<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7022" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7022?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T05:39:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17426">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/eb6a5cc1ef06ce9ac463a18b0fbcf59c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4566d517622e00a914562191ebe001c0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23004">
                  <text>-

.
•

'

•

TEMPO

SPORtS

INSIDE

Back to the good

Prep baseball &amp;

old days, C1

softball action, 81

Coleman executed
at Lucasville, A&amp;

•

tmts
Deaths

•1.25

Minimal impact expected-from Cheshire sale:

Mary Jane Adkins, 87
Henry A. Norman, 85
Wilkie 1-iolman, 78
Mildred Pullins, 63
hWis,AI '

'

'

'

Meigs realtor:
seller~ market
will continue
BY IRIAN

WHAT . Do

You · THINK? ·

J. RIID

BREEOOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 40s
.,.,..,Al

•
•
•

I

i

·Ohio 143
to close
HARRISONVILLE
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation will close
Ohio 143 at the junction of
Ohio 684 in Hamsonville, to
allow for the replacement of a
box culvert, beginning June 3.
Traffic will be detoured
along 684 to Ohio 692 and
. back to 143.
. The project will be ·completed June 17. ·

Man convicted
of assaultln&amp;
football coach

' '

'

(

'

.

CHESAPEAKE (AP)- A
man has been convicted of
assaulting a high school football coach.
Kerry Newlon, 39, ofBiue
Rock, was found guilty of
punching Crooksville coach
Doug Clifford on Nov. 2 as
fans rushed the field to celebrate the team's playoff victory at Chesapeake.
Lawrence
County
Municipal Judge · Donald
Capi'Cr issued a written verdict Wednesday on the misdemeanor assault charge.
Authorities say the altercation started when Newlon's
brother, New Lexington
Police Chief Jeffrey Newlon,
argued with Clifford because
the chief's son did not get
·more playing time.
Kerry Newlon faces up io
six months in jail and a
$1,000 fine at his May 13
sentencing.
The Newlons had previously testified that Clifford
was the ·agsressor, and Kerry
Newlon sa1d he was defendin~ his broiher. But another
w1tness confirmed Jeffrey
Newlon confronted the
coach, Capper's ruling said.
Clifford sustained a cut
over his left eye and a dislocated shoulder.

Index
411diDR1-2t ...... .

calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby ·
Editorials
Obituaries
Region

Sports
•

ca
C2-4
02·7
insert
Cl
A4
AS

A2-3

81·6

Weather
A2
c :1002 Ohio volley Publllhlnc eo.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County's real estate market is
a seller's market, u~'Cordin~ to
a local realtor, but the anticipated exodus of Cheshire residents from their homes will
not likely have a dramatic
effect on home sales here.
Dottie Turner, a Middle,P?It
real estate agent, said Fnday
she has seen an increase in
client~ hoping to take advantage of the ready Cheshire
buyers' market, but has heard
little from Cheshire residents
interested in moving to Meigs

Devon Hill, ,..cine

•
County.
"l ·have seen an increase in
people who wish to sell, but I
haven't been .contacted by
potential
buyers
from
Cheshire," Turner said. "It
may be too early. I don't think
AEP has .addressed purchase

price with those affected by
the buy-out.
"I think most of those who
live in Cheshire und who.will
be usked to sell out ure in
limbo right now and haven't
begun to consider where they
will move to,"

Meigs Coun applies for
grant to fun health center
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH.,MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - "We've
given it every chance to succeed, we've done everything
we can do, and we have a
strong application. Now we
have to wait."
. .
Meigs County commissioner Mick Davenport was
commenting on Meigs
County's application for a
$650,000 federal grant for
use in openins a community
health center m the Veterans
Memorial HosJ?ital building.
Th~ appllcat1on and documents to support it will be
submitted Tuesday to the
U.S. Bureau of Primary
Health Cure Services. A decision on the grant is expected
by July 31.
.
The documents represent a
year's worth of work by the
community health cure plannin$ steering committee
wh1ch gathered and compiled
demographic and other inforPI..H IH lihlp, AJ

BY KRII DOTION
KOOTSONiltMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - As part
of Holzer Medical Center's
Strategr VII team's goal of
"investmg in lifestyle and
community resources," the
hospital has decided to
focus on "quality education" and its importance to
the community.
"We sent out 225 letters
· to area businesses several
wee~s aso," said Tom
Childs, ch1ef o~rating officer at HMC, asking them
to write a letter to the editor
in tbe Gallipolis Daily
· Tribune stating how quality
education is -important to
their particular business. I
·· wrote a letter to the editor
myself several months ago
dealing ~ith the importance of quality education
for recruiting and retention
of quality employees at
HMC.
"Our strategy team felt it

Turner said the increase she
hilS seen in properties for sali:
since AEP announced its
plans to buy out the community is needed in the buyer's
market that has been in place
tor some time.
"In my yeurs of reul estate,

I've never · seen 11 stronger
seller's market in Meigs
County," Turner said. "For
some time, we've been short
on · uvuilable properties
throughout the real estate
rnurkct. In the past, it bus usuPitllt IH Ch•hlre, AJ

CBfound

in Pomeroy.
·Syracuse
watersu
Anderson: No need for concern
BY IRIAN

J. RIID

READY TO GO- Taking a final look at Meigs County's appll·
cation for a $650,000 federal grant for use In opening a
community health center Is from the left, Paul Reed and

Mike Davenport, board members, as Bob Byer, Emergency
Management director, and George Hoffman, committee
coordinator, discuss the project. The application will be flied
Tuesday with the U.S. Bureau of Primary Health Care
Services. (Charlene Hoeflich)

would be approprilite for
other business leaders to
also author such a letter."
Township trustees will
also be contacted.
"In authorizing such arti·
cles, we continue to send a
message that we are in support of quality education m
the Galha school system city, county or private,"
Childs said. "It's not just
the kids and the sc.hools
that are impacted by quality
education but the business
infrastructure - the development of future business
leaders, the . ability to
recruit in new businesses
and professionals."
Childs said that the team
isn't
advocating
nor
endorsing a position in support of bond Ievies, "but it
1s a logical extension that to
have quality education, it
requires quality programs
and quillity teachers," he

said.
"I believe we have the
quality programs and quali·
ty teachers. In my opinion,
the weak link in the equation is 'bricks and mortar."'
Two of the most frequently .asked questions by visiting physicians and poten·.
tial new businesses are, "Is
your downtown thriving?"
and "What is the support
and status of your schoo.l
systems?"
"Visitors; potential new
residents want to · know if
your schools are progressive, relevant and current,"
said Childs. "Recruiting
physicians is similar to
recruiting quality teachers.
Is this where they want to
rais~ their families?
"We want a long term
commitment from them and
havin~ access to quality
educatiOn for their children is often a deciding factor."

POMEROY -The chemical C8 has been detected in both .
the Pomeroy und Srrucuse water supplies, according to the
Ohio Environmenta Protection Agency.
The systems are the second and third along the Ohio River
in Meigs County to discover trace levels of the chemical in
their wells. Tuppers Plains·Chester Water District and the
Washington County communities of Little Hocking and
Belpre have also· found their supplies contaminated with
ammonium pcrtluorooctanoate, commonly known as C8.
The chem1cal is used by E.l. DuPont De Nemours, Inc. at ·
its Washington Works plant in Wood County, W,Va .. to man:
ufacture fluoropolymer-related products.
.
.
DuPont has agreed to assess human heallh risks associated
with the consumption of the ~hemical in wuter supplies, 1111
well as to monitor surface and ground water and air emissions
for the chemical, which is known to be toxic to animals and
pel'!listent In humans, meaning it remains in the system for
e~tended periods of time following exposure.
John Anderson, Pomeroy village administrator, said
Pomeroy water customers have no reason to be concerned
because levels of CS found in the )lomeroy supply are below
those believed to be of any danger. A first test of Pomeroy's
SU)lply rev~al~ l~vels of 0.06 to 0.8~ parts per billion in its
wens and ns d1stnbution system - well below the levels of
.07 to 0.7 found in the TP-C supplies. A second sample was
taken Thursday, Anderson said.
TP-C general manager Don Poole has also said he feels the
levels of C8 in the district's wells pose no immediate health
ihreat.
There are no EPA regulations in place IJOveming exposure
to CS, althouih DuPont has esta:bhsh¢ Its own community
exposure suid'elines, which the company says are "conservative and h1ghly protective."
.
·
"There's no concern at this point and no need for residents
to feel they have to do anything about it," Anderson said.
"The supply will be closely monitored every 30 days to
determine if the levels are increaseing, and if they are, at what
rate they are incroasil!g, and what, if anything, can be d(lne."
Anderson said exposure to CS will likely be widespread
becausejt is also released into the air.
in Lubeck, W.Va., a class action suit wa~ tiled by re~idents
who say their health has been endangered by the release of the
chemical through direct discharaes intO the air, the Ohio River
and their water supply, and now, residents of Ohio communities affected are eligible to join 1111 plaintiffs in the suit against
ihe chemical company and others.
Apublic meeting regarding the class action suit will be held
Monday at 7 p.m. at the Oils Conference Center on Market
Street in Parkersburg, W.Va.

The Holzer Health Hotline is now...

River Cities Nune. On·Call
1·800-462·525

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

'

If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a
. specially trained RN.

304-67·5-4340

Check wilh yoilr phy•icion obout medication concerna.

'

- -,, . .,--'

'f

'

(

BREED~MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

HMC focuses on education

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

•

Jenny Shirley, Pl. Plaa11nt

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

I

�.
'

PlgeA2
•

man to s
at
URG commencement

. 8unct.y, April II

•

•

•

RIO ORANDE - ' Dr.
Susan Tave Zelman, superin·
tendent of public Instruction
for the state of Ohio, will
deliver
· the
2002
Commencement address to
approKimotely 43S gruduotes
on Sunday, May 12, at 211.m.
at the University of Rio
Orande nnd Rio Orunde
CoHmemr"tnn!tsysaCaoelltcoacg.r"du•tes
"
" "
· Is entitled
"Pre
rc
for pntho

W. Y~

• w.•.--~
~ ..
loo

...

Future You
Cannot
Predict."
"All of

'.

our chil·
dren need
~0e y 0 ngd
Zelman
h r t h
school,"
Zelman said. "We need to
mulntuln high standards In
'""!'ii~"!"'!"!'l"---=~-...,"""'l~,..------- prcpuring K·12 teachers In
r.W
VI 1 1
h
order to ·reduce remedial
8St rg n 8 Wilt tr
• classes
at the college level.
28
They (teachers) need to know
their subjects as well us how
I I
to teach. It's ull one system."
Zelman ussumed her duties
at the Ohio Department of
Education in 1999. Her
OHIO· ~ .
responsibilities include fram·
ing policy, advancing systemlc reform, building ~osl·
tlve working relationships
. with the governor's office,
legislators nt the stute · and
fcileral levels, und con·

.

stituont
organizations Department of Education and
(including purents ond busl· · private foundations in order
ness community), supervls· to create support ror multi·
ing the Implementation of sector partnerships.
laws, regulations, policies
Zelman, who holds a doc·
·and programs, and providing torote In education from the
u cleur vision of progress and University of Michig~n, went
refonn.
to Missouri after 6~ ·years
"I continue to advocate for with the Massachusetts
resources
In
PK-12 Department of Education. As
ussocluto commissioner for
(preschool to Rrade 12 levels the division of educatlonul
of education), Zelman said. personnel, she worked close·
"Oeouraphy should not
., destiny," she said ly with the Massachusetts
determine
Higher ·
Education
in response to' 11 question Coordlnatlna
Board to pro·
about the current educational
mote policies and coordinate
funding issue . currently proarams to Improve recruit·
bc:lfore the Ohio Legislature mcnt, education, certlflca·
and Ohio Oov. Taft. "I um tion,
and professional devel·
optlmlnlc about Its resolu·
opment of teachers and
tlon."
administrators
In
Zelman's extensive experl· Massachusetts.
once in framing public policy
In this role, Zelman was
In K·l2 education Includes responsible for the ncqulsl·
work In Mussuchusetts and tlon of the National Science
Missouri.
Foundation
Statewide
She served us deputy com· Initiative
and
the
missioner of the Missouri Purtnershlps
Advancing
l)epurtrnent .of Elementary Leomlng Math und Science
und Secondary Education (PALMS). She ulso served us
from J994-99. In . this role, PALM! a primary principal
Zehnun ussisted the commis· ittvcstlautor for one and one·
sioncr with the implement&amp;· half years. Zelman wal hon·
tion und evuluution of educu·
tion reform, supervised inter· ~~gdl~y the Mussac~~~~~~
divisional und ·interagency Administration for her efforts
cnlluborution efforts, coord1· us co-director for the
nutcd
the
Missouri Carnegie Foundation Middle
Depurtmem's legislative and School Turning Points
lel!ul . rcsponsHillitles, isnd · In ltlati ve.
Slolrwd us the Depuf!mcnt'¥
Before . beginning her
. liulson
to ·the . U.S. resjlonslbllltles ·
in

Massachusetts, Zelman waa
an assoclate/rofeuor of edU·
cation for I years and chair
of the Depmrtment of·
Education at Emmanuel
Colleae
In
Boston.
Simultaneously, she held a
flve-~eur a~pointment with
1he ducat on ..1 ec hno 1OilY
Center of the Harvard
Graduate
School
of
Education .and received the ·
National Science Research
Opportunity Award for
Women throuah Columbia
Teachers College. Her
research focused on chil·
drena' and teacheu' mathe·
matlcal thlnklna.
Zelman and her husband,
Allan, a policy analyst, have
three children: Allau, a 1997
araduate
of
Brandeis
University; Rachel, who Ia
attending Lesley Colleae;
und Josh, a student at Boston
University.
"I am the first mother to
h
rl
d
f
· occupy 1 e supe nten ent 0
publfc lnatruct1on's position,"
Zelman said. ''Thla makea me
inore pauionate about the
Importance of education."
Zelman will receive an
honorary doctorate of public
aervli:e during the May 12
commencement at Rio
Orande. In case of rairi, com·
mencement will be moved
from the front areen to Lyne
Center.

.MASON COUNTY CLEAN-UP MONTH
•
•
•

•

•

• •

•

Showers, thunderstorms coming
IV THE AIIOCIATIO Pftlll

••Y•

The National Weather Service
ahowers and thunder·
atonna will affect the 111te Saturclay nl1ht and Sunday u a
cold front workl acrou the re1lon and Into weatem
Pennaylvanla by Sunday evenlna.
.
·
It will be wann Sunday with hlah• In the 601 acrou the
north and the 70s In the lOUth.
Hlah pre11ure wlllatart to build In behind the front Sunday
nlaht and Monday and brlna drier condition• and teaaonablc
temperature•.
·
Hiah preaaure covered mo1t of the Oreat Lakea realon and
eKtendeilaoutheaat to the mld·Atlantlc realon early Saturday.
Thia kept akiea aenerally clear, eKcept for tcattered mid-level
clouds that had lpread into lome welt central and IOUthwelt
counties.
Weather Fonc:ut
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a chance of 1hower1 and thun·
dcmorma. Breezy. Hiaha in the lower SO.. Southwell wind•
I~ to 2~ mph. Chance of rain ~0 percent.
Sunday nlaht... Partly cloudy. Lowa4~ to 49.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Hlah• in the upper 601.
Monday night... Partly cloudy. Lowaln the upper 401.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of ahower• durina the
niaht. Hiah• in the lower 70a.
.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of ahowera and
thunderstorma. Lowa in the mid !10. and hiah• in the lower
701.
Thursday... Moatly cloudy with a chance of ahowera and
thundeutorms. Lowa in the mid ~01 and hiaha near 70.
Fric1ay...Mostly clear. Lowa in the upper 401 and hiah• in the
lower 70s.

Correction Polley

Our main concern In all eloflet II
to bt accura!t. ff you know ol an
trror In a aloty, call fill neMroom
at .ue-.2342 or lle2·2166.

Newt DeDartmente
Gltllpal..

"-Partmtnt lllllltlfJool ara:
=='lngldltOI'
IditOl'

....,Int...,
.,.,.

P..or

~.
~.

11 .

23

I!Jd, 20
. I!Jd. 21

Dt!»ttmtnt ........... ate:
OIMrll Mil ••••
.._
.._

I!Jd. 12
~. 13

I!Jd, 14

On the web
-~.oom

-.~.com

E-fMII

-·~.com

MMOm)'IMII,..minlf.com

'

.

Sund1y, April aa; 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, Ohio Point Pltlllnt, WV

21,2002

..
Ohio weather

.

u area are pr1ont1es
IY PAM WIWAMION
PAMWOMVDAILVAIQIITIA.COM

POINT PLEASANT - ·
April Ia officially Maaon
County Clean-Up Month and
the
Maaon
County
Commlulon 11 encouraalna
citizen• to do their part to
make area communltlet u
better place to live.
''Thla i1 our home, and we
muat do everythlna we can fo
make Maaon County a better
pl&amp;ee to live," Cominluloner
Phyllla Arthur aald. "By
doing thla, we thow pride In
our 1urroundlnaa and atlmu·
late the quality or our life."
Citizen• could adopt their
community for a day and
lend a hand to your nelah·
bor1, eapeclally the elderly, to
help them to maintain their
property. A coat of n,ai nt, a
freahly weeded aarden, or a
clean 1toraae ahed goea a
lona way In both how the·
community looka, and how
Ita resident• feel about it.
Plantina a cree or. hostlna a
community
tree·plantlna
drive would also serve to
l'e•utlfy the area, but don't
atop at juat treca. With the
apnng flower• in full show,
UIC their inspiration to plant
summer flower• or dec:ora·
live 1hrub1 in your yurd or
community.
One of the most visible and ·
vital pro)ecu a peraon or
oraaniZlllion can tackle ialhat
oflitter control.
"One importar11 thina we
can all do it notliuer:• Anhur
aaid. "It you look at our
county, litter is a very evident
problem."
Litter it 10 much a problem
for the eounty that rtl com·
mit~ion routinely maintains a
1tretch of land on WVa. 2 aa
part of the Adopt·A-Hiahway
prC)JJ'am.
The next time you ao for a
walk in the neiahbOrhood,
take alona a aJove and a tra1h
baa. The extra ltreu:hinaand
berldina will only add to your
workout lll!d the litter control
will provide the neiahbor·

-------------~----------------------------------4-

hood with a vl1ual facellft.
Commi11ioner Bob Baird
aee1 litter at an luue that
may affect new bualne11e1
looking to develop In the
county. lt'l an iuue that Ia
high In hl1 prlorltlea Iince
Baird also serve• on the
Muon County Development
Authority Board.
.
"Litter control 11 very
Important," Baird aald.
"When tomeone cornea In
lookinf to develop in the
urea, I everythin&amp;_waa clean
It'd make a bla difference."
For thole who do the drop·
ing of litter and not the pick·
r.ng up, that piece of paper
you throw on the ground
could also cost you hundreds
of dollun.
Ar~lu·

We1t Vlralnla atate law
view• lltterln&amp; 11 a mlldemeanor. Upon tlrat convlc:·
tlon, • litter bua could be
fined no le11 than $50 and no
more that $500 and may be
aaalaned to litter patrol alona
public hl&amp;hways, roada,
atreeta, alley•, or any other
public property.
Litter Ia defined aa aarbaae,
refuae, traah, cana, bottlill,
papen, a1he1, the citrcaaa of
any dead animal or any jlart
thereof, or any other olfen·
Jive or un•l&amp;htly matter.

Tlte Welt Vlrainla Dlvlalon
of Nature! Reaourcea already·
haa a number of envlronmeri·
tal 1teward1hlp proJect•
underway,
inclualna,
Operation Wildflower, Weat
Vlralnla
Wild
Yarda,
Community Tree Plannlna
Pro&amp;rtm, and the Weat
Vlrjlnla Save Our Stre11111
PTOaran1.
.
For more Information on
any of the alate pr011'11111,
c:all 1·80().558-3370.
·

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

Dream comes true for
new·business owner
_Grungy Hands and
Primitive Friends opens
~dnesday
FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Downtown Oallipolls
welcomes another uniqu.e specialty shop to
Its rnnks this week when Orunay Hands and
Primitive Friends opens for business at 348
Second Avenue.
The new craft and "primitive art" shop
opens Its doors Wednesday.
The shop Is owned by Tummy Roberts,
formerly of Bob's Markets. Roberts, who
halls from Oalllpolls Ferry, W.Va., in Muson
County, said "her heart and love for her
work 11 In the people of Oallla County and
Mason County." She said she "gives her
heart and soul to everythin$ she does."
Grunay Hands and Prim1tive Friends will
operate seven days a week. The store will be
open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monduy
throuah Saturday,.und from noon to 6 p.m.
on Sunday.
"Orunay's will cany a wonderful selec·
tlon of crafts und unique primitive art and a
whole lot more," Roberts said In u prepared
statement. "Surprises will uwait you at this
lillie shop_."
·
Cindy Weaver of New Haven, W.Va .. will
assist Roberts as a part-time employee.

Meigs County Special
Olympians enj g .
successful season
FROM STAFf REPORTS

POMEROY .:.... Special
Olympics athletes from
Melas lndustrie• recently
competed in the third annual
Meig• High School .National
Hunor Society Track and
Field Meet in preparation for
Friday'• .Reaional Track and
· Field Meet at Athens Hish
School.
According to Steve Beha,
exe.cutive
director
of
Carleton School and Melg1
Industries, the National
Honor Society 1tudenu at
Meia• Hiah School organize
the local event each yeur aa a
,community project, provid·
Jng trainins for the athletes
who are preparing to partici·
pale In the SO-meter and 100·
meter da1hca, standina lona
jump, softball throw, shot
put, relay race• and the 100·
meter walk.
Forty Special Olympic ath·
letea from Meia• County
joined over 300 other athlete•
at Friday's regional meet.
National Honor Society
tudentl
also made the trip to
1
Athens to auist and eheer the
.athlete• on 10 victory.

--..---------

:AEP
Jeports
•
:earn1ngs
drop ·

Ownet8/n1urance

Ute !lome Car Bll81neo

7u '1fl. -p,~ -p~· ·
INSURANCE PLVS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

992·6677
Many of you have asked how to vote for Bi11 Jenkins, our
write-in candidate for Probate I Juvenile Court Judge.
Here is what you should do:
1. · Take the pencil in th~ booth,.or your own pen or pencil,
.and write on the gray envelope your ballet comes in,
2. Where it says office, write-in Probate Juvenile Court
Judge and where it says candi4ate'l tUJme, write-in
Bill Jenkins .
If you have any questions, ask the election official at your
polling booth.
·
Thank you.
t

..

. -----4·

· COLUMBUS (AP) American Elec:tric Power
repotU that its fu-qiW1er
;earnina• fell 16 percent
•becauJe of the reuuion and
:. mild winter that kept eneray
:demand low.
' ThC Columbut-bated utili·
' ty 111id it made $189.4 million
..for the quarter that ended
'•March 31. . or 59 centt a
:lhare, compared with $226.3
:mlllion, or 71 cents a share, a
:yur aao.
·: Revenue fell S ~cent to
:·stB billion from SJ4.2 bil·
. lion.
: The per 1hare eamina•
:were in IJne with expecta·
:tiOIII of analyltl JUJ'\Ieyed by
:ThomJOII
Flnanciai/Firtt
'Call.

.OVB promotes five officers
GALLIPOLIS - Oflicer
promotions at Ohio Valley
Bank have been announced by
Executive Vice Presidents E.
Richard
Mahan and
Larry E.
Miller II.
Linda L.
Plymale has
been pro·
meted to
assistant
vice presi·
dent-transit
Plym!llt
officer.
Plymale
began her
career at
OVB
in
1968 and
f i r s t
became a.
bunk officer
in 1986.
This year,
she will eel·
ebrate her
3 S I h
anniversary
with
the
bank. She is
a graduate
of Oallia
Academy
H i g h
Schoo l ,
attended the
University
of
Rio
ltepp
Grande,
and has rep·
resented the
bunk at several confer·
ences and
seminars.
She and her
hu sband,·
M i k e ,
reside in
Gallipolis .
Kimberly
R. Williams
was pro·
moted 10
auistunt
vice presi·
dent · sys·
terns offi·
c e r .
Williams
began her
employ·
Phllllpe
ment wrth
·ova in
I987 as a proof operator in the
processing department.
She is a grudaate of Fairland
Hiah School and attended
Mar•hull University, with a
major in computer Kience.
She is a 199~ recipient of the
Joycelyn M. Barlow Award of
EJ~cellence, the blink's highest
honor. She and her husband,
John, reside in Crown ·City
with their 1011, Brian.
Bryan F. Stepp wu named
auislllnt vice pre1ident-retail
development. Stepp joined the
IY.ank in 200 I.

r-----..,

RIAOY TO ao - Tammy Roberts Is the
owner of Grunay Handa and F'rlmltlve
Frlands, located 111 348 Second Avenue In
· downtown Glllllpolle. The store opens
Wedneaday. (OVF')

ilunba!' 1ilmr1 ·ilrntlntl• Plgt A3

He is a graduate of Point
Pleasant (W.Va.) High School
und h11s earned 11 6achelor's
dearee
from
Marshall
Untversity. He is also a grad\J·
ate of the West Vfrglnia
Banking School, a Small
Business Administration "certified lender," and a· former
vice president of BJJ&amp;T. He
and his wife, I.,isa, reside in
Point Pleu.sunt with their chil·
drun, Saruh and Andy.
Pamela D. Edwards was
named assistant cashier-com·
mercial loan operations.
Edwards joined OVB in 1993
as a teller and customer ser·
vice representative.
She is a graduate of Oak
Hill High School and has rep•
resented the bank in several
classes and seminars. Over the
years, fldwards has earned
several awards for her work us
a teller und in customer ser·
vice. She und her husband,
Kenny, reside in Oak Hill with
their son, Cory. Another son,
Josh, resides in Bellefontaine.
Gregory A. Phillips was
named assistant cush1er-indi·

rect lendin11 assistant ft11naJ·
cr. Phillips joined OVB tn
May 1993.
. He is u graduate of Loaan
(W.Va.) Senior Hiah School,
received a bachelor's dearee
in business . administration
from Marshall University, and
participates in OVB's contin· ·
uing education program .
In December, Phillips
received the Joycelyn M.
Barlow Award of Excellence.
He und his wife, Sonya, reaide
in South Point with their three
children, Lauren, Taylor and
Luke.
·
"For many of uur employ·
ees, this is the first job they
ever had," said OVB
President un(J Chief Executive
Officer Jeffrey E. Smith .
"They started With OVB
either right out of Khool, riaht
out of college or in some
instances, the military service,
and continue here today."
OVB currently employs
249 people in its 17 offices
throughout Ohio and West
Virginia.

Vote for

RICK
SWAIN
Republican
Candidate

I
Bethel Worship Center
· hho3tiiiJJawcekof

Spiritual Renewal
April 28 - May 4
1:00pm nightly
With guest speaker l'ilslor Lonnie coats of
ltestoratlon Christian Pellowshlp, Athens
I

I

-+-,._ JJti"Speclal Drama
Presentation by
C.O.R.E.

•

Bethel Wonlalp Center It h~eated In the 1\appen Plaint !khool.
f111t

11111re Info: l'otor koo Blrbor(740) 667-6793

Been waiting for a
great mortgage rate7
SPICIAL AfHLITI - Mamie Cede, attltted by members of
· the Mel&amp;a HIJh School National Honor Society, competes In
the ltandlni lone jump durlne the third annual Track and Fleld ·
Meet, tf)Ontored by the Honor Society, (S&amp;Jbmltted)

Mlrlboro................. M.OO off a.ton
Wlnlton
17,00 off oarton
Camtll.................... $7.00 olf carton
8alom...................... S5.50 off carton
Vlrglnl• Sllm........... se.oo off carton
I•Jc,,.,,,,,,,,~,N.OO off Clrton
Dorai ....................... QJO off a.ton
Kooii.................... .S10.00 off Cll'ton
Vlcfroy....................S2.00 off carton
Mlttv,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,....................
P8JIMIIJ1 FJitetf,.,,,,,,,,,fl,fUHhu
#fUfUfl#fffrflll

\\

$21M catton
-~~~ Clfton

S2J.N catton
S27.ot catton
S2e.N carton
$23.11 C11ton
S20.15 catton
S22.N carton
S1U2 CM1on
120.42 ClltOft

120.42 C8l'tCJn
111.42 carton
UIA Gold •• d ......, ........., , , , , . , , . , , , , , f11A2 ClftOtt
NEW Qrtzzly
l1.ol c:.
Redman Cflew ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, t11.11 carton
louatlrn Prldt Chew,,,,,,,,,,,,., l12.1t cartan
Taylor1 Ptldt Chew.......................... S14.tl cartan
Levi o.r.tt Clw ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..... J11.18 catton
Levi lxtra Chew,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, $11.11 catton
.._. PG41Gft et.w'•.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 11fM cartan
Mof'..... Cftew,,.""''' '''uu••••••uuunu S11,7t Clfton .
Dur.,.o Cflew',;,.,,,u•••,,,,,,,,,,,,.. S12.11 C8l'ton
lud f t lud ~ .., ,,,,,,,,;, 114.11124 PK
llllh lllld lultl
S11.41124 PIC
M~dl •• ,,,,,_,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,

.,uff............................

OAK HILL
BANKS

Light.......................

Otd MUw....., .....,•• _,,,,,,,.......... H.M2A PK
Cc»ore,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 114,W4JCJ PK

lA·----

1121 llltftJ Ar. . .

500 3rd Ave. Oalllpolls 44&amp;.0315
·201 S. Front St. Oak Hill 682-7733

•

�•
I

Page A4~

Opinion

Sundaiy, April 21, 2002

Sunct.y, Aplll 21, 2002'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pltleant,

Ill

rles
Henry
· A. Monnin

Qllllpolll, Ohio • Pom1roy, Ohio
Point Pl1111nt, W. VI. .

,,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I

t

·-"

,;1 •

g

Den Dlckerton
Publlther
Llrry l!loytr
Advtrtltlng Mtntger

I
I
I

..,
.... ,:

~

Dlant Kty Hill
Controllt.r

..

I

IAitlfl to t~l tdJtur tlr# WIICIIn/11, 1''"J 1l11mld b11 ltll tlt rm .rrHiwort/i. All/fllltrl

::J

lilt"'"

ldlllftl 1111d llfiW b1
umlltil'ludt mltJrm utili r,./,pl/oHtt llllilfhtr.
No ~rrllrrrlllllfflrl will bt pubiM~rd. 1.-ltm , J,illfd hfl In NIIIHf 14tdfl, mhlr'~''"K
1111111, 11u1 ,,,malblfll,
.
Till upltdtml •xprflrtd In '"' f'lllluHn h11lot.~ ant '''"'''mmwu II/ f1111Olt/11 Vttllly
l'llbfl~ltJitf (.'o, '# ldlflirltlf hiHJNI, UH(IIU ltlh#rM•i.f l 111/lttd.

" " 1d)1tt ID

,,

• '•

.•

NATIONAL VIEW

·Unclear
Bush not alone in being
·confused on Middle East stance

I.

.I
••

I

'.
~:·

•

ut

'"'

"- ..
"

'!
' I'
'

...
,,"

New publisher's view of tri-county

My first 90 days as publisher here are
up, so it is pascume to Introduce myself
und let you know whut I silmd for.
• Hobbs (N.M.) News-Sun, on Bush's Middle East
In hue Januury, I began work us publisher for the Ohio Valley Publishing
policy: Analysts who believe President Bush hlls
Company. As you may or muy not
shown himself to be indecisive regarding lhe Middle
know, the OVPC consists of the dully
East dilemma may be correct.
ncwspupcrs
in
Oullipolis,
However, everyone has shown themselves to be
l&gt;omemy/Middlcpurt
and
Point
indecisive, except for perhaps the Israelis.
Pleusunl. My goal is to improve all
The escalating violence between Israel and Palestine
three papers in us many ways as possi·
is not approved by Americans. The problem of how to
ble.
stop the violence doesn't have a quick, eusy answer
In my lirst three months here. I have
had
the opportunity to meet a large
~hat analysts might like.
.
number of different people in the three
Perhaps Bush's stance is on.e of thoughtful considermarkets
our newspapers serve. For the
ation. It wouldn't be wise to jump into this situation
most purt, my initial experiences have
without lookin$ at the many facts that surround the
been positive. ·
.
issue. After revtewing the facts, Bush will have to facHavin~ spenc all of my life in the
tor in the depth of emotional hatred these two counsouth priOr to coming to this part of the
tries have for one another. .
·
country, I have to say that weather
. aside. there are not as many differences
After September II th, Americans developed a deteras I thought there would be in the two
mination and a patience in their commitment to tight
ureus. There are just as many baseballterrorism. Instead of a quick fix. Americans have temcap-wearing-indoors,
red-pickup-truckpered their resolve and now understand that the
driving, good-old-boys in southeast
Middle East does not hold a quick fix.
Ohio/western West Virginia as there are
American actions will have to be defended and that
in the south. Nice to see the women of
defense may be the blood of our armed services perthis urea ·love their fast and sporty
brightly colored cars every bit as much
sonnel. '
a~ southern gals do. People he~e are just
The United States should act as soon as possible, but
as
friendly (initially) as southernen.
onl&gt;' when the position and plan of action ts clear. That
My mother ~rew up in a very small
actton should mclude all the factors before a decision
town in Georg1a and my dad was a lifeis made.
·
long Tarheel who later became a foot·
Until then, it appears Arafat and Sharon are the only
ball star at Virginia Tech before going
ones comfonable with the war between their two
off to World War II. There were seven
of us Dickerson kids growin~ up in
countries.
Statesville, N.C. The first stx were
boys. I fell in the middle.
.
Parents here love their children just as
much as southern parents love their
younguns. Most everyone in both areas
drives on the right side of the road and
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
rarel~ uses thoHC things called turn sigToday is Sunday, April 28, the IIIIth day of 2002. There ~re
nals m their vehicles. I can find grits in
247 days left in the year.
· the grocery store - 2 flavors even I
Today'a Highlight in History:
·
.
People in both areas smoke too many
Fifty years·ago, on April 28, 1952, war with Japan offici~l ·
cigarettes, drink too much alcohol and
ly ended as a treaty that had been signed by the United States
eat too much pizza. I am guilty of only
and 47 other nations took effect.
the last.
On I his date:
Most everyone goes to church on
In 1758, the fifth president of the United States, James
Sundays in both locales. I am a llfelong
Monroe, was born in Westmoreland County, Va.
Presbyterian, one of Gods' frozen choIn 1788, Maryland became the seventh state to ratify the
sen aR we often jokingly refer to ourU.S. Constitution.
•,
Helves. Politically, I am a mugwumJ'.
In 1789. there waH u mutiny on the Bounty as the crew of
Currently I am living in the beautiful
the British ~hip set Capt. William Bligh and IK S;~ilors adrift
countryside pf West Virginia. This sumIn a launch in the South Pacific.
mer that address changes to the heart of
In 1945., Italian dicllltor Benito Mussolini and his mistress,
. downtown Gallipolis. This is the eighth
Clara Petacci, were executed by lllllian partisans as they
community I have lived and workea in
·attempted to nee the country.
and the tirst that has a city tax. Not a
In 1947, a six-man expedition uiled from Peru aboard a
positive.
·
bal•a wood raft named the "Kon-Tiki" on a 101 -day journey
to Polynesia.
.
·
In 1958, Vice President Nixon and hi~ wife, Pat, began a
goodwill tour of Latin America that was marred by hostile
mobs in Lima, Peru, and Caracas. Venezuela.
In 1969, French President Charles de Gaulle resigned.
ln 1986, the Soviet Union informed the world of the nuclear
disutcr at Chemobyl, saying the accident damaged a reactor'
and that aid was bemg rendered to "th011C affected."
ln 1988, a night attendant was killed and 61 peoons injured
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor last
when pan of the roof of an Aloha Airlines Boeing 737 ""led
week struck a blow for clarity. fn the
back during a flight from Hilo to Honolulu.
cyberworld of pornography, she said,
In 1990, the musical "A Chorus Line" closed after 6,137
the actual-child and the vtnual-child are
performances on Broadway.
.
not of the ~arne species. As a matter of
Ten years ago: Pre1idtnt Bush and Bill Clinton won the
law,
all they share is a hyphen. One may
Penntylvania presidential primari c~. The Agriculture
be abused. The other may be dtleted.
Department unveiled iu pyramid-shaped recommended-diet
That summation is oversimplified, but
chart that had cost nearly $1 million to develop.
it
reflects the c&lt;immon sense behind the
Five years aao: President Clinton and three of hi ~ predccesCoun's 7-2 decision striking
Gwr11e Bush, Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford - begun · Supreme
down
the
Child
Pornography Prevention
. · drafting a nattonal army of comp!Unity service volunteers durAct
of
1996.
The
majority opinion, skilling the Presidents' Summit for America's Future in
fully written by Justice Anthony
Philadelphia. ·
Kennedy, leaves in place plenty of fed·
One year ago: A·Russian rocket lifted off from Central Asia
eral law '" punish those who produce
beating the first liJYdU tourist, California bu~i nes~man Dennis
and Hell obscene materials involving
nto, and· two cosmonauu. on a journey to the international
images of children. The opinion af110
JP"AC.e station.
.
leaves
untouched
"the
First
Today's Birthdays: Aulhor Harper Lee i ~ 76. Former
Amendment's vase and privileged
Secretary of State James A. Baker fll i~ 72. The pre~ ide nt of
~phere:· The court got this one e~actly ·
Iraq, Saddam Hu s~in , i~ 6.5. Ac lre~,_,~i nger Ann-Macgret is
n&amp;ht. ·.
61. ActreJ~ Marcia StraJt~man is 54. Actor Bruno Kirby is .53.
The Pin.l Amendment of 1791 I.IIICA
'1'oni&amp;ht Show" ho~t Jay Le011 i ~ .52. Actress Mary
only
14 words '" say that "CongreAA
McDonnell is 49. Rock singer- mu~ician Kim Gordon (Sonic
Vouch} ill 49. Rapper Too Short is 36. A ctrc~s Simbi Khali i~ · shall make no law abridging the free·
dum of ' peech. or of the pr~ss." Th011e
31 . Actor Chris Young is 31. Rapper Big Gipp (Goodie Mob)
word~ were not 'lerioosly examined in
i• 29. Actren Penelope Crut i~ 28. Actor Nate R i~&lt;hert is 24.
cerms
of pompgraphy uncil long after
Actte.n Jessica Allrd ("Datk Angel") i~ 21 .
1bou~t for Today: "If youth only had a chance or old age 1 Congre~s adopced the Comstock Act of
1873. That law forb-ddt any"ne to mail
any bram.f."- Stephen Leacock. Canadian humori~t-educapubl icati on~. chat were obscene, lewd,
tor.(l869-1944).
.
.

TODAY IN HISTORY

' I
••

••

.

'"

white-knuckles this roud fre(1uently nnd .
manuges to eKhule somewhere uround ~
Teuys Valley. ·
, .
•·
Viund Street in Point·Pieusunt gees my ~
thumbs down vole for the nlOSt-truV-"'
eled, worst puvement condition of u
road in Meigs-Oullia-Muson. Besides ,; '.
Den
front-end alignment shop, who could
love thai mud? The city of Pomeroy
Dickerson gets my vote for the most rc:tuiler
unfriendly village. Puying to purk'?
Come on Pomeroy. Docs the revenue
PUBUSHER
generated from the meters provide
enough nickels und dimes to even pay
the mecer maid und ·maintain the
There are some major differences in meters?
·
the two areas. Soucherners apparently
The wotert'ronHtreas urc our greutest
spend more on hearin$ aid baueries natural resource and should be fully
than folks around here, smce that has to developed for recreational purposes. 11
be why so many people here talk so was nice to learn of the waterfront plans
loud.
.
in Pomeroy and Point Pleusunt. How
I have only been m one school build- about Gallipolis? Can you tell I am pro-.•
ing so far- Gallia Academy - and I was business?
ecstatic to be able to leave when I did.
Civic organizations abound here .; ·
While well maintained, the building is Having joined my dad as a Rotarian, 1
ancient, grossly inadequate for today's believe in community service and .
learning environment and is terribly involvement. 1 have noticed that ther~~
overcrowded. Some of you relirement- are a larue number of civic t&gt;rganiza~ :
aged folks may be able to remember ·
d F 1
f
d h'
b 1•
way back when the building was new. ttons omg ot~ 0 goo t mgs, u •
Learning that students leave school .for many are pulling in different directions~;
lunch off campus every day sent me In Little gets done in this environment
to a J'arent-panic. I do not believe chat except for massive wheel spinning and ,
kids Jeavin~ school and roaming the name-call in~. · Some communities I ,
have lived tn have large Community ·
streets of owntown Gallipolis every . Boards wich representation from al('
school day is neither a sman nor a safe major organizations that chart the agen.' '
idta. In respect to the school buildings, da for tlie community. In one progreh
I am thankful my 8, almost 9-year-old sive small town in southwest Oeorgiu;·
daughter goes to school in a brand new the Chamber Board serves this very,
state of the art primary school in the
,
'll
f N h C I'
use.u 1purpose.
~i
I
dh
rura san . I s area o &lt;?rt aro tnll •
Discovering early on that an absolute- :
~n area.htt hard econo"1tcally by clos- ly fabulous library exists in Gallipolis'
tog textile mills. They sttll found a way showed me that when the communit{
to fund several new schools.
decides something major needs to be'"
.Traffic on . Eastern ;Avenue/Upp~r done that it could in fact be done. This.,
Rtver Road!Ht~hway 7 m, Galllpof\&amp; 18 • area has an Inferiority complex that it '
an absolute mghtm~re, bke that ts a needs to get over and fast. We have a lo~
news. nash to area ~nvcn. I undtrstand to be proud of in Meigs-Oallia-Mason . ':
help ts on the way 1n the form of a road Holzer Hospital, Holzer Clinic and th~.
that would allow us to bypau .that bot- Well ness Cenler at Pleasant Valley are
tleneck. I thank all of;ou that have let area jewels that are underappreciated. •
m~ car out or all owe m.e to tum .1~.ft.
We already have excellent libraries ·
Withou~ you, I would sttll be watt1ng and medicaf. facilities. we can have
and wamng. I have managed to learn excellent roads. We can have excellent
the fine art of pulling out in front of school buildings. We can have excellent
other motorists on this road, an downcowns and waterfronts. II is within
unsouthem-hke trait.
.
the power and ability of the citizens and
What more ca,n. be satd about ~e the leaders of Meigs·Gallia-Mason to
deplorable condt~ton of U.S. 3.5 tn make it happen. I promise that I will
Mason county? It !8 baffhna to all of us work with you to get It done
"
a~ ~ \YhY the political leaden of West
·
.,,:
V1rg1nt~ refuse to ~orrectthat deathtrap
(Den Dickeraon i.r the Publisher for! .
of a htghway. I JOin the crowd that the Ohio Valley Publi.fhing Co.)
,,

...,..--------------------------------.·

tor•-

'

•I

lascivious or indecent.
The Supreme Court finally got around
to a direct First Amendment challenge in
the cue of Samuel Roth in 1957. Thus
began the ~emanticallr, tricky busineu
of dtfining "obscenity. ' It hu proved an
inordinately difficult problem. finally
resolved - more or less - in the Miller
case of 1973. Material that appeal• to
"prurient interest" is legally obscene,
and thus unprotected by the First
Amendment, if taken u a whole it
depicts "JYdlently offensive: HC~ual ronduct." The Miller ca.'le also introduced
Heveral phrases that have become part "f
the mantra: "oontem,porary oommunity
standards" and "lackmg ~~erious litcriU')',
anistic, political or ~ientific value."
The Miller criteria have remained
largely untouched over the P.aJt 29
reaB. Federal involvement Ji&amp;mficantly
Increased, however, with the Ferber case
off982. Hero the court atueed that child
pornography - real-chird pornography
- is a particular evil to be combated. AI
the time there WBJ plenty of cartoon
pollJ()gtaphy, but oomputer porn wa'
waiting to be bom in the form of the virtual-child.
Under the Miller cld4!, "oommunity.

'

standards" rontain an element of age:v
Said Justice Kennedy: "PictufeS of·
young children engaged in certain act~ 1
might be obllcene' where similar dtpic!(
lions of adults, or perha~ even oldtt'
adole~~Cenc.s, wvuld not.' Federal law'
will continue to proscribe obscen~:
images made by usmg both uctual and'
simulated minors.
The problem with the Child.
Pornoaraphy Prevention Act, saicl~
Kennedy, is that it reaches 1:-elond the;
Miller definition of "obscenity. It drop!l
the criterion of redeeming IIOCial o~ cult'
tural values. Suspect material need not'
be patencly offen~ive . Under this act;,
ima$es do .not have even to appeal to•
~mment intereAt. The act extends td'
1mages that "appear to be" of minor~;
engaged in ·sexually explicit conduct. It'
is immaterial whether the . images aro:
made with real, live children or with ii
technician's palette of pixels. The liceral
terms of the ~ta tute, as Kennedy ·
observed, would nmke it a crime for a
simulated Romeo to embrace a phantom
Juliet.
·
(Urrers to Mr. Kilpatrick should be
.rent in care (Jj'th/,y newspaper. or by t·
mail to kilpatj)(at)aol.cfJJII.)

•

COLUMBUS- Dr. Henry A. Norman, 8S,
died Tuesday, ADril 23, 2002; at his residence.
He wu born N'ov. 10, 1916, to Howant and
!'Jot'l (West) Norman in Poner.
Norman was preceded in
death by his parents; a
daughter, Henriettn; a son,
Howard; and broti!Crs,
Hanley, Hensel, Robert and

Prank.

He is survived by his wife
of 62 years, Oean (Gilmore)
Norman; ' a daughter,
Marialyce (John) Sunami;
grandchildren, Cl\ristopher
NOfnlln
and Jennifer Sunaml; adopt.
ed son, Choi Thomas; and
~ Nnteces, nephews, relatives and friends. .
...,,, onnan was a veteran of World War II
a~d Korea, major U.S. Army retired, and was a
ptlot from the Tuskegee Institute. .
Dr. Norman araduated from Bidwell-Porter
High· School. Rea e11!1)ed bachelor's degrees
from .Wilberfon:e University, and went on to
e1111l his master's and doctoral degrees from
Ohio State University. He was a member and
former trustee of Second Baptist Church and a
60-year member of Omega Psi Phi fratemity.
He was a past president of the Columbus chap·
ter of Big Brothers Association and fonner edu·
cation d'trector for the Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Hygiene.
Services will be belaat II a.m. Monday, Apr!
29, 2002, at Second Baptist Church, 186 N.
17th Street, Columbus, with Pastor David S.
Carter ofticiatinl!· Family will receive visitors
from 10 a.m. until service time.
Burial will be in Pine Street Cemtery in
Gallipolis following the service.

Wilkie Holman
MIDDLEPORT -

Wilkie Holman, 78,

Middleport, died on Wednesday, April 24,
2002, at his residence.
He was born on Jan. 14, 1924, in Racine,
son of the late John and Minnie Danielson
Holman. He served with the U.S. Army Air
Cotps during World War II, and was a member
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion
of Middleport.
.
He was employed at the former Middleport
High School m 19~4 and retired in 1982 from
Meigs Local School District. He was a eustodian for nine years at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. He was also employed at the
Middleport Library. He was a member of the
Seventl\ Day Adventist Church in Pomeroy.
On April 19, 1981, lie manied his lifelong
love whom he met In 1946, Virginia . Lu
Grogan. He never had 'lillY sons or daughters,
but he treated all of his nieces and nephews as
his own. .
Surviving, besides his wife, are his brother
and sister-in-law, William and Marie Holman
of Wayne, Mich., a sister-in-law, Shirley
Holman of Inkster, Mich.; several nieces and
nephews and several great nieces and great
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in
death by his infant brother, John; brothers
Jacob S., John S., and Earl Holman; two sis·
ters, Virginia Holman Napper and Mildred L.
Holman Jewel; a great niece, Monica Holman
Wolfe; and a great-great nephew, Tyloer
Wolfe.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday,
April 28, 2002, at Fisher Funeral Home m
Middleport with Pastor Roy Lawinsky officiating. Burial will follow at Letart Falls
Cemetery. Visiting hours will be held from
. noon until the time of service at the funeral
home.
·
Military services will be conducted by
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion,
Middle,Port.
Visiting hours were held at the funeral home
Saturday.

·Mildred Pullins

Mary Jane Adkins

PICKERINGTON - Mildred E. Pullins,
63, Pickerington, formerly of Pomero)', died
Wednesdar, April 24, 2002, at Mt. Carmel
East Hospttal.
.
She was the daughter of the late Carl and
Helen Pullins, and a member of the
.FlatwOods Methodist Church. She attended
Ephiphln)' Lutheran Church and was a member of Melrose Rebekah Lodge IIS71 of
Plckerin3ton.
,Survlvtna are her brother, Carl Pullins of
Columbus; two sisters and brothers-in-Jaw,
Lois and ·Rudy Muuer and Alberta and
Roger Smlth, all of Pomeroy; and several
nieces and nephews.
.
Beaidea her parenta, she was ~eded In
death b)' her aiater, Anna Margaret Pullin~.
Frienil1 may call on Tuel&lt;lay, April 30,
2002, from 10 a.m. until noon at Dwayne R.
Spence Funeral Home, 550 Hill Road North,
Pickerington, where lervicel will be held II
noon '1\ieaday with Pallor David Shugert
otrleladng.
Interment wlll follow at Violet Cemetery In
. Pickerington.
Memoiial contributions 1111)' be nw:le to
the Arthur C. Jamea Cancer Hospital, 300
Well lOth Ave., Rm. 519, Columbus, Ohio
43210.
Online condolence• may be lellt to the
famlly at www.lpencefuneralhome.com.

POINT PLEASANT - Mary Jane (Van
Sickle) Adkins, 87, of Point Pleasant, died
Thursday, April 2S, 2002, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital inl'"oint Pleasant. Born June 10, 1914,
in Pilmey, she was the daughter of the lute Eli
Daniel and Minnie Catherine (Bowe) Van
Sickle.
:
She was the owner and operator of Mary
Van's Beauty Shop in Point Pleasant; a member
of Main Street Baptist Church; member of the
Hidden Valley Country Club Women's Golf
Association; the. Mountaineer Senior's Golf
Association; and .a graduate of the Charleston
School of Beauty.
·
·
In addition to her parents, she wu preceded
in death by her husband, Roben G. "Bob"
Adkins; and three brothen. Charles, Clyde and
William "Tobe" Van Sickle.
.
She 11 IW'Vived b)' four daughters, Juanita
&lt;Leonard ''Buater'') Riftle of Point Pleuant,'
Janet GaniiOII of Winter Haven, Fla., Barbara
(WIIJiam ''Bill'') Wallia of Loulaa. Ky., Brenda
(Keith) West of Crown City; I 0 grandchildren
and nine great-grandchildren.
·
Funeraf service• will be conducted at 11 a.m.
on Mondi.Y at the Crow-Huuell Funeral Home
· in Point Pleuant with the Rev. Richant Sargent
otriciatina. Burial will foUow in Kirkfand
Memorial Gardena near Point Pleasant.
· Vlaitation will be conducted at the funeral home
on Sunday from .5 to 9 p.m.

Melp
lnn ..... A1
mation to •how the need for
additional medical ICrviCea in
the
pl!rticularly for the
unl
llitd underitisured.
DavenPQ!1 who 1w chaired
the c:oinmiuee; 8J well 8J
Suaan leaac:, the grant writer,
aeemed confident the project
· will be funded when they met
with . the atetring commitrft
laat week.
Isaac said the Meiga
County application i• the
only one aeeking funding for
a "new •tart" heillth center in
Ohio. Federal dollart · have
been aet uidt for health care
in undetaetved rural communitie•, like Meigs County,
making it probable that the
funding wiD be approved.
·
MeAnwhile, the c:ommitrft
will bepn work next month
on funding for reopenin¥ the
ho1pital .a1 a . critical care
facility with an emergency
rOom. The hoapital was
doled two yean aao.
·1nrorporation papera for
the community heafth center
have been filed and board
members and off'ICerl hive
been named. The off'teers
are Mick Davenport, president; Dr. Harold Brown, den·

;::r•

list, vice preaident; Mike
Swi1he!t director of the
Meiga Ultloty J:?epartment of
Job• and Family Servicea,
1ecretary, and Paul Reed,
pretldtnt of Fannen Bank,
treuurer.
·
.
Other board IIU!mbers are
Carson Crow, local auomey;
Susan Oliver, executive
director of the Meigs County
Co\lncil on Aging; Charlene
Hoeflich, general manager of
The Daily Sentinel; I ohn
Musaer, insurance agent;
George Hoffman, project
coordinator; Norma Torres,
health commi11i11er; and
Becky Baer, Ohio State
University extension agent.
At la1t week's steering
commitu!e meeting, Bernard
Fultz said arrangements for
use of the VMH buildina are
being finalized. ·He said that
Holzer Conaolidated Health
Syatems, which holds a 99year leue on the countyowned prooertv, hu aueed
to "reJeUe''
ofit for
UIC U a Heafth Center. The
agreement, according to
Fultz, will alao incl··de provitions Cor another ..:ctton to
be released from the leue for
the critical care hotpital and
emergency room.
An · agreement to providt
doctor• and other medical
penonnel for the health cen-

a-poroon

w.v

6unba!' lll:imtt ·6tntfnd • Page A5

.

.

Tri-c;ounty Notebook
Gallipolis pollee
reports

28 percent. Every year more
than 9,000 youth are served
through 2,000 volunteers.
For information, call
OALLIPOLIS - Police Charles Henson at 304-675officers in Gallipolis · are 6830.
investigating chree cases of
theft.
Thomas Morse, manager of
Oak Wood Homes, 604 Ohio
7 in Gallipolis, told .officers
that
a
6-horsepower
POINT PLEASANT ,Campbell Housefield power The Concerned Women for
washer was taken from the America will be conducting a'
business sometime after clos- National Day of Prayer at
ing on Thursday evening. noon Thursday on the steps
The washer is valued at $489. of the Mason . County
Eric Springer, S6 Neil Courthouse in honor of Chose
Avenue in Gallipolis, report- who died in the terrorist
ed to officers that a Jennings attack on Sept. II.
.
.22-caliber handgun was
A community choir will be
taken from his residence on hand to sing fatriotic.
about 10 days ago. Springer s~ngs and a specia tribute
said the gun had a full maga- Will be presented by
zine at the time of theft. The Concerned Women for
pistol is blue with black plas· America.
tic handles and is valued at
Randy Parsons will be the
emcee and the choir director
$80.
John Millhone, 413 Eagle will be the Rev. Dennis
Road in Rio Grande, told Weaver. Alice Click is the
officers that a wallet wa·s prayerforce director and cotaken from his vehicle chairs are Erwanna Jeffrey
Thursday afternoon while it and Lisa D. Smith.
The public is invited to
was parked in Ohio Valley
attend.
Bank s parking lot bordering
·
Locust Street. The incident
For information, call Alice
occurred between 3:30 p.m. Click at 304-895-3590.
·
and 4 p.m. Mill hone told officers that the wallet contained
$5 in cash, a car key, driver's
license, social security .card,
debit card and several other
POMEROY Meigs
items.
Anyone with · information County Health Depanment
regarding any of these inves- will conduct a Childhood
tigations should contact che Immunization Clinic on
Gallipolis Police Department Tuesday from 9 to II a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. A parent or
at 740-446-1313.
legal guardtan muse accompany the child and shot
records must be provided.
There are nationwide manufacturing limitations on various vaccines. The Ohio
Depanment of Health cannot
J'OINT PLEASANT determine when supplies of
The Tri-State Area Council of particular immunization~ will
the Boy Scout program is be provided to the Health
inviting business leaders to Department. Those w.ith
the Marshall University Mid- questions should contact the
Ohio Valley Center on at department at 992-6626 in
noon Wednesday for a lun- order to detennine the availcheon. The purpose of the ability of needed vaccinafund-raising meeting is to cions prior to attending .the
learn more about the success . clinic.
of the Boy Scout l?rogram.
Sen. Oshel Craigo wtll be the
guest speaker.
.
The Tri-State Area Council
has increased its membership
40 percent in the past five
TUPPERS PLAINS years while the youth popula- Eastern High School alumni
tion has decreased more than will hoi~ their annual ban-

quet on May 25 at the Eastern
Elementary cafetorium at 6
p.m. The dinner will be fol- .
lowed by 11 dance with High
Country. Tickets are $20 for
the dinner and dance.

~uraflends

NaUonaiDay
of Prayer .

Immunization
clinic Tuesday

Business ·
leaders
welcome

academy
MORGANTOWN
·More than 100 local govemc
ment officials from across the
state
gathered
in
Morgantown April 20-21 at
the Ramada Inn and
Conference Center to attend
che Spring 2002 session of
the West Virginia University
Local
. Government
Leadership Academy, coordinated by the WVU Institute ·
for Public Affairs.
The two-day session
included a series of threeh
kh
d ·
our wor s ops eslgned to
develop and hone the leadership and governing skills of
the state's local government
officials.
Thirtv of the participants,
'
including Mason Councy
Commissioner
Phyllis
Arthur, were awarded a
Certificace of Achievement
for completing the Local
Government
Leadership
Academy's six core work·
shops: Public "Management
and . Leadership Skills,"
"Financial Management,"
"Con Oict
Resolution,"
"Economic Development,"
"Professional
Conduct:
Ethics, Open-Meetings, and
Freedom of Information
Act."
"Personnel
Management," and at least
four elective workshops.
.
The Institute for Publi.c
Affairs is a public service and
research unit of the Eberly
College of Arts and Sciences. ·
The West Virginia University
Local
Government ·
Leadership Academy is cosponsored by the West
Virginia Associacion ofA
Counties,
the
County
Commissioners Association
of West Virginia, and the
West Virginia Municipal
League.

Eastem alumni
banquet

I

IIMIIWII

I"O!Iri'&lt;~Lfor fomi/ill OVtr J7ytllrt,

I

Chesh•Ire

-----------------"I think it ~ill help Meigs
County some but I ~ I the
immediate ~onomlc ~npact
from Pllp A1
of the Cheahire buy-out will
probably be centered around
Oallia County and Its ptopetty
ally been the other way tax base," said Varnadoe.
around.
"Meigs County's real estate
"There u~eeither not as market has a I,'Otential for .
~:Z,v~g . ~ovlng around growth, considenn' two hundred plus people wtll be IookMeias Coun 'I Economic ing for hollies, and that's
Development Dtreetor Peny
Vamadoe said Gallia County usuming they want to relocate
80
~'tj.~~a~tter really
ter his already been signed will likely benefit IJ!OSt from
any
real
estate
boom
that
with On-Call
Medical results from the Cheshire buy• depends on these residents and
Aasociates of Athens. Dr..
their relocation plans."
Eric Hasemeier met with the out.
committee and discussed the
role of On-Call and their
commitment as "short term
providers while long term
recruitment of doctors takes
place.''
Hasemeier emphasized the
imponance of "growing your
own doctors" and announced
that to help with that On-Call
will create a medical scholarship fund for Meigs
Countians who will commit
to rerum to Meigs County to
practice afcer they complete
their medical training.
·aeorge Hoffnmn, project
COUPON
coordinator, who has worked
with Isaac on the grant application, said agreements have
also been signed for dental and
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
behavioral 'health services, a
required supplement to primal)' health care services, as have I~ TM HEARING AID CENTER I
patient transfer agreements
I
I
with area hospitals .
Geuing agreements all in I
I
place is not only a part of che
~rant aPl'lication process. but I Ctll Toll Frtl
tn
. tppolntmtnt I
t&amp; requtred to fulfill the I Thl tnta will bt g!ytn by 1 L!ctnlld Hgrlnq AJd S•l•ll•t. I
requirementa of accepting the
Anyont who his trouble hllrlng or undersllndlng ,
I
funding if awarded. The com- I convtrlltJon.lelnvlttcl to hlvt •.f.BlE he!rlngllttto 11tlf
munity ·health center will
thlt problem ctn be htlpedl Btlng thli coupon with you for
have to be "up and running"
FREE HEARING TEIT, a $75.00 value.
I
with 90 days of receiving the I . UMWA •your
UAW • ARMCO, AND AU. OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
arant.
8
WAI.K·INS WELCOME
..

----------1!11

1

REE HEARING .TESTS

I

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

Workingman' in Point.Pieasant
bode story In mday's Buatne• section ... Page 01

1

1

DPIP
Wltlele•lln
.....lrlrl

........

...........,_.liM_

11111111'1

1

DUST

mOlD SPORES • SOlOKf
BHCTfRIH • HOUSE OUST
The•• tin:y partkk• can
be the biggest threat to
:your family~
health.
Reducit'8
them
can
help
prevent
ru11n_y no•e•,
1rieeziug, .itchy ·eyetJ, ·
aore throatn,

headache• alul other
•ymptom• triggered by
allergen• anti other
hou•ehold pollution.

achieve the ultimate
in whole house air
1pun1ty that goes beyond
traditional air filtering
methods, choose

u.,,,.••

~......._

DEMONSTRATIONS
I INFORMATION ON
PRODUCTS
TUESDAY, APRIL 30
7:00PM
THE WOMAN'S CLUB
2300 PARRISH AVE
PT. PLEASANT
BRING AD TO ENTER
FOR CHANCE TO
W~N A FREE PRIZE
OR CALL

304-429-61111

·I

I

••

.I

�...... AI • • • • 1timtt ·6tnlintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolltl, Ohlo • Polftt Pl1•••nt. WY

Coleman executed ·at Lucasville.

•

.

.

Cincinnati, two days before crawl space beneath their for drugs," Coleman wrote
As a child, II&amp; witnessed destr()yed theirs.
Victim~
to the Ohio parole board in ~roup sOli: and proatitution
Mrs. Walt&amp;n. had jut
the Walters attack. A feder- Toledo home.
al appeals court had
10 his home and was, aiven sNvcd
By the time Coleman and his attempt to be spared.
lcmoaade
to
ordered Coleman resen- Brown were arrested, on
Coleman's lawyers say a \'ulaar nickname because Colenw~ ud Brown when
tenced in the case. which July 20. 1984, in Evanston. his mother abused both II&amp; could not control his uri- she was attacked. The «)1.1·
pending.
Ill., their crime spree had drugs. and alcohol while she nation or bowel movements pie had said thlly wutltd to
Coleman~ was
Coleman also was indict- taken
them . throu~h was pregnant, altering the until II&amp; was neuly a teen- buy lhll Waltm (latnper.
ed. but not pFOseeuted, in Indiana, Michigan, Illinots, growth of Coleman's brain.• ager.
Hamlltoa
Couaty
·the rape, beating and stran- Kentucky and Ohio, police He grew up mostly with his
Police and prosecutors, ProSI!(Iutor Mlchaltl Allea,
·
gulation
of
Virginia said.
grandmother after his though, saw Coleman n a whose Cindnnatl offi(lo
Temple,
30,
and
her
daugh"To
this
day,
l
cannot
mother put. him in a trash eharimtade man who securltd thlt sentence that
LUCASVILLE (AP) ter
Rachelle,
10.
Their
bodany
motive
for
my
can
he was 6 months eh111rmed his way into his got Coleman elteeutltd,
attribute
Alton Coleman, whose six- ies were stuffed into a actions other than n:-oney old, when
they said.
victims'
lives,
then called him "pure evil." . .
week crime spree left a trail
of murder, rape and robbery victims across five
states in 1984, was put to
death by injection on
Friday for the beating death
of a suburban Cincinnati
woman.
.
Coleman was the only
person under a death sentence in three states: Ohio,
t:.oc-~~. -:.==-~·~~~~:~:'1:~'\:::
Illinois and Indiana.
TM huftbNaklnt dHIIIoft hM IIHft mllllu. ftOW U..
tuk
'nlat••n• Mil
thcluuncll of dollln worth of tiM~ mutt Mil wtl IMt ..... ._. wtlatevw purai\MI "'"II
Coleman wore a white
1¥11.....11 AIMtoluteiJ llOthlftt Will M left that till lllroOM won't IWitllt Tille II tM 1M oMMI te
non-denominational prayer
11uv thl ~~~~ na- lllrMII flnlture tlllt rou"ve lllwap wlfttld at till .,... veu wMt te IIIJ•
shawl with stars of David
l,_,.ll!ntl
on • nm • - ......... notNftt .._. IINiok ••• alt mutt 10o wall to wei, In • matter et
on it and prison-issued
dapl 1111111 II lllellevlftt... lll'lfta , _ tl'lllllll aNI ........ • hMtl awer ,_ M'Wlftllt ...VI lhl
navy blue pants with an
orowdl•••
till ll11re when lh'itr open. lhtre ,,... 11H111 te ••rve , _
orange stripe. He uttered a
r.art of the 23rd Psalm.
FAMOUS NAME BRANDS
*RULES OF LIQUIDATION=
'The Lord is my shepherd,
• AIIAIIvMI••- MaiM tu•ltol To....., ....
I shall not want. He leadeth
All 141141b te AM All ..... f1M1
me to green pastures,"
• lxtnl CIIMie ... Dellwor
.
when asked if he had a final
• AN 141141 On A Pint OeoM .....
statement.
No...._ ........ No ...........
He was suspected in as
• MerahaiMIIM 11uet le rtMMVe•
many as eiglit deaths, plus
numerous robberies, rapes
and kidnappings during the
five-state spree with his
girlfriend, Debra Denise
Brown. He was executed
for the murder of Marlene
Walters, 44, of NorwoOd.
More than two dozen relatives and friends of
Coleman's and .Brown's
victims made the trip to the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility.
$399
$1s9a
$399
One of them was .Mary
$849
. Hilliard; ·the grandmother
. ·of Tamika Turks, a 7-yearBUTTERFLY
old who was stomped and
SPC OAK
strangled in Gary, Ind., on
June 18, 1984. Tamika was
DINING SET
the second child slain during the spree.
Hilliard said Coleman's
execution does not .end the
pain for her.
"One. chapter has been.
2~
.
ONE ONLY
closed, but another chapter
is Debra Brown," Hilhard
said after the execution.
'"We want the same thing
that happened to him to
happen to her. Then,
maybe, we'll have a little
peace of mind. We want her
BERKLINE
executed just like Alton
DOUBLE
QUEEN
Coleman. Until this is
RECLINER
done, there will be no
SI,.EEPER
peace."
·
SOFA
When asked if Coleman
has expressed remorse for
his
actions,
prisons
ReFinald
Director
Wilki!ISOn said, ''It s not
been an 'I'm sorry' type of
SEEING IS BELIEVING ... COME PREPARED TO BUY!
remorse. He's admitted
what he's done in is his
own convoluled way."
Because of the number of
victims, Ohio prison offi·
cials decided for the first
time to broadcast an execution via closed circuit to
another prison room to .
accommodate the additional witnesses.
Coleman fought his execution ' through state and
federal appeals courts and
the U.S. Supreme Court,
arguing that he had ineffective counsel in the Walters'
trial and that the state ·
should not be allowed to
telecast the execution.
His attorneys said the
transmission would tum his
RESTONIC
death into "a spectator
sport." They said state law
TWIN
prohibits
broadcasting
MATTRESS&amp;
"equipment at executions
FOUNDATION
and allows only three wit·
nesses,.to be chosen by the
victim's family.
·
Gov. Bob Taft denied .
clemency, as he did in
Ohio's three previous executions.
In
1991,
then-Gov.
Richard Celeste commuted
Btown's death sentence to
life in prison. Celeste concluded that . Brown was
mentally retarded and
shared a "master-slave"
relationship with Coleman.
She is now serving her sentence
at
the
Ohio
Reformatory for Women in
Marysville.
However, she also was
sentenced to death for
Tamika's slaying. An
appeal of that sentence is
pending in federal court in
Columbus. ·
Coleman and Brown also
were sentenced to die for
the torture and slaying of
Tonnie Storey, 15, _!!!.

. . . . . . . . . . . 1111

grandmother
wants
girlfriend to pay

A"IR 50 YEARS... A SHOCKING TURN OF EVENTS .
EVERYTHING GOES TO THE WALLS IN A.MAnER OF DAYSI

CLOSING

:"::...n::.-r;

THE

DOORS
FOREVER!

lie_,

.·* •
'*.

ALL

OAK Albany
URIO Sofa &amp;

SOo/o

R~~~~~~r

$1098

OFF

$198

~2i~

LAMPS

2 Way

$698

~~~!J

CHAIR &amp;
OTTOMAN

$398

98

$3399 3PC ALBANY SECTIONAL
""'" .RECLINER &amp;FULL SLEEPER .. $1698
TOUCH LEATHER MATCH
SUEDE LOVESEAT....................................$698

$4699 6PC COUNTRY BEDROOM SET
KING POSTER BED, DRESSER
MIRRORS, CHEST I NIGHTSTAND ..... $2598
5PC PINE BEDROOM SET
QUEEN HEADBOARD CHEST
MIRROR &amp;NIGHTSTAND .....

RCA25"

PORTABLE
TV

$138

$238

1.....--------------------============================.J

•

- ---------

--

Plp81

Meigs top Nelsonvill~ in league adion
~ jll~t rout llitl 1)11 t~ n~t with
L\1ll1m1% ~"@ llw- win ,\1\d lt•~w
ROCK SPRINGS - The Md~ tilt
Manmoon mad&lt;\ It t\~o wh~ In &lt;Ill . Cullum~ alm\~'td ju%t ruw hit in hh
n~y da)~ Friday by ootlng the v:mt- :\ U ) lnnll~Q% I)( '~~ but di&lt;l iS~Iit.'
lng Nt~ruwlllt ~ Uud:.e ~ ll..S In ~\''&lt;'til &amp;tt ~~ whil~ tttilti~ ~ut
TVC Qh\Q Divmm~l ph}\
~Mit.' ~~f.
.
The Min-audoen \l!td l ~N run
Kn~pp ~:&lt;~mt. rul in the fuunh
rourth innin~ ~nd Dnn&lt;kln 1\anu-. innh~ with tht lllm kli.\d~ lnd 1)1\\'
bl.1~ thm- run hruntrun to put th.- out with hi~ ll'l!m l~dh~ (I.. I, Tht
Uuek.-y« awar.
. .
lt.'nlw hurl\lt """"~ t\\~ hit! in th~
F~!Jlman Erie Cullum~ ~1111 ~t.'nior hmh~ a~ tht Uuek\-~ d~~ tht i!'IP
l}ankk Knapp lilllittd th~ Um~ki:)~ til fi..S hut Kn~pp took rollm)! &lt;~1\\lt

lvMIOliM't

bldMshlld

back Atlttns In
A win
THE Pt..AINS - Th;~
Rl~r V&lt;tll~y sQftba.ll ttam
jumped llut to 11 6-.tl l~d in
th~ lint lnnln~;. which wa:~ a.U
th~ Raidm n«\1~ In thdr 63 vktory over Atht1u,
Gt.&gt;rl Mefan th~w ~ rour. hiuilr 101" th;) R.aldt.'n (I ~'i, 64 SEOAL), while Ri~~tr \l~llt.'y
had 10 hiu a&amp; Nirole W~tld1u
had a do~lbl" and a pair ofsin- .

O'a"~l

!a""·

.

t~t llllllwl~j~l~t "'' hu thl' ~t \)fth"

W"-Y whll~ fann~ th'\' ~ttfflTht M&lt;Ar.t~n ~ pll'n~ t)!' htlp
lml11 tht Dut~ htkk&gt;t\1, \1% th.- \)\%\~
ron ·"""" ~~~~ "I' till\. tt~
Th\ilhl@ l~tl In
~n I)( tht
~.-..'lllld th~ Milto.U\1\'1% took tht l~d

t""

~ '" Lell rna~ '""' "'""
bu~ n~!Wd out ~'* to bad&lt; :!11\gl~
10r

to ~1\ th~ lnnh~, Wlth \lll~ ~ut
~

Ut~tl~)!t

~~~~~

1.:-tl\'htt. jtrob Slnltl\

ro ~"&lt;111\1 ~'\\I'll~ jimmy

511\lth,
Tl1~ M\\t&lt;~ud~~

1\tlt thh'&lt;' ~~~~~

thin! imlil~~ jolm ~~n~
lc~· rta~:h~ llll t11.- i'irst ~r hi~ thlft .
sllll1;11'11 &lt;~nd ~~~~nt't'd ro ""-'l)llJ whtn
atro'S%

111 till'

........... u

r~aa

lvloonWWt

't'\.Wl 11£11.. S l'li\INS = 't'h~ pl~t
tmrawlctl lnm tht• thriller t~fY\lllt
th&lt;lll~n It \\1\IIIM bt\ bm when th~ ttn\11
~~:rlpt W&lt;l\ Wtlfu'll \&gt;hltiHI\ WottrthM ~&lt;IIIII'
lmm~ with tht l·\1 \&gt;ktmy o~r th~ ~""
nn Ll•ly MWl~ tu tt~kt- 11 •m.111~ 111M in thl'
Ho,·ktnl! IJMjl&lt;m (fl'i-Vall~y C;mrer-.
~~~~) ~h•mrlomhtp r~~~.
Wa!\'lful'l: I! lli:!W I:2·0 \\WN.II In th~
~~~~ ,md Iol~ I t~wri\11,. whll~ Ga~"'ftl 18
l O· l l11 tlw ~~~~
'''itl I,\~ \J~mlt
Wot~rlbn.l thl'\'ato~~~~~~ In cwry hmh1g,
puttin11 tlll~ fllllll~r
011 bo!c in ea~h
fromc, c~t:cpt tlw iL~th l'lllllltl whet\ l:ia!"'
~rn htwl~r Koti~ ll..llbci'11'&lt;lll walla.'ll tWil
b&lt;ltl'\'1'1,
.
Wa"'rlbru thl'\'att'ncd 111 th~ l111t whl'n
Uurtlm"' led ott with a wolk bm woK II'!\
ltronil~tl un 11 tbree out. tiiii!Wfll weltt
tluwn i·l · -\ In th~ flr1t hmh1~ at the
hands IIIWal:t'rlbl\1 pltth~r jel'tllltiA ~1nlth .
A llh'&lt;lt plt~h~rl! t:ltioll dt&lt;~lll)l~tl
b~tWI!Nl n~wly tbuml Cl'tlWn jl'Wt!l
l~obcr1ton of B~l"'"'· who h~! bcctt llllt-lt~tldln~ 1ln~c ttllllh ll! ti)J ·to the bll! dub,
1\.ob~rtoott &lt;11\&lt;tln pttdtcLI " 1!1\'at l!&lt;llllc,
bm llllitcrn \VIII up d1!11imtjc.:o11da Smith,
whu owr th~ y.11111 h~1 bc~n 1111c t~r tht&gt;
lcul!liC\ llltm tutt!l!tlmt hurl~,.
WotcrftJru Jlldy.1cl tbr a run h1 the !l'tom!
with u Smith Wlllk 11nil Huck !ucrllh,but
Smith wa! l~lt on bole. Ba!tWI allilln went
down In oru~r Riter ljCttllll! C&lt;lllt;ht !ted!· .

V1lley boys
CHESHIR.E Ath~ns
s~'Ored thM· rum in the top of
tho si:.:th inning t.o defi:at River
'J.IIley in hlt,~h school baseball
action, II·7.
At.hen,1 led S-O RQing into
the bottom of the fourth
inning, but the Raiden, with
the 11.\listance of a lllakc Marcum home run,scored tlw runs
of their own 10 rie th~ ll"nie
Riwr 'J.III~y took a 7-5 lead
in the tltth innint,~ b~fore .the
Bulldogs r~llicd in the sixth and
hdd on for the win. .
Ra}"can Allen Went 4-for-4,
with n double fur the Rald~n
(2·1 6, li-H SEOAL),
Cram Oregory had three hits
for the Bulldogs (7-\1, 5.4
SEOAL), whil~ Trevor had a
pair of Admn' hits.
The Raid~rs tr~vcl Jackson
Monday.

.Ohio blasts
Buff1lo

GAL.l..IPOLIS - The ClitTIidc Ladie1 Golf A•~oclation
will have their openini! day
1:30 p.m. May S at the i'Jlr
wune.All rnemberJ are urged
10 attend.
ReguJ;ar play ttartt 9 a.m.
MayS.
The JCh dule for cvcntt will
be play eYery Wednetday
mornlnJ and Thurtday
evcnina through Sepr. 22.

11..11 ~"' tw

thl'

OVI' 001\M&amp;roNDlNl

~stRinr

CLGA openlna
day announciCI

H&gt;\nlllln \\&gt;.\1~1 •nd '"~

Eagles fall
to Waterford
again, 1-o

Bulldop l'llly

COLUMBUS - The Bob·
catt were •hutout for the fifih
time in their la11 six games
Friday in an 11·0 lo11 to No,
20 Ohio State. Ohio, whi'h
rested some key players in
pr~p (tr:ltion for thi1 weekend's
Mld-Arn crlcan Confetence
nwch-up with Miami, fell to
20-21 overall.
The lluckeyes muck for
two runs in the fim inning
and nine rum in the third en
route to their 47th win of the
season • a new schuol record.
Sophomore Kristie Howe (6·
5) took the l0111 for Ohio.

\llh\!11 ~\!

thlrd.

Erka "Thylar also had three
hit!. while M~Fann rolll'l:ti'd a
pair llf hit!, indudinQ a dou·
blc. .
Amy Sunnncn had twQ hi11,
incl\lding a double ror th~
llulldll~JS (3- 11. (}.9 SEOAL),
. River 'klley plays host ·to
jackson Monday.
.
·

Bobcats fill at
No. 20 Buckeyes

h·omc

Jlmm~ ~mlth doubl\'11 ~ ~nttmdJ tll&lt;i~ rta~h~ &lt;Ill &lt;Ill \'trot, l\1111\~bu~
~tlll'lng tll~ .~1111 11\ll\)h~ 1\am~bll~ th\'n dtlll~ " t:ha\\1' lilhmt \Jffi-tl~~~t

gl~.

. .
ATHENS -.Jimior dumstop Jaso n · Sho.ckey went
f1111r·for·Aw with a caro~r·
hi11h six f\111! batted in, and
the Ohio offense totaled a
season-best 25 hits as the
Dobcars outslul!lled Duffalo,
24·9, in Mid-American Con·
ferenco baseball action on
, Friday afternoon ac Uob Wren
Stadium.
The game was the fim of a
four-game 1ericl between the
two teams.

Ram~n~ ~:~ntt

IIIli•

NOT iviN CLOII- Point Pie11unt aenior J1nnifar Adkina elldoa noma nf11iy for tn11 Kniahta' third aooru of
the dey eaeinat warren Friday. Point won 4·1. (Can Adklnal

Ustill
perfect In the SEGAL
Point

IV DAN ADKINI

CACKiNSOMYC~ILYAICIISTER.OOM

POINT PLEASANT - !'oint Jllun1nnt'1 K~ndra
1\illle proved flrlday 1hu not only wields a llliiChty
glow, but alio ~ mighty stick AI !he relted rhe Wmen
Local Lady Warrlon with a lingle a1u a double for a 3·
RUI, 2-for-3 pcrfcmmnce, leadh111 the Lady Kni11lm in
a 4· 1 SI.!OAL confer~nce win.
Rillle'! deadly double come in the bottom of tlw fir11
innint!, pu1hin11 Lacey Powell ond Katl~ l~ou1 h ncrft!K
the plate to 11ive the local "JIIAd a I quick 2· 0 lead that
they held Ulltil the third lnninl! wh~n Rllll~ 3nd Aileen
Cam.1drove in rum to incrco1e the l ~od to 4·0,

l'uw~ll hnd r~~dv~•l ~ rr~c trl)l ttl ArM! tll'l bull! while
II.. UU!h WUK hit by A pitch rur U rr~~ trip, UIIO.
"K~nllrn wn8 pltthln~c~ with u lot uf' m nl1d~ l1 t~ tmluy
nl1~r fi1ch11! Sprh111 Vull~y ihur1duy," Knid 1\Jim tnuc h
Lmy Wrll!h t. "Yuu wult.l ~~~ It 111 h ~r ~y~s. Shr WI!!
pitchilll! n lilt do1~r lmld~ ... 11 lot tll!htcr In the zcmc."
SrnitJr Mlramlu Dum ulm Wll! actlw 111 the plat~,
hu111111crint; tl lll u Mhll!lt 011 u 1-rur-2 tilly, while Cu!tu
wnK nlm '1-tbr-2.
Rifllc (13-4, 111·0 SEOAI.), runnct.l MIX while wulkhll!
111•1 n Ml illolic Lndy Wurrlor. und n lluw~u tJHiy three hltK

PIIIH IH Point, 12

In the thlrtl lnnilll!, huw..wr, WMerlbrtl
l!llt tile br11uk It Heeded. With 1111~ om;
Alu1111 Miller d6ublcd &lt;lmL!ttJic thlru,
rlt&gt; lluu~rbt~ch walked &lt;~mi jenny tlrutrcr
laid tltlWI1 11 )l~rf~ct lttuccrc bum.
Miller ~1\J!!ctl the plate fur what Wtluld
bc,llllll' the l!llllWio only ruu.
l':uKtcrn thh'ali'Hcd itt tlw fllurth whl'n
with ilnc tlut Sundy 1-'tlwell !lll~ll'tl 1111d
C:111! Lt1tlwkk illll!lcd, but the fitlly ended
thdr tlll two l'iu!tern Ktrlkcllull!.
Wllhi rlbrd~ run lttJod a1 the Wlldcubl
el~hu~d thdr !r"'llld wh1 owr tile B&lt;~wc!
thl! ~t·~~un = ll&lt;~it~rn~ uuly two ltliic!.
S111lth pkkctl ll)l th~ wh1 with clt~ht
KtrlkcmltM umlo11c Willk, while 1\ubcrt!OII
Muffcl'llu th~ luKM with till'llc !trlkctJul:!l and
ilw Wlllk•.
.
t:imcrn hitter! were flfl'cuy 13b!dl.
S~11Jy IJuwcl! tWO !hl!!ICI.j&lt;IIICt C~ Jaway II
ihl!!l~. Km Ludwkk " Mhij,jlc, ollJ jt•i!kt~
IJ!iltlll rt tltmhlc. Wotcrlbl\1 hlttcl'!l were
Miller with u llm1blc uml !hl!ilc, .mcl Umh
" tloublr.
EMtCI'l1 !!lJCi w·Suutlmn 011 Montlay.

e"""

tl 'llltlt*'l

~ltl~l

WlllffOfd QQI aaa 0 - 1a0
~11s1tm
oo·O a o a o - o 4 1
W,•JiltiOMII llflllh llfta ~. Hill. b~ · ~llll ~llbCIHIOft lftd
Afflllftdll 'l'lllglt.

Marietta rolls over ·slue Devils
in tight SEOAL baseball race
lv lknoH Coo,.,.

BCOOP£ROMVDAILVTRIDUNE.COM

OALL IPOLIS - Gallia Aml~my had ~
chance to gain ,ome ground ov~r the rclt or
the leal'l'e in itl race fM the Somhemern
Ohio Athletic League ~ltle.
Marietta, though, who trailed a half a fPiliC
11oini into the cuntclt, wa4n't j!Oing to jutt
hand the Blue Oevil! the crown ... and Oallia
Academy dcferuively didn't help mmert
either.
TheTigm,with 12 hlu the a11lii&gt;U1C~ oftlx
Ulue Devil error~, defeated Clallia Academy
Friday, 16-5.
':Jun total defentive meltdown," .aiel Gatlla

A~ad.cmy hrad coach Ura~k l'illuehrnl.
"Tiler~·~ really nothlnt; el1c to .uy. We dul!
Otlrstlve! a hoi~ that Marietta woul&lt;l lltlt l~t
111

~limb

0111

of."

·

Angelo Hardy went 2-fur-.3 for ti1r Ulue
l')cvill (ll - ~. 6· 3 SEOAL).
Urandon Uurk~. l~yan 1:!1ehbauKh, Mm
Miller and )6nad1an Frlinkl rach coll~et~11 a
two hlu forthe Tigert (10· 2, 6· 2 SEOAL) .
An error In ctnterlleld put M~rietta'1 Thny
Huffinan on ~econd in ~he 1r..:ond hmlnl!•
Huffinan th~n 1coreJ on a Kevin BrrauM bale Hl'l IAPI - Q lila Aolldomy thortltop Andre Ooigor took1 to
hit.
.
make the taa on Mariotta'• Ryan l!lchblugh during the thlrel
tnnlna of tht Bluo Dtvtle' 10.5 loee to the Tla ,. Friday.
·
PINH 1M Dtvlllo 12
Etohbauan te Olltltd taft. (Shannon Shipioy)

'

I

I .

�Povn•ov • Middleport • Oelllpotia, Ohio • Point Pluuqt, wv

PREP SOFTBALL

Sundi~April28,2002

PREP BASEBALL

Marauders top Buckeyes in marathon Eastern
lh.lllllnRt

Mllsser was hit by a pitch. Amanda Fetty
;md Nikki Butcher singled IOUowed by a
E.lSONVItlE - It was ~ ma\'iathotl walk to Mi11dy Cha11cey.
-&amp;trait that la:sl&lt;tli almost th- holln a:s the
Kristell Naj&gt;pet lofted a sacrifice fly ro
lAdy M•l'lllden handed Nelsonville- tenter ~d Carrie Abbott drew a base 011
Yo!\; a JQ-l 0 lo$S.
balls.
The nuclre~s fall 1'0 1-10 Qn the sealetren and J~ica Blaetrnat each addtjl
ron With Meigs at 8-4 venus Tri Valley a ba:se hit ro give Meig1 a 7-2 lead alter
()onfi!reiiC\! teams a11d 8-8 o'ie!'iall.
o11e.
()ontrol problems played a m~or part Jetren fallned the side in he second as
il\ the nuclreye\ demi~e a:s the combined the Maroon and Gold, in their half, added
)iitchitig st.ttf of R&lt;~sie Chapman, Jennifer sewll more runs, as the Bucke~ hurler
bhhop and Gi~r 1\11\in~ yielded twen- gave up seVen free passes, one base hit and
ty \valks, eight hits, strii('ing out six and the det'ense committed two erron.
hitttt'lg tli- batten.
N1;lsonville-York picked up a srore in
Katie j~etren started on the mound ror the third alld a pair in the fOurth olf two
Ml'~ as tht Lady nudreyes plared t\ro base hits a walk and fieldillg error.
runs olf a Me~ error aild ba:se hits troll\
The Marauder (our run fOurth was,
Katie rox aild ChaJ&gt;lllan .
alter two were down, came as the result
Ill the lo\wr p.trt .o f il\l1ing oile, Ka\'ia of rour walks a base hit and two hit bat~~T

ters.
The. filth and sixth inning1 saw Meigs
add two more runs to their total for the
evenillg. Jeffers twirled three innil\81 in
the win, giving up three runs on three
hi13 and striking out four.
Chancey, coming on if the fOurth in
relief, was tagged for seven runs, otf five
hits as she fanned three and walked three.
Meig1 hitters were' Chancey with a
hone run and single,Jetfers and Blaettnar
with a pair of hits each and Amanda Fetty
and Butcher hitiin~ safely.
Fox led the Buckeyes with a roundtripper and two singles and Cranford
chipped in with three base hits.
Every Marauder contributed to the
victory as each reached base in some
fashion and scored as Coach Hansen substituted freely in the fourth inning.

Wahama girls sweep up on Wirt County
lh' DAN

~DII:IM

season~"

0AOKINSOMY0Aili'IIEGI$TER,OOM

In the second game of the t\Vinbill, the
lAdy Moons held down the visiting lady
Tigers, despite a 2-2 deadlock at the end of
the tlr&amp;t inning and only a 6-4 lead .in the
second.
Junior i{ara Sayre led olrensively in the
second game, hammering out two doubles
and soorillg three runs on her own ell route
ro a ~~fur-3 perrormauce.
Senior Meredith Riggs was a sWing
behi11d her with a 1-ror-3 day With a single
ill the books.
~ was tecogtllted prior to the beginlling of the t\Vinbill durl~ Senior Day
acti\&gt;ltie attd later betweel\ the games \vas
pn!5enred sevehll gills &lt;111d a congratulatory
calre &amp;om her ttamrllates alld coaches.
Mallory Weaver alld K.yUe Sayre finished
up the day with 1-ror-4 showings, with
Weawr posting a sillitle and Sayre a single.
• 1\am Sayre artd OhUni!t!r sptit duties on
the mound, with Sayre fillltlillg three and
Walking !'our in two inning1 while
Ohlinger struck out lOur and walked three
duri~~g the remaindillg llve.
•
For Wirt County, Lihdsay Wfer and Jessi-

MASON -Hot on the ~ ofsplltting
a t\Vinbill "S'llmt Guyan Valley earlier thb
week. the Wahama lady l'aloolls kept their
lnomentltnl going l'rida)l notd\ing a double Witl o\1\'t the Visiting lady figtrs of
Wirt Collllt;l i -2 alld '9-4, ill dialllolld
\lctiol\ at the Masol\ ball field.
In the rlr!t nlatthup, Witt ,IU111ptd to a 20 lead in the top of the third lnnlt~g befure
Wirt\ lanham beg&lt;ln J&gt;&amp;ing out free j&gt;asses ro tlrst ~e itt the bottom ofthe third,
allowing the lady Moo11s the opportullity
to bl!gln their \'ianlpage on the soorebook.
~t walkillg ill li:iur runs,jUllior Nicole
Ohlinl!'!t tlalll!d a hefty double way I:)Ut to
leR: lleld fur three nmre runs a11d &lt;1 ct&gt;lllldent 7-2 lead rot Waharna that IWuld
n!main throu~tlmut the contest\ elld.
IJhlinger, afro proVing her sttellgth liom
the mou11d, sttilck I:)Ut seVe!\ batters and
walked li:i11r.
"Thb ~ a toWly dilren!nt te.ml playl"4!
rod:ty," ~~aid Wahama tl:l;lth Shawn llmh.
"We'te !tarth~ to malre a turnartllllld and if
We tall just tilt batk on lome ertors, I think
~we're going to do very weU the rest 1:)( the

ca Gillespie ltd ; t home plate, each' hitting
singles and finishing up 1-for-2 on the day.
Teanunate McCrosky was 1-for-4 with a
single, also.
··
Lanham took the loss for Wirt County,
striking out seven L1dy Falcons while
waUdngsevett.
·
The tWO wins boos! the Lady Falcon
record to 5 and 1.4 overall.
The Lady Falcons are scheduled ro tr:lvel
to South Gallia for action twinbill' action
Saturday begirmiug at noon .
They then take a break and are not
scheduled to hit the field again until May 4
when they travel to Wirt County fur varsity and junior varsity action beginning at 1
p.m.
atMnon ·
f'lRST GAME
Wahama
007
000
K·
- H 3
WI~
002
000
0
- 240
(WP) Ollllnget and Brinker; (LP) Hollen and Wyer
HITTING: Wahama • Kara Sayre 2-5: Riggs 1·3: Ohlinger
1 • 3, . 3~81.

SECOND GAME
Wahama
Wlrt
(W~)

120
000

K

o

-

-

g 52
433

S.yro and Ohlinger, Riggs: (LPI Lanham and '1/yer.

Hitting: Wahama • Kara Sayre 2·3: Woavor H: Kyll•
SOyro t·4;. Rigga 1·3. \Virt • L. Wyer H: Gillespie 1·2;
McCroskey t ·4.

ily to celltertleld by Michael scored again in the fifth,
Watn!n, but that was the only Marietta had already taken an

Devils

240
220

defense stops
Waterford
. BY Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles have
· been putting tip some .big
offensive numbers, but the
defense and pitching were
key ingredients in Eastern's 3-1 win over Waterford Friday night.
Eastern is now 13-2 on
the season, and is 10-2 in
the Tti-Valley Conference.
Ken Amsbary and Joey
Baker, the two hurlers in
the game, put forth great
complete game pitching
performances. When the
· dust had settled it was
Amsbary's effort that
proved to be best. Amsbary fanned four and
walked two, while Baker
fanned. eight and walked
none.
Eastern and Waterford
were retired in order in
the first inning, but the
second saw a different
light.
.Ryan Smith singled for
Waterford with two out,
but never got past first
base. Easternis Ben Holter
doubled to lead otT the
Eastern second, then after
two out and advancing on
a 6~3 groundout, Holter
scored on an Amsbary .single, followed by a Cody
· Faulk single to push home

the gameis second run, 20.
Waterford had two hits
in the fifth, but a good tag
at short by Lyons got the
lead runner before Puller
doubled . He too was left
on base.
In the fifth inning Brad ·
Brannon .singled and
scored on a Chris Lyons
double for an Eastern
insurance run, 3-0.
Waterford came back
with a Baker double in the
sixth. He scored on a
David Jones single, then
with two out Amsbary
walked two to load the
bases, but got Heiss · to
strike out to end the'
inning, the score now 3- I.
Eastern hitters were
Lyons with a double,
Charlie Young a single,
Jimmie Putman a single,
Ben Holter a double, Cacy
Faulk a single, and singles
by Amsbary, Cody Faulk,
and Brannon.
Eastern goes to Southern Monday.
·
at

Program runs th
1002 (HEVROLE
TUREVAN

Point

MSRP $32,545

t~~~telau

Melp
ilVI!t the lefttleld fent~ fhr a
three run hmrtet.
After a gt'tlul\d out the
Marduders loaded the bases
with slnW@I by Jimmy Smith
and Hannan and a Jmtb Smith
walk. r!.illtltt Wll8 able ttl get olr
the hotlk wlthtlut alltlWlhl! any
more MIINuders to cro!B the
pliihi In the lftnlhg. ·
The Bu~kc!}'l!s nllled It! the
top tl(the (l:)urth with the basel
!full of Buckc!}'l!li Knapp eame
tltllll n!llef'o((::uUuml Atld \ws
Nteeted rather rudely when
llUlott ripped a two run double
ttl rlllht.
Al£er Knopp fartlled Tim
CUne t'tlr the lnnitljp li!ctlnd
out, Matt Hiill rlppeilt lingle
tl!r Knipp thAt lltoughc ewo
mtltt rum In beCort Charlie
Wend IJI'tlundcd to Hlttnln t'or
the dnil ouc of the lntUniJ.
Meijp then blew the
tlp•n on their htlt' o ehe
fourth, Duu fadtler reached
when the :nuckeye 1ecot1d .
butltlilrt dl'tlpped • lly bllll;
John S!illley ripped illother
llnl!l• t left with Pickler huttllna Into third bate ilH the
play.
Olue !'faeh~d on an erl'tlr
~eorlng Jlacklfr And 1\anubul'l!
foU~d with a walk 10 load
the bd~tj , IJavld Mcclure
grounded to the ihottstop,
whieh thttW home trylniJ to
~~~~ the Cutce out but th; thi\JW

Specializing In total
hlp and knee replacement

Por lnltlll ev•lu•tlont or follow·up vislh for total joint
ltpllctmtnt; we offer office hours at 9554 u.s, Route
110 111t, Barboursville, wv.

~ /VUU ~ tdtcU-

$18,798
'

2002 CHEVROLET
SHORTBEDTK
Air, Auto, Chrome wheels

TU-• Ptalna

1120.

Wallrford o·oo oo1 o-153
Ea11em ·oaooto x-871

t~ 1tet S4le 'Puee
~~te....

WP·Ktn Ambury and Oocy Faulk. LP·
Joey Baker and David Jonea.

2002
REBATE

11,498

Krista Thcker led off with a double and scored ·
on single by Marie Denney. Denney drove·
both Rio Grande runs.
.
The Bidwell native plated Carrie · Laufer :
with a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning that :
made the score 9-2.
The Redwomen were held in check by .
Bearcat hurler Ashley Foreman. Rio Grande
managed only four hits in the first game
defeat.
.
Thcker had two of the hits for the Red- :
women, both doubles.
Saint Vincent led 4-1 in the sixth inning,
when they added five markers on six hits.
Amanda Cook (4-3) took the loss for Rio
Grande, yielding 12 hits and nine runs, strik- ·
ing out' three in seven inning1.
:.

1001
CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLOt
8

8

Loaded with
leather Interior

1001 CHEVY CAVALIERS
S~a.e
8

10,998

Rebaleslo deal•r Incl. college Grad rebate

$J,OO(J
Down

llldld, SUirool,
ORe ClrtfiiRier,
ORIJ 11,311 millS.
New TaiiiH trade

Payment
as low as

1001 CHEVY CREW
CAB DIEtEL

2002 CASH BICII

8

loaded, wtlh

2002 CHEVY J10 ·PICKUPS
S~a.e

10,998

8

Rebates to deal•r Incl. college Grad rebate

lldlllllllllllllhlr,

eaulumem

IUIIUID.ISIIon

Just trilled

$250/mo.
With approved credit

311111.

Financing
Available
Introducing the NEW MF 1433V/1440V

oniV 30.110 mllll.

lellber, LT IIHI
WIIOidhnewl

• l new 4WD models - 33.0 &amp; 40.1 Gross Engine HP
• Standard 8x8 SynchroShuttle Transmission
• Independent PTO
Atk
• Flat Spacious, Platform
for Chuck
• Tilt.Hood
or Jeff
• Compatible MF attachments available

OIUoHtalth

'

OniV 15,000 mlln
PIIICED FIR TIE
IPIIIII

PIICED Tl II FIR
·IICITIIII SEISOIII

IUI'IIDIIJ, dll,

crulla, air.

auto nnsmlsslon

PRICED TO IELL
II OWl

Chevy Truck • Moat Dependable
Longeat•laatlng, Trucks On The Road

1616 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis

..

~, Grant Medical Center

RIIIIJior ammerl

......., ..liS,

CHIVY
.,

*MASSEY FERGUSoN·

Our ntllt clinic dtt• It Frldily, M•y 10.
Ctll (114) 411-1174 br 1·100·J'I1-4fto to; •n 1ppolnt1111nt.

\

MSRP $21 ,685

Wll8

The
Joint Implant' Center

rme

•

everybody

right fiel~er bwight WoUett
doubllllg off the Marauder
Jimmy Smith walked (orcin~ runner at secohd.
In Olm and luvlns the bases
Knapp held the Buckeyes in
full, Matt l·hll tam~ on Ill relief ch.eck the rest &lt;lf the way and
of tmlott aftd !urn!ndered 11 fanned pinch hitter RusseU
iiictlllce fly ttl tight by 1-illhlJatl l'olC:to end the game.
ielltllli! ltanuburg, after a fly
Meil!' hitters }\'ere Stanley
tlUt Clul! Smith Uned a two with three singles, 1\amsburg a
run dtluble to brlnll the count hometUl\ a11d a single, Glaze
ttl 12·~ II! Hiill was llnally able with two sin~es.jimmy Smith .·
to get out tlf the lnllillg.
a double a11d a single. Fackler
Mell!l- threaterted in the llfth and Hannan each . si11gled
lrtlllllg with St4nley md Ghl!e while Chris· Smith added a
j!t!ltlftl! b11ck ttl batk slnllles, a double.
!Unubutll walk loaded the
Next up fot the Marauder
bues, but Halli!Ot out o( the are the Alexander Spartans
lnl1llll! when McClure ileW Monday at 5:00 pm at Meil!'
out co rll!ht with Buckeyt High School.

fnllnPipll

I

~nd

Keyless Entry,
Pwr. Windows, locks,
tilt and cruise ·

$26,998

~

was high
Mil!.

2002 CHEVROLET
IMPALA

"Warner Bros. Edition"

Redwomen.• swept by Saint Vincent ~

run the DevUs ctluld muster 11-2 lead and never looked
RIO GRANDE- Alter a 4-0 week, last
up ill the !ectlnd, ·
back.
With the ti~~t~! up 6-1 in
"There's a lot of games left week, in which the Rio Grande softball team
The tllue Devil! tied the .tht! btlttom ilf the lilurth, the to play," said Houchens. moved into fourth place in the American
same ill their half of the ilt't- Blue D~vils gilt oft the board "Marietta's a l!"od team, 'but Mideast Conference, the Redwomen have lost
ilnd as, Nick Merola, Hartly ~salt\ a! Merola doubled and I'd be surprised if they win the that momentum after losing for the fOurth
consecutive game.
«nd Drew llu1h were Walked 11tored l:)n a !acrlllce 11rounder rest of the league (games)."
The Redwomen lost a doubleheader to
with Ill:) I:)Uts ro )()ad the b&lt;lie!, to it!tolld by aush.
The Blue Devils travel to Saint Vincent, 9-2 and 6-1, on Friday afterMel'tlla stl:)n!d tln ~ satrifite
By the time Gallla Academy Jackmll Monday.
noon at Stanley Evans Field.
Sain\Vincent (7-15,6-14AMC) scored first
on
a two-run home run by Nicole Hinerman
lindsay johti!on took the lo~o~ror Warren from
in the first Inning of game one.
the mound, ra:nnlrtgllve ahd walking five.
Hinerman would later drive in another run·
Plllnt, now 14-6 overall, plays host to Athens
a double in a five-run sixth inning that
with
Mllllday ill a 5 p,m, wrslty matchup. Thesday
from Pip II
they ttavel to Marietta for their third consecutive blew the game open.
Rio Grande (t 2-16, 9-9 AM C) cut the
ttlnfenmce l!'lf11t! in llve days, with the game
during the c~tltpaill"•
deficit to 2-1 in the second inning when
!lor the Lady Warriors (7-10, 4-5 SllOAt), bl!glntling at 5 p.m.
Gates.j~llnll'er ~adWIIy atld Amber Horner all
11 Palill Plill..ril
20:1
000
X
442
ptlsted 1 -ftl~'&gt;-j da~, with Gate! and ~adway l'oiMt PltlMnt
~
.
000
000
1
131
nolltug sin(!les ill the llnt inllllll! and Hotl\et · ll'llliltla
•nd but1l1!Li') .loilhool\ al\d Ttoadway.
pmtlng to the !ttlrebl:)l:)k ill the seVI!mh hll1lllg
tftN!I; (1'1') butot 1-:!; Rl"ll 2·:!. GAB!; Oa.to 1·2. RBI. (WL)
whell she dl'Ove ill Th!~dWIIy With a!I:)Ud dtluble. tlotu I·~; tliat!wtiy 1-~; HO!ritt 1-:l, ~81 .

llornPqtl1

Easle:ii3
Waterfordl

CHEVRO·L ET
7 40-446-3672

(740)446-3672
Coli Toll Free!
1-aoo-s21 ~oo.a4

wru.ll ,....

�It 11 B4 • 61ri~ ltimn-INntilltl

'
Sunday, Apr!IH, 2002
•

· Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleuant, WV

Pometoy • Middleport • GIIUipolla, Ohio • Point PIHunt, WV

Rockies fire manager Buddy Belt
•

LOADED BATSCleveland Indians
Albert Belle flies
out to end the
eighth Inning of the
AI~Star Game with
runners on base In
this July 9, 1996
photo at Philadelphia's Veterans
Stadium. Omar
Vlzquel uncorked
some of those old
stones about
Albert Belle's Infamous bats. In his
new autobiography,
"Omarl My Life On
and Off The Aelcf,"
Vlzquel, the lndl·
ans' Gold Glove
shortstop, reveals
that Belle, his
Cleveland teammate from 199496, used corked
bats. (AP file)

Vizquel uncorkS stories
about Albert Belle
CLEVELAND (AP) - replaced Delle's illegal . bat high 50 homers in 1995,
Omar Vizquel uncorked with one signed by Sorrento. took, a few swings at Vizquel,
some of those old stories
The umpires were not too.
about Albert Belle's infamous fooled, and the Indians were
''I'm sure he didn't really
bats.
forced to return the original like me, so he's not going to
And Albert isn't happy bat, co rk at1d all.
say nice things about me,"
about it.
Belle, who lives in Arizona, Belle said. "He must not have
In his new autobiography, went on Jim Rome's nation- had anything to write about.
"Omar! My Life On and Off ally syndicated radio talk He sure doesn't have enough
The Field,"Vizquel, the lndi- show on Thursday to counter interesting things to write
ans' Gold Glove shortstop, Vizquel's claims and insist about from his career.''
reveals that Belle, his Cleve- that he was innocent.
Delle was fined in 1994 for
"No, I never used a corked using n corked bat, just one
land teammate from 1994· 96, used corked bats.
bat," Belle said. " ... And if I of the· slugger's numerous
Vizquel talks about Belle, was using cork, don't 'you headline- making moments
who retired from baseball last think I would have hit 60 or during a turbulent career
season with a debilitating hip 70 homers in a season? If all shortened by injury.
injury, and covers a host of my bats were corked, how
Vizquel is the first player
other topics in the book, co- come they haven't surfaced? go into detail about his forwritten by Akron Beacon · A l'ot of my bats were lifted mer teammate's deception.
Journal reporter Bob Dyer.
from my locker.
"Albert knows where I am
"Don't you think all the coming from," he said ThursVizquel opens Chapter 10,
entitled, "Albert and Other people who hated me over day following the Indians'
Clubhouse Characters", by the course of the my career game against Chicago. "He
saying, "I didn't hate Albert would have gone out of their got into trouble a few yt,ars
Belle. But he was certainly a way to steal one of my ago. It happened a long time
difficult guy to like."
corked ban?"
ago, ·and I thought it was OK
Vizquel recalls the July 15,
Belle, who hit a career- to talk about it."
1994, game at. Chicago's
Comiskey Park in which
Belle's bat was confiscated
after White Sox manager
Gene Lamont questioned its
legality.
When
umpire
Dave
Phillips asked the Indians to
give him the bat Lamont
wanted to inspect, Vi~quel
1ay1 in' his book that Cleveloland's bench didn't know
'what to do.
"Guys were saying, 'Oh
my God! The bat is corked!'"
Vizquel said. "My response
was, 'What?' I felt a little bit
like the way I felt when I
fint heard the true identity
of the Tooth Fairy. ,
"I can be naive at times,
.but I'm not stupid. Certainly
Unlimited Access
not 1tupid enough to steal
As'low as $11.95 per Mo.•
Albert's corked bat and
Pononal E·mall Account
replace it with one that
10
m,.a
ptnQRal
web tpaco, lmmodlali actlvlallon
looked completely different
- one .that was autographed
by Paul Sorreiuo. That wasn't
Loc1J numbcg tnclydc;
even a nice try.
"The problem, of course,
~. weverty, Jlokton, WNt Unton, 0,_,., Olfltlolie,
MoAttttw, '-'-moUitl, HIIIO~.,.,.,..
was that all of Albert's bats
WY, AINne,...,...... Oat:c t&amp;:Aiiit ~
MtOs:n•liiiNI..,.. morel
were corked.''
em
After Belle's bat was taken
...... IMreert'fteb JlliiUinNII,
away, an Indiam pitcher
-..~~~""'crawled through' the space
above the drop-ceiling from
the visitors' dressing room to
the umpires' room, and
1

DENV.ER (AP) - Colttl ~'" disqpoltf.ttd
ondo Rockits mana~r
lhat tltis leas not
Buddy Bell \\'\1$ fired Friday
wid1 the ~am off to the wont •••rlr~d orlt the urcry I
start in dub histoty.
Wcrnttd it to. I Wdltttd
Clint Hunll~e, the Rockies'
to stt t/1is tltitrl
hitting COAch for the last six
tlrroNRh· ••
~an, replactd Bell.
The announcement was
I'Clln~M 'IIac~~e&amp;·-~o~•r
made ·about three houn
8uddr ...
before the start of the Rock- IUI.Iy to re-insrill som.- contii~s' home game with the dence.
·
' ·
Philadelphia Phillies.
"I've asked d1ese &amp;UY' to just
"I am disappointed that this come out .firing. We've got
has not WQrked out the way I nothing to lose. We haw tllent,
wanted it to," Bell said in a ~ haw skills, we should be
statenlent. "I wanted to· see compeririw. But \Ill." need to
this thing through."
· play the game :md not worry
General manager Dan about the outcome. If we're
O'Dowd said the change was going to err, I want us to err
not about assi(!lling blame but on the side ohl!l!ressiv.: nature
about trying to turn around than on the side of caution. ·
. "Sometimes teams play not
the team's 6- I6 start.
"Quite honesdy, \Ill." need to to lose, and I think our club
sbrt playing the game with falls in that category right now.
more joy tin~ more con6- I've challenged our men to
denee than' we've played · play to win."
already this year," O'Dowd
Hunl)e said he was excited
said. "We really need to start about the opportunity but
building
some
positive hadn't thought he would
momentum.
become a manager this way.
"This is about a new step
"This is not the way I WQuld
hnw wr1tten
·
th e story .or
r.
th e
"rorward."
O'Dowd said Hurdle, 44, is opp()rtunity to evolve," Hurdle
the "manager of the R.ockies said.
- not interim mana~r - for · O'Dowd, who hired Bell as
the remainder of the season. manager shortly after beii1g
Clint brings passion, he brings named Colomdo's GM in Sepenthusiasm, he brings a charis- tember 1999, said he had
111a I think this ballclub mixed feelings . about the firneeds."
ing.
The Rockies have the wont
"From a personal standrecord in the National League point, this was really tough,"
and the second-wont record he said. "But from a profesin the majors, just ahead of sional standpoint,! don't think
Detroit, and are eight games it was that tough." ·
behind first-place Arizona in
Colorado pitcher Mike
the NL West.
·
Hampton and Todd Helton
"We are beat up right now," said the players take the blame
Hunlle said. "We are not play- for Bell's 6ring. ·
"! think we're all pretty
ing a good game of baseball.
My job is going .to be hope- mu ch in shock," · Hampton

• GALLIA AUTO SALES· GALLIA AUTO SALES • GAUIA AUTO SALES •

'99 Suburban
4X4

'99 Ford Wlndltar LX
U V6, ~ Local Trade

lleor Air, canape, LoodMI

. $12,700

...:"lin

700

'98 5·10 LS
All, CD Plctytf

'97 Chevy Venture
ElctMded LS

CDITape, Power llat, 1 OWner,
57,000mllel

$10,500

'00 Orand Am S£
'99 Blaur LT 4X4
4 Door, All The Toytll

$14,500
'98 Benz C280
Iuper Nlwll .

'99 Ford Contour SE

$6,595
Buick LeSabre

$12,500

V6, Loadld, l'octory Whlllt

$10,500
'97 Toyota Avalon
lllarpl

$9,995

Montana Elctended
lllar AC, CD, Pactaly WManly,

10,000mllw.

9900
'00 Impala

$12,700

'96 Oldl
supreme .SL ·
I Door, Only 61,000 mllll

$6,700
'98 Elcort ZR2 ·
I Door

'00 Dodge Intrepid

$8,995

$5,595
.
'00 Sebring Comllt'tlllllel
lharp,

...,_.for lummeitti;wl

$13,900

==:•

........
---..··--·

''""••the••-.,_,,

NASCAR

Parking does little to change Harvick ·
l't M ~SSOClAltl)

PMSs

ALLIA-AUTO SALES

. Winston Cup
Standings and Results
Slrlua Satell~e
Cup aehedule (wlnners In Hadlo at The Gler , Watklnt

'the 2002 NASCAR Winston '&lt;ug. 11 -

I

Thny Stt'w:ort, -tnother wlatile
p~r.ntheaea) and d!Mr point Glen, N.Y.
The camera shot started at
atandlngs:
Aug. 18 - Pepsi .ao. Brook·
driwr, and u~red Harvkk
his feet and slowly panned up
F.tl. 17 - Daytone 500, Dey- lyn, Mk:h.
could take ~ page from Stewtona Beech, Fla. (Ward Burton) Aug. 24 - Sharpie 500, Blis·
to show Kevin HU\Ikk loung. art's recently toned-down
Feb. 24 - Subway 400, Rock· 101, Tenn.
·
ing on a golf cut during p~
behavior.
lngh m, N.C. (Man Ktn$Gih)
Sept.
1
Southam
500, Dernee activities. With a sly snillt,
Stewart ~:~id it shouldn't be
Marth 3 - UAW·Dalmler· llngton, S:C.
he leued in close and ~nt a
Ctuyaler 400, Laa Vegas. Sept 7 - Chevy Monte Carlo
too h~ro fur Harvick.
(StiHing Marlin)
400, RIChmond.
m-ae to the national audi"I ju~t shut up," Stewart said.
Mlln:h
1
Q
MBNA
America
Sept. 15 ..... New Hampshire
ence.
"Onee I !tt&gt;I'Ped tulking so
500,
Hal'(lpton,
Ga.
(Tony
300,
Loudon, N.H.
·"I'm back," he announced in
much, I stopp~ getting myself
S1ewart)
Sept. 22 - MBNA America
a mocking tone.
in trouble !lo much. It's pretty
March 17 - Carolina Dodge 400, Dover, Oel.
Yes, NASCAR\ ne~ bad
Dllalenl
400, Dllrtlnglon, S.C. Sept. . 29 - Prolectlon O~;~e
simple. I haven't talked to
(Stirling
Marlin)
400, Kansas Clly, Ken.
boy has returned after being
Kevin about that, but it's not a
March
24
f'ood
City
500,
Oct.
6 - EA Sports 500, Tal·
p.arlted for one nee, and little
difficult philosophy to !OIIow."
BriSIOI,
Tenn.
(Kurt
Busch)
ladega,
Ala:
has changed.
Harvick isn't sure he wants
April
8
Oct. 13 - UAW·GM Quality .
"I don't really think that
- or i1eetls - any advice.
SamaungJRadloShack 500, 500, Concord, N.C.
NASCAR ·wants an apology
Fort Worth, Texas. (Matt Ocl. 20 - Martinsville 500,
While appredatiw of the supKenselh)
Martinsville, Va.
for tnything," said Harvick,
port from Wallace and others,
April
14
Virginia
500,
MarOct.
27 - NAPA 500, Hamp·
who was forbidden by the
he hMn 't gotten past th~ sting
tinavllla.
(Bobby
Labonte)
lon,
Ga.
llnctioning body to drive at
or the critidsm fmm other dri- . April 21 - Aaron's 499, Tal· Nov. 3 ~ Pop Secrel 400,
Martinsville Speedway t\VQ
wn alter Mntiusville.
ladega, Ala. (Dale Earnhardt Rockingham, N.C.
weeks ago for a series of inciJr.)
Nov. 10 - Checker Auto Parte
And that\ ~n indic3tion he
April
28
NAPA
Auto
Parts
600K,
Avondale, Ariz.
dents.
'
may l'icvcr d1angc.
·
SOO,
Fontana,
Calif.
.
.
·
Nov.
17
- Homestead 400,
He was cleared to mce Jut
"Most of them that are voicMev
4
Pontiac
Exc11emen1
Homestead,
Fla.
·
week at 'Nladega and returned
ing their opinion are not worth
400, Richmond.
Driver Sttndlnga
to the ttaclt humble, but he
wasting my time over," he s:Ud.
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, 1. Sterling Marlin, 1,369.
Concord, N.C .
2. Matt Kenseth. 1.260.
refUsed to illY he was sorry for
He insi~l' he'$ leamed • lesJune
2MBNAPiallnum
400,
3. Rusty Wallace. 1,212.
his actions.
.
~on th~t can only help hli
Dover,
Del.
4. Kurt Busch, 1,192.
Harvick, 6nt put on proba(Greer.
June 9 - Pocono 500, Long 5. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 1, 178.
tion for scuffiing with Greg
"The best drivers and best
Pond, Pa.
6. Jimmie Johnson, 1,,172.
Biffie after a Busch race at Brispoople in our sport had to cross
June 16 - Michigan 400, 7. Jeff Gordon, 1,168 ..
Brooklyn, Mloh.
8. Tony Slewart, 1;138.
_jlfll 111!1 month, was penalized
something that takes them on a
June
23
Dodge/Save
Mart
!!.
Mark Martin, 1,137.
lot bumping and banQing with
pMh yt~u could' 1!0 either right
360,
Sonoma,
Calif.
10.
Ricky Rudd, 1&gt;114.
·Coy Gibbs during a truck nee
or let!;' he snid. "You come to a
July 8 - Papal 400, Daytona 11. Jeff burton, 1,072.
at MartinsVille. When the sancfork in the road and yt~u cnn
Beach, Fla.
_
12. Bill Ellloll, 1,013.
either
sit
back
and
listen
and
tioning body had seen enough, Hl'l BACK - NASCAR driver Kevin Harvlck sits In the Grand
July 14 - Troploana 400, 13. Ward Burton, 1,006.
Cicero, Ill.
14. Terry Labonte, 989.
he was called off the track, and National Glt'lil of the Talledall Suparspeadway In Talladeaa, try to u11dersund how our
July
21
New
England
300,
t5. Ricky Craven, 974.
sport
works
better,
or
you
can
he puUed his truck up to the Ala. on April 20 .. Harvlck's crew was preperlnl his car for the
Loudon, N.H.
16. Dale Jarrett:968.
b,Jcomc stubborn-headed and
NASCAR hauler to discuss it. Aaron's 499 race. (AP)
July 28 - Pennsylvania 500, 17. Bobby Labonte, 958.
At some point during that bump with the best of them, Childress hGs counseled him on not ne(ept anytlthlg. I'm not
Long Pond, Pa.
18. Jeremy Mayfield, 928.
s.\ylng
that
this
is
n
good
situaAug. 4 - Brickyard 400, lndl· 19. Mlohael Waltrip, 912.
mee~ng, NASCAR decided the veternns took exception. toning it down.
20. Jimmy Spencer, 908.
Hal"Vjck needed to be tllught a . When his &amp;(!8ressiv.:ness crept
"You've got to bite your lip a tion, but I haw learned a lot . anapolla. .
lesson.
.
too close to the unwritten lot of times when you'l'l! dri- from it."
. So they told him to 110. home code of conduct, he picked up ving a race cu;• Chi!dl'l!ss said.
and not to. bother showmg up the nickname "The Instigator," "Your emotions and temp~rs
for the Wmston pup !'lee. It a play on Earnhardt's nickname run high. Will p~ople push
was the fi~t time m t~e sport's "The lntimid~tor!'
him? Yeah, they're going to see .
~4-~u history a dr!~r was
Now he's on pro~tion for whM he's nude of, and he's
pumshe.d for rough dnvmg.
the ~at as punishment for his going to have to bite his lip
· H~rvtck got the message actions at Bristol and Mar- that much harder."
~·v·-- and clear. But the .bnsh, tinsville, and it will be open . He m~de it through 1hllade!Z6··ye;lt--Old driver ~h~ mher-- se~son on him for retaliation.
ga without incident, but the
Dille Bunhatdts nde folThere's little Hnvick can do relll test$ Are yet to come. hl
lowing his death l~st ~ar h~s about it - the slightest slip two Wlleks, the series goes to
, vowed . not to change hts could get him sent home again, Richmond, where Harvi~k has
aggressive style.
and every driver knowi it.
a history - he tangled with
"I, like t~ ~~e the mce car. I · "They're going to tty to use Ricky Rudd on the short trnck
don,t care 1f ~~!a late model, I him ~~ a pingpong bllll," his last year, with Rudd bumping
~on.t c~re •ftts a street ltock, crew chief,KevinHa11ilin,uid. him out of the way to win the
I m going to go out ~nd race "Wouldn't you?"
nee.
the car II! hard as I ~~n." he said.
flour-time Winston Cup
With so many veternns uuk"1 just want ~o wm the rae~, ch~mpion jeff Gor:don said ingno secret oltheir dislike .for
44
18
and a lot of times that doesn t thM~ going to be the hardest his behavior, the pnybnck could
VEHICLES
VEHICLES
~rk any~o~.
thing for Harvick to delll with. stArt there.
UNDER
UNDER
But l did learn th~t we can
"Now he's in a situation
R.usty Wallace, hilllself a
'10,000 .
win nces, we can do ~ lot of where he's not sure if he can handful. when · he broke into
*99 per month
, ~hings, but ~nles~ I can w:alk up nee the same .Wo.y that he did Winston Cup, was one of the
All Credit
. mto that trailer, lit down tn that before or where those limil:.l 6m drivers to offer some "ol'
office and h~ve ~ nor~al, are," Gordon said. "I feel for. fatherly advice" to Harvick.
decent con,versauon . wtth him. That's a tough position tO
"Kevin's I!Ot a lot of talent,
1111 lUlCK RIOAL Ll11110f4 . .. .... " , .... . , .111,111
11t1PORD,·11UXU10llhupero.!b , ..... .. . ,UQ,IH
them, then 1.~ not gotng to be in."
he's just a little wild and
1111 lUlCK ROADMAITIR 110141 .. . ... .. ... ...l.tMII
IGOD
GMC
4K41KT.OAIIIOM7
31,000
miiH
..
..
,
U
I,IH
get anywhere.
c~r owner Richard Chi!- · untamed," Walla(e ~ald. "So I
lftl.l HONDA PAIIPOIIT lk4110420 . . ... . ... ..IIIII
1G0D PORD P.II04XUUm cAII1DIIOBIJJAIIt 121,011
There's ~ lot more to it than dress hired Harvick because of explained to hittt that ~arly in
1117 DODGI CAIIAYAH 110114 ..................tH71
1111 CHIIYILIR 100M 110117 31,000 mlltt .. ... . ,1!1,011
that.
his passion and competitive my career, NASCAR told me
1111 CHIVY IUCKIR 110124 414 ... . ..........110,111 · '171
1111 Ill' OHUOKIIIIOI41 ~Oidtd' ......... ,1!1,111
, When Harvick bunt onto spirit ~nd h~s long used the many, many ti111es they (OUid
1111 PGAD IXI'IDITIOH 4K411DII1? piH1&lt;1gtl . ,1!1,111 1331 llt4 Jll' QUNC CHIRQKIIIIOI1H"' ........Ifill '171
1001 DODGI CARAVAN 1104H 10.000 mill .. .... lti,HI 1311 I'" IATURN ICI11041027,000 njltt ..... ..... .110,111 1171
the Winston Cup scen.e ~ast phru~ "the~·s wone problems run a rnce without me. And I
IGOD IUIARU OURACK IIDMt 21.000 1111~1 .. ... 111,HI 1317 till CHIVVIWIR 4XUIOIN ............... Ifill 1171
~arin a ~ompetttive car,tt did- to have" when tllking aboutan told him I'm mre th~'Y could
1111 PGAD IXI'I.ORIR 110111"10011 Hide' ....... 111,111 1311 llt4 'ORD IKI'I.ORIR 4XI 110111 .... ., .........17M 1170
Jl ~take him long to make cne- a(!81'essive driver.
·
do without him. too, m he'd
IGOD TOYOTA TACOMA 4K41101H tuptr cab •.... 111,111 '211 111100001 CARAVAN 4011110471 .............110,411 1111
rrues.
Now that Harvlck's behavior better be careful."
1G0D 'GAO RANGIR 110441- o.!b ...........til,HI '211 tiiiNIItANK~OCAe4K4110117 .......... ., .lfHI 1111
1111 PGAD RANGIR II'I.Ail4 4X4110402lii!ICII .III,M '211 tltl PORD IICORT IIOINAI7,000 mill . . . . .ltHI · 1111
When he showed he could has tumcd into a problem,
W:illace compares Harvick to
IM PGADRANGIR IC 414411017127,000 1111• ..811,111 1217 tiii,ORCMUITAN0110312 ........ ............ lfHI '111
'·

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

Dragon Internet
·1-888-657-0977

til

said." Any rime thinQS go ~d.
the fiHt ptrson to RO h
nttn~gel\ That just the way
is. But '~ bl:m1e ouneli'I!S."
Hampton, disappointing
3 'Yith a 8.88 ERA this se:~Son.
added, "If you fire anybod)\
you should ha\'e 6red me." •
Hampton Clllled Hurdle .
promorioil "a plus. He's f.unil:
iu \vith this organization, an~
that's probably tho: only plu\
out. of tl1is."
·
Helton called Hurdl.e a "tire-''
lm worker, Wti"J organized amt
wry outgoing. Maybe he can ·
shake some things up."
· •
Helton arrived at Coon,
Field before Bell depDrred. "'
"I just gav.: him a hug," Hd~
ton said. "There wasn't much'
to L.!
&lt;&gt;&lt;: SUI'd,n
••
· Bell was the third m~jdt
league m ~t1mger 6red since tl~
start of the season. Phil Garnef
was let go by Detroit on Aprll
9, whilll Mihvaukee flrell'
Davey Lopes on April 18. All
three teams haw se~n large'
mendance drops: Colondo
enrered Friday with the fifth~
largest falloff the NL ill
42,110, averaging 35,?76 fO~
10 home dates.
·~
Boston fired Joe Kerrigan
during spring training.
':
Bell, SO, Wlls in his third sea·~
son with the R.ockies. His only
season witl1 a winning record
was 2000, when the Rockies
finished 82~80, nnd he leaves
with a 161-185 rect~rd: He also
1mnn~d in Detroit.
,
As n player. Bell was n five7
time All-Star in 18 seasons in
the major leagues, playing
most of his career with Cleve1_
land, 'Thxns and Cincinnati. 1\
third bt1serncn, he led hi~
league in .fielding three times
and WQn six consecutive Gold'
Gloves.
~·

:Fortunes of racing teams
'blowin' in the wind (tunnel)
MARIE'ITA, Ga. (AP) - NASCAR team · Seriet, with controvcny swirling over which car
owner Eddie Wood pee~d into the wind tunnel lui the moot u( each. Oflen, NASCAR will bring
as air paucd over and around one of his Potd Tau- one car from each of the four manufacturen to
ruses at 160 mph. He tapped crewman Mllce determine it' the~ are ~dvantages.
Smith on the shoulder, whispered to him, and
These sessions somcrim~ lead to rule changes,
' they both milled and continued watching.
such as when Ford got twu separate reduedons in
And watching. And watching.
the height of Ia rear ipoiler earlier thil year at
! Watchins what, exactly?
..
' DaytOna w reduee dras. NASCAR. aiJo later
, "WelL you can't ~ally see anyth!np; from here:• changed the wry it inspected the Chevrolea,
euentlally sivins them an extra 1 1/4 inches on
d,Im!l!nSo
'' Wood
Ill
'· ~or more d-..
-~
He was rlght.Tho windowl of the control ronm their fi:o nt en....
owruon:e.
vibrated ancfthe roaring wind made converuao111
On thil day, the Wood Brothen team bJ;Ought
dlScult, but it was !mpoa!ble to see anythins. All can that driver Elliott Sadler will race at inter methe dara 11 measul.'l!d by electrelnic setUOn.
diaiMlzed tRCkl 1uch as Atlanta Motor SpeedStill Wood wouldn't have been anywhere else. way, a 1.54-mile oval with wide,IWieping turlll.
•; "I'd• come hm 24 houn a day If they 1tc me. 1 Handlins il at a pl.'l!mlurn atAtlanca, meanins can
love it"Wood said."l£1 had to send my mama musthaveaaoodbalanceoffrontand~ardown- ·
. here ~th a car for two houn of lime, I'd do that. fon:e.
That'• how important it a:•
.
"We're not ~ally concerned with dras for theie
. •· N ucAll 1w ontten mol'l technical in the can" Man:us said. "Drag iJ only a concern for
.
IV
"'
·where
dri.: past
20 "yean.
theWood
Brorhen and neatIy every traeb like Orona and 'Nladega,
A ththe th
1
; other team ~:~lies on information from wind tun- ven never li oft' the acce erator. t e o er
' nels like the one at Lockheed Martin in 1ubut:ban traekl whe~ they back otr and use the bralce1, we
At!a'nca. SetUOn on the c:ar send dara back to a worry mosrly about downforce:•.
.
eomputet: in the control 100111, where an aerody·
Althou~ teall'll occasi~y race c:an without
, ··-•• expert such as Ford's Bernle Marc:w lookl "blowing' them tlnt,lt's not advilable.
•; ; ; numben.
"You could get away with it;' Wood said. "But
• Lockheed Mardn eni!nHt Gerald Poundl said Ifyou don't, you feel Uu you've lett somethins on
! about half of the wind tunnel lime there is wed the table that miiJht have helped make you better.
(or rau Wn», who spend abolltl2,000 .,et ho,,ur. Nobody c:an alfo!d to that thete dayl:'
'-and
h ..... he
It hasn'ulways been that way. The Wood Broth~lijt't JOU'IIto ""' mote
mote eac ,_,
en team 1w been around since the 19501 but did; The tunnel mostly measures downforce 111d n't·make itt Bnt trip to the wind tunnel until
• dras _ 1 hot topic this ~ar in the Wl11110n Cup 1985.

•'

1111 CHIVY YINTURI 110111Win .. , ...........lti,HI
IGOD PORC RANGIR m 11027louptlo.!b , , .. ...ll1,M
1111 'ORO WI!ICITAR 110104 .. ....... ........tll,4fl
1M CHRYILIR ~~~~~G JKtiiO!Of oanvt~llt .111,111
1M MIIICURY VILLAOIRVAN II !Mil , , . , • , , . , .111,110
1001 H!HfiAC liliAN CAM ltl4.a 1000 miiH .... .117,411
111'1 'ORD IXI'I.ORIR 4KIIt0217 , ...... ... , .. .114,110
1M MIIICURY MARQUIUII1021f 11,000 lliltt .111,110
1M HONDUOCOIID 1.11111104
114,110
1MI PGAD WINOITAR l.liiDIU lt,OOO mlo1 .•.•tll,411
IGOI CHmLIR"CIIUIHR 11DIIfii.OOOIIiltt .fli,M
111'11UIOK RIVIIRAIIOI71 . , .......... , ......111,110
1000 DDOQI DAKOTA CLUI CAIIIOIII ... , ....tli,HI
1MI Jll' WRAHGLIR IPORT IIIMfl 'It qr. ..tl4,111
IGOI OHI'I'I MONTI OAALO IIOQII3,000 1No1 ..ltf,IH
IOOtPOfiO TAUIIut H Ut!NaiiO.OOO miH ... ,fll,l70
1. . MIIICURY COIIOAR IIIIIOII ,OOOINIII ....IIJ,M
1•1'1.VMOUTH VOI'AGIR 111114 . , ...........llt,IH
1001 OHI'I'IIMIIAI.A 11041111,000 miiH . ., .... ,ltf,HI
lOOt IUIOUIQAL LUIOIH ..... ., " , ... ., ..III,HI
1MI TOYO.TA CAMRV 110404 " . . ".". " .. " ..llt,M
1000 MI~CURY IAILEIW 1111101 11,000 llllltt . ..lti,HI
lOOt 'GAO MUITANQ 110114 K,OOO lliltt ... , ...lti~H
1000 VW HITI.IIt017UOOO ..... ... , .. , .. , 111,411
1MI ~Ill' QT 110117 . .. ... . ....... ., ...111,100
1001 POliO TAU~ut Ill 110411 10,000- ... , .lt4,M
1000 DOOQJ AVIHGIR 11110101 ... ., . , .... .,III,M
1001 lltTIU- QALAHT IIOitllt.OOO miiH .•.•114,104
t • OHI'I'IIIO 11041114.000 mlltt ...... , .....111...
111'1 OHI'I'I 01100 IIOitlnlolllldt •. ,,,,.,, ... III,M
1000 'ORO 1'110 II'OilT 111471 .•.•. " •.•.•.•..m ,M
1000 IATUIIN 1.114011 11041111,000- .......m ...
IMI TOYOTA TACOMA K/0 llOitl ....•.•..... Ati,M
1000 'OfiD.fOCut 1W 110111 11,000 11i1tt •.••••.111,111
tMI DDOOIIHTIIIPIC 11110NI .... , " ...... .111,111
tMIJII'OHUOKIIt10104 . , .... "., ...... All.llf
111'1 'OfiD 1'110110110 " ......... "" .... Atl,4tf
tMI CHI'I'IIIOXOAU111111 ... •......... ". Jli,IIO
1MI ~ l'lliiHID 110111.,_. m11tt , ..•.•. AIO,M
,.. 'OliO MNGIR 1111t7 tt,OOO- ........ .111,141
1MI 'OfiD 1'110
.111,110

ont- . . .

"*' ......... "...........

'210
'271

211

1
1271
1211
1274

•••
'270

'Ill

Ita CHIVY 010 VAN CONV.IIOIII .............. Ifill
tiW0LCIIfLIIIOI71 ........................11110
11100 H!NTIAO IUNPIRIII0470 33,1100 miot ......110,711
till H!HIIAO ORAND Pll1XIt03tl .... ., ......17HI
tlt7 lUlCK LIIIAIIIII10144 ....... ., . . .. . ....IfNI
tlt7 HONDA CIVIHK 110413 ................... Ifill
IHI PORC IIPLOMR 110144 414 .. ., .........17M
1000 ~DIICORT ZXIIIOIOt ....... .'........11111
tii'IIATUIINILIIIOIOI ..... , ..... ., ........11411
1017DODOICARAVANIIOIM ..................11411
''"CHIVY CAVIUSK 110421 .... ., ........... Ifill
tHII'ONTIIC IOHNIVILLI tt!MII ... , ..........lfM
11100 KlllllttiA 110411 ......... ·...............10111
tltl 1'0110 RANQIR KLTIIOZ~t ................17111
1HI OI.Dt CIITI.III 1101113 . . .. . .. .. .. . . . .. .. .....
tltl OLCt CIIRA 1102H ................ ., .... ,lf710
,1MICHIVVCAY.WIR11034f .......................
1001 CHI'I'I MilitO Lit 111471 12,1100 mitt . . .. ..11411
tltiCHI'I'IIotOIIOHt .......................11111
IHII'ONTIIC IUNI!RO 110100 , ....... ., .......IIIII
titiiUICUIQAL 1104H .. ... .................litH
IHI CHIVY SolO IIOIH ....................... 11M
till PLYMOUTH NIOH 110111 .. ,. ...........NHI
IH7 NIIIAH IINT11AGXIII0140 ...............11111
tiN POttO 1111011 110111A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .....
· tilt I'ONTIAC T11ANIPORT110411 ..... ,. .......litH
tiN IUICKIKYURK 110411 ................... UM
liN IUICUIOAL 110114 ................ ,..... MM
tiN I'ONTIAC IUNIIRC IlOilO ........... -....litH
tlti~DRINQU41441101W .... .. .. . ...........
tiM OIOIIIICKIRIIOOII ......... :. ,. . .. .. .
11MPOt1DAlRCITARVANIIOI11 .............tiM
tiM HYUNOIA ILAHTRA01.1110074l ........ :litH
liM IIIIIOU!Y COIHIAIIII0171 ....... ,, ........MIN
. IIMOLDtctUIIA1103tl ....... , .............Mill
1HIIIATUIIII ICUIIMtt . . .. .. . . . .. . . .. .IIIII
1MICHI'I'ICAVAUIRIUIIIII ................ PHI
1HIOLCICII~IIA 11111117 .................... , .... ·
IIW POttOTAUIIUIIIOIOI , .. . .. .. .. . . , . . .....
11W H1UAN HIITIIAOIIItOIOI .. . .. .. . .. . .MIN

•

1

111

11

11

1
1
11
1
1

1

1
11

1

1

11

1131

'131

11:II
1127

'111
111
111
1111
1
1

'-

'''-

'H
'H
'H
'tl
'H
'tl '
'H
'H
'H
'H
'H
'tl
'H
'H
'H
'tl

'It
'It

ll.ol. Hupp

hloepereon of tho Month

.,

'

�•

•

Page._
21.

'

.

Crlrbmtions btgin on C2

More world class Lake ·Erie
fishing expected for 2002 season
COLUMBUS- Anglers traveling two previous years.\IValleye catch rates
to Lake Erie - Ohio's premier fishing last year were the highest since 1998,
destination - will be rewarded with with c:itch rates for private boat
some of the same world class fishing anglers peaking in July at more than
anglers experienced last year, accord- one w.dleye for every two hours of
· 'ing to the Ohio Department of Nat- fi.ming. Catch rates for charter boat
ural Resources (ODNR) Division of anglers peaked in July at just under
Wildlife.
one walleye per hour.
"Sportfishing here rivals that on
About 35 percent of the walleyes
any lake in the country," said Mike · c:~ught last year were fish from a
Budzik, chief ofODNR's Division of strong hatch in 1999.These two-yearWildlife. "Walleye, yellow perch, old fish averaged 14 to 16 inches. A
smallmouth bass and steelhead trout reduced bag limit, which took effect
fishing- you couldn't ask for a better in March 2001, will help conserve
or more versatile fishery than Lake these young fish. Ohio's .reduced bag
Erie."
limit was part of measures taken in a
The spring fishing season is now walleye management agreement with
well underWily on Ohio's big lake. the Lake Erie states and Ontario to
Anglers · have been taking walleyes help rebuild Lake Erie walleye stocks
from western basin reefS, Maumee from lows in the late 1990s.
Bay and Sandusky Bay. Yellow perch
The reduced bag limit for Ohio
fishing has also been productive, anglers remains in effect at four
including some limit perch catches off walleyes during March and April and
the Marblehead Peninsula.
six walleyes the remainder of the year.
Fishing for the lake's number one
YElLOW PERCH
sportfish will continue to be good. The excellent perch fishing anglers
Last year, anglers 6Ued coolers with have experienced the past six years
many limit catches of Lake . Erie's should continue through 2002 and
most.popular game fish and this trend beyond. Conservative regulations for
should continue. Anglers should sport and commercial fishermen and
anticipate reeling in many 17 to 18- improved spawns have helped Lake
inch walleyes from the 1999-year Erie's yellow perch stocks to gradualci:ISS, and 22 to 26-inch fish from the ly recover after low levels in the early
1996 walleye hatch. Other catches 1990s.
will include fish from the 1998 hatch
Limit catches should not only be
measuring 18 to 20 inches, as well as plentiful all across the lake this year,
some Junker fish from older year .but many of these excellent table-fare
classes now in the Fish Ohio catego- fish will be in the 8- to 12-inch range
ry at over 28 inches.There will be few and longer. Anglers can expect to see
13 to 15 inch walleye entering the many yellow perch _from a large
fishery because of a poor hatch in 1996-year class, the largest hatch in I0
2000, but strong spawn in 2001 will years, and measuring 10 to 12 inches.
provide. a good_class of fish in 2003. Added to the catch will be perch
The current state record walleye from the 1998-year class now in the
was caught off Cleveland in Novem- 8- to 10-inch range, and 1999ber 1999 and weighed 16.19 pounds, spawned perch that will be 8 to 9
a remnant of the large 1986-yearclass. jnches.
The walleye harvest for 2001 on The top perch jerking locales durthe Ohio waters oflake Erie was 1.2 ing 2001 included numerous sites in
million fish, slightly higher than the both the western and central basins. If

CINTRAL OHIO
Buoktyt Laka (FIIrlltld, Licking &amp;
Ptrry countltla) - u.. I Jig and min,
now combination In lht area near tht
dam and around any polnlllor'Hug•
eye. Flngtrtlnga aaugtya (1 112 Inch)
art atooktd annually Including
473.000 that· wtrt IIOCked 1111 May.
Thla It 1 good aarly largemouth batt
llahlng laka due lo rapid aprlrig water
warm-up. UH crank ballt end tuba
hJroa In and tround Cloutt Covt and
Crtnbarry Marth tor tha bettar ball
llahlng opportunlllaa. Flth along tht
llkt bottom on lhl wlndwtrd tklt 01
tha lake with out balta ana prepartd
balll to lake channel calflth. Carp,
prappltla, and hybrid llrtped ball alto
1lrovlde good aprtng tithing action.
Hargut Cruk Lake (Piokaway Coun·
ty) - C11ppltlt meuurlng 7 to tlnch·
tt art found In lhlt 132·11Clrt lake
near Clroltvlllt. Uttjlga and mlnnowa
tlahed around thortllne are11 wllh
aubmerged woody cover lor bill
rtaulll. Try u.alng amall aplnntrt.
platllo worma and live balle In tht
upper hall of the lakll when tteklng
largemouth baaa. Bluegllla and chan·
ntl oalllah alto olftr good tithing
action. Eltlotrlo molora only.

tomt good-alzed 'tytt. Quilt a few
crapplea are baing caught hare 11
Wtll .
Atwood Lake (Carroll County)
- Anglera are alerting to pick up 1
ltw orappltt around the dam area but
the crapplea ere juat alerting to move
Into the ahallowtr oren Standard
ltadhtid Jlga with brighter oolortd
Iaiit llkt White tnd chartreutt trt lur·
lng tht crapploa.
Stttlhtad (Athtabula County)
- All tlroama appear llahable here
ilght now with plenty ot attelhtad ttlll
to bt had.

80UTHWI!8T OHIO

Ruah Run L.akt (Preble County) Flah tor rainbow trout at thll 58-aore
lake located at the Ruth Run Wlldlllt
Artt by ualng wa• worma or jlgt with
ohartrtutt twlltar lalla or tub11. Cut
15 to 20 tttt lrom ahara and llah
alowly along the bollom. Good toea·
tiont Include along the dam and on
the 1111 llda.ollha lakejuat off ol the
dam.
Caeaar Creak Lake (Warren County)
- Fllh tor crappltl from lht bank In
water I 0 to 20 Ieel deep keeping tht
ball about 8 to 8 foot deep. Uae live
mlnnowa, curly tall jlga, amall opln·
ntra, 1132· to 1118• ounot tube jlgt, or
noarabou jlga. Succeeolul anglero
ktop the bait movl.ng. It llahlng with 1
minnow. llah under 1 bobber or allp
NORTHWIIIT OHIO
bobber and uH a No.e or 8 lint wire
New London ReHrvolr· (Huron Coun- hook. While b111 are alao biting on
ty) - Slxty·four cllgrtta and olelr • the aame baHa.
frolllng boat angltra are taking well·
IOUTHEAIT OHIO
eye on email 11111 lipped with twlater Tycoon L.akt (Gallla County) - Wtttr
tallt. Shortllnt angltrt have alto ttmperaturt 11 88 degrttl and condl·.
been aucceulul catching amallmouth lion It clear, but water Ia expected to
batt utlng mlnnowa under IIcata; alzt rlH quickly I I e ruull Of a 3·plul•
rona•• trom 8 to tO tnchta. Fllh tht Inch rainfall 1111 wttktnd. Fllhlng 11
touthtaat comer. Some action htl ••oalltnt lor ortpplta II to 12 lnchoa
alao baan reported at Willard Rtitr· long whtn uolng mlnnowa and twlater
voir tnd Norwtlk RtHrvolrt t • 2 and 11111. chartrtuH or pearl In color and
3.
1/32 to 118 ounce In alze. II llohlng
"Ptuldlng RtHrvolr (Ptuldlng County) with mlrinowa. flah at 2 to 10 loot
- Fifty-two ctegrtta tnd oltar • Stug· dtptha end ute a alow rat~tvt. Beat
eye art baing taken from wave· crappie artaa are around aubmerged
Wtlhtd ahortllnoa In the early morn- bruah pilot and atick·upo. Anglero are
Ing. Jlge call Into 5 tolO IHt of wtttr alto reporting a few oatchtl of batia
throughout the lake when ualng buzz
produce lht moat llah.
Foatorla RtHrvOirt No. 2 and No. 8 balta.
(Hengock County) Slkly·llvt Piedmont Lakt (Belmont County) degrua and clear • Crapplta are Walfr temP&lt;trature It 80 degreeo.
btlng taken from both trtaa during Flohlng lor largomouth and omall·
lha dlly. Flah wax wormt 7 fHI down mouth ball Ia u.:.uent. Floh are
tlong South Olke at No. 2, while red
lnllne lplnnera wO&lt;k bttt off the point
ntlr the tower at No. e.

•

\

mlnnowa.

·

Lake Logtn (Hocking County) But are being caught along the
edg11 on Ra~alaa and ru~btr wormt.
Crapplet are hilling minnow• flahed
around lht ahore near tht atructurea.
Flahlng activity hal dtollntd tt 1
reauit of the ,recent weather condl·
Ilona.
LAKE ERIE
Waalern Baoln - Lakt Erie water
temperature It 51 degraal oH Toledo
and 45 dtgretl off Cltvtlana. Flahlng
conllnuea to bt tabulout on Wttttrn
Baeln Lake Erla aa ·long 11 weather
conditlona permit. Action tlowed a bit
over the wttkend with a cold front.
Prior lo lht wtikend, pro and amateur angltra In lhl PWT tournament
.wore In awe of the large numbtra 01
huge llah taken and tournament
recorda broken. Tourney angleraland·
ed 348 walleye that weighed over 10
poundo. tully topping the provloua
racord of 35 llah In exoau 01 10
pounda 111 two yeara ago, alto on
Lake Erla. Prot ultd trolling ttch·
nlquea.
Moat anglera art catching walleye In
tht 18· to 18·1nch range wllh aomt
larger flah end tome llmh catchtt
repMed. Some angltra 111 vtrtlcal
jigging ualng ltadhetd Jlga lipped wllh
mlnnowa and blade b.llta whllt othtlt
are ualng trolling mtthodtt. Trolltrt
art taking tht largealllth. The prime
locatlona have bten Maumee Bay,
Sandulky Boy, oH Cavia StaN, and
the Wtattm .Batln RHf Compltk.
However, many female wtlltyt have
now opawned and are moving awty
from reefa. The legal bag limit for
walleye at Lake Erie and Ita lrlbularlll
11 lour per engler per day during
March ana April.
Perch · action It axcellent, ••P&lt;tclally
oH tho Marblehead UghthouH with
II mila of large perch ot 9 to 13 lnchn
being taken. The yellow perch bag
limit remalna at 30 perCh per angler
per day. Smallmouth ball angltrt art
alto doing well In the lalanda 11111.

ADrll.

The apring perd\ aOtiori II alto Underwtly
and II tMCIIIInt. The hOI IPOil are oil the
MlltllthHcl Peninsula. tiPICIII))I oft tht
Marblehtael Li{lhthoutt, with II~ pen:h In ,
lht In the a- to 13-lnoh range bllng taken.
Tht yellow perch bag limit remains at 30

PlfOI\ per angltr per Clay. Smellmoulll ban
angllra are aiiO dolllg wtll In tnt lallndl
arua. Tha legal limit for amallmouth ban II

flve fllh per angler with a minimum length
requirement of Ill lnohtt.
Weatem lllaln Wllllyt Struma
·
The Maumet Rlvtr It 58 aegrua and lilt
water level Ia nolmal and mu&lt;Rty. The liming
· Ia right for ·angltlra to catch a miMic! ball Ol
botn walleye ancl while ball on lhe
Maumet. Anglera ara taking an ocoaalonal •
walleye In tht 18· to22·1noh range ullng 1/8· 1
114 ounce Jlga In chartrauae, flortacent
orange, and pink. Beat area Ia lrom Fort ·
Mllga uplitream through tht 475 Bridge. •
Anglera ara alao taking good numbara of ,
whfte ball ualng ahlnert ti81ow bobbera. • . •
The Sanduaky River Ia 58 clegreea and the ~
watella high and muddy, but receding. Tht .
waltaye fla~ery Ia waning b11t tht number or·
white basa btlng caughl Ia lncraaalng. Fur· ·
ther updltea on botfi Maumu ana San·
duaky rivera walleye flahlng dan aiiO bt
obtained by vlahlng the Olvfalon of Wlldlllt
wabalta at www.dnr.atate.oh.uiii'WIIdlllalllah·
lng and click on Flahlng Raporta.
Central luln ltHihlld ltrumt
Peak runs are winding down, but some big
lith In the 10· to t S-pound ra~ are btlng
lancltd when slrtam condltlont art rlghf. '
Streama have coma down from recent hlgh ·
flows anel .,. a•naraiiY. moderate and
atalned. Slreame ke Mill, Aroola, and Palna
creeks art relatively clear, but rain or anow
·may muddy condition• locally. Flah can ba
.found throughOut the main rlverw and trlbU:
tar1ee, but wiH ba oonoentrattd In the lower
portion• or the crtekt •• thty aet reacly to
migrate back cut to tht lake. Slrtam ltttl·
htad anglart UH apewn ~·· llaa &amp; mtQ·
goll, mlnnowaJ or fUn auch 11 woolly bug: ·
gart, welghtta nympht, 1QQ patttml and
atreamerw thai lmflalt ahlntrt.
•
Anglert ahculd note lilt bag limit change t6
two altelhead trout and aalmon In the aggrt·
gate on Maroh 1~L that will btoome vtlld
from Sept. 1 lhrouil" May IS.

REMINDER
Middleport VIllage Residents
The legal limit Ia amalllea per engler
with a minimum ienglh requirement of
141nohn

DEADLINE FOR
VILLAGE INCOME TAX
April 30, 2002 ·

OHIO AIVIA
Hamilton, Clermont, Brown and
Adame countlea- Out to the extend·
td period ot rain the Ohio River along
Hamilton, Clermont, Brown and
Adam• oounil11 I~ high and. muddy.
Monroe County- Flahing In the Han·
nlbal Pool wu good juat btlort the
recent ralna with whitt ball and
atrlped ball btlng otughl on min·
nowa. Saugeyt wart hiHing Jlga tnd
mlnnowa flahtd on the bollom. Flah·
lng wtl tucOtllful In thl biiClkwatar
arttt lor orapplat when ualng min·
nowa tor ball. At thlt lime, the riVtr It
llttdlly rltlng with muddy conditlona
and awiH current•.
Jefftraon County - Smallmouth bua
art being taken Juat below the New
Cumberland lock and dam on the
Ohio aide. Suoca11ful angltrt art
uelng mtnnowa or whitt twitter talla
and tube jlga. Out to high. walar the
ball are being caught juat 5 to B lett
from ahore. The high and mud!IY condillon of tht river htt 1110 driven tht
amallmoulh Into crttlct where wtler
Ia clearer. Angltrt thould look In
laland Creek and Cro11 Crttk.
11p 01 tht Wttk - A-nt ralna have
made rain gear a mual lor lht llohtr·
man. A good rain tult will nOt only pro·
teet you from toaklng ralna, bul will
alto prottct you from cold wlnda.
When chooalng rain g11r. lilY tway
from b~ght oolort. If you can Ht lht
flah, they can- you. Choolt a color
thai wiN blend In whh your aurround·
lnga.

For

r ,H

1\ I I

rII Ul S

Life For Home For Auto
For... Ever.

'

a

can help you protect the thlnga you value mOtt. 4nd, we'll be
when you nlld ua. For mora Information ·
Call me ... Stop by... -11'1 your cholcel

C

. Nitltt.....
ihlllranct

a

Flnanclttl S.rvlcaa

-

........'*

·CHECK CASHING &amp; LOAN
211 UP!*IIvw IN.
Oalllpolll,•,, Mile IOIItll "'

lhllllftrMJtt

448-2404
.._~-

uo- et nn• •

.......
•tt~

I

Sunroof, Auto ·w/ CMII'Cirlw lo lriOIIon
CD Player, Remole byleH ently,
Powtr wlnclowl, rnlnot'I.Aioolll.

_,vo~,

'

PON'TIAC

EXCITEMENT MAlJEAS

Z04 w. 2lld ltrttt
l'omlroy, Ohio
112-0411

.

WHAT'I THIIt - Teele Maynard
founchn old-fashioned IYfOecope
flsclnatlna. The olaselc toy was
just one of many on display at the
Yesteryear presentation. A stereoscope, juml)lna jack end severe I
windup toys were like rellca to this
aener!ltlon of hi&amp;Mech kids, but
once they flaured out how they
worlled and what they did, the
toys were lots of fun . Samanthle
Baker and Heather Brooks are
also pictured. (Brien J. Reed)

Back to the
00 -0
'

Yesteryear gives a glimpse
of it used to be done
BY lilliAN

. DEAR HAD ENOUGH:

month-old baby girl.
My 76-year-old grandma
(my daughter's _Breat-grand·
mother) helps us trequendy by
baby sitting, but doesn't like
being stuck Indoors for hours 111
Q time. My mother just told me
q,at Grandma Is buying an
iilfant car seat so that she can
drive the baby around town.
Abby, the thought of my
grandma behind the wheel
makes me uncomfortable. I
know I must say something, bul
she is one headstrong lady and
won'llike whlll she's hearing.
The bond between my
daughter and her great·grandma
i$ wonderful, so another sitter Is
out of the question. What is the
best approach to aU of this,
AbbyTPiwe respond quickly.

~ PROTEC11VE NEW
PAD, SOMEWHERE IN
CALIFORNIA .
.: DEAR NEW DAD:

Seventy-six isn't necessarily
9VCII' the hill. However, if you
have any doubts about your
irandmother's ability to drive
iafely with your child in q,e car,
you MUST assert your parental
~pollllibility and protect your
llhlld. There is no way to llUgar·
Coat it.
. .

ABBY:

Please

your rcadm that the
American Association of
Poison Control Centers hal
tecendy launched a new nation·
aJ toll•free telephone hotline for
poiBon·emergencies 24 hours a
day, BeVen days a week- 1800-222-1222.
· The poison center can llllJwer
question&amp; about household
Products; chem.ialli at work or
In the environment, druga (Jnscriptions, over-the-Counter,
hertil1, illellll or animal IMII·
cine~), snake bita, tpider bitet.
~and mushrooriJI.
.
Mole than 70 pM:ent of poi·
~ are preventable.
can alto call the hotline
or pOiJon prevention information and for lllicUn to poat the
new hot1ine number rn their
bomrs. Having the poiJon
tmaJenCY . Jlllllba' hluJdy can
11ve a fife. - LINDA 8.
KALIN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF POISON

J,er doughier Jeanne Ph/Uips
1hart the pseudonym Abigail
J&amp;n8Urtll.

•

.

•

RIID

RADBURY - For boys and girls

accustomed to 21st-century computers, · DVD players, and ·
microwave ovens, the lifestyles of
·
their historical counterpans may .
seem like a lesson in ancient history.

NIA

You're not wrong. I don't know
how many of lhese wedding
celebrations you have hosted
for your brother, but at this
point I tJti!1k you should be a
p l l ,at THEIR wedding ban·
quct. And tell your brother 1

J.

BREEOOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

IN NORTHERN CALIFOR·

for Jharin&amp; this important informalion.Paullne Philllpl and

I

No DVD players?
No microwave ovens?
What's a kid to do?

DEAR ABBY: During the
past SO years, my handsome
and loving 83-year-old brother
has been rnurried and divorced
eight times - maybe more.
Between murriuges he has lived
with a number of women off
and on.
Now he has made yet another
conquest. At\er knowing u
woman in her 70s for only three
weeks, th~y tied the knot. I
don't know how It's possible to
fall in love that fast; 1 guess
some people do. However, now
my brother wants me to meet
his "bride" and prepare a fancy
dinner in their honor.
1 have flady refused. ·I have
no desire to meet another of his
brides and make a big to-do
about it. What do r,ou . think,
Abby? Am I wrong I I wn 84
and can't take_ any more of this
nonsense.- HAD ENOUGH

CONrllOLCENTEIIS
DEAR LINDA: Thank you

U..OCClNOTIu.-Cifdlltl . .
/

· Here comes
the bride' is
:old ~ainfor
groom~ sister

inform

llllllll,llen.lllllcl

OHIO VALLEY

ADVICE

; DEAR

scAsus

J

Abby

DEAR ABBY: I am a new
father to my ·precious 13·

be charged a $25.00 Late Filing Fee
.
NO EXCEPTIONS
I I

Dear ·

~dso.

•.

Any returns flied after this date will

lr~ S U i : 1\ I J I

lund• Aptl 21. :aoo:a

wam

?(pi Ouli till!Paylllyi

NORTHIAIT OHIO

Bertin Lake (Mahonlng County) CrtppiH In lilt 7 to. t Inch rtngt art
btlng caught off the Btdtll Rotd
Brldgta and off Berlin Station Road. A
few whitt baaa art btlng cauaht here
on mlnnowa tithed In ahallow wttar.
Mallonlng · Atvtr (Stark County) Anglera hera art catcntng 10m1 Whitt
bill.
Ttppan L.akll (Jtfftreon County) Crippltla art being taUfl hlrt on
mlnnowt flailed In brually trtlt
whtrt lht wtllr II 5 to 10 fHI dHp.
Moll of lht OIIIPPIM art of dtotnl
lizt. well over tht nine Inch limit for
crippltla on IIIII llka.
.
Walborn AaNrvolr (Stark County) Filllarrnen ara picKing up .eomt crapo
plat, 7 to II lnclln In length.
P)lmatuntng'L.alct (AahiiiiWI County)
- Wtlkiya ftahlng hao bHn opotly
but a r-nt tournament lumtd ~P

avartglng 151nchaa In length and tre
being caught on lube ttylejlge. Saug·
eye flehlng Ia fair with 10· to 15·1noh
flah baing CIUQhl on jlga. Catllah are
hitting liver and out baltt (auch 11
ohubt). Crappie flahlng 11 good with
10· to 14·1noh flah being caught on

PllpC1

•

•

COI.UMIIUS (AP) - Mete II the WMidy
Lakt ErilllllllnQ 1111011 ~ by ... OMlion of Wildlill of 1111
~ of
Nlltutal Reloure~~: .
·
Wltltm lluln
The Lllkt Eril
temP~tature II 50
C!eg/elt oil Toledo and 4S diQtMI oil
CliYIIand. Hlgll windl .,. tlCf*)ted .
Lake Erie the next few dllya, whlcll mer ·
hamper flailing acdvlty. Howtver, flahlnll ,
continuea 10 lit fabu!OO• when wtnc1 ana
· wtWI condltlona art fawrable.
Anallll are catching wtllaye In 1111 11- to
f8;jnch range With tome larger lllh and
tome limit catq~~ta reported. some angtera
are vertical jigging ualng laadhlld -Pal
IIODid with m nnoWt and blade balta while .
oh!a are utlng trolll'l!l mathodl. Trolllrl
... taking tnt 11111111 flih. The prime loolllont have bHn 'MaumM lily, SlnduliiY '
lllv. oil 011'111 111-. ""' Mkldll ttllnd,
-lind Wettam Balin rHfl. Howlvtr, many
femllt Wlllflya have ,_ .,awned and are
movlna IWIY from rHfl. The legal baQ lmlt
lor wtlllya lor L.ake Eril and Ita lilbutaril4 II
four per angler per dly during Mln:h and

anglers weren't doing . well in onl! ing ofF the Bast Islands, Weighed in at
spot, all they had to do was move to 9.5 pounds. The VYOrld ~rd is I 0
another location.
pounds, 14 ounces.
· ·
Ohio perch anglers caught 5.5 milThe daily bag limit for smallmouth
lion yellow perch last year, similar to bass is five fish with a minimum size
the 2000 harvest. Catch rates peaked length of 14 inches.
during the traditional peak month of · STEEIHBAD TROUT
September at four fish per angler
Yet another popular span fish has
hour. Ohio's o:bily bag limit for yellow entered the sc:ene on Lake Erie in
perch remains at 30 fish per angler.
recent years - steelhead trout. Central
SMALLMOUTH BASS
basin anglers can e.itpect the same
Bass anglers can anticipate reeling great fishing they experienced last
in many of Erie's Junker smallmouth year - a steelhead bonanza on the
bass during 2002.'JYpical catches will open lake during August and Septemmeasure in the 14- to 18-inch range ber. Five-fish limits were the norm
and weig~ 1. 5 to 3.5 pounds. Anglers when wave . conditions were favorcan expect fishing to be g(&gt;od at many able.
of the traditional smallmouth haunts,
"The division's ste~ead stocking
especially in the spring and fall.
program adds yet another dimension
Smallmouth bass catches will to Lake Erie angling- one that lures
include fish from spawns of 1995, anglers from near and far as word
1996, 1997 and 1998 now ranging in spreads about this popubr fishery,"
size from 14 to 18 inches. Hot spots said Budzik.
should include the Bass and Kelleys
These feisty fish provide .some topislands areas, Western Basin reef com- action angling on the open lake in the
plex, Sandusky Bay, Ruggles Reef and summer with · continued fishing
harbor breakwalls from qeveland to opportunities on central basin streams
Conneaut.
from fall through spring as steelhead
Successful spawns over the past move into spawning tributaries; ..
decade have provided excellent smallThe Division ofWildlife will mainmouth bass fishing opportunities tain this popular fishery in future
across Lake Erie. Anglers target small~ . years by releasing approximately
mouth from spring through fall with 400,000 steelhead trout this spring
the best action occurring in May,June into the Vermilion, Rocky, Chagrin
and September.
and Grand rivers and Conneaut
In 2001 , angler pressure remained Creek.
high with anglers spending over
Trout are being caught on the open
400,00() angler hours in pursuit of lake by anglers targeting steelhead as
smallmouth bass. Creel interviews well as those trolling for walleye.
reveal that most bass. anglers practice Anglers should look.JQr peak steelcatch and release with six out of seven head action on the waf~rs off Lorain
smallmouth bass released after being to Conneaut throughout July and
landed. ·Ongoing research coupled August. Catches should measure 19 to
with recent regulations changes 28 inches with a total harvest similar
should help ensure that the lake's to the previous year of 28,000 steelsmallmouth fishery continues to be head trout. Many charter guides now
among the best anywhere in the offer steelhead charters as an alternacountry.
tive to traditional wall~ charters.
The state record smallmouth bass,
For a recorded Lake Erie fishing
taken in june 1993 by an angler fish- report, calll -888 HOOK FISH . .

OHIO fiSHING REPORT
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -The wttk·
ty tithing report provided by lht Dlvl·
alon of Wildlife of the Ohio Oepart·
ment of Natural Rtlourota.

Like Erie
Flshln1 Reports

In the Yesteryear program. members of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Progrum escort Meigs County flflh ·
graders through u lesson In the past. Hunds-on cruft pro·
jects, n video presentation about Meigs County's hrsto· ·
ry, u colorful dlspluy of tum-of-the-century toys und lhe
·experiences of many older RSVP voluntccn make his·
tor&gt;; come alive for the students.
·
'lt's reully not Just a lesson In history,. It's a Jesson in
Mcias County filstory," sold Dluna Coates; RSVP
Coordinator for the Melgs County Council on Aging.
"From stories about one-room' schoolhouses and prfvles,
to the skil ls our volunteers can shnre, the volunteers give
of themselves."
Volunteers will contribute over 4!50 hours of time just
ut the site - the fellowship hull ut the Bradford Church
of Christ - not to mention the many hours of prepuru·
tlon thut other volunteers spend maklns uctivlty kits und
preparing food .
·
.
Besides the contributions of RSVP workers, Trinity
Church members prepare food for the volunteers und
Chester-Shade Historical Associution pays the chll·
drcn's lees und the cost of bus transportation.
This Is the 17th year lhat RSVP hus helped recreate
the past for local students, and CoateH estimates that
over 3,500 kids have gone through the program.
"It's unenjoyable prOJ!ram becauHe It affords OPP,Ortu·
nitics und experiences the student~ haven't had, ' suld
Eastern Elemenlltry Teacher Cind~ Chadwell. "Many of
these students, even though they re In the fifth grade,
...'
haven't worked in lhe kitchen u1 home, or had muny of
the other practical experiences taught here."
Allee Wolfe, an RSVP volunteer with the program,
agreed that many studenu arc missing out on 8kllls
•
which not only have an historic significance, but 11 prac·
tical
application, us well.
'
'
"If
these Btudentsget that e,.;peri~nce ut ull, they get It_
•
from their grandparents," Wolfe satd,
l
Besides the history lesson und practi~ul skills learned,
there's unolher reward for studentN who participate In
HILPINQ HAND - Helen Bodlmer, a volunteer with the RSVP program, rolled up the Yestc:ryeur. After the program has finished, studentH'
sleevee of her period costume to show Teele Maynard how to operate a rolllne pin and eHHUYH about their experience will be judged und awards
·cut nOOdles from dou&amp;Jl. (Brian J. Reed)
presented.

,

.

.
. .'

Yc&gt;u can qfford to go to college
While the news continually reports
110rieJ reaardinJ larae percentaae
increue• rn college tuftion, I am here
to tell you that colleae is.affordablt.
There are many way• to finance a
college education. Let's e"amlne the
financial aid that may be available
whet.her'you are a hiJh school 1tu·
dent or a 40-year-old non-traditional student.
Firat, tO apply for any kind of state,
federal. or rn~llouse financial ald. the
prospective student mu1t co~ete
the 'Free Application for F ral
Student Aid alto known as tbe
FAPSA.
The FAPSA contains -uch infor·
. mation at family demoJI'aphic• and
income, and is used to determine the
family' 1 ability ro meet or cover the
student'• totAl cost of educalion.
Financial aid is awarded based upon
the review of the: information· in· the
PAPSA and the financial nted of the
ltudent.
Financial aid is awarded to eli Jible
· students regardl~1 of race, color,
j!ender, relig~ diJBbllity, aJe, ~·
ttal statui, nauonal or ethnic ong~n,
or socioeconomic status. StudentJ

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VIEW
are encouraged to complete the
application as early as possl ble due
to the limited amountt of fundina for
certain pro&amp;ral111 that are awarde&lt;l on
a first come, first rrerve buls.
Returning studenu mus1 al110 submit a renewal PAPSA each year to
maintain atKVor receive additional
aid. Copies of the PAFSA applica~
tinn form are available in the hip
~ehool JUidance coun.telor'• office,
the financial aid office of your local
community colleae. local libraries,
or the Department of Education's
websire wwwJaf88.ed.gov , · After
completing the PAPS A, 1tudents will
be-notified of-the type and estimated

amount of the financial aid tha.t will
be awarded to the student.
There are three · main type5· of
financial aid that can be awarded to
•tudentfl; Grant8, scholarships and
loans.
GrantN and !1Cholanhip8 do not
normally have to be paid back by the
ttudent. Oe~~rally, most can be u8ed
to cover, tuttJon. fees, books and liv·
in&amp; expenr~es, although 110me have
limitattons. Low interest 81udent
loans, on the other hand, are avail·
able to the studenlt · to cover any
additional expense• the student may
incur. While the 8tudent is enrolled
in colleae. paymcnh are not required
on the loans, but paymenu of prlnci·
ple and intere1t beain appro,.;imately
si,.; months after Jlilduauon.
Most institutions also have specif·
ic tcholarshipt available. These
scholar1hlpt are availabl(\ to studcnu
b~ upon information contained in
the 1tudCnt's completed PAFSA, aca·
demic qualifications. athletic ability,
the program of study the !lludent
choou• or the high IIChool from
which the student graduated.
It is ir11portant for the prO!lpective

student to work closely with the
institution's financial uid department ·
to assure that they arc being consid·
ered for all available scholarships.
Students can also seek outside
seholarships that muy be available.
These include !ICholarships from the
student or parent '• employer. local
busineu and industry, Rotary 'clubiJ
and other civic nrganizatlons. Public
libraries. Internet sitcN and local
civic llr&amp;anizatiOnH are areat
re110urces for information about the
scholanhips ·lncludins where and
when to apply. Many banks also
offer ttudent• loaM -to qualified
applicants.
AI you can see, there i1 a subiJ14n·
tial amount of financial auistance
available to Jtudenll! intere1ted in
attending colleae. ContucJ the
Financial Aid office of your local
~mmunity , colleae today to learn
more about how to put colleae In
your future .
(Luanne Rau BowiTUln 11 vice

preNitkm for financial aNi admin/J.
1ra1ive aflaln at Rio Grandt
Communlly C.ollese. P.O.
Hlo Grandt, Ohio 45674,

�.

'

•
Pomeror'• Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Polrit PIHHnt, WV

•

Jwdrq cm.• Jentirw

SPECIAL SPEAKER- Sen. Otck Schafrath. center. spoke dur·
lng the men's health fatr at the University of Rto Grande. He
. addressed children regardln&amp; good eetlng h bits ond ph~ lcal
fitness. Schafrath Is pictured with Debbie Barcus. Diabetes
Pathway Coordinator at Holzer Clinic. and Jonet Johnson. Gal .
lla County Health Department Cardiovascular Coalition: (Sub
mltted)

""Mr. 1nd M11. Mlkt Zttdyk

Mr. a.,d M.... C111 Cl1l1nd

Cleland-Stewart wedding

Guess-Zeedyk wedding
SHERWOOD - Michele
Guess ofCindnnati and Mike
Zeedyk of Hicksville were
....i.mlt~d In m~rriage on March
t6, 2002 at · the St. John
Luthomn Church in Shcr"
Wood.
The bride is the daughter of
Mkh~cl E. Bnd Mudn Guess
of Thpp~rs Plains. Sh~ i! n
1994 graduat~ of Em~rrt
High School . nnd n 19%
graduate of The Ohio State
Uniwrsity Agricultural Technical lmtltute.
The groolll is the son of
Roger, Jr. and Loil Zeedyk of
Hicksville. He is a 1994 graduate of flairview High School
and a 1996 graduate of
OSU/ ATI. He i; employed
by H i.:ksvillo Grain CtllllJlA•
~ ~y.

Rtlbert 0. Eble tlfficiated at
the double-ring ceremony.
Myra Guilford, orgilnbt, and
Soloist Charlotte l'lble provid·
ed music.
The s~nctuary wa1 deeorat•
ed With irldeacent pew bOWl
and greenery on the railing
· near the llltar. An angel llltar
uran1ument with lavender
rom and baby'• breath, with
two red rote! repretentlngthe
couplea' mothert, completed
the decor.
The bride waa given away
In marriage by her parenu.
The bride wore a white
aatln, off· the· ahoulder . short
tleev~ A-line gown with a
beaded bodice and 1kjrt with
a button-down ba.:k. She
wore a gold bracelet, a gill:
.!ram h~r grandmother, and a
pinkie ring and m1e pin from
her ocher gra!l&lt;lntather. A
gold chain and poarl ne.:kbce,
-\1 gift from the groom, and
pearl earrinl!ll completed her
aCCCIIOrieJ.
She cmied a bouquet of
lavender rows, baby'• breath,
and greenefy, trimmed with
lavender and lrldetunt ribbon.
Mell~ta Ford of Reed1ville
served a• matron of honor.
Sutan Zeedyk of Ncy, the
groom'• cou.tin,
MeliJta
Wood of Columbu1, the
bride's litter, Mendy Clue11 of
Tupper1 Pbinl, 1l1ter of the

bride, and Laura Zcedyk o(
Hickiville, lister o( the
groom, served as bridesmaids.
Samanth• Wood of Columbu!, the niece of the . bride,
served M flower girl.
The bride's attendant! Wore
fltlor-length lilac drease1 with
button! matching the bride's
dress, a wrap and matching
!hoes. They wore silver neck·
laces with matching earrings,
a gifi frolll the bride and
groom. Each carried an arm
bouquet o( three lavender
rose!, baby's breath and green·
ery, tied with irlde!cent bows.
Jon Timbrook of Bryan
1ervcd fia belt man. Russell
Zeedyk of New, cousin of the
groom, Roger Zeedyk IV of
Hitk&amp;ville, brother o( the
groom, Scott Mavis of Edger·
tun, and Adam Zeedyk of
Hicksville, brother of the
groom, served u groom1men.
Brad Keirns o( Millfield,
cousin of the bride and Mark
Gueu of Thppen Plaint,
btother of the bride, 1erved at
ushera, Preston Zeedyk,
nephew of the groom, wa1 th~
ring bearer.
The gentlemen wore black
tuxedoe• with milt, iliac vetu
with matching bowtiel and
white ahirts with gold button
coven..
The bride'• mother wore a
tn-length eggplant clreaa with
a !liver locket necldaee and
matching watch and taupe
thoet. The groom'• mother
wore a floor-length eggplant
dreu with jacket and matching 1hoe1. She wore a 1ilver
necklace and matching ear·
rinl!ll·
'lncy Zecdyk, lister-In-law
of the groom, regimred

. Tart M. QrueMr •nd Jertmy T. John ton

Grneser-]ohnson engagement

LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Cas&amp; Janet Smith of Middleport
Cleland and Stephanie Stew- and Larry and Fona Smith of
art were united in marriage Middleport.
on March 26, 2002 at Little
Attending the wedtlj.ng
Chapd of the Plowers in Las were Hank and Kathy CleVcgas, Nev.
. ·land, Steve and Kelly Stewart,
The groom is the son of Hank and Angie Cleland,
Hank and Kathy Cleland of Trenton Cleland and Heather
Racine, and the bride the Schey, Scott and Carrie Wickdaught~r of Steve and Kelly line, and Todd and· Renee
Stewart of Masotl, W.Va . The l'owell.
groom J• . the grandson of
The gronm is a 2001 gradLeona Cleland of Pomeroy
..,
anti Juanita Roush o( New uate of the University ofFJo
Haven, W.Va. and the late Grande and is a teacher at
Henry Cleland and Donald Southern Elementary School.
Roush.
The bride is ~ 2001 graduate
The bride is. the grand- of Ohio Univeriity and is
tlaughter of Roll Jr. and assistant administrator of
Trudie Stewart of Pomeroy Wyngate of GaiUpoU,.
and the late Wanda Stewart,
The col)ple lives in Racine.

POMEROY
Tara
Marie Grueser and Jeremy
Todd Johnson together with
their parents announce their
engagement and approaching
marriage.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Danny and Debbie Grueser of Pomeroy and
the granddaughter of Bill and
Doris Grueser, and Renee
and the late William Stone.
She Is a 1997 graduate of
Meigs High School and a
2001 graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor's
degree in h~arlng and speech
sdencei. She Ia currently pursuing her master's degree in
speech-language pathology. at
Ohio University.

. Her fiance is the son ofJanice and John Johnson of
· Reynoldsburg and the grandson of the late Monroe at)d
Gayle Johnson, and WilliaJll
and Midge Bandy. He is a
1992 graduate of Reynoldsburg High School and is currendy pursuing his bachelor's
degree in early childhood
education from Ohio Univer-.

si~he

ceremony will take
place on july 27 atThe Helen

Mauck Galbreath Memorial
Chapel in Athens. Music will
begin at 2 p.m. A reception
will follow the wedding at the
John C. Baker Center Bal)room in Athen.s.

Students eam URG scholarships.
RIO GRANDE
Hard work and commit"
ment
have
earned
two Gallla Coun·
ty
ltUdenn the
Atwood
Award for
Sxcel~

._

lence
scholar~

ships at the Univetsity
of Rio Grande/Rio

Community Colle.sc.
The
four-year
fulltuition
acholarthit1,

institution.
Traci Eddy, a River
Valley High School
senio~, is tlie daughter
of Wayne and Laura
Eddy. She plana to
major in communicawhteh II tions.
based on
Clint Wiseman a
academic Symmes Valley High
perfor- .
School senior, h the
mance, II son of Richard and
Wl~tm•n
named in Debbie Wiseman. He
honor of plans to major ·in
Nehemiah and Permelia !llechanical engineerAtwood, founders of the mg.

McLAin- Tucker engagement

Bond-Ounlap engagement

MASON . Heather
Lorena McLain and Jeremy
Paul Tucker together with
t.heir parents announce their
, ~ngagement and approaching
. j;narriage.
, . The bride-elect, a 1997
:graduate of Meigs high
· School, is the daughter of Jim
''and Melinda McLain of
-Pomeroy.
- She is the granddaughter of
'Mildred and the late Norman
'Humphreys of Pomeroy and

Charles and the late Joan
Mclain of Racine.
Her fiance is the son of
Jerry Tucker of Mason and
Lisa · Wood of Letart, W.Va.,
and the grandson of Paul and
Cecile VanMatre · Letart,
W.Va., Ray Sr. and Virginia
Tucker of Mason. He is a
1996 graduate of Wahama
High School.
The wedding will be on
May 25 with a reception to
follow.

OAK HILL _: Mr. and Mrs.
William Bond of Oak Hill and
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Roben Dunlap of
Patriot would like 10 announce
the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children
Heather C. Bond and jason D.
Dunlap.
Heather is a 1991 graduate of
Southwestern High School and
a 1997 graduate of the University of Rio Grande. She is currently employed by the Jackson
County Health Department as

••
R&amp;ZczbOk

_Rockport

•

1ng hoe

you/

• · RIO GRANDE - 'fhe around the stronghold, the toward Corinth, leaving a rear
' rears 2001-05 are the 140th Confederates
repeatedly guard which deterred Grant
· ~nnivenary years of the great- charged the federal position a and the federal army from
est struggle ever to take place total of 11 times, mounting pursuing with Gen. W.T.
on the North Ameri(an con- terrible losses each attempt. Sherman.
· -;"tinent ....:. the Civil War. None of these attacks sueIn late April and May, the
; Recent resurgen(e and inter- ceeded. until Confederate · federals crept toward Corinth
! est in Civil War history is Gen. Daniel Ruggles brought and seized it, a.nd also Mem~ being culminated by the reen- up 62 cannon, the . largest phis. From these bases, the
J acting community in portray- artillery concentration until federals pushed on down the
, ing the lnajor batdea that took then seen during the war.
Mississippi and besieged
Vicksburg,
which fell the next
: place during those yean. ·
Under cover of the artillery,
: The major battle of 1861 the Confederate troops swept summer, in July 1863.
• was Manassas and was reen- forward and captured most of
Oiler, as well as other reen: acted last August with more the defenders of the Sunken actors, would like to encourj ~han 12,000 reenacton com- Road. With the arrival of age public interest in event!
: memorating the battle. April 6 . Buell's army by dawn on April over the next few anniversary
: and 7 of 1862 was the battle 7, 1862, the combined federal years and would be happy to
: of Shiloh, Tenn., and waa forces now numbered wme speak with school groups or
: reenacted earlier thla ·month 55,000 men. Johnston had anyone interested in the histo: with 8,000 reenacton com- been killed on April 6 and ry of the war or the modern
j J'nemorating the battle.
wat replaced by Gen. P.T. hobby of Civil War reenacting.
; James Oiler, local. reenactor, Beauregard, who was unaware
During the activities of the
: cook . place in this historic that Buell'• army joined weekend, the CSS Hunley
• commemoration of the !40th Grant. Beauregard . attacked was on display, the model used
: anniversary of the battle. tater the morning of April 7 and at in the movie, and also the
: this year, he will be reenaciing first was succeasful, but the famous coin of Lt. George
.~ -the batde of Antietam, Md., federals held · firm at the Dixon, commander of the
the single wont day of the "Bloody Pond." Beauregard, Hunley, who was wounded at
war, during September. Octo- low on ammunition and food Shiloh, was also on display.
ber will be the [40th reenact- and with 15,000 of his men
The Hunley was just
Jtlent of Perryville, Ky., and in . killed, withdrew his troops recently recovered from the
2003, reenacton will do Get- ·
'7sburg's 140th.
.
.
Bridal
• List your pre erenccs
• During 2004-05, reenactors
• No aueaowork for
commemorate Cold
friend• &amp; family
Harbor, Spotsylvania, Petera• You teceivc. your
1Jurg and Appomattox, Va.,
favorite lhinp.
where the surrender of
D..obert E. Lee took pbce on
A.pril 9, 1865.
'
Synop11J of Shiloh
: During the winter of 186162, federal forces under U.S.
Grant were pushing southWard from St. Louia, capturing
liort Henry and Fort Donel.son on the Tenne11ee and
Cumberland. riven. This
forced Confederate Gen.
Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.
'1A.Ibert S. Johnston to abandon
seuthern ~ntucky, and much
qf western and middle Tenqenee.
Did you ever wonder why your eye doctor puts
:Grant's army of .tome
drops In your eyes? Most people have. Sometimes,
.jp,OOO moved along the Tenthe drops simply help with a pressure
~tessee River co a place called
measurement. Other times. they're used to dilate
Pittsburg Landing, 22 rnilea
the eyes. But why? A dilation allows a more
nonh of Corinth, Mia: Grant
complete view of the back of the 'eye. the retina. It
W2ited there for Gen. BueU co
does this by causing the pupil, the black space In
j~in him, coming from
tile center of your Iris. to become larger. Thus. a
.Nashville.
wider view Is permitted for the doctor.
: Johnston's
Confederate
Most doctors dilate your eyes when there Is a
:troops, alw . wme 40,000
suspicious symptom or underlying disease. Certain
:tcrong, took the federals by
symptoms. like seeing nashellor sparkles or light,
:C()mplete surprise, rolling over
may be a sign of a tear at the back or the eye. A
· )!nits and pushing them back
dllaUon allows a more peripheral view of the retina.
~ard the Tennessee PJwr.
Diseases, like diabetes, can cause leakage of blood
!Then, along the Sunken
vessels which can best be seen when most all of Ute
~oad, the federals finally
reUna can be seen. Your eye doctor's Orst concern
cttablithed and held a line
Is
your eye health. A dilation helps your doctor
~Jut acoppecl the Southern
preserve your good vision.
.
;advance.
: Confederate troopt knew
Dr. A. Jacklon Balles O.D.
;cJuc they had struck a "Hor224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
lnet't Neat," and named it that.
;R.ather dun seek a way .

Proud to be apart
.of your life.

Dilating the Eyes

Rt.l(lypaa
. Point Plecuanl, wv

304-.,5·787D
Mon•latt.OO-MOSUII 1:00-MO

Subtctlbe IDdly • 446-2342

Don't suner In Silence•.
Contlnenct Is a dlstres8ing and embarrassing condition. Only one·third of those who 8Uft'er from l1100ntlnence
report it to thelr physicians. ~
.VIIIIV 1111111111111111 .
has acontinence
program wteach the incontinence suf(e(et how to control bladder function in an active, non-surgk:al manner.
Don't wait any longer. ..get back 10 living.

For mora

304-815·5250
_ __

_ __ __ _ _

..

Pl{EASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.

.......,.__,_~-.

a registered muw in the Oak
Hill school district.
Jason is a 1995 graduate of
Oak Hill High SchClOl and a
1999. graduate of .Ho&lt;:king
College. l-Ie is .:um·ntly
employed by the Ohio l1ivision ofWikHifc.
The couple 'an• planning a
December 14, 2b02, wl'llding
at their home church. Gallia
Baptist.
They will reside in the Oak
Hill area.

:Local reenactors participate in· Civil War battles

will

A reception wa1 held at the
Knlghu of Columbu1 Hallin
Defiance and the groom's
uncle and aunt, Zane lind
Shelly Zeedyk of Hickav!Ue
hosted a pte-wedding party.
Following a week-long trip
co Gatlinburg and ·Nashville,
Thnn., the couple returned to
their home ac 10625
Brei niger 1\.d., Hic:luvllle.

--

Jaaon D. Dunlep and He1ther c. Bond

Rcl''''l'

.guesu.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hlllther L MoLIIIn 1nd Jer.my P. Tuckll'

~

-..-r-

•• •

••11 • ... ..-

... .

.

...

..

sea floor off the coast of
Charleston. S.C., and all eight
crew along with Dixon's body
were recovered and are being
examined for cause of death
and will recciw a funeral with
full military rites.
State
Sen.
Glenn
McConnell of South Carolina
gave the presentation on the
history of the Hunley and
restoration effort!. More
information on this project is
available online at www.hunley.com . .

Veterans Memorial
Skilled Nursing Center
• 24-Hour Skilled Nursing Services
• Complete Rehabilitative Services
•·Recreational activities lncludl.ng
community outings
• Short-term placement
.••
• Hospice Services
• Medicare, Medicaid,
and Private Pay
Accepted
• James Witherell, M.D., Medical Director

·"Skilled in the Art of Caring in 0:
Home-like Setting"

�~1 •

MktdtlfX)ft • Gllllpol., Ohto• Point Plteunt, wv

•

Elementary honor roll

;UNIVERSITY
Of
RIO
GRANDE
•
••

.

•

:Gra

e

•

••

...
.,- ...."
·Gilley-Morgan engagement
"-"'

McQuaid-Martin tvedding

Hesson-Homer tiJedding
l'tliN I' l'li\ASAN r
tll\l\\111\111~11 "~"' t't~~~ 1-11',.
]&gt;·nmt\•r l'~till' ll~w&gt;n Jnd I k
\\Itt, huth~r 1•f tlw bml~ ;
lt"&lt;'f'h llml ill•~ I lmnt'l' '"""' lkttl-\tnltt Mdh dlld Ih.
llllit&lt;•d 111 tn•nt ., ~~ ,It l\1, ( 'httlhl('h,•r f'&lt;kf,Nnd. 1h•
l&gt;ttdt~-W,·t i'•rk. 1'1•1111 t•k•-. ,,~ 11'\'l't' Dr. A;ll\m l\11nllt'td..
,11\L W.V.t. ~lw '' tlw &lt;IJltj.!IH~r .lmll\\'ll• W1IMt.
1&gt;1 U1·nt¥~ Jlld t•lt,·llh llt''"'n
Hmwt' 11ui 11·•~ l'•tll'' 1 1~1"'
1•f l\•u1t 1'1 1-,t\JHl I k t' tit•• l•" k· 1~11 1 11 h•Jttr \\'•1 )1.111
'·"" nt' 1.11 1.. .1ml Nw\..~1 l'.m·•,·k. Ill.
I lot Ill' I ••I 1kill'\' I. Not tit
lls•&lt;kt W,\, J.wl.. Mtllt•r,
t -......h,t.t . ,,nd tlw l.tt~ . I&lt;~Jtl 11111 k ,,f tht• lw1d~ , tlu~~~
~~~'1'1' "' l ''"" I ·""'' • ~ ,.,f hm1l.. .mt•ttd.mt \\\1' It II Rt,k
Vtl~t\l\,1
\11\\\f, tltWII' I~ \l:l' t~. IIIII
l'lw \Hitdt~tlt \ ~tt'tiiiiiiY ,,.•, ll..hudt•' o~n d 1\.trhJt'J I unl,tl\
p•·tl'lmt"'" h)' l'.tiWf t 'Jrl und~ .lt\\l ·•&lt;ttlt of th~ hid~.
Swt'IWI
whttl' il·tldl\1 w~ddtllll l'OI\1\Itl\tll(lf! \\'~1'1'
'"t """''""' ·h}' tl•rm. A Cdtlll 'tt ~nd K•H~Il 1\..hmlco,
. 111\'ntt~l t.tl "''llfllll 1\t~ iHOf}' ul' ,1\lllt dttd ~ll\1!1\t \tf tltt• brkl~.
tlw ~ '"'''"" mntht·r .tml .. AI•o Olltlttnll wcn- lll'di y &lt;tml
"''' ,.,,,nl ilt.tml\''tt\'111! ufbuth Mmhe\1' 1\..~yn qk\!. l'lml!ll!1111' l•r•d•• .1111 )tl'lll lll w~s r~phcr wus J .'I~ 11(\U~ntl ..
pl~t~•tl .lb&lt;t\'1' th~ ,\1'\' h uf tiw
1\ 1\'C\'(\IIlll\ \\'~~ Cd&lt;'bf~t~d
f!Udln. Slwphol'll hnnks hnld· 111 th e MM 1l11tll UniVCt'!hy ·
1111-1 ft•tn• ut.•rkt·d th ~ hr111t1- Mld- Ohill Vull&lt;')' C:ctllr t· wi~l
nHt)t 1tl tlw ·ll'k· w.1•. Mum· l'.tt~r ttl l( hy { ' huck 1.11·dy 11f'
\,,·,, ~ pt~tvtdl•d by Sct&gt;ll """ l'loMont Vull&lt;')' llmpltt~l cM~r1\,,rh Mtr hJ&lt;'I , n• lllm: jtwk 1111-1 wrvicc. Pot Mlt;oy\Qttl!,
llot'll'' t\ \JXIl phtiiW ; ~tt.l ShNry Miller t~tttl Shh'l~y
Ntt'kry llornor, trump~t . A II~Mtlll, "\llll! llf th~ bride,
v~t't\'ty uf d~•~lc"l 1d~ct\Ot1l ~nd '1\mmy llurAck "l!tl
Wl'l\' pi.t)'l'tt
1\ ~ll~Mi.
l'lt&lt;' hmlt• 11'&gt;1! t•;rortcd by
Tho brid•• l(l'ildltMt•d frtml
l"·r l.ttlwt. 'I ho bml~ Wltl'\' 1111 !'oint 111\•u&gt;.llll llljth School
tv&lt;~ ry Alf\••d AnJlt•ln ~own. untl MM!hfill Uuiwrltty with
lit l' •JU\1 llf!lJIIlO !llliVI\ t~ll- II ll&lt;'I(I'Cl' in !CttHldt\1 y ~tllfCA•
tuml ,, Snlmn" tw~ klim· .111d tltut , doultl&lt;' lll•~oritt~t lu 1\11~·
plt•tMd, drop1wd woist', •utin llsh und Orul Ctlii\IIIUnk"·
hotll(~ with •lmtbl&lt;' Mi tt!''· ti•ms/ l&gt;rlllllll . She •~ •ll' ltN
Th~ b3ck bodk~ r~~lltml l:llli-~li!h lltlll Cllll~het~ II\ Rkh·
!GUll tovrt'l'd bunom to tlw mlmd I kil(lm lli ~h S(·houl.
wnilt. 1'h~ Mlmr J. ur~11 1W~ J••1mil~ r li ttlm n vnltttlt~~ r lor
aklrr ICrc ntt• tl wlth Min 1lw Clt•wlnnd Chnk l'oumlnb•llttl~ nt' II&lt;' Ill lii:lum•d ~ l&lt;'lttt· tt&lt;tn.
catll~dmltraltt .' l ' lt,• hml ~ r.JrThe 1!1'\ttttn ~r,tdt l ~tcd li'OIII
r'lctitVlii'Y Me! Wl'.1(1p•·d With Nitm lliKh s~hool. Mmlinll
nn ht'lt'ioo!ll lt.ttldkcrdncl UniwrHI{y Alt\1 Wt'!l Virl!inlll
f~.m1rin~-t n hnnd· t·rnrhdcd Sdmol of O•t~opnthlc Mcdl·
trllll lll'l·d ,•! ttl .ttd ~ wot·~ 11oor·
um· . II~ 11 dollli-111 l'l'iidcncy
l~ n ~llt i"'riw•nklc ~ow 111 .md 111. l'lltltoloi{Y 111 t.hc Cl~w i 11 1HI

'"""'f.

( llll lt' d IU~l·~.

t;AtUI 10llS Mr.
Aml Mr•. \)~\'\' M Qum.l
ti~\ltp11IU ~1\tHlllll~\'
tit&lt;' 1\\Hfl~~~l' ttf th~tf
llollilhtN Alh~1111 ll..t~ll l!\1
t\1 Mdtthew ' l)tl\' 1\l M~ r­
tln \lf Ch~! l\11'\', Olt m11
11f Mr. JHr)' M~rlln &lt;~I'

11f

lJak I 1111. nil ~u&lt;l Mr\ ,
N~t1,' \'
MHttll
1.1f
Y&lt;llltl~'lllll'tl . The Ct f\' •
111\\11}' t~&gt; lt k t'l••·r Mord1
~. JtH1.l, ~~
JlatriHI\'1'11
UtlltNI
M~thlltlin
t ' hurdl Ill (ltiiiiiHlli~ H
11 ::\tl !11 tltr ~thrn\lllJ\ ,
lht· ~rt~ \1\tlll ~ wa~ tlfti •
cimtl by R~"· Rlehutl
lhrrm . Mu ~k wu provided
by CHh1!.rln11
Shcn~fi\'lll, ur~t~lli&amp;t ~ntl
l&gt;a1dd Stlfn~r. ~ lnj!cr.

Th•• hrldc wnrc a11 A·
frAillc ~ tylo whit~! l!llWII
with l,,t•c 1krvc1, puul1
ami 1.1e1' uu the bottom
,,,. th~ !!OWn ludutlinl! a
mcdlttm min . ·t-IH llou•
quilt WA8 nutlo Of llUfjlll!
and white d \k ro~o! Anti
dmp down purple · to
laVI' IHI ~ r t1ow~r 1. 1-lcr vdl
Wftl 11111\1 ~ llf a ! At! II Clltnb
with white r\J ! I!! 1111d lt
WAI
11\Qdilllll · Jl'tl(!th
haugilig In tlw ba ek. Her

or

her l.k~h lor\ be~ 111 liletlleltMtyiMtt~Satilln, She i~ eutfl'ntl . entplll~ b~ ll..ibi Aid
11hatllltl~)' uf\\li11t 11lNMnt.
Gille~ gt'lldthlwd fttlt\1 l\llt1t
PlNsolll Hil!h Sdmol ,md the
\'Wit Vi~htio State 1\lhc~
· Att~tlemy. 1-k 15 t lltl'\'l\tly
~mplllY\2d With tlw PllHlt
llh.'&lt;t~rttlt l'ttlk~ n~p.~ttntl!nt.

of your life.
Sub~C~rlblllldt~

• ~234Z

~~~t·~·e•t-

ME/111 COUNT'/ FAMILY FUN Fin
Saturday, May 4, 2002 • 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM
Middleport Ch11rch of Christ • Family Life Center

ltoWft
-'!tutl~

fur . th~

Simply by completing a Caregiver aurvey you
Will riOIIVI I frtl IUblcrlptlon to:
Today'• Cereglyer.
a magazine apeolfloally dealgned for family
oareglvera.
Call today and give your thoughta regarding

caregiver needa and receive a '"' aeMglyer
magezlnt eybeorlptlon 11 our thank you.
Contact ua at: 1·800·882·7277
Subaorlptlona are limited.

JJtease come and celebrate the tr11e actlvltle8! .
Fun • Entertainment • lt4!frQthment8
liponi/Jflll hJ tl1r
llolur Mtdkal Ctm4r, 1/olur MtiiJM Clinic, MtitJI Co. Otpa""''"' oflo/J and Jlamll1
Stl'l'lttl, MIIIJI C'o. FumiiJ and Clllldr~n Jllm Council,
. Mllfl Co. 1/talth Otptltrmtnt, MIJJdltfJIIff C'hurch of Cllflll • P11mll1 I)/I Ctnltr,
'
Ohio Start Unl~m/tJ M•ll• Co. ltxftnlloll 0/fkt, ·
011/Q VnJ,m/tJ Colllfl of Olltopalhlt MtdltlniiAritJ 1/IIJIIh Eductltlbn Ctnllr.

"Servleet Rendered On ANon·DI~erlinlnatory Bult"
This proaram is made pos8ible by funds from the Older
• Americun8 Act.

CALL THE MEIGS COUNTY HP.ALTH DIWARTMENT AT
99%-6626 ••oa MORE INFORMATION

www.aaa7.ora

'

Assistance Advocacy Answers on Aging

..-

l!nglish proltssor 4t the
Uttivenity
llf
Rio
dtonde ;11\d
Rio
Gton&lt;le
Commtlllity CoU~III!•
believes it is
a tll!ti!!Mf)'
ttlUtll~ of
bach~ltlt's

tll!gl'l!e &lt;tml~11t ltl&lt;\joting in
li!l)!)!~h htt'tattll'\',
"1 ct~ll)' teadtillg ,md l'l'ad11\jt about th~ r;llllihat texts of
eatly 13tltish Ltterattltc, somet\tlll'! 'to studettts wh11 hnve
~l'lclll\1\ ;~pprt~athl'tl hteraty
tt'~ts It\ all itltetlcdual ot ncodemit way or who have not
beell · el\ttlufa.lll!d hl thh1k
~rltlei!.U)' abllut ratllllll! works
llf htef'lltUh'," l3tOWll said,
!;hi! al51l teath~i collllltJsititlll til l'h'!hllltm students,
"1'hese ttlttrses (tlllllptnltlon)
al'\' lbottt tlcvellllli111J a skill
tnan~ tlo tll:lt value," acctlrdltlg ttl 13~WII. ''sl:l that ):!&lt;Itt 1:1f
;uy jllb i! to j\istil)t the val! til"
ty llr tle;~r, ptcd,e, rtl\ti grrttn•
tl\Uk;~lly•ctltfl'tt

If you are caring for an Individual In your
home WhO II agl 80 or older
and you are looking for tlpa on Careglvlng,
.
. take ~dvantage of thla
apeolal free offer.

Proud to ; apart

~lll!dll\1! Ill" da~\'~~
Or, ~liube~h 131\\W!I,

Point I~IN'illllt Hi».\1 Stllool

The Area Agency on Aging Dlatrlct 7, Inc. Ia
lntereated In the typea of training,
Information or aaalatance
caregiver• need.

'rlwy rt••idr In Clcwloml.

w••

Keeping
Gallia,
Meigs&amp;
Mason
informed

or

l\10 (:ll\.ANP!i - ts
lihak\!~11! still.m imtJoromt
el)l.lm ~r ~y\ roU~ stu·
~ent l'o hldlltle in his or llt!t

aml at~111:b Nl~l1&lt;hllll \Jnlver&lt;i"
t)' wh~ \llw 1~ \\ltlrkltll! l'oW&lt;~rtl

Free Magazine Subscription
For
Caregivers

Clillil ,

M.11d 111 honor wn1 l ~ ttdlol
flllii'L(I!\IIilt nl'lh~ hrid~ nllll
ltonor .tm•ttd.u\1
Kc1t11y
C:t ... iy. llrld ~!.ln .nJI . were
K1 t&lt;li&lt;' lltll'ncr. !l!trr· ttt •law
of tho ~ toom : Ttl llllllJ ll e!&lt;0 11 , kt!lcr•lll•i,IW
tit ~ llrldo;
,,n,l l'.llmtla K&lt;'""'l!" ~'·
llc!\ 111.111 w•! (i r•'l! llorn rt\
hrot her of rh c wootn .

lwr w~ ~ pulled llt~e lt Ill\
the ! hill&amp; with biil; e\tth .
Thc llri&lt;ll! wa&amp; ¥!tllth!d
by her fothcr,
Th11 nt4ld
hllnllr 1\l&lt;~i
Mitltl • l}en ~ ~ \\'Nritll! on
A - tum~ l t}'lll ~;lri!U 1\llf•
t'l c lire!! with putpll'
bcatl! ·tit tht' ttlp. Cryml
Mco~tg11
1111tl S4mantlu
ll.l!c !r WI!Hilll! 411 A·
l'tallll' ~tylc pt~tplc tll'lln
\Vith pllrpll! bHtl! and
thl' tllp Wl!tl! thll btitll!~·
mahh . Chrhta M11ttln
&lt;tntl tl!nal! Pl!lltl.' w~~rln11
white auln dt@ !l~l w~n
tlw nowllr l!lth.
Th~ l!ftltltn wtm Ill·
VHI I!fl}'
t\tlti.'Uil with
t"ll! Hh buwtle illttl eum bN bun wu purlll~ . Hh
IJmtttltHlll.'t\l wu il purlll~
rme . 'fht' hut miln w~1
l)i\vltl Cox wurinll · 1ll·
verl 11rily tUXI!tlu with
purpl~ bt~wtl~ 11nd eutu·
b~r hun . Th@ l!ft'Hllll!tnl!·n
wer~ Seon Mllltr ilntl
M!eln~l 1\U!I! wurlnll .
!llv~r/ l!r~y mxutltl! with
purpl~ buwtle! and eutn·
bllt butt! .
Thll guclt book utl!n·
tlatH wu fimlly Mud·
OW!,

llt'liNf l.lUiASANi - J.
I)~Vttl M~11 (wil1! Muta)
Ill' 1\llnt l1lea!ant ~ml V.. L~tttl
t'KIIlfitleh ot' Ch~ri~~tou,s..e. ,
\\'\lttltl I!~ .to lnt\llllllt.'\! the
et~ltl~ilt llt'thl'lt tlalll!ht&gt;'t,
lllttf\'1\.. l'o .l&lt;lsun t!llle~ ~Ill\ ot'
Murty tJill~y (wit\! j\111~ Ill'
1\lllll 11 1N~&lt;Itlt •llld e hatluttil
tlillt~~ ut'l\llitt l'letl!aut .
fheit \ve~&lt;hlll! &lt;lAte. i.! tttlt
~'\!t lhtdlil\'\1,
·
Mlltlfoltl J!r~tltlatetl foo111

no
Rio
cu

Wtitt~ll

llHj;Uilt'
She tlt!ds lh!shllll!ll ct;tlllll:l•
dill:lll nudenl! "h'\\lan:llng to
l'llttlUiltl!t rttld perhaiJs !hrti\C
th\llil ;~t th~ begltmlnl!8 or
their tltld~tule meers t111d
thcll to se~ theltl luer ~~ ttllll•
ll\l!llteltll!ht."
tllltlltll'lltemellt activities
th.l~ }'l!llf wiU lllt!utle awardlliiJ tltOWil with the l'ltlw!n
)llne! Awa\\1 fllr l'lkcetlelll!e ill
Thadlllll! award tlurtllg a May
7 t!IIHII!'r with her ~lllledi!UI!!,
: ne~o~usc ~lw h~i beet\ chosen
•by lt..iu Oratlde (o~eulty to be
: IHHHJretl thi! yeu, she
, ~ipotttled ttl the l!tlt:id neW!
by i11Yhll!1 "lt'i o~btJut !etvlte
411tlit 11 1111 lllltlt:lf tt; be nlltl1•
: il1o~tetl by a t:tltleague."
: Jlaeulty e~;lleagu ei lllhm
:~otutnent 1:111 her Jlll!itive 11tli•

tud~ itt taking on ~xtm wotk
oss~WHtl~llts . Brown~ l 2 }'~!an

os a Rio \JtaiiM foculty
. 1\\Cil\bN life ptllltttlatcd With
slith jobs as tnoderal'or of a
·lloetry workslmp 111 jacbo11
ill 2001 or~~ a co-tlltator and
co-dht'dtlr tlf alllllthtbit entitied "Wo11te11 of l~.io" in
1998.
She enjoys ttying a 11~w
apprt~oth ttl her t~aching
tespoll!ibiHties as \veiL 1\vo
)i\'&lt;lts •J!tl• tltoWt\ ask~d
ShakesiJcate st11de1tts· to l'etfbrltl a Sl1akespeate play as a
611;11 llsslgtliiWit h1 a selected
tolllt:! ctllltse, Shakcspeat'l' ilt
lletfotn\al\te.
·
"I Bnt tllltvlntcd the way to
leml Sh•kl'speat\1 Is to tlerfurtu It," l3tOWil s:tld.
Ill I \1':11, she co-directed
"1'at1lhlg t~f the Shrew" with
Dr. Me~t-~tt Lloyd, 11 fttrllter
llngll•h prt~rrswr at ll..to
tlhlllde, olltllltesctlted the pertbhltallce at the Ariel theatre
In Oalltpolls. She and Lloyd
haw ~h'!l'lltctl two prtper•
jllitltly til Sltake!peai'I'Ml otgulll!atll:llls Ill West Vitgltlla at1d
Mlthllfolh te~t-~tdltlg the studel\t ~erfot111a11ce experience
Itt tllUet;e tt!atllllll!•
NIJW, mtdetlt petlhtttwtce
hal becume part of her d11ss
sytl~bm Ill tmhlttg the regular Shakespea~ sutvey dass.
t im thctubeu Wt dtlm
perfhrnt !hort !~eltes or In
groups. . .
'rill! yeatl perfotlllllnt@ 11
"twelfth Nll!ht" ahd her stltde11t1 have IJ!Vel1 thli dassic
piece llf llteratute a new look
by \VI!IItllll! lllt;detu dothlng.
BtoWtl believe~ thls expetlehte ls "very ehetgltlllg" to
ttlntiltued le~~tnlltg lrt her .

chosen profu,.ion. lloyd n11d
llrowlt ph11 to publish an artide abo11t wlw they've
learited about Shakespeatt- in
produci11g plays.
She published all essay in
I 91l8 clttitlcd "Con1pa11io11
1ne With my mistress: EhtabNh I aml their Waitillg
Women" in the Oltfonl Ultiwtsity li~ss. she has also
made sdmlnrly prescntatioits
to the Shakespeare Associatlou of Allletica in 199~,
1995, 1997,1998,1999,2000
aud 2002. •Het tapks rauge
from "ll!achhtg Shakespeare
Ill 11ctfotllliHin!: The Experiel\ce of A Mldstlllllller
Ni~ht~ Dteat\1" to "Women's
Alliances in Shakespeare's
Anthony nnd Clcol'atrn."
Slw holds profe•Mttal
11\ell\berships ltl the Shakespenre AModatlon of America, The Medieval lustitute,
Shakespeare iu Kalantuoo;
the MedieVal and ltettaissance
Drattla Society, Sigllta Tau
Delta ;Uid l'hl Alpha Theta,
both of whkh ate honorary
societies: dltd the Ult!Wtsit)"\
Fa cUlt)" Associatiol!.
Brt~Wn
CdltiC
tO )\jo
Grande in Augtut of 1990 as
a·li assotlote jlrofessor. She is
now a tenured professor and Is
actively iuvotwd In the Untwrslty of Rio Clraude Pacult)"
Association \vhere she has
been elt·cted by her colleague; as chair-elect.
She recelwd her bachelor's'
degree !hJtn Stulth Collet!'! ill
MrtsMch. u~ett! and a n1a1ter's
deg~e rtnd doctorate from
the Unlvmit)" of Chicago
bdore she started her first
teaching job at nluefleld State
College Itt LeWisburg, West
Virginia, ill 1979.
She aHd her chUdten, Tint
- 17 yean old and Maggie
- 14 years old, reside In ll..lo
Ota11de. Tim will attend the
University of Chicago In ScpteJ11ber.

GALLIPOLIS Jim
Pope, pttne~pal at Washmgton
Elementary,
has
announced the list of studellt~ who ha\~ made the
Honor !toll for the third
nine weeks of the 2001-2002
· school yeu. (" Denotes aU
A's)
Sixth Grade: Jacob Angel,
Kegan Angel, Matt Baird,
Br.ittany Blal\d, Btialme
Dudley, Danielle Bwwn,
Nina l.ll')wn, Markie Carter,
Anna Donnall)l Dana DotsOil, Antallda Elliott, *Kari
Evans, •Hannah fulton,
Nick Guinther, •Danielle
Harrison, KeVil\ Jackson ,
Ryan Jackson, lrah Jarrell,
Keisha Johnson, * Allysou
Johnnotl , Alelt landis,
Moniqlle leming, Ryan
leslie, *Kristen lynn, Eli
Maher, Olivia Me Govern ,
Saul Me Guire, Andrea
Mendieta, Adam Moss, Lindsey
Niday,
Samalttho
Notthup, Whit11ey l1asqualc,
Maya Patel, Chclshey Pattersou, Amiee Phillips, Cassie
Rhodes, *Daniell&lt;' Sanders,
Ashton Saunders, lauren
Sattndcrs, •11ma Saxon,
*Jeremiah SiM, Aarib Stanley, Jhmy Stover, Zack
·swisher, . Katie Taylo·r, ·
Michael Walker, S.J. Warren ,
Alexandna West, Jcssira
Wkklille and *ll..achcl
Whittington
!fifth Gtadc: *ll..adtl•i
lloster, Keisha llrannen,
*Brittany Burnett, Shay
CI'I'Ws, Meg;nt Daines,
*KamalDay~l. Allison Diehl.
Kclli Evans, Alexis Geiger,
*Tyler Grilltnt, Timothy
1-lutftnan, *Sucheta Kumnr,
Jon Kyger, Chelsea laws,
Casey love, Cory Mawn ,
jah Me Doltald, '*Amy
Meeks, Heather Oppenheim, Megan Ours, Jessi
Rc111y, *Dylan 11..ees, lauren
Shelton, Stephanie Snyder,
Madlsoil Steele, *Alexis
Swi•hcr, Cory Tawney, Ethan
Tawney, Do1ma Wallet and
tlrooke Willis
Fourth Grade: *Nate Alii-

son, Dalron Banks, •BJ Bar- · J T. Corddl, Caleb Cratt.
cus, *Kyle l.lays, Momca *Jaymee Cremeens, *Jayla
Broyles, *Courtney Camp- Ferrell, Cassie Feustel.
bell, Marcus Coleman, Chris *Sh•ina Fillinger, *lauren
Copley. Jordan Cornwell, F1&lt;hcr, *Corel( Gillenwater,
Codie Glenn, Nathamcl Mariah Green, *Jenna Haft,
Gordon, Corey Hannlton, *Rachel Hannon, Victoria
Angela Harvey, Kara Jackson, Howell, Ciara jackson, "Joel
Randy Jackson. Autumn Me Johnston, *Ashjsh Kumar.
IJanicl, Jason Me Nickle, Sarah
lear,
*Bethanv
JR. Me Pherson , Zckc Lunsford, *Natha~ Lynn',
Maher, Jason Mills , Tiata Scarlett Me Guire. Courtney
Moore, n,Vl'r Parh&gt;m, Mooney, Rachel Morris,
*Janelle Parson, *Brittany *Alyssa Nelson , Kelsey NelPatterson, Matthew Patter- son , *Kelsea Porter, *Kayla
sou, Burgandi Plymale, Dil- Purdum, Aoron Rupe, Elizalan Queen, *Nicholas beth Rupe, Annie Saum,
Roach, Kody Roberts, *Kat- *Sidney Saunders, *Danid
lyn Ross, *Orad Satullo.Jared Schneider, *Chobec Sheets;
Saum. *Alii S:tunders,' Rj *Evans Sm.tlley, *Kanessa
Springer, *Alyssa Stanlcv, Snyder, Sabryna Straus!!',
*Maddie Swisher, *Kruii.c •zack Tackett, CobyTawney,
Wandling, *Brandon Welch. Brooke Thriey, Santantha
Chelsea Wickline. Lokeisha w,,lkcr, Alison Wandling,
Wtllhms
and ' Kristyn Jt•ssica W:1rd, *Misha Wilson
Wright.
and •Dn.·w Young.
.Third Gradt•: 1l:!ky Angel.
First' Grade: Bethany
Kathennc B.rr. •carohnc · Adamson, *M-ork T homas
Baxter. *Cody Billings, Brit- AH~n, *Trenton Bailes, Brittany Uocltard. Brady Bran- tany l.lcowr, *A braham
non, Cayia Bush , Katoya IJlain. *Je,;ca Burger, Branllus\1,
Lind"'Y
Bush, don Byus. *Cody ·Call,
*Heather
Caldwell, *Caleb Campbe11, Jazz
*Jonathan Caldwell, *1-hn- Corey, Jordon Co ughenour,
nah Ctutningham, Kyle Dray. Joel Craft, Jacob Crews,
•Katie Jo DunLtp, *K:ttie *Katie Dotson . *Bobby lee
Fisher, Tyler 1-t!llnon, KayLt Ounlap, *Hanna Edge,
HolTman, Adrnna Holley, Christop her Elli ott, *Jesse
•caroline Hudson, Caleb Evam. 1\dcr Fetty. Savannah
Janey. *Joseph Jenkins. Forgt•y, 1lominiquc l' ranklin,
l.ler11:an Koch , *Ch1·is Kyger, Chandler Gctgcr, Christo*Morgan lc.11ic, *Jacob Live- pher Gordon, *Mykal
ly, Mary Ann Ltvdy. lcxt Haner, *Aicx:~ndr.1 Hapka.
long, Mehssa long, Kate- *Jon Holley, Casey Hull,
lynn Lott, Elisabeth Lynch. *Aaron Jackson, *C.1rly Jackc
*Kylic Me Cormick, Mor- so11, *Seth James, Darien .
·gan Me Kinnhs, *Ethan lee, *Charlotte liwly, *Kyle
Moore, *Jordan Pierce, Cayla love, Rebecca Matthew, *T.
Plese, *Tori Rces, Chad Jaye Me Calla. *Peggy Mills~
Rosenbalm,
*Courtney Mi chael Moore, *Rachel
Ross, Ellyn Sanders. Cayti yn Northup, Kenzie Parham,
Tackett, *Tori Tackett, *Cheyenne
l~it c hford,
Wendy Wade aud Andrea Camero n R.obinson, *Grace ·
Withee.
. ltogcrs, C. Cody ltussell,
Second Grade: l'eytolt Rebecca Rutt, Jaidcn ShadAdkim, Jay me Allen , Bill Joe wick, *Bradlcc Swisher,
Angell , Corey Arthur, Dybn *Meghan Thacker, Brianna
Atkins, Karly Atkittsnn, Nick W.1goncr, Tianna Wagoner,
Baile[, *Cassie Dain.l, Melissa *Dusttn Watmicy, *13rcanna
l3aitt, Jasmine
Uea ch, West, *ltachel Willet, Daren
*Bryant B okov it ~. Chadd Withams, *Jeremy Wilson
Carpenter, lara Cli ckcngcr, and *Abby Wise1mn.

-

FREE VIDEO
Ylatt our Wtb Slit to Qtlt !rH Video:
WWW.llghlhDUIIIIItmblyJnfo
LlghltiOIIII A111mbly ol God
lt1t Rout• 110

Keeping
Gal/ia,
Meigs&amp;
Mason
informed

:Students honor Beaver
, Jt..lO tllt..ANDll ~ Th~
:Unlvcnlty 11f lt..lo tluttde
~lle!~ty 11r 1-:lt~IHJts Studctlt!
Jecently r~tlltf111tetl br. Mike
tleaver, electronles Anti
:industrial tethl1tllogy pwre~­
:111r at lt..ltJ &lt;:Junde C:ottttttu: ttlty Collcge 1 as an tlUtit!ltld•
:lnll fatuity nt~mb~r.
· He Joins 11 tlthet (aeulty
m~mben at lt..Ju dntlde for
butmndlttjllel'llke itt higher
,.fd\teatlotl.
, "Dr. nuvl!t's work lu
: tleveltlJliny md huJllemellt•
·Ittl! ch~ Theil Pr•p Jlftlttram, A
~Jleelil ~11rlehmenc Jlftlllraltl
for 11reo hillh 1ehMl 1tud•t1ts
· M&gt;htl wAnt m bridge . tu a
teehn!eal )lfOIItAill tJ( •tudr,
Ill eotlege, !1 very special,'
111ld Ju~ my flryttun, ·vrfll•
t11111t tJ( the .l.t..io (luHd~
!loe!ety u£ Ho11ur1 lltutl~llt! .
l•t h1vti wurked wfth him uti
;~enl j.lftljet tl tWer the put
GOOD TIACHIIt- Dr. Mike Beaver, electrohlci and industti·
y•u."
al technology prufenor at Rio Grande Community College, left,.
't\.m yraduAiltll! !etlltm W!ll reco.,ized ldlt week u the outstandlnll fadulty member
w~r~ f@~ognl~i!d bY the hun- of the y~ar by Jeremy Fryman, pre11dent of the University ot
tltt lltl!\lj.l. They ate Jmmy lllo GriiMdEI Society o1 Honor• Studl!nti, tight. (U~GJ

Ptyman,

mot!At~ ~ttd unl~

Uttivcnity huttuu: Mittie
Curnett, mudate hatton;
boHor1: Je11le• 1-:l•vn, httid· Antlr~a dregoty, a1iod11te
ill illd UltlV~ttit)' hoi!Otll . hullurs: Charlutt~ l\eabter,
"-iHdy Ku~hler, muciate modate hui!Oflj 11nd Jotelyh
tlld UIIJ\iettity htlll.l!tt; 011111 Shevvatd(assudate honors.
The ruu dtande Society
;J'I!r-Ohi:tatyitt, a~ttldue u11l
1JIII1111rllty hottutll Chrlttlllil uf Hun on Student! . Wa1
WeUingtott; lintldite ihd ettibll1hed j 2 years a~o~o by

Nenlty hutiuU: Mlt1dy Cliitd•
her, modtt• atid Ulllverdry

Or. Bd St1fto1tko, ~to(euot of
)l!ydwlugy, to encuurag~
Ult.O uudelttl to punuc
iNde)1eridcnt study )1rojecb.
Pur ihfotntatiou, contact
Or. Bury Tho111pson or
ju~ithe Thon1rsoh, advlsou
\1f the ltlo dtat1dc Sodet)"
of Honors StudeNts.

Sunday .

Times-Sentinel
·Gallla • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2156
Meson • 675·1333

PROUD TO BE APART
· OF YOUR LIFE.
Su11day 1lme1•Sentlnel
Suburlbt today • 446-2342

OISHI
Doll fll[

'rOMMV
l!:MMANlJI!:I.
81'ECIAI.
GUE!ff OEon'
'·ACIUSON

d\iiOI FAElBnlc
- · TVPrlllllimlll
"""' ..t
lntlolotlooilltllvlllol ./uti
-~~-·1.,50

; t•"""' $22.91"''

OkHIN
l'lTAk

IJSH-

\ltlod,..ttiiMtt&lt;dfiiCI11-.tl'ltuliOI Wfh_,~ l-..

,.,....,,at!...

l'todud l!lf r.-!lmllld! IMf'- ,_
lld ...
~..._.,j , . . , _ t:..Md "" . .......

- .......a'ITiiftN ......... U....I-.e.Ut•h........,

iii~.

Mt'l, fNf. C•r1•n N.twotll., DIIICCIVflf'Y
CNN ~~. ll•1en• ntatr• l

e.,.,e~.rut

STE\'1':
JAMES

MnV
DOOKitiNDEM

ITARIMZERS
288-7413
(7,~0)

1·866-660-5600 .

diSR
~OIK

�•

Page C&amp;

Entertainment

••tbav ~mua- _..en:tind
1

•

Papa

Sund!y, April 21, 2002

2112
•

Christian Music

•
m
•
omesiX

•
I
..
BY JIM

FIATTERSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (1\ll) - The Christian musi c industry showed renewed afrcction tor 011e of its old favorites at
the 33rd Annual Dove Awards, givlllg Michael W. Smi.th six
awards, including best artist.
Smith wept, and thanked God, as he ,,cccptcd his second
best artist trophy Thursday.
He first won the honor in
1999.
''I'm just grateful that he
Best Artist
took a little runt from
Michael W. Smith
WcstVirgii1ia, and he gave
Female Vocalist
him a platform," Smith
Nicole C. Mullen
said. "And! just give him
Mile Vocalist .
all the praise and glory."
Mac Powell
Smith won for best
praise &amp; worship album
Ciroup
for "Worship," and best
Third Day
instrumental album for
New Artist
"Freedom ." He got two
ZOEgirl
awards for each album,
Producer
one as the artist ·and the
Toby McKeehan
other as a producer. His
Song
·
sixth award was best inspi1QinOnly~"BartMalard
rational recorded song for
"Above All," a selection on
"Worship."
,
Third Day, which won
.
best artist in 2001, had another big year, Winning five awards
including best group and rock album for "Come Together."
Mac Powell, lead singer fur the band, was named best male
vocalist. ·
"Thank you to Mama for waking me up every Sunday
morning and making me go to church," Powell said.
The awards were prest'Jlted at rhc Grand Ole Opry
House. home of.the Grand Ole Opry country music radio
show. The show was hosted by singer Yolanda Adams and
Kurt WaFncr, the star quarterback for the St. Louis Rams,
·
who has been vocal about his Christwn faith.
"One of five teen -agers buys gospel music,'' Warner
bragged about his favorite music. "Gospel music is leading
all music styles in :growth."
The best female vocalist award went to Nicole C: Mullin,
and best new artist was awarded to the female pop trio
ZOEgirl. Bart Millard was Jiamed• best songwriter, and his
"I Can Only Imagine" won best song.
The 19 performances at the ceremony focused on rock
banks like jars of Clay, Sonicflood and Third Day. But the
genre's diversiry ~as shown off with the rousing gospel of
Kirk Franklin, the teen dance music of ZOEgirl and the
hip-hop of toby mac, who was moonlighting from the pop-

Dove Awards

:=

BIG WINNER - Michael W. Smith accepts the award for
artist of the year at the Dove Awards on Thursday In
Nashville, Tenn. Smith won six Dove Awards. (AP)

'Star Wars'
merchandise
arrives in stores

Fresh, fruity, piquant, salsas are colorful condiments
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)Any time of year, colorful, texture!
sabas visually liven up table settings.
Their bright tlavon also add a whole
range of top notes to the dishes they
garnish.
.
Now is as good a time as any to
review your salsa repertoire.
.
Confirm your old favorites; polish
up the classics; and try out a bevy of
spicy new ideas, ready for incoming
.seasons of bountiful produce and
high-spirited taste.
Here are some fresh and piquant
original recipes. Most are spectacu- ·
larly successful with grilled fish. But
they will complement a wide range
of other dishes, from barbecued
meats to vegetarian specials, as far as
your imagination takes you.
The recipes, adapted for the home
cQok, are the creations of chefs
working in five ~:estaurants in Santa
Monica that are rated in the Los
Angeles Zagat survey in terms that
'range from "elegant" to "trendy" and
"fun."
The salsas' flavor combinations
include mango and mint, ginger and
tomato, pepper and corn. Their
effect is achieved with mininial
cooking - just be prepared to d.o
-loads of chopping~nd dicing of fresh
vegetables, fruit, peppers and herbs.
Recipe directions tell you when
to let the salsa mixture sit for a while
to help tlavors combine and evolve
most fully. Most can easily be made
ahead of time and benefit from it.
Allyson Thurber, executive chef at
The Lobster, says she worked out her
recipe for tomato-ginger ·salsa after
she'd sampled some great Middle
Eastern food and wanted to come
up with a new mahi mahi dish.
"It was tomato season and I just
started throwing . stuff together. I
knew I wanted spicy, so I ended up
going with the sort of sweet-and.
sour taste of a chutney. I don't know

LOS ANGELES (AP) dubious title of"peg warmers.:•
New merchandise for "Star
The "Star W~rs" merchanWoors:Episode 11-Attack ofthe .dise line was still wildly sueCones" arrived in stores Tuesday · cessful, cuning about $2 bil~
as fans lined up for midnight lion worldwide.
sales of the latest bric-a-brac
The previous "Star Wars:·
from a galaxy far, far away.
film, "Return of the Jedi," had
After a large surplus of mer- come out 16 years before "The
chandise languishei:l ·on store Phantom Mena.ce," and Lucasshelws following 1999's "The film and toy manufacturer
Phantom Menace," producrs Hasbro Inc. acknowledged
for the new film· are being ove[l:stimating the market.
'
kept much simpler.
"When .you have a large
"We've scaled it back a lot:' breadth of characters and
said Lucasfilm licensing execu- products like that, you're not
rive Howard RotTman. "We're going to hit on every single
going to stick to the basics one," 1-Iasbro marketing exectoys , vai c·o brames ... the things utive Martin Pidcl said.
our faJ h prefer, rnther than
About 20 different "Attack
some ot the fringe items."
of the Clones" action figures ,
There arc still loads of priced at about $6, were
action figures and shiny space released Tuesday, with the
vehicles. But you won't see number increasing to about
Queen Amidala's face on your 50 by year's end.
Pepsi can or be able to relax in
Highlights of the new toy
an Ana kin , Skywalker inllat- line indude bounty httntq
able chair, and you won't h:ivc Jan go Fctt and his hon\any Obi- Wan Kcnobi clip-on shaped spacecraft Slave I, and
braids to add to your hair.
Jedi warriors Obi-Wan KenoMerclJ.1Jidising excClJtiws at bi and Anakin Skywalker,
Lucasfilm Ltd. drnmatically molded with magn,cts in their
reduced d1eir movie tie-ins for hands so they can use "the
"Attack of the Clones," cutting Force" to draw weapons into
the number .of product~ by their grasps.
about half and reducing licensees
For about $100, there's an 18from about 85 to less than 50.
inch R2-D2 droid d1at is moved
"Last time, they just shipped around by Voice command.
too much," said Dave Gerardi,
Meanwhile, "Attack of the
senior editor of.the toy trade Clones" promotions through
magazine Playthings. '.'After a Frito-Lay chips and Genetal
few months, retailers had to Mills cer~al are expected to be
put a deep discount on them low-key compared to 1999,
and still couldn't move them." when about 8 billion "Phantom Menace'' Pepsi cans were
A lot of the surplus toys many of which featured the produced and Pizza Hut and
much-maligned Jar Jar Binks Taco Bell "Star Wars'' comcharacter - hung in store mercials were ubiquitous on
aisles so long they earned the television .

ular trio de Talk.
Franklin showed off danc e moves worthy of Prince. ·
"Before I got saved I was a breakdancer," Franklin said.
"My name was Kid Fresh."
.
Awards were distributed in more than 40 categories, covering music genres including choral collections, Spanish
language album and rap/hip-hop: Most were handed out'
before the two-hour televise.d show.
Christian music had it~ best sales year ever in 2001, as
mea~urcd by SoundScan. The genre - aided by a Christmas album from Mannheim Steamroller and the soundtrack
to "0 Brother, Where Art Thou?"- sold 49.9 million
albums, up 12 percent from 2000. The gain~ came while the
music industry as a whole declined 2.8 percent.
The Dove Awards are produced by the Gospel Music
Association, a trade organization founded in 1964 to promote Christian music. It has 5,000 members.

if this is a thought process, but it\
how some things work in the
kitchen - lrlal and errot;• she said.
The salsa :dso works well with
fresh Pllcific swordfish, she added.
"The swordfish is a full-flavoml fish
that can hold up ro the strong flavors
of the salsa. The sweet and tartness of
the salsa really bring.out the smokey
flavor of grilled swordfish."

Raa I d'bnJicaQp·
(From Allyson Thurber, executi~
chef, The Lobster restaurant)
5 Roma tomatoes
4 tablespoons peeled and grated
fresh ginger
2 t~blespoons chopped garlic
1 cup white wine vinegar
1 112 cups brown sugar
3 tablespoons lemon juice
I teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon cayenne
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1/4 teaspoon ground doves .
112 .ialapeno, seeded and chopped
1 teaspoon ground ginger
6 green onions, sliced thin (green
part only)
1 small red onion, diced
Olive oil to coat tomatoes when
roasting
Salt and pepper to taste
Cut tomatoes in half and season
with salt and pepper. Place cut ~ide
down on sheet pan and brush lightly with olive oil. Roast in preheated
300 F oven for 1 hour or until
caramelized and soft. Allow to cool
and remove skins; dice (mediumsize).
Combine all other ingredients
exc~pt red and green onions in a
stainless steel saucepan, cook over
medium heat for about 5 to I 0 minutes or until reduced to. a syrup.
Allow syrup to cool slightly; pour
over tomatoes, add onions and combine. Allow to sit for 3 hours. Excel-

llolo IIIII IJ!IIIIotwoik

dloiiiiiUIIIIIV l'lllllllill
IIIII lloic l'laloulonll

l1otllollo1!119holuii.Jull
...... 1o lmola'oTopSO

~Marc Anthony loves the

Big .·
:Apple in English and Spanish

NEW YORK (AP)- Marc A11thony loves New York- in
·two languages.
The Latin pop singing sensation appeared at a press conference with Gov. George Pataki on Thursday to debut a television commercial for the popular "I Love New York" advertis,ing campaign.
Now in its 25th year as a pitch for out-of- town tourins to
visit the Empire State, Anthony's appearance will be .the fim to
air in both English and Spanish.
The 60-second commercials 4ature Anthony in various
locales around New York Ciry, starting in his native Spanish
Harlem, at 116th and Lexington Avenue, and jumping to Times
.Square and then outside Radio City Muoic Hall.
At one point, a fan on the street says, "I know you. Ricky
M~rtin, Ricky Martin, that's you!" Later, a fan asks for a picture
- aGtually, she asks Anthony to take a pictme of her and her
friend.
"Ht's a great star and not only· that, it's just wonderful the
way he's willing to allow people to poke a little fun at him. in
:the ad," Pat~ki said.
~

POOLS

SPAS

IIOVEGROUND

, arlyS22.98~"*"'

.•

Yllkl Mljol CHdit cttd llld 12oft101'11h COfi'VI'IIIIYII!IIItQUWIN,
Pt-..ctlor prOtl'ctlon ~ be ,....., tii'NIIIftc~urH or

dl~ '"''"" bllld on Millbll.tw,
Amerh•'• T., 10 IMIII'N""" IIWtftll ........1

•an•
News &amp; information
for the trl-county JOHNSON'S .
UPN, MTV, TNT, Cortoon Nttworii, DlocO¥ory
Ch•nntt •nd CNN. Pkft.
mort!

Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-1182

Sunday limes-Sentinel

Maaon, West VIrginia

740-446-2342

(304) 773-5305

d1SR '
~ORK

i
I

./
(

(

Golfers aren't

'
''
(

lent seMd with grilled salmon or
mllhi mahi.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
Chef Mario Alvarez, executive
chef of Chez Jay restaurant, created a
Iippy mango salsa.
"The key to our mango salsa is
great mangos with a treh. fresh
wte," he said. He finds Hawaii a reliable source for mangos - "ptclting
the right one is what makes this salsa
so great."
He thinks ~e combination of
tangy mango tlavor, fresh mint and
Spicy jalapeno bring out the best in
fish, and that the salsa... will make you
reody for a trip to Hawaii and ready
for sununer."

ManaoAMint
(from Mario Alvarez, executive
chef of Chez jay restaurant)
3 large mangos, peeled and diced
1/4 cup lllngerinejuice
2 tablespoons fresh grapefruit juice
1 tablespoon peeled and grated
fresh ginger
1/4 cup finely minced onion
1 tablespoon plain rice vinegar .
1 small jalapeno pepper, seeded
and finely diced ·
2 tablespoons finely chopped mint
1 teaspoon finely ground fresh
coriander seed
I tablespoon finely minced fresh
basil
In large, nonreactive bowl, place
all ingredients and mix well. Let
rnixture macerate in bowl for I
hour. ·
Very good served over fish such as
ahi tuna, mahi mahi or swordfish.
Makes 6 to 8 servings.
"Chirmol salsa is a staple .in my
hometown in Guatemala," says
Emilio Cuyuch, executive sous-chef
at the restaurant JiRaffe. It's a
national favorite, he adds. "Fish, flat

breads and even beef are ~ with
2 W.. ytllow tomatoes, eli~
chirmol salsa
every home has its
l cup fresh kernel corn
••wn individual recipe and taste." ·
1 teupoon salt
The word "chirmol" means
t teupoon pepper
"smashed tomatoes.''
2 limes, juiced
"My mom made it all the time ' 112 bunch cilantro, chopped
. and we would ~at it on everything
t jal~peno chili pepper. seeded and
- hot' or cold," Cuyuch said. "The diced
mushed tomato base is the key. with
In I~ pan over medium-high
good, spicy jalapenos."
heat, saute diced red onion in olive
oil (adding u needed). After 2 minutes, add Anaheim and green bell
(From Emilio Cuyuch, executive peppers, Saute 2 more minutes and
sous-chef at JiRaffe restaurant)
add tomatoes, corn. salt 11nd pepper.
3 scallions
.,
Saute 2 additional minutes, remove
12 medium-uze vine-ripened fron\ p11n and plm~ wsa in large
tomatoes
container to cool. LeaV\' in re&amp;iger1 cup corn kerne-ls
atQr for 3 hout:S, Before serving, add
2 cloves garlic, minced
lime juice, chopped cilantro and
.
jalapeno
chili pepper. Ideal with
3 tablespoon olive oil
grilled swordfish.
1 lime,juice only
.
Mokes 6 to 8 serving:~.
1/2 cup chopped cilantro
1/2 jalapeno, seeded and minced
Salt and pepper to taste
Grill scallions and chop. Grill
(From Gennaro Lopez, executive
tomatoes whole until soft; grill corn. chef, Rebecca's restlurant)
(You may do the grilling by any
1/2 pineapple, peeled and diced
method; it may be done ahead of
2 large mangos, peelffi and diced
time unless you wish to serve the
1 green bell pepper, seeded and
salsa hot:) Combine tomatoes, seal" dic\ld
lions and garlic In a bowl and
1 red btU p~pper, seeded and diced ·
"smash"," 'i.e. break up, tomlltoes. Add
1 yellow bcll pepper, seeded and
olive oil, lime juice, grilled cotn ker- diced
nels, cilantro, jalapeno, and salt and
1 tlblespoon white vinegar
pepper. Serve hot or cold over
1 bunch cilamro, chopped
striped bm, swordfish or other white
1/4 teaspoon seed~d. finely diced
fish.
serrano chili
· Makes 6 to 8 servings.
1 teaspoon finely diced red onion
1 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt ·
(From Jean-Pierre Pdny, executive
I teaspoon finely diced tomato
chef of L.A. Farm restaurant)
Place c;!iced pin ~apple, mangos and
1 large red onion, diced
bell peppers in a larw: bowl. Add
1/2 cup virgin olive oil
remaining ingredients and toss, ·
1 Anaheim chili, skinned seeded being .careful not to bruise the
and diced
pineapple and mango. Best served
1 green bell pepper, seeded, with fish such as salnion, swordfish
grilled, skinned and diced
or halibut.
2 large red tomatoes, diced
Makes 6 to 8 serving:~.

and

G...-...lan Chla111ul

Pineapple and Man10

Pepper-Com

We love it when people say
nice things about us.
Golf Digest re~ently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in the world! ·.
And in its current Places to
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trail's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4"fi.
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-in·
a-lifetime courses. And all of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
•
semce.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

world and The New York Times
called us "... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
Hill location among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcomers. And wait until you'
see THE JUDGE!
So, we hope you11 understand
· when, like all good golfers, we
like to brag about our scores ..
Call today to book your golf
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips in
the world.

the only ones

•

who

River Cities Community Health Coalition

love to brag

about their
•

s co res '- ·-

Nurse On Call
\

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

H'AMPTON COVE

SILVER l-AKES

H ntiPillt

A~~~ lttii11/G11tlsilln
:NI HOLU

114 HOI.£.

11

OXMOOR VALLEY

GRAND NATIONAL

Bl,.,l•allll"'

0,1111111""b'ft

114 HOLU

.

ALABAMA'S

ROBERT ThEN
GoLF

CAMBRIAN RIDGE

HIGHLAND OAKS

MAGNOLIA GROVE

CAPITOL HILL

Grte111ille

Dflllllll

M~tlle

Inmll/e

:NI HOI.Itl

:NI HOLE.

!14HOLU

IIAHOLU

Alabama'alobert Trent Jones Golf Trail378 holes of world-class golf on eight sites

1~800-462-5255

•

I

1.800.949.4444

Better health for the Tri-State.

IIAHOI.U

WWII/.rtjgolf.wm

-----

-------- ----·---

�•

•

ca

~·

•

. . . . . .i... - ...ctinel

'"*'~

Ctllntl atltbllllll
"" Dei
al """'
CeMn
Mill*
at
""
ctMdl
cllillnQ molnlnQ . . , _ It ""
II
Llll. Will\ Rfi ~- HaM';. Allwnoon ..,_ at 1:30 p.m. w1tt1

luftdb..NMI
FltO GAANtle - c.lllc FUII'411 at 1M ~ al Alo

ADOISON - Sllnclly Schaal
at Adchon FMWIU &amp;.plltl

GMrMullum~U!Mf­

1\w.l. ~.

w.,

~SMIMclav,.NMM
1'110 GRANDE - Pllnat
tMdoll Lectlltll, t :~ p.m.,

~~~y al Alo Grandt. Fof lr'ofolma
10 a.m.;~"" lion, call740-145-7t8fl.
e p.m., w1tt1 Rial! a.n:ua

~.

........

p!HCNng• .

LEC'fA - Lectl Chu!Ch Dl
· BIDWELL - Eltmlty 11om Chlllll Ill Chllatlan Union, 1M'
Palnl Plaaaant, W.''it.., witt alnQ '4lcta all p.m. ~ t.S. P•aach·
at the 8:30p.m. ttr&lt;lce at Poplar lng and tll\glnQ ""gQ8pll will bt
~ FIIIWIII &amp;.ptitt Cnui'CII.
"""'
w.nen a.. ~nc~an rn~a­
t~anatY- """' Bill win bt praCENTENAAV - Anntllt tantlng Goch ~ 11 hi data
Jo11n1an wiM tlng at CantenatY to NaM Amlllctnt. . ·
Ulllltd Cllllallall Chllldl, fl p.m.
tald . . . . . .
GALLIPOLIS - Norm El!lng.
Chlrloh Frandl aellbraltd
tan, blbllaal drarnallal, will apaall hlr 54th birthday an April 28.
at Ellubtth Chlllll Churah, Ctlda may taniiO her at CMItO:&lt;tO a.m. and fl p.m.
b10C1k Cantil', 33S P . Strait,
lllcinday April II
Aaam tOS, Mldcllapart, Ohio
GALLIPOLIS - Norm ErrinQ• &lt;t57fl0,
ton, blbllaal dramantt, will IPIIll · Sarah Haltty will aallbratt hlr
at Elizabeth Chapll Chui'CII, 1 90th birthday May 2. Carda may
p.m.
bt aantto her at lOt Mint Pilat,
TIIMdty, ADI'II 3CI
hlrboraklt Health Cantil', Ntw
• GALLIPOLIS - Norm Em1111- Ltbtnon, Ohlo 4M&lt;t$,
_fori, blbiiCIII dramallat, will apaall .Calvin w. Waugh will aelt·
at Ellzabtlh Chapel Churah, 1 brat• hla 80th birthday an May &lt;t.

C.MM'IIftllV Caltnw 1a
• • •tllll .. a .....
toMftptiM••••••IIIIIfttt
to IIIIUIIMI lllllllflta and
,, ...... 14tNL,. ClllaftdM
It ROt dlaltntcl to Pf'III\4MI

...,1.

Wtclnttdly, May 1
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
Board D1 Haa"h, 9 a.m., hulth
dtpartmant, 499 Jackaon Pika.
GALLIPOLIS - Norm Erring·
ton, biblical dramatlat, wtll IPIIk
at Elizabeth Chlllll Churah, 7
p.m.
laturtlly, May 4
. BIDWELL - Saaand annual
·• 1t
t Gald n of Mv
goap.,
ng a II 11 p.m.· at'
Haart Tlbtmloll
ahatlamoutt on Ohio aso. F•·
turtcl atngtrt, Flay Caak Hurt·
ltlt Stngtrt, Htldtd Homa,
Murphy Family, L.'f. Praaton,
Singing Pomtroya, Uptllttrt. For
Information, oatl 74Q.388·0&lt;t
14.
'

~

of
only

bt
prlfttltl • epnltle lllllftbtr of

. . . . . ''"""' Mid -

ROt.

...-

PLAiNS

-

8tlhll ~ c:.nttt. !UIIIId

"*""·

IPI)rataata.

em

77li.s dlart -**'-' ArM• fool/ .lb'b

Evt~

wti·

MON. TU£.

Fill.
•

s

"'

ore

A\lflAND - Auilanll Gardan Cllil 1 p.m. lith 110ma a1

Dorothy VAlodlld, t.anoa•·

Fecltirel Mogul

OKNLV

•

2.95

4.70

n.t3

n

5.t5

4.75

NSC

,,.

3,800
400
400
3,000

2.95

Km1rt

Oncludes nationwide long distance&gt;

•Ill•
. . · ._._..."""btgutran·

29.58

---

Gltnacll

•

30.30

+

Oannttt

Communi!~

minutes =
anytime minutes

Peoplea
DAY OF THE WORKING MAN - The new bustn.ess will use at least two lull·tlme employees, one full-time seamstress,
and one or two part·llme employees to begin with, but with possible additional hiring. Furbee Jr. anticipates opening the
store In tate May. (Dan Hermes)

Pl'lmler

bonus anytime minutes*

Rooky Boot

night and weekend minutes

+

...
53.35

37.83

Wendy'•

More anytime minutes from the
leader In customer-service.

Crnde Prices edge
higher on talk ·of embargo
•

•

ie:. US. Cellular

.

We connect with

Wlnntr of OuiJtandlna Cuttomer IIMU Awtro
- WllfltU R1- Mltllint

you~

POINT PLEASANT - AA
mttllng, 12 p.m. In rttr ol
Prllltrll Ctnllr.

•

·THU..

0111

r(l·

•

wm.

AEP

•

Rava Fralty, lorm1r Gattta Co.
raatd1nl (Bidwtll aammunlty) Will
~- ""ltbrallng
htr 80th blrlh"•"
""
w•
_,
on May 8. Carda may bt 111\t to
htr at U02 StontWOOdl Lana,
Powatl, Ohio 4306S.

MASON - A ~ubtto mill•
lng wilt ba held at tht Maaon
Fire Dapartmant with Charter
Communloattona In regard•
POINT PLEASANT - Good · to tha etnlor citizen• die·
Shepherd Church CIOihlng glva· count, 11:30 p.m.
away, e a.m. to 1 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - A
HENDERSON - Unt danc- atrvloa honoring the Ntltontl
Ing, Htndtraon Community Day o1 Prayer will ba held on
Building, wHh lnatruotor Dawn the M11on County Court·
Hlftt..d. Btglnntrtll p.m. and hou" ettpa, etartlng at noon.
advlllOid 7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - flotnt
· Pl1111nt Chapter ol Sent ol
Wtdnttclly, May 1
POINT PLEASANT - lht Amtrloan Revolution will
Wldnet.diV night B~ cfubt lor hold lit monthly milling at
p111Gho01 up through 12th Fort Randolph Terraoe, 7
QID, 1 to 1:16 p.m. II Goaptl p.m.
I,JghlhOUit Church, Nttl Rotd.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
For lntormatlOn Clll &amp;76-7228 or
Prayer m11t1n! at Addlaon
176111120.
Freewill Sapllt Church, 7:30
POINT PLEASANT - Cloth- p.m. with Ric It Neat and
Ina g1v1 away evarv WtdMidty, Bob Thompaon preaohtng.
t If 1 .m. to 2 p.m. II Point PIMIant PrttbVWrltn ChUrch, IIIII
~~~f• ~~J:eANT - Tnt
and Main. ConlJI)UIIOnt ol cftan
F
amity
Worehlp Ctntar wilt
ololhlllll t!PP"~·
hotl Forgiven 4, 7 p.m. with
prtaohlng by Rev.
POINT PLEAe.t.NT - FloWY aptclal
Randy
Pareont.
For mort
oiiG will meet • tilt MooN
lnlo.
oatt
11711·
7171
.
LOdge, noon.
•

I

ri ilftlmt ptrfouulild luut ,.'fti

Ecd drr)·~ drutiq figtuft .,. prmWJtd &amp;yAM# ri~

... -

Mirabal Road, Crown City, Ohio
&lt;tSfl2 3,
Dlrran Wolle, aon of Thelma
and Chart• Wolle, Ia hotpltat. tted at Chlldran'a Hoapltal In
Columbua. Sa.nd oarda to htm
fllo Chlldran't Hoapttat, 700 ChM•
dren'a Drive, Room 36E363&lt;t,
Columbul, 9hlo 43205-2fl8e.

POINT PLEASANT ...:. Aloo•
Iunday, ADrll21
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Sunday hotlot Anonymoua, 7:30 p.m.,
ICihool at Addlton FrHwltl Bapllll 811 VIand Strttl. Utt tldt
Churoh, tO a.m. PIHOhtng "'" tnlr~not ol CtHY Law Olllaa.
viol with RIOk B1rc41 at fl p.m.
GALLIPOLIS FEFIRY- Shllltr
tn ptiCII training 1111lon 11 Gat·
~gc~~s:ferl~huba walght ttpotta Ferry Community Ctnt~r.
1011 aupport group, Southtldt
Thurtday, Mav a
Community Center, walgh·lnt
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Prayer
5:30 toe p.m. lottowld by 1 ahort
mttttng
11 Addtaon Fr11wltt
m11t1ng.
Bapllat Churoh, 210 Addtaon
POINT PLEASANT - Aloo• Plkt, 7:30p.m., with Randy Par·
hoilca Anonymoua, 7:30 p.m., · aona preaohlng 1nd apaolat
811 Viand St. Utt aldt tntranot tinging by thl JOYFM Trio.
yt Catty l.aw Olltct.
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS
'
HARTFORD - C.R. Grttn (Taka 011 Pounda Stntlbty) 4:30
will bt at tht Hartford Senter Ott· ' p.m. watgh tn and matting at II
lzana to tKplaln tht M11on p.m. 11 Trinity .Unlltd Mtlhodtll
Countf Veteran'• Projtot, 10 Churoh. For Info call 175·4574 or
a.m. • p.m. Thlt pro)IOI Ia dtdl· 676·31182.
. Ollld to ICiknowtadglng and
POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at
ttrvlng tht contrtbuttona o til
lht Maaon County veteran• of Point Pttuant Gun Club 8 p.m.
tht 201h Century.
OALLIPOLIS,
Ohio
Cooatnt anonymoua mttttng at
'futtdty, April 30
LETART - HELP Dltl Clttt, St. Ptllr't Eplaoopat Churoh,
Latart Community C.tnltr. · 541 Saoond Ave, 7 p.m.
Wtlgh·tna from 5:30 to II p.m.
'
POINT PLEASANT - Weight
fotlowld by ahort mtttlng.
Watohlrt, Ohrltt Eptaoopat
MASON - CommunHy Can· Church wtth weigh In at 4:46
cer Support Group, 7 p.m., p.m. and 5:111 p.m.
M110n Unttld Mtlhodltt Churoh.
NEW HAVEN - NIIW Haven
Allartt canaar palltnlt, ltmllltt
Jr.
O.U.A.M. mHI, 7 p.m . .
and oaraglvtrt tnvlltd.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

......., Aplllt
.
........ 1
RuTLAND - !llallfrom tilt RACINE - Scoltllh Rite
..... o-Ily 'f8 Cllllkl wtl bt liiUIII10 7 p.m. ai the l'llclne
gNII\0 llltln IIIII II the Rulland MMfllllc MI.
" " D~paltmlnl from 4:30
p.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sltll\ lllll wtl
1"1\QEVIlL£ - ~ 'fbwn.
Ill 111!1 an Wtdnntay from
..., Tlut\H maflltno 1:30 p.m.
4:~ p.m, to S:30 p.m. FOf
at Plot* town hal.
lntomle!lon, call ~722.

Ill l\ClPtl'l """" School. ...
hoet a walk alllfllrtl\llllltM•
tl April lit thiOIIQh May 4 It 1
·~
p.m. H!lh day. Paatot L~
SllndiY, Aptlll8
I CQala, flom AMioftllon CIIIIIMtDDLEI"'ff'f - Goaptl liln F~ al Athtnl, wll
a1nQ It 1:~ f).m. at the Mldillt- bt lilt guut apHittf and ""'port Church al the Nazarw. w1• Ill apaolal mualo •VIIfY
MIDDl.EPOA'f - OH 1&lt;11'1
"HHa '1M' 'fill tlllg. Paator Afttn 1'41111nQ. Fof 11\lotmallon, call
Mldclp 111'&lt;1111 public. I'IIIIHII- PMIOr !'lob Barber at 7&lt;to-H7• . COin Club 1 p.m. aiiCtlM M'tCI

MASON CALENDAR

I

D1

IWlatlroCI,

lit .....""" to

Ctltncllr Ia
publllhld II I frtt IIIVIDt 10
nonprofit groupa wlillllll to
announot
mtttlnga and ,,_,
TllatciiY, May 7
alai
IIYinta.
Till oaltncllr Ia
GALLIPt&gt;LIS - Holzer Clinic
Rttlllta will miJt lor . tunoh, nDI!llllllllll ~ tlll'lftiO\t ultl
noon, Iron Gett Rtllaurant In or tllnMIIII'I ·Of any type.
lttma are prlnftcl 11
Point Pltallnt, W.Va.
latuldty, Juna 1
lltcl to ,_..,, lflx ltema to.
RIO GRANDE - CtHio Ftlll• 7411-448•:1001; tmtll llltm to
VII 11 tht Unlvtratly of Rio thltpklllm~dtllytrlbUI1t.DOm.

.,

•

..•s.-nn.r.a
ILAI •a:tan

POMEROY - Pilll'*lilll
Pofllat AldQt AlciQt FWa an OIQIIft IIIII liiMIII IMIIIIIOII.
ChiMOI\, ONo SS&lt;t. JoM Firat Sokullltm .......
Pelt.IEAO't - Vl:tll •• s.._
CC!tollil't. 'l'llll ... mttt at •
EIIWICit.. ....... ~ al Ciuch, Ponlll~ Plitt 1 "'""
Polnl .... II tnt to. ..... 1:~ qua "tn oan ta. '"'ned to t.lll. It M 'JII:IIIIM Sar.Mc.
· U. Ll'lllla. 7~74Ntll0.
01111:a. m Mal'l)OiiM Dliwt.
POMEAOV -

filii• rei•• any "'"'fUPPEAS
"
lltiM ... ptiR,Id

u111 or

tarda~bt~IO-att~

p.m.

I

MEIGS CALENDAR

CALENDAR
tit ·

. . ) . . . . . . . It

CLusifo~ ..Is, ~ D2-7

GALLI A
t=i_"!"~ tinton·

Inside:

...==--......

IJDIIIQ407t

=

·-11, IIIIM\ CIOIIHI-IIft
-1701-ll,

(JDij 121.,11

'

_ O I I o ....... l.iOUppor-lld,

,...,'* • =•lliMnlll.
="mo
fA

......

1WIIWII'- .. IWPII MCr.,

0401uu:!t2

1111. _ , ....
.,1..... 10717llt tJf,

04011»2 It

.,_llfOijjt, ..,c.

---- --

1 ""'

&lt;*M)Df.ml

C1C , ,•• N7f INdio ...... tOt,

u• w.aw

-~. -17401*'*2

_..._,141
ll• lltlw;a4 " -

...

.,..,~~ Jtfi.Miitll,

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

f40ml

......._
......

'llf L Mlllll.

,_ -llleliaoieoo H11fl tt.
0401--

NEW YORK (Dow Jones
News) - Crude oil futures
rose Thursday at the New
.York Mercantile Exchange,
boosted In part by fresh con·
. ceros about the future of U.S.·
Saudi relations and talk about
the possibility of an Arab oil
embargo.
On Thurliday, The New
York Times stirred the fears
. with a report that Saudi Crown
Prince Abdullah was e"pected
to tell President Oeorge W.
Bush in a meeting later in the
day that the relationship
between their two countries
would be in jeopardy if Bush
didn't ~often his support for
Israel's military policies.
·
But the rully fizzled in the
afternoon after a Saudi
embassy official told reporters
at the talks that the country
had no intention of using oil as
a weapon.
,
Front-month June crude oil
futures closed up 3S cents at
$26,73 a barrel after jumping
to as high as $27.20 per barrel
on fears of a Saudi oil embargo.
May heating oil rose I
penny to close at 67 ccnlli a

gallon, while May gasoline
futures gained 0.61 cent to set·
tie at 79 cents a gallon.
The crown prince's displeasure with Bush's Mideast polIcy has been well known for
some time, but the strong tone
of the Times article and partieularly the suggestion that the
Saudi regime might 'syppon
imposing an oil embargo on
the U.S. took traders and analysts by surpflse.
·
The Times article quoted a
person familiar with the ·
crown prince's thinkina. saying that there was talk within
the Saudi royal family and in
Arab car.itals of usin~ the socalled 'oil weapon' against
the U.S., and demandina that
the U.S. l~ave strat~gic milltary, balll!s an the regton.
' It Is a mistake to think th~t
our people will not do ~~at ts
necessary to · survive:. th.e
source told the Times, and 1f
.t~at meat;~s we move to. the
nght of ban Laden, so be to .
the left of Oadhafi, so be at, or
to fly to Baahdad and embrace
~add.wn like a brother, ,so be
at. Its damned .lonely an our ·
1J111111 Ml lelltrp, Dl

!•:

-

111/111 .1 t I H1IIII

IIIII

lit• II VI 1 '/

1•888•BUY•USCC

uscelluJat".com

'

H1n 1

IM•In••• MWJ H1111?

Give 111 1 Clllllt 14G-UI 2342, at. 2J
, ------------------------------~--------~

New store coming to Point
BY PAM WILLIAMION

PAMWII'MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ~
Point Pleasant's Main Street has been
down on its luck for quite some time.
Empty storefronts jump out like an
eyesore. But there are a group of peo·
·pie, spearheaded ·by Charles
Humphreys, executive director of
Milin Street, who have worked to help
bring new businesses into the area as
part of reversing the economic decay in
Mason County. ·
And businesses and residents can all
be excited as they are about to get a
new neighbor with the Workingman's
Store.
"We get a lot of customers in
Huntington from this area, we have for
many years, and I think once we put a
store in here I think we'll just branch
out further and pull in from further,"
Jerry Furbee Jr., vice president of,thc
Workingman's Store said. "We advertise quite a bit and our big and tall store
pulls people from a radius of I00 to
lSO miles every day to Huntington."
''They come to Huntington and they
eat in our resii\Urants and they shop
downtown and .they spend money in
the gas stations and that's the effect we

hope we'll have here too," he added .
Jerry Furbee Sr., is the president of
the companr and has been in the retail
business smce 1956, creating the
Workingman's Store in 1981. He's
built the Workin11man's Store on its
. low prices and hagh quality customer
service and product.
·
"We're good to people," Furbee Sr.
said. "We have 12 or 13 employees
down in Huntington working and
they're trained and taught to treat
everybody right and that everybody
that's in that store is the most important
person."
The new store will offer a range of
products from casual to work clothes,
and from steel-toed work shoes to hospital scrubs in a wide selection of
sizes. Familiar name brands, like
Levi's, Lee's •. Dickies and Tommy
Hilfiger will line the racks.
Furbee Sr. began is pleased with its
e~pansion into Point Pleasant.
"We like Point PleaAant, we like the
whole valley here," Furbee Sr. said.
"Mr. Bell and hi~ son own the building
and they gave us a very good proposi·
tion, and if it weren't for that we
wouldn't be here. They made it possi·

ble for us to come."
Allen and Edward Bell, also of AB
Contracting, are completing the reno·
vations to the 5.600 square foot down·
town building.
"I think its going to do real good
here," Edward Bell said. "You always
have to have good quality clothes to
work in and if it's a good store and a ·
good price, then they're going to buy it
here, they aren't gomg to go anywhere
else."
"We put a plan together to go after
the ri,!lht type of stores that would do
·well m Point Pleasant and draw from
other counties and this is one of those
stores," Humphreys said. "It's been
around 21 years and we believe this is
the store for Point Pleasant, and our
county."
·
Humphreys e"pects the store to draw
customers from Ripley, and even ·
Jackson, Ohio.
The new business will use at least
two full-time employees, one full-time
sewnstress, and one or two part·time
employees to begin with, but with possible additional hiring. ·
Furbee Jr. anticieates opening the
store in late May. · 11
·

Controlling garden slugs
April showers bring May flowers!
The showers also bring slugs and
snails to eat their way through out
vegetable and flower ' gardens. Clean
up around the yard and garden areas
as young sluas are hatching from eggs
laid last fall. Rocks, boards and
leaves provide excellent winter coverage for slugs and their eggs. Slugs,
once lultched, have a tendency to
returo, during daylight hours, to their
initial place of birth. By disrupting
their home base you will be able to
trap and kill larger numbers of these
pests.
For control measures, remember
that several methods may need to be
employed to reduce their numbers.
Most homeowners want to poison the
sluga however, care needs to be ta)ren

Hal
Kneen
GUESTVIE.W
as the poisons may adversely affect
·other animals and birds. The most
common pesticides contain the active
ingredient methaldehyde. Most pesticides come in aranular or pelletized
form and are spread near the plants
being protected. The pelletized form
may have their effectiveness

increased by keeping them protected
from e"cess moi sture. Try placing
pellets in a small container which has
been laid on its side. Research at Ohio
State Univenity states that placement
of poison near the slug's birthplace
improve its effectiveness, more slugs
come in contact with the chemical.
Non-poison control measures
include· placing boards or wet cardboard near the area being protected.
and cbcckin~ underneath each morning and.pickmg up and destroying the
slugs found underneath . Pie pans of
stale beer (yeast, water and sugar)
placed each night at around level,
atuact the slugs and they drown in the
. pan. Remove slugs each morning and

...................
'

�6unbap ~1mr•· i&gt;rnllnrl• Page 03

CLASS I Ill

ADUlT HIGH SCHOOL 01 ·
Pl0t.4A .
Fast!
New I
Untquel Nattonally Accred lted Chrlsllan School. Guaranteetl Failure-Proof. Low
Tuition. FREE Brochu re.

lnon.-..11:

R . .CH

Call

Nowl

1-800-1!69·3997

DIABETIC SUPPLIES at
NO COST II yQu have Medi·
care/Insurance. New me5 ·
· ·
tera, Te~t tnps, lns~hn It
you quahly. (no HMO a) 1·

800 815 1577

"
-" --- -

EARN YOUR COllEGE Old
You . lake
FEN·
DEGREE QUICKlY. Bach· PHEN/REOUX ? There Is o
elora , Masters, Doctorate, REAL POSSIBILITY you

IGPiaea

by correspondence baaed are eligible .ror $250.000 In
upon prior education and Compensation Call . Toll
short study course. For Free 1-877-851 -9765
FREE lrlformation booklet . Selling memborBh lp 81 Roy-

vau•Ad.

•C!ta•ll IGday.. ••

phone

C"MBAIOGE al Oak Aesor1

o~-H~

800·964.-8316

Monday thru Frld y
e:oo e.rn. to S:OO p.rn.

Please call

1· 740·992·2895 days or 740·
992·279 5 evenings and
weekends.

STATE UNIVERSITY

Public Sale and Auction

Work

~rom

Home

LOCATEIJ OF'I&lt;' 1·77 (KENNA EXIT
Nl24)
14 MILES SOUTH OF RIPLEY AT
CASTO'S TRUCK SALES.

Or Any Location!
Fortune 500 Company
$1500·$6000/MO PTIFT
FantMIIC Opportunity

Call Now!
1-800-565-7235

AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Wt! hun

C0l·A DRIVERS:

E11perlenced/Or Trainees
Over 3 nionths
•west Coaal Team Runs
•oreat Miles, Pay &amp; BeneIlls

1-800'253·5148

11

1241'~

fiU '

hulldlnK lnodrd. Thl!llls lhf .~l!l'llhd IIIU'llon or ht' lllll
rrm11 lnt·al rhl!ltlit'tlll•hull. Th(rt " 'Ill ht• ln1 ~ of tuow
llem~ . EYtrythln~t

!Ct'II!C

"u~ 1.~

and

wh~rt·

I!!" , Smnl'

will bt' 11old a11 pllllellolli. i\.l~n tl'f'·ner Uorrt•ll ( '11d11
hiiN (l)r flllllt' by prh'lllt lnlll} (lwt In llln·llun ) 4
Mll('k dump lru('k~ . I h11. durnp lrul·k, 1 S••ml'11, 7
low boy trall~:r11,l U('atntur~t, 4 (ork ll(b, Ill 1997
t.:hny Yan trurk!l. For niore lnrornullltln filii tJII4l
Jll-'li\S6.
OREI~ NLEE ELEC'. CON Ill JIT IIFNilU{ • /\SST

OF ELtC. MOTOH.S - Jl4 liP "I'l l \II Ill' IMIJST
NFiW} "'l'OMMERC'IAL {01~ INliER Am 11/\MMI: k.S
• YALE TROLLEYS - I TUN '11) ~ lON'i • JACK

PUBLIC
AUCTION
M"ily 3, 2002

.

.

AUCTION

,
Weare
offering a
$~00 sign-on
bonus!

Oom~ultrlilntlfnll

Utlft

W1nl1d . t\1100 mDIP. T,
111000. m!lll'T.

Fraa Bt&gt;oklot. 888•R2D•IHB
D~ht. AIObtdlrtQ Ot ¥1111
www.WHIInllyourt.ccm
Dalalntry: Mo601ol81111nu .
Proctal CIAima, Will Troln.
PO AO.,uiPid. Gttll In•
comoIll

1·800·140·11 87

Capt. Cl7

Dial Up
Success With
lnfoCision!

1-877-463·
6247
Ext.1841

H1lp Wanted
NOW HIRINO STATK Tli:STED

l.oll In

v~lnliy ol Jaokoon
an o6uil mMio blook
ond white short hair 011. HI

~lko

1'111 1

protective vtttrln•ry

collar on. l'ltllt
(140)44 1-1'120

ro.
~

aall

,

YAIIIISALK

Sales Clerk Wanted
Experience In 11111, lumber,
plan reading, computer 1klll1
1nd eetlm1t11
Apply In pereon at

Ct1e1ter, Ohio
113 Adrian Ave, Portable
Olt11WIIhtrl l!nd Tabltt1
Clll 985·3301 for lnform1tlon
Cklthll,
Womone
8· ~======::=======
_
Oily Bid,
. Alllly81zet
NIDI
2
2
12. M•r • ~ - o.m· Pm
Help Wantld
(140)44 ·0·110
'rldiVt llturdiVt lunday1
e:oaam· a:ocfm. Lovare
Une. LOll 0 hOUithOid

We.'re growing again/
Are you ready to s.tart
your new career?
*Managers
* Aeat. Manager•
* Customer Salee
* Account Managere
* Delivery Speclallet

lltml.

Allay for Ufl, Hugo Chlrity

y1rd Silo. John..,•• Vln1
llretl. Thuraday 1/2/02,
lllurdly 114102, I •?

vera lilt. o1oPn1 2e111, iiOih,
Mly Ill, 2nd lnd 3rd. t ·•
Mfltt 0111 ADUlt 211.
C1rd of Thankl

Card o/ Th1111kl

We're looking for the
- Best of the Bett.
Join our Winning Teem/

We wl1h 10 1hank

everyone who niada
our 601h weddlna
1nnlver..., tueh a

Benefit. Include

wondtrful, IJ*lal

Httllh lneurtnoe 401·K
Proftt Sharing Paid Vaoetlone
Paid Holldayl EmployH Dleoounta
BonuNe
Lift lnetJrtnoe
Advtnoemtnl Colltgt ~,,..nee

day. We lhenlt thole
who Nnt llowert,

e.rctJ, ll1d slfu.
Al10,1hoH who

' phoned Ul. Wt
·.,peelllly dlank our
· IOIIf, Rtnd)' and

Call the 24-hour R·2.0 Career Line at

(F...-), Ten')' ll1d
(Htldt) for hollln1 ·

1-800·521·5101

Ext. 111
Apply on llne11t www.r2o.com

tiMievenl. May Ood
lMtfeiChOM

· ofrou.

BoU

•

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONUIIIUCK PIAIIION IIIII
UJ.IfU 011 UJ•I44f
TIIIMit CIIIH 011 CHICKW/10,

"Attenllon .1111 Coll•p 11nd aradu11tln1
·
Hll!h School Studenlll"

1ummer job openlnp

Publlo 1111 end Auotlon

ANTIQUE&amp;.
COLLECTIBLES
'AUCTION

'

hoort oi SAM and 4PM,

s.'"' ~ ct.•
380 Colonial Drive

~~

Bidwell, Ohio 4!614
tAo ltllll -·~~~~~ '"""'"'

LICENSED AND BONDED IN
FAVOR OF S'l'ATI&lt;: OF OHIO

InfoCision
Management Corp.

For Info Or To Con8lgn
BOb SELLS ('740) 643-0281 Auttloneer

''

HAROLD Nli:AL (740) S33·0834

Pl iBJ ,1( ' Al l( "TI( &gt;N

Apprentice

\ 11111 &lt;1.1'

.

•

'

nltmlrktltno

lnloCIIIIHiotrll'l -llllr and nntlnllttlltfti.'.
ttWIM41hltt IIMHII,llfe, '1111111Ht1 oiOIK, 111111 .....

A1tn1 Chrlt Gulcfl
321 Sprtn,.lde Dr.
Akron, OH -"333
Of IIUIJ 14 Hlllfrcterefel«c;tlcfq• ce•

COMMERCIAL

WELDER ··.\ llll

PANS • LOTS 01: NEW tHU :r~ ~ I·LAMM/\111.1!
AGE \AIUNETS "' 1 LO T OF MO'IOH.
' * THANSFOHMEH. .'i ,. S()I IAitE ll
&lt;woo'r'w nmOWS "'O IU:NHEIWE AllUOH. JI AN D
PIO~SS • NEWSI,AI'ER PHINTINU EQIIIPM,ENT •
BOOK STITCI-ti!R • WATHR TESTEH. • SOl L
• NEW HYDRONIC' IIEATIN&lt;I II NIT • 114"
.5" PORTAil.LE HYI&gt;RAULIC C'ON!Jl !IT
HENIJI!H • AIR VALVES • SLURH.Y PI IMI'
W!MOTOR "' LA IWE ASST. OP VAR IOI I.... S I Z I ~
VALVI!S • ASST. OF .WIRE "' ALAN
IJK,&lt;IJLiel MOTOR CONIROL I'ANEL " WI .\ OF

I

CONIJIT IONER ANI1 REFRIOERATI ON
• tn ILITY

I RTS • l i'ROI'AN E PLOOR lllJFFERS

' AiliNETS • I NFH.AH.ED C' AMf.H.AS • Ot+ln•
FUkNITIJRI!

I•LUS tOTS NOT USTEU.
n : HMS t CAS II OM l:IH~ t.:K
IJAY
Si\.U: WITIII,USI'rtV•~ IU

o•·

A UGTIONEER:
EIJWIN WIN')'ER N334 ·
I'HONE
273·344 7 OR 372-9656

Public Sale and Auction

··············-·················
MILLER
ESTATE AUCTION :
3 Adjoining Homts Each sells to lilghest Bid over ~30,000 1 !

Ill \

litl lll.l
( )

:

•

111

II

IJu~ lo rtmvln~ 10 u 1111oller home, u public uucilon will be held of the per110111dl
of Murthu OooJin und the lule llltrl OrKXIIn. llltrl und

ESTATE
AUCTION .

und gltiti~WliN l'ur nmlly yeurs with a very huge collection
everything is in excellent condiliun.
·
·

Prom Athens· Rl. ~0132 weSI 10 Alhuny. lum on Rt 6HI. ul
IUm right nil Slate Street, house on right beside uvctpass. wutch for i
· I uvulluble ncatby.
.
· ANTIQUFS II&lt; COLUX1'1BLES&lt;
wmdudum.l, uuk Jrup front f!C~o:rctary desk. w/&amp;nlwUI
ltthror. ouk 2-glu" door cabinet w/shcl•e•. ouk I
I dnor cabinet w/shei\'CI, pine 2-gla!i!l
I
W/11helve!ll, uak chest uf druwen,
w/swlvel mirror frutne lno mirror).

che01 w/wood hundleo. wulnu1 3-drnwe"l
wfglove

holle!ll,

round &amp;

llqUUre

oak

Wi¥1uss ball feel, 0111u1e round &amp; square
&amp; wulnul lump lllble•. round pie CIUSI Dunocanl
l'hylfe lamp lable, small ook fable, smull ovul
lable, uak drup leaf 10(a ,.bit. square
1able w/e&lt;nltr column &amp; carved delllll
le!gt, 4-oak ann chalt1, 6-oak chaltt

chen')' dllljl lc:af lable, 2-&amp;ale leg table~, oak pre11 bock mcklng
,.lit, m•••~lne racko, granlle cuff.. pol. coffCO: arlnder. old wood
~·;~l:i~i~~'k;,). bowli, wood (J.druwer 1pool cablntt, .oiJIIn 11ool w/gla••
1e
MWetal Prince Albert can1 ( 1-Holf I&lt; Half can), old wood
wllools, mllklna 1tool, wood •&amp;a ahil'!'lna a111e.
t2•A,IIIt!din It 1-Rayo), cellulpld vanlly plecet, 3-old quill
dtell11&lt;HIIeler (rouahJ, """'jotlber, Dilley hand plane. tad Iron, lmpo1rioll
l~~~~!:~j~ll&lt;k,
llnlert1ri,. Mfa. Pre11, Unlvetoal meal chopper. brace,
Withe Moomaln Ice cream freezer.
over I00 pieces of ~Ivai

In viltit!tlt pattemt. ~everal pieces ,r
10+ lei!IOIIln 11111ny dltrerent tlze•
~ne.1fna hint In dltrl!renlsii!AIII &amp;
jiiH sflpj!Ofl. ~·blown violin
ttemWirt. &amp;1111 bookeiJ and dishes,
1lilt dlohet, S..:hlno hair """'lvftll,
Cil11lvll10011!pick ltoklert, llenneu
11111111 old medldne botli01, oomc whl·•k•r
dooantoro.
HOlflliHOLD flt!RNISIIING!Js nlct
bedroom 111111 (dooble 4-pmler "::~i~:,:
slln.J.Ichal o( drawellid,....t •
11111plf btdroom tUlle (dooblt llooltcue bedl•cilell
"''~:bl~l
lllf'1 A loviiUl, z.drum end tlbl..,
chelr w/c11110
Zenith
&lt;ulor TV, MIIJlJbltlll alereo oyoleni W/apuken In nh11111. lob of ~able
floor lMmp, plflf kllcltcn ctlblllll w/glall doon, vtriety of Home lnlerior
dec«owr lle111J, "'""' heddlna and llnent, u..,.,...,t of klll:hen diahel,
ow,, loCJ of Chri•IIIW .JeooraOOrts 1&lt; UJ/111. ortlfklel uee. pi&lt;fllc
wtll~t~~l'lrinJ bu.lrd. ond olhet ml~etlllllllllllllemt,
AM) MISO:LLANEOUll• Ford rut opin-out hubt, 3· Wlranperl
l-12" prden lltet. Atlcno rowdller. bell
citallitltiW. vlbtawt lll!dlr, ellrctllo drills, 5tlul
ICI'tW ]leu, lead weiJhlt, l1ond wood
bolott, and mfl&lt;l!ll"""""l ..,..., lletnl.
w/pml~u 1.0. Checks,.., SIOOO mull""""
...''•~"" ... llabil.
Not ,..ponolble for loH oriCI:Idenll,

- --

Iroou

fllfilllloM lad IIOIIQ,..

· lnfoCIIIon Mlnapmtnt Corp.

\ !. 11 I
\II!

Public 8111 and Auction

l

'.''

IICIIIIetK cemmulaiiH ·~ llfllllaldoltlllfllll
IIU miNI. I!Nilfldllllt will lit IW(IGJIIIilt foull
ln..,.....llllt ~lrin11 1ad Nittlullltl tl

,

LINCOLN LN-1

dlaheo (mirlJOid A '"'""'' '""""•
piU:IIm, 1lu11!1, Ml+ P•o!lles ol pink dt~:~~~

j

....

('AI'ACITY, 7' LONG "' STAK I'All&lt; PLASMA
CU-rriNO SYSTEM .. DENISON lllJ IIYilH.A\JLI('
OIL MULTI I'R ESS • WELIW.R ~ IN('I.t iUINfi

As agents lor the !!'Slate of Paul/t M~ler, John A. CornwEll, !
Eleculor, J.CP.C. #02~50 35, Paul A. Miller Tru st. Ern~e D. •
Strawser, Trustee, we will sell the following on the prcm
lm T~ursday, May 9th at 4:00 PM :

Public Sale and Auction

,.•

'

:

I'AN llELTS ' NEW WEUJIN{I LI1AI&gt;S ' NliW
TERitY RANI) 26 112 Ill' STREAM TI IIUIINE
~NOINF. • AI H. TANKS • MF.TAL ROI.I.EH. . lf1 {JA

IcU&gt;Ieto, l •lilddetbtk:k rllsh ,..t genllemen's chain, 011k hull tteO, chenyy··;;;;~i~gl

In Hu11111n a-!'HI ur ladutlrlll ltllllontll~
two tllll'l operltnn In tilt pti'IOIIIIIIftetd,

'"''

l)ltll.l . PIU ,S.\ '
t' IIAIN ll&lt;lls·l S '

Cars • Stamp Collections • Ant1ques

11110 tlmpiiiY"

Help Wlnted

01'

mulch), bow back chair. 2-poddcd parlor

Full time job
opportunltle• 1110 •vtdllbte.

Y/J/1 IMf Wl-1111 fJ lfi/ICIII#~.IIItf

'

168 tWl'. RD. 121W, WILI;OW WOOIJ, OH

AMVETS BLDG.
(FORMER DAV BL~
LOCAlf,?J~SJfll/J"8T. E'I"n
KANAUGA, OHIO (GALLIPOLIS)

Pltllt till Ul It (740) 395•24'70
for more lnform11tlon.

lnfoCitloa Ma....mtnl Corp, It iiHIIllllllliU
dmt Ptrltlllllll Coorcllutor for our Cltltlptlll·
loullotl, QllalllciiU..IMhldt I buhtloN ~

Plemnt Valley Hotpltal, a non-prcnt
healthcare facility, currently hal open
potlllont for 1he followlns:
I) QIIA Pan.llme MLTIMT
ti.Jt SvenlnpiNI&amp;hll (30 hour• aweek
or more) Mull have or be lmmedlallly
e1J1Ible (Ot WV IJc:tnN
2) I:G Part·tlmu~perlenced ·
Phlebotomltu for Bvenlnp/NIJhU
(30 houtta wuk or more)
Send ruumeto:
PLI!:ASANT VALLE\' HOSPITAL
do Human Rttourtn
%$20 Val~ Drive
Point I'IMIIn~ WV U5JO
Or call (304) mM~. ElL 1414
Or FAX to (304) (lt• .wll

Cochran
RefrcNhments served by J\u~lllary
Fi•r lnft!rma!lon cull:

6:00PM

No experl•nce ntctMryl

ASST.

COMMERCIAL SANilUI.ASTEH. • 1:1 H ' 1{ 1·11/\H.
IJENDER • GANG BOXE:S • 1 Alfi: 'IRA:-.111'\ ! ~It'S •
STEEL IIARIJEN ER TESTER • LAIWI: AS\1 OF

Helper 1111\.urry

FRIDAY, MAY 3,

Personnel Coordinator

M/101

WI/.IJU RIIHr

'

Watoh lor our
Orand Openlq

l.g. amount
aamn, bAiktta,
Jr. oara, pot &amp; pana, ••m11'1a.
red wagon, llllrblll,
and mora.

LARGE

Auclluncer • CM Stanley

lt.L. SELLS AUCTION SERVICE

S.erJob

arteptlnaappllaulolill for full and

7h 11111nerou.v to me11tio11!

... Farm Equlpm~nt
Trallel'll ••• Lawn and Garden

$3,000 $4,000
$5,000
"And More!"

LuiiJino'•• Inc., In J•ckAon would like to
tptlk to you 1bout our

May 4, 2002 10:00 am
Tra~tol'll

I\Ill 11 .1 I
t ,(1111 \ Ill I

(AND OJ.'IIIilliNO CUSSES, TOO/I)
~ S.. 6.14 tMII now
lllrl•llme Illite IHttd nui'IIHI lllllllllllllt,
Appllutlun• 11'1 1110 heln(latepted for
Nunhll A1111tant Cl._ to bt htld In
May. Hi'ICC Is a qulllty oriented lon1
tnm ure flrlllty wllh 1n euelltnl Wilt
and btnedt park•ae. It yoo aN lnter.e•ttd
l!leMse apply In per10n between lbt

BAUM LUMBER

Help Wanted '

NURSING
ASSISTANTS

l'I'OCIUcfl'll lUlCk yilrd8
Gallipolis, Ohio

Publlo Ball and Auotlon

Consignments Wanted

W1lm1rt Pl111 M11pn 1 WV

7PM

DAV Building,
28051 St. Rt. 7, North
Cheshiret Ohio
Antiques and collectibles,
'glassware, Cambrldg
wnterpltcher, Blenko glass,
grinders, knives, swords,
new lawn chairs, converter
with charger and much
morel

AUCTION

~·

Don't p1n up thl1 opportunity to make
$3,000 to $5,000 •ml more durln1 the
1ummer month11o

.

lit. mn

@

!lAMMERS ll SI'EEIJ I'LO&lt;Jit

, ..•OOOD SAI.B WITH NICB
VMtiBTYOI ITBMI/111
.4VCT/ONI8RtLBSUB ..t. LBMLBY
'140.141·9161
CA.BH OR A.PPROVBD CHBCK ONLY
FOOD SBRVED BY 1..40181 A.VX.
"NOT RBSPONSIBLB FOR
A.CCIDBNTS OR LOST PROPilRTYJ"
~

. -.....-.----&lt;-

OWNERs Mortha Goodin

SHAMROCK AUCfiON SERVICE

AUCTIONI!:I!Rsl'lll Shttid111
A"IO!lng Auct-: Ouio Pnlet
~'.mall : ShamndAudiooitiOI.&lt;Om Well: wwtUlllmrock·tiJC1lont.com
PH:
22

.,.

for.,..,.,,,

: !IT AN LEV A SoN. ll'oC. ·Coli
:
(140) 175-JJJO
,_ .,.n~ey......,"""
: Htnfl' ... llanW,, .. CAl Al.ldJonHI' ..... c.. ....

:•••••••...•.....•.................

•

•,

�Sunday, Ap~ll 28, 2002

mPirage::::D:":":::•;u:;":ba~p;~i;';'":t:•-~&amp;;t:n:t•:nr:l=;m;::::;::::::::P:o~m;e;r~o=y=· Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio·• Point Pleaunt, WV

I'" M""'

I

AAllXJS

Sian Your !l&lt;JIIln..o ToPrfrM ShOj)plng Ctnter Space Avallabte At At·
lordebla Role Spnng Valley
Plaza, Coli 740-446-{) 101.
- - - - - - - ''Growing lnl ornahonol Com--~ ....
•~ p I Earn B'fQ
pany ,,_.,,
Bus!Nt:9&gt;
S$$ !rom homo! PTIFT For
NUD
AFFORDABLE
lnlormalton. Call TQII Free
1·800·249·7424 or vlsn
Htatlhcaro1 S54.95/mo. lor '
tnUre family. No Limit&amp;· ss AT&amp;T Payphone Rootea l'tUpJ!www haW'II'I(flueotll eom
0 1
Hone. No Pr•E.xisling con- Ss P I
L I S.
r me oca lltl. rea
Mofl.'t'Y
dltlonlle~eclu tlone .
CALL
7
1800 8
) 00·J4 0
TO LoAN
FAMILY CARE NOWIII 1· ~:~~nS
·
...._
·
800-235·9209 e.t 1042
Moo .·Frl. 9am-8pm.
-••-.N-E_E_D_B_U_S-IN-E.,-SS.,--,C-A.,.-PI
•
...
- FREE
CREDIT
now!
WANI'Eil
lnve01ors Looking Charge almoot anything!
- TAL 1

dey...

I

"rid

Lw-ii()ppowiiit-lii1JN
II'iim';,;.,..l

r

t.------_.1
To Do

.1

All Makes Lawn Mowers
and Ou tdOOr Power EquiP·
ment Repalrtd. Free Pickup

51 &amp;oreo, Long
Hom,
good hunting ond ~
very private, rnoltly
ed. own on bolh , _ ot
~d, rood lrontago on 3
lidos of properly. 3 bod·
room 2 full balha. 1 112
~11OfY farm •---'~ ,.,.,,......
menl, vinyl oidlng, Iota ot
clotels and lllorage sp&amp;oo.
conlrol hoot and ale. detaehtd 2 c.r garage w/at·
IIChed ohtd, Ireo goo. well
water. eepUc. 2 stocked
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 28' pondt, $98,900 (740)843·

pro;

Baoe-

I '

~:PTt=~~~~~J~!~ VIS~!

Interior/ E~eterlor Painting
EKJ)e rlenced. References.
Aeaaonable Flates Free
Estimates. (740)388-6041
Ask tor Mike.

money through the mail until YOUR? F~EE DEBT CONyou have . 1nvesUoated tM SOUDATION. REDUCE In·
oflfHing.
terest, LOWER Pavments.
STOP late lees &amp; hara ssA CANOY VENDING tie
men! , LICENSED, BOND·
Earn $60K. Work 4 hrs ED NONPROFIT
Great
Locations.
SO 1"800-268-6331 , 81(t. t 5
Down/F1nanctng.
1-800- www.goldcoastcc ·com
86 1-9166 Ekl 2403
A Lccal Vending Roule.
FAST CASH LOANS! $500$ 125.000 Crodll Problema
100 iop Localkma
$90k!Yr. Potential
Our Spec;laltyl Let us help
Investment Required.
today I Guaranteed! 1·800·

Lewn Care
LOOII;Ing lor quality work ?
Call us. Look;lng lor sloppy
work ? Call the other guys
Licensed and Insured Alv·
er C 1tles Lawn Care. 740·
992·1536

Spring Savings
Home re:m0del1ng and re·
pairs rooltn~J , chain link
tonce,custom wood decks &amp;
ranees lr'lSurance repairs.
Che&lt;:k our price before
you bu y. Free Estimates
304 ·675·3733
top to 8pliom ·Cle aning
Sorvlee, proleasional, real rJe ntial, office c1ean1no at
an
alforr1able
price .
(740)992-2979 or (740)992·
139 1

volo, Counlry
Sehlng.
lot SOls by Ownor. Slacked Pond. Addillonol
Good VIew ot river. 0u1 o1 7.5 Acres Avolloblo. Coli Ja.
flood plain. 38R, LA. OR, nell CaH 11 Century 21
Kilctltn Small Oineht, 2 &amp; Lind (Cellular t
Full balh.
Cor Gorage. (304)834·25!1f or Ofiioe 1·
Froflt' Porch. Block Top 800-731 ·9011 ).
Driveway, 1 9110 IICrt, New
Carpet, Now Roof, 9804 Aernodaltd Ranch Homo.
State Route 78. (7~}44&amp;- Three 8t4rooms, Bath,
1794
. large Kilcl&gt;en and Dining

-

2

Lyons

~~r!:~rd~~;:54~t ~::1°3 :"~•.::k.(r~~~48~ ~:;:~~~~~~~8::0~

3 Dedroom , In Mlddlepon,
call Tom Anderson after
Spm, (740)992-3348.
.
3br. Home large k1tchen, llvlng. rodm , OR, Central Air,
Electr ic tum. 211 7th Street
Now
Haven
$38.500.
(304)662·3772 or (304)662 3752

4 used homes left. Must
see! (740)446·3570.

482· 4805

4 Year Old Custom Built
Cape Cod, 22008q It ,
Beautilut lot with · Privacy
tenc:e. Move in Condition.
Right ott At 7. {740)441 ·
0602
FIRST TIME HOME

~··

309 -- - -==-

-

c1~~ 1967

roonY2 bah. ~~$and kilch-

Counlry homea, n~e lolo,
iocaled on Rl 33 b a Pomeroy/Athens. caM 740f details
-"-2187 or
.
Moellt homo lolnter now

a

on, ook cabfnola. 2 porches,
paved road. perltcl locolion. Clooo to Hunllnglon &amp;
Pl. Pleuant. 15 mlnutet to
T-ta (~)~• ••••
,... ,.. ' ~ ._,:·~
Naw Ooublewldt on 1·5
acres. {740)446~ .

-------------..o....-Real Estate General

back patio, central air. on

largo level lot, $45,000,

New •3 ~ 2ba with shown by appofntment onty,
Great Room on 1· 114 acres (740)992·9189
on

Jertys

A;un. Realtor

~~

1. r

basement, garage, on one
acre lot with trees. Well
maintained, fully carpeted,
Eaatem Local Schools, on
Route 7 near Chellflt'. Alk·
Jng $89.000,.00. 740-9854335
Clearance
So
$ 10
000 00
on~".'[',~, prtCt. New·3one
bedroom. 2 balh IOC!Ionei
home wll/1 many amenities
and extras ltke huge 21 cu·
blc loot refrigerator with iCe
maker and deluxe diah·
waaMr Only $49 905 00
dellverfcl and utu'p
your
foundation.
·
COie'l Mobile Homes
u.s. 50 East ·
Athens, Ohio 45701

on

1

able to quafifled buyers. 0'%
down. 1600 1Q fl , 2 1/2
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom
oak trim &amp; cabinets gas
fireplace large klt~dinlng, 2 1/2 car garage on 1
112 acres. $119,900. Porter
area. ~740}44&amp;·45141lll ~m
or (7.0)448·3248 aftar 8pm
Nowfy Remodeled 3 BR, 2
BA Large Living Room. Ointng Room, Large Walk·ln
CIOaeta. New Oak Ctblnet1
In Kitchen. Full BaNment
wtth one ear garaoe. 1 1!2
acres. (7.0)245-5064
;;:.;.;;.:.:_:;_;:.:;;.:.:.,:.:.:.;_ _
Nice Split LeveJ home. Artnlaton Drive, Point Pleasant
2·3 br. tba. · Fenced back

WE HAVE

r---':'"---w

.... - ·
• -f · ,. . .
rooms, 1" 112 baths, ull New house- financing avail·

Free Money Now I Irs True!
No repavment. Guaranteed.
For per~nal needs, educa!ton. busmess. 1·800·72 4•
6047 (24 hrl.)
Get Cash Fast!! $t00-$500.
Easy Oualillcl tlona Never IUVEFIII
740·592•HJ72
·
Leave Home! Fur'Kta Depos- SO DOWN.
For Sale by Owner 3 or 4
!led·Cheeklng Accoonl Next NO CREDIT NEEDED!
bedroom 1 balh ixcenent
Dey. Loans By County Bank HUD, VA FHA
condition' Many' new fea·
Ol Rehobo th Bea12_h, DE; . 1-800·501-1?77 81(1. 9828 lures . 122 Klneon Drive.
Member FOICIEOL
,
(740)448-8310 or (7.0)441·
t · 800·397· 1908
For u lt: 18 + acres with •979
BRAN CH OFFICE aOJailable
houae garage and aome
·
in your area . Help cllenls
NEED
AN
EARLY
PAY·
OUI
bulldlngo
Neighbor&amp;
For
sale
or lease wHh oplion
consolidate debts lnro one OAY 11 Up lo $500 lnalanlly phOne (304)882·2359
lo buy: 4 bedroom, large
kitchen
1 112 balha
lower monthly payment. by phone! 1·(877)-EAALYTraining, suppon. lmmedl· PAY. Uc i 750005 t at AD· FORECLOSED
GOV'T F.A.N.ci. haaH:entral air:
ate residual income Call VANCE .FFIEEt
HOMES! $0 OR LOW rlwer view from large front
NACC al, 1-70 1·451,9432. STOP FORECLOSUREIII DOWNI TAX_ REPO'S &amp; porch, loose references &amp;
Behind on Mortgage? Don't BANKRU~TCIESI
OK deposll. no peta. 740·992·
COMPUTE R ACCESS?
File Bankruplcy Sove Your CREDIT FOR LISTINGS! 9012
Earn excellent income workHomtlll Guaranteed Servk:e. CALL 1-800-501 -1777 ext.
ing from home part- t1me or
9813 ·
800-915-9704
Ext 21 0
lull-time.
www.BeBossFree.com
TURNEDDOWNON
r--------~::::::::::::::::;---,
EARN UP TO S650 WEEK· SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
LV Working thro ugh the
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
government part·tlme. No _ ___:1:_:-8::8:.
8·:.
58::2:_:-3::3::5::___
4
expenence. Alot ol opportu- USA N1 SILL CONSOL.IDA·
nilles.
1·800·2 11 -979 1 TOR
From
52 •000 •
Code E8
1250.0001
(8°A. Average
Growing Busif)ess Needs rate). Bad Credit No Prot&gt;-

AN r N f - .-lti"'J
In thltl IWWipipet' II
llllbjoc11olhe F-11
Fair Hou1tng Act ot 1 •
which makle It 115tQII to
~~tv«tiH "'~~nr

.

--.llmillllon or
dllc~mlnotlon baood on
raoe, c.,.or, r.llglon, MX

famltlal IUIUI 01 natkN\11
or6gln, 01 any lnttnlton to
makttnyauch
preft...nce, llmltltlon or
dlecrlmtnallon ...

Thla n.wapaper will not

yard with naw deck, 1 car
~araga .
New
Roof.
(304)875-5073

knowingly ICCipt
ldvtrtiMtnenta for Nil
n1110 _,loin

==c:...:;.;c.::__ __

¥~:'~Our

Owner Anxlout to •alt.
Houae For Sale near Mason
Walman. (304)273·0499
leave menoge.

·-·••r
lnfDrn.dltlllltll

'"::,ung-ol4~10&lt;1•re'"
,......
avallablt on an equal

~anch Style Home Built in

SOLD SOLD SOLD

cours e

on

Fair

r

Cape Cod, 4 Bedrooms. %.5 Baths,
Fonnal Living Room &amp; Dining w/
Hardwood Floors. Large Family
- Room, Master suite &amp; Bath with
Whirlpool tub. Lots or custom Oak
trim, woodwork, and solid Interior
Oak doors. Only %miles from city.
PRICED TO SELL!

Acrea TlHabta, Timber worth
20· 30 thouaand. Farm Ia
divided by Dodrill Rd. Rural
Water Line already avalla·

ble. lota of Road Frontage .
One Improved Building Slle
wllh inltalltd pond. crroulsr
Driveway, Septic Syalem,
Electric So!VIclng, Concrala
RV pod 30x40. 810 Dodrill
Rd .. Vinton, Ohio, Ofi Slala
Route
180. Appraload
$141,000, Aaklng 1135,000,
Serious
lnqulrea Only.
(740)59H948 or (740)47481107

(740) 446-3764
(740) 446~2885

r

Real Eetate General

""'"'a====;;..,.,

:nghlo 304-675·1529
) 0 Greal Building Sileo al

Mar11ing · Star E.atatea, Ba·
ahan Aoad, Racine, Oh
(Malga Cly) from 2.3 to 6.8
Acrea. Priced from $20,000
10 $39,000 In approved aubdlvlslon. 740·992·5072.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

~ ocrn, 33475 Bailey Run
.Ad .. on Ohio 124, 112 mila
We1t ol Route 7, water &amp;
)lepllc _slready In, 114,900,

t9X:~~~~IIdlng

Real Estate General

.

Public Sal~ and Auction

-~

--

Saturday, May 4 @ lOAM

Partial !let: coin&amp;, glaseware,
pictures, wicker love eeat, radio
wagons, silver plate Items, very

large rolling pin, small stands, wood
crate$, milk can, metai7UP sign, 5
gal. atone crock, oid cigar boxes,
milk bottles, old books.
Due to advertising deadline,
this Is a partial listing.

ike isaac (740) 388•8741
VIrgil Isaac (740) 388-8880

Public Sale and Auction

BoAcloo Htnderton. WV.
on four lano wflh cl1y

year
over 2000 aquare feel. Has a big kltcl!en.
room, and main (!edroom. 2 more awora1l8
bedroom. large laundry room and 2
really nice back porch and a newer
All of !his lf1ling on 51 acre•

Colles:!lbles

In May, The Dally
Trlbun~ plans to
remove the old two·
story house at the
Second Avenue end
of our lot plus the
storage building &gt;
adjacen~ to it. If you
are experienced and
licensed in the
removal Of demolition
of buildings, come by
the Tribune offices at
825 Third Avenue.
Ask for Den
Dickerson or
Larry Boyer.
Real Estate General
.

)locrosOVIIIOOklng.Aivllr. 112.500 rx 31 acros
ol woodl and turkey.

-

8 00101

now build-

R_,.,

lall

16.0001 Den-

:-me. 5 acros. 19.5001

GoHt. Co.• Rio Grtlndtl
8 ocr... $23,000.
Plno HiM Rd, 5 ICI'OI,

m.JJOOIKyger&amp;woodld
acreo. 113,000 or 5 ..,...
110,0001 Rd.. 11
...-eo, SIUOO or 23 ocr-eo.
S30.000IIICIOI..IPOfiT • HA141LTON ITRI!ET
nice comer lot 1111 lhi1 1 '/, t101y frame hor1111.1
With 3 bedrooms, 2 balM, dining room

family room. Nn&gt;er 2 car

.,.,... air

s. :IRO
Tltil2111ory , _ fdluroo a living room, dlnlna
room,

fd1cl14on;

2' 3

bedroomo &amp;

and -

.... o low oi lha parcefl
. , . -_ Calf now for

inape, ond

*

~~

--,

446•6806
958 Clllfk Chapel Ad.

_ ~J/a4

Branch Offk:e
23 Locual St.

Galllpolll. Ohlo
45631

BidWell, Ohio 45614

•ell
f:i:;J~~~::C:-:1:-;;;::;;;

HDUitliOIJJ

Gootl6

- 4360 Hannan Trace Road
(Directions: SR 775 to Hannan Trace
Road ·left at Bethsda Church· approx.
1·11/% miles up Hannan Trace on right
side of road.)
. 36 acres prlvalely tucks lhls newer vinyl

Applltncos: Rtcondillontd
Walhtro. Dryero. Rangeo.
Refrlgroloro. Up To 90 Days
Guaranteed! We Sell New
Maytag Appllancu. French
Clly Ma}'lag. 740-448·7795.

sided home away for seclusion. 30 x 60

·----------------------.1
WWW.WISEMANREALESTATE.COM

Real Estate General

barn and more . Come see the rest. 112138

Real Estate General

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
HuaiJell D. WmHI, Broker
51 0 21111 A••·• Galli polio, Ohltt 45631
For more informalion· c•ll1 ·
(740) 446-7101
Ito~ tn 11ce ynu

therei

Real Estate General
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 448-e&amp;OB
GAIL BELVILL!.................................. 44H2ot
TAISH 8NVDER...................................441-94B8
JOHNNIE RUIIELL..........................-317-0323
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441-9461
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.\ltiiT'Illhrtll..lltU!Om
e-mail: vlsmiii'\Ooore.com

THE

r

LOCATION for a new
. I
1 ac. 811Ch mil. Roady
for conolruc11on. SUrveyed · &amp;
graded, Haallh Dopf. approved.
Localed In Groen Twp. Appro•. 8
ml from town on SA 588.
Rellrlc1ive covonsnla apply. VLS.

f4021- BUILDING LOT Ill HI I
MITCHILL AD. 1 Ac m/1 · -

'

.

.-

"

...:.......

f..; ~:~!itt

.,

'

""

....,

wmt LOTS OF LAND. Vory

Mllgo Co.· So. of Coolville,

Ing. $27~

Q/1/lit( . "'

~~ ~

, _ HOME IN THE COUNTRY

(740)441-1..a2

..,... wilh large

Tools, joiners, routers,latlle, table saw,
hoUcold carrier, pet carrier, new dish
sets, exercise bike, ping pong table, vise,
pmh mower, 8MM movie projector,
humldtner, window fans, doon,
windows, eard tables
HUNDREDS OF OTHER ITEMS! .
Auctioneer ~ Steve MtGhee
Tenm: cash or ch«k with projler ID

Publrc Sale and Auction

BRUNEll LAND

$27,000. can Rd.. nice rolf·
l ng 16 acros. 123.000 or 6

Other lterm

or Lolli,._

...at.r. 180,000. (304)5-45·
1!491

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

Interested?

leave.,_.

Christmas omamenlll, loom, typewriter,
G rlswold Iron skillets, early 19008 ballot
hoxe~~, ceramic figurines, ceramic
molds, straight back chain

A-

61 acre1, MelQI Counrv,
good hunllng and flohlng,
very private, mostly wood·
;e&lt;J. own on bolh aides or
&lt;Old, rood ·lr\)r11ag4 on 3
ot . properly, 3BR. 2
'Full Balhe. 1 112 IIOr\l farm

7 acros 2 112 mlleo ou1 Crab
Creek Rd. For oale.
(7.0)448-1377 If no answ
_ or

1167 St. Rt. lliO, between
Co. Gar-dge and 1111 Center
·Mally ilem6 o~er 50 years old
Antiques
Quilling frametJ, Ironing board, hanging
light fixtures, apple butter stirrer,
wicker love seat, roof slate, lamp globes,
trunk, curtain stretchers, new horne
· sewing machine

Not llapomible for

olfa,

oldlng, wnh
Iota -men•.
of cloNII vinyl
and
houoo
lloragt spaoo, Ctnlrllf heal
and AIC. 2 car garage with anached 1hod,
free gas. well wator. ooplic,
~ oiOCked ponde, mlnulll
!rom Forked Run 31818 Pari&lt;
~nd Ohio River, 198.900.
i7.0)843-1229

LENDER

Gallia Co. Senior
.Resource Center

ACREAGE

:would make good hunting
club $100.000 creek, water

cl no. 7.0-949·9032

PUBLIC AUCTION

loTs&amp;

'119 acre farm off At 2 Leon,

Housing

Yo ey True Driver Training

~~

113 Acre Farm, Beautllul
Genlly Rolling Hlllo, 58

&amp;It~ ~ 4{1{1~U~f~Het4(

FAIR HOUSING SEMINARS

certified

Wilh 101, Nice, PriVati, Heal
pump, porchal, vary rea·
aonabla priced. A11 eleclrlc.
Hanford. (304)862·2369 ·

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

~2000~,~P~rlced~~a1...:.$1~04~,~900=-~=':PP:':~u:n:l!y:b:l:l:ll:·:::
The Gallia Counly Commissioners will be
holding a fair housing !raining seminar in the
Gallia County Counhouse 2nd noor meeting
room located ailS Locust Streel, Gallipolis,
Ohio. The session will be as follows: ·
May 15, 2002 - 9:00 AM 10 12:00 PM for local reallors/brokers - A lhree hour

Wt have approximately 10
u11d homa1 for under
$2.000. coli 1·800·837 ·3236
ror lnlo.

BY
OWNER
94 Winterplace

(7.0)1141 -9383

encompaiSing Fair l;lousing hi slory, law,
regulations, lhe Ohio Revised Code for
Landlords/Tenanls and Predalory Lending.
k
The presentalion will ulilize overhead
11
~::r.~.d~r~E~C~~~er~~mu~ ~ne:r~~~~;:~~~'gg call
presenlalion, visual aids and informational
WIU brush hog 530.00 I hr to $552+ weeki PT StOOO(JJL'-""'-~--s -- '
handouls.
$4000/week FT. Free book11111111111111 II CGIIf!l
call 304 -675-1754
This seminar is free of charge. Please
1e1
,.aoo-426-o" a. r
Man&amp; Fri 7:00-3:30 Wend classes Sat &amp;liM 8:00-4:30 i2Ms
W1U do L~wn mowmg. www.NewFuture4U.com
HOJ\D:'i
regisler wilh 'lhe Gallia County
palntJng. and other odd )pbs
tuK S\u;
. • Anonlitg 01111 lwdt!g ll'lll8alili ~ onHgiblily
Commissioners Office on or before May I,
call 304·773·5034, ask for
'Jtb plagmem 011 C. Atraiillg'
Ru sty
2002.
Public Sale and Auction
:.~d':'· r:!.~ ':;,~
Contact Kott lmnb i-800-641-369S or(7401373-3"' ·
Oalli• county Commissionm
_ _.:..:;::.;.:.:...::.;:.;:....:;.:..:;.;..:.::.:..::.::.;:___ pump. full basemen!, Ra· .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;.;;,.;;.;.;;::::::~~-=;;;:::::=:;=======---~.J

-

_
~· -~on ...~,. ~-- Maoon Counly·P-Une
1
-,.
~· ~·• R--• -~ 14 70
14x70, 3 Bodroorn, Rocenl· - · ..-.-'
rnoI• Rt-ed. $14,000. bllt homo, 0 •5 acre. 2bod·

Land home
packages. atorogo Buildlngo. Reduced 299
::::.:..1
houoo Land/Homal Land Improve- PrQ. (7.0)448-9478
Addition menlo In one low payment

3 Bedroom on Route 2, ~=-o:::.=====
(304)675·5332
Cope Cod wilh large living
room . ramlty room and
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car at· kl1chen with Iota cf cabinets
tached garage, 2 acre coun· and dOuble ovens, central

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

Custom Building &amp; Remod ·
sling. Over 16-yrs expert once .
Freo
estimates t -800 -483-87 t 7
Fully lnsuroo For all your
.
home repair needs. Can -~-----740-992-11 19 or 740-44 1- Absolutley A Real Ooal! Do
6514
you eam $2K a week now?
No selling
work 4·6
·Georges Portable Sa wmill. hourS/week restocking local
don't haul you r logs to the CAN DLE route. SO down on
mill juet call304--675· 1957
0 A.C.. , ·600·6 13· 740S. 24
hrli7 days
Lewn Care
Commercial &amp; residenllal , II· An Established Vending
censod, Insured, reasonable Route! Earns 61g $$ .. Must
· ratea, lroe estimates ·upon sel11 t -868-571-0225 Ext
visit 304-576·4044
2005
.

otyle

Real Estate General

1'" 1B 110' 3 BR 2 Balt1 J 1
HI
llrtod? 111
I'IIICI MDUC110NI 10.5 S
x '
• ~no: uo ge ng o
0
AcrH wflh lll911 F - ~=. ~":'.:-'oicro lol. ~me~{l.O,.J~~;
~~Near Galf1xJlis. F•c ..1 rrt Condition. !'rf· (7.0)388-0301
...,.irllomllllon

Room, 2 Car Garage, 2 SChoof In Aaclne. 740-949·

largo dock. Newer Roof and
WlndowL t acre. $46,000. Cape Cod
Vinton Area (7 40)368·9305 acrooa '"""

160t credit sou;: after 4pm

ter Collins 1-760-770-7573
E" 14

Houoo &amp; 1•x70 Trolitr on
10+ ocroo O.His County.
0wJw wfU finonco wl down
pl)inlttt &amp; llgnlld conlr'IICt.
(7.0)120-4220oftot- 4:30pm

above ground pool with 1229

1

Child Cere Provider with 7
years &amp;ltperlence. Has
openings. Various hours.
Link accepted. (304)7735057

Bo

10 DOWN HOMII! QOI/'1
&amp;
BANK - FORECLOSURESI LOW OR NO
·MONEV . OOWNI
Ot&lt;
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS!
CALL I ·800-3J8-{)020 oX!
· ·
98!!
1 Acre , river tronl, BricW Yinyl 3 BR 2 Balh 2 Flropfa ce; Hardwood Hooro Ap2.i)OO oq n. Full
mei'lt $160 000. C740)446·
0538,
'

Mike (740)446-7604.
you do
business
1h people
eroy_
area, -$125.000.
740·
~-~· ~· ·~
00.
-w·
·~ AAE YOUR CREDIT CAFI D ,
-you know. and NOT to send BILLS OVERWHELMING 992-6046

1th,•r

•unbnp ttund ·•tllltntl• Page OS

I . ,I___
IJ ';i.~:.Do•-• L..~~~i:~~..J .__..

--- ----DIET PilLS {Phlnlormlno, W~
prtiiUtt wolh hou....
Adlp.x, dldre• . Zt mcal ,
EIC.) ... &amp; Vi&gt;GRAt "No P&lt;ev. trelltrt, and deckt Call
Pft1Cr1pllon or Or. vial! 441·4238 alii&lt; lor Ron 01
roq'd'" Oobvorea by 'Fod ltovo "'"sago.
h ' Air. Coli TOLL-FREE :
t - aee - 438 - e u e "ij~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
www.l t!e6GETMOJO.com

.,Iii
.

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

livable home with Format LR. eaHn
kil, ref., buiM In ovens.. 2 fiAI balhl,
full dry batemenL Lovely corpot
lhtOIJilh-out 30 acreo 11111 ot lind.
oomo W&lt;MXIod, ....., ctaared. An
hOme &amp; bam on properly.
Fr0&lt;11ing on 2 roads. CHoooo a
ochoof AddavUit, BldweU, River
Valley. You can only
homo by .-Jng an appofr1fmBn1 to

--lhlt

PRICE ON THIS QUALITY
, BRICK ~ANCHERI 2 .Car
ettached garage,• large lormal
Jiving room &amp; dining, lamlly
room. Oversized master aui!JI,
plus 3 additional bedrooms, 2.6
balh1, 18\lel approx. 2 acre lot.
Mu1t see to appraclale th/1 an al
12050

1

Flrlt time
Soulh. AJI
ei8Chlc 3 bodrm., 2 balha,
equipped ktl, formal LR, den with
goo fireplace, heal pump, new
carpet, washer, dryer, range &amp; ret
OecX on the rear. Comfy &amp; cozy
well decorated home and you can.
have
lmmedlala
pouaulon.
IIONUI TO IUYERI 11195 Skyline
rnot&gt;le home, 14' x 110' lncludod In
thO oale. 2 bedrmo, 1 balh, eal·ln
kit . lovely LR, walher, dryer, range
a rei. Everylhlng II immactJfolt. 1
Ac mil well lsndaclpod groundl.
2
Move on 1hil fallf

DELIGHTFUL
a picture. Very
II
and lrame ranch
nome otlers 3 bedroom•. walk·,ln
clolel, 2 lull belha, cltarmlng living
room wlllreplaca, New oak ca~lnat1
line the ldtchen. ~ange , refrigerator,
dllhwalhfr. and compac1or ail otay.
UtHIIy room 11 eXIra largo. 2 ller
deCk In the rear -with 36' lnground
pop~. Mlrly fruillrOH, !lowers_, and
lhnibl. Sprinkler t yllltnl . In lha
rsar. 2 car allaChed garage and .•
corport. 2 .story bam building.
Bfack!Op
cemerrt driveways. A
p&lt;oud lo own. VL

PRICE
What are you walling lor?
.Immediate poiHIIIonl Ideal tor
Investment property or perhaps a ·
starter home. 3 bedroom•. Iaroe
· llzed living room &amp; dining area, lull
banmenl.
attached
c1rpor11

oew

PIKE Like
IOC!Ional home on
0\ler 1.3 acre laC with detached
gorago. 3 Badroomo, 2 batho, Nk:e
lloor plan. Owrler requa1llng your
offer! Asking pr~e 163,000.00
12111

- to
- mow
- awamdouo
Mlf.
on U.Itrar•
find in to
a
fury. VLS
~E AJI!A ok1 Jtrfp
mlno land. 11600 per - ·· 182
ocros. Great frx hun1ing or
- - Allo 14 ..... mil
COIIWI*'Cial on SA 7.
,_ -

n

-

l.al 1 Ac IIIII

r1 Vllfley 11t1. 117,GDD-

olhar lfolingo.

Ownor hncfng P'~merlwp-

lilltC

gu

1'7.

balhl. A full panlalfy flnfthed
b••"*"· From pon:ll&amp; bacll dlcll.
Sile on a -lol.

PUBLIC AUCT ON
Thursday Evening
May 2nd, 2002

5:30PM
Located aJ the Mid4ltpot1
Pool on Hartinger Park Drive
in Middltport, Ohio.
"H ¢rf1H
New q- illzflundboerd, q-~~uw.

....a-

day and a.by llcdl, lon 1011.
t.ble
and dulln, lllll.ll rablad wftls ,._ doat,

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

~OR

walu ........ dl.... ,_.aile wllll . .ldl,

wilber, ~-.l doable S.S.

MEIGS COUNTY

lhlk.plduNICaad
baldllOdO «HI plctanll

qtW'fen, tllta-cillal,lllddo, ............ qalll

nck, larp ..,P. ddldr cWIIr Dl If, II p; bz;
.._, flower bora 111111 pi•"'- II •eH!fw,
l EX 1111111 .,.._ ud loll_..!
If aay011e •nil to t w l l p , - n r t y "" Thunotay. Thll ll a _ , lllllker for doe
pool.

c- to- wtw .. dlere!

Dan Smilh • A.IU:IUIIU" OhJIJ IIJ.U
Clllh • PDiiiJ~IID. RefrnlutultU
"N« NIJitllllllb/t/M «dMMIii

•

'

ill'..,

11/lf lll'e 'fJ"

FIIOffl'.,._

....,
,.,.,
llrOL *"""Y

......'"Y E.

I

·CI NO 111- by
room

...,, ,...~ ...,......, Il lS

•• 1111

&amp;-

....2111 '

JO

-I'UT&amp;.Gr.- ...
Cllopel 1111. 2 S1UOO

1 -

-

..,

nom. 111111
tn

--OOIOflil- -- -. -.. . . . ·--pond .......,_,._Olclsr-___
_.....,_
,_

IIIYIIt
75' · ...,. from , _ to SR
ground tor- ~. ntl m. llodng, .fiiNna. 11&lt;:.
to ... " -·
AIKIItCJ

............................112·2211
.,_11 L tlait.~ ,..............................742-2357
AnM II. ChllprMn .......................... ll2-1172"
Karlt Inn M. Clellltld .........- ......... 1112~111
U.. V.·Moodl..-ttJh- .••••••••••- ...1112.(1512
Clellltld
Inc.

WHY NOT UN YOUII IICTAII
, . , . _ fOil THI

___
...
. __-.,.._ .......
FomWOR.IJ'I•- ·· HUIH IIIIIUCTIONI MCmVAlU
•••RJU
~
COLOMU. ,.,_ M
7 IC
"" 'll .. 4 . . hatM . . QIPiil.d

"MIK"

10_.. . ...... .,......, •P"•Icd _, ...

/llJlJITI(JII/\1 ll',fi!H,', !'. IIHOflfMTIOtl Ct.\ L (JR ',f(JP BY fOH II
f f/1/ QUAlITY HOMFS /IJ ('(Jf ()H HrJ(JKII 1'

g11 1111-101 2C.

1 51ICI ,..,._ .--s wWw:;p
~mor• .a•· ·· nt ..

" 1 ....,

p!'loiCII

u 1 $ "' . . .. Thil ham~ ,..
2 t 11 Nill. tlll1. M1a 100m I
1

n.r.-s """*'0 " " " - IIIYO 10

i'lldli. . . . . . . Ontr tM.a
--~-~­

......, ond

li'NI -

..... tor . . fomilr

-

ow 0..,..

.,..,..,__m1o

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

iiAITDH LOCAL ICHODLI,
. . 3 t 7wn wnMor homl hM
...... ol-ll!oo!ng- Vi'lf
.....
wfl d

- ond corporl.
fling
a. ......
. . , . raol,

- o n fm- • r-

-~• S44.ooo.oo mM
~w t •oe

raa

MOc»li f'ltldl ftOtM Ml'l fergl

-

... Tllit -

• In good

,.,.... It prlotd Ia . . . . ...,
W ,toiUIO ......_, .. A e: ila
Dr1wt m•

�;~;D~II;·~·~•;n~ba~p~'l:~ln~•t;•~-·~fl~tl~m~t~l::;'

'

l&lt;lng Sin 'Nttter Bod, E -· Grtvtly atlochmtnla. gra110; ltnl Condition, ll&lt;tdoldt ly tOtllry ouRIVtto&lt;, gr~voty
; ..__
lllntl. Ntw W.llf M l -,. 30
ota,ofonary CUit1Va10t, Qtl""'"
1
C~~,
Oil! ol BoK, 1200.
mower dr vo.
oil

t (740~11123
......,

, ~ Clarf*, 202 Clolll
, - - Flood, Pontr, 01\10,
1740~·7..-a t-e17·130' tiU. Frw £tlimo1ta, Eoey
: llnlncing, 10 dtyoMmo ••
, Clth.

Vlaal Mutor Card

' .._..

ml

~ a-llttla

•

live alot.

, ....., &amp; UNCI lu turo llore

btlowu~ldty Inn, Kantu·
ga. couohto, mat·
I t - drolllro, GE wash·

1740).141 ·0972 altar 4:30
-dtyo, onytlme wHk·
~- 1966 Mercury Topaz,
$400. Now HMd. • •naust
oyttom, ollomator Silo ••L
&amp; 48L oulr jacktto. Blue.
BliCk &amp; Twood S30 " ""
.
Huvy duty odjullobto tloor
jack, 120. old pair rollor
tkllll, $$; 6' lltf) ladder.
ts: 2 t l2'x4' wo rk table,
$20; 17•01992-2529

tt, Toppe
_ n gu tango, Ho+meo vlofble ml01 huml&lt;ll·
Scnoot I&gt;Yt. Gllllpolta, Ohio tlor, $20; calling ion, $20;

(740).148-4712

.

· largo 'roooter, 12: 20"• 12'
Ill pen, $20; box len, $3;
Whitt Wlllnpoo+, Ralngere· (740)992-2529
tor, F101t Froo, $100. AI· .
mond Whirlpool Electric Independent HerDellle Dis•
Slovt, S75. Almond Waat· tributor, Ctll For PrOduct Or
lnghOIJM Froot Froo Raing. Oppon unlly (7• 01441- 1982
orator, $tOO. (21 Washer &amp;
Oryor Melching Solo, $150 Pool Pans lor S.la oiler ra·
laoh . Call after ~pm . mov&amp;l. Slide, Diving Bonrd ,
(740)440•80ell
Vacuum, Pool Pump. Lin·
art. Ladder &amp; Rolle, ate.
FO&lt; S.lt: FltcOIIdilloned (7401446·9961
wolhotl, dryllt ·llld rolriQ·
oraloro. Tl10rnpoona Appfl· Sawmm $3.Bes. Now Super
ance. G407 JICkiOn Ave· Lu mbermata ~OOO , larger
capaci ties, more options.
nuo, (304)675-7388.
Manufacturer ol sawmil ls,
Good UNCI Al&gt;t&gt;llanotl, Ro· &amp;doors and lklddora. NOR·
conditioned and Guaran· WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
toad . Wuhoro, Dryors,. Sonwlll Orlvo. BuHoto, NY
Rangu, lnd Rtlngoratora, 14225. FFIEE lnlormotlon I ·
Some ltart II $95. Skaggs 800·578-1383 EXT. 200-u
AppUancea, 76 Vine St ..
(1401448·7398
Sol id Wood Ocor. Cased,
with
Storm
Door.
TOddler Bed, Full Size Bad
sal
lit
82
12
1
1 38
EKcolltn11117401446-8305
g a screen, 0
'
opening $75 . (740) 446·

~:;;;;,~~=-~.,.---

.
I

i

737~

J\rmQIJI:li
Troy buill Trlmonar Mower,
~-------pi Like Now, $275. Soots Rid·
-

Buv or ull. Riverine Anll·
qu11, 1124t Eaat Main on
SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
992·2528. Ruu Moore .

owner.

Sue' I ·Sel&amp;cllablll on the '1"'
In Mlddlepor!. Colla, glaoo·

ware, Aladdin mantels, and
mort. (7401892·0298
ML'I("tl.lANiiOIJS

M EIICIIAIIIIlL'II:

lno Mower, I OHP. Good
Shape. 5375 . ( 7401258•
1424

Us&amp;d Ooll Clubs. Call Aller
4pm. (7401446·04 t 7

DUII.IliNCo
Sut,, ,tK~

3· STE!L IUILI:IINQS
24x38 W81 $8900 ,
. t ell $3900
30x50 wa o $1 3,900,
sell 5800
50Kt00 wao
$ 8,900,,
2

U,OOO BTU Kenmore Air
condlllonor. 1250. Hoi point
tleclno Flangtc $HiD. Rt·
lrlgorator St25. 13041615·
6693

'

I

8 hp Snapper Rototlller, re·
'veralble tinea, 1800.00 rJrm,
740;742·3706

3 PuP!&gt;Itl. 112 Ltb, tl2 Brit· 1999 MO&lt;IIZ. 3 110m olant, ta90 H041&lt;1a Civic EX Good
200t Dod
St I
RT
tony Spaniol (740IUB· Lotd, Droning Room Trell· ConditiOn (740141&amp;-:11•3
Ohio Vellty Bank wfll ont&lt; 40 000
go
ro uo
'
7010
tr. Llko Nt w, $4000.
10&lt; .. It by Puollc AUOII&lt;&gt;n
mill, i dr., loodad,
'
1
t 990 Chtvy Van, lUther IIIlO, 111nroof,
AKC Ch&lt;&gt;w·ChOw Pupolo (71013417·7237·
1990 Mon:ury Topaz 5 112t3tht T"" Ohio Vallo~ $19,800 080, (74019•9·
8 wltioa old. con anor ~;
.
opud, UOO 1994 S· IO Bank AnnOK, 143 3nl Avt., 2601 oftor 4:30pm.
WHkdays. Anyttmt WHk· 2 pigs, S75 ..ch. 2 tl2 mos 4•4. Loto ol
Qalllpotla 01\10 011 Sltt
1,11
ondo 17• 0).146 .3166
old, l air led, (7•01247·2090 1740)34!8-oott
Sold 10
n - t bOrl&lt;ftr II Chtvy Covalitr, Four
•ao 11• wlltre 11• · W.inoutt•· Door, 07,300 mlltt, LOIIded.
Full t&gt;toodt&lt;l molt Cottlt, t 4·H and FFA Club P~o lor onto Valley Bank witt oHtr pttiiiC or lmplltd worranty 99 Cntvy 2·24 Cavolltr,
yr , old LAosle typO , $1 50, Gallla, Melgo and
••on tor 1110 by Pub!&lt;: Auct1011 &amp; moy be Hen by calling 41 ,300 mllto, Lotdld.
17401992· 7851
COOJnltoo. 1740)366' 9033 or a
2001 Suzuki R22, the Colltcllon ~rtmtnl 1 740~·9tn
1740l366 ·0178 ·
. 110tt341at T"" Ohio VoHoy
17401441 1038 OVB
Buulllul 3 ytor old Qoklen Bank Annu. 143 3rd Ave. at
•
,
,.. Ohio Valloy Bank will onor
AKC Collie PUPf, 8moo. II• PalOmino ti d pon
t GIIMpollo onto on 5/tt/lla, !!;~.. thl.. ~t~.~ ace, tf)hV lor 1111 by Pubtlo Aucttan
Olt/Whllt, M 4 F, 1250 II.; llrohn to
llkl YS~ SolO to
nlii"IOI
,.,...tony l ~•• Wit ' I
2000 Honda Civic
18 1
AKC mate cream Pom., 8 (740)702
Vf.'.it-1,·
1111• wnaro 11 without ••·
mo 1200; AKC mole Tri
prtoud 01 lmpJied worronty CAS
OR CERT
..
•
'" ~.
Shetlla, 9mo, 2Sitoo, St50: Fair plgolor ,.,,, (74019411· &amp; may toe ann by calling
H
IFIEC Gelllpolle, Ohio on
(7401696· 1085
2908 or (740!949·20! 7
the Collection Department CHECK.
.
~old IO the hl~haat bidder
II II• whorl It wllhoulex·
17401441 1038 OVB
AKC Rontstored Chocolate Llmoueln cattle· tt rogtlter al
.
~
·
rt· ·Ohio Volley Bank will offor prostec or lmplltd worranty
Lab Pups, Reedy May 8. COWS• 8 W/CIIVII , 5 yel 10 seNti lhl "~ht tO ICCIPV lor tall by PubliC Auction &amp; moy toe attn by COiling
Dew Claws, Slloto. 5 Fe; calve· 8 yearling bulla both reject My&amp; libido , &amp; with· I
t!i97 DOdgt Ave nger, tho Collection Oepenmont
malo,. 3 Malo. (7.0)&lt;141 · rod a' blaCk, t7401698·a765 Oraw Item~ IJOm 1110 /,~ 0 ' •OSt350 6t Tnt Ohio Vallty at 17401441 · 1038. OVB ro·
10 sale. erma 01
ale: Bank AnntM, ,43 3fd Avt., urvea thl right to acaeptJ
00 1:3
Limousine Bulla. 4· t8 CASH OR CERTIFIED Golllpollo, 01\lo on 15/tt/02. rojecl any &amp; all bios, &amp; with·
IIKC rtOIOiered Cooker months, I Ao glotared 4 CHECK.
Sold to lho hl~hOOI bidder drew 1tom1 !rom lilt prior
Spaniel Pupplos lor oalu to veart old. (740)446·2 1 ~8 Ohio Valley Bank will ortor •aolo· whoro lo without ox· to 1111. Ttrme or Solo:
Iovino homaa only. Vet evonlngo.
lor 1811 by Publlo Auction prw818d or Implied wo"anty CASH OA CERTIFIED
Chockod and lalla docked Polled Herolord Holora 8 io 0
1998 Trani Tralltr &amp; &amp; may be tetn by calling CHECK.
ond oow claws removed . 12 months old . Call 199 4 Konwo~h . -051 841 1 lhl Collocllon Department
For more lnlormatlon cell 13 ~ 4 )B82-2• 26 eltt re:OO
821398 alTho OhiO Valley II (7401441 •1038. OVB rt• TO BE SOLO AS IS. 1981
(304)576·31 28
Bank AnneK. 143 3rd Avo .. 111'&lt;11 the nght to ICCtpV Mercury Tracer, 107,000
Reo Bteck Angus Buill, Galllpollo, Onto on 5/ tt/0 2. raject any &amp; all bldo, &amp; .wit~· mllet, nooda ctutcn. Atklng
yearlings &amp; older, out ol Sold to '"' hiCihllt bidder draw illmt !rom salt pl'lot $500. If lntnltld contact
Champion Hill Wldospreftd, "as Is· whera 111 without 111· to sale . Terms ol Sale: Paul Barker 11 Tl'la Galllpojj;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Champion Hill EXT BOCC prossed or Implied warranty CASH OR CERTIFIED 111 Cally Tribune, 825 Third
CHEC"
A
G 11
Travelor &amp; WLC Ecllpoe. &amp; may be ooen by calling
"·
ve ..
a !polio,
Ohio
gentl e gu orontoett $1000. the Coneotlon Department Ohio Valley Bank will oHer • .5631. (7401448·2342
each call 304·372·2389.
at 17401441 ·1038. OVB rt· ,., oale by Public Auction rnn .
"'·
R~slerod Anguo Bulls B· 11"'81 the ncht
to accapV e 1992 Chevy Goo Prlom, •·oKIJCKS
16., 8 . H.D. Trailer ILikt 52
E s
•
reject any ·&amp; •11 bldo. &amp; wllh· •OB159hl The Ohio Vallmil
SAt.•·.
New) with dovetaiL $1600.
on, Kl on • •ocumaoh drnw !toms !rom a.11le prior
.. ,
r:
Now 6' H.o . King Cutter Son. And Widespread son to oale. Tormo ol Sola: Bank Annex, t 43 3' 0 Ava .,
Box BIMe SCraper, $350. Call Bill Burtoaon. (7401245· CASH OR CERTIFIED Galllpolle. Ohio on 5/ll/02. 1983 Cnt vy 314 ton 80,000
(740)44 1·31 31
5964
CHECK:
~old 10 _the hl~hell bidder mllaa, new tlrll, dual &amp;.IC•
l.l II· Whttoll wllnout ••· hauol carburetor tun
1987 Case lntern etlonat385 White IB~Ing hans 1 1/2 yf 1996 Old&amp; Achleva , 86K, preaHd or Implied warranty S3.oo'o ,
a up.
T•octor, 2 wheel dloool, Low old lor oolo, SOe coch $2795. 1998
Cavalier, &amp; may be aaen by oolllng 8893
080 (3041675·
Hours, Exce llent Shape, 17401985' 3988
tOBK, $2795. 1995 Monte the Colleotlon Copartmonl
(740)2 45·58648foer 9pm
Carlo, 89K, $4395. 1997 S· at (7401441-1038. OVB rt· 1989. GMC Sierra GT, 350,
tO, ,82K, $4395. t5 other 101'&lt;11 lho right lo occopV 6 speed, AAE rima, tonneua
care, truckaln otock . COOK rtlecl any &amp; all blat, &amp; wllh· cover,
sharp,
511 3pt oear llnlol&gt; mowaro
4500 .
10
$1 , 15 ~.00. 611. 3pt. roar fin·
Al!tuli
MOTORI(74 144e.oto 3
draw llemolrom aolo pnor l7401388·0477ovenlnga
ion mowers St ,250.00 ,
l'l)ll SJ\U:
:::.::.:.==.:;..;:.:.:.;,:;,;;,;,.:;:.,_ to tale. Torma ol SAle:
66''HO rear tine tillers ·--iiiiiiiiiiiaoo,P 1998 Pontiac Gtand Am SE, CASH OR CERTI~IED 1189 Toyota 4x4 !ruck, now
St ,200.00, New Holland
V•6, Air, Loaded, 84,000 CHECK.
·
.motor, liking $3,000 OBO,

e.

riO:

s

Bell

T

J~~~~~d~~~llvorl

om (6~01392-7806

no

-3033

·.

ssooo

bl!ldli

i""

m

i,.

~0 ~ 1':"~:;: ~It C.~ ~~Snk9tA7n7na•t•Th1a• on
3 3~?_.
5/ttiO:i:

s

o

~~;dH~~~~d '~J.,!2~;,~; ~~to~~~ScA:SI ~~~!rJi

warertlno SPIQial: 314 200
PSI $21.00 Per tOO; t • 200 Twine S2t oo 20" Silage
PSI $35.00 Per 100 ; All Piaatlo Wrap SS5.00, 30" Sl·
Bra11 Compression Flttlnga tage Plaollc Wrap $85.00.
.
In Stock.
AON EVANS ENTEAPAIS. Fordo 2800 Dlosol Tractor.
El Jackson, Ohio, 1·800· 4800, 5000. 245 M.F.
(740}286·6522
.
537-8528 .

2 1111, 4 pc .. IINt·I·IMCk ,
120 ea.: bathroom heater,
120; 2 Ironing boArd1, S2
tal; 50 po. punchbowl eel.
135; 174011192-2528

e .!~ 'Ir

r ~Vf~,\K'K

t• .~ It =~:s I

HONDA S,
CHEVY'S ,
JEEP'S &amp; SPORT UTILITY.
CALL FOR LISTINGS 1·
800·451·0050 EXT. C·981 2

-:-:::-:=:-::---~--:-

1992 GMC SOnoma, Elderly

Owned. Garage Kepi, Fully
Fords· 2600 aeolel tractor, ' oadod, 1e,ooo mlleo t 997
4600, 5000; 245 M81 aey Monte Carlo, Ful ly Lo&amp;Ooa,
Fergur110n, 17401288·8522
55,000 miles, 2 ooor, Excel·
ioN Condlllon. (7401448:
Kom atsu t ab Track Hoe, 8484
Excellent
Condition. :,;,.::.;.__ _ _ _ _ _
$22, 500.-1740)379·2427
1996 Ford F· f50 PICkup,
~ulo AC 4K4 tt 894 Ac•
Torramlta T-S·C backhoe lual ' Mllet 1 95 ' Lincoln
1996 model 340 hra. EKCul· Town Car Sionaturo Serleo
$8,000. 59 388
Actual
MOea'
lont
Shapa.
13041578·3824
(7 01446 •441 0
·

9

4

W~N'IIIJJ

!'~~~w!'.':f~tol:.·~~~ &amp;:f..~~ '--....:1 ~n.:,:D:::,uv.:..-

At Top Soli, Fill _Dirt lor Wlnttrl, RIO Qrenoe, OH Wontod 10 buy: Utod Mobile
Solo. Equipment Aontal, Caii740·245·St 21.
Home. Cell 17401446-0175
Ooze;, Backnoo, Bot&gt;eat
or (304J675-e965

mllet, $6,000 Or Take Over Ohio Valley Bank will orter oak for Mike.
.
Paymenta. l 3041578 '·4170 · tor aale by Public Auotlon 1991 S·10 4.3L . Auto,
1997 Chevy Cavalier Rally a
t998 Merourr. Mill, Cruloe, AC, New Tlrtl,
Span, 2 door, auto, air, 1111 1655029 at The 01\ o Volley Longbod, E•cellant Condl· .
cruise, PW, PL, $5,995 .00. Bank AnnoK, 143 3r0 Avo., lion. $3~00, 17401448·0850
RIVeNiow Motoro 740·992· Galllpollo, Ohio on 5/tf/02.
3490
· Sold to the hlohosl bidder 1994 FIG&lt;! Ford Florealda
•aala· whero Is, without'"" truck. 1tandard, IOadta. ,
1997 Mento Corio, 57,000 prtlled or Implied warranty $3,000. Good l hapelrunt
m•les. All power, 1 owner, &amp; may toe tttn by oalllng good, 13041576·9936 Loave
$7,500 (7401446·2350
tna Collootlon Depertmont Motoage.
11 1740144 , 1038 OVB
1998 Ford Eaeon 6t OOO
•
·
rt· t996 GMC SONOMA truck
mlloo, CO Playor,.'Sun;ool, oarva• oho right to accepU 60,000 miles, excellent con:
5 speed
tranom loalon. reject any &amp; all blda, &amp; with· dillon, $4,500.00 (740)114g.
$5500. 17401446·1104
drew ltomo lrom oslo prior "1.::.
31o,;:6;.
. - - -·- - - to tole . Torma 01 Sale: t 996 PlymO&lt;Jih Neon E•· CASH OFI CERTIFIED 1996 Toyota TtOO SFI5
prasso Spon,.excellsnt cori· CHECK.
King Cab. Loaded, 4x4, 70K
'dillon , 32,000 mllea, PW, PL
mlleo,
Stt,900
OBO.
&amp; sunroof. Aoklng to taking
(7401448·6962
over payrnenle, 5194 .00 per
month. 740 •992 .9679

Real Eetate General

11

1

'

'

r

jj72W3~7,;,.- · ~-'!!""-~
~·~ &amp;
n•"
~
4-WDs
.

I

t966 Ford Ron(jol XLT Su·
porCab, 4K4; ve, air,
AMIFM Cllt $3 2115 00
Rlvarvltw
40 92 :
3490
-..------1996 Chi\/)' S·tO Blaztr
2dr., ve, 4 3L, 72K, toacltd,
$t0,000 l3041895·3384
.
.
t 993 Ford Van, hcollont
Condition. Low Mlloaga. 74
Pontiac Grand PriK, E•col·
lent Condition, Low Mlle&amp;ge.
1740131lB·8788

MaiO.. 7 .9

Sportater

1200 cuatom.

2000 Banshot. GOOd Con·
dillon. Never Raced. Ntt&lt;lt
rear a•lo barrtngo. $3,l00.
OBO.
(304)882·3428 ,
(3041662·3878

. (304)Ut-2248

~enti

vested , Taking
oilers.
;.
17_40;,:1,;_
24""'5-·06,;,....11_ _ __
1211. Seors Somi·V Aluml·
num Boal. Soaro 5 horoa
gaa ~nglno. l304)675·t3115

SuPt~or

Homo

·r~~~

motor, t989 Hootitr trailer.
M"I,;.,R.-..,CI.tcS
Phone (3041875·4622
v v ~•
..__ _ _ _ _ _. . USED BOATS
·
~
1986 Bayllnar, ' t91t, 4 oyl.,
1992 Yamaha Wortlor 4· Volvc &amp; trailer. 1988 Bomb·
whooler, Runa Great, L.ooka er flah &amp; ski, 1711 , 4 oyl.,
Qreal.
$1800
080 . Mercrulser &amp; trailer. 1980
(7401441-1716
1511 Playtime with 86HP
Evlnruda &amp; trailer. 1991
1g93 vamoha warrior. 4 MOKum 1111 with 70HP
wheeler, Runo Great, Lookt Force &amp; Trailer. 1998 Mill•
Rough, . StOOO
OBO. Oa t6h, 4 cyl., Marcruloer &amp;
•I·
trailer. t 999 Morado 2tlt.
740 441 1716
1
"
Spon CUddy V·6, Mlarcrulo·
1994 1200 Sponat tO 000
&amp;
11 t9'9 M d
•
or •
or
Irs er.
•
ara •
mlloa cuttam paint, lorward 2111, V·6 Merorulser &amp; trail·
oontrolo, big tan~. wiM· or. All boall are PRICED
~~~~~:~ddle bags. ~~:og' TO SELL . J.S. Morine
17401288·8180
(30418?6·6993

Atlfdtntlal or oomm1telal
wi~ng. 14tv101 or roPtlrw. Meeler Llctnltd tlao·
lrlcfan. Akfonour Electrloll,
IW00030tl, 304~75-17811.

1m to 4:30 pm; IlL 1:30 1.m. to 12
Allin C. Wood, lroklr • 441 4523

HOURI:

Homto, lnttldt ond Out.
Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Trenching, Cooko, Build·
lngt. (740).141.0113

:~_u$~~~o~'(74~i~g2-~~r;&amp;· ~~~io~~e~o~iv;~• ;~~~~

Kin Morpn, lroklr • 441-0171
Jelneltt Moorw, • 211&amp;-1745
Pllrlcll R- 740.4411011

ln~tttorel Ealabll•had Mobile

Home Par1d Onct·ln·a·llfe·tlme
opportunity, Major caeh flow!
CALL FOA DETAILS.

·

!'edL~Ctdl

8pooloue,

wall·kept " x
mObile home
on nlca lot In Addlaon Townlhlp.

Rela" on the front parch or the
beck dick. Outbulldlnga lor plenty
olllorage ond a lamb
3 BR,
t BA. Alllloctno central hut and
air. $35,000.

thl1 property! Thlollotlng has a
lot to ofler; plenty of oHica
opoce, lull beoement, otorogo In
the rear or the building, gal
forced air heat and 11curlty
AM thll tor a QOOd price.

PI"·

Real Eatate General

t12t,800

LOTS· AUlEA4

Look In The

'
•' 6unllap tn::lmes
•
6entlnel
•
'
~

Claaslfleds.

''•

446·2342
992·2155

till R;i;;iOi

VACANT LAND
OII'FI!RINT TO CHOOII!
I'ROM
PIIICII VAPIY
ti70,000

MAN\'

COUNTRY
lilt

POR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL, E-MAIL US OR
STOP BY THE OFFICE MON-FRI. 8:30A.M. TO 4:3() P.M .
SAT. 8:30A.M. TO NOON

lokllldt propo~yl Jutt mlnu\el
(rom town, thll tranQuil
ntlghborhOOd 11 ntotlld on tht
benkt of Charololo Llko. Along
Plrt owntrohlp o1 on e ocre
lokt, 11111 3 B~ 2 112 BA homo
h11 1 lara• great room with a
cozy fireplace and low exterbr
malnten.~nce. The ducks, g111t
and flehlng along with the
roaming turkey and deer are a
bonutllt69,900

b~ck ronch with a wondarlul In·
ground pool and fenced In yard

maHer wh1t your
lo... huntlng, 4 whltlant,
horoao, or hlldng.. you namo
lt... thlo land 11 for you! Newer 3
BA home on 42 buutlful acre•
on 5 . ~ . teo. Call today!

all on 4 acrn.

I
t

with
I
Basement. 4 BR hOme with
beautiful
largo kitchen, dining area, LR
hOme
will
your and 3 batho, and a great
beginning. utility room. Huge walk-out
attention from
Reetlng on 2.1 wood~ . battmant Plrlecl tor FR.
private
acres,
with
a Large dock, pallo &amp; 1. 7 acre
wondorlul view. Wall thought lot. 2 cor affachad garage
out floor plan allows for formal pfuo
2 cor detached.
LA and OR, oat-In kitchen REOUCEO TO $130,000
with breakfast nook open 10 1114
ccmfonabta family room with
fireplace.
Beautllully
landacapod lot lnvllee you to
the muHHavel deckt. ~-car
~~~~~Do pluo outbuilding.

!

''·
•.

••.
•'''

offere 3 BRa, 1 112
eat-In kitchen, LR and I
FR with btitccny. Very
wOOdwor'&lt; &amp; doort . 2 car
garage
plua
large
outbtJjldlng. 2.4 acral plua
the river. Extra building
area for kldo.

••

.•

1202

•
"

o':P.:, ·
...,..ly

8 room

tppolnfmlnt

JUIT

•Ctmcufi1Q6
- ··
Army
Stott 11-

t14t,IOO

· ......

to III!DUCIO

~~

TO

lot ' lnltllltlfOn. Nc etedlt
0111 roqulrod.
Sandy•
Yltla, wv p
Offfot.

_, _,

.....

TIM I ..,

home,
~ulflln 111117, and IOCIIed on
llfh Avenue. 4 SRI, 1 1/2
~ai111, nlct l)llvatt ~ack yard
with flOwer- garden and
accenttd wlllt a Charming
fence. 2
Whitt · p1Ckl1
ftrfi'Jacet, fovlly pint plank
floott. Call lodiY for on

Qltr up IO&lt;~S..ton

If

'

•

•.

..•'•

. Wlntlng
1
Then ccme
vltw this Immaculate, low
maintenance
briCk
ranch
o111nng LR wHh fireplace,
dining •••• with blautlful
woocf floor · open to largo
kitchen, 3 BR1, 1 till batho,
plut full b - t ofler!ng
huge PR with 1/rflllact anCI
bar a..a. Now add 1 2 ctr
garage, an ln·grOIOICI pool
lht convenient tocaUon,
home lruly It 1 wlnntr.
Your'rt

••

Cltllr• Lift...

"

.

SU2,000. C.fl

GrubO'I Plono- Tun!~
Rtpalro. Probftml?
Turtlld? c.tl Thl P - Or.
740-448-4526

BULLETIN BOARD
·Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 448-8752 or

1-800·942·9577

•

.~

•••
'
'

•

•

from ltlttlr!yl, Glllfj)OIIt.

,,00, (140J••• 0850

Jenny l.yn Baby Bad, mol·

LAWN CARE
A Cut Above
Landscaping &amp;
Design
Licensed &amp; Insured
· Free Estimates

ADivorce Care Support
Group will be starting on
Thursday evening at
7:00 pm and 9:30 am on .
Sundays. A nursery will be
provided for small children .
Please.call
740·446-1772 or
740-448-3504 for
addltionallnfol"mation.

.._, " " ' - ~ ond IN·

· Hfl. 1740)446-

BRIGADOON ·

J£T
AERA'TIOH MOTOAS
Aopolrad, Ntw &amp; In
- . Ct1 Ron Evtn1, 1·
100-Ul'.fUI.

(1~

--Pfpt-

,'
'i

--IIHDITUI.

F« ~- ~- CIIM...... 1'111 ..,, FOI ~·UL
""
" -Mit·
'
111111
Scnp
Ill Open lolondoy, T-,.,
~
4:30pm
Tltuldl'.

•

:=1

David Wluman, GAl, CAS Broker 448-t555
f'D ~
Carolyn Wateh, ORI 441·1007 Sonny OarnM 44a-2707
~ JJli!!..
Robert Bruce ue 0821 Rita Wltemln 441 t555 .Jennlftl' 81pplfl245-ll020

Advencetale
Aplll29th 4:oo-5:45 pm. .
Apffl301h • 5:00 • 7:00 pm &amp;
May 2nd- 5:00. 7:00 pm ..
WUhlllgton Ellmlntary.

~ llloiVIltllltll at

I

"
•

(740) 446• 3644
.

-

44&amp;-18181or product Info. on the
PH Miracle program aired 4122 on

CBS Early Show?

-Temporary
Health Insurance
Medical coverage
when you need lt.
• RecenUy graduated
• Between jobs
Ronnie Lynch

322 Second Avenue

me.

www.wisemanrealestote.co m

WANT TO BE HEALTHIER?
Are you on Insulin, overweight or
juetllrad of being sick &amp; tired?
Why not call 446-0386 or vlell
USE HERBS INSTEAD
at 2nd &amp; Court

May 3rd &amp; M•y 4th

NliO ..... t4e by Cllllng LJbby
WIMnln 44e
All« Apltl301h.

I!Htdly.

740-379·2316

The Lynch Agency

ats:oo p.m. at
Tlclcels •re $7.00 per pef'IOf1.

NO. 0*', f26,

Wedding &amp; Prom Gowns
Made to your order
Reasonable

O.A.H.S. Spring Mutlcal
Wuhlngton Elementary,

Ftll SID Mlllr-. UO! N
lfu Bad, ~.. ,,,.,

MOLLOHAN CARPET
SPECIALS
$6.95 Berber
$12.95 Berber On Sale
For $8.95
740-388-o173

.

740.;379-2970

ana

(304)273-1111

01 , _ lutiWT••uru ,.,. Ccwtflt...
110•......,. ~ • end
12. 2 VIMMtl Qoo •• lor
Pll1f. 16.00 (7Mij1tf1·1721

porch. 178,900

'

www.vtliOnqi!OOO.com

M:l

garage ·on 1 acre mil. Flelar In
the shade on your wrap-around

1111 lo your own boto with

1110 lnveatoral .. lnvlltoral

REAL ESTATE

FREE CAIHI 110,000 or
mora pooellfo In 58 dar• Of
1 -. Ntvtt RIPIYI Ntw
r.zomel Frll lnlolmatfon.
.fti4.141S

TI/I1(J

Wtll
ronch on
private acres m/1 juat rrnnutat
from town. Formal living room,
remodeled kltahen, large
'acond dwolllngl Thl1 home dlnlnglfamlly room addition with
onarl you the apaca tor 2 working fireplace and
familial. Eat·ln kitchen, living
porch, two car ~UC!OTI:''·I''Ik
room with fireplace, dining room, acraanad·ln
attached garage end a 26 • 32 ,
1 112 oar attached garage, 2 car two car detached garage.
detached garage. 2nd dwelling PLUS a nice 32 x 08 metlll pole
hal 728 oquara teet, t BR, t BA
wllh water and electr1c.
and 1 t 2 x 26 carpo~.
1151 Lind Contttcl Avolloblol .
Chlok out lhlt tboer·uppor with 2
BR I BA on a nice lot ovenoo.klng
your
the qulol village ol VInton.
ond tllko a wolk
$28,900.
Tvcoon LAkol Newly
3 B~. t 112 beth, alleohed 2-car

3 8111 3 lA

.....

Looking For That
Perfect Pet?

i~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;:;;;;;;:;;;::::::;;;;;;;;;;~

01-r, 145. Antiquo Drop
...., Tabla,
Pot
135. Tobit, 140. Pooa ~·
til, 110. Lampe, fH ttl.
(740)446-V742

...
-.
=- .

~~IPP.tt

" WE ARE EXCITED ABOUT OUR NEW WEB SITE"
l ll!!r"'!liPi
iClV~AES AND
AVAILABLE

•

Cuo Ctdtt ~rdon Tractor,
t7HP with 4 mower dock,
Sf.n on Oil lllttr, It 800.
( 401446-6618

.

··'

butn
lown1 One of the
lilT ..red lor homot In tht
_ , Huge llvlno room and moetar
bedroom overlooking tho Ohio
Alvtr. Thlt homo It 1 rorollnd with
many unique futuree Including
beautiful hardwood floor~, trim, .
crown molding and pock•t doors.
S..utltully landacoPfd lot that runo
111 the way to the river. You've
111n the r11t, achedule your
appointment now to see the
IIITI Owner Olltrlng Homo
Worrontvl

Malnlo·

nonct. Wo dO 111 Ropoltt on

1977 Thunderblld, 165
Hcrae motor. Runo Good.
$1700 080. 17401448·9021

road. t .58 ocrtt nvl. Coli

a

GALLIPOLIS,OHIOOOI

3HOCUSTSTREET

1323.

•'

COOKWARE ·Wa rahoute
overltockedl Buy t7•po.
ttl ol ""' coot I Baautlful 7•
ply lllfgloal ottlnttu Jteefl
Cook wino Wllet or oil ar
dlnntr PtMiu • 11695, now
13891 Ufetlme warranty! 1·
800-434·4828 www.vapo·
Nll,com

U:owa••,
t142

.Joe A. !llloor-Broker 441-1618 .
·
Sarah L. Evena·Moore, Broker 441-1816
Patricia Haye- 448-3884 Cara Caeey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 388-1841
___________c==andace
448-7412
II IS PJIIICI JIIEI:IUCII:III
lolltude I 1101u11on nter a
'1011+ ..,. lt.lte Perkl Gotawoy
ratrwa~ located neXt to Tycoon
LAke down I trH llnod dlld lnd

WOOD REALTf,
INC
446-1066

· ond
betht,mora.
mobttl
rtPtlr
FO&lt;I10mt
frH
ntlmota ooll Chtt, 740-982·

•

, StD. Ba~Car Stat, $20.
manto Bedding,
• Prtelo\JI
• aeo. (7401446·9742

Lo1&gt;UPP\

, ......~, Bloc,burn Roalry "Sen&gt;lrw SOMrhom 0/olo For O..r A Q........ c.nr...,."

el

Real Eatete Generel

Polntlt!Q, vinyl lid·
lng, Clrptnlry, dCO&lt;t. win·

I

•• Baby Strcllor, 125. Baby
': Bouncer. f20. Baby Walk,.,

I
I

1

-2155

IAIIMINT

Flah Finders, etc. $1300 In·

Sttt-ee 1943

(304)87~·2901

""
7275-

oorntr

2 2

CIC a.nttll Homt Mllnl•

Baby lttmt, Bldroom Sullo.

""'""
Nlotcftnt, ' : : ;
-I/IMatctt. P

Condition.

76 Goldwlng tOOOCC Col·
lootora Item. Very QoO&lt;I
Condltlon. l304)67e· t31l5

llkt new 118.00; Folcon
ecannor St 5.00; Gun bell
wllh acceuorltl $85.00;
New Ptlltt rllll gun $55.00;
Pelt of FI.R. pole cllmbero
175.00; 220V electric heater
• _ 118.00; prlcea firm, 740·
· - 882·5738

Ivory . Wlddfng DrHO, Vic-

Good

PPY

liJ.4 Second Ave., GaiUpoU., Ohio 45631·09jj
Ya 740-446-0008 740-441-1111 •
evanamoo4Dzoomnel.nel

world? Flttrtot to thlo home
tucked away on private
ChetOIIII .LAke. Nice 4 BR 3 BA
redWOOd ltded hO&lt;nt with 2 oar
attached glltage and private.
deck overlooking the lake.
$174,900

~unba!' t!time~­

30ft. Mllltlrd tra'llf 1ra1or.
Vory

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

AT&amp;T anawarlng machine,

!f

~7711-t12., (74013S2-

17401446•8402

AIR CONDITIONERS· Ctn·
tral and Window. 1740).148·
8308 and t ·800·291 ·0098 .

1184. BalliN -

a:

tlleneer.

www.np ....tan.com

sao.

...~~~tied

t Itt 8th whet! Prowtar

2000 Dodge Durango SLT, t 21t Seart SemiV wllh trail·

Affordable • Conventent

"

your own

740-lltl2-$4t~.

;· 17ft, Like Now, Slatpo
!IIQt
Qrotn
lnto~or.

V8 , Loaded, E&lt;eellent Con· er. Geo &amp; Electric motors.

WOLfP TANNING liDS
Low Monthly tnvtotmenll
Homo Cellvery
Filii! Color Catalog
Call Todoy 1·800·711.0166

"
''

•

WATifti'IIOOPINQ
· Unoondfttonll IWollmo guar·
oniH. Loco! rtllntnc1t fur·
nllhod. Ellablllhed 1!175,
Coil 24 Hro. (7401 448·
0170, Aogora Battmant
Wltlrp!OOitng.
,

(7401441·0618

,

1111 25' nt'llf trolfor, IOlO•
ed. lfllt _,. 11,500. Ctl

Gao motor ecoottra, now In
bOx, 49cC, no llcenae reQulrtd, $t099Inctudesshlp·
ping 10 your home. Colora.
www.acooterguy.mtl or 1·
1996 Jeep Qrond Cherokee 868·288·7383
Laredo, 4K4, Rouawood
wllh Gruy Interior. Good
BoAl'S &amp; M0101l'i
Condlllon; Well Maintained.
mttSALE
130.000 mllee, $6200 .
L-------pl

Real Eatate General

Et«~lt4·- ~ ~eatt,

(740~11N4

t 999 Hcnda KR 200, Very
Good Condition. 2000 HOII·
da XR tOO, E•celltniCOndl·
tlon with Whfll Brothtrl E

6unbap Q:imtf· 6rnlinrl • Page D7

R•l Elt8tt Oene1111

11111 Compo;, 25ft, e•..,_
toni Concltfan, AIC, Awning.

1996 Ford Ranger KLT Su·
parCab, 4x4. 4.0 V6. elr, tm,
cruiiG, $8,QQ5,0Q , River•
view Motort 740·992·3490

dillon, Silver, Tan Leather
1t •
5· 4 000 II
S •
n anor.
•
mas, auous
Inquires
Only.
13041578 4009
'
2000 Dodge Ram IS poo·
oenger van, toodoO. 21 ,000
miles, cost over $30,000
now, oeklng
S2 t ,500,
(7401742·3033
' ---'::--'-'--'::-----,97 NIOtan Oueat, loaded,

wv

Ohio• Point

t

2800 mlloo, loti of Ch~.
mony oxtrao, $9,200. OBO.
(3041675-8957

sarles hea&lt;Htr and

Pomeroy • Middleport •

BE

••t.

1197 SilveradO,
-cab. 11195 Yoma"" WR250 dirt
3td door lrollor poof&lt;ogo blkt, $ t ,500 740·3417-7551 .
with t ' &amp; t18
360 .::· ~ ~~ ~: 11195 Horlt~ Oevl&lt;f10t1 1113
oovor ru~ntng'Crdo llka Convoi1od t~ t 200 ""· 3600
Actual Mlle1. Lata ol EJttra'a
now, 32,000 mllto, St5.000 and ctuomo. bcollenl Con·
make orttr, (7401 843•5525 dillon. $7500. IHOI448·
t998 Chovy 314 ton • 4440
whHI dnvo, Low Mllll, 'E•·
cttleril COndition. 174013417· 1996 Haney Dovldion

ooraper, Tractor Equipment,

,,

Sunday, April 28, 2002

Sund8y, April 28, 2002

• Middleport • Gallipoll•, Ohio·• Point Pleaunt, WV

en. door.

Gallipolis; Ohio

446-8235
1·800·447·8235
HOME DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE
Sat. May-4
eam-5pm
QIOrfl Oiler
31645 St. Rt. 325 Llngt\lille, Oli 45741
7-40-742·2078

'

I

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

ATTENTION
INVESTORS!
Six Rental
Properties
For Sale
4 Located In Rodney
1 Located in Gallipolis
1 Located in Crown City
All are·presently rented
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
740·446·4508

COURTS IDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
Cinco De Mayo
Celebration

Sat May 4th
Drink Specials
· Party Favors
Court Street Gallipolis .

441-9371
.

ANGEL
SPICE OF
LIFE
Flower &amp; Gift Shop
302 Bladen Road
10 mllett lOUth of Galli poll aoil At. 1

740-256-9350
Tuesday thru Friday
Noon- 6pm

COUATSIDE BAA &amp; GRILL
GREAT LUNCH SPECIALS
Tuesday- .2 lor 1 hamburgers
Thursday- Creale your own pasta
Friday- All you can eat deep .
. lrled perch

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION

We deliver 10 downtown area
($10.00 minimum)
42 Court Street
441·9371

• Billed to insurance
• Little if no cost
• Free Delivery
• We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740-446-7283

MEDICARE '
SUPPLEMENT

• 65 or"over

1-800-458·6844

Schwinn Airdyne
Exercise Bike
for sale

446·3538
KEEP GALLIA BEAUTIFUL
ANNUAL COMMUNITY
SWEEP

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

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
1-800-447-8235

Saturday, May 4

Relay for Life

Hours 9 am - 2 pm
C. H. McKenzie Building
111 Jackson Pike

Huge Charity Yard Sale
Kids clothes, 'pius aizes, CO's,
Home ln1erior, electronics,
books, and much more:
JOHNSONS SUPERMARKET
Vina St.
Thursday May 2Saturday May 4
8-?
All proceeds go to the

Orta1 day tO clean up your property

WANTED
Hair Stylist full or part time
available Apply In person
Style Station Hair Salon
305 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
448·2753 or 446·2754
HOUSE FOR SALE
431 Lake Dr.
Rio Grande, OH

245-9838
2 Bedroom, 1 112 bath,
Garage, basement
~nnn

American Cancer Society_

3 FAMILY YARD.SALE
Rain or Shine
Wide selection of boys clothes
3T to size 7 Loll of Brand
Names Women and Mens
clothes Swlngset, trampoline
and lots of toys and misc. Hems
1.2 miles from RVHS on
Uttle Kyger Ad. Cheshire
follow signs 5/lhru 514
9am-?

For More Info ... 446-2342 or 992-2156
\

I

•

....

�ltomlroy • Mlddllpoft • a.lllpDII, OhiO •llollil lll'lllllnt, WY

Neai'Jy 3,000 Hershey
employees walk off the job
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) The two planu make a variNeady 3,000 Henhey Foods ety of candy, including chacoCorp. workers walked off the late ban, Hershey's Kisses and
job Friday. saying they were chocolate eggs.
upset with the company's conNegotiations
between
tratt offer that would increase Hershey and the Chocolate
their bwm m~ ~osts.
Workers Loa! 464 broke off
The strike affects about one- Wednesday. No new talks were
fifth of the work force at the · scheduled. .
·
nation's largest candymaker,
Even before the walkout
but company officials said it began at 9 a.m., workers began
would 'not interrupt service to gathering outside the factories
its customers. The company and union offici:als distributed
has been building inventory signs that read, "Stop the
and cash reserves in prepara- Greed, Share theWe:alth."
tion for a walkout, an:alysts
"The raises they give won't
said.
cover the increases in the medStriken lined both sides of
Chocolate Avenue, where one ical benefits," said Brian·
of two company plants in Daubert, a production worker
Henhey is located . . They at the West Hershey plant.
shouted and slowed traffic as · A deal offered by the comtruckers honked their horns in pany but rejected earlier this
a noisy display of solidarity.
month called for worker
"This company's making health insurance payments to
money hand over fist and increase from 6 percent to 10
there's no reason it can't be percent, then 12 percent over
shared," said
Franldeen ·four yean.
Gibson, who works on comWorkers, who receive an
pany air-conditioning units. average hourly wage of about
"We're ready and .we're going SIB, would get raises of around
to stand tough. We're not 2.6 percent to 2.8 percent
going back in a week or two." each year for four years.
.J

Embargo
from P11p Dl

part of the world, and we no

longer defend our relationship to our people."
The source told the Times

Kneen
flomPIIpD1
replace beer/mixture each
--,e.vening. For more information call the extension office
and ask for Home &amp; Garden
fact sheet 2010.

•••

Have you noticed the purple clusters of flowers higb in
the trees along the Ohio
River? The Princess tree or
Royal Paulownia, Paulownia
tomentosa is beginning to
bloom IS to 40 feet in the air
along its leafless branches.
This is an imported plant ·
from China, named after
Princess Paulowna from the
Netherlands in · the early

that such measures would be
"a strategic debacle for the
United States."
In London, Brent crude
from the Nonh Sea gained 17
cents to $25.93 per barrel.
Nat ural gas futures trading
at Nymex fell 12 cents to
$3.30 per 1,000 cubic feet.
1800's. If you are trying to
propagate this tree, start from
either seed in the .fall or from
stem or root cuttings in the
late suJIIIller or early .winter
months. Young plants or
plants cut down often send up
sprouts 10-12 feet in height
with large three foot across
leaves in the first year. Later
growth is half as great in continuing years. It prefer&amp; well
drained, fertile son · with
ample summer moisture and
shelter from strong winds.
The Ohio River Valley is at
its northern climatic zone so
don't look for it much further
north of our region.

(Hal Kneen is the Meiss
County Asriculture &amp;
Natural Resources Extension
Asent, The Ohio State
.University.)

•

..•

ticket

over

•

New Jeney descend
HILLSIDE, NJ. (AP) - It might have
started out as an innocent office pool,
with co-workers chipping in a few dolJan to buy lottery tickeu.
But now a dispute has appa~ndy
erupted over a winning ticket in the
$331 million-winning Big Game lottery,
with two lawyers getting involved and
the New Jersey State Lottery launching a
review.
One lawyer represents a man who
brought the winning $110.3 milli.on
ticket to a gas station where it was purchased to validate it.The other represenu
a group that claims to be part of an office
pool whose money was used to buy tickets - including the winning one.
Carole Hedinger, acting executive
director of the state lottery, confirmed
Thursday that the commission has heard
from the two lawyers, each claiming a
share of the prize for their clients.
The lottery commission is reviewing
its rules governing such situations,
Hedinger said, declining further com-

ment. She would not identify the
lawyers.
The ticket was one of three winnen in
the April 16 dt:awing. The others we~
sold in Georgia, where 20-year-old Erika
Greene claimed her sha~ of the $33 t
million prize, and Illinois, where the
winner hasn't come forward.
The jackpot was the second-biggest
lottery prize in U.S. history.
The buyer of the New Jersey ticket
chose to take the payout in a $58.9 million lump sum. After taxes, that leaves
about S43 million.
A man took the ticket to the Gulf
Gas/1-2-3 Food Mart the day after the
dt:awing, had it entered into the lottery
computer terminal for validation and left
without saying a word, store owner Amit
Ghetia said. He has not rerurned since:
Lottery players at the convenience
store blamed the man and sided with the
office pool workers. It was not known
how many office workers were in the
pool or what, if any, agreements we~

a1

made amons participants befotehand.
"You sotta share that money,'' said
Kendall Steem of Irvington as he bought
a buttered roll. "That was part of an
office pool. That's bad, man. They should
take him to court."
.
It might come to that. Although Ne'Y
Jersey law empowers the lottery execu•
tive director to setde disputes such as
this, similar spats have wound up in court
in the past. .
In t 998, Phyllis Klingebiel of Rahway
sued her son, Michael, claiming he failed
to share a $2.15 million jackpot he won.
She said they pooled their money to buy
tickets, and eventually settled out of
court for 22.5 percent of the prize.
Billy May of Irvington said the man
who brought in the ticket should be fair.
"He didn't ha'!e anything befo~ this,
so just split the money,'~ he said. "Give
everybody a share, he'll still have some
money and maybe he'll still have some
li:iends. For su~. he doesn't have any
right now."

Melp County's

Whars Inside

osu sprinsseme, a1

Deaths

First-quarter Internet
sales better than ·
expected for many e-tailers
NEW YORK (AP) - The
first quarter, usually a sleepy
time in the retail business,
turned out to be unusually busy
for online merchant!.
The pace of Internet sales,
which picked up momentum
after Sept. 11, further accelerated in the first three months of
2002, fed by an improving
economy, an influx of new
shoppers on the Web as well as
increased speoding from previous custome.rs, according to
company .reports released this
week.
On Thesday, Amazon.com,
defYing critics' contention that
its business was stagnating,
tcported a net loss smaller.than
Wall Street projections and said
sales grew faster than anticipated. The industry bellwether
credited the improv~ment to a
combination of price cuts and
offers of free shipping.
Meanwhile, 1-800 Flower:s, a

Web site that seUs flowers and
other gifts, announced a slight
profit for its fiscal third quarter
- it! second strnight period of
profitability - beating Wall
Street projections of a 2 cent
loss. Sales met expectations, but
the company was able to attract
a larger-than-anticipated number of new customers even with
a decr:ease in marketing spending, CEO Jim McMann said.
Online jeweler Bluenile.com,
which achieved a 10 percent
sales gain and met Wall Street's
profit expectations for the first
quarter, has had a 30 percent
increase in April &amp;om a year ·
ago, according to Diane Irvine,
chief financial officer.
An4 Bluelly.com, which sells
discounted designer goods,
anno11nced a smaller-than-.
eicpected fint-quaner loss and
said it is even more confident it
will be profitible by the fourth ·
quarter.

lNG

North Carolina

drop~ ~rly declsio~

adm1ss1ons plan
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
(AP) - The University of
North Carolina at Chapel.
Hill said Thursday it will
eliminate its early decision
admissions program next
year. ·
Administrators said it was
the first major U.S. university to end early. enrollment.
The common but controversial practice allows students to get a quick
response from their firstchoice college in exchange
for a promise to attend if
admitted.
"Carolina has .taken this
step because we believe it
will best serve our future
students and their families,"
Chancellor James Moeser
said.
The university's early
admission program allowed

.

l

MULTI-RATE INDEX ANNUITY

Don't be
a paey to
teenage drinking.
It's aaainst
the Taw. .

•

l

is unhealthy and unacceptable

+
+

It is unsafe and illegal for teens to
drink and drive
Parents can be prosecuted under
the law.
Everything associated with a
violation; such as personal
·property, can be confJScated.

Calll-877-4-MINORS to report violations.
'

••
'••

•I
•

Bryce L Smith • Mark E. Smith • K. Ry11n Smith
(800) 4~226 • (740) 446-8899
416 5«,1111 Avmut. GIIUifDih. OH 4%3~

...,..,,{TIN MONY (;,..,,

Nt.m IHr ,.,""'""dna •• ""', "rJ ;,.., •"".,.,.,_,

""'*"'kpl"'"'"Jb..JJ.u..,. k ,b.,;..J,

power restored overnight
Sunday.
· Over 15,000 AEP customers
throughout Southern · Ohio,
fiom Brown Courity in western Ohio to Morgan County
Bv BRIAN J. RIID
in eastern Ohio were without
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
power following Sunday
POMEROY - Driving m~rning's . winds ~nd driving
ruin leading to downed power rams, Robmson sa1d.
lines' n:St1lted in. an interrup~·wc.had lots of rain and lots
tion of electricity service for · of wmd throughout . the;
about 590 Pomeroy-area resi. region Saturday night and
dents and 1,290 Mason Coun- Sunday morning," Robinson
ty, W.Va., customers over the said. "The storms' high winds
weekend.
brought down trees and tree
.Ronn R.obinson of AEP's limbs, knocked down power
Corporate Communic~tions .lines, broke utility poles, and
Division in Columbus, s~id locked out numerous electricMl&gt;nday llll&gt;rning that all but ity circuits."
10 of the Pomeroy customer~
"Many of the customers
and appmximately 100 of the . who were effected by the outMason County customers had ages are in fairly remote areas,

High: 70sl Low: 40s
DMiilll, A2

Super Lotto at
.S11 miiHon
CLEVELAND (AP) The Ohio Lottery's Super
Lotto Plus jackpot is growing to $11 niillion for the
next drawing Wednesday
. night.
. · · There were no Super
L9tto Plus game tickets
with the correct · combination for the $8 million
dt:awing Saturday night.
Sales in Super (..otto Plus
totaled $2,414,565 and
players shared $488,075.
Sales in the Kicker totaled
$410,373 and players shared
$233,7 40. Sales in Buckeye
5 totaled S232, 911 and
players shared $163,631.
There were 73 Super
·Lotto Plus tickets with five
of the numbers, and each is
worth $1,500. There were
three tickets with five numbers plus the bonus ball, and
each is worth $10,000.

Pick J: 9-8-9
Pick 4: 4-5-5-8

S..•IUIID: 1-11-19-27-29-47
llclnua 1111: 4

Klclcfr: 2-1-9-4-3-3
Buckeye 5: 4-7-25·32-33

BY TONY M. LIACH
TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL,COM

FUTIVAL QUliN- T.J. Moore, right, was crowned 2002 Racine Flower Festival queen In car·
emonles held Saturday. She was crowned by Mia Baaa, the 2001 quean. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Racine kicks ·off Meigs
County festival season
lv CHAIILINI HOII'IJOH

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· RACINE - Meigs County kicked olf the
2002 fe1tival season Saturday with the Racine
Area Community Organization'• pinth annual
· Flower Festival in Star Mill Park.
t Vlrtlnl•
While it was cool under overcan skie1 most
· Dally J: 6-'·2
of the day, the large crowd found that didn't
DeilY 4: o-5-1-4
PJ:;:11W: 1+12-18-33 (14)
take away fiom their enjoyment of the entertainment and other festival accivitie1.
A mid-morning parade through downtown
Racine to kick ofl:Che fettival featured queen
candidates riding on open convertible~ and
bearing basken of spring flowen, several trac2 la£111111- 12,....
rors led by Ted Smith ilying large American
Calendar
A5
tlagJ,
the Southern High School marching
Classified•
83-5 ·
band directed by Jeanette Oldaker, Meghan
Comics
86
Haynes, MeigJ County Sternwheel Fettival
DearAbby
A5
Queen,
Howard Mullen driving the DARE
Editorial•
A4
car, ~ine tire trucks and retcue vehicle~, and
Movies
A3
riding and walking poliriciaru pasting out cards
Obituaries
A3
and
candy.
Sports
81-3
The Sonshine Circle float tided "In the GarWeather
A2
den" featured Blondena Rainer actized in oldc :1001 Ohio Yllley l'ullflllllnl Co.

Pick s diiJ: 9-0-9
Pick 4 uy: 9-0-4-Q

-·

TH1 WINND - The Sonahlne Circle with ill

11oat •tn the Garden• tOok first piiiCB In parllda
Judlln&amp; Ill the Flower Feltlllal. (Charlene HoefliCh)

fashioned costuming1eated in a rocker reading
the Bible, and Sheila Thei11 kneeling at the
ci'OII surrounded by basken of multi-colored
tpring flowers took tint place in the lloat judging. The Circle was presented a monetary
award in ceremoniet following the parade.
. lltJeN ... IIedM,AS

llASHAN - Work on Pha•e Ill nf the Ravcn!WOOd Connector project near D~ s hall Road progresses as crews step up
efforts to move dirt and pour concrete, according to officials
with the Ohio Department ofTra115portation (ODOT).
Phillip Robert!, ODOT
project engineer for Phase Ill,
said Friday conmuction on "Right now, there is a
the third section of three
. highway segments that will flurry of activity going
ultimately connect U.S. 33
on at the Phase Ill
with the Ritd1ic Bridge and
site. We hove heavy
lntcntatc 77 at Ravcmwoud,
equipment moving
W.Va . is "progrc~sing nicely"
dirt at several locaand current e!timatcs indicate
20 percent of the work has tions between Mornalready been completed.
ingstar and Bashan
"Right now, there is a flur- ·
Road and crews are
ry of activity going on at the
Phase Ill site," said Robem.
busy excavating a
"We have heavy equipment significant amount of
moving dirt at scweral (()castone and rock,
tiom between Morningstar
and llashah Road and crews which will eventually
are bmy excavating a signifibe used as fill:'
cant amount of stone and
rock, which will eventually be
Pllllllp R0111111, ODOT
, , _ 111 proJect tnlll,..,
used a.1 fill."
·
Roberti said workers are
also prepanng to put the fin·
ishing touches on scwcral abutments for a new bridge that
will span Bashan Road.
Once the abutments arc tinishcd, Roberts said, work will
begin on the installation of pim and the placement of
beams.
"Major pipe work has gotten underway as well," he added.
"We estimate that 20 percent of construction for this phase
of the project has been completed."
Meanwhile, work continues on the tim phase of th~ project, which involves six miles of"Super 'TWo" highway from
the Ritchie Bridge to the intersection o( State Route 124
and County Road 35 (Portland Road), and Phase II, which
":ill encamp~ ~pproximately four miles of "Super 'TWo"
htghway, begmnmg at the end of State Route 7 near Five
Points and ending .20 milet tall of Sutton Township Road
in the Morningstar area.
According to RobertJ, Phate Ill, which is scheduled to be.
completed in June 2004, wi11 fill the 4.5 mile gap between
Morning Star and Portland Road.
The total cost of the 16-mile connector project, once finished in 2004, ha$ been estimated at S75 million.

.Occupational Therapy Month
"Skills for the Job of Living"
Holzer Medical Center salutes our

I'••

'
1/Akt*l.-1 DrllfAY'"'oo
, _ _ - . QW, O.,...to;uJII I{I'WIIe Slfiti

noon. Sheriff Ralph Trussell reported that his department had ·
received no word of serious damage to property as a·result of
the weekend storms. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Apri is National

U,
VM IJ P...O, .4clcfrrrlM CMM"'.UIJ r,_,., Strrlm
!IIIII • Gtll&amp;l CMPuy,., 1F1N HM&lt; ~ n. Mm Com ' • ,.

....,., . . , . , , _ tiNQi;, 0.}4&gt;'-

DOWNED TREE - Several trees like this one on High Street
In Pon1eroy were toppled during the high winds Sunday after·

Ravenswood
Con
ro·ect in
gear

•

{,.;(s:

and that makes it more difficult and· time-consuming to
restore their service, but we 're
working artatt\d the dock to
get servke restored."
'Thme customers without
po\Wr in the Pomeroy service
area were expcrtcd .to be
restored by 9 a.m. this morning, R.obinson said, while in
Mason County, customers still
without . power should be
restored by 4 p.m. this afternoon.
Some 400 customcl'll in the
Athens area were still without
power this morning, but were
expected to be restored by
mid-afternoon todny.
Meigs · County Sheriff
Ralph Trussell said no serious
dnmagc to , property resulted
fmm the weekend's storms. ·

w..

For more information about IN.GS~ARTDESIGN MULTI-RATE INDEX ANNUITY please contact

www.llllvt~t.crnn

'

••
•••

Thi$ advertisement focuses on only one of three accounts within the lNG SMARTDESIGN MULTI-RATE INDEX)
ANNUITY. The three atcounts from which to choose are the Interest Account, Terin Indexed Account, and . (
Annual Indexed Account. For more information about lNG SMARTDESIGN MULTI-RATE INDEX ANNUITY
.
including charges. expenses, risks, restrictions and limitations. you may obtain a prospectus
by calling 800-366-0066.You sho~ld read it carefully before you Invest.

,u..,, /nr. Mm.l-. NYSF., NA.!D, SIPC. A

Nearly &amp;00 .loSe power·over•.weekend

Wei liter

Ohio

Rate effective 0312612002 through 04130/2002.
Rates are currently set monthly. However. depending on market
conditions, rates may be set on a more frequent basis. Other rates available.

S1111ing lm~t~UtY SiMt/891

DNIII, AS

Lotte.tes

Interest Account

for anyone under age 21 to drink.

+

I

•I

10Year Rate

It is illegal to host or allow teen

drinking parties in your home.

+

'

0 ·,
0

Mattie Pullins, 91

.

students who applied by
Oct. 15 td be notified about
their status by Dec. 3.
Critics said the policies
fav.o r
universities
by
improving their statistics on
the number of students who
accept offers of admission
while forcing high school
seniors to choose their col~
lege before most ate ready.
"We've observed growing .
pressure on students to
choose colleges e:arlier sim~
ply because they believe it is'
their best chance to get in;
without the benefit of the,
considerable maturation
· that takes plac~ in the seniof.
year of high school," sai~
Jerome Lucido, vice provos~
for enrollment management
and director of admissions. ~

SMARTDESIGNT~

•

Service to be
restored to final
.100 today

I

+

Boyles second at AMC track meet, B1

t

~------~------------------------------------~
·
I
I '

' 'r

M ED I C A L C EN T E R

Occupational Therapists

Discover the Holzer Difference

For mort1 information about tt. opiw at Holar M.dical c.,,.., ,L.a.. call Hol:w ~ical
Theiapyc.nMrat'(740t 4N·•I21inGallipolisor C740J ••2·2104 inPonwoy,
or Holar M.dical &lt;Anllr'slnpotienl Rehob Unit at 1740) 4.Y·•070.

www.holzer.org

..

•

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="464">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9909">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23006">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23005">
              <text>April 28, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="83">
      <name>adkins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1559">
      <name>holman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="194">
      <name>norman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1109">
      <name>vansickle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
