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                  <text>P•ge 8

.

e·•The O.lly SenUnet

,rtday, July , t, 1001

www.myd•llynnttnel.oom
Ill!DOI

NJ:A Cro••worcl Puule

PHILLIP

ALDIII

&lt;
'

TEMPO

BUSINESS

Mason County's

Tough time for
Buckeye Egg, Dl

markers, Cl

...

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6 J\Itl

Cool

tmes

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t A.ltU

hill"

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hn
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Water service
Interrupted In

• I

Overtrick

I

Pomeroy

Rcu\lcr~ uf lust hi·
duy·~ ~u lumn 111i11ht
rcmctnbut· 11 club suit

:I
. BARNEY

I.

•

•

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

. tteLt.O, !UP~eM~ GOU~T1 ••• 1$ IT
(.ONSTITUTIONAt. TO TA~e A
P~AYING MANTI$ TO . '-..._
"St40vi·ANP·
TeLt."1
•

TilE BOHN LOSEU

r
I
Bi&lt;!O\U~ .. ~TU5 ... eRiJ\U~. I COI-\INu .

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Tflt.Y :'11\'1' THE.
1-\t.('..(l.ING

I=&gt; n1e.
TO

similtu· t\l the unc in
tlKiny's diullrum. Lust
wuck 's itl~n. in 11 C\l ll·
· tl'11~ 1 of SIN 111Ht'Uit1p.
wus to duck the first
rmt11d ol' duhs to
111111rd lll!llinst 11 4· 0
brenk . Then. llt·dut-cr
would huvc 12 ~ul'o
trkks. costin11 only 11
pnltry 30·J&gt;oint overtrick If the duhs wt•rc
2·2 nd· l ullulong.
Now let's move h1
this UL'nl. llow would
you phm tho i&gt;lay in
three lllHt'uttll' nftcr
West hns let whut
)'\111 IIIIIY nsslltiiC to he
1111 huncst 1\Htl'th higltcst hcm·t three'/
As mcnlioncd lust
week, North's three·
duh rebid, wilh only
13 hil!h· ~urd points ,
w11s n!!l!rcssivc, but .
CELEBRITY CIPHER
nc~cptnlllc with eight
by LUll C1mpoa
prohuhl c pluyin~t ·
Ctltb!lly Clillltt Otyflloatll!ll lrt crtllld M C(UOIIIn Ill' IIIIIOUI
tricks. Sn11th bid whut
-'e, pae11no PftHril, IIO!IIttlllln lhl Olp/ler llendllolanolhlt.
'
Tocilty't CIW: 0 lqiMI/H
he .hOjlCd he cmtld
mukt!,
Al'lur winninJ:! with
"MCLUH
I'JTU
VCHU
I I' D •
dummy's hcnrt nee.
'"I
TI-l.~ €.'1'E.·
you cross to hnnd
C I V I'
J
DUJO
DUTCOIZIICH
with u dinmond und
~I C,f\T
lluy_ n clul~. West lhl·
I'JTU
PZJDIUK
I~ Tf\e:.
• • • ZI'UI
owtnlj. (tlvcn thut
!fiON'i:l!
1he hcurls nrc 4-4, do
IDII'ZIIHV .· C H U JHCZI'UD. "
you d11c k, scttli 1111 l'or
ZI'CL.JII
LJDOC
plus-41Kl whutcvet· I he
cluiJ spill, ot· du you
PRI!VIOUS SOLUTION - 'Onetln 1 w~lle 1'011 01n ~el l~own
pluy .clubs from the
thlllaht /lr\ lhl ltrlnQtll piiOIIII you look 11 It rlg~t. - Jerry
lOll, rlskin~ IWO Ul\•
Chror•
,
.
- ··
det•tt'ICkR II the clubs
urc 4-0. bul collecting
two overtricks if they
-;.l=ll-=-==-"'=\( nrc 2-2 m 3· 1'/
harra"oe lenora of tho
~
l~cmemh ct· thtn I he O fo"
ocrambled wardo be·
~m!'rt\JgvE~
chance
West's law Ia farm faur alm~le word1.
holding all four clubs/r-- - - - - - - - ,
"' WtNDV · D.A-Y
"T THii '"''R .
is only five percent f-...,.;N~V~H,......P_r-:EH..._-l
(hnlfof'thciOperccnt
1 11 1 1 1

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TI-l I t--1&lt;...

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JlJ(; NATE

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for mnthe·
uny 4·
l•robuhilit,l'
l split). Sn.

muttcully if you ul·
wuy s du~k In 1he pu-

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I'M GLAD t TOOK "((U TO
THE VET, SNOOP'(,,. I'LL
&amp;ET 'fOUR EAR FEELS &amp;ETTER
NOW, DOESN'T IT'?

iOAc.- ; ._ .. _
"' ,-,

THERE'S
STILL ONE ~IN6
I'D LIKE TO
I&lt;NOIIJ...

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M
~ • , ·...C...: I- - "' 1:..,::...._._..=.---'•::..JIU&lt;~
-

1,.1)1-lO INVENTED
FOXTAIL.S ?!

' ... ,. ,.,, ' ... ~ ' JULy 12 I·

S NAB I .
i-"l'.:::....;r:-:-T!r-;:........j

1-.

Wl!lt NtnL / 'tlf'tll"•

P

nl'ler sl!rvkc Is restored.

1

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I I I

trustees meet
Monday
CHESTER Chesler
Township Bonrd of Trustees
will hold tt sp.:dnlmeellng ut
H p.m. on Mnnduy ut the
C"hcst.:r Town Hull to
uppn:&gt;vc the 2003 unnuul bud·
get .

Gallipolis city
commission
to meet
GA LLIPOLIS
Oulllpo[ls C!ty Co mmission
will meet In spedul session ut
7
Tuesduy. The meetittll
wtll be held In the Munidpul
Cuurtmom, · 51!! Second
Avenue.
Included on the ugendu ure
emer~:~ency
resolutions .
ucccptlns chc reslgnutlon of
City Munitger E. V. Clurke Jr.
und uppoli1tlng Rober! D.
Oordon new city munuger.
\Scc t·elutlld story this PUJ:!C .)
Co mmissioners wifl ulso
heur second readings on on
ordinuncc
conceming
~hunl!CS inwnlng l'tll!Uiutlons
for Gulli polls.

r..m.

. Ruth Burnette, 87
Mar.1111ret Porter, 86
Hilda Rake 83 .
Audrey Arthur, 70

mired for ~u mc time muy
openly udmlt thnt Mhe hus
been fond of yuu u1 well. This
UNIO~iutlon IN ubuut tu bud
with ¥rout beauty,
I'ISCBS (Feb. 20-Murch
20) .. i\ dreudcd decision
mny huve to be mucic tuduy.
Once you du ""· however,
you 'II discover thut your .feun
were unfounded.
ARIES (Murch 21 -Aprll 19)
.. This i1 un c~eellcnt duy to
tuke cure ur jubt uround the
houu, Whut yuu do will not
only mend or clcun up the
urea, but It wi II udd urtlstry
und bc11uty to your·ubude.,,
TAURUS (April 20·w&amp;uy
20) ... Be MUre IU muke !OtnC
soelul plan~ with rrJcndA to·
duy, bccuu~e propitious devel·
upmcnta mux occur for yuu in
thl1 urcnu. ·Jt muy be unythln11
from u new rmnuncc to clos·
Ina u busincu deul.
OI!MJNI (Muy 21·June 20)
.. Tett your skills toouy In the
cullnnry urtt, or ut decorutlng.
ehun1in11 your ubodc or cmcr·.
tuinlna. l!~prcsslnK younclf
dumettlculry coula provide
you with C(lnHidcruble enjoy·
mcnt und selr-fulnlitnent
'

delays
in evidence, .
mitigation report
Bv BRIAN J. REID
BREEOOMVCAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The det'ense tcum
· t(lr Eric Quulls hus usked for u contimtun~c of his Aug. 20 dcuch pcnuJty trlul. und while pmsecutors huve
not jointld in the request, Assistant

.---~~...,...,

Pro,ecuting
Attorney

E;K·hus. orully reque~ted u con tinunnce ut a pre-triul heuring hefore
Christoph~r Judge Fred W. Crow Ill on Frida~..
TCilOI!IiU
Mtid citing diftkullics in obmining evtFriday the stute dcncc und.completing a repon from u
will not likely mitigation expert before ·1he August
objet·! to u Iuter trial dale.
triul.
·
Th~ ttlleged · murder weapon
Quails i&gt; dmr~ed remains in the custody of the Ohio
in the shoot1n g Bureuu of Criminal Identification
de:uh
of
hi' und though he hus requested i! for
QUALLS
estrunged
girl- testing . it has not been provtded.
friend.
Rc b~ccn through no fault of the prosecutor•.
Ackerman, in Middlcpon in M;m:h. Eachu&gt; suic.l . The autopsy report was
Qualls' lcud coun sel. William received only earlier thi s month, and

5/tt·eJP;pJiimg s1t·~me.
teo)m1lb !11t1t'eir~ IJiife

Pl1111 111 C•mp, AI

GALLIPOLIS - A lifelong Gallia
County resident with a vision for. the
future hus been chosen to lead
Gallipolis us its new city manager.
Robert
D.·
Gordon. 39, of
·Gallipolis, was the
unam.rnou s choice
of city commissioners following a second round of interviews to find a
replacement for E.V.
Clarke, who will
step down July 26
QORDON
after four years on

•

D.UII1, A2

Bv Joy J. Smw

• llcllana - 21 Pep.

Calendar
Celebrations
Classlfieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather
1t1

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C2

02·7
insert
Cl
A4

AS
A2
81·6
A2

2002 Ohio Vlllty Publlohln• Co.

POMEROY -· "Kids
helping other kids,'' wus
lhe ideo l:J pper Sandusky
High Schoof students had
wtien they rulsed $S.400
for the Feed the Children's
food donation to the Meigs
County
Cooperative
Parish.
.
Food was purchased
from the
Feed the
Children's program in
Okluhomu and transported
In 1heir donated cruck to
Vuughun 's Supermurket
Warehouse in Pomeroy.
The · food
donated
included hominy, bluck·
eyed peaA, potatoes, baby
cereal, · cruckers, pasta,
juices and other items.
The 22,000 pounds of
food will be given to

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BY PAM WIWAMION
PAMWOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

60s

Pl..•• 111 Gordon. AI

Phenomenon brings
dollan to Mason Co.

Sandusky
lend a hand
80s~ Low:

'

Mothman Economics

Up~r

High:

lob.

"I cou'nt it an honor to impact the
·curreot and future growth of
Gallipolis," Gordon said Friday.
"Funhermore, I welcome the opportunity to join the city commissiOn in
their efforls of maintaining and
improvinj! t~e commun~ty."
.
·Commtss10n
Prest dent
Gary
Fenderbosch stated Friday that one of
1he deciding factors in choosing
Gordon as city manager was his vision
for the future of Gallipolis. Gordon
shared some of hi s view of the future
for the city and the com,~unity at
lur~e .
·A citizen stated to me earlier thac

ON 'THE ROCK' - Afteen-year-old Bobby scales "The
Rock " in Gallla County's Perry Township during an exercise Friday. The rock-climbing activity was ·one of many
highlights for 19 boys during a week-long retreat at
Camp Francis Asbury in Rio Grande. Bobby is one of
seven boys from juvenile court who were given the
opportunity to attend the camp for "attempting to make
positive chang~s 'In their lives." (MIIIIssla Russell)

Kids from

Weather

-~

PleiiM ... Qu•lls, AJ

BY ANDREW CART!R
ACARTEROMYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

. BY MtLLI&amp;IIA RUIIILL
MRU SSELL@MYOAILYTRIOUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE - About u hulf-milc down u thin,
pine-lree lined truil in the middle of Wuyntl Nutionul
~orest hi Oulliu County, there's u rock.
·
A big rock.
And on Fridtty unernoon it becumc "The Rock" for
19 young men.
Climbing "The Rock" wus the grund ti nnie in u
week of challenges for u group of boys from Otlllia
County und around che state uuendlng u week-long
retrem nt Cump Francis Asbury, u Wes1ern Ohio
United Methodist Church Cump locnle~d neur Rio
Orunde. ·
Most or the boys ul the cump were from churches
u~ross the western part of Ohio, but also umong this
week's cumpers were seven from the Oulllu County
Juvenile Coun system. According to Jerry Durst,
Gull iu County sheriff's depucy und Juvenile Probution
Of1lcer, the ·boys were brought to the camp "us u
reward for uctivei,Y trylnl! to make positive changes in
their lives."
·
.
"This Is greut,'' Dursl suid. "I um reully, reully
pleased. A lot of positive thlnl!s huve come out of this
week and I'm hoping thut they will usc this us u sort
of slepplng stone to u beUer life."
· ·
Most of the boys ure.from Oulllu Cnut\Cy cu.rre~tly
on probuc ion for charge~ . such.us undenll!e dnnk mg.
breuklng curfew and huvmg clguretces, but there were
no mlshups this week, cump coor~inator Chris Lewis

'more than 200 photos from the crime
scene were recently provided to him.
The mitigation expen is scheduled
to meet with Quails this Friday. _but
Eachus suid he i&gt; not cenain that will
provide adequate time for the prepa·
ration of a repon before trial.
"We're going to need more time if
we' re to give (Quu!Js) an adequate
defen,e."·Eachu ~ suid.
•
Tenogi.ia. s~id that while the state
wtll not JOIIl 111 a motton t~. contmu~
lhe case. he "understands Eachus

Gordon has
a ·visio·n for
Gal
is

Church camp provides
positive experience
.for Gallia Co. youths ·

'

Index
Slllurduy, July 1 ~. 2002
uryc! with ~hurm. tui crnncc
NQw JlCilplc und new, nctlvl.und
klnuncK!. Smile! und
licM mn~ he In the ul'l'inJI f(lr
thonyltti'ulncM! breed !ucce!M,
you in lhc y•••u· uli~11cl. TheNe
LJURi\ (Sept. 23·0ct, 23) •
1\·c•lt ~~il''""'~M will widen
•
"11&amp;1!
111i~ht be the duy to let
YUill' horiY.OnM, bt•i II~ you
Komiionc you !ccrctly udmlre
mu~h knuwlcd~c und Jl&amp; 'UilCI
know the c~tem of your feel·
ruu furwurd IOWIII'U! llch\CV ·
In¥•·
Thl1 pmon 1'1611 wci IIlK hnp[!lnm.
cllmc
the compllrne'llts und
CANCIJil (June 21-July 22)
yuur fricndMhil'·
.. Oun'l lmld buck your lcrmH
SCORI'IO (Oct. 24-Nuv.
of cndcurmcnt toduy, Vl~iblc
22) .. Uclic~c In your drcum
Mi» n ~ of uffccliun will clruw
und reach for the Kky today.
I htlHe whu ure nettr und dcur
Sumcthin1 you've been hop·
to yuu cloMcr. Tryln11 to putch
Ina
for Is within the reuhn of
1111 u broken rumuncc? The
poulblllty
if you huvc fulth in
i\mtl·On•ph Mutchmukcr cun
ynurMclf
nnd
~our ubllltlc!.
l1d11 you undcrstund whut to
SAOITTARI\JS
(Nov. 23·
'"' " ' muk c the rclullt•n!hlp
Dec. 21) .. Fucudc» ure dework . Mull $2.75 tu Mutch·
. ccptlvc, 111 you muy find out
"'"~cr. c/o thiM ncw KJ!IIP.~r~
toduy , Tho1c thlni! thut lwd
P.O. no~ lo7, WlckiiiTe. O~t
UJlpeurcd 10 be the mn11 chul·
4401)2,
lcnalnfl mny turn out to be the
L!!O (July 23-Aug. 22) .. If
cuMfC!t for you to lll:hieve.
ynu focus yo~r inscnulty on
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jun,
lite wuy1 nnu mcun1 ur oc·
19) .. If you reuli~e tluu the
&lt;iHirlnv 1omcthl11¥ yttu wunt
entire world It u clumomn
bm cn11~ider u lu~ury item.
from whi ch you cun anln wityou will be uhic In wnrk out n
Wtty uf jll!ttln~ It toduy wilh· . dom und trcmenduu1 knowl·
cd1e. you'll notice thins~ tu·
11111 hrenkl n ~ the hunk.
duy thut yuu miMht not huve
VIIICiO ii\u8, 23-Sejll. 22)
prcviou1
1y. You' ll prone rrom
.. i\llhpu~h tt~Ht'l'tiven eKK mny
the
study.
he Mtrtttt~ in "yttu , you'll be
AQUARIUS (Jun . 20-l'cb•
.1111111'1ennu~h 111 temper yuttr
I Yl .. Someone you huve ud·

D~fense qtes

D.UII1, AI

I

I had just learned how to use all the gadgets I had
gotten aa girts when I read a claaallled ad that m1d" me
la~gh . It said, "For Sale. VCR. Like New. Never Flfi·
UREO Out."
•

Crow to consider Qualls continuance

Ches~er 'IWp.

Deaths

~=I='=I:"='~
I, p L E WH .~ : :
1

I

·- -- -·--· i

A boil udvisury will he in

cl'i'c~l umil further notice

=·==·==·=-=~---J

comput·cd
wilh some·
one who alwuys
wins
, Two fellows were talking about
u·i~k tht·co.
1 1 ·I · 11
the otrlce romeo . "I don't know
1-low&lt;:vor, if your t-..J.I.-..L.-.1..-..~......o,.. how he .does II," sighed one fellow. "The only thing l've done be·
l II b
J'lllrtncr
w
c~omc
'
_
E
N
h
uII i I t1I cd hy waIcIt iII!! ......,.,!:...;::.....!:,~..=-.;::.....::,..-1 , lnd my wife's back is ··· her · ·I"
d
14
I
j fVt Compl11e
)'Oil SO OWII ·In ll 1IIY•
b~ 11111"0 Inlholhechucklo
milling quored
wordo .
down, duck at trick
· ~ou d"elop from allp No. 3 below.
three und ucco/ll the
ri ~ k of II Sll\ltl IONN.
And wilh this luymll
yuu will do doubly
well , huvin~:t 11 hUJli'Y
purtncr on your hundN
ICIIAM·LITI ANSWIRI
for future dcuiR.
~

p.m.

•.

Belief. Dimly · Croup • Legume. FIGUReD

.I FRIDAY

POMEROY Lc!udlng
Creek C'onsct'vuncy District
will ~unncct nnew wuter line
un Union A'·cm1c in Pomeroy
on Mnndny. Cu~ tt\m ers on
u ·nion Avcnu~. Avenue .
Urldl!~ Rnud und Union
1C!Tncc will huve service
interrupted fl"llm 9 u.m. to 2

1...

sition, inyou
puints
the will
long lose
run ,...

r~;tlllittl:;;:.;,~;~.~.-~ ~

1.25

5

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'
l&gt;ollft No\'(~
\iltriWIIMt Ntlthtf
It

Kyger Creek tourney
under way, Bl

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6-AtcQ l U I

t. ~ Ul
9 Q IU

SPORTS

AMAZED- Jeremy Selby, a volunteer at God's N.E.T.,
examines one stack of food donated by Upper Sandusky
High School students. The fl;lod was stored In Vaughan 's
Supermarket . warehouse until' parish volunteers could
transfer ~he Items to their own st~;Jrage area. (Joy J.
Settles)
needy families .at the Food
Parish. Giveaways are
planned for Aug . 21 •22
and Dec. 18-19 to eligible
families. Four hundred
food baskets are expected
to be prepared and given
to families in need.

Madonna
Meeker,
Lipper Sandusky High
School family consumer
Reience te!tcher, said she
wanted to visit Meigs
County and be sure the
PleaHIHHelpln~oA2

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Milson County is f.inding
out jusl how far people will go
out of Cheir wayto see the
home of Mothman.
And Che county is reaping
plenty of rewards from travelers' curiosity. .
The Point Pleasant Touri _sm
Center says the Jocul Mo1hman
phenomenon attracted visitors
from uround the counlry. und
from other countries 10 the
area.
"There have been people
from in che Bahamas, from
Alaska, California, a lot from
Ohio. There have· been people
coming from Pennsylvania
down, from Quebec, Canada,"
Genetta Browning, a tourism
center volunteer said, naming
just a few.

Holzer Medical Center • Jock.On is now accepting applications
for full-time lic:enlecl phy1iCC1I therapists. We offer
cliem rates,
IIJ!tion reimbur,.ment, Rexible sc:h~uling, in·houte CE opportunities, and a
1/gn-on bonu1 ol $3000. Inpatient and outpatient po1ilions are ovoilable.
All lilted fJo•ilion• require proper /icens11re in 0/iio.

"Some people come and jus1
want to scay a couple of hours
und end up staying overnight
in a hmel.'
Rush Finley, un owner of the
Lowe Hotel, also has nmiced a
. significant increase in the
number of visitors 10 the area.
"This is 1he firsc year, the
very first year I can honestly
say that we have tourists in
Point Pleasant, and I've been
watching it for 12 years,"
Finley said.
"We actually have 'pure
tourists' coming to Poinl
Pleasant, not just people coming for weddings or coming to
visit relatives."
•
Finley says the innux of
tourists staned soon after lhe
release of che movie "The
Mothman Prophecies" on
video. And the visilors appear
Ple•H ... Molilinlln, AS •

,_per

·II in,.,..,.a, p~.o,. contact:
Human Rooourclel p.pg.m tent, Holier Medico\ Cent., 100 Jack""' Pika, Gollipolit, Ohio ~5631

MEDICAL CENTER
JACKSON

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org ·

...... (740) 446·1101 •••• (740) 446·1106

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_J_mm
__~~~--hn_n__~_J_e•_•l_in_ri_______________
Sunday, July 14

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Curtis Yanko faces first-degree murder charge in Danny Arthur shooting
Marshall University.
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va
"The char~e is merely lin
- Jury selection in the first- accusation: said Mason
degree murder trial of Curti'S Col) IllY
. Prosecuting
B. Yanko, 26, of Point Attorney Damon Morgan.
Pleasant, is slated to start "The defendant is presumed
July 25.
innocent until/less proven
Yunko is accused of gun- guilty."
ning down Danny J. Arthur.
The court ordered a psy- .
28 , of Point Pleasant, on chological exam for Yanko,
Oct. 2, 2001, at Arthur 's which Morgan said is a comhome on Poplar Street . man route,
Yanko was arrested ut the
1n other court news,
scene by the Point Pleasant Murcies GOOdbar pled guilty
Police Department.
to felony forgery of u check.
Arthur. a 1992 graduate of· Sentencing was continued
Point Pleasant High School, until Aug. 5.
was an employee of Subway · Greg Keesee was senin Galli~olis. Ohio. and was tenced to I to 10 years in the
completmg his senior year ut state p~nitentiary for felony
STAFf REPORT .

•IColumbuo 111'/88' I

~
KY,

\...-L~~~~!El ~

w.VA.

c 2002 AccuWeathtr, In&lt;:,

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

West Virginia weather

HOEFLICHII!&gt;MYDAILYSE~TINEL .COM

Sunday, July 14
I'

I

""·
' OHIO-

VA.
I

0 ---~····

Su'nny PI Cloody

8howtrl Hlorml

Cloudy

.

:~· Showers,

~n

F~I~M

lr1ow

lOt

storms

possible in valley
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. I'

:I
:I

;I

' '

Partly cloudy skies are forecast Saturday night in the Mid-.
Ohio Valley. whil.e on Sunday, there's a chance of showers and
thunderstorms, the National Weather Service said .
Lows will be in the low 60s with highs in the low to mid
..80s.
High pressure centered over the Great Lakes continued to
bring dry and pleasant weather to the region on Friday.
Temperatures were close to normal in the mid 60s.
Forecast
Sunduy... Cioudy wi'h scattered showers. Highs in the lower
80s. Calm winds. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Sunday night... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 80s.
Monday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 60s.
Tuesday.. .Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 80s.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s and highs
in the upper 80s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon .. Lows in the upper 60s and highs· in
the upper 80s.
Friday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 60s and highs in the mid 80s.
.

I

iunbaJI ~imts •.~tutitttl
tUSPUIJ·HO)

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is
10 be accurate. If you know of an
error in a &amp;tory, call the newsroom
al446·2342 or 992·2155.

New• Department•
Gollfpmfo
Department extentiona are:

, Manoglng editor
Newo·edltor ,
Atslgnlng editor
Sporll

Ext. 18
Ext. 23
Ext. 20
Ext. 21

Pomeroy
Departmen1 e&gt;C1entlona are:

Generof M&gt;tnoger
NeWI
Newt

•

Ext: 12
Ext. 13
Ext. 14

On the web

Sulldlly IUIIoulpllon , ....
IY Yrrttr CJJ rnot.r ioute
11 .25

Ont ,..,

,.,

SubKrlben not deshtn1 to PlY tha ~rrier
~NV r.mlt In ldYtnte dirtd to SundiY Tlmti5entln~. Cr*'ll 'NIH be Jlvoln Qrrier tleh
week. No tubsalpdon by mill permitted in
''"'where home ctrrief tel'lliu il avelltbll.

uno

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,._...

www.mydaiiYtrloone.com
www.mydallyaenlinel.com

153.82

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52 wetb

E-mail

..... ..-Gilllo'13 Weeks
Ut.25

news 0 mydaily1rlbi.Jno.com
newsOmydallysentinel.com

POMEROY - The Ohio Depurtment
of Natural Resources (ODNR) hus
awarded a grant of $328.000 to
Pomeroy Village for the construction of
bout docks along the parking lot wall
downriver from the umphitheater.
The amount covers the complete cost
of the first phase of a four phase pro·
ject. according to John Musser, former
Pomeroy councilman and grant writer.
for the village.
,
The docks to be constructed with the
grant money will extend 240 feet downriver from the amphitheater. When the
entire project is completed, he suid .. it
will consist of 12 sections of 20 feet.
ODNR approved the plans lust week,
noted Musser, who announced a pre bid
conference on Wednesday at 10:30 a.m.
Bids will be opened on July 23.
Musser said he will request u special
council meeting to award the bid so tltut
the work ca.n get underway as soon as
.possible. The goal is to get the first
phase of the f'Our·phue project com·
pleted before the St.ernwheel Festival in

. ·Qualls
from PapAl

.
. .
,
dt~cu!ues m p~p~nng the cuse.
Thts case IS Important to
both the defense and to the
State of Oh10, and (Eachus).
has made so~e g~od po~~ts,
Tenoghu said Fnduy. B&lt;;:l
has ~~n les~ than .t.tmely 111
prov!dm~ ~vidence. . .
Cro~ satd he ~ould c~nstde.r a wntten .m. ~ll,on for a cont1.nuance bef~re an August.12
fmal ,pre· trw I set dunng
Fnday s heanng •. but made._no
pr~mtses to. contmue the tr!al.
,I ha~en t hea.rd anyt~1~g
to md!fate a conu.nua~.ce ISm
order, Crow said. lf you
have an expert who can t pre-

pure u report in 30 days. It
seems us if you should find
yourself another expert."
Eachus
suggested
il
January trial.
Crow considered a number
of other defense motions
. Friday, including motions
regarding the sequestration of
jurors. Eachus has requested
that jurors be sequestered
between the trial and mitigat ion phases of the trial in the
event of a conviction, but
Crow said jurors would likely be se~uestered only during
their deliberations.
·
Crow also ordered.the local
public defender's office to
work with the defense in
reviewing the jury pool and
ruled that jury summonses will
not include the case name.

Appalachian area and I want
. to keep working · here,"
Culley said, "!' m glad to
_help.
I feel. happy I've done
from Page·A1·
something good for others."
Culley brought 20.000 pounds
food was delivered.
of
and some hygiene prod"Students in my class and uctsfood
to
the
paris,h last rear,
.
FCCLA club sold cookies and
Dee Rader, Gods N.E.T.
various items for the purchase coordinator,
said she is
of the food to children who
amazed
at
all
Culley
has done
were hungry and less fortunate for the parish and
she
than themselves," Meeker said. described Culley as havin¥,
a
Andrea Culley, member of
"heart
for
this
community.
'
the United Methodist Church
is such a blessing
in Upper Sandusky and pro- .. ."Andrea
so
many
have
ject coord inater, has spear- received things people
thanks
to
her
heared collection of food and help and organizations,"
arranged its delivery to this
~ader said, "We appreciate
area before.
what she and the students
"I feel there is a need to have
done for us here." .
feed the kids here in the

l6 Wecb

156.61

52 WHts

SIDV.7l

years in the state penitentiary.
Dwayne Allen Davenport
was sentenced to 12 to 30
years in prison on four different sexual offense crimes.
Kelly James Smith was
convicted of grand larceny
of a boat and placed on probation and ordered to pay
restitution. Steven Darst was
placed on probation for a
previous conviction of sexual assault in the third degree.
Lisa Ann Tuylor pled to
the felony charge,of attempting to obtain a controlfed
~ubstance by forgery. Her
case was continued until
July 23.

Mars..all hopes to

mid-September.
The docks will be 10-feet wide with
boat bumpers and tieup rin~s. and
equip)X'd for water und eleotncity so
that boaters will have utilities,
explained Musser. However. the actual
hookup comes in the second phase of
ihe project.
Additional lighting will also be
installed along the parking lot wall.
Musser in describin~ the construction
•said that H-beams Will be driven into
the riverbed, a steel frame built over
them and concrete poured over that.
The · structure will be self-supponing
und not attached to the sandstone park·
ing lot wall.
"The. docks will look much like the
amphitheater without the poles sticking
out of the concrete," said Musser. ''The
only cost to the village of this first
phase is $1,200. That was a match to a
planning gram for the feasibility study."
He said that the village has already
applied for grants for the other three
phase awhich will brina the total project
funding·to $.J.3 million.

create blotecli center
HUNTINGTON. Vf.Va . (AP) •
Marshall University would like to create a home-grown biotechnology
industry with u little help from the slllte,
The university is asking for $8.2 million of the $200 million the state is
eKpected to give away in economic
development grunts this fall. If funded,
Marshall's biotechnology development
center would be adjacent to its Robert
C. Byrd Biotechnology Science Center.
The proposed center would support
research scientists, entt:epreneurs and
existing industries and help the
Edwards Cancer Center at the
Marshall medical school.
. Marshall's grunt application ~ys
25 Marshall scientists will reach age
65 and retire within the next five
years. They will be replaced by
researchers who specialize in such
specialties as molecular biology.
The biotech center will rely on the
business school to write business
plans for research with commercial
possibilities, Aulick said.
·

SMITH CABINETS
will have a special memorial
booth for Kevin Smith at the
2002 Gallla County Fair.
If Kevin did your cabinets or
bought your fair animals, we
wpuld like you to send In photos
or a few words so tnat we may
display them In our special booth.
Send Items to:
Smith Cabinets
2459 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Helping.

Ohio Volloy Publlohln1 Co.

Publlthtd ~ Sundly, 825 Third fWI ..
Gllll~t. Ohio. St&lt;ond-d.Hs pottq• p•ld tt
Gllllpob. Enteted n terond-dltl pottiJfi
pfld It Po!MfOY. Ohio, pod offa.
MmiW. Tht Alsodltecl Prnt end ~he
Ohio Ntwtpaf* Al~ion .
. PottrM""': send tdd,... CDII'IICIIons to
Tt!1 Gallipolil Dally Tribune, 82S Third Nt.,
Ciltllpolll, Ohio 451J I.

0...WMk

grand larceny. Bethany
Carol Mayes pled &amp;llilty to
felony conspiracy to obtain a
controlled substance by
fraud . Her case was continued until Oct. 7
Roger Wallace pled guilty
to DUI third or subsequent
offense. Sentencing was ·
continued until Sept. 12.
Daniel Waugh pled guilty to
the felony charge of attempting to obtain money by false
pretenses. Sentencmg is set
for Aug. 8.
, Timothy Lee Mayes pled
guilty to DUI third or subse·
quent offense. He was sentenced ·to not less that one
year and no more than three

ODNR funds Pomeroy docks

"011r goall1 to htlp develop
better athlete• In o11r comm11nlty. "

4Cia88tB;
Tuesday, July 16th"&amp; 23rd@ 1;30pm
Thurspay, July 18th &amp; 25th@ 4:00pm
Ttam St11l11r11 avallt~ble ... }lilt alit!

..,..J20

NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE
- - ·-

---

Edwards Moving and Rigging Inc. has been
contracted to move generatora, turbines and
transformers Into the Rolling Hills Power
Plant In Wilkesville. Roads will be shut
down along the following route for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
at the Waterloo Coal Terminal on Hwy. 7 N.
We will proceed to Hwy. 124 going west
through Rutland Into Wilkesville. At
Wilkesville we will be taking Hwy 160 north
to the Powe.r Plant. We would appreciate
your patience and cooperation.
MOYING PATE: July 12 and July15

WILLPOWER
&lt;J
Call to

Sund•y.

441-1570

CHARLESTON. W.Va.
(AP) - A federal plan to
flood proof sections of
. . Me Dowell County will ben·
·· · efit the school system but
not some residents whose
homes were damaged by
Muy 's floods.
.
Over the next .several
years, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engit~eers estimates it
muy spend up to $188 million to either buy out county
landowners living on flood
, plains or erect barriers
.ugainst future flood waters.
The project ·grew out of
the 1977 floods alon~ the
Tug Fork River and 1mmors
un effort in Mingo County,
said
Steve
Wright,
spokesman for the corps'
Huntington District. The
Min go County project
resulted in the construction
of flood walls to protect
Williamson and Matewan.
new construction and the
elevation or purchase of 466
buildit\gs,
Both projects were uutho_rizcd by Congress in the
eurly 1980s.
.
· In McDowdl County, 988
structures. including six
schools. were originally eligible for the four-phase program covering Welch.
Iaeger, Bradshaw. War and
surrounding areas.
. After the Muy 2 flood,
nbout 100 of the 480 stntctures identified in Welch
und lac~er 'were disqualified. Wrtght said. The six
schools remain eligible
although local officials suy
Panther Elementary School
is u total loss.
. "They are not there,"
Wright said of the 100 houses. "'In theory you could say
1hey could be purchased, or
money could be given to offset their loss, but that's not
how the progrum works."
Under the progrum. any
structure that is a 100 percent loss doesn't qualify.
Other uid programs are
designed to help in such
CUS!:S, he said.

The distinction could
mean u couple million dollars to the McDowell
County school system.
Superintendent
Mark
Anthony Munchin has suid
Panther Elementary School
was destroyed in the flood.
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency has
told Manchin the building
was 35 percent to 40 percent damaged.
· The school's foul'ldtuion
shifted and its walls were
crucked during May's
floods.
,
"Puttln~ kids right back
on that s1te is just too dangerous," Manchin said. "If
you don't inhabit it .. .
-you're out of the program.
· "It has to be a school for
us to get the $3 million"
from the corps. he suid .
Wright su1d he expected
the corps, the state ~nd coun·
ty to meet to tulk about the
school's status for funding.
Before May's . tlood. the
corps
had proposed building
·
a nood wall uround Punther.
Flood walls ulso were pro·
posed for elementary school s
m Iaeger and Berwind.
Iaeger High School and
elemcntury schools in
Bartley and War were to be
replaced by new ~chools .
Except for Panther, Wright
said the plans for the other
five schools could change.
Munchin said ihe count~
must move "'pretty quickly '
because about $2 mtllion in
state money available to
match the federul dollars
·may expire. The money was
allocated by the state
School Building Authority.
Funding for the rest of the
areas covered by the corps'
flood plan depends on how
many apphcutions the
agency receives.
The · corps estimated it
would need $188 million if
it had I00 percent punicipation. So far, the corps has
only received 121 applications.

l~umington Bcuch has had
HURON (AP) - The bod· a progrum to warn swimmers public programs for the Grear
one drownmg in the past two
ies of two of four swimmers about dungerou curm~ts that Lukes Science Center.
who disappeared while trying can pull someone far from
Undenow is caused by a years. State par~ heuches along
to rescue a woman in Luke shore. The public beach, which stron$ backwash from waves Lake Eric huv~ had one drownErie were. recovered Saturday has no lifejluards, was closed breaking on a beach. Wh~n ing in the past four years.
moming, fire officials said.
At the Cedur Point amuse·
for swimmmg Wednesday. but waves reach over 6 feet. it's
A fi sherman reported the people were allowed to sun- usl!ally considered unsafe to ment pur~ in Sandusky. 9 miles
fi rst body about 6 a.m. at the blithe and picnic.
wcl.t of I turon, the Lake Erie
·
swim, he said.
·
mouth of the Huron River.
The five were wumed not to
The state. which operates beach lui~ ropes limiting how
just' east of where the men dis· swim by a dry stuff member 10 park beaches along Ohio's far out swimmers can go - to
appeared. and a rescue bQut at the purk. said City Ma~a~er 262-mile Lake Erie shoreline, u dcplh of aboul waist deep. ,
recovering it found the sec· Mike Tunn , Leaflets outhnmg · watches the weather closely
The Cedur f&gt;oint beach is
ond. Huron Fire Chief John the swimming bun also were because "it's so shallow and graduall y loped and isn't prone
Zimmennan said.
passed out.
, the wind comes and can drum to undcnows or dangt:TOUs curThe men hu ve been not been
Huntington Bcuch also was up waves very quickly," said rents. ac~-ording to ,pokolsman
identified, he said. The bodies closed on Wednesday and two l1m Lynch of the Ohio Bryan Edwards. Most beach
were sent to the Lucus County other lime s thi s · ye~r. Department
o(
Nut ural clo,ing• involve M:vcre weather
coroner's office for autopsies. Hollingsworth ·
satd. Resources .
like lightnint:. he suid.
Firefighters searched from Swimmers ure ordered out of Lust year there wus a
At Pon Climon. located
the shore und boats at Nickel the water when wuves re~ch 4 drowning at Ni ckel Plate along Lul c Eric 21 miles west
Plate Beach in Huron on feet or more. and sometimes beach and un·other one 111 of Hu ron, th ~ p1Jhlic beach
Saturday for the other two at the 3-feet level.
.
1999. On July S, u 14 -yeur- docs not ha ve lifeguard s.
victim~. Zimmerman said:
Huntmgton Beuc~ closmgs old girl had to be rescued by a Swinunc,., arc wu med by signs
The puolic beach will remain are enfor~cd by hfegu~rds . private boater after she strug· to stuy ins1dc buoys. located in
closed until they ure found.
who remum on duty unul 9 gled againsi rough water.
water uhout 5 f~-e t deep,,
The four men disappeared p.m. and by rangers who
· ·
on Wednesday when they
the park
dark. in . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
tried to help the fiancee of one patrol
While
the after
undertow
of them, who had been oceans is more severe and
knocked down by waves and constant, it cun also be danpulled offshore. They are gerous in Luke Eric. said
Jehrod Smith, 19, of nearby Andy M&gt;Powell. director of
Rebecca Thomas Long wi II be
Sandusky; and Kyle Kroetz,
29, Steve Cupec, 27, and
at the Bossard Memori ul Library
Matthew Smith, 21. ull of
on Saturday July 20 from
Findlay. Manhew and Jehrod
10:00 a.m.-noon
Smith are not related.
The woman. Amy Renee
to answer questions about higher
Anderson. 22. of Findlay. eveneducation. financial aid, the
mally was saved by firefighters.
admission process, etc.
She nnd Cupec were engaged.
East-northeast winds on
Wednesday were 34 mph.
A ~terans Administratioll represe11tative ·
·· causing the worst conditions
wUI b• on ha11d to answer q•1e.ftio11s
JOliN
on the luke that Zimmerman
!lAMMOND
ANI&gt;
abollt VA be~~ejits.
has seen in his 31-year career.
PATRICK
The winds whipped u~ 5-foot
SW}:ANY
waves as the... swrmmers
TICKETS $25
t~s opp~tunily
by
waded in knee-deep water.
l'mhow Oourm~t
Keeping Luke Erie swimmers
Dinner Available
tel your questions answered!
safe means watching for northCelt •'or Det•ll• ·
' .
.
east winds that can whip the .
~'lnal Show of 1001
shallow lake into dangerous
HotThna
whitecaps. beach managers said.
1
Changing from a P.lacid lake
Trio
to n dangerous one ' can lllke a
Tickets $25.00
matter of minutes," said
"Master of the
Carolyn Hollingsworth, managKeyboardl"
er of water recreution facilities
Pete Sears
for the Cleveland Metroparks.
Ouest•
Special
which gets nearly 200,000 visiSpencer Bohren
tors a year at 1ts Huntington
Speel•l Ticket
Beach in suburban Bay Vilfage.
Prlc01 $10
"We're constantly listening
to the weather radio," she said
Friday.
call: 740-245·7425
One week ago, Huron started

1:

,I

HAYf OUf~TIOn~ ADOUT (QlUOf?

lake advanlafe of

to ,stop and

,,

(OltfQf '

W.Va. House enter special session
CHARLESTON. W.Vu, (AP)
- As lawmakers retum to the
Capitol on Sunday IC! de~te
increased coal truck we1aht limits, members of the onlylegisla'tive committee to vote on the
issue offer words of advice.
Expect u tight vote - or
possibly no vote.
"The labor unions ·don't
want an increase, while the
sovemor's office wants an
1ncrease," sa!d Delegate Roy
'"Givens, D-Brooke. "Which
way the pressure goes is how
the vote will go."
As·a member of the Hou'se
· Judiciary Committee, Givens .
• and his 24 colleagues voted
··· on two opposing coal truck
weight limit proposals during
the r~gular legislative session. The)' soundly defeated
by · a 16-9 vote a measure.
sponsored by the coal indus. . try pushing weight limits to
126,000 pounds.
Minutes later. members voted
18-6-1 to pass a labor-backed
: · proposal mainlllining the cur·
rent weight limit of 80,000
pounds while increasing tines
• and stepping up enforcement.
.· l Judiciary Chairman Ion
· Amorcs
D-Kanawha,
favored increasing the weight
limits but voted for both measures out of pure survival.
.
"I know when the train's
coming/' Amores said. "I ~as
caught right on the tracks.
However. Amores said he
believes the recommendations of the govem~r·s ~sk
force will carry we1~ht w1th
any members still sttting on
the fence.
The task force and Gov.
Bob Wise have endorsed legislation calling for increased
weight limits of 120,000
'pounds while raising fines
·and stiffening enforcement. _
House Speaker Bob Kiss,l:&gt;Raleigh, and Senate President
Earl ~Y Tomblin, D-Lqgan.
have both indicated they suppan increased coal , ll'l!ck
weight limits. With leg1slauve
leadership and the governor
joining forces, lawmakers may
view the united front as an
offer they can't refuse .

The committee members
all have questions regarding
the new safety and enforce·
ment measures proposed by
the task force. The Public
Safety Commission's transportation division will be
$iven increased authority to
mspect trucks and cite drivers
for weight and speeding violations using existinll agency
inspectors and Div1sion of
Highway agents .
Lawmakers also 'have fears
about finding the money

needed for repairs to roads
and bridges damaged by the
eKtra tonnage. Transponation
Secretary Fred VanKirk told
a judiciary subcommittee in
February that upgrading
2.684 mi.les of state roads on
which coal is hauled to han·
die heavier trucks would cost
at least $2.8 billion.
But some believe increased
weights are vital to keep the
coal industr~ alive in the economically depressed southern
purt of the state.

ONE COUPON INCLUDES:
• Maintenance Steam
Clean for llohtly soiled
carpets
• Color brightener
• Deodorizer
• Helps rid fleas
• Workmanship
Guaranteed

WE ALSO OFFER:
• Deep cleaning for s
spills, traffic areas
• Carpet Protector with
warranty
·• Commercial Rates
• Orle.ntal Rug cleaning
• Pet odor removal
• 24 hour emergency
service available··

I

•

874.16

roo11ordar

lxplre• July 20, 2002
·-----~------------------------

-----------------·

!!

018 IDd 2 Chairs

CAll. ..

...•ao.os
..... ,.,.
_
~::.:r.-1:::

•
.'

July 14.1002

Flood program won't Bodies of two missing swimmers found
assist
all McDowell
.
County residents

Jury selection to

Ohio weather

PageA3

'

I

•

.~

�Pomeroy • MlddleAOrt • G•lllpolla, Ohio • PolntPieaunt, WV

Sunday, July 14, 2002

PageA4

inion

Gallipolis tax alert
GALLIPOLIS - The Income Ta~
Department for the City of Gallipolis
reminds residents that the following
items are due by July 31: second quarter 2002 city income tax estimates;
June 2002 monthly withholding report;
second quarter 2002 quarterly with·
holding reports.
City tax returns for individuals who
filed for extensions are due Aug. 31,
2002.
· The tux office would like residents to
take note that once an account has been
sent to court, it becomes pub\ ic record.
All court cases are made available to
the newspaper for publication.
Individuals and businesses owing
money or tax returns that are past due
have until Aug. 15, 2002, to contact
Mary L. Rusk at the Income Tax
Department to settle the needed items
or the account will be turned over for
prosecution.

Galllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point PlttUnl, W. VI.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dtn Dickerson
P1,1bllthtr
L1rry Boy•r
Advtrtlalng M1nager

Bette Pe•rc•
Editor

M1n1glng

l.f'tlm 11, rlt• Nfl'lr" onr ll't'kv~cr. Tltfl,'f tAu•ld h11 I1Jl ,,a,. JOO 'fiHW'ffJ. Alll11t1n
lrt t U/f}ttl It} tdillltl tllfd MNSf /J1 St,ltHf4111d /ttt'ltlil lflhfll •11d lfflp/10111 IUI"'Hr,
Nu ultdfH~ lf'rtMS .-!11 JJ. pullli.Jittd. l~tlfrJ .lltmilld 1M 111 JfHHI uut1, Mldnulttr

ln nr. '"" fH'""''ttulltirr.
.
•
rllt 1fPI1tlmu t~pnJml {It 1111 t'UIImtH IHlww "" tit I rmut~u"' ttl rltt Oltlu lttllty
, llwbliilti111 C'11. ') rtlllorioiiHHJrd, rutl•u rlflrlrl4•1sfl ttciiHI.

'

..

NATIONAL VIEW

Covered

Gallia-Meigs Post
reports citations
GALLIPOLIS - Troopers from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio State

New York legislation takes
steps for women~ health
• The Times Heruld Record, Middletown, N.Y., on
" 'omen :~ /te,dtli insllnmce 'cm't'm!le: It took more.thun four
yeurs. hut the persistence of Demucnns in the Assembly
und Rcpubli•·an Stulc Sen. John M. Bonucic, R-Mount
H11pe. has rcsulicd in p~tssagc o,f a bill requiring insurance
wvcragc ul Hn array nl women s health needs. To say thiS
hill hus hc~n needed for u mu~h longer time is to seriously
understate . The governor should sign it as soon as possible.
The lamlmurk Jcgislution mundates insurance coverage
f11r prcvcnti~&gt;n. curly detection und treatment of breast and
cervical cancer, osteoporosis and other health needs lis well
us coverage for prescription contraceptives for. women.
This last. key. provision was the reason for the delar in
passage. Legislutors deserve credit for reuching a senstble
cnmprnmisc on it , ruther than -bowing to pressure and
killing the whole bill.
Tl1e compromise exempts religio·us orgunizmions with
l'u.ith·bused objections from providing coveruge for contraceptives. but only if the ma111 mission of the institution is
religious und it primarily serves and employs members of
thut faith .
... The Catholic Church remains unhappy with the bill
und spokesmen huvc suiu it may defy the law. That shouldn't stop Gov. Pataki from signing the bill . He knows us well
us anyone that it has tukcn Albany a long time to finally do
whilt s right by women's health. ·
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
6Y TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

I·

Today is Sunday. July 14, the I95th day of 2002. ·There are
.170 duys left in the year.
. Toduy's Highlight in History:
On h•ly 14, 17S9, during the French Revolution, citizens of
Paris stormed the Bastille prison and released the seven prisoners inside.
,
On this date:
In 1798, Congress pus sed the Sedition Act, making it a fed·
crul crime to publish false. scandalous or malicious writing
· nbout the United Stutes government.
· · In 1853, Comn)odore Matthew Perry relayed to Japanese
uflkials a letter from former President Millard Fillmore,
requesting trade relations.
· In IRR I, outlaw William H. Bonney, Jr., also known as Billy
the Kid. was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett in Fort
Sumner, N.M.
·
In 1921. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted in Dedhum, Muss .. of killing a shoe company paymas- .
ter and his guard. (Sacco nnd Vanzetti were executed six years
later.)
In \933, all German political parties except the Nazi Party
were outlawed.
In 1958, the urmy of Iraq overthrew the monarchy.
· In \965, the American space probe Mariner 4 flew by Mars,
sending back photographs.
l.n 1965, U.S. Ambnssador Adlai E. Stevenson Jr. died in
London ut uge 65.
.
In 1966. ei~ht student nurses were murdered by Ric~ard
. Speck in u Chtcago dormitory.
.
. In 1976, Jimmy Carter won the Democr~lic presidential
. nomination at rhe party's convention in New York. ·
Ten years ago: The second day of the Democratic national·
~o.nvention included ·speeches from former President Carter,
the Rev. Jesse Jackson and AIDS activist Elisabeth Glaser.
1he American League won th.e All-Star game, defeatin$ the
Nutional League 13-6 at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Otego.
Five years ago: The international war crimes tribunal for the
· former Yugoslavia sentenced Dusan Tadic, a Bosnian Serb, to
20 years in prison for turning on his Muslim and Croat neighbors in a deadly campaign o.f terror and torture O.J.
Simpson's California mansion was auctioned off for $2.6 million.
One year ago: In a boost for President Bush's hopes to build
a. defense against ballistic missile attack, the Pentagon scored
: a· hit with an interceptor that soared into space from a tiny
· ~acifk isle and destroyed its target , a mock nuclear warhead.
C:hina convicted American business professor Li Shaomin of
spy ing for Taiwan and then ordered him deported. Katharine
Graham, the 84-year-old chairman of the e~ecutive committee
of The Washington Post Co., suffered a head injury in a fall in
Sun Valley, Idaho. She died three days .Jater.
Toduy 's Birthdays: Actress Glona Stuart is 92. Former
President Gcr&lt;~ld Ford is 1:19. Movie and stage director lngmar
Bergman is 84. Actor Dale Robertson is 79. Actor Harry Dean
Stanton is 76. Actress Nancy Olson is 74. Actress Polly
Bergen is 72. FormerJootball player Roosevelt Grier is 70.
Coumry 'inger Del Reeves is 70. Actor Jerry Houser is 50.
Actnr-dircclor Eric' Laneuville is 50. Actor Stan' Shaw is 50.
Movie pruducer Scott Rudin is 44. Country musician Ray
Hcmdon (McBride and the Ride) is 42. Actor Jackie Earle
Haley i' 41. Actor Matthew Fox is 36. Rock singer-musician
Tonya Donclly i&gt; 36. Actrcs; Missy Gold is 32. Rhythm-andblue; &gt;ingcr Tamcka Cell tic (Xscapc) is 27. Hip-hop musician
• t~boo (Black Eyed Peas) is 27.
·
Thought for Today: "A man must be both stupid and unchar·
itable who believes there is no virtue or !ruth but on his own
'ide." -· Jo,e)Jh Addi1on, English essayist and poet (16721719).
.
~·

~

..

~--

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Mothman

System allows us to find out if an idea is good or.not
Humorist Calvin Trillin long ago formulated the proper response to lust
week's Supreme Court opinion on
school vouchers. Will the 5-4 decision
have a devastating effect upon public
education? This is the Trillin Reply: It's
too soon to tell.
The probabilities may lie in the other
direction. It is more likely that the opinion by Chief Justice William Rehnquist
will have a galvanizing effect on supporters of public education. The huge
teachers' unions will tight every inch of
the way uguinst tuition vouchers. The
American Civil Liberties Union will
spring into action. Parent-Teacher
Associations are geherally ·dormant, but
they will awaken. Millions of
Americans cherish warm memories of
their public schools. They too will join
the bailie. The court's judgment could
be the catalyst that generates a nationwide cry of S.O.S. Save our schools!
In a dissenting opinion; Justice
Stephen Breyer predicted another reac·
tion. He raised the specter.of significant
religious strife. Many taxparers will
resent the diversion of public funds,
directly or indirectly, for the benefit of
children attending sectarian schools. He
quoted Justice Wiley Rutledge, dissenting in the landmark Everson case of
1947. "Public money devoted to payment of religious costs," said Rutledge,
-"bri~gs the quest for more. It brings too
the struggle of sect against sect for the
larger sliare or for any."
Breyer's concern is a serious concern,
but Trillin's Reply may again be
invoked. In one form or another, public
funds have benefited sectarian institutions since the republic began. Church
properties always have been granted
favored status. Con~ress and the armed
·services have patd chaplains. The
Everson case upheld a New Jersey program that provided transportation by

The First Amendment fnrhids Congress
(and by extension the states) from passing any law "respecting m1 establishment of reli~ion," which is to say, any
law concermng or affecting un establishment of religion . Obviously the
clause is not to be read literal\~, for hundreds of laws have such an effect.
· 'fhe general guidelines date from the
1971 case of Lemon v. Kurtzman. In
that case the court struck down laws in
·
Rhode Island and Pennsylvania that
COLUMNIST ' authorized the states directly to supple. ment the salaries of teachers of secular
school bus to all children alike. subjects in sectarian schools. No way,
Parochial schools share in the distribu - said Chief Justice Burger. Relevant
tion of funds for computers and secular state laws must have a secular purpose;
such laws may neither advance nor
textbooks. Pell grants and G.l. ed uca- inhibit religion; and they must not cause
tional benefits equally benefit secular "excessive entanglement" of church
and sectarian colleges. Police protect all
d
children at street crossings. Justice an state. ·
Breyer conceded that the consequence These are the three prongs of what is
of these various forms of assistance known as the Lemon Ru Ie. The rule has .
"has not been great turmoil." Mayoe the been widely criticized, but it has yet to
reaction to widespread programs of be overruled . In the case at hand,
tuitidn vouchers would be different. It's involving school grants in Cleveland,
too soon tO· tell.
RCi'hnquist made a hook slide around the
rule; he never even mentioned it.
· Critics of the court's opinion called it Instead he relied upon three cases
"fateful," even "catastrophic" ami "devastating." Boosters of tuition vouchers known to experts in the field as Mueller
·
( 1983), Witters ( 1986) and Zobrest
foresaw vast new opportunities openmg ( l993). These were " cases "in which
for the underprivileged, broutht on by government aid reached religious
.changes as revolutionary as 1 ose J?ro· schools only as a result of the genuine
doced by Brown v. Board of Education.
Both sides are J·umpinf the gun. Courts and independent choices of private indicannot approve Cleve and-type vouch- viduals.'
ers until legislatures adopt them and
Freedom of choice is among the hallopponents bring suit. Legislators obvi- marks of a free so~iety. Cleve.land's
ously have been in no hurry. Such ini- modest program provides an element of
tiatives have been roundly defeated in free chotce for at least some of the city's
California and Michigan. Only four grammar school children. It strikes me
states - Wisconsin, Ohio, Maine and an experiment worth pursuing. Maybe it
Vermont - have authorized vouchers will work. Maybe it won't. As Trillin
in any form. The sky is not falling.
says, it's too soon to tell, but it would be
Rehnquist's opinion was the natural . good to fmd .out. . . .
.
extension of a long line of cases that
(~ames J. Ktlpatrtck.ts a colummstfor
have followed the Everson decision. Umversal Press Syhdtcate.)

from Page AI

1

James
Kilpatrick

'HARDBALL'

·Are we becoming agroup ifglobal jeedom fighters?
BY CHRIS MAnHIWI

WASHINGTON - President Bush
wants to change the Department of
Defense back into the War Department.
No longer are the ·Army, Navy, Air
Force and Marines to defend America
and America's vital interests. In his
speech at West Point last weekend, he
showcased a war agenda that included
tightin~ for "human liberty" against
"terron~ts and tyrants," and for "free
and open societies on every-continent."
Who is this ~uy? Napoleon?
Let's get thts straight: The military
forces of this country are no longer
commissioned to fight for America's
defense. Rather, the)' must stand ready
to head for any continent that's home to
"tyrants," every country where "human
liberty" is being denied, and any nation
that is not "free and open."
·
If we don't like a leader or the way a
country's being run, we\re ready to send
in our forces.
Look out Saddam Hussein. Look out
lra9. Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Libya,
Syna and any other country since added
to the "a~is of evil." Either you carry
out a "regime change" or we're coming
to get you!
Just listen to the president's words to
the graduating cadets:
"Our nation's cause has always been
larger than our nation's defense. We
fight, as we always fight, for a just
peace - a ~ace that favors human libert~ We wtll defend the peace against
threats from terrorists and tyrants. We
will preserve the peace by building
· good relations among the great powers.
And we will extend the peace by
encouraging free and open societies on

. -··---· .. .... "" . .... ... ,.
.,

-·~

every continent."
As history, this is tQtally inaccurate.
.As a statement of national policy, it is
totally un-American.
.
The purpose of this country's military
has been to protect this country and its
vital interests. The big wars - the
Revolution, the War of 1812, the Civil
War, World War I, World War II, Korea
and Vietnam- have·an been fought for
strategic reasons. They have all beeri
fought, to put it bluntly, fot us. .
Wha1 are these new goals th~t Bush
has put forth? What ideology has suhk
into his thinking that justifies this
aggressive new role in the world and
makes us a global ACLU that fights
every country that fails to give its cili"
zens the rights of American citizens?
All of this talk is merely the pretext
for an unprovoked American attack on
Iraq. The ideological hawks around the
president can't rrove any Iraqi involvement in Sept. I. Nor can they prov_e
Saddam Hussein supplied the anthrax
for those letters last fall. So they're settin~ up another cause for war.
I m not alone here.
· "I think this is a predicate for an
. attuck on Iraq and l.'m very concerned
about it," Democratic California Sen.
Dianne Feinstein said of Bush's hawkish words at West Point. "I think it
would be a terrible mistake for the
United States, unilat~rally, to attack
Iraq, and to do so without any congressional authorization. ,
"I'm probably more concerned by this
than by anything else, because if you do
this and·.leave unsettled the IsraeliPalestinian crisis, which is a full-blown
·erisis, I think you turn the whole

Muslim East against the United States,"
Feinstein said on CNN.
There 'is certainly no other way to
read Bush's call for military "pre-emptive action."
The big question is whether other
U.S. senators of both parties will insist
that the president seek ' congressional
approval for an attack on Iraq - or any
other country on his roll call of "eviL"
On Sept. 15, four days after the AI
Qaeda attack on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon, Congress ~assed a
resolution authorizing the prestdent "to
use all necessary al)d appropriate force
against those nations, organizations, or
persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist
attacks that occurred qn Sept. II , 200 1.
or harbored such organizations or persons."
My fear is th~t the rightist ide&lt;;&gt;logues
around the president are pushing him to
a position where he doesn't think he
needs to prove Saddam Hussein had
something to do with Sept. 11.
Note . that phrase: "Pre-emptive
action." It means America can attack
another countr~, and not just Iraq
because we don t like it.
'
Perhaps Bush's hawks should just go
ahead and change the DoD back to the
·War Department and 1forget all this
"De~·en
"st ff.
·
Chn' · Matthews. author ofi "No.;,, Let
Me ell You What/ Really Think" (Free·
Press, 2001) and "Hardball"
(Touchstone /looks, 1999), is· u nationally syndicated columnist for tfre San
Francisco Chrmzicle and the host of
"Hardball" on CNBC. and MSNBC
cable channels.

Obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS

Sund•y,July ••· 2001

to be impressed with the
urea .
"The people who have
come have been real enthusiastic about the town," Finley
said. "What they love is how
friendly people arc towards
them."
A majority of the visitors
to the welcome center seem
to be after the same information - Mothman and the
Silver Bridge," Suzanne
Hughes. a tourism center
worker said.
Averaging about 30 visitors a day, the Tourism
.,Center has been open seven
days a week from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. since June I.
The center ·provides
Mothman information, but it
also makes sure to·introduce
visitors to other local sites,
includins Fort Randolph,
Tu-Endie-Wie State Park
and the Farm Museum.
A display of brochures,
fliers and tourism-related
merchandise decorate the
small building, along with
the business cards from the
shops carrying the items- a
marketing technique that
seems to be working out
well.
·~Visitors take the bus·iness
cards and they go to the
shop. putting them back on
Mam Street shopping
again," Browning said. "A
lot of people are skeptical
about all of this about
Mothman, but it's bringing
in people and money back to
Main Street. And that's what
we need."
Main Street merchants
couldn't ·agree more. ·
Criminal Records has seen
the same diversity of visitors,
as the tourism center.

Camp ·
from PageA1
said.
"Of course, anytime you
get a grouP. of guys. together
you're gomg to have your
moments, but there .was
nothing really that amounted
to anything,' Lewis said. ·
In addition to normal camp
lactivities like swimming,
cook-outs and campfires, the
boys also . partictpated in
canoeing and a paintball
challenge. using the game as

Highway Pa1rol cited Timothy Angel,
39, 2144 Hazel Ridge Road, Crown
City. on charges of assured clear distance following a two-vehicle collision
around II :25 a.m. Thursday near the
intersection of Ohio 588 and Buhl
Morton Road.
According to the ~eport, ~ev~rly .E.
Vass. 502 Debbie Dnve, Galhpohs, and
Angel were traveling westbound on
588 when Vass slowed to tum. An~el
was unable to stop in time, causin$ htm
to strike her in the rear of her veh1cle.
Angel's 1998 Chevy truck suffered
light damage, and Vass' 1997 Ford
Escort sustained moderato damage. No
injuries were reponed.

Gallipolis pollee Issue
citations ·
GALLIPOLIS - According to
report from the Gallipolis . Police
Department
• Samantha
Dawn
Bonecutter, 18. 381 Buckridge Road,
Bidwell, was cited by Gallipolis police
officers for an outstanding warrant.
Also cited were William W. Cox, Jr.,
26, 10 Little Bullskin Road, Gallipolis,
stop sign violation; Jeremy W. Conley,
23, 1559 Ohio Route 7, Gallipolis.
charged with · theft . and shoplifting;

Bessie Fields, 49, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va .,
charged with stop sign violation.

•

Galli• jell report
GALLIPOLIS - Placed into the
Gallia County jail recently were
Bobbie K. Morrison, 31. 56 Union St.,
Bidwell, charged with failure to appear;
William D. Viars, 46, Scottown,
charged with probation violation;
' Bryan R. Davis, 23, 272 Redbud Hill
Road~ Gallipolis, charged with two
counts of failure to appear; Donald
David Crago, 26. 612 Fifth Ave.,
Gallipolis, char~ed with escape and
drug abuse:Dav1d Michael Wandling,
40. 11253 Ohio 7 South, Gallipolis,
charged with contempt of court;
Charles Anthony Stone, 35, 381
Buckridge Road, Bidwell, non-support.
Recently released from the Gallia
County jail were Pauline L. Jeffers. 31,
Pt. Pleasant, W.Vu .. charged with driving under suspension; Juanita G.
Robinette, 45, 74 Green Road, Crown
City, probation violation; Craig ~an
Durham, 41, 733 McClaskey Road.
Vinton, charged with disorderly conduct; Benjamin L. Boster, 22, 225
Texas Road, Gallipolis, charged with
unable to care for himself; and Kurtiss
Lee Groves. 25. 1303 Shephard Lane,
Vinton, charged with failure to appear.

Ruth E. Bumette

GALLIPOLIS - Ruth E. Burnette. 87, of Gallipolis. ~hio ,
died on Thursday. July II. 2002 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Burnette, a homemaker, was born on September S,
1914, in Patriot . She was the daughter of the late Cleveland
and Edith Donohue Cochran. She was married to Carroll H.
Burnette Sr., who preceded her in death. She attended Patriot
United Methodist Church.
. Surviving are two sons. Ca.rroll H. (Bonnie) Burnette Jr. and
John B. (Maury) Burnette. both of Gallipolis; one da~ghter,
Bonnie Fruth .of Point Pleasant. W.V~ .; five grandchildren,
Deborah A. Rifne, Craig L. Burnette, Robert E. (Maryellen)
Fruth II, Fabrienna Hannan. and Brent H. Burnette: three step·
grandchildren, Kennah (Mike) Criste. Todd (Tracie)
Pridemore. and Keith (Kim) Pridemore; six greut-grandchil.
dreli. Roben Eric Fruth. Tiriu Lee Burnette, Jacob Burnette.
Christopher A. Fruth, Tyler 0 . Fruth and Jessica Hannan; five
step-great-grandchildren, Michael Joe C'riste II, Kylenn Dean
Cnste, Maggie-Makayla Criste, Hannah Pridemore. an.d
Alexa Pridemore; three sisters-. Juanita Cochran Tackett. Dom
Cochran Beck. and Hope Cochran Burnette. all of Gallipolis..
She was preceded in death by her parents und her husband.
Carroll Sr.: daughter. Betty Lee Burnette; son-in-law, Robert
E. Fruth; sisters, Helen Davis • . Darlene Wright, Marie
Hawkins Sheets, and Betty Davis; brothers, Charles Cochran
and Raymond Cochran.
Services will be held on Sunday. July 14, 2002, ut I p.m. at
the Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio. with Pastor Alfred
Holley officiating. Internment will be in Patriot Unit.ed
Methodist Church Cemetery. Friends may call from noon ro I
p.m. at the funeral home.
·
Pallbearers will be John B. Bumette, Craig Burnette. Brent
B.urnette, Todd Mayes. Robert E. Fruth II, Ron 0 . Burnette.
. and Larry Lloyd. Honorary pallbearers are Carroll H. Burnette,
Jr.• Leslie Beck, Buell Burnette. and Marshal Burnette.
In lieu of flowers. the family requests donations be made to
the American Diabetes Association. -

thing for Point Pleasant all
around, I think." ·
·
· And a Mothman web site
created by Criminal Records
has received · more than
700,000 hits.
Harris' Steak House is see- ·
in~ an increase in customers.
'We've had a lot of
tourists," owner Carolyn
Harris said. "I had people all
day yesterday. All I did was
talk to and tell them where
GALLIPOLIS - Hilda Louise Rake. 83. Gallipolis. die4 on
things were and what was
friday.
July 12. 2002. at Arbors of Gallipolis.
going on, and about the
~he was formerly a nurse's aide at Gallipolis State Institute.
Motllman and how to get to
She
was born on Aug. 24. 1918. in Galltf'OiiS to the late E.
TNT" - the powerhouse
Blake
Strait and Georg~anna Sha!o Strai.t. She was a member
where Mothman was first
of the St. Louts Cathohc Church lh Galltpohs.
sighted. .
Surviving are three daughters • .Sharon Jenkins and Kuy
Apple Grove Market in the
(Philip)
Arreguin both of Covina, C~lif., and Teresa .(Tom)
northern end of the county
DeVoss
of Grove City; two sons, Mtchael Rake and James
has even felt the effects of
Rake; 10 srandchildren; nine great grandchildren; one sister,
the new tourism.
Audree Price of Gallipolis.
"Business has picked up a
She was preceded in death by her parents;·one son. John D.
good
bit,"
Michelle
Rake
111; and several siblings.
·
McComas, an em_ployee at
· Graveside services will be at 10 a.m. on Tuesday. July 16.
the market said. "People are
2002 at Mina Chapel Cemetery with Father Rea1s Schlick.
comins in acuins drinlcs and
Arransements are by Willis Funeral Home.
chips, cold sandwiches and a
lot of gaa h11 been aold."
Althoush trevolcn may
not ahare the rea'""' for
GALLIPOLIS - Maraaret Lloyd Porter, 86, Gallipolil,
· their villi with the local
died Saturday, July 13, 2002, at Holzer Medical Center.
atorekeeperl and worlcen, It
doe1n't take much to fiaure
Born Feb. 5, 1916, in Moriah. Jackaon County. 1he wa1 the
it out.
. daushter of the late Jqhn Owen Lloyd and the late Elizabeth
''One of the employees was
Edwards Lloyd. She was a retired nurae from Holzer Medical
wearins a Mothman shirt
Center. In her earlier years she worked as a nurse at Gallipolis
today and a lot of peoplcuked
Clinic and at Holzer Clinic. She was a member of First
her
where
she
got
it,"
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis.
·
PASSING THROUGH - Point Pleasant Tourism Center WOrk·
er, Suzanne Hughes, left, took time on Friday afternoon to McComas said. "And when
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in deat~ by her
husband, James Shennan Porter; three brothers. Dav1d, Rees
Introduce Allison Smith, John Schaar and Tam\ Smlth.Schaar the movie came out. that's all
you
heard
about
in
here
and J. Owen 'Onie' Lloyd; and by one infant sister.
to the local sites .and attractions In Mason County. The famShe is survived by two sons, David L. Porter of Juckson,
Ily, traveling home to Michigan stopped by for more lnforma· people talking about the
Motlurian
and
going
to
see
the
Teim.,
and James S. Porter of Columbus; five grandchildren;
tlon about Mothman and Is just one of hundreds visitors to
movie."
four
great-grandchildren;
and one brother, James H. Lloyd of
Mason County In recent months. (Pam Williamson)
( Editor.'s
note:
Jeff
Oak Hill.
.
·
Wamsley, co-auihor of
Services will be at I p.m. Tuesday at Waugh-Halley-Wood
We've had people from the Mothman craze is so "Mothman - the Facts
Funeral
Home with Rev. Raafat Zaki officiating. Burial· wi II
Alaska,
Hawaii, even great that Wamsley has start- Behind the Fiction, " is still
follow
in
Centenary Cem~tery. There will be no visitation.
Genruiny," Jeff Wamsley, the ed opening on Sundays. doing book siJnings and will
In lieu of flowers. contributions can be made to the charity
store:s owner said. "A lot of People, he said, are wailln$ be just one of many area resof
ones choice.
them are on trips and they see at the door when he opens in idenu who will be featured
the Point Pleasant. si~n on the morning.
on an upcoming "Onso/ved
"I can definitely look at Mysteries" program about
Route 35 and remember 11 from
the (Mothman) movie and my sales and see an the Mothmdn on July 29 on
stop"
.
increase," Wamsley said. the Lifetime channel. J
RIPLEY, W.Va. - Audrey G11inn Al}hur, 70, Ripley, died
The turnaround caused by "It's definitely been a .good
Thursday, July 11, 2002.
.
She was born Sept. 28, 1931, in Putnam County, W.Va., 10
the late P.R. Sr. and Violet Alice Walters HilL
a way to look at the violence "It's been an interesting pro· to trust each other. That's
She was a Christian and former Sunday school teacher.
what we do with all of our
in society while discovering gression."
She is survived by her husband, William V. Arthur Sr.; soils
.
positive ways. · to, handle. .Sixteen-year-old Ancel, camps . .
David (Trudy) Arthur of Ashton, William V. (Bunny) Arthur
Much of the cost to send
aggression, and discovering one of the seven boys from
of New Haven and Scott Matthew Arthur of Parkersburg,
Gallia County wh attended . the boys to the camp .answers in the Bible. ·
W.Va.; daughters Mary (Henry) Hoppe of Pomeroy. Sherry
Because it is a church spon- the camp, was impressed $340 each - was raised by
Craigo of Longs. S.C., Joy (David) Stephens of Nitro, W.Va .,
sored camp, the boys also with the week's activities, Lewis and Darst and donated
Lisa (Jim) Casto of Leon and Tammy (Eugene) Roub of Point
by
Grace
United
Methodist
citing
Thursday's
canoe
trip
attended daily worship serPleas;mt, W Va.; brothers F.R. Hill Jr., Charles William Hill
vices, which was a new expe- down the Raccoon Creek as Church in Gallipolis and
and Stunle(Rill, all of Bessemer, Ala.; 3 J grandchildren and
a f.reat learning experience. North Broadway United - 18 great-grandchildren.
rience for several of them.
. .
·
Church
in
'I definitely learned about Methodist
- "In the beginning, the
She was preceded in death by one grandson, Danny Arthur.
boys would hang out in the teamwork," he said, laugh· Columbus. The money went
The funeral service will be held at I p.m. Sunday at Vail
back of the group and not ing: "When we didn't work for food. lodging and paintFuneral Home Chapel in Ripley with Paul Arthur offiCiating.
participate much, but during together we didn't go any- · ball e&lt;JUipment.
· Burial will be in the Haven of Rcat Cemetery, Red House,
· Activities at the camp
last night's (Thursday: ser- where."
Putnam County.
·
''That's what the camp · is began in early June and will
vice they were actively parIn lieu of flower's. memorials may be made to the Kanawha
ticipating and many had all about," L¢wis' wife Sue run until the beginning of
Valley Hospice or Gideons International.
made the decision to stllrt said. "Learning to work August. For information.
·
following God," Lewis said. dynamically, as a team, and calf740-24S-S254.

I

Deaths
Hilda Louise·Rake

M1111ret Lloyd Porter

Audrey Guinn Arthur

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----------EE HEARING
COUPON

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IS'tlt.r~We TM. HEARING AID CENTER I
1 . 13
~
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Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by

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I c.ll Toll F-

or
lippofntmlnt.
Tbt In!• will bt aim by • Ucm 1._,. Nd "rr*'!llt.
Any- who lwl trouble '-'"1 or uncl!rtllndlng
convlftltlon It lrwlltcl to hiYt 1 .EBa htlnng tttt to ttt II
thll problem ctn bt htlptcll 111ng thlt COUJM!II wl1h you for

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Buc_keve
Bgg's w.oes ... •D1
J'

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UMWA~~~~~~~=·~~~:-~VIOERS
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WALK~NS WELOOME
.I1

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Iunday, .luly 14
OAK HILL - Union mHtlng. I I
a.m. and 2 r,·m , al Corlnlh
Mlaalonary Baplal Chu~eh , Jamaa
!mory Road Rill Ctlvln MNdowt
Pliler.
NORTHUP - Northup Btplltl
Chu!Ch Homecoming Strvklea alar!•
lng al I 0:30 a.m. wllh Rt\1. Jo11ph
Godwin apaaklng. "RtiNatd" wUI be
alnglng 11 1:00 afternccn ttrvlctl
ADDISON - Sunday Sohecl II I 0
t .m. 11 Add laon Frttwlll Bapllal
ChuiCh: praaohlng atrvlot II 8 p.m.,
with Rlol&lt; Barcua preaching,
POMEROY - Burlingham 7230,
Modern Woodman ol Amtrloa, annu·
al picnic al I 2:30 p.m. al lht north·
bound park near Darwln.l'll&lt;e ccv·
lrtd dlah and a lawn chair. To bo
honored lhOII working wllh youlh
grcupa Grag and Dtbblt MoCtll,
boy aocula: Janice Haynn Robin
Eulman, and Donlat . Arnold , 4·H
laadara and Tony Qllkey,. Lillie
lMgue. Camp 10 lurnlah mtal, drink
and !able "rviOt.

.

lht g\ltaltPHktr, dlacuttlng care ol
anlmtlt ourlng lht Gtllll County
Junior Fall.
GALLIPOLIS - Gtllla Counly
ShtriH'a Aaaoolallon mo&amp;llng, 7
p m., 11 Gallla County Courlhouao.
Olaouaalon about county lair and
ccmmlulona .
POMEROY - T.B. Clinic lrom
4:30 lo S p.m. allht '!\Jppara Plalna
Flrt Otpartmtnl. Rlldlng will bt
dont on July 17, 4:30 to 5:30p.m. All
lqod nandltra art urgtd 10 anond.
• POMEROY - Pomeroy chapler
I 86, Ord1r ol lht Eulern SIBr
polluol&lt; dlnntr, S:l 5 p,m., rigular
maollng. 7:30 p.m.
..
POINT PLEASANT - Aleohollol
ArYJnymoua, 7:30 p,m., e11 Vllnd St
Uaa ildt tnlranct ol Caaey Law Olllol.
'l\llldly July 11
GALLIPOLIS - Breullte~lng
ola11 al HMC Frt~oh 500 room,
6:30·8:30 p.m. For more lnlcrmallon,
call 4&lt;6·5030.

calendar·

Sunday, July ••· 2001

POINT PLEASANT, W.VI,
Clotlrlng
give
ftWfty
tvary
Wtdn,ldoy, 10 a n1 . to 2 p.m II
Polnl PIHunt Prtabylerlln Chu!Ch,
8111 ond Main ConlrlbuiiOI'a ol cl11n
ciOihll ort apprtellltd

oaraglvtra lrwttid
POINT PLEASANT. WVI
Aphaall alrokt aupport group mHI
lng, hoaltd by Oltnnt Mclnlyrt,
Plttttnl Valley Rthtb Ctnttr, 1 p.m

POINT PLEASANT, W VI,
Muon County Tourl11n CommiiiH
meeting, a a 111 al MOVC Public
lrwlltd to tllond

POINT PLEASANT, W Va
Alccholkla Anonymoua meollng, 12
p.m. In rttr ol Prtaltrtt Center.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - T111
"ppaloohlan Country Cloggert will
parlorm 11T\J·Endi•Wit Sllllt Park
ftl pari of thl Polnl PIHtant Artlll
Strlea, 7 p.m.

Page A&amp;
POINT PLEASANT, WIll
Rolary olub will "'"' at lht Moott
Lodge, noon
•
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
The
Muon Counl)l Chapttr of lht AARP
Chapter 3182 will held 1 polluck din·
ntr lllhtlr regular mon1n1r mttttno at
Fori Randol pi\ ,.tract 1 I 1:30 1.m
CrM1kl and lobltl ttrvlcll will bt pro-

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

v'ded . Mernbelt urgtd 10 bring a cov1~ dlah and a~tnd lht rntlting.

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2002

KYGER CREEK LITTLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

Swisher Loshe wins opener

Paint Co.

STAFF REPORT

CHESHIRE - In the opening gume of the Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament on
Friduy, Pomeroy Swisher &amp;·
Los he used u big second inning
to adlllunce with a 13- 1 win
over Southwestern.
After a .scoreless first inning,
Swisher &amp; Loshe had hits from
Chris Burkhamer, Nathan
Cook and Kirk Legarto score
nine runs to mount a sizuble
lead.
Cook was the big hiller fur
the day as he collected a pair of
hits, Including a double.
R.C . Smulies also had a double, while Eric Wood had u hit
for the Pomeroy lcum.
Zuch
Huislop
hud
Southwestern 's only hit of the
gume in the third inning, which
drov'e in Tyler Ring.
Swisher &amp; Loshe will play
the Mason Yellow Jackets 4:30
p.m. Sunday.
Muson hud a first round bye.

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SUNDAY'S

.HIGffilGHTS

Coupon rtqulrtd, OHtr tapl- 712C/0~. Limit 1 por auotomor.
1

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Upper River Road • lalllpolla, OH 448·2511 :
. ····················-···········-··--····

South Gallla
helmet flttln1 ·
· Ml:lRCI::RVlLL E ·
Helmer l'iltinl! for South
dulliu vursiry fombull will be
~ ut 6 p.m. on Moncluy, July 22
ul the hi gh school.
Thut will ulso be the l'irst
duy of footbuli cump for the
· 2002 Rebel seuson.
FtH'. tnorc informulion, con·
lucl hcud cot1ch Donnie
SuundcrN ul 256-6782.

BIDWF.U, I 1\DVANCF.S

In whm was supposed to be u
civil war of sorts between
Bidwell lund Bidwell II in the
second gume Friday, the
Bidwell I teum moved on to the
quurrcrfinals by way of fort'it.
Bidwell II only had three
players arrive to the Kyger
Creek field .

Southern
schedules
sports physicals

Gordon

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MASON, W.Va . - Communlly
Canoor Support Group, 7 p.m.,
Maao.n Unlttd Melhodl•l Church. All
area cancer palltnll, lamlllta a~d

nity, and my inlercst in the
bellerment of the community," Gordon said. "I think this
opportunity, . when the door
from Pill AI
opened - us it rarely docs
during one's lifetime - was
they longed for the· citr, beneficial for me to ruke
urnbiance of their youth, ' udvuntuge of it."
Gordon said. "I will uppeulto
Gordon
i5 currently
the public to join me m fos · employed us executive directering n renewed sense ·of tor for the Gullla-Jackson·
community resilience despite Meigs
Treatment
1uny and all udversil)l- A place Alternatives to Street Crime
where we ure comfortable 10 Program (TASC), a grun1·
bring up our young people funded program operated b)'
and know that we are gi vmg the Oliio Department of
rhem something that will be Alcohol and Drug Addiction
stable in their future - as Services, administered local·
well as have stability today ly by the Oallla·Jackaon·
during our time - and once Meigs Bourd of AIcoho I and
again claiming whur I consid· Drug Addiction Services. He
er to be our regal pluce as one hus held thut post since 1995:
of Ohio's earliest communi·
Prior to his work with the
tics."
TASC . Program, Gordoi1
Gordon expounded on his worked ut Woodland Cenrers
vision, stating he hopes to from I986 to J99S. He said
help insrill a new sense of his work at Woodland and
community pride with the with TASC hus been valuable
goal of seeing rhe areu grow preparation for his new post.
und thrive,
.
"My work with the residen"Oftentimes. we huve peo· tial program at · Wood lund
pie thar arc moving away Centers gu ve me a lor of
from rhe community," h e growth in munugemcnt skills,
said. "Once they huve their budgeting, payroll, those
basic education·, they move kinds of things, which I only
on for professional reasons, buill on us I became execu·
for economic reusons. tive director of the, TASC
There\ no reason why- we Program," he said. "(TASC)
can't improve our current sit· opened doors on the stale und
uation and rcrain as manx of national level for me. I've
those individuals as posstble, had rhc opportunity to spend
J if not regain some of those tiinc with legislutivc-Ievel
individuals back into our individuals and to talk about
community. But that is not some of the needs right here
done by one office alone. I in our community and about
think that's whut's csJ;Cnlial not on Iy some of the rhings
here.
we need for the future , but
"!"hat has to be a communi· preserving wh_at we already
ty effort across all boards, huve.
across all organizations,
''That's a very big point
across all government enri- with me." he added. "When
ties in order for ino be a suc- we have a community liuch as
ceu," he added. "And that's Gallipolis, that we not wait
exactly, as I said before, what until we have inner-c ity
I would like to foster in this issues ro ask for assistance or
· community." ·
to monitor, or to even pre·
Gordon al so cited sound serve. but that we start
fi5eal managemen1 and main· preservation now of the qual·
tenance and safety of the city nie&amp;that we have within the
as priorities he will address community- whether or not
dunng his administration.
we're ta~ing about our down·
Gordon said the current town or whether individuals
""'dispute within the city com· feel ~afe within their own
mission was a concern for homes."
him, but that he did address
Gordon and his wife,
that iu ue during his inter- Sherry; reside in Gallipolis
with their sons, Nathaniel
view.
· "My focus will not be on and Christopher.
He was one of five candithat tssue. but how we can
foster more of a cohesive dates commiuionera inter·
team effort in the future," he viewed last Tuesday in spe-said. "The way meetingi· cial session. Gordon was
could be conducted, the way informed Thursday nijJht fol·
conversations could be han· lowing another speeaal ses·
died so that they are more sion that he wat the commisaccepting of all views and lioncn' choice for city man·
· opimons. And that they were ager to succeed Clarke. He
weighed, given what value will au ulnj: the city managthey were wonh and then uti· er's duties July 26.
lized in a manner that was
Clarke was originally
llCheduled. to retire in May,
appropriate."
·
Gordon hu been active in but that was delayed after he
numerous loi:af community agreed to remain with the city
organizations and activities to train Rick L. Carter of
throughout his lifetime and Dayton, who wu hired June
believes his experiences will I to replace Clarke.
beneficial in hts new role as However, In a move thai surprised commisSioner~. Carter
city manager.
"I think that my back- resigned June 2~ to accept
ground. my history in. the another job, leaving ·the city
community. is an example of without a replacement for
, my dC(jication to tbe commu · Clarke.

Sunday, July 1•, 1002

••
I

RACINE - Thelaa lamlly reunion,
Slar Mill Park, Raolne.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Counly
Animal Welfare Laaguo monlhly
meeting, 7:30 p.m., al Sl. Peler'a
Eplaoopal Church. Fred Deel will be

Page 81

~u~n••••••••••••••••••••··~

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . Organlzallonal mHIIng and rectP·
lien lor lht alumni and Mld·Ohlo
Valley Sludenla In Muon, Galli, and
Melga Counly, 5:30· 7 p.m. II MOVC.
Call 074·7200 lor more lnlormallon.

GALLIPOLIS
Chrlallan
Wtdntadty, July 17
Womtna' Club luncheon, Holiday
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va .
Inn, noon. For mort lnformallon call
!Nedn
taday nlghl Bible clubt lor
Eunice
11
446·1
897
or
Mary
al
388·
.
LONG BOTIOM - Servloll 7
prtachool up through ·121h grode, 7
p.m. al Lena eonom Unlltd 0098 be lore July 13.
10 8:15 p.m. al Goapel Llghlhouae
Melhodlal Church. Sunday; wllh
POMEROY · - Mtlga Counly Church, Ntal Road. For lnlormtllcn
Dave Calley.
Health Deparlmunl, childhood lmmu· call 67!·7229 or 675·6620.
GALLIPOLIS FER'RV, W.Va .. nlzJIIon cllnkl,9 1o I I a.m. and 1 lo 3
Fallh Goapal Church 50th annlve r· p .m., 11 2 E. Memorial Drive In
aary and homecoming. Service will · Pomeroy. Tako ahcl reoorda. Children
alarl al 9:45 wllh G. R. Crew, mla· mull
bt
accompanied
by
alonary lo India and flral paator cl lhl partnVguardlan.
ohurch, apeaklng, The Goapel
POINT PLEASANT - Wolghl
Me11enger1 will be tinging.
Walchtra Attoclallon meollng, 804
Main Strtel. 5 p.m. Wtlgh·ln al 4:30
Monday, .luly 18
GALL I PO~IS
Galllpolla p.m.
Bualnen and ProleaaiOnal Woman '•
.Club meeting, 8:30 p.m., Down
LETART, W.Va. - HELP Dial
Under Rellauranl. Gueal apeaker, Clan, Letarl Communlly Center.
Penny Coon, dlroolor ol Gallla Welgh·lna lrom 5:30 to 8 p.m. lol·
lowed by ahorl meellng.
County Senior R11ource Ctnltr.

Local .vports gallery, Page B3
NASCAR news, Page B4
Ot~tdoors News, Page B6

llturday, July :10
RIO GRANDE - Raunlon of Rio
Grandt High School alumni, 10rm11
tt'ohtra and tormtr aludtnla,
Jamta A. Rhod.. Sludtnt Ctnlll,
Unlverilly
ol
Ric
Grandt.
Atgltlrallon al 10 s.m., lunch II
neon, program t1 1 p.m.

I

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Aphaalll Slroko Support Group pic.'
nlol mttllng, 12:30 p.m. tl lht
Plonanl · Valley Rthob Plcnlo
Shalltr. Hoi doga will be provldtd,
aide dllhtl are welcome.

Inside:

RACIN E- Sports.physi·
culs for Southern Locill nth·
lclcs who were unuble tci purticipntc in the clinic offered
hy the Meig s County Hculth
Dcpurtmcnl will be held
Friduy from I lo 4:30p.m. ut
the office of Dr. Douglus
Hunter, 207 f'if1h St. Sports
physi cul forms must be com·
plctcd nnd signed by both
student und parent and ure
uvuilubie ut Southern High
· Schuul und -Hunter' R office,
Physiculs will be free of
churge on this clute only fur
uthlctes In grndes 7 through
12. An uppolnunenl is no.t
required. Information is
·uvul luble by contacting
Hunter 's office at 949· 2683.

Komowa's wins
Ohio Am title,
Gerken third

_Our name's changed,

but it's still ~

·
•

Flrstar Is now U.S. Bank.

Nationwide Accees. With more 1h11n 2,200
location! nnd um 5,000 !II"M! acro11the cuumry,
At f11nrnr, we've maJc &lt;.jUitc a mun~ fur oursdvcH over
rhe year!. And now we're makin~ an&lt;Jihcr great IHtmo U.S.Ilank i• readyto ~~Crvt you,
for uunr:lvet-U.S. llnnk.
wherever you nrc. Plus, you
can still BCCCIIinlornmtion on
The Same Familiar Faces. AI we ch"llll" namel,
your accounts 24 houn a· day
we hclieve our m1'"t vnlu .. hle amr is mrr I&gt;COI&gt;Ie. That'i hy calling l·H66-Y.33-6728.
why you'll ct&gt;ntinue to deal wilh the same pcuplc yuu
know and lrUII. Whelher it'• the hanker or teller Ql your
Five Star Guaranteed Service.
local offiCI!, 111 rhe
As a U.S. Bank customer, you'll get the same great ~ervice
priva1c banker you've
you've come ro expect from Fiutar, thankt lo our
worked with for
e~cl utivc Five Star Service Guarantee- a guaran·
yean, they'll
tee rhat actually pays you if we eYer fail to
1till he there
deliver superior cutromcr ~erviCl!.
when you
Community Involvement. At u.s. Bank,
need rhern.
wc've'learned KJrne pretty valuable le110111over the
New Name. Great New Opportunities.
years. Like when you treat
We al10 know yuu have kmuuKh in your life ro keep
people •• a nei!lhbor, they
·track of,.and the laor thing you need are change• with return 1he favor. Whtn
your banking. Don't wurry. 't'uu'll•till enjoy all the
everybody work• t0!¢ther, ·
ume fea1um and benefits of your Pimar account~, and everybody gTOWSIOgethet
your C.'hecking and SavingJ
And when you invest in a
ac.ount numbero will not
community, the community lnvcru in you. That'• why
change either. And of
we're 10 wmmintd rorhe rommunilict we serve and the
cour~e, the rate and term
projects that fuel our future growth.
of your CDa or loan• will
Pintar is now U.S. Bank. Our name liu changed.
remain the ••:unc, mo.
What rnanert moo hatn 't,

•

*l

·

*fiRSTAR @Is now
.

FW.Itor,..,. 0... a ~'rd

bank.@.
five Sw Serviu GuarSUJtud
u•bank.co.m
MembtrFDIC

SYLVANIA (AP) - A lot of
yo1111g guys look at the Ohio'
Amutcur us u ~!epping stone.
Not Kevin Kornowu.
Kornuwu shot u closing 68
Friday- the lowest round of
the duy - to tie Mlchuei Subo
before winnio~ rhe 96th Ohio
Amateur Golf Championship
with u pur on the first pluyoff
hole.
Kornuwu begun laying the
groundwork for the title just
over a month ago. With a yeur
of NChoollcft at the University
of Toledo until he can become
u CPA - and out of eligibility
to play ~olf - he lined up un
internshrp this summer ut un
ecologicui engineering firm.
The victo?' came on the
same Sylvumu Country Club
course where Kornowa, a
Sylvuniu native, caddied for
three ycurs us u kid.
Unlike many of the other
20-somethlngs who contend in
the sture amateur, Kornowa
has no immediate plans to
become a pro. He has been
promi lied u job when he com·
pletcs hi s coursework a!
Toledo and said he would be
perfectly happy sf:Bying close
to home and rlayan~ in aJnlloo
teur events ul the ume while
building a career in business. .
He becomes the second
Toledo-area native since
World War lito win the event.
Alan Fadel won the 199!! Ohio
Amateur.
In between rounds of 68, he
shot 70 and 74 to finish at 8·
under-par 280.
Sabo shot a 69 but made
bogey on the first playoff hole.
Jason
Gerken,
the
Princeton-bound I7·year-old
from Logan. wu just a shot
off the lead until he bent the
shaft on his putter and waa
forced to pull with a 2-iron the
. last five holes. He had two late.
birdies but fell short because
he three-putted .for a double. bogey on the first hole he used
rh~ 2-iron.

..

Gti.MES KESOIU:OUl.l!lJ

Due to the rains thnt fell on
Suturduy inorning, the ·ramain der of the tourney 's first-round
games were pushed buck to ·
Sunday. The remainder of the
. games have also been pushed
· back one duy.
·
WHAT A PITCH I - Pomeroy Swisher &amp; Loshe relief pitcher Kirk

Le&amp;ar shows his unique pitching style during action against
Southweatern at the Kyaer Creek Little Leeaue Tournament Frida~.
The Pomeroy squad won the same, 13-1. (Butch Cooper)

Indians' Thome hit hard by Charlie Manuel firing
general
munager
CLEVELAND (AP)- Jim Thome
Mark
Shapiro
and
fell us if he'd been hit by one of his
owner
Larry
Dolan
own mighty swings.
·
and insisting they
The Cleve.land Indians ' all·time
make a long-term
homer leader said Friduy he was
commitment
to him.
"complereiy shocked" when his long·
"Charlie
is
a man's
time friend and mentor Charlie
man,"
Thome
said.
Manuel wus l'ired aN manuger. Third·
"He believes in whal
buse couch Joel Skinner took over
he believes. He did·
Thursduy us interim manager.
n'l jusr ~eact without
"He's my guy and it hit me hurd."
Thome
thinking
things
Thome said. "ll wus a very difficult
throu_gh . He just
duy for me. Churlie is a father figure wanted to know his !ulure. You have
to me. I respect and cherish every· to respect that. Everybodx wants to
thing he has done for me."
know what their future is.
Manuel, in the final year of his con- thorne, who will be a free agent
true!, was fired after meeting with

after this season and has been the
subject of trade rumors by the SUd·
denly rebuilding Indians, watt)s to
know.
.A
"My situation prelly 'much remains
the ~ame," said the tirsl baseman,
who two weeks ago said he would
not wuivc a no-trade · clause in his
contract. Asked if he now might
reconsider, Thome said, ''I'd rather
not talk about that."
·
Thome was not in the lineup for the
lifth con.1ecutive game Friday night
because of back spasms. His 26
homers are second in the American
League and he has a team-high 60
RBi s with a .278 average.

"Nobody has asked me about any
trades," he said. "Charlie has been a
big part of my career, though, so this
makes you think . But iny obligation
is to still wear the uniform until they
ask me to take it off. That doesn't
change."
.
Thome's relationship with Manuel
began as a 20-year-old third baseman
in 1991 at Triple-A Colorado
Springs.
"Charlie was my minor league
manager. then my hitting coach and
t~otanager in the major leagues," he
suid. "He can look at me and tell me
PluniMThome,IJ

'

Nicklaus taking shots·at challengers , Moss
as Ttger .cruises toward major record wows

the fans

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1\vo years ago at the Memorial, during
his Ialit full season of competition, Jack
Nicklaus said he would be delighted to
see Tiger Woods break bls record of 18
professional majors.
."I hope I'm there to congratulate him,"
Nicklaus suid, deferring to his monality.
He never imagined Woods would make
up so much ground so quickly.
·
Or so easily.
At the time, Woods had won only two
ml\iors. A month later, he won the U.S.
Open by 1' strokes, then the British
OPen b_y ·eight strokes. With the POA
Champtonthip and the Masters, he
beciii!UI the fiilt player to win all four of
them in a row.
Now, he heads 10 the British Open at
Muirfield as the first player since
Nicklaus in 1972 with a chance 10 win the
third leg of a calendar Orand Slwn. A vic·
tory would put WOQds halfway to
Nicklau•' benchmark in the majors.
And the Golden Bear it arowllng.
Nicklaus findJ no fault with Woods,
only the players who fail to compete with
him.
He rattled off a list of his ri vats Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Tom Watson
and Lee Trevino, who combined to win
32 majors - and notes that no one
amon11 Woods' peers, except for 4!!-yearold Nick Price, has WO!J11101'e than two.
In the world ranking, Woods ha&amp;- as
man~ ~ors as the rest of the top I0
com n .
,

'
CHARLESTON,

W.V'a. (AP) -

As a

Oblo.
Now die
Mioruota

all-pro

child growina up in
Rand; W. Va., Randy
Mosa remembers how
much it mea~~t when a
family friend treated
111m to a irip to Cedar
,.._IIIIUNIIIIIU pilt in

V!kl• .n.

...
I.,......
MJO a
•• ,. . . 1 . . . . . .
1 , • .,_

Oli lrt '

t• 1M for.

Coot'!:*
...
':at
.... bulloldl of cllfl.

._ftlralll«p ••
..... ~il . .
THE ONCE AND FUTURE KINGI - JIICk Nicklaus, rl&amp;ht, and Tiger Woods share a
Jauih as they walk up the seventh fairway during the second round of the PGA
Championship, In this photo from 2000. (AP)

"I had guys wbo had a history of again.'
knowing how to win golf tournamenr.s,"
"I think: somebody is going ,to do that, ·
Nicklaus said. "The guys today ate ter· which will be Tiger's competition in the
rifle players, but they haven't had the future," Nicklaus said. "Until that haphistory behind them to say, 'I've won
Piettn ... Galf,l2
this tournament before, I can win it
••

~~ .r:-.
,...,....ia
......
tlllll'
IMibJ Jll'ltlrlr

. ...... .,.•

: : 'ld~~ :.: :M;oe:etl;.

...

~··Lilla

-It II'OQIUQI I IlL

Moria .........1 l

n •••

�.,
·-Page 82 • &amp;unba!' a:lmr• ·&amp;tntlntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaaant. WV

Bruce Matthews to call
retirement on Monday

Armstrqng coasts in
Tour's seventh stage

HOUSTON (AP) - Veteran offensive lineman Bruce
Matthews otliclally will end his NFL career after 19 seasons
Monday at a news conference in the offices of Tennessee
AVRANCHES. Fmnc~ (AP) - Three· Forges-les-Eaux to Alencon in 4:23.7 Sel.'Titans' owner Bud Adams in Te~~:as.
·
time champion Lance Armstrong crashed onds. In a group of some of the world's
The Houston Chronicle reponed the retirement Friday
in
the seventh stage of the Tour de Frunce best sprinters. Oscar Freire of Spain was
night. ~ut the Titans would not comment on the report. Team
on
Saturday, fmishing in 9 L~t ph1ce and second and AustraUa's Robbie McEwen
spokesman Robbie Bohren confirmed the Titans have dropping
from third to eighth in the .over· finished third with the same time.
scheduled a news conference for Monday.
Armstrong, who finished the staae in
standings.
The announcement has been expected since the end of last ullAnnstrong
72nd
place, is expected to focus on his
crushed
several
miles
before
season, but the man who had played· more NFL games (296)
individual time trials and
the
finish.
losing
his
plu\:e
in
the
m~1in strengths than nnyone except kickers had kept his options open just in
mountain
stages.
The nl.'xt time trial is
pack. I~ wasn't immediately clear what
cnsc he wanted to return.
Monday, and the llrst of sil\ f!IOI.tntaln
the crash.
·
Matthews, who will tum 41 on Aug. 8, never missed a caused
Armstrong.
seeking
hi~ fvurth struij:11l stages in the 21-day Thur is Thursday.
game due to injury in his career. Deciding to quit wasn't Tour title. slipped 34 seconds behmd "You won't see Lance attacking in these
easy, but he told the Chronicle he will devote himself to overall leader Igor Gonzalez Galdcuno. tlut stages and wasting his enerjy,"
being a husband and father to his five sons and one daugh·
Muller said. "Lance is definitely going to
who retained the yellow jersey.
ter.
go
aU out for the time trial." Monday's
Austruliu's
Bradley
McGee
won
the
"During this offseason, I wavered a number of times.
~tuge
covers a 32.2-mile stretch from
stage, a I 09-milc run through the
Going back and forth so much was staning to take a toll." seventh
northern Normandy region, in 4 hours. 10 Lunester and Lorient· along France's
Matthews said.
•
Atlantic.coast.
·minutes
and 56 seconds.
"At limes, l felt like I could have played .another season,
McGeen sprinted across the line just Gonzalel ~eano, of the powerful
but at other times, l felt like it was time to hang It up. Once
ahead of Jaan Kirsipuu and Pedro Honllo. Spanish team Once, retained the yellow
I decided what to do, it was an easy decision.''
jersey. ·
·
who finished in the same time.
Matthews only missed games in 1983 and 1987 due to
The
89th
Tour
is
going
to
plan
for U.S.
In
the
sixth
stage,
Armstrong
coolly
let
contract disputes. He ~layed ev~cy positj()n on the line, .and
Postal.
Armstrong
hopes
to
stay
clo..~ in ·
last year he tied Merhn Olsen for most Pro Bowls in. NFL several rivals mal&lt;.e n high-risk sprint.
The 30.year-old Texan c.ased across the the euriy rhases, then~ake a move fof a
history with 14, including nine at gllll'd and five at center.
finish
line deep in a pack of riders Friday commundmg lead before the July 28 fin·
Only he and guard Randall McDaniel, who also retired
·
at
the
same time German sprinting .spe- ish on the Champs-Blysees.
this yeur, appeared in every game in the 1990s.
For Zabel, Friday's win marked his 12th
Matthews spent the first 14 years of his career with the cialist Erik Zabel won tile m'e's siKth stage
victory in the Tour - the same
stage.
Houston Oilers, who drafted him with the ninth pick overall
number
Armstrong has won. The German,
"Joining
in
on
u
sprint
is
a
big
no-no"
in 1983. He reluctantly moved with the team to Tennessee
who
won
three stages last year, placed
for the three-time champion, suid Jogi
and played in the only Super Bowl of his career in January
Muller, spokesman for Armstrong's U.S. second in two other finish-line sprints this
2000, when the Titans lost to the St. Louis Rams 23·16.
.
·
Postal Service teum. ''With his cupubili- yenr.
He was opposed to tile relocation, b11t spent five seasons
ties,
you
don't
want
to
mkc
·the
risk
of
Zabel
hus
tuken
home
the
green
jersey
a
in Tennessee while keeping his offseason home in Texas.
record six times.
"Even though I didn't want the tea,m to move, it turned out having a crash in a sprint." .
Riders pushed the pace from the start,
Zabel,
of
the
Telekom
team,
won
the
to be·a blessing," Matthews said. "In Nashville, 'ever~ Titans
and
a group of llve breakaway riders held
124-mile
run
through
the
cow
pastures
game is such an event. The fans are so enthusiastic. Now
and
red-brick
villages
of
Normandy
from
the
lead
for about 37 miles.
that Houston's got the Texans and Reliant Stadium, I think
it's worked out well for both cities.''
·
Matthews' decision mew he will remain tied with his
brother, Clay Matthew• Jr., with 19 1euonsin the NFL. His
brother JJlayed 278 games at Unoblcker for Cleveland and
Atlanta from 1978·96. and their father, Clay Sr., was a
defensive lineman for the San flranciaco 49ers In the 19,0s.
"Ood blessed my brother and I with bodies that could take
a pounding. When I was young, I wanted to be'like my older
brother," he s!lid.
"My whole life, J'vc copied lhose cl0$est to me - first
Clay and then Munch (Mike Munchak) when I ollltle to tho
Oilers. I attached myself tQ !belli, Not only were they great
players, but they were great peopl~. too."
. · ·

lbome
from Pip 81
I'm going to go wrong, or get
in a hot streak before it hap·
.. pens."
: Thome. who has hit 308
'homers in an Indians uni·
. form, said he spoke with
: Manuel, before going to
: Jacobs Field on Friday for the
· second game of a four-game
series with the New York
· Yankees.
· "I talked t\) him and he
seems to be doing good," he
said. "He will do well in
whatever endeavor he choos·
cs. His relationship with me
and other players close to

•

'

him will not change."
Thome said he believed
many teammates were sad·
dened by the move and felt
·personally responsible for the
team's disappointing 39-47
rec~rd in the first half under
Manuel.
"It. was diiTicult to watch
the heat thlj), Charlie took
because we !(now how much
he really cared," be said. "He
worked with us every day, he
switched the lineup around,
he tried to do the right things
to make us better.
· "! think it might have been
his best managing job. It
obviously was his biggest
challenge. For what he had to
work with, I think he did a
great job."

y

Moss
lrom .... B1

u

A

friend and curreot Chicago tl~llr
Bobbi Howard speot more than &lt;m
ho\lr friday signmg a\ltogfilph.dor
falls at Charleston's LaidleY. Field.
"It's ~real to come out h~re t~nd
see all these fllmiliar faces and rem·
inisce about my old p1ayil1j days
here on this field." Mo..~ said.
This season will be the first in
Moss' four· year NfL c~Meer wi thoot ·
Vi~ing receiver Cris Carter l\-~ a-

CHBVROLET
740.448-3872
CUVl

t~mmmate,

"Wt&gt; will miss Cris a whole lot."
Moss said, "As far as people sayilljl·
I'm losing a mentor. I don '1 really
see that, He helped me get tl\fO\Igh a
lot of things, ~ut I also helped him.
too:'
Vildng Coach Mike Tice has
vowed to gt&gt;t Moss more involved in
the game this se"'~o11 by using him in
a variety of offensive roles, Mo..~s
has been asked to learn thll !lanker.
split end and slot position to avo1d
constant double teams, ·
."We ha..-e been worl:.ing. on a lot of
different things in mini camp," Mo..~s
said. "I think a lot of people are
wanting to see what I can do whem I
get the ball 10 to 1S times a game,
''I'm not goln~ to be gwedy. but
I'm really lookmg forwllfd to the
season."
·
Moss finished last se11.~on with SO
receptions for 1.224 yards and 10
·touchdowns. But talk of a possible
125-~atcb. 2.000.)'ard receivmg year
does not seem to u1terest Moss,
"Records m~&gt;an nothinjl to me."
Moss said. "I've been pne step aw~
from the Super Bowl and that's alll
care about."

~94

lhe GlllO!l ~ Ml!\11 \OM\~ \M ~ \1\lt and finiiMG wi\n
ll 1~0 r~Q, l~l' i\10: ffoot !QW. Mot\ \\1, D,J, H\11\\, $«!\\

Ferrell, Ry1111 earr. Cnrla llo\@1'1, 1~ Smltn, ~ A~.
: Mld\11e fQW, Cllfla\ii\11 JQIII\$00, lli\l1t SntPtKI, Ct\O!Iio
C11lvert, .klhn lrouter, ~ler Eutman, letr:t Smltn, CMt~)l
~IQ, I)@QI\ rQ'&lt;'&lt;\ ~ lim Sml\11 WI »o CaNt!!\, Nol ~
tured Ia aulati:\n\ W&lt;~Cn !Wry llote!l,

t99 Buick LeSabre

lhe KYger Creek L~ Ral&lt;lor• Qlrlt Mlall Team flnlllho&lt;l v.'lnnlna thalr 1111:\ilYe 11n&lt;1 1111:\1111 toumamont i:\~&lt;1 with a 15·0
reQor\1 . They aro: flont row. Car~ Shllwr. Kll~till SMwr,
Shalln Comer, Abby HamQn&lt;l. Mldtllo row. Kllltl~ Jarfl!ll, Alicia
Re~nol\1!1, 'l't~nlll RlohtU&lt;hJ, Krll\lln Stump, Kristin Smath!!fl,
Katelyn Blrehfltllct. Kay\ee Roae, Courtney Shflwr. Book row;
Am~ Shriver (oolleh), llillnll Corflaa, Jonnlfor Grubbl!, llllll
Comer. Emily Hommon\1, Moria Corfllltl, Cfi!IQ Rlohaf&lt;lll
(coach), Oavld Stump (COl!Oh),
·

Power SHb. Power locks 6' windows,
locallY owned

.t98 Chevy.Monte Carlo LS
Former \l'lllmmalu lln&lt;lolai&amp;mlltoa Jl'lff Goldll~ (ll!f\l of Gfto~
I.lind Dorok IJ@MO~ (riQht) ofthe N WHIIWI'I Rl!dt fi!ICI!~tly took
htlmll top hOflllfl at thll 0111 HYbbllrd MtmOrilll 1.1\tlll l.llq\lll
'follfnilffiO~\ hOld I~ S~IIC\Iat, Vllut~ Wilt 1\ n\tmbtr of \hi
tOUI'IIIm nt Chllml)l0111 l~ct Wll l'lllmOCI top !Jtfti\INt llii\VOf,
whllo Goldon Will ni!mlld Moat ViiiiYt~bill Player.
·

APR with
Approved Credit

Chevy Ext. Cab

Cu.rtollt WIIHI.r IIH spo/ltr,
low 1ttiiU aNti NICE/

tgg Pontiac Grand Am

lhe Ky&amp;Clr Cret~k Bobeltl boa bl!ll taom roccmtly won tho
Rutlftml 61U Bond tournomont. They ftlao won thll O.V.A.A.
leosuo tltla with tln unbollttm r ord. Thoy 1ro: flont row, Tylar
C11nll011~. Jeremy Groco, Tylor Tuttl11, Slltm Stm&lt;la, Cody Nobill, ·
Jeremy arumflold. Ry&amp;m Cll!r~. Soth Luc~t. Chrla Mlanor, Htury
Smllthora. eook row, D11vld Sonda (ool!oh), J11aon Jonoa, Buddy
. HIUinbothom. Soon Word, Oovld Rumloy, Joah Poek, llrM&lt;Ion .
Burnotto, Alun Shlllln&amp;ton, Brion Pock (ool!Ch), P11111
HIIJSinbothom (co~~eh)
. Not ple\1.1!11&lt;111 aronaon IMalor.
'
.

Golf

from Page 81
· pehs. ·he's goinj! to have guys
. scared of winnmg. And that's
: really what I think they ure."
: Sergio Gurcia scared?
'Fraidy-cut Phi.l Mickelson?
. Nicklaus has been outspo: ken ever sinceWoods won the
U.S. Open at Bethpage Black,
where he had a four-stroke
lead going into the final round
and shot a 2-over 72 - his
.. tirst final round over par in a
: major he won - for a three·
: stroke victory.
That followed Woods' second straight victory in the
Masters, where he played the
back nine at Augusta National
: in I-over 37 und still finished
· three shots uhead of the field.
: Nicklaus said the players had
: been "buffaloed" into believing
, the can't beat Woods, causing
• them to take chances und play
· beyond their capabilities.
'1iger knows he can win.
: They . other guys aren't so
: sure," Nicklaus said. 'They
should take less of a gamble
and let Tiger make a mjstake.
: He's quite capable of making a
· mistake, just like I was."
Some think Nicklaus Is still
: making mistakes by assumin~
· the competition is less than It
· was in his r,rime.
"I think 1f'liger was playing
when those guys were playing,
Jack wouldn't have 18 majors
and Arnold und Gury wouldn't
have as many as they do," Brad
Faxon said. "He is better than
~ . anyone who • ha~ ever played,
f und for them to think that the
· competition now is not so good
is absolutely ridiculous."
·
.. John Cook, who was a PGA
Tour rookie in 1980 when
Nicklaus won two majors, said
•

he would. love to have seen
Tiger und the Golden Bear play
against each other in their
prime.
As for Nicklaus' rivals,
"Tij!er Woods would beat the
brams out of all those guys."
"It's just wehavetheoneguy
that is. so dominant that he
would have dominated anylime, WJywhen:, with
club,
uny ball. any condition,' Cook
sa1d. "Nicklaus ·preuy much
had their number, too. It wasn't
like..they went• out und beat him

•.

anr

...

Up.
. W~s is the. first player
smce Nicklaus m 1972 to win

the first two legs of the Grund
Slam. The third stop in both
years was the British Open at
Muirtield.
Woods won the Masters and
the U.S. ()pen by three strokes.
So did Nicklaus.
Woods didn't get much of a
challenge on the back 1.ine at
Augusta National; which had
been toughened .by the bigge.~t
course overhaul in club history.
Neither did Nicklaus.
In his 1997 autobiography,
"My Story," Nicklaus recalls
closing with a 2-over 74 on
~unday and doing "everything
10 my power to hand the
Masters on a platter to anyone
ho uJd
d
wBruce
co .. Crampton,
come an getBobby
it."
Mitchell and Tom Weiskopf
finished second. None bad
experience winning a major at
the time.
"If they or anyone else bad
been able to make any kind of
run at me in that final tound, it
could well have been a differ.
ent story," Nicklaus said. "My
luck lay in the difficult condl·
tion of the course, which slm·
ply precluded 'attacking'
golf."
.
.
Nicklaus ended the chapter
by writing, "Gentlemen, I am
still grateful to you all."

Submitted·
Photos

Up To
•

60 Months
.

.

On Select Models
Hurry, .While Supplies
Last!
r.::-1
~

GENE JOHNSO
CHEVROLET
7 40-446-3672
..
•

Chevy Truok ~Moat Dtt~tndlble
Long"l·ll•ttng, Truokl On The lload

1818 Ea111rn Avenue, Ga11Jpoll1

(740) 446·3672
Call Toll Frill
1·800•Sll•00 84

.

Q~lllpolla ftfllll yootl'l won llrat
aoa~otboll Cnmp hola roeontly

p1!1oo 11\ tl'lll Dan~ill Jon111
ot Point Pluunt. Tl'loy oro:
front row, Aloxla Golaor (hot .ahot el'lomplon), ~onotl'lo~ Ky&amp;or
(Mon11y Boll toom chomp). Buck row, 61111u Wh11loy (Hot Shot
Champion), Olivia Aumloy (Ono·on·Ont ~na Hot... Shop
Ch~:~mplon), Jomlo Hftllllorty (Ono·o~·Orto Chomplon), Brott
Bowman (Monoy !loll totlm champ).
'

Air Condltlonllfl,
And morel

'Ol Chevy S·lO Pickup

-~====~====~~-=~~~

Bengals, DE Joey Evans
agree on contract terms

Soccer's Mike ~apper
· announces retirement

INCINNATI. (AP) - iho Clnelnnotl Denubl8 Mbld
l''rldoy they lli!I'I!Od tO torm8 of II thrcO•)'Oftf OOiltfllllt with
dofanNive end Jo1.1y ~vunM of North Cot'l.lllno, th 0 naniM'
M vetith•mund llrun pick.
· firm1 wero not diMoloMod. DonaftiM ph1yors 11rc to roJl(lrt
to trnlnlnaoomp July 25 In Ooor11otown, Ky.
l!vonM wu8 ovorshl\dowod ut North Comlfna b~ hl1 tonm·
moto8 on tho dofanMivo lin~. JYIIYI Pcppor1 nnd Kyon Slm1,
both nrNt-mund plekl in lhl8 yollt''M NFL druft. Th 00ril!lll8
Nold, however tliot lh y 800 Ev11n1 D8 il proJII)tlet.
Ho 11 the third of tho Denanl1' 8lx drnft 1oloetlon~ to 111111
for thl1 M1uon •.ihe othon nro tlaht nd Mau Schobel, n
third-round eholee, nnd fro 11l~ 1l~ MIII'Quand MAnuol. D

COLUMBUS (AP) - Mike Luppor, 11 momhcr of lbe MLS
Columbu• Crow alneo l997 And Atomor nationaltoMl mom··
bor, haa onnounecd bla rotlremont duo to ohronlg lnlurlo8.
. Loppor, 31, announced hi• decl•lon Thunda~, al'tor a rlaht
knee Injury limited blm to fo!lr IOINII thil "aaon. .
Ho hu l\lleoptocl 1 po1ld&lt;1n 111 aulawn to Crow pro&amp;ldont
lind aoncral mt~nqcr Jim Smith and will h11ndle CIUIIJM, clln·
lea and eommunlty outreach.
Lappor pl.yoclln 110 MLS aamea over alx aaasona 111\d had

nvc aoall anc!IO 1111111.

.

Ho playocl In 44 matchtl wldl tbl u.s. National 'l'lam
lncludl"ll In the 1994 World Cup. He 1110 playtd In 1M 1992
Olymplol in Baswlona.
.
l.llppor helped dto UCLA BNIIII win the le90 NCAA
Championahlp and he wu 1 tin Melli All·AIIt.rioan In 1991,
Ho playod ona .-on In a~~ (VtL Wolt•burl&gt; aacltwo
In Bnahmd (Sou~) bcrore jolnlna the c...w.

ZAORBB, Croatia (AP) •• OtiQ Baric, ftred u ooaoh ot
wa.. hlrld Friday to Nplaet
, Mlrlco Jozlo .. Croalla'a CJ111Gh.
·
Blrla, 69, was Jlven a ont-~001111'101. Ho ltd 111m1 to
ei.Jihl Aullrlan dt111 .and took
Vienna to the ftnal ot the
Buropoart Cup Winnar'a Cup I Alllfrla Sal&amp;bufl to tha ftflll
of dla UllPA Cup.
·
JoJic mi.Jiped af'tor Croitll was aUmlnllod In tho nne round
of lht World Cup,
.

.,

'00 Chevy Blazer 4 aoor

tlx th·round pick.
iho un8lanod eholees 111'0 on: n1lve t110klo Levi Jone1,
ftnt round; fr o 1nfoty l.nmont Thomp1on, soeond round;
ond klekor-punt r '1'r11vls Dorsch, rourth round.
.

Bears sign Greg Kellett, Peter

Baric hired to COich Crodl
All•lri•'• national team lfll y..,.,

t.J PackAge, Automatic Trcmsmlss/onJ .
Con&amp;fltlonlng, factory warranty r.mc

.

LAK f!ORBST, m.(AP) with tho C1.1lt8 and hid 2~
- Tho Chicago B1111r1 ttlllklll and ono 1110k.
ligncd fr C•IIJCHt d fonMIVO Tho B 111'1 1110 qrced to
toeklo Chrl1tl11n Pctor 11.1 a t rm1 on 1 throo•yelll' conon -yeor contrBCt on Prlduy. true! wllh tholr thlrd·round
p I r II I nvc··yOIII' NPL plek, OL Totnlnca M toalt.
VOtertln Wh() piii~Od for Tho 0 m al1o olalmod
Ncbro1kn. He apontlo8l 8 A· rookh1 fullboek Orou ·
•on with tho lndltmapolll Koll 11 from lndlllnnpoll8.
1.1111.oftcr fc:,ur MIIIIORI With Tho C1.1lt1 hlld 111111 d him os
tho New York Olnn11.
an undr.11rlcd fr o ogant In
P tor pl11yed In 14 anmo1 April

-

_._.,;_

--·- ..

-- -

••

�Sunday, July 1'4, 2002
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Plea18nt, WV
I

High school .powerlifters lift myths.of beauty and brawn

-

NASCAR

•

No way around big wrecks at restrictor-plate races
IY 1lll MIOCIATID f'IIUI

Bobby Labonte looked over his
tom-up race car and shook his head in
.disgust: Three restrictor-plate races
this season, three .big Wfi!Cks.
When he linally walked out the
gate at Daytona International
Speedway, part of Labonte wanted to
st~y away furever.
"A couple of years ago, I realty
liked to run at Daytona ana
Thlladtga, but it was different racing
theni" he said. "I'm not sure what to
do. know I am not happy with the
way it is now, though, and I don't
really consider that racing."
Despite its efforts, NASCAR has
yet to t'lnd a way to ensure safer racing- and less blocking - at the two
big tracks.
Labonte was in the middle of an.
18-car accident in the season-opening
Daytona ~00. He was involved again
whet\ 24 cars crashed at Tnllade~a
Superspeedway in April, then saw hts TROUBLE WITH THE PLATE - Bobby Labonte (18) flips In turn two of the Talladega Superspeedway as Johnny
nice runied In Saturday night's 14-car llenson (10) spins on the final lap of the NASCAR EA Sports 500 In Talladega, Ala., In this October 21. 2001 photo.
collision late in the Pepsi 400.
· Three restnctor-plate races this season, three big accidents. When he finally walked out the gate at Daytona
Like everyone else in Winston Cup International Speedway, part of Labonte wanted to never come back. (AP)
racing. he has few solutions that
could work before the series' final
plate race 111 Thlladega in October.
Three races and some minor tinker· . curs are running bumper-to-bumper just stupid."
For h1s part, Jarrt ct agre.ed he mi@ht
"lt'sjust so disappointing that none lnl! on spoiler heights Iuter, it doesn't and if one driver. gets by another, he
of us really know what we can do to seem as if the new package is work· can take the train with him and shuf- have erred.
"Maybe I should have let up
get the 11elds separated a little," said ing.
fle the field tremendously.
because
the only way he was going to
Labonte, who also Oifped his car at Bui with no clear-cut ·answers NASCAR president Mike Helton
ThlludeJ!a on the lina lap last ye11r. NASCAR won't remove the restric· has said the sanctioning body frowns get br me was to go below the yellow
"Let's just put it this way - there's tor ,plates because the high speeds on blocking, but has no wuy to police line,' Jarrett said. "Maybe I made the
one restrictor-~Iate- race left this year, would be too dangerous - the dri· it other than lecturing teams on how wrong decision. I don't know."
NASCAR tried io control blocking
so that's good. '
.
vers are forced to hold their breath dangerous it cun be.
.
Daytona and Talladega are the only and hopl:.the inevitable never comes.
Tha·t was apparent when blocking by setting nn out-of-bounds line at
trucks where NASCAR requires the "The rules package, I think it's the was the main contributor to the big Daytona and Talladega, · forbidding
cars to go below the yellow line• on
use of horsepower-sapping plates to best we have to work with right now," wreck last week at Daytona.
slow the cars, which would go well driver Elliott Sadler said. "You'.re not
When Jeff Burton tried to get past the apron to improve position.
over 200 mph without them.
going to see any of us backing otT Dale Jarrett late in the race, Jarrett Drivers are penalized a lap if they go
But by controlling speeds, the field because we are scared of the wreck first blocked him high then ran him below the line.
Sadler said that's the only thing the
tuns ntost of the rnce tn 11 tl@ht pack. that mi@ht happen.
down low on the truck. The ~oves
sanctioning
body can do, the rest has
When one car errs, it usually causes a "But I think everybody has a side to caused the two cars to make contact,
bl~ accident.
..
them that you feel a little bit better sending Jarrett into a spin that led to to be up to the drivers.
"It's such a tine line to sa~ who's
When dri\'ers angrily complained when you walk out that gate after a chain-reaction pileup behind him.
following a pileup on the last lap at those races, after everybody's ·OK.
"That was a clear case of blocking right and who's wrong, it's JUSt our ·
Tillladega last yeur, NASCAR held un because the big one cun happen."
and it came from two veterans, and competitive nature to want to block
unprecedented open meeting to dis·
NASCAR nfso has tried to resolve that's. disappointing," said Mike and want to stay up front," Sadler
cuss Its options.
the blocking issue but It has found no Skinner, also involved in the crash. said:"When you .have not even a half
II led to u new aerodynamic r.ack- .clear way to stop drivers from staying "A lot of times these wrecks happen a second to make up your mind and
lli!C that chanl!ed the hei@hl of the in front of other drivers to prevent because you've @Ot inexperienced decide to block or not to block, to
rear spoilers and removed a roof passing.
guys who shouldn't be runmng where pass or not to pass, it's just toush.
"I think that's an issue that ts just
detlector and metal strip at the top of The practice is almost second· they are, and they make a mistake.
the spoiler. The charges were sup· · nature in a sport where every finish- This was a case of two veterans fight· goi'ng to have to be left up to the driposed to separate the pack a little and lng position carrie~ bonus points. And in~ for the same s~ot on the track, vers, it's like a gentlemen's agree·
make passing easier.
it's critical in a plate race, where the netther giving anythmg up, and it was ment."

a

NASCAR's leader stiU factor after cancer
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Bill France has
made it all the way back.
That 's dear when he holds
COllrt, his eyes lighting up
while he discusses the fUture
and past of · the sport he
helped tum into a multibll·
lion-dollur business.
It was only 18 months U@o
thnt the chief executive officer of NASCAR wos thought
to be on his death bed as he
underwent treatment for can-

LOS FRESNOS. Texas · I in Texas for the 105-pound STRONG WOMt:N - Viviana
(AP) -Viviana Rodriguez is class.
Rod.rtguez practices
4-foot-11 and 97 pounds, a Girls powerlifting is an
powerllftlng April 10, 2002,
size 0. with room to spare. out@rowth of the increasing
In Los Fresnos, Texas.
She's also a champion pow.. use of wei@ht training for Rodriguez, 4-foot-11 and 97
eriifter who once hoisted a sports ranging from cheer·
pounds, Is a champion
three-lift total of 640 pounds. leading to distance running. powerlll'tar who at one meet
Rodriguez is one of the top said Johnny · Graham, a
hoisted 640 pounds over
members of the weight lifting retired Army sergeant who is
three IItts. She Is one
team ut Los Fresnos High head coach for the USA · of the top mery1bers of the
School. a leader in a sport Powerlifting Association.
weightllftlng team at LOS
that 's gaining international Once in the weight room,
Fresnos High School. a
popularity amo ng women girls find their srowing
leader In a sport
and girls.'
streng1h intriguing, 1f not a
,
that's
gallng popularity
"It gives them a se nse of bit addictive, he said.
among girls and women
· power. to be able to do some·
''They get that poweriifting
around the world. (AP)
'
thing like this with their bug,'' Graham said. "For the
body, to be uble to lift things ~iris, it's being able to say,
•
that muny of their peers Well, guess what, I can
•
can't,'' said Kim Beckwith, a squat 200 pounds.' They
champion powerlifter who is watch the mouths open up."
pursumg a doctor:ltc in sports . It also comes down to the
~tudies at Texas.
realization that "a female can
First lunch period al Los lift heuv~ weights and stili
Fresnos, just east of South look femtnine also," he said.
~:~:,---;~::::;;::::::~::::::::::::;
Padre Island. is u frenetic
Beckwith's
supervisor, t'aking 11 coat hanger and benefits of powerlifting.
time. Tex-Mex music blares worts history author Jan bending it too many times . As a girl, Belsito grappled
/'J/
},..,,..
across the cuvcrnous lobby· "odd. wus labeled the Even among the young. such with having a body that did·
1"141Uf.jllf/ Tt"" ~lf.4 ..
lunch room. district police stron~cst woman · tn the injuries can take si~ months · n't match the model -thin
~·
' ., ~
officers
guard
against world' in the 1970s and '80s
f.IIQIICMU
•••
peeiouts in the parking lot , and the first woman inducted to 1tea 1·
ideal.
und for the team it's grunt into
the
International
"If you're not a college
"I never fit into that mold"
R,~ r,l:::~aJ
time that has paid off with Poweriifting Hall of Fame, aihlete or trai~i~g for some she said. "It got to the poi~t
_....,......-~
,
three recent statewide tro· with lifts that included 545 co~petttton, It 8 . ktnd of where once I was out of my
NHGIICMJl
.,
phies.
pounds in the squat.
~orntless .to b~ hflln$ heavy, teenage years, I realized the
"Why we do so ·well, I
Todd believes powerlifting envy ·welght, he sal~.
thing is you are going to have
Dr. Thomus Marlin, the
.
don't know. It 's just natural," sends n new message to physician for Penn State's to do the .!hmgs that make
Rodriguez said, breezing women about their bodies. football and wrestling teams, you hap~y.
.
Jhrougn a series of warmup Other researchers say women said girls should wait until . .She d1scovered powerl~ft·
squats with 130 pounds over- report immediate mood lifts ther are college age before tnB: as a means of tenston
head. ·
proportionate to the all)ount tukrnll up the sport.
~ehef to get her thr(lugh nur~A Registered Investment Advisor
There arc teams throu,11hout of wci)lht they hoist.
"Powerlifting in that ~oung mg scho~l. No.w 45, ~he ts
the Rio Grande Valley pro- Still, medical experts say age group is pushing 11 too known tn hftmg ctrcles
'
ducing powerlifting super· the sport is too new to allow much, too soon,'' he said. around the world.
Jim
Morrleon,
Certified
Financial
Planner
stars. Harlingen, 15 miles them to judge whether it is "Girls who are just starting 10
"I can honestly say I could
away, still celebrates body- truly beneficial to women. have menstrual periods, their go to 10 or.J2 different coun·
530 Second Avenue
building trailblazer Rachel And some 11re adamant that bones aren't fused .... If you tries and it's like being a
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mclish, a local who became the sport is not appropriate injure the growth plate, the celebrity," she said. "That's
the first Ms . Olympia in for teenage girls.
bones may quit growing or kind of a good feeling,"
740.446.1986
1980.
Sun Antonio pediatrician grow it're~ula.ri.y."
. .
Powerlifltt' ng is espect'ally
The first time .Los Fresnos Jorge Gomez said he has
B01 h
d h
coach Don Smith saw treated too many lower ·back
P Y~tctan~ ~at 1 .eh popular among women in
Rodriguez, he told her she in~·uries due to heavy we 1'l!ht support weight hftmg wu Europe and Japan, she said.
BUSINESS PLANNING
. less weight; it can improve
. .
"I think in the USA we're
EDUCATION PLANNING
was 11oing to be on his team. h tmg to embrace th~ sport; muscle coordination and
. He stmiiariy spotted poten·
When an athlete t,rtes to hft . overall bone stren~tth.
sort of in a different culture,
RETIREMENT PLANNING
tial in Edna Santamaria, who a ~remendous amount of
Linda Jo Belsito, chair· women reallr aren't sup·
tied for state champion in the wetght, the bone~ on the woman of the New York posed to be btg and strong," Jlnwt I , Morrlton 111 lltqltlll'ld Jllltprtltf'l1111vt Of lnf Oftttl ...\1111111 through Walnul
123-pound class and has lower part of the spme can be State branch of Powerlifters Belsito said. "But I think lltMIItouJIUM,Ina., Mtmblf' NAID. lltic. J.l. Monlton. AltM ..Ittlt nat tffHIItli
with WU. (... urlllll taltvlllet tUptt"'l.,. rrom 1 Wll ornoe laotttd 11 U:40 w.
squatted 295; and Stephanie stressed to .the ~omt. 'Of frac· USA swears by the personal that's changed, that's old hat.
-1011 ~. Oolym!Juo, OHII~· IUI)
-~arajns. who was ranked No. ture, he sa1d, likemng tt to
'
· . That's the beauty of it."

J. E. Morri"SOn
&amp; ASSO,CiateS

Sports Trivia

Bill Russell became the first black head lo 1987. the NBA awiU'ded ex.rntion fran·
coach of a major U.S. sports team after Red chises to Charlotte, N.C., an Miami for
Auerbach rettred from the NBA Boston 1988, and Minneapolis and Orlando, Fla.,
Celtics In 1966.
for 1989.
'

f

life niter Bill France.
active purticiparit in the
But he completed his can· sport, not a mere figurehead.
cer treatments last year, and The elder France decided
with improved health has to shorten the Daytona 500 to
come Increased visibility.
450 mile~. His son thought
'A' 1:111:111 . . . 'J,•!Il'llrl -rwr:
N,T!.Y,,IJI'I .1:'1When Dale Earnhardt died thut wus silly.
fl
y,
.,.,.,
II
I I
at last ye11r's Daytona 500,
"It was a brilliant idea,"
• : ·1, "· \' 1 :1-1 .. 1!·1 • I ·, 11 1L• ·r q r! -· :v
France was front and center France said, reflecting on the
• 1&gt;jv,,t·. -r • r-11, It ·.. :1 '• ':.
the next day to discuss what mainstream
publicity
the loss meant to the sport. ·NASCAR received for the
.!
I
He still travels to ruces, move. "I thought it was
I
r. • I ., )I ) . . ,, \ ... ! .
'·
urtd while Helton may be in dumb because it wnsn 't
: . 'i I :I: . :
II I
' I!
charge, nothing of any going to make a big differ·
Import goes through the ence in the big picture. But I.
1\ H )SES :\tIT( )I\ I( ) ' 1'1 V 1&lt;:
NASCAR offices without wus wrong."
,'OUH41l II t.Cll \"I Ill '\ 11 '\f. H• '
stopping at France's desk.
"I don't need to get tn the
way of Mike and thoseJ.uys
• GALLI AAUTO SALES • GALLI AAUTO SALES • GALUA AUTO SALES
up there," France sai . "I
don't want to try to microaa ron1 I:Xpedltlon
00 Jeep Ol'and Cherokee
ntanul!e things I used to years •
I
n~o . We've got good people.
l:ddle Bauer 4l4
Srmroof, Lealher, CD!Tope
It s gotten down to the point
where ali we · have to do is
have a caucus over a few
Items every once in u while."
He has strong opinions on
almost every topic Involving
the sport he took to the next
level in popularity. On
France's watch, this back·
woodsy Southern sport
turned Into a nationwide phe99 rord Wlndstar u
Che¥)' Blazer 4~~:4
nomenon with u $2.8 billion
.'J.B V6, Roar Air
4 IJoor, 28,000 rnll.•
TV contruct. He speaks as an
I

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.

'lo.,_ Vono, Plok•Vp,, froniVer-. I Hord to 1\1111 lnafntl

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97 Che¥Y ~cab 4~~:4 .

97 MilO XCab XLT

97 Jeep Orand
Cherokee Umlted

gg 8-10 4l4lca~ 1..8

89 o~c !uburban &amp;LT

88 ronl Contour

4X4

U.ododl

88 Dodge 8tratus

990rand4m

Loodorll

4 Door, Bluo

ln•lrOMIInlill ' " Moy Apply

·• C~lnje!l ·

(Up to ~ qli. I lO)
• MoDIIU Filet

• lubrltolo Chi"''
• FlU 1/tMite

Ma!ntenente lmsptdlon

/\n ( muhtiUniny,

Cl..-d.

lw•II11Jf' ( I IOU

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C,PI VH I'

• Install New
Spark Plugs
• Inspect Fllfers,
Belts &amp; Hoses
• Other Engine
Performance
Items Additional
• 12,000 Mile,
12 Mo.
Guarantee,
Whichever
Comes First

• ln1t1ll New Disc
Breke Pad•
• Some Forellfl Cars,
Trucks &amp; Vena
Addltlonel
• lfll)ect Rotort
turnln1 lnctudirJ
Free Brake lrilpectlon
• Inspect Matter
Cylinder I Brake

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'

...

•••

•••

Roger Clemens of the 1986 ·Boston Red Charlie RobertSon of the 1922 Chicago
Sox. set a major leag11e record by striking out ' White Sox pitched a perfect game against
20 batters in a 3·1 victory against the Seattle the Detroit Tigers, winning the contest by a
Mariners.
score of 2·0.

.

~

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

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lddlllonll11t,DOO Mllt/11 Month NIIIOIIWidt Wlrtlnly,

..

Ending their record 21-game losing ~trcak, · In a 14·4 victory over tl\e Braves in
the Baltimore Orioles won their first g~!Jle of Milwaukee, Willie Mays of the 1961 San
the 1988 season, 9·0 over the Chicago White Francisco Giants hit u record·tying four
Sox.
.
home runs.
·
·

Chevy Blazer
4
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Aulo, Air

•••••

II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :

Auro, Air, TU1, Crullo

I\ I I Ill ! h \ • I\

700

Wellston • (740) 384·0608

•••

•••

•17

1279 S. Pennsylvania Ave.

•

· Goalie Patrick Roy of Colorado set an Coach Pat Riley aulncd his record I OOth
NHL record with h1s 16th career playoff NBA playoff victory when the 1989·90 Los
shutout, making 20 saves ln a 2·0 wm over Angeles Lakers bent the Houston Rockets
Los Angeles in 2001.
104·100.
.

i

· U.adod

•••

Gaining 11 unanimous 15-round decision,
Kirk ,_ueter of the 1994 Montreal Bx.pos
Tony Tubbs captured the WBA heavyweight was the first pitcher since Fernando
title in a bout against Greg Paige in Buffalo, Valenzuela in 1981to stan his career with a
N.Y., in 1985.
· 10·0 record.

I

"Yep, he's pretty active,"
NASCAR spokesman Jim
Hunter said, lau@hing, when
asked if the 69·year-old, second-generation NASCAR
lm1der was sti II @Citing
urouud OK.
In November 2000, France
11 Ired MIke Helton to replace
him as president, and the
realities behind the move
were lm,possible to ignore.
For tlie tlrst tlnte, .somebody not named France
would be in charge of stock·
car racing's sanctioning
body. France was distancing
himself from day -to-day
operations, nnd NASCAR, It
appeared, wus preparing for

•••

IV THE AISOCIATID PRill

tour place to.find
NASCAR news!

~

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00 Olds Alero

98 Olds Aurora
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Additional

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bpi,.; 01/l1/0l

•

•

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FRESH START

cct\

i)unbaP l&amp;tntrt .i)rtllllltl• Pe;e 85

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Poln1 Pleaunt, WV

Sunday, July 14,2002

"

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P geB&amp;
Sunday. July 1.,2002

Ctlebrcuimls b,.g;, rm C2

. '

Page Cl

Bacteria forecasting could speed..decisions DNR lifts trainins,

B OOMINGTON. Ind. (APl
oientists hi.I\'O developed u ruJlld
m thod to predict when tllli:teriu lcvl.lls in
Luk\! Michigan uro too hljh. 11 11ndin1}
that could p1-el·ent the 111111Cl'o!ssur \'lo.~ ­
of heuche~ th111 purk mllntl{lers fenr

hunting moratonum
I'IIQM lli W.VA. DNA

.

1'h Dlvi~IM of Nnmn1l Resoorc shus lined n t~mporuy
mortllllt'lum on huntii1J! anti dol! lnlinln~&gt;~ In ~l~ttht enstem

ina

ure tuint~d .

..

Sunday. July 1., 2DG2

COutHII.'s clfectlve July a, tl.'COfllilli '? f.)NR Director Bd
Hmnrkk. Th bun hml be.~n J'llllntocl1ect Mtl.)' 241n Ornnt,
llnrdy, Pondlt~ton, Orernbrl~r. Monroo. Puyeue, Hnmp hit'!)
nnd Mln~ml ('llUntl~s Ill the retj\ICSl ol' West vrralnln
Dtlpot·un~nt of Aaricultmc ommlsslon r Ous DouAlMS M
llllroteetlve.meusure Ol!llin~t thl:l spn.•nd of Avlun l,nflucnu.
The dlscu~e hud been ldcmtlll&lt;id on 11 P.\)Uitry lnnn ntur
Moorctlcld In Mrcy. Low·ptllh\lllc.'ll Avltm lnfluan7.n h not u
threllt to human heuhh, but It un be spral\tl by PliOP.Ie, nnlmul~ und oontmnlnnt~d ~ulpmcnt to uther poultry nooks. ·
"Thnnl:s to ev~ryun11's c11'urts, It uppenrs tho Avlnn
lntlu nJtl ctneracncy Is under control h~ro nnd In Vlfl\lnla,"
snld ommls~loner Aat'l~:ultura Ou5 It Doualnss. 'Both
ONR u1ul Agrlcultu~ ulso wnnt to thllnk l\t'ell doa trulners
lor th lr puilenc~ und COOI)Crntlon tlurlna the pMt few
weeks ~o thut w~ could h~:lp prole~! thb cconumlcullr,
lmportnnt poultry Industry In the eustllrn pnrt of our stnte.

Th now uppl\liiCh using u I:Ompu!orited forocustin~ modt'l tukes Into
oooount rec::ent rnmfull, wind. luke levels,
tlir und w111er temperuturos nnd sunshine
to uccurutdy 1\.&gt;recust E. ~·oil buctcrla
levels within just throo hours.
Heulth oniciuls cummtly test woter
samples individuully to determine b&amp;ICIC·
riu levels, u process thut cun tako up to
48 hours und le11d to bl:uch closmjs
bused on int'ormution thut is duys old.
"Now we'ro muking decisions bused
1)0 whm's going fin now," suld Oroa
Olyphnnt, 11 professor of p.colojlicul ~cl ·
cnccs ut lmhunu Univcfllity who devol·
oped tlw n~1v, upprouch. "We're nqt bus,
in/,1 decisions on whnt hupi)QIICd yesterduy." .
·
· DANGIROUS·WATIRS - A sign nlerta swlmmors to etos d booeh . JI.Jiy 3., 2002,
Olypl111111 hus !llreudy t·ccdved tlllndlnniJ Dunos Stat Pork inCh sturton, Ind. Th bollch s woro closod duo to 1111111
rcq11t•~t~ for more lnlurmutmn ulxmt tho levels ol bllctorln round In tho wotar, (AP) .
method from ollicinls In ll11ston. Snlllu
Monkn, Cui if.. una New Zeulnml.
ti;r other jll\)hl~ms In th~ wntcr, souny· pnteutlnl 1\•t' this mt•th11tl t1• he usnl is
"Th~~·~·s lwuchcs nil over the CO\IIItry thinllthey CUll usc to pt\'dkt when wutcr I!Hith IIHirt• wldesjll\'ml.''
thnt urc sut;ft•ring from tho Stlme proh· Is l'ontuminlltcd is nhvlnusly u llllOd
Even whe11 tlw fm~cust is Wl'\11111.
lem." lw .smd. "All these plu~es ure In ,11 icl~u. "
hcuhh nllkiuls mtm'tlnsill!lliii Y)lrl\llllil,
tctTihlc Sllllntlon whct'C thuy roully dun t 'llw cities of Chlcn1111 niul Mllwnllkre llielktyckl suld.
know,, whether 111 keep tho benches hlreil Olyplmnt 111 deveillll lndivlduul
"Oul: mi~~lt111ls tn post tlw l11fomllltio11
0
~~n . " . . .
.
, mod~ls hl fmccu~t htlctedu.l•wls ut their und 11'1 the Clii1SIIIIl~l' mnkt• un lut\u·mc1i
.llw hnd11111s Wt\1 be publlshe~l Iuter ·htuch~s 1,11 Luke Mlchi!lnll. He li1iplc· ctcdsion," h~ snlllulmut closing hcnd1cs.
\Ius ycur Ill the mternutlonul JOlll'lllli 1110111 . 1 I I
I I· r . I 1)1) I ' • " Bcfnl'~ it wns ~lnd nf II flip ui' the ~IIIII.
Environmentul
Monitmlny
nnd
~' tw lllliLd s 111 1 1c · (II)' sum· Now It's ulillk Hilll't' impt·nvt•d.'' •
. Assessment .
. nwr scuson In hl•t.h cltlil.l ln.lt snmntCI'
llkhmd Whitmun. dm·f nf tile U.S.
111
Fcdcrnl "fJt'IWics nnd !!~'~nips frnm nml Cl•mpurcd the llmlln11s wut~r Sl'lllll· ticnhtnlcul Stii'Vt'}'s l.ii~C Mldiillllll
11 1' 1111'1"
W'ISCIII1SIII 1111'1 piL•s lilkL•n dully In Mllwuukl'~ und Ulnlll
..
, I
II
111 ·''1'11111
"' • ·
·'·
·
·
• 11
tl
k 11 ('II1
l'.cnlo~icnl l~csl'nrc 1 Still 1111. s11 t ucctl·
1
11
Michlgnn l1uvc hecn working togct~t~l' ·~·~c. mcs • ~c~ · . ~ . , .l'll!lll· . , , • nile llii'I'Custin!l would hnw 111 tid~
for ycurs to dctcnninc tho sn11rces nl h.
I he nmdtls succcsstully lllcdktnt hcu~hjln•'I'S uvc1· lllllil rcul·tlmc tcstinjl
Ci11i hu•·tcriu in Luke Michi!lun, us well when huctct·ln levels wnulcll~e llhnv~ nn wus uvuilnhlt·.
us fustcr wuys to prcdictnnd test lew it. llc~cptllhlc level ~O percent 111• the 111.11 c In
"You hnw to ucccpt thut you're only
l.l. coli is n bncterlu found in the Mqwuukee unci 7~ il~IWntolth~ tlnw In )lolng to he t'i)lht 11 c~t'lllill IWI'ccnt u~~ of
inlcstlncs 11nd feces of wm·m·hlnodcd IHCIIj,lO. Olyphlll 11 suld.
fhc tlnw," he suid. "Snmc hcuch &amp;nun·
mununuls. When swullowed. It c11n cuusc
Mllwuukee hus since lmp l ~memed the "ll~l's m·c willin!l 111 ucc~pt thut l'isk un!l
dlnn'hcnund other hculth prohlcms.
new testlnlllil)(li'OIIch ut.two hl.\ncl~ts und sonlo lll'c Ill&gt;!."
·
The Centers fur Diseuse Contrul nnd I'Cieuscs '" 1 liiHil·lhltc lorecust ol hucte·
At ·the lndinllu Dun~s Stut~ li11rk.
Prevention estlmutes 7J.OOO cuscs of l'iu levels 011 11 Web situ und tclephnnc benches wo1·~ clostd l\11· five stmi)lht
Infection und Ill deuths occur ouch yenr hot line, uvulluhlc In flnr~llsh 1111d duys lcmlln~ up to tile July 4 holhluy
In the United Stutes fl'llm E. coli c~&lt;.po· Spun ish.
h~~IIUS~! of ht!lh hnctel'iu l~wls . The 11111~
sure. Most illnesses huvc been ussocillt·
The city expects tn eventuu lly ~onduct lllll'k hus IHH yet Implemented t·~ul · tlnw
cd with Ingest ins food und wuter but cnn reul·thnc t~wccustlns ut II benches thut 'orccu.&lt;tln 9 or tcstln~ .
ulso occur nl)cr swimming In conuunl· spun n 11-vc-cnunty IU'cu on tuke
"TWo wcck.1 llj,lo. w~· hud cl11ht lJcnch·
nnted
wuter.
Michi11un's
wl:stcr·n
shmu.
cs
clllscd.illllwc nnw know tlmsc heuch·
1 Dr. Jny Vurmu. u medlcul epldemloln.
"These urc fuh·ty signlflcnnt ndvru1ccs cs were ()K," Whltmnn suid. "Thct'cl's
gist with the CD · ln.Atlnntu, noted thnt for u community like Mllwuukee, (liven ·licnvy clnmnl{c nnw - we hud 111 tmn
E. coli outbreaks in recrcutionul wuters thnt we t•cly prlmurliy on primitive meth· llCIIplc uwuy hccuusc tht•t'll WIIN u eels! of
ulso 1111int to other problems.
ods of determinln11 bncterlu levels," suid quulity of life, und cconc1111lc loss utld
"We're nuqust worried ubout E. coli," Puul !Jiedr1.yckl, the city's murutaer of rerututlon to northern lndlunn.''
Y11rmu suid. 'E. coli serveR UR u morkcr diReuse contml und pro~entlon. "The

Dear

Abby

ADVICE

Husband
, rifuses to play·
second fiddle

or

llUNTlN(J AND Tk.\t'I'IN(l
R~out .ATtONs IIMot'llliRR AVAti .AII.l.t~

I&gt;KAR AIIBYt I huve been
tlutlng my ll~ ·husbund for
five ycurs . (He wus my sec·
onll husbuml.) We divorced ·
In the mh.l· t990s. Two ycut·s
lli!O, he ltitlk II Job liUI of Nllltll,
but we lmvc ~untlnuell tu ~ce
euch other. When we're uhm
lull!ethcr. we huv~ u wonder·
t'ul time untl ul\i very huppy.
Tho prnhlem Is· betWeen
hh11und 111~ son from my first
murrlu(,lc. · fhcy do nut 1101
uit1111j, never hnvc und pmbu·
bly IICVCI' Wil I. It WUS the rcU•
son our lllllt'l'iuge fulled.
My sun hus JUst 11ruduutcd
from hl11h sehoul. und will btl
l!llhljj to ulocul cullel!e In tho
fltll. My e~ thinks It Is time
for 11111 to sell my house und
move In with him. 1f l do thut.
It wllllcuvc my ~on with nu
home bnso.
Abby, I love my son. ~le
hus t1cvo1' been In trouble und
Is tlll honor student. l:!ven
thouwh he I~ I H. J know he
still needs me closd hy fllr tho
· IICI'.t few yours. I ulsolove my
tlK , but he hus termlnutcd our
relutlonshi ll hccuusc he suys I
huvc mude him "second l'ld·
die" by not ugrcclng to sell
my huusc untl join hli11 ut this
time. I ol'fcrcu to keep my
home here und truvel buck
untl forth us needed until my
son Is out of colle11e. My eJt
inMIHtM thuliM rldtculOUN.
I un1 bmkcnheurtetl. Whut
· othur Holutlon could J hu~e
~u~~lbly mude'l - SAD IN

1'he Wa~t Vlr~&gt;~lnlll ·1hmtln[l tllitl Trupplttl! Ret~.ulutlons
Snmmnry :lOOl - 200~ hl'tll:hura I~ nnw nvullulllc nt nil
lie nso ngcms und Dlvlsltm or Ni11urnl ResnurceR omce8/
nceordln11. to lld llnrmlek, DII~Ctl'l' l1f thli Division o'
Nuturul R~sm11 •cs Wildlife l{esou1ws Set•tlon.
''.For tho third yeur In u row. Wcsl Vh·l!inlu's huntlnli! nnd
trttlllllnr; ruJiulutlons huvo been combln illnto one publica•
lion' liomrlck stUd. "This n~w fornuil hus btlM populnr
with huhtct·~ Ot1(1 un111ers, Rince It comhhl~s nil th huntlna
und 1ru1mlna rouulut1onsln one ptucc."
'
SAfi SI VINC. VOlJII Nil tl S

Things Happen. Thai's
Why there's Insurance.
To find out moro about protecting your aulo,
homo, lifo, hoolth ond bualnoll Coli mo ... Stop by...
PllCIIIIO~ '

JI"WA I~
II I W. ~~ 11001

t81·841t

.

- il'a your chol~ol

C

N•llonwtda'
lnauranc• &amp;
Flnonclol Sorvlc11
Mlllo#!twJt h C)! 'lti~:~t ••

Ult lnacnntt UnGIIwritllfl bY NIUiliiWICit Lilt ltllllrltiOI CO!I'4llny.
Nollonwldt MutUIIIftiCIIIIIOI Oompeny IlliG Anll~ltelllOII'4IItllll,
Home Ofttoet Oolumbut, OH 4UIJ.I210

MIICI 11/00

'

''#"_ _ _

REGIONAL fiSHING REPORT

I

WI!BT VIRGINIA
KANAWHA RIVER - Shoreline
llehlng has boen gcod lor ball,
whlcn are hitting tUbe balta, apln·
nara, crankbalta and ptattlo
worms. The London, Marmot and
Winfield took ond dam tallwator
aroaa are providing ' gcod llahlng
for white ball. fiycrld 1trtpea
baaa aaugeye, aauoer. walleye,
amol1mO\Jt~l and catnah.
OHIO RIVER - The river Ia In
good flehlng condition, Black bate
are being caught along shorellnea
on tubo oalte, crankbolll and apln·
ners, Smallmouth. largemouth,
whlto and hybrid atrlped~ball are
belno. caught below the Racine
and J;1.C. B'yrd locka and dam on
minnows and Jlga. Cattleh ore
being caught throughout the rlvor
on cut ball, nlghlcrowtora and
llhlcken liver.
Flthlng remains good below tho
BellevHie and Willow leland dams
along tho Ohio River. lor anglers
·llahlng for hybrid striped Dllu.
Shlnera or mfnnows that are har·
vetted with a throw not near the
dame are working beet Tho ball it
flthod along the bottom near the
dam In current aroat. L.erge tltver
apoont or while lurea Including
teadheaded Jigs; eptnnert, ana
aP.Itetor bobbore with "fllea" aro
a fQ producing_ 110me flth,
· MONONGAHI:LA RIVER - The
rlvtr It at normal aummer pool
and flah are feeding actively, Large
011Hieh were being caught recenlly
from the Hildebrand talt~ate11 on

For The Best Wheat . .
Price In Central
and Southern Ohio

big mlnnowa and goldllth.
CARAWAS COUNTY) - Anglor~
EASTERN PANHIINDLE - Thl using night orawlore and ohlokon
South Branch of the F'atom o, llverli oro ptoklng up ohennol cot·
Shenandoah and Cacapon rlv ra llah by llahlng on tho bottom of tho
are In good ti thing condition, river.
although !Iowa have gollon low In Tappin Lako (l\Jaonrawna
reo nt wooka. Lorge numbllrt ol County) - A good 1pot for
ohannot catflth wore notod In blutgllla with auoc ae1ul ongtors
recent olaotro·lllhl!11l auMyt on plckliig up theao psnfleh by uaing
the lower South IDanch. While any llvo ball.
they aro oooatlonally caught on AEP RECREATION LANDS
arllltolal turoa, balta such ae min· (MORGAN
COUNTY)
nowe hollgrammttoa, llvor and out Largomouth bon aro. bolng
boll (ohunl&lt;a ol truth ~llh) work caught in alzo•leaathon 121nchol
b11t. Flahlng activity Ia boat at on ptaatlo worm• ond tubo Mill ot
night.
·
pond• MB·41, 42, &amp; 29 (A to C
CENTRAL WEST VIRGINIA - ~aut Road) , ChMnel oetfllh In 1110
Area rivera oro normal and oloer. t e to 18·1nch tlzo rango uro being
Smattmouth and rook bnlt fllhlng caught on night ornwlor~ or chlol&lt;·
hfto boon gOOd. The Buckhannon.-. on IIV r1ln pond MB·29&amp; MB·138.
1\'gart and Elk ar&amp;i oil Droduclng Water temperatura vorlot from eo
tmlllfmoutht .Tht Woet Fork River to 84 dogrooa within tho~e~ pondo .
wat tlooked with mulkle finger· MUSKINGUM RIVER (MORGAN
lings thll week.
.
COUNTY &amp; WASHINGTON
OHIO
COUNTY) - Chonnol colfflh In
INDIAN
LAKE
(LOGAN . tho 18·10 20·1noh rongo are bolnQ .
COUNTY) - Saugoyo aro begin· OBUJ;Iht OIIOCIOIOd with tho
nlng to movo doepor. Try flehlng Mcconnelavlllo Dam, Rokohy
th1 top of the thermoollna 111 tho Dam, Lowell Dam, and Devolo
old Indian L.eke (eatt tide) portion Dam eltot. Flthlng/rouuro hoe
of the take. Many· good largo· et1o boon obtorvo within othor ·
mouth bait can be caught ueTng ehorollno tlltl within tho llatod
~lattlo worm• and tuoe balta .. river poofa. Primary ball II ohlckon ·
Chpnnol oatfleh thould be aotlve. livort or nlghl crowlort.
Ffeh lht channtl opening• con· Shovtlheed catftih In tho S·!o 30·
talntng current. Plecot ol fr11h pound rangt .art botng caught at
glzzara thad or chicken liver make thole 1lt01 above utlng Cr~ak
the beat bolt. Saugeyt flngtrttnge Chuba. Shlntra, Bluoglfl Sunfllh .
(1 1/2 Inch) were ttOCked ln oally and Gofdlllh 11 bait. Wator levtla
June.
are normal with water tompora·
TUSCARAWAS RIVER (TUS· turtl from 77 to 80 dogron

'4t2

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• High Back Bucket Scat~ Dual Cup Holder~
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• Headlights

Cuhr."adeClft
lOWEll
.
e
.
TRACTOR
4359 St. Rt. 160 N; • (740)·446·1044 • Gallipolis, ·ohio
.

I

I!UVC you un ulti111utun1 w chooH~ between him und
your tlcHh und blooo. It'll the
reuson your 111urrluge didn't
Hurvlvc.
Now, muy I tel~ you how
111uch I rcHpect yuu f'nr nlllk·
lny thu deciHion you did'/
Muny wumc~n would huve
mudc the Hcii'INh choice und
rutlonullzed It by s11yin11 thut,
Ul It!, the yoUilj!IIIUM WUH old
enuu11b to be on hiH own.
If your Hecond husbund
rcully loved you, he would
huvc won your hcun with hlll
m11turity und putlence und
11111de Mure thut your love
Htory hud 11 huppy ending for
ull concerned. Remember
thut - untl your broken hcun
will hetll fuHter.
J)EAR A8BY1 Cun u mun
t'uthcr 11 child I() ycurs ufter
he'll been Hhotln the tcHtlclcH
(nne hud tn be removed) ttnd
. In the Htomuch, und endured
NUrllllry und three blood
trunHt'UMIOnM'I
I huvc been with thiN mun
fur 13 yeun und we have un
ll ·yeur·old Non, I huve not
11011en pre11nunt by him Nlnt:c,
even thou11h we huve tried.
All ot' u sudden, thiH 11lrl he
huH been Involved with on the
Hide IH H11yln11 Hhe 18 preanunt
ufter ull his lnjurh11l Is this
po1rll ble'l
·
I 1lept with him uround the
some time ~he •uy• 1he con·
celvcd, How c:Qme I'm not
preanunt'l If unyone I• pre11·
nunt, It •hould be me. Cun
wmeone Jutt pop up prea·
nunt untfcr theHe circum·
8tonce87 - BAWLINO IN

LI~Si\llllfl

s-e.~-;-

'02 MONTANA

•20,750
.
•

'

1.2\
llgooa '£:1

BUICK .

It'•

one sign at a time ~ ...
..,

''The marker programs
these days are
pretty much dependent
upon individuals:'
Joe Geiger with the Division of
Archive• and Hl1tory
BY PAM WtLLIAMION
PAMWIII'MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

'.

e~

'20,800

~
fXCITIMENT MATT At

•••

,

OHIO
DKAR SAD: None. Your

CUSTOM

All New Big Country

"About a ·third of these markers are no longer there. They've been knocked down
or they've been stolen or whatever, but Point Pleasant's markers are still around."

CALIFOKNIA
DEAR BAWLINOs Not

knowlna the extent of the
mun'H ln.lurieJ, I can only
un1wcr tfiut, )'Ill, It mJty N
w••lble thut he ls tile rather.
If there h any que1t1on In hi•
mind, he thould diACun It
wlth his lk!ctor to determlllll
bl• 1perm count - und with
hts . luwyer to llettrmlne bl•
llublltty.
DEAR AB8Ys AI ·u child
arowlna up, I remember my
. 11unt rcc:ltlna, "If 'Ill!' und
'undJ' were poll and punt, ... "
and the re•t e1cape1 my
memory. Thlt llule po~.~m ha•
been aoinjl round and round

....... ... Altlflly, Cl

----..
''

A NIW LOO!( - The merker at Tu·Endle-Wel State Park boaata a freeh coat of pelnt cour·
teay of the Maaon County Cereer Center. Such markart are .an Important part of Ma1on
County hlatory, ~Pem Wllllamaon)

OINT PLEASANT - Historical
murkers thu.t permeate Mason
County, rcluting events of the
area's rich history, ure getting a
' bright, new look.

'

Yllluntccrs ur~ refurbishing the mnrkers usJun of
the tourism lnltiutlvc in Muson Courlly, Lowe Cook
und the Muson Cou111y Curccr Center huvc tcumcd up
with the West Vlrginiu Division of Archives and
History to give the wcuther-wurn murkcrs u much·
needed fuccl i ft .
Cook got involved In the project uftcr Point
Plcu.1unt City Council member Leotl&amp; Sung prc~entcd
him with the ldeu!
.
After u quick. cull to Welt Vlralnla Archrvcs and
History, Cook begun reseurchina what it would toke
to I'IINtore the morkcrs,
"I just Hturted lookir111 Into lt ond dolna liome
re1curch on how to clean up cast aluminum and prop·
erlr, pulntlt," Cook sold.
' We followed the directions that came from Rome
commcrclul outfltR and we worked with Mr. (Qury)
Wulbrown utthe Cureer Center. They did most of the
work."
.
· ·The tlrst sign In go under u·puint brush was the one
locuted on the corner. of SIKth Street and Vlund
Street. beside the Mason County Courthouse. The
murker dotulls the exploits of Oeorge Ro11ei'N Clark
and the defeat of the British at Vincennes and·
Koskasklu with un urmy of only 17.5 men. Clork's
prtrty begun Its expedition from the mnuth of the
Kunuwhu Rl~cr.

•

r

PleeN ... Hlttory, Cl
•

Fossil skull in AfriC:a may shift theories of early human evolution ~·
•

IY MAliK IYANI

PR£U WRITER
In whut muy be the most sturtllna
foHHII find In decades, Mlllentlsu In
centrul Afrlcu May they have
uneurthed the oldest truce tlf u pre·
hurriun nncestor .... a remurkubly
lntuct skull of un DP-CIIke f(lllcies thut
wulked uprlaht llf far. buck WI 7 mil·
lion yeun uao.
The thlck·browed, nut·ful!lld skull
wa• ruund In Chud, I ,,00 miles west
ot' pre·humun discoveries In -eaAI
Af'rlcu.
· Exuctly where the 8kutl flts .Into
man'• family tree Is not cleur. But
the skull'• u11e, shape and location
chullenac bst81c bellef8 ubout . the
evolution mun '• edrllo8t ancestor•.
Amona other thl1111s, tho find could
pu1h bw:lt the dute at which humuns
ore beiJeved 10 have diverged from
apet. And It JIIIIJiests thut uprlah~
Wlllklna humun ancefton evofved
not just on the srastlandt, us unthro·
poloJistA have lona thouabt, but In
fore8tA u well.
Scientist• nl11knamed the tpeclmen
Toumal, or ''hope of life" In Africa'•
Ooran lsnauaae.
It wu. uncovered a ye~~r aao by 11
40-penon re~eurch team led by
French paleontololll•t Michel Brunet
In a remote, wlnd·Koured 8trewh of
desert thut wu a lulh forest lOll)!
aao. Detuill uppeur In Thuriday I
luue of the journal Nature.
It IM the culmination of u lonely
and 101ne11mes danaerous selltl:h by
llrunet that beaun
year• aao, fur
from the most celebratr:d ex.cava·
lions In eut Africa: Besides havlna
to deal with the horsh cllmutc!, the
-· reseurcbers hud to dl11 caretully
around land mines left from decade•
of wor,
·
"It's a lot of emotion
. .to hu~e In my
.
A810CI~TEO

or

2'

hand the be11innlng of the human lin·
eu11e," Brunet said In 11 Mtutement. "I
huve been lookln11 for this for ~o
lona."
.
Other scientists who have e~um ·
lned the skull said It Is u lundmurk,
buf enigmatic, specimen.
"lt'M not whut we thou11ht we
would find," tuld Bernard Wood of
Oeor11e Washln1110n University, "If
you look ut the buck of h. It look•
like a chlmpunzec, and If you look at
the front of it, It looks like something
In the hurnun foHHII record unum·
biiiUOUHiy u couple of million years

uao."

· ·

H11rvurd unthropologiHt Dun
Llebllrman · Huld the skull raiHes "u .
wheelburrow full of questions." He
likened It to Raymond Durt's 1920s
dlltCOvery of a tkull of an "ape·man"
In wuthem Africa, which lent the
flrAt 1uppon w Charles Durwln'•the·
ory that the deepcsl truce• of human
evolution could be found on that
continent.
"It's a major find," Lieberman
Mild. "It wlillllke many yean for us
to undentand just how Important It
Is."
,
Other researchers were more
auarded.
"This IJ 1111reat extension onto the
fo11ll re&lt;:ord," said University of
California paleontoloal~t Tim White,
"But that'• what the real•tory I• here
- Jt's on openln$ window.''
Indeed, Toumat is the oldett addl·
don to a fll'OWina may of ~ntly
discovered hominid,· or pre-human.
foull1 that 1bow human evolution
wa1 not an ordel'ly prOfll'CIIIon.
ln1tead, Africa ·appe11t1 10 ha~e
been widely populated with many ·
different trantltfonal species, How
they JCI IIOI1ed Into a new edition of
the human.famll)" tdbum could take

'

A NIW lkUU. - Thl Toumat
lk&amp;dl, uen tn thlt undlltld hand~
out photo, alone with fraaintn~
of a Jaw lind aevtral teeth, wert
found 11111 aumrner In th• hllfth
Chad dtaert In central Africa.
tAP) "
year. to Iettie.
Toumai wu• t:lllflified u a mem,
ber of the newly dubbed llpeciea
Sahelanthropus tthaden•l• and 11
thouaht to be between 6 million Qnd
7 million year~ old.
That meant it oould be u much a•
J mJIIJon ye~~rs older than prevlou•ly
found bomlnld f011i11, and ut leWJt 3
million year• older than the neJtt·old·
cat hominid •kuiiJ, ·
.
Brunet ooncluded Toumui wal~
upriaht bec:auM! the bole for the
spinal oord at the tkull'• ba~e Ia.
•haped like tho11e of more recent
blpedul prchumant;
.

The 1kull appeor~ to ~ the 1ize o(
that of a modem common chlm•
pan1.ee with a 1imil11t cranial capacl·
ty and ·•m 'li•h teeth. But facial
dclllllt, sucl u a very thick bony
eyebrow ridae. are like thole of male
hominid•.
'
The . lpc~;imc:n'• ap fall• neat a
critical point when the human lin·
eu~ 1plit from apes. Relylna on
aenetlc evidence, tcientiltl have
BIIUmed the lpJit ~urred 5 miiiJon
to 7 miiiiDn yeart .110: Tournai'•
a~nu may push back: die tltne-

hne.

•

.

•

•

,

�Poi'Ml'OV • Middleport • Gllllpoll" Ohio Point PIHnnt, WV

Mr, IIICI Mrl, llonlld Lit Tlwmty

Mr. 1ncl Mil. lttphtn Dtvla

·Crneser-Davis wedding
Mr. tnd Mil. Joahul HtiP

Russell-Heap wedding

I

I

1

,.

CHESTER - Christo ()awn Russoll und Joshuu lty11n I loop
were murried June 1.5 nt tho country homo of the orlde's nunt
und uncle, Renu uml llob Ynlcs. Four Mile C'reek Rnud.
..Coolville.
·The hride Is the daughter of Ronnie nnd Rohln Rus sell ol'
Coolville. She Is the ~:runddnu1Jhter of Shumn Donnhue uno
Donnn Russell of Coolville, Vcnton Swunz of Alfred, the
grcnt grnnddau!lhter of Re~ und Ann Summerfield of
Reedsvllle, und Clludys Russell of Coolville. The lllllumls the
son of Riclwd und Billie llenp of West Chester.
The bride und her nttendum were escorted to the ceremon"
'
by Herb und Sue Mutheny of C:lusslc Currlujje. The bride wus
. escorted down the nisle by her purents.
· Richard Heap, father of the groom performed the afternoon
ceremony. Music wus provided hy Mike und Dol Nnrman urul
Amy While, cousin of the brlde ..wus tho voc1tllst. A "inoth~t·'s
rnessuge" ~~~~ glv\)n by Billie Heur.
.
,
Oiven in mnrriu!le hy her parents, the bride w~e u 5truplcss
Min A-line l!Own with beuded Cornelli embroidery. She cur·
rlcd u bouquet of daisies and other nssoncd Mowers.
The honor of uttendunt was Currie Russoll, sister of the
bride. She wot·e u Ooor length pule yellow gown und curried
nowers simiiur to the brldul bouquet. Ellen Hnrper und Anuren
Russell, cousins of the bride were the flower girls. Best mun
wus Jucob Heup. brother of the 11room.
. The reception wus held utlhe Yules' home.
The bride is u 1997 11ruduute of fledcrul Hocking Ul~h
School and 11 currently employed u1 11n IICtlvltlel thcrupl1t ut
Eustgatc Heohh and Rehabllltutlon Center In Cincinnati.
· The aroom Ia u 1993 groduutc of Lakotu High School und u
graduate of Ohio State University. He Ia currently employed
aa u rcaionulaulca manaacr for American Medlcol Equipment
of Cincinnati.
The couple rcaldc In Batavia.

I'OMEROY - Jcsslcu DuHicllc Orucset• nnd Stephen Roy
l)nvls woN married Juno IS, In tho Ucllom 11d Mcthodi&amp;t
Church 111 Point Plomnt. ·
The bride Is the duu11htor of ·Onry nnd D brft Oruoacr at
Pomeroy. She Is cun'Cntly nttcndlnll Hockin[ Colle~.
The brldel)r~1om Is tho son of Hurold und "BvolytfDIIYII of
M11son. lie h11s u llnchclor's dcllreC In llush1CIIIIdmlnlatrollon
l'mm W.Yo. University und he Is currently employed 111 Atllona
Wnl-Mut·t tts un usslsuuu munnjjor.
' Rev. C'lll'roll McCuuloy sot·ved us officlntlniJ mlniMtcr altho
double rln11 ceremony.
.
· Murkeetu Ct·uml'! wns thu phum snlnlst. Tho Ql1\trch w11s
· decorut~d with vurlmtN l'lowor ut'l'lll11,lCI11QI1tM lind other dccnru·
tlons mndo hy the bride's ~o~rundmothcr. Vlolu Hurtcnbuch. The
weddlnll colors were periwinkle nnd sliver.
Oury 1111d Dehru Oruo.1er, pnronts of the bride, j!IIVO tho brldo
In murrluge.
The bride wore u white llnwn with n CAthcdrtlllon;th trnln.
Andt:llu Clrueser. muh.l of honor. WOI'C u periwinkle dre81.
John Rundolph of VInton wuM bcMt mun, Chrlltophor o11 v1 1
of Muson nnd Juson Newson of Onlllpoll1 Forry wore u1hora.
The receptlnn wus held ut the Oollomoud Methodist Chureh
lmmcdlutely followln11 the c~rcmony. Lorrl Randolph reiJII•
tered yucNts.
The couple will be tukln11 u honeymoon cruiMe to tho
lluhamus.
·
They will rc1ldc In Syracuse.

Bush-Mast rs e11gC{~emeut
Mr. end M11.

Mr. tlllt.l Mt8. Sll'llhctt llt'\lwnlnl! ul'
llllltfitll!c
ttl Jnhtl
Lu\vreue~ l)rii!I!M, Ktlll nr Mt'. Ulll.l Mt'M
, l.utty l:&gt;rll!l!~ Ill' l..olll!
llottmn.
·
. 'l'lm hrltla·clc 'I IM II ltlO I l!l'lltllltllt! or tlt!Hl\!111 llll!h St:hool
uml I~ ~ llrt\lntly un~ntlh111 Hockln~o~ t'ullcl.lc I'm· 1111 MM\li:lutc
tlo~t\lc 111 ~~~~ountlttll · Sho I~ ~urt'lllllly cllltJioyctl ut 1\cctl's
t'mtntt')' St\ll't\,
·
·
ll~r nunccl8 11 l'li&gt;H l!flltluutc. ul Uustcrn llll!h Schuol nntl
l!t'utluntl.ltl lhuu I hlCkhll.l t'olllll!~ In lilt) I, lie I~ curt-cntly
c t1111loy~d hy II&amp;H cnnMtructlon.
Allllll\ltl dtureh wctltlllll! 11 llltumctii\Jr Au11. t 111 l :30 II·ttl.,
ut Ud~tl llultcd Ut\ltht\lu Church, 11 1\\Ccptltlll will follow.
ltl\l:i()SVII,t.U -

MIDDLBPORT - Jennifer Mlt'l llu,l'mun nnd 'rhnolhY
10A!lJlh Fouta were mMrrlod M11y 25 "' th MlddiOI:IOI, Church
of t'hrlat.
.
·
· Tho bride lalha diiUiJhtor of Losllo und Putl'i ·lu Hnymun l.lf
Mlddlapon. Th aroom 'IK the sun of Ju~011h und ('ut'OI PoutM
of Fllntltono 011.
Tho R v. Mike W11n1ko llCrt(mnod the douhl~ t·lnl.l c~t~mo·
ny. Tho church w111 dccorutod with mul)nolluM, Ivy, white 1 w
oow1, 11nd c•ndloa. Mury Schufor wuM th Ot'lllii11Nt.
Olvon In mlrrlliJO by hot· futho'r, tho brld wm u Mlmpl 11
pl11tlnum whlto Bolio dollancr ~own hy MellftNII Sw11ot,
· cmbolllahod with bo•dln~ anll omliroldot')'. Sh uiMo wot'll her
arc11r·grollt arandmothar • wcddlna rln~ und Jlourl dro11 our·
fh11llo
.
Tho brlda'a bouquet ·WliN 11 cucndo of Ivory tllHOM, whllo
II lioa, lllt1c ond .arocnory.
.
.
Tho mAid or honor Will Mllrlunu StlllltM. ol' Mnr,l'hmd,
Hoathor Wt1o of Cho1tor, ond t..ouh Hutton ol' Smtth Point.
Thoy woro floor lonath eolary a•·ccn sloovclo88 dt'CN8 8, lind
e11rrlod bouquota ot fvory, ro8CI, whlto llllo1. llluc, und 11rcon•

Mr. 1nd Mil. Oharlea Gotlllln

·for local news

POMBIWY - Tina M. Stooke~ und Rub 11 l•oorllltte~. Sr.
were tnllrrlcd June 15l.on tho 181und or Oulvc~tun, ·ro~uM.
DcUCh with tho CluJr Of MOXICU 118 It buckground NCCIJC ,
.
'rho bride IN lhc duughtor of llcrmun und Vlcklo Bu~.1.urd nf
ColumbuJ, Sho IH ourrontly employed ttH u lcuMina ox~cutlvc .
ror Jlomoroy II fl'J,
.
I AIIIIZO owtro long
Tho brldoliroomlllho 1011 or ltubon und Connie ltodrljjUO~ for ldtJOd comfort
Mr. of'l'cxnllc 11 currently Cllll&gt;loycd 111 u rnuuu11cr or u huuM·
ln(llrm.
.
Tho reception wu1 held uf tho IJiuMJhiJl llotol ovorlooklnM
tho Clulr Over 250 rumUY und frlcnd1 auondcd. A lllx eour111
l1CIII wu1 1ervod und ~ DJ pluycd tho mu11~ .
Tho murrloac united tho brldcllroom'll children, Mucic,
hul1c und Andreu. dnd the brfda'1 children, Ruymond.
Amber und Luko.
'rho couple ro1lllc In Pomeroy.

your

Overbrook
Rehabilitation
Center

llOMGRtiV - Charlll8 and Mulne t:loc1Jieln, ((outc 1
llomeroy, ob8ei'Yed their SSth weddln11 n11nlvermy on Jun~

28.

fh lr daullhter, Charlene Ooegleln ol' t&gt;ayton, and ~on8 and
tr r••u hnv~ u~ hlld thAt hn1
daUMhtera·ln·luw, M11rk and Thmmy of Tuppers l;lnln~. and
M tlll~ lnt h~ulth untl! ~~~~~~~you muy
tm ell~lbte 1\or noolotnrr~e .
Mlkll and Jotly, and their l!rnntl~hlltlrun, Jetullfcr. Bntndon.
t'nllthe ttrtllln l'uunry tt~nllh I untl Oradloy t:loo;lcln, ]t!lnetl \he ctluple for u l'nmlly cclehtall~jlHfllll~IH Hl441 •20.\9,
lltm.
fur 111111\l illftlfiiiHiitrll,
Rt!th Mr. and Mr1. Ooolllllln um llfelt!lll! re~ltlcmN or Mellis
tnll todMy Mild IRil the Nll'f!ls,
tllUill~,
.
They Wll'l marrhtd 111 ChaiU!r on June 28, ltl4 7.

yDUr body.

FUJR

.!~~rili,N~rt~T~U:~FI::~I!j
:'~~D~I!~8;~1Qf~N;1
HI, 1.&lt;11

Ctlmmunilfl &amp; 1amlllj 1un

uly Zt, 2002- 0-Spm

H•rd Drive•
Without The
Hard lell
'

.

.

At Plregr, you're home frM.

spedt1/
you/
'

Pamu.

.,

•

An open wedding will he oh~rved .

'R

t\uu)ll0o, ,

J

a.. your family to

GALLIPQCIS - Lena Coen and lame* Stower will be mur·
ried at ~ : 30 p.m. Sunday, July 21. 2002 at Bob Evant Purm1
Cubin•.
·
'
The bride-elect i~ the dau11hter of Ruth Cacm of Oallipolil
:and the late Bill Coen. She li currently employed by Wal·
·Man.
· Th pro1pective bridc$room iathe 10n of Le~ter and Becky
Stower of Vinton. He " currently employed by Bob Evan•

so

In h~ltl

Stookey-Rodriguez wedding

tor
• You rHIOVI yuur
l•vorlrt rhlnjll.

Coen-Stower engagement

tliCMII 1i1 uvnilublu

Mr. lnd Mrl, llubln llollri..,el Jr.

frilnd• &amp; l1rnlly

BRFlNTWOOD, Tenn. - l}uvld and Melinda Shoemaker of
Bremwood, Tenn., announce the lllli!UIICment and forthcoming
weddinjl of their dauJJhter Llu Caroline to Surrod Loaan
Wut8Clll of De"ter, Ml11:
.
The bride-elect i111 gmduatc of llardlnllllnlver•ity and 11 an
uccountaru lit Na&amp;hville. Tenn.
·· ·
·
Her mutemuljlrundj&gt;arenu ure Mr. and Mr1. Sume1 SJanton
of Na1hvillq, Tenn. &gt;atcmul jlrandpurcntl. are Mn. Either
Blaine and Mn. Loui~e Shoemaker of Oulilpoll•. and the lute
Daryl K. Shoemaker.
The proipecdvc brlde_aroom 11 ulw u jlruduute of Hardlna
llniver.lty and ia an auditor In Nu•hville.
The wcddin11 will he July 20 ut Wcril End Church of Chrltt,
Nu•hville. Tenn.

Mudtl\niiiMrtdt~MIJN

The tri·coun~~s source

or~IIIO)' Bblln, wearing an Ivory loco ,drou ond wt'l8t conuao.

Invites you

Goeglein 55th annivers_ary

't 'h~ IIUI'I!nll for
I Chlldl'l!n with ·

• No

Shoemaker- Vfatson engagement

t'ruu~e WON

Jt~ctl~vlllt! 111111\llltl~t! thl.l Cll!IIIIICIIICIII Ulltlll(lCOtHhll!
nf th~lr t.lll\tl!hlcr, Ul'l\l~ct Duulcllc llruwnlnl!,

wAathe newer alrl.
·
·
Boll man waiHamcd Azlz of Atlonto Clu. ()th~r Ul'llOIH81l1 n
wcro 1ohn Loveday and Sumo• Juek1on. Th~ usher~ ware
Mleh11ol and 1offory Poull of PllniMtottc Uu . und Jo8h110
Hll}'mon of Mlddlopon.
•·
Tho bride and groonl'1 mothor8 wore onkle len11th drcn'l11
with lllcil overlay Ill tho top and 11 wrllt eorlaiJC of' 1vory roll! I
and lll~~e.
·
:
ThO reception w11 hold at tho ohuroh. Thoro wat 11 throo·
tlored Ivory Qlkt with oaQh layer 01111 podoml . Azlz, th btll
man, aavethe coa111nd 'Androw Bakor waa the DJ.
The brldtlraduatod from Mala• Hlah Sghoolln 1998 und
aho worked at the Melaa Count)' Dlatrlcl Library before her
marrlaae. The aroom graduatod from Rldaolllnd Hlah School
In IPP7 and hela currently 11 U.S. Marino Corp1 11nd plonato
beQomt an electrician.
· .
They couple wlllaSJ.!!nd their honeymoon In Now York City,
They will re1tde tn Oeorala when tho aroorn Ia dlaoh•raed
from the Marln11.

L11 lhotmlktr 1nd J1rrod Watton

t:l;\l.I..IPOI...IS - i{otlnltf Lee 't'awney and Stcphunlc Br·ln
tnatriCI:I June 29 ut Unlllpoll ~ t'htlstlan C'hurch.

John Drtaa and lrldpt lrownlna

Tlmoth~ ~uta

Hayman- Fouts weddi1l~

1

..,

Crouse- Tawney wedding

Dlvkl luah 1ncl Kimberly M1att11

perwuk

NC

•

Mr. IIIII Mtt. Ill,.,. ttollt

TER

It is the miuion of the ...... Jllbll , _ ,
• OccupadonaJ Therapy
llhiMWI. C111• to restore each individual we serve
•
to the fullest possible level of physical, mental, social, • Phy•ical Therapy ·
avocational, sensory and spiritual function.
• Spe«h Therapy

1211azlllllllrclllnea • ....., wr 21271 • IJitJ IJ2..7t24
'

Stout 40th anniversary
PLEASANT
VALLEY
I

No Credit NM4Nd

• P1y11ttnw To 'It
Vour Budget
• No Obllptlon ·
•

,,,. Dtllvtry

1nd litup

lllver Bridge PIIZI
01lllpoll•
448-4417

•

No other aect~unt o(fen yt1u more d1an Plrttar flrre Check in(!.
In add Irion ro flree lnurn~r Bank ln11; ytm'll al1o JCill a (re~
Cheek 11rd, no monthly malnrenance fe 8, no mlnlmurn '
balanu requlrernenu, a ~omjletltlve lnrere1r me~, 11ntllt'~
All baekrd by our tJCclulive Five Star &amp;ervlee &lt;:Jullrantce,
Plut, nnw you can enjoy twn free mnntht 1Jf lntrrnrt Bill
flAy, which allowt you 161
.
t'l Sn• on J'Ot.t•ll• by payln&amp; yoor blllt •l•ctronl,•lly.
tt f!chadule r.,udn11 monthly payment• ~uch 11 your
motrllll' or Cit p1ym1nt. ·
OP~y on"'lm• bllltllld chilli' or c1ncel 1 payment.
· Jlor mure lnform•don,tltop by Any Pim.r hrarwh,
c1il 1·866·221·47S7 or cdwck u1 out It ~ttlr.~om.

�J

,

PageC4

•

1l, 2002 ·

I~

I

,

~lave

you noticed how much bet·
tet the sidewalk ~tllmnces to the·clevator and the visitor's 'center at the
lrlcig; C'ounty (\mt1house look?
.: It 's hcen all painted around the
:&lt;loors. and then inside the elevator
.foyer. the walls have hccn painted
,Qnd i1cw tile has hccn Installed.
•. Funding for the project ·. came
through lite t•on\etoy Merchants
Am 1&lt;:iutitin which received a dona·
tion from someone who wants to
' . ano11ymous.
·remtutl
: Since the entire courthouse needs
:a little sprucing up and the revenue
·CJow for county operations is slowQ, ~ down, maybe what we need to
~ &lt;J h divide the entire histot·ic buildIng into little squutus. and then seck
.m.tl ul'llucltt or not-so-atllncnl resi&lt;iclll s wl1o might want to spruce up
11 square.

•••

· Fnt thn;c who lind it dif'lkult to
. d11 h;nll ' urfacc arrohics. here's an

Charlene
Hoeflich
MEIGS COUNTY
alternative - London Pool at
Syracuse is 11ow offering adult
water aerobics classes on Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 6 to 7 p.m.
Shirley Sopher is the instructor and
there is a charge of $3 for each crass,
hut the benefits can be great and the
exercise is less strenuous, making it
well worth the cost. If you 11eed more
irlfonnation. just call the pool.

•••

Everything fmm crayons to calcu-

returns occasionally to visit her par· names from the Tuppe~s Plai~s area.
ents, Jim and Katie of Orange It was donated by Dons Davts Well
Township.
and Evelyn Bahr Well.
:
Mary just completed 11 bicycle trip
Do you ·have one wht~h you
down Scenic Highway 101 from · would like .to shllre durmg the
Seattle to the California-Mexican . Chester festival? If so call Kaye
border. Her. solo trip took her down Fick at 740-985-4415 .
the
Pacific
coast
through
.
• • •
.
Washin(!tOn,
Oregon,
and
How long has it been sm9e you
C11liforma.
took a walk in the woods, ~!axed,
She biked 40 to 50 miles a d11y and on a bench down by the nver to
camped at State Parks ovemi~ht. watch the water flow by, or stop~
Her odometer registered 1,880 mtles to smell the roses or whatever tt is
when she arrived in Mexico. .
thllt grows in your garden?
• • •
Too long probably.
Among the many displays at the
Bringing nature into our lives is
Chester· Courthouse to be featured important to well-bein3. It's a way of
at Chester-Shnde Days next week· reducing stress, increasmg energy. lift·
Many here probably remember end will be signature q.uilts.
ing our spirits. Srealing even a few min·
Mary Nally (that cute little kid showing
Two with hundreds of Meigs utes from a hectic day can restore body
4-H lam~ Meigs County Fair).
County names are already there, and s011l in so many ways. Just do it.
She gl'llduated from Eastern, went one form Anna Tuttle d11ting back to
(Charlene Hoeflich is genera!
to Ohio University, and then went to the 1930's on lo11n from her daugh- manager for · The Daily Sentinel,
Washington State where she is ter, Mary Kay Tuttle Rose, Another Pomeroy. Cqntact her at hoeemployed as a social worker. She from about 1929 with hundreds of flich@mydailysentinel.com.)
lators is needed as God's N.E.T., a
pan of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish, begins its collection of school
supplies for disadvantaged children.
July is always the month when the
appeal for help goes out. For kids to
have the supphes they need when they .
enter the classroom can make a differ·
ence in how they feel about themselves
and how they perform in school.
If you would like to be a part of this
program. school ·supplies can be
dropped off at God's N.E.T. on Main
Street in Pomeroy, Monday through
Thursday, noon to 5 p.m., and Friday
and Saturday, 6 to 9 p.m. Distribution
will tuke place on Aug. 20.
·

•••

How will college.change your lie?
: Cnllcgc wi ll definite ly chungc .
.:.~ &lt; &gt;Ill' life for lite better. College has
: ~ lot 111\ltc thunthc obvious to offer.

: ~hilc ~llhullci ll g ymtr cur~cr oppor• 1ui1il i~' hy ohtai11i11g a degree is
' clenrly lhl• nilira l end result. there
' nrc llutlly nliditiollal hc11efits. Keep
• reudiug and al low me to outline
: somr hcnclits you IIIII Y not have
: thought ol'.
: . Col lege offers many oppor1u11ilies
; 1'\11 ' tudcnls In ~mw u11d mature.
·: n•!!nrdlcss of lhctr u11e. To be suc·
': cc ~s ful in complctmg u co lle~e
• dr~rcc. students must ha ve u sig mf: ka11t illlroutH of se lf-di scip line.
: llnlike lii~h school, students are not
~·cquircd In ulletld class every duy.
. N,, &lt;111c is look lng over their sltoul. \ ler In assure thul assign ments arc'
. ,w111plctcu . ( 'ullcgc students must
ullc11d cla ss . cu111plctc homework
, itsoiglllllCill s and. study all on their

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VII;W
own. Thi~ is sometimes difficult for
yo un ~ adults when certain soc ial
activities with friends must be given
up in order lo uccomplish · the
ussigned acudemic respon sibilities
thul college demands. This is also
true for adult students. when the
burdens of children. cooking dinner,
and other family responsibilities
coincide with their academics .

Students must lenrn to prioritize to
balance their tusks enabling them to
meet both their personal wants and
their academic needs. These priori·
ti zation skills will be highly valuable to future employers.
College also teaches students to
interact with other individuals as a
learn. In the world of employment,
we are often required to work with
individuals who have interests,
backgrounds and skill levels that are
different from our own. If we are
not accustomed to working closely
with different individuals, this can
become a challenging situation. A
great deal of college aclldemlc work
that is assigned is to be completed
by a te\lm. The professor usually
. chooses random individuals to cornprise a team. The team is then 11sked
to work together to compile
research, .complete assignments,

and even do a class presentation of
their assigned project. The grade for
the assignment depends on the work
and effort put forth by each team
member. The team must learn to
divide up• the work and strive
toward a common goal, much like
an assignment given to employees
at a job.
The trait of persistence is another
benefit gained by attending college.
Let's face it; certain academic class·
es are not likely to be applicable to
your employment opportunities. For
example, do you really think that if
you are a journalism major that you
will ever have the need to use the
quadratic equation that you learned
in your required calculus class? In
my opinion, it is highly unlikely, but
these classes are a.pan of complet·
ing a college degree. Successfully
completing these required classes

outside your major, and maybe not
of genuine interest to you. indicates
to your future employer that you
have theetenacity' to complete a task
no matter how trivial it may seem.
These classes also provide an indi·
vidual with a broad base in a variety
of subject matters.
As you can see, college offers
many benefits that will change your
life for the better. In addition to the
direct employment benefits of a
degree, college graduates arc
knowledgeable,
well-rounded,
mature individuals with a lot to
. offer future employers.
(Luanne Rase Bowman is vice
president for financial and adminis·
trative affairs at Rio Grande
Community College, P.O. Box 326,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, 245· 7236.)
'

BY JAMEI SANDI

I

I'

I

Gallia ~ introduction to the. Jazz Age

Oa ll it10lis hit the Ja n Age in
1'123. ut lcu' l fnr those whn freCjll&lt;'lllc&lt;i lite Onllipolls .Theater that
yeut. l11 fact the sewnd movie lobe
sltnwn there in 19Z3 was "A Dramu
of the Mud Age." The promotional
put out by the movie's ownl'R firm
suid that the movie asks the qucs; lion. " Is the modem world, like
: lllrcicnl Rome, ruci ng to ruin on a
wuve uf jazz und cocktail s?"
Some of the muvie titles that year
suggested a crossi ng over the line to
ti1Ul road. There were such titles us
"Elope If You Mu st." The Vclleil
Wnman." "Woman Who Walks
. Alone," "011c Week of Love;' "A
Matrimony of Ful lure," "My Friend
The Devil ," "Bonded Women/' und
"W hu Are My Parent s'/" One movie
~ lnimcd that t1 would expose ull the
. sins nf I he lutz Age.
or (nurse most or the movies
.

.

above had more shoc k·in the title
thutd n the actual fuotagc ..und these
movies rerrescntcd only about one·
tenth of ol of the movies shown here
in 1923. That year cpwboy movies
were still very popular. The main
cowboy stars were Tom Mix, Jack
Holt, Buck Jones, and Hoot Gibson.
Jac kie Coogan, child actor.
slurred in 3 movies in 1923, "Oliver
Twist," "Peck's Bad Boy," and "My
Boy." Female stars included Gloria
Swanson, Marian Davies, Mabel
Normand , Florence Vidor, und
Theda Barn. l'opulur male slurs in
J 923
were John Barrymore.
Thomas Meighan , Dustin Famum.;
Harold Lloyd, John Gi Ibert and
William Russell who made famous
the "Boston Blackie" character.
But the most provocative performances in the Gallipolis Theater in
1923 were live shows. Burlesque
wus big in the US in the 1920's and
•

its influence was being felt all over.
Vaudeville and the old minstrel show
were coming to the end of their era.
There were such burlesque type
shows here in 1923 as "Harold Orr
and His Hollywood Flappers," .
"George Wintz' Venus," "Margie,"
and "Eve." Venus was advertised to ·
have ''a jovial harlcquanade with
the most alluring coterie of heart
snatchers ever ~athered outside a
sultan's ·seraglio.' Of Margie it was
said that it provides "an aggregation
of stage bub,Y vamps that can warble
and dance.' The girls In Eve were
"prettier. than Eden •s garden." A
small crowd showed up for Eve.
The Tribune reporter stuted that it
was much better than the usual
shows. "It was clean and the jokes
were fresh ."
.
Even straight musicals and come·
dies based on cartoons had dancing
girls. In 1923 the, stage production

of "Bringing Up Father," "Barney
Goo3le and Spurkplu3," and 'The
Origmal KatzenJammer Kids,"
came here. All three advertised that
they had "prettx showgirls." The
Broadway hit ' Sue Dear" played
here and even it added a "dancing
chorus of genuine charm."
'Tickets to some of these live
shows were quite expensive running to as much as $2 a seat. In this
era a T·bone steak dinner could be
had for about 50 cents. So a $2 seat
by . today's money would be about
50 dollars. The cheapest seat for this
burlesque type show was 50 cents.
It is interesting to note that most of
these shows took mail orders. Most
likely me11 from other cities near by
had to sneak away from their hometown to go _to these shows. Now
there were some local entertainers
still playing the Gallipolis Theater
in 1923. Included in that number

would be the Great Galvan! and
Prof. Lewis' Orchestra. Galvani,
alias f:red Daniels of Porter, Ohio,
was a magician and hypnotist who
traveled the world on the vaudeville
circuit. Prof. Lewis was made the
music director at the Ohio Hospital
for Epileptics about. 1910. He held
.that posiuon for nearly 40 years and
for most of those years he directed
both an orchestra and a band. Both
were welltraveled groups. Another
local group with a not so local
sounding title was the Hod Williams
Manhattan Orchestra. The Hod
Williams Manhattan Orchestra,
based in Gallipolis, Ohio often
accompanied the movies in 1923
all of which were, of course, silent.'
(James Sands is a special corre·
spon.denr for the Sunday Times·
Semmel. lie can be contacted by
writing to him at 346 Meadow
Lane, Circleville, Ohio 43 JJ 3.)

'

Tough times at Buckeye Egg
See today's Business section ... 01

,Proud to be apart
. of your life. .
Subtcribe today • 740-446-2342

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.

Dragon Internet

Suppose you have a leaky gutter or need a
new light filuure installed.
Both llJ'C small fix-it .jobs, so why hire a
full-blown repa ir company o,yhen the neigh·
borhood handyman could do the job? ·
As with most hume maintenance. the quick
and easy decision on whom to h.ire isn't
always so quick and easy.
In filet, according to Mike Turner of The
Home Service Store. you .need to approach
·'and manage the work by· a handyman · or
woman just us you would larger repair and
jmprovemimt compunie ~. Turner estimates
nearly 15 percent of all U.S. household
repairs and odd:jobs are done by solo contractors, otherwise known as handymen. He
says rf you can operate a screwdriver or hammer, you can cull yourself a handyman.
This group specializes in minor projects,
usually in the $200 to $600 range. Often,
individuals start sinal! in hopes of building a
real business leading to higher-payi ng work.
Their skill sets might be limited, but they
nevertheless take on projects outside their
-5cope of ability because they simply need the
. work.
"There are a lot of good handy-peopl e,"
says Turner, "but they can't be a know-it-all .
What you risk is people acquiring experience
.at your expense, taking jobs they're really
not suited for, and perhaps the inability to
. back their work if something goes wrong."
. Many handymen also operate under the
. radar screen of local licensing agencies.
Some jobs, such as replacing electrical wall
plates or installing new doors, don't require
licenses. Still;some handymen ·perform more
:complicated tasks. such as rewiring a room
or major plumbing, where licenses are
mandatory.
The trump card for most handymen is low
. pricing. Without an office. staff or other overhead costs, they can bid jobs at lower-than_.going rates . But what appears as low pricing
Isn' t always so, says Turner. "Ifl pay the right
guy $125 per hour and it takes two hours to do
the job but a handyman charges $50 per hour
and takes all day; which is the better deal?
Most consumers will go with the $50 an hour
guy but end up paying more. The real question

;

becomes how long will it take to complete?"
Turner advises homeowners .to hold the
handyman to the same set of standards as any
other repair or improvement company. Make
sure you get time estimates and pricing up
front. You should also be satisfied they have
the necessary slsills. and that you provide a
firm list of expectations. If the job is compli·
cated. ask the job candidate if they have the
appropriate licenses.
(The Home Service Store manages home
maintenance, repair and improvement tasks
in more than I 30 markets nationwide and can
be found at www.TrustHSS.com.) .

TEN YEAR AWARDS - Holzer Medical Center's 29th Annual Service Awards Dinner was
held on May 17 at the hospital 's Education &amp; Conference Center. Kathy Arrington , Hebe

Foster, Pat Adkins, Jeff Harrison , Tina Brenner, Betty Bush, Beverly Cunningham, Tim
Gillespie, Carole Oliver, Beverly Rife and Billie Stevens. From left to right , LaMar Wyse, HMC
President and Chief Executive Officer, Kathy Arrington, Hobe Foster, Pat Adkins, Jeff Harrison
and Alan Stockmelster. Chairman, Holzer Hospital Foundation. Not pict4reC!. Brenner. Bush,
Cunningham, Gllleapte, Oliver, ·Rife and Stevens. (Contributed)

~er

213 cup water
113 cup natural·&amp;~ peanut

but-

ler

1/3 cup holsln sauce
1 tablespoon seasoned rice

. wine vinegar
1/2 teaspoon Asian chill sauce
1/2 cup chopped green onions
.J ,/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro
· Cook paste according to pack·
age directions, omtnlng salt and
fat. Combine chicken and bell pop·
pers In a coland~r. Drain pasta
over chicken mixture: let stand 5
minutes. Heat oil In a small
eaucepan over medlum·hlgh heat:
add . garlic and ginger. Cook 1
minute, stirring frequently; add
water, peanut butter. holsln sauce,
vin~gar and chill sauce. Cook 1
minute or until thoroughly heated.

PHOf\JE RA~'s
JOB IS TO MAKE

OT'UL.

· SURE YOU KNOW
YOUR RIGHTS...
GUARAN"TeD BY
THE PUCO' SMINIMUM
Ta.EPHONE SERVICE STANDARDS.

'Ntet

PJHnnt, WV, PorUMOVIft,
UnkNt, Whtrtw,
MIIAitllut, WllftltlfiDn CH, Mt.lleftfnQ,IrOt'lton, Mlrllnl,
Alhlnl, lftd Motel
""" • ODthtWtl- *'pgntw ppm
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Mtup ... lpplltt to IW ntw ICCOUrtll ,

Monlnty Dllk'tf rtse II 11t.tl

(740) 441·2850

AND WHEN YOU CALL, I'LL
MAKE SURE THINGS
ARE TAKEN CARE OF,

CARE
fohn P. McMurry, MD - Ob$tetrician/Gynecolooist

&amp;

Some jobs are suited for your local handyman,
but complicated tasks that require special
skills, licenses or added staff are better left to
larger companies. (AP) ·

stirring wllh a· whisk. Combine
2 cups chopped roasted akin· pasta mixture arid sauce In a large
teas, boneless chicken breasts bowl: toss to coat. Stir In onions
and cilantro.
(about 2 breasts)
Makes 4 servings.
2 cups thinly sliced red bell popper
. 1 teaspoon dark sesame oil
. 2 garlic cloves, minced
• 1 tablespoon minced fresh gin·

For More Information

Suite .214
PVH Medical Office Building
... Allllabillll: lllti1JN411
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

Faye Myers. Doug Brown and Linda Addington received 5-year awards. From left to right,
LaMar Wyse, HMC President and Chief Executive Officer, Cox. Smith , Myers. Brown,
Addington and Alan Stockmeister, Chairman, Holzer Hospital Foundation . (Contributed)

8 ounces fenuctne

Local Acc111 Areaelnclude:.
,.,_.,, pt,

• Pollll ......~' Wllfllce:

FIVE YEAR AWARDS - Holzer, Medical Center's 29th Annual Service Awards Dinner was
held on May 17 at the )lospital's Education &amp; .Conference Center. Angle Cox, Cathy Smith,

Peanut Noodles With Chicken

1-888-657-0977

Call Your H11lth Cere ·
Provider Or The 011111
County Hlllth Dept. At

of wOrk

THE HOME SERVICt: STORE

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Pononal Web Spa&lt;t, Immediate Activation

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Thesdays, Thursdays &amp; Fridays

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl. .aant, WV

Sunday, July 14, 2002

PLEASANT
VALLEY
'

THE PHONE RANGER AND_PRONTO WANT YOU TO SAY
GOOD-BYE TO l'ELEPHONE SERVICE PROBLEMS BY CAll.JN7..

.

•

�•

••

Sunday, July 1"·

Po!Mroy • Middleport • Qalllpolle, Ohio • Point PIHIInt, WV

· · Page Ct • •unii4J&gt; 11tm111 ·•tnrmtl

.Pace c1

:aooa

1.. 2002

.Area Agency on Aging 7 hosts art show Ohio Valley Youth
Orchestra elects

I

I

Joan
B Ilne (Jackson
The Area Aacncy 011 Aainll
County):
2od place, Betty
n:ccntly hosted its 2 f ~Ill
Ahr
(R
County}: " place.
Annual Senior Citizens An
Letty lark (Scioto County).
how/Essay/Poetry Contest
Oil • hurt'h: 1st plo ,
in the Atrium of the Fine and
Barbm llod~e . (Hiltllland .
PerforminJI Arts Bulldina at
•
Count ). Oil • llortrnlts: V
the Univenity of Rio Onmdo.
plac~. Urendo Kty Miller
Rio Orunde. Ohitl. The Senior
. Citizens An Show ~nd Essay
(Jaekson County): • d place;
: Comest showcased 2!10 paint·
Holen Homer. (Hi11hl1nd
ings and 47 essay/poen\s
Countyl: 3' plucv, Frunels
OA Llf'Ol.IS - The .01\lu Vllllcy Youth Orthcstra held
entries by senior citif.ons from
lll~on (Juckson County). Oil
ll~ mmunl n~tln~ otl July I h Eltctlon of oOlcors was held
Adums. llrowu. Oalllu.
• rtorul· Prol~sslonAl : IS1
lind II ~view of tfle )'CUr's hll!hliahts WCN lliVCn.
. Highlund.
luckson,
111~c~;~, MLtry
lose (0Ailla).
This hus OOI!nll yeur of 11mwth for Tho OVYO which h11s
: Luwrenco. Pike, Ross. Scioto.
Oil
•
l.ondscl\11_0
• c p~~ndl!dto throe ~tuembfcs now sorvldnu students !!ill&amp; 5·
· and Vinton Countil.'s.
20. OmtliO~ Unlvt~I111Y of Rio Orundc students 11re now
: Winners are as follows: WINNIRS - Plctur d from . left, Levine Morris, Pl'Ofessk,nul: V_pluco, Donald
Benson
(Ross
county).
Oil
•
ptlrtlilp~~thli with thil prollnlln alvlny them un:hcstrnl and
· (Adams County)
Chorlos Murray. both from G IIIII County, end Pnmol
Anlmul
"\
Birds
•
coochh~
c porillncc.
.
Essuys: 1 st Pluce, Ruth K. Matura , Executive Director of the Aree Aaency on
Pmfcssionul:
I
st
·phi
o,
An
Instrument
Inventory
hus
bllcn
~stubllahoo
for smdents
Pence. Childhood Memories: A&amp; In&amp; District 7. Inc .. Morris and Murr1y recently pot·
who
nmy
not
own
un
Instrument.
Oonntlmu
to
this
lnvcnta·
Donuld
Bctlson
(Ross
: 2nd Place. Alice Rosonfolt, 1\c\peted In thtf Ar a A&amp;oncy on 1111n1 District 7'!1 ort County). l)nst~ls ·f'larul : lst
ry
uro btlinlo\ snlicltl!il It' unyone hus un lnstrmncnt In thi!lr
: One April D"y: lrd l'l"ce, show nd us y/ poatry contest. Lavin II Morris won
c:loset not in us~, thlly con donuta It to the OVYO and
: Elsl~ F~nton. Childhood first pl~co und Chorlos Murray rocelved second pi c pluce. Murlnn Counts (Scioto
re&lt;.'CI\'O u tux wrllo off.
County):
lnd
pluec.
Betty
: Mempries. Poems: 1st P,luce . . lor their ssoys on childhood memories . (con·
A. now stl'inl! toucher, Cnthy Orunt wus nddoo to the staff
Sghr (Rt\ss C'oumy); 3' pluco,
!lilly 0 . Sutterfield. llnmpy tr lbutod)
this
yeur. C'u!hy not only otfors trndltlon~tl 1111d Suzuki
Curolyn Loo (Ross County).
Joe: 2nd Pluce, Hazel Roush.
htstnlctlon, lllll Appuluchlon Oddlhtl! us well.
• Other: V pluco.
· Childhood Memories: und 3
CHIOIRI -E: 1st pluc~. tPustuls
A brochure wns publish~ und two 1\tnd ruisors wore
..'m~\lyn t.oo (Ross County).
: rd Pla\'C, Burton Young. I'm
EleiUHlr runnlnj,jlltll\1 (l1 lko P~st~.&gt;ls
~o~iv~n.
u "'l'lmu for Thtl'' nnd thc "Minl-Mucstro for u
• Ahstrucl : I' plucc.
: iiug~:cd . (Brown County).
('ounly).Cross-Stitch: All Vlol~it Wrlllhl
Moment."
.
(Ross County).
: F.ssuys: I st pla,·e. Jeun
Cutlllllll'ies: l't [IInce. llctl)' Pu~td~ ,, Anhnuls:
OVYO students C0111t! fl'lliH ilS fur I\ WilY liS eolumbus lllld
pluco,
· Jlundle.
Childhood
llllbhu . l'encil - Still Life: 1st Mill')' l)eck (Jnckson V
t'lljlltmul
1\lhl!nrsuls wcl\\ hold In Chillicothe, Jndtson,
Countyl: . A.tllcn• nnd
Memories. (Oullin C'ilullly).
plnce. llurbnru llolt.emet·
tlulllpolls. ThNo Ntrouts wcro held 11181 yilnr,
. Essuys: I st l'lnce. Luvinu
(Scioto County). Poncil • 2 ltd tllu~~.
onch
on~ ~ulmlnutlnu In 11 cnncort. flaulurcd soloists were
Lee
(Ross
:Morris. Childhood Memories:
Other: lsi plucc. Ruby lllto Cumlyn
[llnnlst LnMury Wysc In Nov~mllcr. clurlnollst Juck
Coullt
):
~
d
plncu,
C'urolyn
Evnns (Jnckson County) .
:2nd Place. ChurlcsA. Murrny.
Colomtm In Februury und OVYO memlw. Ben Hunllsh on
Dixon (Rtm Cuunty). Pastels
· Some l'hih.lhood Memories.
1 1
tubu. In Muy. Six ol tho cl~t~hl gruduntlnl! seniors ure l!tllng
: Pooms: 1 st plnce • Jmtn
Pencil • Lnndscup!l: sl ~nell. • l.nndscupc: 1st ~Jim;c. Judy
an
to to IJU music mujors In the full .
.
llelen
Schmid
(Scimo
Unroe. Anuck on America. ·
. '
County): 2nd plnce. !lolly Jo Swepston (Ross ( ounty); 2 d ·
Tho OVYO u~;ml Is to broudon lho culturul horizon of An
~·
lilt~hcllCk (Adums County): phtcc. Cttrolyn 01·uvcs Dl~on
hlstorlcully undct· st~t'vod populutlon In the henri of
1(1-!i~hlund County) Essays: I
: st IInce, Olorlu M, Drugoo.
~rd pluce . .Rlllh (Jt'OSjoun (Ross ('ounty). l)ustcls •
A.J'I'uluchlu . For lnfon1u11lon, contuctUtlltrd l)resldt~nt, l..&lt;iru
: Dud Stopped Rouminll Todny.
(lllckson County). Jlencil • flOI'It'Llits: 1st plucll, ll~tty
Snow u1 740·446·7923 or Mus it: l)lmctm·. Scott Mlchul nl
: Poems: I st Phtce. Mnry B!ST OF SHOW - Pictured ll
't d Fl I l 1
Suhr (Ross County). Pustcls •
740-596-3614.
: Moberly.
Roflectlve from left, Mmy and Gono · lll'tnu s 1111 orn : s1 P ucl.l Still Llfu: I stpluce, Mnry
in holh cutc~orlos. J)ot
· Requests: 2nd Plnce, M11rl Iyn Close of Gallla County: atond· Flemin~ (Scioto County).
Trouor (Ron County); 2nd
J. Houlllin. My Cr~111ion Of A In&amp;:
Sht~ron
Bowmen, Wutorcolor. Lundscu~! 1st plucc. Mury Peck (Ron
Yellow Rose: 3rd Pineo • Community
Ralntlana 1
VI 0 1 w 1 111 (R
roumy): 3 rd plnce, Curolyn
. Phyllis Luck • 4 nnd 54. Coordlnotor for thee Aretl County):
!)I nco.
ot
r
11
nss
2nd elacc, ·Holen Lee (Ross County), Acrylic •
·(Jackson County) Essays: V Aflency on A&amp;ln&amp; District 7, Lewis (Scioto County): 3rd Anlmul &amp; Birds: ht plnco,
. : Pluce. Mnry Anno Whnloy, Inc. Mrs. Close recently pnr- pluco; Juunhn Clurk (Juckson Allee Rosonfolt (Adum&amp;
:Childhood Memories: 2nd tlclpatad In the Ar o Ajoncy County). Wutorcolor
• County): 2"d j)lncc, Curolyn
. :Place.
Marthn
J)eck
.
.
on
Ad)nfl
District
7'8 art show s
I'
I
)J I
MILTON, W. Vu. - Wuhun1n Hi11h School sen lor Hollie
'ldh d M
1
3A
no
euscupo: I p nco, 10 en Oruvcs Dixon (Ross County);
llun11tz ho&amp; been seloet.cd ns one of tho year's Foodland
: Cl11
oo
emor es: r.. and ossey;poetry Contest Schmid (Scioto County): 2 d ilphtcc, Gone B. 'lYe (Ross
schalurshlp winners. For the rlflh eonsetutlve yettr1
Pineo, Mnry Ann Cochrun, where she recalv d beat ol ~lucc,
Donuld
l)runoo County). Acrylic • Sonsenpc:
Childhood Memories: Poems:
• 1 1
)
"'
Foodlnnd stares In the trl·slnle ure11 of Ohio, · W. Vu. ana
Isl pluce. Mury Anne Whuley. show (pro,oss one cateaory BI'OWil County). Wuton:olor . lst pluce, W.W. Jurvls (Scioto
Kentucky huve owurded scholorshlps to nrcn studenu. This
fer her · poln\lnl · titled. Animal &amp;. alrds: I" place, County): 2 d pluco, Juunltu
yeur, 18 omswndlna hlllh school &amp;onlors huve wonlcholllr·
Fane~ Free: 2nd pluce · Ruth "Sentinel." She elao received Violet Wrluht (Ros~ Count~): Clork (Juckson County),
ships to nron studem1. This ~ear, 18 outstnndlnu hlah school
. OrosJ
enn~
Mnke
Your
liourt
1st
pl•ce
In
th"
profoaslon•\
2"
I
All
M
S
I
Like A G1irden. (Lnwrence
~
"
"
P nee. · ce · • m 11 Acrylic -Landscnpe : ht
senlors huvc won seholurshlps or $1000 eoch to lnelr cho·
County) Bssnys: 1 st Pluc~. categories In mix modlu lor (Adums County): 3rd place, Jllucc. Don Rockwell (Scioto
s
n coll~gos. universities ruul toehnltul schools. The spon·
-~nes Lightne·r. Childhood her .
painting&amp;
titled, Jo Ann White (Adums County): 2nd lllucc, W. W.
surlnfl ~tore for Bnmllz's s~hol11nhlp wu '1\Yin riven food·
emories. Pike County : "Clown ... Hilltown," ond "Cat· Cmmt~), Wntercolor • Flornl : Jurvls (Scioto Cou'nt~): 3rd
lund.
·
Poems: 1st plnce. Ellner lalla." (Contributed)
lst puce. Donuld IJruuoo pluce, Oene ·rye (Hiahlund
The Independent owners of Foodlnnd Supennarke18
Smith. Cusunhies. (Scioto
(llrown Count~): 2nd plnce, County), Aery. He • Still Life:
underwrite the Folldlnnd Scholurshlp pro11rum, which to
H- e1en 1.cw1s ( cloto ·Co l1111~) I" piuce, Curolyn Or11ves
County) Essuy.s: lst plac·e. Pu~er: Mury Close.
dntc hus uwnrdild $78,000 In scholmhlps. fllathroo;h thla
liU"O VloJAI Wrl~1t Dixon (Rou Counly). Acrylic
An~ela
Bryun Oormun, ' hotooruphy
"1
1• Animal
R II1&amp; ~r·'
~ " I ' •
~
schalurshlp pro11rnm thnt Foodhmd rec:oanlzel the commit·
Chltdhood Memories: 2nd Blrdl: " P liCe:
us e (Ron Coullly), 2 A nnl· n • Other: V plilce, luyno
mont of hllll1 IClloOIItudents aenlors thrOughout the rcalcn
pluce. Vic lor Polls, Childhood McAill~ter (hckMon County): AnnuTh\1· (1\dnm~ Collntv)! Horton (Juckson Coumy); 2 d
10 l'tlCOIVo help In defrnylng the COSt ot their JlOSt•lllConilory
Mem&lt;•ries: 3rd Jlluce Alhertn 2"d pluce: Sylvlu llukel· 2nd nluce Viulot Wrll!hl (R~ISN pil1cc. Rushlc McAllister
educntion.
'rhc scholnrsltlp recipients were honomd nl n spe.
(Adams
County). Coumy)
(Jackson
County).
·
clul luncheon hoMttd ut tho
.
.
· Gifts.
Montgomery
Orndous
• Lnndscnoc:
Poems:- Ood's
Ist plucc.
Don Photonru11hy
~
,. I' Oil : Ill I'ds: Isl 11 Iuco,
Out or Dislrlct, · Scnrlet Ooks C'ountt·y Club
Thompson, Vulcnunc's l'ncm plucc: Royce Hortolr(Juckson Ulnnche Wnles Kunousc Acrylic • Anlmuls und Birds:
In flocu, W. Vu.
for my Wife: 2nd pluce, Jo County) 2 nd t&gt;iuco: Normu (Jackson County); 2ru.l plucc. I sl Place · Bevilrloy Codner
Twin Rivers Foodlund,
Robens. Where Huve All of Fristoe (Adams County); Betty Mouns (Scio\O ~oumy): (Mcl111 County), Acrylic ·
nionll with tho three
: the Children gone'?: 3r&lt;l pl11ce, 3dpluce: Juuni)u Clurk 3rd plnce, Letty ('lurk (Scioto Souscupo: I Mt Ploce •
flu~tmun 's Foodlunds In
: Reule Tumcr. L..ongins fur (Jnckson
C11unty). County). OIL · ANIMALS: I" llovorley Codner (Mclys
llolllu C'oumy u1·e owned
. llome. (Vinton County) Photogruphy • Swnmj): I" pluce. . Mury
Co~hrun
nnd tlperuted hy l)ob und
Acrylic
Essuys: 1st place, Thcrcsu pl11cc, J11)me 1-lorton (OIIllia. (Jncksun County): 2nd pluce, County),
Shcllu Bns1mun unll sons
stout, Childhood Memories. County). Plwloj!rutlhy • Juyne . !'lorton (Juckson Amcrlcunu: I st Plnce,
Uronlund Kllvln.
(MEIGS COUNTY) Poems: 1 Flower: · Is' plnce. Ken County): . Ppluce. Juunltu Beverley Codner (Mclus
{'ounty),
stl'lucc Tic . Put rick D. Wood McAllister (Juckson Coumy). Clnrk (]nckNun County). Oil .
• The II and and 1 st Pi 11cc Tic PhoiOI:lriiJlh~ • Portrulls: I" Other: V plnce, Viuln ClettleN Thl~ your the Arou Auency
: . Dorothy Downie, Why'/ · pluce: Sylv1u Bukel' (Adums (Jnckwn County); llelen on Ajllllf! hud volunteers from
•
llome1· (llighlund Counly): JuckNon Cmuuy 111 hillp wilh
· Art show winners ure us Cnunty).
• follows: Mix Mediu . Otl1er: I
Churcoul .• Flonll: I F't 3rd pluce, l~uhy 1-lile Evnns tho dlspluy of the show. 'rho~c
st Pluce • . Edith l~upert plucc: Nonnn 11 Allen (Jn~k·son Cmull~) . Oil • S1ill wlm helped were Bernadine
(lttckson Co.): Mix Mcd111 • (llighlnnd CowHy). Chnrcoul Life: IHI pluce. Shirley 1-lume1· Johnion, Shirley Humer,
Animuls: 1 st l'luce. Alice Lundscupe: l't phtce: Nnnna (Juckson County): 2nd Pluce, Mury C'ochrun, Juunilo ('lurk,
· Smiti1; MiK Mcdi11 . Allmuct: E. Allen (lli~hlund County). Virginlu Wulkor (lllghlund und Ken · und l~ushic
: JM.nry Close (Ciullin Co.); Mi~ C'hnrcuul · St1ll Life: I' plucc, County): :lrd pluce, Mury McAilliter, Royce und Juync
: Media • Lundscupe: Mury Beny Jo Hllchcock (AdumR Cochrun (Jucksun County). lli)rton, Joun BKIInc. und
Oil • Lundscnpe: lst pluce. Kuth!llen Siders.
· l'l()se: Mix Mcdiu • Cast C'mmty),

new ofRcers
for
•
upcom1ng year

TRAVEL NOTEBOOK
Manha 's Vineyard a new route with a fast,
Public to pt flnt
ferry that bypuses the traffic and
parkin&amp;
woes of Falmouth.
look at restored
The plan from Chlll'les A. Doudio,
lu~ury

Wldswo~·Lonlfellow

•

House

The dilemma of Icelanders
dining on denizens
of the deep

1

Foodland.announces
2002 scholarship winners

r

Seniors.treated to some·southern Gospel
GALLIPOLIS - An uudiencc uf 180
people gathered ut the Oullia County
Sen1or Resource Center fur the monthly
senior evening dinner on July J to heur
the joyful sounds of the Joy FM Trio. lo
honor 20 birthday&amp;. and to awurd door
prize~ to two dozen attendees.
A trio composed of three empioyee8 of
the Joy FM Radio Station in Point
Pleasanl performed an .outstl!nding pro·
gram of Southern Gospel numbers that
: proved to be one of the many delightful
:-e.rograms this year for th~ humdreds of
residents who auend the dnmers.
A tria member, Randy Pur~ons. served
a~ · the master of ceremonies and was
joined in the musical portion of the pro·
gram by Ricf Herman and Beth Ann
Rollins.
Prior tq the musical program Parsons
· announced that Beth Ann's daughter. 3·

year old .Grucc Rollins, hud cxpreucd eel the .11roup that volunteer• urc needed
her desire 10 lead Lhe audience in the to participate in tho Annual Reilly for
Pledge of Allegiance. As the audience Life at the Oalllpoli1 ity Park for a 24·
stood. the confident little airl accurately hour period on AUjiUII 16. 1'hl1 event has
led the recltiOil of the J&gt;ledj!o. and when proven 10 be a •ucccuful fund rulter for
they reached the point ill' "Under Ood". the banle agolnat all form• of cancer 111
there ~~~~ u noticable rile in the level of teum1 rotate shlfu in walkina all nlaht
the vo1ces of t~osc partlclpatlna.
and aolloil pled11e1 for their effon.
·
One unidentified voice from th~ uudl· Don Denney, chairman of the center'•
cncc concluded the recilullon w11h the ''advilory commluee allllted by Onrlund
remark. "that from haiah. chapter J I, we
d
h '1 1
be •
read , 'and a little child llhull ·lead them." Lanier. rew t c w nn na num r1 .or
The Ohio Valley Bunk'• roprelenta' . door prlzellthlll were donated by Arlxm
lives, . Lillv Holley and Billy Jo ~f Gulllpoll1, Fred J, Dccl, Qunll Office
Mcudowll, then preHcnted birthday ~ifts Supply, Clyde Evan. 1.
Harold
to 20 people who were oorn in euher Montaomery. Fruth Pharmacy, Dean
June or July. Clcor(le Hively 86 and Jean Evun1, Lurry Bctz, and Don ~olcomb.
Curter 84. were the two oldclltto be hon· Rcervutiona arc now l)elna ucccpllld
ored while the youn11ellt wall ~7.
at the: center for the lllnlor cvenlna din· •
Joan Schmidt, prellidenl of the Oullia ncr on Monday, Au11. ~ at 6 p.m. For
County Council on ABill(l, then remind· . rellcrvuti_on!plea~~e call 446·7000, Ext . ~ .

Exhibit of British roy1l
family memorabilia on
display In canada
. VICfORIA. B.C. (AP) - Monarchy
mavens will be pleased to know that a new
. exhibit of memorabilia about the British
royal family is on display in Victoria, B.

c.

The "Celebrating Royalty" exhibit at the
Royal British Columbia Museum displays
more than 300 items, including thrones.
ponrails and dresses worn by Queen ·
Elizabeth II and Diana. Princess of Wales.
The exhibit showcases the depth of
· royal connections to British Cal umbia,
beginning with the Victorian era and continuing into the .Present. Queen Elizabeth
ll has visited Vtctorla in the past and is
scheduled to visit again Oct. 4-8.
The e"'hibiL, which began June 28, is set
Ia run through Jan. 31. Fa( more in forma·
BOSTON .(AP)- A Rh~ Island busi- tlon call 2S0-356-7226 or visit www.roy·
nessman plans to offer travelers to albcmuseum.bc.ca.

•

A new Rhode Island·
Martha's VIneyard lux·
ury ferry Is planned

Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament under way at Cheshire
Ohio Electric Choice

'

'

Power Tip No.4oo

Uae your "Price to Compare" on
your electric bill to shop·for savings.

)

w••

aullmloolona:
• Collll'

nnowwobh• ar4 fli;CIIpl.lld, poovlood 1t1ey oro In fOCilt erliJ hllVO

goi&gt;d con11aot Ncjlllllv&lt;!IIIIIO aro iicco~o: - r . iJIO~IO lneluOcl • print

along with 1119 nogati'Al.
• Black-OIIld-wlllte phoiiJjlaph•
IICCtlpteO, prwiOf(J !hOI' oro In foc:u•
an&lt;J h!MI I£OOd contraat. N~ alto
aa:opleO: hOwllVPr, pl9!1M
Include 8 1)11nt 81/JI'IC wltn tile rlllfl8llv&lt;l,
• SUIMBrd-ti7Jj slldolto lliij o0X:ap100, provldod ttioy are In fOCilt lrliJ MilO

are aro
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• ~Uilmitt~Jd phO!QII floO&lt;Jid ll4 110 •malillr lhllfl s!lttld!o&lt;d wolltiii7AIIIrld
no larger then 8 x 10.
II Polor1cxHype ""'"'" 1110 dloc;QuriH!/lll oln&lt;l'llMY d&lt;J not raproouc&lt;~ wall
on newoonnt.
• When oubm11Ung dii!Jilll photD11 , lle wro 11191ntlliiJ5 ar• IIJI'~d 80 hl&amp;h,
rooolutJon, hl&amp;h&lt;IU8111Y JPEG fliiJI,
,
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llfllcll d&lt;J not trll01i18t8 well 1D newfiPM)fj{ CQI"mnt, AlJv{j(!Ux WP'I fl!l£11ti'Al0
am not &amp;CC43pted , ·

pnoi.OfU•nn•

••

president of the company that operates
hi11h·speed ferries from Namaanseu to
Block lsland, would ferry passenaers from
Quonset Point in Nonh Kingston, R.I., to
the Vineyard town of Oak Bluffs.
Oak Bluffs selectmen voted to share the
town pier with Donadio's sleek vessels.
The new Vineyard ferry, which would
carry up to 3SO people, could begin operating as soon as neJ~I summer.
The plan would bypass the
Massachusetts Steamship Authority,
which runs the ferry service between
Falmouth and the Vineyard, and has
blocked a plan to run high-speed boats out
of New Bedford.
The Quonset Paint-to-Vineyard trip
would take nearly twice as long us the 4Smlnute Falmouth trip, but Donudia said he
believes the demand would be strong
among travelers tired of the congestion of
existing service.

,.Y•

Th~! we~~~-l~nn~~rRe~~~!~~~

I£OOd control t

A statue of ·twO marinara overlooks fishing
boata In the harbor ol ReykJavik, Iceland, May
IV PAUL AMn
12, 2002. Fishlnfl Ia central to the national
.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ldentl~ of the oountry and· Icelanders claim to
R YKJ AV IK, Iceland - TheN al\\ two have
the world' a beat aupply of fresh seafood
wuys to see wholes in Reyl\lavlk.
·
You can tnke u bout onto the chill wate11 of lncludlnl cod, herrin&amp;. redflah, and lobster. (AP)
tho North Atlantic and scan the horizon for a
ullmpse of tnll fln, or you ~an order them hi· gNnte'st swlmmtna pool.
ml at Ulfur Bystelnsson's restaurant.
..
~llky blue, ~ot spring water from the near·
. Ice lund hus 1\\S[lftted on lntcmntlonol whal· by11eothermol power station fllls n basin In the
Jnll bnn since 1080, but nostalgic locals and volcanic rock. Hundreds of vlshors can 1\\lux
politically Incorrect tourists cnn sliU eot the · In a vast minernl·enrlched bath even when the
rich.. Nd meat of the mtuin11 nmmmnl&amp; at temperatures oui of the water dip below freez·
Eystelnmm's tozy Thrlr flrakkar bistrO,
ln11 and snow falls around. There nre mas"Thls is from old stock," the chef uys after saaes, sttunas and whilc mineral mud scrubs
serving u plate of fln whale sU111k In pepper thai leave your skin feellna baby soft.
11nuce. "We 111\\ uslnll meat that's 13 ~ea11 old,
The Blue Lagoon's 1\\slauranl, which offers
but It's .lltstllke new."
.modem, MedlterrnnL!IIlt·Bianted flsh dishes,
Hystclnsson Insists the meat's suspiciously was recently selected as among the world's
. fresh taste It due to the Icelanders' deep·frettze top 50 by a London magulne, reflecting the
techniques, rnther than any Illicit h11rpoonlna International reputation Icelandic chefs have
trlrs·,
.
.
. ,.
developed over the past decade by adapting
. 'lt s from n fln whale of 35 tons,' he lays. the countl')''s wealth of nnturallngredlents.
" 'That's not somethln~ you can shoot ·and
Aside from the more exotic foods,
: sncuk home one night.
Icelanders claim to have the world's best sup·
For unsquenmlsh dlnen, whalea are juat one ply of fresh seafood. Flshln11l1 central to the
CKnmple or the odd wildlife on menus In the natlanalldentlty and sales of cod, herring, red·
Icelandic capital.
·
flah, lobster nnd other marine life account for
Puffins oN 11 nntlonal symbol here. Tourlata two·thirds of the country's expons. .
flock to L.undi Island 10 sec~ them aitd atorea
In the old days, Icelanders tended aimply to
.,arc filled with cuddly toy veralons of the cute deep fry or boll their fish Into blandness,
lillie seublrds thut look like (!Cnllulnl with Byatelnuon eltplalna. ''Now we've stoned to
rnlnbow·striped beuka. They arc 11110 aerved do other thlnas. to use beautiful sauces."
anioked us 11 1amey appetizer In rcltauranta
Vld Tjomlna 11 a venerable town house
around town.
re11aurant down by tho lake. lta &amp;mall, cozy
Perhapa ~he uhlmlltll foodle IAboo 10p1 the room1 are decorlled with antlquaa, but chef
.menu at the prize-winning flth l'lltauranl Run!ll' Marvlnaaon 11ke1 an updated approach
Tvelr Pl1k11r- dolphin e~~tpacclo orienlll.
to hl1 cooking.
·
·· .
"Tlttea a bit like venllon," aay1 a Belalan
You. can atart with an array of marinated
vlaltor who1e culinary ourlollty overcame 1111y 1a1hlmi·1tyle raw f11h freshly P.IUcked from
qualm• about tuoklnalnto thin allvtra of mar· the Atlantic, or _perhapa hot tmoked brcaat of
lnatecl Pllpper. ·
Oullllmot with horaeradlah. Then move on to
.i Shocking to outaldera maybe, but Icelander• catflah with red onion, 1lnaer and aoya, or
:.eay cooklnaln thlt land of Vlklna• hu never. baked aalt cod with olivet, tomato and cheoae
: been for the falnt·heartecl. .
Marvlnuon '1 elanature dl1h I• marinated
: In hl1 novel "The Pith ~an Slna," the coun· cod china "a Ia malton," eerved here In aauce
:)ry'a Nobel Prlze-wlnnlna author Haldor delicately flavored with tarraaon and a touch
··Laxneaa deecribea an early 20th-century ban· of c~.
!;quet comprlalna "tmokecl lamb, pickled whale
''The china are trlclltlonal, but the way we
:and aardlno1 ... lteamina hoi bloOd eautage ... do It 11 my Idea," 1ay1 Marvlnuon. "In olden
:!tln,ed aheepa' heads."
·
day1 they were very often 1alted and boiled
:: I you're tempted, lcelandalr conneetl 1ev· ani! they eervod It with mashed sheep fat. I
~·.ernl cltlea In Weatem Europe and North don't know If my way Ia better, but It's cer·
~.America vln ReykJavik, offerina deals that talnly different."·
:;enable trani·Atlantfc truv11let1 to ilop over In
Contrasting with Vld T/omino's homely
::the world's nonhemmost capital.
. .
design, tho decor at Tvelr F skar Is rigorously
:: Just three hours from · Amllerdam or mocfem with a hint of oriental mlnlmallsm.
;:L.OMdon, and around five hours from Boalon
The ~uayside . restaurant whose name
:)lnd Now York, Reyl\lavlk Ia un lncreuslnaly nu1an'1 'two fl•h" offers pun·flred sea bau
~'POJlUlor •hort·ltlly·deatlnatlon.
with par1nlp and lemon or arcllc ·char on
•• The capital· Is home to 11round half of tomato polenta. Then there's . dolphin steak
· ;,lcelund's total population, but with luit with areen pepper and blue cheeae sauce. ·
~110,000 citizen• huddled around the harbor,
''Today we are not allowed to hunt dolphin,
:fteykjuvlk hus the ulr of an overgrown tlahlna but when they 11e1 one In the nets they can
~Ill age rather thnn a European metropoll1.
brlna It ln. Sometimes It happens by accident,
• In the older part of town,· bri&amp;htly painted, ~y ml1take," says owner Oluur
:• orru;11ted tin houses cllna to army knoUt Oudmunduon.
)pVCrlooklna the 11111 wat11r1 of Lake Tjomln
"I've never heard anybody cQmplaln.
~nd there ure atorel aplenty off'erlng hand· People unden11ncl that lt'l lomethlng we
.ocr11fled 1ouvenin, lncluiiiP.Il chunky hand·knlt always uaed to eat here."
1weaterl (which come In hand~ when aprina·
Acrou town In the Thrlr Prakkor,
'time temperature• hover arounil 32 P),
By1telnuon aaya he haa enouah deep-frozen
1 Reykjavik haa al1o developed a rcputadon wbale meat to la•t another year. and ls hope·
\1 a lively nightlife center with downtown fulthe ban on whaling will be relaxed before
packed with hlp ban where you can tr)' to 1pot he runa out..
local mea11tar Bjork or dance the nlaht away
The countey'l Marine Reaearch Inllltute
In 11 city where the aummer aun never aeta.
1tockl of lin and mlnke whtllet In the
The city makcllt ea•r. for ahort•IIIY vltlton water• between Iceland and Oreenland have
'iO ae1 a tute of Iceland 1 maanlflcent country· recovered IUfticiently 19. allow limited Qatch·
aide. Car rental Ia e!(penllve, but bua compa· ina to "'aume and the aovemment has hinted
nle• will pick you up from your hotel for day· It may rceume whale hunu ·in defiance of
.intematlonal oppotltlon.
trlpt to aome of the m01t tJie()tactilar altet.
The molt popular tour• follow the "aolden
''Thl1
meat that we were used to eatina
circle" route- tl\at heada ea1t out ot tile city once or twice a week,',Eyatelnuon say1. "ft
thrOUIIh the ruJaed Vlllll of the Thlnavelllr Wll I ";~I tradition for Ul, like for the
national park. It . wa1 here In 930 that 1apanete.
lcelltllderl created the world'• oldeat plll'lil· ' Opinion poll• ahow mOll lcelandera want.
ment overlooklna a fan of oriltlneltreamlthat whallnatareaume, but othertare worried that
tumble from the aurrounalna anowcap1 Into could hurt the ltl~'tlucratlve tourlam trade,
the country'tlaraett lake. ·
which drawl more whale walcherathan whale
The roud then 1nakes up to the aulfurou• hot eatera.
•prlnal bubbllna throuah the earth's rocky, Eyatelnuon doetn't think f()l'elanen will
aurfacc at 0
. ey•lr. Although the ortalnal Oreat atay away If the whallna reatarts. In 14 years,
Oeyser 1toppcd tpurtlna in 1935, It'• little he 14)'1, almolt half the rettaurant'l 35,000
pclghbor Strokkur remalnl a reaular aurae· cuttomen have ordered one of hlt whale meat
tlon, throwtna a jet of water and Iteam up to dl1he1 and only nine have walked out to
JOO feet Into the air every to mlnutet or 10.
protellltl preJcnc:e on the menu.
Oullfott wa1erfalll1 the third atop, 1 brellh·
For Naaayo Taniguchi, a vlsilingiapaneJe
111klna natural wonder where the 111ac:laJ waten joumallat, By1telntton'1 whale ,suhlml
of the Hvlta River ca~ellde Into a naiTow aerved with raw tcallope and waaabt was an
canyon In ·u thunderous lwo-tlered utanwt en;'OIIonal e~perlence.
.
that throws up areal cloudt of white •pray
'When J· waJ a kld at tchool they used to
allntlngln the aunlfllht to form Jlule rainboW a. alve ua whale ever;r day. It was cheap and the
Another memora'&amp;le e~curslon head1 welt only meat we got, Taniguchi hyl.
over the ttark, lava Jatldteape of the
"1 kn&lt;!W I~'• tuppoled to be a bad thing
Reyl\lanel 1'enln1ula to the Blaa Lonld, or now, but 1 had to. I haven't had It for 30
Dlue t.aaooJI, a cont~~nder ror !he world'• years."

PORTLAND. M&amp;ine (AP) ..,. After 2
112 years of restorations, visitors are 11ettln11 their first look at the newly .overhauled Wadsworth-Longfellow House. the
boyhood home of 19th-cenlury poet
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
·
The federal-style home underwent
painstakins renovations to sive visitors an
tdea of what the house looked like in
18~0. The Maine Historical Society will
held an open house July 6.
Longfellow was born in 1807 in
Ponland, where he is honored as a native
son.
Buill in 1785·1786 by the poet's grundfather, the house now serves as a memori·
al to his famous grandson. The three-story
brick house is a National Historic
Lllndmnrk.
The goal was Ia re-create what the house
looked like in the early 1850s, says Laura
Fecych Spra11ue, curator of the 1\\storalion.
- Thoush Lonsfellow had moved out by
then and his parents had died, he was a
frequent vi~ilor to the family homestea~.
where his s1s1er Anne and h1s Aunt Lucta
continued to live.
The renovations actually began In 1997
with research into the period and detective
: work as to what might huve existed under·
neath later coals of paint New sheets of
wallpaper were produced, sometimes dig·
hally. from remnants of border• and colorfUl, highly pallerned fragments that e"-iSt·
ed behind coals of paint and wooden
beams.

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• •

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ShopplnJ liu ntvit b.. n •••lor. Ju•tlook on your eloctrlc bill and find tho "prlcolo
compne" H11ed In conll per kllowou hour. Then, when cholee come• to your area,
compare thot ptlet to a cumpetldve oupplltr' • offer 10 determine If twltchtnr 1o • new
ouppller ,..Ill actually 11ve you money. For oi1J1 of tuppllero and on "apple• to oppleo"
comparloon chart, loJ on OhioEiectrtcCholco.com. Or ~U 1ho toll · froo numbtr.

To learn more, ollok or call

' 1·888·0EC·1314
OhlolleotrloCholoe.oom

Olrlw l).e.rtll Ot.it•lt•..,.,. .tdot M16t Ut~~ ,OW., IM OW. o-..-' o--J _....,_ I.Pl .... pr ........ a..-..t
"'"l •~rk
11 _,...,.I.,.. .,.__,.._.,. .. .,..._.. d.tit '-t.lpt..tkn .. II_. .., .... ,-.,..,.._ dlt.

_,.,.d1,. ...

p•*•••""l'•

.,

'

�. Sunday, July 14, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point Plea•ant, WV

Page C8 • 6unbap t!J:imt~ · 6rntinrl

China considen radical plan for saving -almost extlnd river dolphins
SHANGHAI, China (AP) - Chinese. sci·
enlists are preparing a drastic rescue plan for
one of the planet's rarest animals- a dolphin
with the mi ~fortune of living in one of
China's busiest and most polluted rivers.
The plan calls for professional fishermen to
round up all the fewer than 100 Yangtze River ·
dolphins, o.ne of only four freshwater dolphin
species in the world. The captured dolphins
would then be released in a protected reserve.
Government scientists say the dolphins'
oqly hope is to be moved from their sole natural habitat, the lower Yangtze River in cen·.
tral China. Their numbers have dwindled
rapidly with the increase in fishing, boat traffic and industry along China's longest river.
Other expens agree that unless somethin~ is
done, the blue-gray dolphins - the same stze

as their more playful oceun cousins but with
longer. thinner snouts - will be extinct in 20
years.
But they say simply relocatin~ the dol~hins
won't solve the river'1, worsemng condnion.
or help other species. They also say there mny
be difficulty catching the smart, fast-moving
creatures, and getting them to accept their
new home.
.
·
"Trucking down the dolphins will be like
lookinM for u needle on the bottom of the
ocean. suid Zhou Kutyu, un expert on dol·
phins at Nanjing University.
The extreme nature ol' the plan to transplant
an entire species undersco~s !he m~unting
environmental costs of Chmu s rup1d economic growth.
•
The government hus begun or is consider-

ing expensive progl'llms to ave other Mire ani•
muls as well, includin~ leopards, tigers and
Chinn's most distincttve wild animal, the
. punda.
The dolphins huve lived in the Yangtze for
25 million years. Called the ''Goddesses of
the Yangtze," they we~ a traditional symbol
of peace ~nd ,prosperity to Chinese Hvlng
along the nver s banks.
But in recent decades, tho dolphins have
been dec)IJ111led, most b~ beina accidentally
entangled m fishermen s n~t&amp; und hooks .
There were about 6.000 in the 1950s.
"The dolphins have no chance of survival if
they stay ,in the river." said Wang Ding,
deputy . dtrec.tor of the . Institute . of
Hydrobtology m the centra.! cuy of Wuhan.
The institute will oversee the relocation

~ess scruffy and stinky, more moneyed ·
and packaged ~ the new backpacker

I .

•

I

BANGKOK,
Thailand
(AP) - Where hove all the
gritty backpackers gone,
those shoestring vagabonds
from the West with soiled,
baggy garb who believed
diarrhea and body odor were
badges of a true traveler·communing with the locals?
On Bangkok's Khao Sun
Road, one of the world's
~ensest concen. trutions of
"'young travelers, the scruffy
backpacker seems on the road
to extinction, the stuff of nos·
talgiu and Hollywood movies.
The youthfur brigades still
struggle under overstuffed
backpacks, clutch their
Lonely Planet guides, scour
for bargains and fuel up on
muesli. banana puncllkcs und
hummus. Bui they're a different. breed.
"The image of the back·
packer is of someone laying
around on a beach getting .
stoned, and a small ~rcent·
age are like ' that,' says
Eleanor Lund, u neatly.
dressed 18-yeur-old from
Edinburgh, Scotland. "But
""/UOSt travel to learn us much
about a country as they can."
Ordering a IO·baht (24cent) bowl of noodles from a
street vendor, she's o.n her
"gap year," the time-out
young Britons take between
high school und university.
Land spent four months
teaching slum children in
India, und is. traveling in
Southeast Asia with friends
for two months.
.
John Hughes, a British
expatriate who · runs a Web
site about Khao Sun Road.

Abby
fromPipC1

,,

in my head, and it.drives me
wild that I can't remember
the whole thing.
I know this isn't a serious
problem, Abby, but I would
-lappreciate any help you or
your readers can give me.

Hi.story
from Pip C1
Walbrown, who teaches
h
agriculture/forestry Qt t e
career center, wasn't the only
teacher involved. Russell
Williams' welding cla.~s lent
a hand in repairing a crack in
the marker.
"The vocational people up
there have been very, very
good to help with a great
muny things," Cook said.
-,"The welding instructor
welded it back where it was
broke "
The. effons put fonh by the
career center and Cook have
not gone unnoticed.
The Division of Archives
and History sent Joe .Gei~er
from the Databa.,e Arch1ve
section down to help with the
reinstallation of the first sign.
"The marker programs
these days are pretty much
dependent u~n indivi.duals
who have an mterest in histo·
ry to keep them going
because we don't get state
funding to rj:pair markers or
· tO eut up new ones. '
'We're really grateful to
Mr. Cook and certainly ui the
people at the career center for
their hard work."
Geiger notes chat the
Mason County has an exceptiona! number of si$ns that
are still standing smee the
historic marker program was
initiated in 1934.
•
"About a third of the murk-

says young people taking
breaks in schooling and those
seeking temporary employ·
ment and learning opponunities abroad have largely
replaced the travelers of old
who wandered footloose and
fancy-free as far and long as
their money would take them.
And there are some older
ones who come back druwn
by fond memories of their
younger backpacking days.
"It seems to me that a lot of
backpackers have plastic in
their back pockets whereas
they didn't before," sdys
Hughes, who ftrst encountered Khao San Road 15 years
a~o. "They're better orga·
mzed and getting more pack·
aged."
Khao San - has likewise
undergone dramatic change.
The 300-yard strip and surrounding alleys, neur the
Grand Puluce und other his·
toric sights, have mush·
roomed from a few wooden,
family-run guesthouses in the
early 1980s into u thriving
tourism area.
"Khao San Road - anything you can ever want,"
suys Scott Robinson. quoting
a line from "The Beach," u
novel
turned
into a
Hollywood movie that boosted the popularity of the road
und Thailand's backpacking
culture.
Whlld two older Thai
women twist his hair into
dreadlocks, the 21-yeur-old
Robinson talks about his
upcomin$ eight months of
travel, a liberating pause from
studies and u love affair back
Thanks.
IN OHIO

in
Sydney,
Austrulin.
Meanwhile. he's experiencing
Khuo San Road and staying at
a guesthouse for 150 baht 11
night, or about $3.50. "You
can sometimes get it for 90
baht,"
.
But the area now aloo feutures several upmarket hotels
and trendy ni~:~ht spots, the
Iutter attracting wcll-h,eeled
Thais who once shunned the
. neighborhood as a ghetto for
uncouth " furun~:~s" (foreign·
. ers).
Travelers can still get their
bod~cs tuttooed und pierced,
eat tor rock-bottom pr1ccs and
pick up a fake "International
Press Card" or· "British
Columbia Driving License."
But Khao San has sprouted
shopping arcades, American
cham convenience stores, tailor shops und plenty of ATMs.
As testimony to backpacker
spending power, rents in the
urea now equal those along
Silom Road. Bangkok's
"Wull Street," says Nopporn
Bhuttnn, u member of · the
Khao Sun Road Business
Association.

effort, which Wana said has been approved by
the Ministry of Forestry and could beain next
year.
The $6 million plan would hire 50 professional fishermen in boats to senreh a 1,100.
mllc stretch of the Yangtze und cafllure the
dolphins using nets .
The nnimuls would then be released in the
newly creuted Tiun· erzhou n,uture. reserve in
Hubei province. The.reservc: IS built around 11
13-mile segment of the Yungtic that was left
behind when the main river cbtmged course.
The reserve is ulreudy home to 20 tlnlcss
porpoises, another thrcutened uquutlc mummal found in the Yangtze und elsewhere In
Asia. Wong suid the porpoises, which were
put there on o trial basis by the biology lnstl·
tute in Wuhan, huve thriv~d .

Refuge s stem helps restore
industria Ohio River islands
MIDDL8 ISLAND, W.Va.
(AP) - From the shade of u
10-by-10 birdwatching shel·
ter, Mull Connolly studies u
painter's palette of plant lifo.:
luvender thistle, · wheat-col·
ored barnyard grass, rust-red
smunweed und snow-white
chmnomile swuy among vauious shudes of green.
"Yeuh, it's pretty," he says
.·with u shrug. ' And yeah, peo·
pie like wide open spuces.
But it should be forests." ·
Connolly, deputy manager
of the Ohio River lslunds
Nutionul Wildlife Refuge, Is
less interested in protecting
whut is thun restoring what
wus. Hundreds ofJears ugo,
this 233-acre islan was cov·
ered with trees, their branches
heuvy with birds.
Today, trees ring only the
outer edges of what has
bcc(lme u vust meadow lqnd stripped down by a cen·
tury of funning und li factory
thut mudc marbles, Birds still
feed on tangles of blackberry
and grape vines, but their

numbers are fewer und ihe
species have chunged.
Connolly and the rest of his
U.S. Fish &amp; Wildlife Service
staff want to rebuild the
forests und lure buck the creutures that once thrived. The
ceruleun wurbler with its bril·
linnt blue hues . The pro·
thonotury warbler. feuthered
in gold, orange and green..
'Here, history Is the goul.
Middle Island is umong22
Islands thut, In whole or in
part, m1!ke up the refuge.
Creuted 111 1990, the network
now encompasses more thun
3,200 ucres of fish and
wildlife hnbltnt in one of the
nation's busiest Industrial
waterways.
Fish &amp; Wildlife plans to
acquire 13 more islands along
a400-mlle stretch of the river
between Shippingport, Pu...
und Maysville, Ky.. eventually linking some 12,000 acres
of flood plain' forests, wet·
lands und uquutlc hubitat.
The latest addition is Fish
Creek Island, a forested, 48-

ucre greul blue hcron.rook~ry
that remains relmlvely undlS·
turbed. Canso! Energy donllt·
ed
the
Island
near
Moundsville to The Nature
Conservancy, which will tum
it over to the refuge.
In the early f900s, Fish
Creek lslund wus tapped for
oil and nnturul gn8. Luter,
power lines wore erected
there. Consol bought It in
19S6 with C(llll mining plans
that never mmerlulized.
"We felt this wus 11 wonder·
· ful thin~ that Fish &amp; Wildlife
r
,
was dom~. trymg to capture
all those ~~lands nnd restore
the,t;n .... It wus u nuturul flt for
us, says Consol spokesman
Joseph Cerenziu.
·
A total of 193 bird species
~ave been found on the
1slands, 76 of ,which breed
there. The refuge is nlso
home to .500 plunt species,
101 kinds of flsh und 42 vari·
eties of mollusk, including
the endungered pink mucket
und funshell mussels.

ers that were put up are no
longer there," Geiger Nuid.
"They've been knocked
down, or they've been stolen
or whatever, but Point
Pleasant's markers are still
around."
Although funding from the
state may not be available to
replace missing signs, some
area residents find ways to
pay the 51 ,500 price tag that
comes with creating or
rer.tacing a marker.
'Just about all new markers
that go up today are usually
the initiatives by the local cit·
izens who take an inten:st in ·
something," Geiger said.
"We work with them in the
. wo~ding and getting it erect·
ed.
.
There are a lot of people m
Point Pleas_ant w~o are taking
an mterest mthear htstory and
s~eing how ~istory can pro·
v1de them With a means of
promoting tourism and ·eco·
~omic development, he con·
Unued.
. . . ...
The West Vtrgmaa Dlvlsaon
of Culture and History
recently rele~ed a book with
~ u~ated hstm¥ of all the
~IS tori~ markers IR, the state,
Markang Our Past.
Proceeds (rom the sales of
the books will go to refur·
bishing existing markers and
erecting new ones.
The books can be ordered
from WVDCH. Cultural
Center. the Capitol Complex.
1900 Kanawha Blvd. East,
Charleston, W.Va. 2S30S·
0300 Cost is $12.95 each.

Classified ad.r, D2·7
EncryptiofJ softwart jlawtd, D8
Crude pricts jump. D8

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how /tHYII .l'lrH'i:.l' tlj' fllrti'IWI /'1!/fill'lllt'dltl,l'l
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'111i.• l'hllll ,\'111111'.1

MON. TUE. WED.

THU.

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FRI.

AEP

38.73

3e.95

3!1.27

37.o-

'35.51

Arah Coli

11.21

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+31.81

30.5&amp;-

30.01

30.65

29.8~

44.11

4UO

4UCI

41.51

Aahland Inc.

• -.S,11
39.00

38.39

37.n

37.08

37.1)6

ATU

+10,17

10.01

1.71

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10.441

Bank One

+38.70

37.28

35.80

31),13

35.87

• • 11.00

11.88

11,10

11.14

11.00

AmTechiSBC

Alllo

+

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28.20

28 .12

27.90

27.23

lorgW.rner

28.91
• 87.11

aa.aa

150.11

83.11

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+ 2.75

23.90

2.791

2.81 1

Chlrmlnglt.opa

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'1.11

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2.78

1.38

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7.13

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+23.21

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23.76

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13.10'

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+19.48

44.85

17.89

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44.07

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+

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11.10

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21.18

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' 74 .80

72.71

71.00

89.85

71 .05

11.30

17.01

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4.50

4.50

4.50

3.95

IO.ot. 411.¥

41.58

Bob Evana

0

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21.85

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~

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515.88

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50.58

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DESPERATE

READERS: If any of you
can help "Desperate in
Ohio," please don't be shy. .
Pauline Phillip.! and her
daughter. Jeanne Phillips,
share the pseudonym Akigail
Van Buren. Write Dear Abby
at www.DearAbby.com or
P. 0. 8(JX 69440, Los Angele.!,
CA 90069.

Inside:

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t
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VIEW
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,.

Have 1 bullness news ltem7
Give Ill • Clll.t (740) ••• 2:142,
at. 2J
.

uture·
•
m
Where does
Buckeye Egg
go from here?
Bv

JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED ~RESS

pusts.
"Thu 1111\lorlty nf' th~m
· 'ROTON
Put huvo hud ~omplluncll prub·
Lumpton hus lived with llltns und prnhlcms wlth
hordes of f'lles und the odor illcl!ul mlgrunl l11bor. It's
of chl~kon munuro ~llttiiHll· not u l11rl!o list ul' ctml.ll ·
lng t'rtnn ·hllr neighbor dutes." Suhll suld. ·
Bu~ko~o E!!l! Fm·m sln~e
Annthcr tlllccrtulnty is
she moved uhout one mile whether the stnte would
Sliuth of It in the eut·ly Impose stricter I'CI!ulutiuns,
Ill90s.
llr let 11 new nwncr keep
Lumpton, 57. wus purl of permits thut Snhli consld·
11 luwsuit Ohiu's furl!cst ers extr~mcly wcuk.
egg producer sctllcd lust
"They prnbnhly cun be
your, lifter u jury ordered it rim ndc4Ut1tcly il' you huvc
to puy $19.1 mlllion to Its 1100d permits und the com·
ncil!hbors for puttln11 up puny knows It hus to comwith the Illes, the ndor und ply with them . There's
polluted wutcrwuys.
hccn lin open lnvitutlon l'nr
· But sh&lt;l uocsn't think the uhusc," Suhll suid.
6,000 ' n~a·c f11rm's Cl!l!
The stutc t1nd courts CONCERNED ClTIZIN -Pat Lampton sits ne~l to Racoon
opcrutlun should nccbssur· huvll l'lncd Pohlmann ut Creek which runs throuah her property near har home rn
ily be shut down when il's lcust $1.3 million for vio· Croton on Tuesday. In 1998 a manure spill from nearby
pUI up I'm sulu this month lutlons thut Include illcg11l Buckeye EU Farm contaminated the creek killing the
ulnng w1th two smuller dumJllng of Cl!I!Wtlsh· und waterway' s wildlife. Lampton, 57, was pert of 11 lawsuit
Bu~keye Eil!l! furms In wustcwuter, itnJlroper dis· which Ohio's largest eg producer settled last year, after II
nur.thwest Ohio. The posul of munure und fly jury ·Ordered It to pay $19.7 million to Its net&amp;hbors for
f'nr1m' bcleullucrcd nt:lgh· unll beetle lnl'cstutlons on putting up with the flies, the odor and polluted wetarweya
burs huvc mixed feelings neighbors' property.
. thni ref1e~t the lnevltuble
The compuny's defense near the farm. (AP)
clush between desire for 11 hus b11cn thm It Is other
cleaner llnvlro.nmcnt und "funns, not Buckeye En,
the economic boon of 11 oautlna the probl§mR. ,
productive but dirty i11dus·
On July 2, Licking
try.
County Common Plans
"At one. time I would Judge Gregory Frost
hnvc suliJ let It t'uld, let I( reJected the nrBument
go under und forget It," when he found In J·uvor of'
Lumpton Mnld. But now the stute, whlch' lssued Its
she und others find them· ninth contumpt of court
selves wishing for ll white citation for vloiuting terms
knight, "someone with of ulnwsult It flied DllUlnst
knowled11e nnd money that Buckeye Egg In December
cun brlna that pluce up to 1999. This time, the contho wuy ft 's supposed to be tempt order · wus for too
run ."
muny flies, which ure
Fred 1-llndred grows corn uttruct.ed to the munure the
und soybeuns on lund he hens produce.
louses frbm Buck.eye Egg.
Frost suys he's tried to
Some of' thul lund. :Jiro bulunce the concerns of
ucrcs uhout 20 mile~ north· neighbors agulnst the beneust of Columbus, ulreudy cf'it Bt1ckcyc Egg brings to
hus been sold aruuctlon, to · the communities In which
u Murylunp couple.
they operute, hlcludlng w
"Hopefully, some good the . locul furmers wnoile
buyers wlfl . co1ne ond 11ruin provides food for
'
UP
FOR
IAL!
Chicken
barns
can
be seen In the beck·
acquire the jurms and It Buckeye Eg11's chlcke1is.
around
of
this
photo
taken
Thursday,
June 27 In Croton
wlfl go on. It's u good
"They bencf'lt not only
prior
to
an
auction.
A
judge
on
Tueaday
ordered Buckeye
facility - good ens farmers ond schools, from
thai needs to continue for their taxes, but the workers Eag Farm, the state's lergeat ag farm, to be&amp;ln tlhUttln&amp;
everyone," 1-tlndred suld.
that work there . All of thut down Ita barn&amp; In two counties because of a fly outbreak
Other neighbors believe hus to be token Into consld• this aprlng. (AP)
the egg farms urc just too eratlon,'' Frost suld.
bl§ to mnnuye.
.
He said It would be up to
I'm just sort of uaui nst o buyer to repair the rein·
me~afurms in gcntlfal. I tionMblps with those who
don t think you con have live In the shudow of the
that -many unlmals con· farms.
fined In that smoll an
"l would like for them to
llreu,'' said Frlcdu Douthitt, become good' nelahbors. I who llves about half a mile would II ICe to s.ee 'Buckeye
south of the Croton barns. Eag or a successor compo· ·
Buckeye E~g operates ny, either one of them,
three farm~ With o total of operate the furms and not
more than 100 burnH und disturb the neighborK In
"·' million chickenH, The, the urea," Frost sold. · ·
stutc hu8 threutcned to
Andrew HanHen Is hun·
revoke permits, und u dllng the sale for
judge hils ordered the Pohfmann. Hansen, u man·
owner to begin closing aalna
partner
at
burns in nonhwest Ohio,
Compliance Consulting,
.Owner Anton Pohlmann was president of Buckeye
retired this sprina and Bag from October 1997
moved back to his native throuah November 1999.
Oermany, Ieavins doubtJ Armentrout said Hansen
about what wllr- happen would have no comment
after the 1ale of the farms on matters concerning
In Liekina, Har.din and Buckeye Baa. ·
HOT TOPIC - Farmer Fred Hlndrea tlllkl with other farmWxandot countln
Buckeye Eaa hasn't ere on June 27 In Croton alter en auction of land that wa1
'lt'a not a matter of just ruled cut sellina any or all owned by the Buckeye Eg. Hlndred arowe corn and eoyaelllna facilities ·or land. the land to developers, beane on lend he teaee• from the compa"j. (AP)
Tt't actually selling a busi· · although the cost ofknockneu. There will be a lot of ina down the barns and and the f11e8.
Intend to develop it - for
Interest," said · David clean ina up the sltea mlaht
"We've kind of been now.
Armentrout, president of be prohibitive.
watching this area for
Lampton aareed the area
Compliance Consultina
The Croton farm is yearH,"
said
Beth has development potential.
Auochues, which man· ~pread over 6,000 acre&amp; Fitzgerald of Mlllenville, Despite her belief that the
ageH Buckeye Egg for iuHt north of John1town in Md., who put In the win· farm, which produces 2..5
Pohlmann.
.
tickina County, about nina bid on the 390 acres billion tggs annually, can
Environmcntul luwyer ei11ht mile• from the auctioned on June 27. be propertr. run, she would
Richard
Sahli
of upscale vlllo11e of New "This llind, in ponlcutar, is prefer to • see it all dlsapColumbus, who has battled Albany
in · northea1t riJiht on the rim of a hot peur."
· ·
Buckeye Eag on ,.behalf of Frunklln County. New sub· area."
·
·
"If the farm closed and
it1 neiahbors for a decude, dlvisionH ure poppina up
She und her husband the barnRdisappeared, that
worries about proNpective clole to the farms - but bought the land as an could be a nl~ flat retl·
buyen with checkered far cn9ugh from the odor• lnvutmcnt and don't ~ntlal area," 1he 1aid.

0

�..•
P1ge 02 • •unb~v t!:mtrl -ltrtttmel

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

· Sunday, July

14, 2002

Sunday, July

14, 2002

116

1

Qertbune - Sentinel - ~egi11ter
CLASSIFIED

Full Time X·Ray TIOI\. Mon·

NoOne

!lae Cenl

i

" - - - - - - - • Fotttr

Moonlight Etoortl. Full
IINIOI malt lnd ltm&amp;ll II·
COfll and dB rlOi fl Prom I
nd PrOIIIIIone.la~ Con~·

~arenta.

come Foster partnll In
Lawrence, Gallla, Je.cklon,
•
M~g1 artAI. There will bl
dtntlll. WI 1110 dO Birth· e 10 10 tsmlllfl Chosen tO
d&amp;y, Private And Bl.ohtlor become pAtt ol lhl pllol
Parlin
Qpm·
Oom. project. Quollllad oppllcanll
(7oOI388·1788.
may recetvt up to $40.00
per dAy ralmburaamttnl. In·
Why wall ? Start meatln~ terut•d
partlel
Call
Ohio olngloo tonlght, call lc I i740/648·0873 oak lor Rob·
free. 1·800·788·2623 IMt ort. 1 yoU hlwe pravlou1ly
I021.
coiled, pleaeecall again,

ANNtltJNc:JC.MiiNI~

-1.,.------·
r.
GIVEAWAY

IIAUTY
PAO!ANT • e•Wk and " e·Mth ~III!KINQ LOCAL IEAU IJ
•
I;
""'"'
· Pupptea BlAck Lllb/Ge rman
Tllll Rooewood Boouly Sheppo;d Ml, ,
Greet
PIQtl, nt and Ba~y Conteat. Around Children. (7., 0,247.
Agoo. Newborn IO 27. Boyo o003
to -4, Evtrunne
,... wlna a tro· :--:::::---:-:---:---:
phyl Ba a MOdol In our upo
2 t 111 1
coming Still Pagunt. Free l&lt;lttana.30 87
ema '
Complllato bt Ba~tuty Win: bl~tok malt . ( .,l ~" 2 131
ner In tach Age Dlvlalon Giveaway: Baby J(lttena,
and olio Ovorotl Wlnnort (740)2~8·8089 altar 5:00pm
PagHnt Date 712!. ~eg\1 •
lor by phono \ ·888·11 1· - - - - - - - 7673.
.
.www.RouwoodPogoonlo.h
Card of Thankt
~::;;=====::::,
omtt load,com
C·1 Boar Corry Ou·t perrnll
101 a11l0, Choator Towr11hlfl.
MO~I County, lind. ltlltra
Cal~lll and
1
ol nttflll to: Tho 0 oty
, /..en ice Wallgh,
S.nllnal , PO Bm; 720·20.
. Pom11oy, Ohio 46789.
a11d their family,

In Loving
Memory of

Sondy Saund!l~l
on ner. 51st
Birtkday

July 14, 19!S1
Feb, 11, 2002
Sadly missed by
Kathy Rollins·
Betty Long, Paul

Halley· Sanely

thank the entire
communlly for
th1 countlfSs
cards and good
wishes they
recel~ed In
honor of
Calvin 'II 80th
birthday.
and their
recent 60th
anniversary."

Burris
In Memory

/11 Memory

Gene Henson
J•ly 13, JOIIO

It 8eenl8 like It wao Y&lt;'8terd•y, yet It Nl!t!ml
like 1111 been turner. I never lhouahtl
would he hen wlthou you by my Nlde. II
only I &lt;-ould lou~h your fpce, hold your
hand, jWll one more lime. Someday I will
be with you aaaln. Toaether as we were
meant to be. f"or aiWMYI •nd lorever, I

hne 10 many aood memorlet1 or uo.

Like a
bleulna. the memorlu arow 1weeter ond
1lowly repl•c• lhe hurl.

Mlu you .w very much,

Wife,

J~ll/1

In M•mory

Helen
'Haskett
ll, 1919- De&lt;. 6, ZOO I
Mother,
Grandmother,
The days wl1hou1 you are lonely and blue
vlolono, dreams and special memorieo of you
Often we feel your preocnce and !ouch
juot knowln&amp; you urc In heaven, hclpa us

•

The holidays wlthoul you are lonely
and never will be lhe oame
Althouah you are n't at our homeo,
we afwaya apellk of your name,

Saddened by you JeavinJ your home
1110meone else's will
We know how much you felt our love
because we feel ~ourt 11111
Thlo picture that you poocd for 10 proudly
11 your blnhday pany lui year
Wu mean1 as a four·acneratlon picture
But quickly became a memol)l for us to
hold 10 dear,
Slldly
Dauahler &amp;

Publication
8und•y Dlapl•yr 1 100
Thu .. d•y for aunll•ya

Help Wanted

HOmE HEftlTH ftiDfS, CERTIFIED
DURSE ftSSISTftDT

remnle. 1ett. Olamonda, Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currtney,•
M.TS. Coin Sl'lop, 151 Stc·

VAIU&gt;S.UJo:

I

~::;:::::=~

.

ond Avenue. Galllpolla, 7•0·
4•0·2842

en \I I \I
' llt\ltl'

I \11'1

YARD SALE-

GALLII'OI.l~

Career Opportunity!!

HtlJ' WAN'Ill&gt;
108 Georgu Creak Rd .,
Plul Slzu Mens and Worn·
en1 Clottltl, Furniture, Dancer• &amp; Eaoorta, Male
Houaehold ttoma, Ctramto and Ftmalt. Sertout lnqul·
''"Only. (740)709·9071 .
Molds.
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
7/IS/02, 9:00·4:00. Polio
675·1429.
·
Furniture, Plolureo, Old DIMONITRATOR81 .
Magazlntl, Ntwapa pers, Immediate work In Mason, Cashier lor oonvlnlence
Clothea. misc . Quality wv area retaU/~rocer'y atOI"t, e~perlenct requi red,
I
2• u kl A
II
I I I i740)992·8542 .
atorea um p ng.
ex be :.:....:::.::::.:..::..::_ _ __
ttms, "' ntn e ve,
01
Garage Salt· July 12· 13,CtiC hlteEdule, FrSI. Sail. 1 Seooun. COL · Orlver Neodod lor
11 n&lt;:ore erv cea • • Traa" Coll- tlon. Mull have
1 orlvt, B''"
.,..~.-~ 7000747belweonl'pm
2!o Moonota
·
Domino"• Pizza, J&amp;ckaon · •
"J;l
oxparlonct driving_ top
Pike. Flaln or Shlnt.
weekda~•·
heavy trucka. Prevloua Ea:·
Olttary Aide
.
perlence Driving Garbage
Sctnlo Hl!lt Nuralng Centar Trucka a plua. (740)388·
IIIP'""!!'!"_!!!""_ _ , 11 now occepllng appllca· .;9_ea_6_ _ _ _ _.....;
lion• for 1 part•tlme dlttary
'VAliD SALEaide. PI"" apply In person __;.;H;;.II;::p:..W.;.;;;.•;;.n;;.w...d__
l'oMttKOV/MII&gt;tll.ll. al311 Buckrldge Aoftd, Bid·
weiiiBohlnd tho Spring Val·
15 Family vard Sale. Monday ley
Cinema) or ca ll
J ly l ''h 9·00? Baby Bod 1740)448·7 \50 And ask lor
und ~."!.,· ' ·, . Sl II
Jualln Frum lor mora lnfor·
11
,........ euor es,
ro t r, mellon.
High ChAir, Blcyolea, LIIIIO =-::---:-:-:----::Ty~e Toy1, Mlac . Chll[lran 0 1
kl
and , Adult Clothing. Page om no'a now Ia ng appll·
Street, Middleport
cation• lor aalt drlvert, Gal·
llpolla and Pomeroy lOCO·

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

~M~W

In Memory

•ualneaa Daye Prlot To

AbtOIUit Top Dollar: U.S.
Klttena. Frtt to good nome. S1tv1r, Gold Coins, Prool·

r76

--~~~~

We are seeking career
minded individuals to join
our successful team.
We offer:
• A $500 sign on bonus
• Full health benefits

• $7/hour and up
• Weekly pay
• Paid vacation

Gallla County Council on Aging (Senior
Resource Center) Is currenlly accepllng
appllcalions lor part·lime and/or lull·llme
(30-35 hours) posllions of home heallh
aide and/or certified nursln!l asslslant.
Appllcanls
must
have
owri
transportallon and willing to lravel In
Gallla County. Job description and
appllcallons available at the Senior
Resource Canter, 1167 St. At. 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio, from 7:00 Am to 2:00
PM Monday lhru Friday, Poslllons
lmmadlalaly available , Contact Genel
PlaniZ.
An Equal Opportunlty/Afflrmatl"e Action
Employer
Help Wanted

Earn extra
Work ftexlble hours!
.Maintain nursing skills!

CALL TODAY
1-877-463·6247 ext. 1841

···c··
Ill
II

In M1mory

In Remembrance of

Carrol Williams
First, Papa, let me say how sorry I
am lor not being able to be by your
side the last lew hours you were
with us, Circumstances beyond my
control still keep me away and I
know you understand and forgive
me. The world sometimes makes
no sense, We live in a day and age
where loved ones are being kept
from one another because of other
people's mistakes and wrens
doinRs, It's the same in our com·
mumty just as it it around the world ·
with the war on terrorism . Papa, ·
you believed In peace, love, harmony, and all the virtuous things in
life,
·
I'll never forget how stern your
voice was the last time I saw ·you.
You said, "that's my grandson•. You
were so proud of me. The love you
gave me and showed me is a treasure I'll keep forever. I've yet to
become half the man you were.
Hopefully someday I'll be as great a
man as you.
·.
From the time 1- was little when I
threw a snnwball at you and I took
off runnina, to the time I would
race you to the couch to see who
woulil take a nap the fastest, _to
seeing you in the car with Mama
watchlng me play baseball in Little
League, and the times when I
worked for you at the car lot and
furniture store, end ell the times I
would cell you and say, "Mr.
Williams, Mr. Williams• and you
would
"Mr. Rathburn, Mr.
Rathburn, with 11 little chuckle in
your laugh to all the times I
needed ailvlce or just to get direc·
tlon, the memories I have will live
forever and will be palled on
my
children someday, I'll never forftet
all our times tosether and tna fe
lessons you taught me.
.
You've touched many people's
lives and left them wltn a smile.
You will always be remembered as ·
a gr1at man by all of us. l 'm iss you
and will come visit when I_ gel
home . I!Ml.L ~ X.OU f&amp;Q1JJl.
I lbve you very much.
·

sa,v,

to

Your Cirandson, Chris Rathbum

84 Lumbtr Comptn,- Is searchlna; for

career-·mlndtd Individual• for our
Manager TralnH Proararn. We want lndl·
vlduals who are looking for a caretr
that Include• customer service,
hands·on woril, growlns sales, and
1 Minaeement. Manaser Trainees
eam Sl6k·Sl0k per year, with lht
poJSiblllty of earning S50k·S\00k
wllhln 2·5 yea~l College prelerred,
but not required. No con1truction
~nowltdse neceuary. ThrouJh our
p&amp;ld trllnln1, you will become an
Industry professional! We offer an
t~Ccellent benefits packas• alons with
a great working environment.
Apply In person Mof1day·
Thursday from 8am-5pm at:
.

One
of
WcNI
Virginia's
Ia r gcst
community bunks is
lookfns for u smurl,
friendly part · tlmc
teller for the Pt.
Plea.unt office (2S·· 30 I
hn/week). To
well . you
organized,
auen1lon to
ShD"'
helpful
lniti~live. Por your
efforu , you will
rece ive -compeiltlve
wagea plus Incentives
&amp; comprehensive
benefit s (Including
401k plan).
If you huvc al least
6 monlh 's cush
handllna experience
&amp; a des ire to provide
excellent cuSiomer
oervlce, join a bank
thal'o aolna placeo.
Send your reoume 10:
Clly National Bank

.

.. LUMBER. COMPANY
Roulo31
Rlploy, WI/

If unable to apply In per10n,
please forward resume todayl
. Fu: n•·321·2111
E·malh ·,ar•me14hunbtr.com
Vl1lt our web1ltt at:
www.ll41umb..com
lqu• Opport""ty !mploror INFION
Dru1 Frt1 1n~ror11nen1

.'OK SAIJ·:

Surnmor c ....onc.

.:~~;..

2 Bedroom -

I

)Ysl out-

All &lt;&gt;I modOto rnutl ~ 2003 tldo Gollopolla on Sttto

r~2~-~~-~":':'It~~
r.
~.~~,..,~~n~l.

~w
..
.. ... FO&lt; Sot. RO&lt;ONltiiOnOCI ~IW~
..gor~.~..
~.~m~~R~...~~~~
-..o
Sit- C'*'tor _,.,..
"""~~"
$27$
h:
r....,_ """*" - - WaWrNowance 3407
l ..

Gall

10
__J-Ioui0tlli
_Gow.
___.D
_
&lt;lryOro and

_,I rm

,... l ... -

-

f!\OOols on tho woy Boll Roull,., (7110)Ut·l519
poo. _, 1 tra!Olt
1360
011 ,
lin'• to buy 1.1 now Many
.
(7«J)a92 .Q228
Jacksort ,..,.. HotPQtnt
$17!
hOo'nel yet to cr.ooa. lrom, 2 B.aroom Houle 0t1 K.ne.
f'll.ll. f3C&gt;tlo875-·7311
l.q New Ktontnott 0ryer
11311 SA 160, Clolllpollo or tlont lhould potuot tho 11"'"11 vorbot and wrlllon Sl8.000 080 (7o0)4&lt;e· don't delay. wore movong or&gt;..,,.,.,., GoHipoho 15!101 !_~-AporlrnOnl~ Good UMd -·Roo Sl60, Magt&lt;: Cho4 Eloc1""
..II i740Jm·lie20 b o - lollowlng quollllol.
""""""nlcllion okiHa, Mod- 9910
them&lt;&gt;Yt
mo, Ooposot Aequo~ •• :::::...._•• ~mry.,R.._ ~ • - · - and Guoroo- Rongo. Almond. S17J
8om·6Pm
..
~ld. Me&lt;lloaro lnd MOS
c - - - (7110)441·1!19
.............. N -oren
Stutggo~r&amp;v...
Poo!&gt;lo Orltnlod
knowledge. LSW wllh "'1&gt;0- 19110 Modutor on 2 112
152ee
ballooom
bolh,
bo..
RtqUr11d
(7110)Ue-t&lt;73
•
Wallhoro,
o,.,..,.,
Sl1
Golllpolll located home "cusiOmOr Sorvlco end •lorlco ~long llrm coro pr• ooroo 01 lond on lull bofO. uS ~East A111ons, Olloo 2
~ tnd -.go&lt;atoro. ;;;;;;;,-----~
health agency -king FT
Solot OriVon
ltrred bul not roquirod. mont 3 BodroomL !tOling
P..,. 741!-592· 1972
mont houoolor ..,.t ., Point 2 br 0111 •111 II Mo· SOme .,.n 01 US so:._
STNA. Competlll... wages
Ouallfltd candidatta p&amp;Nae room, tamUy room wtth llr•
PIHsant $300 P*f month tot1 1300 + Clip cell •.e Appiflneel, 11 Vtne !t ,
~
with benttlla. Phone toll fi'H "'Conaid.rable tact with contact Charla Brown, Ad- place, dining room, utlllry UHd Homas Down Pay- plus uttht•• plul depalll pm ~-675- 1811
(740~7311
L.~-------~
at888-441·1393 or a.w.. 31
CUitornlr,
mlnlttrator at 333 Plge room, II.Jtchen with new,... menta aa low as $999 (:»4}fi75·1Mt
..,
•
3064 SR 180, Goltipolli'.''
*Good.......,_,_ and~ Stroot, Middleport, 011 lrogerotor l oto,., I lull (740)Ull-321 8
Ape,_ Cottage lor Rtrt1 t&lt;.nmoro -mry.r Soc, 11uy or ... - . , . Ani
3 Bodooom Aancn 1\ornt In 5250
·-.... ~·
~ 45780 EOE
boll\1 ,.,.., ~'"'" ·
lincoln
.,. II~ 3 ~- N - 1124 Eut Mtlln 00'
tkll~
'
,
11196 Norrltr I. 80 Moblt. Addllllrl
Townllhlp. ~)17H5110 or i~)l75- llll · $&amp;S UCI1 2 SAl~· E - . , . . . 10().
1•· ~
0
0
446
0722
"OotalltnO goal orlontad Pon·dmo lna1ruc1or Noodod
Hom., 3bf,
conlraf
1 '
· No Indoor 4024 til&lt; lor Noi&gt;cy
Orywt- $60 OICft, AJ- \li2-252t Ruu MOore
11
Coli lot Appi.IExam Info.
~ping, Accouning, Modica! 3011. pool with now dOCk air, 1 tell &amp; 'lot Woll Mil
IIAUTIFUL
~~~~T· Call ah01 S OOpnl i740)Ue- QWr\01
Flldoral Hlro Full bonaflte. Wo offer a genorouo bone- Olllco. Send Resume lo Eallern School OlaUict on -rattly. (~)175·74i9
'lattlpolll 809 2nd Avo., o MENTI AT IUOOll PR~ 80ee
,
-------.._,.
I-B00·842 2128 Ext •n
l"o ~""·-lncl··•'"" •o1• GCC, 1176 JooJ&lt;son Pike, Flal-~ Road. Pomer~. • 1
bedroom, 2 balh. No ~11. CEI •:r .. C"ION r•
S..O"t - on dto ·t"
4
.
-~
,;11.;;;,.,(1nd ';';;:.,·.;Sullo 312. Galllpolla, · OH 70().'992.7729 .
., • oakWOOd ~_;r70 ;,br , 2 rolllln&lt;:tt,
~o~alt TATIS~$2\;..~~ C - -R~~Ptl. 202~k on , _ _ I Colli. gt1,.
Grahams l)pholtltru II ·-rv--nt.
..5631 .
bl201.,t nlca COoru . ..,...&amp;10· ·s••n •montn
(740 25.. •
._..,,
...,.....,
A~ •'
••·--·•"
·~
• lrorn $297 to $383. Wo~ to 1740).46·74« 1·877-e30- Wlt9,
mo....L ·-:9360
looking lor someono lnlll·
~I'ITTIMI OPININOS 2 bedroom ho\Jooln Pomer•
.
llhop &amp; ......... c.tt 70(). 9152 FJM Ell.,.tH. Euy ..,.. i 740)\lia-o2M
'
llted In INrnlng to fe·UP. lnter..ttd ptrtonl ahould FOR AN LPN AND STNA Cfo/, :::11 Mil onwil~nd
e::aet
For
aate
89
Champion
llkt
Ntw
Sola
&amp; LDWt Hll, .48·2561 Equal Houalng hnanc:W\g, aQ Gaya Mfl"'t H
u-~~,
.
~
1
10
hOisltr lurnltuftl. Salts IX· complete a job application, We currintty have part·tln';e Of
rent
op
14x&amp;O mobHe home, 2 br • 1 .Antique
01n,ng Room Opponunity.
Cllh l/1uJ Muter C.rtt
,• ....,.._.r.u.ANI-::U~5
perle""" lo helpful, Coli wnlch can be obtained al ~llont o·-'lable In all ol buy, 740-e98·n&lt;M
be. wether &amp; dryor hook (7•0t2••·1249
o
MFltt-ltANiliSI·
(7.0)448-3-t38 for an a
~u•t . 2 blldroom town- ~ I• lt111tt aaw alcM
point
t
po anr Ohio \IIIIey Bini&lt; looa- .,._,
our nurolngvat dtporlmonto. 2 Story on nlco olzo tot In ups, now furnoco , now hoi .. oJ&lt;I
men ·
lion 01 from our wtbtltt, Wt are 'a 70-btd IOnQ•ttrm Chttt.... 3 b/'., bath, k11chen, water tank, IIDYII &amp;, ralriQtt· New!y Decorated Carl)lt. ~:on:'~ ~:'~~ New and Ut~ Furn1ture
Hind FofVId
1850 Toola.
Hordwero S.loo Cltrk . www.ovbc.com . Apptloa· hoollh ctt91ocllity.
Uvlng ooom, b0-1. prict olorlully carpet, Mndow olr Palnl , Etc 5 roomllllaoa·
Ired
~ .. 2GS?
Store moved to 130 Bulo· Pr$50-$t60 1740)§e&lt;(.
~ Stnd Reeume to: CLA 5&amp;7 tbna mual be rwtumed na f:'rovtdlng quality care for rlducea, mora Info call condttlontr $3500.00 ~- mtnt Flel &amp; Oepostl No requ
· 1740,-v·
'illt Ptl(t. Stofe houra 10-3
•
7869
c1o Gottlpoila Deity ltlbuno, Iaior lhlnk ~31 , 2Q02,
our realdonlo It our main (740)1i85·3il2
875-21114
Poll. l304\ft75•5152 ·
Downtown· Upo~~~lra. 2 Bod- Mon· Sol Call lor direcllor1&amp; - - - : - - - - - - - : · 825 Third Ave, Golllpolla,
E
concern. Wo ... toolclng lor 3 bod room newly romod· Foo ..... 24~40 doutllo W\!!o
~
' Ui,':f~U:'i room, Apt ., Oopoolt &amp; Rotor· 1740J&lt;Me:•782
.
311" Storm - · - · ·
• Oh CM31
'
peopte who ahara these val· tied , In Middleport, call Tom modular unlls , sell con.
nr..~,'
enctt. 1740&gt;"0-0138
wtth ICI'Hnl and ~rt
11
• Help wanted caring ror the
uea. you art
that person, Anderson
atter
5pm, talntd healing I cooling.
Gracloua living. 1 and 2
$60 4 Shutter~ 54
.~.
Cl
~-~--· c
••
plooH apply 11 '
i740)992·3348.
Thou unlls oro one Iorge
\1.
$10 17401•46-'l&amp;e
•
: ....,.rty, Dtf'lt roup Horne, VVVIYI\Nft enter nal an Holzer S.ntor c.,. een..,
room end tomplet~ open 12M80, 1br. Trailer far rent . bedi'OOII'I apartment~ at v
• -now poring minimum wage, lmmedloto opening for 1
380 Calonlol o..
B&amp;droom
wllh
goroge
on
Inside
and
wu
uoed
••
WILoundry
Aoom'br
t.orgo
loge
Manor
and
Alvwtldo
4
Foru..,.
Slool
T'"
oll141'
3
• •naw ahltta: 7am-3pm, 711'1"1- part time ottlct a..lllant.
lldWeU, Ohio 45t14
apprOJIImately 1 acre On school claatrooma. A. total ttnotd yard. $350 Mo. Apartmente In Middleport.
ram urea. P2e&amp;·75-A1S,
. :Spm, 3pm·\lpm, \lpm· Must hove good communiAn Equal Opportun'lj
Routt 2, GIIIIPQIIO Forr•, ol '·20.00 unllo will •o $3!0 Otpooil. i30ol)875· From $278-1308. co• 70().
$100. (740)9112·2084
992·5084.
.1om, call 740.992·5023.
cation
okllloPluto
and bo como
compul·
Em""""'r
' available
•
" ,.,
.""'" 2.0•• 9••
Equot Houotno ----:::--:--=--:--:--::-----.---.;
.,
llloreto.
In
,_,.
i304)875·5332
at S8.800 ucn
~ 1 i7~""'
Opporlunltloo.
• lngflm Blfll• Compony will and comptalt your oppt~a·
REOISTIAED
Bod
h o end dollvlfy It aYalloblo . "· •10, a lltdroom wltn
Real Eltate General
- be occapl lng oppllcatlont lldn at 333 Page Suool,
SONOOAAPHER
5
rooms, 2 Bot a, ' call i740)992·2478 , 740·
North Third, Mkldlof&gt;On, , ili~i~~~~~ffin~i:ii~
" for Deckhanda II tht Alh·. Middleport. Oh or for mort Abdominal Sonographtr,
~f:s ::a:~. ~~a~.~ 591 ·9342 lUI Stuve.
~~~::; ~~~~:=.":3s~:~ bedroom turnlahed aparl·
• land Dept. lor Emptorment tnlormollon call i740) V92· tog!Sierod OtJogllllj ollgl· (740)245·1117
Good uiiOd 14x70 2 bed· Ront ,
$2!0
Oapoolt mont, no poll, - 1 rot·
: Securllj office, 184-1 Carter 6472.
ble
room Front Kitchen. Ontr (7110)o•t-e954
"'"""' requlrod, i7110)\lia·
• Avt., Ashland, KV 41105 on
for a lull limo or port limo
Cabin with 2 lots back ol $699 S.OO. con Nikki 7&lt;()0165
• 7/1 !5 through 7/1 7 from The Alhens·Mtlgs Educt· potltlon, In an outpatient dl· "fVcoon Lake. EdOma Tra11 385 ,9948
2 bedroom Mobllt Home -N-ow-T-,,-,n--A-.N-Ic_o_tlo_n_o-_
8:00am dtl 3:00pm . HNvy tlonal Strvkt Ctnttr hll 1 lgrtoltlc ctnler. E~ecellant
Rd. (740~.,46· 1360
':-'c..:.:-::·-:::-:--::--::-:- New Haven
Wnt 0~ Town·
35
2
• labor background 11 prefer· position opening 81 Out~l· utary (negolla~e). Fringe ·Fiamodeled Home. Located Mason Co. Paltatlne Rd . _130ol
_)88_2_·1_t_o7_ _ _ _ houae
Aotrrtmenta,
lndudea
.. rtd (I .e !arming, togging, School High School SBH benelltalneludt Holiday &amp;
Ann
Ot'lvt
New
T"lt
112acre.
1998
1•x75,
2br
lh
11 62
• 'Conatruction, atc .). YOu Teacher fpr the Melg1 Vacation P17. •o1K proWlnelowa VInyl Sldln~ 2ba .. E•ctUtnt Condition 2,Btdroom Trailer In Glllll)o- Water
Sew~ •
• 'mutt have a valid pk:ture 10 County SchOOII tor tht {ll'lm and Haallh lnaurance. Roof. ca'rpet, lnau!allon &amp;_ Owner Flnandng. $..8.1500, 0111. Near Alrporl, S2651mo. $350/Mo ' 7• 0·
: ana SOCial Security Card to 200~2003 &amp;:hoOt
Year. Hou,. .,. Mondor thru Fri· Now Deck, Throe Bedroom, (304)562·5840
Otpotll
Roqulrad . lWin Rl,.ro Tower Now eo·
• eppty. EOE MJFN
Applfcanlo mull have SBH day, w.tlh no aNeo houra call. Living room : Oontng Room &amp; Now 2003 14•70 3brl2blh. (740)387·n60
coptong app&lt;lcitlono lor
. •Jtwttry
Salttperaon. Cerllllcatlon or be willing to Send resume to: CLA580. Kltcrten Comblnld . l'Wo car Only $9915. down &amp; only 2 Btdroom, 2 Bath. Unfur. tbr Hud Subaldllld IPUII
Frlandt• Moth. req I d Oil • Temporary Teaching Clo Golllpollo Dally ltlbuno, Gorel---.J~~~!£2!!,.2t!_
~
...... 1\ooo wired otora~
- S1Q3.201month . Call HarOld nlahed, No Polo, Groen ut". PRid i3041875-e871
EHO
• "'"nil.!', Full Time lm'!.~..1.· C.artlllcale In that area . Sal· 925 3rd Avenue, Gallipolis,
'w
n=
Ohio 4583\
bulldlngo, Prlca $92 ,000. 740·385·767\
Sohool Oloftlct, P~valo Lot C:Jal"',;,·--::"""~--,
all Opening. Apply at Ac· ary will be baiOd ""•~pori·
·
Phone 1740)048·t&lt;7e
' ·
~·~ Golllpollo. i7oO)o48·
S
qulslllona, t51 2nd Ave .. enet and certll!eatlon ac· Saleaperaon netdtd fro
New Ooublewldt on 1 Acre . 'W~
PACE
1
Qaltlpolia. No phone cAlls cording 19 aatary schedule. memorial type cemetery. Country Homt with 1-112 Ck&gt;u to Town. 4 BedroonV
fOR RENT
, pltaat.
This position hall Board ap- Must haw previous sales a&lt;lree. 314br, 2ba., 2 Clr· 2 Beth with Game Room. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Tralltr. ..__ _ _ _ _ __.
provtd benellta. Submit Itt• experience. Preferably In Garage, above ground pool, (7140)4•6·3384
Central Air, Raterencea and
McCiure'a Reatauranl now tarot lntertatlnd resume to Cemetery Sates. We have a Handcrafted kitchen cabl·
.
Dtpoalt I"IQulred. No ~tal Trailer space lor rent, S 120
hiring all 3 loca.Uona, run or John D. Costanzo, Superln- new 200 unit Mausoleum. neta. 011 Leon Baden Rd. No Creditl Government (7•0)38S•08SS, 1740)3aa- per month , In Mlntrlvlllt;
500 oq " oHict building, ale
PRrl·llmo, plok up appllca· lellOont, Alhono·Molgo Edu· High Commlaokm, Lola of i304)o5ll-1580
loaoo , Only 3 Loll . 9770.
&amp; ceiling ran , $275 ~r
, lion 11 IOclllon &amp;bring bock catlonat ServiCe Ctnlor, ~7 I.Ndl. Wo Solo Mauootoi7110Jm·3570
month. (81ol878·1111l\
.. betwun
Q:30am
&amp; Richland Avenua, Suitt uma, Burial S~ces. Loti
Mobile
Home
Lot
for
rent
in
Prefarred Loans wllh lntor· IO:OOim, Mondoy thru Sat· 1108, Athono, Ohio 45701. and Markers.
I Jack lor
eat Aatu as low 11 6.75% Gallipolis area. Wilt hold up Would llkt to rent a lot for
: urdly.
· Applk:ollon Ceadllne: July more Information (740)592·
.tf ...,.--wtth Land Home Pui'Chaat. ~ 7 ~8•80 Call (740)448· now rnol&gt;to room. 116, 801
,
22. 2002. The AMESC to on 5060.
(700)440·3093.
:::.::_
_
_
_
_
_
_
around
Raclna/S)'ItcuH
or
RUSTIC
HILLS ·. A one slory homo wnh a two
• Modi Prlva1o COro lo now Equal Opponuntlj Employ·
, lllnng PCA'I, CNHA't and tlll'rovldar.
vicinity, story very large be(1rocm sUite, with it's own
ORIVIRI· Tho Boll Paying
We have appro~elmatity 10 ' Taking Applications ror a aurroundlng
STNA'I.
PIIIM
call
. Regional Frt ~ht with lhe
uactd homes lor under Ratrled Couple tor • 2 Bod- 17401949·2543
bath. Has a large bedroom , an average
i740).48·•1•8 or 1-800· The Athona·Matgo Educo· moat Home lme. COL-A All'"l"talo odvtl11oln~ $~.000, call 1·600·837·3238 room Troller In Qountry. No
bedroom downstairs, aad a lam lly room, dintng
In
thle
ntWIPII)Ir
II
411-e33&lt;4 lnd atk for Diana Ilona! Service Centtr naa a and 1 year TIT exp. re·
for Into.
Pola. Depaoli Roqulood. =,;;,;;;;;;;:;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ room, kHchon and bath all ddwnstairs. House
• or Tmany.
poolllon opening oo School qulred. For lmmtdtate hire
iubftct to '"" J1ecMf11
(7110)245·9212
r*to
I
y
II
I
Houalng.Act of1HI
lfou£uoLo
looks vary n ce everywhere,·
ou w11 ove 1.
Loni&amp;
: · MINTAL Hllo\LTH
Ptyohotoolot lor lhl Molgo call · NPI l"dUIIriOt TOLl Jlalr
~KJMENTS
Gooos
Aleo
a etorage building,
drl"', and
County Schoolt, lor lhl 'AEE, 2.f7 0 88e·338· which maktl 11111...110
•
PR0,18110NAL
AOW.GE
actverttae " any
lOR RFNr ··
.._
_
_
_
_
_.
~~~~=~~=~~!!!!!!:.!!!!.....!
· Excellent opportunlry tor 1 2002-2003 School Year. 8288,
pt"tfe,.not, llfftllttlon or
: quaiHiod menial hoollh pro- Apptlcanll mutt hold 1 cor·
POMEROY :WRIGHT STREET • On a
dltorhnln1tlon
biHd on 314 Alire IIVtll lot In Golllpo- t and 2 bedroom apart· Air Condhtonor, 33,000BTU
Bl.SININS
. toutonallo join 1 mulll-dli· lllloato or llconao lhal etlowa
Carrier,
8.000BTU
,
dead
alrool lies this trl-level home wllh
lis
Ferry.
Utllllle1
on
alta.
rece,
col«,
,..tgtOn,
1111
menta. furni shed and unfu r· e,oooeTu. IV" Panooontc ae"'n end
• glpllnary ttam In 1 commun· them to HM •• 1 School
'J'JtAINING
roomt , 3 bedrooms, 2 batl'ts, dining area
ramlllal etatua or n1tlon1t $17 ,000. Leave massage. nlahed, aeouriry depoalt
· Iii' mental hoollh oelllng. Paychologltl. Salary will be
Color TV, MlciOWIIvo. 700 and fam ily room. Alao has a 2 car garage
Thlo 40 hour RCtlllon pro- baRed on .,porllnct and Golllpollo CwHr Collov• origin, or an~ tntenllon to (304)675·43\7
qulrad, no poll, 70().992· 3rd
Avo., Galllpollo.
V
t d ,__
d 1"1
make My IUCh
vldellht opportunity to de- certification according to ~Careera Clote To Home)
opener, I'JI nea an n~ on s "ng on a
, 22\8.
preferenae, limitation 01 Farm lor sale· pond , barn
liver
outpatient ulary tchedule. Thla poll·
all Todoyt 740·446·438 7,
horae atalll, corn crib, 1 Bedroom Apartments Appltancet: Rtcondllloned large lot, comes with !"lulpped kitchen.
. . dlnrlmlnatlon."
counHIIng/c::aat manage· Uon ha1 Board approvtd
Wathera, Dryers, Aangaa,
14K70 mobile home. cia,
1·800-2 ···04 52,
Starting at $289/mo, Waah· Refrlgratora, .UP To 8Q D1ya
ment to mutl·nttd children. bentflta. Subml1 ''"" ol In·
R:ll
IIKHl!l-12746.
Me l~t County, (7.0)742·
er!Oryer Hookup, Stove and GuarantHdl Wt Sell Ntw
adolteetnlt and their ram- ttrta1 and retun'll to John
Thle MWIJNiper wtu not 252
Retrlger1ior.
(7.0).,.,· Maylag Appllonc.., Frencto
1111. Prevloua 111 perlenct D. Coatanzo, Superintend- 1176 Mlsctlt.JANWIJs
knoWingly accept
'
•
working with youth a plua, tnt, Athens·M•Iga Educt·
ld\JerUMmtnts IOf real Halt acre lot on Tycoon 1519.
Cllj Maytag, 740·•o48-7785.
Minimum acceptablt quaUft· !tonal Service Center, 507
lltlll wftlch 11 In
Like with 12x60 trailer, ask·
: caUona: gradual• HgfH In Richland Avenue, Suite
vt"oi•Uan of the law. OUr lng $18,500, .i740)247·1100 . 2 Bedroom Apartment on Rt ,---=---=-~::­
\60 t~\'"'1 Hol1or Hotpi· l..arge Computer O.tk l30.,
· monlll hoonh related llold 1108, Alhont, Ohio 45701. Blaokberrlll. You pick.
,...,. are M,.by
1a1.
mo., Depoalt R• 6 Drawer Cllk $30.
farm,
23
aore1,
rnA.
Horlt
· with knO'Niedga of oounHI· Applloatton Deadline: Jutv Fnondly R~. 112 gatloo,
lnfOf'med thetall
quir&amp;d. (7110)441-15 19.
(~)17&amp;..2•v
trailer,
barn.
oul
bulldln~s,
' lng tochnlquoo and poyctoo· 22, 2002 . Tho AM ESC Ia •n (7•0)258·11 5 Leave m11·
dwelllngl ldve.rtiHd In
aage
lanced
,
aepar.ate
traler
Pathology. pOIIttalon or Equal Opportunity Employ·
lhla newepaper •e
tpaoe, currently rented,
one ol the loltowlng provider eriPrOYider. •
avall•blt on an 41Qu•l
Public Sale and Auction
S87K, i740)742·1119 loo,.
opportunl1y bl ....
quallfloaUona
required: T"· Alh
M I E"
mtatage,
LSW, PC, PCC, LISW, or ·~
ont· • Dl outa· iii
WAN'IliD
requtrect countelor tralnta. llonal Service C•nter 11
To Do
Convenient Location , Coun· Lot lor 5alt· Approx. 2 1/2
1
STANLEY &amp; SON, INC. MARKET REPORT
Benall(a Include: health, IHking School ~h· · · - - - - - - · try Setting. Approximately 1 BCt81, Cleared &amp; ready tor
: dental, vltlon, Plld vacation, Lantage Pathologtll lor ..,
112 Acree, 3 Bedroom•, Qa. bulldjng, gravel driveway.
2002 THIS HAMMER TIME'S FOR YOU!
paid holldlyl 401K retire· the tlgl County ·Schooll, All Makta Lawn Mowera rage, Workahop/Outbulld· water A eltctrk: avaHable,
: mant plan, a~ more. Send tor "the 2002·2003 School and OutdOor ~=tower EQuip· lng, Green School District. Por1ar
area .
Asking
• ra~mt and letter of lnttrllt Y111r. Appticanla muat hive ment Repaired. Free Pickup 112 Mile oil Neighbo rhOOd $13,995 , Call (1.0)448·
• 10: JUCIIIh amllh, PH. 0., 01· a Masltro degreo, allO 1 and delivery awllable. Call Road on Hllnop Crlve. Ask· 4514 lrom 8·5 or (740)4-16·
rector, Tri·County Menial current ltoenoo to practice Mike i740)&lt;M8·7804.
log S62,500 . (740)446·0744 3248 oiler 6pm .
}tieallh and Counaellng •• a speech pathologlat Ia·
Jiervtcee, Inc., 313 112 W. aued by the Ohio Board ol Dog grooming done In my Hou se 11'1 Galllpolll. 10 Bel· LOll for Sale In Addlaon
&lt;Main Street, MoArtttur, Ohio Speech·L.anguage Patholo· home. Monday· Saturday, mont Drive. 7 Room a. 48R, Townehlp. 5 Acre LOll.
gy end Au~lotogy. Salary 7:00am-7 :00pm, can Anglo 2 LA , 2 112 Bllhl, Full -Mason Co. 1 Acre Lot Cllj
•M52. EOE.
will be baaed on certification (740)379·9058
Buement. Large Lot. water Eluatrlc paved rd.
i740)446 \380
'
'
·
: NurHol looking lor an .,. and oxporlonco ocoordlng to
•
Owner llnanclng . $25 ,000.
• ~lllng opportunity, that rou utary sohedule. Thlo pool· Georges Potloble Sawmill.
" can tnJov and beCome p.art uon haa Bo11rd approved don't haul your logs to the House In Middleport . 3 bed· (304)562·5840
: ola great team? Our faolllly btlnellta. Submllle"er ot In- mill juat call304·615·1957. room, Quiet street, corner Rocksprings Ad approx
• hal a long atandlng hl1tory ternt and reeUme to John
tot, 2 ca r garage, mull see
··
·
pf POtllent regulatory com· o. coetanro. Superintend- Houaeholper
available· to appreclatel 740·992· 20 acres, au wooded, great
pllanoe •• wetlaa dedicated ent. Athena·Melga Eduoa- Once. occasional, regular. 2679
lor hun tlng or home at1e,
On Salurday, June 29th, Henry M. Slanley Ill,
ataH who enJoy• caring lor lk)nal Service Ctnltr, 507 Cleaning, cooking, packing,
· cloae to new Meigs Middle
CAl &amp;AARE Auctioneer &amp; Real Eslate Broker &amp;
®r retldenta. We want to Richland Avenue , Suitt ,movfng. Whatever needa Older 2 11ory house. Corner School &amp; Htgh School,
mul rout Sign-on bOnuo ol II08, Athena, Ohio 45701 . doing . Honoat, reliable. 3&gt;4 &amp; Center, Maoon. Oo- $30,000, (740)992·2064,
the Hammer Time Team sanl smoke signals
S500 ollorod toollntereolod Application Doodllno: July i740)«6·7604
tache~
$16,000. _740·992·3703.
from Leading Creek Rd . In Middleport, Ohl Fi111
cal'ldknilll 1hould apply to: 22. 2002. The AMESC Ia 11 Top 10 Bottom Cleaning
Welehlown Mlnertvlllt, 2.7
new from the gavel and the haze blankeled the
: Klmtl Convaltacenl Cen· Equal Opportunity Employ· Strvlce. professional, reef.
acrea, WOO&lt;Iad'sloped area:
hills rivaling the smoke fron1the power plan!.
dtnllal, ortlce cleaning at
$3,000, (880)5!3·3753
. ttr, 75 Kimel Lint, Athena, eriProvider.
on a
comer lot Ia
Blddert
were from the slale of Maryland, Wesl
Ohio 06701 • ~~~~ M":~'
an
allordebto
price.
Clltytctn
ll'raam
Home
that
Ia 14x70 , and has
HI
\
I
\
I
..,
. RN, O.O.N. I•N M t ' -Tho -'lhono-Melgo · Educa· i740)992·2979
VIrginia &amp; Ohio·. This property's minimum bid
3
bedrooms,
·2
bathe,
and
a big front porch .
NHA. EQual Opportunity tlonal Service Centar 11
1400 Sq. ft. 3 br.. 2 ba. dou· ~~=~==:::=~
was $75,000. When the blddinfl war was over
Hulow utlllt0!1. ce•nral air and gee h..t.
Encouraging aeeklng a Multi Handicap·- Will preuure wash nouses, ble wlclt , on 2.39 acres In Cl
and the fil1! was oul. the property sold fQ&lt;
ect Otveraltv.
pad Teactter tor Pomeroy trailer~, and decks Call Mason COunty WI/, reduced
H~
$309 ,0001 To fire up the inte11!SI In your propRallabla person needed lor Elementary. Salary will be 44\ ·4238 aok lor Ron or lor quifk ...In 304·937 ·3503
FOR RFNr
erty , call1-888·BiD IT UPI
, Infant care at home real· . based on carllllcatlon and leave mesaage.
1971 Tornado ntedl IOI'Tit "'~--littiliioiiiiiio--,0
dlnll. Must be dependable. txperltnoe acoordln~ to thr
.
work, tkMltrlc stove, retrlger. 1 ·3 ,Bedrooms ForeoloiHid
~
STANLEY &amp;SON, INC.
~ -~y.Auctlontora,Rt_l_llltro
To Inquire. (7o40)448·~225
~:~ryha':h:~~d T:~,:!d
'
ator, couch/chair. air COf'\d., Homes From $199/Mo.. 4%
) llonorlllono Ptoudly ltMnt Yoiu llnco 1110
CNA'I, RESIDENt
benoflll. Submlllottar of In·
new bllh lub: S\ ,000 , Down, 30 v..,. at 8 6%
(7401 775•3330 www.ottnleylndiOII.com
AIIIITANTI
lorut lnd reoume IQ Jolin
~~
(~)458·11101 ,
APR. For Uallngt, 800·31~Htory M. S~n~y.lll, CAIMiionltf l Rtol Ea\1118I-~ Are Now Boln" 0. Coolanzo, Suparlntond·
"'------·
C8 nl
B&amp;droom 3323 Ext. \709.
1 •~.
, 1nIarv ....
w tnt, Alhtna·Mtiga Educ:a·
\Jrru•u UNU '
.,"'
ury, 3
'
Wm. J, Fonnn, Jr., John J. Stowtrl &amp; Ptori 0. HouNI, ~·
• Conducted for
tiona! Service" Center, 507 '
14x70 Trailer, EMcenent 1 Bedroom. S2?S'mo., $250
-o&amp;Rollo&lt;IC&gt;\IHW-n,~ . .CNA &amp; ~llldent Alllltant Richland Avenua, Suitt
Condition (740)258·1249
dtpoall, No Pete, Referen·
cu Rtq uiJtd. i740)448· ---=-,.'"0':"-:::-:-...,.-:-=-~=---....;
f'otlllono If You Are A COr· 1108, Alhono, Ohio 45701 . IS AT&amp;T Payphone RoutH
lng, Enlhullatllc, Ooponda· Appllcallon Deadline: July ss Primo Local Sileo. Great
9342 after 6:00pm
Public Sale and Auction
bla Person, Then WO Want 22 2002 Tho AMESC II an Return .
(800)800·3470
You To Join Our nam Equal Owonunl\y Employ· :.20/H.:;_:R;;.S= -:::::-::::-::::--Public Sale and Auction
e~~ul?~~e: Glo~": or/Provldor.
INOTICII
Oldl Compolllivt CNA Wag· URGENTLY
NEEOEC· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
... Paid Vocollono, Paid ptoama donoro, Nm sao IC lNG co. rocommonao '"at
Mottl Many Other Bonlilll sao
- k 1o 2 or 3 you do butlnou wllh PfOplt
RavniWOOd Clll Center hourf'~ookly· c 11[ Blo Lifo you know. and NOT to und
1113 Wethington St.
Plaomo 80 ,;100 740•5; 2• mo~ through lho moll until
RaveniWOOd, wv
'
you have lnvtltlga1ed the
8851
RtlortriOOI Floq~rtd
·
oHorlng,
Wonted· oor\llled moc:hanlc :s=;;::~--=---,~~'
Cu•tomtr llrviiDt
wllh toole Willing 10 work tart our 8 Lll1 n111 o;
TUESP~ .; I
RoproHnlall¥1.
Bllurdl)lo' Apply II Mill• dor... Primo Shooplng COnPorl·llmt poollton 01 Tho thon Sor~loo Center 420 tar Spoca Available AI AI·
( ;...
A publla 1uatlon will bt
Dolly . Sen11ntl, Pomeroy. · WOit Main 51 Pomeroy lordoblo Role. 2 Nloa Exoc·
WHkdiYI Only, Mull bO Oh
"
' Ullvl 0111011.' Nlwly Rl·
rNI 111111 of lhl E11111 PIUI Hldgtt,
lludlon Center 111 RL 33 Ill
people oriented, oompultr •
·
mddoled . Spring Vattoy Pll·
LOCATION: RouMIIO E..I
lnorill, and tniGI' working Thl VHiogo of Rutland It IO· za, Call i740)448·3481 .
of Ath1111 nNr I0/71nllrohlnge • .
wl\n nufllb009. Stnd ro..,ml ctpllng fll&lt;lmol tor tho of·
n11r Dlron Ro1d 1aro11 from lWp. 11810: Blntlntl CSR, o/0 Clalllpo f~ mronogor poolllon. Pool·
Flalwall cablnel, 9 pc. chlrry Frtnelh OR
Cirlhlge/Troy Town1hlpt.
olio Cally ltlbunt 825 Tlllrd lion allrll 1111.00 hr. tor 32 IIIII'""=_ _ _ __ ,
tulle, 4 pc, Frtnoh BR suite wllwln btdll, 2
AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACI! ON AT 10 •
Avanlll Gaiiii&gt;QIIo, OH hll I · Applicant mUll
~
M,T.
labl11, lg. park banoh, dlek, flto
4&amp;e31 ar drop trr ·s.nuntl bl oomputor llloroll, hlvt
·s~
Wllah lor IIQnl.
cllblnel,
lawn rurniturt, commarclaluvvlncJI
' Offloo.
okllla
dolling
1110 00"""
·
II publiC
litdwith
hovt
llrong L,.li
~
meohlna,
amount or
· lg,
SELLING
APPROXIMATELY
,..-~-:::-::---;:-::::;: worl&lt; r l l o .
TUIINID DOWN ON
Coli Entry CO!rl&lt; wll11 b&amp;llc Bind fll&lt;lnte lnd wort&lt; rol· IOCfAL IICUIIITY /Ill?
88 ACRES OF REAL ESTATE
Aocounii"O okllll nudod. .,_., by \ 2pm on No FH Unl..a Wo Win I
lamps,
ract!IIJ.
of
iCanhap 1\rp. and 'hoi Twp.)
Bind roaurno to: PO Box 27 7/11/02 10 PO Box 420, Alii·
1 ·88~·882·3348
VIH , . .1 Of
I
, Pl. Pl. WI/ 288~ or Fox to: lind, Ohio "4775 No phone
Wolor, eleCtrk IIIII oopdc oy...mtor mobile home
Germany china plua extra piiOtt, ""''Y•I
~)875·8786 bOioll July 01111
· oetup 0111he Dillon Rood .U011 ollho property.
Camlval, Pink OtprtNioO, gleN cnum.s
alontware juga, jart &amp; crocka,
EX~ERIENCEO CAAPEN·
Announoam1nt
TEAS NE!DEC. MUll hovo
rnarbltl collection In lhow - · ll'l'trltll
• driwr(l 1-H &amp; Iron•
balonce due on dtllnry a! dotd.
old
old cut iron Ice
old
portollon 10011 &amp; tutowlodgo
w/old
eotna,
ne
top
opp
ng
SELLING
TO
fDGHEST
BIDDER
ol roaldintlal remodeling.
coetuma Jewelry·
Quollllod oppll041"11 con
ABOVE SU,OOO.
For All Your Advertlalng Needa •
plok up on opplloiUan II
moN,
doMIOI, llntlll,
EST,\TE OF PAVL HEDGES
CMIIIon'l Conllruc11on ,
Community
antique
hoi'M
clock,
old grinder,
labtrl Thy, AllorneJ
1.o3
lwl., Golllpoeoraen,
lg.
amount
olloola
plua box loll
llt, Open 8·8 M·F. Claulfled
more.
SHAM~OCK
AUCTION
SERVICE
i740)Uli-05!.
Contact Us t •

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"-lont

VIcki Nottingham at
1-800-920-8860
8 am · 4:30pm · Monday through Priday
Holzu El1ra Cnre tJ.f!tr.r comp~tlliv~
compen.mtlnn In n friendly, prtift.t'.~ional
atmo.rphere that .iupptJTl.t your growth
nnd de'.lelopmem.
Equal Opptull~ni' ty f.mployer.
Help Wanted

Opportunities

Growl,

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PUBLIC
AUCTION
.

meran, wu.

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~~~~~~,o;:r~~~~

pf----:---.;.,;.--

P.O. Box 7615
Croul.ann, WV

'

please call

• Manager Tralnaaa
• Cuatomar 8alaa
• Account Mgra.
·
• Delivery 8paol•llat

Atln: HR

2~313

If

*Managers:

(Teller· Pt. PI)

(Re oumeo will be
accepJed only until
7119/02)
EllPOC/AA
Employer

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Include• Free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
·
Ads Mu•t Be Prepaid

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

GIVFAWAY

Loca! Agency In Ohio lttk· 2 me.let,
1
lng quafilltd OOU PIII 10 bt· (740)446·-421 1

Rthabllitallon

10

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for

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lbtt.'i

E•·

Ol•play Ads

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116

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To Place
Qeribune
.Sentinel
~egiste.r
Your Ad, (740) -446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333.
Call Today~·· or Fax To (740) 446·3ooa
or Fax To · &amp;92·2157
675·5234

ANNOIJNCI!Mt&lt;:NTS

lbuWAPmD

3

In One Week With Us
.REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

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116

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countlu Like

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• dey·Frldty, Ooylimo Hours, COj)llng IPI)Ilclllonl lor lho Contor 11 now IC&lt;tQ1tng reNo 'NIMtndo or Holldoya, pooillonool Mortgage loan oumulorlhopoalllonolOI- 1990 •••70Cioylor&gt;,38R, I
V.C.tion and Other Ben.· Originator with l~dary rector bf Soc,.l Strvk:11. 112 Bath, Remodeled ,
ma Apply 11: Medical Piau, IMnc.t experltnee Appliae· CandiCS.tt muat pou••• Porch. e,,nldJng, ~en-.d L.ot.

We Cove·""""..,
Melge, Gellle,
And Meeon

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

lfn.rWANlll)

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

If lnttrt111d, pl1a11 call

ConnJe Carleton at
1-888-225-1135
8 am • 4:30 pm • Monday ihtou1h Prlday
Holur Home Car~ olfm comprtlrlvr .
compeMariOII In a frl•ndly, pro/111/o/Ul/
armo1phere rhar I"PPOtri your 1row1h
and d•v.lopm,u.
Equal Opporrunlry Employor.

)

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The Amerlclln

~! NetWork

TILIMARKITIHO
1-IIHT+.IOII

1-800-821-8139

Crlvora 10 ~anaport 01109 to
• from aucuon, oall bet\; ten
101m-epm, i740) m-oee7.

www.amerlcancommunltyclassHied.com

or visit our website:

'

.

AUCTIONEER/REALTOR: Pal Sheridan
Alhenl Really: 592·1146
Email: ohamrockauctlontiiiOI.cilm
WEB : www.dwnrodc·aucttona.cam
Pll• 7ol0-5!n-4310 or 800-419·912l

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
IIUCTIONUR RICK P!IIIIION 166
173·5115 OR lt3·544l
TERfliS: CASH OR CHECK WilD •

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AERATION MOTORS
'
ClqodBool
IliM Font lll"""' L"'* o1
C'lrt bra.rM.1 n•w (rAn tS ~~~~~t ~ &amp; RM)utlt 1n Pf•I'NMt.- W•" be&gt; small
-· """
• __, ,_, ntW pana, Runagood Dftv.
mm 1. so;oo iN()J'l92.·!&gt;.'13ol Stocl. Coli Ron Evons, 1 1M&lt;!} 01111 1);1 (!&amp;OI&lt;•S: For Sllo Ahor 8 flCit&gt;n\ on dolly $385(~)Ml!·
-·
-- 1.'00-537·95.."11
0039
(7&lt;0)3119033
112311 or (304)8751111!11
A I Top Sod F•• Oort to&lt;
R~IS\t~
no--

(500 w n

Sal•

[QlJll-\ffiel\1 R•ntAI

w..or.

O.U.r s.c•hoo tlot&gt;cot t.Uroy te 1"2 1'4&gt; . 42" '""
..,._ TraciOI Equ-J moMr, l•kt - · $500,
t7•ol9-1~7
1700...
9

sa!ld-I"'J.
Poonl
More

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$11011tld
1yr. old

ss.ooo

Plana. WNtnoy by Komblll 130'~
~ SmtM ~ ........ E~lor\1
C:ond1h00 Solid WO,.,_, "''
· 101'4&gt;-,ulrl
SO cut,
U· (740)311Ht t5
·~..
tra -bltdOI.
bolla
15·1 "'""' E-lor(304)1175-:lt•e
- · - llorH, Col lntf
5pm (7&lt;0)37'8-2t20
A-blo • CCMWO!Ilont NfW AND USED $T£1!L jji;p;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Two' R-altr.cl 5 _ , ~.
WOLFFTANNING lEOS St... aoams. P•~ Cllan·
"~~~
Dopto -~Gro•,
Low Mon\111y '"""''"'""" For COneralt, Anglo,
, &lt;•
sO (Porchooo
Home DotiVO&lt;y
no&lt;. Flltt Bor, Stool tlroh"'J
Fg~t'MF.Nf
~';' 101 to. 7'01388·
FAEE CQ\Or CAtalog
Fo1 Ora1no, .DriYOwoya &amp;
Call TOO.y I ~1)().7tHl1SS W•""liY' L&amp;L Sc!tll&gt; Met· l O f t - SIO&lt;k ll'a•·
ltw&amp; .
•ww np otstan t om
· als Clper1 Mol.,...-~ or. Ukt Now t7401378·
GIWN
"'~~&lt;" A&lt;h~ Hte .~1 • ., ~d'.!.! T.:.:.=: a~. ca~aneiepm
J!a&lt;:t&lt;&gt;• SO deck. hydro. ... Saturaoy &amp; Sullday 1lt
~--- •• .~~
••"•n&lt;. suoo t30&lt;ti675· t7•ol••6-~
JoM
~· t- -~ tl!OOib Rount~ Bolt&amp;. MOtod
51153
'..,..
mo'""· Now - 323 COon Hoy and Whoot Hay.
Noftllt l'rlcl. "'"' AWrtlll Pltlo.O!.
~Jndlewoo&lt;l FJ,.. (740)245·11652
""'"'"• SOO•oom Se&lt; . boby 3 Y"" okt Excollorlt Con· piiCO lnHrt (740)446-1485 -~-----~tms. la•oe Clog caw•• dlt~ Ptld S2QO .-sk.lng Farm All Cub l'rriclor ~ tor Slit. (J4&amp;0)l!l2·
(30&lt;1675-280!
StOO t:l041675-3440
wlwooda Bolly mower
Pool
lllblt,
,
ThiH
Good
Cont11tlon $1800
C 8 . EqUipmant, 68 Befvti·
811
75 1059
dtre:, Blufl. All Numbers
Nlco 130416 •
"""' l!t)m
Atrrui
Match. Chrom"e. Rollbar fo4 P1oco, 0no 1nch
nllt SAt.E
Small P1Ck.·UP {740]38~ · lllbiO $95(1 (7&lt;012~·11064 . Ford 800 Trlcror, Hw Riding Lawn Mower RQtotJI· er. ntw 11 ~ 1 ' NM;t &amp; L.,..,...,;iiiiiiiiiiiiii;.._.
01 59
""· 2'7' rv eou rico)2~· strat~N .-.ooo. 130411!75·
COOL DOWN, Cenilol Air 1102. Asl&lt;l&lt;&gt;• Junlo!.
:382::::.:•~----- 1972 Porooha oor Gl4 .

...._

~,~tun D&lt;aools. Sll8 Mtldoutn
1~ OO:•n Takt (30&lt;~·
all SSO
ti1D'i88Htl86
01
2924

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$J500. (3()4)757~12

and • Heat

~rn1-1s 11 ~u don't call us Sttv.r Pvnch Bowl. Towel , lni81'N1ional Super C.Model
1\btf'
we both toso Froa esli· E+ght Cups, Never us~ . tmciOf,Nnl~.uuddal· nut
·.
""""' i740)44tl·6Joa ana $100 (740)696-t:!el!
ly, com•• w " ol equip- tan Mercury

'

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9&lt;1~9

s•oo. t740)992·206•

Sut,•JIS

lin·
protoctors,

!IIAIQ• VfttiOUS SilOS wlth

ers

1_\mi

(740)9~2·5169

'

W~ t orllne

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~--H·lll-'lti~-01-£-PjL,I

Ir's

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s.w:

~
lt.t/yl SliM IM7
"' 11-8 Au
~t~~tilL'!.,~~·
=';'"I
o:;,~~~
Foru
Thul\lterblrd, $700 ~S'='
AtC, 1~
~. QUM
1800 Chivy~. SIPd, PfW. rtdfortY lnltnot.
1'011

=

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Real Eatllte General

Real·Estate General
39872 SR 692· Rutland

WOOD REALTf,
INC
446·1066

1D91 Toyota Comry. Well

lHOCUSTSTREET

~~

=

'NQrtt Clf.

1983 Ford lllurut Stat\orl

·-

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SS PRICE SLASH SS

1803 Ford 1\mpO. au~ call

!740)892-snt ....... - ··
01 . ., 11 ~ .,_, ,_

...... n..- ........

1883 Grand·Am, · ~as.

·~
1-JI

.

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Real Estate General

.... I

-·

one is compl~!ed ror you. $90's.

1112199

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Russell D. Wood, Broker

______.J

510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 456..11

e10wa.

$13,000.

......

balt'll, ITIOI)IIe nome

'

tallmott cell Chot. 740-002·
6323.

~

Cullom Building &amp; Remod·

···~

or 7&lt;0_.41·6514

PRICES VARY

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

trodo. 6 ely.. Sap. 14.000
OBO or lredt lor ~ whHI
drl\10 .. me VIIUI, (1-al992· --~-=~~=-~~-=-..,..--:---&amp;5:!2
Real Estate General
glua topptr,
(740)142·23511

1{eatt,

WWWoiWiliJIJ•IIIUOrU, CO Ill

,..llrmtrb Bfadburn Realty us,,.Jitll StJIIIhtrn Ohio f'or ~~~A QuiUitr

$5.000.

e8 Toyota 4•'· 4Cyl., 511).,
50,00(1 muea, aic, ntw
whetla &amp; tlr... ad1.1ll owned .
m1 1n1., nt\ltr mudded,

5}4. Stl.,ontl Ave., GulllpoUs, Ohio 45631-0994
740-4,~6-0008 740-441-1111
brokerilevuus-moorc.com

. $12 ,000,

trade

-

Prudential

Info.

2000 l'ukon Danall, 38.000

· Joe A. Moor-Broker 441•11!111!1
Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441·1818
Patricia Haya- 446·3884 Care Caaey-2415·9430
Cynthie Siciliano- 388-1841
Candace
446·7412

. Real Estate General

(740) 592-3015

MOJOI 5Ub16CFII

$65,000

t158 Ba your own boll wltl'l
t~lt prop~~yl

new QUALITY BUILT home on
2 lt~elacru mill Very n1ce 3 BA
2 BA 11ome wrth solid 6 panel
doors. lots of htHdwood lloor1ng,
Srnl!h cus tom kitchen and 2 car
SSII~OOO,Lotated In Porter area .

This ttstlng has o

101 to oHer: plenty ol oltlce apace,
lull basement, storage In the rear
olthe building, gaa lorced air tieat
and atcurlty ayatem. AU thla tor a
gOOd price Gllie us a call today!
1180 ln\ltllortl lnvutonl
lnvutoral Established Mobile
Home Par~l Once ·ln·a·llle·Ume
opportunity MaJor ca ah Howl
CALL FOR DETAILS
~:::.!..::::.:~~~---­

room . Sltuoltd on
$2a,800,00 12205

1

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

REALESTATE
s~ee

BRICK ...

canatructld ranen nome. Level
lpprox.
..-88
acre
nicely

bo

II
walk-out bleement, Graam kltchtn
with loada ol cu1tom made Smith
etblnota, oeramlc Ute floori"'J &amp;

thle

I

tamlly room , With a baaemtnt In town living Ia )ull

nice kllchtn,
Ctntral air OOfl&lt;~tloril~.

room,

MEIGS COUNTY

o~en

lloor plan, breezewav to 2 car

1111 · Lout! on , L.outlon, garage with llnlthabla 2nd floor,
·• LouUon ... That' a what thll thrtt full bailment, Smith'• cuttom

to cltDO,JI frtHfll

ttory
room tor
pi~~~~:
enlenatnlng
p1
Format LA l OR; 2
with tlrtptocal: Roe
Room; 4 or 5 BAo: 3 112
bathe; blaulltul remodeled
kltchln pluo 2nd kltchenene:
lnojlround pool wltn gazebo
and polio ,art~: 2-oar garage:
and
tono
ot
ttorage.
Convenltnlly tor:atld 11 the
ectge oltown. Un-cremp your
lilt· you'll never ou1grow lhta
Call today
1&amp;23

ono ta
Vtry nice,
t oart&lt;t tor, older 2 BR
home, with Iota ot enaroctor.
1 both, eat-In kiiC(Ien, tult
blllment ond oltuated on
about en acrwr In oountry
IUmJUndi."'Ja. S5g,900 1237
home?

~rcel'lllilt .

PDRTLIINP.eUF,.NGTDN

'

LANDING-

An ...outtvo aubdlvtalon ·riH~ned lor
horatiOYII'a &amp; l&gt;otltrtt l'ou won 1blllovi
tnt loiiUrtl. Aol'llt 10 tho btiUIItul OhiO
tor l&gt;ool lovera, 100" l&gt;oll dor.k, rkii"'J
Ml'9• ptcn~ thllttr. rldi"'J troll a, A much
mort. Ctrtttn rHtrtottono apply. LOt
prlotto and ooreaee vory,

iWttiOn-

vour

"

Formal Glnlng

2 tor 1 dtall
1
prOPfl!)' hu 1 !PI ol pottnllol to

room 11 well at a ntoe

be a money mallet for you . Tl'le

t 11 homa hat 3 · 4 btdrooma, 2
barha, Uvlng Room, Dining room,

1180 Ntw Llatlngt If 1
new g11 lurntce . The 2od home
country atnlog Ia whit vou are h•• 1 t&gt;taroom, 1 Dath , &amp; ttvt1'9
lOOking lOt, look htrt flrat. Thlt 3 room . Only 151,000. Greet
bOGroom, 2
homo lo titling tnv01tmtnt that ~houtd CAIH
f'LOWI

www':l~j'!:ll~u:~::::~~~~~:llll

room. Eot-ln kttohen, lorgl
llllohtG by brHUWiy
l&gt;ld&lt;oom end both lila approx. 320
lq . ft. Situated on approx. 8a aorta
with pond &amp; "" 1o roaldtnee.

pump/Diflt111 I CI. Nlct tcrHntd tn

prlv11t lour! tat N

porch- -

M•nv l"'"'',. emenlllet Call for vour

NIW UITtNGt 211 UNION
AVINUI .. , Roomy rtnch homo with
4 bldrooma, 2 batha, 1/~lng room,
ttmlly room. Nowtr root &amp; .hoot

on II

CIIHmt •

RUITIC COUHTin' LIVINQ...
trom an -theUO proopeotlve
onty. Thlo 2-ttory home It O!lty
7 yew old lind otlero llvi"'J wtlh 3 BRa; 2 bltht; LR,
lind eat~n kltOhln. 8t1Uited on
2.4 In RI'W Vlltty.

742·3171
QUITitl WOODID

- ·--·

OOH'T KIIP THflloWINQ
YOUII MON!Y ' "WAY ON
IIIHT. Tht own.11 took very
otro ot .!hit Cttyton
BRI, 2r =~o::.or:::;u:,~ ~
QII'Citn '~'I bunt tn ...,..,
lrtd I
:~~ lntlllied
tlroptoce. Cu
y 011 LOt t8
In
Trailer Coun ond
tuedurul_.e,

Jonn-·•

ours:

MIDDLII'OIIT. Oldtr homo with
charm 1nd great locatlon neer
aohoof, grooory, oto. Loll of room
htrt tor lhl ltmlly. Give Chtryt o
oalt lor mort tloltlla. 12110

•

•

www .wisemanrealestate .com
David Wlaem1n, QRI, CRS Broker 44f..H51
Clrolvn Weech, QFII 441-1007 8onnv G•m•• 44f-2707
Robart Bruce 448-0821 ~ Alta Wiseman 441-1555

I'U ~ ~
.· lM . ~

2

........,..

740

)

446 3644

~

----·~----'----..

-my." "

=.

U2.ol00 t2H

NIW LIITINQI •~ 7 (Tupport 'Iaine) Araa, ranch homo with 2 bOclroomt N¥11'9 room kiiOhtn with appilancta, ~P~Jro• . 1538 oq, H., rtttlng on 4 lovtltoro .C~M Cllt!)11boulltlll onoi 12204
'
.

·---~·

equiPPed

BAt, 2 boltlt nlot
front ~ .. 110rtge lllittdlng,
olt etiUIIed In 1 lovely country
-.,g with g-t ...... to
8R 31 by.,.... Call loday ond
.....,. your ~lome ow_,

Cheryl Lemley

.

luturoe:
LR·DR
with VIUttecl

oport.to welt

· t16.000 00 12201

(

rteht
Prtotd to 1111 II
tnll
"IOg..roed"

=~~=
:ldlot1en.
3

IC 'HOMit
Approll U2 oorH wtttt 0,_ tlory
(tOme, tl'llng room kttohtn &amp; btltl.
App&lt;ox. 1040 oq, ft. ot rullto ond
oozy llvlog. Thll 0111 II JUtt
ldorlblo lo milt attll'91 i.Ooaltd
II Sigley Rldat. Call to/ more
tnlormatlonl Uf N

lht city aohool

ln~eelortt

ii-.iiiiilllllllll..o~n~2~.5~

IIOf'lgt or potenl181 IO aekf to
your llvi"O area, 2-car garage
on •a lovely 2.5 r'!'V1 acre lot.
Priced at $109,900 Call tO&lt;IIy
to Me au the potenllal lhll
pfOPtnv hal to otter. 1828

NmNO WITH flU

Smith'l woodwork
throughout, toma oeramlo tile
lloora. In addiJion, 28 x 28 metal
barn with fen ced ar•• tor
ani mall, nlc. 21 ' tbov1 ground

(IIIII Wflllt yoM -

Pottoct country location with
teatun•g a hom4 bull
with tht family In mind. Over
2500 oq. N. with LA, lg. K opon
to dining area, FA wllh aecond
kltchtnetto , 3·4 BAt, 3 oatha,
Iorge attic . opace groat tor
prt~ocy,

WONDI~,UL

~lichen,

1

3·•

'*'

Uf)tlo\tl,
nett pump
A elorege
AWordllblt
H"IIDIII . TO "ND THAN IT
IIIMI To ttnd 1 homo tn CIOod
repair tor ltlltr Priot ot 841,800.001
uw.tv quatnt u otory homo with
llvi"'J room, 3 bldroomo, ~­
gartgo P~IIOit I!IOitl 12101

I Oll/IOIJITI O N/11 ll ~, lli'J (,', &amp; ti'JI OI!MIITI O I'J C/111 0 1! ', 1()1' I!Y I
IIIII Ol lllllfYIIOM I ~ /NUI/1!/I II OOK/1 T'

Luxurtoutl 911
wrap around porch and
upertenoe nature on 3.8
titautllul acrea. New In 1eee tnd
beautifully cared for, thla 3 BA, 2

112 BA nome hu 1 nlco

apace
tnctudoa
largo
baHment, 4 BRa &amp; 3 tutl
Datha. Soml-prlvato
acre
lot. Flat lawn. Oon'l hoatlale, It
won't last. $185,0001101-

ITD~Y

1

•

·

NIW LIITINQt '~IINDLY
HOIAI aiiUIItd on
oornor trttd lot. 4 8odroomo

cozy tlroploet complomtnllng Ill

LOTit 4 tcroa up, motlly all
WOOtloct owoor will oonaldtr ulllog
on land oontriOI. aaaoa

WO#Iiltl (orl 011/1111 W.
lllll!llltaltY mtwr tlltlltlf

,.

flll you In on tho rtll, Handy
loeoUont ta117
.

. LOTI .895 tort IIIli hat rood
Ironia go Aloog SA 1110 and
Bulavlllo. tdool tor Rtatdtntlal or
oommerctaL Ownor ltlltog btlow
opprottod valuol 12141 .

of genue ro!Hng country
I Ia 1 mu1t . to 111.

bedroom rancher hll In addition
to a total remod~llng lnaidl and
out Selling In move .ln·condltlon
11'".11 LeOrand t Drlvt propert)'
otfera newer; replacement
wlnc! owt '- vinyl tiding. decking,
peal , roof . contrnuou1 guner
•vetem. dall C1blne11 In kltchtJ1,
harawood lloort on and on IT
WON'T LAST HUOOI

bltha, foyer, living room, all large
tiHd rooma. Muat call to wa can

•aaoa

4BAa

charming three bedroom two bath homey fttllng. With a one car
ranch wllh large eat In kitChen, detached garage and the extJi
formal living rpom and cathedrll atoragt apaet · ol !ht tuft

•'

S\0,000.001
on
thla ont It you
· take
advantage ot 1 grttt opporlunlty to
own thta lovely 2 1101'1 homo lhll
hll hid • 1 major taco .lift.
Everything otmoat trom top 1o
t&gt;onom It ntw. 3 Blrlroome, 2 tutt

· motlly iU wooded owner wlli
conalder lllllng on lind ocntract

dining room. Juat off the dining
room le an equipped !dtOhtn and
family room combloatlon with a
10

n: A.J',:

Over 2500 oq . tt. ot ltvlog

quality

Oulaldo a Doau!ltully tanrii&lt;&gt;IPtd
enuy teada to a tattetully
decorated formal living room and

to

IOta

hOmt, Capo Cod alylo with

two 1tary aalanlal ttyle

' l

AD'VAt~T",Q!I

~:~~~~~~~~ ·~~~~ 1:0~ ~~.:_o'i:;.~.':J"

Nl LIITINGI LD71t 4 terti up

porch J7UOO

brtok

only $1 Sl,llOO. 1205

TOWN.
Acree comet

equipped with applloncea, tormal
dining with prohy tlotahld wOOd
formal dining ltll. 2 balhl, . tloorlog &amp; trench doora thai loada
attached 2 car garage . Within a to rear dtok acroat houM, matter
tow lhon mtnul11 to hoapttal, btaroom &amp; both wit~ wlllnpool tuD
grocery, eto. litN
&amp; watk.fn clolll, tamly room, llvlog
, 2 oddlltonal blltla end
Rt1"11'9
' 3i
hoUit.

polt,
and take a wal~ to beau tiful
Tycoon La~el Newly rem0&lt;1.eled, 3
BR, I 11:2 bath, attached 2-ca r
gtuaue on I acre nv1 Rela;.: In lhe
ehaoe on your wrap -around

lleoutHul

llmilttlt potential. Formeny
uaed •• a rottaurant , It 11
well outttd tor o"loe apace.
apanmenta or a mixture.
Featuring appro• . 51100 eq..
" · plul lull Duemonl,
bolulltul woodworl&lt;, htgh
celllnga, greallocailon. 1111

aattor wanll an oHert $87,1500 00
natO

llndtcapld 101. Equlppld kllehtn,

''

Thta

call tor 1n appointment. Motivate

lf184 wanl To Own Your
Bualntu? Great cuh ttow!
Established retail shop up and
ready to go. Owner willing to
adYiae and help you get started
aa you can continue ttre aucce111
Call
tor delalla.

1943

All thit, and i'nuch more, tor

LENDER .

rontld k&gt;l.

Covet ~I The

flroptact. and 112 t&gt;ath .
Hidden In tht t&gt;acll yard. you'll
lind 011e ot the nlcell
land~ pools in ihe irea.

·--

ceHing and also lnoludlng living

wv

ot tnla n~ b""" ronch
reveaJa only half of wt\11'1
otter1td. There't much mort
than lht 3 BRo. 2 bltha, LR &amp;
eal In kitchen. The deluxe,
walk-out baHmenl feature•
an outatandlng bar area. rec
room area. lamlly room with

G:r ·

ntw 14' •

Bodrooma, 2 tun bllha, eol·ln
kllehen with akyllghl l oathoral

ll'llf

NEWSPAPERS

COMMERCIAL LISTINGS!
IOYtly a llory hom4 IIIli hat 101110
oHer lntldt and outt Including
plenty ot room. 4 Bldrooma, 2
romodolel, bollia, 11\11"11 room,
family ·roam, tonnol dlnlog area,
anachtd gara;o. Over 3.P3 oorn
nicely londaeepod lot which
lncludlla frontage along Aaocoon
Cruk. A •tot quiet place to ttvo.
Grun School dl&amp;trlet. hurry and

800-280-2574

280 East State Street,
Athens, OH 4570 i

Real Estate General

1113 PRICE REDUCED\ In town
and clolt 10 achoota, park
t~on1, groctry 1nd much morel
Thrs 2 atory home ha&amp; the
posslbllrty ol having 3 ren tal s wllh
it. Live In one and letthfll rent from
the others pay your mortgage!

~ IIUCTIIII

Jot!Maoorol00·9l6·
l&amp;!l'l 0! vilk ........

45 toot Cove~ Stmi·Vant,
Road Worthy, $2000.
(740)U6·7800

within paat couple veara. Storeage
building Mull 1111~11 ooel 12208

.·~-:;::-_
GREAT INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
1150,000
15010

t~.

deck ,\ oidc·
1\IUOOCtll

$29,000, (7&lt;0)11&lt;9·401 D

room with tlr8pllct, tat-6n kltctltn,
1ttachtd gtrtge, Iota of updaln

--

..

Clote to lhe F..aa.tm
School• tltJ ttva 011~
owner 1;975 '4.1 1\
bticklvlnyl rtn.::h home
on aiii'IOit • hiJr.•m
''" l
l IIIII

mllut , tJtCtlleni condition,

a,,.,,.,,

12022

12t0

;================

(740)992·2486

OYER 1 ."CRI
tomlty room, 3 btaroorot, living

10 . . . . . . .
""" 16(1 It 1210 ~ .h.

All sel up and ready lor your 4·H animals .
your horses , or you,r hobbies. 1990 3
bedroom, 2 bath home wilh new
pump. deck ·and porch co relax on, eX1:ral
large 2 · car garage for slorage
tinkering, and a four stall barn with
storage area and tack. roorri, electric
waler. All fenced and In great cor1dllion I
just t 2 miles on SA 33 to AI hens · or
Pomeroy. Could be financed VA , FHA,
Conventional. Have a look al lhe photos
j26 al www.lerryconrethr.. lty.com !hen
give us a calllo set up a tour. $113,000

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL, E-MAIL US OR
STOP BY THE OFFICE MON·FRI. 8:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M.
SAT. 8:30A .M, TO NOON

(7401••&amp;·&lt;235 ,

95 S·10,
73,000 cab,
mlloa,llblr1/C,
pb,
p1, delu11.a

...

....

rlenct.
Fr~t Ettlmates.
Funy lnsurea. No Job To
Big or Small. 740-992·111 g

~ Ford F-1 SO for tall or

aU set the cost ol purchaae

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

Z.l """" .............
rloddot
·bftwlt!
...

repair and more. For free

Pltallltave menage.

Call or stop by our office (or a free Quality Homes Guide 1i1 color

..,...~ ...... Wrwilo

'-

C&amp;C General Homt Malnle·
ntnce- Painting, vinyl aid·
lng, Qlrptntry, doors, win·

mllft. E~ectl!tnl COndlllon .

Real Estate General

....... l l , . . . _

·!lvaiy ........... ....

OFFERS 4 IIR'S, 2 lATH

XLT, Looa.d . Oleltl Alter
Merkt\ Turt&gt;o, 10a.ooo

537 9526

BA hOme on 1 79 AC In Green
townshrp Also Included is a weu
kept 2. BR mobile horne In
addltron to a.u lhl&amp; an 8)(\ra building ,
tot can be either used or aold 10

'

................ ,.,...
""""·- .......

A Farmett• Flnallyl

e3 Ford Crew Cab, Duly

RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
ES Jflckson, Ohro, 1·800·

./

' MAooo .........
"""'
·6"0.,

.G.w. ... . _

BrASs Compr&amp;S!:iron Fittings
. In Stock

12083 PRICE REDUCED! Cule 2

TliiS 'ACKAGIINO.UDE~

• WE ARE EXCITED ABOUT OUR NEW WEB SITE" ·
PICTURES AND INFORMATION AVAILABLE ~

~..,....

tii"'J. Over IS.'l'otrs Expo·

e~-~

i"" 10. nJ

MtildowbrOOk Or.
Point PltaUnl or call
(304)875·3823, INw mea·
HQI ~ llOCHttry,

446·7143

PSI $21 00 Por 100, 1· 200
PSI $35 00 Per 100, All

•

THE 1111. vtiNON

2812

Cu.stom built; 3 yrs old; 2
story; 5 acres with pond;
2,400 sq. ft. plus full
basement, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2
bath. Kerr Rd.· Minutes from
hospital &amp; Fh. 35.
For more Information call
evenings &amp; weekends

(740) 448-7101 OR 1-800..515-7101

Sp&amp;e•Rl· J,/4 200

Immaculate t996 Skyline 3 bedroom, 2
rancll home with all appliances. gas
lflr1epi11Ce In the. lamlly room/dining area
kitchen . Large liVing room, 2 car
laa1raae. 1111d country front porch with nice
over paslures. Beaut~ul 2.85 acres,
home nearby. Meigs Local School$.
about •99 when you call . Pnc&amp;d to
owner moving co be near famtly.
Immediate poasesslon. $94,500

' IIHHI -.

Professionally llllldsc:aped cuily co maintain
iot. Lara• sized livina room 1111d kitchen with
nice tile nooring &amp;. Ollk ~ubinels, muster
bedroom &amp; bllill. additionlll bach IUld 2
bedrooms, annched 2 ctll' anragc. ·Retll' deck.
Waste no time building thnt new home this

L1\·..~,UCK

1889 2e 11 Jo)'CO Etglt,
uted 8 timee, SlHpl II•.
awning, AC, and m~ro•
wave. Rtar btctroom , lull
bed. center bath. Su at

REDUCED TO SELLI
$243,900

UKB BRAND NEW RA.NCII

GALUPOLIS,OIU045631

HOUR$: llon-Fn 1:30am to 4:30pm; Sat 1::10 a.m. to 12
Allen C. Wood, Brobl • «e-4523
Klflllol'glfl. Broker • 44&amp;-0e71
Jt1111n. MooN, · 25f.t745
Pltrfetl Ron 7~tOM

molnlt=-J;:~ mllol;o. 1

Wanted to Buy. Uai'J Mo·
bl!t Home ce.n (7&gt;t0)4-4&amp;·
0175 or (~)876·5D65
·
llllll"_ _ _ _ _...,

Ir

AtmlS

FOR Sow!

m:

13041576·:1909

lndop&amp;r\dont Herbft,tile Ola·
lc
hlbutor, Can For F»roduct Or 81ock. br k, sewer plpvs,
Opportunity ("140)44 I- ' 982 wlnctowa, lintels. etc. Clftudt
Wlntera. Rro Grande, OH
Long1dJor9ttr Busketa tor ic!ii"'l'7.:•::;o-:;a4:;5:;_;
· 51.\t2~t"---.

rm

no

. . . . -r:

Marquia. ~ Ctc~elltrrok'"5'."51·1 5.
:.:..:~==::..:.::::..__ men&lt;. $1100. OBO. IAuat Clqod Condilon
(74
• ...,.
"
••
1·800·291-1)098
1
Sioreo·Coblnel Siylo tor Sell. (3041675·•335 to\16pm,
·
01388· 1991 Goo Mtlro, STSO.
11208
COOK MOTOAI. (740)...6·
Grubb's Prano- Tunrng &amp; $50. Bog ol LAdles Clothes 13041&lt;56·1 673 •llor epm.
0103
.
ReiM\•rs Problttms7 Noed tor $5 00. Croct&lt;pot &amp; Col·
WAN"Illl
l\rnett? C~U rM P1ano Or too M•ker lor SS. Polarol&lt;l
740·446 4525
Comero, $15. (740)4•6·
11llh1\'

Hk16-ft ·bol.l, Autumn cOIOf'S, - . - - - - - - - .
good COf\drhan, $125. Lowry
BUIUJI-,'
Tllluno cover tor Bit Ford
pjano, vory good condrtlon,
r~
lull
s!z.t
uuck
btd

IIIII&lt;

I

o.o:;.•
,·•

I!!!20':

j'o.

st•••·

Auros
rot~ SAt .a.:

prMI\t, "

I

a•·

16

July 14, 2002

t1.0 0 0 - - Gl!ogt
$900 1885 Ford Clown VIc- Runt good $2000 080.
Kopt,
Oleo,
$489~ 2 Chovy - t ' t 111.89 1 lOria. $500 IQ85 Plymouth gs !Aoztlo Mlllt &lt;1-cy!Stpd,
(740) •• 8 8890
01c11 Cut..... 82 For porta. \l:lyoQtf, S100 1891 Fon1 72.000 milt&amp;, aott lop.
la88 F"'onltK Qrana-Atft,
R
C*)S'71..H2S
~mpo. $~ 1M8 Otds ...., 11.. oo..~ ...... ln*-.1..·. Now
runt good.,_,_ ""'11985.,.... -.. ~$'''
C
"" · - · ·~~
rollabtt, $400, (74011185- Cal ont&lt; 500pm. (740)3111· 2000 Ct.elief LS 4 Door Cltll, ~ 1888 MY)' polot runs grHI $4400
38to •
0483
AI&lt;, ""''"' cNIH: KeytoN go~':: ~~':r;:: oao: 11-a~·m3
1890 CuttaM
()tel. 1985 Co= Z·H. Low Ent~::·ro mllot $8(100 ttae Boro."'IYY\Io, 1e00 1890 - - - - - - amobllo, 4
s~· mllot L
, (~)87$- (740
300
Poot11o Qrand-Am, $1100 88 Cho"l' Ct'lllltr Rilly
· - 5188
•• 50;'
(740)4&lt;4eotel5 01 (740~·
2000 FOld Eocon 2•2. INt Poolltrl SUndlioc., . SQort, 88,000 , tliuo. ..,,7
~~
OOilCitl
AIMngor
ES,
20,1500
..
gorogt
kopt,
$1000.
1892
Buiclt
AOQIII,
II$
04dl
Cutluo
Sl.
IHI
1985
1891 LIHr R""" Groot 5 groot ~. RUlli Clqod, 1b ,_ oondllion, priCt ,.. $1000 1887 Oodao Dov1&lt;&gt;- ~ · iollllor, NQh m11tt.
~ ..J "·, ,_, ....:. .-.l500. (~)e7S-ettltl
GO'iablt, (:10ot)e7S-8808
na. $650. 1H f Cho'l)' CIHn, $2,185; 117 Ntoo
~$1450
~·
Stcrm· $1800 · 1-7
H""'IIOt
080 1Q85 Qorjge Intrepid, For Solo' tt73 IAUOII"'I Calli/On,
- ...........
......,..
""' ' • dr"' 108 ' 000'
SIOO. tWO
Chovy blue, $3,285: 1M! Grand Ct~ ·
(740)&lt;4t · 1013
(740)4&lt;4eo?t61
Corworlibtt, CIMond En- CtVItlier, $800. 1888 Lin· • - SE, duel tlldlnQ doo!t.
1891 Thurlatrbird, Air, Tin, 1007 Sltum 4 doo&lt; ISapd gino. IAUOI tto to ~· coin Towncor. $800, 'Coli white, S•,•as: (7i0)142·
Crulto, Po- Wlfldowt, wilt\"''
(740'37'8- att $8500 Arm (7.0)•08· (7&lt;0)388.voo:l
3802or(740)142-t081.
SHit and Door- Lod&lt;a..Aioo a166 '
'
2030
suorool. RHtt;
Real Estate General
Clqod Condition. $2,000
.:OBO.=.::t7~40::!)HS-82&lt;1::::=.:::.'-Real Estate General

·- - =· .

I

A-·· r•o

CondtiiOnfUS

Sunday, July 14, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • QalllpolliI Ohio • Point Pl•unt, WV

-1

.. ....._..- ---

-- ... ..._.___

. ,

•

�•
Page 06 • 6uubap UJ:1mtf -6tnrmrl

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

J•uhlk

~I J itns

111

1 · ,

\ tUII' Ulj,tllt lu 1\ nn~. lll'lh t l"l'll I( I)I hi tu 'u.u r

Sundly, July 14, 2002

Sunday, July 14, 20C

NEW YORK (AP) - The firefighters
The families of 80 firefighters killed on
union said Friday it will distribute most of Sept. II asked state Attorney General Eliot
the $70 million in charitable donations It Sp1tzer in May to investigate the union and
received since Sept. I I to families of fire- file suit if necessary over its plan to invest
fighters killed in the 1;ne of duty, respond- the moner before providing puyments.
ing to families' outrage at o plan to tnvest
The un10n also had p1onned to not give
the money.
.
money to the families of single, childless
But the Uniformed
Firefighters firefighters who died in the terrorist
Association will keep $13 million to create attacks, said Randy Mastro, the attorney
an en~owment for t_he f~milies of firefight- representing the firefighters' families .
ers killed on the JOb tn the future, said Block called the changes "un evolving
union lawyer Michael Block.
process" that'is now complete.

Public Notice

Public NotiCe
Public Notice
UPON ISSUANCE OR
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
A
STATED
THE FOLLOWING EFFECTIVE DATE.
lllde will be received
PURSUANT TO OHIO
by the Melge locll APPLICATIONS
School Board, at 320 AND/011 VERIFIED RI!VISED CODE
I
COMPLAINTS WERE SECTION 3745.04, A
1!111 Main SlrMt,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711 RECEIVED, AND THE FINAL:· ACTION MAY
FOLLOWING DRAFT, BE APPEALED TO
lor the following
PROPOSED, OR THE
project:
FINAL
ACTIONS ENVIRONMENTAL
NEW FIELD HOUSE WERE ISSUED, BY REVIEW APPEALS
T HE
0 HI 0 COMMISSION (ERAC)
MEIGS LOCAL HIGH ENVIRONMENTAL
(FORMERLY KNOWN
•
SCHOOL
PROTECTION
AS
T HE
•
42001 Pomoroy Pike · AGENCY (0 EPA) ENVIRONMENTAL
"omeroy, Ohio 45788 LAST
WEEK, BOARD OF REVIEW)
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE BY A PERSON WHO
ADOPTION, WAS A PARTY TO A
In ICcordance with THE
the Drawlnge lhd MODIFICATION, OR 'PROCEEDING
THE
Spacltlcetlone pre- REPEALOFORDERS BEFOI!E
(OTHER
THAN DIRECTOR
BY
pered by:
EMERGENCY
FILING AN APPEAL
ORDERS); THE WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
Panlch, Noel +
ISSUANCE, DENIAL, NOTICE OF THE
AIIOCIIIII
MODIFICATION OR · FINAL
ACTION.
Arch.ltecte end
REVOCATION ·OF PURSUANT TO OHIO
Englnure
'507 Rich lend Avenue, LICENSES, PERMITS, REVISED CODE
SECTION 3145.07, A
..
Suite 301 · LEASI!S,
AC110N
.Athene, Ohio 45701 VARIANCES·, OR FINAL
Tolephone: 740/5112· CERTIFICATES; AND ISSUING, DENYING, . - - - - - - MODIFYING,
~420 Telelu: 7401592· THE APPROVAL OR
Public Notice
Public Notice
Real Eatate General
Real Eatate General
DISAPPROVAL OF REVOKING, OR
3824
AND RENEWING
A
. ·Internet: pnerc.com PLANS
NOTICE
SPI!CIFICATIONS.
PERMIT, LICENSE,
Any Propoud "DRAFT ACTIONS" 0 R
VARIANCE
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
The Boerd ol Thl VIIIIQI ol
Equal lor a Standard ARE
WRITTEN . WHIC)'i IS NOT Truetell
of
Columble
Middleport
will
hold
a
MAKES
THE DIFFERENCE
"ehall be aubmllted to STATEMENTS OF PRECEDED BY A Townahlp will hold • public meeting
VIROINIA
SMITH,
BROKER ............... 444.el0f
lhe Archllect no later THE DIRECTOR OF PROPOSED ACTION, budget heerlng It I epprovlng the 2003
OAIL IELVILLE ................................. «&lt;·li!Ot
lhen tan (10) daye ENVIRONMENTAL
MAY SE APPEALED IPICIII meeting, July budget 11 Vllllgl Hill
TRISH 8NYOER ...................................441·t451
.flrlor to
PROTECTION'S
TO THE ERAC BY 11•2002 et7:00 p.m. II Council Room on
Branch
Office·
J OHNNI! RUSSILL ..................... ...... :1117-o3a3
the bid opening. It no (DIRECTOR'S)
FILING AN APPEAL the lira elation.
·
23 LOCUli St. .
July lith 11 7,00 p.m.
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Gallipolis, on1o,..~ DAVID 8NYDER ..................................44t.-14S8
'Addenda II luued INTENT
WITH WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
Mery
Brody,
Clerk
Cerolyn
s.
French,
Bidwell, Ohio 45814
45831
ecceptlng
the RESPECT TO THE · ISSUANCE OF THE
Cotumble Townohlp Clerk
·Propoeed Ecjuel, the ISSYANCE, DENIAL, · FINAL
ACTION. ~~ 12, 14, 15, 18, 17, 882·3037
'
·!!rOpoled Equel ahall ETC. OF A PERMIT, ERA C APPEALS
HOME
be conaldarod LICENSE, ORDER, MUST BE FILED
Preffy 11 a
well
(7)
14,
~
5,
2002
rejected.
ETC. INTERESTED WITH:
planned atone and frame ranc;h
home otlera 3 btdroome, walk·ln
'Seeled bldl will be PERSONS MAY ENVIRONMENTAL
Real Estate .Gen~l
closet, 2 tutl batha, charming ll\llng
received lor:
SUBMIT WRITTEN REVIEW APPEALS
room wlilreplace. New oak cablrieta
.. Genarel Tradal
COMMENTS OR COMMISSION, 238
line 1he kllchen, Range, refrigerator,
,Contract
REQUEST A PUBLIC EAST TOWN STREET,
I
dlahwalher, and compaclor all 1tay.
Plumbing Contract . MEETING
R0 0 M
3 0 0, .
05drmt. up,
Uilllty rccm Ia tMtra large. 2 liar deck
' HVAC Contrect
REGARDING DRAFT COLUMBUS, OHIO
kit., LA, OR, 1 1 , 1 In the rear with 36' lnground poet.
·.· Electrical Conlract ACTIONS.
43215. A COPY OF
basement with family rm &amp; WOOd Many fruit trees, flower•, and
until Auguat8, 2002 COMMENTS OR THE APPEAL MUST
stove and other rooma tor lhruba. Sprinkler 1y1tem In the rear.
11 2:00 p.m., when PUBLIC MEETING BE SERVED ON THE
recreation. Attached garage lovely 2 car attached garage and a e1rport.
!reed lot. Privacy fence &amp; hot tub, 2 alory barn building. Blacktop ond
they will be opened REQUESTS MUST liE DIRECTOR WITHIN 3
weod dad&lt;, lronl perch &amp;~de porch. . cement driveways. Ahome you'll 05
and read.
SUBMITIED WITHIN DAYS AFTER FILING
Thla dellgnHul dwelling can 05 aeon proud to own. VL Smith 446-6805
A Pre-Bid Meeting 30 DAYs OF NOTICE THE APPEAL WITH
by In appointment. LV Smllh 448- 14041 HAPPINESS IS WHERE
Will be held on July OF THE DRAFT THE ERAC.
8805
VOU FIN~ IT. Thlo Charming Older
'24, 2002 at 10:30 e.m. ACTION.
''PR· APPLICATION fOR
.A.~~~~QIUT BUSINESS end home hae been remodeled, nloe
It the project aile OPOSED ACTIONS" PERMIT TO INSTAll
STOAE FOR kitchen, 2 t/2 bathe, 3 bedrma.located at the Melge ARE WRITTEN GALLIA COUNTY
oyslem.
Building located In the country. Nice lot lo
Locel High School on · STATEMENTS OF LANDFILL
code . Continuous grow a garden and enttrtaln the
.P.omeroy Pike 11 the THE DIRECTdR'S 487110USH HOLLOW
I~~~:.~ Iince 1988, Prlcelncludea lamlly. $85,000
E11t end of the High INTENT
WITH RD
II
. Call JOhnnie 387-0323 'or
School parking lot.
RESPECT TO THE BIDWELL OH
448·8805.
Contract
ISSUANCE, DENIAL, FACILITY
14005 COMMERCIAL LOT ON SR
.Documenle may be MODIFICATION,
DESCRIPTION: AIR
7 NORTH .77 acre mil Beaulllul
obtained lrom the. REVOCATION, OR APPLICATION NO 08·
equipped , 2 pole borno, and trailer
Architect by piecing a RENEWAL 0 F A ll6238
atorage. Call ror more lntormatlon. 14044 12 AFFORDABLE PRICE
refundable depoelt In PERMIT, LICENB!, APPLICATION
175,000.00 Will buy an Immaculate
VLS SIBO,OOO
lh ..mount olt30.00 0 II
VARIANCE. RECEIVED FOR
home . 3 Bedrma., 2 batha, torm~l
1
1402B·W•~•r,
oloo.
on
Mltcl101
Rd.
per Ill p1y1ble to WRITTEN
PERMIT TO INSTAll
LA, heat pump•. new carpet, range,
laa•ted corner or SA rtf.
~lnlch and Noel COMMENTS
AND SOLID . WASTE
&amp; ·dllhwaaher. Otek on rear, out
127,500
building, nice la~oeape. QUICK
Archltecio. No more REQUESTS FOR A LANDFILL. FINAL
'
POSSESSION. 1 Ao. m/1. OPEN
then three (3) 1111 PUBLIC MI!ETING IISUANCE OF
·..,..
.
HOUSE JUNE 28TH, 2002. 10:00
will be provided to 1 REGARDING A RENEWAL OF NPDI!S
a.m
, Loc.tlon 11950 St. At. 7 south
blddor.
PROPOSED ACTION PERMIT
Take Survlce Rd. lett en Clay 14030-IT1S
· DOMESTIC STEEL MAY IE SUBMITIED 0 HI0
V'ALLEY
School.
ACAEIIUSE REQUIREMENTS WITHIN 30 DAYS OF ELECTRie CORP
faahlon
will\
'AI SPECIFIED IN NOTICE OF THE KYGER CREEK
conve1jonce
this
4 SA, 2 atory
SECTION 153.011 OF PROPOSED ACTION. PLANT, 5758 STATE
home,
2 balha, (whlrtpool tub).
T.HI! REVISED CODE AN ADJUDICATION ROUTE 7
Lovely equipped kll/lamlly rm
APPLY TO THIS HEARING MAY liE CHESHIRE OH
14044 II Move thla dealroblo 1995 combo wlhlrdwccd lloora, cherry
PROJECT. COPIES HELD
ON
A ISSUE
DATE
MobHe Home to your lot. 14' x 60' coblneta. Enjoy vlawlng the country
OF SECTION 153.11 PROPOSED ACTION 01101/2002
Skyline with 2 bedrma., 1 bath, lrom
window. Formal dOling
cenual air, range &amp; ref. Lookt like 1m &amp;
OF THE REVISED IF A HEARING RECEIVING WATERB:
I . Poroh
new lor only S1e,ooo.
&amp; patio
CODE CAN liE REQUEST
OR OHIO RIVER 1
BUY BOTH HOMES
rolling land. Paaluro. ~"':~"-'' ,,,,,,. 1
OBTAINED FROM OBJECTION IS KYGERCREEK
!Imber, pc~ &amp; I
·ANY OF THE RECEIVED BY THE FACILITY
bam &amp; bulldlnge.
'OFFICES OF THE OEPA WITHIN 30 DESCRIP110N:
8806
DEPARTMENT OF DAYS OF ISSUANCE · POWER PLANT
4DMINISTRATIVE
OF THE PROPOSED P E RMIT
N0
140&amp;1, &amp;2, 53 a 54 RENTAL
SERVICES.
ACTION. WIIITIEN OIB00005'LD
'
:::0. INYI8TMENT8 Wo~hy cl aorlouo
.4051 IDEAL OPPORTUNITY TO thought. 4 propertlea w/1 0 unlta to
:The Conlrict COMMENTS,
THIS FINAL ACTION
BUY · A HOME THT IS NOT
Documenle may be REQUESTS FOR NOT PRECEDED IV
You 01n add value
more
OVERPRICED. SB9,900,00 Located rent.
lnoome by llxlng each unll.
r•vlewed lor bidding PUBLIC MEETINGS, PROPOSED ACTION
549 Le« Fort&lt; Ad. 1year old, 112 ac: or all ol the bulldlnga olltrod.
purpoau without AND ADJUDICATION AND IS
mil 3 bodrma., 2 batht ullllly rm 1rom $39,000 lo $6&amp;,000.
~harge during buel- HEARING REQUESTS
APPEALABLE TO
Nice L.FI &amp; din rm. are'a, beau111Ui Information available. Located
na11 houre 11 the MUST BE SENT TO: ERAC.
coblneto In equipped kit. All electric Pomeroy.VLS 446·6805
P/IICII ol lhl Melgl HEAIIINQ CLERK,
,
home. Be aure to HI .lhla. A buy
you can not afford to mi11. VLS 13380 BARGAIN· Brick &amp; vln~
l11CII School Dlltrlct, OHIO
July 14, 2002
444·6805
t6e Architect end -the ENVIRONMENTAL
BR, 2 BA home on prOlate 1
12118 CHESHIRE AREA old attlp lot. Family rccm, living
lellowlng locallone:
PROTECTION
mine land. 1600 per. acre. 182 wmreplaco, OR, a~ large utility
: FW Dodge
AGENCY, P.O. BOX
acre1. Great for nunrlng or
. 1475 Dublin Roed
1048, COLUMBUS,
recreation. Alao 14 acre• nv1 roam In thll one with full bueiT'IInt.
C:Oiumbue, OH 43215 OHIO 43211-1048
Altllched 2 car garogo ond
commercial on SR 7. ·
'· Bulldere Exchenge (TELEPHONE: 814dlllched
2 cer garoge ao well could
14033 THIS HOME FITS THE bt UNd for ttorage . Priced tor 1
,ol Columbue
844·2121). "FINAL
HISTORIC · PICTURE
OF
tp5 Dublin Roed
ACTl 0 NS:
ARE
GALLIPOLII • Home loalurea 3 quick oale. $8&amp;,000 ·'
Columbue,-OH 43215 ACTIONS OF THE
BA, and 1 bath with cuatom f4Dtt OUVAN TWP. So Acroo m11
'
DIRECTOR WHICH
cablnits In
, ~•ry large lot localed on Twp. Ad. 2 bornaln need
(f) U, 21, 2002
r
ARE EFFECTIVE
that hll
for HVeral ol repair. 2. clotorna, aepllc 1~
optlono,
lhla home ~~ctrlc, Cl&lt;eat hunllne or get-a-way.
•
with

. Wish Someone A
Happy Blrthday
With A Tribune
Classified HAPPY AD!

~unbap

~-

446-2342
'992-2155

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

• *

446 6806

-

a

~~JI..l•

....

.

.,......

'

BY IJSA StNGHANIA
A~ BUSINESS WRITER
After a decade of investing
in stocks. Philip Little is about
ready to get out.
·
A 50 perceot decline in his
_portfolio has the 37-year-old .
Los Angeles publicist looking
st alternatives, like suspending
contributions to his retirement
plan WJd using the cash to buy
·real estate instead.
His gut feeling: "There's
more fallout to come."
"It seems like there's a corporate scandal a day. And I
don't wWJt to put my money
.linto a complllly until I'm sure
that the books arc clean. Ril!ht
now, I'm not sure," Little swd.
He is no\ alone. Months of
corporate accounting scandals
•and quarter upon quarter of
· dismal earnings reports have ·
pulled the major indexes down
to near or below their post-terrorist attack lows. Investors
:rear that the bear market that
has engulfed trading for the
last two years is simply goin2
to get worse.
Those anxieties may be
well-founded. Analysts say ·
~nvestor confidence is so frag·
'ile that it may be months- or
even much longer - before
the market can move and stay
up.
1 "It's impossible to call the
low right now. There's a lot of
volatility out there," said Tom
·Galvin, chief investment officer ot Credit Suisse First
Boston.
"I tend to believe the econo-.
my and profits arc recovering
Wid the S&amp;P 500 should be at
. least 20 percent higher by year
end," Gulvin said. "But It will
be impossible to believe in that
forecast until we con string
together a week or two without any new admittances about
accounting investigations."
·Many people - individual

investors Wid markets experts
alike - think the indexes will
continue to drop until
Congress, which is acting on
several pieces of legislation,
actually passes tougher laws
against corporate fraud. They
want to see prosecution of
more of the executives who
are to blame.
"If we don't see $Ovemment
action, you' rc gomg to see
people n·ot reinvest or not
tnvest very strongly," said
Roben Vance Sr., a retired
manager in TUcson, Ariz.,
whose portfolio has shrunk by
nearly )S percent. "We've got
to take action against people
who've taken advlllltage of
people."
AI MinnWJ, strategist at V
Finllllce in Sarasota, Fla., puts
it more bluntly:
"What is it going to toke to
instill confidence?'For lack of
a better tenn, getting rid of oil
the crooks running U.S. corporatiops."
Others believe that the market is stuck in a trading range
because of the lack of positive
business results, but won't
decline too much more. No
one knows for sure, of course,
Wid a lot of strategists, who
had predicted mBfket turnarounds by now, say it's sim·
ply too volatile .to even guess.
Stocks were supposed to get
a boost later this month from
second-quarter , earnings ·
reports, which are $enerally
expected lei be WI tmprovement from a year ago. But the.
incessant doubts about corpo·
rate IICCOunting - this past
week alone, there were questions about Merck, BristolMyers Wid Duke Energr- as
well as the fact that busmess is
still relatively tepid, may temper investors' reactions to any
good news.

CLIFFSIDE
GOLF CLUB
Twilight Special
All you can p,lay with cart
$20.00 .
Valid Saturday and Sunday,.
after 3 pm ·
....
Tee Time Required

740-446-GOLF
•
'

''
'

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577

TREASURE CHEST .
Going Out of Bualnas8 Sale
All movies, video games on
sale for limited time. Over
3,000 new and old releases
Open 12-5 Closed Wed &amp; Sun

388-0855 .

POINT CLEIIR, Ill

European Spa. Experience the latest in lpa
therapies and treatments. Allow trained hand•
to massage away the remnants of ~ hard day of
~olf or juet the cares of the world, as you relax ·
m luxury. Experienqe the popular Hot Rock1
treatment, Vichy 1hower, a~ti•aging f~cial 8 or
give yourself a work-out..in the cardiovascular
workout ro~m. Give yourself over to all the

luxury offered in the new 20,000 1quare foot
1pa at MARRIOTI'S GRAND HOTEL GoLF
RESORT AND SPA, part of the Re1ort Divieion
of the ROBERT TRENT }ONES GOLF TRAIL. .
Enjoy golf a~ the re1ort Lakewood Counee or at
nearby championJhip Magnolia Grove cout1e8 •
For Spa reaervatione call 251.990.6385. For
solf and hotel packages at The Grand or anywhere on the Trail, call800.257.3465.

NEW LISTING
3607 Bulavllle Pike· $88,000
Remodeled 3 BR brick/vinyl
ranch, 2 bath, LR, Den, Eat-In
kHchen (new · cablneta) with
attached 2 car garage, central
air on 1/2 acre lot.
Call448·4737 for appointment.

ALABAMA'S

5 FREE CRUISES

Plu" DII"'Y WOtld, 1M Vegu,
. Florida, SrtniOn, HIWIIf,
•
Golfo 'Grldtllt llo•d Trip

inlo the north tower. He suid it wa a
shame the union had to be pressured to
distribute the money as donors intended ,
although he was ultimately happy with the
outcome.
"The
Uniformed
Firefighters
Association went from one of the worst
Sept. II charities to one of the best as far
us giving it out,'' said Riches. of the I 2th
battalion in Harlem . "II wasn't about
money, it wus uboul doing the right thing."

BY CHRISTOPHER WtLU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
More and more smokers are trying to
kick the habit ruther than pay higher
cigarette taxes in staies from New York
to Hawaii, anti-smoking groups say.
"Do the tax increases make more
people want to quit? You better believe
11," said Helene Zurember, who runs a
smoking cessation group at Beth-Israel
Medical Center in New York.
Her group, usually eight or nine
members, has jumped to 19 since hi¥h·
er city and state taxes drove the pnce
for a pack of cigarettes to more than $7,
the.htghest in the nation. A similar ~ro­
gram at the city's Metropolitan
Hospital Center saw refeJTals during
the first 12 dayt of July jump 62 percent from a year ago.
. Seventeen states have decided this
year to raise cigarette taxes. Frustrated
smokers are complaining, to be sure,
but they are also calling hot lines. visiting Web sites and contacting local
orgllllizations for heir,.
Calls to an Illinois 'Quitline" jumped
dramatically after the state boosted cigarette taxes by 40 cents to a total of 98
cents a pack. The line is getting 140 or
150 calls a day, up from I00, said

Bristoi~Myen,

Kathy Drea, director of public policy
for the American Lung Association of
Illinois.
"We always ask people what inspired
them to call," Oren said. "In the past
couple of weeks, people have been
tulkmg about Ihe lUX increase."
,
Peter Fukhry of North Arlington.
N.J .. Is one of those driven to try quitting. as ·he ~us four times in the past
over health concerns.
"Financially, I just can't afford to
smoke," said Fakhry, 25, who lost his
job as a chemical engineer in March
and smokes I 112 packs a day.
Fakhry said he is not bitter about the
70-cent tax hike. "Anything that can
motivate me to quit, or motivate any·
one else to quit, is worth having," he
said. ,
New Jersey and New Yorbtate both
have u $1.50 per pack tax, the notion's
highest. Washington state is third, at
$1.425. The recent tax hike means a
pack-a-day smoker in New Jersey will
pay an additional $255.50 a year; at $6
arack, that smoker will shell out a total
0 $2,190.
Many of the new tux increases take
effect this month. New York City made
the biggest jump - $1.42. New Jersey

was next at 70 cents. followed by .
Pennsylvania at 69 cents and
Con11ecticut at 61 cents.
Connecticut's e~tperience suggests ·
the interest in quitting may extend
beyond the first week or two of paying
higher tues. Taxes increased April 3
and requests for help are still up, said
Margaret LaCroix, a spokeswoman for
the American Lung Association of
Connecticut.
,
The group is filling up olas_ses on
how to q_uit smoking even though there
usually IS little ·demand for summertime classes, she said.
·
Cassandra Welch, national director of
field advocacy for the American Lung
Association, said studies show smoking declines 4 percent to 7 percent for
every IO percent increase in cigareue
taxes.
"Increasing tobacco taxes is actually
one of the most effective ways you .con
get people to quit smoking, but mQre
tmportantly it keeps people from starting, especially kids," she said.
Welch, however, said many states
struggling with tight budgets have also
cut baok on anti-smokmg programs
even as they reap new revenue from
cigarette taxes.

'

.

Merck problems highlight struggles

direct response to drug comBY THJREIA AGOVINO
M&gt; BUSINESS WRITER
. panies' attempts 1o elllend ·
NEW YORK (AP) - It's their patents, which increases
not as if the pharmaceutical sales, by exploiting loopholes
companies aren't trying to in the currentlegislation.
bolster their bottom lines. It's
;These developments are just
just that their efforts aren't more bud news for WI industry
beset by product failures,
working.
Consider the past week: spotty development pipelines
Both Bristol-Myers Squibb Wid numerous lawsuits.
The malllise has led.some to
Co..and Merck &amp; Co. suffered
setbacks as strategies each wonder whether pharmaceutiemployed to improve their cal companies- which many
perfonnllllce backfired, send- investors had hoped against
hope were more solid than
ing their shares tumbling.
If that wasn'·t bad enough. a· those in other industries Senate committ~ passed a will ever regain the spectacubill that would make it ea.,ier lar growth of the late 90s.
"I look at these large cap
for generic finns to launch
their products. The bill is a pharmaceutical companies

Wid I just wonder if they are
dinosaurs," said Eric Lucero, a
senior vice president at
Independent Investors. which
mllllages $20 billion.
"We just don't need another
Wltihistwnine," he said. "We
need drugs for diseases like
stomach Cllllcer, WJd for that
rou don't need 5,000 people
m a clinical trial and you don't
need a 5.000 person sales
force. You don't need a big
drug company."
Extincuon isn't imminent:
Most of the compllllies still
have flenty of cash Wid not a
lot o debt, Wid there is still
tremendous need for their
products.

According to analysts at
Thomson Financial/First Call,
drug complllly profits will fall
4 percent this year. But that is
vastly better than the avemge
62 percent drop in profit predicted for firms on the
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 inde~ .
Still, for the first time in
four years, the value of SIO\:k
shares for drug compllllies has
declined more thllll that of the
S&amp;P 500 as a whole. Drug
company stocks, considered a
safe haven 'when technology
stocks were plummeting two
years ago. are down 23 percent while the overall market
is down I3 percent, according
to Momingstar.com.

BULLETIN BOA

.

•
1mme'r~e younelf in all the pleasures of a

Under the plan announced Friday, the
families of the 343 firefighters killed in
the World Trade Center, along with the
families of all firefighters killed in the line
of duty si nee 1980 - together more than
700 families - will euch receive $50,000.
Children of late firefi¥htcrs who wer~ 23
or under on Sept. II wtll receive $38,000
immediately. and $500 a year after that
until they turn 24, said Block .
Chief Jumes Riches, 51, lost his son ,
James Riches, 29, after the firefighter run

Market selloff might Cigarette taxes forcing smoken to consider quitting
not be ~ver yet

t[tmes -~ent(nel

~~ qt' Q/m~t~

6unba!' lltmr• · 6rnttnrl• Pege 07

·Firefighters' union agrees to distribute Sepl11 donations

Bf CRfATIVfll
,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

Mexico ..a more
Call now t.-5D&lt;4-'3378
Join the akb' Ooul Club

J-..:-=·

.oomloklb

First Baptist Church
Racine, Ohio
"Faith Mountain" V.B.S.
July 15-19 6:00pm· 8:30pm
Info 740-949·3025
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
Sat, July 20th 11 am- 6 pm
11 flavors of Ice cream &amp; morel
Salem Twp. Vol. Fire Dept.
St. Rt. 124 In Salam Center

· PIZZA PLUS
EATERS SPECIAL
Chicken or Shrimp Alfredo
$8.95
Chicken or Steak or Shrimp
Stir-Fry $8.95
Our 16" Pepperoni &amp; Cheese
Pizza $8.95
Delivered to your home or
business ()( park In Gallla Co.
· for Free
2 Location
1 Rio Gr~nde
245-0088
1 Spring Valley Plaza
446-0088

Homegrown
·sweet Corn
at K·Mart Lot In Qalllpolle
Rttlll $2.50 doz.
At ftrm In Iota of 50 doz or
more $$1.1'5 doz.
Com 1vallable all eummer

Baughman Farm
(740) 256-6535
'

The Gallla • VInton
Educational Service Center
will hold Its regular monthly
board meeting July 17, 2002
at the Human Resources
Building at Buckeye Hilla In
Room 155 starting at 7:00
p.m.

Mizway Tavern
4th Anniversary Party
Sat July 20th
Food- Music No Cover charge
Karaoke every Wed &amp; Fri.
Fundralser for

Fred J. Deel
Candidate for
Ohio House of Representatives
87th District
',
Friday, July 19 6:00pm
Cheshire Pad&lt;
$25 a person/$40 per couple
Meal with Spare Rlbe provided
Pd by the oommltlll to 11101 Fred J.
Dell, Tim Menle, Tr~~rer, ~6t,

Need Remodeling?
C~ll Upon .
JESUS
Master Carpenter
Yard Salt
7/15102
11:00 • 4:00pm ·
Pallo Fumlture, Plotur11, Old
Megazlntl, NtWipaptl'l,
· Clothta, mlac. Quality lltml.
24 Htnklt Avt.

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION
•
•
•
•
•

65 or over
Billed to insurance
Little if no cost
Free Delivery
We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740-446·7283
1·800-458-6844

Needed:
Skilled Construction
Workers- Knowledge of
carpentry and/or
plumbing, roofing,
HVAC, etc.
Local Work
992-7943- 591-7002
591-4641

Dwight Icenhower .
will be performing at a
benefit for
London 'Pool
July 22nd 7-9 pm
Admission $3.00 ·
Ages 3 and under free
Door prlzesl

For More Info•••

446-2342 or 992-2156

A&amp;L Grooming
Does your pet need a makeover?
Maybe Just a day away from home
while you shop, work or play?
We offer Doggie Daycare In
addHion to our grooming services.
'Let ua pamper your ptt"
152 Delaney Rd., Patriot, Ohio
45858

7 40-379-9056
HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER

Breastteedlng Classes
Tuesday, July 16
6:30 - 8:30 PM
HMC French 500 Room
For more Information or to
pre-register for tlie class,
call
(740) 446-5030

Dance Recording
artist
Liquid Crystal
Appearing
Thursday, July 18th
6:30- 12:30
at

Court Side Grill
Gallipolis

f

�•

Page D8 • 6unbap "I mrs ·6tntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point

Plt~sant,

Sunday, July 14, 2002

WV

Security flaw
Crude .prices jump on Venezuela unrest
afflicts technology
for sending
·
scrambled e-mails
BY TED BRtDtS

send u specially coded e-mail
which would appear as II
WASHINGTON · - The blank message followed by
world's most popular soft- an error warning - and
ware for scrambling sensitive effectively seize control of
e-mails suffers from a pro- the victim's computer. The
gramming flaw that could .hacker could then install spy
allow hackers to attack a software to record keyuser's computer and. in some strokes; steal financial
circumstances, unscramble records ·or copy a person's
messages.
. secret unlocking . keys to
The software, culled Pretty unscramble their sensitive eGood Privacy. or POP. is the 1i1uils. Other protective techde facto standard ,for encrypt- no logy. such as corporate
ing e-muils and is widely firewulls, could make this
used by corporate und gov- more ditlicult.
"You cun do whatever you
ernment offices, including
some FBI agents and U.S. want- execute code, read e-.
intelligence agencies. The · mails, install a backdoor,
scrambling technology is so steal their keys. You .could
powerful that until 1999 the intercept all that stuff."
federal ~ovemment sought to Maiffret said.
restrict 1ts sale out of fears
Experts said the convethat criminals, terrorists and nience of the plug-ins for
foreign nations might use it. popular e-mai I programs
The new- vulnerability, dis- broadened the risk from this
covered weeks ago by latest threat, since encryption
researchers at eEye Digital software is famously cumberJlecurity Inc., does not some to use without them.
exploit any wea~ness in the Even the creator of POP,
complex encrypting formulas Philip Zimmermann, relies
used to scramble messages on such a plug-in, although
into gibberish. Instead, hack- Zimmermann uses one that
ers are able to attack a pro- works with Eudora e-mail
grumming flaw in an impor- software and does not suffer
tant piece of companion soft- the same vulnerability as
ware. called a plug-in. that · Outlook's.
helps users of Microsoft
A plug-in for Microsoft's
Corp.'s Outlook e-mail pro- Outlook Express- a scaledgr~m encrypt messages with down version of Outlook a few mouse clicks. ·
is not affected by the flaw.
Outlook itself has emerged
Maiffret said his company
as the world's standard fore- immediately. deactivated the
mail software. with tens of vulnerable software ali all its
millions of users inside many computers, which c,an be
of the world's largest corpo- done with nine mouse-cl(cks
rations and government using Outlook, until it could
offices. Smaller numbers use apply the repairs from
the Outlook plug-in to scram- Network Associates. The
pie their most ,sensitive mes- decision improved securitr,
sages so that only the recipi- but "makes it kind of a pain ·
ent can read them.
to send encrypted e·mails, he
"lt's .not the numberofpeo- said.
pie usin~ POP but the fact
Zimmermann, in an interthat they re using it because view, said POP software is
ther' re try in~ to safeguard used "quite extensively" by
the1r data,' said Marc U.S. agencies, based on s;~les
Maiffret, the eEye executive when he formerly worked at
and researcher who discov- Network Associates. He also
ered the problem. "Whatever said use of the vulnerable
the percentage is, . it's very companion plug-in was wideimportant data."
sprefl.d.
Zimmermann
Maiffret said there was no declined to specify which
evidence anyone had sue- U.S. agencies might be at
cessfully attacked users of risk, but other experts have
the encryption software with described trading s~rambled
this technique. He said the e-muils using POP and
programmin$ flaw was "not Outlook with employees at
totally obvtous," even to the FBI, the Energy
~rained researchers exumin- Department and even the
ing the software blueprints.
super-secret
National
. Network Associates Inc. of Security Agency.
Santa Clara, Calif., which
In theory, only nonclassiuntil February distributed tied U.S. mformation would
both commercial and free be at risk from this flaw.
versions of POP. made avail- Agencies impose strict rules
able on its Web site a free a~ainst transmitting any clasdownload to fix the software. s1fied messages- encrypted
Jhe company announced ear- or not - over the Internet,
·tier . it was suspending new using the government's own
sales of the software, which secret networb instead.
·
hasn't been profitable, but
"The only time the ~overn­
moved wit~ in weeks to repair ment wovld use POP 1s when
the problem in existing ver- it's dealing with sensitive but
slons. The company's shares unclassified information and
fell 50 cents to $17.70 in has a reasonable degree of
Tuesday trading on the New · assuJance that both parties
York Stock Exchange.
have POP," said Mark Rasch,
· Free ll'ersions of POP are a former U.S. prosecutor and
widely available on the ex~rt on computer security.
World Wide Web.
"It s hardly used on a routine
The flaw allows a hacker to basis."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.'

. Jay
.

fromPipDl

provide for your family's
needs. Disability insurance
should not be ove,looked and
should replace at least sixty
percent of your'income in the
event you are incapacitated.
Remember, the bills don't
stop working when you do.

SAVINGS
It's very difficult .to start
saving early, especially for
your child's college, when
under'the burden of current
costs. But you need to have a
shan-term emergency fund
first (enough to cover your
expenses for up to six
months) and then get going
as soon as possible.

-

Contribute the maximum
allowable into t~~x-deferred,
employer-matched retirement -vehicles. Then consider putting more away into an
IRA. Consult a financial
planner about setting up a
separate college fund .
·
·WILL
·
Have your will updated or
draw up a new one. Naine a
guardian and an alternate,
pi us someone to manage
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Raymond James Finan6ial
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Member NASD &amp; SIPC.)

Business news
every weekend.

•

. Sunday limes-Sentinel

NEW YORK (Dow Jones News) Crude futures jumped on both sides of
the Atlantic Friday amid growing concerns about political and labor unrest in
'Venezuela.
Front-month Nymex August crude
oil futures climbed 65 cents to close at
$27.48 a barrel. On London's
International Petroleum Exchange. 'the
gains were more moderate. NOrth Sea
Brent futures rose 36 cents to close at
$26.)2 a bameL
The Venezuelan government. facing
a general strike threat. urged opposition
~roups Friday to come to the bargainmg table.
The appeal came a day after 600,000
people marched in the capital city of
Caracas to demand the resignation of
President Hugo Chavez. who was ousted for two days following a strike and
street protests in April.
Venezuela's largest labor group, the I
million-member Venezuelan Workers
Confederation, will decide Monday
whether to strike to oust Chavez.
Fedecamerus, the country's largest business group. husn 't decided whether to join.

•

Venezuela's largest oil workers
union. meanwhile, threatened to call a
strike nex.t week if talks with stateowned monopoly Petroleos de
Venezuela, or PdVSA, fail.
The union is demanding wage
increases and an upgrade in benefits
during tlilks scheduled for next week.
"If we don't ' have a solid answer by
PdVSA on our demands, the board will
meet· and decide to cull for a nationwide strike," said union secretary-general Oswaldo Caibet.
.
Thursday's massive demonstration
af\d growing talk of a nationwide strike
hqs sparked fear not only a disruption
in Venezuela's oil supplies but also of
civil unrest in the country. a top supplier of oil to the U.S .. analysts said.
"The oil workers strike is what got
Chavez in big trouble in April," suid Bill
O'Grady, an oil and gas analyst with brokerage A. G. Edwards in St. Louis.
Analysts said thai a big part of
Friday's rally wus .related to a recent
surge in gasoline prices. ·
Ousoline futures have SW'ged more than
6 percent over the past lust three sessions

amid supply jitters caused by reports of
refinery snags around the country.
On Friday, gasoline for August delivery rose 2.61 cents to 82.60 cents a gallon; the price of heating oil edged 1.53
cent higner to 70.54 cents a gallon.
Natural gas futures fell 4.3 cents to
S2.787 per I,000 cubic feet.
Among reported refinery outages,
Conoco Inc.'s Westlake refinery in Lake
Olarles, La., was said. to have shut one
of two of its refonners Wednesday,
Repairs would take'four to live days, a
source familiar with operations said.
Also
Wednesday.
Phillips
Petroleum's Rodeo. Calif.• refinery
shut down following a mechanical fail'ure. The company said it would take
four to five days for the refinery to
restan.
· Meanwhile. the International El'lergy
Agency issued its latest Monthly Oil
Report.
.
The lEA revised down its 2002 global oil demand forecast due to a lackluster global economic recovery, but it
said it expects economic recovery to
boost oil demand significantly in 2003.
'+'

Reds, .Indians victorious, li1
'

Melp County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so &lt;enh • Mondoy. July 1 s . 1002 • Vul Sl . No Hl

What's inside

Kyger Creek tourney, Bl

Deaths
Grant Boyer, eo
Kathryn Douthitt, 73
Margaret White, 71 ·
Details, AJ

www

War
John Hunt Morgan 's fal\·e of
2.000 cavalrymen were routed by a much larger force of
Union cuvulrymcn. infantry,
artillery and gunboats on the
Ohio River.
.
Battle reenactments. mili'-'
tury camps und u tent city
containing period merchunts
and a blacksmith will be
ltvailable to the public during
the weekend festivities .
Reenuctors will ulso perform
mili!!lry drill and ceremony'
throughout the weekend as
well as demonstrations and
engaging in smaller skirmish-

lslund reenuL'lment will htke nnrtheuo,tern Ohio. He · wu&gt;
phu:e ut I p.ni . Sunday fol• put into the &gt;lute penitentiary
lowing a I0 u.m. perill(l in Culumbu&gt;. from which he
L·hurch service .
la1cr eM: aped.
The Buttlc of Buffington
While the butth: is considlslund involved u forL'e of cred signitkunt by historinns ·
approximately !1.000 Union due to the involvement of
soldiers under the cvmmund muny types of forces in e~is­
of Gens . Henry M. Juduh and l&lt;'nce ut the time. it was llllgeEd\i•ard H. Hobson, who pur- ly overshudowed by the )urger
sued Morgan 's 2.000.cuvulry- · buttb of Getty~burg and
men ucross Ken1uckv. Indiana Vil'bburg. which &lt;X:curred
und Ohio. The Unioi1 soldien. the \am~ monlh:
cuught up to Morgan\ force
Th~ r&lt;.&gt;~nu•·tm)jnt is coIll Ponland. penning it uguinst &gt;pon&gt;orcd hy the Meigs
the Ohio River.
County Historical Society and
Morgun himself e~cupeLI Hurri s Furms. and is hosted by
from the Union n~t and was the 91 't Ohio Volunteer
captured a week Iuter 111 Infantry. Company B.

READY TO MINISTER

Meigs:County

POR'l;LAND - The I39th
Anniversary Commemoration
of the Ci vii Wnr • Bnttle of
Buffington Island will take
place this weekend l\1
Buffington Island Park in
Portland.
Reenactors begin their invasion of the park on Friday, fol lowed by battle reenuctments
on Saturday und Sunday.
The weekend's events will
commemorate the July lQ ,
1863, Battle of Buffington
Island, which is con~idered
the only significant ~ivii Wur
battle fought on Ohto sot I. In
that battle. Confederate Gen.

IJ:.lO u.m. Saturd&lt;ty with a military drill followed by memonul servkcs at II 11.m. und
noon . At I:30 p.m.. u discussion of locul history concerning the butt lc will be held,
L'omlucted by the Meigs
County Uistoricul Society.
At 3 p.m. on Suturduy. ut u
site nonh of the park reenactors will recreate the Suttle of
Corydon.
Ind..
where
Morgan's Raiders crossed the
Ohiv River and defeated u
small federal force .
Suturduy's events will conclude at 7 p.m. with a military
es.
bull.
Events. get underway · at
The Battle of Buffington

Fair tickets ·

• unlimited nights
&amp; weekends
• includes nationwide
long distance

now on sale
Weather

POMEROY - A jury
triotl scheduled for Tuesday
in Meigs County Court has
be~;!ll~ttns:p\e&lt;;t. • "- ,

camp·meets
MIDDLEPORT- BrooksGrant Camp, Sons of Union
Veterans of the Ci vii War and
Major Daniel McCook Circle,
Ladies of the Grund Army of
the Republic, will meet at 7: 15
p.m. Tuesday at the Riverbend
Arts Council building in
Middleport.

,Audiovox 480
1¢

Special

1,100
anytime
minutes

1,400
anytime
minutes

meeting
' CHESTER - Chester
Township
Board
of
Trustees will hold a special
meeting at 8 p.m. today at
Chester Town Hall.
·

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Dally 3: o-7·0
Dally 4: s- 5-4·0
Powarball: 3·22·37·42-49 (8)
·cash 25: 1·1o-13-t5-t6-25

:a Sadlon• Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

*Now open Sundays; t2-6pm.
Fof othof ..... olltn,- .........

W.VA.

Index

For businesses with ten or more lines, please call 877-947-5729.
·u.s. Cellular stores )

.

--

- - 3965GIII~ It,
(740) 456-3212

--

T1oe telullr llrclll(l, liMa' 17001 't"l122

AYIJ..

Oollhll
Oollhll

110_.,.

-_.,.

AOL Ke)'Word: -au1ar .

•Phone equipment ofler valid on IWO·Ytar HMc. IQI'"Hmlflta on pfant $35 and high«. Promollonll pno,W ritodeltubjtct
to change, Afle plan offer wild wllh a two·vear NMct aweement on rate plant S3lli and higher. Night and 'WHke~
mlnultl ere vlllld M·F 9pm - 5:59am and all day Saturday and Sundly. Alrlll'l'lt off• ~plrtt upon rtll plan change.

Rooming chargH, IHI lind olher ..... may oppl)l. AcfMiilon ... lol25 porI no. Offer oxplroo July. 31' 2()02,

DID C&lt;lmiWf- 319 E Mlln It,
1304! o161-12A2
.

Indianapolis, Ind., are front row. from left, Rick Bolin, Bethany Amberger, Brook Bolin. Dakota
Smith. B.J. Smith. Cody Smith.and Greg Smith; back row, from left, Caroline Snowden- whose
daughter Amber will be going on the trip - Bill Amberger, VIcki Smith and Doug Shamblin. Not
pictured, .Andrea Warner. (Joy J. Settles)

Bradford church
members head for
•
•
• •
1nner c1 miSSIOn
NEWS(i!IMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Supii'Lotto: 1-22-25-31-40·42

'

BRADFORD GROUP- Leaving today to do mission work for the Wheeler Mission Ministries In

Bv Joy J. SmLEI

Pick 3 day: 5·7-9
Pick 4 4ay: 9·5·3-8
Pick 3: 0-9-4
Pick 4: 3·9-3-5

12 Pllp1

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A3
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e 2002 Ohio Volley Publishin1 Co.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

'

High : 90s, Low: 60s
Details, A2

Trial canceled

700
anytim.e
·minutes

Island

n

•

i

myd.uly"•nt~nd "'"'

.

BY JIM FREEMAN
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

I

Hometown News,.per

POMEROY - Twelve members of the
Bradford Church of Christ. left today on
·their first mission trip. For the next five
days they will be working with inner city
children and teenagers in Indianapolis. Ind.
In that city. according to Vickl Smith,
coordinator of , the mission group, some
children and teenagers live in a world where
gunfire is just outside their front door.
"Those kids join gangs instead of little
league teams and drugs are handy and an
attractive escape," she said.
The Bradford Church mission group
drove to Indiana where they will be working
with Wheeler Mission Ministries in conducting "backyard clubs" for inner-city
children. The "clubs" are similar to vacation
Bible school programs sponsored during the
summer in area local churches, Smith
explained.
Wheeler Mission Ministries offers· wholesome activities as alternatives· to drugs and
gangs, Smith said.
The youth and adult spon sors will spend
their evenings serving meals at Wheeler
Mission's homeless shel.ter and assist with

a basketball camp held at the community
·
center.
Some
members
will
travel
to
Bloomington, Ind ., wheri: they will work us
counselors · for troubled teenage girls at
Camp Hunt. .
·
The Meigs County community a'nd church
members helped finance the trip . The youth
group also collected donations and prepared.
boxes for the local homeless shelter to help
provide funding for the mission trip . ·
Members of the group include Smith,
coordinator, employee with Ohio University
Air Transportation in Albany; Greg Smith,
AEP employee at Gavin Plant; Bill
Amberger. AEP senior lab technician; Rick
llolin, Ohio Valley Electric Corp. at Kyger
Creek; and Doug Shamblin, minister of the ·
Bradford Church.
Youth, members in the mission group are
Bethany Amberger, junior at Southern High .
School; Brook Bolin, senior at Meigs High
School; Andrea Warner, junior at Eastern
High School; Amber Snowden, a recent
graduate of . Meigs Hi~h School; Cody
Smith, senior at Meigs H•gh School; Dakota
Smith, a student at Meigs Middle School;
and B.J. Smith, senior at Ohio University.

HOEFLICH(i!IMYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Season and member&gt;hip tickets for the ·
2002 Meigs County Fair, Aug. 12- 17, ure now on sale.
Season tickets may be purchased from Joe's Country
Market , Rutland; Home Nutional Bank. Racine: · Baum
Lumber Company. Che ster: Sugar Run Flour Mill.
Pomeroy: Swjsher Lohse Pharmacy. Pomeroy: Little John's
Food Mart . Tuppers . Plains : Gloeckner s Restaurant.
Pomeroy:· Whaley's Grocery. Durwin: SyruL·use Country
Market. Syracuse: Dun's.
Th . fo
Middleport:
Taz's
e price f
Murnthon,
Route
7,
1.:...1.~
Pomeroy; Reed's Country
SeaSOn UUICU Store.
, . Reedsville:
SO/d only to
McDonald s, ·Pomeroy:
• ...r ·~ ,l nd
Little John's Food Mart,
lnu/VIuUOIS 0 not
Middleport,
Rutland
to COmtvJny Of
Department
Store.
• r;-·
.
Rutland; By the Way
Ofgantzation -IS
Country Store. Langsville,
11
year. The
and Landmark, Chester.
.P 14
""
•
. The price for season
ttckets - sold only to
d .
individuals ami not to a
a miSSIOn to
co~pany or .organiZation
fair.1 freefarking aJ/
- ts $14 thts yeur. The
tickets give gate admission
wee long, and
to the fiur, free parkmg all
entertainment
and
week long. and ente,rtum.
ment and shows. but nql
shows
not the
the amusement ndes.
'
'.:.1
Membership
tickets,
amusement flueS. .
which entitle holders to
admission and voting privileges, are $15 und may be purchased from uny fair Board member or are ·on sale at the
Sugar Run Flour Mill in Pomeroy. However, the tickets are
only ;tvai lable to Meigs County re·sidents over 18.
Daily admission to the fair is $6 Monday through
Thursday, $7 on Frid~y and Saturday. Duily admission tickets include ull cntertainmel)t and shows as well as ·the
amusement rides.
· For those hnlding memtiership, season. or 4-H tickets,
there will be an udc.litinnal charge for rides - $4 a day
Monday through Thursday. and $5 u day Friduy and
Suturduy.
.
· ·
As in the past children under two will be admitted to the
fairgrounds free . However. if they want to ride, they must
purchase u ride puss.
.
As in previous years ~enior Citizen's Day will be
observed on Thursday and to be udmitted to the fairgrounds
all seniors have to do is show their Golden Buckeye Cards.
Kiddie Day will be observed on Wednesday and children
12 and under will be admitted free until noon and can get a
handstamp for $3 to ride all day.
The rides will operate on a schedule of I to 4:30 and 6 to
II p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sa,turdily;
and noon to 5 and 6 to II p.m. on Wednesday.
. Reserved parking in specified areas is being offered for
$25 for the week. The parking cost does not inclu&lt;;le admission onto the grounds. There me also camping spaces avail-·
able for the week at $100 which includes electric and water.
Spaces can be reserved at the secretary's office on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds on Saturday, Aug. 3, but c&amp;nnot ~
spotted before noon on Aug . 10.
.
All open Class entries must be regis&amp;ered at the secretary's
office on Friday and Saturday, Aug . 2 and 3. The office will
be open from 8_a. ~ . to 4 p.m. both days. The deadline for
reg1stenng entr1es ts 4 p.m. on Aug. 3.

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