<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6950" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/6950?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:54:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17352">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/bc1de725b206248e4acb1853476974b5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6ffaa073eebe76538e0ed3216d4f0683</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22786">
                  <text>•
',

••

TEMPO

SPORTS

He's a cowboy,

INSIDE

Caven takes poll
at RQckingham, 81

Highlander Alloys
ready to roll, A3

baby!Cl

•

tmes
Fannie L Clark, 91
·freeman A. Enoch, 85
~dward N. Burdette, 62
B~n M. Evans, 82
'E4nice Strauss, 93
(ilenna Rummel, 89
· Patty A. Burdette, 70
Betty J. Conkle, 66
Melvin L Hill, 75
Pauline E. Kay, 87
, ••

•

Debllls, A4

'.

. .'
'

'

'.

\Veall•er
. . H!lh: fOI, LiM: lOI
:-

Details. A3

. ·clean Ohio·
.offers S2 111llllon
:: In grants
1~~~:sRE~TSCiean
:vA~~
dtlio Conservation Program
f&lt;ir open space and watershed

Page Sixteen- 2002 Bridal Edition, February 22, 2002

~:,~:~-·..~ .~J-e~. ----e-ry_,;.;...;;;.;,.;~~_,:~~ti~~-·'~ ~r.; ~ ~ ; ; w;_:~,.-.eb-~-~:.;..!r_,__~
:·
:-(~~.--W·-!'F~·." .I"':.:"~.&gt; -~-&gt;-iN
._.--~"'~"'l'"'!G~.:.M,.l""I--~.-1~'..-I...Q_{._-J. ...F--\-I-.-I-E--:--:--,..... Pap ·12

expression of individuality.
Fine jewelry continues to play ·
director of the Jewelry animportantroleevenafterthe
Information Center UIC), a bride's attire has been estabnonprofit trade assoctatton Jished. Colored. gemstones can
based in New York City, urges be a great way to complement
potential diamond buyers to the bridesmaids' dresses and c•n
add a fifth C to their list of serve iis a thank· you for particirequirements - COnfidenCe in patJ'ng
oL!. speet'al day. Some
, . 1 , Sh
um
ones jewe er. ' opping at a colored gemstones, like blue
jeweler who is a member of a topaz and amethyst, are accessi~
professional trade association, bly priced so brides won't brealt
like Jewelers of America OAl their budgets with these
assures couples that their jewel- thoughtful gt'fts.A pendant ·or .a
er maintains high ethical stan. 11r dards and is provided with karat gold locket with an
ongoing education."
inscription of the date of their
On her big day, a bride wants wedding is an instant heirloom
everything to be perfect. that any bridesmaid will cherNothing enhances the natural ish, and inscribed karat gold
glow of a bride like the luster of cufflinks or watches will help
cultured pearls. ''Beautiful cui- the groomsmen look dapper on
tured pearl jewelry is available the day of the wedding and for
in a varil!ty of styles and prices," years to come.
notes Aoren~~- "From· delicate · Memories of one's wedding
fresl),water to pearls from the last for years. With fine jewelry,
·~ . South Seas stunning in size and even .after the dress is put away
lwtre, pearls never go out of and the guests have all gone
style and can be worn by the home, there will be a precious
briile for years and years to reminder of the brilliance ofthe
come." The more traditional special day. A piece of fine jewbride may opt for a cultured elry worn on one's wedding day
~I choker or an elegant can emerge from the photo
tnple-strand coUar, and a more albums and videos to be worn
modern type may decide on a and cherished for generations ro
M', ~ drop pendant dangling on come.
·,:r delicate platinum or gold For more information about
chain. Cultured pearl studs are a fine jewelry, log onto wwwJew-. ,classi~ way to add a subde touch el~,;nl:
'Tuuo.org.
m'

&amp;pend
a romantic
one ofour whirlpool
,.......,._. DeluJe
0:-Mhri*J lkakfast

....
A

~

Q uestlon:
•
. What if my fiance ·
and I are hosting and
paying for the wedding
ourselves; how do we
d
wor
our invitation?
'
.
Do we still include our
parents' names?

h
c oose 0 ur
d
d
•
we . 1ng party
carefuIIy
i

y·

.

Answer:
More and more c"Ouples are financing their
own
weddings.
Howevl=r, to q.refuUy
wf,r~ :xour invitation as
to pay respect to your
parents many etiqu·e tte
experts suggest stating
- "Together with their
families, Jane Smith
and John Black request
the honor of your presence to help celebrate
the beginning of their
new life together •.. " or a similar variation.

'

i

i

THAT SPECIAl TOUCH
341 SECOND AVENUE • 41.~ OIIJ(}ll6jl .-

7~2522
WE CAN DO JUST YOftR BOUQUET OR WE
CAN HELP YOU PLAN.YOUR WHOLE DAY!
lfB O,D ov• UIMU 1'1/IL!UI'ICB llli/DAL CONSiJU.fNT
·.RIIIliWrSA£.: lfBDDINO DAYCOIJDINAnON

.

'

fl-011 SIU fiLOlfBU • 'fiiBDDING5rMIONUY
..

BQIJII'flllNT /UINI'AL

CANZIBU.-.,UCRD,-,IWIS, TBNT3, TAlLIS, CRAll&amp;, UNBNS,
{MNCB 1'1.0011$, CBNfUPIBCBS

UJIOfiSINBS ol ROUB IMA'f/IN CA . .IAOBS

'filii RAVB li'OUIID WITii' IIOSTOfl TRBAUAS PROroGIAPRIIIS,
CUUUS, IIIJSICIANS, BA '¥1ol D/SICJOCICBfS

RBUING IIIDMI'UN IBAIITII'IJL "BDDINGS fiOIIOI!D A 01!CAD11
~~Mm~~~~UIJ~N~£W

~~r:~~~
~chincludestow~istr~!~c~~~
11

areacoun-

1.25

5

Man surrenden after standoff.
\

'

over 'to police after discussions with the ·department's
negotiator, Greg Frazier,
whom Police Chief Roger
f!randeberry said did a ''super
job" in bringing the tense situation to an end.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Radvanyi was taken to the
GALLIPOLIS - A Gal. lipolis man was lodged in the Athens Psychiatric Center
Gallia County jail after he for evaluation, police said.
Brandeberry said the inciallegedly barricaded himself
dent
began when police
in a Vinton Avenue. residence
with a gun, and, warned qffi- received a' call at 11:49 a.m.
cers he had gasoline and from Cynthia Coleman, who
said her ex-husband had bromatches.
Frank T. Radvanyi, 43, sur- ken into bet residence at 38
rendered wirhout incident to Vinton Ave. in alleged violaofficers at 3:22 p.m. Friday, tion of a civil protection
ending a three-hour standoff order.
stemming &amp;Om what police
Officers went to the house,
said was a domestic dispute.
secured it and utilized their
Radvanyi turned himself K-9 unit, Virago, in a search

Police negotiator
eases tense
situation

of the house. Brandeberry · traffic.
said that when officers
"Negotiations were sucattempted to clear rhe base- cessful and the suspect was
rnent, they found Radvanyi taken into custody without
there with a gun to his head. incident," Brandeberry said.
Radvanyi is being held on
Radvanyi allegedly told
officers to leave the house, an outstanding felony warand made claims of having rant from Gallia County and
gasoline, matches and a gas another from Vinton County, ·
in addition to misdemeanor
mask.
Officers then established a warrants from Jackson Counperimeter around the . area. ty, the chief said.
Police anticipate charging
Additional officers and Frahim
with violation of a civil
zier. were called to the scene'
and neighboring homes were protection order and will
evacuated. Gallia Coumy consult with the county
EMS and Gallipolis Volun- prosecutor's office to see if
teer Fire Department were other charges are appropricalled to the area, while the ate.
"All the officers did a great
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State
Highway
Patrol job," Brandeberry said. "They
blocked of!Vinton Avenue to
Pluse see SbindaH, AI

Spotlight: Cheshire at Risk

ELEOION YEAR

New report target·s
Redistricting
VI. II age neakh COncerns new challenge
for
candidates
ABP takes
.....
.·

'

'' ·

.

~. in 2002.
·· :l.'otential ,appJ,is;.anfSJor, ~
.
grant .funds can attenl two"' · "-··

.

·

.

·

·

.

··., ·

gr~nt. workshops for an
Oll'l!rVIew and, how to apply· ' . ·.' · ...
for, Clra9 '0~·'!:\',_...,, ...;;..• '
~..,. 'fi-f~·. ~he Natural ResourceCOSe 00 a
As~istanc~ Council ~ill hold
. COnclUSiOns .
.two- trumng semons on
March 14 at Ross · County
BY KEVIN KEUY
R:~source Service Center,
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
14'75 Western Ave., ChilliCHESHIRE - A federal
corhe.
agency's report confirms for
· . The first class will be from
Cheshire residents what they
lc$ p.m., and the second class
say lias been going on for
is: from 7-9 .p.m. For details,
some time: Emissions from
r~fer to www.pwc.state;oh.us.
the . Gen. James · M. Gavin
Eligible for the ·funds are
Power Plant pose a health
· local governments, parks, joint
hazard.
recreation districts, conserAmerican Electric Power '
vancy districts and non-profit
officials, who are still gauging
organizations. Matching funds
the fuU report, said they recWill consist of contributions
ognize the problem and are
of money by any person, and
working to resolve an unexlocal political subdivision or
pected byproduct of the
the federal government.
plant's attempts to reduce
. Local match may also be
toxic material from emismet by in-kind contributions
sions.
bY such parties through the
The Agency for Toxic Subpurchase or donation of
stances
and Disease Registry,
equipment, land, easements,
a division of the Centers for
labor or materials necessary to
Disease Control and Prevencomplete the project.
tion in Atlanta, Ga., studied
District 15 consists of
Gavin's emissions last sumAdams, Brown, Fayette, Galmer and concluded that HEALTH HAZARD? - A new report from a division of the
lia,
Highland,
Jackson, ·
clouds
produced by its Centers for Disease Control concluded that emissions from
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
scrubbing technology "pose the Gen. James M. Gavin Power Plant pose a potential
and Vinton counties.
a public health hazard to health risk to nearby residents. Officials with American Elec·
some residents, particularly tric Power, Gavin's owner, said the problem has been recognized and is being addressed. (Bryan Long)
residents with asthma."
The report recommends
report does validate our conSCR is used during the
AEP reduce noxious emis.. s.ctlonl - :11 .....
cerns that elevated levels do high ozone period of May
sions soon to eliminate
. calendars
C5
through September, but proinstances of ~ore throats, blis- pose a prob)em."
duced
a "plume" that on hot, ·
Celebrations
C2-3
'Fix in place'
ters and breathing problems.
The problem arose after humid days settled on the
Classifieds
02-7
The study was requested
village instead of dispersing
Comics
insert
by the U.S. Environmenral Gavin installed a selective
into
the atmosphere.
Protection Agency at the catalytic reduction (SCR)
Dear Abby
Cl
The plume aggravated resrequest of Cheshire officials operation to reduce levels of
fditorials
A6
nitrogen oxide from coal piratory problems for some
and residen[S.
Obituaries
A4
"We've been teUing every- burned at Gavin, AEP's residents and created unease
R~gion
A2-3
one we have health con- largest coal-burning generat- throughout the conununity,
S~orts
B 1-B,
cerns," Cheshire Mayor Tom ing unit in Ohio and the sec- which believes it has been a
Weather
A2
Reese said. "We don't want ond largest in its seven-state "guinea pig for new •antito hear we're at risk, but this system.
Please see Che1hlre. AS
c 2002 Ohio Val~ Publishing Co.

'l .

k ,t

Index

..

'

.A .Ci etime·
rojmise
•

From Acquisitions Fine Jewelry

11

Ask about our group
f!»' your wedding party.

.Gallipolis Super
321 Upper River Road

(740) 446-8080

Platinum and 18K Gold
·Rings Special Enough

Senior ·Outreach

To Mean ~orever.

L~tting OVP work for you
GaUipolis 446-2342 • Pomeroy 992-2156 • Pt Pleasant 675-1333

, ......

I

BY KEVIN KELLY •- c•• · KKELLYIIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

..

GALLIPOLIS - Redistricting of congressional and state
legislative districts have brought a n.ew spectrum of candidates to the forefront as they enter the battle to win their
parties' 1iominations in the May 7 primary.
The statewide filing deadline for the primary was Thursday, sending regional candidates to new counties to flle their
petitions.
The widest change will be seen in the makeup of the
Sixth Congressional District, represented by Ted Strickland
over four terms since 1992.
The district, which formerly stretched from ·Marietta to
Cincinnati's suburbs, was redrawn by the legislature to
extend over 12 counties from eastern Scioto to a portion of
Mahoning. Gallia and Meigs remain in the Sixth's makeup,
1:\Vo of the counties in the district that border the Ohio ·
River.
Strickland filed for reelection last week in Columbiana
County. The Lucasville Democrat faces opposition within
his own ranks from Charles Brown ofYorkville and Lou A.
D' Apolito of Boardman.

PluM see RecJan, AI

Sales tax, commission
race top Meigs primary
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDIIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -· A proposed sales tax hike for law
enforcement, and a contested Republican race for Meigs
County Commissioner will top the primary Q.allot in Meigs
County on May 7.
The Meigs County Commissioners voted Thursday. to
place the proposed increase in the local sales tax - to 6.5
percent - to address continuing financial restraints in the
sheriff's office.
Since November, when a layoff of deputies was barely
averted, Meigs County Sheriff Ralph Trussell and members
of the Ohio Patrolmen's Benevolent Association have urged
the commissioners to iinpose half of their remaining one
percent in permissive sales tax, but the commissioners insist
that local voter~ should choose whet?cr the tax is needed.
In · county-wide races, Republicans w1ll choose etther ·
John Fisher or Don R . Hill as their candidate for, County

Ple•se see Meigs, AI

•

"Reaching Out to Meet Senior Needs"

J.soo-80().8000 ~ www.superS.com

For advertising information

This house on Vinton Avenue
in Gallipolis was the site of a
37, hour standoff between
police and Frank T. Radvanyi,
who threatened to commit
suicide. The incident ended
peacefully with the his surrender. (Andrew Carter)'

Reassuring Phone Calls and Home Visits
Prescription Reminders • Loan Library

MEDICAL CENTER
l)iscoJJel' the Holzel' Difference

For more information, please call

www.holzer.org

* '10 Dow~ 1'10 A Month
.• Free

(740)446~9560.
II

,._ _,.._....,_.

...-.

·--·... ' .. •

-..,._...,

.

__

_.

l

�'

•
•
•
••

!

on
nder Alloys almost rea

PageA3

J'unbav Gaa ,. ....adhlll

Suncllty. Februry 24, 2002

-~--~------------------------~~
Ohio westlwr

ocomotive
•on
rau

lknlly,FaM

IY PAM Wl'll'fll D11
FoW\IitiMYDM.YIIIOISTIII.COM

·.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. There are many smiling facet

.,

I raun u lmw1• I •

•

.I ColumbUI l¥114• I

/

•

at Highlander Alloy~ in New
Haven, W.Va., both in tho
office and on the plant 8oor,
,; u the sound of refurbishment
~and reconstruction fillJ the

•

I 11.1'•

&lt;

.' . '
. ,p.
{
'

.

1 Highlander Alloys pur•' chased. the old American
• Alloys plant late last year and
: have begun renovating the
: facility with the aoal of hav: ing 90 worken on u they
; ready thenuelves for produc: tion.
: "I've already put in the
; orden to begin hiring the
people . and
: production
: they've already went through
· the pre-employment screen;\ng. testing, medical exams
: Jnd all that:' Leighton Wolfe,
f.project manager for High~lander said. "We're only re~y
: Waiting for some outside sup: pliers to finish up, but the plan
; liad been for about the last
!inonth to be ready by the
• 15th of February."
•• • Jobs . at Highlander are
~~eing posted at the West Vir&gt;:ainia Job Services office in
~Point Pleasant.
: : "We've hired all the union
: gualificd electricians and
~ puintenance people, there: fore, those areas are still
-understaffed and we're des: perate for those kinds of high

e

' •
\

!

...

't

I

...

..'
.. ..

...'

1

Sunny, warmer for Sunday
BY THE ASSciciATEO PRESS

A low pressure system moving into the region won't deter
sunny skies and temperatures in the 60s Sunday, forecasters said.
Increasing cloudiness and a chance of showers are in the
forecast for Monday. Highs in the 50s Monday are expected to
yield to colder daytime 'Jtighs for most of the week.
Weather forecast:
UP FOR BID - This Cummins Diesel Engine Watt 1941 locomotive is up for bid by the government. The original acquisition
price was $68,000. (Submitted photo)
Sunday... Mosdy sunny and warmer. Highs near 60.
Sunday night...Mosdy clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
next week, you 'll have a tion price of $68,000, the accessories will be open for
Monday. .:Increasing cloudiness with a chance of showers.
chance to bid on a 1941 loco- locomotive is listed on-line as · bidding via Internet auction
Highs in the lower 50s.
motive, along with rails and ' a Cumntins Diesel Engine from Feb. 25-27 on the Web
Monday night. .. Mosdy cloudy with a chance of snow or rain
switches, all from Point Pleas- Watt 1941 , manufactured by site,
showers in the evening, then a chance of snow showers late.
ant.
General Electric, in running www.govliquidation.com.
Lows in the ntid 20s. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
If you've ever had a hanker- condition, having 1593.12 Those without computer
Extended forecast:
ing to own your own train hours on it and an auto bat- access can also subntit bids by
BY PAM WIWAMSON
Tuesday. .. Mosdy cloudy with a chance of snow showers.
engine, this is you opportuni- tery charger. Buyer beware, fax. The auction event numPAMWOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM
Colder. Highs in the lower 30s.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ty as Government Liquida- however, as the south engine ber is o618 and the locomoWednesday. ..A chance of snow showen during the day, otherwise
.
- Train whisdes in the dis- . tion, an auctioneer for the is reported to drip fuel when . tive is lot 4013. '· '
partly cloudy. Continued cold. Laws 18 to 23 and highs 28 to 33.
United
States
military
surplus
·running.
For
information,
call
the
tance, the click-clack of rail
Thursday.. .Increasing cloudiness. Lows in the lower 20s and
Proceeds from the sale are Government Liquidation cuscars rolling along the Jines, and the U.S. Armetl Forces,
highs in the lower 40s.
opens
the
bidding
to
the
pubdistributed
to the U.S. Trea• tomer service line;&amp; at 480these are all fantiliar sounds to
Friday. .. Cioudy with a chance oflight snow. Continued cold.
367:..1]'00 , J ! ,
~··;.. , ·-"~
sury.
people in Mason County, ~nd lic.
.
'
Lows in the upper 20s and highs 30 to 35.
With an original acquisiThe locomotive and related

Rails and
switches also
available·

..

·~

•.,....

••

"St. louis Catholic Church
"celebrates 150th year
_o f serving Gallia County

•"lt

'.•,

Correction Polley

:; GALLIPOLIS - St. Louis
; :Catholic Church in Gallipolis
:;will honor its sesquicentenni; al, 1852-2002, with a year of

.
,'I'CeIebranons.

Crabtree &amp; Evelyn
Vera Bradley
Briar Patch Primitives
Primal Elements
Gift Baskets made to order

Newa Depertmentl
o.lllpolll

extentlona are:
lbnlglng ·ldltor
Ext. 18
Newlldftor
Ext. 23
Alllgnlng ldltor
Ext. 20
lporta
Ext. 21
Pomeroy
Department

$25.00

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE
..J A private consultation wlth the doctor.

~ X·rays, If necessary.

&amp; neUrologic test.
-J A confidential repon of our Hndlngs.
.J An explanation of our treatment procedure Hwe
determine Chiropractic can help you .
&lt;A REFERRAL TO THE PROPER SPECIALIST IF WE
DETERMINE CHIROPRACTIC CAN'T HELP YOU.

: ; The church was originally
::located on . Grape Street
I :t,erween Second and Third
.
;wenues.
"We found a cornerstone
. - - - - - - , and
according to all
of the.
records
we can
find this
would
be our
150th

Hewl
Newa

Ext. 12
Ext. 13

. Ext.14

On the web
www.mydallytrlbune.com
www.mydallysantlnel.com

E-mail

'

newsO mydallylrlbune.com
news Omydallyaentlnel.com

.

year."
....__ _ _..... said

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME
OF THE DANGER SIGNALS:
~ Headache
.
~ Arm pain &amp; nul!'bness
&gt;/ Backache
&gt;/ Fatigue
&gt;/ Tension
&gt;/ Whiplash lnluoy'

•

228 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Oh 45831, (740) 446-3838
This Certificate Entitles

,_

·. SUnday

Mlllsublatallan
Dolly ..........- - --

13 Weeks · - Gollll Coonly

2f Wtaeb

..

Sll.lO
S53J2
SI05.U

- - ...... COonly 12t.l!i
Weeki
28w.b
S5fUi8
I]

52Wttb

To a·complete, orthopedic, neurological
examination, Including x-rays for $25.00.

Tunes-Sentinel
IOI.n

Must pr..ent adlcou

Cel8a. 446-2342

Meigs • 99.2-21 56
Mason • 675-1 ~

•ttlme of examlnallon. E•plr.tlon date 03'3112002

II you are experiencing any af these aymptomt, caM our oftlc:e toaay for an appointment
Hours by appointment: Mon • Sat • Emergency Houq AvaHable

Christopher B.
Wilcoxon, DC

"The small classes and
flexible scheduling at
GALLIPOLIS CAREER
COLLEGE helped train ·me
for a "career close to home."
I'm now working at F.A.C.T.S.
or Gallipolis.!."

Jennifer Bias
Receptionist
T.SJGalllpolls

French City Chiropractic

•

r • ·

228 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 448·383e
Across
Caplaln D's

•

fMonsignor William R. Myen.
• ''We moved to our present
; location at 85 State St. in
'.1908 to escape the very pro, 1! duce ·and market area," he
••added.
l • "It is in a spirit of gratitude
l that we remember those who ·
: have gone before us - clergy,
! religious and laity - who
~lave by their work and sacri~
Ilice made it possible for this
• parish to exist for nearly 150
: yean through many trials and
:difficulties," Myen said. "They
: have provided us with a foun: dation , both material and
: spiritual, that has served us
: well in our own day." ·
; ~ Myen said that although
, there will be many events
: planned throughout .the year,
: the big event will be the
:church's "Feast of St. Louis:'
tflamed for its patron saint, the
:weekend of Aug. 24-25.
:: It will be a big festival and
: tpaghetti dinner, as the church
• has held for the past seven
: ;yean, but Sunday's celebration
:)viii feature the bishop with
: ltespen in the evening. There
: :will be music, food and they.
I
also display the items that
! they will be placing in a time
: capsule later in the year.
: "Another thing we're doing

Win

•

•

..

.•

.5.~·~·
·~··

p 'tr'• ••

•

still working on; ' Myers said.
To commemorate
the
anniversary, the churchheld a
contest to design a logo.
Timothy Lynch was the
winner, with some input from
Josette Baker and Saundra
Koby. The three main elements of the logo include the
cross, crown and fleur de lys.

l!'~llt
~

.~~~~
·. .J .C

Spring Valley Plaz\ • Gallipolis

446-4361 or
1·808-214-0452

with

Chatty GtOve
Arnotlcan Dtow
7 Pfoco OinJng
Roorn GtOu~

frLFIIL

e
o!e;[ ome" 9

·uI:L~~
,;, .,

~areers

•

Reg. $128.00 Program
Muat present ad at time
of appointment.
(Expiration Date: 03131/02

&gt;/ Arthrillc pain by stiff neck
&gt;/ Loss of sloop
~ Scoliosis
&gt;/ leg pain &amp; numbneaa

is a Mission March 10-13, Grande."
'Called to Discipleship with
The church has also teamed
Jesus through Mary,' directed up with the Gallia County
by Father AI Winshman, SJ., · Historical Society and will be
of Boston:• said Myen.
putting a display with artifacts
"It'll be a renewal of our and .history in the window in
faith and comntitment," he celebration of its sesquicenadded. "We'll also be having a tennial July 4-Aug. 25.
.
parish dinner May 19 at 4
"We're also planning a pi!~
p.m. at the l.Jniversity of Rio grimage in May that w~'re ..

~

CERTIFICATE •
FRENCH CITY CHIROPRACTIC

Deperlma1t extentlona are:

Oennl M1n1ger

.

.J A thorough spinal examination lndudlng orthopedic

informed

BY Klul DoriON

• : KDOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - . Holzer "I am proud that our tn4rketing qforts have been )dent and Chief Executive
Medical Center was recently
recognized with these very prestigious awards. ~. Officer of Holzer . Medical
honored with a number of
ffi were able to successfully capture the 'Holzer .. Center.
awards in Ohio and West VirDliffierence' on film, which provides a rt.Rection
Holzer Medical Center's
ginia for its summer 2001
:I'
most
receilt television camtelevision advertising camof
our
world
and
the
quality
of
healthcare
we
paign, "Baby Love," a collabopaign. The campaign featured
provide
to
tlu
community
and
region
we
serve.
"
(740) 441-1259
J'The Fishing Hat," which
rative effort with Holzer
contained scenes from 'JYcoon
Clinic,' debuted on Super
1-800-995-NEST ·
LloMerWyte
·
Lake, and "A New Life."
Preeldentond CEO, Holzw Medlcol Ctnwr
Bowl Sunday. "Baby Lqve"
Lafayette Mall
At the Columbus Advertiswas recently voted "B~st
300 2nd Avenue • Galllpolls , . O~ '
ing Awards in Columbus, ing Hat."
employees and volunteers," Regional Commercial of the
Ohio, Holzer Medical Center
As a result of the Charleston said Jeffrey M. Barnes, Vice ·Super Bowl" in a local survey
was awarded an Addy ·Award Addy Awards, the commer- President of Mar}seting and conducted by WCHS TV 8
for Best Local TV Commer- cials now qualify for district Public Affairs at Holzer Med- and WVAH FOX _
·
11
cial for "The Fishing Hat."
competition in Louisville, ical Center.
"I am proud that our marMost recendy, at the West Kentucky. This level repre....
Virginia Advertising Awards sents a number of states in the keting efforts have been rec"I'm In Pain"
in Charleston, W. Va., Holzer Eastern Part of the United ognized with these.very presCan Chiropractic Help Me?
tigious awards. We were able
·Medical Center was awarded States.
HOW MUCH WILL IT COST
..
"I am extremely proud that to successfully capture the
·two Citations of Excellence
'
We are often aekad, "Whal'a the beat way of finding out whether or not a doctor of
:in TV Advertising for "The our work has been recognized 'Holzer Difference' on film,
chiropractic can help my problem?
Fishing Hat" and "A New in both Ohio and West Vir- which provides a reflection of
We bellev111 the anawer can be found In 1 complete chiropractic con1uitatlon and
·Life;" an Addy Award for Best ginia. It is a true reflection of our world and the quality of leJcan,lnostl~on, Including x-raya.
.
.
, ,
·TV Campaign for "The Fish- the quality of healthcare ser- healthcare we provide to the
And to help find out for sure, we Will do a complete consultation and examlnatlol), lnc;ludl.ng
:ing Hat;" and the People's vices offered at Holzer Med- community and region we x-rays, If nece11ary, (procedures that normally co1t $128.00 or mora) for $25.00. .
;:
,
lx::hoice Award for "The Fish- ical Center and its over 1000 serve," said LaMar Vlyse, PresWe will make this special program available through March. The only exception to '"'
:
Involves personal lnlury caees (workers' compensation and auto accidents) In whlcll there 1~
no charge directly to the patient.
·
··

Our main· concern In ali stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a otory, calllhe newsroom
at 4ol6·2342 or 1192-2155.
.

.

.

:,

.

.Keeping
··. Gallia;·': ~ ·
Meigs&amp;
·Mason

Highlander is a global com- now of buildi ng mo re furpany and owner of rwo man- naces."
ganese ntines in Africa. and
Highlander is looking on
plans to produce Ferro man- · installing a multiple of other
ganese and silicon ma nganese fu rnaces if it is feasi ble,
in their new M ason County dep ending on if eqgineers
facility.
deterntine they have the
Local suppliers have proved space, the power con tract
difficul t to find, but Wolfe under negotiation allows,
assures that those who help availability of wo rk force, .and
them now, will reap the bene- long-term incentives thrOugh
fits late r.
th e state.
"Supplier base is a problem ,
Although dealing on an
payment up front, no credit, international level, and not
so we're going through that," direcdy with the local econoWolfe explained. "But in the my, Highlander believes thei r
next few weeks we're paying presence will make an impact.
off a million dollars worth of . "Our industry is not tied to
ve ndo rs, so as that com es local consumerism or those
about, all of the sudden we're ki.nds of things, we're dealing
going to have people r unning with a national and internato our doors, so if you want to tio na! levels in a very specific
get in now, this is the time to product so we don't have to
get in, because these are the cater to the local marke t, nor
people that have helped us do they need to cater to us;·
CUANINQ UP- Don Duncan holds the truck still while Roger Barker dumps in some old scrap and we 're going to help them Wolfe said. "But overall, the
as Highlander Alloys begins cleaning, repairing and renovating the ir new facility in New Haven. in the future,"
more steel, the b etter the
Highlander hopes to be able to turn on one of the furnace s by next week and hope to employ
Although setting the goal of econo my, the more steel, the
90 people. (Pam Williamson)
having 90 workers o n by the better we do, that's how we
qualified maintenance and rwo weeks ago in the process ri ght now co uld probably get time they open for produc- impact on the local level."
electrical people;· Wolfe said. of gettin g the mec hanical a j ob it he can pass the quali- tion, th e number will surely
Although still completing
"To hire the production peo- people bac k in the line and ficatioris test.''
increase as more furn aces renova ti ons to the facili ty
ple, we have to go throu gh are completing that process.
itself, it won't be too lo ng
Highlander is a priva tely come on- li ne or are added.
the seniority hi re backs
We give the order some, ow ned limited par tn er&lt;h ip
"When I said we're going before the furnaces in New
through the union negotia- rwo to three weeks from now, formed and is an affiliate of into production, that means H aven are up and run ning
tions so we can't at this point and my guess is, the serious U bex group, a venture capi ta l one furnace," Wolfe said. "By again very soon. ·
comntit to how many more push will be on people out- gro up. The company has two the first of Marc h or there"As of right now, rather
. people we need in those side the se nior union people prim ary inves tment groups abouts, we' ll have th e seco nd th an talking abou t weeks until
unskilled' or production type from the production side, but • behind it, lcd by Boris Bannai furnace, then by the fir-st of able to open, we now kn ow
jobs, and if we can use history any qualified enginee r, main- and Eli Reifinan, both head- April or May will be the third that's it's down to days," Wolfe
as an evaluation, we started tenance or electrical person quartered in Israel.
furnace and there is discussion said.

'·'
'•

Holzer Medical Center receives
awards in television advertising
.

:

.

'

to fire up

lbruSat

gollipo~.~~!~~college com
gcc@gallipoli!'c~~~~rcollege.com
www

�•

Sunda~Feb.24,2002

Sunday,Feb.24,2002

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

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

&amp;unbap tn:imr&amp;-&amp;rnlind • Page AS

Gallia-Meigs Notebook
Fannie L Clark
LETART, W.Va.- Fannie L. Clark, 91, of Letart, died on
Friday, February 22, 2002, at Mitchell's Home Care.
She was born on October 26, 1910, in Letart, daughter of the
late Okey W. Roush and Alma Pickens Rowh. She w.15 a
homemaker, and attended the Broad Run United Methodist
Church. ·
Surviving are her daughters and sons-in-law, Erma and
Wayne Jones of Mason, West Virginia, and Linda and Burton
Hickman of New Haven, West Virginia; a son, Clyde Clark of
Letart; two sisters, L. Irene Justis of Mason, and Louise K. Gibbs
of Letart; seven grandchildren , Lynn R . Jarrett, Poca, West Virginia, Lana D. Noble of Shade, Mark T. Clark of Letart, Martha
J. Dickie of Miami, Florida, Norris R. Bumgarner ofSouthside,
West Virginia, Roger L. Bumgarner of Letart, and Scott A.
Jones of Mason; six great- grandchildren, Trace M. Jarrett and
EvanT. Jarrett, both of Poca, Marissa L. Noble of Shade, Kristen N. Dickie and Ryan]. Dickie, both of Miami, and Thomas
· Bumgarner of Point Pleasant, West Virginia; and a step-greatgranddaughter;Tiffany M . Jarrett of Chesapeake, Virginia.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Carl T. Clark, in 1983; a son, Warren N. Clark; a greatgranddaughter, Audrey Clark; four sisters, Freda Henry, Eunic.e
Hart, Estyl Clark and Elsie Lieving; and two brothers, Hazen
H. Roush and Raymond S. Roush.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, February 25,
2002, at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, with the

Rev. Rex Young officiating. Burial will follow at Broad Run
Cemetery in Letart. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Sunday, february 24, 2002, from 6-9 p.m.

SYRACUSE- Freeman A. Enoch, 85, of Syracuse, died on
Fri&lt;4y, February 22, 2002, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
He W2S born May 20, 1916, in Akron, and wis raised in Parkersburg. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army Air Corps during
World War II, serving in Italy:
He was a member of the Church of ChriSt in Henderson,
West Virginia, and was a retired Postmaster in Syracuse. He W2S
the owner of a grocery and other businesses in Reedsville, and
a produce farm in 'Portland.
Surviving are his wife, Leola Shockey Enoch, and son, Douglas E Enoch, both of Syracuse; three grandsons, Jason, James
and Jef&amp;ey Enoch; three brothers, Ralph Enoch of Parkersburg
and C.E. Enoch Jr. ofVienna, West Virginia; and several nieces,
· nephews and cousins: '
Services will be held at 2:30 p.m. on Monday. February 25,
2002, at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, West Virginia,
with Brother George Topping and Brother Don Wright officiating. Burial will follow at Ravenswood Cemetery:
The family will receive friends an hour prior to the service.
Freeman's wishes were to have no viewing so that his Wni.Iy
and friends would remember him as they knew him in life, and
in .lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the American

were by Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville.

CHESHIRE - Betty June Conkle, 66, Cheshire, died Friday, Feb. 22, 2002, at her residence.
Born June 1, 1935, in Meigs County, daughter of the late
Amos and Lottie Smith Leonard, she was a 1953 graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
She was a member of Rocksprings Health Club and
Cheshire Garden Club, and a onetime president of the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Organization.
She was a lifetime member of Rocksprings United
Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband, James Conkle; a brother, Lawrence
(Matjorie) Leonard of Pomeroy; and two sisters, Lois Taylor ,of
Kenton, and Dorothy (Gene) Miley of Baton Rouge, La.
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Harry "Pete" ·
Leonard.
,
. Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Middleport, with the Rev. Arland King officiating. Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Monday.

UPLAND, Calif. - Edward Newman Burdette, 62, died
suddenly at his Upland, Calif., residence on Wednes.day, February 20, 2002. He was a longtime reSident of Me•gs County
before moving to California in 1985.
.
Born in Gallia County on September 26, 1939, he was the
youngest son of the late Otho Sr. and Virginia Burdette.
He worked at the Betsy Ross Bakery in Middleport for
many years until its dos(ng in 1985, but is probably ~est
remembered as the "gifted" organist at the Heath Umted
Methodist Church in Middleport for so many years, where he
will· be sadly missed by many fi·iends and family.
Surviving are his wife, Cherole A. Burdette of Upland, California; two daughters, Kellee and Daniel Nease of Racine, and
Tracy Woods of Rancho Cucamonga, California; two sons and
daughters-in-law, Chris and Kim Burdette of Glendo~, C-!ifornia, and Luke and Jeanette Burdette of Pomona, Cahforma;
eight grandchildren and many nieces and nephews; two sisters,
Marilyn Millikin of Fairfield, and Joanna and Buford Crawford
of New Brunsfeld, Texas; and a brothe.r, Otho Jr. (Olene) Burdette of Las Vegas, Nevada.
·
.
Services will be held at Stone.Funeral Home in Upland, Ca)ifornia, at 2 p.m. on Sunday, February 24,2002. Memorial contributions niay be made to the National Wildlife Federation,
11100 Wildlife Center Drive, Reston, Virginia 20190-5362.

Blood drive set

Board meets
Monday

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Pauline Elizabeth Kay, 87,
Point Pleasant, died Friday, Feb. 22, 2002, in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born May 4,1914, in Southside, W.Va., daughter of the late
Wilbert and Martha Bateman Ballard, she was a homemaker,
and a member of First Church of God in Point Pleasant, where
she was active in Women of Church of God, Kindred Spirits,
Pastors' Prayer Team and Ladies Visitation Group.
She W2S alsO preceded in death by her husband, Roy Burwell Kay:
SurviVing are a daughter, Donna (Lloyd) Akers of Point
Pleasant; a grandson and five great-granddaughters; and a sister;
Ida Mae Jeffers of Southside.
Services will be I 1 a.m. Tuesday in First Church of God, with
Pastor Cad Swisher officiating. Burial will be in Suncrel$
Cemetery. Friends may call at Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, from 6-9 p.m. Monday, and at the church Thesday. one
hour prior to services.
·

Ben M. Evans

Riley Blayne Chafin

...

',.

· Eunice Strauss
POMEROY- Eunice Strauss, 93, formerly of Pomeroy. died
at St. Anne's Hospital in Westerville on Friday, Feb, 22, 2002. ·
The family will receive friends at Ewing Funeral Home on
Monday, Peb. 25, 2002, from 6-7 p.m.
·
Burial will be private.

----------EE. HEARING TE

'

COUPON

fln

1
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
1
· "We Care For You Like Family"
I S'e/t,ce TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I
1
I HOME OXYGEN • HOSPITAL BEDS
I
I • CPAP MACHINES • WHEELC~AIRS
I
• OXIMETRY
I Anyone who h11
I NEBULIZERS
or
I convarutlon 11 Invited to hive 1
heerlngtHtto ' " If I
24 Hour Emergency Service • Free Delivery
llhll problem can be helpedl Brlnglhle coupon with you for 1
FREE HEARING TEST, 1 $75.00 Vllut.
I · UMWA.your
UAW. ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
I ~~~~-800-458~684~4WALK-INS WELCOME

The agenda includes discussion of playground sutfaces.
replacement of playground
· features, stabilization and tree
maintenance.

Elizabeth Lynn Webb of
Creel&lt; Middle School will
Gallipolis and Charles Elbert
hold parent-teacher conferMasters III of Gallipolis; Katie
BIDWELL -A Gallipolis- ences on Monday and ThursCoffinan of Gallipolis and area man was cited on three day form 3:30-6:30 p.m.
Thomas Polcyn of Gallipolis;
charges by the Gallia-Meigs Contact the school office to
Mary Angela Mullins of GalPost of the State Highway schedule an appointment
lipolis and David Lee Banks
Patrol following a one-car with your child's teacher.
of Gallipolis; Charity Wagner
accident late Wednesday on
of Patriot and Christopher u.s. 35.
Gillenwater of Patriot; Sharon
Troopers said Robert P. KenGALLIPOLIS- Gallia Soil Renee Denny of Gallipolis
and Water Conservation Board and Allen Lee Hanning of nanl,31,411 Quail Creel&lt; Road,
POMEROY - Units of
of Supervisors meet Monday Gallipolis; Brenda Metz of W2S westbound in Springfield Meigs Emergency Services
at noon at the C.H. MacKen- Gallipolis and Rodney Sexton Township at 10:30 p.m. when answered the following calls
the car he drtM: went off the
zie ~tutal Center,
of Gallipolis; Melinda S.
right side of the road and struck for assistance:
"
Smith ofThurman and Chad
CENTRAL DISPATCH
a right-of-way fence.
E. Conard of Glenwood,
10:14 a.m. Friday, Village
The car was slightly damW.:Va.;
aged, and Kennard was cited Manor Apartments; Middle'
Nicole Evans of Gallipolis,
GALLIPOLIS United
for driving under the influ- port, Bradley Colburn II,
Producers Inc. market report and Robert Taylor of Gallipo- ence, driving under suspen- Holzer Medical Center;
from Gallipolis for sales con- lis; Leanne Rawlins ofVinton sion and failure to control.
'12:05
p.m.,
Veterans
and Michael Perry ofVinton;
ducted on Wednesday.
Memorial
Hospital,
Matilda
Betty J. Reed, 62, 301 Third
1
Pauline ]. Clark of Gallipolis
Feeder Cattle
'
St., Racine, was cited for fail~ Rowley, Holzer;
275-415# St. $95-$114 Hf. and Henry ]. Sheets of Gal- ure to control by the patrol
1:33 p.m., Overbrook Cen$88-$99, 425-525# St. $90- lipolis; Kate Canaday of Rio following a one-car accident ter, Vada Benedict, Pleasant
$105 Hf. $78-$90 550-625# Grande and Jay Holsinger of Friday on Ohio 681.
Valley Hospital;
St. $85-$95 Hf. $75-$84 650- Rio Grande; Sarah Moon of
3:56 p.m., Beech Street,
Troopers said Reed was
725# St. $74-$82 Hf. $68- Jackson and Charles E. Cox Jr. ·westbound in Olive Township Middleport, Wilkie Holman,
$75; 750-850# St. $68-$78 of Oak Hill; Debra L. Spencer at 11:45 a.m. when the car Holzer;
of Vinton and Maurice A.
Hf. $62-$73.
8:44 p.m., Story's Run
Toler
of Bidwell; Rhonda she drove went off the right
Cows
Road,
Jackie Leach, Holzer.
of
the
road
and
struck
a
side
Well Muscled/Fleshed $39- Morris of Gallipolis and tree. The driver said she
POMEROY
Kevin Jamison of Gallipolis;
$44; Medium/Lean $35~$39;
2:03 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Allison R. McQuaid of Gal- swerved to avoid collision
Thin/Light $28-$34; Bulls
with
a
deer.
Clinic,
Dwight Logan, Holzlipolis and Matthew D. Martin
$54-$63.75
er.
· of Cheshire;
Back To The Farm:
RUTLAND
Sherie Salyers ofPatriot and
Cow/Calf Pairs $580-$710;
1:01 a.m. Friday, Dark HolRobert Kapp of Point PleasBred Cows $300-$755; Baby
low
Road, Edward Landerant, W.Va.; Melissa K. Jackson
Calves $75-$245; Goats $26-$115. of Gallipolis and William C.
milt, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
CHESHIRE
Upcoming specials:
Kyger
Gambill . of Waverly; Sarah
Brood cow sale Feb. 28 at Salyers of Patriot and
noon.
Matthew Richards of Patriot;
Saturday feeder calf sale, Jessica Bickle of Bidwell and
Let us copy your old family photoa, Specials
March 2, noon.
2-5x7'a
for $14.95. Reg $19.95. SAVE $5.001
Jennings Gillenwater II of
We
also
do paasport photos, Identification
Call the office at 446-9696. Bidwell; Felicia Mollohan of
photos and
Kodak Processing on
' Gallipolis and Daniel Boggs
phototlnllhlng.
· of Gallipolis; Delores VanWatch Batteries lnatalled while you watt.
meter of Mason, W.Va., and
' •'
Bobby Lee Hayslip Jr., ofVin•
ton; Vanessa Short o£1 GallipoGALLIPOLIS - The fol- lis and Nicholas Stidham of
lowing couples have filed for Gallipolis; Cassie Goodwin of
GALLIPOLIS
marriage licenses in Gallia Thurman and Clint M . Tabor
County Common Pleas ofThurman.
Court:

Supervisors
· to meet

,.

Uvestock report

Parent-teacher
conferences

Marriage
licenses

AWNEYSTUDIO

S}lmmer that don't equate to
Reese also requested a 30what emissions levels were for day extension of the comthe rest of the summer.
ment period on PTE's appli"I think our concern· now is . cation. EPA issued a 14-day
how the report is being inter- extension, expiring March 1.
preted," Holliday added. Reese sought the extension
"During the summer, at no to gather more information
time were we in violation of so residents can ask "intelliambient air quality standards. gent,. informed questions"
"That's really the crux of it. about DTE's plans.
Testing for a five-minute
"We
haven't
received
A Registered Investment Advisor
period is different from the answers to questions and if we
standards we are held to;· he don't get them, we won't be
said.
better off on March 1 than we
Jim Morrison, Certified Financial Planner
Cheshire's concerns about ..' were before the hearing,"
530 Second Avenue
air quality and health issues Reese said.
increased recently after 'a · "We have an existing probGallipolis, Ohio
Michigan firm applied to the !em we're trying to get away
Ohio Environmental Protec- from, and this synfuel plant
tion Agency to build a syn- looks to add more chemicals
thetic fuel plant at Gavin to to the mix," he added. "We
BUSINESS PLANNING
produce coal briquettes as an have more than enough probEDUCATION PLANNING
alter!lative energy source for !ems and we don't need any
RETIREMENT PLANNING
plants like Gavin.
more."
Issues and questions were
DTE spokesman Guy
raised,by Reese and residents. Cerullo was unavailable for
JIIMil E. Morrtaon 11 1 ~~-... RepreNnt.IIIIVe of 11td offer~ eecurttlel thrauth Wllnut
lltrMt S.urltiM1InD., Member NAID I IIPC. J.l!. Marrl10n I A.11001atee II not llfftll-.cl
at a Feb. 12 public hearing, in comment Friday.
wtth wu. (leaurlhl .atl~ldH Hf*VIHII tram • was atftctlocad n u.o w.
Hlndlnon Ad., CQ!umbul, OH 114-442-33&amp;1)
which Reese sought more
information about the plant,
...
to be operated by DTE Energy, a division of Detroit EdiYou've got .to feel it to believe iC
son. '

J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

7 40.446.1986

Tempur-Pedic Swedish Mattress

•

University ltlall Home Show

SUPER SPRING SAL~

• DoUBLElltJNG.. "'~

• TIIJI' IN F()R~ t~
~G ; . .

• *ANY~TQ83
~i
. ·U.l: _.,

•

.

•

liSI

Tempur-Pedic• has used technology originally developed
for NASA to create a mattress that automatically reacts to
your body's weight, shape, and temperature to provide

*FREE:,

j

*FREE:

1011.,. Slreet
Point Pltaant, \W 25550

Rt.l, Box 63
ClayiJck Rolli
Ripley, wv 25271

...

.--.....

790 North S«ondAI'e.
Middleport, Ohio 4576o

....

......

,

.unsurpassed comfon and therapeutic suppon. Billions of
viscoelastic memory cells conform exactly to your body.

~FREE:

f'B off• Slllp Apnea eqUipmmt at our lbfw contHmltmllocalions.

tiiiiii--

PARTS &amp;

alleviating counter·pressure and promoting deep-REM sleep.

"

BRING IN YOUR WINDOW SIZES FOR A FREE QUOTE
REGISTER THIS WEEKEND OR

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'

•

CorBin t!J' Snytler 1'umiture Co.
-.

""''

;rw. ~

-•e ·f6
L

955 Second Avenue
740.446·1171

)!

I '

'•

Exfl.erience the

•

-----~····

. . . . . . . .1111-

Meigs EMS runs

.,

Cheshire

POMEROY- Retired Salvation Army Maj. Glenna Rum~
mel, 89, died Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002, in Asbury Park, NJ. '
Arrangements "(ill be announced by Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. - Melvin L. Hill, 75, Apple Grove,
· died Friday, Feb. 22, 2002, at his residence. ·
Born Nov. 24, 1927, in Cabell County. W.Va., son of the late
Charles and Nellie Flora Hill, he was a former clerk at the
Point Pleasant (w.Va.) Hardware Store, and was one of the
founding members of the Valley Fire Department in Apple
Grove, where he served for 30 years and was awarded a 30-)'ear
service medal upon his retirement..
He was a U.S. Navy and Marine Corps veteran ofWorld War
· II and the Korean War.
·

j(

"Anything they do to
relieve our situation we
appreciate," said Reese. "! do
have concerns because adding
fi'Om Page A1
more chemicals to an already
existing
problem only malces
pollution technology for
you wonder what effect it will
years.
The utility installed SCR have.
"They have no data to show
on its coal scrubbers to meet
federal clean air standards, that we won't have as adverse
which demand nitrogen oxide a situation as weve had.
before," added Reese, who
reduction by 2003.
said
he asked with no success
"We have acknowledged
issues we didn't expect and last year for AEP to postpone
we believe we have a fix in SCR installation until it was
place;' .t\EP spokesman Tom tested in the laboratory · or
plants smaller rhan Gavin.
·
Holliday said.
"We're hopeful, but also
On Jan. 31,AEP announced
it would spend $7 million on skeptical," he said.
Raising questions
technology to reduce the
Holliday said AEP has .
plume'~ effects. The new technology, involving injection of questions about the agency's
water, magnesium hydroxide report.
"As far as the report goes,
and calcium hydroxide at specific points during the we're still giving it a dose
process, will reduce su!filr tri- look because the full report
oxide levels that caused the with charts and tables compiled by the agency was only
problem, officials said.
, The new technology will available tQ us this week;' he
!&gt;e used starting in May on said. "Some of the news
Unit 2. SCR won't be used reports point to individual
data obtained early in the
Unit 1, said Holliday.

Glenna Rummel

Melvin,. L Hill

M-.1..,

Eligibility
lnCNases

Pauline Elizabell1 Kay

BRANDON, Fla. - Ben M. Evans, 82, Brandon, died
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002, in Bi.mdon.
A native of Gallia County, he had resided in Brandon since
1997, coming from Arlington, Texas.
. Surviving are a son, Mike (Terry) Evans of Fort Collins,
Colo.; a daughter, Michele (Steve) Landert of Brandon; and
four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Monday at Vinton Memorial
Riley Blayne Chafin was stillborn .
Park.Arrangements are by Mc:O?Y-Moore Funeral Home,Vinton,

PROCTORVILLE Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002.
She was the daughter of Mark A. and Jaime S. Chafin of
Proctorville.
Surviving in addition to her parents are a twin sister, Reece
Bryar Chafin; her grandparents, Paul and Mary Chafin of Kenova, W.Va., and Melvin and April McCallister and Tammy and
Clarence Mathews, all of Proctorville; great-grandparents,
Emory and Vada McCallister of Chesapeake, Berkley and Mae
Moore of Proctor\rille, and Homer and Peggy Jo Chafin of
Kenova; two uncles and four aunts; and several great-aunts,
great-uncles and cousins.
·
Graveside services Were held Saturday at Plealal}t Ridge
Cemetery, Proctorville, with Joe Hill officiating. An:angerrteliiS

for

He was also preceded in death by his wife, Rosalee Hill;, a
daughter, Brenda Sue Hill; and a brother, Charles Hill.
Surviving are two sons, Melvin (Dreama) Hill of Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va., and Roy (Loretta) Hill of Huntington, W.Va.; two
grandsons; a brother, Granville (Frances) Hill of Point Pleasant;
and a sister-in-law, Stella Hill of Middletown.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at Valley Fire Department,
with.the Rev. Bert Flora and the Rev. Charles Tolliver officiating. Burial will be in Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the fire department from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
Arrangements are by Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. .
Members of the Valley Fire Department will conduct grave- ·
side services.

Betty June Conkle

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Patty A. Burdette, 70, Point
Pleasant, died Saturday, Feb. 23, 2002, at her residence.
Born Aug. 27, 1931 , in Huntington, W.Va., daughter of the
late Charles G. and Nellie M. Young Jones, she was a homemaker. She was a former Point Pleasant city clerk, worked in
the Mason County Clerk's Office, and w.IS employed for 12
years at Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department WIC Program. ·
She was a member of the Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church, where she had served as treasurer, Women of the
Church Circle 2 and Point Pleasant Women's Club.
Surviving are her husband, Wayne Burdette; a daughter,
Sandy (Gary) Aide of Ronceverte, W.Va.; a son, Chuck (Trish)
Burdette ofSpringfield,Va.; four grandchildren; a brother, John
C. (Wanda) Jones of Littleton, Colo.;two sisten, Bess (H.E.
"Butch") Rhodes of Powell, and Karen Oim) Anderson of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; four brothers-in-law, Zeke Qean) Burdette
of Point Pleasant, and R o nald Qessie) Burdette, Curtis Burdette
and John Bill Burdette, 1Uof Leon; and a sister-in-law, Juanita
Burdette of Leon.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Point Pleasant Presbyter. , ian Church, with Dr. David Nash officiating. Burial will be in
Leon Cemetery. Friends may call at Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. Sunday, and at the church
Monday, one hour prior to services.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Presbyterian
Church Memorial Fund, P.O. Box 415, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
25550, or Pleasant Valley Hospice, 1011 Viand St., Point Pie~:.
ant, W.Va. 25550.

be in good general health and
?Ot have donated blood with••...,.._,
m th~ past 56 days. Donors
can gtve blood when taking
GALLIPOLIS "Hot most medications. including
Time in the Old Town," insulin and high blood pres' ·United Way of Gallia Coun- sure medicine, if their medical
·ty's annual fund-raiser, will be condition is stable.
' Monday at Down Under
For details, or to check on
Restaurant. Seating is at 6:45 other bloodmobile locations,
· p.m., and dinner is from 7-9 indiViduals may call toll-free
p.m.
1-800-GIVE-LlFE, or check
1
'
Restaurant seating capacity · the Red Cross' Tri-State
''is limited, so reservations are Region website ~t Www.clc~ ·recommended. Tickets are $25 · net/tristate.
' each and include a donation to
UWGC, which is looking to
-reach its goal of $125,000 to
~·assist local agencies in meeting
•
1
the area's needs.
· · Reservations can be made
GALLIPOLIS - Tax relief
· by calling 446-2442, 446- to senior eitizens through the·
: '2345 or 446-8400.
Homestead Exemption for
.. Guest pianist at the event will Homeowners and Mobile
be LaMar Wyse, president and Homeowners who live and
chief executive officer of Holz- reside in their home has
"er Medical Center. His reper- increased this year to $24,000,
.'toire includes ragtime, jazz, Gallia County Auditor Larry
· honky tonk and other selec- M. Betz announced.
tions, as well as classical music.
That is total combined
Gallia County · Commis- income for both husband and
sioner Bill Davis will add his wife, Betz said.
bariton~ voice to some of
The Homestead Exemption
Wyse's selections, and the is available for homeowners
vaudeville team . of John Ver- 65 or older, or 100 percent
non from ElectroCraft and disabled at any age who ijve in
'Jim Craft of Gallipolis City and own their own home and
Schools will present a humor- meet the income guidelines.
ous routine.
To sign up, come to the
auditor's office in the courthouse or call 446-4612,
extension 273.
The deadline to file for 2001
MERCERVILLE -Ameryear
taxes is June 1, 2002.
. iran Red Cross has set a
blood drive for Wednesday
from 9 a.m . until 2 p.m. at
·south Gallia High School,
266 Mercerville Road.
The goal is 35 productive
units of blood to help shore
GALLIPOLIS - Regular
up regional blood supplies for monthly meeting of the 0.0.
hospitals.
Mcintyre Park District Board
To be a blood donor, indi- of Commissioners is Monday
viduals must be at least 17, at 7 p.m. at Raccoon Creek
weigh 110 pounds or more, County Park office.

Edward Burdette

Freeman A. Enoch

Patty A. Burdette

funcl-f81Sif set

Diabetes Association, 1221-A Ohio Ave., P.O. Box 1115, Dunbar, West Virginia 25064, in memory of Freeman Enoch.

'"

•

•

•

~

•TM

Gallipolis, OH ·
1·800·664·5462

fxd.tslvt l'iJcD:!IaM:
mhdlilatlllf
- yriU do
" , ~ Dl't Ill

~-PEDIC
PRESSURE AELIEYING

IW!DI8H t.I4TT~U8 AND PILLOW

I'

�r

•

.••

Page A&amp;

:i'.anbq

24.2002

I
~

Den DlcQrlon
Publllhlf
Dllne 1&lt;1111 Hill
Controller

n.,_.,,,,_,_
u-.
llilllnl•· _.,.

n., ~ u,aiMia iU Hilllflll . . . . Mt llw l:DIIIIUIII 11/fM OIUD lWiq
hJiUIIIq C~. 'I MJMriMI HMi, .W.11 tlfiNrwlH 11DIMI.

P.te

NATIONAL VIEW

Humane
Repeal offood stamp
provision earns credit for Bush
• The Scranton (Pa.) Times-Tribune; on welfare
riforrrt: Many members of Congress and former President Clinton knew in 1996 that a provision of the
big welfare reform law they had passed and signed
was based on a faulty premise.
Now, President Bush has agreed to the repeal of a
section of the law that had eliminated food stamps for
legal immigrants.
In addition to President Clinton, then-House
Speaker Newt Gingrich observed at the time of passage that the provision was unfair, but they agreed to
it in order to pass the sound provisions of the larger
bill. Americans who earn as much as 30 percent
beyond the poverty level are eligible for food stamps:
Legal immigrants were excluded because some lawmakers claimed, without supporting evidence, that
immigrants were entering the United States only to
take advantage of social programs.
As a former governor of Texas, Mr. Bush understands that the vast majority of immigrants come to
the United States to work, and that they collectively
are a vital segment of the economy. The president's
proposed budget will include the first installment of
$2.1 billion over 10 years to reopen the program to
legal immigrants, about .800,000 of whom - less
than 5 percent of total enrollment - were removed
from the program in 1996.
Mr. Bush deserves credit for his humane decision,
which contributes to the ability of new Americans to
contribute to the nation's vitality.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Feb. 24, the 55th day of2002.There are 310
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 24, 1868, the House of Representatives impeached
President Andrew Johnson following his attempted dismissal of
Secretary ofWar Edwin M. Stanton; Johnson was later acquitterl by the Senate. .
On this date: '
In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII issued a papal bull, or edict, outlining his calendar reforms. (The Gregorian Calendar is the calendar in general use today.)
In 1821, Mexico de~lared its independence from Spain.
In 1863, Arizona was organized as a territory.
In 1903, the United Sutes signed an agreement acquiring a
naval station at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
In 1942, the Voice of America went on the air for the first
time.
.
In 1945, American soldiers liberated the Philippine capital_of
Manila from Japanese control during World WarU.
In 1980, the U.S. hockey team defeated Finland, four goals to
two, to clinch the gold medal at the Winter Olympic Games in
Lake Placid, N.Y.
In 1981, Buckingham Palace announced the engagement of
Britain's Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer.
In 1981, a jury in White Plains, N.Y., found Jean Harris guilty
of second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of "Scarsdale
Diet" author Dr. Herman Tarnower.
In 1989, a st:;lte funeral was held in japan for Emperor Hirohito, who had died the month before at age 87.
Ten years ago: General Motors reported a record $4.5 billion
loss for 1991. Secretary of State James A. Baker Ill told a House
subcommittee that Israel should stop building settl~ments in
the occupied territories, or forfeit S10 billion in U.S. loan guarantees. A fourth round of Mideast peace talks began in Washington, D.C.
Five years ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright met in
Beijing with ·Chinese officials, telling them to improve their
country's record on human rights, or face condemnation by the
United States and its allies.
One year ago: In an amicable first meeting held in Jerusalem,
Secretary of Stlte Colin Powell. and Russian Foreign Minister
Igor Ivanov pledged a constructive approach to dealing with
Iraq, missile defenses and other points of policy discord. Fugitive financier Marc Rich, whose 11th-hour paf\lbn by former
President Clinton caused a wave ol controversy, spoke out for
the:! first time, describing the pardon as a "humanitarian act."
Mathematician and computer scientist Claude Shannon, whose
theories about binary code became the basis for modern mass
communications networks, died in Medford, Mass., at age 84 .
Today's Birthdays: Actor Abe Vigoda is 81 .

.

The Ohio Lottery night .
drawings: .
Buckeye 5, 2-9-21-23-33.
Pi k 3 N b
5-9 9
c 4 Numben,
um en, 9-S-1-3.
- .
Pick
The day drawings were:
Pick 3 Numbers, 9-8-.1.
Pick 4 Numbers, 0-1-7-5.
Sales in Buc:~ 5 totaled
$286 325
d -~-- 1.. d

Suaat.y. ,.,._ry 24. 2002

~ft signs disputed

lending bill

I

me

t.r.,I'IMt .lllllhll

,.,.IHMIIdn. ,-w I-.'""""' H 1ft fiOOII -

.....__~

:YroN

Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co.

, , ,, ut

Quh
leaves 2
.....,.._ _ _

PageA7

:----, least 10 years.
"What we hoped all along was that we
q_&gt;LUMBUS (AI') -Gov. Bob Taft .
on ...riday signed a bill that prohibits
Violators of the could sit down with the folks on the
~
· .....n
(AP) ....:
_
provisions could be other side of the uble and talk about
•wu
ocal governments from enacting legislathwest Ohio natM:s wae
tiollt,aimed at stopping lenders from
fined up to $2,500 how to best protect borrowers in Ohio,"
and imprisoned up to Keller said.
the 10 service membets
p""'ng on the poor and the elderly.
·
one year.
Taft has asked the Ohio Department
fwbo ~killed in the Clll5b of
~ority Republicans in ·the Legis!aA federal law that of Commerce to watch the industry
~ ,l!rirry helicopter in the
tu ( hich completed pmage of the bill
creates further restric- closely while the study committee is
ha~-:...
·
F,. .,t2; said it was necessary to ensure
=~McDaniel · of Fort Jef- $84,~99. an 1:'-l""• s,~'"re ' ' · ~orm .regwarion of "sub-prime"
tions for lenders when working, Taft spokesman Joe Andrews
interest
rates hit a cer- said.
. said Friday her son, Air
There were 91 Buckeye 5
leifdFrs sutewide. Those lenders write
Taft
tain percentage also
.Master Sgt. Wtlliam ''au~" tickets with four df the numlop at interest rates higher than con"He (Taft) wants to give it a chance to
will be part of the work. He wants it strictly enforced and
Mci.&gt;a·~,"elll, 36 •.was one of
bers, and each is worth $250.
" ' 'i
'ortal banks for people who have
~~
pan-rescue Jumpers aboard The 3,062 tickets showing
ha .· II"Oblems with their credit.
Ohio law.
monitored, particularly during that peri;~•.ChlnookthatcrashedThun- mree of the numbers ·~ each
: ft. in a statement, said sutewide
"We · will not tolerate predatory od, and if it's not enough, to give it more
~1·
worth $10, and the 31,629
e~rcement would be more effective lenders, or loan sharks, who take advan- teeth," Andrews said.
:; In ·Franklin, the family of tickets showing two of the
than a patchwork of local regulations. tage of senior citizens, people with limThat wasn't enough for the housing
~ Capt Bartt D. Owens said numbers are each worth St .
Pennsylvania ' has passed similar legisla- ited incomes, or people with bad credit coalition's Bill Faith. He said Taft could
was among the eight soldien
tion and at !east three stites - North histories," Taft said.
have sent. a tougher message that would
who were killed while the hellCarolina, New York and Massachusetts
Lawn\akers expanded a usk force that have set the tone for the study committ~ was taking part in antift
S
- and the District of Columbia have will study the issue to include represen- tee.
:t.errorism exeicises with Philipp~ed laws regulating sub-prime ' lend- Utives from the American Association of
"I really did expect a stronger state- .
::pine troops. ,
ing, according to the National Confer- Retired Persons and the Coalition on ment from him on the need for future
t Owens was assigned to the LEBANON (AP) -A man
enc:e ofSute Legislatures.
Homelessness and Housing in Ohio.The action. What's in this bill will not rein in
.~ 160th Special Operations Avia- was convicted on Friday for
The bill, backed by the lending indus- panel is to report back to the Legislature predatory lending at all," Faith said.
t:ti'?n Regiment at Fort Camp- beating his neighbor during an
. try, was introduced after Dayton passed a by July 2003 .
·
The industry is pleased Taft has signed
~bdl. Ky. McDaniel was assigned argument over Str:iy grass cliplaw attempting to restrict predatory
Opponents have claimed the bill does the bill, said Dayna Baird, lobbyist for
'
practices. However, the industry sued the little more ~han federal law to protect the Ohio Consumer Finance Associa.to the 353rd Special Operations pings.
f &lt;;roup at KadenaAir Base,Japan.
Jerry Little told the jury
city and the law has not gone into effecl consumer.; and strips them of the only tion. The new law, along with a law
Thursday that his neighbor
pending the lawsuit's outcome.
line of .defense now available against toughening standards for mortgage broJohn
Webb
provoked
the
Sept.
The
bill
requires
lenders
to
disclose
all
predatory lending by enacting the local kers, should give consumers the protec•
terms of the loan before the consumer ordinance ban.
6 argument in his yard in
,tion they need, she said.
Turdecreek Township, then
signs the contract. It also prohibits
The AARP hopes House and Senate
"All of that may very well get to the
beat him.
lenders from requiring consumers to · leaders who will appoint the study com- heart of this problem. If the ·study comCLEVELAND (AP) - U~S.
"His arms were a-flailin'like
buy certain types of mortgage insurance mittee will select people who put con- mittee ukes a look and sees.some things
Rep. James A. Traficant Jr. a madman," Little testified.
policies and· keeps them from refinanc- sumers fim, spokeswoman Kathy Keller that aren't being addressed, that's where
coached a grand jury wimess
Webb, 56, said he was
ing low-interest government loans for at said.
they should uke action," Baird said.
· amid a corruption investiga~ defending himself: He was just
tion, the congressman's former cutting his 5-acre lot on his
The group also includes and their assisUnts are hired administrative positions at
-chief of staff testified at Trafic riding mower, while drinking tence.
City Hall.
Kenneth Ritchey, director of and fired.
cant's bribery trial.
a few beers, he said, when LitBut amendment supporters
The amendment, passed by
the Ohio Department of
"And did he suggest to you tle provoked the fight.
said
the lawsuit is the union's
Mental
Retardation and 52 percent of city voters in
... how you should answer cerviolates
the attempt to win in court what
Developmental Disabilitie~. November,
.tain questions;· federal prosejudges.. police officers and union's contract, said the law- it lost at the polls.
.'cutor Craig Morford asked
suit by Fraternal · Order of
·-paul Marcone on Friday in
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov. coroners.
Bob Taft on Friday named a
.
Police Lodge No. 69.The con·u.s.District Court.
· · Marcone ·replied that TrafiCINCINNATI (AP) veteran prosecutor to head a ·
tract says assistant police .chiefs
cant wanted him to tell the After a juror left for vacation task force . trying· to prevent
. who are disciplined or dis·
th
taff
,·n MeXI·co rather than return cr1mes agamst mentally retardmissed have a right to arbitra-gran d JUry at two s mem'· hers had worked hard. The to reach a verdict for a woman ed and disabled people.
tion.
The charter amendment
•two allegedly kicked back part accused of ,helping arrange a
GregOry ~ite of Lorain
instead leaves them with "zero
of their pay to Traficant.
' killing; the defense agreed on County h~ been a county
CINCINNATI (AP)
' Marcone said the congress- Friday to allow 11 jurors to prosecutor smce 1981.
appeal rights," union vice pres·
h
hall
continue
deliberations.
Taft
created
the
task
force
The
union
representing
ident Keith Fangman said at a
·man pulled him mto t e
.
r. ll
·
·
f
&lt;"
"d th W: h"
ffi
The agreement to allow •O owmg a senes o newspa- Ci.nclnnati polic!! officers sued news c.onference. The amend- '
, outs1 e e as mgton o ce
.
per reports on problerru with
on Fr~day, challenging a voter- ment gives the city manager
.because Traficant feared his fewer than the usual 12 JUrors
. ,
. .
• ffi
b
d
to decide the case prevented a · 0hlo s $1.85 bill1on system to approved charter amendment more latitude in hiring and
' o ce was ugge .
. mistrial. Deliberations . are to protect the mentally retarded. that changes how police chiefS firing for about ·100 top
resume Monday morning.
Christine Fiorini, 33, did
not return Tuesday with other
jurors to resume deliberations
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) after the President's _Day
About 50 passengers were weekend. Common Pleas
taken off a plane at Lexington Judge Robert Ruehlman
Blue Grass Airport and sent vowed to tmow her in jail.
back ·through security after a
The jury had deliberated
box cutter was found in the one hour Feb. 15 in the case of
carry-on bag of a passenger Dorie Terrell, 24, of Cincinnati, who is charged with
' Friday night.
'
· The box cutter was found at complicity to aggravated, mur. ' a security check point at a . der. Prosecutors say she lured
Delta gate, said Christopher arl African visitor, Ibrahim
;' White, a Federal Aviation Diallo, 30, to a motel parking
Administration spokesman. lot where he was robbed and
,,
The passenger was about to shot to death
Sep~ember.
~ board a flight to Cincinnati She faces a. tnaXJmum life sen'I
' that ·was scheduled to leave at
7:10 p.m. The flight did not
c leave until 8:17 p.m., White
. said. .
·IT TURNS OUT
The passenger had been ATLANfA, GA - Doctors wen:
:· through a previous security surprised when two separate siUd·d
ies found that a natural dietaiy
:· check point, White sal ·
supplement could help cause sig'
' Airport officials turned the nificant weight loss.
··passenger over to the FAA. He
Although not conclusive, both
... SO I WAS
FAS1CR
' was detained by local authori- studies found that patienls receiv. ties but · released later Friday ingthef01111ulacalledBio-Rex3000e,
HA~-lPON
"gh
·d FB 1
k
· lost more dian twice as mucb weight
' '01 t, sat
spo esman as th- in a control group on the
TELEMARKE IER!
David Beyer.
same fat reduced diet. Neither group
.was instructed to decrease the
amount of food they ate or to in·
crease their exercise levels. An article published in the American
Joumal of Clinical NUirition says
. CLEVELAND (AP) - No that you don' have to deu se the
amount offood )'011 eat to loee weigM,
,Buckeye 5 game ticket bad the provided that )'011 limit the fill
, right combination for the , According to a spokesperson for
.drawing Friday. so no one can Phillips Gulf CoJpOration, the ex·
.claim the Ohio Lottery game's elusive North American distributor ofBi9-Rex 3000, tho company is
top prize of$100,000.
GOTTO
considering additiQnal studies in
order to get federal approval to
make phannaceutical claims. Currently, weight lou claims for the
Bio-Rex 3000 supPlement are limiled. However, with the requisite
approval, the company could say
that Bio-Rex 3000 ~ sugar ·
cravings, increases metabolism and
interferes with the body's ability to
produce excess fat
Bio-Rex 3000 is currently available
as a dietaiy supplement and plan in
phannacies and nutrition stores or
by calling 1-800-729-8446. SugA
gested retail price for a four week
supply is just $19.99.
1
www .hcdsales.com o - ooc
Blo-Ru 3000 11 available at:

w.va.

,__, 1o11N-. . - .

AR.O UND OHIO

. , . , . . . . _ . UIJIIIIIU
""

Qelllpolll, Ohio • Pomlroy, Ohio
Point PIMIInt,

. . rdjw:f Wfflllllf6 Mll.,th ripH fUNI IMIMM
No......,.. lollon w/1/H

Ohio

-..m.es .. jeutbttl

...

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Clarifies position

food servi ce booths at th e county fair
are just two examples of forcing one's
Dear Editor:
personal h ealth agenda on the citizens
of the county''
When I decided to offer myself as a
candidate for the 92nd Ohio House
If food poisoning were a problem at
the fair it would be different, but it has
race, I was aware that I would be
not been, nor is it. The enforcers have
reporting every source of income that I
receive, every dollar 1 owe to anyone, only made life miserable for those who
have to deal with them. In other words,
and any debts owed to me. I also knew
bureauc.ratic enforcement of nonsensithat anyone could make any statement cal rules to the extreme.
about me whether it is true or not, as
As for the anti-smoking regulation,
long as they were not doing it with
reckle, s disregard.
once again it is another case of advanc1 now have become aware that my ing a personal agenda at the expense of
personnel record from my position those in this county who wish to pursue, at whatever peril to themselves, a
eight years ago as associate dean of
legal activity. Using the renewal, or in
Ohio University's College of Osteo- sori1e cases the retention, of food serpathic Medical School has been sent to
vice licenses as! threats against restauAthens politicians after they sent a rants that do not enforce the antipublic records request.
smoking law, the bureaucrats in the
This is obviously a fishing expedition . health department to obtain their goals
to help my opponents. I am proud ·of are employing the strong arm tactics of
my association with the medical school fiear. coere1on.
.
'
and my continued adjunct faculry staIf the county "authorities are so afraid
tus association, which allows medical that without the levy, they will not be
students to rotate with the physicians at able to afford the "health army," then 1
On Call Medical Associates. I will leave would suggest that they encourage the
it to the voters of the 92nd District to department to revoke the antismoking
decide if they want to empower and be law, and find a new director. In fact,
represented by those who are willing they should be working to defeat the
levy as the current anti-smoking reguto run their campaigns this way.
While it may be technically legal to lation is hurting the economic viabilireceive someone's personnel record ty of the county businesses.
through a public record request, I am
Such changes would maybe, just
not willing to run my campaign that maybe enable the levy to pass. Unforway. Dale Tampke can rest assured· I tunately, I personally feel that the damwill not be reviewing his personnel age has been done, and there is no way
record.
a levy of the magnitude they envision
I believe someone's public service will ever pass. After all, who wants
record and the way they finance and .more rules and regulations that will
run their campaigns are fair and neces- advance ol!ly the personal agenda of
sary subjects for review in a campaign the director.and hurt business?
Delmar G. Pullins
for the voters to be able to decide who
is the best and most trustworthy candiLong Bottom
date for the position. During my cam1
paign, I will restrict my commen~
about my opponents to these areas.
Dr. Brie: Haaemeier
Dear Ellitor:
Athens
I am writing about your newspaper's
reports on, the effects of the failure of
the Meigs County Health Department's levy replacement. I believe that
Dear Editor: .
the levy will fail and I . encourage all
I am writing in reference to the front voters to vote against the levy.
page article that appeared in the Feb. 7
The health department's staff has
issue ofThe Daily Sentinel concerning demonstrated an arrogance unparalthe impending levy for the Mei~ leled in recent memory. While speaking
County Health Department. Up front, about their concern for public health,
I will say that I am a non-smoker.
Norma Torres and her staff have comThe information presented by the pletely disregarded the public's feelings
county authorities was both deceptive, about U!e ban, and have assumed an
and fear mongering. The failure of a arrogant position of"we know best."
health levy will not bankrupt the
These nurses - and they are only
· county and the townships.Yes, it would nurses, not legislators - have made no
if they were requi~ed to fund the health secre~ about the fact that they care
department at its current level. But nothing about the public's opinions .
they are not required to do so. They
They can now rest assured that a
only need to fund at the minimum strong voter registration effort and
level required by the state.
anti-levy campaign will be waiting
At the current funding level, the aroun,d every corner for them between
health department has too much now and May 7.
money, too many employees and too
Wh~n the levy fails, the .trustees will
little to do. Failure of the health levy not, by law, be responsible for mainwould save the uxpayers money, and taining the over-staffed and underbetter serve the county as it would worked health department staff at curstrip the health department of the rent ·1 evels, and must only fund the
excess baggage it is now carrying.
operation at a level necessary to mainThe health department has been too tain public health. In Meigs ~ounty,
busy employing draconian edicts and that should leave most of them unemregulations. The anti-smoking regula- ployed.
tion, and the busy body inspections at
Perhaps some of thdse who have

Opposes levy

Reconsider ban

worked for this ban will find th emselves working in the re al world, where
the effects of bad public poli cy can be
painfully obvious.
These township trustees are, in part,
responsible for the appointment of the
health board, who passed the ban, and
must now bear part of the responsibil- ·
ity for the ban and its consequences.
Regardless of any campaign rhetoric
which might come out of th e department's upcoming campaign," the voters
cannot be condemned for voting
against the levy.
The trustees who stand the most to
lose for their operations have Ulltil May
til convince the health board to rescind
the smoking ban. If the levy fails in the
meantime, the health .departm~mt
employees and the township and village officials who appointed. the .he;Uth
~· ' 'II"
board will have only themselves to
thank for whatever happens· next.
John Anthony Bettis
. Albany

A·ftack 1 d
ea
to conviction

b·Traficant
·aide testl&amp;es

Govemor names
prosecutor
'IHal continues
without J"Uror ·

· Union
challenges
amendment

a

'Authorities seize
box cutter

Congratulations
Dear Editor:
We, the Gallipolis City Schools Academic Boosters· Club, would like to
extend our 'ongratulations to the students, faculty and administration of the
Gallipolis City school system.
The school system has recently
earned a continuous improvement rating from the state of Ohio. Many hundreds of hours have gone into t\lis
achievement and all who played a part
in it are to be congratulated.
Soon, a "report card" for the· school
system will be sent to all parents with
students attending the city school syst~m. We encourage you to take. ~e
ume to read the report and take a close
look at the numbers for our school system. •t is very important that we ;UI be
informed. For those of you who do qot
have students within the school system,
but would like a copy, please use any of
the public forums available, such as. the
school system's central offite or the
Ohio Education web site.
The Academic Boosters Club has the
benefit of being informed of the academic achievements, both individual
and group, earned by the students in
our schools. From National .Honor
Society at the high school level to
Reading Week at the elementary
schools, our students and teachers are
continuously working to improve the
level of education in the Gallipolis City
Schools.
·
.·
:
We . encourage you to join In, "this
effort to promote the achievements of
these students by supporting our stu~
dents, teachers, staff and .administration
with donations of you.r time, money or
encouragement.
,•.
Again, congratulations .to the Gal~
lipolis City Schools. Keep up tll~ goq~
work. We look forward to futute
improvement in the state ratings a11,1!
continued success for the school sys:tem.
·
'
Lori A. Yqun;
President
Gallipolis City Schools
Academic Boosters' Club
.

.

!n

Weight Loss
Puzzles Doctors

DROP US ALINE.

7-~

,,

111 Court II., Pomoroy, Ohio
7-·21111

•

AN APPOINTMENT

"THERE

lHAN A

A

No winner

in Buckeyes

W8..L BOB, I'VE
GIVE

YOU CREDIT!

GET BROCHURE
ONYOUR

RIGHTS.

REMEMBER TELEPHONE aJSTOMERS... YOU'VE GOT

.

2991 Slnlel, Rl180 • 446-6620

RIGHTS. TAKE THE PHONE RANGER' 5 ADVICE AND -.ru_.._

786 N. 2nd Ave. • 992-6491 • Middleport
204 2nd Ave. • 441-0781

"·

l

121 Tblrd A..., Glllllpollo, OhiO

·sas·
s TELEPHOI\E
REPAIR MAN MISSED

2CIII Moln It, Point P~ W.Va.
*-'7lo11M •
'

A..... Heltl

•

__

,....

·- - ; ; -I-- -.. --------

ftll--. ......_ ......

......, dlePDA. ..._. . . li .. ....._.•
...-..
.... nn..,._., ......

---·

- --- .. -·---,-

I
----------

.

----------·- --- --·---'---- -- - - · -·-

"

.

·•

�Pllge A8 • ilallbp U::imn ·itrntinrl

Region
f1mAipAI

•

Republic~ns

tiling in the
Sixth were Mike Halleck of
Salem and former U.S. Rep.
Lyle Williams ofWarren.
"People have been very
good to me," Stricldand said
Feb. 15 in Gallipolis when he
announced his reelection bid
and discussed the challenge
redistricting hal presented.
"The district is almost 300
miles wide, but it's impossible
to repres.ont a district without
trawling."
Gallia remains part of the
17th state Senate district, in
which incumbent Michael
Shoemaker, a Democrat from
Bourneville, will seek a second term and will be opposed
by State Rep. John A. Carey,
the Wellston Republican who
opted against a fifth term in
the House due to term limits.
Shoemaker, the son of the
late M yrl Shoemaker, who
was Richard Celeste's first
lieutenant governor, was
appointed to fill the seat in
1997 when Jan Michael Long
resigned after winning election as a judge in Pickaway
' Counry.
A former mayor of Well'ston, Carey said he appreciates
"the strong support shown to
me thus far and look forward
to meeting the people of the
area to discuss their views and

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

ballot - Gallia County 4-H
Extension Agent Fred J. Deel
of Vinton, Ron McClintock
of Proctorville, and Carol
Porter of McArthur.
Dee!, who announced his
candidacy in November, said
his focus is on jobs and education. For the latter, he is
drawing upon his experience
after serving 16 years as a
member of the Gallia County
Local Board of Education.
"Providing a qualiry education is a must, but at the same
time, efforts must be made to
attract good-paying jobs to
our area if we are going to
keep the best and the brightesr in our communities," Dee!
said after filing in Jackson
Counry last week.
Meigs becomes part of the
92nd House District, with
three Democrats in contention for the nomination Atl&gt;ens City Councilman
Dale Tampke, Dr. Eric Hasemeier, a former Athens
County coroner, and James
Pancake, a township 1rustee.
Athens City Auditor Jimmy
Stewart, who ran for Congress in the 2000 primary, was
the sole Republican to file for
the post.
Along with Meigs, the 92nd
consists of Athens, Morgan
and a portion of Washington
County.
(The Associated Press contributed to th•s story.)

Meigs

Lwn Page AI

Commissioner.The winner of
that race will challenge Mick
Davenport, the incumbent
Democrat.
Follll&lt;O[ Prosecuting Attorney
John Lentes,a Democrat, will face
olf with Judge Robert E. Buck, a
Republican, in this N=ilier's
race for Court of Couunon
Pleas/Probate and Juvenile Judge.
County Auditor Nancy Parker .Campbell, a Republican,
faces no·opposition.
Filing for Democratic Central Committee, in their
respective voting precincts, are:
Jane M. Frymyer, Bedford;
Betsy H . · Nicodemus, E.
Chester; David B. Sayre, Letart;
Mike Bing, North Olive;
Melody L. Hauber, South.
Olive; Samuel ,Bruce May,
Rutland Village; karen S.
Williams, East Rutland; Norinan C. Will, West Rutland;
Kenneth E. Imboden, Middle"
port 2; Connie J. Dodson,
Middleport 3; Myron J.B.
4;
Duffield,
Middleport
Rebecca J. Triplett, Pomeroy 2;
Carol Ohlinger, Rock Springs;
Bob Smiddie, Scipio; Anna M .
Layne, Racine Village; Bo~by J.
Ord, Syracuse Village; Jo~ N.
lllie, Minersville; and Joyce
Quillen, Racine Precinct.
No Democrats ftled. for

Sunday, Dec. 30, 2001 .

Standoff

Central Cornntittee in West
Chester, Columbia, Lebanon,
Orange, Pomeroy 1, Pomeroy
3, and Laurel ClifT precincts.
fiOiii ....... Al
Filing for Republican Central
Cornntittee were: Tom R. exercised great restraint and
Reuter and Brenda S. Roush, performed just as they have
Bedford; Larry E. Ufe, E. been trained.
"Our negotiator, Greg FraChester; Blair Windon, W.
Chester; Marco Jeffers, Colum- zier, did a super job,'' he
bia; Gary Dennis Evans, added. "He broke his arm
Lebanon; Joyce White and Don attempting to apprehend an
R. Hill, Letart; Janice L. Young, armed robbery suspect on
N. Olive; William D. Durst, S. Tuesday, and came out today
Olive;Thomas L. Dorst, Orange; with a cast on to help with
Robert F.Snowden,RudandVil- this incident. Without queslage; Wilma J. Davidson, E. Rut- · tion, his . efforts saved a life
land; Clwles D. Barrett Jr. and today.
Ruth Powers,Middleport2;Faye
"It has been a long week for
Manl")) Middleport 3; Bernard us with . rwo robberies and
D. Gilke); Middleport 4; Judith . now this situation, but fortuR. Sisson, Pomeroy 1; Eugene nartely. all of these incidents
Triplet, Pomeroy 2; Oscar T. we brought to a favorable
Smith, Laurel CliJf; Judith A. conclusion,'' Brandeberry said.
King, Rock Sprin~; Randy
The incident topped off a
Butcher, Scipio; Robert E. Bee- · hectic week for local law
gle, Henry W. Bentz, Racine Vd- .enforcement that started
!age; Kay Hill, Syracuse Village; · Tuesday morning with the
JasonA. Baer, Minewille; Grover robbery of OxyContin pills
Salser Jr., Racine Pet.
from Fruth's Pharmacy, 204
In addition to the commis- Second Ave., that resulted in
sioners' proposed sales tax the ar;..,st of Beryamin R.
increase; voters will also vote Robinson, 23, Gallipolis, who
on the replacement of the reportedly ingeste.d the dru.g
County
Health before his arrest by Frazier.
Meigs
Department's 1-mill levy for
current expenses, a 5-year
levy; a carryout liquor option
in Racine Precinct; and the
renewal of a 2-mill fire protection levy. for five years, in
Middleport Village.

Frazier was injured in the
incident, and was later treated
and released from Holzer
Medical Center. The suspect
was also transported to HM C,
and later taken to th.o Athens
Psychiatric Center for evaluation. An arraignment for
Robinson is pending in Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Later Tuesday, officers
arrested Charles Stowr, 33,
Gallipdlis, after he allegedly
tried to rob Marchi's Carryout, · 243 Third Aw. Stover
surrendered to police without
incident and was arraigned in
municipal court.
Gallia County sheriff's
investigators are probing the
Tuesday shooting death of
Kenna Lynn Rainey, 24', Vinton, at her Woodruff Road
residence.
Randall J. Johnson, 39, a
neighbor, has been charged
with murder in connection
with Rainey's death and two
counts of attempted murder,
and is in the county jail on
$500,000 bond.
A preliminary hearing in
the case is set in municipal
court for Monday at 2:45
p.m.

banking :business, providing trustworthy
and knowledgeable guidance to help
make her customers' futures brighter
and more secure. ~

·-

•

"

.

it was time t:o focus on
goal of re~irement~
Joan turned to a company
that.had the professional
resources and expertise to
meet her needs.
_."'&gt; ,oAA-i/I&gt;
AI

Judge to decide
if man should
stay in custody
IRONTON (AP) A
brain-injured man ruled
incompetent to stand trial in
the deaths of nine people in a
fire at a fireworks store in
1996 could be released from
state custody next week. ·
Judge W. Richard Walton
scheduled a hearing for Friday in Lawrence County
Common Pleas Court to
determine whether Todd
Hall, 30, of Proctorville,
should continue treatment.
The judge's previous order
that Hall live in a state mental
h.oalth facility expires March
15. Walton could require him
to spend up to rwo more
years at the Appalachian
Behavioral Healthcare campus in Athens.
Lawrence Counry prosecutors opp&lt;&gt;Se Hall's release from
the custody of the Ohio
Department of Mental Heal,th.
"For his safery and the safety of others, it's important he
remain in some type of
.
".
restriCtiVe
environment,
Pr9secutor J.B. Collier Jr. said.
"He doesn't understand the
consequences of his actions.
He didn't think through his
actions at Scottown."
On July 3, 1996, Hall started the deadly fire when he
tossed a lighted cigarette onto
a shelf crammed with fireworks at the Ohio River Fireworks located in Scottqwn.
Nine people died and, 11
were injured.

Page 81
Sunday, February 14, lDOl

SUNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops
: :

Sectlonel Final•

s.tu!Uy'a Gan.s
Dlv~on II
at McArthur
GaDia Academy vs. Northwest,
late
Division IV
. .
at Albany
Eastern vs. Southam, late
Dlatrlct Semifinals
Tuelday'e Game
Dlvlalon IV
at Athana, the Convo
Portsmouth Clay vs.
Eastern/Southem winner, 8 p.m.

Craven wins pole at ROckingham with help
ROCKINGHAM~ N .C. (AP) Ricky Craven is convinced. he knows
the secrer to a grtoat race team - and
it's not cars or engines.
"The critical part of the whole
equation is being around the right
people," Craven said friday after easily winning the pole for the Subway
400 at North Carolina Speedway in a
Cal Wells-owned ford. · ·
~ ·1 crossed paths with Cal Wells, a
guy that has the same degree of passion for this sport that I have,'' Craven
said. "Mike Beam, my crew chief, who
has a wealth of experience, is a good
friend of mine. Roy McCauley is an

to a 17th- place fini~h. ·
"l'ye got a lot better perspective
than I had five years ago,'' Craven said
after beating runner-up Ken Schrader
by about 1 112 mph in qualifYing for
Sunday's race.
"Starting last was tough on the
team, but finishing 17th, that was
higher than we finished in the points '
last year, so we're off to a good start.
· Craven
It's all about being realistic."
Craven's fast lap of 156.008 mph
one.
~as plenty. qui•k enough to beat the
After a strong finish in 2001, Craven 154.696 by Schrader's Pontiac. It also
wobbled a little in the season-opening was considerably fast er than the
Daytona 500, starting last and driving speeds Craven was turning in practice
engineer who is full
of enthusiasm and
very determined and
aggresstve.
"I think the big
difference is a group
of people who really
believe in their driver, which is a great
feeling, and a driver
that wouldn't trade
this team for any-

..

Thurlday'a Game
Dlvlalon II
at Athena, The Convo
Circleville ·
vs.
Gallla
Academy/Northwest
winner,
6:15 1

osu

' SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Ken Griffey Sr. reported to
the Cincinnati Reds' training
camp Saturday to start scouting for the team, one day af\er
he resigned as first-base
coach.
Both management and his
son, Ken Griffey Jr., were
caught off-guard Friday
when
Griffey Sr., 51,
resigned.
' He has not said why he left
the post and declined to talk
to reporters after leaving a
meeting Saturday with the
team's general manager, Jim
Bowden.
Griffey was hired as a special consultant and has been
assigned to Florida's east coast
,to scout the Marlins, St.
Louis, Montreal, Los Angeles
and the New York Mets.
See related story on B5.

home

· Bean' reward
Jauron with
newcontrad
CHICAGO (AP) - Dick
.Jauron, whos~ job was in
serious jeopardy entering the
2001 season, got a new threeyear contract from the
Ch;icago Bears after leading .
them ro ·a 13-4 record and its
first playoff berth in seven
years.

caw, family
•
•
escape •InJUry
In
car acaclent
: :ERESNO, Calif. (AP)
Former Fresno State quarl:j)rpack David Carr and his
'1\&lt;ife and baby escaped injury
~fter a driver hit his car and
sp'ed away T~ursday night.
'Carr, who is expected to
be : the No. I draft pi€k by
the Houston Texans in April,
his family were headed
south on Highway 41 when ·
the speeding Chevy sport
utility vehicle rear-e~ded his
$aturn sedan.

.4

WE'RE NOT JUST PEOPLE WORKING AT A BANK. WE'RE PEOPLE JUST LIKE YOU WORKING AT A B~K.

.

on the 1.017-mile oval .
"I was really loose ofT the truck and
I couldn't power down in the corners," Craven explained. "I told my
guys, 'If you can tie this thing down,
it's a rocket.' They. made some great
de:; isions.
. ,
When we ran that lap, I satd, Guys,
thank you!' This can be a difficult
busine:s but, when th.~ car runs like
that, tts not very hard.
.
It was the fifth pole .of C:r~v~n s
career and hts second stnce jotnmg
Wells' team last season. After a slow
start, Craven earned an emotiOnal first
Please see Craven, B2

retumstoscout
for Reds ·

~over 40 years Joan has been in

.

Ravenswood difeats Point, Page B2
NASCAR schedule, standings, Page B3
J3earcat.s defetJt Marquette, Page B5
Outdoors: In the Open, Page B8

~ J(en Griffey Sr.

concerns."
The 17th, which formerly
included Meigs County, now
consists of Gallia, Jackson,
Vinton, Ross, Fayette, Highland, Clinton and Pike counties, and portions of Lawrence
and Pickaway. Carey and
Shoemaker filed petitions in
Ross.
Meigs has been included in
the 20th Senate District of
Athens, Morgan, Washington,
.Noble, Monroe, Muskingum
land Guernsey counties.
Incumbent Sen. Jim Carne~. a
St. Clairsville Republican, is
not up for reelection this year.
Carey's former district, the
94th, was transformed last fall
into the 87th with the
removal of Meigs. The 87th is
now made up of Gallia, Jackson, Vinton and eastern
Lawrence counties.
Filing in the GOP primary
are Dr. Clyde Evans of Rio
Grande, executiw assistant to
the president for community
affairs at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College, and
longtime Jackson Mayor John
T. "Tom" Evans.
Three
candidates will
appear on the Democratic

Inside:

ana

.

When it comes to Joan's .!Jians for retirement, she understands the importance of having a trustworthy and experienced team
looking after her special needs. That's why she turned to a financial services representative located at Peoples Bank.

..

Because Peoples Bank provides a wide range of products and services that go beyond traditional banks. Joan should know.

Youth volleyball
· camp set

She works at Peoples.

GOOOOOOOALIII - Brian Rolston (12) of the United States celebrates teammate BiU Guerin's first
period goal In the men's semifinal hockey match against .Russia at the Winter 'Oiymptcs ·tn Kearns,
Utah Friday. The shot got past Russian goalie Nlkolar Khabrbulrn (35). See roundup on B4. (AP)

COLUMBUS (AP) - After losing three of
four games on the toad and falling out of first
place in the Big Ten Conference, Ohio State
is focused on winning at home .
"Even though it's a loss, I don't think the
winner of this is (necessarily) going to outright win the Big Ten championship," forward
Zach Williams said Wednesday after the
. Buckeyes (18-6, 9-4) were beaten by Indiana
63-57. "They've got a tough schedule ahead
of them. Now we've got to handle our busrness. "'
we .ve got t~o at horne...
.
Ohio State, which trails Indiana by one
game in the conference standings, was at
home Saturday against Purdue and will play
host to Michigan State Tuesday and finishes
the season March 2 at Michigan.
Indiana plays Sunday at Michigan State,
Tuesday at Illinois arid March 2 at home
·against Northwestern.
.
Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien is co nfident
his team can still win at least a share of the
Big Ten title.
·
"The winner of this (Wednesday's) game is
not going to be out of the woods and the
loser is not going to be out of the picture, and
we c~rtainly are not auf of th~ picture,"
·o'Brien said Wednesday night.
"We need a little bit of help, but if we take
care of our own business, we still think we
have a chance to go right down ·to the wire
in this."
Ohio State and Indiana split their two
meetings this season, with each team winning
at home, so the tiebreaker for the No. 1 seed
in the conference · tournament would be
based on each team's record against the rest of
the conference.
·
Both teams have gone 0-1 against Wisconsin and Minnesota. Indiana won earlier games
with Illinois, Mi chigan State and Northwestern. The Hoosiers play all three teams again.
Ohio State beat Northwestern and Illinois
twic~. but lost in its only game against Michigan State.
.
Wisconsin and Illinois both have ou!S!de
shots at winning a share 'of of the Bi,g Ten
title. The Badgers (17-11 , 10-5) play Michigan at home and have head~to -h ea d tiebreak~
ers against Indiana and Ohw State. The lllnu
(20-7, 8-5) play Northwestern and Minn esota on th e road and Indiana at home.

When you approach banking like you'd want it to be done, you come up with a lot more than just a bank. Because life
CHESHIRE ·- The Gallia Academy Junior Spring
Volleyball Camp will be
held on five Saturdays in
March from 3-6 p.m. at
River Valley High School. ·
• The cost of the camp is
sfo, which includes a team
t-shirt.
.
. Registration and a clinic
will be held March 2. parents must be present for registration.
Gallia Academy coaches
md River Valley varsity
players' will serve as ins}ructors and coaches.

demands ~!lore .than merely checks and 'deposits. How do we know what kinds of things matter and can help the most?
Because .the people who work here are no different than the people who don't.

Every Bank Has Assets. We Named Ours After The Most Important One.

..
www.peoplesbancorp.com

1-800-374-6123
Not FDIC Insured. No Bank Guarantee. May lose Value.

(ONSUMER/(OMMERCIAIJINSURANCE/INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT/TRUSTS/FINANCIAL PLANNING/RETIREMENT

PLANs

..

'•
.. Got E·mall?

;E-mail your sports news to

,,

I

•

s~orts@mydailytribune.com

•

...

••

..

lridians' ink C.C. Sabathia to four-year deal
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - ,...-...,..---, ERA in 33 starts last
season and finished
The Cleveland Indians signed leftsecond to ' Seattle's
bander C.C. Sabathia to a $9.5 mil-,
Ichiro Suzuki in the
lion, four-year . contract Saturday,
AL Rooki e of the
rewarding their most consistent
Year voting.
pitcher last season.
·
·Indians
general
The contract, which contains a
manager
Mark
club option for a fifth year, could be
Shapiro called the
'worth up to S19. 75 million over five
contract unprec eyears.
. _ "
Sabathla
dented for someone
"It's been like a whtrlwmd,
as young as Sabathia,
Sabathia said. "Last year going in, I
who
turned
21
last Jujy 21.
didn't even know if I was going to
make the team. Now I'm, getti.n g, a · "It's a tremendous burden for a
person of his age, but we're confident
long-term deal."
Sabathia, the Indians' No. 1 pick in he can handle it on and off' the field,"
"
the 1998 draft, went 17-5 with a 4.39 Shapiro said.

'•

'

.

Sabathia was one of th e major reasons the Indians were able to win the
· AL Central last season. He tied for
sixth in the league in wins, held
opponents to a .228 batting average
and recorded 171 strikeouts in 180
1-3 innings. Sabathia became the
youngest pitcher ever to win an AL
division series when he beat Seattle
in Game 3 .
Both the Indians and Sabathia took
some risks with the contract. The
Indians possibly are committing to a
player with only .?ne year in the
majors and gamblmg that Sabath1a
won't get injured.
· "In every situation, you weigh the

risk versus the reward," Shapiro sa id.
·" M'ore iinportant, you exami ne the
person. We can live with the ri sk." ·
Projec ting what a young pitcher
will do in the fi.tture also is difficult,
as the Indians learned with righthander Jaret.Wright.
Following the 1998 season , the
Indians signed Wright, who went 2013 in his ftrst two seasons. to a fouryear co.ntract with an option for a
fifth year. Since then, he's .13- 16, has
~ad two should er operations the last
two years and is a question mark
going into this season .
Please sea Sabathla. a:z

�Point falls to Red Devils
FOR n!E OVI'

•

POINT
PLEASANT-The
· Ravenswood Red Devils placed four play. en in double figures en route to an 80-S 1
win over the Point P~t Big Bbcics. in
fidnt of a large senior night crowd on the
Big Bbcks' home floor.
Big Ty Pistelli led :Ill scorers in the game
with 22 points while pulling down a bushel
of rebounds. Pistdli hit on 9 of 14 field goal
attempts and made good on 4 of7 fiom the
free throw line. Other double-digit scorers
for COach Mick Price's Red Devils were
Brett Rector with 16, RJ. Balis with 12, and
Andy Wise with 10 points.
TJ. Deshuk was the only Big Black to
reach double figures. The junior tallied 13
markers and also led th~ Big Blacks with 4
rebounds. Casey Villan collected 9 points,
while fellow senior Brett Powell connected
on 3 of 5 from the floor and finished the
game with 8 points. Seth F:lllon, the other
!"nior on the squad, made the only shot he
took - a three-pointer in the fourth quarter.
"Ravenswood is the best balanced basketb:lll team we have played :Ill season," said
PPHS Mentor Ritchie BLain. "They can do
it :Ill and we just didn't have an answer for
them on the defensive end of the floor. We
wanted to come in here tonight and take
their guards out of the game, but Pistelli just
ran over us. He catches the b:lll well and
knows how to finish down low. He is pretty quick and athletic and we just couldn't
stop him," added the Big Black Head
Coach.
The Big Blacks, after shooting 54% fiom
the floor Thursday night against Roane

Sunday,

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

Ptlge 82 • 6anhp G:imd-6flltlntl

County, nunaged just 39% in this contest.
The Red Devils, meanwhile, shot a very
respectable 48%, including a 38% (8-21)
showing fiom beyond the arc.
!Yvenswood got out of the blocks quick-·
Jy when Balis hit a three pointer thirty seconds into the game. The Blacks, though,
scored the next four points on baskets by
Deshuk and Stephen Handley to take what
would be their only lead of the night at 43. Pistelli then took over, scoring the six
points and Rector added a trey to give the
visitors a 12-4 lead
Point cut into that lead when Deshuk,
Villan, and Hunter Roush hit consecutive
shoa to pull the locals to within a field goal
at 12-10. Pistelli and Deshuk traded haskea
and the Devils led 14-12 at the 6rst rum.
The teams continued to trade baskets in
the second quarter, but the trades were not
always even swaps. Point got two .Ravenswood got four; Point .got two Ravenswood got five; Point got two Ravenswood got five more. In the final four
minutes of the quarter, the Red Devils put
together a 6-0 run and a 7-0 run that
pushed their lead to 16 as the two teams
headed into the locker room.
'"That second quarter was a big one for
them," said Blain. "We were right there
with them, and :Ill of a sudden, we're down
by a bunch. That gave them a lot of confidence and took a lot of the air out of us. We
never reco~red."
The 6nal two quarters provided more of
the same. Ravenswood continued to dorninate the boards, and they shot and connected from all over the floor.

One higi-Jight to the game was that :Ill
three seniors on the squad played significant
minutes and all of them put their name in
the score book. Casey Villars four 6eld goals
- including a three pointer for 9 points,
Brett Powell had a pair of treys with a deuce
kicker for 8 points, and Seth Fallon connected from long range for three points.
"I'm very proud of our three seniors," said
Blain. '"Their effort and determination has
given our program a lot over the past three
years. And, I'm thankful to our fans for coming out here tonight and helping to honor
these guys. This was a special night for them
and it was nice to see all the fans here,"
added Blain.
There was some good news for Point
Pleasant fans, though, as Coach Danny
Dewhurst's Little Blacks avenged an earlier
loss to the Ravenswood Jayvees with a hardfought 38-31 win.
Point led at the first rum 12-8 and maintained that four-point lead at the half.
Ravenswood, though, cut the deficit to a
single point after three quaners to set up a
frenetic fourth quaner. Point was up to the
challenge, though and outscored their
opponents 13-7 in the final canto to claim
the victory.
.
Steven Deshuk Jed all scorers in the game
with 18 points, while Mike CasseU and
Kevin Walker both had 8 points for the Litde Blacks.
This was th.e 6nal regular.season game for
both Point squads. The llig Blacks will begin
the second season on Thursday when they
travel to Hurricane to battle the Redskins in
sectional play.

Feb:·24, 2002

Youth Hoops

what he started last sununer,
when he left his baseb:lll complex in the Dominican Republic and returned to Cincinnati.
"It's time for me to pitch;' he ·
said. "I have two choices: Make
the team or go home and take
care of my complex. Either way,
it will be fine with me. It helps
me relax to know that I have a
plan B."
Last yeat, there was only plan
A: a triumphant rerum to the
majors.
Rijo hadn't pitched in the
majors since 1995, when he h&lt;ui
reconstructive surgery on his
right elbow. He made several
aborted comebacks and had

four more operations over the
years.
While recovering fiom the
setbacks, he built a basebaU
academy in his homeland, but
kept pestering the Reds about
one more chance to pitch. They
obliged last summer, saying it
was his last chance.
· It turned into the feel-good
moment of a %-loss season. He
returned to the team that he led
to the 19% World Series sweep
of Oakland and proved he
could still make it in the majors.
Rijo made 13 relief appearances and had a 2.12 earned run
average, best in the bullpen. He
had hoped to come back as a

· "i know a Pontiac ?" win

fnwnPap81
The Indians have had more success With
right-hander Bartolo Colon, who signed a
four-year deal with a club option before the
1999 season. Colon is 47-25 since then and
has become a dominating pitcher.
Meanwhile, Sabathia is giving up his arbitration years and an opportunity for substantial raises. He would have been eligible
for arbitration after the 2003 season.
Shapiro and Sabathia's agent, Jeff Moorad,
began negotiations soon after last season
ended. Moorad admitted Sabathia might be
underpaid during the contract.
"There's always a risk of undercompensation when you lock into a long-term deal,
but C. C. felt the security was important,"
Moorad said.
Sabathia gets a $1 million signing bonus,

Series champion Jeff Gordriver at 154.292.
Rookie Jimmie Johnson, don, ninth in Daytona, qualwho won the pole in Day- ified 33rd Friday at 152.671.
Among the drivers who
tona and finished 15th, qualftomPapB1
didn't make the 43-car field
ified 1 lth at 153.683.
victory in Martinsville, Va.,
Ward Burton, who won for Sunday's race was Dick
and a runner-up finish in last Sunday, was 18th in a Trickle. He's driving tor the
Michigan en route to 21st in Dodge .at 153.394. •
· first event for car owner
the final Winston Cup
"That's OK," Burton said. Dave Marcis, who ended his ·
standings.
"We don't normally set the 33-year driving career folThat had everyone on the record qualifying, but we'll lowing a 42nd-place finish
team looking forward to . run good come Sunday."
in Daytona.
2002.
"From the second half of
2001 to today, we have
turned the corner," Craven
said. "We didn't lose anybody from last year, and it's
like the season didn't · end.
We just picked up where we
•
left off.
Unlimited Access
"After Daytona, it's nice to
As'low as $11.95 per Mo.*
win the pole and pick up on
,
Peno111l J!.mall Account
the momentum, but we still
10 mep pono111l W&lt;lb opact, lmmodlato actlvlatlon
have to finish the job on
Sunday."
.
Johnny Benson; Schrader's
Lot;al numbcn include;
teammate, was third in
........, w.v.ty,.-uon, Well Union, a..... :fllld, OIIIIJOtll.
another Pontiac at 154.631,
W..hll • ..,a, Ott. MIArthw, Portlmouth, Ntflonvllll, ·Ironton.
followed at 154.507 by the
Pwfnt.........., WY, AlhiM, Mlr1etta,. Cllorg~town, QIOutter;
..................1
Ford of Dale Jarrett, who has
IJJIIII • an 1ht • • - *'90"hbe oom
•-..N on YH~ -...crtptton m.,
eight top-fives and 12 topoolupfoolppllootoorl,_ _ _
1Os in the last 12 races here.
lllltlnt- ~ ......
Jerry Nadeau was fifth in a
¢hevrolet at 154.357, with
sjxth~place Sterling Marlin
the top-qualifying Dodge

1-888-657-0977

li

f

''

Sd:edule
and Standlnp.

, It's the most mind-boggling situation in
· NASCAR, especially for General Motors and its
: Pontiac teams.
'
In ia seventh year without a change to the
: chassis, the Grand Prix has the oldest body on the
' circuit. Its last significant tweaking came in July
2000, when NASCAR permitted a new rear
. bumper cover, a part aerodytwnic:llly similar to
: what the Chevrolets and Fords wen: already
using
. Since then, the maker has stood by and
; watched NASCAR give concession after concession to the other makes despite obvious struggles by the Pontiac teams. A year ago, the Ponti' acs had a distinct disadvantage in downfor:ce,
: proved in wind tunnel tests and in on-track com: petition.
: Downforce, which keeps the eat stuck to the
: track and prevents it fiom ~g- especially
: in the comers - is irilpottant at trades one-mile
: in length or longer.
: Pontiac had two of its five victories last season
: on those tracks, but Labonte's win ~t 1. 54-mile
: Adanta Motor Speedway was ·inherited after
:leader Jerry Nadeau ran out of gas on the last lap

.

The 2002 NASCAR Win81oo Cup IChedule {winners
In parentheMI) and driver poinl ~tanding~:

and his win at 2.5-mile Pocono Raceway isn't a fering."
typical oval because it bas just three turns.
The explanation is enough to make Greg
The only other three wins belonged to Stew- Zipadelli 's head spin. Stewart's crew chief knows
art, who won on two short tracks and a road his team can win ia first-ever championship this
course.
year, but can't accept that they're forc ed to work
It has left the 6ve teams - the two J GR teams, harder to do it.
two entries driven by Johnny Benson and Ken
The way he sees it, the Pontiacs must work
Schrader for MB2 Racing, and Stacy Compton harder than everyone else to be competitive and
for AJ. Foyt Racing - banging their heads in in doing so, harm their chances of getting help
frustration and feeling defeated before they even from NASCAR.
get to some tracks.
"We bust our butts to keep up with the Fords
"I can't tell you how many times I've been up and the Chevys and end up getting penalized for
in the (NASCAR) truck asking when will Pon- it," Zipadelli said. "They know we are at a disadtiac be treated fairly," said Doug Duchardt, vantage, they know we are going .to tracks and
NASCAR group manager for GM Racing. "It's don't have a chance no matter what we do, and
very difficult to understand why our problems still won't even the playing field.
are ignored and its even more difficult to get a
"If ever there was a time for us to start looking
team to drive a Pontiac when they see in black at another make, it's now and it's serious. Why
and white that we are at such a disadvantage."
should w e go on this way when we can just go
'NASCAR doesn't disagree that the Grand drive another car and not have to work so hard?"
Prix has a downforce disadvantage. Winston Cup
Since the Pontiacs are already down to 6ve
Series director John Darby admits the wind tun - teams, Zipadelli's warning of a potential switch
nel numben back up the Pontiacs' claim, and would be a blow to General Motors. Since Petty
based on data only, the car is inferior to the Enterprises took its three teams to Dodge a y~ar
Dodge, Ford and Chevy.
· ago, the Pontiac fleet became the smallest in
Darby added, however, that it's hard to allow NASCAR and another defection could cripple
any relief when the Pontiac is so consistent week it.
in and week out. The two Gibbs cars traditionalJ.D. Gibbs, president of Gibbs Racing, wouldly run in the Top 10, with Schrader and Benson n't address the possibility of switching makes. But
not far behind. And in the 6nal points standings . he acknowledged there is concern about the curlast season, Stewart finished second, Labonte was rent situation.
sixth and Benson was 11th.
"We don't want, two years from now, to have
"Sure they go to some tracks and struggle in to turn to Tony and Bobby and say 'Hey guys,
qualifYing," Darby said. "But we don 't make rule we're sorry, we were in the wrong place.You guys
changes based on qualifying, we do it on results should liave championships between you but we
and they have some of the best resula in the field. couldn't get it done for you; " Gibbs said.
I don't know if I can say they are punished for
"Yeah; I think we're at a disadvantage and its
their hatd work, but it's hard to argue they need real frustrating right now."
some help when they are so good every week.
But there's help on the way, albeit a year away.
"They certainly aren't locked into this current GM has been working for some time on a new
template for the entire year, but we've got to see, Grand Prix that is expected to be on the track at
fiom a results standpoint, that they are really suf- the start of next season.

Fob . . 17 - Daytona ·500, Daytona Beach, Fla.
(Ward Burton)
Fob. 24- Subway 400, Rockingham , N.C.
March 3 - UAW-DalmlorChrysler 400, Las Vegas .
March 10 -Atlanta 500, Hampton, Ga.
March 17 - Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Darlington, S.C . .
March 24 - Food Oily 500 , Bristol, Tenn.
April 7 - Samsung/RadioShack 500, Fort Worth ,
Texas.
April14- Virginia 500, Martinsville.
April 21 -Talladega 500, Talladega , Ala .
April 28 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana , Calif.
May 4 - Ponliac Excitemenl 400 , Richmond.
May 26- Coca-Cola 600 , Concord, N.C.
June 2 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
June 9 - Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 16 - Michigan 400 , Brooklyn. Mich.
June 23 - Dodge/Save Mart 350, Sonoma. Calif.
July 6 - Pepsi 400. Daytona Beach, Fla .
July 14 - Tropicana 400 , Cicero , Ill.
July 21 -New England 300, Loudon, N.H.
July 28 - Pennsylvania 500 , Long Pond, Pa.
Aug . 4 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug . 11 - Watkins Glen ln1ernational, Walkins
Glen , N.Y.
Aug . 18 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug . 24 -Sharpie 500 , .Bristol, Tenn .
Sept. 1 ~ Southern 500, Darlington , S.C.
Sept. 7 - Chevy Monte Carlo 400 , Richmond.
Sept. 15- New Hampshire 300, Loudon, N.H.·
Sept. 22 - MBNA America 400 , Dover, Del.
Sept. 29- Protection One 400 , Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 6 - EA Sports 500 , Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 13- UAW-GM Qualily 500 , Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20 - Martinsville 500, Martinsville , Va .
Oct. 27- NAPA 500 , Hampton, Ga .
Nov. 3 - Pop Secret 400, Rockingham , N .C.
Nov. I 0 - Checker Auto Parts SOOK, Avondale,
Ariz .
Nov. 17- Homestead 400 . Homestead. Fla .
Driver Slandlngs
1. Ward Burton . . . .
. .. 180.
2. Elliott Sadler . . . . . .. . .
. . . 170.
3. Ge.offrey Bodine ..... . . ...... . ....
165.
4. Kurt Busch ......................... 165.
160.
5. Michael Wallrip . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . .
6. Starting Marlin . . .................... 152.
7. Mark Martin .. ... .. ..•.. . ....... . . . . 160.
8. Ryan Newman .. . .. ..•.. .. ... . .. . ... 146.
9. Jeff Gordon ... .. . ....... . .. .. . .. . . . 143.
10. Johnny Benson .. ......... . . . ...... 134.
11. Jeff Burton . .. . . .. ... .'.. . .. . . . . . . . . 132.
12. Bill Elliott . ....... .. . .. .. .. .. ·. . . . . . 130.
13. Robby Gordon . .. . ..... . .. .. . . ..... 124.
14. Dala Jarrett .. .... ..•. .. .. .. ... . ... 121.
15. Jimmie Johnson . . . . . . .. • .. . .. . . . . . . 118.
16. Brett Bodine . . ..... :. .. • .. . .. .. . . . . 115.
17. Ricky Craven ............... , ...... 112.
18. R4sty Wallace ..... .. ............... 109.
19. JeffGreen . . . . . . . . •..... , .. . ... . .. 106.
20. Terry Labonle . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103.

~

~;Daytona 500 win
~jg st~P for DaVis

I

a

~ ROCKINGHAM,
N.C. dwelled- upon. We both can
:·:(AP) •; _ Gail Davis always had credit each other with getting
~ faith that husband Bill would each other noticed. If we hadn't

2001 Deville
Fodoly Wananty .

$29,100

1999TQDII ·

ca•rvu

$11,200 .

Craven

Dragon Internet

a championship

' because I did it," said Labonte, the 2000 Winston
, Cup champion. "But to do so, -you have to \Wrk
: your way out of a hole. No one wants to give us
; any help, so we \Wrk haJd to get out of it and
: find ounelves climbing a mountain each and
: every week."

.

'

Sabathia

Wi~tun -Cup

Pontiac ·ng to overcome
on-track disadvantages
It's no secret in NASCAR that the Grand Prix
I is the most ~ car on the track, leav: ing the five teams who daringly field them fight, ing an uphill battle, ~K In and ~k out.

YOUTH HOOPS- Above, Green's Corey Eberhardt, left, :
and Anthony O'Dell, right, were named to the All-lorna- ~
ment team in tourney action at Pointy Pleasant recently. •
Below, The Green fourth grade team, back row, Joe •
. Calvert (assistant coach), Tyler Eastman, Jason Wray,
Charlie Calvert, Dylan Smith, Terry Smith, Tim Smith :
(coach). Front row, Anthony O'Dell, Hubbell Smith, Corey :
Eberhardt and Kyle Richards. (?ubmitted photos)

6unb4!' t!:imtt' -6rntinrl• Page 83

NASCAR

tiac.

starter, but had to settle for a
more limited role becaui&lt; his
arm wasn't strong enough.
Although the Reds desperately need starters this season,
Rijo's best chance to make the
roster will be as a reliever.

$450,000 this year, $850,000 in 2003, $2.45
million in 2004 and S4.5 million in 2005.
The Indians have a $7 million option for
2006 with a $250,000 buyout, a year that
. would become guaranteed if he pitches 405
innings in 2004 and 2005 or 540 innings
from 2003 through 2005.
In addition, his salary for 2005 can climb
tq S6 million and the option for 2006 can
rise to $9 million if he reaches certain levels :· ,
of performances.'
.
NOTES: Colon will pitch the seasqn
opener on March 31 in Anaheim ...
Sabathia, left-bander Chuck Finley and
right-hand~r Danys Baez will be the next
three starters ... Right-hander Ryan Drese is
the leading candidate for the fifth spot ...
Heavy rains have forced the· Indians to move
their workouts indoors for two days ... The
Indians will play intrasquad games Wednesday and Thursday before opening their exhibition season Friday against Minnesota in
Winter Haven.

.,-

1\DCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) - No one
doubts Bobby I,abonte and 1bny Stewart can
· compete for the W1111ton Cup cl1ampionship this
. season. The only question is if the two Joe Gibbs
: Racing tearnin;ates can do it while driving a Pon-

Rijo refreshed, ready to keep pitching·
SARASOTA, Aa. (AP) Jose Rijo is moving on.
"My comeback is over," he
said emphatically.
The right-hander is no longer
chasing a six-yeat dream. By
overcoming five elbow operations and pitching for the
Cincinnati Reds last season,
Rijo made it all the way back
and found ful6llment.
Now,hes trying to find a spot
in the bullpen.
·
Rijo showed up for spring
training along with 36 other
pitchers hoping to make the
Reds' staff. Rijo, 36, agreed to a
minor-league contract that
gives him a chance to continue

Po~y • Mlddlitport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

1887 Explorer
2 Door Spon 4X4
54,000 Mllel

'8,800
1888 S-10 lS Tl
· AJr,CD~r

5,995

8

1888 ll'lld Am
V-6 Engine

'4.500

: be a success as a W mston Cup had him in the car for a couple
: team owner.
of years, we might not have
! Now that his driver, Watd gotten to where we're at
! Burton, is the Daytona 500
"We might not have had
~ champion, more people proba- enough recognition for Bobby
. ~ bly agree with her.
_to get in the car and give us
~ 'T trunk this has proven what two years to help grow our
: I thought :Ill along," she said. "I program."
·
: just felt like he had such deterDavis
moved
up
to
::mination and tenacity about NASCAR's top.stock car series
:· him that he would be success- with Labonte in 1993. Labonte
;:ful. He never quits."
left for Joe Gibbs Racing at the
:· There have certainly been end of the next season and
;:times when Bill Davis might Davis went through three dif.;have thought about giving up ferent drivers in 1995 before
::racing and going back to · signing Burton for the last nine
:;Batesville, Ark., to run the races.
:;trucking business he still owns.
"We'd watched Ward race in
::Instead, he heads into Sunday's the Busch Series;• Davis said.
i;Subway 400 at North Carolina "He came along two or three
:;Speedway on top of the years after we did and we
~NASCAR ..wdd after Burton's watched .him go real fast, crash
~season~opening victory in real hard, shake it off and go
~Da'ytc)na.
real fast again. He had a lot of
~ "That just adds so much raw talent."
)credibility:' Davis said, beamThe newcomer won on
1'ing. "It doesn't get any bi(jger Rockingham's 1-mile oval in
~than winning the Daytona 500. only his seventh start with the .
, :Hopefully, it earns us. the team, but there were only two
~pect we think we've. lacked more wins and no season
~own through the yean:·
poina finish better than ninth
~ Respect is something that in the next six years.
::Oavis feels has eluded him and
Adding a second car in 1999,
;)Us Bill Davis Racing teatn with Dave Blaney driving, didt)ince ~e and hiJ wife decided to . n't solve any problems. It only
Q1o racing in 1987,
spread them out over two
· : DaVIs is rlot often recognized teams.
'IJ)Jtsi~ of the garage area and
Still,
DJivis
remained
~ name is not usually grouped undaunted, making major
~th famous team ownen such changes - including switching
~ Rick . Hendrick, Richard fiom Pontiac to Dodge in 2001
X::hildress, Jot Gibbs and Jack and hiring Hut Stricklin to
ltoush.
replace Blaney this year.
: Among his drivers have been
"I'd get discouraged, but I'm
. 1\hrk Martin, Jeff Gordon and just not a quitter," Davis said.
J3obby Labonte, but :Ill taced
Does the victory in the Dayfor Davis before they bios- tona 500 herald a move to the
.omed into stardom.
next level by Bill Davis Racing?
: Martin, a longtilne friend,
"I hope so. We're .ready to do
i.vas his first driver, choosing to this;• he said. "This is probably
link up with the established the easiest winter we've had.
lloush Racing but helping We're not changing brands,
Davis sign the 1\p-and-corning we're not building a new shop,
Pordon in 1991. Gordon drove we're not adding a second
for Davis in the Busch Series team, we're not building a new
tor two yean, but nearly broke motor room, we're not turning
his he:irt midway through 1992 over a bunch of help.
~ announcing he was leaving
"Yeah, we brought in a new
i.e the end of the year to go sponsor and new ,driver . and
~ith Hendrick.
crew chief;' he added, referring
; It's ~ wound that still hasn't to Stricklin's team. "Other than
i:ornpletely heilled.
that, we've really stayed the
: "That's past history;' Davis course, so we're far better presaid. "It's prohably been over- pared than we've ever been."
............

)I

•.

. ....... - ~

· ~ •.. ;.'• .. f....~ .."i:~···

It
. .:

,, •

· Super
· Clean,
Locally
Owned and
LOADED!! .

VS, Rear Wheel
Drive Power
Windows, locks
and MOREl

1995 Chevrolet
Caprice Classic

.1995Lincoln
. '
.:\)
Contiriental

'

.

Very Nice,
Locally Owned
Carll

Screen,
Leather and
Much Morel

1999Mercury
Grand Marquis

200001ds
Silhouette Prem•er·
Two tone paint,
VS, Auto Trans., ·
Alum. wheels,
and Morel

;

,, .

.

; 0~·N,,

·:

.,

·; 1898Chevy
' Suburban4X4

198SDodge
Extended Cab Tk

Air Conditioning, .
Custom Wheels,
Tilt and Cruise,
' Locally Owned. ·

· 1998ChevyS·10
PickupLS .
CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE
Chevy Truck
Most Dependable
Longest-lasting,
Trucks On,The Road

327 vs,
Auto Trans.,
LS Pkg.,
Two tone

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Plll88'1'11, WV
•

•

"Sundlly, Feb. 24, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolle, Ohio • Point P...unt, WV

iounbap tlimr• ·il&gt;rntinrl • Page B5

..

2002 Winter Qlympics

·'

S

CITY

2002

Americans look to add to record medal count
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The
United States enters the final
Winter~pic
weekend of the Winter Olympics
with a lot more medals than
expected.
AI Salt Lake Clly Jill'. And it's not done yet.
(Through 1 of 7 medal events,
Despite being shut out Friday for
Saturday, Feb. 23)
(70 of 76 total medal events)
the second time during the games,
Nation
G S I
!gl
Americans are contenders for mmy
Garmany
10
16
7
33
of the nine gold medals up for
United States 10 11 9
30
grabs Saturday and Sunday. The
Norway
11 7 4 · 22
United States goes into the last two
Austria '
2 4 10
16
Russia
5
7
.
3
15 •
days with 30 medals, 17 more than
Canada
3 2 7
12 '
its previous record and 10 more
Switzerland
3
2
6
11
than the U.S. Olympic Committee
France
3 4 2
9
predicted.
Italy
324
9
Skier Bbde Miller got Saturday
Finland
4 2 1
7
Netherlands
3 4 0
7
off to a promising start by finishing
!weden
0
2
4
6
second in the first run of the
China
122
5
slalom. Miller has two silver at
Croatia
3 1 0
4
these games and both came with
South Korea
2 1 0
3
big comebacks on his second run.
Estonia
1 o 2
3
Bulgaria
0 1 2
3
The men's hockey team is guarAustralia
·
2
0
0
2
anteed at least a silver after beating
Spain
200
2
Russia 3-2 in the semifinals Friday.
Britain
1 0 1
2
The Americans will play Canada in
Czech Republic 1 0 1
2·
the final Sunday.
Japan ·
0 1 1
2
Poland
0 1 1
2
The four-man U.S. bobsled team
Spain
1
0
0
1
Jed by Todd Hays grabbed first
Belarus
0 0 1
1
Friday.
place
after runs
two heats
Slovenia
0 0. 1
1
two clean
Saturday,
the With
sled .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J
almost certainly will piCk up a COOL RUN -Tom Rothrock, of the Cashmere, Wash. navigates the course In the first run of the men's slalom at
medal, ending a 46-year drought the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics In Deer Valley, Utah Saturday. (AP)
• NORDIC COMBINED:
for American men in the sport.
to take part in the closing ceremo- Young an11 Phil Housley scored in dominate.
Samppa Lajunen has clearly made
Finland the dominant force in
Sh ort-trac k spee dsk ater ApoIo ny. The IOC also decided not to the sec01\d period and the lead
Supposed to. Uytdehaage won Nordic combined.
.
Anton Oh no, w h o has a go ld an d a kick out a Belarusian short-track appeared insurmountable with convincingly, setting a world record
. silver, races Saturday night in the speedskater caught with steroids in goaltender Mike Richter playing to claim his second gold medal of
Lajunen finished a sweep of the
three events by winning the gold
500. meters and the 5•000. re IaY· .her system. .
great.
'
· the games and third overall.
Early Saturday, an arbitration panel
That doesn't . mean everyone is . But Alexei Kovalev scored 11
"He's the king of these Olympics medal in Friday's sprint. Teammate
seconds into the third period and in speedskating," said American Jaakko TaU us was second in the
rejected South Korea's bid to have happy, though. .
· his gold in the 1,500 turned over to .Russian hockey coach Slava Feti- Vladimir Malakhov followed 3:10 Derek Parra, who was 13th after individual and together they helped
Kim Dong-sung, who finished first sov complained that referees didn't later. Richter was superb the rest of finishing in the top two with Uyt- the Finns win the relay. Finland
previously had not won a gold
but was disqualified for an .illegal give his team any breaks against the the way and the Americans contin- dehaage in the shorter races.
block
d
medal in Nordic combined since
·
Unite States. "An agreement's ued distancing themselves from
Romme, who won the 10,000 1948
Spain's Johann "Juanita" .Mueh- been signed th~t is designed to have their wretched performance on and four years ago and had held the
·
!egg, who competed for Germany a final : between Canada and the off the ice in Nagano.
world record, got the silver. NorGermany's Ronny Ackermann
'-t
·
01ymp1cs,
· won USA"
a thre e prev10us
, he sai d . '
"That was the best gam~ I've ever way's Lasse Saetre won the bronze. was second and Austria's Felix
·s
th'
d
ld
dal
f
th
hI
If go
me
o
ese games
IOC hresident Jacques Rogge been in," U.S. forward Jeremy
• · WOMEN'S
GIANT Gottwald was third.
.
th
50
k'J
bY takmg e
- I ometer cross- met wit South Koreans officials Roenick said.
SLALOM: Janica Kastelic is truly . • CURLING: The men's curl-.
country event. Mikhail Ivanov of. Fri4ay to diSC\ISS their anger over
• BOBSLED: There might be the "Croatian Sensation."
ing tournament came down to the
By winning the giant slalom, she final throw, with a miss by the
Russia won the silver, and Andrus the short-track speedskating race some magic left at Utah Olympic
Veerpalu of Estonia won the won ·by phno.
Park for the Americans, who have became the .first Olympic skier to favored Canadians giving Norway a
bronze.
Also, the IQC's 'exlitutive bo~rd won the last three' events there. . win four Alpine medals at a single 6- 5 victqry ,a,nQ, ' the goi&lt;l,.me.&lt;Jal,
Other events Sat~rday include gave Belar.us' Yulia · Pavlovich a
Hays' crew is halfv.:ay to follow- games, and just the third with three much to the delight of King Haraid, who was in the stands. Switzerwomen 's 5' 000 - meter sp ee dskat"mg " severe warning " and :expelled her ing the U.S. teams from women's golds.
· .coac h and a team doctor from the bobsled and men's and women's
and Women 's 1•000 me t ers- m
She's the only Croatian to win a land beat Sweden 7-3 ·1·n the
short-track speedskating. Also, Rus- games. She was alloWed to remain skeleton to the top of the medals Winter Olympics medal, but that bronze-medal game.
sia and Belarus play for the bronze in the Olympic .Village and march stand.
could change Saturday when her
The final shot was thrown by
·m t h e c1osmg
· .ceremony.
Kevin
Martin, one · of the world's
medal ·1· n men's hockey·
Switzerland-! and Germany-2 older brother, lvici, competes in
• OLYMPIC DIPLOMACY:
• HOCKEy: Playing on the are. tied for second. The USA-2 sled the slalom. .
top skips, or captains. But he's never
The International Olympic Com- 22nd anniversary of the "Miracle piloted by Brian Shimer is· fifth.
The top U.S. skier in Friday's race won an international title, making
mittee is doing aU it can to get to on Ice" game, the United States
• SPEEDSKATING: Jochem was Kristina Koznick, who finished him the curling equivalent of Phil
the end of the games without any again took down the Russians.
Uytdehaage of the Netherlands was 17th. The U.S. women were shut Mickelson, the golf star lacking ~
more problems.
Bill Guerin got the United States great at 1,500 meters and better at out. of Alpine medals for the first major title.
On Friday, it persuaded the Rus- started, pushing in a rebound at 5,000. But 10,000? Teammate time since the 1988 Calgary
"It's unbelievable," Norway's
sians to stay and the South Koreans 15:56 of the first period. Scott Gianni Romme . was supposed to G~mes.
Flemming Davanger said.
_. '

Medals ..able

Protests stirs up memories ()f Cold War rivalries
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) said.
the ruling.
The Gold War is stirring up
Russian indignation , had
"The IOC should have more
memories of the Cold War. An spread all the way to the Krem- control as far as the Olympic
Olympics that began with conn- lin, where President Vladimir Games are concerned," said Kim
tries rrwching together in har- Putin suggested there was a rea- Un-yong, IOC member · from
many is sputtering to an end son Americans were doing so South Korea. "This hurts the
with Russia seething, South weD in the games - 'they had IOC, it hurts the Olympic
Korea unhappy and the United the judges on their side.
Games."
States wondering what the fuss is -"North · American athletes
It was the Russians who had
all about.
· receive a clear advancage:• Putin the most complaints, and they
Olympic controversy escalated said. . •
•
weren't hesitant to voice them
Though Russian ot!icials ~re loudly If nothing else, they tigto a new level Friday, with Russia demanding a gold medal for somewhat placated by .the lOG, ured they have precedent on
figuie skater Irina ~utskaya and the country's hockey coach was their side.
warning that illi hockey players fuming after Russia lost 3-2 to
The Canadians used the same
had better be treated fairly
the United States in a semifinal tactic to get their pairs figure
Later in the day, the Russians hockey game.
. _ skating team a duplicate
. backed off threats to leave the
""There's not' much you ~ unprecedented gold medal.
games after receiving aSsurances do about it right now,'.' said
"Canadian pairs skaters were
.from top Olympic officials that coach Slava Festisov. "An mgree- awarded their gold medals. Now
they understood their cone~. . ment's been signed that is that subjective judging harmed
"We Will stay at the games;' designed to have a final between us, we want the same for Slutsaid Guennadi Shvets, a Russian Canada and the USA. You have skaya:' said Viktor Mamotov,
. delegation spokesman. "Every- this final, you have NHL tefetees. head of the Russian delegation
body understood we had to stay." ... They live here and they know in Salt Lake City.
International Olympic Com- the North Ameri~ playen:'
The International Skating
mittee director general Fr:mcois
South Korea was also upset Union denied the protest. .
Carrard said Russian an(,! Korean over a referee's ruling that cost
·
concerns would be presented to . one of its speedskate~ a g9ld
the IOC executive board Satur- medal that went to America\
!:by, but that any action would be Apolo Anton Ohno. The ~~
taken after the Olympics.
ans, though, backed otf earlier
"We do not expect any threats to boycott the closirig
changes in the results;' ·Carrard ceremony and 6le a lawsuit awr
\

•

Sundey,Feb.24,2002

The pairs skating scandal,
which clouded the Russiari gold,
was different, simply because of
what happened on the ice.
Jamie Sale and David Pclletier
skated an error-free program to
stake their claim to gold. Slutskaya didn't, though she still
appeared shocked when the g9ld
medal went to America's Sarah
Hughes.
"You couldn't beat that program last night without being
perfect and Irina wasn't," said
Hughes' coach, Robin Wagner
The judges who ~~red the
figure skating final didn't may far
fiom the Cold War cbys when
loyalties were divided East
against West. Slulli~ got her
highest marks fiom judges .from
Russia, Slovakia and Bulpia,
while the Canadian and American judges helped Hughes win.
It wasn't just the Russians'
protests that had Olympic officials scurrying to pacily them

with condolences and promises
that they would be treated fairly.
It was the tOne that was surprising.
.
Though Puqn later said the
team would stly. the Russians
first threatened to pull out of the
games and said they also might
· not attend the Summer
Olympics in Athens two years
liom now.
"Without
Russia,
the
Olympic Games will be lost;'
saidVitaly·Smirnov, an IOC vice .
president from Russia.

Check oot fin~ day of
Olympic coverage in .
Monday's Tribune and Sentincl
Auto· Owners Insurance ·
Life Home Car Business '

•

71e '11- AJI- iD')I&amp;"
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

114 Court Pomeroy ,

992-6677

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
AJOB? LOOKING
FOR NEW CAREER?

.

.

• Excellent Payment Plan • Greal Beneflta (lriclvdlnt-. prGfllll)

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING ·
&amp;LOAN
218 Upper River Rd.
Oalllpoll•, Ohio

!I• MHe south of
the Sliver Bridge

446-2404

LINnH cc7ooon.ooo..,. 101 ·
LINnH Cl 71004NCOMII G01

204 w. 2nd ltrHt
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-0481

• Work AI The 11 Dealeratilp

. CINCINNATI (AP) -The only
time that 6-foot-11 center Donald
Little gets to shoot long-range
jumpers is during warmups.
The first time he got to shoot one
in a game, it wound up deciding the
game - and first place, as well.
With all of Cincinnati's shooters
covered, Little took a pass and
swi1hed a lS: foot jumper with 3
seconds to play Friday night, giving
'the fourth-ranked Bearcats a 63-62
victory over No. 9 Marquette.
"That was my first one," Little
.gushed. "There's a first time for
everything." ·
Little's first left Cincinnati alone
in first in Conference USA. The
Bearcats (26-2, 13- 1) won the previous six conference regular-season
titles, but ran into a team just as
deserving this time around.
Marquette (23-4, 12-2) snapped
Cincinnati's 20-game winning
streak with a resounding 74-60 win
in Milwaukee on Feb. 2, its third
·straight win over the Bearcats.
The Golden Eagles nearly made
it four in ·a row.
Marquette overcame a 1~-point
deficit in the first half and a 12'point deficit in the second, setting
·up a b~ck-and-forth finish. There
were five ties and eight lead

.Go hers
:ho ding on
to tourney
.·hopes

changes in the last 16 minutes, with
neither team leading by more than
four.
In the only other game involving
ranked teams, No. 7 Gonzaga be~t
San Francisco 70C54.
•
Cordell Henry's jumper !eli: M~r­
quette up 62-58 with 30 seconds',to
go. Steve .Logan hit a 3~pointer.:to
cut the lead to one, and the Beareats
fouled Dwyane Wade, who had led
the Golden Eagles' comebacks 'l!ld
had 19 points.
Wade, a 70.7 percent free-th~w
shooter, went to the line for a oneand-one with 20 seconds left. He
missed the first, giving Cincinnati a
final chance.
Little, who had made his four
close-up shots . was just hoping for
another at that point.
"I was just hoping they'd shoot
and I'd rebound," he said. ''If anything, I was hoping to get an offensive rebound and put it b~ck in ."
Marquette wouldn't let that happen. The Golden Eagles smothered
the Bearcats' shooters on the
perimeter, leaving Little open on
the left side of the basket. He wasn't
~upposed to touch the ball on the
play.
"I'm the fifth option," he said.
''I'm not ashamed to say it. I was the

;j

last option."
There's a good reason: Little
doesn't have much of a shot. He's
made only 53 percent of his free
throws in his career, a measure of
his shooting touch.
Instead of driving to . the basket
or looking to pass as the clock
wound down, he got a notion and
let it fly. In that fraction of a second, Little thought of guard Kenny
Satterfield, who routinely took the
last-second shots last season and
often missed.
"I don't know. That just went
through my head;' Little said. "I
thou~lt about Satterfield."
Logan cringed as Little let the
ball go.
"You don't know what's going to
happen," said Logan, who scored 19
points. "He's got a nice touch. in
practice - when nobody's look.
mg.
He had a nice touch under the
intense pressure of 13,176 fans and
a national telev}sion audience
watching.
'~He's been working hard lately,"
Logan said. "That was a reward
shot."
Marquette got off the last shot Henry's heave from halfcourt went
off the back of the rin:t, ending a

.

game that came down to one
missed free throw ind one made
jumper from approximately the
same distance.
These two teams are that close.
"It just went their way," Marquette coach Tom Crean said. "It
'turned out to be the kind of game
that people were expecting to see."
No. 7 Gonzaga 70, San Francisco
54
Cory Violette scored 18 points as
Gonzaga celebrated its highest
ranking ever with a victory over
San Francisco.
Dan Dickau added 17 as · the .
Bulldogs (25-3, · 12-1 West Coast
Conference) won their I Oth
straight, and 22nd in 23 games
overall.
Shamell Stallworth scored 17
points to lead the Dons (12-14, 76), who · lost their third straight
despite playing before their first
sellout crowd of the season. San
Francisco had won five of its last six
home games.
Darrell Tucker recorded his 16th
double-double of the season with. GmiNG EVEN ~ Cincinnati guard
12 points and 10 rebounds.
Steve Logan (22) shoots over Mar· .
Gonzaga, which has been ranked quette defender Oluoma Nnamaka
a school-record II consecutive (43) in the second half, Friday In
weeks, is off to its best start ever in Cincinnati. Logan scored 19 points to
lead Cincinnati to a 63-62 win. (AP)
44 years as a Division I·member.

'

STATE COLLEGE, Pa.
{AP) - Rick Rickert only
had one point in the second
half, but Minnesota's star fresh. man has his timing down.
· Rickert's free throw with
38) seconds left was the gt?ahead basket Saturday as the
Golden Gophers kept their
NCAA tournament hopes
, alive with a 68-64 victory over
Penn State.
..
- "He stayed in there this
game;· ·said Minnesota coach
Dan Monson. "Against Michigan. State, when they bodied
him that much, he went to the
perimeter. I think this time, we
got a lot of open looks because
they had to pay attention to
him - he didn't float to the
perimeter today."
Fouled under the basket,
Rickert hit one of two free
throws with 38.7 seconds left
.to give Minnesota a 65-64
lead. Brandon Watkins missed a
running jumper for Penn State,
,and Minnesota (15-1 0, 8-6 Big
:Ten) hit three more free throws
!in the final 15 seconds to put
;the game out of reach.
: Minnesota snapped a three;game losing streak and kept
Athemselves on the NCAA
;bubble. Both of their remain:ing games - against North:western and Illinois - are at
;home.
; Rickert had 13 points in the
flirst half, but couldn't break
ihrough · Penn State's doubleteams in the second half. But
that opened up the floor for
Minnesota's shooters. Michael
Bauer, who missed all six ofhis
~eld goal tries in the first half,
2 0 0 2 CHEVY S, 1 0"
,hit three of four in the second
'I
half and finished with 10
. .,
pointli. Travarus Bennett scored
14 for the Gophers.
: "When they were doubling
down. 1 tried to kick it out;'
Rickert said. "I knew they
SEE YOUR LOCAL CHEVY DEALER
\'VOuld be doubling, so I tried
~o feed otf that:'
' ;.~
, Just keeping Rickert in the
Mualc,Carter
HurriCane Chew'lat
Dutch Mllhir Ch•®•t Inc.
C
~nd 0 ~otorevt:;Jc· 1i}..w
game was a problem for Monalnt AI ens,
H~cane,
·
Pres~onsbu~ KY
.
., . Huntlng~'f
(3 l 757:B700
(60 ) 886· 81
(304)
2301 '
(304&gt; 727-2921
son. · Rickert and Dusty
R.ychart. bot)l had four fouls
Paul White Chev1/M Inc.
Jll§ Holl~ ~hevrol®c. 1
Fletche~ ~all M~l}" Corp.
Dalla•~tomot~fi Group
outh e esjon
Ce~Creek
~ckson,
. ·
inidway through the second
I evlll~
(3 ) 949-26 t 3
(304) 744· 561
(606) 43 :5551
(7
0&gt;286·2171
half, and Kerwin fleming and
I
Maurice Hargrow· each , had
M(arlan~,Murrey
· Danl~l Chevro~nc.
' Gene Joc~l"mon Cb~Wiet Inc.
~omhlll ci~evft
W ltesville
al lpoll8
~evraet ~·
three. Penn State (7~19, 3-12)
c~'lf.f,l~~tl!f
(740) 44 :3 72
(304) 854-13 It
•
rw,s~n,
(608, 4 4-5116 .
,,Was in the double-bonus for
T~rn~ke C~rolet
Don Hall GM Supercenter
the last 9:37.
G~ckner C~~et
ltro
MI}Mre
Chevwe.t
ort~"3out
Ashland.
KY.
: "One of the things our team
(304) 755-8301
(740 53· 1 1
(606) 329-8777
Wlll~~~on
(304
5-7119
,seems to do is mis~ p4ying
Hlgglne
Chevro~~Co.
Inc.
nard for fouling. We . think
1
Moore Ch~1jlet ~IIbert Inc.
We're going to {4rn it up, but
c1 .!8~W~~- 405
(3 II ~·4-321 1_ _ _
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
obviously
thatit very
cost us;'
Mon\ve
don't do
smart,
and .__ _ _ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;,;,;.;,;.;;;,;.;.;;;.;.;,

4o

Call To SCheduJ. An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1·800-822·0417 • 372·2844
476 South Church

Bearcats ·back in front in Confere·nce USA

'------HURRY! OFFER ENDS FEBRUARY 281----'----...J

Wondeiful opportunities are available In
Tom Paden Country. We are expanding our facilities
and need more sales people. No experience Is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team
·
and have a strong Initiative.

I

COLLE 'G E BASKETBALL

Street • Ripley, WV

LINnHCCJOOOnG

Uowtct 110111001

son said. "That's tough, to have
your two leading scorers
strap~ped like that:'
·-

- - - - - - --··
'

--

. .

--·

'MonthlY payment Is $1~.29 for 8\'tiY $1,00Qyou finance. Exam~ doW!! payment: 19%. Some customers will not qualifY. Tab deivery by 2fl8/02.
, GMAO Is aregistered ~~~ marie oiU, General Motors Aa:ep!IIICI Corporatton. iCIQ002 GM Co!p. Bucllle up, Amencal•1- ,.2431 or Cllny.com

--------·

·-~- - ---· ---- ---

---

-

' I

�'
•

~ ~~aau· lentintl

Basebal

Page a&amp;

•

Su...t.y. February 14, 2001

Ken Griffey

It's an age old question

Sr. quits Reds
coaching staff

Shortest cffieason ever still ages Colon, Furcal and others

•

"A lot of times it's not just
players lying and saying they're
younger than they really are: '
he said."Its not just us. It's happening all over baseball:'
Perez reported to the Kansas
City Royals' camp and told
general manager Allard Baird
that he was actually 28 instead
of 26. A contradiction was
found in his birth certificate
and visa.
"Nei6 said, 'I want to get it
out and over with,"' Baird said.
"As far as the value of the
player, we don't look at it any
differendy. I would be concerned if he were 30, 32_years
old," Baird said.
The Royals playfully poked
Perez, with teammate Mike
Sweeney giving him a sweet
treat.
"The boys didn't want him
to miss a couple of birthdays, so
they got him a cake:· manager
Tony Muser said.
Ortiz was thought to be 25.
Irutead, the Anaheim pitcher
will celebrate his 29th birthday
nextmonth.
·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wow! Bartolo Colon, Rafael
Furcal and a bunch of major
leaguers sure got old in a hurry.
The shortest offseason in
baseball history turned out to
last a lot longer for Rey
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP} - Ken Griffey Sr. abrupdy
Ordonez and Enrique Wilson,
resigned Friday from the Cincinnati Reds coaching
too.
_
staff, surprising the front office and his son. ·
Neifi Perez and Ramon
Griffey, who walked away from the team for one
Ortiz? Both good players game in 1998 and has missed time because of medical
just
no longer some of the betproblems during the last two years, will be retained as a
ter young guys in the game.
consultant.
An age-old question has
"It caught me completely by surprise," Reds managbecome
the No. 1 issue all over
er Bob Boone said. "I wasn't aware of anything."
spring training. Every day,
'
Griffey, 51, wasn't available
teams are ' learning a player or
for comment after informing
two is a little older than they
the team of his decision. Outthought.
fielder Ken Gnffey Jr. was sur"It's the Danny Almonte
I
prised to learn that his father
domino effect: ' Chicago Cubs
had quit.
manager Don Baylor said. "It
0
"l only talked to him for a
seems like that has happened a
minute and said that I'd call
lot."
him back," Junior said.
Mosdy, it's occurring with
Rlda' ...,.....,. Bob BooM
The Reds gave no reason for
players from the Dominican
Griffey's decision. Jose CardeRepublic, the product of closer
nal will take over as first base coach
scrutiny of birth certificates,
Griffey was a star on the Big Red Machine that won
passports and visa applications.
World Series titles iJ:i 1975 and 1976. He joined his son
Don't blame us, said Joan
on the Seatde Mariners in 1990 before retiring because
Dalmau, president of the Bronx
of a neck problem.
league that produced Almonte.
He coached six seasons in Cincinnati, where he had
The pitcher's team was forced
designs on the managing job. He left the team in a huff
to forfeit its third-place finish
before a game in 199,.8, when he was the batting coach
in the Little League · World
and became miffed that others were working with hitSeries last summer after local
Dominican officials confirmed
ters.
he was 14 instead of 12.
Griffey returned one day later, saying he felt he had
"See, it's not just us:' Dalmau
been made a scapegoat for the team's offensive strugsaid. "It can happen with major
gles. He said he no longer would be a "patsy."
leaguers as well as Little LeaJunior returned to his hometown in February 2000,
guers.
in part because his father was a Reds coach and he
"It's because of poor recordwanted to be closer to his family. Griffey Sr. was briefly
keeping. It's not like here,
hospitalized for chest pains that season.
where you just look in a comGriffey Sr. had to take off from June 18 to July Blast
puter and find out when someseason because a sore neck and a degenerative disc in
one was born. There, the boys
his back were causing too much pain. He also undergo by what they're told."
. went tests in September after experiencing sh'orttiess of
The terrorist attacks on Sept.
breath,
11
also have had an impact.
At the end oflast season, he was moved into the role
With tighter security in place
of bench coach to reduce the stress on his body. He was
all people traveling to the
for
switched to first base coach after Boone added Ray
United States, closer checks
Knight to the coaching staff.
have revealed the age discrepJunior said it will be different not h:~.ving his father
ancies.
around.
·
"I don't know if it's the result
"Last year when he missed some .time when he was
of 9- 11 or Danny Almonte or
under the weather, I knew he'd be back," he said.
exactly why," said Pat Courtney
'------------~----------' . of the commissioner's office.

'

_.

"It caught me
completely by
surprise. wasn 't aware if
anything.,

This har\d out shows a copy of Cleveland Indians pitcher Bar-' "He's going to taker a lot of
tolo Colon's birth certificate, which was released by his team ribbing from his teammates,
on Friday. (AP)
that's for sure:' Angels general
manager Bill Stoneman said.
True, · the commissioner's
"I' told you guys last year I
San Diego Padres shortstop
office sent out a memo to all would let you ask questions Deivi Cruz jumped from 26 to
teams in December, advising about my age, but I won't allow 29 on Friday, the commissionthem to get players' docuqtents it this year:' Franco said Thurs- er's office told the team.
in order to avoid trouble. A day. "I'm not going to go
"At least we know now:·
branch of the commissioner's through it again this year. Any- Padres general manager Kevin
office was set up in the way, age is only a number."
Towers said: "It's unfortunate."
Dominican in 2000 to help
But the Braves nGw know
The New York Mets and
Furcal, the 2000 NL Rookie of Yankees also were affected.
avoid possible problems. : .
Of course, baseball is tilled the Year: is really 23, rather than
Ordonez had previously
with lore about mysierious · 21.
been listed at 29, but instead
. "He's maturing," manager the Gold Glove shortstop is
ages.
.1
No one ever really knew Bobby Cox joked.
about to turn 31. Mets team~
how old Satchel Paige was, and
The Cleveland Indians at mate Timo Perez is 26 instead
there were always questions first thought Colon was 27 of24.
about Fernando Valenzuela. instead of26, then learned FriWhen Wilson reported to
Even now, does anyone believe day he was 28.
the Yankees on Thursday, the
Orlando "El Duque'.' Hernan"They said I was a year team . learned . the . backup
dez is just 32?
older," the star pitcher said. "It's infielder was 28 and not 26. 1
Atlanta's ageless wonder, no big deal."
"I don't know how it . hap•
Julio Franco, is tired of talking
Indians general manager pened," he s~id. "I'm going to
about it. He's listed at 40, .and Mark Shapiro wasn't troubled be the same player, and do the
that's how it's going to stay.
by the recent trend.
•
same things."
'

·Lofton Likes his chances with ChiSox; Stottl~myre making comeback
'

S P R I N G. T R A 1N I N G ·
ROUNDUP

.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS •
catcher Chad Kreuter said.
help me get there."
.
Kenny Lofton is looking
A bl!llpen session in Vero "It's obvious he's got a good
Jorward to playing for the top
Beach, Fla., drew a lot of idea about what he's doing."
team in the American League
.:· ,attention. That's because
Dodgers manager Jim Tracy
Central division again.
.
tlemyre said. "Today was not intensity than throwing on·"·jap~nese ~itcher Ka;,uhisa was optimistic, saying he
It just won't be with the
as much of a physical day as it the side," said Stotdemyre.. ... lJhu, wh? ~tgned a four-year, anticipates Ishii will fit in
Gleveland Indians.
was more mental. Seeing the
Johnny Damon hopes io $12.3 mtllion contract wtth "somewhere between Kevin
Lofton signed a free-agent
hitter standing in there and improve hisskills as a leadoff the Los-Angeles. Dodg7rs two Brown and Andy Ashby" in
·contract with the Chicago
having to begin to narrow hitter with help from the weeks ago, was throwmg for the rotation because of the
:White Sox after hitting a
success he had in 10 season
your concentration and into a newest Boston Red Sox, the first time.
·career-low .261 for the lndimuch smaller focus. It was Rickey Henderson.
"His mechanics · are very with Yakult of the Japan Cen:ans last season.
great."
Henderson, who signed a solid and very deliberate," tral League, going 78-46 with
' "I look at it as Cleveland is
Stotdemyre said he threw minor league contract Feb.
:going to be looking at our
for
about 11 minutes with 10 . 13, participated in his first
:coattails;' Lofton said of the
'team he spent nine years minutes of warm-up and workout in Fort Myers, Fla.,
with. "It will be strange to went through all his pitches, with the Red Sox on Friday.
"He doesn't have the speed
:play against Cleveland, but so, with an emphasis on trying to
that he once had but he still
:far a lot of guys seem excited throw strikes.
He
said
that
in
the
past
he
makes it look easy," Damon
that I'm over here."
That's because they hope never would have th~wn any iaid. "He's the best leadoff
Lofton can help the White sliders at this point in the pre- hitter of all time. Hopefully, I
Sox the way he helped the season, a testament to how can be the best leadoff hitter
&amp;
of this decade. That's my goal
Indians reach the postseason good he's feeling.
"It was a litde different and Rickey Henderson can
six times and the World Series
in 1995.
The
six-time All-Star
signed a one-year deal for
$1.025 million with Chicago
after earning $8 million last ·
year. And though the .contract
includes bonuses, it is still
lower than market value.
"I looked at the different ·
opportunities that I had and
this was a team that won 83
games last year while they
were. banged up," Lofton said.
"Cleveland lost four good
players
Quan
Gonzalez,
Roberto Alomar, Marty Cordova and Lofton) from last
year's team, and that's going
to be hard to replace. This was
an easy decision ."
.
Chevy Truck- Moet
In Tuscan, Ariz., Todd Stot~ndable Longeat·laatlng,
tlemyre threw batting practice
Trucka On Tlie Roed
for the first time this spring as
he tries to make a contribution to the World Series
ch~mpion Arizona Diamondbacks this season.
lll-c_He~v~Ro_L_er_·_oL_o_SM_o_BI_Le....,. 1616 Eastern Ave.
Stotdemyre missed all of
Gallipolis, OH
the 2001 season after having
shoulder surgery and hadn 't
446-3672
faced hitters in a year.
"It was very sirange," Stot-

Duramax Diesel Eng!ne

Congratulations,
Louie. Bush

Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Louie Bush
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
January

•

I

'

a 3.38 ERA.
"He didn't do what he did
in Japan by accident," Traq
said. "It's no fluke. He did it
•
too many years in a row."

MORE LOCAL NEWS.'
MORE LOCAL FOLKS:
Subscribe today.
446-2342

Allison Transmission

&amp;unba!' 11:im~ -&amp;entintl• Page 87

Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolla, Ohio • Point PlelaBnt, WV

:Adkins' cousin Hitching duo
on verge on major leagues
. HUNTINGJON,W.Va. (AP) -Tim "Men you're young, you think
' ·Adkins and his cousin Jon Adkins a(e
you know so much. Yo11 tllink
· just a phone call away from pitching in·
you know more about the game
the major leagues.
Both former Wayne High School stars than you do. You learn that the
·e xpect to start the seas.on at least at the
only thing you can control is
:·Triple-A level; Tim in the Detroit Tigers
what you do on tlte mound."
))organization and Jon in the Oakland
" Athletics chain. Triple-A is loaded with
DllniH praepect Tim Adklno
'·players who have major league experience.
kees, but his decision wasn't based on
" Tim left for Florida recently for the the money. After he agreed to a contract
Tigers major league camp, while Jon with Detroit, Anaheim made' him a bet/ will soon be on his way to Arizona to ter offer but he declined it.
'the A's minor league spring training.
"I felt like I bad to honor my word,"
·
" Both worked out this winter with the Adkins said. ·
·: Marshall baseball team and at their busiA )eft-bander who throws about 90
ness, Baseball Ltd., at the Huntington mph, Tim has overcome two knee silrg'· Ice Arena.
cries to get where he is. Adkins began
"There will be four left-banders in · his career in 1992 with , the Toronto
l the big league camp, so I have a chance," Blue Jays organization and later pitched
cTim said before leaving for Florida. " I'd in the Atlanta Braves chain before
' like to think I do. If not, I'll be in Tole- working' in an independent league for a
do."
while. The Yankees signed Tim last sea; Tim went 3- 1 with a 3.38 earned run son.
"When you're young, you think you
: average last season at Double-A Nor'I wich Conn. He was 0-0 in one appear- know so much," said Adkins, 27. "You
ance at Triple-A Columbus, Ohio.
think you know more about the game
Tim signed with the Tigers in Octo- than you do. You learn that the only
•'ber, taking a calculated risk. A minor thing you can control is what you do on
-league free ·agent, Adkins could have the mound. Not everybody is going to
resigned with the New York Yankees, in like the way you throw. The sooner you
't whose organization he played in 2001. Jearn that, the better off you'll be."
. He also had offers from Los Angeles, the
That's a lesson Jon Adkins learned,
· New York Mets, St. Louis and Anaheim. too. While he hasn't changed organiza"If I wanted to stay in the game for tions, a career-threatening injury
the money; maybe I'd have stayed with changed his outlook. Adkins underwent
the Yankees," Adkins said. "I felt like that the infamous Tommy John surgery,
- with another club I'd have a better where a tendon was removed from his
chance to make it to the major leagues." non-pitching wrist and ·inserted into
Tim said the Tigers outbid the Yan- the elbow of his pi~ching arm. Adkins is

""' 2000

IIISSAN
FRONTIER
4X4

EXTENDED CAB

back at full strength ,
"I feel healthy," Jon said.
Still, Jon altered his off-season workouts. This winter he threw little, conserving energy that was sapped late last
season and giving his arm more rest. He
has, however, worked on his change-up.
Jon finished last season at the Triple-A
level, making three starts and one relief
appearance. He was 1-0 with a 4.26
ERA at Triple-A Sacramento after
going 8-8 with a 4.46 ERA at DoubleA Midland, Texas.
"I had one really good start, one so-so
start and one not so good start," Adkins
said. "It wa,s good for me to be there and
.t o know· what it takes to ·compete at
that level."
"'
Jon said he'll do wh,.tever the A's asl&lt;
him, whether it's starting or coming out
of the bullpen. Oakland is a pitchingrich organization, particularly as far as
starters go.
"Oakland's a great organization,"
Adkins said. "They're up front with you.
They give the younger guys a chance to
compete at a higher level."
Jon said patience is a commodity he
has nurtured, thanks to his arm injury
and to the nature of the game, Adkins
said he has learned a great deal about
that from throwing with his cousin, as
well as minor leaguers Jared Camp, formerly of Huntington East High School,
and J.D. Brammer, a Logan High graduate.
i
"lfl can learn-from someone else, I'm
open to that," Jon said. "Baseball is a
game of adjustments year-to-year and
game-to-game. When you stop listen·
ing, you stop learning."

2001

CHEVY
· 4X4
EXTENDED CAB

t998

Nissan
Maxima
4 Door

t997
Olds 88
MUST SEEU
P..-er, 0•• Loo1l Owner, Su~r Nl01l

*7,900 .
CaU Herb Smith -for information a~~!:::!.::=:!~

·Indians
lineup
promises
tQ
be
a
work
in
progress
..
L WINTER HAVEN, Fla.
t(AP) - Now that the team's
big hitters are gone, Cleveland
(Jndians
manager Charlie
Manuel says the starting lineup
,will be a work in progress all
·season.
c ":lWe.'re going to t:.hange _our
lineup around more this year,"
.he said Friday. "We've wanted to
,.do it in the past, but it was
,working the way we had it, so
we didn't mess with it!'
As spring training opens,
Manuel has no idea who will
hit first, second or third. The rest
of the lineup can't be determined until the top three spots
are decided.
"We'll look at a lot of differ'ent things in the exhibition
~games," said ManueL "I want to
look at some combinations to
see how' things work:'
The questions start at the
leadoff spot, which was held
mosdy by Kenny Lofton from
1992 ;through · last season. The
t:hicago White Sox signed
Lofton in the offieason.
Right fielder Matt Lawton,
who had a .396 on-base per~entage with Minnesota last
~n, appears to be best suited
!for the leadoffjob. .
"I like Lawton there;' said
~uel. "He gets on base, has a
"~
. d average and he stole 29
es la$t season."
~ Shortstop Omar Vizquel and
:Putfielder Brady Anderson are
lJ!ther possibilities, but both
rppear to have more liabilities

l

than Lawton as a leadoff man.
Vizquel's batting average
dropped to .255 last season. He
said he would feel comfortable
hitting leadoff in about 20
games a season; buethinlcs there
are better candidates for the
long haul. , . .
Anderson has been a leadoff
man most of his career, but he
hit a career-low .202 with Baltimore last season and isn't guaranteed a spot in the everyday
lineup.
The No. 2 spot also is unclear.
Viz:quel has hit there the last
several years, but last season's
numbers suggest he should hit
at the bottom of the order.
"I think Ornar's going to
bounce back:' said Manuel. "I
think he can hit between .2.80
and .300!'
- · Ricky Gutierrez, who batted
·.290 with the Chicago Cubs last
season, is another candidate to
hit second. He drove in 66 runs
last season and could in9'Ca!e
that number by hitting lower in
the order.
"He hit second the last two
years with Chicagu and did a
good job, but I want to see how
.Omar does;' said _Manuel. "If
Ornar can hit second, I could
move Gutierrez down to sixth
or seventh. That would make a
differen~e because he has some
pop in his bat."
While Lawton would be a
solution for the leadoff spot.,he
also is a possible_pick as the No.
3 hitter.

If lawton hits first, designated
hitter Ellis Burks would hit
thitd. Manuel would prefer to
flip-flop Burks and first baseman Jim Thome between the
fourth and fifth spots.
Third baseman J'ravis Fryman
and left fielder Russell Branyan
will hit fifth, sixth or seventh.
The bottom of the order will
consist of catcher Einar Diaz,
cen~r fielder 'Milton Bradley
and Vizquel, if he doesn't hit
seco_nd. With strong hitters such as
Lofton, Albert )3elle, Roberto
Alomar, Manny Ramirez and
Juan Gonzalez in the lineup,
making out the Indians' lineup
has~'t been a big challenge for
the . last several seasons. Those
anchors are gone, but ManueL

Colon's age went from 26 to
27 when government officials
found a discrepancy between a
previous passport and birth certificate when he tried to leave
the Dominican Republic to
report to camp over the week-.
end. .

SMITII'S GMC TRUCK
CENTER, INC. ·

G1lllpol1

135 Pllllll/111180
8111111111. 81111

114111448-2532

"W'rlh """' 20 ytan of loyal Salls &amp; S11'1'kt"

.\lore l .o('{l/ \c1n ....1/on• l .ocal Fo/1,, __ _
,@;lunl:J,lP i:!:'lllll''-' ~l'lllillrl -1-h, "~n·

· u~.· ,·. ,.,

Ohio Electric Choice
Power Tip No .4:

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

doesn\ mind.
•
"I like having flexibility," he
said. "We may move gUys
around from game to game. It
will depend on who's hot and
how ''guys match up agai11,1t
pitchers. I like having all these
options."
Heavy rains forced the Indians to move Friday's workouts
indoors.The hitters and pitchers
both 'Frked in the batting
cages. 'I
Talk .around camp focused on
the age of No. 1 starter Bartolo
Colon. The Indians have
obtain~ Colon's updated passport ant! birth certificate, which
show his age as 28, from _the
Dominican R~public. He turns
29 on May 24.

i..

......

...t
~

~
~

."'
"•
.....•

·CAsn IN YOUR TAX.MONBY NOW)
If you don't have It yet, just bring proof of your return and we'll. cash It
now when you purchase a N~W vehicle from Norris Northup Dodge ...

~

'
Shopping h~o never been eaoier. j\iot look on your electric bill and find the "price to
compare" lloted In centt per kilowatt hour. Then, when choice cameo to your area,

cOmpare that price to '• competitive aupplier'a offer 'to determine if lwitching to a new
ouppller will actually oave you money. For allot of ouppliero and an "apple a to appleo"
comparioon chart, log on OhioEiectricChoice.eom. Or call the toll-free ·number .

To learn more, click or call

1•888·0EC·1314.

•

OhloEiec•rlcCholce.com

"

.

.

�'

oon
Trees available.from a variety of sources for plariting projects

Page88

0

Landowners wanting to plant
trees this spring still have plenty of
options available for trees.
Both Gallia and Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Districts are
still accepting order for its annual
tree packets. Meigs County is offering a variety of tree packets including conifers, hardwoods and
ground cover plants. For sale are
individual packets of White Pine,
Colorado . Blue Spruce or Norway
Spruce, 25 for $1 2, and a backyard
packet including [wo each of Sargent Crabapple, White Flowering
Dogwood, Nanking Cherry, European Mountain Ash and Bald
Cypress for $15.
New this year are packets of Bald
Cypress, 10 18-inch seedlings for
$12 or 25 for $20. In addition,
ground cover packets of Crown
Vetch or Periwinkle are available,
25 for $11.
For those unfamiliar with Bald
Cypress, and that's most of us here
in southeastern Ohio, it's the tree
you see growing in swamps down
south with knee-like' roots sticki.ng

out of standing water. But it grows
well in other areas, too, and is
planted as far north as Minnesota. It
grows in non-swampy areas too, but
doesn't form knees" in those
places.
Bald Cypress is different in other
ways, too. It's not really a conifer,
but not quite a deciduous tree. It
has flat, needle-like leaves that
change color, but don't fall off.
They are handsome trees, and the
wood from Bald Cypress is
extremely durable and lasts practically forever.
For more information or to get
an order form, call the Meigs
SWCD at 740-992-4282 . Trees
must be ordered by March 19 and
should be received around April 12.
The Gallia SWCD has large
White Pines, those are four-year
transplants with developed root
sy.stems, 10 for $25, and small
White Pine seedlings. 25 for $12 .
They also have Blue Spruce and
Norway Spruce, five-year transplants, five for $12, and two plums,
Damson and Stanley, for cross pol-

.

.

Sundlly. Febn••ry 24. :aon

11

Jim
Freeman ·
IN THE OPEN
lination, 3-4-foot tall for $15. Concord grape vines, one-year root
stock, are also available for $4 a
vine.
To get trees from the Gallia
SWCD, contact their office at 740446-6173 . They will take orders
generally until the end of March.
Want to plant' lots .o f trees? I
mean lots and lots of trees? If you
need more trees for your project, or
are looking for something a little
bit different, consider the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources'
Division of Forestry nurseries.
Prices vary according to specils,
and there are currently 16 species
available - conifers and hardwoods .

Those trees are grown right here in
This guy likes to ride horses, and
southeastern Ohio, and are accli- has a riding course set up marked
with road cones. While relocating
mated to our region.
A minimum order of 100 trees is the cones last year for mowing, his
required, with species being sold in daughter-in-law discovered a dead
multiples of 12. There is generally a bluebird inside of one the cones.
If you've watched bluebirds any
substantial discount for orders
at all, you know they like darting
exceeding 500 trees.
For specific information about inside holes in trees, fence posts,
the availability of tree species and and bluebird boxes. So apparently
their prices, contact the ODNR the little bird was attracted into the
Division of Forestry toll-free at 1- hole in top of the cone, and once
877-691-8733. Tree . seedling order inside couldn't get back out. Hopforms are also available on the ping down into the cone was probinternet at ohiodnr.com
ablyeasy enough, but once inside it
• • •
seems as though the taper and
Here's a little food
height of the cone prevented the
for thought...
bird from being able to fly out.
Even worse, they found a dead
We're all used· to seeing orange
·construction cones, especially dur- bluebird inside every road cone ing the summer. You know the about a dozen birds o·r so, total. The
type: plastic with a flat base and a lesson: if you use road cones in
hole in the top. The hole in the top areas frequented by bluebirds, plug
lets the contractor slid the cones up the openings or knock .them
down over poles.
over daily.
I was. speaking to a Meigs Coun- Jim Frttman is wildlife specialist for
ty resident a week or so ago and the Meigs SWCD. He can be contactlearned something new about road ed at 740-992-4282 or at jim-freecones.
, man@oh.nacdnet.org

OHIO OUTDOORS

A look at Who's Whoooo Among Ohio's Ovvls
.

BY THE OHIO DNR

Owls are among Ohio's
most interesting wildlife residents. Although more often
heard .than seen, there are
plenty of opportunities
within our silent winter
woodlands to hear and, with
a little luck, see these spectacular birds of prey.
Owls and other raptors,
such as eagles, hawks and fal~ons, have highly specialized
features setting thern apart
from other birds. Hooked
beaks, sharp talons with
strong legs and feet, and
excellent eyesight combine
to make them fearsome
hunters.
Size is another notable feature. In most bird species,
males are larger than
females, but with raptors like
owls the reverse 1s most
often true.
Owls are found on every
continent except Antarctica.
In the Buckeye State, we
have four owl species that
live here year round: the
great horned owl, screech
owl, barred owl and barn
owl. Except for the barn

owl, they all can be found in
most counties across the
state.
Did you know owls are tlie
only night hunters among
birds of prey? Their nigh~
vision is superior to that of
other raptors, which see no
better at night than humans.
Owls' eyes are so large that
they are fixed in place, making it impossible for them to
look side-to-side or up-anddown . To make up for that,
owls can rotate their heads
270 degrees .
A keen eye is a must for
,Ohio's largest owl, the great
horned owl. As large as two
feet m length, with a
wingspan of up to 60 inches,
this beautiful bird hunts during the darkest hours of the
night. While preferring to
live in open country, it's also
one of our most urban owls.
And with a voractous
appetite, they do their .part

movement by sound leaves slopes or swampy wet
scurrying prey - even that woods. Ohio's medium-sized
concealed by leaf or snow resident owl is also our most
cover - little chance of vocal owl, calling regularly
escapmg the owl's sharp throughout the night and
talons. Hidden from the even into the day. Its call.is
human eye, owls' ears are easily identified once heard:
located on the side of their hoo, hoo, too-HOO; hoo, .
heads and are covered by boo, too-HOO, ooo, and is
feathers.
often paraphrased as "Who
Screech owls favor patches cooks for you? Who cooks
of woodlands broken up by for you all?"
large, open meadows where . Barn owls search out natthey hurit from dusk till ural cavities, like those found
dawn for a variety of prey, in hollow trees, for nesting,
such as field mice, small but will also nest in mansnakes, lizards and a range of . made structures such as
insects. Screech owls are also barns and silos. Once wi.d eurban dwellers, frequently spread acrbss Ohio, their
found living in older neigh- numbers· began to dwindle
borhoods with lots of mature in the mid-1940s, coinciding
trees. Averaging 8-9 inches with the decline of small
m length and a 22-inch farming operations. Thanks
wingspan, screech owls are to the installation of artificial
the smallest of Ohio's four nest boxes near the grassy
resident owl species.
pastures and hayfields where
One · owl you won't lind barn owls hu'nt for small
hanging out in the neigh- mammals, this unique owl

m keeping rodent popula- · borhood park is the barred

tions under control.
Because owls hunt mostly
at night, they .also have a
highly developed sense of
hearing. This ability. to track

owl - so named because of
the horizontal stripes across
its chest. Truly a forest owl, it
inhabits large tracks of land
that feature steep forested

with its recognizable white,
heart-shaped face is making
a comeback. In 2001,
wildlife experts with the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources recorded 48
active barn owl nests, the
most since a monitoring
program began in the mid1980s.
If you're looking for · an
owl encounter, now IS a
great time for a night or
before-sunrise hike ..An owl's
call travels better in winter
because of the cold, clear air
and lack of leaf cover. Don't
forget to dress warmly. While
Ohio has had unseasonably
warm winter weather,. nighttime temperatures still get
pretty frosty.
Finally, should you ever
spy a roosting owl during
the daylight hours, be
respectful of its space. Take a
m·o ment to savor the sight
and then quietly move on.

Over 80,000troutto be
released in
·Ohio waters
BY THE OHIO DNR

More than 80,000 r.linbow lroUt measuring I0 1D
13 inches will be released in
39 Ohio WAterways liom
March through May ro
enhance public fishing
opportunities.
The annual spring lrout
releases brget inland waters,
and have been expanded in
recent years to include local
community park ponds in
addition 1D v:nious lakes.The
daily &lt;;atch limit fur inland
lakes is live lrout per angler.
Anglers age 16 and older
tnU.St have an Ohio fishing
license. Those anglen; age ~ ·
and older may obtain a free
fishing license where licenses
are sold
Additional information
about spring trout releases is
av:illable by calling 1-800-

WITDLIFE.

r----------------------------------

Been waiting for a
great mortgage rate?
\\/.

.

(

·.

~NIJIM'S

tile

.

BUICK
i1:s all good

~timel

@)

'

'

PONTIAC
'EXCITEMENT MATTERS

2001 Park
Avenue ffitra
Buick'• Beat
Diamond white with taupe .
9,000 miles,
Fao,loJry demo

1999 Cadillac
DeVille
. D'elefSance Package,
27 ,QOO Low milee,'
Near perfect condition.

~ ...... 1

Pontiac
Grand Ams' .
4 In Stock
Good Colors
'

BLUE!

1999 Blazers'

OAK HILL
BANKS
Banking In Your Best Interest
il

500 3rd Ave. Gallipolis 446-0315
201 S. Front St. Oak Hill 682-7733
Alllolai11111Ubjoet 10 lppi'9Val. Ra1tt1Ubjecr co c:hanp without nolice.·APR laiD uample u•ina 6.73% and
S IOO.t~ lo.o amount which would ·n~•ult in 180 moalh.Jy p•ymmtl ofS889.0:Z. Ar;Cull APR may nay.
""""dowa .,.ymontj)r equity nq"ired. Lower dowri ptymcnt• ud loqcr cermt ue 1V.II1ble.

&amp; Jimmys'
7 In Stock
Low Miles
4WD&amp; 2WD

2001 Buick
LeSabre '
Very well equippo;d,

18,000 Low Milel.

See our big
selection of·
S 10 and Sonoma
Pic~ups

1999's &amp;

~elebrations

'•

begin on C2

''

Page Cl

!
I

-

I

.............ry 24. 2002

.'

"

DAY'S WORK

Dear

Abby

..

ADVICE

;' Teen reader
¥?ffers guidelines
l:for parents

-Easte{n you;th winning rodeo fame
~

•

•

t

'. DEAR ABBY: Over the
years, you have advised many
fe~ple mothers-in-Jaw
and so on . But I have never
seen advice for parents. I am a
l3-year-old reader who has
~ecided to write my own set
of"guidelines" for moms and
dads. Here goes:
: •(1) Don't expect your kids ·
~o . like the same things you

tlo,

; (2) Tell your kids you love
the.m every day.
·
: (3) When your kids do
something wrong, don't keep
reminding them . Chances are
they feel bad enough already.
; (4) Remember, you weren't
pFrfect when you were growl'!S up. Don't expect your kids
!&lt;? be.
1 (5) If you have more than
pne kid, don't compare them.
:r'hey are completely different
pepple. ·
: (6) Be patient with your
!dds. They're just learning.
i . (7)
If something goes
\vrong, don't blame it on
lhem. It isn't always . their
f~U!t.

: (8) · Surprise your kids
lometimes - even if it's something little.
'
/, (9) AccqJt,that yc;mr kids,are
getting old.er, . ·They ,. can't
~~ys be S yeari old.
; (to) bon't fight in front of
your kids. (That should be a

,

;

IIRIA~ J. flilj,

..

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

po-braine~.)

: (11) Don't assume that you
know what your kids are
thinking.
;; Thanks for letting me contJ:ibute to the column, Abby.
f- 13-YEAR-OLD
: DEAR 13-YEAR-OLD:
You're welcome. If you wete
~lder, you would have seen
the following "commandkents" th~t first appeared in
flY column in 1981 (!).They
clearly address the subject of
'
.
.
rarentmg:
1 A CHILD'S TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR PARj;NTS
! by Dr. Kevin Leman
: (1) My hands are small;
please don't expect perfection
'fvhenever I make a bed, draw
• picture or throw a ball. My
legs are short; please slow·
Jlown so that I can ke~p up
with you.
: (2) My eyes have not seen
!he world as yours have; please
je,t me explore safely. Don't
restrict me unnecessarily.
(3) Housework will always
~e there. I'm litde for only a
lhort time - ·please take tim.e
~o explaip thin~ to me about
!his wonderful' 'world, and do
~o willingly. ,
.
(4) My feelings are tender; ;
flease. be sensitive to my
needs. Qon't nag me all day
long, (You wouldn't want to
be nagged for your inquisitiveness.) Treat me as you
\vould like to be treated.
( (5) I am a spedal gift from
pod; please treasure me as
po&gt;l intended you to do,
1'tolding .hle accountable for
tny actions, giving me guidelines to live by and disciplin- .
jng rne in a loving manner.
(6) I ne~d your 7ncouragement to grow. Please go easy
bn the criticism; rememper,
t.ou can criticize the things I
do without criticizing me.
' . (7) ·Please give me the freeto make decisions coni:er·nitlll myself. 'Permit me to
·
~an learn from
someday
make the·
.,..., ..,._ ,.- &amp;c:isions life requ~
'

HESTER - The Stetson hat
Jordan Koblentz wears probably
couldn't hold 10 gallons, and his
denim britches may be little, but
he's a cowboy in the making, all
the same.

HE's .
'

.

'\'

The 6-year-old Eastern kindergartner has. been a rodeo fan from'
the time he could reaoh the remote control, but it's just not enough
.for him to watch his beloved
sport.
· ... ,,e'.'if pursuing a pinHized.
career in roping and ridingJor
himself.
The tow-headed Koblentz,
who has even perfected a form
of the cowboy's swagger, is
entering his second year of
competition in Ohio's Little
Britches Rodeo Association, a
statewide rodeo competition for
young cowboys and cowgirls.
Dressed · in the regulation
long-sleeved western shirt,
jeans, cowboy boots and 5/1-2
gallon hat,Jordan and the littlest
cowboys in Ohio don't ride
buckin' broncos - they ride
sheep. And they tie goats and
rope dummy cow heads.
Simple?
.

FARM BOY.

' .' .

I:

l\Jo

, "1.

t

"

I

AwARD WINNER - Blue, white, green ·and yellow
,..-all ribbons rewarding Jordan Koblenq for his high
marks In rodeo competition. On Saturday, .Koblentz
brought h91118 a resarva champion award for dummy
roping - roping a dummy cattle head with his
lasso.
J. ~eec;l)
. ... (Brian
'

......

- .... .w.

.

.

.

' _,...

••.

;o.

-~

.

. ; ·,.

It taltes a lot &lt;if practitdor little c~b&lt;?ys'·to, ~tel:&lt; th~i~ !kills, .
and Jo~ u!.es pis l:J~rnyard b~~v,atil ~· a~~nih'~ f.lcility, roping
chickens and other hve!,l:ock -;- ·as well as the {amtlyi cat - 1n an
effort to practice the skills needed to keep the ribbons coming in.
Jordan is not just a cowboy ... he's ·a farm boy. At the 2001 Meigs
County Fair, where he reigned sometimes .reluctantly as Meigs
County's Little Mister, he didn't flinch as the steers, hogs and lambs
made their way through the show ring, and, of course, he looked
rigl)t at home in his western clothes.
'1ordan has always liked animals;' proud mom Cindy said. "He's
always been an outdoor kid. He feeds 'the animals, he helps around
the farm- he's right at home .any. time he can do something outside."
.
· .
On Saturday, at an 'Ohio Little Britches Rodeo Association banquet, Jordan brought home another · ribbon, this one for reserve
champion in dumrny roping. He will add it to a bouquet of rosettes
which is already most impressive, even after just a full year of competiJ;lg.
.
.
.
.
But the junior rodeo wbrid isn'tjust fun for Jordan - it's a family affair for the Koblentz family. Rick, Cindy, and big sister
Georgeanna travel across the state every other weekend with Cowboy Jordan during the summer rodeo season.
'
'1ordan has made a lot of friends, and we've made friends too,"
Cindy Koblentz said. "It's a good family outing for all of us."
And fun though it is, there's an added benefit for Jordan: The
Ohio Little Britches Rodeo Association monitors his school work,
and requires that he maintain good grades in order to keep ropin'.

'

-~.CI

\

•

'

..

t

'.a

~·

�.

8unda~Feb.24,2002

PageQ

Pomeroy • Mldd!lport • O.lllpolla, Ohio Point PIMaant, W'l

6unllap G:hnr• ·6rntintl • Page C3

•

24.2102'

..

••
••

Chrll Carpenter and L111111 Martin

John Tablt and Kate CaldWell

==

.J - Vaequez and Tla Osborne

Catpenter-Martin engagement Caldwell-Tabit engagement Osborne- Vasquez engagement
NEW HAVEN, W.Va ~
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Carpenter
of New Haven and Mr. and
.Mn. Aaron Martin of Sugar
Land, Texas are proud to
announce the engagement
and upcoming .wedding of
their children, Chtis Carpenter and Lana Martin.
The wedding will be held
March 3, 2002, at St. Laurence
Catholic Church in Sugar
Land. A local reception will
be held in New Haven in the

spnng.
Martin graduated from
South Texas College of
Law in Houston, Texas and
currently ..:arks as an attorney for Baker and Beck,
P.C., in Conroe, Texas.
Carpenter
graduated
from . Marshall University
and works as an engineer
for TETRA Technologies
in Conroe, Texas. The couple resides in Conroe,
Texas.

GALLIPOLIS - Jay and
Barbara CaldweD · announce
the
engagement
and
approaching marriage of their
daughter Kate Martha CaldweD to John Michael Tabit,
son of George and Rhonda .
Tabit of Fayetteville, W.Va.
The wedding is to be held at d
Grace United Methodist Chureh
on Man:h 16,2002 at 6:30p.m.
CaldweD is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and received both bachelors

and masters degree.s in Business Administration from
MarshaD University.
Tabit graduated from Fayetteville High School, and
received a bachelor&gt; degree
from Marshall University
where he is currently attending graduate school in Biolagy. He has been accepted and
plans to attend the West Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine in Lewisburg, ·
W.Va., this fall.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. James Osborne of Gallipolis, and Ms. Sandra
Osborne
of
Florida,
announce the engagement of
t)leir daughter, Tia Osborne,
to Jason V3$quez of Paxton,
Neb.
Osborne., a graduate of
Miami University, is a-~echni-

cal risk consultant for ArthuiAndersen in Cleveland.
Her fiance, a graduate of the
University of Nebraska, is '.k
branch manager for Applied
Industrial · Technologies in
Cleveland.
The wedding is planned for
Saturday, May 25, 2002, in
'Cleveland.·
·

DONAnON- The Gallipolis Junior Women's Club recently presented a $500 check to the French Art Colony in appreciation
for hosting the Gallipolis Junior Women's Club Christmas(Tree
Silent Auction. Pictured from left to right, Martha Da¥1s, GJWC
co-chair of event; Mary Bea McCalla,· Director of French Art
Colony; and 4mee Rees, GJWC co-chair of event, GJWC. (Submitted)

Dlt1111 and Lydia Lllywel
•

LAywell 40th Anniversary

BIDWELL - Dana and
.[,.ydia LayweU ofBidweU celebrated their 40th anniversary on Saturday, Feb. 23,

They are the parents offour
daughters, Debbie Tho mae of
Gallipolis, Donna Greer of ·
Columbus, Vivian Leffel of
~002.
Reynoldsburg and Bobbi
·They were married · in Johnson of Galloway.
~meroy, Feb. 24, 1962, by
They also have 12 grand,the Rev. Paul Taylor.
children.

Russellvance
•

POMEROY SunnyDawn Raechild RusseD and
Andrew Vance, both of
Albany, are announcing their
engagement and approaching
marriage.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Robert RusseD of
Athens, and Angie Baylow of

Millfield. Her fiance is the son
of Robert and Donna Vance
of Albany.
Russell is a graduate of
Meigs High School and plans
to attend Hocking CoDege.
Vance is a 1998 graduate of
Meigs and is employed by
Heiner's Bakery.
·

HIIDLE ·

IICDR

·ucUIIER

Vada Mayo

retires from GDC
Vada
GALLIPOLIS Mayo recently retired from
Gallipolis
Developmental
Center with 34 years of service.

She began her career there
in 1965 as a
psychiatric
aide, and
later
became an
LPN. She
advanced
to residential
'c3re
superVisor
with
the
Mayo
scheduling

.:..t. '('\' ·~'·'_&lt;;i.:..~~.~.......

hosted by friends and coworkers. Mayo received many
gifts at GDC.
During her retirement,
Mayo . plans to enjoy home,
family, crafts, cooking and
traveling with her husband.
She also would like to get
involved with lielping others,

RITE AID CUSTOMERS!

office.

......

. ' ..., ~ - t~~.

.Don 1tnc1 Loll aen ·.

,,' .

6-8
-

.

,..
:I
''. I
'I

Flowers &amp;

·.

· Planning AWeddin,g
CaU the weddlna proCealonllll

.a

a
a
a
a
a
Q
Q

Q.

• Corsages

3 MONTHS BEFORE YOUR WEDDING:

$15 OIT equipment natal.

Book your honeymoon arrangements.

DluiiiOCld~N·OoLI

Mall 'four Invitations.
Buy your nancf's wedding Qlft.
Purchase attendants' gifts.
Pick up the rlnQS.
Order or make ceremony progratns.
Haveyourportralttaken.
Have a final dress and headpiece fitting.
Plan your bridesmaids' party.
Begin writing thank you notes as you receive gifts
Submit your newspaper wedding announcement.

t'Jkkiii'Ht Pt..
(740~)414

~~~1r·~

Lorna arid Bruce Hart, and
have two grandsons, Jonathan
and Michael Hart of Marietta, Ga.
The couple will be spending the week with their family in Georgia and visiting
points of interest the~e. Congratulatory cards may be sent
to them at 49421 Lighthouse
Road, Racine, Ohio 45771.

RACINE - Don and Lois
' ~ell of Letart FaDs will be
:l:&gt;bserving their 50th wedding
: ~nnivenary Friday.
;l; They were married on
· ~arch 1, 1952, at Belpre. Bell
· is retired from Ohio Valley
-\Electric Corp.'s _Kyger Creek
. ~!ant.
: ~ They are the parents of a
: llaughter and son-in-law,
.r ·

Hartwell House
.'
I

~ Weddini Speeialiata

Your Professional
Service Jev&lt;eler.

II' 1\oU Scnteo Brtdol e.onU...... .

and eon.uhlnt

Offering Gift and
Bridal Registry

~Jimlono-

... Limol Qlllltltlo_,
l"llntol£4o'f I

Acrou from the Cour1hQtJse in
Historic Downtown Pomeroy.

992-2054

~Beautiful

Picture Frames
~· Great Clocks

•

Bells 5Oth.Anniversary

;1

• Bridal Bouquets
• Centerpieces

a
a

&gt;

A surprise dinner was .given
~ her family members at
!rger Creek Employees club
'use. A retirement tea was

The Bureau for

Children with
Medical Handicaps
(BCMH) is available
to help families.

have a child that has

I spc:ciai neBltn &lt;tire needs you may
be eligible for assislancc•
Call the Galli a County Health
Departlllentat441-2039,

••

,I

I'

for more information.

II

Call today and ease the stress.

I'

;·,I

·You've got to feel it to believe if"

~Pottery

Exr!!!ience the

~MuchMore

If you are looking for a New
Pharmacy... then Kroger would like to
extend a welcome to all Rite Aid customers!
Call us or bring in your bottles .
Just for transferring your prescriptions, we'll
give you a $25 gift card for use in our store!
(•Excluding state and federal programs)

·

Stop by and visit us at

'lempur-Pedic Swedish Mattress

L«11tM ;,. HUNric DowtJttJ~~~t~ Pomnvy

i,

31 Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis
740-441-0383

740-992-7696

.Turn your feelin

into flowers.
'li&amp;L 1p«/du1 Ill p!Hibo1
1"" IUUiyour gu~rtL-

•Recrptions
• Rthtarsal Dinnrn
• SpfcWI} Cakt~
• SltDwen
•PiotMVCH
Call lodiJ ror IR lppolntmmt
for .yo~~r free COniUhllkm ola
weddllll rKepdon U..t you and
your lutlll .tU remember for

SUMMER IMAGE
Hair, Nails &amp; Tanning Salon

lbnlnre1 :~ Ptlluril
~ Sulpf•rt4 Ntlll .
~ Nlth Prttllrt Tt•nlnt
~ Fell• - C.ler - ''""'

~

rfi3!Jiilmvv~
i\rea's leader In Prom,
Wedding and Tuxedo Rental
-Large Selection of

GRIAT WIDDING
PHOTOGRAPHY I

Village Florist

T,.,,,._,~

• MONDAY lltROUGH FRtOIIIY

lomtospm

,. "JIIHitJ••Iwr

SATUNIAY

I om to 12 pm

(740)

""""''"'"',..tJ.,J

SwrlintytJil.tbut 1948

.

RDJI CAuDILL
PHOTOCUPHY

Gllllpolll

)'till to tome

and

Other Accessories

Giw .. • u/1

LocatodHttfelt'• MID Oudlt
onll.teRt.110

Wedding Invitations

"""' .,., -.
,...,~

._Aic,..oal'n&gt;m •P In lllo Glwndl

We feature several Unes of

Q.uaftty sPrlnt .~o~nn

The Area's Ontv American
Cerllfted Hair Color Specialist

760 First Aven"" • GalUpoUs, OH

446-2933
..

_..

'

I

TUXEDO
RENTAL

your.body's weight, shape, and tempcmture to provide

!·

unsurpassed comfort and therapeutic support. Billions of
viscoelastic memory cells confonn exactly to your body,
alleviating counter-pressure and promoting deep-REM sleep.

'

Cor6in &amp; Snytfer !Furniture Co.
.

'"~

"'"'e t6 ~
L

;r~U~M """
,.: .
:: 955 Second Avenue
: 740-446·1171
•

.

SJ995

.,

,,

(H!I/(tlbylho

il&gt;!collwlrillfro

-

.,

'

- Many Styles
-. Order
Early
'
- Pnces start at

l

I

I

THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY, OHIO
(740) 992·2284

·I

Tempur-Pedic' has used te~h!Kilogy originally developed
for NASA to create a mattress that automatically reacts to

I

446-9319

JIIUII Slrvlce Hair, NaHI
and Tanning salOn

•

'*'

.

'

Void wnoro prohibited by low. Not void on tranoto10 trom other
Krogor P h i -. $25 minimum prooorlptlon roqulrod. Coupon

Ot-

not VII~ on Modica~
todorally aowme&lt;1 programa.
Coupon cannot be combined wnn any other otlor. Not vall&lt;! on
Phiii'IIIH/11

· - ., ICbooco .....hi....

~~M

----.---

-

1
I
I

Ron Ellis, R. Ph
Pharmacy Manager

I

OJ4u!=d12,:mi.Oood&lt;rit•IW~

~

.o.-..-~.J
....

-11011110
~··
;,..
,,..,
· · - .. 111

HfM

Gallipolis, OH

Robert Kuhn, R. Ph.
S"l/f PluJrn~~~clst .

1·800-664·5462
(

·-

,.

�_,.,_
...~_'•_u_l(_iu_•.,._.._,_,._dh_w_·____.....AI~_O
__D~I-l=l;;;.;l;;.,.e;;:;·;. . .;: .R.; ; ~;:;.IV.;: . . ;e: ; ;r=-· -----~su;,;,;;,;..,;;.;;.:.;...'Fe.;. .b"-~. .;.ry,_l~.;. .~-002·

tddleton dolls ·even
When a news release came
through last week about the six Lee
Middleton dolls being selected winners in the 2002 Doll Reader Maganne "Doll of the Year" contest, it
took me back about 20 yean.
It was the early 1980s and a cou- ·
pie had moved to the area and were
making dolls in the old bank building .at Coolville. I went right out
there to do a feature story.
Lee, an artist, had started a couple
years ·before creating dolls in the
likeness of her children at the
kitchen table in her home in Centr:al
Ohio.
It was a big move when she and
her husband decided to go into the
doll-making business full-time and
moved to the small village of
Coolville in southeastern Ohio to
do it.
At first, all of the dolls were porce-

lain and their fancy outfits were
made by women of the community
in their homes. Everybody loved the
dolls and the business grew. Vinyl
dolls were soon added to the porcelain ones being produced.
"First Momepts:' which is still a
favorite among many collectors, was
the fint of the Middleton dolls to be
produced in vinyl. Its popularity set
the stage for real growth for the
company.
One of the .things I remember
most about those early dolls were
that they had scripture tags attached
to an arm of each one.
"First Moments" won the "Doll of
the Year" award in 1985, and that
was just what Lee needed to move
the company Into national prominence.
Growing by leaps and bounds,
they soon outgrew the old bank

by Doll Reader Magazine.
period of several years.
The letter says that In its heyday,
This year's selections are "Playtime
Wonder" and "Small Wonder" in the the mill produced more than 40,000
children's play dolls; "Little Fishies" 'elegant croquet sets each year and
and "Cotton Tails" in the collectible sold them around the world.
They're wonderipg whatever hapbaby doll; and "Happy Birthday
Teddy" and "Our Pride and Joy" in pened to *ei,D and have set up the
the collectible vinyl/plastic dolls.
search committee to find out.
·
To collectors in the Bend area If you happen to have one of theo;e
COMMUNITY
and there are many - if you own croquet sets (does anyone play that
one of those award-winning doUs, .anymore?) stuffed back in the corner
building and in 1989, relocated to the value just went up.
b
its new building in Belpre.That same
• • •
of your garage or down in the aseA
h .
by
.
. ment, it just might be valuable. The
year, Lee was named Ohio's "Small
searc " on
a comnuttee tn Search Committee would be like to
Business Person of the Year."
Barnet, Vt., to find owners of emThe artist died in 1997, but the quet sets manufactured of New hear from you . (fenyzrzn@kingbusiness fOntinues to grow and the England hardwoods there from con.com)
dolls continue to win awards. In · about 1888 to 19:38.
• • •
1998, the company won two best of
According to a letter from the
The daffodils are blooming and
show .awards at the International Croquet Search Committee, the the forsythia is budding, a sure sign
Collectibles Exposition and almost riverfront mill owned by the Roy that spring is jusnround the corner.
every year the Middleton dolls are Brothers went out of business after a · (Charlene Hoeflich is general manager
included in those selected for awards bout with floods and fires over a ofThe Daily Sentinel in Pomercry.) ·

Charlene
Hoeflich

Lambert Lands once owned by ormer slave{
.
In 1843, three Virginia brothen,
all of whom owned slaves, sent an
envoy to Gallia County to purchase
some 265 acres of land. Later that
year, the brothen, Frank, Miller and
Minnis Lambert, gave freedom to 29
of their slaves, telling them to leave ·
the Richmond, Va., area and go to
Ohio.
'
This land of 265 acres in Morgan
Township of Gallia County came to
be known as the Lambert Lands.
The property was held in common
by the .29 ex-slaves and their.
descendants.
No individual titles were granted
except one which came later. All
taxes were paid in common. In
11843, there were already about 50
.black families living in . Morgan
Township. Abraham and Martha
Anderson first came to Morgan
Township in the 1820s. The next
decade they were Joined by the following families: Howell James,
Caleb James, lssac Howell, Issac Ellison, Elisha Ellison, Andrew Harris,
and Benjal)lin Fawcett. So the tran-

S!llon for the Lambert plantation
families was made much easier.
Most Lambert Land families
.~.
eventually held some of their own
~··· "·
ground. Some of it they later purchased and some of it was given to
them by squatter's rights. The oldest ...
male resident was generally chosen '
to collect and pay the taxes and to
HISTORY
transact any other business that
might have ario;en.
The Lambert Lands had some chants, gospels, and hymns of praise.
good timber and some years, the The school in those long gone years
colony sold timber to pay taxes. was well attended, but today the
There was also ·at one time ·a large school house has been moved away
limestone quarry thete where grav- and has become a dwelling."
el was mined for sale to the townBessie remembered that her one
ship and the county for road build- grandfather, John, was also part
ing.
Cherokee Indian and that her other
Every family had a big garden, grandfather was a Civil War veteran
and kept chickens aqd pigs. Bessie and later a minister. She recalled that
Jackson, whose family Jived in Mor- some of the homes used newspaper
gan Township, wrote in her book for · wallpaper. And unlike some
"Born In Poverty". that the people other parts of the county, the.
in an I around the' Lambert Lands 'African American residents 1&gt;f Mor"had their own church and school. gan Township kept alive "southern
Devotedly devout, the litde com- sohgs," particularly those accompamunity church rang weekly with nied by a banjo.

~~

..
\. •'4 James
Sands

By the early 1900s, many of the
residents on the Lambert Lands had
to find employment outside of the
township. Some went to work in the
coal fields, some hired on as steamboat workers and some got employment at the Ohio Hospital for
Epileptics. Eventually, people had to
find employment as far away as ·
Columbus. They came home just on
the weekends.
About 1935, Robert West
obtained a clear tide to abo.ut 60
acres nf the Lambert Lands. Ohio
law by then had declared that persons who had lived on a piece of
land uncontested for 21 years could
claim legal ownership. None of the
other Lambert Land families contested West's action. The number of
acres held by the' community then
shrunk to about 203 acres.
At that time, the following Lambert Land descendant families still
lived there: Miller, Minnis, Ellison,
Jones, Ealy, Guthrie, Robinson,
Norman, Harris and West.
Even 'as early as the 1940s, it was

becoming harder and harder to collect enough to pay the taxes. By tlie
1960s, delinquent taxes due. on the
Lambert Lands began to mount up.
In 1961, the Lambert Lands owed
$690 in back taxes plus an 8 percent
penalty.
Heirs of the original 29 families,
who had moved away, just didn't
think it was worthwhile to continue
to pay taxes on land that they no
longer lived on. The property was in
delinquency through much of the
1960s.
Finally, in 19.70, the courts
ordered the Gallia County sheriff to
sell the Lambert Lands at p.JJblic
auction to pay off the back taxes.
Thus ended a 127-year history pf .
.what may have been the only property in early 0 hio history to haye
been commonly owned by seve~al
ex-slave families.
,
aames Sands is a spedal correspondent for the Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by Writing to 1346
Meadow Lane, Circleville, Ohio

High blood pressure, also
called hypertension, is a major
risk for heart disease and the
chief risk factor for stroke.
Blood pressure is the force
of blood against artery walls.
It is measured in millimeten
of mercury (mm Hg) and is
ycorded as two numbers systolic pressure (as the heart
beats) and diastolic pressure
(the bottom number- as the
heart relaxes between beats).
·Both numbers are important. A blood pressure reading
of 120/80 or lower is best. A
blood pressure of 140/90 is
considered to be borderline
· hypertension, anything over
140/90 is too high and should
be evaluated by your health
care provider.'
High blood pressure is dangerous because it makes the
heart work too hard, and the
force of blood flow can harm
the arteries. High blood pres1'ure is called "the silent killer"
because very often there are
no signs or symptoms. Once
it occurs, it usually lasts a lifetime. High blood pressure, if
uncontrolled, can cause heart
and kidney damage.

High blood pressure affects
about 50 million - or 1 in 4
adult Americans. High·. blood
pressure is especially common
among African Americans,
who tend to' devdop it an
earlier age and more . often
than whites. It is also common among older Americans.
About 60 percent of those age
60 and older have high blood
pressure.
Blood pressure rises and
falls during the day, but when
it stays elevated over time, it is
called high blood pressure.
While it can be potentially
serious over the long term,
~gh blood pressure can be
managed using a variety of
measures, which include diet,
exercise and medication if
your doctor feels that is necessary for you.
If your doctor prescribes
medication, remember to take
it every day and follow the ·
instructions exacdy. Medication used to treat high blood
pressure usually must be taken
over a long period of time ..
The most current information from the National Institutes of Health showed that
following a particular eating
plan called the DASH diet

POOLS AND SPAS

(Dietary Approaches
to
Reducing Hypertension) and
reducing the amount of sodi-..
urn (salt) on a daily basis can.:
in lnany cases reduce already '
elevated blood pressure.
...
In fact, researchen believe
the DASH diet may be an
alternative to drug therapy for
some people, especially those
with mild hypertension. ·
The DASH diet encourages
lots of fruits and vegetables
along with low-fat dairy
foods and strict reductions in
total and saturated fats. Previous studies have indicated that
a reduction in salt intake Iowen blood pressure, b~th with
and without the DASH diet.
Making
some ' simple
lifestyle changes can. control
high blood pressure. Maintain
a healthy weight, be physically active, and follow a healthy·
eating plan, which includes .a
diet rich in fruits, vegetables

•

RIO GRANDE - Five
high school students from
Gallia County have received
-scholarships from the Univer. sity of Rio Grande/ Rio
' Grande Community College.
Ashley
Cardwell of
·crown
City
has
been
awarded
the Ohio
First Scholarship. The
Ohio Fint
Cardwell
scholarship
program,
which
began m
1996,
allows high
school
valedictorians
and
salutatorians
throughout
Hineman
Ohio
to
. attend Rio Grande on a

tuition-free scholarship for
four years.
The daughter of John and
Debi Cardwell, Cardwell
attends South Gallia High
School. She plans to study
nursing at
Rio
Grande.
Four
other
scholarship
winnen
from Gallia
County are
all receiving
the Atwood
Lawhon
Award for
Excellence.
This &lt;eholarship
JS
named in
the honor
of
the
founden of
the University of Rio
Grande,
Mooney
Nehemiah
and Permelia Atwood. The

full-tuition award is based on
academic performance and is
granted for four years.
The four winners of this
prestigious scholarship are
Bethany Lawhon , Meghan
Mooney, Andrew Hineman
and James Plants.
Lawhon, who lives in Gallipolis, is the ' daughter of
Timothy
and
Regina
Lawhon. She attends Gallia
Acad!',my and Buckeye Hills
Career Center. She plans to
study computer science at
Rio Grande.
Mooney is the daughter of
Mark and Beverly Mooney
of Gallipolis. The Gallia
Academy High School student will study middle .childhood education at Rio
Grande.
·Hineman is the son of
Walter and Shelba Hineman of Crown City. He
attends Fairland High
School and will major in
pre-engineeriJ:Jg at Rio
Grande.

MEIGS COUNTY CALENDAR
Community Calendar Is
published as a free service
· to non-profit groups wish. lng to announce meetings
· and special events. The
· calendar Is not designed to
· promote sales or fund-rals"jers of any type. Items are
printed only as space per' inlts and cannot be guaran,teed to be printed a specHIc number of days.

MdNDAV ..

:; i

•

.. POMEROY - Pomeroy
Alumni Association, Monday,
7 p.m., home of Yvonne
Young .

POMEROY - TB office to
' l:lold. clinic at Columbia Fire
·Department Monday, 6 to 7
••
~p . m. Area residents can get
:ilkin tests to be. read on
:.Wednesday, 6 to 7 p.m.

.

..
••
••

: • POMEROY - Veterans
:Service Cllfllmlssion, 9 a.m.
:Monday, 117 E. Memorial
•l b·nve.

...••

.,.. MIDDLEPORT -

~·

OH Kan
a::oin Club, Monday, 7 p.m.,

Benefits Include

Benefits Include

Insurance ,

-1011111UI-:" t11,4:1,7~9:1

"="'

101111 Q

IIAIT'S IAI

Trolley House, Middleport
RACINE- Enduring Freedom Support Group Monday,
7 p.m. American Legion hall,
Ohio 338, Racine. Everyone
welcome.

Vacations
Holidays
.
Discounts

Asslotance

R-2-0
Career Line at...
1-800.526-5606
Extension 111
Apply online at...

Profit Sharing
•
Paid Vacations
Paid Holidays
Employee Discounts
Bonuses
Life Insurance
Growth/Advancement
ICoolle11e Assistance

MERCERVILLE - South
Gallia High School Boosters
meeting, 7 :30 p.m., high
school, cafeteria.
GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
Columbus will hold have thier
monlhly dinner meeting at
the Down Under restaurant,
6:30p.m.
Tueaday,Feb.26
EWINGTON - American
Legion· Post 161, 7:30 p.m.,
Ewlngton Academy.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Kenneth Swain will conduct Bible study al Gospel
Tabemacle, 7 p.m.

'
Saturday, March 2
.
WELLSTON - "Salurday
Card Showers
Night Uve; 6 p.m., . PenteMa~orie Green will be celecostal Holiness House of brating her 85th birthday on
Prayer, 23965 Ohio 93 Feb. 25. Cards may be sent
South,"Wellston. For details, to her at 1253 Sugar Creek
call 740-384·5230 or 384- Road , Crown City, Ohio
3372.
45623.
Monday, March 4
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
City Schools Academic
Boosters Club annual spring
meeting, 7 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, State Street,
Gallipolis, 7 p.m.

Revival
Wedneaday, Feb. 27
CROWN CITY - Revival
GALLIPOLIS- Grief Sup- at Crown · City Wesleyan
port group will meet at the . Church, Feb. 25-March 1
Down Under restaurant, with Curtis Sheets preaching,
noon.
Bruce Coleman singing.
PORTER - Bible study at
Clark Chapel, 7 p.m., with
Brolher Steve Rollins .
ThUI'Iday, Feb. 28
ATHENS - .Survivors of
Suicide support group will
meet at Athens Church of
Christ, 785 W. Union St. ,
Athens . All welcome, call
i93-7414 for Information .

CHESTER
Special
meeting, Shade River Lodge
453, work in Fellowcraft
HARRISONVILLE - Har- '·degree, 7 p.m. Entered
risonville Senior Citizens apprentice degree, 8 p.m.
Monday, 11 a.m. firehouse. Refreshments.
.
Potluck dmner. Blood pressures will be taken: .
WEDNESDAY
·· ·
.
' · · · '., POMEROY- Middleport

.

RACINE- Southern Local · Literary Club, 2 p.m.
School Board meeting, Mon- Wednesday, Trinity yhurch,
day, 7 p.m., at lhe Elemen- Pomeroy. Author Irene Brand
tary Building.
to be guest speaker. Pat
Holter to review "Child of Her
Heart" by Brand.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Junior and
THURSDAY
Rita White and Ralph Cook,
POMEROY
Ewings
entertaining at Meigs Senior ·c;hapter, Sons of the AmeriCenter, Tuesday, 11 a.m.
can Revolution, · Thursday,

-

!:», tf, tf
tJ

••

Mkrodenn•braslon is the use of a contmUed strum of mkromlaeral CI')'Stals 'in exfoliate the skin.

MlcrodennabrasJon Is a ·highly effective treatment for acne/Kne
prone/acne Kars, nne lines/wrinkles and hy&amp;)erplgmented
(dis&lt;:oloratlon) skin. The skin will appear clearer, brighter, fresher
and bealtbler after the Orst treatment,

Every Baby
Deserves A
Shot At Ufe

Skin Care will consist of exf0Uatlng facials using natural 1 antllrrltantJ noo-c:bemkal products which 'Increase the ~.:ootent of
collagen and elostln In the skin. The benefit of exfollallon (peeling
tlte dead cdls rrom lhe epidermis) can be seen after one fadal, Use of
t1&amp;e produdo on a weekly basis will lean Skin with a professionally

cleansed and healthier

DISH!

hydrotlon.

For more lnronnation about microdermabrasion and
skin care call 446-1991 and talk with Sandra
McFarland, Proresslonal Choice Electrology Services,
760 1st Avenue, Gallipolis•

(740) 441 ·2950 or your

local heaHh care provider.

•
;

as
low
as
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE

dltii0-1V'Y'~

' mE!IItlkPioltaianol

-11199 vtlot).Juo
. -1DAmorit.o'oTap!O

•

f11ronlt 122.89 ptr IICIIdl

"'lid,._~~ c.rd lnd 12-month t"'O''Immtnwnt ,. . . .
Product lot P'Oft'ltlllm m.t~r ~ . -, rJmtnUI-c:tllfiCII or
diiQI!Itin\lld J'flllm bllld 011 M illllillly.

Variable after the first six months, not to exceed 24%. Subj~:ct to credit
approval. Maximum term of 10 years. Minimum credit line'Qf$7,500.00.
Closing fee of$99.00. Annual fee of$50.00. Appraisal required ($125$225). Other restrictions may apply. Rate is subject tQ change.
• APR rate based on 80% loan-to-value.

OHIO VALLEY BANK

nARtMZERS
(740) 288-7413
Career Line at...
1-800.526-5606
Extension 111
Ann tv online at...

.420 Third Avenue

1-866-660-5600

446-2831

'

SuperBank

SuperBank

just lnsJcla Food/a ld
0 •••••

just Imide ~-Mcr1

.iwe-2188

a

r

'

. ..

}At Imide Sr:Ne-A·I.Ot

441·3575 •

,

. 992-23$7
I

\

·

..SuperBank

....

All products are deslped 10

Improve acne and rosacea, lighten skin discoloration and provlde

Children need 80%
of their vaccinations In the
first two years of life.
For more information: ·
call the G.allla County
HeaHh Dept. at

Capital Line

• , Goo t mEIIISII~

KP~JE•rance.

impede efTects of tbe normal aging process on skin, nght nne lines,

••••ty

Hom

ne cryslllls art blown onto the

epidermal cell structure Increasing the skin's elasticity and collagen.

be::

•

Community Calendar Is
published as a free service
to nonprofit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar Is not designed to promote sales or fund-raisers
of any type. Heins are printed as . space pennlts and
cannot be guaranteed to
appear. Fax IIams to · 4463008; e-mail · them to
news@mydaliytrlbune.com.

Two new services are being offered .
by PROFESSIONAL CHOICE
ELECTROLOGY SERVICES according to
Sandra McFarland, Licensed ·
Electrologist. These services are
· microdermabrasion and skin care.

Meigs museum. Dinner 6:30 .
POMEROY
Meigs .p.m. by reservation only to
County Health Departmenl, made two days prior to meetchildhood Immunization clin- ing. Program, 7:30 p.m., By
ic, Tuesday, 9 to 11 a.m., 1 to Jeff Higley of Londonderry,
3 p.m. at office. Take child's collector of Meigs County
shot records. Children must postal history with slide
be
accompanied
by preservation. Call 992-7874
parent/legal guardian. Call for dinner reservations.

..

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Revival at Lifeline Apostolic Church, W.Va. 2 North,
with Evangelist Jerry Mills,
Feb. 21-23 at 7 p.m.

surface of the ·skJa (epldennis) and then gently vacuumed orr,
clearlna aDd remodng dead cells. This process rqcne111tes the

Health Department (9926626) to be sure vaccine Is
available before attending the
clinic.

~· ··

~ 7:15, ti

•

Health ltwurance

401-k

ADDISON
Sunday
School at Addison Fr-Ill
Baplilst Church, 10 a.m.;
preaching service at 6 p.m.
with Rick Barcus preaching .

:i··

•

Are
ready to
. your new career?
Experience helpful...
Winning attituile and
energy a must!

SUnday, Feb. 24

-···

••
aJ(alinl Are
ready to sta:rt
your new career?
EXperience helpful...
Winning attitUde and
energy a must! ,

GALLIA COUNTY CALENDAR

Monday, Feb. 25

•

1!:"~~·!Sharing

'

and decreased amounts of salt.
If you drink alcoholic beverages, do so in moderation and
if you take medication to
lower blood pressure, take it as
prescribed.'
For more information
about the DASH diet and
other Healthy Heart studies,
ple~se · contact the Gallia
County Health Department
at 441-2950 or 441-2959.The
nursing staff at the h~alth
department is available to take
blood pressures daily from . 8
a.m. until 4 p.m.
You can also visit the special
website
at
http:/dash.bwh.Harvard.edu,
or to hear recorded messages
about high blood pressure
treatment and prevention, call
toll-free 1-800-575-WELL
(9355).
aanet. Johnson, R.N, is a
ntme al the Gallia County
Health .Department.)

I

:scholarships

~:

.

R.N.

•

·F1ve Ciallia Countians
receive Rio Grande
..

.'

BY JANEl' JOHNSON,

Pomeroy o Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio o Point P11uant, wv

.

•
'·

43113.)

What is high blood pressure?

-../

. Sunda~Feb.24,2002

.

"

r
'

r

�\

•

'

Entertainment
•

Ratings high
·for popular
military drama
LOS ANGELES (AP) - 'JAG,"
network television's only military
themed show, has enlisted new
viewers and critical attention this
year.
"Since 9-11, I have done more
interviews than I did in the prior six
seasons of the show," says Donald
Bellisario, creator and eXI!cutive producer of the show that's airing it! .
150th episode Thesday.
The show's higher profile has been
matched by its ratings. For the season to date, the CBS drama about
intrepid military attorneys working
for the Judge Advocate General
Corps is 12th in households among
all prime-time programs compared
to 28th last year, according to
Nielsen Media Researi:h. '
Network TV's last military drama,
"China Beach," which ended , in
} 991 •. had the anti-war sensibil.ity of .
the V1emam War era m which 1t was
set. 'JAG" strikes a less dissonant
tone, one that's proved right for its
time.
·
Bellisario can "take a genre and
concept that sounds like it's 20 years
old and is able to turn them into
good, solid, old-fashioned TV entertainment," said educator and media
observer Robert Thompson.
Bellisario made his name in TV
with the To111 Selleck detective series
"Magnum, P.l." (1980-88) and the
1989-93 sci-fi drama "Quantum
Lean" with Scoa Bakula.

MILITARY JUSTICE- Actors David James Elliott and Catherine Bell, shown
in this undated file photo, star in the CBS military drama ·JAG." The series,
about military attorneys working for the J.udge Advocate General, airs its
150th episode on Tuesday. (AP) ·
·

"JAG" shows the same Bellisario Supreme Court drama "First Montouch: Solid, well-crafted and well- day," also on CBS.)
"JAG" (8 p.m. EST Tuesday) stars
cast drama that is reliably entertainDavid James Elliott as dashing Navy
mg.
The veteran producer prides him- Cmdr. Harmon Rabb, a pilot turned
self on being a micromanager lawyer. .Catherine Bell plays Marine
involved in writing, rewriting and Lt. Col. Sarah MacKenzie, fellow
editing. (For now, he's doing double JAG attorney and his on-again, offduty with "JAG" and his new aP"ahl tnvt&gt;: lntPr,...o.:t

PageC6

2002

Ohio • Point PleaSant WV

sunday, Febru•ry :14, 20021

BIG BEND • 700 W. MAIN ST. - POMEROY

•I
•

After a rocky start - NBC can- decided -with the nerwork's bless-:
ing- to focus more on law and less!
celed the show after a season .
'
audiences discovered the program on act1on.
•I
.
when it moved to CBS.
Another change came in the gov-1
"I think Don Bellisario realized ernment cooperation given "JAG." l
when 'JAG' came out that we were
"What they saw by the end of the:
now living in a very different world
second year was we have very attrac-:'
than in the years immediately after
Vietnam and Watergate," said tl·ve • honorable men and women••
Thompson, director of the Center who were very effective at doing
for the Study of Popular Television their jobs," he said. "I think that fact;
at Syracuse University. "There were that recruitment went up on;
major shifts in the American.heart in Wednesday mornings after the shoW:
regard to the military:'
might have had something to do:
Part of it had to do with the end with it."
:
of the Cold War, part of it with seeWith the . Navy's blessing, "JAG";
ing America's "Gulf War muscles can now film aboard carriers and a~
flexed in a satisfactory way,"Thompbases in San Diego and elsewhere in:
son added.
The bulk on,
.
Bellisario, who said he's always felt Southern California.
like the odd man out in what he production takes place at a ·studio:
calls "very, very left" Hollywood, had north of Los Angeles which include~
'
· no resel'Vations about doing a pro- shipboard and other sets.
military series. The first TV show he
Incorporating current eventsi
worked on was the 1976-78 World 'JAG" will end the season with "'
War !I drama "Baa Baa Black multi-episode story in which i~
Sheep."
characters are called on to thwart ari
But ''JAG" seems to have its roots ai-Qaida terrorist plot.
more in good storytelling than poliBellisario believes the ratings jumP,'
. tics.
Eight years ago, after reading news has more to do with the competi-:
reports on the deployment of the tion than with the nation's patriotiC:
first female aviators to. carrier ships, high. Last season "JAG" faced ABC's
Bellisario began working on a sc~ipt then powerful "Who Wants to be ~
· about a woman flier who ends up a Millionaire"; this year it's "finding
murder victim.
easier going against sitcoms lik~
"I had to find out who investigates "Dharma &amp; Greg." .
,
these things," he reca lled. "When I
Certainly, he says, the show's basi~
found out JAG officers prosecute,
mission hasn't changed since the:
defend and investigate, all with the
shattering events of la.&lt;t fall.
same people, I thought, 'Wow, what
"We didn't discover our patriotisni
a franchise: I sold it to NBC as a
kind of combination of 'Top Gun' Qn 9-11 ," he said. "We've always
been a show that's pro-military bui
meets 'A Few Good Men ."~
•
In moving to CBS, Bellisario notjingoistic."
•

ftole Cldekea-

Leg

Lb.

•

An Internet game plays on the
unpredictability of Bob Dylan
NEW YORK (AP) - He
may not know it, but when
Bob Dylan signals his band to
start a song onstage Friday
night in Dallas, more than
1,000 people far from the
axena are keenly interested in
his choice.
'
Fans of the veteran troubadour have launched an intricate Internet pool built on
their predictions of what
Dylan sings in concert. ·
The pool reflects both the
obsessive interest Dylan still
draws 40 years into his career
and the way this ro.;ad warrior
.bas structured his career. He
generally plays more than 150
concerts a year.
For the fans, it's mostly fun.
"If I ever got a chance to
meet him, I'd say 'thanks,"'
said one player, Becky Dalton,
of Westminster, Calif. "I'm
almost 49, and he makes me
feel 16 when I go to see him.
He'd probably look at us and
say, 'get a life."'
Dylan is into the second
decade of what is jokingly
called his "Never-Ending
Tour." He's typically on the
road for a month or rwo at a
time, rests for a few weeks,
then starts anew.
I There are · 1,054 people
from 50 countries competirtg

still active, could have probably done it. Phish, now on
hiatus, had a similar game
going, Louie said.
Dylan usually plays around
20 songs 1a night. During a 35date concert swing last fall, he
played 92 different songs, Louie
said. The pool has exhaustively
catalogued his current tour: ·
"Blowin' in the Wind;' "Hanest With Me" and "Summer
Days" were played on each of
the first 14 dates.
Twelve different songs,
including "Visions ofJohanna"
and "Simple Twist of Fate;•
were performed only once.
Dylanologists study his set
lists posted every morning
after concerts for tendencies.
They've noticed he's begun
most concer,ts lately with an
acoustic cover· tune, and has
been performing a lot ofsongs
from his Granuny-nominated
album, "Love and Theft."
That might be expected-.
artists usually try to promote
their latest albums on tour but it hasn't always been the
case with DY.lan.
His unpredictability is legendary. Larry Shapiro, 46, an
environmental attorney from
New York City, says he's
moved up to 149th place in
the current . competition

in the Internet pool for his
current set of dates, which
ends Sunday in Austin. He
returns on April 5 in Sto"ckholm for a five-week European swing.
The pool .was started a year
ago by 24-year-old Canadian
graduate student and computer expert Arthur Louie, and
has quickly grown.
· Participants pick · a set of
son(~.', which axe given point
values: low fur the son~ Dylan
plays most frequently, high for
the songs he plays rarely.
It's a game that could be
created around very few
· artists. For one thing, not
many perform· as much as
Dylan." Por another, most acts
are so tightly choreographed
their set lists change very littl~. if at all, fiom dey to city.
The Grateful J.?ead, while

mostly because he's given up -. .
trying to stay a step ahead of
the maestro.
· "It's a frightening thought
to think that anybody can
think like Bob;' he said.
Winners of the game can
. Specializing in total
· actually win prizes, though
hip and knee replacement
Dylan might not appreciate
, them. The grand prize for the
current competition is a CD
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
box set of bootlegged Dylan
concerts.
SportsMedicine Grant &amp; Orthopedic AHociates
Does Dylan himself know
about the game? That's cause '
For Initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total joint
for speculation on the Dylan
replacement, we offer office hours at 3554 U.S. Route
pool; his spokesman, Elliott
60 East, Barboursville, WV.
Mintz, thinks not. Mintz
wrote down the Web address
Our next sllnlc date Is Friday, March 15..
when told about the game to
Call (614) 461·8174 1-800-371-4790 for an appointment.
check .it out himself.
"To my knowledge, he
Grant Medical
Center
doesn't spend any time
• ru.
online," Mintz said. "He's not
,
OhioHj!alth
big cpmputer guy."

MORE LOcAL NEWS. MORE LOCAtFOLKS;
'
,., :::J!
.

Subscribe today.
446-2342 .
,-.~

.~

i .'~··

· ;'"it

•

SAVE•A•LOT

ENGAGEMENT RINGS

99

2%
aoothl
your body.

• All size extra long
for added ·comfort

Large

Gallon

MILK
'From Solitaires to 'Bridal
Sets:'For .tlie largest selection
of today~ best styles
!lfi/IJOiue priced·
Check us out before yo11
decide.

Grade "A"

EGGS

Dozen

Sprite, Diet, or

Coea Cola

Vine Ripe

CLASSIC

TOMATOES

FLAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

12 Roll

,RAND ~·1111 "'"PI!UIIUTOitCilUNYPRICIIi

Rl.1, Gallipolis Ferry, WV 67!·1371

3 Lb. Bag

Northern

Yellow

BATH.

ONIONS

TISSUE
COMPLICATED GUY - Bob Dylan sits at Madison Square
Garden In New York in this May 12, 2001 file photo. Fans of
the veteran troubadour have launched an Intricate Internet
pool built on their predictions of what Bob Dylan sings In con·
cert. (AP)
.

------------------111(
The

Joint Implant Center

or

~~·~~

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.
Boneless Frozen 40 oz.

Cataract Surgery ·

"Mrs. Jones. It looks like you have a cataract In your len
. We need to schedule you for cataract removal.' Every
countless people hear the same words. Some patients
be frightened and maybe·evert alittle surprised when they
they have a cataract.
·
Cataracts are normal. They usually occur as a result of the
1a~1n~ process. Fortunately, cataract removal today Is simple,
~~~11e, and effective. That's a stark contrast from the past.
before Implants were available, At that time, the surgery was
much more Invasive and surgery was fairly unpredictable. ,
newer technology and techniques enable the "cloUded"
or cataract, to be removed through a-very smalllnc!slon.
·Implant Is then usually folded through this hole to replace
the eye's natural lens.
Most cataract surgeries today are done on an outpatient
. Usually, you're In and out the same day. Most people
they are · moving around and seeing better In a
ls~f~~~~~~~~ short time. Sec your optometrist for complete
II
If you suspect cataracts.

·Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

'

.

.

$!!. 99

Chicken Breasts or Tenders . .

Prominade Ice Cream

Mrs. Paul's 24.6 oz.

Fish Sticks 44 Count

.12 Count- Fudge Bars OR
12 Count Ice Cream Bars

Hillshire Farms

24 Count

Srnoked Sausage • Lb.

Junior Pops - Pkg. ,

Farmington 1 Lb.

BlueBonnet

Sliced ·Bacon - Pkg.

Margarine - 1 Lb. Box

Gwalty 1 Lb.

Fresh 24 oz.

Sliced Bacon - Pkg.

79'

Cottage Cheese • Pkg.

'

'I'

•••

,,

Chicken Noodle or

Tomato Soup - 10.5 oz.

SJ99

3 Lb. Tub.

SJ99

Fresh- 1 Lb

49'

15 oz. Can

Margarine - Pkg.
Saltine Crackers • Pkg.
Ravioli • Can
Wylwood 46 oz.

SJ79

33 Varieties
·vegetables • Can

2002. We reserve the

.

..

j

•j

99'
59'
69'

Tomato Juice - Can

Orange Juice • Gallon

Fish Portions- Pkg.

thru Sat. March
. !

SJ99

Fresh GallonI

Portside 24 oz.

a

,,

Assorted Flavors 1/2 Gallon

!

33'

•
'

�..
Pomeroy • Mlddleport • Glllllpolla, Ohio • Point Ptuunt, WV

-..

--

.....

Sundey,Feb.24,~

AT 1HE MoVIES: 'R.EruRN ro NEVER LAND'
8Y MALCOLM RITTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

It would uke mo... pixie
dust than Tinker Bell can
muster to make "Return to
Never Land" fly.
Young children might be
dnwn in by the color and
the action in Disney's animated sequel to its 1953 classic, "Peter Pan."· But for
grown-ups who might have
high expectations based on
the original, the story falls ·
flat.
The story starts out in
London during World War
Il's dark days. Wendy has
grown up; she's now the
mother of two young children, Jane (voiced by Harriet
Kate Owen) .and a toddler
brother. Wendy '· has kept the
faith about Peter Pan and
Never Land, but Jane dismisses it all as childish nonsense.

Page Dl

"Peter Pan isn't real," she ker Bell to set him free. This
decla...s. "People don't fly." · time, in contnst to the origWell, Disney wiU take care inal movie, it's Jane who gets
of that attitude! Jane is kid- to appear dramatically on the
napped from her home by yardarm to ""'ue Peter, her
Captain Hook (voiced by hair flowing he~ically in the
Corey Burton imitating the breeze.
late H•ns Conried, who did
At a "'cent screening, a
the original). Hook takes couple of disappointed sixthJane to . Never Land. Peter grade boys called the show
Pan (voiced by Blayne predictable, and they're right.
Weaver) rescues her, but Jane It's just not •n engaging
is not interested in sticking story. Even the 1991 livearound with him •nd the action sequel "Hook," which
Lost Boys, whom she dis- was overbearingly sweet and
misses as "a bunch of silly. sentimental, was more comridiculoqs child...,n." She pelling.
wonts to go home.
"Return to Never Land"
As Peter observes, "She acts pays homage .to the original
"P~ter Pan" at every turn.
kind of like a grown-up."
Nonetheless, Petet and the · But Hook's old nemesis the
boys eventually win. her. over • croeodile' has. been replaced THE SEQUEL - This promotional Image shows animated characters Peter Pan and Jane, the
and help her get ·'ip touch· by II huge octopus that, pops daughter of a now groWtWp Wendy, In a scene from • Return to Neverland, • the sequel to Walt
with her inner child·- right . its 'suction cups as if snapping Disney's 1953 classic cartoon "Peter Pan. • Oth11r upcoming Disney video-sequels Include "Cin·
before Hook .~a.ptures Peter fingers, an echo of the croc's derella II: Dreams Come true: "Dumbo II," 'The Jungle Book II" and "The Hunchback of Notre
and takes him back to the' ticking clock. It's an annoy- Dame II" as the studio resurrects classic animated characters for a series of lucrative followship. It's up to Jane and Tin- ing gimmick.
ups. (AP Photo/Walt Disney Co.)
·
.

Sundlly. Februery 2C. 2002

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart slwws lww local stocks of interest ~rfomwl last wuk.
Each day~ closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

41.76

41 .58

41 .46

41.94

, ~ .~·

I

THE BIG TIME - Point Pleasant native Steve Knight has grown from racing the streets of Mason County to the 24 Hours
of Le Mans. HIs team took second place in the world last year and are hoping for the top spot In 2002.

Native dimbillg to the top

G~t 225 An~ime

M1nutes for $20*.

Point Pleasant man
makes mark on
the racing world

*a $10 savings for the first three months
IN REVIEW - May models a long black stretch silk gown with

Or

aqua and lilac beading in 'The Living Room' of Nicole Miller
during the Fall 2002 fashion show held in New York. (AP Photo
1 Stuart Remson)

BY MARK HALUIURN
MHALLBURN@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

It's a case of a hometown boy mak. ing good. ·
Point Pleasant native Steve Knight is
making a name for himself in the road
racing industry. He is ranked as the
world's fourth best road racer, but he's
far from satisfied.
Last year, Knight's team placed 2nd
in the Le Mans Prototype 675 Kilos
Class, losing first place by only two
points. In the American Le M•ns
Series, his team had two wins, one
pole, aqd six podiums. •
That comes after he took second

·600 Anytime
Minutes for $39.99.

Fall Fashion Week continues
with Blass, Hannant BCBG
NEW YORK (AP)- Pick ric swatch from an Arnishyour' favorite aunt's .old-fash- weave ·tablecloth, which his
ioned country.quilt. Add some mother had .mailed . to him.
cherished, though vaguely from Sweden. His holiday trip
sha:hby, upholstered chairs that to Vermont country inns
have been in your family for helped further ,the notion.
The showstopper was a
generations. Decorate with
charming, old-time wallpaper. floor-length silk patchwork
Helpful hints from Martha apron, shown over a burgundy
Stewort? No, just suggestions !Weed evening skirt with a red
for patterns and fabrics for cashmere
sweater.
The
trendy dressing next fall, seen embroidery on the apron took
in the Fashion Week collec- about 300 hours, Nilsson said.
tions displayed Tuesday.
Why quilts?
Lars Nilsson, designing for
"Because of the uncertain
Bill Blass, created prints world situation, I think that
· inspired by early . American people are seeking mo..., secuquilts, while designer Douglas rity, comfort and coziness:·
Hannant showed fabrics
Nilsson said.
niscent of vintage furniture
Before designing his fall
upholstery and waUpa11er.
II . .
D gl
, 1 d 2002 co ectton,
ou •s
. h"rd "
In h ts
t
1
se&gt;Son
as
ea
"'
H
d
.d .
Nil
b. d . . annant starte contempIat-~·
fh
H
estgner,
sson com me ; · tL
L h
I " ks f hi mg ne conuor1 o ome. e
tne omespun oo o
S• • I k d
.
.
II
· sweden Wit· h Amen-. . oo. e at V1ctonan wa paper
nattve
· pnnts and upholstery, and by
.
h
can a, sen d mg
and-woven
. h e was done W!tn
· L th e
.
th e time
. .
patterns rerrumscent of Amtsh
.
.
designs and Swedish folkloric collectiOn, hiS favored col~r
textiles down the runway. was Wedgwood _blue, and hiS
Embroidered patchwork bed- fabnc for a btg, sweepmg
spread-like prints · covered be1ge coat resembled creweleverything from ankle-grazing w?,rk upholstery.. .
~ started thmkmg ,about
wool coats 10 long silk skirts
and cashmere sweaters. The hentage, that old 18th-centu-·
message was in the mix, with ry cha~r that has been in your
multiple patterns in one out- family s house for generations,
fit; even knee-high, high- or that ptece that was handed
heeled boots got the patch- down by your great-grandwork treatment.
mother, and that old thrift
"Lars took the quilt to a store piece," said Hannant,
whole new level," said Suze who showed a hand-embroiYalof • Schwartz, executive de...,d jacket inspired by 19thfashion di...,ctor of Glamour . century English porcelain.
magazine, eyeing a deep purSince the appeal Was the
pie evening gown with patch- comfort of the familiar, many
work quilted embroidery. "It of his fabrics look weatherwas a really clever dress. It's beaten and lived-in. It's a
like 'The Waltons go to Man- worn-in kind of chic, in
hattan; the whole homespun, which an expensive jacket can
patchwork Americana pio- have small holes, intentionally
neer."
placed. A red plaid mohair
Nilsson said the idea started cape jacket had shredded
with a mid-20th-century fab- threads.

'

."

'

.'

'

.

Both include 300.0 .
Night and Weekend
Minutes.
',

Time for planting
trees, shrubs

....ru-

Abby

from PageC1

Eeny, meeny, ·
•
m1ney, mo.

.••

r••

INVEST.ING

r

~~ There~ money to be

Ofound in new markets
BY DIAN VUJOVJCH

Nokia252c
for 1¢.

NEWSP¥'ER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION

Investment opportunities
aren't limited to only companies located within the borders
, of the United States. Emerging
markets around the globe can,
.: .and have in the past, "'ward
. investors.
It's easy to fall ipto the
groove of inveSting only in
. ,funds that invest their assets in
• U.S. companies. Doing so fits
·. the bill for many fund
_investors . .But there's a great
. big world out there that's full
. of opportunities, too.
··. "We are looking in parts of
. "the world that presently have
· more than two-thirds of the
·. world's
population," says
. Rajeev Bhaman, portfolio
· manager of the Oppenheimer
· Developing Markets . Fund
· · (800) 525-7048. "So we have a
· · fairly large canvas to paint on
:. and to select some good com-

Add aShareTalk"" line
free. for three months.

of me.
(8) Please don't do things
over for me. Somehow that
makes me feel that my efforts
. didn't quite measure up to
your expectations. I know it's
,Pauline Phillips anq her
hard, l&gt;ut please don't try to daughterJeanne Phillips share the
compare me with' my brother pseudonym Abigail Min Buren.
or sister.
Write Dear Abby at www. Dear(9) Please don't be afraid to Abby.c~m or P.O. Box 69440, .
leave for a weekend together. Los Angeles, CA 90069.

order at home. FREE delivery

1•888•BUY•USCC
uscellular.com

f&lt; u.s. cen:War
.

We connect with

you~

panies from."
Investing in developing markets 1;11eans taking on additional risks, having patience, and a
willingness to tolente volatile
markets. For instance, while
the Developing Market Fund
was up 5.57 percent year-todilte::sgh Feb. 13, last year
5.7 percent; at
it was
year-en
00 it was down 5.3
percent; and in 1999, up 82.3
percent.
Bharnan likes to keep about
60 to 80 stocks in the fund's
portfolio - . right now there
are about 65. The countries
where most of its assets a...
currently invested . include
India, Brazil, Mexico and
Korea. Here's mo..., from him
about the
Oppen heimer
Developing Markets · Fund,
(ODMAX).
Q: Tell me about a couple of
the fund's holdings.

PI . , .....rt.la,DI
'

'

. · Have • business news Item?
Give us • call • (740) 'ue-2M2. ext. n ·.
Jl

I

same time. Not always an easy task. AI!
of my friends still live in Point Pleasant, although I wish I could see them
more."
Knight's style of rocing dates back to
the early1900's when manufacturers
would take their cars on the open road
to prove their levels of endurance.
"Nowadays," Knight said, "road racing is held on purpose-built race .
tracks such as mid-Ohio, or Road
Atlanta."
Knight prefers road racing to oval
and dragstrip racing because it's the
total driving experience.
"In this kind of racing, you get to
turn left and right, and go up and
down hills. Nascar racing, you make a
lot of left turns, and drag racing is just
a straight ride." 1
Then · there's the endurance issue.
Knight spends hours behind the

Pluse ... Netlv., D8

(

Plus, Nationwide Long Distance.

Kills need vacations from parents, just as parents need vaca. tions from kids. Besides, it's a
g...,at way to show us kids that
your marriage is very special.
(1 0) Please take me to Sunday. school and church regularly. setting a good example
for me to follow.' I enjoy
learning more about God .

place in the American Cities Racing
League's overall championship points
for the S-1600 Class in 2000.
Knight grew up in Point Pleasant.
His father and mother, Bill and Betty,
still live here. Bill, and Bill's father,
A.R. Knight, used to own the Mason
County Motor Company, along with
dealerships in Gallipolis and Pomeroy.
Steve graduated Point Pleasant High
School in 1972, then headed off to
college at Marshall University before
transferring to Miami of Ohio where
he graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor's Degree in business.
After moving to Colorado, Steve
earned a Masters Degree in International Business from the University of
Denver.
"I remember Point Pleasant as a nice
town to grow up in," Steve said. "We
were always trying to find fun things
to do and stay out of trouble at the

&lt;!

'•

I''·~

I

.,

Are ' you considering
planting shrubs and trees in
your landscape? March
planting allows . newly
planted trees and shrubs to
develop a root system
before their leaves emerge
from dormant buds.
Now is a great time ro
design your planting plan.
Take a piece of graph paper,
tape measure, pencil and
some time to walk around
the area that needs to be
landScaped. Take measurements of the space you
want to P.lant. Remember
that plantS will grow and
you need to leave room for
this growth.
For example, a young
flowering ctabapple may be
only eight feet taU and three
feet wide at planting, but
will grow, depending upon
variety, up to 15 feet taU and
25 feet wide. If you planted
this crabapple near a building it needs to be at least 13
feet away, so the branches
won't rub against the waU.
Mature height and widt:!t
measurements of shrubs
and trees 'may be found in
extension bulletins, extension fact sheets and gardening books. Sketching out
the 'Ciesign with the plants
on it gives a blueprint as to
whet:e plants should be
planted, how many plants
are needed and overall size
of the landscipe area.
Prepare the soil in ' the
new landscape area by taking a soil sample, improving
surface drainage (perhaps a
raised bed), amending the
soil per the soil sample
results and digging up the
·' ground. Many homeowners and farmers will spray
with. "Round-Up" weed
killer to kill offweeds .within the area ~o be plarited. If
possible; sptay the fall before

..._____..

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

you want to plant for more
effective weed conttol. If
spraying in the spring, aUow
seven to 10 days to elapse
before digging. The dying
grass may be buried in the
landscape area and will add
organic matrer for the new
· landscape bed.

•••
Consider planting wind
breaks around your farm
and yard. Evergreen trees
like Norway spruce and
whitd pine or combinations
of ~rgreens and poplars
can be planted to lift the
wind up and aW'JJ{ fi:om
your lhouse and driveway.
In 'Ohio State University's fact sheet F2-3 entided
"Windbreaks;' it is suggested that a three-row windbreak be planted.
Plant trees six feet apart
in a row and 10 feet
between rows to maximize
the benefits of the windbreak. The trees should be
100 to 150 feet 3WJ:f fi:om
the area being protected
and not more than 300 feet.
When trees grow 25 feet
tall, wind speed may be
reduced up to 50 percent.
For further information
request factsheet, · "Windbreaks" F2-3.

...

Homeowners are you
interested in what is new in
home improvements and
gardening ideas? Get out of
the ~ouse and travel to the

PluHIHKn-,DI

In which educational
program should I enroll?
There are several different
types of institutions that
offer educational services ·in
the State of Ohio. Each
institution provides various
degrees, certificates and
training programs. I will
describe the programs and
the benefits of each so that
you can make the decision
about which is best for you.
Vocational
trammg
schools offer a wide variety
of training programs and
options. Most are shortterm training courses lasting
five to 12 months in areas
such as cosmetology, auto
mechanics, business . and
other trades. Most of the
educational progroms are
concentrated on troining an
individual for immediate
entry into the workforce.
Community and technical
colleges offer several different types of programs,
including associate degrees
and certificates. Certificate
programs show that a student has completed coursework in a concentrated area
of study such as word processing. The certificate program can usually be completed in one full year of
study, allowing for the student to be employed imme.diately.
Associate degree programs
include a more intense curriculum that is balanced
with a ·heavy dose of techni-.
cal courses and a number of
general study classes. These
degree
programs
are
_ designed to prepare students
for a career in a technical
occupation such as nursing,
electronics, medical laboratory technology, or information technology:
'An · associate degree program ~an normally be com-..
pleted in two years of fulltime study, making it a very

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VIEW

affordable college degree to
obtain. Community colleges
also offer the opportunity
. for students to complete the
first tWo · years· of their
degree at a smaller, less
expenSive, student-friendly
institution before transferring to a larger school.
Four- year colleges and
universities offer a variety of
bachelor's degree programs
from which to choose.
Depending on· the institution, students may- choose
from programs as diverse as
teaching, chemistry, engineering or architecture. A
bachelor's degree program
offers a broad array of courses . designed to produce a
well-rounded individual at
the completion .of the program.
While students must take
a large number of classes in
their field of study, they must
also take a se ries of general
studies courses and a series
of electives chosen by the
·student. Students usually
complete a bachelor's degree
in four years of full-time
study. After completing the
bachelor's degree, students
. can go on to complete a
master's degree or eve n a
doctorate
degree. . The
amount of time needed to
complete these enhanced
degrees varies from program
to program.
Now that we have

PluM ... llowlllan, Dl

••

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

P-. D2 • 6anU, ~i mn -IHntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleaunt, WV

Sunday, Feb.24,2002

~rtbttne -

Public Notice

c
L
A

s·
s
I

F
I
E
D·

s
I

•

The O.lllpolle City
Civil
Service
Commlealon will to.
conducting
en
nomination for
Pollee 0111- to to.
111ven et tile Gellle
COunty Court ltoull,
Second
Floor
llileetlng Room, II II ·
LOCUli
Street ,
Ollllpolle, OH, on
l'uladly, Mercll 11,
2002 11 12:00 noon
enct 11 7:00 P.M. Till
Civil
Service
Commluton will
certify tile Pilling
eppllcenll to 1111 City
Menoger end the
Cllt.f of POllee, to to.
conoldered
for
employment by the
Gelllpolle City Pollee
lleplrlmlnL
Requirement• 11t
by the Commleelon
In order to teke thla

examlnltlon are ••

lollowa:
•
· 1 • 21 yllro ijhge
· or older

2. _H igh

school
greduate or GED
equlvant
3. Weight 1nd
·hllglll proporllonate
An application for
liking the teat mull
be compt.ted et the
Golllpolle
City
Building, Pollee
Recorda Depertment
prior to Tuelldly
Merch 5, 2002, 11 4:30
P.M.
A $15.00
ldmlnlatratlon fee
will be due 11 the
I I - of appllcetlon, In
the form of ceah,
money order or
certified Iunde.
AppiiCinll thll Ire
certified
for
conelderetlon of
employment mey be
required to pea'o •
compllle phyelcll
exlmlnatlon, fl111rme
proficiency teat,
phyalcel eglllty 1111,
polygroph

examlnltlon,

and

BULLETIN BOARD

-TRIVIA
Michael Vartan . (Alias) ,
nephew of French actress Sylvie
Vartan. wanted to be a pro pool
player before he decided to be·
come an actor.

Do you have a local·

•

ALL-AMERICAN
LONGABERGER BUS TOUR!
Dresden and Homestead.
Basket Included. Awesome Prizes!
Fun Guaranteed!
6-t 5-02.
Seatin~ is limited, call now!
40-742-2624
NEBULIZER.
MEDICATION
• 65 or over
• Billed to insurance
• Little if no cost
• Free Delivery
e We do all paperworK
BOWMAN 'S HOMECARE
740-446-7283
1·800·458-6844

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For cOmPuter, Prolesslonsl Individual
and Business Tax preparation
ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
446-8677
735 Second Ave.
Electronic Tax Filing
Get your refund in as
little as 2 days

446-8727
The Downunder
OPEN
for Lunch
Try our Buffet

Gelllpolla City Civil
Service Comml11lon
~4.2002

SUPPLEMENT

CLASSIFIED

•
•

''

agent to help you?

paychologlcal profile.

February 15, 17, 20,

MEDICARE

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

Sentinel -

Call for a quote .

BASKET BINGO
Featuring Longaberger
Baskets and Pottery
March 2 at6:30 p.m.
$20 For 20 Games
Elk's Lodge Gallipolis
Food , Door Prizes, Special
Game for Canister Set
Benefiting Gallia Soccer
Limited Tickets Available at
Wood Realty or by calling
-. 379-2932
United Way of Gallia County
BENEFIT EVENT
"HOT TIME IN THE OLD TOWN"
Agala evening of entertainment
.and dining at the
DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT
MONDAY, FEB. 25
.
i Reservations:
446·2442, 446·2345
or 446·6400
$25.00 per person ...
includes dinner and donation .
Seating 6:45p.m.; Dinner 7~9
The Downunder
Wednesday Night Buffet
$8.95
4:30 pm til 8:00 pm
GARAGE SALE
Sat. March 2 - 9 to 5
Sun. March 3 · 2 to 5
2.4 miles out on Addison
Pike, Addison, OH,
on left • brown garage

FAST
Tax Refund Loans!
Get your cash in Minutes! ·
Call for details.
LOAN CENTRAL

Ronnie Lynch

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or ·
1-809-942-9577

The Lynch Agency,

-

In one week With us

446-8235
1-800-447-8235

Special Care Cleaning Service
t 743 Centenary Road, Gallipolis
WINTER SPECIAL
Carpel &amp; Furniture Cleaning
Limited Time Only
3 Rooms - $89.oo·
4 Rooms - $109.00•
5 Rooms· $119.oo·
' Add
A Room for $20.00
~;Deodorizing for $5.00 a room
• Scotchguard additional charge
CLEAN 1 SOFAAND
GET 1 CHAIR DONE FREE
• a roomIs up to 200 sq . 1t
100% NQ-RISK GUARANTEE
OFFER EXPIRES MARCH 31, 2002
CALL: 740-446-9585
OR 800-300-9585

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

·-

-· { '

2. ,&gt;

l\egi~ter
interest with one
year maturity
• Principal is guaranteed
• $5000 minimum
• Alter one year you can walk
away or reinvest
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agen_cy

(304) 675-1333
Or

'

.

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

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Prophets Quartet
will be singing at
MI. Zion Missionary Baptist
Church on
Valley View Drive,
Crown City; Ohio on
. Feb . .24 at 6:00 p.m.
Everyone Welcome

Word Ads

Display Ads

Daily ln·Cotumn : 1 :00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for Insert ion

All Display; 12 Noon 2
Bu siness Days Prior To

In Next Day 's P1per
Publlcetton
.
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p. m. SUrldiY DISplay : 1:00 p.m.
Fo r Sundays Paper
Thursday ror Sundays

S•

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
. Up .To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads M1.1st Be Prepaid

446-8235
1-800-447-8235
AE!SERVE A SEAT NOWII
It's not too !ate for you to get a
seat for our Senior Financial
Survivor Workshop.
• How to protect your assets
from illness and nursing
home cost.
• How to avoid probate.
When: Tuesda~ Feb. 26,2002
Time: 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Where: Senior Resource Center
1t 67 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

MISS GALLI A COUNTY
Independent Candidate
Applications now available
at Ohio Valley Bank main
office customer service desk
Deadline for entry: March 8

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

For More Info
...
'

.___=~:~;,_:,;~::.::...:::;~~~;;:::.:..::~~~~ 446~ 2342

c;.J.IlaC-.ty, OH

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235

1-800-447-8235

or 992-2156

Amulngll

~The Secret ot making girls

'

110 Help Wanted

like you. lalk live wllh
' beauiWul girls. Call Nowl

1·900·226-11140 Ext4449

···c··
Ill II

$3.99 per r}'llnule
Must be 18 yrs.
'Sarv-u

619-645-8434

ENTRY LEVEL
MANAGEMENT
Are you looking for an exciting ·and
MEDICAL
challenging career? lnfoCision
Management
Corp. is seeking individuals
TECHNOLOGIST
for entry-level management to add to our
MEDICAL LABORATORY ·
team in the Gallipolis location.
·
Responsibilities
include
managing
a
team
TECHNICIAN
of 7 to 15 people, client and prognim

In Memory
In Lo•lnB Mrmllf1 Of

LT133 Lawn Tractor

Onlys1,899

Zero Qown. Same As Cash·
till January of 2003*

Dr. David E.
Miller, D.O.

•

Jond, 1952F&lt;bnJIU} 24, 'lOOJ

•13-hp overhead-valve engine
• Shift-on-the-go,
5-speed transmission
•light 15-inch turning radius
• 38-inch cutting width

There Is nota day puseslbat I do not think
of you; I can still see your amite and hear
the comfort of your voice. Words cennot
express hdw much you are missed. You
were my best friend and lhe Jove of my life.
Wbatapleasureltwastohavesbaredour
llves together. I'D love you always.
-"..t ~~~ 4 ,.

;j~~---:=""~·;====---,_,3

I would like to express my
appreciation to all my friends
for their prayers, visits, cards,
calls, food and gifts d11rlng
my recent Illness.
All of these things were
greatly -"ppreclated.
Leonard Jewell

425 Lawn &amp;Garden Tract.or

s600 Off
• 20"hp, liquid-ccoled V-Twin engine
• Autcmatic transmission
• 2· or 4-wheel steer options
• Twin Touch• two-pedal control

Clrd of Thanka ·

7/e /A""" -1

Elsie P. McCoy
NO TH ING RU NS LI KI A Dl FfU

' Dealer Near You, Call:'
To Locate AJohn Deere

•

888-MOW-PROS (foH Free 888-669-7767) ·
"'fflrtndl FtbrUI~ 2t. 21101. lubiiOI ~ IPPrOvtd Ofld~ on John D11r1 Cr1d~ R110MngPion,for non·oomm1ro111 '"·No down PIVmlnt r~qulr1d. SimiAI CnhundlJonUirv IOO:ImN
1bl1 on L111t ondlOll 11r111 mod1f1 onlY. If 1111 b1lonco 11nol p1ldInlull by 1111 ood of l1m1 ~ Cooh promo·
llontlPlrlod, lnttrtM \'All b111111111d kom 1111 onglnol dolt of ~Urohm II 1Ull APR wllh 110.10 Plr monlll minimum. 0!1111 1pt1lolrlln ond 11rmo m1r bomil obl1,lnolud ~aln neNmoot flnonolng ond llnonolng for oommorclelun,AYIIIoblo 11 porllolpeUng dllllfl,'""I ond modol1 mlyilry
~·~
I
.
'
'
01481-21-.l3311

Wishes to thank our friends for the
mii!IY courtesies sympathetically
extended to us during the time of ber
visitation and rtmeral. For thdse who
sent food and for those who prepared·
the fellowship dinner followlna the
runeral service; ror those who called at
the runeral home, sent words or
encouragement and ror your continued
kindness and support. Indeed,
''underneath are the everlasting arms."
~. ;-. fMd. f-. Sc•d. f4t.
~ 'N-e-tp..dfu

I ,

(

' I

knowledge, and some report writing.
Qualified candidates must have a 4-year
degree, strong interpersonal,
communications, and leadership skills.

SIGN ON BONUS
$2,000.00
$$$$$ WEEKLY! Stay-at- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Home
Processing
110 Help Wanted
funds.
No Experience
Ae· ,..
HUD/FH~
Mortgage Re·
-=====~========:..
qulred. FREE Information
Caii1·80D· 501 - 6832
ext.1300

WWYf!.projectrefund.com

Administrative
Office Position

$!000/WEEKLY POSSI·
BLEI Mailing Broohuraa
from Homol No E&gt;porlonoo Are you looking for 8 new challenge? Ir you
Nacassa~l F"'o Delallsl are detailed oriented and have at least 2 years
Call1-acJ0-755-2027(24hrs) of office experience: Clerical or Data Input
$1500 MO. PIT or $4500- and can type at least 40 WPM+ we would like
to hear from you. Ability to work with
$7200 lull lime. WORK IN
Microsoft Word. Excel and
HOME. lntornallonal Com·
Windows 98 Is required.
pany Aaalstanta.
Needs Supervisors
and
Training.
Local-Jackson,
Ohio Company olfers a
Free Booklet.
competitive
Income
and beneftts.
www.•ndleurewerd&amp;4u.eom 1·
Plnr send your resume to:
888-21fl.2m
CLA553
c/o GallipoUs Daily Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, 08 45631
EEO Employ"

110 Help W1nled

· ·•

Caring People...
Your' pay Is bas~dl
on the hours you
work, NOT on
your results!

The Holzer Home Care Difference
Holzer Home Care currently seeks:

• Speech Therapists
We also offer a
eenerous weekly
bonus program.
· Forget what
you've heard
about
telemarketing
and call
InroCislon
Management
Corporation.
I - X 77- ~hJ - 1!:!~7
1·.\l. IX~I

''

• Occupational Therapists
• Physical Therapists
Previous home care experience preferred.
Interested applicants should call ·

Connie Carleton at
. 1·888-225.1135
8 am· 4:30pm, Monday through Friday.
Holzer Home Care offen (:otnpetitlve

compensation inn friendly, professk&gt;nalatmosphere
thai supports your growth and development.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

O'BLENESS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL has a part-time opening
with rotating shirts In the Laboratory.
We offer a competitive salary and
beneftl package. For more lnrormatlon,
contact: Human Resoun:es Department,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, 55
Hospital Dr., Athens, OH 45701
(740) 592-9227
EOE

InfoCision offers monthly bonuses and
excellent benefits including health, 401K,
paid vacation, and holidays.
If you wouldfi.ke to contribute to our
. sucess at lnfoCislon In Gallipolis, .
send your resume to:
InfoCisi.on Management Corp.
Attn : Sam Gaskel
325 Springside Dr.
Akron, OH 44333
Ot email to HRDirector @lnfoCision.com
Visit our website at InfoCision.com

110 Help Wanted

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Polthg Oat•: F~ 14, 2002

110 Help Wanted

·

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF MIS
The Unlversity of Rio Grande is accepting
applicalions for the position of Assistant Director of
Management Infonnalion Systems.
Reporting to 1he Director of MIS. responsibilities
of the position include, but are not limited to, ·
planning, directing ·and assisting the direclor with
coordination of activities in electronic data
p~essina. information systems, system analysis and
computer proJramming as well as assisting with
designina procedures and proa rams to acnerale
necessary reports not provided by existina: software
for' lhe a:eneral campus, Mtast have demonstrated
knowledge of compuler hardware and software,
lncludina applications and programmina. Thil
k.nowledae base should include uperience In an
IBM. AIS 400 env ironment and with ROB
proa;ranunina .
A Bachelor's dearee In Computer Science or
Information Technoloay is required. The successful
candidate will al~ pouess one to two yean previous
e~tperlenco in a Manqement Information Systems
environment. ·Prefer back.around includina Windows

Server and SQL Server, familiarity

with baokins up
and reltorina data from aerver, an understandinJ of
buslneu processes Ud applications bein1 modeled
by the database desian. and be knowledaeable In
SQL ba1lco. Candidate 1hould hove a basio
knowledae of HTML and VB Scrip~ as applied Inthe

development of Active S~rver pap:s.
Interested penons should send a Jeuer of Interest,
salary history, a current resume includina the names,
addresses and telephone numbers of three references
and a copy of their most recent transcript before the

ACCOUNTANT
Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital's
Foundation Department has a temJlQrary
full time Accountant position, available.
This Special Projects Grant cycle is for one
year. This position requires a bachelor's
degree or commensurate combination of
education and experience- previous grant
administration and budget experience is
preferred. Successful candidate will
prepare and maintain all documentaiion
that pertains to the River Cities Community
Health Coalition in accordance with the
grant from the Co.mmunity Access
Program; andwill establish and maintain
effective channels of communication,
processes and procedures to 'assure the
operation of the project remains consistent
with the goals of the organization.
Please apnJ y:

deadline of March 14', 2002 to:

I

Phylli1Mason, SPHR

Director of Human Resources
University of Ric Grande

PO. Box 500

•

Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital
Human Resources Department
P. 0. Box 789
Ashland, KY 41105-0789

.

Rio Ofande, OH 4.5674
e-mail@pmason

F:OetAAE

Fax number 740-245-4909

r
~.~-.

..

··--' r

�Feb.24,2002

NOW HIRING
NUASIN&lt;l ASSISTANTS
Flghtoro/Pallco
Dly lhlft e&gt;nly
Offlctrt/WIIdlllt/Pottal
NoWultlndl
Plld Holldlyt
- .Ill
- r•· Plld
_. •
&amp; F"'
Col,TOU.·
1tH lomt Core
FREE lor Into. -Sun.
A!&gt;~&gt;~Y in-·
_.1CipnVEST.
_,County Ac11on
1--2114 x12113
Gtoup,lnc.
2211/ZMiin-

IIHIUPIIMICII
EARN ~ COI.UGE
Ia - - l o r
DEGIIEE CIUiCI&lt;LY, ory ol all nonlng - - I l l oiOrl. MII1M, D II bur nom.. ,.,.,... _. ~ oou-.ar•IOi biMd
port and ao , , _ , 1a prtor tc11 111101 ond
LPN't. In IIUflinO aiiOrt tiUdy ...... l'or
.,.._
.... IWI8P ,._FREE otlo·nulln--.CoN Plonl. Wid plione
C~IIIAIDGE
PEER""""""-AO•• · II 8TA1'E IJM\I£1181TY 1·
...... II: a Wid blllli.... 81)0 1111118

and~

MIE\"0

G0\/!11-NT
JOel
" .HON foiRIHO" tar Fh

IIWIUII OWN-..
CGtllnlf hourll

FREE
INFORMATIONI
Aboul Hotftt IMed filii-or•

.. ICIII pM lncOmel

FIAJ~':f=' Into. ~"":'llmt~:..!':!

'llftfl.t'llllltidtMdom.com www.~oom
-1132-8104
HSI)O) 2n-5143
-Chlldcara--=::::.:-==.:.n___o_led Go u..,..,..M Jo1ae

-·-.---.wv . ,., -·-,.
oi!KI'M'·

MCAQ, Inc,lt .. EOE,

F.. baia'!fit- PlldnHng.

A/A,MIF

9

Dl:

:=::::::::-::::::::::-

10-

3

7

=Dina,

KaamOa0.

SO::.,

Data Entry: Process Clelma
1-eoo-24 1-7784
for Doctors. Training Avella·
bit. PC Require~ . 1-800· "'ANNOUNCEMENT"'
240·1548, Dept.4t7
NOW HIRING FOR :!002.
Dig Into a Now Careen Pcatal
Jobe
" 3·21 "
. I
$24.50/11r. No _ _ .
Hoavy Equpmen
I
t Toratnng
'*"18ry PdTrllnl"""' 1
PiOg,.mll Loom 10 cporalt 8tnellta. ' CoN 7
u1
T r - 8ai:l&lt;hoH Bull
ayo
4
9889
1155
'NOW (S88) 90Ext
dozoro. ' Call
HIOCHI10·3520
"'ATTENTION"" Now Hlr·

0,..;

DOtnlno't now laldng appll·
cations for tile dnvers, Clal·
~mo~ loca·
llpoll. and ru
••,
tlona only. Apply In per1011.
---"--'-'-.:,-"--Drivers: Start up to .36Cpm
with bonuses. All miles
~&amp;ld. Excellent homo limo,
air ride conventlonals, and
benefital 9 mths OTA 23
Y" old w/CDL A. Also N•·
lng teams &amp; owner opera.
\011. Call 1·800·727·2888
www.c.-hbroa.ccm
-------EARN $1000'8 WEEKLYIIII
Stuffing Ehvelcpea 11 home.
$4 per tnwlopo. 24 hrs.
1
54 7094
1 8 y -. -eoo- 3Earn $2fl00.$3500 Weoo·
lylll Processing Envolopea
~rom Home! Incredible opportunllyll
Easyl
Frao
PostagefSuppllesl 1-BBB-275-6950 Visit our Web site
Today To Got Started lm·
mediately! VfWW·Process·
lngEnvelopes.corn

:..~:;,~

$1ng13F2olr
F'oNataiEJoba
. · .....""'"'· o XI&amp;·
rionce Nece11ary. Paid
1i 1
F
ra nlng. ull Banoflta. For
lnformellorvtlatlnga. Call 7
Daya 1·888·728·9053 ,,

lor-'-

G1D

Aloi)'OU'-rtplirl.toel- An EIIUilllellld Veodlnci IWIN IIIO,OIIIIYEAALY ,._
6 remodlli'lg. 24111 $$. pairing, NOT roplaolna,
111...111'101' • · ..., 1 - 571 ~ Ext Long Cracl&lt;t In Wind·

-

flo--·

""".J"""

-- =="=
="t.:·~
_,,

·I , _

mo~ PM aNI!. contaot Gai110U'H80111+ I llfdf. ::....: ,.~-

:!

":':':.,"':;

OOtnplola fiPCi'la and docu·

montallon
onowledgo•

mu..___
••••
of "ctrpont
r1l ..,_,
I
Ml • ....... ~ng r,

..:1.

lrical ~· paindng:....~
man 1 ,_,..,......- -

•
m11nttnance and gtntlll
rspolr. Kuowirllgt of long
ltnn care. Sllle and-·
al rulaa and rtgulallont and

w::.3152-21~40)882.0240, MUIIC Dll CLUH _ , , .

(7

)

Plrllll _,., Mlnltlry

TRYI Slhg or Play
co, I
eo..,....
..
lalaphoo'" •
to audition to
to
)'011'

C_..lnalar
e0tna
Aowarding pM time RN po- fkandoon Mlaacurl tor
alllon. Conaulla congrega· $100,000 -..g contla.:t
llonlnatartingOI&lt;Kihanclng conttat. CALL Sandy 1·
I Plriah NuiMI Htdl1 Min- 50~ 1188 1558
, _ ~de...,.,.., _.,.,and
TopTtn
tidlfa,..
Convlonce R\lllagt(,
quirtd. - 5 y w , .
Full Tlmo l Part Tlmo
nulling or health care reltl· ~. FuN Time l Port
ed ~""'· Program de- ~ e:*J:..~~
wlopl••~ or ""un- . ""'"' ahhlfta:
laederrlllp aporlanco JlRI rJo Dally Slnllnel PO' Bali
729.()8 " " " -· OH 45789
ONo. EOE. Conlacl: Epia. TRUCK DRIVER TRAINoopal Aollrament Homel,
EES COL I 18 .....,1 Free
Emf)lovmtnt Oftlco, 38113
Job Pl...,.:nl ~·
down Loano Avo=
ClnciMall,
Tranai&gt;ortatlon Meala ,;
0H 45209. Phona
Lodging includid. Coii,TOII
(613)581-oootl, Fax:
Free Today!
1.a88-G78(513)581·943801o-mall:
0020. - · «; · - ··""'
ll!lfl!oym!ntolllcoOsihlnc,cam
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
Ptrt· limo Toller Pcalllon plasma donors earn $50 10
es;on at Farmers Bank &amp; $80 14, WOIIi tor 2 01 3
Savlngr COtn~&amp;nv. Galllpo- hours -kly. Coil Stra·
lit
Branch. Good CuatOtnar ~ 7~
.n_5.. •••1
Strvlct S~ll1 NecHsary,
~~
Ptrvloua Sanl&lt;lng Experl· wanttdl Strloua Ptop1t To
tnct Htlpful but net ro· Wort&lt; At Home! PTIFT Fret
qulrtd. If fnflnl-• .,. wiR Booklell 1100-2111-1691
be acc~lng applications
unll Wtdntsday, February
27,2002. Equal Opportunity .
Employer.
WANTED SERIOUS PEDI PLE JO WOR
'
K ,,_, ~-Reoplralory l!iani,.L Ful
~Tlmt Petition. Ohio Ll· Internal Sutlnaar 11500 up
conaad ART/ CAT. Mon· $7500 PT/FT
day·
Friday,
9:00am- www.rmamafraa.com
5:00pm. COtn~&amp;lfllvt Wage, 1-11118·228-4567
Rttirerntnt Plan, Hoallli In.
auranco. Contact: Sew· We haw atarted a new JlfO"
man't Homtcrre, 70 Pine grem thai fliYI you mOta tor
81., Galllpolll, OH 45831 . your prevloua wor1t illiPiri(740)446-7283
once. · If you hiiVI liMn
AN NEEDED
~~.:,:':.,cu~~job
.........
Wt oro looking tor a "Tom- may ,_.,
N~l"'· tor ourporary Pari· Time MDS For Exporlonct Progrom.
Nuru•, with the poaablllty We can pay you rnc.. than
olbacomlngs Full· lima po- you are maid~ 11 ~·r cur·
••~, •~~-- ~- ..ld be rant Job, Cal lnfoCialon
,..
·~·· ....,._, ·~
~of Medicare/ Management Ccrporallon
Medlcalcf requlrtrnanta. be and 111art eamlng mOta ncWI
atlf·mctlvoted and poaaau 1-&amp;n-483-6.247 EJit 1841
good ._,tnt tidllo. II
.
.

commu-

-nn:

Send,_.,.

~~.......

-Read.

.oc.

·

=~ ~.J:':'!:'
youcon'~!!ulhlaa'tpe(740"'r.~fl500eaae1
WORK F~.M,.~IyO'IMFEUI
. USe-11·
"""''
~
·
-·
,.....,.

Overbrook Ctnttr, 333 or apply In ~&amp;raon at:
PtgeSiroti,Middltport,OH HolzorSenlorCaroContor
46780.
74().892·8472. 380 Colonial Dr.

Equal Opportunlly Employ·
er.
- - - - - - - - Marll'a Plumbing &amp; Hooting
ATIENTIONII
11 looldng for tomiOI .. with
Now Hiring for 2002
..,.. plumbing &amp; liMtlng
F'oalal Jobr $13.21 to uporlanca, (740)378-e17l
$24.50/Hr. No Experience. 8-4·30 M-~
Pold Training. Full Banollll.
·
·
Hl88·728·!1083 Ext2000
McCiurt'a Reatauranl Call7 Days a wookll
hiring aH 3 locallono, fUll 01
::-::-- : : - - - - - - ~&amp;rt·llmo, p1ct&lt; up appllca·
Molhtrs Dreamt
lion at location &amp; bring bac1&lt;
S~ome
betwMn
8:30am
a
aevo
eo..t
•o:ooam, Monday 111 '" Stl·

1705

MISCf! IANIOO!I

FREE CASHr' S1D,OOO or
poulbft 1n 58 doyl or
1 - NIVIr Ropayl Now
progranal Fret-Information.
1-512-373-11121
www.vlllionq2000.COtn
FREE G11111ta &amp; Foundation
Glfla.
Hauling
Purchuo/Ropalr, [ - •
cl- E d l - '"--fll
-~
~:eWrll,:;.,
Pliant 111":"oporelor. tnd
dtltrtnlnt your tllalbll1v ..,.
dly. 1~1'7 ·
wwwflltglll11.ntl

' ·-'""

S.:

::'::':':.:7~::::'::7:~~:-

"ATTENTION" Work From
Hamel 150042,500/mo. PT
$3,000-$7,ODOimo. FT FIN
Booklell

www.,..lly2aucceu.oom or
INOIICII
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. rooomrnonda lhal
you d o - - wll1l poople
you " - · and NOf 10 Hnd
motltl' tiVOUgll the mall unUI
you lloYe 1nveallgated !he

"""""·
drywall, ~&amp;lnllna, tnm doors, wln-

ctowt. Fret Eatimatao.

·

(304)87&amp;-nss

.....(188} 2~2168.....

TUESDAY fE . '.
5:30

..

ESTATE ITEMS; TOOLS

&amp;

MISCELLANEOUS :

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
7ll·Sl85 OR 713·5447
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/10.
Public Sale and Auction

PUBLIC H CTIOD
CHAMPION HEFFER·
Morgan Woodward

Gene Joon1011 OicvrolcJ·(){dJ, Inc.

St.

Fanners Bank of Gallipolis
Midland Co-Opll.and.Q.l.akes Feed

Grlham Blessing Pann
Hines Fe,..&amp;: Callie
Holiday inn

1984 Chevrolet Citation V6, 4 door will run,
was lasl licensed In 1998 good work car.
Furnltura; Showers bedroom set w/vanlly
dr88ser, head board &amp; •loot board . DlnJng
room set table w/6 chairs. Sola, 2·swlvel
rockers, coffee &amp; end tables, lamps,
bedroom suite dresser w/9 drawers &amp;
mirror, &amp;ewing rocker, easy chair, 2·battery
operated grsndla1her clOcks, booksheH, old
ropker (solid bottom &amp; b'ack).
Hoi Polnl 21 cu . fl. uprJghl freezer,
Whl~pool washer, port. Dishwasher (never
uaed) metal bed, assortmenl Dl small
kltchan appliances, .a lec. healer, cookware,
gla88warB, alonaware, alum cooksra, 2) 113
Wagner skillet, #8 Griswold skillet, lleiWare
utenalls, spice rack, granite roaster oil
lampe, Sears 8 h .p 32' cut riding lawn
ITIDWir, 5 h .p . chain driver Pioneer tiller, 2)
puah,lswn mowers.

Bamette FOld .
l.eMy &amp;: laurie Blosser
Allen Boster, DVM

Bv1111 Craie Co.
Drvicl T. Ev.,.. lud,e 411i Dllfricl C01111 or

Appeals
The Peed S10p
Foller Salet aDelivery

Faus-ta v.ril!lly clinic
French City Food Servlca
Cllllil

.

lividcns Fann P.quipmeni/Powcr Equipment
loh-'s Mobile llonlel
Grace Myen Excavating
Norris Northup Dodae

Oakwood F111111
O'dell Tnte Ylluc Lumber, Robbie's BP

Pope APope

Dilley tire
Dlvlr .t Role Ciltlc Servica
Dlllcan's Runnint Sprint~l'lmt
i!rllmFII Foodllnd

Ollila

· Dlrectlona: From Gallipolis 160 N . to
Porter junction 554 go left. 1 mile to Union

&amp;:S~nRob'1
People• Bank Orllipolis

Brown's Marl~
BIOWII's Tru!twortby Hanlwan:
Brown lnsuraocc Agency
Cll:illl Hill Fann &amp;: Family
Clner's Plumbing, Inc.
C.C. Cilclwell TJU&lt;kina
Central Supply, Inc.
Ownplon Hill, Inc.
Dr. Bill C1111k, DMV
CAMAutol'ltu
C111E1! Sont, Inc.

" ~·

10:0oaa

Gallia Coonty Junior Folr Boanl
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Sunset Valley Angu s
The Mmt&lt;~g~~m Coaage
Neal Brotltm C.ule ColShow·Ri~ Feeds
Riverview Farms-Umbeiier Feeds
Adia ConsiiUCtion

.

CHAMPJON STEER·
TayJDrFoellr

Carmichael's Farm &amp;.lawn
Burlile Oil Co.
Ohio VaiO)' Bank

Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
United Producm- G~lipolis

•

138 Union St., Bidwell, OH
lat larch 2, 2002

Society

Sruute

R&amp;:C l'll:klnJ'$1Cve Evens Counll)'
Rio GcnenllllniWirl 11\d Supply
RiverBcnd Veterinarian HOipitallnc,
River P1111ttllondN\'amahl
Brent SauJidel\IG~IIa Cot!nty 1'rolecwa!
Seven Ta Fann
Shrke Shoppe

Soli Lumber
Smidt Bttlok I\JIItlac Inc.
Smitli'r OMC Truck Cetur Inc.
Stanley't AUCtiOII Service
Super I M01el
That Spcoial Touch

Thomu Do It Center
Gccqe 11tompiCII Sound
TotMJft 24- Hour Roatl Service
Vertical Concrete Wrll· Rick Mll1in
Fred Vdlborn ~ Family
Willis Punenl Home
Windy Acre Anpu
Wllemrn lniUIIfiCC Apy
Wiaemrn Real Elll~ Aaency
Yruaer Prrm Supply

.

TOOL ITEMS: Craftsman ratchet apeed
wrench aocketa, Snap·On fie~ relchal,
mlllellalls 2 ft level, Bisek &amp; Decker utility
IIW, tire chains, SO'a bed liner lor Dodge
truck, alum. running boards, mlao . auto
IIIPPIIII, brake lluld, trans, oil, greaae
guna, jumper oablsa, misc. garden &amp; hsnd
leola, Coleman heater &amp; lanterna, 33 RPM
recorda lo Include lhs Joy Finder&amp;, 11veral
table &lt;oada of misc. Items.
Pltlll dreaa lor the weather.
,
Flnla "Ike" I laiC• AucllonHr
For more Information pleale call
III.I C'I FHd Store 740·388-8880
Ike

&amp; Reanle 740·388-8741

·" · 1.aoo-80t ·1m .... 9826

tit

111111r--':"!'----,

j

MONEY

m LoAN

1.,~------Got Cash Farm

1100·

Qual-•
Never Leave Hemal Fundt

$500. Eaay

· ~~~

Sat. March 2nd, 2002
7:00p.m.

,
TURNED DOWN DN
· IOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
• No Faa UnleBS We Wlnl
•
1-888-582·3345 .

VInton, Ohio

Partial

list:

nickels,

Coins,

wheat

V-nlckels,

pennies,

Kennedy

LONGABERGERBASKETS

FRIDAY, MARCH 1,
6:30PM
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 ST. RT. 588,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
l,.ONGABERGER BASKETS: 1999 WTS
O'LUCK COMBO Wfi'IE ON &amp; LID, 2001
COLL. CLUB WHISTLE STOP COMBO
Wfi'IE ON &amp; LID, 2001 LARGE EASTER
COMBO W/GLASS EGG PLATE, 2000
LARGE EASTER COMBO Wfi'IE ON,
1999 LARGE EASTER WITH TIE ON,1998
LARGE EASTER · COMBO Wfi'IE ON,
1998 SMALL EASTER COMBO, 1994
EASTER BASJruT WITH PROTECTOR,
1999 SMALL EASTER COMBO, 1997
EASTER COMBO Wfi'1E ON, 1999
SMALL EASTER BASKET
••••FROM THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
DR. WILLIAM SMITH OF GALLIPOLIS •
ETHAN ALLEN l PC. CHERRY CHINA
CABINET (LIGHTED), OVAL TABLE W/6
CHAIRS AND 2 LEAVES, ETHAN ALLEN
MAHOGANY ENGLISH TEA · TABLE
(BALL·&amp; CLAW FEET), 2 ETHAN ALLEN
LOVESEATS, . LARGE
MANTLE
'MIRROR, CHIPPENDALE STYLE BOX
TABLE WILOCK, ETHEN ALLEN
DOLPHIN CHAIR (BLACK W/GOLD)
••MOST ITEMS CAME FROM TOPES
FURNITURE STORE
PAINTED CORNER CABINET, SMALL
TABLES &amp; STA~l TOLE PAINTED
CHEST, EARLY CHILDS SLED, OX
YOKE, BABY BUGGY, MARBLES,
POCKI!:T
KNIVES,
STONEWARE,
QUILTS, DEPRESSION GLASS, HAND
PAINTED
CHINA,
OTHER
OLD
GLASSWARE
OLD
COUNTRY
ANTIQUES, ToM &amp; JERRY PUNCH SET,
MUCH MORE NOT LISTED YET ..,

AUCTIONEER:
. LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740-245·91166 OR 740-245·9868
CASH OR APPROVED CHECK ONLY
· GOODFOOD
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
ACCIDENTS OR LOST PROPERTY!"

•
**VERY GOOD ANTIQUE
SALE FRIDAY, APRIIL 5.
WATCH PAPER FOR AD!! II

HOURS: lolon-Frl8:30 am to 4:30pm; Sal. 8:30a.m. to 12 Noon

C. Wood, Broker • 448-4523
Kon Morgan, Broker • 448-0971

Allen

Uyr old houae on 1.87
acres, 2 miles oulslae Vlnton. 3BR, 2 Balli, Largo LJv.
lng Room with Flreplaoo,
10x20 Cover~ Perch,
10x10 out building, Atidng
$85,000. (740)388 8630

' Jeartllteloloore, • 258-1745

I

Palrlcla Roll 740-446-1086

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

r

opparl"""' -·
.

1943

steel

Ha&lt;vas,

· Walking

Liberty

Halves,Silver Certfficstes, Silver Dollars,
many more coins not listed, depression
glassware,
crock,

4

gal. crock, 2

small crocks,

FOR SALE

gal green

stone washbowl,

cast iron skillets, tin skillets, savoty white
'
granile roaster, blue granite csnner, egg
basket, wood nail keg, brsss ilems, old
hand tobacco setter, old tools, books,

MOUNTAINIIR
IUILDINO IYJQM
LOG HOMI 'o\CKAOI
YMI fliAVII t 1144 IQ, rT'.J

buck saw, coal bucket, tins, str$p trunk,
chesl of draw&amp;rs, ladder back chairs,

S,J/,::GV

&amp; more, boxes to unpack.

ltfll MCICAOI INCWDilt
• IWI'I.OOI.TifiM
·6" ~il'lloCUfAHil

For more Info please callaaac's

NUMMUO lOO WAll ITillflil

• 014010, IOU'ff NIPI'IM
hU.fiD, lJ YIAII WAIWaY
• QUAUT'I' -.oow. .. 000111

Feed Store 7 4o-3811-8880 or
Ike

IUDt'lt/)lll

$33,660

Finis "Ike" Isaac- Auctioneer

llflPI1JV8d

·

Porllalty Re~ home,
2 Bedroom, 1 81th, Full
8taement, Lorge Unallach·
ed 2 car garage. 127 Kine·
on 0.., $80.000. (740)441·
0485

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

31 LOCUST STREET

Buffalo

other furniture

IOUIII. 10 _.. on

WOOD BEALTY,
INC
446·1066

pennies, Barber Dimas, Barber Quarters,

Abeotutt Real Deall Do you
earn $2K a - 7 No 1011·

Jng. &lt;HI houretlocklng local CANDLE

below-·

ala1ut"'-

AnUque and Collectable Sale

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

Real Estate General

Solzt tho opporiiJnltyl
ctrtlJl1,600
lllld llpprtloal. Groat family
ntlghbo"-d.
Graen
School Dltlricl, ' Cleat 10
All ...................
· 4 In-ground
llldrooma, 3poet.
FuH
Baths,
lnlh•••• r r rll
$182,000. Fot detallt and
tublt&lt;t 10 ... Fllr Houtlng Act of 1111 a~ntment.
(740)44ewhich ...... " lllogtiiO 3139
MtvwU. ....,
your own home?
Pf"l'llt anoe, llmltldon or want
dtacriml- tiotod .. · Own~ own land? Wo dol
,..., COlor, .............. Cal 40)445 3384 to qual~
ty for your new dream
familial
STOP AENTfNQII OWN
origin, or any lnttntiOft to homo.
FOR LESSI $0 or Low
.......nytuch
Down! OK Crtdfll For Uol·
p.Nfel enoe, llmltMion or
lnga Cell 1·800·501·1777
dtlorlmlrwtlon."
ExL 9821
Thll MWIPIPir . .l nol
Wt have approximately 20
1989 Sprucerldga 14x80,
-lngly-,.1
uaad homes for under
edYirtiNiiNitla for .... ·good condition . WHI htlp S2,01111, call1.8()().837-3238
wllh
doll.,.ry.
Call
Harold.
-which loki
for Info.
740-385·7871 .
vlotallon ...... """· Our
IAmi&amp;
'llurohtH Mobile Homo LAta
.... htttl&gt;y
lnfOiiiwd lhlt•ll
ACREAGE
modal 14x70 3br. 2be. on
ctw.11np ....-t!udln rented lot. llkl now In Galllp........ p r+' ....
ella Farry. (30oll875·3888
1111/NER LAND
avettlbll on an ~uat 1111 for Rcaamary
(740)44f.lolll:l

1':':~~~~~~·-

1.a88-li04-7f1841 24hi0

ANTIQUES&amp;
COLLECTIBLES

lllasan, W. Ua.

IES ·J t NY TIMES BEST
SELLER AMERICA'S FA·
VQRITE DOCTORS E~PEATS PREDICT TAIL·
L
I
0
N
S
www.HomeBizOpp.nat

nice arm rocker, hall table, sadd irons,

AUCTION

Jr-------....,

..,.
::;.~~~:::""·
;
.
:
'
::;.:_.::.;.:..,.-,--:-:c:SUGARBUSTERS · COOK·

' STOP FORECLOSURE!
:aEHIND ON 'lOUR MORT·
·GAGE? Don't Fifo benkrupl·
•cyt We 'll help aave your
' homo! oua ..nloed Sorvk:e.
HI00-915·9704 Ext. 220

oradff, 1-800-813-7405, 24

;=====::::::::::::::::1:::::;;::; ·'.
AUCTION

.com

AAA Oretllng Cotd Routt
100 Top LOc'o (All Lccal)
$700 -kly. FrH Into.

All Makae of Lawn-: flou ...
Small Englnet; Kar~
Hwtors and Salomandtrt
M:r NOWI
Aopalrtd.
Ctll
t.tQ
Gel in TlMI Mualc Biz,
(740)446-1804
Top Llbtl CD l DIID All.
David's Hcma Ropalr. High TreHic LoCI. Blo $$,
Plumbing, El«:trrcaa, Paint·
Hlllll-315-4487 24lirl.
---::--:-":":"-::~---:-':-~:---- lng, tiC. (740)258-9313 or ADVI~·SAYER-ALEVEII 80
Public Sale and A.,.,..I0!1 ,
, qo!OJ~1,-Ii707, .
f L.oc. Sltta. eo vou ea(O
1
Earn up
·
urday.
I100K7 'lbu oouldl FT/PT.
$
MO
MEDICAIJDENTAL BILL·
-----:--.~-.:-:-:'l;;;nv':
. Flaq~:;..·.;.1-8()0.=;.;340-=.:;96:;1;;8_
PT/FT
lNG COM~NY faa lm...
HOO.S10-o7o5
dlata Opanlngr for,..,.,.
Real Eatate General
www.CuhNowAndfortYtr.com to Proceu Olalma. Si 5·
Need 5 ladlea to Mil Avon. USihr. Potential. WIN train.
f740)448-3358
PC Required. Cell Nowl 7
Daya 1·800·935·3971 Exl
Need a Second Income
1218
Without a 5tcond Job?
EA~N $25,000·$50,000/yr. $500·$1600/Mo PT
M81inllghl Eaocrl SHiclng
•
&gt;
• •. . I Medical Insurance Billing . $2000·S80001Mo FT
Ferl'llla Model EICOI1, Seri'
.
Noaded
lmmodlatolyl. Full Training Provided
out
lnqulntt
Only.
'
Home Computer Needed . 1·800-488-061!
(140)388-1788 bettu11n 8o
~FREE Web lite 1·800·291· www.DreamUpNow.ccm
9pm.
~
4883
09
Dept "
·
IMaled II the lluctlan Center Ill Rt. 33 II

;.:-'=.;.:..:='----

.-

HIIIB-2311-21180

"""""nt.

WANn!D
.._ _ _
ToiiiDoi.iro_..

'~

u.

10

1111

"'

can

WANTED
SATELLITE A CANDY VENDING no.
EQUIPMENT.
I
pay Earn toOK. WOIM 4 hrs.
$C 1 9HS, up ID 175.00 tor Great LocaUOna.
so
088, DlreotTV, DIIHntt· a-vf'lntrw:lng.
1·800·
~· ..!.~.~:'J'- ~,
~~ 1111-111118 ExL 2403
,...._ 91lftlllilt~WY
A+ MlM MARS/NESTLE
~·r ~
-•~• ,..
~ r"""'=-ret
--~
Dealtrs w11n Old or 'lending Rou,., Unique
ai\UIIl
-.? ~ or
GIMI opportun~
~~?
· - -· ty. Prlnla locallonl ·-• lor~ASHI .
bla
nowl ,,...
Ellcollent
ponat •
t.ntlal.
.... lent """''
rtql.it'ed
-3018 ·
$5K lnd up. TOll Fill

1

•-••

Dopoalted-Chtcldng A¢·
- . FIN 0111 lnaurance lofdaCit Rata. Spring Vdoy ccunt N_, Day. Leana By
fDrm1 from-· Nc _ . PIUI, Col1740 446-0101. county Sank of R - h
·
1011 fret: 1 (888)
Beach, DE
Member
1113.0565 .
---------F-DI_CJ_e_OL_I_·B00---39_7·1_908_
.
•
.
$$ AT&amp;T PaypnooiO Routot
Public Sale and Auction
$$• Primo _ , riler. Huge
Fret tnlo. IIIXHI00-3470
$$

VIAGRA l DIET PILLS 'No
pre'ol. prercrlpllon or DR .
vlall reQ'd." Dolfvtrtd In 1-2
Dayo. Coll 1-.o£T-MOJO (1-8ll8oo438-811!8) .,
www . lnltV_raRX . oom
VISA/MC/AmE"'&gt;'Chtcl&lt;t
olttrlng. '

...,r::

'
0-"&gt;g Com...
pony,::»~ha!P', PT~~

Tol
01 Freevl
Ell
_ _.!... ;
INCII- lOUII IN~:~D? COitll CGtllnlflt&gt;ur Houril
WANTEDI Slolr!IMMEDI· - - -I Full
ATELYI
Training. FREE Booldot.

1

mOta

8t~Wdt. FrM Ytdlo 1~
82e-&amp;523
u~ .
www.giulmtcharU.com ·

-.nation,
.9!1
1 ·800-2411-1~·

(Upi0171/H11)
STARTIMMEDIATELYI
·
F1w.com

- .8 0

$25-$1MiR· PTIFT
• ();~;;;;:'"&amp;.,
11 h
Etcragoaodd J.:O Cali ATTENTION· WORK FROM
" 1 - 1-121"
(7..0)441-'1804
·
HOME! Our .Children Come
1100ot25.01111
To The Office Everyday!
CASHWHENYOUNEED Top to llotlom CIHnlng Earn An ElCirli $500·
IT
8tMce p Oflll loclll •1 ·~~ P'~ •• ()()().
' •
"
• •~ .. ~··· " ...
1000
ENVELOPES
• lng II allordal&gt;le pncaa. $1,01111 Frr. Free Booldot.
$4,01111.001 8tulllng RIEI:Ititllol. cflloo, lli!IOdaf· -AiarnllydrWmt.com
iopaoal-$4por-lng ~-= 1-71H612
lopot. Cal 1.81)0.370-8118 :"11!12·13111
·
Ann: Work from home. Up
241110.
·
to $25-$75/lir.
PT/FT.
DIABETIC SUPPLIES II
FREE Booldot. l.ee&amp;-682·
NO COST. y o u - ~
www.wtllfii&gt;{IIV·
Cllellnturanc.. .,..
lng4you.COtn
~· ~~~... SlripO.(H:;:'") ~
'
Start Your lkJIInou To•- ,_
..
,.
nc
dly... P~ma S'-""1 Con81)0-8 15- 1577
I l l Earn up to $2.01111 I* ttr ~ A - AI Af·

Full li'alnlng.
Bi·llnAE Conatruollon
countries. romodallng, roofing, bllh

Golllpolla, OH 45631
~~~i~';;f!:...,
(An equal opportunity empfoyor)
-------Now accepting applications ~ow-..;,
for Donlaf AaalstanU Office '
Worklr, Dr. David Smith, Galllpollt c.- College
898 Jackaon Pika, Sullo (Careora Clcea To Heme)
101.
CoU Todayl740-448-4367
f.800·214-o452,
'
Reg 190-05-12748.

Aluunlf'lbur-..

I~~~= -

.

El/ntliiG

oMI&amp;enl ~ 22vfl. 2005
-1304)1111-2016
ARE YOU CONNECTED?
a-g.
INTERNET USERS:
don'
~ 10 . . &amp;m FUU·TIME INCOME
.....
1857. -wr..Pwtllmeal._

Nc _
...
0')1.
Dorolhy
Harper,
............ _,N,.
Fo&lt; III'I' CI'Ioh tnd """"' O.T.R. Taam Driw&lt;, 2 YMt1 (740)446-7141.
atucly ..,_ UOO 5118 :r~ 12
crlllolflw1-111-4288 •Pt&lt;ltnct. Good M.V.R. II-IISI
CHIII8TIAN 21113•tS10.
Anrr.(7ot0~271J 1

to """' with boys ages 12· $11.00 • 133.00 per hour _,, 140
11 1n a .-1a1 aottlng. pottntial. Paid Training/Full
.-·
••
1 od Bantflll. For mora lnlorma· Go'"'"""'' Nc
~r lion call 1·800·228·3952 up 1o 131.741 I'M'· , _
Taet • 11 -tlot
810 3234
ploma. Coil (740)534·1217. -:-:1.:::::
· , _ ot11 ..... _.,.
.... tor Usa Conley.
100 WORKERS NI!EDED
MIIOIHuml...tlon loilo.
, _ - boiNftlli
code MWR
crarta. wood
42.000 Nllrtftt 2002. 1$1 CAREER TRAINING
lloma. Motarlal f)fOVIded .
..11.01 ,__, - . . .
$$$ 15 Day COL Training.
To S4IO+ wk.
- . - • AlP 1111,.,
Companln Hinng Today! I Froe fnformrllon pkg. 24 Hr. - . _ AltpGrl' -..my
Eam up to $8001Watl&lt;. Tul·
1-801-428-47i!O
AP
catJlion Rtlmbu- Avella- A 114Cf,OOO FIRIT VEAII lngton D.C. 1-:aoelite. Bonofltt Avallabtel Clot CAREER! No COL. Nc
$$ Whllo TrainingII 1~ Problem I C.R. England 1111117 24 ,._
883-0171 WW'N.CdlweD.eom NHda Driver Ta-•lnMII http://www.go¥Orn1Mnl·
COLU!CTIONI
Now! Nc Up Front Monoy, )abllillli""11
caring tor the
W&lt;irk trom Homel
All E•panaoa Paid. Cell Toll · Halp Nc Exporlanco NecHury Fret1.flfl8.e19-8081 .
~ Darat ~ . _,
paying minimum ·
Futf li'alnlng
A GROWING BUSINESS . ,...
now ahlflo: 7am-3pm, 7amColloc1 Shipping Rofundt
NEEDS HELP! Work own
1
800-71111-21181
·
Flex Sehedule From My ~pm, .J';'~~~ pm·
am,
••·~ ·
COtnmunily AcUon It t01k· Location !
Average
lng 1 cue manage&lt; for ill $400/Ptrt·Time·$1500/FuH· Homo l GaJ'dtn Ptrty fa
lilrfng. Start your own
Employment Program. 2 or Tlmo per WHicl Paid V.C.. 4 year degree In IIDCiaiiiiHY· Iicht, 8cnuaea, &amp; Training! homo blied tlual,_ wtlh
1111la 10 n c - lntar·
1c.. or related field. Com· Web ~~~
'
vlewt conducled Monday,
puter, communicatiOn and www/Coaii2Succeu.com
Molth 4. Cell Pol Mllltr lor
organizational lkllls re- 888·754-Maq
4
qulred. Appllcatlona accept· ABOUT
$1500- ~. ..... ••• · (740~
:.-=-:-~--:-----:
ed tiVOUgll 2/25102 II •:40 $8000/month M1rk1ng from ~
PM. Send retumt and ref· home!H Fantastic bullneu Uve !~ Hou~r, 1
trenctt to: Box 272, opportunity! F01 Fraa Boclc· Cliikf
8mlll l)."~
Chtthlrt,
OH
45620. let CALL NOW: 1.81)0.285~~
(740~
GMCM Ia an EDE.
4489 www.RichotEIC.COtn
·
LPN iiaeded tor T11mpor11ry
Cuatodtan at Point Pfoaaanl Act Nowl
Moote LOOge. Approximate· Ba Your Own Beta From FT poaltton. Prdlo1ricl ~
ly 35-40 hra a week. Aflllly Homo! Fonuna 500 COtnla· -Monitor_..,.. pre.
at Point Pleasant Mooaa ny Ntedl Halpl 11 500· ltr!Od PltUo oon1ac1 John
MedJ H0tna Cor'e
Lodge office, Charleston $80001M0 PT/FT FrH In- ~O
987 Galllpoll '
Rd.
!ormation Coil Nowl
OH. 45631 or ' Clll HI~:
1-800-380-1241
Customer Service
481-6334
(740)446-3800
www.BaalcProllta.com
_,ly.
or
$1 000-$5000
PT·FT
$Earn what you art Mirth
Moln-nct
Director.
Training Provkled
from homo,
.... ~
_ ,1
800-350-8188
tniMnaUmell.-.
~ poraorr - t n t VIr·
$ 1 500;,~ mcnlh.
·~~

Mull= 'H';

111.-

Mounh!' G:imr• -6rnlinrl • Page D5

&amp; Reanle 388-8741

, fi\IM 11001' 'MfH lt!IAn.IO,
I'U, ANO U YW llttNOtH

• J'OIICH IYiftM
• IHIUIOl WM.L , . . _

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

Real Estate General ·

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

•snn=·=-..

Extravaganza
Antique Auction .

BY OWNER
94 Winterplace
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Cape Cod,

MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE
11210

4 Bedrooms. 2.5 Baths,

Formal Living Room

&amp;

Dining

w/

Hardwood Floors. Large Family
Room, Master suite

&amp;

750 Wood Dri111!, Rio Grand'
(DI~tlons: SR 325 S., rl&amp;ht on Cherry

Bath with

Ridge

Whirlpool tub. Lots of custom
Oak trim, woodwork, and solid
interior Oak doors. Only

Must sse Insideforsl11ns.)
this home to &amp;JI}Ireclate'l
all II has to offer. 4 Bedrooms,
lamily room, remodeled kitchen,
see through fireplace, so much to
mention, come take a peak !or youraeH.

2 miles

from dty. PRICED TO SELL!

f!alt /M u ap~flildMeltt

...~- ····A
CAll HOW JOIINHHM liON.

~~

Saturday, March 2, 2002

at lO:OOam
Torch, Ohio

lfiiiCJUIIt

800- 280-2574
0 II t

Locallon: From Pomeroy, follow RL 7 ~orlb
lbrougb Coolville, OH 1o Torch, OH to Co.
Rd. 63, tum rlgbl, 110 lo ftrst road 1o left, 111m
lefl, go approx, 1 mile lo T, tum rlgbl, go
approx. 1/4 mlle,Auclloa House Is on rlgbt.
Please follow lhe signs.

then second street to left. Look

Ave.,

Jl.l.4 Second Ave.•, Gollipollo, Ohio

Yl

fort~W~rly Blaclrbum

·.

www.evaut..mOOre.;·«:01nl

Reahy "Senrint' South~~ Ohio For Otntr A Quart•r C•naury"

. Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evana-Mpore, Broker 441-1618
Patricia Hays- 448-3884 Cara Caaey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379·2990

----------~~~~
1125

PAIC!

446-7412

REDUCEDII

Solitude &amp; aeclualon netr 1
700+ acre ltate Perk! Getaway

J~,:;~~~~~ io

Bidwell, Ohio 45614

45631

,

OUR WEB PAGE IS:ww.w.vlsmlthrealaslale.com
It
I

14011 OUYAN TWP. 00 Acres mil
located on Twp. Rd. 2 barns In
need of repair. 2 cisterns, sepUc
elec1rlc. Great l'luntlng or get·

baths, 2 pole barns and
storage. Call for runtler
linfo,.otlon. VLS
-

FLAT LOT Located on Clarll
Cha~&amp;l Rd. 2 lola· 1 Aero mil .
$19,500
tallll CHESHIRE AREA Old strip
mine land. S800 per acre. 102
acres. Great for hunting or
recreation. Ateo 14 acres mil
commercial on SR 7.
1 - BUILDING LOT SR 588 l
MITCHELL RD. 1 ~ m/1 undar
hQ,OIIIIVLS

530.000.

'

-

C::~:~~~! location

'

from town. Formal living room,

ADVERTISING: The orlalnal wood Sktwbott. Becky
Tblt&lt;htr olp, (21 Ja.Pon:. Gu adv, SJ,., Wolfe oil 1f1n,
Ia. A&amp;P Ill", proc. Cokt ai~Mo (1!144) 2'14 112 Coke-...
(Tn fr•me), Huollne 011 btl. W/1pout, and ather
mtmonbUla.
Modular located tho country on
5 AC with aidraa thai Include
cuttom 01rpetlng, cultom kltcn.n
tilt oounttr topa and ouatom
kllc!Min lilt flooring, hu~t martor
tuna whh don and a mutor bath
Ill lor a king and quHn. A hugo
kitchen wllh atorage, a.torage, .
tloragel Addlllona lntldt Include a
largt formal living room with
private family room, two adcltlonel
Dedroamr and • full beth and •
nlca tat In kltohtn 10und oullht
ftaturoa lnaldt.
Oullldt lhl
owner has addtd a prlvlt11' 18
_ , _ In beck 11010h In addition
1o 1ht 10' 22 covored front poroh.
A dtlaohed gorage wllh aflaohed
home hobby hOUH, 1 24 • 32 matal
you the apace for 2 pole bem and a adclllonal hobbV
famllltt. Eal·ln ollchtn, , living hoUH wllh lht Mra. A muat t01 at
room wHh fireplace, dining ~ • 1189.1100
1 112 oa• allaohed garage, 2 car
·dttaohed garagt. 2nd dwelling
11M 728 aquare IHI, 1 BA, 1·BA
and 1 12 • 28 carport. Thlr one
will go ful. Glva ur a oalltoday.

'

lhis

14037 D!~IGHTI'UL HOM! Clean
comfortable- PLUS Income located
on SA 100. 4 Bedrms, 2 belhs,
appro~&lt; . 314 of an acre. Live on 1st
floor &amp; rent lower level ror $400.00

home that has been remodeled
Inside, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, lovely

wood cabinets in kitchen, fantastic
side porch for !hose warm evenings

and the landscaping Is out ol this
world. You will want to see this
call Wilma for a peek.

mo. would make a gooct Mother·ln·
Law Suite. Income can help you

h1

'

Oack on tha rear. Comfy &amp; cozy
wall decorated home and you can
have
Immediate
posseSSion.
BONUS TO BUYERS 1995 Skyline
mobile hOme, 14' x 60' Included In
the sale. 2 btdrml, 1 bath, eat;ln
kit., lovely LA, wather, dryer, range
&amp; ref. Everything Is Immaculate. 1
Ac nvl or wen land~ grounds.
2
I I . Move on this fast!

own this good home. Owner moving ,

out of town. Coli to Inspect, tills will

remodeled kitchen, larga
dlnlnoJfamlly room adclllon with
wort&lt;lng flroplact and rcrMned·
In po~eh, two car attached gartQt
and a 28 ' 32 two ctr dtlached
nlct 32 x 41

:~':,:r~~.lld~:8

with water
lor only

~~~~'.'!'!!!!

ntwtr
homo

wllh

full

ba1ement, nice 3 1tall bam and

·I·

alii on 2 • .,,., .., land

Large home In town, new
1999, 4 BR. 2.5 BA, 2 car
garage,
vinyl
siding,
nlco
neighborhood. Needs some TLC
but priced rlghla1171,100

14021
TRULY
D!LIGHTFUL
HOME Prel!y 11 a picture. Very
w_.l plllnned atone and frame
rancll homo ofttia 3 DediCCms.
walk4n CIOHI, 2 full bttha,
charming living room wnireplace.
New oak cablnttl line the kitchen.
Range, refrigerator, dlshwaaher,
and comptlitor all atay. Utlll!y ,..,.
It tJCira largo. 2 ~tr deck In lilt mr
Wilh 38' lngiOund pool. Many flllk
trHI, tlowtrl, and ahrubl.
Sprinldrr ryllltm In lilt roar. 2 car
allaOhod garage and a carport. 2
alory bam building. Blacldop and
ctmtnl
A homo you 'll
. VL Sm1111 44&amp;·

flU Nlco brlok nnoh
2 AC MIL with large family
tormal living room and
kitchen all In a prlvtlt
With rolling marod0101
the baoodrop
offtre Mvoral out bultdllngt

bedroom

14030IT'S
PERSONAUTY
PLUS!
ACRES.
HOME·
SUILDINGS Old fash ion charm
with modern convenience in this 4
BR, 2 story home, 2 baths,
(whlrlpocl tub). Lovely equipped
kit/family rm combo w!hardwood
lloors, cherry cabinets. En;oy
viewing the country .from every
window. Formal dining nn &amp; LM
wlbeamed ceilings. Porch &amp; pat~
72 ACRES ol beautiful roll ing land.
Pasture, woods &amp; some timber,
pond &amp; mineral rights. Lorge bam
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 448-6806
140016 HDr,IE
&amp; INCOME
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulavlllo
Pk. 3 bedrm, 3 bath living quarters.
Also 18' x 32' garage plus 30' x 20
building 112 ac. of land. Good sales
to sell. VLS

Rd. 3 bedroom, 2 ballis, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME 00
kitchen, CII'8Plic tne In kitchen &amp;
baths. NEW CARPET through out,
neutral decor. 5 ACRES MIL

1131

l A. All Cl!y ulllhlet, Cl!y achCCII,
living room with wood burning
fireplace, full ba11mant, large
wood deck and largt patio In

14044 ONE OF A KIND First time
offered. Located SR 7 Scuih. All
electric 3 bednn., 2 baths,
equipped ldl, formal LA, don with
gas llreplace, heat pump, new
carpet, washer, dryer, range &amp; ref.

14045 Mobllt Hama Lol 1 Ac mil
an PINunt Vtllty Rd. $17,0fiD.
VLS

retreat located next to Tycoon
Loki down a treo lined daad end
road. Also gel a bonua with 2
extra building lots Included at

STONEWARE : 2 aol. Joo. Homlllon 1•1·• Do.....ho
•lxln• bowl wflnvtrted bottom, (unmarked but rtrt),
Donalbho jan, 2 aal. Bee blve Jua. 1tone prlncy pot, .S
pi, Stone ~burn, chicken watenn1 :ZO+ other none jup
aod Jon, and 1ott ..-. ·

TERMS: Cub or pod check w/pror.r I .D. NCI
,..pollllblt for ttddtnta or lou o propeny.
Announcementt day ot ult take pnetdenc.
,
ol prlalad matorfal.
·
Refrahmeota ~ldtd
For lnftll'lllllllon, pleua call f r l 989·2623 (hotllol
, or (740) U7·1N44 (tucllon houH)

sse Clark Cha~&amp;t Ad. .

BranchOfflco
1

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 44H80e
GAIL BELVILLE.................................. 448-9209
TRISH SNYDER ...................................441 ·8458
JOHNNIE RUSSELL...........................317.0323
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441-9411
WILMA WILLIAMSON ................. 740.288-0038

grqundl. $44,000

740446-oooa 740-441-1111 ··

e";;ntmoo(4t'~ooi1Ulet.net

......

AucllonMrl Bill Moodltpauah
Oblo Lie, tl7693, W.Va. Uc. ff311
L1&lt;10111i 11114 flo•llll 1•/oyor of SMif of Olilo orul ~IIi.

*

lliill

~
IJ ClP
'::7UtJ,C eJJM

.LOT ON SR 7
I =~COMERCfAL
.77 of an acre, beauliful
I !f!UIJ&gt;{*' Clayton mobile homa,' 3

for I
a homt bualnaaal4
, living room , family
room/office plus a huge metal
building that can be used ror a
out thla
home bualnen located near the
REDUC!DI
junction ol SA 100 &amp; SA 554. IIRICE
tmmecutattly ktpt well bUill 3
$102,900 . .
.
BA 3 BA ralud ranch on 3
private acres JTl/1 Ju•t mlnutea

Moodlapau&amp;h Auctloneerlna Services

~""""'

••way. JR

GLASSWARE AND 1'01TRKY: Lou ol Fea.... Ftiitoo
ltmpt , Bleako, Fotlorlt, Jmperl•l, Wtmnoreland,
Depreulon, Black Amet:hysl, Vlklna. Cf11tal, Occupied
Japan &amp; more. Roseville Arl, Welter (Hveral PC1.), Hull
Arl (•nrral pr1.), McCoy, R•ventwood Pottery,
R.avcnawood Patlery chlldJ Jtlln preten.. tlon bo~~:, A.m.
Bilque, cookie Jan, banks, pitcher &amp; bowl, •nd lob

Autdonttr'a Note1 At our aucllon thll II j111t a partial
llod• or a very fl. Silt, you don~ wantlo ml81hll-• .

V"/ ·'~ · ~

acres mil on Sand H~low Rd.
Water tap, wildllle and hunting

· Real Estate General

SPECIAL INTEREST: Walnut hand mtde chUc:ll com.n
wfvlewlna bolt {dra. J9-10?). I.e· nn••y atyle rtvtrttd
~nter lllble lamp &lt;• mull aee).

Sunday.

';(,.

4 46 6806
•

GaUipollo, Ohio 45631

Call or stop by our office tor a free Quality Homes Guiae in ((}/or.

:;:t

will bt thrn •uctlon• 30 min. a_.Part 1t1nl11 11 our
aucllon l01801un lat., 1100 p.m, Sat. lc U100 nooa oa

rl~/
.
'-"~u

t4007 LOTS OF LAND 44.240

ookl''

NOTII1 Thlt It tbo bt&amp;lnnln' IUtllon of ·t very Ia.,.
-•••d In lhoi\I.O.V,, If you lilt andGut o..-lhtrt

r

(740) 446-7101

Real Estate General

brau full 1z, Bed, oak 6 drawer spool cablnel, oak l5
drawer prlntert c•blnet wfslant front lop·, Mlulon oak
ladle• drop lront dnk, Spinet dt1k, e•k . natwall
cppboard, 5-t", 41", &amp; W oU h001ler C81Jineti wfllour
biBI, lpc. Stqa hack cupbolrd wJaiUJ door top, oak
ladln drop front dale, oak etr. Tible whtkk A ball
bottom lbelr, l door eounlry wardrobe, oak rtvol•l. .
bookeue, leeded alu• doon oak booke~~lt, cherry
btken cupboenl, Marietta Chair Co. plate rupboard, tl
Ua
a.re, 011k tldeboanl•, •nual oak, ••lnul,
daerry, mahopny cheltl &amp; dreuers wJmlrrer'l (IOIDt
very nrly), stver•J oak wathltanda, (1) oak wall
telephones, 3 pr:. Elllplre llyle MUtt Itt wJhlde a bed
loveaut, (1) Vlctorl• 1 pc. Sttttf' It&amp;&amp;, Vktorlaa side
chain A plat(orm rotken, Vktorian marble top pirlor
table, parlor tablu, blblt 1ta1Hb, (l) 8 ft. eordeftd oak
IN!adls wlflnall, .,.Jc $ leued table wJ4 Ieana, mah.
Duncan Fife drop lear lObi&lt; w/4 cbaln, oilier drvC 1ur &amp;
pedallll table~ wJchllln, oak mantelt, VIetor an oak
kitchen doek, plano ttooiJ, llamp back trunks, cedar
·c:llatl, Dtco blue &amp;1111 top tablet, haU mirrors, praa
back dtaln A roekera, barrel chair, barrel &amp;ablu, 6 e•.
back oriental cUin, lamp tablet, mite, chalra,
'• roll top desk, (l) 1m. Coantertop pean11t
lhowca&amp;r:~, &amp;: Iota more furnhure tlllltrrtvlng.

VEHICLE• 77 Chevy Suburban, 31410a, JJe, alllo tra111.'

-=============:.:=============i
.. OP_

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 2nd

W &lt;

n.IRNITURE: 7 112' 16 It. Cherry comer cupburd,
VIctorian walnut ladlel cylinder llak wlbookcue top,
cherry Vlctarlan ladla dttll wfmlrrored 11llery,
VIctorian walnut drol,) center marble top dre.er
w/mlrror, ... Walnut hl&amp;bwall bed, walnut blpboy chat,
(hath early pa.), curved &amp;lUI oak aecret.ry~ 5'3" aolld

I\IISC: Wlncboat.r lock &amp; key, Wlnc-r 11athtlp~
fl4 Grilwald lkUie&amp;. o&amp;htr Iran wan, 'CNNBt willie lroa.
l.R. mtmonbllla (ll;eya, lantan~~, aw, tint, Uld ete.),
men• A ladl11 .pocktC w•tehll, Lona•berp:r Bllktll
other ltlaketl (old), •Web bt.. porcelain, tharmomtltl'lt
braa ktldtl, w...bolnll, ltrd pntHt, cera alatllart;
cui lroa bell, (1931) Daltoy Ktd Rydtr B.B. aun;
primitive tooll ud lou mon.

Real Estate General

#2165

(740)446-3764 .
. - (740) 446-2885

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

Country homea, nlco Iota,
located on AI 33 betwaen
Pomoray/AIIiano. Coil 740892·2187 for dtlaill.

• vlnvt 8 eA. 2 8A homo on
prlvllo 1 110t11 lot. Family room,
Jiving room wlflrtpfoco, DR, tnd
11rgt Ullll!y room lp 11111 cne w1111 full
- n t . Altaclted 2 cor goroga
and dttaOhtd 2 orr garega H wtll
oould ba uaad for EIOqga, P for a quiCk Nit, 1115,000

nlco starter home. 2 Bedrooms, lg .
L.A., Kitchen, UUUty room , Office or
• :3rd bedroom ... Panlal basement,
nice bedroom, closet and other
storage areaa.
'112 acre mfl,
$45,000. Needs some work to
make thll an Investment or

c~~~;;:;.'
;.:home.
and
~
riding.New
Callroo!
virginia

HISTORIC
PICTUR!
OF
GALLIPOLIS • Homo ftaturaa, 3
BA, and 1 beth with cualom
oablneta In kitchen, very large lot
tl'lat l'laa potential rot uveral
optlona, I ua
thla horne
with great
1

�PM• Dl• ltnNp G:imtf·ltrntlntl

rr_.,l. ,r•

~
.........,

Hol.-_ltiN
__
[_
-...___
-· ~

in

25 ton WOOd

..

own.:=:...
_
......,::;:.,
•-••- - · • -

75

k

Rontora
,

31101'1- homo In-.,
11fM1 coo-•: CioN to If.
lnly, COl Llorary •• 448-

RIAD,.., 235.
u - -llllMI;s

II"":'

,..

•

"-;'RI!Nr

abodicoon mobll.l homo tor
-

no poll (740)992·

5lai

$ell(). Mike

COIIdtlonod and Cl.,;ran· WOO., $500, Rullion SKS
IMcl. WOIMro, Dryora, Rlllo:=·~
:r-~ ~rigoralora, ~:..... ...:.~ •• -s·. ~.
-·
--· - - • ....,,.
• v·1
~·m- 10 t /2
..,.....ncoo, 70
no 1., t"nc
-h
r ----1 gr..;,, Ll• ·
(740)448-'13811
"-, ~ ·. (7'";:;.._ ,_
_
- . - - 11073
Mollohan COrpot, 2C2 Cl.lrt&lt; after llpm.
Chopol Rold, · Ohio. - - - - - - -(740)448-1444 t -877·830- 4 eon-y Lolo. Ohio va~
tt82. Froo Eottmatoo, Euy ley Momory O.r&lt;!Ont, 'Gar·
financing, 110 cl.lyo"""" ao doll of Evorlaotlng Ufo",
cuh.' Vfui Mootor Card. LIMI LOIS C - 10 rood.
Cl&lt;fw. 1· 111111 alot.
will apHt 2·2, $300 lOCh .
(740)867-4060
ANITQuEt!
9 cometary Lots for Solo.
I .
Prime Location, Mound Hill.
(513)553·2731 evening.
Buy or Mil: Rlwrlno Anti·
q -. 1, 24 Eut Moln on A-ble • Convonllnl
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- WOLFF TANNING IEDI ·
992·2&amp;28. Run Moore, Low Month~ 1""'"'""'"15
owner.
Home Dollwry
FREE Color COIIIog
Suoo'oSot-onthe"T" COHoda)'t·800-7tHll58
In Middleport Dalto, gta...
.np.etslln.com

-~coolllloo 0
NO ..-. ~ 10
Col
112·124t ••7• ~

*-'73i-72t5

~-

'

I

-;;;;;;;;;;;a;:-wo.;;;::
2 bodiCKMn lrlllor, S2~ mo.. -------=
ro1 &amp; c~op, 1.1norav111o, Dh
(740)992-em ofterllpm.

lllltutlful RIYor Vlooo Idol!
For 1 Or 2 Pooplo, - .

Sundliy, Feb. 24, 2002

r~
•MFli.Dwas£

Good UMd ~ Ro- 85 Ford F· l~. NHda

-:;,'it*-...:;!'~=
- ctt ~liiChld ·

Pilot I ' - m
11 "'''

Pomeroy•

=~· ==Is,

r

and Authentic Replica Luke Sky·
wall&lt;er Ughtsaber, $200. J.
-Dopooii,No-.FooML'ICf'J•ANEOl51 ·GordonSiarwarat :24Scate
tor 'llllllr Part&lt;, 740· 441 ·
MEIIcHANDisll
Dlecast, $50. (304)675·
0181 .
,..
• 5052

i

lll&lt;lrL
(740)448-85-49, (740)«0·

_~e-~_
8 .______
MOillE HOME OWNERS
tntor-m &amp; C011mon goo,

oil &amp; r..,_ ineluding hi offlcloncy hoot
pump oyotomo. WI CArr\1 I
complete llno of Mobile
homo parte &amp; - l e o .
IENNETT'I HEATING lo
COOLING (740)446-HII
... t;::a~

www.

.c

NEW AND UII!D STEEL
SIMI Beams, Pipe Rebar
For CON:-.te, Anglo, Channo, Fl.ll Bar, SIOOI Grating
For Drains. Driveways &amp;
Walkw"ff. L&amp;L SCrap Mol·
all Open Monday, lUetday,
Wednotday &amp; Friday, 6am4:30pm. Cloii!KI Thuraday,
saturtlay
&amp;
sunday.
(740)448-7300

lluol-.

r

~
•~ ......,,

I(7.~.448·7553
31-

ua we both lose!

lbr. F - . Nowty Ro-

_..,...
(304)675-3042

Required.

IIAUTIFUL
ApjiAT·
111N'1'S AT BUDGET PillCll AT JACKION ElTATII, 5 2 W - Drillll
trcm IH'I' to t383. Wlllk. to
lltOP a 1110\1111. COli 740448-2588. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Chrloty'l Family Living,
33140 Ntw LIN Rd., Rut·
·-~.
~~. 740-742·7403.
~""' VllfV
Aporlmlr\1, homo and ll'lllor

rentalt. COrrlrMt'clal 1torefnonto -table for ......
v-ncioo - ·
CIIIn 2br. WID Hool&lt;up.

~.. No

,.....
a and
I'Wtl.
(304)875-6t82

For the Dlscrlmlnallng Ton·
•nt. o.lua 2 BR, Near
Holzor, CIA,
Appll.lnceo
Furnlllled
Including
W.&amp;D.,
Clrport, Private Dock,
1489, Lout Required.
(!40)448-2957

or 1-8()0.172-5M7.

www.orvb.com/benne11

I..-.

EQt.lJrtlm\T

l(fV-

i

,_

I

lluwJtNG
.,._"".........,

•

Block. brick, -

pipeo,
windowa. Unteto, etc. Ciaudo
W1nlara, Rio Granda, OH

(740)448·3186
Approx. 3

r

jlee&amp;

I

Llvl!srocK

Round boloo, good hey, un·
dor CCV&lt;tr, 800-1000 lbo.,
AT STU[)..AQHA Stllllona- St5.00lbol.l, (740)985-3548
'Cilipothls Zlrlr&gt;Othar • Z1po Squo
Chocollte Clltp son and -·roc~ 'l!,..~Rdlor
'Looo War Stsr Poco" blacl&lt; (740)§ fl.
·~
·
7 2639
foundalloo&gt;, also AOHA and
ASPHA Fhoraoo forc~•)sa 1 o, Hay &amp; Bright Wlra Tie
ayre
arms, • Straw, Yoor'AoondDoltwry
3319
I \l:&gt;lume D11coun1 Avall.l·
- - - -- - - ble.
Harltsge
Farm.
For SOI.I: Registered Anguo C304)675-5724.
COws, Heifers and Bulla.
Registered
~lmouatne
Cows. (740)25t!-1352

I

j

-r

89 5

•

riO

I

Aums

L.,_..,;RIRoliiiiiS.iiUEiiioo_.l

na"'

-·ua

0oo

Vol-001'

1118&amp; Covalilf. Sorno body
dam•f!Z·
Rune Gre~~

$800.

For All Your
Advertising Needs

'

--~

Contact Us At:

1··800•821•8139
Announcement
...

yellow female Chow mix,

""

p tea_se call 740-667·97t2 or

(304)882·3486
Jack Russell Te"ler Puppies, 7 wlcs old, $lSO.
,7401245. 5624

Valley Truck Dr'lver Tra'lnl'ng
CDl(ertilicolion l wl: cour&gt;e

Baxter of Gallipolis, Ohio, nys, "nr
quallt 1 or a Goldu Giant bulldln1 Is
unmatthed. The bulldln1 was enc:te.d In a
tllllfly and proiU15Ional manner. Golden Glut
wu very easy to work with berorfl durina and
after the complelion or my bulldlna:." Call
Scott Good at (740) 367·711' for a qoote on
our nnt prGjed. Steel bulldln&amp; packaaes
tum-key sen-Ice is available.

I

rli~i~~Bff~~~i:~ra~~

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

I

www .BIG- BEND REALTY .CO

:
:1
;

i'"

._..
·•

,:
•

)•
;•
'

!'

•
'
•

~

I
owner
this extensively remodeled home
end enjoy lht! spectacular view
ol the mighty Ohio. Over 3,000
sq. ft. living space. 5 Bedrooms,
3 baths, whl~pool rubs, kitchen
has over 32 ft. of new oak
cablnets. Fireplace 11'1 formal
living room &amp; ramny room, formal
dining area. New ceramic &amp;
carpetad floor~ throughout. New
tumace and central air unit. Low
maintenance. No one has lived
in hOme since remodelir.,g was

(7o40)11e 384e
Now Taking Appltcatlona38 Will 2 Bedroom Town·
houH Apartmenlll, Includes

On 2002
16 Wide
3 bedroom

Pomeroy, Iorge 2 bedroom,
Naytoro Run, wid, o/rol, fur·
nllhld, lg. yartl·pallo, no
poll, (740)992-6886

2 bath

Tlldng Application&amp;. Ra·

I

IJ\IIIIV'I Auto Saloo-

rWI:

I rlkM::~ I

~2000~~~--~~3/l4iiaton . r.,.log- 2000

Public Notice

r ;. . _,"

But Trockor

r

I

.

I

Ir """""''"""""''•

HARRISONVILLE • Just out ol IO)Yn is
approx. 5 acre parcel ol nice laying land
mobile home that has 2 bedrooms, 1 balh.
an A-style shingled roof, a 32x32 garage, and
storage building . Comes with a satellit~ dish.
$23,000.00

c

=

r

r

r;::.....

r

.2

5

Public Notice

Public NotiC4l

14' Evan a
Avtnua ,
NOW, TH£11EFOIIE,
for - b y public: aucloo a
ul.lr cab, 4x4, Sl'-ado LS, opon V-hull, 9.9 EvlnMte ~ proJect, and
BE IT IIESOLVED by
1111115 Boonoo. tA75- at
CD
player,
aluminum otroko, troiUng motor, snap
WHEREAS, 1ha CHy thto City Commlaalon
h Ohio Volley Bar* Anwhoolo, puoh button 4 on CO\III', IIII o&lt; c _,.. ,.,. Commlaalon wlahet of the Ctty
of
- · 143 3rd lwo .. Glllllpodrive, Rhino tlnor, II· eluded, $4800.00 080. lo NOme that portton Gelllpollt, Ohio, the!
Ill, OH .., ·31!1102· Sokl 10
borgtau • -· 14,600 740-0411-2727
a
newly lha nama fur the
tho hldllll -.. tomil.ll. S22.ooo.oo 740-1192· - - - . , . . - -- - - of
-~
•uto--~~Wiihout ... _ , .. _ _
6849
99~11!'openVBot- conatrucled roed llood mHigatJon ......._
11118 Oldoii- Dolta ee or imiJIIod Mtrllnty or Implied -..r&lt;y a moy
tom Boat with Now Gal within thto city llmHa dncrlbad above
Cllln 1118 ~
• &amp; moy bo _ , by Cdlng bo _,by calling""' Col86 florlgo Ram. 4x4. 318 Troll.lr. No Motor, $2000. of Galllpolll which ahall be " GKN Slnlar
Colt, till Coll-tlon "--' at loc11on Dept ot (740)441 ·
Auto. 4' Ult, Haw Extra .30 (740~(5.911)9
toeglna at Stale flouta Road" lor llo antlra
Low ,
, 1
Hondo
""""
1038 0118
over 300 10 go - Truck.
7 and runa batwun length.
ll&lt;Un~....
Cord- (740)441·1038. OIIB ro.
rOMrvoo tho
(740)441-09961ilfer5pm,
AI!IOP.uns&amp;
10
Thla Raaolullon
GKN Sinter and Jlm'a
•tton~.~(7~40~1)~44~8~-~~- " any
" 'IIIII
rightbids,
to_..,
, . . . any
&amp;
'""'-""
AN1'1i!OJRIES
::
Mjlcl
&amp; w1t11- right
0U blda._I . .witlidiaw
.......
I'Oit
SAUl
91 GMC Jimmy, 4K4, R,_
Farm Equipment to ahall taka affect and
1111 '""' Ranger XLT draw 11oma trom sale prior !rem Ult prior to 11011. ,_
Good,
Mako
Oft&lt;or,
newly be In full force from
pickup · • " ' - · boclllnor, to oate. Terms of Sale. Torms al SOI.I. CASH OR 1972 Ch- 314 T
(740)448-8044
luclgot P[lced 'lrlnlml.,. the
auto, 3.0 VII, PS, PB, AM CASH OR CERTIFIED CERTIFIED CHECK.
-·'
.on ,
o1ono AlllYpes, Accoos To conalructed Farm and altar the urllaot·
FM CUI., boautlful little CHECK.
Ohio Val'"'• Bank will alter r;'.oo~~~~- Must See, 97 Aslro Van •.56.000 mll.ll, Qwr 10,000 Transml-. Road and deacrlbad p•rlod · of lima
'""* In f)lrtoct condition
_,
..~~
air, cruise, ""· PW, PL, Rebuild Kits 740-245-5677 aa followa : Being a alto- by law.
w/88.000 actuol mllea. Ohio Valley Bank will offer for ule bV public auclloo&gt; a
AMIFM ca ...ue, dual air Coli: 331l-37S5.
' newly created city
PASSED: February
$3,7SQ,OO 740-882-e7t9
forby public auclion a 2001
ChWo/'1
lnipata, =~~~t;""C::. ~':"
. s~oo.' bags, ABS, seals 7, like
18,2002.
a1rett,
which
Ia
2000
Honda . 4TIIX, 1102718 litho Ohio Vallwt
new, Must aoHI $10,000
1992 - . , Stanza, Fully 10017119 altho Ohio Valley Bank Annlil, 143 3rd Avto., !740)388.()138
nrm. (740)379-2134 loaveloii~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ altuata In the City of
Galllpollo , Gallla ATTES'f.
10
~. 11m. 1904 f1on. Bonk 1\ronoK, 143 3rd Ave., GoHipollo, OH on 319102. 1965 C11evro1o1 Truck, K10, r=:··~
,.;._~-County, Ohio, the Annelta M. Lanclera,
SSE Edition. $4785, Gallipotla, OH on 319102. Sold to lhll ~ 4x4 short bed, Rebuilt centerline of which Ia Clerk of the Gelllpolla
t181 Toyoto Corella, Auto, Sokl to tho hfilhesl 'u is· when~ 1.1" wltho&lt;J1 ox· G~. (740) 37fl.9258
u~--·~ .,
NC, Ulao Now, Low Mll.ll, ' asia· when~ It' withoulex· ~or Implied warrenty
'""''"""'~
'·
cfeacrlbad •• followa: CHy Commlulon
$2100, 111t14 Toyolo '1100, presood or Implied wanranty &amp; may be _ , by calling !991 2 w11oo1 drive GMC
.
ATTENTION HOMEOWN·
Beginning at Slota
Ye, Automatic, S5700. 1118&amp; &amp; moy be_, by calling 1111 Colloctlon Dept at SLE
112
ton
truck, 1981 Goldwing GLIIOO In- edERforS
. VDIInylsptayidHomoolng
R,!'~ Route 7 (a . k .a. J.GaryFenderboech,
Mazda 826, 4 doo&lt;, Auto- the CCIIocllon Dept at (740'"1-1038.
OVB ra· ...,,
•• 000 •00 • 740-04"27""
1a;ra1a1e Pall
• red ment Windows.
nvl s,
....-~
,..
gv
r o1 p ea.,
No
"'--·· Eaallrn
Avenue) Prealdent of the
motlc, AC, S2000. (740)2511- (740)44 t-1038. 0118 . re- lhoo rlohl to accept/
w1th gold plnstrl pes, runs mont For 6 "-ntho.
City
centerline
alation Galllpalla
1012
tho right to accept/ Mjlcl any &amp; allblda, &amp; 'With- 1997 F· I!!O, Extended Cob, and looks ~a1t L011 0I
~
'.,
"-:::"--:-:------ rejec1 any &amp; 111 bfda, 1 with- draw n- from solo prior Very
Good
Condition
•· ·
menta Starting at $89.00 1022 + 51 .85; thence Commlaalon
1904 Morcury Topaz, 2 draw """"' from sale prior to lliiO. Terms of Sate. $10,995 DBO. (304)675- add ons $3,500.00 304 • per month. All Credit Ouall· leaving aold S.R. 7
door, whl!o, 711,000 .mlleo, to sale. Torma or Sale: CASH OR CERTIFIED 4994
882·3465
fles COli I-800-25Hl843
and
with
the
The
foregoing
auto,
llr,
cuaeno CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK.
t963
Harley
Davldoon
BASEMEH'I
centerline of aald Reaolutlon Ia hereby
2000
S·IO,
NC
,
5
speed,
12,495.00 DBO. 740-992: CHECK.
- -- - - - Sportstor, $4000. (740)441 ·
WATERPROOFING
GKN Sinter Road the opproued •• lo form.
34110
:::-;~:=--::-:-...,....,..-,,- Ohio VOlley Bank will offer CO Player, Pewter, 28,000
$9800 . (740)386· 9521 Leave Me888ge,
Uncondnlonal III.IUme guor· following; N . 37 dog.
=:::-·-::--::--:=-- Ohio Valley Bank wiD otter for - by public auction a mlloo,
43".50·,
a D
111915· a.rotla, 83K, $2885. lor sale by publ~ auction a Wlzar&lt;l
Lown
Traclor 0413
1998 300 EX, Good Conclj. antee. Local references.tur- 24' 13"
u
1
1818 Corllca, 831(, $2885. Llwn Boy Sll..r Mower, •9371592 at tho Ohio Val: 88 Dodge Dakoto, 4K4, V6, lion, New Tires &amp; seat bov- nlohed. El!abllshed 1975. curve 1o the left, Hid
oug 10 ow1eo,
111113 cavoollor, 98K. S2t95. 111909180 at the Qhlo Val· l"f Bank Ann.,, t43 3rd Automatic, PW, PL, Fair er. $3200 OBO. (740)378- Call 24 Hro. (740) 446· curve having a radlua Galllpolla
City
111117 5-10, 73K, $5295. 15 lwt Bank """"'· 143 3rd Ava., Galllpolli, OH on Condition,
9::2;:58.;.;
·
----~·
0670,
1·800·267-11576.
1273.24 teat, a delta Sollctor
$1
,700.
othora otlrllng at S1495. Avo., Gallipolis, OH on :w102. Sold to 1111 hlghesl (740)441.()194.
·
Rcgers Waterproofing.
angle 5 deg. 42' 3 8",
COOK MOTORS. (740)448- 319/02. Sold to tho hlgheot blddtir 'ao fo. whore Is" with1998 Honda 4 wheel or 300·
February 24, 2002
0103
bidder •u lo- whllnl la' with- out oKproued or Implied 94 ChWo~Y K· tiiOO Silverado, 4 Ira&lt;, Like Now. Clreon, -~---~-- lnd 1 length z 121.90
Kept ,
$3500. C&amp;C General Horne Malnte- feet; N. 43 dtg. 08'
Public Notice
1995 &amp;-10 Bluer, Good out upreued or Implied warranty &amp; moy be aeon by ~ auto, loaded, Reese Garage
Condition, Good Tlroo, warranty &amp; moy be seen by calling tho Collection Dept hitch, brako conirol, 62,000 ;:(7:;40:::)-:446-:-2":61-'5-,..-,-- nonce- Pointing, vinyl old· 51" W, 23.74 feet; 1 - - - - - - - (740~alter 5pm
calling tho Colloctlon Dept at (740)441·t038, OIIB re- mlleo, $10,000, C740)949· 2000 Banshee, Pro-&lt;:lrcull :J!..:"'b::~:·=·~ curve to tha rlghl,
RESOLUTION NO.
al (740)441-1038. OIIB re- tho rtghl to accept/ 21:-7::0 --:::---:::;-:,- pipes, NOYOr raced. Needs repair and more. For lroe oald curve having 1
R20112.07
1997 Ford contour, 4 door, .......,. the ~ghl IO accept/ rajlcl any I all blda, &amp; with- ::
95 Ranger, Blue, e• lift kit, $rear axle bearings . . estimate call Chet. 740-992· radlua • 1273.24 feet,
- · 78,000 mll.ll, auto, air, rejoclany &amp; all blda, &amp; with- draw ltema trorn sale prior
a della angle 5 dtg.
A RESOL
tilt, crulle, 14,i95.00 OBO chw heme from sale prior to .... ' Terma of Sale. 33' Super Swampers, 3400/0BO. Must soli. 8323.
DESIGNATI~~E
740-992-3490
lo sale. Termo of SOlo: CASH OR CERTIFIED 5spd., . CD, Nice Truck, (304)674.()292 (304)882· ::--::--:-:--:-,--- 42' 3 8", end e length
$10,500. (740)763-3598
3878
Superior Home Malntonco • 126.90 Ita!; N. 37
STREET NAME OF
~. Civic
· CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK.
::::-:-=-:--:------ We do all Repairs on cfeg. 24' 13" W, 362.74
1..
••7 ~LX, Ex· CHECK.
.
='=;c_~-~~,...
FARM ROAD FOR
clllont Condition, Power
Ohio Valley Bank will oftar For SOle: 89 Ford Ranger 2000 Polaria 400 SCrambler homn, Inside and Out. car· feet; a curva 10 the
THE
Door Looka lnd Windows, Ohio Valley Bank will oft&lt;or lor ulo by public auction a PU· Blue, Ext Cob, 4 cyl., s 4 wheeler. Only 2 tonks of pen1try, Plumblrlfj. (740)44t· left, uld curve·
Spood, Good Condition, gao uiiC. Brand Now CCn· 01 3
FLOOD MITIGA:riON
CruiM Control, AMI FM Ra· for oalo bV public auction a Roor Tlno Tiller, t455A79 at S2000.
can (740)448·45t4 dillon . $4000. (740)379having a radlua of
clio wllh a I 0 CD changer, Roper Air Condlllontr, the Ohio Vll"f Bank An· or(740)448·3248efter6pm, 2601
Eu!cnuooJ
t273.74 feet, a delta
ROUTE PROJECT
Poww Sunroof, 61,000 1824079 at tho Ohio Valley nax, 143 3rd Ave., Galllpo15
38
mlloo, $8995. (740)446· Bank Annu, 143· 3rll Ava., lo, OH on 3/W02. Sold to
"•~
&amp;
12001 Harloy Davidson 883
RDluGERAllON • angle of
clag.
WHEREAS, the C"'•
'
•~~
H
· s o Ao
41 " , and 1 length of
..,
4720
·
Galllpolla, OH on 3111102. tile hlghoot bidder •u II·
4-WDs
ugger, 1
tual Miles,
f 1 Ia con1truct1ng a
348
82
11
Sold to tho hlohHI bidder where Jo• wllhout exproaaod 1,,_--llliloiiiiii.__..l. Brand New Condition, Aeaktentlal or commercial curve •
•
i flood mltlgltlon road
1111111 Honda LX, 4- •u Ia- wtoora Ia' wlthoullll· or Implied warranty &amp; moy
1&amp;500. (740)379·2601
wlrlrlfj,· now service or ro· th~.nce N. 53 deg. 00' which woo formerly
DR, 4cvl., Sllvor, 30,000 presaod or Implied warranty •bo ooon by coiling the Col· 1987 4x4 Eagle Station
18 Honda 300 EX Good pelra. Master UconiiC alec· 54 W, 48.83 feel to referred 10 10 tho
millo, t'S, POL, Exellllenl &amp; may be ..., bv calling loctlon Dept at (7401"41 ·
Wagon,
$1100.00.
740·
Condlllon Askin
3 000 trlelan. Ridenour Eleclrlcal, tha junction ·of a Bob Evana Avenue
Cond(740)31
.1!!:.,900. the CCII action liopl at I 038. OVB rooarves tho 992·2553
(7401379 589 g
'
· WV000306, 304-1175· 1788. newly created road,
·-•·-..,.. ...
C740)441 · 1038. OVB ,.. ri!lhlto_,ro)lctany&amp;
II d F
R d project; and
t 999 Whllo Bonnovlle SE the right to l&lt;cepl/ aD loido, &amp; withdraw llerno 1989 Chevrolet, 4K4, Sllwr·
D- "TS &amp; M
ca,de
I ~rbm I oah'
WHEREAS, thto CHy
"""'
UIORS
Public Notice
aa
po n
e ng I e commlaalon wlahta
~. CD ~ Aluml: rajlclany &amp; 1111 bids, &amp; with- from oale prior to ole. ado. 3~ Automatic, $5900.
Call
(740)256-11741
roRSAU!
termlnua
ol
the
num Whoolo, LoW Mlln. draw ~ema from aalo prior Torma of SO". CASH OR
aforeaald GKN Sinter to name all of that
Clrool ConditiOn, Muot Sooll to sale. Termo of Sale. CERTIFIED CHECK.
1989
S-to
Blazer,
$3200.
Choeiunat
Rood, end baing 1 portion of the newly
(740)441·0838
CASH OR CERTIFIED
1985
(740)388·8270
e, 235 HP/
RESOLUTION NO.
'::-~,_;;;_;;....,....--- CHECK.
10111 of 1472 •83 teet, conotructed flood
vlnruda motor, New Seats,
R2002~8
Ill
tl
t
Stir Auto Saloa, acroas
1990 F-250 XLT, E - COrpet, Stereo, Power haad
"'
or 0.278 mllea In m
go on
rou e
fn&gt;m bonk In Racine, Ohio,
4x4, PW, $5500. Conoplotetv Rellullt, Lots 01
leng!h.
within the city llmlla
afforuablo used cora and 67 Chevelle F.F 396 En·
Sell Trade Cab,
(740)388·1591
EKtras, EKcalllnl Condition,
A RESOLUTION
The
b 0 v e ol Galllpolla which Ia
1
trucka. 740-9411-2451
glne, 400 Turbo, auto, Sun,
Call Evenings alter 8:00
DESIGNATING THE
'deacrlbed road hiO a a I I II
under
In the · ·
set Red, Restored condl·
1991
Jeep
Wrangler,
(740)245·58&amp;4
'
STREET
NAME
OF
variable
right
otway.
cunatructlon
In the
81 Ceprlc:e, V·8, aUto, 4 dr., tlon. Appraised
value
116,000 mlloa, Hard and
GKN SINTER ROAD
.t
hI
f
• T
$
For 1 deacrlptlon of
own a
PI
o
..,. good, Chesler $2100 $22,400 asking $12,600.
So
. " •CIP 5,000. (304)875· 1986 Rogal t6 ' Fiberglass,
AS A PART OF THE
Gallipolis Add!
(740)~
' '
' (304)675· I 310
8682
4 cylinder Mtro·rulaar moseld right of way,
•
son
lor pleat
kl •FLOOD MtTIGATION
cunaull lhe right ol and the ' City or
1993 Forti Explorer 4&lt;4 4
'
urt s
~at,
ROUTE PROJECT
Galllpoll b I I
door, Eddie Bauer Edlll;..,, $3000; 1977 ~lnnebago
way plana for Bob
• eg nn ng
Reel Estate General
completely loaded, 86 ,000 motor homo, 24 camper,
Evana Avenue Flood II Roull 35 and
mltn, SS.4 9S.OO OBO. $2000 oeo, (740)742-4803
WHEREAS, the City Mitigation Route; and progressing aoulh to
~:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;;;;;
Ia conatructlng a
WHEREAS, tha City Ita
temporary
740-992 .3490
flood mitigation road, wlahea 10 name the termlnua lllhe GKN
which waa formerly road "GKN Sinter Sinter Plant, and
referred to a a tha Bob Roed".
Including that portion

Bonk....._6H

1992
Moo&lt;:ury Topaz, $800. 1865
Dorlgl
0·2~
Ptcl&lt;up,
11000. 19110 Ford Tlnl&gt;O. 4
door, SIOO. 11187 Plymouth
l'totlzCII1, ~. 181!4 DodQO
111n1 Rom von. S450. 11110
ChlvyBofottl.$1600. 1991
Ford - r Van, SUOO.
1985 Ford fllnglr Pk:lwp,
1&amp;00. (740)38! 9303

r

I

I

to ba conatructad
beginning et the GKN
Sinter Plant, · and
terminating at Mill
C-"IIOiid;and
WHEREAS, the CHy
wlahaa to name lhe
r08d " Farm IIOiid- fo.
hi ttorlc purpoa. .
and to anaure lhe
name for thto rood Ia
conalatant for Ita
antlre langtlo.
NOW,
THEIIEFOIIE, BE IT
RESOLVED by the
City Commlatlon of.
lhto City of Golllpollo,
Ohio: tlUtt the name
for
tho
flood
mlllgallon
route
baglnrilng 11 RoU1e
35 and progreaalng
aouth
Ia
Ita
temporary tarmlnu1
at the GKN Sinter
Plant ahall be "Farm
flood" for Ito antlra
length aa well aa the
remain- ot thto road
to be built from Ita

current termlnu1 1t
GKN Sinter to

c...k.

Mill
J

Thla flelolutlon
ahall taka affoct and
be In lull force from
and attar the aarllaa1
period
of
lima
at-bylaw.
PASSED: February
18,2002.

ATTEST:
Annona M. Landera,
Clerk of the Galllpolla
CHy Commloolon
J . Gary Fancferbolch,
Prealdont of tha
Galllpolla
City
Commlaaton
The
foregoing
fleaolutlon ta· hereby
approved •• to form.
Douglaa Cowlta, '
Galllpolla
City
Solicitor
February 24,

2002

•

•
"

•

Buy,

or

CLASSIFIEDSI

:......

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Sewage, Trash,
S3501Mo.. 740-14B-0008.

~~

e

.

~

Nowty
·
2 Bed·
room Apt.,
Stovo/
Rolrlgono·
tor, Ut11111oo Paid, $4001
month. 48 Olive St.,

modeled 2 Bedroom In ·
town. Stove, Refrigerator,
Dlahwalher, Off Strut
Parking, Rlnl lncludao Wo·
~•r and Sewer, No Pet1,
14751 month. (740)448·
tlll71

::
,.
,_
·

~·

ft~~=:;;~e~a~~s~a~e~·=e=n=e~r~a~~===;

Water

btllo Volley Bank will otter

10

&amp;unba!' Q!:imtf · &amp;rntind • Page D7

;,:o._

- ..- -

:::-==------

Graclouo living. I and 2
bedroom apartments at VI~
logo Minor ond Rlwrlllde
Apartments In Middleport.
From $278-$348. COli 740G92·S064. Equal Houalng
Opportunltlto.

..

1

One top hopp n·g

Announcement

lnd~ent

R 1E t t G

10

I ~.,F_ _1'0R_A_~-- 1F

~

Fox

Jlllll!!
' !fll-IJ!IJIIIIIII!

yr. old r----=~========;;-:...1

rib

~~

saoo.

40

S20Q. (304)675-4248

=937"1~r.

10

IF

Ohio Volley Bank w11 alter
for- by public: auc:11on 1
1997 a...,. Monto Corio,
1271751101 h Ohio Volley
143 3rc1 ,_
lllle l'orU """"· 4 cyt. Ill'· GalllpoUo,
on 3/III'Oi:
bo.(7 ~ ~ Runo Cloocl. Sokl to ""' -

I 987 Ntlll/l Moxlmo SW
loadld, ounroot. 8cyl.
$1200. 080(304)67~
1987

.!~

1881 Oldo c.t1uo,
111112 a...,. 11100, 2 D - T""*, Good Cob.
(740)311·7588

-,:~-:---::--:-::-::::':'
1tl7 ~ Grond Mil·
quiOL$. Thlo-- ...
dan. 000 _e;::"Y1 09,!~
wl7o,
m-.
Mull ,.. 1111.1 ono.
•• • •• 00 8 " - · v~ ·~
...- .
~ - ~
tora 740-8112·34110

Puppies lor sale, with pe· Moo ~ f1i 7:00·3:30 Weeke nd rl a11111al &amp;lun 8:00-4:30 12 week&gt;
Herbal lie Dis- ';:'~t"'s~~·oo Per~~~, 1• 200 PMatra,h ToyShiPoodh
T loMB rchtady
tnbutor, Call For P . - Or PSI s35 00 Per 100 . All
rc 6,
zu ar 1.
• finamifll and lunding ovoi~ble bo1ed oneligi~U~
oor website al www.&amp;oldenalant.rom
' Mplacemenlon(lodltoinins"
Dpportunhy. (740)44H982 Brass cOmpression FIWngs Cash only. 740-742.0003
In Stock.
..
MUSICAL
I b
JET
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
•·-·~
(oh!Dct Kar lam 1-800·648·36!5 01 (7401 37).3966
AERATION MOTORS
ES Jackson, Ohio, HIOO· t.,..-llli"""iiii"iiii'vniiii-iiii"••p~ ·._._._.........._............;,;;,;;.,;,;;;,;,;_ _,
Repaired, Now &amp; Aobul~ In 537·9528
-,
Stock. Call Aon Evans, 1·
G ita
M rshall $250
Real Estate Gen·eral
800·537-9528.
watkins Pro&lt;l
. ucts: Double P~av~mS2pe5o." (3041675:
h h~0 nd do k
-•
strong! w
a
r va· 4249
nllla, extracts, pepper,
King Size Manre11 &amp; Box sp~ea. dessert miKOa, sal·
1
Springs. Aetrlgerator. AU In . ves and liniments. Call740WalnUI L..-. 600 h. II . Good CCndnlon. (304)675- 949•3027 .
Kiln driad and Surlacod. 5162
'--'---:::::--:-::::-"--.,....-----$1.00 par
board
It, Metal frame greonhouees
Real Ernate General
7
( .tel)4.46-9966
wlfurnaces
, accessories.
30'x84'
$1 ,000.
30'x80'
$2,000. Coll740·949·2115
·
Russell D. Wood, B&lt;1&gt;ker 446-461 8
*
----::--:-;::--,...,....-::---.,---Judy f!&lt;Will ,
441 -0262
Cheryl Lemley .............. .... ............... 742-3171*
Tarrume DeWm ............ ........... .. 245-0022
Dana Alha ...................... ................... 379-9209
Ruth Barr
446-0722
Jim Slone .. ............ .... ....................... .446-9483*
I sliver oaqulns, I midnight
blue/purple, bought An·
droa'o In Jackson, pd.
S400.00 1111 lor $160.00,
Olhlr $50.00; CB-Cobra 23
channel $~. 00 . 740-992·
'-'88;.:33,:__ _ _ __,..,.
Bed Uner for Short Bad lull
oiZt Chev. Truck out ol
2001 m
. oriel. $150./0BO.
(304)882·2514
•

: r'

wv

w,

992 3354
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
Repairs. Problems? Need SawmUI $3,795. New Super .,.-'' --,----ll.Jned? Call The Plano Or. Lumbermate 2000, larger German Shepherd F'upplea
:-:740-'-'448="-c-452
.:.:C:::5'::-::- : , - - capacities, more options. AKC Reg. 15 wks. old. Had
Hot Tub, $500. Camper, Manufacturer of sawmills, 1~1. Shots. 3 females left.

Pop-Up, $750. Chest· Type edgers and sk-rs. NQA2 eloth coats, ankle length, Froozer, $100. (740)258- WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
green &amp; blue, bOth dark col- 6368
Sonwlll Drive, Buffalo, ~Y
ora. tlze 11 &amp; 12, $5 a
14225. FREE t•rormalion
ptoco, (740)887·3852
Household Items &amp; Baby t -800·578·1363oxt200·U
2 prom drosses sizes 7 &amp; 9, Items. (3041675•2801
Specl
314 200

I

-SUE

304-773-5774

riO

or (740)448· 29HI098.
(740)446-113(18
1-800·
HEATING &amp; Found:
If iOUordon't
call BENNETT'S
COOLING (740!"48·9418

1 and 2 bedroom apart· - - - - - - - menta, turnllhed and unlur· 10.PfaltzroH
Yorktowne
nilhld, .....nty ct.pQIIt , . cupt &amp; aaucera, never
qulrod, no pets, 740-992· ullld, s3. SOl, (740)667·
:1218.
~52
*

uiiOdltld. No Pita. Dlpoeit,

COn&lt;IIUonor Estimates. ca11 pacliage.

A111'0S

to DOWN CARll POliCE
Available llvough 4TII,I:-ATTHUIIW IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI
March. Charllo 11cKNn OTION,K ~'!!!~~~~~HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S,
Wedding Draaa, Slzo 12.
- · · · - ~"
JEEP'S &amp; SPORT UTILITY.
FormoJ Clown, S1zo t2. 2
ANGUI,
11
..OI,.UD ~•• • FOR USTINGS 1·
HI"""-DI.
-H ~
Formal Gowns, Silo 10.
"~
·lfOC&gt;-451-ooetl EXT. ().9812
(740)379-2788
IUUI OtWJI'Y POll '10IIACCO
HTTLIRHT 1 - Dido 98 ~. 4
~ ~ F- Rolrtg.
FAIIM
FOil 11101111 .... door,
qollon, boautlful
orator, Round Gl.lu Top
FO. CONTACT CHAIIUI cor In condition
Kllchon T - w/oholro. L.Jv. ,
• IOYDCIOI)-11
w/111,000 octual mUll.
lng Room Chair. (304)675- TIN for FfoltWon~ tool long. $2,3!0.00.
5852
tu-. and Hay- ng flu.
Rlwr Vl.lw Mot0111 740Wine color Aigner, high
Sudol a, 12
Uov &amp;
::.
992;;;..,34110;.;,;.;_--,.-,--,
spike 3" hoot knoo high Volt, High Ou~ Fits moot
...,.,
Plyrnoutto Rollant I
boots, ccst $109, Mil $20, ATVo, 1285.
'
GIWN
...,., 4 cy1 outo 48
size 6 llko now, (740)867· Jlm'o Farm Equipment Inc. actuai mlloo. st ', 50Ci.oo.
3652
r40)4:!8-2484
45 Round Bal.ll Ha~ 8001b. 740-742·2852
COli (740)387-7586

"""'ay..,

PoM Aool 320 GTI 330 COII740-2(5.5121 ·
·
GTI S200
firm 2 heavy
rods OYP8r-.;;nd 740~
992-7242
·--iiliiiliiiiii-_.1

&amp;

r

Wl'SIOCKIO

w -. kip al""' llno, por- CRESS GREENS. 'll&gt;u cui lOYD IEIP CATTLE
fiJI tUrquoiH lome' !oct condllloo&gt;. OrlglnaUy $&amp;.00 per ..-w, ~ NRPOIIIIAHCI
lULL
Slzo 18. St~. coot$41111.
SZM. cut S12.00 por bullool. IALI. -DAY lloiAJICH

Homo Ow,.,.· AKC Registered Lobs,
Two s .R. Mobi.. Home In **** Prom or..• .... Dog Run· ChaJn Link. 2· Tappan HI efflclercy 90 ptus Chocolate
or
Black.
Cly, 13251 mo. Water Fur- -Morf.lee". Auberglne(Ught 10fhc10h. sections or 1- gas furnaces Including oil (740)44f-o931
niolwd, Dopo11t and - · Smokoy LIYOnder) color, 10K30H. sections $125. and oloctrle gas lurna·
onco Required.· No ~11. Paid $160- worn once u a (304)675-4249
cos. HI Efficiency Hoot ..,.,,--,--,---...,....,.-,{140}448·11!1
aner Brkltamald c1re11. Size Free .-,. ... Furnaces and Air Pumpa, featuring Tappans CFA Himalayan Kittens.
5:30pm.
18120, 1811 for S100. ShOes
..,...1
Free Incredible warranty Call after 6pm weekdays.

sw.

I

a.... llraplooa IIOqljln

1op with

;;.:.:;__~--...,....-..,- Rnldonllol

to motch· ~~~ 9 112,

Flu.ns &amp;

VmnuLa

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

....has**
*
**

YOU. Owner

relocated
and
must
sell
Immediately! Low maintenance 2
_.ory vinyl sld!ld 5 '1'lfi~ID}1!1m'
with over 2,61)() .q. H. Ol !!iring*
apace. Walk·Out basement, ·
decking. Newer construction. 24
x 40 2 story bam with ~ttached
8x24 shod. 2 Aores along stsla
rOute. Call for appointment today!* ·

•''••
''·

Real Estate General

'

Real Estate General

'·I

•

' OFFICE

.
'•

REAL ESTA:
Stteee 1943

992-2259

'

'·~

.'

completed. Don't miss this onel
can for

,_
~.-,

10% dn,

, 8.50% opr, wiopt)l'olled crodtt
lnteructlon of US 33 &amp; 595
Juat South of Logan

PRIVACY
NEIGHBORSII Best of both
worlds. Brick ranch located on
SA 588 offers over 2000 sq.
ft. of living space. Quality
constructed wHh 3 BAs, 2 t/2
la'!lB living room,
dining, eat in kitchen &amp;

M·F 8;30-8, Set 9-6, Cloaed Sun

385-4367

'IWin RNwr 'J'owOra accept·
tno apptloattono now lor

The extra Income !rom the rentala..L.
that com.e with this home, thai hasJill

3 bedrooma, 2 batha, basement,*

Untii...Uabll

kilchan family room and more~
One rental conslata ot 2 bedroom"JI(
and bath. Call and let ua toll you..L.
abOUt !he rast. Priced a!J(
$79,900.001 U139

Moren 1. 2002
1Dr. Hud SlllllldltiiO apt. for
-.y and dlaoblod ~DH
(304)678-8679

EXCELLENT
LOCATIONExcellent lot is what you will
say· when y~ view this
Immaculate ranch located at
1323 Cora Mill Rd. Olfe~ng
la'!lo LR, FR open to kitchen
&amp; bar area, 3 BAs, 2 baths, full
basement, 2-car garage wilh

Oak trim &amp; some workshop area, plus 24x32
Over 4 acres building, nice deck with
screen~, surround bench. Situated on
nearby. 6.293 mil flat • yes flat acres.
IO
needs.

Upololra Furnilhed I Bad·
room Apt. UtltiiiH Paid .
(740)448-a&amp;tg, C740)448·

4827

t

room

18x80 - . 1100/mo. 740992-21117.

POI~EIIOY ·A 1 '/.story home with vinyl siding,

upper and lower front porch, partly llnlshed
basement, and a rear deck. Has 3 to 4
bedrooms, 1 bath, with kitchen and living room
down. Grea1 starter home or

Mobile Home LDt, Takll t2·

t4• 18 Wldu, $1261 mo
l'flll dapoolt, Cloocl Reier·
· (740)448-0175
1torago Spalle lor ront 4033
loot. wllh motif
oholvlng. Locallcl In Chy o1
Point Ptooaan1 . . lnqulro at
(304)674-0102

whh

detachad
and
morel Must
one to appreciate. OWner
~~~~,2~~Y~~.JO sail, requelling an

FARM UITINGI Approx. 41
acrea wiiM 40 x 70 frame bam
wlstalls, 24 x 40 wort&lt;ohop with
loft, storage' shed &amp; detached
gerago. Roc:onlly remodeled I .5

atory home with new kitchen,

large dining, den, 6 bedrooms,
2.5 baths, very nicely .- a tcdl

Must see to appreciate all l htJ
amenities that comes with this

1111-•

property! 12111

FRONT STREET • MIDDLEPORT • A house
wllh a view of the Ohio River. A split level home
with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath and pari basement
Has a detached garage, and a front and aide
stoop. Has a nice level lot
$50,000.00
Plus

110ry
been
refurbished. Lart!c living room
beam&amp; and massive firepliace
porch. Let 1he rent from the

cottaae make the payment. Green
N0.360
-- •

Quality Sublorban Llvlngll

This well cared lor multi-leVel
Story building situated at

Avenue. Oownllalrt Itt
beauty oalon and olllco

up

u*

rental.

Upstalra has 2 one bedroom*
N)lrtments. NICe rental Income.
Call forcornplelellallngl •2135 ·
DOES A HANEIY LOCATIO.-,;N;,.;; . . I
A WELL MAINTAINED Y
INTEREST YDU? Nlca
home
with
lmprovamanta~

JUST OFF FLATWOODS ROAD· Approx. 3.07
available. Tho land abu\9 two roads, possibility
ol apiiHing Into two lois, Greal for your mobile
llorno or now home.
$17,000.00

a favor and take a clo&amp;ef
at thlo roomy railed ranch
and what aM It hao to olttr. For
atartera 1 warm aee througtl
fireplace sMuoled batwaen living
room &amp; clnlng i!l'IHl. and nice
·finished
wood lloorlng, 4
bedrooms, :2 baths, ramlly room,
Ioyer. LOts of Improvements such
as heating syetem, ·remodeled
ki!Chon and mora. Lot ua get you
In to Hothlo homel 121!5
LANDI Ovor 44 acres with

county Water tap In place.

Cleared p,11tura land with aorne

WOOded acroo tool Paved road.
Rowloovlllo Roedl f21St

LEVEL LOTI Approx. 1/2
with publkl water available. "~'.'Ill• 1

place to build a new home.'
Rorlnoy areal Broker owned!

CLDSE' TO
approx.
location torr · i&gt;u.~n·~nv~:-i-!ililitu+l
available. Along SR
McCormick. COli
lnlormallon. t2171
IMMEDIATE POSSE8810NI 3
Bedroom ranch. Freoh~ pointed

ao

exterior

and

lnt1rtor.

1::

MIDDLEPORT· A nice ranch with 3 bodraoma,
family room, sun room, kltohan, living room, and
ont bath. Roally naat and nloe. Decorated
nloa everywhere. Haa a large back yard that Ia
partially lanced. Parlect far that family or
aomaone that needs everything on one lloor.

Bill'• Tire
Shop

MIDDLEPORT • N. 3RD ST.· A ranch style
home !hal Ia only 10 years old . Home has
3 bedrooma, 2 baths, and a storage bu ilding.
Also has vinyl siding, Anderson windows &amp;
some newar carpeting .
$41 ,000.00

Ra-ood,WV

(304) 273-3271
W.'y• ec!d"' tp
•rerylm;
Cotapltta nballll
f)'...............r

all..-111, cornputtr
ball- ....... "

olrulo, iadlolllr - "
npalr, dre rodt, baD
jolalll, otc•.

. ... •t

...

IAGGII&lt;&gt;n Townshllf.

One ncre or five

What e ver you need from thi s

DOTTIE TURNER, Broklr........992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING ..... .. ........ . 949·2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING .........949·2131
BETTY JO COLLIN$ ................. 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS .................. . 992·3056
OFFICE ..................................... . 992·2888

N!W LIIT1NQI MIDDLIPORT
VILLAGE Nk:l 3 bedroom ranoh
home with largo lovol lot. Thlo
homO II In good rapalr lnd II
priced to 1111 at only $49,800.00
Looated at Rlv1rvltw Drive.
12115
WHY NOT US! YOUII INCOME
TAX REFUND POR 'litE
DOWNPAYMEN'I
on
lhll
moderato~
priced homt In
Middleport Village. Thla homo
has 2 bedrooms, bath, living
room &amp; kitchen. Full d~VI·In
ba1emen1. There'• nDthlng you
would have to do to thll one
except llva hare. Would make a
nice
I
11 well.
Only

*

kitchen

and

family

room

(where most tlmele spent) ara
really nice. The reeenlly
remodeled kitchen features
·eustom oak cabinets with tots
ot extra features. The family IN
4th Ave:
walk to school.
"" room is very cor; &amp; has a gas Walk over town. Walk to ball
fireplace. Also, 3·4 BAs, 2
games... you ~I the Idea. 3
baths, large screened In
BR ~ome w1th I .5 baths.
;;~li:9§2o:car garage &amp; more. la'!lo family room, ·LA, eat-in
•.,
Located In Spring kitchen, Extra
lot with

i i

PORTLAND
BUFFINGTON
LANDING· An executive sub·
division designed for horse lovers
and boaters! You won't believe the
tea1ures. Access to the beautiful
Ohio River for boat lovers, 1DO' boat
dock, rldin·g ring, picnic sheller,
riding !rails and much more. Certain
res1rlctlons apply. Lot prices and
acreage vary.

Full

baHmont, omall lot tltualed
within mlnutoo of hoapilll and
town. Not 1 hugt prloo on lhlo
onll $40,000.00 1211:11

JUST OFF HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD •
A 4 bedroom home with one bath on a dead
and road. Has a newer root, tree
and alta
on a 1.5 acre lot.
JUST
,500.00

Announotmtnt

COOLVILLE • BRISTER ROAD •
This 1g88, 14~70 single wide,
Includes living room, equipped
kllchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 'baths, HIP
&amp; CIA. This all alta on 8+ acres.
ASKING 148,000.

Middleport· 3 bedrOom homo
offering approx. 1800 sq .. ft.
includes ~0 x 24 living room,
kitchen, partial basement and
2 car carport. $89,8001127

3

largo ll~ng roor!), I I
kltohen, full beooment
room, rec. room and more. .: '"':'' ""'·•
lencod In bock lawn. N~ly
landocopod and oo much more,
we must toll you the rOll. t21H

acres of nice laying land with water and electric

home oilers a high quality ol
living you're sure to enjoy. The

RUTLAND. Groat location. If your looking for a butlnou opporllmltv, lhlsla H.
Included ara 2 commercial buildings an slUing on .81+ acres. Tne t etory
block blolldlng with newar shingle roof, 2025 eq, ft. of floor ' &amp; atorage sp~
wllh N.G. opaco heal. The 40 x 80 mala! building hoe a cemanl floor &amp; I~
fl. lnaulatld cellngs.
ASKING $71,000 '

Reduced to

•

story· home offers much more HuiiiY-i~'Y.ff
you

than

Vaulted

might

tongue

ceiling, create

lmagirie. to make

&amp;

groove home yours.

a dramatic feel style home

formal Living

In the living room &amp; loft area. 3 Room
&amp; Dining
Room,
large BAs, 3 full baths, eat-In remodeled Kitchen with bar
kitchen, Master BR has area &amp; dinette area open to

fireplace &amp; master bath has sunken

Family

room

and

offering • lat for your doll~r.
Appro&lt;rmalely t 1/2 flat acre
lot. 2 BRa, 1 1/2 baths, nice
Living Room, all In good
oondltlon...wllh
replacement
windows. Fully equipped with
appliances· stove, refrigerator,

HUNTERS PARADISEII 52

freezer,

acres of wooded deer/turkey

washer

&amp;

dryer.

Afleelled carport, Storage
al tllis house II your
building &amp; nice. covered front
Is weak, because
porch. Owner le ready to aatl..
will
all your
call today and atop paying rent
.
2 story
• Be a HOMEOWNER. with 4 BR's, 2
, large LA,
$28,000 1820
FR, DR. Always wanted to
own
a house
with 2
slal~~ys? ... , Tall
collings,

country, 3 BR hunling cabin,
tree stands, outbuildings, ete.
Most all furniture stays. Don't
hesitate. $75,800 1142

trim. Lots of character.

REDUCED
TO
$791,9~~Jil~'s a bargain a1 that

~.

iiRi~:vi.LuE

CLOSE TO
This 3 BR home
offers great value to anyone
TOW~!

looking for convenience and

affortlablllly. At $89,900 yO&lt;J'II
.a lot mort than you might
Imagine.
Full
basement
enhancas your living space,
wnh large family room and
potantlal 4th BR. In -ground
pool. Located on tho edge of
town . 1241

Aflo·rdatole &amp;
.
level floor plan will allow you to
enjoy all this house has to oller
while keeping out · of each
other's way. 3 BAs. &amp; 2 baths,

large

eat-in

kitchen, living

room, family room and 2-car
garage. Good storage--good
privacy. Priced at $89,900

1238

homo . with 3 beclroome,
I .50 101'8 lat.
MIDDLIPOIIT • OLIVIII ITIIIIT • Thll 8 yaar old 28x48 Outah
houllng home leatur11 3 bedroornl, 2 blithe, g1rclan tub, 1kyllght1,
n - r OltPII. poi'Oh, deck, metll aarport ttorage building. Home haa
gu heat, CIA, equipped kitchen, lldawalkl &amp; btauUiul landlc~
12tx80 101. Home hill bien YlfY well malnlllned. AI KING

a

thlo 3 bedroom Wlndoor homo
hll had loll of tondtr ~ng
cart. VInyl tiding, tbtrmo douDII
hung windowt, ohlngla rool, and
carport. Situated on I .07 ICrll at
Ttxao Road pr~ ld at $44,000.00

12114

*********************

with

insert, 3 BRs, 2
car garage and
lot. PRiced

whirlpool 1\lb, One car garage
"plus" has 112 bath. Country
setting. Nice siZed lot. I
$129,9001102

an,

www .wi semanreal estate.com
David Wlnmen, QRI, CRI Broker 441·1111111
Cerolyn W1aoh, QRI 441·1007 Bonny Qarnaa 441-2707
Robert llruoe . 441-0121 Rita Wlaeman 441·111115

rD ~
11M Jlif!l '
/

(740)
446
3644
.
11

�•

\

'

!

Kenseth wins Subway 400, 11

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, Ohio • Point Plnnnt, wv

nmes

Chief of Centers for Disease
New York
Control and Prevention resigns announces
ATI.ANTA (AP) -Saying
"You can't do the same thing
fo~r." Dr. Jeflrey Kaplan
resigned as head of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Kaplan, who made the
~ncement Thunday in a
meeting' with senior officials,
gid he had not made a decision on what to do next. His
resignation is elfective March
31.
' "We've reached a point
where we've made some significant achievemeniS, and it
was a good time to make the
shift," Koplan, 57, told The
Associared Pre5s.
Among the highlighiS of his
CDC tenure, Kaplan cited the
agency's response to the
anthrax lerters last tall and the
effort to build up the_nation's
defense against bioterrorism.
Oth~r highlights induded
boosting national immunization levels, working to slow the
nation's obesity epidemic and
focusing on preventing chronic diseases.
It was CDC officers who
were responsible in the early
days of the anthrax crisis for
determinil'lg how the agent
spread, and how infected people should be treated: The
deadly anthrax attacks killed
five people.
The federal agency came·
under intense criticism from

members of Congress who
gid the CDC did not act
quickly enough, or communi-.
cate clearly to the public about
the danger.
In an AP interview last fall,
Kaplan defended his stalf.
saessing that the anthrax mailin~ were an unprecedenred
bioterrorist attack. He again
defended the response on
Thursday.
"Here we had an event in
which there could have been
hundreds of deaths, and there
could have been many hundreds of cases, and yet we
ended up with five deaths;' he
said "Sure we always want to
have none, but I think it was a
very effective response:·
Koplan's boss, Health and
Human Services Secretary
TommyThompson,called him
an aggressive, passionate leader
who led an effective response
during an extremely trying
time. Thompson called the resignation a loss fur the country.
Koplan assumed the agency's
top job in 1998, under President Clinton. He had worked
22 years as a government
health officer, including a stint
as a "disease detective" - one
of the CDC's t3med outbreaktracking investigators.
. He earned a bachelor's
degree in English from Yale
Universil)\ a master's degree in
public heal~ from Harv:ud

RESIGNS - Center for Disease Control Director Jeffrey
Koplan Is shown In this Nov.
15, 2001 file photo In WashIngton. Koplan resigned as
head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
which was criticized for its
response to last fall's deadly
anthrax · attacks.
(AP
Photo/Dennis Cook, File)

University and a medical doctorate from Mt. Sinai School of
Medicine.
A native of Boston, Koplan
lives in Atlanta with his wife,
also a medical doctor, and has
two children, a 25-year-old
son and a 21-year-old daughter.

that's a tenth of the U.S:s size
economically, a large-cap
company could be a billion
dollar
company. And that's
f1om PlgeDI
frumPapD1
considered small-cap by U.S.
Bhaman: Something that standards.
local Home and Garden Shows.
So what we are looking for The Columbus Dispatch Charwe've owned for a long time
is Embraer.lt's a Brazilian air- is to invest in businesses tha.t ities Home &amp; Garden Show has
craft manufacturer and makes have growth opportunities begun and remains open
regional jets. Regional jets are that we think are significant. through March 3 at the Ohio
airplanes that fly intra-conti- Whether they are a billion Expo Center.
nent rather than inter-conti- dollars in market cap or a
Show hours are Satwday 10
nimt. So they are smaller jets quarter of a billion it really
a.m. to 9 p.m., Sundays 11 a.m.
that fly high and allow for is isn't relevant. What is relevant
better point-to-point travel. . is the opportunity the com- to 6 p.m., weekdays 4 to 9 p.m.,
except Wednesday when it
Convenience is one of our pany offers.
Q: Looking ahead, do you opens at. noon. Tickets are $7
underlying investment themes
and we think that people are expect to see some choppy each, with children three to 12
years of age at $2 each.
going to demand · more con- markets?
Bhaman: I think they wiD
The Tri-State Home and
venience in the future. They
be.
There
are
lots
of
uncerGanlen Show will be held
don't want to have to fly from
Cleveland to Pittsburgh and tainties (in the markeiS) and March 15-17 at the Huntingthen on to Tampa. They'd perceived uncertainties can be ton Convention Center. John
rather fly from Cleveland to greater than what actually Marra, host for WSAZ-TV, will
Tampa directly. And what happens. But choppy markets be airing live television shows
these planes allow you to do is allow for opportunities. So for his. weekly Farm and Garfly directly, fly conveniently, I'm excited about that. den Show on March 16.
fly safely, and fly quickly. That Frankly, choppy markets are
Master Ga!deners and state . : ,
makes them a viable proposi- when people throw away the
specialists
fro111 the tri-state area ','
tion for the airlines and a baby with the bath water.
We're here ready to catch the will be presenting various class.
great thing for customers.
es throughout the weekend.
Q: Will these be like the baby.
Dian Vujovich~ most recent Tickets are $5 each and are
Ame~ican Eagle planes?
Bhaman: American Eagle is books include · "101 Mutual available at the door.
Get ready for spring by seeone of their biggest cus- Fund FAQs" (Chandler House)
and
"10-Minute
·
Cuide
to
the
ing
what plants and ' home .
tomers. As is Continental
Stock
Market"
(Matmill4n).
To
improvements are available for
Express.
learn
more
about
mutual
funds,
Q: 'Another trend and comyour home and garden.
visit
her
i#b
silt
at:
www.
dianspany that represents it?(Hal Kntm is Meigs County~
Bhaman: We own a compa- funtifreebies. co til.
Extmsion agent for agriculturr and
ny called Grupo Televisa, in
natural resourw, Oltio Stale Vni·
Mexico. Televisa is the world's
'vmity.)
· largest Spanish language
broadcaster. They own cab!~.
satellites and massive amounts
of programming. They also
are the largest supplier of programming to Univision in the
U.S. U nivision in Miami gets
more viewership than NBC.
The purchasing power of
. . . . II .. T!Z Ftlllr
the U.S. Hispanic market is
bigger than the purchasing
~ Nallcn:udldiiDIII dlltlnat
fower of all ofMexico. Mexi~o is getting more af!luent,
•100 :11VI)I teet mF'IP'
the cost of money is corning
down and we think this is a
trend that's very compelling.
Q: What about the size of
the companies you invest. in.
_rl _ _ ,.,... ....... _
Are they small, medium and
large?
~---....,..,~
Bhaman: One has to distinguish what a large-cap is in a
U.S. environment from what
a large-cap is in an emerging
markets one.
The U.S. economy is more
than two times as ·big as every ·
other economy in the world.
And, most emerging markets
are less than one-tenth the
size of the U.S:s economy.
Which means, a large-cap
company in the U.S. is much
larger than a large-cap com- .
pany in a developing country.
For instance, in the U.S., a
brge-cap 'company is considered one that has S10 billion
in market cap. In a country

Kneen

Markets

.........
·Un-·ond-·5""--.
.
.............
-Wt'l--""'
.......-....
..-·.....

..

I

NEW YORK (AP) Former New York Times
publisher Arthur Ochs
Sulzberger is retiring from
the company's board along
with tw9 other directors,
the company announced.
Sulzberger, who goes by
the name "Punch," ,ei:ved as
publisher from 1-9,63 to
1992 and was the company's
chairman and chief 'execu-.
tive from 1973 to ; l997,
when his son Arthur
Sulzberger Jr. became chairman . Russell T. 1i.lewis
became chief executive in
1997.
Sulzberger, who is 76,
spent his entire professional
career with the Times
except for one year, 19531954, when he worked for
the Milwaukee Journal.:.:;
"My
fa'ther, · Plftlch
Sulzberger, has served The_
New York Times Comp·any
brilliantly for 50 years and
we
are
extraordinarily
grateful for his vision, leadership and wisdom," Arthur
Sulzberger Jr. said in a state-

Native
fromPapD1
wheel, in sometimes grueling
conditions. His shortest rae~
(the Grand Prix) is two houri'
and 45 minutes. While his
longest races are 24 hours
such as 24 Hours of Daytona.
Several weeks ago, Knight
finished second in class at
Daytona, and sixth overall in a
fie.ld of about 80 cars. Still,
d~pite his strong showing, he
doesn't like the famous
course, because it's built for
lap ·racing.
. "I would prefer a true r11ad
course;• Knight said. "Dayto~'s a big oval, so they put

•

board changes

ment Thursday.
Two other board members also are retiring,
Robert A. Lawrence, 75,
and Charles H . Price II,
who is 70. The company is
nominating
Cathy
J.
Sulzberger, a partner ·in the
LHIW Real Estate Development Partnership, to be
elected to 'the board, leaving
the two other seats vacant

.Wp County"s

'
for now.
Cathy J. Sulzberger, who
served as a director of the
Chattanooga Times from
1996 to 1999, is the daughter
of Arthur
Ochs
Sulzberger, the sister of
Arthur Sulzberger Jr. and
the · cousin of Michael
Golden, vice chairman of
the company.

Mlat's inside

completing the programs to
quality for 85 percent of the
jobs in today's market. Now
that is a significant reason to
get an education.
It is important to weigh all
of your options when choosing a program of study. I hope
that I have helped you in
making a better decision.
Remember - college is in
your future.
(!.Manne R. Bowman is vice

ftanaPIIpD1

reviewed the different types
of educational programs, let's
look at where the jobs are.
According to a recent study
by Workforce 2020, a bachelor's degree or 1 higher ' is
required for 20 pereent of the
jobs and an associate degree
or advance training ts
president for administrative ·and
required for 65 percent.
This means that the educa- financial '!!fairs at the University
tional programs that we have of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
discussed will allow students Community College.)

us in about half the oval, then
put us into the infield, then
back out onto the oval, then
into the infield. It's not a true
Le Mans course. It's just the
best they can do with an oval
for a road race."
Still, Knight concedes, 24
Hours of Daytona has a great
history.
Knight started racing in
college in Ohio in car clubs,
but . remembers cutting his
teeth on the back roads of
West Virginia. He recalls once
racing a friend all the way
from Point Pleasant to Wheeling.
"We were young and stupid
then," Knight recalls With
-laughter. "We got pulled over
\1}' an off-duty State Trooper.

Glenna A. Rummel, 89
Raymond F. Adams, 61
Elizabeth Stebbins, 85
Euhice Strauss, 93
Homer P. Parker, 78

Weather
•. -Hlp: JOt, Low: 101
•::

Details, Al

;WASHINGTON (AP)
-;- Enron Corp. has asked a
fe.deral agency to pay a
huge insurance claim on an
idled power plant in India, a
itcl~~t- ~nced in patr~
still-outsfanding government-backed loan.
.
The relationship between
Enron and the litde-known
Overseas Private Invest. ment Corp. demonstrates
company's two-prong
gqvernment-relations strat-

. OHIO
Pick 3: 5·5·2
Hck 4: 0-4· 1,s
SuperLotto: 7:S.1!H8-3&amp;46
Bonus Ball: 17
Kicker: 0-8·3·6·6·3
Pick J day: 6·6·9
.Pick 4.day: 8·1 ·4·8

W.VA.
Deily J: 9·9·2
Dtll}l 4: 5·1·8·1

.,

1fuMrblll: 8-15-19-21-38 (J3) .

'
I'.

'

.

.'
''

I•

'

. 2 Sedlon• - 12 .....

·Calendar
&lt;:lassifieds
Comics
:Dear Abby
'eCiitorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

J~.

,.... advantage of the lcMI'81t • • ~ ~ dllrlng the
_
· Flndar Hame Equity La an Salel ·
/l

'

.

'

@ This is not an introductory rate
¢'&gt; It's a fixed tate for the life of your loan
@ Consolida~ your debts
·
@Pay off yo:f high interest credit cards ··

@You may qualify for up to 125%
of your home's value
.

0

-Demolition
project ends

it gives them something to hold onto while problems are resolved. Sheriff's Deputy Mony Wood
was delighted to get 56 bears from the Sonshine Circle from Lois Sterrett, center, and Catherme Hart.

· OPIC, is still owed $453
million . in payments for
Enron-related
projects.
Anothe, U.S. agency, the
Export-Import Bank, is due
$512 million. The tWo
agencies made $1.2 billion
iri loans on Enron-related
projects overseas.

•

ered an eyesore in downtown Pomeroy, was demolished Fri·
day as part of a continuing demolition project In the village.
(Brian J. Reed)

SOMETHING TO HOLD ONTO- When children in traumatic situations are handed a teddy bear

egy.

'

COMING DOWN - The Century Bar building, long consid-

Details, A3

die

'

POMEROY

Deaths

Luckily, he let us go."
Knight says learning to
. drive in West Virginia was
great training for a road racer.
, "If you can drive on the
roads ofWestVirginia, you can
drive anywhere. All the hills ·
and turns, and driving in the
dense fog and rain make it a
real challenge;• he said.
Looking ahead, Knight is
hoping to make up those two
points
and winning the
ALMS · Championship this
year. And he has a pre~
strong personal goal. ·
"W~ want to win the Team
Championship, and the 24
Hours of Le Mans," he said.
~.. And, persolially, I want to
win the Driver's Chalt\pionshipl I want .to be No. 1."

Here's

Spot_
light: Helpful Teddy Bears

E~gles calm Tornadoes, B1

I

that

.

•,

all backed with our
· Five Star Service' Guarantee
It's

AS

83·5 ·
86
As

M
A3
A3

8·1·3
A2

· c 2002 Ohio valley Publlshina eo.
'

'' ap~ly, calll-800-75-MONEY, ext. 4100, log onto
",To
www.fustar.com, or stop by any Firstar branch. .
~',,Limited Time Loan Sale, .. Don't Wait ... ApplyTodayl

Seyen sites 'cleared qf debris

Sonshine Bears .
make a difference

BY BRIAN

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

·

Council on Aging
seeks funding

•

James'Cancer Center expands
coverage into Southeastern Ohio
COLUMBUS · --' The
Arthur G. James Cancer Hospita! and Richard J. Solove
Research Institute is entering
into a partnership with the
Genesis HealthCare System to
enhance cancer services provided in southeastern Ohio.
Genesis offers health care
for the n:sidents of southeastern Ohio thro~gh two hospitals in Zanesville, GenesisBethesda and Genesis-Good

PIUH ... Poilleroy, AJ

SURE TO PLEASE - Teddy bears of all sizes
and colors were included in the supply given to
the sheriff's department by the Sonshlne Clr·
cle. Here Mony Wood looks at one sure to
please some little kid.
·

ier for our officers to do their job."
Bags of teddy bears are carried in each of the
11 cruisers so they are always available, said
Wood.
This is the second year that the Circle of
about 32 women from ·Racine, Letart and
Portland ranging in age fi-Qm 30 to 92, and not
necessarily affiliated with the South Bethel
Church, has provided bears for the sheriff's
department.
It's become a project dear to their hearts.

Samaritan.
Genesis has provided quality
cancer services for many years,
but the new partnership will
· expand its abilities by offering
staff members access to James'
extensive training and treatment programs as well as to
some of its clinical trials and
support services. The partnership may also mean that
patients who are now traveling
from Southeastern Ohio to

The James in Columbus will
find they can get their ·treatment ar a facility closer to
their homes.
"This is a wonderful opportunity for The James to join
with one of the premier health
systems in Ohio,'' says Dr.
David Schuller, director of
The James, a sentiment shared
by the leadership of the Genesis HealthCare System.

REED

POMEROY - Friday's demolition of the old Century
Bar in downtown Pomeroy will probably mark the end of .
the village's clean-up efforts for the remainder of the year,
according to Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar.
The building on the lower block of Pomeroy's business
district is owned by Ben Ewing.
The village has undertaken the daunting task of demolishing seven buildings this winter - buildings which have
been deemed eyesores or safety haiards. The other buildings
torn down by the village this year include the Masonic
Temple and house adjacent to it, for the Meigs County
Commissioners,-fWo homes on Mulberry Avenue, a home
on Mechanic Street, and a building on West Main Street at
Monkey Run.
Because of the mounting bill for landfill dumping and
equipment rental, the village will probably · stop with the
Century Bar, Blaettnar said, and begin again next year with
the demolition of another four building{.
"In my opinion, we've done more in the last month than
ha.&lt; been done in the past 10 years," Blaettnar said.
The bill for the landfill had topped $5,000 before the bar
was demolished, Blaettnar said, and several building owners

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Providing cuddly teddy
bears for hurting kids is a favorite outreach
project of the Sonshine Circle of- the South
Bethel United Nre'thodist Church.
Last week, Circle members Catherine Hart
and Lois Sterrett deliven:d fifty-six bears to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department for their
use in comforting children caught in domestic
violence or other traumatic situations.
Officers were delighted to get the new supply because the bears provided last year were
all gone.
"We see little kids every night at some of the
worst times of their lives and having teddy
bears to give them helps take their minds off
what is happening around them. That makes all
the difference in the world to those children,"
said Sheriff's Deputy Scott Trussell.
"Having something to hold onto has a calming effect," added Deputy Mony Wood. "lr,.also
makes it so the children don't think bad of the
officers who are doing the job they have to do.
Give them a teddy bear, and that sends a mes:
. sage that we're really on their side, that we're
just working to handle a bad situation which
may involve their pan:nts."
'
Wood described the Sonshine Circle's project of providing bears to their department as
one of the "best things ever started."
"It comforts the children and it makes it eas-

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENJINEL.COM

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Ways of increasing funding for services as
state monies are n:duced were discussed at Friday's meeting
of the Meigs County Council on Aging Board ofTrustees.
A report on the 2002 budget showing a decrease in available funding was presented by Susan Oliver, executive
director. She noted that one way by which the agency is
coping with that is by combining jobs when employees
resign rather than filling the positions.
Catherine Shenefield, reporting on the recent meeting of
the Buckeye Hills Regional Council on Aging, gave details
.o f the budget cuts. for senior programs, which she n:ported
total about 11 percent .
She noted that the Passport program, whiclt serves indigent senior citizens in their homes, has been cut six percent.
To address some of the funding issues, the board adopted
a policy which sets forth suggested donations for specific
services. While the policy specifically states that no eligible
participant will be denied a service because of an inability
or. unwillingness to donate all or part of the cost of services
-received, it does encourage donations.
The suggested amount for donations for home services or
delivered meals is S2 per meal and .homemaker
service/respite care/ personal care is $5 an hour.
•

· :lt•%

PluH see Coundl, AJ

'

Looking for something meaningful to do this year?

Consl~er · _ volunteerlng ·at

the Hospital!
For. more information, contact
Dawn Halste~d, Director of Volunteer Services, at
(740) 446-5056.

I

I

'j
I .

.

'

'

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

_,__

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

-------------

.

"

----- .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="462">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9907">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22788">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22787">
              <text>February 24, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3350">
      <name>ballard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="253">
      <name>burdette</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2872">
      <name>chafin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2705">
      <name>conkle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4094">
      <name>enoch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="113">
      <name>evans</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>hill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2106">
      <name>kay</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1458">
      <name>leonard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4000">
      <name>rummel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2033">
      <name>strauss</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
