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Saturday, July 12, 2003 .

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

Page 10 • iltaturba!' QI:iJ1!ti ~iltenlinel

.

~

·-

-- ...

ACROSS

Wife's husband goes.back
a long way with her mom
Dear
Abby

· months~.

ADVICE
er/daughter bond. Everybody
has a skeleton in the closet If
you can't let this go, I recommend counselin~.
DEAR ABBY: I am a married
24-year-old with a daughter who
just turned 2. My P.roblem is that
my mother dishkes my best
friend, "Marci," for no reason
that I can figure out Any time I
invite Marci to a party, Morn
raises a stink.
Because of that, my friendship
with Marci has cooled over the
past year. We haven't seen much
of each other, and I wanted to
change that, so I invited her to
my daughter's birthday ~- I
infonned Mother ahead of tune
that Marci would be there -and
warned her not to make a scene.
Mom got back at me by showing up at the pany with a sixpack of beer. Abby, she raised
me never to have booze at a
child's party. and we exchanged
words m front of everyone. I

because it became such a tense
situation - with Marci on one
side of the room and Mom and
her six-pack on the other.
I have tried talking to my
mother about why she dislikes
Marci. She brushes it off with the
accusation that I'm choosing my
best friend over her.
My mother has a history o(
bad-news friends who ended up
stealing from her or tt-dShing her
behind her back. How can I get it
through her head that Marci isn't
like that? - STILL FUMING
AT MOM IN SOIITHERN
IDAHO
DEAR STILL FUMING:
Your mother may be competitive
with Marci, or she may remind
your mother of someone who
hurt her iu the past If sAe hasn't
come up with a reason for her
aversion, it may be unconscious.
That said, you're an adult and
entitled to form your own friendships. You and your mother
aren't joined at the hip. Enjoy
both your mom and Marci on
sebLte occasions.
EAR ABBY: My boss
asked me to write to you. He has
a box of birthday cards that he
wants to use up. When he needs
to send a greeting of any kind, he
uses one of them. He crosses out
"Birthday," and writes in the
appropriate word: "Wedding,"

49

kitty

53
54

1 Cubby
11 Rev the

engine

etc. He feels there is ncthing

wrong with this. I say it is not in
good taste. Who's right? WORKING FOR A CHEAP
BOSS IN BOSTON
DEARWORKING: You are.
(Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also known
as Jeanne Phillips, and was
founded by her mother. Pauline
Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.comorP.O. Box
69440. Los Angeles. 01 90069.)
Good advice for everyone teens to seniors - is in "17re
Anger in All of Us and How to
Deal Uolth It " To otrkr. send a
business-size, self-addressed
envelope, plus check or money
otrkrfor$5 (US funds only) to:
Dear Abby, Anger Boo/del, P.O.
Box 447, Mount Morris, IL
6/054-0447. (Postage is included)

47 Jazz

bird

4 Retiree s

ended up coning the party short "Graduation," "New Home,"

DEAR ABBY: When I was. a
child, I developed a huge crush
on "Mickey," a young man who
worked for my mother. As L
grew older, the crush grew to
love. 1\venry-six years later, I am
still very much in love with him
- and . we were married two
Last rught, Mickey told I'll\!
something that's tearing my
heart out: He and Mother had an
lfffair 18 years ago. I am hying to
act as though I'm 0 K, and
promised Mickey I wouldn't tell
Mom that he had confided in me.
Now I honestly don't know if I
can keep silent, knowing my
husband had sex with my mother. I feel hurt, betrayed and sick
about the news.
I still love Mickey and don't
want to end our marriage. He
says the affair shouldn't matter
because it happened long ago,
and I shouldn'tdwell on it-but
in my eyes it might as well have
been yesterday.
· How will I ever face my mother again and not let on that I
know? - DESPERATELY
HURT IN FLORIDA
DEAR DESPERATELY
HURT: You were just a child
when the romance happened.
For your mother's sake, it would
be a kind~s not to let her know
that you know you have more in
common than the usual moth-

1 Outback

56
57

12 Dateless
13 Wheel rod
14 Cassius

59

15

60

Clay
Repeat
Neaten up
Unfasten
Coast along
Use a
crowbar
Pie baker
Strong suit
Hang open
Blvd.
Thump
Garden
pest
All there
Henri s
Islands
Unlatch,
to a bard
Profound
Outmoded
Not make
the grade
Decfmal

16

17
19
21

22
23
26
28
29

31
35
37
39

40
42
44

46

melodies
Fuel rating
Call-length
Twist
Soggy
Bafdwin
of films
Joule
fractions
El Dorado
loot
II not
Calendar
diva.
"Wolf Man"
Chaney

58

61
62

DOWN
grief I''

3 Platoon

27
30

Restless
Cheer
Excited
Aborigines
Rust or
patina
Bygone
Door
opener
Mysterious

5
6

1
8

9
10

12

a

Talented
41 Pixie
20 Chop off
43 Kitchen
23 Scale notes
pest
26

4

32
33
34

36
38

Caviar
44 Ruffle
Stlmpy s
45 Candy
pal
stripers
Nervous
46 Fireplace
swallow
tool
Citrus cooler 48 Distort
Make tracks so Wanted Gl
- Angeles 51 Wolle the
Package
sleuth
ahlpper
52 British
(abbr.)
achool
Mild
53 Ginnieexpletive
55 Tick off
Structure
Dust
particles

areas.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
- It always seems that there is
one agitator within every group,
and so it is with you today.
Someone will stir things up and
put you in a position in which
you may have to choose sides.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's never a good time to
overindulge. but today you
might be tempted to do so. Be
very attentive to commonsense
health matters. Don't partake in
anything in excess, either internally or externally.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- A relationship of dubious
value could come to an abrupt
end. It wasn't right to begm
with,
so
check
www.bernice4u.com for your
romantic needs.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)Cover"ups have a way of being
unveiled today, and you don't
want to ~et caught in an awkward posttion. Anything can be
rectified if you have the ~uts to
explain what needs explaming.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
- If you are too tied to your
own 1deas today, you could
miss the excellent suggestions
of a concerned friend. Be openminded. ·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Be careful what
you get yourself into today. It's
quite possible that in hying to
help another. you could end up
carrying his or her entire burden.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19)- It may seem like everything you want to do today is
either thwarted by associates or
impeded by obstacles you can't
control. It's important that you
not lose your cool.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Be that nice person that
you always are, but don't relinquish the driver's seat to some-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Sports
Page 81

• Tribe falls to White
Sox . See Page 81

· • Tour de France continues. See Page 81

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In tune with
what's happening
now. whether
it's across the
globe or in your
. own backyard.

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Avoid discussing them with
negative thinkers who would
only further deflate them.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

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JUDO'S TOTAL

• Clyde Harmon, 83
• Dorothy Clark, 87
• Thomas Weaver, 83
• Dan Bonecutler, 80
• Irene Workman , 72

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· Answer
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Word
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= 19

Page AS

'"'OOWN

·

.

• Drive-in nostalgia. See
PageA2 ·

• Preventing pinkeye. See
PageA3

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

•

• Tall ships serves as
classroom. See Page A6

AVERAGE GAME 165·175

by JUDD HAMBRICK

BY BAlAN

=

DIRECTIONS: Make

A 2· to 7·1etter word from the letlef!; on each yardline.
Adcl poii'IIS 10 eacn word or 1ener using scoring direcl!ons at ttght Sevti'Hener
words get a 60·point bonus_All words can be louod in Websler's Ntw Wortd

mag~·

cortege Dictionary.

248

CAl'\ YOU SPEAI&lt; UP.

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

HIS NVMetfl~ ON
iiE SWA'rT~!l. WHY

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io 6E 1&gt;. I'ROll\.EM

OON'TYOV GIVE
HIM ... CALL~

W\111 '\0\lR LINE:

Mostly sunny, HI: 80s, Low: 60s

Index
I HEM YOU LOST A CLOS~
MATCH TO A SANDBAGGER ..

4 Sections. - 24 P8tes1

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STRS employees that cost
$818,000. Nearly $870.000
was spent for sculptures. artwork and polished stones.
Whilehead shakes her
head in amazement at how
this money could be spent
this way when there are
school dislricts scrounging
to get by and ret irees bare I y
making ends meet.
"My daughter (who is also a
l~cher) suggested that these
people should have taken over
an old school building instead

of spending this much
money," Whitehead said.
The STRS handed out more
than $14 million in performance bonuses to its employees, including thousands in
bonuses to employees not
associated with managing its
investment portfolio.
" I think teachers, both cur·
rent! y employed or retired,
troubled,"
are
deeply
Whitehead. "We have some
retired teachers that make
less than $1 ,000 a month. So

I

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WAI.Jc ~'GilT IN

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Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorial
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

A good day for a ride

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MIDDLEPORT - Plans
for an expanded Meigs
Center for the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College are
taking longer than expected,
but progress is being made,
according to Meigs County
Economic Development
Director Perry Varnadoe.
Varnadoe said Friday a
committee made up of
Meigs County ecqnomic
development leaders and
university officials will
meet again next week to
continue plans for a new
center in Meigs County.
The university has committed to expanding its
Meigs facility, if a suitable
loca tion can be found ,
because an expan sion of
programs at the center
have created a need for
addi tiona! space.
The
Meigs
Center
recently added a master of
fine arts program and &lt;in
early childhood educalion
program to it s degree
offerings at the Middleport
branch . and plans additiOnal programs later thi s year.
' The Meigs County
Communit y Improvement
Corporation , which rents
space on Mill Street in
Middleport to the university for its current Meigs
Center, has offered to construct a new fadiity for Rio
Grande, and lease it back
to the university at cost.
Varnadoe said I he committee working on the
expansion plans has looked
al "several" sites, including
existing buildings, and has
completed a set of prelimi·
nary building plans.
"The process is taking
longer than I think any of
us expected il would, but
it's a comp licated process
to determine what is needed, and what is available in
terms of building space, "
Varnadoe said .
Originally. the CIC
made its offer to construct
a building on the condition
the ui1iversity ren]ain in
Middleport .

Boston Kuhn of Oak Hill, with hi s grandmother, Marilyn Elliott of Neighborhood Road, took advantage of the breezy warm
weather Saturday afternoon by taking a ride in his wagon down Second Avenue. (Kandy Boyce photo).

Gloeckner recognized by historical society
in the United States Army,
Gloeckner settled in to family
life in East Letart. Through
serving on the Soil and Water
EAST LETART, Ohio
Conservation
District Board,
For years of dedication and
he
learned
about
preservation
by
David
hard
work
of
different
types
of land.
Gloeckner to make ihe Battle
of Buffington Island ree nact- Wetlands preservation was
ment possibl e. the Meigs becoming an issue as well as
County Historical Society is historic site preservation.
He continued to study and
dedicating the eve nt to him
read what information was
this year.
1 ..
ilable, but it was nol until
ava
The board vlllal · during its
1987
that Gloeckner saw hi s
June meeting to recognize
firs!
Civil
War reenaclor.
Gloeckner's eftorts at the
Tom Melcalf of the 91 st
upcoming event July 19-20 in·
Ohio
Volunteer Infantry
Portland, Ohio. He is a past
Company
B reenaclment
board member and worked
group
camped
on the hill next
.
from the beginning on the event.
A long time hi story buff, to the Pomeroy Courthouse.
Gloeckner said the journey to He also did a firing demonlhe even! in Portland was a stration on Court StreeL "I
long one . He first became thought it was outstanding,"
interested in the Civil War Gloeckner said. He signed up
when he saw a lelevision pro- the 91 st that afternoon.
After meeting Metet1lf, a
gram entitled "The Gray
residenl , ihe two
Vinton
Ghost." Not lo ng after that
his family visited the began attending reenactment
lhe 9l st participated in. They
Gettysbur~ battlefield during
.
decided
there needed to be
I OOth anmversary.
local
events
in Gallia and
He found out from his
grandmother that he had a Meigs counties.
relative in the Civil War. · Gloeckner attended reenactin
Tennessee,
Information was harder to ments
Pennsylvania,
Ohio,
find then as many libraries and Wesl Virginia toKentucky
see how
and museums had not cataother
reenactments
were
set
loged military information
up.
One
year
he
attended
42
very well from the Civil War
dofferent
reenaclmet\ts.
era.
Working with the 91 st and
After attending The Ohio
State University and serving
Please see Honored, AS
BY CARRIE ANN Wooo

Staff writer

The 2003 Battle of Buffington Island Reenactment. July 19·20,
in Portland. Ohio is being dedicated to battlefield preservation·
ist and Civil War reenactor. David Gloeckner. (Carrie Ann Wood)

For. the latest heolthcare
information and to.
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
log onto our website:

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(" 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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no, I don't think how they are
spending this mohey is fair.
This is why we are unhappy.':
According to research by
Dennis Leone, superinten•
dant of the Chillicothe Cit~
Schools, there were 33 STRS
employees receiving salaries
last year that were larger
than the current governor
and chief justice of the .OhiQ
Supreme Court last year;

Slaff writer

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Wsil: www.bemic~u.com.)

Is! DOWN

. S C A \.!;~~ ~ G E -

Obituaries

Weather

-""

MILES lAYTON

expans1on
•
ongo1ng

I-\AP' 1

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J.

URG
Meigs

I'VE E'IER

~

in 1989. As former president
of
the Meigs County Retired
Staff writer
Teacher 's Association, she
said she is "very concerned"
REEDSVILLE - The
by the news coming out of
controversy surrounding tlie Columbus.
spending h~bit s of the
The STRS summary.of
administration for the State
construction costs for the new
T~;achers Retirement System
and renovated headquarters
(STRS) has people conshows that a total of $94.2
cerned and upset.
million was spent which
Maxine Whitehead, a
. included a fitn ess center for
vocal mu sic teacher for 31
STRS employees that the
vears. retired from the
staff estimates cost $426,000,
Eastern Local School district and a child care center for
BY

•

- Nothing must be taken for
granted today when it comes to
business dealings. In a situation
whereyouaresureyouhavethe
upper hand, chances are the
opposite will be true.
(Cancer. treat yourself to a
birthday gift. SendforyourAstroGroph year-ahead predictions by
mailing $2 to Astro-Graph, do .
this newspaper. P.O. Box 167,

41h DOWN

AVERAGE GAME 155·165

$1.25 • Vol. 38, No. 19

State Teachers Retirement System concerns teachers

• Kyger Creek Little
League schedule. See

,......______...,_._ _.._........_,
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Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • July ll, 200J

Center •

one who has no business in it.
The controls must be handled
by someone responsible.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
- Don't come on too strong
about how something should be
handled today, or a distasteful
chore others have been dodging
might be dumped squarely in
your lap.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- You and an associate will
come up with a brilliant idea
today, but sadly, neither of you
have the skills or experience to
pull it off.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
- Your faith m your present
plans is rather fragile today.

1-11-m

tm

•

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties

Astrograph
BY II£RNc£ BEDE Osot.
In the year ahead, you are not
likely to trip over the same
stumbling blocks that have
robbed you of success so many
times in the past. In fac~ an
exciting upsurge could be in
store for you in many new

Wildlife area haven
for fishermen, B1

How does your
herbs grow?, Dl

,.,

2 Kind

of slipper

Spo~

·Garden

Quilter makes memories ·
for a lifetime, Cl

24
25

1 "Good

Home and

· Tempo

base

Discover the Holzer· Difference

www.holzer .org

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PageA2
Sunday, July 13,2003

lture

iunbap mtmei ·&amp;tnttnel

Preventing bovine pinkeye

Ohio weather
Sunday, July 13
BROOKLYN. Ohio (AP}
- On a recent summer night
when the sun set late, no one
seemed to mind that the
Memphis Drive-In wasn't
starting "The Hulk" until 40
minutes after its advenised 9
p.m. stan.
As the projectionist w&lt;Ji!fd for
the sky to tum OOwn the housl:
tights, children squi'41ed on swings
in fiunt of a·I00-by.QS.foot screen.
Adults set up folding chairs in
front of their minivans while a
hypnotic voice from an old-time
radio commercial droned over
the drive-in speakers, "Enjoy ~
refreshing, ~ce-cold Coca-Cola.
No one paid attention to the
time, which seems to have a way
of standing still at the drive-in.
Born in the 1930s from
America's love of film and autoC 2003 AccuWaathOf, Inc.
mobiles, drive-ins have survived in spite of 24-screen multiplexes with digital surround
.
' .'
sound, reclining high-backed
Sunn~ Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Showers T·siOrms
Rain
Flumes
Soow
Ice
chairs and stadium seating.
They have done so by previding affordable double features, a family friendly atmosphere and a httle nostalgia.
"It's just a very convenient and
kind of magical place - the stars
twinkling at night," said Randy
Loy, 00-executi ve direc1or of the
United Drive-In Theatre Owner&gt;
Association. "It's freedom more
than anything."
Drive-ins reached their peak
in the 1950s as young people
Tuesday ... Mostly
clear. sought a little freedom.
Today... Partly sunny. Highs
Highs
in
the
mid
80s.
in the lower 80s. Light and
As the movie indus1ry snuggled,
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. mostly because of competition
variable winds.
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows A chance of showers and from television, Hollywool marthunderstorms in the after- keted heavily towanl teenagers.
in the lower 60s.
Monday... Mostly sunny and noon and evening ...Then a who liked the privacy of the drivewarmer. Highs in the mid 80s. slight chance of showers. in and the chance to show off their
Monday night... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s and cars, said Joe Austin, assiStant prohighs in the mid 80s.
Lows in the mid 60s.
fessor of !XJPU1ar culture studies at
Bowling Grren State University.
At their height in 1958 there
were 4,063 drive-ins, according to the Gennantown, Md.based owners' group, which
has
145 member theaters in
Sunday, July 13
the United States and Canada.
But rising laOO values and the
popularity of malls, cable televisioo
and VCRs
coooilxlled to the
dwiOOiing oorrkrs of drive-ins.
Today, llue are 433 left in the
OHIO
Uni!fd States. Ohio and
Pennsylvania have 37 ea:h, the
1110!1 of any state. New .Jer.;ey,
where the fust chive-in was built in
1933, doesn't have any left, a;:o:xding to the chive-in association.
There's Ina clear explanation for why Ohio and
Pennsylvania have the most.
One reason could be that the
states tend to hang onto their
VA.
older structures, Loy said.
For Larry and , Denise
Maynard's five children, the
drive-in offers the chance to
romp on the flatbed of their
pickup, eat a sheet pizza,
drink sodas, then climb into
sleeping bags to watch
movies and probably fall

RODNEY M. WALLBROWN
WVU Extension agent

BY

.
(;······-·

The sun rules the day

West Virginia weather

m

For an evening at the Memphis Drive-In in Brooklyn, Ohio, Rich and Elaine Scheff! fill Rich's
dump truck with bedding materials, slightly tilt the bed , and stretch-out to a movie under the
stars. (AP Photo/ Jamie-Andrea Yanak)
asleep during the second one.
"I like the drive- in because
we gel to lay down in a car
and I like the drive-in where
there's a big screen to watch
the movie," said Amber, 4.
Mrs. Maynard said her children aren't likely to sit still at an
indoor movie theater. Plus, at the
Memphis Drive-In, four of their
children, all under II, get in free.
Adults pay $7 for two movies.
That means the three-screen
drive-in near Cleveland relies
on sales from concessions and
a three-day-a-week flea market to keep going.
Owner Russell Wintner, 51,
said he and his partners have
passed up opportunities to sell
the land. The theater, started by
his grandfather and three panners 50 years ago, has remained
profitable, Wintner said.
"The Memphis Drive-In is
one of those drive-ins that's
kept chugging along," he said.
Drive-ins have benefited
from many blockbusters
films that attract family audiences, said Belinda Judson,
executive director of an
indoor theater group, the
Columbus-based Mid-States
National Association of
Theatre Owners. The topgrossing movie so far this

PAINT
SALE

O'Dell's

year is the G-rated animated
fish 'tale "Finding Nemo."
"I think they're doing very
well," Judson said. "There seems
to be a resurgence the last few
years in drive-in attendance."
Loy said there will never
be as many drive-ins as there
were 50 years ago, but the
industry is on an upswing.
· About 40 . drive-ins have
reopened and 20 new ones
have been built since 1990.
Darci and Bill Wemple
opened one this summer in
Broadalbin, N.Y., a town in
foothills of the Adirondacks
where tourists visit in the
warm months. The Wemples
already owned a drive-in
about 40 minutes away in a
farming community.
"For the people that live
there, it is their theater," Mrs.
Wemple said. "For everyone
else, It's a novelty draw."
She sees her patrons enjoying
freedoms that can't be experienced at an indoor theater bringing their own fool, cozying
up in a sleeping bag, smoking.
"No one can tell you, 'You
can't smoke in your car.'
.
yet," she said.
At the Memphis Drive-In last
month, Roland Bonacci sat in a
row of folding camping chairs

with nine relatives. They arrived
in three vehicles and brought
pizza for what they called an
affordiible family outing.
"It seems like a lot more
families now," Bonacci , 38,
said of the crowd. "I remember it being a lot rowdier.
Now, you see all these kids
running around."
Some parents come with their
infants, feeding them a bottle
while watching the movie.
"You don't have to worry
about a sitter," Bonacci said.
The Memphis Drive-ln
recently bought a ne\V FM
,stereo transmitter so patrons
can receive better .sound on
their car radios. But for nostalgia's sake it kept the drivein speakers that hang on car
windows.
Projectionist Jim Marcinik
shows off the stereo system
in the two-story brick projection house where a worn ,
beige Laz-Z-Boy also sits.
He is accustomed to keeping
12 reels of film or more spinning at indoor theaters, so he
may relax in the recliner. But
he won't drop into a deep sleep.
"You have more pre.ssure at a
drive-in,"
Marcmik said.
'They've got the horns. They
express themselves more easily."

Pinkeye is the co mmon
term fur Infectious Bovine
Keratoco njunctivitis (IBK). a
di,case condition of catt le
that is infectious in nature
and causes an intl am mation
of the transparent corne a,
wh ite of the eyeball. and the
in side lining membrane of
the lids.
The econom ic effects of a
herd outbreak can be severe.
Reduc ed average weight
gains of 17 pounds have been
documen ted in calves with
one eye affected and 30 to 65
pounds when both eyes were
infected. The incidence of
pinkeye is usually higher in
calves, but breeding age animals are also affected.
A bacteria (Moraxella
bovis) is the infectious agent
usually involved. It may be
tr1111sferred from cow to cow
hy several methods, especially
hy flies and spec ifically the
face tly. The organi sm may be
carried hy the face t1y and
remai n viable for up to three
days. but it on ly survives for a
few hours un the house tly.
Some anim als remain as inapparent carriers of M. bovis
al'ter thev overcome the clinical signs of infection. Later
I hey can serve as a source of
infection for a herd outbreak.
An ani mal recovering from
pi nkeye usually develops
some imm unity against M.
bovis. but thi s inununity is
relative ly weak and of short
duration. Cows usually have
more resistance to infection
than calves .
Other di sease conditions
that must be differentiated
from pinkeye include "rednose" or IBR (infectious
hovin e rhinotrach etits) and
foreig n bodies such as awns
fr0111 June grass .or foxtail.
The affected eyes will not
heat umil these foreign bodies are re moved .
Blowin~ dust and ultraviolet radiation from s unlijlht
may cause enough 1rntauon
to initiate pinkeye in a herd,
and . if combined with a face
tl y infestation . thi s can result
in an ex plosive herd outbreak.
• The peak incidence usually
occurs in July and August. This
conincides with the conditions
listed earlier. II is also the period when cattle are out on pasture and very difficult to handle for indiv1dual treatment.
The clinical signs of infection include wetness of the
face clue lu excess "tearing"
from the affected eye. squintin g of the eye lids. reddening
c)f the conjunct iva, and the

occurrence of an ulceration
on the tran sparent cornea,
which re sults in a disco!oration or loss of transparency of the cornea . Blood vessels may also become evident
within the cornea. The specific signs evident depend on
the stage to which the disease
has progressed.
Commercial vaccines now
avai lable have been shown ,to
be beneficial in the prcvention of pinkeye. Although
some animals may still he
affected with lB K, the incidendce is much lower in vaccinated than in unvacc inated
animals. Some vaccine products are eflecti ve with a signle initial dose. For others two
doe s must be give n two to
four weeks apan for initi ation
of immunity. Follow specific
label directions. The calves
can be vaccinated in the
spring when handlin g them
for branding, dehorning . etc .
The breeding herd should
also be vaccinated at thi s'
same time, before the begi nning of "fly season". The
vaccine ca n be used in the
face of an outbreak. but it
will be much less effective
then. Many of the animals
will already have been
ex posed and will be in the
incubation stage when vaccinated. so will still be affected
with IBK before thev develop
an adequate immunity.
Control of flies, especially
the face fly, is another important preventive technique thai
should be considered. Use of
ear tags impregnated with
insecticide is of \lenefit. These
he lp reduce the fly population
and also help keep them away
from the eyes. However, with
repeated use of pesticides. a
resistant tly population has
developed. This makes it neeessary to rotate pesticide used.
Insecticide dust bags to control
flies on the animals and feedthrough products that kill the
face fly larvae in the manure
pats should also be considered .
Proper pasture management will aid in IBK prevention. This involves control of
dust and clipping of old pasture to aid in preventing eye
injuries. Provision of shaded
areas will aid in 18 K prevenlion and also wi ll make the
cattle more comfortable .
The goals of treatment are
to protect the eye and provide
a localized antibacterial that
can act against the bac teria
involved. Eye protection
could be achieved by bandaging. but is very difficult, so
other methods are used .
Applying a patch over the eye
with adhesive to stick it to the
hair works well, and a piece

of denim applied with rubber
cement is usually adequate.
Patches are also available
commercially. The eyelids
can be closed by suturing, or
the third eyelid (nictating
membrane) can be pulled
across the eye and sutured m
posiiion. Each of these methads protects the eye from sunlight, dust, and flies. and prevents their inference with the
healing process.
The challenge in using
antibacterial products is to get
one to remain in the eye for a
sufficient period of time. The
tearing process with wash any
free med ication out of the eye
in a matter of hours . If the eye
is just treated topica lly the
medication should preferable
be repeated at le;~st every
twelve hours.
A subconjunctival injection is an excellent method
for providing an extended
period of medication from
each treatment. The animal's
head is well restrained, the
upper eyel id is rolled back.
and approximately one ml of
an anlibiotic or antibiotic and
cortisone mixture is injected
with a syringe and needle .
The needle is directed under
the most superfoctal layers of
membrane covering the white
of the eyeball (sclera) or the
inside of the upper eyelid.
The medi cation is gradually
absorbed rrom this site over
the next two to three days and
provides a constant source of
medication. One treatment is
often sufficient, but it can be
repeated if necessary.
A single intramuscular injection of a long-acting form of ox
tetracycline (LA-200; Pfizer)
has also been shown to be
effective. The M. bovis organosm os usually sensitive to this
antibiotic. This specific formulation will maintain an effective
blood level for three diiys.
Intramuscular injections of
whole blood, plasma, condensed milk, or other products are also said to aid the
healing process. Any beneficia! effect is evidently due to
non-specific stimulation of
the body's immune mechanism to a foreign protem.
Acute anaphylactic shock is a
potential hazard with repeated use of these products. ·
The eye ot the bovine
species has great healing
power and can repair mu~h
· damage that may occur to It.
When excess tearing has
stopped, it usually indicates the
repair process is well underway. Funher treatment ts generally not required, but a long
time may be needed for the
body to repair prevtous damage and replace scar tissue.

Page A3
Sunday, Jul)' 13, 2003

Deadline ne_aring for Mason County
farmers to file an acreage report
STAFF REPORT

Mason County Farmers are
required to file acreage
reports for all cropland on a
farm as a condition for direc1
and counter-cycli ca l payments, loan deficiency payments, and marketing assistance loans. In addition.
farmers are required to make
reports for Burley Tobacco
Quota Farms , Conservation
Reserve Program Acreage.

and uops for which non in sured crop disaster assistance
payments will be requested.
For all other farme ~:,' repons
are optional. However. acreage
report' can be an impoo1ant
land use and production record.
The following are reporting
dates for West Virginia
Farmers: Julv 15 for corn.
soy bean s. Burley tobacco &lt;otld
all other crops; September 30
for ornamental nur\4ry. gin-

,eng. aquaculture. turfgrass
sod. mu shrooms. Chri .stmas
trees and lloric ulture; January
2 for honey and Maple sa p:
and May 31 for small grains
(wheal. oats. barley).
Late fees will be imposed if .
reports are no1 filed by these .
deadlines.
Please contact ihe Mason
County Farm Service Agency
at 675 -2020 for additiona l
information.

Ohio foundation mee.ts this week
BY JENNIFER BYRNES

Special to the Times-Sentinel
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The
Southern Ohio Ag,icultural
and Community Development
Foundation (SOACDF), which
was established with a portion
of Ohio's Phase I tobacco settlement dollars, ljs announcing
several programs at two meetings scheduled for Tuesday,
July 15,beginning at 7:30p.m.
at Hannan Trace Elementary
School in Mercerville, and on
Wednesday. July 16 beginning
at I p.m. at the C. H. McKenzie
Agncultural
Center
in
Gallipolis.
The same information will
be covered at both meetings . .
All tobacco growers. tenants
and quota owners of FSA record
between 1997 and 2000 are
strongly
encouraged
to
attend.Prograrn oppo11unities
and criteria for the coming year
will be reviewed.
General
Agriculture
Programs offers a 50 percent
cost share on up to two of
five programs including:
• Livestock System s (fencing and corrals};

• " Forage Imp rovement
(lime and seeding);
• Feeding Systems:
• Production Livestock
Genetic Improveme nt: and
• Grain Handling.
Quota owners may receive
up to $1 .000 and tobacco
quota owners/growers and
gruwer/tenaoll ' up tu $2.000
in a combined project of any
two of the above five General
Agriculture Programs.
The application period fur
this program is Aug. 1- 15.
2001 Appli cations will he
approved on a ti rst-come. tirstserved basis based un postmark
date of application after tirst
priority is given to those applicants who have never received
a grant from SOACDF (excl usive of Educational Assistance).
Applications postmarked
prior to or after the published
application period will not be
accepted and will be relu rned
to the applicant.
•
Also on the agenda for the
July 15 and 16 meetings is presentation of the Agricultural,
Diversitication Program.
This program offers a 50 percent cost share up lO $15,000
for quota owners and up to

$40.000 tor quota owner/growers and growersltemults on the
creation of a new agricu lture
business or the ex pansion of an
existing agriculture business.
OSU hold will follow up
meetings later in the month
spec ificall y for individual s
interested in this program.
Other programs that will be
briefly disc ussed o n Tuesday·
and Wednesday include: the
Educational
Assi stance:
Program: econom ic development: and the status of the
Indemnity Payment Program.
Applications tor the General
AgricultlU'e ProgrJ011S. Agticulruml
Diversitication
w1d
the
Educational A'sistance Program
will be available al tl1e meeting.
For those who cannot attend,
you may pick up applications at
any of the Galli a and Jac kson
County ag ri culture agencies
staoting Jul y 14: FSA ; OSU·

Extension or NRCS/SWCD
offices; or at the Lawrence
County SWCD office in
Linville. or the Lawrence
County Extension oflice.
For more information.
please call your field representative. Jennifer Byrnes a~
(740) 645-0432.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Andrew Carter

Jeremy Schneider

Managing Editor

Asst. Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
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unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good
taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column belmr are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board.
unless otherwise noted.

Today in History
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, July 13, the I 94th day of 2003. There are
171 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 13, 1793, French revolutionary writer Jean Paul
Marat was stabbed to death in his bath by Charlotte Corday.
On this date:
In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governing the
Northwest Territory.
In 1863, deadly rioting against the Civil War military draft
.
erupted in New York City.
. In 1878, the Treaty of Berlin amended the terms of the
Treaty of San Stefano, which had ended the Russo-Turkish
War of 1877-78.
In 1886, Father Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of
Boys Town, was born in Roscommon, Ireland.
In 1960, John F. Kennedy won the Democratic presidential
nomination at his party's convention in Los An~eles.
In 1967, race-related rioting that claimed 27 hves broke out
in Newark, N.J.
In 1974, the Senate Watergate Committee proposed sweeping reforms in an effort to prevent another such scandal
In 1977, a blackout lasting 25 hours hit the New York area.
In 1978, Lee Iacocca was fired as president of Ford Motor
Co. by chairman Henry Ford II.
In 1979, a 45-hour siege by Palestinian guerrillas began at
the Egyptian Embassy in Ankara, Turkey.
Ten years ago: The American League defeated the National
League in the All-Star Game, 9-3, in Baltimore. Race car driver Davey Allison died in Birmingham, Ala., of injuries suffered in a helicopter crash.
Five years ago: A jury in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., ruled that the
Rev. AI Sharpton and two others had defamed a former prosecutor by accusing him of raping Tawana Brawley. Four
roung cousins in Gallup, N.M., died after becoming trapped
m a car trunk.
·
One year ago: The nation's governors opened their summer
meeting in Boise, Idaho, with high health care costs the main
topic. Photo~rapher Yousuf Karsh died in Boston at age 93.
Today's Btrthdays: Former Housing Secretary Jack Kemp is
68. Actor Patrick Stewart is 63 . Actor Robert Forster is 62.
Actor Harrison Ford is 61. Singer-guitarist Roger McGuinn
(The Byrds) is 61. Actor-comedian Cheech Marin is 57.
Actress Didi Conn is 52. Singer Louise Mandrell is 49. Actordirector Cameron Crowe is 46. Tennis player Anders Jarryd is
42. Country singer-songwriter Victoria Shaw is 41. Bluegrass
singer Rhonda Vincent is 41. Actor Michael Jace is 38.
Country singer Neil Thrasher is 38. Singer Gerald Levert is
37. Rhythm-and-blues singers Lovell and Laval Jones (Twice)
are 32. Singer Deborah Cox is 30. Rock musician Will
Champion (Coldpla~) is 25. Country musician Mike
Melancon (Emerson Drive) is 25.
Thought for Today: "There are people who want to be
everywhere at once, and they get nowhere." - Carl
Sandburg, American writer (1878-1967).
·

Moderately Confused
WHAT?/
•

,

NO

LEMON
WED&amp;E.?

'

'

I

I
'Speak Out!'
(740) 446-2342
extension 35
'

,,

Attention, consumers with bodily
hair: The razor industry has news for
you! You will never in a million years
guess what this news is, unless your IQ
is higher than zero, in which case you're
already thinking: "Not another blade!
Don't tell me they're adding ANOTHER BLADE!!"
Shut up' Don't spoil the surprise for
everybody else'
Before I tell you the news,
let's put it in historical context by reviewing: THE
HISTORY OF SHAVING.
Human beings are one of
only two species of animals
that shave themselves (the
other one is salamanders).
The Internet tells us that
humans have been shaving
since the Stone Age. Of
course, the Internet also tells
us that hot naked women . want to
befriend us, so we can't be 100 percent
sure about everything we read there .
But~thal www.quikshave.com/tirreline.htm is 'lelling the uuth, Neandrllal Man
used to pluck his lirill hairs "using two seashell~
as tw=s." No OOubt Neanderthal Woman
foond this very at!Ia:tive. ''You smell like a
clam," were proOObly her exa::t wmls. It was
during this ern thai the ~ was invented
By 30.000 B.C., primitive man was
shavin~ with blades made from flint,
which 1s a rock, so you had a lot of guy's
whose faces were basically big oozing
scabs. The next shaving breakthrough
came when the ancient Egyptians figured
out how to make razors from sharp metal.
which meant that, for the first ti111e. the
man who wanted to l5e well-groomed
could, without any assistance or special
training, cut an ear completely off.
This was pretty much the situation
until the late 19th century, at about 2:30
p.m., when the safety razor was invented. This introduced a wonderful era

known to historians as "The Golden
Age of Not Having Razor Companies
Introduce
Some
Ludicrously
Unnecessary New Shaving Technology
Every Ten Damrr Minutes."
I, personally grew up during this era. I
got my flTSt razor when I was 15, and I
used it to shave my "beard," which consisted. of a lone chin hair approximately
one electron in diameter. (I was a "late
bloomer" who did not
fully experience puberty until many of my
classmates, including
Dave
females, were bald.)
B
My beard would poke
•a•r•ry--•its wispy head out of its
•
follicle every week or
so, and I, feeling
manly. would smother
it under 14 cubic feet
of shaving cream and lop it off with my
razor. Then I would stand in front of the
bathroom mirror, waiting for it to grow
again. Mine was a lonely adolescence.
The razors of that era had one blade.
and they worked fine; ask any older person who is not actively drooling. But
then, in 1971, a very bad thing happened: Gillette, looking for a way to
enhance the shaving experience (by
which I mean "charge more") came out
with a razor that had TWO blades. This
touched off a nuclear arms race among
razor companies, vying to outdo each
other by adding "high-tech" features
that made the product more expensive,
but not necessarily better. This tactic is
called "sneakerization," in honor of the
sneaker industry, which now has people
paying upwards of $200 a pair for
mcreasingly weird-looking footwear
boasting the durability of thinly sliced
Velveeta.
Soon everybody was selling twoblade razors. So the marketing people

·Honored

Obituaries

put on their thinking caps, and. in an
astounding burst of creativity, came up
with the breakthrough concept of:
THREE BLADES. Gillette, which is on
the cutting edge (har!) of razor sneakerization, currently has a top-of-the-line
three-blade razor - excuse me, I mean
"shaving system"
called the
"Mach3Turbo," which, according to the
Gillette Web site (www.Gillette.com)
has more technology than a nuclear
submarine, including "open cartridge
architecture" and an "ergonomic handle" featuring "knurled elastomeric
crescents." That's right: It has elastomeric crescents, and they have been
knurled! By knurlers 1 No, I don't know
what this means . But it sure sounds
technological.
Which brings us to today's exciting
news, which was brought to my attention
by alert reader Jake Hamer. Gillette's
arch-rival, Schick (maker of the Xtreme
3 shaving system) has announced that
it 's coming out with a new razor that has
- prepare to be floored by innovativeness
-FOUR BLADES. Yes! It will be called
the "Quattro," which is Italian for "more
expensive."
Of course it will not end there. 1 bet
an urgent memo has already gone out in
Gillette's marketing department. "Hold
some focus groups immediately!" it
says. "Find out what number comes
after four'"
Yes, the razor-technology race shows
no signs of slowing. And who knows
what lies ahead? Razors with 10 blades?
Twenty blades? A thousand blades?
Razors that go backward in time and
shave your ancestors~ Exciting times lie
ahead, shaving consumer!
. I'm getting a set of seashells ..
. Dave Barry i5 a humor columnist for
the Miami Herald. Write to him c/o The
Miami Herald, One Herald Plaza,
Miami, FL 33132.

A'T
LEAST 1
we DtON T

GET SARS.

Clyde W.
Hammons
BIDWELL - Clyde W. .
Hammons, 83 , of Bidwell,
Ohio, died Saturday, July 12
at Holzer Medical C3enter in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
He worked 41 years as a
coal miner before retiring. He
also lived and worked on the
family farm.
A son of the late Wise and
Lilly Gamble Hammons,
Clyde was born April 21.
1919. in Emory. Virginia .
He is survived by a daughter
and son -in-law, Sharon and
Larry West; a son and &lt;laughter-in-law, Glen and Eileen
Hammons. all of Bidwell; five
grandchildren. Cheryl (Jeff)
McAvena, Charlene (Mike)
Hemphill,
Michael
(Stephanie) Hammons, Denise
(Ryan ) fj\Hersman, all of
Bidwell ami David (Wendy)
Hammon; of Gallipol is; six
great-grandchildren Matthew
Hemphill, Kindra Hammon s.
Timothy Hersman. Taylor
Christoph er
Bradbury.
Me Avena and Ethan Hersman;
one brother. An Hammons of
Mountain Citv. Tennessee.
In addition io his parents, he
was preceded in death by his
wife. Ethel,G Williams Dec. 9.
2000. whom he married on
June 5. 1937, in L:ang, We st
Virginia: a daughter Doris Ann
Hammons: a son. Charles
Hammon s;
two
sisters.
Clydeth ·Hammons and Hazel
Osbome ; and two brothers.
Everett and George Hammons.
Funeral services will be at
I p.m. Tue sday. July 15,
2003, at the Rodney Uniteu
Methodist Church wit h pastor Jay Nessdroad and the
Rev. Arland King officiati ng.
Burial will follow at Ohio
Vall ey Memory Gardens.
Friends may call from 6-8
p.m. Monday at Willis
Funeral Home.
Pallbearers wi II be David and
Michael Hammons, Mike and
Matthew Hemphill. Ryan and
Timothy
Hersman.
Jeff
McAvena. Eugene Stout and
honorary pallbearer, Lany West.
His body wi ll be taken to
the church one hour prior to
the services on Tuesday.
E-mail condolences may be
se nt In the family at
www. wiII isfuneralhome. com

and Harold Roush of
Rutland,
Ohio;
Dennis
"Chuck" Clark of Pomeroy,
Ohio; Shelby and Wayne
Satterfield of Racine, Ohio;
12 grandchildren, 14 greatgrandchildren and three
great-great-grandchildren.
In addition to her parents,
Dorothy was preceded in
death by her husband, Fred
Clark; sister, Lucille Jesse;
brothers, Bill. Dick. Boe and
Pete Brown; grandson.
Bobby Seelig; and an infant
great-granddaughter.
Funeral services will be at
11 a.m., Tuesday, July 15,
2003, ~t Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, Ohio,
with the Rev. Keith Rader
and James Satterfield officiating. Burial will follow in
Rocksprings Cemetery.
Friends may call from 7-9
p.m., Monday, July 14, 2003.

lbomas Ervin

.,.ommy"
Weaver

NEW HAVEN - Thomas
Ervin "Tommy" Weaver, 83,
of New Haven, West
Virginia, died July I I, 2003,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
A son of the late Ervin and
Daisy Bumgarner Weaver, he
was born January 8. 1920, in
New Haven, West Virginia.
He is survived by his wife,
Betty Ferguson Weaver of
New Haven ; daughter and
son- in-law, Frances and Mike
Taylor of New Haven ; sons
and daughters-in-law, Clyde
and Elnora Weaver and
Nicky and Virginia Weaver;
brother and sister-in-law, Lee
and Marie Weaver all of New
Haven; eight grandchildren;
3 step-grandchildren; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents,
he was preceded in death by a
sister, Ada Hood; a brother,
Clarence Weaver; and a son,
Michael Keith Weaver.
Funeral services will be at II
a.m., Monday, July 14, 2003,
at the Anderson Funeral Home
in New Haven, with Pastor
Glenn Lambert officiating.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m.
Sunday at the funeral home.
An on-line registry is available
at www. andersonth.com

Dan J. ··curly"

Dorothy Mae

Bonecutter

Clark

Happy talk on holiday
ened to "Ward" as he entered wider America-was knocked upside down at Goree Island in
Senegal. where President Bush spoke on the
first leg of his African journey.
Bush, standing on the spot where Africans
began their lo1;
journey fiom their
motherland, 0 1 the obligattxy denunciation of slavery, calling it "one of the
and
greatest crimes of history."
planned for"? Mortar
Conservatives probably found that
attacks, drive-by .
shootings, ambushes
part tolerable, ihough many would
msil.1 thai some slave masters were
in broad daylight. 32
U.S. soldiers slain
really nice guys and that a few free
since May--all this
Colbert blllcks owned slaves too.
after President Bush
King
But what must have really
declared Baghdad a
• ---•caused Connerly et al. to weigh
done deal ? Yeah,
partaking of a shot of hemlock
Wolfowitz and comwas to hear a conservative, antipany saw it coming,
affirmative-action president tell
all right. Olickens also
the world that the "racial bigotry
have lips.
fed by slavery did not end with slavery or
Listen instead to Franks, who until with segregation. And many of the issues
Monday was chief of U.S. Central that still trouble America have roots in
Command in Iraq. He told the Senate that the bitter experience of other times."
while some postwar dust-ups were expectThat 's not what conservatives have
ed, "I can't tell you whether we anticipat- been telling themselves. Why, everyed that it would be at the level we see right body knows--because they have been
now." Credit Franks with at least taking a saying so--that if SOil)e blacks are lagpass on the administration's happy talk.
ging behind, it is their own fault, helped
Franks' assessment doesn't mean the along, of course, by indulgent, mushUnited States can't handle the increa~ingly headed white liberals who encouraged
sophisticated Iraqi attacks-:or that it should dependency on the government. But ,
cut and run. But his candor suggests that at alas, there was George W. Bush, standleast the folks in uniform understand some- ing on the soil where the Western
thing the administration's desk-bound assault on African culture began,
hawks can't seem to get through their indulging in a little truth-telling.
And if that weren't enough , enter
heads: that their "know-it-all, we-can-dono-wrong, just-trust-us-dammit" attitude Mississippi assembly line worker Doug
won't cut it and that leveling with the Williams on the same day of the Goree
American people is the beiter way.
Island speech to authenticate the presiThe next case of happy talk on holiday dent's rem!)fks. Williams, as reported by
occurred earlier in the week, and it was the Associated Press through interviews
enough to cause the likes of Wardell with his co-workers, believed that black
Connerly and other hi&lt; ;k conservatives to people had a leg up in society. Co-worktake to thei&amp;beds with the vapors. After all. ers also reported that Williams used racial
they have achieved fame and several pieces epithets on the job and made threats ·
of silver reassuring white audiences that against African Americans.· So as Bush
America would be well into an era of racial spoke in Africa about "issues that still
bliss with a contented and well-behaved trouble America," Williams was back
flock of"people of a darker hue" were it not home proving the truth of those words. At
for the incessant instigation of self-serving the end of his shooting rampage, five corace "hustlers" who keep things stirred up workers were dead, four of them black.
by constantly manufacturing racial wrongs.
If that isn't a stark rejoinder to conThe little world of Wan:lell--it was short- servative happy talk on race, what-is?

Finally we've managed to get through a
week in which happy talk at home and
abroad was put on hold for a while. We
should savor these moments while we can.
Let's begin with the Senate Armed
Services Committee hearings last
Wednesday. The lead witness, Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, was his
usual adept self, dazzling some panel
members with his footwork and receiving
kudos for his performance. But a few
members apparently had decided to rest
their pompoms and start behaving like
U.S. senators as contemplated in the
Constitution and by folks back home who
sent them to Washington. After all, the
subjects of the hour were war and peace in
Iraq (and their cost to the United States).
Prodded by increasingly restive con~
stituents as well as unpleasant news from
the postwar front, senators made it plain
that they wanted more than the secretary's
usual comforting words. They got 'what
they were after. Under grilling, Rumsfeld
presented the senators with the price tag for
the U.S. occupation of Iraq. It may sound
like chump change to Pentagon planners,
but the spending estimates should serve as
a wake-up call to U.S. taxpayers.
How many of us knew, before this
week, that the monthly cost of military
operations in Iraq was about $3.9 billion?
Or that the administration has now resorted to juggling billions from an Iraq contingency fund and other military accounts to
cover unanticipated costs~ Add to that the
·suggestion by Gen. Tommy Franks, who
testified alongside Rumsfeld, that nearly
150,000 American troops will have to
remain in Iraq for the "foreseeable future."
At $4 billion a month?
The rising U.S. casualty mte was al'iQ high
on the list of committee concems. No W\lllder. American troops in post-Saddam
Hussein Iraq are being killed at the rate of one
a day-and that's not counting the wounded
or the Iraqi rockets and gunshots that have
missed their targets. Once again, the committee pried out answers that portrdy a postwar
Iraq sharply at variance with the one the Bush
administration led the nation to expect.
Only a month ago, in testimony before the
House Armed Services CorJllllittee. Deputy
Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz was

------ - · ---'---- · ··-- - ···-. ~ ·· • .,..,. ,.,.~·1"' ·'~' •'" t r• .. . ... ,.. .,.

•

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

Sunday, July 13, 2003

One man 5 close shave with facial destiny
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

Sunday, Jutt 13,2003

playing down any notion of surprise at the
extent of postwar fighting. "As we expected
and planned for," he told the House committee, "smaller combat operations in Iraq
continue, even as we work with Iraqis to
establish stable and secure areas throughout

~peeled

"

•• "~ &lt;t ....,_. ~

•· •

,.,

' .

.J,.,

-

'

:wanted

•

GALLIPOLIS FERRY
POMEROY - Dorothy
Mae Clark. 87, of Pomeroy, Dan J. "Curly" Bonecutter,
Ohio, died Friday, July II at 80, of &lt;'lallipolis Ferry, West
Pleasant Valley Hosp ital in Virginia, went to be with the
Point Pleasant, West Virginia, Lord on Friday, July II,
2003, at Holzer Medical
after an extended illness.
Center
in Gallipolis, Ohio.
She was a retired cook , a
Dan
was
a retired machinist
member of the Enterprise
from
the
Marietta
Manufacturing
Souper Sewers and belonged
to the Enterpri se United and Amherst. He was also a deacon and superintendent of the
Methodi st Church.
A daughter of the late Gospel Tabernacle Church of
Valentine E. and Maggie Point Pleasant, West Vtrginia
Born October 29, 1922, in
Ryther Brown. Dorothy was
Ferry,
West
born Febrimry 29, 1916, in Gallipolis
Virginia,
Curly
was
the
son
Pomeroy, Ohio.
of
the
late
Phillip
H.
"Dan"
She is survived by her chi ldren , Alva and Karen Clark , and Lucy Martin Bonecutter.
He is survived by a son and
of Lang svill e, Ohio: Sue Ann

Deaths .

DUNBAR
lrene F.
Workman. 72,ofDunbar, We&amp;
Virginia, died July II , 2003, at
the
Meadowbrook
Acres
Nursing Home after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Robert L.
Workman; her granddaughter,
Tamara Vance; parents.
Greene and Daisy Vance;
three brothers atid five sisters.
She was a former employee
of Kanawha County Schools
and retired from the West
Virginia
Rehabilitation
Center after twenty years of
employment.
Irene was a devoted mother
and
grandmother,
who
blessed those left behind with
enthusiasm and love .
She is survived by her children and their spouses, Ronald
and Nina Vance, Richard and
Linda Workman, Sherry and
Jack Lucarelli, Bev and Mark
Scarpelli; nine grandchildren
and four great-grandchildren.
Other survivors include three
sisters, Audrey Gardner, Freda
Harrison and Alice Hill.
Funeral services will be at 10
a.m., Monday, July 14, 2003, at
Keller Funeral Home, Dunbar,
with the Rev. Jay Parkins officiating. Burial will follow in
Grandview Memorial Park in
Dunbar. Friends are invited to
join Irene's family and loved
ones to pay homage to her life
from 2-4 p.m. Sunday at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the
Alzheimer's Association,
I Ill E. Lee St., Charleston,
W. Va., 25301 or to the Cross
Lanes United Methodist
Church Building Fund, 5320
Frontier Drive, Cross Lanes.
W.Va., 25313.

'

Retirement
from PageA1
There were 82 STRS
employees with total salaries
(base salary plus bomts
checks)
in excess of
$ 100,000 last year.
"Why should these people
get -~~id more than the governor?' Wh1tehead satd.
Whitehead said these ligures
upset her, but not as much as the
huge bonus checks some of the
employees at the STRS
received last year. Quoting
superintendent
Leones
rei.earch, Whitehead said there
was one STRS investment
employee who received a single
bonus checks of $110,000 and
$68,880 on top of that person's
base salary of$164,000 in 2001
which was a very good year for
this person who received a
gr.md total of $342,880.
"We have a few retired
teachers in Meigs County
that are trying to decide
between medicine and food ,"
Whitehead said. "This is why
we are unhappy with the way
the money is being spent."
Health care costs are now eating away retirement checks.
Wendy Carper-Halar, assistant
supenntendent of the Meigs
Local School district, thought
she was going to be able to
retire sometime in the near
future, but with her retirement
dwindling because of health
care costs, she is pragmatic. She
will have two children going to
school full-time this year.
" I am concerhed that I am
going to have to work until I
am 75 or 80 years old,"
Carper-Halar said.
When teachers retire, they
receive year end money called
the 13th check that usually
comes out around Christmas.
Whitehead said retired teachers
count on this money and she
· said in the past she has used the
check to pay for Christmas presents for her children or grandchildren. Up until two years
ago, Whitehead said she had
received the 13th check every
year since she retired.
"It is not fair that these (STRS)
employees get $ I0,000 to
$20,000 bonuses but retired
employees did not receive the
money they counted on at the
end of the year," Whitehead said.
State Representative Jimmy
Stewart has called for the resignation of the execut ive

director of the State Teachers
Retirement System.
Stewart (R-Athens) said growing questions about the m;magement and spending at STRS
make clear a ch;mge in leadership is needed and that it is time
for STRS Executive Director
Hetil Dyer to step down.
"My sense is there is an
increasing lack of confidence
in Herb Dyer among both
lawmakers and retirees."
Stewm1 said.
STR,S has lost 21 percent or
$12.3 billion of its investment
assets during the last three years
and retiree health benefits are
being scaled back. Carper-Hai&lt;lf
said she knows retired teachers
who. after 30 years working,
have to get jobs at Wal-Manjust
to make ends meet.
In particul&lt;lf, Stewart said
Dyer's suggestion that the
money spent "belongs to the
board" not to the teachers who
contributed to the system and can
be spent "as the board sees tit" is
the absolute height of arrogance.
Carper-Halar is enraged by
Dyer's comments.
"It's not your money," she
said. "It is the teacher 's
money, the administrators'
money and the people's who
put money and faith into this
system and who have been let
down like they have pulled
the rug out from under us."
· Stewart was upset that Dyer
and the board could be so callous.
"I am outraged that Mr. Dyer
has not expressed more concern
in his response to this maner:·
Stewan said. "Retired teachers
in my district and across Ohio
have spent a lifetime helping
educate children. and this is the
treatment they get? It is clear to
me STRS needs a complete
management overhaul - and a
he&lt;~thy dose of common sense."
In addition to calling for
Dyer's resignation, Stewart
recently helped pass a major
expansion of the state inspector
general's authority, giving the
inspector general the ability to
investigate potential wrongdoAlLto- Owners Insurance

"Its nice. There were a lot
of people working behind the
scenes to do things," he ,said
on hearing of the board's
action. Gloeckner only hopes
the battle field is preserved.
He said fame and honors are
fleeting, he would just like to
see the graves of the soldiers
that fell during the Battle of
Buffington Island are found.
He hopes the government
will fund a memorial in the
area with all of the names of
. the men who died there and
that the battlefield is marked
as a major historic battlefield.
He said it was the last
major penetration of the
South. into the North and it
was the last time Ohio was
invaded. It was also the last
time U. S. Navy was
involved in a battle on the
Ohio River.
Gloeckner said he would
never have been able to do
the reenactment if not for the
support of his wife, Sally.
They reside in East Letart
with their son. David.

ing 'II the state's live public pension systems, including STRS.
"This type of reform is critical to protect not onl~ retired
teachers but also all retired public employees," Stewart said.

Visit us on
·the Web
Gallipolis Daily
Tribune
www.mydajlytribune.com

Point Pleasant
R~i$er · .
www.mydallyregi~er.com
.
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'"

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the Kanawha Battalion,
another reenactor group he
joined, Gloeckner, Metcalf
and others worked on the
Gallia County Civil War
Soldiers Homecoming held
in the Gallipoli s City park.
Through contacts he had
made, Gloeckner was finally
set to see what had always
been a goal, reenacting . at
Ohio's only Civil War battlefield in Portland.
During the first reenactment, the event drew about
1-25 reenactors. Gloeckner
said over the years they had
many different events. such as
the setting a village complete
with a black smith, te~~ther,
baker, carpenter and one year
a functioning post offtce.
It was through the bakery
and a set up produce market
that soldiers were given their
rations. One year he said a

'Thmgc$ ttl~@.,

COLUMB US - Charle~ ''
''Fritz" Savre, 6:!. of Racine
died July ~ 11 .~003 at Ohio
State Uni versit y llospital in
Columbus .
Ohio.
Arrangements are pendin g at
Roush Funeral Home tn
Ravenswood. West Virginia.

Proud to be apart of
your life.

from PageA1

•

Charles "Fritz"
Sayre

- ·- ··---·-· -· ---

Workman

"G_Pfac~ ftJ ((p &amp;

POMEROY Donald
Hugh Davidson passed away
Tuesday, July 8 . 2003 at hi s
residence on Chester Road,
Pomeroy. Ewing Funeral
home is handling arran ~e­
ments . A memorial gravestde
se rvice will be announced by
the family at a later date.

675 - 1333
992-2156

lrene·F.

Coming Thursday ...

Donald Hugh
Davidson

446-2342

daughter-in-law, Ronnie and
. Linda Bonecutter; daughter-inlaw, Phyllis Bonecutter, all of
Gallipolis Ferry; grandchildren, Lana and Kevin Riffle of
Gallipolis Ferry, Ron and
Trisha Bonecuner of Dayton,
Ohio; Lisa and Barry Henry,
and Danny and Tonya
Bonecutter of Gallipolis Ferry;
great-grandchildren. Kendra,
Travis and Kaci Riffle, Karnille
and Ronnie Ill Bonecutter,
Craig and hi wife Heather
Henry; great-great grandchildren, Brandau imd Kaitlyn
Henry; and Karson, Kenlee and
Kadann Bonecutter.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded in death by his
wife, Millie Siders Bonecutter;
sons, Danny Lee and Henry J.
Bonecutter (infant); a sister. ·
Katherine Bonecutter; brothers, Sherman and Carl
"Popeye" Bonecutter.
Funeral services will be held
at I p.m .. Tuesday, July 15.
2003, at Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
with Pastor Bert Flora officiating. Final resting place will be
at the Henderson Cemetery,
Henderson. West Virginia.
Friends may call lit the
Deal Funeral Home from 6-9
p.m. , Monday, July 14, 2003.

Confederate soldier rode in
on horse back and stabbed an
apple with his sword. He said
the crowd loved it.
Another time the 1st Ohio
Artillery brought canons
from the statehouse and fired
them, unfortunately the b!ast
from the gun powder leveled
part of a pumpkin patch.
For several years the P. A.
Denny sailed from Gallipolis
to Portland, stopping in
Pomeroy and Racine as part
of the reenacment.
Over the years Gloeckner
put in countle ss hours and
resources into making the
event possible, solely to bring
about awareness of the battle
that took place there with
Union forces and lohn Hunt
Morgan's Confederate raiders.
The past several years
Gloeckner has been unable to
participate in the reenactment
because he has been helping
hi s parents , Erwin and
Margret Gloeckner. . He is
looking forward to getti ng
back into it now.

Hill Peterson Carper Bee &amp; Deltzler
Ctlerleltonlt'lll

Mof9MIO'IItl

800.822.5667 .......
emaU : jcpeteJsonOhpcbd.com

.,..,.,..v• or

LA

Hill Torlseva &amp; Williams
""'"""'" OTLAw
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WMellng. WHI

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866.706.14n "" "..
amaH: btlnl 0 htwlaw us

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---~---------------------c-- --------

�·Nation

iPunbap Ottni~ -itntintl

Nation/
World Briefs
WhiteHouse
supports CIA
despite Iraq
nuke blunder

'\1

WASHINGTON (AP)
President Bush said Saturday
he had contidence in CIA
Director George
Tenet
despite his agency's failure to
warn Bush against making
allegations about Iraq's
nuclear weapons program
later found false.
"Yes I do, absolutely," Bush
said. "I' ve got contidence . in
George Tenet. I've got contidence in the men and women
who work at the CIA and I look
forward to working with them
as we win this war on terror."
· Bush asserted in his State of
the Union address in January that
Iraq had sought nuclear materials
from Afiica Nearly six months
later, the White House acknowledged the charge was false, and
the tempest that tollowed has
shadowed Bush on his fivecountry trip through Aliica
In a carefully scripted mea
culpa the White House on Friday
blamed the CIA for its January
misstep and Tenet finished the
job hours later with a dramatic
statement accepting responsibility. ,Bush had said that the CIA had
reviewed his address and did not
mise any alanns.

PageA6

Inside:

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Tall ships also serve as international.classrooms ·
OEVELAND (AP) - 'Ill! tall Indian Navy training ship, said the
shipo; fisi~ mlakem am Sl'JVeS ship i~ a big change from the acalas a lkHing irflmtimal dmoo n emy's 295-foo sailing ship Blgle,
including extr.rtight quarters and a
Iii a seh.t gJOOJJ of &amp;lrlns.
galley
rrenu with a foreign touch.
Michael Nmhau&lt;len of Thtvis,
On
the
Tarangini, where a third
Oilif., a On;t Guard Acaremy
cadet, is spending the summer of the crew is vegetarian, there is a
aboanl the Indian ship INS steady diet of rice and spicy curTarangini. which is taking in the ries and massala
"The meals are~ much the
Hartxllfest event throogh ~.
Noolhausen, who will spend same as this one, but i! s all pretty
almilst two months sailin the good," Nordhausen said as he dug
Great Lakes on the 17~-foot into a spicy mutton Cllll)l, lentils,

rire and homemade plain yogurt.
LJ. Pawan Preet Man's duties as
logistic offirer in:l~ owrseeing
~ ga)ley and cooks. Man, ~ of
the tCw Women who has gooe to sea
in the IWO years that the lrxlian
Na-.y has allowed \YOil'C1 officer.;
abatrd ships, says sre tries to see
that variety is W&lt;Xked into the menu.
''We serve Continen!al food and
Otinese food once a week." Man
said "Fool is very important We
sail for such a long titre that good

food keeps the morale up. Fool
here is tastier than it is on bases."
The ship's head cook, · Lalit
Chauhan. and his chief assistant,
Chendekar Subhash. occasionally
prepare chicken in orange sauce,
noodle dishes, oven-browned
potatoes, Russian salad, vegetable
soup and french liies. All are
made using recipes from the U.S.
Department of Defense.
The crew and the cooks say
sailors prefer the Indian staples, such

Konerko's homer lifts ChiSox
past Tribe in twin bill opener
I

Meigs rocks
Parkersburg
POMEROY, Ohio
Meigs Fenney
Bennett
American Legion Post 128
used the long ball to its
advantage Friday, hitting
three home run s in an 8-5
victory over Parkersburg at
Meigs High School.
The big blast came in the
bottom of the seventh when
Dustin Gibbs belted a 3-run
homer to put Meigs ahead for
good.
Doug Dill and Luke
Haislop homered in the third
inning. Haislop's was a 2-run
shot that pur Meigs ahead 3-

2.
Charlie Young pitched a
complete game to earn the
win, recording I0 strikeouts
and just three walks.
Kenny Boggs suffered the
loss for Parkersburg.
Haislop , Dill, Gibbs,
Jeremy Blackston , Buzz
Fackler and Ken Amsbary
each had two hits for Meigs
(13 -9).
Dill , Blackston , Fackler,
Gibbs and Am sbary each had
a double .

Indians place
Lawton on DL
CLEVELAND (AP)
Outlielder Matt Lawton was
placed on the 15-day disabled
Saturday
by
the
list
Cleveland Indians, who
recalled rookie first baseman
Travis Hafner in time for a
day-night doubleheader.
Lawton dislocated his right
middle linger while taking a
swing in the fourth inning of
Friday night 's 12-5 win over
the Chicago White Sox.
Lawton swung and missed
a 1-1 pitch from Gary Glover,
stepped out of the batter's
box , looked at hi s hand, and
walked straight to the
Indians' clubhouse.
He will wear a splint for the
next two weeks and may be
sidelined for one month.
'
After a slow start, the 31year-old Lawton had been
one of the Indian s' hottest hitters, batting .313 with eight
homers and 17 RBi s in his
last 25 games,
Lawton, who signed a fouryear, $28 million deal with
the Indians before the 2002
season, is hitting .248 with 15
homers and 47 RBis overall.
Lawton is the third veteran
starter to be sidelined with an
injury. Ellis Burks (elbow) is
out for the season. and shortstop Omar Vizquel (knee)
may need season-end ing
surgery.
Hafner is back with the Indians after being optioned
to Ttiple-A Buffalo on May
26. He batted just .206 with
four homers and II RB Is in
30 games before being sent
down.

Big-city drug
problem arises
in a rural
Oregon county

•

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

F

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•

'

•

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated P(ess

Paul Konerko hit a
CLEVELAND
three-run homer in the lOth inning Saturday
and the Chicago White Sox rallied for a rare
late-inning win, 7-4 over .the Cleveland
Indians in the opener of a day-night doubleheader.
Konerko, mired in a season-long slump,
hit his first home r with runners on base in
2003 to give the White Sox their first win in .
41 games when trailing after the eighth.
Reliever Damaso Marte (3-1) got the win
and Tom Gordon earned his I DOth career
save as the White Sox snapped a four-game
losing streak overall and ended a six-game
slide against the Indians.
Gordon is just the 14th pitcher in history
with I00 career wins and saves.
The White Sox tied it 4-4 with two outs in
the ninth on closer Danys Baez's throwing
erro~
.
Magglio Ordonez opened the IOth with a
double off _Terry Mulholland ( 1-2) and
Carlos Lee singled before Konerko. who
came in batting .184, hit a 3- 1 pitch onto the
home run porch in left for his sixth homer.
Konerko had stranded runners in the sixth
and eighth before getting his clutch hit. '
Indians rookie starter Jason Stanford was
one out away from his first major league win
when Baez tielded Roberto Alomar's high

hopper and threw it
down the right-lield
line.
In the ninth, Baez
gave up a single to
Carl Everett and
walked Joe Crede
before Miguel Olivo
sacrificed.
Baez
retired Jose Valentin on a fly to left and it
appeared he'd closed out the White Sox
when Alomar chopped one down into the
din.
But the ball hung in the air long enough
that Baez had to rush hi s throw, and he fired
wide of first, letting both run nets score.
Stanford limited the White Sox to one run
and four hits in six innings of his second
career start. Despite his solid outing, he was
sent back to Triple-A Buffalo following the
game.
Milton Bradley had two RBi s and Coco
Crisp three hits off White Sox starter Mark
Buehrl e, who pitched into the eighth inning
and remained unbeaten in his last six starts.
Between games, the Indians recalled " ghthander Jake Westl:)rook to start the 7:05 p.m.
game aga inst Chicago's Mike Porzio,
recalled Friday night so he could make his
first start this season.
Stanford took a one-hit shutout into the
"

Please see Tribe, B1

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
The 0.0. Mcintyre Park
Di strict will supervise an
open track program from 7to
9 .p.m. each Tuesday begmning July 15 at the UniverSity
of Rio Grande.
There is no fee for the program, which wi II feature run- .
ning and jumping events
only. Children under ISyears-old must be accompanied by an adult .
For information , contact
Mark Danner at (740) 4464612, ext. 256.

Kyger·creek Little
_League Tournament
July 15-20
Kyger Creek Employees
·Club Cheshire, Ohio
Tuesday, July 1·5
Game 1 - Pomeroy Diamondbacl&lt;s v.
Racine, 6 p.m.
•
Game 2 - Pomeroy Mats v~ Syracuse, 8 p.m.
.
Wednesday, July 16.
Game 3 - Mason Yellow Jackets v. Rutland
Reds 1; 6 p~m.
Game 4 - New Haven Reds v. Rio Grande,
8 p.m.
Thursday, July 17
Game 5 - Chester v. Game 1 winner, 6 p.m.
Game 6 - Green .v. Game 2 wilmer, 8 p.m.
Friday, July 18
·
Game 7 - Rutland Reds 2 v. Game 3 winner,
6,p;m.
Game 8 - Gallipolis Devils v. Game 4 winner, 8 p.m.
Saturday, July 19
Semlfloals
Game 9 - Game 5 winner v. Game 6 winner,
6 p.m.
Game 10- Game 7 winner v. Game 8 win·
ner, 8 p.m.
Sunday, July 20
Home Run De.rby, 2 p.m.
Consolation, 5 p.m.
Championship, 7 p.m.
'

·'

'

.'

Fine fishing

McClintic Wildlife
Area haven for
local anglers
B,y

ANDRE

ltRADO

Staff writer
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - With all of the tishing action available in
Ma son. County during the
summer. local enthusiasts
can't afford to mi ss out on a
single opportunity.
The Ohio or Kanawha
rivers are usually the destination for many a deep-water
angler with a nice fishing
boat, while the more basic
fisherman may be content to
patrol the shores of Krodel
Lake looking for bass or
bluegill. '
·
However, some of the best,
and most overlooked. fishing
opportunities in Mason
County can be found at the
McClintic Wildlife Area's 18
ponds, with more to be added
in the future.
The rustic area is situated
on 3,655 acres in the former
TNT area near the State
. Farm Museum north of Point
Pleasant and features ponds
·large and small that are
stocked with bluegill , bass
and
channel
catfish.
Throughout the spring and
early summer, pond II was
repaired in preparation for
fishermen. Unfortunately,
spring rains caused the completion to be·moved back and
the pond is now slated to be
finished in ·early August.
"The dike was leaking and
we're trying to improve its

integrity. which will provide
easier access to fishing
opportunities," said Wildlife
Manager Dave McC lung.
·McClung also explained
that catching fish from some
of the ponds is tricky since
fishermen are required to
share the ponds with the
water fowl that are native to
the park.
"They're wetlands and
more of a habitat for waterfowl and just because there's
water there doesn't mean it's
specifically designed for
fishing."
Fonunately, many of the
ponds offer good fishing
opportunities with five new
ponds built in the last few
years and stocked with
bluegill, bass and channel
cats. One of the most impressive characteristics about the
McClinti c is the number and
variety of ponds that can be
reached.
The ponds are located in
almost every corner of' the
area and it's not hard to find
an isolated fishing spot in the
shade where you can spend
the day searching for the one'
that got away.
Taking a ride out to
McClintic and driving the
many roads and trails will
unearth many pl aces to fish
and gives fishermen a chance
to really get away from houses, cars, and people, while
still being close to your own
backyard.

One of the many ponds to be found in the McClintic Wildlife Area in Mason County is stocked
with bluegill. bass, and channel catfish: While trees that ring the pond offer fishermen a welcome relief from the heat, the fallen trees in the middle of the pond offer a prime refuge for
large mouth bass. (Andre Tirado)

Construction
continues on
Pond 11 in the
McClintic
Wildl ife Area
after facing setbacks caused
by an unusually
· wet spring.
(Andre Tirado)

Tour de France

Armstrong loses rivals in Alps
BY JOHN LEICESTER

Associated Press

Track program
at Rio Grande

from your home page. It's the good stuff that pages built for dialup can't do. Try it .

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SBC.COM/SBCYAHOO

Page Bl

Chicago 7, Cleveland 4, 10 innings

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) lmq's U.S.-Ied provisional government is in "the final stages"
of setting up a governing council that will be the fll'St national
Iraqr political body since the
fall of Saddarn Hussein's
. regime. No date has been set
for establishing the council, a
senior Western diplomat told
The Associated Press.
Several international media
outlets had reported the council
would be named this weekend,
and U.S. officials said Iraq's
American administrator, L. Paul
Bremer, would hold a news conference Saturday where he was
expected to announce the makeup of the council. The meeting
with reporters, however, was
canceled early Saturday. No reason was given.
The council will consist of
25-30 prominent Iraqis. It will
have the power to name ministers and select an independent central bank governor,
&lt;111d will be consulted by Iraq's
American leaders on all
important issue. It is meant to
be the forerunoer of a larger
constitutional assembly, that
will have about a year to draft
a new constitution. Free and
fair national elections to select
a fully sovereign Iraqi government are expected to follow.

,,

Scoreboard, Page 82
Youth sports photos, Page 83
NASCAR Weekend, Page 84
Young cheerleaders excel, Page 85
In the Open, Page 86

as chicken massala, goo! &lt;r muttoo
amy, a spicy cabbage dish. veg,
etable cunies and vegetable pilau.
.aloog with rice and Indian tea
Noolhausen was !lll1p'ised by
the frierdiness of the m:w and said
they have 00re everything possible
to make him reel welcome.
Among the Hruborl'est's highlights is the Tall Ships Challen~e,
a series of races in which 25 ships
are scheduled to participate
throughout the summer.

No date yet for
establishment of
Iraqi governing
council

PENDLETON, Ore. (AP)
- A convoy of patrol cars
and a black, armored van
creep through this cowboy
town, stopping in front of a
trailer off a gravel road.
Officers with guns and bulletproof vests pour forth and
insid,e,
shouting
barrel
"Police, police! Get down!"
Drug raids have become a way
of life in Oregon's rural Umatilla
County, known more for its
mnches and farms than as a playground for drug tr.tffickers.
Nonetheless, a convergence of economic and geographic factors have turned
the count)' into a haven for
drug crimmals.
Umatilla County is uniquely positioned for its size three major highways intersect within its rural boundaries. giving traffickers easy
access to Canada and
Mexico. At the satlle time,
severe budget cuts have left
only a handful of state troopers to patrol hundreds of
miles of back roads.
What's more, the county's
ag ricultural base provides an
ample supply of fertilizer, a
key ingredient for methamphetamines, ·and a growing
migrant population is used by
Mexican drug traffickers as
cover for their activities.

iunbap Qttmes ·itntind ·

Lance Armstrong rides past spectators sitting on a tractor
and cheering riders during the seventh stage of the Tour de
France Saturday cycling race between Lyon. central France ,
and Morzine-Avoriaz. French Alps. Armstrong finished 15th
in the first mountain stage and was second overall. (AP)

,.

MORZINE, France - Legs
whirring. shirt ope n. a silver
chain bouncing against his
chest, Lance Armstrong powered up the Tour de France's
lirst big climb. fans ' cheers
· ringing in hi s ears.
By the top of the Col de Ia
Ramaz, at 5,342 feet, two riders viewed as threats to
Armstrong 's quest for a
record-tying fifth straight
Tour title were struggling far
behind.
Other key challengers ,
however, stayed nearby.
Clearly. the road to Pari s
and victory is going to be

'·

long.
Enduring to the end ,
Richard Virenque of France
held on Saturday to wi n the
seventh stage, the Tour's
longest and the first of seven
days in the puni shing mountains.
Virenque, still a darling of
French cycling fans despite
his involvement in a drug
scandal that rocked the 1998
Tour, grabbed the front-runner's yellow jersey and the
spotted jersey for the bes_t
mountain climber.
" It's magic." the Quick
Step-Davitamon team member said. "I dared - today
was a day for taking dares."
Armstrong, aimin¥ to
match Miguel lndurain s fi ve

successive victories, finished
15th. 4 minutes, 6 seconds
behind . That put him second
overall,
2:37
behind
Virenque. with 13 days of racing to go.
On the 8.9-mile climb up to
the Ramaz pass, the 31-yearold Texan showed the determination that makes him so
feared .
With gray cliff faces tower-.
ing above. Armstrong and his
U.S. Postal .Service teammates picked up the pace.
Armstrong removed his sunglasses, uncovering eyes
almost glazed in concentration.
" Behind, exhausted riders
Piease IH Tour, B1

�.

.•

Page 82 • l§allipotig J9al(!l UJ:ribunt

Scoreboard
Waat Dlvlalon

Eut

W

L

, Pet.

At1anta ...............60

31

.659

OB

Philadelphla ....... 51
39 .567
8 ~~
Montreal .......... ..48 44 .522
12h
13
Florida ............. 48 45 .516
Now York .... .. .....39 52 .429
21
Centre!
WLPctGB

Houston ...... ...... .49
St. louis ............47
Chicago ............ 48

43
45
46

.533
.511
.500

49
54

.451
.449
.407

so

Clnclnnali...........41
Plt1st&gt;urgh ..........40
Milwaukee ......... 37

L

Pet.

38

600

Tolecto .............. ..46

48

489

10•

ColUmbus .......... 46

49

484

11

20. Greg Biffle ...... ........................... I ,707

Indianapolis ...... 41
52 .441
Frtday"aGamu
Buffalo 4 , Dumam 3
Pawtucket 3, Ch•rtotte 2
Natfolk 4, Indianapolis 3

15

2
7'~

n

1 1'11

Atlanta 9, Chicago Cubs 5
Aorida 5, Montreal 4
Phlladalphla 10, N.Y. Me1S 3

St, Louis 4, San Diego 2
Houston 4, Pittsburgh 2

Frontier League

Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 1

Ea1t Olvlalon

C&lt;Morado 7, Los Angeles 6
San Francisco 10, Arizona 7
satun:lay'a Gamea
Atlanta (Ramirez 8-2) at Chicago Cubs

W

San Francisco (J. WiiUams 4·1) at Arizona
(Schilling 4-3) , late
Florida (Redman 7·3) at Montreal
(L.Hernandez 8-6), late
Pittsburgh (Wells 2·4) at Houston
(Oswalt 5·4), late
Cincinnati (Haynes 1-9) at Milwaukee
(W.Franklin 5·5), late
los Angeles (Ashby 2·5) at Colorado
(Jennings 8·6), late
San Diego (OI.Perez 3-3) at St. Louis
(Stephenson 4·9), late
Sunday'• Game•
Florida (Willis 8-1} at Montreat {Vargas 6·

W

Philadelphia (Myers 9-6) at N.Y. Mets
(Giavine 6-9), 1:10 p.m.
Cincinnati (Graves 4-9) at Milwaukee
Houston

San Oiego (Eaton 4-7) at St. Louis
(Haren 0-2}, 2:10p.m.
Los Angeles (W.Aivarez o-1) at Colorado
(Neagle 2-2), 3:05p.m.

San Francisco (Brower 5-1) at Arizona
(Webb 6-2), 4:35p.m.

Atlanta (Reynolds 6-4) at Chicago Cubs
{Zambrano
8:05p.m.

s-n

Amarlcan League
1'1:1.

L
35
37

.593

2

Toronto ........ ......48
Baltimore .. ......... 41
Tampa Bay ........ 31

45

.516

9
14
24 t

48

.461

59

.344

41

.544

47
Chicago ............. 44
48
Cleveland .. ......... 40 · 52
Detroit .... .. .. ........ 24 66

.484
.478
.435
.267

Kansas City ....... 49
Mlnnesota .......... 44

GB

5'1,
6
I0
25

WHI
WLPctGB
SaaHie .............. 57 34 .626

Oakland ..... .... .. .. 52
Anaheim ..... ....... 47
Texas ............... 38

39
43
53

.571
.522
.418

5
eY1
19

Friday'a Gomoa

Pel.

W

GB

1

3~,
4~

11
19 ~:

GB

Kyger Creek Lillie League
Tournament
July t 5-20, 2003

Kyger CrHk EmpiO)'MI Club
Chelhlre, Ohio

Thunodoy, July 17 ·

p.m.
Frldoy, July II

Satunlay'a Gamu
Chicago White Sox 7, Cleveland 4, 10
innings, 1st game
Chicago White Sox (Porzio 0·0) at
Cleveland (Westbrook 3-4), tate
Minnesota (Radke 5·8) at Anaheim
(Washburn 7·9), tate
N.Y. Yankees (Musslna 10-5) at Toronto
(Halladay 12-2), tate
Baltimore (Hentgen 1·5} at Oakland
(Halama 2·4), late
Boston (P.Martinez 6-2) at Detroit
(Roney 1·3), lale

Kansas City (Lima 4-0) at Texas (Valdes
7-5), lale

Tampa Bay (Zambrano 5-4) at Seattle
(Meche 10·4), late
Sunclay'e Gamet
N.Y. Yankees (Weaver .. -7) at Toronto
(Escobar 5·5), 1:05 p.m.
Boston (Wakefield 6·3) at Detroit
(Ledezma 2-2), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago Mlite Sox (Garland 6 - 7~ at
Cleve la ~d (Traber 4·5), 1:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Lohse 6-7) at Anatleim
(lackey 6-8), 4:05p.m.
Tampa Bay (Bell 1·2) at Seattle (Pineiro
10·5), 4:05p.m.

Baltimore (Johnson 7·4) at Oakland (Zito
8-6). 4:05p.m.

Kansas City (May 3·4) at Texas (Mounce
1-2), 8:05p.m.

Game 7 - Rutland Reds 2 v. Game 3
winner, 6 p.m.
· Game 6 - Gallipolis Devils v. Game 4
winner, 8 p.m.
Soturdoy, July 19

Semifinal•
Game 9 - Game 5 winner v. Game 6
winner, 6 p.m.
Game 10 - Game 7 winner v. Game 8
winner, 8 p.m.
Sunday, July 20
Home Run Derby, 2 p.m.
Consolation, 5 p.m.
Championship, 7 p.m.

Auto racing
NASCAA Wlnllon Cup .
The 2003 NASCAR Winston Cup sched~
u!e and standings, with winners in parentheses:
Feb. 16- Daytona 500, Daytona Beach,
Fla. (Michael Waltrip)
Feb. 23 - Subway 400, RockinQ_ham,
N.C. (Oale Jarrett)
March 2 - UAW·DaimterChrysler 400,
Las Vegas. {Man Kenseth)
March 9 - Atlanta 500, Hampton. Ga .
(Bobby Labonle)

March 16 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
400, Darlington, S.C. (Ricky Craven)
March 23- Food City 500. Bristol, Tenn .
(Kurt Busch)

South Atlantic League
Northern Dlvlalon
W
L Pet.

Tuoaday, July 15

,Game 1 - Pomeroy Diamondbacks v.
Racine, 6 p.m.
Game 2 - Pomeroy Mets v. Syracuse, 8
p.m.
W8dnesday, Julv 16
Game 3 - Mason Yellow Jackets v.
Rutland Reds 1, 6 p.m.
Game 4 - New Haven Reds v. Rio
Grande, 8 p.m .
Game 5 - Chester v. Game 1 winner, 6
p.m. •
Game 6 - Green v. Game 2 winner, 8

Boston 5, Detroit 3
Cleveland 12. Chicago White Sox 5
N.Y. Yankees 8, Toronto 5
Kansas City 13, Texas 3
Anaheim 5, Minnesota o
Oaktand 2, Baltimore 0
Seattle 4, Tamp&amp; Bay 3

Greensboro ....... 14
x-Lake County ... 13
Hagerstown ....... 11
LeXIngton ........... 11
Lakewood .......... 10
Charleston, WV .10
Delmarva .............8
Kannapolis ........... 6
Southam

L

L

Pet.

L

:1

~~

3

3
3'·
9"

Pel.

GB

Los Angeles ...... 15
3 .833
Houston ............. 10
7 .588
4~
Seattle ....... .. ......... 9
7 .563
5
Minnesota ............9
8 .529
5'it
SacrSmento .........B 11 .421
7~
San Antonio ......... 6 11 .353
8~
PhoenlJ1 ............ .. .3 14 .176
11 'h
Saturday'a Game
All-Star Game at New York, tate
Tl.leedav'• Gam~a
SacramentO at Cleveland, Noon
Washington at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Phoenix at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Pro soccer
Major League Soccer
Euter11 Conference
WLTPtaGFGA

MetroStars .... .. 7
Chicago ......... 6

4
3

3
4

24
22

22
23

18
17

New England .. 5

3

5

20

22

20

Columbu$ ....... 5

5 4

19

19

18

D.C. Un~ed .... .3

5

6

15

17

17

Weatern Conference
WLTPtaGFGA

San Jose ........ 6
Kansas City .. 5

2 6
3 6

24 20
21 26

17
22

Los Angeles ... 3

6

16

18

7

17

GB

7

.667
8 .619
9 .550
10 .524
10 .500
11 .476
13 .381
15 .286
DIVIIIon

1
2 ~,

3
3%
4
6
8

W

L

Pet.

GB

11-Hickory .......... 14
Capital City ........ 11
Charleston, SC .. 12

1

1
9

.667
.611
.571

n,

Asheville ............ ll

10

.524

3

Rome ..................9
Savannah ............9
S. Georgia ......... 8
Augusta ...............5

9
10
12
15

.500
.474
.400
.250

3 ~,

2

4
5Y,
B~.

x·won ftrel he.tf
Frlday'a G•mB
Charleston, SC 7, A&amp;h8\l~le 1
Charleston, WV 7. Kannapolis 3
Greensboro 4, Le~~:ington 0
Hagerstown 4, Delmarva 2
Hickory 6, South Georgia 6, camp. of
susp. game
Hickory 6, South Georgia 1
Lakewood 5, Lake County 1
Augus1a 1. Rome 0
Capllal Cl1y 2, savannah 1

March 30 - Samsun~adloShack 500,
Fort Worth, Texas. (Ryan Newman)
April 6 - Aaron's 499, Talladega, Ala
(Dale Ea(nherdl Jr.)

Aprlt 13- Virginia 500, Martinsville. (Jeff
Gordon)

April 27...,... Auto Club 500, Fontana, Calif.
(Kurt Busch)

May 3 . - Pontiac Excitement 400,
Richmond, Va. (Joe Nemechek)
May 25 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord,
N.C. (Jimmie Johnson)
June 1 - MBNA America 400, Dover,
Del. (Ryan Newman)
June 8 -Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
(Tony Stewar1)
June 15 - Sirius Satellite Radio 400,
Brooklyn, Mich. (Kurt Busch}
June 22.- DodgeSave Mart 350,
Sonoma, Calif. (Robby Gordon)
July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
(Grog Biffle)

July 13 - Troplcana 400, .Joliet, II!.
July 20 - New England 300, Loudon,
N.H.

July 27 - Pennsylvania !00, Long Pond.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug. 10 - Sirius at The Glen. Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
Aug . 17- Michigan 400, Brooklyn.
Aug . 23- Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Aug. 31 - Southern 500, Darlington,
S.C.

htunlllv'• O•me•

Sept. 6 ...... Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 14 - New Hampshire 300,
Loudon .

Asheville at Savannah ..late
Augusta at South Georgia, late
Capital City at Charlelton, SC, •Iate
Charleston, WV at Kannapolis, tate

Sept 21 Sept 26 -

Delmarva at Lakewood, late
Greensboro a( Lexington, late

Do""'
400, Dover, Del.
EA Sporta 500, Talladego,

Ala.

Hickory al Rome, lalo

Oct. 5 - Banquet 400, Kansas City, t&lt;an.

Lake County at ~ageratown, late

Ocl. II UAW·GM Ouollly 500,
Concord, N.C.
Ocl. 19 Old Dominion 500,

Sundoy'aQomu

Athevllle at Savannah
Augullo al Soulh Georgia
Capllal Cl1y al Charloolon, SC

Martinavltle, va:·

Charleaton, WV at l&lt;annapolla
O.lmarva at Lakewood
Greensboro at Lexington
Hk:kory at Acme
Lake COUnty at Hagarstown

Nov. 2 - Checker Auto Parts 500,
Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 9- Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn

Oct 26 - Georgia 500, Hamplon.

400, Rockingham , N.C.

Nov. 18 - Ford 400, Homeattad, Fla.
Driver 8111ndlnga •

lntamillonal Llligua
North Dlvlolon
W
Buffalo ............... 82
~wtucket .......... 51

L
39

Pet.
.571

QB

.,

.Mot

,~

Ottawa ............ ...49
SCranton .......... ..47
Rochester .......... 44
Syracuu ........... 38

45
47
49
52

.!21
.500
.473
.422

4'.1
6'1.
9
13'1.

Cok&gt;rado ....... 4 8 3 15 17 26
Dallas ............. 2 7 4
10 14 24
NOT!: Three polnt1 tor victory, one
point lot tie.

Saturday'e Games
MetroStars a1 New England, tate
Dallas at Kansas Ci ty, late
D.C. United at Chicago, late
Colorado at San Jose, late
Wftdneaday, July 16
Dallas at New England, ~~30 p.m.
Salurday, July 19
San Jose at D.C. United, 4 p.m.
Kansas City at Columbus, 7:30p.m.
New England at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
MetroStars at Dallas, 9 p.m.

Transactions

SouthDivlalon

W

L

Pet.

Durham ..............48
Norfolk ............... 47
Chorlo11e ............ 4-4

43
46
49

527
.505
.473

2
5

Richmond .......... 42

54

.438

81,1, I

Ql

from Page 81
sixth when the White Sox got three straight
singles and pulled to 3-1 on Lee's two-out
RBI single.
Stanford, though, got Konerko on a fly to
deep left for the final out
The White Sox closed to 3-2 in the eighth
a~ainst reliever David Riske, whose wild
p1tch allowed Fmnk Thomas to advance to
second . He scored on Lee's two-out double.
But Riske got Konerko to ground out to
end the inning. ·
Cleveland scored in the bottom half when
Bradley and Jody Gerut executed a double
steal, and Alomar let catcher Olivo's throw

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed lo

terms with OF Ryan Sweeney. Recalled
LHP Mike Porzio from Charlotte of the
International League·. Optioned RHP Dan
Wright to Charlotte.
KANSAS

CITY

ROYALS-Ac11&gt;aled

RHP Runetvys Hernandez tram the 15-day
disabled list. Optioned LHP Chris George
to Omaha of the PCL.
OAKLAND

ATHLETICS-Agreed

lo

terms wllh SS Omar Quintanilla.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Agreed to

terms with SS Heath Kelly.
TEXAS

RANGERS-Traded

RHP

lJgueth Urbina tq the Florida Marlins for 1B
Adrian Gonzalez, OF Will Smith, and LHP
Ryan Snare. 'Activated LHP Aaron Fultz
from thlt 15-day disabled list.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Announced
LHP Doug Davis has declined a minor
league assignment and has opted tor free
agency.
National league
LOS ANG~LES DODGERS-Placed
RHP Kevin Brown on the 15·day disabled
list, retroactive to July 4, and Ron Coomer
on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive 1o
July 8. Recalled AHP Alfredo Gonzalez
from Jacksonville of the Southern League
and INF-OF Chin·Feng Chen from Las
Vegas of the PCL

Tour
from Page 81
began t,o peel away. Among them: Giro
d'ltalia champion Gilberta Simoni and
Santiago Botero, the best climber on the
2000 Tour. By the finish, both lost more than
6:00 to Armstrong, with Botero 74th and
Simoni 77th.
"It was good," said Armstrong ·s
spokesman, Jogi Muller. "We already have
two challengers - Botero and Simoni out of the reckoning."
Now for the rest.
Those who stayed with Armstrong included 1997 Tour winner Jan Ullrich, Spaniards
lban Mayo and Jo seba Beloki, and
American Tyler Hamilton, mcing despite
breaking ,his collarbone in a crash on the
Tour 's second day.
Ullrich, coming back from a doping ban
and knee operations, looks particularly
strong. He trails Armstrong by 38 seconds
overall. Beloki, the 2002 runner-up, is 32
seconds behind. .
"Ullrich is a big motor: He has won here
and compeled several times," Muller said.
"If his knee is holding up then he is one of
the main threats, no question."'
A key day comes Sunday. with the 8,728foot Galibier pass.
"Lance said today was very hard, but
we're not worried about the position at the
moment. The real test for us is tomorrow,
with the Col du Galibier," Muller said.
"He's very confident about it."
At 142.9 miles, with three passes over
3,300 feet, Saturday's leg from Lyon and
temperatures in the 80s proved too much for
seven riders who dropped out. They included Italy's Alessandro Petacchi, the sprint

MONTREAL EXPOS- Placed LHP Seon

Stewart on the 15-day disabled , list .
Transfefred AHP Tony Armas Jr. from the
15- to the 60-day disabled list. Announced
RHP Bryan Hebson has been claimed off
waivers by the Boston Red 8011 .
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Piaced 38

DBvid Bell on the 15-day disabled list
Activated INF Tyler Houston from the 15·
day disabled list.
PIITSBURGH PIRATES- Signed Lloyd

MCClendon, mahager, to a contract extension through 2004.
BASKETBALL

Nlllonal Balketball Alaoclatlon
INDIANA PACERs-Named Lorry Bird

president or basketball operations.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS - Nomad

Mike Dunleavy coach.
NEW JERSEY NETS-Agreed to terms
with G Jason t&lt;idd on a six-year contract.
Signed G Zoran Planlnic to a three-year
contract.
NEW ORLEANS HORNETS-Signed F

David West to a three-year contract.
WASHINGTON WIZARDS-Announced
the resignation ot Fred Whitfield, director of
player personnel.
FOOTBALL
National Football Laegue

NFL-Suspended Green Bay LB
Torrance Marshall lour games for violating
th8 league's substance abuse policy and
Minnesota TE Byron Chamberlain four
games for violating th e teague's policy on
banned substanc:es.
CINCINNATI BENGALS-Signed LB

Khalid Abdullah to a three -year contract.

HOCKEY
N1tlonal Hockey Ltague
ATLANTA

THRASHERS-Signed

F

Tomml Santala.
FLORIDA ~ANTHER8-Signed RW MBJC

Blrbraer to a one-year contract.
MONTREAL CANADIENS-Signed F

Alexander Perezhogln to a three-year con·
tract.
NEW JERSEY DEVIL8-Announcad lhe
ol D Ken Daneyko.
SAN JOSE SHARK8-Re-slgned C

retl~ement

Gallipolis Hometown Dealer

GENE JOHNSON

much going, but I just told
myself to be patient, keep
hanging in there," Perry said.
"My goal was to stay within
two shots of the lead to have
a shot Sunday.
"And the next thing you
know, I made four birdies on
the back nine, birdied three
in a row on 15, 16 and 17,"
Perry said. "I look up and I
got the lead of the tournament It's kind of crazy."
Twenty-eight players are
within five shots of the lead.
"It's going to take a 4 or 5
under for me tomorrow to
win this thing because I think
that with everybody bunched
around like this, somebody's
going to shoot a good
round," Perry said.
Kelly said he bets that will
be Perry, who won the
Colonial and Memorial tour·
namenls this year and has
won four times in the I0
tournaments he's held a 54·
hole lead.
Kelly returned to his old
putter, which broke during
Friday's rain delay, forcing
him to use a replacement.
"I reattache~ the old putter
las( night," Kelly said. "I
know it's a bit off, but it's
good enough. I just misread
some putts."
He wasn'tthe onl)l one.

CHEVROLET

.

7 40-446-3672
CHIYT
WI'UIITHIU-

2000 GMC Jimmy 4X4

Thirty-ni ne boys and girls participated in the annual Baby Blue Basketball Camp, conducted by Jim Osborne at the First Church
of the Nazarene Family Life Center. The following players won contests : Dribble Tag- first place, Andrew Owens; second place,
Wade Martin; third place, and Cody Wandling. X-out- first place, Evan Moore; second place. Wade Martin; and third place, Kyle
Love. Staff members included Heath McKinniss, Tom Bose, Donnie Johnson, Cody Caldwell and Zach Shawver. The following
businesses contributed to the camp: Bob Evans Restaurants. Coca Cola, Coaches Corner, The Movie Station, Shake Shoppe,
Spring Valley Cinema , Kipling Shoes, Gallipolis City Recreation Department, Lorobi's Pizza, Family Oxygen Supply and Zide's
Sport SJ1op.

2 Door. SLS Pk2 with Power
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Wheels and MORE!!!

2002 JeeP LibertY 4x4·s

Raider Basketball Camp

bounce off his glove and into center for an
error.
Bradley's two-run double gave the Indians
a 2-0 lead in the first. Ben Broussard made
it 3-0 in the fourth with a sacrifice flv.
Buehrle gave up four runs -two-earned
-and eight hits m 7 1-3 innings.
Notes: Jacobs Field has hosted II previous day-night doubleheaders, includ.ing a
three-team one on Sept. 25, 2000, when the
White Sox and Minnesota Twins both visit·
ed the Jake on the same day . ... The Indians
were expected to make another roster move
before the night game. Earlier, they placed
OF Matt Lawton on the 15-day disabled list
with a dislocated right middle finllcr.
Lawton got hurt while swinging at a pnch
Friday night I B Travis Hafner was recalled
from Buffalo .... Alomar made two errors.
sensation of this Tour. who won four of six
relatively flat early stages.
"It was a bit of a shock to hit the mountains for the first time," said Armstrong's
teammate, George Hincapie, who tinished
93rd. "Overall the team d1d pretty OK."
Tens of thousands of fans lined the route
through alpine foothills and passes, turning
the stage into a daylong celebration of
cycling.
Fans spray-painted slogans such as "AIIez
Armstrongl" on the road . Families pic·
nicked facing snow,capped peaks. Villages
had barbecues and parties before the racers
zoomed past.
Yirenque broke away with a small group
of riders early in the sta~e and held on, pow. enng over peaks. He ra1sed his arms in victory as he crossed the line a! Morzine. Last
year, he won the climb up Mont Yentoux.
marking his comeback from a doping ban.
. Virenque was a member of the Festina
t~am that was kicked out of the I998 Tour
after customs officers found banned drugs in
a team car. In the trial that followed ,
Yirenque testified about systematic drug
abuse within his team and cycling in gener-

LocallY owned and nice!
2 TO CHOOSE fROM!!!

200 I GMC Sonoma
Extended Cab

Per

miles, Auto.
Transmission. V6. Power Windows
and Locks. AND MORE!!!

These area yo ungste rs participated in the recent Raider Basketball Camp, conducted by River Valley High School coach Gene
Layton . Contest winners were as folltlws: Group I girls, Hot Shot- Sarah Rustemeyer; Free Throw-Tosha Alexander;
Bal lhandling- Tosha Alexander; Group I boys. Hot Shot- Tyler Noble: Free Throw-Cody Wimmer: Ballhandling-Trey Noble;
Group II girls. Hot Shot- Rachel Walburn; Free Throw- Rachel Walburn: Ballhandling- Chelsea Stowers; Group II boys, Hot
Shot-Zack Dee I; Free Throw- Zack Deel; Ballhandling- Chris Misner. Campers of the week were Colt Holstein and Karl Carter.

2002 Chevy Trailblazer

T-ball Champs
1

Leather Interior. 16 Em!ine,
Auto Trans .. Power Windows
and
Tilt. Cruise!

al.

His admission of doping led to a sevenmonth ban that kept him out of the 200 I
Tour.
.
Yirenque long has been known as a
climber, taking the King of the Mountains
title at five previous Tours. He has six career
stage victories in the event.
But given Armstrong's strength, Virenque
doesn't expect to keep the overall lead lo the
finish in Paris on July 27.
"I used up a lot of watts today. I'm sure
I'll pay it for it," the Frenchman said. "If I
keep the yellow jersey for another one or
two days, it will be a bonus. I can finish my
career now without regrets."

2000 Chevy Ext. Cab 4X4

Patrick Marleau, C Marcel Goc and D Rob
Davison.

SOUT

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Signad D

Bryan Marchman! to one-year contract.
VANCOUVER CANUCK8-,qe-olgnad F

Brad May to a two-veer contract

1111PGIITIAC
QRUII PRIX IT

SOCCER
Mejor Ltegue Soccer
LOS ANGELES GALAXY-Acqulrad D

Ryan Suarez, MF Anlonlo Martinez. D--MF
Paul Broome, and a condlllonal 2004 draft
pick !rom Dalla&amp; for 0 Ezra Hendrlokaon, F
Gavin Gllnton, and a 2004 flrll•round draft

sport

-IS. r.:'!
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11,995

1

13,995
2002 CIEYY
TIIACKEII4X.

GRAND Alllll GT

111211. AulD,

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tact. warranty, auto. air. till ,
aulse, power windows &amp; loeb.
AM.fM. CO. sporl-~

8885

See monday's Tribune, Regist~r and Sentinel for complete
c~uerage of tbe DftSCAR Wmston Cup Troplcana 400

1

11,995

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS SUPERSTORE
!

"Call us for
the best

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www.seimports.com

ROCHESTER-Named Anna KPwoina
UASINUS-Namad Wayna McKinney

The Green Giants t-ball team finished their season with a 13-0 record , won the OVAA Division 2 championship and the Kyger
Creek T-ball Tournament. Front row, from left, Matthew Bailey. Devon Barnes, Kendra Barnes, Olivia Woodward. Chelsea Copley,
Maddison Si1Jers, Mackenzie Frum and Ryleaigh Caldwell. Second row, from left, Tommy White, Emma Collins, Isaac Sheets,
Jared Riffle , Brandi El lis, Carli Dillon and Kaylei Muncy. Back row, coaches John Copley and Danny Woodward . The team was
sponsored by atto rney Brent Saunde rs and Overbrook Center.

flOW, IO,OII(i mile•. bol. of

looks &amp; seat, sport
wl!eels,VG.

Dol&gt;ba

men'a and women's tenrils coach.

air. llh.

erulaa, powflr windows.

men's baaketball coach.

men'a soccer coach.

111140, Auto. air. tilt. cruiSe .
power Windows, locks, leather
s•t &amp; POWir sunroot , Vli,
2 door, SPOrt whtllls

11HPOIITIAC

men'a crou country coach, Jerry Wimberly
women's bASketball coach, and Stephan
Fenton women 's volleyball coach.
HAMLINE-Named Andrew Hanson
men'• an,d women's swimming and dlvtng
coach.
PACIFIC-Named Guido Baumann
director of tsnnla and man's tannla coach.
Sherry

1tll HOIIDA
ACCORD EX

f11111, V6. au10, 1111. till.

COLLEGE

POTSDAM-Named

IMPORTS SUPERSTORE

CfOIM, windows, loeb
&amp; teal, AMIFII, CO, low ml1o~

plcl&lt;. Wai'IOd MF Joae RaHz.

2. Dolo Eomhardt Jr........................2,371
3. Jeff Gordon .........·........................2,348
4. Bobby labon18 .................... ........ 2,296
s. Michael Wall rip ........................... 2, 159

'

Tribe

MLB-Fined Pittsburgh 1B Randell
Simon $2,000 and suspended him three
games, retroactive to July 10, for his
actions in Milwaukee on July 9. Suspended
Minnesota LHP Kenny Rogers five games
for intentionally throwing at Cleveland OF'
Milton Bradley and Minnesota manager
Ron Gardenhire one game for intentional
actions of Rogers af1er a warning had been
issued during a game on July 3.
American League

BLOOMFIELD-Named M~heol Gront

8. Kevin Horvlck .............................. 2,049
9. Rualy Wallac. ............................. 2,019
10. Sra~lng Marlln ............................ l ,998
II . Tony Slewa~ .............................. 1,949
12. Mark Martin .............................. 1,949
13. Terry l.abonlo ............................. l ,910
14. Jill Burton .................................1,907
15. Robby Gordon..
.. ................... 1,an

EKLY SPEC

BASEBALL
Major League Baseball

1. Man ~nseth ...............................2,551

6. Jimmie Johnaon .......................... 2,079
7. Kurt BUICh .................: ................ 2.087

is two strokes back at 204,
and six players are three
shots off the pace.. -'
"The course played harder
the first two days, but
nobody really di~ anything,"
Blake said. "I feel fortunate
that I'm still in it just a stroke
back."
The rain and wind that
hampered play the first two
days lightened up Saturday,
and sun and light breezes
seemed the perfect prescription for lower scores.
But the only golfer who
made a big move was
Pappas, who trimmed seven
shots off the lead with his
round, tied for the best at the
ioumament
"It was an interesting day. I
caught fire at the end of the
(front) nine," said Pappas,
whose best finish in 44 PGA
Tour events was third at this
year's Chrysler Classic of
Tucson
"I thought with 5 or . 6
under I would get within
shouting distance of the
lead," Pappas said. "Mission
accomplished."
He and Jeff Gallagher (67)
were the only two golfers out
of 80 who shot bogey-free
rounds.
Perry was having a
mediocre round himself even-par through 10 holes before collecting four birdies
to jump into the lead.
"I couldn't seem to get

MILWAUKEE (AP) Kenny Perry never expected
to be in the lead after three
rounds at the Greater
Milwaukee Open, especially
not at only 8 under par.
The 6, 759-yard Brown
Deer Park course, one of the
shortest on the PGA Tour,
usually produces scores
much lower than that after 54
holes.
But rain, winds and a
change of a par-5 hole to par4 with the removal of a large
oak tree have made things
tougher this year.
The fairways on the par-70
layout were soft, the pin
placement was difficult and
the notorious! y thick rough is
putting the U.S. Open to
shame.
"I think it"s just a combination of everything," Perry
said. "It's all showing. The
scores are not very good."
Perry, who finished in the
top five each of the last three
years at the GMO, grabbed
the lead at 202 with a 4under 66 Saturday.
Brenden Pappas, who
carded a 63, was among a
half-dozen golfers one stroke
behind. Jay Don Blake (71),
the 36-hole leader, also was
at 203, along with Jerry
Kelly (70), Heath Slocum
(68), Steve Allan (68) and
Patrick Sheehan (70).
. Shigeki Maruyama (69),
who won here two years ago,

GB ,

.615

Central
WLPetGB

'

Pet.

W

Charlotte ......... 12
6 .667
Detroit ................ 1o
5 .667
Indiana ............ .1 0
7 .588
Cleveland ............. B
8 .500
New York ............. 7
7 .500
Connectfcut ........ .9 10 .474
Washlng1on ........ .2 14 .125
Weatern Conference

Youth baseball

Eaat

W
NewYork .... .. .....56
Bos1on .... .. .......54

Woman's National Basketball
Aeaoclatlon
EaetemCOn..,.nce

Kenosha .......... 24 18 .571
Rockford .... .. ...... 23 20 .535
1'!,
Gateway ...... .. .. 22 20 .524
2
Cook County ..... 22 23 .489
3Y,
River City ......... 19 25 .432
6
Mid·MissourL ..... 18 27 .400
7 ~,
Friday's Game•
Chillicothe 7, Florence 2
Cook County 6, Rockford 4
Evansville 5, Richmond 3. 12 innings
River City 4, Gateway 3
Kenosha 6, Mid-Missouri 2
Kalamazoo 5, Washington 4
Saturday's Gam••
Chillicothe at Evansville, late
Aorence at Kalamazoo, late
Gateway at Mid-Missouri, late
Kenosha at Cook County, late
Richmond at Washington, late
Roektord at River City, 1st game, late
· Rockford at River City, 2nd game, late
Sunday'l Game•
Chillicothe at Evansville
Florence at Kalamazoo
Gateway at Mid-Missouri
Kenosha at Cook County
Richmond at Washington
Rockford at River City

4), 1:05 p.m.

al

L

Evansvlne ......... 29 15 .659
Chillicothe ... ...27 15 .643
Washington ...... 25 18 .581
Alchmond ........ 25 20 .556
Kalamazoo ........ 18 26 . 409~
Florence ... .. ......... 9 34 .209
Wa1t Dlvl1lon

(Ciemenl6-7), I :15 p.m.
Philadelphia (Duckworth 3·3) at N.Y.
Mats (Seo 5-S) , 1:20 p.m.

:!Sunlliw l!:imrs -:!Srntmrl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

As usual, Perry has
great shot at GMO

16. Ryan Newman . ...............
17. Ricky Craven .......

Pro basketball

Rochestar 7; Richmond 4

WLPctGB
San Francisco ... 56 36 .509
Arizona ............ 51
41
.554
5
Los Angeles ...... 48 43 .527
7'12
Colorado ............ 49
46 .516
8'&gt;
San Diego ......... 35 59 .372
22
Frldoy'o Gamu

(Kinney 6-7), 2:05p.m .
Plltsburgh !Fogg 5·3)
(Redding 5-8). 2:05p.m.

GB

Columbus 8, Syracuse 7, 11 Innings
ScrantonWUI&lt;es-Barre 8, Toledo 7
·
SaturdiY'I GamM
Buffalo at Syracuse, late ·
Columbus at Toledo, late
Indianapolis at Louisville, 1a1e
Norfolk at oumam, late
~wtucket a1 Rochester, tate
Richmond at Charlotte, late
ScrantonWIIkes-Barre at Ottawa, late
Sundliv'• Game•
Buffalo at Syracuse
Columbus at Toledo
Indianapolis at Louisville
Norfolk at Durham
Pawtucket at Rochester
Rtchmond at Charlotte
Scranton-Wilkes-Barre .at Ottawa

Wnt

;

W
Loulsville............ 57

1,833
.1 ,831
18. EllioH Sad1er ............................. I ,n3
19. BiH Elliott ................................. 1,n2

Louisville 4, Ottawa 1

3

Sunday, July 13,' 2003

PGA

Pro baseball
National League

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

592-2497 • 93 Colun~bua Road
We Don't Pressure The Customer ... We Pf'fJssure The Competition!

I

.

'I"-

-- -

---------

·- \ -

.....

�PageB4

NASCAR Weekend
Reborn Stewart keeping his cool

Driver
Matt Kenseth

2,551

16

2.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2,371

14

3.

Jeff Gordon

2,348

13

4.

Bobby Labonte

2,296

10

5.

Michael Waltrip

2,159

17

6.

Jimmie Johnson

2,079

17

7.

Kurt Busch

2.067

16

8.

Kevin Harvick

2,049

14

9.

Rusty Wallace

2,019

7

1 0. Sterling Marlin

1,998

6

SOURCE: NASCAR

Tony Stewart climbs out of his car Friday after taking the pole for Sunday's Tropicana
400 at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Ill. Stewart took the pole with speed of
184.786 mph. (AP)

Speedway
I
Pit road

TV schedule (EDT)
Friday, qualifying (Speed
Channel, 4 p.m .); Sunday, race
(NBC, 3 p .m.)
Next race- New England 300
July 20, Loudon, N.H .

Driver standings
Top 10

Joliet, Ill.
Sunday, July 13
Date
Kevin Harvick
2002 winner
Race length , 267 laps, 400 .5 mi.
Kevin Harvick
Race record
121 .200 mp~ July 15,2001
Qualifying record Todd Bodine
183.717 mph , 2001

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10 .

Matt Kenseth
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Jeff Gordon
Bobb~ Labonte
Michael Waltri12
Jimmie Johnson
Kurt Busch
Kevin Harvick
Rusty Wallace
Sterling Marlin

Keep up ·
with your
favorite
NASCA A
Winston
Cup
drivers
right here
'

Points
2,551
2,371
2,348
2,296
2,159
2,079
2,067
2,049
2,019
1,998

·.

'

c

Pltchet;S (W-L,

Braves

OF

OF

ER4;;llj,ves

Kevin Brown
Dodgers, 10-4, 2.30
Kerry Wood
Cubs. 8·6, 3.36
Mark Prior
Cubs, 8-3, 2.54

Woody Willi Ifill~
Cardinals. 1

Russ Ortiz
Braves, 11-4, 3.50

Reserves

AP

Bidwell - Brown's Trustworthy Hardware
2:00-3:00 p.m., 12:45 pm Phone#740-446-8828

Gallipolis -The Feed Shop
4:00-5:00 p.m., Phone# 740-446-3333
*We will match any competitors advertised price of the same type and
size of fish. except on large mouth bass.
To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call: 1-800-247-26 15

ders do not have to be placed in advan~
·

FARLEY'S FISH FARM

Andruw Jones
Brave s, OF
PrQston Wilson

Paul Lo Dues
Dodgers , C
Riehle Saxon
Brewers, 1B
Jose Vldro
Expos. 2B

The All-5tars Unlimited Twinkle Stars·

American
lchiro
Suzuki

All-Stars Unlimited continues
., tradition of excellence
GALLIPOLIS - The Cheer Station's All
Stars Unlimite(l cheerleaders snatched up
another five National Championship titles, a
first place fini sh, a first runner-up, an sixth
place ranking at the 2003 National
Cheerleading Competitions. The events were.
held by American Cheer Power in Columbus,
Ohio and by the All Star Challenge in
Baltimore, Maryland . The combined allendance at the two National Events was over
30,000 and involved 8,200 cheerleaders from
20 different states.
At Baltimore. the All Stars Unlimited. along
with other patticipams enjoyed dinner and
music at the Hard Rock Cafe and a private
Dolphin Show at the Inner Harbor Aquarium.
At the Cheer Power National Competition
Magie Bostic won her National Title in the
best tumbling past contest. Magie is a second
grader at Green Elementary and the daughter
of Brett and T1ffany Bostic of Gallipolis. Also
at the Cheer Power Nationals , Kayla Rose and
Courtney Reuter earned their third consecutive National title for best duo dance. Aubrey
Rice and Kayci Waugh successfully defended
their National title in the best duo cheer division. al so winnin g for the third year if! a row.
· .Kayla is· the llaughter uf Karen Rose of
Bidwell and Cou rtney is the daughter of Scott
and Lisa Rueter of Gallipolis. Kayci Waugh is
the daughter of Rick and Wendy Waugh and a
sixth grader at Oak Hilt. While fifth-grader
Aubrie Rice attends Vinton Elementary
School and is the daughter of Randy and
Robin Ri i·e of Vinton. Ashly Curry of
Gallipoli s is the daughter of Mark Curry and
Gigi Campbell, Sara Cravens, daughter of
Robin Cra vens of Wellston grabbed a I st.
place fin ish in the junior Varsity Division of
best duo cheer.
· Shaina Filinger, the third-grade daughter of
Kelly Filinger uf Gallipolis, earned six.th place
in the besl cheerleader division rounding out

a

the All Stars Unlimited competitors. These
National Titles and sixth-place finish all
accrued at the American Cheer Power
National Cheerleading Competition held in
the greater Columbus Convention Center in
Columbus, Ohio.
Traveling on to Baltimore, Md., the All
Stars Unlimited Cheer teams competed for
two days in the All Star Challenge National
Team Championships. There they picked up
two more National Titles and a first runnerup.
The Twinkle Stars Unlimited have now won
the National Championship for six years
straight one for every year since they formed.
Their 1998 and 200 I titles were won at Myrtle
Beach, S.C., 1999 and 2000 titles were won at
Charlotte, N.C., at the USA Cheerleading
Federation Championships, 2002 was won in
Columbus, Ohio, and this year's National
Title in Baltimore, Md.
The Twinkle Stars, which is made up of second through fourth-graders , and the Mini All
Stars which was formed just this year for
grades kindergarten through second, both won
the fide of National Champions in their divisions. The Youth All Stars were named first
runner up in their division also at the All Star
Challenge in Baltimore, Md . Members from
all three teams come from Gallia, Meigs,
Mason, Vinton and Jackson counties.- In the
past six. years of competitions. the Cheer
Station's All Starts Unlimited, cheer team
stunt teams, duo cheer, duo dance, individual
cheer and dance teams Championship Tides.
These teams and individuals train at the
Cheer Station and Tumbling Center and are
coached by Becky Rothgeb. New members
are now being accepted for cheer teams to
compete at the Junior Olympics in July at
Detroit, Mich., and also at the Paramount
Kings Island competition during Labor Day
weekend.

Edgar
Martinez

Pitchers (W-L,
Carter
I Rays, 14\ 4.17
etoo.hl Haoegawa
. 3', 0.81

Eddie Guardado
Twins, 20' , 3.41
Brendan Donnelly
Angels. 1'. 0.41
Keith Foulke
Athletics. 22' . 2.53

Esteban Loaiza
White Sox, 11·4,
Roy Halladay
Blue Jays, 12·2,
Jamie Moyer
Mariners, 11-5, 2.99

Reserves
Ramon Hernandez
Athlebcs. C
Jaoon Glambl
Yankees. 1B
Brei Boone
Mariners, 28

Tigers, OF
AP

SOURCES: Major League Baseball ; Associated Pn:1ss

INTERNET SERVICES

AGRICULTURE
Jim's Farm Equipmeni

BlueStarr Network

www.jimsfarmequipment.

www.bluestarr.net

AUTOMOTIVE

MEDICAL

Norris Northup Dodge

Holzer Medical Center

www.norrisnorthupdodge.c
om

www.holzer.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.h olzercl in ic.com

www.turnpikeflm.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Holzer Clinic

www.pvalley.org

.

'

rdinals

Braves

Position

8:00 -9:00a.m., Phone# 740·992-2164
Wednesday, July 16

cr

.

SOURCE: Associated Press

Team

Pomeroy - R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply

,

Gary
Sheffield

Javy
Lopez

Delivery Will Be: Tuesday, July 15

Chicagoland

Tropicana 400
Site
•

National League sta

Fish For Pond Stocking

work for him and things, he's still mad
and upset but he's just not taking it out
(on anyone)."
Stewart said there 's another important
factor in the change of attitude.
"Probably the biggest thing was winning the championship and just taking
that pressure off," he said. "And we want
to win another one right away, as soon as
possible. But just getting that first one
out of the way was big for us."
With more than half the season left,
Stewart hasn't given up on winning that
second championship this year, although
he knows the odds are against him.
"You never know. I mean, there's no
blueprint on how to win a Winston Cup
championship," he said. "If we won all
the races the resi of the year, I'm not sure
that's still a guarantee that we can catch
up and win the thing."
The new Tony Stewart added serenely:
"We'll just do the 'best job we can, hope
our luck gets better, and take whatever
that gives us at the end of the season."

.

. Baseball's All-Stars to meet in Chicago

Points top 1 0

1.

WINSTON CUP

I

. , 2003 All-Star Game

All-star players from the National and American League will converge in U.S. Cellular Field in Ch1cago
for Tuesda9's AII·Star game.

11. Tony Stewart 1 ,949; 12. Mark
Martin 1 ,949; 13. Terry Labonte 1,91 0;
14. Jeff Burton 1 ,907; 15. Robby
Gordon 1 ,877; 16. Ryan Newman
1 ,833; 17. Ricky Craven 1,831; 18.
Elliott Sadler 1 ,773; 19. Bill Elliott
1,772; 20. Greg Biffle 1,707; 21. Ward
Burton 1 ,690; 22. Joe Nemechek
1 ,688; 23. Jamie McMurray 1 ,648;
24. Ricky Rudd 1 ,644; 25. Johnny
Benson 1 ,610; 26. Dave Blaney 1 ,592;
27. Jererny Mayfield 1,589; 28. Dale
Jarrett 1,553; 29. Kenny Wallace
1 ,545; 30. Jimmy Spencer 1 ,487; 31.
Todd Bodine 1 ,479; 32 . Jeff Green
1 ,353; 33 . Steve Park 1 ,303; 34.
Casey Mears 1,297; .35. Kyle Petty
1 ,247; 36. Jack Sprague 1,241; 37.
Ken Schrader 1 ,212; 38. John Andretti
1, 137; 39. Tony Raines 1,111; 40. Mike
Skinner 1 ,004; 41. Jerry Nadeau 844;
42. Larry Foyt 646; 43 . Mike Wallace
588; 44. Brett Bodine 308; 45. Derrike.
Cope 258; 46. Christian Fittipaldi 213;
47. Boris Said 155; 48. Ron Fellows
1 51; 49. Hermie Sadler 128; 50.
BuckshotJones112

get part of my life back by just sitting
here and letting people do what they do."
Zipadelli, whom Stewart credits with
holding the team together and getting the
driver through last season, sees the difference in Stewart, himself and the rest
of the team.
"It's about not doing things that we' ve
done in the past, you know, letting emotions take over and stuff," Zip11delli said.
"That's on everybody's part: mine,
Tony 's, the team. I just think he's done a
better job of not letting things he can't
control get him worked up."
And Zipadelli said the problem wasn't
all Stewart's.
"We all learn and grow from our mistakes and things in the past," the crew
chief said. "I know I have. I still lose my
temper and I'm still a hothead. I just try
not to take it out on individual people
anymore because I don't want to hurt
people's feelings.
"I think that's all Tony's done. Rather
than taking it out on the people who

Cheerleading.

Winston Cup
Series
Wks. In

Associated Press

®alhpohs ilail!' t!r:ribunr • Page BS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

NASCARTOP 10

BY MIKE HARRIS

As the broiling sun beat down on
Daytona International Speedway, Tony
Stewart sprawled in an easy chair in his
cool, darkened motorhome, a contented
look on his face .
A tennis match was flickering on the
big TV screen in the corner, but the
sound was turned down and the defending NASCAR Winston Cup champion
wasn't watching. He pursed his lips,
thought for a moment and said, "You
know, I just got tired of being angry."
This is the new Tony Stewart: a man in
control of his emotions and his life.
Racing once consumed him. Now,
Stewart enjoys spending time with his
infant niece, Emma Rose, riding his
motorcycle, and becoming immersed in
a new hobby, scuba diving. Stewart is
even cutting back on what has been the
love of his life: short track racing.
"I've found things outside of racing
that I' m enjoying doing, too;: he said. ·
A year a11o, as he ground toward his
first Cup title, Stewart was often anything but cool and contained.
He added to a reputation as
NASCAR's "bad boy" by punching a
photographer, was fined by his sponsor,
Horne Depot, for his bad conduct, and
had strained relations at times with crew
chief Greg Zipadelli and the rest of his
Joe Gibbs Racing crew because of his
behavior.
Stewart needed help and he got it,
turning to a sports psychologist midway
through the season.
"The first thing he said is, 'You're an
average person in a not-average environment anymore,' and that's how it all
started,'' Stewart said. "It definitely
helped a lot. We dealt with him the
whole last half of the year."
The psychologist became a fixture at
races, often watching from Stewart's pit.
No longer.
Stewart talks with him occasionally on
the telephone, but he's mostly on his
own now, and enjoying life more, even
though the first half of the 2003 season
has not been kind to him.
Engine failures, crashes and other
problems have left Stewart with only one
victory and eight top IOs in the first 17
mces. The latest miscue came in the
Pepsi 400 when Stewart ran out of gas
heading into the first pit stop and never
got back into contention, fimshing 21st.
He has rallied a bit since slipping to
20th in the standings but will still go into
Sunday's Tropicana 400 in II th place,
602 points behind leader Matt Kenseth.
Instead of the tantrums and black
moods of the past, though. Stewart has
dealt with the adversity with a quietly
calm demeanor.
" We just haven't had the luck we've
had in the past," Stewart said. "I think
we've all learned how to deal with it.
Five years of Winston Cup racing, we've
had to deal with just about every emotion involved and what can happen in a
Winston Cup weekend. It's learn as you
go.
" You do your job, and every day that I
keep my mouth shut and I don' t respond
to something that somebody makes me
mad about, that Monday or Tuesday
Mike's not calling me and saying,
'You've got to do this interview or that
interview to do damage control,"'
Stewart added, referring to his public
relations man, Mike Arning. "I actually

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Sunday, July 13, 2003

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See today's TempO section, C1 .

•

I' .

�Page B6
Sunday, July 13, 2003

Inside:
Bookshelf, Page C3

Food, Page C2
Celebrations, Page Cs-6

Page Cl
Sunday, July 13, 2003

Ohio's
forests
have
Over 90 North American
vertebrate species are known
changed dramatically over the
past 200 years, due to introto use acorns, the article
states. Acorns are a valuable
duced diseases and land use
changes. For instance, most
food resource for many aniAmerican Elms and American
mals because they are high in
Chestnuts were wiped out in
Jim
energv content and easily
the early 1900s due to Dutch
Freeman
digest~d. They can also be
Elm Di sease and Chestnut
stored for long periods, makBiight. ·
IN THE OPEN ing them an important food
Are oak trees the. next to
resource during times of low
go?
food availability.
The American Chestnut, tion). which has the headline
Many small animals and
once the queen of .the forest, "Goodbye to oak?."
birds relf on acorns for fall
was vitally important to
The magazine observes that and winter diets, and even
wildlife: the nuts were large, Ohio's forests are becoming larger animal like d.eer and
sweet, and highly desired by more dominated by red black bear depend heavily on
wildlife and people. In the maples, something that many oak acorn crops for survival
davs before the Chestnut deer and squirrel hunters have and successful reproduction.
bli"ght, the tree reproduced already noticed. Many ecoloInsect-eating buds are also
abundantly by seeds and gists and foresters predict that affected by the oak-to-maple
sprouts. had few insect ene- maples and other shade-toler- shift. The diffeJ:,ences in
mies, and competed well with ant trees will replace oaks in leaves and bark between oak
the other trees of the forest.
Ohio's forests.
and maple affect the ability of
Today,
the
American
Oaks were not always the insect-eating birds to find
Chestnut is known only in dominant trees in Ohio's food. Some maple species
memory because the young forests, their dominance was have smoother bark than simAmerican chestnut trees essentially caused by people, ilar-sized oaks. Because
rarely survive long enough to first by American Indians and rough bark holds more
produce tlowers and fruits.
then by settlers' cutting fol- insects, some birds avoid
The American Elm was a lowed by fire.
smooth-barked trees:
common sight in small cities
Throughout the 19th centuSo what can be done?
and towns, lining and shading ry, many forests were clearcut
According to the article,
streets and residential areas. at regular intervals to fuel forest owners need to carefulMany small towns and vii- small iron forests, and farm- ly consider how current manluges have at least one street ers used fire as a land-clearing · agement practices will affect
with the word "elm" in it. technique. Also there were oak forests. If we avoid clearMiddleport, 'Rutland and Point few whitetail deer to browse cutting and burning, we will
Pleasant all have Elm Streets. the emerging oak seedlings.
likely lack the large disturRacine also has an Elm Street,
But during the past century, bances that favor oaks. Also
and even went one step further several factors have facilitat- in soine areas high deer densiby erecting a historical marker ed the growth of shade-toler- ties are another problem raeremembering the "Old Elm ant trees: fire suppression, ing oak regeneration. Of
Tree" that was once a commu- reduction in clear cutting, and course insect pests like the
nity landmark.
heavy deer browsing. A walk gypsy moth are another probAmerican Elm trees were through the woods reveals an lem altogether.
wiped out in the 1950s and absence of seedling and
Ifyoudon'tbelieveoaktrees
1960s, leaving many streets sapling oaks, and many grow- can disappear from our woods,
barren and empty looking.
ing maple trees.
just remember what happened
· Today's eastern deciduous
But what does this have to to the American Chestnut and
fore sts are facing another with wildlife? Plenty.
American Elm trees.
change, according to a recent
If maples replace oaks and
(Jim Freeman is wildlife spearticle by Amanda D. hickories, )Vildlife will still cialistfor the Meigs Soil and
Rodewald
in
Ohio .. have plenty of cover and shel- Water Conservation Districts.
Woodlands,
Watersheds, ter, but it will be deprived one He can be contacted weekdays
Wildlife (an Ohio State of its major food sources, at 740-992-4282 oratjimjree·
University Extension publica- namely acorns.
man@oh.nacdnet.org.)

In th g nd des gn
:Mason County quitter makes
.memories for a lifetime
BY HANDY BOYCE

Staff writer

Tyler Campbell, 10, displays the first turkey he bagged during the recent youth season. The
bird weighed 19 pounds and had a 10-inch beard.

• B. D.
&gt;u::i'i/&lt;1\

u:s

•Camping
• Camo's
• Boots
• Knives
• Tents

• A little bit of eve1rv1
Ot•J~N
MON.- SA1'.
9AM '1'0 UPM

Nn"r

. HENDERSON, W.Va. While the hustle and bustle of
life sweeps many people up
and scatters their dreams to the
wind, one local lady has managed to pursue her favorite
hobby for a lifelin\e, creating
precious memories for others
to enjoy in the makin~.
Those memories will be on
display at the Heritage House
on the Bob Evans Farm at Rio
Grande, Ohio, thmugh Sept. 28.
Marjorie Rogers, who says
that she is proud of her 71
years, has been asked to showcase some of her favorite quilts,
after winning countless awards
for her original designs.
She has awards from the
county fair, the Bob Evans
Festival, the West Yitginia
Farm Museum and a "Best of
Show" award from the National
Quilting Society in Charleston.
Rogers said that she was
accepted at the American
Quilters Association, a juried
show, but didn't win an award.
"It's nice to win, but it's not
that important. The Lord has
been good to me and that's what
matters most." Rogers said.
Rogers said she has been
sewing since she was big
enough to reach the treadle
on her mother's sewing
machine, and has been quilt-

ing since the winter of 1949. looking for just the right fabShe doesn't usually use the rics to make it. It took her a
sewing machine to quilt, year to make. Each fan in the
though, saying that she quilt has eight segments and
prefers to sew by hand.
each segment in every fan
"It's so relaxing. Every has an identical pattern.
"I called it 'Victorian Roses
spare moment I have, you' II
fmd me quilting. I love and Fans.' I used my grandsewing the different fabrics mother's fan pattern and
and colors to~ether to make appliqued roses on it. It is
pretty things,'. Rogers said.
called a 'fussy cut.' I won 'Best
Her tiny stitches line up of Show' from about 400 to
across her quilts straight ~s 450 entries. I couldn't believe
soldiers marching in fonna- that mine was chosen out of all
tion. They are so tiny that one those quilts," Rogers said.
has to inspect the quilt closeRogers has a beautiful
ly to find them.
sewing room, brightly lit
Rogers said that she chose her with natural sunlight and
first pattern from a Grii newspa- teeni.ing with accessories to
per and taught berself to quilt.
help her quilt.
"It was an applique called
She had a table made espe'Sieeping Cats.' I didn't cially for quilting. It is a sturdy
know at the time how hard it oak table with tiny drawers
was. I didn't finish it until tucked under it to hide accesyears later," Rogers said.
sories. It is a little lower than
Rogers said that she still cabinet height, but taller than a
has the quilt - and many dining room table. Rogers has
others, as well. She said that baskets under the table holdshe hates to pan with them ing - what else - fabric.
when they are finished, but
Not bolts of fabric, but
has given many awar. to her balls of wound-up strips of
two daughters, Jenmfer and fabric, all sewed into one
Patty, relatives and friends.
iong strip. She has them
She doesn't sell them, woven into rugs for her floor.
though.
"I save every scrap {)f fab"I don't know how maily~ic. I love the bright colors of
I've done. I never kept it," Rogers said.
track," Rogers said.
And what else does Rogers
Rogers srud that she doesn't do in her spare time? She quilts!
really have a favorite, but there
"lflhadsormJ~~:tocleanhouse
is one that is special to her.
for me, I'd quilt all the time,"
She searched and searched, Rogers said, With a chuckle.

\&lt;'

'

iJI.

'

'

..
'
'

'

.

I

,
'. 'i•. •. '
; &gt;i'

·

'

Marge Rogers said that she often works on more than one quilt at a time. This queen-sized
double wedding-ring quilt is about half done. Each quilt has thousands of tiny stitches that bind
the front and back and filler together-. and that is only the quilting process. It doesn't include
ail the sewing that is done before the two are connected.

Special Report

Carbon monoxide poisoning
plays larger role in.boating
deaths than first thought

.,.

At Smith Buick Pontiac!!
I

,.'·

'03 BUICK CENTURY

4,000

miles,

Charleston Daily Mail

Tips from the Coast Guard
about carbon monoxide .

. CHARLESTON, W.Va. - As many as 15
percent of deaths formerly attributed to
drowning may have been triggered by carbon
According to the Coast Guard's
monoxide poisoning.
Carbon Monoxide ·Fact Sheet, carbon
That recent discovery has spurred the U.S.
Coast Guard to issue a warning to boaters: monoxide can accumulate:
• When exhaust gases become
"Take special care."
"Virtually all injuries and fatalities involv- trapped under enclosed places
• Under inadequately vented canvas
ing carbon monoxide are preventable through
simple awareness on the pan of the boat enclosures
owner and operator," says Capt. Scott Evans,
• When a following wind causes the
chief of the Coast Guard's Office of Boating "station wagon effect" and blows the
Safety.
gas into a boat's cabin
Evans says that most boaters are aware that
• When exhaust ports become
carbon monoxide can accumulate inside blocked
boats' engine compartments, but few boaters
• From other vessels' exhausts ·
understand that the colorless, odorless, toxic
' Boaters can protect themselves and
gas can collect in deadly concentrations outtheir
passengers by:
side the boat as well .
• Knowing where and how the gas
Engine and gene~ator exhaust outlets are
can
accumulate in and around a boat
common carbon monoxide sources, and swim
• Maintaining fres~·air circulation
platforms and other overhanging structures
tend to trap the deadly gas.
around the boat at all times
Such a setup nearly c6st racing legend AI
• Knowing where the engine a(ld gen·
Unser Sr. his life.
erator exhaust ports are located, and
. The four-time Indianapolis 500 winner was keeping swimmers away from those
piloting a houseboat on Arizona's Lake areas
Powell when one of the boat's propellers
• Keeping passengers from sitting,
became entangled in an anchor line.
When Unser dove under the boat to free the teak surfing, or hanging onto a swim
rope. he surfaced repeatedly in the air space platform while the boat's engines are
beneath the house platform. Unbeknown to running
• Taking measures to dissip_ate
him. the space was filled with carbon monoxide-laced exhaust gases from the boat's gener- exhaust fumes Immediately after any·
ator.
. one smells them
By the time Unser. emerged from under the
• Installing and maintaining carbon
boat, he was semiconscious. Friends rushed monoxide alarms inside the boat
him to a hospital, where he was placed on
• Treating symptoms of seasickness
oxygen for the next several hours and eventu- as possible carbon monoxide poisonall y recovered.
ing. Get the victim into fresh air immeCoast Guard officials say the popular practices of wake surfing and teak surfing, are diately and seek medical attention.
notorious for causing carbon monoxide poison mg.

In wake surfing, swimmers ride short surfboan.ls or body boards on the steep wake of
boats moving at relatively slow speeds, often
mere feet from the boats ' sterns. Teak surfers
hold onto boats ' swim platforms, often made
of teak, and bodysurf the wakes.
1'·
''Boaters should forbid high-risk behaviors
such as teak surfing," says Evans. "Any
symptoms such as headache, diz.ziness and
nausea should be treated as possible carbon
monoxide poisonings until anotlter cause is
pinpointed. ·
Evans says boaters "can greatly reduce risks
to themselves and their passengers by educating themselves about carbon monoxide."
"They should know where exhaust outlets
for the engines and generator are on their boat,
and keep everyone clear," he says. "And they

'03 PONTIAC SUNFIRE
Only

BY JoHN McCoY

/

·-

Sunroof,

S·Speed,
Aluminum
Wheels

~

· ~~~~~---~~--~

'02 MONTANA Ext.

Balance
of New
Warranty

'00 GRAND PRIX

'01 PARK AVENUE

Only
26,000 Miles

Loaded,
One Owner

Marge Rogers selected the best of the best of quilts and wall hangings to display at her quilt
show at Bob Evan~ Heritage House.

·oo CH

4 Door,
One Owner,
34,000 miles

'

8

Marge Rogers won "Best of
Show" out of more than 400
entries at a National Quilt
Show in Charleston. Her entry,
"Victorian Roses and Fans:
took her a year to make. She
carefully selected coordinat·
ing fabrics and hand·stitched
the queen-sized quilt.

14 900

'00 GMC SONOMA
Extended
cab

4 Cyl.,

Automatic,
Automatic
NICE!

'99 GRAND AM
One Owner,
SHARP!!

should understand how and where carbon
monoxide can accumul ate - for example,
when slow speeds and a following wind create
a backdraft that draws carbon monoxide into a
boat's cabin.''
\
Carbon monoxide enters people's blood'--,t'!'l!"'
streams through the lungs. It kill s by blocking
the body 's ability to uptake the oxygen it
needs to survive. Long exposures at low levels can be deadly, as can short exposures at
high levels.
Symptoms of carbon monoxide poi soning
include irritated eyes, headaches, nausea,
weakness and dizziness. Because the symptoms are often confused for seasickness or
intoxication, peo~le often don't receive needed medical attenuon in time.
(Distributed by Th e Associated Press)

One Owner,
CD Player
31,000 Low

Miles!

'

Marge Rogers has a variety of quilts on display at the Heritage House on Bob. Evans Farm in
Rio Grande, Ohio. They will be on display through Sept. 28.
.
'
--·---

i

�.

On the BooksheH

·Page C2
Sunday, July 13, 2003

VEGETARIAN COOKING: Yard-sale Miniature pavlovas
have
grape
filling
·
recipes for veggies and dessert
'

BY J. M. HIRSCH
Associated Press

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) It's yard sale season again,
that time of year when virtual
buffets of bargains laid out on
,lawns draw us from our
homes at obscenely early
hours on weekends.
My wife and I have a routine. On Thursdays we scan
the classifieds for good hits.
Saturday morning, coffee and
cash in hand, we're on the
road by 7 a.m.
What does this have to do
with cooking? Aside from the
occasional cookware bargain
(I ' ve snagged new Le Creuset
pots lor $5), there also often
are reams of inspiring and
entertaining recipes to be had
for pennies.
Yard sales are not suited for
recipe snobs. I relish the
adventure of 'spending a few
bucks on boxes of sometimes
decades-old cookbooks with
ugly photography, knowing
I'll find at least a few items of
interest.
Where else could you find a
cookbook
self-published
from Guam for 10 cents?
Though recipe testing indicated the price actually may
have been a bit high, it still
was fun to try.
But it also is easy to find
some real keepers. I recently
carted off nearly two dozen
issues of Cooking Light magazine from the 1990s for $2.
They may be old, bull wasn't
reading the magazine then, so
they are new to me.
By far my favorite yard sale
finds are recipe boxes, those
tiny treasure chests packed
with scribbled index cards,
folded up newspaper clippings, and kitchen kitsch
recipe cards filled with family
favorites.
It is a treat to peer into a
cook's past, seeing , and tasting the recipes a family may
have grown up with. And 11
can be entertaining to see how
tastes, ingredients and even
appliances have changed over
the years.
During recent weekend bargain hunts, I picked up three
such boxes for SO cents each.
One dated from the 1960s or
1970s, but the other two went
back at least to the 1930s.
The woman who sold me
one of them said she had
found it buried in a wall of
her house when she renovat·
ed. It felt like readin~ an
anonymous diary as I ptcked
through the fragile cards
brown with age.
Among them were oddities,
such as "Auntie Bond's
Tomatoes." which calls for I
can of tomatoes, 2 tablespoons flour in a bit of water,
a large onion and celery seed
- but never says what to do
with any of it.
Prunes apparently were a
favorite. One box had recipes
for fluffy prune frosting and
"Delicious Prune Sponge." I
decid'ed to take the author's
word on that last one.
Another recipe card left
much a mystery.
"See Mom about drop
cookies."
Cooking from such recipes .
is hit or miss. Often the cards
were just reminders of recipes
known by heart, making tt a
challenge to recreate them.
Others benefit from updating.
I was intrigued by one
recipe scrawled in a shaky
hand on an index card. "Anna
Shorey's Dessert" offered lit-

Yard sale recipe boxes offer the treat of peering into a cook's past, seeing and tasting the
recipes a family may have grown up with, and noting how tastes, ingredients and even appliances have changed over the years. (AP Photo/Larry Crowe)
tie guidance when it said: " I
can Carnation evap. milk
beaten stiff. Add ), cup sugar.
Fold in juice of l lemon or ',.
Freeze."
Made as directed, the dish
was a milky block. Likely,
ther" was more stirring
involved that didn 't make it
into the written recipe. For
round two I tossed the mixture into an ice cream maker.
Now that was a sweet , and
creamy treat!
Since zucchinis are just
comin~ into season, I couldn't rests! another recipe called
simply "Zucchini Delight."
This dish calls for sauteing
onions and zucchini in tomato
JUtce, but doesn't do much
with seasoning or offer serving advice.
This seemed like a great
lowfat meal, perfect for using
up abundant produce, but in
need of a bit of updating. A
dash of salt, a bit of freshly
ground pepper, and some ~ar­
tie got the flavors ~01ng.
Served over couscous, II was
delicious.
Another recipe for sliced
tomato salad needed little tinkering. This simple and tasty
salad calls for a bed of greens
covered with sliced tomatoes
and drizzled with a sourcream dressing.
The original recipe instructs
the cook to "peel the tomatoes
and chill them thoroughly in
the electric refrigerator." I
skipped both the peeling and
the chilling, the latter because
cold robs tomatoes of taste.
The final recipe I tested was
"Bishop 's Bread from New
Hampshire." What I assumed
would be a sandwich loaf of
some sort ended up a tasty
cross between angel food
cake and a blondie.
A bit of Internet research
turned up countless variations
of this dessert, and the trivia
that this bread dates from
Colonial · New England.
Housewives al'parently baked
it in anticipallon of the par-

son's visit.

I tablespoon cider vinegar
Pinch cayenne
Zucchini Delight
I to 2 tablespoons grated
horseradish
(Preparation 30 minutes)
28-ounce can crushed
Arrange the greens in a bed
tomatoes
on a large plate or platter.
2 medium onion, roughly Layer the slices in an overlapchopped
ping circle on top of the
3 medium zucchini, sliced greens.
in half lengthwise, then cut
To make the dressing, cominto 1.-inch half moons
bine all ingredients in a small
Salt and fresh ground blacl\.. bowl and whisk until smooth
pepper
and well combined. Drizzle
2 cloves garlic, minced
the dressin~ over the tomaI cup water
toes. Serve Immediately.
I tablespoon extra-virgin
Makes 4 servings.
olive oil
I cup couscous
Bishop's Bread From
Drain the juice from the New Hampshire
canned tomatoes into a medi(Preparation 40 minutes)
um saucepan. Reserve the
3 eggs, yolks and whites
tomatoes. Add the onions to separated
the p~n and saute over a
I cup sugar
medium flame until onions
I teaspoon vanilla
are tender, about 7 minutes.
'l, cup milk
Add the zucchini, stir well
), teaspoon salt
to combine and saute S min·
1'1, cups all-purpose white
·
utes. Add the reserved toma· flour
toes, salt and pepper to taste,
I 'l, teaspoons baking pow·
and garlic,.then reduce heat to der
low and simmer IS minutes.
I cup raisins
Meanwhile, combine the
I cup slivered alm(mds
water and , oil in a small
Powdered sugar
saucepan. Bring to a boil over
Preheat oven to 375 F.
a high flame, then remove
Use a mixer to cream the
from heat. Add the couscous, egg yolks and sugar in a large
shaking the pan gently to bowl. While mixing, add
ensure all grains are covered vanilla and milk.
hy the water. Cover and let sit
Sift together the salt, flour
5 minutes.
and baking power, then add to
To serve, fluff the couscous the bowl and mix well. Add
with a fork and transfer to a the raisins and almonds, and
large plate or platter. Spoon mix to combine.
the zucchini mix over it.
In another bowl, use the
Serve hot.
mixer to beat the egg whites
Makes 4 servings.
to stiff peaks. Using a rubber
spatula, fold the egg whites
Sliced Tomato Salad
into the batter, being careful
(Preparation 15 minutes)
not to overmix.
4 cups salad greens (baby
Spread the batter across a
spinach leaves or Romaine standard baking sheet, about
are nice)
),_ to'l,..inch thick. Bake for 18
4 medium slicing tomatoes to 20 minutes, .or until top
(beefsteak are good), cut to 1.- begins to brown and a toothinch slices
pick inserted near .the center
), cup sour cream (or soy comes out clean.
alternative)
Let the bread cool, then cut
~ teaspoon salt
into squares and dust with
';, teaspoon sugar
powdered sugar.
1, tablespoon lemon juice
Makes 12 squares.

5th Annual
~"~"Shall

We Gather At The River»
featuring
.
~~
The l--Mark --,
Trammell
Trio
·-~-

Thomas

Also Appearing:

j

\~
·\

Pomeroy Amphitheater
Saturday, July 19th • 7:00p.m.
Presented by

-'.

~\

The First Southern Baptist Church
· Pomeroy, Ohio

- - - - - ------- •--'·

·-·. - ·-.

By The Aoaoclaled Pniea
The
meringue-based
dessert known as the
pavlova makes a charming
summer sweet. In this version, made in individual
servings, lightly glazed
grapes flavored with a
touch of lemon fill small
meringue shells.
Picture them served with
a dollop of lemon yogurt
or whipped cream on top,
perhaps garnished with a
lemon twist, and imagine
how decorative they ' d
look set out as part of a
buffet.
How practical, too, for
entertaining, in spite of the
pavlovas' airily delicate
appearance. The meringue
shells may be made ahead
and stored in an airtight
container. The recipe
tester reports that she
experimented with filling
them with the prepared
grape filling, held them for
two hours at room temperature, then refrigerated
them overnight - and the
meringues held up well,
without getting soggy.
Grape Pavlovas
(Preparation 15 minutes,
baking time 2 hours; sauce
preparation 15 minutes)
2 egg whites
1, teaspoon cream of tartar
Salt
I cup sugar
I tablespoon cornstarch
I cup water
I teaspoon butter
2 tablespoons fresh
lemon juice
';, teaspoon grated lemon
peel
2 cups s~edless grapes
Optional garnish: lemon
yogurt or whipped cream
Preheat oven to 250 F.
Beat egg whites with
cream of tartar and a dash
of salt in small bowl until

soft peaks form. Gradually
ad4 ), cup sugar, beating at
high speed until stiff peaks
form and sugar dissolves.
(Mixture should feel
smooth when . rubbed
between thumb and fore finger.)
Line a large baking sheet ·
with parchment paper. If
desired, draw 2-inch circles as guidelines for
meringue shells. Spoon
meringue in 2-inch circles
on parchment paper; form
indentation in centers of .
circles with back of spoon.
Bake I hour at 250 F. Turn
oven off without opening
door and leave meringues
in oven I hour. Remove
meringue shells from oven
and cool completely.
Combine ';, cup sugar
and cornstarch; add water
and mix well. Cook and
stir until mixture comes to
boil. Simmer · and stir I
minute. Add butter and stir
until melted. Stir in lemon
juice and peel. Add grapes
to sauce; mix well. Cool.
Just
before
serving,
arrange glazed grapes in
center of cooled meringue .
shells.
Makes 10 servings.
Nutrition information
per serving: 97 cal., I g
pro., I g fat, 24 g carbo':, I
mg chol., 0 g fiber, 69 mg
sodium.
(Recipe created for AP
by the California Table
Grape Commission)

All li!GES , All TIMES S.t 0 0

Jhe :flnlmal Welfare £11gae
of Gallla CouniJ expreaa11 grateful
appreciation
••••
to the following:
•

,.

'

* Everyone who
supported our first yard-sale fundralser. It was a big success!
And special thanks1o League
member Hilda laney for
holding the sale at her nome.
The money raised will be used .
for pet spays and neuters and the emergency
care of pets. * Dr.•Brian Hendrickson and staff at Rlverbend
Animal Olnlc.
*Red Rooster owner Phyllis Tegethoff and
Manager Charlene Carter for the collection of
nearly one hundred dollars In donations for the
Lea.v:ue and the
use of the pa~ng lot for the
low-cost spay/neuter-mobile. .

.:-111

* Wai-Mart Manager Ron Bowen and ~
Department Manager Kelly Worrell for
donating two cat carriers to the League, which
have already been put to use.

J(IHen purrs 1nd puppJ klaaea to
all of JOU!
·
Remember - show you care about your pet and the
welfare of others - please have your pet spayed or
neutered. This safe procedure makes your pet
healthier and happier and saves lives by preventing unwanted kittens and puppies.
For additional Information about tile
Animal Welfare League, call vice-president (Im Cozza at 441-164 7 or check us
out at www.gcawl.com.

--·--···-·--·-----·-------------

Sunday, July 13, 2003

An unlikable/hero obsessed,
Finding all you ever need with unrequited love
LEARNING CURVE

"All You Ever Need." Four
simple words which when
strewn together manage to proVIde solace to even the most
cynical of beings.
When I decided to write about
Max Lucado, a San Antonio
minister and world-renowned
author, I wasn't really certain
how to approach . this subject.
COLUMNIST
The idea of discussing an author
whose trademark Christianbased writings runs counter io complacency that he announces,
today'shyper-hipcultureseemed, ''From now on, 1 will not give
well, a bit intimidating. But then water to those who uren't thank! returned to his stories and soon ful". Sound familiar? Well, you
remembered the why.
can imagine what the villagers,
Max· Lucado writes with a stunned by the announcement.
~entle , poignant manner, teach- try to do. Elzevir, however, finds
m~ us about faith &gt;md goodness, reason upon reason why more
without preaching rhetoric. and more villagers will not earn
Whatever your religious model, a place at "his" well. Soon, no
or for some, sans model, these one is worthy of "his" water.
stories exist to help us extract The people begin to give up.
mearung from our lives.
~'It's no use· we can't please
In "All Your Ever Need"., a you", cry the'people. (Ever feel
wtse, gentle man, named Tobias, _ that way? Ever made someone
provides for the villagers cool, else feel that way?)
clean water fT?mhis well. Now
Nearing the story's end, the
these j)eoPle hve m the desert, so villagers, nearly broken, see a
water IS a h?l commodity. This stranger appear. He reveals himguy Tobta~ IS BO admired for his self to all. It is Julian, older and
generosity that he comes to be wiser than when he left. As
known a~ the "Watermaster". (I expected, Elzevir is derided by
know, I know, sounds like a late- all for his mistreatment of them
night infomercial gadget.) His bui Julian, the Son of his Fathe;
son, Julian also helps the people, quiets the crowd and speaks
carrying their heavy loa~ home. these words: , "My Father's
Day 111 and da~ out, this father- water is a gift to all", followed
son duo are. Willing and able to by "Freely you have received,
serve the villagers, all without freely give. The story ends with
pay. Even more remarkable is Julian pictured holding out a
the thoughtfulness Tobias shows stone jug; his face possessing
tor the villagers; always asking kindness.
_
them how their lives are and
When I read Max's books, I
what their hopes are for the am rt;minded of my own father's
future.
stories. My father, a son of an
So far, everything's working Orthodox priest (yes. unlike the
beautifully. Everybody has Catholic ones, they can marry),
become accustomed to this act would tell us kids; there were
of kindness ;md so when Tobias five of us stinkers. stories the
announces that he and Julian length of novels. · His stories
will be going away for a while, would always meander like · a
and that Elzevir, their servant, long, winding country road and
wtll be watchmg over them, no we kids would invariably cry
one bats a caiTX!I's worth of eye- out, "Where are you going with
lashes. The villagers trust that this?!" What we didn't know
Elzevir will supply their needs. until years later, by way of his
Well. it turns out, Elzevir can many friends who came to his
be trusted to provide for them. funeral, was that my D-ad's stobut only on his tenns. It seems ries, filled with characters he
that to Elzevir, the villagers have · described as his friends and
become ungrateful, taking their acquaintances weaving in and
full buckets without a murmur out of his life, were really bibliof thanks as they had once done. cal characters, teaching us about
(Poor, ungr;lteful villagers! humanity. And to think we .kids
Don't they know a good thing just thought he had an unusually
when they have one?T)
high count of friends!
So what do you suppose
I tell you this, not because I
Elzevir does? Accept their miss my father immensely, but
faults 1 Not a chance' He because I have faith . that he is
becomes so annoyed by their ever-present in my life. His sto-

Diane
NaderEpling

ries live on in me. I'm afraid;
however, that the story-telling
gene has skipped over me and so
I. like some·of you, rely on other
means for doing the work.
That's where Max Lucado and
authors like him can offer spiritually-guided books that smooth
out the rough spots of our lives.
Most of us know our lives are
blessed. Yet somehow, many of
us pass over this knowledge and
get caught up in the artificial of
our lives. You know the ego-driven stuff. It's become necessary,
for 'many, to make known to all
how utterly busy our lives are;
how we must have a bedroom
for each ofour children or they' II
just crumble!; and heaven fotbid
we don't sign our kids up for
swimming lessons-they can't
possibly learn from a parent!
Happily, 111Qst of us will never
know the hurt in our bellies for
lack of food or water. Most of us ·
will never know despair so great
as to not even recognize it as
anything but nonnal. And,
thankfully, most of us will never
experience fear for our personal
safety by our own government
But many will.
Our communities have been
filled with countless Bible
Schools this summer. These
churches, big and small, provide
a much needed service for our
youth. Just this morning, I was
informed by those ~:legantly,
coiffed news jollllialists, of five
separate killing sprees, many
involving children . . It made me
nauseas. It made me pick up a
book instead.
Do something good. Pick up
a book, for you and your children. There's a Max Lucado
book waiting for you at your
local library or book store. His
books make great gifts.
Next week. we'll tum multiculturalism on it~ multi-faceted
head. Travel with me through
the world of foreign-language
literature for kids. Grown-ups,
get your translation dictionaries
ready. Until then, keep your
comment~ and questions coming. I look fotward to hearing
from you. Keep Reading.
(Diane Nader-Epling of
Gallipolis worked for , 20
years as a speech and hearing
pathologist and is the mother
of three. You may write to
her: Diane Nader-Epling, in
care of The Daily Tribune,
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
OH. 45639, or e-mail:
news@ mydailytribune.com)

Fast-food investigator now probes
pot, porn and produce-pickers
2:30,3:00, 6::!0,
t45, 9'.35, 9:45
lie !Ia FIII

Page C3

an Indiana man who was senAssociated Press
tenced to a life term without
. parole for brokering the sale of.
"RL-efer Madness: Sex, - but not actually selling, buyDrugs, and Cheap Labor in ing or growing - 700 pounds
the
American
Black of marijuana.
Schlosser says laws that
Market." By Eric Schlosser. apply
a high minimum senHoughton Mifflin. 310 Pages.
tence, like the one applied to
$23.
Young, often hand the judiciaNo matter what adherents of ry's role to overzealous proseeconomist Adam
Smith cutors. No physical evidence
believe, "the workings of a linked Young to the crime, and
market are ultimately subject to he was convicted by testimony
human, not divine, interven- from conspimtors , who made
tion," Eric Schlosser asserts in deals for reduced jail time.
a new book.
The human toll of the war on
"Reefer Madness," his wild- drugs can be shown by statisly entertai ning and scrupulous- tics, Schlosser says: About
ly researched analysis of the 20,000 marijuana offenders are
American underground econo- · in federal prison, with that
niy, questions whether markets same number in state and local
are ever free. Schlosser shows jails.
people and government all too
But he's not content to go by
often choosing to intervene in the numbers, as he visits Young
destructive ways.
in prison and a range of others
More important. he reveals caught up in the industry- pot
the human stories hidden , gurus, drug enforcement
behind legal and economic the- agents•. J)fOSCCUtors and affectones.
ed farrulies.
Keepin~ ":!~juan~ ille~al
As he did in "Fast Food
Nation'' (200 I), his imagina- means mat~taimng a htgh pnce
tive and sobering account of and dtvertmg coveted federal
the 'pursuit of cheap eats, dollars to law enforcement
Sch losser proves to be a bril- Schlosser prefers strict regulaliant cultuml historian. Vibrant tton, focusmg on the protecUon
storytelling lays the basis for an of children.
.
array of statistics as he examSchlosser's treewheelmg and
ines marijuana prosecutiorts, engrossmg sectiOn on pomog·
illegal labor in California agri- raphy shows that prosecutors
cltlture and the decades-long hav~. targeted it as they have
investigation of a king of manJuana. but on two fronts:
pornography.
obscenity and financial improPot and R&lt;Jm are linked by pnety.
not only their outlaw status but
Reuben Sturman,_ a porn
because they mean big bucks. magnate, was mvesugated for
The United States grows as decade~ but never convtcted on
much ·as $25 billion worth of obscemty charges. Instead, he
marijuana a year, Schlosser was brought do~n by fraud and
says, while Americans spend tax prosecuuons, . whtch
upwt.rd of $10 billion on "adult Schlosser documents m &amp;?meentertainment."
times htlanous, sometimes
He opens "Reefer Madness" heart-rending detail.
with the story of Mark Young,
Ironically. Sturman's down·
BY ADAM JOYCE

'

fall and the simultaneous hightech boom sparked competition
in the porn industry. More people can now produce and consume the product, in private
settings outside the purview of
government.
"In 200 I , Americans spent
about $465 million ordering
adult movies on pay-per-view,"
Schlosser notes. "Most of the
nioney was earned by wellknown companies that don't
boast about their links with the
sex trade."
Schlosser again focuses on
colorful characters, but he
plays down the plight of pornindustry workers. This is odd
because one of the most affecting parts of the book is his
report on the use of illegal
immigrants by California
strawbeny growers.
He describes a sharecropping
enterprise where workers
shoulder debt for growers and
Mexicans work long hours for
little pay. "Illegal immigrants,
widely reviled and often
depicted as welfare cheats, are
in effect suqsidizing the most
Important sector of the
California economy," he says.
Schlosser disputes the idea
that people ' won't pay the
prices necessary for higher
wages. "Maintaining the current level of poverty among
migmnt fannworkers saves the
avemge American household"
only "about $50 a year," he
asserts.
Cheap Iabor affects markets
in other ways. It discourages
innovation, which is crucial to
remaining competitive with
foreign producers. Also, when
growers suggest creating lowcost housing in areas such as
San Diego, homeowners
lament the possible decrease in
property values.

BY DoNNA LIQUORI
Associated Press

his memoirs during a long aain

ride to a relalive's funeral years
after the events depicted in Anita
Shreve's
novel take plare.
"AD J1e Ever Wanted.'' By
The
st.ory
begins with a fire at
Anita Shreve. Uttle, Brown. 310
the Hotel Thrupp in an uninspirPages. $25.95.
ing New Hampshire college
-town.
As Van Tassel flees the
Nicholas Van Tassel, the narrator of "All He Ever Wanted," is hotel, he spots a woman standing
near a lamppost That vision prono1 a likable man. He's pompous,
pels
Van Tassel for the rest of his
self-righteoos, anti-Semitic, jealous and difficult to bear His stu- life.
The object of Van Tassel's
dents refer to him as
"Scrofulous," Latin for ''wild desire, Etna BliS.o;, has just moved
boar."
to town to stay. with her uncle,
But V.m Tassel 00es have a and Van Tassel immediately
decent st.ory to tell. He's writing begins pursuit

Shreve portrnys a man who is
consumed by an unrequited love
and is, at fillil, a sympathetic char- ·
&lt;der.

However. the anempt is
admirable: putting the narralive
on an unlikable male character.
The story is compelling and
worthwhile in the end
.
When he prqlOSe5 marriage, .
he embraces a stiffening Ema, •
who was not giving or receiving.
He writes that the-entire marriage
was "written in that embrace,''
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Douglas Baldwin, Belington $3,()(X)
Christine Button, Belpre, OH $3,&lt;XX)

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Robert Stidham, South Po1nt. OH $888

Jeannie Johnson, ParkersburF $Cl8f3
Jack Posey, Parkersburg $888

Sherron Hart . Cowen $1.000
Benie Jane Henshaw. Huntnlgton $1.000
Nora Mann. Ronceverte S1 ,000
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R0nda WilSon. Huntington $3.000

Pam Tomblin, Albright $888

Chester Mvnes. Walton $2,000
Wil ma Gaye Orum , Triadelphia $1,000

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Timothy Sm ith . Augusta $1.000

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Denzil Dale Brumfield .
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Bobby Dfu r. Weston $1 ,000

Frances Snell. Martinsburg $1,(1()()

W~liam' Rose . Kimball $3.CXXJ

Joseph Rife. Princeton $15.000
WiiUam Shawver. Rupen $1 ,000

Thomas Webber. Chester $2;000
Agnes Wooten. Pelersburg $ 1,000

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Timothy Spradling , Charl~ton $1 ,000
Wil~am Stutler, Bridgeport $15,000

Pascal Wor1ey. Point Pleasant $2,000

Gary Taylor, Bradley $1,000

Helen Bolyard, Kingwood $.1 ,000
Louellen McNe~. Mannington $1,000

Cynt hia Anderson, Harrisville $1 ,000

Bobby Burton, Coat City $5,000
Wfladene Frazier. Hartford $5.000
Sheila Stone, Mason $1 .000

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Alfred Ward, Webster Springs $1 .000
Vt-gil Wilson. Pennsboro $5.000

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Sandra Simmons, Elizabetn $2 .000

Thomas Delon, Bradley $4.000

Jason Shepherd, Middlebourne $17,000

Robert Lancaster, Luray, VA $4 ,000

Jesse Rodgers, Clay $4,000
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Quention Massey Wdverly $4 .00Q

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Brian Unk, Charleston $5,000

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Robert Riggleman, Elkins $5,000

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Brenda Criss, Lochgelly $1.000
Darlton 'Cuppett, Bruceton M~ls $1 .000

William 'Hicks, We1rton $3.000
Mary Miller, Fa1rrnont $3.000

Bonita Flack, White Sulphur Spgs $1 .000
Charles Freeman . Charleston $1.000

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Clarence Best, Vienna $2.500
John L. Brown. Jr.. Morgantovvn $5 ,000
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Leslie Church. AldersOn $3,100
Endora CoopEr, Montgomery $2 .a:xJ
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Angel GonzaleZ. Ranson $1 25,000
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Richard Bivens. Candler. NC $5.000
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Thomas Sturm. Grafton $5;(100

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Vld&lt;ie S\rniTl!!fs, Richwood $2,600
Sharor\J.-ea Tomey, Bucl&lt;hannon S2, 700
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Edith Wilcox, Chllrles TO'Ml $2,600
Tl"&lt;lmas Wilfong , Flemington $2,600
Mary Wimer. Moorefield $2.700
Jason Zirk, Moorefield $2.700

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Ellen Boone. Kearneys~ille $800
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Page C4

.Behind the

iunbap ottm~ ·itntintl

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Highlander, Toyota's leading SUV, continues to appeal to women

Beaver-Nuce

All these women can't be
wrong.
Women account for at least
60 percent of the buyers of
Toyota's top- selling sport
utility
vehicle,
the
Highlander.
The five-passenger SUV
with a starting manufacturer's suggested retail price,
including destination charge,
of $24,390 for a four-cylinder, two-wheel-drive model
has only been out three
model years.
But its car-like ride ,
maneuverable size, elevated
ride height and easy entry not to mention Toyota's reputation for quality and durable
vehicles - continue to win
over buyers, especially married women, according to
Toyota's buyer statistics.
Highlander
purchasers
have a median age of 41 and
median household income of
$70,000, Toyota reports .
Seventy percent are married,
45 percent have children, and
60 percent are college-edu·
cated.
Such couples and families
aren't looking for an S.UV for
rugged off-road use.
So the Highlander, which is
available in both two- and
four-wheel drive but is basically designed for pavement
and mild off-road duty, can
fit the bill.
Based on the pricier Lexus
RX300, the Highlander has
car-like unibody construction, a Toyota Camry sedan
platform and a quiet interior,
and its independent front
strut and rear dual-link suspension provide a jostle-free
ride.
In fact, in the test
Highlander, a four-cylinderpowered model with fourwheel drive, I didn't even
notice when the vehicle
passed over many manhole
covers in the pavement.
Even on uneven surfaces,
the Highlander kept much of
the turbulence away from riders, allowing only mild vibrations to be transferred to passengers. The ride isn ' t wallowy and cushioned, though.
The tester rode on standard
16-inch tires, and road noise
was at a minimum.
Power-assisted rack-andpinion steering was like that
found in cars and had a pretty .
mainstream feel.
And the Highlander's looks
are, well, not exactly bold or
aggressive for an SUV
In fact, there's no cladding
on the Highlander's body
sides, and on the test vehicle,
even a luggage rack was a
$220 extra.
·
No matter. This is a sport
utility that looks easy to
drive, and it is.
At 5 feet 4, I found it easy
to get inside ; with just a few
adjustments of the seat and
tilt steeri ng wheel, I was

Diana Renee Beaver and
John Daniel Nuce, both of
Gallipolis, are announcing their
engagement and upcoming
maniage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of James P. Beaver of
Thurman and the late Alinda M.
Pullins Beaver.'
The prospective bridegroom
is the son of John Nuce and
Kandyse D. Nuce of Gallipolis.
The wedding is plann~d for
August 9, 2003, at Grace
United Methodist Church, with '
Pastor Robert Ingrdlll perfonning the service.

The 2003 Highlander, shown in an undated publicity photo, continues to be Toyota 's top-selling sport utility vehicle. Introduced as a 2001 model, the High lander
is a five-passenger. mid-size SUV offered with a choice of four-cylinder and V6 engines and two- and four-wheel drive. Its ride and handling, though. are designed
for pavement and mild off-road duty. (AP Photo/Toyota)
.
comfortably positioned.
Riders in the back seat
enjoy a tlat tloor, and even
the middle person in the back
has a soft resting spot. Three
adults back there will sit
closely, however.
I could see over and around
cars and through the windows of other mid-size and
compact SUVs that were in
front of me. Larger vehicles,
though, blocked my view.
The Highlander is shorter in
wheelbase and overall length
than competitors like the
Honda Pilot and Nissan
Murano, but not by much.
Indeed, maximum cargo
space in the Highlander, with
rear seats folded down, is
81.4 cubic feet, which is just
0.2 cubic foot shy of that in
the Murano. The Pilot, which
is 3.6 inches longer than the
Highlander, has 9.0.3 cubic
feet of cargo room.
The Highlander dimension
that's most telling, perhaps. is
width. The Pilot is 77.3 mches wide, according to Honda,
and the Murano is 74 inches
wide, while the Highlander
measures 71.9 inches.
Thi s helps explain why the
Highl ander lags both competitors in interior shoulder

room.
The Highlander also has a
bit less front headroom and
legroom than the Pilot and
Murano.
For example, the Pilot's
front headroom measures
41.9 inches vs. 40 inches in
the Highlander, . and the
Murano has 43.4 inches of
front legroom compared with
40.7 inches in the Highlander.
The 2003 Highlander doesn't offer a third-row seat, so
passenger capacity is limited
to five, the same as the
Murano. But the Pilot comes
standard with a third row, able
to carry up to eight people.
The base engine that was in
the test Highlander - a !55horsepower, 2.4-liter, double
overhead cam four-cy linder
- had a buzzy sound when
pressed, and it can seem to
struggle to get up to highway
speed quickly.
It a lso can feel taxed when
the vehicle is loaded with five
passen~ers .

Maxtmum torque is 163
foot-pounds at 4,000 rpm.
Fuel economy is the benelit
of this powerplant, because
the four-cylinder is rated at 22
miles a gallon in city driving
and 27 mpg on the highway in

a Highlander with two-wheel
drive. Note this is the kind of
fuel economy more likely
found in a car rather than an

suv.

In the test Highlander with
four-wheel drive, the fuel
economy mti ng is 19 and 24
mpg, respectively.
But the majority of
Highlanders are sold with the
uplevel V6 that provides better acceleration, quieter performance and is better suited
to ' a vehicle carrying four or
live passengers.
The 3-liter, dl)uble oyerhead cam V6 is rated at 220
horsepower and 222 foot pounds of torque at 4,400
rpm.
Note this is less than the
245 horses and 246 footpounds of torque at 4,400
rpm in the Murano and the
240 horsepower and 242
foot-pounds of torque at
4,500 rpm in the Pilot. The
Murano and Pilot do not offer.
four-cylinder models. The
only transmission in the· 2003
Highlander is a four-speed
automatic, while the Pilot has
a five- speed automatic and
the Murano comes with a
continuously variable transmission.

All these vehicles with V6
are priced similarly. The
starting MSRP and destination charge for a 2003
Highlander V6 with twowheel drive is $26.070. Its
$27,470 for a 4X4 model.
The 2003 Pilot, available
only with four-wheel drive,
starts at $27,360, and the
Murano with two-wheel
drive starts at $28,739.
Highlander sales rem ain
strong and at the top ·of
Toyota' s fiv e S UVs. Last
year's sales of 113,134 were
up 30.5 percent from 86,699
in calendar 200 I, and sales
were up another 5.2 percent
in the first half of thi s year vs.
the same period a year ago.
In fact, Toyota announced
that Highlander sales set a
June record last month .
The National Highway
Safety Administration gave
the 2003 Highlander · 4X4
four out of five stars for driver and front-passenger protection in a frontal eras!! test.
In side crash testing, the ·
Highlander 4X4 earned five
out of five stars for front- and
rear-seat passenge r protection. NHTSA said the
Highlander's rollover r~sis­
tance ranks three out of five

J.D. Power: Lexus again leads in durability
JOHN PORRETTO

Associated Press
DETROIT (AP) - Lexus
maintained its top spot for the
ninth year in automobile
dependability rankings, while
Kia was at the bottom, according to an annual study' oy market researcher J.D. Power and
Associates.
· Lexus, the luxury division of
Toyota Motor Corp., was fol lowed by Nissan Motor Co.'s
lnfiniti, General Motors Corp.'s
Buick. Porsche AG and Honda
Motor Co.'s Acura.
GM was the only one of
Detroit's Big Three automakers
to score better than the industry

average of 273 problems per
I00 vehicles.
"The' Lexus brand has
become one of the bulletproof
brdflds out there," said Mike
Wall, an industry analyst with
CSM Worldwide. " In tenns of
quality, efficiency and overall
manufacturing, I think Toyota's
been head and shoulders above
the rest."
Besides Kia of Kia Motors
America, the bmnds rated lea&gt;t
dependable were Ford Motor
Co. 's Land Rover, Daewoo
Motor America's Daewoo,
American Suzuki Motor
Corp.'s Suzuki and Vl)Jkswagen
of America's Volkswagen.
The closely watched study,
released Tuesday, is based on

response~ r'rom more than
55.000 original owners of 2000
model-year cars and light
trucks.
For the lirst time, J.D. Power
reviewed models at three years
of ownership instead of four to
five years to better support
manufacturers' efforts to
improve replacement models.
Because of the change, 2003
results are noi directly compamble to previous studies.
Some of the most common
problems in the new survey
were excessive bmke wear.
wind noise and unexpected
parts replacements.
"Conventional wisdom said
that dependability was the property of the Japanese and

'

'

I

Europeans," said Joe Ivers,
executive
director
of
quality/customer satisfaction at
J.D. Power. "While it's still true
for automakers like Toyota and
Honda, it's no longer the case
for many Europeans."
Ivers noted that while
Porsche', Jaguar, Saab and
BMW scored above the industry avemge for dependability,
Audi, Mercedes-Benz and
Volvo were well below the stan-

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

stars.
Last
December,
176
Highlanders from the 2003
model year were recalled
because a port-installed alloy
wheel installation did not
provide proper lug nut s for
the spare tire. ·
Highlanders from the 200 I
and 2002 model years were
part of a safety recall of
154,593 vehicles last year
because the nozzle un a fuel
vapor recovery hose had the
potential to leak fuel after a
hi gh-s peed
crash
and
rollover.
And in calendar 200 I,
Hi ghlanders were part of a
recall of 41 , 169 SUVs
because of the potential for
air to get into the master
brake cylinder, which could
lengthen stopping di stances.
The Highlander is a recommended buy of Consumer
Reports, which lists the predi cted reliabilit y of the 2003
Highlander as much better
than average.
On the Net:
Natiorwl Hig/nvav Traj]ic
Safety Administration:
www.+nhtsa+ .dot.govl
In su rance In stitute for
Highway Safety:
www. high W(/ysafery.org!

Check us out on
the web:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com .
www.mydailyregister.com

dard.
MATINEES

J.D. Power said 52 percent of
new-vehicle buyers indicated
that long-term durability was
among the most important factors in their decision.
On the Net:
J.D. PatVer: htrp:l!www.jdrxuxxn

.

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•

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Michael and Julie Casey of
Bidwell would like to
announce the engagement
and upcoming marriage of
their
daughter,
Jessica
Brooke Casey to Jaso n Kent
Abbott of Flatwoods, Ky.,
son of Kathy McKnight.
The bride-elect is a 1998
graduate of River Valley
High School. She attends
Marshall University where
she will graduate in May
2004 with a bachelor ofarts
degree. She plans to further
her education in nursing.
She is the granddaughter of
Ray and June Smith of
Bidwell and the late Charles
Casey and Velva Casey of
Bidwell.
The groom-elect is a 199-3
graduate of Russe ll High
School. He will graduate in
2004 with a bachelor of
English degree with a minor
in Latin. He is also serving in
the Army National Guard. He

Jessica Brooke Casey and
Jason Kent Abbott

plans to serve as an officer in
the United States Army after
graduation .
He is the grandson of Edsel
and
Bobbie
Rice
of
Kentucky.
The open church wedding
will be held at 3:30 p.m. ,
Aug. 16, 2003 at the First
United Methodist Church in
Huntington, W.Va.

Anniversaries
Lawrence 40th
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev.
and
Mrs . Terence W.
Lawrence celebrated their
40th wedding anniversary on
Sunday, June 29, 2003. The
congregation of the church
they
pastor,
Calvary
Christian Center, Inc., in
Gallipolis, hosted a dinner
for them on Saturday, June
28, 2003.
The fellowsl;lip hall at the
church was decorated beautiful to carry out the "Rub~
Rev. lo Mra. Terence w.
Anniversary" theme. A deltLawrence
cious full course dinner for
them on Saturday, June 28. married to Brett Wilt, and one
2003.
~randson, Caden. The~ live
Mrs. Lawrence is the for- m Madison, Wis. Tabitha is
mer Feryle Moore of London, an elementary school teacher
Ky. Pastor.Lawrence is origi- and Brett is a meteorologist.
nally from Charleston, W.Va.
Out of town guests includThey met eachother while at ed, Melvin and Claudia
Bible College, St. Paul, Moore of Cincinnati, brother
Minn .
and sister-in-law of Mrs.
All guests had been asked Lawrence ; the Rev. Raymond
to bring or send one memo- Anderson of Charleston,
rable happening or experi- brother-in-law of Pastor
ence with or about the , Lawrence, who performed
Lawrences. The happening or the ceremony 40 years ago.
experience was either told by Other out-of-towners includthose present or read after the ed Jerry and Teloa Tackett
and Paula Witt, nieces of
dinner.
The Lawrences have one Pastor Lawrence also of
daughter, Tabitha, who 1s Charleston, W.Va.

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tilled with floral bouquets
make charming centerpieces
for an afternoon wedding.
For an elegant evening
reception, a collection of

NEW YORK (AP) - It
could have been worse. A lot
worse .
' Budget cuts for museums,
concert halls and other cultural institutions in the city were
serious, but not as serious as
anticipated, officials said.
The city's Department of
Cultural Affairs funding was
down by $1.6 million over a
year ago, forcing some popular sights to shorten their
hours of operation. But the
amount when the fiscal year
began July I was higher than
the $94 million cut initially
proposed in ApriL
'The original cuts that were
proposed were a disaster. ,..
All things being equal,' we
· came out of this budget cycle
OK," said Karen Brooks
Hopkins, president of the
Brooklyn Academy of Music.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
Gallipolis Daily Tribtme
Subscribe today • 446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

.... -·

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books and photo albums.
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Hopkins is also chairwoman of the Cultural
Institutions Group, a consorfium of 34 city-funded institutions pn city-owned property.
Kate Levin, the cultural
affairs commissioner, said the
city was able to stave off
more severe cuts because of
financial aid from the state
and federal governments.
Hopkins and other officials
said the financial picture is
far from rosy.
"It can't get any tighter. We
don't want the budget to be
cut any further than it has
been already," said Ron
Kavanaugh, spokesman for
the Bronx Museum of the
Arts.
The Department of Cultural
Affairs' budget is $118.8 million for the fiscal year that

began July I, down from
$120.4 million in the previous year. The reduction s
come on top of cuts made last
year, Hopkins said .
The Brooklyn Museum of
An will be closed fur two
weeks in August, for the tirst
time in about a decade, to
curb expenses. The American
Museum . of the Moving
Image in Queens is cutting
· back on the days it's open.
Other museums have postponed exhibits or are taking
their time in filling positions.
"Everybody is implementing a version of the disaster
plan,"
Hopkins
said.
"Measures will still be
taken."
Organizations are looking
ahead with some concern,
hoping that a bud~et review
in November won t result in

funds being stripped. They'
are heartened by Mayor·
Michael Bloomberg's person- :
al dedication to the arts, as·
well as other city officials·
who seem to recognize the it'
importance.
" I am cautiously optimistic:
... that these numbers will'
stick," said Rochelle Slovin,'
director of the American·
Museum of the Moving
Image.
Because the cuts weren' t as
deep as feared, she said ber
museur;n will be able to con- .
tinue its education program-.
ming in the fall, and she'll be:
able to hire a new director of
education.
Given the state of the econ-.
omy, Levin said, "to be able
to be a steady funder is really
quite
an
extraordinary:
achievement."

am

pie's OOme, a Heart:&lt;;croU ~ fa:h is~ooheavy
wiD SlalU the as of lime.
• Write from the hean. \bws in lS a Wting testament to their love." an:hival-qualil}' ~am tmlitm5
Krelm' illl'i 1m! aafting artislic 13 by 19 nx:hes. Check oot
lm:rning rme (:lDJt13l. fran SJll' yoor 0\WI Wild&lt;! truly exress )WI'
cial poemc; \\Tittm by d-e !:ride alii dleps feelings. Yoo may wish to cenificates for weddin£5 ~ www.heattscroll.com for even
gtOOm to ~ wed- cm:ribe cimim qualities of your anni\\'lS!Ifies sin::e 1973. llnwgh rme ideas am suggesti&lt;n; on llJw
ding·certiftalles.
beloved cr stae yoor lqJes frr)Wl' Hear1sooll, l&lt;relm otrers afud- to rresen'C am mermiali2e )WI'
able,~~ dxu- wtiliing vows am commitrm11, to
"A growing llUll1lrr of coopJeS tUuretogdl~et
of all fuiths are 3'iking artiSs to
• Krep it l:rief. Your l=t is full rmJtslhatare~in:ttmng­ vi!w the COOl[XUly's entire Cllalog
recoo:l their~ vrms," says andyouremoomsnmdeep,hnit's ly JXllllar with couples, wedling of n~ oovenants (for wedJcmthan Kren~. an artist v.!ne rest to keep vows on the shcrterside planners and invitation dealers ding, anniversmy, renewal ofmws
a.:m;s tre crun!Iy. 'Th,&gt;, covenants ?' commiWent), matching wedCOfiiiliOY, Heartscmll: 1h: Alt of (wm 20) words).
have
al9J rex. 1e )J.lUiara; awed- ding Jll)gllllll cover; am m::re, oc
Love, Sjlrialire; in ~ng alii
•ilianeditocA5ksonnn:you
ding
gift
item.
to find a realer in your area R:r
memorializing wedding vows_ trust to .revr.v yoor stltelrent at
more infonnation, aill (888) 664Theoovenantscorre
in
19ditrer''Eldl roople illl'i to finl treir own least a rew days Mae the wedling
srtriaJ. voire when ~tting teeJings This "edita" can relp Cllldl )Xllfll- ent design~ with a&amp;eledion of vows. · %25.
into wmls."
tially emtmassing rom and might
Bridal Registry
Here are a rew tip; fer coopies even ~ changes kJ help you

to fux!UII \\otrre- alii if- you may
insertap:r.maisllfeml'ltintrew--

two
grandsons,
Joshua
Robbins and Taylor Robbins
Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. (Ruth
Mr. Robbins is retired from·
and Bob) Robbins Sr. of
Kaiser
Aluminum and Mrs.
Gallipolis observed their 48th
wedding anniversary May 31, Robbins is a retired supervisor
and caseworker with the state
2003.
.
They have one daughter, Welfare Department, Ohio
Kimberl y Robbins-Phelps,, Youth Commission and Gallia
and one son, Ralph T. (Rob) County Welfare Department
Robbins II. They also have· with 32 years of service.

Glitter Spray. For a fall wedding, substitute pumpkins
and gourds. To dtsplay the
gleaming produce , paint
glass bowls or plates with
Frosted Glass Finish or
Looking Glass paints. (Be
sure to post a sign that says
the fruit should not be eaten.)
In two simple steps,
Krylon Looking Glass
Mirror-Like Paint creates a
beautiful, mirror-like finish
on ·ordinary glass products.
Soft and romantic, the
rellecti ve finish is breathtaking in candlelight. For a dazzling centerpiece, spmy the
insides of champagne flute s
and wine goblets with
Looking Glass, turning them
into gleaming pedestal s fo r a
display of silk flowers. Or,
spray the underside of a
glass platter or charger plate ,
and arrange votive candles
and a few silk !lowers on
top. (Note: This is a decorative finish and is not water
resi stant).
For a touch of stardust on
that special day, spritz silk
!lower bouquets and centerpieces, pew bow s, table -

TI-ae vows, like
e1eme11ts
of the we:lding cerem6ny, are

POINT PLEASANT Tom and Romona Holland of
Point Pleasant will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary, Saturday, July 19, 2003 .
An open house reception,
hosted by their children, will
be held on that day from 2-5
p.m. at Main Street Baptist
Church, II 00 Main Street,
Point Pleasant. Famil y and
frieuds are invited to attend .
Tom and Romona were
Mr. 1o Mrs. Tom Holland
married July 17, 1953 at
Heights EUB Church in Point
Pleasant. They have two chi)- Loveland, Ohio nad four
dren , JT Holland of Point grandchildren. The couple
Pleasant, Jeff Holland of requests that there be no gifts . ,

Robbins.48th

mi smatched candleholders
can become a gl"aming ceoterpiece when painted with
Krvlon Metallic Paints. For a
so(ter finish , spray glass candleholders with Frosted
Glass Finish. available in six
colors to match any color
theme. A simple collection
of glass vases or even glass
jars can be similarly transformed. For a more playful
mood, Krylon Stained Glass
Color turns glassware,
including votives, hurricane
lamps and candleholders,
into a rainbow of transparent
color - red, blue, green,
orange, yellow and purple.
Accent the painted pieces
with hearts, swirls and
stripes, or even the couple's
name and wedding date.
drawn with Krylon Leafing
Pens in gold, silver or copper.
A bride-to-be with more
creativity than cash may al so
. find inspiration in the produce aisle of her superrnarket. Fresh fruits, including
apples, pears and oranges,
can be sprayed gold and silver and dusted with Krylon

Unique·and personal celebrations of everlasting love

Holland 50th

-+---··---·~·-----

Sunday, July 13, 2003

Museum, other cultural budgets tight but:
slightly less disastrous than anticipated ·

ux m:mplating their VOI;l;:
• Chd it &lt;J.Jt. 0mt1t with d-e

CHARLIE: S ANGELS(PG· 1
t=ULL

Celebrations ·

Creative ideas help savvy . .
brides cut costs, not corners

Engagements

BY ANN M. JOB
Associated Press

8v

iunbap lime' ·ienttnel

Page CS

~officilDngatyoorwenmy

eroony.
• Find litfraty inspirnlion. Tir
Bible, Shakesp;:are, Kahlil Gilran
and Nllo Neruda are just a fuw of
tre rrm: ~ ~ fer
idelti,p:JemiCJ:~toinciOO:.

V\Ih!n writing, picture tre two of
you realing yoor vows again after
15 yem; tiy to use language dlat

eXJmll your feelings e-.e~1 better.
• Pr.dire. Stage liight at the wedding could make you faget oc
stumble over a key JW.I'e. Real
your vows aloud several tirre;
betW: your wed.ling day to a fiiroj
cr relative, or in fiult of a mim.r.
lliing tre oommy, rea:! them
fiom acleatly f1inted text
"O.tr rtlalliage oovenants ambine acoople's vows oraher \Mitten exp=ioo of tlrir reeiings with
beautiful anwaK," Krem:r says.
''Displayed rn tre wall of the,cou-

• List your preferences
·• No guesswork for
friends &amp; family
• You re&gt;.:t:i ve you r

favorite things.

The
Joint Implant Center
Robert A. Fada, MD , FAGS
Sports Medicine Grant &amp; Orthopedic Ass ociates

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement, we offer office hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, WV .
~

Our next clinic date is Friday, July 18.
Call (614) 461-B1r4 or 1·800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement ·

· --~---

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--.·~

..

·
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·

·
.
·

�'

PageC~

Celebrations
Fashion

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iunbap ltm~ ·itnttntl

Classlfted ads, Pages 03-5

Sunday, July 13, 2003

'

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Sunday, July 13, 2003

••.
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Faces You Recognize, Service You

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Page Dl

How does yo

•

of speakers attend the meetings as often as possible.
The group also participate
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio _ For in outings to local gardens
garden centers.
thousands 0 f years, herbs have and
Members are urged to cuibeen recognized for their ti vate gardens of their own,
many uses, includin~ flavor- but the group also maintains
ings, scents, and medicines.
a Public Discovery Herb
The study of herbs is some- Garden at the French Art
thing that dm be traced as Colony, located on First
back as far as the Stone Ase. Avenue in Gallif?Olis.
and one group of local lad1es
The garden 1s supported
is hoping to keep that trudi- through funds of the annual
tion alive through their orga- Plants, Tastes and Tea sale,
nization, the Gallia Area held the first Saturday of
Herb Guild.
each May at the FAC.
Organized irt 1995, the
"We have three small garGuild was fonned with the dens back here," Guild mem•
hopes of furthering the local ber Pat Parsons said as she
interest in the cultivation and checked the progress of the
uses of. herbs.
groups • herbs in the back yard
There was no local group- of the French Art Colony.
dedicated to herbs in Gallia
"We usually get together
County at that time, so sever- and plant some annuals in
al women approached a . he_re, too, but it's just been·so
Meigs County group for help. wet we haven't been able to ."
"They' re club was full, so
The gardens contain a mixthey helped us start our ture of dill , mint, comfrey,
own," said founding member thyme, sage, and lavender.
Helen Lewis.
Lewis also has an extensive
Over the years, the society variety of herbs in her garden,
has seen a drop in member- used mainly for cooking.
ship, but a core group of ladies
"I use my herb garden
have kept the Guild going.
everyday for culinary cook"Many have moved or ing,' she said. "I use herbs to
passed on," Lewis said; "And make
everything from
now, we would like to get more spaghetti sauce to fresh com
people interested in the group." on the cob."
Members meet once a ' Sweet basil, sage, and
month, except January and thyme are some of Lewis'
February, and have a variety favorite cooking herbs.
BY MIWIIIA RUSSELL
Staff writers

ue~5en

With over 50 years of combined experience, our knowledgeable
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"Having choices is great. That is,
unless you're really indecisive."

A model presents a wedding dress by German fashion designer Karl lagerfeld for Chanel 's Haute Couture fall-winter 20032004 collection Tuesday in Paris. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

chi

cea grow?

Lewis said that one of her
favorite dishes is a fresh
tomato s.alad made of sliced
red and yellow tomatoes cov"
ered in fresh sweet basil,
vinegar and powdered sugar.
During their last meeting,
Gallia County Extension Agent
Becky Colhns spoke to the
group abt'&gt;ut the do's and don'ts
of using herbs in cooking.
"A general guideline when
using fre sh herbs in a recipe
is to use three times as much
as you would of a dried·
herb," she said. "Wheh substituting; you are more succe ssful substituting fre sh
herbs for dried herbs, rather
than the other way around."
Collins also brought along a
sampling of her lemon-lavender sugar cookies for the
group to try, and as an example of how easy cooking with
herbs can be.
" I just used store-bought
. sugar cookie dough and rolled
the sliced cookies in lemon
zest and lavender," she said.
"But be careful not to add too
much lavender - the cookies
will smell great, but they will
end up tasting like bath soap!"
Anyone who is interested in
joining the herb guild is welcome to attend the next meeting, which will be held at 6:30
p.m. July 21 at the French Art
Colony, or for more information, contact Helen Lewis at
(7 40) 379-2727.
ABOVE: lewis used her grandmothers old garden gate in her own garden, as well as the
stack of owls to It' left, a piece of handmade art the she and her husband crafted.

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ABOVE: A bumblebee feasts on the Echlnacea flowers In Helen Lewis' backyard herb garden .

Photos

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lEFT: Herb Guild member
Helen lewis ties her Echinai:ea
plants to keep them upright.
The flowers , also known as
Purple
Coneflower,
are
believed to support the body's
Immune system.

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ABOVE : ·Echinacea flowers stand tall against the other
herbs In Helen Lewis' garden.

I.
•

•

•

MUUssia
Russen

�Page 02 • iounbap l!l:tme• ·6rnttnrl

Pome~oy,' Middleport,

Yard Sale Mistakes That Can
Cost You Dearly
.

Let's Get This Straight:
•

Gadget Proves
There's a New Way
.to Decorate
Homeowners and apartment dwellers
alil:e can rest assured that their decorating
days will now be easier. A new product on·
the market helps solve this classic home
improvement dilemma. The Strait-Line
Laser Line Generator is an innovative
hand-held device that casts a level, red laser
line on any surface.
"While there are a number of laser tools
on the market, none are quite like this," BE A STRAIGHT-SHOOTER when it
says Don Zeman, host of the nationally comes to mastering home improvement prosyndicated radio show "Homefront ." "For jects. The Strait-Line Laser Line Generator
casts a straight, level laser beam, which
~yone who has ever encountered problems
helps with projects like hanging shelves,
Oligning pictures, mounting wall decorawallpaper, molding and more.(WMS). Who ·
tions, hanging wallpaper or for other home
hasn't encountered problems . hanging picimprovement projects like cutting wood tures straight? And how about the intricacies
and tiling floors, the Laser Line Generator of mounting level shelves or attempting to
is· a perfect solution. It creates a straight align wallpaper? Trying to put up anything
line wherever you need it without having to that requires a straight line can be a hassle,
spend time drawing marks on nice especially when working alone. Holding the
level in one hand and making a pencil mark
surfaces."
Unlike many other laser tools, which can of a straight line with the other isn't always
an easy task.
cost hundreds of dollars, the product is
affordable with a suggested retail price
around $60. It is powered by two AA bat- would have had to use a pencil to draw a
teries and includes a carrying case that eas- line across my entire wall to make sure the
two shelves were lined up straight and then
ily attaches to a belt.
Its ergonomic design includes a soft-grip I would have had to go back and try to
handle and levels for horizontal and venical erase the marks. This tool was quick and
'
applications. And with a flip of the lens easy to use and it didn't involve the inconcover, it's easily turned on or off. It also venience of marking up my walls."
There are no other accessories to buy -includes built-in metal anchor pins that can
attach the product directly to a wall for no tripods or special lenses . It includes a
one-year warranty and is made by the same
added stability and an extra free hand.
"The anchor pins allow the user to mount company that manufactures quality tools
the laser to the wall or ceiling, so their like Vise-Grip locking pliers and Quickhands are free to do other things," says Grip clamping tools.
The product is also useful in the workZeman. "Many people will appreciate this
feature because it can make handling home shop because it can cast a straight line for
cutting wood, metal or other materials. And
improvement projects much easier."
And if the laser line encounters an obstacle its nylon-reinforced case withstands the
like molding or framing, the line continues heavy-duty use of workshop environments.
past the obstruction. It's made possible with " I think years from now, we ' ll still be hearpatented technology that "casts a line" on ing from ]Jeople about al l of the differe11.t
the surface similar to the way other objects uses they've found for their Laser Line
Generator," says Zeman.
can cast a shadow.
It's available at hardware stores and home
"I used the Laser Line Generator to hang
a pair of decorative shelves in my new improvement centers nationwide. An· online
apartment," says Heather Budnick, a veteri- demonstration of the new product is availnary technician in Chicago. "Without it, I able at www.strait-line.com.
.

Spruce Up Flea Market Finds
(WMS) · Summer means tag
sales and flea markets -- 'the key
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is just a bit too shabby, spray
paints and coatings can help
tr~nsform trash into treasure. Is
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$3 dresser just a little too retro?
Don't despair·· with the right
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something you love in an easy
afternoon.
The industry leader in paint
technology, Krx)on® suggests
that correct surface preparation
is the key to a happy ending.
When working with painted,
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sand the surface and remove any
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wood or metal, or dramatically
changing the color of a painted
piece, use a primer before painting. Look for latex spray paints
with fast dry times and soapand-water clean up, and carefully read and follow the
instructions on the can.
Stage a practice run before

you start. First, try your paint and
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patch o~ an inconspicuous area of
the proJect. Be sure to protect
your work surface with a drop
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Once the prep is done, the fun
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hello Pme, K1w1 Green or
Chenille Sage. Dated becomes
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latex spray pa1'nts from Krylon ·,n
a palette of 40 popular colors and
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mixing and 'matching colors, like
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Royale dresser. Or. use stenciling
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thin coats to avoid runs and drips.
Now, it's time to accessorize.
Details can make a room , and
today 's paints and finishes give
new life to secondhand finds.
Spray-on faux fini shes in textured
ston e, antique crackle or soft
suede to rejuvenate and update
wicker bask.ets, plastic storage
containers, wooden frames or

ceramic lamp bases. Glass paints
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soft, frost~d shades enhance
glassware. In two easy steps,
Krylon Looking Glass® paint
creates a dramatic, mirrored
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Krylon MystiqueTM offers the
latest excitement in home decor
fim1·shes ·- a shimmering, color· patnt
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coors,
not one. Can't decide if
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or purple? There's no need to
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silver/green, blue/purple and
magent a1go ld , the product adds
a dazzling tini sh 10 wood, metal,
plastic, glass or wicker.
With just a little planning and
preparation, Krylon · products
give ·flea market finds a new life.
For application tips and project
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1 Seoul'

'

6 Shaped ll&lt;e an egg
11 HinW prince

Most lnlorlcr
Taek
22 Gotton up
16
21

23 WWII plane,

- Gay
24 lslarid graoting

25 Clrrutar

98 Colr1Milll081&gt;001tiltiol01li
98 Musical soood
100 Pemanl

Cup handle
t05 Grow wea.y

104

Latge crucifix
t07 ItaiM money, once

106

toe Wavetop

110
112
113

35Unwantadplant

t t9
121
t 24

42 Blad!
44 Afew
46 liter lngrectient

49
52
53
55
59

Flecldns
Aexlble tube
Best - and tucker
Trinket
Farewen, amigo!

60 Plunder
61 Ate Ylll}&lt; last

64 Direct
65 Optirristlc
66 Holsf.&lt;lrawn veticla
67 BeipaiiT
68 Drone
70 Orl8d up
7t

Marquee notice

(abbr.)
72 Leg part
73 Conceal
74~
78 Aclresa- Farrow

n

Church cisserrter

79 Will grWtd
60Knocks

82 Stole

84 Persia, at present
85 Where Havana Is

86 Usual food and drink
87 Baseball's Babe 86 Appear
90 Dlvlngbird

91 P8C\Jiior

82

Not worthy ol

114
116

t.oolced
long and hard

Monotouy

Sticky stuff

111 Mounlllln range
t t8

lnRuala
Thlclt IOupS
Aid anclSeized
Plane part
Playing card

125
128 Parent

Soap plant
t31 Chronicle (abbr.)
132 Repeat
130

138 AoRolbls

137 T.y to get (2 wds.)
I 39 Greek latter
140 Skin or coconut

Wllbricate
142 Heavenly being
t« Mood (3 Mls.)
147 c.na upon
149 Gape
160 Dlmet guest
151 Edgy
152 Regloo for grazlntl
153 Singer Lena154 Gladden
155 Contallli&gt;IUOUtloolc
156 AquatiC mammal

1

Mttll~r

3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Awilcen
Samovar

'Eartyro- .. :
Portllni'IState
Female fox
Snakes
Links Item

Tanlby
wltlin ano1har
11 Fann machine
12 lnsacl
13 Connect
10

Dilhealten

Unoar-.e

I

2 ·f'lclled

t01 That girl
102 Jot

26 Sometting
anticipated
28 Neighbor ollndla
29 Curve ehape
30 Grows old
31 Back talk
32 Moved ahead
eautlously
34 B&amp;fort

37 We9'1flllil
38 Leigh or JackS&lt;lll
40 Peasoop
41 -Moines

DOWN

,,

14Stsndofftsh

15 Horae-drawn
carriage
16

Belen

17 C.y lila bUIIgl1t

18 I Mooed
19 Pcl1lon
20 'The Canterbury-·

21

Forte

part

30Sulln0Unting
33 t.fld oath
38 Ar1l1ldal bini
38 Joke
39 Pool or coiiH
43 College dtgCl*nnty OIII!M

«

45
47

Kilcled

-Angetes
48 Little ones
49 Fen
60 t..11&lt;e a lot
51 Lost and conlustd
52 Tnmpat
54 Conrnand
56 Play down (hypli.)
57 Eagle'a ntll

56 Fear
60 Secullr

61 Oller a price
62 Cooked too mu:h
63 Excavated
66 Certain Aslanll
67 Hyge

69

lniOfPiel wrongly

Actorll' place
Vagrant
74 t.tmicked
72
73

75 Oscillated
78 Gawrong
79 Keep alloat

8I - -de-oamp
63 Native of ~suft!K)
85 Red wine •

86 Proclamation

89

MaryTyter-

921nkapot
93 Playing cartl

94 Coln·toos resUt
97 Blue

99

Table~

100 Trick

103 Vaat land mass
105 --ootta
106 Stniet
I07 Glove size
jog Ckmsy boat

Binge
.112 On 1he house
11t

t 13 Pistol
115 Otftce rote, fa
117 Railes

Choose
t20 Hard candy
122 Etectncal
123 Mlddilg
t24 WOllkerYiili'rl tOr.~ I
t25 Flooded
126 Poem division
t27 Pot or 8unwgh$
129 Ellk:al
.
t31 WUil cycle
133 Noblel111Ml
. 134 DeYice on a door
135 Less lretll
118

Mtrrfrnent
138 Prot37

(proporllonalely)
t 40 Exp1061ve daYice
143 Sea eagle
145 Encountered

146 People
147 Toand148 Cereal grass

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

To

m:rtbune

Ad ...

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classifled@mydallytrlbune.com

·place
Your

Otftfee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday .
.8:00
a.m. to 5:00
., .,, .

p.m.

•

•

r

.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

All Dlaplay1 12 Noon 2 ·
Bualne•• Daya Prior To
Publication

Jn Next D•y•e P•per

In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Sundaya P•p•r

IIL~."·o-HELP-·w·ANrn0--""1 1"6 , HELPWANim
CLINIC COORDINATOR

C· 1 Beer Carry Out permit
tor sale, Chesler Township,
Meigs Counly. send letters
of interest to: The Daily
Sen tinel, PO Bo.~e 729·20,
.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
FREQUENT HEADACHES?
You may qualify for FREE
assessment. Call 740-593·
1060. St ud~ Sponsored by
Ohio University and the
Nationallnsmutes of Health,
Athens, Oh

Dental Health Partners of
Holzer Medical CenterJaCkson has an opening for
a Clinic Coordinator.
Responsibilities will Include
supervising the staff of den~
tal assistants, performing
chair side assisting, sterlli·
zalion, of instruments, labQ..
ratory prOcedures and the
preparation and in\IEintory
control ot dental instru·
ments and supplies.

I

Handy-Man,
hOme
Improvements ior all your
home Improvement needs,
rob! specialist. call Mark
740·988·8010 011 -877·379·
2623
-------Hardware sales clerk, experience nice but not necessary. · Forward resume to
CL.A·570. c/o Gallipolis Dally
Tribune. 825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Help wanted caring tor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,
new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am5pm , 3pm-11pm, 11pm·
7am, call 740·992-502 3

Requirements fo: the position are: the completion of
TASC of Southeaat Ohlp
Board of Directors will meet accredited course In dental
in Athens at 4:00pm on the asslstlni;J preferred, five
y"ears previous experience
following dates:
ir. dental assisting and cur· Help wanted Child care
Tuesd ay, July 22,2003
rent dental radiology license workers wanted for residenTASC Conference Room
required .
8 North Court, 5th Floor
tial treatment facility, pay
based on experience. Call
Tuesday, October 28, 2003 Excellent compensation
740·379-9083
Tuesday, January 20, 2004 and benetn package.
Tue sday, April 20. 2004
Home Health Care of
317 Board Conference
If interested, please con Southeast Ohio is currently
tact·
Room
hiring Home Health Aides,
7990 Diary Lane
Humane Resources
LPN's and AN's for service
in Gallia , Mason, Vinton, and
Department
Meigs counties. Call 740·
HOLZER MEDICAL CEN662· 1222.
TER·JACKSON
-,
Jackson,
OH 45640
INSIDE SALES
4 puppies, part Beagle. 7 Phone: (740) 395-8300
' 25 OPtNINGS
wkS old, 3 female , 1 male, EEOIADA Employer
"WILL TRAIN
cute! 740-245·5393.
'CALL
Ull'iT AND
BUSINESS
FOUND
NOT HOMES
MINIMUM
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT
FOUND oil Sandhill Rd. light
brown Husky m i .~e . Cream Rapidly growing bank holdSI.OG-$12.00
colored lace. (304)674·0047 ing company has career
PER HR.
GUARANTEED!!
opportunity in Jackson tor
Found small female dog an experienced professional
TO START+
near TNT area 304·882- to provide admin istrative
BONUSES
2365
support to President, CEO
CALL

I

r

~----------..
GIVK~WAY

'-~-------"'·

r

and other senior officers.
Requires excellent interper·
sonal skills, ability to handle

' no. SALE
yJ'UU.J

304-675·2700
1..aoo.B75·2673

NOw Hiring Professional
Painters. Rates variable.
Send Resume &amp; references
to: JA09, 200 Main Street.

Pepel

Cola
Bottling
h11 an opening
for
1
Part-time
MllrchandiHr for: Cheehlre

Pt Pl. WV 25550

end lhe 1urroundlng lreL

NOW HIRING
SCHEDULER, SECRE·
TARV AND·HOME

ropottUv1 lilting of SD-100
poundl; mu1t be ot leut
18 yeoro of og1 end hove

HEALTH AIDES. GOOD

an

Compan~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Po1ltlon requlrtl he1vy.

HOURS, COMPETITIVE

WAGES, BENEFITS, PRE·
FER SOME EXPERIENCE
BUT WE WILL TRAIN
RIGHT PERSON. APPLY
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
8:00AM TO 4:30PM. FAMI·
LY SENIOR CARE. 859
THIRD AVE, GALLIPOLIS,
PH . NO PHONE CALLS II

Now hiring, phone sales end
field sales personnel. hourly

&amp; commission. Will train, but
experience a plus. Must
have good organizational
skills and good people skllls.

Career and positive minded
people need only to apply.
Call (740) 843·1248
Overbrook Rehab Center is
l~ing for a rull·time ward
clerk
for
our lacility.
Computer J'kill s, reliable
transportatic5n, must be able
to work clOsely with others.
For more information con·
tact Diane Milliron at 740·
992-6472

Part-time cook/helper need·
ed for 100 bed skilled nurs. I Tty I 1
I
I d
mg acll · nares 6 app I·

cants

exclillent

driving
record. Pey 11 $8.65 per
hour; aprox. 26-30 haura
per WHk; ovenlngl ond
weekondl required. P~or
merchondlolng or ltOCk·
lng experlencele a ·plue. H
qualified, piiUI 11nd 1
resume by no later lhon,
Friday, July 18, 2003, lo
Humono Reoourcto/PlM
,
Box 299, Franklin

SCenic Hills Nursing Cen1er
of Bidwell, OH Is currently
accepting applications for a
FT 3p·11p RN. We offer
comPetitive wages, experience pay, shift differential,
excellent benefits,
and
Incentive programs. Please
apply In person. For more
Information, please contact
Dianna Thompson at 74D448-7150 between the
hours of 8-4:30. We are an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer.

r

n.

YAKD SALEGALLIPOLIS

July , 2 &amp; 13. Multi-family
yard sale, 554 Jay Dr.,
Spring vall ey. Ladies jeans &amp;
clothing 10·26 (lots of 18 &amp;
up) ; some men . teen &amp; boy's
clothing. Bowling ball, bean~
ies, puzzles. COs, small
appliances,
glassware,
books. lireplace grate, 18..
,
.
h
sin k a \lamty, P1us muc
pm
_ ___
_
m_o_re_. 9_a_m_·5:...
Moving Sale SaUMon-Fri ,
Home Interior, copier. taxmachine. and mi sc. Hubbard
Ave . Gallipoli s 446 _8578

r

WANTF.n

'10 BllY

_

I

"-------·
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Gold
Coins,
Silver.
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold
U.S . Currency,·
Rin gs,
M.T.S. Coin S hop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446·2842 .

proliciency in Word and
EJCcel
Five years office
experience
requ ired .
Previou s banking eJCperl ence and/or degree pre·
ferred. EJCcellent compensatlon and benelits, including
profit-sharing and 40i(K).
Send r"esume and salary
requirements to : Oak hill

~;~~~~~

~

~hOuld ap~l~ .10 : · FAX RESUME TO: BOW·

Road ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, Attn: Mary Hoffman ,
Dietary Manger.
Extendicare
Health
Services. Inc. is an equal

Announcements

LIS OH 45631. FAX#: 740441 -3072
-------Substilute
Van
Driver
Needed for lransportlng

Frequent
Headaches?

Financial, Inc .. Attn: Human
Resources, 14621 SR 93,
Jackson, OH 45840, EOE,
MJF/ON
-------E.~eperienced lead carpenters-must be familiar with all
phases ol residential remod·
eling, valid drivers license,
tools. transportation, and
relerences. Local worK, pay
based
on
experience.
Applications available at
ConslructiOn.
Christian s
1403
Ea stern
Ave ..
Gallipolis. 446·4514

talk the tifW Avon . Call
Marilyn, 304-882 ~2645 to
learn all the ways it can worK
tor you.

Homemakers needed to
provlde in home ser\lices. in
the Ripley &amp; Cottageville
areas. (304)295.0890

Now hiring car wash manager. Some mechanical knowl·
edge prelerred. Fax resume
lo 304·295-0249

I \ 11 '1 ( ' ' \ II \I
\ lit\ I( I '

t!ard of Thanks

-.

"'

The family of Edison Brace
wi she s to thank everyone for their
prayers, cards, flower s, gifts and most
of all your visits while he was a patient
at Veterans Memorial Extended Care and
Rocksprings Rehab Center.
We especially thank all of the employees
who gave him "special care" while he
was there. We want to thank all who sent
cards, food, flowers , for the phone calls,
visits, and especially the donations for
the RACO-Edison Brace Memorial
Scholarship at the time of his death:
Special thanks to Dr Witherell, Son shine
Circle for the meal, Larry Halley, Ian
Lavender, and the staff of Cremeens
Funeral Home . Thank you sincerely for
sharing during our time of sorrow.
Your kindness Is deeply appreciated
and will always be remembered.

Tugm manUmi....Q.t
tftlrballft lnttrootlono!.
We ha\le been in business
for 22 years and we market
the most incredible heal1h &amp;
nutrition, personal care and
cosmetic produ Cts available
today
Acce pting re sumes lor
Instructo rs :
Business
Computers,
cl eric al.
Medical. Accounting. Send
resume to Gallipolis Career
College. Attn : DlrectOf of
Education, 1176 Jackson
Pike. Gallipolis Ohio 45631
Addressers wanted immedi·
atety. No e.~eperlence necessary. Work at home. Call
(405)447-8397

God bless each one.
Wije, Mabel, Daughters,
Kath ryn &amp; Family, Joyce &amp; Family,
Son, Jim &amp; Family

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·

,.

675· 1429.

M"'~-------------'!IJ

••

0

-

'

'

Card of Thanks

Do you suffer from:
• Severe
headaches?
• Throbbing pain?

Care tor the elderly in my
country home 740·388-0118

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your lags tc the
mi11 just CE\11 ~04 - 675 - 1957 .
Jim's Carpentry and small
landscaping.· 20 yrs e~~:peri·
ence.
Free
estimate.
(7401446·2506

,,- - -lor-chlldcare
--on

1'70~

Aocksprmgs Rehabilitation MANS HOME MEDICAL 70
Center, 36759 Aockspnngs PINE STREET, GALLIPO-

Say good bye to high phone
bills I New local phone serv·
ice ~ith FREE unlimited
nation Wide long distance 1800-635-2908 or www.free·
dommovie.conv'itpaysyou

Non-profit, non denomlna·
tional agency seeks full and
parHime teachers for abstinence unlit marriage and
high school program. Email
resume to cstherjnt~wltasl­ WOLFF TANNING BEDS
-CON·
ma.IJ.Jm or fax to 740·965- AFFORDABLE
VIENENT
tan
at
HOme·
pay·
1320
ments !rom $25/month
FREE Color-Catalog Call
loday
1-800·842·1305.
---,-,-----www.np.etstan.com
WANTED MANAGER/GAL·
Ll POLIS AREA waste
water experience a plus
send resume and salary
requirements to:
I.P.I
BOX 2228
Help Wanted
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43216
ATIN : RICHAAO BAAS

11'40

Local Tank Drivers COL, encourages
workplace 10 medical appointments.
Tank. Hazmat.. &amp; asphalt. _di_ve_rs:...ity.:..._M_IF_D_N____ Position Is part ~time with no
800·598·6122
··
Scheduler. Secretary, and be ne•..ts. Hours will be IIex1
M
__E_Dt- .-HO_M_E--P-R-IV.A-:T-E Home Health Aides . Good ble and could Include late
CARE Seeking full time AN hours, competitive wages, afternoons and out of counfor Gallipolis, Ohio office . benefits, preler some e.~eperi· ty travel. Must ha\le valid
M
h
once, but we will train right Ohio driver's license and
ust a\le 2 yrs nursing
experience, Ohio lice nse person . Apply Monday thru . good
driving
record.
and eligible fo r a West Friday, 8:00 am to 4:30 pm Program sponsored by the
at Family Senior Care, 859 Retired
and
Senior
Virginia license. Full benefils package, Please call Thi rd Avenue . Gallipolis. VOlunteer Program of Gal1ia
Karen at 1•8()()-533_5848 or _o_H_
. N_o_:p_h_on_e_c_al_lll_ _ County. please send resume
tax resume to 1_740 . 699 _
to Phyllis Mason, SPHR ,
of
Human
. EOE
Seeking MA, LPN, to work Director
2310
- - - - - - - - part time in a family practice Resources, University of Rio
Need to consolidate or start office in Jackson , Ohio. Grande. P.O. Bol&lt; 500, Rio
a new business. . Call Must know medical terms Grande, OH 45674
National Bank toll free 1• and be familiar with back
866 -699 •3064 . Good credit, office duties, plea se fa.~e Super 8 Motel now accept·
no credit, bankruptcy.
resume to 740·288-4466-or ing applications for heusemail to 3375 MI. Zion Ad keeping. Must apply In perNeed to earn Money? Lets Jac~son. ohio 45640
son.

- -- - - -

Teachers Needed

Scenic Hills Nursing Center
ol Bidwell, OH is accepting
application for a fill-in LPN
on our 3·11 and 11·7 shift.
We oHer excellent wages
and benefits, experience
Furnace, OH 45829
Of fax to 740-354-9789 or and shift differential pay, and
BUSlNE$
e-mail to cgrlzzleOgjpep- a variety of Incentive programs. Please apply in per1'RAINING
al.com
son. For more information, "---iiiiiiiiiiiill;.._.l
No phone calla pteaea.
please contact
Dianna
·
EOEIMIF/ON
Gallipolis Cer. .r College
- - - - - - - - Thompson al740·446· 715Q. (Careers Close To Home)
are
an
Equal
RESPIRATORY
THERA· We
Call Todayl 740~46-4367,
NEEDED
FOR Opportunity Employer.
PIST
1-800·214·0452
NATIONAL HOME MED·
www.gallipoliKareercollega.com
ICAL EQUIPMENT COMPA·
Rea 'i90·05· 1274B.
NY. INOIVIDUAL MUST BE
POSITIVE, ORGANIZED,
AND SELF MOTIVATED
R.R.T, C.R .T. OR ELIGIBLE
REQUIRED. F.T., M·F, 8:30·
-BAD CREDIT???·
5. NO WEEKENDS, PAlO
CALL Hl66-269-6331
HOLIDAYS. EXCELLENT
Low lntrHt·various Loan•
COMPENSATION PACKAGE INCLUDES, MEDNewly
approved
dealgnod
forprogrami
YOU
ICAL, DENTAL, VISION,
Cell Hl68-289-6331 XI. 24
AND 4m,K , E.O.E. MAIL OA
HRS

10!1!:"""~-""!'---. confidential information, and - - - - - - - - opportunity employer that Gallla County senior citizens

We are independent distrib·
utors and ort~ldaota

•

Display Ads

Dally In-Columns :1.:00 p.m.
Monday-~rlday for Inaertlon

\ Y\01 \( I \II \ I "

24 People to lose weight.
Natural, Dr. Recommended.
Call 1·800·690·2549
or visit www.ThinOrNot.com

I

Word Ads

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallyregister.com

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get

Card of Thanks

(WMS) - Your children will be sharing the
summer with critters galore. Keep them safe
with these tips from the American Academy of
Pediatrics:
• Don't use scented soaps, perfumes or hair
sprays on your child.
• Repellents appropriate fof use on children should
contain no more ·than 10 percent DEET because
the chentical, which is absorbed through the
skin, can cause.harm. The concentration of
DEET varies from product to product,
so read the label of any product you
purchase.
• Avoid areas where insects nell or
conareaate, like staanant pools of
water, uncovered foods and sardens
where flowen are in bloom.
• Avoid dressina your child in clothina with bright colors 11r flowery
prints.
• To remove a visible stinger from skin •.aetitly scrape it off horizontally with a-credit card or yo~r
fingernail. You can also remove a stinger by with a pair of tweezers or your fingers.

•

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
classlfled@mydallysentlnel.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

HELP WANTED

&lt;

l\egister

Sentinel

·:'

I

Summer Bug Safety!

ister

C L A S.S I F I E D

"

cash for ite.ms
you own'.
You learn
what collectors
wanr to
buy, who
wants to
buy
them,
where
to go
for
free appraisals, and tips on how to get top
dollar for books, china, jewelry,
records, and other popular items
you might want to sell. Tips on
selling by auction and on the
Internet are included.
The {look may be ordered by
sending $29.95 plus $5 s/h to
Treasure Hunt, Box 3028-CY,
Pismo; CA 93448 . Name this
paper when you order and
receive "The World's Most
Accurate Price Guide" and a 30day money-back guarantee at no
charge. For credit card orders call
(805) 773-6777 during California
business hours.
Don't think disasters can't happen to you, Hyman warns. A
New England family sold a black
vase painted with daisies at their
yard sale for $100 because they
"knew it was good." The man
who ):)ought their vase contacted
Riley Humler of the Cincinnati
Art Gallery (p. 55) who helped
him sell the vase for $51 ,700.
That same Gallery sale turned a
$130 pair of yard sale va~es into
$39,000 .for another alert yard
sale shopper.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
95 Puton

OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

'Otrtbune- Sentinel-

''One home in four sells • Perfume bottles often bring
sometfiing for pennies hundreds, and every so often
•
tens of thousands, of dollars;
that could JUSt as easily • Fishing lures have sold for
bring in hundreds or $9,000 each;
dollars."
• Fountain pens have sold for
(WMS) - Americans love yard $20,000+;
sales. There's something warm
• Machine-made marbles can
and friendly about giving neigh- bring. hundreds of dollars each;
bor and stranger alike the oppor- * Baseball gloves, 1940 to
tunit~ to find something useful 1970, can be $2,000;
among stuff you no longer need. • Signed pottery is frequently
That's the good side of yard worth hundreds, sometimes
sales.
thousands;
The down side, according to • Cigarett~ lighters, especially
author Tony Hyman, is that Zippo, Ronson and Dunhill can
"every time you sell something, bring hundreds of dollars;
• ~ast iron frying pans, muffin
you're gambling. All too often
you're losing money and don't tins and roasters can put up to
$1,500 in your pocket.
"know it."
You might ha -:,e sold Collectors, dealers, authors
grandma's 2. 5. carat diamond and experts in more than 100
ring for a quarter like a Western fields worked with Dr. Hyman
N.Y. yard-saler, or given away a to create his long-running
$52,000 photo in a "$5 frame," "What's it Worth?" segments for
like another.
the CBS-TV Saturday Early
Most people don't take losses Show. From typewriters to old
that dramatic, says ·Hyman, newspapers, Hyman showed
author of 16 books on collecting, viewers items they should never
but professiQnal yard sale shop- sell without advice . .
pers claim one home in four sells Now those same experts (and
something for pennies that could hundreds of others) have
just as easily bring in hundreds pledged to provide free evaluaof dollars. Each weekend, pro- lions by mail and e-mail, helpfessional shoppers focus in on ing you make money by dispos50 or so categories with values ing of things wise!~.
much higher than folks realize. · Readers of "Trash or Treasure
They look for:
Guide to the Best Buyers" are
• Costume je'welry including introduced to roadshow and
rhinestone , 'Bakelite(c), "What's It Wonh?" appraisers,
Victorian, and designer whicli and get hundreds of home phone
sells for thousands of dollars and e-mail addresses of other
·today;
authors, club presidents, and
• Banana seat bicycles from other experts. This lOth Edition
the 1970s bring $500+ and can contains 640 pages of honest
buyers ready to evalu.ate and pay
be sold with one phone call;

ACROSS

•

Sunday, July 1a, 2003

Gallipolis, Ohio· Point Pleasant, WV

25 sartoua People Wanted
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash lor the
pounds you LOSE!
Safe. Natural, No .Drugs.
800·201 ·0832

Help Wanted

l:.o~klng

your way to Athens? I have
openings. (740)696·008t
luauemlulana, all t11111;

740-2111i!tj171Vanted

Caring People...
Tl1t'

SENIOR CARE CENTER
Diff~~nu.

NOW HIRING DIETARY AIDES
Holzer Senior Care Cenrer, a

70

Bed long -

term care nursing facility has an opening in
!heir dietary department. HSCC pride s irself in
providing the highest quality of care for our
res ident s. We have a very unique dining
program and str i ve to make the dining
experience as pl easurable as possible.
If you like working with the elderly. and are
committed to providing qualify services in a
warm, friend ly, home·like atmosphere, come
see us at:
380 .Colonial Drive
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
Or ca ll 740·446·5001 and ask to spe• k wilh

Greta.
Equal Opportunlly Employer

HelpWantBd

Help Wanted

• Nausea or
vom~ing?

Exciting
Opportunities I

• Sensitivity to light
and sound?
You may qualify
for FREE
Treatment &amp;
Assessment.

Call

740.593·1060
Study sponsored by
Ohio University and
the National Institutes
of Health, Athens,
Ohio

Wise Medical

Staffing
Now Hiring
Local &amp; Travel
Assignments AN's
to $38
LPN's to $22
Call lor application
(toll free) '

an-207-7060

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Card or Thanks

Iva johnson

MEDICAL RECORDS
TRANSCRIPTIONIST

January 12, 1912-June 26, 2003
Tile Family of Iva Johnson
would Iilte to gives thanks to all those
who sent jlowtrs or cards, donated to
special funds in honor of mom, gave
.food, called or came to visit, and unt up
special prayers.for our family at the lo$1
of our mother. Your kindness was deeply
appreciated and will never be forgolmf. ·
A special than Its goes out to the staff of
Holzer Senior Care who not only saw
to the comfort of our Mother but was
abo there to comfort "'· Thanlu to
Holzer Hospice for ,their alllll&lt;lnct with
Mom~ tlttds at1d for their advice to us
on her condition. m would allo /lite to
that1k those who toolt part lt1 Mom's
service, Pallor Alfred Holley, Mark
Sanders, Donna Hltltmatl, 11t1rl Tilt Joy
.LAdles of
Providtt~ce Baptist Church .
Without the presence offamily atid
friends the loss of our Mother lllCiuld
')It• beet1 much harder to i:ope with.

•Work from home after initial
training period
•Flexibility with schedule
•Typing at least 65 ~pm
•Courses In medical terminology
and medical transcription
preferred
•At least one year experience
•Competitive wage and excellent
benefits package offered
S.nd reeume or vlelt the Human
Reeoureee Department to eubmlt an
application at Saint Francie
Hoepltal, Attn: HR Department, 333
Laidley Street, Cherleeton, WV
25301. fax: (304) 347-6748r EOE

Thanlu to Ell&lt;!ryone,
Mabel, Virgii,James, lGiy and Rlc/c

WANTED:

Part· l ime position availabl e in

M eigs County. H ours: 8 am Sat thru 8 am
Mon ; sleep over required . Dutie s include
teaching community and pcrsm_
tal ~kills to an
individual

with

tnental

retardation.

Requirements: Hig h school diploma/GED,
valid driver's license, three years good driving

experience and adequate auto mobile insurance
coverage. Starting sa lary: $7.00/hr. Send
resume to: Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box·604, .Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadtinefor applicants: 7118/03.
Equal Opportuni1y Employer

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

eWeb is herel
MEDICAL RECORDS
CODER
@Web coding software sll6ws for
remote coding
Code from home
Flexible Schedule
Fully automated encoder and
grouper
Continuing Education provided

RHIT. RHI~l'prevlous experience
or recent rtiM grads encouraged to
apply
Competitive wage and excellent
benefits package offered
Send resume or VIsit the Humsn
Resources Department to submit
an application 11t Saint Francis
Hospltel, Attn: HR Department 333
Laidley Street, Charleston, WV
26301. fsx: 1304) 347·6746. EOE

www.allranclahoa ttal.com

-·

'

.

-

..

,

.... .------~-- ,-----~. ·--

�•

Page 04 • 6unbap

«tmu -6mttul

It AND~

l..jiJ--W.oiToiiiANIIDoiillo_ _,ll eO
Will babvs•t m my home
Over 5yrs professional expe
rlence With children Great
References Call anytime
(7401256-6338

Apa rtment butldtng Rac1ne
br 3 baths large LA DR OH mctudes 4 apartments
KIT &amp; fam1ly Room f1mshed 1 offtce 4 lots wl sewer &amp;
basement 3·car garage water taps Call (740) 949
also on lot 2 car garage 2
BR apt
1/2 block fr om

House and Mob1te Home
both 2br trash/water pa1d
\le ry clean near Porter
$375/$400 depos•Vrefer
ences 740-388-1100
--------HOUSE FOR RENT· 1 BR
schools 446·2300
Great 1n town location
NEW HOUSE lor SALE
$475 00 per month Oepostt
Debbie Drive 3 bedrooms 112 acre lot Tycoon Lake on &amp; references required Call
2
baths
S1 29 000 Eagle Road City water ho W1seman Real Estate 74Qsepltc n1 ce s hade trees
(740)245 9268
1:144!!161"3644
~:--"'!"!:---,
ask•ng $8500 (740)247
'MOBDFOR..En~~IES
Smaller 3 bedroom ranch 1100
~•
near town 2 car garage lull
dry basement $68K 740 2 acres on Ingalls Ad JUSt
off At 218 ask1ng $1B 000 t Ox60 2 bedroom mobile
446 2699
- - - - - - -- call 740 245..0133
home lor rent $325 a month
Super Nice 5br 2bth laun
4 acres Eagle R1dge Ad plus $200 deposit or buy for
dry Am balcony lull base excavated electrtc sept1c $5 000 OBO cal 740 388
ment 6 44 acres $59 000
0578
call (7401286 2554 or (7401 perm t &amp; water available
(740)992 0031
384·5998
2 bedroom tra1le r 103
Amblesrde Dr Kerr OH
Bruner Land
Well malntamed 2br 1ba
Remodele d $275/month
741)-441 -1492
Cape Cod As~1ng 65 000
$250/deposlt Refe rences
(740)441·0102
Galha County V1nton Dodr II (740)388 8070
pr4l MOBILE HOI\..~
Ad seven 5 or 6 acre lots to
2BR mob•le home for rent 1
choose
!rom $14 500 AND mi le from town
AJC
H&gt;R Si\I.E
UPI Burnt Run t7 ac res
wate r/lrash prck up fur
10 usM homes under $17 000 A10 Grande two nished no pets references
S2 000 w111 help with det1v ac re lots $22 500 your req u red $150 deposrt $265
1
ery call Harold 740 3B5 cho1ce Kyger 6 ac res monthly 446 0761
$11 500 or 18 acres
9948
$17500

(304)882·3419
::W:::II:-'1'-pr_e_ss_u-ro'-'-w-as"Ch_h_o_mo_s
trailers decks metal build
~ngs and gutte rs
Call
or leave message

't I\ I

·-------,I
,:--:~-....;;~
10
Bt.5INfNi

r

OPPoim.JNrrv

·

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG C9 recommends that
you do busmess wtlh people
you know and NOT to send
money through the mall unlit

~~rl~ve mve.sl1gated the

--=-----ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending macl'llnea wJth
excellent locations
Ill for $10,9951-800-234:::--...,-:--'6;.:
964___ _
Franchtse/.Master franch1se
uniq ue
rapidly growing
pizza co nce pt 22 year htsto
ry Traming marketing oper
attons support See why we
sold over 100 tranchtses 1n
2002 alone' 1 888-344-2767

l!ex111tr-2-t0~-----,
I'Rom8IONAL

i

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

i4x60 Mobile Home 2BR
central heat &amp; a1r Very good
shape $7 000 00 call-441_9_2 5_9_ _ _ _ _ __
1978 w1ndsor 12•65 3br
2ba now a r all wood
Excellent shape $7 000
(7401388 8070

I

SERVICES

1981
Baron
14x70
wJexpando 2b r 1ba garden
TURNED DOWN ON
tub v1nyl s1d1ng new carpet
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? new hot wate r heater f1re
No Fee Unless We Wm• place $8 500 (304)773
1-888-5B2 3345
5153
I ~ I \I I .., I \II
1985 14•65 traile r 2b r
mostly fu rn ished central a1r
HOMI&lt;S
8x1 2 out bUIIdmg all on
FOR SALE
rented lot #2 Quill Creek
740·245 5846
(31FHA &amp; VA homes set up
lor 1mmed1ate possess on all - - - - - - - - Withtn 15 m1n of downtown 1991 Bnilant 8ella1re 14x80
Galltpolls Rates as low as 3br 2ba new atr and fur
nance $7 000 down and
6% (740)446 3218
lake
over
payments
2 houses fo r sale t 5 acres $13 000 (7401388-8070
MIL Green School Otslnct
$26 500 00 446-7029
Coles Mobile Homes an
- - ' - - - -- - - - - assembled team with o\18r
3 Bedroom newly remod· 120yearsofh0 us1 ng expe n
eled m Middleport call Tom
ence Patnot Homes QUI
Anderson after 5 p m
stand1ng 1/5 year warranly
992 3348
s hmg les &amp; ms ul at1on by
3 bed rooms 2 lull baths
mce &amp; clean great locahon
10 C1ty v1nyl std1ng Pnced lo
sale now' (740)446 9539
3 br house wiJacuzzl on 25
ac re Mil 36x48 horse barn
740 388 1591 or 740 286

=

All real eatate advertl .. ng
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
fair Houarng Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertiee "anv
preference, llmltallon or
dlacrfmlnatlon based on
race, color, religion, ae~~:
familial atatua or national
or'uln, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diKrlmlnation '

Thla newapaper wUI nol
knowingly accept
advertlaemtmll for r••l
estate which Ia In
violation ot the taw Our
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertised In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases
Forttosure 4br 4ba $9 900
for 11st1ng call 800 719·3001
Ex F144

Call now fo r maps and other
pa rcels available for home
s rtes huntmg and recre
alton Owner f nanc1ng wtth
s ligh t property mark up We
buy land 30 ac res+ up
Lot tor sale
(740)992 5858

Auction

SPECIAL NEW SALE
Monday, July 14th

6:00PM

OLD-GLORY
AUCTION HOUSE
97 Beech St, Middleport, OH
Phone 992·9553
Th1s sale conststs of a
very large selectron of
n ew
merc handt se
Tools, B1kes Windm ills
6&amp;8 It , Large lighted piC
tures w/sound, Water
yoyo s, Fiber Op11C 11ems
Dolls, lnd11n 11ems,
Pocke1 &amp; Co lleclor's
kmves, Household 11ems
Come Ou1 and enJOY a
fun filled evenmg and
enJOY our grea1 food'
JIM TAYLOR AUctioneer
liCensed In OH &amp; WV

Rl ' I \ I-...

&amp;

knobs (easy
d1rectto from
Depot
match Home
just a
few good reasons why your
next new home should be
from Coles Mob1le Homes
15266 US 0 East Athens
Ohio
1 740 592 1972
"Where you get your
moneys worth
,....,..,-.,..,-.,..,-.,..,----Coles Mobtte Homes
US 50 East Athens Oh10
45701 740 592 1972

C;==;;:===~
HOUSES
FOR RENT

rio

1

..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
·
1 bedroom house 1n Rac1ne
appliances partial utlt1es
paid S325 month $325
depos rt no call alter Spm
(740)992·5039

La nd Home Packages ava11
able In your a rea (740)446
3384

1-3 bedrooms foreclOsures
home from $199 month 4%
down 30 years at 8 5% APR
for lrstmg ca ll 1 BOO 319
3323 ext 1709

New 14 w•de only $799
down and only $159 63 per
month call Ntkkl 740 385
7671

2 Bedroom 2 bath house for
rent m PI Pleasant
Reference
$450 ph
(3041675 8859

New 2003 Doublew1de 3 BR FOR RENT Ntce 4 BR
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down home at the edge of town
and &amp;295/mo 1-800 691 $850 00 pe r month DepoSit
&amp; references requ red Call
6777
W1 sema n Rea l Estate at
Used Tra11er 3 bedroom 2 '-74.c0:.·4~4:.:6-c.:3:.:6:.44'----­
bath 14x70 must be moved N•ce clean 2 bedroom house
F1nancmg
ava1 lablo
1n Pomeroy $400 per month
(3041675 7783
plus depoSit (7401 696 7244
Auction

Auction

Hou1e &amp;
Barns

""!o2 Tracts

Pasture
Pond
Tracton

Be Kmg of the
Mountainlll
As Agents for rile
Seller,
Dorothy Condee
Naomi Ha~ln!,.
Claro Hodc lns &amp;
G en Ha s~lns
We will ..11 the
REAL ESTATE FIRST
On Trod #1
Locotfll at 1015 Bul•v•ll• Pike, Golllpolit Ohio
ImsL!J. has 88 oc; u Orlft floor plan 3 bedrm 1 bolh home
wj llvlng rm dlnlng rm &amp; kltd1en, clout to town &amp; me Ohio
Rrver detached blodr go oge co Hie born 2 mach nery !heds
&amp; milk parlor a re all on me mounto n top w/Co Water
eJOtrol Include $100QQ pr month rntof!!! from the cell ular
tower lease &amp; 791 pound IObocco ba~e
~ ApproJI 40 beovllfvl .-:enK oc w/a stream bor
derlng the property, tract loy! diagonal acran rd from Tract
#1 &amp; has a deed•d acc•n eosemenl through lhe Sh.ets'
prop•rty Thls tract has Co water available • lectrlc &amp;. nolu
ral gas Is oo Linwood Or OPEN HOUSE Sun J11ly 20"from Noon to 2 PM Term~ on Real Estate S7 50000 down
per troct at rime of 1al•, balanc• or clos1ng by 9/ 26/ 2003,
Note L•swte, 58A Tewers Inc. has the option to pvrd!ase
Tract I or final bid price for 30 days aft•r ovctlon allowing
lessee option to buy as stated n Lease Agreement os Right
of Flrrt Refusal, no contingencies e . usr regarding financing
fARM EQUIPMENT

2 REALLY NICE FORD tOO's (19.5.5 &amp; I 956) both wlde fronr
•nd traCTors w / live power gas motor~ &amp; olwoys vnder shed
S spd tronsm1sslon NH #67 string ,quare baler (ga raged) S
bu:sh hog mower, 6 grader blade 8 dh( MF 3 pi 2 bollom
12 plow, #16 New Ideo manure ~preode r ground driven,
NH 56 flve bar hay rake (2) 4' harrows wl11vaiOB, hoy
wagon Terms Cash or check wj po$lf1Ve 10, everything sold
as Is
Call for Fr.. Btochur• !I
STANLEY &amp; SON, INC
(7401 775-3330
H.nry M Sto11l•y Ill CAt MtE
Ar.octlon~tr &amp; t•ol f11r:r1• l roker
Wm J FOI!ftln Jr &amp;
Jr;iy, J St•worl
Aocllon••'~ &amp; ._ohor!®
Llso J W•llrnO!'I

Apprl!'flllc• Ar.octloneer

APART· T'.'f:tn Rwers Tower IS accept

dr yer

It

MEROIANDISE
JET

Bl.IDGET mg applications tor wa1t1ng $95 00
refnctgerator
AERAT ION MOTORS
PRICES
JACkSON liSt lor Hud SUbsiZed 1 br $95 00 atr cond111ona1 5000 Repa1red New &amp; RebUilt In
ESTATES, 52 Westwood ap~rtme nt call 675 6879 BTU $95 00 Go ld swlve rel Sloe~ Call Ron Evans 1
Dnve from $297 to $383 EHO
rod&lt;er $45 00 4 opk chairs 800 537·9528
Wal&lt; IQ shop &amp; mov10s Call
$40 00
ea
couch

740-446-2568
Equal Very clea n furnished stud1o
Hous1ng Qpportunl1y
apt $290 00 a mon mcludes
water &amp; trash ref &amp; security
For lease Charmmg unfur dop roq 304-675 3042
mshed Apt second floor

two bedrooms 1112 baths
AJC llvtng room dmmng
area washe r/dryer new
appli ances
R1ver-v1ew
across City Park Off street
park1ng
$625 OOlmonth
plus utll1hes Secunty and
key depos•t No pets
References required 740446 2325 446 4425
For l ease Beautiful 1600
Sq Ft restored seco nd
floor apartment In H1stonc
D1stnct Ideal tor profession
at couple all modern
amen1t1es 3 bedrooms spa
c1o us hvl ng/d1n1 ng lots of
storage 11/2 baths rear
deck HVAC $600/month
plus ut1ht•es Security and
key depos•t No pets
References required 740.
446 4425 or 446 3936

Pleasant Va lley Apartment
Are now 18kl ng APP Ircat•ons
fo r 2BR 3BA &amp; 4BA
Applications are ta ke n
Monday lh ru Fnday, fro m
9 00 AM -4 PM OH1ce 1s
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Pont Pleasant WV
Phone No ts (304)675 5806
EH0
Spac1ous 1br apt washer
dryer
and d shwashe r
mcluded water/trash lnclud
ed $375mth 740 441-9546
or419 3591768
Auction

Thursday, July 17 5:30 p.m.
Mr &amp; Mrs Moore have moved and w1ll sell the
followmg Located 1n Monkey Run, Pomeroy,
OH Walch for Signs up from McDonald's
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS:
Buffet, Breakfron1 ches1 of drawers, Wash
stand, Wood chatr, Large c1der press Stone jars,
R R lack, Wood sled Highchair, Iron baby bed,
Carb1te hghts Kraut Kutter, Wash boiler, P1cture
frames, Army umform, Trunks, Melal bed,
Breakfront dresser, Navy shirl, Player p1ano rolls,
Rad1o, BoPeep wmdup toy, Approx 50 metal
sold1ers, Box of old toys, Hopewell chma,
Embossed milk bottles Spnng H1ll Moore &amp;
Ross, Ashland Pmsley Dairy, McKean's Dairy,
Ona WV, Guyan &amp; Broughton bottles, Alladm
Lamps, lanterns, Fenton Ruby Avon &amp; m1sc
glassware and lots of records
HOUSEHOLD:
K11chen table &amp; chairs, Couch, Cedar chest,
Hot Potnt dryer, Ke nmore washer, Metal
Wardrobe RCA TV, and miSe 1tems

MIK;
Used ~as furnace, Shallow well pump Shop
Vac FIShmg rods, Wrenches and lots More'
Owner • Lloyd and Ruth Moore
Auctioneer: Dan Smith Ohro 111344; WV 11515
Apprentice: Alan Haley Oh1o 110245
CASH POSITIVE I D REFRESHMENTS
Nole Attic Full" Come see wha1 we f1ndll
Auctton

washer $95 00

1r

MlscEuANEou;

AT
AT

PUBLIC AUCTION

House for sale 27 Anne
Street Pomeroy $17 500
wtll constder any offer 386
8591 or 740 709 0064

Po1 nt Pleasant Sandht ll Ad
near Ma rshall Umverslty
1500 sq ft wlfull basement
1/2 acre level lot $103 000
(7401949-1 131

BEAUTIFUL

r

Sprtng Valley Area appro~~:
101 171 C
I
x
ty water sewer
nat gas electnc are ava I
able (740) 446 9539

House for sale L1ev1ng Rd
West Columbia WV 3
acres 6 rooms
(3041773-5343

JUST REDUCED 3104
Kathnor Lane by owner 2
story 4br calomel 2 1/2
bath attached 2 car garage
reck room •n basement
landscaped w/gan;len plot
$ 175,900 Call 804-379
4632 see b;o app only

GooDs

For Lease One bedroom
unlurntshed new ly redeco
rated second lloor Apt at
corner of Second and Pme
AIC $300 00 per mon th
Mob le home for ren t no water ncluded Secunty a nd
pets (7401992 5858
key depoSit Off st reet pe rk
mg References Required
APARThiENTS
No pets 740 446-4425 or
FORRENr
446 3936
--------1 &amp; 2 br apts clean no Modern 1 br apt (740)446
pets 1 w/stove &amp; refng 0390
(740)992 7481
Now Takrng ApplicatiOns1 and 2 bedroom apart· 35 West 2 Bedroom
ments furmshed and unfur Town house
Apartme nts
mshed secunty depos t Includes Water Sewage
reqwed no pets 740 992 Trash $350/Mo 740 446
2218
0008

lots #9&amp; 10
Heatley s
Add1t1on 1n Bidwell 2 large 4 rooms and bath a ll utilities
lots pnced to sale now l paid $400 month 46 Ohve
Street (7401446 3945
(7401446 9539
Apts (Downtown) all elec
N1ce mob le ho me lots quiet tnc •deal for senlor persons
country sett1ng $11 5 per One 3 roo m one 4-room on
mcludes water f1rst floor clean&amp;mce
month
sewer trash 740 332 2167 (7401446 9539

Home for sale new 3br briCk
2 1/2 bath 2 car garage 2
m•les trom Holzer green
and ctty schools call 446
9966

House on 7 corner-lots owr
3000sq ft exc cond 3br
2ba1h garage senous calls
only 446·7995 shown by
appt only

H otSEHOID

FORRENr

28R
w1 ndow
atr
$300/month Spnng Valley
area gas heat/stove $250
depos it 304 675-290~ or
740 441 6954

Grac1ous 11vmg 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Village
Ma nor
a nd
R verstde
Apartments 1n Middleport
'-'-C..C--''--'-'-='--- From $278 $348 Call 740
992 5064 Equal HOUSing
Owens Cormng vmyl s1d ng
VINTON,OH LAND
Opportunities
by V1pco James Hardre Sid Beat fu Home 81tos and a 3BA
Ranch Home available on
lng available tow "E ther Scomc Ad Ranging 1t1 J8ac Sac
mopane windows by K nrc tracts only m1nutes fromlhe
Auction
carnage ca~pets &amp; floor1ng hospt al
by Congoied. appltances by
800 21H365
General Eleclnc faucets by
COUNTRYTVME
Glacter Bay &amp; Moen light

~02;;1;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; fl)(tu res cabme t pulls

r

MEGIS COUNTY Tuppers
Pla tnes tust one 5 acre
tract left border ng state land
$ 16500' Allred Sr 681 8
acres $16 0001 Chester
Bashan Ad
t2 acres
$22 000 or $22 ac res
$31 000 co water Danville
5o r 7 acres $9 0001

APAKIMENTS

MENTJ)

I

i

(740)446 0151 ask for Ran
I I "\\

r

l~.,r•-·FOR·HousEs
-RENr
_ __.l
10

MOdem updated 2 story 4

Will do odd JObs mow
weedeat. pa1nt Call B1ll at

Sunday, July 13, 2003

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

Auction

Sunday, July 13, 2003
FARM

FRUITS&amp;

Country Produce Market
Potatoes
Tomatoes
Melons Corn etc 1n season Troyers Woodcraft 9
m1les west of Gallipolis
along St Rt 141

$95 OO,d1nnlng table and
chars $125 00 round d1n
n1ng table $40 00 lull s1ze
bed box sprmg and mat
tress $125 00 mce dresser
efectnc ra nge$65 00
$95 00 Skaggs Appliance
76 V~ne Sl' (740 I 446 7398

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
Ta k1ng orders fo r green
For
Concrete
Angle
beans very tender call
Chan nel Flat Bar Steel
(7401378·6291
For
Drams
Gratmg
I \H\1.._1 1'1'111 . _
Onveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
HOIJSD!OIJl
,\ 1 1\l ... lf)( ...
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Gooos
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
washer $95 00
drye r Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed
FARM
refndgerato r Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
24 000 BTU A1r COnditiOner $95 00
EQuiPMENT
use 1 summer $300 Ph $95 00 a1r cond1trona1 5000 Sunday (7401446-7300
BTU·$95 00 Go ld SWIVB(el
(3041675 8859
273 square hay ba1ter Fort
rocker $45 00 4 oak chairS
Office Furniture
D1sk mower 5 112 II new
$40 00
ea
co uch New scratch &amp; Dent
Full S1ze Manress Set
Hoba
rt commercial meat
$95 00 dtnn ng tab le and Save 70% 1-800 527 4662
New m PlastiC w!Warr
gnnder 220 volts 740 379
Street
Argonaut
519
Brdge
cha1rs
$125
00
round
d1n
Sacnftee $119
2590
Cell Phone 304 412 8098 n1ng table $40 00 full s1ze Guyandotte/Hunlmgton M/F
bed box spnng and mat
or 304-552 1424
tress $125 00 mce dresser Small Pop Mac h1nes lor sale
electnc range $300 to $700 call (740) 379
Good Used Appliances $65 00
22=1~8--:::-----,
Aecond1t1oned
and $95 00 Skaggs Appliance =
B ll1LIJINr.
Guaranteed
Washe rs 76 VIne St (740 ) 446 7398
Dryers
Ranges
and
..._.
Aefngerators Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliances 76
Block bnck sewer p1pes
Vono St (7401446-7398
Remmgton model 1100 20 w ndows lintels etc Claude
Ktng S1ze PillOw Top gauge both barrels wood W1nters R1o Grande OH
and synthet c stock a nd fo re Call740 245 5121
Mattress set
Wtnchester
New sltll m piastre sale $299 arm $600
i&gt;E,~
16
gauge
$450
model-12
cell phone 304-412-809B or
FOR
SAlE
256 6667
304-552· 1424

I.

t

r

r

S~

l~.o~--iiSiiUPI'IiiliJiiits

i

AKC registered chocola te
lab pupptes born May 9
2003 1-male 3 tamale
Buy or Sell
R1~enne $250 00 each call 740 357
Ant1ques 1124 East Ma1n 0985
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526 Russ Moore Beautl1ui Beagle Pupp1es
owner
full blooded/ no papers
$50 00 each call 388 9907
""o-ue_e_n_P_II_
Io_w_1&lt;_o_p_M_a_tt_ro_s_s .
~~-~~
Set
i Tu:.ta...I"L"l!'!u..-x..
•
GREAT PETtit does not
New m piastre w!Warr
shed 2 male Maltese pup
W111 accept $199
Bally Ntc~l e Slot mach1ne ptes ready to take home
cell phone 304·41 2·8098 or lull s1ze 3 11ne $1 500 00 $625 oc .all 740 446 7454
304 552 1424
call (7 401 367-0224
Rat Terror puppies ful l
Compaq computer BOO blooded no papers $75
- - - - - - - - - MHz Aih lon processo r each Pare nts on pre m• ses
Thompsons Appliance &amp; 128MB memory 30GB hard 304·8B2 3340
Repa r 675 7388 For sale dnve OVO ROM CO RW
re-con d1t oned automatic exras $800 or OBO 740FRUIIS &amp;
washers &amp; dryers refngera 441.0751
VEGETABL..I:S
tors gas and electnc . , . - - - - - - - - - - ~--ririiliiiiiiiliiiliilio,.J
ranges air conditioners and Cool Down II
Central Black Bemes Frrendly
wnnger washers Wtll do Cooltng Systems New and
R1dge $12 00 gallon 256
reptms on ma,or bra nds 10 Used Installed (740)4461145 please leave message
shop or at you r home
6308
Mollohan Carpet 202 Cla rk
Chapel Road Porter OhiO
(7401446 7444 1 877 830
9162 Free Estrmates Easy
hnanc•ng 90 days same as
cash V1sa/ Master Card
Dnve a hMie save alot

ANIIQUIS

r

I

Used Furmture Store 130
Butav111e P1ke ma«resses
dressers co uches bun~
beds
bedroom suites
recliners grave monuments
740 446 4782
Gallipolis
Oh Hrs 10 4 Stop By

Deep freeze ente rtainment
center B4 h1gh x 34 width x
20 deep has door/secretary
on It Hosp1tal bed not e lec
ant1qu e dtn1ng roo m set
wlbuffet has capta1n chair &amp;
5 strarght cha1rs Very good
shape (3041675 5020

Whirlpool and Kenm ore
la rge capac1ty al mond col
orad washers $75 00 each
446-9066

Electnc exe rct se ton mg
tables Lose we1g ht feel
great withe push of a button
(304)675 796 1

Auction

PIE .CUT LOG KITS

6 X8 tiN EAR FOOT lOCi~

Real Estate

STARl AT $2 25

IORAlf mSSLIRETR£ATfO

C•u FOI 001

S12 (AU.lOG Q;
Fm 81rouRt

800-458-991J0

Real Estate

Auction

Road . \1ht'11' - Oil

Due to ~ellrng hn home aJUI m01 111M fp Lmdft&gt;\ the
joflouwg fJerWJIIlli propt. rf\ of Clan (( H Gmton (/1/{1
the lute Glerm A GaHan 11 Ill be ojJt'IWI llf fm!Jl u mu
troll DIRECTIONS From Atliw1 Rt 50/32 11 t'l/ l Hf
011 Rr 682 at frghr rum /tift ml ,Ru Mmuf A1 11111e 10
\f!umd l1ght (C &amp; E Stores/ turn l efr 011 (wun lmn
tften m1medwte !eft rm H1ckon IIIII!\ 111t0 MuJ/tgcm
lumSl' 011 left JU'II pmt set mul rurvt' 11 atr II {nr ~'X"'
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTJBI . ES; (many pit:lures

on web stte): Excellen t Smge r 22 1 I Port.tble
Electm: Sewmg Machme 111 ~.:usc prnn 1t1vc ~ tcp h.td.:
cupboard Oak step bad; cuphoord lngrah.un shelf
clock The Sun Mfg Co One Pound Colfce Grmdt r
old ornate platform rock mg ch .ur M.1 hogany c hm t~
cabmet w/sltdmg glass doo rs L me cedar ches t
stecm1er trun k Rosev ille #45'i-4 vast: Fenton p1ccco,;
hurncane lamp 4is &amp; record tlhu ms lmpcn 11
Cand lewick 12 sn tck scls/7 cups/sa ucers/few Olhcr
p1eces Knowles 'Norman Rockwell &amp; othe1 cu ll e~.:
tor plate~ 1 sm til ncstmg hens cook boo k" po n rble
Sm1lh Coron.t typewnter RCI\ Y1 Cl&lt;ll table 10p rad1o
w/45 reco1d player Bakehte rad1o Mob11it y Pl.ate
sterltng 111 box &amp; c redm/~ u g.us a~sort m c nt ol co-.
tume Jewelry 2 boxes of old buttons old h.us uc~
shoe stand );event I old quill tops 4 Gc1 ma n pmcl.!
l,n n hallenna N 1 ~0 lad1cs hc.td lm mcd VH: tonan
pnnt small glass nut b,askct w llccuo n of v.tc.atwn
pennants , Atllt:ns H S 1960s \ a r:o;~ty Jadet 1965 &amp;
68 Aren,t 1962 A me-. Bern Aurora Conn frombone
m case sword Boy Seoul undorm N.ttmn wtdc
advertisers dock &amp; tO\o,cls sulyard \\/we1ghts husk
mg peg so me old ~,; t acks scy thc hog huob old mar
kct basket l.m tcrn push plow Ide Ide bo~~: \~ lfi shtn g
lures rods &amp; ree ls wood h1gh chmr IMhy scales old
chddt cn s book s Magazmcs 1940s 50s 60~ L1f~.:
196:\s 65s 66s Seve nteen 19 ~0s-40~ The ln r.; trucror
and lots more.
COLLEC OOR [())'S la!!m yen gi!!K.! cuodthon).
Ltoncl 027 Tr un complete wlm.m ~ ex tr.1~ John
Deere Pedal Tractor &amp; W.1gon (sull make s pop
~ound ) Fue Dept Cny Pedal Muna~ F11c Trud
metal Se.rrs Happ1T1mc Sr rV I( ~ Stilton w/A IIstalc
Truck Te'i:aco Toy Tanker (motom:cd) 111 ong box
M 19% metal CtiC U); Truck wlwm kmg Mt:H) Go
Round on bed metal N Y 12 Emcrgcm y ServiCe
Truck McCormtc k tractor &amp; wugon mct,al Lunu
Sturdy Construction Co Shovr.: I me t&lt;.~ I Lumar
ConstruCtion Co Shove l Marcrest No 10l meta l
livestock truckltrmler l tto .J:\5 metal plane Metal
doll house w/plastu.: furmtu re metal children s cabt
net \.1./dtshe'\ small ra nge, Amsco Toys Bottle
Sten!Jzer pan wlglass bahy do ll hollies doll bed
Terr) Lee doll 111 ong dress &amp; other do ll s old
Manonctte chma heads Easel C halkboard Stand pel
let gun WWI meta l soldier figunn~,; lots ol old
games, some model ~ MacGregor c atchers mm ~ tb s
bag of marbles rockmg horse old teddy be,u"' liiCV
cles skates and more
HOUSEHOLD t!IRNJSHINGS; heauufu l Wlilel
~ ohd wt1dw nnd cherry bedroom '\UI Ic (q uee n bed)
N1ce cherry lad1es wmmg desk Cuno c tbmet Scar~
billiard table w/equ1pmcnt tC\:Otd pla)er 111 c.1 bmet
Smger '\CWtng mach1nc 111 n1 ~,;e l..abmct M 1yl.u r ~.:o n
tempomry sofa 2 SWt\e l rocker chu•r" end &amp; coffee
tab les, brass lamps Sunmon:-. h1de a hcd sotu hall
cabtnet leathe r n.:cliner as~ot tcd flamed pr111IS
Blonde bedroom r&gt; uite comp lete Round M rplc dint:ttc
t.1b lc w/4 cham Maple wush -; tand t.ahlc Hotpomt
rcfngerator Tappan 42 g01s •·rnifc Quasar m1cro
wave d1shcs po ts p.ms smo~ ll ktt\: hc n appliance:-.
Hotpomt was her GE dryer Scn cl rcfngeJUtor c.ud
tab le/~.:h a1 rs luggagt: 5 dr.1"'cr met tl ftle cabtnct
Steelca~c desk and other mtsccll tncous 1tem"'
TOOLS &amp; MISCELI.ANEO!!S; 10 x 10 Burn
Shed Toro supe r blower mowe1 p~t10 t.able .tlunu
num lawn rockrng ~,;ha t r s some long hand led
)ardlgarden tools U!o;soned hand tools work hcnch
wJLttl lestown vtse hatc het br••-.~ &amp; b1ts wood plane
pipe/mo nkey \\. rcnches alummum exlcnsion l&lt;tddc1
dentaf's\:hool equipment
TERMS. Cash or ~.:heck w/postllve I D Checks over
$ 1(X)() must ha\ C bank authonzatton of tun ds a\lail
able Food will be avatlable Not responsible for loss
or acc 1dents
OWNER Clllncc H Gaston
by Nuncy G Thomas &amp; Mllx Gaston Tr us t ee~

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER: Pat Sheridan
Emllil; S hamro&lt;kAucllon@aol.&lt;Om WEB·
www shamfO(k·a uctlons com
PH· 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Two sets ot two row corn cultl\l&amp;tors 3 pomt cement
m1xer 323 One row corn
picker shaver post dnver 3 1
16 Inch John Deere plows 6
1nch x 40 loot grarn auger
146 John Deere Front end
loader
Coli
74Cl-992·71103

r

1999 Dodge Ram 4 x 4
automatic 51 600 m•1es
fully equ 1pped
a~i;klng"
$13 500 (7401 992·2060

i

4-WDs

UVlmOCK

At.r~Ut

FOR. SAtE
F
·~------,J

1£96 Blazer 4 door loaded
4wd 98k good cond1t1on
runs good , $6 500 00 740
441 0013or 740-441 ·7333

son has to offer. Add family and
friends to the mix and you 've

1996 Blazer 4-door, loaded,
4wd 98k good cond1t1on

got the rec1pe for a great summer What's the tcing on the
cake? Sharing the season with

runs gOOd $6 500 00 740
441 0013 or 740.441 7333

your favorite pet. However, just

'
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS
Hondas
chevys,
etct 99 Toyota Sienna XLE·
car&amp;ltruckl from $500 F.or Burgundy loaded gray
ltstlngs 1-800-719-3001 ext leather, power windows
3901
cru1ae CO 2 slidi ng doors
-~------- Rear a1r w/dual contro ls
1973 Ford LTD 400 eng1no S14 500 (3041675·6568
runs good, $250 740.446·
_26_39_ _ _ _ _ _

r

MOIURCYCLE!

as there are precautions to help
people get the most out of
summer, followmg just a few

I

1988
Merc ury
Grand - Marquis runs great goOd 1982 Honda GL 1100 65K,
condition call 367 7530
looks good runs good ta'k·
1989 Dodge Omnl, runs tng offers 245·0460
good $300 00 446·7492
1996 Harley Davidson
1990 Toyota Celica GT 5 Sportster needs a ltttle work
speed needs body work $4200 00 tots of extras call
(3041676 6844
740-448 7492

111 RIDGE AVENUE,
RIO GRANDE

S

(D1rcc u o ns U5
tmn n ght onto Cherry
R1dge house will be on lelt)

ratse the temperature inside

1994 Chevy Capr1ce poll ee $3000 00 740 388·8183
package VB 350 engme
runs and looks great 1994 Bass Tracker tadpole
14ft w/Bhp mercury trolling
$2000 00 446· 7029
motor f1sh finder trailer&amp;
spare used very l1t1le
1995 Ford Escort Stat1on $2 800 304·675 1731
wagon 89k We ll ma1n
1a1ned $2500 804 379 1997 Voyager alu min um
bass boat 40 hp Me rcu r..y
4632
depth fmder, trolling motor
1995 MttSUbiShl M~rage LS Askmg $4250 00 (7401 742·
good cond $1 700 00 740 2728
245 9069
i 998 17 F1sher V bottom
1998 Noon 4dr 130,000 bass boat 60 hp Mercury
miles ru ns good good outboard 2 I vewells 72 lb
cond $2 000 OQOBO
trollmg mo1or f1 sh tmde r
un der 30 hours us e lr~e
1999 GMC J1mmy 4 dr SW new garage ~ept bought
SlT loaded leather moon
new 1n 1999 $6000 00 (740)
roof Bose sounds 43 000
742 2301 after 5 pm wee~·
m1l es askmg $1 1 900 call
days
Paul 740-446-6491

ROOMY OLDER HOME WITH CHARM
&amp; LOTS OF POTENTIAL'
4 Bedrooms 5 haths lr vmg 10om. d •mng
large lam d) room approx 2 244 sq tt of
II\ mg
space
Come sec
the
rest I

#2254

Sunday, July 1:Jth
J :oo pm - 2:00pm

CALL740 446 7438

iii1iF~~~:;--,

..,I

I ~\

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond iUo nal llfet1me guar
97 Ford Explorer XLT 4x2 antee Local references fur·
BOle pnce reduced $7 500 n1shed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (7401 446·
Call 304 882 3338
OB70 Rogers Basement
Good 88 Dodge Anes sta· Waterproofing
t1o n wagon 4 new ttres n8't\l
engtne overhaul a r no rust
$600 l~r m (7401949· 2202
Home
General
C&amp;C
Maintenance- Pamt1ng v1nyl
TRUCKS
s1dmg carpe ntry doo rs
FOR SALE
w1ndows baths, mob1le
home repa1r and more For
1973 ha lf ton Chevy piCk-up tree esti mate call Chel 740·
runs good ps auto 307 V 8 992 6323
$1250 (7401992 1493

r

1989 GMC Srerra extende d .. ~
oob4x4 V8 305au1o 61f1Ch
lift $4500 OBO 740-379 ll
2280
14

til Classifiedstt;4

(Du ec tlons SR 775 1Ls1 H.uman Trat:c

cab exc cond 740 38B
1591or 740 286 021 1
1995 Ford F150XL 4WD 5 t~
speed w1111 38 mch hres and
body lift 446 0350
••

~S

.tt:n.;s

~.:n mcs

wnh thi s 1unc h

ho m e
Wtt h Wt 1p Mound d ec k
l
bedrooms I 5 b.lth s Ioyer h v 1n g room
dC)l UVC I SIZCd dc t ,lr.: hcd g.~r,tgc ~A-1\h
wmk shoplstor.tgc i.l!c.l bo nu s g uest house
You II CI1JOY look111 g &lt;.~ llh 1 s o ne'
#2245

Sunday, July 1:Jth
:J:OO pm -4:00pm

are your

14

ttx:u:xxxxxxxx:tl

ROOMY SIZED RANCH '

dJo.l. , _ ~ plea4e &lt;fWa
U4

..Jiope"'

a edt

u._,..._ "-'

BIG BEND
REALTY, INC.
Ru ssell

D.

Wood, Broker

510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis,

446-7101

July 17

5·45

&amp;

815 pm

.t 90 Mtnute Shows

Large maste r ~u1 te. loy l:r ll v1ng 10om.
dtmng room kudu;n lanuly room
ccntr.tl arr condru onmg 2 r.:ar attached
garage lmmcdhttc Pos:-.c~smn'
#2250

OH 45631

sors promoting wild blueberries
to consumers and retailers.

day.
• Pets need sunscreen, too.
Believe 11, even w1th all that fur
to protect him, Shaggy the
sheepdog can sttll get sun burned , particularly tf he has
light-colored skin or hair Avoid
bringing your pet outstde

heat Keep walks to a gentle
pace and make sure you carry
plenty of water If your pet ts
panting a
lot or seems
exhausted, stop.
• Take 1t easy on sensitive
pets. Elderly, very young and ill
pets have a hard time regulating

between 10 a .m. and 4 p.m,
but if you do, be sure to rub a
bit of sunblock on unprotected
areas like the tips of the ears,
the skin around the lips and the
tip of the nose.
• Tangle-free's the way to be.
Keepmg your pet well groomed
will help your pet's fur to better
protect him or her from the sun
and heat. If Fluffy has extremely
thick hair or a lot of mats and
tangles, her fur may trap too
much heat, and you may want
to consider a haircut.

offers special in-depth reports,

f1tness

program

designed to help you reach all
of your ittness goals. Workouts
geared toward all fitness levels.

Vistt the best fitness s1tes on

Counctl's

to www.health.org
inform and promote the use of The Department of Health and
blueberries to consumers and Human Services offte1al stte dedt·

the Internet - thts s1te prov1des

food industry.

to fttness

designed

cated to the prevention of drug
addict1on.

www.benjerry.com

Call 740-446-ARTS

CONDO FOR RENT
North Myrtle Beach
Dates Available in
August, September
Sleeps 6
446·8657

Includes

links, chats, dtscusston boards
and shopping resources related

current
www.atozfitness.com

research.

Fmd out tnformatton about Ben

Atozfitness provides a no-non·

&amp; Jerry's renown ice cream, fro- www.osha.gov

sense approach to allow you to

zen yogurt and sorbet, tncludmg Occupational Safety and Health
where your nearest shop is Admimstratton Web site geared
located.
toward ensurmg safety and a

able on the Internet Free per·

have the best information avail·
sonal tratnmg adv1ce.

healthful work environment.
www.afaa.com
The World's largest fitness and

www.icecreamusa.com
Ice Cream USA is the manufac- www.healthfinder.org
turer of frozen desserts, includ-

Healthfinder® is your guide to

tng Good Humor, Breyer's and

reliable health tnformatton for

Popsicle . Learn the history of parents, caregivers, health pro·
favonte treats
fessionals and others

Thts site

offers a

www.mentalhealth.com

listmg of Internet Mental Health gtves in-

hotels, motels, tnns and bed
breakfasts

throughout

&amp;

the

If

d

GALLI A COUNTY
REPUBLICAN ANNUAL

CORN ROAST
Thursday, July 17th
"6:00pm
Bob Evans Shelter
Rio Grande, Ohio

actually

days.

Th~y believed that, traveling in

conjunctton wtth the sun, the heat of
Strius

com-

bined wtth the
heat of the sun

It's frosty; it's
tasty; and it's
enjoyed the world-over. ice
cream is one of the most
popular desserts, but how
i:lid it rise to superstardom?The first frozen dessert has
been traced back to the second century BC. It was a mixture of snow, nectar, fruit •
pulp and honey. The first ice
cream parlor in America
opened up in New York City
in 1776. And now ice cream
is so much more - with flavors beyond the imagination. •
Accori:ling
to
the •
International Ice Cream
Association, the top five
flavors are:
1. Vanilla,
2. Chocolate, 3. Butter pecan
4.
Strawberry
and
5. Neapolitan.

has

certtfied

more

than

150,000 f1tness professtonals
around the world.

www.sikids.com
Sports Illustrated for Ktds offers sports
news, games, cartoons and fantasy
leagues speoftcally geared to a
younger audtence

lnformatton about all college
and profess10nal sports from

www.adventuresports.com

most common mental disorders,

ers tn sports tnformation and

to find outfitters, tour guides and infor-

reporttng.

matton

Adventure Sports Online makes 1t easy
for

your

next

outdoor

adventure
www.sports.com
European and Untied States

www.fitnessonline.com

ness level and weight-loss abiltty.

www.littleleague.org
sports news provtded m Official tnlernattonal headquarters for
Enghsh, French, German, Italian
children's Little Lea~ue sports events.
and Spamsh for the benefit ol Site mcludes t1ps for organizing and
international vtsttors.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M . FRI.
446 - 2342.992-2155.675-1333

runmng a local league

Berber Spectal $5 95 Yd
Dnve a ltttle Save a Lot

MOLLOHAN CARPET
202 Clark Chapel Ad
1-877·830·9162

Bidwell OH
446-7444

Alexis Taylor
Gardens

RIO GRANDE HIGH SCHOOL

End of Spnng Flower Sales I

attendaes , and Fnands

van 85 ,000 ml • $6,000

10" Hanging

Baskets $4

95

REUNION

HANDICAPPED VAN

Evaryone Welcome-

wtth whaelchalr lift

Graduatas, Teachars , all

91 Ford Econoltne- Full sized

Saturday, July

4 " Annuals 35¢ a pot

19, 2003

Horns Grown Tomatoas

Jamas A . Rhodes Student

$1 ,291b ,

Center

Local Swaet Corn

$2.99 doz.

Green Onlona Local

Free to the public

State Representative
Jon Petterson
Senator: John Carey
State Representative:
Clyde Evans

Romans

one of the most notable lead-

This stte provides advtce on
Pet care resources are o ere
on thts stle through the health, nutntion and exerc1se so
American Animal Hosp1tal that you can maximize your Itt·
AssoCiatiOn. Ftnd a veterinarian
and learn more.

and

depth tnformatton about 1he 52

Untted States and Canada that medications, news, recovery stoaccept pets
ries and links.
•
-Mwv.healthypet.com

Greeks

blamed Strtus for the hottest summer

TeleFitness® EducatorTM, AFAA

espn.go.com

www.petswelcome.com

sun.
Early

Ice Cream

The North Amencan Blueberry
site

sphere, Strius nses and sets with the

Scoop on

www.fitness.com

overview of resources.

summer months tn the northern hemt·

Get the

www.global-fitness.com

www.hon.ch/
Health on the Net Foundation

earth recetved heat from it During the

to create a dou thetr body temperature, so ble whammy of
make sure they stay out of the summer heat They
sun on the steamtest days. Dogs named the ttme period,
with snub noses, like Pekmgese, from 20 days before the
pugs and bulldogs have a hard
conjunction unttl 20 days
time staying cool because they
alter,
"dog
days"
are unable to/ant efficiently,
after the Dog Star.
and also shoul stay out of the
Nowadays,
we
heat Overweight pets are also
understand
the
prone to have more problems
heat of the summer
wtth the heat, thetr extra layers
very differently, but
of fat act as tnsulation, trapping
not before the term
heat tn their bodies and restnct·
worked tis way into
mg their ability to breathe freely.
common usage.

Onltne

Medline Library of Medicine, sur-

BULLETIN BOARD
Anal Theatre

then nght on Carman Dr )

14
14
14

Ricky Van Shelton
(Di rectiOn~ SR 7 tlJrn k:IL on Add1 son

4

~~l,.

fl oNE tl
tl STOp tl
tl
tl
tl sH0p t:
tl
t4
~~

1998 F150 XlT loaded one
owner perfect shape jet
black 76 000 o r~g1nal miles
740 388 9946

Canadian growers and proces·

II I ..,

r

- -- - ~~l
1991 F350 Oual~e extended ""

Approx 2

keeping your dog or cat at a
healthy wetght, which helps
h1m or her stay. cool, overdoing
it can cause your pet to over-

Health, Fitness &amp;
Sports

www.blueberry.org

2003 Hornet 27BS exc
cond 2811 Travel Trailer
sleeps 9 ask1ng $12 900
call446· 1973

6369 STATE ROU fE 775,
PATRIOT
UPD&lt;\.Tt:S GALORE'

your pet should have plenty of
water on hand for hot summer
days. Check your pet's water
bowl for fullness several times a

veys, E -health trends and an
20m Keystone Camper
Excellent Cond11ion $9 800
Call (304)675·6436

~;:xuuxux:u::;4

Rom.l prope r!)' will he nn left)

Timely Topics

1 An associat1on of Maine and

19BS Cruise Master class A
by Goorg~a Boy, 33 000
m1les
a~k1ng
$13 500
(7401992-2060

• Be cautious on hum1d days
Just what are the "dog days of sumHumidity can interfere with ani·
mer" anyway? The term describes the
mals' natural abtlity to nd them selves of excess body heat. hottest, sultriest period of the summer,
Unhke you, your four-legged typically between early July and early
sure that your pet doesn't get fnend persptres only around hts September. They are named for the
lost, into a fight or eat some· or her paws, whtch ts not bnghtest star tn the sky, Sinus, the Dog
Star, located wtthm the constellation
thing he or she shouldn't.
enough to cool the body.
• Don't forget the water.
• Don't push it Though exer· Cams MaJor. In fact, the star 1s so bright
Indoors or out, both you and cise is an tmportant part of that anctent Romans believed that the

When it gets too hot outside, or you
need a break, check out these informative and fun websites!
www.wildblueberries.com

1996 PLYMOUTH GRAND
VOYAGER SE MINI VAN
32 000 Ml $7 200
1994 CHEVY SILVERADO
EXT CAB 4 WD PICKUP
W/TOPPER-71 800
Ml
10900
1994 RED CORVETTE
COUPE 2 TOPS LEATHER
INT AUTOMATIC 20 300M!
$14 900
2002 HARLEY BUELL
BLAST
MOTORCYCL E·
PURPLE 650 Ml· $3600 00
91 Pontrac Lomans LE fair
cond•lron run s great 49 750
actual m1les A1r cond1t1on
broke $850 Call Frana
(3041675·6333

courtesy of the
Animal Hospital

Association
(www.healthypet.com).
• Never leave your pet in the
car. Ever shde into a parked car
and wonder if your r~ar has
melted because the seats are so
hot? It may feel cool outside,
but the truth is, the sun can

1991 Mercury Cougar XL m19B3 Yamaha Venture
good conQ , 146 000 mt!es XZV12 lois o1 new stuff
$1300 OBO 446 7995
Included new fro nt ti res 34K
miles runs good taking
1992 Cutl ass Ciera 40 offe rs 245 0460
$1 995 1993 Nrssan Alt1ma
$1 995 1997 Honda C1v1c
$4 795 We take Trades
COOK MOTORS
741)-44&amp;-0103
1987 Bass Trac~er DaepV
1992 grand Am 4dr good
cond AIC $1,500 740 669
1989 Evlnrude 40HP: all
0000
accessones, run s good

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pet safety tips can help keep
your animal friends healthy and
enjoying the months of fun and
sun.
Here some pet-friendly sum·
mer tips,
American

Did You Know?

your car to dangerous levels
wtthin mtnutes, even with the
wtndows rolled down.
• Keep pets on a leash. This 1s
your best optton for maktng

(Tf) - Now that the lazy,
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have finally arrived, it's the perfect time to kick back and soak
up every ounce of fun the sea ·

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Have a -'Furry'
Good Time with
Summer Pet
Safety Tips

•

E\'ENINC
211

TRUCKS

FORSAu:

VEGETAIIIJiS

6unbap 1Jimd -6mttntl • Page 05 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • G~lllpolls, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

3 to.r $1 .00
10% off

all Americana Item

a

July 14th • 19th

HOME SWEET HOME
402 4tn Avenue
M·F

10·6

Sat

11·3

Unlvarslty of Rio Granda
Reglatratlon · 10:00 11m'
~Lunch ·12 Noon
Program · 1 ·OO pm
Reglatrlltlon' Fee. •
$2.00 Family
51 00 Single
Bring covered dish and table
service- Dtinks furn ished
Information Frank Petrie , Jr
740·245·5371

740·446·0775

�Page D6 • ~adlp

Ct_.·.tllttatl

.

.

.

Sunday, July 13, ~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

.

The ultimate shop project: $1.3 million home
THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON- This is
the house that Ben built. And
Erich and Chris and Mau and
· Tyler and Josh and John.
More than 60 Fairfax
County, Va., high school students erected the walls of the
house. which has served as
their classroom for the past
two years. Then they built
staircases, measured molding, laid down hardwood
floors and installed windows.
Three dens, five fireplaces
and seven bathrooms later,
they say the lessons they've
learned are priceless.
The· house is not.
Starting this week, it can be
bought for more than a cool million: $1,325,&lt;XXl, to be exact.
The sprawling five-bedroom house - 6,500 square
feet, counting the finished
basement - on a cul,de-sac
in McLean is the 16th built
by students from seven
schools through the county's
professional technical studies
department. Like Fairfax,
other Washington area scho_ol
systems offer such hands-on
learning opportunities.
In Montgomery County.
Md., students at the Thomas
Edison High School of
Technology have built an
entire block of 2,000-squarefoot houses in Aspen Hill as
part of the school's career
education program. On
Saturday, a three-bedroom
modular house built bY. students in Prince Wtlliam
County, Va .. will be open for
public inspection, eventually
to be auctioned.
But this is the first time, as
far as anyone can remember,
that students may find their
class work paying off in such
a big way. Fairfax school
oflicials say the house also
exemplifies the new direction
of vocational education.
"'When you used to say
vocational, it meant the kids
who weren't successful," said
Jeff McFarland, coordinator
for trade and industrial education. "Now. from being a
dumping ground, most of the
kids are college-bound.
Tl1ey 're thinkers."
The school district developed the program in partnership with the Foundation for

Applied Technical Education to about $800,000 on this
Inc. Most of the 16 houses · house, according' to their
have been built on school- teacher, 25-year vocational ed
owned property in McLean veteran Buddy Foster. "A kid
across from the Spring Hill Cl!ts something wrong. I gotta
Recreation Center, and there buy a new one," Foster said.
is room for one more before
In high-performing Fairfax
the students and their tools County, McFarland knows
move on to a property in that most parents want their
children to go to college, so
Springfield. Va.
Some of the profits from he has created a flexible work
each house are used to pay schedule that allows them to
for other vocational ·pro- attend. other classes. He also
grams. The rest go to build pays them $8.50 for each
the next house, and each non-instructional hour they
house takes about two years. work on the house.
Between hammering and
Although students build
nailing, students hear from about 70 percent of each
speakers and take field trips to house, the marketing and
learn about trades. within the selling are left to real estate
industry. The most complex agent.
"An incredible house
jobs--the roof. electrical wiring,
the installation of granite coun- awaits your ownership,"
tertops and brass fixtures--are Lilian Jorgenson, an agent
contracted out to professionals. with Long &amp; Foster· Realtors,
but they are asked to explain promised in an advertisement
she drafted this week. "This
the work as they do it.
. That, plus frequent do- house has been built by stuovers as students learn, tends . dents who show a gifted talent for fine craftsmanship."
to raise construction costs -

Newman wins
'D'opicana 400, &amp;
•

SG CE'• T S • Vol

a

Professional landscapers put the final touches on a house built by students and going on the
market for inore than a million dollars this week in Mclean, Va. (Washington Post photo b~
Dayna Smith).

CHESTER - A concert by
three groups of professional
harmonicu players is a feature
of Saturday's program at the
annual histone fest called
Chest~r·Shade Days .
Their pert'ormances will
begin at 3:15 p.m. at the
Chester lirehouse and conclude just before 6 p.m. when
the
Ohio
Harmonicu
Assocation's state championship competition gets underway at the old Courthouse
overlooking the Commons.
AI and Judy Smith. who
pertorm a~ "The Hotshots,"
will pre~ent a u~ique progmm
combmmg mustc and humor.
The duo have performed on
cruise ships and at intenmtional music festivals in

J. MILES
Slalf writer
BY

• OSU raises tuituion

. .;g~~s;· ·~ 2 "' -·'.
• Community calendar
SeePage3

Weather
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Ritz Camera

POMEROY - Every now
and then when the urge hits
someone; to go grocery shopping, be it for a cold drink on
a hot summer's day or some·
. ·thing
mi~ht come across Becky
Elhs, the friendly cashier at
Powell's Super Valu.
Ellis has worked for
Powell's 40 hours a week for
more than 27 years. Her
favorite time to work is the
day shift. She credits her
longevity, which is rare in the
grocery store industry, to the
people with whom she works.
"I like the people I work
for. They are very good
employers," she said. '"I also
like the people I work with."
Before the store installed
scanners. which record and
tabulate the prices of products,
Ell is knew the price of thousands of items in the store.
Even though lhe price of
grapefruit or cans of corn

BY ANDREW CARTER

SOuthem Elementary

Managing editor
_

1 Sections - 10 Plilll

9

Calendars

3

Classifieds

7

Comics

10

Dear Abby

ID

Editorials

4

Movie·s

5

Obituaries

5

Sports

6

Weather

2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PORTSMOUTH

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

___

S
GALLIPOLIS
0
there's thes.e three guys in an
RV ···
Sounds like the start of a
pretty dumb joke, but actual ly it's a really good story of
giving back to a community.
And that' s. just what
Laurence
Loesel.
Ben
Dowdy and Will Stuart, &lt;til
from Roanoke, Va., are
doing in a very unique way.
All three are distance runners who are making their
way across the country raising funds for the constf\ICtion of a multipurpose athletic facility at Cave Spring
High School in Roanoke their alma mater - and pro-

~

· The Hotshots, AI and Judy Smith, will be one of three groups
performing at the Chester-Shade Days festival Saturday.

Please see Fest. 5

Becky Ellis, a cashier who has worked at Powell's Super Value grocery store for 27 years,
knows her' customers on a first name basis. Ellis is seen here busily ringing up Mina
Swisher's groceries. (J. Miles Layton)

moting the spo11 of running .
A~cording to Loescl. the
proposed $1.5 million facili ty will house accommodalions l(lr lrack and fidd and
other sports and will feature
an all-weather field turf
intield and a new lield house.
"'My take on (the crosscountry trip) would be more
lium a running perspective.
just because we were all nmners in high school and we&gt;
also competed in college."
Loesel said. "Now I'm a
coach over at Cave Spring
High School, so from a running standpoint it's really big.
But I think it's more of a com·
munity aspect of where we're
coming from. (Roanoke) is
really rallying behind us.
"That's 1he angle we 've
taken. The rec leagues and

stuff will have access to (the
"This htt' been our nicest slop
fucility).'"
. in the past couple of days,"
Cave Spring High School Stuan said. "We've gone
is the alma maier of current thruugh Chillimthe tutd Jackson
NFL stars ' Ronde ami Tiki the last few d:1ys tmd didn't
Barber, twins who play fnr have good experiences there."
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
"You guys have done right
anq New York Giants. here," Loesel added. "It's got
respectively.
some Frencl1 intlucncc and
Dowdy, Loesel and Stuart you can see the historical
began their journey on May 14 value. It's very nice. the setin .San Francisco by running ling ag:1inst the Ohio. People
across the Golden Gate Bridge pay big money to have that.'"
and expects to tinally get
Today they e xpe~ted to
home to Roanoke this Friday. continue
their journey
Their route from California through West Virginia before
has taken them through getting home . A stop in
Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Charleston is 011 the itinerary.
Kansas, Missouri. Illinois.
The cross·country trip has
Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. provided more than its share
All three agreed that the of interesting and strange
Old French City was one of experiences for the three
the more picturesque stops
Please sea Runnen, 5
on their trek east.

MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (APl
- Sens. John Kerry and John
Edwards changed their minds
an~ deci~ed to appear with
other Democr~tic presidential
candidates lit the NAACP's
presidt•ntial
forum
on
Monday.
Kerry's t~ides said the
Mussachusetts senator initially refused to take part in the
forum In honor a verbal
agreement quietly reached
with three of his rivals E&lt;.lwards of North Carolina.
Rep. Die k Gephar&lt;.lt of
Missouri and Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut.
Under the agreement. the
cundidates would not share a
stage other than during six
&lt;.lebates being organized by
the Democratic National
Committee.
That would mean convincing the various groups that
invite them to speak to give
. each candidate a designated
time instead of having them
appear together.
The joint appeuran,·es are a
common fornillt for dozens of
presidentilll forums being
organized by lahor unions,
envimnmcntalists.
civil
rights actiVI,tS, abortion
rights supporters. and other
interest groups active in
Denlllcratic politics.
The NAACP was one such
group and had invited all nine
Demouat ic candidates to
their convention on Monday.
Such forums are supposed
to g1ve the candidates a
chance to woo Democralic
voters . but the campaigns
have received so many invi~
(ations this year that the
forums are creating scheduling headaches. All nine candidates agreed that the
Democratic
National
Committee would sponsor
six oflicial televised debates

Pluse see Dlsput11, 5

Together we can change your body.
And your life.

c."'"''" •

AZTec•
l'QIJC·111t
WEST VIAGlfil"
.
FIL EIHtnM• • acM UHOII

Staples

the alkrmxm.lt will he held at
1:30 p.111. and the fee is $1 0.
which includes a bt-ginner's
harmonica. Those interested
are asked 10 call Mary Powell
at 992-2622 to register.
A panel of professional
musicians will judge the Ohio
State Harnmnica Championship contest ami prizes of
$200. $Ill() and $)0 li1r lirst,
second and th ird. respectively. will be awarded.
Each contestunl will play
two numhet&gt; of their choice.
each from a different musil"ul
• ~enre - country. blues. folk,
JllZ7. gospel or rock but not
dusskal. said Mury Powell.
event chairperson.
The festival activities kickoff at 6 p m. Fri&lt;.lay with an
old-ti1shioned potluck picnic

Runners with a cause take a break in Gallia

Rochellla-

Index

......._

"'"'

lAYTON

Please see Ellis, 5

NOW WITH NO ANNUAL CON.TRACT OR CREDIT CHEC_K

"'ww m y c1 ,~tl y " ' "''" ~" t

14 2003

Candidates'
agreement
Cashier knows customers on first-name basis to limit
disputes
falls apart

·Inside

$29~2

JULY

England. Fmnce and Japan.
and euch holds the title of the
lnternationul
Harmonica
Associution's "Harmonica
Player of the Year."
The "Harmonica Star
Revue·· of Akron, a trio of
Roger Nealeigh, lead. Ei'ieen
Dorsey. chord, and Leo
Spishak, bass. is best known
for pluying favorites of the
1930s, ' 40s and '50s, bringing back memories of the big
bands, romantic ballads, lively polkas and old standards.
They perlorm m mtdwest
stutes unt1l the weather gets
cold and then they. go to
Flonda and tour rettremelll
communities.
Members of the Buckeye
State Harmonica Club. Inc.
are also scheduled to pertorm
and will oiler a hanuonicaplaying workshop earlier in

News editor

Page 5
• Charles Sayre, 62
• Jean Thomas, 62
• Harry H. Bailey, 89
• Earl Denny, 77
• Virginia Hindy

All

MONDAY

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Obituaries

unlimited night &amp; weekend minutes
nationwide long distance with no roaming charges
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217

Harmonica concert, contest highlight of Chester-Shade Days

• Scoreboard. See
Page 7
• Boone plays hero for
Reds, See Page 6
• Clarett under close
scrutiny, See Page 6

THE WASHINGTON POST

'•

5 3 No

Sports

Reminder:
Get a
:Tetanus
Booster
Gardeners are at a high risk
of developing tetanus, according to public health authorities,
and should make sure · their
booster shots are up to date. _
. Thirty-nine percent of the
cases reported to the Centers
for Disease Control and
Prevention in 2001 were of
people who contracted the
serious disease from gardening and yard work.
"We often think you only
get tetanus if you step on a
.rusty nail," said Dot
Richardson, an orthopedic
surgeon in Clermont, Fla.
A deep wound is more likely to lead to tetanus, but any
injury that breaks the skin can
allow the pathogen to enter the
body. The disease is caused by
a bacterium that is commonly
found in dirt or on plants.
Once the skin is compromised,
~ven by an insect bite, the
pathogen can be rub~d into it
later by an unsuspectmg gardener, said Richardson.
· Once inside the body, she
said, the bacterium's spores
release a toxin thai causes the
muscles to seize violently. A victim typically spends four to six
weeks in intensive care; 10 percent to 20 percent of them die.
· The danger is that while people with serious wounds go
immediately to a hospital for
treatment. including tetanus
vaccine, those who receive
milder cuts and splinters in the
$arden do not, she said. The key
ts to keep up immunization.
Health authorities recommend a booster shot every 10
years - advice ignored by 53
percent of the adult population,
according to CDC estimates.
People involved in other
pursuits are also at risk,
mcluding home improvemem
and sporting hobbies, according to Richardson, who is a
two-time Olympic goldmedal winner m softball.

Diplomas awarded, 5

Target

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_

_

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•

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