<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3927" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3927?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T10:57:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13846">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/18625eeaf7e78d9f05335dfd9930546c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d4147576f3b20a31c51f77bc8e9aedf3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13874">
                  <text>...

•
~

flriU.y. April ·a s. aoo8 .

.... B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Cleyeland takes first
of 2 from Kansas City
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(API - Grady Sizemore
bad four hits and two R81s
and F
Carmona surviv
ve s'halcy innings to
Geveland past Kansas
City 9-6 in the first game of
a doubleheader Thursday
night, the RQyals' sixth conseootive loss.
Sizemore was 4-for-5
with lhree singles and a solo
borne run and Casey Blake
and Jason Michaels hoth
bad two RBis amid
Cleveland's 15-hit attack.
Blake followed his 4-for-4.
six-ROI game on Tuesday
night by .reaching base three
times in four at-bats, with
two-ROI singles.
Cannona {3-1 ) gave up
nine hits and four runs to
impTOve to 4-0 lifetime
against Kansas City. He
walked fo11r and struck out
one.
Brett Tomko (1-3) went

fOOT innings for the Royals
and allowed II hits and
seven run's - six earned.
He snuck out. two and
walked two.
Rafael Betancioort wol\:ed
the ninth fur his first save.
since taking over for injured
closer Joe BoroWski.
David DeJesus
and
Miguel Olivo 1lomered for
the Royals as ·every Stalter
for both teams had either a
hit or soored a run, or both.
After Travis Hafner and
Victm Mattinu singled
leading off the Cleveland
third. Third baseman Alex
Goroon was charged with
an ·cll'Or when Ryan Gadco's
gTOunder went 1hrough his
legs, allowing Hafner to
score. Ben Francisco fol· lowed with an R81 double
and Michaels flared a tworun single into right, makil\ll
it 7- 1.

fnmPageBI
were third and fourth.
The other competitor
wjth dual first-place finishes was Aaron Martindale
&amp;om Eastern. He took first
in d:le boys 800m and
1600m run, and teammate
Josh Collins placed sebond
in the 1600m and third in
the 800m. Keith Aeiker,
also of Eastern, was third
in the 1600m and fourth in
·
the 800m.
Devan Soulsby of Meigs
was first in the 800m run
and Alyssa Newland of
Eas~em was ·third. Both
competed and placed in the
I 600m run, as well, where
Soulsby was second and
Newland was once again
third.
Meigs ' oilier two individual first~ came from
Adrian. Bolin il) the girls
· I OOm hurd)es and Jeremy
Smilh in the boys 400m
dash. Also placing in the .
I OOm hurdles was Casey
Smith of Meigs and Jackie
Burns of South Gallia.
They were fourth and fifth,
respectively . . Additionally.
South Gallia'sJeff Clyburn .
was fourth in the 400m
dash and Eastern's Zacb
Moore was fifth.
ln the girls 400m relay,
Meigs was first, Eastern ·
was second, and South
Gallia was fiflh, and in the
girls 800m relay, lhe-order
from first through · third
was Meigs, Eastern, and
South Gallia.
The Meigs 400m and
800m relay teams woo on
lhe boys side, as well, and
Eastern was second in the
800m relay. South Gallia
was fourth in the 400m
relay.
· The Eagles had three
relay teams place first: the
boys 3200m, the boys
.I 600m, and the gids
1600m.. Meigs was third in
the boys 3200m and
1600:p relays, and they
took fourth in the girls
1600m relay. ·
Holin was fourth in the
girl s 300m hurdles.,_ -followed by South -Gallia's ·
Andrea Thomas in fifth .
Thomas was fouith in lhe
400m dash behind Meigs'
Morgan Lentes in third.
Lady Eagle Morgan Burt
had a pair of third-place
finishes in the girls high
jump · and long jump
events. Patti Vining . and
Kelsey Shuler, botli · of
Meigs, were fourth in the
high jump and long jump,
respectively.
Lady Marauder Olivia
Bevan was third in the
3200m run. Meigs . 3200m
·girls relay team also took
third.
South Gallia's Jake
Watson took third place in
the boys 3200m run, fol lowed by Nick Schultz of
Eastern and Nathan Cook
:Of Meigs in fourth and
fifth.
Marauder Crockett Crow
was lhird in the boys 300m
hurdles, and teammate
Jacob Well edged Crow for
third in the 11Om hurdles.
ln the bOys high jump.
Eastern's Mike Johnson
was third. In lhe long
jump, Burroughs was third.
Eastern's Devon Baum
was fourth , and Well was
fiflh.

Meigs

\\bat's a11he bulz about?
.Hoi ley procb-er works ID bring bees bade. Cl

ft\M&amp;PIIItBl

But after a delay in the
action in the top of the
sigh that stopped die game
for· 10 minutes ~d led to a

change
in
umpil'es,
Wcllston homered off the
first pitch out of the delay
wid! one runner on to tie it
at 2-2.
.· M~gs again retimd lhe
side in three batters in tbe
sevendl, but the rnomenhlqJ
had already changed hands,
and Wellston scored the goahead run with two hits in
lhe top o{llhe eighth.
The Lady Marauders
mtnm to action Friday with
a makeup game at borne
against Nel.sonville-York. .
Start •time will be 5 p.m.
w
""

T Ill: :S. ..... I
000 1l02 01 101 DOD DO -

\'allq'

OJ:ife~
Ohio Division

'

'5IJftlmlt game

Hometown News for Gdia &amp;: Meip munties

ega'in!;t
WellstDm Oil
Thursday in
ROOksp!i;;cs.
Eric
Rw ' 'I !Jill

ala.

•

•

-

1

-

'

Easte

SPORTS
.~ Blue Devils stay hot,
beat Chillicotle.
.~ . . . BI

•

I

]\'

...

' ,l

58 0
270

~uate in size for the dis-

year m both the elementary
TUPPERS PLAIN'S school an~ the neighboring
Eastern Local Schools
~ H1gb School: 1be
Superintendent
Rick
distnct expects to gam 10
Edwatds will meet with dJc
s~ts per year, Edwards
head of the Ohio School
w~ b~ on ~nt
facilities
Commission
pFOJecllons exanuned as
'Monday, to defamiDe bow ~"!fl!iUIUlthediSIIict.lbe ~of the facilities plan&amp;stem will deal 'With an dislria: s clcinentary school, ml\ll piOGtSS.
.
.
iniKase in·enrollment pro- now ne:adY 10 Y~ old,
The ~ bas 1dentifie:d
jected over :be next decade. was designed and ~t ~y B: specific need for ~Edwards said be will meet to house ·t he ~stnct s tiOna! :classroo~ space m
with · Director Michael ·~tat that~
·the: ~nmary . wmg · of die
Shoemaker in Columbus to
Open enrollment IS on buildir~g .

tnct s cwrent and shorta
classroom addition completed two years after the
school was renovated.
The board has mtly begun
to plan m general terms, but
Edw~ ~d Monday's
meetmg w1th Shoemaker
should "bring the district"
clo~ to ll)on: spectfic
facil1~es expanston plans.
No discussiOns :have been
held on funding sources for

lb f.l il'

ew ~ results of an
assessment. ~mpleted by
:be comnusston and . to
de~ a plan
posstble
facilitlies exPB!Iston. . .
. Edwards sud die district
ts ~ ~ . reach enrollmalt of 900 m the neX'! .10
~ d':'C to ne'!" f_amilies

•

· • Jti: L GlassiJum, 51
·• htlaklu M. I - - 81
:~ f'aUI.Jc aaph .Milar, 56

'-

• Donna too Piitcar, 66

~

·~ J. 'Mxldrui, 68

bJsiDR

dttaJt. See PilltAl

:•Shemaynotm u,
. getliilg tugell :er again.
'See,.Al
:• f-edetal p!DII
seel~ cl8ater
wamings on lasik
.eye surgary. See PliltAS
• FourdatiCin 1eoei uas
boost See Pa!leA6
• LSftover ·l:iiL)odes
_recycled by Cllerlin
·aoneye •Jdenls.

-

·Seer.u

LU1'CF. 4poll

· It's }u.st

Mast
Tubing

.US·ASiitla Street
Pt. Pletiut, wv !5551
314475-U
.
FH: JIU7S.7317 .• '

Around The

Corner

. f
uva•"""f ru
~

.u

BK :

Rltera
Reii*QIIIC:.
· AeMnall

fbMI c.

Request f"ami(r

.• Ohio I1Wl plaacE !PlY
.in Rust Belt lheiHo-«der
.ring. See . . A6

.......,IICie

INDEX

YowAmz'sll FIDoT
Corering Detdu!

I

435'1. Sac ' A:
(740) 446· 7619
If

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

Ct

Classifieds

D3-5
insert

• r

Comics
f.ditorials
•

ATHENS

594-3571

4 SllcnoNii - q PAGIIS

k""IW • Coauilen.UI• .
Wholes•le • Retail

7tt U&amp;-1117

A4

Movies

C3

Obituaries
Sports

As
B Section

Weather

A6

e;)ao8 ClldD v.ze, r 'I'

,:I..
)&gt;

• ..... , ··a
•

Village
slates
pancake
breakfast

3Crom 8:30m H :30 .a .m. at

.,..... ...... ,.
Mill OUI'I.&amp;T, DIC.

For Life 11ays in recogmtion rA the .\metlican Cana:r
Society's Relay Fl'!r Life in
Gallia County.
The ,proclamation 'Qlllintained that cancer is a gmup
of 'diseaseS characterized by
WilllllllltrOlled growth and the
s~ of abnormal cells
wl:ich. if not controlled, can
Jesuit in premature death.
CIII!OCT is predicted to strike
ooe .out of every · three
Americans sometime fu our
tifetime wilh an estimated
56,840 .new cases of cancer
to be diagnosed in' Ohio i
2008,
according
·o
healthyanlericans.org. .

Dtp.ftment ·
Pancake
Bll'.ff.st 011 Saiw:day, May

Stteet • Gallipolis

740-446-0007

BAHEI:r'S

a-.

, ltto -Grande Volwetec:r Fne
70

J

~ie the ·dog takes ~har&amp;e of &lt;~ ·scrap Pietle of wood while voluntee~ wMI-: ..'!Un~ina

Cf1urch outside of Pomeroy.
- RIO GRANDE ·- Get replica of Noah' s Ark at Hillside Baptist
.
ready to catch, because the
pancake flipping stylings of
Chris Cakes of Obio will
ICtunl. for the seoond annual

Oxy~:en

ITt

n:

Co.

.. ,IJII.

the Village ' Municipal
BUilding.
Hosted by lhe RGVFD
Ladies Auxiliary, die event
saves as one of the Diany
fund-raisers the organization runs to taise money for
lifesaving equipment for the
fire depaument.
. Thanks to :the support of
the community and ii grant
through lhe Gallia County
Commissioners,
the
depiutment .recently purchased a thermal iJNgiitg
camera and a portable
(lefibrillator. The cost for
the pancake breakfast is $5
per plate, which includes
all you can eat pancakes,
sausage, orange drink and
coffee. Bake sale items
will also be available and
children ages ' four and
under eat for free.
The ladies auxiliary i.s
also gearing . up for the
annual Rio Grande Vlllage

"'"'

..

~

.........

., , --

"\ tt,

}._.j.

any new construction, but
Edwards said the district,
based · on lhe preliminary
planning process now completed and enrollment projections, would qualify for
funding assistance for an
additional II ,000 square
feet of space.
A program offers financia! assistance to districts in
ntle(f of facilities expansion
due to relatively high open
enrollment - 10 percent or
more of the district's enrollment.

IIY IIEnl 5E ta&amp;LT

.

Auia/Home/B.U.OIIS/
UlltiADD•ity
Aa lad tpeac1ewt ~J
• 1 w.lllq Erie

~_!

BSERGENT4l&gt;MVDAILYSENTINEl.COM

2

WFATHER

\III

Volunteers bringing back landmark

=:r:=-r=l:·
TOW;

..

°

the ark

Pwple bay and Relay

See . . .U
• Man aa:usad.af
JAtAiii ·IQ~

Equimnentlnll SupJflu
CPAP . llllchines

•

gztlia
• . . A.,.;?.d:r,
a 1114QIDIS~ -aue,.
,_ ~

.•local8riefs.

DelnK.Eoarkl

term future needs due to

GALUroLIS
llepresentati ves of Relay
fur tife lll!d the Americ•n
Canner Society met with

·pqeAS

R

Eastern High School is

ERIGELOMVDAILYiliiBUNE.OOM

.

·roDAY'S
NUMBER IS:

IM

-~,1

to discuss enrollment impact
for

0BDUARIES

M.A. -CCC-A
Owner&amp;
Audiologist

"' !

the rise in the ~s~ct - up
by 5~ students m this school

lhii:IIIIIJ.Rim
BRE£DMjii'I),QLVSENTINELCOM

WP- S1urglll: u•- Eboloboch.

Diane McVey

~'
_ 1&gt;&lt;1 ......

'

proclaims
day to .
'Paint'

v-...

., .. ~ alllel!'r.

Talisha Beha
stands ready .
at lhiRI base
du:i;;)g a l:i-

County ~

r15 Welt

;.JNS,.-,E.,r.q. ...

...,_, ......... :We-

Meis semior

PlAY COVERALL BINGO

•

--- I .

dtree baltecs in four of five
i.nnil\lls to open cbe game.

WIN UPTO $1,00.0 !!!

Track

Holzer
Clinic

ALONG THE RivER

~'
..

POMEROY- According
to lhe Bible, God told Noah
to build an ark before the
great flood and according to
Pastor James Acree Sr., God
told bim bow to rebuild the
replica of the ark at Hillside
Baptist Church on Ohio 143.
For several years iht!'&lt;tirst
replica rested behind the
church as both a symbol of
having failh in God during a
catastrophe and as horne to
Power In The Blood
Ministry's ,annual play
abw,lt Noah and his· srory. At
its""' lieight, lhe play drew
around 400 in attendance.
.However, the yeais slowly
deteriomted the ark, which
Acree burned down after he
felt it bad become unsafe.
Still, even lhough the ark
was gone from sight, it was
not gone from the minds of
those who'd seen it.
"The people in lhe community brought it back."
- Acree said.- ~
• _ ~
Aeree ancl fellew volun.
teers are in the process of
rebuilding the ark, which .
is UOth the scale of
Noah's at 84 to 89 feet
long and 26 feet high. The
plan is to have the ark
ready for return performances of lhe Noah play
by the Power In The Blood
Ministry group set for June
2-8. Acree said he felt the
story of Noah endures
because Noah endured
hardships while knowing
God bad a plan.
Acree also has further
plans to add on to his.church
by consti;ucting "The Arch,"
il which is an outdoor ll!:ena
1 c.· \wAl

" z-•

A voice from history
Kaitlln Dewhurst of
the Ariel Players
speaks to the audi-

ence in character
du:ing "Memories
ofa •W arfor
FreedOm, • an orig~
nal play that
debuted Saturday
during the Federal
Army Homecoming
encampent in the
Gallipolis City Park. ·
Directed by Cathy
lord, the production is a first for
the annual event.
The enca'mpment.
which began Friday,
continues Sunday
' with loading and firing at 9 a.m .. a
church service at
10 a.m., and
memorial services
and an honor guard
salute at 12:30
p.m. The camp
closes at 1 p.m.
-Kolly/ ,._

�•

(

r

)

REGIONAL

.._,lima-6tntind

Local Briefs
GALUPOUS _ Gallia
County Local Board of .
Ji"
•
·u
· ·
:"""C~n WI meet lD Sjleaal sesSJ~ on Tu6da~ at 7
p.m. at River Valley !'ftddle
School, formerly BidwellPorter Elementary.
The board:S regular monthly mMmg IS Monday at 7
p.m. 10 the admtmstrauve
olOOes. 230 Shawnee Lane. .

picnic at 0.0. Mcln~
Pa!t (fromclt""_:~ a.andm. familiesunt:ii.3
p.Dl.
UWPU
eocoura,ged) and an evening
at the Elks F~ from 8 p.m.
unril midnight with live
music and adult bevernges.
Contact Neal Peifec at
(740)
645--4692
or
nealpeiferdodge@yahoo.ro
m to RSVP or to assist with
finding cl~smares.

Reunion plans

Help event
scheduled

CHESHIRE - Plans are
UDdei way for the 15-year
GAUlPOLIS - Gallia
mmion of the River Valley
lligb School Class of 1993' County
Genealogical

Society, OGS &lt;llaptec, is
sponsoring its founh annual
Help Event. "Focus on
Children,~ in conjunction
wirh Boswd Memorial
Library, 10 a.m. until I p.m.
on Saturday, May 3.
The event is ·to help 4Hers and Scouts with
genealogy fair projects and
badges. The society will
help students to find
answers and bow ro locate
resources. lnu:met help will
be available. No cltarge,
light refreshments.
Adults also welcome for
help with lineage applications or general re~
For information, call 4464242.
.

•

Man accused of plotting Columbine-style attack
LAKEWOOD- An Ohio

an lndiaru~ teenager about
oouducting a Columbinestyle attack on two schools,
aulborities said Friday.
Lee Billi, 33. of the
Cleveland
suburb
of
Lakewood, was arrested
llu:-sday and is charged with
ooospiracy ro commit mwder,
said Ryan Miday, spokesman
Jor Cuyahoga Count
Prosecutor Bill Mason. A 16year-&lt;~ld Indiana boy was
amstcd earlier in the week.
Lakewood Police Chief
lim Malley s.aid he didn't
lrnow bow far along the two
were in the alleged plan but
said they were tallcing about
a Columbine-type plot.
BiHi was held in the oily
jail to aw.ait arraignme11t
mi&gt;ednled Monday.
A computer was removed
from Billi's home · in
Lakewood in addition to
computer disks, papers,
books and three partial
boxes of handgun ammunilion, Malley said.
· Authorities said the two
exchanged e-mails on
Sunday and discussed condueling simultaneous mass
murders at the teen's schOOl
IICIII' 'South Bend, lnd., and
• another location. Malley
said he didn't lrnow the

Sunday, April 27, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

other location but it didn't delelltion oenrer and UDdecgo .
involve a Lakewood school. a psycOOlogical evaluation.
At the teen's home near
St. Joseph Probate GoWt
downtown South Bend, Judge Petcc Nemeduaid the
authorities said they found teeD must stay in detention
more than 100 knives and "fur his own protection and
several illegal snakes.
protection of soqely.~
Billi lives in a two-story
wit doesn't oound from
brick apartment complex past hisrory that anyone was
within view of the Lakewood .keeping an eye on him.,~
·High School football stadium Nemeth s.aid.
located on school ground.~.
Autborit:ies said .a school
The superintendent sent word officer investigating an
tbmugh a secretary that be , unrelated threat aUhe teen's
was · unaware of any J)lot sobool, Penn High., disoovinvolving Lakewood schools. ered Internet poslli.n gs in
. Laura Budny, who lives in which the teen discussed bis
Billi's apartment complex, support for the Columbine
said he had worlred as a shooters, a reference :00 the
security guard and lives 1999 massacre at a suburalone. She s.aid she often ban Denver high school in
saw him coming and going which two students killed
in a blue uniform and he told 1,2 classmates and a teacher
her recently that he was hav- before committing suicide.
ing a lot of stress because of
School officials queshis mother's cancer.
tioned llhe teen about his
"I just thought he was a · postings and learned he .had
dodcy kind of guy," she said. exchanged e-mails Sunday
· James Packwood, 15, a wim an unidemified person
fu:sbman at Lakewood High in whichd!ey discussed conScbool, lives upstairs from dueling "Columbine-l.ike
Billi and said he was directed mass murders" at the same
by law enforcement officers time on Sept. II at Penn and
to return ro his apartment oo anot:l!er location, St. Joseph
Thursday, apparently during Prosecutor Michael Dvorak
Billi's am:st. "It's kind of s.aid Thursday.
scary.~ said Packwood, who
The boy lived in his
didn't know BiOi
deceased
gnmdfatib.er 's
A jud!e in Indiana ·o n bouse •
Sou!!h Bend's
· mday ulkred that k 16- IIOiithwest 1iide in a rundown
year-old boy, whose name neighbnd~ scattered with
was lllll.released because of vacant !houlli;:S. Most neighhis ~ remain in a juvenile bors declined liD Wk Friday,

Two

viii'Criw=.

Photo CCWII-I Es; fll '7 5 ,

...

Rio Gtande Volunteer Fire Department Chief Bob
Brandebewy prepares to catch a pancake at the 2007
RGVfD ·PaACCII&lt;e Breakfast.

:can

n

r

X ..,..1,.,.

Representatives of Relay :fur life and the American Cancer Society, along with Gallia County
Commissioners, proclaimed May 1 ·paint Our Town Purple Day and Relay For Ufe Days.
Pictured from 1eft; back row, ·Giltlia County Commissioners President Justin fallon, Ken
Moore of HlillzeroGenter forCanoerCare, Gallia County Commissioner Joe Foster, and Gallia
County Commissiomers Vice President David Smith; middle row, Relay for Life Luminary
Chairman Jlilan Schmidt, Billie Handa, American Cancer Society, and Karrie Davison, Paint
the •County P1.1g~le •Committee; front row, Pair;Jt the Town PIJri)le &lt;;ommittee and Relay for li~
Chairperson Cana Wamsley, Cancer i.aison Physician Holzer Medical Center Dr. Alice A.
.Dachowski, and Gallia County Relay for life Ohai.r:person Bonnie Mcfarland,

nation

largest and most
voluntary bea1th
organization since 1913 and
has funded research which
has contributed to ,e very
lrnown metihod for detecting
cancer and techniques for
treating cancer, whidJ · 'bas
increased cancer survival
rates from 10 percent ro
. more than 65 percent.
. The ACS is a valuntary,
communily-.based coalitioll
of local citizens dedicated
to eliminating cancer ~ a
. major
health problem
through financial suppwt
and education awareness.
The Relay For Life event
tlnaucia.lly benefits the
American Cancer Society's
research and patient support
programs, and educationally benefits our local citizens. The ACS' Relay For
life in Gallia Couflly is a
· community event that
allows an opportunity to
Pastor James Acree .Sr. hopes "The Arch" venue, located just beloY&lt;the ark, will be a home network with businesses,
to .d ifferent events, including Gospel sings, all summer lo~.
. ·
associates, family and
~espected

· A•'s'11uil W..'t Brak l'our Bo-T •
AS&amp;' ' ' ..__..UIIits..,.Rrady Fori..._.. Ddlwry!

SPRING INVENroRY

CLEARANCE SAL~!
I~ l'ritfft llJutpg /rt»ff

. $1,295 • $9,995
l5 AmQS 10 CHOOSE
FROM!!!!
hjm h AdArW A.s $8 a mo,
100% Financing with qualified credit.·
·
We take trllde..ins

'

..

Bl.tliclh
In

•

Me

IIOOiliD BEAM

e

.....

a G:U•z11U
I aM

"'"Ms · a . a d c

a•

~,.

.....

web

M~ County.calendar
.·Chun:lt events
Sunday, April27
:- POMEROY- Dayspring
'in concert at the Mt. Union
:tsaptist Church 6:30 P·PI·
:sunday. The church is local~
:ed at 39081 carpenter Hill
·Road, Pomeroy. For information call 742-2832.
~ - EOINT ROCK - Revival
;beginning Sunday 11 a.m.
'Silrvice at the · Point ~ock
:owroh of U1e Nazarene on
:SR 689 between Wilkesville
·and Route 32, and continuing
:through Wednesday, 7 p.m.
:fiCI'Vi.ces. Rev. ·Bud AUman,
:evangelist; special music by
'the
Brian
Family
:Connection, Sunday. and Jim
~d Cathy Si~sion, Monday
;tuough Wednesday. Uoyd
&lt;Jrirnm, Jr., pastor.

au

•:llllcona

-•

Wednesday, April 30
. LETART. W.Va. -. John
·E. "Jack" Ord, fonnerly of
:..Ctart, W.Va. will observe
:his 89th birthday on April
:30. A 'card shower is
·planned. His address is .
:Lakin Nursing .Home @I
:Bateman Circle, Lakin,
~. Va. , 25287 .
Thursday, May I
: RACINE - Eva Teaford
:will observe her 80th birthiday n May I. Cards may be
·sent ro her at P. 0 . Box 55.
:Racine, Ohio 45771.

\

.. .

Public IJM'diDe"
Monday, April 211
RACINE
-Regular
meeting of S!)uthem Local
School Board, . 8 p.m., .high
schQUl media room.
POMEROY - Regular
lllQetlng_ of Meigs County
Library lloard, 3 p.m. ,
Pomeroy Library.

•-••- .

~
\
'•

.

POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., lljl Memorial Dr.
SYRACUSE
. Commit;tee meeting of the
Syracuse Village Pool, 7:30
p.m. at village hall.
Thesday, April29
SYRACUSE- The final ,
public meeting on the
Syracuse CDBG Distress
Grant apPlication, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse
(;()ln!!!UhilY
Center. PUblic urged to
attend.

Tree Care Specialists
Ia Meigs COcm(Y

"We Care For Your Trees"

Monday, Apri.l
6:00PM

Holzer's NJ:W
Ro~s an

Red, Vwlm 11n Bble
Fllnvers Juzpe BUGS, ANI TIUS do TOO!

Scott L. Swain
ISA Certified Arburist,
Cel1ified ()ps- !!lal &amp;:
Laodscape Prefessiooal
G.Wpolis, OH

Oubsand

"-'ttly

.~

•

Birthdays

Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
·followed
by
meeting.
Pomeroy Library.

.

111111 =
1 •••
••w. n.a:tandbo•
til! lil••- c::ot".n

Sruulay 1Mie.r~;s.

-~

m

.

Q

·- . . .....

•

friends, with the same goal For Life Days thrGu~out
of mak:in,g a difference in Gallia County. All cituens
the battle ~~gainst cancer.
are jll'ged to recognize and
. The oolor pwple .is 1he parucipate in this antistg!lllture color of the cancer campaign held in
American Cancer Society's our communily.
R.e~ ~ Life ·~:&gt;v~ !ilg~ommissioners also pronifymg lbe pasl;ton l!hat " claimed the recagnition of
cancer survi¥ors and their the Relay For Life event as
families and · 'l oved ones the
"Purple . ·Ribbop
f~l f~ the mtdication of Campaign" to show s~rt
.Ibis disease.
.
to those individuals living
Therefore, Galllll ·County wtth cancer, and honor
Commissioners proclaimed those individuals that bave
May I as Paint Our Town· lost their lives to the dreadPwple Day and as Relay ed disease -o f cancer.

I ,andmark

...

'

Support groups

a

· .,..

•

.

Card shower

____ -~ '.------Hscci~~Y American
Cancer
has been the

f

Regular meetings

, each month at. Athens
60th birthday on April 28.
Church of Christ, 785 W.
Cards can be sent to her at
Union St. , Athens. For inforGAUlPOLIS _ Practice Holzer Senior Care Center.
mation, call 593-7414.
for the French Colony Room 114. 380 Colonial.
·
BY IKAntY Mnun t
Monday, April 28
GALLIPOLIS - Look OIO!Us, a four-pan hannony Drive, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
not sure how he got ahold of
GALUPOUSKnights
Good
Feel Better cancer
·
BIDWELL Pauline
- IIMcY SUGAR .
the bag, but be could have
7 p.m. Shaver will celebrate her
program,
thUd
Monday
of
style
women's
group,
of
Columbus
will
have
a
died in the few minutes it
eaclt Tuesday at the Gallia
· . Drar Aanie: I am a 24- took those piuents ro pick dinner meeting at the the month at 6 p.m., Holzer County Senior Resource 93rd birthday on April 29.
year-&lt;~ld male. Four months out cucumbers and squeeze Holiday Inn at 6:l0 . p.m. Center fur Cancer Care.
Center,ll 67StateRoute I60, . Cards ca.n be sent to her at
Future plans wiD be disaga, my girlfriend ·and I tomatoes.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis ..Enter the side cen- · Holzer Seni&lt;Jr Care Center.
broke up after three years · Please print this as a cussed concerning some of Alcoholics '
Anonymous ter door. For more infonna- Room I II, 80 Colonial
tOgether. "Felicity" wanted common sense reminder to the needs within the com- Wednesday book swdy at 7 tioli. contact Suzy Patter at Drive, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
the split. I still love her.
parents to never· let a child munity. All members are p.m. and Thursday open (740) 992:5555 or Bev
GALLIPOLIS -Mabe l
urged to attend
·
We had our sllare of prob- play with a. plastic bag. Beaver is celebrating her
meefing at noon at St. Pe:ter's Alberchinski at 446-2476.
Tuesday, April 29
~sand I have oome trust Glad I Was There in
Episcopal Church, 541
CHESHIRE _ Citizens S8th birthday on May 4 .
GAILIPOUS - Gallia Second Ave. Tuesday closed Against Pollution (CAP) Cards can be sent to her at
iSsues. I ~so was very oriti- Fremont, Calif.
Coun~
Veterans ·service meefing is at 8 p.m. at St has its quarterly meetings at 138 Buhl Monon Road .
Cal and didn't let her be herDear Fremont You may
.self. Near the end, I suspect- have saved that child's life, Commission will meet at 4 Peter'sEpiscopalChurch.
theCbeshireVLilageHallon Apartment 501, Gallipoli s .
rid She was seeing someone and we appreciate the p.m. at the Veterans Service
GALLIPOLIS
the last Tuesday of Janua~y, Ohio 45631 . .
-:tse, although she insisted he reminder. that toddlers are Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.
Narcotics
Anonymous April, July and October,
GALLIPOLIS - Due ?o
Friday, May 2
was just a friend. But when I quick and parents need ·to be
Miracles in Recovery meets starting at 7 p.m. Anyone failing health, the family of
GALUPOLIS - River every
·moved out, he moved in.
vigilant. (We might have
Monday
and with concerns is encouraged Annabel Houdashelt is
· rm trying to get over her, saved the ·scolding for the Cities Singles Club, 6 p.m., Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at St. to attend. For more infonna- requesting a card stiower.
but every three or four parents rather than the child• Bossard Melilorial Library. Peter's Episcopal Church.
lion, call (740) 367-0273.
Thinking of you cards can
For information, call 446weeks. Felicily will text or however.)
POIN'f
PLEASANT,
GALLIPOLIS
be sent to her at 6657 State
call and say haw muoh she
Dear Annie: Your advice 2722:
W.Va.
-.
Narcotics Gallipollis Rotary Club Route ·440, Hickory, Ky.
'lizesd8Y, May 6
·lllisses me and how angry to "Thumbelina" was right
Anonymous Living Free meets 7 a.m. each Tuesday 42051 .
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Group
~he is that( didn'i trust her. on. She was the 30-year-old
meets
every at Holzer Clinic doctor's
E-mnilco-unityadenRetirees will meet for Wednesday and Friday at 7 dining room.
Clinic
Just the other da¥, she invit- wife who'd recently lost 40
dar iter~~s to tlu!Uy@mytlai;Cd me ro lunch, and the next pounds and was surprised to I unch at noon at the p.m. at 305 Main St
GAUlPOUS - French lytrillltne.colfl..
Fnx
day, she asked .me to a parly. find herself · unhappy with Counside Bar and Grill
VINroN - Celebrate City BarlJersbop Chorus prac- tmiWIIIIUJMIIts ro #6Restaurant
' :~he says it's because she · the way she looked.
Reoovery at Vinton Baptist tice, i:30 p.m. every Tuesday 3fJtJll. Mail items ro 825
Theday, May 13
)lllisses hanging out. This is ·
I just turned 40, and after
Church. Small groups look- at Grace United Methodist •...,..
....,,_, .....• 11~• • r-mftAli
.nL:...,._,., s, .,....,
GALLIPOLIS
- PERl ing for freedom from addic- Church. {Juej;(S welcome.
·liard because I keep think- my third child was born, I
45631.
AllltoiUICemellts
:0\g it means we rni ght get decided to g~ my act togeth- District meeting represent- lions, hurts, habits and
GAlLIPOLIS
- The IIIQY also be dropped off 111
iback rogetheL But, Annie, I er and lose some weight. In ing eight Ohio counties, 10 hangups every Tuesday at 7 French Cily Treble Makers, tht Tribluu ojJice.
:still l;ee the .other &lt;gDy's car less than a year, through a a.m., Gallia Connly Senior p.m. For information, call barbershop chorus, meets
&gt;Oyer at her place..
sensible diet and exercise, I Resource Center. I 167 State 388-8454.
evely Thesday, 7:30p.m., at
. ;: ;f .don't !mow what she managed to drop over SO Route 160. Speaker~ are
POINT
PLEASANT, Grace United Methodist
:wants :from me. How am I pounds. I should still lose Mike Muffell, health care · W.Va. -"Let Go and Let Church. Accepting new
:~sed to forget her? another 20 to be a "bealthy" benefit organizer., and lack Godn Nar-Anon Family members. For info, call Hugh
· .~ Doping
.
weight, and I hlive loose skin Wymer. PERI president. Group meeting, every Graham at (740) 446-1304.
:; Dear Hoping: Felicity from being pregnant and Noon meal will be served at Monday at 7 p.m., Krodel
GALLIPOLIS The
jsn't sure what she wants, but obese., but I don't let that stop cost of $7. Pay in advance Park: recreational building. Perennial Cat. a shelter for
;ibhe were seriously interest- me from being · happy by April 30 by sending the The group helps families ·homeless and abandoned
«1 in getting back mgether, because I've tried to keep my money to Jane Colley. pres- and friends of drug addicts cats, meets the fourth
:Mle'd tell you and break it off focus on being fit, not "pret- ident, 981 Centerpoint or users to attain l;Crenity, Monday of each month,
:Wjth the other guy.
ly." Let's face it. Looks only Road, Oak Hill, Ohio regardless of whether 6:30 p.m., at Bossard
ind&lt;p&lt;nd•m
45656. For information he/she -has stopped using. Memonal Library. Anyone
..; Instead, she likes having last so long, skinny or not.
'
~ ae&lt;nCO'. wt can tailor
contact her at (740) 418J&gt;ath af you dangling on Thumbelina should find 6800.
The group Tespects all interested in being involved
.
·:!llrings. If you want to get something else to put her
thr- best ins.urancr pmttetion zr
members' anonymily.
with caring for homeless
Saturday, May 24
:.o ver her, you must stop energy inro. She and her
Vinton cats in this area is invited.
VINTON
compe&lt;itivt ph=. We n:prcocnr
GALLIPOUS ·- French Baptist Church will operate ·
·accepting her invitations, ·husband
. should join a gym.
oaly rb. finesr (lt.,.-..,
:stop responding to ·h er text Take up mnning. Train for a City Classic, the ftrst a food .pantry every Monday ·
American
·
Boer
Goaf
.messages and phone calls, triathlon. She's still quite
from 5 to 6:30 p.m. For
iruurance
:and start .dating someone young, and there is too Association sanctioned Boer information, call 38S-S454.
JACKSON Geneva
.else. Once she sees that you much fun to be had instead Goat Show, I 0 a.m., Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
G~
Cox
celebrated
her
84th ·
indeed.live without her, of worrying about what she Counly Junior Fairgrounds. MS (Multiple Sclerosis)
:she may make another play sees in the mirror. - &amp;en The judge is Teny Burks, Suppon Group meets the birthday on April 26. Cards
can be sent to her at 7827
ABGA sanctioned judge
;for you, but it sounds like 'J'brft ill Houslon
second Monday of each Pattonsville Road, Jackson,
from
Kentucky.
Jackpot
Insurance
•some of your trust issues
Dear Houstoa: Looks
month at Holzer Medical
:were well-founded. Be care- don't last forever, so it Wether Show mcluded. Free . Center. For infonnation, Ohio45640.
Compa~~y,
BIDWELL - Charlotte
ful what you wish for.
makes sense to work: on admission. For information, contact Amber Barnes at
French will celebrate her
which loo truly "'med rh&lt;
Drar Aanie: This mom- being healthy - at. whatev- oontact Queen Acres · at (740) 339-0291.
(740)
256-1330.
ing I was in the grocery er weight that bappe.ns Jo be.
!&lt;pU101ion • The 'No Pmblm'
GAlLIPOLIS - NAMI
~tof!) and saw a little boy in
AJIJW's MtD1fJOx is wrilsupport group meetings will
People~. Ask Ul zbour the
,a shopping cart playing with tm by Kmlty MilclaeU IUUl
take place the third Thursday
plastic produce bag over MtlTCJI S~~g~~r, lollfliMe ediman)' orhtt advant~ of doing
each month at 6:30 p.m. at
his head. His face was com- tors of tlu! Au ln•+rr
GALLIPOLIS
the Gallia Counly Senior
hus;...., with an indcp&lt;ndcnr
pletely covered. Both of his coburua. "'-.u e..ml yo,. Grieving Parents Support Resource Center.
.
insurance: ag.-:ncy.
parents were fewer tlian 10 cstions ID IUIIIUsfiiDil- Group meets 7 p.m . second
feet away at the time. Thank
@cotftt:nstiVt, or write Monday of each month at
God I was closer.
ID: Annio!'s MPiU...r, P.O. Holzer Medical Center.
, I yanked rhe bag off his Box JJ81PO, Oirngo, IL People attending should
meet .in the general lobby.
:head and scolded ·him never MJ611. To fUul 11111 :to do it again. At fust I was tJbefll A 111tie 's Mnifbox,
r information, call Jackie
horrified, but now I'm 111111 read fealllres by otJaer
eatley at 446-~700 or
ijbsolutely furious! What is Creaton Syl"'lioote W'itos
ancy Childs at 446-5446.
"' · wrong with these parents1 .111111 cadoollists1. 11isit tlu! . ATHENS - Survival of
This little boy was no more Creators Sypi'«JU
S!licide ~ypport group meels
than 3 years old, and I' m page Ill WWt&amp;J.cretllors.cOIIL 7 p.m., fourth Thursday of
7

'Paint'

.,

Sunday,April2~2oo8

We offer the
best prices ·
and protection
for you.

•

'said, adding he hoped it
_ ___
would be utilized all summer long for various
from Page AI
events.
As for the ark, voluncontinue to make
teers
for concerts and other activities. The outdoor venue is' progress nailing the pine
nearly complete and will siding to the replica which
hok1400 when ·it opens for a .has come to symbolize
Gospel Sing on May 31. what to cling to in tbc: mid'"The Arch" is also handi- dle of a stonn. Tbe replica
capped accessible and will even has its own ,.rumat iii.
alfow the elderly to park: Louie the dog who lile.s to
near rhe stage ami listen to carry off scrap ~ af
the music without leaving wood from the :worbRe.
their vehicles.
Acree joked Louie bas
"Meigs County needs
something like this," Acree his own ark.
·

PageA3

&lt;-v

Community
events

getting together again

7

-·. ,,.....

Gallia County calendar

. ·She mny IWt mean

ti:umPIIItAJ
Yard Sale, scheduled for
June 7 beginning at 9 a.m.
To rent a space near the
village building or: .~nate
items to · the fire dcpanmeot contact Joya: Russ,
(740) 682-7060; Michelle
Miller, (740) 709-9903;
Melissa Donley, (140) 4188639;
or
Phyllis
Brande~. 441-5891.
Olbei'
events · ~ on tbc:
•
including die Rio Grande
Communily Fest, scheduled
for SqJt. 6 and the !illOODd
annual Rockets over Rio,
l;Cheduled for Sa~y.
Oct. II. Everyone is invited
to come out and enjoy all
the events scheduled in tbc:
viUage .

ARoUND ToWN

.. . ., li-·6tntind

Breakfast

. Special meeting . on~%is~fi ~held: A

man is acoused of e-mailing

PageA2

organizations
.•
•

'740~2015

Melldlly, April 211
POMEROY - OH-Kan ·

.
'

'

IDIDollillliiRI

~ICICIO,

fl eerlam

includi ig
for \

for this .f REE prognw.
more information.

(740)
1

�•

(

r

)

REGIONAL

.._,lima-6tntind

Local Briefs
GALUPOUS _ Gallia
County Local Board of .
Ji"
•
·u
· ·
:"""C~n WI meet lD Sjleaal sesSJ~ on Tu6da~ at 7
p.m. at River Valley !'ftddle
School, formerly BidwellPorter Elementary.
The board:S regular monthly mMmg IS Monday at 7
p.m. 10 the admtmstrauve
olOOes. 230 Shawnee Lane. .

picnic at 0.0. Mcln~
Pa!t (fromclt""_:~ a.andm. familiesunt:ii.3
p.Dl.
UWPU
eocoura,ged) and an evening
at the Elks F~ from 8 p.m.
unril midnight with live
music and adult bevernges.
Contact Neal Peifec at
(740)
645--4692
or
nealpeiferdodge@yahoo.ro
m to RSVP or to assist with
finding cl~smares.

Reunion plans

Help event
scheduled

CHESHIRE - Plans are
UDdei way for the 15-year
GAUlPOLIS - Gallia
mmion of the River Valley
lligb School Class of 1993' County
Genealogical

Society, OGS &lt;llaptec, is
sponsoring its founh annual
Help Event. "Focus on
Children,~ in conjunction
wirh Boswd Memorial
Library, 10 a.m. until I p.m.
on Saturday, May 3.
The event is ·to help 4Hers and Scouts with
genealogy fair projects and
badges. The society will
help students to find
answers and bow ro locate
resources. lnu:met help will
be available. No cltarge,
light refreshments.
Adults also welcome for
help with lineage applications or general re~
For information, call 4464242.
.

•

Man accused of plotting Columbine-style attack
LAKEWOOD- An Ohio

an lndiaru~ teenager about
oouducting a Columbinestyle attack on two schools,
aulborities said Friday.
Lee Billi, 33. of the
Cleveland
suburb
of
Lakewood, was arrested
llu:-sday and is charged with
ooospiracy ro commit mwder,
said Ryan Miday, spokesman
Jor Cuyahoga Count
Prosecutor Bill Mason. A 16year-&lt;~ld Indiana boy was
amstcd earlier in the week.
Lakewood Police Chief
lim Malley s.aid he didn't
lrnow bow far along the two
were in the alleged plan but
said they were tallcing about
a Columbine-type plot.
BiHi was held in the oily
jail to aw.ait arraignme11t
mi&gt;ednled Monday.
A computer was removed
from Billi's home · in
Lakewood in addition to
computer disks, papers,
books and three partial
boxes of handgun ammunilion, Malley said.
· Authorities said the two
exchanged e-mails on
Sunday and discussed condueling simultaneous mass
murders at the teen's schOOl
IICIII' 'South Bend, lnd., and
• another location. Malley
said he didn't lrnow the

Sunday, April 27, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

other location but it didn't delelltion oenrer and UDdecgo .
involve a Lakewood school. a psycOOlogical evaluation.
At the teen's home near
St. Joseph Probate GoWt
downtown South Bend, Judge Petcc Nemeduaid the
authorities said they found teeD must stay in detention
more than 100 knives and "fur his own protection and
several illegal snakes.
protection of soqely.~
Billi lives in a two-story
wit doesn't oound from
brick apartment complex past hisrory that anyone was
within view of the Lakewood .keeping an eye on him.,~
·High School football stadium Nemeth s.aid.
located on school ground.~.
Autborit:ies said .a school
The superintendent sent word officer investigating an
tbmugh a secretary that be , unrelated threat aUhe teen's
was · unaware of any J)lot sobool, Penn High., disoovinvolving Lakewood schools. ered Internet poslli.n gs in
. Laura Budny, who lives in which the teen discussed bis
Billi's apartment complex, support for the Columbine
said he had worlred as a shooters, a reference :00 the
security guard and lives 1999 massacre at a suburalone. She s.aid she often ban Denver high school in
saw him coming and going which two students killed
in a blue uniform and he told 1,2 classmates and a teacher
her recently that he was hav- before committing suicide.
ing a lot of stress because of
School officials queshis mother's cancer.
tioned llhe teen about his
"I just thought he was a · postings and learned he .had
dodcy kind of guy," she said. exchanged e-mails Sunday
· James Packwood, 15, a wim an unidemified person
fu:sbman at Lakewood High in whichd!ey discussed conScbool, lives upstairs from dueling "Columbine-l.ike
Billi and said he was directed mass murders" at the same
by law enforcement officers time on Sept. II at Penn and
to return ro his apartment oo anot:l!er location, St. Joseph
Thursday, apparently during Prosecutor Michael Dvorak
Billi's am:st. "It's kind of s.aid Thursday.
scary.~ said Packwood, who
The boy lived in his
didn't know BiOi
deceased
gnmdfatib.er 's
A jud!e in Indiana ·o n bouse •
Sou!!h Bend's
· mday ulkred that k 16- IIOiithwest 1iide in a rundown
year-old boy, whose name neighbnd~ scattered with
was lllll.released because of vacant !houlli;:S. Most neighhis ~ remain in a juvenile bors declined liD Wk Friday,

Two

viii'Criw=.

Photo CCWII-I Es; fll '7 5 ,

...

Rio Gtande Volunteer Fire Department Chief Bob
Brandebewy prepares to catch a pancake at the 2007
RGVfD ·PaACCII&lt;e Breakfast.

:can

n

r

X ..,..1,.,.

Representatives of Relay :fur life and the American Cancer Society, along with Gallia County
Commissioners, proclaimed May 1 ·paint Our Town Purple Day and Relay For Ufe Days.
Pictured from 1eft; back row, ·Giltlia County Commissioners President Justin fallon, Ken
Moore of HlillzeroGenter forCanoerCare, Gallia County Commissioner Joe Foster, and Gallia
County Commissiomers Vice President David Smith; middle row, Relay for Life Luminary
Chairman Jlilan Schmidt, Billie Handa, American Cancer Society, and Karrie Davison, Paint
the •County P1.1g~le •Committee; front row, Pair;Jt the Town PIJri)le &lt;;ommittee and Relay for li~
Chairperson Cana Wamsley, Cancer i.aison Physician Holzer Medical Center Dr. Alice A.
.Dachowski, and Gallia County Relay for life Ohai.r:person Bonnie Mcfarland,

nation

largest and most
voluntary bea1th
organization since 1913 and
has funded research which
has contributed to ,e very
lrnown metihod for detecting
cancer and techniques for
treating cancer, whidJ · 'bas
increased cancer survival
rates from 10 percent ro
. more than 65 percent.
. The ACS is a valuntary,
communily-.based coalitioll
of local citizens dedicated
to eliminating cancer ~ a
. major
health problem
through financial suppwt
and education awareness.
The Relay For Life event
tlnaucia.lly benefits the
American Cancer Society's
research and patient support
programs, and educationally benefits our local citizens. The ACS' Relay For
life in Gallia Couflly is a
· community event that
allows an opportunity to
Pastor James Acree .Sr. hopes "The Arch" venue, located just beloY&lt;the ark, will be a home network with businesses,
to .d ifferent events, including Gospel sings, all summer lo~.
. ·
associates, family and
~espected

· A•'s'11uil W..'t Brak l'our Bo-T •
AS&amp;' ' ' ..__..UIIits..,.Rrady Fori..._.. Ddlwry!

SPRING INVENroRY

CLEARANCE SAL~!
I~ l'ritfft llJutpg /rt»ff

. $1,295 • $9,995
l5 AmQS 10 CHOOSE
FROM!!!!
hjm h AdArW A.s $8 a mo,
100% Financing with qualified credit.·
·
We take trllde..ins

'

..

Bl.tliclh
In

•

Me

IIOOiliD BEAM

e

.....

a G:U•z11U
I aM

"'"Ms · a . a d c

a•

~,.

.....

web

M~ County.calendar
.·Chun:lt events
Sunday, April27
:- POMEROY- Dayspring
'in concert at the Mt. Union
:tsaptist Church 6:30 P·PI·
:sunday. The church is local~
:ed at 39081 carpenter Hill
·Road, Pomeroy. For information call 742-2832.
~ - EOINT ROCK - Revival
;beginning Sunday 11 a.m.
'Silrvice at the · Point ~ock
:owroh of U1e Nazarene on
:SR 689 between Wilkesville
·and Route 32, and continuing
:through Wednesday, 7 p.m.
:fiCI'Vi.ces. Rev. ·Bud AUman,
:evangelist; special music by
'the
Brian
Family
:Connection, Sunday. and Jim
~d Cathy Si~sion, Monday
;tuough Wednesday. Uoyd
&lt;Jrirnm, Jr., pastor.

au

•:llllcona

-•

Wednesday, April 30
. LETART. W.Va. -. John
·E. "Jack" Ord, fonnerly of
:..Ctart, W.Va. will observe
:his 89th birthday on April
:30. A 'card shower is
·planned. His address is .
:Lakin Nursing .Home @I
:Bateman Circle, Lakin,
~. Va. , 25287 .
Thursday, May I
: RACINE - Eva Teaford
:will observe her 80th birthiday n May I. Cards may be
·sent ro her at P. 0 . Box 55.
:Racine, Ohio 45771.

\

.. .

Public IJM'diDe"
Monday, April 211
RACINE
-Regular
meeting of S!)uthem Local
School Board, . 8 p.m., .high
schQUl media room.
POMEROY - Regular
lllQetlng_ of Meigs County
Library lloard, 3 p.m. ,
Pomeroy Library.

•-••- .

~
\
'•

.

POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., lljl Memorial Dr.
SYRACUSE
. Commit;tee meeting of the
Syracuse Village Pool, 7:30
p.m. at village hall.
Thesday, April29
SYRACUSE- The final ,
public meeting on the
Syracuse CDBG Distress
Grant apPlication, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse
(;()ln!!!UhilY
Center. PUblic urged to
attend.

Tree Care Specialists
Ia Meigs COcm(Y

"We Care For Your Trees"

Monday, Apri.l
6:00PM

Holzer's NJ:W
Ro~s an

Red, Vwlm 11n Bble
Fllnvers Juzpe BUGS, ANI TIUS do TOO!

Scott L. Swain
ISA Certified Arburist,
Cel1ified ()ps- !!lal &amp;:
Laodscape Prefessiooal
G.Wpolis, OH

Oubsand

"-'ttly

.~

•

Birthdays

Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
·followed
by
meeting.
Pomeroy Library.

.

111111 =
1 •••
••w. n.a:tandbo•
til! lil••- c::ot".n

Sruulay 1Mie.r~;s.

-~

m

.

Q

·- . . .....

•

friends, with the same goal For Life Days thrGu~out
of mak:in,g a difference in Gallia County. All cituens
the battle ~~gainst cancer.
are jll'ged to recognize and
. The oolor pwple .is 1he parucipate in this antistg!lllture color of the cancer campaign held in
American Cancer Society's our communily.
R.e~ ~ Life ·~:&gt;v~ !ilg~ommissioners also pronifymg lbe pasl;ton l!hat " claimed the recagnition of
cancer survi¥ors and their the Relay For Life event as
families and · 'l oved ones the
"Purple . ·Ribbop
f~l f~ the mtdication of Campaign" to show s~rt
.Ibis disease.
.
to those individuals living
Therefore, Galllll ·County wtth cancer, and honor
Commissioners proclaimed those individuals that bave
May I as Paint Our Town· lost their lives to the dreadPwple Day and as Relay ed disease -o f cancer.

I ,andmark

...

'

Support groups

a

· .,..

•

.

Card shower

____ -~ '.------Hscci~~Y American
Cancer
has been the

f

Regular meetings

, each month at. Athens
60th birthday on April 28.
Church of Christ, 785 W.
Cards can be sent to her at
Union St. , Athens. For inforGAUlPOLIS _ Practice Holzer Senior Care Center.
mation, call 593-7414.
for the French Colony Room 114. 380 Colonial.
·
BY IKAntY Mnun t
Monday, April 28
GALLIPOLIS - Look OIO!Us, a four-pan hannony Drive, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
not sure how he got ahold of
GALUPOUSKnights
Good
Feel Better cancer
·
BIDWELL Pauline
- IIMcY SUGAR .
the bag, but be could have
7 p.m. Shaver will celebrate her
program,
thUd
Monday
of
style
women's
group,
of
Columbus
will
have
a
died in the few minutes it
eaclt Tuesday at the Gallia
· . Drar Aanie: I am a 24- took those piuents ro pick dinner meeting at the the month at 6 p.m., Holzer County Senior Resource 93rd birthday on April 29.
year-&lt;~ld male. Four months out cucumbers and squeeze Holiday Inn at 6:l0 . p.m. Center fur Cancer Care.
Center,ll 67StateRoute I60, . Cards ca.n be sent to her at
Future plans wiD be disaga, my girlfriend ·and I tomatoes.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis ..Enter the side cen- · Holzer Seni&lt;Jr Care Center.
broke up after three years · Please print this as a cussed concerning some of Alcoholics '
Anonymous ter door. For more infonna- Room I II, 80 Colonial
tOgether. "Felicity" wanted common sense reminder to the needs within the com- Wednesday book swdy at 7 tioli. contact Suzy Patter at Drive, Bidwell, Ohio 45614.
the split. I still love her.
parents to never· let a child munity. All members are p.m. and Thursday open (740) 992:5555 or Bev
GALLIPOLIS -Mabe l
urged to attend
·
We had our sllare of prob- play with a. plastic bag. Beaver is celebrating her
meefing at noon at St. Pe:ter's Alberchinski at 446-2476.
Tuesday, April 29
~sand I have oome trust Glad I Was There in
Episcopal Church, 541
CHESHIRE _ Citizens S8th birthday on May 4 .
GAILIPOUS - Gallia Second Ave. Tuesday closed Against Pollution (CAP) Cards can be sent to her at
iSsues. I ~so was very oriti- Fremont, Calif.
Coun~
Veterans ·service meefing is at 8 p.m. at St has its quarterly meetings at 138 Buhl Monon Road .
Cal and didn't let her be herDear Fremont You may
.self. Near the end, I suspect- have saved that child's life, Commission will meet at 4 Peter'sEpiscopalChurch.
theCbeshireVLilageHallon Apartment 501, Gallipoli s .
rid She was seeing someone and we appreciate the p.m. at the Veterans Service
GALLIPOLIS
the last Tuesday of Janua~y, Ohio 45631 . .
-:tse, although she insisted he reminder. that toddlers are Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.
Narcotics
Anonymous April, July and October,
GALLIPOLIS - Due ?o
Friday, May 2
was just a friend. But when I quick and parents need ·to be
Miracles in Recovery meets starting at 7 p.m. Anyone failing health, the family of
GALUPOLIS - River every
·moved out, he moved in.
vigilant. (We might have
Monday
and with concerns is encouraged Annabel Houdashelt is
· rm trying to get over her, saved the ·scolding for the Cities Singles Club, 6 p.m., Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at St. to attend. For more infonna- requesting a card stiower.
but every three or four parents rather than the child• Bossard Melilorial Library. Peter's Episcopal Church.
lion, call (740) 367-0273.
Thinking of you cards can
For information, call 446weeks. Felicily will text or however.)
POIN'f
PLEASANT,
GALLIPOLIS
be sent to her at 6657 State
call and say haw muoh she
Dear Annie: Your advice 2722:
W.Va.
-.
Narcotics Gallipollis Rotary Club Route ·440, Hickory, Ky.
'lizesd8Y, May 6
·lllisses me and how angry to "Thumbelina" was right
Anonymous Living Free meets 7 a.m. each Tuesday 42051 .
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Group
~he is that( didn'i trust her. on. She was the 30-year-old
meets
every at Holzer Clinic doctor's
E-mnilco-unityadenRetirees will meet for Wednesday and Friday at 7 dining room.
Clinic
Just the other da¥, she invit- wife who'd recently lost 40
dar iter~~s to tlu!Uy@mytlai;Cd me ro lunch, and the next pounds and was surprised to I unch at noon at the p.m. at 305 Main St
GAUlPOUS - French lytrillltne.colfl..
Fnx
day, she asked .me to a parly. find herself · unhappy with Counside Bar and Grill
VINroN - Celebrate City BarlJersbop Chorus prac- tmiWIIIIUJMIIts ro #6Restaurant
' :~he says it's because she · the way she looked.
Reoovery at Vinton Baptist tice, i:30 p.m. every Tuesday 3fJtJll. Mail items ro 825
Theday, May 13
)lllisses hanging out. This is ·
I just turned 40, and after
Church. Small groups look- at Grace United Methodist •...,..
....,,_, .....• 11~• • r-mftAli
.nL:...,._,., s, .,....,
GALLIPOLIS
- PERl ing for freedom from addic- Church. {Juej;(S welcome.
·liard because I keep think- my third child was born, I
45631.
AllltoiUICemellts
:0\g it means we rni ght get decided to g~ my act togeth- District meeting represent- lions, hurts, habits and
GAlLIPOLIS
- The IIIQY also be dropped off 111
iback rogetheL But, Annie, I er and lose some weight. In ing eight Ohio counties, 10 hangups every Tuesday at 7 French Cily Treble Makers, tht Tribluu ojJice.
:still l;ee the .other &lt;gDy's car less than a year, through a a.m., Gallia Connly Senior p.m. For information, call barbershop chorus, meets
&gt;Oyer at her place..
sensible diet and exercise, I Resource Center. I 167 State 388-8454.
evely Thesday, 7:30p.m., at
. ;: ;f .don't !mow what she managed to drop over SO Route 160. Speaker~ are
POINT
PLEASANT, Grace United Methodist
:wants :from me. How am I pounds. I should still lose Mike Muffell, health care · W.Va. -"Let Go and Let Church. Accepting new
:~sed to forget her? another 20 to be a "bealthy" benefit organizer., and lack Godn Nar-Anon Family members. For info, call Hugh
· .~ Doping
.
weight, and I hlive loose skin Wymer. PERI president. Group meeting, every Graham at (740) 446-1304.
:; Dear Hoping: Felicity from being pregnant and Noon meal will be served at Monday at 7 p.m., Krodel
GALLIPOLIS The
jsn't sure what she wants, but obese., but I don't let that stop cost of $7. Pay in advance Park: recreational building. Perennial Cat. a shelter for
;ibhe were seriously interest- me from being · happy by April 30 by sending the The group helps families ·homeless and abandoned
«1 in getting back mgether, because I've tried to keep my money to Jane Colley. pres- and friends of drug addicts cats, meets the fourth
:Mle'd tell you and break it off focus on being fit, not "pret- ident, 981 Centerpoint or users to attain l;Crenity, Monday of each month,
:Wjth the other guy.
ly." Let's face it. Looks only Road, Oak Hill, Ohio regardless of whether 6:30 p.m., at Bossard
ind&lt;p&lt;nd•m
45656. For information he/she -has stopped using. Memonal Library. Anyone
..; Instead, she likes having last so long, skinny or not.
'
~ ae&lt;nCO'. wt can tailor
contact her at (740) 418J&gt;ath af you dangling on Thumbelina should find 6800.
The group Tespects all interested in being involved
.
·:!llrings. If you want to get something else to put her
thr- best ins.urancr pmttetion zr
members' anonymily.
with caring for homeless
Saturday, May 24
:.o ver her, you must stop energy inro. She and her
Vinton cats in this area is invited.
VINTON
compe&lt;itivt ph=. We n:prcocnr
GALLIPOUS ·- French Baptist Church will operate ·
·accepting her invitations, ·husband
. should join a gym.
oaly rb. finesr (lt.,.-..,
:stop responding to ·h er text Take up mnning. Train for a City Classic, the ftrst a food .pantry every Monday ·
American
·
Boer
Goaf
.messages and phone calls, triathlon. She's still quite
from 5 to 6:30 p.m. For
iruurance
:and start .dating someone young, and there is too Association sanctioned Boer information, call 38S-S454.
JACKSON Geneva
.else. Once she sees that you much fun to be had instead Goat Show, I 0 a.m., Gallia
GALLIPOLIS
G~
Cox
celebrated
her
84th ·
indeed.live without her, of worrying about what she Counly Junior Fairgrounds. MS (Multiple Sclerosis)
:she may make another play sees in the mirror. - &amp;en The judge is Teny Burks, Suppon Group meets the birthday on April 26. Cards
can be sent to her at 7827
ABGA sanctioned judge
;for you, but it sounds like 'J'brft ill Houslon
second Monday of each Pattonsville Road, Jackson,
from
Kentucky.
Jackpot
Insurance
•some of your trust issues
Dear Houstoa: Looks
month at Holzer Medical
:were well-founded. Be care- don't last forever, so it Wether Show mcluded. Free . Center. For infonnation, Ohio45640.
Compa~~y,
BIDWELL - Charlotte
ful what you wish for.
makes sense to work: on admission. For information, contact Amber Barnes at
French will celebrate her
which loo truly "'med rh&lt;
Drar Aanie: This mom- being healthy - at. whatev- oontact Queen Acres · at (740) 339-0291.
(740)
256-1330.
ing I was in the grocery er weight that bappe.ns Jo be.
!&lt;pU101ion • The 'No Pmblm'
GAlLIPOLIS - NAMI
~tof!) and saw a little boy in
AJIJW's MtD1fJOx is wrilsupport group meetings will
People~. Ask Ul zbour the
,a shopping cart playing with tm by Kmlty MilclaeU IUUl
take place the third Thursday
plastic produce bag over MtlTCJI S~~g~~r, lollfliMe ediman)' orhtt advant~ of doing
each month at 6:30 p.m. at
his head. His face was com- tors of tlu! Au ln•+rr
GALLIPOLIS
the Gallia Counly Senior
hus;...., with an indcp&lt;ndcnr
pletely covered. Both of his coburua. "'-.u e..ml yo,. Grieving Parents Support Resource Center.
.
insurance: ag.-:ncy.
parents were fewer tlian 10 cstions ID IUIIIUsfiiDil- Group meets 7 p.m . second
feet away at the time. Thank
@cotftt:nstiVt, or write Monday of each month at
God I was closer.
ID: Annio!'s MPiU...r, P.O. Holzer Medical Center.
, I yanked rhe bag off his Box JJ81PO, Oirngo, IL People attending should
meet .in the general lobby.
:head and scolded ·him never MJ611. To fUul 11111 :to do it again. At fust I was tJbefll A 111tie 's Mnifbox,
r information, call Jackie
horrified, but now I'm 111111 read fealllres by otJaer
eatley at 446-~700 or
ijbsolutely furious! What is Creaton Syl"'lioote W'itos
ancy Childs at 446-5446.
"' · wrong with these parents1 .111111 cadoollists1. 11isit tlu! . ATHENS - Survival of
This little boy was no more Creators Sypi'«JU
S!licide ~ypport group meels
than 3 years old, and I' m page Ill WWt&amp;J.cretllors.cOIIL 7 p.m., fourth Thursday of
7

'Paint'

.,

Sunday,April2~2oo8

We offer the
best prices ·
and protection
for you.

•

'said, adding he hoped it
_ ___
would be utilized all summer long for various
from Page AI
events.
As for the ark, voluncontinue to make
teers
for concerts and other activities. The outdoor venue is' progress nailing the pine
nearly complete and will siding to the replica which
hok1400 when ·it opens for a .has come to symbolize
Gospel Sing on May 31. what to cling to in tbc: mid'"The Arch" is also handi- dle of a stonn. Tbe replica
capped accessible and will even has its own ,.rumat iii.
alfow the elderly to park: Louie the dog who lile.s to
near rhe stage ami listen to carry off scrap ~ af
the music without leaving wood from the :worbRe.
their vehicles.
Acree joked Louie bas
"Meigs County needs
something like this," Acree his own ark.
·

PageA3

&lt;-v

Community
events

getting together again

7

-·. ,,.....

Gallia County calendar

. ·She mny IWt mean

ti:umPIIItAJ
Yard Sale, scheduled for
June 7 beginning at 9 a.m.
To rent a space near the
village building or: .~nate
items to · the fire dcpanmeot contact Joya: Russ,
(740) 682-7060; Michelle
Miller, (740) 709-9903;
Melissa Donley, (140) 4188639;
or
Phyllis
Brande~. 441-5891.
Olbei'
events · ~ on tbc:
•
including die Rio Grande
Communily Fest, scheduled
for SqJt. 6 and the !illOODd
annual Rockets over Rio,
l;Cheduled for Sa~y.
Oct. II. Everyone is invited
to come out and enjoy all
the events scheduled in tbc:
viUage .

ARoUND ToWN

.. . ., li-·6tntind

Breakfast

. Special meeting . on~%is~fi ~held: A

man is acoused of e-mailing

PageA2

organizations
.•
•

'740~2015

Melldlly, April 211
POMEROY - OH-Kan ·

.
'

'

IDIDollillliiRI

~ICICIO,

fl eerlam

includi ig
for \

for this .f REE prognw.
more information.

(740)
1

�OPINION
6unbap f;flld -6nttind
125 Third A

.

0

Ohio

-

-

PHII..ADB.PHIA - In
die
run-up
to
tbe
Pennsylvania primary, our
·frieod Linda Wcrtllcina'
cp......t a )"011118 fCDIIIIe voa011 NPR She loWS rom
bcrweco 8al3ck Ohama Qillary Oinron, so sbe
hooagk·bodl of lheir alllabi-

(740) 446-234"2!Fo 6'}~46 30118
www.mydllllytrtbun .

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
"

Kevin Kelly

Dlaile Hill
Controller

Managing Editor

I

•
llu! editor an we1oolrtL 1ltey sltoJd4 ~ ~SS
dian 300 words. All kt.ten are Sllbj«:t li1 ...titing and IIUIS1
be signed and incbule address and ·~/qhoM """"- N.o
fUJJiigned /etten wi!f ~ puiJiislied. Utters should be •n
good tasl~ .addressing issues, Mt personalities.
UlteN IO

VIEW

.READER'S

Prepa

"""'

::.

:.:f

vaal

Rio Grande teaks skiDs ·
ONrEiihN':
Rio Grande Community College and Rio Grande
University provided me with a woudedul education. The
skills dlat I have learned in lofunnation Tocboology have
pi9*00 me for a variety of business responsibilities. I
bel1eve dlat Rio Grande is .an important element to lhe education system of Ohio and that students of Rio Gr.mde will
move fll!Ward with rewaromg careers.
The professors of ~o ~are wen ed•II'Med, and
deliver personal atlell1iloo to thea_studeiUs. My IT_professors of the Evans Scbool of Busmess, Dadene Ringband
ud Cbuck Wmters, have taken special care to prepa1e me
fur a~ rewanJing career, .and !he secrewy ofdle Evans
· School of Business, Brenda Louck!;, has enoow:aged me
with ber e:v«..endlll'illg mrile and :attentiGn to dotail.
Ouis c.clirUi

·

"
" ' "The
' " ' 'most
""'"
"tel:.~
powerful
story sbe bas to ldl is based
011

bel- gcodl:r _ !be firg
with a R:al d!anre

WOIIWI

to be _.......,.. But 1hat
... ~~
loclby

~~~vo'f.:::.l!"-:'aa

[f .

Ob.ama is defined "'"
bis
~J

parents:
Ointon
is
definedmarriage,
by her ~
to Bill Her fa\IOrite role is
Stron•,.
., w,....9n
----, but ber
oilier role, W~ Wife,
keeps g~ in tbe way.
That's very unfair, of
course. · The siJlllggle
again~ sexism daat &lt;linton
tqnesents is every bit as
heroic as Obama·s agm~
Glcism. She is just as muoh
a pioneer as be is, .a nd
many older women, who
remember Yoilat it was like
to face discriminatiion on a
daily basis, identify with
her drive to make history
(:she won older white
women by more than two
to one here). But many
younger women do not
idenl!ify with Hlllaty, especially when her busbaod
insists on sayillg i'Wpid
ilhingsdwSteponiberfiUJly

· : · DOnna Lou Pader, 66, of
.Tuppers Plains, went home
, to be with the love of her
'tife, her lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, on Friday,
. April 25,' 2008, at her home,
: She Was born in Athens
. on Dec. 19, 1941 , the
daughter of the late Aubra
.and Alta Bailey.
She was preceded in death
. by her husband, Jan; her sis'ter, Audra Rae; and a broth, er-in-law, Bob Stout.
: · She is Slln'ived by her
, sons and -their families, Greg
'and Anna, Jeff and Jodi; and
her grandchildren: Jacob, .
. ·Jordan, Jessica and Jennifer
Donna Palloer
Parker,
Justin
(Jamie)
. Robertson and Katie Robertson.
,. She is also survived by her sister, Jean Stout of Little
. Hocking, her brother-in-law, Dennis Bulin of Florida; her
.nieces, Tawny and Mandi; bcr nephews, Rick and Rusty;
and numerous greatcnieces and nephews; great-great nieces
and nephews; along with many aunt, uncles and cousins.
. · Also surviving is her close friend, Janet (Bud) Richards.
·. In addition to family,' she is slln'ived by a loving and
·:praying group of church members at Faith Harvest Church.
.·where she was ·the Pastor.
- Donna was a II;&gt;Ving daughter, sister, wife, ~nt, motherand grandmother. She instilled the love of Jesus 10 her fam--ily. Proveros31:28 Sllys: "Her children rise up and call her
blessed, her husband also and he praises .her."
.
Ne'&lt;er was a ttuer verse than this on how her family feels
.about her. Donna spent her adult life leading people to
.Jesus. Her greatest JOY was seeing people accept Him as
lmd. She and her husband established Faith Hartest
Church in Coolville. J-ler lifelong dream of a place where
'.people could be taught about Jesus had come tnuc:· Some of
her happtest tiDies were spent at the church nnmstermg 1:,1\l
God's people.
. Funeral arrangements are being made at White. .Scbwanelliuneral Home in Coolville. Visitation will be 2
..iO 7 p.m. 'Sunday, April27, 2008 at the funeral home, with .
services being Monday, April 28, 2008 at Faith Harvest
Chlll'Ch at ll a.m.
- GraveSide services will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens.
In lieu af flowers, donations can be made to Faith
Harvest Church.
,
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white:
schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

tbe : stuff of legend and
rigfrtiy So. The feminist
movemell!: · is equally
imnmta11t (and liberated.·

:::l.:
..........), .__ it
~~ ~""'~""' .....

d.o e s

OOl exm lbe

same hold 011
Aiuerica~s imlginalioo.
Then: is oo oatiooal boli-

~
S
·.

.....
G ....
TheOrFeminine
M .stique is not I Have a
5enca Falls was
Selma. · WOIIJC!I wrn:
blnoo 1rom votillg and
~
bUt~

ciusade =~sclrragcau'
has failed into bi..
,....,_
~:~-

.

.

e~SSI~:!s::m,
. - - ,., . IS
in this 001l111iy.

aotiviSts can still be
derided as '1n INJ!I!ICI"l" or
"feminaris" wbm similar
!ilursabouthlrlscu-1311ims
WOOhl neva- be to1cl:atell
(and sbonldn't be~. It's still

awpiabletousemeb-Willd
llbout Hillary, but I¥VCI' lbe
n-word about Barack.
But if Obama's book and movie - i.s more compelling dian Ctinton's, be's
llbout to run into a real
tilockbusta:: Jobn )((Cain
~lis one of llhe best
,t.merican stories of all
(Steve Robots' ,fate1tboolc
is "Jiy F.QJbus' H-s:
MMJOir of .a Family"
(Uliam Af{JI'R'}W, 2005 ).
Stew and Colcie Robms obn
be COfllt.IOiit1d by e ·ci1 m
~@ptail.OOffl.~

TODAYJN HISTORY

LETTERS . TO ·THE
EDITOR
IAters to. the editor -arf! welcome. lJJey sbotdd be
less dlarz 300 wolds. Allletk'rs are Sllbject to editin~,
must be signed, and incbuie .atfdrf!ss and tdqJhorte
lflinlher. No unsigMd letters will be prdJlished. Letters
.---Siaollld be-i'-1 good taste, addreni"g issues, not perwnaliries. Lerum ofthanlcB to -organiltllicR!s and individuals wiU rwt be acapted for publioation.

&amp;unba!' Gtim" -j,rntintl
Reader Services
1

Col• ?I 11111DJ
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
0..: n.r. mnoem in II is ID be 45631 . Periodicall)OIIall" paid
acc:uw. Hyou - til an onor in a a1 Gallipolis.
'IIDJy,.pleasecaloneofournena:w:&amp;. ••mtwr: The Associated Pnns,
the
West , Virginia
¥r••• ·
Associalion , and the Ghlo
NeWflp&amp;par Aaoocialion.
Gallipolis,OH

ar-•

{l'a) •• 2342
Sentinel 1 .Pome•oy. OH
(7a)tiN155 ·
l\'li*r • Pt. Pleasant, 'IN
(IIM)IJi-1111

0...17•

•s' rsu

as
Salliuel• Pometoy, OH
$ 'Z)W I leD

wv

II,

sa 1 , , . ,_,

C -.

..,, z r

..,

..._ • Glllip-.. C1H
ea; 7 Pgt
I
. Sabel• Poo•Of, OH
0

Sti11ac........,,...._
.,_.....,

a....- ............OJD.M

«,WV

• ; ,,z 4 -

•..0 .s.nlarCII
. - .. .. ......
'10D

a....- .. .. . ... ...-

St.tia:ttMi llhlaM IWiil in . . . .
dRat&gt; . . ~ llllyT...... "*&gt;

----·--

.......... bt;' m.ll jNNtl-.:i i n - ;

......

-a
I

.... c .. .

- ~ - ."3228

26-.. - ...........'8420
S2-.. .. - ...... - .'127.!1

7

tl' ,., 411 1111

-----.._ _...,. , , 1111

reo.

. P..tolilbecl . - y Sunday, 125

.

lluncloJr .... ..... . -..."1.tlll

13-.o ........

• ;z' am

•Jr •Pt.'F1

__

Tribune , 825 Tilird A•enue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

G n a - .. . .. ... . .'10D

- · Golipilis, OH

....... l't.,

Pwtu...., . Send address correo1ions to the Gallipolis Dally

01' P c
Flj
13-.. .. - .. - - . . ' ..'53.55

26-.. - - ... ' ' ....'107.10
S2 Weeks . .... -- ....'21421

Deaths
,.,. Joseph .-er

and 'sap its~ powa:.
·Obama also profits from ·
histPrr. The civil-ripts
JDOi&gt;-emr:nt and its lewl!'r,
Mattin Lutbec King Jr:., are

nw••vn

Thday is Sunday, April27, the U8tb -day of 1001t The!e
~ 248 days kft in the year.
.
lbday's Hlgbligln iD Hlstoly: On April27, l1m, during 1bc
Fm.tBalbary War, ao~can-locl furoeofMarines~~­
~' amries~ die City ofDcma, on die sbon:s ofTripoli.
On dJis date: In l52l , Pootuguese explMer Fadinaod
Magdlan was killed by oati'&lt;es in tbe Pbilippines.
.
In I 510, Pope Pius V eJromJ!!!•nicated Queen AizllhrdJ L
. In 1822, the 1-8th p~esident of me United States, Ulysses
Ollio. ·
S. Gmnt, was bam in Point l"Joa
In 11!65, the w:•mer SultaDa exptOdcd oolhe :t.fissisliippi
Riva- uear Memphis, Tenn., killiqg IDOJC dian I ,400 people, mosdy fioeed Uni011 priSilii«S of wa. .
In 1967, EKpO '67 was officialy opened m Moalleal by
Ca....tim Prime Minister Lester B. Pear!ion.
·
In 1918, 51 COilSI1UCtioo WOJters plunged to lbCir deatbs
wbeo a &lt;nlfold inside amoling tOwel' a die fteaun!s Pow«
Sh«ion site in West V!!Einia fdll68 tea 10 lhe grouod.
lbday' s Binbdayli: Ador JJICk Klugman is 86. A.llbess
A-*Aim:le is 76.A-oer0lsey Kasem is 76. Actress
Judy~ is 69. Rh)'lbm~·blues mngerCu~ ~i!]g
is 64. Rock s.ii1gcl' Kale ~ (The B-52 s)_ ~~ ~­
RbJ1'uu _._blues si,... Helbie Muodl (lbe StytistiCSj Js
59. Aaol' Douglas Sheelun is 59. ltod: musician Ace
.ftddey is-51. 1\lpsi"'"' Shmla &amp;pun is.o49. Acme James
Le CirM is -46:-&amp;oa: lDiriil:ian ROO ~uires (B~ Head TheW
and me t.toasta&lt;s. is 43. S~ Mica Pms is 39. _Rock
siu(r_,;.;- TraVis U I 11 (Days uf llbe New• iiS 29.
Rock sj £ &lt;r'Sici•l'lib:icl: $luq&gt; ·~ 0.. Boy} is 24.
1bou,zbt fuc Today: "'Tbere is oo man w good, who, were
be to submit all bis thougbtli and avtions Ito die laws, would
not detave haqging 10 limes in :his life.~- Michel de
Mootaigne, Fmndl pbilosopber (1533-1592).

Pomeroy • Middleport • GampoUs

Obituaries

Fried nYM'inJ as the MidlleQass DMI!f*T of Middle
~but tbll's blldly a
lieroic IWI'ative, aod it
~ oootri\led. Sbc tells
vola's th3t her flllba'- so
fuJgal '1M: used to tum die
beat off overnight.~ But
bumble nnioin&lt; are a bard
lidl wbi:B-,.,..,.you and your busbini earned $109 millioo
IDBih OVCl' tbe past eight years.
The most autbeatic worn

~:aodse~lboutmld­
iog~She oouJdn't finish
Oin!m' s, IU: Obama's kqlt · • .._ Linooln doin
• bel- awaJa: far into lbe ~
Right .then: is one key
........
""""'
reason why Obami' still . . K:=d~a=~
leads for the Democr3tic
nomination and Clinton, tdl a soy that cmlofi&lt;'S
despite her strong ~wing their vinues and values. DiU
was the Man f'rom
here in Pennsylvania, stays Ointoo
Hope,raisedbym~stuck in second place. The
junior senator fium Illinois ishod .sinrgle modler. ~
W. Bush
was who
the Sherift'
· has a more compelling From
Texas,
fOUDd
. stOiy to tell dian lhe junior
God
and~
. &lt;lmwWOIDiiD
-"-wilh
senator liool New York.
u.a
a
Y
· UU!6 ·
Presidential
lilies
is
....__ .. ~pet
.... __ aloohol, They were the !Uni
mon:.....,..m
. .. . ......,
of tbeir own movies, the
about· issues.
· want heroes of dleir own myths.
leaders v.bo (W!IIIIC&lt;1 to lbi:ir
Obama' s film bas been a
lives and gJ3ltJ !heir llftlb- boxsOfficeseosalion: Son of
lems. But lbcy .also want a black ~ from Katya
lleadm; of
dwarter, and a white llliJthel' from
Jll"'Pie who have fared Kansas, lle's the Golden
advmilty and lrilllllfhed twer Otild, a one-mam melting
it Presidt:mJi ·should uodei-- pot After Harvanl Law
SiaDd average people but not School, be tumed down
fancy Salaries to ot;gaDil.e
be av~ tbemselves.
Voters leam about char- laidsOff steelwotbrs. In
acter through nanative. .,_,... llO srenes in his movie
Stories oon..ey _who candi- ~ iJi w~. He
dates are .and v.bat tbey lwely mentioos his brief
stand fur. That's been true Senate tenure. He is the
since
llitie
George unsullied Outsider 'lobo will
Washington cMpped down oust the siniste:r In~.
that blasted ·cbelcy tree, and Cbicago i.&amp; his NIIZIIllltb., die
lobbyists his mooeychaogit's still true Uiday.
Wbelher it was Andy ers, tbe Capitol bis ttmp1e.
Clinton's story seems
Jackson defealing tbe
British at New Orieans, or we.akby~son. She's

~ .

-·' Sunday, April27, 2008

SlllulaY'('P"l r'/, zoo8

A tale of two stories

'

.

Page.A4

· Rick L: Giassbum, 51, of Hilliard, passed away Friday,
Apri125, 2008, at Doctor's West Hospital in Columbus.
He was .preceded in death by father, Herbert Glassburn.
He is survived by loving wife of 27 years, Becki
Glassburn; mother, Connie Glassburn; siblings, Delia
(Ted) Wotring and Melanie Pitzer; father-in-law, Robert
(Ev.alee) Shank:; brother-in-law, Rob Shank; many nieces,
nephews and dose·friends ; and beloved pets, Duke, Jake,
aodScooby.
The family would like to send a special thank you to the
staff at Doctor's West Hospital and HoJDeReach.
A llleDlOri.al iielvioe will~ held 5 p.m. Monday, April28,
2008. at St. Mark"s United Methodist Church, with Pastor
Vijay Buck officiating.
In liou of flowers, memorial contributions may .be made
to Ohio Health HomeReach, 180 E. Broad St., Columbus,
Ohio 43214, or The Capital Area Humane Society; 3015
SciQto Dalby Executive Ct., Hilliard, Ohio 43026.
Arrangements WeFe completed by tbe Tidd Funetal
Home, Hilliard.

Jdcldau M. Lewis

Paul Joseph Miller, 56, CoolviUe, died Thursday, April
24, 2008, in St. Joseph' s Hospital, Parkersburg, W.~a.
He is stln'ived by his wife, lryna Valentmovna Miller.
There will be no visitation or services. Arrangements are
by the White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.
·
Sign the onli.ne guestbook at www.whiteschwarzdfuneralhome.com.

c.ol1 Waodndf
Carol Jean Woodruff, 68, Wellston, died Thursday, April
24,.2008, in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
She is survived by her husband, Richard Woodru1f.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Huntley &amp; c.. ens
Funernl Home, Wellston, with Pastor Rob Ervin will officiate.
Burial will be in the Ridgewcxxl Cemetery. Friends may call
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral ho~ .

4.7 quake rocks·Reno as
area's seismic activity continues

Add.alou M. Lewis, 81, of Pomeroy, passed away on
BY Seen 1 Sauuut
1800s to float timber from
Friday, April 25, 2008, in Huntington,W. Va.
ASSOCIATED PR£55 WRITER
Lake Tahoe down the
Sbe was born May I 0, 1926, in Racine, daughter of the
mountain to Reno. There
late Ralph S. McKenzie and Dorothy Coe McJ&lt;mrie.
RENO, Nev. - More were no immediate -reports ·
She was a graduate of Racine High School, Class of 1944. than 50 aftershocks were of flooding along the thune.
Sbc was employed by the former Elberfelds Department recorded on the west edge
:Jars of mayonnaiiiC, botStore for '13 years, and she retired after 18 years of service of Reno after an earthquake ties of ketchup and shamas a cook for the Meigs Local School Dislrict
that shook cans off shelves, p0o fell from shelves at a
She was a member of the Wmding Trail Garden 'C iuband !mocked pictures off walls Wal-Mart store in northa member of the Racine Methodist Church. ·She was one of and dislodged rocks on west Reno. Overhead telethe first women in Ohio to be elected to a county fair boaid, hillsides along the Sierra visions swayed at a· sports
serving on the Meigs County Fair Boatd for 24 years.
Nevada. ·
bar in neighboring Sparks,
She was a loving and devoted mother, .gi31ldmotber and
There were no immediate II miles east, whel!t bargreat-grandmother.
reports of injuries or major tender Shawn Jones llid the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by damage early Saturday rumble was signiflt:antly
her husband -of 51 years, Robert J. Lewis.
from the magnitude 4.7 ·Stronger thai) Thursday's
She is Slln'ived by her children, David (Katherine) Lewis quake that hit at II :40 p.m. event
of Pomeroy, and Carol (Paul) Durst of Huntington; broth- Friday. It was the largest
"The bottles were iibaking
er-in-law, Jack B. (Mwy Margaret) Lewis of Pomeroy.; quake in a two-month-long so I sent everybody outthree grandchildren, Robert and Eric Durst, and Nikita swann of tremors.
side," be said.
Lewis; and a great-grandchild, Aidan Lewis. .
"The earthquake was
Ken · Smith, a seilmoloServices will be 2 p.m. Monday, April 28, 2008, at the strongly felt in west Reno gist at the university lab,
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Jeff and felt throughout the .said the recent activity
Garrett officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Reno metropolitan area," around Reno is QPUsual
Cemetery_ Friends may call at the funeral home from I to 2 the University of Nevada, because the quakes started
p.m.Monday.
Reno's seismology lab said out small and conbllue to
A registry is ·available online at www.andersonmc- in a statement early build in strength. 1)le nordaniel.com.
Saturday.
· . mal pattern is for a main
The U.S. Geological · quake followed by lmaller
Survey said Friday night's aftershock!;.
quake was centered six miles ' · "If' the pattern colltinues
westofRenonearMognl,an we may be looking at a
.----.;--------....:...
· _ _.::...__
actually see, such as the area rattled by a swmm of larger event" in the: Reno
~!are that &lt;CaD make oncom- more than 100 quakes the area, Smith said friday.
mg headli~ts .a huge "star- day before. The, strongest of "We wouldn't ·be sug&gt;rised
those ·was a magnitude 4.2 to see it (swarm) en4!at any
burst" of.ligbt. · .
· • Oarify how often that caused high-rise hotels time and it also wouldn't be
patients suffer diffeFent side to _sway_ ~ the downtown surprising to see a· large
-earthqlll~U _ The tlottom
effects, such as dry e~e. caStoo d1&lt;h'V:t.
'Die
illrollgeSt
llftershock
line is we don't kn~ what
Some eye SUI!COOS say 31
percent of Lasik pattents · measured magnitude 3.7 will happen."
Reno's last major quake
have some degree of dry and was recorded at 12:29
a.m.
Saturday.
measured
6.1 on April 24,
eye before ~· and it
The
temblor
cracked
1914,
and
awakened people
worsens for abOut 5 percent
afterward. Other studies say walls in northwest Reno, as far away as Sacramento,
48 peroent of Lasik recipi- broke lawn wateriiig tines Calif., said Crdig dePolo,
ents suffer some degree of and damaged a wooden research geologist with
flume built . along the Nevada Bureau of Mines
dry eye months later.
•
!
• Make more understand- Truckee River in the late and Geology. .
able the conditions that
.
•
should -disqualify S!JlllCOI!e
frQm. Lasik., such as large
pupils or severe nearsight-

Federnl panel seeks clearer warnings on Lasik eye surgery
BY Lluru•"

U'RD

&gt;P! MEDICAL WRITER

Bosnia vs. bitter: Which iveakness will hurt
.
. ......
Demoaatic chances in November?
I -have to ask:: Dees anyooe .actually belie&gt;.'e New
Y01ik,
New
.Jersey,
.C alifumia -o r Pennsylvania
would go for Md:ain over
· Obama in lhe geaora1 decDaswla ~ ti011? Will Wliitc w~---..
--•class men~ ·womenWI~
prefer
!iOIIlOOile more in ·tine ·with
George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney dian ·someone who
remaioing oontests in seven can bring about the ·obangt!
states:aJIIitwo IICUJiiWe!i limo they are uDous for? We'H
a oontest about wbich .candi- see ifObama wins 1he JJOCI if
·!We is anraa:ing what lcind be can appeal 110 ,their .aspim....,
..__ ballot ....
lions. But, for oow, the
.,,. ·v oter at ...,.
.,.,x. media woUld have IUS focus
The pllimaries a~~: a numbers
game based 011 Mnniug del-- on ihcir fears - real or
egam&amp;, 001 pitting llp3lt the imagined
Democratic -ooalioon .and
During the closing weeks
v.bo is 1111Jl""ling m ·whom.
of this long Democratic
HillaJy Ointoo -contends r.ampai~p~ season, I eqJeCt
that 011ama can't Win the Glintoo will relllllllJ the
big states !like Ohio most C\Jil\lclitive Democrat
· · arnia and Penn Jv-!!!!ii in winning ov~ 1hose yotdie general ~an erti Who &lt;xmfin~ tQ l!eJieve
~se be didn' t in die pri- · iri th~ . ClintOn brand maries The .argument is espcci.ally 011 lbe economy.
speciolis. Gi¥en the state of ~ut, I can't swallow the
the economy .and McCain's - idea •that ithose YOters or
lack of iiJtercst .in it, 1bese even. tbolle so a!Jed big
voters, with Ointon oo.t of states OiDI:OD ~ will .go
the nee, will likely be inter- red m teseotliialt if Obama
esttd in voting for Obama.
wins tbe ·nOmination.
Meanwhile, for Obama to · To win lhe nomination,
Win!bemoverindleremaia- Ointoo's suppmtm have
ing primaries, ;be must Dell'- said that Obama must also
ttalize Ointoo's SIRlngth llll df:monstrate ·that ,he ~
lbe t:OOOOUIY by ~to w1thllWld
~ s politikey middlo-class swing vnr- cal ~ machme -_ and
ers in Indiana, Nmth the filth ,generated mSlde
Carolina, Oregoo . . and ~ ~ · Ocmooratic
Kmtuc.ky. Obama .,.asn•t ~ - coo.u.:ost. 'lbc:Y
lb1e ,eo fLilly o•n~tet with 'act ·as if Kepul)ficans ·w ill
llilue-,oollar, white, small- tzat die oomination of
town .;,&lt;lim !like tboie in OlintonindJC'511511emanner
Texas and Mississippi that Oleney -believed tbe
That' s
· no
surprise. kagi people would tteat
Pennsylvania is no swprise, our invasion: with :filowen.
citbcr. He wins dck;gates
Obama makes a oomwitb a·diffc:renl ooalition of pelling argument that be
voters -tban J) om., .have presents the best change in
typicllly m1il'ld UJlOil. Still, a change electioo. And if
0&amp;ama c.~'t est oo being Clintou is able to win lbe
the leader iD J*dged .cJele- oomiMtim, lile must llio
gates or lbe JlllPU1Ir vote. He hannmr away at the same
has to fiJdtt bd:: against die change ~&amp;IF in ·order to
media tliat bas fallen into defeat ·M£Cain, wbom
Ointon' s trap of «klaring many believe would n:pretbat he din 't win 1be gmalll sent a ·~ Bush ~ oo
lw:ause tbe oollitioo that both Qll1onal _sec
_ unty ~
lrought 'him vic1oy in the well as domcsbc iiSSUI'lS.
primaries iS difiemJt.
'
Sophisticated supa:deJe:-

··-'le

c::!f.
m

me

..

,gates looking to detmnine
·who i.s the most electable
&lt;CaDdidate must go ibeyood
turnout numbers 't o determine which candidate. is
responsible for ~ new
voters, •can help Democrats
'
.e~d die electoral map.
and can inspire Americans
of every persuasiBn to
1110Ve beyond tthe hot, beat·
ed and distorted rhetOliic -of
past election seasons to
really ,get an umJerstanding
&lt;Of where the .candidates
stand oo the &lt;issues.
11here's a .n:ason far the
dissatisfaction, mood and
~pirit of voten; right now.
From the way -we ~d
~ves from their 1milb
m bow we fuune ·lbe dec.lions, politicums. and pindits are partly Ito ib1•mP. _
'!bis e~ i! __not ~
IOOU.t btue-ooilaf; JOw~ ~te voters. This
e1eclioo IS about each and
evecy ~ ofus who wantn
better life, a safe and '!lCCIJre
oo.untry and competent
leaden; wbG upescut -om
vlilues and are accountabll:
to us, the AmericanP,COPk .
As the vice presidan of
tbe United States ·would
say: so. Obama did IIKll puH
off an liJl!lCl So: Hillary will
fight until the bitter end. ~­
~ need.~ to deal. 1111th
'bitter gate. So. Ctintoo
~s to deal ~ "Bosnia

- '

November

'

.

(Donna Brazile is a polit-

ical COIMUlfiiQior em CNN,
ABC and NPR, cOntributirtg coburu.Ust to Roll Ct(/,
lite_ newspaper of r --iii'Jl

H1l~ anJ fom~Lr ~i•n
manager for AI ~- f "

-------- ----....-------~------;----:_;----- -· -- --- - ··-- ~

·-

.. .

..

...

-

•

to

~-

liii1Pef-fue~. So.
·
And so rt goes. Will

Clii!too's perceived dishooesty or Obama's peroeived
inexpr.riroce_ be more danming'w henitoomestotbetypc
d .nrl• the Republicans
will mount in 1bc fall? One
thing -is for sure: The
DcniOOlills will need anyone
and everyone shouting from
die l'llfia's ~to show up 011 1
oold, v.u, windy day in emy

WASHINGTON In
fury and despair, patients
harmed 'b¥ Lasik eye
surgery told federal health
advisers Friday of severe
--eye pain, blurred vision and
even a son's suicide. The
advisers recommended that
the government warn more
clearly about the risks of the
hugely popular operations.
About 700,000 Americans .
a year undergo the elective
laser surgery. Like golf star
· and famed Lasik recipient
,. Ttger Woods, they're hop·ing to· throw ·away their
.. gla5ses, just as the ads &amp;ay.
·, And while the vast major-:ity oonefit - most see 20. ~0 or even better - about
..one in four people who
. .seeks Lasik is not a good
_·candidate. A small fraction,
.:perhaps I percent or fewer,
. suft'er serious, life-changing
: side effects: worse vision,
severe dry eye, glare, inabil-ity to drive .at night.
. , "Too many Americans _
..have been harmed by this
.procedure and it's about time
; this message was heard,"
.
.David Shell of Washington
David
Shell
shows
a char't of his vision after having lasik
· told the Food and Drug
Administration's scientific surgery while sp!;aking at a Food and Drug Administration
d1scuss Las1k
·advisers before their !'eCOID- {FDA) hearing in Gaithersburg, Md . Fnday
..mendation that tb!: FDA pro- surgery.
· vide dearer wlfllings.
But one thing is eleor, lillid
Shell held up lln·ge pho- bad, I fell . into a decllf'
: :to graphs that he said depict depression than J' d ever Dr Jayne Weiss of Detroit's
· his .blurred world, showing experienced, and I couldn't Kresge Eye Institute, who
: halos around objects and . get out." Gerard ~an read chairs the FDA advisory
panel: "This is a referendum
.double vision, since his from his son's su1c1de note.
·
Man
Kotsovolos,
who
on
the pcrfonrumce of Lasik
; ICJ98 Lasik.
worlced
for
the
Duke
Eye
by
some surgeons who
"I see multiple moons,"
·be sai,d angrily. "Anybody Center when he had a more should be doiug a better job."
sophisticated Lasik procedure
The FDA advisers - a
want to have Lasik now?"
. · Colin Dorrian was in law in 2006, said doctors classify group of mostly glasses:· school when dry eye made him as a success because he · wearing eye doctors - rec,: his contact lenses so intoler- now ha~ 20-20 vision. But he - ommended that the agency
:able that he sought Lasik, said, "For the last'two years I make moie clear the warn:even though a doctor noted have suffered debilitating and . ings it alf!l3,dy provides for
· his pupils were pretty large. unremitting eye pain . ... would, bc Lasik patients:
~ Add ph'Btographs that
. ·Both the dry eye and pupil Patient~ do not want to ~· s~ should have disquali- tinue to exisf as helpless VIC- illustrate what people suffering certain side effects
·fied Dorrian. but he .tims with np voice.''
The
~ober
testimonies
'received Lasik anyway ' ' and his father described six illustrated that a decade after
·years of eye pain and fuzzy Lasik hit the market, there
·vision before the suburban still are que~tions about just
.Philadelphia rna~ killed how often patients suffer
bad outcomes from the
·himself last year. · "As soon as my eyes went $2,000-per-eye p~edure .

...

On northern vt pond, spnng
~~~SpeJl-O!!~~~=
!!la~tan=y~-l --arrives when einder block falls

one whose nearsightedness
WEST DANVIllE. Vt (AP) - Forget what the calenis fixed by Lasik is guaran- dar says. In these parts, spring doesn't arrive until me .cinteed to need relllii.ng glasses der block falls through the ice on Joe's Pond.
in middle age, som!llhing · The 65-pound block, which is placed on a wooden pallet
that might not be needed if on the frozen swface of the pond and tied to an al~ c,lock
they skip Lasik.
on shore each winter in a $1-per-chance guessin~ game,
That's a big reason why plunged into the water at 5:25p.m. Friday.
Weiss, the glasses-wearing
Four people who guessed April 25 at 5:15 P-Ill- - the
ophthalmologist, won't get closest time- won $1,~23 apiece in the annual Joe's Pond ·
Lasik even though she Ice Out Contest. according to organizer Dave Parker.
offers it to her patients.
Don Rogers, of Swartz Creek, Mich.. Janet Egizi, of St.
"I can read without my Johnsbury, Roxanne Gorham, of Lyndonville, and Joe
glasses and ... operate with- Kelly, of Barre, were the winners. The 20th annual contest
oUt my glasses, and I love drew 12,039 entries, many far from Vermont.
that," sqe said. "The second
The earliest-ever ice out date was April 16. in 11)98 and
aspect is I would'not tolerate 2006; the latest was May 6, in 1992.
any risk for ·myself.... Does
that mean Lasik is good or
oot g-ood? It means l,pSik is
.
good but not for everyone."
Lasik is marketed as
Tllub tD IN! followirlg Bllsirlnses for their do-..•s a;
quick and painless: Doctors
GaJn,HWs c - Ca/kge for OIU 13th annlllll Admirli~
cut a flap in the cornea Profenioltllls ~cilltio• Dtly celebration:
the eye's clear covering McCoy's Otw Slop, \ 'inton
aim a laser underneath it
McDooald 's. Welkton
and zap to reshape the
Breada's Kill&amp;: Curl
Mdlonald&lt;.G.U;poo.
cornea for sharper sight
Br.w."s MarUt
Mildl'oG ....hoose.M........
The FDA agrees with eye
c.dltC~
/MIIchec lleet" ~ t
surgeons' studies that only
c..taiaD's
l"'ialioawick Insurance. Pt. PIIAMnt
about 5 percent of patients
Pauiylik Cemui~L 1lteht-. Pwrt
c-ieFJddo
are dissatisfied with Lasik.
Patriotic FOO!Ib
cvs ............Ook llU
What's I!Ot clear is eltactly 1
Pou1 Davia;
bow many of those suffer
lloiry Qoo&lt;a, 1'1. - ·
lll&lt;d CDaw's A.ma. Grll
lasting severe problems and
RelamnStaiMm. RM~
A NioiO no.
how many just dido' t get
.
Sbak&lt;~
u..blftls., C ' •))•
Shoe- Scnsatioo
quite as clear vision as they
Don. To Earth I
' •P' .00 La,,.
Slyk Su.lion
had expected.
eo..
Summer~T....-..

Thanks

Cooh.,.,...

0.-

.

PROMO RATES
.__

Nllll!d a pat Auto
inwruee rate?
Stay local mil i:aiJ an
A3'flll yuu lllrady
know aad trust!

•

IIU'WIJ

Vltlll

_..,_,IOilbactcu.com

81

00/0 tr 48mo8
Bart's Tech .Center

30 yn illljllrilltce
Par1a. Service _

n•n llaioJ...., LKe ad..,.-, oH 45707

Is740-592-5143

M-FM;Sat . • 1

F--·

F.-..il:y DaMar, c "J

JEssica Dillon

,

-len

tJ

Reed &amp; 8aUr tnsurance ApiiiCJ .

..J"-....
'";;r.:.;;MMnSINII
Olt 4518
992-3600

Ohio Mutual

lnlilnnC&lt; Group

Or visit us on the web-- -w.reedbaur.oom
Home
Auto FaiDI Business

~-lloc

u

~- Cily Croft Moll.._ H -

.SUn

Kl~

Tannin&amp;

Super 8 M,.el, Golllpolis

T......-FNII'. Jacboo
Tlw An.! t--..
1lw Comer RS.nmt. M ' @ ': 1 ,
n..l-~
11le KOI"'M!r Steft. Bidwtfl
,._.,~

Tri-Coooly ............ -

ll s 111M
WIC Ol'f"te:e

. wKov--......_

�OPINION
6unbap f;flld -6nttind
125 Third A

.

0

Ohio

-

-

PHII..ADB.PHIA - In
die
run-up
to
tbe
Pennsylvania primary, our
·frieod Linda Wcrtllcina'
cp......t a )"011118 fCDIIIIe voa011 NPR She loWS rom
bcrweco 8al3ck Ohama Qillary Oinron, so sbe
hooagk·bodl of lheir alllabi-

(740) 446-234"2!Fo 6'}~46 30118
www.mydllllytrtbun .

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
"

Kevin Kelly

Dlaile Hill
Controller

Managing Editor

I

•
llu! editor an we1oolrtL 1ltey sltoJd4 ~ ~SS
dian 300 words. All kt.ten are Sllbj«:t li1 ...titing and IIUIS1
be signed and incbule address and ·~/qhoM """"- N.o
fUJJiigned /etten wi!f ~ puiJiislied. Utters should be •n
good tasl~ .addressing issues, Mt personalities.
UlteN IO

VIEW

.READER'S

Prepa

"""'

::.

:.:f

vaal

Rio Grande teaks skiDs ·
ONrEiihN':
Rio Grande Community College and Rio Grande
University provided me with a woudedul education. The
skills dlat I have learned in lofunnation Tocboology have
pi9*00 me for a variety of business responsibilities. I
bel1eve dlat Rio Grande is .an important element to lhe education system of Ohio and that students of Rio Gr.mde will
move fll!Ward with rewaromg careers.
The professors of ~o ~are wen ed•II'Med, and
deliver personal atlell1iloo to thea_studeiUs. My IT_professors of the Evans Scbool of Busmess, Dadene Ringband
ud Cbuck Wmters, have taken special care to prepa1e me
fur a~ rewanJing career, .and !he secrewy ofdle Evans
· School of Business, Brenda Louck!;, has enoow:aged me
with ber e:v«..endlll'illg mrile and :attentiGn to dotail.
Ouis c.clirUi

·

"
" ' "The
' " ' 'most
""'"
"tel:.~
powerful
story sbe bas to ldl is based
011

bel- gcodl:r _ !be firg
with a R:al d!anre

WOIIWI

to be _.......,.. But 1hat
... ~~
loclby

~~~vo'f.:::.l!"-:'aa

[f .

Ob.ama is defined "'"
bis
~J

parents:
Ointon
is
definedmarriage,
by her ~
to Bill Her fa\IOrite role is
Stron•,.
., w,....9n
----, but ber
oilier role, W~ Wife,
keeps g~ in tbe way.
That's very unfair, of
course. · The siJlllggle
again~ sexism daat &lt;linton
tqnesents is every bit as
heroic as Obama·s agm~
Glcism. She is just as muoh
a pioneer as be is, .a nd
many older women, who
remember Yoilat it was like
to face discriminatiion on a
daily basis, identify with
her drive to make history
(:she won older white
women by more than two
to one here). But many
younger women do not
idenl!ify with Hlllaty, especially when her busbaod
insists on sayillg i'Wpid
ilhingsdwSteponiberfiUJly

· : · DOnna Lou Pader, 66, of
.Tuppers Plains, went home
, to be with the love of her
'tife, her lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, on Friday,
. April 25,' 2008, at her home,
: She Was born in Athens
. on Dec. 19, 1941 , the
daughter of the late Aubra
.and Alta Bailey.
She was preceded in death
. by her husband, Jan; her sis'ter, Audra Rae; and a broth, er-in-law, Bob Stout.
: · She is Slln'ived by her
, sons and -their families, Greg
'and Anna, Jeff and Jodi; and
her grandchildren: Jacob, .
. ·Jordan, Jessica and Jennifer
Donna Palloer
Parker,
Justin
(Jamie)
. Robertson and Katie Robertson.
,. She is also survived by her sister, Jean Stout of Little
. Hocking, her brother-in-law, Dennis Bulin of Florida; her
.nieces, Tawny and Mandi; bcr nephews, Rick and Rusty;
and numerous greatcnieces and nephews; great-great nieces
and nephews; along with many aunt, uncles and cousins.
. · Also surviving is her close friend, Janet (Bud) Richards.
·. In addition to family,' she is slln'ived by a loving and
·:praying group of church members at Faith Harvest Church.
.·where she was ·the Pastor.
- Donna was a II;&gt;Ving daughter, sister, wife, ~nt, motherand grandmother. She instilled the love of Jesus 10 her fam--ily. Proveros31:28 Sllys: "Her children rise up and call her
blessed, her husband also and he praises .her."
.
Ne'&lt;er was a ttuer verse than this on how her family feels
.about her. Donna spent her adult life leading people to
.Jesus. Her greatest JOY was seeing people accept Him as
lmd. She and her husband established Faith Hartest
Church in Coolville. J-ler lifelong dream of a place where
'.people could be taught about Jesus had come tnuc:· Some of
her happtest tiDies were spent at the church nnmstermg 1:,1\l
God's people.
. Funeral arrangements are being made at White. .Scbwanelliuneral Home in Coolville. Visitation will be 2
..iO 7 p.m. 'Sunday, April27, 2008 at the funeral home, with .
services being Monday, April 28, 2008 at Faith Harvest
Chlll'Ch at ll a.m.
- GraveSide services will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens.
In lieu af flowers, donations can be made to Faith
Harvest Church.
,
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white:
schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

tbe : stuff of legend and
rigfrtiy So. The feminist
movemell!: · is equally
imnmta11t (and liberated.·

:::l.:
..........), .__ it
~~ ~""'~""' .....

d.o e s

OOl exm lbe

same hold 011
Aiuerica~s imlginalioo.
Then: is oo oatiooal boli-

~
S
·.

.....
G ....
TheOrFeminine
M .stique is not I Have a
5enca Falls was
Selma. · WOIIJC!I wrn:
blnoo 1rom votillg and
~
bUt~

ciusade =~sclrragcau'
has failed into bi..
,....,_
~:~-

.

.

e~SSI~:!s::m,
. - - ,., . IS
in this 001l111iy.

aotiviSts can still be
derided as '1n INJ!I!ICI"l" or
"feminaris" wbm similar
!ilursabouthlrlscu-1311ims
WOOhl neva- be to1cl:atell
(and sbonldn't be~. It's still

awpiabletousemeb-Willd
llbout Hillary, but I¥VCI' lbe
n-word about Barack.
But if Obama's book and movie - i.s more compelling dian Ctinton's, be's
llbout to run into a real
tilockbusta:: Jobn )((Cain
~lis one of llhe best
,t.merican stories of all
(Steve Robots' ,fate1tboolc
is "Jiy F.QJbus' H-s:
MMJOir of .a Family"
(Uliam Af{JI'R'}W, 2005 ).
Stew and Colcie Robms obn
be COfllt.IOiit1d by e ·ci1 m
~@ptail.OOffl.~

TODAYJN HISTORY

LETTERS . TO ·THE
EDITOR
IAters to. the editor -arf! welcome. lJJey sbotdd be
less dlarz 300 wolds. Allletk'rs are Sllbject to editin~,
must be signed, and incbuie .atfdrf!ss and tdqJhorte
lflinlher. No unsigMd letters will be prdJlished. Letters
.---Siaollld be-i'-1 good taste, addreni"g issues, not perwnaliries. Lerum ofthanlcB to -organiltllicR!s and individuals wiU rwt be acapted for publioation.

&amp;unba!' Gtim" -j,rntintl
Reader Services
1

Col• ?I 11111DJ
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
0..: n.r. mnoem in II is ID be 45631 . Periodicall)OIIall" paid
acc:uw. Hyou - til an onor in a a1 Gallipolis.
'IIDJy,.pleasecaloneofournena:w:&amp;. ••mtwr: The Associated Pnns,
the
West , Virginia
¥r••• ·
Associalion , and the Ghlo
NeWflp&amp;par Aaoocialion.
Gallipolis,OH

ar-•

{l'a) •• 2342
Sentinel 1 .Pome•oy. OH
(7a)tiN155 ·
l\'li*r • Pt. Pleasant, 'IN
(IIM)IJi-1111

0...17•

•s' rsu

as
Salliuel• Pometoy, OH
$ 'Z)W I leD

wv

II,

sa 1 , , . ,_,

C -.

..,, z r

..,

..._ • Glllip-.. C1H
ea; 7 Pgt
I
. Sabel• Poo•Of, OH
0

Sti11ac........,,...._
.,_.....,

a....- ............OJD.M

«,WV

• ; ,,z 4 -

•..0 .s.nlarCII
. - .. .. ......
'10D

a....- .. .. . ... ...-

St.tia:ttMi llhlaM IWiil in . . . .
dRat&gt; . . ~ llllyT...... "*&gt;

----·--

.......... bt;' m.ll jNNtl-.:i i n - ;

......

-a
I

.... c .. .

- ~ - ."3228

26-.. - ...........'8420
S2-.. .. - ...... - .'127.!1

7

tl' ,., 411 1111

-----.._ _...,. , , 1111

reo.

. P..tolilbecl . - y Sunday, 125

.

lluncloJr .... ..... . -..."1.tlll

13-.o ........

• ;z' am

•Jr •Pt.'F1

__

Tribune , 825 Tilird A•enue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

G n a - .. . .. ... . .'10D

- · Golipilis, OH

....... l't.,

Pwtu...., . Send address correo1ions to the Gallipolis Dally

01' P c
Flj
13-.. .. - .. - - . . ' ..'53.55

26-.. - - ... ' ' ....'107.10
S2 Weeks . .... -- ....'21421

Deaths
,.,. Joseph .-er

and 'sap its~ powa:.
·Obama also profits from ·
histPrr. The civil-ripts
JDOi&gt;-emr:nt and its lewl!'r,
Mattin Lutbec King Jr:., are

nw••vn

Thday is Sunday, April27, the U8tb -day of 1001t The!e
~ 248 days kft in the year.
.
lbday's Hlgbligln iD Hlstoly: On April27, l1m, during 1bc
Fm.tBalbary War, ao~can-locl furoeofMarines~~­
~' amries~ die City ofDcma, on die sbon:s ofTripoli.
On dJis date: In l52l , Pootuguese explMer Fadinaod
Magdlan was killed by oati'&lt;es in tbe Pbilippines.
.
In I 510, Pope Pius V eJromJ!!!•nicated Queen AizllhrdJ L
. In 1822, the 1-8th p~esident of me United States, Ulysses
Ollio. ·
S. Gmnt, was bam in Point l"Joa
In 11!65, the w:•mer SultaDa exptOdcd oolhe :t.fissisliippi
Riva- uear Memphis, Tenn., killiqg IDOJC dian I ,400 people, mosdy fioeed Uni011 priSilii«S of wa. .
In 1967, EKpO '67 was officialy opened m Moalleal by
Ca....tim Prime Minister Lester B. Pear!ion.
·
In 1918, 51 COilSI1UCtioo WOJters plunged to lbCir deatbs
wbeo a &lt;nlfold inside amoling tOwel' a die fteaun!s Pow«
Sh«ion site in West V!!Einia fdll68 tea 10 lhe grouod.
lbday' s Binbdayli: Ador JJICk Klugman is 86. A.llbess
A-*Aim:le is 76.A-oer0lsey Kasem is 76. Actress
Judy~ is 69. Rh)'lbm~·blues mngerCu~ ~i!]g
is 64. Rock s.ii1gcl' Kale ~ (The B-52 s)_ ~~ ~­
RbJ1'uu _._blues si,... Helbie Muodl (lbe StytistiCSj Js
59. Aaol' Douglas Sheelun is 59. ltod: musician Ace
.ftddey is-51. 1\lpsi"'"' Shmla &amp;pun is.o49. Acme James
Le CirM is -46:-&amp;oa: lDiriil:ian ROO ~uires (B~ Head TheW
and me t.toasta&lt;s. is 43. S~ Mica Pms is 39. _Rock
siu(r_,;.;- TraVis U I 11 (Days uf llbe New• iiS 29.
Rock sj £ &lt;r'Sici•l'lib:icl: $luq&gt; ·~ 0.. Boy} is 24.
1bou,zbt fuc Today: "'Tbere is oo man w good, who, were
be to submit all bis thougbtli and avtions Ito die laws, would
not detave haqging 10 limes in :his life.~- Michel de
Mootaigne, Fmndl pbilosopber (1533-1592).

Pomeroy • Middleport • GampoUs

Obituaries

Fried nYM'inJ as the MidlleQass DMI!f*T of Middle
~but tbll's blldly a
lieroic IWI'ative, aod it
~ oootri\led. Sbc tells
vola's th3t her flllba'- so
fuJgal '1M: used to tum die
beat off overnight.~ But
bumble nnioin&lt; are a bard
lidl wbi:B-,.,..,.you and your busbini earned $109 millioo
IDBih OVCl' tbe past eight years.
The most autbeatic worn

~:aodse~lboutmld­
iog~She oouJdn't finish
Oin!m' s, IU: Obama's kqlt · • .._ Linooln doin
• bel- awaJa: far into lbe ~
Right .then: is one key
........
""""'
reason why Obami' still . . K:=d~a=~
leads for the Democr3tic
nomination and Clinton, tdl a soy that cmlofi&lt;'S
despite her strong ~wing their vinues and values. DiU
was the Man f'rom
here in Pennsylvania, stays Ointoo
Hope,raisedbym~stuck in second place. The
junior senator fium Illinois ishod .sinrgle modler. ~
W. Bush
was who
the Sherift'
· has a more compelling From
Texas,
fOUDd
. stOiy to tell dian lhe junior
God
and~
. &lt;lmwWOIDiiD
-"-wilh
senator liool New York.
u.a
a
Y
· UU!6 ·
Presidential
lilies
is
....__ .. ~pet
.... __ aloohol, They were the !Uni
mon:.....,..m
. .. . ......,
of tbeir own movies, the
about· issues.
· want heroes of dleir own myths.
leaders v.bo (W!IIIIC&lt;1 to lbi:ir
Obama' s film bas been a
lives and gJ3ltJ !heir llftlb- boxsOfficeseosalion: Son of
lems. But lbcy .also want a black ~ from Katya
lleadm; of
dwarter, and a white llliJthel' from
Jll"'Pie who have fared Kansas, lle's the Golden
advmilty and lrilllllfhed twer Otild, a one-mam melting
it Presidt:mJi ·should uodei-- pot After Harvanl Law
SiaDd average people but not School, be tumed down
fancy Salaries to ot;gaDil.e
be av~ tbemselves.
Voters leam about char- laidsOff steelwotbrs. In
acter through nanative. .,_,... llO srenes in his movie
Stories oon..ey _who candi- ~ iJi w~. He
dates are .and v.bat tbey lwely mentioos his brief
stand fur. That's been true Senate tenure. He is the
since
llitie
George unsullied Outsider 'lobo will
Washington cMpped down oust the siniste:r In~.
that blasted ·cbelcy tree, and Cbicago i.&amp; his NIIZIIllltb., die
lobbyists his mooeychaogit's still true Uiday.
Wbelher it was Andy ers, tbe Capitol bis ttmp1e.
Clinton's story seems
Jackson defealing tbe
British at New Orieans, or we.akby~son. She's

~ .

-·' Sunday, April27, 2008

SlllulaY'('P"l r'/, zoo8

A tale of two stories

'

.

Page.A4

· Rick L: Giassbum, 51, of Hilliard, passed away Friday,
Apri125, 2008, at Doctor's West Hospital in Columbus.
He was .preceded in death by father, Herbert Glassburn.
He is survived by loving wife of 27 years, Becki
Glassburn; mother, Connie Glassburn; siblings, Delia
(Ted) Wotring and Melanie Pitzer; father-in-law, Robert
(Ev.alee) Shank:; brother-in-law, Rob Shank; many nieces,
nephews and dose·friends ; and beloved pets, Duke, Jake,
aodScooby.
The family would like to send a special thank you to the
staff at Doctor's West Hospital and HoJDeReach.
A llleDlOri.al iielvioe will~ held 5 p.m. Monday, April28,
2008. at St. Mark"s United Methodist Church, with Pastor
Vijay Buck officiating.
In liou of flowers, memorial contributions may .be made
to Ohio Health HomeReach, 180 E. Broad St., Columbus,
Ohio 43214, or The Capital Area Humane Society; 3015
SciQto Dalby Executive Ct., Hilliard, Ohio 43026.
Arrangements WeFe completed by tbe Tidd Funetal
Home, Hilliard.

Jdcldau M. Lewis

Paul Joseph Miller, 56, CoolviUe, died Thursday, April
24, 2008, in St. Joseph' s Hospital, Parkersburg, W.~a.
He is stln'ived by his wife, lryna Valentmovna Miller.
There will be no visitation or services. Arrangements are
by the White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.
·
Sign the onli.ne guestbook at www.whiteschwarzdfuneralhome.com.

c.ol1 Waodndf
Carol Jean Woodruff, 68, Wellston, died Thursday, April
24,.2008, in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
She is survived by her husband, Richard Woodru1f.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Huntley &amp; c.. ens
Funernl Home, Wellston, with Pastor Rob Ervin will officiate.
Burial will be in the Ridgewcxxl Cemetery. Friends may call
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral ho~ .

4.7 quake rocks·Reno as
area's seismic activity continues

Add.alou M. Lewis, 81, of Pomeroy, passed away on
BY Seen 1 Sauuut
1800s to float timber from
Friday, April 25, 2008, in Huntington,W. Va.
ASSOCIATED PR£55 WRITER
Lake Tahoe down the
Sbe was born May I 0, 1926, in Racine, daughter of the
mountain to Reno. There
late Ralph S. McKenzie and Dorothy Coe McJ&lt;mrie.
RENO, Nev. - More were no immediate -reports ·
She was a graduate of Racine High School, Class of 1944. than 50 aftershocks were of flooding along the thune.
Sbc was employed by the former Elberfelds Department recorded on the west edge
:Jars of mayonnaiiiC, botStore for '13 years, and she retired after 18 years of service of Reno after an earthquake ties of ketchup and shamas a cook for the Meigs Local School Dislrict
that shook cans off shelves, p0o fell from shelves at a
She was a member of the Wmding Trail Garden 'C iuband !mocked pictures off walls Wal-Mart store in northa member of the Racine Methodist Church. ·She was one of and dislodged rocks on west Reno. Overhead telethe first women in Ohio to be elected to a county fair boaid, hillsides along the Sierra visions swayed at a· sports
serving on the Meigs County Fair Boatd for 24 years.
Nevada. ·
bar in neighboring Sparks,
She was a loving and devoted mother, .gi31ldmotber and
There were no immediate II miles east, whel!t bargreat-grandmother.
reports of injuries or major tender Shawn Jones llid the
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by damage early Saturday rumble was signiflt:antly
her husband -of 51 years, Robert J. Lewis.
from the magnitude 4.7 ·Stronger thai) Thursday's
She is Slln'ived by her children, David (Katherine) Lewis quake that hit at II :40 p.m. event
of Pomeroy, and Carol (Paul) Durst of Huntington; broth- Friday. It was the largest
"The bottles were iibaking
er-in-law, Jack B. (Mwy Margaret) Lewis of Pomeroy.; quake in a two-month-long so I sent everybody outthree grandchildren, Robert and Eric Durst, and Nikita swann of tremors.
side," be said.
Lewis; and a great-grandchild, Aidan Lewis. .
"The earthquake was
Ken · Smith, a seilmoloServices will be 2 p.m. Monday, April 28, 2008, at the strongly felt in west Reno gist at the university lab,
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Jeff and felt throughout the .said the recent activity
Garrett officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Reno metropolitan area," around Reno is QPUsual
Cemetery_ Friends may call at the funeral home from I to 2 the University of Nevada, because the quakes started
p.m.Monday.
Reno's seismology lab said out small and conbllue to
A registry is ·available online at www.andersonmc- in a statement early build in strength. 1)le nordaniel.com.
Saturday.
· . mal pattern is for a main
The U.S. Geological · quake followed by lmaller
Survey said Friday night's aftershock!;.
quake was centered six miles ' · "If' the pattern colltinues
westofRenonearMognl,an we may be looking at a
.----.;--------....:...
· _ _.::...__
actually see, such as the area rattled by a swmm of larger event" in the: Reno
~!are that &lt;CaD make oncom- more than 100 quakes the area, Smith said friday.
mg headli~ts .a huge "star- day before. The, strongest of "We wouldn't ·be sug&gt;rised
those ·was a magnitude 4.2 to see it (swarm) en4!at any
burst" of.ligbt. · .
· • Oarify how often that caused high-rise hotels time and it also wouldn't be
patients suffer diffeFent side to _sway_ ~ the downtown surprising to see a· large
-earthqlll~U _ The tlottom
effects, such as dry e~e. caStoo d1&lt;h'V:t.
'Die
illrollgeSt
llftershock
line is we don't kn~ what
Some eye SUI!COOS say 31
percent of Lasik pattents · measured magnitude 3.7 will happen."
Reno's last major quake
have some degree of dry and was recorded at 12:29
a.m.
Saturday.
measured
6.1 on April 24,
eye before ~· and it
The
temblor
cracked
1914,
and
awakened people
worsens for abOut 5 percent
afterward. Other studies say walls in northwest Reno, as far away as Sacramento,
48 peroent of Lasik recipi- broke lawn wateriiig tines Calif., said Crdig dePolo,
ents suffer some degree of and damaged a wooden research geologist with
flume built . along the Nevada Bureau of Mines
dry eye months later.
•
!
• Make more understand- Truckee River in the late and Geology. .
able the conditions that
.
•
should -disqualify S!JlllCOI!e
frQm. Lasik., such as large
pupils or severe nearsight-

Federnl panel seeks clearer warnings on Lasik eye surgery
BY Lluru•"

U'RD

&gt;P! MEDICAL WRITER

Bosnia vs. bitter: Which iveakness will hurt
.
. ......
Demoaatic chances in November?
I -have to ask:: Dees anyooe .actually belie&gt;.'e New
Y01ik,
New
.Jersey,
.C alifumia -o r Pennsylvania
would go for Md:ain over
· Obama in lhe geaora1 decDaswla ~ ti011? Will Wliitc w~---..
--•class men~ ·womenWI~
prefer
!iOIIlOOile more in ·tine ·with
George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney dian ·someone who
remaioing oontests in seven can bring about the ·obangt!
states:aJIIitwo IICUJiiWe!i limo they are uDous for? We'H
a oontest about wbich .candi- see ifObama wins 1he JJOCI if
·!We is anraa:ing what lcind be can appeal 110 ,their .aspim....,
..__ ballot ....
lions. But, for oow, the
.,,. ·v oter at ...,.
.,.,x. media woUld have IUS focus
The pllimaries a~~: a numbers
game based 011 Mnniug del-- on ihcir fears - real or
egam&amp;, 001 pitting llp3lt the imagined
Democratic -ooalioon .and
During the closing weeks
v.bo is 1111Jl""ling m ·whom.
of this long Democratic
HillaJy Ointoo -contends r.ampai~p~ season, I eqJeCt
that 011ama can't Win the Glintoo will relllllllJ the
big states !like Ohio most C\Jil\lclitive Democrat
· · arnia and Penn Jv-!!!!ii in winning ov~ 1hose yotdie general ~an erti Who &lt;xmfin~ tQ l!eJieve
~se be didn' t in die pri- · iri th~ . ClintOn brand maries The .argument is espcci.ally 011 lbe economy.
speciolis. Gi¥en the state of ~ut, I can't swallow the
the economy .and McCain's - idea •that ithose YOters or
lack of iiJtercst .in it, 1bese even. tbolle so a!Jed big
voters, with Ointon oo.t of states OiDI:OD ~ will .go
the nee, will likely be inter- red m teseotliialt if Obama
esttd in voting for Obama.
wins tbe ·nOmination.
Meanwhile, for Obama to · To win lhe nomination,
Win!bemoverindleremaia- Ointoo's suppmtm have
ing primaries, ;be must Dell'- said that Obama must also
ttalize Ointoo's SIRlngth llll df:monstrate ·that ,he ~
lbe t:OOOOUIY by ~to w1thllWld
~ s politikey middlo-class swing vnr- cal ~ machme -_ and
ers in Indiana, Nmth the filth ,generated mSlde
Carolina, Oregoo . . and ~ ~ · Ocmooratic
Kmtuc.ky. Obama .,.asn•t ~ - coo.u.:ost. 'lbc:Y
lb1e ,eo fLilly o•n~tet with 'act ·as if Kepul)ficans ·w ill
llilue-,oollar, white, small- tzat die oomination of
town .;,&lt;lim !like tboie in OlintonindJC'511511emanner
Texas and Mississippi that Oleney -believed tbe
That' s
· no
surprise. kagi people would tteat
Pennsylvania is no swprise, our invasion: with :filowen.
citbcr. He wins dck;gates
Obama makes a oomwitb a·diffc:renl ooalition of pelling argument that be
voters -tban J) om., .have presents the best change in
typicllly m1il'ld UJlOil. Still, a change electioo. And if
0&amp;ama c.~'t est oo being Clintou is able to win lbe
the leader iD J*dged .cJele- oomiMtim, lile must llio
gates or lbe JlllPU1Ir vote. He hannmr away at the same
has to fiJdtt bd:: against die change ~&amp;IF in ·order to
media tliat bas fallen into defeat ·M£Cain, wbom
Ointon' s trap of «klaring many believe would n:pretbat he din 't win 1be gmalll sent a ·~ Bush ~ oo
lw:ause tbe oollitioo that both Qll1onal _sec
_ unty ~
lrought 'him vic1oy in the well as domcsbc iiSSUI'lS.
primaries iS difiemJt.
'
Sophisticated supa:deJe:-

··-'le

c::!f.
m

me

..

,gates looking to detmnine
·who i.s the most electable
&lt;CaDdidate must go ibeyood
turnout numbers 't o determine which candidate. is
responsible for ~ new
voters, •can help Democrats
'
.e~d die electoral map.
and can inspire Americans
of every persuasiBn to
1110Ve beyond tthe hot, beat·
ed and distorted rhetOliic -of
past election seasons to
really ,get an umJerstanding
&lt;Of where the .candidates
stand oo the &lt;issues.
11here's a .n:ason far the
dissatisfaction, mood and
~pirit of voten; right now.
From the way -we ~d
~ves from their 1milb
m bow we fuune ·lbe dec.lions, politicums. and pindits are partly Ito ib1•mP. _
'!bis e~ i! __not ~
IOOU.t btue-ooilaf; JOw~ ~te voters. This
e1eclioo IS about each and
evecy ~ ofus who wantn
better life, a safe and '!lCCIJre
oo.untry and competent
leaden; wbG upescut -om
vlilues and are accountabll:
to us, the AmericanP,COPk .
As the vice presidan of
tbe United States ·would
say: so. Obama did IIKll puH
off an liJl!lCl So: Hillary will
fight until the bitter end. ~­
~ need.~ to deal. 1111th
'bitter gate. So. Ctintoo
~s to deal ~ "Bosnia

- '

November

'

.

(Donna Brazile is a polit-

ical COIMUlfiiQior em CNN,
ABC and NPR, cOntributirtg coburu.Ust to Roll Ct(/,
lite_ newspaper of r --iii'Jl

H1l~ anJ fom~Lr ~i•n
manager for AI ~- f "

-------- ----....-------~------;----:_;----- -· -- --- - ··-- ~

·-

.. .

..

...

-

•

to

~-

liii1Pef-fue~. So.
·
And so rt goes. Will

Clii!too's perceived dishooesty or Obama's peroeived
inexpr.riroce_ be more danming'w henitoomestotbetypc
d .nrl• the Republicans
will mount in 1bc fall? One
thing -is for sure: The
DcniOOlills will need anyone
and everyone shouting from
die l'llfia's ~to show up 011 1
oold, v.u, windy day in emy

WASHINGTON In
fury and despair, patients
harmed 'b¥ Lasik eye
surgery told federal health
advisers Friday of severe
--eye pain, blurred vision and
even a son's suicide. The
advisers recommended that
the government warn more
clearly about the risks of the
hugely popular operations.
About 700,000 Americans .
a year undergo the elective
laser surgery. Like golf star
· and famed Lasik recipient
,. Ttger Woods, they're hop·ing to· throw ·away their
.. gla5ses, just as the ads &amp;ay.
·, And while the vast major-:ity oonefit - most see 20. ~0 or even better - about
..one in four people who
. .seeks Lasik is not a good
_·candidate. A small fraction,
.:perhaps I percent or fewer,
. suft'er serious, life-changing
: side effects: worse vision,
severe dry eye, glare, inabil-ity to drive .at night.
. , "Too many Americans _
..have been harmed by this
.procedure and it's about time
; this message was heard,"
.
.David Shell of Washington
David
Shell
shows
a char't of his vision after having lasik
· told the Food and Drug
Administration's scientific surgery while sp!;aking at a Food and Drug Administration
d1scuss Las1k
·advisers before their !'eCOID- {FDA) hearing in Gaithersburg, Md . Fnday
..mendation that tb!: FDA pro- surgery.
· vide dearer wlfllings.
But one thing is eleor, lillid
Shell held up lln·ge pho- bad, I fell . into a decllf'
: :to graphs that he said depict depression than J' d ever Dr Jayne Weiss of Detroit's
· his .blurred world, showing experienced, and I couldn't Kresge Eye Institute, who
: halos around objects and . get out." Gerard ~an read chairs the FDA advisory
panel: "This is a referendum
.double vision, since his from his son's su1c1de note.
·
Man
Kotsovolos,
who
on
the pcrfonrumce of Lasik
; ICJ98 Lasik.
worlced
for
the
Duke
Eye
by
some surgeons who
"I see multiple moons,"
·be sai,d angrily. "Anybody Center when he had a more should be doiug a better job."
sophisticated Lasik procedure
The FDA advisers - a
want to have Lasik now?"
. · Colin Dorrian was in law in 2006, said doctors classify group of mostly glasses:· school when dry eye made him as a success because he · wearing eye doctors - rec,: his contact lenses so intoler- now ha~ 20-20 vision. But he - ommended that the agency
:able that he sought Lasik, said, "For the last'two years I make moie clear the warn:even though a doctor noted have suffered debilitating and . ings it alf!l3,dy provides for
· his pupils were pretty large. unremitting eye pain . ... would, bc Lasik patients:
~ Add ph'Btographs that
. ·Both the dry eye and pupil Patient~ do not want to ~· s~ should have disquali- tinue to exisf as helpless VIC- illustrate what people suffering certain side effects
·fied Dorrian. but he .tims with np voice.''
The
~ober
testimonies
'received Lasik anyway ' ' and his father described six illustrated that a decade after
·years of eye pain and fuzzy Lasik hit the market, there
·vision before the suburban still are que~tions about just
.Philadelphia rna~ killed how often patients suffer
bad outcomes from the
·himself last year. · "As soon as my eyes went $2,000-per-eye p~edure .

...

On northern vt pond, spnng
~~~SpeJl-O!!~~~=
!!la~tan=y~-l --arrives when einder block falls

one whose nearsightedness
WEST DANVIllE. Vt (AP) - Forget what the calenis fixed by Lasik is guaran- dar says. In these parts, spring doesn't arrive until me .cinteed to need relllii.ng glasses der block falls through the ice on Joe's Pond.
in middle age, som!llhing · The 65-pound block, which is placed on a wooden pallet
that might not be needed if on the frozen swface of the pond and tied to an al~ c,lock
they skip Lasik.
on shore each winter in a $1-per-chance guessin~ game,
That's a big reason why plunged into the water at 5:25p.m. Friday.
Weiss, the glasses-wearing
Four people who guessed April 25 at 5:15 P-Ill- - the
ophthalmologist, won't get closest time- won $1,~23 apiece in the annual Joe's Pond ·
Lasik even though she Ice Out Contest. according to organizer Dave Parker.
offers it to her patients.
Don Rogers, of Swartz Creek, Mich.. Janet Egizi, of St.
"I can read without my Johnsbury, Roxanne Gorham, of Lyndonville, and Joe
glasses and ... operate with- Kelly, of Barre, were the winners. The 20th annual contest
oUt my glasses, and I love drew 12,039 entries, many far from Vermont.
that," sqe said. "The second
The earliest-ever ice out date was April 16. in 11)98 and
aspect is I would'not tolerate 2006; the latest was May 6, in 1992.
any risk for ·myself.... Does
that mean Lasik is good or
oot g-ood? It means l,pSik is
.
good but not for everyone."
Lasik is marketed as
Tllub tD IN! followirlg Bllsirlnses for their do-..•s a;
quick and painless: Doctors
GaJn,HWs c - Ca/kge for OIU 13th annlllll Admirli~
cut a flap in the cornea Profenioltllls ~cilltio• Dtly celebration:
the eye's clear covering McCoy's Otw Slop, \ 'inton
aim a laser underneath it
McDooald 's. Welkton
and zap to reshape the
Breada's Kill&amp;: Curl
Mdlonald&lt;.G.U;poo.
cornea for sharper sight
Br.w."s MarUt
Mildl'oG ....hoose.M........
The FDA agrees with eye
c.dltC~
/MIIchec lleet" ~ t
surgeons' studies that only
c..taiaD's
l"'ialioawick Insurance. Pt. PIIAMnt
about 5 percent of patients
Pauiylik Cemui~L 1lteht-. Pwrt
c-ieFJddo
are dissatisfied with Lasik.
Patriotic FOO!Ib
cvs ............Ook llU
What's I!Ot clear is eltactly 1
Pou1 Davia;
bow many of those suffer
lloiry Qoo&lt;a, 1'1. - ·
lll&lt;d CDaw's A.ma. Grll
lasting severe problems and
RelamnStaiMm. RM~
A NioiO no.
how many just dido' t get
.
Sbak&lt;~
u..blftls., C ' •))•
Shoe- Scnsatioo
quite as clear vision as they
Don. To Earth I
' •P' .00 La,,.
Slyk Su.lion
had expected.
eo..
Summer~T....-..

Thanks

Cooh.,.,...

0.-

.

PROMO RATES
.__

Nllll!d a pat Auto
inwruee rate?
Stay local mil i:aiJ an
A3'flll yuu lllrady
know aad trust!

•

IIU'WIJ

Vltlll

_..,_,IOilbactcu.com

81

00/0 tr 48mo8
Bart's Tech .Center

30 yn illljllrilltce
Par1a. Service _

n•n llaioJ...., LKe ad..,.-, oH 45707

Is740-592-5143

M-FM;Sat . • 1

F--·

F.-..il:y DaMar, c "J

JEssica Dillon

,

-len

tJ

Reed &amp; 8aUr tnsurance ApiiiCJ .

..J"-....
'";;r.:.;;MMnSINII
Olt 4518
992-3600

Ohio Mutual

lnlilnnC&lt; Group

Or visit us on the web-- -w.reedbaur.oom
Home
Auto FaiDI Business

~-lloc

u

~- Cily Croft Moll.._ H -

.SUn

Kl~

Tannin&amp;

Super 8 M,.el, Golllpolis

T......-FNII'. Jacboo
Tlw An.! t--..
1lw Comer RS.nmt. M ' @ ': 1 ,
n..l-~
11le KOI"'M!r Steft. Bidwtfl
,._.,~

Tri-Coooly ............ -

ll s 111M
WIC Ol'f"te:e

. wKov--......_

�..

OHIO

itna, limn-ielltind

Leftover bicycles recycled
by Oberlin CoDege stud~nts
OBERLIN
(AP)
Eschewing fuel-guzzling
cars apparently wasn't
green enough for bicycleloving students at Oberlin
College.
Armed with bolt cutters
and hacksaws, students and
campus employees scour
campus at the end of each
school year to round up
abandoned bicycles and
recycle diem.
.
Oberlin's -assistant safety
and security director Marge
Burton says up to 200 bikes
are left behind by departing
students each May. Students
say unlocked bikes are often
"borrowed" and sometimes
pever make it back to their
original owners.
"This is a town with more
bikes than almost any other
town anywhere," 'said Liz
Burgess, an alumna of the
college who runs the city's.
merchants association. "So
it would make sense that we
would have more abandoned bikes than just about
anywhere else."
According to the U.S.
· Census Bureau.. Oberlin

PageA6
Sunday, Apri127,

'

200!

.......... ""' ..... u
....,, - ,........ , ... u

F otmdation receives boost

ranked 12th in the United
States in percentage of residents who .commute to wort
or scbool on a bicycle.
The bikes end up at the
campus bicycle oo-op.
which seJVes as a recycling .
center.
Student
Sean
O'Brien of East Lansing,
Mich., is a volunteer
mechanic at the O(H)p.
"Some people jUSl think
it's kind of a hassle to bring
(the
bicycles) home,"
O'Brien said.
The center is also home to
bicycles collected by campus security and city police.
lf the bikes cannot be
returned ·to owners or sold
at an auction, officials send
them to the co-op.
There they are spruced up
and reused, with some
donAted to city youths who
need them.
"I don't think bikes in
general are valued as much
as they should be," O ' Brien
said. "It's a dream of mine
to not have any bikes laying around out . there and
have one for everyone who
wants one.,

Swilay, April r7, . .

___
-....

LocAL ScHEOOLB

...GALLI'
..,.._,...CUS-·-----

receilled a firlaiiCial
boost from Powell's

Food Fair In the .
amount of $50~000.
The ~ation, pre-

.

, . . . N-Y. . . 113

lAIIy Ma

The Meigs looal
Enrichmemt
foundation recently

c

..,..1rDm 'GIIIa MdMIIgl .........

5..,.. A ,CM
.a
1

,

~

""'*"""Ill-"' ' · ' &gt;'· 5 p.m.

sented by Lee .
Powell of f'oweWs
Food fair, left. to
Steve Musser, foumdation treasurer, will

.... eo. .....

go into a growiqg
fund meant to

-O..::,.IIItllolgo.IIP•m.
.._
.. Sou•••1. S:p.tn.

finance oew educa-

o.llla-.yoi"'"•• ..,,4:l1Jp,m

-Vollor. .. f-~p.m.

-OOUner•UoJuo. 5~.111.

JIIalen

-

tional, academic

.s.,. .
. ,Gila, 5 ,.,.• 5'P.m.

Vollor•,_, 5 PAll.

n

and athletic ~pm­
grams/facilities in
the Meigs 'Local
School District.
f I

,

$M

a

..._.atGIIIar · ,.,,a,p.m.

- ·- ·-···
p.m.
-·~··
-li!JIIIr.,,...,..........
__'"p.'"m"·.
-.I
.._Vdlr .. 'loltl¥11, I p.m.

2 ,,,.._

iP.olllliGAhllt'GIIMik.
11
..

ny,~-p.m.

...... Golla ..
-~

. -. 4:l1Jp.m.
!(' k fold, ..... kul•ii at~
4:liJ ·p.m.
1

.....

51
•

~,
p.m.

5 . 'MM
I I

.....

,~,. - n

-li!JIIIr

lauii •Cillla

:t.&amp;:ao

.toulh - · I p.m.

watwnw.l,p.m. .

v.-&gt; •O ou::\llll-. 5p.m.

.:

Ohio man pleads guilty in
Rust Belt theft-to-order ring
YOUNGS1QWN (AP)
- A man accused of being
the leader ·Of a sophisticated
theft ring stretching from
Qeveland
to
western
Pennsylvania in the Rust
Belt region pleaded guilty
and faces up to 10 years in
prison.
Bobby Mock, 39, of
Youngstown. hei{!Cd lead a
ring that burglarized businesses .and homes through•
out the region and resold
stolen goods, including
big -screen TV s, riding
mowers and motorcycles,
prosecutors said.
Investigators say 10called CUSIOJ!erS plaqljd
outeu for !ilemiiiD lie • 'm
in .catell.
Some orders wene taken
in a .c omer ttftlle vlllt parking lot of . the Genei:il
· Mators · Corp. Lordsto~
plant, where several . suspects wotted"lllld allegC!fly
reached C!IUt til buddies as
fencinj! prospects, authorities satd.
Mock agreed to a plea
!ileal Friday in MahoJiing
·c'Bunty Common Pleas
Court over charges in a 44count .indictment, includ. ing breaking~and entering,
theft and receiving s~n
propelty.
"We thought this was the
best course of .action .at this
tiJne," Mock's lawyer, John

.,......, r

-lllo.llla"'
oy,e ·p,m.
_ . Vollor a1 loulhl'olnl, 111.m.
.....,~Ill ao.-..ep.m.
1

,

......

~

~At d

Blue Devils stay hot,
beat Chillicothe 9-5

·Gallia

Academy
starter -Nidk

Stewens,

.... -·AIJBII

~deliv­
ers a WIII1Tl-

~LYTRIBUNE.COM .

LIP pitch
second
b
Blelt

GAUlPOUS its

and ·Caleb
WBmlmont,

9-5 VIctory over visiting
Cbillicothe

.middle, Wllit
for the llhrow

~-i.-Cloudy

!Mad• ·

m

from the
Clltcher dur·
lrC the fifth
lnnii'C of

FridaY's

rs

SEOAL
South bale-

triumph, pounding out
.
.,
.hits d unng the .our-run
decision.
The hosts fell behind 2..0
after a half-inning of play,
then retaliated with three
scores in their half of the
first to take a 3-2 lead after
one full inning. The Blue
•.and White extended their
lead with a run in both the

ballpme
BCalnst
OhUIIcothe
at Memorial
Field •.

....

..,..'??I

-•= a

---

--at..-,

in the rin , said assistant
prosecu
y ShideL
'
"If
was not the tini·leader, be was the most

au.

~-4'Cd.

they have no
on •t he
overall take from more than
125 burglaries.
"It's a .hapless group of
indivi.d uals who largely
acted iudividually ... This
isn't some Mafia-'lype ~a­
nization," Limbian said.
Youngstown, where the
alleged ring was concentrated, "has lost more than
40,000 ·manufacturing jobs
and its lJOPulation uf about
82,000 is half of what it was
some 40 years ago. Thefts
also occurred in nearby
Hermitage, Pa., and in the
Pittsburgh area.

For lllOI'e informatiOD,
..,... w 7 . , . _
cootact Meigs football. Gallia lfocademy fte.ad softball ooao1t Jim Niday, middle wearing white, talks with his team following Friday's 12·1 victory
NaCh Mite Chancey .at t~uv•lrilitln&amp; Chillicothe during an SEOAb South Division seftball-oontest lit Memorial Fteld. The Blue Angels won their sec7~992-2158 or 74G"992- Olllk:onsecuti'tll! S£~ So.uth Division
With the triumph.
.

crown

0064.
11lr •alii WAUaS

~

ftoond~ie
H d• ).
= ·~ J;

FREE SHIPPING \ 1.866.MOBiliTY- ATT.COM/WIRELESS- VISIT A STORE

,...·-.--..,,......,.,ICl.+

·11!11' US fOR 30 M'IS. SA1111a' UOi..IS GU.uiUII

1.11
Cttr Mttalt•e•c (~-

.........,_...
40.211
c 5 (ftiEI-

. . . . . (IMIE)- . . . .
••ftiEI-ZJ.M

....
0

I

a.u

.... j

• r

PB M1:c(WVW)-

8 til

a

,...., -

(lft'IE) - 47.71

..... fiMEI---

u

"

,.

",.,.,_

~

..... I 81 7

D1WiKJ-

--------

. . 10

i1

(21+

1'1' 4 1 •

....-.llod~W....... 7l1 £-S:..S:t.6 -

~)-21.G&amp;

(T«)) 9SZ·ll15

i1.00Jliii-1D
.
7J£Ho:lonS:., i1.00JlA--

.-n..z-.

88T (IIYIE) - 11.28
(M"Mq)- 21.81

o~l,..,._

•• (dldYIE)- .....

. . - , 8ool:l (MIIMQ)-

5.2JO

..,.. tio:td: .... -

.. fllll:ll_

• .,.... -

.

·- 1-7410 ue 2342 •
~·

n.za

~

.._IIIP C(t:IMIM:QI-

........
_
...
I·-----,...
.............

-

-a.u

·•• •z r
..,_mn a.trrMWJk
cr-.n ••••.
- ..
en; ,

II liME) - 22AI

·_ (.,.._ ...,;,.

......,&amp;: •.._.1

33

.. .... _.,....m;M:It)tltUe.oom

WM l(tnSE)-17AI
'II i;'l(tnSE)

l;" c

.

Friday.
Eastern ~ves to 8-8
this season With the victory.
Gordon f'.mwf the win for

!li6-1·T«J 1•1001

11.71

b

II&amp; If II

ttst..,...a~m

Ide,..' lpiJ.tra•Wfl

11

•

llllltil • iaJia: . . . .
a
ai(741J4a8Ul '

0

•

'

_.......,. eia•flllelt

•

•
•

Eric ..... • IJI

'(740) · · -·- ·

&amp;Arrren..tra•WIIIr
(?40) ... . .. ... •

M I I . aiiJIM) 17. . .74.
r 1 we.

:

Jim Niday was pleased with
the divisional-clinching triwnph, especially since this
one of the main targets for
his ttoops at the beginning
of year.
.
"We're happy to win any
game that we are in, but one
of our goals at the beginning
of the
was to get back
in the
ue championship
game. We knew die only
W!I.Y to do that was to win
tl!_e _(SEQALJ . South
Dtvision to get into p.&amp;t one..
I - · II
as
n
•
~ 3

k:

I

lc:lrumtl ,.., '

i

•• .
JXWft

~tem

\II" 11

eophomore Arld!ew 8enedum (10) deli'tll!fs a thrOW

to fln:t liMe durifC Fridll)''&amp; llOfloOOilfefen baseball game
apinJt.Wood Count¥ Christian In Tupp8111 Plains .
•
' '

the Eagles. The senior
pitched all five innipgs,
Rriking out five battel's and
walking two.
·
Up 2.0 aftu ooe because
of Gordon's first double and
Pierce's first hit, Eastern
scored five runs in each of
the second :md thiJd inniDJS
to win with the mercy rule.
Four consecutive hits did

volleyball
.program is
pleased to
announce
1that Brooke
Taylor of
R i v e r
T~
Valley
,,_High
School has signed a nationallener of intent to play volleyball beginning in the fall.
Taylor, a 5-9 hiner and
setter from Bidwell, feels
privileged . to have the
opportunity to play .colle·
gtately at Rio Grande. "I
feel ,privileged to play for
Rio Grande. This is a great
thing for me," Taylor said.
"I love volleyball and just
want to play.
"Rio Grande is close to
my home and has the major
I'm looking for; volleyball
was just a plus."
She plans to major in
Nursing.
"I would like to be a registered nurse," Taylor said.
Rio Grande bead coach
Patsy Fields commented on
her newest recruit. "Brooke
is a &amp;ood hitter but needs to
wor!_on.bein ~ ~li­
sive. I believe Brook.e will
work hard to improve and
she certainly will be a great
role model for our program
both on and off the cow:t."
Fields said.
'
Taylor recited what she
feels her strongest assets are
and also cri~ued herself on
s to get better
what she n
at beading to the college
level. "I don't like to lose,
and I don't believe I ever
give up," she said. "I think I
i1ecd to work on my talking
and passing. I also need to
be more consistent with my

serving."

their opponent to - rwo hits
and beat~ Wood County
CbristiaD W'tldcat&amp; I2-0 in a
non-conference
game

~Us

I

I

'

-

u1, · -

. . - - .. ,

~ .~

TUPPERS PLAINS ntus Pieroe bad three hits,
Kyle Gordon bad two doubles, and both scored three
runs apiece as the Eastern
Eagles baseball team held

at :e;all 740-5684760.

P I 'co ltnSEI- 17.R
Ptauts: III•IINIQI -u.a

•

d ewat

illlll'e illfornJI7ion 'rilit 1he
• hite at www.movp.aq

Elecouta, 10&amp; ~2nd 1\ve.

I

melnh:n ad 1mir

()-u11W.. Alr••••ims

Ohio .,..., ..... c.,. (IIM-

•

I

Eastern routs Wood·
County Christian 12-0

will 10 to 1he
For .L ife of
llld Wood

eo.u

W C

Flipt

,..

series sweep of· the
y Cavaliers - who fell
to 0-10 within the league.
Gallia Academy also bas the
tie-breaker edge over runner-up Jacbon (6-3) with
three games left in divisional play.
.
The hosts never trailed in
the contest and scored 12
straight runs through four
._
innings while pounding out
· H bit~, CHS. . ~ ~hich
.
_ The Bluc.Arwds (JJ-4, 9~ liCOil!d its lone tun in tl!e top
0 SEOAL South) won their of the fifth - · bad only four
third straight game this week safeties in the ~
and also clinched a threeAfterward GAHS coach

f1i&amp;bt (13-20

u . . A partioll

I 'X' 'i; I' llol5 [ _ , ....... i1.00J41f&gt;.2&gt;107

-

f:f

ti-ndirap). ·
• "RRii 'tOu1'llllllmlt will be

., tio'' ' !(ti{J.)

..,II

Gallia

BELPRE - The Mid- Academy softball hecame·
Ohio
Valley
Golf the firSt Southeastern Ohio
AssoClation wUI bold tbcir Athletic · l,kgue team to
opening day tourDament at cliDcb a liJl?l in the c:hampiOxbow Golf &amp;t ·Co.u ntty onsbip gBIDe of this year's
Oub oo Sunday May 4th at SEOAL Day of Champi0118
I p.m.
event, .as the Blue ~els
: 1bere wil.) be three flights won their second-strll~t
·
'th a winner SEOAL South Division tttle
.
. All ~- ci- @ay eye!!!q_ wlth .a livepats ·will earn' ~ · ·. inning, 12.-1 victory over
WWrrd the year
visitinc Chillic::othe
at
• m:t.onsbip based on Memorial Field.
' dlcir ish
~le Flight ·(0-12
-

Wed~te!ilday...Partly--el!&gt;!ldy.

TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

~-w,pmen

teams.

Lows in the upper 30s.
Hig!ls in tlie lower 6Gs.
Wednesday
mpt...
Partly cloudy in the
evenmg ...Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 40s.
Thursday
throu&amp;ll
Friday.-Mostly doudy.Highs in the mid 60s. Lows
in the mid 40s.

n

RIO GRANDE -· The
University of Rio Grande
womens volleyball team
stayed-- close to home with
its
latest
signing.
T
h
e

tiiCDI.bcr •under ·~· Price
includes ~If, cart. bmdb,
and beverages. Priz.e&amp; will
be awarded for 1be 10p tbree

to 15 mph with gusts up 10
25 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Mondry . nigllt aad
JUesclay.-Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
in the mid 50s.
&amp;esday algid.. .-1

De •

. . . . . WIWMif
SPECJ~

MASON, W.Va.-. The

.in . ,die .

r!ss I -

Taylor

l31h Amnal Meigs W
Golf TOill'IWIIeJlt will be
'bc1d Slllarday, May 31. at
dJe Ri\'Cftide Golf' c • 8:30a.m;
The foimat is a ·560 per
pc:nlGO. bring your own
team fOUNIWI 11Cfamble.
1Cimii II1Wil haw: a com. biDed h'!fti'ie~~p of 40 or
libove 'Wi1h .oaly ooe ream

T'~~ SJridtlaikr-~~
&lt;about $400.000 .
worth of stolen · . have

made a late rally bid in the
seventh after a three-run
. homer by Seth Dawes made
it 9-5, but the guests never
came closer the rest of the
way. CHS managed 10 hits

addsRV's

4:il0 p.m.

lSth&lt;Aonual
Meigs FootbaU
~If toomey ·

February.
Moo~k
w
major player

able 9-2 advantage through
five complete.
The Cavaliers (5-12, 3-7)

Redwomen
voUeyball

!fJ'

eo.IGnMIIIIoulh G1111a. Sp,m.
l!la9lll"l: 1111:.5 p.m.

Local Stocks
. _ ('I!'INQ) -a
............. (ftiEI-12.10
...... (IMIE)- 21.71
. . ~ (IM"WWJ- ZJ.U
...,craw lftiEI- 47.17
C I 1 '' i
(IIUDAQI
-All
Ct• I I I (11/IIDMU - 4 . .
.Ct
I C.._ (U'NIQ) -

.a

·eo.IGnMIII11oulh - · 5 p.m.
tllllgllll: ,,
idln, 15 p.m.

ll_.ii0...,..\11111-"'= at )

. . (IMIE)- 4UI

during

Sou1hcastcm Ohio Athletic
League · South .Division
Dnn el
ltlllllt
IDitChup at MciDorial Field.
The 8iue Devils (9-6, 6-3
SEOAL
South) &amp;ta!Yed •one third and fourth frames, then
.
PJDI: back of divi&amp;lon-lead- IICOied four more times in
mg Jackson (7-2 ) with the the fifth to take a comfon-

GAUlPOUS -

with showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Southeast winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Muadry-Mostly clo)ldy
with showers likely w~th a,
chance of thunderstorms.
Much cooler with highs
the mid 50s. West· winds 10

winning

aeason-best

~to four might Fridry
~ with a .convincing

Bowman,(5)

~TERs.MYDA!LYTRJilUIIE.COM

. Swdey-Mostly sunny. A
slight chance of showers
and tltunderstonns in the
afternoon. . Highs in the
lower 70s. North winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
east in the afternoon.
_,Cha~ of rain_2!! percent . .

GaUia

Academy baseball extendrd

iiyllll!onlon. 4:10p.m.

1.,.1

Jeffrey Limbian said. The
deal requires Mock to cooperate wtth authorities investigating the case.
Fourteen others ·. were
accused of participating in
the theft ring. One of them,
Gennaro Bellard, 42, previously pleade!i guilty for his .
role m breaking into a
motorcycle shop. He's been
in the county · jail on an
unrelated drug charge sfuce

~t . ~rson

·Bl

the deed for the Eagles in
the
second.
'Andrew
Benedum walked. and then
Klint
Connery.
Tyler
Hendrix, and Gordon hit
back-to-back-to-back' doubles. Pierce and Zach
llendrix also got hits before
the inning ended, and
Eastern led 7-0 after two.
Gordon had ooe strikeout
in the first and two in the
secood and gave up just ooe
..

·-,

t

,...,

She explained what her
goals are while flaying for
Rio Gtanoe. " want to
improve myself to the best
possible player I can be,"
Taylor satd. "I want to help
makci a difference with my
teMmmates on and off the
court. I also want to have
fun while I work my hard·
est.'"

BroOke is the daughter of
Blaioe and Donna Taylor.
She
joins
Brittany
~snbcrg of Mlrion Elgin
.
School. Pderington
North's Ashley Belknap,
and San~ Folk of .l.ancasta'
High SChool as the latest ·
members of the Rio Grande
volleyball program.·

�..

OHIO

itna, limn-ielltind

Leftover bicycles recycled
by Oberlin CoDege stud~nts
OBERLIN
(AP)
Eschewing fuel-guzzling
cars apparently wasn't
green enough for bicycleloving students at Oberlin
College.
Armed with bolt cutters
and hacksaws, students and
campus employees scour
campus at the end of each
school year to round up
abandoned bicycles and
recycle diem.
.
Oberlin's -assistant safety
and security director Marge
Burton says up to 200 bikes
are left behind by departing
students each May. Students
say unlocked bikes are often
"borrowed" and sometimes
pever make it back to their
original owners.
"This is a town with more
bikes than almost any other
town anywhere," 'said Liz
Burgess, an alumna of the
college who runs the city's.
merchants association. "So
it would make sense that we
would have more abandoned bikes than just about
anywhere else."
According to the U.S.
· Census Bureau.. Oberlin

PageA6
Sunday, Apri127,

'

200!

.......... ""' ..... u
....,, - ,........ , ... u

F otmdation receives boost

ranked 12th in the United
States in percentage of residents who .commute to wort
or scbool on a bicycle.
The bikes end up at the
campus bicycle oo-op.
which seJVes as a recycling .
center.
Student
Sean
O'Brien of East Lansing,
Mich., is a volunteer
mechanic at the O(H)p.
"Some people jUSl think
it's kind of a hassle to bring
(the
bicycles) home,"
O'Brien said.
The center is also home to
bicycles collected by campus security and city police.
lf the bikes cannot be
returned ·to owners or sold
at an auction, officials send
them to the co-op.
There they are spruced up
and reused, with some
donAted to city youths who
need them.
"I don't think bikes in
general are valued as much
as they should be," O ' Brien
said. "It's a dream of mine
to not have any bikes laying around out . there and
have one for everyone who
wants one.,

Swilay, April r7, . .

___
-....

LocAL ScHEOOLB

...GALLI'
..,.._,...CUS-·-----

receilled a firlaiiCial
boost from Powell's

Food Fair In the .
amount of $50~000.
The ~ation, pre-

.

, . . . N-Y. . . 113

lAIIy Ma

The Meigs looal
Enrichmemt
foundation recently

c

..,..1rDm 'GIIIa MdMIIgl .........

5..,.. A ,CM
.a
1

,

~

""'*"""Ill-"' ' · ' &gt;'· 5 p.m.

sented by Lee .
Powell of f'oweWs
Food fair, left. to
Steve Musser, foumdation treasurer, will

.... eo. .....

go into a growiqg
fund meant to

-O..::,.IIItllolgo.IIP•m.
.._
.. Sou•••1. S:p.tn.

finance oew educa-

o.llla-.yoi"'"•• ..,,4:l1Jp,m

-Vollor. .. f-~p.m.

-OOUner•UoJuo. 5~.111.

JIIalen

-

tional, academic

.s.,. .
. ,Gila, 5 ,.,.• 5'P.m.

Vollor•,_, 5 PAll.

n

and athletic ~pm­
grams/facilities in
the Meigs 'Local
School District.
f I

,

$M

a

..._.atGIIIar · ,.,,a,p.m.

- ·- ·-···
p.m.
-·~··
-li!JIIIr.,,...,..........
__'"p.'"m"·.
-.I
.._Vdlr .. 'loltl¥11, I p.m.

2 ,,,.._

iP.olllliGAhllt'GIIMik.
11
..

ny,~-p.m.

...... Golla ..
-~

. -. 4:l1Jp.m.
!(' k fold, ..... kul•ii at~
4:liJ ·p.m.
1

.....

51
•

~,
p.m.

5 . 'MM
I I

.....

,~,. - n

-li!JIIIr

lauii •Cillla

:t.&amp;:ao

.toulh - · I p.m.

watwnw.l,p.m. .

v.-&gt; •O ou::\llll-. 5p.m.

.:

Ohio man pleads guilty in
Rust Belt theft-to-order ring
YOUNGS1QWN (AP)
- A man accused of being
the leader ·Of a sophisticated
theft ring stretching from
Qeveland
to
western
Pennsylvania in the Rust
Belt region pleaded guilty
and faces up to 10 years in
prison.
Bobby Mock, 39, of
Youngstown. hei{!Cd lead a
ring that burglarized businesses .and homes through•
out the region and resold
stolen goods, including
big -screen TV s, riding
mowers and motorcycles,
prosecutors said.
Investigators say 10called CUSIOJ!erS plaqljd
outeu for !ilemiiiD lie • 'm
in .catell.
Some orders wene taken
in a .c omer ttftlle vlllt parking lot of . the Genei:il
· Mators · Corp. Lordsto~
plant, where several . suspects wotted"lllld allegC!fly
reached C!IUt til buddies as
fencinj! prospects, authorities satd.
Mock agreed to a plea
!ileal Friday in MahoJiing
·c'Bunty Common Pleas
Court over charges in a 44count .indictment, includ. ing breaking~and entering,
theft and receiving s~n
propelty.
"We thought this was the
best course of .action .at this
tiJne," Mock's lawyer, John

.,......, r

-lllo.llla"'
oy,e ·p,m.
_ . Vollor a1 loulhl'olnl, 111.m.
.....,~Ill ao.-..ep.m.
1

,

......

~

~At d

Blue Devils stay hot,
beat Chillicothe 9-5

·Gallia

Academy
starter -Nidk

Stewens,

.... -·AIJBII

~deliv­
ers a WIII1Tl-

~LYTRIBUNE.COM .

LIP pitch
second
b
Blelt

GAUlPOUS its

and ·Caleb
WBmlmont,

9-5 VIctory over visiting
Cbillicothe

.middle, Wllit
for the llhrow

~-i.-Cloudy

!Mad• ·

m

from the
Clltcher dur·
lrC the fifth
lnnii'C of

FridaY's

rs

SEOAL
South bale-

triumph, pounding out
.
.,
.hits d unng the .our-run
decision.
The hosts fell behind 2..0
after a half-inning of play,
then retaliated with three
scores in their half of the
first to take a 3-2 lead after
one full inning. The Blue
•.and White extended their
lead with a run in both the

ballpme
BCalnst
OhUIIcothe
at Memorial
Field •.

....

..,..'??I

-•= a

---

--at..-,

in the rin , said assistant
prosecu
y ShideL
'
"If
was not the tini·leader, be was the most

au.

~-4'Cd.

they have no
on •t he
overall take from more than
125 burglaries.
"It's a .hapless group of
indivi.d uals who largely
acted iudividually ... This
isn't some Mafia-'lype ~a­
nization," Limbian said.
Youngstown, where the
alleged ring was concentrated, "has lost more than
40,000 ·manufacturing jobs
and its lJOPulation uf about
82,000 is half of what it was
some 40 years ago. Thefts
also occurred in nearby
Hermitage, Pa., and in the
Pittsburgh area.

For lllOI'e informatiOD,
..,... w 7 . , . _
cootact Meigs football. Gallia lfocademy fte.ad softball ooao1t Jim Niday, middle wearing white, talks with his team following Friday's 12·1 victory
NaCh Mite Chancey .at t~uv•lrilitln&amp; Chillicothe during an SEOAb South Division seftball-oontest lit Memorial Fteld. The Blue Angels won their sec7~992-2158 or 74G"992- Olllk:onsecuti'tll! S£~ So.uth Division
With the triumph.
.

crown

0064.
11lr •alii WAUaS

~

ftoond~ie
H d• ).
= ·~ J;

FREE SHIPPING \ 1.866.MOBiliTY- ATT.COM/WIRELESS- VISIT A STORE

,...·-.--..,,......,.,ICl.+

·11!11' US fOR 30 M'IS. SA1111a' UOi..IS GU.uiUII

1.11
Cttr Mttalt•e•c (~-

.........,_...
40.211
c 5 (ftiEI-

. . . . . (IMIE)- . . . .
••ftiEI-ZJ.M

....
0

I

a.u

.... j

• r

PB M1:c(WVW)-

8 til

a

,...., -

(lft'IE) - 47.71

..... fiMEI---

u

"

,.

",.,.,_

~

..... I 81 7

D1WiKJ-

--------

. . 10

i1

(21+

1'1' 4 1 •

....-.llod~W....... 7l1 £-S:..S:t.6 -

~)-21.G&amp;

(T«)) 9SZ·ll15

i1.00Jliii-1D
.
7J£Ho:lonS:., i1.00JlA--

.-n..z-.

88T (IIYIE) - 11.28
(M"Mq)- 21.81

o~l,..,._

•• (dldYIE)- .....

. . - , 8ool:l (MIIMQ)-

5.2JO

..,.. tio:td: .... -

.. fllll:ll_

• .,.... -

.

·- 1-7410 ue 2342 •
~·

n.za

~

.._IIIP C(t:IMIM:QI-

........
_
...
I·-----,...
.............

-

-a.u

·•• •z r
..,_mn a.trrMWJk
cr-.n ••••.
- ..
en; ,

II liME) - 22AI

·_ (.,.._ ...,;,.

......,&amp;: •.._.1

33

.. .... _.,....m;M:It)tltUe.oom

WM l(tnSE)-17AI
'II i;'l(tnSE)

l;" c

.

Friday.
Eastern ~ves to 8-8
this season With the victory.
Gordon f'.mwf the win for

!li6-1·T«J 1•1001

11.71

b

II&amp; If II

ttst..,...a~m

Ide,..' lpiJ.tra•Wfl

11

•

llllltil • iaJia: . . . .
a
ai(741J4a8Ul '

0

•

'

_.......,. eia•flllelt

•

•
•

Eric ..... • IJI

'(740) · · -·- ·

&amp;Arrren..tra•WIIIr
(?40) ... . .. ... •

M I I . aiiJIM) 17. . .74.
r 1 we.

:

Jim Niday was pleased with
the divisional-clinching triwnph, especially since this
one of the main targets for
his ttoops at the beginning
of year.
.
"We're happy to win any
game that we are in, but one
of our goals at the beginning
of the
was to get back
in the
ue championship
game. We knew die only
W!I.Y to do that was to win
tl!_e _(SEQALJ . South
Dtvision to get into p.&amp;t one..
I - · II
as
n
•
~ 3

k:

I

lc:lrumtl ,.., '

i

•• .
JXWft

~tem

\II" 11

eophomore Arld!ew 8enedum (10) deli'tll!fs a thrOW

to fln:t liMe durifC Fridll)''&amp; llOfloOOilfefen baseball game
apinJt.Wood Count¥ Christian In Tupp8111 Plains .
•
' '

the Eagles. The senior
pitched all five innipgs,
Rriking out five battel's and
walking two.
·
Up 2.0 aftu ooe because
of Gordon's first double and
Pierce's first hit, Eastern
scored five runs in each of
the second :md thiJd inniDJS
to win with the mercy rule.
Four consecutive hits did

volleyball
.program is
pleased to
announce
1that Brooke
Taylor of
R i v e r
T~
Valley
,,_High
School has signed a nationallener of intent to play volleyball beginning in the fall.
Taylor, a 5-9 hiner and
setter from Bidwell, feels
privileged . to have the
opportunity to play .colle·
gtately at Rio Grande. "I
feel ,privileged to play for
Rio Grande. This is a great
thing for me," Taylor said.
"I love volleyball and just
want to play.
"Rio Grande is close to
my home and has the major
I'm looking for; volleyball
was just a plus."
She plans to major in
Nursing.
"I would like to be a registered nurse," Taylor said.
Rio Grande bead coach
Patsy Fields commented on
her newest recruit. "Brooke
is a &amp;ood hitter but needs to
wor!_on.bein ~ ~li­
sive. I believe Brook.e will
work hard to improve and
she certainly will be a great
role model for our program
both on and off the cow:t."
Fields said.
'
Taylor recited what she
feels her strongest assets are
and also cri~ued herself on
s to get better
what she n
at beading to the college
level. "I don't like to lose,
and I don't believe I ever
give up," she said. "I think I
i1ecd to work on my talking
and passing. I also need to
be more consistent with my

serving."

their opponent to - rwo hits
and beat~ Wood County
CbristiaD W'tldcat&amp; I2-0 in a
non-conference
game

~Us

I

I

'

-

u1, · -

. . - - .. ,

~ .~

TUPPERS PLAINS ntus Pieroe bad three hits,
Kyle Gordon bad two doubles, and both scored three
runs apiece as the Eastern
Eagles baseball team held

at :e;all 740-5684760.

P I 'co ltnSEI- 17.R
Ptauts: III•IINIQI -u.a

•

d ewat

illlll'e illfornJI7ion 'rilit 1he
• hite at www.movp.aq

Elecouta, 10&amp; ~2nd 1\ve.

I

melnh:n ad 1mir

()-u11W.. Alr••••ims

Ohio .,..., ..... c.,. (IIM-

•

I

Eastern routs Wood·
County Christian 12-0

will 10 to 1he
For .L ife of
llld Wood

eo.u

W C

Flipt

,..

series sweep of· the
y Cavaliers - who fell
to 0-10 within the league.
Gallia Academy also bas the
tie-breaker edge over runner-up Jacbon (6-3) with
three games left in divisional play.
.
The hosts never trailed in
the contest and scored 12
straight runs through four
._
innings while pounding out
· H bit~, CHS. . ~ ~hich
.
_ The Bluc.Arwds (JJ-4, 9~ liCOil!d its lone tun in tl!e top
0 SEOAL South) won their of the fifth - · bad only four
third straight game this week safeties in the ~
and also clinched a threeAfterward GAHS coach

f1i&amp;bt (13-20

u . . A partioll

I 'X' 'i; I' llol5 [ _ , ....... i1.00J41f&gt;.2&gt;107

-

f:f

ti-ndirap). ·
• "RRii 'tOu1'llllllmlt will be

., tio'' ' !(ti{J.)

..,II

Gallia

BELPRE - The Mid- Academy softball hecame·
Ohio
Valley
Golf the firSt Southeastern Ohio
AssoClation wUI bold tbcir Athletic · l,kgue team to
opening day tourDament at cliDcb a liJl?l in the c:hampiOxbow Golf &amp;t ·Co.u ntty onsbip gBIDe of this year's
Oub oo Sunday May 4th at SEOAL Day of Champi0118
I p.m.
event, .as the Blue ~els
: 1bere wil.) be three flights won their second-strll~t
·
'th a winner SEOAL South Division tttle
.
. All ~- ci- @ay eye!!!q_ wlth .a livepats ·will earn' ~ · ·. inning, 12.-1 victory over
WWrrd the year
visitinc Chillic::othe
at
• m:t.onsbip based on Memorial Field.
' dlcir ish
~le Flight ·(0-12
-

Wed~te!ilday...Partly--el!&gt;!ldy.

TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

~-w,pmen

teams.

Lows in the upper 30s.
Hig!ls in tlie lower 6Gs.
Wednesday
mpt...
Partly cloudy in the
evenmg ...Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 40s.
Thursday
throu&amp;ll
Friday.-Mostly doudy.Highs in the mid 60s. Lows
in the mid 40s.

n

RIO GRANDE -· The
University of Rio Grande
womens volleyball team
stayed-- close to home with
its
latest
signing.
T
h
e

tiiCDI.bcr •under ·~· Price
includes ~If, cart. bmdb,
and beverages. Priz.e&amp; will
be awarded for 1be 10p tbree

to 15 mph with gusts up 10
25 mph. Chance of rain 70
percent.
Mondry . nigllt aad
JUesclay.-Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
in the mid 50s.
&amp;esday algid.. .-1

De •

. . . . . WIWMif
SPECJ~

MASON, W.Va.-. The

.in . ,die .

r!ss I -

Taylor

l31h Amnal Meigs W
Golf TOill'IWIIeJlt will be
'bc1d Slllarday, May 31. at
dJe Ri\'Cftide Golf' c • 8:30a.m;
The foimat is a ·560 per
pc:nlGO. bring your own
team fOUNIWI 11Cfamble.
1Cimii II1Wil haw: a com. biDed h'!fti'ie~~p of 40 or
libove 'Wi1h .oaly ooe ream

T'~~ SJridtlaikr-~~
&lt;about $400.000 .
worth of stolen · . have

made a late rally bid in the
seventh after a three-run
. homer by Seth Dawes made
it 9-5, but the guests never
came closer the rest of the
way. CHS managed 10 hits

addsRV's

4:il0 p.m.

lSth&lt;Aonual
Meigs FootbaU
~If toomey ·

February.
Moo~k
w
major player

able 9-2 advantage through
five complete.
The Cavaliers (5-12, 3-7)

Redwomen
voUeyball

!fJ'

eo.IGnMIIIIoulh G1111a. Sp,m.
l!la9lll"l: 1111:.5 p.m.

Local Stocks
. _ ('I!'INQ) -a
............. (ftiEI-12.10
...... (IMIE)- 21.71
. . ~ (IM"WWJ- ZJ.U
...,craw lftiEI- 47.17
C I 1 '' i
(IIUDAQI
-All
Ct• I I I (11/IIDMU - 4 . .
.Ct
I C.._ (U'NIQ) -

.a

·eo.IGnMIII11oulh - · 5 p.m.
tllllgllll: ,,
idln, 15 p.m.

ll_.ii0...,..\11111-"'= at )

. . (IMIE)- 4UI

during

Sou1hcastcm Ohio Athletic
League · South .Division
Dnn el
ltlllllt
IDitChup at MciDorial Field.
The 8iue Devils (9-6, 6-3
SEOAL
South) &amp;ta!Yed •one third and fourth frames, then
.
PJDI: back of divi&amp;lon-lead- IICOied four more times in
mg Jackson (7-2 ) with the the fifth to take a comfon-

GAUlPOUS -

with showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Southeast winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Muadry-Mostly clo)ldy
with showers likely w~th a,
chance of thunderstorms.
Much cooler with highs
the mid 50s. West· winds 10

winning

aeason-best

~to four might Fridry
~ with a .convincing

Bowman,(5)

~TERs.MYDA!LYTRJilUIIE.COM

. Swdey-Mostly sunny. A
slight chance of showers
and tltunderstonns in the
afternoon. . Highs in the
lower 70s. North winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
east in the afternoon.
_,Cha~ of rain_2!! percent . .

GaUia

Academy baseball extendrd

iiyllll!onlon. 4:10p.m.

1.,.1

Jeffrey Limbian said. The
deal requires Mock to cooperate wtth authorities investigating the case.
Fourteen others ·. were
accused of participating in
the theft ring. One of them,
Gennaro Bellard, 42, previously pleade!i guilty for his .
role m breaking into a
motorcycle shop. He's been
in the county · jail on an
unrelated drug charge sfuce

~t . ~rson

·Bl

the deed for the Eagles in
the
second.
'Andrew
Benedum walked. and then
Klint
Connery.
Tyler
Hendrix, and Gordon hit
back-to-back-to-back' doubles. Pierce and Zach
llendrix also got hits before
the inning ended, and
Eastern led 7-0 after two.
Gordon had ooe strikeout
in the first and two in the
secood and gave up just ooe
..

·-,

t

,...,

She explained what her
goals are while flaying for
Rio Gtanoe. " want to
improve myself to the best
possible player I can be,"
Taylor satd. "I want to help
makci a difference with my
teMmmates on and off the
court. I also want to have
fun while I work my hard·
est.'"

BroOke is the daughter of
Blaioe and Donna Taylor.
She
joins
Brittany
~snbcrg of Mlrion Elgin
.
School. Pderington
North's Ashley Belknap,
and San~ Folk of .l.ancasta'
High SChool as the latest ·
members of the Rio Grande
volleyball program.·

�b

Sunday, Apri127, 2008

~ Ut'inn fmliud • Page 83

Pomemy • Middleport • Gallipolis . · /

Sunday, April27, 200~

Pomt:roy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Alexander seizes win at Eastern.

.Meigs
sheDs Lady Buckeyes
. STAFF REPORT
-'

Youth Hunting Submissions

SPORrs.toiYOAILYSENDNELCOM

.By ERic " - " ' t
ER~NOOLPH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

•

.. t

TUPPERS PLAINS One bad inning.
That's all it took for
Alexander to break open a
3-3 tie in the seventh and go
on to win
11-6 over
the 'Eastern
L a d y
Eagles .in a
non-conference girls
softball

'.

.

~

I

\

g a m
Friday.

i •

r!
I!

..

.

Subm- photo

Meigs senior Cassady Willford has signed to play football with Heidelberg. Willford signs
the letter intent with his father· Ray and his mother Kimberty. Picture in the back row is
Marauder football coat;!) Mike Chancey and Meigs High School Principal Steve Ohlinger.

Willford signs with Heidelberg
· Marauder wrestling team,
qwilifying for state as a senior.
and IS a member of the track
ROCKSPRINGS
team, throwing the shot and
Cassady Willford, a 6-foot, discus.
285-pound senior with the
"Heidelberg felt like home
Meigs Marauders has signed a to me," the Marauder star said.
letter of intent to play football "I really like the allllosphere,
with . Heidelberg College. and I love the coaches.
Willford is the son of Ray and
"I lOved every minute of my
Kimberly Willford of Rutland career at M~igs; I will miss the
and was a three-year starter for practices, games, and m~
coach
Mike
Chancey's teammates. I wish them luck. '
Marauders at offensive guard,
Marauder coach Mike
center, and defensive taCkle.
Chancey is proud of his lineCassady earned all-confer- man. •')• m very proud and
ence and aU-district honors as happy
Cassady," said the
a senior when he tallied 63' vetcGID Marauder coach. "He
tackles for Meigs (58 assisted, was not&lt;OO!y a great player but
25 solo), including three rack- a
't remendous
leader.
Jes for loss and 2 sacks for Heidelberg is getting a class
minus-21 yards. He also was a y~ man."
four-year letter winner for the
Heidelberg is · located in
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

mr

BY BRYAN WALTEIIS
MARIETIA Gallia
Academy tennis got back to
its wiorung ways .on friday
evening, sweeping host
Marietta by a S.O oown during a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League non-divisional contest.
The Blue Devils (10-3) w.on
all five matches in straight
sets and also won 6-of-1 0 sets
by a 6-0 score. The Blue and
White also won three sets by a
6-1 count and the best fimsh
for the Tigers in·a set was 6-2.
. GAHS also claimed a season sweep in this series after a
5-0 victory over MHS at
Memorial Field back on April
9th.
Junior Kamal Dayal was a
i()ve-and-lov~ (6-0, (i-0) winner over Lucas Harrison in the
No. I singles match, while
sophomore Josh Jackson
duplicated that result in his
No. 3 singles competition
against Wes Gilkerson.
Senior Joan Sojka was a 6-

Trlfm and is a member of the
Ohio Athletic Conference.
Mike"Hallet, the coach of the
Student Princes, was pleased
to land the lineman. "We aJ:e
very ·exCited about Cassady.
His passion for beillg a ~ Ea~les. She Pitched seven
student ·and player makes him tnnmgs, struck out three,
·· .
a student-athlete we feel will and walked two.
· be a great asset here at . Alexande~ scored o~ce m
· Heidelberg," Hallet said. "We the first mmng on a hit and
really like Cassady as a persOn a~ error. Ne1ther team
and a plaxer and believe he scored m the se~ond, but
has the ability to compete here Alexander made . It 2-0 m
on a·consistent basis. We also the top &lt;?f the third befo~
note his exceptional wrestling Eastern tied the g~~ up m
season, showmg his diversity
~ott~m of the mnmg.
and athletic ability.. We are theJesstca
Cleland got on
very _excited about Cassady
base
·
wtth
a . one-out walk,
and hts future teammates here
and
Kelsey
Holter ~d
at Heidelberg; they will do
Rawson
followed
up With
special things for us in their
back-to-back htts. Bland
four years."
•
then got her first RBI, and
Britney Morrison followed
her up with her first of two
RBJs. Both came on ijeld'
'
ing errors by the l;;ady
Spartans.
Black. · ·
Gallia Academy tennis ' A hit and consecutive
returns to the bardcourts on error-s gave the lead back to
Monday ·when · it travels to Alexander in the fourth, but
PortsmOuth for an SEOAL again it wotildn•t bold.' . ,.
'
South Division contest with
Tro.jans. The event will Start at
4:30p.m.
Nates:· 'llle No. 3 singles
IDlllklh between GAHS and
Chillicothe that was postpooed due to darkness last
'l\Jesdity at Memorial Freid
will be Il)llde-up on Tuesday at ·
4:30p.m. The Devils won the
team c o t =
.· by a 3-1 ·
· score and
.co-leaders
with the Cavs with that outcome. That match. between
Josh Jackson and the Cavs'
Justin Ball wiD determine the
tie-breaker for the SEOAL
South Division. Jackson lost
7-5 in the lim set to Justin
Ball and ha~ serve-for Hie Slaff
of .the second set. ... GAHS
coach Jim Osborne picked
bis 200th career roaching win
last Monday against Logan.
Osborne has coached tennis
for 23 years and currently has
a 201-173 career mark.

0t~~~~~n~a:o~': ~ th~:":t!::! t /o~~eb~~ ~l~~a~~~a~f::s J;;stu~:~~;

..~

i

'

I

}
"
'

Devils
'

fromPageBl
ip the setback.
GAHS
starter
Nick
Stevens· went the distance
for tli~ wInning deci Sian,
allowing II ve earned runs.
zero walks and also fanned
three over his seven inninj!S
of work. D'dwes was credtted with the loss. surrendering eight runs (all earned),
II hits and two walks while
fanning four over 4.1
irmings on the mound.
Derrick Webb entered in
relief during the fifth for the
guests, going 1.2 innings
and allowing one earned
run, four hits and a walk
while striking out one. Both
teams had two errors in the
contest.
The Cavs started the scoring. in the frrst with back·toback~ad-off singles by
Mart
unn and Dawes,
then
n came home on a
f~eldefs choice by Webbmaking it a 1-0 game.
Dawes later scored on a
two-out double by Aiel'.
Orow for the early 2·0
..Svantage.
·
Chillicothe's only lead of
tbe ni,ht, however, was
• ahoft ltved, as the Devils
lellt &amp;even batters to ·the
~ in their hal_f of the
''

Aulltin Roush led off the
inning by reaching safely on
.a error, the J.P. Finnicum
followed with a single to
give the hosts runners on

•

.

·

. JICII.• • •

,
.
I, 6D. yu:tor over. 0.~"'!'00
St11111P m ;the_No. .2 ·sfugles

match.

\

·

. The j\Hiior-~ duo
of Quinton Nibert and Joolan
Cornwell remained unbeaten
as a team, defeating Alex
Sturn and Zach Mullen by a
6-1, 6-1 count in the No. 1
doubles contest.
The ]l!llil:!r-SOjiliutllllfu duo
of Ttm Huffman and Mollie
Blake were 6-0, 6-2 in the No.
2 doubles contest with COOy
Mo!"''w and Eric McCauley.
Jumor Tyler Counts was also
an 8-0 winner in an exhibition
match with the Orange and
the corn
out. Cody o
rounded
out in the next at-bat; lowing Roush to score for a 2-1
deficit.
Stevens followed by helpil)g his own cause, drilling
his first offering from
Dawes over the right field
fence
"=bringing
in
·Finnicum and himself for a
3-Head after one inning of
play.
·
·The score stayed that way
until the third, when Brett
Bowman doubled home
Dave Rumley for a 4-2 edge
through three complete.
Stevens also singled home
Fim1icum in the fourth for a
5-2 lead.
Then in the ftfth, GAHS
conti!Jued swinging the hot
bat as the hosts added three
mote
runs.
Shawn
Thompson started that rally
with a lead-off double, then
Thomp&amp;on came home to
score following a single by
ian Dressel for a 6-2 contest.
Caleb .Warnimont sinl!led
Dressel OV!iir to third, giving
the Devils runners at the
corners with one away.
Rouah followed . with a
around out that allowed
Dressel to socm: for a 7·2
lead, then Finnicum clri lied
an R81 triple to score
Warnimont for an 8·2 edge.
Finnicum liter scored on
an RBI single by Noble,
making it a 9-2 contest after
five complete.
Gallia Academy bad nine
players produce at least one
hit, with Finnicum and

.

E.a·s tern
.committed
,
five errors
in the top of ~ seventh,
and the Lady · Spartans
scored eight fUllS. as they
batted around the order.·
resulting in a final score
that wasn't truly indicative
of how competitive the
game was.
Sami ·Cummins was 2for-4 with a home run, Allie
Eric~~
Rawson was 2-for-3, and
Kathryn Bland had two Eastern senior Katherine Bland leads off second base durRBis for. Eastern, ...w~ ing Friday's TVC norH:onference softball game against visitmoves to 6-8 on the seas: J ing Alexander at Don Jackson Field in Tuppers Plains.
·

Blue Devil telmis tames Marietta
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

e.

the Lady Eagles would have
to wait till the fifth to tie the
game a second time.
With one out, Rawson
was hit by a pitch. Bland
then registered her second
RBI with a single that sent
Rawson all the way around
the bases and into home for
a 3-3 game.
_
. Both teams _were ~tired
m four b~rs m the suth.
After the Lady Spartans'
btg seventh, the Lady
Eagles found themselves
down 11-3. The deficit wat;
sizable, b...t that dido 't keep
Eastern from working to
erase it
·
Holter ,:eachjld • -on an
error to lead off lhe inning.
Rawson then got her second
, hit before Morris.oo got her
second RBL
.
.·
Cunup.ins hit a shot to
Jeft-ceater field On the next
•

l

'

..

.
•

conversed they concluded
that the ball hit the scoreboard and not .t he top of thi!
fence and she was awarded
. the home run, gtvtng
Eastern their sixth run.
There were a combineji
15 errors in the game. ·
The Lady Spartans finished with 12 hits, and the
Lady Eagles had eight.
Ashley Miller also sillgled forEastem, who doesn't play again until Monday,
May 5.
Aleu.-n,&amp;otwme
AleKander

101 100 8

-

11 12 6

Eastern
002 010 2 - 6 8 9
WP -: McClain: LP - Cummins.

MORElOCALNEWS:
MORE LOCAlRUS.
· Subscribe today.

:
992-2155
or
446-2342
1 .
. .,.1) i

. NELSONVILLE
' Mjcki Barnes had two hits
·and two RBls and eight dif, ferent players had hits for
· ·. Meigs
as
the
Lady
· Marauders softball team
:defeated the Nelsonville. York Lady Buckeyes Il-l in
: six innings in a Tri-Valtey
·Conference Ohio Division
:game.Friday.
: The win puts the Lady
· Marauders at 3-3 in the TV C
:Ohio and 6-6 on the season.
: Talisha Beha and Shanalle
:Smith had two RB!s each
:for Meigs, and Amy Barr
:bad two hits. Four Lady
· MiJrauders scored two runs
: apiece: Barnes, Barr, Lian
and
Shellie
:Hoffman,
: B&lt;1iley.
· Barr earned the win, strik: ing out two. and walking
: none.
: For four innings, it was a
:close col)test between Meigs
·
:and the Lady Buckeyes.
: Tbe Lady Marauders
scored once in the first·
·inning. Barnes walked, and
Barr and Smith singled one
after another to drive her in.
·That run would account
for all the scoring until
Meigs came alive in the
.
fifth.
Nelsonville- York threatened in the fourth after a
leadoff double, but the Lady
Marauder defense didn't
allow the ,runner to get past
third as they retired the next
three batters to end the
inning.
· · Starting the fifth at the top
of the order, Meigs capitalired on four errors and a hit

Eastern ·
. from Page Bl
hit in between to keep the
Wildcats' offense to a minimum.
In the third, the Eagles got
hits from Nick Brannon,
Tyler Hendrix, Jlierce, and
Derek Griffin to expand the
lead to 12 runs.
:: Wood County got one
: !JIOre hit in the fourth, but
: tliat was all the offensive
:production they would

Bames

Beha

batsman from ·the Lady
Buckeyes to score five runs.
Smith registered both her
RB!s. and Beha had the only
hit. Consecutive singles
from the home team gave
them their first and only run
in the bottom of the inning
to make the score·6- I.
Again at the top of their
order in the sixth, Meigs got
their bats going· and lit up
the Lady Buckeyes for six
hits, including an RBI triple
by Bailey. Meri VanMeter,
Hoffman, Barnes, Barr, and
Chandra Stanley all had singles,
and
the
Lady
Marauders scored five more
runs as they batted around
the order.
Meigs closed out their
third TVC Ohio win with a
three-up, three-down bottom
of the sixth.
Meigs finished with I 0
hits and one error. The Lady
Buckeyes had eight hits and
seven errors.
The Lady Marauders' next
game will he Monday at
home against TVC Ohio foe
Vinton County. Game time
is scheduled for 5 p.m.
llelgo 11, -HJe.Yorl&lt; 1
Meigs
100 055 - 11 10 1
N-Y
ooo mo - , a 1
WP -Amy Barr; LP - C. Mat1in.

muster, and the mercy rule
ended the game after their
at-bat in the fifth.
·
Jordan Kimes also had a
hit for Eastern, giving the
Eagles 14 for the game.
Connery and Hendrix each
scored two runs, while
Benedum and Brannon
scored one.
Eastern currently has no
games scheduled until
Monday, May 5.
Eelllwm 12.

wee

EHS

WP -

-

·eo. Chri..., o

51nnlnga

ooooo 255 OX -

021

12 14 1

GOIOOn; LP- Nunley

Subm-pholo

Submllted photo

Pictured above is Brady Kinflaird, 13, son of Marijill Hawks
of Gallipolis, with the turkey he downed while hunting on
April 19 during Ohio's yooth turkey season. It was Brady's
first hunt.

Pictured above is Madison Burns, 11, of Gallipolis. with the
turkey she downed while' hunting during Ohio's youth turkey
season on April 20. It was Madison:s first turkey and
weighed 21 pounds with a l&lt;Hnch beard.

Angels

imrings of work. Noe
who gave up zero earned
runs and one walk while
fanning seven in · the winfromPageBl
ning decision- also picked
game playoff," Niday com- up ber 20th career victory as
mented. .. 1 guarantee you a varsity pitcher.
that we will be looking forGAHS started the scoring
ward to that game and who- in t~e first as Hannah
ever we play.
C:unnmgham led off With a
. " We •re pretty pleased · smgle, then came home
with where we ~ ri~ht tJu:ee batt~rs la~r when
now, but we are still gomg Bnttany Miller delivered an
to keep taking things one RBI douJ;lle for a 1-0 advangame at a time. There is still tage. Bnttyn Saundes fola lot of softball to be lowed . wtth an RBI double
played."
to score . Miller, !hen
The Blue and White lost Lmdsey N1day provtded
in last year's SEOAL cham- another RBI double to plate
pionship game at home to Saun~ers for a3-0 edge. . .
Marietta by an 8-1 count
Kari C~pbell foll~wed
after fmishing 11-1 in the that up w1th an RBI smgle
SEOAL South. This yp's : that scored Niday for a 4-0
SEOAL title game will be at lead after one full inning.
the N"rth Division charnpi- All four of the hosts' runs
on, s
home
site
on came with two outs.
Then in the second,
·wednesday, May 7, at 5
p.m.
Lindsay Ward led off the
Starter Amy Noe made frame with a walk. Claudia
h.er. retllfll to the circle after Farney came in to pinch-run
s1tung out two games with a for Ward, and Farney soon
bruised leg, and the sopho- scored after Cunningham
more was sharp in return as followed with an inside-theNoe allowed just one hit park home run for a 6.()
through four of her five edge.

Kimber Davis was then
walked, and a one-out single by Miller - combined
with a CHS throwing error
- gave the hosts runners at
· the coners with one out.
Saunders hit into a fielder's
choice, which allowed
Davis ~o score for a sevenrun cushion after two com·
plete.
Both. teams went score~
Jess in the third, but GAHS
continued its . offensive
surge in the fourth with five
runs. The Angels had three
hits in that inning and also
bmefited from both Lady
Cavalier errors jn establishing a 12-0 edge.
The guests managed three
hits and also benefited from
one GAHS error in the fifth,
which
resulted
in.
Chillicothe's lone score.
Sam Jacobs scored that lone
run after reaching safely on
the error.
Eight different Angels
had at least one hit in the triumph, ·with Miller leading
the offensive attack with
three hits. Cunningham was
next with two safeties, followed by Saunders, Niday.

Campbell, Noe, Stacy
Cummons and Shayna
Feustal with one hit apiece.
Cunningham
and
Saunders led the Angels
with two RB!s each.
Cunningham, Miller and
Niday also scored twice in
the decision.
Jacobs,
Vanessa
Montgomery, Karol Ojeda
and Ashley Horsley each
had one hit for the Lady
Cavs. Annie Downing was
the losing pitcher of record.
allowing II earned runs and
two walks while striking out
one over four innings of
work.
Gallia Academy returns to
action Monday when it
hosts Jackson in another
SEOAL South contest at
Memorial Field. Game time
is scheduled.for 5 p.m.
Galllll _ , 12, Chlllicolho 1
51nnings .
Chillicothe 000 01 1 4 3
Gallipolis
430 5x ~ - 12 11 2:
CHS (n/a, 0.10 SEOAL SouthJ: Annie
Downing and Karol Ojeda.
G/UiS (13-4, ~ SEOAL South]: Amy
Noe and ,Undsay Ward, Shayna Feustal
(5).
.
'
WP ~Noe: LP- Downing.
HA: GA-

up

....................
~---­

Thompson leaqing the way
with three apiece. Roush,
Noble, Dressel, Bowman,
Wamimont and Terry Smith
also added a safety each to
winning cause:
Stevens also had a teamhigh three RBisJ followed ·
by · Noble with :a pair.
Roush, Firmicuul, Dressel
and Bowman also drove in
one run. Finnicum scored a
game-high three times.
Dunn, Dawes and Grow
all led the Cavs with two
hits each, followed by
, Webb,, Cody Speakman,
Zach Glendening and Kevin
Scott with one safety each.
Dawes led the ~uests with
three RBis, while both he
and Dunn scored twice in
the setback.
The Blue Devils stranded
nine runners on base, while
Chillicothe left seven on the
bags.
Gallia Academy played a
pivotal SEOAL. South
make-up game qainst visitins Ponsmouth on Saturday
and returns to action
Monday when It hosts
Jackson in another key
SEOAL South Divisionoontest. The .'first pitch at
Memorial . Field is scheduled for 5 p.m.
._.. '

\ Ohllltoolllt
O.UipOIII

'

iij

=

301 140 1

-

300

'

'

---·----..--............................-..

Gru P~ Sunroot

201M ·

....
· ·'
·~·
.

'

....,
a »z
a;»

II

GM

-

I 111

CHS (11-12, H IEOAl. - ): (I) .... Zloll

GAHS (H, W IIIQAI. - ): Niolc
Btw_.lllld Dave ftumllf, ,

Wf'--;UI'--

HR: GA- Niolc (1ltll lnnil1tl,
ono on, OMOIJO; c- -c.-&lt;--

InninG·-

--

'IJted.llled

Wamnly---·--·----..------.................................."---..

o.-. - Giotldetolng.
onttt

-~

fiiRii i

' Scmola, Sunroof, Fadmy Wamnty•.·-·-..·~------................._ ...:...........•........ .'....................$14,995
SF,. 3To·a - From...................- .........................~...........................................$19,3Cio
2007 Toyota c..y LF. Fadmy Wmanty.
-:·--... - ................................................................Jt8,210
2006 .Pontioc Grond Pril, E.ay WorTIIdl'---·-,......-.................- .........................~ ..............................$12,400
O..vey Impob. F.ay
SIUOO
!1005 C.ditla! U..illf, Loilled,1.(. Heol&lt;d Selle, Fi&lt;loly WIITOJity......, ......, ..........;;;; ......... _ ..·...... _,•••...Sli,'IGII
211M Chryolor !iobri"'l Lulllor. Stmmof; Law Mila......
·
.....: ........-.........~.d,!IIIO
~dclilil:~ ~lit. ...- - - ' - - - -..--..................._,_
. _ .................................... ,... _.,......,...54,100
2003 ..... -Sl4,'100

11 Ohllll Ia I
- e10 a

zoo ooo 1

•·" *•'

an, OM 014).

•

~

'-

'

au

I

I

Hannah Cunningham

and inning, Olie on, nobody out).

(sec·

�b

Sunday, Apri127, 2008

~ Ut'inn fmliud • Page 83

Pomemy • Middleport • Gallipolis . · /

Sunday, April27, 200~

Pomt:roy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Alexander seizes win at Eastern.

.Meigs
sheDs Lady Buckeyes
. STAFF REPORT
-'

Youth Hunting Submissions

SPORrs.toiYOAILYSENDNELCOM

.By ERic " - " ' t
ER~NOOLPH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

•

.. t

TUPPERS PLAINS One bad inning.
That's all it took for
Alexander to break open a
3-3 tie in the seventh and go
on to win
11-6 over
the 'Eastern
L a d y
Eagles .in a
non-conference girls
softball

'.

.

~

I

\

g a m
Friday.

i •

r!
I!

..

.

Subm- photo

Meigs senior Cassady Willford has signed to play football with Heidelberg. Willford signs
the letter intent with his father· Ray and his mother Kimberty. Picture in the back row is
Marauder football coat;!) Mike Chancey and Meigs High School Principal Steve Ohlinger.

Willford signs with Heidelberg
· Marauder wrestling team,
qwilifying for state as a senior.
and IS a member of the track
ROCKSPRINGS
team, throwing the shot and
Cassady Willford, a 6-foot, discus.
285-pound senior with the
"Heidelberg felt like home
Meigs Marauders has signed a to me," the Marauder star said.
letter of intent to play football "I really like the allllosphere,
with . Heidelberg College. and I love the coaches.
Willford is the son of Ray and
"I lOved every minute of my
Kimberly Willford of Rutland career at M~igs; I will miss the
and was a three-year starter for practices, games, and m~
coach
Mike
Chancey's teammates. I wish them luck. '
Marauders at offensive guard,
Marauder coach Mike
center, and defensive taCkle.
Chancey is proud of his lineCassady earned all-confer- man. •')• m very proud and
ence and aU-district honors as happy
Cassady," said the
a senior when he tallied 63' vetcGID Marauder coach. "He
tackles for Meigs (58 assisted, was not&lt;OO!y a great player but
25 solo), including three rack- a
't remendous
leader.
Jes for loss and 2 sacks for Heidelberg is getting a class
minus-21 yards. He also was a y~ man."
four-year letter winner for the
Heidelberg is · located in
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

mr

BY BRYAN WALTEIIS
MARIETIA Gallia
Academy tennis got back to
its wiorung ways .on friday
evening, sweeping host
Marietta by a S.O oown during a Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League non-divisional contest.
The Blue Devils (10-3) w.on
all five matches in straight
sets and also won 6-of-1 0 sets
by a 6-0 score. The Blue and
White also won three sets by a
6-1 count and the best fimsh
for the Tigers in·a set was 6-2.
. GAHS also claimed a season sweep in this series after a
5-0 victory over MHS at
Memorial Field back on April
9th.
Junior Kamal Dayal was a
i()ve-and-lov~ (6-0, (i-0) winner over Lucas Harrison in the
No. I singles match, while
sophomore Josh Jackson
duplicated that result in his
No. 3 singles competition
against Wes Gilkerson.
Senior Joan Sojka was a 6-

Trlfm and is a member of the
Ohio Athletic Conference.
Mike"Hallet, the coach of the
Student Princes, was pleased
to land the lineman. "We aJ:e
very ·exCited about Cassady.
His passion for beillg a ~ Ea~les. She Pitched seven
student ·and player makes him tnnmgs, struck out three,
·· .
a student-athlete we feel will and walked two.
· be a great asset here at . Alexande~ scored o~ce m
· Heidelberg," Hallet said. "We the first mmng on a hit and
really like Cassady as a persOn a~ error. Ne1ther team
and a plaxer and believe he scored m the se~ond, but
has the ability to compete here Alexander made . It 2-0 m
on a·consistent basis. We also the top &lt;?f the third befo~
note his exceptional wrestling Eastern tied the g~~ up m
season, showmg his diversity
~ott~m of the mnmg.
and athletic ability.. We are theJesstca
Cleland got on
very _excited about Cassady
base
·
wtth
a . one-out walk,
and hts future teammates here
and
Kelsey
Holter ~d
at Heidelberg; they will do
Rawson
followed
up With
special things for us in their
back-to-back htts. Bland
four years."
•
then got her first RBI, and
Britney Morrison followed
her up with her first of two
RBJs. Both came on ijeld'
'
ing errors by the l;;ady
Spartans.
Black. · ·
Gallia Academy tennis ' A hit and consecutive
returns to the bardcourts on error-s gave the lead back to
Monday ·when · it travels to Alexander in the fourth, but
PortsmOuth for an SEOAL again it wotildn•t bold.' . ,.
'
South Division contest with
Tro.jans. The event will Start at
4:30p.m.
Nates:· 'llle No. 3 singles
IDlllklh between GAHS and
Chillicothe that was postpooed due to darkness last
'l\Jesdity at Memorial Freid
will be Il)llde-up on Tuesday at ·
4:30p.m. The Devils won the
team c o t =
.· by a 3-1 ·
· score and
.co-leaders
with the Cavs with that outcome. That match. between
Josh Jackson and the Cavs'
Justin Ball wiD determine the
tie-breaker for the SEOAL
South Division. Jackson lost
7-5 in the lim set to Justin
Ball and ha~ serve-for Hie Slaff
of .the second set. ... GAHS
coach Jim Osborne picked
bis 200th career roaching win
last Monday against Logan.
Osborne has coached tennis
for 23 years and currently has
a 201-173 career mark.

0t~~~~~n~a:o~': ~ th~:":t!::! t /o~~eb~~ ~l~~a~~~a~f::s J;;stu~:~~;

..~

i

'

I

}
"
'

Devils
'

fromPageBl
ip the setback.
GAHS
starter
Nick
Stevens· went the distance
for tli~ wInning deci Sian,
allowing II ve earned runs.
zero walks and also fanned
three over his seven inninj!S
of work. D'dwes was credtted with the loss. surrendering eight runs (all earned),
II hits and two walks while
fanning four over 4.1
irmings on the mound.
Derrick Webb entered in
relief during the fifth for the
guests, going 1.2 innings
and allowing one earned
run, four hits and a walk
while striking out one. Both
teams had two errors in the
contest.
The Cavs started the scoring. in the frrst with back·toback~ad-off singles by
Mart
unn and Dawes,
then
n came home on a
f~eldefs choice by Webbmaking it a 1-0 game.
Dawes later scored on a
two-out double by Aiel'.
Orow for the early 2·0
..Svantage.
·
Chillicothe's only lead of
tbe ni,ht, however, was
• ahoft ltved, as the Devils
lellt &amp;even batters to ·the
~ in their hal_f of the
''

Aulltin Roush led off the
inning by reaching safely on
.a error, the J.P. Finnicum
followed with a single to
give the hosts runners on

•

.

·

. JICII.• • •

,
.
I, 6D. yu:tor over. 0.~"'!'00
St11111P m ;the_No. .2 ·sfugles

match.

\

·

. The j\Hiior-~ duo
of Quinton Nibert and Joolan
Cornwell remained unbeaten
as a team, defeating Alex
Sturn and Zach Mullen by a
6-1, 6-1 count in the No. 1
doubles contest.
The ]l!llil:!r-SOjiliutllllfu duo
of Ttm Huffman and Mollie
Blake were 6-0, 6-2 in the No.
2 doubles contest with COOy
Mo!"''w and Eric McCauley.
Jumor Tyler Counts was also
an 8-0 winner in an exhibition
match with the Orange and
the corn
out. Cody o
rounded
out in the next at-bat; lowing Roush to score for a 2-1
deficit.
Stevens followed by helpil)g his own cause, drilling
his first offering from
Dawes over the right field
fence
"=bringing
in
·Finnicum and himself for a
3-Head after one inning of
play.
·
·The score stayed that way
until the third, when Brett
Bowman doubled home
Dave Rumley for a 4-2 edge
through three complete.
Stevens also singled home
Fim1icum in the fourth for a
5-2 lead.
Then in the ftfth, GAHS
conti!Jued swinging the hot
bat as the hosts added three
mote
runs.
Shawn
Thompson started that rally
with a lead-off double, then
Thomp&amp;on came home to
score following a single by
ian Dressel for a 6-2 contest.
Caleb .Warnimont sinl!led
Dressel OV!iir to third, giving
the Devils runners at the
corners with one away.
Rouah followed . with a
around out that allowed
Dressel to socm: for a 7·2
lead, then Finnicum clri lied
an R81 triple to score
Warnimont for an 8·2 edge.
Finnicum liter scored on
an RBI single by Noble,
making it a 9-2 contest after
five complete.
Gallia Academy bad nine
players produce at least one
hit, with Finnicum and

.

E.a·s tern
.committed
,
five errors
in the top of ~ seventh,
and the Lady · Spartans
scored eight fUllS. as they
batted around the order.·
resulting in a final score
that wasn't truly indicative
of how competitive the
game was.
Sami ·Cummins was 2for-4 with a home run, Allie
Eric~~
Rawson was 2-for-3, and
Kathryn Bland had two Eastern senior Katherine Bland leads off second base durRBis for. Eastern, ...w~ ing Friday's TVC norH:onference softball game against visitmoves to 6-8 on the seas: J ing Alexander at Don Jackson Field in Tuppers Plains.
·

Blue Devil telmis tames Marietta
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

e.

the Lady Eagles would have
to wait till the fifth to tie the
game a second time.
With one out, Rawson
was hit by a pitch. Bland
then registered her second
RBI with a single that sent
Rawson all the way around
the bases and into home for
a 3-3 game.
_
. Both teams _were ~tired
m four b~rs m the suth.
After the Lady Spartans'
btg seventh, the Lady
Eagles found themselves
down 11-3. The deficit wat;
sizable, b...t that dido 't keep
Eastern from working to
erase it
·
Holter ,:eachjld • -on an
error to lead off lhe inning.
Rawson then got her second
, hit before Morris.oo got her
second RBL
.
.·
Cunup.ins hit a shot to
Jeft-ceater field On the next
•

l

'

..

.
•

conversed they concluded
that the ball hit the scoreboard and not .t he top of thi!
fence and she was awarded
. the home run, gtvtng
Eastern their sixth run.
There were a combineji
15 errors in the game. ·
The Lady Spartans finished with 12 hits, and the
Lady Eagles had eight.
Ashley Miller also sillgled forEastem, who doesn't play again until Monday,
May 5.
Aleu.-n,&amp;otwme
AleKander

101 100 8

-

11 12 6

Eastern
002 010 2 - 6 8 9
WP -: McClain: LP - Cummins.

MORElOCALNEWS:
MORE LOCAlRUS.
· Subscribe today.

:
992-2155
or
446-2342
1 .
. .,.1) i

. NELSONVILLE
' Mjcki Barnes had two hits
·and two RBls and eight dif, ferent players had hits for
· ·. Meigs
as
the
Lady
· Marauders softball team
:defeated the Nelsonville. York Lady Buckeyes Il-l in
: six innings in a Tri-Valtey
·Conference Ohio Division
:game.Friday.
: The win puts the Lady
· Marauders at 3-3 in the TV C
:Ohio and 6-6 on the season.
: Talisha Beha and Shanalle
:Smith had two RB!s each
:for Meigs, and Amy Barr
:bad two hits. Four Lady
· MiJrauders scored two runs
: apiece: Barnes, Barr, Lian
and
Shellie
:Hoffman,
: B&lt;1iley.
· Barr earned the win, strik: ing out two. and walking
: none.
: For four innings, it was a
:close col)test between Meigs
·
:and the Lady Buckeyes.
: Tbe Lady Marauders
scored once in the first·
·inning. Barnes walked, and
Barr and Smith singled one
after another to drive her in.
·That run would account
for all the scoring until
Meigs came alive in the
.
fifth.
Nelsonville- York threatened in the fourth after a
leadoff double, but the Lady
Marauder defense didn't
allow the ,runner to get past
third as they retired the next
three batters to end the
inning.
· · Starting the fifth at the top
of the order, Meigs capitalired on four errors and a hit

Eastern ·
. from Page Bl
hit in between to keep the
Wildcats' offense to a minimum.
In the third, the Eagles got
hits from Nick Brannon,
Tyler Hendrix, Jlierce, and
Derek Griffin to expand the
lead to 12 runs.
:: Wood County got one
: !JIOre hit in the fourth, but
: tliat was all the offensive
:production they would

Bames

Beha

batsman from ·the Lady
Buckeyes to score five runs.
Smith registered both her
RB!s. and Beha had the only
hit. Consecutive singles
from the home team gave
them their first and only run
in the bottom of the inning
to make the score·6- I.
Again at the top of their
order in the sixth, Meigs got
their bats going· and lit up
the Lady Buckeyes for six
hits, including an RBI triple
by Bailey. Meri VanMeter,
Hoffman, Barnes, Barr, and
Chandra Stanley all had singles,
and
the
Lady
Marauders scored five more
runs as they batted around
the order.
Meigs closed out their
third TVC Ohio win with a
three-up, three-down bottom
of the sixth.
Meigs finished with I 0
hits and one error. The Lady
Buckeyes had eight hits and
seven errors.
The Lady Marauders' next
game will he Monday at
home against TVC Ohio foe
Vinton County. Game time
is scheduled for 5 p.m.
llelgo 11, -HJe.Yorl&lt; 1
Meigs
100 055 - 11 10 1
N-Y
ooo mo - , a 1
WP -Amy Barr; LP - C. Mat1in.

muster, and the mercy rule
ended the game after their
at-bat in the fifth.
·
Jordan Kimes also had a
hit for Eastern, giving the
Eagles 14 for the game.
Connery and Hendrix each
scored two runs, while
Benedum and Brannon
scored one.
Eastern currently has no
games scheduled until
Monday, May 5.
Eelllwm 12.

wee

EHS

WP -

-

·eo. Chri..., o

51nnlnga

ooooo 255 OX -

021

12 14 1

GOIOOn; LP- Nunley

Subm-pholo

Submllted photo

Pictured above is Brady Kinflaird, 13, son of Marijill Hawks
of Gallipolis, with the turkey he downed while hunting on
April 19 during Ohio's yooth turkey season. It was Brady's
first hunt.

Pictured above is Madison Burns, 11, of Gallipolis. with the
turkey she downed while' hunting during Ohio's youth turkey
season on April 20. It was Madison:s first turkey and
weighed 21 pounds with a l&lt;Hnch beard.

Angels

imrings of work. Noe
who gave up zero earned
runs and one walk while
fanning seven in · the winfromPageBl
ning decision- also picked
game playoff," Niday com- up ber 20th career victory as
mented. .. 1 guarantee you a varsity pitcher.
that we will be looking forGAHS started the scoring
ward to that game and who- in t~e first as Hannah
ever we play.
C:unnmgham led off With a
. " We •re pretty pleased · smgle, then came home
with where we ~ ri~ht tJu:ee batt~rs la~r when
now, but we are still gomg Bnttany Miller delivered an
to keep taking things one RBI douJ;lle for a 1-0 advangame at a time. There is still tage. Bnttyn Saundes fola lot of softball to be lowed . wtth an RBI double
played."
to score . Miller, !hen
The Blue and White lost Lmdsey N1day provtded
in last year's SEOAL cham- another RBI double to plate
pionship game at home to Saun~ers for a3-0 edge. . .
Marietta by an 8-1 count
Kari C~pbell foll~wed
after fmishing 11-1 in the that up w1th an RBI smgle
SEOAL South. This yp's : that scored Niday for a 4-0
SEOAL title game will be at lead after one full inning.
the N"rth Division charnpi- All four of the hosts' runs
on, s
home
site
on came with two outs.
Then in the second,
·wednesday, May 7, at 5
p.m.
Lindsay Ward led off the
Starter Amy Noe made frame with a walk. Claudia
h.er. retllfll to the circle after Farney came in to pinch-run
s1tung out two games with a for Ward, and Farney soon
bruised leg, and the sopho- scored after Cunningham
more was sharp in return as followed with an inside-theNoe allowed just one hit park home run for a 6.()
through four of her five edge.

Kimber Davis was then
walked, and a one-out single by Miller - combined
with a CHS throwing error
- gave the hosts runners at
· the coners with one out.
Saunders hit into a fielder's
choice, which allowed
Davis ~o score for a sevenrun cushion after two com·
plete.
Both. teams went score~
Jess in the third, but GAHS
continued its . offensive
surge in the fourth with five
runs. The Angels had three
hits in that inning and also
bmefited from both Lady
Cavalier errors jn establishing a 12-0 edge.
The guests managed three
hits and also benefited from
one GAHS error in the fifth,
which
resulted
in.
Chillicothe's lone score.
Sam Jacobs scored that lone
run after reaching safely on
the error.
Eight different Angels
had at least one hit in the triumph, ·with Miller leading
the offensive attack with
three hits. Cunningham was
next with two safeties, followed by Saunders, Niday.

Campbell, Noe, Stacy
Cummons and Shayna
Feustal with one hit apiece.
Cunningham
and
Saunders led the Angels
with two RB!s each.
Cunningham, Miller and
Niday also scored twice in
the decision.
Jacobs,
Vanessa
Montgomery, Karol Ojeda
and Ashley Horsley each
had one hit for the Lady
Cavs. Annie Downing was
the losing pitcher of record.
allowing II earned runs and
two walks while striking out
one over four innings of
work.
Gallia Academy returns to
action Monday when it
hosts Jackson in another
SEOAL South contest at
Memorial Field. Game time
is scheduled.for 5 p.m.
Galllll _ , 12, Chlllicolho 1
51nnings .
Chillicothe 000 01 1 4 3
Gallipolis
430 5x ~ - 12 11 2:
CHS (n/a, 0.10 SEOAL SouthJ: Annie
Downing and Karol Ojeda.
G/UiS (13-4, ~ SEOAL South]: Amy
Noe and ,Undsay Ward, Shayna Feustal
(5).
.
'
WP ~Noe: LP- Downing.
HA: GA-

up

....................
~---­

Thompson leaqing the way
with three apiece. Roush,
Noble, Dressel, Bowman,
Wamimont and Terry Smith
also added a safety each to
winning cause:
Stevens also had a teamhigh three RBisJ followed ·
by · Noble with :a pair.
Roush, Firmicuul, Dressel
and Bowman also drove in
one run. Finnicum scored a
game-high three times.
Dunn, Dawes and Grow
all led the Cavs with two
hits each, followed by
, Webb,, Cody Speakman,
Zach Glendening and Kevin
Scott with one safety each.
Dawes led the ~uests with
three RBis, while both he
and Dunn scored twice in
the setback.
The Blue Devils stranded
nine runners on base, while
Chillicothe left seven on the
bags.
Gallia Academy played a
pivotal SEOAL. South
make-up game qainst visitins Ponsmouth on Saturday
and returns to action
Monday when It hosts
Jackson in another key
SEOAL South Divisionoontest. The .'first pitch at
Memorial . Field is scheduled for 5 p.m.
._.. '

\ Ohllltoolllt
O.UipOIII

'

iij

=

301 140 1

-

300

'

'

---·----..--............................-..

Gru P~ Sunroot

201M ·

....
· ·'
·~·
.

'

....,
a »z
a;»

II

GM

-

I 111

CHS (11-12, H IEOAl. - ): (I) .... Zloll

GAHS (H, W IIIQAI. - ): Niolc
Btw_.lllld Dave ftumllf, ,

Wf'--;UI'--

HR: GA- Niolc (1ltll lnnil1tl,
ono on, OMOIJO; c- -c.-&lt;--

InninG·-

--

'IJted.llled

Wamnly---·--·----..------.................................."---..

o.-. - Giotldetolng.
onttt

-~

fiiRii i

' Scmola, Sunroof, Fadmy Wamnty•.·-·-..·~------................._ ...:...........•........ .'....................$14,995
SF,. 3To·a - From...................- .........................~...........................................$19,3Cio
2007 Toyota c..y LF. Fadmy Wmanty.
-:·--... - ................................................................Jt8,210
2006 .Pontioc Grond Pril, E.ay WorTIIdl'---·-,......-.................- .........................~ ..............................$12,400
O..vey Impob. F.ay
SIUOO
!1005 C.ditla! U..illf, Loilled,1.(. Heol&lt;d Selle, Fi&lt;loly WIITOJity......, ......, ..........;;;; ......... _ ..·...... _,•••...Sli,'IGII
211M Chryolor !iobri"'l Lulllor. Stmmof; Law Mila......
·
.....: ........-.........~.d,!IIIO
~dclilil:~ ~lit. ...- - - ' - - - -..--..................._,_
. _ .................................... ,... _.,......,...54,100
2003 ..... -Sl4,'100

11 Ohllll Ia I
- e10 a

zoo ooo 1

•·" *•'

an, OM 014).

•

~

'-

'

au

I

I

Hannah Cunningham

and inning, Olie on, nobody out).

(sec·

�...,.., .

....,,,,,~

..

.

!

Chapmanville devours Point PleasantJin five .Wah~ifl3~·losing skid -.
BYLmtC...
:~::theruncea~th~o= extended to six straigb't
c~;-t=~h::~~ with 8-lloss to Bison ~.COli

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Chapmanville
sluggers Caleb Toparis and
Ryan Vinsoo bit back-to.back hooJe runs in the thi!d
inning to awaken a -sleeping
giant as the Tigers posted
eight bits and a dozen runs
over the final tluee innings
to take a 15-4 victory in five
innings over host Poipt
Pleasant Friday evening.
Point Pleasant (12-IQ)
was clinging ro a 4-3 lead
with two outs in the thi!d
inning when the back-t()back h()IJICrs occurred
putting Chapmanville (198) oil lOp for good.
And once the gates we~
opened ~ was no stopping the flood.
~.a~y en
.,._
1be Tigers~ a dozen Point Pleasant's Clay Krebs is ~ated after crossi~
noanswe~ runs over the
hOme plate during the first inning of a high school basj!ball
final t:bn:e innings iileluding game against Chapmanville Friday in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
a very costly fifth inning for
Point Pleasant that saw 'the Hunler Podunovac with an
Point Pleasant, on the
hosts commit four errors RBI single in the-fifth.
other hand, simply went
and give up six runs ro seal . Along with smashing the cold after a ~-hot start. .
the Orange and Black victo- g()-ahead homer in the third.
After Chapmanville had
ry.
Vinson also picked up the jumped out front 1.0 in the
Chapmanville collected pitching victory in tluee opening
frame,
Point
It· bits in the win led by innings of work, strilcing Pleasant slepp:d to the plate
Josh Mahaffey who went 3· out ~- It was a nice tum· and looked as if it would
for-4 with two doubles and around by .the ·sophomore easily handle tbe visitors..
a pair of runs batted in. after giving up four straight 1be Big Blacks scored foor
Evan Brown added two bits hits to open the game lead- runs and collected fOur hits
including ·a triple and tluee ing to a 4-1 PPHS lead.
in the inning to open up a 4RBis, Zack Martin was 2Martin replaced him mid! 1 lead, but could not match
for-4 with an RBI and two way through the thi!d and that intensity over the flnal
triples and Vmson added a finished out the coolest with four innings.
single to his home run with two strikeouts and only two
1be Tigers crept back into
one RBI.
total · baserunners.
He the game with a pair of nms
Rounding out the Tiger retired Point Pleasant in in the second and tied the
bitters we~ Toparis with order in the final two coolest in the thi!d when
his thi!d inning homer .and innings.
Toparis smashed a solo

Vinson then stepped ro the

give CHS a 5-4lelld.
OlapmanviUe then tacked
oo foor runs in the fuurtb
and pilt the game oot of
reach with six runs in the
fifth inning highlighted by a
quartet of PPHS errors ro
seal the win.
Clay Krebs led Point
Pleasant at the plate with an
RBI double m the fli'St
inning followed by D. W.
Heldman and BJ. Lloyd
woo bad an RBI bit apiece.
Curt Grimm added the other
bit for the Red and Blackall in the first.
Lloyd also picked up the
loss oo the IOOUIId. fanning
two in _t:bn:e innings vf
work. He was replaced by
Tyson Jones in the founb
and D. W. Herdmall finished
out the game ~ being
called upon in the fifth.
With Point Pleasant entel'ing inro the final week of
the ~gular season, the Big
Blacks will tty lO get in a
few more· 'practice games'
befo~ enlering into the real
season next week. PPHS
will n:tum to the diamood
Sarorday with a pair at
Logan starting at I p.m.
·

•

: flattimore

.-""""
...

W

11... ~

~2

9

~

I

--

-

Wl

,.5 9
15 9

GB
2
3

111 t3

. ireus

8

.625 .458 ·4

(Correia 1 -~). 9:05p.m.

6.1N.Y. Yankees 4
• T_..,.l3o•
_.. ~ , 5, Boston 4,' 11 innings
. KansasCity ·8, Toronto 4
· · 'BIIttimore at 'Chalgo Whtte Sox. 'Pf'd..,
a-

._,-

• e.ttimore (Burres2-'l) at Chicago White
'So!&lt; '(Danl&lt;s2-1), l i05p.m .. 1at game
Bahlmore (Trachsel 1-3) a1 Chicago
White Sot: (Masse1 ~).7:05p. m., 2nd
,game
L.A. Angels (Moseley 1-2) at OetroH:
I'(Galarrage ~.10), 3:55tp :m.
. , :N.Y. Yankees (-Kennedy 0-2) at
,Ctevellnd ,(SOwers ·D-0), 3:55 !p.m.
8ostDn (Buchholz 1-1) at Tampa Bay

1

p.'m.

.

, lllnnesota(BBMer2 -0)atTf!J:AS (Ponson

neQeSSdasai)'M

• · AI

1

'

ato--

~,on,

TBA

Chicago
St. Louts
Milwaukee
'Houston
, Cincinnati
1'-rgh

15 8

, .. 9
13 10

Sln.&amp;rdpntQw. Ph•ft

,

1

I

Amonio TBA ~necessary
,
• · •
.

. . n. Phi' 1 lphil

103
Thursday, &amp;nrii24: Toronto108, 0rlandc
......-

.609 1
.565 2

9

14

S

Arizona
Colorado
. ' san Francisco
los Angeles
&gt;San Diego

TBA

Pet 'G B
16 6 .727 10 12 '.455 '6

Thursday, May 1. Orlando at Toronto,

L

1013 .435

6~

9

13 .409 7

9

14

.391

n

TBA, naoessal)'
, Sa1un:tay, 'May 3: Tomnto at Orlando,
; TBA.Ifnecessary
·

n r ..... u.w=t'n

7'n

1"'i; ll!ab
1!?.111""
9 Uta
93 ~...,

d

BtuT ay, ......-••
• ·.-...u on 82
:
'Monday,
April
21 : Utah 90, Houston 84
Th·-"
Ap II 24 H sto 94 Utah

u•;:oya,y,

r

:

ou

n

•

92,
SatlJblh
rda leads
•~Iseries 2·1
26 Houst
u

y, .....,..

at Utah

neoessa~

rR.O

:
Utah

u~
~ 1.

I

Saturday, April 19:. &lt;Cleveland 93,
Waahlngtt&gt;n 86
.
fo!onday, Apnl 21 : Cleveland 116,
Washing1Dn86
Thursday, -'Pfll 24: Washington 106,
'Cieveland72,Ciell8iandleaclsllllries2-l
Sunday, April 27: ·Cteveiand at
Washington , , -plm.

Fiidaj&lt;o lipolllllf

£$

"

RHP

'*'

1

1..0
'Saturday, April 26: •Philadelphia at

Montreal, 7 p.m.
Uont"'al

at

Wednesday ·Aprll 30: 'M ontreal at

Phi/adolph'18, 7 ;p:m.

at
at
at

•••MBIMW

p,

. Friday, April 25: Pittiburgh ·5 , N.Y.

Sunday, April 27: 'N .Y. 'Rani)BI'I at
Pittsburgh, 2 p.·m.

---

Tuesday, April 29: Plttabuogh at N.V.
Rangeis, 7p.m.

.....,._...._
~

~

I

....~c•OI

aCE

* 14.1 5 11
.Aprii10: 'Montreai4,Boston,
~·~

Mu

--

•

April12: 'Montre813, Booton 2, OT

9osto

~:- ~~:~~~Bo"::-:6·

OT

Aprii'19: Boaton5,Moiltr8al.

Thursday, ·May 1: Plttaburgh at N.Y.

Ra

"Pr/114: ~• . 0ttawa1
~

16: 'Pitt8burgh 3, Ottawa 1

'

Sunday, ·May -4: 'N .Y. Rangers at
Plttliburgl\, 2 p.m., H"""""'"'ry .
Monday, May 5: Ptnsburgh at N.Y.
Rangurs,7p.m., ifnB08UIIry ·

-..-ay, May 7: N.Y. Rangers at

Plttsburgh.T.BD.Ifl'lBC8IIU.ry

·.\pr/121.:- 5. Booton0
1!5 5 ., ~9
0
Apr!lg: l'l1llburgh·• .- O
Apr1111: '1'111ot&gt;urg115.&lt;0tifta S

7

ngers, p.m.

'

•UIUA •C31 5

5 n.C

Dolml ,_ 7

'

ICE
,

~.Apri24: D81mft-4, Co/oqdo

3,

.750 472 455

2 5 0 .286 _.. 412

W l T Pct
Chicago
Grand Rapids
Colorado
Kansas City

11

1 2

....

.....:-::"::·====--1

.Lennox signs on to play softball at Rio Grande .
BY MAliK w.w.

'

well and [
can't ~&lt;~:it
to
JOID
RIO
GRANDE
t h e m , "
~Diversity of Rio Grande
L ~ n no}
. ·bead softball roach David
~d.
I
Pyles is putting the finishliked the
· ing tollCbes on . his 2009
study tables
: class. The lalest to sign on
that
are
' the dotted line is Marissa
d t
man a o_ry,
: Lennox
of
Gahanna
and I hke
' Lincoln High School.
Lll•llX
the amaz! . Lennol(, an outfielder,
-ing ru;ade;w.as an all-district per~ Dlill11. I abo thought the
former last season for a girls on tbe team were ~very solid ~ led by ly nice as weU as Coach
Coach Tun
to.
Pyles."
LennoJt wiU be the thi!d
"Coach Campolo has a
Gahatl!la Lincoln player to really good program, good,
play .a t Rio Grande. Carrie quality kids come out of
Laufer and Jenna Gauthier · that progratD, he teaches
have also worn the ·Rio Red them well," Coach Pyles
and While.
said."Marissa also plays for
"I am eJtcited and pleased a higb quality summer pro' to be going to Rio. The. gram, so she's going to
softball team is doing really come in and oompete for an
!I'EaAI. TO THE TIM£S.SENnNEL

~-

1-0

Sa1urday. Apri/26:~at1la1rolt,3

p.m.

,..._, Aprll29: Oalrott .at~.

·K iri&lt;

3 5 o .375 483 472
3 5 0 .375 423 462
1 7 o .. 125 :182 481

Satunlay'o~

Cleveland at New York, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Orlando, 7:90 J),m.
Georgia at Arizona, 10 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Jose, 10SI p.m.

"'
Saarloos

~
outright

ln;N

to

1

SUndoy'l 'liiolno

No games scheduled
Sacramento (PCl).
.
. tlooiday 'o Gomr
NEW ~ YANITFS Placed RHP
Dallas at Philadelphia . e p.m.
BrianBT'UTlllf On the 15rday Ol. Recalled
'Friday, . . , 2
RHP Jonl!llthan Alba'•det·o and RHP
""
Philadelphia at Qeveland, 7 p.m .
ChrE ·Britton 1Iom ScrantonWI/ima-Barre
Grand Rapids at Colorado, 9 p.m.
CIL}. Designated C Chad 'Moeller for 1
'Salufdloy, . . , s
aaaignmant.
New OJ1eans at 'Georgia, 7 p.m .
SEATTI.'E MARINEI'Is-Agreed .to
terms with C -Kenji Johjima on a·1hree- 1 Dallas at Columbus, 7 p.m.
- - ,..._.,. ""'--..gh 2011 . I San Jose at Orlando, 7:30 p..m.
1f88.T COnu.-...eA-,.I)n, ""...,.,.
Kan&amp;aS City at Utah, 9 p.m.
TEXAS RANGERs--Recalled C Jarrod
Arizona at los Angeles, 10:90 p .m.
Salala--~·
~
~'-"
(I'CL)
"......,,.. .....,m •••, ...noma
.
Molidaf, ... li
ActivaladLHPEdclieGuan:lado1romthe
Chicago at Tampa Ray, 8 p.m.
15-day 'OL. Placed RHP Luis Mendoza
I
on 15-da:y DL, retroactive to 'April 24. 1
Rulu1188d C Adam'Methuse .
iiiASKEliBrALL
.
r· , 1111 I
lbell'
'litton
Sprint Cup Sbiiidin. .
'NBA-Fined
Maurice
Cheeks , I
After PhoeniiC. :
Phillldelphia coach. $25,000 for his Name
Wint Pl5
actiom attar a~n:;;.~me .
1
1215
1. Jeff Bunon
•
.IJO
2 K·•· B sch
1
f' s5 wi~OGibiiiU...u
3 Dale Earnhardt
0
CONS-S
-66
1
~~NTA FAl
lgnad K Kevin 1 4 : Jlmmle J~nson
_99
1
1
~~ ·
5 Ka · H 'ck
0
103
SAN 'DIEGO CHARGERS-Claimed 6. o.,vm .~IIYOr
1
;37
'
QB Casey Bnimlet .off .waivtmt from
·1i nnt_~~rtrn
7
0
137
Miaml
. ony •:newa
·
8 Cl'ntBo
0
17t
,H OC«£V '
· 1
wyer
•
-1 , .. " " " ' " ' 90.CaGri edBwiffards
3
-174
NEW YORK RANGER5-Agreed to 1 · reg . le
0 ·
· -176
termswlthG 'MilkaWiM«nan. -R ecalledG 11 . KaseyKahne
·0
-286
David LaNoveu, D A - Hutch/naDn, 12. Ryan Newman
1
-300
D ·Corev-Potter,O ·BobbySanguinetti,F --------------------·'If-----..,,.,.-....,,f'O..ne•Byers,F - ~!· t:.:'Go~on J
~
-~
~. f' auri KO!plkcpt&lt;i. F ~
·
n1n roe• r.
. •
_ , .m F 1'.•, "'-ren1NU ·1mm 15. IAatt Kensetll
0 'r · -346
-(AHI.).
16.KurtBusch
0 ."• ·358
1\\MI'A 'BAY L I G H T N - - 1 11. Juan Montoya
0 ., -361
5mw Stilting, coacto
(AHL). \ 18. DavidRagan
0 (
·381
hurbeen Te
Wid "to it 'COllege .::out- 19. Brian Vickers
o·
·981
lng ptdion and tbtolkwlll TIIJl:a:a•clso 20. Bobbv Labonte
o ;;-381

I

l

NASCAR

'

I · '"'

11

IIY MAliK.,,., '

dash and the 4x HJO-Il,leter
~lay. Site w.as tabbed honorable mention All-Scioto
RJO GRANDE - The Valley Conference in soa:et
University oj Rio Grande and earned both the P.A.C.E.
womens soccer and track and Bulldog awuds for
and field programs teamed 'Zane
up to bring in two-sport atb- .Graves was cxcit.ed ro si$fi
Ide K.ayla Graves from Zane with Rio Grande. "I'm excttTrace High SchooL .
ed to move oo with my life
Grave5, a defender an~ but still be close to home,"
scxx.er pi.tch and a sprinter in · she said.
track, shouJd provide a boost
Her reasons· f91' choosing
for both programs. She was Rio Grande were wide-rangvoted as the most improved ing. "Financially, the displayer for the. Zane Tl'liCe lance' from home, the sports
soccer team and 2nd team and the ooaches, the campus
all-4istrict in end and fleld, and my major," Graves said.
as weil as qualifying for the She plans to major in
region.als in the 400-meter Physical Therapy.

'lhMle:

or

..

for
·PPHS bead

roach Danny

O.:,~~r

._,_ "'-"-.. 5

•

g~et6an•"=:..~
"~
g o i n ..
~

througbojtt
the nigbl ·as
•
the · s~t
•
..P P 1_1 ~~~f - defense ~
lJie basepath ~· The B_it
Rj:d 1J13D38ed just ~ hils
~ by _Amick _and ·Palmer
With a stng!e apteec.
_
Hefoer pt~ up the ~
for ~· fanmng four aiid.
walk!ng one.
~mt PleaSI!nt got ..the
scormg started 10 the~
~ of the second mmng
WI~ !-·nm and added · two
moremtbetopofthefifth:JO
provide tbe only runs soced
oo the night
Wirh the seven team
Parkersburg
SoftDall
Tournament be,ginning early ·
Saturday mommg, tbc Lady
Knights softball squad Will
be· spending the night 1n
Paltaosburg before an eady
ftrst round game .a gain,t
Ritchie County 9 a.'lll.
Saturday.
Point Pleasant is then
scheduled to play Tyler'
Consolidated at noon aid
Fairmont East at I:~.
Tbe championship is
uled to begin at 3 p.m. ·
·
PI'~ '(;

P

1

rRO~ 'Q"'Pw..tloa-..,.,.. ~

ooo ooo o

=·-and

PPHS (1U): , . _

3

-

3

O'J 1

W)lllnt"""-

Graham.

WI' - Wyam. L P - -.

\

f USED CAR STORE

·a

Cli-

..

gives you

90 Days until your first payment! (That's July)

lnleNsl Rates • Low • 5.24%

Molley Down! Plul ·100 gallons

$lied lender's

wilb
Your trade is worth more. 3 month ·
mile

pp sh. out Parkersburg
us," said

ootfteld job. Sbe has
iar with Rio Grande other
ticed with us, I thought~ than fact that they did have
BY l..uBw Ctul
looked good, sbe's qwck her major and that academLCAU~lXREGISlER.COM
with a good ann, hits the • ic results of the softball
ball well and"knows the . team was ~ery g~ She
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
g~ ~ well._
plan~ ro maJor Social WOdl. · _ Point Pleasant limited
Site II rome m and oom,:
Her goals while playing , host Patkersburg ro J'ust two
pete for an outfield spot, for Rio Grande are "to hits and lhre
...4 •
Pyles reiterated. ·
.
. w. a Wt~ m
Le
di
sed h ....t-ome better than I am any semor mght VIctory
.
nno11
scu$ . w at" rigbi now and to help the .plans by the Big Red as
her best _assets~ - ~ also team with my strengths.~ I'PHS stole a J-0 Virtnrv
some things she needs to Le
'd
Frida .gh .
·--¥
work on beading to next
nno!t. Sill · · . ·
.
Y.nt 1 Ill Parken;burg.
1 v~l. "I feel-my best assets
ManssalsthedaJ!ghll!;rof . ~.mglb!:i~lii!COlld_pa&amp;s ate that 1 am fast, 1 have Dave and Jan Lennox of ~ ~~m two mghts,
good judgment on By balls Gahanna.
.
Fnday s vtctory helped
and 1 get the bat 011 the ball
She
JOIDS
Bnttny · ease the bad taste of a 1.0
most of the time, 1 have a Lovelace ' of !-'iddletow~, loss to Ripley the night
strong arm as well," sbe East _Carter H1gb Sc:bool s !'efore as Pomt .Pleasant
said. "I need to work on Stevte Sh-u.P, .Lrnd~y unproved_to 1~-8 on the seablocking all ground balls Slevens of Ri_verstde High son heading mto the final
.and not bitting. wimpy PQp- School, Jessica Hart of .week of tbe ~gular season_.
ups when rumiers are on Unioto High School and
Ace T~sa Wy~ ag~
base."
Chelsu Brooks of Triad played a big part_ m the VICLennox .also pointed out High School as the 2009 tory as . s~ pttched !he
that she was not very famil- softball recruiting class.
shutoot while ~so leading
the offense, gomg 3-for-l
with a triple. Wyant finished
1be night with eight stribouts and one walk in picking
up the victory.
" Kayla is ~y going to happy, very excillld to have
Anna Sommer backed up
help us, I know for swe and her as a future member of W~ant's ~ormance with a
I really think: that she' U be the Redwomen team."
parr of hits including an RBI
while
Morgban
able with her speed, ro help
Graves discussed .what she triple
in soccer as wen," Rio felt her best assets were and- Mullins added the other hit
Gt:andc bead track and field also mentioned what ·she
die night with a single a&amp;
ooacb · Bob Willey said. feels she .-.Is to work on as Point Pleasant rack:ed up
"Site's a very hard worker. it ~s · to socca: ~rm half a dozen hits on the
Tdlcing · with her coaches, qwck:, I listen to my peers, night.
Point
Pleasant
also
they bad ~ but praise and I'm · 4 good leader. I
for her, just the tdea of how don't back down," site said. received nice bunt work
lw'd she works.
. "I need to wodt on my ball from Jennifer Wickline woo
"Sbe 's just an outstanding skills and my ball handling." gave up a few sacrifice
young lady. Great famill;,!
Hert9aJ while playing for bunts to help move runners.
was eJtcibng to go to
Rio Grande? "To build as a Sommer. also produced a
Trace and sign her. Almost player and as a leader," site couple of nice plays to keep
all of her teammales were said. ·
tile shutout going.
there, so that says a lot for
Kayla is the daughter of
"'verall we played a solid
be.r, what kind of person she Eric and Angie Graves of game. Except for a couple
ist Willey added "''m vezy Cbillicothe.
errors, this was a good win

Redwomen sign ZT's Kayla Graves.for two sports
SPECIAl TO THE TIMES-SlNTIN£l

_ ,

~

doing any fwtber damage, WP-Sooull'-z._..n

.

-

PF I'll

o .na . 537 421

:.:r:S

ATHENS

E

Wea11i1n DM8ign ·
WlTPct l'FPA .
4 4 0 .500 437 4;16
San.Ari.zona
3 4 0 .429 ll1i5 404
los Angeles 3 5 0 .375 .sa 500
Utah
0 9 0 .000 481! 594

KANSAS CITY ROYALS-PIBOl!!CI·RHP

IM.S

28:

o

3 • o .429 . , . 981

Canlral Divloion

-

Philadelphia 3, OT, Montnlal leads .....

'April

7 2 o .778 535 432

6 2

AIIERICAN CONI E1

Hideo Noma on waivers1or ·the purpose
ofO~isKlAcondNDitiona~.:r-HlETI·C~ •sslg··"

••w1·11.

Monday,

New Orleans
Onando
Georgia
Tampa Bay

BAlTIMORE ORIOLEs--Placed LHP
.Adam Loewen on the 15-day DL.
Purchased the contract o1 INF Eider 1
l'ridlry'ITorTes1rnm Norfolk (IL).
j
Grand Rapids 72 . Kansas City 311
BDSTON RED SOX...:...Purchased the
contract Of -RHP Bryan Corey from New Orleans 70, Utah '56
:Pawtuc:Qt (IL). Optioned INF Joe I Chicago 65, Colomdo 58

(Z
ell 7;)
EA5!IEIWI CGl
J NCE
PI" , '
Th da
........II ,.,.. M - - 1 -4 .
Ulll y, ........
~:
Onu'

'r!li..lladalph
' 7 ·p.;m.
rn
...

2 6 0 250 386 438
Sou1liem Divlolon
WlTPct PFPA

Thurstonoutright10PawtudultandRHP
Justin 'Masterson to Portland {El).

ICE

4 4 o .SQO 396 391 ·

ColumDus

•n.rta.n 1 __.,_

9'"n ·&amp;.....,.2:

•'

New York

•

. ...... ~,

Apn110: Dalla&amp; 4, Ana~ o
Aprli12: Dallas_S, Ar.lleim.2
Aprll15: Anahefm 4, Dallas 2
April17 : Dallas 9, Anaheim 1
Aprll18 : Matleim ·5, ~2

I

Philadelphia . 8 0 0 ' 1.000 528 .tOO
Dallas
1 o o 1.000 353 299
Cleveland
4 3 0 .571 410 426

ML.B--SuspendedTorontominorteague
CJonathanJaspetorSOgamesforvio-lating 1he Minor League Drug Prevention
and Treatment 'Program.

z

•

Eaetem OiviMW'I
W l T Pct PF I'll

a• .::;.••

Aprii14 : 'Minnesots3,Colorlldo2, 0T
Aprii1E : Cotorado.S, MinnaBDia,
April17: Colorado 9, Minneio&amp;a.2
Aprll19: Colorado 3, Minnasala 2

1

-NATIONAL
........ -~~
t..oo'1iuo E
CO E

'fRANsAcnONS

:llll' ·~·--

Aprti1 7:Boaton 5. Montrea1 1

I

·&amp;,'' pJ
'Aprii"9:'Calgmy s,:S.Joaa2
....-10: San ,...._ ......- o
...,.._
- 4.• .._,,
'Aplt/1s:•c.tgary
. -·s
'Aplt/15:SanbeS,Cilgary2
.April 1~: ·San . - 4 ,'Calgary 3
April20· Ca.ln•ry 2 San Jo&amp;e 0
· 22:· SanItt"'
April
. - '5, Calgary 3

s.n

I

·PRoFoonAU

Tuasday, April 29: san Jose at oa:nas.
7:30p.m.
· Wednesday, April SO: San Jose at
1la/la&amp;, 9p.m .
l'riday, May 2: Datlas at San Jose , 10
;p.m., tf nBC8&amp;6ary
Sunday, 'MEiy 4 : San Jose at Dallas, 9
1P in1.. If 11BOOBS8JY
Tuesday, 'May 6: Dallas at San Jose, to
&lt;p.m.. H,neoessary

Rangers4, 1'-Ufllh leacls """"" 1-0

!'

coach

r.p.m.

p

-

on
• · Saturday 'May 3: Philadelphia
H
..n Montrual, 7 p.m., If T18D68iry
9
...,.......y,
:
at ouston , :OJ\.!
Sunday
May
4: 'Montreal
p.m.
Philadelphia, 7 p.m., If f1BOIIBSBJY
Friday; May 2: Houston at Lhah, TBA. tf
Tuesday !May 6: Philadelphia
':;~ay4': Utlih at-Houston. i'BA, tf ·Montreal, 7-p';m.,lf T18D8IS8fY

T~:.~Im.Aprll 29

1

'Monday, April 28: Toronto at Ortando, .

1

.

T-hufS:dav. May 1· San Antomo at
Phoemx TBA n neoessary
~-turda'y M'ay 3· ~oen··· at 'San
= . .
. r"
Antonio , TBA, If necessary

94, Orlando leads series 2-1

Saturday, Apri126: 0 rlandoatTomnto. 3
p.m.

.391 6

·-w _._,

I

i

Phoeni.J:, 3:30p.m.
.
, Tuesday, April 28 : PhoeniJ: 81 San

Tuesdav. Aprli22: Orlando 104. Toronto

.652 -

nger&amp; ·

: ••· ·

· San AntoniO leads se
.j
Sunday, "Pfil 27: San Antonio Bl j Aprii20 : 0&amp;Uas4,Aneheim'1

,00

GB

-~

~I ~1 68 ' ~:VV. RangorsRa 55 · ~~ 33

.,..,

Tuesda April 22 : San "ntonio , 02 1
Phoeni.:Y9s
' 1
. San Antonio 115 [
F 'da
.t.. ... .
1 25
Tl
!(• .......-n
'
.
ries
1
01 99

~ ~

0r11n0o VI Jprpntp
Sunday, April 20: Ortando 114. Toronto

2'k

·

5: Detroltat~ . 10

..,,
!LQ
~- April 25: llBIIIiB 9, Sari Joaa 2,
1JT, Da/W;- serios1-0
'Sunday, April V : 001185 at San Jose , 9

. . . .1

1
::1J.Y.:-

Saturda ~I , 9. San Antonio
Phoeni.: ~·15
·
·

t

6'1.

•4."

·'-"'13:,._, ..181811y-4, 'N.Y."-11n S. OT

Saturday, tM ay 3: Dallas at New
Orleans, TBA. If neoussary

TBA . tJ :necessary

11 12 .~78 4
9 14 .391 6

w

3

1 ',
2

Rar-

n . -.1111 ......
Orleans, 7 p.m.
.
• ••
Thursclay, 'May 1: New Orleans at I Aprl9 : Cotorado 3. 'MinllfJBOW 2, OT
Dallas, TBA, H necessary
April 11:&lt;M;nnesotB 3, Colorado 2, OT

llllllonlil.......

13 11 .542
12 n .522
New Yort&gt;;
11 11 .500
• Washington
8 16 .333
c.ntn~DtwWon
w L Pet

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

'Aplt/9: N.Y
4, __, t
~ 11 : ·N.Y. IRw;gas'2, ·"New ~II

Dallas'92

1

1il Y Yankees a1: Cle¥etand 1105 ·p ·m
! Sunday ~ril 20: Phllactelphia 90
. .
' '
' .
,._,_._~o~
'
' Boston at Tampa Bay, , :-40 p.m .
' ..,-,;rtii.IIIV\.1,
.
. Minnesabt at 1i
2:05
I
Wednesday April 23 : Detroi1 105
· Baltimore at ~=· ·.~mSox:. 2:05 Philadelphia 8e
'
Am.
go
.
FTiday, April 25: Phila$ia 95, Detroit
"ronmto at Kansas City, 2:10p.m.
I 75. P.h/ladelphialeads series 2-1
Oakland at Seattle. 4 :1 0tp.-m.
Sunday, .Aprll27: Detroit at Philadelphia ,
7 ·p.m.
, LA. ~ngels at Detroit, 8:05tp.m.
. .
Tuesday, April 29: Philadelphia at
"
Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
e-Oiwlliae'
Thursday,
May
1:
Detroit
et
W L Pet G'B
Philadelphia, TBA, if necessary
· Florida
14 9
.609 Saturday, May 3: Philadelphia at Detroit,
· ' Phlla:lelphia
'• ~HI!IIma

·

Tuesdau, April 29: Dallas at New

.

. un y, ay--. . :tanta
if-neoessary

•''*''

.

up

- y.

Sundaw, a ...ril V : 'New Qfleans at

EAS1E
·
Rill CONFERENCE ·
i
BD11onys.Atllrftl
-I Sunday,April20: Boston 104, Atlanta 81
Wednesday, April2~: Boston 96 , Atlanta
, 77, Boston loa~ senes 2· 0
I Saturday, Apnl26. Boston at Atlanta, 8

. ().()t,:S!OSp.m.
·. QMian:J (O~scherer 1..()) at Seattle

Sundllr'a 0 . . .

:c

r.~&lt;•allas.
r.
•9.•
_~
;.-"p.m.

Monday, Apnl 28. BoBI:on at Atlanta, 8
, p.m
.
~~) . 7:10p.m.
Wednesday.Apnl 30: A1t&amp;nta at Boston,
TDftlniO (Marcum 2-1) at -Kansas City TBA , tf necessary
·
(11kK:hevar ~1), 7:10p.m.
Friday, May 2:'Soston at A.11anta, TBA. tf

. (Bedard 1.0), 9.10 p.m. .

C

If•....,......, &amp;·MI 22· •New Orteans ·127
I .,.:;--'/
.
'
_ .. .,.• 03'..,.,
1 Friday,.\pr/12S: Dallas 97, New'Orloens
87, NewOrleano leads-2-1

'eell•"oriwtion
P.-,c;rt •G '-""
fiRST :FIOtlJND
~71)

~It GMt...

•
, 1heir option on Damtn Rumble., asststam
Thursday, May 1: Detroit at Colorado. coach.
'
,0 p.m.
COLLEGE
~- May 3: Co/olado at Detroit, 1
CUlVER - STOCKTON-Named
'J).m.,
CaTV
rrmothy Southers women'5 baskeball

:p.m., •• ,, .
ary
April21 : Wash~ -I. Ph~&lt;2 .
!fJ&amp;duwsat&amp;)', May 7: CoDrado 81: ~.
Aprii22: PI ......... 3.Wis1Mgbi.2,0T TBD, fir
my

7 . . . _ n.IQSS
l. Satufttiw, ~I 119: New '011ean5 ~04.

~8•1

!Rain
•Oakland-4, Seaule3

,D p.m .

1

11M. ~flEIOOSSilry

PRo BASKETBALL

. - 6 . Minnesall! 5,10 innings

Sunday, Apri127, ao08

llprl ~9: WllllllingiDII'S, Phil I ; lil.2

Wednesday, April 30: Denver 111: L.A..
lakers, TBA, If neoessary
Fri~, 'May 2: L.A. Lakers at Denver,
"ITBA, tf&gt;necessary
Sunday, ~ 4: Benver at LA. l.akers.,

(Pennv 3--2), 10:10 .p .m.
.
SuN:~.,--. Gamea
! Attanta at'N.V. Mets , 1:10p.ril.
Chioago ,Cuos at Washington, , :35 p.m.
Rorida at Milwaukee , 2:05p.m.
Houston at St. Louis. 2 :15p.m.
Arizona at San Diego , 4:05p.m.
1 Cincinnati at San -Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, • :10 p .m.

,.......,._ca.• ~Is 4, 'Detroit 3

20T

· ·

(*

I 10:30-p.m.

•Colorado (Rectman 2·1} at L.A. Obdgers

Philadelphia at Pinsburgh. 1:55 p.m.

16 .333 7

my

Den"''·

'I

PctGB
£25 -

If,. .

(GermanoG-2),3:55p.m.
,
I e I ' 1n..t
Florida (Hendrickson 4-1) al Milw~
Sum&amp;ay, April .20: !LA. ~~..Hers 128,
(VII'anueva 1.-2), 7~05 p .m.
Danv&amp;f 1li.C
.Philadelphia
(Kendrick
1-2)
at
Apri/2!1: LA. ~ 122,
Pittsburgh (Qorris Q-S), 7 ~05 p.m.
Denver -:107. L.A.Uken; &amp;ldwrifi 2-0
Ohicago , Cubs (Zambrano 3-"' ) &amp;1
saturday, -April 26: LtA. Lake!"S lit
Washing10n (Chico D-4 ). 7:10 p.m.
5:30 p;m.
CinCinnati (Belisle 0-,) at San Francisco
Monda.v, ~rl128:LA. Lakers at Denver,

10 13 .435 3
, .0 1-4 .417 3'h

. t.o&amp;Angelos
:: lo.kland

Pf 5
.t. ?' 5
J
April11 : Wllohington 5, Ph~ 4
Friday, 'May 2 : CleW~ land at Washington,
April 19· PhUadelptua 2, WuhingiDh 0
1 April 15 Philadelphia 6, -nglofl S
TBA. H necessary
'Sun13!1, JMIIt ..: WUhingiOn m ·Apr1117: n-, ' \ 4 11l 4, Wt:::B•UU• "S,

'Wednesday, April SO: Washington lit
Cleveland, TBA

St. Louis 1 Qewland, lfM.
(W•;nwright 2·1 ), 1:10 p.m.
Arizona (Owings 4..0) at San Diego !
&amp;1

12 11 .522 2
12 12 .500 .2'1:
,o 14 .4n 4 '.1.

Pet
.571
,, 12 .:UB
10 13 .455

•D.atrolt

I

.591

I

Houston {OswaH: 2·3) at

()aMn/J- :

: ll'crronto

~~ffaloreceivedapairof

BendAre.;iteamslonetally
coming in the third. singles each from Tuckec
J Buffalo pitchers dido't and
Belcher
with
home, it's a her.
ann, seems to have a ........... · -"- 8· WHS ._____ ·th tbe
BY MARK W•••._
.,.w.....
·
""""'
wt
Wmterstein
swatting
a
sin.SPECIAl TO llfE 11MESSEN1'1NEt
small rom~we kept watching more attitude.
She's athletic B'
d
...:o..:
1
·5
ISOD . uo · su ....ng out
gle and Scott driving in
munity, they closely every week and she enouthgh; so ""! ~~~ rulin
berg during_/ the . seven inning three wt'th a double.
RIO GRANDE The ·
have a good ~y ·looked good," Pyles out at we won I """' at
CODiest'
-'
.
University of ftio Grande
softball pro- added
somewhere else, but right
.
: ,_ . Scott came away Wtth the
gram and
Hart feels confident in her now she's going to come in : ~u~al~ J_um~ out t~ ·a ·!pitching win after going .
womens softball program is
coach, and ability, and she discusjed and compete for the catchea tn e opentng five innings and giving up
pleased to announce the
signing of Unioto High
they have a what her best assets are in er's job."
frame wh_en Tucker ~d iiD u"'earned nm on six bits
School's Jessica Hart ro a
good cafete- playing softball. "l have a
Hart plans to major in Belch~r stngled to .begtn with nine strikeouts. Lewis
national letter of intent to
ria
with great attitude. I pick peo- Education/Intervention -the Btson frrst. Lewis ~d 'finished IJP on tbe bill for
. play softball begiiming in
great food," pie's heads up when they are Specialist.
Scott then drew successive the Bisons and gave up two
the 2008-09 academic. year.
H.rt
she said.
down," she said. ~1 love to
Her goals while at Rio free passes to sco~ the f!rst hits while fanning silt.
Hart. a catcher woo also
Hart came have fun, but I think I might Grande are "to obtain a run of the game. FoUo~mg Zuspan went the distance
· c~~hes and plays second to know about Rio five years need to work on gettiitg my degree in a major that is sat- a slrike out Zuspan h1t a for Waham.a and was
·
for the Lady Shennatis, ago. ~r dido 't know much bead up when it is down, isfying both personally and batter to chase hoJ?C anoth- tag ed with tbe loss afiu
is an aii-«Jnference and is about tbe.scbool, I was inJro,- other than that, there is ooth- financially and 1 just want to er run before Parkins lofted · ~
' gh
·
•cu=ntly batting .500 for the duced through the indoor · ing."
play softball," she said.
a_ sacrifice fly to right to !!vmg ~p el 1 run.s 00 su
season.
.
·
winter softball league," she
As it s.tands right now,
She is the daughler of gtve Buffalo an early 3-Q htts wt~,L llandstnkeouhit~,
"I am very eJtclted (about said. · ·
Pyles sees Hart coming in Angela· Mittan and the late edge.
wau.s
two t
signing with Rio Grande),
"I bad not seen her pial and cOmpeting for the catch- George Hart.
Wahama cut the lead to
· .
. .
.
She joins Brittny Lovelace two at 3-1 in tbe thi!d wbeit
Tbe White F~ns will
they have a great softball high school or travel ball, ing positio11 with fellow
team," Hart said. "I have Pyles said. "She oome in newcomer Chelsea Brooks. of Middletown, OH, East Brice Clat1c reached on an ~gam try and_bring a ~ro
got to know a couple of the here (for the winter league) ~Jessie will rome in com- Carter High School's Slevie error and was .followed by Its current stx game slilk
players and they are ~y and ~y impressed every-, pete for the starting job that Sha!p, Lindsey Slevens of back-t{)-back singles Derek when ~ Bend ~ team
nice. I'm just anxious to body that saw her play. The Whitney (Harless) is leavi.ng Rivc:roide H1gh School, Veazey
and
William enlettluns Poca _o ojMondly
meet new peor,Ie and I hope umpires, talked ro them and open,~ he said. "Sbe's an Marissa Lennox of Gahanna Zuspan to fiU the sacks fora 5 p.m. ounng.
. ·.
. I love it there. '
obviously, coaches, and a:t:hletic, played in our winter Lincoln,
and
Cbelsea with White Falcons. Caleb
1
Hart said~ w~ sever· (sophomore pitcher) Sophie ~ and kind of liked the Brooks ofTriad High School ' Roach's two out single w 001~!
18 0
al factors in ber deciding on Young coached ber wmter looh of her, site bits the ball as the 2009 sofiball recruit- broUght Clark around buta a 300 500 x
8u
· Rio Grande. "It's close to leagueteamand~yliked real well and has a great mgdass.
. base running blunder pre- -S(4-"J: ~andUrdot•~
====~·====-====='-"====--==-'------'-----=------~--........
venteil ltleFatoons ·rrom- =~1~·10). licolt, t:nla (e)~

19 9

'I'.....,. Bay

a

Redwomen softball ad.ds Unioto's Jessica Hart

I

WlPctGB
15 10 .600 -

~--=--.,

Vll1900: i!. ...,.,

Oincirn:lati at San Francisco. lale
Colorado al L.A. Dodgers. late
·
Sm dq 's GM.a
I'Jianto (T.Hudson 3-1) at N.Y. Met5
(IMine 1-2), 1 :10 p.m.
,

lc&amp;ct .......

e.tDiil

in the thinl.
A
five
run foaitb
BUFFALO, W.Va.
by Buffalo
The muggles ()Olltinued for
blew the
the Wahama .While Fai()Oll
game wide
baseball teant
Friday
open wi~
evening as the Bend Area
all
five
diamond nine dtopped its
Bison runs
sixth stnight outing .after
co ming
falling to host Buffalo by
a f t e r
7
an 8·1 lllliiEinI
Z u s ·P a n
Despile out-hitting the struck out two of the first
Bison by an 8.(i oount and three batters he r.oed in the
getting a s~g pitching inning. Wmtersrein qJmC'l
outing from sophomore the frame with an infield
right-hander
WiUiam bit and aftec the next two
Z11span, the While Fali:ons bitters struck out Harris
failed to suppress a couple coaxed a walk. Tucker sin-·
of big innings from the gled home a run before
Buffalo offense. !£be Bison Belcher and Lewis walked
plaled ·th~ first inning to chase home anodler
nms before breaking the Buffalo run. Adam ~
contest. open with a five run . then clean:d the sacks with
fourth frame to gain the 8-1 a bases loaded double ro
baseball victory. Wahama give the Bison a five run
fell to 4-11 following the inning and an 8-1 advanloss while highly ranked . tage.
.
Buffalo impiuved to 13-10.
Although
Wahama
Zuspan issued seven free reconled a bit in each of the
passes during his route final · ~ frames the ·
going performance with While Falcons ·failed ro
five ,of those base runners mount anything considered
eventually scoring which ro be a serious ~ with
_
,
.
•
ultimately proved ro be the Buffalo holding on to the 8PI
0¥
:u. . 15,PolniF
,.
d'"
Tbe young
.
.
h
..
c 122 &lt;~&amp; - ·
15 no
1uerence.
I iriump .
~s ~~~0
sophomore fanned II bitVeazey had pair of sin(3) o n d - l'odunovoc.
~rs in . easily. his most gles and a double and
PPHS (12-10): B.J. lloyd, Tyoon- mtpresstye outmg of the Zuspan two singles to pace
~i~: Henlmon (51 ll!1d Henlmon. 2008 spnng season.
the WHS offense. Garrett
WP - V11111011. LP - I.Joyd.
Wahama.. although col· Underwood, Caleb Roach
HR- CHS: ~Toporia. -""*&gt;J,
the. an d Anthony 8ond also
none on; Ryan Vinocn. 1hirtl inning, none Jec un· g e1'ght h't
I'S on
on.
night, managed just one reconled ooe safety apieCe
-------------~--------------------,---~---- unearned run off a pair of for Coach Tom CuUen's
·
·
Bison hurlers with the

BY Gall\' Q • •

SCOREBOARD

.. ...., li11ld-6tntilltl
...

'

PageRs

Yriii1~~

low interest)
(Jblt~ 100

�...,.., .

....,,,,,~

..

.

!

Chapmanville devours Point PleasantJin five .Wah~ifl3~·losing skid -.
BYLmtC...
:~::theruncea~th~o= extended to six straigb't
c~;-t=~h::~~ with 8-lloss to Bison ~.COli

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Chapmanville
sluggers Caleb Toparis and
Ryan Vinsoo bit back-to.back hooJe runs in the thi!d
inning to awaken a -sleeping
giant as the Tigers posted
eight bits and a dozen runs
over the final tluee innings
to take a 15-4 victory in five
innings over host Poipt
Pleasant Friday evening.
Point Pleasant (12-IQ)
was clinging ro a 4-3 lead
with two outs in the thi!d
inning when the back-t()back h()IJICrs occurred
putting Chapmanville (198) oil lOp for good.
And once the gates we~
opened ~ was no stopping the flood.
~.a~y en
.,._
1be Tigers~ a dozen Point Pleasant's Clay Krebs is ~ated after crossi~
noanswe~ runs over the
hOme plate during the first inning of a high school basj!ball
final t:bn:e innings iileluding game against Chapmanville Friday in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
a very costly fifth inning for
Point Pleasant that saw 'the Hunler Podunovac with an
Point Pleasant, on the
hosts commit four errors RBI single in the-fifth.
other hand, simply went
and give up six runs ro seal . Along with smashing the cold after a ~-hot start. .
the Orange and Black victo- g()-ahead homer in the third.
After Chapmanville had
ry.
Vinson also picked up the jumped out front 1.0 in the
Chapmanville collected pitching victory in tluee opening
frame,
Point
It· bits in the win led by innings of work, strilcing Pleasant slepp:d to the plate
Josh Mahaffey who went 3· out ~- It was a nice tum· and looked as if it would
for-4 with two doubles and around by .the ·sophomore easily handle tbe visitors..
a pair of runs batted in. after giving up four straight 1be Big Blacks scored foor
Evan Brown added two bits hits to open the game lead- runs and collected fOur hits
including ·a triple and tluee ing to a 4-1 PPHS lead.
in the inning to open up a 4RBis, Zack Martin was 2Martin replaced him mid! 1 lead, but could not match
for-4 with an RBI and two way through the thi!d and that intensity over the flnal
triples and Vmson added a finished out the coolest with four innings.
single to his home run with two strikeouts and only two
1be Tigers crept back into
one RBI.
total · baserunners.
He the game with a pair of nms
Rounding out the Tiger retired Point Pleasant in in the second and tied the
bitters we~ Toparis with order in the final two coolest in the thi!d when
his thi!d inning homer .and innings.
Toparis smashed a solo

Vinson then stepped ro the

give CHS a 5-4lelld.
OlapmanviUe then tacked
oo foor runs in the fuurtb
and pilt the game oot of
reach with six runs in the
fifth inning highlighted by a
quartet of PPHS errors ro
seal the win.
Clay Krebs led Point
Pleasant at the plate with an
RBI double m the fli'St
inning followed by D. W.
Heldman and BJ. Lloyd
woo bad an RBI bit apiece.
Curt Grimm added the other
bit for the Red and Blackall in the first.
Lloyd also picked up the
loss oo the IOOUIId. fanning
two in _t:bn:e innings vf
work. He was replaced by
Tyson Jones in the founb
and D. W. Herdmall finished
out the game ~ being
called upon in the fifth.
With Point Pleasant entel'ing inro the final week of
the ~gular season, the Big
Blacks will tty lO get in a
few more· 'practice games'
befo~ enlering into the real
season next week. PPHS
will n:tum to the diamood
Sarorday with a pair at
Logan starting at I p.m.
·

•

: flattimore

.-""""
...

W

11... ~

~2

9

~

I

--

-

Wl

,.5 9
15 9

GB
2
3

111 t3

. ireus

8

.625 .458 ·4

(Correia 1 -~). 9:05p.m.

6.1N.Y. Yankees 4
• T_..,.l3o•
_.. ~ , 5, Boston 4,' 11 innings
. KansasCity ·8, Toronto 4
· · 'BIIttimore at 'Chalgo Whtte Sox. 'Pf'd..,
a-

._,-

• e.ttimore (Burres2-'l) at Chicago White
'So!&lt; '(Danl&lt;s2-1), l i05p.m .. 1at game
Bahlmore (Trachsel 1-3) a1 Chicago
White Sot: (Masse1 ~).7:05p. m., 2nd
,game
L.A. Angels (Moseley 1-2) at OetroH:
I'(Galarrage ~.10), 3:55tp :m.
. , :N.Y. Yankees (-Kennedy 0-2) at
,Ctevellnd ,(SOwers ·D-0), 3:55 !p.m.
8ostDn (Buchholz 1-1) at Tampa Bay

1

p.'m.

.

, lllnnesota(BBMer2 -0)atTf!J:AS (Ponson

neQeSSdasai)'M

• · AI

1

'

ato--

~,on,

TBA

Chicago
St. Louts
Milwaukee
'Houston
, Cincinnati
1'-rgh

15 8

, .. 9
13 10

Sln.&amp;rdpntQw. Ph•ft

,

1

I

Amonio TBA ~necessary
,
• · •
.

. . n. Phi' 1 lphil

103
Thursday, &amp;nrii24: Toronto108, 0rlandc
......-

.609 1
.565 2

9

14

S

Arizona
Colorado
. ' san Francisco
los Angeles
&gt;San Diego

TBA

Pet 'G B
16 6 .727 10 12 '.455 '6

Thursday, May 1. Orlando at Toronto,

L

1013 .435

6~

9

13 .409 7

9

14

.391

n

TBA, naoessal)'
, Sa1un:tay, 'May 3: Tomnto at Orlando,
; TBA.Ifnecessary
·

n r ..... u.w=t'n

7'n

1"'i; ll!ab
1!?.111""
9 Uta
93 ~...,

d

BtuT ay, ......-••
• ·.-...u on 82
:
'Monday,
April
21 : Utah 90, Houston 84
Th·-"
Ap II 24 H sto 94 Utah

u•;:oya,y,

r

:

ou

n

•

92,
SatlJblh
rda leads
•~Iseries 2·1
26 Houst
u

y, .....,..

at Utah

neoessa~

rR.O

:
Utah

u~
~ 1.

I

Saturday, April 19:. &lt;Cleveland 93,
Waahlngtt&gt;n 86
.
fo!onday, Apnl 21 : Cleveland 116,
Washing1Dn86
Thursday, -'Pfll 24: Washington 106,
'Cieveland72,Ciell8iandleaclsllllries2-l
Sunday, April 27: ·Cteveiand at
Washington , , -plm.

Fiidaj&lt;o lipolllllf

£$

"

RHP

'*'

1

1..0
'Saturday, April 26: •Philadelphia at

Montreal, 7 p.m.
Uont"'al

at

Wednesday ·Aprll 30: 'M ontreal at

Phi/adolph'18, 7 ;p:m.

at
at
at

•••MBIMW

p,

. Friday, April 25: Pittiburgh ·5 , N.Y.

Sunday, April 27: 'N .Y. 'Rani)BI'I at
Pittsburgh, 2 p.·m.

---

Tuesday, April 29: Plttabuogh at N.V.
Rangeis, 7p.m.

.....,._...._
~

~

I

....~c•OI

aCE

* 14.1 5 11
.Aprii10: 'Montreai4,Boston,
~·~

Mu

--

•

April12: 'Montre813, Booton 2, OT

9osto

~:- ~~:~~~Bo"::-:6·

OT

Aprii'19: Boaton5,Moiltr8al.

Thursday, ·May 1: Plttaburgh at N.Y.

Ra

"Pr/114: ~• . 0ttawa1
~

16: 'Pitt8burgh 3, Ottawa 1

'

Sunday, ·May -4: 'N .Y. Rangers at
Plttliburgl\, 2 p.m., H"""""'"'ry .
Monday, May 5: Ptnsburgh at N.Y.
Rangurs,7p.m., ifnB08UIIry ·

-..-ay, May 7: N.Y. Rangers at

Plttsburgh.T.BD.Ifl'lBC8IIU.ry

·.\pr/121.:- 5. Booton0
1!5 5 ., ~9
0
Apr!lg: l'l1llburgh·• .- O
Apr1111: '1'111ot&gt;urg115.&lt;0tifta S

7

ngers, p.m.

'

•UIUA •C31 5

5 n.C

Dolml ,_ 7

'

ICE
,

~.Apri24: D81mft-4, Co/oqdo

3,

.750 472 455

2 5 0 .286 _.. 412

W l T Pct
Chicago
Grand Rapids
Colorado
Kansas City

11

1 2

....

.....:-::"::·====--1

.Lennox signs on to play softball at Rio Grande .
BY MAliK w.w.

'

well and [
can't ~&lt;~:it
to
JOID
RIO
GRANDE
t h e m , "
~Diversity of Rio Grande
L ~ n no}
. ·bead softball roach David
~d.
I
Pyles is putting the finishliked the
· ing tollCbes on . his 2009
study tables
: class. The lalest to sign on
that
are
' the dotted line is Marissa
d t
man a o_ry,
: Lennox
of
Gahanna
and I hke
' Lincoln High School.
Lll•llX
the amaz! . Lennol(, an outfielder,
-ing ru;ade;w.as an all-district per~ Dlill11. I abo thought the
former last season for a girls on tbe team were ~very solid ~ led by ly nice as weU as Coach
Coach Tun
to.
Pyles."
LennoJt wiU be the thi!d
"Coach Campolo has a
Gahatl!la Lincoln player to really good program, good,
play .a t Rio Grande. Carrie quality kids come out of
Laufer and Jenna Gauthier · that progratD, he teaches
have also worn the ·Rio Red them well," Coach Pyles
and While.
said."Marissa also plays for
"I am eJtcited and pleased a higb quality summer pro' to be going to Rio. The. gram, so she's going to
softball team is doing really come in and oompete for an
!I'EaAI. TO THE TIM£S.SENnNEL

~-

1-0

Sa1urday. Apri/26:~at1la1rolt,3

p.m.

,..._, Aprll29: Oalrott .at~.

·K iri&lt;

3 5 o .375 483 472
3 5 0 .375 423 462
1 7 o .. 125 :182 481

Satunlay'o~

Cleveland at New York, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Orlando, 7:90 J),m.
Georgia at Arizona, 10 p.m.
Los Angeles at San Jose, 10SI p.m.

"'
Saarloos

~
outright

ln;N

to

1

SUndoy'l 'liiolno

No games scheduled
Sacramento (PCl).
.
. tlooiday 'o Gomr
NEW ~ YANITFS Placed RHP
Dallas at Philadelphia . e p.m.
BrianBT'UTlllf On the 15rday Ol. Recalled
'Friday, . . , 2
RHP Jonl!llthan Alba'•det·o and RHP
""
Philadelphia at Qeveland, 7 p.m .
ChrE ·Britton 1Iom ScrantonWI/ima-Barre
Grand Rapids at Colorado, 9 p.m.
CIL}. Designated C Chad 'Moeller for 1
'Salufdloy, . . , s
aaaignmant.
New OJ1eans at 'Georgia, 7 p.m .
SEATTI.'E MARINEI'Is-Agreed .to
terms with C -Kenji Johjima on a·1hree- 1 Dallas at Columbus, 7 p.m.
- - ,..._.,. ""'--..gh 2011 . I San Jose at Orlando, 7:30 p..m.
1f88.T COnu.-...eA-,.I)n, ""...,.,.
Kan&amp;aS City at Utah, 9 p.m.
TEXAS RANGERs--Recalled C Jarrod
Arizona at los Angeles, 10:90 p .m.
Salala--~·
~
~'-"
(I'CL)
"......,,.. .....,m •••, ...noma
.
Molidaf, ... li
ActivaladLHPEdclieGuan:lado1romthe
Chicago at Tampa Ray, 8 p.m.
15-day 'OL. Placed RHP Luis Mendoza
I
on 15-da:y DL, retroactive to 'April 24. 1
Rulu1188d C Adam'Methuse .
iiiASKEliBrALL
.
r· , 1111 I
lbell'
'litton
Sprint Cup Sbiiidin. .
'NBA-Fined
Maurice
Cheeks , I
After PhoeniiC. :
Phillldelphia coach. $25,000 for his Name
Wint Pl5
actiom attar a~n:;;.~me .
1
1215
1. Jeff Bunon
•
.IJO
2 K·•· B sch
1
f' s5 wi~OGibiiiU...u
3 Dale Earnhardt
0
CONS-S
-66
1
~~NTA FAl
lgnad K Kevin 1 4 : Jlmmle J~nson
_99
1
1
~~ ·
5 Ka · H 'ck
0
103
SAN 'DIEGO CHARGERS-Claimed 6. o.,vm .~IIYOr
1
;37
'
QB Casey Bnimlet .off .waivtmt from
·1i nnt_~~rtrn
7
0
137
Miaml
. ony •:newa
·
8 Cl'ntBo
0
17t
,H OC«£V '
· 1
wyer
•
-1 , .. " " " ' " ' 90.CaGri edBwiffards
3
-174
NEW YORK RANGER5-Agreed to 1 · reg . le
0 ·
· -176
termswlthG 'MilkaWiM«nan. -R ecalledG 11 . KaseyKahne
·0
-286
David LaNoveu, D A - Hutch/naDn, 12. Ryan Newman
1
-300
D ·Corev-Potter,O ·BobbySanguinetti,F --------------------·'If-----..,,.,.-....,,f'O..ne•Byers,F - ~!· t:.:'Go~on J
~
-~
~. f' auri KO!plkcpt&lt;i. F ~
·
n1n roe• r.
. •
_ , .m F 1'.•, "'-ren1NU ·1mm 15. IAatt Kensetll
0 'r · -346
-(AHI.).
16.KurtBusch
0 ."• ·358
1\\MI'A 'BAY L I G H T N - - 1 11. Juan Montoya
0 ., -361
5mw Stilting, coacto
(AHL). \ 18. DavidRagan
0 (
·381
hurbeen Te
Wid "to it 'COllege .::out- 19. Brian Vickers
o·
·981
lng ptdion and tbtolkwlll TIIJl:a:a•clso 20. Bobbv Labonte
o ;;-381

I

l

NASCAR

'

I · '"'

11

IIY MAliK.,,., '

dash and the 4x HJO-Il,leter
~lay. Site w.as tabbed honorable mention All-Scioto
RJO GRANDE - The Valley Conference in soa:et
University oj Rio Grande and earned both the P.A.C.E.
womens soccer and track and Bulldog awuds for
and field programs teamed 'Zane
up to bring in two-sport atb- .Graves was cxcit.ed ro si$fi
Ide K.ayla Graves from Zane with Rio Grande. "I'm excttTrace High SchooL .
ed to move oo with my life
Grave5, a defender an~ but still be close to home,"
scxx.er pi.tch and a sprinter in · she said.
track, shouJd provide a boost
Her reasons· f91' choosing
for both programs. She was Rio Grande were wide-rangvoted as the most improved ing. "Financially, the displayer for the. Zane Tl'liCe lance' from home, the sports
soccer team and 2nd team and the ooaches, the campus
all-4istrict in end and fleld, and my major," Graves said.
as weil as qualifying for the She plans to major in
region.als in the 400-meter Physical Therapy.

'lhMle:

or

..

for
·PPHS bead

roach Danny

O.:,~~r

._,_ "'-"-.. 5

•

g~et6an•"=:..~
"~
g o i n ..
~

througbojtt
the nigbl ·as
•
the · s~t
•
..P P 1_1 ~~~f - defense ~
lJie basepath ~· The B_it
Rj:d 1J13D38ed just ~ hils
~ by _Amick _and ·Palmer
With a stng!e apteec.
_
Hefoer pt~ up the ~
for ~· fanmng four aiid.
walk!ng one.
~mt PleaSI!nt got ..the
scormg started 10 the~
~ of the second mmng
WI~ !-·nm and added · two
moremtbetopofthefifth:JO
provide tbe only runs soced
oo the night
Wirh the seven team
Parkersburg
SoftDall
Tournament be,ginning early ·
Saturday mommg, tbc Lady
Knights softball squad Will
be· spending the night 1n
Paltaosburg before an eady
ftrst round game .a gain,t
Ritchie County 9 a.'lll.
Saturday.
Point Pleasant is then
scheduled to play Tyler'
Consolidated at noon aid
Fairmont East at I:~.
Tbe championship is
uled to begin at 3 p.m. ·
·
PI'~ '(;

P

1

rRO~ 'Q"'Pw..tloa-..,.,.. ~

ooo ooo o

=·-and

PPHS (1U): , . _

3

-

3

O'J 1

W)lllnt"""-

Graham.

WI' - Wyam. L P - -.

\

f USED CAR STORE

·a

Cli-

..

gives you

90 Days until your first payment! (That's July)

lnleNsl Rates • Low • 5.24%

Molley Down! Plul ·100 gallons

$lied lender's

wilb
Your trade is worth more. 3 month ·
mile

pp sh. out Parkersburg
us," said

ootfteld job. Sbe has
iar with Rio Grande other
ticed with us, I thought~ than fact that they did have
BY l..uBw Ctul
looked good, sbe's qwck her major and that academLCAU~lXREGISlER.COM
with a good ann, hits the • ic results of the softball
ball well and"knows the . team was ~ery g~ She
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
g~ ~ well._
plan~ ro maJor Social WOdl. · _ Point Pleasant limited
Site II rome m and oom,:
Her goals while playing , host Patkersburg ro J'ust two
pete for an outfield spot, for Rio Grande are "to hits and lhre
...4 •
Pyles reiterated. ·
.
. w. a Wt~ m
Le
di
sed h ....t-ome better than I am any semor mght VIctory
.
nno11
scu$ . w at" rigbi now and to help the .plans by the Big Red as
her best _assets~ - ~ also team with my strengths.~ I'PHS stole a J-0 Virtnrv
some things she needs to Le
'd
Frida .gh .
·--¥
work on beading to next
nno!t. Sill · · . ·
.
Y.nt 1 Ill Parken;burg.
1 v~l. "I feel-my best assets
ManssalsthedaJ!ghll!;rof . ~.mglb!:i~lii!COlld_pa&amp;s ate that 1 am fast, 1 have Dave and Jan Lennox of ~ ~~m two mghts,
good judgment on By balls Gahanna.
.
Fnday s vtctory helped
and 1 get the bat 011 the ball
She
JOIDS
Bnttny · ease the bad taste of a 1.0
most of the time, 1 have a Lovelace ' of !-'iddletow~, loss to Ripley the night
strong arm as well," sbe East _Carter H1gb Sc:bool s !'efore as Pomt .Pleasant
said. "I need to work on Stevte Sh-u.P, .Lrnd~y unproved_to 1~-8 on the seablocking all ground balls Slevens of Ri_verstde High son heading mto the final
.and not bitting. wimpy PQp- School, Jessica Hart of .week of tbe ~gular season_.
ups when rumiers are on Unioto High School and
Ace T~sa Wy~ ag~
base."
Chelsu Brooks of Triad played a big part_ m the VICLennox .also pointed out High School as the 2009 tory as . s~ pttched !he
that she was not very famil- softball recruiting class.
shutoot while ~so leading
the offense, gomg 3-for-l
with a triple. Wyant finished
1be night with eight stribouts and one walk in picking
up the victory.
" Kayla is ~y going to happy, very excillld to have
Anna Sommer backed up
help us, I know for swe and her as a future member of W~ant's ~ormance with a
I really think: that she' U be the Redwomen team."
parr of hits including an RBI
while
Morgban
able with her speed, ro help
Graves discussed .what she triple
in soccer as wen," Rio felt her best assets were and- Mullins added the other hit
Gt:andc bead track and field also mentioned what ·she
die night with a single a&amp;
ooacb · Bob Willey said. feels she .-.Is to work on as Point Pleasant rack:ed up
"Site's a very hard worker. it ~s · to socca: ~rm half a dozen hits on the
Tdlcing · with her coaches, qwck:, I listen to my peers, night.
Point
Pleasant
also
they bad ~ but praise and I'm · 4 good leader. I
for her, just the tdea of how don't back down," site said. received nice bunt work
lw'd she works.
. "I need to wodt on my ball from Jennifer Wickline woo
"Sbe 's just an outstanding skills and my ball handling." gave up a few sacrifice
young lady. Great famill;,!
Hert9aJ while playing for bunts to help move runners.
was eJtcibng to go to
Rio Grande? "To build as a Sommer. also produced a
Trace and sign her. Almost player and as a leader," site couple of nice plays to keep
all of her teammales were said. ·
tile shutout going.
there, so that says a lot for
Kayla is the daughter of
"'verall we played a solid
be.r, what kind of person she Eric and Angie Graves of game. Except for a couple
ist Willey added "''m vezy Cbillicothe.
errors, this was a good win

Redwomen sign ZT's Kayla Graves.for two sports
SPECIAl TO THE TIMES-SlNTIN£l

_ ,

~

doing any fwtber damage, WP-Sooull'-z._..n

.

-

PF I'll

o .na . 537 421

:.:r:S

ATHENS

E

Wea11i1n DM8ign ·
WlTPct l'FPA .
4 4 0 .500 437 4;16
San.Ari.zona
3 4 0 .429 ll1i5 404
los Angeles 3 5 0 .375 .sa 500
Utah
0 9 0 .000 481! 594

KANSAS CITY ROYALS-PIBOl!!CI·RHP

IM.S

28:

o

3 • o .429 . , . 981

Canlral Divloion

-

Philadelphia 3, OT, Montnlal leads .....

'April

7 2 o .778 535 432

6 2

AIIERICAN CONI E1

Hideo Noma on waivers1or ·the purpose
ofO~isKlAcondNDitiona~.:r-HlETI·C~ •sslg··"

••w1·11.

Monday,

New Orleans
Onando
Georgia
Tampa Bay

BAlTIMORE ORIOLEs--Placed LHP
.Adam Loewen on the 15-day DL.
Purchased the contract o1 INF Eider 1
l'ridlry'ITorTes1rnm Norfolk (IL).
j
Grand Rapids 72 . Kansas City 311
BDSTON RED SOX...:...Purchased the
contract Of -RHP Bryan Corey from New Orleans 70, Utah '56
:Pawtuc:Qt (IL). Optioned INF Joe I Chicago 65, Colomdo 58

(Z
ell 7;)
EA5!IEIWI CGl
J NCE
PI" , '
Th da
........II ,.,.. M - - 1 -4 .
Ulll y, ........
~:
Onu'

'r!li..lladalph
' 7 ·p.;m.
rn
...

2 6 0 250 386 438
Sou1liem Divlolon
WlTPct PFPA

Thurstonoutright10PawtudultandRHP
Justin 'Masterson to Portland {El).

ICE

4 4 o .SQO 396 391 ·

ColumDus

•n.rta.n 1 __.,_

9'"n ·&amp;.....,.2:

•'

New York

•

. ...... ~,

Apn110: Dalla&amp; 4, Ana~ o
Aprli12: Dallas_S, Ar.lleim.2
Aprll15: Anahefm 4, Dallas 2
April17 : Dallas 9, Anaheim 1
Aprll18 : Matleim ·5, ~2

I

Philadelphia . 8 0 0 ' 1.000 528 .tOO
Dallas
1 o o 1.000 353 299
Cleveland
4 3 0 .571 410 426

ML.B--SuspendedTorontominorteague
CJonathanJaspetorSOgamesforvio-lating 1he Minor League Drug Prevention
and Treatment 'Program.

z

•

Eaetem OiviMW'I
W l T Pct PF I'll

a• .::;.••

Aprii14 : 'Minnesots3,Colorlldo2, 0T
Aprii1E : Cotorado.S, MinnaBDia,
April17: Colorado 9, Minneio&amp;a.2
Aprll19: Colorado 3, Minnasala 2

1

-NATIONAL
........ -~~
t..oo'1iuo E
CO E

'fRANsAcnONS

:llll' ·~·--

Aprti1 7:Boaton 5. Montrea1 1

I

·&amp;,'' pJ
'Aprii"9:'Calgmy s,:S.Joaa2
....-10: San ,...._ ......- o
...,.._
- 4.• .._,,
'Aplt/1s:•c.tgary
. -·s
'Aplt/15:SanbeS,Cilgary2
.April 1~: ·San . - 4 ,'Calgary 3
April20· Ca.ln•ry 2 San Jo&amp;e 0
· 22:· SanItt"'
April
. - '5, Calgary 3

s.n

I

·PRoFoonAU

Tuasday, April 29: san Jose at oa:nas.
7:30p.m.
· Wednesday, April SO: San Jose at
1la/la&amp;, 9p.m .
l'riday, May 2: Datlas at San Jose , 10
;p.m., tf nBC8&amp;6ary
Sunday, 'MEiy 4 : San Jose at Dallas, 9
1P in1.. If 11BOOBS8JY
Tuesday, 'May 6: Dallas at San Jose, to
&lt;p.m.. H,neoessary

Rangers4, 1'-Ufllh leacls """"" 1-0

!'

coach

r.p.m.

p

-

on
• · Saturday 'May 3: Philadelphia
H
..n Montrual, 7 p.m., If T18D68iry
9
...,.......y,
:
at ouston , :OJ\.!
Sunday
May
4: 'Montreal
p.m.
Philadelphia, 7 p.m., If f1BOIIBSBJY
Friday; May 2: Houston at Lhah, TBA. tf
Tuesday !May 6: Philadelphia
':;~ay4': Utlih at-Houston. i'BA, tf ·Montreal, 7-p';m.,lf T18D8IS8fY

T~:.~Im.Aprll 29

1

'Monday, April 28: Toronto at Ortando, .

1

.

T-hufS:dav. May 1· San Antomo at
Phoemx TBA n neoessary
~-turda'y M'ay 3· ~oen··· at 'San
= . .
. r"
Antonio , TBA, If necessary

94, Orlando leads series 2-1

Saturday, Apri126: 0 rlandoatTomnto. 3
p.m.

.391 6

·-w _._,

I

i

Phoeni.J:, 3:30p.m.
.
, Tuesday, April 28 : PhoeniJ: 81 San

Tuesdav. Aprli22: Orlando 104. Toronto

.652 -

nger&amp; ·

: ••· ·

· San AntoniO leads se
.j
Sunday, "Pfil 27: San Antonio Bl j Aprii20 : 0&amp;Uas4,Aneheim'1

,00

GB

-~

~I ~1 68 ' ~:VV. RangorsRa 55 · ~~ 33

.,..,

Tuesda April 22 : San "ntonio , 02 1
Phoeni.:Y9s
' 1
. San Antonio 115 [
F 'da
.t.. ... .
1 25
Tl
!(• .......-n
'
.
ries
1
01 99

~ ~

0r11n0o VI Jprpntp
Sunday, April 20: Ortando 114. Toronto

2'k

·

5: Detroltat~ . 10

..,,
!LQ
~- April 25: llBIIIiB 9, Sari Joaa 2,
1JT, Da/W;- serios1-0
'Sunday, April V : 001185 at San Jose , 9

. . . .1

1
::1J.Y.:-

Saturda ~I , 9. San Antonio
Phoeni.: ~·15
·
·

t

6'1.

•4."

·'-"'13:,._, ..181811y-4, 'N.Y."-11n S. OT

Saturday, tM ay 3: Dallas at New
Orleans, TBA. If neoussary

TBA . tJ :necessary

11 12 .~78 4
9 14 .391 6

w

3

1 ',
2

Rar-

n . -.1111 ......
Orleans, 7 p.m.
.
• ••
Thursclay, 'May 1: New Orleans at I Aprl9 : Cotorado 3. 'MinllfJBOW 2, OT
Dallas, TBA, H necessary
April 11:&lt;M;nnesotB 3, Colorado 2, OT

llllllonlil.......

13 11 .542
12 n .522
New Yort&gt;;
11 11 .500
• Washington
8 16 .333
c.ntn~DtwWon
w L Pet

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

'Aplt/9: N.Y
4, __, t
~ 11 : ·N.Y. IRw;gas'2, ·"New ~II

Dallas'92

1

1il Y Yankees a1: Cle¥etand 1105 ·p ·m
! Sunday ~ril 20: Phllactelphia 90
. .
' '
' .
,._,_._~o~
'
' Boston at Tampa Bay, , :-40 p.m .
' ..,-,;rtii.IIIV\.1,
.
. Minnesabt at 1i
2:05
I
Wednesday April 23 : Detroi1 105
· Baltimore at ~=· ·.~mSox:. 2:05 Philadelphia 8e
'
Am.
go
.
FTiday, April 25: Phila$ia 95, Detroit
"ronmto at Kansas City, 2:10p.m.
I 75. P.h/ladelphialeads series 2-1
Oakland at Seattle. 4 :1 0tp.-m.
Sunday, .Aprll27: Detroit at Philadelphia ,
7 ·p.m.
, LA. ~ngels at Detroit, 8:05tp.m.
. .
Tuesday, April 29: Philadelphia at
"
Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
e-Oiwlliae'
Thursday,
May
1:
Detroit
et
W L Pet G'B
Philadelphia, TBA, if necessary
· Florida
14 9
.609 Saturday, May 3: Philadelphia at Detroit,
· ' Phlla:lelphia
'• ~HI!IIma

·

Tuesdau, April 29: Dallas at New

.

. un y, ay--. . :tanta
if-neoessary

•''*''

.

up

- y.

Sundaw, a ...ril V : 'New Qfleans at

EAS1E
·
Rill CONFERENCE ·
i
BD11onys.Atllrftl
-I Sunday,April20: Boston 104, Atlanta 81
Wednesday, April2~: Boston 96 , Atlanta
, 77, Boston loa~ senes 2· 0
I Saturday, Apnl26. Boston at Atlanta, 8

. ().()t,:S!OSp.m.
·. QMian:J (O~scherer 1..()) at Seattle

Sundllr'a 0 . . .

:c

r.~&lt;•allas.
r.
•9.•
_~
;.-"p.m.

Monday, Apnl 28. BoBI:on at Atlanta, 8
, p.m
.
~~) . 7:10p.m.
Wednesday.Apnl 30: A1t&amp;nta at Boston,
TDftlniO (Marcum 2-1) at -Kansas City TBA , tf necessary
·
(11kK:hevar ~1), 7:10p.m.
Friday, May 2:'Soston at A.11anta, TBA. tf

. (Bedard 1.0), 9.10 p.m. .

C

If•....,......, &amp;·MI 22· •New Orteans ·127
I .,.:;--'/
.
'
_ .. .,.• 03'..,.,
1 Friday,.\pr/12S: Dallas 97, New'Orloens
87, NewOrleano leads-2-1

'eell•"oriwtion
P.-,c;rt •G '-""
fiRST :FIOtlJND
~71)

~It GMt...

•
, 1heir option on Damtn Rumble., asststam
Thursday, May 1: Detroit at Colorado. coach.
'
,0 p.m.
COLLEGE
~- May 3: Co/olado at Detroit, 1
CUlVER - STOCKTON-Named
'J).m.,
CaTV
rrmothy Southers women'5 baskeball

:p.m., •• ,, .
ary
April21 : Wash~ -I. Ph~&lt;2 .
!fJ&amp;duwsat&amp;)', May 7: CoDrado 81: ~.
Aprii22: PI ......... 3.Wis1Mgbi.2,0T TBD, fir
my

7 . . . _ n.IQSS
l. Satufttiw, ~I 119: New '011ean5 ~04.

~8•1

!Rain
•Oakland-4, Seaule3

,D p.m .

1

11M. ~flEIOOSSilry

PRo BASKETBALL

. - 6 . Minnesall! 5,10 innings

Sunday, Apri127, ao08

llprl ~9: WllllllingiDII'S, Phil I ; lil.2

Wednesday, April 30: Denver 111: L.A..
lakers, TBA, If neoessary
Fri~, 'May 2: L.A. Lakers at Denver,
"ITBA, tf&gt;necessary
Sunday, ~ 4: Benver at LA. l.akers.,

(Pennv 3--2), 10:10 .p .m.
.
SuN:~.,--. Gamea
! Attanta at'N.V. Mets , 1:10p.ril.
Chioago ,Cuos at Washington, , :35 p.m.
Rorida at Milwaukee , 2:05p.m.
Houston at St. Louis. 2 :15p.m.
Arizona at San Diego , 4:05p.m.
1 Cincinnati at San -Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, • :10 p .m.

,.......,._ca.• ~Is 4, 'Detroit 3

20T

· ·

(*

I 10:30-p.m.

•Colorado (Rectman 2·1} at L.A. Obdgers

Philadelphia at Pinsburgh. 1:55 p.m.

16 .333 7

my

Den"''·

'I

PctGB
£25 -

If,. .

(GermanoG-2),3:55p.m.
,
I e I ' 1n..t
Florida (Hendrickson 4-1) al Milw~
Sum&amp;ay, April .20: !LA. ~~..Hers 128,
(VII'anueva 1.-2), 7~05 p .m.
Danv&amp;f 1li.C
.Philadelphia
(Kendrick
1-2)
at
Apri/2!1: LA. ~ 122,
Pittsburgh (Qorris Q-S), 7 ~05 p.m.
Denver -:107. L.A.Uken; &amp;ldwrifi 2-0
Ohicago , Cubs (Zambrano 3-"' ) &amp;1
saturday, -April 26: LtA. Lake!"S lit
Washing10n (Chico D-4 ). 7:10 p.m.
5:30 p;m.
CinCinnati (Belisle 0-,) at San Francisco
Monda.v, ~rl128:LA. Lakers at Denver,

10 13 .435 3
, .0 1-4 .417 3'h

. t.o&amp;Angelos
:: lo.kland

Pf 5
.t. ?' 5
J
April11 : Wllohington 5, Ph~ 4
Friday, 'May 2 : CleW~ land at Washington,
April 19· PhUadelptua 2, WuhingiDh 0
1 April 15 Philadelphia 6, -nglofl S
TBA. H necessary
'Sun13!1, JMIIt ..: WUhingiOn m ·Apr1117: n-, ' \ 4 11l 4, Wt:::B•UU• "S,

'Wednesday, April SO: Washington lit
Cleveland, TBA

St. Louis 1 Qewland, lfM.
(W•;nwright 2·1 ), 1:10 p.m.
Arizona (Owings 4..0) at San Diego !
&amp;1

12 11 .522 2
12 12 .500 .2'1:
,o 14 .4n 4 '.1.

Pet
.571
,, 12 .:UB
10 13 .455

•D.atrolt

I

.591

I

Houston {OswaH: 2·3) at

()aMn/J- :

: ll'crronto

~~ffaloreceivedapairof

BendAre.;iteamslonetally
coming in the third. singles each from Tuckec
J Buffalo pitchers dido't and
Belcher
with
home, it's a her.
ann, seems to have a ........... · -"- 8· WHS ._____ ·th tbe
BY MARK W•••._
.,.w.....
·
""""'
wt
Wmterstein
swatting
a
sin.SPECIAl TO llfE 11MESSEN1'1NEt
small rom~we kept watching more attitude.
She's athletic B'
d
...:o..:
1
·5
ISOD . uo · su ....ng out
gle and Scott driving in
munity, they closely every week and she enouthgh; so ""! ~~~ rulin
berg during_/ the . seven inning three wt'th a double.
RIO GRANDE The ·
have a good ~y ·looked good," Pyles out at we won I """' at
CODiest'
-'
.
University of ftio Grande
softball pro- added
somewhere else, but right
.
: ,_ . Scott came away Wtth the
gram and
Hart feels confident in her now she's going to come in : ~u~al~ J_um~ out t~ ·a ·!pitching win after going .
womens softball program is
coach, and ability, and she discusjed and compete for the catchea tn e opentng five innings and giving up
pleased to announce the
signing of Unioto High
they have a what her best assets are in er's job."
frame wh_en Tucker ~d iiD u"'earned nm on six bits
School's Jessica Hart ro a
good cafete- playing softball. "l have a
Hart plans to major in Belch~r stngled to .begtn with nine strikeouts. Lewis
national letter of intent to
ria
with great attitude. I pick peo- Education/Intervention -the Btson frrst. Lewis ~d 'finished IJP on tbe bill for
. play softball begiiming in
great food," pie's heads up when they are Specialist.
Scott then drew successive the Bisons and gave up two
the 2008-09 academic. year.
H.rt
she said.
down," she said. ~1 love to
Her goals while at Rio free passes to sco~ the f!rst hits while fanning silt.
Hart. a catcher woo also
Hart came have fun, but I think I might Grande are "to obtain a run of the game. FoUo~mg Zuspan went the distance
· c~~hes and plays second to know about Rio five years need to work on gettiitg my degree in a major that is sat- a slrike out Zuspan h1t a for Waham.a and was
·
for the Lady Shennatis, ago. ~r dido 't know much bead up when it is down, isfying both personally and batter to chase hoJ?C anoth- tag ed with tbe loss afiu
is an aii-«Jnference and is about tbe.scbool, I was inJro,- other than that, there is ooth- financially and 1 just want to er run before Parkins lofted · ~
' gh
·
•cu=ntly batting .500 for the duced through the indoor · ing."
play softball," she said.
a_ sacrifice fly to right to !!vmg ~p el 1 run.s 00 su
season.
.
·
winter softball league," she
As it s.tands right now,
She is the daughler of gtve Buffalo an early 3-Q htts wt~,L llandstnkeouhit~,
"I am very eJtclted (about said. · ·
Pyles sees Hart coming in Angela· Mittan and the late edge.
wau.s
two t
signing with Rio Grande),
"I bad not seen her pial and cOmpeting for the catch- George Hart.
Wahama cut the lead to
· .
. .
.
She joins Brittny Lovelace two at 3-1 in tbe thi!d wbeit
Tbe White F~ns will
they have a great softball high school or travel ball, ing positio11 with fellow
team," Hart said. "I have Pyles said. "She oome in newcomer Chelsea Brooks. of Middletown, OH, East Brice Clat1c reached on an ~gam try and_bring a ~ro
got to know a couple of the here (for the winter league) ~Jessie will rome in com- Carter High School's Slevie error and was .followed by Its current stx game slilk
players and they are ~y and ~y impressed every-, pete for the starting job that Sha!p, Lindsey Slevens of back-t{)-back singles Derek when ~ Bend ~ team
nice. I'm just anxious to body that saw her play. The Whitney (Harless) is leavi.ng Rivc:roide H1gh School, Veazey
and
William enlettluns Poca _o ojMondly
meet new peor,Ie and I hope umpires, talked ro them and open,~ he said. "Sbe's an Marissa Lennox of Gahanna Zuspan to fiU the sacks fora 5 p.m. ounng.
. ·.
. I love it there. '
obviously, coaches, and a:t:hletic, played in our winter Lincoln,
and
Cbelsea with White Falcons. Caleb
1
Hart said~ w~ sever· (sophomore pitcher) Sophie ~ and kind of liked the Brooks ofTriad High School ' Roach's two out single w 001~!
18 0
al factors in ber deciding on Young coached ber wmter looh of her, site bits the ball as the 2009 sofiball recruit- broUght Clark around buta a 300 500 x
8u
· Rio Grande. "It's close to leagueteamand~yliked real well and has a great mgdass.
. base running blunder pre- -S(4-"J: ~andUrdot•~
====~·====-====='-"====--==-'------'-----=------~--........
venteil ltleFatoons ·rrom- =~1~·10). licolt, t:nla (e)~

19 9

'I'.....,. Bay

a

Redwomen softball ad.ds Unioto's Jessica Hart

I

WlPctGB
15 10 .600 -

~--=--.,

Vll1900: i!. ...,.,

Oincirn:lati at San Francisco. lale
Colorado al L.A. Dodgers. late
·
Sm dq 's GM.a
I'Jianto (T.Hudson 3-1) at N.Y. Met5
(IMine 1-2), 1 :10 p.m.
,

lc&amp;ct .......

e.tDiil

in the thinl.
A
five
run foaitb
BUFFALO, W.Va.
by Buffalo
The muggles ()Olltinued for
blew the
the Wahama .While Fai()Oll
game wide
baseball teant
Friday
open wi~
evening as the Bend Area
all
five
diamond nine dtopped its
Bison runs
sixth stnight outing .after
co ming
falling to host Buffalo by
a f t e r
7
an 8·1 lllliiEinI
Z u s ·P a n
Despile out-hitting the struck out two of the first
Bison by an 8.(i oount and three batters he r.oed in the
getting a s~g pitching inning. Wmtersrein qJmC'l
outing from sophomore the frame with an infield
right-hander
WiUiam bit and aftec the next two
Z11span, the While Fali:ons bitters struck out Harris
failed to suppress a couple coaxed a walk. Tucker sin-·
of big innings from the gled home a run before
Buffalo offense. !£be Bison Belcher and Lewis walked
plaled ·th~ first inning to chase home anodler
nms before breaking the Buffalo run. Adam ~
contest. open with a five run . then clean:d the sacks with
fourth frame to gain the 8-1 a bases loaded double ro
baseball victory. Wahama give the Bison a five run
fell to 4-11 following the inning and an 8-1 advanloss while highly ranked . tage.
.
Buffalo impiuved to 13-10.
Although
Wahama
Zuspan issued seven free reconled a bit in each of the
passes during his route final · ~ frames the ·
going performance with While Falcons ·failed ro
five ,of those base runners mount anything considered
eventually scoring which ro be a serious ~ with
_
,
.
•
ultimately proved ro be the Buffalo holding on to the 8PI
0¥
:u. . 15,PolniF
,.
d'"
Tbe young
.
.
h
..
c 122 &lt;~&amp; - ·
15 no
1uerence.
I iriump .
~s ~~~0
sophomore fanned II bitVeazey had pair of sin(3) o n d - l'odunovoc.
~rs in . easily. his most gles and a double and
PPHS (12-10): B.J. lloyd, Tyoon- mtpresstye outmg of the Zuspan two singles to pace
~i~: Henlmon (51 ll!1d Henlmon. 2008 spnng season.
the WHS offense. Garrett
WP - V11111011. LP - I.Joyd.
Wahama.. although col· Underwood, Caleb Roach
HR- CHS: ~Toporia. -""*&gt;J,
the. an d Anthony 8ond also
none on; Ryan Vinocn. 1hirtl inning, none Jec un· g e1'ght h't
I'S on
on.
night, managed just one reconled ooe safety apieCe
-------------~--------------------,---~---- unearned run off a pair of for Coach Tom CuUen's
·
·
Bison hurlers with the

BY Gall\' Q • •

SCOREBOARD

.. ...., li11ld-6tntilltl
...

'

PageRs

Yriii1~~

low interest)
(Jblt~ 100

�•

P

e

•·I

'

•• 5I

7 eSl

I

•••••...,.., .... ,. zallt•Oan:a "

ct.- -6entiad

.

.

Tougbman bouts draw legislative attentio~......

13-~d

I

fiPu

UTilE ROCK. Alt.. 1be Jlll•llffholn•: puucb duK
.nmgbt Jmid O.nn111 took
with it his memory of tbe

'Jeu!bna in
February. HarRison said
Thngtmll!!iswmogtolct.the
uncOuditioned and 11I1Jftpared enter !be rio! ..gaintt
figbta's ..mo lbave. DIJlSttm1
martial lilts.

'11;. boxer from ~Win

SIDOd for 1 moment against
abe yellow aud black JqjiC5.,
.his eyes ~ ·over as if he

II

•••

· were ~:md ~ his 90
""" ••ids m abe spol'ligbt .of a

local ~- klllrnllment.
Slowly, - slid 011 the ropes
Olito bis •
side. While a
·OQgside doollx .,.. • he! bis

As lbe lidtts fell in the
basement or Little R.ocll;'s
. Statcbouse
Convention
Carter Stubby Stumbaugh
- a fanner Cabot mayor,
flliiDICf
siooal candidate and
night· s ring
BI!DOIJIIOCII" cbaMised the
crowd into silenre for the
national anthem. With
whoops m1 ~ punct.u8ling the end of "lbe Star
SJ»ngled Banner," the fi,gbt
on. ·
.
.
For Duncan's bout. ~
ncnt Corby BiiJirlislcy
en~ the ring fust. The 35year-old Billingsley .bad
fought in five · other
'lOughman ~sts
in
Atbnsas ll!ld Texas, once
I;RWnv a bone in his right
~

oong:

.

.......

Corby Billingsley of Little ~ocll. left, and Jenid Duncan of. DeWitt, filht, "filhl dui'ITC the
loughman contest Friday Feb .. 29 In Little Rook. All(. Questions about the &lt;figlilers' .heBII'tl
·niM! plllllued loughman since Its aeat1on by Michigan pomoter Art Oore. Ronald Miller,
one of the first to die from IR1uries suffered In a To• -ITIIIn toumamerrt, climbed Hck Into
Uni11el'Sity Hospital bed. His the ring for a second fight l~ •1981 even ttlough.t1e ';~ dizzy and was seelrg double.

CODCUSiiicm Wali Cbe lltcst
injuly for 1 boxing attraction
in wbich 11 fighters have
'died since it &amp;tliiltd in 1979. ·
Duucan didn't know until
11f1cr payiD&amp; his $SO C'J!I1n!oo!o
fee that muy on the card bad
far more experience dJan

nr mat owns Toughman, said showroom floor.
bis oori1pany puiS on fights in . The
Albnsas
State
16 SlltteS, wbile franchises Athlelic Oommission meets
nm the n:sl. including those in tbe back, next to a iliilplay
in Atbnsas. He refemd of spa deaning supplies.
questions to Robertson, who Mattingly, the commiswotb for On the Move sion's secretary. We:! be tries
· what tbe contest's IJD""'rr AdvertisiJ18 of Little Rock. !D go to ~stling and boxiiJs
biJ1in2 ~
whicb
arg1,11ius
the events throughout die state,
"W""Iih
. it's a 'If AibnsiS bouts.
but sometimes his scbrdnlc
you want to it, you can do "There's IJ'C!!!eildous risk. doesn't allow him the lime.
tt' type thing," said Dr. Every f\gbter is advised of One of the panel's seven
Robert
Cantu,
a that. It's laid oot in laymen's unpaid commissioners might
Mas88cbusetts lleUIOSUlJJCOD terms, it's · laid out in attend a bout instead.
·
aiUcal &lt;of the toummlcDts. legalese,~ Robertson said.
But with Thugbman, com1be poiCDiial for ilg1lly is 'Oearly, all of these yoq mission memberli simply
much higbcr than it ·would be IIICII aDd women are niade have 110 authority if tbey see
if tbcre wcrcn't that mis- aware of 1he risk that they something they dOn't like_
~h of experience and take when they enter the
In 2001, then-Sen. Bill
trammg."
ring.fl
Gw~ sponsored a bill,
And, in A$anS8S, the state
• ••
passed mto law, exempting
Athlclic Commission basn 't
Arkansas
Vacuums "boxing elimination COD"
had authority over the Janito1'ial SIIJ'plies sits in tests" from the commission's
m•tches since a 2001 chauge southwest Llttle Rock., a oversight The bill instead
in state law.
nondescript factory look- simply Iimital the length of
''We actually don't have ,aJike&lt;lifastreetofwornstrip matches, required that fightthe legislation to regula~ malls and fast-food reS!aU· ers be sober and said a doctor
Toughman," said Johnny rants_ Btigbt yellow mop must be ringside.
Maningly, the sOle pan-time \oo'Ckds, floor polishers and
Albnsas, however, does
employee of the oommis- shiny trasb cans line the not traOit fighters to ensure
sian, which ~J...Illlrterly
in the back of a ·
Rock
janitorial company_ "They
don'! pay any ·gate ttceipts
IIJid we don't license anybody or anything."
But after the February
death of aT~ fighr:r
in TCUlbna, an Adcansas
lawmaker is ·wmtiug 10 bE
the eveors once described by

...

Cl ·

:

Tw•b lrD of FJkMt, 1l:las, The bell ~· The lW!
died al.W two mpts of shin1css ~ aaue to 1M

ASSOCIATED MESS

vital signs, 2.,000 &amp;us IIIISIItialed 011 $2~ cups of beef'
booe\labedclay. .
The aowd-ple!Siug fights
wcat em. but it 'Wil1d be several boars befon! Duncau
fully· ·awKened ·in a

Jlpet~D ~·

'

w•

they don't enter new OOIIICsts
soon after bciDg tnoct.ed out
in another. ·
Robertson provided the
bill, said Gwatncy, now
chairman of tbe Aricansas
Democratic Party_
"i.¥dia Robertson knows =·against another man's

more about boxing and boxing rcgulalion than anybody
in AibnsiS and that's who
brought me that bill. She's a
real .safety-conscious person." Gwatncy said. "1iust
me, that bill there was for tbe
good of boxing, not for its

detriment"
Gwatney said that, without

center of lbe . rillg aM
IJillqsley Sllatcd ~
pnndbes. ~:-f~
4itttlll't die~ ~

jabs !'!.C:~ tadlt!

'

.

Sunday, Apri127, 2008

.

me '
.IIIII ~
:a Qreet fight. . a
ca•1Jlbt Duncan off ;guard.
But Duncan countered
with lllU£lb -of me same +-

jabs of

ttading blows umil the cud d
the 00-serond ·round.
Duncan, wemy, ·~
for Round 2 wilh his :arms wj
ro protect his fllcc, but wilbirl
seconds WBS backed .00 •
comer. Bill~'s ~ ·
band
co
. widl·
~!.{w. Diml:an'seyt!J
rolled •
bis body a d
and bis bands dlopped tu ~
liide.
· -·
The world sliDned away. : .
i&lt;rlio- c
~.~
Duncan awoh iCYCa,t
boun larer in 1 ~hilt
to a "'WID!d of Oi mw !J

- family and &amp;ien-11 0..
liling his bed. A docter Sill
Duncan suffered a ·"..._
--:ussion :and discbag ;~
Duncan cntcm1 the riDg
Duncan spent a half41D!i!r
after lifting some weights the ~lying to itllw:M-=r ~ ~
week before die fight and pmted his a1r ad .i t
~ mmc1 a p1m~ ~s ·before be bcpn, ~
bag 11 a !.ocai gym. He
l~Rlmcmbcring patts ~ dia
seen smne of die other fighthr. He couliln't ·!eCal
ers at mixed-Dllll'tial atts 000- w
. he landed mm
tests and boxmg' matches; -•n"'- against BillinRs1ef. ·•
Tongh!!ll!n rules uy fighters ~·Duncan hopes ~
cannot have more than five effon: to ban ~

his bill, amateur bo!Wlg victories .in the Pft:WOUS five
matcbes could have gone on years.
withciut ringside physicians_
"What's the reason for me
Louisiana,
Missouri, to pay $50 to go oirt there
Tennessee and Thxas all ban · and t0 be 80me professional
Tougbm•n-style
bouts. amateur . boller's J'unching
Oregon liUikes getting a bag? It's unreal; Duncan
license for a tournament said.
nearly impossible.
. Nonetheless, Duncan wailArkansas state Rep. Steve ed in lhe comer for tbe ·bell,
Hanelson bec•me ~ . wearing black :head gear in banning the fights when his hands swnting inside the

a

doesn'tcometoo soon. His l
l/2 rounds lit a flame_
drives me to want to
fight more in the~~~
just because of ·-~- lib:

"'t

this guy," l)lmcan Said. "~
makes me want ro .figbt l1liR
. because I want to go and l
want to show 1hosc people
that, bey, someone just Gff
the street can figbl as good :as
them."

~C!~~i~
'11UIIl!!ll

cocldi2bting."
-

. At
Little
Rock's
Powerhouse Gym, fighters
hoping, to enter that week's
Toughman competition line
up, padding shoelcss across
induslrial gray carjleting for
a weigh-in. Factory linemen,
conSIIUclion workers and the
unemployed seek to show
tbeir dominanre or let off
steam. -''We just bad a tornado up
1bcre in Clinton. I got my
bouse toukeli away," said 22year-old Johnnie Arnold. "]
just want to go let liome
agee out"
.
Amok!, like others before
him, wasn't bo!bered by previous deaths in Tougbman

,.

'I •

evCIII:S.

~

"Man, r d hate to be the
dude who died or the dud!:
'IWo killed him, but man, you
tnow, ... it's a competition,"
said .chris. Haycraft, a ~~vir:oo artiS! from
·PtOIIIOier-Lydia RobensOO
warns conteS!ants 1hey'il
figbl shirtless - unless 1beY
ae women, Boxers can ..,.,..
into tbe riDg in wlrt
1bey lib: - as long as .a prefilbt bmlthalyza" test f!lUJ]d
:DO UllllC&amp; of llcohol.
"'CaUinly no aJmhol. or
dru&amp;t." Robenson said. uyou
c:1D biCk to thll M~j"
·~ about tbe
en bealtb have plaped

.

1Joolsif

ao

1bvalnMn Iince its mation
by Jofidripn proiiiOiel' Art

Ooae. lm•Jd Millet, one of

die fint to die from injuries
iidf&amp;ed in •Toual•llllil tour, •• ,.,.. cUmbed" ·bark .into
tbe
for • lflCODd fight in
1981 even thoup be felt
· dizzy d Wali ""MDg double.

rml

A former Golden Gloves
one-time
OJvmpic tv-fo•' also have
di&amp;id hom--~~ suf&amp;:n:d
during tbe fi~. .
promoters
Toughman
mess tbat each of lbe hundreds of tiplti ....,., aCrosS
the ooomuy are IDOIIitoml by
a
doctor and an
C!llpC'.,... w!.rcfmlc. fip· s
alto are~ to we.- 16cmaoe gloves, headgear,
~ profCCtion IDl JDOIIIh:.

winDer . and

riDJsidc

,.,..Stephen
...

Coppler of
AdorcAble Promotions Inc.,
the Bay City, Mich., coriipa·
• j

...... .

•

••

•

•

•

�•

P

e

•·I

'

•• 5I

7 eSl

I

•••••...,.., .... ,. zallt•Oan:a "

ct.- -6entiad

.

.

Tougbman bouts draw legislative attentio~......

13-~d

I

fiPu

UTilE ROCK. Alt.. 1be Jlll•llffholn•: puucb duK
.nmgbt Jmid O.nn111 took
with it his memory of tbe

'Jeu!bna in
February. HarRison said
Thngtmll!!iswmogtolct.the
uncOuditioned and 11I1Jftpared enter !be rio! ..gaintt
figbta's ..mo lbave. DIJlSttm1
martial lilts.

'11;. boxer from ~Win

SIDOd for 1 moment against
abe yellow aud black JqjiC5.,
.his eyes ~ ·over as if he

II

•••

· were ~:md ~ his 90
""" ••ids m abe spol'ligbt .of a

local ~- klllrnllment.
Slowly, - slid 011 the ropes
Olito bis •
side. While a
·OQgside doollx .,.. • he! bis

As lbe lidtts fell in the
basement or Little R.ocll;'s
. Statcbouse
Convention
Carter Stubby Stumbaugh
- a fanner Cabot mayor,
flliiDICf
siooal candidate and
night· s ring
BI!DOIJIIOCII" cbaMised the
crowd into silenre for the
national anthem. With
whoops m1 ~ punct.u8ling the end of "lbe Star
SJ»ngled Banner," the fi,gbt
on. ·
.
.
For Duncan's bout. ~
ncnt Corby BiiJirlislcy
en~ the ring fust. The 35year-old Billingsley .bad
fought in five · other
'lOughman ~sts
in
Atbnsas ll!ld Texas, once
I;RWnv a bone in his right
~

oong:

.

.......

Corby Billingsley of Little ~ocll. left, and Jenid Duncan of. DeWitt, filht, "filhl dui'ITC the
loughman contest Friday Feb .. 29 In Little Rook. All(. Questions about the &lt;figlilers' .heBII'tl
·niM! plllllued loughman since Its aeat1on by Michigan pomoter Art Oore. Ronald Miller,
one of the first to die from IR1uries suffered In a To• -ITIIIn toumamerrt, climbed Hck Into
Uni11el'Sity Hospital bed. His the ring for a second fight l~ •1981 even ttlough.t1e ';~ dizzy and was seelrg double.

CODCUSiiicm Wali Cbe lltcst
injuly for 1 boxing attraction
in wbich 11 fighters have
'died since it &amp;tliiltd in 1979. ·
Duucan didn't know until
11f1cr payiD&amp; his $SO C'J!I1n!oo!o
fee that muy on the card bad
far more experience dJan

nr mat owns Toughman, said showroom floor.
bis oori1pany puiS on fights in . The
Albnsas
State
16 SlltteS, wbile franchises Athlelic Oommission meets
nm the n:sl. including those in tbe back, next to a iliilplay
in Atbnsas. He refemd of spa deaning supplies.
questions to Robertson, who Mattingly, the commiswotb for On the Move sion's secretary. We:! be tries
· what tbe contest's IJD""'rr AdvertisiJ18 of Little Rock. !D go to ~stling and boxiiJs
biJ1in2 ~
whicb
arg1,11ius
the events throughout die state,
"W""Iih
. it's a 'If AibnsiS bouts.
but sometimes his scbrdnlc
you want to it, you can do "There's IJ'C!!!eildous risk. doesn't allow him the lime.
tt' type thing," said Dr. Every f\gbter is advised of One of the panel's seven
Robert
Cantu,
a that. It's laid oot in laymen's unpaid commissioners might
Mas88cbusetts lleUIOSUlJJCOD terms, it's · laid out in attend a bout instead.
·
aiUcal &lt;of the toummlcDts. legalese,~ Robertson said.
But with Thugbman, com1be poiCDiial for ilg1lly is 'Oearly, all of these yoq mission memberli simply
much higbcr than it ·would be IIICII aDd women are niade have 110 authority if tbey see
if tbcre wcrcn't that mis- aware of 1he risk that they something they dOn't like_
~h of experience and take when they enter the
In 2001, then-Sen. Bill
trammg."
ring.fl
Gw~ sponsored a bill,
And, in A$anS8S, the state
• ••
passed mto law, exempting
Athlclic Commission basn 't
Arkansas
Vacuums "boxing elimination COD"
had authority over the Janito1'ial SIIJ'plies sits in tests" from the commission's
m•tches since a 2001 chauge southwest Llttle Rock., a oversight The bill instead
in state law.
nondescript factory look- simply Iimital the length of
''We actually don't have ,aJike&lt;lifastreetofwornstrip matches, required that fightthe legislation to regula~ malls and fast-food reS!aU· ers be sober and said a doctor
Toughman," said Johnny rants_ Btigbt yellow mop must be ringside.
Maningly, the sOle pan-time \oo'Ckds, floor polishers and
Albnsas, however, does
employee of the oommis- shiny trasb cans line the not traOit fighters to ensure
sian, which ~J...Illlrterly
in the back of a ·
Rock
janitorial company_ "They
don'! pay any ·gate ttceipts
IIJid we don't license anybody or anything."
But after the February
death of aT~ fighr:r
in TCUlbna, an Adcansas
lawmaker is ·wmtiug 10 bE
the eveors once described by

...

Cl ·

:

Tw•b lrD of FJkMt, 1l:las, The bell ~· The lW!
died al.W two mpts of shin1css ~ aaue to 1M

ASSOCIATED MESS

vital signs, 2.,000 &amp;us IIIISIItialed 011 $2~ cups of beef'
booe\labedclay. .
The aowd-ple!Siug fights
wcat em. but it 'Wil1d be several boars befon! Duncau
fully· ·awKened ·in a

Jlpet~D ~·

'

w•

they don't enter new OOIIICsts
soon after bciDg tnoct.ed out
in another. ·
Robertson provided the
bill, said Gwatncy, now
chairman of tbe Aricansas
Democratic Party_
"i.¥dia Robertson knows =·against another man's

more about boxing and boxing rcgulalion than anybody
in AibnsiS and that's who
brought me that bill. She's a
real .safety-conscious person." Gwatncy said. "1iust
me, that bill there was for tbe
good of boxing, not for its

detriment"
Gwatney said that, without

center of lbe . rillg aM
IJillqsley Sllatcd ~
pnndbes. ~:-f~
4itttlll't die~ ~

jabs !'!.C:~ tadlt!

'

.

Sunday, Apri127, 2008

.

me '
.IIIII ~
:a Qreet fight. . a
ca•1Jlbt Duncan off ;guard.
But Duncan countered
with lllU£lb -of me same +-

jabs of

ttading blows umil the cud d
the 00-serond ·round.
Duncan, wemy, ·~
for Round 2 wilh his :arms wj
ro protect his fllcc, but wilbirl
seconds WBS backed .00 •
comer. Bill~'s ~ ·
band
co
. widl·
~!.{w. Diml:an'seyt!J
rolled •
bis body a d
and bis bands dlopped tu ~
liide.
· -·
The world sliDned away. : .
i&lt;rlio- c
~.~
Duncan awoh iCYCa,t
boun larer in 1 ~hilt
to a "'WID!d of Oi mw !J

- family and &amp;ien-11 0..
liling his bed. A docter Sill
Duncan suffered a ·"..._
--:ussion :and discbag ;~
Duncan cntcm1 the riDg
Duncan spent a half41D!i!r
after lifting some weights the ~lying to itllw:M-=r ~ ~
week before die fight and pmted his a1r ad .i t
~ mmc1 a p1m~ ~s ·before be bcpn, ~
bag 11 a !.ocai gym. He
l~Rlmcmbcring patts ~ dia
seen smne of die other fighthr. He couliln't ·!eCal
ers at mixed-Dllll'tial atts 000- w
. he landed mm
tests and boxmg' matches; -•n"'- against BillinRs1ef. ·•
Tongh!!ll!n rules uy fighters ~·Duncan hopes ~
cannot have more than five effon: to ban ~

his bill, amateur bo!Wlg victories .in the Pft:WOUS five
matcbes could have gone on years.
withciut ringside physicians_
"What's the reason for me
Louisiana,
Missouri, to pay $50 to go oirt there
Tennessee and Thxas all ban · and t0 be 80me professional
Tougbm•n-style
bouts. amateur . boller's J'unching
Oregon liUikes getting a bag? It's unreal; Duncan
license for a tournament said.
nearly impossible.
. Nonetheless, Duncan wailArkansas state Rep. Steve ed in lhe comer for tbe ·bell,
Hanelson bec•me ~ . wearing black :head gear in banning the fights when his hands swnting inside the

a

doesn'tcometoo soon. His l
l/2 rounds lit a flame_
drives me to want to
fight more in the~~~
just because of ·-~- lib:

"'t

this guy," l)lmcan Said. "~
makes me want ro .figbt l1liR
. because I want to go and l
want to show 1hosc people
that, bey, someone just Gff
the street can figbl as good :as
them."

~C!~~i~
'11UIIl!!ll

cocldi2bting."
-

. At
Little
Rock's
Powerhouse Gym, fighters
hoping, to enter that week's
Toughman competition line
up, padding shoelcss across
induslrial gray carjleting for
a weigh-in. Factory linemen,
conSIIUclion workers and the
unemployed seek to show
tbeir dominanre or let off
steam. -''We just bad a tornado up
1bcre in Clinton. I got my
bouse toukeli away," said 22year-old Johnnie Arnold. "]
just want to go let liome
agee out"
.
Amok!, like others before
him, wasn't bo!bered by previous deaths in Tougbman

,.

'I •

evCIII:S.

~

"Man, r d hate to be the
dude who died or the dud!:
'IWo killed him, but man, you
tnow, ... it's a competition,"
said .chris. Haycraft, a ~~vir:oo artiS! from
·PtOIIIOier-Lydia RobensOO
warns conteS!ants 1hey'il
figbl shirtless - unless 1beY
ae women, Boxers can ..,.,..
into tbe riDg in wlrt
1bey lib: - as long as .a prefilbt bmlthalyza" test f!lUJ]d
:DO UllllC&amp; of llcohol.
"'CaUinly no aJmhol. or
dru&amp;t." Robenson said. uyou
c:1D biCk to thll M~j"
·~ about tbe
en bealtb have plaped

.

1Joolsif

ao

1bvalnMn Iince its mation
by Jofidripn proiiiOiel' Art

Ooae. lm•Jd Millet, one of

die fint to die from injuries
iidf&amp;ed in •Toual•llllil tour, •• ,.,.. cUmbed" ·bark .into
tbe
for • lflCODd fight in
1981 even thoup be felt
· dizzy d Wali ""MDg double.

rml

A former Golden Gloves
one-time
OJvmpic tv-fo•' also have
di&amp;id hom--~~ suf&amp;:n:d
during tbe fi~. .
promoters
Toughman
mess tbat each of lbe hundreds of tiplti ....,., aCrosS
the ooomuy are IDOIIitoml by
a
doctor and an
C!llpC'.,... w!.rcfmlc. fip· s
alto are~ to we.- 16cmaoe gloves, headgear,
~ profCCtion IDl JDOIIIh:.

winDer . and

riDJsidc

,.,..Stephen
...

Coppler of
AdorcAble Promotions Inc.,
the Bay City, Mich., coriipa·
• j

...... .

•

••

•

•

•

�.

•

.

PageC2

YOUR HoMETOWN
8r

Greener homes make a
gtiXliiCf planet and whether
we agree with the .environmentalists'
· ·dire piediclioos.,.
ted ·
or are JUst mteres
manli~ cests, now may ibe the
beit time ta make some
borne improvements.
My philosophy i~ don't
put oft' today what will ooti
you more tomcmow, what
with the inflationary trend
of these times and die pmbab'le ~ults of the legislalion just passed by 1be Ohio
House. That legislation,
because consumer protection is missing, could mean
higbe:c dectric and nanmtl
gas bills. ~Ohio Consumers' ·
Counsel)
So it's probably .n ot wise
to w.ait .until the weather
gets cold and the beati~~g
costs balloon before getting to wor.lwn energy efficieucy. .
·
Rice has never been one
of my f.avorire foods, hut die
"'raliooin!( of rice gaing &lt;011
.i n 'this oountry today, just
blows me away.
For iiODlC 'Of .us, it ~
back memories of •A
when you ibad 1o bave a
ratioo stan1p Ito get a bii!B
sugar·0 f even agalloo d ps.
Having ~wn up ea :a
I famt in Alheas
.i n What wPU14scribed as .a aislilvmtaged family, my llllOd!rr
canned .all sttmmer l011g to .
prepare food for winter. She

,.

«

Iiiways complained about
tbe artific~ 5Weetenet" S!Je
bad to use m cliii!V'!il mms
and . ap@l~glz.ed _for_"'that .

taste of saccharut~ m Cbe
pies she made.
.

!ood

Abu is .a pe.at cihoice for·
toor ;guide in D_C. He loves
the oity, k!nows it !inside and
out, .and cng·""'S
1his
-_, sl.•nn"
·~~'6
Jmowledge.
·
Many ·SU!Iiiesmverome w '
~t :about how . M:onlliey

So

0

7

ad ~
housclhold
-.e
• Have your housebGid
:SeWQe ' 'Y~ U!~
:and mainu'iued ITCglllady.
Rlr
one 110ilhree
bedroGm
,..
___.a...,._u
- • .....,.
·
.............., ~ ........, StU
1,000 l!lld UOO ,gl1km lank,
ltds sbouW be l!+DP 4 '!Ill
:a fnlguency «every'-*'
-

ENV1RONNIEt4nli.l£AIJ'H

Many bovseluMs in
Glillia Oou""' Chat ~ 11101
served lby ~:rpublic lieWer
depend 00
bGuscliGI&lt;I
.
stems 110 mo.,.,

=llge ~

......

sq1lira:;a.'* ~Sd . y R.W!urftotnt:toy¥0lits1118111e ' !Ire•~ u _
Sllllle we prulted oomments ,
·
• • •
,._ ~ bilk
.rerordcd by Jacl.: IRllub in die 1ects _a nd -settles wasrew.acr rover ;aoocssib'le ifur inspcc.early ]•900s indicariqg it 'WJIS frem yGur lbmne. Your ilicm .and &lt;ek.auing. !Install
dl;a ~ the nellt shOIII- OOginally Mt. Que Run. .
househa1d sew~ 9'st.cm ri8Crs if~~'QC ...ru be.
There'ii the one :a'OOut ill repiesents .a mllp!' lia1l• Ca1l :a~ 'IIC!w.Qe
circus oomin;g w ilOWD.and a mont ldllll yoo Will waut ilo SJSie?l IC"•••wtor Or your
0u. tbe brighter side, monkey e5Cl!Ping and hid- protect
.
~pith de,pattmeQJ.- iif yon
,grantS fum! ,tbe ~()hie 'and ingoutinMonkeyRun. The
If your _, sew~e system e~ pmb'lems or iif
West Vll!ginia Art Council ilatest one a!llllCs fmm Fa
would fat!., systems .ar~ l1here are~~ of -syshave been awarded . for 100mas DeWees -of Gn;w~ co~'l!ly :to rq&gt;laoe. JIIId prGJJ- Item failure.
f
another suiilDICI" of stocy- City, woo ~w up in er ongomg ~
• ~ways obtain ~uired
tetling along the river.
Monkey R'llD. She sent can e~tend t¥tr life.. pemn~ts When- ma\ii~~g lOT
This year i t has been .aloog il ne'NSJliiPCI' clipping IPr~~entl~, m••n~aooe :allGWUlg FepBU'S_ Ito your
c~ to fGUT localioos. ·writteiunanyycars,agowith :-"1 not -..u.y ptUtccr your 'SY~·
,
.M iddleport,
Mason., . yet another version.
mvestment, but ~ illw
.. Di&lt;VI'll'l
df wJJter,
lla~eusw.aod aud Rip'le . . lit goes something like protect nile . ·Cil'Wl'OllllleDt tik!e roof ·1draius, !footer
'Staryteiier Donna W.tlson
fuis. Dming the Oivil War, a and •t he pu~lic !v:a1ib · ••
4rnrins, .and ·SIIDIP pumps
kivdbeo
. d Arts Council . gmup Gf Meig·s volunteer
WW ti pu •"'~ :aw.ay lfrnm itbe system.
~---- - - Hill~ .4..6 'u udiDIIIiog !the program ·soldi' en; camped ,aJ~ the I'IUijnfm "'f!
.,.,...,.s
:w_,.~ '""'
Ji '!'••i"' ax Gllyfcllcrs on Ohio River ·to prevent
A g()!'ld example is pump- 'SOil k'"'Mgto-system iliiil~.
Wi ' -&amp;Clays -a Dmrsday, Confederate ll'ebels !fr0m ing your sepliic itiiilk.
.. ~ a ;good vep!!h~e
Jal,Y 9-31 ~ opep..air or coming lWFOSS into Me.igs P.unt,ping ,the ~c ltaDk oovcr 101/Cll' ithe ~stem m
ltiaylor,lboes,.dtj'"hfing County. One oftooseUruon o~~emo,.,es die buil:d-&lt;Up of onler1t0~mnovc~cess
aa 101e ~ •••
saJdiers was named Mu&amp;. sediments lhat mluces ithe water .and pmvent erosion.
.
-.
, · He .became SG attached .w performance of die taak lthat
~ Do nat .a1low 'D.Yone w
A1aa w_.J&amp;oe's eipui- llle euvooument dlat lhe would 'lead :to fllilure m\the rdJJivc m plllk :~g over
Clllle ,jp 'WMilh.zt ., Q_
C. vowed io llui1d a house lin sepl!ic llystem a~ ;any pm:t of the septic ~sme..: • is .d .. ay fDim
ftlll. Be was 4ller tilled
(leach) field. .
.ltelll.
Mill lie ~ UiJe iin ~ and iilwaslti bud.._.. 811 t,_· ~ Never dig •o r build .any"~ !111m:, - die: dima• dies
begm ~ w _.... ~· ·S }'Illlfa.
.
ltbin~. over y0ur -system.
I - 1; !lti Ide 115 -~- ldJe~;as UuDke Run, bier , .Qbtain and lkee;p 41 ~ This ')001nlle'! hlllll-stnfaces,
Sept. 11 .ma a p1-= fOill1qlfCd 10 Moatey Ibm.
of .;~he -system wid! . :a 'SUCh as IOCiiiiCI"ete •6! asphalt.
Hew ia» die 1\ j p
' . . · In 6cr letter, Mrs. DleWees MBi'!"' rcpoM ·CJ! re,paurs, • Coosc,rve wJJter to .avoid
Qe,htisinoe-ftldtodle ""!!ini«les;aiboutbrll'dlihl- ' 1"~·.111l!jpCC11101l ~ ovcdGactin:g the. ~smm.
0'1 .
~
i s - iho!Jd day£ in Monky llun ~ mBI~oc acl!l&gt;?- Pmm,ptly _mqJarr . leaky
~ illS pi&amp; fur IJus.. ;and lber ~~ Jimend, il!es. Bc!low IS .a .dbcok tist faucets '@I' toilets, and mstafi
d
.
e r . i c e

L ·.:: ' •z:;-

·. .

-m.:s

Zr

'*

*

'*

u,..

•G a

.a

.W ork of Appalachia' exhibit

saving devices.
• Don't use -&amp;epic Unk
add.il!i&gt;les. ·These IPfl!lducts
usually do not belp .and Gall
ibe bannfully Ito the
ilion 'Gf your ·system. · '
• Biminate &lt;01' mdtllJC' ithe
use 0f a ~ 'dilq!OS8i.
The additipnl wasiC ~
fllucedby;JJP,h I ~
...wH Ileal to alnl' . . . . .
WJifa"

qxa;a:.

.

•aaoe~

•m

• Don'l-.se JlllilriiOilet
-disposal as :a ~rash
.can.Colifee grounds, dcDta'l
-disposable ,4j~
IDtty tlittc:r, 'SBDit.l!f ~
IlilMS,

lkiins, tam,pons, cig.aldte
lblllit~,
condoms,
fat,
:grease, oil, :automoti¥e Ililu• ..
lids, .and paper 'towel~&gt;
shoUld ne¥er 'be di~sed
&lt;Of in 'lbe system.
.
• Never pour dbemicalll o0r
&lt;cleaners iiuch as pints, ,.,_._
ni&amp;bes, thinnen&gt; ;and pesti- ·
cides dovm the &lt;dniitl1tc;iilet.
. HarSh &lt;dhiWicais can kiiH .
lbelletiiciallbaoteriia ilhat ltmlit
w.astewJJter.
· • Newer&lt;elinlb•oovm into a
sept;ic ltank. The natui.ld
treatment _process in fiqllic
!tanks .prodUces m:Uc glllie$
lthat •can lill. One ·shoUld 1001
fm;get .about the linvestmctit
you lha¥~ made lin YGUr
lhoosd!Gld sewage ~&gt;ysumi.

.. I ACKSON
The
Wlian Jones Museum is
honored to present the an
wock and fine craft of
locally and regionally
aCclaimed female . anists
dUring the "Women' s Work
of Applilachia" Exhibit to
be on display April 15
f.lu:ough June 3, 2008.
·
· Several artists' works are
iii transit and will be added
dUring the frrst weekend of
May.
lleatured female anists
sporting regional
and
nlltional recognition include
Klutenkamper,
Allyson
Shawnee Stare University
professor of photography in
Portsmouth;
Traci
l..
iJ;ligginbotham, known as
The Colorful Artist" iii West
Virginia, and Jaki Good,
educator and photographer
in Piketon.
Locally recognized artists
op display include Lilly
•Goldsl1!yn,
artist,
of
1ackson; Lucy Cox, owneroperator .Soap Maker of
131essings Bath and Body, of
Jackson; Rachel Branum,
pursing student and artist, of
~eynoldsburg ;
Jessica ·

that dv: towists can see
~ ay aail its many .his-

Wllh
.prOOuct&amp; tleq · fOrlc ~ Giber . Mttacttons
turned mtG ~ one - - .from • CI(ICil11ir" mun. ,.

-·

At*

·Female athletes left
dear i•.a•pt'tSSi()Jl.Onpmca.I e~

lllle ~)!!or-., !lbe die
was IL!w1l's
'·t 'd -~· 1 ~ .. ,.••...,. ;alfv.llllaes Ito llhe
Wo.meo competing · in · 'lllot "'aabw" · H lnv.as rderee 'Smdh rroin Pmut
spor:tiugeventsagainstmen 1hcav.icltba1eti.Upme Plt•mit .It
~
.goes back to the early 1900s e\a' ~ ~ Il:onton. 1bc that Lrevc got to shoot ·sellin soulihern Ohio history •g irls ·easy liD took at, eral fme 11brown eWlll1l'ilhwhcn the St. Louis Stars, but they --~a iha!rl out being fookld. AI• '\er
composed of about half men time ~ Ito lce,p .dlc;r part &lt;of the en~
and balf women, played ey.es ao dJe ball.came ~n 5•foot, 2-i'uob
baseball against 1be Ohio
About ibat :SIIIDe :yea: Stubby Winter ·dril)b1ed
~~ fO!~steam {19.361 ~ iravifuti -~ me )e_gi of Ms.
m OOipolis. Gooring Jab' •a !oaal's am li•• tM . Lf?vc aacl Wlllla: dmflcd
·. to the _area was .a n
by'OieOhioa•*'!tdtleAIJ . upaadieSIM!-YknCiflmoe
~l:n's b118Cblill ~~ A• ...... IMI ' , ' 1halt mr•Qiydi't
'
'"IbeBloomerGids. re.n. ~ • .._. illlce ..Most d die ._game was
e note that in 191.4the Slllr 'iitne8 • die
·
. ~ · .. ~ ........., :and 1\m!m
pi~ an_d catcbOr. for die soUth
":u~J:
37-34. Q~n~
Obi.o Umvemty ~men •sn lliiCe at SootbweStmi
\1laiPie . poured into the
baseball team were WOIIjCil. 'ScboiJI in 1964 and -once m ·. ~y Juni0f High to
Much inte!;est was drawn ,1\inkioy m 1948.
. warcb 1dx: ,game. lin l.949,
to Ironton m early 1936
The staJ: of the Ml Hard Walker would leave
wben the famous Waterloo Amerioan Redheads in !the the Rei!hc:ad~ .and :fooD. her
Wonders v.:e~e. challenged later 1'9405 was 11Dc1 own travdiug1eamaillrddJe
by an all grrl s team called Wilker, who :wail IJom .in AltJmsas Thtvek:rs ~
the Dayton Bloo~ Girls. I!Jl4.111dby 1948. Mlensbe limm 1949 to 1965, ..00
The publtctty leading up ·10 ~ .in ftoo:w::iu_y, w.as ·;a !lbout 80 .percent of ~their
the game told how the gUk \.eiiDD of many yeaR of pmes. In 1966, HueJ
bad very seldom test 10 MU ball. She bid been Walker was in the :first class
men's teams and 1hey were WOird in 1940 as the AP Of 1'6 women jndnant iluo
led 'OJ a gumt w&lt;imau, Bedl Female .Athlete of the Veal:, the Hd""' 'MuiCII'11Amateur
H8JDJ•* whohadiPlayedm -w.as the most valuahlep'lay- n"*"""'BIUofF.ame.
Kan~. ~ pbotQ in till; a-inMU :bl!!lin 1942..-1
Mien 6e l\11 American

8r!.

",bililll •

Sn

wu

an-

1aoiot

I

t

· fJ ;::;;,.,
H!P .

:·

•

....~·. .

During halftime of the
, Redheads games, Hazel
wou.ld challenge men ,and
women to a free throw
sbootini comesi. The competition usually included
shooting not only while
standing but also while sitling in a chair.
Walker made 20 straight
free throws standing that
nigbt in Pomeroy and nine
out of 10 while seated in a
chair. Jtalph Gibbs made 25
out of 30 and Junie Gibbs
made l3 out of. 20 s~
and vecy few while
.
.During 1be game, .6-foot, 5iDch Redbe.ad~ center lean ·
Love stood eyeball to eye- ·
-ball with Pvmetoy's Budcy
Willers. Part of die fun of

HUNTINGl'ON, W.Va. Va;ginia Artist fellowship ill
Marshall Uruversity' s music ooqJOSition. It was
Ulcbt:iba will premiere 11 "'"'"!IICIIHortbegroupas:Cbe
new wort. by faculty mem- uxpat uf IXcbcsb a dim;tor
ber Dr. Mliik Zanrer at 8 Dr. SOlen Dikmer, who will
p .dL Tuesday in the Smith oondnct the~on
the
"'be Marshlill Orchestra
Music
Hall
Huntington campus.
, conoen will also feature
1be
.woli,
"Short petformanoes by the win·
Sympbony.n was produced ners of the student concerto
during Zanter's tenure as ~tion, John Galloway
mcipient 'of a 2007 West and -...,Andrew
Tilley.

-.

1

•
:: POINT .PLEASANT, W.Va. - · Native People of the
·l'oint have received a donation of two historical 18th cenftlry prints that will be raffled off on Sunday, June 15 at 3
.~.m. foll?wing the Chief Cornstalk and Daniel Boone pub.lic _questton an.d answer forum al Fott-Randolph.
~AniRL Robert Griffing a.nd-hi~ prinh :ompuny Para~aunt
•rress oT New YOrk"'Sfareluive donatedtheprinr "Pmntoo
: ~obe . " Griffing devotes his time to telling the story of the
.pmlem Woodland Indians through his art. His original
·pMntings and limited edition prints are known world wide.
:lie was one of the first artists to specililize in Woodland
:lildians during the 18th century, and today he is recognized
:as one of America's foremost historical artists .
: :: The paintings of. artist Andrew Knez Jr. of Pennsylvania
I the life and struggle of the Eastern Woodland
: . · s of the 1750 through the 1830 period in Western
· ennsylvania, Western Virginia and Ohio. This was a time
;ivli.en survival was placed directly upon the shoulders of the
: lndi vidual.
: :.. These _,prints are beautifully framed and matted and wm
:be on dtsplay at the following Point Pleasant businesses:
: j'\pril 21 -22, Farmers Bank; April 28-May 4, Iron Gate;
:May 6-13 ; Pancho 's, May 20-24; River Museum, May 25·et; Benningans , June 2- 6; · Jon Panack Nationwide
iwurance; a(!d June 9- 13! Mason County Tourism Center.
:: The prints will also be in the General Store during the
:Siege of Fon Randqlph. Raffie tickets will be $3 each _o r
:four for $1 0. The prints will be on display at the informa;tion tent during Native People of the Point.
•••

1

1

:.e·

z

------- ..

•

GAILIPOLlS
Residents living in and
around the Gallipolis community can be screened to
reduce their risk of having a
stroke or heart attack.
Life Line Screening will
be at Holzer Medical Center
on May 6. The site is localed at 100 Jackson Pike in
Gallipolis. Appointments
will begin at 9 a.m.
Cardiovascular disease is
the number one killer of
both men and women in the
United States.
Recomffiended baseline
. screenings
·
include
Stroke/Carotid Artery, Atrial
Fibrillation,
Abdominal
Aortic
Aneurysm
and
Peripheral Arterial Disease,
The Carotid Artery screening uses .ultrasound to identify blockages in the arteries
in your neck, a leading
cause of stroke. The Atrial
screening
Fibrillation ·
checks for an irregular bean
beat and the Abdominal
Aortic Aneurysm screening
looks for a ballooning of the
largest artery in the body,
Screening for Peripheral
Arterial
checks for
tilockages in the arteries of

Disease

RIO GRANDE - The
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies at the University of
Rio Grande will present .
"Welsh Heroes," an exhibit
.of original artwork by 2008
Madog Research Fellow
Benjy Davies, during April
and May.
Welsh · Heroes will be
shown ·i n ihe second floor
gallery of the Greer
Museum on the Rio Grande
campus from April 25"May
9, A reception and artist lecture will be held on Friday, .
Apri125 from 3 to 5 p.m. to
celebrate the operung of the
exhibit. The public is invited to attend the opening
reception, and there will be
no admission fee.
The exhibit will &lt;feature
20 original digital illustrations of historical and contemporary leaders in Welsh
poetry. art. music and politics, and will include
Owain Glyndwr, Richard
Burt~.
Nye . Bevan,
Cathenne Zeta-Jones and
rugby great Ray Gravell.
The selections for the
·exhibit were loosely based
on a .popular website that
lists the Top I()() Welsh
heroes, according to an
online poll commissioned
by the Culturenet Cymru
in· :W04:· ·
Madog Faculty Fellow
and Assistant Professor of
. Art Benjy Davies chose 20
of the individulils on the list
to illustrate, creating digital
images that incorporate por,
traiture, desi~n. pattern and.
virtual painttng. The work
will be shown at Rio
Grande during the spring,
·.and then will travel to' other
areas of the United States
and to Trinity College in
Carmarthen, Wales. Rio
Granlle and Trinity College

Benjy Davies is
titled "Ray Gravell"
is among the
"Welsh Heroes·
exhibit by Davies
at the Esther Allen
Greer Museum at
the University of
Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community
College that start·
ed April 25.
s

.

http ://faculty .rio.edulbdavie.
s/welsh_heroes.
Both
websites
will
include brief descriptions of
eac~ figure lilong with the
artwork, in order to help
raise awareness and understanding Gf Welsh culture
and history.
Davies joined the Rio
Grande faculty in. 2004 after
teaching
ar- Wesleyan
College in Macon, Ga., and
Oltio University in Athens.
He is a graduate of Ohio
Uruvcrsity and Ohio State
University, and currently
teaches -graphic design and
printnihlcing at Rio Grande .
He also runs the Luclcy Man
Press in Gallipolis. His
work has been included in

more than 100 exhibitions
nationally and internationally; including the McNeese,
Bradley, Parkside, Harper
and Northern National
Exhibitions, and is represented in a number of public
collections such as the
Ainity Art Foundation, the
Ohio State Uruversity and
the city of Vaasa, Finland.
9avies is-the ftfth Madog
Faculty Fellow ·at Rio
Grande. The program was
started in 2003 in order to
help foster an understanding
and appreciation for Welsh
heritage and contemporary
Welsh culture. The Madog

:=,

1!i .. . .................................

.; N 18'... ...... .........................
:·&amp;24'............. ........................

::

.

-

~

....

~

•
...........

~

_

...... ... ,_ ....,
~

--·

...

-

·

... _

..

· '

INGROONDPOOLS

2973 PloduoitAd.~==i;;......,.

c.tlo

Aliutdlly, •v-ant. -~~•-""""'""""-

ori
and work
numerous programs and
special projects.
Beginning on April 25.
Welsh Heroes will also be
able to be viewed online at
http : //www . l uckymanpress .com/welsh_heroeslin
dex.html
or

SubKrtbe now for
21108-200!1 II rieL
10«Mi08, 1110MII,

12Al&amp;ID8, 3121101, 5109109
.... Olllae: G8 2nd .....

Stationary
Sofa

$599
Cherry Gathering
Table with

Mipp' lnurts

'

0

54x36x54
w/4 ~ chltlrs

$799

A
·5 ·
'

'

,,
• .

1:V&lt;mloTiERiiiiBili·~

Faculty Fellqws are able to'
spend extra time during the
school year researching
Welsh-related topics of their
choice. The Facu.lty Fellows
present their findings at the
end of each academic year,
and the reports are. kept on
ftle in the Madog Center.
The Greer Museum is
open from I to 5 p.m. ,
Tue~days
_ through
Saturdays or by appointment. For more informa- ·
tion. call Jeanne Jindra at
(800) 282-7201.

i't'--1- - -500 BAE

m-·IIOfmlls..-Aic.t P.
5
311
-

p ., ........

Ohio

·
:;;aatiilfr;;;• =~,~~

.......

·the anus and legs, a condition that leaves the individ·ual at 4-5 t:imCs higher.risk
of heart disease.
Additional screenings can
be added for more comprehensive risk assessment and
include C-Reactive Protein,
a ·blood II1lllka' for vascular
disease and diabetes; romplete Lipid Panel Including
HDULDL and total cholestrol; Glucose, i measure of
blood sugar level which can
detennine yoru risk for diabetes; and an ultrasound
screening for osteoporosis.
Pick any four screenings
for$140. All eight are $199.
Life Line Screerung was
established in 1993, and has
since become the nation's
leading provider of preventive screenin&amp;s.
You can VISit Life Line
Screening on the web at
http://www.lifelinescreening .com/Press/multimedia/Pages/index.aspx
to
download illustrations and
photos.
For moll! information on
the screenings or to schedule an appointment, call
(877) 754-9631 . Pre-registration is requin!d.

This piece by

:~:JiJmtmn;ot.tiUt•

Galloway will play the fiilit
movement of the Trombone
Coooerto by~ JJIOOb
and Tilley will play two
movements of the Marimba
ConceM' by Ney Rosauro.
The event is free and open
· to the public.
For further information,
contact
the
Marshall
Department of Music at
('304) 696-3117.

.,

s· : nttted phato

Prints help promote
.~annual historic event

it was
that they
had
i.n 28 years
bef0fe •over JO million fans:
They played on · ave~age
about 200 .,games a year:
lbey lllldaho been featumd I
in lilldl ~arines 118 Life,
('ollirr'i, Pic, Spons Life,
~ News and Argosy.
-~~~ 1~3. the . Redheads ·
were •oiwfted by .Benily
01/c:rmaa .and his Wife N
Oveanan w.as the_. of die ·
team. The Redbews ,JU)tld
tbe Soudrv.es'"t' f.laalry.a ·
rCjlOdcdly won acloseJ!illlle.
(I ti 5-b il• ·• slilll
..,,.lJ?td Ill [til" die ·
S '!:JY 'in r-Sreej·d He
~- ·
5 5 ,.,....,
Ill , . , Jli1it.,. 1/loM,
nille, OJIIifl 41Hl.J

r

•

:f

Orchestra to premiere new wott
-

·

: ~The End of an Era " by Andrew Knez Jr. Is one .of two prints
' ;tlepicting Native American life In the Hlth century that are
·~ing raffled by Native People .of the Point during the annu:!II reenactment of the siege of Fort Randolph on June 15.

.IJ~ T~ ibowed ~kDIItimlal ~ 11m* .:Rc*D:ii!C cc~rsClio~1
palmmg a ball m each band. dlampion eight -times. ·
Souibwestcm If
The day after the game
the Ironton Tribune said,
1'he Dayton Game More
fun than Three Ring
.Cli'CUs.". The Waterloo lads
won easily 43-36 before one
of the largest crowds in
.Ironton history. At tunes the
Waterloo players would
stand aside. arid let the
women shoot saying, "You
CIID' tllllllu: it."
1'he Wonders tried all the
triclrs they could think of
and some "they .invented on
the spur of the moment.
Curt McMahon stood with
his back tQ the basket and
shot 11 perfect foul by throwinjl the ball over his bead
wtlhout looking. Orlyn
Roberts tried bouncing the

Life Line sc~nings
setfor~ay 6

Research Fellow

information
the Ga11ia ~
HeaithDqlantmen .at 44iJ.2UI8.
S 16LUZ Obio Dqmrtmertt
&lt;Of · Health, !Bur~au 10f
En:Wmnmenta1
Health ·
www.odh.olrio.iov.
llll0fe

SUNDAY PUZZLER

brother, &gt;Gene. m.MisliOUIIi.
{a..dale lloc:/lid ir
p11 u1 - .• ..,,,. 4 011
o.ily .'IMI 61el;, lie · WIJ!.j

de~

lcontacl

ttwls of toulists eall'ips w Marcia Grue.i « Amold, .,.
.;· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
D.C. He is 1Q}Iy ~ · ~yew up next doot:. She l l
forw.aJXI 110 M.ay when die '!lliii ;reads l!bis -s~
•- "dti· gem :a fin1e wm!Jer ani:! fOendl&gt; c1i,ppi'}gs ;10 11er

:110

enthusiastic about having
this exhibit in the Lillian
Jones
Museum.' Even
though the house does not
have the advantages of a
traditional .glillery as far as
lighting, it does lend itself
as an environment where
' visitors feel comfortable
viewing an sorts of art, artifacts, antiques, and archival
documents. .
.
While arranging the
exhibit, Landrum explained
that she looks forward to the
chance to educate others
· about the art works on display. As a college classroom
· teacher, Laudrum enjoys
asking the viewers to tell
her whal they see, what they
believe the image is about.
The Lillian Jones Museum
is open on Tuesdays,
It I Jtltt ,piiiDIG Wednesdays and Saturdays
This is one of the entries in the "Womens Work of from I to 4 p.m. The
Appalachia" exhibit at'the Lillian Jones Museum in Jackson Genealo~ Center, located in
the Carriage House directly
now through June 30.
·
behind the museum is open
MLIJllby, graphics
tograpker for the .Gallipolis on Wednesday and Saturday
graduating senior of the Daily Tribune; and Amy afternoons during the sumUniversity
of
Rio Landrum, director ·of the mer season. Special houn;
Grande/Rio
·G rande Lillian Jones Museum of and scheduled group meetCommunity College; Joy Jackson.
· ings are available . by
Kocmoud. writer and phoLandrum is honored and appointment.

PR01JEC'f
. YOUR
IN'VESD.IENTJ
For

Swmday, April27, 2008

·- Muset11n unveils Woinen's

Know yoUr septic tank
Don 't wtut. unlJ•t wmter
.
to save on energy · GALLI.~~~~~~~ .; .e'::

-COMMUNITY (ORNER-

CoMM

..' .

&amp; 11 •kj, Apt. 'Z], 21008

PageC3

f

'

•

- -· -

�.

•

.

PageC2

YOUR HoMETOWN
8r

Greener homes make a
gtiXliiCf planet and whether
we agree with the .environmentalists'
· ·dire piediclioos.,.
ted ·
or are JUst mteres
manli~ cests, now may ibe the
beit time ta make some
borne improvements.
My philosophy i~ don't
put oft' today what will ooti
you more tomcmow, what
with the inflationary trend
of these times and die pmbab'le ~ults of the legislalion just passed by 1be Ohio
House. That legislation,
because consumer protection is missing, could mean
higbe:c dectric and nanmtl
gas bills. ~Ohio Consumers' ·
Counsel)
So it's probably .n ot wise
to w.ait .until the weather
gets cold and the beati~~g
costs balloon before getting to wor.lwn energy efficieucy. .
·
Rice has never been one
of my f.avorire foods, hut die
"'raliooin!( of rice gaing &lt;011
.i n 'this oountry today, just
blows me away.
For iiODlC 'Of .us, it ~
back memories of •A
when you ibad 1o bave a
ratioo stan1p Ito get a bii!B
sugar·0 f even agalloo d ps.
Having ~wn up ea :a
I famt in Alheas
.i n What wPU14scribed as .a aislilvmtaged family, my llllOd!rr
canned .all sttmmer l011g to .
prepare food for winter. She

,.

«

Iiiways complained about
tbe artific~ 5Weetenet" S!Je
bad to use m cliii!V'!il mms
and . ap@l~glz.ed _for_"'that .

taste of saccharut~ m Cbe
pies she made.
.

!ood

Abu is .a pe.at cihoice for·
toor ;guide in D_C. He loves
the oity, k!nows it !inside and
out, .and cng·""'S
1his
-_, sl.•nn"
·~~'6
Jmowledge.
·
Many ·SU!Iiiesmverome w '
~t :about how . M:onlliey

So

0

7

ad ~
housclhold
-.e
• Have your housebGid
:SeWQe ' 'Y~ U!~
:and mainu'iued ITCglllady.
Rlr
one 110ilhree
bedroGm
,..
___.a...,._u
- • .....,.
·
.............., ~ ........, StU
1,000 l!lld UOO ,gl1km lank,
ltds sbouW be l!+DP 4 '!Ill
:a fnlguency «every'-*'
-

ENV1RONNIEt4nli.l£AIJ'H

Many bovseluMs in
Glillia Oou""' Chat ~ 11101
served lby ~:rpublic lieWer
depend 00
bGuscliGI&lt;I
.
stems 110 mo.,.,

=llge ~

......

sq1lira:;a.'* ~Sd . y R.W!urftotnt:toy¥0lits1118111e ' !Ire•~ u _
Sllllle we prulted oomments ,
·
• • •
,._ ~ bilk
.rerordcd by Jacl.: IRllub in die 1ects _a nd -settles wasrew.acr rover ;aoocssib'le ifur inspcc.early ]•900s indicariqg it 'WJIS frem yGur lbmne. Your ilicm .and &lt;ek.auing. !Install
dl;a ~ the nellt shOIII- OOginally Mt. Que Run. .
househa1d sew~ 9'st.cm ri8Crs if~~'QC ...ru be.
There'ii the one :a'OOut ill repiesents .a mllp!' lia1l• Ca1l :a~ 'IIC!w.Qe
circus oomin;g w ilOWD.and a mont ldllll yoo Will waut ilo SJSie?l IC"•••wtor Or your
0u. tbe brighter side, monkey e5Cl!Ping and hid- protect
.
~pith de,pattmeQJ.- iif yon
,grantS fum! ,tbe ~()hie 'and ingoutinMonkeyRun. The
If your _, sew~e system e~ pmb'lems or iif
West Vll!ginia Art Council ilatest one a!llllCs fmm Fa
would fat!., systems .ar~ l1here are~~ of -syshave been awarded . for 100mas DeWees -of Gn;w~ co~'l!ly :to rq&gt;laoe. JIIId prGJJ- Item failure.
f
another suiilDICI" of stocy- City, woo ~w up in er ongomg ~
• ~ways obtain ~uired
tetling along the river.
Monkey R'llD. She sent can e~tend t¥tr life.. pemn~ts When- ma\ii~~g lOT
This year i t has been .aloog il ne'NSJliiPCI' clipping IPr~~entl~, m••n~aooe :allGWUlg FepBU'S_ Ito your
c~ to fGUT localioos. ·writteiunanyycars,agowith :-"1 not -..u.y ptUtccr your 'SY~·
,
.M iddleport,
Mason., . yet another version.
mvestment, but ~ illw
.. Di&lt;VI'll'l
df wJJter,
lla~eusw.aod aud Rip'le . . lit goes something like protect nile . ·Cil'Wl'OllllleDt tik!e roof ·1draius, !footer
'Staryteiier Donna W.tlson
fuis. Dming the Oivil War, a and •t he pu~lic !v:a1ib · ••
4rnrins, .and ·SIIDIP pumps
kivdbeo
. d Arts Council . gmup Gf Meig·s volunteer
WW ti pu •"'~ :aw.ay lfrnm itbe system.
~---- - - Hill~ .4..6 'u udiDIIIiog !the program ·soldi' en; camped ,aJ~ the I'IUijnfm "'f!
.,.,...,.s
:w_,.~ '""'
Ji '!'••i"' ax Gllyfcllcrs on Ohio River ·to prevent
A g()!'ld example is pump- 'SOil k'"'Mgto-system iliiil~.
Wi ' -&amp;Clays -a Dmrsday, Confederate ll'ebels !fr0m ing your sepliic itiiilk.
.. ~ a ;good vep!!h~e
Jal,Y 9-31 ~ opep..air or coming lWFOSS into Me.igs P.unt,ping ,the ~c ltaDk oovcr 101/Cll' ithe ~stem m
ltiaylor,lboes,.dtj'"hfing County. One oftooseUruon o~~emo,.,es die buil:d-&lt;Up of onler1t0~mnovc~cess
aa 101e ~ •••
saJdiers was named Mu&amp;. sediments lhat mluces ithe water .and pmvent erosion.
.
-.
, · He .became SG attached .w performance of die taak lthat
~ Do nat .a1low 'D.Yone w
A1aa w_.J&amp;oe's eipui- llle euvooument dlat lhe would 'lead :to fllilure m\the rdJJivc m plllk :~g over
Clllle ,jp 'WMilh.zt ., Q_
C. vowed io llui1d a house lin sepl!ic llystem a~ ;any pm:t of the septic ~sme..: • is .d .. ay fDim
ftlll. Be was 4ller tilled
(leach) field. .
.ltelll.
Mill lie ~ UiJe iin ~ and iilwaslti bud.._.. 811 t,_· ~ Never dig •o r build .any"~ !111m:, - die: dima• dies
begm ~ w _.... ~· ·S }'Illlfa.
.
ltbin~. over y0ur -system.
I - 1; !lti Ide 115 -~- ldJe~;as UuDke Run, bier , .Qbtain and lkee;p 41 ~ This ')001nlle'! hlllll-stnfaces,
Sept. 11 .ma a p1-= fOill1qlfCd 10 Moatey Ibm.
of .;~he -system wid! . :a 'SUCh as IOCiiiiCI"ete •6! asphalt.
Hew ia» die 1\ j p
' . . · In 6cr letter, Mrs. DleWees MBi'!"' rcpoM ·CJ! re,paurs, • Coosc,rve wJJter to .avoid
Qe,htisinoe-ftldtodle ""!!ini«les;aiboutbrll'dlihl- ' 1"~·.111l!jpCC11101l ~ ovcdGactin:g the. ~smm.
0'1 .
~
i s - iho!Jd day£ in Monky llun ~ mBI~oc acl!l&gt;?- Pmm,ptly _mqJarr . leaky
~ illS pi&amp; fur IJus.. ;and lber ~~ Jimend, il!es. Bc!low IS .a .dbcok tist faucets '@I' toilets, and mstafi
d
.
e r . i c e

L ·.:: ' •z:;-

·. .

-m.:s

Zr

'*

*

'*

u,..

•G a

.a

.W ork of Appalachia' exhibit

saving devices.
• Don't use -&amp;epic Unk
add.il!i&gt;les. ·These IPfl!lducts
usually do not belp .and Gall
ibe bannfully Ito the
ilion 'Gf your ·system. · '
• Biminate &lt;01' mdtllJC' ithe
use 0f a ~ 'dilq!OS8i.
The additipnl wasiC ~
fllucedby;JJP,h I ~
...wH Ileal to alnl' . . . . .
WJifa"

qxa;a:.

.

•aaoe~

•m

• Don'l-.se JlllilriiOilet
-disposal as :a ~rash
.can.Colifee grounds, dcDta'l
-disposable ,4j~
IDtty tlittc:r, 'SBDit.l!f ~
IlilMS,

lkiins, tam,pons, cig.aldte
lblllit~,
condoms,
fat,
:grease, oil, :automoti¥e Ililu• ..
lids, .and paper 'towel~&gt;
shoUld ne¥er 'be di~sed
&lt;Of in 'lbe system.
.
• Never pour dbemicalll o0r
&lt;cleaners iiuch as pints, ,.,_._
ni&amp;bes, thinnen&gt; ;and pesti- ·
cides dovm the &lt;dniitl1tc;iilet.
. HarSh &lt;dhiWicais can kiiH .
lbelletiiciallbaoteriia ilhat ltmlit
w.astewJJter.
· • Newer&lt;elinlb•oovm into a
sept;ic ltank. The natui.ld
treatment _process in fiqllic
!tanks .prodUces m:Uc glllie$
lthat •can lill. One ·shoUld 1001
fm;get .about the linvestmctit
you lha¥~ made lin YGUr
lhoosd!Gld sewage ~&gt;ysumi.

.. I ACKSON
The
Wlian Jones Museum is
honored to present the an
wock and fine craft of
locally and regionally
aCclaimed female . anists
dUring the "Women' s Work
of Applilachia" Exhibit to
be on display April 15
f.lu:ough June 3, 2008.
·
· Several artists' works are
iii transit and will be added
dUring the frrst weekend of
May.
lleatured female anists
sporting regional
and
nlltional recognition include
Klutenkamper,
Allyson
Shawnee Stare University
professor of photography in
Portsmouth;
Traci
l..
iJ;ligginbotham, known as
The Colorful Artist" iii West
Virginia, and Jaki Good,
educator and photographer
in Piketon.
Locally recognized artists
op display include Lilly
•Goldsl1!yn,
artist,
of
1ackson; Lucy Cox, owneroperator .Soap Maker of
131essings Bath and Body, of
Jackson; Rachel Branum,
pursing student and artist, of
~eynoldsburg ;
Jessica ·

that dv: towists can see
~ ay aail its many .his-

Wllh
.prOOuct&amp; tleq · fOrlc ~ Giber . Mttacttons
turned mtG ~ one - - .from • CI(ICil11ir" mun. ,.

-·

At*

·Female athletes left
dear i•.a•pt'tSSi()Jl.Onpmca.I e~

lllle ~)!!or-., !lbe die
was IL!w1l's
'·t 'd -~· 1 ~ .. ,.••...,. ;alfv.llllaes Ito llhe
Wo.meo competing · in · 'lllot "'aabw" · H lnv.as rderee 'Smdh rroin Pmut
spor:tiugeventsagainstmen 1hcav.icltba1eti.Upme Plt•mit .It
~
.goes back to the early 1900s e\a' ~ ~ Il:onton. 1bc that Lrevc got to shoot ·sellin soulihern Ohio history •g irls ·easy liD took at, eral fme 11brown eWlll1l'ilhwhcn the St. Louis Stars, but they --~a iha!rl out being fookld. AI• '\er
composed of about half men time ~ Ito lce,p .dlc;r part &lt;of the en~
and balf women, played ey.es ao dJe ball.came ~n 5•foot, 2-i'uob
baseball against 1be Ohio
About ibat :SIIIDe :yea: Stubby Winter ·dril)b1ed
~~ fO!~steam {19.361 ~ iravifuti -~ me )e_gi of Ms.
m OOipolis. Gooring Jab' •a !oaal's am li•• tM . Lf?vc aacl Wlllla: dmflcd
·. to the _area was .a n
by'OieOhioa•*'!tdtleAIJ . upaadieSIM!-YknCiflmoe
~l:n's b118Cblill ~~ A• ...... IMI ' , ' 1halt mr•Qiydi't
'
'"IbeBloomerGids. re.n. ~ • .._. illlce ..Most d die ._game was
e note that in 191.4the Slllr 'iitne8 • die
·
. ~ · .. ~ ........., :and 1\m!m
pi~ an_d catcbOr. for die soUth
":u~J:
37-34. Q~n~
Obi.o Umvemty ~men •sn lliiCe at SootbweStmi
\1laiPie . poured into the
baseball team were WOIIjCil. 'ScboiJI in 1964 and -once m ·. ~y Juni0f High to
Much inte!;est was drawn ,1\inkioy m 1948.
. warcb 1dx: ,game. lin l.949,
to Ironton m early 1936
The staJ: of the Ml Hard Walker would leave
wben the famous Waterloo Amerioan Redheads in !the the Rei!hc:ad~ .and :fooD. her
Wonders v.:e~e. challenged later 1'9405 was 11Dc1 own travdiug1eamaillrddJe
by an all grrl s team called Wilker, who :wail IJom .in AltJmsas Thtvek:rs ~
the Dayton Bloo~ Girls. I!Jl4.111dby 1948. Mlensbe limm 1949 to 1965, ..00
The publtctty leading up ·10 ~ .in ftoo:w::iu_y, w.as ·;a !lbout 80 .percent of ~their
the game told how the gUk \.eiiDD of many yeaR of pmes. In 1966, HueJ
bad very seldom test 10 MU ball. She bid been Walker was in the :first class
men's teams and 1hey were WOird in 1940 as the AP Of 1'6 women jndnant iluo
led 'OJ a gumt w&lt;imau, Bedl Female .Athlete of the Veal:, the Hd""' 'MuiCII'11Amateur
H8JDJ•* whohadiPlayedm -w.as the most valuahlep'lay- n"*"""'BIUofF.ame.
Kan~. ~ pbotQ in till; a-inMU :bl!!lin 1942..-1
Mien 6e l\11 American

8r!.

",bililll •

Sn

wu

an-

1aoiot

I

t

· fJ ;::;;,.,
H!P .

:·

•

....~·. .

During halftime of the
, Redheads games, Hazel
wou.ld challenge men ,and
women to a free throw
sbootini comesi. The competition usually included
shooting not only while
standing but also while sitling in a chair.
Walker made 20 straight
free throws standing that
nigbt in Pomeroy and nine
out of 10 while seated in a
chair. Jtalph Gibbs made 25
out of 30 and Junie Gibbs
made l3 out of. 20 s~
and vecy few while
.
.During 1be game, .6-foot, 5iDch Redbe.ad~ center lean ·
Love stood eyeball to eye- ·
-ball with Pvmetoy's Budcy
Willers. Part of die fun of

HUNTINGl'ON, W.Va. Va;ginia Artist fellowship ill
Marshall Uruversity' s music ooqJOSition. It was
Ulcbt:iba will premiere 11 "'"'"!IICIIHortbegroupas:Cbe
new wort. by faculty mem- uxpat uf IXcbcsb a dim;tor
ber Dr. Mliik Zanrer at 8 Dr. SOlen Dikmer, who will
p .dL Tuesday in the Smith oondnct the~on
the
"'be Marshlill Orchestra
Music
Hall
Huntington campus.
, conoen will also feature
1be
.woli,
"Short petformanoes by the win·
Sympbony.n was produced ners of the student concerto
during Zanter's tenure as ~tion, John Galloway
mcipient 'of a 2007 West and -...,Andrew
Tilley.

-.

1

•
:: POINT .PLEASANT, W.Va. - · Native People of the
·l'oint have received a donation of two historical 18th cenftlry prints that will be raffled off on Sunday, June 15 at 3
.~.m. foll?wing the Chief Cornstalk and Daniel Boone pub.lic _questton an.d answer forum al Fott-Randolph.
~AniRL Robert Griffing a.nd-hi~ prinh :ompuny Para~aunt
•rress oT New YOrk"'Sfareluive donatedtheprinr "Pmntoo
: ~obe . " Griffing devotes his time to telling the story of the
.pmlem Woodland Indians through his art. His original
·pMntings and limited edition prints are known world wide.
:lie was one of the first artists to specililize in Woodland
:lildians during the 18th century, and today he is recognized
:as one of America's foremost historical artists .
: :: The paintings of. artist Andrew Knez Jr. of Pennsylvania
I the life and struggle of the Eastern Woodland
: . · s of the 1750 through the 1830 period in Western
· ennsylvania, Western Virginia and Ohio. This was a time
;ivli.en survival was placed directly upon the shoulders of the
: lndi vidual.
: :.. These _,prints are beautifully framed and matted and wm
:be on dtsplay at the following Point Pleasant businesses:
: j'\pril 21 -22, Farmers Bank; April 28-May 4, Iron Gate;
:May 6-13 ; Pancho 's, May 20-24; River Museum, May 25·et; Benningans , June 2- 6; · Jon Panack Nationwide
iwurance; a(!d June 9- 13! Mason County Tourism Center.
:: The prints will also be in the General Store during the
:Siege of Fon Randqlph. Raffie tickets will be $3 each _o r
:four for $1 0. The prints will be on display at the informa;tion tent during Native People of the Point.
•••

1

1

:.e·

z

------- ..

•

GAILIPOLlS
Residents living in and
around the Gallipolis community can be screened to
reduce their risk of having a
stroke or heart attack.
Life Line Screening will
be at Holzer Medical Center
on May 6. The site is localed at 100 Jackson Pike in
Gallipolis. Appointments
will begin at 9 a.m.
Cardiovascular disease is
the number one killer of
both men and women in the
United States.
Recomffiended baseline
. screenings
·
include
Stroke/Carotid Artery, Atrial
Fibrillation,
Abdominal
Aortic
Aneurysm
and
Peripheral Arterial Disease,
The Carotid Artery screening uses .ultrasound to identify blockages in the arteries
in your neck, a leading
cause of stroke. The Atrial
screening
Fibrillation ·
checks for an irregular bean
beat and the Abdominal
Aortic Aneurysm screening
looks for a ballooning of the
largest artery in the body,
Screening for Peripheral
Arterial
checks for
tilockages in the arteries of

Disease

RIO GRANDE - The
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies at the University of
Rio Grande will present .
"Welsh Heroes," an exhibit
.of original artwork by 2008
Madog Research Fellow
Benjy Davies, during April
and May.
Welsh · Heroes will be
shown ·i n ihe second floor
gallery of the Greer
Museum on the Rio Grande
campus from April 25"May
9, A reception and artist lecture will be held on Friday, .
Apri125 from 3 to 5 p.m. to
celebrate the operung of the
exhibit. The public is invited to attend the opening
reception, and there will be
no admission fee.
The exhibit will &lt;feature
20 original digital illustrations of historical and contemporary leaders in Welsh
poetry. art. music and politics, and will include
Owain Glyndwr, Richard
Burt~.
Nye . Bevan,
Cathenne Zeta-Jones and
rugby great Ray Gravell.
The selections for the
·exhibit were loosely based
on a .popular website that
lists the Top I()() Welsh
heroes, according to an
online poll commissioned
by the Culturenet Cymru
in· :W04:· ·
Madog Faculty Fellow
and Assistant Professor of
. Art Benjy Davies chose 20
of the individulils on the list
to illustrate, creating digital
images that incorporate por,
traiture, desi~n. pattern and.
virtual painttng. The work
will be shown at Rio
Grande during the spring,
·.and then will travel to' other
areas of the United States
and to Trinity College in
Carmarthen, Wales. Rio
Granlle and Trinity College

Benjy Davies is
titled "Ray Gravell"
is among the
"Welsh Heroes·
exhibit by Davies
at the Esther Allen
Greer Museum at
the University of
Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community
College that start·
ed April 25.
s

.

http ://faculty .rio.edulbdavie.
s/welsh_heroes.
Both
websites
will
include brief descriptions of
eac~ figure lilong with the
artwork, in order to help
raise awareness and understanding Gf Welsh culture
and history.
Davies joined the Rio
Grande faculty in. 2004 after
teaching
ar- Wesleyan
College in Macon, Ga., and
Oltio University in Athens.
He is a graduate of Ohio
Uruvcrsity and Ohio State
University, and currently
teaches -graphic design and
printnihlcing at Rio Grande .
He also runs the Luclcy Man
Press in Gallipolis. His
work has been included in

more than 100 exhibitions
nationally and internationally; including the McNeese,
Bradley, Parkside, Harper
and Northern National
Exhibitions, and is represented in a number of public
collections such as the
Ainity Art Foundation, the
Ohio State Uruversity and
the city of Vaasa, Finland.
9avies is-the ftfth Madog
Faculty Fellow ·at Rio
Grande. The program was
started in 2003 in order to
help foster an understanding
and appreciation for Welsh
heritage and contemporary
Welsh culture. The Madog

:=,

1!i .. . .................................

.; N 18'... ...... .........................
:·&amp;24'............. ........................

::

.

-

~

....

~

•
...........

~

_

...... ... ,_ ....,
~

--·

...

-

·

... _

..

· '

INGROONDPOOLS

2973 PloduoitAd.~==i;;......,.

c.tlo

Aliutdlly, •v-ant. -~~•-""""'""""-

ori
and work
numerous programs and
special projects.
Beginning on April 25.
Welsh Heroes will also be
able to be viewed online at
http : //www . l uckymanpress .com/welsh_heroeslin
dex.html
or

SubKrtbe now for
21108-200!1 II rieL
10«Mi08, 1110MII,

12Al&amp;ID8, 3121101, 5109109
.... Olllae: G8 2nd .....

Stationary
Sofa

$599
Cherry Gathering
Table with

Mipp' lnurts

'

0

54x36x54
w/4 ~ chltlrs

$799

A
·5 ·
'

'

,,
• .

1:V&lt;mloTiERiiiiBili·~

Faculty Fellqws are able to'
spend extra time during the
school year researching
Welsh-related topics of their
choice. The Facu.lty Fellows
present their findings at the
end of each academic year,
and the reports are. kept on
ftle in the Madog Center.
The Greer Museum is
open from I to 5 p.m. ,
Tue~days
_ through
Saturdays or by appointment. For more informa- ·
tion. call Jeanne Jindra at
(800) 282-7201.

i't'--1- - -500 BAE

m-·IIOfmlls..-Aic.t P.
5
311
-

p ., ........

Ohio

·
:;;aatiilfr;;;• =~,~~

.......

·the anus and legs, a condition that leaves the individ·ual at 4-5 t:imCs higher.risk
of heart disease.
Additional screenings can
be added for more comprehensive risk assessment and
include C-Reactive Protein,
a ·blood II1lllka' for vascular
disease and diabetes; romplete Lipid Panel Including
HDULDL and total cholestrol; Glucose, i measure of
blood sugar level which can
detennine yoru risk for diabetes; and an ultrasound
screening for osteoporosis.
Pick any four screenings
for$140. All eight are $199.
Life Line Screerung was
established in 1993, and has
since become the nation's
leading provider of preventive screenin&amp;s.
You can VISit Life Line
Screening on the web at
http://www.lifelinescreening .com/Press/multimedia/Pages/index.aspx
to
download illustrations and
photos.
For moll! information on
the screenings or to schedule an appointment, call
(877) 754-9631 . Pre-registration is requin!d.

This piece by

:~:JiJmtmn;ot.tiUt•

Galloway will play the fiilit
movement of the Trombone
Coooerto by~ JJIOOb
and Tilley will play two
movements of the Marimba
ConceM' by Ney Rosauro.
The event is free and open
· to the public.
For further information,
contact
the
Marshall
Department of Music at
('304) 696-3117.

.,

s· : nttted phato

Prints help promote
.~annual historic event

it was
that they
had
i.n 28 years
bef0fe •over JO million fans:
They played on · ave~age
about 200 .,games a year:
lbey lllldaho been featumd I
in lilldl ~arines 118 Life,
('ollirr'i, Pic, Spons Life,
~ News and Argosy.
-~~~ 1~3. the . Redheads ·
were •oiwfted by .Benily
01/c:rmaa .and his Wife N
Oveanan w.as the_. of die ·
team. The Redbews ,JU)tld
tbe Soudrv.es'"t' f.laalry.a ·
rCjlOdcdly won acloseJ!illlle.
(I ti 5-b il• ·• slilll
..,,.lJ?td Ill [til" die ·
S '!:JY 'in r-Sreej·d He
~- ·
5 5 ,.,....,
Ill , . , Jli1it.,. 1/loM,
nille, OJIIifl 41Hl.J

r

•

:f

Orchestra to premiere new wott
-

·

: ~The End of an Era " by Andrew Knez Jr. Is one .of two prints
' ;tlepicting Native American life In the Hlth century that are
·~ing raffled by Native People .of the Point during the annu:!II reenactment of the siege of Fort Randolph on June 15.

.IJ~ T~ ibowed ~kDIItimlal ~ 11m* .:Rc*D:ii!C cc~rsClio~1
palmmg a ball m each band. dlampion eight -times. ·
Souibwestcm If
The day after the game
the Ironton Tribune said,
1'he Dayton Game More
fun than Three Ring
.Cli'CUs.". The Waterloo lads
won easily 43-36 before one
of the largest crowds in
.Ironton history. At tunes the
Waterloo players would
stand aside. arid let the
women shoot saying, "You
CIID' tllllllu: it."
1'he Wonders tried all the
triclrs they could think of
and some "they .invented on
the spur of the moment.
Curt McMahon stood with
his back tQ the basket and
shot 11 perfect foul by throwinjl the ball over his bead
wtlhout looking. Orlyn
Roberts tried bouncing the

Life Line sc~nings
setfor~ay 6

Research Fellow

information
the Ga11ia ~
HeaithDqlantmen .at 44iJ.2UI8.
S 16LUZ Obio Dqmrtmertt
&lt;Of · Health, !Bur~au 10f
En:Wmnmenta1
Health ·
www.odh.olrio.iov.
llll0fe

SUNDAY PUZZLER

brother, &gt;Gene. m.MisliOUIIi.
{a..dale lloc:/lid ir
p11 u1 - .• ..,,,. 4 011
o.ily .'IMI 61el;, lie · WIJ!.j

de~

lcontacl

ttwls of toulists eall'ips w Marcia Grue.i « Amold, .,.
.;· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
D.C. He is 1Q}Iy ~ · ~yew up next doot:. She l l
forw.aJXI 110 M.ay when die '!lliii ;reads l!bis -s~
•- "dti· gem :a fin1e wm!Jer ani:! fOendl&gt; c1i,ppi'}gs ;10 11er

:110

enthusiastic about having
this exhibit in the Lillian
Jones
Museum.' Even
though the house does not
have the advantages of a
traditional .glillery as far as
lighting, it does lend itself
as an environment where
' visitors feel comfortable
viewing an sorts of art, artifacts, antiques, and archival
documents. .
.
While arranging the
exhibit, Landrum explained
that she looks forward to the
chance to educate others
· about the art works on display. As a college classroom
· teacher, Laudrum enjoys
asking the viewers to tell
her whal they see, what they
believe the image is about.
The Lillian Jones Museum
is open on Tuesdays,
It I Jtltt ,piiiDIG Wednesdays and Saturdays
This is one of the entries in the "Womens Work of from I to 4 p.m. The
Appalachia" exhibit at'the Lillian Jones Museum in Jackson Genealo~ Center, located in
the Carriage House directly
now through June 30.
·
behind the museum is open
MLIJllby, graphics
tograpker for the .Gallipolis on Wednesday and Saturday
graduating senior of the Daily Tribune; and Amy afternoons during the sumUniversity
of
Rio Landrum, director ·of the mer season. Special houn;
Grande/Rio
·G rande Lillian Jones Museum of and scheduled group meetCommunity College; Joy Jackson.
· ings are available . by
Kocmoud. writer and phoLandrum is honored and appointment.

PR01JEC'f
. YOUR
IN'VESD.IENTJ
For

Swmday, April27, 2008

·- Muset11n unveils Woinen's

Know yoUr septic tank
Don 't wtut. unlJ•t wmter
.
to save on energy · GALLI.~~~~~~~ .; .e'::

-COMMUNITY (ORNER-

CoMM

..' .

&amp; 11 •kj, Apt. 'Z], 21008

PageC3

f

'

•

- -· -

�•
' .

CR!.EBRATIONS

PageC4

s;.,.,,Ap!2'], 21008 .

Infottuatiooat ineeti'V' ,

set on . . .r~ program
RIO GRANDE - Tile
Uai~· of Rio Otaode
WI be boldina iDfonDitioaal m eiup. _in dne loc:alioos in 90'llhrnl Ollio for
KSich•s ia:testc1 in
leuning abold lhe

-a will abo lqin •

6 p.m.

Rio
~ _. Sba- surr
De

IDCdings :at

Uoi:wa:sily will also be fol-

loqd by infurmaliooal
=: lings tor the masa- of
busiDess adminim'alioa in

...... or~ecarioo ioct.ss- ~Jlll«Uiii*
room teriiw.B P."'!'at.
1 p;m. Stucleot~ can blk die

C 0 D N ER DAVIDS 0 N
ENGAGEMENT

The; m • ;ein~s ftl be bdcl
011dle RioGrmdc.....,IS,as
wdl as • Sba- Slac
University in Purlsn..o -t
Soudnn Stile O••••••lity
Col~ in Hillil!oro.
I
Rio Gnlnclc o8'mi twoI masrer of cdlacalion in
: classroom aer"ing · pro-

!

. :!:s~~=:k!:. entrepre-

TUesday, May 6 ;and WI
al&amp;o begin at 6 p.m. This
meeting will be held in
Room 210 in Massie Hall
The inf&lt;W:maliooal meet-

.: :

:~~-=:

~ownrompanies. · Mmy
0f die students in die MB:l\

p:ognuualsoendup~

tbfir own businesses While

~~-~.!!.gof~·

...., """~~
ia classroom teacbing Jl"'gram is a two-year progtam
1111t includes a mix of boOI
u:aditional clllssroom and
oo•line wmk.
Stucleots enrolliiig in die
Rio Grande pmgram at &lt;all
liRe instinJtionS will be Rio
Gr.ancle
stuclents.
Rio
&lt;bnclc holds the progmm
•lhe two locations olfcampiiS in oob" to be ~sible
to stJIIcleots
.... gl"lUt -~ntlio.
1he dasirooms. all dee
WoMil•iom will be ow11•rt"
eel dJrough ..-icleo lints so
dut&lt;:ludrutsooeadlcampu~

can imi:Act with cadi otiJI%

At die iufiJrmlliooa1 mcet· S, area lrRdems will be
listen to preseatllioos
about die ~ and have
tbcir qucstlODS answcml
' iog at Soulhem State
Fo.r mo~ illjo.~
Community College will be call Jason IIIUtt.!rs dl (800j
. held on Wednesday, May 1 -281-7201.

PICKENS~

Dod!!!i

RACINE - 'Sarah ·C elesta Pickens imd
McCombs were man'icd on Feb. 9, 2008, at the Ru
Church of God in Rudlllld by the Rev. Ronald Head!:
The bride is the da•.gbter of Calvin lllld Kay Pickens of ,
Racine. Her fiance is the son of Lewis and Bnmdace
McCombs of Patriot.
·
The bride was given in marriage by ber fa!llei Jessya
Barnette of Pomeroy was the.maid of hooor and kssica
Gloyd of Letart was the maid -of honor. Bridesoaids Wl:l1!
Jenny Hatfield of Syracuse, and the junior bridesalli4 IWI&amp; .
Hanna Barnette of Pomeroy. .
'.'
-·
Halley Barnette ·served .a s flower girl, arid JOShua
Hatfield as the ring beam:. ·
·
··
·.
. Cory Hatfield of Syracuse was best man, and groomsmen
were Jeremy Barnette of Pomeroy; Man Milliron of Leta1t,
Jacob Hatfield of Syracuse. Ushers were Corey Hatfield
·
and Jeremy Barnette.
A reception as held at the .Middleport Legion Hall witb
music by C&amp;J DJs. The couple took a ttip to Huntingron;
W.Va., after the wedding. They now reside at Racine.
The bride is a graduate of Southem High School in 2005
and is attending Gallip9lisCommunity College. The groOm
gradualed from South Gallia High School, studied industrial mainlenance at Buckeye Hills Career ~ for two
_ years and is currenlly working at Carmichael ~uipment.1

...,..ISC ·

~!t~:=-.:!i:= :~an:u~:

RAClNE- Mike and Lee Codner of Racine .announoc: 1 The two mastcn' of eduthe engagement of lheir dlUighret, Brandi Miobelle Godner ' ~ in ~ ~of Marietta, to John Michael Davidson, also of Marietta, mg p~ ·~ ~ mtcrson of John and Debbie Davidson of Pomeroy.
·
v~llon
speci:aJislle&amp;r!Y
The bri.de elect is a 2001 graduare of Soolhem Higb ~clbood ~- ~ .m
School and a 2006 graduale of Hocking CoUcge. She is an mtavenllon spocialistlmild
adrninistraive assistant witjl Elpro Sen&gt;ices Inc,
~ ~oderale . 1he progAJD
Her fiance, a 1999 gcaduate of Meigs High School and a IS w1dely ~ .md reg2002 graduate of Washington Stale Community College, is ularly draws ~tuclents from
employed at AEP Muskingum River Plant.
around die reg;~on.
.
The wedding will take plaee at 4:3&lt;1 p.m. on June 21,
_Classes are offered on the
2008, at the Racine UniUlef Methodist Churoh, Racine.
Rio Gmncle campus, and on
the
Shawnee
State
University and Southern
state Community College
campuses.
The infonnatiooal mecriqg
at Rio Grande will be bcld Oil
Monday, May 5 hc:gi~ :It
6 P.·m. The ooHK!ur JDI"!C''iiqg
will be bcld in R00111 216 in
Bob Evans Fanns Hall
The inf01'Jll81ional meetiog at Shawnee S.
University will be belcl GD

MCCOMBS
WEDDING

MBA ~ full-time or
pat-Ume.o odle Rio Grande
c ¥«. aocl pllt-4imc on
dJeSbawoce 5I* Clmpus.
·n e MBA ptog.am is
· • • fie in dJe rqion
ofils focus 011 eubq::waotdsllip. The prognm IS 9d up
to pvc •S1Uelcnts business

:£to

, ' MAHAN
ANNIV·ER:SARY GAlLIPOLIS - Scott and Becky Mahan celebrated
their 25th weddiJill anniversary on March 26, 2008.
They were married March 26, 1983, by the Rev. Alfred
Holley.
.
They enjoyod a trip to Gatlinbw-g, Tenn., when: they
renewed 1heir wedding vows at 1he l.llapel of Honeymoon
Hills. Scott and Becky are the parents of two daughun,
Megan and Healher Mahan.

·M' BUSINESS WRITER

spending is recession-proof:
lt holds . Up longer, but can
· eventually fold.
It's even becoming cool
.J to be frugal.
Last week, EJJegid..com,
tbci ICeD offshoot ofFJie .mg.
arine, !iumcbed a new video'
fixture called Self-Made Gid,
which shows . teens how -tn
make clotbes'and accessories.

NEW YORK - The souring job market and rising
costs of the usual reenage
i~ulgenc7s a slice of
ptua, a drive to the mall, the
honest new jeans - .are caus· mg teens to do somctbing
they rarely do: be thrifty.
~- ~ ~- It's.a far .
thei'!ti.l" · The~ Yi~
li~~41het~lli,g-sfiel1lllilg llf4'CCffift lfoy; m-creale a ·pmm cltilfh.
· yeats,
teens splurged
"It's a little lack:y in the
on $100 Coach wristlet economic unrest' -tn tote a
handbags, S60 Juio/ Co~ture big logo bag," said Holly
T-shlTIS and $80 ~Jeans Siegel. the sire's senior edifrom Abercrombie &amp; Fitch.
tor. She said it' s no lolljler
Now jobs for teens are about teens "one- uppmg
less plentiful, and parents each either," · but rather
wbo supply the allowances where they can get it cheap.
~ feeling the economic
Victoria Bradley, a 16pmch themselves.
year-old from Springfield.
. The stalwart Tetailers of Mo., says the $80 sbc cams
.teen 'fparel, suc)l as racb moolh from baby-sitting
Aberctonibie and American is bcilljl Cllllen ·up by more
,llagle Outfitters Inc ~ .are expens1ve sChool lunches,
-reporting sluggish sales, tme.night mrls With friends
&amp;:fying the m~ that teen and stylilih ckJCbr:S.

ON THE BOOKSHEI..F

•

·ohio author mines dark tales in debut
BY IIIII I
~IPIIESS

,"

Ullll
WRITER

.
.. ailiJ.IoomE '

The .
.,b\)ot sigiUft8 bSkd for

·: ~S.

- jndic ,..,. the
.-~s ........ oo ~d,ges
.:.s - It ....... Dooa1d Ray

-,llnlkx:l; for depii&lt;:ri'lg life
•
as agnAesque blend of
wife bNteriJ
-'lafifi~:~+~....;...

a. •Jili'R,

.. wNioctj ,; a ~·iliiX P¥Cf
_,.al ~Who drew on
;I[!JII:ilil protilc 11s lb&amp;t haunt-

ed tiiellds and I'Cillliives for
.liis
fi~st
book,
""Kooclremstitf," a collec. tion of dark stories set in
.J11lT.al southern Ohio. While
..it's itiiction, llhe ibook is get;ti.ng national acclaim for
~lS .imagery and· sense of
malism.
.
.
, His chanwters are dam:aged souls. There' s a moth·c r who asks her son te creep
..into her bedroom IMith scis_sors and .aot out a serial
-tiller fantasy. There 's a
drunken father who orders
.!tis 7-year-old son .to. dobber another boy in llhe
.,resllroorn of .a -drive-in
.movie tbeater.
, ·The book' s title is a nod
.to Pollock's hometown of
~mstiff, .a hamlet of
a few hundred people
,about I() miles from
Otitlicotbe thai had gravel
roads, rundown housing, a
.licw gener.al stores and a
_rough-and-rumble reputa6on when Pollock was
-growirig liP· The Foads are
paved now, and new
_h omes have been built -on
4{i).,acrc lots l!bat used to be
-farmland, but It's stiJJI a
,crossroads.
"lfs not nearly .as wiled as
the s(!l)ries in · .m e book,"
5aid Pollock, 53, sipping
-oofifee · over breakfast at a
lacal. •restaUrant. "I took
tlhat fhard-'OOJIC reputation
ud SDJt of cran'ked i.t up a
couple notches."
. , · The ~~esult is a bleak,
1i0D1Cfuneti w0lent 'ook at
people on me fringes of
.Appaiadbjan society who
aren't ty·pic.al fodder for
.pib!Jishing giants ~ike
Doubleday. which released
die book in March and
printed 27,()(i)O copies .
:That's .about five times the
.average for short story colJections,
said
Gerald
How.arli, who ,c dilell ·the
book.
· Sales were :at 3,000 as of
mid-A,pril acooFding to
!1f...,1oen BOOkScan, which
m.:b ;about 70 percent .of

,.......

Don -Ray Pollmck, author ·of 1/(nockemstiff, is seen at Grandview Cemetery, which overlooks
the paper mill where Pollock used till ,~ &lt;in ·t:hillicothe. ·
.
many ft.merican fictian ;guage .and sentence struc- read the book,. you think,
wrilers."
rure. He also ltOOk ,a .coore- ' Hey, I didn't know he bad
Pollock sailil he's flat- spondeocec.ourse in fiction ·t hesetboughtsin ·h isbead,"'
rered, even a bit embar- wl'iting .atOU.
_
he said.
rassed. by ;the accolades.
Some of-his early stories
People in Knockemstiff
Publishers Weekly and The were published in small lit- and Chillicothe, where a
New YOJt Times .compared •erary journals. ln2005, with few of tbe stories ' in
his book to "Winesburg, lhe support of his wife, Pollock's book take place,
Ohio,"
Sherwood P0llock quit the paper mill aren't upset by the crude
Anclerson's 1919 masrer- where he'd worked for 32 portrayaL Everyone gets
piece an small-town life. years ta seek a masler' s thai it's fiction, said
Am!IZ@n.oom put the book degree in creative writing al Hutley, 51.
on its list oftop new releas- Ohio Stale University.
Ohio State awarded
es for March.
To leave the factory Pollock with a one-year fel"~ockemslliff" is filled and the security of a weekly lowship in January, which
with dege·nerales, but · paycheck - was difficult, he's using to finish a novel
Pollock ,IJoesn 't mean to but so far no regrets, said about a serial killer in
portray his hometown .as a Pollock, .a . trim man with Knockemstiff whose crime
gothic freabfuow.
light brown "hair who speaks spree is intertwined with the
"I probably pushed the with a slow drawl.
story of a teenager yearning
envelope as far as yau can
"It's .apparent to me how tO •CSCllflC life in the hills. go without stereotyping or much he wants to . be a
Doubleday has an exclu· going iiOO far to the point writer," said Valerie Vogrin, . sivc first option to publish
where you're just making an editor al .Sou 'wesrer, a lhe novel .
fun -e f these people. And literary joumal at Southern
He works on the manumaking furl of these people IJIPnais
Univ~ity
in script up to five hours a
was never my intentioo .at Edwardsmle, m., :that pub- day, typing on a compuler
all,~ said Pollock, a high ili&amp;d some •Of Poilook'.s in the attic of bis Victorianschool dropout who battled .early waR:.
era hame that serves as his
his ·Own cdrug .and &amp;oohol
"There's no canelessness office. It's also the only
addictions.
in his writing,~ Vogrin said. place in the house that his
Tire book' s characrers .are "Every word is there for a wife will let him smoke.
trapped in life qr in situa- reason." ·
Black-and-while photos ·of
tions ·!bat l!hey don'twant to
"Fight Club"
author authQrs suc.h as James
be in, he said. Some are Chuck Palahniuk is among Jones and poet Jahn
looking for a way out, while Pollock's fans. The two are Berryman are framed on
others are beyond redemp- to tour together in May for the walls for inspiration,
· tion.
bookstore readings
in and a window to )lis left
Follook was lucky to find Minneapolis, St. Louis and . overlooks the top of a maghis own wa:y ·out.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
nolia tree in his backyard, a
He got sober in i 986 .after
Palabniuk said lie loves serene view when contema fourth Dip tn mhah, then the fatalistic characterS in plating plot lines.
started takinfl night classes "Knockemstiff."
The writing can be men. at Ohio Umversity, where
''They work Cllormously tally
e~rhausting,
but
be graduated wilh _an bard to stay stuck in their Pollock said be's confident
English «&lt;egree in 1994. · misery,.and that seems more that he's got a good story.
:maustty sales.
"AU my tife 1 !lhaught realistic .and touching than
Pollock is scheduled to
., ..American fictian by writingwauld be a nice life a.ny standand transfalmallion graduale with his mas1er's
uli large is written by ·b ut never had the disci- and
happy , ending,
degree at the end of lhe
pe0ple wbo have gone pline or determination to Pahlhaiuk said.
year, and then he' d like to
~fdl and come ,o ut of try.~ said Pollock, an avid
Pollock's former oo1- gel a job teaching fiction
.our etlte educational insti- reader who drove a dump (eag~~es at ti-le paper mill writing to college stuclents.
Wtioo&amp;, which i.s nol to say truck at the paper mill. have enjoyed watcliing liis
"I got lucky," he said, still
1hat those people don't ·try "When I was 45 I realized emer~ence as a writer. a bit surprised at his sucJto take a bard look at the if I dido 't give it a shot, it What s shocking about the cess. "I've gotten a lot of
:iconditions af . American would be too !ale."
grim
stories
in nice compliments, and don't
'life, because they .do ,~
He began his eight-year "Knockemstiff' isn't the get me wrong, I like to hear
HowaJid said.
quest to become .a profes- subject quttler but where it them, but I don't want to get
:. "But there' s no substitule sional wrirer by typmg out comes from, said mill work- arrogant enough that I
fore:x.pericace, and Don's a stories
by
Ernest erCurtis Hurley.believe that stuff. I just
·witness ito dUngs thai don't Hemingway and others,
"Don's kind of a quiet ' wouldn't be the same
·rome .aoross the . radar of studying their use of Ian- guy. ·That's why when you wtiler."

.

H

'feeqs turn to thrift as jobs vanish and prices rise
BY ANNE D'hlllliCBIIZIO

••

Now, sbc Says, sbc and bel"

months a,go lllld has had to
cut back on spending. He '1i
or just browse at -the mall
. shoppin:g more at 'Thrget and
"I used to be able to buy a less ·at Abercrombie &amp;
T-sbirt and jeans every cou- Fitch's HollisleT.stores.
pie of months," VICtoria said,
"Now, I just get money
adding some of her friends from my parents, but they
are even "making tbeir own don't bave as much because
_clothes .o r altering their old 'of taxes and everything
ones to fitu lOOk beller."
else," be said.
· ,
Vil:fma' s ..........,., M"o&amp;elle
Teen hiring has sllm.,.-_.1
Bfadk:y. said She and her bu5- )1}' 5 J)l(roent since M~
baitd. cul back spending~ - 2007, wtth-lnany mom'iilid"
themselves last year, lllld pop stores, which typically
eady this year also started hire younger woth:rs, lay~ back "frivolous" buying off employees. Hiring in
Ill¥, for 'their tbrce gids.
the overall job IDirlret fell
'We have made a ron- by jiiSI 0.1 percent during
scious cffrnt to not use creel- the same period.
it cards," !jllid Bradley, who
Thafsstillnotasbadas'the
stopped paying for Victoria' s- 13 pcrcrnt drop in 1i= hiring
rexi messages l&amp;St 10011th. in the early 1990s. That
The top priority is school means that if the larger ,job
supplies lllld choir fees.
~ miirors tbe .last u:eo
The job market for ~s biriqg slump, "we' re not out
isn't what it used -to be, of the woods,fl slid M"odwl
eitber: Natl)an Reeser., a P. Meom:a, cbief eoooomist
Cincinnati 15-year-old, lost at the lntmultioiJal llimcil
his job making piiza four of S~Jowio11 Ceok:r.!- ·

mends head for the tluift store

i'

1-800-291-5600

'Into the Wild':
The book and movie
After seeing the movie
"Into the Wild,n I was
moved to read the book.
Usually the movie does not
live up to thf! !ext, but this is
an exception. Jon Krakauer,
Beverly
an uutdoorsman and mounGettles
·t ain climber, wrore the
book. He is also die author
of
anolher
tale
of
endbl:ance, Into Thin Air,
about an expedition on
Mount Everest which went and his mark on the b\IS, and
terribly wrong and left sev- he will leave a mark op yQur
eral Climbers dead on the memory.
Essentially,
mountain.
McCandle ss starved to
Into the Wild is tbe story death, but was al so brought
of Christopher McCandless, down by eating Lhe wrong
J-990 graduale of Emory thing. Many natives and sciUniversity. A fan of Jack entists have tried 10 figure
London, Thoreau, and ·out exactly why and how he
· · McCandless died, and Krakauer thinks
Tolstoy,
refused his affluent parents' he has found the answer.
offer of a new car and hit
One wonders why this
the .road in .his old Datsun · inrelligent, idealistic young
immedialely afler gradua- man left ·all the comforts
tion. Before leaving, he and benefits of civilization
donated lhe remains of his to hike into the wiiderness
college fund, some $24,000, alone. Krakauer tells of a
-to Oxfam America.
similar experience in his
He drove as far as own youth -when he climbed
Arizona, where the car the De vi I' s Thumb on the
became incapacitated in a Briti sh Columbia/Alaska
flash flood. He burned the border. The .author does a
last of his money, removed great job of getting inside
the plates from the car and tbe head of Chris/Alex .
The story began with an
buried them. He was then
article in Outdoor magaon fool and hitchhiking . .
McCandless began call- zine, which prompred many
ing himself Alexander of those who had known
Supertramp, as he did not Chris/Alex along the way to
want his family to know contact Krakauer, who
where he was. He was espe- retraced his journey and
cially critical of his father, interviewed tho§e who met
·
an aerospace engineer, who him.
the
most
interesting
cbarhad an earlier family. He
also had another son, born acler in the film is SO-yearbetween Chris and his sis- old Ronald Franz, played to
ter, Carine, by that first · perfection by Hal Holbrook. .
wife. Chris saw his father . who got an Oscar nomina. as a bigamist. The young tion for this role. Franz was
man had a high moral code a widower whose wife and
and high expectations for only son were killed by a
drunk driver while Franz
himself.
During
his
travels, was in lhe military. He lived
Chris/Alex camped at a solitary exisrence," working
Bullhead City, a few miles leather to make some exlrv
outsicle Laughlin, Nev. He cash. He and McCandless
·
had a couple of friends who developed a real bond du sold used books, and · he · ing their time together.
Though you know the end.
·spent some time with tbe
of
the story, that will not precouple. He made friends
vent
you enjoyment of the
easily and worked harvesting milo in Carthage, S.D. excellent writing on the batHe bought a canoe and pad- tle between man and nature.
dled down the Rio Gnmde It is a riveting and haunting
story. lt can take you to a
into Mexico.
place
_you may never be, to
His goal was always
Alaska, where he planned to see things you will never
walk "into tbe wild" and see. I'm far too old now to
spend a summer living off go .hiking "into the wild,"
but I can walk with Chris
the land. He carried very litMcCandless through the
lie with him - a rifle, .len beauty of Krakauer"s prose.
pounds of rice and not much
This reminds me of one of
else . He hitched _up to the chief reasons to read Fairbanks and caught a ride "I read because one life is
with a trucker, who let him not enough.~
off a1 the ·Stampede Trai) on
snow-packed side road .
The dale was Apri128, 1992~
In
September,
McCandless' body was
found inside an old bus
which had been trucked into
the wilderness for the use of
liM Srmday F,_s.Seruinel
hunlers. He had survived for.
Subseribe 1oday
over I 00 days by eating
-446,2342 or 992-2155
TOOlS and berries and hunting gllj)le. He left diaries

a.

IIOliD IDBEAPAII'

· OFVOIIIJit

v

. '

KARR
CONTRACTING
(m) 646-5566

Systems, Inc.

Sunday, .April%7, 2008 .

.

7-40-985-3444
34740 St. Rt. 7
Pomeloy

CaU us tcdayot:

Quality Window

PageCs

Olrwt' · ~~~~p.-a ..ay ·

.

d ........ la:

•M It ) .
•P -ayfun . . . . iejiiyar-w=ey

•Dn••twmy-. ·,

www.qualitywindowsystems.com
'Wittlapp!Wedaedit.
•
------------------------7'"----~:-------------------------,-..,. r~ ~

Be amazed with modular.
The better, stronger, faster way to build.

•--5 ,
• f'*'

1111~, Clpe Cod. TWI S11ry,

jttn I

(BBNI•n Five Points and Chester)

www.karrcontracting.com
- www.allamericanhomes.com

IIIII __,..., Halies.

Design Center Hours

£7

MtHI·Fri-11:00 1D .i:Otl all&lt;l By ,ypoii!JJaelll
s.t: lly . , m - t
s-: By w•i e~~~

.

--··· --·. .-. --•··-- •-

.(

_.,..._""'"-

I

.,
r

�•
' .

CR!.EBRATIONS

PageC4

s;.,.,,Ap!2'], 21008 .

Infottuatiooat ineeti'V' ,

set on . . .r~ program
RIO GRANDE - Tile
Uai~· of Rio Otaode
WI be boldina iDfonDitioaal m eiup. _in dne loc:alioos in 90'llhrnl Ollio for
KSich•s ia:testc1 in
leuning abold lhe

-a will abo lqin •

6 p.m.

Rio
~ _. Sba- surr
De

IDCdings :at

Uoi:wa:sily will also be fol-

loqd by infurmaliooal
=: lings tor the masa- of
busiDess adminim'alioa in

...... or~ecarioo ioct.ss- ~Jlll«Uiii*
room teriiw.B P."'!'at.
1 p;m. Stucleot~ can blk die

C 0 D N ER DAVIDS 0 N
ENGAGEMENT

The; m • ;ein~s ftl be bdcl
011dle RioGrmdc.....,IS,as
wdl as • Sba- Slac
University in Purlsn..o -t
Soudnn Stile O••••••lity
Col~ in Hillil!oro.
I
Rio Gnlnclc o8'mi twoI masrer of cdlacalion in
: classroom aer"ing · pro-

!

. :!:s~~=:k!:. entrepre-

TUesday, May 6 ;and WI
al&amp;o begin at 6 p.m. This
meeting will be held in
Room 210 in Massie Hall
The inf&lt;W:maliooal meet-

.: :

:~~-=:

~ownrompanies. · Mmy
0f die students in die MB:l\

p:ognuualsoendup~

tbfir own businesses While

~~-~.!!.gof~·

...., """~~
ia classroom teacbing Jl"'gram is a two-year progtam
1111t includes a mix of boOI
u:aditional clllssroom and
oo•line wmk.
Stucleots enrolliiig in die
Rio Grande pmgram at &lt;all
liRe instinJtionS will be Rio
Gr.ancle
stuclents.
Rio
&lt;bnclc holds the progmm
•lhe two locations olfcampiiS in oob" to be ~sible
to stJIIcleots
.... gl"lUt -~ntlio.
1he dasirooms. all dee
WoMil•iom will be ow11•rt"
eel dJrough ..-icleo lints so
dut&lt;:ludrutsooeadlcampu~

can imi:Act with cadi otiJI%

At die iufiJrmlliooa1 mcet· S, area lrRdems will be
listen to preseatllioos
about die ~ and have
tbcir qucstlODS answcml
' iog at Soulhem State
Fo.r mo~ illjo.~
Community College will be call Jason IIIUtt.!rs dl (800j
. held on Wednesday, May 1 -281-7201.

PICKENS~

Dod!!!i

RACINE - 'Sarah ·C elesta Pickens imd
McCombs were man'icd on Feb. 9, 2008, at the Ru
Church of God in Rudlllld by the Rev. Ronald Head!:
The bride is the da•.gbter of Calvin lllld Kay Pickens of ,
Racine. Her fiance is the son of Lewis and Bnmdace
McCombs of Patriot.
·
The bride was given in marriage by ber fa!llei Jessya
Barnette of Pomeroy was the.maid of hooor and kssica
Gloyd of Letart was the maid -of honor. Bridesoaids Wl:l1!
Jenny Hatfield of Syracuse, and the junior bridesalli4 IWI&amp; .
Hanna Barnette of Pomeroy. .
'.'
-·
Halley Barnette ·served .a s flower girl, arid JOShua
Hatfield as the ring beam:. ·
·
··
·.
. Cory Hatfield of Syracuse was best man, and groomsmen
were Jeremy Barnette of Pomeroy; Man Milliron of Leta1t,
Jacob Hatfield of Syracuse. Ushers were Corey Hatfield
·
and Jeremy Barnette.
A reception as held at the .Middleport Legion Hall witb
music by C&amp;J DJs. The couple took a ttip to Huntingron;
W.Va., after the wedding. They now reside at Racine.
The bride is a graduate of Southem High School in 2005
and is attending Gallip9lisCommunity College. The groOm
gradualed from South Gallia High School, studied industrial mainlenance at Buckeye Hills Career ~ for two
_ years and is currenlly working at Carmichael ~uipment.1

...,..ISC ·

~!t~:=-.:!i:= :~an:u~:

RAClNE- Mike and Lee Codner of Racine .announoc: 1 The two mastcn' of eduthe engagement of lheir dlUighret, Brandi Miobelle Godner ' ~ in ~ ~of Marietta, to John Michael Davidson, also of Marietta, mg p~ ·~ ~ mtcrson of John and Debbie Davidson of Pomeroy.
·
v~llon
speci:aJislle&amp;r!Y
The bri.de elect is a 2001 graduare of Soolhem Higb ~clbood ~- ~ .m
School and a 2006 graduale of Hocking CoUcge. She is an mtavenllon spocialistlmild
adrninistraive assistant witjl Elpro Sen&gt;ices Inc,
~ ~oderale . 1he progAJD
Her fiance, a 1999 gcaduate of Meigs High School and a IS w1dely ~ .md reg2002 graduate of Washington Stale Community College, is ularly draws ~tuclents from
employed at AEP Muskingum River Plant.
around die reg;~on.
.
The wedding will take plaee at 4:3&lt;1 p.m. on June 21,
_Classes are offered on the
2008, at the Racine UniUlef Methodist Churoh, Racine.
Rio Gmncle campus, and on
the
Shawnee
State
University and Southern
state Community College
campuses.
The infonnatiooal mecriqg
at Rio Grande will be bcld Oil
Monday, May 5 hc:gi~ :It
6 P.·m. The ooHK!ur JDI"!C''iiqg
will be bcld in R00111 216 in
Bob Evans Fanns Hall
The inf01'Jll81ional meetiog at Shawnee S.
University will be belcl GD

MCCOMBS
WEDDING

MBA ~ full-time or
pat-Ume.o odle Rio Grande
c ¥«. aocl pllt-4imc on
dJeSbawoce 5I* Clmpus.
·n e MBA ptog.am is
· • • fie in dJe rqion
ofils focus 011 eubq::waotdsllip. The prognm IS 9d up
to pvc •S1Uelcnts business

:£to

, ' MAHAN
ANNIV·ER:SARY GAlLIPOLIS - Scott and Becky Mahan celebrated
their 25th weddiJill anniversary on March 26, 2008.
They were married March 26, 1983, by the Rev. Alfred
Holley.
.
They enjoyod a trip to Gatlinbw-g, Tenn., when: they
renewed 1heir wedding vows at 1he l.llapel of Honeymoon
Hills. Scott and Becky are the parents of two daughun,
Megan and Healher Mahan.

·M' BUSINESS WRITER

spending is recession-proof:
lt holds . Up longer, but can
· eventually fold.
It's even becoming cool
.J to be frugal.
Last week, EJJegid..com,
tbci ICeD offshoot ofFJie .mg.
arine, !iumcbed a new video'
fixture called Self-Made Gid,
which shows . teens how -tn
make clotbes'and accessories.

NEW YORK - The souring job market and rising
costs of the usual reenage
i~ulgenc7s a slice of
ptua, a drive to the mall, the
honest new jeans - .are caus· mg teens to do somctbing
they rarely do: be thrifty.
~- ~ ~- It's.a far .
thei'!ti.l" · The~ Yi~
li~~41het~lli,g-sfiel1lllilg llf4'CCffift lfoy; m-creale a ·pmm cltilfh.
· yeats,
teens splurged
"It's a little lack:y in the
on $100 Coach wristlet economic unrest' -tn tote a
handbags, S60 Juio/ Co~ture big logo bag," said Holly
T-shlTIS and $80 ~Jeans Siegel. the sire's senior edifrom Abercrombie &amp; Fitch.
tor. She said it' s no lolljler
Now jobs for teens are about teens "one- uppmg
less plentiful, and parents each either," · but rather
wbo supply the allowances where they can get it cheap.
~ feeling the economic
Victoria Bradley, a 16pmch themselves.
year-old from Springfield.
. The stalwart Tetailers of Mo., says the $80 sbc cams
.teen 'fparel, suc)l as racb moolh from baby-sitting
Aberctonibie and American is bcilljl Cllllen ·up by more
,llagle Outfitters Inc ~ .are expens1ve sChool lunches,
-reporting sluggish sales, tme.night mrls With friends
&amp;:fying the m~ that teen and stylilih ckJCbr:S.

ON THE BOOKSHEI..F

•

·ohio author mines dark tales in debut
BY IIIII I
~IPIIESS

,"

Ullll
WRITER

.
.. ailiJ.IoomE '

The .
.,b\)ot sigiUft8 bSkd for

·: ~S.

- jndic ,..,. the
.-~s ........ oo ~d,ges
.:.s - It ....... Dooa1d Ray

-,llnlkx:l; for depii&lt;:ri'lg life
•
as agnAesque blend of
wife bNteriJ
-'lafifi~:~+~....;...

a. •Jili'R,

.. wNioctj ,; a ~·iliiX P¥Cf
_,.al ~Who drew on
;I[!JII:ilil protilc 11s lb&amp;t haunt-

ed tiiellds and I'Cillliives for
.liis
fi~st
book,
""Kooclremstitf," a collec. tion of dark stories set in
.J11lT.al southern Ohio. While
..it's itiiction, llhe ibook is get;ti.ng national acclaim for
~lS .imagery and· sense of
malism.
.
.
, His chanwters are dam:aged souls. There' s a moth·c r who asks her son te creep
..into her bedroom IMith scis_sors and .aot out a serial
-tiller fantasy. There 's a
drunken father who orders
.!tis 7-year-old son .to. dobber another boy in llhe
.,resllroorn of .a -drive-in
.movie tbeater.
, ·The book' s title is a nod
.to Pollock's hometown of
~mstiff, .a hamlet of
a few hundred people
,about I() miles from
Otitlicotbe thai had gravel
roads, rundown housing, a
.licw gener.al stores and a
_rough-and-rumble reputa6on when Pollock was
-growirig liP· The Foads are
paved now, and new
_h omes have been built -on
4{i).,acrc lots l!bat used to be
-farmland, but It's stiJJI a
,crossroads.
"lfs not nearly .as wiled as
the s(!l)ries in · .m e book,"
5aid Pollock, 53, sipping
-oofifee · over breakfast at a
lacal. •restaUrant. "I took
tlhat fhard-'OOJIC reputation
ud SDJt of cran'ked i.t up a
couple notches."
. , · The ~~esult is a bleak,
1i0D1Cfuneti w0lent 'ook at
people on me fringes of
.Appaiadbjan society who
aren't ty·pic.al fodder for
.pib!Jishing giants ~ike
Doubleday. which released
die book in March and
printed 27,()(i)O copies .
:That's .about five times the
.average for short story colJections,
said
Gerald
How.arli, who ,c dilell ·the
book.
· Sales were :at 3,000 as of
mid-A,pril acooFding to
!1f...,1oen BOOkScan, which
m.:b ;about 70 percent .of

,.......

Don -Ray Pollmck, author ·of 1/(nockemstiff, is seen at Grandview Cemetery, which overlooks
the paper mill where Pollock used till ,~ &lt;in ·t:hillicothe. ·
.
many ft.merican fictian ;guage .and sentence struc- read the book,. you think,
wrilers."
rure. He also ltOOk ,a .coore- ' Hey, I didn't know he bad
Pollock sailil he's flat- spondeocec.ourse in fiction ·t hesetboughtsin ·h isbead,"'
rered, even a bit embar- wl'iting .atOU.
_
he said.
rassed. by ;the accolades.
Some of-his early stories
People in Knockemstiff
Publishers Weekly and The were published in small lit- and Chillicothe, where a
New YOJt Times .compared •erary journals. ln2005, with few of tbe stories ' in
his book to "Winesburg, lhe support of his wife, Pollock's book take place,
Ohio,"
Sherwood P0llock quit the paper mill aren't upset by the crude
Anclerson's 1919 masrer- where he'd worked for 32 portrayaL Everyone gets
piece an small-town life. years ta seek a masler' s thai it's fiction, said
Am!IZ@n.oom put the book degree in creative writing al Hutley, 51.
on its list oftop new releas- Ohio Stale University.
Ohio State awarded
es for March.
To leave the factory Pollock with a one-year fel"~ockemslliff" is filled and the security of a weekly lowship in January, which
with dege·nerales, but · paycheck - was difficult, he's using to finish a novel
Pollock ,IJoesn 't mean to but so far no regrets, said about a serial killer in
portray his hometown .as a Pollock, .a . trim man with Knockemstiff whose crime
gothic freabfuow.
light brown "hair who speaks spree is intertwined with the
"I probably pushed the with a slow drawl.
story of a teenager yearning
envelope as far as yau can
"It's .apparent to me how tO •CSCllflC life in the hills. go without stereotyping or much he wants to . be a
Doubleday has an exclu· going iiOO far to the point writer," said Valerie Vogrin, . sivc first option to publish
where you're just making an editor al .Sou 'wesrer, a lhe novel .
fun -e f these people. And literary joumal at Southern
He works on the manumaking furl of these people IJIPnais
Univ~ity
in script up to five hours a
was never my intentioo .at Edwardsmle, m., :that pub- day, typing on a compuler
all,~ said Pollock, a high ili&amp;d some •Of Poilook'.s in the attic of bis Victorianschool dropout who battled .early waR:.
era hame that serves as his
his ·Own cdrug .and &amp;oohol
"There's no canelessness office. It's also the only
addictions.
in his writing,~ Vogrin said. place in the house that his
Tire book' s characrers .are "Every word is there for a wife will let him smoke.
trapped in life qr in situa- reason." ·
Black-and-while photos ·of
tions ·!bat l!hey don'twant to
"Fight Club"
author authQrs suc.h as James
be in, he said. Some are Chuck Palahniuk is among Jones and poet Jahn
looking for a way out, while Pollock's fans. The two are Berryman are framed on
others are beyond redemp- to tour together in May for the walls for inspiration,
· tion.
bookstore readings
in and a window to )lis left
Follook was lucky to find Minneapolis, St. Louis and . overlooks the top of a maghis own wa:y ·out.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
nolia tree in his backyard, a
He got sober in i 986 .after
Palabniuk said lie loves serene view when contema fourth Dip tn mhah, then the fatalistic characterS in plating plot lines.
started takinfl night classes "Knockemstiff."
The writing can be men. at Ohio Umversity, where
''They work Cllormously tally
e~rhausting,
but
be graduated wilh _an bard to stay stuck in their Pollock said be's confident
English «&lt;egree in 1994. · misery,.and that seems more that he's got a good story.
:maustty sales.
"AU my tife 1 !lhaught realistic .and touching than
Pollock is scheduled to
., ..American fictian by writingwauld be a nice life a.ny standand transfalmallion graduale with his mas1er's
uli large is written by ·b ut never had the disci- and
happy , ending,
degree at the end of lhe
pe0ple wbo have gone pline or determination to Pahlhaiuk said.
year, and then he' d like to
~fdl and come ,o ut of try.~ said Pollock, an avid
Pollock's former oo1- gel a job teaching fiction
.our etlte educational insti- reader who drove a dump (eag~~es at ti-le paper mill writing to college stuclents.
Wtioo&amp;, which i.s nol to say truck at the paper mill. have enjoyed watcliing liis
"I got lucky," he said, still
1hat those people don't ·try "When I was 45 I realized emer~ence as a writer. a bit surprised at his sucJto take a bard look at the if I dido 't give it a shot, it What s shocking about the cess. "I've gotten a lot of
:iconditions af . American would be too !ale."
grim
stories
in nice compliments, and don't
'life, because they .do ,~
He began his eight-year "Knockemstiff' isn't the get me wrong, I like to hear
HowaJid said.
quest to become .a profes- subject quttler but where it them, but I don't want to get
:. "But there' s no substitule sional wrirer by typmg out comes from, said mill work- arrogant enough that I
fore:x.pericace, and Don's a stories
by
Ernest erCurtis Hurley.believe that stuff. I just
·witness ito dUngs thai don't Hemingway and others,
"Don's kind of a quiet ' wouldn't be the same
·rome .aoross the . radar of studying their use of Ian- guy. ·That's why when you wtiler."

.

H

'feeqs turn to thrift as jobs vanish and prices rise
BY ANNE D'hlllliCBIIZIO

••

Now, sbc Says, sbc and bel"

months a,go lllld has had to
cut back on spending. He '1i
or just browse at -the mall
. shoppin:g more at 'Thrget and
"I used to be able to buy a less ·at Abercrombie &amp;
T-sbirt and jeans every cou- Fitch's HollisleT.stores.
pie of months," VICtoria said,
"Now, I just get money
adding some of her friends from my parents, but they
are even "making tbeir own don't bave as much because
_clothes .o r altering their old 'of taxes and everything
ones to fitu lOOk beller."
else," be said.
· ,
Vil:fma' s ..........,., M"o&amp;elle
Teen hiring has sllm.,.-_.1
Bfadk:y. said She and her bu5- )1}' 5 J)l(roent since M~
baitd. cul back spending~ - 2007, wtth-lnany mom'iilid"
themselves last year, lllld pop stores, which typically
eady this year also started hire younger woth:rs, lay~ back "frivolous" buying off employees. Hiring in
Ill¥, for 'their tbrce gids.
the overall job IDirlret fell
'We have made a ron- by jiiSI 0.1 percent during
scious cffrnt to not use creel- the same period.
it cards," !jllid Bradley, who
Thafsstillnotasbadas'the
stopped paying for Victoria' s- 13 pcrcrnt drop in 1i= hiring
rexi messages l&amp;St 10011th. in the early 1990s. That
The top priority is school means that if the larger ,job
supplies lllld choir fees.
~ miirors tbe .last u:eo
The job market for ~s biriqg slump, "we' re not out
isn't what it used -to be, of the woods,fl slid M"odwl
eitber: Natl)an Reeser., a P. Meom:a, cbief eoooomist
Cincinnati 15-year-old, lost at the lntmultioiJal llimcil
his job making piiza four of S~Jowio11 Ceok:r.!- ·

mends head for the tluift store

i'

1-800-291-5600

'Into the Wild':
The book and movie
After seeing the movie
"Into the Wild,n I was
moved to read the book.
Usually the movie does not
live up to thf! !ext, but this is
an exception. Jon Krakauer,
Beverly
an uutdoorsman and mounGettles
·t ain climber, wrore the
book. He is also die author
of
anolher
tale
of
endbl:ance, Into Thin Air,
about an expedition on
Mount Everest which went and his mark on the b\IS, and
terribly wrong and left sev- he will leave a mark op yQur
eral Climbers dead on the memory.
Essentially,
mountain.
McCandle ss starved to
Into the Wild is tbe story death, but was al so brought
of Christopher McCandless, down by eating Lhe wrong
J-990 graduale of Emory thing. Many natives and sciUniversity. A fan of Jack entists have tried 10 figure
London, Thoreau, and ·out exactly why and how he
· · McCandless died, and Krakauer thinks
Tolstoy,
refused his affluent parents' he has found the answer.
offer of a new car and hit
One wonders why this
the .road in .his old Datsun · inrelligent, idealistic young
immedialely afler gradua- man left ·all the comforts
tion. Before leaving, he and benefits of civilization
donated lhe remains of his to hike into the wiiderness
college fund, some $24,000, alone. Krakauer tells of a
-to Oxfam America.
similar experience in his
He drove as far as own youth -when he climbed
Arizona, where the car the De vi I' s Thumb on the
became incapacitated in a Briti sh Columbia/Alaska
flash flood. He burned the border. The .author does a
last of his money, removed great job of getting inside
the plates from the car and tbe head of Chris/Alex .
The story began with an
buried them. He was then
article in Outdoor magaon fool and hitchhiking . .
McCandless began call- zine, which prompred many
ing himself Alexander of those who had known
Supertramp, as he did not Chris/Alex along the way to
want his family to know contact Krakauer, who
where he was. He was espe- retraced his journey and
cially critical of his father, interviewed tho§e who met
·
an aerospace engineer, who him.
the
most
interesting
cbarhad an earlier family. He
also had another son, born acler in the film is SO-yearbetween Chris and his sis- old Ronald Franz, played to
ter, Carine, by that first · perfection by Hal Holbrook. .
wife. Chris saw his father . who got an Oscar nomina. as a bigamist. The young tion for this role. Franz was
man had a high moral code a widower whose wife and
and high expectations for only son were killed by a
drunk driver while Franz
himself.
During
his
travels, was in lhe military. He lived
Chris/Alex camped at a solitary exisrence," working
Bullhead City, a few miles leather to make some exlrv
outsicle Laughlin, Nev. He cash. He and McCandless
·
had a couple of friends who developed a real bond du sold used books, and · he · ing their time together.
Though you know the end.
·spent some time with tbe
of
the story, that will not precouple. He made friends
vent
you enjoyment of the
easily and worked harvesting milo in Carthage, S.D. excellent writing on the batHe bought a canoe and pad- tle between man and nature.
dled down the Rio Gnmde It is a riveting and haunting
story. lt can take you to a
into Mexico.
place
_you may never be, to
His goal was always
Alaska, where he planned to see things you will never
walk "into tbe wild" and see. I'm far too old now to
spend a summer living off go .hiking "into the wild,"
but I can walk with Chris
the land. He carried very litMcCandless through the
lie with him - a rifle, .len beauty of Krakauer"s prose.
pounds of rice and not much
This reminds me of one of
else . He hitched _up to the chief reasons to read Fairbanks and caught a ride "I read because one life is
with a trucker, who let him not enough.~
off a1 the ·Stampede Trai) on
snow-packed side road .
The dale was Apri128, 1992~
In
September,
McCandless' body was
found inside an old bus
which had been trucked into
the wilderness for the use of
liM Srmday F,_s.Seruinel
hunlers. He had survived for.
Subseribe 1oday
over I 00 days by eating
-446,2342 or 992-2155
TOOlS and berries and hunting gllj)le. He left diaries

a.

IIOliD IDBEAPAII'

· OFVOIIIJit

v

. '

KARR
CONTRACTING
(m) 646-5566

Systems, Inc.

Sunday, .April%7, 2008 .

.

7-40-985-3444
34740 St. Rt. 7
Pomeloy

CaU us tcdayot:

Quality Window

PageCs

Olrwt' · ~~~~p.-a ..ay ·

.

d ........ la:

•M It ) .
•P -ayfun . . . . iejiiyar-w=ey

•Dn••twmy-. ·,

www.qualitywindowsystems.com
'Wittlapp!Wedaedit.
•
------------------------7'"----~:-------------------------,-..,. r~ ~

Be amazed with modular.
The better, stronger, faster way to build.

•--5 ,
• f'*'

1111~, Clpe Cod. TWI S11ry,

jttn I

(BBNI•n Five Points and Chester)

www.karrcontracting.com
- www.allamericanhomes.com

IIIII __,..., Halies.

Design Center Hours

£7

MtHI·Fri-11:00 1D .i:Otl all&lt;l By ,ypoii!JJaelll
s.t: lly . , m - t
s-: By w•i e~~~

.

--··· --·. .-. --•··-- •-

.(

_.,..._""'"-

I

.,
r

�6unbap limd -ittttind

ENTERT

Page~6·
Sunday, April rJ, 2008.

EN1'

DJWh on . . finn, P8ge D2 ·

O.delling, .,.., 06

OVS Spring Finale
features soloist
GALLIPOUS - Dry out
from this spring's rains by
basking in the wann glow
of great music and tbe
sound of a Stradivarius at
tbe
Ohio .
Valley
Symphony's season finale.
Led by music director Ray
Fowler, the OVS offers worts
by Brahms and Schumann at
8 p.m. S~y. May 3 .at the
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Perfonning Ans Centre in
downtown Gallipolis.
Both Brahms' Symphony
· No. 2 zand Schumann's
Cello Concerto have been
audience favorites since
tbey premiered, thanks to
their warmth and the parade
of beautiful tunes that will
leave concen-goers humming on their way home.
Schumann's concerto wasn't played until after his
death, but it was ·an instant
classic with its musical innovations and technical display
for tbe soloist. Brahms' second symphony is his most
pastoral, starting with the
gentle breezes of a summer
afternoon and ending with a
bla.zing outburst of joy.
Soloist for the Schumann
is Soo Bae, who began
studying cello at age 6 in
her native South Kotea- She
moved to Toronto two years
and
eventually
later
enrolled in that city's Royal
Conservatory of Music. She
earned
her
bachelor's
degree from Philadelphia's
Cunis School and an artist
diploma from tbe Jriilliilrd
School in New York:, where
she now teaches as an assis- ·
tant to Joel Krosnick.
Soo Bae in 2006 was
awarded fJrSt prize in the
Canada Council of tbe Ans
Instrument
Bank:
Competition, which earned
her the three-year loan of a
cello made in 1696 by the
legendary Stradivarius. She
thrives on innovative collaborations, and she bas performed with jazz clarinetist
Paquito D'Rivera well as
with Grammy-wjnning fiddler-violinist-composer

Sunday, April:l:J, 2oo8

Travel &amp; Destinations
What type of vacation can your tax rebate buy?
BY II' r M IL Swn
.
Above: In each hive, the queen is the only bee that '·
can lay eggs. She is larger than the worl&lt;er bees '
and can lay as many as 2,000 eggs per day duriog
the peak of the season.
:-

Mark: O'Connor.
In 2004, she fourided and, with her ft8nce Jason
Sub, continues to direct Angelos Mission Ensemble,
a music academy for .string
studetlts which ainas to educate ·and mold future
Christian musician leaders.
Tickets to the 2007-08
OVS finale · are available
through the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing
Ans Centre at 426 Second
Ave. in Gallipolis Ohio. The
box office is open 9 a.m. to
4 . p.m. Tuesdays through
Fridays and 90 minutes
prior to the concert. Call
(740) 446-ARTS (2787).
Prices are $22, $20 for
seniors and $10 fQr students. Tickets are also .available online at www.ohiovalleysymphony.org.
The public is also encouraged tQ attend OVS
rehc:anials fur free from 7 to
10 p.m. Friday, May 2, and
I to 4 p.m. Saturday. Open
rehearsals are an excellent
way for new audiences to
grow comfortable with
symphonic music.
The May 3 corporate
sponsor
IS
Baker &amp; ·
Ho~tetler. Funding for ~
Ohio Valley Sympbony IS
provided by the Ann Carson
Dater ~~t. Further
support 1s pro~ by the

IAit: Pure honey Is produced

by the bees and col- :
lected by Burdell for consumption by humans. The
sweet treat Is a super saturated solution of sugars .
made primarily from nectar. Since the honey has
betin digested by bees, it cantains enzymes which
make it a naturally self-preserved food .
•
JoyKDCil DUd/. . . . . .

Bees

mostly fed to the brood in
order to replace bees lost in
tbe nonnal
of life
cycle and colony activity.
• Bees do not create
honey; they are actually
improving upon a plant
product: Nectar. The honey
we eat is nectar that bees
. have r;epeatediy regurgitated and dehydrated.
• The average American
consumes a little over one
pound of honey a year.
• In the coutse of her lifetime, a worker bee will produce 1112th ofa teaspoon of
hooey.
• To make one pound of
honey, workers ia a hive fly

course

fromPageCI
flower, some of the pollen
grains are transferred onto
the stigma of other flowers
causing pollination to occur.
• Nectar provides the
gy for bee nutrition and
pollen provides the protein.
When bees are rearing ~
quantities of brood (baby
bees), they delihenlely gath~lien to meet the nutritiorial needs of the brood. A
boney bee that ·is deliberately gatherilig pollen is up to
len times more efficient as a .
pollinator than one that is
primarily gathering nectar
and · only unintentionally

mer-

Arts COuncil, • state
~ ~ fuDd&amp; and s~
ports. qullity arts expel"_~-

,.

\

• Bees collect nectar and
pollen from blooming
plants within fllght range.
As a rule of thumb the for-

llinl area III'Oillld a beehive
ences
to
stletlltben
Ohio
communities cufturally edu extend s fi.or two mil"es,
cationall and~ · although bees have been
Y·
Y- observed foraging twice and

55,000 miles and tap two
• While foraging for nee;
million flowers. .
tar and pollen, bees iiladver• In a single eQllecting tently transfer pollen f:roQl
trip, a worker will visit the male to the female cootbetween 50 and I00 flow- ponents of flowers. Each
ers. She will i-eturn to the year, bees pollinate 95 ~
hive Carrying over half her worth an estimated $10 biJ,.
weight in pollen and nectar. · lion in the U.S. alone. All
• A productive hive can told, insect pollinators conmake and store up to two tribute to one-third of the
pounds of honey a day. world's diet..
Thirty-five pounds of honey
• The first European
provides enough ·energy for colonists introduced Apis
a small colony to survive . mellifera, the common
the winter.
· honeybee, to the Americas.
• Theoretically, the energy Native Americans referred
in one ounce of .honey to the bees as ".White
would provide one bee with Man's Fly." Today honeyenough energy to fly around bees can be found all over
the world.
· the wor}d.

/ ·.u,/. ( t/1
I ,

transferring pollrn. .

omo

BY C111111TY I.JIna.IE

I.

N' MOVIE CRmC

,

Tina Fey didn't write "Baby Mama," though you'd he
forgiven for walking into it and assuming she did. After all,
her face appears prominently on the movie's ubiquitous
posters, alongside that of co-star and former "Saturday
Night Live" cast mate Amy Poehler.
The script actually comes from first-time director
Michael McCullers, who previously wrote the .second and
third "Austin Powers" movies, but it eould have used more
of the mean girl. Mommy culture, with Its capacity for
smugness and solipsism, seems like a ~ topic for parody,
but "Baby Mama" approaches it with kid gloves.
The movie certainly has its zingers here and ,there, and
enough laughs scattered throughout to keep it bopping
along i~ en~nain.ing fashion - that is, until its ooey..gooey
conclusiOn Jn which every conflict works out way too neatly. The strongest moments, though, come from s~g
players such as Steve Martin and Sigourney
eaver,
despite the comic talents of its exceedingly capable stars. ,
plays J:&lt;ate Holbrook._the control-freak: vice pesideutof
a Phil*lphia-based orgaruc gt'llrel)' store cbain who tiJQ
herself m the
so many ~men do:
at 37, llfii:r

,,

.

~

' •

I

I

extreme distances wears out
the wings of individual
bees, reduces ·t he life
expectancy of foraging bees
and therefore the efficiency
of the colony
• Nectar cbntains sugars
that are the primary source
of energy fOI' the bees' wing
muscles whicb are used to
heat colonies in winter.
Pollen provides the protein
and trace minerals that are

I \

r •v

. 39"'

'

E...,.o Pl.ennin&amp;

'•

I

I

Mtidi.llllid Plllllllin&amp;

Wilb!l'nailtll, Power oC
Attllltlley, ~ianwhip.
Life I n a a - , r..o.-.
TennH..Jth~

20

Med:iowe Suppl .,

• ·• .
Tax Minimjzetjoa

a 123&lt;4 M7a 9oF

1...-.esR.Henry

Call7~20~3
To 'Schedule An
Appoinbnent

"MmtR

· NEW YORK ~ A' getaway to
Republic. A road
trip with the kids. Even a weekend
in Vegas - as long as you take it
easy in the casino.
.
With .most Americans e r n g
to receive a tax rebate o ~ to
$600 ($1 ,200 for married couples), there are plenty of ways to
get the most vacation for your
buck:, say travel experts. Whether
it's a cruise, a tropical paradise, 01'
family travel, these trips can all be
done for Under $600 a person.
Note: Deals are subject to
~· travel may be limited to
oertam time periods, and taxes and
olher fees may apply.
:CRUISES: Appealing to firsttime cruisers and ·time-pressed
~velers, several cruise compa~s ~offering shorter cruises ou
oilier ships fOI' as little· as $60 a
night per person (based on double
occnpaocy), says Carolyn Spencer
Brown,
editor-in-i:hief
of
CruiseCritic.&lt;;om. For example, a
Caribbean Princess three-night
cruise from Fort Lauderdale to the
Bahamas in May starts at $259
(for a no-frills room).
1bere is no other traveL option
(other than a cruise} that gives you
so much for the base price," said
Brown. "You get all your meals,
you get aooommodations, you get
cntenainment, and you get to go to
a variety of places without having
tQ bop on planes, trains, buses."
· Travelers scrting a loop vacation aboard a more IUXIBlOils ship
can caleb deals in the ollseason. A
seven-day auise · on Holland
America to the Westan Caribbean
(leaving from Thmpa) in Novembei ·
!lilts at $514. (Thmsportatioo to
1be port, tips and extras like the spa,
alcohol and sbore excursions will
add to your bill.)
TROPICAL
GETAWAY:
Bdicve il oc not, $600 can get you a
beacb in the Olribhean 0£ Mexico.
O!eaptlights.cOm has an air-hotel
package from Pboenix to Cancun,
with a d&amp;w-illgbt hotel stay at the
four-star Barreto 1\Jcmcun IJeacb
Resort &amp; Hotel Villas fur $585 per
persDIL The resort is all-inclusive.
Cancun is a popular destination
for spring breakers searching for
the 24-hour party, boneymooners
on a romantic getaway, and any~
one else craving sunshine and

ibe Dominican

take a hike tbrou~ the rainforest,
or go whale- and (IHtle-watching.
Visit the Diamond Botanical
Gatdllns to see the mineral baths.
Mliho Bay Resorts on St. John..
U.S. Vugin Islands, bills itself as
ali "ecotOOrism destination." The
resort has l I 4 units connected by
ele\lllted walkways of srairs and
boardwalks to alleviate soil erosion and damage to the beach, and
a "Thlsh to Treasu~e" recycling
program, in which trash is recycled into craft items and anwott.
Round-trip airfare from Miami
to St. Thomas, with a feny to St.
John and four nights at the resort
is $430 per person, according to
Maho Bay Camps in oonjunction
with Trave::=;~
ROAD
: Skip the airport
hassles and hit the road. Even with
the high cost of gas, driving is
cheaper than flying a family of
fuur, 'says Carol White, who wrote
"Live Your Road Trip Dream,"
with her husband Phil.
"It's al.so a great way to reconnect with your spouse or family,"
said White, who recommends
leaving the electronics at boine for
real bonding time. "How long has
· it been since you played caros or a
board gamer·
To save on lodging and meals,
White suggests camping .out in a
· tent or RV in one of the national or
stale parks. Yellowstone National
Park: has biking, horseback riding,
boating, hiking and park: eduCation programs for kids. Most of
tbe national parts also have Junior
Ranger programs for children.
"You can pack a picnic to your
favorite spot, take a whitewater
» .,.._ rafting trip on the Rio Grande, go
u.s. Route 20 road signs a1e seen near Caze~ia, N.Y., in this July 24, snodreling at Dcy Tot111gas, rent a
2000 file photo.
sail,boat (on a lake) in Grand
Teton," said White. "The list is
If you want more than the endless and just depends upon the
relaxation. But travelers who are
seeking more · than beaches and beach, take the Islabon Jungle · features of the park: itself." ·
For couples, "there are a lot of
night clubs can arrange snodrel- River Tour on scenic drive on the
ing, diving and fishing excursions; Carretera Touristica Route, a road beautiful parkways and soenic dritour the ancient Mayan ruins a1 · lined with vendors and scenic ves .all over the oountl)' that you
Tulum, about 80 miles away; or views. The Dominican Republic is can combine with activities along
to
Columbus the way," such as. California's
. visit the neatby eco-P._ark:s Xcarat also 'home
and Xel-Ha for wildlife-watching. Aquaparque, one of the biggest State Route I (Highway I) along
the Pacific or routes through the
Travelzoo has an air,hotel ~­ water parks in the Caribbean.
Liberty Travel has several dis- state's wine count!)' in Sonoma
age to the Dominican Republic for
$499 per person, mcluding counted air-~1 ~k:ages to St. and Napa Valley. In New Et:~gland,
roundtrip airfare from Miami and Lucia. A sample arr-botel package U.S. Route l includes small towns
New YOlk. five nights at the four- Ieavi~~g from New York:, witb and the coast. Pick: a theme, such
star Sunscape Casa del Mar (all- three nights in ·the four-star Coco as historic mansions, golf courses,
inclusive). Lie on the beach, visit Kreole hotel starts at $575 per per- -or wine, and map out tbe route.
"Don't overplan your trip," said
the dubs, or go fishing, rafting, son. Too. much sun? Rent an ATV
and ride "through the mountains, . White. "The best part of the road
diving, or whale-watching.

20

Annual PVH H9spice Tribute
Butterfly Release &amp; ·Celebration

Fer

when

•

ASSOCI~lm ~'~lESS

.

Review:·'Baby Mama'
.jf goes easy on mommy culture
'

I

(

- - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . - - - - - ' - - - three tlliies this distance
from tile hive. Foraging at

I

Dl

INsiDE

am-

ception would be nearly impossible
her ("l just don't like
YIJI!fUtmls," ~says), she ~s toPoehler'sAngieOstrowiski,
an~ junk f~. Red Bull-guzzling smrogate.•
Predieblble odd-couple high jink:s ensue. But tht:ce are
some surpnses, too.
:Weaver co-stars a~ tbe WASPishly named Chaffee
B1cknell, who runs the surrogate agency even though she's
freakishly capable o_f ~g her own children well past
menopause. Her feruhty ts a fact that she condescendingly
dangles over Kate, to great amusement; she views surrogate parenting as just another source of outsouroing.
Amazingly; Angie has passed all the background check:s,
even though she and her crass common-law husband, Carl
(played broadly by Dax Shepard), come clunking into
K!tte's genteel life from the Philly suburbs b i q rap
music from tbeir junky car. (Kate's doorman and VOice Of
reason, played hilariously by Romany Mateo, warns her · ·
that baby mama drama surely lies ahead )
When Angie leav,;s Carl, a philanderer and oon artist, she
has nowhere ·else to go so she moves in with Kate.
·Throughout all the obligatory gags about morning sickness
and cltildproofed toilets - punctuafed too frequently by the
jaunty score from Fey's real-life husband, Jefflticbmoadit'_s obvious ~at Angie will help Kate loosen up and Kate
will help Angte grow up. Still, ~y endean with her likable
awkwardness, and Poehler has just the right goofy emrgy
and crazed look: in her eyes to play opposite her.
While.obsessing about all the us_ual stuff that pJll!!!"'o•:x:=:upupieses.
prospecllve moms, Kate also must JUggle the demands of her
New Agey boss, Martin's silver-ponytailed Barry. who makes
Clueless, pretentious asides like, "I was swimming this morning with the dolphins in Costa Rica" (He also rewards good
wtxt with five minutes of unintenupted eye contact) .W
5he finds unexpected IUIIIIIllOe with Gn:g Kimrar's Slllllltalecky Rob, who runs the Super Fruity juia: bar in the neighborhood where Kale's company is building its flagship store.

"!Jaby Mama." a Univuml Pictim!s ,lease, is tUuJ PG-13
for 'crude and se.wallrumor, language and a drug ,qermce.

Running time:l 98 minules.

· --------

T~roand a ha/jstmsOIJI offour.

--·

ON0oo
.

o Spcdal gift to all who auend
0 Public 'is conlially invited
For_,. ijJCu

ziM "allffiiiiU••:I'II"••

•f

•'=-••
·wa, ..
GrillfSJ: I IJPfGNISLilrnu
(J(U)67S-1«».

•

.. ,., 1" 1u• hurl'

~

'

.\',n (: "l
.

~

.

I'"
.\
\ ,i.tl'/''1
, l_r

Croup

..._________.

r---·--~----~---------------------------

~ . . . &amp;fi•ti . . . ~ .• lill&amp;U'f*&amp;........,

I . . . . . . . . . . . . Pfti~L-&amp;-:.....e
,
·
I
·
· ~
1 •••
uflhaR
nlt's H t' ,,... ., wod r .,._ '
1
ace Mtf•l m 1 ~"• ' J' at a
'liflf
lkr-..n . _ . , , ... _. ... ,, ,•
·
1 .tl..&amp;tMIIII'wu••n•=~n·•·•.ttut· 'II t :
f
\WY2Sa.M t 't+ ,...
111M
nu aa 1

•;-r·•

I

J
t
1

r

'*"

e

I • .MAJ.

~ • .-.ESS:

t
1·
1
1

.

.

..

P., , 1F

Slllilt

I
I

.
1-----------------=--------------~~L .

.~

-.a:r~ QlJEEH"

~~

.l'EI.EPIIOie

1··1N IFDYC»':

'

.J

-----------------------------------~----·

ti

,

._..

#

•

...__ _

•

trip is letting things happen alo~~g
the way."
CliiES: It's not impossible to
trnvel 10 a sophisticated city fur
$&amp;). Get out of the casino, the highend restaurants and upscale sbops.
and Vegas can be done for less than
$500, says Bryan Allison, vice presidmt of marlreting for Vegas.com.
Vegas_com has several deals on
air-hotel packages, including two
airline tickets from Phoenix and
two nights ~t the Circus Circus
Hotel &amp; Casmo for $474 per per- ·
son (double occupancy).
Once in Vegas, spend tbe afternoon relaxing in ypur hotel• pool
complex, and at night wander the
Strip to see free attractions like the
Bellagio' s
fountain
show,
Conservatory and Botanical
Garden; tbe Lion Habitat at the
MGM Grand; or the "Sirens ofTI"
show, staged four times a night
outside Treasure l.sland Hotel. Red
Rock Canyon. 17 miles from
Vegas, offers hiking and a 13-mile
scenic drive ($5 car entry fee).
Washington D.C. is 11. great des- ·
tination for !families looking for
.fun on a budget, since many museums are free . Visit the National
Mall, the U.S. Capitol and the
Supreme Coun Building. Check
out the Smithsonian and the
Museum of Natural History. Stroll
through Constitution Gardens. See •
the pandas at the National Zoo.
And for a night on the town, head
to Adams Morgan or Georgetown.
A sample Hotwire trip, with airfare from Columbus, Ohio,
Reagan National, two nighl~ in a
hotel and a rental car is $564 per person (based oil double occupancy).
Finally, you can plan· a trip .t o
New, Orleans that's not only in
your budget, but that can help the
eoonomy there. "We have a bit of
a ways to go to get to•.where we
were before Katrina," said Mary
Beth .R omig, spokeswoman for
the New .Orleans Metropolitan
Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Roundtrip airfare from Boston
to New Orleans and a three-night
hotel stay at l!he three-star Pelham
Hotel is $574 per person, according to Cheapflights.Cjlm.
Stroll down Boumon Street. .eat
beignets at Cafe Du Monde, listen to
street rnusiruns in Jackson Square,
check out the new Louisiana African
American Heritage Trail, or tour
parts of the city that ~ still recovering from Hurricane Katrina.

to

�6unbap limd -ittttind

ENTERT

Page~6·
Sunday, April rJ, 2008.

EN1'

DJWh on . . finn, P8ge D2 ·

O.delling, .,.., 06

OVS Spring Finale
features soloist
GALLIPOUS - Dry out
from this spring's rains by
basking in the wann glow
of great music and tbe
sound of a Stradivarius at
tbe
Ohio .
Valley
Symphony's season finale.
Led by music director Ray
Fowler, the OVS offers worts
by Brahms and Schumann at
8 p.m. S~y. May 3 .at the
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Perfonning Ans Centre in
downtown Gallipolis.
Both Brahms' Symphony
· No. 2 zand Schumann's
Cello Concerto have been
audience favorites since
tbey premiered, thanks to
their warmth and the parade
of beautiful tunes that will
leave concen-goers humming on their way home.
Schumann's concerto wasn't played until after his
death, but it was ·an instant
classic with its musical innovations and technical display
for tbe soloist. Brahms' second symphony is his most
pastoral, starting with the
gentle breezes of a summer
afternoon and ending with a
bla.zing outburst of joy.
Soloist for the Schumann
is Soo Bae, who began
studying cello at age 6 in
her native South Kotea- She
moved to Toronto two years
and
eventually
later
enrolled in that city's Royal
Conservatory of Music. She
earned
her
bachelor's
degree from Philadelphia's
Cunis School and an artist
diploma from tbe Jriilliilrd
School in New York:, where
she now teaches as an assis- ·
tant to Joel Krosnick.
Soo Bae in 2006 was
awarded fJrSt prize in the
Canada Council of tbe Ans
Instrument
Bank:
Competition, which earned
her the three-year loan of a
cello made in 1696 by the
legendary Stradivarius. She
thrives on innovative collaborations, and she bas performed with jazz clarinetist
Paquito D'Rivera well as
with Grammy-wjnning fiddler-violinist-composer

Sunday, April:l:J, 2oo8

Travel &amp; Destinations
What type of vacation can your tax rebate buy?
BY II' r M IL Swn
.
Above: In each hive, the queen is the only bee that '·
can lay eggs. She is larger than the worl&lt;er bees '
and can lay as many as 2,000 eggs per day duriog
the peak of the season.
:-

Mark: O'Connor.
In 2004, she fourided and, with her ft8nce Jason
Sub, continues to direct Angelos Mission Ensemble,
a music academy for .string
studetlts which ainas to educate ·and mold future
Christian musician leaders.
Tickets to the 2007-08
OVS finale · are available
through the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing
Ans Centre at 426 Second
Ave. in Gallipolis Ohio. The
box office is open 9 a.m. to
4 . p.m. Tuesdays through
Fridays and 90 minutes
prior to the concert. Call
(740) 446-ARTS (2787).
Prices are $22, $20 for
seniors and $10 fQr students. Tickets are also .available online at www.ohiovalleysymphony.org.
The public is also encouraged tQ attend OVS
rehc:anials fur free from 7 to
10 p.m. Friday, May 2, and
I to 4 p.m. Saturday. Open
rehearsals are an excellent
way for new audiences to
grow comfortable with
symphonic music.
The May 3 corporate
sponsor
IS
Baker &amp; ·
Ho~tetler. Funding for ~
Ohio Valley Sympbony IS
provided by the Ann Carson
Dater ~~t. Further
support 1s pro~ by the

IAit: Pure honey Is produced

by the bees and col- :
lected by Burdell for consumption by humans. The
sweet treat Is a super saturated solution of sugars .
made primarily from nectar. Since the honey has
betin digested by bees, it cantains enzymes which
make it a naturally self-preserved food .
•
JoyKDCil DUd/. . . . . .

Bees

mostly fed to the brood in
order to replace bees lost in
tbe nonnal
of life
cycle and colony activity.
• Bees do not create
honey; they are actually
improving upon a plant
product: Nectar. The honey
we eat is nectar that bees
. have r;epeatediy regurgitated and dehydrated.
• The average American
consumes a little over one
pound of honey a year.
• In the coutse of her lifetime, a worker bee will produce 1112th ofa teaspoon of
hooey.
• To make one pound of
honey, workers ia a hive fly

course

fromPageCI
flower, some of the pollen
grains are transferred onto
the stigma of other flowers
causing pollination to occur.
• Nectar provides the
gy for bee nutrition and
pollen provides the protein.
When bees are rearing ~
quantities of brood (baby
bees), they delihenlely gath~lien to meet the nutritiorial needs of the brood. A
boney bee that ·is deliberately gatherilig pollen is up to
len times more efficient as a .
pollinator than one that is
primarily gathering nectar
and · only unintentionally

mer-

Arts COuncil, • state
~ ~ fuDd&amp; and s~
ports. qullity arts expel"_~-

,.

\

• Bees collect nectar and
pollen from blooming
plants within fllght range.
As a rule of thumb the for-

llinl area III'Oillld a beehive
ences
to
stletlltben
Ohio
communities cufturally edu extend s fi.or two mil"es,
cationall and~ · although bees have been
Y·
Y- observed foraging twice and

55,000 miles and tap two
• While foraging for nee;
million flowers. .
tar and pollen, bees iiladver• In a single eQllecting tently transfer pollen f:roQl
trip, a worker will visit the male to the female cootbetween 50 and I00 flow- ponents of flowers. Each
ers. She will i-eturn to the year, bees pollinate 95 ~
hive Carrying over half her worth an estimated $10 biJ,.
weight in pollen and nectar. · lion in the U.S. alone. All
• A productive hive can told, insect pollinators conmake and store up to two tribute to one-third of the
pounds of honey a day. world's diet..
Thirty-five pounds of honey
• The first European
provides enough ·energy for colonists introduced Apis
a small colony to survive . mellifera, the common
the winter.
· honeybee, to the Americas.
• Theoretically, the energy Native Americans referred
in one ounce of .honey to the bees as ".White
would provide one bee with Man's Fly." Today honeyenough energy to fly around bees can be found all over
the world.
· the wor}d.

/ ·.u,/. ( t/1
I ,

transferring pollrn. .

omo

BY C111111TY I.JIna.IE

I.

N' MOVIE CRmC

,

Tina Fey didn't write "Baby Mama," though you'd he
forgiven for walking into it and assuming she did. After all,
her face appears prominently on the movie's ubiquitous
posters, alongside that of co-star and former "Saturday
Night Live" cast mate Amy Poehler.
The script actually comes from first-time director
Michael McCullers, who previously wrote the .second and
third "Austin Powers" movies, but it eould have used more
of the mean girl. Mommy culture, with Its capacity for
smugness and solipsism, seems like a ~ topic for parody,
but "Baby Mama" approaches it with kid gloves.
The movie certainly has its zingers here and ,there, and
enough laughs scattered throughout to keep it bopping
along i~ en~nain.ing fashion - that is, until its ooey..gooey
conclusiOn Jn which every conflict works out way too neatly. The strongest moments, though, come from s~g
players such as Steve Martin and Sigourney
eaver,
despite the comic talents of its exceedingly capable stars. ,
plays J:&lt;ate Holbrook._the control-freak: vice pesideutof
a Phil*lphia-based orgaruc gt'llrel)' store cbain who tiJQ
herself m the
so many ~men do:
at 37, llfii:r

,,

.

~

' •

I

I

extreme distances wears out
the wings of individual
bees, reduces ·t he life
expectancy of foraging bees
and therefore the efficiency
of the colony
• Nectar cbntains sugars
that are the primary source
of energy fOI' the bees' wing
muscles whicb are used to
heat colonies in winter.
Pollen provides the protein
and trace minerals that are

I \

r •v

. 39"'

'

E...,.o Pl.ennin&amp;

'•

I

I

Mtidi.llllid Plllllllin&amp;

Wilb!l'nailtll, Power oC
Attllltlley, ~ianwhip.
Life I n a a - , r..o.-.
TennH..Jth~

20

Med:iowe Suppl .,

• ·• .
Tax Minimjzetjoa

a 123&lt;4 M7a 9oF

1...-.esR.Henry

Call7~20~3
To 'Schedule An
Appoinbnent

"MmtR

· NEW YORK ~ A' getaway to
Republic. A road
trip with the kids. Even a weekend
in Vegas - as long as you take it
easy in the casino.
.
With .most Americans e r n g
to receive a tax rebate o ~ to
$600 ($1 ,200 for married couples), there are plenty of ways to
get the most vacation for your
buck:, say travel experts. Whether
it's a cruise, a tropical paradise, 01'
family travel, these trips can all be
done for Under $600 a person.
Note: Deals are subject to
~· travel may be limited to
oertam time periods, and taxes and
olher fees may apply.
:CRUISES: Appealing to firsttime cruisers and ·time-pressed
~velers, several cruise compa~s ~offering shorter cruises ou
oilier ships fOI' as little· as $60 a
night per person (based on double
occnpaocy), says Carolyn Spencer
Brown,
editor-in-i:hief
of
CruiseCritic.&lt;;om. For example, a
Caribbean Princess three-night
cruise from Fort Lauderdale to the
Bahamas in May starts at $259
(for a no-frills room).
1bere is no other traveL option
(other than a cruise} that gives you
so much for the base price," said
Brown. "You get all your meals,
you get aooommodations, you get
cntenainment, and you get to go to
a variety of places without having
tQ bop on planes, trains, buses."
· Travelers scrting a loop vacation aboard a more IUXIBlOils ship
can caleb deals in the ollseason. A
seven-day auise · on Holland
America to the Westan Caribbean
(leaving from Thmpa) in Novembei ·
!lilts at $514. (Thmsportatioo to
1be port, tips and extras like the spa,
alcohol and sbore excursions will
add to your bill.)
TROPICAL
GETAWAY:
Bdicve il oc not, $600 can get you a
beacb in the Olribhean 0£ Mexico.
O!eaptlights.cOm has an air-hotel
package from Pboenix to Cancun,
with a d&amp;w-illgbt hotel stay at the
four-star Barreto 1\Jcmcun IJeacb
Resort &amp; Hotel Villas fur $585 per
persDIL The resort is all-inclusive.
Cancun is a popular destination
for spring breakers searching for
the 24-hour party, boneymooners
on a romantic getaway, and any~
one else craving sunshine and

ibe Dominican

take a hike tbrou~ the rainforest,
or go whale- and (IHtle-watching.
Visit the Diamond Botanical
Gatdllns to see the mineral baths.
Mliho Bay Resorts on St. John..
U.S. Vugin Islands, bills itself as
ali "ecotOOrism destination." The
resort has l I 4 units connected by
ele\lllted walkways of srairs and
boardwalks to alleviate soil erosion and damage to the beach, and
a "Thlsh to Treasu~e" recycling
program, in which trash is recycled into craft items and anwott.
Round-trip airfare from Miami
to St. Thomas, with a feny to St.
John and four nights at the resort
is $430 per person, according to
Maho Bay Camps in oonjunction
with Trave::=;~
ROAD
: Skip the airport
hassles and hit the road. Even with
the high cost of gas, driving is
cheaper than flying a family of
fuur, 'says Carol White, who wrote
"Live Your Road Trip Dream,"
with her husband Phil.
"It's al.so a great way to reconnect with your spouse or family,"
said White, who recommends
leaving the electronics at boine for
real bonding time. "How long has
· it been since you played caros or a
board gamer·
To save on lodging and meals,
White suggests camping .out in a
· tent or RV in one of the national or
stale parks. Yellowstone National
Park: has biking, horseback riding,
boating, hiking and park: eduCation programs for kids. Most of
tbe national parts also have Junior
Ranger programs for children.
"You can pack a picnic to your
favorite spot, take a whitewater
» .,.._ rafting trip on the Rio Grande, go
u.s. Route 20 road signs a1e seen near Caze~ia, N.Y., in this July 24, snodreling at Dcy Tot111gas, rent a
2000 file photo.
sail,boat (on a lake) in Grand
Teton," said White. "The list is
If you want more than the endless and just depends upon the
relaxation. But travelers who are
seeking more · than beaches and beach, take the Islabon Jungle · features of the park: itself." ·
For couples, "there are a lot of
night clubs can arrange snodrel- River Tour on scenic drive on the
ing, diving and fishing excursions; Carretera Touristica Route, a road beautiful parkways and soenic dritour the ancient Mayan ruins a1 · lined with vendors and scenic ves .all over the oountl)' that you
Tulum, about 80 miles away; or views. The Dominican Republic is can combine with activities along
to
Columbus the way," such as. California's
. visit the neatby eco-P._ark:s Xcarat also 'home
and Xel-Ha for wildlife-watching. Aquaparque, one of the biggest State Route I (Highway I) along
the Pacific or routes through the
Travelzoo has an air,hotel ~­ water parks in the Caribbean.
Liberty Travel has several dis- state's wine count!)' in Sonoma
age to the Dominican Republic for
$499 per person, mcluding counted air-~1 ~k:ages to St. and Napa Valley. In New Et:~gland,
roundtrip airfare from Miami and Lucia. A sample arr-botel package U.S. Route l includes small towns
New YOlk. five nights at the four- Ieavi~~g from New York:, witb and the coast. Pick: a theme, such
star Sunscape Casa del Mar (all- three nights in ·the four-star Coco as historic mansions, golf courses,
inclusive). Lie on the beach, visit Kreole hotel starts at $575 per per- -or wine, and map out tbe route.
"Don't overplan your trip," said
the dubs, or go fishing, rafting, son. Too. much sun? Rent an ATV
and ride "through the mountains, . White. "The best part of the road
diving, or whale-watching.

20

Annual PVH H9spice Tribute
Butterfly Release &amp; ·Celebration

Fer

when

•

ASSOCI~lm ~'~lESS

.

Review:·'Baby Mama'
.jf goes easy on mommy culture
'

I

(

- - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . - - - - - ' - - - three tlliies this distance
from tile hive. Foraging at

I

Dl

INsiDE

am-

ception would be nearly impossible
her ("l just don't like
YIJI!fUtmls," ~says), she ~s toPoehler'sAngieOstrowiski,
an~ junk f~. Red Bull-guzzling smrogate.•
Predieblble odd-couple high jink:s ensue. But tht:ce are
some surpnses, too.
:Weaver co-stars a~ tbe WASPishly named Chaffee
B1cknell, who runs the surrogate agency even though she's
freakishly capable o_f ~g her own children well past
menopause. Her feruhty ts a fact that she condescendingly
dangles over Kate, to great amusement; she views surrogate parenting as just another source of outsouroing.
Amazingly; Angie has passed all the background check:s,
even though she and her crass common-law husband, Carl
(played broadly by Dax Shepard), come clunking into
K!tte's genteel life from the Philly suburbs b i q rap
music from tbeir junky car. (Kate's doorman and VOice Of
reason, played hilariously by Romany Mateo, warns her · ·
that baby mama drama surely lies ahead )
When Angie leav,;s Carl, a philanderer and oon artist, she
has nowhere ·else to go so she moves in with Kate.
·Throughout all the obligatory gags about morning sickness
and cltildproofed toilets - punctuafed too frequently by the
jaunty score from Fey's real-life husband, Jefflticbmoadit'_s obvious ~at Angie will help Kate loosen up and Kate
will help Angte grow up. Still, ~y endean with her likable
awkwardness, and Poehler has just the right goofy emrgy
and crazed look: in her eyes to play opposite her.
While.obsessing about all the us_ual stuff that pJll!!!"'o•:x:=:upupieses.
prospecllve moms, Kate also must JUggle the demands of her
New Agey boss, Martin's silver-ponytailed Barry. who makes
Clueless, pretentious asides like, "I was swimming this morning with the dolphins in Costa Rica" (He also rewards good
wtxt with five minutes of unintenupted eye contact) .W
5he finds unexpected IUIIIIIllOe with Gn:g Kimrar's Slllllltalecky Rob, who runs the Super Fruity juia: bar in the neighborhood where Kale's company is building its flagship store.

"!Jaby Mama." a Univuml Pictim!s ,lease, is tUuJ PG-13
for 'crude and se.wallrumor, language and a drug ,qermce.

Running time:l 98 minules.

· --------

T~roand a ha/jstmsOIJI offour.

--·

ON0oo
.

o Spcdal gift to all who auend
0 Public 'is conlially invited
For_,. ijJCu

ziM "allffiiiiU••:I'II"••

•f

•'=-••
·wa, ..
GrillfSJ: I IJPfGNISLilrnu
(J(U)67S-1«».

•

.. ,., 1" 1u• hurl'

~

'

.\',n (: "l
.

~

.

I'"
.\
\ ,i.tl'/''1
, l_r

Croup

..._________.

r---·--~----~---------------------------

~ . . . &amp;fi•ti . . . ~ .• lill&amp;U'f*&amp;........,

I . . . . . . . . . . . . Pfti~L-&amp;-:.....e
,
·
I
·
· ~
1 •••
uflhaR
nlt's H t' ,,... ., wod r .,._ '
1
ace Mtf•l m 1 ~"• ' J' at a
'liflf
lkr-..n . _ . , , ... _. ... ,, ,•
·
1 .tl..&amp;tMIIII'wu••n•=~n·•·•.ttut· 'II t :
f
\WY2Sa.M t 't+ ,...
111M
nu aa 1

•;-r·•

I

J
t
1

r

'*"

e

I • .MAJ.

~ • .-.ESS:

t
1·
1
1

.

.

..

P., , 1F

Slllilt

I
I

.
1-----------------=--------------~~L .

.~

-.a:r~ QlJEEH"

~~

.l'EI.EPIIOie

1··1N IFDYC»':

'

.J

-----------------------------------~----·

ti

,

._..

#

•

...__ _

•

trip is letting things happen alo~~g
the way."
CliiES: It's not impossible to
trnvel 10 a sophisticated city fur
$&amp;). Get out of the casino, the highend restaurants and upscale sbops.
and Vegas can be done for less than
$500, says Bryan Allison, vice presidmt of marlreting for Vegas.com.
Vegas_com has several deals on
air-hotel packages, including two
airline tickets from Phoenix and
two nights ~t the Circus Circus
Hotel &amp; Casmo for $474 per per- ·
son (double occupancy).
Once in Vegas, spend tbe afternoon relaxing in ypur hotel• pool
complex, and at night wander the
Strip to see free attractions like the
Bellagio' s
fountain
show,
Conservatory and Botanical
Garden; tbe Lion Habitat at the
MGM Grand; or the "Sirens ofTI"
show, staged four times a night
outside Treasure l.sland Hotel. Red
Rock Canyon. 17 miles from
Vegas, offers hiking and a 13-mile
scenic drive ($5 car entry fee).
Washington D.C. is 11. great des- ·
tination for !families looking for
.fun on a budget, since many museums are free . Visit the National
Mall, the U.S. Capitol and the
Supreme Coun Building. Check
out the Smithsonian and the
Museum of Natural History. Stroll
through Constitution Gardens. See •
the pandas at the National Zoo.
And for a night on the town, head
to Adams Morgan or Georgetown.
A sample Hotwire trip, with airfare from Columbus, Ohio,
Reagan National, two nighl~ in a
hotel and a rental car is $564 per person (based oil double occupancy).
Finally, you can plan· a trip .t o
New, Orleans that's not only in
your budget, but that can help the
eoonomy there. "We have a bit of
a ways to go to get to•.where we
were before Katrina," said Mary
Beth .R omig, spokeswoman for
the New .Orleans Metropolitan
Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Roundtrip airfare from Boston
to New Orleans and a three-night
hotel stay at l!he three-star Pelham
Hotel is $574 per person, according to Cheapflights.Cjlm.
Stroll down Boumon Street. .eat
beignets at Cafe Du Monde, listen to
street rnusiruns in Jackson Square,
check out the new Louisiana African
American Heritage Trail, or tour
parts of the city that ~ still recovering from Hurricane Katrina.

to

�7
Pomeroy • Middleport •

PageD2

DOWN ON mE FARM

tErtbune --Sentinel - Re

Snnday, April rJ, 2008

CLASSIFIED

-EXTENSION . CORNER- .

\

Consider herbs
when·you cook

I
I

these slower plants from
seed next year.
Most of our herbs can
Do you enjoy herbs when
you pook'1 Think about withstaild above freezing
growing helPs in your temperatures if planted outflower or vegetable garoen side· now except basil. Do
not plant basil outside until
this year.
Herbs may be annual (one night temperatures are
year fr9m .seed to flower), above 60 degrees Fahrenheit
biennial (grows leaves tbe (noi'mally around Memorial
first year and then flowers Day) . Exposure to one or
die second year) or a peren- two nights below 60
nial (grows and flowers degrees, cause root rots to
occur leading to plant death.
year after
plant.
Basil plants are tropical
Otoose
a wide range
of plants depending upon p'lants in nature. Rosemary,
your rooking · Deeds. Some tarragon, ~weet maJjoru,m
of,theeasiest to,grow include and bay leaf need winter
pii'Sicy, mints (peppumint, protection in our climate. If
spearmint), chives, thyme, you wish to grow these
megano and S~~ge. These plants, plan to take tbem in
varieties are nOnna1Jy pur- each fall or be prepared to
. chased J5"ially grown purchase them each spring.
plants. ·
lant these Homegrown herbs are great
plants into · -drained soils to haye when making homemade spaghetti sauce, spice
or containers in a S115551Y area up fresh fish or add to those
.o f tbe gardm. Most herbs fresh vegetables. So enjoy
like soils with so.me .organic
' matter or compost. Soil mix- growing a few herbs in your
-tures . .
of 50 per- yard.this year.
For further infonnation
cent
and fiftf percent
tor peal-tite1i0il mix on growing herbs visit Ohio
S.tate University's website
w
for me; .
.
at
www.ohioline.osu.edu
i Several -~ of enJOyand
discover
our factshcets
meat aDd~ am nmron
growing
herbs.
· ·
mally be. ~xpectM Do not
over-ferttlize )'Gill' herbs.
Take a little time out of
' 'AddCoolpost .ead! year·and
your
busy week to drive
as .lheoompostdcoomposes
around
our county with the
it allows sufficimt nutrients
to be availahle, for~ Jre,rb family. The spring flowers
plant.~ Ow~:.fedilizatton and trees .are in bloom.
.causes lush ~but little Redbud, apples, peach trees
bcrb ~- If_,.. must use are in full bloom as well as
clteiDlcal f~ use fer- · lij)ring flowers from trilli~low in~~n with ums to spring beauties. SOOn
' bi,gber l.evcliHif ·~hOiills the leaves on the trees bide
the •beauty of the Ohio River
heFbs and •Our native rock. Enjoy
f:Um weed stutddiH and ~e green pastures with new
ftlllllet If ·seed&amp; ~~planted bom calves and horses playiinsjde now ~ '.should ing in tbe paddocks.
Spring in southern Ohio is
tral'lsplants ~ a few
weeks. Basil, dli¥es .and a joy to behold after our
parsley cail be :tlal1led from long•.cold winter months.
seed but take eight to 10
(Hal Krwe11 u 1M M .
weeks before they are a Coullty A,ricfdtlule tuUl
Resoruusl
large enough size to . be Nlllllral
transplanted. In other Co11111Ut11ity lhvtiDp-at
words, this year buy trans- &amp;lru:IIIOr, Ohio Smu
plant:&amp; and attempt. growing Ulliversity bk11simt.)

•

·
r 7
- ;1511111
Ralph Ooak, National Swine Registry field representative, relays a bid to Jostl Sodimer, auCtioneer, and KeAdr:a BQdimer,
clerk, on the auction block.

-

:1 "'1 1
ARCHBOLD - "ln a
season &lt;Of Change, Wby
Blend In?" was the advertisement for the Tom
Moyer and Family Spring
Showpig sale, and "blendil)g in" was not the case on
the evening of April 12 in a
large blue and.white tent in
which 7 3 bead ·e f weanling
pigs weighing 65 to 90
pounds sold for just under
$94,000, a record sale for
the Moyer ra.mily.

~~

Josh Bodimer, auctioneer
for
Jmsh
Bodimer
Auctioneering ·
from
Gallipo'lis conducted the
auction with help of his
wife Kendra Bodimer Faking the clerking duties,
Charles Bodimer (Josh's
father), Richard Stephens
and ABFon Ruff checkin~ in
buyers · and cashie1mg,
Michael Stephens and
Nathan Jones Faking on the
runner
duties,
Jake

.
my
fJrst4-Hpig:a:ittion
and
Bodimer (lash's brother)
watching
~vin
Wendt
:auctaking care of pbo:ie bids,
and Kyle and S;u:ah Deel tio.~g ·:and I got diill
. taking on tbe photography bumps. Siuce·. tbca I bave
of the auction.
. always wanted to do a 'big
There were l'egistered tirpe' pig auillion.
~~appreciate Tom Moyer
bidders
fmm
Ohio,
Missouri, Montana, Kansas, and family ·g ivins me the
Oklahoma,
. Michigan, opportunity to conduct such
a vresMgieus Slile, ancLbope
Indiana and Illinois.
this
·sale opens more dOOI'I&gt;
"This was a drearn rome
true for me," Josh Bodimer to conduct more pi,g :aucsaid. "I remember going ro lions :across die Country,~
·
Washington Colllit HWJse 1D he a!!ldM
•

.

.
In One Week With Us
c~ssrried@~;a::~;ibune.CQm REACH OVER~85,000 PROSPECTS

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DELMAR. Md. - The
strawberries just turning
red on one Eastern ShOFe
field here could end up on
plates almost anywhere except on cafeteria trays
just down the road.
That's because schools
aFen't set up to accept local
produce, •leading to a
Byzantine nationa'l food
distribution grid where
apples from Maryland end
up in schomls in · South
Carolina but aFen't served
iri local -ones .
"The trouble is that major
school systems, ·to get what
they want, they deal wi't!h a
wholesaler. They ~ant a·
one-stop shop;" Wicomico
County f~r Patrick
Hochmuth said.
.
A bill awaiting the gever- Farmer Patrick Hochmuth of Delmar, Md tends to his strawberry plants on ~il 14.
nor's s.ignaturc ail!l&amp; to tHoolilmuth remerilberfl when farmers used to t!eliver ~rot!uce to local schools, bl,ll: now the
· dul_nge dull. It's part of .a Qnly 'local outlets ifor his 15 acres of produce~are -termer"s markets. That's beCause
llllllenal Farm-To-School 'Sdllools .aren't set to acicept local pr.oduee, leading to a Byzantine national food dlstrimo¥emcnt tbat~s headed ro I!!Lition •grid Where apples from Maryland end up on cafeteria trays in SOuth .carolina but
Mvyland to encourage aren't served in 'local schools.
IOmC looal produoe •011 cafe~tra{!;,m missions of . medleys and _sala~ bars address childhood obes.ity, do that. you're beiping 'preboosting local farmers populated by limp 1oeberg too. When kids learn about serve open space .and helpWhile mmming fuel costs 1~.
.
.
. agriculture, they naturally ing the he.alth of .the
rfur · sbipp~ food ion~ dis1be food serviCes m get curious about trying Chesapeake Bay." said
_ l:inOeS bas f0UIId unarumous most .iiOhools .aren :t usually ne.~. foods.
.
.
Mark Powell, chief of marapproval tfiiom Mruyland prepared to deal wtth whole
I ve seen kids get exc1t- ketmg for the Maryland
leps1am .
foods. They want. something. ed about beets and turnips . Department of Agriculture.
. The 1biU 4f~Ould uart"-a . thal''s_:at ll:as,t ~ly ,ere- _ and ~ra~is~~s ~~!~se thee ~The pro_w~ hasn't ~n
~Maryland ~HomegFOWII"'~~ana:.miil~to.'-pop ln- pu1led-ll oucor.tne::grounG- stgned tnlo law yet; iiiii:U't
w.eek in school cafe~ 1the oven," said Janet But if you hand a kid a beet likely the state will start
and encourage schools to 'B achmann of the Al:tansas- and say, 'Eat this, it's good small with looal produce in
teach children about local based National Sustaina~le for you,'_ they say, 'Eww,"' schools. But already farma.griculture through fann Agn~ulture lnformatron Kirby wd.
ers are excited about tbe
field trips. Some states even Serv1ce, a USDA-funded
There also are environ- possibility of selling to
display posters of local agenc~ that promotes local mental r'?llsons for spend- ne,\ghiJ?rhood sch~ls..
farmers-in cafer.elias so chil- foods m schools_
. mg more to get local proI think education IS tbe
&amp;en fJling tbfiiJugh lunch
Maryland:s bill would J?Ut duce. Relying on local best way we can sustain
lines team where their food educators m touch W7th food reduces the amount of ourselves,"
said
J.D.
comes from.
state
Departtnent
of fuel needed for ·shipping. Rinehart, owner of Rinehart
1bis is a great idea," said · A:gxiculrure marketing offi- And when schools buy orchards in Washington
Bobi Crispins who grows cials to figure out how to locally, they can make County. "We need to Jllllke
fruits vegetabies and flow- put
products
like local farmers more profc them aware that food does..ers Millersville but does- Hochmuth's berries in itable and more likely to n' t come from a grocery
n't sell to the three schools schools. Offi~ials in other k~p farming.
store.'It comes from a farm
near her farm.
·
state~ ba¥e Sllld schools and
If you suppon a local and 1t- grower that works
It's .a lot more ooqilictt- farms ~ are enthusiastic farmer, you're belpin~ keep tirelessly tn get that food
ed than it sounds to ·get pro- . lbout the 1dea of local food them profitable, and if you out there."
duce from 71Ct01&amp;1be Flll'llet in afetcrial - ltbey just r---::o. :-.-:~-:=--~~-~~--......
.into a IChool. . Scboolt are 77llCd a go-~een.
bound by USDA JUidelines
"They did want to ,P~.
dill .,,
leave them clwe local, but they dido t ~
~
~
-90 centl per lMil know whether they could or
w..l ...
u- •
to
on food. Bldd.in&amp; 1701, bow woudd they do it,
. . . '"' ·- : .u.AIIar, _, II
'
mun achooll often would lhele be the quantity,
1711 ~
aren't allowed to apend would the price~ in line," .
5Jh·ZWI iWCWift
more .on produee pown aal.d Cbrle KJtby, program
1a.1:001111- 11M •• 7337
Joc•lly.
admlniattatar
'for
.Pomlfttv.
AI\W &amp;a
And achool• oeed /ordert Oklahoma'a
Farm-To·
'
~
plaoed month• in Advance, School Ptogram.
2:00 •J:OO P.ll. ,_,.
III •
,l lld they often aren't
Oldahoibi ~ ta:Villl
Gllllpolll Thl Ftlel.._
equipped to handle simple locally .,own melons in a
_. •
....,..
P"'P wOrk like peeling car- few schools in 2002, and
4:110.5:1111 p.m., (740)
•111WW.fal1eysfimfann.com
rots or ICI'Ilbbing dirt-crust· now that state's melon proeel potatoeJ.
gram has grown-to hundreds
To PllceAI Order (II De Stare Above •Cal: l...U7.J61!
1be limitations n:sult in of- schools.
FARLEY &amp; FARLEY ASH FARM
tbe cafeteria food everyone · Kirlly said qricult\U'C
remembers: canned fruit educauon and -more local
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421
salad, frozen vegetable produce in cafeterias helps

........

·

.,.in. to

Pul&gt;llahlng _.....

Free and ~orth. it I Orphan '

.,:rHi,.,..

law•

F'ISh f or pond Stock'lng

.

foster

lndoor/~utdoor,

parent.

"_lOSd~ .

potty-1ra1ned, ~ _kitties w.
sweet personalities, . no

. -.

loyal friend Please call 304675-1045 alter 5;30 pm...,
deliver.
Free Lab mtx puppies.
Mother is Blacl&lt; Lab. 441·

r4

.

of Bartender

Center.
Located at 333 Page Street,
Middleport, Ohoo •• pleased
to announce we are accept·
ing applications for LPN's to
join our friendly and dedicat·

..

leaching and behind

IIJwlol

(74lt

uuaaa

Class A COL+ 1 Yr. OTA
Exp Req

1...aoo-S..io11

www.

chedoi.'

Ma~
Syracuse yellow house on LPN Staff Oevelopmem 2nd Ave, Galipolis.
lhe left Baby olothes,kids Coordinatoro 740 .992 .
•
clothes Ia~ &amp; small,bools. 6472. EO£ &amp; A Participem Management: Assistani
Microwaw, water · cooler of The Drug-Free Workplace Manager positions at Zanzis
with . hot or cold f&gt;roglam.
To Go! store loca1ed at 900
eleC1nc.Large tool box

Po~outh
Ohio 45662 Ann· OrlvEd
Dept., 0{ Fu ~ '10,
740-35Hl537
Orlvers needed· CDL
.
. · .

almost new,red tool

2nd Ave. Health l~nce Drivers willing to drive fof

almost

and other benefits ava•labte. local

ready~ix ~company.

lanctair

.com

FEDERAL
POSTAI..JOBS
$17.89-S28271hr., now hlr·

ing. Fer application and free
ll"""""mont iob into, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
913-599-1!226. 241hni. emp.
serv.
=.::__-:-:---

Need
PIT
flora!
Opportunity for actvanoa· Two (2) position&amp; open at deatgneriOelivery person
ment. lnclu.d~g opera11ng Aobertsburg, WV (neaJ wt1h experience In noral .

creative and

organized,

abte to

manaQ&amp; an

established .aacount list while calling on
new Customers.

C d'da
an I tes must

~e disciplined, Selfmotivated and a learn player that
understands the importance of developing

strong, mutually beneficial business
relationships with our Customers. Sales
experience and reliable transportation
necessary If
II and
. you can se
you want to
work full time, I Would like to hear from
you.
Please send resume 1 cover letter and
three references to:

and lranch•s•ng. To learn Buffalo, WV) plant. Send resumes to P.O.Box ·
Gallipoa. Drlllr Tribune
moJe mail resume to 72 N Experience is pefe.Ted but 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
.....,,
- - - - - - - ·675-1429.
Plaza Bllid., Attn: HR, not neoessary. Must be Wll- CLA Box 102.
Attn: 111111 Radgeni
. ChiiHcothe. OH 45601 . or ing to do pra-maintenance
FouND
Garage/moving sale May 1
..
PO. Box 469 Glrlllpolla. OH 45631
&amp; , • • antiques, tools, Help wanted at Dais! Home hand detiver to Eric at the on tructs and equiprrlftnt, Now hinng em~ 10 set
FOUND: 4-2Hl8 Lelart, 2 8 5
Group Home.740-992·5023 store. EOE
yenl/plenl and other millctll· I.IP and predeiMII lawn and
Sassafras Rd. area, blacl&lt; liassware. lumrture. equip- - - - - - - - laMOOO taslcs. Eocpe&lt;lence ag equipment Fax resume or .e-mail to mrodgerS@mydailytribune.co
Lab lOOking puppy wired col· _"'"_nt_,_m_ust_go_,s_um_ne_r_Rd_.
- - - - - - - -rating equipment and to 740-4&lt;6-9104
All replieS Will be kept in strict confidence.
lor, 304-593.()703 idnetily Murti
family garage
sale May ;;;;;;;Hel;;;;;;~p;Wa~nt~led~;;;;;;~;;;;;He~l~p~Wa~ll~ted~;; extra
Sldls such as welding Now taking lqlplications tor ~=;;;~;;;;;==-=~~:;;,;;~::::!
or Take
1 and
2. Namebrand
a plus. Starting pay baaed summer
posi11oris
.at
LOST· Blue TICk Hound clothes,
toys. end
on -""""" IDl driving Raoooon Crook l'afk. Picl&lt;
Help W••ttd
Help Waul8d

304 75 _ou='rat_ _ _ _.....,
3328
..
p
AIJCTION AND
uppy 1.ound ~~ Pomeroy
Fu:A M
Post Office 4·12.Short legs; ~
A1IKEf •
small: brown coat wtth black

Cline · Hill Area

-6 ~

more.Noble

Summit

Rd.

I

j

~

,:;i;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.J

nose. Very friendly, great with Cross Creek Auction Buftalo
kids,well behawd. To claim Auction saturday 6pm
2
or ~dopt Jennit&amp;ro a. 'Trailer Loads, used mar·
74 336

1171.
chandise, Produce, Cereal,
local Greenhouse Plants
l
Vanilla cololed Dog hanging ,Starting to sell high quality
around Mt. Vernorvliarman kni·-s
~ as Case, ~......
~ -..
~·
~
=~:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::; Park 4119/08 Identity 304· &amp; Mossy Oak. Building is

L--G-I'I'EA•'•l\1•~•1'--'·

n3-5425 or 304-675-2834

•

: Call 740446.0051
: ActtWeiler Husky mix,

Debit

AUCTION: Modular House
2008. Buci&lt;Bye Hills Career

at A2:00 Noon on May 3,

• needs good home w/ area to

~~;~~~~~

Ohio Valley Bank
is accepting applications for
Full· Time Secorid•~ Market/Fn-House/Loan
-,
Undenwriting/PrOces~ing Clerk

msuranoo .. - - at C&lt;eek
meeting employment County Part&lt;. 740-379-2711
oequi18 ments. Call Valley
. Brool&lt; Concreto corpora10 POST OFACE NOW

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

~ at ~~·)~ •519 to

~ ''

.......vv

salary and benefits

package, including 401-K

Tetirement and career advancement

HIRING

iriOJ

scheclule an tntenrMtw.
"
We offer generous

lead/Carpenter

and

2

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$S1Kfvr, indudas
Fedentl Benefits, OT.

=~d.
~:;:.,~ C:.~w~u=·h~!
''
HIS6-403-2582

37· Pomeroy, Oh 45769

oppoltllnities.

Pre-employment drug lesting isrequired.

-:::::::====-=======:;

ind~ ~am drop ott 'applicatioll&amp; r
EVER WONDER

record. . Benefits

-alter

Help 'Watted

Help Wlfllld

WHAT IT WOULD BE LIKE TO• Get Paid w.-..,;
ru. you are woJth?·
• Have freedom to pace your work:?
• Have ari employer who shows appreciation

F

~lor ahjob -:•111 done?

• ee W at ItS ike to be in

on. things~

• Receive Encouragement and extra training
tobecomethebes1'

IF'VOU-

Interested persons may obtain a job
application at any
Oh" V
10 alley Bank location or fiom our
website, www.ovbc.com

Center, Aio Grande, Ohio.

• Have a positive attitude
• Have a desin: to be: successful

•

• Have a good, professional appearance.

•

En'

.

~oy working With people

Medir-.1 ,• , 'w/lledlc:allleupliartill
Pleasant .,_,,_ H · 1 ·
•at~r osptla IS curre ntly
accepting resumes for a Medical

• Wanr to become pan of 1he community:
• Want a rewarding, fun. and exciting canoer.

sraduate of an approved program fur
Medical Assistant or Associates degree in a
related field or 5 years experience in
Physician Offices r..,uired.
Send resumes to: - ...

~Good people mean A kit ro u&lt;! We will ~ilp .

l'TN•,.,,..."' ,_see as!
' ,:.•-ca_r•_r_.C.,--~A-:-S-S-IF-::-I-=E-D--1-N-D-E-X~---. .,t
__~.~-Bu\'--...ll ~-~Card~~ai~T!IM~_~I!I~~~Cami~~OI~Tiiii!lii~~~ ~~sn~~:~~ ~:: d~~o~: D~~~~:!:!~

' run &amp; play. Owner is unable
·t
1o 245 5205
•

(304) 550·1616
1639

S1ephen Reedy

(M).

·

•

tull. Visa and Master card &amp;

i'or Sele ............................................:. 725

,.

..

FINMerlcel.......... ,..................080
Accee.oriea ......................•... 780
770

740·245-5334

Absolute Top. boliar . -~I·
ver/gold · coins, any
10K/14K/18K gold jewelry.
dental gold, pre 1935 US
cuhency, prootlmint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
446-21142

Cars·.

Wanted to buy ·Junk
call 740-388.()884 , if no
answer. leave a message.
can Call Collect

EOE

Tluutk You
H.O.P.£. /merv&lt;nri"" M&gt;uld /iki! ro rlwn/c all who
comribwed. parricip;ued arul assi:rred • •irh the 6rh
Ann""/ Autism Wu/k held ar the Gallipolis CiQ• ·
~-

,_

.

, Upcoming spea.ls:
Heullng..........................................:GI...-y......................................................040
GeM&lt;el

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hippy Ada.......................................... - ........050
Hey &amp; Greln..................................................MO
1111p
110
...,..... lrnprolll'efl1ent• ............;...•••.•••••••••••••••810

-to&lt; Sole............................................ 310
- G o o d s ....................................... 510
ttouM• tor Rent .......................................... 410

In MuniiOfi•m ...............:.....................- ......... 020
.
. 130

Equlpment........................ eao

1CIOWOIIKERS IFD£D
Assemb6e crafts, wood
it.ems.To

~

provided. Free

Materials

tmormation

pl&lt;g. 24Hr. 801-428-4&amp;49

Middleton Estates is accept•
ing ·applications lof Medical
Coo r a 1nat 0 r 1H 0 me
Supervisor. Will be responii·
ble tor · coordination of

'

/'ar&lt;Apnl/9th.

..

,'""au~' K'asfilled \\'ith a commutU~· ofpeopk

hy aJt.tism. lr will as:rist them with training,

:nfJJPOt'ff.J _iij."UJ Jj~~.··~t't.'lli, wrti(Tiiii!"ifto~ m~Milnii a~
gm11.p ofindividUilll' who were so commined 10
making a diffe~nce for individiWb· wirh autUm.
Stt!Ve Hague, Tommy, Talent, T~· A.lbriRht and
Carl Wamslt!J•(employees of~mer1can Electric
Powtr)
spuirlteoded a.fundraising tl't'nl 10 lrold"
competition among the local power pianls to Ue
who could raist the moy mot'llty. Together thLst:
indi1•idU~J.I.f raised ova SJ 2.500. What an Olf'IQ:jng
group of 11ttlfJit' to tkdicatt their rime ro tntikt
~·uch a huge t·onrribution!

'
Again rhartk _W)U 10 t!l'i'(''ont&gt; M'hn Jupported this
e1•cnr. and ~a1•t' .. HOPE" to tht families.
Ar~ i1Jdb•idwl wilh auti.~m can ILcul a producti 1 ,~
lifr lhrough positivr cMJ"t.unity J&amp;f/!port.
Maclc Appm;itrlio"' H.O.P.l!.. llller'WflliMI

~~=::::~~~~~~~~=~~
Residential · Setting.
Bus'lness .""-"'ftun~tu
..
1
Interested C a - may
apply at 8204 Calla Drive. 5
Gallipolis,
Ohio or by e-mail
to: ..,.~~rescore"'""
An
Eq 1 Opponunity
Medica1Appointmentsfof35
Adults
in
a MR/00

";:======="t't""'===="=F==::;·

E~.

The fami/.v ~I

Regina Akt"r.v

EXCEP'DONAL FRANCHISE

&gt;WJuld like to &lt;XfJ"'SS

OPPORnJNITV

their heartfelt thanlcr
ro fllliUh· muJ,friend.&lt;
for their pruyers,
oords, flowers and
food. W• a/.&lt;0 would
lw ro rllanJ: Willis
Fun~ra/ Hom&lt; for
"tNir supporr and
tmder$1tmding.
God (JI~ss You All

National restaurant br.md seeks new hands-&lt;&gt;D
Franchisee for"existing corporate-run restaurant
7ocoted in Portsmouth, OH. Qualified buyers
will receive all the benefits of a complete
fr.mchise system with a minimum capital

iOvcstment.
Contact: Debnt Webb

' 11tii00418-95SS ext 1303
-w.huclcllebouse..a

you become successful.
Se. Jim Cochran

Experience·• plus nolallecfSsity.
W~. Salary/Mo. Commissioo/Pd.

II , _ IIOspital

u

~'o

-r
... __
.___

'-1'

1111

Vacation/Insurance

Please dress prc&gt;&lt;esstoo
r · al

- - • . . . . . . .~

1520...., Drive
Paint" r-M, WV 15550
~~ I7S-4S4G

wlw care so much abou1 individuals with aJUi.sm
and rheir familit&gt;s. The mone.r roised aJ the waUc
will S!'PJKH1 families. in Southe'astern OH affected

rrsources. dietary· ttetds. biomedl'cal matrrumts.
therapieJi and stq,port.
wanting to Buy Junk Gars.
"304""=7
-" -- .. .~' ~' A1thi»UKh'11.'e 7't1H ~ fflnlttrmi.,mltlfl""f)'Ofi""&lt;"'Wiio
-- ,"Uf!:f"lil. .,
-.._ ..

11...

lhldl

the

wheel lnstr~lon lor new

.

w·.... . .:.

lid

Outakle Sales Repi IIIUtaUft

Needed' Drtvlr Educallon Tlllthlng Onwers-Co &amp; OO's

Exjlenence Required. Send pooltion open In the
NEW PAY
Oh' v 1 p
Resumes to. Attn: Mike, PO . Gallipolis and Meigs ...a.
10 a ley ublishing with offices in
Box 303, Gallipolis, OH Flexible hou,. Must,. able
PACKAGE!
Pomeroy, Gallipolis and Pt. Pleasant is
4563. Resumes must be to work evenings and wee!&lt;·
lor OHFO ~
accepting resumes for a full time Outside
received by Monday, May ends. 20 to 25 hours a Home Weeki~ &amp; Weekends!
1
Ia ·
Ap
5th at4pm.
,_Job erQIIs clus&lt;oom Regional Runs $60k+ sa es represen trve,
plicants must be

I dependable,
Team Players
.
~ positi~.
Cou~de

•
r

· 4 used ,tires: 245175JR16.

Next sale, I0 a.m. Wednesday, April 30.
May I, 2, 3, COBA-AI SchooL
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Manure free to haul away.
For more infoimation, call DeWayne at (740) 3390241 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website. at
www.uproducers.com.

S1.00 for lar9e

atti1udes to join
Bar ~nd . Grill now dri'l8fl. Qualified candklates
• us Ill providing outstanding. seekt?g ~pltcat1ons for must have a HS Diploma,
. quality care 10 our residents. qualified lme ~s and valid Giver ltcense pass

PoMEiloYIMDD.J:

·

celebrafton

Overbrool&lt;

ed staff. Appllcan1's must be

y A7ID SAW-

-.

A

box. An Excellen1 Wffi to earn
new.Dishes what money. The New Avon.
Wurtitzer Organ needs some nots cookie jar, blue iaans Call Marilyn 304-882-2S4S .
repair, 13 base pedals 304· large ·adult &amp; also jeans tor
.
882·2385
kids lots oltoysl
AVONI f\11 .Areasl To Buy or
~AND
·
Sell. Shirle~ Spears, 304-

0365

Bred Cows, $480-$800; .

.

Thu...cl•y for Sunct..,.

Garage Sale 31am•l•es·Ratn Stop by and fill out an appll· dishwashen;. Please apply background
EoE.
enterta•n•ng. Great compan· or sh•ne Wed Apr.30 and Th ca1ion · M·F 9AM·SAM. tn person Of caM to set up an Mail resumes to AAA 1414
ionsforanyoneinneedofa
1.3202
At
124 Contad Hollie Bumgarner interview 441-9371 308 12th Street,

Bll!Y_ C:~'1~·iJoatsLS12~S6'1; 4m--~;::UOO;
$t~.~•.c$24.:M .

I LHe ..

scratching or biting. very

Back to the Fann:
$500-~840;

r

pan, bag of food 8. toy, cour· Oh. 740-256-6098

tesy

Feeder Cattle SteadyJHigher

· Cow/Calf PairS,

"'-'

• Allldt mutt be jripllld"

y
SAWkmens .round tn lhe TNT
ABD
area, on need o1 good
GA.UJF'OUS
homes. 2 different makes &amp;
models to choose from Gray Huge Sale. May 1, 2. 3.
Tabtly or Black/White. Come 8am·5pm. All new merchan·
lui~ loaded with 1litter bOO&lt;, dise. 102 20d St. Crown City.

the right to odlt,
...,. or conce! ony
od ot ony lime.
Uuat
onlhe

1

Well-Muscled/Fleshed, $47-$56.
Mf!dium/Lean, ·$42-$48.
Thin/Light, $1•0-$35.
B.ulls, $50-$65.

For Sunct.ye P•per

a:.

Nowyoucanhavebordenandgraphlcs
Gddecltoyourclasslfledads
,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
Grophks SOCforsmaU

All Dt•pt•yz 12 - n ;z
Bualn-• Daip PriOr To
Publlaotton
Sun.t.y D1splay: 1:00

fr~Ohilo~V~•IIoyi~il""t&amp;i_r_=.=.G~_:JVFA:~ :w~ "~ ~l Frr·~Y~UI=ID~SAI.E=~lii:":0 ~11W'~.~w.~ANI D= =~I~I~ l i;: : I W'=:w.:ANIHI: : : ~I~I;1,1;6 ::::HaP~w.~AN~rJDI~~I :1";:6 :Htu==w.~ANIDI===~==Help==w.=nl8d==:.=:Hel~p~Wanted

LivEsTOCK REPOKf

.

ln-1"tton

In NeKt Dey'• P•per
sund•y In-column: 1:00 p.m.

5:30 p.m.

992-2157

Display Acls

Mond•y-Frld•Y fOr

Monday thru Friday

(304) 675-1333

/}earltitec

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

=~~~

275-415 lbs., Stee..S, $75-$116, Heifers, $70-$97;
425-525 lbs., Steers; $75-$110, Heifers, $70-$90; 550625 ·lbs., Steers, $75-$105, Heifers, $70-$88; 650-725
lbs.; Steers, $75-$92, Heifers, $70-$85; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$85, Heifers, $7~$80.
.
· ,.

Or Fu To

Or Fu To (740) 446-30118

Worc:I 1-Acls

7:30

l\egtster , .

Sentinel

... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156

ca~;:.::V

-

up

tn'

tErtbune

To Place

r

Websi!es:
.WW;fl.mydaUybibune.com
W'WW.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregisler.com

· PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Maryland joins effort to put local food in school caf~terias , ~~~ish~.~
BY KW:S7EFI Wtid7

.

•

l:!/

r

wv

OH • Pt.

RNDAJOBOR
ANEW CAREER

,_

Orfax:

. IN TH~SSIFtED~1~
Help 'Watlld

.Help Wanted

CERTIFIED SURGICAL
Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis. ' 0~ .is
li

ec

h

00I

full-time
og•s ·

Certified

Sutgical

· ts

Primary responsibilities lnchlde performing
technical dudes as instrument technologist.
first. or

second assistant

the direct

under

•upervision of the surgeon. Assists with the
care, preparation, maintenance and processing
of surgical supplies and equipment. Shift will
be 7:00am-· 3:30pm, 7:30am - 4pm. and 12
hour shifts along with ovenime, weekend and
on call hours.
Qua7illcaliottt Current CST or gniduote of
accredited School of Surgical Technology and
eligible for cenification ..
Experience: Prior experience as a CST within
the past five yt:MS preferred.
'

Interested individuB!s may contact:

u - a-mos.,.,._,
H~ MO!Ii&lt;al C...W

l"J-*-I'Mie
Gd'prlk,Oif 831

.-.-: (7•J -..stts

RN's
CD •t:r wlult we have to after!
We will pay for your insurance during your

TECHNOLOGIST
. ...
. seeking

Help'W.....

introducrory perind!

•

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center is

searching for caring and reliable Register«!
Nurs~s

that want to join a winning team .

Rocksprings Rehabilfuition Center is a 100-bed
skilled nursing facility located in Pomeroy.
Benefits include:
• PAlO INSURANCE DURING YOUR
7NTRODUCTORY PERIOD'

• Incredible Staff
• Location- Easy occcss to major highways
• Cconpetitive Wages
• Broad option benefit plan
•401K~tplan

• Continuing education opportunities

• EJtcellent unit orientatioo

• Recognition Programs
• Advancemenl opportunities

• Pay for experience

Interested individuals should contact:
Mary Dmnmjtt, DON

F..: 7.._992-17"
....._,,.._,~

Or Apply ito~ Ill:
~SJR~K..:
p
roy, ()If &amp;5'7e

Fu: n•J -..st"

Extendicaze Health Services. Inc. is an equal

EEO/ADA Emjlloyer

opportunity employer that encourages
WOttplace div=rty.

rf

,..

I

�7
Pomeroy • Middleport •

PageD2

DOWN ON mE FARM

tErtbune --Sentinel - Re

Snnday, April rJ, 2008

CLASSIFIED

-EXTENSION . CORNER- .

\

Consider herbs
when·you cook

I
I

these slower plants from
seed next year.
Most of our herbs can
Do you enjoy herbs when
you pook'1 Think about withstaild above freezing
growing helPs in your temperatures if planted outflower or vegetable garoen side· now except basil. Do
not plant basil outside until
this year.
Herbs may be annual (one night temperatures are
year fr9m .seed to flower), above 60 degrees Fahrenheit
biennial (grows leaves tbe (noi'mally around Memorial
first year and then flowers Day) . Exposure to one or
die second year) or a peren- two nights below 60
nial (grows and flowers degrees, cause root rots to
occur leading to plant death.
year after
plant.
Basil plants are tropical
Otoose
a wide range
of plants depending upon p'lants in nature. Rosemary,
your rooking · Deeds. Some tarragon, ~weet maJjoru,m
of,theeasiest to,grow include and bay leaf need winter
pii'Sicy, mints (peppumint, protection in our climate. If
spearmint), chives, thyme, you wish to grow these
megano and S~~ge. These plants, plan to take tbem in
varieties are nOnna1Jy pur- each fall or be prepared to
. chased J5"ially grown purchase them each spring.
plants. ·
lant these Homegrown herbs are great
plants into · -drained soils to haye when making homemade spaghetti sauce, spice
or containers in a S115551Y area up fresh fish or add to those
.o f tbe gardm. Most herbs fresh vegetables. So enjoy
like soils with so.me .organic
' matter or compost. Soil mix- growing a few herbs in your
-tures . .
of 50 per- yard.this year.
For further infonnation
cent
and fiftf percent
tor peal-tite1i0il mix on growing herbs visit Ohio
S.tate University's website
w
for me; .
.
at
www.ohioline.osu.edu
i Several -~ of enJOyand
discover
our factshcets
meat aDd~ am nmron
growing
herbs.
· ·
mally be. ~xpectM Do not
over-ferttlize )'Gill' herbs.
Take a little time out of
' 'AddCoolpost .ead! year·and
your
busy week to drive
as .lheoompostdcoomposes
around
our county with the
it allows sufficimt nutrients
to be availahle, for~ Jre,rb family. The spring flowers
plant.~ Ow~:.fedilizatton and trees .are in bloom.
.causes lush ~but little Redbud, apples, peach trees
bcrb ~- If_,.. must use are in full bloom as well as
clteiDlcal f~ use fer- · lij)ring flowers from trilli~low in~~n with ums to spring beauties. SOOn
' bi,gber l.evcliHif ·~hOiills the leaves on the trees bide
the •beauty of the Ohio River
heFbs and •Our native rock. Enjoy
f:Um weed stutddiH and ~e green pastures with new
ftlllllet If ·seed&amp; ~~planted bom calves and horses playiinsjde now ~ '.should ing in tbe paddocks.
Spring in southern Ohio is
tral'lsplants ~ a few
weeks. Basil, dli¥es .and a joy to behold after our
parsley cail be :tlal1led from long•.cold winter months.
seed but take eight to 10
(Hal Krwe11 u 1M M .
weeks before they are a Coullty A,ricfdtlule tuUl
Resoruusl
large enough size to . be Nlllllral
transplanted. In other Co11111Ut11ity lhvtiDp-at
words, this year buy trans- &amp;lru:IIIOr, Ohio Smu
plant:&amp; and attempt. growing Ulliversity bk11simt.)

•

·
r 7
- ;1511111
Ralph Ooak, National Swine Registry field representative, relays a bid to Jostl Sodimer, auCtioneer, and KeAdr:a BQdimer,
clerk, on the auction block.

-

:1 "'1 1
ARCHBOLD - "ln a
season &lt;Of Change, Wby
Blend In?" was the advertisement for the Tom
Moyer and Family Spring
Showpig sale, and "blendil)g in" was not the case on
the evening of April 12 in a
large blue and.white tent in
which 7 3 bead ·e f weanling
pigs weighing 65 to 90
pounds sold for just under
$94,000, a record sale for
the Moyer ra.mily.

~~

Josh Bodimer, auctioneer
for
Jmsh
Bodimer
Auctioneering ·
from
Gallipo'lis conducted the
auction with help of his
wife Kendra Bodimer Faking the clerking duties,
Charles Bodimer (Josh's
father), Richard Stephens
and ABFon Ruff checkin~ in
buyers · and cashie1mg,
Michael Stephens and
Nathan Jones Faking on the
runner
duties,
Jake

.
my
fJrst4-Hpig:a:ittion
and
Bodimer (lash's brother)
watching
~vin
Wendt
:auctaking care of pbo:ie bids,
and Kyle and S;u:ah Deel tio.~g ·:and I got diill
. taking on tbe photography bumps. Siuce·. tbca I bave
of the auction.
. always wanted to do a 'big
There were l'egistered tirpe' pig auillion.
~~appreciate Tom Moyer
bidders
fmm
Ohio,
Missouri, Montana, Kansas, and family ·g ivins me the
Oklahoma,
. Michigan, opportunity to conduct such
a vresMgieus Slile, ancLbope
Indiana and Illinois.
this
·sale opens more dOOI'I&gt;
"This was a drearn rome
true for me," Josh Bodimer to conduct more pi,g :aucsaid. "I remember going ro lions :across die Country,~
·
Washington Colllit HWJse 1D he a!!ldM
•

.

.
In One Week With Us
c~ssrried@~;a::~;ibune.CQm REACH OVER~85,000 PROSPECTS

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DELMAR. Md. - The
strawberries just turning
red on one Eastern ShOFe
field here could end up on
plates almost anywhere except on cafeteria trays
just down the road.
That's because schools
aFen't set up to accept local
produce, •leading to a
Byzantine nationa'l food
distribution grid where
apples from Maryland end
up in schomls in · South
Carolina but aFen't served
iri local -ones .
"The trouble is that major
school systems, ·to get what
they want, they deal wi't!h a
wholesaler. They ~ant a·
one-stop shop;" Wicomico
County f~r Patrick
Hochmuth said.
.
A bill awaiting the gever- Farmer Patrick Hochmuth of Delmar, Md tends to his strawberry plants on ~il 14.
nor's s.ignaturc ail!l&amp; to tHoolilmuth remerilberfl when farmers used to t!eliver ~rot!uce to local schools, bl,ll: now the
· dul_nge dull. It's part of .a Qnly 'local outlets ifor his 15 acres of produce~are -termer"s markets. That's beCause
llllllenal Farm-To-School 'Sdllools .aren't set to acicept local pr.oduee, leading to a Byzantine national food dlstrimo¥emcnt tbat~s headed ro I!!Lition •grid Where apples from Maryland end up on cafeteria trays in SOuth .carolina but
Mvyland to encourage aren't served in 'local schools.
IOmC looal produoe •011 cafe~tra{!;,m missions of . medleys and _sala~ bars address childhood obes.ity, do that. you're beiping 'preboosting local farmers populated by limp 1oeberg too. When kids learn about serve open space .and helpWhile mmming fuel costs 1~.
.
.
. agriculture, they naturally ing the he.alth of .the
rfur · sbipp~ food ion~ dis1be food serviCes m get curious about trying Chesapeake Bay." said
_ l:inOeS bas f0UIId unarumous most .iiOhools .aren :t usually ne.~. foods.
.
.
Mark Powell, chief of marapproval tfiiom Mruyland prepared to deal wtth whole
I ve seen kids get exc1t- ketmg for the Maryland
leps1am .
foods. They want. something. ed about beets and turnips . Department of Agriculture.
. The 1biU 4f~Ould uart"-a . thal''s_:at ll:as,t ~ly ,ere- _ and ~ra~is~~s ~~!~se thee ~The pro_w~ hasn't ~n
~Maryland ~HomegFOWII"'~~ana:.miil~to.'-pop ln- pu1led-ll oucor.tne::grounG- stgned tnlo law yet; iiiii:U't
w.eek in school cafe~ 1the oven," said Janet But if you hand a kid a beet likely the state will start
and encourage schools to 'B achmann of the Al:tansas- and say, 'Eat this, it's good small with looal produce in
teach children about local based National Sustaina~le for you,'_ they say, 'Eww,"' schools. But already farma.griculture through fann Agn~ulture lnformatron Kirby wd.
ers are excited about tbe
field trips. Some states even Serv1ce, a USDA-funded
There also are environ- possibility of selling to
display posters of local agenc~ that promotes local mental r'?llsons for spend- ne,\ghiJ?rhood sch~ls..
farmers-in cafer.elias so chil- foods m schools_
. mg more to get local proI think education IS tbe
&amp;en fJling tbfiiJugh lunch
Maryland:s bill would J?Ut duce. Relying on local best way we can sustain
lines team where their food educators m touch W7th food reduces the amount of ourselves,"
said
J.D.
comes from.
state
Departtnent
of fuel needed for ·shipping. Rinehart, owner of Rinehart
1bis is a great idea," said · A:gxiculrure marketing offi- And when schools buy orchards in Washington
Bobi Crispins who grows cials to figure out how to locally, they can make County. "We need to Jllllke
fruits vegetabies and flow- put
products
like local farmers more profc them aware that food does..ers Millersville but does- Hochmuth's berries in itable and more likely to n' t come from a grocery
n't sell to the three schools schools. Offi~ials in other k~p farming.
store.'It comes from a farm
near her farm.
·
state~ ba¥e Sllld schools and
If you suppon a local and 1t- grower that works
It's .a lot more ooqilictt- farms ~ are enthusiastic farmer, you're belpin~ keep tirelessly tn get that food
ed than it sounds to ·get pro- . lbout the 1dea of local food them profitable, and if you out there."
duce from 71Ct01&amp;1be Flll'llet in afetcrial - ltbey just r---::o. :-.-:~-:=--~~-~~--......
.into a IChool. . Scboolt are 77llCd a go-~een.
bound by USDA JUidelines
"They did want to ,P~.
dill .,,
leave them clwe local, but they dido t ~
~
~
-90 centl per lMil know whether they could or
w..l ...
u- •
to
on food. Bldd.in&amp; 1701, bow woudd they do it,
. . . '"' ·- : .u.AIIar, _, II
'
mun achooll often would lhele be the quantity,
1711 ~
aren't allowed to apend would the price~ in line," .
5Jh·ZWI iWCWift
more .on produee pown aal.d Cbrle KJtby, program
1a.1:001111- 11M •• 7337
Joc•lly.
admlniattatar
'for
.Pomlfttv.
AI\W &amp;a
And achool• oeed /ordert Oklahoma'a
Farm-To·
'
~
plaoed month• in Advance, School Ptogram.
2:00 •J:OO P.ll. ,_,.
III •
,l lld they often aren't
Oldahoibi ~ ta:Villl
Gllllpolll Thl Ftlel.._
equipped to handle simple locally .,own melons in a
_. •
....,..
P"'P wOrk like peeling car- few schools in 2002, and
4:110.5:1111 p.m., (740)
•111WW.fal1eysfimfann.com
rots or ICI'Ilbbing dirt-crust· now that state's melon proeel potatoeJ.
gram has grown-to hundreds
To PllceAI Order (II De Stare Above •Cal: l...U7.J61!
1be limitations n:sult in of- schools.
FARLEY &amp; FARLEY ASH FARM
tbe cafeteria food everyone · Kirlly said qricult\U'C
remembers: canned fruit educauon and -more local
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421
salad, frozen vegetable produce in cafeterias helps

........

·

.,.in. to

Pul&gt;llahlng _.....

Free and ~orth. it I Orphan '

.,:rHi,.,..

law•

F'ISh f or pond Stock'lng

.

foster

lndoor/~utdoor,

parent.

"_lOSd~ .

potty-1ra1ned, ~ _kitties w.
sweet personalities, . no

. -.

loyal friend Please call 304675-1045 alter 5;30 pm...,
deliver.
Free Lab mtx puppies.
Mother is Blacl&lt; Lab. 441·

r4

.

of Bartender

Center.
Located at 333 Page Street,
Middleport, Ohoo •• pleased
to announce we are accept·
ing applications for LPN's to
join our friendly and dedicat·

..

leaching and behind

IIJwlol

(74lt

uuaaa

Class A COL+ 1 Yr. OTA
Exp Req

1...aoo-S..io11

www.

chedoi.'

Ma~
Syracuse yellow house on LPN Staff Oevelopmem 2nd Ave, Galipolis.
lhe left Baby olothes,kids Coordinatoro 740 .992 .
•
clothes Ia~ &amp; small,bools. 6472. EO£ &amp; A Participem Management: Assistani
Microwaw, water · cooler of The Drug-Free Workplace Manager positions at Zanzis
with . hot or cold f&gt;roglam.
To Go! store loca1ed at 900
eleC1nc.Large tool box

Po~outh
Ohio 45662 Ann· OrlvEd
Dept., 0{ Fu ~ '10,
740-35Hl537
Orlvers needed· CDL
.
. · .

almost new,red tool

2nd Ave. Health l~nce Drivers willing to drive fof

almost

and other benefits ava•labte. local

ready~ix ~company.

lanctair

.com

FEDERAL
POSTAI..JOBS
$17.89-S28271hr., now hlr·

ing. Fer application and free
ll"""""mont iob into, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
913-599-1!226. 241hni. emp.
serv.
=.::__-:-:---

Need
PIT
flora!
Opportunity for actvanoa· Two (2) position&amp; open at deatgneriOelivery person
ment. lnclu.d~g opera11ng Aobertsburg, WV (neaJ wt1h experience In noral .

creative and

organized,

abte to

manaQ&amp; an

established .aacount list while calling on
new Customers.

C d'da
an I tes must

~e disciplined, Selfmotivated and a learn player that
understands the importance of developing

strong, mutually beneficial business
relationships with our Customers. Sales
experience and reliable transportation
necessary If
II and
. you can se
you want to
work full time, I Would like to hear from
you.
Please send resume 1 cover letter and
three references to:

and lranch•s•ng. To learn Buffalo, WV) plant. Send resumes to P.O.Box ·
Gallipoa. Drlllr Tribune
moJe mail resume to 72 N Experience is pefe.Ted but 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
.....,,
- - - - - - - ·675-1429.
Plaza Bllid., Attn: HR, not neoessary. Must be Wll- CLA Box 102.
Attn: 111111 Radgeni
. ChiiHcothe. OH 45601 . or ing to do pra-maintenance
FouND
Garage/moving sale May 1
..
PO. Box 469 Glrlllpolla. OH 45631
&amp; , • • antiques, tools, Help wanted at Dais! Home hand detiver to Eric at the on tructs and equiprrlftnt, Now hinng em~ 10 set
FOUND: 4-2Hl8 Lelart, 2 8 5
Group Home.740-992·5023 store. EOE
yenl/plenl and other millctll· I.IP and predeiMII lawn and
Sassafras Rd. area, blacl&lt; liassware. lumrture. equip- - - - - - - - laMOOO taslcs. Eocpe&lt;lence ag equipment Fax resume or .e-mail to mrodgerS@mydailytribune.co
Lab lOOking puppy wired col· _"'"_nt_,_m_ust_go_,s_um_ne_r_Rd_.
- - - - - - - -rating equipment and to 740-4&lt;6-9104
All replieS Will be kept in strict confidence.
lor, 304-593.()703 idnetily Murti
family garage
sale May ;;;;;;;Hel;;;;;;~p;Wa~nt~led~;;;;;;~;;;;;He~l~p~Wa~ll~ted~;; extra
Sldls such as welding Now taking lqlplications tor ~=;;;~;;;;;==-=~~:;;,;;~::::!
or Take
1 and
2. Namebrand
a plus. Starting pay baaed summer
posi11oris
.at
LOST· Blue TICk Hound clothes,
toys. end
on -""""" IDl driving Raoooon Crook l'afk. Picl&lt;
Help W••ttd
Help Waul8d

304 75 _ou='rat_ _ _ _.....,
3328
..
p
AIJCTION AND
uppy 1.ound ~~ Pomeroy
Fu:A M
Post Office 4·12.Short legs; ~
A1IKEf •
small: brown coat wtth black

Cline · Hill Area

-6 ~

more.Noble

Summit

Rd.

I

j

~

,:;i;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.J

nose. Very friendly, great with Cross Creek Auction Buftalo
kids,well behawd. To claim Auction saturday 6pm
2
or ~dopt Jennit&amp;ro a. 'Trailer Loads, used mar·
74 336

1171.
chandise, Produce, Cereal,
local Greenhouse Plants
l
Vanilla cololed Dog hanging ,Starting to sell high quality
around Mt. Vernorvliarman kni·-s
~ as Case, ~......
~ -..
~·
~
=~:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::; Park 4119/08 Identity 304· &amp; Mossy Oak. Building is

L--G-I'I'EA•'•l\1•~•1'--'·

n3-5425 or 304-675-2834

•

: Call 740446.0051
: ActtWeiler Husky mix,

Debit

AUCTION: Modular House
2008. Buci&lt;Bye Hills Career

at A2:00 Noon on May 3,

• needs good home w/ area to

~~;~~~~~

Ohio Valley Bank
is accepting applications for
Full· Time Secorid•~ Market/Fn-House/Loan
-,
Undenwriting/PrOces~ing Clerk

msuranoo .. - - at C&lt;eek
meeting employment County Part&lt;. 740-379-2711
oequi18 ments. Call Valley
. Brool&lt; Concreto corpora10 POST OFACE NOW

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

~ at ~~·)~ •519 to

~ ''

.......vv

salary and benefits

package, including 401-K

Tetirement and career advancement

HIRING

iriOJ

scheclule an tntenrMtw.
"
We offer generous

lead/Carpenter

and

2

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
$S1Kfvr, indudas
Fedentl Benefits, OT.

=~d.
~:;:.,~ C:.~w~u=·h~!
''
HIS6-403-2582

37· Pomeroy, Oh 45769

oppoltllnities.

Pre-employment drug lesting isrequired.

-:::::::====-=======:;

ind~ ~am drop ott 'applicatioll&amp; r
EVER WONDER

record. . Benefits

-alter

Help 'Watted

Help Wlfllld

WHAT IT WOULD BE LIKE TO• Get Paid w.-..,;
ru. you are woJth?·
• Have freedom to pace your work:?
• Have ari employer who shows appreciation

F

~lor ahjob -:•111 done?

• ee W at ItS ike to be in

on. things~

• Receive Encouragement and extra training
tobecomethebes1'

IF'VOU-

Interested persons may obtain a job
application at any
Oh" V
10 alley Bank location or fiom our
website, www.ovbc.com

Center, Aio Grande, Ohio.

• Have a positive attitude
• Have a desin: to be: successful

•

• Have a good, professional appearance.

•

En'

.

~oy working With people

Medir-.1 ,• , 'w/lledlc:allleupliartill
Pleasant .,_,,_ H · 1 ·
•at~r osptla IS curre ntly
accepting resumes for a Medical

• Wanr to become pan of 1he community:
• Want a rewarding, fun. and exciting canoer.

sraduate of an approved program fur
Medical Assistant or Associates degree in a
related field or 5 years experience in
Physician Offices r..,uired.
Send resumes to: - ...

~Good people mean A kit ro u&lt;! We will ~ilp .

l'TN•,.,,..."' ,_see as!
' ,:.•-ca_r•_r_.C.,--~A-:-S-S-IF-::-I-=E-D--1-N-D-E-X~---. .,t
__~.~-Bu\'--...ll ~-~Card~~ai~T!IM~_~I!I~~~Cami~~OI~Tiiii!lii~~~ ~~sn~~:~~ ~:: d~~o~: D~~~~:!:!~

' run &amp; play. Owner is unable
·t
1o 245 5205
•

(304) 550·1616
1639

S1ephen Reedy

(M).

·

•

tull. Visa and Master card &amp;

i'or Sele ............................................:. 725

,.

..

FINMerlcel.......... ,..................080
Accee.oriea ......................•... 780
770

740·245-5334

Absolute Top. boliar . -~I·
ver/gold · coins, any
10K/14K/18K gold jewelry.
dental gold, pre 1935 US
cuhency, prootlmint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
446-21142

Cars·.

Wanted to buy ·Junk
call 740-388.()884 , if no
answer. leave a message.
can Call Collect

EOE

Tluutk You
H.O.P.£. /merv&lt;nri"" M&gt;uld /iki! ro rlwn/c all who
comribwed. parricip;ued arul assi:rred • •irh the 6rh
Ann""/ Autism Wu/k held ar the Gallipolis CiQ• ·
~-

,_

.

, Upcoming spea.ls:
Heullng..........................................:GI...-y......................................................040
GeM&lt;el

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Hippy Ada.......................................... - ........050
Hey &amp; Greln..................................................MO
1111p
110
...,..... lrnprolll'efl1ent• ............;...•••.•••••••••••••••810

-to&lt; Sole............................................ 310
- G o o d s ....................................... 510
ttouM• tor Rent .......................................... 410

In MuniiOfi•m ...............:.....................- ......... 020
.
. 130

Equlpment........................ eao

1CIOWOIIKERS IFD£D
Assemb6e crafts, wood
it.ems.To

~

provided. Free

Materials

tmormation

pl&lt;g. 24Hr. 801-428-4&amp;49

Middleton Estates is accept•
ing ·applications lof Medical
Coo r a 1nat 0 r 1H 0 me
Supervisor. Will be responii·
ble tor · coordination of

'

/'ar&lt;Apnl/9th.

..

,'""au~' K'asfilled \\'ith a commutU~· ofpeopk

hy aJt.tism. lr will as:rist them with training,

:nfJJPOt'ff.J _iij."UJ Jj~~.··~t't.'lli, wrti(Tiiii!"ifto~ m~Milnii a~
gm11.p ofindividUilll' who were so commined 10
making a diffe~nce for individiWb· wirh autUm.
Stt!Ve Hague, Tommy, Talent, T~· A.lbriRht and
Carl Wamslt!J•(employees of~mer1can Electric
Powtr)
spuirlteoded a.fundraising tl't'nl 10 lrold"
competition among the local power pianls to Ue
who could raist the moy mot'llty. Together thLst:
indi1•idU~J.I.f raised ova SJ 2.500. What an Olf'IQ:jng
group of 11ttlfJit' to tkdicatt their rime ro tntikt
~·uch a huge t·onrribution!

'
Again rhartk _W)U 10 t!l'i'(''ont&gt; M'hn Jupported this
e1•cnr. and ~a1•t' .. HOPE" to tht families.
Ar~ i1Jdb•idwl wilh auti.~m can ILcul a producti 1 ,~
lifr lhrough positivr cMJ"t.unity J&amp;f/!port.
Maclc Appm;itrlio"' H.O.P.l!.. llller'WflliMI

~~=::::~~~~~~~~=~~
Residential · Setting.
Bus'lness .""-"'ftun~tu
..
1
Interested C a - may
apply at 8204 Calla Drive. 5
Gallipolis,
Ohio or by e-mail
to: ..,.~~rescore"'""
An
Eq 1 Opponunity
Medica1Appointmentsfof35
Adults
in
a MR/00

";:======="t't""'===="=F==::;·

E~.

The fami/.v ~I

Regina Akt"r.v

EXCEP'DONAL FRANCHISE

&gt;WJuld like to &lt;XfJ"'SS

OPPORnJNITV

their heartfelt thanlcr
ro fllliUh· muJ,friend.&lt;
for their pruyers,
oords, flowers and
food. W• a/.&lt;0 would
lw ro rllanJ: Willis
Fun~ra/ Hom&lt; for
"tNir supporr and
tmder$1tmding.
God (JI~ss You All

National restaurant br.md seeks new hands-&lt;&gt;D
Franchisee for"existing corporate-run restaurant
7ocoted in Portsmouth, OH. Qualified buyers
will receive all the benefits of a complete
fr.mchise system with a minimum capital

iOvcstment.
Contact: Debnt Webb

' 11tii00418-95SS ext 1303
-w.huclcllebouse..a

you become successful.
Se. Jim Cochran

Experience·• plus nolallecfSsity.
W~. Salary/Mo. Commissioo/Pd.

II , _ IIOspital

u

~'o

-r
... __
.___

'-1'

1111

Vacation/Insurance

Please dress prc&gt;&lt;esstoo
r · al

- - • . . . . . . .~

1520...., Drive
Paint" r-M, WV 15550
~~ I7S-4S4G

wlw care so much abou1 individuals with aJUi.sm
and rheir familit&gt;s. The mone.r roised aJ the waUc
will S!'PJKH1 families. in Southe'astern OH affected

rrsources. dietary· ttetds. biomedl'cal matrrumts.
therapieJi and stq,port.
wanting to Buy Junk Gars.
"304""=7
-" -- .. .~' ~' A1thi»UKh'11.'e 7't1H ~ fflnlttrmi.,mltlfl""f)'Ofi""&lt;"'Wiio
-- ,"Uf!:f"lil. .,
-.._ ..

11...

lhldl

the

wheel lnstr~lon lor new

.

w·.... . .:.

lid

Outakle Sales Repi IIIUtaUft

Needed' Drtvlr Educallon Tlllthlng Onwers-Co &amp; OO's

Exjlenence Required. Send pooltion open In the
NEW PAY
Oh' v 1 p
Resumes to. Attn: Mike, PO . Gallipolis and Meigs ...a.
10 a ley ublishing with offices in
Box 303, Gallipolis, OH Flexible hou,. Must,. able
PACKAGE!
Pomeroy, Gallipolis and Pt. Pleasant is
4563. Resumes must be to work evenings and wee!&lt;·
lor OHFO ~
accepting resumes for a full time Outside
received by Monday, May ends. 20 to 25 hours a Home Weeki~ &amp; Weekends!
1
Ia ·
Ap
5th at4pm.
,_Job erQIIs clus&lt;oom Regional Runs $60k+ sa es represen trve,
plicants must be

I dependable,
Team Players
.
~ positi~.
Cou~de

•
r

· 4 used ,tires: 245175JR16.

Next sale, I0 a.m. Wednesday, April 30.
May I, 2, 3, COBA-AI SchooL
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Manure free to haul away.
For more infoimation, call DeWayne at (740) 3390241 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website. at
www.uproducers.com.

S1.00 for lar9e

atti1udes to join
Bar ~nd . Grill now dri'l8fl. Qualified candklates
• us Ill providing outstanding. seekt?g ~pltcat1ons for must have a HS Diploma,
. quality care 10 our residents. qualified lme ~s and valid Giver ltcense pass

PoMEiloYIMDD.J:

·

celebrafton

Overbrool&lt;

ed staff. Appllcan1's must be

y A7ID SAW-

-.

A

box. An Excellen1 Wffi to earn
new.Dishes what money. The New Avon.
Wurtitzer Organ needs some nots cookie jar, blue iaans Call Marilyn 304-882-2S4S .
repair, 13 base pedals 304· large ·adult &amp; also jeans tor
.
882·2385
kids lots oltoysl
AVONI f\11 .Areasl To Buy or
~AND
·
Sell. Shirle~ Spears, 304-

0365

Bred Cows, $480-$800; .

.

Thu...cl•y for Sunct..,.

Garage Sale 31am•l•es·Ratn Stop by and fill out an appll· dishwashen;. Please apply background
EoE.
enterta•n•ng. Great compan· or sh•ne Wed Apr.30 and Th ca1ion · M·F 9AM·SAM. tn person Of caM to set up an Mail resumes to AAA 1414
ionsforanyoneinneedofa
1.3202
At
124 Contad Hollie Bumgarner interview 441-9371 308 12th Street,

Bll!Y_ C:~'1~·iJoatsLS12~S6'1; 4m--~;::UOO;
$t~.~•.c$24.:M .

I LHe ..

scratching or biting. very

Back to the Fann:
$500-~840;

r

pan, bag of food 8. toy, cour· Oh. 740-256-6098

tesy

Feeder Cattle SteadyJHigher

· Cow/Calf PairS,

"'-'

• Allldt mutt be jripllld"

y
SAWkmens .round tn lhe TNT
ABD
area, on need o1 good
GA.UJF'OUS
homes. 2 different makes &amp;
models to choose from Gray Huge Sale. May 1, 2. 3.
Tabtly or Black/White. Come 8am·5pm. All new merchan·
lui~ loaded with 1litter bOO&lt;, dise. 102 20d St. Crown City.

the right to odlt,
...,. or conce! ony
od ot ony lime.
Uuat
onlhe

1

Well-Muscled/Fleshed, $47-$56.
Mf!dium/Lean, ·$42-$48.
Thin/Light, $1•0-$35.
B.ulls, $50-$65.

For Sunct.ye P•per

a:.

Nowyoucanhavebordenandgraphlcs
Gddecltoyourclasslfledads
,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
Grophks SOCforsmaU

All Dt•pt•yz 12 - n ;z
Bualn-• Daip PriOr To
Publlaotton
Sun.t.y D1splay: 1:00

fr~Ohilo~V~•IIoyi~il""t&amp;i_r_=.=.G~_:JVFA:~ :w~ "~ ~l Frr·~Y~UI=ID~SAI.E=~lii:":0 ~11W'~.~w.~ANI D= =~I~I~ l i;: : I W'=:w.:ANIHI: : : ~I~I;1,1;6 ::::HaP~w.~AN~rJDI~~I :1";:6 :Htu==w.~ANIDI===~==Help==w.=nl8d==:.=:Hel~p~Wanted

LivEsTOCK REPOKf

.

ln-1"tton

In NeKt Dey'• P•per
sund•y In-column: 1:00 p.m.

5:30 p.m.

992-2157

Display Acls

Mond•y-Frld•Y fOr

Monday thru Friday

(304) 675-1333

/}earltitec

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

=~~~

275-415 lbs., Stee..S, $75-$116, Heifers, $70-$97;
425-525 lbs., Steers; $75-$110, Heifers, $70-$90; 550625 ·lbs., Steers, $75-$105, Heifers, $70-$88; 650-725
lbs.; Steers, $75-$92, Heifers, $70-$85; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$85, Heifers, $7~$80.
.
· ,.

Or Fu To

Or Fu To (740) 446-30118

Worc:I 1-Acls

7:30

l\egtster , .

Sentinel

... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156

ca~;:.::V

-

up

tn'

tErtbune

To Place

r

Websi!es:
.WW;fl.mydaUybibune.com
W'WW.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregisler.com

· PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Maryland joins effort to put local food in school caf~terias , ~~~ish~.~
BY KW:S7EFI Wtid7

.

•

l:!/

r

wv

OH • Pt.

RNDAJOBOR
ANEW CAREER

,_

Orfax:

. IN TH~SSIFtED~1~
Help 'Watlld

.Help Wanted

CERTIFIED SURGICAL
Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis. ' 0~ .is
li

ec

h

00I

full-time
og•s ·

Certified

Sutgical

· ts

Primary responsibilities lnchlde performing
technical dudes as instrument technologist.
first. or

second assistant

the direct

under

•upervision of the surgeon. Assists with the
care, preparation, maintenance and processing
of surgical supplies and equipment. Shift will
be 7:00am-· 3:30pm, 7:30am - 4pm. and 12
hour shifts along with ovenime, weekend and
on call hours.
Qua7illcaliottt Current CST or gniduote of
accredited School of Surgical Technology and
eligible for cenification ..
Experience: Prior experience as a CST within
the past five yt:MS preferred.
'

Interested individuB!s may contact:

u - a-mos.,.,._,
H~ MO!Ii&lt;al C...W

l"J-*-I'Mie
Gd'prlk,Oif 831

.-.-: (7•J -..stts

RN's
CD •t:r wlult we have to after!
We will pay for your insurance during your

TECHNOLOGIST
. ...
. seeking

Help'W.....

introducrory perind!

•

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center is

searching for caring and reliable Register«!
Nurs~s

that want to join a winning team .

Rocksprings Rehabilfuition Center is a 100-bed
skilled nursing facility located in Pomeroy.
Benefits include:
• PAlO INSURANCE DURING YOUR
7NTRODUCTORY PERIOD'

• Incredible Staff
• Location- Easy occcss to major highways
• Cconpetitive Wages
• Broad option benefit plan
•401K~tplan

• Continuing education opportunities

• EJtcellent unit orientatioo

• Recognition Programs
• Advancemenl opportunities

• Pay for experience

Interested individuals should contact:
Mary Dmnmjtt, DON

F..: 7.._992-17"
....._,,.._,~

Or Apply ito~ Ill:
~SJR~K..:
p
roy, ()If &amp;5'7e

Fu: n•J -..st"

Extendicaze Health Services. Inc. is an equal

EEO/ADA Emjlloyer

opportunity employer that encourages
WOttplace div=rty.

rf

,..

I

�'

Page 04• ••.., ....... 611tlld

I·•

II''

~WANID&gt;

IIDIWANIUI '

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

II''

Ol1io v.y Home _ , Polrl ~- WV, - tnc. hirlnQ STNA, CN ... , ny is -.g a Oir"'*'&lt; of
Home Health Aides and
~ Cere Aides, Futl
Tome and Per Oiam pooltions available. Accepting
appiicalioos lor AN and

Human

lblJ'WANIID

To Do

--.a.ar---

have at
least five fOars .,_,..,.,.

TwirOouod......-c:alisfor
For1une 100 Compar1leo

in the Human Resource
field. Applicant rros1 _....,. in -oling
all bene!il plans. Appllcanl

0125

-·01-.nd

_. --$350tnteriorl

.m

"""1"'ofit -

•

.........,

~sand their
tomilieol

OHIO VALLEY PUOUSH-

Hew 'DakWII a.M.
. . 1M11ng held N0W1

lNG CO. recammendo
that you do business with
people roo '&lt;now, 'I

Cell for your 8del •ieW!
1.........c-MYU

NOT to send .money
' through the mail r i

::,","'investigaled the

Jab od.II01

hensive benefits paclulge
Ga.~s and Pt.Pieasant
is accepc;ng resumes for a
M time outside sales
representa1Ne. Applicants
must be organiZed. .
creative and able to
manage an established
account list while calling

lodging at our employee
resorts In Ft. Myers Beactl &amp;
Daytona Beach , Fl. Big
Bear lake, CA. and Pigeon
Forge, TN. Come for per· t
·
at 6136
sanaI 10 erv•ew
Huntington Ad, Gallipolis
Ferrv . WV 25515. Pt1 800669.1809 or fax to 304-6754682.
M!FIDN
EOE 304-373·1011
w w w . g o r I c . c o. m
www.rfftlc.ccm
Tw hard working dependable emp~QveeS needed tor
Security Officers needed in full time: Both positions lift·
New Haveri WV $7.00 ~ ing involved, some computer
S7.66 per ~r. ~itt work, knowtedge required . ·Inside
hours vary. Must have a high position Monday : Friday.
school diploma or GED 8:00 ~ • ..:30 pm. Truci;.
. clean crimmat history, pa~ Driver position 'Monday •
drug · screen and bad!:· Friday, "7:00 am · 3:30 pm
ground check. Call 1·800· must have COL. He.ath
275--8359 ·M·F 8:30 to :00. Insurance, paid vacation
EEo-MFOV
after 1 year, 401 (k). Apply in
-Se_e_ki-ng_h_e_lp_for_so_me_one
__
to' person ·at the Fruth

on new customers.

Candidates must be
disciplined, selt~motivated
and a team player that
undefStands the
.

_

lrf'4X)rtanoe of developmg

st~, mutua_lly be_nefi~

.b'Jslness relattonstups witt"~'
our customers, Sales
e~CPGrienoe and reliable
transportation necessary.
· It you can sell and you
wan1 to woril. full time, I
would like to hear fim1
'Please ~ resume,
cover letter and three
references to:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Ann: Malt Rodge"
P.O.Bol&lt; 469
Galipolis, OH 45631
oremail to.
mftxtger&amp;O mvclailytl"'lur..eom
.All ~ias Will be kept in

sme1wola.....

ment plan and tree vacation

a

:::.:=:...:.:"-'-----

n:------.,I
,

•

Giglntic 11ovtng s.te
•d:tl part 9:oo-5:00
293 Fisher Street
Thurs. 5-9 thru Fri. 5-10 . .
Furniture. linens. seasonal
items, e•ercise equipmen1
collectibles, desk. Tum
at Mitches' Flowers go up hill
comer of 5th and Fishel'.
MkJ~aaa !CIIt
, _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

lti

"-------oJ
WAN'IFD
To Do

take -care o1 parents call Pharmacy Corporate Oftice,
J04.675- 2~ 54
• Rt 62 North, Point P~sant,
WV.
EXPERIENCE PAINTER·
The Village ol Rio Grande is Wonted:
INTERIOR/E XTERIOR ,
!_~ing. awlaflcat";;'s . for 29 Senous Poople 10 Work STAINING. OIL, ETC, NO
""' position . pa time from home using a compul· JOB TO SAMLLORTOBIG,
surT'If'Ntr mowng help. The er.
Up 1o $500 .00 to CALL (740)742-~056 ASK
. . , . - is IIP!lfOI&lt;imotely 20 $1,500.00
PTIFT FOR TOM OR LEAVE MES.
hours per - _ minimum wwwJ&lt;omelflCOI1194-U.com SAGE

::.~il~;.;: ISHOP ClASSI~IEDSl

Friday.

.

1

Estate Aultioli
Salurday May 10 2008 ~OAM
.usllt Wlpple Road Pomeroy, Ohio

Public: Audioo
Friday, May 2, 6:00pm
Amvels Bldg. , Burnette Rd. (Kanauga)
Gallipolis, Ohio
We Will Be Selling Items From The Gallipolis
Ohio Home Of The Late Mr.i. Hazel
Edgington, Who Resided Here Over 60 Years.

Antique cane bottom chair, Mamie top
antique dry sink, Unusual Antique book shelf
that twns into a table, set of 6 ~tique .cane
bottom chairs, French Provincial Dinning
room suilt, early American maple hutch,·
assonmenl of blue Fenton coin glass, Fenton
Lamp, 2 unique antique roclr:.ing chairs, Set of
4 Ducks Unlimited framed prints, Ohio
University 170th ·anniversary ?.,up · bottle.
outdoor metal furniture set, mise kitchenware,
dinnetWare. and stemware, Sofa and matching
loveseat, Cream Club chair and Ottoman,
entertainment cabinet, Lane Cedar Chest,
Spinel P·iaoo, Glass lop sofa ,table and
matching coffee table, mi!iC. framed artwork
and mimlrs; 2 Freneh style upholstered
ai:mchairs, Lato• tigtware pieces, mise lamps;
small blanket chest with duck decoy design,
coffee ·table, flowered ' sofa bed, cloths
S1eaD1eL Queen bedroom suite, drop leaf end
table, queen bed and dresser, misc. tv's misc.
toys and games, c;xercise equipmen~ .and
much more. Come and enjoy the auction
bring a chair, we will have everything in the
garage and under a 1m]:&lt;: ltnt. Terms of the
sale cash or good check with valid ID. This
auctiou is being conducted rain or shine.

AntiqurJrclkw1!hle It • Ou~
Victorian DresserW/mirror, Mamie Top And
Candie Holders, 3 Pc. Watetfall Bedroom Suite
In Excellent Condition, Unusual Folding
Sewing. Rocker, Walnut Victorian Pador
Table, Victorian Platform Rocker, Victorian
Wall Table, 2 Easllake Chairs W/needlepoint
'Seats, Painted Comer Cupboard, Fancy Dome
Trunk, Quill Fancy Shadowbox, Galllipc~is
Bicentennial Prinl(water Color By Earl Tope),
1940's Chest Of Draw..,., Depression Glaos.
Leffon China, Reproduction Victrola, Cast !roo
Pot. Bam Lanterns. Old Hats. Misc.
Stooeware, Kraut Cutter, Biscuit Board, Teapot
w/Gallipolis Bandstand, Old Tools,
Repro.gasoline Pump Radio
Houoel!old, Mjg Items: Flexsteel Uphol.
Sofa, Gooseneck Ar!nchair, Platform Glider
Rocker. .Zenith TV, Dining Table W/4 Chairs,
llcdliide Tables, Coffe&lt;~ &amp; End Tables,
Household Linens)ewing l!Jachlne,
Bookcase. Misc. Lamps, Sewing Notions,.
Knick Knacks,·Pictures, Rugs, Other Items ...
~Dewalt 12" Compound Miter Saw. 10"
Benc-h Top Table Saw, Rand 25 Hp
Compressor. Misc. Power Tools (drill, Router,
Saw), 10' Step Ladder, Wagner Power Painter,
Mi!iC. Small Hand Tools, Tool Box~. Bauery
Charger,.Much'More ....
AUCflONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY 740'388-8115 OR 74(!-441-7766
""'ICENSE
_ D !l¥ TH
_E!i_TATE OF,Q!iiQ~ ~t · · ~'
•UNGTE; llNERYTHJNG IS VERY
CLEAN &amp; IN GOOD CONDITION!!!!

I

This is the estate of Bernard V. Fultz
(EsiBte I 26-6120011 )

· =:Wf

•

Madlillery, Tracton, Etc.
Valley Volunteer Fire Dept..

... Q. ._

•

Apple Growe, WV ·
12 miles south of Pt. Pleasant on Rt. 2

2 AUCHON RINGS
' NEW fann gates and com! panels
• Round bale feederi
•• Expecting lots of hay equipment ready for
' hay ""!S!" If you H,\YE SQMEIHING IO SfJ ·I I
lUIS IS DIE fiME AND DfE PL,\CE!

TJtldac ...........
Fri.May9'
""
Sat. May It 7am • .........

. Aucth•~~n
,JaeAniapool WVfl*l 3114 576 44119
Eridl CGolrad WVfl~ 3114 576 lt3t
MidiM!I Adkiao WVtl61. 3114 633 21lt
Terms of sale- Cash
*Fire Dept and Auction Co. not responsible
for accidents. theft or loss of pryP""Y· '
Announcemettll&gt; sale day take precedence
over aU printed material .

•

TUANED DOWN ON
soaAL: SECURI1'Y I9WP
No Fee Unless We Win!

on
SAVINGS

s~

Shop
Classlfleds!

Auction
'l1loaoas Estate Audloa
Saturday, May 3, 1.088 Ia:. LIIL
Lnqljng: Reedsville, Ohio. Follow l!.t. 124
South through Reedsville, Appro•. 2 miles &amp;
We will be seUirtg the complete estate of the
late Glady's and·Paul Thomas.
Hw+H· Aex.tr:el sofa &amp; loveseat, La-Z·
Boy recliner rockers, Magnavo• 1V, lamp tbl•,
2 &amp; 3 pc. bedroom suite, chest, dressers.
wardrobes, dep . China, maple tbl. w/6 ·chairs,
entertainment ctr, stereo, VCR, desk, Sentry
safe, reg. clock, L.G . Wt. Clock. children's
furniture, quilt rack &amp; quilts, Kenmore Fridge
&amp; microwave, Kenmore stacl&lt; washer &amp; dryer
(li.kt: new), Student fridge, airC, space helllet'S,
8 pc. service flatware, card tbl, wlchairs, kero
heaters. alum glider. robot vacuum, ice cream
freezer. campus supplies, hand &amp; power1ools,
16". alum ladder, wood lathe, wheel bamJws,
lawn &amp; garden tools, Christmas decor, .baskets,
canning jan; &amp; lots more.
Collectibles; Stamp col'iection, old books,
· glassware (Fenton white hub piwher w/6 tomb
&amp; other), depression, cut glass, Japan, China &amp;
etc), potlery (Roseville, McCoy, Hall, &amp; more,
stoneware (unmarked A.P. Don~hho top bat&amp;:
other misc. jan;, Ironware (Wagner &amp; etc), oil
lamps, costume jewelry. jumbo peanut butter
jars, blue jars, old wys, kitchen wares (wood
butter rolls), mike btl, old slat ba•kels ,
watering cans, bikes (I Banana), sleds,
children's golden ·records, oookboqks, framed

pictures.

Auction

boxes, knives. and lots more.
· Mootlispooq:lt Allltit a hoc Senic1o
Auctioneer's: Bill &amp; l'ood: Ohio Lie. N76937 &amp;

available. !nformalion:(740) fo67.()644 or 989-2623

. l Yr Old ~r cape Cod Home
I $30,000 Ml•lmum Bid m
3 · 4 Bedrooms 1 % Bath
S WIJDfhd Acru
/
5.1L, May I 7, 200a 12 NOOn

lDcded .......,... 2 mil8 s. of
lokArthur &lt;lt Mill St. IU. 93 S.
H&lt;lmden, OH' CMalliftg Add,.,,,
EXlliEMELY na homo Pf"Viously ll'iled ..,.
appro•. S119,000 &amp; will sell at Miction w/a
Minimum Bid of SJO,OOO! IINut.ul
hcHnc h&amp;i front &amp; rur potchet., eilt-in kitchen,
dinir\i rm ., &amp; bed.rm on main floor ; upstairs
dHigned into 2 Of 3 bedrm~o .; fuil IHIMment
h.ll1 conct'fte floor * I walk.otlt door. Homf:

drilled -u &amp;
.. ptl&lt; tonk. The Clngerl&lt;b's did no1 utMift
Wlndaws ,

eted:ric Uterefo~ the hotM hu no eiKbidty.
This could be nk:e ~ar round hotM or week·
ond ,__,. Just A low mtlor. froto lake

luporr Stoto l'l.rk.

CI'EN "?''· sp MAY 110. , , . 21fM
Torms: 130,000 minimum bid: 55,000 down
at timrt of saAe : billa.ru 6-possesskm by-6-17 1001: off""'d lreo &amp; cle•r prior to doslnrj;
tuos pror.ued 10 &lt;losing dole; sold tn pro'
ie:M as -k condkton; no contlngenclts: caw.11

I

etnptor.
Mo~s IL • Am~W.)'. Glnterlch , Owners

CAU. FOR fJtEE lltOCHURE 1!1
-STANlEY 6 SON, fMC. (7401 775-3330
WWW.STANlE'I'ANDSOfti.COM

~ rr•s

·

Auction

HAMMER TIME!!

1i

, ---

......,.,onr_.,

' ru•uw,llwhllltcnDr
1
•1 toolo u ,.

1
r

Estate ~doe !ale ll.oloort L. --.y
llSl State Route 681, Albuy, OWe
l'nllll u-OWo,..... u.s. Ill. !ill Waa

1Na ne• @ e

lu=•~lilll -

d

•

d

required and

--------

LANDAHDHOIIE,,_3
bed, 2 bath, land,
ready to mcwe into. -~ 399
a month I ac) 866 564
w ·
· ·
8679 _MUST SAI..E'
-~------

not

Ill +M•tiwl In

j . Wo " " F ' . .
'
_..,.,..,., .

deposit $515

$100. (74C)645-3372.

•=.

~

II . 41 ~~I
, ..---ssoone y a ..,.,.,..,..,..
:Ranch 61yle house with 4
j bedrooms. living room. dining room, kllchen, large tomlty room, central air. ges heal

Ow.n: Owtoo A P I lk CtaoMr
.,.. s.idl ......, •• lr 7. . .11tl3
Licatse 113449
Cash Positive ID Refteshmoms "NO(
responsible for accidents or loss of popetiJ"

i

4 yeer old AKC Reg. Male 23051or lniD(rnatlon.
oa~und
' I Maasle
·
~~·
• blk/tan. G1111
Ferguson
with kids $125. 2 'fWI' old Bat*hoe, Diesel S5.500. 1997 Tr--• Avalon XL. 118
AKCAeg u-•-~~
_,_
~-~~. Caii74C-2~
k miles, good gas mileage:
·l'!ld. Great with kids $250.
$3800. 740-245-9239 or
7., •4• 4884
Sale on King v.~. Tirl'-.
·
~ ~· 645-0660
4, s &amp; u ft. Jim's Form - - - - - - --

-o--

I

1.,~--tiiiiiiii""""iiiii;.'·_.l.. References

f
i

l

AKC~,;I

dBpoett

Home Pal'k. 081 446-2Q03

t ad ShlhTzu.2 Equipment. C811

.74~

6926

Tara

Townhouse AKC aegistered Yortde
Ideal fof 1 or 2 people, refer· Apartments, Very Spacious, Male, 1 112 yao" old."""'
.... r ,
7
enoes, nopets. 5milesfrom 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 IIITIOII 31bs .. S400. ~5-

mites $3600. T4!H;45- 1683
ori4Q.i46-3&amp;2t

_ _::,__ __ __

2005 Harter ~
FICtory ~- 1 of 200
buin. Has ooty 850 original

.,;tes Maroon Metallic lal'i&lt;
&amp; !ins. With embossed
tlames throughout . Price
$t6.000.00 MUST SEE to
APPAE. Cl'~! D-·se call
"'"
7am-5pm 74ll-949-2217 &amp;
6pm-9pm 740-949-2216

r-

~
L

~

I.ms &amp;

AcJI£AI;E

r

I

~Ad

;

MCOTOR~~
,........,

I

1992 Dutchmen. 26tt, Great
S/laoe. Sleeps 4, AJC, Use
tor lamily oolings, hunting
camp. or hve in while working out of_' town. Awning

included. · Cal l (740)367-

1 bth, all electriC, carport, lg.
front porch, close lo schooi, apartment
for
library &amp;park, available May elderlyldisobled, call

Orange,

Great

Condilionl Asking $t0,900

OBO. 740-245-0125

r

•

6679

Real Eatale

Automatic

trans.

Uses

Regularga~ 740-446-t329
·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime g~r­

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

antee. Local references fur·
nished. Esta~i st:ted 1975.
Cal 24 'i"' (140) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Real Estate .

Aeltl Esl8llt .

Real Estate

REALTY, INC.
OPEN 80J.JSE WEEKEND

Codter Spantel puppies

readr now, (74C)949-3001

I

.

tone brown eld , tan int.

------'--- --------

CKC Miniature Pinschers,
sham, wormed, !ails dodlad.
$300 - . . 740-388-8l88

the
675-

.

1986 Chevy 1500. 4WO. 2

Avenger,

Dodge

Hugger

Aclul Pool &amp; Baby 8855
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. -Baby--Pygmy--Goals--lo&lt;-so-le-.

• 1ol, $400 dep., $400 ""'
mo. , water &amp; garbage includ-· ""'
~·
near Jad&lt;son Pike. Priced., ed; No Pets, (74C)949-2217
..,ct 1 fireplace. Addition ol a seu. 446-7525
~
large Florida room com~ .....,.,
6 ·-es -• on Lefl

4·Wheeler 300EX, $ 1•000

~7~40~)~4 4~6~4!!060!.,-~_,

loaded, looks and runs 79Fonl9000. 441-7514&lt;&gt;&lt;

71 Chevy Nova 3s0/350.

Bath,

No · Pet&amp;, lease Plus 70-367.()119 • eY811ings
SoaJrlty Oeposll Required,
;_(74C_;_)36_7-054
__
7._ _ _ _ Chihuahua puppy, male,

1999

5pm

greal 86,000 miles. $3400. 256-6926
245-5189 u 645-6505

\

German Aottwl!illers, 1st
sham, woiined,good mark·
tngs,parents 011 sight.$150M,-$180'f 11011. -.....

·-.-·CASH. 740-992-0218.

..;;;;;_..,I.

r

r

. Uted Coucll

fleadytogo. TwomaleAKC
minlaiUIII Sohnauzers.

r

140-9112·1328.

·

Films &amp;

}I

IIZOOUli

Hanging-. 4'

pol-

1ed plenls, bedding plants,
large polled
1~
$3.00 each.
Yoder's
Gnoenhouoe,
10miw.t
o1 Gallipolis on SA 141 .

... --......
''
-~·--·­
..............
:1 ..._
.

MHl!D-

-

-lid.

'

fur5911

and Loveseat.

~======::. Holzer.
2BR ~s.
miles paid
from. .;,;;;,;;;;;..;;;;;;.;.
Call388-829a _ _ _,.
Some6 utilities
~
$400+&lt;iep. 740418-5288
SrolmNG
;;;10;:;::;;:;;::;;:;;:;:;;:;::;
L.-....ifOaliiitllfMiiiliii._.l.1 2BR, WID hook-up, stove &amp; ~
Gooos
•
.,!~~
1
,

.r

,

~ldge

r

!urn. Close to Hospital

1
L_..,;_..i;io;;iiiliiiut
_.1

2 badtoom houa9 for 'rent1 and ooltege. 740-286-5789 NOrt;on compound bow with ...,
~ Looking for an updated tam· no pets,.(740)992·5858
or 740-441-3702
2 soopes and 1l1her extras, 2002 . John Deere 790
r lty home, on , acre ..., wl
-------,., - also, popup blind and nile Series, die&amp;et engine, 4x4,
rlloot&lt;yanl privacy fence In 2 br. house on Mn St., 3 Br,$395, 28r,$295. plus ::ision!"'P"J40-446-73t7; good heavy duty ioeder
' Gallipois.thi&amp;2100SQFt. 3 Pomeroy, $375 per mo. &amp; dep., plus utilities. Racme.
Mtn]JAriRJl.S
tires, tires loaded w/
2 ba. • I ig. bonuo room $375 dep., ('14C)9112-6385 Ohio: 740-2 47-4292·
·
~ • methanol, Iron! biJn1oer w1
·vinyl sided rench has new
br
S525+·~·
weighls, oitle entry "'""·
· ~ attaohed -~ 2 cor 2 " coontry,
_,,..,
rear- anns one owner
•··~·
. "':"'....,. '•
-access to Alexander/Meigs &amp;tMM. 52 Westwood Commarical Tanning Bed,
'
'
•garoge ' refonoshod hanl· bu roul 74ll-749-0024- Drive, from $365-to $560. Couoh, &amp; complete Baby
308 . hrs.
740446·2568.
Equal Furniture set ~3219 Cont~ Paul at 7 40-446' wood Hoofs 16 ready to ~·
;movain, centralaif&amp;natln.l - - - - - - - - H o u s i n g Opportunity. This
91nor.740-645-2399
~Gil furnace, stone FP In 28r, 1 bath. 1636 Chatham institution is an Equal Green Sofa. Hor1ptta1 bed,
.~ ~. Kitchen ha&amp; new oak .Ave. 74Q-..446-.4234 or 740- Opportunity Pro.vider and Air ma~reBS , Jerry chair, 720 JD hoybine v good
$600o. NH 850 lllUild ·-.,.,., new vinyl ltooring, 208·7861
Employer.
304-675-5182
'.lg. pantry&amp; laundrr room ::..:.::...:..:__ _ _ __
$1800. IH oombine 2 heads
;:&amp;pac;lous maoter su•e wl 3 Brl. house in l'ornero\'.
Beech St., Midrleporl, 2 br. HOI TUb I Swim Spa Oullat. ·$1800. Bush Hog 8'pultype
·f.P &amp; private ent~ance. 1 112 bath, air, full base- furnished apt, no pets, $1000 alt. Huge ee.loclion. $3500. Gravity beds $350:IPrioed to 1811 SOI';uao Now ment, 2 qtf garage, $650. . dep.&amp;
ref.
required, Styles. Free Delivery. 750. t8' wing type disc $500.
Top Quality. BOti-029-66~~ _ ~2285
' ""',000. call (7~)6-15-1751 14D-9CII,2003.
(740)Wl!-tl165
•.

r
-Apia.•-

:br.

I

toe,.,.,.__

ADVERnSEYOURREALESTATE
IN THE CLASSIAEDS

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2.00

""'*""'·

P.r~~ -

'

Real Estate

Real Estale

FRI .

.'

~.

.:

'

.'

;~~~"-~. -! ~nence Required. Send
· Resumes to : Attn. Mike, P.O Box
303, Gallipo~s. OH 45631 .
Resumes musl be received by
Monday, May 5th at 4 pm.

..Ac!ri......_

itlefoi-lolti« .. •khiiL
Pft-.1 P!eptdy ,r.- F.--is It Flea M cCarol D. Harris, POA.
SBAMROCKAUCDON SERVICE
rap1i

' '

..

u

afteruler NeeHii:J!-·.

!

TERMS: c.ll « dlect w/pollitive I.D. No Credit c.nk.
Cherb o"er $1....t have huk
4Jir..ds
a"al'aHe. AU 11111n1 are ft1111L Foocl willie awMaHe Net

1

•

..
•

presents
"OUT 4A BUCK"
Fri., May 2nd
10 pm --2 am

HALFHIU:S
TAVERN

3rd Annual Poker Run

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
North Myrtle Beacli
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
2 row ocean view.
Openln,g• from May thru Sept.
448-2206 Mon lhru Fri.
or leave meuage

QUAN111Y SHOP I&lt; HAND TOOLS!

•

Tht Annual mHIIng ollht

KCHS Alumni wu1 111 11e1G
lllht River V1lley HS on May 24,

Saturday, May 3rd
Sign-up 10:30 to 12:00
$1 0 driver or $15 w/rider
Uve Music @ 8:00 by

"VALLEY 'ROAD"

All Proceeds to
Fudd Jividen Who Is
·Battling canoer

renn11 at e er
'Adoptathon"

ClllBeclty Mellgt at 74Q-446-31 94

We need homee for 40 adu~ C&amp;tti.
All are altered, all would make .
good "Bam Cats~
Hours: M,W,F 9am • 11 am
Tues., Thurs., Sat., Sun.
4pm-6pm ~ •

byMay201h

740-945-7275

hour Ia at 5:30 pm
and dinner I! 8:30. 11 S.OO ·per
pei'IOII. Send reservations to
20()8. Social

.'

Kyger Creek Alumni:
P.O. Boic 350
Cheahlre, Ohio 45620 or

'

-------:--:-:-:-

many
256- 2005 Aldie Cal 400. 480

-r

-· •

'" ·pletely cedar opens onto House-Trailer lot for sale, · - - - - - - ·
palio &amp; pool area. Heated In has septic and eieclric. 1.1
1 ,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ol
acres Caii74C-256-&amp;39
1 and 2 bedroom apart· ptD-- llollfllfl!D
,ground pool enclosed by prl.
menta. tumlshed and unlurGooos
1vacy fencing and land· Meigs Co. 5 acres on nlshed, and house&amp; In ·. L_ _
~leaped. Finished 2 car Landaker or CoOks Ad. Pomeroy and Middleport,
rgal'llga altaehed 10 house $19,900. Reedsllille 10
rity ...,.,.
~&amp;ale: Berber Carpel $5.115
l a n d - &amp; heated 3 car
-.--· roqu.-. no yo reomants $40.00 &amp; up.
,
acres $19,900. Danvile t3 eocu
pets, 740-992-22t8.
igerage
unattached. acres $26,500. Salem Ctr 18 - - - - - - - - Uolohon Caflll'l. 2212
i Excellent oondition reedy to eores $45,5001 Glllia eo. 8 lBA Apt. In Spring Valley, EoeMm Ave, Gaillpollo, Oh
t"""'" in. $255.000.00, Coil: "' 10 acres $t2;500t Cal WID
hool&lt;ups. Visit 740-446-7444
·
: (74C)949-2217
74C·441 -t492 or YiBlt www.oprlng-valtey-pioper, _ , . - - - - - - - www.brunerland.com. We lleo.oom or call ~362
Sofa with recliners &amp; ·- ·
' In' lown,3 to 5br's , 2 batho, flancli. We tinanoel
matching -.r/recliner,
: - over · payments. - - - - - - - - 1BA duplert, .-!lltieslnclud- superelnQeWII-. O.VO
t$825/monlh. Tratles ar:cepl- MOBILE HOME LOT FOR ed. 11325/month. Cheshire, TV &amp; cabinet. .... in good
red. 740-645-7889
RENT, 103t Georges C- Oh. Cal1740-256-1970
Cond. Coli 740-367-7115,
Ad, 441-t tit
BA
apt.
(74C)
t-lll
leave mesaage Mno answer
44
2
94

microwave, clcclric hOspital bed. bandiC~YJ equipn:icn~ single bed frame,
baby bed, Coleman CIIIDJl stove Jtlaligp~s, pn:ssure canner, canning jan;,
assorted lrnickknacks, glassware, andmuchltlOR:. ·
.s
Lincoln ACIOC welder, welding
Campbell Hausfeld 2 bp. 12 gal. air COdljhe&amp;oi(J{, 4-mot.al
16ft. wood Slep ladder, shop vac, bar clalrq&gt;s, assorted C·
I cl•amp~ 3-vise. electric drills, saber saws. body grinders, router, Craftsoaanl
12" lathe, Craftsman 10'' table saw, Craftsman table top belt sander,
edger/joiner, Craftsman scroll saw, Deba 12" band saw, 2bench lop grinders: bench top &lt;!rill press, Ctaftsman tool cabinet, Maota:
Mechanic mitte bo•. lots of long bandied yardlgardert tools, comc-aloop,
1cllllin falls, pipe wrencbe•. 1oo of open&amp;; box end wmt&lt;lbeli, raps,
"'~""""'-· oioides, SO&lt;-asiltJMit harnini!iw &amp; lhlllleu,
Ctu.el., loS '· ·
''!-''ains. poii drill. bol.l cutters, _,pipe Cllttcrs &amp;;
"" " dye 1101, 1"1'
rivelOt, kty ruoker, ,hot-~•••ll~uldctciOqulpll'IOtl~-l:liJ1e.blililk"puilcya,l..,_...,;;"'
homemade forge, 2-55 gal. metal drums, 2-wheel 'utilily wagon.

Executor: Ch..-les Dailey Jr.
Auomey: Susan Gwinn.
Athens Co. Pi'obalt Case 120071'231
Auctioneer: Ouie Opperman &amp; Paul Harper.
Apprentice : Chris Collins
Ottie: Phone 740-385-7195. Emijil:
OC(]opp l~hod.i 1ng. net Website for pictures&amp;;

01'•

-

oov•n .113,500 miles. Books camper. 740-379-2254
03 Dido Alero, 4dr. aUio,
-lent cond. $5700. Call St 5,500, asking $12.500. RV Service at Connichael
44H4170f441 ~7417after Traaers74().446.3825
40 740-578-1(XJ]after5pm
·
·

-

.
.
:
required.Noflell.448-t 271 ~,.old . Voryloving. $150. t7T7
2Br at Johnoons Mabile or 1119-1657
746-367-7124

I

Lots of AUTOMOBILE PAilTS; 1937 Ford
Motor and many &lt;Jiher pariS. Very Good
Variety of Modem Furniture, Appliances &amp;
Household ItemS. Terms: Cash or good
checlc auction day. ·Positive ld. Food. 24Hour security al farm. Pole bam in case of
rain. 2-Auction rings. .Vehicles, Tractors,
Equipment will begin selling at about...l2:00
Noon'

86. '--CJ7 ""nch
1

""""441-7514
·"
extras.

$5500. t1rm -

,;:_•• , mule7'JeepCo,l ~3

Aantaii!BIIerlarsole1970 includes- and oewer.
7
~ _.....,., - · . 2 Bdrm. 12X60 Tr. In good $200 dop. 446-'3617
Twin AiVIIIII Tower Ia """""'' • biackltan $300 finn
:
shape for age ounentty renl·
.
.
ing applications for waiting ~75--4787
'House for sale in Racine ed must sell. 740-742.C011 . Troller on town .Aocrno, 2 br., list lor Hud-subsidized, 1-br - - - - - - - •

Lie.., ed&amp;lloadedlaOIIio-M lw411~A:Na
..lih-lf~
AIMlfM
r's 4511 .,.....
Email: SllamrockAIIdioa@aol~

- . , . - - - - - - - tt02

old male WA.u&lt;ER Transmission New Rims tion. ~.CIItalyticconvert- ve, ...... excellent cond: 7271 ASk tor Joe.
Ct~'"HOUND .
Til'ea &amp; Paint' 2002 ,...; er, Asking $2200. Gall 740- great N:;, running boards, 1996 Challe- Sth wheel
N
with papers. ·1i
For CJ ·
~- ·
gray leather int. tonneau
"»'"''

month ~7s-n83

New 3 Bedroom homes from Gavfn. no calls after
$214.36 per month, Includes 6pm.441-0t8t
many upgrades, delivery 8 Takilg applications for 28R,
set-up. (740)385-2434
no pets, $275/month

.; '=::"'.::'

IIOIJSFflQ!PfUINJSHJNGS; Kenmore washer and dryer,

\

·

-apt..

¥tol!ltion filtM • · OUr

more.

AUCDONEERS: Ja1u1 Palridl "Pat" Sl
Ka-ry Sllaidaa-Boyd It Bftllt IKiec
Apptlelltict Audiclanr: Mille lloyd

bedr0om-

Middleport N. 3rd Ave.,2 Br.
93 Clayton 3BA, 2 both
unlumiBhed no polS dell &amp;
$10,000. Also, 92 Ctaytan Smon, olean house for rent. rvferonoes. j-40-992.(llsS.
2BR • 1bath$7000-be
Uv Am~ Eal ' K" &amp;
• ·
· ., ~·on .,.
mewed. Call 740-:rog..~ 179
Bath. $300 per mo., $300 New Haven. 1 bedroom fur·
" - - " N __,~ N
dep. &amp; rvtOr·
Be utit I do blewlde ith ....,._. 0 ~·-.,.. 0
~~
u
w · peta.Cal7~
ences. No peti.T~9B2'" yard and 00.:20
0165.
•
$550000110 746~lbu
~rr; 5 ·
·
Nice qulel 2Bil apt

...~~~•=* lor....
-

-

Thursday' May l, 4:00 p.m.

it?~h;~~ ~Q!~~zl-t

cond .

~gage bags, c.ru
....,.....,., _ ·~
.......

Pteasant, garage attached, $592. 740-992-5064. Equal 1

7...0..385-7671.

·--•In

w/18 diamonds in watch &amp;: 14 diallloods inband. JIPPW•.. 1200 ball cards, 196G-1980;
and several silver dollars.
'
1
Lna Mmr«- I
A Mlr New Husqu~:
23 HP approx. 30 br w/48" cu~ dog
single we 10x6 trailer w/drop tail
fishing poles, Slcill worm saw, small air
oondiliooa, mise tools, pile mise &amp; loiB

..u-

LARGE ESTATE FARM
AUCflON

3pt
auger.
&amp;
CAilT:
Honda Recon-;50
2003 Youth E-Ton
Viper AIV. 1966 Triumph 500 Motortyclenol running. 8hp Go-Can. 3-Disassembled
Motorcycles:
1973 Penton l25.
1972
Yamaha 2SO. 1969 or 70 BSA 441. 2'I'RAIU:RS: (6' &amp; 12' transpon trailer&amp;. 2·
RIDING MOWERS: MID 17.5hp mower-!year old &amp; Ranch King 14.5hp niower. 13
Excellent GUNS: Several New &amp; in Orig.
"'-- S&amp;W 686
Boxes.r Guns seII at II '"""'";
stainless .357 mag revolver. Suum Ruger
Single Six .22cal. Star 9mm 380 pistot
Taurus 65H 38 Special wlgold trim.
Browning Buck Mlli .22 pistol. Taurus
PT945 45cal pistol. G~aga Elbar UiS
pistol. New American DetTinger '22cal Sshot Taurus {;5 .357mag revolver. U.S.
Revolver .32cal rnod.5 revolvtr. Sav~e
221250 rifle w/scope. Savage 93R 17 rifle
w/Winchester soope. Bauer 25cal auto. Pistol
LAR.GE
Good Selection of .Ammo.·

f:--..:.':;,

weed eater, 2..Craftsmao leaf blowers, CraftsDWl chain saw, .
1896 &amp;: 190i Morgan Silver Dollars, 1927 &amp; 1928 Peace Silvor
1899 Barner Half Dollar, 6-Bicentenial Eiotmbo- Dollatl, 1971
Dollar, ! 904 Barner Qtwter, 26-Silver Quanm, ! 908
Dime, 1888 Indian Head Penny, 463-Wbeal Pennies daled 1923-1958,
Three Cenlllries of Pennies in Colleclor Pack (1898 Indian Head, ! 943
sltel LiDcoin, 2000 Lincoln), !956 &amp;; 1861 Napoleoo fu:llch Coins, 1920
Penny, 1996 NOI'Ihem bdand one pound;
ANDOUES 4 m J F£1111 Jili: very old Maytag washer, Maytag
eagine Model 500 Series II, oak drop from s&lt;ocrel8ry desk, oak library
!able, old V~etrola cabinet, old
cboferobe, grinding whoel oo lilanC~I
draw knives, old blow lorrlt, oollectioo of miniature pencilllharpener,
salt/pepper sets. j..- of marilles, old bunoos, coal miner's wick lamp. set
Old Hickory knives, Steinbach SmokiDg Mea NuiCI'IICker in orig. bo•.
milk can, 2-railroad jacb,

responsible for loss or accidents. Refreshment

'I'RAC'IO&amp;S.It~: - M.F.

edual'llle.._,.
8
:,• -hill• :
-"
--,
. _ , _ , no11g1an,c.n.ew ...... ornltlonlll

I Ttut....-w &amp; EQUIPMENT: 1960s lntemation&amp;i Cub Tractor, disk, .
I ~"m"' bar, blade, Troy Bilt 5 bp. Trimmer/Mower, J.onesred Lil'Red 220

Ohio . Temu: cash or check wilD . Announcemcnts
day of sale takes precedence of printed materilll. Not

446-7278

-------95 Dodge Avenger, 94
Chevy Cavalier. 95 Chevy
Eldorado. 446-3243 "' 446lmt
Meigs .~ . Call ""· an - - - - - - - appi.Aiwrbend ~ p;gs, PublicAudion-12 noon May
740-256-1360
2nd, 1993 Honda (formerly
·
flood vohicta) &lt;&gt;omnalforteo·
'i9nY goat kids. 1 blaok 1ure vehicle, runs/looks
doe $75 &amp; 1 - $50 740-446
good . ground ettecls. stan·
~
ing bid $800, may be seen

lional horne $279 per month appliances Included, Ref. Housing Opportunity.

111

h llotlolto

......, -

DIRECTIONS: Rt. 50-8 miles east of Athens eiit on Rt. 329
through Guysville to Stewart, tum righl on Rt. 144, auction
will be held at tbe V'tUage Park. near the Fire Station, watch
signs.
~~~~ (sold w/reiiCf'Ve: 19991eep Wrangler.4WD, ooft lOp, souna&lt;oaq
miles in very good oonditioo.

1

"':"' •••llolr4

..,.,.,_ I i

- - . . . , . Aol rO

Ste~art,OH
'

-==::~~~20083bedroom2bath&amp;ee-

.......,,. tllo-..
1.,.

EVENING AUCTION

000107 Licensed and bonded in favor of the state of

or www.mood.is_paugb.oom

•

Auction

projector w/movies.

stool, wood brl, wood Winchester amm9

ill. Qici.d

wfvtnjll

movie

washboard, trunk, copper kettle wlstand, .
cobbler's bench, gossip bench, wood step-

Mrool

gate.:

CLASSIREDS

.,.;,ndo

'1998 Honda cbriiOOn.
19.000 mts. new tires and
brakes, tank bra, soft lug-

j

kennel.:

ADVERTISE
IN THE

Mollu:.,'!:&amp;

I

4Cov, 5Tours. Sun. Bvons.
0!; 300LT. 00 Must ., 77
dump, 98Ecf", Oee.00301&lt;
m'1., 98 •
- 6~........_,
~~-. 60 more.

r .__

A~IReal•or. 7~78-2817
tl•: ~ .U.C Ball b&lt;droom suile

I

folio.,.,, auction signs.

parts.

equipped

Duplex tor Sole on Land
Conlract 740-992·5858.

COU.ECIOR VEIDCU!S:
Nearly
restored 1937 FORD 4dr sedan, 8 cyl.
Ememely . Low Mileage 1978 . DODGE
MAGNUM wlonly 19,7S4 miles-in excellent
condition! TRUCKS J&lt; AUTO: 1994 Dodge
'Dal:ota 4x4 pickup. 1993 Ford Fl50 4x4
pickup. 2003 Ford Tawus w/3lk miles,Wvage tit!&lt;. 1985 Chevy SIO pickup for

740-446-SOW
Auction

payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yara. Covered
deck. AllaOtled geroge. 740367-7129.

j

' ...

PlY'-·

llo I
w/large dresser, nigbt s1alld, draw..- dlesl.
made by V.B. Williams, Ztnilb 2T' 1V, lilaDd,
VCR. single bed, loveseal &amp; couch. end lt.
coffee tables, wood table w/4 chairs &amp; lqe
· leaf, titcben cabinet, citation uprigbl li=!..-,
Emerson microwave, misc. &amp;lands, laWf
fumiwre &amp; more.
G!'Ps; Mossburg Deer Slayer 12 ga. 22' rifle
bore model 4'15 New Haven com. 12 ga.
Stevens single sbol, 22 ga. Springfield 187 N
Auwmatic, l'bi!Siale gOurall 12 &amp; 16 ga. and;
Ruger cbimpmuDk 22 rille.
·
l'll!dl.; 2003 Ford ISO 4•4 Exteodod cab
wltool box w/5th wheel hitdl
f
ciNe'; Antique •watch 14 tarat whifll
gold Geneve w/IS lwal wbi1t gold band .

0 -.

SAnJRDAY, MAV3,2111111@ 1._
AU S&lt;ls widoout R,, ne

C91NSI4[;N~~~~ITAUCTION

I

I

Ells)' 18 W.

. 3rdAnnual

!O:OOAM

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

7-miles IDthe .......,., Albuy,take SjL
till Elllt fill' 1 _IIIIlS tD F-. .
·

Auction

MaylO

~

JET
"f~TION I!QTOAS

Ellm View .

br.- -

Ridge Rd. Follow auction ·signs 10 38S49
Gold Ridge Rd. oo left
. . . Eol.lte sells at ' " " .... BeatJiiful3 yr
old borne wn. bedroom &amp;: 2 balbs, 8x64
porell. 14,440 sq ft on 6.3 oaa of wooded
land. Have 10 ..., 10 appreciale! 10% down
payment day of auclion. Balance due at
~- Olftml by Pal1iltr Rally- Bud

••te

Wanted: Local sami truck BtrltdlnQ oorlng n&gt;goJar busi·
driver, with COL· &amp; good ness hours oi,J1:30 AM until
' Auction
Auction
record. Please call 746-992· 5:00 PM, - Y through ::::::::·: :::::::;:::...;;::;::;::;::;::;::::;

· 3020 or 740-352-DSSO

·

j~

96 John Deere Ba~ Angusllulls,show, ,.._.
4x4, Cab, Ext. Hoo. 441- El&lt;oeJtent Qreeding, Top
OJieooin~. Aaklng No polS, $400 1110+ S400 T"'""~ · Aepaired, New&amp;\.Rabultln 751401'2~
Parlormonce,
Priced
$80,000. 740-.7029
IMICUrity depooll, (74C)9112· antl'or orna1 ..,._ FOR Stoct. Call Ron Evans. t- EBY HTEGRtTY.
A e a s o n a b 1 •• .
u -. log~- _
33t4
RENT. Call (740)441-tl11 800-537-9528.
BUI • 1
·KIEFER www.sloterunangus.com,
•·~·~ •mng oo
""""''"'"i»•&amp;inlo&lt;mltion.
LT,
'VJOJ..LEY (740)28115395
0
t66acres, CUS10ml&lt;ildlen, 3 Badroom House in
NEW AND tilED S1'EB. HORSE/LIVESTOCK
.
St
...
Beams
P'""'
3BA, 2 balh. $t42,900. Col s - . S500/monlh + .
·~LEAS. LOAD MAX Club lambs tor Sole tor
74C-251H1247
dopooil Hud •1\pp. No Polo.
For Concrele, """"· EQUIPMENT TRAILERS, Information call Ryan
(304)675-5332
AplltbtMriS , ~. Aat Bar. Steel C...RGo EXPRESS &amp; ~et74C-949-2008
740-59H12115
Grating
For
Dram&amp;, H 0 ME S TEA 0 E A
.
~
RJR......,.
•. ·
·
•2&amp;3
on-ays&amp;Wolkways. L&amp;l CARGOICONCESSION "Ciubplgsfor-. AISired
S
hlp, newly •Canlnlt heal &amp; AIC
S&lt;np Malals Open Monday, TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· from top Boa11i . rn OQUnlry.
16X80 3 Bedr-.. 2 l!alh remodeled, no inside polS. •W-idr)er-.p
TIIO!Iday, Wednesday &amp; NECK
HITCHES. p;g&amp;ri[111agelo&lt;Masooand
house in CONVEMIEHTU LOC...T·
2BA, 2 baths, 3 lla81l more Pome!Of, HUO app~. ED &amp; AFI'OAOAIIlEI

~~ 1e'4~ 1

H

lJvmlx](

:n Hawlhome Ln., Pl.
,-_3br,tba,10t5/SF
:New 11oor """"'; ogoo, fresh
,pain!, new heal pump
• $79,000 304-593-6979
Vinyl Skiing. Shingle Roof. HUO apPfOved, $450 per •AIIeietlric- averaging
Friday, &amp;om-4:30pm . Closed CARMICHAEL
EQUIP"
S230permonth. 740-385- mo.plussecurilydep., reler· $50-$60/monlh.
Thursdey, Selurday &amp; MENT ICARMICHAEL
~ Ilion!
9948.
""""" reqUired, Langsville •Owne&lt;
SOWO&lt;, Sundo¥-(74C)446-7300
TRAilERs SALES &amp; SEA• Locoi-"Y of1oring 'WI)
- · call (74C)742·2210
VICE SPECI"L 2OFT
'DOWN ~~·E·~
t989 Schultz MH 14x- wl
tl1llh
Nioe Dining Room Suite
•
•
~·M '" pro'
'"
3br HoUse 111
· Masoo No (304)882-3017
HUIOh ]ilble w/6 -~,,. GOOSENECK FLAT13ED
1""ms lor you 10 buy your 7x21 expando, tolal - ·
'
'
~- ' $3999 VIEW QUA ENTIRE
:home inslead of renting.
3BA, 2 bath. $9500. 740- Pet&amp;, $400 mor1tl, ~
•
maple S650, WOitt OUI TRAILER INVENTORY AT
•" 100% financing
379-2222
depooil :J04.:882-31!S2
•
. •lwoiit's. like - WWW .CARiollCHAEL·
Pomeroy !'&lt;;ice Depl.
• • Las&amp; than perfecl: credit
3br House In' 'New Haven,
304-882~3108 ·
TRAIL.ERS.COM 7-'0-446- 05 Sftlppar·· Rider, 12 112 Quality cars, 1rucb. vans
•. •- ..,.,.
·
2740-4&gt;06-3510.
bed, 2 bath, 299 a month. No ~
~. •
- monlh, •·~
n
·
~~
~
STEEL AACIIIM• - 1 3825
Hr.,
28' cui. IJI&lt;e New
$400 starling 81 $1500 to 58300
•• Payment ' could be 1he
.........
_
_
3652
f manang
'
.
.......,.._,
Made i!'1 USA. Ttvee can- Have you priced a JOnn
aval'Ia ble wtt. h
: oome .. .... .
2002 t6x80 aa-.! 3 Bed 3BA
$500/month. Furnislled Apt, 2nd Ave, - . t ordero 251&lt;30 and o.ere
warranty.
COOIC
1 Mortgage ·
Loc:a1010. 2 Bath 2000 t6x10
'
Upotalrs .All un~·
pd
:
lately? 'mill be surIII01'0AS 328 Jar:l&lt;son Pike.
1 105
•(74C)3GHIOOO
Fleetwood 2 """ 2 Bath, $350/depooil 441·t489
•
40-441Hlt03
· 161&lt;24. Wlltseilfor-.ce piled!~ootoorused
•
;!,~. :~s, Gallipolis,
. -. Call Today
i"""'"""Y
o1
,ou,o'-"'
::-,.,;,....;.;,.---,
17
1999 16x 80 Fort;;,. 31!ed 2 stler 4pm.
11
4
Bath, 1997 t4x70 Oolotood 4 iledlllom House for A.,.
HUGESO&gt;Iinge!
WWW . CARE Q . COM
RlllSAu:
·r1S
TRucxs
3 Bed 2 Bath. Oaylime 388- $600/rent
$600/deposO u.tng ~ om 2
-Ca-rniOOaei Equ- 740,
FOR S.\1£
0000 Evening 38tHI017 or (7.W) ~or 3G7-nG2 Bedroom Apts. at Village
I'm
1-446-2..12
01
Hyundai
Accent
,
2..5·9213
,
.
ManorandRiversideApts. in
R-.SAI.E
John Deer A 1947 Tractor, Hall:::hback 5 speed traQ~. 01 Sharp White Ford F150
Nrce 3br, Aancto m Pt, Mlddlepor1, from 5327 10
Eleclric Start High &amp; Low 65,310 miles, good condi· lariat Super Crew 4dr. SAL.

SM. May 3N, llllltL&amp;
Located St Rt. 33 II Darwin, ()bio T.- St
Rl. 681 west go approx. S miles 10 Gold.

~~~iii~~~

56
I,_..L'fi,;:;;,

I

Property Audion

•NOTICE• ·

- direct care positions in , . , . . . - - - - - - .
Ripley, wv pr~ resi - 11
Sao:u
dertialicommunity sl&lt;il train·
1;1tto;Dlii,;;ION-..J
ing with individuals with
MAI!)O. to be and wHng to phy~ Golllpolio c... COIIogo
letlei
.t timu for (Careers Close To Home)
dlents with cta.,lenging CoO Todoyi 74Q-446-4367.
. HIOD-214-0452
Mhavion. High school
diploma Of GED required. www.~:~~~UiDoiiSCflreorcollege.edu
No experience necessary.. Ac:c•ed~ad Membe! AGCred~ing
CouOOI lor lnd!Jpendllnl Collegss
Criminal background chect&lt; and Schools 12749.
reQuired. Must have relia~M
transportation . Houri~ rate- ~i76
$10.00, after training. Call1 ·
· M~E J -Ut'EOt.S

that includes a 4Ct k retire-

Real Estate &amp; Persoul

riontod -

On-Silo ~ lor

30 wpm strong
with oocurocy
onO tions
curranlly
IICOOjlllng
applica·
possess
oommuntcator fuft
time/ 1)4rt
time

Ohio Valley Publishilig with
office&amp; in Pomeroy,

•=.t.w..

olyourchoioofor$129

01'

Aepnaeatative

,
on oomor of
Pol'let Ad &amp; 554. Asking
-

·.....
- ooo. ~ r . . -,
• cal for mora inlo. 38lHl044

Unrue .. (304)273-2tell

CllrlstiM~

fits including h8alttl insur·
clerical/data/entry billing Trainer Position
ance and mileage. Phone
positions, 2nd shift(M-F Are you interested in a
7~1 ~1393 tor more into
4pm-10pm). Must type mW1 ,_rding position? PAIS 15

tionlphone/general office
&amp;kilts. We offer a ver; compolilive wage and a compre-

appU4t-82112

Horne tnl-- tor """"
intonnation about Horne ..

&lt;alloonbehaltof

Now Hiring:
FuiTorne Dey Shill
FuH Trme Evening Shill

both:~~·. L.Rt.,

FA DR"';-,•
. loc:lltedS.,._fTomHotzer
· " · ., •·
bath.

11111ytUflonlyl

Sl. Pl. Pleasart, WV 25550 CalllnloCIIIion Today!
A&amp;L carriers, ooe of the
Ohio Valley Home Haalth, nation 's largest tomlly
1-a&amp;-IMC-PAYU
Inc., hiring a FT LPN tor owned LTL motor treiltl car'
Ellt. 2347
Pasaport/Private Core Dept. riel'S, has in'IT\8diate openCompetitive wages &amp; bene· ings
for
part-1ime,
www.infocision.oom

OU!sideSalea

'' BA.&amp;

.._..-.,. 61uti•d • Page 05
10

1

::.BA~~.,:.es·~ Newhorne, ,_r!Midin. 3 bedroom

a..........., -

Use_,_,.,

mileage reimbursement.

apply at 1'480 Pika, ~is, Ohio

Coli
(740)645 0546

r "== rr == 1r = Jr

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

·.r.·_
. ..-.lbe-s.w:_,._.,~l ~.,r.·_.-.lbu=-:Sw:-~.,J' r• ~

9pedor•-

*"""rlir.-og for,...

LPN's. Apply at 1480
Including:
Jacl&lt;soo Pike, GallipoHs,
TIIM Warner Cllble
phone 441-1393 1o&lt; Sk~ted mus1 t.o.o s1r0ng communiotlice 01 apply at 1456 Cation sldlls and S1mng comt Up ID SL5Gihour
Jad&lt;son Pike, phone 441· puler sl&lt;ills. Oewee' Pie·
9263 tor Pas$port/Private fenvQ, bu1 rd 111101lda!or1. K

Care OHice. Competitive interested. please send
.wages and benetils indud- resume' ., CLA 8 c/o P&lt;&gt;inl
ing health insurance and Pleasant Register 200 Main

'.
· Sunday, April27, 2008

t Atre, Flat Lot "f"ri&lt;"~ 2000 c.- COpe - · 3 - · Zllll lq.l. •
311A, ~ Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR, Cod. 4BA 2 BA Fln, 571Joot Dr.
Den wl flreJ&gt;Iace, 2 elf 81 norlt, lUll w/ don .,.. lrg _..,
Goroge Aoclnol' o1 Rio- in
FA, LA wl ttrlt* FP.
$115,000 (74C) 245-9125
$198,900. """"-" yon! w/ in _ . .
Cll for an 740-245- pool. $t40,000. ,.

· MoWog
Eolimalet
(74C)441-1333 or

-......
.....,._,. __

~nt should

Sunday, April 27. 2008

It

L.awn-Gare
&amp;
Trimming.- Ffloe

;.,_y--40.£':~

Resource&amp;.

It

WANID&gt;

.

-

'NCHi OPEN - - - ,
·- -A-f'l:l'S'PARADIS .
Spring Valley Plaza
1116 Jacllson Pike

740-44 Hl738
Bulk feed ·· Pet Supplies

NOTICE
Eagles Aerie #2171
Nomination and election of
all officers and one trustee
Nominations 1
April 21st, 2008 I
7:30pm
Election
May 5th, 2008
7:30pm·

Large Potted
Tomato Plants
Large Fems
Onion Sets 99c pound
Green .Pepper, Cabbage
arid Tomato Plants
Complete Variety of
Soils &amp; Mulchs

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE
Jackson Pike
Across From
Gallia Co. Fairgrounds

u
- Ba.m.-??
1

BIG 5 FAMILY
YARD SALE
1154 Second Ave.
Galllpolla
Loll of Kldt Clothlt
Knick Knackl &amp; Mo,.

The Qellltlolll City !lillie qlllllllolllonl.
1ot1oo1 Dlelriot le l-IM .,._,.
eca~applloellone thould

•~bmlt 1111
il18fl eup- lpjlllcatlon 10 tile
plemenlal
aonti'Kt lltlllllon of JICit W.
poeltlont loflhl 2001- P • r t " n ,

fDr

IN THE
BULLETIN BOARD
FOM GREAT RESULTS!

2008-~rlrom l~perlnhndenl,

lncllvldulll llolcllng en
ellwtAitM YilllcllilkM far
l'upll
Activity
lupmltlor hom 11M
Ohkl Depe- of
Ed~cJIIOtt _. 11f11110---~- - -

-- -

--

Clllllpollt City lciiOOI
Dlltrlct, 11
._
11rw1. ClllllpCtlll, ott
41U1 .
Aprtl27, 2001

-

�'

Page 04• ••.., ....... 611tlld

I·•

II''

~WANID&gt;

IIDIWANIUI '

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

II''

Ol1io v.y Home _ , Polrl ~- WV, - tnc. hirlnQ STNA, CN ... , ny is -.g a Oir"'*'&lt; of
Home Health Aides and
~ Cere Aides, Futl
Tome and Per Oiam pooltions available. Accepting
appiicalioos lor AN and

Human

lblJ'WANIID

To Do

--.a.ar---

have at
least five fOars .,_,..,.,.

TwirOouod......-c:alisfor
For1une 100 Compar1leo

in the Human Resource
field. Applicant rros1 _....,. in -oling
all bene!il plans. Appllcanl

0125

-·01-.nd

_. --$350tnteriorl

.m

"""1"'ofit -

•

.........,

~sand their
tomilieol

OHIO VALLEY PUOUSH-

Hew 'DakWII a.M.
. . 1M11ng held N0W1

lNG CO. recammendo
that you do business with
people roo '&lt;now, 'I

Cell for your 8del •ieW!
1.........c-MYU

NOT to send .money
' through the mail r i

::,","'investigaled the

Jab od.II01

hensive benefits paclulge
Ga.~s and Pt.Pieasant
is accepc;ng resumes for a
M time outside sales
representa1Ne. Applicants
must be organiZed. .
creative and able to
manage an established
account list while calling

lodging at our employee
resorts In Ft. Myers Beactl &amp;
Daytona Beach , Fl. Big
Bear lake, CA. and Pigeon
Forge, TN. Come for per· t
·
at 6136
sanaI 10 erv•ew
Huntington Ad, Gallipolis
Ferrv . WV 25515. Pt1 800669.1809 or fax to 304-6754682.
M!FIDN
EOE 304-373·1011
w w w . g o r I c . c o. m
www.rfftlc.ccm
Tw hard working dependable emp~QveeS needed tor
Security Officers needed in full time: Both positions lift·
New Haveri WV $7.00 ~ ing involved, some computer
S7.66 per ~r. ~itt work, knowtedge required . ·Inside
hours vary. Must have a high position Monday : Friday.
school diploma or GED 8:00 ~ • ..:30 pm. Truci;.
. clean crimmat history, pa~ Driver position 'Monday •
drug · screen and bad!:· Friday, "7:00 am · 3:30 pm
ground check. Call 1·800· must have COL. He.ath
275--8359 ·M·F 8:30 to :00. Insurance, paid vacation
EEo-MFOV
after 1 year, 401 (k). Apply in
-Se_e_ki-ng_h_e_lp_for_so_me_one
__
to' person ·at the Fruth

on new customers.

Candidates must be
disciplined, selt~motivated
and a team player that
undefStands the
.

_

lrf'4X)rtanoe of developmg

st~, mutua_lly be_nefi~

.b'Jslness relattonstups witt"~'
our customers, Sales
e~CPGrienoe and reliable
transportation necessary.
· It you can sell and you
wan1 to woril. full time, I
would like to hear fim1
'Please ~ resume,
cover letter and three
references to:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Ann: Malt Rodge"
P.O.Bol&lt; 469
Galipolis, OH 45631
oremail to.
mftxtger&amp;O mvclailytl"'lur..eom
.All ~ias Will be kept in

sme1wola.....

ment plan and tree vacation

a

:::.:=:...:.:"-'-----

n:------.,I
,

•

Giglntic 11ovtng s.te
•d:tl part 9:oo-5:00
293 Fisher Street
Thurs. 5-9 thru Fri. 5-10 . .
Furniture. linens. seasonal
items, e•ercise equipmen1
collectibles, desk. Tum
at Mitches' Flowers go up hill
comer of 5th and Fishel'.
MkJ~aaa !CIIt
, _ _ _ _ _ _ __,

lti

"-------oJ
WAN'IFD
To Do

take -care o1 parents call Pharmacy Corporate Oftice,
J04.675- 2~ 54
• Rt 62 North, Point P~sant,
WV.
EXPERIENCE PAINTER·
The Village ol Rio Grande is Wonted:
INTERIOR/E XTERIOR ,
!_~ing. awlaflcat";;'s . for 29 Senous Poople 10 Work STAINING. OIL, ETC, NO
""' position . pa time from home using a compul· JOB TO SAMLLORTOBIG,
surT'If'Ntr mowng help. The er.
Up 1o $500 .00 to CALL (740)742-~056 ASK
. . , . - is IIP!lfOI&lt;imotely 20 $1,500.00
PTIFT FOR TOM OR LEAVE MES.
hours per - _ minimum wwwJ&lt;omelflCOI1194-U.com SAGE

::.~il~;.;: ISHOP ClASSI~IEDSl

Friday.

.

1

Estate Aultioli
Salurday May 10 2008 ~OAM
.usllt Wlpple Road Pomeroy, Ohio

Public: Audioo
Friday, May 2, 6:00pm
Amvels Bldg. , Burnette Rd. (Kanauga)
Gallipolis, Ohio
We Will Be Selling Items From The Gallipolis
Ohio Home Of The Late Mr.i. Hazel
Edgington, Who Resided Here Over 60 Years.

Antique cane bottom chair, Mamie top
antique dry sink, Unusual Antique book shelf
that twns into a table, set of 6 ~tique .cane
bottom chairs, French Provincial Dinning
room suilt, early American maple hutch,·
assonmenl of blue Fenton coin glass, Fenton
Lamp, 2 unique antique roclr:.ing chairs, Set of
4 Ducks Unlimited framed prints, Ohio
University 170th ·anniversary ?.,up · bottle.
outdoor metal furniture set, mise kitchenware,
dinnetWare. and stemware, Sofa and matching
loveseat, Cream Club chair and Ottoman,
entertainment cabinet, Lane Cedar Chest,
Spinel P·iaoo, Glass lop sofa ,table and
matching coffee table, mi!iC. framed artwork
and mimlrs; 2 Freneh style upholstered
ai:mchairs, Lato• tigtware pieces, mise lamps;
small blanket chest with duck decoy design,
coffee ·table, flowered ' sofa bed, cloths
S1eaD1eL Queen bedroom suite, drop leaf end
table, queen bed and dresser, misc. tv's misc.
toys and games, c;xercise equipmen~ .and
much more. Come and enjoy the auction
bring a chair, we will have everything in the
garage and under a 1m]:&lt;: ltnt. Terms of the
sale cash or good check with valid ID. This
auctiou is being conducted rain or shine.

AntiqurJrclkw1!hle It • Ou~
Victorian DresserW/mirror, Mamie Top And
Candie Holders, 3 Pc. Watetfall Bedroom Suite
In Excellent Condition, Unusual Folding
Sewing. Rocker, Walnut Victorian Pador
Table, Victorian Platform Rocker, Victorian
Wall Table, 2 Easllake Chairs W/needlepoint
'Seats, Painted Comer Cupboard, Fancy Dome
Trunk, Quill Fancy Shadowbox, Galllipc~is
Bicentennial Prinl(water Color By Earl Tope),
1940's Chest Of Draw..,., Depression Glaos.
Leffon China, Reproduction Victrola, Cast !roo
Pot. Bam Lanterns. Old Hats. Misc.
Stooeware, Kraut Cutter, Biscuit Board, Teapot
w/Gallipolis Bandstand, Old Tools,
Repro.gasoline Pump Radio
Houoel!old, Mjg Items: Flexsteel Uphol.
Sofa, Gooseneck Ar!nchair, Platform Glider
Rocker. .Zenith TV, Dining Table W/4 Chairs,
llcdliide Tables, Coffe&lt;~ &amp; End Tables,
Household Linens)ewing l!Jachlne,
Bookcase. Misc. Lamps, Sewing Notions,.
Knick Knacks,·Pictures, Rugs, Other Items ...
~Dewalt 12" Compound Miter Saw. 10"
Benc-h Top Table Saw, Rand 25 Hp
Compressor. Misc. Power Tools (drill, Router,
Saw), 10' Step Ladder, Wagner Power Painter,
Mi!iC. Small Hand Tools, Tool Box~. Bauery
Charger,.Much'More ....
AUCflONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY 740'388-8115 OR 74(!-441-7766
""'ICENSE
_ D !l¥ TH
_E!i_TATE OF,Q!iiQ~ ~t · · ~'
•UNGTE; llNERYTHJNG IS VERY
CLEAN &amp; IN GOOD CONDITION!!!!

I

This is the estate of Bernard V. Fultz
(EsiBte I 26-6120011 )

· =:Wf

•

Madlillery, Tracton, Etc.
Valley Volunteer Fire Dept..

... Q. ._

•

Apple Growe, WV ·
12 miles south of Pt. Pleasant on Rt. 2

2 AUCHON RINGS
' NEW fann gates and com! panels
• Round bale feederi
•• Expecting lots of hay equipment ready for
' hay ""!S!" If you H,\YE SQMEIHING IO SfJ ·I I
lUIS IS DIE fiME AND DfE PL,\CE!

TJtldac ...........
Fri.May9'
""
Sat. May It 7am • .........

. Aucth•~~n
,JaeAniapool WVfl*l 3114 576 44119
Eridl CGolrad WVfl~ 3114 576 lt3t
MidiM!I Adkiao WVtl61. 3114 633 21lt
Terms of sale- Cash
*Fire Dept and Auction Co. not responsible
for accidents. theft or loss of pryP""Y· '
Announcemettll&gt; sale day take precedence
over aU printed material .

•

TUANED DOWN ON
soaAL: SECURI1'Y I9WP
No Fee Unless We Win!

on
SAVINGS

s~

Shop
Classlfleds!

Auction
'l1loaoas Estate Audloa
Saturday, May 3, 1.088 Ia:. LIIL
Lnqljng: Reedsville, Ohio. Follow l!.t. 124
South through Reedsville, Appro•. 2 miles &amp;
We will be seUirtg the complete estate of the
late Glady's and·Paul Thomas.
Hw+H· Aex.tr:el sofa &amp; loveseat, La-Z·
Boy recliner rockers, Magnavo• 1V, lamp tbl•,
2 &amp; 3 pc. bedroom suite, chest, dressers.
wardrobes, dep . China, maple tbl. w/6 ·chairs,
entertainment ctr, stereo, VCR, desk, Sentry
safe, reg. clock, L.G . Wt. Clock. children's
furniture, quilt rack &amp; quilts, Kenmore Fridge
&amp; microwave, Kenmore stacl&lt; washer &amp; dryer
(li.kt: new), Student fridge, airC, space helllet'S,
8 pc. service flatware, card tbl, wlchairs, kero
heaters. alum glider. robot vacuum, ice cream
freezer. campus supplies, hand &amp; power1ools,
16". alum ladder, wood lathe, wheel bamJws,
lawn &amp; garden tools, Christmas decor, .baskets,
canning jan; &amp; lots more.
Collectibles; Stamp col'iection, old books,
· glassware (Fenton white hub piwher w/6 tomb
&amp; other), depression, cut glass, Japan, China &amp;
etc), potlery (Roseville, McCoy, Hall, &amp; more,
stoneware (unmarked A.P. Don~hho top bat&amp;:
other misc. jan;, Ironware (Wagner &amp; etc), oil
lamps, costume jewelry. jumbo peanut butter
jars, blue jars, old wys, kitchen wares (wood
butter rolls), mike btl, old slat ba•kels ,
watering cans, bikes (I Banana), sleds,
children's golden ·records, oookboqks, framed

pictures.

Auction

boxes, knives. and lots more.
· Mootlispooq:lt Allltit a hoc Senic1o
Auctioneer's: Bill &amp; l'ood: Ohio Lie. N76937 &amp;

available. !nformalion:(740) fo67.()644 or 989-2623

. l Yr Old ~r cape Cod Home
I $30,000 Ml•lmum Bid m
3 · 4 Bedrooms 1 % Bath
S WIJDfhd Acru
/
5.1L, May I 7, 200a 12 NOOn

lDcded .......,... 2 mil8 s. of
lokArthur &lt;lt Mill St. IU. 93 S.
H&lt;lmden, OH' CMalliftg Add,.,,,
EXlliEMELY na homo Pf"Viously ll'iled ..,.
appro•. S119,000 &amp; will sell at Miction w/a
Minimum Bid of SJO,OOO! IINut.ul
hcHnc h&amp;i front &amp; rur potchet., eilt-in kitchen,
dinir\i rm ., &amp; bed.rm on main floor ; upstairs
dHigned into 2 Of 3 bedrm~o .; fuil IHIMment
h.ll1 conct'fte floor * I walk.otlt door. Homf:

drilled -u &amp;
.. ptl&lt; tonk. The Clngerl&lt;b's did no1 utMift
Wlndaws ,

eted:ric Uterefo~ the hotM hu no eiKbidty.
This could be nk:e ~ar round hotM or week·
ond ,__,. Just A low mtlor. froto lake

luporr Stoto l'l.rk.

CI'EN "?''· sp MAY 110. , , . 21fM
Torms: 130,000 minimum bid: 55,000 down
at timrt of saAe : billa.ru 6-possesskm by-6-17 1001: off""'d lreo &amp; cle•r prior to doslnrj;
tuos pror.ued 10 &lt;losing dole; sold tn pro'
ie:M as -k condkton; no contlngenclts: caw.11

I

etnptor.
Mo~s IL • Am~W.)'. Glnterlch , Owners

CAU. FOR fJtEE lltOCHURE 1!1
-STANlEY 6 SON, fMC. (7401 775-3330
WWW.STANlE'I'ANDSOfti.COM

~ rr•s

·

Auction

HAMMER TIME!!

1i

, ---

......,.,onr_.,

' ru•uw,llwhllltcnDr
1
•1 toolo u ,.

1
r

Estate ~doe !ale ll.oloort L. --.y
llSl State Route 681, Albuy, OWe
l'nllll u-OWo,..... u.s. Ill. !ill Waa

1Na ne• @ e

lu=•~lilll -

d

•

d

required and

--------

LANDAHDHOIIE,,_3
bed, 2 bath, land,
ready to mcwe into. -~ 399
a month I ac) 866 564
w ·
· ·
8679 _MUST SAI..E'
-~------

not

Ill +M•tiwl In

j . Wo " " F ' . .
'
_..,.,..,., .

deposit $515

$100. (74C)645-3372.

•=.

~

II . 41 ~~I
, ..---ssoone y a ..,.,.,..,..,..
:Ranch 61yle house with 4
j bedrooms. living room. dining room, kllchen, large tomlty room, central air. ges heal

Ow.n: Owtoo A P I lk CtaoMr
.,.. s.idl ......, •• lr 7. . .11tl3
Licatse 113449
Cash Positive ID Refteshmoms "NO(
responsible for accidents or loss of popetiJ"

i

4 yeer old AKC Reg. Male 23051or lniD(rnatlon.
oa~und
' I Maasle
·
~~·
• blk/tan. G1111
Ferguson
with kids $125. 2 'fWI' old Bat*hoe, Diesel S5.500. 1997 Tr--• Avalon XL. 118
AKCAeg u-•-~~
_,_
~-~~. Caii74C-2~
k miles, good gas mileage:
·l'!ld. Great with kids $250.
$3800. 740-245-9239 or
7., •4• 4884
Sale on King v.~. Tirl'-.
·
~ ~· 645-0660
4, s &amp; u ft. Jim's Form - - - - - - --

-o--

I

1.,~--tiiiiiiii""""iiiii;.'·_.l.. References

f
i

l

AKC~,;I

dBpoett

Home Pal'k. 081 446-2Q03

t ad ShlhTzu.2 Equipment. C811

.74~

6926

Tara

Townhouse AKC aegistered Yortde
Ideal fof 1 or 2 people, refer· Apartments, Very Spacious, Male, 1 112 yao" old."""'
.... r ,
7
enoes, nopets. 5milesfrom 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 IIITIOII 31bs .. S400. ~5-

mites $3600. T4!H;45- 1683
ori4Q.i46-3&amp;2t

_ _::,__ __ __

2005 Harter ~
FICtory ~- 1 of 200
buin. Has ooty 850 original

.,;tes Maroon Metallic lal'i&lt;
&amp; !ins. With embossed
tlames throughout . Price
$t6.000.00 MUST SEE to
APPAE. Cl'~! D-·se call
"'"
7am-5pm 74ll-949-2217 &amp;
6pm-9pm 740-949-2216

r-

~
L

~

I.ms &amp;

AcJI£AI;E

r

I

~Ad

;

MCOTOR~~
,........,

I

1992 Dutchmen. 26tt, Great
S/laoe. Sleeps 4, AJC, Use
tor lamily oolings, hunting
camp. or hve in while working out of_' town. Awning

included. · Cal l (740)367-

1 bth, all electriC, carport, lg.
front porch, close lo schooi, apartment
for
library &amp;park, available May elderlyldisobled, call

Orange,

Great

Condilionl Asking $t0,900

OBO. 740-245-0125

r

•

6679

Real Eatale

Automatic

trans.

Uses

Regularga~ 740-446-t329
·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime g~r­

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

antee. Local references fur·
nished. Esta~i st:ted 1975.
Cal 24 'i"' (140) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Real Estate .

Aeltl Esl8llt .

Real Estate

REALTY, INC.
OPEN 80J.JSE WEEKEND

Codter Spantel puppies

readr now, (74C)949-3001

I

.

tone brown eld , tan int.

------'--- --------

CKC Miniature Pinschers,
sham, wormed, !ails dodlad.
$300 - . . 740-388-8l88

the
675-

.

1986 Chevy 1500. 4WO. 2

Avenger,

Dodge

Hugger

Aclul Pool &amp; Baby 8855
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. -Baby--Pygmy--Goals--lo&lt;-so-le-.

• 1ol, $400 dep., $400 ""'
mo. , water &amp; garbage includ-· ""'
~·
near Jad&lt;son Pike. Priced., ed; No Pets, (74C)949-2217
..,ct 1 fireplace. Addition ol a seu. 446-7525
~
large Florida room com~ .....,.,
6 ·-es -• on Lefl

4·Wheeler 300EX, $ 1•000

~7~40~)~4 4~6~4!!060!.,-~_,

loaded, looks and runs 79Fonl9000. 441-7514&lt;&gt;&lt;

71 Chevy Nova 3s0/350.

Bath,

No · Pet&amp;, lease Plus 70-367.()119 • eY811ings
SoaJrlty Oeposll Required,
;_(74C_;_)36_7-054
__
7._ _ _ _ Chihuahua puppy, male,

1999

5pm

greal 86,000 miles. $3400. 256-6926
245-5189 u 645-6505

\

German Aottwl!illers, 1st
sham, woiined,good mark·
tngs,parents 011 sight.$150M,-$180'f 11011. -.....

·-.-·CASH. 740-992-0218.

..;;;;;_..,I.

r

r

. Uted Coucll

fleadytogo. TwomaleAKC
minlaiUIII Sohnauzers.

r

140-9112·1328.

·

Films &amp;

}I

IIZOOUli

Hanging-. 4'

pol-

1ed plenls, bedding plants,
large polled
1~
$3.00 each.
Yoder's
Gnoenhouoe,
10miw.t
o1 Gallipolis on SA 141 .

... --......
''
-~·--·­
..............
:1 ..._
.

MHl!D-

-

-lid.

'

fur5911

and Loveseat.

~======::. Holzer.
2BR ~s.
miles paid
from. .;,;;;,;;;;;..;;;;;;.;.
Call388-829a _ _ _,.
Some6 utilities
~
$400+&lt;iep. 740418-5288
SrolmNG
;;;10;:;::;;:;;::;;:;;:;:;;:;::;
L.-....ifOaliiitllfMiiiliii._.l.1 2BR, WID hook-up, stove &amp; ~
Gooos
•
.,!~~
1
,

.r

,

~ldge

r

!urn. Close to Hospital

1
L_..,;_..i;io;;iiiliiiut
_.1

2 badtoom houa9 for 'rent1 and ooltege. 740-286-5789 NOrt;on compound bow with ...,
~ Looking for an updated tam· no pets,.(740)992·5858
or 740-441-3702
2 soopes and 1l1her extras, 2002 . John Deere 790
r lty home, on , acre ..., wl
-------,., - also, popup blind and nile Series, die&amp;et engine, 4x4,
rlloot&lt;yanl privacy fence In 2 br. house on Mn St., 3 Br,$395, 28r,$295. plus ::ision!"'P"J40-446-73t7; good heavy duty ioeder
' Gallipois.thi&amp;2100SQFt. 3 Pomeroy, $375 per mo. &amp; dep., plus utilities. Racme.
Mtn]JAriRJl.S
tires, tires loaded w/
2 ba. • I ig. bonuo room $375 dep., ('14C)9112-6385 Ohio: 740-2 47-4292·
·
~ • methanol, Iron! biJn1oer w1
·vinyl sided rench has new
br
S525+·~·
weighls, oitle entry "'""·
· ~ attaohed -~ 2 cor 2 " coontry,
_,,..,
rear- anns one owner
•··~·
. "':"'....,. '•
-access to Alexander/Meigs &amp;tMM. 52 Westwood Commarical Tanning Bed,
'
'
•garoge ' refonoshod hanl· bu roul 74ll-749-0024- Drive, from $365-to $560. Couoh, &amp; complete Baby
308 . hrs.
740446·2568.
Equal Furniture set ~3219 Cont~ Paul at 7 40-446' wood Hoofs 16 ready to ~·
;movain, centralaif&amp;natln.l - - - - - - - - H o u s i n g Opportunity. This
91nor.740-645-2399
~Gil furnace, stone FP In 28r, 1 bath. 1636 Chatham institution is an Equal Green Sofa. Hor1ptta1 bed,
.~ ~. Kitchen ha&amp; new oak .Ave. 74Q-..446-.4234 or 740- Opportunity Pro.vider and Air ma~reBS , Jerry chair, 720 JD hoybine v good
$600o. NH 850 lllUild ·-.,.,., new vinyl ltooring, 208·7861
Employer.
304-675-5182
'.lg. pantry&amp; laundrr room ::..:.::...:..:__ _ _ __
$1800. IH oombine 2 heads
;:&amp;pac;lous maoter su•e wl 3 Brl. house in l'ornero\'.
Beech St., Midrleporl, 2 br. HOI TUb I Swim Spa Oullat. ·$1800. Bush Hog 8'pultype
·f.P &amp; private ent~ance. 1 112 bath, air, full base- furnished apt, no pets, $1000 alt. Huge ee.loclion. $3500. Gravity beds $350:IPrioed to 1811 SOI';uao Now ment, 2 qtf garage, $650. . dep.&amp;
ref.
required, Styles. Free Delivery. 750. t8' wing type disc $500.
Top Quality. BOti-029-66~~ _ ~2285
' ""',000. call (7~)6-15-1751 14D-9CII,2003.
(740)Wl!-tl165
•.

r
-Apia.•-

:br.

I

toe,.,.,.__

ADVERnSEYOURREALESTATE
IN THE CLASSIAEDS

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2.00

""'*""'·

P.r~~ -

'

Real Estate

Real Estale

FRI .

.'

~.

.:

'

.'

;~~~"-~. -! ~nence Required. Send
· Resumes to : Attn. Mike, P.O Box
303, Gallipo~s. OH 45631 .
Resumes musl be received by
Monday, May 5th at 4 pm.

..Ac!ri......_

itlefoi-lolti« .. •khiiL
Pft-.1 P!eptdy ,r.- F.--is It Flea M cCarol D. Harris, POA.
SBAMROCKAUCDON SERVICE
rap1i

' '

..

u

afteruler NeeHii:J!-·.

!

TERMS: c.ll « dlect w/pollitive I.D. No Credit c.nk.
Cherb o"er $1....t have huk
4Jir..ds
a"al'aHe. AU 11111n1 are ft1111L Foocl willie awMaHe Net

1

•

..
•

presents
"OUT 4A BUCK"
Fri., May 2nd
10 pm --2 am

HALFHIU:S
TAVERN

3rd Annual Poker Run

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
North Myrtle Beacli
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
2 row ocean view.
Openln,g• from May thru Sept.
448-2206 Mon lhru Fri.
or leave meuage

QUAN111Y SHOP I&lt; HAND TOOLS!

•

Tht Annual mHIIng ollht

KCHS Alumni wu1 111 11e1G
lllht River V1lley HS on May 24,

Saturday, May 3rd
Sign-up 10:30 to 12:00
$1 0 driver or $15 w/rider
Uve Music @ 8:00 by

"VALLEY 'ROAD"

All Proceeds to
Fudd Jividen Who Is
·Battling canoer

renn11 at e er
'Adoptathon"

ClllBeclty Mellgt at 74Q-446-31 94

We need homee for 40 adu~ C&amp;tti.
All are altered, all would make .
good "Bam Cats~
Hours: M,W,F 9am • 11 am
Tues., Thurs., Sat., Sun.
4pm-6pm ~ •

byMay201h

740-945-7275

hour Ia at 5:30 pm
and dinner I! 8:30. 11 S.OO ·per
pei'IOII. Send reservations to
20()8. Social

.'

Kyger Creek Alumni:
P.O. Boic 350
Cheahlre, Ohio 45620 or

'

-------:--:-:-:-

many
256- 2005 Aldie Cal 400. 480

-r

-· •

'" ·pletely cedar opens onto House-Trailer lot for sale, · - - - - - - ·
palio &amp; pool area. Heated In has septic and eieclric. 1.1
1 ,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ol
acres Caii74C-256-&amp;39
1 and 2 bedroom apart· ptD-- llollfllfl!D
,ground pool enclosed by prl.
menta. tumlshed and unlurGooos
1vacy fencing and land· Meigs Co. 5 acres on nlshed, and house&amp; In ·. L_ _
~leaped. Finished 2 car Landaker or CoOks Ad. Pomeroy and Middleport,
rgal'llga altaehed 10 house $19,900. Reedsllille 10
rity ...,.,.
~&amp;ale: Berber Carpel $5.115
l a n d - &amp; heated 3 car
-.--· roqu.-. no yo reomants $40.00 &amp; up.
,
acres $19,900. Danvile t3 eocu
pets, 740-992-22t8.
igerage
unattached. acres $26,500. Salem Ctr 18 - - - - - - - - Uolohon Caflll'l. 2212
i Excellent oondition reedy to eores $45,5001 Glllia eo. 8 lBA Apt. In Spring Valley, EoeMm Ave, Gaillpollo, Oh
t"""'" in. $255.000.00, Coil: "' 10 acres $t2;500t Cal WID
hool&lt;ups. Visit 740-446-7444
·
: (74C)949-2217
74C·441 -t492 or YiBlt www.oprlng-valtey-pioper, _ , . - - - - - - - www.brunerland.com. We lleo.oom or call ~362
Sofa with recliners &amp; ·- ·
' In' lown,3 to 5br's , 2 batho, flancli. We tinanoel
matching -.r/recliner,
: - over · payments. - - - - - - - - 1BA duplert, .-!lltieslnclud- superelnQeWII-. O.VO
t$825/monlh. Tratles ar:cepl- MOBILE HOME LOT FOR ed. 11325/month. Cheshire, TV &amp; cabinet. .... in good
red. 740-645-7889
RENT, 103t Georges C- Oh. Cal1740-256-1970
Cond. Coli 740-367-7115,
Ad, 441-t tit
BA
apt.
(74C)
t-lll
leave mesaage Mno answer
44
2
94

microwave, clcclric hOspital bed. bandiC~YJ equipn:icn~ single bed frame,
baby bed, Coleman CIIIDJl stove Jtlaligp~s, pn:ssure canner, canning jan;,
assorted lrnickknacks, glassware, andmuchltlOR:. ·
.s
Lincoln ACIOC welder, welding
Campbell Hausfeld 2 bp. 12 gal. air COdljhe&amp;oi(J{, 4-mot.al
16ft. wood Slep ladder, shop vac, bar clalrq&gt;s, assorted C·
I cl•amp~ 3-vise. electric drills, saber saws. body grinders, router, Craftsoaanl
12" lathe, Craftsman 10'' table saw, Craftsman table top belt sander,
edger/joiner, Craftsman scroll saw, Deba 12" band saw, 2bench lop grinders: bench top &lt;!rill press, Ctaftsman tool cabinet, Maota:
Mechanic mitte bo•. lots of long bandied yardlgardert tools, comc-aloop,
1cllllin falls, pipe wrencbe•. 1oo of open&amp;; box end wmt&lt;lbeli, raps,
"'~""""'-· oioides, SO&lt;-asiltJMit harnini!iw &amp; lhlllleu,
Ctu.el., loS '· ·
''!-''ains. poii drill. bol.l cutters, _,pipe Cllttcrs &amp;;
"" " dye 1101, 1"1'
rivelOt, kty ruoker, ,hot-~•••ll~uldctciOqulpll'IOtl~-l:liJ1e.blililk"puilcya,l..,_...,;;"'
homemade forge, 2-55 gal. metal drums, 2-wheel 'utilily wagon.

Executor: Ch..-les Dailey Jr.
Auomey: Susan Gwinn.
Athens Co. Pi'obalt Case 120071'231
Auctioneer: Ouie Opperman &amp; Paul Harper.
Apprentice : Chris Collins
Ottie: Phone 740-385-7195. Emijil:
OC(]opp l~hod.i 1ng. net Website for pictures&amp;;

01'•

-

oov•n .113,500 miles. Books camper. 740-379-2254
03 Dido Alero, 4dr. aUio,
-lent cond. $5700. Call St 5,500, asking $12.500. RV Service at Connichael
44H4170f441 ~7417after Traaers74().446.3825
40 740-578-1(XJ]after5pm
·
·

-

.
.
:
required.Noflell.448-t 271 ~,.old . Voryloving. $150. t7T7
2Br at Johnoons Mabile or 1119-1657
746-367-7124

I

Lots of AUTOMOBILE PAilTS; 1937 Ford
Motor and many &lt;Jiher pariS. Very Good
Variety of Modem Furniture, Appliances &amp;
Household ItemS. Terms: Cash or good
checlc auction day. ·Positive ld. Food. 24Hour security al farm. Pole bam in case of
rain. 2-Auction rings. .Vehicles, Tractors,
Equipment will begin selling at about...l2:00
Noon'

86. '--CJ7 ""nch
1

""""441-7514
·"
extras.

$5500. t1rm -

,;:_•• , mule7'JeepCo,l ~3

Aantaii!BIIerlarsole1970 includes- and oewer.
7
~ _.....,., - · . 2 Bdrm. 12X60 Tr. In good $200 dop. 446-'3617
Twin AiVIIIII Tower Ia """""'' • biackltan $300 finn
:
shape for age ounentty renl·
.
.
ing applications for waiting ~75--4787
'House for sale in Racine ed must sell. 740-742.C011 . Troller on town .Aocrno, 2 br., list lor Hud-subsidized, 1-br - - - - - - - •

Lie.., ed&amp;lloadedlaOIIio-M lw411~A:Na
..lih-lf~
AIMlfM
r's 4511 .,.....
Email: SllamrockAIIdioa@aol~

- . , . - - - - - - - tt02

old male WA.u&lt;ER Transmission New Rims tion. ~.CIItalyticconvert- ve, ...... excellent cond: 7271 ASk tor Joe.
Ct~'"HOUND .
Til'ea &amp; Paint' 2002 ,...; er, Asking $2200. Gall 740- great N:;, running boards, 1996 Challe- Sth wheel
N
with papers. ·1i
For CJ ·
~- ·
gray leather int. tonneau
"»'"''

month ~7s-n83

New 3 Bedroom homes from Gavfn. no calls after
$214.36 per month, Includes 6pm.441-0t8t
many upgrades, delivery 8 Takilg applications for 28R,
set-up. (740)385-2434
no pets, $275/month

.; '=::"'.::'

IIOIJSFflQ!PfUINJSHJNGS; Kenmore washer and dryer,

\

·

-apt..

¥tol!ltion filtM • · OUr

more.

AUCDONEERS: Ja1u1 Palridl "Pat" Sl
Ka-ry Sllaidaa-Boyd It Bftllt IKiec
Apptlelltict Audiclanr: Mille lloyd

bedr0om-

Middleport N. 3rd Ave.,2 Br.
93 Clayton 3BA, 2 both
unlumiBhed no polS dell &amp;
$10,000. Also, 92 Ctaytan Smon, olean house for rent. rvferonoes. j-40-992.(llsS.
2BR • 1bath$7000-be
Uv Am~ Eal ' K" &amp;
• ·
· ., ~·on .,.
mewed. Call 740-:rog..~ 179
Bath. $300 per mo., $300 New Haven. 1 bedroom fur·
" - - " N __,~ N
dep. &amp; rvtOr·
Be utit I do blewlde ith ....,._. 0 ~·-.,.. 0
~~
u
w · peta.Cal7~
ences. No peti.T~9B2'" yard and 00.:20
0165.
•
$550000110 746~lbu
~rr; 5 ·
·
Nice qulel 2Bil apt

...~~~•=* lor....
-

-

Thursday' May l, 4:00 p.m.

it?~h;~~ ~Q!~~zl-t

cond .

~gage bags, c.ru
....,.....,., _ ·~
.......

Pteasant, garage attached, $592. 740-992-5064. Equal 1

7...0..385-7671.

·--•In

w/18 diamonds in watch &amp;: 14 diallloods inband. JIPPW•.. 1200 ball cards, 196G-1980;
and several silver dollars.
'
1
Lna Mmr«- I
A Mlr New Husqu~:
23 HP approx. 30 br w/48" cu~ dog
single we 10x6 trailer w/drop tail
fishing poles, Slcill worm saw, small air
oondiliooa, mise tools, pile mise &amp; loiB

..u-

LARGE ESTATE FARM
AUCflON

3pt
auger.
&amp;
CAilT:
Honda Recon-;50
2003 Youth E-Ton
Viper AIV. 1966 Triumph 500 Motortyclenol running. 8hp Go-Can. 3-Disassembled
Motorcycles:
1973 Penton l25.
1972
Yamaha 2SO. 1969 or 70 BSA 441. 2'I'RAIU:RS: (6' &amp; 12' transpon trailer&amp;. 2·
RIDING MOWERS: MID 17.5hp mower-!year old &amp; Ranch King 14.5hp niower. 13
Excellent GUNS: Several New &amp; in Orig.
"'-- S&amp;W 686
Boxes.r Guns seII at II '"""'";
stainless .357 mag revolver. Suum Ruger
Single Six .22cal. Star 9mm 380 pistot
Taurus 65H 38 Special wlgold trim.
Browning Buck Mlli .22 pistol. Taurus
PT945 45cal pistol. G~aga Elbar UiS
pistol. New American DetTinger '22cal Sshot Taurus {;5 .357mag revolver. U.S.
Revolver .32cal rnod.5 revolvtr. Sav~e
221250 rifle w/scope. Savage 93R 17 rifle
w/Winchester soope. Bauer 25cal auto. Pistol
LAR.GE
Good Selection of .Ammo.·

f:--..:.':;,

weed eater, 2..Craftsmao leaf blowers, CraftsDWl chain saw, .
1896 &amp;: 190i Morgan Silver Dollars, 1927 &amp; 1928 Peace Silvor
1899 Barner Half Dollar, 6-Bicentenial Eiotmbo- Dollatl, 1971
Dollar, ! 904 Barner Qtwter, 26-Silver Quanm, ! 908
Dime, 1888 Indian Head Penny, 463-Wbeal Pennies daled 1923-1958,
Three Cenlllries of Pennies in Colleclor Pack (1898 Indian Head, ! 943
sltel LiDcoin, 2000 Lincoln), !956 &amp;; 1861 Napoleoo fu:llch Coins, 1920
Penny, 1996 NOI'Ihem bdand one pound;
ANDOUES 4 m J F£1111 Jili: very old Maytag washer, Maytag
eagine Model 500 Series II, oak drop from s&lt;ocrel8ry desk, oak library
!able, old V~etrola cabinet, old
cboferobe, grinding whoel oo lilanC~I
draw knives, old blow lorrlt, oollectioo of miniature pencilllharpener,
salt/pepper sets. j..- of marilles, old bunoos, coal miner's wick lamp. set
Old Hickory knives, Steinbach SmokiDg Mea NuiCI'IICker in orig. bo•.
milk can, 2-railroad jacb,

responsible for loss or accidents. Refreshment

'I'RAC'IO&amp;S.It~: - M.F.

edual'llle.._,.
8
:,• -hill• :
-"
--,
. _ , _ , no11g1an,c.n.ew ...... ornltlonlll

I Ttut....-w &amp; EQUIPMENT: 1960s lntemation&amp;i Cub Tractor, disk, .
I ~"m"' bar, blade, Troy Bilt 5 bp. Trimmer/Mower, J.onesred Lil'Red 220

Ohio . Temu: cash or check wilD . Announcemcnts
day of sale takes precedence of printed materilll. Not

446-7278

-------95 Dodge Avenger, 94
Chevy Cavalier. 95 Chevy
Eldorado. 446-3243 "' 446lmt
Meigs .~ . Call ""· an - - - - - - - appi.Aiwrbend ~ p;gs, PublicAudion-12 noon May
740-256-1360
2nd, 1993 Honda (formerly
·
flood vohicta) &lt;&gt;omnalforteo·
'i9nY goat kids. 1 blaok 1ure vehicle, runs/looks
doe $75 &amp; 1 - $50 740-446
good . ground ettecls. stan·
~
ing bid $800, may be seen

lional horne $279 per month appliances Included, Ref. Housing Opportunity.

111

h llotlolto

......, -

DIRECTIONS: Rt. 50-8 miles east of Athens eiit on Rt. 329
through Guysville to Stewart, tum righl on Rt. 144, auction
will be held at tbe V'tUage Park. near the Fire Station, watch
signs.
~~~~ (sold w/reiiCf'Ve: 19991eep Wrangler.4WD, ooft lOp, souna&lt;oaq
miles in very good oonditioo.

1

"':"' •••llolr4

..,.,.,_ I i

- - . . . , . Aol rO

Ste~art,OH
'

-==::~~~20083bedroom2bath&amp;ee-

.......,,. tllo-..
1.,.

EVENING AUCTION

000107 Licensed and bonded in favor of the state of

or www.mood.is_paugb.oom

•

Auction

projector w/movies.

stool, wood brl, wood Winchester amm9

ill. Qici.d

wfvtnjll

movie

washboard, trunk, copper kettle wlstand, .
cobbler's bench, gossip bench, wood step-

Mrool

gate.:

CLASSIREDS

.,.;,ndo

'1998 Honda cbriiOOn.
19.000 mts. new tires and
brakes, tank bra, soft lug-

j

kennel.:

ADVERTISE
IN THE

Mollu:.,'!:&amp;

I

4Cov, 5Tours. Sun. Bvons.
0!; 300LT. 00 Must ., 77
dump, 98Ecf", Oee.00301&lt;
m'1., 98 •
- 6~........_,
~~-. 60 more.

r .__

A~IReal•or. 7~78-2817
tl•: ~ .U.C Ball b&lt;droom suile

I

folio.,.,, auction signs.

parts.

equipped

Duplex tor Sole on Land
Conlract 740-992·5858.

COU.ECIOR VEIDCU!S:
Nearly
restored 1937 FORD 4dr sedan, 8 cyl.
Ememely . Low Mileage 1978 . DODGE
MAGNUM wlonly 19,7S4 miles-in excellent
condition! TRUCKS J&lt; AUTO: 1994 Dodge
'Dal:ota 4x4 pickup. 1993 Ford Fl50 4x4
pickup. 2003 Ford Tawus w/3lk miles,Wvage tit!&lt;. 1985 Chevy SIO pickup for

740-446-SOW
Auction

payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yara. Covered
deck. AllaOtled geroge. 740367-7129.

j

' ...

PlY'-·

llo I
w/large dresser, nigbt s1alld, draw..- dlesl.
made by V.B. Williams, Ztnilb 2T' 1V, lilaDd,
VCR. single bed, loveseal &amp; couch. end lt.
coffee tables, wood table w/4 chairs &amp; lqe
· leaf, titcben cabinet, citation uprigbl li=!..-,
Emerson microwave, misc. &amp;lands, laWf
fumiwre &amp; more.
G!'Ps; Mossburg Deer Slayer 12 ga. 22' rifle
bore model 4'15 New Haven com. 12 ga.
Stevens single sbol, 22 ga. Springfield 187 N
Auwmatic, l'bi!Siale gOurall 12 &amp; 16 ga. and;
Ruger cbimpmuDk 22 rille.
·
l'll!dl.; 2003 Ford ISO 4•4 Exteodod cab
wltool box w/5th wheel hitdl
f
ciNe'; Antique •watch 14 tarat whifll
gold Geneve w/IS lwal wbi1t gold band .

0 -.

SAnJRDAY, MAV3,2111111@ 1._
AU S&lt;ls widoout R,, ne

C91NSI4[;N~~~~ITAUCTION

I

I

Ells)' 18 W.

. 3rdAnnual

!O:OOAM

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

7-miles IDthe .......,., Albuy,take SjL
till Elllt fill' 1 _IIIIlS tD F-. .
·

Auction

MaylO

~

JET
"f~TION I!QTOAS

Ellm View .

br.- -

Ridge Rd. Follow auction ·signs 10 38S49
Gold Ridge Rd. oo left
. . . Eol.lte sells at ' " " .... BeatJiiful3 yr
old borne wn. bedroom &amp;: 2 balbs, 8x64
porell. 14,440 sq ft on 6.3 oaa of wooded
land. Have 10 ..., 10 appreciale! 10% down
payment day of auclion. Balance due at
~- Olftml by Pal1iltr Rally- Bud

••te

Wanted: Local sami truck BtrltdlnQ oorlng n&gt;goJar busi·
driver, with COL· &amp; good ness hours oi,J1:30 AM until
' Auction
Auction
record. Please call 746-992· 5:00 PM, - Y through ::::::::·: :::::::;:::...;;::;::;::;::;::;::::;

· 3020 or 740-352-DSSO

·

j~

96 John Deere Ba~ Angusllulls,show, ,.._.
4x4, Cab, Ext. Hoo. 441- El&lt;oeJtent Qreeding, Top
OJieooin~. Aaklng No polS, $400 1110+ S400 T"'""~ · Aepaired, New&amp;\.Rabultln 751401'2~
Parlormonce,
Priced
$80,000. 740-.7029
IMICUrity depooll, (74C)9112· antl'or orna1 ..,._ FOR Stoct. Call Ron Evans. t- EBY HTEGRtTY.
A e a s o n a b 1 •• .
u -. log~- _
33t4
RENT. Call (740)441-tl11 800-537-9528.
BUI • 1
·KIEFER www.sloterunangus.com,
•·~·~ •mng oo
""""''"'"i»•&amp;inlo&lt;mltion.
LT,
'VJOJ..LEY (740)28115395
0
t66acres, CUS10ml&lt;ildlen, 3 Badroom House in
NEW AND tilED S1'EB. HORSE/LIVESTOCK
.
St
...
Beams
P'""'
3BA, 2 balh. $t42,900. Col s - . S500/monlh + .
·~LEAS. LOAD MAX Club lambs tor Sole tor
74C-251H1247
dopooil Hud •1\pp. No Polo.
For Concrele, """"· EQUIPMENT TRAILERS, Information call Ryan
(304)675-5332
AplltbtMriS , ~. Aat Bar. Steel C...RGo EXPRESS &amp; ~et74C-949-2008
740-59H12115
Grating
For
Dram&amp;, H 0 ME S TEA 0 E A
.
~
RJR......,.
•. ·
·
•2&amp;3
on-ays&amp;Wolkways. L&amp;l CARGOICONCESSION "Ciubplgsfor-. AISired
S
hlp, newly •Canlnlt heal &amp; AIC
S&lt;np Malals Open Monday, TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· from top Boa11i . rn OQUnlry.
16X80 3 Bedr-.. 2 l!alh remodeled, no inside polS. •W-idr)er-.p
TIIO!Iday, Wednesday &amp; NECK
HITCHES. p;g&amp;ri[111agelo&lt;Masooand
house in CONVEMIEHTU LOC...T·
2BA, 2 baths, 3 lla81l more Pome!Of, HUO app~. ED &amp; AFI'OAOAIIlEI

~~ 1e'4~ 1

H

lJvmlx](

:n Hawlhome Ln., Pl.
,-_3br,tba,10t5/SF
:New 11oor """"'; ogoo, fresh
,pain!, new heal pump
• $79,000 304-593-6979
Vinyl Skiing. Shingle Roof. HUO apPfOved, $450 per •AIIeietlric- averaging
Friday, &amp;om-4:30pm . Closed CARMICHAEL
EQUIP"
S230permonth. 740-385- mo.plussecurilydep., reler· $50-$60/monlh.
Thursdey, Selurday &amp; MENT ICARMICHAEL
~ Ilion!
9948.
""""" reqUired, Langsville •Owne&lt;
SOWO&lt;, Sundo¥-(74C)446-7300
TRAilERs SALES &amp; SEA• Locoi-"Y of1oring 'WI)
- · call (74C)742·2210
VICE SPECI"L 2OFT
'DOWN ~~·E·~
t989 Schultz MH 14x- wl
tl1llh
Nioe Dining Room Suite
•
•
~·M '" pro'
'"
3br HoUse 111
· Masoo No (304)882-3017
HUIOh ]ilble w/6 -~,,. GOOSENECK FLAT13ED
1""ms lor you 10 buy your 7x21 expando, tolal - ·
'
'
~- ' $3999 VIEW QUA ENTIRE
:home inslead of renting.
3BA, 2 bath. $9500. 740- Pet&amp;, $400 mor1tl, ~
•
maple S650, WOitt OUI TRAILER INVENTORY AT
•" 100% financing
379-2222
depooil :J04.:882-31!S2
•
. •lwoiit's. like - WWW .CARiollCHAEL·
Pomeroy !'&lt;;ice Depl.
• • Las&amp; than perfecl: credit
3br House In' 'New Haven,
304-882~3108 ·
TRAIL.ERS.COM 7-'0-446- 05 Sftlppar·· Rider, 12 112 Quality cars, 1rucb. vans
•. •- ..,.,.
·
2740-4&gt;06-3510.
bed, 2 bath, 299 a month. No ~
~. •
- monlh, •·~
n
·
~~
~
STEEL AACIIIM• - 1 3825
Hr.,
28' cui. IJI&lt;e New
$400 starling 81 $1500 to 58300
•• Payment ' could be 1he
.........
_
_
3652
f manang
'
.
.......,.._,
Made i!'1 USA. Ttvee can- Have you priced a JOnn
aval'Ia ble wtt. h
: oome .. .... .
2002 t6x80 aa-.! 3 Bed 3BA
$500/month. Furnislled Apt, 2nd Ave, - . t ordero 251&lt;30 and o.ere
warranty.
COOIC
1 Mortgage ·
Loc:a1010. 2 Bath 2000 t6x10
'
Upotalrs .All un~·
pd
:
lately? 'mill be surIII01'0AS 328 Jar:l&lt;son Pike.
1 105
•(74C)3GHIOOO
Fleetwood 2 """ 2 Bath, $350/depooil 441·t489
•
40-441Hlt03
· 161&lt;24. Wlltseilfor-.ce piled!~ootoorused
•
;!,~. :~s, Gallipolis,
. -. Call Today
i"""'"""Y
o1
,ou,o'-"'
::-,.,;,....;.;,.---,
17
1999 16x 80 Fort;;,. 31!ed 2 stler 4pm.
11
4
Bath, 1997 t4x70 Oolotood 4 iledlllom House for A.,.
HUGESO&gt;Iinge!
WWW . CARE Q . COM
RlllSAu:
·r1S
TRucxs
3 Bed 2 Bath. Oaylime 388- $600/rent
$600/deposO u.tng ~ om 2
-Ca-rniOOaei Equ- 740,
FOR S.\1£
0000 Evening 38tHI017 or (7.W) ~or 3G7-nG2 Bedroom Apts. at Village
I'm
1-446-2..12
01
Hyundai
Accent
,
2..5·9213
,
.
ManorandRiversideApts. in
R-.SAI.E
John Deer A 1947 Tractor, Hall:::hback 5 speed traQ~. 01 Sharp White Ford F150
Nrce 3br, Aancto m Pt, Mlddlepor1, from 5327 10
Eleclric Start High &amp; Low 65,310 miles, good condi· lariat Super Crew 4dr. SAL.

SM. May 3N, llllltL&amp;
Located St Rt. 33 II Darwin, ()bio T.- St
Rl. 681 west go approx. S miles 10 Gold.

~~~iii~~~

56
I,_..L'fi,;:;;,

I

Property Audion

•NOTICE• ·

- direct care positions in , . , . . . - - - - - - .
Ripley, wv pr~ resi - 11
Sao:u
dertialicommunity sl&lt;il train·
1;1tto;Dlii,;;ION-..J
ing with individuals with
MAI!)O. to be and wHng to phy~ Golllpolio c... COIIogo
letlei
.t timu for (Careers Close To Home)
dlents with cta.,lenging CoO Todoyi 74Q-446-4367.
. HIOD-214-0452
Mhavion. High school
diploma Of GED required. www.~:~~~UiDoiiSCflreorcollege.edu
No experience necessary.. Ac:c•ed~ad Membe! AGCred~ing
CouOOI lor lnd!Jpendllnl Collegss
Criminal background chect&lt; and Schools 12749.
reQuired. Must have relia~M
transportation . Houri~ rate- ~i76
$10.00, after training. Call1 ·
· M~E J -Ut'EOt.S

that includes a 4Ct k retire-

Real Estate &amp; Persoul

riontod -

On-Silo ~ lor

30 wpm strong
with oocurocy
onO tions
curranlly
IICOOjlllng
applica·
possess
oommuntcator fuft
time/ 1)4rt
time

Ohio Valley Publishilig with
office&amp; in Pomeroy,

•=.t.w..

olyourchoioofor$129

01'

Aepnaeatative

,
on oomor of
Pol'let Ad &amp; 554. Asking
-

·.....
- ooo. ~ r . . -,
• cal for mora inlo. 38lHl044

Unrue .. (304)273-2tell

CllrlstiM~

fits including h8alttl insur·
clerical/data/entry billing Trainer Position
ance and mileage. Phone
positions, 2nd shift(M-F Are you interested in a
7~1 ~1393 tor more into
4pm-10pm). Must type mW1 ,_rding position? PAIS 15

tionlphone/general office
&amp;kilts. We offer a ver; compolilive wage and a compre-

appU4t-82112

Horne tnl-- tor """"
intonnation about Horne ..

&lt;alloonbehaltof

Now Hiring:
FuiTorne Dey Shill
FuH Trme Evening Shill

both:~~·. L.Rt.,

FA DR"';-,•
. loc:lltedS.,._fTomHotzer
· " · ., •·
bath.

11111ytUflonlyl

Sl. Pl. Pleasart, WV 25550 CalllnloCIIIion Today!
A&amp;L carriers, ooe of the
Ohio Valley Home Haalth, nation 's largest tomlly
1-a&amp;-IMC-PAYU
Inc., hiring a FT LPN tor owned LTL motor treiltl car'
Ellt. 2347
Pasaport/Private Core Dept. riel'S, has in'IT\8diate openCompetitive wages &amp; bene· ings
for
part-1ime,
www.infocision.oom

OU!sideSalea

'' BA.&amp;

.._..-.,. 61uti•d • Page 05
10

1

::.BA~~.,:.es·~ Newhorne, ,_r!Midin. 3 bedroom

a..........., -

Use_,_,.,

mileage reimbursement.

apply at 1'480 Pika, ~is, Ohio

Coli
(740)645 0546

r "== rr == 1r = Jr

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

·.r.·_
. ..-.lbe-s.w:_,._.,~l ~.,r.·_.-.lbu=-:Sw:-~.,J' r• ~

9pedor•-

*"""rlir.-og for,...

LPN's. Apply at 1480
Including:
Jacl&lt;soo Pike, GallipoHs,
TIIM Warner Cllble
phone 441-1393 1o&lt; Sk~ted mus1 t.o.o s1r0ng communiotlice 01 apply at 1456 Cation sldlls and S1mng comt Up ID SL5Gihour
Jad&lt;son Pike, phone 441· puler sl&lt;ills. Oewee' Pie·
9263 tor Pas$port/Private fenvQ, bu1 rd 111101lda!or1. K

Care OHice. Competitive interested. please send
.wages and benetils indud- resume' ., CLA 8 c/o P&lt;&gt;inl
ing health insurance and Pleasant Register 200 Main

'.
· Sunday, April27, 2008

t Atre, Flat Lot "f"ri&lt;"~ 2000 c.- COpe - · 3 - · Zllll lq.l. •
311A, ~ Lg. Kit &amp; LA, DR, Cod. 4BA 2 BA Fln, 571Joot Dr.
Den wl flreJ&gt;Iace, 2 elf 81 norlt, lUll w/ don .,.. lrg _..,
Goroge Aoclnol' o1 Rio- in
FA, LA wl ttrlt* FP.
$115,000 (74C) 245-9125
$198,900. """"-" yon! w/ in _ . .
Cll for an 740-245- pool. $t40,000. ,.

· MoWog
Eolimalet
(74C)441-1333 or

-......
.....,._,. __

~nt should

Sunday, April 27. 2008

It

L.awn-Gare
&amp;
Trimming.- Ffloe

;.,_y--40.£':~

Resource&amp;.

It

WANID&gt;

.

-

'NCHi OPEN - - - ,
·- -A-f'l:l'S'PARADIS .
Spring Valley Plaza
1116 Jacllson Pike

740-44 Hl738
Bulk feed ·· Pet Supplies

NOTICE
Eagles Aerie #2171
Nomination and election of
all officers and one trustee
Nominations 1
April 21st, 2008 I
7:30pm
Election
May 5th, 2008
7:30pm·

Large Potted
Tomato Plants
Large Fems
Onion Sets 99c pound
Green .Pepper, Cabbage
arid Tomato Plants
Complete Variety of
Soils &amp; Mulchs

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE
Jackson Pike
Across From
Gallia Co. Fairgrounds

u
- Ba.m.-??
1

BIG 5 FAMILY
YARD SALE
1154 Second Ave.
Galllpolla
Loll of Kldt Clothlt
Knick Knackl &amp; Mo,.

The Qellltlolll City !lillie qlllllllolllonl.
1ot1oo1 Dlelriot le l-IM .,._,.
eca~applloellone thould

•~bmlt 1111
il18fl eup- lpjlllcatlon 10 tile
plemenlal
aonti'Kt lltlllllon of JICit W.
poeltlont loflhl 2001- P • r t " n ,

fDr

IN THE
BULLETIN BOARD
FOM GREAT RESULTS!

2008-~rlrom l~perlnhndenl,

lncllvldulll llolcllng en
ellwtAitM YilllcllilkM far
l'upll
Activity
lupmltlor hom 11M
Ohkl Depe- of
Ed~cJIIOtt _. 11f11110---~- - -

-- -

--

Clllllpollt City lciiOOI
Dlltrlct, 11
._
11rw1. ClllllpCtlll, ott
41U1 .
Aprtl27, 2001

-

�. '

PageD6:

GARDENING

Student council
•
• •
sponsonng
IDlDl

Students participate
\in Ea•th Day, A2

SEEDS

G STARtS
'

'

Sunday, April r,, 2008'

Relay for Ufe, A6

BY DJAN FOSDICK
RlR ll&lt;E ASSOCIAtm 1'11ESS

It's a wonder you can' t
detect a pulse from a seed,
considenng all the life
within.
Even before they genoinate, you can · predict how
their life cycle will evolve.
Each seed carries a genetic
mix that determines hardiness and disease tolerance,
plant size, texture and
color
and
d istinctive
blooms or fruit.
Then there are the differences visible only to the
practiced eye between conventional seeds and their
organic equivalents. The
variations can malre all the
difference in your garden.
"They come from alto- ·
gether different circumstances. so they have altogether different traits," said
Frank Morton; a seedsman
and plant breeder from
Philomath, Ore.
Organic seeds are often
large - containing their .
own food reserves. Their
roots dig deeper to mine
the soil and spread leaves
quickly to stay ahead of Organic seedli~ are grown from light trays inside a home in New Market, Va. April 8 . Organic seeds generally have more
weeds. In other words, vigor and genetic diversity than t!1eir conventional counterparts. They have to be bred to resist many kinds of pest pressures.
.
they can flourish in poor
soil and compete with is often drenched in chenliIn the grand scheme of
other plants.
cals, he said. Organic seeds backyard gardening, workOrganic growers are are free of that kind of pro- ing with ~c seeds is
learning to 9LPCCl more duction - and good ones more a malter of lifestyle
vigor from ( their seeds, are also bred to resist pest than it is utility, said Ellen
Morton said. While conven- pressures.
Ogden, of Manchester
tional seeds and hybrids
It remains debatable, Village, Vt., co-founder of
often have one gene that though, whether organic the "1be Cook's Garden," a
stands up to pathogens, seeds produce a more fla- seed catalog for gardenen;;
organic seeds have lhe kind vorful harvest than convenwho love to cook.
of disease resistance found
"We need to be more
tional strains.
in nature.
Monon says it's no con~ careful with what we're
"That means a variety of
test
when he compares con- putting into the ground," •
things working together to ·
ventional
tomatoes to said Ogden, who designs
give a plant a strong constigardens. ·
tution and a' belter ability to. organic - although that kitchen
be
because
he's
getand
everymay
·"Herbicides
combat ailments," he said.
ling
them
locally,
so
they
thing else. Whoever uses
Then there are the enviaren't
traveling
as
far
after
organic
seeds is thinking a
ronmental benefi~.
being
picked.
And
genes
little
more
about what
''Commercial seed FWeventually
tell.
they're
doing."
ing is one of the most mten"You can give them all
sive users of farm chemicals
On the Net:
going," said Jim Gerritsen, the composts and fertilizers
For IIIOR! about plturting
who with his wife, Megan, and clean things you want
operates WoodPrairie Farm but if a particular ~t with . organic vegetable Bags of organic soil are seen in New Market, va. April 2 .
isn't genetically predis- . seeds, see this University of Good gardening starts from the ground up with a good seed
in Bridgewater, Maine.
Cooperative starter, potting soil or growing mixture: Gardeners using
•n conventional seed pro:- posed to crispness, it won't · Florida
duction, soil must be free of make any diffen:nce," · Extension · Service bulletin: organic seeds will want a olean soil, ot a growing medium
"plant pests," so. the ground Morton said.
lmp:/ledis.ifas.ujf.edu/hs227 made up of natural products and absent of any chemicals.

,.,. .......

.

Soil type makes
a big difference
when you
ganJen using
organic seeds
So heie you are, fashionably green wilh organic seeds. nawrnl fertilizers, a fresh sbipmeot of
live beneficial bugs.
What are you planning 10
do about your dirt1
Good organic gardening startS from the
ground up.
..
"You get 1hc best of
everydling when you take
good, lusb soil dial will
produoe lhe taslie&amp;1.
n:bealtbiest"""'"".
"" vegccables available,~ said fun Geuiasm,
who owns and opcares
WoodPrairie Fann in·
Bridgewarec, Maire.
lfs one lhi.og, howevec.; 10 ~efine lhe soil in a
large planling bod, where
it becomes a seasonal
matter of tesling, amending aild tilling. It's quite
anolher when you want a
specific blend for small
raised gardens, palio gardens and pots. 'lben you ..
can dip into lhe soores of
mixes available commercially by the bag.
"Our organic soils are
growing very fast as a
new product offering much faster lhan lhe average organic product,~
said Steve Titko, Director
of Technical Selvices,
Growing Media, for The
ScottsMiracle-Gro Co.
Using nalnral jDateriaiS.
offen;; belter plliot nutri- .
tion and means· you're .
dealing with a living ecological system, said
Frank Morton, a seedsman and plant broeder
from · Philomath, Ore.
Instead of just holding .
the plant up, organic soil
can sustain bacteria,
earthworms and "everything functional to theplant arid its roQts."

•
..
...••
Middleport • Pomervy., Ohio
j&lt;t( I

\l'-, •\ 111.;;-. "\ ll.t'l-

BY Be •• J.. REED · '
I!REEDOJMMtL'I'SE!N1111NEL.COitt

POMEROY- American
Elocuic Power ·said pas•
sage o f Senate Hill 221,
regulating die electricity
iDdusuy, will oot oeoessarily determine if lbe &lt;rom,pany will build a dean· coal
generating plant in Meigs
County, but its provisions

support
Celebrate Natio~al Volunteer Week

.PaJeAS

•

• Kulliss Lee 8laley. -40
•01isqlher
Higgitilol•n. 2B

•

INSIDE

-· --...1
I""'

•

:....

.... 4+1 News NOles.

.,_

s..-..u

• Gat yo&amp;M' bal6"it
\atalion lalaronline.
See ... A3

~on .....

INDEX

By

a:counts, better.

lial impaot on electricity pos1ttve for the state,"
prices in Ohio.~
McHenry said.
"AAthough lbe timpact will
"We will work with the
be more defined through •the PUCO to ensure ~e
PUCO process, it appears the filings necessary to have
1!hat .t he House amendments an order by :Jan. l , 2009."
a
workable
pFovide
In March, the Ohio
appl'03Ch gging forward, Supreme Court reversed a
including preserving a mar- decision by the Public
!ret rate option and a mecha- Utilities Commission of Ohio
. lllism for future investment
,. re-AEP.AS
in Ohio, which we believe is

-causmg
concerns,
POMEROY ~ House
Bill I 03 is causing concern
from municipalities and
support from landlords.
Same municipalities feel
bill could cause local
water systems to feel a
financial pinch if landlords
are only liable for up to
$200 or are excluded altogether from having a financial respOnsibility to pay a
water bill owed by a tenant.
Dave Spencer, treasurer
.o f Racine Village, said this
· bill could pose an undue
stress on local water systems
trying to collect delinThil 8lgn !Uding "Volunlaars at:~ Shining 'Stars" want up at tlile Stt!ilior Citizens Center this morning. O~laylng It here
are11'om the lett, Diana Co11111, RSVP COOI'dlnalor, and voiUAtaers, Setty .!lonnson, Juanita ~ouaf:\, 'Polly C.urt11, Mack quent fees. Racine's village
ordinance is wri1ten so that
l..elgllbl, and JUne Kloes.
'
landlords are responsible
for the water biUs and no
water· or trash accounts are
put in a tenant's name.
Racine currently has 354
1
water customers with an
estimated 30 percent of
those being renters ..
BY CtwLaE 1toEJ:1..!cH
4t.SVP vplunteers · provide .
Spencer fear~ if the bill
HOEFLICI-IOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM
more dian their SkillS .and knowlpasses it could lead to delinedge, lhey •give l:heir friendship,
quencies which then puts a
POMEROY - When senior they give themselves." said
strain on the whole system,
c1tuens
become
actively Diana Coates, progmm coordinaincluding customers who
-IJ~f.~~~- .as volunteers theY,_.mt · rnr for !!le Meig~ Cooney Council .
P&lt;!f theif wal.er fees on time.
strengthen coitlmunilies on Aging. "The opportunities are .
Raising rates and additional .
through lhe servi.ce they provide. as diverse .as the vo1unteers themfees are just two scenarios
but they e~ce the satisfac- selves," she addM "Volunteers
smaller water systems could
tion of havmg mntributed 1beir select a service geared to specific
pOSsibly be faced with to
time aod effort 110 .the betterment inteJ:ests, sometimes consistent
stay operating in. the blac k,
of -others.
,
with past pmfessional careers,
according to Spencer.
"\nlunteers
Sbinin
" . "" Stars" otller limes ~elating to their avoHB 103 was introduced
real!i' a sign in front of the Meigs cation or bobby."
on March 8 and currently
·Senior Cmtcr whe~e iast
'rwo of ·lhe best-knovm pro:
rests in the Local and
year
die Retimi Semor · grams carried out by retiied
Municipal Government and
~Jilie!:l"
··~ .:(RS~) 7Q siJnirir · ..,olunturs · ben :.. .are.LJ rllill1 - ... _· R~:vltn lizntion
Committee.
-~
men ~·anil women CO!IIributed· a · Yesteryear ·and Seniors in ,
total of 31 ,174 hours .in volun-· Schools. At Yestel)'ear, which has
State
Repre sentative
teer service ~ 29 dilferent s~s. been ongoing for more than 20
Jimmy Stewart (R-Albany )
· Older ~h1oans ll'C_ bemg years the senior wolunteen;; share
said although hi s knowl saluted this week, April 27 ~ lheir ta1ents with hundreds of fifth
edge of the bill is limited at
May 3, by t!Je O~o grade students who embrace the
this pOint, ne has recently
~artment of AgiDg which · skills and crafts r:1 generati.C!lllS
heard from landlords. low
JOms the natu~n m the obser- past and use that infmmation to
Numerous crafts and skills are tau,ght by, the income advocates as well as
vance of Nabo~ Volunteer cmicb their own Jives.
local government officials
RSVP volunteers at Yesteryear. Here Lawrence
Week. Tho theme ts "Volunteer
Eblin instructs Kyle Riffle in some leather work.
Phase- HI IOJ, A5
to Change th~ World."
,. 171 . . V I l I a. A5

the

-

Senior volunteers
tagged Shining stars'

.u

Students design, install device· EHS
.

.

••

RIO GRANDE-- ·Eight students from
•
A3 , the Univemty of Rio Gr.ande bad the
Annie's Mailbox
opportunity roceody to gain real-world
A3 experience by building an important
• Calendars
83-4 . new machine for a J:egional roawany.
Classifieds
The dudents are all in the manufaoturing icchnology piogtiDI. and *orkcd on
Comics ·
the project in a class taught by Mike
Dyer. The students actually designed,
Sditorials
built and installed a brand new machine
Q:ovies
for Appalachian Timber in Sutton, W.Va .
Dyer eX;plained that Appalachian
Obituaries
Ttmber makes railroad ties and beams,
B Section and said the employees have to carry
Sports
and stack the heavy beams by hand.
Weather
A3 The company came to him to see if he
i:l -~v.tloyr ,, F ;(lo.
and hi s students could de sign a
J113Chine to take over the heavy lifting
and help the employees. Dyer has
wort.od with the company before, just
as he and hi s students work with other
1 companies in the region .

-

. BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

are

SeePlfFA5

~
aU

locating a $2 billion plant in
Lebanon
Township.
McHemy said that depision
will remain in the hands of
lbe
P.ublic
Utillil!i.es
Commission of Ohio.
"The . provisions for
investment in r-ene-wables
and energy efficiency
liJli!'CIIf 110 strike an appFopnate balance between the
·eovironmem and lhe poten-

•

.• Reed &amp; BalM"
'after houts' hek1

Get the same !tanking you already know. Only better.
Visit wesllanco.cem for more .information.

shoutd .allow AEP to
"move furw.ard."
Meli.ssa·Mc:Hemy of AEP
.said th~ are mecrumisms
for .investmentli in new
emorgy included in lbe !bill
as passed by the Ohio
House last week, but said i1
is too ·eady 110 detemline if
lhe OODlplUly will be .ab]e to
recover costs for lhe plant
- ibe primluy Gbstacile in

HB103

See PIF ·A3
. • OU keyboaR:I &amp;enilw
. sdledlllled for Jlnt 6-7.
SeePIFA6

..

"'"' · "'·'daii~-.·IIIIIH·I.'"''"'

\1'1{!1 .!X . :.!OOH

SPORTS

• All slsrcheedaa•s
, . , . tllllional tide.

Starting April 28th, Oak Hill Banks is officially WesBanco Bank.

\ltl\!l\)

Students in electrical design classes at

Rio •Grande helped Dyer and his stu-

dents desi,gn the new machine for the
company, and then his students built it.
1be machine moves the beams down a
line, and then stacks them so that they.
can be picked up with a forklift.
Previously, the employees had to manually lift the beams, which weighed
between 200 and 250 pounds, and stack
them by band.
Dyer and his students installed the
fiCSt part of the machine over a weekend
earlier ·in the semester, but when it was
set up it did not work properly so they
had to tear it back: down again. They
then fixed a. problem in the design, ·and
then set it back up again.
It is oow working properly, and .Oyer
and.his students
are putting in the ne w
.
equipment m stages.
Appalachian Timber is happy with the
won:· the Rio Grande students have been
doing oo the project. and Dyer and his

Kyle Gordon and
Heaven Westfall
were named
Prom King and
Queen at
Eastern High
School Saturday.
Brien J . Aeedlpholo

.

,. . . . . -..,he,AS

•

"

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="542">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9993">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13876">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13875">
              <text>April 27, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="602">
      <name>glassburn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2339">
      <name>mckenzie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="467">
      <name>parker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1667">
      <name>woodruff</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
