"
heading
into
Saturday Stewart sajd. "This series is
: night's Pepsi 400 al Daytona so complicated, .. it's hard to
International Speedway.
have a life. so it's hard to
The difference: a sou l- keep a positive attitude. We
cleansing team meeting at find more things .to do as a
team now than . we 've ever
the end of last season.
"That:s the best thing that done before, whether it 's
happen·ed, that I sat down playing cards or going to .
w.i'th my race team and let watch a movie or whatever it
them vent for a day, .and it is."
was one of the most prodticStewart's 2005 season,
tive meetings as a race team .which he characterizes as
that we've had since I've "probably .one of the worst
been there," said Ste)Vart, seasons we've had up until
who has driven the No., 20 this point," has had its ups
entry for Joe Gibbs Racing . and downs. In the IS races
· since arn.vmg in the Cup before last .Sunday, Stewart
offset three second-place
series in 1999.
"We 1JOI a lot of things out finishes and a third with five
in the air," he added. "From finishes of 30th or worse.
the start of the season we've Three times he led the most
had fun racing as a team laps in a race and failed to
and, even the days where win.
.
we've had problems, it's
He acknoJN!edges it · has
made it easier to
back to · been
and, at

Stewart never has enjoyed
the baggage that comes
, along with being a Nextel
: Cup star. Media obligations,
sponsor appearances and
testing all put a strain on the
top drivers.
That team meeting. and
hew ·. attitudes,. have made a

2005 Nextel Cup schedule
Feb. 20- Daytona 500, Daytona Beach. Fla . IJefl Gordon!
Feb. 27 ~ Auto Club 500, Fontana, Cali! (Greg Biffle)
'
March 13 - UAW·Da1mlerChrysler 400 . L a&amp; Vegas /J1mm1e
' Johnson)
March·2Q- Golden Corral 500. Hampton. Ga . (C arl Edwards )
Apr il 3 - Food C1ty 500. Bristol . Ten n (Kevm Hcirv1ck'
Apnl 10 - Advance Auto Parts 500. MartinSville Va (Jett

'

~~)

· BY MIKE HARRIS

u_p.,

. .,. (Tialllt).
near·lv 2SO qlll ...fJJ ••, W. . .tg place!~
the pass competition, IIIJ'IWM on the wianing tug-of-wa'r
team. Both Wandling and Bays plan to be memberii of
Gallia Academy's 8th Grade football team.

•

NASCARTOP 10

ASSOCIATED PRESS

as a team and not get rln•wn
"When you !rave a team
effort like that and a support
group like that, if one person
gets down it's easy to have
that many guys th.at are on
your ,side to lielp pick you

'

. I

Qordonlooks for more restrictor-plate dominanCe

can.'' '

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL rc) THE TIMES-SENTINEL

Temiis
Venus Williams
wins Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON; England
(AP) ~ Venus .Williams
mustered one last comeback,
capping her career revival by
wmning another Wimbledon·
title.
Williams overcame ran
early deficit and a championship point to beat . topranked Lindsay Davenport
4-6, 7-6 (4), 9-7 for her fifth
Grand Slam championship
aqd her firs~ in nearly four
years.
When Dll.venport hit a
forehand into tbe net on
championship
· point,
Williams raised both fists
and grinned. ·

News

' '
. SuQday, July 3, 2005

'

.

Seven teams tied at 63 for the day
and in fourth place.
The closest to the pin contest was
won ,by Lanham on no, . 7 and
Min!on on no. 14.
The number of different players
.to hav~ played at least once during
the year has risen to 114 with the
addition of Conley and Ron Halley
of Gallipolis. The average number ..
of players has risen to 60 per
Tuesday after the halfway mark for
the season.

PageB3

WEEKEND

'

Minton, others gain ground at Riverside
STAFF REPORT

'

"But, at the same time, the
attitude of the team is better
than it's been since 1999,"
Stewart said. "Even though
it isn't the season that ·we've
wtmted, it's made it more
acceptable .
"And .that doesn't mean
we're bein~ complacent. It
just makes 11 to where we're
all on the sal]le page and
we're all work!ng toward the
same goal. We re all ther.e to
pick each other up and we're
having fun with it. •
"We were all down at San
Francisco
.' the other day after
'

April 17 Samsung/Rad i OS~aclo.. 500, Fort Wo rth, Texas
. (Gre9 B1flle)
April 23- Subway Fre sh 500. ~vondale , Anz . (Kurt Busch I
May 1 - Aaron 's 499. TallAdega. Ala . (Jefi Gardon)
.May 7 - Dodge Cha rger 500 . D.irlmgt on. S.C. (Greg 81tf le)
May 14 - Chevy American Revolut1on 400. R1ch mond Va
(Kasey Kahne)
May 29- Coca-Cola 600 {Jimm1e Johnson)
June 5 - MBNA AacePoints 400, Dover. Del (Greg 81ftle1
June 12 - Pocono 500. Long Pond , Pa . tCart Edwards)
June t9 - Salman Begms 40b . Brooklyn , Mich (Greg 81ll le)
June 26 Dodge /Save Mart 350 . .Sonoma Cal1t. (Tony
Stewart)

CUP

July ·2 -

.

0

AP

the media day and I found a
shop that had a flag that
said, 'The beatings wiLl continue
until
morale
improves.' And everybody
that's come in that trailer has
laughed their butt off that's
At;' photo
see n that. So, you know,
Tony
Stewart"zips
up
his
fire
suit
as
he prethat's just the kind of thing
we're doing. Having .fun, 'lpares for his qualifying run Friday at
Daytona International Speedway in D,aytona·
picking on ·each other."
Stewart always has credit- Beach, Fla.
ed crew chief Greg Zipadelli
- with Stewart since his
rookie year - as being the
real leader of the. team. But
Zipadelli said S.tewart lias
had a big hand in the change
of atmosphere around the
No. 20 team.
·
"Well, Tony is a big part of
this team," Zipadelli said .
"A lot of his attitude and the
way he shows up, like
myself, i~ l show up and I'm
in a bad mood .and I'm taking it out.on the gu
then
the we"'kend.
"We have a \ot of responsibilities, but I think one of
. them is being the be ~t leaders we can. Be their friends ,
be people . It's important that
. Tony and my~elf set that
tone. You ask a lot of those
guys, and we; need to give
that back to them."
Stewart, sitting next to

Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach ; Fla.·

July 10 - Ch1cagpland 400 . J~iet Ill
July 17- New Engla nd 300 . Loudon . N H
July 24 - Pennsy lvam3 SOD. Long Pond Pa
Aug. 7 - B'rir::kyanl 400. lnd 1ttnapo1ts Aug . 14 - Smus al The Glen. W8tkms Glen . NY
Aug . 2 1 - GFS Ma rketplace 40q . Broo.kty n. M1ch
Aug . 27 - Sharp1e 500. Br1stol. Tenn
Sept 4 - Cailfarma 500, Fontana. Ca111
Sept . 10 - Ohevy Rock &amp; Roll 40 0. R1chmond . Va
Sept 18 - Sylvan1a 300 l..qudon. N.H.
3epl . 25 - WBNA 400. Dover. De l
OCt 2 - UAW-Ford 500. Talladega . Ala
Ocl. 9 - Banquet 400. Kansas C1ty Ki!'l
Oct 15 - UAW~ GM Oual 1ty 500 . Concord . N C
Oct. 23- Subway 500 . Mart1nSv1lle. Va
Ocl. 30- Bass Pro Shops MBNA 400 Hampton. Ga
Nov. 6 - D1Ck1es 500. Fort Worth. Te)(as
Nov. 13- Checker Aute Part s 500. Avondale . Ar1z
Nov. 20- Ford 400 , Homesreao Fta ~

.NASCAR Weekend·.throughout July in the Times-Sentinel.
•••

During Farmtrec Frenzy t ake advan-::age of the
industry's best finalicing and get t he tractor yoJ've
been dreaming about .Lot of Bang. L itt le .Bucks.
And NO int~rest for 48 m'o nths! •

I

farrnt.tac com ...

Zip~delli~od&lt;!ed .

.

"We've done it together
a'nd we're . having fun,"
Stewart said, "even though
the results haven ' t ·shown
this year."

_ .. - - - · . ........ ~- •.· _....._ . ·~··· --t-· ·- ~-- - ·. - ·- - - __ ___,

McGrath Truck &amp; Tractor Repair
ll40J 696·0358

--,---------,---

�,

.'

.

..

..

·PageB4

OUTDOORS
Imagine what it would be
like&gt; to c:unp without a leal)'
tree canopy overhead • .Thpt s
,
CENIBAL OtttO
.
what some campers will expeHargUs Creek Lake (Pkkawey County) - ,For channel catflah, fish along tht bank
this summer at Maumee
rience
with ahnmp, night crawlers, and chicken llvers. Sho(elin' areas "'*' the dam, island
and east shore are good plaCes tO fish tor largemouth ban. Thera Is B! 15 Inch miniBay State Park in Lucas
mum length limit to keep your basa. Baits to use Include plastic baits, crank balta and
.
County
because of a destructive
live bait Crapp1e can lle found on drop-otfs and around wooay vegetatiO[I. Use minmsect known as the ememld
nows to catch these fish in early morning. Sluegi~ cem be caught using night craw1era
suspended by a bObber. Electric motors only.
· • •
ash bgrer.
. O'Shaugtmessy Reservoir (Delaware County) - For largemouth bass, try spinner
· As thousands of Ohio&lt;ms and
baits, plastics, and live bSII along brush and talkln trees along the enttr8 western
shorelinf. These areas, espeda!ly the deeper shorelines, are also good for crapPie.
out-of-state visitors take. to our
Try uslng o minnow suspended by a bobber. Earty morning and late avenlng are the
thts :;eason, they
campgrounds
best times to fiSh. Channel catfiSh can be taken throug;hout the lake using shrimp, cut
may
be
unknowingly
threaten·
bait, -and night crawlers fished on the boHom. A good population of bluegill can be
caui)ht using sme!! wor!'"s cr cricfl:~ts !:IUS~nded fit lfJRRI two feet under a bobber.
mg some of the very trees
under whicl) they've pitched
N~ATHWE!!J; 0!10
.
.
their
tents - all because of the
Maumt;te River (Paulding CountY)- 'The water level is low. Aathead catfistt are In
firewood they brought along
abundance. Night is the best time. ·
..i
·
Willard ReservOir (Huron County)- The water level is down two feet but that has not
for a cozy campfire.
seemed to hurt tha, fist'ling Yellow perch are be•no taken on white weighted jigs l ate
The emerald ·ash borer is a
afternoon 1s the best time and the best spot Is along the north shore.
Blanchard' River (Hardin County) - Good numbers of smallmouth bass are being
small, metallic green beetle that
taken in they even1ng L1ght wlored Ag,palas are worl&lt;ing; well. The best spot seems to
attacks and destroys ash ,trees.
be iuound the County ~cad 20 bridge.
This
unwelcome insect arrived
Lost Creek Reservoir (Allen County) - Saugeyeln the 12~to 18~ 1nct1 range are being
• ca ught on leeches. The best spot is the north side of the reservoir.
in North America from Asia
Ferguson ReserVoir (Allen County) - Channel cats are belnQ taken on night
·
about
five years ago. Already it
crawlers fished on the botlom. The east side of the reservoir 'ls the beat. Smallmouth
has claimed millions of ash
bass In the 14~to 16-lnch range are being taken on the surface usi~g buu baits. The
west s•de of tl'1e resef'IOir ls.the best location.
trees in Michi~an, and si~&lt;
northwestern Ohto counties. · ·
NORJHEAST OHIO
In its larva , stage - before
Tappan Lake (Hamson Cotmty) - C1'1annel catfish are D1ting on stink bait and night ..
crawlers on or near the bottom. Look for bluegill hitting pn eart~worms In 3 to B feet of
becoming an adult beetle - the
water.
.
ash borer literally bores or drills
Atwood lake (Carroll and TuscarawaS counties)- For saugeye, angler$ should try
its w.ay through soft tissue that
Using a Jig lipped with a leech or night crawler In 15 feet of water. Atwood Lake ttu a
25 horsepower ·limit.
·
. lies beneath the bark of the ash
tree. Within three to five
SOUTHWEST OHIO
years, the tree dies as the
Caesar Creek Lake (Clinton, Greene, and Warron counties)- Saugeye anglf!111'e
taking good numbers trollirig medium or ,deep-diving crank baits along subn'ief'Qtl1
ljestruction cuts off the tree 's
points or JJnderwaler humps. Casfor drift with live night crawlers o~ a bottom~
nutrients and water, starving
ing harness rig, or use a lead head jig tipped with a p1ece of worm. Bluegill and tun·
the tree to death.
fish are being ct,~ughl by anglers usirJQ curly tails, jigs with plastic bod[es, live minnows,
~ -earthworms, OF- wax worms as bait, Good color-choices are white or-chartreu&amp;$. Fish
· With· the borer's larVa over
from the shoreline and keep the ball under a bobber between two to 10 feet deep. Cast •
y

1

intc aieas with wood debris and submerged tree!;! or brush. Use a No.8 fine-wtre hook
for Uve baits _Channel catfish are being caught by anglers using night crawlers, shrlmp, •
and chicken liver in the creek-abOve the lake. Fish the bait tlght·line along the bottom
in live lo eight fool depths.
East Fork lake (Clermont County) - Largemouth bass are being caught by 8l'l~lers
using mght crawlers and plastic worms fished with a Taxas rig. Fish undercut banks on
the shady side ot the lake during ~:~arly morning or late evening. Hybrid striped bas&amp;
are being caught Dy anglers trolling or Jigging shad COlOred crank batls or spoons In
five to seven foot deplhs. Also, try slowly trolling with lllte gizzard shad. A.U hybrids lea&amp;'
than 15 inches long must be Immediately relea88d back Into the lake. Also. 8"""1'1
can only keep 8 dally llm1t of tour hybrids. Channel catfish are being caught by angler&amp;
using crawfish, live mfnriowS, or ea"tttrworms as bait. cast into the areas under under·
cu t banks or neaf submerged trees and brush. Keep the bait off ol the bottqm and
about ftve to eight teet deep Use a No. Ho 3-sized baltholder hook;.
Stillwater Aiver (Miam• County) - Smallmouth bass and channel catfish are being
caughl by anglers us1ng dark colored jigs cr'crank baits, night crawlers, or crawfish as
bait. Fish shallow areas in the early morning and early evening hours. Flsh deep pools
during mictday. For smanmouth b.ass, use a small hook size and fish a worm or min.~
now by casting it upstream and a!lowlng the current to float it into the hOJe.
SQUIHEAST OHIO
Muskingum Alver (Washington. Morgan, and Coshocton counties)- An~&amp;l'$ continue to catch flathead catfish usmg live suck~&amp;. goldfish, and sunfiSh. Channel cat~
fish anglers have been most successful using night crawlers. chicken livers, and cut
bail. Large flathead catfish up to 40 puunds are also being caught. The most produotive- sites continUe to be at any of the low-head dams and at tho mouth of larger fribuIEHy streams.
Tycoon Lake (Gallia- County) - The most pro(j_l!ctive angling success Ia tor white
crappie. Boat anglers were fish1ng submerged fence rows with small crank b8hs in 2
to B feet ot water. s~nrish are being caught at all near shore tocatlonS with worms and

bobber.
Lake Rupert (Vinton County) - Angler effort has fOcused toward channel catfish
during !his heat wave. Nice catches of fish in the 15-to 26~inch range have been
recorded while fishing the snallow weed beds Live bait In the form cf night crawlers or
small minnows has been favored. Boat angling pressure tor white crappie, saugeye,
and largemouth bass has slowed cons1derably. Fishing at night and with surface lures
has been the onty et1ective technique reported from !:Jus angkns.

LU.E.INI

On June 2:5, the blade ban (largemoutl'l and ema.llmouth hue) ~M~~Dn opened on
Ohio watBfs of Lake Erie. The daily bag limit ia five and the minimum alze ltmlt Ia 14
Inches.
Weetenl Basin
Walleye - Walleye flsh•ng has been slow .1n Ohio waters of the western basin. The
best wdeye fishing has been northwest of the turnaround buoy, between the tum-.
around buoy and West Sister Island. and south of MP and Mer cans of the Canadla'n
border. Drifting or trolling worm harnesses and trolling spoons produce rha most fish.
YeUow Perch - Yellow perch fishing has been good recentty. The best areaa have
been south of N1agara Reef, west of Kelleys Island, and around Gun laland Shoal. Filh
just off the bonom using perch spreaders lipped with shiners.
Sma!lmouth Bass - The btlst.smallmouth bass fishin~ has been around the Bass
Islands, Kelleys Island and Sandusky Bay. Largemoutl1 baas have been caught in
Sandusky Bay. East Harbor and.West Harbor.
Central B•sln
Walleye - Walleye fishing has been excellent in eastern Ohio's waters of the CehtOJI
Basin. The best fishing has been three to five miles nonh of Fe.!rpon Harbor in 50 to
70 feet ol water. three to seven m1les northwest of Ashtabula in 50 to 70 feet of w•ter,
and three to five miles north of Geneva in 50 to 70 feet ol water. Trolling spoons or
crawler harnesses using planer boards, dipsy divers or jet divers, have produced the
bast catches. The best spoon cotOfs have been confusion and watermelon. Fish have
r&amp;f'\Qed from 15 to 28 inches.
•.
Yellow Perch - Yellow p9fch fishing has been excellent one to three mile&amp; out from
Fairport Harbor to Geneva •n 30 to 50 feet of water and one to three miles out from
Ashtabula to Conneaut in 25 to 50 feet of water. A percl1 spreader tipped with shiners
is the most popular set up. Fish have .ranged from seven to 13 Inches.
'J".,'hi;ai}ass - Tha .oos; wh;to bB.is :ls.'i:ng h.:;s be&lt;Jn from !tiD Go~re a~ thc-E.::t~at;s
CE~ wall. Anglers are using agitators With small splnoors and twister taMs. Fish have
ranged from 9 to 12 inches.
Smallmouth Bass - Smallmouth bass fishing has beeil excenent on Ruggles R881
and around the shoreline ahd harbors in 15 to 30 feet of water a~_ FMPgrt.
Geneva, Ashtabula and Conneaut Jigs t1pped wtth shiners, tube jigs, je~ baits and
crank baits have been the most productive lures.
lake Erie sur1a.ce temperatures rang'&amp; from 68 to 74 degrees.
.
OHIOR!VEA
Belmont Couflty - Rwer conditions continue to be e~~:cenent tor f1shlng opportunities
• for channel catfish and flathead catfish. Channel catfish have been caught using cut
baits, night crawlers , chicken livers. or nver shin.ers Flathead catfish have been caught
using cut bait, live golelfish, and live suckers . Wa~ temperature contlnuea to climb
higher. The current 81 degree 'Miter temperatura has been favorable ror catfllh fled..
lng behavior and the llkelihpod at angt81' suoceaa.

np ot 111o - -

•

The weather Is hOt and the fish are most actliit In tl'lt COOl.,. earty morntng and tm.
evenlng hours. An~lers will find success b)' fishing In areu with structure or ciOie to
thl thermocline. The thermocline Ia a band at water that marks 1 111pld temperaturli
d'lanoe In • bOdy of water, loosely translated:,where the oold and wsrm water mHl

Laura
'

Jones .
OuTD OOR NoTEBOOK
winterin~

beneath the tr~.e·s
bark, an - unwinlng campe-r
.equid easily transport infested
firewood to a camps ite and
potenti'!liY spread the heetle.
· By followin g a few easy
steps! state fores ters say y;e can
help preve nt the beetle from
spreading elsewhere in the
state. "For starters, usc only
local sources of firewood ,'' said
forester Dan Bal ser .with the ·
Ohio Depanment of Natural
Resources. "Fortunately. m&lt;Jst
state parks sell firewood on
site, so we'·re asking campers
not to bring in tire wood pf any
kind·. If you ha ve already
brought in firewood to a campsite, don' t take it home with
you and don't leave il behind burn it! .. ·
.
~Five species of i1sh trees
grow in Ohio: blue, green.
white. hlack and pumpkin. In
addition lo being common in

view

the

prtblcted

weather

forecaet

for

Lake

Erie

·Gallipolis Lion's Golf Tournament

~000000
.......
Walleye Plate

STAFF REPORT,
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS Ohio·,
hunters and anglers \:a n IIOW
show what matters to them.by
purchasing one of four new
sportsman's license plates for
their car. 1ruck or trailer.
Smallmouth Bass Plate
accordin g to the Ohio
,,_
Department
of · Natural
--Resoun.:es (ODNR) Division·
of Wildlife .
· Ohio license plates with
images of the smallmouth
Whlte·Tahd Daer
bass. walleye , white-tailed
deer, or wild turkey arc now
Ohio DNR/photo
·availabl
e through the state
New license plate designs. ·
..

,

•

~Y.,

...oooooo
.......
.

-

.

~~~:

Basketball

,

B.ase b3 ((

Ohio ONR/phOIO

Symptoms that an ash tree
might exhibit 1f. infested with
the emerald ash borer:
·• Distinct, D·shaped exit
·holes

1n

the bark

"'

•Serpentine-shaped tunnels
under the bark on the surface
of the wood
. • Young sprout growth clustered at the base of the tree
• Unu~ u a l activity by woodpec,kers and other 1nsect eat·
ing birds
•Die·back on the top th ird of ·
the tree
•Vertical splits 1n the bark

'¥000000-

Latta. o{ Bowling Green,
Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
··Th ~ sport sman \ license introduced the lcgisJ.ation
plate ~ •are a great way to creal!ng the wildlife. specialshow case your interest in ty plates.
hunting and li .shing. while
Arti st Adam Grimm of
n1.1kin !! o.t fin,mcial contribu- ·Elyri a. winnc1 of the 2000
tion !'or the all -import:llll kdcnil uuck sta mp and 2005
work of v..ildlife conserva- Ohio wetl:mds habitai stamp
tion :· sai d Stev~n A. Gray, competitiOn s. illustrated the
chic( of th e Division o f design for each plate.
Wildlife.
..Ohio is f(ntunate to have
E:tch speci,tlt y plate cosh an acclairneu artist like
;tn additional $25 above the Adam Grimm providing the
regul:t r li cense plate registra- paintings for the sportsman 's
tion fcc . F1ftecn dollars of plates . Acl:lm·s donation of
til&lt;il · amount ~oes to the this artwork is ,l' g~e; !l g ift to
Divi;i,&gt;n of WiTuiife to support a wide ran ge of pro- the angler' and hunters of
gr;nns. includin g oper&lt;.Hion of our state.'· :-.a iJ

the state's fis h hatcheries,
J·and ac·yuisit ion for habitat
conse r\ation·. youth education programs . and ou\door
skills education among other
efforts .
Stat~ rep rese ntative .Bob

Ct,.evan PR812
Pln/IIR13

KeHy Nawllaltr
&amp;tid

AddiORal Sli ts Ai;~, b ~

70.000 Milt Warr1nty

3UIO Mh Warranty

PmneR14

NnClfl)' ~

A~CIJ(I nai S11t1

A:niaOiil

•24
......

~~-•sao

.._

Arst-tlme anglers are encouraged to, check out our web-alta 11 www.ohiodnr.com
to find out more about fishing.
·

'

West Virginia DNR seeking public
comment on proposed·rule changes
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
Another proposed rule for chronic wasting disease
fee revi sions adopted and other diseases.
allows
(AP) -The state Division of
Natural ResourceS is ·seeking by the Legislature to become
.Another ptoposed rule
public comment on a varie ty effective. Lawmakers raised would ,allow anglers to
trapping and fishing licenses
falconers who
and set the fee for lifetime have an out-of·state falconry
license1 at 2J times the eqttiv- permit that meets federal fal·
alent of annual licenses or conry standards would· pay
· stamps, the DNR said. .
lowerfees for a West Virginia
The DNR also wants to
establish minimum ~tandards permit under another profor captive deer facilities posed rule.
because of concerns that capWritten comments wi II be
'tive animals could expose the accepted on . the proposed
state ·s wild deer population to rules until 4;30 p.m. on July
chronic wasting · di sease, a 28. The DNR said it will then ·
neurol.ogical disease found in make revisions as appropriate
elk and deer.
and submit the new rules to
The proposed sta ndards .. the Legislative Rule Making
wou ld address fence design Cbmmittee before the 2006
and construction. disease test· regul~r legislative session
ing and moilit_oring of animals opens.
I

NISSAN XTERRA 4X41112707 29.000 ML-5 BOFW AT AC TJLT CASE PW PL SPRT WHLS CO.......................... $19,995

04 SUBARU IMPREZZA OVTBACK sw ~12MSII,OO!JMlS BOFW AT ACTILTCRSE'PW PLAWDCOSPRT wttLs SSPO $18.495
.f•04 FORD EXPLORER XLT ~12s21 veATAc nLTCRSe PW PL4X4 REARAC 3RO SEATCDJO.oooNLSSPRTWH eOFW~ $19.995

THIRD PLACE
The third pi ace
JEEP WRANGLER 4X4 •m4625.000MJ..S5SPD PW PLCDTILT CRSESPRTWHLS'TOW PIC.G ........ ~ .•.
$19.330 • $2 9 7
foursome in the lf.:o!l·m SUBARU LEGACY AWD OUTBACK msrosoFWAT AC TtLTCRSE Pw PL PWREATS SPRTWHLS _
$19.300 $2 96
FifJh
• Annual
CHEV BLAZER ZR2li127684X4 2 DA AT ACTILT CRSE PW PLCD SPfiTWHLS..
. . _,, ··~· ........... Sl 5.300 $245
...02 SAnJRN VUE AWO V6 111125~ 28.000MLS BOfW AT ACTlLT CASE PW PL SP!ij.WHLS CDAWO \16..............·...... Sl5.995 $243
Ga llipolis Lions
**02 MEAC MOUNTAINEER 4X4 lt12490V6AT AC TILTCFISE PW PLCD PWR LTHR SEATS JRO SPAT WHL$. ...... $11,850 ·$289
Go lf Tournament
CHEV TRACKER LT 4X4 11112431 GRE't LTHR&amp;CYLAT AC TILT CASE PW PL COSP~WHL.S M......................... ' St t .595 $1 75
at Cliffside Go lf
...
02
MERCURY
MOUNTAINEER AW01f ll3\lilro!Ml8110FW A1 J.c; a,
~,..,.
St 7.850 $269
Course -f1red a
01
FORD-ESCAPE
XLT
4X4~12610AT
AC
TI.TCRSEPW
PLJ&gt;WR
SUNROOf
Sli'M
WHLSCO
•.
$16.995 $2
very good 62, just
01 DODGE DURANGO XLT PLUS 11:16111 n.,AT &amp;C11l.TCRSE PWP1..1'Ml Ln-tA SE'TSSPRTWHUL. __ ...:.. ...... ..._ ..... _. St6.49S
three
strokes
01 SUBARU FORESTER L 1126,14 A.WD PW Pl SPRT WHLS ROOF RA.CK AT AC.
s t 3.995
behind the win01 NISSAN PATHANOER LEH12582BOFWATACTILTCRSE PW PLebSE STEREEOCOSPRTWHLS4X4 ........... $17,995
ners. From left
$14.300
00 JEEP CHEROKEE 112167 AT AC TILT CASE PW Pl CO SPAT WHL S ~ .......~ ..... _.. .,,,_.............. ,_ .. ,............
are Abe. Epling.
00 NISSAN XTERRA 11112714 4X4 V6AT AC TILT CASE PW PL SPAT WHLS .............. -...... - ................................... . II 5,600
Tim Scites , Ken
99 JEEP GAO CHEROKEE LOREDO 4X4 41'12780 AT AC DVD CO nLT CASE PW PL PWR LTHR SEATS
110.995
Boster and Dave
m;t DODGE DURANGO 4X4112720AT AC T1LTCRSE PW PL ve ..... _................................................ ~ .................. ~... ............. $11,395
Morgan.
98 GMC JIMMY 4X4 1112719 4 DR AT AC T1LT CASE PW PL PWR LTHR SEATS SPAT WHLS .......... M.................................... $9;895
TeRtii ......

.. lilA!$ &amp;l'lll"""-.$:.1111iU! IIt.JI,IIA'

M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . . . . . .

98 GP..tC JIMMY 4X4 1112763AT ACTllTCRSE PW PL ...... M................................. M•"'"M'"' ........................MOM"""""".............. $1.995
98 FORD EXPEDmON 4X4 11112719 REARAC lRD SEAT AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL PWR,SEATS SPRTWHLS.. ......... $13.800
98 CHEV BLAZER 4X4 11112606AT AC TILTCRSE PWP!.. SPRT WHLS ........ ,, ........ -·- ..................... ~ .. .
EXPEDITI()N 4X4 1112532 VB XLT 4X4 AT ACTlLT CfiSE PW PL PWR SEAT 3RO SEAT SPAT WHLS ...... ~

FOURTH PLACE
- Three teams
posted 63s on
the leader board
following the Fifth
Annual Gallipolis
Lions Club Golf ,
Tournament. The
traditional
tie·
breaking system
was used to
, accord the official
honor to th1s four- ·
some composed
of, from left. Jim
Miller,
Tom
Young. Ron Noe
and Lee Knotts.

~~i4;.:;;,~774 ............. . ····································································· · ··························

123.695 $363
$24,395 $3 56
$17.290 $2 59
$22.995 $3 59
sn.9Ia • sJ 59
116.495 $2 59
01 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4112668 48,mJMLSAT AC Tll.TCRSf PW Pl. V8 SPRTWHLS............................ 518.995 $31 2
SOPER CJ{B 4X4 112671 DiiAD CABAT AC TILT CRSf XLTPW Pt. PWRSEATSSPRTWMi:S.....: .._._ .. ,. $17,900 $2 93

"04 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 4X4 111'12530 29.000MLS BOFW XLT AT AC T1LTCRSE PW Pl SPRTWHLS VB......
03 CHEV 510 XCAB 4X4 111'12nS,19.000MLS BOfW \16AT AC TILT CASE PW PLCDAllOY WHLS.M ................. .........
02FORD F350SUPER DUTY 4X4 112684SCAT ACTILTCRSE PWPLDUALYY10SPRTWH~ .. -·...
... -.
-02 FORD F2sosuPER cAs 4X4•12saovaATACT1LTCRSEPWPLCQALLOYWHLSTOWPKG..................
01 CHEV SII.VERA004X411274iAEG CAB SHOAT BED AT ACSPATWHLS .....................-......................

01 FORD RANGER 4X4 FLARE SIDE4 DR 11112597SUPERCAB4DRXLTPWPLCDSPRTWHLSAT A.C .. -~-·-· $15.300

$24-3
$2f7
01 FORD F15Cl4X4 SC •t2453 .................•. ·-···········-···-······..····-···-······,.. ·····························-·········" ········ .....- ......... 116.995 $2 7 6
00 FORO F15Cl4X4 RED 012578 AT AC SPAT WHLS..... ·-······'··········-··························· ··-·-·········-······~·-··········· II 1.995 ' $t 93
01 GMC SONOMA SUPER CAB •12591ZR24X43ROATAC11l.TCQSE PW LSPRTWHLSCO ....... ~....... ~ ••-.......... $15.600

-oo T?VOTA TUNDRA SRS ll12486 lC..CA84X4 VSAT AC T1LT CASE PW PLSPRTWHLS C0 ..........11..... ~.........~•.
OS FORD FOCUS2X4SE 012756 MLSBOFW ATACTILT CASE PW PLCDSPRTWHLS

114.180
$19.295
05 CHEV MT CARLO .,2664\5.000 MLS BOFW AT AC TLTCRSE PW PlCASSSPRTwtlLS PWRSO.TS - -- ·-. ·- ·'·-- 517.495
*05 PONTIAC B0NNEVIU~11263318,000 MLS SOFW AT AC lllTCRSE PW PLPWR SEATSSPRTWHLS CD
$17.900
*05 BUICK CENTURY 111' 1257024.000 MLS BOFW AT ACTllTCRSE PWPLPWR SEATS OJ....................................... $14.995
04 PONTlAC GRAND PRIX GT 11112773 AT ACllLT CRSE PW PL PWRSEATS SPRTWHlSCO....... ~ ···-.. ···-··"""""""·" $13.695
04.CHEV IMPALA 11276GAT AC TILT CRse_ PW Pl PWfl SEATS CD SPRTWHLS........ ................................................. $11.995
04 CHYSL.ER SEBRING CONVT. Oll1591 '.000~00f'WAI ACn.t CR5( P'WI'I.PWRSOT'SlU~NmWQRS!'MT'MU co
$18.995
04 CHEVY Cl..ASStC •12159:Jl.[JJ) Ml..S BOfW AT AC1lLTCRSE PW Pl CD SPAT WHLS .........................._.... ...... §11 .995
04 DODGE NEONSXT 111'127fi021.CKXJMLSBOfWAT ACTILTCRSE PWPL .......................- .......................................... Sl2.995

o5 NI$SAN ALnMA 1111269628.001 MLS 60fW AT AC nLTCRSE PW PLPWR SEATSSPRTWHLSCD .............

bers i&gt; Jul y
15. Each
application
sho uld
include all
informa tion
·about . the
athlete uur·
their
ing
years
··at
GAHS. The
information required is the
number of varsity letters
earned for each spon. special
honor&gt;. such as the GAHS
athletic key. AII-SEOAL. AllDistrict and All·State. ,

Houm mOptmtlon

12:00 p.m. until 6:00pm Monday thrt~U9h Saturday
1;oo p.m. un~l fi·OO p m. Sunday
StryleulfMI

'iu

tntm~t. ~o Pmn•nh For 911 lla" •

~111 1 \tu\Jmum J\Hltli"' R UJI~d ·

•·s

DUNft.llr

-:Lt&lt;"

'/)alaCrJJan
~TIRE
,1

.J.. •

The connnittee os ·also
accepting nominations for
forme r coaches and omstanding hoostc r:-. for considerati on:
This year. 'he nominations
for male athletes include prior
to 1979 and b&lt;lck. and for
female athletes. the lwminations are for \hi&gt;se who participated prior to 1,98,1-.md back'
The applicat ions for the hall
of fame may be pkked up at
the .. main office at GAHS. the
Scars store. Lorobi ·' Pizza on
Second Awnue or the Galli"
Academy Web site.

.

.

04 CHEVY CAVAUER4 DRt1274t 26.000MLS BOFW AT AC TILT CASE PWPLCD -·····-··· ····-···············
04 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER ot2004BOfW AT AC TILT CASE PW PLCD --·························-··-··················
D4 FORD TAURUS SES •t2589 V6AT AC TILT cASE PW PL. co SPRT WHlS 22.&lt;mML.S BOFW ..~................-..... ....
OJFORDTAURUSot2mATACTILTCRSE PWPLPWRSEATSSPRTWHLS .....•........................••............

$2 89
$2 58
$2 6 4
$2 I 6
$19 5
$18 5

$2 8 3

$( 79
$199
111.995 $ t 73
Sll.lOO $139
$13,855 $2 1 1
S9.&lt;95
$135

OONISSAN MAXIMASE 1l2728 BOFW AT AC TILT CASE PW PL PWA SEATSSPATWHL-···-:·-············· 11&amp;.995
OOCHAYSLERCONCOROE LXI1112717 3.5 V6AT AC,TlLTcpSEPWPLPNRLTHRSEATSSPRT WHLS
$13.320
03 NlSSAN SENTRA GXE -12605 BOF\VAT AC TILTPW PlCO ............................. ~····-·····......................... .....

$212

$11.300

$280

$199
,$16 7

03 SATURN L200 • 12Sn 39.00J Ml.SAT ACTlLTCRSE PW PL.................................... ..... .......... ............................. Sl 1-.995

$1

02 BUICK PARK AVE UllRA .uw. ~~D~oYUo~~O(l...,. ,,....st:,•' •' •C."-' CO!SI' - "~ -.r.cru, ldli..L.s
$22.9:95
112NISSAN MAXIMASU12026 V6AT AC TILT CASE PW"'PWR SEATS CD SPRTWHLSBOFW ......•. 115.995

$3

01 BUICK LESABRE M127S8AT A.CllLT CRSE PW PLPWfl SEATS•JIIOOSf&gt;RT WHL.S CD ....... - .•- .......... -.................~.. S! 1.270
01 VW NEW BEETLE Gl5t127374CYL5SPO PW .Pl TILT CASE WUNROOFSPRTWHLS ........................................ $13,455
S7.99S
01 PONTlAC GRAND PRIX SE112644Al ACTl.T CRSEPW P\. Sf&gt;RT WI1LS -- · - - · - - - · -··- _.. 01 HONDA CMC LX 4 OFI "2627 AT AC TILT CASE PW PL .... a ............................-

----·-·----·--·- ••• _.

00

110.995
Sll.995

. .:. .:. :. .

RED~.;~;·~c;;S!~~:~~;;,~~~~~T~~~::.~ ~~J~~~i~

51 ~r~rson

05 CHRYSLER TOWN 6 COUNTRY VAN ••• •on.ooo1M..IIIK&gt;&lt;w •r ac "'' catol'"" ",._..,occooooo o...c.&lt;.1TOJ • oo ••11

Fomlly Utar8cy Night
Thun:tdays from 6:30p.m. unti/8.30 p.m.
Sponsored by Gallipolis City School Oistnct. held '" con,IUnctioo witt\
Bossaru Memoriallibfary and Gallipolis Juntor Women's CluD. FREE

WOOOGE CARAVAN SE •t2753ATACT1Llm&amp;P.WP'l

111.995

03 FORO wtNOSTAR 112715 AT AC llLT CASE PW Pl REAR AC .. ,_, ................... ~..- ............--·-.. ~·~M-·-·-·.. ····-.. ···- S11.150

.

_..,_,.(45mtnute-llona)

(Ciia-1 I J) CIJSJO• WHEE.l S

$30 por person por "!6SllO
Mornings: 10-10:45 am Levels 3 and 4
Mornings: 11-11:'5 a.m. leYels 1 and 2 ,
Evefl.: 6-6:45 p.m. leo;&amp;as 1 and 2
E'venings: s·45-~· 30,p. m LEMHs 3 and 4

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426 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, wv 25550
304-675-3930

$219

Fomtly Night .
Fndays from 7:00 p.rp. Uprif 9.00 p m

to publiC

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Season Info"'

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00 CHRYSL.:ER 300M 112632AT AC TILTCRSE PW Pl.PWR Ll'HR SEATS PW SUN ROOfSPRT WHLSCO.

Fomtly$100 F"amity of four. P'.us $10 bf each adational person

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$t60

"04 TOYOTA TACOMA XCAB PRERUNNER 4X2 .. _nooo..u~•~ ~oc:'T\.• CO!Il"'.r;:l;l-.-..-TOO~~-o-.u; $21 .150
02 FORD RANGER 4X2 t12745 AT AC .~~~,.-........~ ... ~~-·~--·-····-·· .. ········-,~· ..·--··...... -.7 ........ -.................,_. S9.995

Session t· Jur&lt;~ 13-~3 Morday thmugh Th~rsday (Friday make-up)

~'!,"':'~22-Moroay

through Thursday"[Fridoy , _)
Mornings and Ewning le$80nS
, Sossicn 3- Augusl1· t 2 - through Thu"""y !f'ridoy makeup}. or&lt;v"'"""" par&lt;1&lt;1l·l0t lessons

01GMC SIERRA X-CAB 4X2 •1:m2 XLT SUPER CAB41.000 MLS AT ,loC TILT CRSE PW PL SPATWHLS .. ---·"·-"··- Sl 6.995
Paymenls f!Ou•ed

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of S 1 ~5 cash 01 lraoe· t&gt;lus Ia• a no1&lt;11e

2004·2005 60 nio at4 99 o\PR 66mo a l 5 5J A.PR 72 mo 115 75 APR 1003 60 1'I'Kl ~1 5 19 o\PR 6€ mos 5 99 o\PR '7~ moa t.l6 74 A.PR
2002 60 mo 5 49 ,l,PA 66 mo at 6 09 APR &lt;'Xll 60 mo 111 6 09 -'PA 66 rro;; a1 e 7fl 2000 60 1\10 5 64 At:IR 1999 · 6C mo1 S 64;,1\PR
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GALLIPOLIS -· Members
of the, Gallia Academy Hi gh
School Athletic Hall of Fame
Committee are now accepting
new applications for nominations forthe class of 2005 that
will be inducted Sept. I0 at .
the Gallipolis Elks Lodge.
· The induc1ees will be intro·
duced a( the GAHS-Ironton
football game on Memorial
Field on Sept. 9.
'
Committee
Chairman
Danny Cox said that the deadline for applications to be
received by tbe voting mem-

P171/liRU·

httptt1168basrd.ndbc.noao. govldat~srotUUS6t .KCt.E.html

licensing
stemming
from a fes tructHring passed
by the Legi slature ear~ier this
year.
The proposed changes
would eliminate separate
hunting licenses for wi ld boar
and separate stamps for
migratory waterfowl. Under
the Le ~is laturc \ .restructuring, the wi ld board , license
was included in· the resident
big game 'stamp and the resident hunting. tishing and trapping .license. The waterfowl
stamp was inc.luded in the
base resident and nonresident
hunting licenses,

:;;;;;":;;';;;'!':;~;;:;r;m;;LT CASE PW PL PWR SEAT CO SPAT WHLS SUN ROOf

.GAHS Hall of Fame·applications d11:e
11

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$1911

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Track/Ruhning

RUNNERS UP Three of the four
team
members
w~o toured the
18-hole Cliffside
layout carding a
6r to take runner
up ho~ors in the
Fifth
Annual
Gallipolis Lions
Golf Tournament ·
are pictured. From
left are Morgan
Saunders,
Lee
Harris and Gene
Gloss. The fourth
member. Jackie
Knight, is absent
from the photo.

Gray.

3008.

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LIONS GOLF CHAMPIONS -· This sm1ling four~ome shot a 59 to ·capture first place honors 1n
the ·Fifth Annual Gallipolis Lions Clu~ Golf Tournament at the Cliffsiqe· Golf Course: A total of
68 golfers competed under ideal weather conditions in the largest fund raiser the uo·ns sponsor each ye&lt;!r. From left are Kevin Petr_ie, Andrea Adkins, Frank Krauter and Shawn Ryan.

For more information on
the ' portsman \ plates. go to
ohiodnr.com . Plates can be ·
ordered · by · calling
l888PLATES3 or by visiting
the local deputy regi strar's
office.

Send us your
outdoor news
GALLIPOLIS . The
Sunday Times-Sentinel is in
the process of collecting
submilted times to . . help
make our weekly outdoors
page better. ·
If you are holding a fishing or archery tournament,
or any event related to out·
doors - send ·us the information so we can help get
the word out.
We also accept hunting
and fishing pictures, of both
young and-older hunters.
E-mail your information
to
sports@mydaHytribune.com, phone us at
(740) 446-2342 ext. 33 or
drop it off at our Gallipolis
or Pomeroy office.
·
For text only items, you
can fax them to 1-740-446-

instrUction and will participate In Jun
BRISTOL, Va . - The Mountam High
games, and Will get a camp basketball. Running Camp will be held July 11·16
refreshments and a t·srmt
· and 16·23 in the mountains of' south·
South Gallla youtl1 football camp ,
Contact Jim Osborne ' 446 -9284 for western Virgin1a
more..1nformation .
FQr more inlormat•on, call Scott
MERCERVI LLE - South Gallia will •
_._.
Simmons at 1-800-451-IVIC or ~ go to
hold a Youth football camp July 7·8 1rom ORG Women 's Basketball Camp
www mountainhigl1running .com
6 p.m. until 8 p.m. both daYs..
RIO GRANDE - The University ol Rio _ · · '
The camp is for those m grades 4-8 cG ramnpd e 1s hOidmg w
. omen's basketball .:
8
5
and reg istratiOn begins 5.45 p.m .
Thursday
The schedule lor the remaining camps
For more mtormaliOn. contact Justy 1s .
.
·
Eastern Volleyball Camp
Burleson at (740) 245·5B05
,
• Varsity and .JV ShootOut. ,Ju ~y 9.
TUPPERS .PLAINS - The f1rst·ever
• Ju ruor High lndtvldual C.amp, July 17· Eastern ,Vo lleYball Camp for g1rls enter20 .
mg grades 6-8 will be held July s..a \
- Vars1ty and JV TAam r.amr ,July ?1Cai'n o stafl includes o1avers and
23 --'coi:!.ches-.--from the 2005 ·Tri·Valley
·
River Valley hcops camp
For more Information, contact Da111d . Conference and sectional c hampion
CHESHIRE River Va lley · High Smalley at 245·7491 or e-mail h1m at Eastern lady Eagles.
School will •have a basketball ca mp for dsmalley@ no edu.
'
Contact How•a Caldwell lor more infor·
boys and girts entenng grades 4·8 on
mation.
Wednesday, July 6 through Fnday, July
'
8 at Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
The three-day camp w1ll take place
from 9 am. to 1 1'30 a.m and w•lt
Marietta College Camp of Cttamps
0 .0 . Mclntyfe Tennis Le11one
focus on instructions ·m fundamental
MARlEnA - The Manetta College
GALLIPOLIS - lhe 0 0 . Mcintyre
basketball .
Baseball Camp ot Champs W)ll be held
.. Early registration •s encouraged and all ov·er the course Ot the summer at Park Disti'ICt will offer adult and ch ild
tenms lessons. The hour-long lessons
partic1~ants w.ill receive a camp t·shir t.
Pion e.er Park
For more 1n!ormat•on or to s•gn·up,
The Day Camps for grade s 2·8 w1ll be will be held 10 a·m until 11 a.m. and
contact RVHS boYs basketball coach tield July 5·7. 12·1 4 and 19-2 1. while also trom 1 i a m. unt1l .12 pro . on
Gene Laylon at {740) 245-5753 m call ·· the Ae s•dence/Commu ter Cam·p will be Saturday morn1ngs
lnstructto n runs through July 16
,
h1m at A1ve r Valley High School at (740) ~ held tor grades 6·12 on July 24-2 8.
The instructor will be Tom Hopkms and
For a cam p brochure, call ttle baseball
367-7377
oltice at (740)376-4517 or (740)376-- class size is llrnited to 20 pe·rsons per
Baby Blue Basketball Camp
4673 or check ttl a web at www ma r~et· ho ur lesson . Children ages six and
above are welcome
GALLIPOLIS- Boys and girls who will ta edu.
For more mtormat•on, contact Mark
be in grades 1-4 ne~~:t year can ·attend
Danner at 740-446-4612 ext 255 .
the annual Baby Blue Basketball Camp
at the Nazarene Church on July 5·7.
(E-m&amp;J I yoUr camps c/1mcs or league
The c·amp wilt be held !rom 1 p m unt1l
Mountain High Runn ing Camp
regJ slratJons to ' sports@mydallytri2:15pm. each day.
to Qe held In BrlsiQ)
bune.com or lax th9m /o 446-3008)
Each partiC!pant will rece1ve basketball

Volleyball

New sportsman's plates available
Wildlife artist
Adam Grimm
donated desigtJ.S

Camps and.Clinics
.Football

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On the Net:
To

our f01nts aml woodlands. they
frequen tl y are foun\1 in home
and commercial landscapes due
to their otherwise hardy nature.
The tall. and graceful looking
trees have leaves icaturing li ve
io nine pointed leatlets.
Slime Ohioans have been
~a iling the state\ Emerald Ash
Borer hotline thi s spring. fear·
ing that their ash trees h&lt;tve the
deadly disease. But. foresters
say that many Ohio .ash trees
are also suflfrin g from a ntl!l·
threatening leaf ~i ,;-ease known
as anthracnose - c:aused by a
wet spring. While the resulting
fungus c&lt;tuses not ice&lt;tble
amounts of hsh leaflets to drop,
Balser stresses this does not
present a major thre'at to the
healtlt uf the tree. which will
recover just line.
The landscape of Ohio's
forests is seriously threatened
hy the iltfestation of the emcl:ald ·ash borer. Fortunately,
tlwre is '"methin·g we can all
do 1o' help . Not transponing
any Jirc wood thi s summer and
inspecting the ash trees on your
prope11y are two W&lt;tys you can
heJp with Ohio's battle against
this i1 beU. Remember, it will
only take one load of intecrect
lirewoml Ill chan~e the look of
Ohio's 19 rnilhon acres of
forested lund.

Sunday, July 3 ; 2005'

'

Help stop the spread OJ Emerald Ash Borer

COLUMBUS (API -The weokly fishing report prnYidod by tho DiYlelon of Wlfdlito of
tt1e Ohio Department of Natural Re~urcea.

PageB5

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Sunclay, July 3, 2005
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Weekly Ohio fishing report

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LocAL·SPORTS

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Lo_
ca/ Softball -~ Gallia, County Church Lea:i;iuE

PageB6
Sunda~, July 3, 2005•

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where it g~ts interesting. With
s~ECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTINEL
just one !lame to go, Vinton
•
Baptist, F1rst Baptist, and First
. .
. ChDrch of God are all in a 3. With
~ne week left m · way tie for second place.
the 2 . 5 Galli a County Vinton Baptist helped themChurch Softball League sea- selves out wit!) a huge win
son, the race. for the regular over First Baptist th1 s past
season champwnsh1p's ~nd the week. So, a lot is still to be
.battle fo_r tournament sccdmgs ·decided coming.imo ihi:; lin.al·
are commg down to the w1re. week before the GCCSL
In the women 's stand.mgs . Tournament.
one
j;ame
separate's
In action at First Baptist
Fellowship Chapel and F1rst field. First took on Vinton
Baptist, who play eac_h other in Baptist. In the women\ game.
the regular season hnale. On F1·r-..,·t (6-1) wc1n r·or the t-1t'th
the . men's side, · Rodney straight time with a 1~-0 victoMethodist remains unbeaten ry. First's five-game ' winning
and has a two-game lead for streak is second longest this
season to Fellowship Chapel
lirst place.
streak.
· Second place. however. is women's ·. six-game
.BY

ERIC

L. WHITT

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Vinton's women feilto 3-4. ·In for-4 with a home run;.Marvin this game. Middleport had the
the men's game, Vinton (5-2) Baird, who was 3-lbr-4; and .]eague'S Week eight bye.
ended a long .losing streak .to Aaroi:I Metzler who was 4-forIn action from week seven,
F1~st (5-2) w1th _a 13-7 . W)n. 4. Faith's mt;n fell to 0-6.
First Baptist women and men
W1th the wm, Vtnton moved· · In action at Rodney both beat Good News Baptist.
up to thatthree-W'!Y he for sec- Methodist Field, Rodney took Also First Church of God took.
ond place. ·
on Good News Baptist In the on Vinton Baptist. In the
At Faith Baptist Field Faith ··
,
Rod · ( )
8
took 'O n First Church of God. women .s hgamef..., . ne~ . 3•3 women's game, Vinton WQ!L3 h· ln .hthefmGeodn's game •· First
in Ihe women's game, First wGooodn wN11 ."1. 11 't' e011 7v 11ctot~H· C
0
Ch ·h 0 f God (3 4)
85
ews e
- · n e
urc 0
won 6· 5 10
un.:
won •• · men 's ·game, Rodney (6-0) · extra innings. They were· led
· They were led by Ashley won for the 171 h straight game by Scott Pelletier who was 2•
Chapman, who was 3-gor-4.
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. M'ddl ·
Faith fell to 1-5 · In the men's With •1 15-2 VIctory. R oey for-3. The Rodney- 1 eport
~arne, First Chu~ch of God (5~ was led by Rob. Sanders who game was rescheduled . for
) won tis
· th.1rd game m-a-row,
·
· was 3-for-4 With two runs another date ' and no.·rscores or
and moved into that t!Jree-way scored. Oood News fellto4-3. info. were reported rom the .
tie for second place. fhey were · The other week eight game Ltvmg Water-Fatth . game.
Jed by Mark Haner, who was was . Living Water against Fellow,ship Chapel had the
3-for-4 with two home runs; Fellowship Chapel. No ·scores leagues week seven bye.
Andrew Sanders, who was 4- and info were reported from
As the final week of the sea-

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son hits, oome key match-up's
take place. ·In week nine
action; First Baptist takes on
Fellowship Chapel. The winner of the. women's game will
be the regular season champs.
h·.
Rd
1n ot er games,. 0 ney.
takes on Vinton Baptist,
Mit!dleport takes on Fait];_ ·
Ba tist and First Church of
P '
·
God. takes on Good News
Baptist. Rodney's men are a
·
f
r h' th ·
~ 10 away rom c m~ mg err
second
strrught regu ar season
t'tl
tied
1 e: and the. three teams
.
for second will battle II out for
the. tournament's , No.2 see~ . .
L1vmg Water has the leagues ·
we'ek nine bye.

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GRADE SCHOOL OPEN G}'M

LESS .......

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Grade scho0\ open gym is
be;ng held each Wednesday
from 10:30 a.m. until noon
at the Gallia Academy High
School gymnasiun:J . The open
gym, supervised by coach
Jim Osborne, .is free and
boys and girls in grades 1·6
are allowed to participate.
The open gyms run ·through
July 20. Pictured are some
scenes of local youth enjoy·
ing recent open gym sessions.

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Alexis Aur~. playing 8-Ball for Bidwell Team 2.
catches 'the SOftball in her glove - .which. flew. off In the
process.. The out didn't c_ount.
Elght-year~ld
\

. CLOIID ..MOID&amp;Y, JULY 4TH .

Mon . · lh.. s. 9 am · 8 p'm • Fri . &amp; Set . 9 a"'· 9 pm • Sun 1 pm · 8 pm • TOLL 'RIE l · e00- !21·0417 · 422 ·07&gt;6
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Local art·on display
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French Art eoiony announces
Purehase A~vard winners
.

STORY AND PHOTOS
SUBMITTED B'l" THE FRENCH ART COLONY

G

ALLIPOLIS - The 37;h annual Potreillo #I" anl an honorable mention for
Festiva( Exhibit, a p:irt of the River "Long Ago·#I.'' purchased by P~ples Bank.
Recreation Festival each year,' will be , Haley also received a Purchase Award for
shown in City Park on Monday, July 4 from '"Aspen Spring," from US Bank as a gift for
10 a.m. until 5 p.m. Juro,rs ' selections will be Holzer Medical Center.
-available for viewing at the French Art
Please see Art, C5 .
Colony today from I until 5 p.m., and also on
Monday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.
Winning entries will remain in the galleries
at 530 First Ave. throughout the month of July
during normal gallery hours. There are numerous exceptional pieces available for purchase
in both the galleries and in the City Park.
Jurors for this year· were E(lfline Allen,
Phillip Arabia and Lee Gray.
Ms. Allen is professor of art at Marshall
University since 1970. Her field of expertise
is ceramics and art education. Her ceramic
work has been published and exhibited both
here and abroad.
·
Phillip, artist and gatlery owner; from
Spencer, W.Va., has taught painting f~r 35
years and has served in several Artist in
Residency programs. His work is in numerous collections.
.
Lee Gray is program director at the Dairy
Barn in Athens. Her exr.ertise i~ in textiles
and conservation of text1les. She has several
publications in her credits and also handles
administrative and curatorial duties.
The jurors selected 65 pieces for the gallery·
exhibit. Overall. they were very .impressed
· with the quality of work submitted for this
. competition. ,There was a wide range of media.
and techniques represented and a "wonderful
sensitivity' to presentation."
Experimentation with digital photography
· .(e.vealed a whole new range ofcreativity. The
quality of work being shown
in City Park is also very high .
and provided a significant
challenge for the jurors. They
cautioned artists about artists
signing their work so tha,t the
signature is visible, but not
obstrusive or appear to be
part of the creation:
Winners in the Professional
Division
included
Jane
·' Herman from North Adams,
Mass., who received Best of
Show for a fiber entry entitled
"Behind Beaver Mill." All of.
her four entries will be shown
iri the gallery and all are wear:
able garments. The imaginative textures and designs are
appreciated best by being
v1ewed on a model.
She also won second place
in fibers for uve.r-oriica #2," 'avery unusual hat. This is the
first time a work in flbers has
won Best of Show.
Other winners in the professional division were Gretchen ·
Tippie from Chilticothe,
receiving first ~lace in pa~tels
for "Cactus. ' She aJso
received first place in prints
and drawings ana a Purchase
Award from Jane Daniel for
an acrylic, "Pieces of the
Puzzle."
Second place in pastels
.. w~nt to Virginia Carvour for
"Early Morning on the
Savage." Ms. Carvour, from
Columbus, also received two
. Purchase Awards for other.
pastels: Mane · Designers
selected "Pink .House" and
Jeri and Rick Howell chose
"Black Canyon of . the
Yellowstone."
Photography was well-represented th1s year in both pro:
fessional and amateur entries,
thus jurors elected.to divide
the work making two cate' gories in each division, classic• pbotograhy and digital
photograph)'. Receiving first •
place in classic ph•oto£ratphy,

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SUJJ.day, JUly 3, 2005

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FANS CAP1:UJUNG UNUSUAL MOMENTS IN SPORTS

.,Edlton Note- "Fan Cam"·is a bmnd new interactive feat,uR: at tbe Sunday Tunes-Sentinel. If you capture an unusual
or humorous sports moment, ··send it to us. Email ·to
IIJIOI:IS@mydailysentinel.com or drop it off at our Gallipolis or
Pomeroy office.
·
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tcn:lhk:clnt

• )Al11..- (n~

-Fan

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•• Air Cbrdli tml "'0

Cl

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Vinton BRJ;itist's ,me~ pick up h~ge victory
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' Ironton: for a phoro collage;
"Jessica's Dream." She also
two 1'urchase
received
Awards, both from Oak Hill
Banks, for ' "Maine Sunrise
and "Maine Sunset."
Second R!ace in classi~ photography went to . Matthew
Ziff for "Barn Roof."
Honorable mention for "Dark
Eyed Predator'' went· to (luck
Gearheart from Portsmouth.
In professional digital phptography, Thomas Suter, from
Wheelersburg, receiveq first
place for "Untitled 1."
Second place was awarded to
Bruce Haley Jr., for "Plains of .

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Pa~C2

YouR :HOMETOWN

·iunba~ ljmtl-itnttnel

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iunba~ lime~ ~&amp;tnttnd

Sunday, July 3, 2005

A take on the popular· TV

. .

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·

"A~erican Idol" _contest is

.

·Students visit Was~ngton, ar~a ·site~ Nominations sought for annual Jenq) awards

.
· ·

The Ohio Chautauqua·will ., monthly food box 'is provided·
be in full :sw in~ with. day- to the M~igs Senior ~en~er for
ume acuvmes tn Pomeroy dtstnbullon to semors who
and Middleport, and night· qualify: Those over 60 who
time' performances on a reside in Meigs .County, ·meet
C
Roaring "20s theme in the poverty income guidelines,
harlene . · Chester · each evening. On 'ahd would like to get some
Hoeflich
Friday;--Porrland will- come food to -carry them over are
alive as Civil War reenactors asked to contact Webb; (800)
pour into town to set up tent , 3-85-6213, extension 241.
. city and prefpare foBr a reen-_
•••
actment. o the all 1e o1
Robert Burton , "ArtieBuffington Island, ,They' II , Foo" as we all know him, has
for that inspirational work of remain on site" through been out the past couple of
art to be of
created
in . S un d ay demons t ra 1-tng .. th e weeks pt'cking raspberries
front
thefor display
Mtilberry
t 1 f th at t'une peno
· d . along the old Flood Road in
Co,mmunity Center- "a per- J'f
I es y e o
. On Friday, the , annual Pomeroy.
·
manent sign of Christianity in
the communi!)', said Dee activities_ of qester-Shade · He picks the • berries and
Rader, whos.·e ·,de'a· t't _w"as.
Days will get ·underway, then '· gives them away to
·
· .
The winner i~ the coptest comp 1_e menung
the ,e ld er 1y rest'd ents or oth ers
was Jenni Duoliam, and it is Chautauqua . schedule, and who aren' t able to get out and
now in t)lt;.hands of James of continue through Civil War pick their own. He's been
Tony 's rortable Welding &amp; ball on Saturday night.
doing that for years.
, .
Radiator, who will work with
And in t!)e amphitheater on
This year, "pickins were
·student welders to take stain· that July 14 Friday night, lean," he says, because of the
less steel and construct the . popular bluesman Johnny hot dry weather. So if you are
eight-foot-high'. piece of, Rawls and hi s band will one 'of those people who usustructural art.
·
shake up the town with his ally get a box of berries from
Dee tells us that James is style of jazz and soul music Artie-Faa, but · didn't this
looking for donatl\lns of as part of the Pomeroy Blues year. it was probably because .
stainless for the project and and Jazz Society's summer there just weren't enough to ·
would be delighted to ·hear entertainment program.
go around.
·
from anyone with a. cont(i.
••• ,
••• ·
bution. After it's cqmpleted
If you are a senior citizen
Remember to play .it safe
and erected, a dedication and sometimes run a little with
firecrackers · thi s
service will be held, but that lo)V on food before your nexl Fourth of July. If · you
could be a \)'hile.
'
Socil!l Security check comes mis se d the Rutland fire•••
in, Sharon Webb . o,f the men's fireworks display last
Nobody dare say during Commodity
Supple'ment . night, 'you mi~ht want to
!he second week of July Food Program, a federal take in the one in Racine
that there's "nothing to do nutri\iOn . program which tornorJOW , night.
.
here," because that week is . operates out Qf Logan, wants
(Charlene Hoeflich is gen·
packed with things to db you to know ther~ is help.
erpl mdttager of The Daily
and places to go
W. bb
th t
f
Sentinel in Pomero•:)
·
,
·
e
s~ys
a · a ree
J

comtng to the Metgs County
but a big rain·hit the county Fair, and any want-to-a-star
oh the 4th. In 1955, it was can get in on the action.
The .
history
of IOO;o~he price of a hamburger
Preliminaries will be held
Independence Day celebra- was duwn and there began a at R p.m. each night of the
· lions iri Gallia County over Civil Air Patrol rally at fair, Monday through Friday,
the last 215 years 'of the ·swisher fiefd in Cheshire. Aug. 15-19, on the hil_l stage,
area's history would make an Thai tradition went on for with the finals to take place,
intcresti,n)l study. 111 the early several_years and included. a on Sdaturdday, Aug. 20, at the
d beatt dinner whicti wilh 100. gran stan .
·
day s, celebrations cent ere .
While it costs· $5 for those
around a •tavern where . the degree weather in some years who pre-register or '$iO to
. ht th
Declaratipn of Independence . mu st have been 4,'a hool." en te ron th e con 1es 1 mg
. e
'i 7 an d 19·'i 8 were so
would be read. In the latter ql 956
.. • 19
·
take
ar
b'
Th
fi
t
1
h p·
M C d" s
s e tg . e trs pace
part of the 19th century. qutel t at terce
c ree Y winner will receive . $500.
,
·
t· th G II' ]' oft- e of the ·
II
II
G
many sma
a ta communt· D e a 1po ts
tc
Other prizes are $300 for se.c·
ties held bi_g events · with State Highway Patrol slated. ond place, $100 for third, $50
some of_ those conti nuing . "you might a_s well ~tay eac h for· fourt h and f'f
1 th. No
right up to World War II .
home."
more than 25 will be selecied :
· But from 1942 to 1966. the·
In 1959." a new 49-slar fla g · to perform in the finals.
observance of July 4 in "Old was unfurled for the first time
Performers ·can enter one
Gallia" was just downrighr on the 4th at the Doughboy night or all five , but are limiidulL Of course, the war was Stalue and again the Tribune ed to one song itt the prelimithe reason from 1942 to 1945 bemoaned art all too q_uiet naries. While each one has to
to downplay the day. but in day. Harry Hurn picked that provide· their own mpsic.
]·946 the editor of the Daily refrain up again in 1960 and there will be a sound system
Tribune was pleading for a even predicled that never and lights.
·return to the good ·old days. , again wovld
Gallipolis
Oh, yes. This is a contesrfor
The Masons did get up at 4 .observe 1he 4ih as it once did. amateurs, not professional s.
a.m .. on that . date in full
In 1961 . the Gallipolis Fire
And no, you don ' t hawc to ·
regalia to "witness exemplifi- Voltin!eer Department had a· reside in Meigs County.
cation of the ancient rites of big fireworks show on the Entry forms with all the rules
the order" for the benefit of river near the City Park . It are in various busine sses
candidme Harry K. Mills Jr.
followed by two days a !;&gt;oat around the Bend area or can
Once again · in 1947, the show that attracted 6,500 be secured frbm Debbie
Tribune reported a quiet holi - people. While hoat shows of· Watson, fair board secretary,
day here and especially com- sorts were held in the years &lt;It 985-4372.
plained abut the new state just ' after 1961. they did not
For someone, this could be
law that made firecrackers fall on the 4th.
the start ·of something big.,
illegal.
Perhaps the biggesl impe- Will it be you?
•••
"The 4th just doesn ' t seem tus 10 reviving the 41h of July
A
_ design has been selected
the same," wrote !he editor. in Gallipolis was ,lhe compleIn 1948, watermelon sold fo r tioo of I he riverfronl landing
6 c;ents a pound. the Avalon at the park in 1966. The first
excursion boat came, the River Recreation Festival
Silver Bridge Grill opened up was held in 1966; but not on
its new garden with Johnny . the "4th of Julv. It was in 1967
McCoy and hi s Orchestra. that the festi;al moved to the · Everyone loves the ~ ummer
but no fireworks. ·
4th and lhe days leading up to flavor of good food cooked on
. ' ,
the grilL But researchers have
· In 1949, it got up to I04 on the 4th as it does now.
suggested
that
improper
coqkthe 4th. In 1950. the most · The Daily Tribune reported
exciting news was the prison- in 1967 !hat "over 3,000 line , ing can lead .to an increased
er who spit himself free from Riverfront for July 4 celebra- risk of some types of cancer.
Becky
How often is it safe to grill?
j~iL The man was in the ·s her- tion ." The fireworks were put
Nesbitt
Unfortunately, there is no
the "G'allipolis cle.ar answer. But it's good to
iff's office waiting to be on by
booked . He was' chewing Volunteer Fire Department. be aware of the relative risks
tobacco and every few min- The boat show was kicked off of different . types of food
•
utes he would step to the by Wendell and Lois Thomas preparation . .
open door to spit, except on . padding a canoe downriver. · However, t problem is'n' t
about the 15th spit he took off The plan was for them to pur- exactly the g 'II. it's the fact of ils Report on Carcinogens.
running. 1951 was ·-even pQsely tip their canoe over that meat (or ti or eggs. for This report includes 188 "rea:
duller than 1950, In 1952, the and be rescued, but with tern- that matter) is b 'ng cooked at sonably anticipated" listings,
as well as 58 substances that
Rotary donated new benches peratures that day ill the low a high' temperatu for a long are
"known to be human carfor the park, but ther~ was 60s, !hat plan was scrapped. time. That could h
n in the 'cinogens."
,.
nothing to see .on the 4th.
A 58-minute storm complete broiler or iq a very
[)'ing
Other compounds, called
Finally in 1953, the with hail had moved through pan just as easily as the gn , polycyclic aromatic hydroKanauga Drive-In decided it the area earlier that day. It
Tl)e problem stems from CaJ)bons·(PAHs), are found in
' was time for fireworks and was the Chamber of comp0unds called hetero- the charred parts of meat.
that tradition continued for Commerce that led the way cyclic amines (HCAs)~ which Like HCAs, the~ ate listed as
many years. Some Gallians · in proving Hurn wrong by fornl' when animal proteip is "reasonably anticipated to be
traveled to Coalton to see in bringing a lively 4th i)ack to cooked at these high tempera- . humap carcinogens," ~nd
tures. Over the years, scientists · have been for more than 20
perso~.. Isham Jones , the
the Old French City.
writer of such great songs as,
(James 'sands is a special have gathered evidence from years. Both ·compounds are
"1t Had To Be You' and "I'll correspondent
for tlte animal studies linking HCAs also found in cigarette smoke
See You In My Drams ." Sunday Times-Sentinel. He with an increased risk of _sev- and polluted air.
Don 't give up on grilling
Jones was a native of Jackson can be contacted by writing eral types of cancer, including
it's a low-fat option ·for
the
stomach,
colon
and
liver.
County.
to 1040 Military Road,
For now1 not enough evi- meat !'reparation. To reduce
·1954 brought a drought, Zanesville, Ohio ·43701.)
dence has accumulated to your nsk, you can: ·
. . label HCAs as "known liuman · • Marinate meat before
carcinogens." But in January.' grilling. Tlie added moisture
2005, HCAs were li sted as appears to reduce the number
"reasonably anticipated to be of potentially risky comhuman carcinogens" -in the pounds.
• Microwave meat for I .5
Dep;lflment of Health and
Human :;_ervices' lith edition ~0 two minutes before putting
BY JAMES, SANDS

a

Sunday Times-Sentinel

,,

TOWNElTlNG
OTIC E.
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The C8 Health Project Coordinators are conducting
a !jeries of community CB Health Testing Awareness
Town Meetings.
The Purpose is to provide a loruil1 for informing area
. residents who live in the six affected water distriCts
about the upcoming CB Health Project Testing
Program.

.... .
Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

Blennerhassett Junior High 7-9 prn
(1.uboCk Public -

Dis11ict)

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2. Tuesday, ..Ju'l y 12: ....
Belpre Middle School 7-9pm
(Lillie Hoddng WfliBf District &amp; City ot Beipfe Water Department)

3. Thunday, .July 14:

been

'Pt. Pleasant Moose Lodge 7 ·9 pm

diagnosed
with

•

Rheurnatotd
· Arthritis?

lays. !golf, Jf.D•.

(t.tpson COunty Public Service Dill"')

4. Friday, .July 15:

l.llflblo;rtu,. '

Meigs High ·school 7-9 pm
Project coordinators, Paul' Brooks Jr. M.D. and Art
Maher, "1t'iA will speak aboulothis health sur.iey and

in!Qnnation.

researCh study evaluating an

' investigational ~rug for tpe
signs , an~ symptoms of
Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Qualified particiranu will receive research
~rudy drug and rt"Search sruJ~·-relared
physician visir .s fi t nt 1 'c~t . If ~·ou woul~ like

more
Lnfonnation or think •thac
you may be
t •
\•
eligible for rh£' research study, please call or
visit our Website: Call 740-446# 760 I

(toll-hee 1-877-41 -STLJD\')
v.ww. resCarch!'wl)lu rinnscorp,CI 1m

Th1s study IS being ccnducted at the Holzer Clmic.

CS HEALTH
-l,llC)JI:CT

Or Egolf had tho 0J4101111nity to study LASIK "'M"'Y under the slime opbthalmologisb
who pt!furmed tbe ~" on..,.. wond- ~mous atbletes.
,
He li 1 ~ oftll.e American Medical ASSOL1ation, tht American Al:adtmy o,f
Oplnb~mology, and lite Amnicao Society ofCatmctlnd Refr&gt;&lt;:~ive Su!i•'Y·

!!
Call toda;v for your rBD coDBUltation
wi~ Dr. Jay ~If.
.

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L 'J( r

.BROOKMAR,INC:. -

~WCHMitl~~~thelad~hMitln!Drrruln..ODIDOCI~

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1-304-865-4205

417 Grand Park Drive, .Vienna, WV 26105

1-80CJ..55H658 Fax: 304-865-4208

oppor1um'!ies to patients in ntNJd.

•

" •

. eonctucted by:

Brin(llnQclinte.il nmrr:h study

'

Health Departinent offers scrap tire
collection, rabies vaccination clinic

RACINE 4TH OF JlLY
ca.E8RA110N
.
sa-tEOU E OF eve.JTS

i

www.cShealthproject.org

...

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Luther Vandross, R&amp;B crooner deluxe, dead at 54·

Call.Dale Hart at
7 40·949·2656
For more information

Fi-n ance With
Farmers.

•• •••••• ••

A

(T_. Plains-CI1esler Water O.st"' &amp; Vilage ot I'Orroroy Water Olst"'l

, you may
eligible to participate in a

.CORRECTED

I

it on the grilL That 'appears to foil under meat. -,
• Cut awa)i'charred portions
significantly reduce the formation of these substances.
of the meat before eating.
• Clean the grill before
• Include fruits and vegetausing it, , scraping away old bles on the menu. Even when
charred food bits .
grilled, they don't form the
. . • Turn meat several times same compounds as meat. ·
(Becky Nesbitt ,ois the
during cooking to minimize
Ga/lia County Extension
charring.
• Use an indirect grilling Educator, family and conmethod instead of placing sumer scie~~ce'slcommunity
meat . directly over coals. development and chair, 0/Jio
Consider using aluminum State University.)

1 ~ Monday, .July 11:

Have you

ATHENS ;- The di.Jectors ties by direct, person-to-per- as are supporting documents
of the· ' Father Lawrence son action. There are many such as news stories, publicit~
Martin Jenco Foundation are people here who, like Father or 'other informative materials.
seeking nominations from the' Marty, dedicate their lives to Self-nominations will not be
29 counties of Appalachian he)ping others. We just want considered. E-mailed nominaOhio ahd the state of West to recognize them and say tions will not be accepted
Virginia for the Fourth Annual ' thank you,'" said Anderson.
The mailing address for the
Community Service, Awards.
'The foundation's focus is on Jenco Foundation is P.O. Box
The . Fourth
Annual the 29 counties of Appalachian 783. Alhens. Ohio 4570 I. For
'
Community Service · ~w:u:d&gt;'~ Ohio and West Virginia," said more information , see. 1he
wtll mclude a $5,000 pnze and Board Chainnan Jack Wrighl foundation\
Weh
si re :
two $1,500 prizes awarded to of Athens.
www.jencofoundmion . ar~ . · .
individuals in Appalachian
Nominations for the 2005
Winners of the Jenco Awards
·Ohio.. and ~est Virginia who . awards are being accepted will be announced during the ·
have performed noteworthy until Aug. I, 2005 . Anyone Paul Bunyan Festival on Oct.
commumty servtce m the who wishes to nominate an 2,,2005. on the main swge a1
Appalachian region.
individual for the · Jenco the Hocking College campus
Jack Spadaro of Hamlin, Award should write a detailed in Nelsonville.
W.Va., wo11 the 2004 Jenco letter to the foundation board
In addition to Anderson and
Award for his personal com- " explaining why tha,t person Wri ght , board •. members
m1tment
to ftght forth~ health _ shou!J be selected. The leuer . include Sharon Hatfield, Don
. ~ubmlttod photo
and
safe!¥
of (JCOple hvmg antj ! of nomination should include Cooley, Carolyn · Fisk . ' Tim
Katie Hubble of, Gallipolis, left , and Ryan Turvey of Kitts Hill
the name, address and contact Peacock, Gay Dalzell. Melody
were among 37 high school winners from around Ohio who . working m mmmg reg10ns._
Irene
Flowers,
director
of
information for the nominee Sands. Jim Fuller, Angie Pyle .
toured Was~ ingto n in . June as _-parr of the OniDRural "Electric
the
Kilvert
Commumry
Center
and
the nominator.
Mar\! Hogan und Chip Rogers .
Cooperatives' an_nual youth tour.
Ill Athens County, rece1ved the · Multiple nominations tor the John P. Lavelle serves 'as !he
Jenco A?Jard for same pers&lt;\n are encouraged, foundaiion\ legal counsel
~uid attended a performance at and Cheryl Hubble and Ryan 2003
Colllii!umty Serv1ce.
·
!he National Theatre.
is the son of B(ent and
Keith Wassennan, of Good
Katie is the daughter of Joe Lavona Turvey.
Works Homeless Shelter in
Athens, received the 2002 Jenco
CommunitY Service Award. .
'
Susan Burt of High Rocks
Academy for Giils in
Hillsboro, W Va., received the
Outstanding Support for Youth,
and Elise Sanford of the Athen's
BY ZANE ' A, BEEGLE, R.S.,
i
10 remove any slanding water saliva of an infected animaL
. Photographic Projw in -Athens
GALLIA COUN TY HEALTH
in your area, 10 include buckThe Gallia County_ Health received the Cominunity
DEPARTMENT
ets, old pools and poor Department is offering this Support Awards for the Arts.
9:15 Parade Line Up At ·southern
drait1age areas. If you have any ' rabies vaccination r~inic in
'
Other winners include:
The. Gallia Count)\.Health scrap tires !hal you want· to use cooperation with the River Sandra Shirey, Athens Red
High School
·
Depar.tmenl is spons01!4ug a tor decorations · and such. yo u Bend Veterinary Clinic in Cross in Athens; Donna Sue
scrap lire coll~ction ' and need to drill holes in 1he tires hope of preventing the spread Groves, Appalachian Art
9:45 Flag Raising by American
rabies vaccination day on so thai the v won't hold waler. of rabies in this area. Fees for Project in Manchester, Ohio;
Legion Post 602
Saturday, July 16, 2005. at For example:· tire _,w ings.
this vaccinalion will be $5 at Cheryl Withrow, communi!Y
•
the Gallia Counly Serv.ice
The health deparlmem will ' the door.
aclivtst and youth leader m
10:00
Parade
Center on Jackson Pike .
Qe-taking tires from Y a.m. to
The American Veterinary Scott Depot, W.Va .; Jim
This event will. allow noon on July 16 with 1-12 Medical Association recom- Couts, Marietta/Washington
11 :00 Chicken Bar-8-0~e
1
Gallia County residents to passetlgcr or li ghl I ruck !Ires: mends that depending on· the County food bank; . Reggie "
dispose of discarded scrap . free: over 12 is $ 1 per ure; J. brand of rabies vaccine, dogs Robertson, Athens County
3:00 Patriotic Prograrry at Star Mill
tires and have their pets vac- 18 motorcycle, ATV, lawn . and cats should be vaccinated · youth leader; Carol Kuhre,
Park And Games For The Kids
cinated for a minimal fe e. traclcir tires: free: over !.&amp;.,is •at ,ihree·.. months of.,. age.... and .. community activist in Athens;
The health department offers 50 cents each; J.(i se mi-lrac- again at a year old. Booster and Tom O'Grady; communiBig Bend Farm and Antique Club
these services to reduce the tor trailer lire's: free: over 6 is shots must be given every ty activist in Athens.
Display
I
i
Former ·hosta~e Terry
• risk of vector borne diseases $2 each: 1-3 farm tractor ihrce years thereafter.
and rabies in the county,
I ires: free: over 3 is $4 each.
Hopefully, bY, increased Anderson establtshed the
3:30 Parade Awards- •
·
Scrap tires left in the upen
Rabies is a disease thai awareness of the potential · Jenco Foundation in June
serve as a breeding habilat for , affects !he nervou s system and di seases, the opportunity to 200 I to honor his late friend,
4:00 Big Bend Cloggers
mosqui10es that can carry.such is very deadly. Encounters .have the animals vaccinated Father Lawrence Martin
diseases · as Wesl Nil.es Virus with animal s of all sorts and scrap tires discarded, the Jenco. J enco was the director
5:00 RACO'S .12th Annual Frog
and encephalitis (Equine, should be taken very serious! y. threat of ihese disease~ in our ofCatholic ·Relief Services in ·
Jump
LaCrosse, St. Loui.s), as wel.l as Animals !hat carry tile virus - area will be lessened.
Beirut at the time of his kid·
'
malaria and typhoid fever. One are dogs, cats, raccoons and
' For more information about napping by pro-Iranian radi5:00
•
7:00
Rocky
Mountain Blue
tire holding water can produce bats to naine a few and the per- scrap tires and rabies pleas cals in Lebanon in the 1980s.
thousands of mosquitoes.
son can be potentially infected call the environmental section
Anderson and Jenco deveiGrass Band
Other means of preventing by the bite, a scratch or even of the Gallia County Health oped a strong friendship while
6:00 - 7:00 Last Chance Band
the breeding of mosquitoes are coming in contact with the Departm~ryt at 441-2018.
they were both in captivity. ':The 2005 winners will
10:00 Fireworks
exemplify the dignity and
selfless act of giving that t)le
.
I
,
Jenco Award seeks to recogBY NEKESA
tour in Japan, said she was in the chest."
nize," said Anderson.
"The Jenco Award will be
MUMBI MOODY
mourning the loss ' of her
Vandross was a four-time
AP MUSIC WRITER
friend of more than 20_years. .Grammy winner in the best given each· year to people
"He was a musician whO male R&amp;B performance cate· whose work contributes to the
NEW YORK - Grammy couldn't help but give you all gory, taking home the trophy dignity and sense of worth of
award
winner
Luther he had," . she said by tcle- in 1990 Jar the single "Here people
living
in
the .
we·apologize for any incoiwenience
Yandross, whose deep, lu sh phone. "He was the .kind of and Now," in 1991 for his Appalachian · region," he
voice on such hits as ''Here guy who was born to do what album "Power of Love,'-' in added. "We are interested in
this may have caused . .
and Now" · and "Any Love" he did musically and let the 1996 for the track "Your hearing about people who,
sold more than 25 million world know about it. He was · Secret Love" and a last time like Father Marty, have made
albums ·while providing the not born to keep it smothered for ''Dan~e With My Fathe)'." a difference in their communiromantic ·backdrop for mil·
.lions of couples worldwide,
died Friday. He was 54.
Vandross died at Johp F.
Kennedy Medical Center in
Edison. N.J, said hospital
spokesman Rob Cavanaugh.
He did not release the cause of
death but said in a statement
that Vandross "never really
recovered from" a stroke two
years ago.
Since the stroke in his
Manhattan home .on April 16.
2003. the R&amp;B · crooner
stopped
making
public
appearances - but amazingly
100 Years of Community Building
managed to continue hi s
recording career. In 2004, he
captured four Grarnmys as a
sentimental favorite. including
best song for the hines;
. weet
"Dance With My Fathe
Vandross. who was stil
a
wheelchair. at the lime. deliv·
.
· ered a videotaped thank you:
"Reinember. when I say
• •
•• .
• \
goodbye it's .never for long,''
.
said a weak-looking Vandross .
Get $250 ••
':Because"- he broke into his
Interest Rate
••
familiar hit - "f believe in the
Home
Starter
power of love."
Vandross also battled weieht
•••
•...J Gift
problems for years while suffering from d_iabetes and
••
RIO GR:A.NDE - Kalic
Hubble of Gallipolis and Ryan
Turvey of Kim Hill were
. ~mong 37',high school winners
from throughout Ohio who
visited Washington and other
points of interest June 17-23 as
part of Ohio Rural Electric
Cooperatives Inc.'s Youth
Tour to the nation 's capitaL
The week-long 1rip included this visit to old Alexandria
and other arem: nf historical
.
-- significance . . The student s were awarded
the tour in a sc holastic competition
spo nsored
by
Buckeye Rltral Electrk
Cooperative Inc . of Rio
' Grande, OH. a Touchstone
'Energy® cooperative.
·The sophomores and juniors
joined 1,,400 other rural youths
representmg 44 states-and sever'dl countries. In addition to
touring the nation 's • capital,
students met with members of
their congressional delegation,
_toured the Library of Congress

1

Re(}uce,e3Dcer risk by ga·iiling safely

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Sunday, July 3, 2005 · .

'

. I

Tracing ~story ·
(OMMU·N-ITY (O-RNER·. of Independence At this year's fair, it coUld happeit fqr you
,' Day" ceie·bratt•on's
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Construction Loans
...
3.99°/o
•

most
celcbmted
B balladeer of
his generation . He made
women swoon wilh his si lky
yet forceful tenor, which ' he,
often revved up like a motor
., engine before reaching hi s
· beautiful crescendos.
· Jeff O'Conner, 'vandross'
publicist, called his death "a
hhge loss in the R&amp;B industry.
He was a close friend of mine
and,right now it's shockm ~." .
O'Conner satd he recetved
condolence calls Friday from
music , luminaries . such as
Aretha
Franklirl,
Patti
LaBelle, Michael Jackson
-and Quincy Jones,.
Singer Roberta Flack, on

'·

Fo

Farmers
Bank
Savings Company
~

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. . ._ _..._ ..,.a 1

Pomeroy

992.2136

Member FDIC

Tuppers Plains

Gallipolis

667.3161

446.2265

Mason
773:6400

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Ac:tvertl'ecl rate and APR effective during six month construction loan penod only and

subject to chftnge after. loam subject to credit approval.
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iunbap Ukfm,. -ienttnel

-CELEBRATIONS

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ON· THE BooKsHELF .
sunday, ·J uir 3, 2oos ·
Coffee-table books: America the ·
LeSt We forget: Stiuggle.for independence beautiful
- and not-so~beautiful
iunbap 'imt&amp; ~ientinel ·

" surtday, July a, 2005
•

SAFETY IN THE
SUMMER: PART'
2
.
.
\

BY JoANNE Eworr, RN
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
- DEPARTMENT,
BCMH COORDINATOR

Summer is now with us and
the incidence of childhood
injuries and medical emergencies will most assm:edly be on
the rise. Sunburn and poison
ivy/sumac were discussed in
th;o.l;lst anicle. Toda}:__we_will·
discuss nosebleeds , strains
and sprains, and heAt exhaustion and heat stroke ..•
Although they can be
scary, nosebleeds are com;
mon in children ages 3 to 10
yelll's and usually aren't serious. In fact, most nosebleeds
stop on their own and can be
treated safely-at home. Steps
to take when a nosebleed
occurs are: have child sit
with his or her head tilted
slightly forward (not tilted
back .as this may cause gagging, coughing, or vomiting),
pinch ihe soft part of the nose
for at least 10 minutes.
The doctor should be called
if the nosebleeds are frequeilt, a foreign ,body is ~n the
nose, if child tends to bruise
easily, or if the child' has
recently started a new )nedication. ·
·
What's the difference
between a strain and sprain?
Strains involve a panial tear
of musde. Sprains involve a

Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hoffman

HALEY~HOFFMAN ·
'

WEDDING
TUPPERS PLAINS - Linda L. Haley· of Middlepon and
Charles E. Hoffman dfTuppers Plains exchanged wedding vows
in a do~ble rin g ceremony at I:30 p.m. on June I. 2005, in the
Hecu11and Little River Wedding Chapel in Townsend, Tenn.
The bride is the daughter of the late Rev. Worley Haley and
· Phyllis Ha ley. and ihe groom i's the son of Dana Hoffman of
Rutland and the late Bernice Hollman.
For her wedding. the bride wow a drape front beaded silk
gown of silk duponi, featuring a long. sleeve less scoop-neck
column, partnered with a beaded and embroidered long-sleeve
jacket. She carried a bouquet of wildtlowers.

part.ial ' tear of ligarpents · doesn't seem to be improving immediately. In cases of heat
exhaustion and while await(which connect Jwp.bones) or after five to seven days.
tendons (which connect musPrevention should be the ing help for a child with .poscle to bone). You can ·expect primary concern before any sible heatstroke, you can do
pain, difficulty moving the · spons activitf. Make sure the the following measures to,
mjured part, , decreased child warms up properly and help: bring child indoors or
strength and· swelling with stretches. Appropriate protec- into shade immediately,
either injury. You should stop tive equipment should always , undress the child . .have the
activity right away and think be worn.
.
· child lie down and elevate the
R.I.C.E.fbr the first 48 hours
During hot, humid weather, feet slightly, 'if the child is
after the injury. Rest: .re£1 the the body's internal tempera- alert, place in cool (not cold)
injured part until it's less ture can rise and can result in bath water-or-sponge~bathe painful. 'Ice: wrap an ice pack heat exhau slion and heat- the child repeatedly.
or cold compress in a towel stroke. If not quickly -treated,
If outside, spray the child
and place over the injury heat ex,haustion carr progress with a garden hose. If. th¢
immediately. Continue for 15 to heatstroke, which requires child 'is alert, give frequent
minutes at a time and contin- emergency medical care and · siP.S of· cool, clear liquids. If
ue six to eight times a day. ca·n be fatal. The_followi~g the child is vomiting, turn his
Compression: support the sy~ptoms . can s1gnal he;tt or her body to the side to preinjury with an elastic com- exh,tusuon . severe thmt , . vent choking. Monitor the
. ,
,
T , ·h
pression bandage for at least muscle weakness, nausea and
two days . Elevation: rais~ the sometimes vomiting, fast and .. chhtll~ s tempertture. deac k
i,njured part above the. heart shallow breathing, irritability, c 1 r~.n . to . a way? nn '
level to dec.rease swelling. headache, increased sweat- plenty o! flutd~ before and
You may give the child ing, cool and clammy skin, durmg any activity m hot,
Ibuprofen for pain . and IQ , and elevation of temperature sunn,Y weather, even tf they
help reduce swelling:
to Jess than 104 ·degrees.
aren t th~rsty. Make sure_ktds
After 48 hours, apply · a
Heatstroke can exhibir the wear. light-.;olored .. loose
warm moist compress three to following symptoms: severe dothmg and oni_Y partiCipate
four .times a day. Call the , and· throbbing 'headache ,' tn heavy actiVItY. outdoors
physician if there is significant weakness, dizziness or con- before noo_n or alter 6 p.m.
pl)in- when the injured part is fu sion, difficulty breathing, Teach c htldre~ to come
touched or moved, irouble decreased responsiveness or tndoors- 1mmed1ately when,
bearing weight alter-an injury, - loss of consciousness, little ever they feel overheated.
increasing bruisin~, numbness _ or no sweating, flu shetl and
The Gallia Coun\y Health
or a,fe~ling of "pms and nee- 'dry skin, elevatimi of temper- Department c_an provide safedies 111 the lllJUred area, a ' ature to 104 degrees or high- ty mlor)nat1on sheets on
limb that looks "be_rit" or mis- er. If the child has a tempera- these subjects and many oth·shapen, signs . of infection ture of ·I04 degrees or niore, ers. Contact the 'Galli a
(increasing warrnt~. redness, or shows any symptoms of County Health Depanment at
swelling, and pain), an injury hemstroke, seek medical care 441-2018. '

Rio Grande, OUjoin for MBA progr~

' .

RIO GRANDE- .Through evenings and on weekends in
a partnership with Ohio .order to meet the scheduling
University, a master's of busi- needs-of working people.
ness administration (MBA)
Jack Barr, director of exterprogram will be offered at the nal rehitions for . Ohio
University of Rio Grande/Rio University's College of
Grande Community- College Business, said that OU is
beginning in late Augu st.
offering the program at its
The program is known as a regional cltmpuses, as well as
Professional MBA program, at Marietta College and Rlo
. and it is designed for people Grande .
who have work experience
"We are really trying to
who want to attain this degree reach out to sout~eastern Ohio
·to funher their careers.
and to people who are at that
The Professional MBA point in their careers where an
program will be offered by MBA will help get them up to
Ohio University on the Rio the next level ,'' Barr said.
!Jrande campus for the first "This program is a way for
time this fall. An informa- people to use their professiontiona-l meetihg for anyone al experience and their underinterested in enrolling in the graduate degrees to gain an
new program will be held on MBA degree that will help
Den'nls Robinson and Allison Arthur
the Rio Grande ·campus on them in their careers.''
Thursday. July 7, beginning
Because the courses are
at 7 p.m. in Room 118 of the offered in the evenings (usuBob Evans Farms Hall.
ally just on Monday nights)
"We are very happy .to be and on weekends (usually
able to work with Ohio just one or two weekends a
University to bring this· month), students will be able
Professional MBA program to take classes around. their
area residehts," said D.r. work schedules. The program
GALLIPOLIS - Bruce and Wendy Arthur of Windermete. to
Krishna
Kool, interim dean also features on-line discusFla., are pleased to announce the engagement of thei r daughter, Allison Kaye Anhur, to Dennis Patri ck Robinson, son of of the College of Professional sions between· professors and
Studies at Rio Grande.
students, although none of
Gene and Janet Robinson of Sylvania, Ohio:
Rio
Grande
offers
a
variety
the courses are offered comDen.nis is the grandson of Donald and AI vera Robinson of
.
of business-related majors pletely mi-line.
o~Jiipnli&gt;. QU wifl se11o professors to
The bride is a graduate of St. Urs ula Academy in Toledo, and is expanding- its business
progranis.
the
Rio Grande campus to
and Emory University with a degree in ne~roscience and •
Students
will
take
classes
.
teach
students there, but Rio
behavioral biology. Allison is currently a f~:mrth year medical
for 22 mon'ths . but courses Grande students will also
student at the University of Florida School of Medicine.
Dennis is a Ph.D. candidate in eanh and atmospheric sciences will be offered 1n the work with students and proat Georgia Tech and is an alumnus of the University of Michigan
. and St. John 's Jesuit High School in Toledo. Allison and Dennis
f!!et as cast members of the St. John \ spring musical in 1996.
They will be married on June 3, 2006, at the Courtyard at BY SAMANTHA CRITCHELL Idea" (Disney) includes parLake Lucerne in Orlando. Fla.
'
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ents' tips for, well , family
fu,n. A total of 350 submitNEW YORK - It sounds ted their ideas, including
, so good: Lazy summer days Cindy
Gwozdz
from
with nothing to do. But, as Taunton, Mass.
anyone with active and antsy
Her, daughters used over. children in the house knows, sized boxes to turn the backnothing to do gets old fast.
yard into a drive-in ' movie
Some new· books and mag- theater. They spent an entire
azines come to !he rescue, atternoon decorating their
offering ideas for thing ~ to do boxes with windshields,
before re_st becomes restless. rearview mirrors, wheels and
The best pan? Most can be license plat~ s. Then , their
"done with items yo/f likely Aunt Carol pulled a TV onto
have around the house : :
the deck to complete the
• "FamilyFun: My !}reat experience. (She also load~d

fessors on OU 's Athens campus and at the other. campuses through high-speed video
hook-ups.
In 'these vidfo hook-ups.
Rio Grande students will be
able to ask questions and
interact with students on the
other campuses.
"This new program fits in
with
Ohip
University
President
Roderick
McDavis' initiative of having
us be much more supportive
of the regional economy and
the regional efforts to pull
southeast Ohio up to the economic levels of the rest of the
state," Barr said.
Instead of sending its bl,lsiness students and professors
into the region to help area
residents create busine ss
plans, OU is _expandi11g its
programs to gtve more area
' residents the knowledge and
ability to draft their own busi,
ness plans so they can help
the businesses and organizations throughout the region.
. Ed Yost, director of graduate and executive . education
and development at OU, S!!id
he is impressed with the programs offered by Rio Grande
and happy_!o b~ working with
the umvers1ty to add tfie new
Pmfessional MBA program .
He added that OU and Rio
Grande have a good relations hi~ and he is hoping that it

ARTHURROBINSON
E -N GAGEMENT

cultivates into more programs that wi II bene fit area
residents. .
·
In addition to learning about
business from the professors
and other students, Yost pointed out that the students in the
Professional MBA program
will also have a chance to
interact with the business communities in southeast Ohio so
that they can learn from these
business communities and ere-•
ate a niuch larger network of
business professionals.- .
"We saw a big demand in
southeast Ohio where people
who were early in their
careers wanted to further
their educations; but they had
jobs and couldn't come to the
Athens campus for classes,"
Yost said. "This is our answer
to the region.''
·
. For more information on
the new program, or for
information on the Thursday,
July 7 informational meeting,
call Rio Grande at (800) 282720 I, call Yost at (740) 5932028 or (740) 593-2085, oremail Yost at yost@ohio.edu.
Additional information on
the program can also be
found
on-line
at
www.cob.ohiou.edu/pmba/.
For 'additional- information
on the wide variety of abdemic and professional programs offered by Rio C'Jrande,
log onto www.rio.edu.

Rest can tum to restless in the summer without engaging activities for children

when it comes to buying
insurance most people
are looking lcr an expert
can give them the

advice they need.

up on snack food and mos- · says mom Lynette, "and the
quito coils.)
food is more reasonably
Meanwhile , the Kittles priced."
family of Jupiter, Fla .. has
Tawni
Ballinger
of
its own drive-in theater -.
Germantown, Tenn ., with
the garage. They drag their . help from and decorations by
VCR (or .maybe a DVD her twin daughters, turns the
player) out to the garage and family van into an ice-cream
then climb into the family truck all in an effort to help
van . "There are no bugs.:· the hungry.

.

yage ·C s ·.

-

c

It is entirely appro.priate
,·
two children. He was con- was
ill-trained,
poorly
Bv RON BERTHEL
that Georg_c WashiQgton has
cerned with every detail of his cldthed, some marched wit~;ASSOCIATED PRES:&gt; WRITER
· home at Mount Vernon and out shoes. Ammunition was
been honored in David
McCullough's most recent
wrote to his manager even insufficient. Troops left as
Th.e
Declaration
of •
hi.story, "1776." McCullough
while planning battles.
. soon as their enlisunent (usu- Independence. Constitution
is one of our· best contempo' A large ponion of the book ally a year) was over. Many · and Bill of Rights, collective-.
rary ·historians, having won
Beverly
deals with his retreat from recruits were very young: ly called the Charter&gt; of'
Pulitzer Prizes for "Truman''
Gettles
Boston, then the march to New many got sick; many desert- Freedom. &lt;ire c_entra'l to
and ','John Adams."
York, considered the key · to ed. These were indeed ·. "the American free&lt;)om and indeHe did extensive' research
holding tpe .line against the times that tr.y men's soul5." · pendence, and to -the book .
for this book, traveling to
British. There were many
Two minor 'victories at 'The .Chaners of · Freedom :
England to examine letters
Loyalists in the city who aided Trenton ancl Princeton in 'A Nev.· World Is ·at Hand"'
dia:ri-eJ&gt;, offici'a:l papers antl'~~-------and abetted the king's trnops. DeceiT)ber and . January (0. Giles Limited/Antique
newspapers. He gathered facts .tie German wife.· The Briti sh Washington occupied the high rene weddthhe spirits ofTthhe gben- Collectors' Club, $29.95). ·
1 an t e1r troops. e atfrom 25 libraries, archives, Empire included Canada, the vantage point in Brooklyn, eras
The Chaners and other do~special collection s ·and his- new world from the seaboard found himself surrounded and tie of Trenton was the restilt of uments - from King George·
toric ~ites in the U.S. and the of
Massachusetts
and vastly outnumbered by both a difficult march through Ill' s prodamation to suppress
·United Kingdom. There are Virgi!lia to the Mississippi British and Hessian (Gennani sleet , hail and snow on the colonists' rebellion (1775)
copious footnotes and a huge and beyond, f&lt;om the ' soldiers. an4 . was forced to Christmas Day. The British to the Civ'il Rights Act of 1964
list of sources.· I believe you Caribbean to the shores ·of withdmw the troops across the did not anticipate an attack the - displayed at the· National
can trust this account as 'being Bengal. London, with a pop~ river. The crossing was accom- . day alter' Chri stmas. especial- Archives in Washington, D.C.,
historically accurate. ·
ulation of nearly a million, plished at night, as silently as ly in such horrible weather.
·,tre ·,j).s·o on vt'ew ·,n the book's
· d
d
r
1776 is best remembered in was th~: largest t 1ty in Europe pos sible, during ·a terrible _ Th.e r1g111 for m
ep~n ence co\tlr photos and described in
American hi story for the and "widely considered the storm, followed by pea-soup contmued until 1783 and the -text by Stacey BredhoiY of the
Declaration of Independence. . capital of the world." ·
. fog, all to the colonists' advan- Treaty of.Pans. There " much_ National Archives.
Without Washington 's little
After th~ first shedding of rage. '"In a single night, 9,000 mot~ of this story to be toll). . The book chrmi icles the
army and the men who fou ght blood ~t ' Lexington and troops has escaped across the- McCullough says, "The' year events and ideas that led to the
for- freedom, it woul&gt;l have Concord in April of 1775, the river. Not a 'lite was lost. The 177.6 ... was a year of all-too- creation of the documents. and
~en mere empty wqrds. beauBritish were under siege · at only men captured were· three ~~~e~~cgto' ri~~~e~:~ . s~~~~;gn:~-· the im pact the documents.have
uful words, carefully crafted. Boston and were short ot who had hung b&lt;!ck to plun- desenion, cowardice, disillu- had on U.S. history. including
bitt with little meaning without suppli es · and food. After the der." Had the British captured
the Louisiana Purchase. Civtl
the. battle to make the word'; British victory at Bunker Hill the ragtag little anny at this sionment, defeat, terrible di s- War and aboll.tl·on ot· s·lavel".
J
live. We are still struggling with heavy · loss of troops, point, the Revolution woul!] couragement and fear." Sprinkled . throughout arc
with concepts of "life, libeny King George was determined have been over.
Indeed, it was nothing shon of quotes by America's founders
and the pqrsuit of happiness." to put down !'he rebellion.
Some 2.0\)0 troqps were a mit;acle that they succeeded and leaders, including Thonqs
McCullougli's hook begins
Washington reluctantly gave le(t to guard Fort Washington, at ~II. "Storms, contrary Paine, Alexander Hamilton.
with King George Ill, much. 'up his life at Mount Vemon to but the Brit1sh attacked with winds, the oddities · or Abraham Lincoln and Susan
maligned by historian s, not heed ·the call for his leader- 8,000, and tlie fort· was lost. strengths of individual charac· B. Anthonv .
as crazy as he has been par- ship. He had never led an anily "The enti're garrison of 2,837 ter had made the tlifference."
A.tno11g ' 90 color illu stratrayed. The "madness" carne . in battle. His father had died Americans marched out of And the stalwan and courah
lions are , maps, paintings,
later, toward the end of his when he was II. He set out at the ·fort between two lines of geous 1ca der was none ot er engravings
and
photos
reign. The , author portrays age 16 to become a surveyor's Hessians and lay down their than George Waihington... We depicting historic events and
him as capable, caring, a man apprentice in the wildemess of arms." The tragedy of it was owe a deep debt of gratitude key fi gures, and photos of the
'}'ith wide interests in archi- western Virginia. Experience that many perished from di s- to every one of these brave Rotunda of th e National
lecture, an, farming, his large was his teacher, and he had lit- ease on horrible British prison souls who endured and perse- Archives. where the Charters
family (a total of 15 chit- tie fonnal education. He had ships.
vered on this July 4th and have been newl y encased.
dren), faithful to his plain lit- married a wealthy widow with . Washington's small army every other day of our lives. . . Also shown are the
-------~-------------~--~-------------------Rotunda's two murals-, each
l4-by•3 5 feet , painted by

'PIRATE'
· cOAST' IS' CAPfiVATING
'· · 'READING· r93&amp;.Fo~~n~~p~~t/~h&lt;:~~~~
1

Battlegrounds: Walk in the
Footste ps uf America's
Brave&gt;t " (Reader's _Digest,
$24.95). Richard Sauer~ takes
readers through 200 years of
historic battles - from the
A(llerican Revolution to the
Sept. II tcrrqri&gt;t attacks - in visits to battlefields. forts and
monuments .•
Among tlie stops are sites
of battles foug ht on .U.S. soil ,
including those of the .Civ'il
War. and , I hose · against
America n Indian s and the
Bri li sh: an(! monuments to,
wars Americans fought in
Europe. the South Pllcific,
KorG.a am.!'Vietnam .
Sites rane"e from Minute Man
Nati onal Historical Park in
Concor&lt;,I Mass.. where Ioca I
militiamen ·· assembled to '·
oppose· a British .advance durinQ the American Revolution, to
the· USS Arizona Memorial in
Honolulu.·
where the Japanese
at lack 011 Pearl Hw·bor bro.ught
America into World War II.
Text de,cribes the event s
that led to ·each hallie and
· &gt; duces ·t k·ey pIayers .
tntn.
Accompanying ,t he word
story are 250 il lustratio ns,
most in color. including
paintings. phntus .and maps .
...
· The mas\! ve "Atlas of the
Civi l War" (Oxford Uni versity
Press, $85) appearxcapable of
answering just about any ques- ·
tion that might ari se about the
War Between the States.
Author&gt;
Steven
E.
Woodworth and Kenneth J.
Winkle compiled the atlas
under the direction of James
JYI. McPherson, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning hi storian who ,
provides the book 's foreword:
The 400-page volume covers every significant battle
and military campaign while
considering the social , economic and political deve lopments of the period.
There arc live sections. one
for each year of the war . from Ig6J. 'The Coming of
War." to 1865. - "Triumph,
Tmgcdy mid Reconstruction."
Each section is introduced by
" McPherson.
1 ,

Jefferson handing a draft of the
cially in the waters on· North In the United States, there easily to authority. What' s Declaratipn of Independence
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
Africa . .U.S. ships conducting were two schools of thought more. Eaton was intolerant of to John Hancock. president of
..
lawful bu siness in the about the problem: One advo- anything that might sully the the Cotttinental Copgress: and
"The
Pirate
Coast: Mediterranean were fre - cated appeasement and toler- honor of the U.S. and was in the other, James Mallison
Thomas Jefferson, the First quently set upon by the so- ance of the practice of paying , strongly oppqsed to appease- offers the final draft to Geo·rge
Washington. president of the
Marines, and the Secret called Barbary Coast pirates. tributes and ransoms, while ment andpaying ransol)l.
Mission of ' /805." By
The Barbary Coast, ruled the other suppOrti!d creating a
Instructed to support an .Constitutional Convention .
~
.
Richard Zacks. Hyperio11. piecemeal by satraps. or· gov- strong navy to tight back.
· uprising staged by the pasha's
Freedom
doesn
'
l come
432 Pages. $25.95.
ernor~. of the widespread
In 1803, the frigate USS brother, Eaton .gathered eight
without
a
price.
...
Ottoman Empire, stretched Philadelphi~. commanded by Marines and a small. ·ragtag
'" America' s
In
Richard Zacks' "The Pirate . from Egy·pt west to the William Bainbridge, ran army of _Christian and Arab
Coast" i ~ an excellent book Atlantic. For centuries, aground _in .Tripoh harbor m mercen_ane s. They marched
that captures .a period of pirates 'there had preyed upon- what is now Lib} a, Bainbndge.- 500_ tmles across· the Nonh
Am~rican history not often foreign merchant ve ssels, and hi s crew of about 300 were 'A!ncan desen trom Egypt to ,
visited today. _
seizing them and their car- taken hostage and enslaved. the. coastal cny ot Derne ,
It tell s an exciting true tale goes, and enslaving their . Lengthy negotiations bet\~ecn whtch they setzed. The _pia'\ ·
in which uncenainties, cru- crews and passengers, They lnpoh and Washmgton got w~s to then attack Tnpoli
cia! decisions, military and also demanded regular pay- nowhere, ~o Presidert Thomas wtth the suppon ot a small
naval action, and honor and ments from European nations Jefferson . instructed Wtlham .fleet ?f U5 .. naval vessels.
·lietrayal all play roles.
for their ships to be allowed Eaton to attempt t{) ovenhrow Eaton s ulumate goal was to
Early iJ,1 the 19th century, to ply their legitimate trade.
the pasha, or military ruler, of free Bainbridge and crew and
the fledgl ing United, States,
The captives· oft~n endured Tripoli.
to exact financ1al pumshment
Eaton had been a U S. fwm the pasha. He was also
dependent on foreign trade lifelong forced labor as slaves
for its development and pros- of Muslim masters, or impris- Army captain and consul 111 determmed to ~ermanently
·perity, became a victim of onment until ransomed by Tunis. He was bfunt and out- end payment ot tnbute to
piracy and exton ion, espe- •' their fami'ties or g&gt;Jvernments. spoken, and didn 't submit Tripoli .
~--------~--~-------------------~-------. ,
PROVIDENCE MISSIONARY
Career
College,
Willis
Ferry, W.Va., received two photography for "The Quilt."
BAPTIST CHURCH
·Purchase Awards for her Second place wen.t to Roy Funeral Home, · and Evans,
'
waLeTcoicrrs. ' ·
Mu!.Jins,, -Gallipolis. fnr Cbir.dngton, Moulton law
Ohi&lt;? Valley Bank pur- "Taos, N.M." Mullins al so offices. All programs at the
· from Page C1
TEENS RUN ROAD
chased "_Upstairs Balcony" &lt;IS received a Purchase Award French Art Colony also
JULY 11th • 15th from 6:30-8:30 PM
a gifi for the Gallia County ·for. "Harvest Rest" from US re ~eive support from the
There were several winners Convention and Visitors Bank as a gift to the Gallia Ohio Arts Council.
Classes for ages 3 years to 12th grade
The galleries at the French
in professional oils, acrylic_s. Bureau. The bank al$0 pur- County Con-vention and
An Colony. 530 First Ave ..
watercolors and ceram1c chased "Falls View at Glen Visitors Bureau .
Gallipoli
s are open to the
entries.
,
Ferris, W.Va." as a gift to
Honorable mentions went
JOIN US FOR AN ADVENTURE TO
Winning first place for an Holzer Medical Center. to Julia Sheets for "Steeples public. without charge .
_ LAST AN ETERNITY
acrylic · entiiled ' "Nabob's Honorable mention was pre· at Creede, Colorado"· and Tuesday through Friday from
10
a.m.
until
3
p.m.,
and
Vineyard" was
George sented to Gloria Pet'lnington, . John Sheets, also Gallipolis,
Gillmor, from Scott Depot, Charleston, W.Va., for "Pink for . "Rocky , Mount~in Sunday from I until 5 p.m.
CALL 740-256-6991 OJ;1,740·256-6625
W.Va.
· .!11 waten:olors,
Stream." This also received a Special' tours and programs
are available by calling (740)
frmn Surprise."
..
Frankie Wheeler,
FOR MORE DETAILS
Dunbar, WSa., won , first
Also in the, amateur dtVI- Purchase
Award ·r fro m 446.-3834 or . to request fur1
lace for "Harvest Time." sion, first place in printsd and Peoples Bank as a gt t to t 1e ther infmmation.
P
. ngs was awarde to Gallia County Convention
Thi s received a Purchase drawl
Agnes Hapka, Gallipolis. for and Visitors Bureau.
Award from Farmers Bank as "N
h
d B " Th'15
Tw o additional an1ateur
a gift to Holzer Medical
atasda Can
•eaPu
. 1
artists had work J.uried into
. s. Wheeler also recetve a urator s rc tase
Center. M
·alt -, t'lal- , ., L,, e '· •,,ow: Helena Stricker
received honorable mention Award from J
• ·
.,
Blenda _Rech, . M~rietta, from Charleston and Ida York
for "Heav Rain on Glade."
Sylvia y
.Jackson.· ' recei':'ed hrst._rlace m mls an~ from Hurricane . W.Va.
Catlettsburg, Ky. , received - ~cryhcs lor Pumpkin Los;.
Committee chairs for the
second place for "Fall in the Second place tn the same c.•I- Festival Exhibit are . Sandra
A' ,
· egory went to Joe Ann Koby 3nd Jan Thaler. both
, '{~ceramics, Bill Meadows, ~ra":'ford, ~?rnado, W.Va., for. from Gallipolis. Assisting
Huntington, W.Va., ":'as Sprm~ ~,
. .
.
v.M'·ith receivilclg entbrie,,s werde
If you'"e
a woman' who _makes
1 ,
awarded first place for a . Recel\ mg hon~rable m~nan anne
amp e
an
stoneware tea pot and honor- non was ~~~al arttst Aim ~ Peggy Evans. Several other
~
. able mention for crystalline Clarke for Green Appl~s.
dedicated volunteers will help
rrequen a fOOm VI I •• •
you shoufd cal/ tO see jf you
glazed porcelain green vase. Kar~n Wonn, Crown Ctty, with installation in the City
This piece , received the rece1v~d hr~t place for a pas,; Park fi'nd serve as'hostesses.
qualify tO ;.,articipate }n a
Cu nitor's Purchase Award tel entttled Truck Farm #I . .. Major donors making thi s
BY NORMAN N.·BROWN

...

r!IJI:Af'ION BIB£B SCHOll£

Art

t b th

's 'ts

~~~~~LJ-----il----~~~i~-~~~::~;ti~~~s~~~ ~~~~~TTI~~~~~-~ti~o~n~-~·~e;xh~i~b~it~s~a;~~~d~~~~h~~~~~§~f'ef~~~~~~~~~~$+-----f~~~~ ~-----Matthew Jenkins and Ashley Fraley '

FRALEY-JENKINS
ENGAGEMENT

"
Reed • hur Insurance
.
' Agency
2097 E State St. Suite B
Athens, OH 45701
· pdillon@reedbaur.com

· CHESHIRE- Ron;tld K. and Donna Fraley: the parents of'
Ashley Renee Fraley. are proud to announce the engage ment
of their daughter to Matthew Scott Jenkin,.' the son of Kathy
Gingclsburgcr ol Cheshire and Mike' Jen kins of Pomeroy. .
. Fraley, a registered nur&gt;c at tile Arhnrs nf Gallipolis. and
Jenkins, an operator fo r McKinney Drt ll ing, plan to wed on
Saturd~ y. Sept. J. 2005. at tl1c Cheshire Baptht Church . A
reception is to follow at the Gallipoli.s Shrine Clu b.
The cot1ple will- reside in their home in Cheshire. after the ·
wedding.

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Other prokfessional _eadn~~~t~ Marietta, for
Gallipolis and he
· w hose wor was JUfl 1
River Border Initiative.
the show, . include Florence Came By."
Lovett, from Greenup, ' Ky.;
ln amateur phOt\)graphy, Additional suppoFt ,for the
Jan' McNemar, Gallipoli s; Pauline Wade, Oak Hill , exhibi t and ani sts' reception
Nosha Namahoyto from received first· place in classic came from the 9aJ.Iipolis
. Dayton: Je ssica St. James
from Ironton ; Larry Sumpte11
Culloden,
W.Va.; · and
Katherine Ziff from Athens.
In the amateur divisiof!, 39
. artists entered. '
' 18'·.......................'1079
Best of Show and first
24' ••••••••••.•••••••••••1 1259
place in watercolors went to
15X30 Oval •···•·'1779
' first-time entrant · Rebecca
Adkin s of Huntington for
"Garden Roses." She also · '
received second' plac~ · in ..
Watercolors fbr "Vi II age ... · · ·
2973tj
Maxine Kinnaird. Gallipolis·

.HOLIDAY

~;=
· -~~
f-

·l'nvestt'gatt'onaf' treatment 11;Or
Female Dv~ractive Bladder.

Qualified volunteers, Please call .
18 and up, receive
all study related care or toll-free 1-877 -45-STU DY
at no charge.
.'
ww·w. resea.rchsolu l i on scor p~ com

740.446 7601

Brought ro you by

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-~!!£~t~~~s
·

research studies covtring a broad range
of therapeutic
areas.
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Page.C6

ENTERTAINMENT·
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iunbap lim~ .-f)entintl . .,
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Down on the Fann, Page 02
Gardening, Page·D6 .
,

Welsh·la~guage course
. .. at URG July 17-24

''

6~nb~!' Otime~ _
-6tnttnel

INsmE. ' ·

Sunday, July a, 2005

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RIO GRANDE - Visitors - left the position during the study of three Welsh songs,
from around the world will 2004-05 school year in order and Dr. Beth Brown,the 200304 Madog Faculty Fellow, will
, . 8Yt.lll1 ~ p-.
· 2. "Tbe WaY It Is," Keyshla-Co.ld. A.tM.
be traveling to the .University to return to Wales.
Students learn a tremendous also address the students.
,
_.
.
3. "The llmancipation of 'Mimi," Mlliah
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
{Weekly Cbans for the nation's best-selling Carey. Island. (Platinum)
Community College campus aD\OUnt · in . their classes, but . The course does have a
~ music as they apPe&amp;r in · next · 4. "~ast Money," Birdman.·Cash Money,
.th,1s summerfor an imponant they also have a good time with ·tuition fee, but scholarships
week's issue of Billboard magazine.
5: ''Classic Moments," Patti LaBelle. Def
week-long Welsh language the experience. In addition to are available. Also, while stu~led with permission, (Platinum signi- SOOI Classics.
course, which will also fea- . learning in the classroom, the dents from around the world
students are' involved in a vari- will be attending the course,
·., fi;es .m~ than 1 million copies sold; Gold
6: "Who )Is Milce JonesT' Mike Jones.
ture other activities.
·
ety
of other actiyities. . .
students from around the
'~Jignifies more than SOO,OOO copies sold.):
Swishahouse. (Platinum)
.
.·
·
· ·•. On July 17-24, Rio Grande
Dr.
Timothy
Jilg,
the
new
region are also inviteiNo take .
'
H
' o t ~-:....... - . . . ; . _
7. "Bt!," Common. Q.Q.O.D. . • , ._ , ,,
will host the 29th annual Cwrs
....,...,u 1 - 8. ''Monlrey' Business,'' B)a_Clc -~ PeaS.'•
Gymraeg Yr Afon Fawr. which director of the Madog Center pan in · the course and learn
A&amp;M:
. . .·,, ,.
·
is a Welsh language co.urse for for Welsh Studies · at the more about the Welsh ian-·
,
people with all kvels of expe- -University of Rio Grande, guage and culture. ·
(COIJ1Piled from a national sample of mon- 9. "Album ll," Kem. Motown. :. _
explained
that
the
studentsThe
Welsh
culture
has
played
10. "Ap or ~othing," Fat Joe. Te~Tli: SQIJI!dt.· ,: rience speaking Welsh.
itored :C®nb[&gt;' radio by Broadcast Data
Copyngllt
2005, VNU BIUin"' Metli# . · ·~some students ' att~llll the wjiJ be involved with activi- an important pafi in the history
. Systems) .
·
. .
.
and
Nielsen
SoundScan,
Inc. · . ·
·
annual conference who cannot ties such a~ folk dancing, a of southeast Ohio, and many
1. ''Fast Cars and Freedom," Rasca) Flatts.
•.
·
.
speak Welsh at all. while ot\ler · Welsh pub nigqt, singing, local people come from Welsh :
1
' Lyric Street.
.·
HOt R8p Tft!!Cks
.
students are fluent in Welsh. Welsh films and a "Fun backgrounds. Rio Grande offi· 2. "Good As I Once Was," Toby Keith. ·
The
annual event is presented Night" filled with skits · and cials are thrilled to have the
· '
.DmamWotks.
·
by
the
Cymdeithas Madog, other events. In addition, stu- week-long course· on the Rio
3. '!Making Memories of Us," Keit!l Ur_ban. ·(Compile9 from a national SIUilPie of.~s
the
Welsh
Studies Institute in dents will be treated to a wine Grande campus, and they are
Ciljlitol. ·
,
reports collected, compped, and Providecf by .
'
N(lnh Ame.rica Inc ., 'l:a {ax- and cheese ·reception liosted excited about the many won· .4: ''Somelhitig More," Sugarland. Mercwy. Soun,dScan)
.
.,. ' ·
exempt,
non-protit organiza- by the Cardigan Club at the derful things that will be hap- ··
: ·. S. ''Y~'ll Be There," George Strait. MCA
I. "Just a li1 Bit," 50 Cent, Sblldy. , · ' · :.
tion
dedicated
to . helping Greer Museum on the Rio pening at the Cwrs Cymraeg.
li :N8$vhille.
.
.
2: "Grlnd With Me," Pretty Rieky. Atlantic. '
For more information on
Nonh
Americans
learn use Grande ·campus, a trip along
·6, ~'Lot ofl.eavin' Left to Do," Dierks
3. "Wait (I:he Whisper SOng)," Ylrig Yq c
and enjoy the Welsh language: th~ region 's Welsh Scenic the July 17-24 Cwrs 'Cymraeg
:.Sentley. ~jtol.
.
. ··
. Twins. ColliPark. ·. . · .
· · · '· . • ''"
Locally. the course is spon- Byway, a visit to the Tyn Rhos Welsh language course at Rio
. .7. "MissiSsippi .Oilr," Faith Hill. ·Warner . 4. "Let Me Hold You," Bow Wow (feat:
sored
by the Madog Center fof Church (which was built in Grande, call Jilg at 245-7186
Bros.
.
Omariort). Columbill.
.
,
Welsh
Studies
at
the 1851 and is still used for spe· or (800) 282-7201. Additional
· 8. "Keg in the Closet," Kenny Chesney.
5. "Dreams,""The Game. Aftennath.
University of Rio Grande and. Cia! sei'Vices), and a visit to the information on the course Cl\ll
BNA.
·
.
. 6. ''Pitnpin' All Over the Worl4," Ludilcris
the
Cardigan Club. Rio Grande W~;,l s h-American Heritage also be found on the Internet
9. "If Something Should Happen,"-Darryl (feat. Boqby Vlilentino)..DTP. •
.
at the Cymdeithas Madog
last
hosted the Cwrs Cyrnraeg Museum in Oak Hill. ·
WQrley. DreamWorks.
'
?. "Give Me That,': .Webbie {feat. Bun B)·. course
Rio Grande faculty member Web site at www.mado:g.org,
in 1990, and it was very
10. "Goodbye Tune," Blake Shelton. Tnll. . .
.
, •·.. or .
· successful
at that time. · ·
Dr. David Lawrence, the 2004- . or through . link on the Rio
"It's a - week-long, intense -05 Madog Faculty Fellow, will Grande -Website, which is
VNU · Business Media
course
on the Welsh language." speak to the students about his located at www.rio ..edu.
,aNI Nilti.n SoundScan, Inc. ·
. _9. "Lose_·Controll'' Mi~Y'El
_ liott F~lllripg . said Jeanne
Jones Jindra, presi·
·'
Ciara &amp; Fat Man ~·~Vle -QOid Mll!4. ,, .
dent of the Cardigan Club.
·.
Top Country Albums
. 10. ·. ".Ba~;k ' . n~~~I';I\Ji~e ·;'i?,n!l~·l'
The S.tudents at the annual.
5
seminar are divided into dif' (Compiled from national sample of sales
skill level groups,
· I'C)lOI'ts. collected, compiled and provided by and Nielsen ~ lrm. • .. .' ''
·, , ·ferent
depending
on their knowl'' " .-'
. « ·- · " ' - - - )
,
.
I
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. ' &lt;
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edge
of
the
Welsh language.
t. "Hookyt~ University," Toby Keith:
Hot DaiCe Music - .Club Play
Whi le students with no previDreamWotfS. latinum)
ous
knowledge of Welsh are
' 2, ''Feels Lilce Today," Rascal Aatts. Lyric
(Compiled from a national sample dance
not
expected
to learn to speak
Street. (Platinum)
club playlists}
·
'
·
the
language
perfecuy in just
. 3. "Be Here,'' Keith Urban. Capitol.
I. "Don't Cha (R. RQSIIrioMaskade/DJ ·
one weeR, they will learn a
'(Plalijtwn)
· Dan Mixes),'' The Pussycat Dolls (feat. Busta
.
greai deal about the language
., ~
:4. ·."Twiye the ~peed of Life," Sugarland. \Uiymes). A~M.
·
... ·
and
aspects of the culnow You
..
· • tGold)
2. "Live. You All · Over.'' TOlly M~ • ture other
during
the
course.
&gt;·· ~- .· ' realest Hits 2," Toby Keith . Presentsl&gt;t:'bqrab.Cd0¢.r, T~yBoySIMir ·
Can
Cymdeithas Madog brings
.f~Works.(Piatinum)
Label. .
., " · '
.
BU!J H
in instructors from around the
~-·· ~- . ''Wileri ihe· Sun Goes Down," Kenny _3. "Krafty," New Otder. Wam¢r Bros
_
•...'
·
world
to
teach
·
Welsh
during
·OUEED Size
~'CheSney. BNA. (Platinill11) '
·
4. "AS 1 Am," Qeepa Soul. NM." .
.
the
course.
and
some
teachers
· . · 7. "The Right to &amp;re Arms," Larry the
5. "Summer M'oon," Afri~sm All &amp;tars.
Set for Hfull
with local conneCtions will
. Cable Guy. Jaek. (Gold)
·
Yellow. ·
.
Size Price! ·
also be teaching. ·
· 8. "Horse' of a Different Color," Big &amp;
6. "Doesn't Really Matter," Murk. Tommy
One
instructor
will
be
Kara
· Rich. Warner Bros. (Platinum)
Boy Silver Lallel.
·
Lewis, former director of the
9. "Here for the Party." Grelhchen Wlison.
7. "Gotta Go Gotta Leave (llred)," Vivian
Madog Center for Welsh
. Epic. (Platinum)
·
Green. Columbia.
·
Studies
at Rio Grande. Lewis
10. "Blame the Vain," Dwight YOllkaJn.
8. ''Lonely No More (J. Nevins,lfrancois L
;yia.
.
.
. Mixes)," RQb Thomas. Melisma. (Platinum}
.. (.'.,-iriJt 200$, VNU B~ Media . . 9. "Movin' On," Cln:is Tlie Ga:ek'Panllgbi.
...., . . . . ..Sei~Mif&amp; . , ,•• ·-, ..~ ~-~ ·intG.. ~ .p~,~ . ~. ~ . - ~s~ _. ~·F~tt ··.·... ~~-,
'

.

. Wc:"Jr':· ~oos;

otlhe

. 't;f

r~~-~ ·-~

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Anl11181

....,

, 2. "Slow Down," Bob&amp;y Valentino. DTP.
(«;:ompiled from a natioruil sample of sales
1 3. .''Wait (The Whisper Song),'' Ying Yang
reports collected, compiled and provided by
1,'wins. ColliPmt.
SoundScan)
4. "Frcie Yourself," Fantasia. J.
- I. . "La Tortura," Shakira (feat. Alejaridro
S. ~ Me Hold You,'' Bow Wow (feat. Sanz). Sony DIS&lt;»s.
·
.
.Omarion): Columbia
2. "La Camisa Ne~" Juanes. SW'CO.
· · 6. 'Oller 2 U," Destin 's Child. Columbia.
3 ''Lo Qu Paso
.1 l. "Just a Lil Bit,~' 50 6:nt. Shady.
Cartel.
e
'
," Dad4y Yankee. El
,,, 8. ~- 'Yith Me,'' Ptetty Ric~. Atlantic.
4. "Nada Es Para Siempre," Luis Fonsi.
, ·_·9, ~in All Over the WorJd, ' Ludacris · Universal Latino.
, ~feal ~ Valen~). ~!"·
5. "Mayor Que Yo;" Bah Ranks, Dadd
10, ;Must ..Be N1ce, Lyfe Jennings. _ Yankee, Tonny Thn Thn, ~sin, Yandel ~ _
Columbia.
•
Hector. Mas Flow.
.
·
~.::: So2fJ!!!:,.,~U. Busintss Media Di6. "Alge Mas," La SA Esiaeion. Sw;Jy'

~

top RaB/HipHop Albums

: 508
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In this photo provilled by the Homestore Plans and Publications Designers Network, the class ic
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• Would.you like to network an~ share Ideas with other
.. _lttra&lt;:y programs In your !=Ommunlty? ·

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Ale y~ seeldn{, resources to support your program?

I

so, call nie Appalachia READS Center at

740~·593.0160

.

~xte rior

AP Photos

of thi s home is built around an interior that offers all

'•

Classic exterior features Palladia11 \VIIl(lo,.v

(AP) - The classic exterior of this home, plan M-81
by the Homestore Plans a!Td
Publications
Designers' .
Network, is built around an
interior that ·offers all · the
amenities desired by today\
families. The floor plan covers 2, 112 square feet of living
space.
· Step across the wraparound
· porch and into the ',enri-y,
which features a curved ~lairway lind a glass-block. wall
defining .the dining room. '
Nearby, the sunken great
room boasts a soaring cathe- ·'
dral ceiling, a fireplace
flanked by Frel)ch doors and
ample space fQr large family
gatherings. ~ . .
The formal dinin~ . room is
ayailable for specml occasions, while the vaulted
breakfast nook serves everyday needs. '{'he nook offers
front- and back-porch access,
jusl right fpr barbecues with
friends and family.
The island kitchen provides
· lots of counter space and lies
conveniently close to the· utility room and a powder room.
·------ ·----· -- -· ------- -------· - ..

1312 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio -

Call446-1744

o
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or visit www.appalac:hlaREADS.org
for more Information ••
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kitchen

gre1t room
1e·-~"wte·-e"

24'-6' . . , _ •It!

1bll'Cdoi.
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In this photo prou ·c • ""'' ·vided by the
12 '-•"&gt;&lt;12'-4 " 1~·
.....thcl•
r ~~ ~
. , .Homestore Plans
~~;;;;£;;-~,L·
and Publications
"'
= ""'"==~,.,.,.
Designers
Network , the for- ·
mal dining room

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is avai!'ab.le

Time for c~ec:king safety in the ba~kyard .
.

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special occasions. while the
vaulted breakfast
nook serves
•
everyday needs.
The nook offers
front- and back1-==--===.4 porch access._just .
111
right for barbe·cues 'with friends
and family.c

_porch

-- -· ------·- -----·-

'40 ' - ~"-'-- "ll'~-~

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[QJ~~@. -L,

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In th is photo PrOvided by the
Homestore Plans and Pu blications ·
Designers Netl4ork . upstairs offers
two large bed r'ooms.

0NTHt.HOU51::_ CO M

Backyard safety tips

other potentially dangerous
Never leave grills unat- using lawn 1i10wers and out·
sA'tar1to do a sa!et y chec1c up It' your back. yard JUSt as you shoul9
__ eq nip~ent _ and_ baz.l)fd_ou~ . _tended.. l!se _ p.ri l~ on!L()_Ut___ ~o()_r _power ecJuipmem. 'lik~ _ 1It's
1l" }V v r ·homt: +lcreo .Jrc 50 ffc-ll. ~,~~!et-y-.-ste p c;,_ t t;. t::~~P
· matenal s put away, out of doors. Make sure ashes ar~ hedgers ancf 1nmme". ik
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
reach-, in· a locked shed. cooled before you put them 'ure 10: .
Close all open1ngs.
Fully enclo s e the yard .
Spending time in the back- locked. cabinet dr on a high in the trash. Embers can . Operate lawn mower&gt;
Make sure there are no ocen ~s
A gooo 'ence and secure gate
m spaces wrere a child co uld
helps keep k 1ds and pels v.he1e
yard with family and friends shelf. That includes garden .smolder undetected in - Ihe respons ibl y. K~cp chi loren
~co M e entra:::oed or e'lla ngled ,
you
want
them
both
1n
and
is one of the great American tools, lawn mowers, grills, trash for, hoU'rs before ignit· and pet&gt; in&gt;ide when using
ou! of your yard
pastimes. However, it really propane tanks. lawn chemi- ing. Teach children to stay mower&gt; and 'power equipNever lenve grill ~ ~nattended/
is
important
to
make
sure
that
cals.
charcoal
lighter
fluid
,
away
from
grills
jusi
as
with
ment.
Clear
the
mnwin~
an:-a
use 91 ts ::~ty c. ...; m.,L~r" 1.&lt;\al..e 5~re
Use
insect
repelle;nt.
·
CALL 800-634-5265 ·
your backyard is safe for kids and paint thinner.
stoves. ·
· of debri s ~ rocks . iwi~s.
as"'eS are cco1e a oe-f ore you put ·
Keep you r yard from "becomm9
and adults.
i
Check and maintain swing
Pools require intensive toys - before &gt;Ianing. Now 1or an appointment
them ,n tne t·ash Teach ch1ldren
a mosq wto breed119 ground and
10 sta~ away ~r o r- gnlls
e1 1m1nate all star,d•ng •.vater
'
·- Grills, swing sets, lawn ' sets and other playground· safety steps and vigilance .
Riding mowers that have
•
mowers, pools .. fences, even equipme nt. Pad areas under Always have adull . supervi - reverse can be dangerou s.·
"
Keep sharp tools out ot reach .
,
deck chairs and tables can be equipmenl with a 6-inch bor- sion. Even a wading pool or ·Alway ;, check what's 't&gt;chi1iu
• l'aq)le -.ID I1Uiille mci8 ~
• 'IW tam1y OOII!plail6 tlfll ,00 pllrf blV
Sharp objects ar d .ather pote ntia y da11 geuous eo.upr· ent and I'
potential danger spots if not der of I 0-12 inches of soft: filled bucket could be dan- 'ou to mak~ sure there are no
hazardous ·natenals should :Je p el! awa~ out r ' ' each 11"1 a locked
• 'lbu w, but hli!Ve ~ und11111tadng
IDo ~
used and maintained with impact-absorbing surfaci ng gerous to a young child.
children . pel&gt; or object,_
shed tocke_d cab1net orO'"~ a h1g r- ~he'
1--..safe~y.i~ mind. ·
such as wood chips. mulch or
To avoid children entering he fore . op~rating a rid in~
~~-~ID
• 'tbu 814J!Mienoe ~~tn.J!!)QI'~--!!.'!l!!ll..!!!.!..!o!!!!!!L--I-It's sman to · do a safety . rubber matting.
. the pool ,unin vited. rcSifit-1 mower in re,er'e Your -kids
Alwayswear~unscreen
.
in
your
backyard,
Check
equipment
for
cor·
access
wi1h
a fe.J,Ice at ·lcasl -t. m1ght be in Ihe · hou'e but·
·
·
checkup
If,.., ••,.,._. • ., ef fhH ,,_,,_, ,_...., • FlEE
fiJf,
just as you should in your rosion and deterioration, feet high (with vcnical pickeh "h-;11 about Ihe nei,hbor's ' \
OIJWr UIWB?
m11101- aii•IIIIDI
home. Here are some key missing · parts. splintered less than 4 inches apan or
nr 'rlentd cp.he_tsd'?ren
· ·, .
' •
11
safj!ty steps 1p ~e: . . '
wood and sharp edges. Be · ~hain links no larger than I 3/4
• 011
IS JIUEJIHI ·
IUJIII IS IEUEWifil
W1th young ch1ldien m the sure all S-hooks are closed. mchcs). a self-dosmg. self" the 9perator s la p or any1
home, fully enclose the yard Check
for
instability. latching gate and a pool cover. where on a mower.
'
. ·
.
- n~ open gates or paths. A Equipment must be firmly
Steps and ladders for
Keep hands and feet a\\ ay 0\'cr-spray. K~cp them oft the -;an tra' el through dry so1l lo
good fence · and secure• gate anchored in the ground . to above-grou'nd pools should from rotating pan&gt; and from are~ tor I he re w mmcnJeu &gt;hock i'ou.
helps keep kids and pets avoid inju·ries from tip-overs. be secu.red or ren10ved when under the machine.
penod of tnne afler apph.:aDon I us~ P"" cr eqUip·
whereyouwantthem-both
Make sure there are ' no the pool is not in use.
Wear eye protection ~
.
tion lo a\ oid contamimtinn me1:1 in wer.:ondilions. _
in and out of your yard. A openings or spaces where a Consider installing an alann safety gias&gt;es or gogg les ~ .lhrough bare feel or mge'\vhen , u&gt;~ng e'tens10n
spring-loaded gate closer is child
could
become 'to alen if unauthorized acce:,s &lt;luring operation. When·. using twn. Fmall}. &gt;tore all 'jJesii - cotd&gt;. make wre they are
recommended . and can be entrapped or entangled.
10 the pool' is being ~uemptpestic_ide&gt;. or other 13wn c1ue&gt; and o1hcr chemrcals m m;ode lor outdoor u,e, and
easily installed. After instal ~
Choose age-appropriate ed. l;lave ·a rescuing de vice chemicab. keep children and t)1c1 r ongmal c·&lt;lllt anl~r, .
appropriate t&lt;'r the equipment.
Thmk &gt;afet) ''hen U&gt;ing ·
With &gt;mart ·,afcty steps in
lation, tune up the tension !O equipment.. A guideline: If such as a life preserver or a pet' our of 1he area. II . is
make sure it closes properly -you have to lift your child to · telescopic pole with a shep- imponam 10 erhure lhat' they metal -l:ldders and trimming ·place. )OU d11 · ~njoy your
and securely.
· use the- equi'pment, it isn't herd's hook :
a~·oid inhala tio'n and ~xpo- tree&gt; . EkctriL'ily p;i,,c, righ1 nwn great outdO&lt;lrs!
Ke~p , sharp objects and safe for them to use.
Safety is critical when ); Ure to chemi•al du&gt;t and lhrough metal tools and e\ en . AnJ . ,1ha!', all there is.lo it&lt;
'

·

'•

-t--------52'-0"·------''-----+

'BY MORRIS AND
- .JAMES--CAREY

JULY 5 • 9AM-4PM

•• •to join the IHeracy network

'

~

,-- ..J
A d~wnloadable study

"'i!~ll;'-·~...w.··j&gt;.•"'- .• ~.:,...,4.,;......,. .

TUESDA¥

• .....,c·t rr

-

Exter10r wall
framing: 2x4
Foundation options:

plan or this house,
including general inl'or.•
mation on building
costs and financing, is
available at
www.houseoftheweek.co
m: To receive a study
plan by mail, send $10 .
plus local sales tax to
House. of Jhc WeekJ .
. P.O. Box 75488, St.
· Paul, MN 55175·0488,
or. call (866) 772-101.3.
Re sure to reference the
plan number. To view
J:!undreds ·nf home
designs, visit our Web
slte at
www.houseoftheweek.com .

the amenities desired bv today's families. -

',

• Doyou

.

Standard basement,
4 crawl&gt;rpace, slab

Fonovisa. ·
·
9. "Obsession (No Es Amar)," Frankie J
· , ' (Compiled 'from ·a national sample of sal!lS
·
reports collected, compiled and provided by (feat Baby Bash). Columbia (Gol\1)
10. "Eres Divina," Patrulla·81. Disa.
SOundSean)
.
&gt; I. "Boyz n·da Hood," Boyz £fda Hood. Bad Copyright 2005, VNU Businns Media
and Nielsen SoundScml, Inc.
".Boy. '..
'

EADS
,._,..,..,

sq. ft.

.\

.

·---- ONE~DA¥--ONLY

1,598 sq. ft.

Detached garage:

•

FREE HEARING TEST

r

Standard basement:

t ·

scos.
.
7. "Bandolero," Olga Tanon. Sony Discos.
8. "Hoy Como Ayer,'' Conjunto'Primavera.

. --...-., IIIC.

·.

· 2,112sq.ft.

·

t4NN ,

1,?98 s_q . ft.

1 , mtal hvmg arell:

'

•..,---

Destiny's Child. Columbia. ·
··, ., ,
Copyright 2f)()5, VNU ·Busine1~ Mtdill.
·
(ComPiled from a national sample of sales and Nit/sen SoundScan, Inc.
leporl$ .8nd nidio.playlists)
~'We Belong Toce!her,'' Mariah Carey.
Hot ~n Songs

Bedrooms: 3 ·
Baths: 2 1/2
Upper floor:

~

'

_to. ''Gitl.(l VMQuev!Vl. J&amp;bua .~ '?\ ·

I

Plan M-81
DETAILS

; · Main ·floor:

of

· -

. -·

lI. 514 sq. 'ft.

c~ri::'2tJt~.{, :\{Aid~. ·~iss )~~:
'

'

.. SuncJ.ay, July 3, 2005

I

Te~;~~~p~i~'{•, ;~~::~ (f~. ~eUy).

a

Dl

•

' .

SIGN·s OF HEARiNG LOSS

1

•••lq

ch\N\der,~e.e

~rl·d~

~~fA~Ij~~~~
~ Wt ~~-~
. -~
~~

.

..
'

�\

iuubap ltm,.·ie.ftttntl "'

PageD2

·DOWN ON .THE FARM

Sunday, J"Qly 3, 2005

,..

Control strategies for Japanese beetles
BY HAL KNEEN

Adult Japanese beetles
haYe begun to emerge from
the ground to contmue the1r
l1fe cycles Soon after the
emergence. the beetles w1ll
mate and the female -w1ll
begm to J,Jy the 11ext generation of eggs 1n your l&lt;~wn or
flower beds
Each
afternoon, · the
female will dig 11110 the w ll
to a depth ot tour inches and
lay one to five eggs She
wlll re-emerge the next
m01 nmg to f-;ed and mate
ag,un. Between 50 to 200
eggs will be l~tid by e,~eh
adult female beetle over her
Six-week life spa n
As adults, the be'e tle teeds
on the leaves of ovc1 400 tree
and shrub · spec1es Weep1ng
cherry ttees, roses. purple
leaf plums, hibiscus, brambles, Rose of Sharon,
Vtrgtma creeper and crabapple trees are favonte foodstuffs of th1s beetle. The
question most .' homeowners
ask is, how to control the
damage of the adult beetle')
· Control strategies Include
cultural, mechanical, bJolog1Cal and chem1cal Cultural
pwctices Include av01ding
plantmg plant spec1es thdt
are likely to attract the beetle. Plant red maples, holl!es,
boxwood,, yews, arborv1tae.
magnolias. pnvet, lilacs.
hydrangeas and pmet all
wh1ch are less likely to be
fed 'upon .

Pick off the adult beetles
from the plants in the late
mormng aild drown them In
soap apd water. Some "homeowners place J)ipanese beetle
traps in their yards 100 or
200 feet from their suscepubl~
plants. A female
pheromone (sce nt )' attracts
the male beetles wh1ctl then
cannot leave the trap. Some
days. the bag 1nay need to be
emptied two or three \•mes
Bwlog•cal controls for our
area mclude the. spray mg of
Bt matenals (Bacteria poptllae. better known as M1lky
Spote, D1sease ,tnd pdr,ISIIIC
nematodes,
Stemermen,J
glascn). Chemical control to•
the adult beetle IS lumted to
spraymg susceptible plants
(do not spray Virgima creeper) "'ith stomach insect1c1des
wh1ch must be eaten like carbaryl and rotenone or contact
killers hke MalathiOn or
Orthene wh1le the adult beetles are flymg .
Applicauons onto soils of
Merit (imidaclopnd), Mach 2
(halofenoztde), or Meridian
(th1amethoxam) to control
grubs 111 late July and August
seem to work well. Both dry
and 'extremely wet summers
reduce the viability of young
Japanese beetle larvae due to
drymg of eggs and drownmg
of larvae Unfortunately, the
treatment ot your yard may
not keep Japanese beetles
from flying into your garden
lrgm your ne•ghbors or from
, a l!eld up to one m1le away.

The recent dry spell is forcing some cattlemen to alter
One
their maragement
option is to wean calves a llttle earlier than usual
T1me of weamng can be
altered to mfluen&lt;;_e cow body
cond1110n 10 maintam high
reproductive rates and reduce
feect requ1rements Cows
•••
The dry weather condi- nursmg their calves on dry
tions are havmg ·an eftect on pastures are qu1ckly dropping
the tlowers and vegedtbles in we1ght, or body condition.
our ga rdens If possible, irri- When a cow IS declining in
gate in the early mornmg body cond•tion, the calf is not
hours between 5 and 7 a.m. growmg ut optimum
Changing, e1ther the weanUse soaket hose or "leaky"
ing
date and/or the calving
hose to keep water oft the
leaves ot the plants and date will intluence cow condition. Any change in time of
reduce the amount of evapoweaning must balance the
r,Hion of water.
'
potential positive •mpacts· on
Mulch your plants usmg up the cows wuh potential negato two mches of straw, shredtive impacts on the calves or
ded' newspaper or grass clip- ' calf market weights For
pmgs. In flower beds, bark mstance, weanmg too early 1s
mulches may be used
a negative. Spnng calving
Use water soluble fertiliz- cows •rt.adequate body condiers in the morning, as late tion usually need only small
afternoon appllcauon of fer- quantities of supplements,
uhzers will not be taken up wh1le thm cows usually need
mto the plant. During hot large quantities of suppleafternoons, plant roots will ments h1gh m energy.
Researchers in Mmnesota
take in only water and leave
the nutnents m the s01! as reported a 6 to I 0 percent
the plant attempts to regu- higher energy requirement
late its transp1ration (cool- for maintaining thm cows
ing mechal)ism) It is better (versus moderate to high
to water -twice a weel:: for body condition) through the
longer penods of time than winter in a cold envlrQnto water for a few mmutes ment. A ·cost savmgs will
result from having cows
each day.
,
enter
the winter m good
(llal Kneen is the Meigs
body
condition
County Agriculture
&amp;
Keep in mind that we have
several other beetles1hat may
cause foliage, frUit and root
mJury like June beetles, rose
chafer beetle and onental
beetle~. For further information. contact our Web site at
oh10line.osu.edu.

Natural
Resources
Educator,
Ohio
State
University Extension.)

B_e infonned before selling your timber
assiStance. you can have
your cake and eat 11 too It
IS poss1ble to get more·
income fro m your t1mber
How many farmers would sale (often more than douallow a perfect stranger to ble the ongmal otter) wh'1le
come onto the farm , select and keepmg the potent1al of
load the best c;Jttle w1th a ver- your forest to produce
b,!l promise to pay half of future benefits m place
whatever the~ were sold for at
Here are a few lips to prothe market? Sounds ndiculous tect your torest and your
doesn't it? Why should selling ttnanc1al mterests
limber be any d1fferent?
•.Make sure that you have a
Sellmg timber can be one woodland management plan
of the most Important tinan- and that the sale will enhance
dal decistons that you make not conflict' with your man111 your llfet1me . and an " agement objectives
1mproper umber sale can
• Be leery of buyers who
c~use long term env•ronmcnwant to "selectively cut" your
tal damage which greatly woodland or cul only trees
reduces your forest's poten- abovl! • a certam diameter
tial to prov1de future benefits. Both practices often remove
Look before you te'ap Get on! v the best trees from the
information and assistance forest and leave you w1th litto help msure that you are tle potential tor the future.
• Know what you are sellmakmg the right decJSJons.
Wtth proper plaflllmg and· mg. It i-s best to measure and
BY DAVE APSLEY
OSU EXTEN~ION
mRESTRY SPECIALIST PIKETON

.

'
economtc
a'nd community
development grant and educational ass1stance.
Elig•bll•ty has been extended to Ohio quota owners and
.growers who produced tobacco from 1997 through the
2004 seasons
The followmg programs
will be held to d~scnbe tn
detail
the
Tobacco

Foundation programs and
deadlmes·
• Wednesday, July 13 at 2
p m. at the OS U Extension
off1ce m Jackson
• Wednesday. July 13 at
6·30 p m at Scioto County
School . in
Vocdllon,ll
Lucasv1lle
• Thursday, July 21 at 6.30
p m at South Galha H1gh •
School m Mercervtlle
• Monday, July 25 at 6·30
p.m- · t y.mm~-V&lt;~U~y H1gh
School in A1d
AgncultUlal proJect applicatiOn penod '1s Aug. 1-15,
2005. and 1s on a f1rst-come,
lirst-served
basiS
Appltcat1on forms and rules
w11l be ava•lable the week of
Jul y 4
'For more information. call
Ed Vollborn, Eastern Dtstnct
lleld representative. at (740)
44!-1.479

•

livESTOCK REPORT

'

GALUPOUS - United Producers l11c. ' market
ri!port }rom Gallipolis for sales conducted on
1
Wednesday, )utie 29.
'
.
· _ ,

Feeder Cattle-Steady/lower
.
'

275-4 15# ~t $100-$ 150 Hf $90-$117 50 425-525# St
$100-$130 HI. $90-$ 120 550-625# St. $95-$1 18 Hf. $90$100 650- 725# St. S90-$1 00 HI. $85-$95 750-850 St $90$100 tJf. $80-$92

Cows~Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $56-$67 MedtuFlln $52-$58;
ThiniL•ght $) 0-$40; Bulls $68-$75.50.

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pa1rs $760:$1.285, Bred Cows SJ&lt;)0-$885;
Baby Calves $130-$340;· Goats, $20-5120. Lambs, $115dn.: Hogs. $40
'\

Upcoming specials:·
Sale Wednesday. July 6. I0 a m
For more mformauon. call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at·(740) 339-0241 VISit the Web"site at
www uproducers .com
•

~ L~~--------------------~
l

...

\

'

· Alleviating losses
Now may be the time to
High temperatures raise the
restructure your breeding and
calving calendars. Timing the concern of heat stress on catstart of calving m anttclpa- tle. Heat stress is' hard on
tion of the plant growth cycle livestock, espec1ally in ~om­
can reduce the need for high bination with h1gh humidity.
levels of supplement or hay. Hot weather and high humidThe· cow's nutrient· reqUire- ity 'can reduce breeding effiments increase substantially Ciency. milk production, feed
after calving and contmue to intake, we1ght gains, and
increase through peak lacta- sometimes cause death .
Some t1ps to control heat
tton, generally 45 to 60 days
post-calvmg . ' At the same stress
• Ob&gt;erve livestock fretime, reproductiVe functtons
must b'e'~upported in order to quently
• Work cattle early m the
remam on an annual calvin~
.
0
morning
to decrease the JISk
schedule.
As range or pasture plants of heat stre"
• Provide shade, 1mproved
mature, outnllve quality
declines to the point that the · vent dauon and a sufficient
best pro"· •cllon cannot be quantity ol fresh water. Shade
maintained. While an indi- for lt v,estock can be prov1ded
vidual plant 's maturation date by trees. bu1ldmgs or sunw1ll vary with the year, tem- shades.
• Cool, clean dnnking
perature, rainfall, soil, elevation, etc., 11 IS well estab- water IS essential to help
lished that w1th maturation keep an ammal's internal
comes a decline in both body temperature within nordigestibility and protein con- mal limits. Water temperature affects rumen tempera~ent. Re~ardless of. the date,
this dechne in quahty begins ture and thus blood temperaat the boot stage for grass ture, which affects bram cenplants and at the bud stage for ters that control feed consumption.
broad l~afed forbs.
• Control bitmg f11es.
Research ind1cates Ohio
• Watch . out for toxic
Valley pastures typ1cally
reach matuflly in early June. plants. Dry weather reduces
More ar1d sites will be earlier the amount of available
and high elevallon forest grasses which can lead to illranges will be later. After ,ness from consuming toxic
these dates, it is difficult for a plants and weeds that may be
lactatmg cow to consume the only "greens" available
suffic1ent nutrients to main- for ammals to consume.
tam her calf, herself, and her
• A danger sign in cattle is
panting.
The panting mech aown body condition.
Considering early weamng nism m cattle does not appear
may benefit the cow, the calf, · to work as well as the one
your pastures and your wallet. dogs have

SUNDAY PUZZLER

GM'.AWAY

4 fam11~ yard sale· July 1st
2nd &amp; 4th 3 m1tes out 143

71 Brusque
72 Copy

74 Do a tarm Job
76 MuSICal drama
79 Nol hidderr
81 Gaat teetll
83 Looking glass
87 Not as many
88 Approach ,

89 On )'OUr -

91 Atver '" Frar.:;a

92 Handles
94 EssayiSt'S pen name
96 Five (prolix)
97 Was gloomy
98 Encounler
100 Planet near the sun

102 Frond
104 Slull
107 Quantity of paper
409 Aarsos
t 10 &lt;K1nd of

o&lt;IO&lt; syrup

111 Carew 0&lt; Stewart
114 Swerve
116 Be aware of
118 • -I saw Elba'
119 Heavenly body
120 Engage
121 P&amp;lfect

129 Coarse file

130 Bo!th

1Jlt Ostrich relolve
Su&gt;glng

COU11tr1eS

2 -Vera

3 Peru's capital
4 Diminish

,

Lack of harmony
6 Barber service
7 Theatar section

5

123 Hit tn basebaH
125 Creature of myth
126 Waterway
121 Char's ex
128 Town '" Nevada

133

DOWN
1 Ag-'between

bird

136 omy
137 Excltange
141 ,Wnter-Lazarus
144 SolaJM promise
145 Desk1op picture
146 Moo
149 Support11g oolll1Tl11
151 Prevenllnxn
happe1111lg
153 Villain
In Shal&lt;espeere
155 Ukeness

157 Shrewd
158 Pester playtully
159 Greek coin
160 Mof11er.of-pean
161 A pronoun

162 Made mistakes
163 Olntmerrt of old
164 Cupl!lty

8Sirrnan
9 College exam

10 Wee ·
11 MQnte12 ACOOjunctiOO
t 3 Zoo denizen
14 Ba blave errough
t5 -peeve
t 6 Poker stake
t7 leA
t8 Singer- Tumor
t9 Wat god
23 L1ban1ne
30 Make mquuy
32 Cakes and 34 Talkatol
36 Foray
37 Reveal
38 Armed conflict
40 WWII seMcewoman

N&lt;Jilklwoman
42 Regular
43' Slrol\g connectiOn
44 Slrfngid tnstrument
46 Gehrig or Ferrigno
47 An O&lt;gan
41

49 -Jose
50 Capture

51 Wickedness

.52 Depend
54 SeNe 12 wds )
55 CtoselighUy
56 Suddon fear

59 MuW matenal
60 Retained
62 C1ty 1n Utah
65 Divide IntO fourthS
66 More cheertul
67 Seaduct&lt;s
69 Postal wor1&lt;er
71 The elne
72 Domain
73 Suffen~
75 Solid evidence
76 Repeatedly,
poetically

93 Try to flnd
95 Splnnrng 'round

'

Corg1/Jack Russell m1x Ant1que
sale
M1s
Neutered Loctks like Jack Everythmg
llnaglnable
Russell 74Qc992·3357
Gnndstone, Pumps Wheels
:-:---~-.,...-.,....-.,....::-- Buggies , July J 2.3&amp;4 3rd
Mature male ,dog Beagle. House Leon -Baden Ad
good wtltl ch 1ldren Needs
Country home
740 992· Yard Sale July 2nd, 3rd 4th,
0366 and ask tor liz or Ben 1 1/2 m1les past Roosevelt
School SA2 N

r

Ir

IJ.Nr AND

FOUNTl

..__ _iiiiii0...-1

WA/111}])
m B UY

~

Found ladles watch a1
Gall1poll s McDonalds on Aosolute Top Dollar U S
Sunda~ June 26 {740)446 Sil\ler and Gold Co1ns
Proofsets Gold Rmgs U S
9390
Lost· Male Black dog w1th
some wt11te Me·d1um SIZed
Answers to the name lucky
Lost m th e AI 588 area
Otlenng SSO rew8.rd, please
ca_l_
l i_74_0_
I4_4_&gt;·_13_7_7_ _ _
Lost-·100 lb Red &amp; Blad:
German Shepherd In Darwm
area wear1ng 2 red collars
740·992-6001
Reward for safe return
MISsing female gray Tabby
Wear1ng p1nk collar wtth fake
diamonds and red name tag
l ost near old Bidwell school
(740)388·8166

Currency ·M T S Com Shop
151
Second
A\lenue
G II I 740 446 2842

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;
1110

--HEL-•t'•W•A•N'•n•co-.J
...,

L.

LEARN
TO
DRIVE
'NO Elo:PEF11E.I\ICE i\JECESSIIF1Y
FULL TIME CL ASSES

108 Additional

120 Hover
122 Soap mgredienl
124 Vessel tor cooking
125 Mode

126 L1ke a fox
129 Furrow
130 Scary yell

Gallia County

or.trearh,
275 State Street.
Bag sale $4.00
Monday-Fdday

9am-2pm.

***********
Movtng yard sale Clothes
dishes old books, furn
more
kn tck Knacks
Road
1n
Yellowtown

132 Nolhtng more than

t 34 Stable occupant
135 Apprrused
t 36 Censure angnly
137 Pettyquarrel

138 'When )'01.1 - IJIIOO

139
140

a star •
Singing vole&amp;
Wo«l•n arlthmt!tlc

143

State positively

142 Spouse

July

14

1-800,334-1203
www alunctracto rtra~er com

*********'**

Slg~S

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Ass emble crafts
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matertals provided
Free tnforma!Jon pkg 24 hr
801·428 4649

•

An Excellent way to earn
money The NeW Avon
Calf Manlyn 304 882 2645
Anyone With dnve, des1re
and 1ntegnty has a $250+/yr
Poll 'fralntng provrded 1
800-750-9122

=~:.:....:.:.::::~_.:_.:._

AVONI All Areast To Buy or
See Sell
Shtrley Spears 304
675 1429

vilrd sale 7/2 715, kn1ck Now H1rtng All Postttons ,
knack s clo thes bar set Apply at Court S!reet Grtll
Pomeroy Oh
table Hemlock Ad

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sole .......................................... 725
Announcement ............................. · ........ 030
Antiques... .... ... ... .. ..................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................. ,................ 440

CERTIFIED NURSE
ASSISTANTS

HR

Scenic Hills Nursing
Center
311 Buckridgo Road
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph 740/446·7150
Fax 740/446-2438
Email. admln shn@
tandemhearfhcare com

HEIPWANrnD

1.46 De11cate fabric

147 Monster ·
148 Unwonted plant
150 Dined
152 Cllfl handle
154 Org IO&lt; lawyers
156 Impair

Autos for Sale. .. •• ...• .•. .. .... . . .. .710

Boats &amp; Motors lor Sole. ........ ... .. ..... 750
Building Supplies .................................. 550
Business and Buildings ... ... . .. .. .. ~0

Business Opportunity . . . ... ................ 21 0
Business Tralning .......................: ........... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.... ... ... ... . ... 790

Camping Equipment .. .. ... .... .. ...... 780
Cards of Thanks ........................................ 01 0
Child/Elderly Care.......... .... .. . .... .... .. 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerotlon .. . . .... .. ....... 840
Equipment lor Rent ...... .. 1.......................... 480

Excavating................ .. . ... ... .. ... 830
Farm Equipment .......· .......................... 610

Farms tor Rent. ...........................................430
Forms tor Sale.......... ... ••. .... .... •• .•. 330
For Lease ..... ............. ...... .......... .... 490

For Sole........ ............................... ... .. ... 585
For Sale or Trade.... ... .. ................. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables. .. .. ......................... 580

Furnished Rooms •••.••....••....•....•.....••... •..••. 450

General Hauling...... ... . ... .. . ............ 850
Giveaway .... .... ....................................... 040

84 Tear

85 Mme's output

H:lppy J'o.d~ .. . ..... . -....... , ............. .. ........ 050
Hay &amp; Grain ...... ..................................... 640

€nmscn

Wdd West bar

Help Wanted ............................................. 110

Home lmprovamerita ........... ................ 810

Homealor Sale ......................................... 310
Household Gooda .................................... 510
Houaealor Rent.. ....................................... 410
In Memoriam ............................................... 020

I ro

HDPWMmD

--.,...-.,...-,...--::---

Durable Med 1cal Equ 1pment
Company
seekmg
a
Manager Knowledge •of
OME and Marketmg helpful
but w1111ra•n the nght person
Salary
based
on

Expioence Please send
resume With cover lener to
PO Box 707, Gallipolis, OH
45§J 1-0707'
Full·ltme and part-trme poSI·
!IOns available Must ha\le
dr1vers license, e~r.:pEmence
tn operat1nQ scrubbers and
buflers Corgmercllll Floor
Care (740)36'7-0255
Gt~ardlng Angels Child Care

Training For Employment
'
Bulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders,
Dump
Trucks, Graders. Scrapers, Excavators

Train in Ohio
Next Class: Aug. 8th
, National Certification
Financial Assistance
Joh Placement Assistance

800-383-7364

Associated Training Services

www.alsn-schools.com
· 03-11-1697'1'

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

The ODMA&amp;OD Gallipolis
Developmental Center IS
recruttmg
Aeg1stered
Nurses to plan and prov1de
nurs1ng sarv1ces to 11s reSI·
dents Interested persons
Shotlld submit an Oh10 CIVIl
Ser\IICe Application (avail·
able O(l grounds) and have a
valid Ot11o AN and driver's
l1 censes Please submtt to
ODMR&amp;DD Galllpolts
Developmental Center
Anen!IOn Human
Resources Department
2500 OhiO Avenue
Galltpolts OhiO 45631
Phone (740)446 1642 ext
273
Fax 740 446·134,:;c&gt;
, ___ _

Mlscellaneoua................ ~····· ................... 170
Miscellaneous MerchanUise ...................... 540

Mobile Home Repair ................................... 880
Mobile Homes lor Rent ........................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan........................................... 220
Motorcycles l 4 Wheelers ........................ 740
Mualcallnatruments ......u .......................... 570

.

005
Petalor Sate. ......... .... .... .. .................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ............................. 820

Personals...

.Keeping Gallia,.
· Meigs ~ Mason
infonned
Sunday

............ :......... , ............... .....

Professional Services............... •......... . 230
Radio,' TV &amp; CB Repair .............................. 160

Real Eola\O Wanted.......................... .. ..... 360
Schootalnatructlon .....: .......................... 150
Sead Plan!-&amp; Fertlflzer ............................. 650
'
.
Sltuallons
Wanted .................................
·• 120
Space tar Rent... ..... .... .. .... .... ........... 480
Sporting Goods ...................................... 520

SUV'afor Sate.......... .... ......... . .. .. ........ 720
Truckalor Sale ........................................ 71's
Upholstery .................................. ... .. .... 870
Van a Fot Sale.. . ... .. . .... ... ... . ..........730
- Wanted to Buy ..... ·................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea ........... .... 620
Wanted To Do ........................................ 180
Wanted to Rent.......................... ...... .... ... 470
Yard Sale· Galllpolla..................... .. ........072
Yard Sala-Pomeroy/Middle ........................ 074
i'ard Sate-Pl. Pleaaant ......................,. .... ..... 076

· TUru!s-Sentinel
Ga!tta • 44&amp;2342

~·992·2155

Mas&lt;ln • 675-1333

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

ADJUNCT FACULTY

POSITION .

MINORITIES ENCOUA·
AGED TO APPLY

STABILITYIII

Local Hardware Store
• Management Skills/Experience
Necessary
•
• Competitive Wage
• [nsurarice
• Vacation,
Etc.
'
Send Resumes to
Bidwell Hardware
c/o Ohio Valley Supermarkt:ts
P.O. Box 772
Gallipolis, OH 45631
EOE

.

Trurk l&gt;rh l'l'
, Training
3 Week CDL
Train in
Columbus
Next Class
Aug. 8th
Financial Aid
Job Placement
Assistance

800-383-7364

' Help Wanted

Help Wanted

BOILER OPERATOR
Holzer Medtcal Center- Gallipolis is
seeking a Boiler Oper~tor for the
Plant Operations Department
Individual will operate and maintain
boilers, chillels, fire system and other
·uttlities.
Requireme!lts for posttion include:
Ohio Htgh Pressure B01ler Operators
license. ExpeFience in operating gasfired boilers 1s Highly desirable.
Restructured Competitive Salary
and Beneftt Package available for
qualif1ed applicants. If intere.~ted
please co~tact:
.
Human Resources Department
HOUER MEDICAL CENTER
1oo Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
Phone: (740) 446·5105
Fax: (740) 446-5106
EOE/ADA EmplpY.er
'

Associated
Trainin~

Services
Help Wanted

O

WANl'EI&gt;
To Do

WANTED Part·llme pos1110n lntenor/e)(ten~r
pam t1o g.
re fer
ava1lable to asstst tndtVIdu reasonable rales
SceniC H1Us Nursmg Center als w1th mental retardahon ~nces expeuenced for free
a T$-ndem Health Care ~!,a group home tn Brdwell est+mates call {740)742
Facthty, 1s seekmg a select 1) 35 hrs 8am-5pm Sun 2 2013 or 645-.2638
few to toln our outstandmg 10pm MITu/W
team We currently seek a 2) 35 hrs 3'9pm MITu 3· ._ LOW-MOIStUre
Carpet-Cleaning
full t1me AN Supervisor to 9 30 WITh 3·1lpm Fn
Brand New Method
work a 3pm 1 ~ 30pm shift 3.; 26 hrs 3 9pm Th 2 11 pm
Dry In 1..HDYr
Proper license reqUired We Fn 10am 7pm Sat
No Steam-or·Shampoo
offer shtfl d1t1erent•al e11cel· Must have htgh school dlplo
vahd
dnver s
Free.·Est1ma tes
lent benef1ts perfect anen· ma/GED
'" 'Clearly Clean"**
dance mcentlves and much hcense and three years
good dnv1ng exper1ence
(304)8'75..0022
morel Please apply to .
$7 251hr Pre·erTJployment
Drug Tesltng Send resUme Rooltng Decks Hardwood
Attn· Dianna Thompson,
to
Buckeve Commuflllv Floor and Ceram+c Tile
HR
New
Ser\ltces PO Box 604, 1nstallat10n
Scenic Hills Nul'ltng
Const
ruciiOn
Pole
Bar
ns
Jackson
OH..
45640
Center •
Notch
BUIIdmg
Dea dltne lor appl1cants Top
311 Buckridge Road
7/8/05 Equal Opportuntty Contractors (304)675 3042
Bidwell, OH 45814
WV036667
Employer
Ph 7401446-7150

L.-==.:.:..==--

Fax. 740/446-2438

I

tandemhealthcare com

SFIDF/EOE
HROtlindemhealthcare com

l

190 CHU~JIEIJJFRI~Y

SCHOOl$
INsrRucnoN

Email admln.ahnO

CARL
Chlldca re avatlable near
Holzer
Cha rola1s
lake
Estates Any1tme Mon·Frt
12 yrs eJtp $3/hr $25/0ay

Galllpo,lls Careet College
(Careers Close To Home )
Call Today I 740 446 4367
1·800·214·0452
o/fWW galtrpol•'caleercolleye com

FIN SILPN S needed for 100

Accretllod

Membe1

liiiliiiiill '

ll.ccrtidrl ng

Counc I tm l!'ldependenl Colleges
11no Schools 12746

"0

futuf'6 of your JOb?
Do you tell flka you aro not

Ir

iiltiiiao~:;;;:.~,::::::::,:,_....,
.

'r~~J

STNA'S Overbrook Center
js currently accepting appll·
cations tor lull·l1me STNA'S
7A·7P, and 7P·7A, and 3A·
3P·······
shifts are avail·
able If you are Interested
please come 1n and fill out
an applicatiOn at 333 Page
Street Middleport Please
No Phone calls EOE

A ll Types Masonry BriCk
Block Stone Free Esttmate
(304)773 9550
jQ4':"S93
6421

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

------'---

Help Wanted

__ __;.:...__ _ __

I HI I Ill 11\1\1, I \11 .10111'1. \( 1.\11 \I
'

Home Health Aide/
Homemaker Training
Program

.

"'' .... .,_, , .,., •...,

, . ,..,.,. ..,, . , llloldnf Ill
..,., 1111 llutb an "'''·
The AAA is currently accepting

"applications for their Home Health
Aide/Homemaker Training Program.
The program is of no cost to the
participants. Upoll"'graduating,
participant will be assisted with
job placement:
For more information contact
the Area Agency on Aging at
740-374-9436 or 1-800-331-2644.

,-.,-

Busoo:o;s
01'1'1 JlffiJNfl'\'

DtRECTV
FREE Home
tNOTlCEt
enterta 1nment
System [oH IO VALLEY PUBLISH
FREE Equtpment and Insta ll
NG CO recommends tha
up to toJr rooms 145 chan·
ou do busmess wtth peo
nels $29 00 a month Ask ' .,le yot1 know 'iiid'NOT J
how to get FREE HBO
end money through th
MAX, and STARS t 800 tna~l until you have mvest1
523 7556 for detatls
Wted the otterlllil

.

DHK
Cleanmg
&amp;
Powerwa~h1.i'g Cant Keep
Up Your 'to Do" It~! too B•g?
Let Us HELP Yout Wa II
appreciated?
Clean A-Up &amp; Get·A·Done
We
do
All
Why not begin a career with
A e s'1den I 1a II 8 u s1ness
a stabtle employer that
ln s1de / Outs t de
values the hard work that Taktng applications for Hot
Dally/Weekly/Monthly 740
you do?
Tub Techn ician Must ha\le 985·3639 or 740 416 1823
knowle,dge 1n electrical and
We offer
plumbing areas E11pene:nce
•Up to $8/hr w1th no expen· 1n repairmg poo ls and hot Georges Portable Sawmtll
don't haul your Logs to the
ence
tubs would be helpltil Mill JUSt ca ll 304·675·1957
•Medlcal/40 1(k)
Anyone Interested please
•Paid vacallonslhol tdays/ call Baum lu mber at 740
training
985·3301
Health Care- elde r care 1n
my home pr1vate liVIng area
Call Today•
with bath expertenced w1th
1-&amp;n-463-6247 ext.
reference Park Ad Shade
2454
Oh (740)992 0556
Do you worry about the

~ar row Smart Contac
he OhtO DIVISIOn o
F1nanctal
lns tttut1on 1
pu 1ce oi Consume
tp-f!atrs BEFORE you ref1
ance your home o
bta1n a !oan BEWARE
1 requests lor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Call
he Olf1ce ol Consume
jAHa 1r's toll lree at 1 866
~78-0003 to learn tf th
fortgage broker
o
Is
properl
ender
1censed (This ts a publt
ervtce announcemen
rom the Ot110 Valle
PublishlnQ Company )

Help Wanted

Attention Drivers

Owner Operators
No NYC or Canada

$1,500 Sign On Bonus
Home Ever} Weekend
'86CPM UE
'Paid Base Plates &amp; Permits
'Paid Liability Insurance
'Paid Fuel Taxes
"Paid Fuel Surcharges
'Medical &amp; Disability Benefits
Available thru True Choit:e

Company Driver's
Sol~ up to 40¢/mile

*********************
Team up to 46¢/mile
1 year OTR experrence

and Good MVA required

'

..;::; ·\rea Agency on ·\gmg
Alill"nl

Hoc~ rn~ Mrr1p

Monrr .. /lw/olr I'• rn ami
Wtrlhrn loHI Cmrnllt'l

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

11'
. . 80

.110 Hfl P W.\NilD

bed skilled nurs1ng lac1 1tty
wtth excellent opportunity for
challengtng and rewarding
expenence
Great star t
rates and excellent regulatory
compliance
history
Interested
carid1dates
Resot1rces ,
should apply to Rockspnngs
Unlverstty of Arc Grande
RehabilitatiOn Center 36759
P.O Box F27
Rocksprrngs
Road
Alo Grande OH 45674
Pomeroy
Ohto 45769
e-ma 1t pmasonOno edy
E)(tendlcare
Health
fax (740}245·7228
·Applications wtll be accept· ServiCes, Inc ts an equal
opportumly employer the \
ed until pos 1t1ons are !Hied
encourages
workpla~e
EEOfAA EMPLOYER
diversity
M
/F
QN
•
WOMEN AND

~t'n'lng

lnsurance ...... ............................................... 130

Lllwn &amp; Gardan Equlpman1 ....................... 660
Uveatock......................................................630
L~at and Found ........................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage .............. o............................ 350

J&gt;OSmON
ANNOUNCEMENT

Please forward any questtons about these poS1t1ons
to
the
GDC
Human
Resources Department

MANAGEMENT

____

._
1

RN SUPERVISOR

Post1ng Date June 21 2005
,
.
Serv1ces Inc 15 an equal •The Untvers1ty of A10
opportumty employer that Grande 1s tak1ng appllcaencourages
workplace Ilona for part-trme faculty
d1versrtv MJF DN
members 1n the areas ol
History, Commumca110ns
Social
Work
Span1sh,
OUTSII)E SA.LES
Public Adm1n1strat10n and
REPRESENTA.TIVE
Nurs1ng Clrmcals PositiOns
avatlable for Fall Semester
The
Gallipolis
Da1ly
beginning In ,\ugust 2005
Tnbune 1s acceptmg
resumes tor a full time
A bachelor's degree tn spe·
outside sales represents·
cif•c field IS requlrect w1th
t1ve to 101n our sales team
preference given to apph
and to mana~;~e an estab·
cants
With
Masters
llst1ed account 11st wh!~
Degrees For • the Soc1al
cathng on new accounts
Work pos111on must have an
The successful candtdate
MSW or an MSW+ 2 years
wtll be a disciplined, self· experience
motived team player that
understands the lmpor· All candidates tohould submtt
lance
ot
developing
a current resume and letter
strong, mutually benefi· ol tnterest to
cial bus1ness re lationPhyllis Mason SPHA,
ShipS wtth our accounts
Qirector of Human

Cen ter 1s now accepltng
apphcaltons lor a Teacher's
Atd9 ThiS pOSitiOn IS a part
t1mettemporary
position
ThiS poSition IS des1gned to
SF/DF/EOE
HROtendemhealthcare com asstst th e Lead Teachers 1n
...
meet1ng the needs of the The IDeal cand1date will
&amp;
Resident
ass1gned
to
the1r
children
CNA,s
have sale expenence. For
Ass1stants
Interviews Are areas II you are self moll·
conf1denttal
mtervlew,
dependable
and please send resume and
Now Bmng Conducted f'or vated
CNA &amp; Resident Assistant enJOY work1ng wtlh ch1ldren,
PoslliOns
If You Are A then thiS could be the pos1· cover letter to Gallipolis
Dally Tnbune Ann Jim 1
E
Carmg
nthuslaSIIC 11on for you You must be at
Fteeland, 825 Third Ave.,
Dependable Person Then least I 8 years of age and
Galhpolis Ohio 45831
We Want You To J01n Our have at lea st a h1gh school
Team
Corne On 0\/er &amp; diploma or ce rtific ation of Owner Operators
Check Us Outl Compel lllve h1gh school equivalency
TAKE THE ,.R8T 8T!P
TOWAFIO A II!TTIFI
CNA
Wages '
Paid (GED) by the state board of
FUTVAI!II
Vacations P81a Meals, And education If you are tnter· "~ P~haH Pilon A'4H.tble"
Man y
Other
Benefits ested In this posttlOn please
'Great Pay
Ravenswood Care Center contact Becky Hess or
'Guaranteed home ll~e
1113
Washmgton
St , Dama Schultz at (~40)388·
"No Leaa•On Co9ts
'Spouse Alclar Program
Ravenswood WV (across 8454 for more mformat1on
'Pa1cl Orientation
R1tchle Bndge Ai 2 North - - - - - - - 2 yrs OTR 8KP req
tast Busmess on r1ght) Legal Secretary, Full·ttme,
Miller Trt~naport...a Inc
References ReqUired
Expenence preferred but no
call W1lson ToUel1
required send Resnme to
at our N1tro, 'WV location
Dental Hygtentst needed TSC20 cJo Pomt Pleasant
800-345-6111
Send Resume to PO Box 45 Regtster 200 Mam St Po1nt
www m1llert com
Pt Pleasant or tax resume Pleasant WV 25550
304 675 6553
~r 1me epnae e a
Local tru ck tn g company
the Gall!pohs Da1ly
Onvers Needed at BF I seektng Class B COL dnver
Tr1bun~ Must have
Waste Serv1ces Class 8 wtth good MVR sa lary pay,
valid dnver's
COL reqUired Apply Pomt home weekends
good
ltcense M1mmum wage,
Pleasant Jeb Serv1ces
equipment (740 )388-0855
apro11 30 hrs week
Stop by the Tnbune
AN1LPN S~--Overbrook cen· or (740)709·1 58 1
Office located at 825
ter 1s currently acceptmg
McClure's Restau rant now
Thm:l Ave to 1111 out an
apphcat1on6 for LPNS and
h1nng all locations lull or · - - a ilcahon
AN S
7A·7P and 7P·7A part ltme p1ck up apphca
Sh1ltS are available It you t1on atlocat 1on &amp; brmg back
1o ooam
&amp; Portamedtc, the nations
are Inte rested please come between
le....ad1ng paramed1ca t health
1n and fill out an app!tcat lor,~) 11 ooam
Monday thru
tnformat•on servtce compa
at
333
Page
Street Saturday
ny
1s seek1ng Med Tachs
Middleport
or call and - - - - - - - speak
w1!h
Hollie Paramedtcs
&amp;• EMT's Phlebotomies, EMTs and
Bumgarner
LPN
Staff needed Apply at 1354 LPNs to do msurance
exams 1n the Gallipolis &amp;
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
Development EOE
Me•gs County area Must
have 1·year blood draw
expenence
Contractor
-==H:e:lp=W:a:n:t:e:d==--==H:e:l:p:W:a::nt:e:d==;
Posrt1on
Ema11
Resume
to
,
phls 120dmr@portamedlc net

Heavy Equipment
Operator

iirunbq t:bnn -6ntttnd • Page 03

l..,l".o_Jfw&gt;
__w_MmJJ
__.IIho

Drivers N - :
Nursmg Asststant Classes
COL Dr•vers wtlllng to dnve Begtnnmg July 11tl1 thru
for local ready mtx-concrete July 27th, 2005 If you enpt
company Exper~ence 1s
elderly people and want to .
preferred but not necessary becotne a member of our
Dn11er must be willing to Oo t1ealth care t~am, please
pre-matnlenance on trucks stop
b~
Rockspnngs
&amp; equ1pment yard work &amp; Rehab1htat1on Center at
other mtscellaneous chores 38759 Aockspnngs Road
E•per\ence operatmg eqwp PomerO'J Oh1o 45769 and hll
ment &amp; extra skills such as out an applicatiOn for the
1 welding a plus
classes
CaU ( 3041937 _3410
Extendtcare
•
Health

Auction and Flea MarkeL ......................080
2323 Performance Pkwy
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories... ... .... ·...... · 760 ._ ___-lCol umlru•..:QH .4320.7.
Auto "Repair:-: ............................................... 7761 1
---·

145 Prince In opera

77 -diem

90

WYTHEVII,.LE VA

Northup

78 F"""'lasheep
80 A1ette1
82 Solidify
~e6

ALLIANCE

G&lt;tUrol:L~

1t0 -de grace
111 Boxers' locale
1t2 Spoken
113 Remove, '"pnntlng
115 r ned IO&lt; office
117 Tnumph
,
119 Reduce to pulp

' JOO l'lACEMENl
" ENROLLING NOW

TRACTOR TRAILER
T RAINING CENTERS

Y•Ril SALI:- .

106 Youthful suffix

"FiNANCING AVAILABLE

YARil SM F

96 Unadulterated

99 Chlldjsh outburst
101 Concern
103 Seaeagle
104 Rara105 Change tile decor

t1,,o·

2 male Pomeranlan/Spltz
mb: Good w1th chltdren, CCCU Youth Yard-Bake
needs good home Call Sale July 6th Harlford SceniC Htlls Nurs1ng Center
walch for s1gns
(740)388·0143
a Tandem Health Care
Fac11tty IS offermg CNA
c::---.,...-:-::~-.,...-,-- June301h July 1st 2nd 4th
Classes
6 week old Black Lab m1~r.:ed large 5 famtly everyth 1 n~
pupp~es free to good home lrom maternity cloth1ng to
BECOME A CNA FREE
CElli (749}367 0624
furmturfO! Tornado Ally 1ust
past Bashan Act 4th B\lery·
Now rs your chance to
Fl'ee k1t1ens ll"er tramed to thing lett 112 prtce
good home Call (740)441· c:-c:_~c.::_,:=~-- become a CNA and leave
1127
At t43 l si 2nd Jrd, the lmanca? to us• We w•ll
clothes glassware, lots or pay lor your state exams
provide m class tram tng
Free several truck toads of stuff, come see 9·5
f1rewood
Locust
oak, -~-~.:.cc=-- matenal and best ol all
maple. cherry yours for ~... o fomnio cal co kittens Prove yuunmtf w•u we W il l
removal \740)441-(1514
91 /2 wee~s old to good QNB you a iob 111
home 740·742·230 1
Apply now tor July &amp; August
Free Clothing household
YARD
SALE·
classesuJ
and m1sc 11ems Tables
Pr. PLEASANT
located on At 7 (Add1son)
F01 more mimmation please
between - Ant1que
&amp;
2 Famtly Yarl:l Sale At 62 contact us at
Marathon stores
South, July 2nd &amp; 3rd 9·4
- , . . . . - - - - -- watoh for stgns
AHn · Dianna Thompson
Male
2112 yr old Welsh

r

-

i.

r

l'mll';ROYIMIIJIJI.f.

Trailer \Ire found tn front of
Woll Garage acroSS from
H&amp;R Block (740)388·9061
around a OOpm

•

·•

\\.\1!1 \(I \I I \ I ...,

'COl TRAINING

mark (w1th tree marking
ACROSS
1 Grew wan
pamt) those trees to be sold.
6
Shut w1t11 IO&lt;ce
• Don't JUSt se ll to the first
10 Bum, 1n a way
person who comes along
15 Alstorante tare
20 Excuse
Advertise! It's usually best to
21 lnd13n of the
get at least three b1ds on your
"
soutnwest
22 W1ld exCitement
sale. Sell only to a buyer With
23 French painter
a proper tratning and a good
24 Saloo rtems
reputation When possible ,
• 25 Elderly
26 Pass100
use an Ohio Certified ·
27 Bring Into acco«l •
Loggmg Company.
28 Oolong IS OOe
.• Always protect yo'urself
29 Grolto
31 Lolly
with a good contract
33 Bottle part
Contract~can reduce mi sun·
35 Penods
derstandmgs and diSagree36 Got up
37 Roar
ments. A proper contract will
39 Cut down with an ax
also help to min1m1ze dam4t Go ashore
44 Rabbn
age to your propt;fy
45 -breve
Selling Umber JS a compli48 Ray flower
cated process Contact the
53 Steer clear of
64 Affectionale
County Extension ofhce for
55
New branch or bud
tact Sheet F-37 Gettmg the
57 Cut
Most Return F10m Your
58 Dam
59 Charge k1r riding
Timber S&lt;rie, also found on60 New Zealand panot
lme
at:
www ag .ohJO61 ' Do - others •
63 carpentry Item
state edu/-ohJOllne/for64Csase
f actli ndex htlnl ·
65 Wrtty rernall&lt;
66 Wherewithal
68 Wheal portiOn
70 Worl&lt;at

Tobacco Foundation_announces new programs
The
GALLIPOLIS
Southern Ohto Agncultura)
and
Comm unity
Development
Foundation
w1ll hold a 'senes of mformationa! meetmgs to announce
ns progmms fur 2005-06.
F1eid representatives will
• discuss grants ava1l.tble to
tobacco families for dJverSJficat1on pro,1ecr-. ' as well as

OSU EXTENSION AG SPECIALIST
GALLIA COUNTY

C LA S S I ' F I E D
4 · YARD SAl .f.·
.l.ito HfJ.PW.wrm

;

Dry ·pastures? Consider early weaned calv~s
BY ROBERT W. PAWELEK

S~uiit!n~da~y..,,.,.Ju.,.loioy..,3;;i.;,.,.2...oo
...s...,.--~!"'""'~~...;.Po~m~e~ro~y...•"!'M~iddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
~ ··
'Otr~b

Help Wanted

WANTED. Position available to
assist an indiv1dual with mental
retardation m Meigs County. 28
hrs./wk: 2:30-Spm Mrfu, 2-6pm
WfTh/F. Must have high school
diploma/GED, valid driver's
hcense, three years good driving
t:Xptait:w.:t: auJ aJ~:yuate
automobile insurance . $7.25/hr.
Send resume to : Buckeye
Community Serv1ces, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline
for applicants: 7/8/05. Preemployment drug testing. Equal
Help Wanted

Attention job seekers and
employers! The Tri-County
Employment and Training
System of Lawrence, Jackson
and Gallia counties are one·stop
employment centers committed
to the complete assistance
of both job·
seekers and local employers
GALLIA COt:NTY
WORK
'
OPPORTUNITY
CENTER

Help Wanted .

Mmrdmr - Frrday
7·00 am ro 4 JO pm
(740) .J46-J21l

NII"-.IC: . T~/\NS?OiU
..::..::.::::..

5 Y STEM

DRIVERS-REGIONAL
**NEW PAY SCALE**

Home Weekends • Home Some Duri~g Week
EZ Pass/Pre Pass • 2,500-2,600 Miles Weekly
Excellent Benefits
•
1 Year Current E~perience
·
Online Transport Regional
We Say It- We Do It
Call 866-543-1235 Ext. 138 ..,
or apply online •
ww~.onlinetransport.com

JACKSON COUNT\
ONE-STOP
Munday, Fue~da),
Thu,-\day &amp; Frrday
. 8·00 am ttJ 4.30 pm
Wedne~day

7 OIF am ro S 30 pm
(740) lR6-4/RI

LAWREN'fE
CO\INTY
WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT
RESO URCE CENTER
~

Munday . Frrday
R·OO.um to 4 Wpm.
!U0)5.!l- J/.JO

..

•

I

'\I

�•

"'
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, -QH • pt.'Pleasant, '!IV

r~

HOIIIEl;

r

FOR SALE

TURNED DOWN 0!1

Country Home-10 acres two
bedroom· one bath-garageaclgas furnace 2 mile from
Hartford Slid1ng H1ll Creek
Road 4B 000
304·882·
2491

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

1-888 582 3345.
I&lt; I \I I " I \ II

New
Haven Beautiful
Neighborhood 3 4BR FA
w!FP 2BA DR LA V1ew on
$29 900 6 rooms 3 BR Net www orvb com or tall
home, 2 car garage 69 t304)8B2 3368
askmg
Burnett Ad (7 40)446 7684
or (304)744 0173
108
Leg1on
, Terrace
Pomeroy Oh1o Aanch type
house good shape beaut•
lui rver v1aw 2 bedroDm
home w1lh hardwood floors
ce•hng fans !~repla ce bu1lt
111 eqUipoed k Iehan w1th
nook Full basement wid
hookup 1/2 bath and
garage 3·year-old root
Pnc~
reduced $44 500
(7401992 5502

Newly Remodeled 213BR, t
112 BA H.1!_rdwood Ceram1c
Fln()rs !11 11 Basement 1 Car
atlached Garage Deck &amp;
Large Fenced Backya rd
~B 500 (859)797 9806 or
(3041675 2036

No Down Payment Poss1ble
1900 square It house 3
bedroom 2 bath full base
menl new heal pump sets
on 3 acres SA 7 Eastern
School D1Sir1CI (7 40 )985
3 bedrod m Ranch 2 car 4321
garage m ground pool
$90 000 Call (7401256
NO DOWN PAYMENT 3 br
1962
2 1/2 balhs large 2 car
3 bodrbom 2 bath Ranch garage
In M•ddleport
style housa newly remod Relocating Call (740)992
eled f3idwell area $69 000 9799 Leave message
Call (740) 441 1528 or
(740)709 5952 after 4pm
Rental Properties tor sala
3 Bedroom 1 112 Baths Trailer and Garage Apt
Fam•ly Room , Ommg Room • Mason on 4th Ave House on
Full Basement Storage Mad son Ave PI Pleasant
Bldg Garage New Cen tral House Roush Ferrell lane
112 Pt Pleasant Four Vacant
Air New Wmdows
Pleasant St (304)675 4034 lots m Mason Counly
{304)675 1911 or {304)593
3BA 1 112 bath Ranch 2 car 2096
garage m ground pool
Green
school
d stnct
(740)446 1619 lor photos &amp; A
l
Ch h
more
mtormatlon• oush
ana
es Ire
htlp /lwww geoqli8s com/bs Baaut•lu l 3 bedroom formal
thompsoo1321
~
d1mng room Oak kitchen
Oak lloors ca rpeted Sun
2
1/3
baths
3BR t BA Ranch style room
house located 6 m1les past $117 000 (7 401367 76 15
Holzer hosp11a1 on Rl t60
(7401388 9263

2 br 2 ba 1 I acre Eckard
Chapel Road R\2 N 6 m1ies
from Pt Pleasan t 304 675
. 1757

4 bedroom 3 bath b• leYel
homa country setlmg large
decK/pat o Sitting on aprox
10 acres FA LA DR &amp;
~I t ch en
$120 ODD
(7401742 3142
403 Sprrn g Ave Pomeroy
Ohlo One tam1ly home tor
80 years St1ll like new 3
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths 2 car
garage $50 000 740 992
2426
8 room house n GalllpoiJs
Needs work
S29 500
(740)441 1078 Of (74D)446
Attention!
l ocal co[Tlpany offenng ~ NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
g•ams lor you to buy your
horne 1nstead of rent ng
• 100% t1nancmg
• LElss lhan perfect cred•t
accepted _ _
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Locators
Mortgag e
(740(367 0000

Al1 real •tate advertising

In 11\la newspaper Ia
aublect to the Federal
Fialr Houaing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise ' any
preter8nca, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon tMted on
race ~;olor raltglon sex
familial stalus or national
origin, or any lntel)tlon to
make any such
preference !Jmjtation or
-d•s.c~•rn~cn

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
..tate which lain
violation of tt'le law Our
ruders are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

V1ew photos/info online
% Down• 3 bedroom 1

4 bath UR D/R FIR
ar garage lenced m
ack yard 112 acre
lOse to tOwn $132 500
ode 4505 rr call
740)446 8325
t sa Stealll 4 bedroom
bath 2 car garage
ew Haven WV Oode
505 or ,call (304)8B2
368

MOIIJLE H~t~
tUII SAl£
12x50

1988 flme Ridge

mobile home Good co nd1·
liOn all electnc 2 bedroom
1 bath ma,or appliances
ncludetd $7 300 Present lot
available lo rent $150
monthly (740)446·2796 or
(740)388 9687
Clayton 1995 3 bed
room 2 Full Bath 2 Dec~s
Heat Pump Appliances
Washer &amp; Dryer Bhnds
Bwll 1n Hutch Out Building
$20 000 OBO !3041593
6437
14~~:70

1988 Redman Riverview
Good cond I on' ,14x70 2
bedroom 1 1/2 bath all
ele{::lnc central aur and
mator kitchen appliances
ncluded Must move 58 500
(7401256· t 328

R

1 8QO Cb11tnut Slrul.
Gellloolle, OH
3 Bdrm 1 bath a~r WID
1'1ookup refr.dg &amp; slave

2 BA house located •n town
$400 month plus deposit No
pets reference ]equlred
Call
(740)441 -0110 or
(740)9925174 ask for Jay

Doublew1de In excellent con
d ton w1th
unattached
garage fenc ed yard lot -----~--­
Included Price negohable New never liVed 1n extreme
(740) 441 1715
ly enwonmentally frendly 2
bedroom 1 5 bath house
Great 2000 Fleetwood 2 1186 SA 141 Centra.t heat &amp;
bedroom w1th full delivery a1r COOdlliomng utility room
se t up and central a•r Call garage No 1ns1de pets
$500/deposlt $500/month
Russ (740)385 2434
(7401446 0666
Auction

"Bank Stock"
20 shares of Home Nattonal
Bank Stock

"Misc."
Alum ladde r, mt sc hand t ool s,
Brothers t y pewnter , atr walker
hospttal bed , boo k s, lots &amp; lots of

Auction

new 1111 Sc
B ernard Fultz-Executor
Case # 2005 I 035

10 ~00

AM

Dan Smith-Aucti1meer
OH#I3449
Christopher Cottriii-Apprentice
OH#0096 •
Cash

AtfLIW!Ieer ~ Not t!

Sw( k

1n ~

1519

room aparlments at VIllage
Manor • and
R1vers1de
Apar tnwnts 1n Middleport
From 5'295·$444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housmg
Opportunities
Large 1 Bedroom Apartment
for
Aenl
$425/month
U!ililles Included (304)67~·
5819
"- - - - - - - - : North 3rd Middleport
bedroom rurmshed-apt pre·
v1ous rental reference dep r..
no pets 740·992·0165
V
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now tak1ng ApplicatiOns
ior 2BA 3BR &amp; 4BR
ApphcahOns are · taken
Monday thru Friday lrom
9 00 AM -4 PM Off1ca Is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dr~ve Po1nt Pleasant WV
Phon e No IS (304)6755806EHO
Auction

EVENING AUCTION
59766 Mi

Ohve Road , Vmton County, M c Arthur, OH
Thursday, july

7, 5 00 p m

DIRECTIONS Rt 50 west of M cArthur tum un Mt Ohve Road, go 1 5
m1les tu hou s~ un left wa tch for stgn!'&gt;

EQUIPMENT Fa r mall H Tractor (restored) 14 ft dur~l axle tr :u ler
frame Poulan Pro rear tme rototdler (used very little) 1 pt potato plow,
v.alk behmd poto:tto plow, hors~ drawn Internat tonal H arvester ~1ckle
bar mowe r horse d rawn dump rake corn p lanter, Oli ver cultivatur hay
rake drag h11rrov. Sth wheel h1tch hay wagon 3 pt bO()m hft, 3 pt 2 14
mt.:h plows old Dav1d Bradley walk behmd mown, Wheel chm r ramp
""/elec tnc hydr.1u hL lift for fu!l s1ze va n 1

TOOLS 6 ft &amp; 8 ft flbergli1sS' step lo:tdders law n fert1hzer cart bolt
cu tter engme ~timd 2 wheel barrow ~ electn c edgt-r btrd ft'eders,
mflatablt&gt; b"oat mdoor plant growmg ra ck
ANTIQUES children s mmmtme " Little Sw ecthLtH t Wolvenne battery
washmg machmt: and Kaya nee Sew Master sew 1n g machme oak
secretary w I glass dc.oor ce da r ""ard mbe tlld p&lt;~ t chw ork quilt, Cola
Coolt r old lndws hnb &amp; p u rs~ s, lots uf u1stume 1cwelr} box o f 1940s
dothmg 1940s vamty dresser w f l arge roun d mtrrur oak bookshe l ~ o~k
dresser 2 wood k1tchen storage cabmets, old flat wa ll ~.hnla LUpboard,
buffet Duncan Phyffe dmmg table, ilbrar ) table M.1)tng \\nnger
v.asher several crocKs &amp; 1ugs some glassware w mplete sel ( 16) wheat
pattern chma, tm bread box, cast 1ron kettle \o\ / hd Jron sk1llets kerosene
l amps old gloss Ct'thng l1ght fixt ures huskm g hi.Xlks croq uet set old
b&lt;1bV bed, old record playt&gt;r and lob ol o ld r(cord s (B1g Band era), 8
track t.lp~s bo)(eS of western books (LoUJe L mour) pr of buttnns, 4
.,.,ood fashm).!; lures (jane!'&gt; &amp; Bomb ~r) Underwnod manual typewnter
box of cookbo1)ks o ld camems, mm v.,; heels frnm mmum:- spreader
Suhm Motor 0 1l s1gn old L 1fe maga zmes 60s-80s Southeastern
(R1chmonda le) bnsketball progr ams, old~ Chtlhcothe phonl' books
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS Maytag washer and ga&gt; dryer Smger
portable sev.m g machme m1sLellaneou s dishes pots pa ns, small
k1tchen apfhances, wood dmette tab le &amp; 2 cha .rs metal student desk
double be( frame, OCL.l Sional chair!'&gt; 15+ afag,ms l ots uf t.:r aft supphes
several boxes ot books Chnstmas decoratums tn cl udtng tree color
wheel wmdov. mr cond1t10ner several boxl.'s of ct"r&lt;lm lc grt&gt;enwan• and
lots more

Owner. Karen Johnson
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER· John Patnck "Pat' Shendan
Apprentice Auctioneer: Kerry Shefldan Boyd

Auction

p •

1 l(tu''' ••rt"H't~&lt; ,,,

!

Rare 1 ql Dazey churn, 2 qt Dazey
churn, metal B qt
Dazey churn ,
candles1 1ck
telephone,
VIctrola
phonograph, m1n1ature Gnswold corn pan ,
mm tatu re sad tron , Santa door stop,
and~rons, baskets , ·Wind up t o y s cherry
seeders, old cameras, large cast 1ron
ashtray/sktllet, h s hmg lures , very old
m1n1a1ure lqom , s pace shuttle lunch box,
Jewelry, lighters , watch fobs Jocks wood
planes cast tron corn pans, Vtctonan
photos, wooden da1ry crai e, m1lk bottles ,
marbl es , •exhtbltton baseball c ards ,
Whistles pocket kn1ves , wr1st watches,
pocket watches , tobacco t1ns, oJd keys,
poht1cal buttons sad 1rons old books, old
bottles, c1garette cards, old microscopes
medals, old eoms, carb tde m1ners lamps,
Fenton glass , toy Mustang lnct1on car m
box, adv trade cards , old hats, ratlroa d
s tgnal lamp, ratlroad lantern, shtps
lante rns trunks, p1pes, stra1ght razors ,
pedal cars, ntce floor la mp, old clock s,
stoneware, lraternal tewelry, desk lamp ,
tO ¥S cars , coflee gnnders, toba cco
baseball cards, ICB c ream scoops, model
BB Da1sy nile, Gnff 1n pedestals, f olk art
carved p 1pe, cast ~ran sktllets, coal bucket
&amp; shovel, arrowheads, buttons surveyors
scope m- box, cap guns, advert1s1ng tins,
old eyeglasses sheet mus1c, candle
holders, cast tro n cham removal tool,
lnd1an malden IR bubble glass frame,
framed tobacco advertiSing co"ee tins,
pottery Hull art, o ld com1 c books, belt
buckles, paperweights, melal banks, old
Borden s Elste the Cow double s1oed s1gn,
old phone box c hlldrens books , snow
globe/mus1c box, art deco mov1e cameras,
"Dianna the Huntress old bronze &amp; marble
grouptng", very old framed GAHS
basketball player, m etal banks, postcards,
ol~ metal doll bed, flu e cover w1th pa1nted
cowboy, cast 1ron gnddle, Roycroft arts &amp;
cra fts tug, R oyc roft b ooks, models, cow
bells mov1e lobby cards, other m1sc 1tems

tl11261
tm5344
t115283

Country stors 1tems of spec1a l mterest
Store Jars - Lance , Gordons &amp; Planters,
Coca Cola crate (Parkersburg, W Va ) ,
thsrmometers
36" Ma11 Pouch , Pepsi
Cola, F J Beasley M1llmg &amp; Gro cery
(Athens, Oh10) F~rst Nat1onal Bank of
Gall1p0l1s, Oh1o All Star Da1ry Foods
c lock, Vernors G1nger A la S1gn, framed
cou ntry store pnnts wooden cracker ~ox
from Toledo , Oh 1o

t507338

These ttems are available at the Ohio Valley Bank Anryex, 143 3rd Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH on lhe date and ttme spectfied above Sold to the htghest •

&amp; may be

AUCTIONEER ; LESLIE A. LEMLEY
74D-388-81t5

OVB reserves

CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE
www.lemleysauctlon.com
Not re8ponalbte For Accidents or Lost Property

prior

CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK

t

A~too al1on

Ema1l ShamrockAuction®aot com
WEB• www shamrock·auchons.com
PH . 740.592-4310 or 800-119·9122

Auction

Auction

Auction

'

Consignment Auction
At The Haley Family Farm
583 Fairview Rd. Bidweii,OH
Take US 35 approx 10 m1les west of Gall1pol•s and 5 miles east of R1o
Grande to 650 I Rodney Ptke Extt Proceed north thru 4 way Stop
Fa1rv1ew Ad ts approx 112 mtle on left 1/2 mtle to auct1on stte on left
We Are Taking Consignments of
farm equipment, lawn

&amp;

Tara

Townhouse .-.mana

Apartmenta, Very Spacious
2 Btdrooma C/A 1 112
Both. Adu~ Pool '&amp; Baby
Pool l'atlo Start $385/Mo
No Pe ts
Lease Plus
Security Dtpoalt ReQuired
(74014-46-3481
- - - - - - - -'TWin Alvere Tower I&amp; accept
lng applications for wa1tlng
llst for Hud-subsized 1· br
~partment call 675 6679
EHO

;D~Is~
h~R~oc--.~
.~-.r~&amp;~B-o_x_l_or

Sale e.~~:cellent condition
Valley Apartments 1n Mason 525 00 (304)937 3348 call
WV currently accept1ng attar 5pm
applications App ly at 501
Shawnee Tra il In Pomt Fiberglass popup camper
Pleasant
Applications sleeps ;4 $1 BOO 3 Dog Frick
accepted on Tue sday&amp; sawm111 With gas power un~t
HUD assisted
(304)675· $4 000 medal cante racks
4900
$75 h.aywagons 5 )on &amp; B
l:i:ir--~--~...:., ton manure spreade r
SPACE
3011 100 medal greer:!~l9~ijB
__
FOR RENT
w11tl furnace $2 000 green
house furnaces &amp; supplies
Downtown OHice Space 5 wculat1ng tans $50 Phone
room suite $650/mo 1 room (740)949·2115 1f not at
off1ce- $225/mo 2 room home leave your phone
suite $250/mo Secunty number
deposit reqwred You pay -;:-:-~:--:---­
uhhtles All spa~e s very mce Gravely Super Conve duel
Elevator Call (740)446·3644 wheels 4ft blade complete
fol appo 1ntment
rebuild
electnc stsrter
$1500 00 OBO Lawn Boy
For Lease Ofhce or reta•l 21 men mower $85 00
spt&amp;ces in very good cond1 740 696 1227
t1on Downtown Gallipolis
Apprm{ 1600 sq ft each 1 Hobart meat sl cer set of
g1tal scales meat gr•nder
or 2 balhs Lease pr1c e d
p
. ._ negoti able to encourage epsl pop cooler wood d1s
new
cusmess
Call play or war~ tables
(740)446 4425 or 1"0)446 117401446 ' 7787
3936
JET

garden equipment,

tools, furniture etc.
Already Consigned
Both Tractors have been Restored and Run Good
Bll 16 Am1 sh bu11t portable ammal shelter, Massey Ferguson 3 bottom
plow one row cultiVator (both have three potnt httch) machete toolbox.
Bald\Ytn organ, 3 p1ece bedroom sutte, exerctse btke old metal food
g~ r level newer Whtrl Pool washer and dryer tread mtll &amp; other
exerctse eqUipment, push plow, rocker cradle rota t1ll er (needs cot I)
small atr tank tackle box Home L1te cha1 nsaw Black and Decker
rechargeable leaf blower 13 tnch It res stone crocks Ctgar box dnll bit
sharper
../
•
Oliver 60 Tractor, Farmall Super C Tractor

1999 Blazer 4lC4 LT original ;984 Bayllner 19ft Cuddy
owner 76K exc con d cabin VoiOJo Penta good
198.4 Aabbil GTt need&amp; loaded neYer In mud condition S3 500 (740)367
wo rk fast $900 1991 New $10 500 (304)458· l 002
0314
Yorker luJI power good
::-=-::::-::--:---:----.
51 100 (7401245 6014
1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4 2000 Bayllner 21 ft cuddy w/
good condition loaded new traile r many extras Y&amp;ry
198~ Pontiac Trans-Am tires
As~ l ng
$11 000, clean 304 675 5563
5apd 305 H 0 only 55 000 (7401441 0658 or (7401709 95 KawaSaKI ST750 et-skl
1
miles vlPer blue t tops 1931
3 seater "with trailer vests,
HOMEGROWN GROWN
e~~:ce llent shepe (740)446
sKI rope/s~s Excellent con
' GARDEN VEGETABLES
0350
2001 Ford Exp lo rer 4K4 dillon $ 1 800 (7 40)446
Loaded recently deta led 8124
~
Available et McKean Farm 1995
Buck
Century
59 000 m11es new 11res
on
Cente nary
Road Custom 1 owner 48 000
, 12 000
(7401256 6936
CAMJ'ERS&amp;
m11es auto air power w1n leave message
MaruM
Ho~ru;
I \11\1 ' l 1'1 '1 I I '
dows &amp; locks excellent con
.\ 11\1 ... 11)(1,
d1110n
$4 200
OBO
Chevy 1989 short bed step 1999-·Trall Lite Bantam
(740136'7·7623 or (7401339
Side ortg owner $3 0 ~ 9 00 Flyer Excellent con d t1on
2227
FARM
(740)992 5963
LQaded Must see 740
EQUII'MENT
1995 Ford T Bird LX V8
VANS
949 2709 $8 000
Sunroof r.ellrhon~ Frcnt
i0.._.J 1 98 Jayco Eagle 3011 51h
0% F1xed Rate up to 36 Bumper cover &amp; Hood Bra ~---FiiOiiiRiiSiiiAiiili.E
wheel with slide out
months on New John Deere loos Great Runs Great -,
cond1t1on
Compact Tractors &amp; 110 TLB $5 0001080 (304(593 6437 1984 Chevy van Old Bell Excellent
AMan11c van 99 000 m11es (7401446 3505
at Carmichael Eqwpment
(7401446·24' 2
1996 Chryslar Concorde LX $800 00 or bast otte r 740 Coleman Campmg Tra11e1
949 2025
101 000 miles excellent
12FT 2 Kmg Beds $4 995
400. Case tractor gas_. con dlt1on
$3 250
Ca ll
call
fo r Deta1ls (304)675
1995GMC Convan At
$2500 175 Massey d1esel (740)245·9254 after 5pm
1731
condition
low
m1tes
Must
$5 000 New Holland 488

t

1999 Chev.y Metro 4 dr 4 see to appreciate A bargam
cyt 76 000 m1les $3 000 $9 995 Also Walk1ng Horse
Saddle Bnd le (304 )675
OBO Call (7401441-0712
8175
2000 Ford Taurus 70 000
m1les $7 6DO (740)742 96 Ford Wlndstar Powe r
Windows
power locks
3405
7 K1ng CutUer f1n1sh mower
cruise. rear A/9 160 000
new blades &amp; new double- 200 1 Black Mustang V 6 m1les $2 600 (740)256
bell (7401992 5963 $695
$85DO F1rm (740)742-0502 B152
nice
clean tar runs greatl
lmgat1on system will covor
2'5 acres 3 PTO pump 304 2dr 2001 Dodge Stratus
937 2805
One owner like new Fearl
haybme
$1 500
New
Holland 477
haybme
$1 000 MF 35 gas $3 250
Ford 801 gas $3 500
MJISUbiShl MS090 Trackhoe
$12 500 (740)696 0358

r
r

ranges a r cond11toners and Call 740 245 5121
wnnger washers Will do
PETs
repairs on major brands m
I''OR SAl F
shop or at your home
~~--------J
female Pekmgese AK"
Used Furniture Store 13D 1
"f
B 1 11 p k w h
d
sable wlblack mask, 6 wks
u av• e ' e as ers ry old
Ador able'
$300
ers refr igerators., ranges
mattresses dresser coucl'1 (740)446 1000 leave mes
es dinettes rechners gra\1'8 sage
monuments much more - - - - - . , . . - - - (740)446 4782 Gall pohs 8 reg•stered Labrador pupp1es wormed &amp; I rst shots 5
OH Hrs 11·3 (M S)
blacks $ 150each 3yellows
Wh.rlpool washer &amp; dryer S20q each ca ll (740)247
Call (740)446 4536
2117
Basset Hound puppies
Shots wormed parents on
~
premtse
$300
each
(7401256
6887
Buy or sell
A1venne
Ant1ques 11 24 East Ma•n AKC German Sl'lepl'1erds
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 74D Pups &amp; Adults
992 2526 Ru ss Moore 1 Black &amp; Tan L1Her
owner
1 Solid Black Lttter
MERCHANDISE
~-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-r
2 cemetery lots located 1n
Mound H1ll Cemetery m
Holzer 1 additiOns r~vers•de
$575/each (740)446 3565
2002 Cadillac Dev1lle w/war
ranty
520 500
1996
Dutchman crank up camper
Air king &amp; qu een beds
$3 350 2 cyl dmsel tractor
hog
S3 800
w/brush
(7401367 0\06

1997 Dodge Dakota SLTV6
2 Wheel Drive
72 000 m1les (304)593 161 -'
2000 GMC 314 ton p ck up
$1D 200 call
Clarence
Gcble (740)992 1108 If no
answer teave message
2004 Ford F 150 Supercrew
4~~:4 FX4 oil road package
5 4 VB 6 CD changer run
mng boards power every11'1 1ng Tonneau cover tow
package 27 000 miles
excalle nt yond•hon N A D A
Book Value $30 375 sell lor
$28 900 (7401446 8217

r

4x4
FoKSALE

In Memory

2 m n•ature b"'n..' Donkeys
.....,
Mare n1ce pets (7401446·
7787
--,.-----..,--Ask about our AQ HA
Member D1scoums on new

\Ill' I '

I ' ,,

Our Beaullful L1ttle Angel
cJ(alhJa !lJa111n 9Ta11iJ
5/51o4'- 7/1/04
A year ago loda) God called )OU home He
needed another Angel. Such a beaultful one.
As )OUr lillie body
shutting down, a b1g
smtle crossed your ltny hps.

•a•

We knoM one thmg for sure. God was calhng
your name. My htlle Angd your comtng home
You're m no more palo, there's no more tubes
Your hltle body ts now new, made
to Goo's glory,
Till we meet agnm.just wanted to tell you we
n"itss vou and luve vuu but we meet
•
you ag3in soon

·n

chtna set (servtce for t2)
Household &amp; Furniture
Almost new leather recl1ne w/ heat &amp; massage kttchen table w/cha~rs
lift chatr GE refrigerator Tappan gas stove pots &amp; pans 2 3 pteca
bedrooms suites, lamps Newer 32 1n RCA TV, Panasonlc DVDICO
Player( almost new) kttch~n ware, several ktlchen gadgets In bo)(es,
· coffee maker, Sharp Mtc rowave, step stool desk. trontng board tron
Kenmore Vacuum clea ner rechargeable vacuum lamps
_
Tools
Poulan cham saw Taro leaf blo wer, cordless electrtc weed eater
screwdnvers wrenches small propane torch measuring tapes
alumtnum a nd wood step ladders
Collectibles
Poc ~et kmves, old Oh1o Valley Bank bn tte clips brooch, 1980 people
of Gallla County Book Galha County Year BooRs 1960· 1963. 1928·1929
Ga llla Ac ademy Hand Babk O ld life magazines older Radt o Flyer

Alan K. Haley Auctioneer
Pictures at www. haleyaucllons .com

' Brt run Mof1lllll tm(/ /)I'. \hnktmf ~{udw tmd rhe

and If a}] 11! Piw1w11 Hi! It'\ Hoyural A
wl rhcmk. 1 111 l'cnr or t\lftt:.d Ho lft1 \ fi)r h11
f/11110/t/1~ IHJ11/1 flllc/ 1101/1/c 1[11/~tf\Ut' nw11/0 /0
Knu ~h1m 1n ;1m/ U rill 1 f w1t' wl lfrmu fi" rllt'rr
IHif'lul pm)1 1111111ai11 1111Tamt' A lt n ~ fH.Ital
~{Jfl

limn A You w m ol! t lf'f'rFil lllfl d

1om

fJwlhl m Wid 11111111/ll ) u/1 r k 1/U/IIt
111//

~I I

II

t'n

and

MW!j lt!

I I lllfWIIII

o!u r11 1 lu ruut: mh( ({; d

Thank You
The 1-atmlv r~fJ-Iuyd E Amkery

Real Estate

Shop the
Classifieds!

" The
Ohio
Valley
Christian
School ,
loeatad at 455 3rd
Avenue In Gallipolis,
Ohio has requested a
nonpubllc
school
charter lrom the Ohio
Deparlmonl
of
Education " Any pereons having know!·
edge of racial dlscrlmlnalory practices In
tha recruitment of stu·
dents,
admissions,
employment, scholar·
ships/
loans/
leo
waivers, educational
programs, or athletics/
eKtracurrlcular activities should contact
the Ohio Department
of
Etlucatlon,
Procedurltl
Salaguards, 25 South
Front
Street,
2nd
Floor, Mall Stop 204,
Columbus ,
Ohio
432t5, (614) 466·2650
Juno t9, 26, July 3, 10,
2005
Real Estate

Real Estate

JfOMfSTE5t:D rJJT/J{V
REAL ESTATE SERVICES
205 FIFTH STREET NEW HAVEN WV
Telephone 304-882·2405
OVERLOOKING
THE
GO~F
COURSE- Neat we ll matntatned 3 BR
house family roo m built tn breakfast
nook cen tral 01r garage hot tub
RIVER FRONTAGE- Approx 2 acr es
on the Ohto r over 3 BR house wtth
family room and de ck overlooking the
r Jver . p•cn1c shelter w ot h water &amp;
electr•c Call for details
I

SPECTACULAR R1ver Vtew fro m the
drn ong room and deck of thts 4 BR
house 2 5 baths family room . garage,
central atr and other extras
IN GROUND POOL- 3 BR ranch well
ma1n t a1ned
remodeled ki t c hen
sunroom garage central aor $74 900

G)

·--

O~PO RT UI'tlrv

CAROLYN THORNE, Broker 882-2447
SANDY ELIAS- 882·2221
TERRI OLIVER- 882-2890

Real Estate

Real Estate

See how easy the Riverdale stall can
make home ownership
pen for you!

Grandma and Grandpa

ONLY $299/mo*
In Memory

4 B.A. 2 Bath
sectional Home

In Memory

!tm \1 Sham'

11 f1o

1he dm to '' Of'
anti tt'fint and tt lllt'lllhl' ! fum
II\ hu 11 12 'wn 1/IIU wu hfl lhn

rlu\

1\

ea rrh. 5/ume Emil 'uu rmJul\ 2, 1;.to
luu It lot rlua tmft~l tim wui lt&gt;mtmhn
Rummbtr w1u !&gt; milt \0 111 ltd lwu
'ow blllt' t 'e\ wul oil rllt ~o(){/lf1m ' I
!lin tmlm m n•memlntmt t ' " tlw r
fuuuh 11 til \top tlllcl ll11nk oj wu
wulnlurl a/owl jtund \Oi l 11 ert ft.h
lwp( 11 that tht' Hti/1U il l Jm~tl \mt hw
H til hotel wu 111 tht' ll ht•m 11/mt&gt;W! t Ltt
111111

II '.

\filii

t l rn um 111111k11r11

LAFI(;it::: .Sr:::Lr:::C,:TION
Pa ymen t l 1gu re d on lot ready s1te landll10me mortgage
30 Yr at 6 5% f1xed APR 20% eq u1ty wlapproved cred1t

\0/1111 11 1 {otRt&gt;l

IVERDALE

•• Jwr llapp( li t d and n /n n lwppt 11ed
711t H ' me It \\Oil' /o he lemnd/1t hen a
\01111 ~ f ll, Hill dtt'f w fl(l l,' lt all\ Not 11

c/,n \

~:o e 1

IH rhm Dad and I tlm11 rhwk

of \ rm Y,m an

111

HOMES

mil hl!w t' (oil' I t' l w ud

H f (/f{ II lffl \till 01-:(//IJ

We 'it nd tmr /oJJe to yor1. llp above }~m are tmr guanlrau a11gei
,.~rom, Mom , Dad, Grandma, Arm/~, lhrcles Cortulls and Pnends

37121 Ho c ktng Dr
Logan . Oh1o

740·385·4367

The leader m affordable housmg

BULLETIN BOARD

R1o Grande H S

"

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Reumon

HELP WANTED

July 16, 2005

Bar Tender

Pot-Luck Meal- Noon

Send R esume

N ot location c hange

PO Box 303

Umvers•!Y of R1 o Grande

GallipOli S, OH 45631

Cafeteria· Lower Level
BASKET BINGO
July 7 6·30

CHICKEN BBO
Rac1ne Ftre Dept

00 a

m

Advanced ttckets.

Homemade Ice C ream and
desserts w1ll available

Call Jen Hoback 949-2169

Mare 1/4 Horse/Pony

July 4th, 2005

and the surrounding

Rutland Amencan Leg1on

communtty

11 years old- light brown
(Gtnger color) $650.00

(7 40)
(7 40)

Spec1al Door Pnzel

245-1984

Spec1al Door Pnzel

80
En1oy the holiday!
From your fnends at

Tope's Farniture
151 2nd Ave . Gallipolis

Open to employees

Monday,·
July 4th, 2005
Supresta U.S. LLC
Club Hou.se
12:00 untTI 6
•

BINGO

645-4848

people pay

$80 00

Lucky Ball

•

We have computers•
Doors open
Mol'\day

'

COMMUNITY
.
FUN DAY

Middleport Amencan Leg1on
Sponsored by Racine Youth League

Monday, July 4th
Serv1ng at 11

Come JOin the fun"

4 30

Food, Games, Pnzes

&amp; Wednesday

Car. Show

Everyone Welcome•

Trams set w/several cars
Other
New .n Bpx Super Nlntendo several n1ntenda gams, several v1deo
tapes and OVDs enclyopodta set, boxes ol books linens, Chnstmas
ttems stuHed an1mals cameras boxes of m1sc ttems radtos , 45
record player vases. lots of candles, baskets
'
Somelhlng For Every Onel
Still going throug~ things.

\t

lo"e and K1s11es

Consigned From Local Estate
Antlaues
Secretary's desk, corner cupboard cedar chest, Keystone Model A82
16 mm projector, several16 miJ1 ta.po reels, 1920-1930's era baby
carnage Grunow Teled1al tombstone type radto, GE vacuum cleaner. 3
ptece bedroom su tl e (rope/pineapple dostgn) end table phone table,

W/1711916 511412005
oulti !rke ro e.rtemi a .wu t're thw1k wu ro Q/1
llho helped rhrouf&lt;h rhe li!m.'~J &lt;md /on of r:mr '
belo 1ed huJband fiuher. Rrmulfmlu r mrd greur
J&lt;rmrd(athe r.'-TiumAI 10 Vrt man\ fnelrd\ jmml\ and
BrJJfa maken ( 011 or~t n }or rh( f1m\ en {nod
c c11ri~ 11111.1 ctnd phom 1oli.1 Tlumk \'"' 1t1 Dr.

w,.

Mommy and Daddy

Frn wnmu

John Deere A1d ng Mowers
vet checked &amp; shots
startmg at $1 399 F1nancmg
(3041937·2310
aOJe table subJect to John
www trlstalek 9 com
Deere Credit approval Your
payments
could be as low
For Sale Chocolate Lab
Pups $200 00 740 992 as $39 month w•lh $0 down
Carmic hael
Equ ipment
6227
(7401446 24 12
Golden Retawer puppms
AKC 1st shot &amp; wormed Zero Turn Z Trak Mowers
$200 00
POP 304 675 from John Deere available at
4 9%
11~~:ed
rate
Ira
3526
Carm chael Equipment With
Poodles one T1ny Toy black John Deere Credit approval
female Two brown standard ( 7401446 2412
www careq com
Poodles (740)441 9478

both Tractors have been restored and run.

Thank You
Flo1d rS/wm) Kmgen

t0-7-74 to 7-2·93

Horses tor sale Call lor
more mlormat1on (740)379
2584
t'

SAVINGS

3353-

In Memory

Card of Thank•

11111 It 1

on

IN MEMORY OF SHANE KEATLEY

John Deere Equipment
Carmichael
EqUipment
(740)446 2412

1\1' ,\

Get A Jump

Truck Camper AC TV - - - - - - - - Ante nna w1red for Cable
Pubhc Notice
li~e new $6 500 (304)675

In Memory

1998 Ranger 4x4 5 spd 3L
AM/FM cassette NC ott
road package new pa•nt
$5 500 OBO Call after
4 30pm (740)256 6257

LnL
... .,.,. •......_....

I

"--'----~---

white 3 o ve 42 OOOmlles
Call (850)543 4079

Speo1al Purch ase· John
Deere 702 B &amp; 10 Wheel
Rake s/ Jol'1n Deere D1sk
Mowers Call for pnce
Carmichael
Equ 1pment
(74D)446 2412
·

i

Slarcraft told up camper
A1r/heat Sink stove &amp; refng
erator steeps 4 Was $4 995
redu ced
10
$3 995
(7401446 2282 "

I

F404~=LW

AutomatJ~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1t1onal lifetime guar
antee Local references fu r
nlshed Establlsl'1ed 1975
Cell 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproofnw

I

r

AERATION MOTORS
Trailer lot 2 5 miles out
John Deere 10 It No Tit Drill
Nelghbornood Rd
Cal l Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In for
Rent
Carmichael
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
(740)448·1 685
EQ ulpmen1 (7401446·2412
800·537-9528
John Deere Commercial
WorKslte Products In Stock! I
NEW AND JJSED STEEL Compact Excavator 27C
Steel Beams Pipe Reba r 35D 500/Skld Steers 371
Looking lor house to rent For
Concrete
Ang le
328/Tractor
locally Mason or me1gs co Channel Flat Bar Stee l 320, 325
Loade r Backhoe 110TLB
call·-304·773·5600
Gratmg
For
Drams Check out our renta l rates
\ 111 ~ 1 II \\111"'1
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L Great Financing AvailableScrap Metals Open Monday Ca r m~ehae i
Equipment
HOUSEHOII&gt;
Tuesday Wednesday &amp; (740)446·2412
Gooo;
Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed
Th ursday
Saturday
&amp; Massey Fe rguson 250
Sunday
(740)446--7300
d1esel 6 bush hog 6 lin ish
Local Fraternity in despe'rate
need of donated working Pole Barn 3Dx50lC 10FT ng mower (740)446 4949
electric stove or relngeralor $6795 1nclui:les Pamted New 5003 5005 &amp; 5020
Please call Gr m (740)709- Metal
Free
Dehvery SeMs John Deere Utll•ty
1195
www nat10nw1depolebarns c Tractors @ 0°o l1xed/ 36
months l,Jsed Ut11ity Tractors
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark om (9371559 8385
C 4 9% Variable/ .60
Chapel Road Porter OhiO A1d1hg mower
Murray months
Carm•chael
(7401446·7444 1 877 830 W1zard i 1 Hp 30 1n cui
Eqwpmenl (740)446 2412
9162 Free Est•mates Easy S250 81 Ford F 100 V 8
fmanc •ng 90 days same as 2BBI $400 (7401992 7607 New John Deere Round
cash V sa/ Master Card
Balers @ 1 9% Fixed Rate
Dnve a I Itie save alot
Flnanc1ng for 48 Months or
BUILDING
New Model 457 Standard
Sut,m;
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Round Baler Only $13 250
Repa r 675·7388 For sale
cash Makes 4X5 Bale
re conditioned automatiC Block brick sewer p1pes
Ca rmichael
Equ ipment
washers &amp; dryers refr~gera windows lintels etc Claude
(7401446
24
12
tors gas and electnc Winters R1o Gra nde OH

MISCEU..ANEOllS

Card of Thanks

motel
type Shettle Puppy-AKC with
heaterJAC 9000 BTU w/dlg· pedigree
1st ehota
ltal controt1 $400 A.tao Beautifully marked sable &amp;
Lennox heat pump 3 51on white rnate $300 00 ftrm
great
shape
$200 740 698·9500
(7401245·0134

Anhque Haywood Wakefield
table &amp; cha•rs S600 good
condlt•on
Steel Jeep
wheels $tOQ (740)4466962

• Page 05

"'I In 14 I "'

4x4

i~---A•I'm-QU-1•:&lt;&gt;-_.J AKc

j)"' /) '

FRIDAY, JULY 8, 6·30 PM
AMVET'S BLDG. LIBERTY AVE,.
JUST OFF BURNETT RD , KANAUGA, OH

VARIOUS RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT TO BE SOLD

of sale

of Bank

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES AUCTION

tA70945
«166914
tA68878
t891344
ts47895

the nght to accepl/ re1ecl any and all b1ds , and w1lhdraw 1lems f ro m sale

requ1red No pets (740)446·

apt

$375/mo $30Q./deposll No pa1d NICe locat•on no pets
plus depos•t
pets water pd References $375/mo
(7401446
9442
needed Ph (740)441 0829
3 rooms &amp; bath all utilities
Two Bd mob1ie home $325
pa1d
Down st a~r s
919
a month $325 de~os1t year
Second AYe sUitable lor 1
lease no pets Located 1n
5295/mo (740)446 3945
Racine No calls after 9 00
74()-992·5039
BEAUTJFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood'
Dr ve from $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; moves Call
Equal
740·446·2568
Hous1ng Opportun~ly

Lemleys Auctwn

msan

038

Furnished upStai rS 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean ref &amp; dep

Washer/drye r hookup Wate r Grac1ous rtvmg 1 and 2 bed

Au rhon~~r

·The Oh1o Valley Bank wtll offer for sale by public aucUon the followtng items

losale Terms

bedroom

~u~p 'GtfM-~mtintl

FOR SALE

Licensed &amp; Bonded m Oh10 &amp; WV -Member of Oh1o &amp; Nahonal

Public Auction
July 9, 2005
10:00 a.m.

seen by calling lhe CollectiOn Department at1-888-441· 1

The 20 \lime\

\eil at 12 15 PM

Auction

Ohio Valley Bank.

btdder 'as-ts, where-ts' w1lhout expressed or 1mplied warranty

10

AI'AKIMmrs

TERMS C.1t;h nr Lhet.:k v. / po~1t 1V€' I D No Credi t Card s C hecks over
$1000 must ha\e bank aut honzatum of funds ,t ., ml able Food w1ll bl
avatl o:tblc Nut rcspnns1blt:&gt; fm loss or au.'adents

, or Jo \\ of Proper!\

Auction

CHEVROLET IMPALA
FORD F150 4x4 TRUCK
YAMAHA 400 KODIAC
FORD EXPLORER
FORD WINDSTAR
PONTIAC GRAND AM
KEYSTONE TRAVEL TRAILER
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
CHEVROLET C1500 TRUCK
GMCS104x4

ID

Not re.spomtble for aa tdent\

Announcements Day of Sale take pracedence aver all printed material
Drinks 6 Homemade Food Available · Rain or Shine · Bring Your Own Lawn
Chair and Enjoy The Day With Usl
Directions From Belpre Ohio, follow St Rt 7 S to caution light at Mlddlepon,
tum left, follow algns From Gallipolis Ohio, tallow St Rt 7(N to caution light
at Middlepart, turn right, follow signa From Athene Ohio, follow Rt 33,
St Rt 7, 1urn right, go lo caution light Follow stgns to South Fifth Street
JIM TAYLOR ·AUCTIONEER· 740-992-9553

Auction

Pos tltve

Refreshme nts

1-e.""''"

1998
1987

2 BR centrally located 10
min from town hospital and
power plants (74D)446
4234 or (7401208 7861

cab mets mt sc ltvmg room chatrs. two
couches lamp s, e nd &amp; coffee table s,
ste1eo, desk, tahl e, radarange, con sol e
TV. VCR. rock e r &amp; reclmers, c he st of
dr~wers, d1 s hcs. pots &amp; pans, &amp; llllen s
"Antique or Collector's Items"
:rable &amp; 6 ch.ttrs, 4 kttchen chatrs.
stand, c upboard, mantl e clock, dresser
set &amp; stone Jars

Blanket Chest Shelves Cane Rocker
Tables Wash Stand Record Cab1net 4 N1ce Oak Chars Full S•ze
Bed (Cannonball) Glass Front Hutch Beautiful 5 t1ered Corner Stand
wlbench Newer Queen Ann Style F1le Cabmet Sp1ce Box Wall Cabmet Small
Desk Bench Computer Desk Magaz1ne Racks Old Claw &amp; Ball Legged Stand
Secretary Morns Cna ~r Flip Top Hard Table (old) Full S•ze Beddmg Dressers Pat o
Furmlure
&amp; Garage Items Craftsman &amp; A1g d Hand Tools Numerous Tools &amp; Tool
{;'"'""'"""6"'-'0i"''""'"" C&gt;ro~or,;n 7 -1.14 SG'f/ B&amp; D Sander Craftsman Sabre
Charge Master Wagner Pamt Sprayer Rotary Tool Hardware Propane Heater
Wood Clamps Saw Horses Weed Torch Garden Tools

2000
2002
1999
2004
1996

2 bedroom AJC very n~ee
no pets m Gallipolis
(7401446 2003

freezer, metal w,trdrobe, me ta l

:;~~:~~~~ ~D:
tnmg Table w/cha~rs Leaves

1997
1997

electrtc Middleport $3.75
plus deposit {740)992·3194

"Household"

Carmva t Fenton Depression lmpenal (Just to
a few) Churns Crystal Ponery Nest ng Bowl Set Baner Bowls Tea Pols
Storage Jars N1ce Jadeite M1lk P1tcher Wedgewood Water Pilcher (Mended)
T Lena,; Fostona Cook1e Jars Holly D1shes F1gunnes Can1sters 011
P1ctures Small App\tancea Many Mirrors Ruga Btenkela &amp; Unens
Fans Cookware
Bresd Bo~~:es Lamps
-~t
I
1 Jones Stone Jars+ others 8+ 10 Gallon Crocks
1920 sTable Top RadiO Churns Post Cards Old Floor Modal Aad1o
1Vn;1aaoe"Baby Buggy Beautiful Ornate Wall M1rror Cooper Bo1ter 5 Quilts J Hoover
Farm Prmt 1800 s Ansoma Keyw1nd Mantle Clock Seth Thomas Key W1nd
P ewt~rware AssOrted Stoneware Buner Pals S1lver Can delabra ~ Trunk
Mantle part s 1 pc W Rogers Silver Servtce Wagner Beer Bo~e Crate s
Jw;;ll;aonst&gt;urg Pottery P1tcher Kraut Cutters Old Egg Scale Oak P cn•c Basket &amp;
Balokels. Lithographs (old) Sheet Mus1c Travelers 1116urance Prints
Lasp Old School Desk Cast lron tlems Tins Copper Bucket Records
·;~,;~~~~:Old Sled Keg Gas L1ght Old Coffee Grmder (out of old Rutland D Store}
lc
I Parasols &amp; P1cluras Boyds Doll &amp; Bears Curner &amp; lves Pnnls Dresser
Sp1ce Set Blue Danube Jar
.IEllllltllli'-LllAnllllUll!hll'llllll1li Hocker SectiOnal Enterta•nment Center Knock
Wall Cabmet Round Oak K•tchen Table Hoos1er Cabmet Oak Stands
11man''l. Flexsteel Sofa Arm Chair 01toman Ornate Old Parle Table Drum Table

2000

2

2 bedroom mobile home all N•ce 2 bedroom furn ished

Wlmlpool refngerator's, Gibson
wa sher, Hot Po mt dryer, 3 pc
bedroom s utl e, Fngtdatre upng ht

We have been commiSSioned to sell the household of Mr &amp; Mrs Parsons
ol S F1fth St of Middleport Ohto due to relocattng They are selling lhetr
t IS an e&gt;:tra ntce clean
home after many years of residency here
• sale To
to m1sst
wtll be
to sale stte

Au~tlon

2 bedroom apt In RiO
Mobile Home Lot only
2 Bedroom Mobile Home
$375/mon
Located
m Add• son P1ke S 125/month Grande $325 pl~s $325
Gallipolis
Ferry
Call call (740)446-3644 tor more deposit Call (740)245 9060
1nfo
(304)675 3423

Th1 s ts the estate at Howara D Nol a n
Located at the corner of college &amp;
May St m Syracuse , Oh\0 Watc h lor
a ucuon s tgn o n St Rt 12

1ncluded C1ty school $475
mo $400 depos11 no pets
Ref raqut red (304)675
2525

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt: Pleasant, WV

I

ESTATE AUCTION
Sat. Julv 9th, 2005
fO:OO A.M.

461 S Third St , Middleport, OH

Auction

r MoB~.::;;~ r M~~ ·j ..r_.~--REN·ml·rr"S~' r

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OLD GLORY AUCTION SERVICES

1

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Beecn Street Middleport 2
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L1st your home by calling
(7.0)418-3620

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Sunday, July 3, 2005

•

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Sunday, July 3, 2005

O'Dell Lumber
Open Sunday,
10 to
and July

4

Ju ~y

3

4
8-4

61 VIne, 446- 1276 Gallipolis

What will you fmd at Teens at Bethel?
Teenagers worsh lptng to Chrlst1an
music and listening to speakers talk
aboul loan Issues Youth groups
camping, praying and seeking God.
Pastors, youth loaders, community
leaders and parents reach ing out to
young people This all happens at the
Cross, at tha stage around campfires
and during the activities Camp or jo in
us for the day at the farm on Bethel
Road July 14. 15 &amp; 16 nckets on sale
now l Check out the schedule at
22 teensatbethel erg or call 1 666 668
• 4835 to get more detwls

BASKET BINGO
Gallipolis City Park

Monday, July 4 at
· 6:00pm
10 games $10
2 Spectal

games $5 each

7 40·645- 2571

To beneftt United Way

Joe Moore Apprentice

of Galha County

I

Smok1n Rob s
Stale Liquor Store
1525 Eastern Ave Next to P1zza Hut
Stop at Smok1n Robs for your
41h of Ju ly Party Supplo es
Ice Pop Beer W.n e L1qu or and
Tobacco needs
Coke 12 pk
$3 49
Peps• &amp; PeP,SI Products 12 pk
$2 99
24PkBud andBudl1
$14 99
24 M•llerl1te NR s
S16 99
24 Pk Miller Lite &amp; MGD
S14 99
24 Pk Natural L1ght
$9 99
Bush and Bush Lt 24 pk
$10 99
Smok1 n Robs 16 oz RYO
$12.49
Midnight Spec1at 6 oz AVO
$4 99
Bugler $2 00 off 6 oz can
$6 99
Gambler Tubes 200 ct
$1 59
R1zzla Tubes 200 cl
$1 69
SS Llttte C1gars cartM
$8 99
Kayak Snufl!Can
S 79
Skoal FC LW Wintergreen Roll $25 gg
Copenhagen
2 Cans for $5 49
Ulrge selec110n ol cold W•ne and Wme
Coolers
Open on July 41h 1 30 am 1o oo pm

Terms : Cash or Check wilD
Food Concession available.

'
'\,

•

Serenity House
'""'r'"' " vtcttms of domesttc
vtolence call 446-6752 or
1 -8 00-942-9577

ng Dawn #7
F&amp;AM
Past Mas ters 1n
M o n , July 4

FC
6

Degree
00 am

'

Breakfast to follow

�•

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PageD6

GARDENING
Wd~ blackbert·ies .are an ,a ptly natned 'bramble' crop

.iunbap ltm~:ienttnel ·

Sunday, July.3, 2005

'

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i

Bv DEAN fPSDICK
FOil AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Wild berries are ripening
across America and the race
is on among man and ani·mals, birds and insects, to see
who will get theirs first.
Blackberries are, the largest
and most recognizable of the
wild frui1s. They are easy
.
pickings from. thickets along
quiet roadsil)t:s, fr!Jm shrubs
in sunny meadows, growing
across mountain faces and
paralleling seashores from
Texas to British Columbia.
For people who respect
property rights, wild blackberries generally are free for
"the taking. But that doesn't
mean you won't pay a price if ·
you aren't wearing the proper
uniform - long•pants, long. sleeved shirt and boots. Be
· prepared ·for chigger and
mosquito bites, skin rashes
". from poison ivy or sting net~
ties, scratches and shredded
clothing from the thorny
canes and the potential for
Lyme · disease from infe~ted
deer ticks.
.
Despite all that, berries
have become the darlings of
the fresh fruit industry. says
Matt Ernst, , ;m extension
associate with the University
of Kentucky Departmeni of
Agricultural Economics. '
"Health benefits, particularly the antioxidant levels.
anq the fact that they just
plain taste good have con- ·
sumers of all ages eating
berries at unprecedented
rates,"
Ernst
says . .
·:Blackberries
especially
al&gt;peal to our sense of nos tal ~
g~a; many Americans still
remember picking wild
blackberries at some point in
their lifetime."
Aside from seeking blackberries in the wild. people are
growing them ' in their gardens, gathering them from

.

summers are long enough for and perhaps most enjoyable
the plants to mature.
of all, you can eat the berries
Having the new cultivars fresh, dappled with cream
available doesn't mean you. and sugar. Learn to ignore the·
can't transplant canes from a seeds.
,
favorite stand of wild plants.
Blackberries are delicate,
But that would come with however, and highly perishsotne large horticultural red able. Here are a few tips for
flags attached, not the least of preventing spoilage: ·
which are the threat pf dis• "Wait to do your picking
ease and the plant's irt'Vasive until the berries are ready to '
almosl fall off into your
tendencies.
"Cultivating and propagat- hand," says John Strang, a
ing wild blackberries is not fruit and vegetable crops
usually
recommended extension professor with
because of disease (and) the University of Kentuch
virus problems inherent to .· "If you pull a berry off the
wild stock," Ernst says. "In bush with some red in it, it
fact, it. is always recommend- will be pretty acidic. It will
ed that the home gardener or taste sour."
farmer eliminate nearby wild
• Pick blackberries in the
brambles before establishing mo~ning before the temperaa blackberry .or raspberry tures rise and while the fruit
planting . .
is still firm. Don't wash them
"Proper soil drainage and ·until juSt before they're
site preparation, as well as a served.
• The sooner berries are
trellis or other means of
allowing good · circulation to refrigerated, the longer
the canes, are also important they' ll last. "They're black;
for establishing blackber- they absorb sunlight very
AP Photo
ries."
quickly,"
Str,ang
says.
Wild blackberries are a delicious but delicate crop, a favorite food of man and animals. Pick
Training
plants
to
grow
on
"Unlike
many
other
garden
the berries as they ripen on the canes, soft to the touch and almost ready to fall into your hand.
trellises, walls and fences or ·. products, they won't get any
Berries with any red still in them are acidic and will taste tart. Leave them for another day.
row cropping the blackberry sweeter or riper once they're
commercial pick-your-own berries,
their
domestic Comanche and · Cheyenne patch also helps maintain off the bush. They're at their
operations or buying them cousins,. but there are some varieties (wit.h thorns); the some control. Blackberries highest quality when you
and are capable of growing 9 or pick them." ~
hand-harvested and fresh differences. Perhaps the easi- Apache, . Arapaho
• Spread the berries around
from , the field at farmer's . est way to tell them apart is ·.Ouachita, among others, I0 feet tall, · eventually
becoming an impenetrable in shallow, airtight containers
markets.
· • that
blackberries
when whic;h grow thornless.
of sharp,.thorny canes. so they aren't bruised or
tangle
The University of Arkansas
"Some Kentucky farmers picked come with a core
You
can
thin much of that crushed beneath their own
are planting and marketing attached while raspberries are introduced two hardy .new
plants this year for tempera- unwanted growth by rupning weight.
blackberries locally as an hollow.
alternati1;e crop in the wake
Plant breeders are building ture- sensitive areas, which a tiller between the rows, - - - - - - - - - On the Net:
of declining burley tobacco on what nature has so abun- up to now had limited the pruning the plants aggresFor more about growing
production.'' Ernst says.
dantly provided by producing spread of blackberry produc- sively or eliminating emerg·
blackberries
and raspbering
new
canes.
Ignore
them
at
tion.
Blackberry
plants
genMore than 2.000 different hardier varieties, larger and
ries,
see
the
University of
yqur
peril.
varieties of bl&lt;\ckberries are sweeter berries and friendlier erally don't fru\t until their
Agriculture
believed growing across the or thornless plants. "New cul- second year. Extreme cold -:Jt doesn't take many black- Arkansas
Division
Cooperative
plants
"
to
satisfy
an
.
berry
routinely
kills
unprotected
Norther!J
. Hemisphere . tivars relea ~ed by the
Loganberries
(a University Of Arkansas and tirst-year canes if they over- entire · family. Yields can Extension Web Site:
http://www.aragriculture.
range from one-half gallon 10
blackberry/raspberry hybrid), others over the past decade or winter in l)arsh conditions.
The new Prime Jan and two-and-one-half gallons per org/horticulture/fruits- .,
J?oysenberries, thimbleberries so have especially caught the
·
and marionberries are among eye of many producers and Prime Jim varieties produce plant. That makes for a lot of nuts/Blackberries.
the most con1mon of the wild the palate of many con- fruit in their first growing freezing and canning - fla- ,
You can contact Dean Fosdick
berry siblings . Blackberries sumers," Ernst says. That season, allowing blackberries · vorful jams and jellies, pies
and
cobblers.
Or,
simplest
at
deanfosdick@netscape.net.
to
be
gathered
anywhere
the
often are confused with rasp- includes the Cherokee.

-

.A-rose that is not loved?
·

.
thorny canes. As birds plantFOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
ed new seeds, multiflora rose
became an outlaw, banished
· The small white, · some- by law .in some st,ates.
· times pinkish, blossoms of
Multiflora rose has. admitwild multiflora roses, now tedly, been generous with iis
past, made the plants almost good genes. This rose laughs
likable. For the rest of the off cold and you won' t find its
summer, though, the plants stems, leaves, orflowers suiwill push their murderously lied by black spot, powdery
thorny stems skyward · and mildew, rose midge, or any of
.outward, seemingly not con- the other ills that plague those
tent until they have engulfed hybrid tea roses in your backthe whole planet.
yard. Multiflora rose is also a
Multiflora rose grows in so prolific bloomer, yielding
many places that it seems clusters of three dozen or
native. It's not. The plants more blooms. The plant even
. arrived from Asia a century blooms in partial shade.
· ' ago and were planted as
One botanical variety sports
windbreaks, as_ deiorative__double pink blo ss~ and
crash barriers for highway was grown by the Empress
median strips, and for erosion Josephine in her famous rose
control. Used as living fences garden at Malmaison .
to corral animals, the rose
With its long canes, reach-·.
was described as "horse high, ing up to 12 feet. multiflora
bull strong, and goat tight."
rose would be expected to be
In time, multiflora roses in the bloodline qf climbing
stalted tuniing up every- roses - and it is. First came
where as uninvited guests. the variety Dawson. in 1888,
Wild animals loveq the food but the , real breakthrough
and shelter provided by the came a few years · later. in

BY LEE REICH

·.

Plant breeders can be-in your backyard, too

. •
1893, when multiflora rose
mated with a dwarf China rose
to produce Crimson Rambler.
Crimson Rambler was the first
of many so-called rambling
roses that you now see trair)ed
along split rail fences.
·· For the past hundred-plus years, the name multiflora
rose has been popping up
among . the branches of the
family trees of many notable
roses,
S\JCh
as Trier,
Evangeline, and the ·ever-.:
popular American Pillar.
Multiflora ·rose even helps .
along weaker members of its
race by being used as a vigorous rootstock upon which to
graft other rose varieties. In
this case, you never get to see
the multiflora rose blossoms.
Multiflora rose is a plant to
-keep an eye on. Admire· the
blossoms .. but also glance at
n~glected comers of your
property. You'll likely find
multiflora rose seedlings trying
to establish. themselves there.
Don't be fooled by their youthful wispiness. It won't last.

•.

Bv DEAN FOSDICK

Horticultural Co. in West Germany
called
the
Chicago, Ill. "They may just "I,..eucanthemum Ice Star."
be out there doing a little The' long-blooming perennibackyard pollen dabbling . · al came to Ball by way of a
But it's people like that who Connecticut man wbo got a
are making a difference."
finder's fee for the tip. "He
And it's people like Carr was specifically looking for
who are charged with finding things of interest to us,"
them and then ensuring that Corr says.
the discovery is mutually
Then there's "Magilla," a
benefic~al. Ball is one of a ' red, white and green perilla
number of companies in the resembli~g a coleus. It was
business of breeding, pro- spotted by a Ball employee
ducing· and distributing orna- who .was traveling around
!Jiental plants worldwide. Japan. "A guy had it growing
The privately owned· Ball in his garden," Carr says.
Discoveries was created to · "(The employee) asked if the
link the parent company with grower would be interested in
. hobbyist plant breeders.
marketing it." •
"We may have formalized
Plant prospecting is a sub_our outreach ~it more than jective enterprise. Selection
has been prevalent in the lies entirely in the ·eye of the
past," Carr. says. "We can beholder. But Q.all wants
take something that someone something that. win give gar.~
has found in their garden in deners good value. The plant
Hoboken (N.J.) and sell it in also must provide _;;trong
South Africa. We ~an really color, from beginning of seagive it the light of day."
son to end. "Eye candy." Corr
Now growing on.a proper- says. "Jt, has to be visually
. ty near you is a white, dou- appealing. If it doesn't tum
hie-flowered Shasta daisy your head, it's probably not '
developed by a gardener In going to go anywhere.''

FOR APWEEKLY FEATURES

Conjure up an image of
the typica'l plant breeder
and you'll probably see in
your mind's eye a lab-coated scientist in a brightly lit
sterile room , 'llusily blowing pollen grains in one
direction or another.
You would be right, for
the most part; propagation
usually is done in a corporate setting.
But a surprising mimber .of
new plant varieties are making their way into your
flowerbeds courtesy of backyard breeders. These are peopie who _atiently and privately hybridize their way,
generation after generation,
toward longer-lived, more
brillian~ly . colored plants.
"Lots of people in this world
are interested in just one
plant: a delphinium or something. That's what they do for
entertainment," says Brian
Carr, new crops development
manager
for
Ball

· In the GaUipo_
lis Daily Tribun.e
••

·A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Your Baby s Name Here Ages newborn to f«)ur years old·. ·
,
·
·

, .

•

r---------------,
' your baby's
.
·
Simply. send

1Baby's Name

·I ·.

1phot.o graph along with the coupon

1Birth Date

IParents
!Address
Phone

~

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ID~lDV

Edition '05
~e published
, July.22 .,

Your Baby's
Ag~

Parents Names Here

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1 to

BA:.b~~o~~r.J~~~:~d~v~~ne
Gallipolis, OH 45631

· ·oeadlineforsub~~~o~,

the left with your payment of
$8.00, and ~~'II dQ the rest.

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I
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i~~ o~ l t11
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L~~d~~~~n~~:~~~~J
Mail or deliver to:

'

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~

Q: rib utt ~
;::::::::::;;.. ." ' ' ..,
-

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- - - - -

825 Third Ave. • Gallipolis, OH ,

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'·

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.

·.
.
A Specl•l

'

ment to:
•allipol ' aile 1tribunr
·tlaint t}ltiutant ltrgilttr
The Daily Sentinel
•

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