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'JIP&amp;Wh&amp;'Ma.'M .
tilton c.. DNnwntt.ll
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I I., •

Cancer survivors walk for charity

"....... ,....,..a.

Tax hikes top
Meigs ballot
RepubHc~tns will have
two tllndlda~ fur \:UUI\ty
~~~~''"'~~loLI\\r lmm whom
to choose, Oo11 It Hill 1111d

~~her Jt, nemocretlc
h~eumbcnt Mid: Davell{lOrt
Is unop{lOscd In his prim~~cy

John
bid.

I FRIDAY

OVPC launches 'Newspaper in
Education' program for schools

ICil.w.l.m AN1W1H
Obt1ln • Nil~ • Tryst • SICOIId • OISTANCI
.·
Onllll;ntl~ o~~trwtiQnt cutlt to 1noth1t: 'foit'lt ~011 ':
hllrcllbout tnt n•w ;ttllc dltt? Vou don't lott Wtl;llt
but ~II look thlnntr f!Om 1 OISTANC!,•
'

MAY31

SalllrdAy, May ~. 2002
rr YtJII rulluw your Mllbl· '
tiOUI 111111, 11111d1 IIIA!trlal -~~~~~
fftll \lWII \11 thf yur ihfld,
l'tt•t•l• will aptn prt~loualy
lnntlltOI!IIllt lliiiii'A (or you,
which wlll111~k• tht way tll•
ltr.
i ,_URUS (A~•rll 20· M~y
20) •• Evt•f)'buuy
n turn
(uf l"rlonnl Mlhl and thl1
wold bl! yo.ur d1y to eomw
Olli Ahtnd urtht CIIJ'YI, Oon't
cn llt~t auy ~ullt lr your
tliiiUJIIUI m ctniOrt~ Ull ttl(•
!ltlalllctlun, Try1t11 .to patch
ur n bruk1n runllnU! Tho
A!lrD•tlraj•h Macch1111lttr ctn
helt' yull m1denllnd whit lu
du tu mtokt tho rtlatlunlhlp
wurk, Mall U.75 iu Mmh•
mnktr, ~lo lhh 11~1~1p1pnl
p,Q, linK 1751!, Murray Hll
8utlun, New York, NY

M'"

I Ill &amp;r••

tJUMINI (May 2i •Juuo 20)
•• Mnuy ur yuur bttttr quail•
lltl will bt ht t•ltltnn, You'll
111 rh• pruor whan yuu eo111t

. an

tht 11'1111 •• MOOd thhl~l

wlll•utotH•tl(•iiY atArltu hAr•

pan.
,
CANC::Im (Jtutt 21 ·July . ·
22) •• Oe~utoually wt'rt (nr•

tUHlll 'tiiOllllh to hlYI tvtry•
thhlM r~ll lllto pl•r• without
too mu~h tiThrt. Thlt could

Ute. 2t) •• 11trtntt1hlp ar- •
raillllfttnta tuuld prtlYt tx- -:-·
etptlonally lucky 1\)r you, , _
Your euunttl'jllrt mlaht tUl'll •
11ut to be mort t~ttTvt than ' ·

bt tl'\lt (ur yllu With WhittYtr
you're tlllt\lltdln,
·
LI!O (July 2l· Au[!. 22) ••

·

Whtn plnuuln~ iUIIIIthln8 IO·
cl1l, 1111kt an tll'ott tu lntlu~e
1 ltU1ltlvt 1 shy !Htnd, Nut
only will he or abe •pprtclott
belnalnvlted, btillt eould 1110
tum out to bt 1 biM plw.
Vll\00 (AltJI. 23·Stpt. 22)
•• lt'1 HIOrt thiH likely th1t
yo11 could bt A1h1dt or two
bttter thAn tho~a yo~ con1pete
••lnst, but what retlly m1kt1
you look (IOOd 11 tht graclout
wa~ you'll htntllt the win,
LIDI\A (Stpt. 23·0ct. 23) •
• Your l!fllttat ntollvulnll
(lctor 11 your own filth In
tourltl( 1nd yuur abilities,

Thl1 coufidtnct wlll provt In·

1plr1tl01111 (or pOHOill With
whon1 you'll bt IIIYolvtd .
SCOJlf!IO (Oec. 2-i·Nov,
~2) •• You don't havt co IC•
ctpt condltlanl th11 Itt not to
your ulvlnt•••· rr you Ill
your mind to duinK so, you
have tht whmwlthalto n11kt
thlnp happtn l'or you .
S/iOITTAii.IUS (Nov. 23·
~

you rtlllltd IHtl hiAkt I nl~tlf t
tonlrlbutlun.
'
CAVIli COilN (l)tc, 22·
Jnn. I~) •• Foeua on Lhln••
thou un l'urthtr your ·lfttbl• •
ttou1 lnttrt!lb 1 btctlllt what•
eYII you pUI V0Ut han~ 10 hAl ;
the pu~tntlal to turn (lUI to bt •
A wlnntt. ·
·
AQUAI\IUS Q•n. 20· fleb , '
19) •• If you ean t bt near tht · •
fblk1 you lllYt, love tht l'olkl ' l
you're ntlr •• IIOtld thiHIIA
will h1ppt11 tu you. Yuur
euul!fnlallty will win tht htort

PNbate.Juvenile Judgt ·
RllbeLt Buck Is " C\\Lidldate
fur ~eelectllln, He al)pellt$
lln the R~publlcan billlllt,
while John Lentes Is a .
Democratic ctmdidiite fur
the liOSIRepubllclln
and

nemlltMic

C~ntral com·
mltree· membe~ will also be

ell\\:ted In those predm:ts
where candidates have
11lcd:

.

......... u ....
C2
Ctltbrttlons
C:lllllfltdl
D2·7
Insert
Comics
Cl
Dtlr Abby
A6
!dltorl1l1
A4
Obituaries
A2
Rtalon
·
&amp;1·8
Sports
A2
Wttthtr
•
e :1001 OhiO Wlil'll'llblillllnt CO.

West Rmlnnd, Chnrlq D.

Barren Jr.\ Middleport ~.
Ruth l'ower~ i Middleport 3,
!&lt;'nyc MtmlcyLMlddlillOI't 04,
BernArd
u. CJIIke)';
lillta11 ... Malllt M

or an,

•

111SC S \Ptb, 20·Marth 20) ~
,
lllltllrt that IHIY hove bttn
laanly ltructurttl can bt
tlahtolled up •nd lYon con· ,
cludtd to yo11r IAtl!l'lctlon,
·•
Al\11! (March 21 · AIIIll Ill) •
•• I!Ytft l~OUMh thl1 lnlaht bt •'
COIIIIdmd I UIY oil' rar you,
you ntlaht bt too ftJtltll .tb ,
linlply hanH Around tht :
•• SIYflll nt~ortont ptHIIUil

hou1e, l1l1n II lftillly pl'tljtCtl
bolltvt you can handlt.

11 you

\i

Discovtw the Holzer Differ nc

www.holz r.ol'll

i

•
•

,

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Republlca11: Bedford,
Brenda s, Roush \ ~ast
Chesttr, Larty l:t Life: We5t
Chester, blair Windon:.
Columbia, Marto Jeffe~:
Lebtumn. no candidate;
Letart, Joyte Whitt! Den
R. Hill; Nlltth Olive, Jalllll@
L.. Yolllll!l South Olive,
WUHum D. Out·8t\ 1'1mm111
L. Dorst, Orani!CI Rutlllnd
Vllllll!e, Robert F. Snowd n;
linst Rulltmd, nil cllndld~tte;

�·····hdhvl

.

·Adopt-A-Highway volunteers 11111ke

Ohto'Miltilf
$un...,..,S

Country
opens May 11 in

6

IIY TOllY M. I.IACM

Tl~llVSENTINELCOM

Cotu:da.- •

.. 1

141~~"4" I

w.~

West VIrginia weather ·
Sunday; May S

·POMEROY - In an effort to keep
Ohio's roads both beautiful and clean,
several local organizations, businesses
and individuals have joined together to
parti~ipate in the Meigs County AdoptA·H1$hway program.
Eight volunteer groups have taken
!)3rt in 'the national clean-up program ·
*.nd will be responsible for a specific
two-mile stretch of highway from which
litter will be cleared at least three times
ayear•
.. . .
A1I groups paructpaung m the program have pll!(fged their commitment to
ret)\oving trash from their desisnated
area for two years with the optton to
renew.
'Current Meigs Counly Adopt-A·
Highway volunteer groups include the
Meigs County Bikers Association, the
Riverview Garden Club, the Meigs High
'School · welding class of 2002,
Hanisonville Masonic Lodge, Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church, Shade
River Lodge, and Bethel Worshi('
Center.
"Thank yous are too often overlooked," said Meigs County manager
Brett Jones.
"So, on behalf of the Meigs County
Garage and OOOT District tO, we want
to send our sincere thanks to all the participants of our Ado('t-:-\-.High.w~y pro·
gram," be added. "Thetr help •s mvaluable with preserving the beauty of
Meigs County and the clelinliness of the
roads mat run through it."
According to stati~tics, in 2001,
ODOT removed more than 330,000
bags of trash from Ohio's highways. The

'I

Otcio

"'"''

•

41'173'

0

CLEAN HIQHWAYS- In an effort to help beautify Ohio's roads, several Iobei

nlzations, businesses and Individuals have joined together to participat!! In
Meigs County Adopt-A-Highway Pf'Oir&amp;rn. Eight volunteer groups, such a~ the Me~llS
County Bikers Association, have pledged to clean-up a twoinlle section of hlghw~
at least three times a year ror the neKt two years. (Tbny M. Leach)
•

I

job is time-consuming and costly, and
District 10, alone, removed more than
19,000 bags - at an average cost of
$I 1.33 per bag, which equals more than
$218,000 taxpayer dollars spent on litter
removal last year.
In ·comparison, the cost of District
lO's guard rail projects, for all nine
counties within that district, was
$242,000.

BY MIWIIIA R••ll•
· MRUSSEllOMYDAilYTRIBUNE.COM

4.35 ounces
were found with
a street value
.of$10,000

l&lt;Y.

·~~.tno.

~~~--

Warmer conditions expected
IIV i'llli ASSOCI~T£0 PRESS
Th~ National Weather
Se!'\1\ce s~s It will be partly

cloudy With i chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows In the upper 50s.
cloudy Sundliy with ll!mpera- Chance of rain 40 percent.
tllres In the 70s. Partly cloudy
Extended forecast:
sides With a chlince of show· Tuesday... Mostly cloudy
ers ahd thunderstorms lire In with a chance of showers and
the forecast for Monday.
· .thunderstorms. Highs in the
Sunrise Sunday will be at upper 70s.
6:27 a.m.
Wednesday...Mostly cloudy
Weather torea~-st:
with a chance of showers and
Sunday... Partly cloud)' lind thunderstorms. Lows in the
Jwarrner. Highs In the mid 70s. lower .60s 11nd highs in the
Calm winds.
lower 805.
Sunday
night. .. Partly Thursday... A chance of
doudy. Lows In the lower showers and thunderstorms
50s.
during the day, otherwise
Monday... Partly cloudy. A partly ·cloudy. Lows in the
chal'lce of showers and thun• U('per 50s tllld highs ill the
derstorms in the afternoon. lower 70s.
Highs near 80. Chance of rain
Frlday... Mostly clettt. Lows
40 ('ertent.
.
hi the upper 40s atld highs In
Mondlly . nlght ... Mostly the mid 60s.
. ·.

New business •••
The Country Cupboard
Read about . ~ on A3

CotrHtlon Polley
Our main conc:.m In all ttor1h It
lo be IOOUIItl, II 1'011 know llltn
em:lr In a a(Oiy, cell U,. neweroom
at «6·23-lll or 00.2-11168.
New. De!Hirtment•
Qilflpot'.
Otlparlmenl elden~ IN&lt;
MlniOinlltiiHOt
l!xt. 11
Ntwl tdftor
Sxt. 23
~a:tlnl tdltat
Ext, 20
Ext. 21

Dtlpertmant "~
eldenlloiit INl
CHMI'II MINiiJtt
Hlwa

HeWa

Sxt. 12
E~t. 13
Ext. t4

Ontht web
.VWW.f!\yd&lt;lliytfllll"111.ailn1

www.mVdall~tlillll.tlolll

I -mill

lltM4tM~iytni)Unt.eom

new.etll)'dllll!y..ntlnti.04lll!

r

ST~FF

REPORT

GALLIPOLIS - An ·
anonymous tip led to the
arrest of a man and
woman in conrtection
with the alleged posses·
slon and transportation of
crack cocaine, the Gallia
County Sheriff's Office
re('Orted.
·
Taken Into custody
Wednesday were William
White, 21, Detroit, Mich.,
and AMber Smith, 22,
Galllpoils,
sheriff's
Detective Chad Wallace
said.
.
.
White was charged With
po~session
of crack
cocaine and remains in
the Oallia County jail following an arraignment in
Gallipolis
Municipal
Court. Smith, charged
with complicity,
was
·released from custody
after posting bond followIng her ap('earance in
court.
Detective
.Sheriff's
Chad Wallace said inves·
tigators were alerted
anonymously to a possible shipment of crack Into
Gallla County. After fol·
lowing up on the inforrna~
tlon; Investigators stopped
a vehicle just west of the
U.S. 3!1 road rest near Rio
Grande around 4 a.m.
Wednesday.
The
vehicle
was
searched with the aid of
sheriff's K9 unit Jese. The
dog Indicated the pres· ·
e11ce of an Illegal sUb·
stance, Wallace said. A
physical search of the cur
allegedly turned "P. 4.35
ounces of crack wtth an
estimated street value of
around $10,000, he
added.
Also seited
were
$1 400 in cash and the
vehicle. In conjunction
with the Investigation, the
Chillicothe
Police
Departrnertt seized about
2 ounces of crack.
Wallace said the arrests .
were made as part of an
ongoing investigation Into
a muhi·atate drug ring /
operating in the area.
White had been arrested
by !itPUtlu IIlli. 11 at a
Oulllpolll-arl!a residence
in wfllch drugs, cash and
weapons were seized, and. ·
was free Oil his own rec·
ognlzance
prior
to
Wednesday's arrest.
r

GALUPOLIS - During
Stroke Awareness Month this
May, . the . Inpatient
Rehabilitation Unit at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis,
joins forces with the
National Stroke Association
(NSA) and other heaithcare
providers to increase public
awareness of stroke and
stroke rehabilitation.
"stroke smart" and learn the vided later in May.
Stroke is one of the leading ways to help prevent a
The Rehabilitation Unit at
causes of ailult disability and stroke. In order to help Holzer Medical Center pre).
costs the United States more patients and families under·
than $30 billion annually. stand stroke and how to pre- vides comprehensive rehaHowever, surveys on stroke vent recurrent stroke, HMC bilitation services, including
awat'eness in the U.S. have Inpatient. Rehab now offers a · physical, occuplltionul, and
revealed. ·that among adults new program, Starting Now speech therapies, to patients
age 50 or older, 38 perCent as part of the patient's stay who have eKperienced stroke
other debilitating
do not know the location in on the unit. This five-part a11d
the body where a stroke ·
injuries or ·illnesses. More
occurs, and 19 percent are educational series was devel- than a decade of studies have
unaware there are w;~ys to oped with the American .demonstrated that the large
Stroke Association and
help prevent a stroke.
majority of stroke viCtims
.
Stroke is literally a "brain includes informational mate- who receiv~ organized rehaattack" and . occurs when rial, as well as daily instruc- bilitation can recover to lead
blood flow to an area of the tion by a team of healthcare active, independent lives in
brain is interrupted by a professionals. Starting Now
blocked or broken blood ves- IS also offered to any inter- the community. helping to ·
sel. When a stroke occurs, it ested community member, reduce the cost of long-term
kills brain cells in the imme- an&lt;! a · free Stroke Risk care by $500 million to $1
diate area. When brain cells Assessment will also be pro- billion annually.
die, abilities that area of the
brain controls are lost or .·.·~~.·.·~~.·.·~~ .·.·~~
impaired.
You can reduce your risk
of stroke by becoming aware
of your risk factors. Some
~
risks you can not change or
control, such as your age or
HUMANE SOCIETY CLINIC
family history; but by rnak·
ing a few changes in your ~.,.
daily habits or taking rnedi· ~ Mtrehall H•••
Fox'e Plua
cine as prescribed, stroke 6
Tttlord ReallY
OlM Plua
~
risks can be reduced.
• Erik Aeneehld
Subwly
~"'
~
Meta• Veterinary Clinic
TNT Pit Stop
Holzer Medical Center's 6 • Dtve
ICrtweczyn
Pomeroy Exxon Food Mart .
Rehab Unit and the NSA are
ICelly Gruetter
.LIHie Coal Bucket
9_
Meta• Molal
Countiy Corner
"
encouraging people to be
~"' Mlllfe'e Bakery l Dell
Homer Hill C.rry Out
9 ··
~ The Corner Rettaurant
Hilltop Grocer'•
•
•
Pomeroy Middle School
Rutllnd Dept. Store
~
Sue lano
Yaughtn't Dell
·
,.~

For information about the Starting
Now program, the Stroke Risk .
Assessment, or to make a patient
referral contact the rehab unit at
740-446-5070.

STAFF REPORT

. G~LUPOLIS .
Another craft and home
decor shop is corning to
downtown Gallipolis this
week when The Country
Cupboard opens its doors at
10 a.m. on Saturday, May
ll.
Proprietor
Susan
Eastman said the shop,
located at 400 Second Ave.
in Gallipolis, "wiU offer a
, unique bien&lt;! of counttr,
gifts aitd primitives. '
I crafts,
Items on shelves include
' · candles, wreaths, country .
., linens, antiques and a line
. , of gourmet food.
Eastman said the store
' · will carry horne design
products, including quilts,
pictures, shelves, wrought
· · tron, country lighting and
. primitive country furniture.
' ' · Also available is reproduc·
tion antique furniture, rang·
! · ing from pie safes· to fann
: tables. ·
'.'
To complement its lioe of
home design items, The
' · Country Cupboard staff
will provide interior design
services.
'"This is a dream-come·
true for me," Eastman said.
"I have always wanted to
have a shop like this. In my
own eKperience, I have
traveled to many neighboring cities in search of just
the right touches for my
own home. I want to offer
all the features of the various stores I have visited in
one unqiue shop here in

!

Meigs County ODOT employees are
currently holding an Adopt-A~Highway
membership drive to increase volun~r
participation in the area. .
·
For more information about tile
Adopt-A-Highway program, cont&amp;ft
Jones at 740-992-2.501; or Stephtm;~e
Filson, ODOT District 10 public infor·
rnation officer, at 740-373-0212, EJtt.
202.
'

Seminar probes investing for warne~

~ ·

raise stroke awareness

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HMC rehab unit helps

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

GALLIPOLIS .
Gallipolis area Edward Jones
investment representative
Amy Bowman-Moore will be
hosting a free investing progrant for widowed, divorced,
and never-married women on
Thesday at 6 p.m. at her
office, located at 990-A
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
The program, "Taking
Charge," wlll offer sin~le
women insight on planmng
for retirement alo~ with tips
on maintaining their independence later in life. The pro·
grant will also address what
financial decisions sln~le
women need to be making
now.
"Regardless ot your age,
It's not too early, or too late,
to take charge of your
finances," said Moore.
.
"A lot of women just dot\'t
know where their assets are
and what to do with them,"
she said. " And many women
are rniUIIIging their money on
their own because of divorce,
. or because they have outlived
their husband.
''Tile statistics are stagger·
ing," she added. "Womertlive
longer, spend less time in the
workforce, and still make less
money than men, and 50 per·
cent are not covered by pension plans."
.
Currently, 9.1 million
women own their own busi·
ilesses, employ 27 .S million
workers and generate 3.6 trillion in sales, and 90 percent
of women will at some poirit
will be the financial head of
the household for one third of
their adult lives.
"Long-term care is also a
worrisome burden,'' Moore
said. ''Three out of every four
nursing horne residents are
women, so long·term care is a
major issue."

''You don't have to have a
certain income to.be an investor.
And all consultations and portfolio,
reviews are free."
Amy Bowman-Mocln
•

Moore also added that
investors can begin for as lit·
tie as $50.
"You don't have to have a
certain income to be an
investor," she said. "And all
consultations and portfolio
reviews are free."
This live, interactive broad·
cast is presented via the firm's
private satellite network and
should last 40-SS minutes.

Refreshrni:nts will be serve(!.
Moore's next program will
be held Thesday, May 14, and
deals With college planning_.
"Just reMember," Moore
said. "You can go to'the ~ailk
and get a car loan, you can go
to the bank and get,'a schQDl
loan, but you can't 'go to tl,te
bank and get a retirement
loan. The time to plan 'is
now."
..

F
.
I

uti-time Commlnloner
dldlottld to making Malge
County a priOrity.
n touoh with the oonoema
of taxpaye,. and property
ownel'8.
·

Gallipolis."
Eastman describes herself as "a longtime advocate of maintaining a thriving downtown shopping
experience for Gallipohs."
· Said Eastman, "Being a
hometown girl, I've always
had an interest in the success of our downtown area.
l.t is exciting to see the way
ifs growing right now, and

Jt.

•.

The Country Cupboard
will operate from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Monday through
Saturday.
·
At its grand opening on
Saturday, Eastman said
'gourmet treats will be
available for sarnJ?Iing and
a Mother's Day gtft basket
will be given away.

~

~
)~

::~to'~ ~~tr~!a::.c~lg~~t~j
!.. ~wnsh1p
l,be rout~·s intersection with
. Road
261

." urlington
Road)
in
· aclcson County is nearing
- completion.
_ Pro~ect .iD:spectors and si~·
i~~p~:::e~~ans for the Oh~~

; ;T~;anspo_rtation ~istrict 9
·tt•ll begm c'?nductmg a burn
··•lest,
;iest ofmthe
~tgnal tod_ay. ~e
wh1ch the stgnal IS
:,urned to a flashing mode,
::Will
be conducted through1.out the weekend to ensure
'the working order and operation of the signal.
.
, Once the bum test is com·
l pleted; the traffic signa! will
• be activated ·on temporary
: timing devices to aid in the
1

laneS iS Under Way jn the final ~h~tr~~~o~~s~n~~~o'~0 :~:in~
phase
of the pr:o,iect
Ohio.32 WI" II lion
s.ignal.~t Ohio ~2's intersec.
I' J
'
w1th Burlington Road,
be JiedUced tO·One lane 'In. eaCh justIn south
of Jackson.
.
.
additien to the installa·
d'IJiectl'on
and once, completed 1 tion
of a traffic signal and
, 1 ·,
the construction ~f turn
the traffiC Signals will be changed ~2n6ts:6:e ~r&amp;~~~lrna!f~~
to thel'r permanent tl'ml'ng devl'ces• "prepare-to-stop"
includes the instal~ation of
s1gns and
The sc
· hedUied co
' mplet1'0n date east
flashing lights on Ohio 32
and west.
for the ent'lr:e
pro,iect
l's May 31 • turnWhile
construction . of the
.
I'
J
lanes is under way in
.

maintenance of traffic
throughout the next phase of
the project in which the contn:tctors will construct leftturn lanes to Burlington

eady and willing to 11rve the people, the farm•,
and the bualn"• community of Melg1 County.

the final phase of the project, Ohw 32 will be
Road from both east · and reduced to one lane in each
westbound Ohio 32. It is direction, and once cornpletanticipated that the signals ed, the traffic signals will be
will be in full operation dur- changed to their permanent .
· ing the week of May 6.
timing devices.
.

!; ...PUCO approves 9-1-1 plan for Vinton County
.
'

A BIG
THANKS
::
For making the
~

a success!

•:

~

xperlenced In budgeting, purchaalng, and ha•
public Hrvloe experience. •
J

.

'

.

•:
6

R'll'~~~~IMWIIIBaptlll

~~c:':r::superYIIUI

~

StaNd Hlllrt Ctthollc Church C111 NUIVI
Syracu.. Church olthe
Form~cy

9_

"
...

~~~':chmllenberg
::li~'crtnerel Store
No~,jirom~n'ePiuaExprell GlntGeremlo
Pep• Cole

~~····

';;b~;:ngrateful, MCHS

~

~

.

..--!:!&gt; ..--!:!&gt; .......... . ..--!:!&gt; ..--!:!&gt;........ .....:; .....:;····
I?'" I?'" ... ... I?'" t?"" ... ... v v

To the following Businesses for their
donations to Gallipolis Career College
for our seventh annual National
Administrative Professionals
Day celebration:
Avon Products
McCiurel of Gllllpolll
..llltSimmono
McDonelde of Gllllpolle ·
Bob Ev1na, Rio Grinde
McDon•lda ol Rio Qrondi.
Dlydltlma l Nlalll Thing•
MlchHII Frllndl '
Dl1ntAdame
Nlllonwlde Archery
DIINI . .Wir
Noble Romln'a i&gt;tm
Ellhl Look1
Pltker Compound Iowa
Flnlltllc·Simt, Gllllpolll .
PlrtoNII Touch
Qlnoe o1 Mlton
Poncllrou, Gllllpoll•
Glovtnnl'e l'lzu, Rio Gr111de
Premlce Hill
Gllnco/McGraw Hill
Rio Grandt BP
Good Newe Blbll BooUiofe
Rio Tire
Hlllmllk ol Glllfpolll
SoulhMStemiTholllpiOn
Home Town C.ndltl ol P~
Learning
Kllntug~ Drive In
The Country C.ndle ShOp,
Krogera ol Pomeroy
Ml-•vllle
uar Photogrlplly
TurnpiU Ford
Lomhl Swick 01 Pomeroy
Vlkkl Lllvlng
Lunch Box c.t.rlng .
WISYQ Big Country 118

Henz'
on t'n'ten"ds to· cha~ge
its Vt"nton 9-1-1
systems within individ1'
VI
ual counties in Ohio.
t!:of Ohio (PUCO) approved
County SUbSCribers a.monthly
rate Of.
Currently, 81 Ohio counties
~ · .the 9·1·1 final plan for
,
•
have enhanced 9-1-1 erner*Vmton _County on Thunday. 24 cents per access hne for the prOVI- ~ency service, leaving seven
;::~~~·t:am~0~~ra~~~~ sion the service. Horizon Chillicothe ?!~g:~~n~e;i~~thout the
"•:000n
Ma7anI· verizon North
WI'II assess its subsen'bers a monthly
24
w:~erizon). filed copies of the
rate of 20 cents per access line. .
· **VOTE FOR **
f!•vtnton· County 9·1·1 final
·
t·:
COLUMBUS The
t=· Public Utilities Commission

:.l

OUR GRANDDADDY IS

• ·plan with the commission.
\ Pursuant to that plan, Verizon Commission.
for monitoring the develop-,
• \Uid Horizon Chillicothe
The PUCO is responsible rnent and implementation of
:'Telephone will provide the
: county with 9-1·1 emergency
• telephone service.
.
;. Verizon intends to charge
: its Vinton County subscribers
• 11 monthly rate of 24 cents per
: IICCCSS line for the proviSIOn
: ihe
service.
Horizon
; Chillicothe will assess its
• •ubscribers a monthly rate of
: IW cents per access line.
~ • Horizon Chillicothe cus: lomers located in Vinton
; j:ounty were previously ·
by the Ross County 9·
: -lsystem. Those customers'
• -1-1 calls will ·now be
~ Jljrectly routed to the p!oper
j Ytnton County emergency
! responding agency.
~ : Verizon
and Horizon
• Chillicothe are responsible
• : for notifying their Vmton
LANDAU SCRUBS AND
, : to;:!t subscribers of the
(iv · "lity and use of 9·1·1
• service. Both companies
: have filed their customer
sale onl on in stock Items
: notifications
with
the

.!ted

'

~

I'
. rn
,, thrilled to be a part. of

•
Is
for
•
· .,ll~~l!!l··iiiC
fR Signa set operation at Wellston Interchange ••
..
,_
' WELLSTON - Ohio 32
While construction
of the tum Zanesvtlle
Sh~lly andwasSands
Inc. of &lt;t
.. will face another change in
.
, .
awarded a

!

E

FULL CUPBOARD - Susan East111an will open her new
business, The Country Cupboard, at 10 a.m. Saturday, May
11, at 400 Second Avenue In Gallipolis. (Kris Dotson)

Vote For

RICK

Commissioner

May 6·11 th • 25C¥o OFF

.AI-L
HEALTHCARE APPAREL

.

~

•

•

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I

FREDJ.DEEL
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Key lssueil:
. Quality educational opportunities for all
youth in Ohio.
Employment: Develop an environment thai will attract
industry and business which provides
meaningful employment.
Health Care: Affordable.healthcare for all, especially
seniors, with a Prescriplion Drug Plan ·
available 10 everyone at costs comparable
to those in other states.
Education:

Fred Deel has the experience and

..............,.,...,.
..........
-...... Dell

..

r II

quatifications necessary to serve
.
....
••nr·-.
a, l!ttll
the people of the 87th District. -ltt'L

�Pwt• M

Pom1roy •llldJhport • Gallpafla, Ohio • Point Fttlltn\ WY

• • • • Cllld ••lltiul

'Bir ..... Jr.
PROCTORVIllE - WiUis "Bill'" Eilrly Reaves Jr., 74,
Proctorville, died Thursilay, May 2, 2002, in the Vtlerans
Affairs Medical Center, HuntinglOI'I, W.Va.
Born AP.'!I 9, 1928, in HW!tingon, son of the late Willis E.
Sr. and Mildred Holcomb Reaves, he was the mind owner of
Hobbyland, and wu a U.S. Navy vete.ran.
.
H-: was a member of Huntington Masonic Lodae 1S2, AF &amp;
: AM, ,Eastern Star in Ironton, White Shrine ancf the Scottlsh
: Rite.
: · Survivina are three children, five gnndthildren and a sister.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville, with Pastor Don lrby officiating. Burill will be in
Spring Valley Memory Owdens. Huntinaton. Friends may tall
. at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Stlll®y.
. · 0111.veside rites will be conducted by Proctorville VFW Post
: 6878 and Huntington Masonic Lodge IS2, AF &amp; AM. .
•

Primary
lnwnr.pAl
name on the tall ballot,
served the probate-juvenile
division from 1973 until
1979, in addition to stints as
Gallipolis city solicitor and
village solicitor for Cheshire
and Rio Grande.
D. Dean Evans, a 30-yeur
Gal!ipolis attorney, was .the
chotec of -the Republican
central and executive .·com·mittees last May to fill the
unexpired tcnn of two-term
Common Pleas Judge Joseph
L. Cain, who retired from the
bench. Gov. Bob Taft subsequently approved Evans'
appointment.
·
Evans must run this fall to
complete the remaining two
years of Cain's term. Barring
the entry of an independent in
the race, Evans will be unopposed on Nov. S.
Republican voters will
decide five contested races
for central committee posts
Tuesday. The races are in
Green .5, Paul Dean Niday
and Theresa Northup; Green
6, Haria J. Eutsler and
Gregory Allen Northup;
brcenfield, Charles E.
Chambers Sr. and Henry
Sheline: Harrison, Kenneth
Swain and Charlene . M.
Ward; and Raccoon, Cindy
Leigh Hager and Churles U.
Miller.
.
Local tax issues on the bal·
lot include fire levy renewals
in five townships: Clay, 1.3
mills; · Green, I mill;
Greenfield, I mill; Harri son,
1 mill; and Perry, I mill and
.5 mill.
·
·
· Re~onal racet
Voters wtll also decide on
regional races in the prim~!')'.
including campaigns withtn
both parties for state repre·
sentativc in the newlyfanned 87th House Dlstnct
of Gallia, Jackson, Vinton,
and. eastern Lawrence and
Ross counties. ·
University of Rio Grande
administrator Dr. Clyde
Evans, a . former Gallia
County
Chamber
of
Commerce president, is seek·
'ing the 001' nomination, as

and is pttdlcttd to have ~
pen:ent t)f 6,200 l)f ~
wt blllots in the Drinwy, 111
whlth local, ~lonal and
state elfidlditts will be cllt).
sen fur the RepubiiCI\11 Md
Democratic tlc'kets 111 the
Nov. S election.
SWI'MI'ORT
..
tn the f110$t recent aubern&amp;·
OALUPOLlS Low wllll
election yell~' primuy,
vater tumout Is prtdl~ In 1998, ballots were wt l)y
Ohio and loc~tlly fur nt~~tly l million, t)f 28 ptrTuesdt~Y 's primnry, t~ sta~'s ~nt of the stllte's thtil·'1 inll·
chl~f eltetloo~ officer sllid
llo11 ri!il !\\red wtm.
FridQY.
'1\lmom sttltlstlcs from ~
Seertttlry of State J. vlous prlmaey electrons
Kenneth Blackwell predh:ted lntludt 2 001,736 (33 ~
thllt ntArl)' 1.9 million, or 27 cent) In 1994: 1,8~i844 (31
pereent, of Ohio's 7.1 million percent) II\ l9w: 11nd
registertd ~ will pruticl· l,628;4S9 In 1986,
pate in the prlmtu')'.
Blackwell's turnout p!t\dle·
Gallln COunty, with 36 vot· tlon Is based on InfOrmation
lng prtelncts ond 21,67~ h!8· provided to Blackwell by
ls~red votm, Is t~tpooted to oounty boortls of elections.
see just o 29 peroent tumout . Cttltulntlons were derived
- or 6,235 voters go thlil from the tntal number of rea·
polls,
Ateordlng
to lstered vot\\n, turnout fll!ures
DIockw!lll 's fortens t.
of slmlhw election .yem nnd
Meigs Count) h11s l7 oth~r fnttors speulflc to lndl·
prteincts and 14,659 votetil, vidunl counties.

Officials says it will finalize
rules environmentalists say
will destroy waterways
WASHINOTON (AP) The Bush administration swd
Friday it was amending a
clean-water rule that environmentalisll say bans the dumping of mine waste into the
correlate with state· and nation's waterway».
The administration contends
national standardt.
the
dumping of debris from
"Newspapers offer teachen
a weekly In-paper le1son they mining activity is allowable
.can count on to be ellw:atlon· and denied that the chan.se
ally sound, meanin~ful, moti· would encouraae "mountainvatina and fun,' added . top mlnins" of c:oal in which
the topS of ridset in App-'~hla
Dickerson.
The program, beins in ill are 1heared off and dirt and
first year locally, will only be rock are puthed into nearby
involving one cla..room per streams.
Pnvironmentallall disagreed.
elementary school with the
"Now
that the admln.iJtrsdon
future soal of expanding it to
has
changed
the rulef, it ICI1d8 a
include every third arader
clear 1i,nal tp the coal compa.
within the tri-county area.
To becomi a sponsor, call nie.noc only to condnue but to
740-446-2342 in Oallia accelerate their demlctlon of
County, 740-992-2156 in waters,'' said Joan Mulhern, a
Meip County, or 304-675- lawyer at Eartlijustice Legal
1333 il! Mason County, or · Defense Fund.
The
Environmental
atop in at your local paper
Protection
Agency
and the
office to pick up a
Newtpaper tn Education Anny Corps of Engineers share
respon~ibllity for ensurins
Partnership form.
compliance with the Clean

Read you Ohio nevvs
in brief on A7 · ·
*Elect*

__ ___..,.

Your.,,
Vote Appreciated

•

r

OH-

OVBC GRADUATES

•

•

Qualified, Proven Leadership, and
Committed to Re.tore FIKal
to Gallla County
llltweAIDr'..,

'

of enhanclna Its renewable·
energy offerings.
ABP recently completed
another wind farm, the I ~0·
me1awatt Trent Mesa Wind
Project, which abo uses
Enron wind turblne8.
Oesert Sky, formerly
named Indian Mesa ani!
Clear Sky, uses 107 U·
megawatt turbines and can
provide power for up to
54,000 homes.
In trodlnll Friday, ABP.
shure1 closeil up 12 cents to

$45.86.

On the Nett .

Tom Shepherd, Ohio Valley
Bank vice president cif marketing, was named Instructor of the
Year. Shepherd led the Sales Tralr)ing classes. Marilyn Kearns,
OVB assistant cashier and director of human resources, was
named Student of the Year. Kearns earned a total of 8.5 credIt hours during the year while maintaining a perfect grade point
average.

TOP INSTRUCTOR, STUDENT -

•

,IAitNI Dlllt.OMA* - fhOi~ eatning bank group diplomas GRADUATE DIPLOMAS - Four have eamed Ohio Valley Bane
through the Ohio Valley Bane Corp. Continuing EduOIItlon Corp. graduate diplomas, from left, Diana Parks, Ohio Valley
Program Wlil'l!, ffont, from left, OIMa Parks, Clara Hale, Debbie Bank main office: Ann Bush, Ohio Valley Bank Jackson Pike
Moom 11nd Sh~lan JMk&amp;on; back tOW, nom left, Judy Hall, Ann office; Renee Hughes, Loan Central Jackson office; and Clara
Bush, R~nae Hughes, Mar:llyn Kearns end Richard Speirs.
Hale, Ohio Valley Bank fllaln offlae.

'

leta~ Ke1ma

Keams wins
promotion •.
· POMEROY ·Betsy
Keurns has been promoted to
,e.ssistant vice president at
•rurmers Bnnk nnd Savings
Co. In Pomeroy.
Kearns' promotion WM
approved 111 the recent annual
meetlnll o( shliteholders or
Farmers
Bank,
and
.11nnounced by President and
Chief Blleoutlve Officer Paul
:M. Reed.

Kearns is the brunch· manllJCr t1t the '1\lppers Pluins
brunch of Farmers Bnnk. She
has 23 ~eiltil of banking experience, 16 ye~rs of which has
been spent .wlth Farmers
bank.
She was hired as a collection officer and served as a
loan officer for nine years.
She .has been manager of the
Tuppers Plains branch for 2·
1/llears, nnd according .to
Ree , hils been responsible
for recent growth there.
. "The success and growth at
the Tuppers Pial ns office
since betsy's lirrlval is the
direct result of her leadership
skills and her commitment to
our customers," Reed said.
Kearns is a graduate of
Eastern High Schoo. She has
two children, Rynn and
Dyann, and two stepchildren,
Tyler and ChelsL Sl\ll and het
husband, Patrick, live . at
Chester.
The bank bonrd nlso reapt)olnted Reed nnd the followlng officers: Woody Stines
executive vice president and
chief lending officer; Roger
Hysell, executive vice presldent and chief operating offioer; Mike Llevlng, executive

SUNDAY BUSINESS
vice president and president tal resources 10 underserved
of Farmers Bank of "'est
"'
an d over1oo ked markets.
Vlr~lnla; Shawn Arnott, con· . Adena Ventures is a $34
trol er and fintmcial officer; million venture capital enterDonna Schmoll, assistant prise that will make equity
vice president; and Randy · Investments in, and provide
Hays, assistant vice presl· operational assistance to
dent.
small businesses located in a
region that includes southeastern Ohio, West Virginia,
northeastern Kentucky and
westel1) Maryland.
"This is a si11nificunt development
for
central
ATHENS _ The u.s.
Appalachia
and
other
parts
of
Small
business
the country that have been
Administration hilS approved left behind," said David
Adena Ventures of Athens as Wilhelm, founder and generthe nation's ·first New al r.artner of Adena Ventures.
Markets Venture Capital
'The historic lack of ven·
company.
·
. ture cnpital in this region has
The designation is the first prevented a lot of ~real busi:
under a new j)rogrurn passed nesses from uchievmg all that
Into law by Congress in 2000 they might. For the first time,
. and Is administered by the . entrepreneurs here will have
an opportunity to compete,"
SBA.
· Through the new program, he added.
To help businesses prepare
the SBA will p~ovtde New
for
Investment and meet
Markets Venture Capital
companies with financial growth objectives, Adena
leverage and grant sUt)port to VentUres partnered with three
help bring new venture capl· Institutions that will provide

Named flnt

In nation

to qualifying companies.
Investors
in
Adena
Ventures include: Ohio
U ni verslty, the West Virginia
Economic
Development
Authority, American Electric
Power, National City, Fifth ·
Third Bank, Huntington .
Bancshares, KeyBank, .the
Ohio Bureau of Workers
Compensation, BB&amp;T, the
Huntmgton
Area
. ex~cutive r~ruitment, le~al Development Council, the
assistance, mtemet capacity .F.B. Heron Foundation and
and other services at no cost WesBanco .
professional consulting services to entrepreneurs.
Professional staff, faculty,
graduate students and alumni ·
of
Ohio University,
the
University
of Charleston,
w. Va.; and the Mountain
Maryland . Entrepreneurial
Development Center will
provide assistance with busi1
ness p anning, information
and accounting systems,

Spring
Diamond Sale!

Edwards, Osbome .complete leadership training
. GALLIPOLIS .- Ohio orgnnltlltlonnl and perfor;Valley Bank's Sandra L.• 11\llnce skills or UJ)Wafdly
Edward!; eenlor vice presi• · mobile mid· to senior· level
dent ofnnanclal bank group, bonkers. Bankers with
and Jennifer L. Osborne, demonstrated
executive
vice pre8ident for retail lend· . P,otentlal are nominated by
' ing, were among 17 banken their bank 11nd chosen by an
from uround the state who lnetltutlon selection commitrecently gr11duated from the tee to participate.
Bank [;eadershlp ln8tltute.
As a final requirement for
· Developed by the Ohio graduation, Edwards and
Bankers Auo~intiun (OBA), Osborne along with their
the
llank
Leadership teum members cgmpeted in
, 'Institute h a yeur·longlead· oral presentlltions. Bdwards
ership development program nnd ller group won first
thut enhanceli the leadenhip, place with thefr demonstta·

lion, "Building a Sales
Culture." Osborne's group
r.resented the topic of
'Recruiting, Developing,
Mnnaalng and Retaining
Oeneratlo11 X."
"The ·concept of the program is simple," explatned
OBA presidellt Mlcliael' M.
Van Buskirk. "We're estab·
llshlng a core network of
future bank leaders that will
provide direction for both
the Association and the Ohio
banking indus~ well into
the next century. '

Students In the program
meet quarterly throughout
the ·year for two-day intensive study sessions and
hands-on learning. Each session concentrates on key
learning activities for leadership skills development such
as strategic planning; risk
management; presentation,
writing and listening ski lis;
team building: conflict management; regulatory structure .and environment; the
legislative process and more.

AEP: http://www.atp.com

:Gifts bolster O'Bieness' 2002 annual giving campaign
' · AT!mNS -... Olft8 from tile
·estate of 11 formet Athen8 teal·
dent, the Charles O.
0' Bleness Foundation and an
anonymoo1 ®nor will con·
tribute $25,000 · towlltd
0' Bien en
Memotlal
H01pltal's 2002 annunl slvins
campaign for the improve·
ment Wid e11panslon Of the
· h08pltal'8 brefiSt lmugfng Aet•
ivl~8 . .
· The nl'lit lead ~ft, In the
·· amount or Sto,i'JO(), came
from the e~tate Oladys V.
Jacob8. Jacobs wu a charter
·member of the Oulld of
0' Blencu
Meltlorlal
HosDital.
The Charles 0. O'Bienen
· Foundation al110 pledged
:sto,ooo to the campaign.
:Throuahout the yettrt, the
·foundation has contributed
more than $1.5 million to the
hololtal throuJh capital fund·
rllltlng campaigns, rulnWillllv·
:Ina ciinpaians and olhet cJinr..
, IUible~.
·
'I'he foundation's namenke,

Currently, donM hilve con•
tributed more than 574,000 to
the 2002 unnulll giving cllnl·
palgn to assist with the pur·
ehw of a !itlt!ond mammography unit and a computer aided
detection system.
.
The total cost of the project,
Including two new unlt8 for
pro~:essing
.mamri!Ogturn
films, is about $266,000.
O'Dleness rec~ntly installed

the new murnmography unit,
which significantly Increases
the number of manutJograms
the hospital can schedule each
day.
As a complement to both
mammography units,
0' Bleneas also installed a
computer aided detection system that can detect up to 20
percent more breast cancers
than mammography alone.

or

lonJZtlme Athens banker who
ptedJI!d II COial of$ I mllllon to
ihe COils~ or the orisinal
·O'Bkine&amp;s Memorial Hoil)ltal
'ltnlettlre lhatope&amp;d in

1970.
An IIIIOII)'IMUt ddnor CM·
ttibuted tl1t ~an'• third

leal! Jlrt in the amount

S,.ooJ,
•

or

To contribute, gifts may be
to the O'Bleness community relations department or
call (740) .592-9494 for more
infonnation about making a
pledge.
~nt

1st IVERSARY . t
iiw Slar 'Driller 1raining j
STARTS NEW CLASS MAY 6, 20

5:00 PM • 9:00 PM
.
(740) 441-0553. (740_
) 339-0321

Toll Free 1·888·281-8634
We would like to thank everyone in the community
that hai went through Five Star Driver Training
School. We appreciate your business. .

Chll'ltl 0. O'Bienen, Wl8 I

•

Common Plea• Judge
o . tt&amp;.-~'"11

Montgomery
Commluloner

s

COLUMBUS (AP) American Electric Power on
Friday dedicated a 160·
mesnwatt wlnd~power pro·
ject In western Texas that It
purchased In December from
a subsidiary of bankrupt
Bnron Corp. for $175 mfi·
lion.
Power from the Deeert Sky
Wind Purm will be bouglit
under long-term contracts -by
City Public Service, San ·
Antonio's municipal electric
utility, sald AEP, baled In
Columbus. Texu Oov. Rick
Perry and U.S. Encray
Department offlclale Joined
the utllltie1 for the dedfcatlon
ceremony Friday.
Under terms of ihe deal,
Bnron Wind Corp. will oper·
ate and maintain the wind·
power project, .located near
. lr11an, In western Texas.
AEP Chairman E. Linn
Drag:r Jr. uld the acqu,isltlon
furt ered the comnny 8 goal

992·6677

Harold

•

•lp
Me

Wuter Act by controlllng per·
mits for vwious types of dumpina.
The tWO aaencies 8Wd Friday
they were Implementing the
new rule to chun~e Army
Con1s reaulatlons dutina to the
1970s; which Illite that rivers
and SlfCDl111 may not be u8ed 118
reposttoriet for lndu8trial
w':,~~ the Ann Corps will
adopt w; EPA'• ~nitlon of
"Alf material .. which doe8 not
include such 'a ban.
The new rule was intended
"tO harmonize differences
between existina EPA and
Army Carpi of Englneen rea·
Auto· Owner. lnsuranc11
ulations," ilccordlna to a statement iseued by both agencies
Life Home Car Bu•lnat
Friday.
111e National Mining
'1il '1/1 Pult. Pn )ll •
Aasociatlon had argued for d~e
INSURANCE PUJS
chan~. It sllid .put.tlna rocla
and dirt from niiruna operuAGENCIES, INC.
tlons in waterway• It no dltrer·
ent from fiUJns stream beds to
114 Court Pomeroy
create land for ·construction, .
which is allowed under Anny
Corps rules.

~

Sund.y, M.y 5, 2002

. Gallia, Meigs
rates predicted at
less than ha!f

AEP dedicates Texas
wind-power project

The full page will run on
Tuesday in color each week
during the school year.
Sponsors will also receive
a certificate from OVPC and
the elus they sponsor, a
qu~ page thank r,ou ad
from that class that wtll have
the sponsor's picture In it and
letterS from the children.
Kid Scoop is an award. winning educational pa_11e
d1at provides teachers wtth ·
instant "in-paper" · leuons
and because each section is
· labeled with the academic
standard it addresses, it is
simple for teachers to demonstrate how the page'• lesiOIIJ

•

Ohio vOter tumout
for Tuesday at 290/o

Rutlnnd VHI~e, Snmuel .
Bruee Mayt..Bnst Rutllmd,
Knren S, wlllloms; We~t
fl-m ........, A1
Rutland, Normun C. Wilt;
vo .......
Snlem,
110
candldnte:
Pomeroy 1, Judith R. Sisson: MiddlePQrt 2, no cnndldnte:
Middleport 3, Connie J.
Pomeroy 2, no !)nndldote: Dodson; Middleport 4,
Luurel Cliff, Oscur T. Smith; Myron
J.B.
Duffield:
Rocksprings, Judith A. King; p
1
did
Scl,..lo, Rnndv Butcher·,
omeroy ' no eon nte;
~"
~
Pomeroy 2, Rebecca Triplett;
Racine Vllliii!O, Robert E. Pomeroy 3, no eondltlato;
Blilegle, Henry W. Bentz; Brudbury, no candidate;
Syrncuse Vllloge, no enndi· Laurel Clift', ·no tandldnte:
dnte: Mlnen;vllle, no t:andl· · Rocksprings, Curt!l Ohlinger;
dute; Rnclne, Orover Salser Scipio, Bob Smiddle; Racine
Jr.
Vlllllge, no candidate;
Democ:mtic: Bedford, J11ne Syrntuse Vllloge, no Cllndl·
M. Frymycr; Enst Chester, dute; Mlnersvnte, John N.
BotHy H. Nicodemus; West thle; Rntine, no candldntll.
Chester, no cnndldnte;
Candidutes for state repre·
Columbin, no condldote; . sentutlve und U.S. represen·
Lebunon, no cundidnte; tutlve will nlso uppeo.r on
Leh1rt, Duvid B. Suyre; North both
Democratfc
und
Olive, Mike Bing; South Republlc11n bnllots. .
Olive, Melody L. Hnuber;
Polls are open from 6:30
Orunge, no cnndldnte; a.m. to 7:30p.m.

from Pip AI .

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

RACINE- CarllOI'I G. Drummet, 17, of Rltine, died an
Thursday, Ml)' 2, 2002, at Holm Medial CMter 1.18 t~ result
of Ill automobile atcldtnt.
He WlS born on May 27, 1~7"- in Bowling OM!\ (\\\WI
County), Ohio, son of Orqory li. Drummer o.nd ~ M.
~-Drummer. He wa.~ employed M 11. clli'J)tftttt for Wesl\m
Construction Compwly.
·
SurviYlng In addition to his ~ts ~ hi&amp; wile, Kelly 1..
Smith Drummer of R®lne; n son, Chandler Drummer alid o.
dauahter, 'lalon Drummtt both at home, and a .son due In
OttOber 2002; his stepfather, Ot~rY Sll1vvn of Rutl~; his
stepmother, Kadene Drummer: a brother and sister-in-law,
Aaron and Eritll Drummer of Rntine; 11 sister, Meaan
Drummer o!' Rutllll\d; n step lsttt, Amber Slavvn.
Al!o surviving are his mntemDl grandpruents, Mlllt R. and
Patricia Tyson of W11yne; ·his pntemlllarnndpnrents, lohn 1111d
Evelyn Drummer of Bowling Green; his mother-In-law, Cindy
{Robert) Roble of Pomeroy; his fllther-in·law, Too\ Smith of
Racine; his brother-ln-lnw nnd slster-in-lnw, Chris And Erica
Smith of Pomeroy; thre nlilphews, Loa_an Drumml!l' of
Rncine, Md Dillon nnd Comrytl Smith rifPollleroy; 11 Jretlt
uncle. .Howo.rd Mln11rd of Middleport; nnd two uni:l!ls, ltlm
H11ym11n and Kelly H11.ymcan of Rudne,
.
He wo.s precedcil in deoth by his niece, JordAn Smith.
Services will be held 111 ·11 u.m. on Mondll}', M11y 6, 2002,
nt Fisher Funeral H()me In Middleport. .Buri11l will follow nt
Lettut Falls Cemetery, Friends muy ctllllt the funeml home on
Sund11y, Mlly S. 2002, from 2·4 nnd 7-9 p.m.
·

Wilma Mulne Houck

Education

.

c.tlon G. Dnlmanw

Page AS

..

A 11/lu fo,. Cti.rol Pmn' '"' M11y 7th ilttllllttfM c11m"!11"
JIIUI, MllrmJtult/u'i ttnJ t/tJJtdtJIIH lfJIUIIwU ltlllftJnt II
Jljf,u for the ptt~pk oftlu 87th Dim·la.

We offer Driver Education classes for $199 (40 hours)
Juvenile Driver lnterventl~n Program $80 (6 hours)
Adult Remedial $140 (8 hours)

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papA&amp;

Opinion

f

: j'ur~q 'l"nrus- Jea~ntl

· SundRf, May S. 1112
•

for
Oelllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Point Pleaunt, W. VI.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher
Diane Kay Hill. .

Lllrry Boyer

Advertl•lng Manager

•

Controller

• AU lfltrrl
/.Aitm to tll1 Hilur "'"' w~kcmt•. Tlr•J Jlllud4 b• l111.1 tluur 300 wunh.
an •MIIJ«t 1~ tdllbta ttll~ lflfUIIH rlgntd tJitd indiUifl. tuldr1u •nd Ukphttllt nu•Hr. ·
No un•lf,.n/ltiNrt wUI H pllblirlrfd. Utt, 1llould N In good IIJSII, tMI4~1i11g
11111111, lUll ~rtoiUJJJii••·

WAR OR
PEACE?

COULD I.
SEE ASECTION?
I

·

'flt6 opfiiJDIU lqrlllulillllft ~oJ11m11 below (11'1 t/11 COIIIIIIIIII Dj 1/rl Olrio Vfllley
l'ublhAU.r Co. 'I rtlllorlal boGtd. NnUu f.llll•rwh • ntll1d.

WFl.CH, W.Va. (AP) Rescue crews in heli~
and four-wheel-drive vehicles
· searclled through the sleep
valleys of Appalachian coal
country Friday after flash
floo::!"J left at least four people
and 12 missing.
. Five inches of rain Tell in
six hours Thursday, sending
streamS and rivers surging out
of their banks in the mountainous area where West
Vuginia, Kentucky and
Vuginia meet.
Some communities were
cut off by mudslides and others had water up to the eayes

of homes in a deluge so powerful that people laShed themselves to the irces. More than
100,000 homes and bnsineues lost power at ~ peak "of
the storm.
"It was like the mountain
just opened up and water
started to come out," said
Brenda Blankenship, po!il- ·
master of tiny Hurley, Va.
"Everythin$ is ·demolished.
All the busmesses in Hurley
are 11one, houses are gone.
They'~re just gutted."
.
At least three peopll: in
West Virginia and one in
Virginia
were
killed.

Netanyahu: .
Arafat must go

said.
The person who answered
the phone at Lees' home
said he was not available to
comment.

vltiiiM
Authorities spent Friday looking for at least 14 people

reported missing: eight in
West Virginia, three in
VIrJinia and one in Kentucky.
"People were tying themselvet to trees. They couldn't
get helicopter assistance in. It
was awfuf," said Vicky Jones,
a dispatcher with the
Buchanan · County, Va.,
Sheriff's Office.
Two people who had been
unaccounted for in Buchanan
County were found Friday
ni~t with friends or family,
wd State Police Sgt. M.P.
McMurray.

OUR VIEW

I

Bad idea
Proposed dgarette tax increase
may very well backfire
Increasing the cigarette tax in Ohio hy 50 cents a pack is ·a
bad idea, even if its passage might shore up the holes in th~
state budget.
The potential for it to backfire in border counties like Gallia
and Mei¥s is great because it may drive smokers across the
river if its determine~ ..yest Virginia taxes are cheaper. Or. for
those occas1onally dnvmg by Kentucky, where the tax 1s 3
cents a pack, it may be economically w1ser for them to buy a
few cartons there.
The point is, it's going to force people to quit buying in
Ohio unless they don't want to go to the trouble of zipping
across a nearby bridge and back. Or they may kick the habit
entirely, which would be great news to anti-smoking advocates.
·
Sin taxes have long been viewed by lawmakers as ·a reason. able means of raising revenue. But the double whammy of
tobacco companies raising .their prices to pay litigation settlements, and the Ohio and local sales taxes bemg what they are,
is pushing the cost of a pack to the $3 mark.
That's.almost enough to make anyone 9uit.
'
And even on a more cerebral level, the mcrease won't solve
Ohio's budget deficit, said the Buckeye Institute, a public pol.icy think tank that argues government spending cuts are the
·solution to the problem.
·
·
. ''The government spending binge of the '90s has greatly
·contributed to the current fiscal crisis," said the institute's
director, Robert Lawson. "Policymakers need to make the
politically difficult decision of dramatically reducing state
spending to permanently alidress this situation."
··
The instituie also concluded that with the availability of cig- .
arette sales over the Internet, and 30 percent of Ohioans living
in border areas, ''consumers will have plenty of options, other
than Ohio businesses, to spend their money."
Coming at a time when the legislature has withdrawn
money from the state's tobacco settlement -leaving tobacco
growers needing help with an increasin~ly tough market in
this end of the state high and dry - an mcrease in the cigarette tax is a.poor concept at best, and the state may well be
shooting itself in the foot if this proposal comes to pass when
.legislators take it up next week.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
funds out of the embryonic cloning deemed more important to society than
business, especially when medical I am will need my heart or your lungs or
Dear Editor: .
· breakthroughs using adult stem cells are your child's liver ... Never doubt that
the "use" and abuse of mankind did not
occurring regularly.
· · On May I, you published a ·Los
Adult stem cell research costs no one end with Hiller's eugenics program and
Angeles Times editorial on reproduc- his life. Adult stem cell research does "experimentation" of helpless subjects.
tive cloning. The opinions dramatically not demean the sanctity of a human Never tioubt that it coufd can happen
illustrate the illogic surrounding this being. Adult stem cell research is clear- again here.
critical issue.
1 sa.er
e
&amp;
· · of the ce11s.
Dr. Nancy B. Graham
.or the rec1p1ent
The Wn.ters descn·be the "notion of 1y
Gallipolis
Adult stem cell research does not lead
copying DNA for the purpose of creat- . our nation further down the slippery ..
ing a child" as "morally repugnant," but slope of valuing one person's life over
Great show
they endorse as moral "therapeutic another's.
.
clonin~." Therapeutic cloning (an oxyThose _loud, bullying proponents of · Dear Editor:
moromc term) involves, despite what ~mbryomc stem cell res.e~h must fall
I was fortunate Friday night (April
they call "creating a few human cpJJ,s," mto one of two groups;·'either they are 26) to attend the variety show at the
making embryos (i.e:, preborn hu\rian
'bl
· ~
d b
· tT
beings with a full set of human chrilmo• ter,n Y wun orme a out sclen 1 IC Ariel. Gallia County is truly blessed to
.b r ~
reileatch iii the area or they have anoth- have such great talent. The show was
somes ) to canm a lze or parts to ne- er; hidden agenda. Perhaps we already marvelous and entertaining for young ·
.fit tho.~e humans already fort nate outside the womb or test tube need .to and old.
enough to be born.
f
Although I question both the right- ex_amil_l~ th~ lon~-term consequences_o
We are so lucky to have people like
ness and the utility of reproductive thts ullhtanan vtew !!bout a human life Dan and Edna Whiteley, who give so
·
"
h.ld" 1
d more carefully.
. ..
much of their time to the community. I
cIomng to create a c 1 •
won er
Mav,be someday.someone With. more say a great big thank~u to them and
what twisted thinking would make
1 r. th
11
d
kd
these editors believe that it is immoral va ue an you WI nee your 1 ney; the rest of the people t put the show
to give a person a life but moral to kill y~u have two and why shouldn't you together. I wish them much luck in the
that person for his cells. President Bush give that person one kldneb whe~ you future.
has acted correctly in keeping federal can serve the ~eater good y an mvolPbyUisPope
untary donatiOn? Maybe somebody
Patriot

Illogical argument .

t

KILPATRICK'S VI:PW

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. Today is Sunday, May 5, the I 25th day of 2002. There are
; 240 days left in the year.
:, Today's Highlight in History:
· ·On May 5, 1961 , astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became
· America's first space traveler as he made a 15-minute suborbital flight in a capsule launched from Cape Canaveral,
Fla.
•
. ·On this date:
: In 1821, Napoleon Bonapru te died in exile Ol) the island of
: St. Helena.
; In 1862, Mexican forces loyal to Benito Juarez defeated
·French troops sent by Napoleon III in the Battle of Puebla.
In !891 •. Carnegie Hall (the~ named "Music Hall") had its
. opemng mght m· New York City.
· In 1912, the first issue of the Soviet Communist Party
: newspaper Pravda was published.
·
: In · 1925, John T. Scopes was arrested in Tennessee for
:teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.
In 1942, during World War II, Japanese forces landed on
the Philippine island of Corregidf,lr.
.
In 1942, sales of sugar resumc!d' in the United States under
. a rationing program.
· In 19S5, West Germany became a sovereign state.
: In 1980, a siege at the Iranian embassy in London ended as
' British commandos and police stormed the building.
In 1981 , Irish Republican Army hunger-striker Bobby
Sands died at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland in his 66th
day without food.
·
Ten years ago: President Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton
: picked up primary victories in Indiana, North Carolina and
:the Distrtct af Columbia.
Five years ago: President Clinton arrived in Mexico for his
first Latin American trip. A jury in Jacksonville, Fla., found
R.J . Reynolds Tobacco Co. was not responsible for the death
of Jean Connor. a lifelong smoker. American Airlines' pilots
· ratified a contract, ending nearly three years of negotiations.
: One year ago: Pope John Paul II became the first pope to
: visit Syria, where President Bashar Assad asked him to take
' the Arabs' side in their dispute with Israel, referring to what
Assad described as Jewish persecution of Jesus Christ.
"Monarchos" won the Kentucky Derby.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Ann B. Davis is 76. Actress Pat
· Carroll is 75. AFL-CIO president John J. Sweeney is 68.
: Saxophonist Ace. Cannon is 68. Country singer-musiciari
: Roni Stoneman is 64. Actor Michael Murphy is 64. Actor
Lance Henriksen is 62. Comedian-actor Michael Palin is 59.
Actor Jean-Pierre Leaud is 58. Actor John Rhys-Davies is
58. Actor Roger Rees is 58. Actor Richard E. Grant is 45.
ABC News Correspondent John ·Miller is 44. Rock singer
Ian McCulloch (Echo and the Bunnymen) is 43. Actress Tina
, Yothers is 29. Actress Danielle Fishel is 21.
: Thought for Today: "Wars on nations change maps. War
:on poverty maps change." - Muhammad Ali, American
· bolltng champion.

·Court prudently ducks answer on what~ a 'taking'
How long, the prophet asked, 0 Lord, ·
how long? Justice John Paul Stevens,
sitting in for the Lord, last week provided an enigmatic answer. It all depends,
he said, it all depends.
Stevens was ·speaking for the
Supreme Court in a case of major concern to property owners everywhere.
The question before the court was short .
but not simple. Did the Tahoe Regional
Planning Agency in . 1981 "take" the
property of 400 landowners? If so, the
COWMNIST
owners are entitled to just compensation.
·
If not? Suppose it was not a "taking." permanent floating crap game in New
What then? Glad you asked that ques- York. Roll those bones! Roll those
tion , said the court, but it prudently moratoria!
ducked an answer.
For procedural reasons of its own, the
The facts are not in dispute. All the Supreme Court limited its review to the
parties agree that Lake Tahoe is a Ordinance of 1981 and the Resolution
national treasure. Located on the of 1983. It ignored the injunction of
California-Nevada border, the lake is as 1984 and the plan of 1987. ' As the case
clear as crystal, as blue as a sapphire. Its comes to us, fe have no occasion to
natural beauty cries out for preserva- consider the validity of these provition. Toward that end, in 1980 the two sions." The cou~'s order granting
states jointly created the Tahoe review "did ·not encompass the theory
Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) and of 'rollipg moratoria." This judicial
directed it to promulgate environmental astigmatism permitted Justice Stevens
standards throughout the Tahoe Basin. to look only at a 32-month period
One immediate effect was "to halt between Au!l'lst 1981 and April 1984.
temporarily" the construction of resi- Justice is blind, so they say, and these
dential housinl! in areas classified as justices needed glasses.
"high hazard'~" or "sensitive." Thus
The several orders, inj11nctions, plans
came the ftrst temporary moratorium, and moratoria . naturally spawned a
identified as Ordinance 81-5, in August swarm of lawsuits as the frnstrated
1981. It was extended by another tem- landowners sought relief. Most of the
porary moratorium in 1982, and by a owners had purchased their lots long
further temporary moratorium, known before the TRPA came into existence.
as Resolution 83-21, in 1983. This They dreamed of building retirement
lapsed into an· eight-mon~h temporary homes on or near the lake. A few of the
inJunction in 1984, which in tum was original 400 litigants have sold their
succeeded by a completely revised property back to the TRPA at fire-sale
"plan" in 1987. The plan remains in prices. Most others have held on, hopeffect.
mg that some day they will receive
One is reminded of that famous in:;ti- either just compensation or a permit to
tMtion made immortal by "Guys and build.
•
Dolls." This wai the oldest established

James .

Kilpatrick

DROP US ALINE.

This is the hitch. The Constitution
says that private property shall not be
"taken" for public use wiihout just compensation, and the regional planninl
agency says it hasn't actually "taken
the land. It has merely {l!CVented the
owners from doing anything with it. If
the TRPA had condemned the sensitive
.lots outright, and taken title to them, the
former owners would have to be paid. If
the agency )lad forthrightly leased the
land as .a preventive measure, again,
compensation would be due. Here the
owners are left in limbo.
Justice Stevens rightly observed tiW
jl,Ovemment could not operate frugally
1f every regulatory delay, no matter how
brief, were interpreted as a compeuable "taking." True, replation can •o
"too far," but how far IS too far7 How,
long is too ion~? The answer, he said,
depends upon ' a. number of factors." It
depends upon "the fac.ts presented." He
cited cases approving delays of . 16
months, 30 months, and even three
years in the case of a water and sewer.
age project. There can be no categorical
rule.
.
Chief J,ustice William RehnquiJt,
writing·in dissent, focused upon a sixyear period between 1981 and 1987,
when the Tahoe landowners first were
denied any use of their land. Sucb temporary takings, he said, "are not different in kind from ~nt takings, for
which the Constitution clearly mjllires
compensation;" It is as if the government "had taken a six-year lease on
their property."
I believe the owners have a bundle of
back rent coming to them. To this day
they have received no .compensation, •
just or otherwise. The slate's rolling
moratoria have rolled them Oat. So wbo
ever said life is fair?
(J~s J. Kilpalrick il a columnist jo(
Universal Prtss Syndicalt.)
'

111 Court 1t.. Porn• ow. Ohio
7-.:IIM

•

·a

ASHLAND (AP)
Former
Israeli Prime
Benjamin
Minister ·
Net11nyahu, who once
si~ned a peace agreement
w1th Yasser Arafat, now
says peace in the Middle
East .is impossible until
Arafat is removed as leader
of the Palestinian Authority.
Netanyahu,
speaking ·
Fridaf night at Ashland
University, described Arafat
as a terrorist who "names
public squares after killers"
and sai~ his regime must be
dismantled.
"I think he has to be
expelled. I don't think he
has to be killed," he said,
noting later that assassinat: ing Arafat would have
1 wide-ranging repercussions.
1
Four
years
ago,
" Netanyahu · and Arafat
; signed · an interim peace
· agreement in Wye River,
,:, Md., with former President
Clinton looking on.
J.

~

.

Trustee faces
accusation
,, (\~EXANDRIA (AP) : A township trustee took a
; ,can, ..of1 .g~~J.i.n.e 11nll_ 11 fl:\lr~
~ from a fire department wlth~ ou~ , permi~sion
Friday
morning and used them to
, burn down an abandoned
; house next door, firefighters
: said.
~ Licking County arsC!n
, investigators and Oh1o
• Environmental Protection
·· officials will inspect the
, remai)lins pile of rubble
• duri11g the weekend to
~ determine whether charges
- should be filed against
David Lees, said Police
Chief Mike Kilburn.
"I think our gut feelittg at
this point is we're goinl to
charle him with arson,' he

School settles
lawsuit
BELLEVUE (AP) - The
family of a 6-year-old boy
who was struck .and killed
by a truck when he chased a
ball off a school ~layground
has senled the1r lawsuit
against the district.
· Christian Beck's parents,
Shawn and Toni Beck, will
receive $90,000 from the
Bellevue School District.
The parents sued the district in 1998, saying there
should have been a fence
surrounding the playground
or a playground supervisor
to make sure children didn't
run onto the busy highway.
The
senlement
was
reached
Thursday
in
Sandusky County Court.

Security breach
deteded
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
screening machine detected
explosives in a carry-on bag
at a security checkpoint at
Cleveland
. Hopkins
International Airport on
Friday, and authorities
closed two concourses for
2-112 hours, officials said. ·
Hours later, there was a second security alert.
. Airport Commissioner
Fred Szabo slid screeners
were unable to find the baa
and he could not rule out the
possibility that the baJ and
the person carrylnalt got on
a departina flight before the
concourses were closed.
· He slid there was no way .
of knowin&amp; whether there
was ail explosive in the bag
or whether it was a false
alarm. The machines fre-

.,_ge A7

Ohio

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su.-y, _, s. 2G02

quently return false readin§s, he slid.
We don't have any indication that there wq actually an explosive de~ice, but
we don't know for sure," he
said.

Shooting
suspect
lndlded

Englewood, Fla., is charged
with aaaravated burglary,
four counts of kidnapping
and felonious assault.
Wackier was shot in the
shoulder during the stand·
off.
The deputy, Cpl. Joe
Addy, 26, was shot in the

COli

LONDONDERRY (AP)
- A grand jury on Friday
indicted a man on charges
related to the shooting of a
Ross County sheriff's
deputy durin~ a three-hour
hostage situation in March.
Jay Wackier, 25, of

"'·
Of French City
Chiropractic Has
Been·Named ·
Chiropractor Of the
Month For The
Month Of April

VOTE FOR

Jerrv L. Rus
For County Commissioner
'STRAIGHT TALK'
A vote for me is • vote ror
you end Gallle County.
I am ready to 11rve the people, .
11 I run-time Comml11loner.
Together .we can get things done.
Sincerely, Jerry

right hi~.
.
The suuation began when
deputies responded to a
report of a man holding his
girlfriend and her parents
hostage,
Sheriff
Ron
Nichols said at the time.

"Wilcoxon is to chiropractic
what sterling is to silver"

(740) 446-3836

•.

River Road • Gallipolis, OH

PelliiO&lt; by lhlolondldlll, Jt~ L.liuok, 121 Joy Drlvt, Oolllpolll

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EVERYTHING · PRICED TO SELL ON SIC: iT! 1.
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Hour, Well To Well Public Sell Oft Of Entire Showroom Inventory! Our Crewe, At the Very
Momant, Are Going Up &amp; Down The Alalea ...Stocklng &amp; Packing New Furnltura On The
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Extra Selea Paople...Extre Credit Oeaka... Extre. Delivery People... Don't Dllay... Be Near the
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Inside:

5,2003

GIWII awarded

meuabeushlp
GALLIPOLIS

-

Life

..--=~--.,member

stntus hus

b c e n
IIWnrded by
t
h e

I.

Onllipolis
Kiwuni .
Club for
veterJin
member
nnd past
Grlllt
lieutenunt
governor
Chnrles "Foxy" Orunt. ·.
. In 197S, by a vot~ of the
delegtllc body ut the
International Convention,
Kiwnnls lntemutionul estub·
lished a means for recognizing indlvlduuls who demonstrated concern for others
through outstunding Kiwanis
service.
Grunt has been a member
of the Gllllipolis Kiwunis
Club since June 14, 1970. On
the locullevel, he hus chuir~d
and served 011 most stunding
committees, hus been u long·
time member of the board of
directors, hus been three
· times its vice presid~nt, three
times its president-elect und
twice its club presillent-dis·
tlnguished, and chaired tl,IUny
club projects. .
On the division level, he
"r."US chuirman of the member·
ship and growth committee,
served on the board of directors for several years and was
lieutenant governor-distinguished.
He has helped build two
Kiwanis clubs and one Key
Club.
On the district level, he has
served on the board of direc- .
tors, in addition to district
convention presider of the
Sponsored 'Youth Forum,
been u ~resenter on "How to .
be a Lteutenunt Governor,''
served as a judge for the Ohio
District
Key
Club
Convention contest for three
years, . and served as chairman for the Ohio District
Key
Club Convention
Oratorical contest.
On the International level,
Grunt hus attended nine international conventionM, served
as sergeant-ut-arms, served
two years in the International
Election Committee, holds a
60-member Ruby K award, is
a recipient of two Ring of
Honor awnrds, is a Hixson
Fellow, and is the recipient of
two Legion of Honor awnrds.

Slip repair In
Mason County
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. ...,. West Virginia
. Department of Highways·
Mason County is announcmg
that County Route 58/1· .
Thirteen Mile Creek will be
clo~ed from Tribble Road to
Calispel May 6-10 from 7:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. for &amp;lip repair.

· Llctn11tax
. lpprovecl
EVERGREEN - A SS
vehicle llcen~e renewal tax
will cake effect in Springfield
1bwnship be$inning Jan. I,
2003, townshtp ltll81ee8 said
Thursday durinalheir reaular
monthly meeting.
The tax, said . tru•tees.
tbould Jtmerate anywhere
trom
~
per
1la! and wiU be used for road
inalftftiiiiiCC and equipment.
nvo llpCCial meetings had
. pmioully been held to di8·
CUD the tax, and it met with
little re•l•tance. Morgan
Tow~~thip and .everal other
township~ have alJO chollen
to partidpale in the proJI'Wll.

Achievinj! _membership in
MORT's TOT is attained
only by those who have
demonstrated exceptional
professiomtl
knowledge,
client service and ethical conduct. Euch year, more than
1,000 MORT members quail·
fy for TOT, representing
about 4 percent of the total
MDRT membership.
MORT is an intemntionul,
independent association of
ubout 23,000 of the world's
best life insurance and tlnari·
cinl servh:es professionals
from about 60 nutions. .
.
Thier cun be c:ontuc:ted at
446-944S or tolerins@zoomner.net,

Golf
toum1ment set
GALLIPOLIS - Oallia
Academy High School Band
Boosters' II th annual golf
toumument is Saturday, May
18 ut Cliffside Oolf Course.
The-ort' time is 8:30 a.m.
There will be fun und food all
day.
Entry fees are $~0 for
members und $60 for non·
members. Sign up at Cliffside
or call 446-2324.

Free

'

lmmunl11tlons
OALLIPOLIS . - . Free
immunizations will be pro·
vided by the Gullin County
Health Department on
Thursday, May 9 ut the health
department, 499 Jackson
Pike, from 4-6 p.m.
Children in need of immuni?.ations must be uccompa·
nteu by a parent or legal
~uardian, and bring a current
tmmunizution record with
them.
Also, the WIC office will ·
see clients by appointment
during the evening hours.
Additional services, such
us blood pressure checks and
pregnancy tests; will be
offered during the evening
hours at the -health depart·
ment.

. Bolrd meet1n1

by Chris A. Mllh~~n, 41 , 160 Buker, Middleport,
Rand Ave., Oalllpolis. Mah1111
had slowed nearfy to a stop to
avoid striking a dog, the
report said.
Damage to Williams' cnr
wns disabling, and was nonPOMEROY
functiC!l).lll to Mahan's vehi· Foreclosures have been
cle, trt50pers sold.
granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to
North American Mortgage
Co., asainst · Jucque L.
RIO ORANDE - James Thompson, and other$, and to
V. Kinneman, 18, 952 Jessie Wells Fllt$0 Bunk Minnesota,
Creek Road, Bidwell, was N.A., agamst Dale f:, Taylor,
A foreclosure action has
cited for follure to yield when
entering 11 roadway by the been !lied by Bonk of New
Onllia-Melgs Post of the York, Raleigh, N.C .. against
State Highway Patrol follow- Robert Coe, Albany.
ing u two-car accident
Thursday on U.S. 35.
Troopers suld Klnnemun
wos attempting to merge into
the eastbound lane of 35 from
the eastbound rest area's
POMEROY - Summer
entrance ramp at 12:0S p.m. food .si~n-up will continue at
and collided with an east· the Metgs Cooperative Parish
bound our driven by Oeruld J. through May 3) .
Todaro, SS, Columbus.
Anyone who hns received
Dnmage to Klnneman's cnr food from the pantry since
was functional, and nonfunctional to Thdllto's cor, troop·
ers said.

Foreclosures
flltcl

Citation lssutcl

·APplications
av1lllble

November should call 992·
7400 or 'stop at 311 Condor
St. in order to be placed on
the first summer food giveaway list.
. First·time applicants must
provide a current utility bill
with the appllcnnt's name and
address, a photo identiflca·
tion and the .Social Security
numbers of those in the
household.
Food distribution Is set for
June 26 and 27 from 9 to II

a.m.

Courthouse
doses
•

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Courthouse .will close
at noon on Tuesday for
Election Day. ·

AEP starts
wind-power
project

GALLIPOLIS

Insurance
Setvicu
LLC
in
Gallipolit,
to
the
MJUion-Dollar Roulld Table'•
(MDKT) Top of die Table.

POMt:itOY - Marria$e
licenses have been issued tn
Meigs County Probate Court
to . James Richard Buskirk,
33, Middleport, and Autumn
Margaret Griffith,
27,
Middleport; Raymond J ..
Smith, 77, Pomeroy, and
Patricia L. Noel, 64,
Pomeroy·! Philip A. Hurnm,
23, Rae ne, and Kara R.
Kin~, 21, Racine; Thomas
Cratg Werry, 29, Waverly,
W.Va., and Dawn Allyn
Roush, 26, Pomeroy; and
Robert Edward Bishop, 37,
Middleport1 and Stacy JoAnn
Frederick, ;.:3, Middleport. ·

•

NIA PtoYOIIa
I'IIIITIIOUND

THE BUTCHMEISTER

(-.ol-1)

lundly,Ap~l21

PhlladoiPhll 101, Botton 103
llalao 115, .Minnltoil 102, Dalllt wino

..

~.0

3-0

'

L.A. Llktro 92, Portland 91, L.A. Llkort
win AriH 3-0
Moncloy, Aptl1 2t
Toronto 89, Doltolt 83
Sacramento 81, utah 88, Sacramento
wlnt .. ~.. 3-1
.
'
' -.y, Aptll30
Charlotlt 102, O~ando 86, Charlotto wino
..,,•• 3-1
lndiano 97, Now Joroov 14

-nttdoy, Moy 1
Philldeiphll 83, Botton 81
91. Son Antonio 79
Thurtdey, Moy 2
tjew Joraoy 120, lndiano 1011, 20T, Now
Jor.er. wlnt tt~H 3-2
Dttro 188, Toronto 82, Dolton wino H~H
3-2
,rldoy, Moy a
Booton 120, Phlitdolphia 87, Booton wine
Nrlll 3-2
Ban Anlonlo101, S..ltlt 78, San Antonio
wino Hrltt 3-2
lflurdly't Oamt

Dallao 11 Saoramtnto, 1111
',
TodiY'I OlmH
~hlrlolle ol Now .lerlfY, 12:30 p.m.
Booton at DolroH, 3 p.m.
Ban Anlonlo at L.A. llokoro, 6:30p.m.
Mandoy, Moy I
Dlllat at Sloramonto, 9 p.m.

_Rockport

-

A
' (11~·

-

Rczabok

~-lfSI'OOf

Tulodoy,Moy 7

Ch1rlolle 11 Now Jtroov, 8 p.m.
8trl Antonio II L.A. Llkoro, 10:30 p.m.
,
Wld.-ey, Moy 8
llotton al Dolroll, 8 p.m.
Thundoy, Moy 8
Now Jeroov al Charlotte, 7 p.m.
Sloromonto al Dallu, 9:30 p.m.

••

,__,.,.

Mdoy,Moy10

Doltollllllotlon, 1p.m.
1.;!1, Llklrt II 8trl Antonio, 9:30 p.m.
,

•

lalurdly, Moy 11

Slorlmtnto at 011111, 3:30 p.m.
luridly, Moy 12
Now Jtroov 11 Charlolif, 12:30 p.m.
Doltollll Booton, 3 p.m.
L.A. Llkoro at Son Antonio, 6:30 p.m.
llonder.lloy 13
Dallull s-omon!D, Op.m., KriOClOOHrf
TUOidoy, lloy 14
Botton II Doltott, 8 p.m., K,.._ry
. Sin Antonio II L.A. Llklrt, TI!A, K-

Seek

dlullutlon
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
to Carrie Belle Baker,
~acine, and Paul Elbert

-lllldoy.

H')'

Kn-

. R I O ORANDE- Few
arguments in sports can
be answered Without any
dispute.
. Ashly Roberts is the most decorated col~ge athlete to ever grad·
uate from River V,alley High
School. Hands down.
And she isn ~t done yet.
The junior shot putter/discus
thrower at the Um versity of Rio
Grande set the American Mideast
Conference record for the shot put
at 42 feet, 3.35 inches at tbe conference championships last weekend in Houghton, N.Y.. She liiSO
tied for the fanhest throw in the
discus, but lost a tiebreaker. She
also look third in her non-specialty event, the hammer throw.
"She probably had one of the
best performances I have ever
seen at a conference champi •
onship," said Rio Grande throwing coach Juan McCabe.
· What Roberts has done is eum
All-American status in the discus
in booth of her first two seasons at
Rio. She placed second as a freshman - missing the national title
by eight inches - and third as a
sophomore. Her performances this
season have already earned her a
rewm trip to the National
Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics championships.
The NAJA National championship meet will be held May 23·
25 in Olathe, Kansas, the home of
the NAJA. She will become the
first Rio athlete to ever throw in
three events at the national championships, having made provisional qualifying marks in the shot
and hammer for the first time this
year.
Roberts considered track "just
another sport" while in high
school. 111en, college coaches
stal:ted to take notice of RQberts'
performances, such as qualifying
lor the Ohio Division 11 state meet
in the shot put as a junior.
Roberts, who ftnisbed third in
die discus at the state meet her
senior year at River Valley, began
10 tllink that track might provide
the route to an education, .
"Probably aboUt my junior year,
when I stal:ted gettJng letters and·
stuff," she said
Coming to Rio rather that several other schools is a decision with
which Roberts is very comfortable.
"I think I have done a lot better
because I'm close to home," said
Roberts. She was also very famiJ.
iar with the ~o Grande~
having wolted with M
prior
to coming to Rio Grande.
.

b2amonlo al Dlilu, TBA,
Thunodlv, lloy 11
D11ra1J II Botton, TIIA,
· L.A. LakMt llfllnAnlonlo, TIIA, K H')'
l'fl4llr; lilly 17
. .
Now Jtrtoy • Cllor1oat, 8 ~. m., • .......,,lloy11
Dallat II Sooromoroo, T8A, Kn,.,.,.._,'Y
Ban Anlonlo at L.A. Laklrt, TBA. KlilY

..,.,...,,.

JtfOOV, TIIA, KlilY
BOlton at DtiiOII, TBA, Hn«lltlty

Charlollol at New

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- The anticipated beanball
battle never really got goinJl,
Reds pitcher Jose RiJo
plunked leadoff man David
BeJI, but that was quickly
forgot~n as San Francisco
beat Cincinnati 6-1 Friday
ni~ht for the Giants' fourth
wtn in five games.
"I don't tliiilk it was inten·
tional," Giants manager
Dusty Bak~r 'aid. "I .don't
think anybody manded
becau~e
tt dtdn't hurt.
tJnleJs you get hit on the
6one or 8ometbing. how
much is 83 mph supposed to
hunT'
Jeff Kent broke open the
aame with a ~hree-run
Jlomer in the ~eventh. The
.oot off Rijo (2-1) tcOred
Bell, who singled, and Barry
Bonds, who walked.
; Kirk Rueter (4--1) blanked
dJe Reds for eipt innings,
l)ut' Will pu Jled tn the ninth
after Sean Case)' and Adam
Ounn opened wath singles.
Chad Zerbe relieved and
allowed Aaron Boone's RBI
tingle.
; Rueter lw 1101 thrown a
~mplete game since J11ne
29, 1999. against Colorado;
a span m 87 stans. His ~ast
shutout Will came agamst
the Giantfl on Aug. 27, 1995,
with Monlieal.
'
· He aUowed · one run on
nine hits with two walks and
two wikeoutJ. The Giants
helped by turning four dou·
ble plays behind him.
Recent tension between
the teams and comments by
Reds
reliever
Scou
WiiJiamsoti this , week Md
fueled &amp;peculation there
might be trouble.
t:ast Sunday in Cincinnati,
FeliJ;
Giants · rei iever
Rodriguez hit Caley in die
upper arm with a piteb after
Reds reliever Oabe White
threw over Bondi' head.
W'dliiiDlJOII later .aid tbere
wu now bad blood between
the clubs.
•

GALLIPOLIS- Goodwill
lndut~rie• of Soulhetn Ohio
Inc. will celebrate Goodwill
lndu111iet · Week May 5·11.
11le annual event it obterved
nationally by all 187
Ooodwilf member orpniza.
tiont in North America.
The OalJipolia Goodwill
rehabilitation facility will
have an open hou~e on
nurtday, May 9 at I 0 a.m. at
252 Third Ave.
·

Dulv•lnJurecl

•

BY DAN POLCYN
DPOLCYNOMYOAiLYTRIBUNE.COM

lilY
lilY 1S
C - II Now Jtroov, TB!I, W-

aary

GALLIPOLIS
A
Bidwell-area woman Will
injured in a two-vehicle acci·
dent Thur~day on County
Road 6 (McCormick), Jlle
Gallia-Meigt Post of the
State Hi&amp;~~way PalrOI report·
ed.
'
Debra R. WiJiiamt, 47,

0WND1 Mla NtW11111#

lUI UfE riii1

IJMIIGFII ~

•••••

Bu~

~·"'(u~
-- .,. ~-

ALAN DviiiT Nm.l'llla /01 T1Utl /AM16AOAMIOif
Lfar PU«&lt;I /OliN~ jOHN &amp;Jooi.JJ IW6 B.X:HT

~

:m u,.,., JU.- ...... Oe!l\l 'llo, Oil '
111 1ofiW *'- Of'lllo Iii.- Briolp

•

Roberts throwing her way to.success

'

WILKESVILLE - Traah
service will begin ·in
Wilkesville Townsllip on
Saturday, May 11 at the
township garage, tru~tee&amp;
announced.
Reaulnr service will be the
second and founh Saturday
of each month from 8 a.m.
until noon. A large item ser·
vice is available on the fourth
Saturday of the month, along
with regular garbage 11ervlce.
Trustees advise that the
township
ll,lld
~ervice
provider re~erve the riJI!I to
refu~e ~ervice to anyone from
outside the townfhlp. Any
large item brought to the
township prase not on the
fourth Saturday will al10 be
refulled.
.

70, 381

Rio~

CON,IIIIHCI IIMII'INALI

Mly11

~menl

Butch
Cooper

Pro Hoops

Giants top
Reels, 6-1

Ridp Road. Will tranJponed
ftoril the JCeiiC of the 2:35
p.m. coiUtioo to Holur
Medical Center by Gallia
.
Tolet, a !Jure.)lm MDJn' QN~nt)'EMS.
Taoopm
Mid
Williamt
wllf
member, il a tJJree.time TOT ·oonbbOund wbm Jbe itnd
qiWilliet.
the rear of a minivan driven
1

HIGHLIGHTS

Servlcebetln•

-

Tolet, CLV1
otToletaoo
To I e r

SUNDAY's

Llcenselsiutcl

· RIO GRANDE - Oallia·
Vinton Educational Servl~e ''
Center Governing Board' a·
regular monthly meetina is
Wednesday, Ma)' I~ at 7 p.m.
in Room 1S~ of the Human
Resource
Building
at
Buckeye Hills Career Center.

EueplionaJ produa know!·

edp aud
client w·
via have
elevated
Ronald .R.

. SuiiMy, M.y I, 2002

COLUMBUS (AP)
American Electric Power
on Friday dedicated a I (i(Jmega.watt wind-power project in western Texas that It
purchased )n . December
from a substdlnry of .banlcruP.t Enron Corp. for $17S
mllllon.
Power from the Desert
Sky Wind Farm will be
bOught under .long-term
contracts by City · Pu~~c .
Service, San Antonto s
municipal electric utility,
said AEP, based tn
Columbu's. Texas Oov.
Rick Perry and U.S. Energy
Department officials iolned
the utilities for the dedication ceremony Friday. ·

sur.ooo St2.ooo

,...........
..........,

Devils beat Ppint, 17·11, Page B2
Angels fall to Knights, Page B3
Outdoors: In The Open, Page B8

"--·

,....

"

........... .,

Dan Polcyn

photos
'

Going
bowling·too
many .times
I love bowl gnrnes.
It's what makes college football
unique, and better, than other college
athletics.
. Pitting two tenrns from different parts
of the country locations like Miami, New
Orleans, Pasadena, Orlando, Tnrnpa Bay,
Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, etc...
New Years' Eve and New Years' Day
ore perhaps the best two sporting day of
the year.
When I think of the holidays, I think of
Christmas lights, good food, packed
shopping centers ... and yes, the college
football bowl season.
I love bowl games, and apparently the
NCAA does too.
Why else would they add three more
bowls to an already overcrowded bowl
schedule?
Didn't North Texas, with a 5-6 record,
making ilto the New Orleans Bowl, send
a message to the NCAA?
How does the NCAA justify this ...
"We believe they (the new bowls) will
sponsor events that will be ~ood experiences for student-athletes, ' said lim
Curley, who is the athletics director at
Penn State University and chair of the
Football Certification Subcommittee, in
a statement.
·
(Cough, cough, cough)
Neeasomething to drink.
(Cough, cough, cough)
Sony, I about choked on the pizza I
was eating.
· Anyhow, why hide the .one, and only
· true reason for all these crappy little
bowl games... MONEY!!!
That's' apparendy why we have college
sports now, to make money. .
PIMMM1Cclap1r.IJ

Marauders
top Belpre
in seventh
8Y JIM Soul18Y
· 01/P CORRESPONOENT

ROCK SPRINGS - In a contest far
different from their first encouriter,
Belpre's Golden Ea~les and the
Marauders hooked up 10 combat with
the issue still in doubt into the final
innin$.
Metgs won 7-6.
Neither team gained an advantage in
the opening frame and Belpre put runs
on the board in the second as James ·
Reali led off with a base on balls.
Meigs staner, Jimmy Smith, Fanned
C.J. Riding after which Jason
Hildebrand stePPed to die plate and
drilled a two nin homer to left before
Smith retired the final two batrers.
The Marauders cut the deficit to one
· in their half ·Of the inning with Buzz ·
Fackler drawing a walk., stealing second and third on a wild pitch. Zadt
Glaze ripped one 10 deep shon and
advanced io second as the fielder ovtt•
'threw fmt as Fackler scored.
Dave McClure walked putting runners at ftrSt and second with none down
that resulted in ' pitching change »
Jared Waters came on in relief for the
Eagles. Chris Smith was hit by a pitcb
to Toad the bases but Mei~ could not
capitalize on the opportumty for a bi&amp;
inning as Glaze was caught oft' third
and Waters fanned the last two
Marauders to end the inning.
One more run was posted to tbe
Eagle side mthe~ by way of
one out. ~ to back siu&amp;Jes from
Tony Shutts and Devin COW11111i111Plli1uo.lloo Meigs reaptured tbe leail in tbeir
•011 of tbe third staltin&amp; wilb Jobn
!:!;'ley's roulid tripper over tbe 34!1
mar1t; in, left. Jimmy Smilb followed
with a base b.i t but was out • '«&lt;Oid u
Fackler miCbed on a field«'s dll'ice.
Fackla' advanced to RaHid oa a piek
off play went awry .and Zacb Glue
came through as tbe DH wiJb a dOIIUe

"
'

...... .....
.,

;

�}'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point PIU..nt, WV

Page B2 • 6unbap Cimes-6entintl

Sunday, May 5, 2002

• Sunday, May S, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Otllo Point P)Q..nt, WV

'

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL

HIGH SCH,OOL S.OFTBAtL

Fed .

•

lv DAN ADIIINI

•

Gallia closed the scoring in
the sixth inning with an
unearned run off Point reliever Nic Dalton.
Rocchi worked four innings
to pick UP. the win for the
Blue Dev1ls. He struck out
five batters and gave up eight
hits.
Mike Warren also added
two to the Devil hit parade, as
did Bobby Jones. Wade
Caldwell also had a single for
Galli a.
Brandon Bonecutter was 2·
for-4 for Point. .Tench also
added a single for the Big
Blacks, and Kevin Thompson
had a single.
·
Point drops to 8-13-1 over·
all and 4·7 in the SEOAL
with the loss. Point will play
host to River Valley ·on
Monday.
The Blue Devils will play
at Logan on Monckly.

OPOLCYNOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - During
the first inning, Point Pleasant
baseball
coach
Jamie
Higginbotham said it would
take about a hundred runs to
win Friday's SEOAL game
with Gallia Academy.
It didn't take that many
runs, but fans looking for
offense went home satisfied
as the Blue Devils won the
shoot-out, 16-11.
Leadoff hitter Andre
Geiger, who entered the game
hitting around .450, paced the
Devils with a 4-for-4, twoRBl night as Gallia improved
to 10-7 on the season and 8-4
in the SEOAL chase.
Angelo Hardy also added
three hits and an RBI, while
Donnie Johnson had two sin·
gles and four RBI for the
Devils.
Gallia ripped 16 hits and the
Big Blacks notched 12 of
their own.
Point jumped on Gallia
starter Brandon Rocchi for
three first-inning runs. A
Gallia error, a Matt Warner
single, and back-to-back doubles by Andrew Dennis and
Kenny Durst generated the
opening-frame offense.
Dennis. Point's senior third
baseman, finished the night 2·
for-5, including a three-run
homer in the fourth inning.

DADKINs.MVDAILYAEGISTER.COM

downs~;.'

·Eagles..

'

BY Scon WOLFI

·,

OVP CORRESPONDENT •;
STEWART
~· :
Avenging an earlier loss-~
at Eastern, the Federal ·
Hocking Lancers posted.
a 7-4 victory over the·'
Eagles Friday night in:•
the rematch of the Tri·;i
Valley
Con~eJ,e~ce.l
Hocking
01VIston
showdown.
Federal Hocking took
the initial lead in the
second off Eastern
starter Charlie Young. ~
. The Lancers then:
II Clllllpollt
added a single marker
1111111 Aoodon., 11,111.
11
Point
300 530 0 - 11122
in the third and added
4 o 5 5o t x - 15 15 s
litADING HOME- Gallla Academy's Bobby Jones (33) gets the lead from third base as head coach Oolla
two more in the fourth .
(LP), Solh Guldno (3); Nlo
Brack Houchens watches on In the Blue Del/lis' 17-11 win over Point Pleasant Friday. (Dan Pol~) -O.lton Routh
(5) and f.lan Wamar. Brandon
after Eastern plated' ;
(WP),
oau"'
(5)
and
llollbV
the
Big
Blacks
and
the
Blue
The Blue Devils answered highlighted the inning with a
three · runs in the third~ ,
Jonea•.
quickly with four f\Jns of their twO:.run triple into right field. Devils plated five runs in the HITTERS: Point - 1·5: Oonlol
for a 6-3 Federal lead. .
Tinch 2·5, 28, RBI; 1\ndriW Dennie 2·5,
own on hits by Geiger, Nick
Roush took the loss, giving fourth frame.
Two of those runt I
28, HR, 3 RBI; Ktllny DUI'IIIIOI, 28, 2 RBI;
Merola, Hardy, and Johnson. up eight hits and taking the The Big Blacks scored Ktvln ~ 1·3: BrandOn llontoutttr
came behind a two-ruri' •
The· Devils pulled away in hit for nine of the Gallia runs. three in their part of the fifth 2_.: J. D.~~. RBI.
Jason
McCumber home
- 1\ndra
28. 2 RBI:
the third, notching six runs off Point rallied to narrow the as J.D. Thompson - 3-for-4 111111
Mlkl warran 2·5:
. - z.a: Nlcl&lt;
run in the fourth inning.
Point starter Hunter Roush game in the fourth with the on the night - had an RBI- 1·3, 28, 2 RBI:
HlrdV ~.
Eastern added a single
2B, RBI; Donnll Jahnaon 2·3, 4 RBI; Wada
and reliever Seth Gaskins. help of the Dennis homer but single and Daniel Tench Coldwol
,_.,RBI: Steve K111noy 1·3, 38,2
run
in the sixth inning,
Outfielder Steve Kenney squandered the rally, as both ripped an RBI-double.
1'1111.
but Federal got it back
in the bottom of the
frame.
Zach Wires , and
Charlie Youna hooked
up in a good pitching
BY Scan WOlfE
had a double, Justin Allen a double, ing to Stamer' in the fifth before Southern's . four runs in the fifth
dual in which offens~
OVP CORRESPONDENT
and Tyler Little and Joe Cornell each Hamilton came back to finish the inning as SHS led 8~3. but. Miller
ultimately prev'ailed,
HEMLOCK - Despite falling singles. Every Tornado contributed. . game. They fanned three and walked came back to make it 8-6. Southern
especially the Lancer
behind 0-3, the Southern Tornadoes
Miller was led in hitting by Matt nine.
added three runs in the sixth and
Federal poundturned up the wick and burnt the Starner. Hamilton, Sicilian, and
Southern went scoreless until the nine in the seventh for the 20:6 · arsenal.
ed out eleven hits.on the
Miller Falcons 20-6 here Friday Jeremy Paige with two· hits each, fourth when Dally Hill reached on an finale.
night. Wires picked up
night in boys varsity Tri-Valley while B.J. Humphrey, Hook, and error, Ohlinger doubled, Burrows
Southern hosts Federal Monday
the win, while Young
~onference
baseball
action. Kennedy each singled.
reached on an error allowing a run after hosting Eastern Saturday at
'suffered
the loss.
Southern is now 10·5 on the season.
Brice Hill was the winning pitcher in, and Tyler Little had an ~Bl sin· noon.
Southern was led by the 4-S hitting with relief from Wes Burrows who gle. Brice Hill then slammed a two·
For Eastern . Ken
.
from Senior Dally Hill, who pouna- went the last four innings. They run double for a 4·3 SHS lead.
• lllmlooll
Amsbary had twp sin·
o o· o 4 4 3 • - :zo t3 2
ed out four hits with a double. Aaron combined for six strikeouts and otie Errors, a double by Brandon fierce 8ouhrn
gles and Myers had a
3 o o o a o o - 5 11 1
and sin~les by . Dally Hill and Joe MHIIr
Olllinger and Brandon Pierce each walk, while giving up eleven hits.
tripJe.
PoT , Fedml
WP•HII, Burrowt ll1d · LP-Himllton, Sllmtr,
had two hits each, while Brice Hill
Hamilton suffered the loss, yield- Cornell brought home .the bulk of Hamilton
ond·SIImor.
Hocking, Wires, Bond.
and McCumber all had.
two hits and Wires had
a double.
.
Eastern hosts Trimble

-nt

E"''

Tornadoes dominate.at plate in win over Miller

HIGH SCHOOL .S OFTBALL

I
I

~onday.

Warren scores early to defeat River Valley

•

.BY BuTCH COOPER

BCOOPEROMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM ·

CHESHIRE- Warren took
advantage of early River
Valley mistakes Friday in the
Wamors 5-1 win over · the
Raiders in Southeastern Ollio
Athletic League softball
action.
The Warriors got all the
runs they would need early

on.

In the first inning, Jill Gates
led off with a triple and scored
when Jennifer Treadway · got
on by way of an error. . .
A Jennifer Coffman smgle

scored Treadway and Tiffany
Weese doubled m Coffman as
the Warriors led 3-0.
"In the first inning,
(Warren) just came out with
the bats going," said McFann.
Coffman was 3-for-3, while
Weese and Gates each had a
pair of hits.
For R.iver Valley (14-8),
Nicole Watkins was 2-for-3.
Warren added a run in the
second when Megan Morris
got on by way of an error and
scored on a Gates double.
Another Warriors run came
across the plate in the third

Lyndsey Johnson singled in
Coffman.
River Valley's biggest
threat came in the fifth inning
when Sarah Russell was
walked, but was tagged out
when trying to get !lack to
third base after Mariah
Saunders connected on a double to centerfield.
Saunders scored when Erica
Taylor singled and Amy Hood
was walked to put runners on
fust and second, but they
would be left stranded.
River Valley J)Ut runners on
first and second again in the

sixth with two outs as Geri
McFann singled and Jamie
Nickels was liit by a pitch, but
th~ were also lert stranded.
' Our hits were a little bit
weak," said Coach McFann.
"We left players stranded in
two or three mnings."
McFann, the Riideri starting pitcher, allowed nine hits,
but only one in the final four
inninss. She also struck out
two m the complete game
loss.
Johnson pitched 6 2/3
inni nss for the Warriors,
allow1ng six hits, but no strike

outs · as the Wan-en defense
played an en-or-free same.
River Valley plays host to
Logan Tuelday before enter·
taining Oallia Academy
Wednesday in sectional play.

w.,.,

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OVP CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK - Pounding
out thirteen hits and putting
together a seven-run third
inning,
the
Southern
Tornadoes hammered the
Miller Falcons IS-3 in a
five-inning mercy rule
game at Miller High School
Friday night.
Southern is now 11-8 on
the season.
Southern !titters were led
by freshman Brooke Kiser
who was 3-4 on the night
with three doubles, while
Rachel Chapman was .2-2
with two walb, and Katie
Sayre 2-3 wilh a walk. a
double and a single. Deana
Pullins bad a single,
Briaette Barnes a single,
Joanne Pickeas a double,
Emily Hill a double, and
Brittany Denny a sinaie.
Miller hillers were Trista
Jaksoa wilh a lriple, Alieia
Perpsoa a double and sinde. Leslie Altier a double,
Hillary Colvia a siaJle,
Erica Manrin,c a sill$1e, and
Courtney W,npt a smaie.
MiiJer went up 1-0 in the
first when Alie1a Fergason
doubled and Leslie Altier
duubled her home.
Soathem then root- a 7- 1
lead when Rachel .Marshall
led off wilb a walk: and

'

f

Deana Pullins reached on
an error, as did Brigette
Barnes. Katie Sayre then
singled home a run, Rachel
Chapman walked home a
run , and Kiser doubled
home two more. Joanne
Pickens then hit two run
double for a 7-1 SHS lead.
Miller came back: with
one in the third on an error
and singles by Ferguson
and Manring, the score 7-2.
Southern plated four
more runs in the fourth
when Barnes reached on an
error, Chapman singled her
home after a stolen base,
and Kiser slammed another
double. Ashley Roush
walked to load the bases.
Joanne Pickens walked
home a run, and Emily Hill
hit a . two-rua double, !he
score now 11-2.
Pour straight hits from
Barnes, Sayre, Chapman,
and Kiser brought home
four more runs in !he fifth
inning. Soutbem gave up an
unearned run in the fifth
making the score 15-3
Soulhern in five ioainp.
Rachel Chapman pitched
aaotber great game . ID get
!he win wit'h four slrikeouts
and just one walk.
Southern's defense made
just two errors.
Leslie Altiers suffered the

a

Subscribe today.
446-2342

Roberts
fUNII ..._II

•

..-...

Cooper
_
.,_,..1
·. I must have forgotten.
: Silly me.
The San Francisco Bowl, Hawaii Bowl and
:~ City Bowl (Oiarlotte, N.C.) will begin
p this year, bringing the total of bowl games
to .
,pu~ a couple of weeks ago, the NCAA
a moratorium limiting the maximum
; bumbet of bowls to 26.
• Well, since it's obvious that, in the near
: future, there will be more than enough bOwl
; aama~every I-A team in the country, let me
; ~ d ~~~out by suggesting bowl games

• ~ Clneav Queen · Clt)'l Bowl
(Cindnnetf)- The third place Mic:t-:American
Conference school against Rut~, the only
Big East team withoUt A bowl iilter the other
boWlt have~ filled up.
:• • Tbe Coors Lllbt. l'laltle Bottle Bowl
' (CieYUnd) - The bat Ohio team left after
·: the Buckeye Bowl picks their ttams apnst the
bal Florida team d1at wasn't choeen by the cur·

•

,. . . . . . .1
tcorinJ Fackler. Dave McClure ICOfed Olaze
: with a sharp sinJ)e to center before the
; lnnina was over and Meip wu on top by

•one.

'
r'

'

=

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our

Gallipolis, OH
~3672 .

•

•

oflhe

O'Dell True Value Lumber ·,

834 Eat M8Jn Str1tt, Pomer:Dy, Ohio 457ee .

.

: Belpre went scoreless in the next frame as
~ Meip .picked up one more run in their half
'Of the fourth.
; Wilh one away Brandon Ramlburs lined a
:slop to left. Dill wu hit by a pitch and
' Stanley wu aboard on an error with
; RamlliuiJ scorinJ. ChriJ Smith hit safely
Dill was naile(l tryin• to ICOI'C.
• Iimmy Smith uildwtehed a •trikeout
•between two walb in the fifth and the
!Marauders called on Derrick Knapp who
:f.llme on ill relief and prompdy fanDed the
:nest two Eaales endina the tfireat.
~- Belpre mounted an Offense in the sixth that
:CO..tcr have been disastrous for !he
· )lataaderl Hildebrand's double and Alkire'•
!bate 111p put rQnnerJ a f111t and I«&lt;Old with
out. Colvin wu sale on a Meip miscue
*Orina Hildebrand.
t· A Wt16 pircb and a walk to Webster loaded
,.., batea ad it looked as if ,the 1lx lnnlnJ

:but

lone
'!

-

Belpre 1n etghth
Bv JIM ~IY
rally was cut short by means
OVP CORRESPONDENT
of a strikeout and a ground
ROCK SPRQNGS
ball to second.
Meigs' Lady Marauders
A single from Belpre's
took a 3-2 eight inninj! con· Adams combined with a
test from Belpre. the1r sec· · pair of Marauder errors
ond win of the season over made it a 2-1 game in the
the Eagles, raising their lifth frame. Harris chipped
record to 10-3 in Tri Valley in with a base hit and the
Conference play and II· 7 Maroon and Gold 's fifth
overall.
miscue of the evening knotKatie Jeffers worked the ted the score at two all in the
mound for the Marauders sixth.
and with the assistance of Neither team threatened
her teammates good defen- in the seventh and Belpre
sive play, held the Eagles went down in order in the
scoreless through the first upper eighth.
.
four innings, giving up only
Davis banj!ed one up the
three hits.
middle wh1ch was misA two run second gave played and free passes were
Meigs the advantage as awarded Jeffers and Napper
Belpre
hurler
Harris following a strikeout, loadallowed Jaynee Davis and ing the bases. Xantha Smith
Jeffers aboard with consec- worked Harris for a base on
utive walks with one out.
balls and wus credited with .
As all designated ·hitters the RBI that secured the win
are supposed to do, Kristen for the Marauders.
Napper slapped a double to Jeffers gave up six hits. all
left plating the two runs. singles, struck out three and
Napper wus left stranded on walked none in the win.
third as Harris recorded the
For the Eagles. Harris
final two outs.
allowed fiv.e hits, walked
Meigs posed a threat with nine and fanned five.
·one down in the fourth as Napper rapped a double and
Davis drew her secoiKI walk two singles with' Burbridge.
and Jeffers and Napper hit and Je(fers adding a hit
back to !;lack safeties but the apiece.

than most high school throwers will produce
in two seasons. For that reason, McCabe gave
Roberts the week off from throwing the week
following her performance in the conference
championships as she prepares for the nation-

rent bowls (1 think that leaves just one)
• Tbe Mountain State Bowl (Charleston,
W.Va.) - The West Virginia legislature can
now force West Virginia and Marshall to play
every year by making playing in this bowl
mandatory and leaving the state during
December illegal.
. • The City of Buffalo Freeze Out Bowl
(Butralo) - The southern most SEC school
against the southern most PAC 10 school. It'd
have to be fun to watch, don't ya think?
• Tbe Holzer Bowl (GaiUpolls) - Not a
true I·A bowl game. The last place Big Ten
team against Rio Grande ... · ohhhhh, Rio
Grande lloesn't have a football team.
Just a few ideas.
But seriously, I'm a supporter of the bowl
games.
Like I said before, I love bowl games. I hate
the notion of people who want to make football
more like basketball. Sure; a tournament's a
good thing for basketball, but football is better.
On this day, · though, with all these bowl
games and too many teams getting a~tseason
berth they haven't truly earned, I m leaning
toward the national tournament sidelines.
You can not have too much of a good thing,
but some of these bowls do not represent a
good thing.
·
Whose idea was it to put a bowl game in
Idaho on blue turf, anyhow?

,• --------~----------------------­

.'

Trimmer• Starting At
95
.

Miami (23-20, 10..6 MAC) was led
offensively by first baseman Michael
Carlin, who went three-for-four. Three ·
other players had two hits each, and catcher Mike Oalloway drove in -a pair of runs
for the RedHawks. Landis picked up his
fifth win of the season in as many decisions, striking out six.

MANY VEHICLES WITH aALANCE OF FACTORY
WARRANTY AND .THIS WEEK, RECEIVE A FREE
TENT WITH VEHICLE PURCHASEf IPrl1tSII11

!· Roberts is well-known by coaches of all a1 :c,ebeetrt.s approaches be.r sport iiust as sen··
: colleJe levels in Ohio, havmg finished sec, ond 1n last summer's Buckeye Challenge. ously as any other athlete from higher-profile
......
..
· th
~
11
sports like football, baseball, and basketball.
·•nat com~litaon pus rowers .rom 8 over
"She sees this as somethi~ that's no.t recreOhio in a field event ,uadrathalon - discus,
shot put, hammer and avelin.
adonal to her," he said.. " is is somethin,g
Roberts was behind Ohio State's Katy that she wants. She want's to be a national
Craig in the. final tally of last year's event champion, that's why she puts in the long
1i
hours."
·
without .even throwins the jave in. She has
Roberts and McCabe have discussed where
decided
Javelin In the hopes of she mi~ht go after she runs out of eligibility at
winning to
thetake
titleup
mthe
August.
Coaches from around the area contact Rio. S e will likely continue working with
McCabe to find out how his charge is doing. · the goal of making the Olympic trials for the
"She's got a good reputation out there," 2004 games in the discus .
said McCabe.
"1 would like to go to the Olympics in the
Although .Roberts Is gifted with obvi.ous discus," said Roberts. "If my arm will hold
natural strength, McCabe make no bones · up, probably need about 20 more feet to go to
about how Roberts has been able to achieve the Olympic trials."
·
what she has.
''The Olympic trials might be in her future,"
· "Ashly is probably one of the hardest work· said McCabe, who admits it will take some
·ers that I've ever had," he said, "and I have work to add the 20 or 30 feet onto her throws
had a lot of throwers/'
to earn a qualifying m.ark.
McCabe estimates that since October,
But he sees it as a possibility.
Roberts has pilt in more throws in her events
"Her best throws are ahead of her,·~ he said.

Tie Wead)''l Bucke)'e Bowl (Columbus)
Pot the two best teams in Ohio that don't
1 make ir to Ul)' of the current bowl_games.

.•149

181&amp; Eastern Ave.

in trouble early on, as the host ReciHawks
scored three runs in the first inning against
Ohio right-hander Mllrc Cornell
(Columbus). Miami managed four hits
against .the Bobcats' top pitcher in the
opening frame, and then added two more
in both the third and fourth innings to take
a 7-0 lead.

1
•
1 -

Congratulations,
Mike Sergent

CIIEVROLET
74C).:448-3872

· OXFORD - The Ohio baseball team
scored tour runs in the top of the ninth, but
,it was 1101 enough to overcome a six-run
:deficit as the Bo6cats fell to Miami, 8-6, in
:a Mid-American Conference .· same on
·Friday afternoon at Stanley G. McKie
;Field.
.
·
The Bobcats (17·22, 5-11 MAC) were

~~­

loss with four strikeouts nament Monday.
and nine walks.
• U1ml I :fg
Southern hosted Jackson 0 0 7 4 4 - 15 13 2
10 I
01 - 8 1 4
in a twinbill Saturday, then -WP.flocNI Cl&gt;opmon
and K-. _..
plays at Trimble in the tour- LP~-and-F"'JIIJ 1

Gene John$on Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy
has announced
that Mike Sergent
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
April

:Bobcats open series at Miami with loss

03120tx-7112
LP.cllllte Young ll1d Clloy Faulk
WP·Zach W!rao 111c1 Juon
McCumlltr

MORE LOCAL SPORfS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

inning and a single to center field in the for-3 on the night. while Johnson and
fifth.
Lewis were l·for-4.
Powell and seniors Miranda Durst and "They held there own tonight," said
Jennifer Adkins were 1-for-4 durin11 the Wright "Their outfield did a fartastic job
river-rivalry game. Powell reached base at keeeing us from scoring a few more
in the sixtli inning with an infield single points.'
.
that handcuffed Oallia's shortstop, while Durst and Riffle s,elil mound duty for
D!!rst ShC!t a single to center fiefd in the the Lady Knijlhts, w1th Durst fwming six
third inmng that pushed Roush across players and R1ffle two. Between the two,
home plate. Adkins then followed that up Oallia scattered seven hits in the sevenwith a double to center that gave Durst a linning game.
·
~s to home plate.
·
. Witb Friday's win, the Lady Knights
Drain was illso on the offensive track (15-8, 10-2 SEOAL) go into sectional
Friday, sending out a solid single in the play Monday when they are scheduled to
fifth inning to center field that allowed host Roane County at 5 p.m.
Rime to score.
"J' m very pleased that we had some
II POINT PLIAIANT
ood solid bits today," said ·Point Coach GALUA
ooo
oto
t a To
POINT
001
111
X711 0
Wright.
·
(W~Du
· rot oncl Allllt (2), oncl Adldno. (L~)l.t'ft end
For Oalfia, Dunkle led at the plate with s1,
• • • game, hamme r1 ng OU t RBIS In
· HI
NQ - Paint: K. Aou"' 3.-1, a ABI: A. Aolnty a... 1
a 3•101-.
ABI; K. Rlltle 2_.: K. Drain 1·3, t ABI: L Powell I_.; M.
the fifth and seventh innings.
· Durat 1-4, 1 RBI; J. Adkl,. 1_. 2 ABI. Qallll: ounklo 3·4,
Gallia's Painter and .Wamsley were I· 2 ABI. Painter t-3: wamaley t·3: Johnoon H ; Lewta H .

COLLEGE BASEBALL

EIIIIm0030010-~72

Southern hammers Miller in five innings
BY Scorr WOUE

POINT PLEASANT - Five Lady
Knights hammered out RB!s Friday an&lt;l
as mUiy were honored during senior night
activities as the local squad defeated
river-rival Gallia Academy1 7-2, to hold
onto a lie for firSt place in me SEOAL.
Senior Kalie Roush stepped to the plate
carrylna the heaviest aluminum, nailing
three solid bits in four trips to lead the
Lady Knights offensively With two RBis
during the diamond affair. Roush nailed
singles in the first and third innings and
posted a double in the founh that pushed
fellow seniors Shelly Workman and
Kristin Drain across the plate. ·
Behind her · was SOP.llomore Amber
Rainey,lloing 2-for-4 wtth one RBI in the
sixth 1nmna on a double to left field that
scored freshmUI Lacey Powell, while
Kendra Riffie also posted a 2-for-4 per. formance with a aouble in the third

F-

Mel'Min.

:

•••
•

Blue Devils rock Point in slu est Hock
. BY DAN PoLcYN

6unbap Ql:imrl·6tnltntl• Page B3

hex was about to occur. However, Knapp
reached baclc and fanned Cumpston and
Shutts and the Meigt coachina ataff breathed
a sigh of relief.
· ·
. Wolfe led off the final frame for the Eagles
with a base on balls, advanced on a ncrifice
then Riding's single and three wild throws
by the defense resulted in a 6-.5 Belpre lead.
As Meigs came to bat in the seventh.
Fackler tingled one to ahort which was mishandled then advanced to second on a steal.
Glaze sin-led to short ri$1Jt then was lifted in
favor of pinch runner Er1c Burnem who took
second on a wild pitch that scored Fackler
with the tying ·run.
In a strateaJc: move that misfired, Chris
Smilh and Iacob Smith were intentionally
walked in hope• of settina up a play at any
base. Ramsbura lined to the second tacker
for the second out and an attempt to catch
Bumem off third failed when ihe umpire
ruled that the third baseman wu off 1M bq
when receiving the throw.
· After a short discu11ion, Dill came to the
plate and !tit a hot •hot to short which wu
again muffed and Eric Burnem plated the
winnina run.
Knapp aea the win as the Maroon and
Gold go to 9-10 (8-6 in TVC) and Belpre
potu a 7-16 (7-7) record.

NO REASONABLE
OFFER WILL BE
REFUSED I

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00 MERCURY SABLE SW 110503 15595
00 DODGE AVENQER ES 110508 14999
00 FORD ESCORT ZX2 f10509
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98 OLDS 88 LS 4110372
97 BUICK LESABRE 110544
'11 BUICK RIVIERA 1110375
'11 SATURN SL2 1110403
96 PONTIAC FIREBIRD M10616
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96 OLOS CIERA 110289
96 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX*10312
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93 FORO PROBE GT t10559
119 CHEV VENTURE 110513
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119 MERC VILLAGER VAN 110483 15810
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119 FORO WINDSTAR VAN 110604 1&amp;4e5
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PlaRII~•Tl

.·Indians snap losing streak

CLEVELAND (A~Bartolo Colon dom- and ·Jim Thome and Ricky Gutierrez ~dded
inated for eight shutout innings and Omar RBis for lhe Indians, who scored more than
Vizquel homered as the Cleveland Indians two runs for the first time in seven games.
snapped a six-gante losing streak Saturd,ay It was hardly an offensive brealcout for lhe
with a 3-0 win over the Texas Rangers.
Indians, who have scored just 12 runs in their
Colon (4-3) gave up four hits and started last .seven games and have been outscored
two double plays for the Indians, who also 118-44 in an 18-game stretch. ·
halted a seven-game losing streak at Jacobs But lhey made lhe most of the three runs
Field by winning for just the lhird time in 18 · they got against Valdes (2-4), who allowed
games.
seven hits in 7 2-3 innings.
.
Vizqucl homered off Ismael Valdes (2·4), Texas had won a season-high six straight.

PREP BA'SEBALL

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.

BY GAilY CLARK
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT

MASON- Adam Rickard's fifth home run
of the spring highlighted a lhree run founh
inning ail lhe Wahama White Falcons swept
lhe regular season series wilh Win County
Friday evening wilh a 9·5 diantond victory
over lhe visiting Ti~ers.
Rickard also cla1med his sevenlh mound
decision wilhout a loss on lhe spring after
hurling a six hit complete gante wm over the
Falcons' future sectional opponents. Rickard
allowed five runs after scattering six singles to
. the Tigers i!l addition to fanning eight to run
hia string to a teant high S6 trikeouts on the
· .:year in 41 innings.
.
.
Wahanta totaled nine hits on the day with
Jared Loni and Ryan Mitchell joining Rickard
with an extra base knock with a double apiece.
Ric:brd drove in three runs with Brad Roush
al10 chulna home a trio of WHS base runners
with a pair of singles, Ryan Hodge, Ryan
Routh and Bryan Cromley finished out the
White Falcon offensive stan wilh a sinale
each.
Ryan Roush kept hl.s hittina strlna alive at
six garnet with a run scorinl second inning
sinale. The senior IICCond sacker has made a,
ateady climb to near the top of the Bend Area
battlnaleadm over the last half of the spring
campaian with his late season flourish. Since
hla !)at flu came alive lhe basketball and bue·
ball atar hu pushed his 2002 batting average
lrom the low 200 range to his cumnt .380
mark. Junior Gabe Lamben Cbntlnuea to pace
the White Palco11.1 offentively with a .400 bat·
s.

tin_&amp;av~e.

The Friday evening victory extendlcl coach
Gordon Spencer's th1rd rated Claa ~ White
Falcon• aeaaon record to 17•3 on die year.
DaJIIte IOiinJ two of its last four contes!J the
BetWI Area team has captured 17 of itJ Jut 19
outinaa.
Wahama struck for four runs in the second
Inning to lay claim to an early 4-0 advantase.
I

lhti-

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'

.

Whta it ~ tl) 1M Wlllt
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oi.Jt4 •

GLENS FALLS. N.Y.. (AP) -- San wbileplayingwiththeWildelts.HehasS!aid .
Francis.~.c'O 49ers receiver Terrell Owens .is he plans to donate most of hi$ Sllluy. from ·
trying his sure hands on the baskc.tblill court.. .the Wildelts to charity,
Owens made his debut with lhe -In don't make it, I don't make it butl tll\
Adirondatli: Wildcats on Friday night in the honestly walhway and 5111 'I tried,"' OweM
U.S. Basketball Le~~&amp;ue. his first wmpeti· said, "There.'s not a lot of J*!Pie who ewn
tive basketball since he played for have the guts to try.·
Tennessee-Chattanooga in college.
Owens seemed to be having fun on the
The football player entered lhe game c:oun. He slapped bands with several J*S•
~~&amp;llinst the Brooklyn Kings with 5:35 left in in&amp; children while he was on the bench and
the second quarter. He was greeted with he chatted with fans sittina cowtsicle during
loud cheers from the fans. several of wiKlm dead ball timeouts.
-· including two young boys sitting court- Thele is no definitive time for how 1on&amp;
side •• were sporting Owens' replica game Owens will remain with the Wildcllts.
jersey.
Owens said he's taldf14 it "day to day. •
Seconds lattlf, Brooklyn's Fred. House Friday's game begins a ux-4ame homestand
nwled a 3-pointer from lhe left comer right for the Wildcats. OWOIIS Sllld he has talked
over Owens. Owens' defense picked up, with team officials about having 11 "flexible"
however. Wilh 4:49 left. he stole pass and schedule so that he can fit in his teSpOnsl·
fed teammate Kareem Syed to start a fast billties to San Fn~ncisco. The Wildcats' sea·
bren.k that ended with u Syed luyup.
son ends June 23.
On the Wildcats next posses ion. Owens - Despite his success on the field, O~ns is
• who wore a white headband --·drove lhe perhiiJlS best known for his flamboyant
left baseline but threw a pass into traffic that touchdown celebrations and feuds wilh San
was stolen.
Francisco couch Steve Mariucci.
His only basket of the half came when But Owens said his suiting up for the
Syed found him directly underneath the bas- Wildc:nts c:omes from 11 desire to test his basket for 11 luyup plus a foul on Brooklyn's ketball skills and to see if he has what It
· Sharif Fordham. Owens missed the free · takes to possibly mllke the jump to lhc
throw.
NBA. It doesn't, he sold, hove anylhlna to
He finished the half 1-of-2 from the Ooor do with his troubled relationship with his
with two points, an assist and 11 turnover as couch.
Adirondack led 61-56.
·
At a minicamp last week, both men
Owens, who made his second straight Pro seemed reody to put the past behind them.
Bowl after catching 93 passes for 1,412 M~ucci even pledged his support for
yards and 16 TDs lust season, played bas- Owens' basketball career, son of.
ketbull for three seasons at Tennessee- "Obviously, you'd prefer your · guys to
Chattanooga .after walking on his sopho- lhink about football all year round ... but
more season. Tennessee-Chattanooga mode we'll keep our fingers crossed and hope thut
the NCAA Tournament in Owens' junior and he stays healthy and hils some fun,"
senior seasons.
Mariucci said.
As u heavily muscled 6-foot-3 shooting His 49crs teommates are also behind him,
guard, Owens risks injury and a football Owens sold.
. salary of more than $.4 million per year "EverybOdy wished mo well," he swd.

Your Friends
&amp; Neighbors

Lambert ·reached on an error before Long
drew a free pass. Brad Roush drove in the
gantes first run with a single with Long later
scoring after pulling off a double steal. Hodge
walked prior to Ryan Roush drivina in anoth·
er run with an RBI single. Rickard's ground
ball to shon brought home lhe finlll WHS ru.n
of the inning for a 4-0 White Falcon edge.
Win County cante right back to malce a
game of it with lhrce lhird inning runs on lhree
wallcs, and run scoring singles by David
Calebaugh and Adam Cliceseman. .
The White Falcons quickly put the game
away after the Tiger uprising .wilh three runs
in lheiourtb and two more in the fifth. Lona's
leadoff double followed by an RBI single by
Brad Roush preceded the big hit of the night
in the Falcons fourth as Riclcard delivered a
two out two run homer to ' give WHS a ?-3
advantage.
·
Wahanta added two more runs In lhe fifth to
extend Its lead to 9·3 when Bradford Clark
was hit by a pitch and later scored on a two
base hit by Ryan Mitchell. Mitchell tallied the
final Wahanta run of the contest on a Brad
Roush grounder to shon.
The Tigers pushed across single runs in the
alxlh and aeventh on hits by Cheeseman and
Jared Alltop and a WHS error in the sixth and
an RBI safety by Matt Sellen in the Win
County seventh.
, ·
Wahanta Is scheduled to visit Clay Count)!
Saturday before openina up the final week of
lhe re1111ar aeason at home galnst Calhoun
County Monday. Treks to Gallia Academy,
Catholic, and Bvft'alo follow on

Meet Edward "Woody" Stines Farmers
Bank's Executive Vice-President.

Member FDIC

011

. it wm l'l\llttet.
"I won up this mooling just ftllstR!ed,"' Smilh Wd,
"I'm just t.:t to wtlott I did fw~-stlndlftluoo.nd,
not di)ing ~ng.lt'l\ fMtRiing,
"~ ~

slnee I\.~ been 1\eie., theft's been • quv.
terbodt c:ontroversy."
lffmolte wins the job. II would mutt the fifth~
uliw ~ lhlt the Bt.nalls opMtd wi.lh a d.ifftnmt.
• qu~. Neil O'Donnell opeMd in
Jeff Bllikt
repined the jab In '!&amp;, Smith 10! it In 2000 •nd Kilnll.
stllmd the fim 11 awes and the fllllllhrte last~­
Kitna, mlering tl\e s«&lt;nd ~of his fuur-yw- c:onIAC:t, Wllkcd Into hut Brown Stlldi.um wilh lhrte of his
and tlilimed thlt the stllltinajob still belaftiS Ia
• him,
.
"I'm hopina ~ tAn put this thint ta rest lluldtly 11m
ll1\Cl for thO rest of the time in my c:ontn~tt," Slid lUtntl.,
who \Ill&amp; the l&amp;ll&amp;ue's lowut·rated ~ l1.1.st swon.
"Hopcflllly there won't be any c:onttowr&amp;y ~ust I'll
htve a grell Ylt&amp;r thl yur."
No 8Cnnls qullrtertiock hilS ht\d a Pto Bowl ~ sin~»
Blake In l99S. Since then, the l'mnchlse h11.s tried one
quurterback tlflar anolhar, IOOnd somelhlna wrona with
each one, then quickly mo\lt'd on.
They've hod more qu~ Ulan Supmntin hlld
Dtcllrivtls.
"Somebody told me thllt Jon said It's &amp;olna to be hmtt
for the te11.m to go through four months of quruiarbadt
. controversy." Frerotte stid, "lt Is hmtt on the tenm. I've
been throuah th11.t. .
•
"You've aot to f? about it lhe riaht W'il'J and llppltll\ch
it the ri&amp;ht W'il'J. lt s lmport1111t for a tellll to have one auy
in there. After this four months Is over, ~·u find out who ·
the 'uy Is golna to be."
G1ven the Benaals' recent history, lilt three probnbly
will play at some point. The front office then will hold
nnottier cnsting call for next season.
"It's been since 1990 thnt they've been to the plnyoffs,"
Frerotte swd. "It's been along time Silli.'tl they've~ to
any bl• g11111es or chnmpionshlps. This Is the upside,
where 1t's going to hnppon." .
·
They lhought they wore playoff-bound lnst settstm,
when LeBeau opened mlnlcnmp as an Elvis Impersonator
. and later slllrted talking about the upcomlna "championship seuson." Tho Benaals flnlshoo 6-10, their lith
consecutive senson wllhout n winning record.
On Friday, LeBeau burst th~h the bnnner nnd lip·
synced to Uttlo Richard's "Siippln and n Slidln'" for sev·
• eral minutes. He emphasized ibo line, "Won't be your
· fool no nlOre," applying It to the tenm's lnck or respect in
the NFL.
.
Oettlna respect will h11vc n lot to do with getting a qunrterbnck.

tm

rewvers

·~ As expected,
.
.~: Gonzalez a no-show
'

(~'JJ) Farmers Bank
~ We're Your Bank

taftlnltt

.

·jfor Chiefs
minicam·
p
.

Woody ha1 been In the banklnsbualnm for
17 yoara.1ho 11112 1/2 yoa11 of which have ·
·been a1 P111111er1 Bank . Married to Jodie, who '
also worktln tho field of bank Ina. they have four children from aae 7 1a
14. Active with hla kids, Woody ei\Joya aolns 10 lhelr aportlnaand aohool
events. Woody and hla f11111iy auend the Mlddlepon Chl11'1lh of Chrill. In
hla apart liftte he ei\Joya re·modellna hit homo and hunlina. Hi Ia a member ·
of the Pomeroy Oun Club. ·
Bom In Now Brunswick, Now Jersey Woody altendell Marletll Colleaollld
araduatod wllh a BA dearee In B1111nc11 Bconomlca. While at Marietta
Woody wu on lhe Crew team, and wu a member of Della Upallqn
Fralcmlly. Woody Ia alao a araduate of the Ch1rlea1on Nallonal Bank
School of Conaumer and ComrnorclaiiAndlna and lho Graduate School
of Banklns·ln Mldlaon, Wlaeonaln.
Woody haa apenl hla career worklna moaliy In tho commerchd loan
ma. He llkea commen:lllloana becaute of lho varilly 10 lhe job, and
beca\lle of lho t\exibllily he can offer to hi a cuatomors.
Woody hu workod u a colloctlona auperviaor, ualallnt Vlce.Prealdenl
andVIce·PrealdenVCommen:lalloll1 omcer. AI fannen woody Ia our Bxecutlvo Vlce·Pretldent/Senlor
lAnder. In lhla caJ*ItY be lalhe hold of our lendtna depanmon11111d aupervlaoa lhe collection dept ..
Woody Ia II.., an execull ve omcer of
lhc
Coun1y Chamber of
Co~~~~~~~~te. Oft 1M chamber board he
volun~een hlallme aalhelr 1reuurer.

M•

OM-~

'

"I really e'l/oy working in .the banking industry
.
because il gil'es me the opporlunily to to work
with people and help them reach their goals."

1

Thef :si&amp;Md ~~to

Wedlles1\)' ud ~ 1111
.
opeft ~tian wi.lh .klft
KitM. for 1M $Wtlftl job..
Nellher Kitu. Mt Atm Smilh Wt.'!i thrilled.
Smith,,~ dnf\ ~~itt m1~ wws w~
~ lbwt the tl.~lhood &lt;l WIOihef ~ runtdfiiiM
se:out teAm in ~ ~ • thlt·lhlllklljna ~
bact It&amp;t ~. bdllnd Kltu. and ~ Mltdlcll, lO' ll
~to sWt Dec, 16 qtiMt thlt ltts and t\ft hi$!ilamsmna,
.
·
.
He uJ*IS to be beMd by lninina amp. He's nat~
•

49ers' Owens makes.
USBL debut with Wildcats

Rickard blast helps Wahama
defeat Wirt County,,9-5 . · ·
.

Westem Conference semifinals

mg QBs again

·I

l

.......

01 .. •M*Pl aalfl\, WV

NB

Shapiro Supports Manuel: David Boston apologizes
to Cardinals for arrest
"Charlie's not at fault"
CLEVELAND (AP) - Charlie Manuel's
chin is up, and his ned:. i.s safe for now.
Indians aencral manaser Mart S~ said ·
he's pleased with the Job Manuel ts doing
despite Cleveland's slide the past two ween
after an 11-1 start this season.
"I feel very stront~lY that Charlie has done
an outstandinl! job,' Shapiro said. "I've been • HOME IS WHERE HART IS: On;:e:
very happy wuh the job Charlie is doing. The !lain surrounded b:y reporters inside Jlle.OO&amp;
problems we're having are not the fault of Fteld. John Hart looted right at ~lome.
one person. There is a lot of blame to go Hart. who spe11t 10 of his. t4 sea.sons in
around."
Cleveland as the Indians gencml llWll.l&amp;tt·
The Indians entered a three-game series was back at the Jake for the first time ~
this weekend against the Texas Rangers in a laking over as GM in Texas.
five-gante losing streak. After win nina l 0 of "I c:.ircled this one a Iooa time ago." Hart
their ftrstll, Cleveland has dropped 14 of 16.. said while standing in an unfamiliar visitors'
To make matters worse, the Indians have dugout. "This was a tri_P I wanted to make and
played slopoily and uninspired during the wanted to put this behind me. It's good to get
streak. Thelve losl six in a row at home, and back."
·
earlier this week lhey were beaten 21-2 by lhe Hart said it was different getting off a pllllle
.• Anaheim .Angels - lhe ·Indians' most lop- in Cleveland. and instead Of heading liome.
sided loss at Jacobs Field.
he drove to a downtown hotel.
"It's aut-wrenching," Shapiro said. "It's "It's lieelt strange," he said. "But for me.
more than tough."
. coming back puts thinas in perspective. This
Shapiro met with reporters before Friday's city was great while I was here and I'll keep
game in a hastily arranged briefing in the pillling for thc.se guys. But it's time to move
Indians' dugout to address Manuel's job sta- ·on."
tus, lhe Indians' strellkiness and other Club Hart said he will always cherish his lime in
issues.
Cleveland, where he helped rebuild the
One of lhe biggest reasons for the Indians' Indians and played a role in getting them to
wild inconsistency can be traced directly to two World Series.
lhe struggles of some of their veteran players,
Hart said he talks with Indians GM MaFk
· he said.
.
.
Shapiro at .least once a week, and said he
Entering Fridafs game, four regulars - made a special point to call his protege a few
, ··Jim Thome. Trav1s Fryman. Russell Branyan dar.s ago after lhe Indians ~ot beat 21-2.
; and Ricky Gutierrez - are batting .:.!27. In • I told him, 'Trust me, its never that bad,"'
their last 16 gantes, the Indians are hitting just Hart. said. "He has picked me up after some
: .224 and averaging 2.4 runs per same.
tough games, too."
In the 16-garne span, Cleveland has been • BASELINES: CF Milton Bradley is still ·
outscored 114-39 and have scored three runs experiencing some double vision In his left
or less in 13 of those gantes.
eye. Bradley suffered a broken orbital bone
"When you have as many veteran players near his eye when he got hit by lhe ball while
, as we have that are struggling unless you trying to make a catch. Shapiro said doctors
parade Randy Johnson or Curt Schillina out are wailing until swelling subsides before
· there every night, you're not going to win,'' deciding if Bradley needs swgery.... Rangers
Shapiro said.
RHP Dave Burba also returned for the first ·
· Shapiro said he's been pleased wilh the time since leaving the Indians as a free 1189!.
club's young pitchers, and he's convinced the Burba pitched four years in Cleveland. and
Indians can tum thinas around.
· wasn't sure where to go when he walked into
He's been trying lo slay positive, which he the ballpark. He almost started toward the
, said can be tough.
Indians' clubhouse. "It was hard to take lhat
"My only fear is when guys stop believ- first right," Burba said. "It dawned on me,
., ing," he ·said. "That's when bad things can Ibis is where I'm supposed to go." Burba said
happen."
he received some good-natured ribbing from
Shapiro said he's been disappointed with some of his former teammates as he ran in the
. .the club's defens.e. In the last 16 gantes, the outfield before Friday's gante. "They were all
Indians have made 15 errors.
·
taking potshots at me,"lie said. "But it's been
"That bothers me more because we can't great to see everyone. I had some great times
play that kind of baseball," he said.
and played for some great teams here."

II $Old•

J"" CifeMJ

.

.· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - All-Pro tiaht end Tony
:"Oonzalez wasn't around when Kana11s City's newest wide
: receiver made an impressive debut durin&amp; Friday's flrat day
:.of mini-camp.
: Johnnie Morton made three over-the-shoulder catches on
:fly patterns and consistently beat every cornerback the
· .. defense put on him. More than once after a play, Chlefa
··coach Dick Vermeil ran over to compliment Morton.
: "It wia flln aettlna acquainted wltll the auya, runnlna the
: plays," Morton saiD.
:: Slaned 11 1 free aaent out.of Detroit, where he had 77
:reception• for 1,154 yarda and four touchdowns Jan year,
:Morton was made the Chiefs' No. I wldeout the minute he
:' aet toot on tho practice field. ·
: And that's just fine with him.
• "That'• tho way I've always approached it alnce my rook·
: lo year" he said. "I don't count myaelf as a number, like
· one, tV:o or three. I alwaya try to play aa a No. I 11nd have
·my aroup play as a No. I."
•. Oonzalez, embroiled in a contract dlaputo, did not aur·
: prlae anyone when he chose to atay home in Callfornlll.
: "I love Tony Gonzalez and I reapect him," Vermeil said.
: "Bur I did not even give It 1 thouaht. That'l all part of the
·. butlneaa and I reapect hla ri&amp;ht to do what he's dolna."
: Tho versatile Gonzalez, who Is aometlmea tpllt wide,
,believes he should be paid similar to a wide receiver. The
.·chiefa insiat he Is a tl&amp;ht end and wlll be paid •• one. So he
: refused to sian laat year, and the club gave him a franchiae
: player taa, forolna him to play for the Chiefs or sit out the
: comins season.
·
.
,I

,45~

tT'S OUA AtGHT
GUARANTEED 8Y
THEPUCO'S
MINIMUM TELEPHONE SERVICE
STANDARDS. SO JUST CALl. EM'
NOW AND AAISE A Lrt'TLE H·E·I.·L.·O.

FOR A
81lOCHUAE ON
OUR TELEPHONe
RI&amp;HTs,
SO CRA'~ THE WHrp .
AND I.ETS iET THXS CORRAl. OF
T-SHIRTS MOVXN'I

:rzn,

�Sundly, ..., 5, 200111

Pomeroy • Mldd~ • a.lltpolla, Ohio • Point Pte•••nt, WV

-

NASCAR

on

•

•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
BY n1E

~I~Tm

•

rtn
•
1ronman recor

Bani~ a twist of fate,

The 2002 NASCAR Wlnllon
Cup echedule (wtnnerw In
pai.ilt Ull}lfld difwr point
ilt.lidliiga:
.
Feb. 17 - O.ytona !iO(),
Daytona Beach, Fla. (Ward

~

''

Jt was considered an act of
defiance when Kevin Harvick
: answered a recent sur.unons
: from NASCAR to its big red
• hauler by driving his I1IC(. truck
: right to the door and leaving it
: there.
~ "Hey, J might have driven
: right in the door, if I was mad
:: ~nough,:' said retired three' tltne Wmston Cup champion
: Darrell Waltrip. "It's easy to
: lose y&lt;lUr perspective in the
: heatOfbattle." .
: · A lot has been made lately of
:·drivers losin$ their tempers
: and doing things that reflect
• badly on the sport.
: Most of the drivers involved
: have . been
NASCAR's
: younger generation, including
: Kevin Harvick, Tony Stewart,
: Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kurt
: Busch, Robby Gordon and Jeff
,.Gordon, none older than 32.
: · The recent road mge - on
; and off the track- has meant
: headlines, fines and other
: penalties for the drivers.
• Harvick has been punished
; the hirdest, barred from mcing
:' in an April 14 race in
::Martinsville - the first driver
:: to be pW'ked for a race for
: rough driving in NASCAR's
: 54- ye;tt history.
:: Richl!l"d Petty, ~ · retired
,;,seven-time champion who
:. 'remains involved as a team
: owner, said NASCAR com~ petitors have always beaten on
: each other, both on and off the
•, track.
~ "It's just a lot more visible
: now because of TV and all the
:coverage that the sport sets
t, now,", ~d Petty, whose 35:: year career ended in 1992.
: "On. the other hru1d, ·it's a
: matter of respect. These fellas
"don't respect each other, the
::owners, the cars and how
: much money these people
:have 'got invested in their

Subway 400,
N.C. (Matt

KenHih}

St-11·

March 17- C.IOIInli Dodge
. Delilei's 400, O.illngton, S.C . .
(Stelling Mallin)
March 24 - F~ City 500,
Brtatol, Tann. (Kurt BuiiCh)
Apill
8
Samaung/RadloShack !iOO,
Fori .Worlh, Texa1. (Man
Ktnnlh)
Apill 14 ...,. Vlrglnll !iOO,
Martli11Villt. (Bobby Llbontt} .
Apill 21 - Aaron's ·499,.
Talladega, Ala. . (Dele
Earnhardt Jr.}
April 28 - NAAA AUIO Parts
500, Fonlana, C.IK. (Jimmie

Rudd will beoome the stOCk

~at Lowe's Motor Speedway. · .
; Rudd, who benn the streak !an. ,II, 19Sl. 01_\ the
·now-del\lnct road course at Rtvenide International
:Raceway, said he never gave the record much d\ought
:until other poople began talking about it.
'That doeSn't meanlte's not plood of it, lhougb.
"I lhink it says a little bit about &gt;'OOf Character,"
Rudel said. 'There's plenty of days that I coold have
:Sit oot of the raoe carbecause of an injucy or illness or
· sometbing. rhad some days I'd much rather have been
:laying in a bospilal bed than silting in the raoe car."
· One of those days was in Feb. 19, 1984.
.
A week earlier, Rudd had survived • wild, rumbling
aesh at Daytona International Speedway during a preliminary to the Daytona 500. It was his first race for
owner Bud M001e, and the risi~ star was determined
·not to blow the opponunlty to drive for an esmblished
·winner for the first time.
·
"I took a trip to the hospilal and, really, they wanted
to !teeD me there quite a bit longer than I wanted to
stay. I baskally cheCked myself oot the next morning,"
Rudd said.
He ran both the 125-mile qualifying race and the
SOO-miler with torn eartH~ tn his ri~. horribly
swollen eyes ~ worst of all, severe dimness .when
. he ~~m
.· ve on the hlf!h banks of the Daytona crack.
''It onlY afm:~ me where you pull 0-loads," he
said, stn11ing. "One eye would go this way and the
· other e~ would go ~~~~. way.... I~ probilbly wasn't real
smart of me to driVIng. I ~tcally foCused on the
baCk bumper of the car in front of me. It was about all
1could ste."
Rudd finished severtth.
Lllbonte, whose 2()-year string of races ended in
August l&lt;MXl after he suffered an inner ear injury In a
tniSh the previoos month in Daytona, has a unique
~iation of Rudd's acrompllshment.
I CIUI re~mber Ricky running at Richmond, Va.,
after he'd had a terrible accident at Daytona and
turned over 10 or l21imes," Lllbonte said of the 1984
cniSh. "His eyes were so swollen that he could hardly
.ee and he ran Daytona 111\d then won the race at
Richmond the next week.
''That's just kind of the men~lty that driyers hav~.
If there's any war you can do tt, .you'te gomg to still
continue to race.'
Another time when Rudd could have given in was
in May 1988 in Charlotte while dri vlng for Kenny
Bernstein.
''That was during the tire Will'$ between Hoosier and
~and everybody was blowing tires," Rudd
said. 'We were running in The Winston and blew a
rlaht l'ront tire and hit tl\e fence, hit It really hard, and
lOre all the ligaments in the left knee."
· Docton wanted Rudd to have immediate surgery,
illdelining him for six weeks. Instead, he flew to
.
.
.
Indianapolis to see 1111 orthopedic specialist who put IRONMAN - Ricky Rude:! waves during driver Introductions before the start of the NAPA 500 at the
him on an exercise progrnm and designed 11 knee brilce California Spaedway In Fontana, Calif. April 28 In which he finished third. When the 45-year-old Rudd
to keep Rudd In the Clit.
·
takes the green neg Saturday night In the Pontiac EKcltement 400 at Richmond lntemlltlonal Raceway,
'1lte only trouble was I couldn't use my left leg lit he will match Terry Labonte's lronman record of 655 consecutive Winston Cup starts. (AP)
all, so they had the team work and put a hand clutch
·
.
.
·
lot pit stops," Rudd said. "Once I got off pit road, I had ihe problem. l went to see some other doctors and for many years and I have a tremendous amount of
could hand shift it and not use a clutch. That was a oneguydlagnosedmeWJdtreatedmelnoneday. lfi'd respect for him."
pretty lOilgh weekend."
·
had the right eW' doctor in the fm!t place, I'd. never
Rudd's record could last a long time.
A.liain, Rudd finished seventh.
have missed those races."
"Most of the guys who've got 100 races less than
"lfack when we came along, it was 11 fight to get a · Timing Is Important, too.
me are as old as I am," he said. "'The young guy~, I see
chance to get the good l!qUipment," Rudd silld. "There "Safety equipment is getting better all the time," them coming in at a younger age in good equ1pment
was maybt only five good cars, five really solid win· Labonte said. "If! had the headrest that w.e have toda~, and leaving at a younger age, so I would say the i"eoord
ning teams In the garage area.
.
.
I would just Imagine I woul~ never have been hurt.' will pro~bly stand for quite some tir.ne.''. · .
.
"Once yc;&gt;u hlld a shot at one of those ndes, you
He hasn't missed a start smce. ·
.
Rudd 1s proud of the streak, saytnjJ 11 shows his
couldn't afford to lrlve it away."
.,
"If I could have hel!i.it, I could have really put it ~ut d~~nation. But heal~ takes prlile 1~ his record of
Labonte lOOk tlie irontnlln teCOrd from Richilrd there where it would be hard to reach," Labonte swd. wmrungllt least one mce m 16 consecutive seasons, li
Petty in 1996 w~en he ~rove in his S14th consecutive . Very shonly, however, the record will belong to stt?,ng .tflat ended in 1999.
,
. ,
race. The two-time Wmston Cup champion doesn't Rudd.
.
l kind of couple the two together, Rud~ swd. 'To
lament the way his ~treilk ended.
"Ric~'s had a good career, and I'm ~lad he 1s the · be out here every weekend, that says one thi~, but to
"Unfortunately, I dld~'t get the right ear doctor," guy th~t s going to break it,:• Labonte sa1d. "We s.tart- h~ve -~~~win s~ak, that ·kind of g~s. hand tn hand
Labonte said. "After I nussed 11 couple of mces,.I still ed mcmg about the same titne wtd been competitors With 1t.

Johnaon)
May 4 -

Ponllac Exc~emant

400, Richmond.
May 26 - Coc:a-Cola
Conoord, N.C.

June

2 -

eoo,

MBNA Platinum

400, Dover, Del.
June 9 - Pocono ·500, Long
Pond, Pa.

Brooklyn, Mich.

Aug. 24 - Sharpie 500,
BilatOI, Tenn.
Sept. 1 - Soulhem !iOO,
Da~lngton, S.C.

1

Sept. 7 - Chevy Monte Cello

400, Richmond.
Sept. 15 - New Hai!1Pihlre
300. Loudon, N.H.
Sepl 22 - MBNA America
400, Dover, Del.
Sept. 29 - Pro*tlon One
400, Kanna City, Kan.
·'
. Oct. 6 - EA Sporta 500,

IRUIOri Giudhfr returns tO
Ihospital·for skin grafts

Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 13 - UAW·GM OuaNiy
500, Conoord, N.C.
Oct. 20 - Martlnavtlla 500,
Maitlnavllla, v•.
Oct. 27 - NAPA 500,
Hampton, Ga.
Nov. 3 -

Pop Sacral 400,

Rooklngham, N.C.
Nov. 1o - Checker Auto
Parts 500K, AYOndalt, Ariz. ·
Nov. 17 - Homet11Nd 400,
Homeatead, Fla.
Drl- 8tlndlng1
1. Sterling Marlin .. . 1,515.
2. Kurt BuiiCh •.•.• , 1,372.
3. Malt KenHih • . . . 1,383.
4. Ru1ty Wallace. . . . 1,354.
· 5. Jimmie Johnson . . 1,3152.
8. Mark Mlrtln . . . . .
7. Jeff Gordon ......
8. Ricky Rudel. .....
9. O.la Eamhlrdt Jr..
· 10. Tony Sttwarl.. ..
11 . Bill Elliott ..... . .
12. Jtfl Burton .....
13. Dale Jarrett. . . . .
14. Ward Burton .....
15. Teny Labonte . ..

•'
•

"We're honoring her suc·
cess and thinss she's been
able to do in her life. And
we're also honorin~ her farni·
ly," he said. "We rc kind of

,
.
:
·

1,292.
1,283.
1;278.

1,233. '
1,214. '
1,178.
1,178. '
1, 123. ~
1,115. '·

1,089.
1,051.
17. O.ve Blaney .... 1,044.
18. Ryan Newman .. 1,031.
19. Ricky Craven . . , 1,026.
20. Bobby Labonte .. 1,019.

~

Lpcal numbcg Include:

-.,.-.,..--,0-0ol-.
-........
........ -.
~Oif.Mo-.-.Nol
JloiM ~ WV, Alhlnt, Mlrtefta. Qaa IUiown, 0.......

Plncf••••·-....... nco
MIOJ...,..IYtl-., lftCI moNI

.._.on,_,.,. 1Wa:: lptkM ""'·
Nlup ,..IPPHM to II ntW IOOOWMt,
.......,IIMIIif-lolii.H

'

lryson admits biting Lewis
NEW YORK (AP) - Mike Tyson admit- June 8 bout in Memphis, Tenn.
On Friday, Tyson explained himself in
~ference melee that led to the loss of the statement released through spokesman Scott
;former heavyweight champion's Nevada Miranda.
.
· a""";n license
. "I said I bit Lennox because thjlt IS what
:""..'( 1.d bite him " Tyson told FOX News everyone wanted to hear. I will say anythi1.
bannel in an interview scheduled to air to get under his skin," .the statement sat ·
turdS: ni ht
.
"But on June 8, flesh will not be enough. I
aTysol eJier apologized. for .the lan. 22 ~ill take Lenno~·s title, his soul .and smear
,:bmw! durins a news conference m Ne~:V h!s P,Om,rous br&amp;ns all over the nng when I
l York but refused to say .whether he b1t hit him.
ed f
bo . .
• Le .'
Tyson was suspend rom xmg In 1997
: A./t~r Tyson was denied a license to face for b!ting Bvander ltolyfield's ear during a
Lewis in Las Vega&amp;, the fighters agreed to a. ·bout m Las Vegas.

r.

I•

t

...... IV.,.. Ill

.............
_.
•. . ,12211,.._

Dragon Internet
1-888-657-0977

his outpatient treatment schedule.
"With everyone's support I am making .a
stron~ recovery and am in great spirits," he
said. 'I have my sights set on the road ahead
and getting back to competing as soon as possible."
Gardner, 30, is tile Greco-Roman world
heavyweight champion. In the 2000 Sydney
· Olympics he beat Alexander Karelin, the
Russian star who had not lost an intemation- '
al match in 13 years.
Gardner was stranded in the woods Feb. 14
when his snowmobile bosged down near his '
hometown of Afton. He spent 17 hours outside in temperatures that dipped to 25 below
zero and was found with a body temperature
of 88 and his feet frozen.
· Gardner was released from the hospital
Feb. 28.

··=~---:----~------.

16. Mlohael WiHrip ..

......,...

Ptnanal E-mtll Atcounl
10 mop penonol web tpace, lmmtdlttt acllvlaUori

.

£.:. bating Lennox Lewis' leg during a news

trying to be behind them in
their time in honoring their
privacy and hopefully get the
messase across that that kind
of stuff is ridiculous."

Unlimited Access
As'low as $11.95 per Mo. •

.

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) - Rulon
~Gardner, the Olympic wrestling champion
~ frostbitten in the Wyoming backcountry in
~February, was back in the hospital Friday for
~ skin $rafts on three toes.
t Skin wu grafted onto both of Gardner's big
~toes and to a third toe on his right foot.
~ "The great news is that, with this p.roce•dure, my toes are now over 90 percent
thealed," he said. "And all the toes on my left
::root, except for the big toe, are completely
::healed.''
:; In MW'ch, after amputating the middle t~
fon Gardner's right foot, doctors were oplt·
~mistic GW'dner would not lose any more t~s.
t Gardner has been in and out of the hosp1tal
•·for more than two months. He planned to stay
tat the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center
~for a few days before leaving and resuming

Eamhardt teams to honor Lopes in Pontiac 400
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - left headlight. Over•the·wall
Newa that autopsy pho- pit crew members also will
toara~s of Lisa . ''Uft Bye" weW' stripes under their left
LOpes have appeared on the eyes.
.
· Internet hu prompted Dale
Lo~s often performed with
Earnhardt Inc. to plan a tribute a similar stripe under her left
to the alnaer durin&amp; Saturday eye.
nlllht's NASCAR race.
Earnhardt Ir. . was sympaLopes, 30, a member ofthe thetic to Lopes' family w6en
Orammy·wlnnlna R&amp;B trio he learned tliat moraue photos
TLC was killed In a traffic of the slnser had appeared on
accident in Honduras on April the Internet. Several new spa·
25.
. . pers and a Web site wanted
Durlna the Pontiac 400 at access to autopsy photos of
Richmond
International · EarnhW'dt's father last year
Raceway, the race CW'I of for their own independent
Dale Earnhardt Ir., Steve Park lnvestigntlons into the death
and. Michael Waltrip wlll all of the aeven•time Winston
have black atripe under the Cup champion. .

ROAD RAGE- Kevin Harvlck (2) leans In the window to have words with Andy Kirby (77) after the two crashed between the flrst and second turns In the early

laps of the NASCAR Mr. Goodcents 300 at the Kansas Speedway In Kansas City, Kan .. In this September 29, 2001 photo. Road rage, on and off the track, has
become the thing of the moment, with plenty of accompanying headlines and ensuing blg,C:Sollar fines and probations Issued by NASCAR. (AP nle)
wreck, get out of the CW' and the issue right now - he him off, costing him positions
"There's a couple of other Jeff Gordon, the defending
teU somebody else to fu it. ' seems to have a mindset 'Hey, -those are alf paybacks.''
guys that the more they talk, and four-time series champion.
Then they get on their airplane I've got to settle this right now.
Harvick, who says he wants the dumber they look," he said. has been around for 10 years
and go home.''
The man done me wrong,"' he to "race the car as hard as I "But they're good guys to race but, at 30, is still one of the
Retired two-time cham,Pion said.
cwt," has vowed not to change against on the track. They youth brigade.
Ned Jarrett said angry drivers
"Veterans don't do that. his aggressive style. But his don't run over people. They
In last year's season-finale
hitting each other has been There's lots of payback out car owner, Richard Childress, don't deliberately wreck peo- in New Hampshire, he retaliataround "from day one." .
there in different ways. They'll has counseled the driver on . pie. They don't act like idiots ed a~ainst Robby Gordon "Of course, they settled it in. pick the ri$ht time when they toning down his behavior.
tn their cars and things like who IS no relation - by ramTerry Labonte, an active that. If they go home and look ming him from behind.
different ways back then, can make 11 just one of those
many times in the early days just racing-type deals, and they two-time champion who has at the videos, they might realJeff Gordon earned a one-lap
with fil!hts under die. grand· have different ways of paying had his share of on-track izesometimesyou'rebetteroff penalty - an uncharacteristic
stand w1th fists or a tire tool or back other than just hitting encounters, said NASCAR not to say much.'' ·
display for the usually cool
wh11tever," said Jarrett, now a race cars.''
should have suspended .Bill Elliott, the 1988 series Rwnbow Warrior.
broadcaster, like Waltrip. . Jarrett noted a recent race in Harvick for six weeks.
cham.P, said the consequences
''Things happen in the heat
:··cars."
:•Now, with all the attention which veteran Jimmy Spencer "It's not .the first run-in of dnvers .losing their temper of the moment," he said.
:' In Petty's heyday, things !hatthesportgets,youcan'tdo was fooled into jumping. a .they've had with him. I think onaracetrackcanbehigh.
"You're so focused and intent
:were hpndled differently.
II the slllrle way.
. restart- a move that cost htm they probably ~ot his attenQon,
"They've got to control it," on winning the race or getting
• "In the situation I was in, I
"You could get by with a shot at winning.
but I'm surpnsed they didn't he said. "If you ... deliberately a good finish and somebody
~ knew I had to control myself,'' things back then that you can't
"Those kind of things are get his attention more thwt take a guy out at Richmond does something that you think
~e said. "I owned the CW', I today. But the veterans W'e r.aybacks," Jarrett added. they did," he said.
and he retaliates at Charlotte, is stupid or on purpose.
~ worked on it and, if I tore up a smarter and more patient. It 'There's all kinds of paybacks
Labonte also denounced we ain't running 125 (mph) at
"Some guys are cooler than
. ~ fender, I had to fix it.
seems that Harvick - l!lon't that nobody sees - not draft- some of the trash talk that he's Charlotte. You could get some- others, but we all get mad. The
body hurt."
problem is, we're all human."
.,' "A lot of these new guys mean to pick on him, but he's ing with somebody, cutting heW'd from drivers.
,,'',.--------------------------~---

June 18 - Michigan 400,
Brooklyn, Mich.
June 23 -... DodgaiSavt Mlrt
350, Sonoma, C.IH.
July e - Pepal 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla.
July 14 - Troplcana 400,
· Cicero, m.
July 21 - New England 300,
Loudon, N.H.
July 28 - Pemaytvanla 500,
long Pond, Pa.
Aug. 4 - Bilckyard 400,
lndlanapolla.
Aug. 11 - Slrlua .Satellite
Radio at Tht Gltn, Watldna
Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 18 - Peptl 400,

oo

8\' THE 'ASSOCIATED PRESS

:

MarCh 3
UAW·
DalmlerChryaler 400, Lee
~· (Sierllng Mallin).
March 10 - MBNA Air!eriCa
500, Hampton, !3a. (Tony

oar spon s new lronrnan on May 26 in the Coca-Cola

I

!Veterans ·say road rage has always been aroUnd

Rockingham,

PRESS

6unba!' lfimts-6tnlintl• Page 87

Cup
Scl:edull.nd
Stllndlnp

Burton)
Feb. 24 -

An iron wi.D, a high threshold forpain and a·measurt
of lid~ needed to get to where Rldcy Rudel will be
. Saturday nigh! at Ridlmond lntemalklnal Racew~.
: Wheri ~ 45-yeat-old r.ICel' takes ~pen fla&amp; for
•lhe Pontiac Excitemellt 400, he wlll match R:ny
:~, t«:ord or 655 &lt;:onsecutive Wii'ISIOO Cup
·~

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pleeunt, WV

INlllill'll

iHBO: Roy Jones Jr. to fight

I ~~

loililoloa ll•lllool-...

•

............ .,.

.

Clinton Woods, date not set

.,..
........ 1,_..,...... ,...
,....,. .. ..,.......,.., .. ,..,.,. t •••

............. ,..,.. ........

--1

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

lPN, MlV~ TNT. CMIHn ...._.,._ Sf

-IIMICMi.....

JOHNSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·1182
Maaon, WMt VIrginia
(304) 773-5305

NEW YORK (AP) - Roy Jones Jr. has an the case.
.
. date
"July 13 is not a workable pay-~-v1ew
for HBO. We're in discussions wtth Roy JOI}es
.Jones the undisputed light heavyweight and his representatives to select an altemanve
chlmpioo will make the mandatory · World date." HBO S,P.OJU senior vice president Kery
Boxing Cooncil defense against Woods on Davis laid Fnday.
Jones ia 46-1 with 37 knockouts. Woods, the
HB~ were reports that the tight would be WBCs top-rated contender, is 31-1 with 18
13, but the cable network laid that's not knockouts.

~t for his next title defense:. Clinton
~of Britain. What's needed now11 a dale..

..•
I

Check out the ~unba!' tEt~ -j)enttntl
for your complete sports fix

For more information_
about the
opportunities
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
offers, please ·call

(740) 245-5334

�,. ..

. Judlg ~··· lttdinel

1.217'

.

'

"

Cdduulium ~fl tift Cl

Whosays that money can't buy you love?
Cheddnl!l through my e-mail
teccntly I came across what ap~
to be a typical slnglcs-1)-pc advertisetnent; you know the type. when: they
use acronyms instead of words to save
space. and money - . fur lnst.mt e,
SWM mean~ "single white male" or,
ln this case. SBF meant "sinj!le blatl:
female.
The ad read thus:
SDF - Seeks male companionship.
ethniciry unimportant. I'm a svelte
good looking girl who LOVES to
play. llo~~e long wall: in the ,VOOiJs,
riding i.n your·pickup tr\tck. hunting.
camping. and fishing trips. coty winter nights lying by the fire.
Candlelight dinnen will havt" me
eating out of your hand. I'll be at thl"
front door when you get home flQm
work, wearing only what nature gav~
me. Kiss me and I'm yours. Callx.xxxxxx and ask for "Daisy."
Thinking they had found the per-feet companion, callen instead found
themselves talking to the local
Humane Society abom an eightweek-old black LabrJdor retriever.
I remember an old saying, although

I don't .remember who said it or
whete I heard it, which goes something like this: wwhomevu it was'
that said money can't buy u lovt.
never bou~t. a puppy.~ ,
This saying came ro mind ~r thc·rece-nt National Wild Turkey
Federation banquet in Meigs
County. That's becausl." the second~
hi~hcst priced item auctione-d off' at
the NWTF banqu;.or was a Labr~dor
retriever puppy. Apparently somebody thought, at least in !his case,
that money could buy love or happitwss.
Sometimes lhe best things in life
are free - or nearly tree. All you have
to do is t'ontttct yo\tr local dog shcl· ter ro . s~e about adopting a dog or
puppy. Usually all you have to do is
pay a small "adoption" fee.
All of our family's curtent .dogs
were "free" dof~S . That 111eaos they
came from somewhere other than a
pN store. Occasionally you'll see ads
in this newspaper advertising puppies
"free to a good home."
If you are a "cat" person, you
should probably srop reading now. I

friendly ~nd an~us to plt.ue
Our lAbrador, 1\~ie, bas the
umoying totntk-nq of trying ro Nt
his \W.'I into the house ~ •htne\1\'r
•
. thm is a thunderstorm. At 6nt l
by tht hundreds, but dogs are usually enremined thought'! of tmklng him
aCNd unl~ it's some tear-jerking into a hnnring t'Om~nion, but that
~ot• Yeller~ type of film.
· id~ quietly wt'nt by the wa)'$lde. '1.'¢
I recently thought about som~ of W&lt;J.~ up and run to the door when- ·
IN THE OPEN
th~: dog$ I lu\\'1: known, and c:ompdtd e\W \ve hen thunder· hopeful \~ ~
a me~tal.list; sort or "hill of~me of .there betOO: hi! ~: Julie, 01\ the
know }'Our (at is lhe "' d'$ best pet. dogs. .Th1:$C \vef':n't 11-r1ly my other halld, \YM\ts nuthi 11g lt\ du with
but eats attn't dogs. ~d thi $lOry is ~ JU t dost that 1\ll'lll pla)'td ~r the illdoon. God «tt~ipJ!«i her \vell
about dOQ$.
cont:lt\ut ro play some ~t 1~ my hfe. tor d~llling witlt the worst that 1\it\lre
The relationship bel'\veen man and (good or. bad)\ tht hst mcludes~ can dish out.
canine is extraordina""and the love ''-P"""
1ckl• Cin'*•ThA•
L- Lln"'
... - ~~rhll•" \\'t' need to set Mide a Spe• ''
'"" .-~•,
ul'
uo, ~~
and devotion displayed by our ealtin!' l~pe.
tus, Sammi, Rt , llarney . dll r
bi1
d
friends is legendary. How Cllll a lilce and Chandar, Dr.mdy, •o~ Dun e1111 Yto t:tm!'m r our ogs.
as alien as a dog's - think about it, Betlt, Kluy Dog, Reggie, Sll;., Gria: , I'm sure most tlf m ha'lll out own
long . nose, sharp teeth, a1~~ toni!Ut )l~ie, Shiloh, Meeko, Do lind Luke, l~st of dogs that ha~ to~ched our
lljln~mg out - look su fannhar, ~:om- lliper, ~~~orted fulc hounds, 'Cilm\ lives.Why not take a httle ume out to
· hounds, rabbit dogs alid l'lltrieven.
!llflec.t on }'\l\ll' dogs, pttst and P~'~~-fonmg e~~en, .to us?
Whtte ever man go~~S, dOQ$ go.
1apologite ifl have lbrgotten your sent?
They !Jiadly pe~rm .their du~cs. dog.
_ Jl~ ,
Frfftttan
.is
'~ldlifo
protectmg us, savtng hves, hdpmg
E.wryo11e it seems has their fuvorire SJ!Milltst/"lltmllffl molllu111ror wult 1M.
herd animals, snitling out illeQal bt:ted of dog; me, I'm partial to the Mti§s StN'l tmd n1utr Cmt.tm&gt;~uiott
drugs, the .list goes on 1u~d ~n, but retrie\1\'rs - golde-ns, Labrndon, OOII'iel. He nm /Jt tlltthKftd tt!Hbill)l$ ill
one ofth':lr greatest ~ntr1bunons ro Cheapeakes. Rttrie~~en, in gtnel'lll, (7&lt;f0) 992-4282 ur ~~ jim·
mankmd 11 perhaps stmply cumpan- · seem ro be i!OOd- natu!lld dogs, ftH!Mmt@olt.ll(lt:f/Nel.tJW

Sidekick 'Bucksaw' helps teach the young
hunters _about the ·ethics of hunting . ·
MARENGO (AP) - A

hum~r

who onc.- dalized.

lost his deer stand to vandals has m:ated a
"Charlie McCarthyish" sidekick to tt•ach
youngsters about the ethics uf hunting.
Dan Snyder, a former mechanical designer
born and raised in the rural areas surrounding
this small central Ohio town, tours sportsman
and travel shows and visits schools with his
dummy "Bucksaw." ·
He also teaches youths the habits of the
wild turkey. The birds exceptional eyesight
and hearing .make it a coveted target for
Ohio's hunters, who have until May 19 to go
afield during this year's spring turkey hunting
season.
Snyder, 46. came up with the ide;t two years
.ago, after a bad expericnc&lt;' hunting with his
oldest son rt,sultcd in his deer stand - in the
middle of 100 acres of private land - van-

"My son. who was with me for .the first
time, asked who would do such a thint; and I
had to explain it '"''' not a hunt~r that did it,"
said Snyder.
He determin~d it was up to private citizens
to make a statement about ethics and 111spect
as a hunter. At the time he was the JAKES
youth chairman for titc ' Heart of Ohio
"Strum•r's"' chapter of the National Wild
Tlarkcy Federation, n program that already
had recci~~ed national and stat(1 awards.
Instead of purchasing a new stand he went
shopping for a $375 "dummy.
.
"I named it 'Bucksaw' and storted developing a progr•m where he - as an older mentor - would lead rne into the woods," said
Snyder who acknowledged having a Charlie
McCarthy dummy in his youth.
·

1m

ionwp and lo)'Uty;
PeQple love ~ Did you a)'
when ~\1 Ye-ller" died? l did. Ha\1\'
)IOU e....-r noti~ that In movll!$ dogs
rarely die? Script writers kill people

reeman

Big .
Turlley

•

Sandusky
residant Waldo Porter, formerly of Gelllpolla, returned
to Gallipolis to hunt turkey
.and baa&amp;ad this 22.25pound bird on April 28. The
animal, which he killed below
the vlllqa limits, sports 10.
Inch beard. Porter returns to
Gallla County to hunt turkey
and deer each
ytar. (Dan Polcyn)
HUNTING TRIP -

'02 BUICK LeSABRE
CUSTdM

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Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Man is
mining his
•
mamage·
.DEAR ABBY: I love my
husbuntl nnd don't want 10
lose him. He h11s 1\IW"YS been
my knlaht In ghlnlna rumor;
but I now know for alllctthnt
· he's cheuth\8.
Lust nlaht he left far n
week IQ be With II WOtnllll he
Pftld to tll here. She does not
know h11 s mnrrled. Aetunl~.
there Is u lot she doesn 1
know.
I have ulwnys lived by the
poem that StiYS If you love
somethlna - Silt It FM. If It
oomes bnck to you, h's yours,
but If It doesn't, It n11ver
belonged to you in the first
plnee.
.
, Abby, this 111011 hus left and
cam.e buck to me five times!
Buch time, he tells me he
laves me, ond I believe him. I
~hould mendon th11t he Is
from London, nnd I 11m 11
nntlve Texan, still Hvlna In
tho town where I arew up.
l!nalnnd Is where SHB Is
t'rom - and whore he always
aoes.
.
My husband IICCUSIIS me Of
trylna to take aw~ his
frlenas •nd control him.
Believe me1 I 11m not. All l
ever wontoa was a peaceful!
hoppy life with tho man ·
love.
.
Whnt should I do? I feel
Hko n tool, but I love ~~- husband denrly. - WIFE
WITH .AN ACHING
HEART
DEAR WIFE: While the
paenl you huve purnphrased
has n lovely messnac; 1 scrl·
ously doubt thnt your troubled mnrrloge wos what the
poet hod In mind. .
You soy the womun doesn't
know your husband is mar·
rled. Thnl melltls he's cheat·
Ina on both of you. You nnd
the Bnallsh ladyfrlend 11re
overdue for 11 truth session.
· Texas women ure supposed
to be tough. Ask ~ourself,
"What would Aim Richards
do?" Tell him to a_et bnck In
the eorro~ or you 'II turn him
Into u gelding. Your wonder·
Ina spouse m11y hnve been
born In Englnnd, but that
doesn't entitle him to bolt
whenever he feels like tt.
DEAR ABBY: You printed
a letter from "Tired unci Wor·
rled In the Mldwestt a 21·
year·old mother or 11 19·
month·old child. She was
sepurnted from an abusl ve
husband ,ond said she did not
know how to handle her
daughter's constllnt cryinJI.
You suaaested she see a pedl·
otricton for n referral to a
child p8ychlatrlst.
As a licensed mlll'l'laae and
family therapist, here's what I
think: "Tired and Worried"
appePI'8 to be a youn11, lnex·
perlenced mom who hus loit
control of her own life. Her
19·month·old may ·not need
to aee 11 child paychlatrlAt
nearly aa much as thl1 young
mother needs a parentlna
1kllls clau. They are offered
at local adult education program• or community colreae~, aa well at the YMCA
anll many churchet.
"Tired and Worried" COI!Id
allo uae tome penonal theta·
py to help untanale heraelf
· rrom her controllfna family,
·u well at develop uaertlon
aklllt that may prevent her
from aettlna Into another
abu1lve relatfonlhlp. She can
find referrah for low-fee
coun.ellna In the phone book
or from her local community
menial health aaencle1.
When 1hl8 youna woman
wrote, "I'm on the vcr11e of a

A great man who
touched, healed and improved
· thousands of lives..·
Ina the winter nnd sprh1~
IIDOTSON~VDAil.YTRIBUNE.COM
months. I came to Onlllpolls nt\er
ALLIPOLIS
my graduntlon from the ntedknl
-Dr. Charles department of Ohio State Unl·
ver8lty. The first yenr nfter I
E. Holzer Sr. 8J)Ont u 11 medical officer at thewas a man Ohio Hosplllll for Bplleptlcs,
that nlOSt peo•. Where moat Of my WOrk: WitS SUI'alcaJ.
.
.
p1e know createdHI
o zer · 'jDurlnll this yeur's residence,
Hospital. ·
11n opportunity was ut'forded to
But muny m11y not know the observe the crylna need of u hos·
lona list of accomplishments he pltnlnnd helllth center In this tcrrltory. The only fly In the otnt·
b I dure:.t
th IIftieQted t he cntIre ment
rr1::t~:
Was !hilt lOWed II liOod deul
on
my
edueutlon, und
Til1 8 story wIll tioc:us on the h~d onlv medical
$50
leflntthe
end of mr;
mnn . . The areat mnn who
'
touched, healed and improved first year's . resldent:e. Cred t
thousunds of lives.
seemed to be aood however, und
I
was nble to .finance the pur·
ReeentIy, 11 historlca l mnrker chase
of n lnr"" residence, and
wus dedicated In his memory
e·
where more than 200 local, s.tltte the remodellnaund equlpplnll of
same 118 u hosphul wllh uucom·
nnd 11111lonnI dl anttnr Ies· honored modntlons for 12 puttents, giving
his contributions. His arandson, n series of.notes In puyment.''
F.L. ''Mike" Harvey, shared
"Pa~u renll:ted thut there were
some of hls wild adventures with hua" orrler• to· alvlnll madl"lll
the audience with the fortune of
"
"
"'~ ~
uslna Dr. · Holzer's own words cure, and not the h1ust of them
from the Centaur, his medical were the roads nnd lhe river,"
fraternity's publication.
Interjected Harvey.
"We ctlleil him 'Papa.'" beaan
"Papa himself recalled 11 purHarvey.
.
tlc11111r :t,our period during the
"I'm In 11 purtlculurly unique ~~~fh~ da).",~at the wnter wns
position to talk obou~ Pupa ... rlslnll most rapidly, I wns ~ulled
Burly In hls life, he worked his to Oak Hill to operute 11 case of
way throuah college whitewash· acute a.ppendlcltls," continued
Ina miles and miles or fence on a Holzer.
Iorge farm near Columbus. He
, ft
1 1 th
footbul1 . In coue11 e and
'A er comp et na e operu·
P.Jtrtted
~~ d
111
d lion, I started back:, but by the
.eame money 80 na pots 110 time 1reached Rio Orunde, 1 wn1
puns door to door."
wurned that ·the wnter was over
"Papa answered the medical the road ... 1tried to hire u hone,
needs of the community."
but was unsucceuful. Carrying
"The roads were very poor my surgical bnfts, I 8Utrled on
Indeed," wrote Holzer Sr.
foot towards oa lpolls, and pret·
"Bven the maln market roads
wore practically lmpauable durPIIIH 1M Holler, Cl . ·

•

lv K~~ta Do'ION

I .,

Mtrnorabllle

from the Holzer
ftmlly wee on
dltpley et the
French Art

..~=· ·

,

Carter)
•

Qt1Mit~

tlon

thll
.

u.s. 35 Assooln·

1928: J&gt;resldeht of the West
Virginia/Ohio Bridlle Compnny
· 1909; Resident _physician at responsible for bulllllng the t1rst
Ohio Hospital for splleptl~s.
Silver Bridge. Owner, Founder
and President, Gallipolis Alrwhy,
· I!HO: Returned to Olllll~lls Inil.
and openlld a nven bed hospital
at !07 Second Ave.
1929: Batabll8hed Holzer Hos•
pltnl Foundation.
1913: Closed the hospital and
studied for sev11ra1 monlhi In
1\)33: Putthased and testored
Vienna, Berlin 1111d l..ondon.
"Our House Museum."
1914: Met and murrled Altnl\
1944: Oave the museum to the
Vomholt. Moved hla otflces to Ohio H1storlcal Soel~ty for one
533 Second Ave, addlna •lx dollar (reversion clause returned
.more beds at 507 hoapltal.
It to tho family If it ceased to be
a museum).
11116: Completed plans and
be11an construction or Cedar
194': Received honoracy Doc·
Street hospital.
tor of Laws Dc11rec from Ohio
State University. Sou, Charles1
1917: 9Jl!ned the t111t modem lt.,
completed his training Ql\U
hoapltalln: SB Ohio.
.returned.
·· '
1918: Commtnloned · Pint
1947: The community cele·
Llelltenant, Medical Corp, WW brated
his 60th birthday.
J. Purchased and Improved
I
ho.me 111 530 Pltli .-\venu•.
1948·11l~O: Hol!er Clltllc was
Named . the home "RIVerby" born,
with Drs. Holzer, Sr. and
(River-bee).
Jr., Ashe, Foster, Mu11nus'sen,
1918·1928: Served on the 0111· Vornholt and Weinberger.
llpolla City School Board.
1949: Dr. and Mrs. Holzer
1920: Named "Pellow'' In the aave the Hospital to the citizens
Americll\ Colleae of Suraeona of the five courtly service lll'ea.
with wife, Alma, openea the
19!0: Received the "H. Ham·
School of Nurslna
mond Bennett Award" for eon·
19~2·1924: Owned !hi! Oal• l!lrvatlon ... efforts on behalf of
Prlends of the Land,"
Upolll Tribune.

19!2: Activated succeufut
1925: APJ)!)intecl to the Bulrd
communitY fund talsln11 to add
of Rio Or~nde Culleae.
new wing to Holzer Hospital.
1926: Plrat expansion of Holz·
Novemblr 1, 1P56: Dr.
It Hoapltallo 53 bod1.
Holler (S.nlor) died Hll million llvn on.
1927: Appointed to the Bolrlt
,,

'

!

:;

''

.~

' '

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The stories abOut Dr.· Holzer are
fascinating and powerfUl.
His .friend and attorney,
Henry Cherrington, once said,
"He was the only genius I've ever known."

Colony. (Andrew

llluHIHAIIity,CI
•

of 'h'ultees, Ohio University.

19011: ·Fll'llt trip to Southern
Ohio.

MIMORIP-

Bobble Holzer,
rllht, telkl with
Tlme•Sentlnel
reporter Krlt
OQteon et Riverby about the lift
end tlm11 of or.
Charlll E, HOIZ•
er Sr. Bobble
Holzer wae one
of meny Oellla
oourltlane on
hand for the
unvtlllnl of the
hl•torlo marker
on Flrtt Avenue
oommemorlitlnl
or. Holzer Sr.' I
many oontrlbu·
tlont to the Mid·
Ohio Valley.

Marker spurs memories of Dr.
Holzer sr:s accomplishments

..

,,

•

�Sunclly, May S, 2002

Porneror• Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio Point Plellnnt, wv

PlgeQ
••••• ,..., .. 211!
•

R1ndy L. Roach 1nd Jeulca L. Persona

Parsons-Roach engagement
lilly L. HqMa Jr. and Jill MoCMIIater

Roush-Leachman engagement Moodispaugh-Sellers engagement
LETART FALLS - Mr.
und Mrs. Marshall . Roush,
Letart Falls, announce the
_pngn~ement und approachina
rnamuge of their daughter,
Courtney Beth Hill Roush, to
Adum Russell ' Leachman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Leuchmun, Worthington.
The bride-elect is also the
grunddaughter of Mr. und
Mrs. Dullas Hill, Apple
Grove, and the late Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Roush, East
Letart.
The groom-elect is the
· grandson of Ml'. and Mrs.
Ronnld .
Leachman,
Adamsville, and Irene
Morrison and the latn Mr.
Wilber Morri~on, Dresden.
Roush gntduated with honors from Racine-Southern
High School in 1995. She
;!rHduated cum laude from

Ohio University in 2001 with
a bachelor of science degree
in exercise physiolo,y..
Leachman 11raduuted w1th
honors from WorthinstonKilborne High School in
1995, and Ohio University in
2000 with n bachelor of science in civil engineering.
The bride-elect is currently
pursuin~ her doctoral degree
m phys cal therapy at Ohio
Umversity. Leachman is u
project engineer for the
Quandel
Group
Inc.
Currently. he is the project
· engineer for the Meigs Lifal
School District building and
renovation project
The open church wedding
will be.held Sept. 28, 2002, at
3:30 p.m. at Mount Pleasant
United Methodist Church,
Mineral Wells, W. Vu.

POMEROY - Darlene
Linda Moodispaugh and
Larry 0 . Sellers Jr.• together
with their parents announce
their
engagement
and
·upprooching marriage.
The bride-elect, ,a 1998
gruduute of Meigs High
School, is the daughter of
Sum and Nursa Terzopplous
of Cheshire. She is the grand·

Hall-Boles engagement

THURMAN Emily and Sarah Elizabeth Boggess
Anne Hall and Jeremy Don of Naoma, W.Va.
Boles are announcing .tl!eir
The .groom is the son 'Of
engagement and approachtng Pamela and Morlc Rayburn of
marriage.
.
. Point Pleasant, and Daniel
The bride-elect attended Boles of Montano. He attend·
River Volley High School ed Point Plensunt High
and' is employed by TCKS School and is now serving
Corp. in Point Pleasant, with the U.S . Army. He
W.Va. She is the daughter of recently completed basic
David Hall of Point Pleasant, training at Fort Knox, Ky.,
W.Va., and Margaret and and will be st11tioned at FOrt
James Oiler of Thurman.
Hood, T&amp;xas, where the Cop·
Her paternal grandparents pte will reside.
•
are Amos and Eloise Hall of
The wedding is Saturday,
Point Pleasant. Maternal. M11y 11, 2002, at the Kroclel
grandparents are the late · Park Oazebo in PoiJit
•
late Leonard and .Catherine Woodrow Wilson Boggess, Pleasant.
•
Breeze. Both are employed at ·r-------..;.--------~
·
0' Bleness
Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
An open church wedding is
planned for May II at 4:30
p.m. at the Oak Grove
18" QOLD
14K
PAST
Wesleyatf Church, 13771
CHAIN
Kimberly Road, Nelsonville.
MOM
PRESENT
IFIACELETS
A reception will follow at
NECKLACE
FUTURE
the home of the groom's
ANKLETS
brother.
PENDANT .WITH EARRINGS
SPI!!CIAL

dau11hter of Mildred Terrill
and Homer Moodispaugh.
Her fiance is the son ·of
Larry and Agnes Sellers of
Portland, una grandson of
Ruth and the late Harold
Sellers of Portland.
The wedding will be held
on June I with u reception to
follow at the. American
Legion hall in Middleport.

LONG BOTTOM
Crystal Bailey of Long
Bottom · announces the
engut~ement and approaching
mamnge of her mother,
Daphne Young, to Anthony
Breeze Sr.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Helen Smith and
Freda Holzinger, and the late
Russell Holsinger.
Her fiuncll is the son of the

QClark'~

$49.95

NEW SELECTION
OF TWO TONI! .

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Now Accepting New Clients

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.

Celebrating your good timesf... ·.

602 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

'

Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

•

••

:' NORTHUP - E. Glenn
(!_nd Jacqueline "Jackie"
rnhnm nre celebrating their
olden weddina anniversary
n Saturday, Mny 18, 2002,
tlt Northup Baptist Church.
~ith .an open reception from
o:-4 p.m.
1
They were milrried on May

~

Specializing in total
. hip and knee replacement

u

60 East, Barboursville, WV.

Our next dlnlc datal• Friday, May 10.
call (614) 461•1174 or 1·100·171-47!10 for an appointment.

() Grant Medical Center
•

•

'

OhioHealth
'

Medical professionals providing free
health care answers &amp; physician referral

'

-

They have four children
· and three arandchildren.
The couple requests that
11ifts be omitted.

Kathy Allen
Jackson, OR
Gallipolis, OH
Sue Goelllng
Gallipolis, OH
Judy Taylor
Chester, OH ·
Lisa Short
Oak Hill, OR
Teresa Woods
Emma Casteel ·
Crown City, OH
Gallipolis, OH
Debbie Webb
Gallipolis, OH
Missy Somerville
Rio Grande, OH
Shelble Willis
Pomeroy,OH
Mindy Barr
Pt. Pleasant, WV
Sherrl Williams
Bidwell, OH
Angle Stone
Albany, OR
Freda Casdorph
VInton, OR
Tammy Hawks
VInton, OR
Shannon Goble
Patrtot,OH
Kim Grover
Cotta1evllle, WV
Lelgha Gregory
Pt. Pleasant, WV
Carol Hlll
Stephanie Kemper · Bidwell, OH
Mandy Strickland OakHIII,OH
Bidwell, OR
Jane Campbell

H

H

H

u

Better health for the Tri-State.
'

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•

-·

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SI'ON80H1,'l&gt; lit'

Herhs,
S~:edllngN, Hc)ONeplnnts, etc.
Brln~o~ 11 phmt &amp; 11 Mend!
Saturday, May 11 • tAM • 12 Noon
Annu~tls, P~nnmhds,

-

.....

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~ ·

J.

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.

.
-

...

-

·'~

-

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I'

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•

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PROUD TO BE APARr

•

- - - -· -

-

d,'

·''

Every mother Is unique but all mothers
have one thing In common: no matter
how busy they set, they're always
there for you. This Mother's Day, show
mom how special she Is • fill her day
with love, lauahter, and warm
memories.

OF YOUR LIFE.

Ohio VGII1y Publllhlng
family of MWIJHI/}IrN
Qalllpolla Dall~ Tljbune
The DaUy Sentinel
Poilu Pleuant Realater

H

.

t•

H

1~800-462-525· 5

- --

Bossard M1morial Library &amp;
QQ/1/a Coullly Master Oardtlllr.l
at Brmard Memorial Library
'1 SpnJcf Strwi, O.U/pol/1, OH

. · Would Like to Honor Our Nursing Sttiff
for their Care and Dedication During National Nurses Week u
u
u
YRS OF SVC
NAME
TOWN
Bidwell, OH
10
u
Mary Shaffer

H

·•

Roy Colliers at Asbury
Methodist
Church . in
Northup.

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS TEAM

~·
u

'

For Inltlal evaluations or follow·up visits for total joint
replacement, we offer office hours at 3554 U.S. Route

18, 1952, by the Rev. Lee

EXTENDICARE MANAGEMENT
u Administrator
Bonnie McCain, DON Teresa Woods and the

••

Nurse On Call

.~

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u

River Cities Community Health Coalition

--

Graham
5Oth anniversary
.

u

Joint lmp_lant Center

Sunday nmes·Sentinel · .
Serving Oallla, Meigs and Mason counties

-·

.Plant Exchange!.

('i40) 992·9124

Celebrating your good times/

•\

bring May flowers ...

'

I

•••

••••••••
CLARK'S JEWERLY
•
'
'
113 COURT STREET
•
'
'ADJACENT FROM THE .COURTHOUSE
• .
• • • • HISTORIC DOWNTOWN POMEROY •

Cynthia A. Rainey 1nd Roy E, Myers

, lncl IDiiik to Jennifer Konkle. '

'··~~

REGISTER TO WIN A
SPECIALGIIT FOR MOM·

TO THEIR OFFICES

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Chr·latt11n Academy (formerly
Ia I)Oy.l rtglaterlng \fo .
ctaalebvallablel Call

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AMTA lporll MIINII' Ctrltlltd

The

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$29.95

~ ~ft ~
, ..
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with Karan Rose

Myers.
Both are graduates of Point
Pleasant High School.
The open church wedding
will take place at 2:30 p.m.,
May 18, 2002, at the Zion
Baptist Church in Gallipolis
Ferry.
. ·

The ceremony will tuke
place ut Ball's Chupel Church
in Ashton nt 6:30 p.m.
The reception will be
directly ufter the wedding in
the church's reception hall.
The gracious custom of tm
open church wedding will be
observed, so she welcomes
everyone to join them on this
speciul dny.

.

Jetuelr!'

$148.815 .

WATCHI!I

ANNOUNCES THE ADnmoN
OF A THERAPE.UTIC TOUCH
MASSAGE CLINIC

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. nnd
Mrs. Jake Ruincy of
Gulli polis Ferry ure announcing the fonhcoming marria~e
of their daughter, Cynth1u
Ann Rainey, to Roy Eugene
Myers, of Southside, son of
the lute Roy E. and Dolly D.

ASHTON - Sumer Renee
Hughe would like to invite
everyone to join her in the
celebrotion of her parents'
love for one another.
Billy Lee Hushes Jr., the
-6on of Bill and Sherry
Hughes of Ashton, nnd Jill
McCallister, the duughter of'
Qplll B~rd of Milton, will be
;united m mnrringc on Muy
,17, 2002.

YOung-Breeze engagement

B4CK TO
111:4LTI1
CI11ROPR4CTIC

Rainey-Myers engagement·

·Hughes-McCallister wedding , Skinner-Simms engagement

lmliJ A. tt.JI •nd Jeremy D. 1o1M

Courtney Roush 1nd Ad1m Luchllllll

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. und e~tployed ut Blockbuster
Mrs. Simer und Cuthy Vtdeos.
.
Pursons of Gulli polls wish to
The groom elect is u stu·
unnounce the cngugelllcnt dent ut · RIn Grunde
a..nt A. llmma •nd Mlohell1 L. Skinner
und upcoming murriuge of University mtljority in com. their duughter, Jesslcu puter science und is a part of
Lortulnc Parsons to Rundy the Produce Munugcmcnt
Lee Ronch, so11 of Mr. und Tcum ut Wul-Murt. ·
Mrs. Rkhurd und Ellzubcth
The outdc\or ceremony will
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. Puul Fruth
Phurmucy
of Rouch. of Gullilllllis.
tuke place Muy IJ ut 4 ~.m. ul
J. Skinner nnnounces the Oullipolis.
The bride elect is u student the home of th~ bride s purengnsement of his daughter,
Sinuus is u gritduute of ut the University of Rio ems. Mfclilllle Lynn Skinner to Morehead Stutc University Or,unde 1mljoring in curly
Furnily und friends ure
Brent Allen Simms, son of und is currently in the u.s. childhood cducution und Invited to shurc In thi s speciul
Mr. nnd Mrs. Jnck (Minttda) Army ut Fort Wuinwright, · ll'linoring in Spanish. She is occuslon.
Simms of Oulllpoll~. Skinner
i ~ ulso the dnughter or the lute Alusku.
A July 20 wedding will
. Em9il engagem,ene wedding anniversary
Rebecca M. Sit In ncr.
.
Skinner Is t\ gruduute of tuke pluce ut St. Louis
announcements ana photos
C hur~:h
in
Ohio Nonhern University Cuthollc
to news@mydoilytribune.com/
nnd is n phurmuclst with Oulllpolis.

I

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.

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

u

1

1
1
1

New hire
New hire
New hJre

....

u

u

'

•

•

�•

. Sunday, Mey s, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qelllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleeunt, WV

Pege C4 • 6unbnp 1Ehnrl·6rntlnrl

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

itunbap e&amp;imrl -itrntinrl • Pege CS

OHIO MASONIC FRATERNITY
'

'

Largest fratemal initiation
in Ohio held in 10 cities

Mr. 1nd Mrs, Okey Coffee

Amy J, H1rrl1 and Kevin 81rnette

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff•ry P. Jon••

Mr. and Mrs. Mlttllew D. Martin

Cc1fee 5Oth anniversary

Harris-Barnette engagement

Walter-Jones wedding

McQuaid-Martin wedding

GALLIPOLIS - ' Okey
nnd Phoebe Miller Coffee of
Oulllpolis will celebrate their
SOth wedding unni·vcrsury ,
Tuesday, May 14.
.J They were murried on May
14, 1952, ut Rubyville, Ohio,
by Rev. Spurgeon Metzler.

GALLIPOLIS - Ed and .
Mr. Coffee is is a retired
burber und Mrs. Coffee is Jennifer Hurris of Gallipolis
retired from Buckeye Rurul ure proud to announce the
Electric.
.
engagement of their dough·
They ure the parents of one ter, Amy Jo Harris to Kevin
daughter, Beth (Russ) Elliott Barnette, son of Lurry and
of GullipoHA and have one Carol Burnette of Gallipolis.
grandson, Travis Letcavlts of
The bride-elect is a 1999
Gallipolis.
·
sruduate of Gullin Academy
High School and is currently
employed by Holzer Medical

Center.
The prospective bride·
groom is a 1996 graduate of
River Valley High School
and is currently employed by
Pillsbury in Wellston.
The open church wedding'
will be 3 p.m., June I, 2002,
at l'irst Christian Church, Rio
Orande.

COLLEGE NEWS
Ohio Unlvenlty
ATHENS ..... The following
student! were named to the
deans list at Ohio Univmity
for the winter quarter 2001:
Ruth Dar111er, sophomore;
Amber Davidson, junior;
Drew Dunkle, senior; Melissa
Elliott,senior; Leslie Linder,
freshr11an; Jennifer Luca~,
sophomore; Nicole Mount,
fre1hrnan; 211 of G~llipolis.
Abo listed were J, Elkins,
senior, of llidwell and Cara
Butcher, freshman, ofVinton.

Murray State

scoring betwe~n 11!- 23
ACT /860- 1080 S·AT and
maininl! at least a 3.0 final
high sc hool. grade point
average.
Dunkle is the daughter
of Beverly and Daniel
1
Dunkle, Gal ipolil. She will
graduate
from
Gallia
A ca d~my High School,
where her main activities
include: volleyball; basketball; softball, All - League
SEAOL lim team; All ·
District first team ba!ketball and National Honor
Society.
Dunkle plans to major in
accounting.

GALLIPOLIS - Cindy cred ivory and mauve flow·
.
.Brumfield Walter und Jeffery ered tea length dress.
P. Jones were united in marBilly McCoy of Apple
riage at a private family c.ere- Grove, W.Va. served as best
mony on March 23, 2002, at man. Jason and Ryan Walter
the Good News Baptist ushered guests. ·
Church, Gallipolis.
Music was coordinated by
Cindy is the daughter of Tanya Kelley. Songs includ·
Joann and the late Cline · ed, "Only God· could ·love
Brumfield of Gallipolis.
you more," and "Prom this
A candle of remembrance moment."
was lit in honor of Cline
A reception was held at th,e
before the couple repeated church immediately foilo~­
their wedding vows.
ing the ceremony. The bridal
J.P. Jones is the son of table was adorned with ivory
Rosie and Gordon Powell of satin ribbons and ivy. The ·
Arkansas John Paul Jones of two tier ivory wedding cake
Wellston.
Rev. Thomas Mollohan and decorations were providperformed the double ring ed by Sandy Stone of
etc.
and
ceremony. The bride was Celebrations,
Plowers
or
Gallipolis.
Bev
esconed down ihe aisle and McGraw and Mary Ann
given in marriage by her sons Manin presided at the brldiil
Jason and Ryan Waller.
The bride wore ivory lace table.
After a honeymoon trip to
· covered satin .sown designed
Las
Vegas, Nev., the couple
by Bridal Originals. The
resides
in Gallipolis.
· Queen Anne neckline tapers
The bride is a graduate of
down to a V·shaped bodice,
Oallia
Academy High School
givingway to a lea length
skin. The gown was accented and is employed by Electro·
with sheer lace, long sleeves Crafts Engineering Solutions,
and peurls adorning her neck· Gallipolis.
line.
·
The groom is a ~raduate of
Tammy Mollohan, sister of Poin~ Pleasant Htgb S~h?OI
the bride, served as maid-of· and ts employed by Plulhp·
honor. She wore a lace cov· Sporn, New Haven ..

University
Mlahlll A. Wood1ll 1nd T1r1 M, Perllnpr

Woodall-Persinger engagement
POINT PLEASANT M1. Sheri Peninger and Mr.
Andy l'ersingefr announce the
engagement o their dau_ghter,
Tara Michelle, to M&amp;ehael
Adam Woodall,son of Mr. and
Mn. Mark Bank!.
..J Peninger i1 a 2000 graduate
of Point l'leaunt High School
and graduated from the
National
Inltitute · of
Technology in 200 I.

MURRAY, Ky. - Susan
Michelle Tackett of Didwell,
will be among tho&amp;e graduating this spring from Murray
State University.

Wllmlnpon
Collete

Sh~ is employed at the .

White House Clinic in Berea,
Ky.
Woodall is a 2001 rrraduate
.,
ofl'oint Pleasant High School
and is attending Berea
College.
An open church wedding i1
planned for August 10, 2002,
. at the Gospel Lighthouse
Church in Point Plea.ant. .

The Newest Looks At Prices
_You'll Find Very Refreshing.
MAKE MOM~ DAY

WILMINGTON
Cara A. Dunkle
of
Callipolis, i1 the recipi~nt
of a $7000 scholarship to
attend
· Wilmington
College. This scholarship il
awarded on rhe bafil of

•La Z Bo.y
• Flexsteel

12th Annual ·

~~V. GOSPEL ./{14..
.
Wednesday, May 15 • Sunday May 19 ~~

Starting at

(One or the largeat and m01t exdtlnj Gospel Slnp In Wen Vlrll.l~la)

OALLIPOLIS - Mr. And
Mrs. Dave McQuaid of
Gallipolis announce the mar. riage of their' daughter
Allison Renee to Mauhew
David Manin of Cheshire,
.son of Mr. Jerry Martin .of
'oak Hill, and Mrs. Nancy
Martin of Youngstown. The
ceremony took place Marcli
9, 2002, at Fairhaven United
'Methodist
Church
.in
Gallipolis at 5:30 in the after·
noon.
The ceremony was official·
· ed by Rev. Richard Barcus.
· Mustc was provided by
:. Catherine Shenefield, organ·
·1st and David Stiffler, singer.
' · The bride wore an A-frame
style white gown with lace
:sleeves, pearls· and lace on
·the bottom of the gown
including a medium train.
· Her bouquet was made of
. · purple ,and white silk roses
. and drop down purple to
lavender flowers. Her veil
. · was made of a satin comb
with white roses and it was
medium length hanging in
the back. Her hair was pulled

back on the sides with big
curls. The bride was escorted
by her father.
The maid of honor was
Mindy Pence wearing an A·
frame style dress purple dress
with purple beads at the top.
Crystal
Meaige
and
Samantha Reese wearing an
A-frame styfe purple dress
with purple beads and the top
were the bridesmaids. Christa
Martin and Lenae Pence
wearing white satin dresses
were the flower girls.
·
The
groom
wore
silver/gra:y tu"edo with tails
His bowlle and cumber bun
was purple. His Boutonniere
was a purple rose. The best
man was David Co" wearing
· silver/gray tuxedo with pur·
pie bowlle and cumber bun.
The groomsmen were Scott
Miller and Michael Reese
wearing silver/gray tu"edos
with purple bowties and cum·
ber buns.
The guest book attendant
was Emily Meadows.
The cake was provided by
Linda Kemper.

COLUMBUS - Ohio joined the same Masonic
Masonic Fraternity initi· lodge in Marion, where
ated more than 8,300 can· the president Was a memdidates as part of its first ber.
one-day Initiation on
"The one-day initiation
April 27 ·
was an e"cellent opportu·
The ceremony was held nity for me to get
in 10 cities around the ·involved and be a part of
state, with numbers of history," said Hardmg.
Traditionally,
new
candidates varying by city
from as low as 286 and as members join the Masonic
high as 1,864.
fraternity by participating
"This is very likely the in three progressive inili!arg~st frat~rna,l initiation ation
ceremonies, or
·m htstory,' satd Thomas degrees. Reynolds said
E.
Reynolds,
Grand these degrees are solemn,
Master of Masons in and . each teaches lessons
Ohio. "I've been over· in character improvement.
whelmed by the success Normally, the ceremonies
of this one-day initiation are conferred at local
program.'' he added. "The lodges and intervals of
last time we took in num· two weeks to two months
bers like this was 1957, or more may occur
when we initiated 8,500 between them .
new members over the
Ob
course of a full year. The . " . viously, eliminating
success of this program the apparent obstacle of
has brought us a well- time
was
extremely
needed infusion of a vari- attractive ' to our larlle
ety of men."
· group of members,'' satd
George Braatz, slate sec·
The 8,300 new members
represent ~ wide spectrum
DON'T WAIT
of professwns and ages.
"We ha.ve several· city
VACCINATE!
mayors, a theoretical
physicist, an immunolo·
gist, business executives,
factory workers, retirees
and even a very talented
tattoo artist, to ~oint out
just
a
few, '
said
Reynolds. "The youngest
is 19 and the oldest is
99 ."
One new member , is
Warren G. Harding Ill, · IL.o;.:...,:~
great-nephew of President
c1 nYour
Care
Warren G. Harding, who
Provider Or The Gallll
along with three other
Dept. At
Ohio · presidents was an
·2950
active Mason. Harding

your body.

FLAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
PURNffURIAT~HT

Rl.l,GIIIIfHlth Fmy, WV

61~·t37l

·~~~~~~~·

·Gallipolis Career College news
medical office administra- hired as a medical secretary
GALLIPOLIS
at Holzer Clinic in the clinGallipolis Career College tion.
Shirley Wright has been ic's lab.
student Kim Seth received a
Manion is a graduate of
perfect attendance award .hired as a data entry clerk at
C. J. Hu11hes Construction Gallipolis Career College
for. winter quaner 2002.
where she received an asso·
Co.,
Huntmgton, W.Va.
· Leanna Hornsby has been
of applied business in ·
elate
Wright is
hired as a medical tran·
medical
- - . a graduate
scriptionist
office
0
f
in
the
adminis·
Gallipolis
pathology
Irati on.
Career
department
S h e
College
at Holzer
resides
· in
where
she
Clinic.
Gallipolis
received as
Hornsby
with her ·
associate .
is a gradu·
daughte'r
of applied ·
ate
of
Emily.She
business
in
Gallipolis
resides in
technical
Career
Minion
Crown
John10n
support
Co liege
City with
specialist.
where she
Tim,
daughter
husband
Amanda Manion has been
received an associate in
Angel, and son Scott.
applied bu!i~ess i!l medical
office admtnutrauon.
She reside&amp; in Crown City
with her husband Robert, ·
daughtel'!l Alicia and Olivia,
and son Dustin.
Btandy Jo Johnson was ·
recently hired as a medical
records technician at Holzer
Medical Center.
Johnson is a 2002 winter
of
quarter
graduate
Gallipolis Career College
where she received as ano. elate of applied business in

s~~

RECOGNIZES THEIR
EXCEPTIONAL
AND DEDICATED NURSES
MAY 4,2002

I am a long term care nurse
I work at Holzer Senior Care,
Some days I laugh, some days I cry
Some days I wonder why I am still there.
I care about my Residents
I worry I can't do enough,
Alii have ever wanted is to make a difference in their life
But I am responsible for so much other stuff.
When I stop and think, "Do I really make a difference?

LOCATION

Historical West VIrginia State Farm Museum
(S mllea North of Point P1111ant, WV.juet off Btltl Rt. 82)

Gfu• Mona tiN Bat

Does anyone really appreciate what I do?"

.

5 BIG DAYS *** OUfR 70 GROUPS &amp; SOLOISTS
(1fnglng from an outdoor open pavilion)
May If. 2002- 6:00 pm 11111 (Only) Oprn '1\ilent (limit llllnjpj) real~tu on arrlt'll
Mar 16. 2002-· 3:00pm 11171 ••Knln Sprnecr It Friends It Jody Brown Indian Family
It More
May !7, 2QQ2.. 3:00pm til ??••Melody Trio, SlnaJna Eehoo, Halrt Family It many more
May 11, 2002 ··11100 1m til'/ ? ••J,B, It BarbaI'll Spe~~«r, The Frecmans, The Browdtrt
It Many, M•n.Y more
Mu 19 •• 9:30am Momlna Wot!ihlp with Ev•naellll John El1wk:k Singing by Mdhmlcl Trio
1nd Nlehok f11mlly
Till, The Browdcrtlt Prcaehlna by C11t'tn R1y E.-am

_
.
·Pregnancy Prevention Month
~·~&amp;~a~h~·nte

Antique Pine
Bedroom Group

T - who ...., drup, llkobol, or mpae In ullheallby behavlon ollen !Jerome
preplllli wblJe 1 lftnqe, IUik flldlln rellted to teen pretiJUIIIl'&gt;' lnducle: Uvl111 In
areu With blab poverty, low Ieveii or oduadoa, dwlalnl reslclmce oRen, Uvlnl In
Jlnp paNIII boweholdt. and havtnau older 1lbUn1 "'ho II • teen puent.

I Night Stand

to teen motbtrt lldrer from: bieber r•IM ot low blrtb welaJ!t and
m.ted t,.Mb probJn., 1JK111 'ed probabllldel ot Infant rlcalb, blladn-, rlcaf-,
dU'onlc: raplntol'}' probldll, DMDtll retardation, ...,tiiiiPn-, lad ccrebl'll pally.
Low blrtb wfiPt lnfut. h.,.• double the 1'1111 or beinl dy•lexla, hypefld.lril)', or •

Childree born

'=:'·ly

C:lotlcllunclly

ilr.
,,

•

CORNER 3RD &amp; OLIVE

And the way s_
he hugged me and said, "Thank You".
Yes, I am a nurse at Holzer Senior Care

Cheat,
Dre1Hr

GALLIPOLIS

I remember that smile on my Resident's face

May2002

Queen Bed,

F;tctu 1:3.0 to f

•

The initiation cereretary for the Ohio
Masonic fraternity. "Our monies were held in ·
analysis also shows that Akron,
Cambridge,
new members were influ· Canton.
Cincinnati.
enced by the opportunity Cleveland,
Columbus,
to become part of the fra- · Dayton,
Steubenville,
ternity's many charitable Toledo and Youngstown.
and community efforts."
of the size of
Masonic
charitable theBecause
various
such
work in Ohio encompass- facilities as groups.
the Palace
es a wide variety of pro·
in
Columbus,
and
·Theater
jects, such as awarding
scholarships, sponsoring the Firstar Center in
training for teachers, dis- Cincinnati were used to.
aster relief, sponsoring accommod'ate the atten·
Special Olympics athletes dees. ·
for the summer games,
Information about the
and the hosting of two Ohio Masonic fraternity
summer life-skills camps can
be
found
at
for at-risk youth.
www. freemason.com.
"Part of our success is
also a result of a recent
public awareness campaign. which included
advertising at movie theaters and creating a new
w.eb page," said Braatz.

44&amp;-3045

d...bUlty.

CALL THE MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
WeUness
Teen Pregnancy Prevent on statr at

And I am proud of what I do;
If anyone ever asks why I stay here
I will tell them, "I MAKE A DIFFERENCE"
So it's all worth the struggles I go through.

HSCC NURSES PROUDL~'RVING THE RESIDENTS OF
GALUA AND SURROUNDING COUNTIES. .

~~~§§~~~~~~~~f,~o~r~nro~~~~~nf,~o~nma~~tl~o~n~~~~~
. !~~~=5===5==~·
~
J'uDdtd

ot lob lad

Scrvlca.

�.

'

·Alone tl•e River
Ohio·Valley Crusade or Christ kicks o.. . ,

PageC&amp;

- hadtq 'l'm.e.· ltntiud

S•• diJ: l ! j S, 21D

The kickoff for summer musical
programs down by the riverside will
come on June I when the Ohio
Valley Crusade For Christ - that's
· the group that brought in the Power
Team last spring . - stages a
· "Gospel on the Levee" fest.
It's been described us a free fami'
ly fun day, getting under way at 3
p.m. and continuing unto 10.
There .will be several gospel
groups and a Christian clown to
entertain, a bounce house. an obsta. cle course, a kiddie train ride, and
more, not to mention food galore
. being donated by churches around
. the county. Be sure to pencil it in on
your calendar.

quitters he(,l! who should be eii(()Ufa~ed to P!':"!icipate in the Ohio
Bte:entenmal Commission's quitrina
show.
Quilting events to tuke place next
year in celebrotion of the state's
200th binhday will include a big
display at the Ohio State Fair.
Interested? Just call 1-888-0hio200 for more information.

To make the event ~and better this year, the commntee is lootina for craft and anlictue. dis~ays
which cin be exhibited or sold froin
booths inside or ouL
lntetested in participlltinll?
Amanda Ramage, 742-2121:
Tammy Searles, 742-225 1, or
Marcia Elliott, 742~2133, are wa.it·
ing to hear from you.

Sure, it's months awur. but good
thin's take lots of plunmng.
A 'Come Home to Rutland" celebration will be held on Aug. 24 at
the Rutland Civic Center, und the
commitlee is looking for things new
and different to attract 11 crowd.
Games and hayrides for the kids
will be held during the du~ and
there will be u teen dunce m the
evening.
.
A horSeshoe pitching contest, a
car show, a display by the Gold
Wing Club, a flower show by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners nnd 11
jewelry display by Clark's Jewelry
S•ore ure already committed for the
celebration.

It's reunion time and every year

Charlene
Hoeflich
. COMMUNITY

•••

eled to Logan-Hocking Middle
School to take part in the contest.
The students were given ''{lrompts"
in three rounds of competition a.nd
then had 40 minutes to develop their
narratives.
Nick received u medallion for
Never heard of the Power of the placing lOth and qualified for the
Pen program until Jacinda Yonker, regional C?mpet!tion, which was
Meigs Talented and Gifted teacher, held at Uriloto Htgh School.
excitedly announced that Nick
This is the.first year for local stuKuhn, an Eastern Elementary stu· dents to participate in the Power of
dent, had placed lOth in the writing the .Pen tournament, which is an
competition with students from 10 interscholastic writing event for
seventh and eighth graders.
southeastern Ohio schools,
Seven students from Meigs ele: mentary and middle schools tra vMeigs County has some expert

•••

•••

•

•

•••

when it comes around, there's
always an appeal for the addresses
of "lost" classmates.
This is the 20th anni~ of the
Meigs High School Class of '82.
und 11 celebration has been planned
for July 6 at Royal Oak Resort.
Oav1d lunnarelli advises that
ma.ilings about the reunion went out
last week, but he huil no addresses
for about 35 members of the class.
So if you graduated in that cluss und
didn't gel a leiter, you now know
that you are umong the "lost." Just
contuct Betsy Hcruld Nicodemus,
Kim Birchfield. or 1\ttthy Hoffmun,
and they ' II fi II you in on phms lor

.

In the 1~ Bl11e Sulphur (l!llh

spelhD&amp;) ~~~~~ near
Kyaer was cle~Oped u a resort to
entenaln persons wishiai to bMbe
in and drink from the blUe sulfllric

•••cheeriqa up once
Everyone needs

·
a Professor Wayne
' lnspoc:tod the sprinp lllcl declired
thein to be the finest In Ohio. The
professor stated that the Blue
Sulphur Sprinas had 13 times as
muCh c:hloiide of sodium as even
the flrnous ~inia resorts.
" When first
in 18110, there
existed a 1().room hotel to host vis" ltors. The Gallipolis Journal report·
' ed: "Across the road !'rom the hotel,
the Blue Sulphur Spring bubbles
from the bOwels of the earth
~neath to battle with the phantom
· ot Jissolution in that wOnderful
~NCbine, man. Ballasted, bound and
ganed with a huge rock, adorned
' by-ihe skill of man, the blue water
fOrces its way through an Orifice

Sands

~l879,

Luanne
.Bowman
EDUCATION
process. Considering thut a 10 per·
cent raise, which would be an
extremely rare case, would amount
to about a 50 cents increase on the
hour.
This would only result in a raise
of your annual take home pay of
approximately $1,000. When you
consider the average colleje graduate earns approximately S1S.50 an
hour and has a great deal of opportunity for advancement, you begin
to see the enormous financial bene-

fits from a college degree. ·
Let's try something. Take a second. and make a list of what you
think your bills will be when you
ure on your own. How much will
your rent und utilities cost? Your
monthly car payment und car insurance? Gas? Food? Personal items?
Other items you need to live on?
What you spend on entertainment?
If you 'take a job making $6/hour,
your take home pay will be less thun
$11,000 per year. That is close to
$900 per month, or $230 ~,&gt;er week.
Taking into consideratton that
health insurance alone can deduct
another $200 a month from your
pay. do you really think you can live
the lifestyle you dream of on that
amount?
In addition to financial benefits,
students must think about job satis·
faction. What kind of job is going to
make you huppy? What do you real·
ly want to do with your life? Now is
the time to pursue your dreams. All

of our local high school graduates
have the opportunity to be nnything
they want to be. w1th a few exceP.·
tions. lf~ou are S·foot -10, you w1ll
probably not r.luy professional busketbull, and 1f you are 6-foot-10,
you will probably never be u jockey.
Other than that , you have few limitations. You are truly at a turning
point in your life, so take this
opportunity . to better yourself for
the future. And advancing your edu·
cation is the best place to stan.
Many individuals make the decision not to continue their ·education
after high school,' and after a couple
of years in the minimum wa'e JOb
market, the individual begms to
realize that this type of career isn't
glamorous and without advanced
skills and training, the chances for a
promotion are limited.
The individual begins to want a
bri,hter future for" themselves and
thetr fnmily. Thir is where your
local community college can help.

Community colleges are filled with
non-traditionul students who
becon1e employed directly out of
high school und now want ~o
improve their life. In fnct, 11 majority of the students on muny community college campuses nre over that
nge of 25. It is never too late for . .
nnyone to go to college and earn a
degree.
Whether you are fresh out of high
school, have been workina at a milt·
imum wage job for a couple of
years, an adult whose kids have left
home and you are looking for new
opponunities, or a senior citizen
wanting to take 11 few classes, your
local community college can help.
Cull today and find out how to put
college in your future.
.
(Luanne Raslt Bowma11 Is vier ·
prtsldtnlfor financial and admlnls·
trarivt Qjfalrs at Rio Grand•
Community Collt§t, P. 0. IJox 326,
Rio Grandt, Ohio 45674, 740·245·
7236;)

Gallia Garden Clubs convene
GALLIPOLIS - Five
Oallia County Garden· Clubs
met on April 25 at the C. H.
McKenzie Ag Center for
their spring meeting. Contact
Chairperson Suzy Williams
of Gallipolis Garden Club
called the meeting to order
and Patricia Parsons of Open
Gate Garden Club read devo~ions .
Jackie Graham,
Cheshire Garden Club, read ·
the secretary's report of the
Fall 200 I meeting and Anne
Baker of Floral Friends
Garden Club gave the treasurer's report.
Suzy announced upcoming
events such as the Regional
Meeting in Pomeror,. Ohio on
Saturday,
Apnl · 27,
Gardeners' Day out in
Lebanon, Ohio on June 2,
and Ohio Association of
Garden Club Convention in
Wadsworth, Ohio July 15, 16,
17. Jackie Graham took roll
call and presidents' repons
were given. Floral Friends,
Gallipolis, Open Gate,

Cheshire and Rio Grande
Garden Clubs were represented with 'a total of 24
members present. Brenda
Covert announced plans for a
Design Study Workshop by
Faye
Collins,
OAGC
Accredited Judge, in July,
and the Gallia County Flower
Show
scheduled
for
December. Brenda is asking
two volunteers from each
club to help with the flower
show and will schedule a
Dlannina committee meetina
soon.
Open Gate Garden Club
obtained Drema Lentz of
Village Florist in Rio Grande
to be our guest speaker. 'Her
displa,Y. of flowers, wreaths
and gtfts was lovely, and she
gave the meanings of different flowers in the event a definition is needed to accompany a floral arrangement, e.g.,

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Carnations express love; fascination and distinction.
Light red represents admiration while .dark red deootes
deep love and affec'lion.
Whtte carnations mean ~ure
love and good luck, stnped
symbolize a regret that a love
cannot be shared. Yellow carnations means rejection, and
pink carnations mean "I will
never forget you." Pink car·
nations have the most symbolic and si$nificance.
According to legton, cama·
tions first appeared on earth
as Jesus c11rried the cross.
The Vir~in Mary cried at
Jesl!s' phght and pink carnations sprung up where her
tears fell. Thus. the pink carnation became a symbol of a
mother:s undying love. In
1907, it was chosen by Queen
Ann as emblem of Mother's
Day, now observed in the

'

United States and Canada in are welcome with or without
May. She drew Remy 2lants to exchange. Katie
Simon's name of Gallipolis Shoemaker is. working on a
Garden Club to receive a bus tour to Gierman Village
Robert Kincaide teapot and will announce final plans
arrangement for a Mother's at a later date. Open Gate
Day gift, and il prizt was. Garden Club will host the
given for the most flowers Fall County Meeting on
named in a llame called October 24, 2002 and Rio
Grande Garden Club will be
."Flower Power.:r
Gallipolis Garden Club in charge of the program.
provided refreshments and
six' door prizes for the
evening. Jackie Graham
announced the Master YIIR our Wtl! Sittig get a frM yldlo;
Gardeners' plant exchange at
www.llglithoultiiHmbly.lnto
the Bossard
memorial
Llghthoult Alltmbly of God
Libtary on Saturday May 11
at1te Routt110
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon; aH . L...--:=~==-~--.J

FREE VIDEO

llllillllll!!!!!!!!!

.HISTORY
and is held in a basin 3 feet 4 incha in depth and 3 feet in diameter."
The anicle went on to say that
DeOD1e dtank the "magic water"
botli from the basin IIICl at the din~
ina table. "lt will change the c:otor
of your tonaue. make your eyes
younalllcl m1 the outline of your
form, just as they were years aao
when you danced all niJbt IIICl :wftb
the bieakina of dawn found. the
roses on your cheek still." (1880 ad)
The water at this resort was
believed to cany besides sulfur (the

Women's
Mlsslon•ry
Union meets
GALLIPOLIS
Countryside
Baptist
Women's
Missionary
Union met Saturday,
April 20, at Golden
Corral. Those attending
were: Cindy l!nd Mason
Angel: Janet Miller:
Kyne and Haley Angel;
Misty and Logan Rose;
'Kathy Sullivan; Jodi
Fellure; Carol Powell.
· Janel Mllle.r opened
·with prayer. The group
'discussed old busfness,
-including food baskets
l~ot the month of April;
and the Annie Armstrong
Mission goal of $150
which was met and
exceeded. In September
.the Ray Roberts Mission
Goal will be presented to
tho church community.
, The aroup exceeded its
:Easter bas!Cet goal of 24.
"Tho baskets were distrib·
;uted to the community.
~ Under now business, a
;:Moiher 's Day cookout
:will be held Saturday!
:May 11 and members wll
:c!iscuu further service
•projecta at the next meet·
Ina on Saturday, May 18.
' Following the business
~meetina, devotions were
%led by Rose
1od I· closed.
Fell ure with
and
:,Mlaty

2002 at the Greenbottom
Management
Wildlife
Area.
Along with Kem Shaw·
Wildlife Manager, mem·
ben and loaders construct·
' ed 33 nesting boxes.
These boxes will be hung
up around the area for
Wood-ducks to use for
nesting. Shaw explained
the purpose of the pattern
of the boxes construction.
The box is constructed to
prevent predators from get·
tina in and allow easy
access for the .ducks.
Members and leaders
attending were: Valerie,
Amanda and Kristen
Hannon, Kom, Donita and
Caleb Shaw, T~rry, Brenda,
Tabitha
and
Travis
Bowman, and Kim, Evan
and Adam Wilson.

ray~..,Belrs

: 'm1ke It shine'
~ MAsoN _ The Haer

: Bears 4-H Club Participated
: in the West Virginia Make It
.. shine Statewide Clean-Up
• Program by plckina up trash
: off , of the Ordnanc.e
•,Elementary school yard and ·
softball fields April 6.
,; Club members picked up
•:enough glass, food wrappers,
: :drinklna straws. bottles and .
,other trash to fill three large
bags.
.
[ :trash
Club members were &amp;1 ven
•:couJ)Onl for a free game of
~· bowling after the pick· up,
!!, ~ourtesy of The Mason
~' Bowling Center in Mason.
~ Members also met on April
\24 on Fair Ground Road to
•paniclpate In the first Adopt·
A-Highway pickup of tbe
" year.

1

.. till!( 122.99 ,.,.,.,., 011;.."" I AI£ lllliiiTY -IMSII' l881
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GALLIPOLIS} OHIO

I•P hl..a. school

reu•n••lon

. You are invited to attend a
nurse recruitment reception at
·Camden·Clark Memorial Hospital
from 4:00 until6:00 pm
Tuesday, May 7
L.D. Carsner Auditorium
800 Garfield Avenue
Emplo,menl In/onnadon on Staff Nursing Po.sllions

TOUt's ~d • Hors d'oewms Smed • Free Valet Parldng
· . For mtrc m/01'11141rion, c.U ~Z~·Zm

Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital
· Fur Yo111 Llfrtlml

meet

"
: GREENBOTTOM
: Members
of
the
. Roadrunners 4·H Club and
"Ashton Little Rascals
i Cloverbuda met March 27,

446-0100

·Please aend rne more
lnlormallon about your
community

The BuniU for

S2299
mo

--

1·866-660·5600
__,...__
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.............
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..............
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...,...._
---

~

~--~~~~~~~----·- . . . . . . . . . . --..c...~

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

,,
'

street address

WJ'I!flllf .

It you hive 1 child that hu

(740)288-7413

~ .........

. . . . . 111111 . . . . . . . .

Free Back

&amp;1Fraax-rav

apeclal he1lth care needl you may
be ell1ible for mlatance.
Call the 011111 County Health
Dtpltlmont It 441·2039,
for more lnfonn•don .
Call today and -the 1tnN. ·

,,

'

.

- --'""""1flr:lr~st~n:::a-=m::::e----·---·, ~as""l~n""am"'"e.,._------~-:--.·~=---- ·--·-

Mldlcal HlndlcaJIII
(BCMH) I• available
• to help famllle1.

STffRGfiZERS

Ashly Roberts IDtlldng
her IDflrk llf URG

~
Nursing Gradu

· Children with

.....

event can be made by
contacting
. Donna
Broyles at 85 Locust
St., Gallipolis 45631 or
446-2071. These should
be made by May 22;
however, payments can
be made at the door.
This year the class or
1957 will meet in the
school library to visit
at 3 p. m. A short memorial service and exhibit
are planned .
This class, · celebrat·
lng Its 45th anniversry
since graduation, was
the last senior class to
11raduate from Bidwell·
Porter High School.
After the reunion, the
clau plans plans to eat
the eve.o.ing meal and
enjoy otlfer activities at
Holiday
Inn
in
Gallipolis.
No reservations are
necessary for the meal
at Holiday Inn.

~
. Attention

i· Roadrunners
:•

Vanco, safety officer;
· Amanda Lively, ~ealth
reporter. ,
·
Dues were set at $2.
Nut meeting was set for
7 p.m., May 1S.

BIDWELL
.
Bidwell-Porter . High
Sc:hool was the . first
consolidated
high
school
in
Gall1a
County.
In 1903, the villagers
of Porter and Bidwell
voted to build a new,
two story, wood-framed
school building halfway
between the two vii·
lages on Ohio SS4.
As time progressed,
additional rooms were
1\eeded and in I 928 the
citizens built a new
brick building at the
same location. This
GALLIPOLIS ....;, The building served as · a
Country Roads 4-H club high school until I 957.
met on April 24 for its wl\en the district con·
monthly meeting at Holly . solidated
with
the
Vanco's house. Officers Vinton school district.
were olec:tod. They are as
It then aorved as an
follows: Holly Vanco, elementary . school was
president; Alex Breech, completed.
vlco president; Nlchole
The reunion will be
Kinaery1
aecretary; hold
Mar
25
at
Amanda Lemaster, trea- B 1 d w e I · P o r t e r
surer; Sara Lively, news Elementary School on
reporter; Jenny Stephens, Ohio 160.
. ..
re:.:c~re:..:a
..;.tl..;o..;n=le=a=d=e.,:r;..,....1-oe_:y:..o=~R=e~s=er!!!vl!!al!!tl!!o!!n!!s!!f!!o!!r!!!!th!ills
,

.

•,..._ ............ ..n ............ ,2 -~ .......'"50

brand of sprllll water beer, creek, men salt blathhoost!s. IIICl a
tun~J With I ml line to
Around the time of the Civil War, conduct guests ftont pl~ee to pl~~~:e.
Waddell Sprinas nea.r Rodney
The Black Diamond Dlnce Hall
bec:ame popular, as did a rewn on was to be made from sandstone l.nd
Gallipolis fslancl In the 1810s.. there have a 1~ ch~li~ qina
was lnother small man near Kyger from the ~mng. The dwlte hall was
tailed Yellow Sulphur SprlllfiS.
to be the finest in southern Obio.
[n 1883, ~ the auests Ill the Also robe added in later years were
sprinas was Ma.~or Downina of a better race~n~d:: 11 baseblall fteld,
Pomeroy. He was the man who lawn tennis, croquet coun. bowlina
tauaht Mart Twain how to pi lot a IIlley,
billi:ltds room and bandst~.
stelmboat. Also toming here were · Unfortunately.
most of these
several area bu&amp;inessmtll and theimprovements
Re\-er
came ro pass
atrical people from Onclnnali. One
of the actors, who s~t a week ot and the 870 acres ~~ooent into the
Kyp, was 7-year-otd Flank Jones. haltds of a sheep fanner. However,
pronounced by some as one of the for many years people did rome to .
iully gtut child actors of that en. the springs to fill up jugs full of
Mrs. Gregg, an actress who water, so they could "tlll:e the·c:ure"
appwed a number or times on the at home.
(James Sands is t l sp«ia/ rorrr
stage in Gallipolis, accompanied
spondent fo r th&lt;! Sunday 1Im&lt;'S·
Master Jones.
·
Stmtint&gt;l.
Ht&gt; can be conl&lt;lt'tM by
Among the flans for 1884 were a
hotel to llold . SO guests, a lovers' writing to 346 ftlrmdow Ulltc!, .
walk, a dam to permit fishing on the Cirrlt villt!, Olaio 43 113.)

OWII

Tri-county ·Notebook.

~

DISH!

sulfui, salt, and ~bttlte (11011). In
the 188()$., Homeopathy and
Allopathy were popular medical
stucliiU and doctor&amp; from both
lnnches rec:ommended water treat·
ment hlah in minerals as a way to
treat disease and to miinll.ln aood
health. .
Theft were a number of health
Jesorts, for insll.nce, in West
Vqinia that became POPUlar in this
era, indudina Wftite Sulphur
s~~ anc1 Berkeley Sprinas.
Blue Sulphur Sprinas was not the
first sprina resort to de~op in
Gallia history. In the 1830s and
1840s, there was a resort about
three mila west of Bwington that
wu owned and operated by doctors
and science pl'!)fessors frOm Ohio
University. A. Dr. Kittredge, who
lived there for a time. develOped his

.

•·'

SDelUnt&gt;.

1883, penoiiS bad three kinds of
~ to choose from at ICyatr.

james

'

tent~~ty

lime, rnapeslurn lllcl alum. ln which he liiUbRd u a health food. miJe.lon.g

•waters in the . hills overlootina

You're graduating! now what?
: I am sure that ·right now. high
· school seniors everywhere are looking forward to graduation day.
Parents and grandparents may be
looking forward to that day also.
: While graduation is a momentous
:occasion in the student's life, it only
·marks the beginning of another
' chapter. The graduate must now
dec1de what to do next.
Some high school graduates
. believe that they can have a suc.:cessful career and earn a good .liv, ing without a college degree. Let's
. face it, the number of youn§ people
in today's society that will 'make it
bif without a college degree is
bunimal.
Students seeking employment ·
directly out of high school willlikeiy only be able to find a job that
pays the near minimum wage rate of
SS-$6 an hour, with limited benefits. Even if the employee is a firstclass worker, advancement from a
minimum wage job is a slow

Jnfened 21st

cent~~ty

the n~union .

in a while.
Genial Nora Rice. who is rec:uperatlna from extensive hip surp-y,
spends many quiet days at her
home, 678 Broadway St..
Middlepott.
.
Martha Greenaway called this
week to thank her maR}' friends here
for the &amp;et·well cuds. She's as exu·
berant as ever, allhouah she's not
moving around mucli now. She
remains confined to tho Garden
Courts Rehabilitation Center in
Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., for therapy following a hip fracture.
·
Martha had hoDed to return to
Pomeroy this rnonih, but now thinks
it will be summer before she Is able
to milke the trip home. ·
She Sllid she wus ''touched by the
outpourina of love" from her
friends here when they heard of her
fall.
(Charll!nll Hotdllch is gltnerttl
mmtogl!r of The Daily St11tin1tl in
Pomttroy.)

Sul ric springs were pOpular in Gallia

Clly

state

Zip

OP GALUPOLIS
~

phone number

WCAM

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631

--

-- ·-•

'

-

----~-·

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�. . . . . . . . . .h,lil

P ge Cl• A:nhp Itt-· Antt.t

•

to be

1

s••• .,. .., s. 2112

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
7rtU dwt *-'s -lutlll ~ t# ivtlil!f ~mill&amp;w WHA.
· .

~~hfo~~-fM'il'1IW#ly..W.~~Ws ~s

TMU..

TOlE PUB-

24 Cube

Spanier, associate professor of
English and

Mt.Dew&amp;

LISHED-~

PRODUCTS

a photocopy of a ·
letter from Emest
Hemingway to his
fourth wife, Mary

2/$

Welsh, In

. . . . . . . 111-1111111
•ICCIP'IMCCllfiiiS

llllllCIIf

edit and annotate
thousands of let·
tars Hemingway
wrote during his
lifetime. The
famed author
· was on the CO\'e l
of at least two

Consultants help people tell their story

lllDII'f···--·111111

Itt CttAIUMI HOIFIJCII

HOEfi.ICH~VOAILYSENTINEl.COM

.

[ssues, fore•ground. (AP)

ty soon met a Negro riding a
splendid black saddle horse.
"He said it belon~ed to Mr.
Sam Shires. Assummg a confident air. I told him that Mr. .
Shires had given me permis·
sion to take the horse, so he
obediently dismounted, and I
started on to town. We soon
come to water, but at first the
horse had no difficulty in
keeping his footing. The further we went the worse it
became ... Occasionally the
ground would give way
under us, and the horse would
have to swim.
•
,;Eventually we reached
home, only to find a message
waiting, asking that I come to
Point Pleasant immediately
to operate a case of intestinal
obstruction.... most of the
city was flooded to the second story.
"After considerable effort,
..J located a boat to take me to
my destination ... Before the
operation was completed,
word came that a bout had
brought a case of prostatic
obstruction to the hospital
and that I was needed as soon
as possible. After several
hours effort to get somebody
to take me to Gallipolis and
being turned down on all
sides on account of the danger, I finally persuaded a half
drunk man to row me down
in a johnboat.
"This was the pre-Volsted
days, and Gallipolis was wet
and Point Pleasant dry. My
·boatman's desire for liquor
overcame his fears ... It was
no unusual sight to see chick·
ens und even pigs on the
roofs of the floatmg buildings
... I found the patient in desperate condition, and did the
first stage of a prostatectomy.
That completed, another call
came to go back in the country about 22 miles to operate
on a second acute appendix ...
This operation was performed under ether anesthesia witll no assistant. I had to
depend on a redheaded boy

..

Abby
ftomPipC1
mental breakdown," it was u
cry for help that's needed
before she -or her baby are injured. - JAELLINE
JAFFF.:, PH.D.
DEAR DR. JAFFE: Your ·
solution may be better than
the one I offered. However,

before finding a therapist listed in the · phone book, it's
preferable to get a referral
from a physician. They usually refer to someone they
know whose expertise ·they
trust.
·
Pauline Plrillips and her
daughter Jeanne Phillips
share the pseudonym Abigail
Van Buren. Writt Dtar Abby
at www.DearAbby.com or
P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069.

POMEROY - Everybody hns a
· sltlry Kl 11:11 and for many a popular
way of doing that Is through "scrapbooking" - a technique used to creatively combine photoaraphs nnd
other memorabllla with joumnllng. .
Photos placed in traditional11lbums
have long been used Kl capture memories, but it is tho story In one's own
handwriting that personall!es the
pages and changes an ordinary lilburn
mto a precious memory book.
While some may refer to scrapbooking as n hobby or a croft, Paula
Pickens and Jeannle Taylor, consul·
tlltlts for Crentl ve Memories, prefer to
describe It as "a unique way of preserving memories because It puts a
stQry behind.the pictures."
Scrapbooldng- ls'irealty tr melbod of ·
creating Joumlllistlc photo albums by
taking pictures and Information and
then appiY,lng inspirlltion and imagination to come up with an attractive
display which wm appeal not only to
those looking lit the album todny, but
those discovering it 20 or 30 years
from now in n bolt In the attic. ·

4/$

"Life" magazine

fromPapCl

liii•RIAL lOOK - Margie Blake of Middleport, new to scrapbooklng, attended her 11rst class last week. Hera she
Is beln&amp; Instructed by Jeannie Taylor on the art form as she worlls on a page bf what Is to be a memorial album for her
late father, Gene Hams. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

·---·-.........

Spanier's office
in State College,
Pa. Spanier Is
coordinating a
project to collect.

Holzer

'

PEPSI

women's studies
at Penn Slate
Uniwrsity. holds

who seemed to be above the
average in intelligence... I
finally reached home again
by the some methods, as
weury u disciple of Hypocrites as could have been
found in all the length and
breadth of the land.
"Such trips were mude day
and night during the 10 days
the flood was nt its !)eight ... .
ull of the patients operated
during this ten-day period
recovered ...
"The trip down the Ohio
River in the flood waters
made me want some better
means of transportation
between Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant; but 11 was not until
another. most vivid experience in the Allegheny ice that
a definite determiimtion was
made to try to build a bridge
... We organized a company,
and got four Scotch bankers
to finance the venture ... a
$1,200,000 steel structure,
known as the Silver Bridge,
was comple,ted in 1928."
"That was Papa," said Harvey.
"And his accomplishments
are a matter of record and
history. He was a strong promoter of building good roads
throughout this part of Ohio,
built an nirpon on his own ·
property, and started the first
air ambulance in the state."
Harvey continued by
recalling personal Christmuses, plane rides and other
family favorite stories.
.
"And so to summarize,
Papa touched so many lives,
saved so many lives, and
built so many things that sur·
vive today and make our
lives better. He wilS a master
of the principle that 'all
things are possible,' and his
life was 11 living testimony to
a man who proved over and
over again that it's trae."
The Holzer exhibit telling
the story of Holzer Hospital
and its growth into Holzer
Medical Center wi II be in the
French An Colony's sallerics
until May 12. There 1s also a
permanent historic exhibit in
the new Education Center on
Jhe lower level of the Charles
E. Holzer Jr. M.D.· Surgery
Center at HMC as well.

FN..

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.SWIFT
Sausage &amp;biscuits .~~Ct.

HARVEST

1eoz.

1

FRESH

SHERWOOD

Ground
Beef

Bone-In
Bacon En
&amp;Pieces Hamsteaks

$ 19, $ 59Lb. $

39Lb.
'

•

51bbao

Sunny Cane

Sandwich Pure Cane
Spread 'SUGAR

$

99Lb.

consultant. Pickens didn't start until a
couple of years ago after retiring from
Ohio University.
Both took the classes because they
wanted to do their own albums and
both were so enthusiastic about scrap·
booking that they went into the business.
Tiley huve home parties where they
present the simple steps program first
and then move on to· workshops for
more hands-on instruction.
Because of its popularity, Thylor
and Pickens have organized a scrapbook club - kind of a social group
where serious scrapbookers get
together to cut and paste.
They both stock and sell anything
anyone would ever need to make
beautiful heritage books which show
the good times of family life.
Slild Taylor, "I enjoy scrapbooking
and I enjoy sharing it with other people because It Is such a worthwhile
thing to do.
"In some ways it reminds me of
what I Imagine the old quilting bees
were like because we all get together,
hav~. u ~ood time and do something
positive. '

- .......
sua

s2.7s

sua

sut

37.~0

se.as

INVESTING

Silver lining after a
down market.· Roth IRA
If you were like most peo·
pie, you watched with dismay
. as the value of your IRA
shrank during the downturn In
the economy. It was 11 painful
sight. But If there is a sliver
llnlng, It may be that you wlll
take a smaller tax hlt now If
you convert your traditional
IRA to u Roth IRA before the
value of your shares rises
much .
Oranted you will have to
pay tues on what you convert, but since your IICCount is
down, the hit is lower than
what it once might have been.
This could be the perfect time
to convert and, most likely, It
wm be worth it in the long
run.
First or all what Is •
ROTH? A Ruth Is a style bf
. Individual
Retirement
Account developed In the late
1990s. Contributions to a Roth
IRA are not tax deductible and
therefore don't lower your
taxes at the time contributions
are made. This is different
than contributions to a tradl·

Bryce

Smith
GUEST
VIEW
tiona! IRA. But, when you
withdraw money from ·a Roth
IRA, none of it - including
the curnings-wlll be taxed
(assuming that the Roth lRA
has been open for at least five
tax-years and you are older
than aae 59-112) because you
already paid taxes on the prln·
c)p.aaJl before you clepoaltea It,
This me11ns the Roth offers
tax-exempt and not tax·
deferred savings. With a tradl·
tlonal lRA, which Is taxdeferred, you pay taxes on the
profits plus your Initial contrl·
butlons at withdrawal . The
PIIIM Ml

IIIMIIIII.. Dl

· Have a business n ws Item?
. Glw Ul I Cllllt (740) Ul 2:1.2, ut. 2:s

3 LINI.

"

STORE MADE

'

Wendy'•

Pholtls alone tell a story, but the
joumalingtells "the rest of the story."
Taylor says that she thinks those
who look at scrapbooking as a craft or
11 ~obby probably wlll not continue
domg It very long, but those who
appronch lt as a way of preserving
memories for generations to come
probably will never stop.
In teaching the classes and conducting workshops, Pickens said that they
"emphasize the 'loumaling, because
that's the part whlch sets apart scrapbooking from filling u~ a picture
album. It's the story behtnd the picture in your own words that makes the
album special."
Scrapbooking, explained t~e two
consultants, is about enhancing pictures with layouts, links and letters,
it's about organitlng memorabilia in li
new wny. of using lllrdes and ovals,
geometric designs, decorative pieces
and colorful stickers, and muting and
mountings to make pages more
appealing.
Taylor, a teacher at Meigs High
School, took a Creative Memories
scrllpbooklng class in 1996 and the
following year decided to become a

ICRAPIOOKING -Jeannie Taylor, left, and Paula Plckene, oonaultanta for Creative Memories, teach others how to create journallatlo photo albums. Thev have orgenlzed e scrapbook club where those Interested In the art of preserving
memories 1111 together to worll on pages.

It~

tiot too late for frost

POMEROY - Is it time to plnnt
frost-tender annuals and vesetables?
Homeowners and commercial growers ask me this question each sprlng.
There is a chance of frost throughout
the month ot M11y irt our region; however, the prospects lessen as each day
passes.
.
In aeneral, &amp;arden&amp; wlthln eyesl$hl
of the Ohio River and lu tributanes
have a frost free date of Ma}l .5 to I0,
while homeowners away from the
river and In the hills need to delay
untll May 1.5 to 20.
Rememlier that tropical plants Hke
hibiscus and mandevilla vines need
air temperatures above .SO degrees F.
at night, so aon't leave them outside
for a couple more weeks past the frost

I

Hal
Kneen

·

GUESTVIE.W
free dote. P\Jmpklns. peppers, water·
melons, dahlias and vlnca (perlwin·
klc) also need to be planted later as
they need warm soil temperatures of
6.5 to 70 degrees F. to properly germinate or root out into the soil.
Coinmerclal growers and some
homeowners lay down block plastic

'
•

film. one to (wo weeks before they
plant to assist in warmer soil temper·
utures. Between the raised bed which
promotes better drainage, ~nd the heat
absorbed by the bluck plastic film soil
temperature under the plastic may be
ten degrees warmer than bare ground.
Another season e~tender would be
to try $ermlnating these most tender
plants mdoors from seed or purchase
transplants from local garden centers
and set out two or three week old
transplants for an earlier crop.
•••
Toke a ride through the vegetable
growing regioi1 of Meigs County
(Ohio 338 and 124 from Racine to
Reedsville) to see the progress of this

•

PINH-KMM,Dt
I

"

�•

P.ge D2 • Aunbap 1:imtt-thnrinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

.'(!tribune.- Sentinel - l\e

WV

Sunday, May

5, 2002

i~ter

Sunday, May

5, 2002

.P omeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pieaaant,

~EMPLOI'MENT

Help wonlod cartng for lilt OWN A COMPUTER PUT Goveonmonl Joba Wlldlllo ~~ PouoDit Sowmlll,
INO-I!I
~. Carol Group Homt. IT TO WORK. $251$75 per and Pollia! - - 1101r. don, htul your logo 10 tht
·~ · Conllcl f'lroon:
now paying rr\lntrnum - · hour. PTIFT, FUll Training, Full cltnellll. f'lld training. mlft full call304-675·1957 OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
' .Jottlle N. lalltt, DINoior. ntw aNIII: 71m-3pm, 7am· Fttt lnformellon: Coli or No txperltnco ntcelllry
lNG CO. raoommonds thtt
you do t.ualnoto W11h peoplo
' O.Q, Molnlyro f'lnc OltlriCl !5pm, 3pm·l1 pm, 11 pm. vl~l - .RR _ _ _ 1. For awllctlkln and uom Handyman
: 18 Locutl Slrttl
7am, oo11740--11023.
-228-4887
col lOll frat 1-888·778·4288 Will mow groaa, wtod•ool , you know, tn&lt;J NOT 10 lind
• Golllpollt, Ohio 45531
txt 1&lt;10
cltan rt110r Dank a, bulkl money lh•OUQh tht mtU unlll
•
OWn A Corr4lu1tr? Put 1110
goldfioll ponds, can do a~ you hove l"""lllgtlod lhe
=.ANNOUNCEMENT.

The Board ot f'lril Commlo· ·
llontro or lilt 0 .0. Mclnl'lro Co111-800-41111-0450 24 hra.
Pirie Dlllrlel It -king 1 Dl·
rtelor 10 liM 11 Chill !\do lmmodlalo opening perl·
mlnlllrallvt Olflotr 10 dlrtcl limo/lull lime AN In phy~·
lht lotal odmlnlllrlllon Cltn Offlct. OGmptllllvt Ill•
planning, managornonr and ary &amp; ~1111. R&lt;lfpond to
operation• of lht counl'l· JR03, 200 .Main Slrttt.
wide Parle Dlolrlcl, In 00• Polnl Pluunt, W\125550
·
00 ~.
•
wllh lht policies, rmmtdlall opening Part•
• bt/·llwa llllbllshod and IU• mtiF • I
ell
•
II
U•·l me nurot prt •
• lhorlzod Dy lht f'lrll Board llonar In Phyalolan olllce.
• ond In oompllenco wllh lhe ComJ)IIItlvt oaary &amp; bent·
: Ohio Rovltt&lt;l Coclt Clltpltr 1111. Aoopond lo JR04, 200
• 15~5. The Director Is ,.. Matn Strat, Point Pltaunl,
• oponolble for Admlnlotrallon. W\1 28550
• Budgtl Managomonl, In·
' veslmonta, Aooounllng and INTIRNIT
IU81NI81
• Granl Wrlllng, utabllohlng CINTIR \til WOrk From
: Vltlon and llrologk: plan· Homt. Prr • Ffr $500 •
• nlng, lmpltmtnlallon and $4500+Month
PAll
· · periOdic &lt;Ovlalone Ol Dlllrlel IOOKLET
1-800·170: .M1111r Plana, land aoqulal• 3558
www.oornmonoy·
• "ion, pliMing, dear~. do· homt.com
"''
-'Wiopmtnlandtxpenalonof
• )lubllo perka and lacrrrrraa, Ltrry'a Lawn Cora nol&lt;fa
• .Park Management and op- patt•tlmt labOrer, axparl·
"lrallont, auporvlolon ol full· tnCt Wllh oommor&lt;:lal mow• •uma career and part·t!me trl prtltrred . 740-7-42·
• :.a11ona1 employees, Dis· 2803
"ol r 1
d
.. r o lponlort programs Lifetime lncomal Immediate
• and II)IOiol tvtnll. Clrtoror Caoh Flowl Ground Floor
Full
; =~:~:'~r~rl':/.~':: Opporrunllyl
• programa wilh Counly tltol• 'ltal~lng/Nol MLM
Call
; od ollk:lala, pollllcal ouD-dl· Now. S86·266·4276
• vlalona, cammunlty leader- Uvt In lht Alhton Milan
" lhlp and organizations, County Area? Autism Strv·
., forming partntrahlpt, pro· k:et Center II accepting ap·
' vldlng ltOMioal Wltlanct pllcallona for parlllmo am·
• and tuPPOrt ro cltnoflltnd Jlloyeeelnltrtllod n provld·
".prqvldo ltrvlota 10 Gallla lng dlrtOI lttvletl for lndl·
; Counly rtoldenll. Requlrt· vlduall wllh cltvtioPmenral
, manit: Graduallon from an diiiDIIItloallvlng In lht Aah·
• accradlled oolleg1 or unlver· ton Mason Count~ ar11.
• tlty with a bachalot'a de· Contact: Paraonnel P.O.
; gree In Park Admlnlalrallon, Sox 807, Hunrlnglon, WI/,
• ·flarural Ataouroeo, Horlloul· 26710 or ploau phone 828·
• lura. Foraarry, Public Ad· 8014reopondbyMonday6·
•·"mlnlllrlllon or Rtllltd 13·02
•Field. Minimum flvt yurt of.
'progrotllvely !aeponalbla Looal Homo Hearrh Agonoy
:exporlonooln f'lrlc Msnaga- now hiring lor full·llmo AN.
ment, Malntenanct, .and Preltr homt hfltth '"peri·
Long Rango Pltnnlng. Pro- tnot but nor nooe111ry. Wo
ven uperlenctln communi· olltr competitive wagtt,
'tv ltldtrthlp, oommunlca· htallh ln1uranot, 1nd a
"tiona. publlo relatione an..:t frltndl~ work atmoephere.
buldlng perrnorohlpa. Ctrtl• Ploalllnqulro ar Family So·
fltd Park and Rooraarron nlor Cart, lno., 889 Third
' Prolttllonal (CPRP) praltr- Avo., Galllpolla, OH or lind
red. Open until Filled. For rllumt to: ~0 Box 707,
oomplaro Job daacrlpllon Galllpollo, OH 48831. For
.nd .pplloallon roqulro on
appolnlmtnl
carr
• (740)441·1377. Alao ~Iring
mania oonraor tho
f'lraollal C.ro Aldlt no axperiii!Ca nectaaary.
•Loouar Slrltl, Galllporra, wllllraln. EOE.
Ohio 45831. (740)446·4612 LOOKINCl
FOR
A
;:.xl. 268.
CHANGE? We
an an·
lwtr. 8t llll·tmploytd. Set
EKCELLENT INCOME PO· own hOura '!Urnkoy proven
1
TENTIALI Btoomo modi· butlnoaa. Oomplolo Train·
cal blllo&amp; No ~&lt;Perl~': lng Provided Froo lnformo·
= g·. mpu1
oom
"~&lt;CLMS. 1·888·833·21587 "~ """
88•
·
•
1 8 225 0700
•
•
•
•
:
•
•
•
:

In one week.With us

REACH OVER 28s,·o oo PROSPECTS
YOUR
l\egi~ter
Place
tltrihune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446·2342 ·(740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To · 446-3008
or Fax To
992·2157 ·
Or
To
875·5234
TO

Oearll1irM .
.QlaRJ.u..Ada

D•llv In-Column: l.tOO p.m.

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

Dl

WRITE Aft

Su~ce11ful

~

rI

\\\IH ' I I \II \1 ...

r

I'EHsoNW

t~

HELPWA~IliD

I

I

~DII'

Are you llrtd of thoae har·
.,.rng phone carla? Oon•r
know whore ,lo turn? Call &amp;
lind out your opllono, Bron·
son Coplan &amp; Aasoclaloo, I·
866·699·2974.
C-1 Bear Carry Out parmll
lor sole, Chaster Township,
Me1gs County, send lellara
ot Interest to· The Dally
Senrrner. PO So• 729·20.
.Po
.::.m:::•:::•Oy:.::·:::O::.h:::lo::.4:;:5:::76::9::..o--

eunday Dleplayt 1100
Thur.day for •undaye

llor •und••• Paper

" - - - - - - - · G a r a g e Sale. Graham $1000'1 WEEKLVI STUFF·
~
School Ad off 141 . 1/arloua lNG ENVELOPES
AT
Moonllghl Escorro. Full 110m1· good buya. May 4· HOME I FOR FREE DE·
TAILS .CALL 1·909·350·
00, ;00 malo and female as- 5th, 9·4 .
corte and dancers. Prompl
3895, (24HRS) 7 DAYS
I I
I •• c rr Cla
•-r •~m• 514102
and Proesoona a.~ on·
rage ~•· ~~···
· 12000 WEEKLY! Moiling
aonlk!l We aroo do Blrlh· 2534 Georgto Crttk Rd. 400 Drochurttl Sarrarac·
day, Prrvare aM BAchelor Ladlta S·l4, Toddler glrll, lion Guarantaedl Poaraga &amp;
Par~rea
8p.m·
Bam. rnranr boy, !.IdiOt &amp; Mtno Supplloo provided! ~uah
(740)386-1799.
x.Largo, Olahto, Homt Do· Soii·Addrooood Stamped
ccr, Comforter Stt, Sowing Envtloptl GICO, DEPT. 6,
START DATING TONIGHT! &amp; Dulltlng Supplltt, Kmtl BOK 1438, ANTIOCH, TN .
Havo run mooting ollglblt Trot, MTO Tlaclor. LOla ol 37011 • 1438 Slarl rmml&lt;fl•
orngraa rn your area. ·Toll mlao.
arely.
Free
1·800-ROMANCE
ext. 9135
Yard Salt. I I 0 MaDeline $2500 00·$3200.00 Week·
.
Dr.. Monday 516/02 &amp; Thea· ryrrr Mailing Lo«eror Eaayl
Why wall? Slarr mooring day 517102.
Frat
Supplloi/Poolagol
Ohlo alnglearonlghr. call toll
Amazing
Opporrunllyl
""" I·S00-766·2623 exl r4
YARD SALE· ., Weakly Payehtokall $1000
1621 .
f'oMEROYIMmoLE Bonuonl To gtl otarled,
vi• It our wablllt today!
M II
L
~NOUNL'EIIIEI'ti'S Donato Yard Solo Lellovtro; w w w · • 1n g 1 1 •
1.,~------·· Shop al yaro ulo prices ·ltraFromHomt.eom
RoUse lndullrloo, Albany+ $629 WEEKLY! Mailing lol·
"'STOP CRIMEII"
Athans.
740·898·8200 ltrtlrnm homo. Eaoyl Arty
Laleat Technology &amp; Sacurl· www.rouoandualrlao.o
Houral FuiVparHimo. No
rv Produelo. Unique Fund·
.,
S .
•-lence neceoaary. carr
rilolng ldoaa. FREE cata·
aARD IILEu.s. Dlgolll-688•389 . 1790
rogrr Toii·Frto 1·88B-72S•
Pr.I'LFAsANT
24 hourrtoOrdlng
2227. SAVE $$ o~llnt 01
.
'
aagleoyosocurlry.uo
Addlllon.
'PIDIRAL POSTAL
1 1 Burdtllt

r

Pubtlcatlon

Sunday In-Column: :1.:00 p.m.

O.Crfptlon • Include a Price • Avoid Abbrtvl•tfol\1
• Include Phone Numbtr Ancl Addru1 When Nttdtd
• .Ads Should ~tun 7 Di1.1

11'16

•u•ln••• Dey• Prior To

In Next Dey•e Papet'

• lt•rt Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete

Ada
Should Include These ltoms
. To Help Get Roponn ...

ro

thl!lgh~1~1o~ocl 1~,•jojoal~,~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

blbuM-8tntlnel·~llllf will be rnpon11Wt fOf' no more thin the
an., lou or expenMihll rttultl trom lhl putMkleUon or
POLIC
•• jl.8: Ohk)
'DUty PublllftlnJ
11'1:
IIWIYI
eonUdttltlll.
• Currentf'IHftW
Pill Olrcl I~IM . •
onlv hllp wantld M11
IOitwndlrdl •

11116

HwPWM'IliD

Hw&gt;Wt\NllD

I._Hw&gt;-·W.·All'llD--

$450.00·$1,00000 Wookly... Cualomer Strvlc~,Rtpre· ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII
Mailing Lenora From Homo oontanvo Noodod
Work Crolla,
Toyt,
Jtwtloy,
or Aaoembllng Products. No Around Your Sohodulol Wood ,
Stwlng,
Experience
Noceosary. S500/S6000mc. PTIFT Call: 1\IPI~ ... Grttl Pa~ CALL 1·
FTIPT. Help Needed lmmo· SSS·244-557S
BOO· 95·0380
XII 201
dlaltl• Call Sundance 011
12 4hro)
,.
' "GOV'TPOSTAL~OII"
lrlbulor 1·866·382·2206 24 To $1 6.35/hour. Frtt Coli· ATTENTION! I
Hro Toll FrH.
. applloallonltxam prop lnlor· Now Hiring lor 2002 Poalll
matron. Govornmonr Hlro· Joba 113.21 to $24.110/Hr.
$69,882, 797.67 Owed In Full Benaflfa. 1·800·642· No Experltnoo. Paid Trllln·
Unclaimed Refunds. Make 2126 tMI.I26 FH Rtqulrod lnO~ Full Btntfllt. 1·188·
$S$SS Watkly Helping
720·11083 Exr. 2000 Cell 7
HUDIFHA Rtlurn Thlo Mon·
"U.S. POSTAL JOII"
oaya a wookll
oy. NO Experience AI· Up ro Sl8.3e!Hour Pooalblo.
qulred.
I ·600·449·4S25 Froo Call application/exam ATTENTION:
HOME
exr. 4560
·
prop lnlormallon.
BASED BUSINESS! Our
Federal hlrt·Furr Btnoflla
children como 10 tho ofllco
$800.00 WEEKLY SALARY 1·800·S42·2128 "" I 30 everyday. Earn txlra In·
mailing Salas Broohurea Foe Required
como pervrurr rrme. FAEE
lrom home. No oxperltnoa
rnro.
www.goafleryour•
necouary. FTIPT. Ganu· AMAZING OPPORTUNITY: drtam.oom 800·440-~14
lnt opportunity, Free I up· Work From Home. Paid VI·
pllaal 1-706·431-6600 (24 callona. Up lo i500· IAIIT!NDIIIII
Mokt
houra)
$6,500/monlh, PTIFT. Carr 1100·$280 par Nlghll No
1-686·240·1660 OR 111111 E&gt;rperltnoo NttdiCf. PTIFT.
$967.65 WEEKLY! Proc· www.ToYourSuectto.ntl
CALL NOWI 1-188·201·
oulng morlgogo rofundo
18&amp;4 tMI. 2053
from home no ••r.rlenco ANNOUNCEMENT·HIRING
required. For dtllla call I· FOR
2002
Polloi Burger King 11 aHklng
_
s7_7_·2_5_0·_54_6_
8_ox_l_.BO_s_AC_P l'oallroni/Ftdorer
Hlrt Crow Mamcltrl avallaDit 10
Sl3.21·$24.501hour. Full work lht following thlllt:
'"ANNOUNCEMENT'" Benoll!a/Pd. Trolnlna/Pd . . Mornlnga (81m·2pm), Afttr·
NON HIRING FOR 2002. 1/acarlon No Exporlinoo noon (Oom·5pm), Cloalng
Poalal
Jobo
$13.21· Rtqulred. 7:30 om·tt pm (4pm·2tm). 11 rnltrttlod rn
S24 .501hr. No oxporlonco CST 1-866-726-0083 xl 706 irexlblt thlfla, compellllvt
nee. Pd Tralnlnlf'Full Banewagoe 401K Frat Unl•
fila. Call 7 Days I (88S) AI/ONI All Araaal To Bu~ or lorme ' Olocounrod mtall
728·90S3 Exl. I 155
:~~:14:lrley Spearo, 04 " and employee lnauranet
..Baoury Conaullanla'" We
IIOp Dy Burger King In Gel·
Need Holpl PTIFT Training
llpofla lor your appllcarlon
Provided! Free Brochure!
and lnlorvltw. EOE.
800·678·2103 or
www.beau1yconaultanton·
C.rd of Thenkt

Dllhtl, quilt pltoaa, klrohon
chtlro, chevy thorl bod liner Up 10 118· 351 Hour Polllblo.
&amp; oul18, Friday/Sot
~= ~~;~tt:~~~~~~~:~~
Glganrlc Yard Sola Rain or monl Hlre·FUII Benollra. 1·
Shine, Friday, May 3, 9em· 800·842·2 128 B&gt;l 050, Faa
4pm. Sarurday, May 4, Required.
9am·lpm. Roulo 82, Lton, ABOUT
•
11500
3 mllll Waterloo Road. $6000/month wor~ln !rom
Look For Slgne. Clothea, hornell! Fantaetlc Jslneaa
Home Interior, Tools. Nln· opportunity! For Free Book· llne.com1323
rondo, Furnllull, Riding lei CALL NOW· 1·800·285·
Lawn Mo1or, Houoonord 4489 www RlchnErc com
:Items, variety of Items too
·
·
Hiring lor 2002 Postal Posl· numeroua to Name! ·
Admlnlstrati'Je
Memory
rroniFoderal Hire. 113.21·
Now'a rhollmo
The tamlly Phyllis
$24.50/hr.
Full Yard Salt Frll Sal. 3 I 4 ar 1/arlol'l Clrowlh llmllod pari·
Hilley
like
BanelllaJPald Trarnlng/Pald 2g25 Maple Avt.
norahlp opporl~nlllot. Thai's
Vacatlcna No Exparienoe Yard Solo F VSal 9•4 '"'
whal you'll Hnd at a branch
expreuthelr
thanks
/rr Memory Of
~~:~·~·~ 11 1-888 "728 • 1 112 milo; GaOrgo POrted office admlnlalraiOr al Ed·
·and
x·
Rd. Brandname baby &amp; ward Jones. we offer great
everyone who kept
1 Clarence Ray DeWitt will maMtnily clothea.
benefits and a comprenen·
not bt responllble tor any
,.lve online training program,
Phylll• In their
dtDta other than my own •
WA~
all In an opportunity thai's
05·03·02
TO BUY
battd right In Polnr Plooa·
prayers. We would
'
'
anr.
WvOffice Admlnlllralor·
Make Earlh Oay ovtry dayl
·
Branoh
Wlro left us 011
like 10 exprns our
Donate to AeUaelncluetrlta. Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. TralnH
May 5, !986
iratllude lowardi
SIOres In Athena and Alba· Sliver, GOld Colnl, Proof· You'll aupport the Invest·
~· 1-800-837-7600
1811, Dlamonde, Gold men! representative and
Our lips cannot tell
"The Kina Chapel
www.reuselnduslrles org
Rings,
U.S. Currency,· contribute to the lliOColl of
Church" and
how
we
miss
her.
M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 151 Soc· your orrrce. Dullea Include
New Orleans trlp. Athens and Avenue, Qalllpollt, 740· 11ar1oua cualomer aervlce,
"Ladlo
Aid of Mt.
Our hearts cannot
Counly group. July 29·Aug. 448-2842.
marktllng and admlnlalra·
Zion"
their
3, lOr more Information call
live tunollone. Applicant•
tell what to say.
~40-594-2706
Slide In Truck Camper, mutl htvo txcellonl organ!·
p111yere and
740
God alone knows
The llrol over Scipio Town· 1 )845"0921
zallonal aklllo and lllaabllll'l
toad.
thlp Quoen'a Pagoanr. All Wanrl&lt;f 10 buy: Utt&lt;l Mollllt .IQ worlc walllndllpa~onrry.
how we miss her.
lllfl. Eaoh age rtotlvot a Home. Call (740)448.()175 Come - wtty we ro No. ,I
In our homes lhat
.~
crown, rrophy 1 lllh. or (304)675-81165
on FORTU~E magozlntt
Queen
level receive•
2002 1111 Of 100 Bill Com•
are lonesome today.
~.s-1,
$50.00 calh prlza. Salur·
pa.nl11 to Work for" In Amer·
Loved a11d missed
day, Juno a, 2002: carr
loa. Apply onlne ar www.od·
~
M
740-698•6081 tor tntorma·
wardjonet.comlcareera. ·Or
tnt«
by
Family
·
11on and •ntr~ p&amp;cktt.,110
, ..ncl your retumee10 :
'Nott: Thlt pegaam It no1
HELP WAI'm'D
Edward Jonot
alfllloltd wllh 1111 Scipio
Attn: AH·I4892·PPR
Township Firemen'• Filii·
124.5 J.J. Ketley Memorial
Card of Thank•
val In erty way.
f I Eam up to f2,000 par Drlvt
week. Fill oul ln1uranoe St.louis, Mo 83131
forma lrom homo. No oxpe· Fax 888·880·4098
GIVEAWAY
rltnct. Clllloll frH: 1 (888) E
•
M
a
I

ank You

In

r

or
would

to

appreciation to

Neva M.
Grimm

~---~---'

Include• Free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 Worda, 3 Daya
over 15 Word• 20¢ Per Word
Ada Muat Be Prepaid

All Dleplaya 1.2 Noon 2

Monday-Prlday for ln. .rtlon

lbouaJ!Illand

-------=--

tor

lhelr

\ t·' ll' rei a 1 •
' lo t LI\

.... ._. .
. .6r ..

St..

e

r

I

-------~·

1.,

Free Puppy. 10 mortlh old
BIIOI&lt; and Ten Malo, Ml&lt;fl·
um Slzo. Mlxad Brood,
Pl•as~~ont
DlspoJitlon .

(7~ 0 ) 379' 927 S

86:l.e505
ajoMtOboktdara.oom
~~----------eoE
II
ACT NOWII Work from
homo, PT/FT lree bookltl. _ _ _..;..._ _ __
I·BQ0.250-2098
Happy Ad
www.dontworrybtl'leh.MI

11m

WEIKLYI Procoto·
. Froe·KIUona lo good homo. lng HUOIFHA Morlgtgt At·
Bob-tailed. one grey-while, fundi. No Ekperlenee At·
one yellow·whlle, ont black· qulred. Fbr More lnfOtma·
· while. 140·992·6246
lion Coli 1-800·501 ·8832,

~ • • ~· .....

GutaaWho't
ATtentgar

=E~.r~.7~10~5==~:""'"~~
Kitten• ·to give. away, very .:
plovful &amp; cure. 740·940· IUUWEEKLYI SIIY·II•
2693
Homo
Prootoalng
HUDIFHA Mongogo At·
Lo8r AND
!uncle. No Experience Re·
·F
· qulrl&lt;f. FREE lnlormlllon I·
OliNJJ
• 800·501·8832tl&lt;l.l300
loll· Garman Shl:irt haired www.pr~ttttund .com
Polnlor Bird Dog. Whllo wllh 11000/WEEKLY
P0891·
brown lpolt. j7ol0)245·0020 BLEI Moiling 8roohurto
,.,---=--::,.,---,--: from Homtl No Experltnot
Mlttlng Cal. Croom colored Ntc-ryl Froo Ootalltl
molt oal. Family ptl, Fair· Call 1·800·7&amp;5-2027 (24hra) ,_ •
grow·~• 1r1a. PIMH c111
740·11112·02211

r

I

.Happy
13th

Birthday

.CHRIS
PALMER
ft
1.-,
111:1 •

..,, ..
lbtbday

Flrtl Tlrnt. Ltrgo 2 Ftmlly
't'lrd Sola. 513102· &amp;14102.
Noma Branda, Glrlo, lloyl.
o4-8• , Appllancft, Furniture
&amp; much mor•. 220 Otbblt
Dr., Golllpollt.

CalvlaW.

Waugh

.......
Yoarllrll

Ooptl I rntlltd lht ad up,
Book
yard 11lo, Frldoy
B/3102. Anllquo r o CIIIIro and I ll!lrd ltmlly will
hlvt morr trurr htrt roo.
02&amp; 41h Avo.

•

•

•

THANK YOU

WORDS CANNOT BEGIN TO EXPU88 THE
COMFORT AND STRENGTH WI HAVE
RECEIVED FROM OUR FIUENDUND FAMILY
DURING THE LOSS OF OUR MICHAEL. .
TO THANK
WE WOULD ESPECIALLY
REV. JOliN JACKSON AND JERRY MULLINS
FOR TIIEIK LOVING WORDS AT THE
FUNERAL, Till! i!ISNAUGLE LEWIS FUNEKAL
IIOME FOR THEIR KIND AND CARING WAY
OF GUIDING US THROUGH THIS TlllAGEDY'{
AND TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND FAMILY, Jl
VOU SENT FLOW£118 TO COMFORT US,
BROUGIIT FOOD TO SUSTAIN US, WERE
PRESENT TO IIOLD US, SENT A CI\KD TO
ENCOlllllAGE US, OK SAID A PKAYER. TO
UPIIOLD US, WE SINCERELY THANK YOU.

UU

SINCERELY,
THE FAMILY OF MICHAEL MCCORMICK
KATE, JACOB, A HANNAH MCCORMICK
JIM, JERI, JAMIE A Jl!SSICAALLI£
NICIIOLE MCCORMICK
STEVE A REV ELBERJIELO
I

C.rd of Thank•

to

relative• and trlenda for their
prayere, ftowere, carde, 1nd

food.

87 0

Special thankland kind

worda expreeled by Rev. Alfred

au,..wV

Ul

1110

l~=·

Htlp

Wtntod

community!

PART-TIME
ACTIVITIES
ASSISTANT.
Day/Evenlna,

Holztr Medko/ Ctflltn in Gallipo/i• orrcl Jadaon,
Ohio, era now «-.pHng application• for
rtgi1rtrecl n111111. Wt cH.r now ptr clitm rafts,
Rtxibt. oehttluling,
8 an&lt;J 12lrour shift., in·hou11 CE opporil/nilitt,
rtlot:aHcn c11islanct, wHktncl clillwronricl, cn&lt;J o
il!iHon rtlmblil'lfm.nl,

lign'Ofl &amp;onu1 ol $3000.
.
PosiHons crt cvctloblri in lire following o,W,o;
Medical/Surgery

Obsltlrics

· week.

Pediatrics

Por more inforrnallon

lnfoCIIlon

a "job"?
Dlai·Up Succeu

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Alllofod~~~~!.f.'!~~~ln~ONo~.-- 1
Human Rotourctl Otpar1monr
Holzer Mtdicol Ctnlor

I \1. I s ~ I

.
McCiuro'a Roarauronl now
Exporlonood For(~O&lt;I~~~d hiring all 3 rocarrona, lull or
Ntodtd. Phont 1
• parHimt pick up appfiCI·
1743 or (740)448·1 04 alltr 11on arroea11on &amp; bring cltok
8:00pm lor lnlarvltw.
cltiWitn
G•30am
&amp;
.
.
.
h
Exporlonotd
Houaohold IO.OOom, Monday I ru ar,Gooda Qptralor• Cllat A urday.
jCDL• Mu~lvt a P91111"' , ""I!IIOAI. BILLING, , The
..HIWdt,
wark ' l\abfli, o~"' I" I w ric ~·r Hom
:gooddrlvngriOQrd lndiX
nt nl 0 I,·I
'oollonl por•onal 'abllltlea· Sutlntll, TrllnlnQ, Your
.PC FREE WEBSlTE 90
.wllh Nallanof Aooounl and
'
1 '800
&lt;:.0.0 . cullomoro. Grtal
•
•
"
'llompany lo work for. All
·
oernperty owned and
MOOILI
;.dllpiiO~I&lt;f
locally. Art you Sttklngohlldrtnjrom2yro.
olooklng lo gtl oH rho rood old lhru adulll ot atltgtt.
• H II me • nd H lilt -n? c ataoga,
1
•-·r
11
,u
~ eom!Mfcaa
'Call (800)848·8691 lcr lnltr· &amp; Til No oxp. nao. Solto·
'view. Great Nt.v and btnf~ Ilona 11 Bpm &amp; 7pm on
~Ill. (Siarllngply Olttd on Thuro.,MayGiht Rodl·
'txptrltnco) Alhtnl, 0~10 11011 Holt!, Hunllnglon, WI/
•aroa. Btrlout lnqulrlea only I~E txll 18 or I~W tMII
;pr11ee.
111. (570)888·7928 ul409
; - - - - : - - - - www.hlghlllo.com/Hunl
,Qovornmtm ~0111
MYSTERY
SHOPPEAS:
o$tt .OO·S33.00 par hollr po- 12&amp;/hour. ror rooar area
~enllal . Paid 'ltalnlng/Furr butlntoata. FREE mar·
,S.nefttt. For mere lnlorma· chandiiO, mtlll 1nd morel
•lion oall 1·800·228·3952 No uporlonoo 1
www.411.ullth0f)llrm.oorn
:..r, 3234

s

~r\JOI&lt;I

No E&gt;ptrltnot Noododl
Earn 134,000 Flrtl Yoarll
CDL In 15 Dayal 100% 'lUI·
liOn Rttrnburllmtnl. Ctrttr
Sllrltd Upon Groduttlon.
Llmllod Potlllcna Available.
Call Today! 1·800·&amp;50·•818
www.odllrolnlng.oom

P'olnl Pl~nl, WV

Announctment

lAM N&lt;Tr MIM'IMINn IN TIIK NIKXT 11'1\lle V.:AQ.

,u :c:KP'fiNU NI!W PATUGNTI•I.IMI'rt'-P W
IIKAN'I'.DI'iKAMIC, f'OIIOHAIY AlrrtlK\' fJI8KAJIKo
IIKAitT t'AII.V MI!.o 11\' ............ Jo!NIIION,
CII(HI..lfT~MOI,nOaLr.MIIJ~NVTIIINII
AlllfOCIAT«U WITit OfA81rrt'.M Ap.jl)

lnltrlorl Exltrlor Palnllng
Coli Tbdlyl7~0-4~&amp;·4387, Experltnood. Roltrencoo,
1-800-214.()482,
RtiiOnlblt Alltl. FrH
R:a 11111-115-12748.
Elllmalta. (140)386·8041
SctiOOI.S
Aok for Mike.
.

llfti'.P TUTINC~ 1 AN" COMOfilfAIIt' AM11UIT

'

Residence Coordinator/
Assistant Administrator
Assisted Living ·
Wyaple or Gllllpolla hll1 Wllque A dlllleatlnl
Job opportualty wllll tile o,... for t1oe1r

........., Coordlntrar poo111aa. .u tbo lrrtc....
Coordlnarar, , _ Job wllllkl · be to 11111ot tile

Admlnlltl'lltor Ia tile dty•Jo.dly ldlwltlot
optrtU,.. • tile - . I J y . Tblrr req.W.

ot
I

vmadlt Pfl'*' wbo -

woriiiD _ , dUfenat
- or a buflnno, llldudiiiiiiiiiWII wltb: Tilt
mor~~o~~ 111 or
llolllbctft llld . . . , .
lllrDuP ........tty •tnldl llld IDYolllld MMIIe "'11111, td...,...odve ...., JUdi •

w,...,.•,

1\il

I

~

3

PDST/IL &amp; WILDLIFE
Earn up 19$47.000
For apj&gt;l~ollonlo"m Info
Call 800-tl2~'7054 )1;2Q8
lte
Ired .

~018

roqu

RESPITE
CARE
WORKER(S)
NEEDED:
Would you be willing 10 care
lOr on lndlvklual(o) wllh
lternlng llmltatklns In your
own homo lor a law hourt
tach month? Hlfth school
dogroo required.· f lnloreal·
od conlaol Chrlal'l at 1-8001531 2302 Equal Opportunl

Ltwn Coot
commerokll &amp; residential, II·

ADULT HIGH SCHOOL 01
PLOMA.
Full
Newi
UnK!utl Natlonolr• • ·--•.
' -··~
lte&lt;t Chrlattan School. Guar·
an1HOI Falluro•Proof. Low
'!UIIIon. FREE Brochure.
Call Nowl 1·800·680-3997
EARN YOUA COLLEGE
DEGREE QUICKLY a ••h
• •
olora, Maattro. Doerora10,
btl oorrolpondtnco booed
upon prior l&lt;fuoorron and
snort
courae.bookltl
For
FREE ltudv
InformatiOn
p~no
CAMBFIIDGE

Ctnll&lt;f. lnsurl&lt;f. reaoonoblo
roles, lrtt tallmtlol upon
vlalt 304-57B-&lt;104•
Lawn Care
Looking for qualll'l work?
carr uo. Looking lor sloppy
work? C.lllho olher guys.
l~onttd tn&lt;l lnaurod. Rlv·
or Clllll Lawn Cora. 740·
992·1536

Non-Smoking,
Chrlsllan
Mom will babysll · rn my
hOme. c ""'Kl ma1174 0) 446 ·
3128

• .
• S ATE UNIVERSITY
I · Sprlrig Sovlngo
1
ty Employer.
Home remodeling and re·
RNI LPN netdtd IOf Home
·
pairs, r.oollng, ch~tln link
Cora In lho Garrrrra Area j 110
jlenoo,cuarom wood decka &amp;
FTIPT houro wl btntflla·.
Mtscu.L\Nt::oui fence~, lt~aurance repalrl.
Chook our prloo Dtfort
~~~;7";~~':,1~j7~=
you buy. Free Eotlma toa
DIABETIC SUPPLIES or "30:..4:..:·6:..7::.5·::.37:..:3:;:,3____
Saloa f'lraon . Musr have 2 NO COST II you htve Modi· Top 10 Bouom croanrng
ru:•re e~tperltnee In 18181 of carellnaurance. New me· Service proletalonal rosl·
mbtr &amp; hardWare, Stnd tars, Tea1 Strips, Insulin II dentlal ' olllce cleaning II
resume or J)lek upDan ~pll~ you qualify. (no HMO's) t - an
'affordable
price.
::;:ro~7~~1~":!~rJ·I~.::;: 600·815·1577
(740)992·2979 or (740)992·
Clalllpollo, OH 45831
Old
You
lakt
FEN· 1391
PHENIREDUK? There Ia a Will b h h $30 OO I •
SPECIAL
SHOPPSASI REAL POSSIBILITY ou call 304'·'678·~~84 .
"'
Cheok arorot In your trol. ora eligible for S250,;,J rn
Evtnlnga avalll,ble. No tx~ Compen1atlon. Call Toll Will do Qfl!ll ounlng &amp; other
perlence neceaaarv. Great Free 1·877·851-1~765
tawn work. Free Ettlmatll.
bonoflltl 1·886-478·1342 FLOOR
HEAT WATER (304)576·2371
ut. M333
Bl G
.
TUN . Amuollornow Wil l do Ltwn mowing,
Toltrflaolclltro wanled IO conolruollon. Fraa lnforma- palnllng, and Other odd JOOI
htlp ut qualify peoplo for a lion. GUARANTEED LOW· call 304·773-5034, oak lOr
dlocount preoorlprlon pro· .EST PAICES. 1·800·448· Ruary.
gram. Telephone, oompuler. 4043
printer &amp; needed. $59. De·
Will preasure Wftlh hou1e1,
poalr required on hire lo oal N!ID
AfFORDABLE lrallero , and decka. Carr
up acoau coda for phone Healthcere? $54.95/mo. lor 441 •4231 Ilk lor "on or
line &amp; refunded alter 5 entire lamlly. No Llmltl· IHvt mtiiiQt.
wetkl: tr lntertlted call Jay Ilona. No Pra·Exls11ng con· Will take cart ol elderly,
al 304·675-7077 or reave a dlllonaloxcluolona. CALL nlghll, exp. 1 rolorancu
moa11ge a1877-879·2882
UNITED FAMILY NOWIII 304-675·7981
1•800•235·0200 Exr. 1042
Tras~ Haule r Needad . Mon.~Frl. 8am·6pm.
1
COLt Requ rod. Nlghlo, NO DIETING! NO EKER·
Mutl have 2 years 1111Pirl·
l!ru
BUSJN•~~
onca driving lop heavy CISEI Loto 4-Bibo.lweek. ···
·~'
lruoka. Mutl oo ar. raaor 25 Tho oapauroa do lho workl
ytera of age. Carr9:00·5:oo. Only 11 U911 www.falan!P·
86
1
(740)388·91lS6.
·
or.oom HI ·SNIPER
SS AT&amp;T Poyphono Rouroe
TURN SPARE TIME INTO PSYCHIC
$$Primo Local Sileo. Groll
SSS
Mall·ordoriE·oom· rnrornaiiQr)ally Famoua Pay·
(S00)80,0·3470
maroa .· PT/FT. Ftae Into chic John Paull He'a been -=~~=~--Full Training , www.boyon· ooon on Nallonalrolovlolon "'sl 000'
WEEKL"
Ih
dyoumorrzona.oom
88B• (CBS f. HBO) brlngln~ hla NEw ~YSTEMI Rep~~.
252·g270
IUCOttl ~~ predlo~g ovo, lhe old MLM olow·pay way
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
wlll1 1ho Now EMM MONEY
"'~HINEI FREE Ino
I BOO•
plume donora, earn S50 lo Gllltd Man Help You o· ~
$80 per Wllk lor 2 or 3 dayl Toii -Frt• l-600·86S· 242.()383 Exl. 3041
houro wttkly. Carr Bro Lifo 8809 """"' code 77 Local 1100 Par Hour. Homtworlc·
Ploama Sorvroe, 740·592· 954-870-2920 To conracl Dy ora Nal&lt;ftdl Largo advorllo·
8881.
mall Ploaao aond your lng llrm payt $4 lor ovtry
H
nama. homo phone, Door vorot•mall rarrr•·ed. Make
Work From ome
llmtiO Ollllnd dtlt of blrlh
••
Or Arty Loeallonr
I . J • " I ~o D• $400·$500 everyday rn your
Fonune 500 Comparty
o . o.. n ,au. ' · . ~x apart limo Llmlltd apace.
s1800.$5000/MO PTIFT
87'0372, Coral Sprlnga, Fl. 1•858 . 843•9926 Ex!. r;oo
Fanllotlo Opportunlly
~7
(24 hro.)
Call Nowl
1!"'
II I Ill
nA~I ~
$1500POaalbiBII
www.a ra pro a.com
To Do
Raisin~ Gourmat Mush·
•
•
U FREE INFO
EARN GOOD PTIFT IN·
roomo or a.
·
COMEI Faat Moving Mulfl· All Maktt Lawn Mowers Sporotlma Enlorprloo, Box
Nalronar lndutlry looking and Ourdoor r&gt;owtr Equip- 142. Mr. llernon, Oh 43050
for PtopltiO Trtln II Homo. monl Aopalrtd. Fr.. PICkup 1·800·910·3088
1·800·935·8084
and delivery available. Carr ... NEED BUSINESS CAPI·
www.A-rAmonForANow
Mlko (740)446·1804.
••L?'..
rnva'aloro Looking
1
vou ·oom
'"'
For
All ~pea of· l'roleete
h
Po .
www. capta1saarc .net •
lor Colllna 1•780-770· 7573
Exl. 14
An Eolabllahad \lending
For
Rouror Earna Big
Muat
Advertlslntt
~~~ 1-888-571 ·0225 Ext.
•
;,;,.;;;;._-:-:--::--:-:---:-=--:-:-~-Public S Ia and A ction
--~
a
U

800·~·83 6

filii""-:::-........-..,
"--liOiiJ~ia'OR'I'IJNiiiiiriiiiiiirl'liri'Y,_,~

~

l:'r~j L:~~~· -..=r~~l&amp;y

I

ng

Your
Needa .

u.

B •-•••Caltact Us At:

1·800-821-8139
Announcement

111ft'-···-··

~L~IIIIHAR'I'M(JNITOIIINUt~

1btla ID oulplnt and porriUn aiUiudt, - ·
tdflllalllnlllw 1111111111, llld ......,. ....,.,
lldlll. l'mlclul Job t1Pfl1a1 Ctllld ......... will
be unlldtrtd.

0

c

S

.

1

·

11

' '/..ru*"

1

'"'II:' :

,.,.,h ...

·--OLUTE ESTATE
Er REAL ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY) M.&amp;'Y

HOUSE

l

Public Sale and Auction

i~:r:;~~~~~~2·slory
house
&amp; basement·

D~~~\~~~~;:g~~

w/3
BR· LR, DR·air
All elec1rlc-cen1ral
lioors· lireplace &amp; plenly ol closels • se&lt;s on a 75 x
m/llol.
legal description of 1his prope~y will be found In deed
book 121 on Pg. 552A, all of lol 68 and lhe wes1erly qne half
lot no. 67 of VIctory Heights addition . Also will be selling cemetery
lots In Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Lot ~3A Easterly one half.
Graves 3 &amp; 4. Section A said map being of record In the office ol
the County Cou~ of Mason Counly, WV. In Pial book No. 3 pg. 64

FURNitURE
Rose colored sofa, 3 pc. cherry Queen Ann coffee table &amp; and
lables, wing back chair, French needle polnl chair,
recliner, brass table, Emerson 13' color TV, RCA 19" color
Queen size hldabed, modern roll top desk, honey maple lwln
&amp; dresser, Sharp Carousel microwave, Whirlpool refrrlgs·raltor,
kllchen and dish washer like newll &amp; more.

AUCTION
•••
"'

.,

'

'•k'
'

~ ·~:..

Public Sale and Auction

Cenleun Rl. mn

wu.

OLASSWAFIE &amp; MISC.

ANTIQUES
Slage Coach type lrunk, steamer lrunk, walnut viet
rocker, oak Morris chair, 3 ea~y Arrow back chairs,
Maddock China Mlnglree PaHern England, Signed
print, old plciUre frames, mirrors, lnternaclonal Sliver
platlera &amp; candleabra, eet of mantle lus1era w/pnsma, lg.
school bell, brass candle slicks, beautiful lg. room size hook
llnent, books· The Crossing Wlnslon Churchlll·aet of
Thackeray• works, Early candle mold, adv. Cow Chow Puriina I
milk scale&amp; mual eeell &amp; much more.

• Aakaboutour Relocation Packall"

•
• N4?W araduatH •nd expertenced nUrtetiiN
welcome

For more Information on II!If rx&lt;ttrns opporwnlly or to apply conl«t llotrtllnd-VI&lt;tortan

VI!HICU!t

VIO..p, 910 Thuztlar DriYf'W, Calumbut, 011

1986 Chevy Cargo Yin

4Jll5, " '' 614·4t4·WJ. fiJI: 614·4M·JGJ7. [()£

~ARTLAND-VICTORIAN VILLAGI!

-'• ..... O,pe:....,.....,..,

www.hcr-Nnorcare.com

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
IIUCTIONffR RICK PfiiRIOH , ..
711· 5715 OR 711·5447
TeRMS: CIISH OR C:Hfc:ll WilD,

•

RJCI r .EAIIOIIUCTIOif. COMPANV

1997 OldeAchleva

HCR·Manareare

JOOBrlanroodDrlve
Gtlllpollt, Oblo 45631.

I

Nice eelectlon of glaseware, Pink Stemware, Etch atemware,
Compoles, Figurine•. 83 pea. Franclaoan Dease~ Rose-cups·
bcwla·platel·glasaei· Salt &amp; Pepper shakers· creamer &amp; sutJar··l
buller dish &amp; gravy boat, HV. blue &amp; while plales, Limoges,
glan bow~. Ruby, Depression, Sienko pitcher, jewelry, kitchen
appliances, cookware, sweeper &amp; much more .

da)lf a month

Funeral Home. ·

fl .

Hou'" will be told al12:00 noon.
viewing call 773·5795 or 773·5447.

RNs&amp;LPNs
',lSOO IIGN·ON BONUI
• 11 hour th!fte to you only have to work 12

._ .

3

lO:OOAM

•flnrnlng 111111 hlxilg _...lxlled onll;blllty
'JG&amp; placN 011 Oa!s hliiir(
Conlacl lAir! lamb l.fro.6.11.369S ar 17~) 37:J.3966

VIIIIJa facility currently has lhc folloWing
•PJ&gt;Ortunru..,

- • bolpl!llltr pll"nopbr.

•.

p

Thursday, May 91h a! 4:00

Men &amp; frii:00-3:30 Wind daM !at &amp;51111:00-4:30 12wttks

£""

We.offer:

bO1h1

G:t
=

e

As agenls for the estate of Paul A. Miller, JOOn A.
• Emulor, I.C.P.C. #02ES035, Paul A. Miller Trusr,
• Srr.,...r, Trusree, we will sell rhe l~l~ng on rhe prer~so!l ;

COl~ SwluOIWII

alr1 You can prlteUc:ally

a fre•h Jtart and potltlvu t:hanae In your
career and fulurt. Our ll..rtlan~·VIctorl.ln

u

Localed at '26 masi!Mn Circle In PI, Pleannl, WU. Watch lor signs.
Will be Hlllng the ellale al Helen Slerntt. mrs. Sterrett was a ldtaol
teachrr In mason Counly far many years.

the ,.nse of 1'1tnewal at HCR Manor C.ra, the

nation'• leadlna operator of lona·term
&lt;entm. Right now II lhe purfort Ur1M! 1D """"'

room and
or Clblno11

lti!'O

Cars • Slamp Collections • Anrlques

IIOi/KaiAKH,

f'OK

'
ll2
roomo, l ·

~rego,

l AdJoining Hom" f&gt;&lt;h solls ro H~hesr Bid over llO.OOOI

UIIK MONtTOIIUHU, MTRr;ll. t!.clld • t!:KU.

c:'OMftRimKNifJYJ£ LAI1'MTJHU OH lftTi'.

::;&lt;J

•~•

........

i

==·

room !amity
kllchin wllh loll

Cltarlnct
So,. .,....110,000.00 • ont
onl'l at lhlt ptlot, Ntw 3
tttdroom, 2 Dllh ltci&gt;Qntl
homo wit• many -1101
and txtrll hkt huQII 21 CU·
boc: lool ,.f•lgortlor wilh lot
moktr and dtlu&gt;t dlah·
washer Only S4UOS.OO
dthvorod tnd 101111&gt; on your
loundlhon
Colt'l-S. 50 Eoor
AI~ Ohl&lt;t •
.SQ2. 5701
740
1972_ _
-~.:..:.::..::::::...;::;.:
FIR8TT1MI HOMI
IUURSI
$0 DOWN.
NO CREDIT NEEDED!
HUD, VA FHA
I 800 501 1777
082fl
•
•
•
ext
For Saro Dy Owner. 3 or4
lttdroom, 1 bath, oxoallonl
condiUon . Many new lee•
turn.
Klneon Orll/0.
122
i~W446·5310 or (140).41·

11

...........................,
•: MILLER ESTATE AUCTION

•::

'
1641

Copt Cod will! llrgo hvmg

j

~Z~~ns

I'll ...

1740

o:;:

4

KVAt. UATntN,

l&gt;illl"'o
poyroiL
llld
lllllot
Ill upbold
... WynpU.IofPly
r. . dtd CIIIIIIDII'

03

• Page

f""~~
I II
• u
:::'l:';.;~~~ on ~
malnla'·~. •·try •ar~ll&lt;f.
,_ '"
' ~
Eoirorn Local SchOols, on
A--- 7 naar Cha' "lor, ••o.
NEED ~N E R
PAY
~··
•
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE DAV?? Up to ~~L~alanll; ~')?.,589,000. 00. 740-985·
1/endi~ Route. Unique ma' ·hi "~G
by phonal t-(S77)·EAFILY· r---~~---,
c ne, rea1 opportun 1IV. ~v. Lie• 750005 11t AD·
Primo rocallono available \lANCE FREEl
nowr E•corrent prom po!Onllal. rnvaSimanr rtqulrod, STOP FORECLOSURE Ill
~~:::....,:~)K
~~ :."':.~,:~~~:~
......
Homer Guaranttt&lt;IIServlot.
PORECLOS!D
GOV'T
4200
All,..lotlo18 odvtrtloln; HOMES I so OFI LOW
9
800 · 15•9704 E&gt;l 2IO
COMPUTER ACCESS?
In lhlt ntwttpoper lo
DOWN I TAK REPO'S &amp;
Earn excollenllncome work·
TURNIO DOWN ON
aubjlcllo lhe Ftcltrol
BA,NKRUPTCIESI
OK
~g from homo parl·llme or SOCIAL SECURITY ••r? Folr Houtrnv Aol of 1HI CREDIT FOR LISTINGS!
"'
·~rc·.. m-ta
~ 1111'r
luiHimo.
NoFnUnleaoWoWinl
-·
•-.olo
·CALL 1·800·501-1777 alii.
www.BeBoaaFroe.com
1·888·582·3345
odvtrlloo "any
9813.
J)tlftrtnce, llmllltlon ar
EARN $90,000 YEARLY rt· USA f1 BILL CONSOLIOA· diiC~mlnollon btoiG an
Land
home paekftgaa.
pairing, NOT replacing, TOR
From $2,000· r1oe, color, ,.llglon, 111
Landi Homltllanc;t Improve.
Long Cracks .In Wind· $250,000! (8% Average ttmR11t etatue or national mente In one low pa~ment.
ohiOfdo . Froe video 1·800· rare1. Bad Credit No Prob·
r r
r
Loan olfleoro on hand 7
626
USIC
d
reml For laal reourro. call or g n, or ,.ny nttnt 1an to dayo o week. (7'0)448·
·S 523
ana a.
mokt ony ouch
'
www.graosmechanlx.com
IOIIIroo 1·800·518·4209 .
prormnco,llml1111an ar
3093
E:ARN UP TO $S50 WEEK·
dltc~mlnollon.."
Ohio River, 1.7 acroa, 2BR.
LV Working lhrough lha
Thlo nowopopor will nol
28 A Mobile Home. Porch,
government ~art·tlme. No
HOM~
knowingly •ccepl
Deck, Heat Pump, Apptlan·
experience. tot ol opporty.
H)M &amp;u:
sdvti11Hmtnts lor 1'111
cea, Garage, ·Outbuilding,
~:::·E6 t -800-21 1-9791
"tate which lain
River Aceeaa. Boat Launch·
10 DOWN HOMES! GOII'T •lallllonollholaw.Our . lng r mile, Eureka Area.
Growing Buolnou Naeoa &amp;
BANK
FORECLO·
'"dorurolltroby
$49,500. (740)379·9488
Help! Wor~ lrom homo. SUAESI. LOW OR NO
lnformorr 1hl1 orr
PRICE REDUCTION! IO.S
Maii·Order!E ·Commarca Up MONEY DOWN I
OK
dwolllngo odvonlotd In
Acrto wllh 1999 FlttiWOOd
Ia S552+ wookl PT. $1000· CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS!
lhlo nowopopororo
Mobile Homt Naar Galllpo·
54000/wuek FT. Fraa book· CALL 1·800·338·00:20 ext.
IVIIIIOI• on an equtl
111. Excellent Condition. Prl·
Jet.
1·800·428·0118. 9811
oppartu~lty bates.
vale,
Country
Setting.
www.NewFuture4U.com
srookod Pond . Addlllonal
. Acreo Available, carr Ja·
1 Aora, river lronr, Brick/ vi·
·
Growlnglntornatlonai Com· nyi 3 BR 2 Bath 2 Frropra.e1 acroa. Long Bottom, 7 5 C
C
1 r~o~l~ar
21
1
pony naoda ~olpl Earn Big . oe~, Hardwood floors, Ap· gOOd hunllng and llahlng, ~~~ 1I11 ~end
SSS lrom homo!. PTIFT For pro• 2 000 aq ~. Full Baao· vtry prlvalo, moarry wood·
)
• !
or Office 0.
1.
1304 834 2 96
rnrormallon. Call Toll Froo
1 •5180000 1740 )448 ad, own on bolh oldeo or 800 _731 •9011 ).
I ·S00·249·7424 or vloll
man'.
'
·
• road, road lronlaQt on 3
hllptrwww.htwlogauoo•••.com . 0 538 ·
eldes ol property, 3 bed·
2 Badroom, 2 Bolh, 28' room 2 full balho, 1 112 Priced lo ot11.·2·Siory brlok.
NEVER LOSE MONEV above ground pool with etorv rarm houH wlba1t· 3+BR/Siudy, LA. DR,
~~In In MLMI Instead, try large deck. Newer Roeland ment, vinyl lldlng, lot• ol Kltohon, 2•112 Bllh, CIA,
Famr~
Ml It's Now, lt't Hot , 11 WlndOWI. , acre. 148,000. cloaeta and storage IPICt, Gaa htal,
RmtFP. Baaemen1, 4-car
~~~L~~d~ 1g~T~~~J ~~~ lllnron Aroa. 1740)388·0308 contra I htar and ole, dt· Garage,
MI. Vernon Ave·
I ·S • •
.
altar 4pm.
rachod 2 oar gorago will·
68 486 3850
tachod ahod, lrao gao, worr nuo. Coli (304)875·2940
Start Your Bualneu To· :3 Bedroom home, plua 1' water, a1 ptlc, 2 atocktd Rtmodtltd Ranch Homo.
day... Prima Shopping Con· Oedroom home bolh on ono ponda, $9UOO (7&lt;10)843· Thrtt Bodrooma, B-'h,
lor Space Avollabla AI AI· lot In Mlddleporr, In good 1229
condlllon, $89,500.00, ooen - - - - - - - - Largo Kllchen and Clnlng
Room, 2 Car Garage, 2
~~~~~~~~a~~·o~f;~~~W"Y by appolnrmonr . 740·992· Now houao· rrnonclng avail· s1orago
Buildings. Reduced
81!4
ro qualified Duyoro . O%
Prlco . (740)446·9478
3 Bedroom on Routo 2. ~~~~· 1 g~~ro~&lt;l,.,~:· ~~~~~
MOIIII.t: IJ( 1111Jo~
MONEY
(304)675·!332
oak trim &amp; ·ooblnl!a. gao
fl!MSAU: .
'10 UlAN
3 Oodroom, 2 oarh brick llreplaca, largo kllohonldlnL.--aoiriiliiilliilltrra-,.1.1 ranot1 on U5 flat acr11. lng, 2 1/2 oar garage on t
~
newer car-l an&lt;J vl"yr, lull 112 aorea. 5119,00tr. Porrar 1964 14&gt;70 Hampahlro, 2
$S CASH·BY·~HONE 8$ baoomont '(partially llnlth- area.(740)446·481411115pm Bedrooma, 2 Baths, Fie·
$100 • SI.OOO No credit ed), now .pprrano11, 2 oar or (740)446·3246 afler 6pm modeled . Call lo view.
(740)367-7997
ohtOkl
5·Min. Approval!
At 33 abovt Now
Monoy
lnro your
"tn
---:--::":::-"":"":""--::-:'-"::----aocounr.dapotlrod
carr Todllyll
Toll·
'· 304•882•38117
bli
FrH l-886-424·5oM4 'Exr. 31ttdroom, 2 Dllh, 2 oar...
u
ale and Auction
74
laohtd gJrago, 2 aoro eounlry HHing, Flvt Pol nit l'l&gt;m·
-"-"- " - " - " I
BAD CREDIT? NO CREO· troy trto, 112!,000. 740·
'UILIC AUCTION .
IT?
NO PROBLEM. 902-8048
"::.""'~
•·•~; i
1 woAODOU11tND
LEARN H~" TO GET THE
I:
vn
CREDIT YOU DESEAIIE. 3 Dodroom, In Mlddloporl,
Anamtoa \lil"~',rr :
SEND S.A.S.E. TO P.O. carr Tom Andoreon alltr
L&lt;fig~o010 ""'[~' !
BOX I 278. LANGHORNE, 6pm, (7otll)GQ2·3346.
' !o or orva
j
PA 19041
od
..
I
~::
3 b room, In mlddlopor, ,
THURIDAY
JO&lt;k . ono..i!. j
call Tom Anderson liter
Adm., .. 1ni on • .
&amp;pm, (740)892·3348.
Mt&gt; 11, 3003 triHJ 'M
oromlo"~! "" r
DEBT CONSOLIDATION.
·
"J~WrJU~'
$2.000 • $200,000 No ap· 4 uted homoo loft Mull :1 mnoo •• IO.J31 on lon Horotd .:~3. Joo~lon,' ~\~i
plloarron reoa. Save ISSS$ auel (740)448·3870.
'=·~ ";,"'~'~Oia"'k('o'.:T.::~'~Ir.~· ,,:C'f. ~Mi~~~'~, :04\;i
Ellmlnala High lnlarear.
: •••• ortlo" . rood.
~·6/l~oo ooard lt. tmblrl
Non· Prollt . Carr Now 1· Ranch 1ryro brick houaa,
!,..~(r~.~
..
'.~".,:r.:
,,o
o,
r,.~
~
n,
,''n"'/l
'
,
~
....
,· ,.,,:r-"
,: ,l!.,n't~ng~lmrnl~~~~'8!
. ~~~~
668·861·DEBT (332S) ex I. bd
3 r II b th 2
.• c1
• '""''"' ...rn •• ...
rml,
u
a
'·
·oar
.
CA
L
'o
•IIOOHUif•
HI
,
108 www.debtermlned.com
11 r·•·• b
garoga, n · - oaomon 1• ;
ITANLIY e. ION, INC,
,,.., 1 1 e. s s so
·
FREE
CAEOI't
now I 2 lrploe, hardwood tlra . : ....., ........,..,, III,ColiAcMtleftHr.; ...
.-.r
Charge almoar onythlngl 740·992·5189
. .. ...... _ ......... .. .... .. _ .. _ .. . .. . .. . .. . ..
1/ISA/MCI 160+ Crodll sour·
p bll
COl. No orl&lt;fll Check. I ·
u
c Sale and Auction
600·322·4961 xs4

Al'f'riCUAOlJLATH)N,

OIJM twi'K'K IWr&amp;IUI ON IJITIC JC·MAY, V.tWI,
t!I/J'fiA"OtJND Ot'TIIk IlEA..,, C'AJUYrlfM.t ,

1111111 ....,.,. to:

.,.... - - -..,...
(Coraera CioN To Homo)

aauipor·

ollorlng
A CANOY VENDING rto.
Eorn $80K . Work • hra. A,RE YOUR CREDIT CARD
Grtol
Looollono
$0 BILLS OVERWHELMING
YOU? FREE DEBT CON·
Down/Finanelng
1·600· SOUOATIOIII REDUCE In·
861·9186 E•l . 2403
toroot, LOWER f'lymonll.
A LOCII Vtnclln• Rou..
STOP lata IMI &amp; liar....
IIOO Top Looatrona
·
monr LICENSED BOND·
$90k/Yr. Polonllal
ED, NONPROFIT.
1-800·286·8331, oxl.l5
1nves1men1Roqu 1rad '
www~ldeoaat
1·800·483-87 17.
....
cc.oom

Mid-Ohio Valley Truck Driver Training
OF

Help Wanted

•v~onmoal PloMa- 1-wltb

·~

r

Goll'~la ~·-·

moolarlylhlng. Reasonable
rolea. Call '74G-99.2·2828.
atk lor Don or lotvt moo·
~~...... - ·

•

AAIEOE

lttncdrecmnpr ,..,.,....,....
,...,.,._ laeoaiMo, llld I fa ......

oom

r:::§J

6 ROOIT\ll, ~. 1 112
clt1h, full cltsomont With 1
car goragt. 2 - . _ FUll
011 l'urntct and Eltolrk:
Heel Pump, Fonood In·
1'1'1111""'~~........- . . , ground poor 1 112 oao Qll·
~ll'lN&gt;IONi\1.
ragt 314 ..,. 3 milt btlow
SJ.Jt\'1{.'1-:S
S80 000
~~~·
'
'
8!111 gtlllng oul of hand'
Nttr:J a latllotn?
No uplronl FHI
Coli T!&gt;ll Frat
1-888·7'12·82112

Offlct Work In Pomeroy,
'Www.glldlti.OOm II you 18·1V P-SaltoiTtlottr·
Work.FuiiiPirl
)!avo 10 10 75 poundt ro viet
.loot, wo pay you Ut 1· TlmoiFitMible SO~od. I'll·
1101 For Slucltnll. Will Tr11n
o800·928·4308
1·888·97oi-JOBS

(304) 675-4340

Wo olrrr dolo nwonllal opporiUIIII)' wltb

238-5989 24 hr Rtoordlng
FrH
Bookltfl
www tblz4younow
.
.
OWNER OPERATORS
Ntw f'IY f'lct&lt;agt Up To
89epm Loaded &amp; Emply.
Homt
Weakly.
DO%
Drop/Hook. Mldwesr Rt·
glonal RunL Claas A Cll2
•rL E&lt;p., 1,·800-~-282 .

Pexo

Admlnlllrator

\

~~~~D; ~-~r•·•u

~01

45631

Holley and the McCoy-Moore

fJd liN~ ' " .tt.

1

......,l'••l•••·•tot
cr••••••·•t••
-.Nil.....,

25:10 Valley Drive

I-S77 lit 1-lr 2l7

~gonoy

~vt

100 Joclioon Pikt
Galipol~, Ohio

doHu11111n
Rnouieetr

lnfoCIIIon

o.o.
J~cr~~:r;'"b~~~~e~~~

•GOVERNMENT
JOBS
"'NCNI HIRINCI" lor FIRE
:FIGHTERS/POLICE OfFI·
.CERSiWILOLIFEIPOSTAL
•140/K a )'Ill. Paid Training
•t. Full Btntflll. Coli TOLL·
:FREE f01 Info. Mon·Frl.
,oom·IOpm/EST.
•1·800·4&amp;1·1111111 •1203

Crilicol Care
Emergency Department

ZB·3Z hours per

Arc you looki na for
a career and nol just

With

............
,,..

l'llsterecl Nurses

Is currently accepllna
applicallofts for a

With

.

O.lll,olll •'"' l•lc•on, Oltlo

to be a part of the
Gallipolis

Dial-Up Succ:e"

Orllltr'Tialntto
A ~K Yur CarHr
No CDL NHdtdl
USA N - Driver 'ltalnott
Nowl Call ToM FrH 1·868610.0081

~{ .'~~!~ ~:K,

lnfoCision is proud

company'/

oarrora for manogtmtnl
and lilt drlvtra, Gllllpollt
and f'omtroy k&gt;ctrlona only.
Apply In perton.

888•229•5288

Rehabilitation
Center

strona, growing

~~~'
Domlno'a now laking oppll·

hr. Raoo~lng or vltll
24
'"
www.wtdhftyourt.oom

Nursing and

a career with a

Could Earn
l1e!Hr and Up. Medical
BIHing Co. Nttdt Ptoplt 10
Prootll crarmt. Wll Train.
PC Required. Ctll Now 7
Da•t
1·800·035·3071
Extll2l"
•
DAtA ENTI'IY: Btcomo 1
MEDICAL BILLER II you
lltvt 1 F'C, Earn FT pay for
PT worlc from home. NO
oxperiii!Ct ntctlllry, Carr
U.S. Dlgool
1-588 •380 •
1780 24 hOur raoorolng.
Dtll Enlry: ModiOli Billing,
Ptoctll crarma. Will Trarn:
PC Rtqulrtd. Grell rnoomolll
1•800440 •1107
Dtpl.417
.

HELPWOO'Ii:D

Chief TIIChnotoglot
Ltllortlory
Provlclt aupervltlon of lht
lilY to day operarlone of lht
lal&gt;oralory. 'Aatltl lilt labo:..:.:~::.:...---,..,.--,ralory managor wllh lht ad·
Dr1vora wanlod, no COL, 23
mlnlllrallon of lht laboraloyra. or older, good driving
ry 11 required. Qualified oprecord,
Donofrra,
drug
plloanll will poeaoaa 1
toraon, aanlora wtlooma. 1··
btohtlol dogrtt In Medical
800·531 .e583.
Teohnology &amp; cit oll'llfltd
Medical Teohnologlll
Drlvera·Ouallly Company
11 1
wllh21o3yra. olaiiKOkpe·
maktaQuaiii'IDrlvtrtiSitrl
I
S b I
&amp;
up ro U8opm wllh bonUI•
r enoti u m,I HtiUmtR Denial Hygltnllt .Exctltent Ill Met;UDtnJUtt/VII. Plul
eovtr llltr lo. umon '" pey w\1~ blntflll. Stnd R'" 401K. 12 moa. OTA exp.
oouroao, Jookton Gtnoral
10· ~0 Box 380 Mt CDL·A. 010 &amp; Toama Wtl·
Ho~l, PO lie»! 720, Alp- ton
or oall (304)n3. oomol800·727-21188
1fY••• .28 2r7E':,~ 10 k~:
372 • •
~ .. ------:-::-:-::-:-:--::--~---lllmtlgholp.org
u
Help Wanted
W.~F.':/~rii~~~"J3 11 mol~~ _ _ _..;..._ _...:,_ _ _..,._ _ _ __

.a.qun-u or ropp"·amo Include ...w •

The family of Mary Lou Moore
want to expr••• their thanka

Expotlonotd/Or TlalnHa
OI'Or 3 rn&lt;H11ht
·
'Wtll Cotll Toam Runt
'Grttl Mllto, f'ly f. Btnto
fire
1-800-253·5148

' lniiiOI'J'O\\ ...

Are you looking for

~

~~~
CDL·ADAIIIEAS:
.DATA ENTI'IYI

Pleasant Valley

;uul

delldou•

"7"'-' ,.-,

Hw&gt;WANI'IID

·-nct

!

Fax

8unbll!' 1E1mr• · 8tnllntl

~.iii=Htu==w=~==i~l'iiriO=="=,.=~=n=;Iiil,:;,a=Htu=ll=,.=w=M'Im=,=~l~l';'a~Ht;uo=t:!=,.=w.=~=::;l'r::::a:J;:::w;;'IO;:I\I«E;Do;~)=~~;;::Oirolr:;IIU&gt;J:~:~:
. 'Y::::;iilii==:,~;;~;(M;:~;:::~Ir;IO;::::.=FOR:;tloMI; =:;s.w:;&gt;_'i==;I:r='.a~~~FOR;•.u~:u:~os~~~

• Dl,..tar, il.O. llolnly,. H35 -kly procotolng worlc.
Up 10 $1500·
: Dftlrlol
·mall. Eatyl No oxperltnco $7500/Mo PTIFT. 1-888·

WJ:u:d..Ad.a

wv

'

STANLEV

I&lt;

SON, INC. CAU.fOIIIIROCHUII£1

(740) 775-3330

•

e
:
.. ......

Henry M IJUtnlor, tU, C A l - I ReM Ellllo BrN
Wm J f ...... Jf , Jotwt J lftwMII PNII 0 HouMr

.,

.,

k,..,... ,.,

www ...

IIIICTIOHUR RICII P!IIIIION 116
7ti·UII OR 771·544!
UfC:IITOR: JOHN It STERRETT
TERMS: CASH OR C:HEC:K WilD.

Term a on Rnl fatale I 0"4 down nonrefundable da, of aucH0/1,
ProPCMJI Hila u Ia. Balance due In JO da,, or If clollnl.

�6unbap OJ:hnti-6tnUntl• Page 05

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

r

6

- - ~. ,l'._,:KlM~A;j~~
· ,;'._.JI ~t~~J:~IJC~~~~r!l

4fllllll't Plano• TUnlllg l ~t&lt;C llfllll- Chocololo
lltDSifl, Pfobl-? N..U Llb Pupe, R..dy Mav 8.
n.n.clt c.lt Till Plano Or. Dow Ctowt. Shols. 8 Fe1~..W
malt, 3 Malo. (740)44 I·
0013
•
~'Ill duly acliuottblt lloor
jiCII, ~ aid polr IOIIor CKC '-DIIIO&lt;td malt Cot~&lt;·

~'":' tlt:r::

="::

iib: (740)l!lla-i~

- - " " " hUmldl·

~rtio~:.'L~~~i

:..J"~~~ ~
=-ACI~~TI~~j
~~. , , _ reo, v.ry

ooklng $50,(140)742~6

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(?40)11111ollii!D
, _

WOOD IIEALTf,
INC
446•1 1166
. .
. .fl

ilOl len,

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molntalnld, All R•· 11188 SIO Bllztr. 4.3,

I{m~..~~~:s.

$oi2DO 080.

c=: ..

MOUNT.t.INIIR·
IUILDINO lnTIM
LOO HOMI MCitAOI
'"I 'ftAvt,tiiU IQ, P1ol
~tl'oorJ'ro•

. -

Sk~lno

U•70, 2 bed·
room, vfnyl tiding, thlnglt
roof, Ctll Klrtnt 7·0·385·
I DOS

-·

11!117. 14•70 Mantlon , Htol
Pump, Building, 3BA', 2 lull
bttnt. Ptyolf. 17401245·
8488
$ Btdroom, toto!' tloclrlo
lrtlltr, mutt movt !rom lot.
Ctll 7•0·112·2272

For Ron1: 2 ~room Trailer
Otlllt CO.· Rio Ortndo In B\dwtll. Phone· (740)388·
tctnlo 8 IOrtl, 12 I ,000. DOS
Ktrr Rd., 1111 5 acttt 101, :N
-:lo-t-. -p-:rl'/41lo-:-lo-:-1-. ""'
ai-r -co-nd- 1·
128.000 or Pint Hill Rd. 5 lion, porchtt, Ntor PlAy·
tcrtt. 122.0001 Kygor 28 ground, Harlford. 1285.
WOOdld tcrtt, 127.500 or 7 Montnly. Piut Otpotil.
tc rtt, .l13,000i Martbol(304)882-2381
Rd.. 31 tcrot wllh ttrttm,
·
wood1, blrn, $31,000 ,

muoo
LOTS· ACIH:AGE

• mm !lOCH,.~ IMIAlti!HO,
Jkt, "-"0 U

'ftott tti!HOUI

, tOICH Ulllllll
, ~Ht!6• Wlott JW..IMO
• Wl.lttiluti

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

IIINM'M,._,.

VACANT LAND
MANY DI,IRINT TO CHOOII!
I'ROM
PAICI!I VAAV

tAU NOW JOI IH+:OiiMAfiON,
liM. IUD tiMI Offtl,

,a. "PAl.ACHIAN.

~.

IUIIIIUII

1100 2!l0 2571J
'" "

COUNTRY
$270,000

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4 Second Ave., Gnllipolla, Oblo 4561Jl·09ji
740-446-0008 740~4.41-1111

"'lfl''" ··s""''"ll

SOLD SOLD SOLD

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Ef/4114·-~ ~~
A C}lifit'lftt' Celt«uey 1'

Joe A, Moore-Broker 441-1818
Sarah L. Evana-Moora, Broker 441·1818
Patricia Haye- 448·3884 Cera Caaay-248•8430
Cynthia .Siciliano- 388·1841
Candace
2

Shop sl home...

•.

WE_HAVE

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r•

lt'oHHt!tly lllm•ltlmr.t

"unbap m:tme~- "entinel
446-2342 992-2155

ID05 Loyton 24ft .. 5th

THIS SPRING, AND IT HAS JUST
BEGUN! PLUS WITH THE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE
CHESHIRE BUY-OUT, WE ARE
EXPECTING A LOT OF MARKET
ACTIVITY. IF YOU HAVE BEEN .
THINKING OF SELLING, CALL US
NOW. THIS MAY BE A GREAT
OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUI

1

FOR MOR tl iNI'ORMATION PLIJI\SE CAL.L, B·MAII. US OR
SiOP DY tHE OI'I'ICI&gt; MON·I'IU. 8:30A.M. to 4:30P.M.
SAT. 8:30A.M. 'rO NOON

!111"""-~~--,

LOI lor Sal.. Appro.. 2 112
F~HMS
!Ortt, oloarld 6 rotdy lor
·--tiitiii!HiiSiAiiJii;._""' .building, gravel drlvtwty,
.
wtttr &amp; oltotrlo available,
113 • 0 F
· Portor
1111.
Atklng
" "
arm, Bttulllul $13,1!1!8, Ctll (740)448·
Oonlly Rolling Hlllt, 58 4514 lrom 8·5 or (740)448·
Aorn Tllltbltl Tlmbtr worth 3248 11111 epm,
20. 30 thou and. Ftrm It =::::=.:7:~~~=:­
dlvldld by Dodrill Rd, RUrtl MIIQI CO. ~IC LAND
Wiler Lint alrotdv tvtllt· Now on tilt Mtrkot. Four
ble. Lolt Of Rood ~ronltge. tO 1011 lroolt turroundld
Ont lmprovld Building Slit by Shtdt Rlvtr Stolt Forttl
Willi lntltllld pond, Cfrcultr tnd only mlnulllo from
Orlvowoy, Sopllo Syatom, Forked Run Slllt Park. ldt·
Eltclrlo Servicing, Concrt1t 11 lor tho ouldoort lover!
FIV pod 30&gt;40, ~10 DOdrill Atk about our Cluranct
Rd .. VInton, Ohio, 011 Slllt Salol Call u1 tOday lor
Routt leo. Approlttd PAll MAPI • DITAILI.
IW ,ooo, Atklng 1135,000. Anthony Land Company,
Strloua lnqulrtl Only. Ltd.
1·100·213·f318
~~~81!2·2148 or (740)474· www.ololond.com

orl740)444·1311.

~. ~~~400.00 ~~~c!"~~\'1:.:.~ ~· Loodod. Top Cond&gt;

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$33,660

Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clork
Chapll Road, Porter, OhiO.
Ibr, Hud Subtldind opt oil (740)448·7444 1·877-830·
ulll, peid lor oldorly ond 9182, Frot EtHmlltt, EIIY
llnonolng, 00 doyt ttmt 11
dit·
tblld 6.H.O 1304!075·8871 oath. V11a/ Motltr Card.
Orlvt· t· lllllo tavt tlol.
Uptlaltt Apartment at 04
LOCuli St. Slovt and Rolrlg· Now &amp; Utld lurnlturt 11011
orator Furnlthod, 1290/mo. bolow Holiday Inn, ~IMIU •
Ulllllltt lncludod. I Ptrton go, Ut1d oouohtt, mal·
Prlltrrtd or Couple. 1150 lrttNt, ~rotttrl, Q! With•
dtpotll. (7.014•8·0081.
tr, llppin gao range,
Sohoot bUa. Clanlpcllt, Olilo.
(740)448·•782

:ood,lt'~~Ciw
Fori&lt;Mitil
111(7:,!1~1~0~~
-··
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• Ollf.OID, IIHAlt"''Miti
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• WE ARE EXCITE!&gt; ABOUT OUR NEW WEI SITE"
PICTURES ANb
liON AVAII.Aat.E

Ktnmoro BlaCk Flat ttl'lllol
oltci(IC rango. Rtmo•ablt
grill. SIII•Cit&amp;nlng . 11100
new, S300 080. 17401448•
eg14
·

OBO (304)87 •

•uduet l'rtoecl 'll'tntml•
alonl All ,...,.,, To
0v1r 10,000 Tronamllllonl,
Rtbulld ~lit, 740-245-5877,
Coli: 339-3785.

I rib

pm;
1::10 a.m. 10 12 Noon
Alltn C. WOOd, lroktl· 44&amp;-4523
Ken Mo191n, Broktr • 440871
.
Jtlnt11t Moan,· 25t-174S
Patricia Roll 74D-44.10M

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~,_li•lltyeoDIVm
!..~
1""" ~"
--~... 1 1
Wnlte, E•lrao, Atklng
$11,500 ORO. (740)388·
8376. C.loftor 7pm.

on the
classlfleds!

0808

GAI.l.II'OLIS, 01110 4!631

HOURS: Mon-Frl 1:30

'- 1 1

1980 GMC 1111 ton Dlcl&lt;up
truck, ao1000. (740)248·
523&amp;
.
lee:t ChtVy 11/4 ton 80,000
mUtt. now line, dull .,.
hlull, etrllurt!Qt tunt )f.

n· AA~ I

I 91!4 Covallor. 2 door, I 1189 lbyolo 4•4 lrucll, niW ~, · 11- taddlt
Koyboiord VK7 Roland, 2 $221!5 . 191!8 Borello, mlllor, aoklng $3.000 OBO. baga, .....,ro long tholo liM JI)'CO PQP·up oompor,
Qam\en Ytoltr\t, 2 Show· $2685 . IVIKl Borella QT, Ilk lor Mlkl. (740)742-2220 plpH, 2220 mllel. $7,000. mony IKiru, $3,100 ,00.
~~~ ~10 ?~
~~t~ Stoll Guller $1995 . 1993 CaVIIIIf. 4 1998 GMC Sonomo, SLS (740)44H527after 8:00.
~740~·:-99-:2:--69_1-:4--:--:--Real Estate General
0tlllOrtunlly. l14tl104I·IG82 lno ..,.....Ia Zing In SINng door, $1995... 1995 S·IO, j)ltkago, Air, Auto, TUt, Got motor 10001110, now In I Dill! 5th whltl Prowler,
.
lntlrumont
Rlpelr. $3496 , COO" MOTOIII. Crulto long Bad 52K I&gt;Ol, 411ec, no llolnta ,.. 2111, Like Ntw, Sloapa 8.
JET
•
(140)448-0103
mlleo,' Original Owner. qul...t, $10Dillncludoa thlp- Sogt Groen
Interior.
AEFI~'TION MOTORS
Fllun
. li &amp;.
1996. Chov L . I 89 00!! $7300 (740)448•471!4 or )&gt;ng to your home. COlore. (740),778·8 t 22, (740)352·
:=.~~~rOll':::~' ~
Vrotm\IILI'::i
mllao. 3.1 ~-8u~n';na, Now . 1740)4~·2g5'/
;~~:rntl or I·
' I 1 ~ \ I ! I ...,
IIQO.a37•118118•
Tlr&lt;lo,
Aaklng
$4000, 88 Sllvorodo, Cl800, El&lt;t.
AlperaQUI (put)&gt;e paoolon) (3011675·2525
cab 1 nbod, new 380 ong. (11111. BoATS &amp; M&lt;JI'OIIS
IW AND UIID ITIIL orgenlc grown ' llowera. t 996 Dodge Neon, oleyl., 8 &amp; lrtnt .. lo many now pertt I
•UK SALE
•
HOME
Vlfllli.. BfttY Paten on Rl tpotd •8 000 mlloo Erctl· lo 1111. "ctlllnl lor toWing,
IMPitoVFMmrS
;
.:-' BMmt. Plpt Rilbat IRi E, ot Syracuat, 740: ''"' . Condlllon. 'sMoo. otklng $5950. call onvtlme 12n SHro StrniV with troll·
~~. A~. Chon- 002-1440
(7401446-7•28
304-882-2468
" · ~., 1 e~~ mot·-.
IAIEMENT
ntl. Fill Btr. SIMI Gttllllg
~
·-"~
~·
For Oflllna, Drl-lye &amp;
1998 Ponlloc Grand Am SE 110 GMC Bonomo SLS, 2.2 Fllh Flndlro, tiO. $1300 In·
W/4TIAPROOFINQ
Wllkwtye, L&amp;L &amp;Itt~&gt; Mot·
V•8. Air, Loodtd, 84,oo0 llltr, AutomatiC, Ovtrdnvo, votii&lt;J , Taking ollort. Unconditional lifetime guar·
ala ()pin Monday, '1\JooGa~
mllat, $0.1100 or llkl Ovtr 85,000 mlln. AIN FM Ra· (740)245-0ell
aniH. Local reterencea lur·
nlohtd. Ellabllthtd 1975.
w.d-y &amp; Fllday, 8amFAHM
Paymtr\11. 1304)5711-4170. dlo, Air condl~onlng, Bid
"'-·
Llnor and Flborglaoo bed 1875 Chlytltr OUibOird 10 Coli 24 Hre. 1740) .448·
4;30pm. CIOitd Thuraday,
$aturdioy
&amp;
Sunday.
I&gt;V\!Il'MIINT
1907 Pontiac Grand· Am. cover, 15400. 174D)378• Hp motor, oloo . lllrt, IMler 0870, Rogort Buamenl
1740)4411-7300
SE . 4dr, alrloruloa. 14,978, 2428
erm&amp; ramole oableo, runo WotorprooHng.
1
04
4014
13041875
385
Old Funlontd Iron Bath tilat Coillnuornattontl
'
··· ··
Ltcnard 8' rallld topper ~~27a: Grec:; Jr~~~~o~ •
"'"' 1304)67S-369e
Ttaotot, 2 Wholl dlotol, Low 1997 Saturn SLI, 5 I!)Hd, till 1897 or nowtr Fonl
Qonoral Homo Molnlo·
Hourt, EKctlltnl Shop"' AC, $3500. (740)379·2788 plok·up. ookln~400 :00 198&amp; Pollrit XL 750 Jtl Ski C!C
· PoliUOIIi Oanittt, Llkt Ntw, 1740)24&amp;·15884 oiler 9pm
.
OBO ~ •••.
with lrollor. Qood Condition, none.. Pllnllng, vinyl old·
lng, oorpentry. dloort, win·
- ··
, eoe t&lt;la s t
ex •;;·.;~;;:;;;;-;:;;:~--.
batna, mobRe home
o~ro':~~ 5 ~~~:: 07 JD 5500 73 Hp Clb, hoot 4WO; 341&lt; mt~.·~dld:
v~ &amp;
~t.:0)700~:~·· 13000· clloWa,
repair and more. For free
illl!l. 1740, ..8•1429
&amp;AC, Wgla. 1140 houro like I740)388-0I 45.
;:.::;.::.;::.~.:..;;;.;;.;:.;....,.__ now oond. Ina !do &amp; out 304·
.,.
19110 2011. Suncrulltr Pon· tlllmotooall Cnat, 740·992l'ool Ptrto tor Solo ilftor ra• 578..2812
I D98 Plymoulh Braozo,
loon BOll. eo np, JoMton, 8323.
()&gt;owl, Diving llortrd, Voo•
· ·· ·
40R,
Automallc,
Till, 11!88 S·T Blazer 4•4 In wllh ttallor, ille tackllo,
uum, P®t Pump, Lll]tlra, Fordo 2800 DIHtl Trocli&gt;r, Orulll, Automollc Door goOd oondlllo~. (304)878· doplh llndor. Etc. Phone Superior Homt Malnle·
nonct, Wo dO 111 Ropelrt on
~lddtr &amp; Rlllt, etc . 4800)!!88400022 2• 5 M.F. Locka &amp; Wlndowa, 00 Play· 3384 oiler Gpm. on Wnk· (304)875·183A
Homtt.
lntldl and Out.
(740)44I•Dllel
(700
-8&amp;
trl740)441-8800
:d•~Y'::.·------ ::.:.=::_:_;.::_
_ __
Plumbing,
_
1987 Aquilron, 1811. opon Corpontry,
Prom DrtUH: IRI ~n 10, Whllo Form
Trootor, 70 HP. 110 Honda Aooord LX T!Win· 1091 Ford E&lt;ploror, 4WO, bOw, 3.01 Merorulttr 1/0. Trenching , Otokt, Bulldona navy, ona MilO; ll)tlte ~~~~~1 1!38 1 Condlllon. dowo, Polloh Aluminum PW, PL, rod, ounrool, IP· Runt good. many IKirae. lngt. (740)«1-0113
4, pink; dyad to moloh
•
Rlmo, CD Player, Now pro&lt; . 150,1100 "mllet, liking $6,000.00. 740·992-:1238
ahooo, bouaht at Brlllony,.,
·~ocK
~~ o, 54,800. (304)87&amp;· $4,500.00 . 740-992-8273
porltot oonillllon. Make ol·
...,,~,
••• 9
2000 Modtl Flener 18' V·
!rtt, 740·002.0053 or 881·
Bottom Boot 9.9 Moroury,
TC BE SOLO AS IS. 11191 199 5 Toyota, 4wo, EKI. Trolltr, $3000 . (740)245·
4088
F~--:-~~-~~ 4.H and ~~A Club Pigt lor Moroury Tro~or. 107,000 .cab, 138 ,000 mllit. goOd 9:;1~09:__ _ _ _ _ _ Rotldenllal or commarcltl
Proto and Orlill!l1tn '!Mil .. Gallla, Mala• rind Maoon mlloa, nHda clutch, Aoklng condiiiOA, $5,100.00. 740· 93 Pontoon bOll &amp; 85 Hp wlnng, 'now toivkll or tt·
Qall Andy, (740)4&lt;18&lt;311110
C'l&gt;unlloa. (140)388-9033 or 1800, II lntaraalld conlaol 1!92•3085
motor wl trllltr , neodt pelro. Miller uconaod alae)
Paul Barker ai .The Galllpo·
trlotan, Ridenour Eltclrlcal,
Sawmill iUOS, Now SUI!Or 1740 388•0178 ·
111 Dally Tribune, 828 Third 1g98 EKploror XLT, 4•4, tome work $1800. 304-871· WV000308, 304-678-1788.
lumbtrmatt _~000. larger QOATI POll IALI
Ave ..
Galllpolla. Ohio loodtd, power ovorythlng, 2::1:::98::__ _ _ _ __
CIPIOII!tt, mort Opllont. 50% Boor Femalot Wllh 45631. (740)448·2~2
now II rot, $e,OOO.OO. 740- Taro Whtol Horot Riding
Manulaaturtr ol tawmllla, kldt l&lt;&gt;r ll1o. Purtbrld lo·
·
949-2221
Mowor, Stooo. 17•01245·
OdQ4!rt and tklddtrt, NOR· !her. Very rueonablt. I 988 cnryaler 5111 Avonua,
9109
WOOD INDUSTRIES 25~ l74o) 245 .o 405
1998 DOdge 1800 Loromll, ::.;;:::__ _ _ __
11111 $850. (740)245-5235
Sonwlll Orlqe, Buflo)O, NV 8·30pm
F
~
A
n
or
•c
I
4K4,
Ouad Cab, Loaded , USED BOATS
1988 0'" e g ' ' Y" 5 $18,000.
14228. FREE lnlormatlon 1- ·
'
(740)448·2218
1988 a..yllnar, 1011, 4 cyl.,
apei&lt;J, $1350, IDI!4 Chevy
100•875- 1383 EXT, 200·U Llmoulln cattle• 11 ttgltler S·IO EKI. Cab, 4, 4, V-B ,
Oodg R
Volvo
&amp; troller. 1988 Bomb·
ct&gt;WII· e wtollves. 5 ylt to ... $6800 1992 ~ 10 2000
• em 18
or lith &amp; tkl, 1711, 4 cyl., .
Single bed mallrtlt &amp; bO• cllvt' 6 yaanlng built both ~to,
·
aengor von, loodtd, 21,000 Mercrultor &amp; trallll. 1980
!fll201n1o. 11oo.oo. 740-01!2• rod a' block, (740)808·i178B ~..
. s2~gri. . ~4 r
.60 ~;· mllee, oQot over S3o,ooo 1511 ~laytlme wlln 8BHP
1288
,
now, Uklng 121 ,500, Evlnruda &amp; troller. 1991
1
740 742 3033
SOCIAL SEC.URITV ·OISA· ~:~riln~~c= ~~~~~. o~~~~:i •o DOWN CAI'I81 POLICE 1 1 '
Maxum 1711 wllh 70HP
IILITY Claim Denltd? Wt , Cham~lon Hill Wldeeprtod, IMPO. UNOS &amp; RE~OSI 87 Ford F·l50 4•4 V·8 Force &amp; Trollor. 1996 Mara·
8ptCIIlllli In AIJpoall ond Champion Hill SXT BOCC HONOA'S,
CHEVY'S, Auto, Air, Clood Condlllon: do 1811, 4 o~l., Mororulatr &amp;
Htlllngt, PREI!. 0
OION$UL• frovoltr &amp; WLC Ecllgoa, JEEP'S &amp; SPORT UTILITY. (740)288·1417 or (740)258· troller. 198 Marada 2111.
WWW. WISEMANREALESTA TE.COM
'rATION.
Btnllll Ttlm gonllo guoran!eod II 00, CALL FOR LISTINCIS I• 11228
·
Sport Cuddy V·8, MtroruloStrYICII, Inc. 'Tbll·lraii: I• oaoh~all 304•372•2389.
800·451.0050 EXT, C·9812
.
et &amp; troller. 1999 Morado .
888·8i!e•4082
Mot
121ft, V•8 Mtroruloor &amp; troll· lllllll"l
,;.;;;~~~=~-- Whlll laying nant t 1/2 yr. 1!19o Sulak Rogal, 740- 992.
'OKCYCLI'li
II. All boolo ooa PRICED ~=::::;:~;::~-.,...,,.....-..,---;._
ITEEL BUILD! NOS,
old tor 1o1o, so, non ~168
·
TO SELL. J.s. Marino
. Rial Eetate General
Real Estate General
Now1 Mutt Soli. (1
._40.:..i9_B6-_3..;_9..;_88____
.~ 2 -no R·" CullomV
, ..,40;,:1:;,;25;;;11-e.;:,;.;leo;;;__ __
1
30K•O Wll 111,800 now •~
'"
~
,7,800: 40.50 Wll •17,100 Whlla laying htnl I 112 yro 111111"-""!!!!----.. Soli Toll Harloy Oovloon"
Allro PARTS &amp;
llOW 111.000: 50MIOO Wit old .80 eanlt each 74D·II85•
TRUCKS
E•oollanl Condition. Cutlom
ACC!MliiiES
tall 800' now 121 ,UIKl: :.:39:.:.68::..;.- - - - - .UK SAU!
Seal, Wheel, Lowering Kll &amp; 1.,~-..liiiiiiiiiliiiiil-,.1
•~~ It ••• 8•" ...........,
- ·- ·--ll;~t;;::,;~_.l Lots ol t)ltraa, 114,000.
"""" w ...., "" '~" Whllt Loylng Hono I 112 1740)448·8413. (740)388· 11!91 OOdgo EniJ)no &amp;
e,aoo, 1·800·4._·5128. - Yllll old , 1!0 oonlo I plooe. 1973 lnlernallonol Slngll 1870
Tranamlltlon, 3.3 '~-8 plut
Two Bloycltl, Vtry GOOd (740)1185·31!58
A•il Simi Convonllonal
·
other llemo, (740)388·11048
Condlllon lilly LIHit Uti .
2ap. AKal, 200HP. Dlo· 1908 Yamaha Worrier 310.
18 j;;;Ail Mountain Blkll,
••, Auno Great 11500. Call Groot Shope, 12800.
Hit I"Hira. (740)448&gt;0678
Saturooy Loavo Mee..ge. (740)448-2804
17401388 ' 9418
Roger Hood,
ID09 Harley Dav)ion , 1200
wattnlno Speolat: 1!14 200
1978 Cnovy 112 ton plok·up, Cuatom, 19000. (740)379·
~SI 131.00 Ptr 100: 1" 200
appro• 36,000 mllaa on ro· 2788
1'81 138.00 l'tr t 00: All 11189 Ctltbrlly, 4x4, Auto, buill 355 englna, alto ralliJIII
$1'111 OOmtlrtiiiOn ~1111ng1 R"unt &amp; Drlvoa Grul, 350 lrMimlaalon, aaklng
tn Stock.
Nudo
Pelnt .
S4eo. ll.•oo.oo oso. 304·882·
ltON IVANI INfllll'ltl .. 1740)•141 • 108~
3448
II Jookton, Olllo, 1·11()().
~37•1!521
---=--=-=-~-::::----:----

110 pon,, $10;

.lHOCtJST S1'1tEilT

11!92 rord Muotong GT,
t - ohlrgor, with
now~,.. anu cnn~~~~t pooy
wh"''' CD p!ayer, many
oalrat, ooklng $8,000.00.
740•1!40·9219

1&lt;)1110)

MIJroKrnlBS

Buy from the Classlfleds!
Real Eatate General

1'"'1~

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.. J',

• *

446 6806

~ (!)~

.

858 Clark ChtlpOI Fld.
Sidwell, Ohio 45614

Branch Office
23 Locuat St.
Galllpolla, Chloe;
4••
w 31

.
r:

Real Eatata General

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIAGINIAIMITH,IAOKIA ............... 44HIOI
QAIL IILVILLI .................................. 44..120t
TIIIIH INVDIA ......................... ,......... 441•t411
JDHNNII IIUIIILL ........................... IG7.0III
DAVID INVDIII .................................. 441•t481
OUR wee PAQIII:www.vltmlthroototloto .com

lol04f HOMI IN THI OOUNT~V

LAND "
• •lfl/
livable homo wllh Formal LR, lll·ln
"'l , rtl ,, bUIll In OVInl., "• 1U11 btIht,
-··ry otrptl
IuII dlfl/ btatmon I. ,~
WITH LOT. 0 •r

::on.:!i:. :..o: :.::J~~

oldtr 110mt &amp; btm on propeny,
FrOflllng on 2 IOidt. ChooN 0
IChool AddavUII, Bidwell, River
Vtllay. You oon on~. tpprtcllll 11111
homo by making an appointment to
lntldl. Owntr 11 on•lout 10
Nil, 10 movt on IIIII 1111 lind In 1
hUrry. VLS
II2IN CHIIHII'II ARIA Old flop
mint
1800lor"''nunllng
acrt. 162
rtt. land.
Groat
01
••
lion
14
:;,';,,01i 1.;;;';'R 7, acrlt mil
14041 MObllt Homo Lal 1 Aa rri/1
on PIHNnt Vtllay Rd. 117,000.
VLI
HHO ,AIUI.OUI IARG'IN·
"
Brloil &amp; vinyl e SR, 2 SA nome on
prillall I tort lot. Fomlly room,
living room wfl!replaoo, DR, lnd
lttQt utUIIy room in lhll 0110 with lull
blltmtnl. A - 2 oor geroge
ana dottchtd 2 Olf geroge 11 will
0PUk1 b1 uno for IIIO(tge. Prlcod
for I qolok atlo. t85,000
1404J IKIDMOIII ROAD oH111 0
rllo4l tllrl« homo. 2 lltdroomo, lg.
L.R., Kltohtn, Utility rooln. Olllot or
:ltd
bedroom... Poi1111 btttmtnl,
nice bedroom, 0i0H1 and -~
11111,
112 IICII IIIII.
•••
~-"
~ 10
"""'
- · or
mtke ·lhll- •
en oomt
1nvt11rnon1
oomtortlblt homo. Now roof tnd
- · · nlot tiding. C.N VlretnJo
II HO 5101
H14P-II II WHIIII
YOU I'INO IT. Thlt c11otming oldtr
nome ,.. bHn rtn!Odlfocl, nlot
illlel1en, 2 f/2 btlht. a btdnnt,
IOciiOd In 1111 oounlly. Nlot lot 10
tnd ...
-~·111
~
~·~ "~
tmlly.
,000
NOll OUYAN TWP. eo Aetot rtlll
IOciiOd on Twp. Rd 2 blrnl In
nood of roptlr. 2 .;altrnt, llll'IIO
tnd · Oro111 hunting or Qtt•a·
way. JR
o
.
c

ttorz,

C

•=

olltrld. Localld SR. 7 South. All
lltolrlo 3 bedrm., 2 balho,
equipped kll, lormol LR. din with
gao llroplooo, lltol pump, new
oorpel, woohtr, dryer, ronga &amp; rtf,
Dtok on tho roor, Comly &amp; oo~y
well dtooroii&lt;J home and you can
hlvt
lmmedlolt
PQIItltlon.
IONUI TO RUVIRI IDOl Skyllno
mobllt nome, 14' • eo· lncludtd In
lht till. 2 bedrmo, I bllh, tal·ln
ldl., lovely LA, wtthor, dNif, ra''
·,..
&amp; rtf. Evorylnlng IO lmmtoullll. I
1\r. mil Of wtlllandiOI...,. ~oundl.
"""
2 Oulbulldl~itll';"t
-·, .on .,I I ltlll
Call VLI 4
14017 LOOIIId ilf3 MI. Carmtl
Ad. 3 btdroom, 2 bolho, CEDAR
CONTEMPORARY HOME Oak
ki!Ohtn, . coram~ lila In kltclltn &amp;
btlhl, NEW CARPET through out,
ntulrol dtcor. 5 ACRES 1.1/L
1105,000. Trllh or Oavo
13312 CA~IIVOUT IUIINIII
tnd CDNVINIINCI ITO~I , 011
IALI. Now altrm l"lltm. Building
' Cornlnuouo
buill to tf&amp;lt OOdl.
operation alnct 1988. Prlet
lncludtt Inventory, Call JOI!nnlt
3e7.0323 or 44U80e.
J400e COMMIRCIAL LOT OH Ill
7 NORTH· .77 ot an acrt, bttulllul
oqulppod Clayton mobllt homo. 3
SR 2
• bttllt, 2 oott blrno lnd
troller otoroga. Coli '"' runner
lniOrmotlon. VLS
UH7 IH Tl11 CITY Hugt Family
nome W/4 SRI, 2 bllht, kll, LR ,
D~cnot, penial btltrntnl.

~80.000 rlg~t,~or M~Kt~F~=j

Owntr will lind oonlriCI loaN IO
purohttt.
!NOlO CIINTLIMAN 011 LADIII

PARM· Farm featurn 41.5

to

mit

oom"'"'
., "'I"
"' " ·-····
- - boN and all .

e

~ar

740•8fl2•7207
.
Q(fjh/lurglndy IIOrll 1011
i Dllfn WlnQbiOk ctiilr. E•·
otllint condition. •200.
~l 17 3·80UI
j(j 0k1 78 RtOOrdl. All tor
•125. Call (740)1!1!2-!1452,
no anowor, IHvt mtlllgo,
AI Top So~, Fill
lole. Equlpmonl

how ntee this one 111 •21 H

bllng &amp;ppro~e . one acre, vloyl
tided 11ome with Ioyer, living
room, aal·ln kitchen, 3 bedrooms,

lntere.ctlon

Df US 33 &amp;

585
.Juet South

of Logan
M·F 8:3CJ.8,

titled

ranch

$134,900.001

HOMES

Set 11-8,
ClotH Sun
Dirt lor a.::::::::::::::::~==;:==;:==:.
Ronlal,

1tyle

And

tlome

prleel 30 • 50 barn wllh 18 • eo
addition on each sld1. Partially
wooded, pa1ture &amp; tlnable land.

Prlvalel)llooaledl.l2131

s!
10

~~~~;~~ ~

•

DIIIVE

108

lnllde to appraclat.l Large sized
lcllcl'len with o~trlum doors that lead
ID raor doo~lng &amp; pool, living room

&amp; bedroom• novo nlot lfnllhecl

wood

I!Oorlng,

lull

dlvldtd

blaomont. Lol&lt; cf updltttl 112117

aorlptf, Traotor Equlpmont.
(740)441-otiiU

raMh

OLDII'I CHAI'IMI N~a tlzod 4
bedroom, u bllh 1.5 11ory nome
lltuated on appro.-. 60' x100' lev.l
lot wllh ovorll•ld Oatachtd 2 otr
garage. Loto o1 rtmOdallng, nlot
kiiCI!tn. E•pootlng a hugo prtco, try
lhll 11184,000.00 J2111
CLOIE TO TOWN- Aeteoge
lpproll . 50 ICIOI. Prlvalt. Good
location

lor

building..

Utilllltl

wllh attached 1 ear carpon. available. Alof1tl SR 588 &amp; Bob
room &amp; formal dining araa.

McCC:Jrmlck.

Call

for

mort

toms TLC. 12187
lnlonmollon. 12171
CONVENIENCE 01' CITY LIVING! LOTI! Uttll K any oaoavallng
331 THII'ID AVENUE! N~o 2 llory ' noodtdl ManuiiCiuri&lt;J homlt
home Wllh Pltnty o1 room to live . ~ wtloomo. ll2103
SA, L.R, family room, kitchen,
NEW ACREAGE U8nNOI OVER
foyer, b11ement, off atreel parking. Ill ..,.. Of mollify wooded lend
Enclooad Irani porch and morel tltuattd at dead and rood. ldool 101'
1001
hunting 0&lt; nlot qylll PilOt to t&gt;ulld
LETI GO HUNTING· 140 ICftl lhlt new hOme. Hurry on d'tll c:w..l
'
approx. Ideal lor tht: huntet. Wildlife 1121N ,
pttntllul. Rood lronllge. Cah lor a
mopll2177

A DEFINITE
MUIT
SEEI
111,800.001 Nlot 101 being appro•.
.929 acre and neat cozy hOmt tnar.
hod loll Of TLCI Living room, ldlcl1on
&amp; tormol dlnil1g aru,
O.llchad 18 • 24 garage.
garden area. Must ... to appr.:lata
thll 11ome. 12113

INVEITMENTICOMMERCIALI
2
Story building tllualtd II 1100 3rd
Av«tut. Oownatalra

beauty talon ond
Upolllrt not 2
apar1mtntt. Nlct

ona

rental~ .

ror c:om))llllo llollngl 11'2135
LOOKlNQ ,011 A''LOT? Mert are 2
ltvtl !ott wllh public water
NWAQt a"aHabft. Not for a

price. 111,800 tor lhlm

OWI'IIr 11

11207t

r~untlng

LIVEL LOTI WIIIIOn -

your

..county

walef a11•H. ov.r t/2 acre. Broker
owntd &amp; wanll in ollorl HURRY! 2

TriCII 1111, ItCh approx. 81! eortt
ltl&lt;lng 1511.1100.00 1&gt;1" 11101. ldtal
nuntlng land. Grltr\IIIICI Twp. 0217t

FOR ADDITIONAl L ! STING S R. INFORMATION C ALL OR S TOP OY FOR A
FREE QUAlITY HOMf S IN COL OR 800KL FT'

Cheryl Lemley

MEIGS COUNTY
an

742-3171

112 N. 3td ltroot. 0no ....,.

r~Md

ranch, 2 bedroom., living
room, kitchen &amp; bath. goroge,

wllh
IOOIIld on
CIII!Odlyl

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

ROAD. Rtoltor OWOtd.J'IO,
PIKI • ilwlldift110II, NO.llil

-.lnHMIIrt.CM

blllmlnl. Prlctd right 138,000
HU4
IAITIIIN LOCAL ICHOoLI, lhlt
3 bedroom wr.- nome 1111 """
!ott of ltr\dtr loving 0111. VInyl
tl&lt;llng, Nrmo double nung
wlndOWI, elllngll roof, ond carport
Shua~d on 1.07 acrn at Taua en lpt)()fntmtnt 10 1M ttHs one I
Road prlcad atS44,000.00 12114
11217i
MIDDLEPORT VILLACIE Nlot 3 bedroom r"""' nome wllh· ltrge ltvol 101
prlctd to Nil II only t4S.500.00 L.ocalld Ill RIVIMIW Or1vo 121111

.

'

llory vinyl tldld 5 bedroom nome
wlln ovllr 2,000 aq. n. 01 living
111100. WOik-out bltlmont, CliCking.
Ntwtr oonllruotlon. 24 • 40 2 etory
blm with onoohld 8l&lt;24 lhi&lt;J . 2

tor

ownor 11111

willing to work with you on thll

no

I

YOU. Owner has
and
must
Nil
lmmedlat.. yl Low maintenance 2

appolntmonttodoyl 12174

IILIEVI 31 +Hfll, newer vinyl

Ill(*

tJ

bailment. 2 Car anached garage,

fenoed In rear lawn. Lota more to
1111
about thla onal

Actll along 1tat1 route. ·Call lor

1112 Nlat thlny I _ , 2000 ta0Za • A hunttrt dr11m OOI!It lrut. I 1/2 IIOry, 3 BA 1101111
Modular loottld In tho country on
on 111 ooroa ol boautllulland. 3 panda. O.ntr wanlt
5 AC wllh blrao IIIII lnoludo altulltd
ollt~l
.
CUllom Ctrpotlng, CUllOm kliOhln
tilt oountor tcpt and outlom mH- Vaoant Lanes- 55 acrn on HI!JOtn ll&amp;llay cr., 1011
·
.
kitchen tHo IIOOrlng, hugo mtlllr lronttge.
tuna wlln din and a mu11r btlh 11» :1 ooro build! loll North Oallla Eottt11. •30.000.
111101 1 Icing lnd qunan, o huge l.lll· lttutllul bullilnt tltal u ooroo m/1 overlooking
lciiCI!tn W•lh lOll cf IIOrtgo, l1rg1 ploturtlqlje ChlrOIIIo Llkt.
lormal living room wllh prlvllo
lomlly rocm , two eddlllonal
btdroome and • lull both round
out tho IHIUIH lnoldo. 0\litldt
tho ownor hto addOd a Pl1vllo 12
• 11 10rionld In book pcron In
addition 10 tilt 10 ~ 22 oovtrld
front po1011. A dtllontd Qlra;o
wilh 1 - hOOOy I'IOuN, I 24 I
32 molll polt barn and an
lddlllonal 1\obl)ji I'!Oult wlln the
Mrl.
.., tl II 81!,000

:~B~lli.,l . P~~~~urot ~

llnlthld woOd IIOOnng. bonut, Iorge
lomllyJreo
room
In
llnlehtd

I'IEMODELED
RANCH
SITUATED ON CORNER . LOT

I 1/2 balht. 24 ' 32 dtiiChld
1121111 '

Oozer1 81ckhotj Bobctt

Hm· eo aoretlllll near lito Orandl,
iaaZ2: 213 141111 IIIII oil 0111111 ,._ 211

0

garage,

150 lot City ocnoo1o. Ltl us thow

l1GIZ .Commtrctotl'tcponrl 1~Saoru IIIII nur Alo oraMt.
~· t.I 21 Acrttlllllln ar- iol¥nthlp UO,OOO.
f.UH- I 2·1~ IOIH IIIII 0Vtii0Ciilln1 Ohio Valltv,

14011 HOMI
I
INCOMI
INVIITMINT 128 ' 130 llullVIMt
Pk. 3 btdrm, 3 both l~lng quorltrl.
4110 II' ~ 32' ga,.ge ))lUI 30' N20
building 1/210. of lind. Good IIIII
lot. PrlcodiO NIL VLS
1•~• THII HOMI THI
~••
ro ' •

attached .

profeealonally landeoaptd 100 k

Wilton X31

lr'Onl, ~IMI 1.3,8 Woad, golf
~~o~a. purr oort. 111o.oo.

m:~~.

looatlonl
ranch en IAtQt
ltvtl lol wllh many lrull trfll,
Qrapavlnoo and nice gard&lt;in tpcl.
Don't lllthla g1111 dtll pan you
. by) $4,9,800
1114 Wlnl To Own Your Own
lulln1117 Ortat ouh IIOWI
Elloblllhod rol1il thOD up and
1141 PIIICI
!lady lo go. Owntr willing to
Con¥tnltn1 ln•IOwn
ldvlot tnd nllp yOU gil llar1od
Nlooly romodtlad turn ol
10 vou can oonllnue lho IUOOIIII
oontury heme . Wol~ IQ park, CIII IOdiY lor delollt.
oohool end onopplng. 3·4 811 2
112 SA Owner ollorlna peln11na
ani floor tovtllftl ailowonaol
CIIIIOitlyiiN,OOO
Land Listin

,lA

:':,Z;

kitchen with newer tile ttoorlng &amp;
dlahwaeher. ntce llted llvlg room,
3 bedrooms and 2 full baths, 2

www. vl~onq2000. oom

taoll Clubo:

bath home wllh many new_
,
like new In/out. Beaullful hardwood

NEW LISTING! SAME AI
NEW... All neutral dooor lnllde,

~REI CASH! $10,000 or
mort j)OIIIble In &amp;e dl)lt or
ltll. Novtr Ropayl Ntw
!IIOoramal ~'" lnlormallon.
1-800·014-841 e

1111 P~ICI
molntononao
· utility 10111
aonv1nl1nt
84, 2 Otr
nowor 1

HOMI Prolly at 1 plcluro. Vtry
wtll planned tlcnt ana !ramo ranch
homo olloro 3 bedroomo, wolk·ln
ololll, 2 lull bathe, onarmlng living
room wmroplaoo. Now ook oobln111
lint'"" kiiOhln, Ringo, rtlrtgorator, •
dllhWIIhtr, and oompaolor oil atty.
Utility room II tMira !arpt. 2 lltr
dlok In thl roor wlln 3e lnground
ooor. Many lrultlrtoo, rrowtrt, and
thrubt. Sprinkler tyllom In tho
· lltr. •• Otr IIIIOhld OIIIQI and 1
n 2
b
otrpo , . IIOry barn ulldlng.
Blacktop end ooment drlvowayt. A
•· mo you 'II bt proud to own. VL
...
Smith 441•1805
tlal7 Ylgt homo In town, now
root 101!9, 4 BA, 2.8 BA , 2 oar
garoge,
vinyl
tiding,
nk:o
ntlghbOrllood. NHOI toma TLC
but prlold rlghill flt,too
f4030.
IT'I
PII'IIONALITY
PLUII
ACRU.
HOM ..
IUILOINQI Old lalhlon chlrm
with modern convonltnel In thll 4
SR, 2 1~ homo, 2 . batnt,
(whirlpool tu ), Lovely equipped
kiVIamlly rm combo w/htrdwood noori, . cnorry coblnoto. En(oy , ·
vlowlng lht OOllnlry Irom avery
·window. Formtl dining rm &amp; LM
wlbumod oo!Nnga. Porch &amp; r,atlo
72 ACRES Of blaulllul rolling tnd,
P111uro, woodo &amp; oomo tlmblr,
pone &amp; minora! rlohlt. Large btm
&amp; bulldlnge. Ctfl VLS 448·8808

SR. lnd I · bllh WKh outlom
minora! riQhl.. tiiiiNlld lnd Oily ooblnott rn kllehOn, vtry ttrge lot
100111. 3 SR, 2 bltn ronoh lfYit 11111 . 11tt - - •11 tor -era!
homo wllh N"'"""
··-··, broa"'lll
•·r cpllono, lot ut
....~...
" .,.
lhow you lhlt-·
homo
tna dinning room. Large living wllh grntlootllon IOdtyl
room, UIK!Iy lnd 2 cor IIIIChod 140!,!, 12, _N I t4 IIIHTAL
gor.... Metf pump wllf1 fii'O)IInl IHVnTMINTI Won'-· of ·-'- ·•
lurntot '"" otnlfll llf. ..,
-IIOQIOd' roof I" IDI!Il 110ng wlln ~~ 4 proportJn w/10 011111110
perlo ond P«CCI. Abevt grOUnd PPOI rtnl. You 0111 Odd valuo a moro
lnd grollloclilon oH 8ullvlto l'lkt lnoomo O)llbclnQ Ulllt. luyElll 11o111o1 RoOd. Large btnn Of II Of tho JXjlldlllgt oHor.,.tfct
1-o· fOO. eo) for llvlfiOck tnd from 131!,000 10 ue.ooo.
no ' wro
"" ...............
tvaKtblt l.ootltO 1rt
1 corn "'"'•
--...,.. lnlormotlon
~emttoy VLS4•• ••OUibulldlng •ncf ...,_ kllclltn
""'""""'
A/10 garagelthtd CioN · - ,LAT LOT LOollld on Clark
10 town wllt1 bltuty 011110
Chtpej Rd 2 lot.. 1 Aero rt111
LoOI&lt; II !lilt ont llld Otll
It UOO
for an oppoinlrlltnl 3eNl323
•240.000

a ltw minute• ot hoapltal, grocery

THIS II IT FOLKS! 3 ~;:~~:.

&amp; morelt2188

mus.

• ·fTIIH: vllmlthOoore,com

QIOANnc

kllchon, 2 full balht, 2 oor garoga
over .4 aort lot. Slluati&lt;J within Jutt

12182

Pa01orv mtdl air tanko
abbut 4' long. Llka Naw,
Dan Htranbtrgor In Cad-

~~~~~~~~
. ~~~~~~~~
14047 LOOKING '01'1 THI 14044 ONI D, A KiND Flrolllmt t40H
T~ULY DILIGHT~L
OIIIATUT LOCATION lor a now
lloma. 3 Iota. 1 ao. aoon mil. Roady
lor oonotruollon. Survoyld &amp;
gradld, HHIIh DIPI. opprovld.
looatld In Grton Twp. Appro•. 8
ml lrom town on SR 888.
Reetr!ollvo oo'lnanlt apply. VLS. .
1402.. IUILDINQ LDT 111 111 &amp;
MITCHILL ·11o. I Ao mil undor
IIO,OOOVLI

11. living ipaot. 5

ranch eltuated on a LOWERED
roomy 1.8 acre tot. Living room, 111,000.001 owner roquttllng
dining area, kitchen, 1.5 baths. 18 .your offer. Ouollty .brick ranch wlln
x 20 stOrage s~ad . $63,900 .00 oonortlt drlvt, living room, dining,

COOKWARE•Wtrohpuu
MIIIOC!Cidl Buy Ono 17·
ttl 11 our OOtll Baautl·
?·~ll eurgloar alllnltlt
toll Clook wino wattr or
oil at dlnnor partloa • •ld05,
flOW •3801 L~ollmo worre,.
~'
1·800·434•4828
www.vtplllfll,oom

(I

'

'

•

...W UITINCII WOHDEI'I,UI.
OUITI. WOODI:D HTTlNO
WITH IIUITIO HOMEI Appro&gt;
8 42 &amp;erN ono IIOry 11ome,

llvlna ruom ldlotlan &amp; biolh. Appro.
104¢ aq.

n. o1

rutt1c tnd ""'Y

living. Thlt 0111 II jutl _ , _ 10
miN -..g1 L.ocaltd II 8iglty

Riclge. c.tll lor
II21M

mot~

lnlormotlonl

Thll t10mt II In good roptlr and lo

�P-aw De • 6unbap 1Jimtt·6tntintl

Sundly, May 5, 2002 ·

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

Jump in unemplo ent
£rate drives stocks · ower

Find the perfect job•••
perfect pet•.• . ·
perfect car••.
in the

6unbip-Qttmel 6entinel
Real Estate General

992-2155
Real Estate General

need, close
home, in the

REAL ESTATE

St•ee 1943

&amp;unbap-tltimef
·&amp;entinel

Crustless white
bra1d from
Lee

Classltleds

446-2342

992-2155

I

PUBLIC
NOTI ES
LEGAL NOTICE
The
City
ol
Qalllpolll will hold 1
public . hearing on
'lllaaday, May 28,
2002
11 8:00 p.m. In the

Municipal courtroom,
&amp;18 Sacond Avenue
Oal!lpolla, Ohio.
Cltt *1 • Board of
Zoning Appttlt· Jeff
Bandera, 800 Third
Avenue, requeata· 1

'"U!

cozy,
living
whh
YauHed
ceiling I
you ovary
evening. Out ol town gue1t1
are no problem with 2nd living
area, Including kitChen, h1
walkout basement: 4 BAt, 3
BAs, on 5 of the nicest acral
In Qallla Co. $259,000 1201

''ttlolil \utin·~ i1• ""'''"'1' :'1'''' '·
1~ 1~1 1\ 1U hlll&gt;\\ , lltllll 'rl'd l ~11:ht Ill \11111 lluur.

.. '

variance to occupy
and 1 change In uae
lor
Commercial
Property ·In • R·3
Dlatrlct.
Catt U • Board of
Zoning Apptllt·Brlan
Unroa, 43 Sycamore
Strnt, requetlt
1 variance lor an·
additional
wall
mounted algn In •
Nalghborhood
Commerclol
.Diatrlct.

Orumman should be (),6325 sh11res or H wleuallowed to buy m&lt;ll'e thlln Pac:kllrd for every C'umpllq
20 pm:ent ofTRW stock. share they own. and
The
state 61\ac:ted th6law to Con1p11q stock will &lt;:tlse
•
block unwelcome tal.-eover beilll! tnl.ded.
HOUSTON (AP} - attempts.
NEW YORK (AP) - A spike ill uneqlloyPulo Alto-bused HP will
Enron
Corp. on Friday Northrop Orumm~~n hlld ~hllll{l~
ment to the highest level in nearlY eight yell$
Its 1kker S)'_mbol
unveiled Its proposal to no lnlmedlate comn'lel\t and from HWP
~I&amp;YO iliYOSt&lt;n yet anolher teaSOII f\'ida,Y to doubt
tu HPQ to
emerae from banltiuptty il$ s11id it was an~aly&amp;llll! the refltltt the prusent:e
,-.e strength of the economy and unlold stocks.
of
11 mover of electricfty and
Tech issues fell for the third ~ht session,
YOlO.
C\'lmf)IIQ,
which
WIIS fmmd·
· l\lltUTIII gas, with operltiOI\S
•while blue chips pulled back followma a threeed In u Houston pie shop in
st.retchina from the United
; session advance. ·
· .
. 198l. The oomf)llnles will
States to ~outh America.
• friday's decline only warsened a slump that
bealn busIness together
Bnron 's nante would dls·has dragged tlwrDow Jones Industrials down 5.9
Tuesduy.
ap.,ear under the proposal
~t 119m their 2002 cl~ing hiah of
HP announced its plans to
outlined durina 11 closedJl(),635.2S, reached Maroh 19, while tho Nasdaq
buy Compaq 011 Sept, J In n
·oon!JX!Site indelt has sulfaed a much sleep!!'
door meetlna wlth creditors . WASHINGTON (AP) - deQI thon warth 5'lS billion.
;s11c!C; falling 21.7 percent fiom its hi&amp;h close ror
in New York, said interim F11ctorles that convert com The company overc~me
the year-~059.38 back on Jan. 4.
chief executive Stephen into the g11sollne nddhlw lime op~sltlon from the
"We IW ill a bear mukel, particullll'ly in tho
Coo~r. Their support is ethanol a.re relellslna c:~r­ families of Its lnte founders
Nasdaq IIJ'el of the market. ThO excesses we built
cructal for the success of bon nlOnoxlde, · methnnol and won u. shnreholdl!t vote
up over many )'ears is being taken out of tho marthe plan,, and Cooper said and some. c11.rc:lnoaens at on the Compnq deul SI.4
kl:t. Just like lt went to extreme levels on tho
tho crechtors receive~ .it levels "mllny tlmosare1Uer" percent to 48.ti pel"':ent.
~u~lde. it is going to extreme.lewis on the downfllvor11bly.
than they promised, the ln their flnal dny on the
~slde,'' said MarkMinervini, portfolio~ of
The new company . or' aovommont says.
New York Stoek B~tchnnllll,
: Fint Mark Fund and ~i&lt;lent of Qwiittcch
companies, under the work- In an April 24 letter to the Con1pnq shnres rose '24
• Rcsearoh Group.
ina tltle OpCo Bneray Co., Industry's 11\lde aroup, the c:ents, more tlmn l perccllt,
. ~ Tho Dow cloSed down 8S.24, or 0.8 percent, to
would have more than Environmental Protection to $11. HP aained 33 tents.
: 10,006.63. Tho Dow had nllied 272 points
I5,000 miles of pipeline, Aaency s.aid tho problem Is or 2 percent, to $17.44.
'l\lllsday lhrou$h Thursday, c:Iaimina its first
510.8 billion In total assets common to "most, if not
~~Y winmng streak sinco the Period that
and projected earninas In nil, ethanol facilities."
"'ended Maroh 12. That surae helped the Dow end
excess of $1.3 billion In Offi~lals In EPA's
; the week up 1 pettCilt.
,
2003 before Interest, Chicugo office, which over.: The bcotidcr market fell Friday, and finished
Income t11xes, depreciation sees nearly half the indus·
• the week with a loss. The Nasdaq ~ 31.79,
and amortization. A penna- try's plants, are phmnlna_n
, Slr1
~ or 1.9 pettCilt. to 1,613.03, havina now fallen II
nent n11me will be chosen meeting with company offiof the past 13 sessions. The Nasdaq ended the
lllter, Cooper said.
.
·tlals In five states to Insist
• week down 3. I percent.
·
The company hus no on changes to reduce the CHICAGO (AP) - Snru
Lee wants to luke over u
;: The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Index declined But many investors worry that the market can
plans to ao back into the emissions.
~11.13, or 1.0 percent, to 1,073.43. The S&amp;P lost
ener11y tr11dina business, The IIOVemmonfs cruck· duty moms hove carried out
always flild another low.
·
;:0.3 percent for the week.
which Bnron developed and down comes while the for lcids for dcendus - sllc:·
;: Wall Street was disappointed by a wcaker- "I think we are In the capitulation SI!IF now,"
turned into its most prof- ethanol Industry presses to Ina the crusts off whitci
thim-expected unemployment mport for April. said Peter Cardillo. president and chief strategist . liable unit.
slgntncnntly e~pnnd pro- brehd. The consumer soods
of
Olobal
Parmer
Slicurities
[nc.
The natfon 's lobless rate Jumped to 6 pe~tent In
du~:tlon us ma.ny states 11iunt is toutinl! its now
April from S.'l percent in Maroh. lt is tile hiahest Cardillo said he expects scllina to slow next
phue out another widely lronKids Crustlcss 131'1lud us
~evel since August 1994, when unemployment week as the markel settles In at a lower trading
used fuel ndditi ve, MTBE, u fl'llsh-from·the-oven lden,
was also at 6 percent.
because It is pollutina wnter coming soott to u bukery
chips fell as investors cashed In profits
; Tech companies fell on a variety·of Indications
supplies. Last week the shelf ncar you.
lhat their business slump lingers. For example, a after the three-session rally. Wai-Mart fell $1.40
Senate pussed legislation nt The product. belnglntro·
LYNDHURST (AP) - the behest of farm groups duced at the supermnrket
Mcnill Lynch note to illveston said,]E"visibilit is to~~.~. Coca-Cola declined 78 cents to $~6.86
TRW Inc. said its share· that would more than dou· industrts nnnun conven·
still lousy for most semiconductor com es, and Oencral Mctors stumbled 56 cents to $65.68;
holders voted Friday to ble ethanol use by 2010.
tiq_n in Chicago starting this
~.!UKI. will continue to be throuah the
quar- Despite the market's . downturn, advanclna
issues
n&amp;ITOwly
outnumbcrcd
declillon
16
to
IS
block
Northrop
Orumman
's
;ter·" Losen among chip maKers included Texas on the New YOrk Stock Exchange. Consolidated
wrilke11d, will be u bit of un
$6.7
billion
hostile
:II'.struments, down $U9 at $28.30, and Intel,
uppcr·crust loaf. Snr11 Lee .
volume came to 1.56 billion shares, · below
takeover auempt of the
N~hich fell $1.29 to 526.56.
Com'-1q Is selling It for ubout 75
company, rejectina the
: Oracle slipped 12 cents to $8.43 after Goldman Thursday's 1.66 billion.
cents more than tho price of
defense contractor's bid to
U
crusted bl'llud, or $'2.59 to
:Sachs and SO Cowen teduced their outlooks on The Russell 2000 Index, the barometer of
smallet company stocks, fell 1.05, or 0.2 percent,
allow It to 11tquire 20 per·
'the software maker.
$3.39 for u 16·ounce lour,
cent of TRW's aharei.
~ Uncertain about eamlnas due next week from to 512.32. For the w~k, the Russell f8red the
PALO ALTO, Cnllf. (AP) depcndin11 on tho murket.
psco, investors bid the networker down ~0 cents beat, rising nearly 2.2 percent.
A vote total was not - After one of the harshest In an cru when c:onvc·
. ln Europe, Britaill's FI'·SB I00 closed up 0.6
immediately available, but nnd closest proKy fi.ahts in nlence tops U.S. shopping
:Jo $13.14.
~ The tech sector has suffered the brunt of selling pen:ent, wblle France's CAC-40 lost 1.5 pe1t0nt
TRW chairman· Philip American business llistory, lists, Suru Lee figures
o-.ause it's exP.OCted to be the last to recover and Ocnnany's DAX index fell I. 7 pe~tent.
Od~n said, "I would char· Hewlett·Pncknrd Co. offi· enough consumers will tum
Japan's
financial
marketl
were
closed
Friday
~~m the recession. Another facta' in the tech
acterize It as a clear cut vic· clully closed Its $19 billion over the ex tru dough. It 's
osclloft' has been the fact that investon ran those for a national holiday. The markell will also close
tory."
ncquishlon of Compuq spending ncurly $10 mi\ .
tacks U,P the most In the last bull market when Monday for another national holiday and reopen
Computer
Corp. on Frldny. Iron to roll it out, muking it
At issue In the special
.
:t:cmpamea including Cisco were tradinll at I00 Tuesday.
shamholders' meetins was On Moridoy, Com(luq the bukery group's biggest
(On th1 N1t..,. N1w York Stock E.xchang1:
~ their earnings.
whether
Northrop investors will receive · productluunch yet.
• The market's overall mlentleas acllina makes www.nyse.com: Nasdaq Srock Marlc11:
::W,Iysts hopeful that stocks have found alxxtom. www.na~da.q.com)·

Enron unveils
plln

Problems·
ethllnol

Classitieds

446-2342

BUSINESS NOTEBOOK

'

"

Cote *3 • Planning
Commlulon Jell
Sandaro, 80.0 Third
Avanua, requeata 1
Slit Plan Rtvlaw lor
Commerclol u11 In 1
R·3 Dlttrlcl.

tor

brick
lnctudl:
gourmat ktlc:hen, formll dining
room, 4 BRa. 2 Balhl,
ovarelzld 3-c~tr garage, IIlii
baatmant a 2 unflnlthld
"tlonua• rooma: all thlt on 4
In llrean lllwnthlp
elementary

~'!!:. '~'VV,~IIQ 1700

TRW takeover
blocked

""rue

H•P,

MayS, 2002

. plete .:.leal
Com

Real Estate General

~

-LENDER

OFFICE

992-2259 .

BULLETIN BOARD
Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800·942·9577

-

SR
1:U. MAPLE QROVE
SUBDIVISION· OHIO
RIVER
FRONTAOE
Approximately
2 acre lot.. Great camping loll.
CIIIICday for mOfe dttalls.

DEXTER- In lh&lt;l country. Almcot 1 acre with garden &amp; yard opact.
remodeled 2 ttory home, original woodwork, new decOfatlon &amp;
W.B. lurnect, If
want cheap heat. H.W. nooro,
featurao. AIKINQ
A 2 11ory frame &amp; vinyl home, 3 bedroomt, bath,
room Cellar area, large front porch, upatalro hat
rlmodtled. CIOII to town, walk to 101!81
hOmt, grut IOcetlon. Thlt one •tory rernodetld home,
acre lot. The hOmt Includes a living room, 2 '*lrocme with
The kitchen &amp; dlnlng room• have oaremic tile throughOUt.
off the dining room opent onto the coverld porch.

redecorllod
homt oilers

•2

oablnett In the oat·ln
kitchen, 2 car attached
01'41Gf· •Prtcld II $~.000.
1131 •

a

I!Nei,

131 OIIW&lt;

•

I

Mo,;-

' $20.00

Free Delivery

www.wisemanrealestate.com
D.vld WIMmln, ORI, CRS Broker 448-9555
11] ~
Carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garnes 44&amp;-2707
!!!. JJ!ij!,
Robert Bruce 448-0621 Rlhl Wl11man 448-9555 JennHII' Sipple 245-11020
\

35 Court Street
441·9603

(2) 14 Oz. T· Bone Steaks ·
Baked Potato &amp; Salad

Before shopping for your
New Address... stop by ours:
.

tlenry E. Cleland ........................ ~ .•192·2259

She"J L. Hart .................................. 742·2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992·5318
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 9$2-6191
Lisa v. Moodlapaugh ..................... 992.0S92
Inc. Offlce .............992·2259 .

Save 30% tc 40%
Direct Mill Prtclng
1211. 13ft&amp; 15ft wide carpet
Free estimates.
Eaay Financing
MOLLOHAN CARPET
446-7444 1·877~830·9182
Drtve·A·Little Save·Alot

$20.00

lllddlaport.
Investment 1231
PfOP8rly oontlltltlg of I
bedroom, I .bath log homt
tnd 2 trailtf loll. ~ x 55 toe.
foiO.OOO 1126

AIKIHO $41,000

O'DELL LUMBER
Exterior Paint Sale
$8.99 Gallon
81 VIne Sl. 446·1278
634 E, Main St. 992·15500 ·
Don't Forget
Molher'a Day Gift llema
Bookl, etc.

(740) 446 3644
J

ATIENTION
INVESTORS!
Six Rental
Properties
. For Sale ·
4 Located In Rodney
1 Located In Galllpolll
1 Located In Crown City
All are presently rented
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
. 740·446·4508
is holding electiQn of officers
Monday, May 6, 2002
7:30pm

HEALTH
INSURANCE
Let us design a
plan to fit your
.budget.

EXTERMITAL TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL
"The s..tl.n Pelt Control &amp;
Termite Proteotlon"
(740) 446·2801

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION
• 65 or over
• Billed to Insurance
• Little If no cost
• Free Delivery
• We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740·446· 7283
1·800·458·81!44
ChOII to Loll Oltt Club
will have open hou1e
May 7th at Grace United
Mtlhodlat Church,
1ide 1ntrance at 8:00 am
Vllltort welcome

Relldente of Perry Townahlp,
at tha May 7, 2002 election,
you will be voting to renew the
firs levy. Thla II a RENEWAL,
not an INCREASE.
Thll notice paid lor by
l'erry Townlhlp.
Clerk, Nancy·Ehman Tucker ·

The Lynch Agency

SPECIAL RATESI
May 1 ·May 15
On~ $5.00 A 0~
EAST NO FLEA MA KET
Be1lde A~ on Eutam Ave.
·2515

American Leglof! Post 27
Nomination ~Officers
5/6/
7:36 me

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

FAIR LAMBS

Public Welcome

Ronnie Lynch

..

&lt;f

446-8235
1·800·447·8235
Chethlre Elaptilt Church 11
~po~~IIOI1ng a YOIIIII 8ei"Ace on
May 5, 2002 at 1o:ao 1111
All arH youth ar1 welcomed .
. Lunch will bl provlded alter
church.

For More Info ...

•

446-2342 OR 992-2155

FOE AERIE 2171

·Good News Bible
Bookstore

(2) 16" 2 Topping Pizzas

kJt(:hen

113

ADivorce Care Support
Group will be starting on
Thursday evening at
7:00 pm and 9:30 am on
Sundays. A nursery will be
provided for small children.
Please call
740·446·1772 or
· 740·446·3504 for ·
additional information.

RIO GRANDE
SPEEDOS
245-0088

new bath, new

17th Mercervllii/Hannan Trace
ALUMNI DINNER
May 25,2002
For reasrvatlona,
Margaret Myers 448·0827

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

FOR SALE $1~6.00
448·8877, 258·1972
SurpriN your mother with a
cake or pie from
THE BAKE SHOP
on Mother'• Day
258·1094

446~2342

n(

Gallla Co. Conservation
Club meeting
Wednesday
May 8, 2002
Dinner at 6:30 pm

or 992-2156

HOUSE FOR SALE
431 Lake Dr.
Rio Grande, OH
245·9838
2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 bath,
Garage, basement
45000

MEDICARE

SUPPLEMENT
Do you have a local
agent to help you?
Call for a quote.
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446· 8235

1·800-447·8235
CHEERLEADER CLINIC
Saturday, May 11, 2002
WILL POWER TUMBLING
12:00 · 1:00 8th · 12th Gradel
125.00 per peraon 20 people mu
F'rlet lncludtt: lnllructlon on jumpa,
mctlon, tumbling and more. plu1 •
Chetrtudlr unlvtrllty T·lhln.
Call 'Will F'owtr Tumbling"
tor llltr It 441 ·1570

YARD SALE
MAY 11
9:00AM • 5:00 PM

.Gallla Soccer Cl~b
Place: Former O'dell Lawn
Care Building
(blhlnd BoD't Mlrket)
Soccer lrtend.. l'leue drop off
1181'111 to be 10id Tu11. or Thur.
6:30 . 8:30

�..

'-1' Dl• •• , I.._..

01lllpoll1, Ohio

tbwJ

.star wan

Prep Baseball: Southem tops.~astern. B1

'Spider.:.Ma.n,' 'MIB,' 'Stuart' give
antves In stores - Just In ti-ne Sony colossal clout for summer
•

·for release of new release
LOS AN05LHS (1\P) - If
"Slur Wurs: Eplst"kll! II Athtd: of the Cluucs" b ubout
tn open in thcutcrs. it must he
time for "Stur Wm'S: Attock of
the Ttlys" 111 begin invuc.llng
stores.
Thm's just wlmt hlllli~IIL'll
1\1csdtt)l, when merchunllisc
tied tu the movie mutcrlullzcd
ttl Thys R U&gt; unll ~lsewhere .
Only this time the rollout wus
more subtlue,l. uflcr some of
the esoteric furc rclcuscd for
1999's "Th.:
Phtuth\11\
Mcnncc" lun11uishcll 011
shclv~s for m&lt;mths.
"We've sculcd It buck II
lot," suld Lucnslihn licensing
exc~utivc Howurd ~uil'nmn .
"We're !lOin~ to slick to the
busies - toys. vldcol!umes ...
the thin11s om funs prefer.
ruther thun S&lt;lfllc or the fringe
Items."
Thus you won 't sec Qul!cn
Amlduln's fucc on ymn· J.&gt;cpsl
cun this time Mound o1· ~
ublc ''' rclux. In 1111 Anukin
Skywulkcr lnllutul)lc dlllir.
You w.-n't huve uny Obi·Wutt
Kcnubl cllp·llll 1\rulds to

tlltuch to your huir.
Mcrchunllislng llXC~utlvcs
ut Lucusfllm Ltd. cut the
. number of p~tlducts c•mnect·
cd to "Attud:. of the Clones."
whkh npens Muy I (1, to
fewer thun 50 nl\cr relcusinl!
nbout HS fnr "Phuntnn\
Mcnuce.''
"Lu~t
time, they just
shipllC•I 11111 nwch ." said Ouw
Ocrurdi. senior editor of the
toy
trudc
mugut inc
Pluythings. "AI\cr u few
mnnths, rctuilcrs ht11l to put 11
deep discount on them· und
~till couldn'tmnvc them." ·
A ltllol' the surplus toys muny of which reutmctl tile.
mudl-llllllil!n~d Jur Jur Blnks
churu.:tcr - hung in store
ulslcs so hmg they cui·nlld the
\lubimts title nf "pel! wunn·
crs."
The "Stur Wut·s" ntcrdmn·
disl' line wns still wildly sue·
cessful. curnlng uboul $2 bll·
lion worldwide. ·
Titc third "Slur Wurs" filtH.
"Rcnu:n Ill' .. the Jcdl,'' hut!
come out Hi ycurs before
"Thll Phtutll\111 Mcnu.:c.'' untl

collvct·ted. 'The tolul untuxcd
rortimt or J')llr trutlitionul
II{ A 1.~ mldc to yolll' tuxublc
in,·omc lite yeur thul you con·
fvom ,....D1
vert uud you lllllst /'liY the
· whole ltiX liuhillly w ten you
tux ·cxcmpt Rnth docs 1101 file your it1Clll11c tuxes. If yuu
churi!C you lux on Interest huvc ltJ usc your uctuul IRA
curned. As hmg us yuu follow suvlngs 10 puy tuxes u·igl!crcll
the rules. you never puy tuxes by shifting them to u l~oth ,
on ynur gttlns. So puylng then you muy be sucl'iflclng
tuxes bcli~t·c contl'lbutlng to tllo mudt pl'ind 11ul up front
the Roth muy work nut tn h~ l'or the conversion to be
. better lui' ymL tlum I"'Yilll! worth 11 . But II' you huvc
them ltttel' on ynur nvcst· muny yem·s to mukc up for
mcnt profits.
tuklnl! the tux bite fron,1 your
The Roth is un cspcdully s11 yings,· usk .your tux advisor
sensible tool 1\tr 11cuplc oth· whether u· Roth still mukcs
crwisc limited to mnking .1cnscl'lll' you.
thlll ·~cductlhlc colllributlons
••uctorH tn ConHid~r.
to u rcl!ulur IRA. Single filers There Is uicl!itlntute pntcntlul
eurnlng up to $95,000 und for tux-free l!rllWth. so ewn
couples curnin11 up tn people with substuntlul IRA
$150,000 urc free to usc It u.1 bulunccs muy wunttu consld·
well . Plrsl·tlme homebuycrs cr convcl'tinl! ut lcust I)Urt. II'
cun ,ulso pull out $IO,IK)() In they •1uulll'y l'or cmwcrslnn.
lrotlts jJcnulty ft•cc und tux· 13ccuuse the dcdslon con·
'rcc II' 11c tll&lt;lltcy htiN hccn In tuln.1 muny vurlublcs~ It's t'CC·
the Ruth IRA for utlcust five unm1cndcd thlll you consult
lUX yeurs .
your Ill~ UUVisor for udultion•
Note: Burring ccrtuiM . ul lnfurmmlon before dccld·
cxceplionK, · prol'ltK with· lng whether the conversion
druwn before retirement ugc will be bcncflclul.
·
und bel'ore the tryoney huH Some t'uctorK you muy
been IM the Roth lor ut lcust wut1llo diHcUKK Include:
flve lux·yeurK will be tuxed,
• Current und future
pluH you'll uiKu Incur u. 10 i11come tux rutcK ugc und lite
percent penulty when those c~pcctuncy.
eurnllli!K ur11tuken before 1111c
• Antlclputcd Kpendlnl!
~9· 112 .
· nccJH durin!! retirement.
How Uoe~ On~ Convert'!
• Other HourccK of retire•.
Inform your 11\A cuKimllun lllllllt funu~ (including pen·
(or trustc~) thlll yuu wl~h w Hion JlitlllH).
convert your trudltlonul IRA · • Other Knurccs of uftcr·tux
tn u Roth IRA. When you l'llc muncy und lnvcKlmcnlN,
your tux returns, report the
• Bcncf1dury'K uge und life
~nnverHion Ill the IRS und expcctuncy.
puy the lncunlc tuxeN owed
• BenciTclury'Kplunned UKC
on !the IRA usKclK Yt1U'vc of the IRA l'undK on lnhcri·

Investing

l

Lucus111m und toy munufuctutcr Hushl\1 Inc. ucknowl·
edgud ovcrestlmuting the
IIIUI'kcl.
· "Whcit you huvc u lnrttc
bt·cudth ttf churnctcrs nnll
fll\xlucts Hkc lhut, you're mit
ll&lt;litt~ ·to hit 1111 llvtry slnl!le
one; Husbmmurkctlnl! executive Murtln Pidcl suld.
About 20 dill'crent "Attack
of the Clones'' uction ligures,
priced ut about $6, were
rclcusl!d Tlh.lsduy, with the
number incrcusinl! to ubout
~ll hy ycnr's end.
·
At 11 Tttys K Us in Los
At\l!clcs. ubout I00 lims were
lin~d up hy mldnl~ln to grub
their "Stur· Wurs' products
llrs.tthhtl! 1\.tcsduy.
Curlu DclluOuttu, 26, wus tl
little ulurmcd to be one of the
few peoplll In costume l'nr the
event - cspcclully since it
wus 57 dcl!rees und she wus
wcurilll! u custoll1·111ude
Pt·incess Lelu "sluvc ~lrl"
bikini l't'OI11 "Return ol the
Judi. " Luckily, she hud u
hluck lflJ)Coau .
1un~c .

• Bcncfidut·y's future
Income tux rutes.
• Rule of return nn invest ·
lllelll .
• Whether you curn over
$100,000 pet• ycur (If so, u
conversion Is IIC1l possible,)
Be minuful thut fimds ·
i'oilcu over Into u Roth IRA
C&lt;)I1Ul llllllcr greul~r rc'strlc- ·
liiJIIS i'&lt;ll' iJillllllty free lii1U lUX·
ft·cc dlstl'illuthm' UK ~om ·
purcd to nun nul Roth IRA
contrlhutlons. 13ut Koth II(A
contl'lhutlo11s . uno gt·owth
huvc udvutHugcs - they lii'C
not .1uhject to the minimum
dlstrlhuiloll rules during Ihe
ow11cr 's life so longer pcrimls
of tux -uxcmpt growth · ure
pussihlc (csrcclully for
weulthy tuxpuyers).
· If yuur employer gives you
the ~hoke of n1.ukinl! nott·
llllllchln!! contributions to
either un emplnycr plun (c.y,,
u 401 (k) plun) or ul(oth lit A,
you should consit.lcr Invest·
lng In rcllremcllt plun8 in the
following priority: (I) pluns
with cmployer·mutched con·
trlbutlonil. (2) Ruth IRAs for
yourself · und Y\)Ur spouse.
unt\ (3) plun ~ without
mulched cnntributiuns.
· DctcrminlnJ! eligibility und
welghinl! the Clli1NCI.jUC11CCH
shnuld he · done curcfully.
Cnnsult with your tux uc.lvisor,
before mukinl! .amy chungcs
to your retirement uccounts.
(/Jrvn' Smith 1.1 llll l11v~.ft ·
m~ttt' executive w/rlt $mlrlt
Parttwr.f

lit Adv~!.ll

Inc. In /u

Gul/1/lol/.r oj]1ce,)

FREE!

l.OS ANOBLES (AP) Sony Pictures Is splnnlna
u eomn1nndlna box-office
web this summer, with n
lln~up 11nchored by tllut
block bu ster· ln•the· muk •
lull, "Spider-Mull," untl
s~quels 111 " M~n In Bluek"
und "Stuurt Lillie."
Beyond thnse three frunchlsc films , tho movie ~tu ·
tlio hus Adum Sund: In .
"Mr. Deeds." u remulo..: ot'
the Frunk Cupru clusslc
"Mr. Deeds Ooes to
Town"; the Dunn Carvey
comedy "The Master of
Ol~l!ulsc": the Jennlrer
Lope~ thriller "Enough";
11nd lhe extreme-sports spy
~uper. "XXX," reunltlna
stur Vln Diesel. director

Kneen

ftom Pip Pl .
your's crops.
Our cunHnerclul ve11etuble
growers hn ve hud t hcl r
putlcncc tt·ied us cool tern·
peruturcs, gusty winds! ruin
und l!Ven hull huve he u up,
pluntinl! und "normal'
growth. 'Tutnlllo trun~plunts
huve sturted to mot out Into
the soli, especlully when
pluntcd In rulsed beds cnv·
crellin blu~k plllstlc,
The furcsl ol' stukes nrc
sproutilll! up to support our
trellised tomuto plunts.
Swect corn is growl ng, but II
too could usc wurmcr tctn·
perutures. Cubbuge .~ecn1s to
be the crop thul Is ei\Joyhll!
·this coni, wet weuther uni.l
should be uvulluble locully
1\J,r Memorlul Ony weekend.

...

Arc you lntereHted In
leurnlng how tn Identify the
trees In your · woods'? The
Ohio Wuodlund Stewords
progrum In cooperation with
the Ohio State University

Rob Cohen nnd producer
Nell Morltt, the teum
behind lost yeur's surprise
smush "The Fast und the
Furious."
"I've never seen such a
strong slute from any one
stud·lo In tuty given sum·
mer,"
sold
Puul
Derj~urubedlun, president
of' Exhibitor Relutions Co.
Inc., which tru..:ks the
movie
box
office."
"Everythin¥ came together
for them thts summer.'lk.
It even surpuss~s Sony's
1997 summer schedule,
when "Men In Bluck,"
"Air Force One" und "Mr,
Best Friend's Wedding'
propelled the Atudlo to u
record box-office huul of

$1.26 billion domesticnlly
for the entire y~ur.
Since then, Sony has
been u middle-of-the-puck
studio lit best, lugging well
behind recent box -office
lenders such us Worner
Bros..
Disney
und
Unlversul. Sony hus hud u
scullering of hits, lnclud·
lng the orl_gtnul "Stuurl
Lillie" und Sundler'5 "Big
Duddy," but plenty ot
.duds, among them "Finul
Funtusy : The Splril8
Within," "Ali.'' "Jukob tho
Llur"
und
"The
Messenger: The Story of
Joun of Arc."
Even some of Sony's
hils were quulifled sue\
ccsscs.

E~tenslo1; Is sponsorin11 un · MCPP, trlclopyr und metsul·
on·hunds workshop entltleu
"Nume Thut Tree' on Muy
17 from 9 u.m. to 3 p.m. ut
the
Athens
County
Extension Ort1ce.
The morning cluss cnver.~
tin lmroductlnn. to tree lden·
tlflcutlon Including pructic·
lng tin pr1.1pured !!pcclmens.
Lunch wll be provided on
site und then u field trip will
tuke you to ·locul forests
where you will identify trees
using the lechnlqueli tuught
111 you durin11 the mornfng
hours.
·
Reslstrutlon cost Is $20
per person und If wonted, u
copy of "Ohio Trees," u new
cx!J)nslon publicution thut
hus color pholol!ruphs of
trees, cnn be purchused for
un
uddilionul
$IS,
Reglstrutlon Is limited to SO
people; Fnr further informu·
tlon, cull the AtheMs County
Extension Office ut 740·

m-sm
... ..

furon ure herbicides found
either ulone or In comblnu.
tlon with euch niher In many
weed killers. Read the labels.
to ·muke su!'ll the broudleaf'
weeds you ure tryln11 to con·
trul ure on the lubel. ·
Also mukc sure lo follnw
uppllcutlon ·directions mixing rates und weuther
conditions. Be cureful not to ·
upply herbicides to plun£
muterlul you wunl to keep.
Dry grunuluttld weed and
feed products may be spread
using u fertlll~.er spreuder.
Note thut the luwn needs to
be moist so the herbicide
sticks nntn the weeds untl
then you 11ee~ 24 to 48 hours
or i.lry weuther for the herbl·
ctde lobe c:ffectlve In killing
the weeds.
If weed populations ure
high or difficult to control,
you muy need to upply her·
blcldes twice or three tlmeH
during the spring.
(Hal Kttmt Is Meigs

111 your luwn scattered Cmmty :1 Extelt .flon agelll
with weeds'/ Now is the dtnc for awlmllurt cmd natural
to upply broudleuf weed rP.fmu·c~.··· Olt/o Stute
killers. Dicumbu, 2,40, Unlver.llty. I

•

a1

•

Melp County'•

What's Inside

Meigs Co. fam1l1es
IV CHAIILIHI HOINOH

HOEFI.ICHOMVD~ILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The new
Kinship . Nuvlgutor . Progrum
of the Mela~ County Council
on Aging is now nfferlng ser·
vices to ussbt rehttlves or.
friends providing care for
another person'schlld.
Susan 011 ver, executive
director, said that Leslie
Rayburn, coordlnbtor, hus
started working with families;
assessing their needs and providing Information und refer·
rul118slstance.
She noted .thut about 800
fmnlltes In the county quullfy
for the services .becuuse they
ore curing for children not
their uwn who are under 18
years of uge.
· The services may include
respite care, financial and
legal assistance and . medical
care, according to Oliver In u
report [liven at a recent meet·
Ina of ihe Board or Trustees.
She said that referruls mny
be made to Rayburn ut 992·

Giants thump Reds, 11

June E. TUrner, 62
DNIIa, AJ

Hlsh: 7p~ Low: 60s
D~t~~la,AJ

.~·111~11• cops
· nabthltf
,

S~ond

1122 J,ackson Pike • Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipoli.r, Ohio

Call (740) 441-1971 or
v

I

434·4194

RUtLAND - A locul poet recently opened the
debut of u new unth(Jingy l)f Ohio poems with her
polgnunt poem ubout Chester.
·
Cathy Lentes of Rutland read her award-winning
poem, "Approuching Chester. Ohio" ut u reception
und debut of "I Have My Own Song For It: Modern
Poem .~ (lf Ohio" ul Olu Church or1 the Green in
Hud so n. The anthology was rece ntl y published by
the University of Akron Pre~ s. and abo includes
Wl!rks by Pulitzer Prize winners Jam es Wright and
Mary Oliver, us well as Robert Bly and former
United Stutes Poet Laureate Rita Dove .
Several of the poets whose works arc included in
the book were on hand . After Introductory remarks
by both editors, Will Greenway and Elton Glaser, .
Lentcs opened the program b)l readinl! her poem,
which paints a colorful portrait of Chester and the
old courthouse there.
The poem is the winner of the 2000 Appalachian
Poetry Competition in Now And Then Mugazine and
East Tennes see State University.
Lentes, a native Ohioan, writes and rubli shes work
about life in the Buckeye Stute. utH i• u frequent
· contributor In literary journal s and · 111agazines
throu)!hout the' Appalachian regiort .and beyond. In
addilton to her Meigs County poem in the anthology,
she currently has work in the April issues of Now
And Then and Northern Ohio Live.
Lentes is also a teacher of ~ritin11. workin11 with
children frnm kindergarten through the eighth grade·,
and with women in journal and creativity work~hops,
Other writen participating in the reading from
around the slate tncluded Maggi~ Anderson, J:?aniel
Bourne, Myrna Stone, Larry Smnh. Robert Mtltner,
Oiane Kendig, and Bob Fo~ .
· .
"I Have My Own Song For It : Modem Poems Of
Ohio" gathers together 117 poems by 85 poets for a
fresh perspective on the. Buckeye State.
Not si nce 1911 has there been a comprehensive
collection of pnems written about Ohio .. This anthol-.
o'y is especially relevant as Ohio celebrates its
bu:entennial in 2003. These poems offer a virtual
tour of peorle and places in the state, traveling
around Ohio M lakes and rivers, farms and open coun·
try, small towns and large cities. In resonant language and compelling imagery. the poems bring Ohio
to iu citizen~ and, beyond the borders of the state, to
Ioven of poetry everywhere.
"I Have My Own Song For It : Mndem Poems Of
Ohio," is available in both cloth and paper editions
from the University of Akron Press and tn-store and
online booksellen. Future reading~ ~ re flanned
around the state through 2003 as a part o Ohio's
bicentennial ce lebrations.

Abbie Houur, rl&amp;J!t, wat
proiJCI of the four-Inch bubble
&amp;Um bubble ehe blew durlna
e conteet It Saturday'•
Family Fun Felt, coordinated
by the Me~&amp;~ County Health
O.pertment. The event, held
It the Femll)' Life Center of
the Middleport Church ot
Chrltt, 'Included demonttretlone and bo&lt;lth extllbltl from
a number of local egenclee.
bullnftHI, and lndMdUIIII,
fr,. food end IOIIVtnlrt, end
tntertllnmetlt and contettt.
£1v11 Pretlt)' trlblltt ertltt
OWiaht lctnhOWfr and the

:a •••••• • 11,.,..

C.lend1r
Clltllfleds

A7
85·7

Dar ~

A4

Edltorlajs
MOYiet ·

M

Comlct

Obltulrlft
SI)Of1S

Wathel'

B8

A3
A3

Bl~~

""

e21110%GHot~"ltlfille&amp;

Lentes opens
poetry debut
FROM STAFF REPORTS

allejedly robbed Spu.dway
with what wa1 detcrlbed a8
"an edjed weapon" Juat
before 2 a.m. Monday.
· After recetvlna an ldentl·
tlcatlon from w11neue11
OPD oft'lcers located ana
amehended Mayes around
7:30 a.m. ·whhoutlncldent.
He Is belna held In the
Oallla County !all on
$20,000 bond on c6ii!Je• of
felony poueulon of ilruas
reladna to an arre•t by tile
Oallla County Sheriff'•
omce.

.... ...

MHI PROM ROYALTY -At Saturday night's prom at Meigs
High School John Stanley, son of Shirley and Daniel Stanley
of Harrisonville. end Ashley Burbridge, daughter of Bill and
Lori Burbridge of Pagevllle , were crowned king and queen.
Theme of the prom was "Completely Lost In You ." (Charlene
Hoeflich)

((Approaching Chester, Ohio" ·
included in anthology

Oall1!)9118 Perry, W.Va.,

Cookbook .
Whan
you gat
your
hearing
tasted In
May at•••
Advanced Hearing Center

FAMILY FUN FEST

STAFF REPORT

Cookbook

FREE!

261!1, Ext. 223, or informu· Wellington who hus ·been
tlon can be emulled to her ut working on u provlsiunul
klnshlp®meigsseninrcenter.c busls wus l!iven pennunent
om. The program Is funded stutus ulong with u 30 cent un
throush lhe Meigs County hour increuse.
Depurunent of Jobs und
A question of whut to do
Family Services.
with the . old but work ins ·
Oliver ulso reported to the freezer.~ the wulk-in rcpluccs
trustees that the new wulk-in wus discussed und It wus
cooler freezer, purchased with decided that ruther thon sell
u gift from the Slstel'll of St. them, they would be offered
Joseph Hospital, hus been i&lt;J God's NE!T. un lnterdenom·
Installed In the. room which lnutionul ynuth · prol!rnm in
previously housed the mltri- Mcll!s County.
tlon ofl1ce.
·
. It wus noted thut Dlunu
Oliver commended .Bellndu CollleN Is working on u phuse
Wellihl!llln, nutrition director of the county's hmnclund
for her work on the. Murch for security pro11rum und Is writMeals proJect which brought jng u,prnposnlttl "use seniors
In severuf thousund dollltrs, to truln seniors to get people
und her nianage111ent of food out dunger zone! 1n the event
costs since tuldng over the of nn disustllr", said Oliver.
prusram,
A new policy fur luundr~
The executive director suid Nervices through the Council
that food costs have been cut on Aging was ndoptell ut the
by about $2,000 a month meetlns und u suggested
through the use of buyln11 in dunutlon of $2 wus put in
bulk, using coupons, 011d .pluce.
making more meals from
"scratch.''
PI••• •• Coundl, AJ

: OALLIPOLIS
Officen from the Oallipulla
Pollee Department c:ap·
rured a man 8U8pected of
commlttlna armed robbery
at the Speedway conve·

For a limited time, D&amp;W Homee North le offering
YOUR CHOICE of FREE CENTRAL AIR
or
$1 ,000 FURNITURE PACKAGE
on any new llnglewlde or doublewldel

·--

MEIGS ROYALTY

Ave11ue In Oalllpoll&amp;.
Accordlna to a preu
release luued by OPO, .
Marvin Mayes, 47 of ·

740·286·21 01

•

Honattown Newapeper

•

!lienee store, 80 I

1000 Morton Street
Jackaon, Ohio

}

Aockln' Country dlllctft per·
forrnt&lt;l, Rocldn' Reale wat
the pit DJ, and e number
of conteltl for chlldrtn end
ldultl were held. Cathy

Lentft, en ewerd-Winnlna
· · poet from Rutland end ·
wacner of crei!We Wlffina
prolf'IIM for ldultl and chiidren, hid • popul• •Fun
with Worclt" dl•play. Here,
A.J. How«d, 4, mltl with
Ltntu. (BI'Ien J. Reed)

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

Nurses

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lsMay6· 12
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fun f:of ·

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Jacklon, Ohio

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Financing

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•

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