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                  <text>ALONG THE RIVER

.I

Fair brings top entertainment
to Gallia County, Cl

I

2004 Chevrolet SSR, Dl

•

'

en ne

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio \'aile~ l'uhlishin~ ( 'o.

SPORTS
• Bengals waive LB
Levels. See Page 81
• NASCAR changes
rules to promote green- .
flag finishes'. See Page 84
• Meigs staves off
Athens Junior's upset
bid. See Page 81

l'onwr·o~ • \liddkpur·t • ( ;allipnlis • .Jul~ 1~. :.mo~

81.:.!;) • \"ol. :lH. :\:o. h')

Meigs tax collections continue to rise
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

was not necessarily the result of
increased sales, but the result of col lection of ,past -due sales taxes paid
POMEROY- After three years of electronically by some vendors.
dwindling sa~es tax revenue. Meigs
June's disbursement to Meigs
County's collections continued a County was the largest single-month
four-month upward trend in July.
increase in . collections since before
Meigs County Auditor Nancy 2000, when the county began comGrueser reported collections of paring revenue from month to
$96, I02.83 for May retail sales, month, year to year.
received last week.
A report of collections of the counThe latest disbursement puts the ty's I percent sales tax for April. colcounty nearly $50,000 over sales tax. lected last month, shows collections
collectiofts a year ago, but the Ohio of $121,701.68 for that month, far
Department of Taxation said last exceeding April collections for the
month's larg~ increase in collections past four years.

In July 2003. Meigs ·County County. but is also due to an overall
received $86.R91 .29 from its I per- improvement in the national economy.
cent sales tax. In 2000. collections for , Commissioner Jeff Thornton said
July were $114.636. Only two last month an increase in appropriamonths this year. January and March. tions to some county offices might
:how ~ecreased collectiOns from. the be possible if sales tax revenue concounty s I percent over the same tinues to increase.
months last year. and those were only
. . . .. . . . ..
slightly less than those of 2003.
_The l?ss m s,tles.tax _collec~ons, along
The county is now $48.272.9.0 With a freeze m state and local governover last year's tax revenue.
ment revenue and th~ collecl!on of perEarlier this year, Economic son_al property _tax from the Southern
Development
Director
Perry Ohio Coal Co. _s Metgs Mmes, whtch
VarnaJoe said the increase in tax col- cloS!!d m 2000. torced commtsswners to
lection~ is definitely a sign of an · impose two across-the-board cuts in
improved retail economy in Meigs annual appropriations to county offices.

Chester-Shade Days

Sheriff releases sketch
of robbery suspect
BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
MRLISSELL@MYDAIILYTRIBUNE.COM

I

GALLiPOLIS
Gallia
County Sheriffs Office has
released a sketch of the man
believed to be responsible for last
Monday's robbery of the Spring
Valley Mamthon in Gallipolis.
The man, a black male
between the ages of 20 and
30, entered the convenience
store at 310 Jackson Pike. and
allegedly robbed the cashier
at knife-point.
The man demanded the
cashier p·lace the cash drawer
on the counter, removed the
money and tled in a green car
that was parked near the gas
pumps on the lot.
He is described as being
between 5-foot-5 and 5~foot-8,
with a stocky build, short hair and
between 240 and 280 P,Ounds.
The incident occurred just

OBITUARIES '
Page AS
• Donald A, Hartung
• Clyde M. Holcomb
• Loretta Faye lmes

.I

. Sketch of suspect

after 9 p.m.
The sketch was released to
area media Friday to assist
with the investigation.
Authorities are asking anyone with information aboul
this robbery. or any uther
ongoing investigations, to contact the sheriff's oftice anonymous tip line at (740) 4466555, or log on to the Web site
at www.galliasher-ift.. org.

INSIDE ·
• Agro~errorism, another
growing concern . See
PageA2
• W.Va. man contracts
hantavirus See Page A2
• Community calendars
See PageA3

A s,oft but steady rainfall
didn't stop festivities at
the Chester Courthouse
and commons Saturday,
for the first full day of
activities surrounding
Ohio's oldest standing
courthouse. History came
alive with demonstrations,
displays and presentations, (!nd a number of
contests. Carl Circle
(above). a marbles champion from his Racine childhood, was in charge of a
marbles tournament for
youngsters, many of whom
had never played the old
game before. Period cos.tumes were plentiful, too,
and Pam Schatz and
Wendy Hannum were
among those who donned
long dresses and colorful
hats for the day. A 10K
Volkswalk is scheduled tor
Sunday morning. (Brian J.
Reed)

WEATHER
Chance of rain, HI: 808, Low: 80s

Details on Page A6

INDEX
4 SEcnONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town
A.3
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D3
insert
Comics
Down on the Farm
A.2.
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
B1
Sports
A6
Weather
© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

.I

Animal ~helter changes hours of operation
Bv

closed Wednesday and
Sunday. It will be open
Monday,
Tuesday,
POINT
PLEASANT, Thursday, Friday
and
W.Va.· - High volume of Saturday from I to 4 p.m.
The shelter was open
dogs and cats in addition to
financial constraints have Monday through Saturday
prompted new hours of . at the same hours, but cutoperation for the Mason backs caused by a tax error
County Animal Shelter.
affecting revenues collected
Effecti,ve this . coming by the county have necessiweek, the shelter will be tated
the
shelter 's
KEVIN KELLY

_KKELLY@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

)

Wednesday closing, County
Administrator John Gerlach
said.
Addit,ionally, the night
drop pen, allowing people to
leave animals at the shelter
when it's not in operation.
will be eliminated.
Because
it's
widely
known the .shelter is affiliatPiease see Shelter, AS

..

The nearly 3,000 feet of walking track at the Star Mill Park in
Racine was blacktopped last week. Here Wayne Angels, an
employee of contractor Myers Paving, talks to, from left, Racine
Village Council member Charlotte · Wamsley, clerk-treasurer
Dave Spencer, and Councilman Bob Beegle. (Charlene Hoeflich)

-Walking track now paved
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

The chipped and sealed surface of the track, built in
1989. was falling apart and
RACINE Star Mill 1.meven, making it impossible
Park's walking track • in for anyone unsteady on their
Racine just got a little nicer.
feet or in a wheelchair to use it,
Friday. the nearly 3.000 according to village officials.
feet of the track which goes
·'With the blacktopping, we
around the park and along the solve that problem and make
river was paved.
it available to everyone," said
The work done by Myers Dave Spencer, clerk-treasurer
Paving of Henderson, W.Va .. of the village.
was paid for by the Village of
Spencer said that Mayor
Racine with the help of a Scott Hill and council had
$15.250 NatureWorks grant been concerned about the
from the Ohio Department of condition of the track for a
Natura). Resources . Total cost
Please see Track. AS
of the project was $:22.000.

�. '

6tnba, lim~ ·itnttntl

DOWN· ON THE

EXTENSION CORNER

Agroterrori~m,

FARM

PageA2
Sunday, July tS, 2004

w.va~

'

Community
events

be a clothing bag sale at 7:30 p.m., second Thursday
Outreach of ea~h month at St. Louis
Thurmao- Vega
Center. from I0 a.m. - 2 Catholic Church Hall.
p.m., Thursdays and Fridays
GALLIPOLIS - .Choose
in Jt1ly and August.
to Lose Diet Club meets 9
1\londny. July 19
VINTON - Huntington
GALLIPOLIS - Friday a.ll\, each Tuesday at Grace
Grange #7.ll will hold its ~reg - Morning Coffee meetings to Un ited Meth0dist Church.
ular meeting. 7:30. p.m .. with 4iscuss community events Use Cedar Street entrance.
rt'fr~&gt;hme nt s.
will now be held at 8 a:m.
GALLIPOLIS - French
TUesday, July 20
each Friday at the Bossard City Barbershop Chorus pracGALLIPOLIS - Free TB · Memorial Library.
tice, 7:30 p.m. every Tuesday
skin tests. +---6 p.m.. at the G&lt;~lia
CHESHIR E Ci ti ~ens at Grace United Methodist
County Health Depanment, 499 Against Pollution (CA P) has Church. Guests welcome .
Jac~"'n Pike Rd.
its monthly meetings at the
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Wednesday, .Julv 21
Gallco Workshop building. Hospice Gallia
County
RIO GRANDE _ · The north of Cheshire on Ohio 7, Dinner with Friends, meets 6
Galli a- Vinton ESC Governing the last Monday of every p.m.. second Thursday of
Roard will hold its regular month starting at 7 p.m .. each month at Golden Corral
monthl y meetin ~ al 5 p.m. Anyone with concerns are in Gallipolis. For information,
The mcetin~ will be hdd at 1he encouraged to attend. For 446-5074.
ESC Office located in room more information. call (740)
CHESHIRE
Gallia
13 1. WtlOd llall, University of .167-7492.
County Board of Mental
Ri o Grande campus.
GALLIPOLIS
The Retardation/Developmental
Gallia
County
Animal Disabilities meets the third
Thursday, .July ~2
RIO GRANDE _. Gallia Welfare League meets the Tuesday of each month , 4
Cowny Republican Pany corn third Monday of each month p.m., at Guiding Hand
ma't and Meet the Candidates at 7 p.m. at St. Peter's School.
l Evans Epi scopal Ch urch. Anyone
THURMAN - Thurmanll '.oht
~ . "&lt; p.m. at B01
· Shcltcrhouse. Na'ncv Hollister interested may attend. For Vega Parish Thrift Store open
of Marietta will spe;1k.
info call 441 -16-l7
10 a.m . to 5 p.m. Thursday
GALI.IPOUS Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - . Gall ia and .Friday. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Coumy Heal th Depanment will County Commi ssioners meet Saturday. Clothing anp
have ext~ndcd hours, .J---6 p.m.. every Thursday, 9 a.m., Galli a household goods avai lable.
lor TB skin tests to be read. free Coumy Counhouse.
CAD MUS
Walnut
pregnancy tests. free hlood presGALLIPOLIS
The Township Crime Watch meets
sure checks and free immuniza- Gallia
County
Airport the second Monday of each
tinn,. Children requiring immu- Authority Board meets at month at 7 p.m. at the old
ni;ations must be accompanied 6:30 p.m .. on the .first Cadmus 'schoolhouse.
b) a legal gumtlian and bting a Monday of ead1 month at the
CENTERVILLE
c·uiTent immuni 7 ation record.
Airport term inal building.
Raccoon Town ship Crime
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Watch meets the .second
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Tuesday of each month at 7
Sensibly) meets each Monday p.m. at the old Centerville
at 6 p.m. at the Sycamore. school.
RIO GRANDE Rio Rranch of Hol zer Clini c with
GALLIA Greenfield
Grande High School Class of weigh-in starting at 5:30p.m. Town ship Crime Watch meets
1954 will hold their 50 year
GALLIPOLIS
Bold the fourth Tuesday of each
reu ni.on. 6 p.m .. July 17, at the Directions Inc, social group . month at 7 p.m. at the fire staDown Under Restaurant. Call meets 3 to 7 p.m. eac h tion.
446-0115lor more inlonmtion . Tue sday 1.11 The Cellar at
GALLLIPOLIS The
M. J. Grace United Methodist "Old and New" quilters meet
GALLIPOLIS Clary family reunion , 10 a.m. Church, 600 Second Ave.
from 1-3 p.m . the fourth
till dark. Jul y- 18 a.t 0.0.' GALLIPOLIS
Mid- thursday of every month at
Mcintyre Park. Shelter House Ohio Valley Radio Club Inc. St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
I, Wild Turkey.
meets 8 a.m. first Saturday of Anyone
interested
may
.,
GALLIPOLIS - The J.H. each month in basement of attend.
Sheets family reunion will be G~llia County 911 Center on
POMEROY
Holzer
held at noon, Jul y 18 at the Ohio 160. Licensed amateur Hospi ce · Meigs County
Northup Bapt ist Church.
radi o operators and interested Dinner ,with Friends first
RIO
GRANDE
- parties invited. For informa- Thursday of every month. 6
Reservations are due for the tion, call 446-4193.
p.m., at Craw's Re staurant .
.. Fun Group" of Rio Grande
GALLIPOLIS
GALLIPOLIS - Ho-lzer
High School reunion. Send to: Gallipollis Rotary Cl(Jh meets Hospice Gallia
County.
Putty Forgey, Box 162, 20 Lake 7 a:m. each Tuesday at Holzer Dinner with Friends second
Dr.. Rio Grande, Ohio 45674. Clinic doetor's dining room. Thursday of every month. 6
For more information, call
GALLIPOLIS -. Gallia p.m., at Golden Corral.
(740) 245-5484 after 5 p.m.
County
Chamber
of
GALLIPOLIS- American
Commerce coffee and discus- Legion Post 27 meets on the
sion group meets 8 a.m. each first and third Monday s of
Friday at Holzer Medical each month at 7:30 p.m.
Center.
Dinner on first monday
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia begins at 6:30p.m.
THURMAN - There will County Right to Life meets
GALLIPOLIS
- The

Reunions

growers requested to watch and report

man .contracts hantavirus

Now is the time to check
.for corn rootworm injury
'

Regular
meetings

RIO

•

F:rench City Treble Makers,
barbershop chorus, meets
every Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.,at
Grace United Methodist
Church. Accepting new members . . For info, call Hugh
Graham at (740)446-1304.
GALLIPOLIS - F &amp; AM
Lodge meets the first
Thursday of each month . at
7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Veteran's Service
Commission meet s on the
second Tuesd.ay of each
month at 4 p.m.
RIO GRANDE - The
Village of Rio Grande regular
Council meeting is help the
second Tuesday of each
month at 6:30 p.m.
EUREKA .- Gallia Lodge
469 F&amp;AM meets every third
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ·
RODNEY
MOPS
(Mothers
of
Preschoolers)meets 10 a.m.
on the tirst Tuesday -of each
month at Rodney Pike Church
of God. Child care provided.
For inform ation call (740)
245-95 18.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Hospice's Gallia County
Dinner with friends,' held 6
p.m. , on the second Tuesday
of each month at the Golden
Corral Restaurant, Gallipolis. ·
For more information. call
(740)446-5074.

Card showers
GALLIPOLIS
Faye
Rees will celebrate her 92nd
birthday July 21. Cards may
be sent to her at Wyngate, 300
Briarwood Drive, Gallipolis.
OH 45631 .
GALLIPOLIS - Varney
Faye Clendenin c\!lebrated
her 98th birthday July 13 .
Cards may be sent to her at 96
Court St., Gallipolis, OH
45631.
THURMAN - Get well
card shower for Roy Moses.
Cards may be sent to Box. 44 .
Thurman, OH 45685.

Sunday, July 18, 2004

Perfectionist dad makes
life perfectly miserable
DEAR ABBY: I have been
five years to a man I
truly love. The problem is. ·
he's a ·'neat freak .'' and it's
destroying our marriage.
I work full time. commute
about I00 miles a day, rai'e
two children wlJh whom I
·spend a lot of tune, cook a
homemade dinner almost every
night. and keep the house
clean. It is never enough for
him. I walk on eggshells u-ying
10 keep the hou.&gt;e according tn
his ~tandards and let my children be children and have fun.
If the kids are going to have
friend' ovemight. I make sure
it 's on a night wh~.n he' ll be
~()ne . Our children can ·t go
barefoot in the yard. and our ,
shoes must be removed at the
door and kept in perfect alignment. If the children cat cookies at the kitchen table, he
complains about the crumbs.
· He was gone thi' weekend.
The children and I cle;uted the
house, picked lemons lium our
trees and baked him a homemade
pie. and prepared a nice dinner lor
him When he got home :ul he
did wa~ yell because someone
had tmcked mud m1 the pore(). He
never even said hello. Mv 3-ycarold kept saying. "Daddy, we
made you a pie and cooked sup·pcr,.. but he wouldn't stop griping.
Please help . Divorce is not
an option because it would
destroy the children. How
can I get him to realize that
his obsessive-compulsive disorder is hurting our fami ly"'
He \hinks it is normal. -AT
MY WIT'S END IN TEXAS
DEAR WIT'S END: You r
hu sband's behavior ·is "normal" - for him. It won't
change until you realize that
the only thing more destructive to a child than divorce is
trying io please a sick parent
who JS impossible to please.
For their sakes, if not for
yours, DEMAND that your
husband consult a therapist
about his problem. Thankfully,
it is one that's treatable.
Please don't wait · any
marri~d

Dear

Abby

. "

Jon1!er to.

..

~!,\crt vollr..,~lf.

Do

not" back du1111. 'Wh en a 3yeai-oltl can recogn i;c that
your hu,band \ bcha1 ior
c..loe ~, n ' t ma~c :-.~n~e. j( ,

time

to draw the line.

DEAR

ABBY:

Ewrv

Wedne..,U~'Y I gn to a teen fliP~

hop cia" to dance and huv~
fun. On one nf those ncc·a, inn,.
mv friend . ..Tr&lt;~ c Y·· c·.,me tu
class cry mg. My hie ncb and r
asked her whJt wa~

\\TUI1!! ~md

she said her dad had hit he-r. We
asked her wh\. and she ' aid il
was

lxcau~e ·~he

was on lhe

phone lllO long. She ' h"'' cd u'
the bnases on her .am1s and
Ieos. lltey looked 1ef\ h&lt;1d. ·
'i told Tracy ' he cou ld come•
home with me and she said.
"No thanks. I'm tine:· This
week. she didn' t makt•. it tn
dance da" . .J r she ' bows up,
with brui-.e&gt; a£rain. should I
miJke 11er l·omc-.. .honK' \\ ith me:
und call th~ police·! Plea,c..
Abby. I don't ll'arH Tracy to get
hurt anymore. - SAD AND
CONFUSED IN SAT\ DIEGO
LJEAR SAD AND · CONFUSED: If it h"j)P'"'' a~ain .
~et the dru1ce tear 1~r nwnTYeLI ..
11 i\ important Jhat an adult·

document what i.&lt; happening.and t eacher~ me required by

law to report abuse. You are a
caring friend, and Tracy is ,
lucky to have y·ou. II i, noL
uml\ual for an abuse 1·ictim tu
protect her (or his) abu ~er. The.
victim may be afraid thaf
speaking out \vill :

L";.tU~e

the .

abuse to escalate. 11 Tracy doe&gt;
not retum to class. a r~p011 can
be 111ade hy calling Chi ldHelp_
U .SA The phone nu n)her is'
(800) -l22--1-b 3.

Chevv Box Truck

E-mail community calendar items to news@mydailytribune.com.
Fax
announcements to 446-3008.
Mail items to 825 Third Ave;,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631.
Announcements may also be
dropped off at the Tribune

office.

Meigs CountY calendar

Report questions USDA s meat recall tracking

Livestock report

AROUND TOWN

Gallia County calendar

another growing concern

Pepper and tomato growoperations that cou ld be in terrorism relating to aniAs recent talks in
ers. Inspect and scout your
sources for spreading animal mal feeding operations, enviWa~hington
. surround
plants and fruit for the pres•
diseases.
like foot·and mouth. ronmental targets, GMOs,
weap&lt;Jns of mass destruction
ence of Beet Armyworm lar• Food processing facili- test plots. And because the se
and homeland security vae.
ties
and packing plants that mainly deal with the destrucjust
so
we
don't
run
out
of
Ohio State University
could
be infiltrated an~ a tion of property, many peothings
to
worry
about
.Hal
Extension
Entomology ·
Robert
toxin introduced ple don't consider them terpotential
another growing concern is
Specialist Celeste Welty has
Kneen
into the food supply.
the concept of agroterrorism.
Pawelek
rorist acts. Since 9/i I. I think
issued an alert due to the
One
"
"
hotoxin
(the
It
is
a
serious
matter,
since
many are looking at the se
presence of Beet Armywonn
organisJtlliJat
causes
botulism,
it
involves
biosecurity
issues
acts
with more scrutiny and
moths being captured in
often
usea
in
cosmetic
surgery)
with
our
water,
air
and
·
food
security has tightened up .
•insect traps in Clark, Greene
can be used to ki II hundreds of
supply.
In' the past six years, there .
and Franklin counties over to my office at 992-6696.
thousands
of
people
.
.
It
should
be
a
concern
agroterronstic acts may be
the past two weeks.
Give your name, address,
11JeSe are just some of the have been 600 incidents of
beyond the acts of terrorism used to get people's attention .
Meigs County traps just phone number and plant
domestic terrorism acts in agriof Sept. 11.
The .scary one is ail eco- things that terrorists would go for. culture, from the de~truction of
caught their first moths (only· affected.
Foot and mouth disease The United States. has not nomic motivation, such ~as
three) this past week.
. Visit our Vegnet web site
well as other contagious scientific labs, experimental
as
had
any
international
making a profit off the manipBeet Armyworm damage http://vegnet.osu.edu to tolagroterrorism attacks thus ulation of the futures market. viral diseases - only has to test plots and university agrioccurs p.rimarily at two sites low the pest's activity.
far: However. there have The economic impact it be introduced into a small cultural research offices to the
on plants - top young leaves
•••
been many in~ident~ of would have on the ·nation and population of animals to targeting of farming opemtions.
and the fruit. The adult
Homeowners
growing . agroterrorism by homeThe weird pan about this is
the ease in which it could be spread rapidly.
moths lay . their eggs on the tomatoes have been calling
these
acts of violem:e and intim- .
The key to this is to be
grow.n terrorists who seek to intlicted could be disastrous.
host plants. Upon hatching the office to complain about
Vigilance can be idation often hurt the very peowreak havoc with the
There are countless targets observant.
these worms are aggressive their. tomatoes having a black
on·
e
of
the
most effective ple that these protestors say they
nation's food supply.
that terrorists can choose
eaters . They graze on the top rotten area at the base .
I define terronsm as polit- front Some areas of agricul- deterrents .
are trying to help. Agricultural
leaves of the plant or eat their
This is a physiological disical acts involving either ture that may be considered
It would be much cheaper technology has done a great serway into the flesh of the fruit. order called Blossom-End
destruction of property or targets of opportunity include: and easier to introduce foot vice to consumers and to·
Welty has found about 20 Rot. As the fruit was developpeople or both. There are
• Chemicals, such as fertil- and mouth here and would mankind and it's had a magnifipercent of her test plot ing, insufficient calcium was
many · reasons people might izers or pesticides, which devastate the economy. Since cent economic payoft·. .
banana type peppers to have able to be transported into the
want to mess with our agri- could be developed into ihe Sept. II, terrorist attacks
The battle to feed humanisi~ns of dama~e near the fruit, causing a weakening in
and subsequent potential ty is not over and when techculture industry. Animal explosives.
mtddle ol the frutt.
·
the development of the tomarights activists have openly · • Cropdusters or light threats, Americans appear to nology is destroyed. that
Bell-shaped peppers in the to fruit cell walls: This weaksaid they hope foot and planes that could be stolen be grasping a better undertest plots are so far worm- ened area allows diseases to ·
mouth disease comes to the and used to disperse chemi- standing of what terrorism is. process is halted, and it can
free. Some foliage damage on .enter the fruit and cause the
Many people do not realize often .be damaging .to the
United States . because it cal or biological agents.
tomatoes has .been noticed in blackening bottoms of the
very people that protestors
would hurt only those in the
• Agribusinesses that that the overwhelming . are trying to serve.
Clark County on the upper- tomato, eggplant or pepper
animal industry.
stockpile chemicals or sources of terrorism in agrimost leaves. The worm eats fruit. The calcium deficiency
(Robert Pawelek is the
culture have been domestic
' Also. there is considerable equipment.
the leaf foliage, but avoids results from· low calcium levGallia Counry Exrension
opposition to geneiically
• Feedlots or confinement - not international, not al- Agent.)
eating the veins in the leaves. els in the soil. excessive
Qaeda - primarily engaged
modified agriculture, and ·
This gives the leaf a tattered moisture ·fluctuations, unbalor windowpane appearance.
anced nutrient levels and
The worm is less thim one drought stress.
inch ifi length, pale green in
Unfortunately, very little
color with a white or dark may be done to help this
With this information we might be
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County University are attempting to obtain
stripe.Neither fruit nor leaf year's crop.
information
on
disease
levels
from
varable
to obtain a crisis exemption for a
Extension
office
is
requesting
that
damage has been noticed in
•••
and
requests
help
.
With
particular
fungicide for our growe~s in
ious
locations
tobacco farmers report any increased
our area because of our late
Before the end of summer,
levels of Frog eye leaf spot, Target spot this information they may be· able to Ohto. However, l!mmg will be cnttcal.
and low moth population. have vour soil tested for calGrowers may contact the1r respective
or
Blue Mold that you may be observ- request a special crisis or emergency
Homeowners will have io cium ·availability and soil pH
for
fungicide
applications
if,
county
extension oftices to report findexemption
ing now or that develops as the season
, pick off the worms.
(should be near 6.5 pH ). Use
and only if, the disease pressure ings. Individual grower.reports wtll be
progresses.
·
Commercial growers need a majority of nitrate form of
kept completely confidential.
Pathologists with The Ohio State becomes high enough ,
. to use SpinTor (on young nitrogen instead of ammoni- .
wormsonly), Av~~t~nt, Intrepid . cal forms (like Urea). Irrigate
(formally
eonfirm) . or your garden when dry and
Proclaim. Pyrethroids and apply mulch to maintain an
other insecticides are not even moisture level in your
effective on this insect. The garden.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
Beet Armyworm does not
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. · 1980s but it was not diag- rodent excrement from a should always take precauover-winter in Ohio, but County Agriculture · and
(AP) -A West Virginia man nosed as hantavirus nntil cabin located in Randolph tions when coming in conmigrate:; into our area a.s a Natural Resources Extension
has been hospitalized with years later, said Dr. Jane County" and health officials tact with rodents."
Ohio
State
moth from the south. If you Educator.
Through July '6. the CDC
hantavirus pulmonary syn- Rooney, state pub! ic health believe that was how he was
see damage, please report it University Extension.)
·
exposed to the virus.
had conlirmed 366 cases in the
drome disease, the tirst con- veterinarian.
The virus is passed to
There is · no specific treat- U.S. since the virus was first
firmed case in the Mountain
State since the disease was humans who breathe in par- ment for hantavirus pul- recognized in the Four
first recognized in the United ticles of urine or feces from monary ~mptom . di sease, Corners Area -of Arizona,
States II years ago, the state infected rodents. Early which is caused by a family of Colorado, New Mexico and
Department of Health and symptoms include fever and hantaviruses, the agency said. Utal1 in 1993. Thuty-eight per- ·
Hum~n Resources said Friday.
muscle aches, possibly with
"Hantavirus disease is not cent of the victims have died.
The
man
·
w
as
being
treated
chills,
.
h
eadaches,
nausea
or
transmitted
from person to
There have been hanEisley along with Ron
Bv .ADAM CAHILL
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday at a Morgantown hos- vomiting, abdominal pain person and there does not tavirus cases reported in 31
Hammo,nd,
Ohio
State
pital, the DHHR said. His and coughing. Symptoms appear to be an ongoing risk states. Cases also have been
University
Entomologist,
name
and condition·were not develop one to six weeks to public health," the agency · reported in Argentina,
. COLUMBUS - Damage sugges.t the following method
after exposure. ·
to corn roots by rootwonn to check for-wotworm injury:
released.
said.
Bolivia, Br'azi l, Canada,
• Carefully dig plants larval feeding may occur
Another West Virginhin
"Cases of hantavirus dis- Chile, Panama, Paraguay
The DHHR said the man
when corn follows corn and don't pull them - taking as
contracted the disease in the "has a· history of c(eaning ease are rare but people and Uruguay. ·
an insecticide treatment has much soil as possible , with
not been applied.
the plaf!l.
According to Bruce Eisley,
• Carefully remove as
research associate for Ohio much soil as possible from
State University Extension the plant without damaging
Entomology, any Ohio corn the roots and also look for
WASHINGTON (AP) found a floor drain har- match the ambunt of prod- know their cu.stomers and
field, treated or not, should
Recalls of tainted meat may bored listeria of a strain that uct held by a distributor how · much product they
be checked for rootworm lar- . any larvae that might still be
in the soil or on the roots.
not get as much product off was blam~d in a food poi- with the amount shipped ship, · Mucklow said. The
val .feeding injury plus ·corn Rootwonn larvae are white,
the
market
as
the soning_ outbreak that left from the plant.
following soybeans· should
FSIS compliance officers
Agriculture Department has eight people dead and sickAfter the Wampler Foods "are really .not knowledgealso be checked if first year about 1/2 inch in length when
reported, an agency audit ened about 45 others start~ case, the FSIS revised its
com rootworm is suspected full grown with a brown head
in the field.
and brbwn plate on the tail.
has found.
ing in July 2002.
methods for tracking the able in the details of every
"Now is the best time to
• If there is still soil on the
The strain of listeria also effectiveness of recalls. company's distribution sysThe . Food Safety and
check for damage because roots you can either.soak the
Inspection Service's "con- had been found at a\}other ''FSIS has made substantial tem," and ·some probably
larval· feeding damage has root system in a bucket to ·
clusions regarding the plant, J.L. Foods Co. in changes to its recall are not good at creating the
occurred by this time," said loosen this remaining soil or
effectiveness of food safety Camden, N.J. The govern- process, strel)gthened veri- audit trails, she said.
JOisley. ."The emergence of ypu can spray the root system
recal.ls may be based on ment said product samples fication activities, · and
At the National Chicken
new adults indicates that Iar- with a hose to remove the
inaccurate or incomplete from various days of established clearer lines of Council, another trade
val feeding injury is over."
remaining soil.
information," the report Wampler Foods production authority," the agency's act- group, spokesman Richard
Eisley also said if damage
• After the soil ·has been
said.
ing director, · Dr. · Barbara · Lobb said he could not
did not show the bacteria.'
does occur, root regeneration removed, check the roots for
The USDA inspector genIn the end, Pilgrim's Masters, ·said Thursday in a judge the effectiveness of
may. occur in some hybrids, feeding injury, either roots
eral's office examined one Pride · reported recovery of statement.
FSIS officials in , handling
·making it more difficult to chewed back to the stalk or : ·or the largest recalls in his- more than 5.5 million
The , in spector general's their own paperwork on the
detect rootworm larval i{ljury. tunneling iQ the roots.
tory, 27.4 million pounds of pounds of product, and the office said the revisions do
processed deli poultry from recall was terminated in not go far enough in mak- poultry recall. But he said
62
a Wampler Foods plant in July i003 after the food ing sure the FSIS knows the current recall system is
Franconia, Pa., in 2002. safety agency determined what happens to recalled effective because compaMediurri!Lean: 50-55
The recall, ordered by that the effort . had been product. . An
FSIS nies "know where .their ·
GALLIPOLIS - The folThiivLight: 42-48
Wampler Foods' owner, effective.
spokesman, Steve ~ohen , product is, and if it needs to
lowing results are from the Jtlly
Pilgrim's
Pride,
was
moniThe
inspector
general's
.
Bulls:
70-78
said the agency is still be recalled .or held, they do
14 auction at United Producers,
.
tored
by
the
department's
office said there were holes implementing its r,evisions so:·
Inc.
Back to the Farm
FSIS.
'
in the records on which the and the changes address the · A consumer advocate
' Feeder Cattle
Cow/Calf Pairs $525-980;
FSIS
responded
that
The
agency
based its determina- concerns.
countered that the system is
Ml and L1 Steers Heifers
it
has
improved
its
system
tion.
The
office
examined
"It
's
an
imperfect
system,
Bred Cows. $365-835; Baby
. ' 275-415 115-lffi 105-150
part of the problem .
for
tracking
the
effe-ctjve582
effectiveness
check
am
impressed
by'
how
but
I
425-525 105-125 105-120
"The companies are
Calves $20-320; Goats $21ness of recalls. And meat forms, and found dis,crep- well it actually works," said
550-625 I00-115 95-112
under
no legal obligation to
industry officials said the ancies in 389.
q3; Lambs $85-105; Hogs
Rosemary Mucklow, a·
. 650-725 90-105 85-95
industry does a good job of
"We attributed this high spokeswoman for the provide this information to
750-850 85-92 75-88
$44-53
getting the product back. error rate to the careless National Meat Association, USDA, and that probably
·· Fed Cattle
Upcoming Specials
But a Consumer advocate approach FSIS compliance a . trade group for meat leads to many of the gaps in
Steers Heifers
said problems in gathering officers and supervisory processors. She said her' the data," said Caroline
Ohio approved feeder calf
80-84
Choice 80-84
data are built into the sys- personnel took in oversee- group's members do not Smith DeWaal. head of
Select 70-80 70-80
sale, 10 a.m., July 21. Beef
tem.
ing the recall," the report process poultry.
food safety for the Center
mobile
available
to
answer
In
the
Wampler
Foods
said.
It
cited
instances
in
funcThe
recall
system
for Science in the PubliC
Cows
case,
government
officials
which . the '?fficials did not tions because companies Interest.
Well Muscled/Fleshed: 55- questions.

Tob~cco

iunbap 'Otimes -ientinti

PageA3

Clubs and
organizations .
'

Monday, July 19
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Youth football' and
cheerleading s ignup will be
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday
at the Tuppers Plains ball.
field . The cost is $35. Those
signing up must provide
their birth cenificates.
CHESTER Pomeroy
Chapter 186. Order of
Eastern Star, will meet at ·
6:30 p.m. for a social hour at
the Shade Ri ver Lodge hl1ll at
Chester. Light refreshments
will be served and scholarships wi ll be presented. The
regular meeting will follow at
7:30 p.m.
Thesday, July 20
MIDDLEPORT - BrooksGmnt Camp Sons of Union
Veterans and Maj. Daniel
M'Cook Circle Ladies of the
GAR. will meet at 7:15 p.m.
in the RivertJend Arts Council

Building in Middleport. Greg
Michael of Huntingtm\ will
speak on "Our Confederate
Cousins."

Reunions

from 6:30 to 9 p.m. July 1923 at the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church. Classes will
be held for children, nursery
to teens. For more information call 742-2743.
POMEROY
Zion
Church of Christ Bible .
school , 6:30 to 8:45 each
evening through July 25. ·

Sunday, July 18
ALFRED - The Arthur
and Nelson Wa"on reunion
will be held ·at noon at the
Woodie Grove, home of Jim
and Debbie Wat son at
Monday, July 19
Alfred. Take a covered dish,
REEDSVILLE
dinnerware and drinks.
Office staff
Tuberculosis
Saturday, July 24
will
be
at
Olive
Township
ALBANY ·
The
Staneart family reunion will Fire Department. 4: 30 to 6
be held at Lake Snowden at ·p.m., to administer TB skin
the Meadows Shelter House ·tests. Staff will return from
beginning at noon. Those 4:30 to 5:30p.m. on July 21
attending are to take a pic- to , read tests. Information at
992-3722.
nic lunch and lawn chair.

Other events

Church services
Monday, July 19
RUTLAND - Vacation
Bible school will be held

Income Tax Course

ENROLL TODAY!
Take the Jackson Hewitt Income Tax
Course 'and become a tax preparer!
Gel mort oot of taxes thin-just 1 refund by enrolling in the Jadtson Hewi~
Income Ta• Coulll!. Our qualified in511l1Ctoll wijf te&lt;Kh you income' tax

p&lt;ti)iration. Vou could eam eXIra money or even begin a nrw rart'er •
We offrr a professionil wor1l l'Ovironm.nl w1th flexible """" to meet
your sdledulf. Whtthef i(s p.trt time or lull nme ~ up to you.
Enroll today, succeed tomorrow/ Ca/1 ·1-800-234-10401

MOll o/fim orr intkptndr:mly ~ ond aptrar&lt;d. 'Conlpktion ol tlus roorse IS
fltirf)(r on otr.&lt; noru
Visit

Tuesday, July 20
POMEROY - A childhood immunization clinic
will be held from 9 to II
a.m and I to 3 p.m. Tuesday
at the Meigs County Health
Department. Parents are to
take shot records .. Children
must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. Take
medical cards if available.

4X4,

Automatic

2 wheel drive, Auto . Air

~~s8,495
'02 GMC SJerra Ext. Cab

·oa GMC Envov SlE

Support Groups
Thursday, July 22
POMEROY
The
Caring and sharing support
Group will meet at I p.m.
adt the Meigs Senior Center.
The topic will be on
Alzheimers,
Difficult
Behaviors conducted by
Lenora Leilheit.

MEIGS t:HJtMBBR
ol t:DMM£Rt:E
St:UMB£E ·

J·l
3 / 4 Ton, 6000 VB, Auto. Heavy
Duty, l Wheel D•ive. Lo•ded Up!
Local One Owner

~s2o 900
'00 GMC Sonoma

ftarslfay laly BBnd
Blnrslde Boll
CDUI'BII .

Four P£ayer ftlams
Sellll-Bilnll Draw
$60 Per Player
Includes fHd and Beverage
1:00PM Tee-on

.priz:es!

lunch at Noon

Bal•ln-One
New Car !Jr 7ruck
Closast to tbe Pin
Longest Drive
Club Roue Cradl.t lor 1st,
2nd&amp; 3rd ·

Call Jenny at 992"5005 For More ln}ormation!

135Pinest.
818160
GalliPOlis. Ohio

ll40J 446-2532
owned ancl

Cmter"

-.._,

�.~

........ _ .

.. .

.

OPINION.
The price.offreedom

.·6uabar tttrntt5 -ittttfnel ··

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446:-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'

..

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Diane Hill
Controller

Jeremy Schneider
Managing Editor

Lerrers 10 the editor are ll'elcome.. The\' should be less rhan
300 words. All /errers are subject 10 ~diting and mu.&lt;t be
signed tmd inclL4de adllress and telephone number. No
unsigned lerrers will be published. Letters should be in good
taste, addressing issues, not pers01wlities.
The opinions expres!'ied in the column below are the conJensus of the Ohio Vallev Publishing Co. s editorial board,
'unless othenvise noted.

STATE

VIEW

Image
MIBs image just doesn't improve
Herald-Star, Steuben,;ille:
Major League Baseball's image problems just don ' t
improve.
.
Faced with questions since tHe 1980s about escalatmg
salaries, drug abuse. the cost of new ballparks, labor problems
and steroid usage, the league has an act that needs to be
cleaned up.
.
But the league often adds to its own woes by sticking to its
rules.
Take the case of Keith Foulke. The Boston Red Sox reliever had an American !lag put on his baseball cap as a way to
support the servicemen and women serving overseas.
The league's labor agreement says players cannot make per. sonal changes to uniforms.
·
..
,
: We'd agree that to maintain the proper look of a baseball
' team that the uniforms must all be the same.
. Why not make the flag pan of every uniform on every
team? It might just make baseball get at least one streak off tts
. tarnished image . '

NATIONAL

A recent poll taken in
Canada says that 40 percent
of Canadian
teenagers
bcH1:ve the United States is
an "evil " country. Among ·
French-Canadian tee ns, the
Bill
number rises to 64 percent.
O'Reilly
· Thi\ is. of course; hard to
· believe and must be laid
right on the doorstep of the
vicio usly
anti often
American Canadian. pre ss, undeniable fact: The United
as well as irrespons ible edu· ·States of America has set
cawrs supposedl y teaching more people free than any
Canadian kids about th e other country in the history
worill·.
of mankind. We all know
And all over the world. about World War II, but
Ame rica is getting slmogh- here 's wh~t' s happened
tered in the arena of public recently :
- In Eastern Europe, the
opinion . Therefore. what can
we ex pect from chiluten '! policies of Ronald Reagan
When gover nment -cfunded led to the freeing of at least
press agencies like the BBC 122 million people from
Canadian Soviet domination.
and
the . .
Broadcast ing Corporation . - More than 48 million
portray America as the South Koretms remain free
world's chief villain, there \ because of American protection.
Nearly 23 million
little anyone can do to balance the picture: The Fox Taiwanese -remain free
News Channel , for example, because of American protec.
isn't eve n . allowed in tion.
The
state
of
Israel
and
Canada.
So for the benefit of the 5.5 million Jews would be
Canadian kids and, indeed, crushed by it s enemies if not
·
children all over the world. I for American aid .
By
removing
the
brutal
am going to set the record
in
Iraq
and
straight right here in this col- regimes
Afghanistan
,
America
and
uonn. Let' s start with an

ing more despicable by the
moment. Michael Moore
and hi s acolytes hide behind
the "dissent" label, but they
are not dissenters, they're
destroyers. Moore has been
quoted as saying capitalism
is "diabolical" even as he
trucks his millions to the
bank. By the way, did you
know that associates of
Hezbollah want to help dis·
tribute Moore'.s movie in theMiddle East? What does that
tell you?
The truth is that America
is a great country striving to
protect itself in an ungrateful
and dangerous world. We,
the p'Qplc, have sacrificed
blood &lt;ind money so others
could have a chance in life . .
Yet many teenagers in
Canada are convinced we
are an evil nation. The powers-that-be in Canada should
be ashamed that their young
people are so ignorant,_but I
know
they
are
not.
Ignorance, you see, is most
often a contagious disease.
Veteran TV news anchor
Bill O 'Reilly is host of the
Fox News show "The
O'Reillv Factor" and author
of the .b~ok ''Who:, Looking
Out For You ?"
·

..

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llrinor • Gallipotis, OH
www.mydlllytrlbune.com
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Published every Sunday, 82S Third

Avenue , Gallipolis, 01-i 4~631.
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Member: The Associated Press,
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Virginia
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Association, and
the Ohio
Newspaper Association.

Po11m11tor: Send address cor·
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; L-------------~------------------------~
.
'

~Obituaries

Donald A.
Hartung

Clyde M•
Holcomb

'
': Donald A. Hartung. 54. of
"J&gt;omeroy, died unexpectedly
':Thursday, July 15, 2004, at
':'Pleasant Valley Hospital in
·' Point Pl easant, W.Va.
' He was 'born Feb . 5. 1950,
;' son of th~ late Don ald 0.
' Hartung and· Edna ·Maxine
· ·Frazier Ferguson. .
·
~ He was an activity director at
'' Lakin Hospital, and a member of
theMiddleportChurch ofChrist.
.; He was an active supporter of
·, the March of Dimes. a member
'' of American Legion Post No. 23
.' in Point Pleasant, and a graduate
:of Met'gs· Ht'gh School.

•• '

In addition to his parents,
· he was preceded in death by a
:&gt;s i.ster, Debbie Hartung, and
,
'•.hts grandparents.
·· He _Is sumved by a brother..
•· Mtcha ~ l (A ngie ) Dorst ot
" Athens, a SISter, Rosemary
:(Larry) Longwell of Te xas;
. ,two .noeces and th ree
'. nephews; and ~everal aunts,
uncles and cousms. .
,. Gravesode servt ces woll be I
, p.m. Tuesday, July 20, 2004, at
, Mtddleport Htll Cemetery. At
·,Mr. Hartung's reyue st. his
.. body wtll be cremated . No
"ca lling hours will be observed.
Arrangements are by the
· Fi sher Funeral Home in
r1: Mtddleport.
l~. Online condolences may be
sent to www.fisherfuneral&lt;

'.

Clyde M. Holcomb, 79 . of
West Jefferson, passed away
peacefully Thursday, Jul y 15 .
2004, at his resi dence, surrounded. by hi s loving family.
He was born June 19 . 1925 ,
in Huntington , w. Va .. son of
th e late Elmer and Myrtle
Sha"' Holcomb.
Clyde retired in 1989 from
the Anheuser-Busch Corp. of
Columbus, and served with
the Anti-Tank Company,
I45th Infantry Reg iment ,
37th Infantry Division in the
Paci fic Theater during World
.
,.,
nar 1,., He participated
in the
in~&lt;~s i on of Luzon in th e
Pht!Ipponc Isl and s and the hberatoon ot Manti a, ea rnong.
two Bronze Star medals for
bravery.
.
He was . a member ot the
West Jefferson Ame.ncan
Leg ion Post No. 20 I. and a
Iarmer member of the W~sl
Jefferson . Volu nteer Ftre
Depanment, where he served
as ass!stant choet. . .
..
He." survtved by ht s wole,
Phyll os G. Gardner Holcomb.
whom he married Jul y 2.
1949, in Ridgway, Pa. : two
so ns,
Steven
(Cy nthia)
Holcomb of Columbu s, and
Ronald (Robin) Holcomb of
Xenia: a daughter, Deborah
(Michael) . Douglas
of
Columbus; and nine grandchildren ,
Jame s
(Lori)

Holcomb. Bryan Holcomb.
Cl1ristina (C harles) Savage.
Libbv &lt;Michae l) Justice. ,
Adaoi1 Denman. Jenn ifer
(Kevin )
Bragg ,
Tyler
(Shirley) Oberle. Ashley
Oberle and Jonathan Obberle.
He is also survived y two .
stepgrandchi ldren, 10 greatgrandchildren and eight stepgreat-gra ndch ildre n; two sisters, Lilli an Saunders and
Annabelle ('Bob) Caldwell, all
of Gallipol is: and two brothers. Lee (Louella) Holcomb
o f Gallipo li s, and John
(LBof bbie ) G Holco mb
of
'\ ayednde,. a. h.
a Iliond tdo tds pahrebnts ,
11·e nwasFprece
e 10d eabt Y a
stster.
w 1 ranees. an a rot11er.
~~Ie~~es will be II a. m.
·Tuesli.ay. Jul y 20. 2004. in the
Rad er-McDonald
Funeral
Home, 1355 w. Main si ..
We st Jefferson. with Chapl ain
Larry Baker officiating.
Bmial will follow in the
Sunset Ceme tery at Galloway.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m. Monday, July 19.' 2004 .
Graveside mili tary services
wiII be conducted by the West
Jefferson Ame ri can Legion
nnu the VFW.
Men10 rial
co ntributions
may be made to the Odyssey
Health CMe, 643 2 E. Main
St. , Reynold sb urg. Ohio
4306R. or to the Jeffer son
Tow nship Fire Department ,
745 W. Main St.. West
Jefferson , Ohi o 4316.2.

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

£Deaths

~

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~,~----------------------------------------------------------------

Loretta Faye lmes
:- Loretta Faye lmes. 65, Prociorville, died Friday, Jqly 16. 2004, at her residence.
• . (\rrangements will be announced by the Hall Funera l Home, Proctorvill e.
,

_________________________________________________
~For the Record
,,

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

0Middleport
!·Police

' 8 ·---

c::::i!s

• Page As

Local Briefs

,

- ~home s.c om

probe stirs more problems

~unbaP ~lntt5 ·f;&gt;rntmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

-.------~~----------------~~~--~----------------~--~~

t.

VIEW

Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press:
: An internal investigation has confirmed that the Department
: :of Health and Human Services threatened to fire Medicare's
; chief actuary if he told Congress that the estimated cost of the
• prescription dl)lg bill was far higher than the White House
: was letting on.
•
: The probe_ said no criminal laws were broken. that
~ Medicare's then-chief official Thomas . Scully was within
: management rights in withholding the information and threat; ening to discipline chief actuary Richard Foster if he released
: it to Congress:
~ The .White House put the cost of the drug bill at $395 bit~ lion. Foster put the cost at $534 billion, maybe even as high
:: as $600 billion. If those figure s had been known in advance of
; the House vote, the drug bill would not have passed. Even at
: $395 billion, Congress had no way of paying for it. And some
.~ t!Vnk tanks believe the real I0-year cost may be something
'~ like twice that figure.
:, And what of Thomas Scully, the official who ordered the
: estimates suppressed? He's gone to work as a lobbyist for the
: drug companies that stand to profit from the costly new entitlement.

.. S'jlnday, July t8, 2004

Sunday, July 18, 2004

Answers
/lonu·.I'WO

.
•

PageA4

Britain have given almost 50
million people at least a shot
at some kind of self-determination. Also, the Amerlcandriven campaign against the
butcher Milosev ic. in the
Balkans saved the lives of
hundreds of thousands of
people. most of them
· Muslims .
-- America is sending $3
billion a year tp Africa to
combat the AIDS epidemic.
By comparison, Canada is
sending
$270
million ,
France a paltry $60 million.
And -d10se countries have
the nerve to ponray America
as a villain? How many
human beings has France
freed over the past 60 years?
The same question can be
a'ked of Canada. Yes, those
milions hltve helped the USA
on occasion, but they are drifting away trom reality now.
It 's no\ only Canadian~
and the French who are misg uid
about the USA,
there , also a fifth column in
Ameri ca itself. The "anarchists" are hoping to disrupt
the Republican convention
in New York City. Police
believe they will use violent
means to do so. And the verbal violence on display daily ·
by panisan fanatics is grow-

•

. ( . MIDDLEPORT -- A bur~,glary at the home of Helen
:;·Bodimer, 175 S. Second
'' Ave ., on Tuesday, July 13, is
~ under investigation by the
~ Middleport
Police
):Depanment.
~- Ofllcers said the residence
.) was forcibly entered. Keys
and some mi scellaneous
items were reported mi ssing.
. The department does not
have a suspep and the investigation is continuing. The
keys have been recovered.
~· In
other . · activity,
~~:Middleport officers:
·

• Investi gated the theft of a
bicycle, reported by Regina
Kime s at 130 S. Sixth Ave ..
· on )uly ll ' The bicyc le has
been recovered .
• Investigated ve hicles ·
being entered at the Kenneth
Wilcox res iden ce, 482 S . .
T!tird Ave.. and the Jeff
Peckham residence at 509 S.
Second Ave., al so on Jul y 13.
The department has arrested and charged Donald
Edwards of Pomeroy in connection with thi s incident'.
Edwards also had an Out·
standing warrant from Vinton
County and was transferred
there following his arraignment on the local charges in
Meigs County Court .

• Is ivestiga ting the theft of
change from a ve hicle owned
by Lean Littl e, n20 Laurel
St. , on July 13.
• Is investi gating the theft
of a pocket knife. two pocket
watches, an old Bible and
medication from the home of
Lloyd
Manl ey,
743
Sycamore St., on Hol y U .
• Is investigatin g several
te lemarketin g fra ud situations. The department warns
that when doin g bu siness
over the phone . be cautious
of high presstire sales that
demand ·mon ey upfront.
'·Remember, if it so unds
too good to be tru e. it probably is ,:' a spokesman for the .
department sa id .

Area choir
won't sing
Monday
POINT
PLEASANT.
W.W. -- The Maso n County
Area Choir will not · be
si nging at the New Have n
Camp· meeting on Monday,
July 19, due to a contlict in
scheduling .
The nex t rehearsal fur the
choi r is Monday. Aug . 2 at 7
p.m. at the Church of Chri st

In Christian Un ion in Point
Pleasant. All members are
reminded to attend and bring

tinns . throughout Maso n
County and sur•ounding
areas. There are no auditions
'
ITIUSIC.
or due,. Anyo ne wishing to
New members. age 16 and participate need only to
up. are ;tlway's welcome to attend the rehearsal. Initial
participate. ·
mu sic is provided for new
. The next ·gospel sing will . members. The choir is feabe Saturday, Aug. 21. at 7 tured at each monthly sing,
' p.m .. fpturing · Mercy, a
sponsored by the choi r.
local group, along' with. the
For n)ore . information,
Mason County Area Choir contact Carol Browning at
and others.
·
(304) 77:1-5689, or Pastor
The choi r is open to indi- Oenni s Weaver. director, at
vidual s of all ch urch affilia· (304) 675-5525.

.

Masons unveil new lodge
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
SJENKINS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

MASON , W.Va. - Clifton
Masonic Lodge 23 in Mason
was recently rebuilt in another location after the sale of
the old lodge.
The old lodge. which had
been in use for more than I00
years, was in severe need of
renovations, lodge officials
said. It was rented for several
years after the original lodge
burned down, and was eventually purchased.
The organization· concluded that it was necessary· to

pay extra to build a new Hussell said that several memlodge rather than spend the bers of the community had
amount of money needed to approached them during the
simply add new siding.
constni ction of the building to
To add the siding would inquire · about it, and several
ha ve cost more than $40.000, . did not know there was a'
and the entire building, Masonic lodge in Mason.
which is· significantly larger . "We are very proud of our
than the previous building. building," Lodge Master Bill
cost more than $150,000 .
The new building opened in Yoho said . ·' Attendance has
May. almost a year after con- picked up because of it, and
struc tion began. The interior: we've had more interest
was completed by members from the Community."
of the lodge, and to them. the
The building wa s open to
final res ult is worth the extra pubiic in specti on during
hard work and expenses.
Maso n··s Independence Day
Lodge
Secretary
Bill celebration on July 3.

Mother of girl injured in crash
that killed six sues two drivers
TOLEDO CAP) --· The
mother of a 13-year-olli girl
inju red in a four' vehicle
· crash that killed six peo ple
ir1 June is suing two of the
drivers and a trucking company.
Brandi Scott was riding
in a Cad ill ac Escalade
when a tractor-trailer hit it
head-on, sending it off a
bridge. The Escalade landed upside down in a creek,
anu everyone in the vehicle
except Scott died.
Scott 's mother. Michelle
of
Sterling
LeFlore
Heights , Mi ch. , is suing
Brian Woody, who authorities say triggere(i the cras h;.
the driver of the tractortrailer. Shawn Tuffelmire:
and his employe r. J.D.C.
Logistics
Inc.
of
Milwaukee .

The law suit was fil ed
Friday in Luc as County
Common Pleas Court. It
asks fo r more than $75,000
in compensati on .
·
The State Highway Patrol
says Woody, 28, of Toledo
started the c hain-reacti.on
collisioil when hi s sport
utility vehicle went left of
center on state Route 2 and
struck a trac tor-trai le r. cau sing the semi to hit 'Scott's
SUV and another car.
Those killed inc lu ded the
driver of th e Escalade.
Brandi Scott 's father Darryl
K. Scott, and fi ve other

passenge rs. Brandi . Scott
was tlown to a Toledo hospit al. A ho ~ pital official
said Saturday that Scott had
been relea sed to a rehabilitation facilit y.
A report. released last
week by the patrol ~howed
Woody had valium and evidence of marijuana use in.
hi s bloodstream .
The patrol determined his
blood alcoho l level was
0.025 percent at the time of
the crash , well below the
state's legal limit of 0.08.
No charges have been
filed.

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 446-2342

"Let Our Family Help Your Family"

·:'~' --------------------~------------------------------~----­
Road near the county's recyOliver said the shelter cur-

Shelter

Behold the circle of life
Pets are good because
which left them basically "R," or they heard the song
they teach children imporjust little pooping torsos. "Who Let the Dogs. Out." It
tant lessons about life, the
But I figured lhat today~ turns out that an aquarium is
main one being that, sooner
with all the technological a powder keg rhat ca.n
or .later, life kicks the buckadvan.:es we have, such as explode in deadly violence
et.
cellular phones and. "digital" at any moment, just like the
. Dave
. · With me, it was sooner.
things and carbohydrate-free Middle East, or junior high
Barry
When I was a boy, my dad,
toothpaste, modern fish school.
who worked in New York
TRUE STORY A friend
would be more reliable.
City, would periodically
So we got an aquarium of mine named David Shor
bring home a tunle in a little ·
and prepared it with special told me that his kids had aJ)
plastic tank that had a little And so the cycle of life water and special gravel and. aquarium containing a kind
·
plastic island with a little · would repeat.
special fake plants and a of fish called African cich·
plastic palm tree, as is so
1 say all this to explain special scenic rock so the · lids; and one of them died .
often found in natural tunle why I recently bought fish fish would be intellectually So David went to the aquarhabitats.
for my 4-year-old dallghter; stimulated and get into a ium store and picked out a
I was excited about hav- Sophie. My wife and I .real- decent college. When every- replacement African cichlid, ·
ing a pet, and I'd give the ized how badly she wanted thing was ready, I went to but , the aquarium guy said
tunle a fun pet name like an animal when she found .a the aquarium store to buy he couldn't buy that one, and
Scooter. But my excitement ·. beetle on the· patio and fish, my only · criteria being David asked why, and the
was not shared by Scooter, · declared that it was a pet, that they should be (I) hardy guy said: "Because that one
who, despite residing &lt;in a named Marvin . She put digital fish; and (2) fish thiu is from a different lake."
But getting back ·to my
tropical paradise, never did Marvin into a Tupperware looked a LOT like other
daughter's
fish : After much
anything except mope container, where, under fish, in case, God forbid, we
thought, the aquarium guy
around. Actually, he didn't Sophie's loving care and had to Marvi nize them.
even mope "around." He feeding, he thrived for
This is when I discovered was able to find me three
moped in om! place without · m~ybe nine seconds before how complex fish society is. totally pacifist fish -moving, or even blinking, · expiring · like a little six- I'd point to some colorful ~aroey Fife fish, fish so
for days on end, displaying legged
parking . meter. fish and . say, "What about nonviolent that, in the wild,
'basically the same vital Fortunately, we have a bee- these?" And the aquarium worms routinely beat them
signs
as
an
ashtray. tie-intensive patio, so, unlle- guy ·would say, "Those are up and steal their lunch
Eventu~lly, I would realize
knownst to Sophie, we were gre01t fish, but they do get money. I brought these
-- it wasn't easy to tell able to replace Marvin with aggressive' when they mate." · home, and so far they have
that Scooter had passed on a parade of stand-ins of var- And I'd say, "Like, how not killed each other or died
to that Big Pond in the Sky, ious sizes ("Look! Marvin aggressive?" And he'd say, in any way. Plus, Sophie
and I'd bury him ·in the gar- has grown bigger!" "Wow! "They'll kill all the other LOVSS them. So everything is working out beautiden , where he'd decompose Today Marvin has grown fish."
fully. I hope it stays that
and become food for the smaller!"). But it gets to be
This was a recurring way, because I hate zucchizucchini, which in turn tedious, going out early theme . . I'd point to some
would be eaten by my dad, every morning to wrangle fish, and the aquarium guy ni.
Dm•e Barn• is a hr1mor
who would in tum go to patio beetles. So we decided would irtform me that these
co/umroi.
&lt;I for rlre Miami
. .
'
New York City, where, com- to go with fish .
'fish could become aggres- Herald. Write to loirn c/o 11re
pelled by powerful instincts
I had fish of my own. sive if there were fewer than
that even he did not under- years ago, and it 'did not go four of them. Or an odd Minmi Herald, One Herald
. stand, he would buy . me well. They got some disease number of them, or it was a Plaw, Miami, Fla. 33132 ..
another moping death tunic. · like Mongolian Fin Rot, month containing rl!e letter

-""!'--•

cling center, is under the · rently charges $ 1 for· each ·
direction of Judy Oliver. The . animal adopted . Should the
from PageA1
facility has been open for animal return to the sheller,
,. about five years, replacing a the reclaim fee for the owner
ed with numerous animal res- shelter that had been in place is $20. plu s $5 a day.
'They mu st have up-tocue organizations throughout for many years.
Although
the
shelter
enjoys
date
., hot s before we release
;.. the nation, especially in New
th em bac k to the owner 's
·.~ England states, Minnesota a close relation ship with res; ·.and South Carolina, non- cue groups,. Gerlach and custody,'' Oliver said.
Gerlach noted that the
•,•,.Mason County residents have Oliver said the number of
trips made by shelter staff to reduction in hours will be
·! left their dogs and cats in the
·• night pen, boosting the ani- Morgantown to deli ver dogs shared by the shelter's part~
.; mal population and the oper- and cills to resc uers will be time staff.
·
ational cost, Gerlach said.
cut to twice a month as a fur'
· 'Thi s wi ll also allow us to ·
:. "We are registered with ther cost savings:
redu ce some of ou r p&lt;u1-time
·:. many rescue groups, so a lot
"Most
of
our
duus
uo
to
·
employee
costs and we wo'n't
.
"
e
;r of out-of-stnte animals are Connecticut
and be forced to lay off any of our
•: drorped off," he said. ·;we Massachusetts," Gerlach said. pan-time helpers." he said .
.. wil only accept animals ''If West Virginia· were a
There is a need for voluni when the shelter is open. mandatory spay and neuter teers to work at the shelter.
- Only animals from Mason state as those states are. our vul- Oliver said. and she encour• County will be accepted. Our ume of dogs wou ld be different. aged anyone interested in
.I tax base should only pay for
" We do require · spay and devoting some time to the
•&gt;"I our aninials."
neuter on our adoptions from facility to call the shelter at
0 The shelter, ?n Fairground the shelter," he added.
675-6458 .
·
·; ·
I

.

···--------------------------·---------------------------------

'
"'
I

Track
from PageA1

•.• long. time, but money was
.1. always a problem.
~
"When
we got
the
•I NatureWorks
grant,
it
'• brought everything together
• and we were able to move on
t, the
blacktopping," said
·;~ Spencer.

·. HI:( explained that the path
; is in four connecting sec~tions, most of which is nine
., feet wide with small sections
10 feet wide. n.mning along
, , the road and river and around
•,o the baseball field .
.,.. Councilman Bob Beegle
\; pointed out that the track is ·
for pedestrian use, and that
vehicles and dogs are prohibited. The officials noted that
both the baseball and ·softball

fields at the park are used by
. Southern High School.
Said Spencer, "The mayor,
council, the school board and
the superintende nt have a

rea lly good working relationship. For us, it's community
first. Thi ~ is a s!ep toward
improving what we have here
in the park for ewryone...

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Absent Linda Wamsley, John Finney
4

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�'. '

.,

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PageA6

OHO

6unbap ~tme&amp; ·6tntinel

Inside

Sunday, July t8, 2004

Attorneys seek·: to ·protect shooting
suspect from jail questioning
COLUMB.US (AP l Attorneys for the man
accused. in the series of
Columbu~ - afea

·highway

shootings asked I he judge In
&lt;'rder guards. socia~ worker,.
clther stale employee' an,d
· inmates not to talk to him
abou1 the cnse unless his
lawyer. is there.
Charle&gt; A. McCoy Jr.. 28.
&lt;~f Columhus. has. pleaded
innoL'ent 16 24 counts.
incltldin~ Jhe November
shooting' death of a 62-yearold woman who was the
only person hit ·in the shoolin~s from mid-2003 to Feb.
14~ He could face the dealh
penalty if convicted.
McCoy is being medicated
for symptoms of paranoid
'chizophrenia. which he's
had for I0 years. according
· to court documents filed
Thursday.

The motion seeking to bar
jail conversalions (vith
McCoy about the charges
was one of 69 rclming . to
trial procedures. such as jury
selection and requests for all
prosecution
documents.
filed Friday in Franklin
Plea'
Court. .
Cou nty
Prosec~tors have until Aug.
13 to respond .
"Jail personnel. officers.
and inmaJes may attempt to
obtain in formatio n from
( I he ) defendant in the hopes
vf assisting the state in its
case:· the motion says. In
the stressful and isolated Jail
selling. it says. '"he wou ld
naturally seek the companjonship of those who appear
i ntcrested and concerned in
hi ; welfare regardless of
!heir sincerity."
Such a request is recom·
mended by the slate public

defender's office in death
cases.
·Public
penalty'
Defender David Bodiker smd.
McCoy's · three-auor.ney
team al so wants Judge
Chttrles A. Schneider to
compel Franklin Cnunly
PnlsCCLJtor Ron O'Brien to
provide a shorter wi tness list
wilh only those he intends to
call at trial.
The attorneys called 1he
··exau!!erated"' list . they
receil•ed misleading. saying
it would require them ex tra
time and expense to investi·
~ate everyone on it while not
knowing· who wou ld actually testify.
Messages seek ing comment were left at O'Brien's
home and office.
Must of the reque &gt;ts are
standard in capital cases.
McCoy attorney· Mark
Collins said.

Shop Vaughan's for the
quality &amp; service you
deserve - hand cut meats,
homemade deli salads &amp;
service you can count on.

Keep a
check on
your local

tveather
Saturday, July 17,2004
Evening:' It will be dry.
except for a sprinkle or two.
Temperatures will dimini'h
from 82 early this evening to
67. Skies will range from
mostly clear to cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the southeast turning from the north as
the evening progresses.
Overnight: Expect a cloudy
overnight. There could be a
few raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will stay near 64
with today's low of 62 occur-

ring around 6:00am. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the north
turning from the . northeast as
the overnight proaresses.
Sunday, July 18
Morning: There niight be a
bit of rain arou nd the area.
Temperatures will increase to
79 with today's low of 64
occurring arou nd 6:00am.
Skies will be partly cloudy tp
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from ihe norrh.
·
Afternoon: Jt will be a
humid afternoon. You will see

light rain. The rainfall 1s
expected to . begin near
5:00pm. The rain should reach
0.12 inches by this ·afternoon.
Temperatures will rise from
8 1 early afternoon to the high
for the day of 84 at 2:00pm as
they drop back down to 80
later this afternoon. Skies will
range from partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from the northwest turning
from the southeast as the afternoon progresses.

Cleveland soldier given hero's funeral;
two others to be buried Saturday
. CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Northeast Ohio soldier killed
in Iraq was remembered
Friday at his funeral at the
church where he was baptized 24years ago.
Hundreds of friends and
relatives of Army Spc.
Joseph M. Garmback Jr.
attended a funeral Ma~s at St.
Ignatius of Antioch Church in
Cleveland . Some strangers
even stopped to salute
Garmback's. flag-draped coffi n as it was carried from the
church.
The Rev. James R.
McGonegal said, "Joey loved
being a soldier. He was .so
self-sacri fici ng."
Garmback, ·
24,
of
Cleveland, was one of five
soldiers killed July 8 when·
the Iraqi National Guard
headquarters was attacked in
Baghdad.
He was buried Friday at
West Park Cemetery. His par·
ents, Joseph Sr. and Marl yo n,
were give n the American tlag
covering their son's coffin.
Joseph Sr. held a white rose
and Marlyon a white handkerchief as they si lently
watched Joseph Jr. 's coffin be
lowered into the ground .
Relatives said Garmback
joired the Army because he
wanted to follow in .the footsteps of his paratrooper
father, who served from 1968
to 1971. Hi s parents, origi-·
nally from Cleveland. now
live in Brook Park .
Garmback was a member
· of the I st Battalion, 26th
I st
Infantry
Regiment ,
Infantry Division. based in
Schweinfurt, Germany. The
division is known as the Big
Red One, having been founded in 1917 during World War

1.
As a civilian, Garmback
had worked as a cook and ran
Indians, Browns and Galleria

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parties for A Taste of
Excellence, a catering company owned by Bill Rini .
Meanwhile, the wife of a
National Guard soldier from
Cleveland who was killed in
Iraq last week prepared for
his Saturday funeral.
Pfc . Samuel Bowen was
killed when a rocket-propelled grenade explocjed near
his vehicle. The 38-year.old
was credited with pulling a
wounded fellow soldier from
the line of fi~last month .
Bowen wa; serving with
Hamilton 's 216th Engineer
Battalion when he was killed.
He leaves behind three chil·
dren and two stepchildren. .
Funeral services will take

place at the Second fl;lount
Carmel Baptist Church in
Cleveland.
"Sam was a good husband
and good father, and my best
· fr iend,'' his wife, Melanie
Bowen, said Friday.
A third Ohio soldie~. Sgt.
Michael Christopher Barkey,
also was going to be buried
with full military honors
Saturday in Canal Fulton.
just south of Akron.
Barkev. 22, was killed last
WednesdaY' when his vehicle
flipped over. He was a member
of
the
1484th
Transportation
Company
based in Akron and had been.'
in the service for nearly four
years.

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Joseph Garmback, sunglasses, left-center, stands with his wife,
Marylon, as the casket of their son, Army Spc. Joseph M.
Garmback Jr. is carried into St. Ignatius of Antioch Church in
Cleveland, for a j uneral mass Friday. Spc. Garmback was killed
last month in Iraq during a mortar attack. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

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Making room for new irwl!ntory !
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ON OHIO RIVER. dod, permit uvaduhle. Gu..rra nh:ed Builduhle NOW S29.900
Q \\OCr

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Baseball scores.and standings, Page·B2
NASCAR Weekpnd, Page B4
.
Local Sports, Page BS
Ohio Outdoors, Page B6

Sunday, July 18, 2004

Boyles finishes sixth at Olympic Trials
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com

Days Until

High School ~

Football
Season!!!
•.

Legion Schedule
Sunday's game
Eighth District Tournament

SACRAMENTO,
Cal if.
University of Rio Grande race
walker Matt Boyles finished sixth
in the ·Men's 20,000 meter race
wa lk final s Saturday during the
U.S. Olympic Trials in Sacramento,
Calif.
The Tuppers Plains native negoti-

u....,;._..:;....:-,I:L.I

Boyles

ated the 12.4 mile for the Olympic Gam es in Athens .
'course i'n a time of Greece. a top three finish along
1:33:17. His time with an Olympk A-standard time of
was seven minutes I hour 2J minutes wa' necessary.
and 37 seconds
Boyles personal-best time in the
behind race winner .
event
was I :30:30. He red-shined
Tim
Seaman
(1:25:40) .
Joh n this past season to prepare for the
Nunn finished · sec- trials.
( UnirersiTr o( Rio Gmnde SporTs
ond, and Kevin
East ler was third.
Informa Tion
Direilnr
Mark
In order to qualify . Wil.litlllls conTrilmted To This reporT)

U.S. Olympic Trials
Men's 20,000Meter Race Walk Finale
1. Tim Seaman. NVAC. 1:25:40: 2 John Nurn. U.S.
Army, 1:26:23: 3. Ke\lin Easll6r, U.S. Afr Force,
1:28:49; 4. Curt Clausen. NYAC, 1:30:26: 5.
Benjamin Shorey. Wisconsin·Parksir;fe, 1:31:58; 6.

Matthew Boylaa, Unattached, 1:33:17; 7. Theron
Kissinger.' New Balance, 1 :33:58; 8. Sean Albert.
Unattached, t :35:21 ; 9. Steve Quirke, UMnached,

1:37 : 13; 10. Michael Tarantino. Wisconsin-Parkside,
1;37:41 ; 11 _ Dave McGo\lern. New Balance,
1:41 :59.

Meigs 9 Athens .Juniors 6
1

Meigs staves off Athens Juniors' upset bid
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman @mydailytribune.com

Glouster at Meigs , 1 p.m

Cincinnati
Bengals waive
LB Levels
CINC INNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Bengals on Friday
waived linebacker Dwayne
Levels. who played in 13
games last season With one
start for the' team.
He ·had nine tackles on
defense and I0 tackle.s on
special tea1;n s.
Level s is a second-year
NFL player from Oklahoma
Stale.

·aoard approves
$8 million in
bonds for ballpark
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - The new ballpark in
Charles ron's East End has
received a funding boost
from the state.
The
Eco nomic
" Development Au\ hority on
Thursday approved ·issuin g
$8 mi II ion in bonds to help
tinance the acqui~i t io n and
construction of the $23 million, 4,500-seat baseball stadium.
· The project is "desirable to
improve economic development and is necessary and
appropriate for the public
interest of the state," according to the bond resolution.
"The increased tourism
activi ty for Charleston will
res ult in additional tax revenue and i ncreased employment in the area around the
stadium;" said Qavid Warner,
the authority's executive
director.
The authori ty 's board in
December approved $5 mil- ·
lion of the bond . .The addilional $3 million is earmarked for remodeling the
adjacent Morris Square warehouse for business use. ·
West Virginia Bats is the
first business to sign an
agreement to lease space in
the warehouse.
The company's move from
P.utnam County to Charleston
could mean adding 13
employees, the company
says.
Earlier this month, fund ing
.for tile ballpark ·took a hit
when the prospective $5 million sale of Watt Powell Park
to
the
University
of
Charl\!ston fell through.
The city has been lookirig
for other parties interested in
buying the current home of
the Charleston-Alley Cats, a
:Toronto Blue Jays' Class A
)lffiliate.

Coaches, .Athletic
Directors
· GALLIPOLIS
The
Callipolis Dail~ Tribune and
ihe Daily Sentmel are in the
flrocess of collecting information for the fall high school
sports season. .
·
Athletic Directors or coaches from Gallia and Meigs
county high schools should
send varsity schedu les, rosiers, media day dates to us via
fax : (740) 446-3008; by
email: spom@mydailyrribune.cnm; or by phone: (741l) ·
446-234:!.

ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs
Post 128 scored four rpns late
to stay ahead of the upset·
minded Athens Juniors, and
escaped with a 9-o American
Legion baseball vic tory
Friday at Meigs High School.
Scrappy Athens stayed
and
close
throughout,
brought the tying run to the
plate in the ninth inning, but
was un able to keep Post 12!:1
from its third straig ht win .
Meigs (20-12 ) takes that
momentum into Sunday's
first round Eighth District
tournament game, where it
will
host
fifth-seeded
Glouster. Meigs owns the
fourth seed with a 4-6 league
record.
The tournament game is
slated for a I p. m. first pitch
at Meigs High School.
Athens'Juniors can not participate in post season play ;
Friday"s loss brought their
season to a close after a 1013 campaign.
-~
..
"'•·
Luke Hai slop paced the
.'
winners wit h (hree hits,
including a double and two
runs batted in. Ken Amsbary Meigs · Luke Haislop s lides home underneath Athens catcher Cory Bean during a double steal attempt in the second inning
of Friday's American Leg1on baseball game. ·Haislop was called out on the play, but finished w1th t hree hits and two runs batPlene see Meigs, 83
ted in. (Brad Sherman) '
·
.
.

..

..

Armstrong clears path to record sixth Tour de France
stand in the way of victory in i'nto a team vehicle &gt;hartl y
Paris on July 25.
before the halfway mark of
Only Italian Jvan Basso · the 127.7-mile trek from
• PLATEAU DE · BEILLE. managed to stay wi th the Lannemezan . A year ago, 1he
France _ Clearing the path five-time champion on the American rode most of the
to a record six th straigh t last of seven climbs in the Tour with a broken coll arTour de France crown, Lance Pyrenees, a devastating bone and fin ished fo urth.
Armstrong overpowered his· ascent to the Plateau de
Armstrong overtook Bass.o
rivals Saturday to cement hi s Beille.
with a fin al burst of speed.
As Armstrong and Basso He also won thi s route in the
Place as one of cycling's bobbed
off their saddles 2002 Tour. The stage win
greatest riders.
Armstrong captured the through exc ited crowds lin- was Armstrong's 17th in 10
.\3th stage 10 move within ing lhe route , other riders Tours and his first this yea r. ·
scattered down the moun· He ·also won the team time
just 22 seconds of leader tain, their hopes o.f winning tt'ials with his. U.S. Postal
Thomas Voeckler, who most
l'k
over.
·
Service squad this year and
1 e 1Y w·ll
1 be easY Pre Y for seemingly
"The team was great. ... It las t.
· the Texan.
d
" A
0 F ·d
· · h t..
W'th ·. t the Alps and two . was a ream ,
rm strong
n n ay, 111 t e . trst
. t )US
r t Said. •
Pyrenean stage, the placmg&gt;.
lime tna\s left to nego Ia e
Ty ler Hamilton, a pre-Tour were reversed: Basso won a
next week, only a meltdown f
·t
II d
'th
by Armstrong or an unfore- a~on e, . ?u e. 0 ~.1 WI
seen accident appeared "to se\ere back pam, dtmbmg
Please see Tour, Bl
BY JoHN LEICESTER

Associated Press

91sl

TOUR

DE

FRANCE

Areprieve lrom the mounuans
Tour cyclists gel a break from lhe mountians from Carcassonne
to Ni mes, and lhen a day break following the slage.

. StaUI14

Sunday, July 18

Nimes'99
Vil levjeille 376.2

Carcassonne
132 feet

Valros 161 .7
0 100mt

CapeSiang 66

0 100 km

SOURCE: Tour ds France

AP

133rd British Open

Hamilton leads, big nam·es lurk
BY TIM DAHLBERG

Associated Press
TROON, Scotland- Some
of the biggest names in golf
surged onto the \eaderboard
Saturday in the British Open,
where
a
little-known
American iook the lead during the third round.
Todd Hamilton hil . it to
within a few feet of the hole
for birdie on No. 14 to move
into the lead for the first time,
but he had a lot of players
with some pedigree just
behind him.
Tiger Woods was one of
them, shooting a 68 to get to
4-under-par. four back of
Hamilton. Masters champion
Phil Mickelson was on the
course just two shots back.
while U.S. Open ch~mpion
Phil Mickelson of the United States plays from the rough on Retief Goosen and Ernie Els
the 18th hole after making a wayward tee shot from the 1st were another shot behind.
on the third day of the British Open at Royal Troon golf
H a~Tti lton played for years
course in Troon, Scotland Saturday. Mickelson's shot land- on the Japanese tour before
ed on the green to set up a birdy on the 1st hole. (AP)
•

•

earning his PGA Tour card
lhis year and winning the
Honda Classic. He started the
day 4 under and made four
birdies against no bogeys
through the 14th hol e.
Thomas Lever of France
appeared to be on his way to a
commanding lead,. but 3putted from 12 feet for double
bogey on .the lith hole to fall
back.
Hometown hero Colin
Montgomerie was also in
contention, four shots back
through 14 holes despite a
number of wayward shots.
Mickelson and Woods
made moves· early on a day
when squalls dumped rain on
the seaside Royal Troon
course .
Woods got to 5 under with a
birdie on the seventh hole. but
played the la&gt;t 12 hob I over
to finish at 4 under with a
round of 68.'
Second-round leader Skip
Kendall, meanwhile. was 6

under. I over for the day,
through II holes.
Mickelson birdied three
holes on the front nine to get
to 6 under, two shots behind
Lever. then survived a scare
when his tee shm nearly went
ou.t of bounds on the . 15th
hole.
· Rain soaked the course
ovemight, and players took
adyantage of the softer conditions with aggressive shots at
the hole.
Kendall, however, made a
bogey on 'the opening 'hole
while Levet made birdies on
the third and fiftl) hole&gt; to
take over the lead.
Woods. meanwhile, made a
12-footer for birdie on the
·first hole, knocked it to 2 feet
on the second and had an
eagle putt of about 20 feet on
the fourth that he just missed.
He added a birdie on the seventh hole after pitchin.g it

PleaH see Open, Bl

�f

.1

,

Sunday, July 18, 2004
Sunday, July t8,

Pomeroy • Middlepol_"t • Gallipolis

2004

U.S. Olympic Track and Field. Trials

Fridays MLB Scores a dStandings

.

Jones withdraws from 200 meter

National League
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Chicago WMe Sox (Garcia 6·8) at Oakland {FI&amp;dman 6-6) , 4:05p.m.
Banimora (Lopa26-6) at Tampa Bay (Brazelton 1-0). 6:15 R.m.
N.Y Yal1kees (Hernandez 1·0) at Detroi1 (Kr'lotls 5·3), 7:05 p.m.

22·26

16-30
15-32

Th'l nday't R"utta
St. Louis 7. Cinc1nnatr2
NY Mels 3, Philad&amp;lphla 2, (11 )
Atlanta 8, Montreat 0
Chicago Cubs 4. Milwaukee t
San Francisco 7, ColorBdo 5
Los Angeles 4, Anzona 3

Seattle Mariners catcher Dan Wilson tags out Cleveland Indians' Casey Blake
during the fourth inning in Seattle on Friday. Blake tried to .score from third on
a fly out by Lou Merloni. (API

Cardinals 7, Reds 5

Royals12,-Twlns 3

Dodgers 6, Diamondbacks 2

Devil Rays 2, Orioles o

St. LtHII•

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Second, T.-ry Clift: Third, Mike DiMuro.
T-2:15. A-44.348 (49. 115).

"" , h ~

lib r hbl
5 1 2 0

_,

Planco 2b 5 1 1 o

4 1 1

Loa AngliM
001
202
010 IS
Arizona
020 000
000 2
E-Terrero (2) DP-Los Angeles 3. Arizona
2. LOB-tos Angelu_6, Arizona 4. 28Bradi~ (15), ShGreen {11]. 39-Cintron (!5).
SB--ORobarts (29}. 5----cora 2. SF- Wenh.
Brito.
IP H RERBBSO
Lot. Anglin
Ishii W,1i-4
6422~2
2 1 0 0 0 1
Mota
'1 1 0 0 0 0
Sanche2

Arizona
Webb L 3-IO
7 7 5 4 ,3 5
FetteNI
1 1 1 1 2 2
Randolph
1 0 0 0 0 2
HBP-by Ishii (Hillenbrand), by Webb (Lo
Duca l. WP-Mota, Fettera.•
Umpires-Home, Brian Gorman; Flrst, 0B.I8
Scon: Second, Ron Kulpa: Third. Brll Miller:
~-2 : 26 . A-29,255 (49,033)

0000
S!lnoorph 1 o o o
Seop
1 000
KGarcaph 1 COO
'JWQnc 0000
T.ll
31141

Phll.s.lphla

002 000 012 5
...... Yorl
000 (J10 000 1
lOB-Phillldelphlll 10, New Yort 7. 2~
Reyes 14). Malsui (29). HR--S.Abreu (20).
Thome (29). 88--:-AOIIinl 2 (16), Floyd (5),
Hidalgo (2). 8--M'IwoodIP
~
Millwood W.7-5
Worrell
8Wagner S, 14

NawVork

S4!P L..4-6
St.!ion

..10FrrJec

Bolls.lico
WP--Mitwood .

H

~~3

5

Unebrink

RERBBSO

3
0

1
0
0

1
0
0

4
0
0

6
0
2

' 7 1 15

2

2

2

5

1'

0

1

0

0

0

0
Tampa Bay
Halama W,5-~
830003
DBa11t'S,1 8
1 0 0 0 1 1
PB--Huckaby.
Umpires--+iome, Jim Reynolds; First, /lvldy
Fletcher; Second, Tim Welo:e; Third, Gary Ced·
erstrom.
T-2:23. A-20 .960 (43,969).

Indians 18, Mariners 6

215 -

18

003 -

6

6

I

1

2

Sun Ia
ab rhbl
I Suzu~( rl
3 0 1 0
Hansenlb 2 0 0 0
Wlnncf
401 0
8Boone2b 3 0 0 0
Bcchcarf 1 0 0 0
Ibanez ~
4 0 0 0
Jcbsen dh 2 2 1 0
JoCbra lb 3 2 2 Q
Leone 3b 4 2 2 4
D'Nilsnc 3 0 0 1
BlmQist ss 4 0 0 1
33 a 1 6

Tlrttlla

DP-Seattle 1. LOB-Cleveland 10. Seattle
4. 28----Lawton (15), Blake (17), THafner (30) ,
Gerut (23), Crisp (14). JoCabrera. :2 04),
Leone (2). HR-8rou&amp;sard (5), Lawton 06) ,
VMartinez3 (15). Blake (15). THalnM 111 ).
Gerul (9). Leone (21. 5-Vizquel. SF-DWil-

"'"

IP

CIMr1l1nd
O Lee W,10-1
Belancourt

H

REABBSO

643326

1

-~

0

0

0

0

1

1 10002
2·3233 1 0
1-3 0 0 0 0 0

-·

Riske
RiWhhe

Blackleyl,t-2

Putz

Otsuka
Neal

Petlilte L,5-3
Redding
Harville

5 1 4 4 2 5
221120
1 0 0 0 0 0

8edl:

..........

Bullinger
1 0 0 0
Peavy prtched lo 4 batters rn the 6th.

0

0

Meals.
T-2:56. .\-39,1 06 (40,950).

I:::--:-=-:---=---==---Bo.ton

Anlhetm

lib rhbi

tb rhbl
Eckstinaa. 4 020
Frgglns 3b 4 0 I 0

GAndsn cl 4 0 I 0
\/Grerofl

CWnon&lt;lt

4 0 o o
3 21 1
3 0 2 I
3000

312 1

BMolnac

4000

U ilar1b 4000
McCty lb o o o ·o
Kaplerlf
4111
Reese2b 4011
Totals 37 410 &lt;1

Al&lt;ndy2b

3000

o

JGilenlf
Erstac! 1b

Tota\a.

32 2 7 2

Boeton
010 200 010 &gt;4
2
Anllhelrn
000 101 000 E- Eekltein (2). OP- Bo sl on 2. L08-Boa1on 10, Mahetm 7. 28----Nixoo (3), Erllad
(16) . HR-Garcraearra (5). Kapler (2) .
JGuillen (16). SB- aritek (6), JGuillen (4).
fPHAEABBSO

......

LukaniC

EmDtee
Tmhn
'FoulkeS,1 4

6
2-3
1
1

5
1
1
0
0

2
0
0
0

0

0

0

0

0

8
0
0
1
0

1·3

2
0
0

4
0
0

Anlhltm

1

I

1

1

KEicotler L5-6

6

8

3

3

3

6

4
0

2
0

2
0

0
0

0
1

Shleldl

2
1

1'
1

I
0

1
0

1

2

0

,

Oor-tnft,'
WP-KEtcobar.

Umpirn--Homl, M.tt HolloweM: Firlt. Bil

Honn: Slcond, Kevil

~&lt;e~ey; Thnf.

IIOf'l.

T-3:01J. A---43,nt (45,o:lJ).

Mark cart'

100

000 -

1

s-

SanF~IIco

Rueter L,5-7'
PeaYy (Be:rtma~~il--Pett~e.
Umprrn---Hon'ie. Oerryl
s: First. Paul FRodriguez

2

T-3 :0 , . ~5154 (57,406)_

San FrtnciiCO 000

Ccllotadtt
200 300
2Qx 7
E-NPere.z (6). DP-San Francisco 2, Col·
orado I . LOB-SEin FrancifCO 8. Colorado 6.
28-Fallz 2 (17). 3B--Caati1ia (3) . HR-Hcil·
!day (10), TGreena 2 (7). SB---Miles (6).
Aueh:rr.
IP H RERBBSO

6

HBP-btt

1

w

33

3

1-3
2·3

llmp"--"H~ . 8111 Wlb; Firfl, Jol'l't
~ Slcond, Wally Bel; Thln:l.

Diu:.

5

003

1 o 0 o 0 1
10001 1
100001
1 II 0 0 0 0 0

PMattrlezW.1D-3
7
1-3
12·3

2

Rockies Glanla 1

Bnlcop

38 512 5

2
0

2

2 7 '7 7 3 0
330 002
113320
Umpires-Home. arry Young : Firat. RoC Villone
Drake; Second, Angel Hernandel; Third, Mar\(' Sherrill
132201
Hasegawa
I
2 1 1 0 0
Wegner.
T-2:26. A--40,691 (43,662).
JMa1eo
2·3 3 4 4 0 1
MMvers.
1-3 2 1 1 o 1
1
Bladdey phched to 7 batters In 1t1e 3rd.
HBP---by JMateo (Merloni), by Vilone (LawSan Ol~go
Houston
ab r hiM
ab r hbl ""'1- bv " """' ITH""'"I
Cinllo 3tl 5 1 1 1 BrggioH
4020 . Umpires-Mome, Tim Tschida : Firs! . Jeff Nelson : Second, Marty Foster; Third, Joe
Loretta 2b 4 1 ·2 3
JVzcno3b 3 1 1 0
Brihkman.
·
BGilw rl 4 0 0 0
CBeHrn cf 4 0 1 1
Paytoncl 3000
Br1&lt;rnn rl 3 0 0 0 T-3: 14. A-32,578 (47,447).
Kleako lb 3 0 2 1 JKent2b
3020
N.&amp;dy lt
4010
Bgwell lb 4 0 0 0
7,
Qinteroc 4 0 0 0
Asmusc
4000
San
Fran
Colorado
KGreenss 4 2 2 o
AEvrtt s&amp; 4 0 0 0
ab r hbl
ab r hbl
Peavy p
3110
Pettittep 1 ooo
Dfham 2b 4000
Mile!2b
501 0
lnbmk p oooo
Laneph
!lOCO
NPerezu 3100
Clayton n 4 0 1 0
Bed&lt;p
0000
Adding p 0 0 0 0
Felizlb
4031
Heltonl b 311 o
OPimroph 1 0 0 0
"OI&amp;Ukap
""""" 0000
1 0 00 Hrvllep
Bonds.H
4010 Castilla3b2221
0000
TyWik[ p 0000
Nealp
0000
LWalllrr!
4021
BullngJp 0000
Allonzo 3b 3 0 0 0
PrWisnd 4 1 o o
lambph
1 000
Totlllt
3S 5 9 5 Totlla
32 1 &amp; 1 GrSAOmcf 4000 HllidayH 3 1 1 1
Mohr rf
40o1 0 TGrwn c 4224
San Ol-eo
030 011
000 5
Trralbec
4020
Estee p
300 0
H.,_lon
000 001
000 1· Auelerp
10 10
MaSwyph 1 0 1 0
E-JKenl (5). DP-San Diego I . Houston 1. OCruzph 1000 Dhmnnp 0000
LOB-San t'&gt; lego 7. Hou&amp;IOM 8. 28-lcreM FAdgez p 0000
(29), Kleslco2 (15). KGraMe (18). 36---CBel- Chrstns p 0 0 0 0
lran (1)_
RnsomH 0000
JP H fiERBBSO
Tudwrph 100 0 .
Tot111 33 1 8 1 Totala
711 1

Mlwodp

Totlll

Gcoom

2
0
0

300

---...y

Varitekc

1 11 0

Gnmslay

1

108

Chi~

0000

2000

6 2-3
1
1-3

000

694423
Buehrle l ,9-3
1 2 1 ,
1 0
Politte
120001
Adkins
01kland
ZitoW,5-7
1 4 1 1 1 3
RAincon
1·3 0 0 0 0 1
Duchacherer
2-3 1 o o o' 0
8rAdiOid
1·3 2 0 0 0 0
Dotei S.4
2·3 0 0 0 0 2
· HBP-...h.· Ad!Ons [Blrnes).

JoFrw p

1 0 00

Baltimore
Bedard L,J-4

Cleveland

r

DaEJel 3b 4 0 1 0
UlflttJI c 4 0 1 0

0 0 0 0

000 000 000 0
002 000 OOIC 2
LOB-Baltrmor e 4, Tampa Bay 8. 28Baldelll ( 141. 39-Crawford (12 1. CSBalctelll (3).
IP H RERBBSO

Saanla

35 513 5

Chlc•;o
010 000
000 1
Oa kland
310 000
10x 5
DP-Chicago 1, Oakland 1. LDB-Chlt:ago
B. Oa~ land 10. 2B-Gal ee (241; Dye (!B).
Crosby (21), Scutaro (23) . HA(17).
F H A E BB SO

4 0 0 0
1 o o o
1 0 0 0
0000

Wggnt'13b 3 0 0 0

1000

Baltlmor•

Tamp~ Bay

Tolail

50 20

BymesW
ECl1avz 3b
Oyeri
Karroa 1b
Hntw:~rg 1b

Vlenlin ss 3 0 0 0

Totall

4110
5 I I 0
4233
30 0 0
0 0 0 0
K~allydh " 4 0.2 1
Crosby ss 4 1 2 0
DMillerc
30 0 0
Scutaro 2b 3 o 2 1

ab rhbl

Kot:say of

Bur!(ec
2010
Gloadph 1 o 1 o
BDallisc 0000
Totlla 33 -1 7 1

a

Cleveland
1b r hbl
Blliard 2tr 6 1 1 1
Vlzquel ss 3 3 2 0
Brs.srd lb 1 1 1 1
lawlon~
4322
Littlelf
1 ooo
VMrtnz c 5357
Blake3b 51 3 1
JMcDid ss 1 0 0 0
Hafn&amp;rdh 4 3 2 2
Meriooi 1b 4 2 1 0
Gerutrf
6123
CrisP cl
6 o· 2 1
Totala 481821 11

Oekl1nd

ab r hbi
Uribe 2b 3000
WHarrs2b 1 0 0 0
Rwandcf 4000
MOrdzdh 4 0 1 0
CaLeeW
3120
Knerko 1b 4 o 1 0
Cred11 3b 4 0 0 .,
Brchrdrf 4 0 1 0

Cmeroncl
JPhllpec
Valenl.ph
Stantonp

BWpp

4 0 1 0

3011

1 001
2000
0000
~cCkn ph 1 00 0
Andlph p , OOOO
Totala · 2t 2 I 2

e8 e

Damoncf 4 000
Mueller :1:1 5 0 0 0
DOrti:t: ell 3 0 I 0
MAmfZph 10 1 0
Blhomltl o a o
Greprrea 5 I I 1
Nixonrf
41 30

3010

3 10 0
4 0 2 0

o IR;:eci::;:::So:::x::_:4•c:A::n,_,geo:;:I•:=,2= - - -

Matsui ss 4 o 2 1
Piazur1b 4 00' 0
Floydl
4 0 10
Hidalgo rl 3 0 0 0

51.2 2
312 3

4 0 0 0
3 1 1 o

Schrieb«: Second, Adam Dowdy; Third, Jerry

NlwVoril

31 2 4 2

LOB-MMwalbl 6. ChiCago 5. 28--BC1ar11
(5), Macllt (5). tfl-Jenldns (13). ssSCiart 1"). BHall (5). s-BHall,
Grudlitjantk. SF---Maciu
1P H RERBBSO

4

Blalock 3b 5 2 2 1

Toronto

·G~cf

~
020 000 000 2
£_..,.,_. [3}, BHaH (7). DP--Ghlcago 1.

......

41 2 1
4 0 10
3030
1010 ·
4 0 0 0
4 000
4 0 10
4 0 0 0

abrhbl
MYongss 4 1 1 o
Al~ndrss
0 00 0

ASrano2b 5234
Filmer dh 4 1 o o
Txeira lb 3 1 2 2
4001
OlucciH
Mathws rl 4 1 3 1
OAUdsn 2b 4
Brajas c
4000
GOmez ss. 3 1 I 0 Nbccl
4342
TOUIII 35 2 I 1 Totala 37111511

BAbreurt
Thometb
Burrell If
Ledeed
Mchelsph
Worrell p

Cllmaft L.7-9

h~

4 0 0 0

TtmPI Ba"t
ab r hbl
Crwtrd II
411a
Rolls3b
2000
81um3b
1 0 0 a
Baldelicf 4 1 3 '
Huff dh
4 0 1 1
'JoCruzrl 3 0 1 0
Lugoss
3010
TMrtnz lb 4 0 1 0
Frdycec
3000
ASnchz 2b 3 0 1 0
30 0 3 0 . Totala
31 2 9 2

lb rhtil
BRbrts 2tl 4 0 1 0
HrstJr rl
4 000
Tejada ss 3 0 0 0
Jvlopzdh _4 0 0 0
RPimo 1b 3
10
~ewhn3b 3 0 1 0
Malosc!
3000
BigbieH
3 0 0 0
Hdo.abyc 3000

Padrn 5, Aatros

Phllllea 5, Mets 1

.

100 -

5
0
1
0

6
1
1

Toronto

SSosart 4000
Aloulf
4000
Delee 1b 4 1 1 0

t01

4
2
0
o

Rangers 1.1 , Blue Jays 2

Rollin&amp; ss

DOD

1
0
0
0

·

Grdzil 2b 3 0 1 0
CPtl!on cf 4 0 D 0

Mgnlo&lt; "' 1 0 0 0
T01811 34313 TOiall

1
a
o
o

T~2 :49 . A- 26,424 (50,091).

Macias 3b 3 0 1 1

V$anl.; p 2 0 0 0
Klohn6t ph 1 0 I I

2
3
o
1

5 3 3 0 4
t
0 0 0 2
Ae~sma
1 2 2 2 0
JJCruz
:1.
1 o 0 0 1
Umpires-Home, Chrlrii8 AeiWord; First, Dan
lassogna; Second, Jeff Kslogg; Third, Ooug

PdMJok cf 4 0 0 0

,.,.IUUe

4 2·3
2·3
2 2-3
1

2112
3000
1000
0 0 a -a

Chlc~go

Furcal ss 5 0 0 0
MGiles 2b 3 0 0 0
JDrewrl
4 ,021
CJones 3b 3 0 0 0
JEsldac
3000
Lroche tb 3 o 0 0
1\Jones cl 4· 0 0 0
3120
ThmesN
Byrd p
2000
JuFrcoph 1 o 1 o
Mcnnllp · 0000
Ritsmap 0000
JuCruzp 0 0 0 0
Mrrero ph I 0 1 0
Totall
32 1 6 I

Schndr c 4 000
EChvez cf 4 0 1 0

3 1 0
I 3 1
1a 1
0 1 1

40 2 0

Alhlatlcs 6, White Sox 1
lb r hbl

ab r hbl
WlkrsnH
4100
NJhnsn 1b 4 2 2 1
Vkt'o2b
3~31
CE~rttfl
4000
JRi~rafl
0 0 0 tJ
TBtsta 3b 3 0 1 2

lbrhbl

Jgg .~

1

..-..,ft.ntl

Cunsell.,se 2 o o o
Eliclnu 1 000
JenkNH 41 2 1
Ovrbay lb 4 0 1 0
KGnr2b 4 1 1 0

·=

0

Ex:pos 5, Braves 1_ (

Chicago

Amlngrp
Godwin ph
Metdlrp
FniiiWT'.p

0

T-2:37. A.-25, 169 {40.785).

Mlfwllukee
llbrhbl

4 1

0

Reed.

ab r

Tigers 8, Yankaaa 0

JeGbl!b
Poeadac

2 . 0

ab rhbl
Tem:no rf
SFinley ct
Hlrnton2b
LGnzlzn
Hlnbm lb
Cinlron ss
Tracy3b
Britoc
Webtrp
Fenerap

·4000

2
4
Wertt11f
2
Vntura 3b .2

41 121712

JAi1con
1 3 1 1 0 2
Klnau City
May W.7-9
7 7 3 3 2 3
SeM82
2 0 0 0 0 1
HBP---by ROa (Berroa)
Umpire&amp;-Hom11, Allonso Marquez; Frrsl, Ed
Rapuano: Second, Ted Barren: Third, Rick

Arizona

ab r hbi
50 1 0
50 t 1

DAbrtsH
lzturis ss
LOucac
Brdley cf
ShGren tb

Minnetoll
100 000 200 3
IC.anua City
106 COO Otx - 11.,.
E-THunter (3), Koskre (7]. LOB---Minne10ta
38 11:11 7 Totala l5 5 8 5 6, Kansas City 9. 28-l&lt;oskle (1 3), LeC roy
(81. RMeteo (2). HR- ShS \ewart (4). DeJe·
St. l.oult
000 110 050 7 sus ~ 1). . DBrown \ 1), Aelatord (2). SB-CGuzman (6). SF-Rives.
Clnclnnlltl
400
001 000 5
•
IPHRERBBSO
LOB-51. ,Louis 6. Cincinnati 4. 2BMlm,.sota
Edmonda (24). JCastro (14). PWllaon (2).
Ractke
L,5·6
3 8 7 7 1 2
HR-MAnderson (6), WPena (11). LaRUfl
Roa
t-3. 5 4 4 a 0
191
1 2-3 1 0 0 2 3
IP H RERBISO • BtrHour

rou•

Associated Press

22-24
21 ·25

St LOtHs {Marqurs 9-4) at Crncinnati (Udle 6-7), 1·20 p m
San Dieg:J (D.Walls 4·5) at Hous100 (Oswa~ 8·7), 4:05 ~. m.
Milwaukee (Sheets 9-5) 111 Chica~ Cubs 1MaddW1 7-7), 4:05 p.m.
Mootreal (Armas Jr. 1- 3) a1 Atlanta (Ru.Ortiz 10-6), 7:05p.m
Florrda (Pa1111no 9-4) at Pittsburgh (I&lt;.Well5 4-6), 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (~mrdl11 ·2) at Colorado (Cook 4·3), 8:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Od.Perez 4·3) at Arizona. (Fossum 2·8). 10.05 p m

Toronto (Lily 7-6) at TiiJUIS (Rk:.AOOng11eZ 2-0), 8.05 p.m
Boaton (Wakefield 5-5) at Anaheim !Colon 6-8), 10.05 p.m.
CleVeland (Sabatha 5-4) at Seattle (A.franklin 3-2 )~ 10:05 p.m.

Dun.n ~

Jones, the reigning Olympi c
Crawford ran a world-best
champion in the 200, wa's 19.88, while Gatlin ran 20.06
slruggli ng at the end of the and Gay, the NCAA champion
SACRAMENTO, Calif
race or whether she knew she from Arkansas, had a personMarion Jones withdrew from could qualify without much al-best 20.07.
ihe 200 melers at lhe U.S. cffon. She declined to talk to
"I wanted to show the comtrack and field _lrial s on reporters afterward.
pelitors I mean business,"
.. Saturday, leaving the five-time
T~e track gave h~r problems Gatlin said .
Olympic medalist qualified earlier m _.the ln.tl s. Jo~t es
Gatlin
and
Crawford
only in ihc long jump fo r 'the fai led Ia quality for Athens 111 al ready are on the Olympic
Athens Games. " ·
~er sr_gnature event, the 100, team m the 100, along with
Jones se nt word nf her with- limshmg fifth 111 the final last defending Olympic champion
draw· 1J two h _. ·bcf
-h weekend. Her ume Ill the .200 Maurice Greene. Greene was
' '
OUI s
ore s e Friday was lOth best well entered in the 200 as well, but
was &gt;ehed
ul ed
. ds--' 1'ea d'mg - as expecte d - d id not
100
emifin··
1· to run 1n the beh'111d Torn· Ed war
- ' _ · a s.
, · 22.60.
·
·
show up for hi s heat
Barnng an unusual set of
, - .
·
circumstances, Joites will not
It was JUSt the second ?DO
Edwards, who made the
defend eilher of the Olympic Jones has run ~II year,her lirst Olympic team in the 100.
sprint gold medals she won in smce havmg .t baby 111 2003. might not be able 10 show up·
Sydney fo ur years ago. She She m.ade ~er outdoor debut rn in Athens. She has an aibitra1\ nished fifth in the 100 finals the e\ent rn the_ Mount_ SAC tion hearing in a drug _case
a week ago.
Relays 111 Apnl, .f1111shmg slated for Monday after
fo
urth rn 23.02.
acknowledging thi s. week that
.
f
h
No reason was g1ven or cr
. h
F 'd
h hd
-·
•
1
wi thdrawal. but she scheduled
n 01 er ev~ n ts
n ay, s e a a posltlve test .or a
Crawford· Just1n
a news conference for later Sha Wil
.
· · banned stimulant this year.
Saturday.
Gathn and !yson Gay _ran Edwards claims she took the
d'
.
three of the tour Fastest t1mes ·drug inadvenently and is tryJ on~s looked or mary 111 her in the world thi s year in the ing Ia avoid a two-year ban
quaht ymg h e~t Fnday, fadmg men 's 200 heats; reigning that would knock her out of
10 la&gt;t rn her t1ve-woman heat world champ ion Tom P·tpp· . the Olympics,
111 22.93 seconds. She sto:ved led the decathlon ·tfte th' t a~
Her teammate, In~er Miller,
111 nearly .a trot on the t.mal da . L' u1., G rr·~ 1 r e Irs
1
J'f' d f
'fi
stnlightawa_y, but advanced IO they, shaot a te ". t gdhtyD won a so qua I le or t e semt .lpu an
eena nals in the 200 and said it was
ihe semlfrnals Saturday Kastor to 0 k ih 10 000 111
· hard knowing Edwards tested
because only one ol the 19
.
. e_
•
..
women emcrcd in the quarter- ? I .09.65 - b1 eakmg thetn_als positive for a banned subfinals was el iminated.
and U.S. chdmplonshtps stance.
•
.
records - bu1 wJII run the
"I support her and I suppon
It was unclear whether marathon in Athens.
doping testing and everything
BY ANDREA AOELSON

S.turdlry'a Game,
P11iladeiP.f1ia tWoH 3-SJ at N.Y. Mets (GiaYine 7-7). 1:20 p.m

Minnesota (Rado:e 5-5) a't Kansas City (!3obble 5·6). I :20 p.m.

.'

PtO

5·5

517

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Pinsbu1gh 6. FlOrida 2
St LOllis 7. C1ncrnnat1 5
PI'I~!ICk!lphla S, NY Mets 1
Monlreal 5, A~anta 1
San Diego 5. HOUSioo 1
Colorado 7, San FranciSCo 1
los Af'lgeles 6, Anzona 2

Kansas Crty 3, MinneSCis 1

Texas 11, Toronto~

GB

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Colorado
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5. Tampa Ba~ 4 ,

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t&gt;omeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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"'*"·

ln.dians s·mack
around Mariners~ 18-6
Bv JiM CouR
Associated Press

practice sw ings 1oday," Melvin said,
"You don 't see too many balls go m it
in batting practice with the frequency
SEATTLE - Victor Martinez was you see tonight. "
struggling over tl:le last couple of The 18 runs and 21 hits by the
weeks so he asked his batti ng coach Indians were season highs.
Eddie Murray _for some advice.
Cliff Lee ( I 0-1 ) won his fifth
"He told me one thing that 1 really straight decision . The 25-year-old leftbander who came to the Indians in a
appreciated,'' Martinez said . "He told trade in June 2002 that sent Hanol&lt;i
me, 'Relax. Don't try to kill the baiL"' Colon to Montreal , pitched six innings
Martinez then had a game that
would impre ss even a Hall of Farner and gave up three runs on four hits and
.with 504 career home run s: He hit two walks, with six strikeouts. Hi s
three of the Cleveland Indi ans' club only loss m 19 stans th 1s season came
record-tying eight homers and drove - June 3 m Ana~enn.
in a career-high seven runs in an 18"6 ,Rook~e Trav1 s Blackley ( 1-2) cou ldrout of the Seattle Mariners on Friday n t get .a batter oul 111 the s1xth, when
night.
the lnd1ans tooka 7-0 lead.
Matt Lawton, Martinez and Casey
Lawton, Martmez a.nd Blake gave
Blake connected for consecut: ve Cleveland a 5-0 lea~ w1th thw homers
homers in a six-run third inning for the m the th1rd. Lawtons dnve was a twoIndians. In the ninth, Martinez, Travis run homer, h1s 16th of the season. .
Lawton, who .al so played m
-Hafner and Ben Broussard all homered off Julio Mateo. And Jody Gerut Tuesday 's All -Star g~me. lauded
connected off Mike Myers for Martmez.
Cleveland's eighth homer, whi'h tied
"He's a young_ player player, but he
the club record set at Milwaukee April swmgs the bat like a seasoned veter2-5 1997.
·
an," Lawton said. ''It was definitely a
Martinez is having a breakout sea- career night for him. He 's goi~g to be
son after hitting .289, with one homer a great player for~ l01~ g ume. .
.
and 16 RBis , in 49 games for the
It was the II th time 111 tranch1se hi sIndians last season. He made his first tory that the lndmn s had three co nsecAII-Siar team and · Ieads all catchers utive homers, Ihe last time was against
with 70 RBi s.
California on Sept. 12, 1996. by Jim
After ihe game, the 6-foot-2, 195- Thom~, Albert Bell e and Julio Franco.
pound catcher kept the media waiting The1r .our ho~e run s m the lllnlh 11ed
for about an hour so he could lift a club record tor homers 111 an mnmg,
weights.
last accomplished against the Los
lnJuly, he was hitting .175 (7-for- AngelesAngels onJuly 31, 1963. "
40}, with one homer and six RBis,
Jody Gerul added an RBI double
coming into Friday's_game.
and Ronm~ Belliard an RBI si n ~ l e for
After workmg wah Murray, the Cleveland s other two runs m the
switch-hitting Martinez went 5-for-5. · s1xth.
.
He hit a three-run homer and a solo
Blackley, 21, a left-hander from
shot from the right side of the plate Australia who is regarded as one of
and a solo shot from the left. He also the most promising prospects in the
had a two-run single.
Mariners' farm system, gave up seven
"You know what. I never think runs on seven nits, three walks and a
about getting in a slump," he said, still hit batter in two innings. In three stans
sweating fro m his workout. "I know since being called up from Triple-A
when I get good at-bats I can -hit the_ Tacoma July I, he has an 11.37 ·ERA.
ball right."
Ron Villone, who will make hi s secAfter Hafner's homer, Mateo hit and stan of the season for Seattle
Lou Merloni in the back with a pitch Monday night against Boston, allowed
and was ejected by plate umpire Tim Martinez's 14th homeJ in the sixth .
Tschida. Both 'benches emptied onto
Maninez had a two-run single off
the field, but there were no punches George Sherrill , making hi s major
thrown.
league debut, in the seventh. ·
The managers differed on what hap- ' Mariners rookie Justin Leone had a
pelled.
'
three-run ho_mer in the founh, his sec" It was obvious thai he hit him on and homer in two nights, and an RBI
purpose," Cleveland manager Eric double in the ninTh .
.
Wedge said ....That's what the result
Bucky Jacobsen, 28, went 1-for-2 in
was."
·
'his major league debut for Seattle.
But Mariners manager Bob Melvin
Notes: The Indians had two runners
said, "They were hanging out there, thrown out at the plate in the fourth,
getung some good swmgs and he when Martinez and Blake opened with
(Mateo) wanted to get them off the singles .·Second baseman Bret Boone
plate. One just got away." .
th1~w Martinez om at the plate when
Tbe etght homers . were the most he attempted to score on Hafner's
g1ven up by the Manners, who have fielder's choice. Blake was thrown out
lost 10 of II . The eight homers also at the plate by left fielder Raul Ibanez
were a record at Safeco Field.
for a double play after Jba):)ez caught
~'They were taking some batting Meloni 's shallow tlyball .

Open
from Page81
about 10 feet by and making the putt
coming back.
· .
The moves by the top P.layers upset
what had been an unlikely leaderboard midway through the Open.
Kendall is 0-for-310 on the PGA
Tour, the kind 11f streak that usually
doesn't end in a major championship.
But considerin_g Ben Curtis won the
Open last year m his fmt major championship, stranger things have happened.
.
·
"I think it's Just a matter of time,"
Kendall said. ' Hopefully, this will be
mine.''
,
Kendall. who had a mid-afternoon
tee time, had to play in a qualifier just
to get in the field. and was largely
overlooked in the first round despite
torning in a nice 2-under 69. But the

39-year-old American m~de everyone
nouce witl:l. an eagle on the 16th hole
Friday on his way to a 66 and a oneshot lead over Levet
.
And he has a good feeling he can do
it again.
''This isn't my first rodeo," said
Kendall, a I0-year tour veteran. "You
just go play golf and hopefully play
. welL"
No matter what happens on the
weekend, the cheesehead from
Wisconsin has had a pretty good trip
overseas already. He brought along
his mother to celebrate her 80th birthday and got a thri II when he shook
hands with Prince Andrew behjnd the
lith green during his first round on
Thursday.
"I think the main thing for me is I
just need to stay relaxed and have fun
out there,'' Kendall said. "The golf
w'ill take care of itself.' But for me. it's
all aliout staying relaxed and having
that kind of calmness, · I guess.
inside."

they're tryin~ to do," Miller
said. "It's a dtfficult situation."
There werj: six no-shows in
the women 's 200, including
trials I00 champion LaTasha
Colander and Chryste Gaines.
Eve n with the depleted fi_eld,
the race looked difficult for
Jones.
A ni~ht after jumping 23
feet, 4 mches - the secondbest long jump in the world
this year and her bes1 since
1998 - Jones fl as hed her
trademark smile when she was
announced at the start of the
200.
Jones, wearing an all-white
body suit, got off to a poor
start but ran the curve weiJ and
was among the leaders coming
into the final straightaway.
Then she slowed significantly
in the last 80 meters and finished far behind heat winner
Miller.
The fanner shining star of
track and field is beins investi·gated by the U.S . Anll:Doping
Agency. She has not been
charged and repeatedly has ·
denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs._ Her
boyfriend, Tim Montgomery,
has been charged with stermd
use and faces a lifetime ban if
found guilty by an international arbitration panel.

Former 10hio State QB sentenced in ticket scam
IND IANA POLIS !A P) - A judge
ordcr,·Li fnnner Ohio State quarterback
An_...,. Sc:h li c: htc r lo pay more · than
"':&gt;'&gt;OO.OOIJ in rest ituti on to 22 viclims of a
tidct-sc lling scam, but prosecutors sa id
\1 is unlikely they ever will see ihe
money.
Marion Cou nty Superior Judge Tanya
Wallen Prall accepted a plea agreement
Friday between the 44-year-o ld
Sch lidner and prosecutors. The deaL
under which Schl ichter las t month pleaded guili y to corrupt business inlluence
and be ing a habitual offender, also
includes an ~ig ht- year prison ~e ntenc e.
However. because Prall ordered the
time to · be served concurrently with a
five -year federa l penalt y Schlichter
already is 'e rving and becau se Indiana
gives inmate s one day of jail credit for
each day served with good behavior, he
is unlikely to serve any addilional time

Tour
from Page 81
stage' fo r the first time in hi s
career and Armstrong was
second.
As in previous years. when
Armstrong scaled victory in
1hc mountain s and then took
his pri ze in Pari s, he said he
was not ready to declare the
ihree-week rac:e ·over yet.
.. As I always say. the Tour
finishe s in Paris,.. the 32ycar-old rider said. "There
are still ~h e Alps and many
dangerou&gt; stages." .
Germany' s Jan Ull ric h ahandoned again on the last
climb. as he was Friday was 2 mi11u1es. -12 seco nds

in prison.
Victims of the scam also are unlikely
to get .any money back, Deputy
Pro secutor Larry Brodeur acknowledged.·
·
"Cieafly. it 's very unlikely that Art
Schlichter will ever pay back all of the
people he 's ripped off in hi s life. Those
civi l judgments are in place in case he
comes into some money,'' Brodeur said.
Schli chter pleaded guilty in January
200 I to federal charges of money laundering. forgi ng securities and unauthorized use of cred it cards to pay gambling
debls.
.
Ue was indi cted following an Internal
Revenue Service investigation into a
sc heme in which he sold tickets to spo(ting events and promised he could -resell
the tickets for a profit. The events
included Indiana Pacers and Indianapolis
Colts games. as well as the NCAA Final
'

behind_ He ca me into the
Tour seem ingly determined
to dethrone the Texan , who
has beaten him three times but hi s race ur1 raveled in the
Pyre nees.
Ullrich, the 1997 Tour winner and a five- time runnerup. is 6:39 behind Armstrong
overall. Last year, he lost the
Tour to Armstro ng by just 61
second&gt;. Armstro ng had rated
the German as his most
re spected ri vaL
In just two stages in the
Pyrenees, Armstrong · has
sliced Voeckler's lead from
more than nin e minutes.
Voecklcr. the French champion, dropped away on the lasl
climb to ihe Plateau de Beille
- an ascent so hard it is not .
rated. But he persevered, lim. iri ng the damage and keeping

,4e

Gallipolis Hometown Dealer

GENE-JoHNSON
CHEVROLET
7 40-446-3672

LS Package, 5J. VB Engine,
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1998 Chevy '/2 Ton
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Four basketball tournament.
Records show Schlichter has been
convicted I0 times since 1995 'Qf crimes
including forgery, fraud and theft, The
Indianapolis Star reponed.
The former Buckeyes quarterback was
the No. I draft pick by the thenBaltimore Colts in 1982. He was suspended by the NFL in 1983 for gambling. He later returned to the Colts, who
had· relocated to Indianapolis in 1984,
but was released the following season:
Schlichter has said he plans to get
treatment for hi s gambling problem
when he is released from prison.
"I think the difference now is that Art
has been in prison for a long, long time,"
sa id hi s attorney, Jack Crawford.
"People have a tendency to bottom out
and Art' s gambling add iction has caused
him to ' botlom out,' and he knows there
is no way_to go but up ."

his overall lead.
'_'I hung onto this jersey
with my guts," he sa id.
"I don't think many people
were betting on me thi s
morning - perhaps even me .
I'm happy because it is mi ssion accomp li shed," he
added.
Armstrong said it had been
his intention to take the lead
when he set oul Saturday. He
came very close on the last
9.9,mile ascent, mined with
hairpin bends that throw off
riders'
rhythm .
While
Voec kler . clung on. other
rivals collapsed. .
Roberto Heras, a former
Armstrong teammate, placed
49ih ,
21:35
behind
Armstrong and Basso, who
linished in the same time.
!ban Mayo, a Basque rider

whose climbing skill s desened him in the Pyrenees,
placed !15th - 37:40 back.
Basso,
I: 17
behind
Armstrong in the overall
standings, has emerged as the
last main rivaL But he is not
an outstanding time trial rider
while Armstrong is. Bassogave up 2:02 to the champion
in the final time trial last year
and finished seventh in the
overall
standings ,
an
improvement from his II th
place in 2002, when he was.
anointed Ihe ·Tour's best
young rider.
"We take him very seriously," said Armstrong, who
added that his team tried to
recruit the Italian last year. ·
''He's riding super strong ."
He added: "I knew Basso
would be dangerous."

capped off the scoring when
he doubled ,home Eddy, and
made the score 5-1.
Meigs managed just one
from Page 81
hit over the ensuing three
which allowed
doubled home a run and sin- _ frames,
Athens 10 chip away at the
gled, while Doug Dill hit his lead.
'
ninth home run of the seaBean,
whose
home
son. Josh Eddy added a two- pulled Athens even at l-1run
in
run double.
the second inning, . doubled
Cory Bean homered, dou- home another run in the
bled and knocked in a pair of fourth
make the score 5-2.
runs for Athens. Teammate Chonko singled
to drive him
Jarrad Willis also went deep in later in the inning.
with two'run home run, as
Athens pulled to within a
part of a. 2-for-4 day at the single run · in the fifth when
plate . Andrew Chonko and Bamhan hit into a fielder's
Tyler Chadwell also had choice that allowed Hiro
multiple hits in the loss.
Tanda 10 score. That was as
Metgs starting pitcher close,
however, as the visiJeremy Blackston worked tors got the rest ·o f the way.
four innings to earn the win,
Meigs added a run in the
he allowed three runs on five si11:th on a Hai1Jop single to
hits. Doug Dill threw the right . th at scored Mike
final five innings .
Davis, who ~ingled to lead
Losing pitcher Brandon off
the inning. Doug Dill
Barnhan lasted into the se.v· then Jed off the seventh with
enth inning and was respon- a solo home run, followed
sible for . all run~ scored . by back-to-back RBI singles
Willis !!ave up just .one hit ,by · Dave McClure and
and reured sill of the seven Jeremy Blackston that made
batters he faced in relief.
the score 9-4.
·
The home team reached
Athens scored its final two
Barnhart for a run in the first runs on Willis' two-run ·
inning after "'ack-to-back home run in the .eighth
hits by Haislop
and
Amsbary. but did most of its inning.
damage in the second. where
Melga 9, Athena Junlora 6
it scored four runs.
Alhont D t 0 2 t 0 0 2 0 6 tO 2
1'0 00' 30 X- 9 ,, 3
An error accounted for the MIIQI
BrantiOn Barnhart, Jarrad W illll (7) ana
'innings' first score, before Co&lt;y Bean. Jeremy 8tactca1on. Doug Dill
Meigs· Ken Amsbary connects for a single in the fifth inning of
Eddy doubled down the right (5} and Terry Durst. W - Jeremy
Friday's 9-6 win over Athens Juniors. Amsbary also had an RBI field line 10 plate two more Blackston. L - Brandon Bllrnha n HR Cory Bean, Athens: Jarred Will~ . Athens.
double In the first inning. (Brad Sherman)
base
runners.
Hai slop Doug Dill, Meiga.

Locally owned and Loaded with Low Miles
and factory warranty!

Meigs

·'

"Call us for
the best
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�PageB4

.WEEKEND

:.6unbap limt~ ·ientind

Sunday, July 18, 2004

Local Sports
NASCAR TOP 10

Gallia Academy holds grade gchool open gym

NEXTEl Cup Series
Fallowing race 18 of 36
Driver
1. Jimmie Johnson
2.

Wtna

51

2,720

13

2,478 .
2,393

3
3
4
1

2,321

2

2,278
2,252
2,229 '

7
6
6

t3

18
t6

9

t8

3
4.

tO

t8

5

0
1

5

9

t2

4

7

t8

6
8

0

3

7

16

3
5

7

17

10
7

8

13

9

AP

SOURCE: NASCAR

2004NASCAR

Nextll Cup schedule

months later that I got spinal not good.
Associated Press
meningitis. Then, when I was
"They told me I had eight to
13 I cmshed again.
· 10 years to walk," she said. "At
"I was a very active child," the time there was no therapies
KANSAS CITY, Kan.
she said.
available. no treatments ()r any, Doctors told Kelly Sutton she'd . Sutton can joke about it now, thing. It was basically.go home
be living her life in a wheel- b\!t she nearly died in the sec- and lay down. And when
chair by now. · She refused to ond crash. Her father, Ed, had you're 16 years old. you're not
listen.
to dig dirt out of her mouth to willing to do that."
Sutton is competing in her keep her from suffocating.
Three years later. her father
first full season in the Tests .showe d spots on her had a prqposition.
Craftsman Truck Series, brain, but doctors assumed they
"My . dad came to me and
despite a struggle with multiple were the result of her head asked me. 'Do you still want to
sclerosis and a career filled
with injuries.
mJunes.
drive a race car''" and I said,
She has not done as well as
She recovered from the 'Yeah, can I" I have MS," ,&gt;he
she would have liked 50 far _ crash, but things still weren't said. "And he S!lid, 'Well, you
quite right.
can do anything you set your
she's 28th in the standings ·"After that 1just started hav- mind to, and if that's what you
· but bein~ behind the wheel in ing symptoms - like my gait want to do we'll do it as long as
NASCA is more than she was off, my running slowed you're able to.' That's when I
down ... I was tired all the started racing."
. ever expected.
"Even if I don't make it any time," she said. 'Then, when I
Ed Sutton declined to be
. further, I never thought I'd be w~ L6 and lost all my feeling interviewed, citing a desire to
· here anyway," said Sutton. who in my right side, I didn't know keep the .spotlight on his daugh· competed in fout races last year
h
·
,,
1er.
but IS still considered a rookie. w at was gomll on.
· "So this is a dream come true
The dia~nosts was a shock.
His daughter CQmpeted for
for me."
" I didn l know much about three years, winning seven feaMS anyway, so it never even ture races. in the Pro MiniThe dream began early for crossed my mind, and when Stock Series at Old Dominion
· Sutton. She started nding they told me that, I was pretty Speedway in Manassas, Ya.
• motorcycles at 10, go-carts at devastated," she said.
Then, another disaster.
with some nasty wrecks
Sutton has relapsing-remitIn 1995, when she had her
; along the way.
ting MS, ·meaning her symp- . first opportunity to go to
:. "1 broke my leg at 10 on_ 3 toms - numbness and fatigue Daytona with the NASCAR
: motorcycle, real bad," she SaJd. .- ~ n~t ~teady. With the help Goody's. Dash car, she hit a ·
"Had my first surgery at 12. of daily lDJecnons, she has not patch of tee and cmshed mto a
·. Got out of !he hospital from had a relapse in eight years.
tree. She landed in a trduma
: that; it wasn't a couple of
Still, her prognosis at 16 was center with a ~ollapsed lung.
BY STEVE BRISENDINE

:12-

I

i..NASCAR changes
BY MIKE HARRIS
Associated Press

i

Yell~w-flat! fmishes are all
; but fimshed m NASCAR.
; The sanctioning body said
: Thursday it will go to a green: white-checkered format, . hop: ing all Nextel Cup an!! Busch
· : series events will end with.the
; ears racing.
.'
; The new rule will take effect
l with the races July 24-25 at
; New Hampshire International
. : Speedway. The truck series
• afready has the rule in place.
; "The green-white-check; e~ format is an attempt to
l ach1eve everyone's.goals- a
! green-flag fmish," NASCAR
• president Mike Helton said.
"Thi~ change, h~pefull y,. will
i provide c~mpennve fim~hes
I In the relatively rare OCC8SIOnS
: it is warranted. .
: ''This format has been sue: eessful in the NASCAR
: Craftsman Truck series and,
: oonsiderinJI the tight competi' lion week m and week out in
~ tJie other 1Wb national seri,es,
' we feernle time is right to use
~ the same procedure in all three
; national series."
.
~ The new format will n01
;.mean a race can't finish under
f, yellow. H there is another cau~ tion after a' green-flag restart,

!

,' .

•

Feb. 15- Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Dale Earnhardt
Jr.)
Feb. 22- Subway 400, Rockingham; N.C. (Matt Kenseth)
· March 7 - UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, las Vegas (Matt
Kenseth)
March .14 - Golden Corral 5oo, Hampton, Ga. (Dale
E;arnhardt Jr.)
.
March 21 -.., Caroli.na Dodge Dealers 400, Darlington, S.C.
(Jimmie Johnson)
·
March 28- Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Kurt Busch)
•
April 4 - Samsung/RadioSI\ack 500, Fort Worth, Texas
(Elliott Sadler)
·
.
April 18 - Advance Auto Parts 500, Martinsville, Va. ·tRust:t~
Wallace)
·
·
April 25 - Aaron's 499, Talladega, Ala. (Jeff Got'don) ·
May 2 -Auto Club 500, Fontana, Calif. (Jeff Gordon)
May 15 - Chevy American Revolution 400, Richmond, Va.
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.) ·
·
May 3o - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. {Jimmie JohflBQI'I) :
June 6 ..:.. MSNA America 400, Dover, Del. (Mark Miirtln)
June 13- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa. (Jimmie JohnSon)
June 20 - DHL400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Ryan Newman)
•·
June 27 - Dodge/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif. (Jeff
Gordon)
. .
July 3- Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Flfl. (Jeff Gordon)
., July 11 - Troplcana 400, Joliet, 111: (Tony Siewart)
. July 25 -.New England 300, Loudon. N.H.
Aug. 1 -Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond
Aug. 8- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis
Aug. 15.:..... Sirius at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 22 - Michlg!ln 400, Brooklyn
Aug. 28 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
.
Sept. 5 - Pop Secret 500, Fontana, Calif.
Sept. 11 ..:.. Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 19- Sylvania 300, louc:lon, N.H.
Sept. 26 - MBNA AmeriCa 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 3- EA Sports 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 10 - Banquet .400; Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 16- UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord, -N.C. ·
Oct. 24 - Subway 500, Martinsville, Va,.
Oct. 31 .- ' Bass Pro Shops MBNA 400, Hamptot:~, Ga.
Nov. 7 - Checker Auto Parts 500, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 14 - Southern 500, Darlington, S.C.
Nov. 21 - Ford .400, Homestead, Fla.
·

broken ribs, and other injuries.
"I had surgery after that, and
then in '96 I had a real bad
attack of my MS," she said.
Eight years after her diagnosis, Sutton was in the wheelchair her doctors had predicted
for her. But by 1997, she was
back racing.
Since beginning her 'drug
treatment tile following year,
she has had no relapses. The
lead sponsor of her truck is
Copaxone, the trade nan1e of
the anli-MS drug she takes.
Sutton's first full season in
the tmck series has not been an
easy one.
She has failed to qualify for
three of II races, and has finished no higher than 20th. She
finished 23rd in . her last race,
Saturday's Built Ford Tough
225 in Sparta, Ky.
B h
h' f T'
ut er new crew c te ' tm
Shutt, said . Sutton has the
potential to be a contender.
"It's a four-letter word called
'time,"' Shutt said. "Time and
experience is all it is. She delinitely has the desire and ability.
"I've worked with some
rookie drivers, Some of them
several years ago, and they're
just now starting to contend," '
he said. "It doesn't have any1. Dennis Setzer, 1,662
thing to do with being female,. 2. Bobby Hamilton, 1,656
having MS, not having MS."
3. Carl Edwards, 1,562
4. Rick Crawford, 1,510
5, Matt Crafton, 1,501
6. Chad Chaffin, 1,485
7. Jack Sprague, 1,463
onto the track, Gordon drove 8. Jon Wood, 1,454
slowly to the finish, just ahead 9. Ted Musgrave, 1·,445
of Earnhardt.
10. Travis Kvapll, 1,418
Some drivers are not in
favor of the !:hange to green•
white-checkered finishes.
"All these race fans drinking
beer and screaming and hollering have not been in a helicopter upside down with 30
tubes hanging out of you after
going end-over-end 30 times
like I've been before because
of these green-white stans,"
Rusty Wallace said in a recent
interview with The Associated
Press. "I think it's · ridiculous
and it's unsafe." •

the race will end immediately.
The rule in the truck series
has allowed multiple greenJiag stans at the end of the
race to assure a green-flag finish, but NASCAR said that
also will change beginning
with the race Aug. 21 in
Michigan to assure uniformity
in all three series.
The new procedure will be
used in case of a caution period that would in the past have
forced the race to end under
yellow, with the cars finishing
behind the pace car. Instead,
the competuors will restan
under ·a green fl~~g after the
track is deemed ready for
competition and take the
white flag - signifying one
lap to go - the next time
around.
The new rule also will eliminate the need for late-race red
'flags, which have been used in
recent seasons to stop the
event, clean the track and fmish under green. The red-flag
rule was used - usually with
four or five laps left - to
allow more than one lap at
racing speed.
Still, four of the last 10 Cup
races have ended under caution, meaning the drivers did
not get to race to the fmish.
That dido 't make the drive~
•

or the fans happy.
Fans were particularly
enra~ed with the finish under
caution in the spring at
Talladega Superspeedway. .
Under the rule NASCA~
adopted last fall, freezing the
field when a caution is displayed, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
first scored in the lead when
the caution came· out on the
!84th of the 188 laps. race.
But replays showed Jeff
Gordon was about three-quarters of a car-length ahead, and
he was put in front.
With fans booing and
throwing beer cans and food
•

•

HUNTSVILLE. Texas Will Power Tumbling girls
gymnastics team members
Erica Blackburn. Rachel
Hannum and Maddison
Maynard recently had the
opportunity 'to work with
world famous gymnastics
coach Bela Karolyi at his
• camp in Huntsville, Texas.
: The Karolyi Gymnastics
:camp is located 70 miles
north
of
Hou ston
. Intercontinental. airport in
the middle of Sam Houston
l National Forest.
Athletes and coaches' are
! housed in cabins .and workouts are conducted daily in
t a sta(e-of-the-art 'gy m. The
~ Karolyi Camp is the site of
• National TOP Testing and
~Trai ning. Cainps.
I

I'

!
!

I

t Karolyi is pictured to the right,

l flanked

by Erica Blackburn on
1 his left and Rachel· Hannum
; on his · right. Madison
t Maynard is in front.

•1 ----------------------~------------------------•

jJarvis awarde~ tumbling scholarship

l
'

••

: MADISON , Wi s. - Dianna Jarvis, a 2004
:graduate of Galli a Academy, was awarded the
j National Tumbling and Trampoline Judges
l Association Scholarship at the 2004 USTA
:Nations held June 16-2 1 in Madi so n,
l Wisconsin.
• The scholarship is awarded to an outstand: ing . senior or co llege athlete who demon: strates exceptional dedication to tumbling and
:trampoline .
; Jarvi s has competed for Will Power
~Tumbling for 10 years and is currently a
1 member o f the USTA and AAU National
; team. She will attend Marietta College in the
:fall , majoring in sports medicine.
She is the daughter of Gary and Suzanne
.
1 Jarvis of Gallipolis. .

!
I

\----------------------~----------------------~-----

CHECK CASHING &amp;lOll
446-2404
license CC700077-ooo and 001
.00001 ,

#

Wellston to hold youth
baseball tournaments

Football officials training
offered in Point Pleasant

WELLSTON- The Wellston Recreat ion
Department will hold baseball to urname nts
July 24-25 in Wellston.
The tournaments will be double elimination format with three games guaranteed.
Cost is $100 and hit your own baseball.
The divisions are 8-and-under coach
piteh. I0-and-under and· 12-and-utider.
Contact Scott Sturgill ay (740) 418-2335 or
John Derrow .at (740) 384-2630.

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.- The Ohio~
.Kanawha Rivers Officials Association is
planning a training class for individuals
.who are intere sted in becoming registered
football officials.
The initial training sessions will be held
at the office at the Mason County
Fairgrounds on Wednesday and Thursday, .
Jul y 21 and 22. at 6:30p.m. and additional
sessions will be held the fo llowing week.
Interested persons must be 18 years of
age have an interest and understanding of
the game of foo tball . . and be willing to
learn the rules and mechanics of officiating.
Those who comp lete the class and
become registered offi cials will b~ el igible
tu assist in officiating middle sc hool. junior
hi gh and junior varsity games-d uring the
coming season .
Anyone interested is urged to attend. For
addi tional information. you can contact
Kevin Durst at 675-5415 or Scott King at
882-3392.

High School Fall League
returns to Rio Grande .
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio
Grande announced that the Fall High SChool
Baseball League is returning for 2004 ~
· The Fall League is open to any high
school st udent in grades 9-12. Thi s league
provides young players the opportunity to
continue to develop their ski lls in a competitive program.
,
Players will be placed on . teams of equal
competitive ability and will play for seven
weeks ending with a tourn amen t on October
9 and I 0.
'
· The. teams will be coached by n1embers of
the University of Rio Grande . baseball
squad. Players will be issued a t-shirt but
must provide the remainder of their uniform
(pants. hat. etc.). Players will be sw inging
wooden bats·.
The cost to participate in the Fall League
is $100 per player. All Ohio High School
Athletic Association (OHS.AA) rules will
apply.
Play begins August 28 .
For more information or to register contact Brad Warnim ont, Head Coach
University of Rio Grande, at (740) 245748f&gt;.
.
Make checks payable to University of ~io
Grande Baseball.

Big Bend football sign·
ups on the horizon
MIDDLEPORT- The Bi g Bend Youth
Football League will hold sig n-ups for the
· 2004 season on Saturday. July 24 at the
Middleport Football S.tadiLtm from 10 a.m.
until I p.m. and Saturday. July 31 at those
same times.
Players and cheerleaders will be signed
up on these dates. Team fro m Meigs,
Southern and Wahama will be organized
the same as last year. Players should be in
grades 3 and 4 and itl grades 5 and 6.
For furtherlnfonnation. call Jim at (740)
432-4073 'or Dave at 674-5178.

Softball team wins OVAA,.
Hanna·n.Trace To~~ey
'~The Kyger Creek girls b-ball softball team, sponsored by larry's Body Shop, finished the regullar season 7-:3, good enough for first place in the OVAA. The team also went undefeated and
took first in the Hannan Trace b-ball girls softball tournament. In front from left are Carley
Shriver, Ramsey Warren, Dayna Nance, Katherine Stump, Ashley Whobrey and Macyn Nancj!.
In middle row are Bobble Jo Gray, Rachael Smith, Kassie Shrive. r, Bethany Gilbert, Kasey Eblin. 1
Ker.rle Sparks, Ketsle Casto and Amy Shriver.
~In back are Ja.son Whobrey, Nikki Whobrey,' Mindy Glllbert, Dena Warrer1 and Gary Warren .

l

VAllEY
we

can

sports @mydailytribune.com

· ------~--~~--~------­

Sports Briefs

--'

II' •• IIC..CIIICI

'f,-southaf
tiMSinr.ndp

STAFF REPoRr

RIO GRANDE - The
Gallipolis
Recreation
Department. the Youth Sport
Group. and Big Time Sports
Enterprises Inc., will hold
its Back 2 Basics All-Star
Basketball Skills and Drills
Clinic at the ·university uf
Rio Grande on Saturday.
.
. August 14.
The' event will be at Lyne
Center from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m.
The leader of the camp will
be five-time NBA All -Star
and two-time NBA defensive player of th e year
Sidner Moncrief. He was
also former assistant coach
for the
NBA Dallas
Mavericks.
The fee is $35 per player.

The clinic is for boys and taught and practiced will
girls ages 6 and up. The inc! ude shooting with propday's activities will include er hand techniques, body
&gt;kills and drills led by Mr. po&gt;ition. release and follow
Moncrl~f to improve your through and other techoffensive and defensive i1iques to improve your
game.
shooting.
Ballhandling will consist
Players will divide up into
age/ability groups to ge.t of ball control. dribbling
individual in structions from with left and right hand.
Moncrief and his staff of speed and control and other
college players, coaches and · techniques to improve ballformer coaches.
handling skills . The defenThe individual skills and sive concept s will include ,
drills cli ni c wi ll comply proper stance. step- ~ lide.
with Ohio High School footwork, defending play Athletic Association rules. er's strength and ot her
If you are from another defen sive . concepts to
&gt;late . please &lt;:heck with improve your gam·e.
your association rules.
For more information, or
There will be no 2-on-2 tu to get a registration form
5-on-5 games. only stations . about the clinic, you can
to. improve your game wntact Brett Bostic at (740)
offensive ly and defensively. 441-6022 'or after 6 p.m. at
The skills and drills to be (740 ) 446-1978.

r-==-==-==--==:====-=::----:=_,--,---,

Help!!

204 W. lnd Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
!192-41461
l.keMt CC7000n-oo6
lictnH " 750041-006

· 135 Pine St.
111160
GalliPOliS. Ohio

"Your

'

.

owned and
Centtr"

.

'Ol Cir•nd Prix Loaded, 44,000 miles.......
.......................................................... $9, 700

ST. RT. 110

(J40J 446-2532 I

&lt;'

•

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

. $TAFF REPORT

·sports@ mydailytribune.com

11 . Mike Skinner, 1,379
12. Steve Park, 1,371
13. David Starr, 1,310
14. David Reutimann , 1,301
15. Terry·Cook, 1,286
16. Shane Sieg, 1,242
t 7. Andy Houston, 1,238
18. Tracy Hines, 1,200
t 9. Hank Parker Jr., 1,198
20. Shane Hnilel, 1,179 .

$CASH$

Gallipolis, Ohio

Nick Saunders; Drihhle elimi, nation : Beth Manin; Shooting
X-out: Nick Saulll.ler~ : Free ·
throws: Nick Saunders.
Sixth Grade - Bump out:
Cody Billings: Dribbl e elimination :
Ethan
Moore:
Shooting
X-out :
Ethan
Moure ; Free .throws : Ethan
Moore.
Prizes were donated by the
Shake Shoppe, Dairy Queen .
and Powerade

Gymnasts work with Olympic coach·

~a Casli tiff Payaay?

216 Upper River Rd.

. winners by grade:
Third Grade- Bump out:
Quinten McKinniss ; Dribble
elimination: Logan Allison;
Shopelng X-Out : Logan
Allison: Free· throws: Noah
Moore.
Fourth Grade - Bump
out: Jeremy Wilson; Dribbk
elimination: T. J. McCaJ.Ia;
Shooting X-out : T.J. McCal la:
Free throws: Brady. Cony.
Fifth-Grade - Bump out:

Back 2 Basics basketbaU
clinic to be held in August

Craftsman Truck Standings

rules to promote green-flag finishes
.

GALLIPOLIS - Eighteen
boys and girls took part in the
tina! day of activities at the
Gallipolis Basketball Open
Gym.
This concludes · the sixth
week of teaching basic bask'etball skills to both boys and
girls from grades 1-f&gt;.
The following is a list of

2

t2

Addltlonat champlonshlp·polnt'aarnero
1.517: 31. Ricky Craven t ,472; 32.
11. Jeremy Mayfield 2,108; 12. Dale
Ken
Schrader t .468; 33. Kyle Petty
Jarrett 2,083: 13. Jamie McMurray
t ,444: 34. Jeff Green t .422: 35.
2,068; 14. Kasey Kahne 2,044: t5.
Johnny Sauter 1,217: 36. Dave
Marl&lt; Manin 2.035: 16. Casey Mea..
Blaney 953; 37. Jimmy Spencer 943;
1,998: 17. Rusty Wallace 1,965: t B.
38.' Derrlke Cope 841; 39. Kevin
Michael Waltrip 1,960: 19. Sterling
Marlin 1,941; 20. Brian VIckers
Lepege.582; 40. Morgan Shepherd
502: 41 . John AndreW 460: 42. Kirl&lt;
1,913; 21. Terry Labonte 1,894: 22.
Shelmerdine 397: 43. Todd Bodine
Robby Gordon t ,B38; 23. Greg Biffle
350; 44. Hermie Sadler 315; 45. P.J.
1,806:·24. Jeff Burton I ,795; 25 . Joe
Jones 282; 46. Bjii .EIIiott 272: 47.
Nemechek t ,763:26. Ward Burton
t ,737; 27. Scott Wimmer t ,700; 28.
Johnny Benson 271: 48. Bobby
Hamilton Jr. 226: 49. Joe Ruttman
Ricky Rudd i ,667; 29. Brendan
207; 50. Andy Hillenburg 206
Gaughan 1,581 : 30. Scott Riggs

.From a wheelchair to the track

sports@ mydai lytribune.com

16

9

2,211
2,173

STAFF REPORT

Prev.
rank

Tap

Points

Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2,615

3. Jeff Gordon
4. Ton~ Stewan
5. Matl Kenseth
. 6. Bobb~ Labonte
7. Elliotl Sadler
6. Kevin Harvlck
9. Kurt Busch
10. Ryan Newman.

Kelly Sutton talks with crew members before the start of the O'Reilly Auto Parts 250 at Kansas Speedway, Saturday, July 3,
· 2004, in Kansas City, .Kan. Sutton is competing in her first full season in the Craftsman Truck Series, despite a struggle with
:multiple sclerosis. (AP)

i§&gt;uub.w lrnurs -i§&gt;tnttnrl • Page Bs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, July 18, 2004

I

SMfTH'SGMC

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TRUCK CENTER

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GALLIA AUTO SALES

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PageB6

OUTDOORS

Sunday, July 18,

Cl

&amp;urtbtt!' Qtfmt!S -~tntinel

2004

Ohio's ancient sea serves up creature comforts 1or fossil hunters
Bv

MAn MARKEY

Associated Press

WAYNESVILLE - The
July sun exacts a toll on the
trio of 50ish men who kneel
on old carpet swatches and
bend d!!ep a.t the waist, lea\ ing their noses just ;1 few
inches from the crusty rock
. slirface their eyes mc'tin• lously scour. They are
soaked in sweat. but they
· · search on.
About 40 yards away. a
dozen youngsters on a field
trip scrape at the shale deck
they stand on. some using
dusty tenni s shoes to pnp
loose · thin (ayers of stone
that they h~pe hide tiny treasures.
Despite their obvious diffe rences in angle and
approach , the two groups
share a mission. They arc
j ust a few of the mole than
10;000 fossil · hunters who
ano.ually visit Caesar Creek
State Park near Waynewille
in southwest Ohio.
The site is the.only utie of
its kind in the state. Most
other fossil hunt ing in Ohio
is done on private land on or
in gravel pits or road . cuts.
The city of Sharonville near
Cincinnati las t year opened a
I0-acre park on donated land
where fossil hunting is the
main attraction.
At Caesar Creek. fossil
hunters pick at the loose
rock; which is ac tu all y the
floor of an ancient ocean.
hoping to fi nd trilobites. brachiopods,
crinoids ,
cephalopods ahd horn corals.
Those tiny creatures inhabited the shallow sea more than
300 million. years ago.
The site was · exposed
about 25 years ago when the
Army Corps of Engineers
excavated a section of land
betwe.en the lake and the
creek below to create a spillway. Clearing the land
revealed the seabed, where

. experts say millions of crit- allow th~ use of tools . and
ters from long. long ago are visitors ar~ allowed to k~ep
sandwiched between layers only those specimens that
of loose rock . ·
are palm -si7ed· or ~ mailer.
This accidental dis&lt;.:ovcrv The top find - a -IJ-inch
opened up the door to fossil trilobite removed from the
hunting to thmt sands of Ohio 's pillway almost 20 years ago
.sch ool I-. ids. c olle~e stu - - is ·on di spla) at the Caesar
denb. outdoors enthus iasts Creek State Park Visit,,r
and the weekend park visi -' Center. All fossi l hunte rs
tors. The geology classes tllltst stop there and pick up a
t'rom nearbv Wright Stale free' permit bet'nre entering
University u~se the ~site rregu - the spillway.
" A k11 or the bcucr
larl y.
"There is no 4uestion that hunters will t'ind one of ead1
this is the best place in the type ot' fossil found at the
state to introduce people to site in ahout an hours time ...
fossil hunting_ ,. said Bill Byrge _,aicl. "And people are
Heimbrock ot Cincinnati , &lt;1 out there looking year-round
diligent fossil hunter and a - except when th.e spillway
reg ular. visitor to Caesar is &lt;.'O\t'red in ~110\\1 . Bits and
Creek.
pieces of fo." ils are easy to
"The res a lot ·of room find. but some folk s alw;1y s
there, with a large. l;irge area seem to be looking for that
to hunt in. and many of the perfect trilobite - ·and those
A few of the fossi ls found by the Kramer family are displayed at the Caesar Creek lake spillway
fossi Is are exposed right at arc very rare ...
the surface. There have been
Trilobites. the Ohio st;tlc near W&lt;Jynesville, Monday. (AP)
tens of thou,ands of trilo- t'o&gt;Sil , are the prime quarry
bites found there. and the at the site. They had a hard,
site keeps -turning up more segmented she ll called an
and more."
exoskele ton and were the
The spillway area is larger scavengers of the ancient
than severa l football fields, ocean. Thcv dined on seaand most of the fossil s are weed and :1lgae and swam
minute - about the .same and Grawled bv the millions
width as a pencil eraser. The throughout the warm, shalexperts recommend combing low seas of the Paleozoic
an ar~a no bigger than a few Era, which produced · more
square feet for close to an than 10.000 different species
hour for the best opportunity of trilobites.
The Caesar C reek State
to find one of the fossils .''Were really fortunate to Park fossil bed is believed to
have a cleared section th is have been left at the site
large, that is so ri ch wi th fos : when glaciers re treated from
si ls, and every time it rait]s it this pan of North 'America
PONTIAC AZTEC 011785 AT AC TI~T CRUISE PW PL CD ONE OWNER.................................................... $8,995
seems to expose · a who le about 25 ,000 years ago. The
NISSAN PAlliFINOER 4X4 '12078 BDFW AT AC 4X4 TILT CRUISE PW PL SP WH.............................. $ t 9.995
new crop of them:· s aid fo~&gt;ils there date as far back
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NISSAN
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Becky Byrge, the office as the Ordovician Period CHEROKEE
LIMITED 4X411119n AT AC TILT CRUISE PW PL ALLOY WHEELS APNFWCO $14,34'5
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administrator for tl1e Army almost 400 million ·years
JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4X4 #11839 V6 AT AC TILT CRUISE PW PLSPRT WHLS.V6 CD................... $17.950
Corps of Engineers, which ago. according .to Byrge.
JEEP GRANO CHEROKEE LORADO 4X4 •12042 AT AC nLT CRUISE PW PL P. SUN ROOF
"Fossi l hunting is one of
manages the site.
LEATHER
SEAT SPORT WHEELS ............................................................................................................,..................... $14.995
'"Weve had little kids. those th in gs that people
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LIBERTY
LIMITED 4X4 •11950 AT AC TILT CRUISE PW P~ P. LEATHER SEAT SPORT
graduate students, retirees probably ne ve r thought
WHEELS P. SUN ROOF.. , .................................................................;............................................................................... $21.995
and fam ilies on vaca ti on all _ about doing , but once they
02 FORO EXPLORER SPORT TRAC 4X4 #11836 AT AC TILT CRUISE PW .PL P. LEATHER SEAT
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99 FORD EXPLORER SPORT 4X4 '11838 2 DR AT AC TILT CRUISE PW PL SPORT WHEELS LOW Ml $1 0,495
tori c sea life by just picking it." Hei mbrock sn id. '' It s a .
away al' the si te wirh their treasure hunt. The fossils are
fingers."
the 11:easure, and the fossils
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SUVJ

'lx'l 1,uckJ ·

Weekly--Ohio Fishing Report
COlUMBUS, Ohio (AFI) - The weekly fishing report provided

by the Division of Wildlife of the Ohio Department of NatUfal
Resources.
'
·
·CENTRAL OHIO
. Hoovet Reservoir (Delaware and Franklin counties) - Hot '
, surface water is now moving fish deeper toward the cool water
·near the therrilocllne. Try casting and trolling, deep diving four to
six·IOOh shad imitating crank baitsl The best activtty Is usu.aiiY at
sunrise and aunaet. Over 700,000 saugeye lingertings (one and
one·l'181f inch) were stOcked In early June. Ten hOrsepowef limit
~. Rulh Cretk Lake (Falr11eld and Perry counties) - July is an
exc:ellent mqnth tor channel catfish . Over 13,000 yearling ·chan·
'n&amp;ls were stocked In September, 2002, and 2,700 a~itlonal fish
were stodced In 2003. Fish around downed treetops with night
craWlers, O!Jt.sha.d,1or prepared baits. Fish these areas with rube
balta or plastic worms for. largemouth bass. Crappie will be hold·
lng just above the thQrmocllne In the deeper woody cover; use
minnows.lo catch them. Try lfshing for carp arOurn:t any BKisling
weed bed&amp; with doughballs: T&amp;n horsepower limit
..,
NORTHWEST OHtO
Maumee River (Wood and Luc~s Counties).,.;.. Channel catfish
. are t;leihQ taken In the area between the Maumee Dam and the
Independence Dam. Nigh1 crawlers, shrimp, and cl1 1cken Uver$
J'te tN baitt of onotce among angler&amp;. Flatheac:1s are also being
taken In the same. area witn the same bait
·
. flndtay Reservoir No. 2 (Hancock Counry) - Walleye are
btlng .taken during· the day using night crawlers. Qrlfting and
,trolling are the bast methods to take these fish. Crappie are
being taken on minnows from the area around the dock.
Chann,et cats are being taken on night crawlers from the banks.
ChetiM: Mill (Rlchlatld County)- Chapnol catfish are being
fak8n at night In the shallow water areas. Cut up shad are work~~'.l;~ for bait flahed on the bottom.
'
ze'RNer (Allen County) - Stnallmouth bass as well as
I'Od&lt; ~ In the 8- to 12-lnch raoge are being caught In the
Augtalzt,· Aoo&amp;ttr tails and j40s seem to \vQrk th~ best. The
t-~rtor Road acoeos II llle hOI spot '
NORTHEAST OHIO
BetlCh City Reservoir and tall water (Tuscarawas County) Cattlt~ i8 aburte~ant at this 196-acre lmpcwndment and its asso.Ciated ~U waters. She-to 10.1nch bullhead catfish are hitting night
crawlers~ cut,tJaffln t~ tall waters close to the rlp~ap shor~ lin•: Survey raulta show that bullheads in the reservoir can
reaCh 14 Inches and the JXlPUl&amp;tloo as a ,whole Is ·excellent.
Bt&amp;Mgilla, 6 10 9 li'lchee, are being taken by boat anglers using
worms, curty 1:all8d grubs, -.oo jigs,
YYelkM Creek afld Cross Creek (Jef1ersonl - Smallmouth
baSI action II heating up.In creekS this time cf year. Angler&amp; are
utlng unra.flght tackle and- s~tt craws as bait nur the Fernwood
.State F=otnt. which Ia located one mile aouth of us 22 near

'

'

c-!Ailll

...,._ «

v-.

.,

catfish are being caught by anglers using chicken livers, cut

bait, al)d spinner baits as bait. Still fish keeping the bait greater
than 10 feet deep. Use a No.4 baltholdlng hook.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
.
Salt Fork la~e (Guernsey County) -large crappie are being
caught on drop-offs In deep water using twisters and minnows.
Anglers.have also been catching largemouth bass in good num·
bers throughout the lake. Channel catfish and flatheads are
being caught from the shore using chiCken livers and night
crawlers. Water conditions are clear and the lake elevation is at
normal summer levels.
"
·
, Seneca Lake (Noble County)- Saugeye angling and success
has slowed consld.erably with the onset o1 recent hot and humid
weather. However, channel catfish are having gbod success
fishing from the shore at access points a{ong State Rte. 313.
Most catfish anglers are using night crawlers and chicken livers
for bait.
Muskingum River (Morgan Co~,~ntyt - Flow Is slightly below
normal for this time of year. Spotted bass ar8 being caugllt on
spinner baits and crank baits. A few channel catfish and flatheaos are also being caught near the·McConnelsville taU water.
Most anglers are using . the traditional baits such as night
crawlers, chicken livers, and cut baits.
(Washington County)- Hybrid str1!1ed bass ttshlng ·is gOOd at
the Devola dam with' most fish being caught from boat near the
face of thE! dam. Most MHybrlds~ are runnfng 16 to 20 inches and
are being caUght on white 1/4-ounc, twister jigs.
·
AEP' ReCreation Land (Morgan County) - Gopd numbers of
large bluegill are being caugllt in tha more remote strip ponds
and la~s In this area. Good catches of l~rgem outh bass In the
12·1o15·inch range are also Jleing caught in these lakes. Many
of these remote IS_
kes may take 30 to 60 minutes to hike to, but
anglers are ollen rewarded with · higher quality calG.hes of
bluegill and redear sunfish. Most sunfish are being caught on
meal worms and wax WClrms. Belly boat angling is an ideal way
to fish these remote lakes.
·
LAKE ERIE
Wtotom Blltn
Walleye - The beSt waUeye f\Shlng has been in the area
aroonel West Sister Island frc;&gt;m the island north to Middle Sister
and from the Island northwest to the turnaround buoy of the
Toledo shlpplng channel. Orirtlng ma'j'fly rigs and troltrng spoons
or worm harne,ses produce thfi! mofll fish . Walleye i1a!chect In
2003 (sizes from 5 to 10 Inches~ are already being CllUght.
Please handle sub-legal fish gently and quickly retUrn -them to
the water.
•
·YelloW Perch - Yellow perct1 fishing has been best at ttte
Kelleys Island airport reef, around Ballast Island, and around
the C!lns along the north boundary of the Camp Perry !Iring
range. Fish Just off the bottom using perch spreaders tipped with
~111fng$1e. ·
.
shiners.
,£ f(lllbuck Cr"k (Wayne CounlY)- Since snapping turtles have . smallmouth Sass - The best smallmouth bass fishing has
Jald their egge, anglers are now ta'rcwtlnc them aB they disperse bee~ around the Bass l~ands, Kelleys ISland and Sandusky
lo foraQ_e for toad. UO&amp;t anglers are uelng urn:onventlonal Bay.
.
,
Wng methods to take lhBBe /ll..tampered, but good eating,
Central Ba1ln
reptltet. Bank lines are most successful on laryJa lakes and long
Walleye -The best w~lleye fishing has been north or Lorain
etream b~'" and float Hnea soom to do beat 111 small Impound- bei'ween th,e old trash dump aOO the sandbar, 10 to ' 1~ miles
manta, like farm ponds., ~or bank lines you need short lengths of north of Ashjabula lf.170 feet at water, 1 to 3 miles north of the
J1rMVv staging 16 which are Ued lart~e hoods (siz:e 510 to 10/0). Chagrin River in 38 to 50 feet of water, and 3 tO 4 mlles .west of
Your lJne 1hould be tong enough to permH the balled hook to lie Fairport Hartxlr in 35 to 45 feet of ytaler.Trolling spoons or worm
DO lhe ~Hom. A number of baits csn be u&amp;ejj but, bfoody, • harnesses uSing divers or downr\ot,ers J'laa produced the best
fOUGII, lleef·ntck 1•·1/est.
.
catches.
SOUTHWEST OHIO
venow PerCh- YellOW perch fishing has been boat 2 to 3 miles
Gtut Miami River and Twin Creek {Montgomery and Wanen ·north of C~eveland ~n 3510 48' feet of water, 3 to 4 milts north of
countiM)- ROCk baas and amall~th ban are being caught Fairpott Harbor In 50 ro 56 feet of water, and-3 to 4 miles out
b'i 111\Qltrt using tmall crawfish colored crank baits, watermelon from Ashtabula to Conneaut in 50 to 55 feet of water. A perch
or pu~o!Qred tubes or twlller tails. CUt Into the spreader tipped with ah!nertls tt1e rnott popuCar sat wp.
aNa ~low the riffles allowing me bait to drift Ylith the current
Smallmouth Bass - The bast smal!movth bass fishing haa
Frathud catll.tl t~re being caught In the Great Mleml River near been around Augglaa Reef end the shoreline and harbors In 15
.the~ .ond Weet Carrollton areao.- Uoe lat~ chubs, to30feotolwatortrom t'alrportHarborto Coonaaui.Jige lipped
.....,., or gotiMih u bait and flet1 the bait ICI'OM shallow- witt! shiners, lube jigs and crank balta have bee'n the most pro11f8'1119r ooodiiOI orau. Saugeyo are boln~ caught b-; anglers ducjlve lure&amp;.
. OHIO. ,RIVER
_ , - ID!Ne feel datp jerk balta. Channel ciiWiah are being
coughl by ongft11 uatng night Ct1Wftl1 anrl ch&lt;Jba. PIIICII the bloH
(Adame County) - Channel coWIIIh arnJ flathead catflsn are
an a No. 1/0 baltl1olding hoolc and coal Into thlllaK walars of being caught b-; onglano uotng chlokon IMtrl, out ba", and spin_ I'*&gt; tilt bill on tho COttom In llledatporpoolo or wfth llvtl nor bails as bait. &amp;tllt fllh ketplng the [&gt;all greater lllan 10 fHI
lllilll tel tho bill dil!l ifl\0 lhll rtttlitt llld ,_n Into the doepor doe~.' Uso a No. 4 balthO\dlnQ hock.
,
~ ...,.,. the wattr It about lllroe to fi'l8 le-' dHp.
(Molga County) - Tl\t river lilt normal tlimrnor pool tiBYa·
(Clinton County) • Thloi.U It tocafed nl{lo mllea tion and cleat. Channtl catfloh are telng cought aftor dark at tn.
Wlfrnl'1QIOO on SlaW Rtt 730. Btueg~ and ounf1811 L..ding CrHk and Snadt !'liver confl-W11tl me Olllo River.
~ bolflll-ghl b-; MQIIrl Vtlng Clllnk btltO. tlllhWQrm• or Channtl coflitl1 are being coughl on night crawttro and ChloiWn
• - u bill Good artlflclal bo" ooto11 ore gr..., or Char- !Ivers. Overall fishing coodltlono are gooct In thO Racine Pool of
~ Thote oro good fllhlng Of)f)Ortunltl• from a boat or lht Ohio Rlvor. A ttw oaugor and ..ugoy. are baing Caught at
lilong tho - n o and plor 1r1ao. looJ&lt; for addl1lonal opponu• lt1e Ra&lt;:IN tall water Ullng twialart arnj minnow comblnadont.
.-In tho rnou1h of e-n Creott Keep tilt """ IMito olx teet (Washington County) - The rr.tr is at normal summer pool
doop,C - • No. 61ong-ohanked hook. Channel catlllh are · etavatlon end clear. Good numbaro ot chanrn&gt;I calfi8h and flatbolng caught by anQters ualng chicken liVers, cut ball, &amp;hr!mp heads are b&amp;1ng caught at the Mulklngum River conlluence with
lind urthworma u bait Cast from the pler area. keep the ball ,. ":'&amp; Ohk) River ,and 1he Belpte City Aamp. Preterred batts are
oftl of the bottom •"'!.~ three to six Jaat Oeep. Use a No. 5 blv&amp;gilt and large ahlnet'8 and are being fiShed below,large sUp
Jlollt1oldlng hoOk. '
bobber&amp;.
'
Eoot Fork Lake (Clermont County) - Crappie are being
(Scioto County) - Hybrid stri/&gt;0&lt;1 bass and white bass sue~ by anglers \J&amp;ing live minnows or 1116 ouroo jigs wlth
cess ·has decreased recently at Greenup dam. However, nice
pfutiC chartreuse cob'ad tubes lipped with a live minnow or catches of flatheads and channel catlish are being caught on
Powlraalt. Fish In and around strudur&amp; such as brush plies and cut ball fished on the bottom using 1/2-ounce sJnk8rs. .,
IaMon
Kotp lhe ball greator than nine feet deep. Channel
catfilh are being caughl ualng chfcftenl!ver as bait Use a No. ~ .
Tip of the Week
1/0, or 210 longehanked hoot\:, Keep the bait under a bobbef and
To float a line rub a candle or fly floatant over the flrst siK feet
on of the bottom, Channel catfish are being caught off a1 Tunnel of the line up from the lure. Use this tbchnique when fishiflg with
floltl,
•
slid&lt; baiL Jerk the ball and then g.ve a fittle slacl&lt;. The baot will
Ohio RIVer (Adams County) -channel catfish lind flathead retrieve in zigzag motion that bass wdl find Irresistible.

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Sunday, July 18, 2004

Fair brings top entedainment to Gallia County
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIIiUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS- If you're
looking for a break from the
run-of-the-mill summertime
activities, the Gallia County
Junior Fair· has plenty of
entertainment in store.
Thi s year's fair begins
Aug. 2 and continues through
Aug. 7. During the week, the
fairgrounds off- of Jackson
Pike will be jamriled pack
with food, games and entertainment.
On Aug. 2, .the fair starts
with a 9 a.m., tobacco judging and ends with a 9:30
p.m., Fair Queen contest.
There are twelve ladies
vying for the title. including
Cassidy Ruff, independent; .
Kel sey Huffman from Galli a
.Academy ; Kendra Speirs
from South Gallia; Lauren
Schmoll from River Valley:
Kristina Stower from Gallia
Academy ; Megan Fisher
from
Gallia
Academy ;
Jennifer Giles from River
Valley; Sarah Stanley from
South · Gallia;
Meghan
Deckard
from
Gallia
Academy ; Brittany Bennett
from
Gallia
Academy;
Jessica Shriver from River
Valley and Brandy Marcum
· from River Valley.
On Aug. 3, the head line
entertainment will be the
Carolina Boys, with the con.cert beginning at 8:30 p.m.
The Carolina Boys are no
st.rangers to the Southern
Gospel mu sic scene. Bass
singer Ray Reese spent 37
years sin gi ng with ~ tile
Kings m~n Quartet and his
son, Brandon, played drums
for the Kingsmen for two
years prior to the Kingsmen's
retirement. Additionally,' lead
vocalist Tim· Surrett spent
·seven years
with
the
Kingsmen; tenor singer
. Derrick Boyd sang for six
years with !he Dixie Melody
Boys; baritone and bass guitarist Jason Selph performed
with the Kingsmen and
pianist Nick Succi, the
youngest member of the
group at 23, pla)'ed for
Middle Cross Quartet for
four years prior to joining the
Carolina Boys.
On Aug . 4, Gallia County
will hear the country music
styling of America's first
"Nashville Star," Buddy
Jewell starting at 8:30p.m.
Jewell won the USA
Network's first "Nashville
Star" contest in 2003, where
he received 2 million votes.
His single, Help Pour Out the
. Rain (Lacey's Song) was the
highest debut - at No. 44 for a new solo artist since
Wynonna debuted at No. 45
with She is His Only Need.
Arkansas
native
Joe
Nichols takes the stage at

Buddy
Performance (two consecutive
years) for his chart-topping singles "The Impossible" and
" B r o k e n he a r t s v i II e ., .
Additionally, "The Impossible''
received a Gramrny ·nomination for Be~t C? untry Son~ .
The New York Ttmes
recently publi~hed an extensive profil e on Nichols , lauding him as "a tradition-minded singer who doesn't look or
act the part," who "may well
be the harbinger of country
mu sic's next phase." They
went on to praise Nichol s's
"mix of hipster chic and
classicism,"
down-home
concluding, "Nichols doesn't
try to look or sound like his

/

family of gospel singers,
The Shafer Family.
When he entered college,
time con'straints made it necessary to quit perform,i.l),g, Ijl:
studied at the UniverSity 'ol
Rio Grande. and then-1i'IIMferred to Palmer College of
Chiropractic in Davenport,
Iowa. After graduation, he
·returned to Gallipolis and
. began his busy professional
practice .
But -singing remained on
hi s mind, and a few years
ago. he started doing performances again ... af churclles,
political fund-rai sers, the
American Cancer Society's
Relay for Life, social ·club

Nlchol5
New York studios for live coveted Horizon Award from
interviews. and that after- the Country Music Association,
noon . he taped a performance completing a. triple crown of
for AOL Sessions. The foi- uuphies that year - Nichols
lowing day, he appeared live was also named Top New Male
on The View, and appeared Vocali st by the Academy of
on Jimmy Kimmel Li ve and Country Music ;md won the
Breakthrough Video of the Year
ESPN 's Cold Pi z7.a.
Award
from CMT: Country
' Nichols is also featured in
this month 's issues of Elle . Music Television. Nichols is
· and Redbook magazines, and the first artist ever to win all
. · has
been
pro fired
in tl1ree awards, and he won them·
· Entertainment
Weekly, all in one year. Nichols has
Country Weekl y and Country nx:eived four Grammy nods:
Music Today around release for Country Album of the Year
(for Man With A Memory) and
date.
In 2003. Nichol.&gt; won the for Best Male Country Vocal
Joe

8:30p.m., Aug. 5.
Ni chols made his major
label debut in 2002, winning
over fans and music critics.
Sincc his debut, Nichol s has
opened for country music
super-acts Brooks and Dunn
and Alan Jackson.
Nichols released his second Universal South album,
entitled Revelation June 29.
Nichols kicked off the
release witli a fast-paced
schedule of media appearances including a live in-studio · perft;,rmance on Good
Morning America, CNN's

Carolina Boys

forebear&gt; : he pays tribute to
them by building on their .
, . ·
legacies...
Local entertainment is the
theme Aug. 6 when Paul
"Bub'' William s takes the
"age at K:JO p.m .. and Joey
Wilcoxon performs 'at 9:30
p.m.
Both
Williams
and
Wilcoxon are staples on the
loca l music circuit. They
recetitly performed at thi's
y'e ar's River Recreation
Festival.
.
A native of Gallia County.
Wi lcoxon entered the ll1cul
county fair talent 'competition
at age six. He won ti"t in
his age diVJs;on singing ,a ,
Bobby Bare hit ·'Detroit
City ... Th is win r6ulted in an
appearance on Huntin gton.
W.Va.-based. WSAZ TV
Channel 3. on the 'station's
Saturday farm program.
which wa' nicknamed ''The
Corncob Report.''
. The next twelve veaf' un til he entered Rio Grande
College ·- helped perfect
his sin!!ing stv\e. E\'ef\o '
opponul1ity to - .,ing (\· a~'
taken . Wil coxon uy' he
has alway&gt; loved to perform , and one of the'e
child hood
opportunitie&gt;
was with his Ohio maternal

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Payment ligured with down payment of $1995 cash or trade plus tax and title with select lenders approval.
2002-2004 72 mo. at5.74 APR, 2001 66 moat 4.69 APR , 2000 66 mo &amp;15 .44 APR . 1999 54 rna at 5.99
1998 48 mo at6 .25 APF' , 1997 48 moat 7.99 A PR, 1996 &amp; older 36 moat 8.25 APR. See Salesman

~~

Southern

(

"

~

~ock

Allstars
,&lt;:,

meetings and county fairs.
And on Aug. 7, the
Southern
Rock Allstars
brings its tribute to Lynryd
Skynyrd.
,
The band's lineup features
foundin2 or former members
of South ern Rock acts as
Blackfoot. Molly Hatchet,
and The Rossington Band.
The band (s composed of
Jay Johnson. a &lt;:haner ,member of The Rossington Band
and Radio Tokyo: vocalist
Jimmy Farrar. who joined
Mullv Hatchet in 1980 as
that hmct· ' ,·ocalist; drummer Jackson Spires who was
a t'uunding member of
Blackfoot: bassist Charles ·
Hart who founded the group
CruiLe Control and worked
a' a.n engineer with Gov't
Mule. Lynyrd Skynyrd and
Widespread 1'1lnic: and
Scnlly Mabry. a iou nding
memher of Tank N Steele.
Admis,ion to tl-.e fair is $7 and
includes rides. A sea~ pass is
available for S20, but does not
include the cost of rides.
Children age two-years-old
ami younger are admi tted
free. but do not' have ride
privileges .
On Aug .3. seniors who present their Golden Buckeye
,-.. rd will be admi tted free.

�•
Sunday, July t8,

2004

Southeast Ohio RMRS
Summertime is when to practices emergency mass
be in blackberry .patch ·vaccination scenario

•••

For the first time in 17
years: Toney Dingess says the
Meigs Marauder Band won 't
be traveling out of town for a
week to band camp.
·It will be held on the Meigs
High School campus from 9
a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday this week,
with Vaughan 's catering food
for the 70 band kids.
While many smdents get
the traditional three months of
summer vacation, band members don't. In late June, director Dingess began rehearsals
so his musicians would be
ready for July 4 parades. They
contmue right through with
few breaks until school starts,
which incidentally, is just five
weeks from now.

effort on everyone's part.

•••

As many of you know, the
Meius C()unty men:s shelter ·
on Union Avenue in Pomemy ·
closed earlier this summer.
What a shame. It was a
Charlene
uodsend
to many who were
Hoeflich
homeless or temporarily
down on their luck and were
trying to pull themselves up .
Money, ()f course, . was the
problem.
Thi s week ii was disapLet's not foroet the
"Remember Life Rally" to pointing to look over county
take place tomorrow night at allocations of funds totaling
9: I 5 down at the amphithe- $9.3 million for the lowater. Spunsoreu by the local inwine and homeless populaRight to Lik group, the rally tion by the Ohio Department
will include a candle light cer- of Development and note that
emony and some music . Meigs County, with its 14.6
)3abv items will also be · percent unemployment rate,
accepted for the Athens had again been passed ovef;
Pref.~1ancy Res.~~rce Center.
Anna Wolf of the Chester
Geez, think how much community will be off again
money we could save if we'd come Aug. 17, this time to
just learn to put trash in the Japan . You may remember
trash can a·nd not dump it all that she went to Niger, West
Africa, with the Peace Corps
over the place.
. Did you know that more sometime ago.
She has now finished her
than 11,700 tons of stuff is
dumped along Ohi()'s &lt;.:ounty, master's in linguistics state and interstate routes teaching English as a second
each . year, which is being language- and in Japan will
picked up by the Ohio be teaching kindergarten
Department of Natural through sixth grade at a priResources and the Ohio vate school in Utsunom1ya,
Department of Transportation which · is close to Tokyo.
at a cost of $2.3 million to She's going on a two-year
contract and will begin her
Ohio taxpayers?
Think how, much better ,job on Sept. I.
(Charlene Hoeflich is genthat money could be spent,
and all it would take is a small eral manager of The Daily
Sentinel in Pomeroy.)

...

...
Take steps to . manage inheritance wisely
•

You may have read about a
vast "transfer of wealth" that
is. taking place as baby
boomers start to inhen t
money from their parents.
While it's true that the wealth ·
· being transferred is enormous
- in the billions of dollars
- it may, or may not, have
much of an impact on your
· personal life.
In any case, if you get an
inheritance, you'll want to
make the right moves. Of
cqurse, you already know
your situation and what
you're likely to inherit, but
1t's useful to keep in mind
that relatively few people in.
the "baby boom" category just over 17 percent - . have
received any inheritance,
according to a study by the
AARP (formerly known as
the American Association of
Retired Persons}. And the
same study showed that the
averl\ge inheritance has on! y
been about $48,000.
Still, even that amount of
money could help you make
. progress toward your finan. cial goals - if you manage it
carefully. Here are a few steps
you may want to follow:
. • See your tax advisor Your inheritance may have
t3x implications, so, before
you do anything with· the
money, see your tax advisor.
· ·• Consider "parking" your
money ~ When you receive
an inheritance, · it may be an
emotional time. But you want

investments - )f you were
determmed to cut down on
debt before the inheritance,
now you can do it even faster.
But if you were already pretty
much debt-free, and you wanted
to help diversify your portAp~il
folio,
now . you've got more
Rice
resources with which to work.
• Review your long-term
'
strategies- If your inheritance is
particularly large, .you rriay want
to re-evaluate all your long-term
to make financial and invest- investment moves. For example,
ment decisions with your head you· may want to look at how
- not your heart . So, don't you're allocating your investt=l .
rush into any decisions - it dollars in your 40 I(k) or other
won't hurt you to "park" your employer-sponsored retirement
inheritance temporarily m a plan. Or, you may need. to look at -.
money market account or a cer- the percentage return you need to
tificate of deposit. Later, when get from your investments each
things have settled down, you year to achieve your retirement
can decide how to use the goals. You 'may even need to conmoney to your best advantage. sider additional "tax-smart"
• Think twice about "splurges" investment moves. In fact. with
- · Once you're ready to lake so many issues involved, you
action, you may be tempted to really should consult with your
spend some of your inheritance investment professional.
on a new car, a down payment on
By following these suggesa vacation home or some other tions, you can help yourself
ffil\)or purchase. You11 want to get the maximum benefit
evaluate tiJeSe choices very care- from you~ inheritance- and,
fully before signing on the dotted perhaps just as importantly,
line. Ask yourself some key ques.. you'll be showing respect for
lions: Do I. really neal this purchase? Will this move add .to my the people who left it to you
debt load? There's certainly noth- in the flfst place.
April E. Rice is an invesm1ent
ing wrong with using part of an
representative
with Edward
inheritance for &lt;;Omeliling that you ·
Jones
Investments,
located 990A
may 'have ~anted - just make
Second
Ave:,
Gallipolis.
441sure you c:km't actually set yourself
9441.
Edward
Jones
has
been
back by making the purchase.
·
serving
individUill
investors
• Boost your savings and
since 187/, memberSIPC. ·

The
Fr.ench didn't·an come at once
.
.

JAMES SANDS
:sPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

Not all of the French came
· to Gallipolis· in 1790 with the
so-called French 500. Quite a
rjumber of them did not arrive
hc;re until the first decade of
the 19th Century. The Rene
Carel family, who were
rlatives of Paris, took up residence in the Old French City
'during the spring of 1803.
: Tbe came by wagon train
across
the
Alleghany
Mountains to Pittsburgh an&lt;l
purchased a flatboat down the
Ohio River. The family
stopped at the Blennerhassett
Mansion where Rene.later said,
':its grandeur of rich fumishipgs and · handsome grounds
was in strange contrast with the
surrounding wilderness."
Rene Carel took up the salt
making trade. From 1790 to
about 1815 or so, Gallipolis per!IOIIS made salt from boiling water
found underground oou; the
Orickamauga Creek. It took a lot
of water to produce small
amoonts of salt With the coming
of the stemnboot and the stage
coach, it became more economical for Gallipolis storekeepers to
get salt from Jackson or
Olarlesron, Vuginia (oow.. West

Vuginia). Hence, the Gallipolis
salt w()fj&lt;s died olf. Salt appears in
abundace in underground streams
near the Racroon Creek and other
places. In fact. when gas and oil
drilling started in Gallia County in
, the 1800s., these salt water pock. ets were a nuisance.
Rene also did some farming
and his sons, Virgil and
Franklin,
established
Gallipolis' first ~team sawmill
and the town's first iron
foundry. Franklin was born in
1795 in Paris and Virgil's birth
year was 1799, also in Paris.
hi 1818, Rene Carel built a
frame house that used to stand
at 23 Court Street. It was torn
down in the early 1960s. It is
intersting that the Carel house
stayed in the family for all of it~
140-some years. Tbe daughter
of Franklin Carel married a
Felix Wood and they lived there
until the house carne to the
Woods' daughter, Lena. She
married J. W. Dillon , a
Gallipolis businessman. The
Dillons' daughter became Mrs.
Frances Hanson and it was
Mrs. Hanson who was Ii vi ng
there when. the house was sold
for the expansion of the
Commercial iUld Savings Bank.
Rene Carel was honored in
J825 when- he was selected to
•

serve as a member of the official greeti ng party for Gen.
Lafayette's visit to Gallipolis.
While Franklin became a
successful businessman as well
a~ justice of the peace, associate
judge and trustee of Gallia
Academy, Virgin might have
been the more interesting of the
two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Rene
Carel. Virgil was an inventor. In
fact, some people claim that he
invented the stemwheel steambOat In the first few decades
after the steamboat had been
invented, all such boats were
sidewheel steamboats. ·
In 1828, Carel constructed
.two, miniature engines, showing that by the application of
the power of the same, the
momentum of , the wheel
would be carried over the dead
pqint~ without requiring a fly
wheel. Carel showed his plans
to a respected engineer who
informed Virgil that no real
advantage would be gained by
the use of two engines instead
of one. So, he gave up on the
ide&lt;! si nee he had no capital to
proceed with his invention.
But in 1830, other people
using Carel's principles built a
few stemwheel steamboats. In
a short time, most steamboats
were built as sternwheelers.

health department. law
What would happen if
enforcement
ahd other
there were a smallpox outresponders. As the scenario
break
that
affected
played out. participant
Southeast
Ohio?
How
agencies
determined if their
would our medi2ai , public
response plans and written
health and law enforcement
Cathy
working agreements were
agencies pull together to
sufficient to meet the chalClark
treat the sick, protect the
lenge. Part of the tabletop
well and provide security
included setting up mass
for mass vaccination clinics
vaccination clinics, recruit~nd transport of medical
ing and training volunteers
materials? This was the sceto
help run it, dealing with
nario enacted at the June 29 rorist incidents involving
· an unusually high load of
tabletop exercise that wa's biological weapons.
held in Logan. Gallia
As part of the exercise, contagious patients, and
County was represented by the response to the incident providing security at the
I0 participants from 7 agen~ was examined, as well as medical center and mass
cies:
the
Health the interaction with local vaccination clinic.
The June 29 tabletop was
Department,
Holzer • and State agencies and
the
third in a series of
Medical Center, Emergency assets that · will respond.
Management Agency, EMS, Participants offered com- increasingly realistic exerRed
Cross, Woodland ments from the exercise, cises to test plans and workCenters, and the Gallia which will be compiled in ing arrangements to protect
County Sheriff's Office.
an After:Action Report with om communities from the
The tabletop was spon- recommendations for future effects of naturally occursored by the Southeast Ohio training and response proce- · ring or intentional disease
outbreaks. Running a mass
RMRS Subregion I, which dures.
i11cjudes Gallia, Jackson,
A "tabletop exercise" is vaccination clinic is an
Meigs, Athens, Hocking, · intended to capitalize, rein- expansion of current flu
Vinton, Ross, Pike, Scioto force, and provide· feedback vac~ination clinics offered
and Lawrence co·unties . on the responders training by the Health Department.
RMRS stands for Regional and preparedness. It also However, vaccinating the
Medical Response System, assists in testing the coun- , entire county .population
and is made up of health ty's Emergency Operations within a few days, the worst
departments ,
hospitals , Plan (EOP), clarities roles case scenario, would take
EMS, law enforcement. and respqnsibilities, and hundred s of volunteers.
EMA, and other response addresses resource issues. · Many Gallia County nurses
partners. The purpose of the Additionally, ii is a learning have already agreed to be
RMRS is · to promote . opportunity for the respon- on a volunteer call list, but
sq10oth coordination of ders to examine the unique · more volunteers, both medresponse and sharing of aspects of tespondi ng to ter- ical and non-medical, will
resources in case a health rorism incidents. It is con- ~e · needed. The next step
emergency overwhelms any ducted !n a no-fault learning for this county is to provide
individual county or affect environment · as a valuable training to potential volunmultiple counties.
training tool for responders, teers. Both classroom train•
The State of Ohio State emergency management, -ing and an actual mass vacHomeland Security Grant health, governmental sup- cination clinic drill are
Exercise Program awarded port, and hospital personnel. pl anned .
If you would like more
RMRS SE . - I a grant to
At the June 29 exercise,
informatipn
about parti ciconduct
the
Tabletop participants were given a
pating
as
a
volunteer.
please
Exercise. The exercise series of incidents that
focu s was . primarily on developed the scenario of a contact Cathy Clark, Health
preparing the emergency smallpox outbreak and that Department Infrastructure
response community to challenged the response Coordinator, at 441-2965 or
·
effectively respond to ter- capabilities of 1he hospitals, cclark@odh.ohio.gov.

.
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HEARING

CENTER
435 Second.Avenue
Gallipolis, OH ·
(Across from Post Office)

.(740 446·7619
(8,00 ·237·7716
Hours: len·Thur 8:30.5:00

•

PageC3

·oN THE BOOKSHELF
Two American cultural titans
Sunken ti-boat provides
thrilling true-life adventure share thoughts about the Bible _

COMMUNITY CORNER

··

.

iunba~ OI:ime&amp; ·itntinel

PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN

If you happen to be looking
for Bob Burton these days,
you'll find h.im in the blackberry ·patch.
For more than 60 years,
he's been there early mornings all during the season
picking berries along the old
Flood Road in Pomeroy to
enjoy and share with others.
In his teen years. berry
picking provided hiin with
spending money. For the past
40 or so years, it's given him .
a nice way to remember others. He gives the berries he
picks to ()]di:r people who are
not able to get out and pick
for themselves. He says his
list of those who qualify just
keeps getting longer.

.

~

(AP) Robert Kurson has
res~arched an amazing story,
wh1~h he tells 111 a dvnamic
and ilgile journalistic style in
"S hadow Divers ."
His outstanding book is the
true S&lt;)ga of the discovery. of
a sunken U-boat off the coa·st
of New Jersey and of the
divers who were determined
to identify the boat and figure
out how it got there .
It begins in the early 1990&gt;
when a commercia l fisherman named Skeets uis~:uv­
ereu a spot of o&lt;.·c:m. about 60
miles off the New Jersey
shore , where he regularly
made good catches.
He kept the location secret
to av()id competition from
other fishermen , but he diu
. give its coordinates to a
friend, Bill Nagle. a deep-sea
dive tour cond~&lt;.:tor.
Skeets saip · he thought
there might be a sunken ship
at th~ Sp()t because one usual·
ly attr:tcts great co ncentra·
tions of fish . He warned
Nagle that it was more than
230 feet down, makin u it
dangemus for divers.
"'
Nagle, who · no lonoer
dived, sugge;ted to di~er
John Chatterton, that they
assemble a teani to investi·
gate the spot. On Sept. 3,
1991. an expedition set ciut in
Nagle's
boat
Seeker.
Chatterton went uorvn to
attach the Seeker\ anl:hm to
a sunken ship , which he dis·
covered, to his amazement,
was aU-boat
Since no.identifying part of
the wreck was brought up.
the team members agreed to
keep the di scovery a secret
- Nag1e was the only one
who knew its exact location
- . to avoid pouching by .other
divers.
·
Meanwhile ; ·Nagle's team
was deep into research but ·
found no records of a U-boat
having been surik near the
spot.
On · a subsequent dive,
and · Richie
Chatterton
Kohler, who joined the team
after a member had died,
brought up a porcelain plate
bearing an ea.\lle, a swastika
and the inscnption "1942."
Butthe identity of the vessel

Sunday, July 18,

Robert Kurson, author of 'Shadow Divers,' published by
Random Hduse. (AP Photo/ Beth Kelly/Random House.O
remained a mystery.
Chatterton and Kohler continued their efforts, making
trips to Washingwn. D.C. ,
England and Germany, to .
consult wartime archives and
other documents .
·
On one of his . dives,
Chatterton came up with a
table knife whose wooden ·
handle
was
inscribed
"Horenburg."
Research
showed that onlv one sai lor
named Horenburg had served
aboard a U·boat. He was a
radioman aboard U-~69 ,
which was believed to have
been sunk near Gibraltar,
Further research, however
revealed something quite
·
startling.
On its last mission, U-869
had orders to sail for New

Jersey. A few weeks later.
orders were sent to abandon
the mission and head for
Gibraltar instead - orders
that U-869 apparently did not
receive.
·
On a dive m 1994, ·
Chatterton managed
to
remove some heavy debris
that had been blocking access
to a ntotor room. There, he
found a spare tool box that
bore the ship's name: U-869.
A re~onstruction of events
led to the theory that the UB69 had been sunk by one of
its own torpedoes, which had
run in a circle right back to
the ship after being fired at its
intended target.
This exciting lxiok is mustread and a genuine page-turner.

Victims feel'ing a bit 'run
down' in two new whodunits
(AP) Writers of mystery
fiction have tried to kill off
characters by shooting, stabbing, drowning, hanging, poisoning, electrocuting, strangling, bludgeoning and even
dropping pianos on them.
In new whodunits by RaJ ph
Mcinerny and Tami Hoag,
however, the . murderous
method of choice is to try to
run them down with a ct~r.
So her'e 's the rundown on
those books and on some
other new hardcover novels of
mystery and suspense, including works by Walter Mosley.
Carl Hiaasen and Sue Grafton.
. Father Roger Dowling
appears in. his .. 23rd novel ,
Mcinerny's '"Requiem for a
Realtor" (St. Martin's). A visitor
tells Dowling ih confidence that
a certain parishioner is having
marital problems. Before the
good father can help, one of the
principals is killed by a hit-.andnm driver. When the police call
it an accident, the. doubtful
Dowling digs deeper.
The last trip of the day for
bike messenger Jace Damon is
nearly his last trip forever, as
someone tries to dispatch him
in Hoag's lOth thriller,. "Kill
the Messenger" (Bantam).
Jace is delivering a package
for a shady Los Angeles attorney when he is nearly run
down by a car, then chased
through back alleys and shot
at. He finds himself on the run
from not only that pursuer, but
from the police, who suspect
hirn uf murdering the attorney.
Los Angeles is the scene of
the crime also in "Little
Scarlet" (Little . Brown ),
Mosley's ninth bOok featuring
school custodian and part-time
private eye Easy Rawlins. The
race riot' of 1965 have lett
Rawlin,· Watts neighborhood
burned and looted. When a
black woman. Little Scarlet. is
found murdered and the main
suspect is a white man. tho:o
police. feiiring further violence, ask Rawlins to quietly

help with the investigation.
Dunne) . by Laura Crum,
Murder is attempted on the horse veterinarian Gail
high seas in Hiaasen's "Skinny McCarthy returns from her
Dip" (Knopf). The villain is rounds to find the horseChaz Perrone. a biologist who shoer's truck in her driveway
is making a fortune altering . and the horseshoer in her
water samples for a business barn - bleeding from a bulillegally dumping in . Florida's · let wound.
Everglades. When Perrone susA British owner of thorpects that his wile has caught on oughbreds who is about to
to his unethical ways, he pushes lo se his fortune reaches into
her overboard from a cruise hi s secret criminal past for a
ship. Perrone doesn't know that plot to steal a $100 million
she has been rescued. so she ·diamond from the royal famdecides to stay "dead" while ily in '·Royal Heist" (Random
exerting her revenge.
.
Hou se) by Lynda La Plante.
Solving crimes isn't as easy
A Seattle journalist investias A· B-C in Grafton's 18th gates a murder and uncovers
·alptmbet mystery "R Is for what cou ld be a huge terrorist
R1cochet" (Putnam-Marian plot in G.M. Ford'&lt;&gt; "Red
Wood). Series regular Kinsey Tide" (Morrow). Underwater
Millhone, who does her private 'mystery is afoot when those
eyeing in Santa Teresa. Calif., who attempt to harvest a lifeaccepts a well-paying job from prolonging enzyme located
a wealthy client Make sure his 2,000 feet deep in the North
daughter Reba, fresh out of Atlantic are murdered in "Lost
pn"'son, stays straight. The job City" (P utnam) by Clive
isn 't the cinch Mi llhone thought Cussler and Paul KemprecoS.
it would be as Reba is soon
"Fang" Mulheisen investigates when hi s elderly mothk~ping bad company again.
In other new mysteries. &lt;.:rim- er is nearly killed by an·
inals are creating a hard time in explos ion at an orderly
the Big Easy in "Louisiana demon strat ion in "No Man 's
Lrunent" &lt;Forge), Julie Snlith's Dog" (Atlamic Momhly), Jon
tale of a privat~ eye who takes A. Jackson's IOth book feathe case when a New Orlean' .lJJring the Detroit police
socialite is found shot to death detective . It \ a lOth · book
also for Nina Reilly, as the
in her 'wimming p&lt;ioL
In '"Bait" (Putnam). Karen attorney from Carme l, Calif..
Robards' story is of a woman uefends a man accused of
who is asked by the FBI to murder and grave-robbery in
in
Law"
serve as a decoy to trap the "Unlucky
by
Perri
man who attacked her in a (Delacorte)
New Orleans hotel room in a O'Shaughnessy.
A retired sherift' in Arizona
case of mistaken identity.
In "K i» Me While J Sleep" joins an organization that
(Ballalltine)
by
Linda invc,tiaates unsolved murHoward , a CIA agent i' der' only to come upon a
a"igncd to capture or kill a ca'c he had handled - and
longtime contract hit \\om ,m apparently rni;handled · year ... af!O in J .;t\ . Jance·~
for the agency.
A hil num l\1r the Nc" Ynrk, "Day of I he Dcau·· (Morrow).
"B&gt; a Spider', Thread"
moh goe, to the 19:1(, Rerlm
is
Laura
Olympic&gt; P'"ing a' .1 tounw l· 1 :'-lornm l
ist and intending to a"a"inate Lippman\ late't adventure
a Nati military ma,tcnnind in for Baltimore private eye
"Garden of Beast's" (Simon &amp; Tc;s Monaghan. whose client
Schuster) by Jeffory Deaver.
i' looking for his missing
In "Forged" (Th()ma ' wife and three children.

(AP) They are .titans in enough for my father and
their respective fields who my grandfather, it must be
tlfl ve taught Within miles of good enough for me."
each other. But they never . By contrast, such technimet unti.l a journalist ·cal analysis is central to .
brought them together to Cross' work. He was rui&gt;ed
talk about the Bible. ·
a Pre sby ter ia·n minister's
The talkers were Prank son bL!I "the Bib! ~ played
Moore Cross. 82, the distill· very little role" in his
guished
professor · of upbringing .because hi s
Hebrew literature at Harvard father was "a Social Gospel.
University since 1957 (now far-left liberal'' whose "'reliemeritus); and Boston gious life was not biblically
University's Elie Wiesel. 75. , ce ntered.''
.
Holocaust survivor, author
Cross began
serious
and winner of the 1986 · involvement . with
the
Nobel Peace Prize. Their Scriptures only as :.1graduate
chat was arranged by student. It turned out to be
Hershel Shanks for the mag- his lifelong voca tion and
.
'
azine he edits, Biblical pa&gt;SIOn
,
Arcltaeology Review.
For Wie&lt;&gt;el. i1s a Jew, the
What attracts Wiesel to
Scriptures
are
what
the Bible ?
Christians cal l the Old
"'I see history in it. I see
revealed truth in it. I see in it Testament. Cross acknowl·
human holiness as much as edges he prefers the Old
divine
inspiration. Testament and is "a little
Whenever you open it , any uncomfortable in the New
page. you know you are in Testiuncnt environment. "
the presence of something Too many ·spirit ., . demons.
· and what he considers
that exists nowhere else."
··magic:·
And Cross?
The two are fans of neiHe said in the classroom
and writings he takes a ther fun&lt;)amen talism nor of
strictly
'"scientific" the radical · skepticism
approach. "'I attempt t() deal (" minimalism") regarding
with the Bible as I would whether there 's reliable hiswith any work of literature," tory in the Old Testament.
"I personally have . no '
and to treat the history of
Israel the same as that of doubt that the Exodus
()CCurred. " Wiesel si1id. '·For
England or China.
But along with that there ·sa nearly 3,500 years it ha s left
private aspect Cross doesn't such an imprint on people\
teach or write about publicly.
"The Bible is a book that has
shaped my life. my beliefs.
· my ethics, my m@ral concerns, my religious outlook."
The origins of their interest in the Bible are quite different. .
Wiesel said "it's been my
passion almo st from my
youth." He was raised in
Sighet, Romania, a Jewish
village where all preschoolers study the Pentateuch
(the Bible's first five books·,
whic.h carry paramount
importance in traditional
Judaism).
At age 10 or 12, he had
some free time before a
worship service and looked
through a Bible · commentary by liberal Moses
Mendelssohn in the synagogue library. An old man
saw what he · was reading
and slapped him ·on the face
to show contempt for liberal
"biblical criticism."
In later life, Wiesel
became tolerant toward crit.
ical scholarship, "but in
truth, it doesn't touch me. It
doesn't change my attitude
toward the text. I say to
myself, if the text was good

2004

memories that I cannot
imagine it had been ill\ented
jus1 as a legend or a tale.'' .
Cro~:-,\ generally agreed.:
hut indi ~a t eu some parts of·
the ·biblic·al · slol') are · more
mythological than others.- ·
Mo\ring bw.:k»·ard. were .
Abraha111 and the other :
patriarch' real people or fie·
tiona! characters"
''I havo no doubt of their
existence.'' ' aid Wiesel .
though he doesn't ncc·essari1) accept every story about
them as literal truth.
Cross, similarly. belie1·es .
"there are real people hehind ;
til~ :. torie~.··

!11

~encral.

think s the bes t th at hi storican obta in i:-, ··Jikeli hnod" about what happened.
not "cert iiLiue ...
In Shank&gt;' wmmary.
Wiese l's public intere't is
the Insp ired text while his- ·
torical prublem.s haw 'ome
private intere' l. wherea,_
Cro." puhlicly ;li sseus the
hiqory and 'eeps the inspi·
ration private .
Note :
Biblical
Archaeolu~ v Re1 iew has .
produced "·
"An
Archaeolu~ic·al Search fur
Jesus" ($1,-+9.951: a sci of
an~

rive vis uall y atlrac{ive: non-

scc1 arian \ideo Jocrllilentaries pmduceu in hrael.
Shanks interviews top sc holars on what\ known anJ not·
known about Je sus· era .

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"'11111'11111•

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he

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�·CELEBRATIONS

:iunbap limts ·ienttnel

PageC4
Sunday, July t8,

2004

l -

I

E

iunba~ OI:ime~ ·itntinel

·PageCs .

EN

Sunday, July 18, 2004

I
USC professor's
VEGETARIAN COOKING
LOW-FAT COOKING
creation offers ·outlet
Chickpea salad and basil leaves Chicken kebabs Over fruited couscous
for moms who write
stuffed with chevre and pine nuts
'

Not willing to lei her idea
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)
she
created
- Sure, mo1hers Jlfe con- go,
www.LiteraryMama.com
,
ce.rned with how much TV ·
their children watch, what which offers a different
kinds of snacks to offer and . view on motherhood ··not
pony-training techniques, di scussed by main stream
. but University of South magazines.
(In
the
meantime,
Carolina English professor
Amy Hudock knew there Hudock. now on her own
must be more· to mother- with"-Sarah, got a visiting
hood than the daily ups and assistant professo rship in
South
Caro lina
after
downs.
·
approac
hing
·
universities
The single .mother of a 2year-old daughter thought where she had previously
many mothers set aside worked.)
"It (the Web site) grew up
. their creative spirit while
undertaking the challenge .as a desire to publish work
of raising chi ldren. Through that wasn't getting puba writing group she found- li shed, " she said . "The
ed last summer while living glossy magazines aren' t
in San Francisco. Hudock publi shing what is really
created Literary Mama, an happening wit hin motheronli ne· magazine for women hood. They rely on experts
that explores the complexi- and how-to articles , and the
ties
of motherhood through first-person narrative pieces
Lucas Sullivan and Nlchelle Graham
poetry, essay or fiction. Slie are very formulaic ."
Joseph Sands and Stacey Milligan
"One of the th ings we
now se(ves as the magapride ourselves on in
zine 's editor in chief.
!judock had been in a Literary Mama is trying to
Nolan .and Nancy Graham in 2004 from Marshall
tenure-track job at Marshall break the formula through ·
of Gallipolis announ ce the University, where she is cur'
University, where she coor- writing th at maybe doe!; or
Doug and Cindy Sands of class of 200 I, and also a 2003
engagement of their daugh- rently employed.
·
dinated
the women's ,stud- does not have a happy endRacine
announce
the graduate of Muskingum Area . te r, N ichelle Graham to
The prospective groom is a
ies program, when she ing, where there 's not
approaching marriage of their Technical College.
Lucas Sullivan, the son of 2000 graduate of Huntington
became
pregnant with maybe that moment of realson, Joseph Cameron Sands,
Both l\re employed at Roger and Brenda Sullivan of
ization. Sometime s the
daughter
Sarah,
to Stace y Diann Milligan, Pleasao1t Valley Hospital Huntingtooi.
High School. He is currently
She said she had prob- pieces are just sketches ,
daughter of Terry and Lou workin g in .the radiology
student at Ashland
The bride-elect is a 1998 a
lems
ge tting the maternity just capturing a moment,"
Ann Milligan uf Sarahsv ille. department.
_
,grad uate of Gallia Academy Community College.
leave
she wanted and felt Hudock said.
Ohio. •
The couple will be married
High . Sehoul She earned a
The
open
church
wedding
Man y of the pieces on the
her impending motherhood
The groom is a graduate of
bachelor of science degree in Aug. 28 at the home of the
be
an
event
of
3:30
p.m
.
will
made her " problematic" in Web site are deeply personSouthern High School, class
. 2002 and a .ml\ster of science bride's parents .
on
Saturday,
July
24,
at
the
academia
so she quit and al; for example, Hudock
of 200 1,' and a ·graduate of
United
Methodist
Churc
h
in
intended
to
be a a full-time wrote in he r column about
Muskingum Area Technical
the struggles of breast-feedmother.
College, class of 2003. Hi s Ca ldwe ll . A reception will
fo
llow
at
the
·
Shriners'
Club
ing
between cla sses and
She
moved
to
California
bride is a grad uate of
hav
ing
to leave her daughsband
and
with
her
then-hu
Shenandoah High School, . in Marietta.
courted other mothers look- ter with a day care provider
in,g to express themselves, while she teaches other
The group posted stories people's children.
Another woman wrote
online and e.xpanded by
abo
ut tripping and dropping
word
of
mouth
to
writers
ALLENTOWN. Pa. · (AP) ·particular eras or design ele- ·
her
4-week-old baby and
across
the
country.
- The first thing fashi on ments, such as " Archai c
That's whe n Hudock the depression and guilt
designer Mary McFadden Chinese Bronze" in 1996.
to do an anthology. that set in des pite the
decided
McFadden, 65. researches
points to in a ·retrospective
She
looked
to print a book baby' s recovery.
of her work is n't a hemline styles like an arc haeologist,
Mainstream . magaz ines
of th e writings but was
or. a hand-embroidered jack- said Saliklis, the museum 's
rejected by publi shers. don't include such honest
et: It 's the "vista," [rum a · curator of textiles: "She 's
Some told her there was no and compl ex storie s and
silk Chinese robe across the cons~antly absorbing motifs
need, as similar anthologies · tend to.underes timate mothgallery to a circular cotton and colors and patterns and
already were in print. Other ers, said Andrea Buchanan.
techniques,"
mandala .from India . She construction
publishers told · Hudock the magazin e's man ag ing
specifically uses . the word Salikli s said. "She doesn ' t
simply
that " mothers don't editor and a writer living in
"vista," suggestin g a sweep- ju st look at something and
read."
Philadelphia.
ing look back through time. j ust lift off. the iconography.
McFadden began incorpo- and plop it onto her clothratin g ancient decorations ing . It goes through a transinto fashion designs in the formation in her, and· by the ·
. 1970s, reflecting the cultures time it appears on one of her
she encountered while writ- pieces it's entirely her own."
ing travelogue s ·for Vogue
When McFadden first - - magazine .
wore designs she made from
An ex hibit pairing her · fabric she bought in Africa,
haute couture with pieces people wanted :to buy the
from th e civi lizations that clothes off her back. Afte.r
inspired
her,
" Mary her first collection for Henri
McFadden: High Priestess of Bendel in 1973 sold out, she
,
High Fashion," runs throu gh sold her personal art collecOct. 3 at the Allentown Art tiun to finance her own
'•
•I
Museum. It will travel to . design bu siness.
Memphis,
Tenn. ,
in
McFadden repeated th e
!
September 2005 and· then to same silhouette, a classic
i
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rollins
Europe, curator Ruta Saliklis long dress, throughout her
I
said.
collections. but her attention
Sixty gowns, hand-painted to details and textures set
coats and 'Other ensembles her apart on the runway. .
i ban and Helen Rollins of
"It was her flair for the
They have two children , from McFadden's 30-year
1 Gallipolis celebrated their
Edd (Kathy) and. Brandi career are displayed with encrusted jewels and bead- .
~ 40th anniversary on June 27, (Lamar). They also have live ethnic textiles from her own ing on her garments. They
i 2004.
grandchil4fen, Daniel, Erin, collection and the museum 's were a simple design. but
: The couple was united in Kaitlynn, Brandon and Trent. archives . ·
the fabrics' were the most
: marriage by the Rev. Wendell
Mr. and -Mrs. Rollins are
All of McFadden's designs interesti ng. Things were not
:Stutter June 27, 1964 at members of French City - from high fashion to the cut up like some designers,
Baptist Church, Gallipolis.
: Eureka Church . .
accessories line she pro- like Alexander McQueen,"
duced from 1994 to 200~ for said
designer
George ·
•
II
the QVC shopping cnannel Simonton , who teaches at
- draw from the past.' She the Fashion Institute of
••
,
named each collection after Technology in New York.

·'

.Milligan-Sands engagement Graham-Sullivan engagement

Chickpea Salad

Ma.ry McFadden fashion
designs on display at
Allentown Art Museum

The

BEST

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS·
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and add additional sugar. if
desired .
·
"
Pour th e dressing over the
salad and [ass to coat. Cover
and "C hill for 4 to 24 hours.
Let the salad stand at room
tempera tu re for 15 minutes
before servinu
Serve salwr alone or t oss
wi th mi xed greens. Serve
wi th lemon" wedges tu
~qu eeze over the salad.
Makes 8 10 10 si de salads.
Nutri ti on information per
se rvin g: 1&gt;4 cal. 4 o pro. 14
arb
f t· "
· ·
0
0
"' c ~ .. _g ' · . •
(Rec ope foom Beneo Homes
&amp; Garden' magazo ne)

8

Basil Leaves·
Stuffed With
Chevreand
Pine Nuts
f Prepar~oti u n

25 minutes)
, cup pone nuts
,
4 oun ces soft goat cheese. \
at room temperature
2 tablespoo ns heavy creah1
Sa lt and freshly ground
black pepper
20 large basi l leaves (abou t
3 inches long)
I medium tomato. fin ely
chopped
Ex tra-virgin olive oil. fo r
drizzling
In a small. dry ·sk illet. toast
the pone nuts over a low
tlame, shak ing th e pan occasionally. untiI golden and fragrant, about 3 minutes .
Transfer. pi ne nut s to a· small
bowl to cool.
In ·anoth er sm all ·howl.
combine (he goal cheese and
cream. Season with salt and
pepper, to tas te.
Spread I teaspoon of the
cheese mi xt ure on each bas il
leaf Spri nkle the leaves with
pine nuts, pressi ng them into
the cheese. Scatter the tomato
on top.
Pi nc.h each lea f togethe r
near the center to form slightly rminded bowls. Drizzle
lightl y with olive oil before
1

servmg.

(Recipe from Food &amp; Win e
magazi ne's "Food &amp; Wine
Fa st," 2004, $9.99.)

Baked beans are summe.r's
favorite barbecue side dish

·Weight Loss

·1Rollins 40th anniversary

. CONCORD, N.H. (AP) Grill the dough as for
The warmer it is outside, the pizza . After flipping th e
.less . willing I am to spend bread , top with shredded
. much time or energy inside cheese and minced fr esh
··preparing a meal, even when rosemary. Grill until the bot··there are guests to be dazzled. · tom of the bread ·is lightly
. But that doesn ' t mean the toasted and the cheese has .
summer menu has to be limit- melted .
Alternati ve ly, for , a light
ed to soy cold-cut sandwich_es or tofu · dogs and veggie lunch that reqwres a. most no
. burgers on the grill. It's easy lll'!le at either the. stove. or
to pull together a summer gnll, try a refreshmg chockmeal than can impres s with- pea salad woth colantro , !rom
·out putting you unde r stress.
Better Homes &amp; Ga rdens
A favorite uf mine is pizza ma~azme~ and basol 1eaves
and flat bread on th e gri ll. stuffed Wtlh goat cheese and
Though the summer heat can pme nuts, from Food &amp; Wone
.be great for getting dough to rnagazi ne's "Food &amp; Wine
rise, I usually opt for store- Fast" (2004, S9.99)
' bought pizza cr ust that is · Both di she s come together
'packaged as a refrigera ted · in little time. The only cookbag of dough.
in g required is a light toasting
To prepare the dough, sim- of the pine nut s in a dry skil ply leave the bag on the let - all of 3 minutes at the
counter for .30 minutes until stove . The salad mu st be pre_the dough comes to room pared ahead of time. The
temperature and begins- to basil leaves could be, as well .
··rise. Roll out the dough on a If so. it's best to allow th e
' lightly flou red surface.
stuffed leaves to co me to
Pizza on the grill cooks room · temperature before
very quickl y. It is best to pre- serv ing and leave the fi nal
pare the toppings ahead or drizzle of olive oil until then.
· use those' t.hat require little
heating time, such as sliced
·.artichoke hearts (canned),
tomato slices, diced bell pep(Preparation 30 minutes
per, mu shroom slices and active. 4 hours chilling)
thin slices of onion.
3 c ups coarsely chopped
.. To grill the pizza, place the tomatoes (about 4 medium )
plain rolled-out dough on a
.IS-oun ce ca n chi ckpeas,
·very hot grill . Cook for I to 2 rinsed and drained "
1
·:minutes, or until crust begi ns
, large cucumber, pee led.
to f!roduce air bubbles and quartered and sl iced (about I
'· the bottom is seared with grill cup )
mark s. Use tong s to flip the
I cup chopped gree.n be ll
·crust.
pepper
.
Add the toppings, includI cup fres h cilantro
ing cheese. Close the grill
', cup finely chopped onion
'and cook until the bottom of
~' c up oli ve oil
·
"the crust is cooked and
3 tab lespoons red winecheese has melted . If the vinegar
cru st is done before the
I teaspoon coarse kosher .
cheese, carefull y move the salt
pizza to an upper rack. or
I clove ga rli c, minced
1
open the grill.
' • teaspoon sug ar
Serve the pizza with a si mSalad greens (optional)
Lemon we.dges (optional)
ple salad of me scl un greens
tossed with extra-virgin o.live
In a very large bowl, com'oil and balsamic vinegar.
bine the tom atoes, chickpeas,
· For a great grilled flat cucumber,
bell ·pepper,
bread. prepare the dou gh as cilantro and onion. Set aside.
To make the dressing, comfor pizza. Before grilling, use
a pastry brush or paper towel bine the oil, vinegar, salt, gar- .
to coat each side liberally lie and sugar in a bottle or jar
with olive o,il. Season both with a sc rew top. Cover the
bottle and shake we ll . Taste
sides with salt and pepper.

~

I

3 slices bacon, chopped
I 1/2 cups chopped onions
3 tablespoons minced gi nger root
3 cloves garlic , minced
Four IS-ounce ·cans navy
or great Northern beans
112 cup packed darkbrown sugar
1/2 cup light molasses
112 cup ~al sa ketchup
1/2 cup apple cider
I tablespoon Dijon-style
mustard
112 cup cmshed gingersnaps
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
leaves
112 teaspoon ground all spice
2 bay leaves ·
Fry bacon until crisp in
medium skillet; drain bac.on
thoroughly on paper towels.
Discard all but I teaspoon
bacon fat; add onions. ginge r root and garl ic to skill et
and saute until· tender, 4 to 5
minutes·. Mix all ingredients
on 2-quart casserole . Bake,
covered, at 300 F for 2
hours; bake, uncovered, fat
30 minutes. Discard bay
leaves.
Makes 8 servings .
Nutrition information per
serving: 473 cal., 3 g fat ,
I00 g carbo., I, 134 mg sodium; 17 g pro., 2 mg chol.

BarbecuE!d
Beans
2· tablespoons olive oil
I onion, finely choppj!d
I bell peppe r, finely
chopped
2 garl~c cloves , finely

chopped
3/4 pound ground round
One ! -pound, 15-ounce
. can pork and beans
2
tablespoons
Worce,laershire sau ce
1/2 tablespoon black pepper 1
1/4 cup barbecue sauce
II~ c up ketchup with
Tabasco saute
1/4 cup canesyrup
3/4 teas poon dry mu stard_
powder
1/2 teaspoo n curry pow der
Heat olive oil and sa ute
onion, bell pepper and gar! ic
m the hot oli ve oil unt il
softened . Stir ioi ground
round and continue cooking
until browned. Drain off
excess grease. Stir in ·canned
pork . and beans , Mix in
Worcestershire sa uce. black
pepper, barbecue sauce,
ke tchup, caoie syrup, and
mu stard and curry powders.
Simmer for an hour io meld
the flavors. Serve hot.
Makes 4 servings.
(Recipe
from
David
Simmons)

Barbecued
Baked Beans
One 16-ounce can pork
and beans
One 16-ounce can kidn ey
b;eans, drained
One 16-ounce can green
lima beans, drained
I large onion, chopped
2 garli c cloves, minced
I
tablespoon
Worcestersh ire sauce
I teaspoon ground cu o)lin
2 to 3 table,spoon s strong
cold coffee
1/4 .cup brown sugar
112 cup ketchup
Pinch of oregano

•

Pinch sweet basil
Dash Tabasco
3 strips bacon
Combine all ingredient s,
except bacon stri ps, in a
greased 13-by-9- inch baking
dish. Place bacon strips on
top .. Cover wi th fo il and
bake at 350 F for I hour.
Remove cover and continu e
baki ng 15 · add itional min-.
ut es.
M akcs I 0 servi ngs.
(from "Pioss the Phlle."
publi shed by The Collection
Episcopa l
fro m
C hri st
Church. New Bern . N.C.)

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
tablespoon ,e,ame or overn ight.
A bri ght range of ;eason- seed,, toa,ted
Prepare outdoor grill
ings. including soy sa uce. . ', teaspoon Chinese live- with hot coals, or hear gas
fruit preserves. hot-pepper 'pice powder (optional)
grill to hot. or heat oven
sauce, garli c and gi nge r.
For the C hicken: .
broiler.
makes spicy grilled chick6
bo11eless,
skinless
To
·make
Fruited
en a nice balance for frui t- chicken breast hal ve (about
ed couscous in thi s-appeal - I', pounds total) . cut into Couscous: Coat large nonsti ck skil let with cooking
ing kebab recipe.
'
l-i nch sq uares
It's amon g 250 dishes
I sweet red pepper, spray. Place over mediumde tailed in "Family Circle cored. seeded and cut into high heal. Add onion, garEat What You Love &amp; 1-i'nch sq uares
lic and celery; cook, stirLo,e" (Rega n Boob. 2003.
'I sweet ye llow or green nng occasionall y, until
S 19.95 ) by magazine food pepper. cored. seeded and softened. abou t 4 minutes.
director Peggy Kat;olinich . cu t into l-inch squares
Add apri cots and cherrie$:
The coo kbo ok features
For Fruited Couscous:
cook I minute or until .
what " bi lled as ...quick
I medium-size onion. vegetables are light-golden.
und easy diet recipes !rum c hopped
Stir in couscous; cook I
our tc ' t ki tchen ...
2 doveS gar lic. minced
minute. Add broth. ', cup
.. What gives tile rc,·ipes
1. ri b ce lery. fin e ly wa ter. salt and pepper.
convicti on is\ , that Iil ey chopped.
Brin g
to
a
boil.
were dcvelopcd) to help tile
6 dried apricots. ctit 111
Immediately ·remo ve skillet
test- kitchen
team
lose .~- i nc h dice
we i,illl . a!-! a permanent
', cup dried cherries or from heat. Cover and let
plan lor healthy eating .
stand I 0 minutes.
dark seed less rai sins
Tile plan worked - and
Thread chicken on 6
I0-o un ce package coushere 's the book with the cous
metal skewers. alternating
I
'
.
rec ipes .
. h peppers.
I
14 r ounce red uced-sodi- wot
Gr ill kebabs, turning
um, fat- free ch icken broth
, c up water
once. until chicken · · i$
': teaspoon sal t
cooked through. about g\ ·
', teaspoon black pepper
minutes.
To
mak e
Marinade:
Arrange cousco us and
Whi sk together oil , ri ce kebabs on plates. Sprinkle
twine, soy. prese rves. hot
top wi.th remaining sesame
sauce, garl ic. ginger. scalseeds.
(Preparation 20 minutes. 1ion s. ': tables poon of the
Makes 8 se rvings.
re fri ge rate 2 hours. cook 6 sesame seeds. and , if
minmes, stand I 0 minutes. using . fi ve-sp icc powder.
Nutrition information per
grill or bro il 8 to ·12 min - in medi um-s ize bowl.
servj ng: 305 cal.. 3 g fat
utes)
Add chicken and sweet (I g saturated), 24 g pro.,
For the Ma rinade: /
peppers
to
mar inade. 4 1 g carb o , 4 g fiber, 387
I tabl espoon d ark Asian Cover: re fr igerate . 2 hours mg sodium , 47 mg chol.
sesam e oi I
'' cup nee wme or dry
sherry
', cup reduc ed-sodium
l!IPtl~D~·~DL:;.::~::
929
sov1 sauce
· ''·T
A
•• ~ 1,079 ·
. ·,.
3 · tab les poons apri cot N
·
t,sso
N
•
1 ... 469
• ••· 779
preserves
1
I teaspoo n li quid hul- N
G
pepper sauce
2 cloves garlic. chopped
I· tablcspuun min ced
peeled fresh ginger
2
scalli ons.
finely
chopped
1

Chicken
Kebabs Over
Fruited
Couscous

I

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Baked Beans
and Meat
I pound ground beef
I large onion . chopped
I bell pepper. chopped
1/2 cu p brown sugar
2 table spoo ns prep ared
mu stard
3/4 ( 14-oun ce) bottle
ketchup
(sec note)
Da sh o f Wo rc esters hire

3.99~

'

sauce
Three !-pound cans pork
and beans
6 to 8 strips ()f bacon
Brown beef 111 ' k illct
without urease. Add omon
and bell ~pepper. Cook until
tender. Add sugar. mu stard.
ketchup and Worcestershire
sauce. Mix well With pork
and beans. Pour into large
greaset! baking ' di sh and
cover with · b,acon ' trips.
Bake at 350 F for I hour.
Serve' 6.
Note: Allor ~ av' she
prefer&gt; the flavor ,;f Hein1
ket chup in th is re.cipe .
(Patsy Allor's rec ipe in
"Finest &amp; Besr Cuisine ...
published hy First ·Baptist
Church. Baton Rouge)

4.09%
APR
fo ,1 (UifV./

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AT THE MOVIES

ittnba!' m:tmt~ -ienttnd

Sunday, July 18, 2004

;

INSIDE
Houseof the week, Page D2

I

Dl

.i&gt;unbap m:imes: ~~enttnel

Health &amp; Fitness, Page 06

'MARIA FULL OF GRACE'
'Fahrenheit 9/11 ': Luring TV
viewers to the theater for news ·
NEW YORK (AP) Time was, you had to go to
the .movies to see the news.
Then came television. which
brought newsreels right into
your home .
Now. in this ele.:tion year a
half-century later. people in
huge numbers have found
that gelling news about the
war in Iraq ami the politics
behind it makes a trip to the
multiplex well W&lt;&gt;rth tl)e
bother.
Who could have fo recast
such a relapse·&gt;
Could be. neither f;ul&gt; no r
detractOt'S of Michad Moore.
whose "Fahrenheii""'),(ll" has
uprooted couch potatoes by
the carload ~inc~! premiering
three weeks ago.
Moore. or (Olii'Se. knows
how 10 make a splash. Last
year a billion viewers saw
him llC&lt;:ept hi s "Bowling for
·Co lumbine" hest-documentary Academy Award by
denouncing the war of a "fictitious' president .. Sh&lt;1me on
you, Mr. Bush'"
But then he elaborated on
that theme with "Fahrenheit
Wll." and the public
response has beet) greater
than anyone could have
imagined, setting off .shock

waves ev~n . beyond its
record-busting $80 million
box ofllce . Hf, .is a film that
is firing up the public , both
pro and con - even people
who haven ' t seen it.
And it 's done something
else. In the way the tilm
frames the presidency of
George W. Bush (" Was it all
just a dream?" Moore muses
over images of AI Gore celebrating his short-li ved win)
"Fahrenheit 9/11" has managed to upstage mainstream
TV journalism.
Along With his previou s
documentaries, a feature-film
satire and political best sellers, Moore has engaged in
· ffillde-for-TV journalism his version of it, anyway. He
headed up the prankishly
muckraking "Awfu l Truth"
on Bravo, and, before that,
masterminded "TV Nation"
for NBC, which billed the
1994•95 series as an "investigative comedic magaztne

rhe .''B&lt;]rney" song.
Needless to say. "TV
Nation" wasn ' t hatched at
NBC News (where tlagship
newsmagazine
"Dateline
NBC'' had been rock eel by
scandal a year earlier after
rigging a fiery truck crash for
its e'pose on fire risk i11 GM
pi(·kup trucks).
. OdJs are Moore could
never tit the TV news' mold .
For instaticc, It's hard to pictu.r~ him pinch-hitting for
Stone Phillips as anchor of
"Dateline NBC." Moore is
. '&lt;&gt;mewhat of a niche personality.
Gra nted. a signature i'Jersonal style hasn't hurt veteran swas hbttckler Geraldu
Rivera of Fox News
Channel. or John Smssel , the
libertarian pamph leteer of
ABC News.
But bulky, bluejeans-clad
Mome is a commined outsider \vith a scruffy look and
a liberal agenda. Long ago he
staked his claim as a
repo rte r-provocateur well
apart from · the nianicured
journalistic mainstream .
All the more surprising.
then. thai the TV-news establi shnient, issuing free content
'tround the clock. cou ld be
eclipsed by an· indepeildent
film that costs good money
to see, and. until just weeks
. ago. hadn't even landed a
the;itrica l di stributor.
So what does ''Fahrenheit
9/11" 'give its aud ience that
newscasts thus far don ' t?
For starte rs: the video
footage of recuperating U.S.
soldiers, Iraqi casualties ,
President Bush in that classroom paralyzed for seven
minutes after learning of the
terrorist attacks .. This is video
you have likely seen

(AP) With. her effortless mule. Lucy shows her how to
beauty, boundless contidenc~ practit:e using whole red
and. yes -.- grace, , grapes. which is difficult for
nowhere else, and you Catalina Sandino Moreno Maria at tirst. But when the
einerge from the theater won- ' should become a rising star time comes to ingest her allotwith the release of "Maria ted stash. Maria .sees each peldering. "Why the heck not ?"
"Fahrenheit 9111." which Full of Grace," her tlrst til in. let is about twice that size.
Moreno stars in the title role
The scene in which she
won · the top prize at . the
as
a
headstrong
17~year-ol~ . swallows 62 pellets of rubCannes Film Festival in May.
tackles grand themes wi.th from a mral Columbian town ber-wrapped heroin before
humor. fury-and naked p;t,rti- who becomes a drug mule in boarding a plane for New
the·desperate hope of creating . York is truly agonizing.
sanship that insists · upon a a better life for herself and the though ·it is perversely fa scire~ponse from the viewer.
baby she only recently real- nating to watch the whole
And it provides a bracing ized she's carrying.
process the repetitive
alternati ve to the claims for
Miserable at her job strip- · packagiryg of the drugs and
objecti vity that re ig n at TV ping roses of their thorns at a the
methodical
labor
news outlet s (including. nat- flower plantation, and bored involved in downing each
u·rall y. the "fair-and-ba l- with her boyfriend (Wilson ·bulky, white nugget.
anced"-boasting Fox News Guerrero). who\ offered to
Nothing goes nearly as
Channel. whose lack of marry her even though both smoothly as Javier promised
objectivity is probably its agree they're not in love. it would, and Maria find ~ ·
greatest asset). These Big Maria is intrigued when herself ~elling deeper and
Media new s providers have Fran klin (Jhon Alex Toro), a deeper mto trouble. even
served as Bush administra- stylish. older guy she meets though she's trying to take.
tion facilitators ever since hi s at a party, tell s her about a steps to improve her increasdisputed election. declares joh that will allow her . to ingly disastrous situation .
Blanca (Yenny Paola Vega), a
Moore. a lillie guy whose travel and make fast money.
He hooks her up with shy friend from home, has
message is unmistakably his
Osorio tagged along and only r.nakes
Javier
(Jaime
own.
Gomez) , a de~ler who things worse.
Moore h•is been in the pub- explains very sweetly and
That we feel sympath y for
lic eye since his first theatri- very plainly that she can . a young, pregnant woman
cal film. '' Roger &amp; Me,'' make $5,000 simpl y for who's bringing drugs into the
became an out-of-nowhere swallowing some heroin and United States without an
hitinl989.
then nying to the United ounce of remorse is a credit
In the meantime, the com- Stales. ("Those gringos don 't to the actress, but especially
panies th;it owned ABC. CBS knt&gt;w a thing," he assures to writer-director Joshua
and CNN have been swal- her.) Of course. if anything Marston for creating such a
lowed up by-even larger con- goes wrong .. he says he 'll complex character in this , his
glomerates. NBC News and track down her mother, strikingly assured feature
its
cab le-news
out let grandmother, sister and
MSNBC. launched in I \1\16, ne_Ehew.
remain under the wing of . ·1ypiCally undaunted - and
mammoth General Electric. havi ng lied and said she was
while Fox News Channe l 18 - Maria takes the job.
was created in 1996 by glob- then seeks the advice of Lucy
(Guilied Lopez), another
al media giant News Corp.
Unshaken by thi s media
upheaval. Moore remains a 1 Auto· Ow11ers l11surance
Softwar• CO or Oowfllood
known quantity. a. media
·
TOLL~Fifll
T~~tchnical u ort
ure Home Cor Business
force who charts his own ·
, S Email~"""' • WHmoll I
path. Maybe that's another
7le~1'~~ ~
INSTANT.MESSAGING · ~~~ •so"' ""
reason ·so many people have
CDJtoiD Shirt,.,, . Wt~ (oler«iul, Wt~~r~ &amp;~rote I
INSURANCE PLUS
left their easy chairs to go see
lmONdlateltcon: www.locolnet.com·
his new tilm. And why .even
- --Plus
AGENCIES, INC.
people who don't go can't
leave it alone.
114 Court Pomeroy
Surf vp to Sx frl•t.rf
~·

debut.
" Maria Full of Grace" presents a side of the drug trade
we don ' t usually get to see.
and· with its hand-held' camerawork, long tracking shots
and naturallightin~ , it has the
powerful, immedtacy of a
documentary.
Marston really understands
how to use silence to build
tension anq natural sound to
create mood. Traffic rushes
by outside as Maria sits in a
pharmacist's office, struggling to cram the drugs down
her throat. Once she, Lucy
and Blanca are en ·route to
New York. the whirr of the ·
. airplane engine underscores
·
their anxiety.
He could have used a con·
trived score or crafted the ·
scenes with freneti£ edits.
In stead. he had enoug!1 faith
in himself to choose stillness.
along with
and that Moreno's performance -.
give this small fi lm a surpriSing mength.
"Maria Full of Grace." an
HBO Films and Fine Line .
Features release, is ntted R
for drug content and language. Running time: I0 I
minutes. In Span.ish with
English subt itles. Three and a
half stars out of four.

,

SPR ING VALLEY
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IIUlll I I, Ill I
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Box Office Opens @
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sunday Time&amp;.sentiriel

Stories on "TV Nation"
included a report about Avon
ladies selling makeup io
natives in the Amazon
wilderness and an effort by
Moore to broker peace in
Bosnia by getting the am bassadors of Serbia and Croatia
to serenade each other· with

..

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US. Cellular
• NEW BOSTON - Next to Wai-Mart ·• PORTSMOUTH - Inside Kroger

456-0000
• WAVERLY -Inside Wai-Mart
Please send me more
information a~out
your.community.

Fir!&lt;il Name

Wvngate- .
GALLIPOLIS ·

State

288-4100

• CHILLICOTHE " Inside Wai-Mart

• GALLIPOLIS - Silver Bridg~ Plaza

774-2220

441~1133

Or visit one of our
• Portsmouth - Be In Touch- 355-3001
• Portsmouth - S 0 C S - 354 1605

Zip Code

•
Telephone Number

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·.Waverly - S.O C S - 947-2409

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the kx.M Clllng iniB Airtiml.-..;1 SharNik phone oilers requO I new 2-yeat ~ Ml"o'U sgrMment LJmited 3 sn.r.tilk lines per~ h ~~ fee per
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h I'AIIII be oo a
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and aH day Sai!M'dly and Sunday. NIQhl and
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I!"~d

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 4563 1

• JACKSON • Inside Kroger

947-0069
Street Address

City

355-1111

~end

'"."Y.tid

rna

Sunday, July 18, 2004

World's ·first ·c.onvertible ·pickup has old~style looks
'

.

.

BY ANN M. JOB

.

da shboard tr im a&gt; well as doo r
handles ca refull y placed.
Th,· plastic on the dashboard.
is a bit too c·heap- lookin g for
my taste. but the sil vc r-culored
needle ... in the gil ug e~ art: run.
In sort of a "he llo" Jash ion.
these needles sweep from their
re st position o\·er 10 their
extre me right of the gHuges
before selllin g back down each
time the SSR ignition is turned

FOR THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

The 2004 Chcvro!ct SSR
looks like, a 1940s to 1950s
pickup that . has been lo vingly
tumed into a one-of-a-kind. hot
rod show tru ck.
Indeed, one man who parked
next to the SSR lest vehicle
and wa[lted to take pictures of
it asked "what did it look like
before" the restoration work
was completed.
Lillie did he know that thi s
$42,245 two- seater comes
direct from the factory with its
bulging wheel flares and convincing old-style looks.
He also didn't have a clue
th4t, despite its appearance, the
SSR is a modern ;vonder as the
world's tlrst convet1i ble pickup
truck .
Its fun-to-watch. power-operated, hardtop roof panels stack
independently -.and ve t1ically
-- into a storage well behind
the passenger compartment, so
they don't intrude into the
pickup box.
Meantime, 'a current version
of Chevy's fabled big block V8
resides uti'der the SSR hood
and provides the hale and
hearty throaty sounds that
make people nearby lllrn to see
what 's going past them.
As if all this isn ' t enough to
draw attention, the SSR's
palene . of eye-catching paint
colors, which includes bright
yellow, purple and a hot rodready .orangish-red, surely adds .
pizzazz.
. I admit the SSR isn 't .a very
practical vehicle, especiall y as
trucks go.
It's not offered in anything but
two-wheel drive, so it's not des·
tined for much otT-road duty.
It has an interior that 's shorton storage space. There's not
even a glovebox, so the owner 's
manual for the test vehicle
\\'Ound up taking up most of the
room in the center console storage area.
And with its standard hard
tonneau cover over the pickup
bed, t.he SSR i'n't ~xactly ready
and waiting to haul tall items
like furniture . In fact. the 23.7cubic-foot pickup bed space
seems more like a trunk than a
versatile truck bed.
The SSR alSo can tow only a
maximum 2,500 pounds, which
i~ considerably less t·han the
4,000-pound capacity of even though the SSR looks as if it
Chevy 's recently introduced should have composite plastic
Colorado
compact
pickup body panels. fhis truck has tradi·
tiona! - and heavy - ,steel
replacement for the S-1 0.
But for showy style, not to .sheet metal, instead .
This contributes to the SSR 's
mention ahard-to-describe niche
vehicle , the SSR is positively surprisingly heavy weight of
4,760 pounds.
unique .
No wonder the 5.3-liter, overCheyy officials are even .
stumped over what other vehi- head valve, Vortec 5300 V8
. cles an SSR buyer might cross- that 's borrowed ,from the .
s\wp. It's likely the · heritage TrailBlazer EXT and put into the
styling of the SSR , the all- SSR doesn't imbu\! an all-out
American image, the raucous V8 sporty feel in so me maneuyers .
The engtnc generates 300
and convertib le driving combine
for a must-have package that ~orsepower and 331 foot-pounds
nothing else on the market can of torque at 4,000 rpm, and
there 's only a four-speed autooffer.
"No other manufacturer has a matic transmission available.
vehicle like the SSR," said But there was no instantaneous
Brent Dewar, Chevrolet general power surge when I tloored the
SS R accelerator.
manager.
.
Instead, my head pushed back
The SSR, which was planned
as a Chevy halo vehicle, rides into the head restraint so mewhat
on a modified, shorteped plat- and power came on steadily, if
form from the brand 's mid- size . not overwhelmingly. The accom~V, the TrailBlazer EXT, and
panying
engine
sounds made
ns twin, th'e GMC Envoy XL.
ride
There are hydro(.ormed. steel the
, side rails providing stiffness to
the boxed frame underneath the
SSR body.
Ye s,

.

.

011.

With only two seats. frontseat riders ge t a good amount
of legroom - 42. I ,inche s.
Thi s is about as much as
what's in the front .seats of
Chevy's full-size SUV. the
Suburban.
J3ut the SSR seats arc fitted
snugly inside -

that to reach the power seat
adjustment controls on the
lower side of the dr.iver seat. I
had 10 open the ('(i'&lt;&gt;or.
Otherwise. my hand co{ild not
fit down there.
Passenger; hear, more than
the engine as they travel. In the
test SSR. the large. 19- and 20im:h tires conveyed a good
~mount of road noi se. · As I
picked up speed and got onto
highway s. wind noise added in.
even if the SSR top wa&gt; on.
So. my passenger and I had
to raise the vo lume of our voices and/or turn up the radio.
I enjoyed the top-down ride,
thou'gh. The roof panels· work
automatically, with just a touch
of a button, and go down in 25
seconds. Passe ngers· tlnfl- ·thev
ride higher o tT th'e ground than
they do in a traditional convertible car.
Chevy officials had said last
eyear they loo k for lcl.OOO to
15.000 annual SSR sales. But
through tlw first six months of
2()04, only 5.4-1~ SSRs h&lt;I\'C
been sold.
Spokesman Bub Tripnlski &gt;aid
60 percent of buyers are ex pected to ·be men. hem·een JS and
50 years of age. Meuian house hold income i&gt; likely to be
$ 135,000 a year. and they're
like ly to have the SSR as one of
~everal ve hicl e~· in thei r lwu~~­
hold.
Because the SSR is a low-,·olume. specialty model. it does not
have a re liabilit y raling fro m
Consumer Report s magazine.
The National Highwa y Traffic
Safety Administration does not

(AP Photo/GM/Tom Pidgeon)

more exciting than it was .
Chevy .~lute s that the SSR 's 0to-60-mile-per-hour time is 7.6
seconds, which is about what
you get with a 2004 Lexus RX
330 spurt utility vehicle with a
V6
.
Note the SSR's ' automatic
transmission does not include a
shift-i t-yourse lf,
manumatic
mechani sm that 's often found in
sporty vehicles.
Additionally, in the test SSR. I
could notice shift points at
times. and this was even when I
wasn't drivin g very aggressively.
But Chevy onicials make a
big point about the cruising abil-.
ity of the SSR. and indeed, on
the highway . and on long
straightaways, the SSR powers
along relatively easily.
Fuel economy of 16 miles a
gallon in city driving and 19
mpg on the highway, however.
is poor for
a lWO·
sea t

so much so

truck that's about the same size.
on the outside. as a 2004 Chevv
Colorado regular cab model. '
At least the SSR comes .with a
sizable, 25-gallon fuel tank. and
the engine uses regular gasoline.
· There's a good amount o f
vibration and silake in the ride.
. Even on mildly uneven pavement in the city - and with the
SSR top's on - I felt a lot of
the road surface. especially manhole covers.
And when I put the SSR's top
down, the windshield shook as if
this were a lot older model convertible.
Even the hyd rauli ca lly assisted
ra ck-and -pini on steering conveyed road sensations easily
through to the steering wheel via
shudders and vibration.s.
In hot rod fashion. the window
s'ill s on the two SSR doors rise
as they go from the windshield
back, and riders feel secwely
ensconced in the vehicle .
The interior carries ihrough
the retro look. with smootH. silver-colored shift knob. center
co n so le
area
and

provid e cr~1:-.h lest rating:-. for the

SSR. and there have been no
safetv recall s ,,f the ' ehicle.
which debut.:d in calendar 200J

Chevrolet SSR
by the numbers
BY THE

ASSOCIATED' PRESS

2004

SSR
BASE PRICE: S-l 1.620.
AS TESTED: S-!4 .145.
TYPE: Front -engine. rearwheel-driw . two- passenger.
roadster pickup truck.
ENGINE: 5J-Iiter. m·er
head valve. Vortec 5300 V
MILEAGE: 16 mpg (city).
' 19 mr;. (highway).
TOP :-.PEED: 126 mph .
LENGTH: 191.-l inc hes.
WHEELBASE: 116 inches.
CURB WT.: -l. 760 pounds.
'BUILT AT: Lansing. Mich.
OPTIONS: I SB preferred
equipment group (include&gt;
Homelit1k garage/gate o,pen
er. AM/FM ., lerc o with Illdashboard 'six-CD player
and
Bose premium &gt;ound sys
tem. electrochromic mirrors
and hea.ted seats) $1 .900
DESTINATION
·,

�&amp;unba!' G:illld -&amp;rntintl • Page D3

Pomeroy7 Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

pageD2

UI:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister

HOUSE OF THE WEEK
Oak
floors:
Buried
treasures
Acountry Victorian, like Grandma's house

Sunday,J~t8,2004 :
''

AP

HOUSE

.

OF THE

. '

.

i

1.

By DAVID BfiADLEY
For AP Newateatures
hie country VICtcN'Ian bnngs back
memories of your grandparents' home.
With only 1,489 sq ft oil1\llng space, it
has Qwte a klt of llvab~ a,ea destQned 1nto
a modest one-story footprint.
UjX)t'l emenng the foyer, you can turn nght
to the parlor or tum lell nto the bedroom
wtng The pariof ls a generous s1ze and
seems larger due to me lO·foot cellmg
heights, which are throughout the house.
Beyond the parlor, you enter the dining and
kitchen ereas by PMSing under a decorative
vtctori«n spandrel. The kitchen has abundant
cabinet spaca and features a pass-through
cabinet between the kitchen and d1n1ng room
. In the bedroom wing you will fir;td three
bedrooms and 1W&lt;l baths Ades•rable feature
9f this plan Is the huge walk-In clOset in tM
master bedroom. Both bathrooms h?Jve
VICTORIAN. Thll country Vlctor11n captures the conect period api)Nr•nc:e, with itt omal•
generous vanjty space and ere simple but
detail lncl proportion•.
well· appointed
The exterior of the home IS authentiC
and mass1ng Ta~e th1s house and set rt neld
en;Oy carefree af1ernaons.
VIctorian style Alttlough the siding •s trberMany hOuse designs Ci81m to be VIctOrian 10 any perrod tJ.ome and it wrll be hard to teW
. oementand nearly marntenance·free, rt
rn tnerr styling It takes more than a tew turned which rs old or new
maintains the correct period awearance
posts and brackets to make a VIctorian . The
deSign rs about proporoon, scale, roof slopes
The wraparound porch rs a grea1 place to

T

Designer Comments
"This tradrtronalty late VICIOriar) reSidence
emerged rn !he United States !rom the Queen

,Anne (1BOOs) and Stidl S1yle (1850s) houses.
Founct on the East Coast and in Mldwestem
states this st)ie was later coined as VICtorian I
These houses rep-esented 11ighty omamenled
porches, bfackets, railings , and steep roof .
- John Guy
forms •

·r

..

APWB·167 Details
,.. Architectural Style'
VIctorian
• Overall
dimensions· 45'·S"
wrde by 43'·0" deep
COVEREO PORCH

• Possible lot size.
65' 11: tOO' deep

I
I

'
,APWE!-167
~

• Double garage

• Attrc

I

J.. --- --· ·-·-- ___.,..;!:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~

Spandrel - A flat panel used to. infill an exterior or
Interior waU surface or open~ng . Usu.any supponed
by a frame, spandrel panels on the elCieriOr of
buildings often are glass with an opaque coating.
In thu!l case, the spandrel panel ts .a flat panel at
the top ot a door opening that is a craved decoratrve
element to add lightness and detarl

Eetlmlled Coat ot Conltructlon
1exdoclellot)

Northeast $178,000- $208,000
Southeast $135,000' · $160,000
$145,000 -$168,000
MidweSt
NonhWest $183,000 -$1 90,000
· Southwest

• Master bedroom
suite wrth waH&lt;·rn
closet

brackets

FOI' a study pian of thrs hOuse, send $5 to
House ol the Week, P.O Box 1562. New
York. NY 10116- 1562 call (877) 228-2954,
or order onNne at APHoueeoftheweek.com.
Be sur&amp; to mclude the plan number. For
downloadable study plans and construction
blueprints of House of me Week befOI'e April
2003. see www.houuoftheweek .com.

'

When we first drive into a
mountain area, we know were
there without even looking;
our nose will tell us. Once
youre among tall pines, spruce,
redwood, whatever, the air
seems to change for the better.
Everythin~ always smell s
clean and tresh.
Cedar is an especially aromatic wood and has other benefits too. Moths hate cedar,
making the material an excellent choice for hope chests and
clo:;et flooring. fn fact, there
have been occasions in our
remodeling company where
we were asked to line not only
the floor of a closet, but the
walls and ceiling as well. Talk
about a large cedar chest!
And although a cedar closet
floor alone can do much to
protect against moths· there is
nothing like the wonderful
aroma 1t exudes and the feeling
that youre in a forest.
lnstallin)l a cedar closet floor
is really stmple - especially if
you rent or own a pneumatic
·wire brad nailer. With a cedar
floor, installation consists of
interlocking tongues . and
gropve,s . and fastening the
material to the floor. That really is all there is to it.
· OK, there are a few simple
rules:
-Pufchase premium material. With premium material the
planks are stmighter and flatter
and that means easier installation and less waste. A box of
premium cedar closet flooring
has fewer short pieces and that
means fewer joints and a faster
installation. Keep in mind that
the material in the box is genemlly sold as "mndom length."
That means that the material
inside the box varies in length.
A novice would think that all
of the material within is as
long as its container not so.
· -Make sure that the floor to
be covered is flat. No bumps or
fumps . No dirt or · debris.
~nythin~ that doesnt belong
there will telescope through
the flooring as an ugly lump. A
cedar closet floor will only be
smooth and flat if that is the
condition of the floor it covers.
• Once the floor is completely
clean, staple down a layer bf
building paper. We use 15 lb.
felt. Random stapling is all that
iii needed here, JUSt enough to
hoi(! the paper in place.
Overlap seams (edses and
ends) 3 to 6 inches. nus acts as
11 vapcJt barrier, an important
part of any wood floor instal lation. Vapor emanating from
below the floor can cause
hardwood flooring to buckle
lind twist.
· Whatever you do, don't glue
the floor down. Doing so eliminates the vaPQr bamer (a bad

Q. Jen asks: I have an
oak hardwood floor that is
covered with carpel and
pad. l want to remove the
carpet and pad and clean
and fin ish the oak tloor.
Any advice?
A. "Buried treasure" that 's how we refer to an
oak fl oor tha t has been
covered with wall-to-wall
carpet.
Hardwood floors were
"standard equ ipm ent'~ in
homes until plywood and
cost-conscious construction
made n s way onto the
scene. ''Uneanhing" an old
wood floor can add significantly to the appearance
and yalue of your home.
Although a carpel and
pad can offer some leve l
of · protection. the nails
used 10 hold the tack strip
at the perimeter and sta-

BY MORRIS ANO
JAMES CAREY
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Unlike ' other appliance'S ,
the less you use the di shwasher, the more likely it is
to break down.
Water that remains in the
bottom of your dishwasher is

Instamng a cedar tloor In your closet consists
~
ol interlocking tongue and grooves and
Cedar flooring
fastening the matenal to lhe l loor.
~
Laying down the
Building paper
•
cedar Is your last
step In lhe
{
Once floor if\ olean,
randomly staple ala)'llr
remodeling
of building paper to lhe
process.
floor- t 5 1b fe~ is
-~
recommend·ed
~. ~
Cedar le repo~lrable by
cleaning and eandlng, but

be .-ul -It Ia V""'f eoft
Md can be eaelly damaged.

ACROSS
1 .....

6~

10 In a frenzied stale
15 lllm
1B ElopMa a belli
t9 ~to COWl
21 G!Mk~·
24
22
25
28
27
28
29
31
33
35
37
38

""""'*'"
Tea variety
Order of busiMIIa

AdjUII onct 1110111'
Urn
BtfoltJ
CooutllRIYtlr In EunlPf
lllllt ltlllt ltd
VOCIIZtd·
_....,_
FIICQy
39 Splttoh wltllaliquld
40 Catkin
42 Laissez- -

:!=~
46 Insert marl&lt;

47 S&lt;:t1COOer pert
48 Clooed,
aaiO oltMatll1
52 Ill

Whe- you top naH or blind
nell, ,.. 18-gaua- pntoUmllllc
brad nallorla rwcommendlld.

53c54
58
57
58
59

Bl8dt...., Eaftcod
Uquar
Blr1ltlh
UtMteCJP10ohi'11111•c.cltlti:tlld one
Old'

60~.,

112 Don tiC IWl

=t:_:an
Top nailing

Hidden nailing

Nails are driven

Nails are drrven Into the

!hrough the top

groove of the plank and
covered by the tongue

ollhe nexl plank.

How to in stal ~ a cedar floor in your closet; 2c x 5 3/4 inches;
96.3 mrri x 137 mm. (AP Photo/Siobhan Dooley)

'

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS.
' PLUS YOUR AD N.OW ONLINE
To ·Piace
l\egtster
UI:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
can Today••• {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
Or Fax

there for a reason: It keeps
seals moist. This prevents
leaks and protects the motor.
But when it's nol used for
long periods, the water evaporates, seals dry out , and
leaks and motor problems
become likely.
To prevent thi s, when a
dishwasher will sit unused

wall and work across the closet from there.
- Whether you top nail or
blind nail, use a small pneumatic brad nailer. We prefer 18
gauge. Brads should be spaced
about 7 .inches apart .. Als(),
brads from a .nail gun become
almost invisible when nailed.
- Leave space for expansion.
There should be·about a quarter to a half inch of clearance
between the flooring m~terial
and the wall. This must be covered with baseboard (or in the
case where baseboard already
exists, a trim piece must be
used). The floor must have
room to expand and contract at
the perimeter of the space.
- Finally, make sure that the
cedar flooring is the last step in
your remodeling process.
Working with wall board, oils
and other construction materials over a finished cedar floor
can easily damage the cedar.
And although · it JS somewhat
repairable by cleaning and
sanding, cedar is very soft and
porous and easily damaged.
The very best thing about a
cedar floor is that installation is
forgiving. The irregularities in
the color of the woOd hide a lot
of mistakes. And because
cedar flooring is relatively
thin, it is lightWeight and easy
to handle and manipulate.
There arenl a lot of home
improvements that you can say
that about. ·
And, thats all there is to it.
•
I

•.

116 llult ot • joltt
If/ L-ltfter1818
the Tentllte
BVN.._
71 TrJI1IPII'flll)' llln

ee -

73~

75 W.lr*ocklced to

76 Throw cut

n

CciiKU!fe
79Goet-

~="
116 HMitw .....

' 6e Calendar .lllbr.

87 Uqtlld110 '6cdul' htm
91 l'tll

~=1011

95 P,otactlva gannenl
97 From-tonmn
98 Part ot utlp's 0011
99 .Rec«&lt;t (prtlxl

tOO a...hop 1t1m
102 Clemency
104 Wtld~­
t05 illlallll"lUP
t07 Poffortoe Clnol

\\"'01 \4 I \II\ l'-1

r

PERSONAI.S

r
I

5 month old Chocolate Lab
Husky mr~~:, housebroke ,
1
Filif1iua-·1-tm 1:'
' shots, wormed, delleaed
Find your Philippine Lady
(740)992-7113 attar 6pm.
lor Love and Happ1 ness
of a Lrfetrme .
1-800·497-8414
Free
to
good
home ·
Sramese/Himaiayan male, 6
months old (740)441-9798
•&amp;

ANNOUNO:~tFNfS

toe Tax wr111-o111

ItO CkMmt
t 12 Dlngelot»
t 13 Conlllmpllbltt·tlll'f
114 Abeolulttly

117 GIMk letlm

118 AciDr- Connery
119 lclcm (el&gt;ll&lt;.l

123 T!IIMIUI
124 Run, Uid ol cofort
125 Modify .
127 8mell crow
128
128
131
t 33
135
136
137
136

AMch-.

Collet ~illlllf

a.lll
MlkAt 11M ollrlist
Trawl Qn

Taut

More lirnld

BN&lt;IIIIy

139 ·- Roaaotltll......
t40 DtMI too lilt
141 Pl1cl1lr
t 42 ExoduiiHIItr

::a_

Lovmg
ChnStlan Famrly t:~rayrng to
adopt once more to complete our family... Fun
Devoted Dad, Stay at home
Mom, and 2 big sisters wait·
ing to-share all our love with
another Angel We rnvite you
to check out webSrte rn
hopes somethrng wrll draw
us
together
forever!!
http ://www.wrshlng2adopt h
omestead com/ You can
reach us toll free 1-877-256·

ap....,

melody
92 Oreu In finery

-7r..:=

102 Paving ma1et1111
103 Evil and lltK:trlc

9 C&lt;lncludt

t 04 lrMlllbe

83 ,_,_ dtleo!ation

t01~

· 8T~

replacernenl

111 Samovar

112 Judged

19-Troplcallnit

20
23
30
32

Belortoow
l..ast:Mlus kx*

P08C&lt;I godclaas
Mole deer
34 Dyv-llled 38 Use rnouthwul1
38 RIIITIIVt the rind

39 Gleam
4101-42 fraud
"3 Old Testament

44
45
46
47
48

munltrtr
Focus obsessively
Btalt
At* dweMng
Em&gt;l'
Exd!llnge premium
Bourl' irileu

113 Gulile
114 DeMlct political
acronym
tt5 L'-'tawann
116 eonrne...
t t 7 Nonchalant
118 Tremble with oold
120 Word ol paring
t2t Mol18r-of-pH!l
122 Vortlon and Slltn
124 Nota125 Plant pti1Cni10I
128 Mild che,.e
t30 GOPmom.
132 Hally Insect
t 34 Tokyo, In the past

I

&lt;

GIVEAWAY

I
·-..

'-------'·
J litter trarned Kittens 2

110
1 ..• • .•

Absolute Top Dollar. U.S
Diesel Mechanic/
Sliver and Gold Co1ns,
Trailer Technlchlan
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs , U S
S300 Sign On Bonus
Currency,-M .T S Corn Shop.
151
Second
Avenue . One of Ohro's leadrng motor
G II' • r 740 446 2842
carriers has an rmmed1ate
openrng 1n our elCtremety
I 111'111\111 . ~1
actrve
growrng shop lor a ·B"
u

sun t.s

,.,.,.,,....-----~ ServK:e Mechanrc Tl;re suc,
110
cesslul app lrcant must pos·

HEI..P W •\NTEn

losT ANil

FOUND
A leadrng provider ot sup·
~..ot~------- port servtees to iridivrduals

sass a hrgh level of mechan1cal aptrtude and be able to

Yard 8811 July 16 · 17 · 16.
Furniture , clothes, knick
knacks. ec\ 9/10 mile out

2 YIIU IOIOimUm tl;llp9119/lC9

rt'lQUIIIId Large portion ol
lrelght m 11 600 mile radlut
Pl'"ue col11 ·600·226·6658 or
304 27'3 -435 t
Atk lo1Archie or Jam~e
Also vls1t oyr webs11e for an
onNnu apphcation
www hi!ut leytrucklng com

reen.
\",\HH Si\u:..

PI~ 1'1 ~"ANT

~=cor11P011f

59 Drew, Ill a way
61 N&lt;lbl4man
63 Sln.,te 64
ltl'l)hallcally
6e "-meal

""*

.

71 Long ll1d *'Oiod
72 lhfpena
14 IJnlvtrslty
Ill Conntcticul
76 loltttake
z~ 'Trilllln 111&lt;1 -·
81 Sc:orn!U11M
kx*ol
83 Adclllanal
85 BetwHn-mottls lroat
87 Bel ol a kind

"" *•

I

'

Are you lookrng tor a
stable Job?
Grve us a calli
You could earn up to
$S/Mur plus bonuses.
we also offer pa id traming,
holidays and vacatrons.
Full or Pa rttrme shtfts
avarlable
Call Today
,·877·463·6247 ext. 2457
www.lnfoclston.com
_::.::.:::::::::::.:.:::::.::::::::~
AVON! All Are ast To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304-

DRIVERS
S45K TO $65K

Arcn( E~~:press will pay you
Sfl5 000 to $65,000 per
year OTA drrvers are needed to keep our lro1ght mov·
rng Ou r customers are busy
and we cannot keep L1p We
offer some of the top pay
and benetrts rn the 1ndustry
LIP operators ~re also need·
ed Do you wan t your own
truck. but can't pul together
the down payment? Wid can
:.:67.:5.:-1.:42::9::_._ _:___ _ _ ,helpl Must tle 23 years o ld

BEAUTICIAN NEEDED
Holzer Senior Care Center
a 70 bed long-term care
nursing facrlrty rs seek rnt;t a
beautician Qualif ied appllcenl must have a Mange r's

wi1h one yea&gt; OTR experl·
ence Snd Hazmat. $1 .000
srgn-on bonusr Call rocru!t·
rnglll

ARCTIC EXPRESS
800-927 ·0431
www.arctlco!ipres s com

License. be ava ilable 3 days DRIVERS NEW PAY
a week. and enjoy working SCALE
//
with the elderly. ·
~
/
/
If you are Interested In thiS
position. please come see
us at 380 Colonial Or
Bidwell OH or cali ' 740-44S·

CLASS A Cffi. NE EOEO
. Earn be

~
~en II!S- ~OK

&amp;001 and eek lor ~artie.

eMin. 1 ye e~p
/,..,.
• Hom• Weekends
. S!500 "I{Jn·on bonul

Come join the caring people

• Start 6)1 36 cpm
• 9!5% No touch freight

ol

PSYCHOL!)GIST

e are a well respected,
111rca l, national practic
ea lng wrth genatrrcs. W
fl r a good starti ng salary,
ellis which mclude liabil
and health lnsuranc
nd a 401 K we are rn nee
f a licensed psychologist
ou can work ·as few or a
many hours
you want
our 1ob Is t r~ see people,
w 1ob Is lo ~II. collect en
lve vo u.-l~t aupport serv
Ice l~lll. t you need Wa are
u~lnflaa that never losse
lgt,t~ ot lht fact ttiBt th
,,Mal noal th ot our client
tl \) Ur llrtt concern. Cal
PIYO t'\Oioglcet Tral'\1111ons.
77 -734 ·203t
or
Ia
eaumo 877·?'34·2030.

AN
Director of Nllrsln
Immediate Permanent
Posrflon
lime ._RN
Physrclan 's Office
resume to Bo~~: EB 14
Main St PI Pleasant

25550

'

A fu ll-trme Registered Nufse
is needed rmmedrately lor
the Hospice Department of
Center,
Holzer Medrcal
Gallrpo t1 s, OH
Fle~~:ible
sc heduling wrth
on-call
hours
Monday·Fnday
Applicants must be licensed
rn the State of Oh io. have at
least one year me~/ surg .
experience and res. q_e in
Gall1a or Jackson County,

Fm irnmediate consrderation. please contact
Human Resources
Department

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
100 Jackson Prke
Galhpolrs, OH 45631- 1563

In !ovilltJ me"lont
of my dearest

«tJ3i[[»'13arnett
. July 16, 2lXl3
":Heaven'&gt; (jain'
- l11wgene

. Un/eAn,efi

We ~II nollorgetyou lirt"{atl,Qel, precious eNid
we 1h1nk obou1you everydbylhe love we shored·
your smio. We lj)1nk oboullhe hoppy nmes
0 And no1 obodflhe sad And we treasure ~?~er;
memor; of lhe spec&gt;oil&gt;mes we hod
We're leaning on God's promise Someday we "'II be
· Together o~n 1n Heaven For oil etemily
love,
Morna, Popo
Sister,

lmmedrate Open rng
Per Diem AN (possibility at
becoming lull t1me)
Holzer Clrnic- Hematology/
Oncology Dept
Bequiremanta · Graduate ot
accredrted sct1Qol of nursing Currently licensed by
Ohro Board of Nu ts1ng
Knowledge of 1npatr ent and
outpatient nursrng and abr lr·
ty to pertorm as 11 pe rtarns to
rob
Current
CPA
Certrfrca tr on required ACLS
preferred
Oncology
Certif1catron preferred

Fax. (740)446·5106
EOE/ADA Employer

110

t 10

Make 50°o sel ling Avon
Limited
lrme
ONLY
(7 40)446-3358 Frrst 5 to CEll •
rec e1ves a gr ft

Regls1ered Nurse (AN) lor
lull lime and oarH1me work
rna 114Bedlong TerrTJca re
Stn te Facrllty
Fulf.t1me
employment oHers an elCten·
s1ve benefrt pa ckage mc IJ.d1ng State CNrl servrce reti rement. earn up to 15 days
vacatron per year 18 days
SICk. eave and 12 olus pa1d
holrdays 1 nealth 'lile msu'·
ance rs available Salar y ~
commensurate w1th eKper&gt;·
enc~. Con tact K1m 81llups
DON at Lak1n Hospr tal
Lak1 il wv
at t304)67 ~
0860 ext 126 Monday tn1 u
f r,day· from 8 00 am · -l rr
p m Lak1 n Ho5ptta! 1S i r
EEO AA Employer

Need a Heatmg·Coolmg
msta ller w1th at least 1 year
e)(pe nence Pay by exper1·
ence Call (740)441 1236

Hu .1' ,,. ~ 'Tf:l)

NOW HIRING· A 1ead1ng
prQV!der lO rndiVIdLIBIS Wil fl
MA 100 IS lookrn g lor d ract
care stall 1r Gallip&lt;lhs No
expenence necess ary $6 35
per hour P&lt;ird trarn mg If you
would lrke to JO I'l our team to
help
1nd rv1duals ach1eve
Ouahhed applicants may
!herr fullest potenii&lt;JI you
apply to
may put you r appl rca11on 111
Holzer Clln.rc ' '
,
at Mrddleton Estates. 8204 SPEECH THERAPY .
Human Resources
Carla Orrve. Gallipolis OH
Department
4563 I
(across trom goll
90 Jackson Prke
TA.NDEM REHAB an rn
Galhpohs. Oh10 4.5631-1562 course) (no phone calls house therapy company Ita~
please] Must apply m oe rlax to 740-446·5532
ful l t1me, part-t1me &amp; PAN
soc
www holzercllnrc com
opportu nr\les lor SLP-CCC
Equal Opportu nity
or CFY for oui Bidwell SNF
Owner Ops
Employer
Call CJ Roper 800·601 Get More Money &amp;
38B4. lax 800-601 -3885.·
Mor e Hom~t 1 me'
ema1t ta nOOmrehabq@tam·
LICENSED
•A vg
S1 iS Per Mile pabay rr com
PRACTICAL NURSE Loaded &amp; Emptv
EOE
• Home 90°-o of Weekends
Scenrc Hills Nursmg Center
WANTED Part·t1me posrtro n
a Tandem Health Care •2500 mr Avg Weekly
available to assrst wrt h mdr ·
Facr lrty. rs seek1ng a select • Weekly Settleme nt s
vrduals wrth mental retardafew to join our outstanding • Free Base Plates .
tron at a group home 1n •
team We current ly seek a • Fuel Card Program
_ Brdwell Bam -Spm Sun 2· ·
full trme LPN Proper lrcense
1Opm MITu1W Mu st have
Afso Hirmg Co. Drivers!
or C'!J tlfrca11on requrred . We 23 yrs CDL·A Ver 2 yr. OTR hrgh school d1plomaJGEO
olfer extrli .shift .prckup
val1d brrver's lrcense and
6 mo Flatbed Clean MVR
bonus. shrlt d itferential ,
three yea rs go od dr1v1ng
H&amp;WTrucki ng
Bllcellent benefitS. perfect
e-.penence $7 00/hr Pre·
1·800·826-3560 ext 19
attendance rncenttves and
employ ment Drug Testing
much morel
- - - - - - - - Send resume to Buckeye .
Part trme employee needed,
Please apply to .
drrve rs lrcense requrred Comm unrty Serv1ces. PO ·
J&lt;~ckso~, OH:
Comme rcr al Fl oor Care Bo~~: 604
Attn: Dia nna Thompso n,
45640 Deadline tor appli·
(740)367-0255
HR
cants .
7/23 04
Equal
Scenrc Hills Nursing
Opportunrty Emf.Jioycr
Part T1me il E! IP wanted
Center
111qwre
at The Wallp aper 150
Sn IOOI.Io\
311 Buckndge Road
Outl et 420 Marn $ t Pornt
I '\."""I"RI \. TIO\
Bidwell, OH 45614
Pleasant No Calls Please
Ph : 740/446-7150
FaX· 740/44 6-2438
Gallipolis Cnreer College '
Email : admln.shn@
Wa nted Full Time. evenmg
(Careers Clo~e To Home )
Line Cook. Apply 1n person
tandemhealthcare .com
Ca ll Tcday1 740-446-4367
Hol1day Inn, Gallrpol1s
1-800·214 0452

· SFIOFIEOE
HR G tendemhea lthcare com

Phone. (740)448-5 105
Paramedrcs . &amp;
EMTs
· needed Apply at 1354
Jackson Prke, Gallipolis.

Card ol Thanks

Card of Thanks

www ga/IOC'ilscnrc('" )liege

cor·

Someone to cre an house .lo. c~recli i BCI Member A~creall ng
Counc1l to ln;:Wp&lt;'ndenl Coll~ges
pan -lime , (740\247-3272
.1nd ScMools 127413

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Country Homes
Community Rental Manager

Th~

Pap1ily of Earl Ray Myers
wouleJike to thank everyon¢ who
~;
s~t;tl6wers,
food, catds
and
· '.
'
'\.:_. • ' • '
•
•
.• ·&lt;
dbqlitions
anp all who kepi in
::,
! : ' ,&lt;

·

'~

us

~

I

yqp~·tho4g~ts ~p

prayt;fS

in our :

&lt;trn(~:ort0si ~9\!I ki?d~9s. ·;oyas,:
' ·greatly
apprec1at~tl! .·; ·', ·
' ..
'"«- • ~ ~ •
'"

Omar Dwayne
Griffin
.

HOSPICE
REGISTERED NURSE

as

EOE
Submrt resume to · 68150
Beybeny Drrve.
St. ClalrS~IIIe , OH 43950
Attn: Katrir.a Dunaway.

Jom the Caring People at

$72 K-S8 0K

In Memog

Family Oxygen and MtdiCBI
Equipment Is looking tor a
highly motivated Service
Technician
Moderate to
heavy lifting and a good drl\1·
lng record required. Must be
responsible and able to
communicate well with senlor cit izens .. WeQes nego·
liable. Resume/applications
accepted In person 0 70
Pine Street , Gallipolis.

Posltlln Requlrr.rs. OH
and WV AN licensure ,
minimum two years of
home health nursrng
exper ie nc e rn a m111nage·
ment role. knowledge of
Federa l and Slate home
health regulation , JCAHO
exper rence preferred

Holzer Senior Care Center.
a 70 Bed long-term care
nursrng lacrlrty IS seekrng a
Dietary Manager. Ouahlied
applicant should have at
least two yea rs full-ttme
expenence rn a health care
sett1ng, have knowledge of
local , State, and Federal
regula tions regarding food
servrce and prefe rably be a
Certtfred Dretary Manager
HSCC prides Itself rn provrd ing the highest quality of
care tor our senrors.
If you like work1ng wtth the
elderly and are committed to
provrd rng quality services 1n
a friendly, "Team Orrented"
work setting come see us at
380 Colontal Orrve, Brdwell,
Ohio or call (740)446-5001

OH

oNO FORCED NYC
'
Call 81)9-812·2382

Medl Home Health
Agency, Inc l!l&amp;eklng a
full-time AN Clinical ,
Orrector tor the Gallrpolls,
phlo
location.

HIRING DIETARY MAN·
AGER

• PJ'Itts program
• Fuel tllscount program
Co mpeny
F=lull&gt;od J.ol 38cprn
~-, • 811n"'•1 tlllcki)li'_~allable__/
, ' Pa•d ~lloUtiOr'f'-, Fi- 1qvonr t1ume lim e ollered
(Equa l Opportu niiY Employer)
• 40 tiC: •~a liable

female 1 male Bwks old to

~=oge~

EMT·B needed lor a g'reat
organizatronllll Securi1as is
now hrr 1ng for the Buffalo
WV area. You must have a
EMT- B qualrficatrons. Above
average wages plus paid
msurance. Unrforms and
trarnmg pro~rded
Please
apply between the hours of
9.00a.m -3:00pm. Moncjay.
Wednesday, and Frrday
6354 Rt 60 East Sutte 4,
Barboursvrlle WV 25504 For
more rnformatron caii1·88B·

(your trailer)
• Term10al Pay
• Frequent home time
' MaintenMce program

·-

4x4 's For Sale ........... .;................................. 725
Announcement ..........................................,. 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Rep~lr .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats,&amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty .................................210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... t9D
Electrlcai/Ralrl geratlon ...... -· .......................840
Equlpmenllor Ron1 ....;................................ 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 81 0
Farm a tor Rent, .......................................... ..430
Forma tor Sale ............................................. 330
For u.,.e .....................................................490
For S:lle ....: ................... ,............................... 565
, FOr"Salt or Trade .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablet .....................................&amp;80
Furnlohed Rooma .................. :................. :•. ,450
Ganerel Haullng...........................................850
Glvoaway ..................................................,.,.!)40
Happy Ado ....................................................o~o
Hoy a. Graln ..................................................840
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
Homelmprovamenta............................ .......810
Homealor Sala ............................................3t0
Houaeliold Goodt ....................................... 510
Houa.. tor Rent .......................................... 4t0
In Memorlam ............................ :................... 020
lnaurance .......................... ,.......................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equlpmont ........................ 660
Ll vaotoc k................... ,.... ,..... ,.......................830
Loot and Found ...........................................0110
Lota a. Acreage ............................................360
Mlacallaneoua ........... ...................................170
Mlacollaneoue Merchandloe.......... ,,,,,, .......540
Mobile Home Rapalr ...................................,860
Mobile Homealor Rant ............................... 42D
Mobile Homea lor Sale ................................ 320
Money 10 Loan .............................................220
Motorcyclea a. 4 WhMiora ..........................740
Muetca lnotrumonto ................................... 570
Poraonalo ... ............................................... ... 005
Pttolor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 82D
Professional Servlcea ................................. 230
Rad io, TV &amp; CB Ropalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wentlld .....................................350
Schoole Instruction ...................................;, 1SO
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent... .... ._.................................... 4BO
Sponlrig Gooda ........................................ ... 520
SUV'alor Sale ......... ,.................................... 720
Truckalor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholotery ...........................................""''" 870
Vana For Sale ............................................... 730
Wanted to 8uy ............................................. 090
wanted lo Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent... .....: ................................... 470
Yard Sale· Galllpollo ....'................................ 072
Yard Sele-Pomeroy/Middla ......................... 074
Ytird Sale-Pt. Pleasant................................ 076

I

eo·,~

Denver Fannrn
Marntanance
Superrntender. t
4271 Lyman Drr~e
H1lhard 0~. &gt;1 3026

CLASSIFIED INDEX

HELrWANIID

work with drive1s Three and
a half day work we'ek, paid
vacation, personal days , 577-2723 EOEIM/F/DN
hoalth insurance pard holi-'
days, overtime pay, 40 1K
plan and unrlorms are
HertleyTrocklng Oompeny
among the many benefits of
Now Hiring
Owner Operators
workrng at Arctrc Express.
Company dn.-ers
Inc Thrs posrtron 1S open
Truck and Trmler Mechamcs
now and yqu c·an begin work
Owner Operator
rmmed1alely Fa&gt; , emarls or
flatbed D'Y[SJOO
rn person applrcants· are wel7C'fto (our trailer)

wrth MR/DD has a vacant
Found· set of keys between "Entry L~vel Management
Unron Ave &amp; Senior Citizens Posrtron· Prefer college
(Hyland Ad) (740)992-7055 deg1ee plus 2 years-expenlo rdentrfy
ence or 5 years expenence
-------~ ICF/MRDD Faci lity Must be
Found Yellow/Blue prllow wr llrng to relocate. Marl
sham hom a ya rd sale Resume to 8202 Carla
across from Honda Shop 1n Dnve GaUr polls. OH 45631
or falC to 740•446-3987.
come
Gallipolis {740)256-1924

Ever

POLICIES: Ohio V1 Hey Publish ing re1.-ve1 the right to edi t. reject. or tlr1CIIIny 1d •I •nY time. Error• must be reported on the tin! dey ol publ!eet!on
the
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Regleter will be re1ponslble for no more than the col t of !he apace occ~:~pled by the error ar]d only the firll meertlon. We 1h11i no! btl !lebhl ICK
any..,., or 111penH thet results from th• publlcetlon or omllllon ol an advertl11ment. Correction will be msdaln the llr11 avellable edition . • Bo• number
ere always confldent~l. • Current rsle c:srd
• All real . .tate advertlaemente are subject to the F..:! eral Fair Houelng Act of 1968. • Th 11 newiPIP41'
ac;ceple only help w•nted adl mNUng EOE
. We w1ll not knowingly accept 1ny·idvertla lng In violation of the law.

·.~~.~-~·.w.w_n_l&gt;_, ro

good home (304)882-2436

50
51 "Iolnl
52 POIIIgl or pwklng

70Longlllh

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Towns hrp,
Meigs County, send letters
ot rnterest to · The Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769

.r

101 Temporary

1
5F
16 To
17
fashioned

.

t'

106 Lesa np.
106 Airborne l:ly

10 LtaVlomeck
11 G-man or T-man
12 Organ ohmoll
t3Wndl
14 Metleval hutlng

~~J~

lJ

All Display: 12 Noon :z
Buslne•• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid•

God Bless
De,b &amp; Greg

96 Ftlends
96 Olllct VIP

ep-uy

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday -F riday for Inaert:lon
In N eMt Day's Paper
Sunday ,In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
ay For Sunday• Paper

8944

95~llnl

5 Vloadwhl

r

r

Puppies to give away. part
Lab , (740)949-Ji 28

6e l!ewtldered

90

1

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

' 89 "'"Citt

t DMIIwilh
2 Mullctlldrllma

G~TAW.V

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

pjsulay Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descr'lptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrev iation s
• Include Phone Number And Address Wtlen Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

for more than two or three
weeks, pour in a half-cup of
liquid bleach to prevent bacterial buildup. Then, add
three tablespoons of mineral
oil. lt coats the surface of the
water and prevents evaponition, even over long periods
of time. With dishwashefs -.
use it, protect it, or lose it.

DOWN

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
.8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ -WRITE AN AQ

992-2157

Oearllfir~ ~

Offtee I!P~tf'

SUNDAY PUZZLER:

, edar is an especially aromatic wood that
C
helps protect your clothes against moths.

thing) and making repairs ialer
becomes next to impossible.
Nails should be used. Either
hidden nailing or top nailing
can be done.
Hidden nailing is. where
nails are driven into the groove
of the plank and covered by
the tongue of the next plank
and so on. Although this procedure is not extremely difficult,
it does require a bit of an experienced hand. This is because
the thickness of the material at
the bottom of the grqove is
very thin . and nailing must
. be
very prec1se.
Top nailing is where the
nails are driven through the top
of the material. Although the
nailing is visible in the finished
product, it is the strongest
attachment of the two methods
and it is the easiest and most
forgiving as well . With top
nailing, the first plank can be
laid in the middle of the closet.
Working from the center outward guarantees better alignment with surrounding walls.
We like top nailing.
-Use a caulk box to snap a
straight line through the middle of the closet. Snap another
tine parallel to it half the width
of one of the cedar planks.
Doing this will place the first
plank dead center in the closet
with the alignment line along
the edge of the plank. Purists,
who insist on hidden muting,
will not want to start with
tongue of their flfSt against the

as polyurethane. lf the surface appears dull after
wiping a Sl)lall secti on
with mineral spirits it is
waxed. If the finish
appears to be revitalized.
the
.fin ish
is
likely
\
polyurethane.
If your test reveals that
the floor is waxed. apply a
new coal o f 'ei ther liqtlid
buffing or paste wax. The
wax shoul d fill in- the nail ·
and staple hol es and result ·
in a smoot h and uniform
fi ni sh. If, on the other
h ~ nd ,
the floor has a
polyurethane finish , buff ·
the surface with a 3M :
maroon bu ffi ng pad and
apply one or more coats or
new polyurethane - making sure to butT between
coats. By the w&gt;ty, a 10inch flat pad works best
when applying finish. ,

ADOPTION..

~House&amp; Week

of the rru¥eriaJ.

pies used to attach the carpet could mar an ot herwise
pristine finish.
Car.efu ll y remove the
carpet and pad. If the pad
is attached with staples,
carefull y remove them
using -pliers. Use equal
caution to remove the tack
strip using a pry bar and a
sma ll hammer. Be sure to
place a small shim sh ing le
or
other
protection
between the pry bar and
the floor.
With the carpet and pad
out of the way, thoroughly.
vacu um the fl oor and then
sponge mop a small secti on at a time using a
cleaning sol ution suc h as
Spic-and-Span. Remem ber,
wood and water don't mix
so be sure to go easy on
the water.
Once clean, use a soft,
white terrycloth dampened
with mineral spirit s to test
if the finish consists of
wax or a hard fi nish such

Dishwashers: Use 'em or lose 'em

ll'fl!.-- .

$158,000.$188,000

Clean.smell for clo~d space

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Entry foyer

Ah, the smell of cedar- in the closet
BY JAMES AND
MORRIS CAREY

·

• 2 x 6 exterior walls

'I

Con..ructlon Glotaaty

BY MORRIS AND
JAMES CAREY

• PorCh OOk.lnns and

I
FlOOR PLAN

CLASSIFIED

WEEK

•

•

~

Include' mce 3 hdr hou,e!! (Shade Oh)
Must Oc uhlc 10 manilgc &amp; mamtain rrntals,
req u ire~&gt; gund cred it arullnleg:nly-cxccliL:n(
scml·rctircmcnt job! Send a resume 10:

P.O. Box 1033, Logan, Ohio 43138

Country Parks Inc.

&lt; ..

; J• ~ll'

.

Bren'da &amp; Halee. 1&lt;&lt;t
Card ol Thanka

Pan Trmc Po,llion Available
with Well t'lab!i,hed Company

Card ol Thanka

Card oj'IIian}J
The fami ly of William Lee Montgomery
would like to express .the.ir thanks and
gra11tude to fami.ly and fnends who gave
us support, kindness and prayers al a very
difficult time- A very special thanks 10 the
many churches, organizations, teachers
and staff at Hannan Trace lllementarv
School, David L. Martin,' Oallia Co.·
Sheriff's ~' 1}lad/S.A.L.T. council:
GaHja (:9, EMS, Pr. Llan Whitely, neighbOrs, ihe $in&amp;ei'$ fdr the beautiful songs,
Rev. C;~aand al)d Frances Montgomery,
Rev. d~~&gt;y Warner .tor his bomforting
words. W~uglh!ialley~ WOlld Funeral
~om~, ~d W:illiS .Funeral Home. May God
.bl~s. ~aOtlpf )i0\1 fo.r your cpntpassion.
·'"
suppQ!'l and prayers.
Bin, Deloris and James Montgomery

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

lmm!'diate opening 1s available for a lull.'.
l im e Security Guard at our Wellston,
Oh io Plant. Candidates must be Willing to
work weekends and all shifts. Overtime is
possible &amp; will
be
requ~red.
Responsibilities incl.ude general planl
secun)\4 I ruck and VISitors gale clearance,
and roving guard dut&gt;es. Applicant musl
be highly molivaled and possess a leam
player att&gt;tude 1n all aspects of their
duties. possi!Ss good mterpersonal &amp;
commun&gt;calion skills Personal computer
skills are a plus Previous secur&gt;ly
experience &gt;s des~red.
We offer compel&gt;tive wages, excellent
health care benefits . pa&gt;d vaca11on and
holidays, pension and 401 (k) plan
Interested appl1can1s may subm1t their
resumes by July ,30, 2004 to ·

General Mills, Inc.
2403 S. Pennsylvan ia Avenue
Wellston , OH 45692
Attention : HR·Securlty Guard
EEOIAA Employer .

�Page 04 • 61Utbap G:tmtf -6mttnel

Sunday, July 1B, 2004

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
l.&lt;m;&amp;

HOMES

FORSAu:

ACREAGE

1r

AP~IEN'IS

l lR RF..w

Ir ~ I,_t__.mR..~iiiiiiiillll,.1 t

,I

It

Sunday, July 18, 2004

Cool Off

Altfated living and extri Home at 598 Jay Drive; Mobile home lot tor rent. Nlca one BR unfurnished 42 small pBr\s bins, mount- AKC BeatJies 6 weeks, trl ~ 981 14x~6 Mobile home 1997 Olds Achleva 4-cycle , 1990 ChevY Ton 4-s,reed
•Cll'ec tor your loved one In my aprox. 2100 sq ft ., 4 bed· Johnsons Mob1le Home apartment. Range &amp; relrig . ed on plywood . Ready to color. Shots. wormed. Steve Price $4,000 or wm trade for automatic, air, Cd. runs 350. Good condition . 1986

•home. Call {7~)388·0t t8.

room,

2 baths, double ~ark. 17~)446-2003
deck. storage build,Cleor;ea Ponablo Sllwmllt, ing,
$~25,000 .
Call 1Wo homesltes tor sale Both
.don't haul ~ur logs to th&amp; {740)44 6-6822 kir appoint- one acra m/1. 3-1/2 mites
•f11tllluot call 304-675-t9~7 . mont.
from Holzer Hospital.
620
Evergreen Rd., $19,500
: Independent ~oovldor- ~\;
' lng tor pta. on W,a:!vers N1ce 3br. 1ba, carport. con - 560 Evergreen Rd., $18,500
Program to care for , honest crete driveway, $49.000. Call (740)446·8840 'or
&amp; dopondoblo, (740)992- East Bethel Church Rd. Call (740)645-4513.
RF.AL fsrAn:
Bryan al 740-441-9t08.
.3949
garag~,

i

Weekly cleaning )obs. Can Very Nk:e House lor sate in
provide ralerencaa. can New Haven , WV 3 BedroJm. ·
: 1740)24~·0448 teovo mos· 2 112 Baths LarQS Krtchen &amp;
Dining Room. Large Family
·sage . 1
-1 - - - - - - Room &amp; Living Room .
house cleaning, Double Ca r Garage, Out
mot r &amp; daughter teart~ , Buildings and lnground Pool
ho~st
dependable. 13041882·2857
('7 ..1-')7•2· 7707
llab·
mlk90 0m,n .com ,.,

L.---\\:liliAJiiiNiiliiiD--,..1
....._
Homa with 5 acres or tess.
All cath. Must not be listed
w1th a real estate company,

:or leave message.

Vie.,r photos/Into oniln.e

:wm work Night Shltt full or
·part Ume lor Elder!~ Exp. &amp;
:Ref. 304-67!5·7961
11 '\ \ \ 11\1

:r•.IO__;;,Biii.!SINEIIii-;sso;,;,;,,..ll i
~

OI'I'ORI'UNfl)'

~

ABSOLUTE GOlDMINE

60 vending machlnell
excellent locations
oil lor St0,995
B00-234-6982
A,.. U $$ motivated? lOOX
more powerlulthan MLM . IF

hrtoua-800·305· 7949.
Deli business for sale d~Je to
IllnesS. please call (7 40)99'2·
1386

.

,.

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. rt,Jcommends tha
ou do business with peo
le you ~nOw, and NOT I
end money through th
ail until you have lnvest1
ated the offerln .

PR!lf'ES',lONAL
SERVICE'&gt;
Honest, dependable women
will do residential or commercial cleaning. (740)44~ 9863

I

.

.

B0droom . 2 Bath, .
4!}K 100', state approved
r;Uilding Be8utiful View.
ddlson Township. Code

::~ or cal117401367-

Bedroom. 2 Bath. 2 Car
arage , $2500 Ca'rpet ·
llowance. Jay Drive.
allipolis. Code 52804 or
all (740)446-7231 .
Bedroom. 2 Bath. River
iew/ Access. Private
oat Dock in Gallipolis. 1
ere lot. COde 90303 or
all .(740)446 -053 1.
BedrOom Bnck Home, 2
ath . 3 Car Slick
nattached Gartl~e . 2
tory Outbuilding. C.ode
2704 or call (740)446566
Bedroom . 2 t 12 Bath,
IQ,Se to Holzer Hospital
n Spring Valley. Code
13 or call (740)446624.

port Limited, 41!.4, Low
(leage, LOaaed with
tras. Code A 12 or call •
740)446-3632 .

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1-868-582-3345

MOBILE HOMFS
fOKSALE

Ul\11 ..., 1\11
1984 6511 Schultz 2 bed·
H~m;
I"OR SALE

pos
lble 011 this 3 bedroom,
alh, counuy sentng, mod
rn home Newly finished i
001
Centrll· alr/heat
ump. baser'l,fJn.t ' on 1
eras. Centrally located
tnutea lrom
Alhana

meroy, ·~ Parkersburg
P'Pf'OXIm•t•ly 1150.0

room , very good shape
' 9800 · Call after Spm
t992 SoUthern Elite 11-l-)(70,
2-bedroom. 2·beth. some
appliances. Call {'1 40)94920 11 alter 5:00
For sale or rent - 2 bedroom
mobile homtls startlni.J at
$270- P• MOnth. Cell 740·
992-2 167

i

~ "~--·lllR--Rf·wt·'-_.J

·Will Presaure Wuh'Muse's.
riloblle homas. metal build·
ll'lgs. and gutterS. Call
' (740)446-0151 ask tor Ron

provided. Water &amp; garbat;Je hang In your shop or work
pa1d. Deposrt required Cal! area
9 sets m1sce1tan&amp;Ous small
(740)446-4345 atter 6pm.
1oo1s
Pomeroy- two 2 bedroo.m 1991 Chevrolet Van with
apartments, R &amp; S lur: tools and parts s11etves. V-6.
n1shed,
w/d
hook-up, auto, PS, PB, AIC
Naylor's
Run
area, 1986 Chevrolet window van
(740)992-6886
w1th seats, V-8, auto, PS,
Twin Rl\lers Tower is accept- PB 1 AJC.
ing applications tor waiting Miscellaneous other items.
list lor Hud-substzed. t ~ br, '553 Jackson Pike in rear.
Phone : 140-44 1-2667, 10
apartment. call 675·6879
a.m.· 5 p.m.
EHO
Couch, bed !tame . head·
SPAL'E
board. mattreSs/boxsprlngs.
btid frame, bookcase he~;id·
board matching dresser,
Mini Storage for rent. 4x15 &amp; dinette. Shyw1nn Dyna Flow
exercise-bicyc le (304)675342 3

Relocating to Gallipolis.
Famity wants to tease n1ce
home with at least 3 bedrooms with garage. needed
38r hOuse has stove &amp; Immediately. Call Jac~ie
refridg . (304)576 -2934
740-707 -7999
740-589·
5258.
819 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, 2
br. full basement $400.00 +
util.. ret. &amp; dep. 304-6758902

eo. H~.o

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Financing available with MQ ~~-----iiii--'
DOWN ·PAYMENT! less Good Used Appliances, Repaired, New ll Rebuilt In
and Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1than perfect credit accepted! Reconditioned
Own don't (rent. Local com - Guaranteed.
Washers, 800-537-9528.
pany. MOrtgage Loca tors. Dryers.
Ranges.
and
(740)992-732 1
Refrigerators, Some start at
Large Metal office cles~
House for rent, option to buy. $95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 $30.00 Call (304)675-2359
$300.00/ month , 4-bedrooru, Vine St ., (740)446-7398
after 5:30 pm
1-bath. 25 Ann Street' Call
Mollohan
Carpet.
~02
Clark
NEW AND USED STEEL
1740)742-9923
Chapel Road. Port9r, Ohio. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1740)446-7444 1'877-830- For
MUIIILE HUMFS
Coricrete,
Angle,
1 9162 . Free Estimates, Easy Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
FOR Rf:Nr
financing , 90 days same as
Grating
For
Drains,
14K70, 2 bedroom , 2 lull cash . VisaJ M~ s ter Car~. Driveways &amp; Wal~ways. l&amp;l
Drivealittle
save
alol.
Scrap
Metals
Open
Monday,
bath. Rio Grande area .
1740)441-9081 .
Sears upright freezer, 3 Tu esday, Wednesday &amp;
years old, $ 300 . Call Friday, Bam-430pm. Closed
2 bedroom. t~ailer lor rentf 5 7401388·0460.
Thursday.
Salurd8y
&amp;
1
minutes hom town. Call
Sunday. I740)44.6 -7 300
1740)446-9342
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For sate, New Chase 10"'ge cha~r.
2 br. 141!.70 Holly Park clean
re -conditioned
automatic $$300 4 t S" .chrome rims.
well kept, c/a &amp; heat,
13_6_7-_0_13_9_· _ _
400
washers &amp; dryers. relrigera- -'_·.:.17_4_0:..
garbage &amp; water paid,
tors, gas and electric Pole Barn 30:.:50K 10 only
access tp catfish pond, t
ranges , air conditioners, and $5.295. includes painte d
mile out Jerrys Run $300. +
damage dep. 304·576-29~~ wringer washers. Will do metal , plans how to build
repairs on major brands in book.. Flider fra~ delivery.
3Br House Trailer lor rent shop or at your home.
(937)559·834 1.
$350 month $250 deposit in
Used Furniture Store. 130 Twin Size Box Springs .&amp;
Letart (304)882-2858
Butaville Pike. Dresser, Ma uress Lik e new $125
Mobile home lor rent . Li~e couches, mattresses. raclin- 1304 1995•3277 after 6pm
ers. grave mOnuments. 2001
n_
ew. Call (740)4~6-2 003 .
B UII..JJINl;
Pontoon boat, much more.
Nice 2 bedroom mobile 1740)446·4782 Gallipolis.
S UI'I'Lit~
home lor rent. No pets OH Hrs. 11 -3 M-F.
$300/month ,
deposit
Block: brick, sewer pipes.
required. '(740)256-6202.
windows, lintels, etc. Cla'ude
ANllQUf:S
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
APARI'Mt;NIS
Call740-245-5t21 .
toK Rmr
Buy or sell . R~erine
Antiques, 1124 East Ma 1n New Shipment!! New BKieri1 and 2 bedroom apart· on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- or and interior doors._;B II
ments, furnished and untur· 99?-2526. Russ Moore , sizes. Call after 5: 00. 50%
nlshed . Security deposit owner.
ott. 6153 St Rt. 160,3 miles
required . no pets, 740·992·
north of Holzer hosplt!Yf'h:
_22-;1-8._ _ _"7'c
~-=:,~.,
~a't:t~s 1740)645-6t67.

r

r

Oooa used J b~roo~-bedroom, stcvland retrlo
'-:anlhly PIIY"'I"I. Cal 14X70. Include• cantr&amp;l air era tor, furnished , utllltlos
hris. or
Robbie
a Only $10,99500 tflcludo &amp; lncludiHl . $400 month plus
740 667·3041
c:teliVf!ry
Ctl ll
' Nlk"- r deposiT. (7 40)2 45·5859.
48
11!.:~~~~---...J . ~ 7 40 )385--99
·
bedroom co mplete
I
d
1· 3 Bedrooms Forecose
Make 2 payments. move rn 4 ~ltchencentral
a1r
Homes, Buy from 1199
.
years on note '(304)736· Reterences &amp; deposit. No
.month 4% down. 30 yrs, 0
3409
'8.5% APR, for listing 1-800·
pels. (7'10l 446 ·0 t 39 ·
749-8106 e~~. 1709
New Oakwood mega store 2. 2 bedroom apartments in
teaturing
Homes
by MiddlePort Call (740)596 2 Br, 1 Ba, House in Down
0akwood, Fleetwood &amp; 2198
or
ce ll
phone
Town Pt. Pleasant. Close to
Giles, One stop shopping (740)591-0649
everything . Needs work. only at Oakwood Homes ol
Price $21,000 080 Phone
Barboursville wv·(304)736- 2 bedroom, apartment for
13041675-5040
rent in Syracuse. $200.00
3409
deposit,
$330.00/month
2· st9ry brick and cedar, 3
Nice 98 Fleetwood, 3 bed- rent , inclt~des water, sewage
bedrooms, 2·1/2 baths, l_iv·
room. 2 bath. with central and trash. Must have suffi·
ing room , dining room ,
air. thermal pane windows ciant income to qualify.
kitchen, family room. laun·
and 10X20 shed. Immediate (·740)378-6111
dry room, attached 2 car
occupancy
availabl e.
9arage;deck, storage build - $14 ,995 .00 Call Harold Applications being taken for
Ing, new heat pump. central (740)385-767t
·very clean 1 bedroom in
vacuum, or·een Township,
country setting yet close to
Call {740l446-6332 1 for SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
town. Washer, dryer, stove,
appointment.
Stock models at old prices, fridge included. Water and
2005 models arriving Now, garbage included. Total elec2br. House Lot 50, 2brTraller Cole's
Mobile · Homes, tric with AC . Tenant pay elecLot 51 Burdette Addition. 15266 u.s. so East, Athens, tric. $300 deposit, $375 per
Pt.Pieasant, call after 5:00 Ohio 45701 . {740) 592·1972, month. No pets. No smok"Where You Get Your ing. 740-446-2205 or 740·
(304)675-6633
4 Acres -Mth 14xeo Newer ,M~c~n;;,•Y:.;'•;.W;.;,;;o~rth;."_ _ __, 446-9565 ask for VIrginia.
MobUe Home . surrounded
FA~
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
by 10,000 acres ior hunting.
FOR SAI.J::
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Call 17401256-6478
L~--..iiliii_:OO,_.,I
PRICES AT JACKSON

"o!
. !"!!!aliii-illiiiliililo,...l
StO 001
rv·s Computers
and . more Pollee Seized!
From $tO 00! Property! for
more Info-ca ll 18001749·
810'[" e• 1.P509

Amn for Sale
Garage,
dry-basement,
175
acre
farm, prime hunt·
totally remolded Open
House 1 ·3
Sat 17th lng ground In Meigs County.
54 acres tillable w/ buildings,
1304)882-28t7
cabin, pond, farm machln·
Bank Owned
Home,ln ery, gas and oil well.
Mason WV, $19,900 Mike Separate mobile home lot
Stack Old Colony GMAC with all hook upa. 4 b&amp;d·
Roallty (304)542·5888
room, 2 bath house, 2 car
garage. Preter life lease on
house &amp; ga.rage. $300,000.
Call 740 985-3888 .

All re.l Htarle .ev.rtl•lng

In lhle ,.:,.P.Pif I•
to the Fedentl
Fair Houelng Ar:t Df 1M8
Whlch'makH It tlleglrl to
tdvertl" "rtny
pr•terat~, llmtt.t:ldn Dl'
diKrlmlrNIIIon baMd on
r.ct~, ootor, ,.ltglon, ...
t.mllfltllltatue or Mllanal
a~.~~

..

Oftgln, or anv Intention ID
fMkeenyeuch

•l"norloloo"'•"'•ce, llmtt.tton or

New Ha.ven- 1 bedroom fur·
22 acres on Hoback Road nished apartment, has w/d, ·
ott .Old State Route 124. In no pets, deposit &amp; refer·

$500 tlold your lotll .

FOR SAU:

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
TRAINING FOR
EMPLOYMENT
Bulldozers, Backhoes,
Loaders, Dump Trucks
Train in Ohio
Next C lass: August 2nd ·
-National o !rtitication
- Financial Assistance

800-383-7364
Associated Training Services

2323

Petformance Pkwy

Columbus, OH .43207

14ft John
Boa t 15hp
Evenrude Motor and trailer
Good condit ion $1000 .
1740)361-7025

1~74 Seaiay 22' Cuddy
cab in, runs great, 302
:...inboard. · Trailer included .
$3900. (740)2 56-6172
; .,1989 15 l~ot 150 s·ierra
boat. No motor or outboard
Blue ,and white. walk thru
windshield. Has mercruiser
4-cyl wl alpha one. $250.00
(7401949-2371
' 1989 Sing'e axle ga_lvan'ized
~ boat trailer (Giasride) tor 14
· to 16 foot ski boat. $750.00
(740)949-2371
52ft floating boat dock with
B)(le, 40 plastic barrels ,
needs
finished
$400 .
(7401367-7025

r

FARM AND WILLIAM ANN ·convertible, 5spd. $3,000
MOTEL, Gallipolis, OH 6BO. (740)446•4241
(740)446-9442.
1997 Dodge Neon , 7t,OOO
- - - - - - - - - miles. cold air, tilt. runs
Peaches. Pick your own. 5
good. $2,000 OBO. 740gallon
container , $8. 256·9031 or 740-256- 1233.
17401446 · 4807

c---------

2002 Ford Focus. 5 speed,

Sweet corn, no order too
large or small.
£all
(740)682·6850
---------

AC, Moon-Root, 6 dlsc/CD
player, till , cruise, power
windows ( 74 0)446· 21 88
---------

Auction
Auction
;::========~========:;

Al.lCtlon

Auction

ESTATE AUCTION
Satur·dav1' Ju Iy 24 ' 10•00
AM
•
•
•

.r
,

Road, watch for s!gns.
·
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECDBLES; iron skillets,
... McCOy teapot, Hall Jewell Teapot &amp; Gravy Boat,
assortment of glassware and knick knacks, ":k(Ferosen
t eRiabmbps &amp;(1 -ACurrier &amp; Clvhes),ct2-o)ld donll$d
''
h
ucen
u er
mertcan
ara er , rou
South Canaan Road (Co. Rd. 24), At ens, OH
· k
bl
WIC er ta e,
VEHICLES &amp; MOBILE HOME: 1984 Ford F250
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHIN~s
u : Kenmore was h er,
1
Truck (diesel w/71,000 mil.es), 1972
Wh'1r1poe 1 d ryer, porta ble W h "poo
' J
1 d.15 h was her,
· Ford too
Truck w/boom pole (rough) , 2·1987 Ford
Whirlpool electric range, Hotpaint refrig~rato r,
Escorts (diesel) fo r parts, older boom truck. box
Magic Chef m icrowave, maple china cabinet,
trailer, 2-old vehicles for scrap, truck bed
maple dining table &amp; chairs, round wood
toolbox,
1964- 12. x 60
Mobile
Home
dinette table w/~ chairs, portable bar w/stools,
(2-bedroom)-must be moved,
dishes,
pols, · pans,
and
small
k~chen
I OOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: Lincoln arc
appliances, sofa &amp; 2-l oveseats, occasional
welder on trailer (rough ), air compressor on
chairs, . maple end &amp; coffee tabl es, lamps,
tr~iler, 2· older ridmg mowers, hay wagon,
conso le stereo, hall tree, entertainment unit,
manur!k'pr&lt;oall_er, .Herd 3 pt Seeder/spreadet,
wood shelving. portable TV, Emerson VCR, RCA
post d111l, grinder, weed eater, several electric &amp;
boom box.
" 3 -Martin gas room heaters,
gas motors, several Ford engines, 3-fuel tanks,
blonde bedroom suite, blankets &amp; linens, single
a-con6ete culvert Pipes, pile of scrap metal,
bed, dressers, old Kenmore portable sew.ng
odd pieces of pipe. Kar-Rite, luggage carrier,
h'
2 1-rolls of barb wue (most new), 2-rolls used
mac tne, sweepers,
·
.
woven wire, Nordic Track, Cardia Lift, e)(ercise
TOOLS; 2001 Statesman 12.5 38" cut Ridin~
Mower, Dump lawn cart, Landmark a1r
bikes, weight bench &amp; weights, swimming pool
compressor, hydra'llic floor jack, Cra~sman
equipment (sand filter w/pump, etc.), 2·sets of
cordless drill, batted
· charger, ~?lectric leaf
trailer 5teps,
·
bl
h · f 11 1
b'1 d
k'l
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Kimball Studio
ower, c arn a • oa
n er, B &amp; 0 s 1 saw,
-~-- ----- - - ---------mechanics tools in too l box, Craftsman mouse
Piano, King trombone, Realistic stereo system,
sander, Craftsman tap &amp; dye, saber saw, drill,
2· portable TVs, built· in dishwash er, chest
and other hand tool s,
f reeze r, 5 dr. metal file cabinet, d""k, computer
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS; Sentry value Guard
desk, 2-older computers, coffee &amp; end tables,
Safe, wheel chair, and other items packed in
assorted dishes, pots, pans, books, videos, table
boxes.
&amp; 2·chtrs; 3·rocking chairs, single &amp; double
TERMS: Cash or check w/positive 1.0. Checks
bed, ~resser, bookshelves, metal storage
O\ler '$1DOO must have bank authori~ion of
cabinet, porch glider, picnic table, folding table,
funds available. Food will be available. Not
2- cast iro n kettles hmaller one cracked),
2-antique school desks,
~
responsible for loss or acddents.
JJRMS: Cash or check w/positive I. D. Checks
ESTATE OF.DELBERT ROUSH,
over $1000 must have bank authorization of
Athens County case fol0041121
funds available. Food will be available . Not
Sharon Tucker, Executor
responsible for loss or accidents.
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
DIREC[IDNS: Rt. 50 east of Athens, turn on
AUCTIONEER: Pat Sheridan
County Road 24, 5 miles from Cole's Mobile
Licensed &amp; Bonded in State of Ohio- Member
Homes or 3 miles from east end of road, on
Ohio &amp; National Auctioneers Assoc.
Wright Road beside South Canaan Baptist
Email: S~amrockAuction@aol.com WEB;
Church, watch for signs. .
www.shamrock-auctions.com
Personal property of the late Orin Dale Wright
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-4 J 9-9122
OWNERS; Greg Wright, Tawn Jutt:on, leesa
Gilde"

EVENING AUCTION

Auction

AUCTION
HH Rd. at 1105
li~~=:!:~off::~Sond
Dr. Pl. Pleasant, WV. We

CentH•ry. Ohio
Office Plo,... 7~-ue..too
Cell Phone 7Q-e45·59DO
•.• 740•J7...1U4 ..

NCAUCTION
Thursday, August 5 - 5:00 p.m.
Salem Center, OH (Meigs County)

REAL ESTATE: Two story country home on mce
lot with 2-ca( detached garage lotaled between
Wilkesville. and Lat1gsville on Rt 124. TERMS:
Home sells at 6:30 p.m . with owne(s cor1se1nl
I 0% down payment day of
balance due at closing on or
Financing should be secured prior to
·
day.
Sells AS Is - Inspections are the
responsibility of !lie interested buyer.
·
ANDOUES &amp; COWC[III f5 HOUSEHOLD
FURNISHINGS, LAWN T!!AC[OR I TOOLS will
also be sold al ·this auction.
From Rt 32- ex~ on Rt 160
to Rt 124 before Langsville,
7, take Rt 124 t~routth

~kk~~~~~::~ 4 miles to Salem Center besiae
1

P

Store, watch for sians.
or check w/positive 1.0. Checks
over SIOOO must have bank authori:ration of
funds available. Food will be availalile. Not
responsible for loss or accidents.

$222Jmo.lncl site for 1st Yr
US 3U SR595
Just South ol ~ogan
II-T, fh.F. 8:30 • 1:00; Wid. 1:30 • 1:30; Sill I-Ii Cfoald Sun

740-385-4367

Personal Property of the late Helen Miller
SHAMROCK AUCI'ION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER/REALlOR:
John Patrick 'Pat" Sheridan
OhioReaiEstateAuctions.com
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB:

WW\'V.shamrock-auctions.com

11

Pc. Diner Set, .C hina Cabinet, 2 Pc .
Hutch, Zenith 25" Color TV, Bookcases,
3 Pc. Bookcase B.R. • Suite, Chest,
Dresser, Night Stand, Lane Cedar Chest,
3 Folding Beds, 3 Folding Tables, Metal
Wardrobe,
File
Cabinets,
Tappan
Microwave
Oven,
Lady
Kenmore
Dishwasher, Lg, Collection Of Collectors
Plates (Hamillon &amp; Bradford Exchage),
Railroad Collector Plates, Collection Of
Capodimonte Plates, Coca Cola GlasSes,
2 Coca Cola Bottle Cartons, Lamps, Oil
Lamps, Princess biana &amp; Prince Charles
Dolls, Morton Salt Girl, J.F. Kennedy &amp;
Jackie Onasis Dolls, ·Frank Sanatra Doll,
Collection Of Spoons &amp; Rack Books,
Stereo, Nice Pots &amp; ' Pans, Cook Books,
Kirby Sweeper, Linens, Lg. Collection Of
Metal Enl Toy Adv. Cars, Lg. Collection
Of Beautifpl Quilys, Samplers, Camera
Equipment, Singer Sewing Machine,
Hoover Sleam Va~. Poclet Watches,
Wash Board, Stage Coach Clock, Some
Tools, New PumD Jack, Wheel Chains,
Kerosene Heater, &amp; More.
Veblcle: 1972 Ford Limited Brougham
4-d:, 31,000 Act . Mil'es.

pc:rhap~ ~·,en more dbconcerti ng than the

pol 1ti&lt;.·al di' i .~ivcncss is th at supposed
rcl igiou' i:--.ucs of1cmimes ~ee m to be at

of tht:~e de batt.'~ . Some of

thc:-c people who claim to ~ !fiCO and

" ome n of God attack th eir political
ri,a b in '~a~s that are ce nainly not
model\ of Christi an charit). let alone
mode l:- of pOlitical &lt;.' i"il ity. Perhaps what
animate:- tltt:~e wel l-inte ntioned people

is

the com k110 n that they arc righl and that

~

t h~)

j,A(

arc

" 'aging

n.:mr.:mhcr

hwnbk

th;~t the gvod example of quiet and

act io n~ ~peaks louder than self-rig hteous

\' 11rd' or d1Ktrinc.

a' a \\~·aplln

tn

a bu ttle for the- sake of

rig ht~ou-.nc''· \Vt: would all do well to
and

that when religion

is used

alliid nur ~n~m i~·-.. it i:-. no longer true religion. All true

re ligion 1' ah(IU! l1n·c.· who~c primary gual i' tu unite. That which seeks to
Ji\'Jdl' i ~ ' trik an d :-tri fc i~ thr.: opp0~ 1tl.! of lov('.

Htured ~-rit'.l' rrp srr(fi.'. b11r fore corax Ol't.'r ali ojJet~Je.).
R.S.V. Pro"m' 10: ll

SCHOOL

serves viCtims· of domestic

For Sale

violence call 446·6752 or

3 bedroom, 2 bath

July

2-5 pm

6 pm- 8

Check out o u r selection of

employees vacation .

HOLZER MEDICAL.CENTER

conceal ed Carry Handgun s

Will be back open on

Breastleeding Classes

and varmint rifles

Monday the 26th.

Call

446-4404 for

8307 SA 141

HMC Educatmn &amp; Confere nce Room A

Metals

&amp;

Recycling will be closing

this might cause.

(2 mi. past SR 175 on left)

379-2804

more info.

Galli a Co. Republican
CORN ROAST

FOR SALE

Thu rsday, July

22 . 6:00

Open Evenings
pm

Jeremiah Brown, Owner

Bob Evans Shelter House
Nancy H o llister Speaker

740-379-2331

~~··-

L&amp;.L Scrap

Sorry for any inconven ience

20, 2004-,
6 30PM - 8:30PM

Tuesday, July

pm

LeGrande Blvd)

ATTENTION
July 17th thru July 25th 't or

21 ,22 &amp; 23

(Location Church property-

new home

BACKWOODS
GUNS

2002 19 ft . Camper $8,000.00
1998 4WD Dodge Dakota
$4,500.00

·r··-·. -···-=-·.

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, July 18t h

2003 Doublewide
for Sale
80 x 32 Corea! deal
Call 446-3481 9-5

"God 's All Star Champions"

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
'. Unconditional lifetime guar. antee. Local references furnished . Established 1975 .
.Call 24 Hrs. (74'0) 446·
0870. Roger s Basement
Waterproofing.

Serenity Ho\Jse

599 1 S.R. 141 Gallipolis

Garfield First Church of God

M eet the Cand idates

. .- . .- . .- . .- . .- . . . .- . .-._
. - . .- . .- . .- . .- . .- . .- . .- . .1
'

~

I

Reaeh 3 Counties

•

i.
:

:

.,
"

Plaee Your Classified Ad In Wednesday~s
Gallipolis Daily Tribune~ Point Pleasant
Register~ or Daily Sentin~l~ And It .Will Run For
FREE In··The .1.1-i-C.o unty Marketplace%

,

...•
·'

' 0

••

.

·7

•nd 141 ,
JnttiHWe.tof

starts 6:30
Monday &amp;
Wednesday,

Sunquest Tanning Bed
For Sale
Call 446-1567
for details

Auction

ESTATE

w ill probahly never cha nge. What i~

the ccma

1-800-942-9577 .

camper.

IMPROVEMENTS

I.

...,_,. ',.j,ttt•-..,

~.-

446-2342 • 992-2155 • 675-1333

HOM E

•,:

l.o&lt;ltt.ld•t the JunCtion of s- Routes 7lS

Real Estate

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

. VACATION BIBLE

Ury.

Real Estate

BULLETIN BOARD

,•

Auction·

2-story Home On
3/4 Acre

I

·

yr

some thi ng),

season.

" I 1-l\ H I "'

•

~

*

2002 Jaco Eagle trailer 27"
·.couch &amp; dinelte slide out, all
.extras, very clean 304-675·
. 6028

:.1

It 1., di~concerting to :-.r.:e hov. di' i~i'e the current political_climat e is within
thi~ co untry. But. that ll• the naiUrc- of poli1ics and

*
*
*

2000 Class-B Motor Home
49,000 miles. loaded, selfcontained,
sleeps
4.
$30,000.
l740)709-t852
leave message.

Thursdav, July 22, 5:00 P.M.

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
· AUCTIONEER: Pat Sheridan
licensed &amp; Bonded in State of Ohio - Member
Ohio &amp; National Auctioneers Assoc.
Email: ShamrockAuction@aol.com WEB:
wvvw.shamrock-auctions.com
PH: 740-592-43 tO or 800 -419-9122

after bein£ out~id e in thl' heat.
Air conditionin g transfer:-. heat frum th e inside of a build1ng. "here u i:.. ll(lt \.\anted.'''
th~ outside . according to tht: Air Conditioning and Rr:frigo.:r:\l lonln-..tituto.: tA RI1 . H~rc·-.
how it works: Rr.:frigt'rant in the system ahsorhs the c-.;cr:-.-. h~ al. \\hli,:h i ~ pumped In an
o ut~ide coi l. A fan blow s outsid~ air over the hot ~.:ui l. tran.,fcrrin g heat from tilL'
refrigerant tn the outdoor air. Bee&lt;mse !he heat i.., no\v rclllO\'l'c! from i n door ~. thL' indoor
arc:.t is cooled.
.
II' you are ·in the market for a ccntw l air-conditioning :-.yMcm. try to hu) it ·in t h~· ~) rr. ~~·•l"l lll , c~~nlractor:-. won' t h~..· bu;-.)
ma~ing service •..'alb, giving them niore time to help yo u d ~ t~ rm i nc what ~ystc m i:-. right fur ~'lllL The~ :.J.I~o may he m t~r c
wiping to offer you a deal. Be sure to ask ahoul all the S}'&gt; t c m ·~, ind uur ~.:l una t e cont rn l o p i H Jil :-. lll l: lllliln,g cn(Jiing . uir
filtration and humit..lifiGllion . Don ' t neu:::-.:-. ari l y go with the c hea pe ~t ll fkr : co mpare hid ' fro nl -.e .. ~..·ra l L"nntract1 i r\. If occ
price i s signi li cantly lower than the rest. thatlll &lt;lY he u red lbg Ihat )O U ,IJpuJdn ' t U'-C th a t ~..·(Hllrac t llr. ·
The avemge lifetime o f ;1 cen tral air-conditioning :-.y:-.tl' m 'ari ~,.-~. dq)l'llding nn how oft~.: n t he "}~1\.' ll'l j, u...cd and hm\
regu larly it is servic ed. On average: a system lasts.,from 10 tu 15 yea r~ . If you '\l"l~~c 11 prnhit'm . he '&gt;ure to ca ll a l·untr ~ ~~- t u r -cooling system s arc ioo comp li cated for horhcuwncrs to repai r t hc m sclve~. l fproh le m~ ~tri ~~ that ure Cll:..tly to (ix. &lt;I n~w unit
muy prove more cflicicm, which can be ea:..icr on Y()ur finance-.; i n tlw long. nm .
MINIMIZING COSTS
While turni'ilg up th e air conditioning t..loe~ keq1 yo u cool. )Oll e m ""hl(m"" a\\.'1) humlrL·d -. nf Jollar .. . Air condlliOn ing
rl!quires a tin anct;.ll commillllCIH. But tl~re ure '0111 C way ~ ttl cu rh l't l~\ :-. h ~· followm,g thc-.l' l ip ~ from th e ARL
* Cau lk and install weather stripping m:ound winJmvs and duors (e:-.peci;ill y .the ;util..') to c.:lo.w &lt;tir g ap~.
~
* Run fans to keep nir moving. You"l l feel cooler and\\ ill l'ut h;1ck ;ur comlitiOI Il"r u:-.e .
* Don ' t block vents or duct s i nside th e house to n~surl- air tl tm i n the hnnw.
* Clean and replace the air cond itioner's filler fn;queml y.e,en monthl) du ring hca'Y u~c .
* Plan "'hot chore i'i" like laundry and baking for cooler nwmitl~ i.lll,d l'\Cil ill f'. hum:-.. Elr.::ct r i.: it y r ct ll.''&gt; ;, ne IN ti.dl) lu\\cr at
ihosc hours and heat from th e applian~.:e :-. won ' t increase the dcJlwnd~ on your air cond ilillll L'l'. If v m 1 h a'~ ll) LhL' yuur (l','L' H
or rnnge. turn on the exhaust fan to remov~ th e exec:-;~ hcut and humid ity: A lso. make :-. ur~. · th at ) ; )ur doth c:-. dryl'r I" \~l llt..'(l
ou tside .
*·Turn off lamps, th e tele vis ion and JJther appliance" whL·n nnt m U'&gt;C.
* Pull drapes ; shades und curta ins tu keep su nl ight out ol' the house . ln ~ta ll awning:-. owr .., indm~;~ and doors to prov idt:.•
shade. Tree~ and ."ihn1 bs p l ac ed in the ri g ht spots can &lt;ilso hdp.kccp out sunlight .
KCep windows and doors clos ed when the air ~.:onditi on .:-t~ i :-. un.
Usc a pmgrammabll! thermostat to autnmat ical ly im:reas~· or dccrea'L' home tL'mpennure:.. during till' day m ni g ht.
Set the thermost at at the highest comfonahle lew!. Ead1 degree rai~L· d reduL·es ~·ncrg y co n ~umptit o n h y thn:L' tn f i vepercent.
Ke ep the"outside unit f ree of ll' aves." grass, dirt Ill' nt her &lt;tlrfitJW tJh -.t r ul·ti(ms.
*Gel the air cond it ion_ing unit l'heck.ed by a qu ali fied co n!l'al'!or or ~e rvi n· tl'l'hlli;.·ian ~·ad1 yl'ar h ~' f(,re lhl' peak ~orlf i n~

.1995
Dutchman
camper/travel trailer, 30',
·- loaded. excellent condition .
$6,495, l740)949-t828

· '99 thirty toot
: 17 401992-3255

··

room

i

Shade, Ohio (Athens County)

The personal property of the late Delbert Roush
will be offered at public auction. In the country
with large yard and shade trees.
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 33 from Athens to Shade, turn
o n Shade Road, then t\.lrn right on Garden Hill

CAMP!:R'i &amp;
MmoR
HOMES

&amp;unllap Q::lmd -&amp;mttntl • Page 05

at Minimal Cost -- With an Air-Conditioning System

(MS) ·- Sure . you can cool 0!T on :1 w;1rm clay hy jumping i nto a llool &lt;'r a ~..· njo~ ing an
ice cream cone. However. nothing quite be at:-. the feelin g of t'llll.!ring. &lt;.~11 ;1 11 ·nmtlitiunk·d

.-96 Kawasaki Jet Ski ZX I
1100 with Trailer $2,500
13041773-9t 98

In

All the packs you
can play $20.00,

Chest
Red worth $2700
Blue Worth $3300
Extra Board $2550

BoAts &amp; MmoRS
tuRSALE

be Mllng the 81111111 of the late Mabel

American Legion
Bingo,

Diamond

r

Announcamsnts

Rutland

Super

r

Auction

Announcements

Everyone
Welcome.

Hafley Davidson Softail
Standard, 2003 Anniversary
Model 100th Edition, 687
miles E11.callent Condition
(304)675·7140

r

r:~

03-07- 1676T
Announcements

Go Kart- Vert Dog 2 seater
go kart, 6 HP Tecumseh
motor. AdjiJstable shocks ,
roll cage, on/off switch on
steering wheel. Bought 3
" years ago for $1, 100 rode
very little will sate tor $500
Firm, call (740)992-2456

rio

www.Equipment-School.com

17~)441-t482

Mtlgl Co. Reedsville tracts
between Otl lo River +
Forked Run Lakes 10 acres
$15,900 . Tuppers Plalna,
Informed thet til
Umberger Rd. 20 acrea with
chNIII. ad'ltlrttHd In
nice home site $26 ,000,
tt~~•
1 willable on tnequal
wa.ter. Cheater, BashBn Ad.
nice 7+ acre home a11t on
apponunlty - banks of Shade Rlwr
Flnooolng avaHoblo willl.lllia St8,000. So. ol Rutland,! cr
DOWN
pAYMENT. 7 ICtll $8,500.
Mortgage Locatora. Local Ollila Co. Vinton, Dcdrtll
Rd. 5 acrea, co, water,
company. 740-992-732t
$t4,500 .
Rio
Gran••·
FORECLOSURE!
Mobley Rd. 8 acres $22,9001
3 bed only $8,000. for llat- " Kyger, Jessie Creek Rd. 6
lngs call
acres~11 ,900 or 19 wooded
t-800-749·8t06 ••t 1144
acres $17,5001
Just llatod by owner. 2 bed- More parcels available In
room cottage with basement each location . .We'll gladly
and extra lot. Fixer upper. send you maps to explOre
Good
location,
EvJna each site. Owner financing
Hetg~tt.
$42,500 080. whh slight markup. We buy
(304)4 t 7-(1062.
land 30 !rcres t up f

new.,..,., ..

~:-rs,'
rr.

East Racine, 1-949-nO· ances. I740)992-0t65
4788, catl-t-949-433-15t8

Thl• new ,.,., will not

-·-

CDNVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED I AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call 17~)441-lttt .
tor application &amp; Information.

Modern 1 bedroom apt.
Phone 1 7~)446-0390 .

Brurwrland

,.,_,,.tyoccopt

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-448-2588 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at .Village
BI.ISINES'i
Manor' and
Riverside
AND Jlun.DINGs
Apartments In Middleport
3 Bay shop with office In From $295-$444. Call 740Henderson, WV. 800·322· 992·5064. Equal Hooslng
Opportunities.

CIIMrtmlftlltlon."

tldverttlltf'neftt•lor rNI
• -~chleln
vloladon of
t.w. Our

j

--ABA Reg . American Bl111dog
puppies lor sale. Call
(7401388•0488
--------Double Carport, 2 yrs. old. AKC Reg. Bassett Hound
Needs disassembled . $650. pups Tri color. (740)256 {740)446-4935.
6887.

11r

sis 4th St. New·Haven, 3br,

For sale ove:r 400 Kerr J1rs
.20 cents each and canning
equipment Call (740)7422821
1•o: uo ~scoum ':June .
Grand Opening Sale
op quality, warranties,
~-ilion , WV, Flea Mar~e
~action
C.
Fridays.
~aturdays and Sundays.
6061326-0777.
.

looks
good , International Log Truck sinStapleton (740)446-4t72 small truck or car ot eQual good,
value. Phone (740)258- $2,500.00 Call after 3 ~00 gle axle, 6.9 li ter diesel.
1740)256-16t9. StOO.
1740)44to()9.4t or 1740)64517~)992-6219
6663.
:;948.
I \I:\ I "I 1'1'1 II.._,
AKC German Shepherd
2003 Ca~aller 4-dr, 4cyl ,
,\
11\1
....
1(~1
,,
pups working dogs, parents
auto, 5000 mites, loaded , 1994 Oddge Ram Full size
on premises Stud Services
sunroof, cd player. $7000 P~k Up w/Topper, $5.000
(304)937·2310 or WWYI.trrsFARM
(740)44t-Q337 or (7401645· 1304)675-7718
la1okl9.com
"~--iiF:QuiPr:llNilliiiiliiiiiiioo-" 6t53
97 Jeep Grand Cherokee
UmltEid , 1ee:ther1 cd, Blc,
AKC Reg. Basset Hound 5 foot International Brush 2003 Ford Taurus SES. fully sunroof, 4)(4 · full time.
P"ps. 1740)379-2668.
Hog, $125. l740)446-25t4. equiped, Including traction 73,000 mites. 740-388-9649
control &amp; side air bags, new
or 740-a88-0173.
For sale or trade- New $23.000 will sell tor $10,700
Holland baler ; New·ldea hay 1304)675-3354
VANS&amp;
..._ Butterfly Koi. Big rake; large round hay bales
4-WDs
84 Buick Lesabre 192K.
$t2 oach. l740)992-740t
Variety ' of '-'Oiors Phone
$400. Needs mechaniCal
(304)675 -5043
work. (740)446-4033
~974 Dodge 4X4 truck, new
parts, runs good, $800 ,
-,--------94 Ods Black $2,300 ,(7._:_4.:::0l:
9..:.49-:..:..:t8::2.:_8_ _ __
Full blooded Toy Poodles,
Bq!t!_Parents qn Pf-emises. 7 2 1/2 year old Black Angus/ 1304)882·2580
1996 Red Winds tar GL. gray
weeks old , $f50 each , HereforC Cross bull for sale.
COOK MOTORS
interior, 85K mites. ac
(7~6)446-3576.
$500. 17401245-5t22 alter ~oved to New Locatior front/rear, luggage rack,
:-:--:--:---::--~­
rcross from Gallla Cou~t) $5,900, (740}949·3068
Mate Boston Terrier, $100,
~='air Grounds I
11 wee~s old; female Pltbull,
t997 Z24. ·$2.995; t99'
MOJUKCYCLES
8 weeks, $t OO. 1740)4473011
ntrepid , $2, 795; ~ 98~
~amry, $1,495. Others I 200~ Honda Shadow Spirit
tack.
motorcycle. VT11 00. e~l$500 !.
Honda's, Chevy's
.. 1740\446-0103
tent· condition . $4 ,800 .
Jeep's , etc Police Impounds
1740)446-7668.
CarS !rom $500. For listings For Sale 90 Corvette auto..Siackberries lor sale $13.00
1·800-749-8104 ext 3901
matic, mirror sunroof, must 2003 Honda 400 EX 'pipe·
a gal. contact 304·895·391 1
see 13o4)675-7346
nert bars. rode very tlttle ,
~ 985 Chevette 57,000 miles ,
asking pay off call (740)742Blackberries, $16 gallon or easy on gas, automatic anQ
Wanted to Buy 1930..193 1 8802
$4 quart or you pick $'12 g81- gold in color. $1 ,300 negoFord Roadster Restored,
lon Friendly Ridge (740)256· tiable. (740}992~653 1 .
anywhere in the Tri-State 97 Honda 750 Nita Haw~ .
~ 145 l~ave message.
304-675·2942· low mites, loo~s &amp; runs like
~989 Camaro cOnvert. A.S., Area
new, $2.700, (740)247·2031
305, auto, 82 ,000 miles , evenings
Blackberries, you pick at garage kept, good condition,
For
sale
80
Harley
Virgi l's berry palch, on State $4,000, 740-446·7194 after
'I'R!JCKS
Davidson , Sportster, leather .
Route t2 4, just south ol 6pm
FOR SALE
saddlebags (304)675-7346
Syracuse.
1990 Honda Accord 4' door; 1989 Chevy S:ilvera do, 4 'For Sale: 2002 Hailey Softeil
-,H-:-O
::-M
:=E-::G-::R-::
O:-:W:-:N:-S::-W
=E-::ET
: :- power loc~s &amp; windows, AJC, wheel drive, auto, runs Nlghtrain. ·Lots of aKtr~s .
CORN
· cruise, 174K, $1,500 . Call gooct. StOOO 1740)379·2860 St8,000.00 OBO 174019!127474
Starting July 1st. Available at 1740)992-4272.
CHARLES W. MCKEAN 1993 Honda DelSol hard top · - - - - - - - - - · - - ' - - - - - - -

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

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&gt;

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Auction Conducted bY

Rick Pearson
Auction Co. #66 ·

. Executor: Harold Muurave
304-713-5447 or 304-713-5785
Terms CasH or Check with 10.

I~l'fllipoli511Bail!' m:ribune
t·· .

The Daily Sentinel

~oint ~leasant ~e!JiSier I

.F4o~.~:~~.- ... ~·-·-···-··(~~~2. 992~-~.?.·-···-··--.. -~~l..ill.:~33~.

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iunbap ~im~ -&amp;tntinel

HEAI4TH

PageD6

&amp; FITNESS

Sunday, July t8, 2004

Meigs mercies

DIET: Children who watch more than Mane Designers adds Esthetician

Glouster, Bt

two hours of TV at higher risk of being
.overweight, smoking,
study shows
.
'

BY SUE LEEMAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

LONDON - Children who
watch more . than two hours
of tele vision a night seem
to ~e at higher' risk of
becoming .smokers or being
fat, out of shape or !wving
high cholestcro) as mlults.
according to a new study.
Watching TV in chillihood and adolescence has
long been linked to aLII'c rse
health indicators. including
obesity. poor fitnes, and
high cholesterol . l.'ul the
st udy publisheo Friday .in
Tltc Lancet was the fiN to
track a group from birth to
adu lthood .
Dr. Davio Ludwig. director or t~e obesity program
at Children's Hmpi tal in
Boston.
and
Steven
Gortmaker. a sociology lecturer at the Harvard School
.or Public Health. said the
television
data ind ica te
viewing 111 cl1ildhood has
"se rious long-term consequences" and strengthen
"the case for a ban on food
advertisements aimed at
children." Neither was connected with the study.
The re;earchers from the
Dunedin Multidisciplinary
, Health a!ld Development
Research Uni t assessed
some . 1.000 penple bnm in
Dunedin. N~w Zeitlano , in
1972-73. at ~cgul;1r intervals
until age 26. They in vestigated as&gt;oc iatinns between
childhood TV viewing and
body-mass inqex. or BMI.
cardio-respiratory fitnes s.
cholesterol lev.el, smoking
status and blood pressure.'
They found that eve.n ·an

average weeknight v1ewing
of one to tiHJ hours
between the ages of 5 and
15 was associated with
higher body-ma" ·indices,
lower cardio-respiratory fitllC"is. increased 'moking and
rais.ed cholesterol.
This was the case even
after they ,:djusted for such
fac.tors as family economICS. the smoki ng habits and
ll'eight nf the parents, unO
the chi ld ren's size at agc , 5.
The study found that
among 26-yqr-olds. 17 perc~nt of m·erweight, 15 percent of raised cholesterol,
17 percent of smoking and
15 percent of poor · fitness
could be attrib uted to
watching television for
more than two hours a day
during childhood and adolcsce tll'e. ·
The re searchers noted
that , as in atiy observational
stttdy. they couldn't prove
TV viewing caused health
problems.
"Te levi sion viewing might
be a marker for so me
unideutified determinant of
adult h.eallh. and individuals
who have a nawral tendency to obesity and poor
physical fitness might prefer
to watch ' television than &gt;do
other activities." they wrote.
The researchers said · several childhood behaviors _
including physical activity
and diet _ could ex plain the
association between TV
viewi"ng and health.
For example, watching
television could affect fit·
n ess and obesity by taking
the place of more active
pursuits. they ·said, adding
that TV advertising in New

Skin treatments can also
Barbara Cole. 31, of Most facial; involve a combe
given purely for the
Masml, W.Va .. is the newest bination of steaming, deepaddition · to the staff at cleansing, application of an wonderful relaxation effect
Mane Designers Salon and appropriate mask, and gen- often experienced during a
facial
massage.
Many
Spa. which itself has newly tle, soothing massage.
fall
asleep
during
the
clients
Your
esthetician
is
devotre
-located
to
Second
Zealand aho ten'ds to pro•
pampering
service.
In
addi
Avenue
in
downtown ed to teaching you to care
mote an unhealthy diet.
The
researchers
said Gallipolis and . owned by for your skin and tp dealing tion, Mane Designers Salon ·
with , spec ific problems, and Spa offers a back treatwa tchin g TV might also· Cynthia Sexton .
Cole, however. is not a such as acne, ·blemishes, ment in which the skin of
influence other hehaviors ,
·such as cigarette ~making. cosmetologist. she is ·a blackheads, excess oil, or the back is steamed, deepwhkh "we found to be sig- licensed esthetician. An dull, dehydrated, and dry cleansed, masked, and lightly massaged. A men's skin
nificantly as&gt;ociated with esthetician is a person pro- skin.
fess ionall y involved with
Regardless of age, any- treatment is also available.
television viewing ...
Cale, who originally hails
.
one's
the
ski n can be improved
the
beauty
and
care
of
Although TV advertising
through professional nour-· from northwest Indiana. . is a
of tobacco · was banneo in skin.
If
you'
ve
ever
heard
of
ishing
treatments, as well as recent graduate from the
New Zealand before . study
School
of ·
members were born. pro- an esthetician, you're in 'through use of a daily skin Huntington
grams have continued to · good con1pany. Although ·care regimen ·at home . An Beauty Culture and is u
show frequent ip1ages of esthetics (the field of thera- esthetician · ·can 'also 'alert 1995 honors graduate of
smoking during children's peutic skin care) has been ,You to new advances in the Ball State University in
Muncie. lnd.
viewing_ time~. they said. around for many decades in skin care field and teach
She received a Bachelor
Tobaccu sponsorship " for both Europe and the United you a preventative approach
of Science degree in music
to
skin
care
and
aging.
States.
there
are
still
very
sports events continued
In addition to hiring a education. Before moving
few · estheticians practicing
until 19()5 ,
to West Virginia, she taugh\
The report said it could in the tri-state area. Some skin-care spec iali st. the public school string orches·
salon
owner,
Cynthia
not define a safe level of of the serv.ices estheticians
Sexton, will soon be offer- tra to · students in fit'th
TV v1ewmg because it may typically offer include
ing Dermologica, a high- through eighth grade in
couldn 't find enough people skin analysis, facials, deeppore cleansing. brow arch- quality, medical-grade skin Indiana.
who watched no television
She has · been Jiving in
ing, facial and body wax- care line which has superior
to serve as a control group,
ing, and professional. make- products for all skin con- West Virginia since 1998
but those who watched an
cerns and will compare in with her husban Sam. They.
up application .
hour or less a day were the
Facials are the estheti- . price to Es!ee Lauder and have ·a 4-year-old, also
healthiest.
·
named Samuel.
cian 's signature service. Lancome.
The American Academy
of Pediatrics recommends
that parents limit their
child's viewing to two
hours a day.
"C learly, obesity IS a
complex conoition, with
numerous genetic, environmental and psychosocia l
contributing
factors.
Subscribe today¥ (740) 992-2155
However, (this) should not
be an excuse f6r inaction,"
Ludwig and Gortmaker
wrote . in a separate commentary in the Lancet. ·
"Measures to limit television. viewing in chi ldhood
and ban food advertisements aimed at children are
warranted, . before ·another
generation is programmed
to become obese."

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hearing Aid Center

FITNESS: Parents urged to get
involved to combat childhood obesity
cal pediatrics at Columbia strugg led with her weight
University, said so many since childhood$tis trying to
children are nqw overweight dci just that because she is
INDIANAPOLIS - Susan or obese that it has changed ·
Hedrick and her 18-year-.old parents' frame of reference. determined to make sure
daughter are turning the tide She said parents often do Niki does not carry her
on years of fast food and not realize their child is extra weight into adulthood.
sedentary living. In a bid to overweight.
A recent high school grad- .
shed a combined 180
Two years ago, in inter- uate, Niki had been thin,
pounds, they have been eat- views with 1,180 parents of like her two brothers, until
. ing healthier and taking long overweight
children, unhealthy habits she adopted
walks this summer.
Dennison found that only
And they are doing it about 25 percent of those early in high school led to a
together _ something health parents realized their child 50-pound w~ight gain.
and diet experts believe is a · had a weight problem.
·After Hedrick enrolled
key to combating the
Her research also found earlier this year in a djet and
nation 's growing obesity that parents of overweight exercise ·program sponsored
epidemic,
particularly ·chi ldren treat mealtime difby the Indianapolis hospital
among kids.
ferently than parents of where she works, · she
Research suggests healthy- . healthy children , often
eating, active parents often allowing the child to choose showed Niki some informapass their habits · onto their .the meal. Some parents even tion about theprogram .
kids, just as sedentary par- used sweets to encourage
At first, the teen was not
'ents do, said Edward their chilo to finish a meal.
very interested, but iil the
Laskowski, co-director of
With America's youth getthe Sports Medicine Center ting fat on calorie-packed past month or so she has
been eating healthier, drinkat the Mayo Clinic in
fast foods and snacks and , ing fewer sugary sodas,
Rochester, Minn.
Laskowski suggests over- spending too much time in doing sit-ups and taking
front of the TV or the comweight parents serious about
puter. Dennison said parents long walks.
making themselves and their
Niki has shed about 5
kids healthier start by hold- need to practice what they
pounds from her 5-foot-6
preach.
ing a family meeting.
"Parents
are
chi
ldren
's
frame .and is qown to about
"You ' ve got to say" ,·Hey
best
and
first
role
models.
170 pounds. She is aiming
· kids, you know we 've been
You
can't
have
Mom
watchdoing the wrong thing here.
to lose 40 pounds more.
Mom and Dad are wrong ing TV for hours and say- "It's just for my ·own pertoo, and we· vc got to lose ing, ' No, Johnny, you can't sonal se If." she said.
·
some, weight. We don't want watch TV, it 's bad for you."'
Hedrjck, who hopes to
you to make the mistakes she said.
Betsy A. Keller, an associ- lose about 130 .pounds..
we've made,"' he said.
ate
professor of exercise and believes she and her daughFamily bike rides. walks,
hikes or doubles tennis 'are sport sciences at Ithaca ter can use the buddy sysways to get ·the whole fami- College in New York. tem to make sure both of
ly burning calories. And recently surveyed 130 par- them stick to their diet and
making sure everyone sits ents about their children's exercise plans.
down together for a healthy weight and lifestyle.
"I really don't see it as
She found that half of the
dinnertime meal is another
parents of overweight chi!- · dieting," Hedrick said. "I
important step, he said.
dren
underestimated their see it as a life-changing
.Since the early 1970s, the
percentage of American child's weight status, 'deem- journey to make myself and
children and adolescents ing them at a normal Niki healthier.':
defined as overweight has weight. Keller said her study
more than doubled, to about also found that parents
15 percent, ·according to the underestimate how much
Centers for Disease Control exercise their children get
"I don't think we're going
and Prevention. .
to
get at this issue of obtsiThree out of four overweight teenagers remain ty until we ask the hard
overweight into adulthood. questions:. What are you
And with two-thirds of feeding your kid? What are
American adult:. now overj you puuing on the table?
weight, · they
f a~:e an Why are you not doing
increased risk of diabet.es. some kind of physical activSubscribe today • 446-2342
heart disease and other ill- ity with your kids?'' she
said.
nesses.
Barbara Denni son, an ' Hedrick. a 39-year-old
associate professor of clini- pediatric nurse who has
1
BY RICK CALLAHAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

•

Proud to be a
part of your Ufe.

'

Invites You To Start The Year OtT Ri tWithA

.Free Hearing est
Thesday 9:00 a.m.-4:00p.m.

10warnlngs
1. People seem to mumble more
frequently.
2. You hear, but have trouble

understandjng alt the words In a
·
·
conversation..
3. You often ask people to .-epeat
themselves.
4. telephone conversation Is Increasingly

cUmcuJt.

_..

5. You no longer.~r normat h~bold
IIOUJlds, such ll!i the dripping of a faucet
or the ringing or a doorbell.'

6• .Your famHy complains that you
play the TV or radio too ioudly.
7. You have trouble hearing when.
your·back Is t\U'Iled to the
speake~
·
8. You have been told .tlult )'ou speak
. !00 loudly.
9. You -expe,rience ringing In your
ean.
10. You have ~ltrku1ty underStanding
coilver!!lltion·when In a lilrge I
.

gioup ot crowd.,

If you ·have experienced 2 or more of these symptoms
· . vou need a thorouRh hearinR test.
Here is an exceptional opportunity from the world's most successful
hearing aid company. We are .offering you a FREE HEARING TEST and
hearing aid evaluation by licensed hearing aid specialists. An electronic
hearing test is q!Jick, easy and painless" Like a routine eye examination,
hearing tests should be performed once a year - even if you have only a
slight problem. If you have a friend lJr loved one who did not receive this
offer, please tell them! You are under no obligation.

ONE DAY 0 . lY!
Thesday, July 20th
9:00- 4:00p.m.
1 ~:0~1~~:;~
.CAll (740) 446-17441
°~!
.
1-800-634-5265

.

Meeting the Guard, Aa

•.
at
,

•' ' ' I ', I ',, \, ,j

1

1. . 1~

SPORTS
• Hamilton's long, hard
road ends with a claret
jug at British Open. See
Page 81

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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HHUHI\•Inil• . o tJ tu~&lt;l •••lll

:4Htl

Meigs County to co.mplete hazard mitigation plan
BY

CH~RLENE HOEFLICH

the

local

county to come up with a
local match of $6. I 27 . Neurly
that . the
half of the local match his
POMEROY -· With tun.d- county has
already been sc.curcd. said
ing from the Ohio Emergency received
ByN.
Managemen t Agency the $18,380 in
Evans.
Mechwart.
Meigs County EMA is mov- federal and
Hambl eton
and
Tilton
ing forward to make commu- state funds
(EMH&amp;Tl. Inc has been
nities disaster resistant by ere- to be used
selected to lead the ellort in
ating an ·Ali-Nruural Haiards for develMeigs County. Byer said they ·
Mitigation Plan.
.
. oping the 1....----o..l bring to tl1e table a substantial
Robert E. Byer. d1rector ol •plan with the Robert E. Byer amou nt of experience in ereHOEFL ICH@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

Unit,

~a id

cning these type s of plans. ·
The initial kickoff meeting
of a mre plannin g group will
he held Wednesday. July 21.
at 6JO p.m. in the basement
L'Onferencc room of lhe Meigs
CountY Courthouse Annex.
11 7 ·- Memo rial
Dril'e:
Pomeroy.
The Meigs EMA director
will head the core planning
group whidJ he oescribeo as a

"mingling of leaders that has
been established who will
have a key role in creating a
Mitigation Plan tha! the entire
coun ty can use in planning for
growlh ...
' As pan of the Disaster
Mitigation Act. communities
that oesire to remain eligible
fo r federal and state mitiga-

Please see Plan, A5

Chester Shade Days
BY

CH~RLENE HOEFLICH

room of the restored 1823
Chester Courthouse was
packed for the Ol1io State
CHESTER The hun- Harmonica
Championship
dreds of visitors attending contest.
Chester Shade Days over
Stuart Ensign of Utica
the weekend were given a won the title with Raymond
look at life in earlier times, Horsley of Lucasville comwhen women tn fancy in g in second, and Frank
dresses enjoyed . afternoon Bard, champion in both
tea, men pulled out their 2002 and 2003. placing
harmoni cas to entertain, .and third. Prizes for first, secchildren · sq uatted in a cor- ond and third, were $200,
ner for a game of checkers. $100 mid $50 respectively.
As ah.yay s a highlight
The
annual
festival
planned by the Chester- was the sing-along of . old
Shade
Historical familiar songs which foiAssociation was filled with lowed
the
competition
at:tivities and exhibits all accompani.ed by the comesreminiscent of yesteryear.
tants · and
their guitar
On the Commons were accompanist&gt;.
Civil War re-enactors with
The event got underway
.
• FITNESS: Cyclist takes a display of battle memora- Saturday m9rning under a
bilia. a 14-foot Cherokee gentle rain with a historical
the hard route to health.
tee pee filled with authentic . pageant :·People of · the
See Page AS
Indian
artifacts · brought in . Past." There was i1 parade,
• On Achievement List.
by Lucille and Ji!ll Cox uf pretty baby and pie baking
See Page A3
Ravenswood, antique trat· contests, a pet show, a
• Some doctors say
tors displayed by the Big marbfe tournament, ·and a
flicking, instead of
Bend Antique Farm Club, checker ·challe.nge, along
and a large tent where the with a harmonica workshop A sing-along by t~e crowd to the music of harmonicas and guitars was a highlight of Chestersmashing, pests may
Ohio Buckeye Harmonica . for beginners.
·
prevent infection.
Shade Days ' annual harmon ica contest. Leaving town with the title of 2004 Ohio State
Club
played
everything
The
festival
concluded
on
Harmonica Champion was Stuart Engisn of Utica . pictured fa r left . (Charlene Hoeflich)
See Page A2
from
polkas
to
'patriotic
Sunday
with
a
IOK
sane• Records show sex
numbers , and couples in tioned volkswalk.
incidents at,youth
period costuming danced
Mary 'Powell, past-presiprison for sexual
the waltz and did the dent of the Chester-Shade
offenders. See Page A2. Virginia Reel.
Historical
Society
and
Pvt. Glynn Staten
Featured exhibits at the active in ' the . festival since
of the 33rd Ohio
Courthouse in&lt;;Juded ·work- it started eight years ago,
Volunteer Infantry
ing model train layouts by said ''everything went great
talks to Kristin
David
and
Nathan and everyone seemed to
Fick about the
WEATHER
Civil War display
Robinette. decade-old wed- have a good time."
ding and ch ristening gowns. · ''People came in from all
on the Chester
across the state, the venCommons for the
and antique dolls belonging dors had a good day, and
annual Chester·
to
· Shirley
· HusteJ . there were lots of things to '
Shade Days fest iCraftsmen
demonstrating see and do. No une even
val. (Charlene
their ski lis included flintk- seemed to mind that rain
Hoeflich)
nappers, broom makers. a on Saturday morning."
blacksm ith and a potter on
the Chester Commons·. ·
Far More Please See. A&amp;
Again this year the courtHOEFUC H@MYDA!LY SENTIN EL

INSIDE

Details onPage A2

INDEX

Anderson visits Meigs social service agencies

Lebanon, met with workers at
Gall ia/Me igs
Community
a SElTJONs- 12 PAGES
Action
Agency.
the
Calendars
POMEROY Vi siting . University of Rio Grande/Rio
A3
with Community Action Grande Community College
Classifieds
B3-4 workers and soc ial services Meigs Center and Cros sroads
Comics
Bs providers in Meigs County on program, and the Department
Friday, State Senate candidate of Job and Family Ser\'ices on
Terry
Andetson said jobs ere -. his Meigs County trip . He
Dear Abby
A3
ation, health care and educa- said the stat~ legi slature has
Editorials
A4 tiona! opportunities are the favored partisanship over sub"three biggest issues by, far'' stantive action to address the
Chester Shade Days A6 in his race against Senator Joy issues facmg Southea;tern
Ohio reside}lts.
A2 · 'Padgett, R-Coshocton.
Ohio
The Athen s Democrat, \~ho
Andersori
specifi cally
B1 made world headlines for attacked continuing state ~:ut&gt;
Sports
seven ye~rs in the 1980'sas in funding to programs
A2 an Assoctated Press fore1 ~n _designed to aid .those seeking
Weather
correspondent held hostage 111 employment in the difficult
© 2004 Ohio Valley Pubtt.hlng Ca.
Bv BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILVSENTINEL.coM

econom tc
climate
of
Appalachian Ohio . including
Youth
Emp loyment
the
Services. or Y.E.S. program.
at the URG Meig s Center.
which targets at-risk young
adults seeking job skills and
jobs .
"This program is one of the
easiest ways to help those at
risk .in finding job&gt;. an.d it has
an 80-percent succes' rate."
Anderson said. "Yet it's one
of several soc ial programs
which suffers continuing cuts
in fundine - three cub in one
year." ~
'' It' s ;en·ices arc typical
of what we need most here

in Sou t heastern Ohio ...
"These cuts are an example
or the lack of suppo11 these
communities recei ve from the
slatt&lt;. Thi' area has the highest
unen1ployment rate. and the
hi ghest poverty in the state.
and yet the state gtn e·rnment
conLinLies to dbcriminate
against us.
"lf we oon ' t pay now for
good programs to help our
people. we 're gni ng to pay
late r for emcr)!cncy inten·ention for tho&gt;e people . and fL,r
the effec ts ol' J,lllg-term
unemployment...
'
Accoroing to Amler;on. thi&gt;
year's' Sfate Senate e l~ction i'

about "one-party" rule in
Columbus.
.
"The answer to many of the
problems
lac1ng - Meig'
County and its neighbors is
new leadership." Anderson
said. "One party government
is not good policy. whether
it's the Republicans in power
or Democrats."
"We must be willing to
work on goals across the aisle
in the statehouse in order tn
tind ;olutioJh to these problems."
Anderson was released
from captivity in 1991. .and

Please see Anderson; AS

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