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,'

Page 86 • '&amp;aturbap t!:tmrll-&amp;rntintl

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

Saturday, June 28, 2003

a dress
43- Leppard
1 Jerk
44 Flaky .
4 Tent holder
mineral
7 Tinned
46 Sheer
.
'
meat ·
49 Nonsense
11 -Khan
50 AC supply
12 Appeal
52 Insect resin
13 Burger
54 Jumble
mate
55 Hiker's trail
14 Diner
56 Back when
sandwich 57 100 centavos
DEAR ABBY: My fifth58 Stom111=h
last. I love my wile wi!h all my your uncle privately how you 15- Fatha
Hines
muscfes
grade son. "Mikey," \s considheall. What can 1do to. make my feel when he extends an invita:6
CaiUe-call
59
Prefix
ered the best soccer player on
maniage to Ru!hie better? tion in your presence and
reward
for recent"
our con,ununity team. My probKENTUCKY HUSBAND
excludes you. Tell your father 17 Lorig for
lem is !he mother of another
DEAR
HUSBAND: !hat occasionally you would like 19 Klutzes
DOWN
player on !he team. I' II call her
Crunseting might help if yoor wifl! to be included. It's possible !hey 20 Polish
Phyllis. At least three other
•1 Indent key
si1urely w.onts to sa\.e !he rrnrriage. don't realize !hat their conversa- 21 "Awesome!"
moms have told me that Phyllis
. It·s (Xl'iSi ble thld she is a sex rtlict If tion would interest you. It's 22 Pig sounds 2 Not
handsome·
has been . criticizing me ·at !he
she's willing to admit !hat she worth a try.
25 Shaggy
3
Fence
games to anyone who'D listen. .
has a problem, Sexaholics
If
!hat
doesn't
work.
consider
flower
4
Fallback
ADVICE
I have never done anything to
Anonymous can be helpful. It's a this: Sometimes people who live 28 Spiral
strategy
her, and I'm begiruring to won(2·wds.)
self- ht'lp group for sexually together ~eed a break from each,
molecule ·
5 Poet's
der if she's bad-mou!hing me have to prove damages . compulsive men and women. It other. Don't take it personally. 29 Emerald
Isle
always
because my Mikey is a better Obviously. Phyllis is !he com- can be contacted by v.'Titing: P.o. Cultivate friends your own age.
31 Junk food
6
Lady,
soccer player !han her boy. munity loudmouth. (Three peo- Box 111910. Nashville. TN
Dear Abby is written by
buy
slangily
(Everyone knows !he only rea- ple have told yo;)U so. l Continue ·37222-1910 The Web site is: Abigail .Van Buren. also known 33 Faint
7 Write
son her son is on !he team is to take the high road and ignore www.sa.ore.
hurriedly
as Jeanne Phillips, and was 34 Singles
because his dad is !he coach.)
If all else fails. consult a fami- fmmtled bv her mother, Pauline 36 Raw metal 8 Jokey
her comments. If you don't
magic word
Last Saturday, I was standing allow yourself to react to. them, ly law attorney and see what Phill1ps. Write Dear Abbv at 37 Pekoe
9
Bard title
on the sidelines talking• wi!h she'lllook like a combative fooL your options are. You deserve to W1nv.DemAbb"con1 or P.O.. Box
~=~os~)
stan
another mother about the team's
DEAR ABBY: My wife. be respected, and your first 69440, Los A11geles, CA 'XXK&gt;9.
40 Gold unit 10 Sultry
treats schedule, when Phyllis "Ruthie,'' and I have been responsibility is to your children. r~~-------=,, 42 Finish
-West
marched up and told me the together for 10 years and marP.S. Have you been checked ,
The
treats I've been bringing to the ried for five. We have three beau- for sexually transmitted diseases
newspaper is
games are junk food. How tiful children. Last year. I caught tSTDs)? II the answer is no. you
a valuable
insulting! I made !hem myself. · Ruthie having an aflair. but I should be. Please don't wait
learning tool for
Abby, I've had it wi!h her. I try eventually forgave her.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 27io stay as far away from this
students of
To this day, every time my year-old male. I ,live at home.
crazy-maker as I can. Is there a wife leaves !he house. I c:m' l My problem is my uncle,
all ages.
law against slandering someone help asking her who she's meet- "Barney." He's my dad's brother.
It
like she:s been doing to me? No ing, where she' ll be, what time I Uncle Barney always takes Dad
connects
way am I going to put up wi!h can expect her home - and if out to eat and shopping and stuff .
the
her nonsense until our sons grad- she's going to cheat on me again, and
never
invites
me. I
uate from high school. Please Every once in a while, I still lind Sometimes he wi II ask my dad
principles and
help.- SOCCER MOM strange phone numbers in her right in front of me. It makes me
facts they learn in the
READY 10 SOCK- IT-TO- pocket or p=e. When I call. the feel awkward and unwanted.
classroom with stories and
HER
men always say they didn't How should I handle this? - ·
events that are
DEAR SOCCER MOM: know Ruthie was married. Then EXCLUDED
IN
happening here and around 1
There are laws against. slander, they quick.lybreak it off wi!h her. MARYSVILLE, CALIF.
but in order to win a lawsuit
DEAR EXCLUDED: Tell ,
Abby, I want my
to

Soccer mom's criticism
is way out of bounds

Tempo

ACROSS

Home and

Sports

Alvera's green
thumb, Dl

Bartrum and Brown
· q~mp, 81

Garden

Down on Bob's
Farm, Cl

,

tmt -

11

Dear
Abby

12 Read .
18 Big boat
19 Cry
ol delight
21 Taper off
22 Spooky, ·
maybe
23 "What's-for me?"
24 Moniker
25 Dent
26 Mad sclen·
tlsl's aide
27 Psychics
may see it
30 Wander
32 Got
acquainted
35 Rough
drawing
38 "Gesund-

heill"
' evoker
39 Maude
of TV
41 At the stem
43 Recital
pieces
44 Lawn pest
45 Horus'
mOther
47 Verve
48 In thing
49 Early jazz
50 Water and
air monitor
51 Chocolate
dog .
53 Dove's
sound

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

-~

'

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
- More than yo u might realize. your thoughts and sugges·
lions will have considerable
impact

on

your

I isteners

today. What you say will have
little gems of wisdom embedded within.
·
SCORPIO" (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - This might be a good
day to revise your thinking
about something that hasn't as
yet worked out for you. It is
time to unsaddle yourself
from unproductive concepts
that are going nowhere.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- It usually is a little detail that derails' otherwise good· legal agreements,
so if entering into one today,
make cenain to read all the
fine print. One could be the
source of undoing down the
line .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Use today to get
all ihose small chares and
tasks that have been piling up
cleaned up and out of the way.
Once the decks are cleared,
there will be plenty of room
for game playing.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- No sign of the zodiac
has the talent that you have
'for being able to talk to either
young or old on their own
le vel. Today you'll brilliantly
display this communicative
gift.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Chances are you are
the one who will have the last
word today regarding a very
controversial issue between
you and a family member. To
your credit, you'll express it
with grace.
ARIES (Ma rch 21-A r'
19) - An old matter that as
needed discussing for . me
time can be opened u for

FAA seeks cause of Mason plane accident

Sports
• Bartrum and Brown
camp. See Page 81
• From coal mine to
golf course. See Page

BY KEVIN KELLY

Naws editor ·
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Federal Aviation Administration
investigators will determine what
caused a single-engine private aircraft to veer off the runway at the
Mason County Airport and strike
some trees Friday, West Virginia
State Police said.
.
The Mason' County Detachment of
the state police is filing an incident
report, but the investigation will be

86
• Wimbledon: Agassi
advances. See Page 81
• NASCAR. See Page

82

AVERAGE GAME 250·260

•.,(D

·..!!...

2nd DOWN

=_&amp;_

3rd0~N

• 78

JUDD'S TOTAL

-

= 128
396

No one leaves without hearin' the blues Meigs
Wailin' Elroys
EMS
kick off
Pomeroy
board
music festival
replaced
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

BY BRIAN

Obituaries

Inside

ttG-120
by JUDD HAMBRICK

• Haffelt's celebrates
anniversary . See Page A3
• Gain' fishing in Point.
See Page AS
• Fallen strongman ·
rebuilds. See Page A2

AVERAGE GAME

FOUR PlAY TOTAL

=

TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: t.4al!.e 11 2· lo 7 -letter WOld l rom the lvnel1i on eactl y•rti!M.
AOcl po~nts to eactl wora or IOOer uSing scoring directions at right. Savan -IBttir
...ord5 get 11 60·pomt bonus. AI words can be 101M in Wllbstefs New Wolld
College ~ry
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

mag~·

c 2003 u,..td r.a1~n ~·· ~

...2..-

()IO~'T

"PRE5UMIN6" PHA5t?

POMEROY, Ohio - The
Blues and Jazz festival began
on a· high note with perfect
weather and two top-notch
musicians Friday evening at
!he dock in Pomeroy.
.
Between 300 to 400 people
attended the opening day of
!he PB &amp; J festival which
featured !he Wailin 'Eiroys .
and Blues legend Kelly
Pardekooper.
Jackie Welker, director of
the PB &amp; J festival , said the
festival brings· !he community together.
"The support we get from ·
the community is tremendous," he said. "It is nice to
see the community turn out
like !his. It is good to see
friends and neighbors together on a Friday night listening
to music together."
The Wailin' Elroys hail
from Logan and featured a
wide variety of homegrown
fast-moving favorites that
got the crowd pumped up for
Pardekooper.
When
Pardekooper and his band
first got up on the stage.
which has the Ohio River in
the background complimented by an orange setting sun
in !he distance, he said the
scene reminded him of Italy.
As a singer. Pardekooper
creates a steady, uneasy tension by delivering his lacon-

Page AS
,
• Lottie Robinson, 87
• Mary McKinney, 73
• Pamelia Kelly, 70

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim·

'IWRc PR!:5UMIN[17
WHEN 010 'iOU
IWJVE IN1tl TilE

conducted by FAA , Trooper K.M. Gilley said the plane was preparing Department, EMS and Point Pleasant
for takeoff when "something hap- volunteer firefighters responded.
Gilley said Saturday.
The accioent injured the pilot, pened" to cause Roush to lose conThere was no fire and all damage
· Benjamin F. Roush Jr., 43, Letart, troL
to th e aircraft apparently came from
and passenger Ronald K. Fraley, 43,
He was unable to regain control the ace idem.
Gallipolis, Oh'io.
and the plane went off the runway.
The plane was secured and FAA
Fraley is the owner of the ' into a grassy area and struck the staff was on the scene Friday night to
Champion 7EC two-seater, Gilley trees.
· begin an investigation .
said.
·
Gilley said he will be obtaining a
"What caused the pilot to lose conRoush was treated at the airport statement from Fraley over the trol of the plane will be determined
and Fraley was transported to weekend.
by the FAA,'' Gilley said. "We, as
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Mason
Mason County 9-1-1 received a state police , don't determine the
call on the accident at 3:4\ 'p.m. State cause. The FAA will know what
County EMS.
Based on a statement from Roush, police , Mason County Sheriffs they're looking for."

'

debate today. Allow all sides
to be heard, because it can be
resolved when everybody ·is
on board.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20)- It doesn't have to take
large sums to make your bank
account grow; small profits
have a habit of adding up in
ways that might surprise you.
The trick is time and consistency in depositing.
·
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20)
- No one knows better than
you what you would enjoy
doing today. so don 't let anybody talk you into doing
somethin~ other than what is
on your hst of possibilities . .

1s100WN

50 CENTS • Vol. 38, No. 18

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • June 28, 2001

.

Busy minds lead busy lives
and in the year ahead the
more vou learn the more your
activiiy level will grow. This
can be true on all levels of
your life, ·be it s~ial, career
or family-oriented.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - It might seem that
everybody wants to confide in
you today. This is because
they know they can talk
things out with you without
you blabbing the entire story
to the whole world.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) lnformation;ou gather today
may provid good reason· to
raise your hopes and expectations about a project you're
workinli\ on. Chances are the
facts wtll tum out to be accurate.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Once you zero in on a specific objective today. you're
not likely to be swayed from
it. You will innately know the
target you've selected will be
well worth your time and
effort.

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties
•

Astrograph
BY BERNICE BEDE OSOL

'

NOTicE

~7

VlHEr-1 DID ~OU
l'iJVl INTO T~t
"DIDN'T NOTIC.c"
PHR5E »

~0

REEO

The Wallin' Elroys played the Blues to a crowd of more than 400 people Friday evening at
the dock amphitheater in Pomeroy. (J. Miles Layton)
ic, sharply-drawn observations with a cool, unhurried
vocal style (marked by a
drawling roll-oft) ·that suggests an undercurrent of
impending doom. Welker
met Pardekooper a cou pie of
years back and the two kept
in touch. Welker said the
Blues man keeps corning
back because of the local
hospitality and the scenic
waterfront.
"He liked it so much he
kept coming back," he said.
Sitting in the back row and

watching the crowd and bani:!
was George Wright, a local
Pomeroy businessman and
music enthusiast.
" I like this kind of music,"
he said. "This is a good night
for it. I'm glad Pomeroy has
these things each year-"
. Welker said a wide variety
of musical styles will perform during the month-long
festival.
"We really try to offer a lot
of things," he said. "There is
a wealth of music !hat is
coming to !he area if people

just take advantage ·uf it.
There is something for
everyone."
Butch and Marilyn Meier,
from Middleport, came for
the music.
"We are big Blues and Jazz
fans," Marilyn said. "h is
something our daughters like
and something we can do as
a family. We have been to the
festival a lot of years."
Butch said. "We enjoy Listening to the music with the
river in the background and
the sun."

POMEROY, Ohio - The
governing board of Meigs
Emergency Medical Services
has been dissolved and
replaced by a new board,
appointed Thursday by Meigs
· County Commissioners.
Meeting Thursday, commissioners cited conflicts of
interest on the part of several
members _of the Board of
Trustees. who also work for
- iheEMS board as medics and
in other positions, and termi·
nated the positions of the
entire board of 12 delegates - representing each of the
county's squad units with two
members each, and the county 's first responder stations
with one member each.
Appointed to the new board
were Middleport Mayor
Sandy lannarelli , representing
all village mayors, Douglas
Hunter. M.D., representing
the medical community,
Wilnia Davidson, representing the Rutland squad unit,
Don Stivers, representing the
community's
paramedics,
Howard Mullen, representing
emergency medical technicians, Tom Reed, representing the community .at large,
· Gene Lyons, EMS adminis-

Pie•se see EMS, AS

Bt&amp; tEAL

WHEN DID ~OU
MOVe INTO Tl\E

Bend Area unites to help Waha·ma football

Weather

"EVER'11111111Cr l:tn
A

J.

Staff writer

61&amp;ANT\~

DEAL" Ptv\~E. '??

Mostly Sunny, HI: 80o, Low: 60.

Community steps up
for field, stadium
improvements

-Index ·
4 Sections- 24 '1'11ps

D..eM.-~.

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
\
Weather

FORGET IT!!!

AI..L T~~ CALOili~S All~
IN Ttf~
~OL~S:

•

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-~ ~Til.ONGDI ""~,,~ - - 0 Of M.Y
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A6 ·
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02-5
insert
A4
AS
A2
B1-6
A2

In
January.
school officials and
cttizens
began
planning to have
the tield meet state
standards.
Six
BY KEvtN KELLY
months later, with
News editor
a lot of help from
those citizens · and
local businesses,
MASON, W.Va. ·- When Wahama
and the approval of
High School's football team qualified ·
Cromley
the Mason County
for the postseason again last fall with
'
School Board, the
a home game, !he community was
field is on its way to being playoff· delighted .
But it was a little less happy wi!h ready.
Rented bleachers, a new practice
having to play elsewhere because
Wahama's field was not up to the area and other planned improvements
West Virginia Secondary Schools are expected when the White Falcons
Activities Commission's standard for take the field again in the fall. .
Wahama football coach Ed
playoff capabilities.

Cromley said people in the community stepped forward to lend a hand,
among them Tim Roush of the Bend
Area CARE organization "who was
instrumental in making contacts and
organizing a lot of guys to help out
manually."
.
Much 'of the physical part of the JOb
went into the creation of a new parking lot on the hill above the lleld. and
conversion of the old parking area
into a new practice site . .
Valley Brook Concrete, operated
by Brent Clark. made a "great contribution" in loaning equipment, while
Alan Bell's AB Construction also
supplied people and apparatus.
Attorney Brad Layne provided the
means for volunteers to loosen up
gravel, and Bob' s Market and

2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.. ~

...

RELAY

FOR LIFE•

CQ f -- li

...
lol

~ ~..::=::~~::____J

Please

see W•hama. A5

Attention Cancer $urvlvors!
And those.interested in the fight against cancer.
The 2003 Gallid County Relay for Life will be helc;l

August 1 S and 1 6
at the'Gallipolis City Park

·

Z t - - -/

;::
0

Greenhouses Inc ., came forth with a
ground cover to allow grass to grow.
Mitch and Gary Roush of Riverside
Golf Course seeded and fertilized the
area, and mulched with straw bought
by the school's athletic boosters.
Cromley said an estimated 300 tons
of gravel was moved from the site.
"Nobody thought that much gravel
was there. but after so many years it
settles down." he said.
\ "We've had nice weather for the
grass to grow, and while ·a lot of people weren't crazy about all the rain.
we were grateful," Cromley added. "I
think we'll be okay."
One of SSAC's other major concerns was with lack of seating at the

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover'the Holzer Difference

A cancer survivors' reception will toke place before the opening lop.

All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!
For more information, please coli Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (7401446-5679•

www .holzer.org

�·,

o•-~
------------~
·
-'cnOl1~----------~P-ag_eA_2
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Sunday, June 29, 2003

'.

Ohio weather
Sunday, June 29
AccuWeather.com forecast tor da

ime conditions low/hi h tem eratures

MICH.

PA.

l lllnolteld 161"181 "

I•

C 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

S1.11ny Pt. Cloudy

·. = '"' ~--fi/iJ}'~ .." .
. ...
.

CKM!y

Showers

T·alcrms

.

Rain

'

'

Flurries

Snow

Ice .

West Virginia weather
Sunday, June 29

PA

-

OHIO

!Morgantown i&amp;1 "185::J.. _____ ·---·
•
,r-.... .... ,..-~·-·-~ -

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.

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KY.

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,.

C 2003 AccuWealher, Inc.

---·-· ~·

S111ny Pt. Ooudy

Cloudy

Showt11 T·ttorms

Rlln

Flurrilt

Snow

let

Nice weather week ahead
Tuesday ... Mostly
clear.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Wednesday ... Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
Thursday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
Independence day... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s
and highs in the upper 80s.

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tonight...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s. West
winds 5 to I 0 mph.
cloudy.
Sunday... Partly
Highs in the mtd 80s. West
winds around 10 mph.
night...Partly
Sunday
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Monday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.

Former Mr.
Universe rehabs
after stroke
BY AMY J. LEACH
Special to the Times-Sentinel

W VA.

. --

Rebuilding·a fallen strongman

RIPLEY. W.Va. - In the
late 19-+0s. a well-built, hand·
some lad walked into the
Chicago YMCA with big
dreams.
·
World War II had ended and
James Park was released from
the U.S. Navy. With a few dollars in his pocket. Park had
tmveled from Florida. where
he had recently completed
aviation electrician school.
His plan was to learn set construct ion f&lt;1r television stations.
That' night. after he settled
into his room. Park and a
friend looked for a gymnasium in which to play basketball. Instead, the two hap·
pened upon a room with ·
weights, workout equipment
and a punching bag.
From that day on. Park continued a titness regime that led
him to such prestigious body·
building titles as Mr. America
( 1952). Mr. World ( 1953) and
Mr. Universe ( 1954).
Today, Park is 75 years old
and recovering from a stroke
at· the Southern Jackson
County Rehabilitation Center
in Ripley, W. Ya. He proudly
shows staff members an aged
ponrait of a dark, cniseled
Adonis with muscles flarin g
and chest bulging.
"I started bodybuilding to
give me something to do, but
then I set personal goals formyself and continued to do
better and place .higher in
competitions," recalled Park.
In his very first event, Park
placed fifth tn the Mr. Chicago
competition. lWo years later
he returned and claimed the
top honors. During the early
1950s, he collected an array of
other titles including Mr.
Illinois, Mr. Midwest and Mr.
Central USA.
One afternoon, while he
was talkin!L with some friends
in the cO'I r'ee room of the
YMCA, 11 petite, energetic girl
caught the eye of Park. He
jokin~ly bmgged;''There goes
the gtrl I'm going to marry."
lWo months later, Park was
walking down the aisle with
that same girl.
"Ethel is more beautiful
today than when I first saw
her.' said Park as a smile
spread across his face. "We've
been married fOr 54 years and
she has supported me during
all of my competitions, as
well as in life."
,
The Parks have four children, Greg, an employee of
I

Oglebay Park in Wheeling;
Karen, a homemaker residing
in Colorado: Brian, an
employee of Hartley Oil: and
Gary, . a swdent at West
Virginia State College.
The devoted couple also has
ftve grandchi ldren and one
great-grandchild.
"Jim has been a wonderful
husband and father. He always
made time for his family and
worked hard to provide for
us," said Ethel. "Jim even
tried t&lt;:J get me in the gym on
.several occasions, but I was
always too · bu.sy with the
kids.''
Although Ethel attended
most of Park's events, she was
unable to join him for the
.1954 Mr. Universe competition that took place in
London. England.
She was pregnant with their
second chi ld and physically
unable to make the trip.
" It was the longest flight I
have ever taken," he joked.
"The vibration of the twin
engines lulled me to sleep. It
was quite an experience to
travel overseas and compete."
At the event, Park stepped
onstage against 20 other competitors. The competition was
st iIf and the panici pants were
well-versed in the art of bodybuilding.
However, later that night,
Park was named "Best Arms,"
''Most
"Best
Chest,"
Muscular"
and
"Mr.
Universe."
" It was an amazing feeling
to know that I had worked
hard and accomplished the
task I had set for myself," he
said.
Flying back home with trophy in hand, Park could only
think about Ethel waiting
patiently at home. She had
given birth to their new
daughter while he had been
away.
"Bodybuilding is much different today than it was when
I competed. Back then, there
weren 't cash prizes or sponsorshiP-s. I made a few dollars
at exhtbitions but I still had to
work full-time."
Eventually, the Parks came
to West Virginia when some
job opportunities arose at the
former Kaiser Aluminum. He
was hired as a millwright and
worked at the company for 24
years. ·
1
However, Park neYer forgot
the thrill of competing or how
much he . enjoyed weightlifting and bodybuilding. After
retiring, Park manned the .22
rifle and 12-gauge shotgun
range for the Boy Scouts of
America. ·
In his spare time, he trained
some of the scouts who were
interested in fitness.
"It was fun working with

(OSU) and the Agricultural
Education Service of the Ohio
Department of Education.
RACINE - Southern High · OSU's Agricultural Technical
School agricultural education · Institute campus hosted the
instructor Butch Mitchell two-day event
attended
the . Hands-On
The conference is designed to
Teaching (HOT) Conference on provide continuing education
June 17-18 in Wooster
opportunities to Ohio's agriculThe annual conference is tural education instructors .
developed in cooperation with Educators are involved in the
The ·Ohio State University planning of the conference, and

~unbap

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James Park, ·a patient at the Southern Jackson County
Rehabilitation Center, works on his coordination and
endurance after suffering a stroke. In the early 1950s, Park
was an award-winning bodybuilder who claimed such titles as
Mr. America, Mr. World and Mr. Universe .
the kids. I also liked to edu- Jackson
County
cate them about steroids. I Rehabilitation Center has
never did them and anybody been helpful and supportive. I
who wants to. be their best · am relieved that I can receive
shouldn't use them," he such quality therapy services
warned. My successes came so close to home," Park said.
from working hard and
With those - words, Park ·
remaining focused ."
readjusted himself on the table
Park continues to keep his and began doing sit-ups.
focus . After the recent
''This is the way we used to
stroke, Park was having do them ·in the Navy," he
trouble with coordination gnmted. "I think I can do
and endurance.
more than the last time I was
" Mr. Park's progress has here."
been amazing," said Melissa
"I have no doubt," agreed
lead therapist at the Han as she held his legs in
, Han,
Southern Jackson County place.
Rehabilitation Center.
Even though the stroke has
"We work together three taken its toll on Park 's. body,
· times per week in order to his mindset has not changed.
build his strength. He sets per· He still lives like that oversana! goals for himself and achieving young man who
never quits. He is a remark- boldly walked into the
able and resilient patient."
Chicago YMCA over 50
''The staff at the Southern years ago.

PT;

this year. 52 hands-on training state supervisor for the Ohio across the state," Wiget said. "It
Agricultural Education Service is important for our teachers to
sessions were offered.
and
coordinator for this. year's .rematn current on all aspects of
Mitchell participated in sci·
ence based workshops such as HOT Conference, approxi- the agricultural industry and
mately 210 teachers from com- offer the most up-to-date teachsoil testing, soil monolith s,
prehensive high schools and ing methods and ·curriculum
botany in a box. and organic area career centers attended.
available. The HOT conference
agriculture. He also participat"The HOT conference pro- offers a solid venue to deliver
ed in classes on how to start a vides an OJ?portunity for teach- this message."
young and adult farmer educa- ing professiOnals to update their
Mitchell has taught aWicultion program. ·
technical skills as well as inter- ture for seven years. Before he
According to Craig Wiget, act with other teachers from taught agriculture he worked

............... -----~--·-

Address:

·--~----

surgery, corrective surgery for a
cleft pal ate. an ear operat ion
and multiple other surgeries
before the age of 5.
"She had to go to a spec i &lt;~i st
in New York to have openheart surgery. It was a fourhour surgery. She went in on
Wednesday and they dis·
charged her Friday, but we had
to stay for I 0 days in case there
were complications. While we
were there we were able to take
in some of the sites. Gary carried her all the way to the top of
the Statue of Liberty," Jill said.
Jill said that Saturday, they
discovered Andrea jumping on
the bed.
"She gave us quite a scare,"
Jill said.
Jill said that Andrea has
endured the worst already.
"She's all fixed up, now,
except for fl at feet. The doctors
say they can't fix them," Jill ·
satd.
Andrea had to be pushed in a
stroller for the walk-a-thon.
"It hurts hecfeet to walk very
far," Jill said.
Jill said that Andrea's handicaps have not hindered her
from leading ·a normal life,
though .
·
"She plays soccer, _jumps
rope and pantctpates m gym
class. She's a brave little girl.
but we've always treated her
normallX. That's· what she
expects, ' Jill said.
Andrea is an excellent student
at
Bidwell-Porter
. Elementary .School, where she
does well in readin g and
spelling, said her mom. ·
But Andrea. like every other
normal kid, says th at re,ess is ,
her favorite subject. followed
by gy m and an.

Several injured in Ohio
River boat collision
DAYTON. Ky. (AP) -At
least five people were injured
when two boats collided on the
Ohio River near Cincinnati late
Friday. police said.
Police were looking early
Saturday for .a 20-foot boat that
they said was speeding at the
time of the colli sion near
Dayton, Ky.
An infant on the other boat
appeared to be uninjured, but
two passengers had cnttcal
head injuries, said Bellevue
police Sgt. Rale igh Bamett.
Others on the 21 -foot boat suf-

fered leg and arm injuries.
Barnett said blood was visible
on the sides of the boat.
The victims were taken to St.
Luke's Ea't Hospital in Fon
Thomas
and
Uni versity
Hospital in Cincinnati. Their
identit ies and conditions
weren.'t immediately avai lable.·
Barnett said dajllage to the
21-foot boat's stern may indicate that. it wa' hit from behind.
Witnesses said the 20-foot
boat may have stopped briefly
on the Ohio side of the river to
check its damage.

•

'' I love to jump (rope) ,"
Andrea said .
Jill said that Andrea loves to
play outside and draw when
she is not in school.
"That is her an table," Jill
said, pointing to a small table
and chair beside tht; fireplace in
the middle of the living room,
fumi shed with a multitude of
t:rayuns. ~
"She sits and watches 'Land
Befom Time,' her favorite
show, while she draws. Petry is
her nickname, alier her favorite
chamcter," Jill continued.
Andrea has to go to the car·
dialogist for checkups . to be
sure there are no problems with
her heart, but doesn't mind all
the tests and questions she
endures on a regular basis.
''The only thing she really
doesn'tlike is the stickers they
put on her chest for the EKG . I
don't know why, but she doesn't like those," Jill said.
Jill , Gary and Andrea incorporate a Velo Cardiac Facial
Syndrome convention into
their vacation time each year.
This year, they are going to San
Diego. on their way back from ·
Jamaica.
"We get to meet other parents
that have children like Andrea.
They also hold seminars and
workshops at the convention,"
Jill said.
Jill said that Andrea was a
special gift to her and her husband.
"God sent the right kid to us
because he knew we would
take care of her," Jill said.

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partit;ipa nt, dOt:s hereby release the Gallipolis Rotary Club. Gallia County

Chamber uf tu mmerce and the Cily of Ga llipolis from any and allliabili1y
for any und all injuries and damages that may OCt'UT to the par1icipam
while compcling in 1he 2003 Gallipolis Romry Mile.

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Call Today
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WobAddnell :

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Email :
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July I st

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** Parade Marshq.ll will be chosen
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Life Home Car Business

Age as of July 4, 2003 :
School:

ae

Marlin Rose,
owner of
,,
Hallett's Mill
Outlet, examines some of
the carpeting
material avatlable at the
warehouse and
-showroom he
and his wife
Nancy purchased from
•
John a~d Max
Haffelt in
1995. Haffelt's
•.
is prepari~g to
celebrate its
anniversary.
(Kevin Kelly)
''because you can only install
Rose is a former member
for so many years, so when . of Centerville · Village
the opportunity arose we Council, and has served on
took it. We had talked abou t the village's volunteer fire
it for a nuniber of years."
department since 1974. He .
He kept the Haffelt name and Nancy have been mar- .
because of the familiarity ried 35 years, and they .
and reputatio n the busi- have two chi ld ren and · &lt;
ness had built.
three grandchildren.
:'
In addition to in stalling · Haffelt' s Mill Outlet is ' :
and seeking out material open Monday and Friday :;
from the warehouse, which from 8 a.m. until 7 p.m.: 8: •
covers 6,000 square fee t, a.m. until 5 p.m. Tuesday,: Haffe lt 's also dispenses . Wednesday and Thursday;· '
advice and instructions to and 9 a.m. until 3 p.m.
its customers.
Saturday. Its phone num- ,
" We get a lot of phone beris446-2107.
calls about what they need,
how to do thin gs and how
to go about achieving their
goal s," Rose said, noting
that the revolution in home
improvem ent has helped
business.
The cable/satellite net·
local Net's Unlimited tntemel access
works Hom e and Garden
PER
MONFHI
Television (HGTV) and
No (rMJiJ Card
Do-lt Yourself (DIY) have
,
e
Required!
been an in spir ation for ~ TOTAL INTERNET sohwore CD
homeowners looking to ~ makes conneding fasl &amp; easy
transform their dig s.
FIVE email boxes, Webmoil,
"It 's
a good
idea
Instant Messaging ond morel
enhancer, although they
don't go into enough Immediate Access ·Sign Up Online
detail," Rose sai d. " You
www.localnet.com
can get more information
online from their Web site .
But it's a big plus for the
floor-covering business."
RELIABLE INTERNET ACCE SS SI NCE 199&lt;1

2003 Sponsors
of tfze (ja{fipo[is
!fUver !R.gcreation ![estiva~

.

Pa,nt and/or Guardian

•

Andrea Strauch was the top fund-raise r for th·e March of Dime s
WalkAmerica in the tri-county"s junior division. She is noping
to raise a "famillion·· dollars for the babies before she is done.
(Kandy Boyce)

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Marlin Rose has seen the
floor-covering
business
change significantl y in the ·
last three decades, but one
thing has remained constant :
Busmess is sti ll brisk.
· Rose and his wife Nancy
have been owners of
Haffelt's Mill Outlet, the old·
est and largest carpet warehouse in the tri-county area,
since January 1995.
They bought a business
started in 1976 by John and
Max Haffelt that went from a
Jackson Pike location now
housing the Foodland whole·
sale · food .store to a 10,000·
square foot structure at 4247
Ohio Route 160, a mile nonh
of Holzer Medical Center.
Haffelt's not bnly suppl ies
the carpet and tlooring material, mostly from · Shaw
Industries of Dalton, Ga .. but
instal ls the surface, be it car·
pet, vinyl, hardwood, ceramIC or laminate flooring .
. "The variety of textures
and colors have improved
ov~r the years," said Rose,
who began in the bu siness as
a self-employed installer in
1969, often working for John
Haffelt.
"The biggest thing is. we
offer the service because you
can buy the material about
anywhere," he added. ·"So
we have to be high-qualified
and know our products very
well."
Despite new competition,
Haffelt's, which plans an
anniversary celebration soon,
has seen business continue to
grow, going from four
mstallers at the beginning to
II now.
"We are very appreciative
of the business, especially
since the competition has
grown over the years," Rose
said. "We will add products
as they become available."
Rose said he bought thll
business from the Haffelts

Name:

Published &lt;N8tY Sunday, 8¥5 Third

~-

BIDWELL. Ohio - Andrea
Su·auch has probably been in
ami out of the hospital more
than most people I0 times her .
age, but the brave 7-year-old ·
has not let that slow her down.
Andrea collected $1,040 in
.this, her third year to raise
money for the March of Dimes
annual Walk-America, held
April 27 in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. She became the top
walker for the junior division in
the ui-county area - Mason.
Galli a and Meigs counties.
Andrea has a mission,
though.
Because she was born with
multiple binh defects, she has
compassion for children that
have gone th rough the same
types of problems she has overcome in her short lifetime.
"I want to raise a tiunilion
. dolla" to help sick babies,"
Andrea said.
She could be well on her way
if there was such a number.
Andrea has raised almost
$3,000 in three years and has a
Iifetime ahead or her to do so.
Andrea was bom with Velo·
Cardin-Fac ial syndrome, . a
delC~t of . the 22nd chromo·
some. causing her to be bom
with a hcm ia, a heart defect, a
deft palate, ear problems. t~e d·
· ing problems. tlat feet and a
host of others.
Her mother Jill said that her
pregnancy was uneventful and
that the handicaps were unexpected.
"We went to the hospital
expe.c ting a nonnal, healthy
baby," Jill said .
Andrea was transferred to
Children's
Hospital
in
Columbus soon after she wa'
bom on June 5, 1996.
The. doctor told her parents,
Jill and Gary, that the 22nd
chromosome anomaly could be
hereditary, but in her Ca'\e, it
was not.
"He told us that it's just the
luck of the draw," Jill said.
Andrea had a hernia opera·
tion and a gastrostomy tube
(feeding tube) implanted when
she was one month old, causing
her some developmental diffi. culties. ·
"Because of the feeding tube,
she couldn't lay on her stomach
for two years, so she didn't
leam to lift her upper body with
her arms unti l after the tube
was removed. Then , it took
three months of physical and
occupational therapy," Jill said.
Andrea also had open-hean

ENTRY FORM
2003 ROTARY MILE

Mali SubKription

26 w..,ks . . . . . . . ....... '100. 10
52 Weeks. .
. . , ..... '200.20

\

Runners are to bring the completed reg istrmio n form with them. The
runners must be a Gallia County resident to be e li gible for a trophy,
which will be awa rded af1er the race at the park front.

Dilly ..• " • . " . . . " . " . " '1.25
Subscribers should remit in advance
direct to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune .
No subscription by mail permitted in
areas where home carrier service IS
availabte. Senior discounts a\lailable .
One-time application neoessa&lt;Y.

Outside County
13 Weeks . . . . .
. . '50.05

for 20 years as a field engineer
for the agticulture industry. He
has experience in agriculture
sales and service. irrigation ,
field tile drainage, dairy, beef,
mechanization and engineering.
Agricultural education's mis·
sion is to prepare youths and
adults to make informed career
choices and to successfully
enter, compete and advance in a
changing agricultural industry.

The Gallipolis Rotary Club is pleased to sponsor the
•
Annual 4th of July ROTARY MILE.
Runners will-meet at the Shake Shoppe, 2nd Avenue at
I 0:00 a.m. on July 4

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month . .... . ......... '9.95
One year ...... .. ..... .. '119.40

Inside County
13 Weeks .. . ...... ...... . '29.85
2'6 Weeks. .
. ........ '59.70
52 Weeks. . . .. . . . . . .. . . '11 9.40

. .\

· Staff -writer

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis.
~mber: The Associated Press. the
West Virginia Press Association, and
the Ohio Newspaper Associalion.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to the Gallipolis Dail-y Tribune,
825 Third Avenue , GallipoliS, OH
45631 . '
.

Our llllln lll!lllben ere:

BY KEVIN KELLY

BY KANDY BOYCE .

Reader Services
Our main concern in aU stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, please call one ol.our newsrooms.

Sunday, Julie 29, 2003

Young
fund-raiser
working toward
helping goal

m:imes -~entinel

Correction Polley

Ohio
Haffelt's celebrating anniversary :
Girl with a mission
..
$unbap ~imes -i&gt;entinel

News editor

Southern teacher receives hands-on agriculture instruction
Staff Report

PageA3

'?"

•

'

\

�•

'. .

0

•.1n1on
•

PageA4

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Sunday, June 29, 20!13

Obituaries

Not 2 fast) not 2 furious
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'

Bette Pearce

Andrew Carter

Managing Editor

Asst. Managing Editor

Leifer.\ 10 the eduvr are u·drouw. 7ht'\ .\ hmild he Ins than
300 words. All !etlers are subjt:"ct to c~tlttin~ uml nw.H In•
.\igned and include addr.ess wrd teleplwne mtmbet: Nu
tm signelllettas ~I' ill he published. tt'lf€' r.~o· sJwufd be m good
taste, addrl:'s~mg issues. 1/0t per.wnalirin
The opimon!l expre.u ed in the t·o!unm/ ht•lm1 are the con.&gt;ellSIIS of !he Ohio Valier P11llltslung Co. \ &lt;'dl/onal bo{lld.
unless mhenl'ise not('d.

NATIONAL VJEWS

Not colorblind
Race should play part
in future ·of students
The Times Herald-Record, Middletown, N.Y .. on
affirmative action.
The U.S. Supreme Court's sp lit de~1sion on affirmative
action policies at the University of Michigan wi ll have the
end result of allowing universities to continue to consider
applicants' race when making decisions on whom to
admit. And that's a good thing.
In ruling 5-4 that uni versnies may make students' race
one of several factors in trying to create an atmosphere of
diversity that offers all qualified applicants an opportunity
to succeed, the court majority said race can nel be the
deciding factor. This upheld the broad affirmative action
policy of Michigan's Law School and many other universities.
But as if to underl ine a rulmg it made on the matter a
generation ago, the court also said Michigan's undergraduate admissions policy. which used a p01nt system to grade
applicants. (20 automatic points for being a minority), was
too much like a quota system and was unfair and unconstitutional.
We beli~ve that affirmative action has been · good for the
co untry because it creates diverse student populations that
give everyone a shot' at the top - the Amencan promise.
Business and military leaders made 'hose arguments to the
court in supporting Michigan . In ruling that race 'can be
co nsidered in col lege admissions. the co urt has solidified
that position, possibly for a long time to come. As split
decisions go. that's not bad.

So the other day I was
waiting at a stoplight in my
car. which ts nice, but. like
most cars today. boring. For
example. when yo u turn the .
.
key. it starts. Every time 1 It
Dave
has one of those modern .
quiet, dependable engines. At
Barry
least I ASSUME it has an
engine: I've never had a rcason to look under the hood .
For alii know, there's a small
alien spacecraft in there, 01 a head-on ~ollision with a
Vice President Cheney.
moth , the Vega would be
Cars were different back reduced to a small pile of
when I got my first driver's su batomic particles. while
license, j u~ t after the inven- the moth would tlit away,
tion of roads. In those days, laughing. For several years.
cars were powered by an the only way I could start my
insane system called "inter- Vega was to raise the hood
nal wmbustion." which and use a screwdriver to coninvolved gasoline actually nect two pieces of metal ; any
EXPLODING fNSIDE THE thief could have done the
ENGINE. Naturally this was same thtng. but no thief ever
very hard on engine parts did . "He\ so stupid. he'd
such as the "carburetor" and steal a Vega. " was a popular
umung
car
the "pinions." Cars were express10n
always . breaking down. thieves.
which meant that , if you
So by today 's nitpicky stan were a male. you were dards, the Vega was not so
always opening the hood so much a motor vehicle as a
you could glare manfully at paperweight with a horn.
the engine until somebody And yet I vividly rem ember
came along who actually that car. unlike the cars I've
knew how to fix it.
had in rece m decade s. all of
In those days. you did not which have the personality of
expect perfection from a car. a pension actuary. In lact.
For example. in 1971. I that might be the formal
bought a Chevrolet Vega. name of my current car· The
which was the result of a bet Actuary.
So anyway. I was at this
among General
Motors
designers to see if they could stoplight, and a guy about my
make a car entirely out of age pulled up next to me in a
plastic and rust. If a Vega had Pontiac GTO convertib le.

I%+ or llJ65 I believe. light
blue. top down , engi ne rumbling . I was openly admiring
his ~a1·. and he looked over at
me. and I low~red my window and '&lt;lld: "Nice Goat."
Lest you think I am some
kmd of pervert who was trying to fondle thi s man \ livestock . I shou ld explain that
"Goat"· is the hepcat slang
nic kname we used to use for
the GTO.
.
"Thanks." said th e GTO
driver. and the hght turned
green, and he rumbled oiL
gasoline explod ing audibl y in
hi s large interna 1-com bustion
engine, while I glided forward tn my eerily sil.elll
Actuarv. whic h I think runs
on a comput er hard drive
powered by nuclear fu s'ion. I
knew th e GTO guy would
probably ha\&gt; e to pull over
within the next 150 yards for
g a~ . uil. new pimon~o,, e lc ~.
but I 11 , Js jealous of h1111 . I
foun d myself humming
"Little GTO." the 1964 hit by
Ronny and tile Daytonas. in
which Ronn y describes the
GTO 111 lo\ ing tec hni cal
detail (''Th1ce deuces and a
four speed. and· d 3~9") and
the Daytonas. not quite in
tune , sing : "Turnin' it on 1
Blow1n ' ito ut 1 Turnin' it on'
Blow1n' !lout'"
That was from the Golden
Age of Car son'gs. songs like
the Beach Boys' "409" ("\'ly
four speed. dual quad. positraction 409!") and of course

The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on the
weapons of mass destruction hearing:
Co.ngress is right to plan hearin gs on the rising controversy about the facts behind the Bush administration's
leadtng justification for 1nvading Iraq , the asserted presence ·of weapons of mass destruction. And President
Bush is right to welcome the hearings . They could clear
up a lot of doubts.
Pat Roberts , the Kansas Republican who heads the
Senate Intelligence Committee, is wrong if he thinks he
is doing the president and hi s fellow Republicans a service by holding his "review" mostly behind closed
doors ....
... There is a real danger that any effort to downplay
alleged flaws in some of that intelligence will only make
it appear that the admimstration has somet hing to hide ..
The belief that Iraq was hiding weapons of mass
destruction was nearly un1versal before the invasion ....
Public hearings by Congress are the right way to set
this whole intelligence co ntroversy 1n its proper perspective.

Moderately Confused -

officiating.
Visitation hours will be from
6-8 p.m., Sunday. June 29 at
Deal Funeml Home.

Deaths
lottie Robinette
MASON. W.Va. - Lottie
Robinette, 87. of Mason died
Saturday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Arrangements later
by Foglesong-Tucker.

.Pamelia Kelly
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio ·
Pamelia McEldowney Kelly,
70, Middleport, died Friday,
fune 27 , in Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant:
A memorial servi ce is
schedul ed for Tuesday, June
I, 2003.
Complete arrangements
· will be announced by Fisher
Funeral Home. ·

A dean 5 list of questions
THETFORD, Vermont- If
former Vermont governor
Howard Dean continues to
bubble up to the higher reaches
of the pre-. pre-presidential
Democratic primary polls,
Diana
we' U be hearing a lot of the following phrase: "Well. here's
West
what we did in Ve'rmont .... "
That line prefaced one of
Gov. Dean\ less contested
statements on NBC's "Meet the
Press " where the lluzz-of-lhe- questions to ask.
day Democrat recently suffered
Where should they begin
a journalistic grill ing at the . their background rese.arch' On
hands of a pleasantly rigorous leavmg office th1s year,
Tun Russert - rigorous. that Howard Dem1 sealed h1s guberis, until it came to discussing natonal papers tor I0 years Howard Dean's ·11 years in the almost tw1ce as long as his two
Vermont statehouse. Along . predecessors, but cons1dembly
w1th the rest of the natmnal less than the 20:year-lock he
media, Russert has so far given sought-. determmmg h.un~elf.
the physician-tumed-politician wtth hts lawyers, what was co~­
a gubernatorial pass, as if ered by execuuve ~rlVllege.
there's no political point to And ~o. on a hot, bnght June
examining what anyone did in ~o~mg. before Dwye~ .went
such a tiny state.
.•
back to her fields to bnng 111 the
Sound familiar~ After look- hay - among other thmgs. she.
ing the other way on the IS alMJ a fanmer- we sat on her
"Massachusett' Miracle" dur- screened porch. and cobbled
ing the Dukakis presidential together a list ol ljLle~tJuns the
run. and driving blind through natiOnal med1a doesn t seem _to
Arkansas during the Clinton h_ave. ~ver asked presidential
.
b'
d' h ld candJd.nc Howard Dean.
campm~ns, ~g me 13 s ou
First. how come Gov. Dean.
a lmlc, dtggmg ~ow th~t who is campaigning on his staie
,mn!lJer ex-govemor has put hts record. sealed hi' own archive"
small state on. a pede~talto use ·"Well. there are future pnl!lical
as a n.11!ondl launch pad. And r considerations." the former
ment1oned th1s 1dea to govcmor told Vennont Public
Vermonter Ru~h Dwy~r. a Radiq. "We didn't want anysavvy Republican veteran of thing cmbarm,sing appearing
the Vermont state legislature in the papers at a critical time in
who rdll t~o tough gubemator- any future cndeav.or."
1al cmnpaJgns agamsl Dean tn
Well. at lea'! he's u1,. front
1998 and 2000.
. about things - or is he''
Problem ts. the med1a don I Having supported Vermont's
know (or. Ill the case of the divisive civil unton law. which
Dean-devoted Vermont media. conlers the legal rights of hus(lon't really want to know) the

?o

I

Cj'\A~·
~

6124

2003 by NEA. Inc.

Staff report

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Mary Elizabeth M'-'Kinney, 73.
. Gallipolis, died .June 27. 2003
at home after a fong illness.
Born April 22. 1930.o~ n Page,
W.Va .. she was the daughter of
the late Henry Sherdin
Honaker and the late Violet
Lizie Honaker.
She wa&gt; a homemaker and a
member of the First Church of
the Nazarene. Point Pleasant,
W.Va ., where she was a
teacher.
Surviving are sons. Louis
·of
Gene · · McKinney
Indianapolis. . Ind., Randy
(Misha)
McKinney
of
Gallipolis,
Bruce
Allen
McKinney ol Indianapolis,
Ind., Paul Douglas McKinney
of Gallipolis: daughters, Vickie
(Paul) Freeman of Gallipolis
Ferry. Carol (Charles) Stover of
Sr,ringfield: six grandchildren;
lour
great-grandchildren:
brothers. James (Margret)
Honaker of Denver. Colo., Burt
(Freda) Honaker of Louisville,
Ky., Hoben (Louise) Honaker
of Beckley. W.Va.. Burnell
Howell of North Port. Ra. ; sisters, Gracie (Ch;u·lesJ Smith of
Indiana and Goldie I Williani)
Baker of Indiana.
In addition to her parents.
She was preceded in death by
her husbaml, Paul M~ Kinney: a
son. John W. McKitiney and a
sister. Martha Ruth Honaker.
Graveside services will be
II a.m. Monday, June 30,
2003, at Jordan Baptist Church
Cemetery, G~llipolis Ferry,
with the Rev. Charles Marker

VVJUD hearings need
to be out in open

hands and wives omo homosexual couples - "in many
wayS:' he said, "the most
import&lt;mt event in my political
life" - he signed the controversial legislation behind
closed doors~ \Vhy '~
And speaking of controversial issues, is the Democra~c
Pm1y ready to umte behind a
leacler who. a' a mcd student.
perfonn ed his OB-OYN rotation at a Planned Parenthood
clinic'' Vermont magazine
reported on th1s in 1998.
adding: "While he has never
pcrfom1ed an abortion himself.
he is strongly pro-choice and
certainly understands the medical procedures involved."
Which must rate as the medical
eqUivalent of not inhalin~.
TI1e quest1on is why~ didn't
Dr. Dean. at one time on the
board of Planned Parenthood,
ever pe1fom1 an abortion as a
Planned Parcmhood medical
re,idcnt'.' And how does Dr.
De;m. who is also an opponent
nf parental notification. explain
Vermont's status as one of a
handful of state' in which abortions ,may be perfonned by
non-doctors·• In 1998 - the
last year the stale re l ea~ed data
- 183 girls underthe age of IR
had abortions.mqre than half of
them pcti'onncd by non-doctm': Momlity asicle. is thi s even
a healthy option''
Dean 's- loudest claim 10
gub\: matonal fame i-. to have
providoo "free" health ~are to
MJtne large &gt;Walh of Vcnnnnt\
6&lt;XJ.OOO citit.en., while .,imultancously balancing the state
budget. b this l(lr real" A' of
ll)lJ8. Vennont had the third
htghest percentage nf Medicaid

For the Record
Point Pleasant
City Police

recipients in the Union (while
next-door New Hampshire
ranked 50). TI1is mdicates that
Vermont's
state-provided
health care comes, mlarge pan .
courtesy Washington, D.C.
How can Dean take credit for
state-provided health care
when, in h1ct, the lion's share is
funded by fedeml taxpayers in
other states'' And how does
such a scheme work on the
national level?
As governor, Dean raided
special funds to even out budget shortlillls: Is that balancing
the budget" And how can Dean
blame President Bush's recent
tax cuts for rising property
taxes when, lor tbe past decadeplus, he govemed a state with
one of" the h1ghest state and
local tax burdens in the nation?
C9rporatinns
have
left
Vermont farm revenues are
down ; logging anclmanufacturing jobs have disappeared.
Maybe the only sector to thrive
in the Dean years is the public
sector: wh y'' Indeed, what
exactly does the Vemmnt e&lt;:onomy consi., t nf minus federal
fund., and pork'' How well does
such a record bode for the
national economy?
With
lower-than-average
·incomes. a heavier-than-average tax burden. and some of the
highest health insurance premiums in the country. Vermont is
hardly paradise lor working
people. Howard Dean h&lt;l' some
explaining to do - if someone
will just ask a few questions.
Diana Whr is " ('()/umnisr
.fin· 711e Wn,!Jinglon Times. She1'
can

he

{'{mtacted

World briefs

Fourth annual 'Battle
at the Point' returns

Mary Elizabeth
McKinney

Chuck Berry's "Maybelline,"
in whic-h Ch uck\ V-R Ford
(pronounced "Foad") chases
down a .Cadillac. and Chuck
displays his grasp of automotive thermodynamics ("Rain
water blowin' all under my
hood: I knew that was doin'
my motor good") .
Nobody will ever write a :
song like that about my ·
Actuary. or any other modern
car. Modern cars are just not
so ngworthy.
"The other guy s arc all
jealous of me "
"When I cruise in my
Hywidai Elantra GT"
"And the girls always feel a
romantic- explosion"
"When they learn that my
warranty covers corrosion"
No. today's cars Me just not
exciting. I've . thought about .
getting a fun old ~ar. like a
GTO.~or •t vintage Mustang.
But then I'd have to keep it
garaged. find a ~nechanic.
etc . So may he Jnsteacl I'll just
get a vintage Vega. I'll keep it
in a Tupperware container,
which I'll carry in my glove ·
compartment.
When
I
encounter other vintage-car
guys. I'll lower my window,
-1nd shake my Vega at them
That way they'll know that.
ii1side my Actuary. I am sti ll
cool.
Da 1·t Barn is a humor
&lt;olunmiH tri r 1he Miw11i
Hem/d. Wrire ro him c/o Th e
Miami Hem/d. One Herald
Pla ~a. Miami, Fl. 33132.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

POINT PLEASANT. W.VaThe Point Pleas;mt Police
Department reported one accident
Thw"&gt;rlay.
lm D. Chaptmm, 56. Milton,
Wfl' inJW'tXI when he wa' nm over
by !'tis own car while trying to
pump gas at the Speedway Ga'
Mm1 on Jetli!J,;on Avenue.
While Chapm:m was moving
his 2000 GMC truck at the pwnp,
he tell out of his truck, which then
rolled over him.
The truck then hit a p&lt;lfked 1995
Buick, owll(.'(( by Julie A.
McW!IIimm ·of G;dlipolis Ferry,
rolled over the hill into the softball
tield below Speedway ruld hit a
building.before coming to rest
Chapman WdS traJt&gt;ported to
Plea-.mt V&lt;dley Hospital and larer
releam He was cited ter failure to
· maintain aJntrol and 110 seat belt

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- This year's Point Pleasant
Stemwheel Regatta will see the
return of another great
American pasttime.
Fishing is becoming one of
the fastest growing of all sports,
with the television broadcast of
a fishing tournament almost
eve1y weekend.
And on Saturday, July 5, 60
bass boats with 120 anglers
take to the water in an effort to
capture not just prize money,
but fame as well.
The fourth annual "Battle at
the Point" promises a $6,000
payout provtded the field is full
with all 60 boats.
The bass tournament i~ the
highlight for the "semi-pro"
anglers, but the.tournament has
some really special events for
the kids and those wanting to
spend some quality time w1th
their families.
The tournament gets underway with a 5:30 a.m. boat
launch and then a 7 a.m. blast
off from the new Point Pleasant
river park.
Once the competitors are off
ti shing. Trail of Dreams', the
official organizers of the event,
will start the rest of the fun.
At Knxlel Lake, from noon
to 3 p.m. , there will be a Free
Kids Fishing Derby tor all kids
under the age of 16. Just bring a

Jihad claims cease-fire

rod and reel, Trail of Dreams
will supply the bait, bobbers
and hooks. There will be prizes
and games for the kids with
free hot dogs and drinks sponlnfoCision
sored
by
Manage ment
Corp.
and
WBYG-99.5 Big Country
Radio.
WBYG-99.5 will be broadcasting live thou ghout the day\
events. Pro-Angler Bob Dillow,
seen on 0LN television and
known as the Ohto Bassman,
will be present to sign autographs, give away photos and
talk llshing to the young
anglers that want that extra
·•professional" advice.
At 4 p.m., the anglers will
return as the official weigh-in
starts at the city launch ramp.
Trail of Dreams will conduct
the weigh-in using a state of the
an system of keeping the tish
;!live and fresh unul they are
safely returned to the Jldtural
waters they came from .
This Catch &amp; R elease
Aeration Unit has two 300-gallon water tanks with hospital
quality oxygen concentrators
provided by Prescription
Oxygen.
Tournament Director Bob
Burgess said the tournament
should be a great day of tishing.
For additional information or
eniry t'onllS. go to www.trailofdream s.co m
&lt;http ://w ww.tra ilofdreams. co
m&gt; or call 304-766-6842.

GAZA CITY, Gaz~ Strip (AP) - An
Islamic JihJd leader said Saturday the radi cal Palestinian group accepted a condition al
·three-month halt to anacks on Israelis. the
tlrst on-the-record comment from a militant
· leader invol ved mthe truce.
··we ha ve accepted a cond itional ceasefire for three months:· the leader,
Mohammed al-Hindi. told The Associated
Press.
AI -Hindi said intensive meetings on
Saturday between Islamic J1had, 1the larger
militant group Ham as and Yasser Arafat 's
Fatuh faction were wm;king out the linal
wordmg of an officml cease-lire declaration.
Ham a' leaders had indicated that they've
agreed to the truce. but they were waiting to
declare formal acceptJnce in the jo1111 declaration with all the parties. None had gone on
the record to say so.
U.S.
National
Security
Adviser
'Condoleezza. Rice was to arrive Saturday to
talk with fsraelis ai1d Palestimans about their
next moves under the so-called "road map"
plan for Palestinian statehood by 2005, the
latest effort to end a ge nerations-old contlict.

Guerilla attacks
continue in Iraq .
BAGHDAD, Iray ( AP) - The di squieting drumbeat of guerrilla-sty le attacks and
sabotage deepened in Iraq. with a U.S. soldier killed in an ambush. another shot in the
neck and an 11 -year-o ld Iraqi boy slain by
American troops who mi~took him for a
gunman.
The latest violence occurred JUst arter II
p.m. Friday. when .attackers lobbed a
grenade at a U.S. co nvoy making its way

through the predominantly Shiite neighborhoocl uf Thawra of northeast Baghdad. One
American soldier was killed and four were
wounded, military' spokesman Sgt. Patrick
Compton said.
A Civilian Iraqi interpreter was also hurt,
he said.
The torrent of attacks and ever-harsher
U.S. crackdown; is sparking frustration on
both sides. Since Thursday, at least three
U.S. soldiers have been killed, with a fourth
dying in a non-combat accide~t. Two U.S.
soldiers were still missing Saturday, four
days after their apparent abduction from a
gu.ard post north of the capital.
Saboteurs have also attacked -Baghdad'S
power gfid and•oil pipelines, foiling coalition efforts to restore basic services like
water and electricity a~ temperatures climb
as hi gh as 117 Fahrenheit.

Liberian president
asks for U.S. help
MONROVIA , Liberia (AP) - With
lighting receded for now in Liberia's devastated capital, President Charles Taylor.
jo111ed his desperate people and called for
American help to end the war in his bloodied West African nation.
But Taylor, making a victory tour of his
shelled capital after chasing rebels out this
latest time, gave no sign he would heed
President Bush 's calls that he step down.
'·We ask the international community,
most specifically the United States, to do
everything within its power to help Liberia
and Liberians out of this mess," Taylor said
in a radio address Friday.
Taylor, an indicted U.N. war cri.mes suspect. spoke after rebels pulled out of the
western edge of the capital. The move
ended a four-day siege that killed an estimated 500 CIVI lians.

Mason County school personnel actions win approval
Staff Report
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. 1\vo resignations were accepted by
the Mason County School Board
during last Tuesday's regular meeting.
Resigning are Bridget Nibert, teacher in
spec1al education at Point Pleasant High
School, effective Aug. 1; Tom Nunnery,
principal at Point Pleasant Intermediate
School, effective June 30 due to retirement; Lei Lai Fowler as junior high cheerleader, varsity cheerleader coach at
Wahama High School and substitute
teacher in the Mason County Schools.
effective immediately.
Employment action approved by the
board includes Rebecca Hatfield, .5
teacher, Collaboration K-6 at Leon
Elementary and .5.coordinator of curnculum services; Tom Nunnery as a substitute
teacher, elementary education grades 1-8,
. social studies grades 1-9 and substitute
administrator, effective July 1: David L.
Darst as teacher, .5 social studies grades
7 and 8 at Point Pleasant Middle School;
Valerie Ball, .5 band/general music/choir at
Hannan Junior Senior High School: and
Linda Womack as .5 cook Ill at New Haven
Elementary.
$ubstitute personnel employed by the
board include Donald Adkins, bus; Eva
Armentrout, secretary; David Arthur, custodian; Teresa Barnett, cook; Marcella
Barnette, aide; Don Barr, mechanic;
Thomas Beckner, maintenance; Denise
Bonecutter, aide; Laura Bonecutter, bus;
Brenda Burden. secretary; Lawrence
Burris, maintenance; ·Michele Butcher,
custodian and cook: Alicia Gale. secretary;
Alan Camp, maintenance; Lisa Casto,
aide; Mirlie Casto, aide; Gregory Collins,
bus; Grace Connolly, aide; Stanley Cook,

EMS
from PagEl A1
istrator. Don Cheadle,
representing
the
Columbia
Township
unit, a'r\d Eber Pickens ,
Sr., representing the unit
in Syracuse.
"Several of the members of the board of
trustees were voting on
personnel iss ues, suc h as
pay rai ses and benefits ,
while, at the same time,
working for the board
itself," Commissioner
Jim Sheets said. "This
was clearly a conflict of
interest and needed to be

.

matnlenance: Tex' Corfee, custodian;
Marketta Crum, secretary and aide: Janice
Crump, aide;
Donna Dalton, aide; Unda Davis, custodian; Darlene Dewees, atde; Clayton
Durnin, matntenance; Dortha Fellure, aide;
Dorothy Flora, custodtan: Dawn Gandee,
secretary; Carolyn Gtbbs, secretary;
Denver Gibbs, custodian; Ralph Greene,
bus; Ellen Greenlee, atde, Cha~es Hall,
maintenance; Joey Hall, maintenance and
bus operator; John Halt, maintenance:
Betty Hill, cook; Jud~h Hughes, custodian
and cook; Rose Hurlow, custodian: Darla
Jackson, aide; Marcella Keefer, custodian
and cook; Robert King, custodian; Sharon
Langdon, aide and cook: Sheila Lanz,
aide; Lonna Utchfield,eook; Angela Lloyd,
aide; Charles Long, bus;
S'usie Matheny, custodian and cook;
Lisa McCarty, aide; Lonnie McCarty, aide;
Wilma McClure, cook; Deborah Moore,
secretary; Russell Moore, bus; Dallas
Ntbert, mechanic; Connie Nichols, aide
and custodian; Rita Nett, aide; Susan Nott,
aide; Dale Nowlin, maintenance; Randy
Parsons, bus; Stephen Patterson, bus and
custodian: Debra Pierson, custodian and
cook; Teresa Pyatt, cook; Donald Rayburn,
mechanic and bus operator: George
Rimmey, bus and custodian; Robert
Rinimey, custodtan: Diana Roach, secretary; Cpra Rollins, cook; Lori Russell, secretary; Thomas Russell, custodian:
Leota Sang, secretary; Doris Settle,
cook; Brenna Shobe, bus; Wanda Siders,
cook; Carol Smith, bus. Carrie Smith, secretary; Delma ·Smith, bus; Geraldine
Stephens, custodian: Sally Taylor, aide;
JoAnn Thomas, aide: Chnstina Thompson,
aide: Joey Thompson, bus: Inez Villars,
custodian; Brian Wallis, bus; Angela
Wamsley, secretary and aide; Tammy
Watterson, cook: Russell Waugh, aide;
Tammy Westfall, aide; Kimberly Wilson,
cook and atde; Rosa Withers, aide; Linda
Womack, cook and aide; F. Paul Wood,

addressed at once."
EMS
Administrator
Gene Lyons said th e new
board will meet for the
first time in Jul y, once a
rev iew of the board's
bylaws has been completed .
Meanwhile, additional
board members will
likely be appo1 nted ,
Sheets said. so that all
squad and first responder unit s can continue to
be represented on the
board. Sheets said letters
have been mailed to all
squad units seeking volunteer board members.
who will be appointed in
the near future.

maintenance; Delores Woomer, custodian. PPMS; George Robinson, eighth grade
Transfers approved included Melinda gnls basketball coach, PPMS; Brent 0 . ·
Williamson to second grade teacher at Blake, eighth grade boys basketball coach,
Point Pleasant Pnmary School from spe· PPMS; David L. Darst, head wrestling
cia! education teacher at Wahama Htgh coach. PPMS; Jayna C. Meadows, girls
School; Torn A McNeely to counselor, track coach, PPMS;
grades pre-K to 6 at Beale Elementary
Wayne Richardson, varsity boys basketfrom central offtce itinerant; Ronald Kim ball coach, HHS: Sharon Watterson, assis- ·
Browning to counselor, grades 1-6, Mason tant girls basketball coach, HHS; Carolyn
Elementary, trom counselor grades 7-12 at Cooper, varsity g1rls basketball coach,
PPHS; Beverly Casto, to second grade HHS ; Rick Stafford, junior high wres~ing
teacher at Point Pleasant Pnmary School, coach
at WHS; Timothy S. Howard, ninth
from second grade teacher at New Haven
grade
boys
basketball coach, WHS; Lon
Elementary: Tina S. Nibert, kindergarten
M
.
Bumgarner,
junior varsity giMs basketteacher at Point Pleasant Primary School,
ball
coach,
WHS;
Gene A. Moore, summer
from kindergarten teacher at Beale
recreation
facilitator.
PPHS, as needed; Ed
Elementary; Larry A. Gtbbs, physical eduCromley,
summer
recreation facilitator,
cation/safety education 7-12 at PPHS and
WHS,
as
needed;
Michael
Wallace, sumHHS from science teacher 7-8 at PPMS;
mer
recreation
faciltator,
HHS,
as needed;
Rebekkah J. Dick, teacher, Collaboration,
Brenda
Sue
Mash
and
·Janet
E. Carr,
grades 7-9 at HHS from special educatton
eJ&lt;tended
day
tutors.
Leon
Elementary:
teacher at Ashton Elementary; Sandra K.
Buttrick, cook Ill , Potnt Pleasant Primary Carolyn E. Douthtt and Tonya R. Martin,
School from cook Ill at PPHS.
science summer school teachers grades
The board also resc1nded the Reductton 4-8, PPMS; Pam Adkins, eJ&lt;te~ded year
in Force listing for Twila Miller, LD/MI speech language pathologist, for summer
teacher ai Wahama, approved placement 2003; Matt Cottrill, Dottie Wiley, Charlotte
of Rhonda Wheeler from the transfer and Oshel, Amber Janicker and ScaMett Enos,
subsequent assignment list to counselor all extended year special education
for grades pre-K to 6, Ashton Elementary, teacher, for summer 2003; and Jenn~er
and approved the recommendation of the Casto, eJ&lt;tended year sign language interreclassiltcation committee to tncrease the preter for summer 2003.
number of days employment for Jun~or
The board also approved deletion of the
Chaney, custodian at Beale Elementary.
recently-vacated
LD/MI/BD teacher at
In supplementar contracts, the board
PPHS,
approved
the posting of an
approved employment of the following:
Elatne Preece, FCCLA coach at PPHS; . LD/MI/BD teacher for central office intinerJudith Markham , Academic FBLA coach at ant'homebound, deletion of the chemPPHS: Kathryn G. Rollins, Academic istry/biological science/general science
FBLA coach at Mason County Career grades7·t2 posttion at WHS, posting the
Center; Sharon C. Cole, Academic FBLA posttion of chemistry/general science _
coach at Mason County Career Center; grades 7-t2 teacher for WHS, approved :
Berna J. Hilbert, Academic FBLA coach at posting supplemental school-level technolMason County Career Center; Judith E. ogy contact positions for all Mason County
Browning, extended year special educ~­ schools, approved posting a suppmental
tJon teacher for summer 2003: Michael contract baseball/football field s~e develCalandros, assistant wrestling .coach at oper at HHS.

Wahama
from Page A1
field. After weighing costs,
boosters decided to rent
bleachers when another playoff game is scheduled.
Meanwhile , boosters have
put $4,000 toward the purchase of new bleachers in the
future. a project estimated. to
cost $60,000 when completed.
Donations to the project are
appreciated, Cromley said.
"The drawback to our situation is that we didn 't have
enough seatmg." Crom ley
said. "Our immediate solution
was to rent bleachers for the
playoffs. It 's a lot cheaper to

rent rather than construct
them."
Plans also call for improvements to the press box. It' s not
a state requirement, Cromle y
said. but the work is expected
to be done by Fred Weaver
and Kevin Knight this summer.
"This was all done at no
expense to the school board,"
Cromley said. "We appreciate
tile board allowing us to do
th is project.
"The school didn't have to
contribute anything. but it did
on the linl e. extra thin gs we
needed,'' he said.
Cromley said the job couldn't have been done without
the level of community support it drew, from people who

----------REE HEARING TESTS
.

KyggrCre,ekHigh;~
_ Classes of 1973 .. 1978. 19?9.
1980, 1982, 1983 &amp; 1984
are hosting a cook-out at the

home of
on

Karen Reynolds1 Edgar .

Saturday, JtUiy 5th

1

For the Best Wheat

.·

Price in Central .
and Southern Ohio

6:30p.m.
Please RSVP to
Karen C9 740-388-91~
Or Kedgar82~hotmail. com

l'ia

I .. I I

duu IC/1 1'II '&lt;mg/o/}(1/.lle/.

---

1·800·523·2217

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

I

didn't do it for recogmuor
but wanted to help the schoc
and the football program.
For the team, the ,ability !'
play at Wahama. when a hom
playoff game is in the offing i
a boost all by itself, Cromie .
said.
·
In the past, Wahama ha
played postseason games •
Point
Pleasant
an•
Ravenswood, and wliil·
Cromley said he appreciate
those school's cooperatio•
and facilities, playing at hom
has its advantages.
"One of the things with
home game is that you can sta:
within vour routine, but whet
you hav~ to travel, you get ou
of that routine,' ' he said.

COUPON

1
I~ TM HEARING AID CENTER I
1
I
I
I
I
I Call Toll Free
an
appointment. I
I The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. 1
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I conversation
is Invited to have a~ hearing test to see II I
I this problem can be helpedl Bring this coupon with you lor 1
your FREE HEARING TEST, a 575.00 value.
I UMWA • UAW•ARMCO. AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS I
WALK -INS WELCOME
..
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Will be giv.e n in GALLIA COUNTY by

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

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·-v

------

-

�\

Page A6

Ha
Meigs Calendar
Public meetings

I.
'
I

Monday, June 30
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m .,
at off ice.
Tues d~y, July 1
PAGEVILE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
town hall.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees will meet
in regular session following
the budget meeting at 7:30
p.m. at the home of clerk
Osie Follrod.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education, special meeting, 8
~,m ., Eastern Elementary
S'chool . Approve appropriations, hire personnel.
Thursday, July 5
RUTLAND
Rutland
Township Trustees, budget
hearing, 5 p.m., at fire station, ·
followed by regular- meeting .

Clubs and
Organizations

Middleport
Community
Association will meet at 8:30
a .m. at Peoples Bank.
Thursday, July 3
POMEROY - The monthly
Holzer
Hospice
Meigs
County "dinner with friends"
wi ll be held at 6 p.m. at
Grow's Restaurant. For more
information ca,ll 992-7463. ~
Saturday, July 5
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778, Junior Grange
#878, potluck supper, 6:30
p.m., followed by 7:30 meet. ing . Officers elected. Public
invited .

Homecomings/
Reunions
Sunday, June 29
RACINE;- Daniel and
Catherine Rose family
reunion will be held at 1 p.m . ·
at the home of Jim and
Karen Holter Werry, Court
Street Road, Morning Star
area, Racine. All family and
· friends invited. Rain will not
cancel . Call 949-2746 for
information.
REEDSVILLE - HaymanBirarri reunion will be held al
1 p.m. at the Forked Run
State Park. There will be a
basket dinner.

Nllic Medi 1QS
&amp;Eva1ts
Sunday, JWJe 29
APPLE GRCM: - The Va1tey
\I:Jiunteer Rre Department is having a "Firefiglters Swap Meet"
from 8 a.m. to .5 p.m. to:1ay and•
Sunday at the fire station on W.Va.
Route 2 in Apple GT'O\Ie.
lndVdJals are irMted to bring any
fire or EM&amp;related eqjpToent to

' sell or bade, or just come out to
bn:M'se Dealers and verdols welcome. Couc css·ons wil be availal)e.

11 est:lay, July 1
POINT PLEASANT - FOOt
latl&lt;*nark
Commission, 7:30 p.m., · Point
Pleasant City Cou1cil ChantJers
NEW HAVEN - Red CIOOS
·· Blood Drive, noon to 6 p.m., New
H&lt;f.IBrl United Melhodist Church.
Pleasant

Historic

'

School&amp;

Spotts

MOl !Clay, .ble 30
POINT PLEASANT - Frn
registration for the Car1 Lee

Football Can-p, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. ,
Giro's Pizza
'Ti I~ rilly, .Ally 1
MASON - WBhama Band
Boosters meetng, 7 p.m., in the
Band Room. AI interested in the
Wahama Band are urged to
atterd.

Fun&amp;

Fll'lCkaisels
Wadi en:'ey, July 2
POINT
PLEASANT
Summer Fun in the Pal1&lt;, 11 a.m.,
ea:h Wed esday tl1rcJu(,tl -tit
and on~ 13, and at 7:30
p.m. on -line 25 and JJ.j 30.

Prog:ams are held at the TuErdie-Wei State Pari&lt; and Fort
~. and are sponsored !:If
the paik and the Fbnt Pleasant
Artist Series. In case of rain, the
events will tal(e place at the
Mason County Library Open to
chilctlJn of al ages and adults.
Jennifer Kayser, 2003 PPHS

1Ja(lia1e, wilt talk about Cleqlaba.
Thursday, .Ally 3
LEON - The Baden community v.ill be freezing ice aeam br
the ioo aeam social, 6 p.m., commuity center. All ~ v.ill be

appreciated.
POINT PLEASANT - Ma.&lt;rn

Reunions

'

Salurday, July 5
POINT • PLEASANT
Duncan Kinnaird families, noon,
large sheHer at Krodel Park.
Everyone web:lrre.
Saturday, .Ally 12

Cardiac Reds rally to sack Tribe
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press ·

MASON - Wahama High
School class of 1983, 5:30 p.m.,
July 12, RM!rside Goit Course
CILtlhOuse. For a&lt;Xlitional intlrmation call Missy Groves
Lavender at 273-9337 or Kin
Wrgn Duncan at 57&amp;-3102.

POINT PLEASANT - John
and Cora PIPJ Mlilfls, 5 p.m.,
Krodel Pari&lt;. Please bring a rm2:45 p.m., Mason Cotnty Pul)ic
-ered dish.
Lbrary.
Friday, .Ally 4

Wahama Band Boosters

PageBl
Sunday, June 29, 2003

County
Library's
Summer
Reading Program will feature
Pt4)pBieer Linda Zimmer, 2 to

NEW HAVEN - Chic:ten
Brubecue, 11 a.m., at the New
Haven Rre Department, for

iunba~ limts ·itntintl

'

NASCAR: Money, money, Page 82
lions Club golf winners, Page 83
Outdoors: Shark girl, Page 85
From mine to golf course, Pag~ 86

Mason Calendar

Please e·mall calendar
Items to ccozza@ mydal·
lyreglster.com, or tax them
to 675-5234.

•

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!
Rotary Mile
.set for July 4

CLEVELAND - Rookie Rainer
Olmedo's RBI
single capped
Cincinnati's two-out, two-run rally in
the nimh inning Saturday as the Reds
came back again with a 5-4 irm:rle ague win o v er the Cleveland
Indians. ·
Olmedo had four RBi s for the R~ds,
who have won a major league-leading
20 games in their final at-baL
Cincinnati also has 18 wins by one
run, a major-league be st.
The Reds were down to their tinal
strike in the ninth offDanys Bae z (0-6)

when Adam Dunn doubled . Russell
Branyan , traded by C leveland to
Cincinnati last season, followed with a
double to almost the same spot to tie it
4-4.
Olm edo, who entered the game with
one RBI, followed with a bloop single
to left as the Reds won for just the second time in eight games.
Chri s Reitsma (7 -2) pitched the
eighth and Scott Williamson worked
the ninth for his 18th save.
- Matt Lawton homered twi ce for the
Indians:--.,
Lawton 's two-run homer. his second
of the game and. No. I 00 in his career,
gave the Indians a 4- 3 lead in the seventh. He al so homered in the first,

'

Cleveland's fi rst homer since June 19.
Ken Gri ffey Jr. made two exce llent
det'ensive plays in ce nter and A ustin
Kearn s made another one in right for
the Reds, who have dropped I 0 of 13.
L eading ,3- 1, Reds sta rte r Ryan
Dempster gave up a leadoff double in
the seventh to rookie Victor Martinez,
making hi s season debut after being
called up from Triple-A on Fr iday
night.
One out later, Dempster was
repl aced by Feli x Heredia, who
walked pin~ h- h i tter Brandon Phill ips.
Coco Crisp popped out, but M artine z
scored on a passed ball by catcher
K elly Stinnett.'
Phillips hustled all the way to third

"Even the price has a nice ring to it."

on the play, but only had to trot home
when Lawton drov~ a 3- 1 pitch into
the seat s in right for his 1Oth homer.
Olmedo, Cincinn ati 's No. 9 hi tter;
gave the Reds a 2- 1 lead in the fifth
with a two-run double o ff Indians
starter C.C. Sabathi a. Olmedo put
Cincinn ati ahe ad 3- 1 with an RBI sirigle in the seventh .
Griffey ran down Jody Gerut's drive
to make a lunging catch in front of the
Indi ans' bullpen in the fourth. In the
si xth, Gri ffey raced back to the wall,
timed his jump and snatched Milton
Bradlefs shot that would have at l east
hit off the top of the wall .

Please see Reds. IU
'

Giving back, paying forward

GALLIPOLIS . Ohio
The annual Fourth of July
Gallipolis Rotary . Mile will
begin at the Shake Shoppe at
I 0 a.m. Friday.
Entry forms may be pi cked
up from members of the
Gallipolis Rotary Club June
29 and July 2-3.

Other events

Pros donate
time to help .
young .athletes

RVHS football
camp July 14-16

8Y ANDREW CARTER

CHESHIRE, Ohio- River
Valley High School will host
a football camp for players in
fifth through eighth grades
July 14-16.
Camp will be conducted
from noon to 2 p.m. each day.
The cost is . $25 . Campers
may register from II a.m. to
noon on July 14 prior to the
start of camp.
information,
call
For
RVHS football coach Greg
Deel at (740) 388-0405 _

Gama Calendar
Lutheran Church, 170 New
Life Way off Jackson Pike.
For information , call 4464889.

Sports editor

GAHS golf
tourney set
for Thursday

Reunions

Saturday, June 28
VINTON -The Gallia
County Vietnam Veterans of
CENTENARY - George
America, Chapter 709 will and Emma Williams Swain
hold its annual picnic at 6:30 family reunon will be held at
p.m. at the Flem Meade 1 p.m ., on June 22 at 0 .0 . ·
Home. quetsions call 446- Mcintyre Park, Shelter #1.
9629 .
Pot luck . .
GALLIPOLIS French
CENTENARY
Colony Daughters of the Cromlish-Kemp
Family
american Revolution pre- Reunion will be held from
sent 'Gallant gals of Gallia noon until dark, Saturday,
. County and our Lambert June 21, at Raccoon Creek
Lands heritage' 7:30 p.m. at County Park, Bob White
the Ariel Theatre _ Tickets Shelter #5.
from
Gallia
County
CENTENARY ~ . J..
Historical
Society
and Clary family reunion will be
Bernadine's.
held from 10 a.m. until dark
Clay at 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park, shel. CROWN CITY Township Trustees will have ter 5.
•
their annual clean-up day
Davis
CHESHIRE
starting at 7 a.m. behind reunion . The descendants of
Clay School. No large items the late J.N.M. and Maggie
such as tires, batteries or Davis will have a reunion at
appliances. Items should be Kyger Creek Clubhouse with
bagged.
lunch at 1'2:30 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Pancake
breakfast, American Legion,
8-10 a.m., public welcome.
Sunday, June 29
GALLIPOLIS - Fashion
GALLIPOLIS - Sanders
family reunion, Mcintyre Then and Now, featuring
Park, shelter # 2.
• 19th and 20th century clothGALLIPOLIS French ing , on display June 1-29 at
Colony Daughters of the French Art Colony, 530 First
american Revolution pre- Ave., Gallipolis. For informasent 'Gallant gals· of Gallia tion, call 446-3834.
County and our Lambert
Lands heritage' .7:30 p.m. at
the Ariel Theatre. Tickets
Gallia
County
from
GALLIP6Lis - William
Historical
Society
and "Bill" Barnett celebrates his
Bernadine's.
93rd birthday on June 28.
Wednesday, July 2
Cards may be sent to him at
GALLIPOLIS
Kids' 3891 Geqrges Creek Rd. ,
Time at Bossard Librai&lt;y, Gallipolis , Ohio 45631 .
sponsored
by
P,athway
PLAIN CITY Emily
Community Church . Open to Mitchell will celebrate her
children five years old and 90th birthday on July 6.
up. For information , call Cards may be sent to her at
{740)245-9664.
393 Allgyer Dr., Apt. E.,
Saturday, July 5
Plain City, Ohio 43064 .
GALLIPOLIS
-The
GALLIPOLIS - Get well
Gallia Academy High School cards may be sent to Linda
Class of 1954 will meet for Roberts at
Arbors
at
brunch at the Red Rooster Gallipolis, 170 Pinecrest
Restaraunt, 10 a.m. Other Ave ., Room 303, Gallipolis,
classes welcome to join.
Ohio 45631 .
GALLIPOLIS Norma
James will celebrate her
95th birthday on July 1.
GALLIPOLIS Military Cards may be sent to her at
Families Support Group 453 Third Ave ., Gallipolis,
meets 7:30 p.m. every Ohio 45631 :
Sunday
at
New
Life
E-mail community calendar
Lutheran Church , 170 New
Life Way off Jackson Pike. items to news @mydailytriFor information, call 446- bune.com. Fax announce4889 .
ments to 446-3008. Mail items
GALLIPOLIS 12-step to 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Spiritual Support Group OH 45631- Announcements
meets 6:45 p.m. every may also be dropped off at the
Tuesday
at
New
Life Tribune office.

Inside:

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Monday, June 30
MIDDLEPORT - ·OH-KAN
Coin Club will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Trolley House behind
the
Dairy
Queen
in
Middleport. The meeting will
be followed by an auction .
The public is invited.
Tuesday, July 1
CHESTER
Chester
Tuesday, July 1
Council 323, Daughters of · POMEROY - . The Meigs
America, 7:30p.m. at the hall. County Health Department
Quarterly birthdays to be Will conduct a childhood
observed ,
refreshments immunization clinic from 1 to
served.
7 p.m . at · the office on
RACINE RACO will Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
meet at 6:30 p.m . at Star Mill Take child's shot records.
Park. This is a rescheduled Children must be accompameeting from last Tuesday.
nied by a parent or legal
MIDDLEPORT The guardan.

Community
Events

•

minutes
for $40/month.

1100 ANmME
OFFER INCWDES:

• Nationwide long dfstance

Exhibits

f&lt; US. Cellular
We connect with you:

Card showers

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
The Gallia Academy Athletic
Booster qub golf tournament i s scheduled for 1:30
p.m. on Thursday at Cliffside
Golf Course.
·
The best-ball scramble i s
open to teams of four players
each. One player with an 8
handicap or better is allowed
on each team. Team handicap
must be 35 or more .
There will be two flights
with pri~es awarded to the
wi'nners. Cash prizes of $500
for tirst place. $250 for second place and $100 for third
place will be awarded in the
Blue flight. Football souvenirs
will awarded to the top competitors in the White flight.
For information , contact
Matt Bokovitz iu (740) 446• 2399, or Tom Young at (740)
446-7477.

Basketball camp
rescheduled at
Bidwell-Porter
BIDWELL, Ohio - River
Valley High School boys and
girls basketball camp has been
rescheduled
for
Monday
through Wednesday at BidwellPoner Elementary School.
The camp will have two
sessions. Session one will run
from 9-11 :30 a.m. and is for
grades 7-8. Session two will
run from 12-2:30 p.m. and i s
for grades 3-6.
Cost of the camp is $30.
For information, contact
RVHS boys ba sketball head
coach Gene Layton at (740)
245 -5753.

RVHS boosters
meet Tuesday
CHESHIRE, Ohio - River

Valley High School Athletic ·
Booster&gt; will meet at 7 p.m.

·Support Groups

Thesday in Ill:: high school cafeteria

Carl Lee
football camp
registration
1•888•BUY•USCC

. uscellular.com

Alrt:IITHI" and phont oftefl Vlllid on rwo-year c:ontuiMf service agreements ol $4{l af!!;i higher. Pnxnot1001.l phor.e pricing Ia after $30 maJHn rebalfl.
"wwiciONI 111188 will apply lo pun;haH ~ ceij phone and wllll'lOf bt InCluded i~ the S3CI rebate. Offers exp1re upon calllllQ plan change. Night and
WMkend f'flii'UM are Vllld M·F ~m to 5:58tm and til day S.Mday and Sunday. N9'tt and weekend mtnulea rue aVR~a~e lo lOcal calling area
oriy. ~ ctwgel, H . tDe8 and rlll.ridlona may apply. Federal and Other Regula by F" charge al S.55 Wtl be aDded. Amonthly FederJJ
UnMtrNl StMcw Furd chlrge may ~· AM MI'Yic:4llgi'Nmentt IUDfld to an eany I91'1T11na1Jon lee. Actill811oo l&amp;e is $25 Limllid timtl offtr.

-• -

0

--

Mike Bartrum, above. talks with a fellow instructor during the Bartrum and Brown Football
Camp Friday at Spring Valley High School in Huntington. Former Marshall and current New York
Jets quarterback Chad Pennington, below left, and former Ohio State and current Tampa Bay
Buccaneers punter Tom Tupa, below right, were among the camp Instructors . (Andrew Cgrter)

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Final regi stration
for the Carl L ee Football
Camp will be held from 6 to
9 p.m . Monday at Gino' s in
Point Pleasant.

HUNTINGTON , W.Va. Giving back or paying forward, however you want to
describe it, Mike Bartrum
believes in it.
And that's why the Meigs
County native, along with former Marshall Univers:ty and
New England Patriots team mate Troy Brown, conducts
the Bartrum and Brown
Football Camp each summer.
Once again this year. the
camp Spring Valley High
School in Huntington hosted
the camp and Bartrum and
Brown invited some of their
National Football League
compatriots to share their
knowledge and skills with
aspiring gridiron greats.
Burtrum , who currently
play s for the Philadelphia
Eagles, said the main message
he wants young people to get,
though, is that the guys in the
pros are no different than the
young folks themselves .
'' It's a great feeling,"
Bart rum said of sponsorin g the
camp. "No. I , just to see these
kids' face s and see how happy
they are, to know that these
guys are grounded . And that 's
what life is all about, knowing
that people might pl ay in the
NFL, but they ' re just like
them. And I think that 's what
they realize out here.
" We wer:e in their same
steps, we went to grade school,
middle school , high school,
just like them."
Bartrum said the camp has
grown each year with nearly
400 athletes attendin g this
year 's camp.
" That's what we want to do,
make it bigger and better every
year," he said. "It's all about
the kid s. That 's the rea son

we ' re here.' '
Former Marshall and current New York Jets q~arter­
back Chad Pennington was of
sev.eral NFL players who participated in
the camp.
Pennington, who enters ·training camp thi s year ast he No. I

'That's what we
want to do, make
it bigger and
better every year.
It's all about the
kids. That's the
reason were
here."
- Mike Bartrum, -11• High
School alumnus and
current Philadelphia
Eaglea longaniJIINII'

QB_ said the camp represents
an investment for the community.
" The key to our future.is our
youth," Pennington said.
" And it's important for us as
profe ssional athletes and ·
younger adults to come back
and do our part to instill in
these guys what it takes to be
the best they can be . That 's
what we focus on.
" We focu s on giving 100
percent effort and making sure
that they 're out here having
some fun. "
Pennington said being at the
camp brought back memories
of his youth.
" I was a guy just like this
that went to these camps," he
said. "A lot of those speeche s
that you thought were boring
and really diqn't matter, but
they do matter. So when we
talk to these guys we try to
pick something out that may
raise an eyebrow, make them
think a little bit. "
Tom Tupa. a former Ohio
State All-American and current punter for the Super Bowl
'c hampion
Tampa
Bay
Buccaneers, forged a solid
friendship with Bartrum when
the two were teammates at
New England .. Tupa said he
j ust enjoys helping young people.
" It's nice coming back and
helping the kids out," Tupa
said. " You never know, if you
reach a kid and he learns some-

Please see Bartrum. IU

•

'Old man' Agassi still alive at Wimbledon
Bv StEVEN

WINE

Associated Press
WIMBLEDON , England
- Andre Agassi broke serve
only once but played two
nearly llawless tiebreakers
Saturday to edge Younes El
Aynaoui 5·7, 6-4, 7-6 {4), 7-6
· ( 4) in the third round at
Wimbledon . .
Agassi , trying at 33 to
become the oldest Wimbledon
champion in the Open era,
will face another big server in
the fourth round Monday Mark Philippoussi s.
El Aynaoui hit 19 aces to
keep every set close, and three
times he was within one point
of forcing a fifth set.
"So much does boil down to

his serve," Agassi saii:l . "It was
so important today for me to
take care of my own serve. So
I felt very, very focu sed."
In women's play, surprising
16-year-old Maria Sharapova
notched her biggest win vet at
Wimbledon, upsetting 2000
semifinalist Jelena Dokic 6-4,

6-4.
Al so advancing were three
other Russians No. I 0
Anatasi a Myskina, No. 15
Elena
Dementieva
and
Svetlana Kuznetsova - to
give their country five women
in the final 16. That's a Grand
Slam record for Russia.
Defending
champion
Serena William s, French
Open
champion Ju stine
Henin-Hardenne and Jennifer

"I don' t know what got into
'the fourth set, and he came up
with clutch shots in both me there." Agassi said. ~' I
tiebreakers, including a fore- . probably won 't do that again
hand winner on his final swing until about 20 10."
to close t~e 3-hour, 13-minute
Philippous sis, a three-time
match.
quarterfinali st but unseeded,
"Whenever· he needed it fired 33 aces and defeated No.
most, he hit the corners. he hit 35 Radel&lt; Stepanek 4-6, 7-6
the lines, he played his be st ( 7). 6-4, 7-6 (6). Agassi has
tenni s,"
three-time beaten Philippou ssis in six of
Wimbledon champion Boris their seven matches, includ'd .
ing their onl y meeti~ on
Bec k er sa1
Capriati won in straight set s.
·
d
d
27
h
gras
s in the 2000 quarte mals
El Aynaom, see e
On the men' s side, French
t .
Open champ Juan Carlos sm1· 1ed as h e con gratu 1ate d at Wimbledon.
Sharapova, a 6-footerf playth
Ferrero , 2002 runner-up A gass1· at l he net an d ofl.ered a
David Nalbandian and No. 10 thumbs-up.
ing in the toumament or e
Tim
Henman advanced .
The No . 2-seeded A gassi · first time , won every game she
served . She completed the
Henman is trying to become', lost serve only once and victory over Dokic with her
the first Englishman to win · changed his usual tactics by eighth ace, then gleefully
Wimbl edon sin ce 1936.
occasionally playing serve dropped her racket and made a
A gassi erased three set a1id volley. He won 27 of 30
points serving at 5-6, 0-40 in point s at th~ net.
Please see AJalsl. U
,j

•

'

l.

�Sunday, June 29, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

In NASCAR, money is
the root of all success
Bv

Associated Press

NASCAR driver Ricky Rudd s its in the garage area as his team works on his car at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedw('ly, in this Aug. 2. 2002 photo. Winning i~ any form of racing
requires the right combination of people , equipment and luck - and plenty of money. (AP)

15

2. Jeff Gordon

2,222

12

Dale Earnhardt' Jr. 2,220

13

4. Bobby Labonte

2,136

9

5. Michael Waltrip

2,024 .

16

6. Kurt Busch

2,012

15

7. Jimmie Johnson

1,965

16

8. Rusty Wallace

1,940

6

9. Kevin Harvick

1,901

13

10. Sterling Marl ill

1,892

5

SOURCE: NASCAR

Overcoming a soggy Cliffside Golf Course and two rain delays th is foursome still managed to
fire a 13-under par 59 to capture top honors in the· Sixth Annual Gallipolis Lions Club Golf
Tournament an June 19. Left to right, Cliff Simpkins, Lee Harris, Brent Woomer and Frank
Krauter.

Local ·hoops camp wraps up ·

Lions Club Golf Runnersup

·. ....
'•

·

GALLIPOLIS, . Ohio Nineteen boys in grades 7-9
participated in the Gallipolis
Area Basketball Camp held
at the First Church of the
Nazarene family life center
and operated by Jim
Osborne.
Individual and team offensive ·and defensive skills
were stressed durin'g the
three-day camp. Additional
talks were given concerning
the importance of academics,
work habits and efficiency in
practice.
Daily contests were held
with prizes donated by the
following local merchants:
Bob Evans Restaurants ,
Coca Cola, Coaches Corner,
The Movie Station, Shake
Shoppe, Kipling Shoes,

Gallipolis City Parks and Casey Love ; 8th grade- .
Recreation
Department, Luke Watts: 9th gradeLorobi 's, Bowman's Oxygen Kyle Hunter.
Supply and Zide's Sport · . Free throws: 7th gradeShop.
Casey Love; 8th grade- Eli
Contest winners were as Maher: 9th grade-Ky le
follow s:
' Hunter.
1-on-1: 7th grade-Casey
5-on-5
champs- Matt ·
Love: 8-9 grade-Kyle Caldwell, Sam Shawver,,
Hunter.
'
Kamal Dayal, Cory Mason , .
X-out: 7th grade-Casey Zach Haislop, Tyler Grimm .
The. camp coachm ou staff
Love; . 8th grade-Sam
Shawver; 9th grade-Matt induded Josh Donley,
Donnie Johnson, Cody ,
CaldwelL
Caldwell and Tom Bose.
Dribble Tag: · 7th gradeThe Baby Blue Basketball
Beau Whaley; 8-9 grade- Camp begins at 1 p.m.
Sam Shawver.
Tuesday at the First Church ,
Shooting 2s: 7th grade- of the Nazarene family life ·
Casey Love; 8th grade-Eli cen ter. It is open to children
Maher; 9th grade- Kyle in first through third grades.
Registration begins at 12:45
Hunter.
Shooting Js: 7th grade- p.m. Tuesday.

AMC honors Rio Grande athletes
Earning second place honors in the 2003 Gallipolis Lions Golf Tournament on June 19 with an
ll·under par 61 was this smiling foursome of, from left. Richie Dil lon, Norm Tarr, Ron Noe and
Tom Russell.

Lions Club Golf Third Place

CEDARVILLE, Ohio -The
American Nti~tConferenre
has passed out its post-season
scholar athlete awards and the
Rio Grande baseball and softball teams each had two members earn spots on the prestigious academic squad.
Junior pitcher Tim Sutton
achieved a 3.70 grade point average in education to eam a place
on the squad. He went 1-4 with a
6.91 ERA with three saves.

Junior second baseman
Gabe Devono also earned a
scholar athlete award with a
3.50 GPA in education. He
hit a career-high three home
runs and drove in 20 runs,
while leading the team in
batting at .412 with 37 runs
scored and 24 stolen bases.
Senior second baseman
Emily Cooper achieved a 3.88
grade point average - third
highest in the AMC ~ in

mathematics. She batted .351 .
for the season with 23 stolen :
bases and 20 runs scored. :
Cooper was also named second team AII-AMC for her
play on the field.
Junior outfielder Annie
Tucker, who also completed ·
her first year in soft ball ,
posted a 3.65 Gl"A in .
Biology. The Wayne, W.Va.,
native hit .280 with six RBI
during the season.

Don Tate Motors

AP

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

Despite shooting 10-under par 62 over 18 holes at Cliffside on June 19 this quartet of golfers
had to settle for third place in the Sixth Annual Gallipolis Lions Club Golf Tournament. From left,
Carl Beaver, Carroll Snowden, Bob Hennesy and Bill Conley.

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Gallipolis Basketball Camp

Photo

Winston Cup Series 2003

'

2,396

11. Tony Stewart 1,849; 12. Mark
Martin 1,846; 13, Robby Gordon
1,834; 14. Ricky Craven 1, 797; 15.
Terry Labonte 1 ,750; 16. Jeff Burton
1,737; 17. Ryan Newman 1,736; 18.
Elliott Sadler 1 ,677; 19. Bill Elliott
1,657; 20. Joe Nemechek 1,639; 21.
WardBurton 1 ,612; 22. Jamie
McMurray 1,596; 23. Dave Blaney
1,534; 24. Johnny Benson 1,528; 25.
Greg Biffle 1,527; 26. Ricky Rudd
· 1,479; 27. Jeremy Mayfield 1,447;
28. Kenny Wallace 1 ,427; 29. Dale
Jarrett 1 ,419; 30. Jimmy Spencer
-1,360; 31. Todd Bodine 1 ,355; 32.
Jeff Green 1 ,277; 33. Steve Park
1,257; 34. Casey Mears 1 ,209; 35.
Ken Schrader 1 , 172; 36. Jack
Sprague 1,171 ;.37. Kyle Petty 1, 148;
38. John Andretti 1, 137; 39. Tony
Raines 1,111; 40. Mike Skinner 1,004;
41. Jerry Nadeau 844; 42. Larry Foyt
585; 43 ..Mike Wallace 551; 44. Brett
Bodine 308; 45. Derrike Cope 258;
46. Christian Fittipaldi 213; 47. Boris
Said 155; 48. Ron Fellows; 49.
Hermie Sadler 128; 50. Hideo
Fukuyama 98

The 2Q03 NASCAR Winston Cup Richmond , Va. (Joe Nemechek)
Tenn .
schedule ·and standings, with win- May 25 - Coca-Cola 600, Aug. 31
Southern 500,
ners in parentheses:
Concord, N.C. (Jimmie Johnson)
Darlington, S.C.
Feb. 16- Daytona 500, Daytona June 1 - MBNA Amer~ca 400, Sept. 6 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Beach, Fla. (Michael Waltrip)
Dover, DeL (Ryan Newman)
400, Richmond, Va.
Feb. 23 - Subway 400, June 6 - Pocono 500 , Long Sept. 14 .,- New Hampshire 300,
"
.
R;::::~~~a~,~A~-~~~~~~~sler P~:~~~a5 (To~r~~~~~llite Radio Loudon.
Sept. 21 - Dover 400, Dover,
400, Las Vegas. (Matt Kenselh)
400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Kurt Busch)
Del.
March 9 - Atlanta 500 , June 22- DodgeSave Mart 350, Sept. 26 - EA Sports 500,
Hampton, Ga. (Bobby Labonte)
Sonoma, Calif. (Robby Gordon)
Talladega, Ala.
March 16 - Carolina Dodge .July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Oct. 5 - Kansas 400, Kansas
Dealers 400, Darlington, S.C. Beach, Fla.
.
(Ricky Craven)
· . July 13 - Tropicana 400, Joliet, Ciiy.
Oct.
11
- UAW-GM Quality 500,
March 23 - Food City 500, IlL
Concord,
N.C.
B~stol, Tenn. (Kurt BusCh)
July 20 - New . England 300,
Oct.
19
- Old Dominion 500,
March
30
Loudon, N.H.
Martinsville,
Va.
Sameun~adioShack 500, Fort
July 27 - Pennsylvania 500,
Oct.
26
- Georgia 500,
Worth, Texas. (Ryan Newman)
Long Pond.
Hampton,
Aprll6- Aaron's 499, Talladega, Aug . 3 - Brickyard 400 , ·
Nov. 2 - Checker Auto Parts
Ala. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
Indianapolis.
500,
Avondale, Ariz.
April .13 - VIrginia 500, Aug. tO - Sirius at The Glen,
Nov. 9 - Pop Se;:ret Microwave
Martinsville. (Jeff Gordon)
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
April 27 - Auto Club 500, Aug. 17 - Michigan 400, Popcorn 400 , Rockingham, N.C.
Fontana, CaiH. (Kurt Busch)
Brooklyn.
Nov. 16 - Ford 400, Homestead,
May 3- Pontiac Excitement 400, Aug. 23 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Fla.

Lions·Club Golf Champs

Points top 10

1. · Matt Kenseth ·
3.

00
Intrigue

• Page 83

·w inston Cup
Series
Wks. in
Driver

way with Winston Cup, but mon template.
"But still, your best funded
it's here now," Rudd said.
As an owner, Rudd urged teams are going to have the
NASCAR to require the best people and the best
teams to run cars with identi- equipment," he said. "It'll
cal fiberglass bodies: out-of- never change in any form of
the-mold Chevrolets. ·out-of- racing, from Formula One to ·
the-mold Fords, out-of-the- here."
IIJOid Dodges, · where that
Each of the three RCR
shape couldn 't be altered.
teams consists of 35-50 peo"AII that wind tunnel time pie. All told, RCR employs
would really be nonsense," he about 270 people - "'any
said. "I was pushing hard for with salaries starting well
that as an owner just because over $100,000.
of the money I was spending
Gordon has seen it from
cutting cars up every week .
both sides as a · driver and
"There's ways you can owner or co-owner at various
maybe try to limit so techno!- times in NASCAR, CART
ogy doesn't buy the sport. "
and the IRL.
Childress just shakes his head. · He understands the prob"lt'll never harpen ," · he lems. Still he's looking at get'
insisted.
ting back into team ownership
He said NASCAR has in NASCAR .
worked to equalize things
''I don ' t want to jinx
with changes such as the sin- myself," he said. "But yeah,
gle-engine rule and the com- . maybe in a couple of years."

~i1Uipoli5 ~ilp ~nbunr

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

. NASCA A TOP 10

TOM GARDNER

SONOMA,
Calif.
Winning in any fonn of racing
requires the ril;lht combination
of people, equtpment and luck
-and plenty of money.
Just ask Robby Gordon and
car owner Richard Childress,
who parlayed ali of the above
into a victory Sunday at
Infineon Raceway.
"Racing is about the tool~
you have to do your job,"
Gordon said. "The more
money you have, the better
tools you buy."
Childress sees that as an
'oversimplification. The best
tools in his box are preparation and personnel.
"You do more technology,"
he said. "You evaluate your
people in every aspect - the
driv~trs and crew chiefs, the
engineers and tire changers."
All came together when
Gordon got the second victory
of his Winston Cup career in
the Dodge/Save Man 350.
Richard Childress Racing
teammate Kevin Harvick finished third.
won
about
Gordon
$205,000
Harvick,
$120,000. At the low end,
Jack Sprague got $54,720.
The winnings paid only a
percentage of the cost of
putting the cars on the track.
That's estimated at about
$250,000 per race, depending
on the .earn.
"Twenty guys can win the
race," Gordon said. "I think
that's why the sport continues
to grow. So many people can
win.
"Once you have a certain
amount of budget, it's how
you spend that budget from
the top teams to the middle
teams to the little teams.
You've got to have the right
people and you· ve got to get
them to march in line."
Rarely can it be done without big bucks.
.
Andy Petree said in 200 I
that he ran two teams the previous year for less than the
$16 million he said Viagra's
parent company spent to paint
its logo on Mark Martin's car.
Petree boasted that both of his
cars won, while Martin failed
to post a top-three finish.
Ricky Rudd, who sold his
team in 1999, said he got tired
of looking for money. He finished that season in 31st, the
worst of his career and the
first without a victory- in 17
years.
"When we started off, we
had a good budget," l)e said.
"Things started going more
and more high tech. The cost
of gadgets got more expensive. There's ali sons of
things going on out there that
are very expensive for a car
owner.
"The wind tunnel was
something you did maybe
twice a year, not 20 times, 30
·times. I don't know how you
can control that."
He cringes at Gordon's
assertion that only the
wealthy can be successful, but
doesn't quarrel with that
notion.
"I hate to see it head that

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Four str.okes separated the winning foursome from this fourth place team in the 2003 Gallipolis
Lions Club Golf Tournament during the 18-hole event played on a wet and soggy layout on June
19. Fini?hing with a 9-under par 63 was this team composed of, from left, Mark Dillon, Steve
Theiss, Jim "Jimbo" Miller and Tom Young.
·

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.,

�•

Page 84 • &lt;!OOihpolis IBailp ~ribtlll~

Agassi
prayerful gesture to the sky.
By reaching the fourth round,
Sharapova matched the best
showing by a wild card in
women's
singles
at
Wimbledon. Three others have
done it. most recently Samantha
Smith of Britain in 1998.
"I'm very haepy. and I'm
very surprised,· Sharapova
said. "I'm very voui1g. I' m 16,
and l"m in the fourth round &lt;It
· · Wimbledon . How odd is that' 1
But I knew that on!: day it
would come. I am surprised.
but it'sjust reality."
Sharapova was born in
Siberia and has live'd in Florida
since age 6. Shedraws·criticism
for the high-pitched grunts that
sometimes accompany her
shots, but in h~r ftrst match on
Court I. there were few shrieks
until the tina! points.
Her showing is remini scent
of the fir st appearance at
Wimbledon . by Dokic. who
upset No. I Martina Hi.ngis in
the -first round in 1999 and
went On tO the qul\rterfinaJs.
Dokic was then 16.
"She just comes out and
swings," Dokic said. "She has
nothing to lose."
Sharapova. ranked .91 st. lost
her first five matches this year
but has blossomed on grass. She
reached the semifinal two weeks
ago at Binningham and has now
beaten two seeded players at
Wimbledon - No. II Dokic
and No. 21 Elena Bovina.
Williams beat fellow
American Laura Granville 63, 6-1 and will next play
Dementieva. ·
HeninHardenne, seeded third, beat
Alicia Molik 6-4, 6-4.
Capriati. seeded eighth. ·
requested treatment on her
right shoulder from a trainer
during the first set but still beat
Akiko Morigami 6-4, 6-4.
"The shoulder is nothing
serious," Capriati said. "I just
had a little kink in there and
wanted to get it out."
Mysl:ina was a 6-3, 6-3 winner against 1994 champion
Conchita Martinez. who was
seeded 18th. Dementieva beat
Ahiko , Kapros 6-3, 6" I .
Kuznetsova, seeded 33rd,
. defeated Emi I ie Loit 6- I, 6-2.
Two-time Grand Slam
champion Mary Pierce eliminated No. 23 Lisa Raymond 4-

iuubap ltmd ·imtinl

Reds

from Page 81

from

P~ge

Outdoon

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis •Point Pleasant

hunter

B1

Page BS
Sunday, June 29, 2003

West Virginia Fish Report

Gerut returned the favor on
Griffey in the sixth with a leapin~ catch in right before tumbhng onto the warning track.
But Kearns got GenJt again
the seventh with a . running
catch before crashing into the
right-tield wall. Kearns, wh.o
has been bothered by a sore
right shoulder si nce May. was
replaced by a pinch-hitter in
the bottom of the inning.
Sabathia
· dominated
Cincinnati's lineup lOr-the lir;;t tour
innings beltm~ A.uun Bmnc beat
out an inlieldsingle to tl1ird leading
otrthe tifth lclr the ReM lirst hit.
Lawtnn connected for his ·
ninth homer in the lirst, a towering shot to right to make it 1-0.
·The homerwasC!eveland 's first Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. (30) jumps high to catch a fly ball··
in eight games. snapping astreak out by Cleveland 's Jody Gerut in the fourth inning Saturday in
of79 innings without one.
Cleveland. (AP)

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - The West Virginia
fis~ing
(eport, released
Thursday by the Division of
Natural Resources:
BEECH FORK - Lake
is at summer recreation
level. Lake and tail water are
clear. Fishing the shorelines
with crankbaits has bee-n
good for largemou th and
spotted bass. l;lybrid striped
bass have been taken in open
water with minnows and

chi cken liver suspended
under a bobber. Bottom fishing with chi cken li ver has
produced nice catches of catfish.
BLUESTONE- Lake is
at summer recreation level.
Lake and tailwater are
cloudy. Fishing on the lake is
good for sunfish during early
and late hours around any
downed trees or weed beds
using worms, small minnows
or j igs. Bass anglers should
concentrate their efforts
along areas with good structure such as downed timber,
rocky drops . or weed beds.
Topwater baits such as
rapalas, tiny torpedoes and
sluggoes are excellent choices. Bluegill can provide
anglers with some fast action
using worms and small jigs.
Channel catfish are hitting in

at Buckeye. Hills Career Center

the lake primarily at night on
chicken liver and worms: '
BURNSVILLE- Lake is
at summer recreation level.
Lake is clear and tail water is
milky. Bass are being caught
in 'shallow water but the
largest bass wil l be found on
st ructure in deeper water.
Spotted and largemouth bass
tishing has been great using
crankbaits and plastics.
Anglers report nice crappie
while bluegill are being
caught from area fish auraetors. Live bait and small jigs
are working best. Try the
tai lwater for some trout fishing action. Saugeye and
walleye are being picked up
on jigs tipped with live. minnows.
EAST LYNN- Lake is at
su mmer recreation level.
Lake and tail water ·are
murky. As the water begins
to clear, channel catfish wi II
active ly begin feeding. Now
is a great time to try chicken
li ver fished on the bottom.
Anglers can also expect to
catch some nice largemouth
and spotted bass near weed
beds while usi ng buzzbaits,
crankbaits or plastic grubs.
R.D. BAILEY -Lake is
approximately 36 feet above
sumnier recreation level.
Lake is closed due to high

water . . The tailwater is
muddy. Some spotted bass
should be hitting early and
late in the day along the
rocky drops with points
another good spot to try.
Bluegill are providing consistent action in the standing
timber with .wufms and small
jigs the best baits. Fishing
for hybrid striped bass and
channel catfish is good off a ·
shallow point at night using
chicken liver and softshell
crayfish. Anglers should
concentrate their efforts
early and late during periods
of extreme heat. Carp are ·
also providing a lot of fun for :
night anglers usi ng corn and
doughballs.
.
STONECOAL LAKE Lake is at summer recreation
!eve I. The lake is clear on the
lower end and milky on the
upper end. Trout fishing continues to be excellt;nt for·
anglers trolling small plugs ·
and spinners while shoreline
anglers are having some success on powerbait. Bass fi shing has been good for anglers
working the shoreline struc- ·
lure with soft plastics and
minnow .. imitations. A few
large walleye and some crappie are being picked · up
around fish attractors on live
bait and small jigs.

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Andre Agassi plays a return Morocco's Younes El Aynaoui
Saturday during their third-round match at the All E;ngland Lawn
Tennis Championships on the Centre Court at Wimbledon.-(AP)
6. 6-3, 7-5.
The No . . 3-seeded Ferrero·
defeated Sargis Sargsian 6-4,
6-4, 2-6. 6-4. Nalbandian,
seeded sixth, stopped Karol
Kucera 6-4. 5-7. 6-7 ( I). 6-4.
6-2. Henman swept 18-yearold Swedish qualifier Robin
Soderling 6-3. 6-1. 6-4.
Olivier Rochus reached the
fourth round at a Grand Slam
event for the first time by beating No. 30-seeded Jarkko
Nieminen 7-6 (5), 6-3, 6-1.

Bartrum
from Page 81
thing, it helps him. then you've done your job.
I went to football and bask~tball camps when I
was younger and there's certain guys you
remember from those camps and, hopefully,
these guys will take something away from this
camp, too."
~ Other current NFL players \vho participated
in the camp Friday included John Wade of
Tampa Bay, Chris Hanson of Jack sonville,
Chris Massey of St. Louis. Tony Stewart of
Cincinnati and JeffThomason of Phil adelphia.
Former Ohio State wide recei ver Allen
D'eGraffenreid was also one of the camp
instructors.
A golf tournament was held Saturday at
Spring Valley Golf Cub. Proceeds from the
camp and go! f tournament will benefit area
·young people, according to Meigs High School
football coach Mike Chancey.
Bartrum donates his portion of the -proceeds
to the Meigs football program, while Brown
uses hi s share to support boys and girls clubs in
the Huntington area. Spring Valley High
School, as host, collects the remaining third.of

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Alexander Popp of Germany,
a quarterfinalist in 2000.
downed No. II Jiri Novak 63,6-4, 7-6 (3).
Popp's mother is English,
and the London media are ·
eager to adopt him as British
- during Wimbledon, at
least.
"Well, it's up to you," Popp
said. "But obviously I've been
playing for Germany the last
26 years, and it doesn't look
like it's going to change."

the proceeds.
·
:The special thing about (Bartrum) is he hasn't changed any," Chancey said. "He's still the
same person he always was. A lot of people, to
have the success that he has had, they may get
the big ·head or think that they're somebody
special, but he's just the same quality of person
and he takes care of us so well .''
Chancey said that due to Bartruin 's generosity. Meigs has been able to purchase new
weight equipment and video equipment which
is housed in the school 's new athletic center.
-· "What a tremendous gesture on his part to
remember us at Meigs High School and take
care of us." Chancey said,
Bartrum and his wife Jennifer have built a
ho.use in Meigs County and spend time there
when they're not in Philadelphia. Chancey said
Bartrum has spent a lot of time with the
Marauder football team. helping out in the
weight room and running drills for the ballclub.
Chancey said former Marauder great Justin
Roush. now a member of the Ohio University
football squad, has also joined in the workouts
and donated his time to help out his alma mater.
"For us to have two alumni like that, with the
accomplishments they have done, to come
back and be part of our football family, it's just
a tre111endous asset for us," Chancey said.

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Eight-year-old Olivia Roach caught this 31 7~inch shark while deep sea fishing off the coast of
South Carolina.
She is the daughter of Paul and
.
. Dodie Roach of Point Pleasant.
.

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Ohio Fish Report

High School and Adult programs offered!
For more information about the opportunities

Buckeye Hills Career Center offers

HOLZER
· CLINIC
www.holzerclinic.com

Dr. Shute will be resuming his practice beginning

Tuesday, June 24,2003

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Main Branch
Gallipolis
740.446.5411

Lawrence County
Proctorville. OH
740. 886. 9403

'

Orthopedic Center of
Point Pleasant
304.675.5971

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- The weekly fishing repon
provided by the Division of
Wildlife of the
Ohio
Department
of Natural
Resources.
.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
Turkey Run Wildlife Area
(Perry County)- Water conditions are clear and normal.
Hand-sized bluegills are
being caught on maggots and
inline rooster tails during the
late afternoon and early
evening hours.
Rooseve lt Lake (Scioto
County J - Water conditions
are at normal pool and clear
with temperature at 67
degrees . While bass fishing at
this lake is slowing down, the
bluegill fishing is in full
swing for kids and their families . Wax wprms and night
crawlers are the most successful baits.
Muskingum River (Morgan
and Washington Counties)Although the river is still
muddy, the level has dropped
to almost normal pool. Water
temperature is around , 68
degrees . Fishing for catfish is
exce llent below the dams at
McConnelsville. Stockport,
and Devola. Channel catfish
12 to 16 inches in length are
hitting on night crawlers.
Shovelhead catfish activity is
excellent with anglers using
whole goldfish or cut bluegill.
This past weekend. anglers
caught catfish that weighed
34, 36. and 38 pounds.
OHIO RIVER
While water levels remain
high, the river and water temperature (65 to 68 degrees)
are at optimal conditions fof
catfishing.
• Washington County
Fishing for catfish is hot in
this stretch of the river. From
Marietta to Beverly to
Newport, anglers are catching
caifish 20 to 30 inch~:s in
length and over 10 pounds in
size. Cut bluegill or whole
large gold fish used · while
tight-lining are the best baits.
Stripers are being caught
from the stretch of river
behind the Lafayette Hotel in
Marietta imd in the Newpon
area by tight-lin.ing with
chicken liver.
Scioto County· - Channel
' catfish up to 24 inches in
length are being caught on
chicken liver fished on the

bottom at the confluence of pier near the park office.
the Scioto and Ohio Rivers.
Grand Lake St. Marys
Fishing at Greenup is poor at (Auglaize &amp; Mercer counties)
this time due to river condi- - Channel catfish are being
tions. Three of the darn gates caught using shrimp, cut shad
were open this past weekend and night crawlers on bottom.
allowing a swift flow of water Fish off the rocks along the
and debris. The fishing access east bank shoreline and
in this area is still under Harmon's Landing on the
water.
south side of the lake. Anglers
CENTRAL OHIO
are also catching'bluegill on
Alum
Creek
Lake wax worms and small jigs
(Delaware County) - Watch near the handicap accessible
for weed beds to emerge. pool on the east bank. Crappie
Saugeye, muskellunge. and fishing has slowed down a bit
largemouth bass will all con- but a few nice sized fi sh are
centrale in the available · being taken by .successful
weeds. There was a very anglers. Try using small jigs
strong year-class of saugeye with plastic bodies in 12-14
in 2002 and these fish should inches of water around subbe approaching harvestable merg'ed brush and rocky
size. Spinner baits, shallow areas.
running crank baits and jerk
LAKE ERIE
l)aits all produce over and
Western Basin - Excellent
around the weed beds . walleye fishing continued
Overcast days are best, espe: across the Western Basin durcially at sunrise and sunset for ing the past week. Limit
fishing shallow weeds. Weed catches of'! 8-to . 22-inch fi sh
beds with the wind blowing have been reported in the area
int&lt;' them that have a distinct around the Toledo Shipping
''mud line" (suspended silt) Channel Turnaround Buoy.
are particularly good for Best methods included cast:
saugeye.
ing gold weapons and trolling
Oakthorpe Lake (Fairfield spoons or crawler harnesses.
County)- This secluded, 41- In the Bass Islands area troacre lake provides the only phy fish and some limits confishing for redear sunfish in tinue to be caught east and
the public waters of central northeast of Kelleys Island.
Ohio. Use a night crawler or Fish from 14 to 29 inches are
cricket suspended by a bobber being caught. in 12 to 45 feet
to catch this fish. Carp can be of water by trollers using
taken using doughballs and dipsy divers with spoons or
night crawlers fished, on the crawler harnesses and by
bottom. Crappie may be taken drifters casting weight forusing a minnow suspended by ward ,spinners. Limit catches
a bobber, look for drop-offs have also been reported from
on the western side of the the area w,est of Green Island
lake. This lake has a very and Rattlesnake Island by .
good largemouth bass popula- trollers using spoons in 24
tion with many large fish. Try feet of water.
using spinner baits, plastics,
Yellow perch fis/lirig has
and crank baits along cover been best between Kelleys
on the western side of the Island and the Canadian border
lake. Electric motors only.
in 25 to 40 feet of water.
SOUTHWEST OHIO
Spreaders tipped with shiners
Cowan Lake (Clinton have been most productive for
County)- Anglers are catch- · 8- to 13-inch fish. Kelleys
ing crappie everywhere Island and the Bass Islands
around the lake using live have pnxluced the best smallminnow or small 1/!6 to 1/64 mouth bass catches. Tube jigs
jigs (chartreuse or green). have been used to catch fish
Best fishing seems to be between 15 and 20 inches.
about I 0 feet from shore June is the peak spawning periaround submerged trees and od for smallmouth bass in
brush. Sprague Road located Lake Erie. When practicing
off of State Rte. 730 is a good catch-and-release please return
spot where 'the road ends at fish to the water as quickly as
the lake. Fish next to the boat possible so that the bass may
'docks. Another good location return to its nest to protect its
·is around the handicap fishing eggs from goby predation.

AGRICULTURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
INTERNET SERVICES
AUTOMOTIVE

BlueStarr Network

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge:com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.bluestarr.net
MEDICAL

www.turnpikeflm.com

Holzer Medical Center

BUSINESS TRAINING

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clinic

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

www.yokeyes.com
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

EMPLOYMENT
lnfoCision Management Corp.

www.infocision.com

www.mydailytribune.com
The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

ENTERTAINMENT

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com .
-

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS
Herbalife Independent Distributor

www.herbsndielcpm

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 COD•
surners in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a llstbig of your web address in our

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

• I

�Page 86 •

Inside:

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Celebrations, Page C6
Food ideas, Page C3
On the Bookshelf, Page C2

Golf after coal

Former mountaintop
mine now golf course
BY JOHN RABY

Associated Press

WHARNCLIFFE, W.Va. - Just when
Mark Nicewonder gave up his dream of
designing golf courses, his uncle called with
an idea: come build one at a southern West
Virginia coal mine - ·2 miles up a mountain.
Nicewonder, admitting he "had to pull a few
rabbits out of the hat and do some things that
a lot of your top architects would not do,"
came up with Tw1sted Gun Golf Club, a linksstyle course short on trees, long on distance,
and definitely worth the drive.
At first, golfers don't ]5.now what they' re
getting into.
The miles leading up to the former Low Gap
mountaintop mining site in Mingo County
consist of a curvy, muddy road and a coal
truck or two.
Get to the top .of the mountain and golfers
see a star!&gt; contrast - rolling green terrain,
meadows, rock walls and wetlands.
"Mountaintop removal has had its negative
publicity in the state, but what I think they did
at Twisted Gun was a wonderful reclamation
of that piece of property," said Danny Fisher,
executive director of the West Virginia Golf
Association. "It's a different character of just
about any golf course in the state."
The course's Web sites boasts that Twisted
Gun is the only 18-hole course in the southern
West Virginia coal counties of Mmgo,
McDowell and Logan because of the regio n's
steep, mountainous terrain.
It 's also is one of only a few in the nation
built on a former mountaintop mine - another is StoneCrest Golf Course two hours away
in Prestonsburg, Ky. West Virginia has at least
two other courses on former mine sites, however.
In mountaintop mining, the top of a mountain is blasted away to expose coal seams.
State and federal regulations require the disturbed land to be returned to its approximate
original contour when mining is finished.
However, variances are allowed if the land is
used for industrial, commercial, residential or
public recreation.
·
. Don Nicewonder, who built The Virginian
golf course in Bristol, Va., came up with the
golf course idea. His Premium Energy Corp.
was a contractor for Mingo Logan Coal Co. to
operate the Low Gap mine.
"Being in West Virginia in mining for I 0
years, I thought i! would be a great g~st ur~ to
give the people 10 southern West Vtrgtma a
nice place to come play golf and let people see
what can be done w1th some of this abandoned mine land," Nicewonder said.
Nicewonder took his idea to Mingo Logan's

parent, Arch Coal Inc. , and to Norfolk
Southern railroad subsidiary Pocahontas Land
Corp., which had leased the land's mineral
rights to Arch Coal.
.
The three parties agreed to contribute
money from every ton of coal n:ined from the
Low Gap mine. Work started 10 1995 whtle
mining was still going on. Mining at the
course finished in 200 I but continues next to
the site.
It took more than playin~ with a· computer
to bring Mark Nice wonder s first golf course
design to fruition. The Houston man dtrected
much of the work over the telephone.
"I'm in Texas, and l had a bunch of guys up
there who didn't even piay golf. ~ere I'm 1.1)'ing to tell them how to dump thts matenal m
there to make it look like a golf course;" he
said. "I spent hours and hours on the phone
sometimes with some guys just trying to
describe how I wanted some of the holes to
look."
Irrigation pipe was installed and coal wastes
from a nearby preparation plant were ~auled
to the site and spread around. SubsOil was
screened and laid 2 i11ches thick as the base for
the grass.
"It was extremely tough because we didn't
have much topsoi l up there," Mark
Nicewonder said.
Reminders of the region's heritage are
everywhere, from the faint hum of coal trucks
at the working operations far below the No. 2
green to the flakes of coal in the bunkers.
A brown Norfolk Southern rail car sits to the
left of the No. 5 green. Along the 14th tee,
tbere 's a red caboose.
Also standing out are the course's lack of
trees - there's none. Planting them would
have added hundreds of thousands of dollars
to the cost.
"Some people say 'you've got to have
trees.' TheY're just not used to playing golf in
West Virginia without tree-lined views," said
Sam Wampler, the course's golf pro.
Having trees "takes away from the effect of
the open, links-sty le, wind-swept nature of the
course," he said.
Developers hope Twisted Gun will become
part of a proposed state go_lf ~~I s imi!~ ~o
one in Alabama. The West Vtrgmta golf trail Is
still in the planning stage.s · by the state
Development Office.
West Virginia's other courses built on former coal mines are the private Pete Dye Golf
Club in north-central West Virginia, which
opened in 1995, and Scarlet Oaks Country
Club near Charleston that opened in 1978.

Page Cl
Sunday, June 29, 2003

on
Bob Evans Farms celebrates 5Oth
.
anniversary of being (down on the farm'
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Golf pro Sam Wampler drives from the third tee at the Twisted Gun Golf course in Wharncliffe.
W.Va. Twisted Gurris one of few·courses in the nation built on a former mountaintop mine. (AP)

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executive of the company that fOLmd.er be reinstated as commoved to Columbus in 1968. pany spokesman , where he
Evans retired as president in was commonly seen wearing
1986. He still draws a. crowd a Stetson and string tie in
· when he walks into the · Bob advertising. '
·
Evans restaurant in this southOwens. who succeeded
eastern Ohio town just a Dan Evans. said he generally
~tone' s throw from the farmdoes not seek out the opinhouse.
ions of retired executives, but
He warmly greets longtime he does talk to Evans two or
employees at the restaurant three times a m·omh.
he visits several times a week
"Bob 's been retired a long
and even brings them flowers time and the busi ness. has
grown in his garden 'at his changed a lot," he said.
home a couple of miles away.
With the company more
" He 's great, one of the focused now and the stock
nicest people you ' II ever ·trading hi gher, Evans said he
find ," said Diana LeMaster, is happier with the compa41 , of nearby Oak Hill. a ny 's performance ~
server at the resta urant for 23
"They 're doing a pretty
years. "He doesn't know any good job.'" he said. 'They got
Horses, cattle, a fe w deer and goats call Bob Evans Farm home. Bob Evans, founder of the
strangers." ·
rid of all those dogs."
company,
lived on the Bob Evans Farm in Rio Grande for nearly 20 years. He and his wife, ·
Childhood friend and classAnalysts credit the compaJewell,
raised
their six children in the large, brick farmhouse known as the Homestead.
mate Loeta "Pete" Abblett , ny 's success to building a
84, said Evans was fun to be business emphasizing quality
with as a chi ld, a mischievous food, cleanliness. service and
boy who often ended up in the also a homey atmosphere in
school oflice:
·
the restaurants - which now
"Bob liked everybody. He's make up 83 percent of sales.
a good PR man," said Abblett,
"Family values are reflected
who still sees Evans once a at every aspect of the operation,
month when the two get · from the menu to the decoratogether with other classmates tions,'' said Chris Boring, presfor breakfast in nearby· ident of Boulevard Strategies. a
Gallipolis .
Columbus-bao;ed company that
Still. Evans can be blunt follows the retail industry.
Bob Evans Farms facts:
and he does not hold back on
The red brick restaurants
- Founded in 1953 by
criticizing the company.
have white trim and the yelfarmer Bob Evans and five
On his list : a failed low "Bob Evans" name,
friends and family members.
Mexican concept, Cantina reflecting Evans' handwriting•.
- Went public in 1963
del Rio, that the company at the top of · the building.
with the issuance of 160,000
tes.ted in the l 990s. "That Inside, there are baskets hangshares
of stock at $9 per
was a disaster," he said.
ing from the walls along with
share .
Also, some acq ui sitions quilts, antiques !lfld historical
- Original 12-stool diner
that he says were a facror' in photos from the area where
in
Gallipolis has grown into a
hi s retirement. "Boy, this is the restaurant is located.
the time for me to get out of
"Good food, good service Rio Grande, Ohio, was founded as Adamsville, but there chain of 522 restaurants in 22
here. They weren't asking my will always win out;" said already was an Adamsville, Ohio, which was located in states, most under the name
opinion."
Dennis Joe, restaurant ana- Muskingum County. So as legend hold , local residents heard Bob Evans.
- Sausage and other prodHe said the company will lyst with Sidoti and Co. "It's about a battle along the Rio Grande River during the U.S.·
have problems if it ever just as a si mpl e as that."
Mexican war and the rest is local history. This cabin is part of ucts sold in about 13,300 grocery stores in 30 states.
strays' from the original idea
Adamsville
mock-up village.
Evans says, "Quality is
- Profits for fiscal 2003
of emphasizing farm-fresh long remembered after price
totaled
$75. 1 million, or
products.
is forgotten ." ·
$2.10 per share, up II percent
Evans helped halt the sale
Evans for years has been
from a year ago. Sales totaled
of the ·company to food giant involved in community work
$1.1 billion, up 3 percent.
Beatrice Foods Inc. in the and has supponed agriculture
early 1980s and in 2000 programs including 4-A and
Source: Bob Evans Farms
backed· a proposal to sell the FFA. He was instrumental in
company to beef up the stock getting U.S. 35 widened in
pnce.
southeast Ohio.
At the 1996 ann ual meetThese days, hi s passion is
ing, share holders accused pushing year-ro und grazing
Dan Evans. Evans' cousin as a way to help fami ly farms
who succeeded his father as in America.
chairman and chief execu"I get more satisfaction out ,
tive, of trying to · erase his of helping 1these small farmKey dates in hi story of Bob . Res,taurant, called The Sausage Owens Country Sausage Inc.,
cousin ·s image from restau- ers than anything I ever did," Evans
Farms Inc.:
Shop, at Evans' farm in Gallia which today is sold in I0 southra nts and corporate offices. Evans said. "They' ve been
1946: Bob Evans opens County after the number of western states. There are nine
They also asked that the the backbone of the nation. " restaurant near a bu sy truck
visitors began to inc~ase .
Owens Restaurants in Texas.
stop in Gallipolis.
196R: Company moves
2000: Stewart Owens
1948: Evans .begins pro- headquarters to Columbus.
becomes chief executive of
ducing sausage with the idea
1986: Evans retires as presirent. Bob Evans Farms. He
of making it a business.
1971 : Emerson Evans, becomes chairman in 200 I,
1953: Evans and five rela- Bob's uncle, retires as tlrst succeeding Dan Evans,
tives and friends incorporate chairman of the board.
Evans' cousin.
Bob Evans Farms in
1983: IOOth restaurant
2002: SOOth restaurant
Gallipolis.
opens in Schaumburg, Ill.
opens in Canton, Mich.
1962: The company opens
1987: Bob Evans Farms
the original Bob Evans buys Richardson. Texas-based
Source: Bob Evans Farms

Bob
Evans:
Facts

Bob Evans: I imeline

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RIO GRANDE - The 12stool steakhouse that sat ne·xt
to a busy truck terminal on a
state rou te in nearby
Galli poli s had a problem: It
could not get quality sausage
to serve the truckers who
filled the place 24 hours a
day, seven days a week.
. Starting with $ 1,000, a couple of hogs, 40 pounds of
black pepper. SO pounds of
sage and other secret ingredients, the farmer opted to make
his own, using a hog's best
parts as opposed to the scraps
commonly used for sausage.
He sold it at the restaurunt and
mom-and, pop stores, and
peddled tubs of it out of the
back of his pickup truck.
It marked the beginn ing of
what h ~wn to a $1.1 billion-a-year enterprise spread
over 30 states, including 522
restaurants in 22 states that
serve 161 million people a
year.
"People like to deal with
farmers. They like to buy
stuff from the farm. They
think its fresher, " said Bob
Evans, 85 . "In their mind. it 's
better. and they're willing to
pay more for it."
This year, Bob Evans Farms
Inc. · is marking the 50th
anniversary of when Evans
and five relatives and friends
joined as partners to incorporate the company.
As part of the celebration,
the company has turned
Evans' old farmhouse where
he and hi s wife, Jewell, raised
their family into a museum. It
includes an , exhibit showing
some of the company's early
television ads of the couple in
their kitchen in the mid-1950s.
The 1820s-era brick house
is on nearly 1,000 acres that
has t urned into a major
tourist attraction in southeast
Ohio's rolling Gallia County.
The company has been listed on the Nasdaq stock market since 1963. An investor
· who bought I,000 shares at $9
each then would now have
more than $2 million in company stock. The company also
has grown from five employees to more than 40,000.
"Bob is a creative guy, an
idea man. a quality control
specialist. That was really the
role he played." said Stewart
Owens. chairman and chief

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Bob fvans and his wife. Jewell , ride a buggy while serving as marshals in a recent local parade.

"

The original Bob Evans Restaurant sits on the Evans· original farm. Patrons can still vi.sit the
working fatm where hay, corn, sorghum are grown on the nearly 1,000 acre working farm .

�_Page C2

iunbap Qtimt~ ·ientinel

Page C3

Sunday, July 29, 2003

•

Happy families . . . LEARNING cuRv.E
are all alike . ~~~~!~9 Harry ~~~=:~,~~~ ~~a_.~~~~~
from last Frid;iy's all-nightef.
No. I uon't mean wllege-student study jng t(Jr tinals kind of
nigllt. I me•m. Mom standing
Diane
around for live manic H;my
Potter houfS at the Barnes &amp;
NaderNoble. And ut precisely 12:15
Epling
am. we. reached the Holy Grail .
of books-yep. our daugl1ter is
now the proud owner of the
new tifth edition. one of a billion. but she's not Wllllling.
canoe. Along the way, you'll
: While J K. Rowling is maneuver . the Great Lakes;
churnl11g the cash registers bowls of water pouring into
these days with her flill throttle one another, as Holling likes to
mystery writings. Holling C. describe them. You'll roll along
Holling's time-worn stories rivers and tributaries . come
have steadily churned the face to face with the gigantic
imaginations of readers, young sawblade at the lumberyard,
and old. Meandering along · and meet up with the people
places and peoples we've all who help you along toward
learned abou t in history classes reaching your destination-the
(yawn. sigh). Holling C. sea, of course.
Holling is renowned for his
Holling c. Holling's imagiintricately woven tales of his- native story is a masterful
torical adventures.
.
study in how to teach history
In "Paddle-To-The-Sea" and geography through what
(tirst published in 194.1). the Charolette M&lt;eson, a tum-ofjourney begins in the Canadian the-century British educator
wilderness
along
Lake called
"living
book s".
Superior. An Indian boy has Teaching these and other subwhittled, from pine. a canoe jects primarily through secone foot in length. Knelt with- ondary sources, e.g. cunricuin is an Indian tigure, paudle in Iurn texttiOoks presents highhand. On the canoe's underbel- lighted events in abbreviated
lv are carved these words: form. History in these texts is
. ~PLEASE Pl.JT ME BACK IN sieved through the textbook
WATER - I AM PADDLE TO writers' interpretations of that
THE SEA".
. history, leaving the reader with
Pal:k your bags. You're a diluted and often skewed
abou t to set out on a wonderful accounting. Living books, on
journey and Holling has pro- the other hand, are real-life
vided you with the best seat in accounts of events told through
the house-! mean boat, er, the author's experiences and

More than a
inconcluhundred years
sive.
ago Russian
The docnovelist Leo
tor's house,'
Tolstoy wrote
by
Ann
Beattie is not
at the beginning of 'Anna
Beverly
her
best
Karenina,'
Gettles
work. She
"Happy famihas written
lies are all
beautiful
alike; every
shon stories,
unhappy famibut the charly is unhappy
acters in this
in its own ·way."
novel are less than lovable When was tbe last time you all of them. This is also a
heard of a happy family in three-part story, told from the ·
fiction? Was it the Waltons? perspective of the mother, the
Maybe the Ingalls · in the daughter arid the son. The
'Little house' series?
. father, perhaps the most interToday I will review a cqu- esting character, never speaks
pie of new books on dysfunc- for himself. He is abusive,
tiona! families Md give three , cold, a philanderer and a
cheers for Oprah's new pick, cynic. Have you ever noticed
published in 1952, an excel- that the evil characters are
lent choice.
usually the most fascinating?
'The three Junes' by new- His }l'ife is an alcoholic, hidcomer Julia Glass is written ing in her room with a bottle.
in three parts. The narrative The daughter and son develcovers three important sum- op an extremely close relamers in the bves of the tionsrJp, because they cannot
. McLeod family. The flfSt sec- relate to either parent.
tion is about the patriarch, a
In adulthood they mimic
widowed Scotsman, now on the problems of the parents.
vacation in Greece. Paul The daughter, Nina, is a
McLeod mourns his wife, the widow, a shut-down book
collie-raising Maureen, who editor. Her brother, Andrew,
was never much for house- . is handsome and t.lashing and
wifery, but a great compru:t- given to looking up old girlion. There are three sons, friends from high school in a
Fenno, the central character rather sick serial high school
of the seco!ld part, a reserved reunion. This one has sexual
gay man who runs a book-· addiction, depression and
store in Manhattan, and the alcoholism, something for
twins, David and Dennis. everyone. These folks sped
David is a veterinarian back entirely too much time drinkin his parents' small village in . in~ coffee and wine and
Scotland. Dennis has married gomg to therapy! Dr. Phil or
a French woman and is a chef Oprah would have a field day
in Paris.
wtth this bunch.
.
While in Greece, Paul
Speaking·of Oprah, she has
McLeod meets ;a young . reinstated her book clul:l and
HARDCOVER FICTION
widow and arust, Fern has chosen John Steinbeck's
1. "The Da Vinci Code" by Dan
Olitsky. She is shy and fearful 'East of Eden' as her flfSt
Brown (Doubleday)
of starting over. Paul hopes to selection. It is symbolic
2. "The Lake House" by James
take her toJ!inner, but she dis- recreation of the Biblical
Patterson (Little, Brown)
appears · with the tour ~de. story of Cain and Abel. (So
3. "The Devil Wears Prada" by
Lauren Weisberger (Doubleday)
(She will reappear later m the says Amazon.com) The evil
4 . "The Lovely Bones" by Alice
book.)
one here is Cathy Ames, who
Sebold
(Little, Brown)
The minor characters are seduces kind and gentle
5.
"White
Death: A Novel from
melll()rable, .including the Adam Trask. Cathy betrays
the
NUMA
Files" by Clive
wicy and hitter'~ of Adam with his wild brother,
Cussler
with
Paul Ke{T1precos
Fenno's who is dying of Charles. The parentage of her
(Putnam)
AIDS, aDd the promiSCUOU8' twins remains a mystery.
6. "The Face" by Dean Koontz
Tonr, who ~ms to have , The twins, Aron, the fair
(Bantam)
affairs with everyone. There and good one and Caleb, the
7. "Die in Plain Sight" by
is a hint that the mother had dark and perceptive one,
E li~a beth Lowell (Morrow)
an l\ffilir with a Delabbor.
mirror the hves of Cain and
8. ''The Guardian" by Nicholas
Sparks
(Warner) ·
The . . IICCOIId ' section Abel. Steinbeck created
.
9.
"The
Dogs of Babel" by
revotves .lll.Qiln4· tbe funeral memorable characters, an
Carolyn
Parkhurst
(Little, Brown) .
·of the ~- ·j The sibling authentic Salinas Valley,
10.
"The
King
of
Torts"
by John
' rivalriet are~ IDd banri- Calif., scenario, and a bitter
Grisham
(Doubleday)
ful. 11l!re il stlll .a i1J8t deal sibling conflict. If you don't
of lovt! IIDd ~ for one. want to read the book, do
. NONFICTION/GENERAL.
anotbet. · howe~•. and the sec the movie, starring
1. "Living History" by Hillary
ftllllUY ~s:. connected. James Dean as Caleb and Jo Rodham Clinton (Simon &amp;
Fellll(), ·the p:lj SOil,• feels his Van Fleet in her Academy
Schuster) .
family does not need to Award-winning
perfor2. "The South Beach Diet" by
undentand him in order to mance as Cathy. There's
Arthur Agatston, M.D. (Rodale)
3. "Atkins for Life" by Robert C:
lovcrhinl,
''
something about this classic
Atkins, M.D. (St. Martin's)
.
The third section, finds that leaves contemporary
4. "The Purpose·DrivEln Life" by
Fellll() and Fern staying at the minor m!lsings in the dust.
Rick Warren (Zondervan)
house in the · Haniptons, 'East of Eden' is a brutal
5. "Moneyball: The Art of
unaware of their connection portrayal of good and evil Winning
an Unfair Game" by
through his father. She is timeless!
Michael Lewis (Norton)
pre¥flaD:l and debating about
(Beverly Gettles is a
6. "A Short History of Nearly
telling .the father of the child. retired librarian and book
Everything" by Bill Bryson
The ending is hopeful but lover from Gallipolis, Ohio)
(Broadway)
7. "An Unfinished Life: John F.
Kennedy 1917·1963" by Robert
Dallek. (Little, Brown)
.
8. "The Teammates" by David
Halberstam (Hyperion)
BY THE ASSOCIATED ~RESS
9. "Who's Your Caddy?" by Rick
Reilly (Doubleday)
Enterlflinmefl! highlights during the week of June 2910. "Open: Inside the Ropes at
July 5:
'
Bethpage
Black" by John
In 1952, the radio program "The Guiding Light" made its
Feinstein.
(Little,
Brown)
debut as a television soap opera on CBS.
In 195.5, "The Lawrence Welk Show" debuted on ABC-

years of research. There is a Webster Holling provide pageclear passion to the subject , fuls of eye candy. These are art
matter, and when students are lessons unto themselves.
exposed to these. their incenAlthough these books I've
tive for learning the material, described are suggested for.
out of interest wins over their ages 9-12, try not to hold yourneed to memorize the material selves to these ages. These
to boast their GPAs.
1
books pre well-suited for readBooks such as those written ing to younger children, perby Holling, inform students in haps in small helpin~s. They
ways which stimulate imagina- will provide you wtth great
tiqn and thought. From . his ideas for developing more inbooks, teachers and parents deptll learning activities.. In
have before them a multitude addition, seek out commumty
of lesson plans to fill an entire progmms such as those offered
school year times five. "Tree in. through OO'Mclntyre Parks
the Trail " is a story of an Indian and Recreation Servtces.
boy who saves a sapling-cotTheir programs focus on
tonwood, spanning a history of natural science which nicely
one hundred and fony three align with Holling's books.
years until the . tree's death in especially "Pagoo" the hermit
1834. The story stretches .along crab who resides in a tide pool.
the Santa Fe Trail revealing a Consider, also working with
rich historical account of the your child's teachers to begin
people who were guided along to move the curriculum forby the great old cottonwood.
ward using primary source
Two or his other books are books (living books) such as
worth
mentioning
here: the ones noted above.Your kids
"Seabird", a carved sea gull wdl be the better for tt.
who embarks on ajoumey by
Next week, we'll check out
riding upon the backs of our what's cool about poetry. I
world's far-reaching oceans, promise, it's not your grandand "Minn of the Mississippi ", rna's poetry!
a tale of a snapping tunle who
Meanwhile, keep reading.
is saved by, yet another Indian
(Diane Nader-Epling of
boy (I sense a. recurrent them.e Gallipolis workedfior 20 .vears
here) who pamts the abbrevm- as a speech and hearing
tions "Minn" on its small shell. pathologist and is the morher
"Minn" )n Indian refers to of three. You may write to her:
"water" . The reader is treated Diane Nader-Epling. in care of
to a plateful of science, geogra' The Daily Tribune. 825 Third
phy and history, s~rved up with Ave.. Gal/ipolis: OH. 45639. or
a side of small-town nostal- e-mail:
news@mvdailwrigia.The illustrations, both by bune.com).
·
·

BESTS ELLERS

That Was the Week That Was

Try
this
•

rec1pe
Salsa-topped
ve~gie burgers
The burger concept is
versatile. but it must be
something re&lt;!IIY appetiz·
ing to bite into, and not too
complicated to make.
Vegetarians need not
feel left' out when it comes
to putting together a
savory patty. warm and
crisp from the p.an, for a
quick meal. This recipe for
salsa-topped veggie · burg·
ers combines a tasty variety of easily available
ingredients to make a
nutritious, low-fat meatless dish. Serve with or
without hamburger buns.

•

.
.
:

Ups and downs of
having jazzman dad

MASS MARKET PAPERBACKS
1. "Dr. Atkins New Diet
Revolution" by Robert C. Atkins
(Avon)
2. "The Beach House" by James
Patterson , Peter de Jonge
(Warner)
·
3. "Angels and Demons" by Dan
Brown (P&lt;icke\)
4. "Hard Eight" by Janet
Evanovich (St. Martin's)
5. "Standing In the Rainbow" by
Fannie Flagg (Ballantine) ·
6. "Fire Ice" by Clive Cussler with
Paul Kemprecos (Berkley)
7. "Angels" by Marian Keyes
(HarperTorch)
8. "The Cabinet of Curiosities" by
Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln
Child (Warner)
9. "Shadow Puppets" by Orson
Scott Card (Tor)
10. "Trading Places" by Fern
Michaels (Pocket Star)

'

'

BY CATHERINE NEW
Associated Press writer

Boulevard in Los Angeles.
Among liule Amy Jo's companions were Koko, a retired
circus
clown; Alain, a hand- .
A.J. Albany conducts a
some
dwarf;
and Terry, her
guided, tour of growing up
with her . father, pianist Joe transvestite substitute mom.
This would seem to be a
Albany, in her memoir "Low
for tragedy. Instead,
setting
Down: Junk, Jazz, and Other
Albany
casts her maximally
· From
Fairy
Tales
dysfunctional childhood as a
Childhood."
Her girlhood playground triumph. She extracts both the
during the late 1960s and '70s chilling details and electrifywas more junkyard than ing exhilaration of those days
sandbox, and Dad wasn'tjust in a series of brief episodes.
Albany's prose is tough and
Dad. He was also a great Jazz
funny.
musician who ran with
From this junkyard hisCharlie Parker, Lester Young
tory
Of jazz burnouts and
and their ilk. He also had a
the fading glory of
lifelong heroin habit.
Hollywood,
Albany pulls
Home for father and daughout
treasures
that are well
ter was the residential St.
worth
discovering.
Francis Hotel on Hollywood

TRADE PAPERBACKS
1. "East of Eden" by John
Steinbeck (Penguin)
2. "Seabiscuit: An American
Legend"· by Laura Hillenbrand
(Ballantine)
3. "The Secret Life of Bees" by
Sue Monk Kidd (Penguin USA)
4. "Three Junes" by Julia Glass
(Anchor)
5. "Life of Pi" by Yann Martel
(HarcourVHarvest)
6. ''The' No. 1 Ladies Detective
Agency" by Alexander McCall
(Smith Anchor.)
7. "The Nanny Diaries" by Emma
McLaughlin &amp; Nicola Kraus. (St.
Martin's/Gritfin)
·
8. "Dr. · Atkins' New Diet
Revolution" by Robert C. Atkins,
M.D. (Quill)
9. "Bookends" by Jane Green
(Broadway)
10. "Atonement" by tan McEwan
(Anchor)

COMING
SOON!
to

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QUAUTY FURNITURE PLUS
~21~ ; ~!.lit'

1:13

•

Associated Press
Cookbook author (:'aprial
Pence and her husband John
Pence have been u'ing apple
juice in their summer cook ing. anu three of their recipe,
follow for home cooks to try.
'·Apple j uice is a great
ingredient
for
recipes
because it provide s a nice.
'weet note of tlavor with just
the right balance." the y say.
Apples and their tlavor lend
themselves to so many applications. too. they lind.
cookbook s
Caprial's
include "Caprial' Cooking
for Friends" and "Cooking
with Caprial." Her fiN PBS:
TV cooking series "Cooking
with Caprial.'' has been fol lowed by "Cookin g "ith
Caprial &amp; John" .- nn which
her husbanu joins her~ &gt; host.
The Pences are ba&gt;eJ in
Portland. Ore .. where the y
own a bistro and l'ooking
school.
These recipes produl'e a
salad. a main uish anu a
dessen. to serve together or
to team wi th other dishc&gt;. as
desired . The tla•.•urs are ve rsatile and preparation is
strai ghtforward.

\I

'' I 1

1\o uh- • !upi'Vt,I
I 1,,,

,1 " ''

1

Llilh

.

BIG
. BEND
•

Worcestershire sauce
volume.
Sah and black pepper to
This airy dish would be a
ta&gt;te
welcome finale for a small
To make the glaze: Add 3 dinner pany or special occatablespoons of the olive oil. ·swn.
onions and garlic to a medi-.
Fresh Fruit Sabayon
Dessert
um-size saucepan and cook
on high heat tor 3 minutes.
(Preparation time 20 minAdd apple juice and cook utes)
until I cup of liquid remains.
8 egg yolks
about 15 minutes. Add honey. · I teaspoon dry ground gindry oregano and dry rubbed ger
1/3 cup brandy
sage. Continue to cook until
I cup apple juice
glaze is syrupy-thick enough
to coat the baek of a spoon.
1/4 cup brown sugar .
Add the Dijon mustard.
1/4 cup sugar
lemon juice, Worcestershire
l/2 teaspoon vanilla
sauce. salt and black pepper . I cup fresh or frozen
to taste. Remove from heat.
berries (such as raspberries.
Preheat oven to 350 F. blueberries and strawberries)
Place a large saute pan on
Place the egg yolks. ginger.
stove top. On high heat, add I · brandy. apple juice. brown ·
tablespoon olive oil and sear sugar, sugar and vanilla in a
pori&lt;; on all sides for about 5 metal mixing bowl and whisk .
minutes. Place in oven and until smooth. Place over simroast about 30 to 45 minutes mering water in a saucepan .
or until internal temperature Do not allow the water to
shows approximately 135 F touch the bottom of the bowl.
on an instant-read thermomeWhisk the sabayon while
ter; ·glaze pork 3 or 4 times cooking for about 5 minutes
during roasting process. Slice or until thick. The sabayon
roast and serve.
should look like very softly
whipped cream and should
Makes 6 servings.
coat the back of a spoon.
• Sabayon, a French cousin Place a quaner cup of berries
of the Ital ian dessert in each of 4 large wineglasszabaglione, is made by beat- es and pour the sabayon over
ing egg yolks with a liquid the berries, dividing it equalover simmering water until ly. Serve warm.
thickened and increased in
Makes 4 servings.

.. ..
•

SAVE UP TO 401. ON
YOUR GROCERY BILL

SAVE·A·LOT

WANT PROOF?

JUST LOOK AT THE RECElPT

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT.

'Rxia)l tomon'Ow, next month.
Count on the,. prices ei!Wiyday.

1.89

ASSORTED VARIHIES
I 1 PAC I SODA

FAIRGROUNDS
HOT DOGS
1101 PK6

LIBBY'S SLICED
PEACHES
19 01 CAN

SHELBY'S GROVE
MANDARIN ORANGES
1t 01 CAN

•••••••••••••••••

Coca Cola
Products

1)11

I 1 l11 • • ._, ot,, I o\

any time or year. The balance ·worcestershire, Tabasco and
of apple juice. vinegar and lemon juice. Whisk olive oil
olive oi l. minimizes any in slowly: add toasted
1harpncss in the spinach. The chopped hazelnuts. Add salt
Jrc,,ing can be made ahead and black pepper to taste .
of time and refri2eratcd umil Pour over spinach; toss and
ready tu use.
garnish with red onion and
Spinach Salad With
apple.
·
AppiP Hazelnut Dressing
Makes 6 servings.
(Preparation time 20 min·
utes)
• Dressed with an appleS ounces apple juice
sweet glaze, tender roast pork
2 cloves gar! ic. chopped
can make a special center2 teaspoons Dijon mustard piece for entertaining family
I tablespoon sherry vinegar and friends. The dish is preJ dashes Worcestershire pared in stages - making the
sau.:e
glaze, searing the pork . and
J dashes Tabasco sauce
glazing and roasting the pork .
Juice of I lemon
You can make the glaze a day
6 ounces extra-vintin olive ahead of time.
oil
Note : the glaze in this
J tablespoons toasted recipe also goes well with
hazelnuts. chopped
chicken.
J bunches 'pinach. washed
Roast Pork With Apple
and drained
Juice-Honey Mustard
Salt and black pepper to
Glaze
ta,te
(Preparation time 50 min112 medium red union. utes)
,I iced
3-pound pork loin roast
I apple. cored and s !iced
4 tablespoons olive oil
In a medium-size saucepan
I medium onion. diced
on high heat. add apple juice
2 cloves garlic. chopped
and cook on high for approx2 cups apple juice
imately 15 minutes until 4
1/4 cup honey ·
tablespoons (or 1/4 cup) of
I tablespoon dry oregano
the liquid remains. Be careful
I teaspoon dry rubbed sage
not to overcook it. Pour the
2 tablespoons Dijon musapple juice into a small stain- tard
kss-stcel bowl and let cool.
I teaspoon lemon j uice
Add garl ic . mustard. vinegar.
I
tablespoon
of

Salsa-Topped Veggie
Burgers
I/2 cup chopped onion
1/2 cup frozen corn kernel s. thawed and drained
I/3 cup finely chopped
red bell pepper
1/4 cup walnuts.
• This refreshing sa lad
chopped
· would be easy to put toge ther
I or 2 garlic cloves,
minced
.
I teaspoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground
cumm
...
1/3 cup canned solid
700 West Main St.,
pack pumpkin
I/4 cup reduced-fat cottage cheese
1
I egg
I slice firm-textured
white bread, cubed
I to 2 tablespoons
chopped parsley
3/4 cup (3 ounces)
shredded
reduced-fat
Monterey Jack cheese
2/3 cup toasted wheat
germ
I/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
Whole-wheat hamburger buns (op.tional)
Salsa
Spray large nonstick
skillet with 'cooking spray.
Add onion and cook over
medium heat until tender,
••• THE PROOF •••
about 7 minutes. Add corn,
red bell pe,Pper, walnuts,
CANNED CORN
0.5 9
garlic, chih powder and
cumin; cook until vegetables are heated through,
0.12
NO PHARMACY
about 3 minutes. Transfer
to mmng bowl ; cool.
NO FLORIST
0.0 7
Wipe skillet with paper
NO VIDEO
towel.
0.11
In bowl of food processor or blender container,
CANNED CORN
0.29
combine pumpkin, cottage
cheese, egg, bread and
AT SAVE-A-LOT
parsley;· process until well
blended. Add to vegetable
SMALLER STORES.
along
with
mixture
SAVE UP TO 401••
Monterey Jack cheese,
whe!lt germ, salt and black
pepper; mix well. Cover
and refrigerate at least 30
minutes.
Form mixture into 6 patties, each about 3/4-inch
thick . .Spray skillet witl\
12 Packs
cooking spray. Add patties
and cook over medium
heat until golden, about 6
minutes per · side. Serve
immediately (if desired, on·
hamburger buns), with
salsa.
Makes 6 servings.
Nutrition information
per serving (1/6 of recipe
served with 2 tablespoons
JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT
salsa): 170 cal., 8 g total
fat (2.5 g saturated fat), 45
g chol., 420 mg sodium,
·15 g carbo., 3 g fiber, 13 g
pro.
(Recipe for AP from
Kretschmer Wheat Germ)

Subscribe today.
446-2342
675-1333
992-2156·

Lllrp Ga1ebo
FMder

SunbreUa Canopy

ll n1

Apple juice gives sUmmer taste to meals

· 49~
WYLWOOD HRNH OR
CREAN STYLE CORN.
R£GULAR DR NO SALT
1UT01USOICAN

PORTS IDE CHUNK
L16HT TUNA
6 01 CAN

COWBOY BILLV'S
BAKED BEANS
t601CAN '

PAR KAY
SOUEEH SPREAD
t10181l

1.39

4.99

KINDLE CHARCOAL
STARTER
32 01 CONTAINER

KINDLE CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS
10 lB BAG

ASSORTED VARIETIES
COOliES
t601PK6

WYLWOOD MINI
CORN ON THE COB
6 CT PIG

1

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PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR .
. LIFE.

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4' A!llrondack Swln1

Sunday, June 29, 2003

{1!\'j J;l ~.)'

TV:

the Experience. The performance was in Denver.
In 1973, David bowie retired for the first time in London.
In 1975, the Captain &amp; Tennille received their first gold
·
record with "love Will Keep Us Together." .
fn 1980, Bob Weir and Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead
w~re arrested for suspicion of i_ncitin~; a riot ";I the San
Otego Sports Arena after they tned to mterfere m a drugrelated arrest.
·
In 1982, Diana Ross opened a world tour at · the
Meadowlands in East Rutherford, N.J. Miles Davis opened
theshow.
.
Also in 1982, shock rocker Ozzy Osbourne married personal manager Sharon Arden.
In 1991. Guns N' Roses lead singer Axl Rose sparked a
riot during a performance in a St. Louis suburb when he
jumped off the stage and attacked !I fan videotaping the
.
concert. Sil!.ly people were ·injured.

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�Page C4

Behind the

&amp;unbap limts -&amp;tnttntl

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Jaguar XJ series adds fuel economy, performance to killer looks
Ass.x:ialed Press

,;edan.
,ole of the XJ.
BUI all-wheel dri\'e is not
It allows shift-gcar&gt;-yourotkred for the Jaguar Xh.
'elf move' w ithnut a dutch
The new. 2004 Jaguar XJ whiL·h remain rear-drive .
pedal. But its design and
cars are like all Jag~uars In the meantime. Audi proplacement don't provide the
pretty and instantly rewgniz- ' ide,; one-vear free u,;e of
same satisfactory shifting
able.
OnStar. an "emergenL'\ notilimotions as in other cars.
Now. they ' re also larger. cation
sYstenl. · whik
In fact. it's way too easy to
inside and out. and made with Mercedes li,t, its TeleAid
miss the gear you want and
a weight-sa,·ing. aluminum emergencv system on the Sshift into a lower one in thi&gt;
~
· · Class. The XJs
monocoque
Jag.
&gt;tructure that
Premium is the fuel for this
offer no such
helps give this
S)Stem.
engine - a&gt; well as the
line of luxuriJaguar offisupercharged version of the
2004 Jaguar '-' cials~ point out
ous sedans an
AJ-V8.
Vanden Plas
agile personalithe aluminum
Fuel economy is improved
ty. better performonoc·oque
from 17 miles a gallon in city ·
mance
and
bodv
of
the
driving
in the predecessor :
Fuel Economy: new- XJ marks
improved fuel
Vanden Plas to ·18 mpg now. :
18 miles/gallon
economy.
the tirst use in
Highway fuel economy is
The starting
the auto indusbetter - going from 24 mpg
manufacturer's
try of such
in the previous Vanden Pl as to
Performance:
suggested retail
aerospace tech28 in the new model. accord- .
price. including 4.2 liter DOHC V8 niques as rivet
ing to Jaguar.
.
destina iion engine; 294 horse- bondin2 and
My passengers and I rode in ·
charge.
of
adhesi,~es
in The 2004 Jaguar XJ8 Vanden Plas is made with a weight-saving. aluminum monocoque struc- luxuriou s quiet in the Vanden :
power, 303 foot$59,995 for the
body produc- ture that helps give this line of luxurious sedans an agile personality. better performance and Pl as. Loud semi s next to me .'
2004 base XJ8 pounds of torque; 0- tion.
improved fuel economy. (AP)
on the highway sounded as if
XJ's
is an increase of 60 MPH: 6.3 seconds The
they were off in the di stance.
$l020 from the
• complex body sors by -U inches.
XJs remains noteworthv for onds cn111pared with the per- so muted were exterior dis2003 model.
production
Trunk space on all XJs its luxuriou s appearance and formanc~ in the earlier mode I. tractions in thi s luxurv car.
But the mid- Base sticker price: process with remains shallow. but is aroma. The test Vanden Plas ac~:ordin~ to Jaguar.
The ride in the Vanden Plas ·
range Vanden
a I u min u m . improved. expanding from had contrasting piping on the
The test car felt more than. kept bumps and even many :
$68,995
Plas
model
however. has 12.7 to 16.6 cubic feet.
seats m&lt;ftching the color of sprightly. with power coming vibrations away from passen- .
remains pri.ced at $68.995 been blamed for the laterIn compari son. the Audi the rich. lambswoo l tloor on smoothly and strongly gers. At most. there were mild
including destination charge. than-e?lpected on-sale date of A8L has 17.7 cubic feet of mats.
each time I pressed the accel- \'ibration ,, with the sense of a
while the top-of-the-line. June I for this British-built trunk room. while the S-Class
The XJ engine in the tester erator. In partict•larly aggres- plush ride. sometimes almost
supercharged XJ R has a tlagship.
has 15.-l.
was the same -t .2-liter. double sive mm·~,. the rush forward tloaty.
$2.520 price boost. to
No label on the outside or
The overall look of the XJs overhead cam. AJ-V8 that's "'"' accompanied by a low
The XJs use independent :
$74.995.
inside of the test car noted isn't changed much. though in the 2003 S-Type sedan and growl from the engine bay.
double-wishbone design at ·
Jaguar officials boast the that the body was made of wheels are~ positioned farther the XK .
The XJ 's automatic trans- the front and rear. and the :
new. seventh-generation cars aluminum. But there were out to the comers no\v and the
It develops 294 horsepower mission 1s a six-spe~d now Vanden Plas rode on 18-inch
are the best.:-equipped XJs subtle indications. such as the hood is shorter than before.
and 303 foot-pound s of th•Jt's also used in the S-Type wheels and tires.
ever.
lighter feel to the front doors.
Inside. riders familiar with torque at 4.100 rpm in its nat- and XKs as well as Audi and
The power-assisted. speedIndeed. even the base XJ8
Thi s. plus the considerable the earlier XJs will instantly urally aspirated version BMW.
sensi tive. · rack-and-pinion
comes standard with reverse seals around the doors, made notice the improved head- eno!Jgh to improve this
Too bad. though. Jaguar steering still had a light feel in :
park assist. self-leveling air closing them solidly a learn- room that makes the cockpit sedan's 0-to-60-mph sprint by continues with its awkward J. the Vanden Pi as test cJr, rem - ·
suspension
and
power ing experience: the tirst few area feel less confining.
about 0.6 second, to 6.3 sec- gate shifter in the 'center con- ini sccnt of its predecessor.
·
adjustable foot pedals. as well times. they didn't close comIn fact, front-seat headroom
as the expected leather sems. pletely.
of 38.4 inches in all the XJs is
plentiful. real wood trim. VB
The lightweight body - it greater than the 37.6 inches in
and power amenities.
shaves 200 pounds off the the S-Class and the 37.4 inchHowever. some items that base XJ8 vis-a-vis the tradi- es in the A8L.
are standard on competitors tiona! steel car body of its
And buck-seat leeroom in
still aren't standard or avail- predecessor - also is 60 per- the base XJ is a comn1endable
able on the XJs. An example cent stiffer, helping improve 38.7 inches now. This comis navigation system, a $2,200 the car's ride and handling pares with 40.3 inches in the
option on the Vanden Plas test even as this sedan has grown S-Class and 42.3 inches in the
ACROSS
92 Apponion
81 Wiohod
DOWN
car.
larger. The growth varies by A8L
93 Dn.&lt;lken one
82
ltJt a1 all epcy
A nav system is standard on model. with the base XJ8
The British inlluence is
94 Tricl&lt;
1 Nolle Dame's city
84 Clearing in 8 wood
1 Fete
the 2004 Audi A8L and the adding the most - 6.4 inches noticed quickly - there are
6 Cook a cartain way
95Mocawgenus
85Enllee8
2 ISland greellog
2003 Mercedes-Benz S- to the wheelbase and 2.6 multiple ashtrays throughout
11 Wale!)' soow
96 Sawi1g need
86 Baking need
3 Streem
16 Dandles
97 Fillshed
4 ·- Got a Secter
86 Lady In alogond
Ciass.
inches in overall length.
the Vanden Plas at a t1me
96 Place often visited
20
and
l&lt;icldng
89 Delaware's capital
5 Stave
Further. both the A8L and
The Vanden Plas test model . when American cars and
21 NaSI oo a11eigll
99 Shows ltlo WWf
6 Trash
90 W-fruil
S-Ciass are available with all- had ·1.5 more inches of wheel- ' trucks are eliminat ing ash22 Name
102 Paused '
7 In 111C1
93 Dog inOz
wheel drive - actually, it's base, and all three XJs now trays.
105 Small hill
23 No4 fit
94s.,p
B Annoyed
25 Name lor • hoood
106 ~lition
standard on the A8L flagship are taller.than their predeces98Ralseup
9 Told a fib
The leather inside the new

Quick Facts:

1

SUNDAY PUZZLER

26 Cklared a lawn
27tnscrille

28 Flavor

Not your father's tank of gas
Can hydrogen
solve America's
energy woes?

energy source . In 20 years, he
predicted, Americans will
drive cars propelled by hydro·
gen-powered fuel cells that
emit exhaust containing nothing more toxic than pure water.
• Bv MAn CRENSON
Both enthusiasts and critics
Associated Press writer
of the technology agree that
switching from fossil fuels to a
Every day. American drivers hydrogen-based energy infraeat up nearly 7 billion miles of structure will be no small feat.
Ri ght now it costs about I0 .
pavement getting where they
times
as much to operate a
want to be.
hydrogen-powered
fuel cell .
TQey consume enough oil to
car
as
it
does
to
run
one
with an ·
fill more than ,150 supertankers. More than half of that internal combustion engine.
oil comes from abroad, weak- And the small amount of
ening the country 's economy hydrogen that is ,produced
and complicating its foreign today comes from natural gas
· relations. And when burned, and other fossil fuels, generatevery drop spews pollutants · ed in a process that releases the
that damage health and con- greenhouse warming gas carbon dioxide into the atmostribute to global warming.
. With automobile use rising phere.
To create an environmentalworldwide, petroleum reserves
ly
friendly and economically
gradually dwindling and conviable
hydrogen energy econocerns over U.S. dependence on
my,
engineers
will have to
foreign oil increasing, most
energy experts agree that a develop a safe and cost-effecshift away from fossil fuels is ti ve way to store and distribute
a highl y flammable gas, both
inevitable during this century.
President George W. Bush on board vehicles &lt;md thfoughhas responded with a $1.7 bil- out a fuel distribution system.
lion research program to devel. op hydrogen as America's next
1

They will also have to either
develop ways to make hydrogen with renewable energy, or
find a way to capture the carbon dioxide released in hydroge n production and keep it out
of the atmosphere. .
Hydrogen power itself is
hardly a new idea. Hydrogen
fuel cells already propel experimental vehicles and supply
power for some building s.
NASA has used them on
spacecraft for decades.
Though you can ·get energy
from hyd7rogen simpl y by
burning it. the most efficient
way to harness the element is
with a fuel cell. Like a battery,
a fuel cell generates electricity
with a chemical reaction. The
most common type combines
hydrogen and oxygen to make
water, ge nerating electricity
that can be used to drive a
motor, light a neon sign or
power a computer.
Aside from Lhe water.
which is pure enough to
drink, there are no byproducts. As advertised, fuel cells
are pollution-free.

29
30
32
34

An arlde
Storied

Ubertlos

Nota!lle time
35 Moasue ollerlgth
37 Hairless on top
38 Of the moon
39 Meodnws
01 Hepbum
41 Moditallw poem
43 Leg bone
44 SMepte
46 Allar boy?

49 Tribal errtlem
50 Cnlii.Htflat
chMges color
54 lnfanca
55 Haughty
56 Cl)' heard at sea
57 "'"'

56 Color
59 Nei&gt;Wn dog

eo Roaches acroes
61 Love
62 GJ'Mk 1n01.111111n
64 Sll4lfd
.

65 U!teriJWNrWOJdl
66 Uatened to
67 Spocllor fttm

68 Snai&lt;e soom
89 O'Oomtll ol TV
70 C'*- "wr('
71 Letlerlorplurala
72 Act .... hlwn
74 Wal paining
75 Main tome
77 Elecblcah.ni1 (abbr.)
eo Mineral

81 -oiTroy
82 Rotten lcld

63 UnolltiiY

67 Dog broOd
99 was Moly fond

90Pu1
91 Sad

107 Liglll nisi
108 Eteva!G
109 AOOnson Crusoe's
creator
11 0 Prison break
113 Poet!y
11 4 Farm s1rueture
115~

119 Hi11 card
120 P1alnly expressed
123 Amuse
125 Perched
t 2e Spooder's undoing
12!! Dead language
t29 "-GoOOnov" .
130 Audi.-l'f !8ed
13.2 Talk on and oo

133 Spoechlfy
134 Cel!dn
135 Not wonly

'136 Mr. Flln1S1Dn8
137 V,.ere Cardfl is

138 Actress - Zellwegor
139 C8lyx pari

Like a lot (2 wds.)
NuntJ0PMicular .

Breas1bone
12 Measured lenglhwisa

99
100
101
t 03

14T~

104

15 Big sandwich

105 Sof'llca brard1
106 Babafs a..-n 108 Say 1mm rnerm&lt;y
109 Godly
t 10 Lawman Wyatt111 A9cot
112 Fragrant wood
113 Abtotuttly necflS8IY
114 Warring s1g1a1
116 Takebylo&lt;te
117 Spicy sauce
116 Halden
121 Farm ~em
122 P..ternak chai-r·

10 Cordocled
11

' 13 Sheer

16 Long """""' opering
17 Stop - -dime

18 Document

19 Seedlike body
24 Salver
31 Helps in Wlll4 IQdoio'J
32 Was In a rage

33 Mulilate
36 Food slore ,lor sl'ol1
38 Ole down (2 wds.)
40 Misl&lt;led
42 Soap ingredien1

43

«

45
40
47
48

Simplelons
Gloomed

Setues a debt

Oe18st

Bnng all9ut

Fat

49 Long lock ol hair

Came t&gt; a poin1
S&lt;.rm1t

t23 CI4JOie
124 Klddtes
127 Hid a bite
t 29 l'rohlblt
131 A lot1Br

50 PIJBue
51 Weer away
52 Mono1era

53 Tlinge required .
55
56
59
60

Slagt
"- lhoW&amp;nl bring ...•

Conolf'OI'd
Sarandcn
or Saint James
61 Long time
53 BN!y &lt;l1nfc
64JOO

65 Prepared apflles
66 Terra69 Monarch
70 Follow loo!prlnts

73 Shed
74 Device in a taxi
75 Arttic goose
76 Oleo &lt;Xlfl18iner
77Disconcer1
78 Frot·lor·al
79 'M1i1ens

.,

Ente

iunbap Q!:imes -ientinel
'

Best
Sellers
'
Weekly charts for the nation's
most popular videos as they
appear in next week's' issue of
Billboard magazine. Reprinted
with permission:
Top Music Video Seles
(Compiled from a national sample of sales reports)
1. "Led Zeppelin; Led Zeppelin.
2. "The New Breed; 50 Cent.
3. "The Beattes An1hology," The
Beades. (Platinum)
4. "Queen: live at Wembtey '86,"
Queen.
5. "Made You look: God's Son
live." Nas.
6. "Live in New Orleans," Norah
Jones. (Platinum)
7. "Josh Grot&gt;an in Concert;
Josh Groban. (Gold)
8. 'When the lights Go Down,"
Faith Hill.
.
9 . "Hell Freezes Over,' The
Eagles. (Platinum)
10. "Trilogy; The Cure.
Top VHS Rentals
1. "Old School." DreamWorks

Home Entertainment.
2. 'Tears of the Sun." Columbia

TriStar Home Entertainment. '
3 . "Die Another Day." MGM
Home Entertainment.
4. "Aboijt Schmidt," New Line
Home Entertainment.
5. 'The Recruit," Touchston
Home Video.
6. "National Security," Columbia
TriStar Horne Entertainment.
7. 'Biker Boyz (Widescreen),"
OreamWorks
,Home
Entertainment.
8. 'Ca1ch Me If You Can,"
DreamWorks
Home
Enter1ainment.
9. "The Hot Chick." Touchstone
Home Video.
10. 'Two Weeks Notice," Warner
Home Video.·
Top VHS Sales
1. "Jungle Book 2." Wah Disney
Home Entertainment.
2. 'About Schmidt" New Line
Home Entertainment.
3. "Atlantis: Milo's Return," Waft
Disney Home Entertainment.
_4. "Treasure Planet; Walt Disney
Home Entertainment.
5. "Harry Potter and the
Chamber of Secrets,• Warner
Home Video.
6 . "City of Lost Toys," Paramount
Home Entertainment.
7. "The Recruit," Touchston
Home Video.
8 . 'Blues Clues - Shapes and
Colors!' Paramount Home
Entertainment.
9. "Care Bears to the Rescue,"
Un~ed American Video.
10. "Tho Incredible Hulk: Original
Television Premiere,' Universal
Studios Home Video..
Top DVD Salee
1. "Old School: Unrated and Out

of Control (Widescreen) ,"
DreamWorks
Home
Entertainment.
2. "Tears of the Sun," Columbia
TriStar Home Entertainment.
3, "Old School: Unrated and Out
of Control (Pan &amp; Scan);
DreamWorks
·
Home
Entertainment.
4. . "Die
Another
Day
(Widescreen);' MGM Home
Entertainment. ·
5. 'Jungle Book 2," Walt Disney
Home Entertainment.
6. "Die Another Day (Special
Edition),"
MGM
Home
Entertainment.
7. "Biker Boyz (Widescreen);
DreamWorks
Home
Entertainment.
· 8. "The Recruit;' touchston
Home Video. ·
9 . "Animatrix (Widescreen).~
Warner Home Video.
10. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer:
Season 4," FoxVideo.
•
Further information is available
at Billboard Online On the World
Wide Web at http://www.bill·
board.com .

inment

NEW YORK (AP) - Chris Rock Wait ": "Bad Company" wilh Anthony hate to mi" that because vo u' re
will be back as host of the MTV Video Hopkins; and this year's "Head of putting on &gt;omething from Banana
,..,--. Music Awards. the State." his directorial debu1. in which Republic ."
cable
· channel he starred as a presidential candidate.
Rock wa' referring to one of the
a n n o u ri c e d
Rock won't announce his comedy more outrageou' moments in Video
Wednesday.
show date' ahead of time - he would- Mu-;ic Award history in 1999. when
But he acknowl- n't even say where,the tour will begin Ross fondieJJ rapper Lil ' Kim's left
edges that his stand- next week. Tickets will go on sale in brea,t. which · was covered only in a
up skill s are a little .each city just 24 hours in advance.
lavender pa11y.
rusty.
But after having hosted the irrever-'
Over the past year, though. the 37So the comedian is enl awards show in 1997 and 1999, year-old has been keeping bu,y with
going on a cross- Rock knows that much of the comedy more whole;ome activities - his
country club tour to springs organically as the evening pro- daughter with wife Malaak ComptonRock
prepare for the 20th gresses, Jimmy Fallon from "Saturday Rock, Lola Simone. who's turning I
annual awards show Night Live" - of which Rock is an on Saturdav.
Aug. 28 at Radio City Music Hall.
· alum- was the host last year.
"You just want to prut~ct your kid
'·I haven't performed in · a lo-o-o-o"You watch people host these shows from stuff. It make; you want to work
ng time.'' Rock told The Associated who change outfits eight times in the harder as an artist. Now you need the
' Press in a phone interview Wednesday. show. No - watch the show That's .money - what\ .college going to cost
After starring in the Emmy-winning the most important thing," Rock ·said. 111 18 years''" he asked .
"Chris Rock Show" on HBd in the
"Half the time the presenters don't
"I've had two calling s in life : qandlate '90s. he's been focusing on films read what's on the cue cards and you up comedy and fatherhood." added
the past few years. including "Down never know when Diana Ro&gt;s is going Rock. "Those are the only things I
to Earth.'' a remake of "Heaven Can to grab Lil' Kim's (breast), and you'd embrace."
".

Teenager turns reluctant grim
reaper in new 'Dead Like Me'
Parinkin , the stage. tilm
•nul TV ("Chicago Hope:·
"Alien Nation") veteran.
&gt;aid he's looking on the
bright side. too.
"What appealed to me
most about the show was
that it was indeed about life.
· not about death. and about
how to have fun and
embrace it." Patinkin said.
"If there's one umbrella the
show lives under it's ' Have
fun .' Don't waste a minute
nf this life - or th is death.
because it's the only death
you' re gonna get.''

The hereafter seems to be
a professional obsession for
Masius. Beside s "Touched
by an Angel," he created and
· for four years was executive
Ellen Muth as George lass, left, and Mandy Patinkin as Rube producer of "Providence,"
appear in a scene from Showtime's "Dead like Me ." (AP)
in which the lead character
was visited regularly by her
dead and send them on to the
(Cynthia departed mother.
mother
·•t don 't know what this
their next destination:
Stevenssm) whom she bickafterlife
thing is with me,"
Ellen Muth, an intriguing ered with and the younger
young actress who appeared sister (Britt McKillip) she Masius sa id, \Vith good
111 the TV movie "The Truth
ignored. Greg Kean plays humor.
Perhaps it's a subject for a
About Jane" and the ·film dad Clancy.
"Dolores Claiborne," plays
Death is in the forefront counse ling session?
''Believe me, I've talked
George. Her fellow reapers but Masius wants to focus
about
it with my therapist,"
are team leader Rube · on the show's humor and its
(Mandy Patinkin), Roxy capacity to be life-affirming, he said. The delicate connection between the living
(Jasmine Guy), Mason in a non-saccharine way.
and
dead is an irresistible
(Callum Blue) and Betty
"In our culture ,' death is .
(Rebecca
Gayheart). looked on as a negative. Part dramatic subject, Masius
(Gayheart leaves the drama of the show says, 'It's a part noted, quoting a former col·
after four episodes, with of the life process,' which is league.
"As Tom Fontana wrote in
Laura Harris of "24" coming not a bad lesson," Masius
on board.)
·said. As for the conceit that 'St. Elsewhere,' death ends a
"Dead Like Me" focuses souls are released by caring life, but it doesn't end a rela·
as well on George's reapers, that's "a very sweet tionsnip.' Closure doesn't
bereaved family, including thought."
come easy," Masius said.

Summer viewers preferring repeats
· NEW YORK (AP) - So far this sum- 12.6 million people Thursday, nearly
mer, television viewers prefer reruns of twice the 6.9 million people who
old favorites to anything new that broad- watched NBC's "ER" at the same time.
cast networks have to offer.
· It's still early, but none of the new realOf the 16 most-watched programs in ity shows. exhibit breakout potential.
prime-time last week, all pul one NBC's "Last Comic Standing" may have
Fox 's "American Juniors" - was a the best shot. finishing in last week's top
rerun, according to Nielsen Media 20.
Research.
In cable, the USA network drew a·
ABC's rerun-heavy schedule had 15 series-record 5.4 million viewers for the
percent more viewers last week than for second season premiere of "Monk" on
a comparable week last summer. Some Friday night, Nielsen said.
of its comedies. particularly "According
For the week, CBS averaged 8.1 milto Jim," are.finding an audience the sec- lion viewers (5.6 rating; 10 share), NBC.
ond time around.
had 7.4 million (5.1. 9). Fox and ABC
Drama franchises played well: both had 6.2 mill ipn (ABC: 4.2. 8: Fox:
Nielsen's top 10 had all three of the ·"Law 4.0,.7), UPN had 2.8 million ( 1.9, 3), the ·
&amp; Order" shows. The ·two "CSI" shows WB had 2.5 million ( 1.8, 3) and Pax TV
topped the list.
had 920,000 (0.7. I)
NBC's "N ightly News" won the
CBS ' "Without a Trace" was seen by

evening news ratings race, averaging 9.2
million viewers (6.6 rating, 15 sbare).
ABC's "World News Tonight" was second, averaging 8.2 million view~rs (6.0;
13) and the "CBS Evening News: had
6.9 million (5.0, II).
For the week of June 16:22. the top I0
shows, their networks and \'iewerships:
"CS I: Clime Scene Investigation.'' CBS.
14.3 million : "CSI : Miami.'' CBS, 117
millim~: "Everybody Loves Raymond.''
CBS. 13 million: 'Without a Trace ,~
CBS. 12.6 million: "King of Queens."
CBS, 12.4 tnillion; ''60 Minutes," CBS.
11.6 million: "Law &amp; Order: Criminal
lntem," NI3C. I0. 7 million: "Law &amp;
Order: SVU," NBC. 10.3 million; "Law
&amp; Order." NBC. 10.1 million:
''Ame1ican Juniors." Fox , 9.8 million.

The Gallia County Commissioners will be
holding a fair housing training seminar in the
Gallia County Courthouse 2nd floor meeting
room located at 18 Locust Street, Gallipolis, .
Ohio. The session will be as iollows:
• July .15, 2003 - 2:30 PM to 5:.30 PM - for local
realtors/brokers/le nding institutions- A three
hour certified course on Fair Housing
encompassing Fair Housing history, law,
regulations, the Ohio re vised Code for
LandlofdsfTenants and Predatory Lending. The
presentation will utilize overhead presentation,
visual aids and informational handouts.
This seminar is free of charge. Please register
with the Gallia County Commissioners Office on
.
or before July 3, 2003.
Gallia County C6mmissioners

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•

r - - -- ..... ·- · ·

Best Sellers
Weekly charts for the nation's
best-selling recorded music as·
they appear in next week's issue
of Billboard magazine. Reprinted
with permission. (Platinum signifies tnore than 1 million copies
sold; Gold signifies more than
500,000 copies sold.):
The Billboard 200 Top
Albuma: Top 10
(Compiled from a national sam·
pte of sales reports collected,
compiled and provided by
SoundScan)
1. "After the Storm," Monica. J.
2. "Dance With My Father,'
Luther Vandross. J.
3. "St. Anger; Metallica. Elektra.
4. "Hail to the Thief," Radiohead .
.Capitol.
·
5. "Bare," Annie Lennox. J.
6. "Get Rich or Die Tryin'." 50
Cent. Shady. (Platinum - certified sates ot 1 million units) ·
7. "Come Away With Me; Norah
Jones. Blue Note. (Platinum)
8. "Fallen; Evanescence. Windup. (Platinum)
9. Soundtrack: "2 Fast 2 Furious."
Disturbing tha Peace.
10. 'Thankful," Kelly Clarkson.
RCA. (Platinum)
Mainstream Rock Track~

LOS ANGELES (AP) "Angels don't like getting
their hands dirty. You know.'
upper management ·types ,"
dedares Rube, one of the
grim reapefs who populate
Showtime 's new drama
"Dead Like Me ."
A little background : The
series" executive producer,
John Masius, created and
was th en ousted from
"Touched by An Angel"
becau se CBS thought his
vision of the show overly
dark .
So does the dialogue represent a bit of payback? No,
says Mas ius. What about the
wisecrack from Rube, "Hey,
you don't see Della Reese
sitting here"o
"That still didn 't feel like
a shot," insists Masius. But,
he adds, "This is not your
mother's 'Touched by An
Angel."'
, .
That's for sure. While the
CBS series was earnestly
uplifting, "Dead Like Me,"
specializes in black comedy,
accented by adolescent
surliness.
That's because the focus is
on Georgia, known as
George, an 18-year-old college dropout who we meet
in the dwindling hours of
her aimless, unhappy life just before a sP.ace station's
plummeting to1let ends it.
But George remains reluctantly earthbound, tapped to
work for an indefinite period
as one of the reapers who
pluck out souls from the

"

Pac ific Pool, it con be eve·rv olav.l

Sunday, June 29, 2003 ·

Chris Rock prans summer warm-up tour

·FAIR HOUSING SEMINARS

laucol•tvtime with your /.cids?

Page CS

-----------

··--- -·-·"

- -·-----·- ----- ----. -·-- -

1. "Like a Stone." Audioslave.

lnterscope.
'Send 1he Pain Below,"
Chevelle. Epic.
3. "Headstrong; Trap!. Warner
Bros. ·
4. "St. Anger," Metallica. Elek1ra.
5. "Somewhere I Belong; linkin
Park. Warner Bros.
6. "Stupid Girl," Cold. Flip.
7. "Straight Out of Line,"
Godsmack. Republic.
8. "Price to Pay." Staind. Flip.
9. 'Caugh1 in the Rain," Revis.
Epic.
10. "The Road I'm On," 3 Doors ,
Down. Republic.
2.

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Hot Country Singles and
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DreamWorks.
.
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·
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·
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�Page C6

Celebrations
Weddings

Weddings

•

Harris-Gaiser

,.

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages 02-7

Home

Engagements
Fowler-Martin

PORTAND, Ohio- Hillery
Mae Harris and Matthew Mark
Gai&gt;er were married at 2:30
p.m.. on Oct. 19 at the Christ
t ·,.mmunity Weslevan Church
in Albany.
. ·
.
'fhe bride is the daughter of
Jeffrey and Deborah Harris of
Portland. and the groom is the
son of Mark and Darla Gaiser
of Radcliff.
Music for the wedding 'was
provided by Kimberly Gaugler.
pianist. and Bill Fisher and Eine
Kleine. soloists. The bride',s
attendants were Kendra Heek
of Columbus, a cousin, matron
of honor: Sarah Beth Gaiser of
Radcliff and Amy Fisher of
Centervi lie, sisters of' the
groom; and Mary Thorson of
Blackburg, Va Selina Mamone
•md Ali Bongiorno, cousins of
the bride, were the flower girls.
David Gaiser of Radclifl' was
best man. ~d groomsmen were
C. J. .Hams, Greenville, S. C.,
brother of the bride; Andrew
Heck, Columbus, cousin of the
bride: and Ken Fisher,
,Centerville. · brother-in-law of

Lewis-Harris
PORTLAND, Ohio - The
wedding of Michelle Diane
Lewis and Charles Jeffrey
Hams took place at 6 p.m. on
Dec. 28 at the Emmanuel Bible
Chapel in Berwick, Pa.
The bride is the daughter of
Robert and Carin Lewis of
Berwick. and the groom is the
son of Jeffrey and Deborah
Harris of Portland. The Rev.
Bryce Hager of Taylors, S. C.
and the Rev. George Bryson of
Berwick, Pa. perfonned the double-ring candlelight ceremony.
Serving a~ maid of honor for
her sister was Laura Lewis.
Bridesmaids were Hillery
Gaiser of Athens, sister of the
groom: Rachel McCarthy of
Panerson, N. Y., cousin of the
bride: Michelle Reece of
Midland, Mich. and Julie Rose
of Augusta, S.C.
Best man was Jason Boling
of Greenville, S.C. and the ushers were Robert Lewis of
Berwick, Pa.. brother of the
bride: Kyle Noms of Racine,
cousin of the groom; James
Tilson and Greg Davis both of

Michelle and Charles Harris
Greenville. W. C.
A reception was held at the
church. The couple took a wedding trip to Williamsburg, Va.
and now reside in Greenville,
S.C.
The bride has a master of arts
in teaching an a bachelor of arts
in history, both from Bob Jones
University in Greenville, S. C.
She is on the history department faculty of Bob Jones
Uni versity. The bridegroom
holds both bachelor and masters of an in Bible from Bob
Jones. He is assistant pastor at
the Fellowship Baptist Church
in Taylors, S. C.

Sunday, June 29, 2003

·row?

McGuire-Hopkins
Charla and Chris Snouffer

GALLIPOLIS ,
Ohio Amber Nicole McGuire of
Gallipolis and John Bradley
Hopkins of Gallipolis are
announcing their engagement.
Penny and Charles Burge of
The bride-elect is tl1e daughMiddleport and granddaughter ter of Mark and Charlotte
of Mick and Jake Burge of McGuire of Gallipolis. She is a
fvlillwood, W.Va., Rosemary 2000 graduate of Gall ia
Hysell of Middleport and Academy High School and is
Lawrence Hy sell of Syracuse. currently employed by Ohio
She is the great-granddaughter Valley Bank.
John Bradley Hopkins and
of Erma Burge of Mill wood,
Amber McGuire
She is the granddaughter of
and the late. Otis and Jessie Kenny McGuire and the late
He is the grandson of Glenda
Hussell of Millwood: also the Patricia McGuire: the late Rife and the late Merch Ri fe;
late Lawrence and Marie Harley and Vera Hill.
Roxie Hopkins and late Cecil
Manley of Middlepon.
.
Hopkins of Morristown, Tenn.
The
prospecti
ve
bridegroom
She is a 2000 grddmite of is the son of John and Robin
The open ceremony ;, set for
Meigs High School and is
of Gall ir.?Iis. He is a 4:30 p.m .. July 12, 2003. at
employed by Smart Style Salon Hopkins
1998 graduate ot Ri ver Valley Middleport Church of Chlist
in Athens. She plans to anend High School and is currentl y Life Center
Ohio University in the fall.
A reception will follow the
employed by Laborers Union
The groom is the son of Gary Local #83 Construction.
ceremony.
and Sarah Snouffer of Bay St.
Louis, Miss. He is the grandson
Bridal Registry
of Bill and Jane Snouffer of
• Li st your preferences
Bay St. Louis, Miss. and Mary
• No gucsswmk fo r
Drummond and the late Charles·
fr iends &amp; fam ily
Drummond of Cheshire. He is a
• Yo u rec e1 \ ' C your
fa votite 1hings.
2000 graduate of Meigs High

Burge-Snouffer wedding
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio Charla Lynn Burge and
Christopher David Snouffer
were mWTied oo May 3 in a
double ring ceremony at the
Cheshire Baptist Church in
Cheshire The wedding was
performed by the Rev. Harold
Tracewell.
Channing Burge, sister of
the bride· was the maid of
honor. The bridesmaids were
. Sam Fife, Renee Reiber and
Kendra Snouffer, sister of the
groom. Faith Leach and Dana
Ambrose were the flower girls
and Cameron Leach was the
ring bearer. Kayhie Hayes,
niece of the bride and Tyler
Little, nephew of the bride registered the guests.
The best man was Gary
Snouffer, Sr. ·father of the
groom. The groomsmen were
Gary Snouffer Jr., John
Ambrose and Ben See.
A reception and dinner
immediately followed in the
church social room .
The bride is the daughter of

Johnson-Weeks
CHESTER,
Ohio
Angela Colleen Johnson and
Michael Joseph Weeks
exchanged wedding vows at
2:30 p.m. on June 7 at the
Belpre Gazebo fn Belpre. Bill
McAfee, . mayor of Belpre,
performed the double ring
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
John and Charlotte Johnson
of Wate rtown, and Mike and
Chris Martin of Chester. The
bridegroom is the son of
Dave and Jennie Weeks of
Alfred.
Attendants for the bride
'were Bobbie Scarberry, maid
of honor; Brittany Johnson,
sister of the bride, junior
maid of honor; Mary Ellen
Moore. Rachelle Johnson,
and Stephanie Mayle, bridesmaids . Shayla Layne and
Kyra Mayle, both cousins of
the bride were the tlower
girls.
·
Lamar Lyons II was best
man and the groomsmen
were Nick Weeks and Steve
Weeks. brothers of ·the
groom; and brothers-in-law,
Chris Johnson and Vinson
Martin. Austin Johnson was
the ringbearer.

Page Dl

CHESHIRE, Ohio - Jeff
and Ruby Fowler of Cheshire
announce the engagement and
upcoming marriage of their
dau¥'hter. Chasity Dawn. to
Patr1ck Eugene Martin, son of
Rick and Gwen Martin of
Middlepott.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Ralph and Lois
Cundiff of Dexter and the late
Mildred Fuw)er nl West
.Virginia. Her france Is the
Chaslty Fowler and
grandson of the late Harold and
Patrick Martin
Helen Gibbs of West Virginia,
and the late Edwm'd and Anna .. graduate of Hocking College.
. Mae Martin of Pomeroy:
An open church wedding will
Fowler is a 200 1 graduate of take place on July 5 at the
Meigs, High School and a 2003 Middleport Church of Christ
graduate of Hocking College. with the music to begin at 2
Martin is a 1999 graduate of p.m. A reception will follow in
Meigs High School and a 2002 the church's Family Life Center.

Hillery and Matthew Ga!ser
the groom.
A reception was held following the ceremony at The Plains
Elementary School.
Guests weye registered by
Christine Mamone. cousin of
the bride, and Michelle Harris.
sister-in-law of the bride, TI1e.
couple took a wedding trip to
Jamaica and now resiJe in
Athens.
The bride has a bachelor of
science in composite social
studies education from Bob
Jones University and Harris
holds a culinary arts degree
from Johnson and Wales
University. Both are restaumnt
managers.

iunbap ~imers .j)entinel

School
· and fur
is employed
as a . 1:'~~=;;;;=~~;:i~i;i~=;:;:;~;;:;;;
tankennan
Florida Marine
in Mandeville, La.
The couple now resides in
Athens, Ohio.
In an effort to provide our readership with current ne\11/S, the
Sun~ay T~mes-Sentinel encourages submission of weddings,
annrversanes, b1rthdays, club meet1ngs and reunions as soon as
possible following the date of the event
To assist in accuracy, we suggest items be typed double-spaced
or neatly printed.
For your convenience, you can e-mail your materials to:
neW5@mydailytribune.com
news@mydailysentinel.com
news@mydailyregister.com
Acceptable formats for write-ups include Microsoft Word and
plain (ASCII) text
Acceptable formats for photos include high-resolution JPEGs or
EPS files.
.
!1 you don't have access to a computer, simply mail your sub~ISSIOns or_hand deliver them to the offices of the Gallipolis Daily
Tnbune, Po1nt Pleasant Reg1ster or The Da1ly Sentinel.
.,
Please include a daytime phone number with your submission.
with purchase
All matenal submitted for publication is subject to editing.

eur

so

ti.ll.:·she added, smiling.

' ,"After viewing Robinson's
own gard~n. located at her
hqn\e along ii}hio I60, it is
evident\' that ''the gardenil)g_
sldliS' @the father have been ·
~ on to the daughter. . ; ·
• Visitors . to the ho~ 1!ft!
greeted wtth an astom$ing
., '

'

.

..

Alvera Robinson of Gallipolis examines the petals of her brightly~olored Day Lilies, which
are the product of prize-winning seeds Robinson purchased four years ago at Bob ShaveJ's
Lilly Farm in Gallia County.
~

FREE
GIFT

Everybody$
in Las Vegas!

. L.. lo.a.il h
KUI:L,_ _ ____j. .

Angela and Michael Weeks
A reception was held at the
Belpre Shrine Club following
the wedding. Brenna Sisson
and Erin Roach reg istered
guests. The wuple honeymooned at Myrtle Beach, S.
C. They now reside in.
Chester.
The bride attends the
University of Rio Grahde and
will graduate in the spring
· with a degree for teaching in
early childhood programs .
She is currentl y employed as
a nanny. We.eks attended
Ohio University and is
employed with Diagnostic
Hybrids of Athens.

Meigs County
Health Department

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LEFT: A plethora of Black-Eyed Susans 11!1¢ Chorlopsis greet ·vtsltors as they makec1heir
WIY'!IIong the front porch of Alvera Rpblneon's home . RobinsOn said oofor is Vflfy impllr_
·
•1'1:arifto her and that she likes to make her garden as colorful as possible.
BOTfOM : An assortment of piflk and satmoooolored Geraniums~ the rear of
1
~rison ' s home, located on Ohio 160 in Gallipolis.
..

�Page 02 • 6unbap tlltlltS -6mtfntl

Learl) to Beat
the Heat When
Temperatures
Rise
Soaring temperatures may
make for wonderful days at the
· beach or pools ide, but &lt;pending
too much time outdoors when
the heat is on may lead to seri. ous heahh problem s for the
unaware.
Though you probably can't
wait to get outdoors when the

weather forecasts a heat wave,
however if you over-exert yourself in hot, humid weather you
may end up with heat cramps,
heat exhaustion or heat stroke.
These condition s are largely
brought on by heat and dehydration, but with proper care it
is possible to prevent them.
Follow these guidelines, courtesy of www.drreddy.coin.
• Heat Cramps - Muscle
contractions, usually in the gastrocnemius or hamstring muscles (the muscles at the back of
the calves. Tho:;se contractions
are forceful and painful. The
cramps seem to be connected to
heat, dehydration and poor conditioning. They usually improve
with rest, water and a cool
environment.
• Heat Exhaustion A
result of excessive heat and
·dehydration. Symptoms include

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • P1. Pleasant, WV

Make LanguageLearning a
Family Affair

lan guag~

''Mom, I'm bored.'" Rainy
d ays notwith&gt;tanding. m;on)
parents are doomed to hear the
dreadcd phrase after a few
weeks of slee ping in. backyard
barbecues and trips to the beaeh ·
or skate park. What 's a parent to
do 0
We ll , ho w about something
educational? Learning doe&gt;n ' t
have to s top at the same time
classes do, and it doesn't have
to be boring either. With a little
imagination and in gen u it y,
parents can pre sent g r ea t
educational activities in a fun
way that children will e njoy.
Even if you're not traveli ng this
summer, you can crea te your
own global adventure for yo ur
chi ld by introducing him or her
to a new language.
With plenty of time. no formal
class structure a nd no pre&gt;&lt; ure
to keep up with more advanced
students, summer is a great time
to study a fore ign language;
children are free to Jearn at their
own pace . Exposing your c hild
at an early age to another

hcJp, fo,tcr cuhur;o l •
apprc:ciafion and
enc!luragc' them to adopt a •
m,w enriched, cultural perspecti'&lt; - and, acco rdi ng to the
language expem at Berlitz. a ·
better under"anding M the
world in whi ch we live. It also
ha; cross-curric ul um potential;
children can explore the
geography, history, and even
agriculture of the country who&gt;e
language they ha ve chosen to
study.
But don't let the kids have all •
the fun. Many ad ults dream of
learning another language or
eve n two. Why no t study •
together with your c hild"
Parents and chil dren can teac h o
each oth er. Pick a lan g uage •
whose ,ounds yo u enjoy or
v.hose culture )OU are interested
in and i ncorporatc some words
from the new lan guage into
your daily life. Here is more •
advicc to he lp parents make
language learni ng a family
affair. co urt e'y of Berlitz
KidTa lk '"
(www.berlitl.comlkidtalk).

Check Out These Websites
Try this. integrated language
act ivi ty for young lang uage
learne"; Get a g lobe a nd
gath er one or more young
children. Then play a world
language audi ocassette like
"Berlitz Kids Songs ·from
Around the World ." Listen to
a so ng and point out to the
children on the globe where
the language of the song is
spoken.
Listen for televi sion shows,
cartoons and radio broadcasts in other languages.
Invite any friends who speak
the lan g uage ove r for a
barbecue.
Host a small play group of
your children's classmates
who are also learning the
new language so they can
practice.
Read stories in the new ·language or written in English
that highlight the new cui ture . Pretend you're in the
country that speaks the language while reading.

Fashionable Shades Protect
Eyes and Make a Statement
Sunglasses can make you seem mysterious. provide the right fashion accessory for
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According to AIIAboutVision.com,
today's sunwear industry, is booming.
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dizziness. nausea. vomiting,
fainting . and a moderately
. increased temperature. Rest and
a cool environment may help.
• Heat Stroke - The most
severe form Qf heat illness. It
can occur in people who are not
exercising, if the weather is hot
enough. A person with heat
stroke usually has a very high
temperature ·(106 F or higher)
and must be treated by a doctor
immediately for delirium or

seizures.
It is possible to prevent heatrelated illnesses. The important
thing is to stay well-hydrated,
make sure that your body can
get rid of extra heat through a
cool environment, and to be
sensible about exertion in hot.
humid weather.

*

Parks &amp; Recreation
www.parksmaps.com
Get maps for national and state parks, golf course informatio n.
amusement parks, travel information. area sights and more.
www.pe~ktopeak.net
,
If you're mi ssion is to backpack and hike along nature s finest
trails, then visit this site to learn more about favorite locales.

Need upbeat exercise musicry Check out this site which offers a
selection of tunes designed with workouts in mind.

www.parentsknow.com
Browse through an archive of informative features all about raising children in the greater New York metro area.

Keep Your Cool
www.airconco.cQm
To some people air conditioning is vital. Learn about this UK company which offers a complete line of portable air conditioning
products.

www.domeypark .com
Splish splash. Getting wet is one of the fastest ways to cool down
when the heat is on. Log on to the official Web site of Wild Water
Kingdom.
www.glacierbaytours.com
Feeling hot under the collar? Well, then take a cruise to an area
where it's bound to be a little cooler- like Alaska!

Also included are the Couric-Smith

Today Show's Katie Couric, the historic
Shorte~Mansion and the barbershop

*

m

the Bluff City Inn which ·dates back to

day, What he hadn't counted on was

1885.

winning the New Orleans lottery_ But

* Alabama's history is filled

with unique tales that are both enter-

that's exactly what he did. Wanting to

raining and enlightening. And one of

the best ways to learn about things ·

make the most of his good fonune,

like the bisforic district in Huntsville

Jamie used the money to . build a

or: the Ciril War legacy of Selma, is on

Victorian cottage in which the couple

•

our free walking tours. More than 30

could begin their new life together.
·.

~·

tours take place aU across the state,
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May 24 through July 5. For rour locatiom,
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""""

6 lamtly Oak Grove Aa .
Racine. July 1st-2nd--3rd 95 . baby 1tems &amp; clothes.
LOngaberger. Home lntenor

~oveaole well mannered
'fC)tmg female tabby. would
make good comoan10n Free
to gooa Mme 740-446-

7143

Corner of Fourtn &amp; Pearl
Streer Rac1ne Tuesday
July 1. 9--?, ratn canc.efs

r

\\'\

I

a

1-en-452-5627
We accept calls 7 days a
week

L,-------,J
VJlJ,
Bl 't

"--------pi
110

bOI'Oer collie ..

•

m••

~t black laD
(tog weat·
•ng a blue bandana. Btue
Founta~n Motel area. Call
740-4A6-J15J

Lost Plk1ngeae 1n j(.anauga
area 6.'4103 goes by me
name of Baby, reward
'Jtfered 740-4o&amp;6-8279

HelpW.mecl

Immediate Fui i-T 1me/Pa rt·
Time F'oSII•on opemng.
Coordinator.
REM Communtty OpfiOns IS
currently seeking persons to
provtd e
act•ve
habllttattoNdffeCt care tn a
restdentlal senmg to lndtvlduals who have mental .retar·
datiOn or other developmental CStSat»litles 1n Mason ana
Roane
County
areas .
Min1mum
quahltcations
mclude . a valid Crtver"s
license and h1gh school
diploma
or
equivalent.
Excellent starting wagel!l
ana compeuttve oeneftts. No
phone calls please Please
SEnd resume/letter of •nter·
est to : REM Community
Opt1ons 3 Boaz Commercial
Pa rk . Williamstown . WV
25187
Atlent1an : Judy
Casto Deadline 10 apply .
July 3, 2003
Rocksprings Ae hab1htation
Center •slooking tor dedicaf·
ed comoMS10nate nursmg
aSSIStants
Competlttve
wages. health and dental
benefit! and 401 K availab&amp;e

Help Wanted

We take Pflde m our hOme
and restdents and need
great team players to pn us.
II you have tl'1ese quahtJCat!Ons please apoly to:
Aocksprmgs Rehabilitation
Center. 36759 RW.spn~
Aoad.
Pomeroy.
OhiO
45769
·Ellfend,care
HeaHh
SeMCes. tnc IS an equal
opportun ity employer that
encourages
workplace
Civer!lty WF D1V

CNA&amp;HHA .

A\ION I All Areas. 1 To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304675-142!iJ

Immediate openings in the
Gallipolis area. We offer
top pay and benefits and
have been voted "Best in
· the Tri-State" for
the past three years!

G .-\J.LJJ'Oiji;

Help Wanted

•

1992 Fora Tempo &lt;I(...(JOOr
'.}ClOd condltlon 51000 call
-t-46-7 6-&lt;4

3-fam•ty yard·MJe ..kJty qn &amp;
5tl'1 119 Basnaru Onve 25~
colOr TV mountaen btke 2·

r;otfee tables womens plus.
s1ze clothlnQ
OuJ·mens
ctotrnng. omer fTIISC rtern$-'

•

has f11ll-time and part-time
openings for Certified Medical
Assistams. Ucemed N11rse with
office exprrirnce and an Office

'

Aockaprlngs Rehabi litation
Center
is 1ook1ng lor
Temporary
Full
T tme
PositiOns tor the following :
Aest orattve / A cthnt1es
As.sis.ant- Th ts
position
Require! an STNA
Actrvrtkts Assistant
Please apply to Rocksprings '
Ael'labllitation Center, 36759
Rocksprings
Road .
PomerOy. Ohio 45769
Extendicare
Health
ServiCOs, Inc. IS an equal
opiJ()rtunity employer that
encourages
workplace
diVersity, MIF ON

Medt Home Health Agency,
Inc. se'e king RN Clinical
Field Educator for th e
Gallipolis. Onfo area . Duties
include Haison between
physicians &amp; hfalth care
1ac1ll1ies. We offer a compet·
i1ive salary, benefits pack·
age, 401k, and flex time.
Please sene! resume to 430
Second Avenue Gallipolis
OH 45631 Ann : D iana
Harless. CIIS1k:·al Manager
EOE

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc .
seekinQ
hJII·time
hcen&amp;ed . Physical Therapist
tor Otuo ana West V irginia
client based. We offer a
competitive salary, benefits
package, 401k. and SIGN·
ON-BONUS. EOE ..Please
send resume to 430 Second
A~ten ue , Gallipol l~. OH
4563 f . Ann: Diana Harless.
Clinal Manager

. Medi Home Health Agency, .
Inc.
seeking
part-time
Medical Soctal Wor'lulr for
tl'1e Gallipolis. Oh1o area .
Masters Degree required .
We offer a competitive
salary. benefits package ..
401 k, EOE. Please sand
resume to 430 Second
Avenue,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631 . Attn: OJ•na Harless,
Clinical Manager

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Arbor's at Gallipolis

1-740-446-7112

Anistant. We offer il competitive .
salary and benefit package, For

· or apply In l)erson at
170PinecrestCr.,
Galllpotls, OH 45631.

morr information contact:

Arbors is an equal opportunily employer

H1mu~n Rut~Nrus D~partm~nt

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

O'Bicnus Mmo11rial Hospilal

Arbor's at Gallipolis

55 Ho1pi1al n,;.,.
AlhcnJ, OH 4570.1
Phtmr: (740) 591-9117
EOE

&amp;

Help Wanted

RESOURCES POSITION

1 .......,

3 Family July 1·2·l- il\o'OO
ocme5 1636 Charha!TI A~~e
Gan!poiiS 9am·Spm

Help Wanted

PROGRAM ASSISTANT,
AGRICULTURE AND NATURAL

(740) 446-3808

HElP W"NIID

a skilled nursing facility, Is seekli1CJ
STHA's to become pari of a caring
team with managers who listen. We
believe In open communication,
coachi11CJ,
and
encouraging
advancement. We are proud of our
fadllty and hove high standards. If
you do to, we would like to hear
from you •. You must truly enjoy
working with the elderly and wont to
_b ecome a part of our 24;-hour team,
We offer competftlve wages and
benefits.
If Interested please contod
Teresa Woods, DON at

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital

Help Wanted

=r:::y:::-\lti):;:S.\1.[=.:::,
~

on

"'

$$$$$$$$

Help Wanted

l
.

The
Athens-Me1gs
Educational Serva has a
position opening for a Work·
Study Coordina tor for tne
2()()3..2004 School Year. Th11
position 11 a 10 mon11'1 posi·
tton wim full ooara approvad
benefits. Applicants should
hold an OhiO teaching cer·
llficatetlic:8n.se as an 1nter·
vention Specialist m any
area of l!lpecial education ,
with a Transit)On to Work
EndOrsement on the certlfi~
catellicense ·
preferred .
Preference will be gWen to
person with at least tnree
(3) years of successful
teaching experience work·
•nQ with students with dis·
abtlit1es at the secondary
level. Salary will be based
on e oucat10n and exper ieoce. Submit a &amp;etter--ot inter·
est. resume . and references
to
John
Costanzo,
Supenntendent.
AthensMe.gs Eaucatooal Serv.ce
Center.
507
Rich land
Avenue, Surte •108, Athens ,
457 01
APplication
Deadline: Until Position is
Fil!eti.· The AMESC it an
deadline: UntJI PMiUon 11 equal opportuntty employfilled The AMESC IS an er/provider
equal opportunity employ·
eri provtder

Help wanted canng for the
elderly Darst Group Home
Mw pay1ng m1n1mum wage.
At
Rocksprmg.s new shifts . 7am·3pm . 7am·
Aehab•hfat10r G4:nter our Spm . 3pm·1 tpm . 1 1pm·
lOCus 1S on reSioent care 7am call 740-992-5023
Our programs are outcom~
Need to earn Money? Lets
onented wrt an tnlerdt$C.1pilTalk the ~ Avon Call
nary effort to serve rre Mar 1lyn. 304-882·2645 to MediCal Transcnptllt tn Pt
·whole" person We are !ook· !earn all the ways •f can work
Pleasant area Must .nave
mg for
an e~ceotion a l
for you
exp Can (304)27J.-0892
AN/LPN to contnbute to lh1s
effort If you nave IQng·term
care expe nence ana feel
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
you could ennance our
efforts ro sente a spec1a1
segment of our commutllty
we would like to talk to you
lntfHested
cand.dates
snould
apply
ro
RoCkspnngs AenabtlttatJon
Center 36759 Rcckspnngs
RoacJ. Pomeroy OH 45769,

enced only need apply.
qu.ck book.! AA1AP payrotl
Cl'tester iieaJ Oak Hill Aa )Otl cosnng. wQr1cs well With
l.o1s ot dcO!leo. hOuN/1&lt;&gt;kl oublc, start tmmea.ately. ref·
qma, toys. and loti more erenC-65 requ1red. can 448Follow Sl...,. at O!Mtet
4514 for more 1ntctmanon.
:..::::.::.::.::!:~.:::..::
~=Construction
Chnsnans
Gallipolis. Oh
:Nil
1-2·3
..
··
Ea&amp;t lo&lt;art Baby dotn ...
baby thmgs, tc:Pfs. diShes Help Wanted
oartenaer
bOOks &amp; lett ot mtsc (740) ap,:tly Wlthm at pest 4-464
247-~1
l J4 JrCIIwe Galhpohs. OhiO
Muln-farrnly 'fclrtl sale ~
1St &amp; 2nd. 8 o31&gt;4 00 pm

Athens- Meigs
Ed ucational Service has a
poSitiOn openmo tor an inte·
grated PreschOOl Teacher tn
Me95 County for Ule 20032004 School Year. Th1s posi·
tton 1s a 9 montn positiOn
with full coard approved
benef tts. Applicants m ust
hold a valid teac1'11ng certif1·
cate/hcense 1n spec1a1 educat•on or pre·~lndergarten
w•th early educatiOn of
1'1an&lt;ticapped (E EH ) vali&lt;ta·
!ton
on
either
certificate/license. A temporary license tor the Early
Education
of
the
HandiCapped
may
be
obta·i ned tor a candidate
p o s !I e s s ' n g
certifieate/1tcense in prekindergarten of special educatiOn . salary will be based
on education and experience. Submit a letter of inter·
est, resume and references
to
Jol'1n
Costanzo.
Superintenoent
AtnensMeigs Educat ooal Service
Center,
507
Richland
Avenue. Surte 1rt08. Athens,
On 45701 . Appllca11on

EXPECT "MORE"

To learn more about oppor·
tun•t•es wtth the ll)dustry
IMder see ~ JB Hunt repre·
sentatlve at
truCk stop
near you . or f:ltped1te yaur
appl•catton by calhng

ila

llilJ' WMTID

The

HVAC Installer Open•ng:
Benelits available. Apply at
or
Send
Re!ume
to
At JB Hunt Transport. we Bennett'! MH Healing &amp;
1391
Safford
g1ve you a stable env~ton­ Cooling
men1 for a long-term dnvtng School Ad. Gallipolis. OH
45631 (740)446-94t6 or 1·
career . plus more·
800-872-5~7
Drrvers

nours PUOJ•c Health eJCperience would be of great
v alue If Interested send
resume w•ttl references to
Absolute Top Dollar US PO ·Box 44 7 Pomeroy. on 10
Stiver
Gold
Cams. 4576 9 by July" 2nd No'
Proolse!s Otamonds Gold pnone ;.airs please
Rtngs .
U S Currency.·
151 HardWare sales clerk expe·
M T S Cotn Shop
Secono Avenue Galhpohs r1ence n1ce but not neces·
sary
For'Na rd resume to
74Q.-446-2842
Cl.A-570 CJO Gallipolis Oa1ly
~ ' ll ' t' n' l ~''
Trtbun e 825 Tn ·ra Ave .
.._ , JH II I .._
Galltpolis. OH 45631

'JlJ

non firm. full time. open·

C'aO:&amp;wt11ta short hair. near
S88 &amp; TlllCU ~- c.aU ~ '

'iUDSML

i

Garage 5ale , Harry Hotter
Bookkeeper- large construeres.deflee. July l &amp; 2.

F"ound- 1mall wMe male
aog. no conBr Salser Ad.

9554

na

·s-?

3 montl'1 old full bloooad
German Snepnera. female.
neeas
space
to
run .

••Habit

.

Chtl near Pan11da Tools EOE 5uol&amp;e1 ro awg sc.r~en SIX
141 , colthes.avon . tools
clothtng. lurmture etc ~am
household, what·nots June
or s1'11ne
28- July 6.
Full ttme AN 01fector needGarage Sale July 2-3 aam-"&gt; May 30 · JunE: 1 &amp; 2 at:34049 ea lor rhe Tuberculosis
85 Arn old Or
Btdwell. New L•ma Ad Rutland Office Hours 8--4 MoM~
bel'1tnd Bidwell Batt &amp; Tackle somett'ung tor e•teryone
thu Friday Some e"~~entng

r

•nf

POLJCIES: Ohio V81t.y Publishing rtMrV .. h right to edit, rtfect. 0t cane.!
tid .t 8f1Y tii'!M. Err01s mutt bl rtp()lted on the fir~ ct.y of
Tribu,..s.ntine~qlittr will De rttpOMibte for 110 mort INn tht eo.! of the .,.ee occupitd by tht tffor llftd onty the flretlnMftlon. Wt INJI not bt I
1ny lou or ••pente that rnuMa from tht publication Of omlsilkHw of an ldYtlliMment. CorrKtion wtn be mlldlln tht flf'.t
edltlon. • Sol •::.:~::1
art 1lwtyl eot'rlidimtial. • Cuntm rill Clf'd tppt..._ • All rMI ntltt: ad¥trt1Nmentl .,., tub;ect 10 tht Ftdtftl F1lr Houelng Act of 1MI. • Thlt 1
~·only help wanttd .0. mMtlng EOE atandlfclt. Wa wHI not lmowtngly IIUepl any •ertl.tng In violation of thllaw.

tiO

• Pay-up to 41 cpm
• T1me off-two days off tor
seven on the road wtth a
14-CSay get ~-rome program
• M•leS·above average
Equtpmenr-new
July 1st 8·4. Bob Roy resiFretg1'1tl1ner conventtonals
ctence. 511'1 Stieet Ra c•ne
• BenefitS·meotea l. oenta l.
Ntce mens &amp; women~ cloth·
v1510n prescrtptton d•scoun!.
•n g, hqusenotd 1tems. some· oatd vacation , and 401k
th•ng lor everyone

Cornet of Lincoln Pike ana June 30-July 1st g. 4 La urel

Yare Sale tuesday July Tst
Jackson Ptke

LOST b1g

Indoor vard Sale 1124
College Road . Syracuse
June30-July2nd 8am-5pm
Furntlure. bedd1ng . dolls.
toys.
lames .
l:laby·
turniture .books ltke new
baby clothes ht!)e ty~es
lad1es !mall thru plus mens
1eans 32-36 gtr)S 6-14
Some boxes of m•sc are $3
&amp; 54 per bolt Bakevoare
glassware etc Lots a t mtsc
Cheap pnces

6130-711. 830am- 430pm. 6
miles below Gallipolis on
Rt7S. wall oven, coun ter·iop
July 2nd &amp; 3rd 9-? 5th
drop-•n stove lots or clean
Street next to Rae me
1tems
leQtOn
Communtty yara sale . 2m•
July 3-4-5 1st one 1n years
!rom V1nton Cemetary on At
Lots of stuff &amp; collectables
160, Ames Rd . Eq.ngton
1st house off SA 681 TR
area . watCh for stgns July
24 7. Cherry Afdge
1-5. 9am-5pm

There w•ll be a manclatory
conference on July 10
2003 1n CMrleston wv.
W rrtten presentattons must
oe recetved no later than
July 31 .2003
Verxtors selected to make
oral preientattons . 1f any.
should be prepared ro 00 so
.mmea1cue1y fonowmg rn1s
deadhne
Further details are aya rlable
ar WNW state wv us/bnm

Thursday for Sund•v•

Pr 1'\lt:lll IY/M lfllll .f.

3 large boxes of yard sale.
1tems . glassware-clotnesm1sc.
SI O.OOea .
1999
Longaberger Datsy basket
combo $75 .00 Longaoerger
Cancer bear $35 .00 74Q.245-5662

C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
lor sale, Chester Townsh1p,
Me1gs County, send letters
o f mterest to : The Daily
5enttnel. PO Box 7:29-20.
Pomeroy, 01'110 45769. · '

'i,\RII S\I .E-

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

:z

Publication

Description • Include A Prke • A•oNI Abbrevi•tlons

'iARO SAt£;

12 Noon

In Next Day'• Paper

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\ J ~

Dt•pt•v:

classified@ mydallyreglster.com

Bu•ln••• Daye Prior To

Su(lday In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
For Sundays Paper

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To t1elp Get Response: ..
\ \ \ () 1 \1 I \ II

r

Word Ads
Oallv In-Column : 1:00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Comptete

Aaone. (7-'0)!00,._2962

~.

fochormilk

classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

25303

f~

classified@ mydailytri bune.com

GAt Ul'l'lLf&gt;

house, the ancestral home of The

Dotlwn
Entq.rut

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

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

www.dennisgreenltd.com
Keep fruits and vegetables grown during the summer season fresh
longer when storing in the refrigerator. Green's Extra Life is the
secret.

~egt~ter

Sentinel

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:

Offiee lfo(q-~

'

WASN'T DRAWING UP THE PLANS.

the luckiest man in the world.

Ad ...

www.musclemi~esmusic.com

www.seniorscape.com
A Web site for Senor citizens providing information for sports and
health maintenance ;m;ong other information for older individuals.

m:rtbune ·

Place
Your

www.honeywell.com/yourhome
Allergies are a growing health concern. An air cleaner may be your
first line of defense against sneezing and wheezing indoors.

his girlfriend, Mamie Harwell. He

And he ended up with a place where

To

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The Baby Think It Over program simulates the experiences young
parents would face should•they have a real child ..

Rhodes was making plans to marry

details to make the event a special

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

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The ultimate site to learn all you ' d ever want to know about the
diseases that plague the wor.ld. Also . keep current on hot health
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BUILDING THIS

had taken into account most of the

G•U!- Coumy. OH

Healthy Minds, Bodies and Outlooks .

1'\"\E FIRST STEp ll\i

In 1889, Eufaula nat1ve Jamie

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e lster
C L A S S I F I E~D

Ohio State Univenity Exten;ion.
Gallia County.
Tbe individual will provide leadership for
planning
and
teaching educational
program-' for
identified audiences.
Bachelors Degree in Agriculture ·related
area. Good communication skill•. both
written
and
spoken
neces.ary.
Compemation will be commensurate with
experiencelcredentials, benefit package
available. plus travel reimbursement Ohio
State
lJ ni.-emty
IS
an
equal
opportunitylaffirmati,-e action employ.:-r.
Application deadline is_ July 7. '2003 or
until filled . Application from and
information paeket available through the
Gallia County Elllemion Oftice
Ill Jackson Pike. Suitt 1572
Gallipolis. OH 740-446-7007.

a • killed nursing facility. is seeking an RN
Unit Manager for a 58 bed unit. The
qualified candidate must possess a valid
Ohio License. We prefer experience in
long term care. strong communication
skills and leadenhip abilities. We offer
competitive benefits and wages and career
growth potential .
Please contaCt

Teraa Woods, DON
at 1-740-446-7112 or apply In penon at
170 P1n«rnt Dr~ GaiUpolis, OH 45631.
Att&gt;ors iS an eauat

er

Help Wanted

Ar~r's

at Gallipolis

A skilled nursing facility, is seeking an
RN, Staff Development Coordinator. Must
possess strong organizational skills and
ability to function as pan of an
interdisciplinary
team.
We
offer
competitive wages and benefits. Qualified
candidates please contact

Teresa Woods. DON
at 1-740-446-7,112
or apply in person at
170 Pineam Cr.
Gallipolis. OH 45631,
Arbors os an equal CWOf!Unlly

r

•

�Page 04 • 6anbap ~lmet -6 tnttntl

1116

HaP WAA'IllJ

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

IIL.i,iO--·~-~-~-~-·,.'-.,I

Manufactunng

Transmllllona, all

IIO~llli
mNSAI.E

ty.,.,,

Piant Admlnlafretor

For over 80 years Reed
M1nerala a Har.sco company

haa been an moustry leader
u1 the manufacture of tndus·

mal aggregates used lor
roofmo products ar)d tndus
trtal abrastves We are cu r·
rently seekmg a motNatea
Plant Admtntstralor for our

W1ll patnt odd jobS any ktnd
of outstde w ork , w111 naul
anyth1ng $4/hr 740-441
9761

All r•l ~~ adnn lalng
Jn thll MWipiJ*' II
aubj.ct to the Fltderal
Fair Housing Act of 1H8
which maku It llltpllo

W1ll pressu re wash homes
lfa 11ers decks. meta l butld
tn gs and Qutters
Ca ll
(7401446·01 5 1 ask tor Ron
or leave message

adverfiN " an y

.,.terence, limitation Of
dl.crlmln~~tlon baHd on

l l \ \ '\(l\1

race , color, religion, M•

Gallipolis OH factlrty

familial status 01 nat ional,
origin, or any intention to
make an y tuch
pt"llference, hm1lll1ion or

BliSINIX'i
01'1'1 JKil ''1m'

Aeparllng dtrectly to the
Plant Supenntendent. you
must be extremely organ·
' NOT ICE I
tzed able to work tn a last
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
paced envtronment and
lNG CO recommends that
able to prmrrttze/handle \lart·
oua cltmcal cluttes wtth mtnt·

mal super-vls1on such as typ·

mg, answermg phones ltl
mg. matt d1slnbu110n, data
~ntry.

dlacrlmlnatlon.·
This

rteWipaper will no t

knowingly ac cept
advertiHmenlt ror real
..tate which Ia In

you do bus1ness w1lh people
you know and NOT to send
money through the mat! until
you have tnvest•catea the

violation of the law. Our
reader1 are hereby
Informed that a ll
dw•lllngs adver11sed in
' !his newapeper are

oHe r~ ng

and schedultng You
wtll alao process payroll and
Franchise/Master tranchtse
create/recetve
purchase

available on a n equal

1:1!0

S14

Wanted person or couple to
As1J.a1 w/dauly rout•ne on
modern da•ry farm lncludmg
mllk•ng feedfllg young stock
&amp; crops Tractor expet~ence
necessart Hous1ng &amp; ut•h
ues poss1ble winouny wage
Respond wrth resume &amp; 3
references tn lener form to
J A24 200 Ma1n Street. Pt
PI WV 2555()

G•lllpolla Career COllege
(Careers Close To HomeJ
Call Today! 7"\)-446-4367
1-600-214 0452
www galltpol•ecareerconege com
.90-{)5-12748

Rea

f320

1997 Log Home, 21 acres
FONSALE
w tth ltsn pond
Call
(740)256-6681
- - - -- - - - - 10 used homes uhder
2 houses tor sale 1 5 acres $2 000 w111 help w1th deliv·
MIL Green School d1stnct er",~, call Harold 740 385
tmmedmte
possess1on 9948
$26 500 740-446-7029
1980 14x70 Holly park tratl
3 Bedroom newly femoel er 3 br 1 112 ba total elec·
eled 1t1 M•ddleport call Tom tnc on 27 acres new 2 car
garage on L1ev1ng Rd West
Anderson after 5 p m
Cotumb1a WV cafl 304- 773·
992-3348
5126
3 Bedroom 2 Battuoom 1
112 Car Garage Galltpals 1995 Redman 14x70 2BR
C1ty Schools,
PhOtos 2BA, wrap around deck
lnlormat1on
Onl1ne
@ w/porch heat pump gas furwww orvb com code 60903 nace e,cellent cond 740
245·5()71
or call 740·446 3992
2 Modular Un1ts fo1 sale· 1
unrt •s 24x36 wtth metal Sid
tng and IS 1n fatr condtt1on tS
askmg $6 800 1 untt 1s
24x36 with wood s1dmg and
also m fa1r cond1tton but
needs some m1nor repa1rs
They would be good for
Sunday
School
Class
Rooms Work ShoJ;ls or as a
Cabm Delivery of Unils also
can be added Make afl
esqwres to Steve Pullins at
(740)992 2478

3 Bedroom 3 Bathroom 2
Car Garage, ntce 18X36
lnground Pool
AddiSOn
Township Photos lnformahon onltne @ www orvb com
code 11003 or call 740 446
4262
7 room house lor sale AJC,
Soft Water system , out at
h1gh water GUido {740}992·
2529

Bulav• lle Ptke Two Story,
2800 sq n 3 Bedroom 2·
Who want to LOSE we1ght
112 Bath Famt ly Room
We Pay You Cash for the L1vmg Room Game Room
pounds you LOSE I
2 Car Garage 30M40 Out
Safe Natural No Drugs
Bu1ld1ng Pool One Acre
800-201 8987
(740)446-805()

25 sertoua

MOBILE HOMES

Peop~ Wanted

2 Rental tra1lers and land
139 Church Street Btdwell
good renters m trailers
S20 000 368-8070

2001 Schultz double w1de 3
Arch type frame 30x40 , Newly remodeled 9yr old bedroom 2 bath A/C downspou11ng deck large appl•·
metal bulldtng not assam· house, 3 bedroom, 2 bath
ances washer &amp; dryer
bled 740-446·2861
wtlh anached 2-car garage
532 000 00 adjusted for
Electr~c gu 1tar and amp and above ground swtm·
moving expenses (7 40) 949·
1992 Ford Probe. 1987 mmg pool
(304)882· 3973
1131 after 6 pm
Dodge Van call 740-256· after 5pm
1102 ask for JuniOr
-~------- 24 x 36 double wide modular
R iver Frontage 11 12 acres class room Built very heavy
For Sale Ranch K.ng more or less 3BR 2 Bath duty to OhiO bU11d1ng code 1
1-4 5x42 mower new parts master swte w(jacuzz• full large open room no bath or
John Deere 7' Sickle bar basement. 2 declls wmver k1tchen self contatned heat
2 docks 1 lloat1ng 446· pump untt Approx 10 years
mower 245--521 1
2784
old S6 500 delivery a\lall·
Free removal of used apptl·
ances (washer
dryers H1stonc 38R log home 40 at&gt;le 740-992 2478 or 740·
refrigerators. w1ndow a1r acres Cole Valley Rd 591-9342
cond•t•ons cook sto'oles, S 175 000
Holleys Cotes Mobtle Homes
etc ) Galllpohs area 44 1· Assoc1a1es call 740·988· US 50 Easl Athens Oh10
1690
1030
45701 740-592· 1972

"''ew,

Full s1ze headboard &amp;
frame
cha1r miCrowave
stand &amp; chest 35 00 each
740-44 1-()988

Auction

r , , ~ r-_r j , J/ J1, 11

D&amp;J Plctcy PalntlfO
Free EsttmateS lntenor an
exteuor pa1nt•ng Grve your
home or garage a fresh ·
new IOcHc We pamt homes
garages, mobtle homes
butldinga barns and roofs
(Call 11-S, 11-6)

--·
(304)89S-3074

•zperlenca

LAWN CARE!
You tell me what you pay
and we II do rt tor less '

rl'\OSI

cases 1304)372 8634 leave
..._._ "'(304)273-4511

MR FIX IT!!!
ComploW Re.-lng
lmenor &amp; ExteriOr custom
wood dedi: &amp; lences Chatn
Lm~ All OOd Jobs
(J04)e7!'&gt;-3733

Announcements

American Leg1on

BINGO
Rutland Post 467
Pay1ng 80.00 or
more per game.
Several spec1al
games for extra
money All pack
you can play for
$20.00. Start1ng
t1me 6 30 p m
Star Burst
$1250.00
2 or 3$300
Luck Ball Games
Everyone

w

Call now for maps and other
parcels avatlable for home·
Sti es hunting and recreatton Owner f ~nanclng With
sl1ght property markup We
buy land 30 acres &amp; up

Lot tor sale tn
(740)992·5858

Rac1ne

--------Ntce mobtle home lots qutet
country setttng S115 per
month
mcl udes
water
sewer trash 740-332·2167

VINTON,OH LAND
Beatitul Home Sttea and a JBR
Ranch Home avatlable on
S~tentc Ad Rangtng tn 38ac 5ac
tracts only minutes tram the
1\ospflal

800-21 3-8385

' 11 r(1 ') '

Rt

'Al D ~(JI'/~
1 ~/J

' .'

Auction

Auction

Antique Auction
Sunday, July 6, 2003 at 12 00 p.m.
Moodlspaugh Auction House
Torch , Ohio
LocaltOI'I From Pomeroy Ohto follow At 7 north through Caolv,ue.
Ohto 10 Co Ad 63 tum
nght go to lirat road to ltift lum lefT go approx 1 mle lo T turn
f19ht go 1 4 mtle auctJon house rs on r~ght Please follow stgns
1
Furniture
3 pG walnut (Black Foresl) V~etonan Bedroom swte (Bed 9
dre1serw1mtrror 7 +washstand 6 5 • J all w/ ct1ocalate marble

tops 7 oak knockclown wardrooe mahg secre1ary bookcase
wiCUNed glass door 7 oak sepback cupt&gt;oa1d oak ll&lt;~twall (ong
tin J Pnm tlatwall cupboard 2 comp~re sellers cabtnels ch1na
cabinets aetlers tables 2 sq oak tables ~ 1 wt 2 pu ll out leaves
on each aide) rd oall; table press back ch81rs 9 pc wahlut dlntng reo~n suite oak Sideboard oak washstand VICtonan walnut
lamp IatKa Oak Te.otas h'9hboy eak dr&amp;Ssei'S w/m1rrors walnul
chest on chest w/malchmg chest walnut bed walnut 111C!onan
bed :2 depl'esston bedroom sulle5 2 emp1re chest oak &amp; mahg
l1brary lables drop front lades deS)( cedar chest ~a~et &amp; IOU
boxes oall; chtld stable w/2 chatrs h1gh chau ctr &amp; lamp tables
wiCke• rockers mtsc presSllack rockers &amp; chatrs w10ught tron
tablw w/chatrs plantahon desk vldooan lovesoat &amp; c ha~rs and
lots mo•e fumrlure sltll arn'llng
"Pone!)' &amp; Glassware
HuH McCo y Am 81sque Wan Cllalllware Cookte J81S
etc Fenton Jadrte Depresston lmpenal Camf\o al C!)'stal
Blenllo Chtn a and lots more
"Stonewaro;(
A P Donag!lhO top ha1 f ~marked) 01her Donaghllo s Aedw•ng
rar Greensboro 1ar (damaged} mtSG tars &amp; )ugs batler bowl
(vanous col0f5) and lots more
UMISC

Oak waal lelphone Aladdm Oil lamp mantel and vtetonan ki! Chllfl
clocks A A memoroblha Blaclo: memorobd1a :2 gurtars old
paperworlo: bOoks rad•os toys piCtures &amp; trames lamps glass
dasey churn krtCilet'l &amp; granite wares 1ronware mtlk bUs blue
tars sm onmi!Nes old tools qu1lls old bo•es old baskets 5
Longaberger ba s~ets ano lots more 1nterest ng rtemsto be found
"Walches·
La clles 14K pendant watch 20 .. pocket A wnsl watdles (allold)

'"

Mood•spaug11 AucttooeE!flllg Servtces
AuctJoneers Btll Moodtsoaugh Oh10 L~e •7693 WV •t388
TOOO MOOCI1spaugh OhiO LIC •000 I 07
l1C811sed and bonded 1n favor of \he states of OhiO &amp; WV

TMms Casn or good check wlproper 1D We do no!IICC&amp;P1 credit
cards wlan s~. pram1um Not re6p0rlstble lor 3Celdon!S or lOss ol
property Announcements d&lt;ty of §ale take precedence of pnnteo
matertal
Good refreshments provl(le&amp;

For Information Please call {740) 667 0644 01(740 ) 989 2623
Cneck oul our weo 5118 (www mood1spaugh com) lor
great prclures

Auction

Auction

ABSOLUTE

Hou•• &amp;
lorn•

r)

much more.
Sand Stone: 1 ton cut san d stone
Terms and Condttions · Cash or good check
wrth ~X&gt;SrtiVe I D Refreshments wt!l be

ava1lable

OWners: Roger Bur&gt;.e dOa TactiCS Conslructton
Inc
Auctlo.-n Note; Mr Burke has decided 10
ck&gt;se TactiCS Construction and htred Allen's
Auc11ons to d1$J)erse htS equ1prnent. Mr Burke
1
has taken very good care of all h1s eqwpment so
you wtll not be drsappomted 1n the quaiJty of th1s
sale There are not a lot of small ttems and th1s
w111 not ~ a long sale so you·u want to be on

ttme

Real Estate

'25 S tu 111 n gh t nn t o Cherry
R1JI.!t.: houM,.' will he on lett)

lD n t.:U t O n~

ROOMY OLDER HOME WIT H CHA RM
&amp; LOTS OF POTENT IAL '

4 Bedrooms 5 hath~ ll\tng room dtn1ng.
l.trgc famd) room apprmc: 2.:!-l~ ~&lt;1 It ol
lt\tng "pace Co me !'\C l! t h e re,. t 1
#2254

W• will tell the

lEAL ESrATE FIRST
On Trad #1

locot.d ot 101$ lulaville Pike, Golllpolia, Ohio
Imst..!lltot 88 oc., o one floor plan 3 bedrm, 1 bath home
w/ h"!n9 rm, dtnmv rm &amp; lufdle.n dow to town &amp; !he Ohio
llh•er, de icxhed blcx:k gouJ&lt;ge, ccnle bam, 2 mochiMfy Uwds
&amp; md.. porlor ore oil on rtte m&lt;MI'to~n top w/ Co Worer,
e.trros indllde SIOO.QQ " ' month t MPftM from rhe ceilulor
towar leow &amp; 79 1 ·pound tobacco bow
ltasiL...ll Appro• 40 beolfti ful, sceniC oc "' / O srreom bor
de•lftlil !he properry, rroct loy1 d 1agonol ocrou rd from Trod
n I 4 ho ~ o deeded occe)' easement rhrough the HSI..t1"
P' operry Th•1 tracT ho1 Co ... o rer ovorl oble. elenriC &amp; norur o l 9 01 11 on l rnwood Or OPEN HO USI: 5vft , July 20"'
from N6ofl to 2 PM. Terfm Ofl hoi brore $7,500 00 do"'n

, .II tract ot 11me of lOie. boloroce or ~

Metal Bunk Beds lu/1-twm
$50
call 44 1-{)426

oo

P&lt;\TRIOT
(0m.:dll1m
SR 775 pa~l H .um ~n
Knad property will h.: on lcllJ

UPDATES GALORE'
acre~ t.:Oilll'!'\ v.tth l ht'i ranch
home Wnh \.HOp .m&gt;U nd dl't::k. 1
~droom.., I 5 hath" IO)l'r ln mg roo m
Approx

de n

~

&lt;It CA t .,,. 1 E

h•ore

·~., ,~~-~

P 0 Box 67 • MINFORD, OHIO 461153
Phone (7401 820-2726 or (740) 820-2725

l&gt;!.a l

oN.,_

' I!_•

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repall-675· 7388 For sale
re cond1ttoned
autorrtattc
washers &amp; dryers retngera ·
tors
gas and electnc
ranges a1r condtttoners and
wnnge r washers Will do
repa11s on maJor brands 1n
shop 01 at your home

SR

on to Patnot Rd .
b"ck long dm &lt;)

'

.

141 10

SR 775 1urn ng ht

property

wtl l he on ng ht

m u~t ~c-c

cmtom bu1h chale t ..tyle home

and dm mg area " nh ~:a t hedra l 18 ft
cctltng~ open to kitchen large \Hap around
LO\ ered porch 1-l acrc'i . garage and
a mu~ l come .md :o.ee . ~ou II be sold 1
112242

Sunday, July 1Jth
J:OO pm • 4:00pm

f0Jrt.:Ltton' SR 7 turn left on
lh~n nght on Cam1an Dr)

Ricky Van Shelton
Anel Theatre
5 45 &amp; 8·15 pm
go M1nute Shows
Call 740·446-ARTS

July 17

YARD SALE

AddJ,nn

1

ROOMY SIZED RANCH'
ma~tcr \UIIC

foyer. lt\.lng room.
dmmg room kuchl'n . lamilv roo•nm:;·,,;;~:~~
(l'ntral atr londuwmng 2 · t·ar :r
garage. Immediate Pu . .~~:!-i .. ton'
Large

~-~r'-'·~
U4 ~

800-837-3238

I \1(\1 ...,t 1'1'1 II "

F

~~

r

ooo

good
con d1Uon
2003 t 999 Lmcoln Nav1gator
Craftsman 17 5 horsepower, wrrv system 3rd back seat
$1 000 740 245 5747
$21 ,500, (740)992-2209

ooo

AQHA reg1ste red appendiX
yearlmg lilly $ 1200 00 Two
thoroughbred
mares
$5()0 00 each 22 yo O H
mare run barre ls $1 000
(740)843-5176

MmuKnu.rs

Bred 9 year old AO HA
Bucksktn $700. 8 year. old
standard 81ed Bay Geld1ng
S8oo 740 245 5235
94 Olds Century

84 000 - - - _ __H_a-rl_e_y_D_a_vr-d-so-n
19 65
mtles, QOOd condii!On NC Lowr•der custom wheels
power door locks, call 245- eva eng ine new pam! 4
5126
speed tra nsm iSSIOn new
94 Shadow, 4cy auto sun· seat lots ol chrome &amp; new
roof spo1ler new pamt parts EMcellent condttton
$2800 88 OldSmObile $300 $10 500 00 080 (740) 949
Ph {304)882 2755
2203

Reg ts!ered patnt and quar
te1 horses all ages and co l·
ors pnced lo sell 740-446- 98 Chrysler Concord $4500
3413
Dodge Neon &amp; 1600 95
Pont1ac F11eb~rd 52500 92
Chevy Cava!1er . $750 97
GRAIN
Mercury Tracer $2500, 93
Fo rd
Probe
$1600 97
Good quality s traw Volume Pont1ac Sunltre $3600 96
d1scount &amp; dehvery a11a1l· Fo rd Contour 52000 98
able Heavy square bales Monte Carlo $5200 96
$2 85 per bale (304)675- Plymouth Breeze $2200, 97
5724
M1tsub1stu Ec11pse 53600 99
I R \\..,PoRI \110\
Mustang $6500 99 Fo rd
Contou r $3200, 97 Toyota
~10
A~
, cam ry $5500 96 T-Bi rd
FOR S ALE
$2600 99 Chrysler Concord

HAv&amp;

I

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

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS
H ondas,
chevys
etc •
~carSJ t rucks from $500 F01
lts!lngs 1·800 7 19 300 1 ext
3901

l

C&amp;C
General
Home
Mamtenence· Pa1n1tng vmyl
Sldtng carpentry doors
wmdows , baths, mob1le
hOme ,repatr and more For
free est1mate call Chat. 740
992.6323

Cus tom
8UIIdmg
&amp;
1981 Goldw1ng GL 1100 Remodeling
Free
lots ol ex.tra chrome new Estrmates lor All Your Home
ttres 47 000 ong1na1 m1les Repa~r and Remodeling
ask1ng $2 000 (740)992· Needs (740)992·111 9
5358

NORTHUP
CONSTRUCT ION-Home repair room
additions garages rooltng
stdtng carpeting &amp; remod·
eltng extens11Je e)(pertence
call 245·9023 or 245 9704

Vinton,Ohio
Monthly Antique and
Collectible Auction
C lasstfteds
Sat. July 5th 7:00p.m. 2003
The
95S.E. miles from Col. 23S to
Class•f 1eds
35 east to Rio Grande 325 N. 7
miles to Vinton.
Partial: Coins, Barber halves,
Dimes, Wheat pennies, Kennedy
halve, ect., guns, 22. cal.
Mossberg model 268, 22 cal.
Mosseberg mode11s'1 MCB, Ivan
Johnson Supershot 7 shot 22
cal. , 32 cal. Forehand HopkinsAllen 1901, woodspoke buggy
wheels, 4ft. RR. screwdriver, N.Y.
New Haven RR wrench, 2 mansaw, bucksaw, cast iron skillet,
bean pot, stone crocks, cookie
jars, granite ware, Daisy sharpener, old bottles , all kinds of
tins, occupied Japan depression
glass, carnival, pressed glass,
lamps, salt &amp; pepper, whatnots,
cherry piter, coke items, milk
cans, some boxes to unpack,
school desk, some pc. of
furniture.
LOG STRUC ! UiE S I
Last months auction was 4 hrs.
fH.(UftOG KI1 S
long.

F1nd whatever
you need
tn the

~~---·4-ii.iWDsi.iiil';,._.,l

LIVFNIOCK

I

Issac's Auction House

V~NS &amp;

1996 Chrysler Town &amp; coun
try 11an Excellent condttiOn
Loaded S6
(304)675
4054

John Deere ground drtven
manure spreader $450
(7 40)245-5235

r

&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U nconditional lifetime guar
antee Local references fur·
ntshed Established 1975
Call
24 Hrs (740) 446·
1986 Che11y Blazer 4X4 V8
0870 Rogers Basement
new pa1nt new t ~res many
Wate rproofmg
new parts 119 000 -mtles
S5 600 (304 )675-3909

j '

1999ChevyTahoe LT 1998

Dodge
Dakota
wlnew
1980 Massey Ferguson 245, wheels &amp; !Ires ( 304 ) 675 "
2200 hours $5 000 very 5366

1

CA~II'ER~

MmoRHOMFS

IMI'KO~ EMENl'S

rL,-------_.1I'
w

1995 Waveblas ter Yamaha
700cc wtlh trailer $2 500 or
best offer 740· 669·7541

1999 Cavala1r 4-door ex- Bravado $5600 96 GMC
cond a 1 amlfm 5!
Sonoma $2200 B&amp;D Auto
miles $5500 abo 25EI-932 3 Sales Hwy 160 N 446-6865·

,\11\l .... l()(h,

I

'I ~PALACHIAN.

I

lOG WAll t:M AlOWARE ' " ROM SS 300
6 ( eLJNEARFOOl lOGS SlA~T AII2.2S
~ORA It ~ESSURE

Fm BIIOCHUAE

1992
Harley
Dav1dson
Oyna·Low
Rtder
low
m11eage lots of chrome ,
Extra tank-lenders &amp; front
ltre
Askmg
$ 12 500
(740)949 9027 neg

Announcements

1995
Harley
Dav1dson
Softatl S11 500 1986 BMW
K 1OOORT lourmg, S2,700 ,

1997 Honda GABOR Motor

For Sale 1990 Cavalalr. pas
Stble owner f1nanc1ng call
446214 1- ·

cross d~rt b1ke $900 080 ,
Eagle Alum slot whee ls
With tires S250 (304)6753959

Harley 89 FXSTC motorcy·
cle 1340cc 11 743 mtles
$11 500 (304)6754027

8oAl 'S &amp; I\1(1)'()R5
FORS~LE
1986 Bayhner 19 loot new
runs great 54500
parts
negotiable 740-245-5466

Announcements

I

In Mm10Y\ of Va/e n e
Jean Jol111 w n Nt'tg!et
HapfJ\ B rrtiuJm

h has been 90 days
s1ncc

the Lord

too k

my ~t,tcr :t\\,1)' h
hurh peop le don·t
kno" v. hat to "ilY I
she ha&lt;o;
350 Honda Fourtrax 4x4 l nm~&lt;i&lt;&gt;n m H eave n
good

Announcements

CORRECTION
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

2001 VLXDLX 600 Shadow
black wmdshteld &amp; back
rest EMcellenl Cond1 t1on
S3200 1304)675 7653
--------2002 Honda Rebel motorcycle
980 miles S2400
(740)379-2766

4wheeler
Runs
(740)379-2316

Auctioneer: Fines (Ike) Isaac
Not responsible for accidents
or lost items.
Call 740-388-8880
10:00 am- 4 pm
M-T-W-F-S

S12 (.~ol,I,LOG 0~

1985 Suzuki Madura street
b1ke 1200cc sha ft dnve V4·
d1sc brake 50 000 m11e
$1550 call 740·245-9692

160N 446·6865

Lie. &amp; Bonded #3728

JRE.tl:o

(All FOR CUI

$3600 95 Dodge Neon many extras both machmes
74_7_ _ _ __
0 ·_2_4_
$ 1695 B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy _7_4_
5·_5_

BULLETIN BOARD

Toll-Free 1-866-460-3958
Trades Welcnlml'll

~3%•97

1990 dump truck , Chevrolet
Kodtac , CATdetsel , 5 esp
lransmls~ton, 2 speed rear,
10' dump bed a~r brakes,
C D L requ1red 48 000
mtles &amp;)I:Cellent cond1llo n
$10 500 00 740 992 2478
or ~40- 591·9342

But . , 1111 -.he\
btg s1s that I lo' c
prctJ rom Jc:o.u"
.thO\. c :-.t'n d me .1
l trtessut•c f rom my
loved

And

my p.ucnts &amp;
Wllh
l ar1oi111intg love .
Lo•veo &amp; mtssed
Bro Jerry Johnson

,

The Gall1a County Department of Job and Family
Serv1ce s (GCDJFS) is releastng a Request for
Proposal to solicit proposals from organizations
Interested 1n developing and providing activities to
adults and dislocated workers under the provisions
of the Workforce Development Act. Act1vit1es shall
be designed to increase the employment retent1on
and earnings potential of participants and increase
the occupational skills attainment by participants.
The program shall operate from July 1, 2003 to
June 20 , 2004. Interested parties may pick up an
RFP packet at the Galila County Department of
Job and Family Services located at 848 Third
Avenue , Gallipolis , Oho . Proposals must be
submitted by 4 :30 P.M. on July 2, 2003 to be
eligible for consideration Please contact Fred
Childers at 740-446-3222 w1th any questions. The
GCDJFS reserves the nght to reject any and all
proposals.

770 PATRIOT RD., PATRIOT

Aunt Clara's
Collection

16x80
3 BR 2 Bath

T RUCKS

IUR S&lt;LE

1976 20 foot Taurus camper
good cond 740·256- 1928 or
1~9 Dodge Ram 4 x 4 740 256 1117
automatic 51 ,600 mt les
asktng $13 500 00 (740 )
2563
992·2060
1997
Cadtllac
Sedan - - . , . - - - - - - : - 1988 Crutse Master Motor
Deville
70,000
m1les 2002 ford F·250 SuperCab Home Class A 31 000
$8 500 (304}675-5815 or diesel 4X4 1996 F 250 2 mile s askmg S 13 500 00
(304)675-6325
wheel dnve , 2002 Camper (740)992 2060
Terry 5th wheel 740·388·
1998 Olds Bravado black
9082 or 740 645 0145
sunroof, loaded $9 200
1998 Cad1llac Catera , power 96 Ford Explorer $4200, 94
everything, Bose stereo, N1ssan 4x4 $3400
81 22ft Yellow Stone, great
n1ce car, sacraf1ce $8,500, Chevy 4x4 $5000
96 shape $3800 256· 1534
1992 Dodge 350 extended Lumma Van $1600 88
..,II(\!( IS
cab , d1esel 5 speed, alum Chevy P1ckup $3000 98
bed , h1gh m1 les , runs strong Ford F150 $4700 98 Dodge
810
H m1E
$6 500 740 64~·2285
P1ckup $5800 , 97 Olds

r

at

q.cll) "" fJ:tJD
' 1--.t~

tt~r....i ,...'"'!l
!1 1 li.MI!Mf' fnM ~ I\N4M__fll f_tl-4!- Ill
.. r- .... r- •r l""•....,.,~...r~.,.........,...... ..,.,.,...._.,.,....,.,

Queen Pillow Top Mattress
Set New 1n plas ttc wlwarran
ty W1ll accept S199 Cell
phone 304-412-8098 o r
304 552-1424

July 4th , 5th and 6th

~

,..~,r' ·~ r'~.- ,...

garage

Hydroponic tOmatoes, vtne
npened locally grown taste
the
dtfterencel
Hayes
Greenhouse, , Galhpohs
740·441-9279

MUIUR~

HJN SAL~.

Stock car and tratle r $2 000 1992 24 ft Po ntoo n w/96
OBO Ca ll 740·256· 6870 Evenrude 48 HPmelaf top &amp;
aller 6pm
trail er ASkl nQ $3800 00
(740 ) 992-2060

Lively 's Aulo Sales
1987
BUi ck
Electra
$ 1200
Stat1onwagon. $ 1 300 Call 1990 Old C1era
740-379·2282 or 740·643- 1989 Ponttac Bonneville
$800 1995 Hyunda1 E-..:cel 5
2497
spd $ 1600
1992 Olds
Wooden playground set 1992 Chrysl er LeBaron Ach1eva $800, 1988 Ford
114K Thunderbird $ 1000 1989
powe r wheels banery oper GTC con11ertable
ated 4 wheeler , Sea rs car- PW, PL automatiC, $3,000 Chevy Cavalier $400 1989
Ford Escort $900 1992
top cargo hauler (740) 742· 740-446 4175
Chevy Beretta $1200 1992
1800
1992 Ponl1ac Grand Pnx SE
Olds Ctera $1200 1994
Whil e, 2 door runs good
8 UILIJING
C hrysler N ew Yorker $2700
Asktng $1600 Call (740)
SUPI'I.IIli
1994 Plymouth Voyager
949 2621 after 5 pm
$ 1800 1993 Ford Aerostar
Block, b11ck, sewer p1pes 1993 Geo Metro $375 ptek $ 1400 1994 Dodge Sp1nt
wmdows lintels etc Claude up sleeper top, $100 1969 $900 1991 Ford Escort SW
Wmters RIO Grande OH Chevy dump truck, $1 200 $950 1989 Suzukt GTI 5
Call 74Q.245 512 1
A ll OBO (7 40)949 2128 spd $999. 1993 Ford Escort
SW 5 spd $1350
leave message
For sale Brtdge Steel dtffer
ent stzes No assembly 1993 L1ncoln Contmental Monday·Fnday 9am -5pm
reqwred For more mtorma- Mark (1, 2 door new fires Saturday
9am-3pm
Closed
non call (304)576·2806 Asktng 54900 00 (740) 992 Sunday
aher-6pm
2060
(740)368-9303

M·F 8.30-8, Sot H .
Closed Sun

'f&lt;"• 1-n 'Hm 100 7 .._..

_..P IVW~i&lt;• ~on.• r

dl' t.lchcd

Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Oh10
(740)446 7444 1 877 830
9162 Free Esttmates, Easy
hnanc•ng 90 days same as
cash Vtsal Master Card
D11ve- a· httle save alol

Sears diShwasher $75 L1ttle
Tykes racecar bed S75 3
toddler car seats $30 each
7 40 •446 . 1810
- -------Wolff Tanning beds
Affortable .Convlenent
Tan AI Home
Payments from $25/month
FREE Color Catalog
Call Today 1-800·842-1305
www np etstan com

lntoraectlon ol US 33 &amp; SR 595
Just Soutll ot logan

Down

!r ~ e·

Wf'll.j F - . J• &amp;
,.,.,., I Sf.e,. &lt;VO,

mcrsucd

tth 3 large bedroom~ large liVIng room

~le lenN . SBA rower~ ~ . ho• !he option ro putchole
Tr!Xf 1 m flfiOI bid priCe fof 30 dO)'I ofter ouct10n o i Jowirl&lt;;~

-1...,., S.aroe•
,..ucJ..,_, A e• .,

2 H5

\\ork: . . hopt .. ror.tgc .ln',l honu" guc"l hou:o.c
Ynu' II L'IlJOY lookmg at1h1' one'
#2245

A

by 9 /26 / 2003 ,

lessee optiOfl ro bl.iy 01 sfoted 11'1 lease Agre.ment at " Riglt
of F.rrt l!eflnoi,H no confl'liJ'I"-'f'ICII!!1 eJI.sl rego ro:fng f11'1Qn1;"'9
FAIM EQUIPMIHT
1 lEAH Y HKE FOlD IOO'c {1 955 &amp; 1956) bolt! wide front'
eMd ltO&lt;fOrJ wj lr11e power, got rnotoft &amp; ol,..oyl under thed ,
5 ~d rronsm11SIOM , NH tt61 'ltrKlg KfUO'I!! bcler (!jjaroged}, S'
bi.nb hog mo""'er, 6' grader bJode, 8 d1K, Mf 3 pt 2 bottom
1 r plo ... , # 18 New Ideo !Tt011vre tpreoder, Qround dri ... en,
NH 56 fr11e bar hoy roke, (21 .t' horro•s, cuhovotou, hoy
wogOfl fer"" Ca'lh or ched: "" potit"'e 10, l!'o'erylhlng 10ld

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar
For
Concrete
Angle
Almond W~wlp o ol Washer Channel Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drams
$75 While Whirlpool Dryer Grallng
Dnveways &amp; Walkways LSL.
$65 (740)446-9066
Scrap Metals Open Monday
G E washe1, good cond1· Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Fnday 8am-4 30pm Closed
han $75 740·367·0502
T hursday
Saturday
&amp;
Good Used Appliances Sunday (740)446-7300
and
ReconditiOned
Pole Barns 30x50, by 1Oft
Guaranteed
Washers
.ncluded plans
sliderS,
Ranges
and
Dryers
patnted metal free delivery
Refngerators Some start at
des1gns beller !han lumber
$95 Skaggs Appliances 76
yard k1ts 937-7 18· 1471
Vtne St (740)446·7398
Kenmore clothe s dryer
used by one pe rson very
good
condltiOfl
phone
(7 40)446-2604

r

Kmg
S1ze
P1llow Top RabbitS and Ch iCkens tor
Mallress set
New still m sale Caii74Q..441·0918
Sale $299
Cell
plast1c
Regtstered Angus bull 2yrs
phone 304 412 8098 or
old Champton H1ll Exacto
304-552·1424
(740)256 635() aner 6pm

Clean tn good shape $300
(304)675 6986

Ill RIDGE AVEN UE,
RIO GRA NDE

RUSTIC BEAUTY NESTLED IN T HE
T REES

Private Sites
Available

&amp;

Claro HoP:hn
Glen Hol«lf'ls

Full S1ze Mattress Set New
tn
plastic
wl warranty
Sacnt1ce 5119 Cell phone
304-4 12 8098 or 304 552
1424

·- - - - -

3 P1ece L1vlng room su11e

c

lloAlS &amp;

ALrn,;
IHRS&lt;Lt

5 week old pupp1es. half Rat 1995 Ftreb ~r d , bla ck , v 6
Terrier hall Jack Russell 3 auto ale askmg $2 700
male 3 female $100 each OBO (740)742 2357
(740)446-3413
1995 lnlrtpld 73k $2 995
6 wee~ old full blooded rat 1995 Stratus $1 995 , 1996
12
terners 1s) shots and ta1ls Cavalier 96k $2 795
docked Luther Moore 7 40 others m stock
COOK MOTORS
245·5597
740.446·0 103
AKC
Golden
Retnever _ __ _:___:_:_c:.:,_ _
w/pedtgree
1
months, 1996 Ford Wtndslar loaded
ma le,
$300 00
OBO 105,000 mtles, $4200 1996
Posstble trade tor gun or Aerosta r
105 000 m1les
ewelry
(740)992·7301
$4000
1996
Ca11a11er
1
145,000 m~les $2500 740
English Bulldog
puppy 245·9020
12 k 0 ld
11 (304)882
w s
a
• 1997 Buick leSabre beau·
3 56 8
__ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ 111ul car exc cond 304 -675

Ktttens one gray, one black ,
2 rechners 1 OR su1t 1 kmg one blonde ca ll 441-0426
waterbed 1 eleclrlc range 1
Peacocks for sale, also two
full bed 740-446·9700
Gravely tracto~s lor sale
740 388-8756
24 round above ground
sw1mmmg pool wtth deck
FRUTili &amp;
Good condtl1on $2500 Call
VEGETABLES
(740)992-3661

New Haven , 1 bedroom furntshed apartment, depos1t &amp; Atr Cond Un1t 2 1/2ton
references.
no
pets , Carner also Jantrol Gas
(740)992-0 165
Furnace
Storm wmdows
a nd
regular
windows
N1ce one bedroom untur· Furnace and Alf Cond untt
mshed apartment Range 8 les s than 10 years old Call
refngeralor provtded Water 740-446 3478 or 740-446·
&amp; garbage patd Oeposll 3731 to see before taken
reqUired Call 740 446 4345 oul
after 6pm
Cool Oownll
Ce ntra l
Ntce Two bedroom apart· Coolmg Systems New and
men! large room tully Used Installed (740)446
equipped kitchen ce ntral 6306
"--------healtng / c o ol l ng
washer/dryer
hookup EZ-Go golf cart battery
operated charger tncluded
(304)882-2523
new tlfes-headltght taillight
Now Takmg Appllcauo ns- looks/runs good $1 ,000
35 West 2 Bedroom negottable 740· 256 6647

10

Aun,;
IUR SALt.

o

I

Twtn Rivers Tower Is accept
mg appltcatiOns lor wa111ng Hand patnted lnd1an Plates
list lor Hud-substzed 1· br 61$300 OBO R1ngs negoapartment call 675 6679 tiable (740)446 8945
EHO
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1·
space for rent m 800 537 9528

Real Estate

""S.IIer.,

l&gt;oroW!y Cond ..,
Nooni Hol«KK

Grac1ous ltv1ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at V1llage
Manor
and
A1vers1de
Apartments m Middleport
From $278·$348 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng
Opportunities

Townhouse
Apartme nts
Includes Water
Sewage
Trash $350/Mo , 740·446·
0008

Why Rent?

(740) 775-3330

_.,~com

Real Estate

Thursday, Eve., July 3, 2003
5:30p.m.
Located at 206 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy Elementary School

-........

STI.NLEY &amp; SON. INC

_

740-446-9769

Auction

S. K"''I ol ""'

01· 11

Norman K. AIWt. Roper I( Alert, John T.
Want Action' Sell Auct.,.,' c.tf Atkins Toct.y!

Real Estate

As Ag...m for lhe

Call for frH lkochure !!

r:) AUC TIONS, I NC. [B

Modern 1 br apt (740)44 6
0390

Tractors

Cltpper

Stat1onary Masonry saw Stone mortar m1xe r,
Master 48" trowelling mach1ne, 2 Waco Wacker
PacKers 5" scaffotdmg, 2 wheel barrows , 36"
vent !an, used 36'" steel doors, Gas cans. used
roof vents 115v fuel pump; Ramsetl Red Head
000 Fasten1ng tool, Bolt cutters, Craltsman
commerctal J•9 saw Hedge tnmmers, St1hl weed
eater, P 1pe pressure tester. Safety betts
Securny hght BtMers Cha tns Shovels, Sledge
Hammers. Wreck1ng bars ExtensiOn cords.
Werner 20' al Ext ladder Ropes. M 1sc Vmy1
s 1dtng &amp; soffet, p1pe f.nlllQ , m 1sc, electncal m1sc
mold1ng. new 314 &amp; , ~ water r.ne 16" 8 lug
Chevy truck~ wheels SS cou nter and s1nks.

Bric k ranch 3 bedroom ,
1.5 bath , attached 1 car
garage, one acre lot,
unfinished basement,
new windows and roof,
all electri c, central air,
1230 Georges Creek Rd .
10 minutes from
hospital,
asking 80,000.
Call

2 Bedroom Ap t 5 m1n p.ist
Holzer 740-441 -0 194

Pond

4106 Backhoe, Dtesel wl 4800 hrs. JD 18"
Hensley Ouckel, 1997 Eager Beaver 10HDB 24 '
Tratler (hke new), 1982 IH 4900DT 466 d•esel wl
new tJres &amp; Banenes,
P ipe La- Blount &amp; George Inc ptpe laser
complete wl accessones (needs OuiO)

Tools:

1 and 2 bedroo m apart
mcnts turnt shed and unfur
n•shed , secu t1ty deposit
reqUired no pets 740·99 2·
2218

Pa1tvra

Backhoe, Truck, Trailer! 1984 John Deere

~---------rJ

r:

A I,Ak'I'MtNrs

L.,.--·f·'{iilll;;,;;R;;,E;,;,;
Nr- -

Only $995 Down!

i

Dr~ve

1

Haskins Farm
128 Acres M / L

U sed Furmture Store 130
Bulall tlle P1ke We sell mattresses dress ers, couches
bun~b eds bedroom SUites
recliners grave monuments
740-446-4782
Galllpohs
APART- OH

from $297 to S383
Walk to shOp &amp; m011tes Call
Buy
or
sell
Atvenne
Equal
740-446-2668
Ant1ques , 1124 East Mil1n
Hous1ng Opporlun•ty
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·
992~2526
Russ Moore
br Apanment $300 month owner
~100 Secur~ty Deposit Ail ~~~"!"'-----~
utllttles mcludad (304)675·
M ISCELLANEOUS
3654
l\1EROIANDISE
•

no

" KITCHEN EQUIPMENT"
Foster double door refngeralor Traulsen 4
door refngerator, Hobart meat sl1cer,
Hobart large m1xer, Blodgett oven Vu lcan
elec 6 burne r stove, Hoi P01nt 2 burner
stove , Groen Steam kettle &amp; Vulcan
Steamer, Toledo small m1xer, S S table
w1th rack, S S work table, S S serv1ng
table, 4 compa rtmenl steam server, S S
small tabl e, S S dratn board w/2 smk
compartment one un1t
" SCHOOL ROOM ITEMS"
Teachers desks, student desks &amp; cha1rs.
lockers, file cab1nets. compack compulers
&amp; mon1tors. metal cab1nets clocks office
chairs, foldtng tables &amp; cha~rs fans TV's ,
computer tables stck bed, wood &amp; metal
book shelves, round &amp; corner tables , t t 0
a1r condttloner. bu ll etm boards , screen ,
world globes, ch1lds fu rnllure books.
mus•c stands. TV carts, trash cans . foldtng
cha" carts . volley ball stands , Dr scales &amp;
lots more
" MISC"
Walk •n coole r, ptano, &amp; small outside
bU1ld1ng {barn)
Owner- Me•gs Local School D1st
Auctioneer· Dan Smith
OhiO 111344 W.Va. 11515
Apprentice-Alan Haley
Ohio 110245
Cash
Pos1t1ve ID
"Not responsible for acc1dents or loss of
property"
Announcements by auctioneer take
precedence over pnnted matters

2BR upslatrs apt stove
lndge
wate r
trash
$275/mo, $27 5 depos1t 740·
441 0583 or 740· 44!1'· 7620
after 7pm
B EAUTIFUL

10

Pf:I'S
fU R SAl E

MENTS
AT
BUDGET 1:'!~------,
PRICES AT J AC KSON
ANI1QUI:S
ESTATES, 52 Westwood

2 story 4 bed1oom home was
1t by the former "Pomeroy
Block Company" alter the
flood The 1stlloot IS actually
olthe 1937 flOOd crest
floor has 837 sq II consts•t
tng ot a large ltvlflg room 14 '!.27
large d1mng room 13 M17 large knchen 13 '!.27 With an addl
11ona1 117 o~ set room pantry &amp; 112 bath The 1stlloor ha s a
front porch 8 x23 and a back porch 7 k t 2 The 2nd floor has
837 sq II 4 good s1ze rooms rang1n g Irom 10 M13 up to the
master becJrOOm WhiCh tS 14 X2T All 4 be drooms have large
closets The master bedroom ha s access to a covered bacll
porch 7 x t2 The att1c has 821 SQ it wrctoset The base
men! has 994 sq tt w1ou1s1de entrance/e)(ll Th e woodwork
IS ong1nal &amp; m excellent cond1t10n The ll•tchen cab1nets are
lhe ong1nal ones bUill in 1937 Kitchen has large pantry lhe
2nd floor l'las 4 bed rooms tn excellent cond1!1on The
upstatrs hall has a large storage butlt1n cabmets lor laundry
and hnens The enl!fe house has recentlY been painted bOth
1ns1de and outSide Has storm doors ll storm wmdow s has
Culligan sot! water system w/water desalter added /IJC The
home has new seamless gutters and spouung The home 1s
1n Pomeroy OhiO on a 10188 M7 5")(1QO )(8 2 and IS In eMcel
lent condition For an appomtment call 992 ·2529 &amp; leave a
message PriCe upon tnspectlon only

Real Estate

lh HN&gt;iME.Jl. TIM£..111

Directions : Take Sl A I 160 north oN of U S 35
at GallipoliS Oh1o Go north about e mtles to
9109 Sl A t 160 II s on lhe lell JUSI pasl
Foodland Watch for stgns

Construction,

Real Estate

PUBLIC AUCTION

2 Tract•

Concr....

Real Estate

ele ctr1c
Furn tshed 1 br
heatpump wi d no pets , ref
erences req utred trash &amp;
water paid rent plus depostt
&amp; electnc

Auction

Hot iSUJOI J)

•

6unbap ~imet ·6tntintl• Page 05

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

R£Nr

COUNTRVTYME
www countrytyme com

11 Af.1

E ·rJ Nr:ll () r

FOR

2 br A C S250 00 a •non -+
u111 no pet s ref 304 675
4874

Real Estate

J[J 8; , r_ ,. ~l~") r:·D m ~rj ~. l ', ,. - 1 r,r- T'; t :l ~: ·

To Do

Same day servce tn

Ad 19 acres w1th barns
S26 500 01 7 acres S 18 500
co water Danv1lle 5 or 7
acres $9 500'

Absolute Public Auction

W A.'«&lt;D

20 y..,.

Auction

Ntce 43 5 acre farm wrth
32X60 me tal pole barn on
Greentree Road Add1son
twp Wooded lot wrth level
frontage n1ce for bu 1 ld~ng
hunting pasture (pnced to
sell)
Call (740)441.0806
Leave Message

3

AI'AKni~:N'I S

2 br tratiBf tor re nt nQ pel s 4 roo ms and bath all ut1ht1es N1ce 1 be(1room ept Crown
day 441 · 9060 aft er 5pm
patd $400 month 46 Oltve Ctty V1llage $300 + security
deposit (740)256·1249
245 5690
Street (740)446·3945

MObile hom'e lor rent
pels (7 40) 992-5658

Sunday, June 29, 2003
10

!\1omu: llmJ~s
mw R~'"'

H llliSfS
Apanment buUdtnQ Aac1ne
HJK RfNI
OH mcludes 4 apa rtments
1 otf1ce 4 lots wl sewer &amp;
water taps Call (740) 949· 1· 3 bedrooms foreclosur es
2493 or.(740) 949-2305
home from $199 month 4°1o
down 30 years at 8 5% APR
l.lrrs &amp;
for l1stlng call 1·800·319·
Coles Mobtle Homes a n
At.'Kl'AGE
3323 ext 1709
assembled team w1th over
120 years of housmg el(pert· 4 acres Eagle Ridge Rd
2·br sell on land co nlract
ence Patriot Homes out· excavated. electric. sepllc mc e location f1 112 mttes
stand1no 115 year warranty perm1t &amp; water ava1lable , from Holzer Hosp11at beat1lul
sh•ngles &amp; •ns.ulalloo by (740)992-()()31
V19 W 388 9946
Owens Corntng . vtnYI stdlng
3
bedroom
house
m
by V•p&lt;;o, James Hardte Sid·
no
pets
mg avatlable low ~e · the1 r Gallla Co V1nton OOdnll Ad Middleport
_
17401 992 5858
mopane wmdows by Ktnro clean country 5 acres ;____:.___
__ _ _
carnage carpets &amp; floonng
500
or
12
acres
bedroom Pomeroy $325
by Congoled appliances by $25 000 co water oH Teens per month plus depOSit
General ElectriC faucets by Run 11 acres $17 000 A10 (740) 992·0175
Glac1er Bay &amp; Moen light Grande tWo 8 acre lots ;____:._ _ _ _ _ __
l1xtures cabmet pulls &amp; S22 500 your cho1ce1 Kyger 3br 10 Syracuse $475 a
Depos1t
knobs d.rect from Home 32 acres ol woOds &amp; f1eld mo nth
$ 475
Depot (easy to match tust a $29 000 or 6 acres $11 ,000 (304)675· 5332
few good reasons why your
N1ce I bedroom house
next new home should be Me1gs Co ol1 Joppa Ad 6 5350 per month plus
Irom Coles Mob•le Homes acres wtlh tra1ler $24 000 or depos•t At 7 1 112 mtles
15266 US 0 East Athens 5 ac res wtth barn $18 500 south ot Middleport (740)
Ohto
1 740· 592 1972 co water Alfred SR681 , 22 992-5226
"Where you
gel your acres of woods
ftetds
moneys worth"
$22 ,000 Chester Bashan

umque
raptdly growmg
o pportunity baHs
ptzza concept 22 year htslo·
ry Tratn•ng marketmg oper
Computer
hteracy
m
ai!Ons support See why we Forctosure 4br 4ba $9 900
W1ndows and MS Otf1ce
sold O'¥er 100 tranchtses m for l1stmg call 800·719-3001 Land Home Packages availand strong customer serviCe
able In y0 ur area 1740 )446 .
2002 alone• 1·888· 344·2767 Ex F144
Bk1tla are reQuired
JO
3384
ext 210
House lor sale 27 Anna
Edwards expenence IS a
Slfeet Pomeroy, $17 500
plus ThiS IS a 40 hours per
I'RIJfl~JNAI.
Will consider any offer 388 Mason area 3br 2 ba older
week positiOn with occas•onSJ.:KVIL'L'i
home 14);70 must be moved
8591 or 740-709-0064
al overt1me
304-882 1108
TURNED DOWN ON
In Hartford WV mobile home
In add11t0n to JOinrng the SOCIAL SECURITY I SSI? w/ flat lot all for $9500 M1ke
Harsco family you can take
No Fee Unless We Wmt
Slack Old Colony Realty New 14 w1de only $799
advantage of a compellllve
down and only $159 63 per
1-888-582·3345
304-542·5888
salary and comprehensive
month call N1kk1 740-385
I&lt; I \I I ..., I \1 I
NEW HOUSE tor SALE
benefits, 1ncludmg med1cal,
7671
Oebb1e Onve 3 lJedrooms
denial VISIOn 401k pensiOn
H OIIII:S
2
baths
$129 000
and much more Reply to
New 2003 Doublew1de 3 BR
1'011 SAJ ,t;
(740)245 9268
Harsco Corporat1on/ Reed
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
M~nerals , c/o K Wa llace 350
Payng $400-$500 rent? Why and &amp;295/mo 1·800· 691
F'op'ar Church Road Camp (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
not buy niCe 3 BR house 1/2 6777
Htll. PA 1 700 1·8888
lor 1mmed1ate possess1on all
acre level lot 31 12 mtles
w1lh1n 15 m1n of downtown
F!lJ&lt; 717-812·5819
from town Call 740-446· Ill'
FMt\l~
Ema1ll'lnnto0reedm1n com Gallipolts Rates as low as
4 737 for appt
mw
SAu :
Equal Opportumty Employer 6% (74014'16 3218

orders

Now hmng full ancJ part t1me
help
at
L11tle
Johns
Kanauga and Centenary
locattons, competNe wages
401 k vacat1on t1me and a
half for holjday work takmg
appltcaltons
weekdays
belween 8am-4pm

IH'\1\1..,

B•Q selec11 0n ol used
ho mes all s1zes Kanauga
Mobtle
Home
Sale s
Gallipolis OH
(740) 441 ·
03 10

740-245-5877.

G•lllpollt, OH Pl•nt

8USI 'I/~X'i
ANIJ B UII JJINI.,

Sunday, June 29, 2003

C&lt;JJI.

~"' .we""" Uw..!

BIG BEND
REALTY, INC.
Russell D. Wood, Broker
510 2nd Ave,, Gallipolis, OH 45631

4 miles west of Gallipolis
on State At. 141
8 am till 3 pm
Rain or shtne
THE IRON GATE GRILLE
presents
Parad1gm Productions
Featunng the sounds of
Blue Brothers, Elv1s, J1mmy
Buffet Alternative &amp; "favorite
County Superstars all live
July 2. 3, 4, 5
601 Ma1n Street
Pt. Pleasant, WV
675-2200
675·7030

3 Family Yard Sate
July 1 9 am
Mercerville
Corner of Cox Rd. &amp; At. 218
Jr. , Misses, &amp; Womens Clothes
· Toys and Various items
IMAGINATION FACTORY
. THEATER CAMP
Ariel Theatre
July 7 -11 9·3 Grades 3·12
Call 740·446-ARTS
Thanks to Kelly Nibert, Mike
Pohlma n, and all tho se
Involved for their hard work
and contnbui!Ons at a recent
chanty event held at M1ss
Kelly's.
Funds raised w111 ass1st m
p rovidmg spay mg and
neutering services wh ich
help reduce the p et
overpopulation problem m
our community.
Many thanks fro m Dr
Shelton and the staff of the
French Tow n Veterinary
Clinic

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
446-2342 • 992-2155 • 675-1333

GM SALES
CONTEST
Allows us to sell all new
BUicks &amp; Pontiacs
Under Factory lnvo1ce
until June 30th .
Plus you get huge
rebate!

Smith
Buick-Pontiac
1900 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis. OH

740-446-2282

VACATION BIBLE
SCHOOL
July 7· 11
6 30 - 8'30
Providence M1ssionary
Baptist Church
Teens Run Rd.
(740) 256·6991

BOWL
"Smoke Free"
Sundays 3-5 pm
Special Rates
Skyline Lanes

Berb er Spec1al $5 95 Yd
Dnve a little Save a L-:Jt
MOLLOHAN CARPET
202 Clark Chapel Ad
Bidwell O H
1·877·830·9 162
446·7444
NOW OPEN
Groom and Kennel Shop
Boarding &amp; Grooming Pets
1141 Bulaville Pike
446·02~1

446-3362

Yard Sale/
Bake Sale
July 5,2003
Sponsored by D.A.V.A. 1153

28051 S.Rr. 7
Cheshire. OH
9 am till 4 pm
Rain or Sine .
Yard Sale
Mon &amp; Tues.
1 m1le from theY on At. 62 on
the left. Lots ol baby 1tems,
clothes, dishes &amp; Lots m1sc

Clay Township Trustees will
hold the1r 2004 Budget
Heanng July 7, 2003 at 6:00
pm at the Clay Townsh ip Hall.
Wanda K Waugh, Clerk

I .

F.O.E. 21.71 dues
can be paid for
2004 year

Home For Sale
Can 't match the quality
for the price
Over 3,000 sq . ft.
4 BR , 2 1/2 bath .
City Schools

446-3764
446-2885

446-7101

•

\

I

�Page 06 • 6un-ap &amp;h8tf ·6ttttfntl

Sunday, June 29, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

There's Diverse flow gfves h9use a view from ·any direction
still time
to plant
a garden

.AP Weekly Features
Ho meow ne rs often build
DES IGN DETAILS
from scratch to ge.t a fl oor
2.526 total sq. tt. First noor:
pl an they can Ii ve with . 1,6'26 sq. ti. Second tloor: 900
The diver se fl ow and sq. ft. Attac hed two-car garage:
tempo
of Pl an APWB
- 1I.0 729 sq. ft. Overall depth: 63 ti.
.
'
.
g1ve consumers a v1ew 111 Overal l width: 80 ft. Exterior
any d irec tio n.
members: 2-ft. x 6-ft. wood
Centmll y situated is a large, fmme Primary exterior material:
POMEROY - It is not too isl&lt;)nd kitchen visually con- wood lap siding. stucco Roof
late to plant a vegetable garden nected to a quiet breakfast material: tibergiass shingles or
this year. The rainy spring sea- nook, large recreation roo m cedar shakes Baths 2 full. I half·
&gt;Oil caused many homeowners
with fi replace and fo rmal din- Bedrooms: 3 Basement: stanhassles as their gardens were ing area. The kitchen also has dard, cast in place LaundJy:
llooded or just too wet to plant. a pantry. Both the recreation · basement Attic: yes
If you want to plant a vegetable room and breakfast nook
DESIGNER COMMENTS ·
garden-from seed, choose veg- open to the deck. A gallery
"Th is is not a typical plan
etables that have growing sea- allows traftic to pass from the
sons of ninety days or less. foyer past the den and dini ng with central b ll ami room's
Make sure you have access to room, which share a common spilling off both side.s. The
water for irrigation, if needed. fireplace. An intimate court- intent is to offer variety and
_ large spaces for li vi ng. The
Plantings of cucumber, squash, yard welcomes visitors.
beans. carrots, mini pumpkins,
All bedrooms are upstairs. kitchen is a focal point.
pie pumpkins and mid season The master bedroom has a Family dining is fo und at the
va ulted ceil ing. A double- island or pri vate nook.
windowed study overlooks Fireplaces warm two roo ms
the foyer. Ge1ierou s over- while deck acCess is from
Brent Glass can be s pectac ular when fab ricated into windows with sweeping. panoramic views. Thi s
hang s are features of the two locat ions ." gabled roof which is capped Schipper, Well s Kas tner plan is chock full of rooms with a view and amenities homeowners cheris h. (AP Photo/ AP
by dormer windows .
Schipper.
Ho use of the Wee k)
·

.Hal
Kneen

Fallen Ohio soldier
remembered, l

Sports

Young people, communities pinched by AmeriCorps cuts

• Tribe takes weekend
series from Reds. See
Page 6

WASHINGTON (AP) As hi s friends at college fretted about landing a jbb after
graduation , Noah Branman
took comfon in knowing he
already had one .
Right after Christmas,
Branman .learned he had
been selected for a 10-momh
assignment with the Bostonbased City Year group,
which is part of the
AmeriCorps national service
program.
Branman knew he would
not make a lot of money
mentoring children and that
was fine with him. "My goal
in life has never been about
money, but to help people in
need and make some sort of
positive change," he said.
But hi s excitement turned
to frustration this month
when cuts were announced
that could eliminate the
pos1110n the 22 -year-old
Brandeis University graduate had hoped to fill in San
Jose, Calif., in August.
Branman is one of thousands
of
would-be
AmeriCorps volunteers who
might end up jobless in the
next few months, according
to several nonprofit groups

EXTENSION
AGENT
sweet com (78-85 day ) may
sti II be made. Once seeds have
emerged, spread newspaper, .
grass or straw mulches around
the plants to hold in moisture
and keep weeds in control.
Check local garden centers
for late sowings of tomato,
pepper and melon transplams.
They should look a healthy
green with a white root system. In late July plant tumips,
rut(\bagas. beets, cabbage.
broccoli, radishes, lettuce and
spinach seeds. Many homeowncrs.. plant cool season vegetables throughout late summer
especially
lettuce,
spinach, greens and radishes.

Obituaries
. Page AS
: • Helen M. Kimball, 83
;• Pamelia Kelly, 70
:• Lottie Robinette, 87

•••
Are you interested in helping · young children learn
more about raising plants
from seeds? The Ohio Farm
Bureau has selected ·a new
book entitled, "Oh Say Can
You Seed?" by Bonnie Wonh
for its Award for Children 's
Li terature.
This book is pan of The Cat
in the Hat's Leaming Library,
in which the writer utilizes Dr.
Seuss's Cat In the Hat character to ..explain the parts of a
seed, pans of a flower and '
why seeds are so very important. This book is available
through the Meigs County
Public Library system.

. · Please see•Cuts, AS

Noah Branman, 22, Los Angeles, Calif., Friday is one of thousands of AmeriCorps volunteers;
who may soon be jobless. His excitement over his new job turned to frustration this month when
cuts were announced that could eliminate the •positior the Brandeis University graduate had
hoped to fill in San Jose. Calif., in August. [AP Photo)

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Obituaries

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Sports
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140 446-1401

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·Staples

Ritz Camera

6-7

PORlD!OUTH
740 353-8563

..

Pomeroy
native \
keeps
town in
bloom

to help wilh spacesuit .

740 594·4800

2

••

Rutland celebrates
its 50th July 4 event
Bv CHARLENE

will be Nashville recording
anist Lee McCormack and ·
. '
the Open Road Band at 7
RUTLAND - Marking the p.m. He will be performing
50th anniversary of the Rutland
Fire Department's July 4 ox
roast, this year's celebration
will carry out the theme "Fifty
Years of Old Glory Days."
Kicking off the celebration
will be a parade at I0 a.m.
Lineup will begin at 9 a.m. at
the junction of Brick and
Depot Streets on Route 124.
Just before the parade stans,
BY J. MILES LAYTON
an
opening ceremony will
Staff writer
take place in the park. The
Meigs Marauder Band will
POMEROY - Despite a
play the National anthem and
little sunshine and a lot of
the flag will be raised.
rain, the flowers on Main
Entries in the parade will be
Street still need a helping
judged with first and second
hand from Dale Riffle to
places being awarded trophies Nashville artist Lee McCormick
make them beautiful.
in the categories of religious, will be performing at Rutland's
Every morning , Riffle can
non-religious, floats , vehicles, July 4 celebration.
be seen watering, mulching
e'luestrian. bikes ATV's and a until the fireworks begin at
and weeding the geraniums,
m1scellaneous category.
II p.m. McCormack's show
''pinkies," petunias and
New to the lineup of activities at
last year's July 4 celebraother plants along the
wiU be the Little Miss and Mr.
streets that have helped to
Firecracker contest. Boys and tion was so well received, he
make the village a pretty
girls, ages 4-8 living in Rutland was invited to return this
said one of the firemen.
place to visit.
.
village or township are invited year,
The
Rock-N-Country
"I like to see the final
to partiCipate. ·Deadline for Cloggers will
perform "at
product when everything has Dale Riffle puts the finishing touches on some flowers. prepar- entering the contest is Tuesday.
taken off and grown up," he 1ng for the Pomeroy B1g Bend Blues Bash lat!lr thiS month .
Applications may be picked noon , and live blue grass
said. "Everyone that goes by Some contend that mus1c helps ftowers grow. (J . M1les Layton). up and dropped off at Joe 's. music will be presented from
blows their hom or hollers at
Country Market in Rutland. 2 to 5 p.m .
There will be a variety of
"When
they
·say
it's
90
downtown
Pomeroy
looked
me."
For more information about
Riffle 's favorite plant is degrees, it's more like 100 different. The streets were the contest residents may con- activities and games for the
lannis , a leafy plant with a on the pavement," Riffle diny, store windows were tact either Mandy or Chrissy youngsters and adults. including bmgo, throughout the day.
said.
boarded up and !lowers were Miller at 742-2285 .
huge flower on top.
A
hometown
boy,
Riffle
.
few
and
far
between
.
"I like them because they
The winners of the Little A drawing for a Longeberger
Today, flowers are in Miss and Mr. Firecracker will basket will be held at 6 p.m.
get real tall. They are the said he loves small-town living.
He
says
the
village
is
bloom
up and down the be announced at II :30 a.m.
A kiddie train ride will be
ones P.eople comment on the
available,
the dunking booth
ahd
the
sidewalks
are
safe
and
the
people
are
street
most.
from the Rutland Firemen 's
friendly.
free
of
din
and
debris
.
Riffle
be
in
operation, cr11fters
will
The worst pan of the job
Park stage. Immediately after
"I never did like the big takes pride in that.
is the heat. Temperatures in
that the parade winners will will out in full force with
"A lot of people comment be announced.
their wares, and, of course,
Pomeroy have reached into city, but here everyone
·
other,"
he
said.
that
they
have
never
seen
the
knows
each
the 80s and 90s.
Highlighting the entertain- roast beef sandwiches from
Four years ago, Riffle said village so clean," he said.
ment lineup for the holiday the ox roast will be for sale
by the firemen.
HOEFLICH

News ed!lor

?ORTSMOUlH

llT•cl!Ct mputers •740574·111 1

Area

WE ST VIRGINIA

Fll Eltctronlct • 304 523-1011

Did you know lhat lhe Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is
offering grant monies for Transitiona.l Work Programs?
Did you know lhis program can reduce your workers' comp costs?
Call Holzer Work Link lo see how lhis program can be provided al
no charge lo slate funded employers.

Target

purchase or use in all &lt;11reas Us01ge Is rounded up t6 the ne•t full minute.

additio n~ ! charJe. Credit/debit card or bank account requ ired for automatic recurr ing payment. Amounts depoSited into your
.uc:oum ;are not transfe~&lt;~~ble or refundAble ante•pwe after 10 day s Yo ur serw1ce wil l be sus pe nded once your bal.1.oce is depleted Sendin&amp;text messages. ro ilming, ;~n d long din;~nce ch~r&amp;es, surch01rges..
L1m1 t ed a((ess to data •serv1ce automatically In cluded Data sen•tces requtre

-

aue ssmenu. other restrictions . charaes .and taxes .apply Availab1hty and reliability of service are subject to transmiSSIOn limitations. Not availab le w ith o t her offers. Offers a'13il;able .f or a limited time. You

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Call

will be bound by the General Terms. and Condit1oos ~nd rate pl;m m&lt;lteriills Night and Well!kend Minutes; Av;~llab le on plans S29.99 and a bow for ulh. placed from the AT&amp;T W1releu Nomona! Service
Area. Lont dlsunce charges may apply. N tght and Weekend a1rttme u from 9 ·00 p.m.- 5:59 a .m. Monday - Fnd.ay; and Friday 9:00 p.m .- Mo nday 5:59 a.m. Nationwid e long Distance: No wirelen

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long distance chartes apply to domestic c&lt;1lts plilced from the AT&amp;T W1reless N.monal Service Area Stilnd•rd a1rt1me ch•r&amp;es ap ply.

I

Across the country, one of
the first AmeriCorps programs in New Hampshire is
reeling, too.
"We may not exist next
year," said Meg Kennedy

.....,

• Former astronQut asked

.ATHENS

www. mydaily~gister.com

tions."

•

•••

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register
Subscribe today
(740) 446-2342
(740) 992-2156
(304) 675-1333
www.mydailytrihlme.com
www.mydailysentinel.com

involved with the program .
The ~roup s say hundreds of
acti vllies may have to shut
down unless the government '
provides emergency funds to ' ·
AmeriCorps. '
The problem-plagued federal agency that oversees the
program recently cut payments to many of the more
than 2,000 groups it supports.
California will see its
6,000 AmeriCorps positions
reduced to just over 2,000
for thi s year, said Chuck
Supple, executive director of
the governor's office on service and volunteeri sm.
"Throughout the state ,
teachers, parents and children will notice 4,000 missing .AmeriCorps members
from their schools, afterschool programs and family
resource centers," he said.
"It will have huge implica-

Inside

Greenhouse owners, whether
you raise tobacco, vegetables
or flowers. now is a great time
to clean up potential disease
and insect problems in your
greenhouse
environment.
Remove and destroy old plants
which may carry diseases and
harbor insect pests. Plan to pur~hase virus indexed plant material and seeds from reputable
licensed growers. If you must
keep old fashioned, rare or
family heirloom plants take
new cunings to reduce insect
pest carryover and toss out
older parent plants.
Keep all potentially infected
plants in one greenhouse
throu ghout the growing season.
Don·t co-mingle clean plant
material with carried over cutti ngs. Clean up old soil and
weeds in and around greenhouses, as both may harbor dis~ases and insects. Sanitize plant
trays and pots. Some seedlings
like pansy, vinca, petunia,
tobacco and .snapdragons are
quite susceptible to root rots
. and need to be staned in brand
new plug trays. Write up procedures to reduce contamina:J'"
tion of newly purchased stock
and discuss them with your
famil y and employees.

Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County · Agriculture ' &amp;
Natural Resources Agent,
Ohio
State
University
Extension.

On top of the game: Chad's
where he wants to be, 6

'I .

\

l '

www.holzer.org
'j

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