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                  <text>,.... a 1 • The Deity Sentlqet

flldlly, -

www.mydllly11 ttlt..a.com

AH.EYOOP

10. 2002

HI:A Croaaword Puaale
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Workin' for the
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~rnest Henlingway
wrote in a letter to F.
· Scott Fitzgerald, "The
good pam of a book
may be only something a writer is lucky
enough to overh~ar
'. or it may be the
wreck of his whole ,.,
NAH U~
life -- and one is as
SAWEO·Ofl=
· good as the other."
RUNT~AlN'T
TMATBIGH
Many say that it is
better to be lucky
than good, but at the
bridge table and in
sporting arenas, . the
better one · plays, the
more favorable breaks
one seems to receive.
How would you
. rate six spades as a
:,~~.~P:;'L';"'A
cpntract on these
11 C';'£;-":II'I:':'::&amp;J~£;:
1;1":V7,£;:...,~·-::::i.:;o;,:;~i'"l · \j North-South
ro ~
, JP
I"JP, JPI'~'
hands?
~fSf~VEI&gt; FO~
•••
~ How would you plan
/
y./11-L
t4AVf
• the play after West
Vll&gt;eOTAPU
leads the diamond

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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THE BORN LOSER

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P'"Mill.fF-~ 0\t-11('16

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MAY10l

High: 80s, Low: 50s
Dlttall.. A2

Rio ceremony

today

qu;~~:e

spades is a
limit raise with 10-12.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
support points (highbyLulaCim~
card points plus shortCal abilly Clpl\er CtCtiiOIPIOO'ICIGii,.,.,. IN CtMIId 11om ctUO'I-111'age points) and four
people, ..... ond - ' · e.cn
tilt
or more trumps.
TodtY,CIUt:R~" S
:
South bids what he
thinks he can make.
'YDL'Y
INUL
I
ILINPIHL
Six SP.ades would be
XIGZ.,
PKJYYLI
ONHD
I
great tf dummy had
· three hearts, since deIIINPU,'
clarer's club lo1er
· could be discarded, As
IIIPU
ZNPDoiiYoiZ
oiZ
·it stands, though,
South needs to find
IILYYNPI . IIZOL
the spade king singleton (26 percent} or
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'When tytrylhlng 0011 rlghl, 1 mo- ,..
bile 11 a plecs of poetry that d.tnou with the joy of Ills. • the player with kingAlsxlftder Calder
·
·
doubleton of spades
holdin~ at most two
WOlD
1
clubs (36.5 percent).
lAM I
::~:t:~'
S~tl~lA-~t.~s·
This gives a combined _.;_.;__;......,.;; Hlto~ ~y CIAY R. 'OW.N
53 percent'cl!l\ll.ce, so
Reorrang• lettert cf th•
six spades is accept- 0 four ICromblsd words be,
l~w to form four slmplt words ..
. able.
,;
After winning with
CHORIE
the diamond ace,
2
South cashed the . II
spade ace, getting the
good news (no 3-0
GYV N I
break) and the bad
news (no singleton
king). He took . his
two heart trickt, led a
diamond to dummy' a·
king, ruffed the last
diamond, cashed the
club ace, and played a
club to dummy's
king. With the partial
elimination complete,
declarer gave West his
trump trick. And
South's luck was in:
West had to return a
red-colored card, perICIIAM-LITS ANSWERS
mitting declarer to
Cliche • Puffy - Tease • Jumble • FILMS
•.
ruff in the dummy
Famous comic's comment upon leaving the movie,, ·
and to discard his los·
theater." With today'a movles,if we took out all the bad
ing club.
. language, we'd go back to silent FILMS.'

-In

•

clphof-"" """"*·

RJO
GRANDE
Commencement exercises at
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College are
Sunday at 2 p.m. on the college green.
.
Susan Tave-Zelman, SUPrrintendent of Ohio schools, is
the guest speaker.
In case of rain. exercises
will be moved to Lyne
Center.

Foundation
meeting

Monday

• SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. The Hambrick Heritage
Foundlitton will be ,;onQu&lt;;t~­
ing' l"lfle'!li'ng· on' MOnoay at
7:30 p.m. at the Hambrick
Church.
The group takes care of the
cemetery and church building
and invited all 1rustees and
the public to attend.

City announces

holiday doslnp
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Point Pleasant City
Hall, street, sewer, sanilation,
floodwBJI and water departments will be closed Tuesday,
May 14, for election day.
Residents whose garbage is
usually picked up on
Tuesday, should put it out on
Wednesday, May 15.

Food ..veaway
'dlunclay . .
KERR- A food.giveaway
Is set for Thursday, May 16 at
Living Water Church·, 839'
Kerr Road, starting at I0 a.m.
The giveaway is sponsored
by Ray of Hope. Plell.!le bring
l!Oxes.

•• •

·Index
• hdloal- ,~ ,....

.,

fl!f'n) ~~~neSoi! and &amp;llktlll
mlln!JilllllSoi! in New Hllven.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. B1111mu S4id thttt he mt$
Recent PQyroll checks of invested SJ.S million in the
Highlanders Alloys LLC facility and he feels th11t
workers have beeri bounc- with 111 thin.l fwnlll:e firing
ins
and company owner Dr. uC on F 'da
all'
the
Boris BllDnai blames th'".. . p unl un profitable
y, m tilg one
·
cblem on the company's shouldn't be a problem.
"lkl, !~&amp;IIITnu
. 'su--'~-·•~--'- On April 16. 0&lt;:!¥. Bob
tN&lt;mi"""'
Wi81! wus in ·town for a ribing . and somehow they bon cuttin; ~o'elelllOny for
boUnced the checks," Bannw the plam and Bannai's part· .
said.
had an llmlllllt~· · R .,.
~
ment "We
with the
blink and 1i's ner ws et man s e on
the company's behtt f.
come to us by surprise,"
"Boris Bannai is the perBannai · then wenl on 10 son who invests. not in fncsay thut he is seeking u
·
· b ·
I:
· shorl-term loan from the tones. 001 m usmess, '""
government.
invests in people. and he's
"We're 1alklng 10 the gov- been doing so with hundred ·
emmenl about shon-lerm of fiUililics in South Afric11.
financing." Bannai said. . · in Poland. und be's dOing it
"There is no reason to '!'0"'1· ltxl11y, nlso, here in MilSon
I guarantee everything 18 County." Rcifmun said.
OK. We' re working to solve
"Way, way beyond all the
it and we have a full under- things that ·W'e due everystanding with employees."
body. from the governor and
One employee, wbo wished his otlice and lilt the people
loremuin anonymous. WIISII't uround who've helped 10
ISS understanding.
build this. I. would like to
"It's crap," he S4id. "They slop for n sec\lnd and suy
need 10 get their act together. thonk you tl}' one person. to
· I have bfils to puy just like he Boris for realizing this. but
(Bannai) does. I m not doing all this is impossible without
this work for nothing."
~ou people, Reifmun lidded.
"We will .~Y eve!'Y cent for 'This is not one mun 's
the cbec:ks, Bann111 ndded, . dream, this is not n one-mun
The company omploys operation, it's teamwork.''
140 workers and it's not . "We broughl $3.5 million
clear how many checks over nnd thut's whul we're
bounced. Highlanders is a working with," Bnnnui S4id.
privately owned limited "This plant cun generate
partnership and on affilinle enough money to be 11 sue·
of the Ubex partnership cess but we need shelter. We
group. The compan~ ow~ s don't-wont to starttl punic."
BB&amp;T otTiciuls wouldn't
· two manganese mmes m
Africa and plans to produce comment on the situu(ion.

Bv OM Hlllllllll

1lHt!IMESOM'IOM.VMG!Sl£R.COM

I' I I I

HAHAHAHA!

•1.25

Dt' la,M

.-

I I 1I I

PEANUTS

etdine

Mona I. Sorden. .87
Hazel Tavlor, 83
Sandra S. Burris, 55

Mr-:----;T:
...
'•,,

Of ALL. Ttlf
· tJAMfS .l
Mlf6fl&gt; vltlll-f
%. viA$ I 1'1

Siege at Fort
Rar.dolp:"., A7

Saturday, May 11 , 2002 '
become a benefactor through
You 'ould be extremely
your efforts. It pays to be
·fortunate in tho year ahoad
chivalrous.
with ·au of your arrangemenu.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -You may even poueu·the MiLady Luck, like the cavalry,
das touch that'll produce
mlaht make an appearan ce
benefits in materiAl ways.
just when you nred her. She
TAURUS (April 20-May
could be doubly fonunate for
20) -- If any light bulbs go off you if what you're involved in
in your head, be lllr&lt; to act
has something to do with
on them immediately •• this
your career.
'ould bo one of your better
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
days to conceive some bright
•• Information that you
ideas. Trying to pat(h up a
thought . was merely trivial
broken romance? The Astrocould prove to ·be very valu·
Graph Matchmaker can help
able for you.
you undersund what to do to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
make tht relationship work.
- When other peoples'
Mail S2.75 to Matcltntaker, · changes play theruielves out~
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
you could con1e to the reali·
1758, Murray Hill Station,
ution ihat you couldn't have
New York, NY 10156.
designed them better than if
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
you -had instigated them your-- Lucky you •• chances afe
self.
that you will derive some
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov.
benefits from a situation·
22) -· Listen to everyone's
where you may be simply an
thoughu and opinions, be·
onlooker innead of a panici·
cause th,ere is a gem hidden
among the chatter. You will
pator.
CANCER ijune 2t-July
t"ognlze it and know what
22) • An attempted auisun&lt;e
to do with it the moment you
for a trirnd could tum out in
hear it.
SAGITTARIUS ,{Nov. 23such a way that you ' ould also
\

Dec. 21) -- Don't be' afraid.to
team up with someone on a

proje.ct that has potential fi·
nancial rewards . Two braim

and four hands could double
your luck.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Romance could be
in the wind for your sign, so if
you're unattache~. get out
and socialize. Your chances of
finding a lover are beuer than •
usual.
AQUARIUS (Jan .. 20-Feb:
t9) - This is an ex,eUent day :
10 tackle that home project
you've been hoping to get to.
-1 _
Thintp s~ollld go lll1Qlllhly ··~ ,
you'll have it done in no time.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Your phone may be ringins off the hook with all your .
friends calling you to invite
you out. Get them all to·
gether if you can and paint
the town red. You'll have a
good time.
·ARIES (March 21-Aprill~)
•• This could be one of your
lucky days, so if you have
somethlna in the pot brewing.
try to bottle it up, especiAlly if
it has financial overtones.

calendars
Celebrations
Classifreds
Comies
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
'

Region
Sports
Weather

A8
C2,4

02·7
insert
Cl
A6
A4

A2
Bl-7
A2

o 2002 Ohio V•lltv Publlthln1 Co.

SBA help for
tornado victims . =~~~..St-;er:e.~~~
·
t•
appears Un I ey :~~:~~u~r:a.~:r ~~~·W:k!~
State of Ohio . ere a bit tat·
· tared. but still flyln&amp; hl&amp;h at

k. · I

storm. tMIIIIssla Russell)

.

Bv KIYIN Kau.Y

a

KKELLYOMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE -A disas·
ter declaratiol! involving
assistance from · the U.S.
Small
Business
Administration in the wake
of 1he Ma;,- 8 1omado that
struck Galha County apr.ears
unlikely because the cnteria
has not been met. .
That was the message
county lt:aders received
Fliday from Dale Shlpte;,-,
director of the Ohto
Emergency
Management
Agency, who also outlined
requirements for a disasler
deClaration by the governor.
Shipley said in a metno tD
Gallia EMA ~lor Mike
Null thitt the requuement' for
an SBA declaration - allow-.
ing. for low-interest loans to
rephlr dama¥e from natural
disasters - 1s a minimum of
PIIIHIIIIU.M

11me of need spurs torrent
of help for GaiDa stonn .·
Ne(~hbors

reach
out to neighbors

to change drastically
Bv BlltAN J. RnD
BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

BY K1111 D01'ION
. KDOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL - When disaster hits a community steps
in to help their fellow neigh·
bors and friends in need.
That was the case seen
throughout Gallia County
Fridi!Y·
.
.
Just driving down Kerr
Road, County roads 75
(Adamsville)
and
41
(Denney), and Hemlock
Road south of Bidwell, you
would see the Red Cross
passing out meals and doing
family service, countr workers with .heavy equt~ment,
county pnsoners ptcklng up
debris, and plenty of family
members and their friends
giving a helping hand.
''The Red Cross has really
helped us out a lot," said
Robin Newman, whose
home was destroyed in the
twister.
"Every day they have
stopped by to brinjl us
breakfast, lunch and dmncr,
but it's so much more than
that,'' she added. ''They have
been here for us giving
moral support too. Today

Face of Middleport

'oN THI ICINI....;, The Red Cross uses Its Urban Relief

vehicle to deliver lunch, supplies and provide family service
to the Newman family, Pictured from left are Ollie BarryPaxton, Red cross volunteer, tomado victims Jason and
R'obln Newman·, and volunteer Mike Oavls, (Krls Ootson)
(Friday) they brought us
shovels, trash bags and cans,
brooms, water hoses baalcallv anything that could
help us.1'
'
''They said they will help
us ~et temporary power
too,' added her husband,
Jason.
And speaking of pitching
in - Jason works at the Bob
Evans Sausage Plant.

·

"The production room,
kill floor and night shift at
the Bob Evans Sausage
Plant where I work took up
money for us," said Jason.
"They're great."
"Yeah, and Wai-Mart said
they give us anything. we
needed as well as K-Mart,
Ohio Valley Bank gave $SO,
PI•HIIIIIIIp,M

MIDDLEPORT - The
landscape of downtown
Middleport will be changed
dramatically
\'lith · th~
planned demolition of the
landmark Mark V building at
the comer of North Second
Avenue and Mill Street, and
an adjacent building.
Mayor Sandy lunnarelli
said Friday the building,
which partially collapsed
under the weight of rain
water on Wednesday, will be
demolished soon - possibly
as early liS this week - along
with the building located
adjacent to it on Mill Street.
The Mark V, which dates to
the tum of the 20th centurr,
originally housed the Lewis &amp;.
eoe Dry &lt;Jood$ Co., and the
Coe's Opera House on the second floor.
For many years, it housed
the Mark V supermarket.
After years of neglect, the
building's roof collapsed,
and it was condemned a
year ago because it p(Jsed n
public safetr threat.
Jeffers E1\cavating of
Pome~ will perform the
demolition work. at village
expense,
according
to

St Anr,tsnl

.n.. Out with the Guys

Iunday, May 19 • 2:00 • 4:30 PM • HMC G I; I l!dt d 1&amp;CcMIIWIWitw &lt;Anllr
A .,.., .wnt for hoyt cnJ,., In our c:ommunily
Keynoll Specslcer: Grcsg White, Head Cooch
Mena Baslcetball at Marlhall Uniwrsily ·

lunnarelli, but owner Curl
Plulter w!U ultimutely be held
responsible for the ''Ost of
demolition and site reclllllllltion:
The buildin~ udjucent to
the Murk V wtll be demolished as a port of the project
because, Junnurelli suid, It
. wus deteriorating prior to
Wednesdn)"s coflnpse and
has been deemed dumuged
beyond repulr.
The collapse hus creuted
interruption of traffic on two
of Middleport's busiest
blocks, South Second und
Mill Street on 1he ''T." Traffic
is being detoured along Race
Street. Front Street and
South Third Avenue, creuting
a confusing maze for some
motorists and raking tral:lic
uway from sevcrul of the
busier re1ail shops.
"It's been a rcul mess," suid
Police Chief Bruce Swift,
"but traf11c will necessarily
be rerouted until the build·
ings cun be demolished and
the site can be cle1med up."
The area around the
building is closed to both
motorists und pedcstrinns.
"We understand it's un
inconvenience, but safety ·
mu st come first,'' Swift
said.

I'

MEDICAL

CENTE~

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
•

�Co.

Centerville's
bean dinner,
parade planned
for May25

....

THE WAR ON DRUGS

~

the
touch
~- ·

.:•·
·,

Itt M WlnN tan

~Mi:::tn~III'IJHCI-.-

MASON,
\\Wa,
-'lteather Fry is ready tu rub
·, td•son Cllunty the fiaht w~,
~h. Fry, a licensed mas~
· ~st; is the most~~
-..additmn to Staty's Hair
-:"Salon in Mason.
., · · "It's aftlf:ting how rAnd\ a

., 1

'' ·ma~ t~tn he~ ~le,"

Fry st.1d. "My mothet lias •
•· \throtilc Illness and that's the
l&lt;· ~ly tllllll thlt @l~ her all)'
.~ kind or relief and thlt's basi•
tally why l went into it llnd
t whj I aot lntemted in it"
.: - Al\er job-shldowina sev·
'1 enal masseu~. Fry d«fded ro
-··bel:ome a masseuse he~elf.
· After re.:eivina her high
'' "'l:hool diploma at the ~ of
16, Fey lttended Horclcing
&gt;t£ollege 1\ef(jre gtaduttina
· ,,from lndign Sthool ol
.. Mlssqe in ParlreBbu~.
:. • Fl'y lldmit&amp; thlit what she
has learned about ma~~
has surprised even her.
•• "l dlan't know th11.t there
~~ so runny types of mas.~ and how it to~tld \iffect
~le so much emotional·
&lt;l)!," Fry S*ld. "When l was In

wtlt Virginia weather
~-11

BY KmN Kru.Y

$d\oolt we did &lt;:linicals and

1\1\ElLY~YOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

. tuff litte thtt lnd l saw sev·end DeOI!Ie with just an out~k of~"

. Fey hls been olferina a
variety of massages at
Stlrcy's sinte Mvch. She has
~ uaillied in albletic mas·
sage, eonMCtive tissue, chair
""*~ O.nioSacnal (head
and sp1ne mlssage), mlo&amp;s· tial release (simflar to deep
tissue massqe), prenatal anil
infant mas~ reflexology,
relki (ene'i)' work), shiatsu,
SomatuEmotional Release,
Swedish, lind trigger point
(~red muscle),
Sh~atsu massage is a fonn
of .llpanese massnge that
11.tlows the masseuse 10 bal·
ane-e the flow of thi, or energy, throughout the body by
applying pressure to uccu·
pressure points.
·
Som~IOEmotional Release
is a therapeutil:: process to
help rid the body ofthe resid·
ual tension left over after a
pe~on sulfe~ some t~ of
trauma. Developed m the
1970!, the massage is
desianed to seek out and
relieve areas of specific ten·

I

RU8IINQ THE RIGHT WAY- Heather Ft)' gives a client a mas·

sBRe. Fry has been practicing the art since graduating from the
Indigo Sthool of Massage. (Pam Williamson)
sions In the body that have
not "released" the physical
reaction 10 a negative event.
Athletic massage encompasses a number of techniques Including training
massaae to help the body
reach its physical peak,
preparation massage for
befOre the game, break massage tu keep muscles pliable
and energy fluid, and antifatigue massage for after the
perfonuance.
Fry
recommends
11
Swedish massage for anyone
who is imerested in trying
massage for the fi~t time.
"Swedish is just your basic
massage," Fry explains. "It's
just basically relaxation, you

· can ~dd in sever-o~! things •
you can take care of tense
mus9les and muscle spasms
and all that son of thmg. It
reduces blood pressure, it has
several effects itself, but it
basically just for relaxation."
If a session is scheduled
for l!=ss than a half hour,
Fry usually gives clients a
chair massage, but if over
u half hour, customers
enjoy lying on her mas·
sage table while she
works away their tension
or pain.
Sessions cost about $1 a
minute or $50 for an hour
session. To reach Fry at
her home office, call 740·
992·5379 .

.

CENTERVILLE - Honoring all veterans, police
and firefighte~ ·will be the theme of this year's
Centerville bean dinner and parade, set for Saturdal•
May 25, organizers said.
The parade is II a.m. and the dinner begins at noon
at the former Centerville Elementary School.
. Organize.d by the Centerville Vol1111t.eer Fire
Department, the pat:ade has been successful tn attracting area fire departments, organizations and citizens,
and is the fi~l observation of Memorial Day weekend
in Gallia County.
The bean dinner has been a ttadition following the
parade, with bean soup prepared in cau.ldrons over
open flame.
·
While the parade has always paid tribute to veterans
and celebrated public safety, the observance has taken
on special meaning since last Sept. II, said the
CVFD's Ann Daniels.
"In place of a parade marshal. we'll honor all veterans, firefighters and police," she said.
As of late last week, the parade has attracted nearly
30 participants, and anyone imerested in el)tering a
unit should contacl her at 245-5635 by May 22.
The dinner will offer, in addition to bea'!s and souP.,
cornbread and hot' dogs. Thunnan Grange 1416 w1ll
also sell Bob Evans sausage sandwiches.
Entertainment is scheduled, in addition to children's
games and raffie tickets on numerous items. CVFD is
working on organizing the firefighters' water ball
fight, a highlight of recent dinners.
Additional events will be announced, Daniels said.
The events will precede the annual Centerville High
School alumni reunion set for that night at the fanner
school.

[Racine woman joins crusade against ,cancer
;~

.

.

l · BY TONY M. Lu.cH

·More rainy weather
forecast for our area

I
m

IV THI AUOCIATIO P~lll
Weather Service ~aya ahowen

The National
and thunderatonna are likely today acrou the Mld·Ohlo Vllley.
Tbe rain could be heavy at tlmea, which could cause same
floodlq. Temperature• wlll be In the upper 70a to near 80.
Moatly clear to partly cloudy aklea were reported aero&amp;&amp; the
realon ovemlaht.
·· Lows early Saturday ranaed from the mid 30a to the upper
401, while normal Iowa are In the upper 40s to low 50s.

I

Extra Firm

s Pc. Oak
Twin
Full Size
LIVInt Room
Mattrtll Ht1dbo1rcl
Tlbltl
Foundation

Weather Forecaat

$188

Sunday...Partly aunny. A chance of showers and thunder. atorma In the afternoon. Wanner and breezY. with hlahs In the
mid BOa. Southwest wlnda 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rnln 40
percent.
·· .
Sunday nlaht... Showers and thunderstorms llkely... Malnly
. from late evenlna on. Lows 55 to 60. Chance or rnln 70 percent.
·
Monda).:...Cooler with rain likely. Highs In the upper .60s.
Chance or rain 60 percent.
·
Monday nlaht ... Partly cloudy. Lows In the lower 50t.
Tuelday...Partly cloucly. Highs In .tho mid 60s.
.

.

1 Only

i·

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I

•.••,
.........
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3 Pc. VInyl
Llvlna Room Set....~ •• 1398
O~erslze ·
Loveseat .................... $498 .·
4 Pc. Cherry
Slelah Bedroom ....... S1598
Recllnlna
.
Loveseat .......~............ $598

s

Priday...Partly cloudy. Lowa In the mid 50s and highs In the
mid 70a.
.
.

When tht occasion calls for
something
special ..

THANKS I
Adams Insurance A&amp;fency
lrvlns Auto Gla88

For donations to Gallipolis Career College
for our 7th Annual National Administrative
Professionals Day celebration

CRUSADE PARTICIPANT Pam Carter of Racine takes
time from

her busy

schedule

as assistant treasurer with
the Southern Local Board of
Education to prepare for the

Avon 3-Day Breast Cancer
Crusade, a 60-mlle walk, from
Ann Arbor, Mich., to Cetrolt,set for May 31 through June
2. (Tony M. Leach)

MANY THANKS
to Voters In the May
Primary for your
co_!Tlpllmentary~otes.

[~~~!~~A'=l
I
appreciate

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

emorial·

Sature~ar
Mar tatll

11._, 11111111

.

"However, rny determination to participate in this
unique event fur surpasses
any physical pain thai l have
experienced while training,"
she added.
Ouring the three-day walk,
participants will spend their
nil!hts in a mobile tent city,
elljoylng hot meals and
showers, and listening to live
entertainment, all courtesy of
the event's sponso~.
The walk will end with
closing ceremonies, whic~.
according 10 fonner partie•·
pants, is an experience unlike
any other.
.
c
'd h rt' · 1
In t~::.~~·m~~~ raY:e sc:~'OO
toward the prevention and
cure for breast cancer and
those interested · in donating
d
cun do so by sending onatlons to Parn Carter. P.O. Box
822• Rac1ne Oh'10 4"771
" ·
If donating by personal
check, ·it is required that
Carter's participation nurnber, which is 2942, be written
on the check for identitlcadon rurposes.
.
AI donations are 100 percent tax deductible, and those
donating more than $250 will
receive a letter of achieve·
ment from the event's argonizer.

•

~=

Extended Fonea1t

.

$48 $398
111111
WllriJIIIIdH

Weclnelday...Moatly clear. Lows In the mid 40s and highs In
the lower 70a.
Thunday... Moatly clear. Lows near 50 and hlghaln the mid

70..

S148

'

educational stminars lind
. : ;n.Ei.cHtM~tlYSENTlNEl.tOM advocacy training, early
1
RACINE ~ "Bnouah is . detection, and awareness pro:enough. I've decided to take grams nationwide.
·•· stand against breast Cllh•
According 10 statistics,
· ~r. " ·
since the event's inception
I Pllm Carter, assistant trea- four yem ago, rnore than
:1urer for the Southern Local · 58,000 people have partlcl:lloard of Education and paled in one of the many
:!:'}ember ohhe Melas County Avon 3·Day walks that take
: ~ancer lnltltulve (MCCI), plate each . year throughout
:tents her frustration over lhe the country.
• lsease tllilt has taken lie\letil
"This walk really holds a
: amity members !'rom her special place In my heart
·: tte.
bec:au~ of what happened
:: "My mother died from can• with my mother and aunt,"
.
iter at the age of 29 and I said Cwr.
:neently lost ~ aunt 10 this
"At some point in our lives,
ltlrrible disease,' said C&amp;rter. each and everyone of us will
:~ancer: has taktn so much know somebOdy who will
.· :from me and I'm ready to sutrer and poi!Sibly die frorn
ifliht back."
. ·
breast cancer,!' she added. "lf
t: So, In ~ttallatlon, Carter Is my contribution tan save just
in the Avon 3· one life; then each ste~I take
'l IIYrticm·•l:'tl
"'
.
c d In thl•• walk w.•'ll d·w nltel~'
,as Canter rusa e,
. , "72•hour, 60·mlle walk from not be In vain."
:J\nn Arbor Mich., to Detroit In !!reparation for the
'lhat helps fund access tq care event, Carter has been train·
lind a possible cure for In(! by walking an average of
, women who $Uffer with 3·3 ritlles eacb evening and
l breast cancer.
IS mllei on weekends.
.' : The effort eli.Uded by those
"When I first Started train·
; Ertle. lpatlllg In th~ walk!- lng, It WIS more difficult than
' ay 31 through June 2, wll 11\ad Imagined," said Carter,
elp sUll!lOrt t~e breast canc~r .as ilhe laced up her fllnnlng
1 ~ause lbrough five vital shoes, "You rea11y don t get,a.
litreas: lilomealcal research, sense of how far a mile 1s
clinical care, flnal)cial asais· until you actual,!Y get out
lance and support services, there and walk it.

.......

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.

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"*'FIRE
DEPARTMENT

* FREE SCOLIOSIS
ExAM

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* ·SAFETY nPS FOR
\'OUR LITILE ONE

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*POLICE
·DEPARTMENT

REE
ENTS • D~OR PRIZE
"Where you are cared for. dnd cared about"
Veterans Memo~ial SIOIIed Nursing Center
115''2 East Memorial Drive, Pom~roy, Ohio
.(740) 992-2104

...... o.lllt""""
111.11
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1101.72

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�Galllpolla, Ohio

Sundlly, May 12, 2002

Obituaries

MU's Greg White to speak at HMC
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medical
Center's community health and well·
ness, and marketing departments are
sponsoring the firSt-ever ''Time Out
With the Guys," Sunday, May 19, from
2-4:30 p.m. in the hospital's education
and conference center, located on the
around floor of the Charles E. Holzer
Jr., M,D., Surgery Center.
. ''Time·Out With the Gur,s," modeled
after HMC's program 'Girls Time
Out," is designed for fathers. sons,
grandfathers and brothers. It stresses
the need of starting a healltly lifestyle at
a young age and continuing that practice throughout adolescence and adult·
hood.
"Young men have many special chal·
lenges in life, and at this event we strive
to effectively address the imponance of
wellness and prevention of diseases not
only to the adults in our community; but
our youth as well ," said Bonnie
McFarland, RN, BSN, director of
HMC's com.munity heahh and wellness
department. ·
Featured speaker for the day will be
Marshall University men's basketball
coach Greg White, who will .address the
challenges facing young men.
Also speaking will be Cindy
Liberatore. HMC's tobacco use preven·
tion coordinator. who will cover the
effects of smoking on young people.
· The highlight of the day's event will
be the free non-fasting cholesterol
screenings for young men ages I 0 to
18, marking the first time HMC has

Superintendent Bob HowaTt!,
Assistant Superintendent Ron
· Patrick and Supervisor Carl
DeWitt, as well as at least six
county garage employees,
were on the scene Wednesday
ni*ht.
'We brought Grade-Ails, a
plow truck and put together
one of our large brooms to
help .clear the debris," said
Barnes.
"Our goal, was to make the
roads passable," he said.
"The next day we went full
force into the cleanup. We
got the heavy equipment
back in there to clean up the
debris we cleared the night
before. We offered our services to any one that requested help iiltenns of getting the
larger debris off of their property.
.
''The guys are very community-conscious fellas, they
are working very hard to
help."
·

Help from PapAl
lind Buzz Cull has been here
helping with his tractor," said
Robin.
"And my friend Kathy
Uvely has been a life saver
: too in taking care of our chi I·
· dren - she's been wonder. ful."
The Newmans said friends
and family have been just
plain "amazing."
"We're doing the best we
can, but we're so very thank·
ful for all of the help we've
gotten."
Gallia County Hijlhway
Department and engmeer's
. office was also immediately
on the scene.
Craig Barnes, Gallia
: County deputy engineer,
: County Engineer Glenn
: Smith, Highway Departmenr

f

•
•

••

conducted cholesterol screenings for
young men under the age of 18.
Holzer Medical Center asks, howev·
er, that all candidates for screenings be
accompanied b~ a parent or guardian.
or have a stgned consent fonn.
Screenings will also be available to
anyone over the age of 18.
According to the American Heart
Association, there is compelling evidence
that the atherosclerroc process, the thick·
ening or hardening of the coronary lllter·
ies, bellins in childhood und progresses
slowly mto adulthood. This in llUn often
leads to coronary heart disease, the major
cause of death in the U.S.
"We are really excited to offer cholesterol screenings at 'Time Out With
the Guys,"' saia McFarland. "We are
dedicated to helping our community
prevent heart disease, and feel that no
age is too youn~ to begin practicing u
healthy lifestyle. '
Guidelines for children and adoles·
cents 2 to 19 yeai'S old include accept·
able total cholesterol, less than 170:
borderline total cholesterol, 17().199;
and high total cholesterol, 200 or hl~h·
er. The American Heart As soc iallon
endorses these guidelines · of the
National Cholesterol Education
Program's Expert Panel on Blood
Cholesterol
in
Children
and
Adolescents.
Additional screenings available at
''Time Out With the Guys" include
blood pressure, height, weight and body
fat ailalysis. A number of informational

SBA

nor's disaster declaration as
necessary to brin~ National
Guard units to act1ve duty or
relocate ODOT resources
from elsewhere in the state."
Commissioners issued a
local disaster declaration
Wednesday, the fourth since
late March. The previous ,
three deelarations dealt with
flooding damage.
Shipley and Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor o.n
Thursday toured the four·
mile length of damage
caused by a funnel cloud that
touched down near Rio
Grande and extending
toward Evergreen, destroying homes, and damaging
tractor-trailers parked at the
nearby U.S. 3S roadside
rests.
·
Shipley had since maintained conlllct with Null and
county commissioners as the
extent of the tornado's wrath
became known.
Red Cross and other re1ief
workers poured into the area,
setting up a shelter at New
Life Lutlleran Church while
emergency operations continued at the 911 Center.
Local officials have been
helped by slllte EMA representatives.
"One of the things thai's
helped, bottom line, is the
number of people coming out
and volunteering things,''
Null said. "As problems
appeared, it scem1 we gave it
five minute• and an answer
appeared."
Null said assistance was
even offered by his counter-

front Pip AI

"2S homes and/or.businesses
with uninsured losses equal
: to or greater than 40 percent
: of the fair market value of the
: property."
As an example, Shiple.Y
said a property with a fa1r
market value of $100,000
· would need $40,000 of unin·
: sured damage to be cou~~
:.toward meeting the mtm·
· mum of 25 properties for
SB A purposes.
A governor's disaster
proclamation, Shipley added.
allows state resources to be
. used outside their normal
: operation to provide recov: ery assistance to local ~ovemments following a dtsaster.
"Our understanding to date.
is that current needs are
being met through local
resources and resident state
: agency resources," such as
EMA. Ohio Department of
Transportation and the State
· Highway Patrol, Shipley
said.
"I compliment you and
lrour staff for c~rdinating
the necessary assistance to
deal with the current disas: ter·related issues," the director said. "You have done a
patjob.
·
"If
additional
state
: resources are required to deal
; with life, health and safety,
• please let us know," Shipley
: uid ...We would use a gover-

••
•

booths will be on-hand representing
community, education, health, safety,
etc. Holzer Medical Center has collaborated with a number of community part·
ners to bring a variety of information to
share with attendees.
Methbers of the "Time Out With the
Guys" planning committee include
McFarland. chair; Nathan Beaver,I.PTA,
Holzer Medical .Therapy Center; Jenni
Dovyak, HMC marketmg and public
affairs assislllnt; Mllri~sa Fulk. GIM
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and
Mental Health Services; Sandy Hart, RN.
BSN, director, HMC Maternity and
Family Center; Cindy Harrison, RN,
HMC Pediatrics Patient Care manager;
Judy Linder, RN, BSN, Gallia County
Health Department; Donna Mitchell, RN,
University of Rio Grande; Sandy Moore,
HMC Respiratory Therapy; Kelly
Painter, Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity,
University of Rio Grande; Kim Painter,
HMC TUmor Registrar; Robin
Schoonover, RN, Buckeye Hills Career
Center; Kim Skidmore, RN, Gallia
County Schools; Karen Stocker, RD, LD,
director of nutrition services, Holzer
Medical Center; and Rick Stocker, LPI'A,
Holzer Medical Therapy Center.
Assisting members of the planning
committee during the event will be a
representative from the Children's
Health Link Grant and members of the
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity at the
University of Rio Grande.
For infonnation, call McFarland at
44~-5679 .

CLEANING UP AFTER THE STORM - Gallla County jail
Inmates clear debris Friday on Kerr Road after Wednesday's
tornado. The mld,ectlon of Gallla from Adamsville to
Everareen was rocked by a tornado that measured between F1
and F2,. destroying at least 10 homes and damaging another
10 to 15. Dam.ege estmetes by Gall Ia County Commissioners
eKceed $6 million. No one was killed In the storm. (Krls
Dotson)

VINTON - Sandra "Sandy" Sue Burris, 5S, of Vmton,
passed away on Friday, May 10, 2002, in Holzer Medical
Center.
She was born ~ul)' 11, 1946, in Gallipolis, daughter of
Virginia Roberts McClaskey of Ewinaton, and the llle Purl
Wayne McClaskey.
She retired from the Gallia County Local School System in
October of2001, where she had served as head cook at Vinton
Elementary School.
·
She was a member of the Church of Christ in Christian
Union in Ewington.
.
She manied Charles Burris on June 14, 1964, at Ewington,
and he survives in addition to her mother and two chilcWn,
Lori (Troy) Broyles of Gallipolis, and Charles (Melissa)
Burris li of Vinton; and three grandchildren, Noah and April
Broyles, and Samantha Burris.
·
Also surviving are six brothers and sisters-in-law, James W.
and Rita McClaskey of Columbus, Robert and . Linda
McClaskey of Vinton, Daniel and Chris McClaskey of
Clarksville, Tennessee, Gary and · Rosann McClaskey of
Vinton, Pearl Kay and Jerry McClaskey of Columbus, and
Mark Allan and Jan McClaskey of Oak Hill. •
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a
brother, ColbY. Dale McClaskey, on OCtober 26, 1998. ·
Services wtll be 11 a.m. on TUesday, May 14, 2002, in the
Church of Christ .in Christian Union in Ewington, with the
Rev. Mike Puckett officiating. Burial will follow in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at McCO)'·Moore Funeral
Home in Vinton on Monday, May 13, 2002, from 2-4 and 7·9
p.m.
~

Mona Irene Sorden
LONG BOTTOM - Mona Irene Denna Sorden, 87, of
Long Bottom, died Friday, May 10, 2002, at Overbrook
Center in Middleport.
·. She was born May 18, 1914, in Fenwick, West Virginia,
daughter of the late Wexler Denna and Pauline Bennett
Denna.
She is survived by a stepson, William (Mary Ann) Sorden of
Middleport; a half-sister, Ula Ludwick of Chino Valley,
Arizona; stepgrandchildren, Mark (Nancy) Sorden of
Kensington, Maryland, Dianna L. Martin of Decatur, Georgia,
Charles and Un Cha Hobson of Fredericksburg, Virginia,
Thom and Kathleen Hendel of Milford Center, Carl Hobson of
North Lewisburg, and T/Sgt. George and Sonya Hobson of
Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas; 11 step-great·grandc~ildren
and one step-great-great-grandson; and several nieces,
nephews und•cousins.
·
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded ip death by her .
husbands, Harry Smith and William F. Sorden Sr.; a brother, ·
Cornelius Denna; a sister, Thelma Denna; half-brothers, lra,
Allie, Sidney and Merrill Young; and half-sisters, Ollie Casto
and Ida Holsapple.
Services will be 1 p.m. on Wednesda,)'. May IS, 2002, in
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport, wtth the Rev. William
Middleswarth officiating. Burial will follow in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday,
May 14, 2002, from 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be niade to
Alzheimer's Association Mid·Ohlo Regional Office, 508
Columbia Avenue, Williamstown, West Virginia 26187, or to
Overbrook Center, 333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Deaths

part in Monroe County, who nications center handled
told Null that even though around 700 calls between 6
churches · and other ~roups p.m. and midnight after the
had pledged aid to vicums of tornado struck.
flooding in southern West
The amount included about
GALLIPOLIS - Hazel Taylor, 83, Gallipolis, died
Virginia, they were willing to · .600 incoming calls about Thursday, May 9, 2002, in PleasantValley Hospital.
provide help for Gallia.
public safety, while another
Born Sept. 27, 1918, in Ohio Township, Gallia County,
Offers liave also been 100 were _l)laced for emerdaughter
of the late Arthur and Dora Elkins Craig, she
made to collect uprooted gency staff. 911, handling
trees, he added.
. ·
communications for city was retired from the Ohio River Co., where she worked
''That's the good old police, sheriff, EMS and fire· as a cook on the riverboats.
She was also preceded in death on March 10, 2001, by
Appalachian spirit - taking fighters in Gallia County, is
her
husband, Orland M. Taylor, whom she married March
care of our own," said U.S. nonnally staffed with three
Rep. Ted Strickland, who dispatchers at all times,, but 28, 1981; a son, Delmar Call; and by several brothers and
toured the damaged area two more were put ~ln to han- sisters.
Friday with Null and ·the die the ·volume of calls,
Surviving are two daughters, Joann (Ronnie) Davis of
commissioners.
Wilson said.
Crown City, and Linda (Rolftoe E.) flife of Gallipolis;
Strickland, accompanied
"Everything worked as it eight grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren; and a
by Karen Sloan, a represen· was designed to do," he sister, Hester Gooldin of Gallipolis.
tative of U.S. Sen. Mike added. "You hear about interServices will be I p.m. Monday in Waugh·Halley·
De Wine, were filled in on agency
communications Wood Funeral Home. with the Rev. Miles Trout official·
local response to the disaster. elsewhere, where firefighters inf. Burial will be in Swan Creek Cemetery. Friends may
''It's a tragedy for a lot of aren't able to communicate ca I at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
people," tlie congressman directly with other agencies
said. "One encouraging thing and such, but we've moved
I've heard is that most struc· beyond that .here.''
tures were covered by insurance."
·Strickland also learned that
emergency response ran
smoothlr· a point supported
by 91
Director Steve
Wilson, who said the ommu-

Hazel Taylor

Johnsoa Joins ova

992-6677

Board to ·m-.t

CHESHIRE - E.L. "Pete" Spencer, yard
superintendent of Ohio Valley Electric
Corp.'s Kyger Creek Plant, retired May 1
with 28 yeurs of service to the company. Plant
Manager Ralph E. Amburgey announced. .
Spencer joined OVEC in 1974 as a laborer in
the labor department. In 1976. he transferred to
the operations department, where he _progressed to a unit supervisor in 1987. ln 1990,
he was promoced to assistant yard supcrinten·
dent .and in.l ?~I, to yard superintendent. .
Pnor to JOtmng OVEC, Spencer served m
the U.S. Atr Force from 1963 until 1967. He
attends First Church of God in Gallipolis, apd
is a member of the Americlln Legion and
Vietnam Veterans of America. Spencer and
his wife Jean reside in Gallipolis.
·

·hck available
EUREKA -

Chay Township trustees'
dump truck will be at Eureka on SaturdAy.
May 18 as part of the township's cleanup
days. Clerk Wanda Wau~h Sllid. No tin:s.
baneries or appliances w11l be ~~«epted .

Pond dink set

GALLIPOLIS - Jason Safford joined
InfoCision Management Corp. as a.personnel
coordinator iii its Gallipolis call center.
As firsonnel coordinator, Safford will han·
die u I aspects of human resources for the
Gallipolis center. His responsibilities include
interviewing and hiring communicators, and
compiling and updating personnel records.
The recipient of a bachelor's degree from
We.st Virginia University, after attending
Marshall University, where he was a member '
of the 1995 1-AA national championship run·
ners-up football team, Safford also worked
for the West Virginia Department of
Highways and the city of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., where he resides.
·

Enters show
GALLIPOLIS - Morgan Woodward of
Gallipolis will exhibit Angus cattle at the
2002 National Regional Preview Junior Show
at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in
Timonium, Md., on Saturday, May 25, said
John Crouch, executive vic~ president of the
American Angus Association.
Woodward, a· member of the American
Angus Association, is one of 147 young
Angus breeders from 16 states who have
entered a total of 280 head in the show.
Bill Conley of Clarksdale, Mo., will judge
divisions for bred-and-owned heifers, bredand-owned bulls, cow-calf pairs and owned
heifers and steers.

Bean dinner
McARTHUR -

POINT
PLEASANT,
. W.Va. - Parents crowded
.the National Guard Annory
:in Point Pleasant as the
annual "Parent Resource
Fair"
was
conducted
Thursday.
The
event
offered parents the opportu·
nity to learn ways to
enhance their child's educa·

Vinton County Pilots

and Boosters, and EAA Chapter IOS4, will

have a bean dinner and airplane rides at
the Vinton County Airport, north of
McArthur on Ohio 93, on Sunday, May
19, starting at II a.m. The dinner is $5 per
person, and aifelane rides cost $15 per
person. There wtll also be a FAA seminar

CONGRATULATIONS
to the staff of

Holzer Home Care
of Veterans Memorial Hospital
on their
SUCCESSFUL MEDICARE ,SURVEY!
The Ohio Department of Health conducted a three-day, on-site,
recertification survey on April 8, 9 and l 0, 2002 . .
CONGRATULATIONS and THANKS to the Home Care staff
for their hard work and dedication. The staff of Holzer Home Care
of Veterans Memorial Hospital includes:

Resource fair offers
enhancement options
STAFF REPORT

GAWPOUS - Gulliu County Soil
and Water Conservation Dist.ric.t and the
Gullia CouniY Farm Bureau ure holdina a
pond clinic on Tuesday. June 4 at the Bob
Evans Farn1. The chnic will run from
5:3(). 7:30p.m. A li~ht meal will be served
for those participating.
On the agenda are the following topics
to be discussed: Aquatic VegetauonSWCD; Pond Construction and Planning
with NRCS and SWCO; Legal Rights and
Responsibilities; Nan Still, Chief Legal
Council OFBF: and Recreational
Stocking-SWCD.
This clinic will offer inforriiD.tion that
every pond owner should know. and pre·
pare those who are thinking of buildi~g a
pond wi!h valuable knowlec!ge to be~m .. .
Get a JUmp on what goes mto putttng m
a pond and taking care of your current
facility for the long run and join SWCD
for this infonnational meeting. Call Ute
Farm Bureau office at 1-800-777-9226, or
the Gallia Soil and Water office at 446·
8687 for more information.

New coordinator hired

Annlvenary award

Featured speakers were:
Smith, director of
spec1al education · RESAII
on motivating children;
Cynthia Barker, a teacher at
Roo•evelt Blementar.Y. &lt;!n
. how to help your chtld m
·reading;
and
Tina
:Meadows. coordinator of
:Mason County Special
~Education
on
:Undentanding the individ·
ualized education plan.
The fair offered door
prizes, packets of useful
tnfonnauon, e11.hibits from
each tchool in the county

INSURANCE PLUS ·
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

Retires from plant

ATHENS
O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital's assistant vice president of nursing
witli 27 years of nursing experience at
O'Bleness has been promoted to vice presi·
dent of nursing.
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Beverly Dellinger, BS, RN, CNA, of
Athens, assumed her new
position following the
retirement of Edna Roberts,
BS, RN, CNA.
Dellinger hegan her
O'Bleness career as a staff
nurse in the medical/surgi cal unit in June 1975.
Throughout her career, she
also worked as a staff nurse
t......Jo.....;:.,.::;..,.L-1 in the emergency depart·
ment, as a nursing superviDeiiiiiJir
sor and as nurse manager of
the outpatient center.
·
As vice president of nursing, Dellinger
directs the manaaement of the overall opera·
· ~ions of the nursmg division to ensure safe,
· efficient and high-quality nursing care for all
O'Bleness patients.

Terr~

7u ~ .'Pulle. ~~

CHESHIRE - Larry P. Sllyte was JIIOIIlOled from yard supervisor to yard superina:adent on May 1 at Ohio Valley ~lrieCCJrp.'s
....-----..., Kyger Creek Plant, Pfant
Manager
Ralpb
E.
Amburgey announced.
S11yre joined Kyger
Cm:k in 1980 as a l1borer
in the labor department,
and during the same year he
progressed to 11 utilhy
worker. He was promoted
to coal handler in 198.5; to
barge attendant in 19&amp;1; ·
und tractor/diesel ojlenltor
in 1990. Later that wiie
year, he advanced a yard supervisor.
Sayre and his wife Sherri. and their son
reside in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
·

O'Bieness names new VP

tion.

Auto· Owner• Tmurance
Life Home Car Business

P101noted by OVEC

GAWPOUS - W. Todd Johnson was
recently named business development oft"tcer
. of Ohio Valley Bank. His base of operations is
OVB 's main office at 420
Third Ave.
Katrinka Hart, senior vice
president and risk managemen\ officer, commented,
"We are very ell.cited to
have Todd back in Gallia
County. He bas ·consider·
able financial rnanat~ement
experience which will provide a gteat benefit to the
,
.1o11n1on
business communities of
southern Ohio."
..
. Johnson is a graduate of Gallia Academy
. High School and holds a bachelor's degree in
: .accounting, with a minor in business management, from the University of Rio Grande. He
has accumulated 14 years of broad accounting
and fmancial management experience. Eight
.of those 14 years were spent in Lexington.
: Ky., where he performed various chief finan. cial officer, controller, and business develop. .ment duties.
. He is a member of the Gallipolis Lions
Club. Johnson and wife, Sheri, have two chil·
dren, Kevan and Ryan.

CHESHIRE ·- Connie S. Mitchell,
purchasing as~istant .at Ohio Valley
Electric Corp. s Kyger Creek Plant,
recently received her anniversary award
for 30. years of service. to the company,
Plant Manager Ralph E. Amburgey
announced.
·
Mitchell joined OVEC on April 24,
1972, as a clerk-typist in the administrative services department. In 1973, she
transferred to the materials management
department as a plant clerk, and was promoted to senior plant clerk in 1987.
. In 1989, she became acting purchas~ng
. assistant, .Progressing to pu~chas•~g
assistant tn 1990. She . restdes m
. Gallipolis.

Briefs

Sandra Peyton, HHA
Shawn Rayburn, LPTA
Andrea Roush, OT
Sharon Stewart, RN
Tina Story, RN
Claudia Thomas, RN
Candy Ulbrich, Clerical
Theresa Wolfe, CMA
Paula Eichinger, RN, Director

Sudha Agrawal, PT
Donna Aleshire, Clerical
Amy Baker, RN
Stella Barrett, OT
Melissa Colwell, COTA
Bonnie Dailey, HHA
Lisa Gallagher, RN
Martha Meadows, HHA
Fran McEwen, SLP
Tina Nelgler, (tN

system, a welcoming cere- parent advisory committee
mony . · . by . · "Ashton or would like more inforElementary- students, dis- mation on the parent
plays and mformation from resource program, contact
vanous local organizations, Nibert at the Mason County
.and a book fair.
School Board Office, 675A parent advisory com- 4~40.
mittee meets monthly to
Next year's event will be
help plan events such as the
on
May 8.
Parent Resource Fair and
other events throughout the
year.
·
"When I came in as director I combined all of the
different parent committees
so every school has repre·
sentation, they have two
parents," , Elizabeth Nibert,
director of federal services
for Mason County said.
·"And anybody else who
would like to come we welcome.n
The fair was sponsored
by Title I and Gear Up.
The resource fair serves
students from grades K- 12.
Anyone
interested
in
becoming involved with the

River Cities Community Health Coalition

e:-~.£!ll~!
.

Nurse Ori Call

Medical professionals providing free
health care answers 8c physician referral

In recognition ofBetter Speech &amp; Hearing Month, Pleasant Va1ky Hospital will be offering
FlEE speech and hearing screenings at these locations on the foUowing dates and·times:

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Business Briefs

S.IWIIa ·s·ncl( lunls

FREE Speech &amp;Hearing Scree
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Trl-

A5

kill ..............
•12 liCIIJIIII.,IM
filii SSIIIIJ llllbl
'I'Jl. . . .IIIIIILHIII

• 'DJCsday, May 7 • Thursday, May 9
Ripley Senior Center The Middleport Clinic
Ripley, WV
Middleport, OH
(Huting &amp;rtniin.!JI Only) 1 p.m. to 4:30p.m.

• Thursday, May 14
• Thunday, May 23
Mason Counry Action Group PVNRC (s-1 Hill &amp;irll)
Point Pleasant, WV
Point Pleasant,WV
(Hutin9 Seremin.!JI Only)
2 p.m. to 4:30p.m. · .
10 a.m. to noon
a
9 a.m. to '11:30 p.m.
W411t-ins welcome oryi!U may caJl (304) 675-5250, Ext. 3502 tQ millie tm ll/lfJOintMent.
Appointmtnts Rre being 1IIIW sepRrRtely lit arhe Mitidltpm Clinit. "PleNe ur/1740-Wt-4226 for thllt loelltitm.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l$$1d

PLEASANT .
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Harald G.

1-800-462-5255
Better health for the Tri-State.

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beet\~ . . . . . (till\ be~ wW

be~\~~ lliSlabl~ (M
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b;t~ll\"$.
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u.s- St~.a:r;. o.t~i\'AIW~fut-~~~

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NATIONAL VIEW

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\Jfllloo?~ar~~. &amp;alOthtbtn:~ar~mlcl\Wdiri~.

Edlcrnol provision in etrergy
bill no boon for Mrycme
• The Oranat Coon~ ltepttr, Sili\Ui AM. C.lt,. tlll risiltl ~t prites: Pre..~tlelll Bush .:. ~ld l\St Clll.l foo'llw If
lhoy want their awroti~W prkt~ to jump 10 ptrtent. Tllal's
whllt Is pNditted to ll~n if t~ ~- ~1011 of 11 lttlend

"Siqe of.Fon R.llldolph.~

tbett "'~ 00 11M \\'trail~

This )'SI''s e'#llllt will \'Ill\ May 17·
19 at FOrt Raftdolph in Krodel Pat\:,

tl\oe~~

*

wll'1\tllli) til ~ Mit to hlltt . 'Ns-flfl!t~ to bt ~
. Ml, we do l!ll\ we w\11 bulld the
ltmo
M ~ illllib~
NJJ...t . JiiiPI!II.. ....... bwditloo ~j\lsl~ll ~1he ~
ral~ ~tu a~S;~ut ~ lilld
. Oall~b' a ~~mrrow.
"' $\l~ IIW?'!&amp; • U)tp wet
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rdft'till!l.e\~
ft.
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The t.l~~ ~ ~ \)f
.. nt ngru pntt.
...... A-'"'
.';'!.'~"":~
~ ~ ~ tbooah too
"'"" unit""
~ to ro\'tf 'ftll. 1ft '16!1 tttttt, 0.. Blltw::
.
.
Bidwell

ik'll!ll'tiM ~ thb ~lOOk..

nytojlmlij lt~thtrillltal'lhetndl~ · ~ ~ ~ ~' QliDt 011 down_.. to~ Ills o\WI ~D)' -Mihoot Itt~ ~~ thl~ ~~ tMI WI\$
~ til its nllllll\lliy til' ~ llplft Mllde..
thM ~ Ob~
.
tht mmllty af &amp;s ~ ~ tu lm~ dr.nlty In the
snlcldt ~ upan liow ~ de&amp;rte 1M e~ af tltMf~ brttl\ ~ WbY did we
mw~lng tif 11ll&amp;.
~ fur tht ialm~ ~~- ~~ ~
MMY btlie\1\t their II\'IIS n lhtlt oft tbt lllm~ Wwt"l ~?
tu Ito With *.lhreY ~ Pttlfll!
.
afflalth, Ollaltf$1{) mUIIoo ~ mel tu cle-m
on tht athttl'lllnd,~'ill \11M 000 p'ill \IP 1M~ llflll put llltft't 01\ tht ~
liS life_ 111\d ~ tllitt liie ~ \0
bcl~ ~ ~~

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Pleasant. ·
"We'll be ~actina

~nt

1Mr Mun
,
A ~\lloew \II' the ltil'roll~ fur !he lhllure

1)1' the ~t ~ Health ~t

loe\l)l ~ tu" deimtnd fur hnn~l*
~ ~~~the l\leil\bml (If the boanl ~
Ill.~ af IbM ~wemnl\\lil ~Y·
~ d!ri ~~~ Is 1be ~of
the "smootll\l! ban" law of tllllt boon!,.
No honest ln~atloo of~ wte

Ross-U.S. 35
project begins
CHILLICOfHI:t

r:onowtna • l)tecoli$\Nc·
hOI\ meeting between the
Ohio
Deputmtnt of
Tunsl)ottatloh and ton•
ttattors for the R.an·U.S,
35 Corridor, the ptQiett to
construct the final lea of
the torrldor 111 R.on
Cou11ty Is telldy to aet
under Wly.
Representative&amp;
from
Kokti$1~ Cali&amp;ttllttlan Co.
llf Columbua met with
ODOT District 9 omclala
Frldll)' til review the pm·
ject pltna and aet tl'relr
ilaenda, 'rhe contractor&amp;
have scheduled to bealn
workln...
.. 11t the alte
l!l.
. on M&amp;y
· "We are plused to be
wotklna with Kokoalna on
thli very lntportllnt pm·
lect," aalil ODOT Dlattlct 0
l&gt;eputy Dlrtctor lohn P.
Haae11, "Thl• Ia ·our ella·
trlct'a btaa••t hlahway
pteject to ilate, lful Ita
complltlon IIIiana much to
tmpm'ilna tranaDOttatlon
for tllll'lolorlata WnO trlVel
thla lncnaalnal~ bua~

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Voice

ft'llllt,n

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will

providing "historic reenactlllellt
dothing costumes of ~ons of the
18th century. along w1th blacksmith ·
and Siltier Dave Maxey:
For those who think they've seen it
llll out at the fort, now is the time 10
stop by ,again to witness the
improvements that have been made
and are still underway.
"We've made a lot ·of improve·
ments out at the Fort. We now have a
Nati'ill lndlan Associ11tlon, 1 group fort tavern, and its set up with tables
rnadt Up or a m!A of Nlltlve re-enac· and eve'1.thing. No H!!uor," Hesson"
tors (Sliawnte, Delaware, etc.) in the . laughed. 'And our sold1ers' huts now
Wtst Vlrainta area, will be attending have some bunks in them, and we'll
the evetlt along wilh m11ny other re· . have people staying in those."
enactors and J!rtlllps.
The · fort's museum is also now
That won't be all the ·event will home to a long-hunter's display, a
have to offer with 1 l•rae J!a:'&gt;UP of tlag display from the Union Jack up
re-enKtors and s11tlers covenng the through the Betsy Ross flag, a lady's
grounds of the Fort.
display of colonial home life.

The R.oss-35 ~roJect will
replace the n1stmJ 9.4·
mile, two·lane st~::non of
U,S,
35
between
Chillicothe and Richmond
Dille with a divided, limit·
ed 11ccess four-lane hlah·
WL)'. Thla is the lut step of
the multl·(lhase project to
construct the enflre c:orrl·
dor, maklna the route a
four-hane 61ahw~ay from
Dayton to Oallipolla: eurrently, contractors are
worklna on ODOT District ·
6'a portion &lt;&gt;f the corridor
to complete the project In
Fayette County,
With a bid amount of
about
$45
million,
Kokoalny wu awarded a
contract aat month to build
the final lea of the bypua.
Althouah mllor eartli mov·
Ina wtn befrln ln the riext
t'ew weeki, · here ahould be
little to no tramo linpacta
dutlna the fltat phaae of
oonatructlon 11 mijor ·con·
atr~o~ctlon will bealn off the
nlatlna rOate.
The project Ia acheduled
to be oompltted by Oct. 31,

Potato

2004.

ATTENTION CO$TRACTORS
&amp; BQME OWNERS
AvtklaiO" pelllltJt~eh year
lulhllna Nolk!t

onnosition .

I 5'71U7 Duty to notify OllUnty auditllr llf improvement
euadna over 52;000: entry fur examination.

't'o ellable the county auditur to determine the value and
looltion ofbulldlnga and other improvement•, any peraon,
othlll' than a railroad company .or a publlg utility whoie real
pmperty·la valued for tnalion by the tu commluloner, that
conittutll any bultdln• bt other improvement coatlnll more
than two thllUiillld dollata upon any lot or land within a
townahlp or municipal corporation not havina a ayatem or
buildlna re1lattalion and inapettlon ahall notify the county
auditor ot the county within whiilh such land or lot Ia located
thai the buildinallf Improvement haa been tompleted or Ia In
pmceaa 11f et~natructlon. rho notice ahall be in writina, ahall
·tllhllln an eithnate of tho cott .of the bulldlna or Improvement,
ahall duerlbe the lot or land and Ita owneuhlp in a manner
reaaonably calculated ttl allow the county auditor to identify
· rhe lot or trlllt of lind on the lilt lltt, and ahall be iltved upon
th1 county iudilot not later than tlllt)' daya after conatructltln
of the bUlldlnaur lmpro~ement ha1 commtnced.

sacr

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Chief

Cornstalk's ..teful visit to the fort
and tile si., thllt was plltetd on Fort
R.111ndolph in May of 1718, on
Satunfay at 1 o'clock," CraiJ
Hesson, Fort R.11nd~ e'#llnt toonb·
natur sil.ld. '"Tbere w11l be tomahawk
throws, tomahawk tOmpetltions and
candle making. We'll be showi!li
dlffe~nt things of eve~day Ute,
bl~~:bmithing, wood work1ng,"
The Fort Lee Seollts, 1\'tembers of
the Brigade of the American
R.tvolution, and the Mesawmi

Action •twnuirf!d
~.,
.

till\ be l1\llde wl\kl\ lndl~tes \ll1y fea'roll
Him. It Iii 001 oors to ~ 1'\lt lhtlt O'M'I ~""~·'ill ~ ..:~ ..~ oo
t~l
I
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-:::;
fur~ fulllll't (If thl~ ~'YY lllhef tim\ the
~ bill bk'Ullle.\ ltaw.
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pu~ ln 1\lct, the ward '~lclde" wft&lt;llllll\ilW\t "' __, m111"'" s t """m ' 11ct1oo of that bool\i wbicllt~ltl.lffillttd tu
The bill woold R~tmdut~ tripling ethaool use In lho whole
~ ~. ft'IUnlet af ~r jmt • R~ the llllfllble - wt.G I.'S your too'illrt 111\'elf lntu an unci~ ~Cglslt~·
:c:ountry to S billion 111lkms by 21Hl.... The bill mainly would
'1\oolltlde ll\tWi$ the mutdw af Ill mill\, ~- t btllt\1\t tllllt \\'Wid Include IUM pn..'\ioll\j! Ill~ which they helre\1\\d
If snlcltle Is IOOftl.ly comet IU\il ROOd 1'\lt e~ tMI tht oolllltloo e~ fut coold 1\tlt ~ re~WIXI by the ~.
:benefit the Mid\\.'tStertl sMell. where 98 pen:ent of elhllnol is
us. why do ~ like me ~ ~ ml~ ~tro~tnd us m'ld In \lthef ~~~~ Ill:\\); ~oow \hl)se boimlll\elilbers
:produced, 111 the ~\plmst of t\~body tl~....
tu ~ythlalrll: flltllltioM when they try to ooUust 11 vlllue.
Currently. Culifumin uses l.lthuool ooly during the winltr
ltnr
tllt.lMtiYt&amp;?
We will sttf oot tWI) ~tloos or will u mnd th11t they ~~re oot
monlhs to meet federul dean air stnndards l:lecau~ the colder
Seeood,
our
wlture
to
be
Ill
~-the one thllt s~ the @lllllt oolnlporent lllld their sheer audadty hilS
weather cnuses n ltvger problem with tl\rboo IOOI\Olt~ thnl\
to"' wllh deAth. We ~~ ~ Mil oow tht aet:mtloo thllt Is lettll\lll ~ultM h1l~ of .lobs fur the hlitd
in WIU11\·~IIther months. Ethanol is beliewd to mi\iglllt 11ir
bealnning
their lives., and now ~ stem alllnt lake (1\'tf II\~ and ~? Wlillt wurkll\@,l!f'ftl:tl~Je eml)lo~~ of thllt
:pollution by redueina enrbon n\Qiloltl®. ... .
.
to be ln~ted In rli,ktina oonti\'IIS of ilmoont Is thllt \\&gt;Mil1 A~ the LM1 agtllt:)' Wid the los.~ or services needed
: Ethanol also cun hllrlll the envlron~M~~t....(Aithollih.) nffi·
the
old lind ~Mse· withoUt ''Drodlloti~ repetts Ill ~ -stlllh ~\tll'l rutd ~tnd ~~~ by our chlttns, AU this
:cltll estlmutes put the reduc
. tlon In g11s mUe~~g,e at I pimtnt to
Vlllue"to ~-Where will ihls ltllllna 0011sltter - Silllh - stup and toosldl!r 00:111'11 btc11use thme unelecl\\d bl:wd
:3 percent; he estinuued ethanol will inerenSil t\lel ronsumption
end?
It you'" too slelt, too old, too heM you slat\ llWQ)' yoonool.
1111!11\~ ~fused to undel'l!tond that
•lip to 10 pe!tel\1....
.
un'Wlnted,
too ualY, too dumb, too what·
Wh11t
Is
the
filht
prt~1 Or Is there Ill~ ~~re tu he p~~ssed l~MIIttll'll, nlll
lnerenslng the cost of drivingmellfts poople wUI have leS&amp;
IIVtr, should ~ik1U ~f and get oot OM?
Gpptllntes.
money fur new cnrs 11nd rtpnirs.
of the way of proams? Wllo is Worthy
April Slii\!IOl\
The t'ollowlng people lll'e those bow'd
The House of Representntlves' version of the eneray bUI
of Ute?
Chllshlre tnemherli whose al'lloo h•ve 11!1\d to this
:daesn 't Include the ethnnol mnndnte. The matter soon wlll be
O.tl From n\llllt.fOU$ stlldies &amp;upport ·
IRI\I)lt\lnhms deltat: Jo Ann Crisp. Dr.
:molved in a conference committee bet~ the Hoose lind
the third P.Oint. Most patients who .
"hnc~•m"'d
Jtl$1\ph It l&lt;'rterntm, James CHI'furd,
Senate. ...
·
::the
request
duih
from
their
docton
we
In
\..v
~
~
Ant\ H1111b~, ~11\\ Je~.
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severe ptlln or hllve m~ depm~IOII.
aboutfutUTe
Two iletlons 11re required ln the tillerWhen tfio8e condition~ 11ft uuttd, hard·
ootlve~ A) The calling of an lmmedi11te
lY anyone still 'Wlnts to die. Wa\01\en In Dear Ecllttm
speellll ~tlng with 11 single pu~se
TODAY
IN
I
STORY
the Netherl11nds where euthllllll&amp;lll is .....
agenda tu rewke •nd re5t:fnd this su·
.•
lepllll\d
is
often
lnvolunwoy
(where
the
m everyone who hils lo'Yed ones uilltd "sfOOithtll bll11" ot b) hnmedlate
••
hospltlllted elderly often cany cards burled In tlie Clay Ch!lpel Cemetery:
Mslgnatlon by 111\Y board llll\ntbtr who .
BY THE ASSOCIA
PRESS
•• Thday is Sunduy, Muy 12, the l 2nd duy of 2002. There are
~uestlng th11t they not be. killed) hllve WI')'~'=~~~~~:~In':. refuses to resdnd, with a correspondhta
:233 days left in the year. This is other's Day.
obServed \hilt hospice cut and aoo&lt;l~n nlll\ce of the same.
.
IIJ)ptllntM~I\t of tneMbtrs who under•
' Thday's Highlight in History:
control m thlnas of !he put.
lr There are m~•"' Stolle$ ovenumtd lind ~t1111d their utles and llmltlltlons.
physlcllli\S
have
limlv
~
how
to
-v
Sh ·ld th
tl ...
•-•• On May 12, 1820, the founder of modern n\lrslna, Florence
tllre for clebllllllted P.ilents other than to some m bmlten 111\d need atttntlun. We
ou tse ac ons "" not ""'""• no
:Nightingale. wus born in Florence, Italy.
kill them Puttlna p~~tlentt down like sick are currently hllvlna It mowed M often as member or the Mellts Coul\ty commis: On this d11te: ·
doas Is unnec:eswy. Physlcllnl In this funds are available to keep It looking M Nioners should permlt the plnttml!nt ilf
cou.ntl')' possess axpertlse In 11\111\llllna ~ M 1!08&amp;lble.
this renewal levy on any bllllot before
: In 1870, Manitoba entered Confedenulon as 11 Canadian
pnln and deprtSslon
.
lerry HM6r, trustee, don11tes his time the wttrs, fllllure to pl'tlhiblt such
:province.
Fourth
fiom
the
'
shrieks
of
the
pro:.
lllld
equipment to spray the renee fur refllattmel\t of thls vote is a dtrelletion
In 1932, the body of the kidnupped son of Charles and Anne
deothers
'the
public
mllht
think
we
docweeds,
ete, If the cemettty Wlls to' bt or dut,Y by any ooul\ty commissioner.
Lindbergh WIIS found in 11 woodeil area or Hopewell, N.J.
tors are fOrclna people ro aubmlt to tho!le turned OVtr to the townahlp trustees to Ills 11 sad result rtw loss ur needl!d
: In 1937, Britain's King Oeorge VI .was crowned at
:westminster Abbey.
·
• useless procedures lllld heroic measures malnlliln, they would be olillgllted only se.rvl®.s to occur due to.the obstlnnlttt
aalllnst their will. Actually, anyone who to mow three times per ytlll\ and wt!ulil or thllse board members 1111d such jeop•
: In 1943, during World Wllf II, Ads forces In Nonh Africa
understands his lllnen anti the available not be required to reset ()r rep~~lr sttlnes lll'tly ttl the nel!ds of our dtl~ens shuuld
'surrendered.
treatmentt
hils the rJaht to dlctllte eK&amp;Ct• · or the fence,
not llflrl will not be tolerated.
.
In 1949, the Soviet Union unnounc:ed un end to the Berlin
ly
how
much
treatment
he
wlll
receive
If
people
that
are
flnilllcl~lly able
The
~medy Is deW': Telephorte e~ch
Blockade.
and when he will stop treatment. The would donate money or rnllke pro viRions of thtMe board members tll\d tlemlll\d .
•
: In 196,, West Oermuny and hrnel exchanaed letters estab·
medlcat profession hu no reason to In their will for funils to be deposited In llctlon.
·llshlna dlplomutlc relations.
force anyone tojo on when contlnulna the escrow account, we eould mall\tain
Charles u. Knlaht
: In 1970, the Senate voted unanimously to confirm HIU'I')' A.
care Is fUtile an the outcome tennlnlll. the ce"lettry forever.
Chester
' Blackmun us o Supreme Coun justice.
The llvlna wlll and medical po~ of Jerey a wfte Cllll'ti h11s aarecd to sem
In 197~. the White House nnnounced the new Cambodian
attorney allow patients to state precillllly .. IICfiiiiU'y•trealurer. Donations ~an be
"OUr
whllt treatments they want.
mailed to ner at 11756 Suue Route 7
"'
rr
government had seized nn American merchant ship, the
Mayaguez, in international wutcrs.
John Ashcroft, 118 head of the Justice South, 01\lllpt&gt;lls, Ohio ~631. All donll· bear Editor•
• In 1978, the Commerce Deportment sold hurricanes would
Depllttment, 181'08ponslble for .the DBA, tiona lilt areatly \f.reclated,
· .
The Ohio State l!unrd of adt~catlon Is
:no longer be given only femnle nomes.
whlch reaulates 11llltlnd1 of medications
.
ary.Mat~aret Willis in the prote~s tlf hnvlnl! henrlngs on sci·
: In 1982, in Fatima, Ponugal, security guards overpowered u
and P.rocedures. Judp Jones' declalon
Je~y H~ntr enee teaching in Ohitl's 5\:htJols. The
:spanish priest urmed with 11 bayonet who was try ina to reach
that ' no statute of MY sort ... authorizes
Jlm aun tl'8 hellrirtgs concern the t~achlng or dltTerPope John Pau I 11. · ·
the nttomey aenemlto decide how doo·
Cloy Chapel trustcllN ent selentlnll views on Issues such ns
tors
should
pmctlee
medicine"
Ia
contrA•
Ult
•
t
. iji · · bloluglcal evolution.
Ten years ago: Four suspects were arrested In the be11tlng of
dieted bltf\e federal reaulatlcins u~tder
&amp;ma e
lCe
On Jnn. a, 2002J..I'resldent Bush
.trucker Reginald Denny at the stun of the Los Anaeles rlot8.
-President Bush announced he would truvol to the Barth
;~~~~ 8~0~:1~\~~.uve every day or their Dear Edltora
signed into lnw HR I 'the Leave No
:summit in Bruzll. Actor Roben Reed of TV's "The Brady
Just because the citizens of Oreaon Clearly you know the meaning of Child Behind Ac:t or lOOl , Within thls
:Bunch" died In Pasadena, Call f., ut age ,9,
.
voted to use druas In Wll)'8 lhllt the red· 'Memorial Day. You would not be llcre bUlls nn nmendment by Sen. Rick
Five years ago: At the Okluhomo City bomblna trial of
eralaovemment11118 fO!bldden doe~ not today if you illd not. You cun he11r the Snntorum, R·l'n. ThiN umendmtnt opens
Timothy McVeigh, star prosecution witness Michael Fonler
mean they should be allowed to do so. voice~ orthe plllt telling us to honor their the door for sdence das1111s to tenth
testified that McVeigh had been bent on trlggerlna u "aeneral
The
federal government hail repeatedly sllcrlflce8 by living 1\Jlly the t'rccdoms upposlrtg vlewN to Dnrwln's evolution,
uprising In America." Austrullun Susie Maroney became the
overridden voter-supported measures In that !hey bOught fOr us with their vel')' Let me quote pllrt of the nlnendment.
ffrst woman to swim ullthe wuy rrom Cuba to Florldll, coverother nren~. lncludlna reaulatlon of abot· lives.
"Where topics are tuught that may gen•
;lng the 118-mlle dlstonce In 24 i/2 hours.
don 11nd the use of medfi:al murljuuna.
The brave men und women we htmor ernte tontrovilrsy (such us biological
: One yeur 'ugo: Singer Perry Como died in Jupiter Inlet
Lost, do we really w,unt to milt up the today mllde the ultimate sncrlflc:e fur lib· evolution), the curriculum should hi.llp
:Colony, Pia., at ogc 88. ·
.
functions of physlclll!)s? We . w1111£ our eny. And we Cllfi honur their lost liveN by stutlentN to underlltund the lull r1111ge of
Thday's Binhdays: Actress Katharine Hel'burn is 95. Critic
docton to helil us or, flllllna th11t, to pro· remembering thlulny.
Mdenttnc views thnt elllst, why such
John Simon is 77. Baseball Hull-of-Fumer Yogi Berra Is 77.
vide the best cnre pos8lbfe to put our Their message Is marked with head· . topllls ntny generate controversy and
Com~ser Bun Bacharach is 73. Talk show hOSt T01n Snyd~r
indlvlduallnterests fl~t above their own stones lind tiny flaas th 1t flutter In the how such siilllntltl~ d1Ncoveric8 call pro•
is 66. Comedian Oeorae C~rlln is 65. Actress Millie Porklnsls
aain. The Hippocratic oath, 2,000 yean b,_ze, They . nre nume1 curved .Into roundly affect Rodely."
;64. Former White House press ~~ecretlll')' Ronald L. Ziegler Is
old und 8Worn by countleu physicians, stonc8 and memorials acrosM our nation ThlM opens the door for "intelligent
·63. Rhythm-and-blues sin~er Jnyotls Washington fs 61.
states, "I wlllalve no deadly mei:llclne to and on di8111Dt 1hores. They will bll for• design" to be tuughtln our !~ChoolR
:count!')' Binger Billy Swun 18 60. Actress Linda l)uno is 59.
a~yone !! asKed, nor suggest . any such ever In our helll't8, nnd we will bd foreY· along side Darwin's evolution.
; Musician Jan McLagan is ~7. Actress Lindsay Crouse ·is 54.
counsel. Do we w1111t a5suranco that our er thlll1kt'ulto them.
.
1'\ie Ohio sunelloutd or llducnllon
:Slnaer-musician Steve Winwood Is 54. Actor Oabriel Byrne is
doctors wUI try to preserve our life or Some vetel'lll\s fear thlll their iietvlce to hM been alven the "go uhc!ud" by the
~2. Actor Bruce Boxleitner is ~2. Singer Billy Sguier Is 52.
will we, like tlie Duteh, live In fear that our nation wlll be foraotten. l.doubtthtu. federal government to ullow oppoKing
Country sinaer Klx Brooks 18 47. Actress KJm Oreist Is 44.
they may kill us7
.
No freedom-loving American could for• views 10 be tuught The h urln 8 11ft
.Actor Vina Rhames is 41. Rock musician Billy Duffy is 41.
When we look at the l1sue of physl· aetthem.
.
·
e II
:Actor Emnto Estevez is 40. Actress Vanessa Willlums (for·
cian-aulgted Aulclde objectively, we J remember well the words on eve!')'• reu11Y11 rnute po1nt.
.
. :merly on "Melrose Place") Is 39. Country musician Eddie
must admit there are no positives about one'• llplla8t autumn In the traalc wllke My pleu is for people to write, coil, e·
•Kllaallon is 37. Actor .Stephen Baldwin is 36. Actre88 Kim . lt. None; not a single one. Instead, I urae of Sept. II : Bverythina has chunaed, for· mall, ur filA the !lllte Bolll'tlnnd let
ull of us til chooJIC life for everyone.
ever.
thllrn know the VMitnlijority of peuple
:Plefda Freeman 18 33. Ac1.reu Samantha Mathis Is 32. Actres8
:Jamie Luner is 31. Actor Mw:kenzie Astin I~ 29. Actor Ja80n
Dr. Nancy B. Gl'lltam In 110 m1111y ways, that's true. But In (78 [X!rcent) want oppoKing vleW8 to be
~ Bin• Is 24. Actrm .Emily VanCamp ("Oiory Day•"&gt; Is 16.
Oalllpoli8 othel'!l, Ufe is very much the sume, thunks Utught.
• Actorl Sullivan and Sawyer Sweeten ("EverybOdy Loves
•
to a new acneratlllll. Slldly, thoul!h; 1t10 Plell!it cull, toll r~. (877) 644-633!1;
.Raymond") are seven.
many have mllde the same ultimate IIIII:• ru (6 14) 466·0~99j i!·mtlll,
riflce 118 prevlou~·aelll!l'litlllllti.
Juhn . Rocheii~t@oue.stute.oh.us; or
• 1bou&amp;l•t for Today: "Ood knows that a mother needs forti·
Dear Editor:
Today, the men fllld women of our wrlte, Ms. Jennifer L.. Shtetli, president
:tude an(l couraae and tolerance und nexlbility and patience
:and firmness and nearly evecy other brave us~t of the human
The Emeraency Contraception armed rorce8 face the har8h NlllltleiJ Md of the Ohio State Board of Bducutlon,
' -IOU!. But becuuse I happen to be u parent of illmost fiercely
Edu~lon Act inlmpresenu the k1lllna hard8hlpii of combat ln Afahanlstan, 2~ s. Front St., Columbuti, Ohio 4321 ~ .:maaernal nature, I praise caHualness. It seems to me I he rare1t
potential or 10-called eltl4erllencr concep- Yemen, the PhlllpplnetJ, and other pi liCe" 41 H3.
·
; of virtues." - PhyJJis McOinley, American poet und author
tion. The IICIJ Bays that EC prevents the we may not know about. We W'o touchec.r
Drlnlel Oall1111her
; ( 190~·1978).
"Implantation ofan en In a uterus,'
but
by
thefr
valor
and
wllllnanesli
to
do
wh11t
Edon
I.

Stop thzs act

tt •• ,..••,

John Mootoya will be retllflliq,
Montoya is an expen in all kinds of
ltathet work, including makina sad·
dies.
·
·
Oho$t Forte
also be there,

11 l'll»ooil)lllQISiii\,CQM

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va, .NeD. ill.St off yolil' breeches and
waisttaats; ladies, lloft JOUr dltftllses Uld lOWI'IS.. it's tiMe ooce qain \0
relive put of the lliStoly of Milson
Collftty with tile ~ &amp;111\llal

Htlt!!da.atd•~"*~t~tlllnai'AO ~ ~ltl ~.r.r ~StC ltlws~~&lt;~oor!Mid~e~lbost

''
'•'

-

Siege of Fort Randolph set
for May 17-19 at Krodel Park

~wti:

'ML\IIIit' ,, ,. illll:a~t*t~~- lllt!lt

ott

'

.•

t ...

•1 ~S,I 'il!\o. ~-= ·~woi
1 ... )'0- *lill *'s
otllli9t
Dlila'\~,.bii:M-'It'CUj"'tll p!IS(IIl ~ odlittrUa~
~e~ &lt;ltli(t ••JPft a.- w· n m . _ hl) ~ . _
..
drwtdltariab:'i••llillltiiJIIM,'i'rll ~~~.11 b1 .1 ~.._.._
. . . . . . Mib-~. .,...
pii!(C !l
~ -t 1M . . .._.. \ll) ~ ~
A - Miw)., Ml, ~--'. ~ • IBill b Ia \ttlhrlilt ..... to
~ fh!lft ~ NIIIM fa&amp; Slit •tnmrt!Jt*we~---iitb
'M nu -Nth \oPJ'W • "Mt ..... wat*t~&amp;o:fteti&amp;UtWM..~Wit'"- "\\at.
\\wt SliJ.tft ~ ~ Dt\\'\we-'

--=Cittt

..*"*

...,

) ••

.

OUR READERs• VIEWS
"'-1:1:.

•

G Tlpala,OND

Upon the dlacover)' or I bulldlna bf Improvement that hal
bten ctlillltiiCted but tJf which the county auditor hli not been
notified u l'lqUlred by thla aectlon, the county auditor ahall
appralu it and plat:e It Uplln the lilt lltt and dupllcare at Ita ,
tmble value, toaethet with a penalty IJIIUIIto tlfly per"nt or
rha amount of tne1that would hav• t.n charaed •••lnlt tbe
buildlna or improvement trom the dati of conatruc!tlon to the
date of dilctWtry had the county auditor bHn .notltled of itt
tllnitriKllllltiiJ ttqultld by thl1 aectlon.

rh. coiJnty auditor, or.bi1 deputy, within rtUOnable houri,
may enrer and fully mml111 all btilldln.. ind llltpi'OWIMIIII
that al'l either liable to or eMimpl from tJxatlon by Tide LVII
(57) or tht kcwlaed Codl~

I

LA''Y

tf.IITZ

OALLIA COUNTY AODrtok

·~

--

-

•

--

----·- --· ---

I

I

'

�,-

J

•

...... ....... hdbccl

I J II ft !If 1i. ltll
lawn ell* A. . . . . . . . . Q.tb "'ll'lirQ at ....., .
M llNii. It~~ ...,._ &amp;I att,' p.ft\.. M IMftto
IIOUP wc.lld lh to aM nd car Mia ..........' " \Q

GALL A
1Uut WI

lilt,,-

AA1 LIPOL.IS

mu•• wllh

11p

PERl

nhra 1bny

dlleclot . . . .m
recr•tlon •t UAG and
Anb.cca Thomes, AIM on
Aetiiilo s p.m.
Del

I

to

GAWPOUS Jac:k
Hohy Will Pf"dl st Bell
Chapill, 7 ~m., w1tt1 HMvtn
Bound elnglng.
~...,,.

KERR- Faod giwaway at
Uvtng . Water Church, 839
Ks" Road, starting at 10
a.m., f;pOfliOied ~ Ray ol

Hops. Please bring lmes.

GALLIPOLIS - CocelmJ
anonymaua ~Meting at St.
Peter'a Episcopal ·Church.
541 Stcond Ave, 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Prayer
~tlng al Addison FreewiM
Bsptlat Church, 21 0 Addison
Pike, 7:30 p.m., wfth Randy
Ps~ preaching.
·

POINT PLEASANT Rolll\f ~ . . meet .. the
MotGse Lodge, noon-

u.a

Foofb1U ~ .flqt IN

\o- -·= .........

,. •• ..,,,.)Ill

wwlda.m11111~ns.
..

1'twri&amp;VJ1-1t

POINT ..«AsAN1' TOPS ~ Ott Powlda
POINT PLEASANT - s.nelbt;) 4:30 p.ftl.. ......... in
Alcoholics Anonymou$. ~30 end mnallrla at s p.m. at
p.m., 611 Vllnd Stleat. Use ~ Unhcl Melt'iOCIIIt
side tnl\'lnCS of C..y Law ~ fOt kilo ctl 8JS.
4Sr4 car 87WB'II, .
ADDISON - R11Yivnl at Olllc:e.
.
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church. May 13-18. 7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- lM · POINT PLEASANT nightly, with Revs. Bob Mason County Bosld ot Shoot at PQinl PI a,ant &amp;In
Thompson, . Jaclt Persona Health will meet. 6 p.m., in Qlb•p.m.
and Don Estep . preaching the Conferlncl Rooms ol the
anct singing by Glorytand Meson County Haslth
POINT PLEASANT &gt;Believers, Earttten 'Jtsnls.
Weight W.tttlsrl. Ctwlat
Addison Choir, Johnson tam- ~·= Mlltlrlg Is op4lft Ep!r.op.a Child\ will\ weigh
lly snd others.
In at 4:45p.m. lnd 5:15 p.ftl..
MASON - Wahams .High
·Card showers
.
School will hold a ~th Night
NEW HAIJEN-. t.-lll:~lfl
Jf,
O.UAM. meet. '7 p.m.
.
Ed!MI Berry wfll cn...ta Under 1he Big Tent, 6:30 p.m.
her 90th birthday on May 21. with a night ol singing .m
Cards may be sent to her at testimony by yo~tfi. -artno
POINT PLEASANT- Lion
98 Krell Creek Ext.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

GA 1 UPOLIS FERRY -

Thl -- Bl?fi'A . . . . . at

•

.....

CMnll Ctluictl.,
Sir._ Malt at 1 1)-ftl..

'

HI H CHOOL SO

POINT PLEASANT
NARFE will nMt at h
tAI:lon Countv ttnry. 1 p.m..

IONALS

Raiders shut out Angels to advance

lblft\t

POINT PLEASANT -111h
W'IUill 8tM
-Golf*
..IUtlhs will t. Mid ·• Ill
WMt Vllginll Statl Fann
~UIIm, Mly 1$-18. ~
ac:thlllel will biQin w.d. at 6
p.m..; lhut, at 1:30 p.m.; FYI.
at 1:30 p.m.; Set. at 11 a.m.;
and SUn. at 1:SO . p.m.
M1 laton tttitl.

"*

Rl'wlvl ..
HENDERSON -

S

grounder ro ~ Watkins. . .
Thlce\WII tmd 11 pa.lr of hi~ For the
k11lders (.I:1-li).
River V:tlley lll!i:lddedlded 11 couple of
rulis in the third lliilll\g as Sarilh"i._
Ru~ll 11nd Mlll'illh S:mndel'li each
nailed klU doubles . giving the
RaldeN 11 ~·0 11dV11ntllge.
:
The l'oorth was when the R11iders
put the g11me away tro good, srorilil!
fo11r runs, Including a -two-run single
byMklns.
·
River Valley plb:her (}etl t.kflmli,
with a little help !'rom the defense,
kept the Angtls offense In tlleck, not
allowing a -baserunner past. serond
base.
·

FRIDAYS .

·HIGHLIGHI'S

P1opMI

MEIGS

Mondtly, Msy 14
Satunlsy, Msy 11
POMEROY Meigs
WILKESVILLE - Fnmlly
fellowship
dinner
at County Republican Party,
Wilkesville United Methodist 7:30 p.m. Meigs County
Church, 6 p.m. P111lsa and Courthouse.
wolllhlp aervlcs at 7 p.m. A
ll.lesdsy, Msy 15
love ollsrlng will be collected.
POMEROY - Bedford
Township
Trus..,s, Tuaauy,
.Sunday, Msy 18
,
7
p.m.
at
the
town hall.
ADDISON Sunday
achool at Addison F111ewlll
POMEROY Meigs
Bsptlat Churoh, 10 a.m.;
.
County
Genealoglcel
Society,
preaching service, 6 p.m.
TUesday, 5 p.m. at the Malga
with Rick -earcua.
Museum.
GALLIPOLIS - Ralph
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
. Workman will p111ach at Mlna
County
Chamber
ot
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
Commerte monthly member·
ship
luncheon, Overbrook
Monday, Msy 20
Center,
noon, Den .
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla Dickerson 12of Ohio
Valley
County Animal . Welfare
League meets at St. Peter's Publishing Co; and Trlsh
Episcopal Churoh at 7:30p.m. McCullough of Gallla·Melgs ·
Community Action Agency
Public Ia Invited to attend.
will speak,
·
· a.turdny, May 21
GALLIPOLIS - Lordsong ·
will be In concert at Gallipolis
Church of Chrtat In Christian
sunday, Msy 12
Union, 2173 Eastern Ave., 7
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio p.m. Prn·concert at 8:30p.m. Sunday ·school at Freewill
with Joy FM Trio.
Addison Church, 10 11.m. with
CENTERVILLE
_ ~rlllchlng aarvlce by Re.v,
. Cantervllle Bean Dinner and
lok Bartus alii p.m.
Pa1ade, . 11 a.m., old
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Centerville
Elementary Qlbaonalres will elng at
School.
.
Mount Carmel Church, ep.m.

MASON

Sunday, May 211
Mondsy, May 13
VINTON Ebenezer
SOUTHSIDE - Chuba
Church 160th annlveraary weight toaa euppon group,
celebration, Mount Carmel Southelde
Community
Road, 12:30 p.m. .
. Canter, welgh·lna 6:30 to 8
p.m. followed by a ehort
Saturday, June 1
meeting.
RIO GRANDE - Callie
Ftttlval at the University of
POINT PLEASANT Rio Granda,
Alc:ohollos Anonymoue, 7:30
p.m., 811 Viand St. U11.aide
BIDWELL - Gospel sing, entrance at Caaey Lew
II p.m. at Garden ol My Heart ottlce.
Holy Tabernacle ehelter
houu, 49150 . Ohio 860.
MASON - Open meeting
Featured elngere, Cherry at Maeon City Hallin regard•
Rldga Bluagrau • Goapel· to running a eewer from
Sln~era, Ben~ Simpklna, Hartford to ·the town of
Upl ere. Call 40.388.()414 Muon.
for Information.
TUttday, May 14
laturclay, June 2
POINT PLEASANT
FIIO GAANDE - Celtic Weight Watohere Aeaoclatlon
Featlval at the Unlverelty of meeting, 804 Main Str~et, 6
Rio Grande.
p.m. Welgh.Jn at 4:30 p.m.
laturclay, June 2t

l.uftK~W"*~ ·
.SO.tl'le.... OMSM(
BJ

.
RIO GAANOE - Prince
Madog L.ecturn, 1:30 p.m.,
Greer Mu1eum Arohlvea,
Unlverelly of Rlo ,Qrande. For
lnforr'natfon, call 740·2415·
7188.
l

POINT PLEASANT Muon County Solid Wute
Authority will meet In g1n1ral
uulon In the Mason County
Ubrsry, 8 p.m. Theee meet·
lngtare open to the public.

AeviVIII
VINTON
· Revival at
VInton. Full G~l Church
with Hrvlcel at 8 p.m. night·
ly. William Gr1en preaching.
Everyone weiCOIM.

Wtdneedty, Mty 18
POINT PlEASANT Wednetday night Bible cluba
·for pre10hool up through 12th
grade, 7 to 8:115 p.m. at
Goapal Uahlhouae Church,
Neal Road. For Information
call 8715-7229 or 8715-6820.

BIDWELL - Revival at
Springfield Baptlet · Church,
POINT PLEASANT ~
Mly 9·12. Dlfferent pr1aoher Clothing give awty evlry
each night With lptOIII Wednelday, 10 a.m. to 2

Plaa.............2

nn-up race
.

BuiCK

Q\

·

'

h:aaUgcoa~

EXCITEMENT MATTERS .

FROM STAff REI'ORTS
'l'Hg PLAINS ~ Blnke

• Ptwlt AflmW •Bo,Jiftlil'.
• Stmfir~ • Lt S.lnw
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~* Good People to assist your Buying Decision ~*

Don rter, Brett fPllna, Bob Cook, Jim Cochran, Greg Smfth

Xlllll

RV boys
fall to ·
Athens,
.13-6

lllllllllllll

Drew Cltlttt
· new hud coach
lt\WU-lleh
'

MONTOOMBRY, W.Va.
(AP) •• There's aolna to be

Cntlett conchfna bn8ket·
ball In West Vlralnln next
yeiU' after
Drew C&amp;llletthwho wu the
Interim couc
111 West
Vlralnlll for the final fl ve
1111nes 11181 80118001• 8l&amp;ned II
contract Frlduy . to become ,
heod. busketbnll couch ut
Wut Vlrglnlu University
Tech.
Cutlett moved from n8Mis·
tunt. to Interim couch 111 We8t
PlltiiT AWAY - Mlill dtscua thrower Evlln Shaw cute one looet durlnl Frltllly'a m11et ar the Unlveralty ot Rio Granlle.
VIrginia In Moranntown ~ Snaw won flrat plaoa With I tOll Of 1315-11,
..
·
.
when 011le Cutlett, his
uncle, retired on Peb. 14, In
hl8 24th suson with the
~V
Mount11lneer progrum .
Oale Catlett wnl! Weu
Vlrglnln's wlnnlnae8t conch,
complllna o 439·276 record.
ITA, IUPO~T
In 30 yeurs as u college
coach, ~~ wns !165·320, The
Mountaineers were 8·1!
when he retired and went 0·
5 under Drew Catlett.
Tech 11thletlc director
Mike S11dn&amp;IIOII lllid
Catlett wnl rtP.lace Steve
Tucker, who re~laned earll·
er this year.
·
Tech, a Division II mem·
ber of the NCAA, playt In
the
Weu
Vlralnla
Intercollegiate
Athletic
Conference.
11

on.

.

Meigs,
compete once more bifore
league championship meets

.lndl1n1 Clll
upllft.h•nclecl
pitcher
CLEVELAND (AP). The Cleveland Indians
c•lled upleft·handed rellev·
er Alex Herrera on Friday to
fill In for the bullpen's onl)'
lefu'.
.
The 1ndlun8 uld they
would be without Ricardo
Rincon for their next three
aamet In Kansa• Cit)' while
he talret care of a ·family
commitment In Veracruz,
. Mnlco.
. Herrera hal split the 2002
teaton between Trtgte·A
Buttalo and Dou le·A
Aleron. He hat a Ll3 £RA
In tlx relief apj7earance•
afllr mlt~lna Aprn with &amp;he
chicken pox.
To make room for
Herrera, the Jndlant sent
lnflelder Earl Snyder back
· 10 Buffalo. Snyder hit •1'88
-In ''" aamet , with
Cleveland.

RIO GRANDE
In
afinql .tune-up befor~ _ their. .
respective conference meets,
the Rtver Vfllley and Meigs
boys track teams met one
. ..............1,12

Ri'Jtr Valley eophomore Chrle Nllla heaves the
lhOt put.

Marcum nailed a pair of
home runs tor .River Vulley
ltrlduy, but the Raiders
struggled ln the fleld and
we r e .
unnble
to pick
up n
~~~=~ season
post ,.
win.
Athens
scored u com-·
blne ulne runs In
the third and tourth Innings
us the aulldogs defeuted the
Raiders, 13·6, in high school
busebull se~tlonul action.
AtheM touk u 2·0 lend In
the bottom of the first Inning
on u pulr of wulb, nn error
and two wild pitches.
ltlver Valley tied the tlllme
In the top tlf the sectlnd on
solo home runs by Mnrcum
und Ruy~ean Allen .
Murcum fini shed the game
2-for-3, while Allen wus 2·
for·4,

arud Hurtley went 3-for-4
for the Bull dugs (I 0-12),
while Grunt Gregory and
1\evln Stickel each went 2·
ftlr·4.
Ore!lory ulso hud u double.
Athens re!lulrted the lend
In the bottom of the second
with the help uf u pnlr .or
River Valley errors.
The
Bulldogs
then
widened their udvuntnge In
the third und fourth Innings
tl5 the Rnlders cotrtmltted
five errors during thai span .
ltlver Vulley had eight
errors on the evening.
The Bulldogs wllltr•uvel to
Warren Monday In sec tion#
semifinal action.
Also ott Monday, Guilla
Academ)' play s host to
Meigs with the wl nner fac•
lng the Athens/Warren win·
ner l'rlduy for the secllonul
title • .

Jackson edges Marauders in sectional semis
IV JIM lot..'t.IIV
O'JP COIIAIIPONDINT
JACKSON - Aller 11 two day

-----'!111----J kson ;;,"'r

del1y, the wellther wa8 ptrlect for
11
10ftball •• Meta• and JaciCIOn tlnally
#a
took the field In tournament play,
,
Unfortun11tely for the Lady · and 8u«:ller advanced to third on tt
Mataudet11 the trail ended 111 thty wild pitch. Calilildy Snydl!r, JiWkiOn
droooed I neartbreilcldJ 3•2 declliOI\ hurler, lOt hertel( OUt &lt;if I jam It the
"' o;, lronlldlu, thtlr third win n..t tWO batlert Wedt down In ~dtr.
the HalOn over the Maroon and J~ekson p11Md no of1en11l~e threat
Oold.
In the HCOIId, aotna down 1·2·3.
LeldlnJ off In tM tint. Jl)'nee A two baH f'lelillna ml~eue put
Davl• banad out 1 doublt, ldvanc· Ashley Surbrldi• aboll'd In the sec:·
Ina 10 third' on • wild ¢.cch. With 0111 ond rram1. Polluwlnl 11 ttrlkeout,
dOwn, Nield Butcher iirew • baH on 8urbrldp wu cut down at third on
ballt add continued 10 NCOnd •• the an atllmpltd tteal.
Jack100 dlfen11 chott not w mike a I~WkMill was held In ~h«k by the
pia)' with a runner II third.
Mll'av,derfln he lronlllliles econd.
Mindy Chancey drew the ~«ond Mel loaded the bmtln the third
free plill a1 Davll croned the plat; at Da~l• tlnp;led, the nell I two

or

a•

I

Mlira~den were retired, followed by
~lngl41~ ftum Chance)' and Katle

Jeffers.
Jlor the sec:ond time, Abbott ripped
&lt;Jne to 8hortl for~lng Je(fen at ~~econd
fot tile flna uut. A pair uf walks to
Sn)'der and Heather Sprlllllil and
Srlttlln)' Henry'M triple to deep right
gave tlie Iron ladles a 2·1 ed1e.
A baM on baU1 to Erlca Osborne
and 11 nubbc!r off the bat of Sallie
Oreer lollded the baell for Jackson.
Whitney Hatleu lined toAbbott who
completed tile double play ciltchlnll
Greer oft first then Meredfth Jt'oun!f.
ed out to end the Inning.
The Miltaudett had an opportunity
!ot a lle In ihe upper fourth as, with
two out, Xantha Smith dtllled a sin·
gle to left and Davh recorded her
!hltd hit, 11 double.

The two om ru II y went for naught,
however, us Smith wus gunned duwn
at the plate In un uttempt to score.
Jdfers retired the Iron ludlesln llrder
In both the fourth und sl~th frame.
The fifth snw what proved to be the
winning r.ull for Jucksqn posted on
the scoreboard when again, with two
away, Osborne singled and advanced
to third. coming home on Oreet'li
base kttotk.
The Marauders' final Htlly cume In
he upper shtth with Abbott reachtnr.
thltd on u two base error and a stea ,
!~Coring when Klillten Napper Was
safe on the &amp;econd Jnchnn ml~~eue.
Burbridge wus · sure on a nelder's
choice as Napper was out at ecnnd
on a very cuntroverslnl call,
l'l.nN Ml Melp, IJ

�PomsiOV •IIUJI

' I

~

• llld ilsp 11rt • GrUipolls, ONo • Point Piss sent. wv

WEST VIRGINI_A P.REP SOFTBALL SECTIONALS

.Point Pleasant girls eliminated by Roane
· IIY DM AI •
1\ing five Roal\e players OEJIIED -Point Pleasant's
CW.JI II ttlftlM:IMOISmt.COM while allowing two walks Miranda Durst dentes Roane
POINT PL~SAfo!T - It al\d four hits. .
County's Stephjlllie St011n a
•as. 1lll entirely dt~rent Offensively, Welsh led the
pass at home dUrifC the
R.oane C011nty Lady Ratdt?rs Lady Raiders with a 2-4 stKth Inning of the Knights 6llquad that came to, ~mt performance behind. two
11oss Friday .to the Raiders
Pltuaitt Priday,,handtng the . doubles and one . RBI.
In sectlomit play.
local Lady Kntahts .1 6-1 Hodge was behind her at 1. aeaaot~·t~dilla loss 1n the 3 with a single in the first
third &amp;ame of Class AAA liming and an RBI tor the
Rtpon 4 Section I tourna- game. Stephanie Sloan
metll action.
posted two RB Is but didn't
Juat Wednesday the Lady make any successful trips to
Knlahts edged · ou~ t~e first in the founh and sixth
Rriden 4·3, but ~nday s innings.
errors during the seven
Roane nine hit the diamond
Point's Miranda Durst ted innings while Roane only
with more determination the locals with the alu- committed. one.
rnd • plan, accordi~g to minum, going 2-3 on the
In the second and final
~!nt Coach La':")' Wnght.
night with a double in the game of the sectional tourRoan~ definuely had a second inninl! and a single nament, the Roane County
·. plan tonight," ~tight said. in the sixth With the squad's Lady Raiders went head-tohead with the No. I ranked
"They _stjlrted wtth !l slower lone RBI of the night.
pitcher and then switched in Senior Jennifer Adkins Lady Vikings of Ripley.
the third inning, which was and sophomore Aileen
Ripley's Cassie Waskey,
I vety smart move."
,
Casto were t-3 with singles. while not throwing a
Roane started the secuon· Adkins • came in the fourth shutout, fanned an whop•laarne with Katie Lance at while Casto delivered hers ping IS Roane players,
the helm, but switched to in the seventh inning when walked only one and scatCarrie Hodge In the founh the .Lady Knights made a tered four hits as Ripley
lnnlna. Between the t~o, last-inning attempt to rally. notc.hed a~ 8·3 win for the
they struck out seven Po tnt "We just weren 'I focused secuonal Ill Ie.
players and allowed only tonight " Wright said "We · Ripley was led at the plate
one walk to first while scat· had several errors thr~ugh- by Christina Gossett ' apd
lerina s.even hits..
out the game and you just Cassi Hayhurst, both 2-3,
T.C. Welsh was behind can ~t win a ball game by w~il~ Rhonda Pnrke_r,
the . plate for the seven- havtng errors. Our playing Knslln Marfle and Jamte
lnnlnaaame,
..
was flat compared to Ball were al 1-3 with Ball
For Point, junior Kendr.a Wednesday."
posting one RBI for the
Rlffie took the mound, fanPoint committed four books. Tiffiny Parrish was

Final

l

Vikinas notched 65. Meigs
was tliird with 49 points.
Lady Marauder Brooke
faom .._II
Bolin posted a pair of first
.......
place finishes, winning the .
·0 1
·
1OO.meter hurdles 917.7 sec0 f 4 · 1 · to edge RV's onds) and the 300.meter burChris Nlda (4().9).
· dies (.5l. 2),
D.J · Fruee won the hiah
The other double winner on
jump for.RV at .5-8.
.
d
R'
11
Freshman Chris Roush the ay was t ver Va ey
won the 3,200-meter run sophomore
Harmony
(10:51.9)
and
was
1ec0nd
in
Ph11Ups.
She
won
the
discus
1
•,the 1,600 (.5:07.1) for the (110 feet, six Inches) and the
Raiders. Hl1 fellow freshman shot put (l6- 7lI'
•1n11 th
Kat! Beth Taylor won the
l erel!l)' "'
..o ,e wu •• n e too-meter dash (13 ..5) for
1,600 and fourth In the 3,200.
RV, edging Meigs' Meghan
. South Gallla l~homore Games
(13.6). Taylor was
Dustin Lewis plao second also third In the 400 and sec·
'In the lona Jumlf .(17-2) fifth . o.nd In the Jon~ jump for RV.
In th~ 100 (12.2 and the 200
(2.5.3) md thl In the high Games .poste the winning
Jump (.5·6).
time In the 400 for Meigs
Chad Mournin11 was the (1 ~;t;'hkins, one ofa half·
hlahest placer for ·Ohio dozen Gallia Academy run·
Valley Christian, taking third ners at the meet, won the
In the shot (38·8).
Raider senior Michael 200 (29.9). was third In the
Buker waa &amp;econd in the 800
and fourth In the hiah jump.
Heath Patrick was the high·
eat placer for the handful of
Ollila Academy athletes at
the meet, taldna third in the
I HI-meter hurdles (18 ..5).
Luke DeGarmo placed ·
third in the discus and fifth in
the shot for RV.

poft • GsWpa&amp;, Ohio Puilil PI nsnt. WV

Soulbem weJII down 1-2-3 in the Sle11'~ thel'l in the eigtO RJ. AN!rews singled, stole SCCOIICI. Th!: ovenlvow went

intoa:nefit:lchllowingAndrewstogoto
lhird,. then another emmt throw bed into
the infield ~ beyond the third blt.seIIIIID and Olll
play llllowing lhe run to
score. Trimble led 4-3.
r'
SHS again wetlt down in Older in the
.:........n......:..n ..._,_._..._ _........._ oL....

or

~-· - u ' 6
wmSou.,L..,._ hi

nuo""" 10

u"'

.
• Justm
Allen, Blandon Pi_eate; \Yes B~ws, ~
Joe Comell all With smglc:s. Trimble hitc
ll'tS were Bobby Trace and Andrews widl
two sin&amp;les each. BIUielt a double. and
Alex Schust a single.

°

10111

B.

""""""te

~ were nee

Hill

••

!Griffey at least a week Bengals agree to·terms
R
CINCINNATI (AP) -~en Griffey Jr. won't
~ back in the Cincinnati Reds' lineup for at

1

1-4 with two RBis while
Ambra Lathey was 1-2.
For . Roane, Lindsay
Berkhouse, Micah Nichols
and Welsh were all 1·3.
Sloan took the mound for
Roane early in the game

before Hodge wes substituted in the third inning.
Between the two, they scat·
tered nine hits and three
WJllks while striking out
only three Lady Vikings.
Welsh was behind the plate

backing up the pair.
•
The Lady Knights finish
up the season at 16·9, While
Roane finishes up 20-6.
Ripley, now advancing on
to Regional play, sports ·a
24·6 record.

Jar season, for the sectional champions~ip
Wednesday.
·
· The Ironladies defeated Meigs Friday, 3~2.
"I feel good about it," said Coach McFaim
on the sectional title game, "I don't want the
girls to be overconfident, because that's
when you can get beat, but I feel11ood com·
ing out against Jackson."
:
Meanwhile, Gallia Academy has thr.ee
regular season league games to make up tbis
week.

1

least another week.

' ''The center fielder still can~t make ShnJt&gt; cuts
• tin his right knee, which he hurt while trymg to
l:han~e directions during a 111ndown on April

N 0 t e b 0 0 k

•·:J,. Gnffey tore the patella tendon and went on setbacks. Everything is good. We're the one

the disabled list.
He'll stay in Cinciimatf (or rehabilitation
:·when the team heads to Milwaukee for n four1 game series startin~ Monday. If his ·workouts
go well, he could jom the Reds in St. Louis for
a .series next weekend.
.
' "If he looks good, there's a p&lt;&gt;!ential that he
1 ilright go to Saint Louis,' Dr. Timothy
: Kremchek said Friday. "If he does, all the
: thoughts are that he could potentially play. Is
: tl(at set in stone7 No. It depends .on how he
. ' does this weekend and earl)' next week.".
·1' ·Griffey worked out at Cinergy Field on the
team's off-day Thursday, and h11d no major
I problems in hts toughesttest so far. He jogged
l-,stdeways, . backward and forward and tested
: the knee by jumping and hopping.
: Stopping has been the major obstacle for
: Griffey, who can take batting practice and play
• c;;~tch without a problem. The team wants him
,to strengthen his thigh muscles more ~fo~ he
. makes any quick stops and changes dtrecllon.
::"I don't have a problem jogging," Griffey
1 said. "They don't.want me stop~ing until I get
1 'l~ a certain point on my testing. '
: " He tore the tendon when he planted his right
; leg and tried to change directions during a runabwn between third and home. He won't be
. activated until the leg is strong enough to han·
.• die such stress.
''The idea is that he has to be able to do what
'I He did when he hurt himself, and not have eain
' or a problem with it," Kremchek said. 'We
" haven'tquite gotten there yet-· going around
''lhird base and sloJ?Ping real quick .and going
•;back left and ri~ht.
·· ' ·The Reds don t want to activate Griffey until
•!hey're confident he can play everyday. He
tore his hamstring in spring trainin~ last sea·
:J· son and stayed on the roster as a pmch hitter
:..for the first month, going 0-for-12 m his limit·
ed role before going on the disabled list.
"We have to be very confident that he'll be
able to bounce back and not play two days and
.Jiliss four days," Kremchek said. "He's had no
1

!

"We expected to do weli tonight," said
Coach McFann. "We played them twice in
the season and beat them both times. The
last time was a 5-1 . ball game, so we felt we .
was a little improved on the first game and
we should've come back and done a little bit
11 Cllellllre
better on this game."
Dlvtllon 1; RfllOn 7 IIOIIonllt
McFann struck out five, while allowing
-VIlifY 1, 0.1111 Aatdomy o
only two hits and one error.
·
O.HII-emy
ooo ooo o
022
RlvtrVtllly
302 400 x
812
Amanda Lewis, the starting hurler for the l.awll
Slpplt. McFtnn and 1\C!~ni. WP - McFann. LPBlue Angels (1·14), allowed seven hits and l.li'Nit. and
OA - Dunklt 1·3; R- 1·2; Slpplt walk. RV Tr-11 ~-4, 2 rune; Wotklno1-4, lrlple, run, ABI; Ru-1-3,
nine walks, while striking out four. ·
RBI, run; Saundtro 1-3, double, RBI; Adldnt 1·2, 3-ABI,
River Valley will play host to Jackson, doUblt,
run: Hood 1·2, 2 runt; MoFtnn 2 runt: Nlckolt RBI; Tt)lor 2
.:
who the Raiders beat twtce during the regu· wdca.

The Lady Raiders tallied

.r

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

·

...........

80 points and the Lady

=

:~FriiiayJli&amp;hldurinaboys'vusi- 15"""'t"-·-~ "!seball IClioo in Slar Mill Put.
granl balb to dlwart OflllClllU• 'l'iimbE llllvanteS to the Dislrict toumaTrimble scaed when Bobby ~ led
"!Dent next wa:t, while Southr:m bows Olll off the imin&amp; with a single 10 right field,
~- 12-6 with thiec lelguc . mllc-up games RJ. Andrews was hit by a pitdl.. theft
~left next week.
1\imblc tried a dwble stl:ll. Th!: o~~ ·~Trimble 11t.'1 been the Soulbem nemesis tlwow at third allowed Tnte 10 slide in
=.~=="'orY~~~m;:uatg safely, then come on home for the tie. 1-l.
:•Ip:asville eoro:."'t:;''dw:"'~ IIIII'Ch . •Soulhr:m news relented. as BnndOD
the -ional
· •
.
Pia~~...Curt ~ bolh dmw walks
,-.
·-o
to ....., Ull the liliiiDg llld Deily Hill
1•. Southern took a 1-0 lead in the lim .eacbed on a fielder's choice tbat eniSled
t!9Jiing when Brice Hill led oft' with 1 Oouch.. Aaron Ohlinaer Md 1 sacrifice Ry

: smgle, Justin Allen singled, llld Hill and~ Burrows an~I ~lefor 1 3-1
• carne horne on a throwing error. Matt · SHS lead. Joe ComeU singlc:d to put run~Ash went on to walk, after Allen was om on the earners. bef01e Alex. Sc:hust
:~llught ·stealing, then Brandon Pierce came in to relieve starter Jesse Brunton.
rilngled to again put runners on the car- Schust put out the fue, .but. SHS Je1! 3-1.
~~rs. A flyout, however, ended the
With 3 outS to go, Southern was m·can-

Raiders

RIO GRANDE - River
Valley pulled away Friday to
·finlall ahead of Vinton
'County in a girls' quadrilngu·
lar met at Rio Orinde.
·

inniog but Southenlled 1-0..
trol Yet. Trimble foup blct. Atbm
The l-0 leld ·WQIId last iDlo tht silttb Aim lllll Brunloo drew bad-to-bid
iming.
wllmi'J\imblelieddtescueaal-1 . ,.
wartsoffsmsartr:rMallAsh.tlaNOIIIh
Previauslybadl~hldamplcOfliiOlllt__ .._.
....
........... _...
nity 10 Slel up ..other SIC(R. . but either ....,..,.. -llllltlltu • IWO-nlll ""'""" .,.,
......,.. ~or.......t ......._....~the~ ~l. rdie~ Justin Allen to tie lhe gure.

,...,o

l 00, and third in the long
jump.
Rl ver Valley · freshman
Sally . Attar won the 1,600·
meter (6:03.7). She also ·
took fifth in the high jump. ·
· Annie Cornett notched a
second-place finish for
Gallia in the 200 and a third
in the 100-meter hurdles.
Shannon Soulsby was sec·
ond In the 400 and fifth In
the long jump for the Lady
Marauders.
For RV, Kelley Ireland
was second in the 800, and
Stacy Rankin was second in
the high jump. Laura
Harrison was in the discus
and fourth in the shot put. .
The Lady Marauders will
run at the TVC championships beginning on
Tuesday at Vinton County.
The Lady Raiders are off
until the SEOAL meet next
Saturday in Logan. ·

· LADY RAIDI!U WIN

ltr Scull Wlul
, • RAONE
~~ emn
lnll. ~'Iiimble.
•
bi."""'
. ;,·, ,.
~ to
-,..,~~
gtlle the
Tomuts a 4-3 SIICtiooal
championshin win o~ the Southern

holding him back, but for good reason. We're
not qtute sure he's ready toplay everyday."
• ROSE JR. rtELEASED: Pete Rose Jr.
was released from Double-A Chattanooga on
Friday.
Rose, the son of baseball's all-time hits
leader, was hitting only .226 after nine games.
He's 32 years old and hasn't played above
Double-A since 1998.
The Reds allowed him 10 realize his di-enm
of playing in the majors at the end of the 1997
.season. They called him up on Sept. 1 and let
him get 14 at-bats. Rose got two hits and
strucl&lt; out nine times for a .143 average.
.
He hasn't come close to the majors again.
• CASEY SCRATCHED: Ftrst baseman
Sean Casey originally was in the starting line·
up Friday but was replaced after his hamstring
bothered.him during pregame workouts.
Casey strnined his right hamstring while
running to first base during a 14-S victory over
Milwaukee on Wednesday. A precat.illonary
magnetic resonance imaging test found no tear.
He felt good when he got to Cinergy Field
on Friday, prompting manager Bob Boone to
put him in the lineup. He was dropped as a precaution when he felt some tightness during .
workouts.
Casey was relieved when the MRI found no
major injury.
"We're having a lot of fun right now," he
said. "The last place I want to be is the trainer's room."
• PITCHERS ON THE MEND: Reliever
Jose Silva threw 50 pitches in battin~ practice
Friday and was sent to Triple-A Loutsville on
a rehabilitation assignment. He'll pitch one
inning Monday.
·
Silva had arthroscopic surgery to remove
bone chips from his right elbow on March 4.
Seth Etherton, who spent last season on the
disabled list followin~ shoulder surgery, threw
40 {'itches Friday. He II throw batting practice
agam Monday in Sarasota, Fla., then JOm Class
A Dayton and pitch nellt Friday.

The Cincinnati Bengals and
ti!lhl end Mou Schobel, a
th1 rd-round pick from
Texas Christian University,
agreed Friduy to terms of a
four-year contract.
.Schobel is the first of
Cincinnati's six draft picks
to reach agreement. His
agent and the Bengals
declined to disclose the
salary and bonus, but
Schobel said he was excited
about the deal.
"I'm looking forwurd to
getting up there and getting
started,'' Schobel said by
telephone. "I sow in mini·
camp there was a lot to
team. B1.1t it was a good
start and I look forward lo
·getting it all down so I
don't have to think about
every play so much."
Schobel, who will ~raduate nellt .month wtth a
degree in psychology, said
he expects to sign a contract

thought enough of McGee
to trnining ca.mp no lower to sign him two days after
than No. 2 on the depth he was released by
chart.
·
Cincinnati,
The Bengals released Schobel originally went
nine-year veteran . Tony to Texas A&amp;M liS a quarterMcGee lasi month. leaving back but transferred to
Sean Brewer os the ·nppar- Thxns Christian after one
ent starter with Schobel os year as a non-playing fresh·
his backup. Neither have mn.n.
any NFL experience.
As a tight end, he was
Brewer, a third-round considered to have good
draft pick lost year, spent speed and hands. He aver·
oil of last season on injured aged more than 30 yards a ·
reserve after injurin~ his catch on his five touchdown
groin early in troming catches last season.
com~. Brewer has bulked · Schobel knows the tight
up m the off-season ·to end position has not provldbecome a better blocker, ed the Bengals with much
which is about all the tight offense in recent years. He
end did in the Bengals' believes he has the range tO
offense lust season.
provide more of a threat.
McGee missed the last
"At minicamp, we were
five games with o sprained told whut we need to do to
knee but led. the tight ends uddress our weaknesses and
with 14 Cljtches. That was try to become complete
lOth on the -team, behind players," Schobel said. "I
three running backs. But think we're alljustt'l'ing to
the
Dallas
Cowboys improve in all areas.•
·

Ohio Electric Choice
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~··

}:Redmen hoops camps set
,

tti:i RIO I GRANDE - The
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UP AND OVIR - Melli hur·
ctler Brooke Bolin lelldt the

The following channels have been
changed or added to the lineup:

300-mettr race durlna

Frtday'e meet at'the
Unlveralty of Rio Grande.
BOlin won DOth hurdle
eventt.

Melp

,.........
Two pop-upa lo second
cl01ed the door on the
Maroon and Oold as they
went down hr order In the
flnallnnlnJ.
Jeffett IUffered the loss
detplte a lood effort 111 8he
. reiJnqulahid only fl ve hlu,
waiUd four IJid fanned two.
·
Clood deten1lve play ~Y the
~~· playtna en'Orle11
...... wu hiJhlllhled by the
Infield eomliO ol Abbott ll1d
Davl1 and rtllef play on the
J1i!t of Alicia WetTY at third.
Snyder captured the win
llloWinJ IeVen hlta, walklna
two and fannlna two u thi
Iron IIdia oonimllled three

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May 24-25
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housed in the college resident ~ails .and be ser~ed
meals m the URG caf~tena.
For r:nore information on
the B'tg R'ed Basketball
Camp call (740) 245-7294
or 1-800-282-7201 ext.
7294.
Please make check ?r
money order payable to Btg
Red Basketball Camp and
ma!l ~o Ken . . French,
Umverstty of R.to Gran~e
basketball o.fftce,
Rto
Grande, Ohio 45674:

OhloHealth
•

CNNISI will be removed from the lineup as of May 1Sth

etl'Orl.

I

:men's basketball program
:announces the dates for its
•2002 Big Red Bas.ketball
, ~Camps ..
.1
·Rio will host one-day var·
I sity shootouts on June 8 and
1 14. The co'st for the sh0&lt;;1to'!t
is S120 per team. An mdt·
: vidual team camp runs from
• June 9-13, featunng the only
: triple-elimination tournaI -,ment in the country, known
I as "The'Triple." The cost for
I the indi vldual camp is $240.
:
A junior varsity and varsi' ty team camp will be held
June 15-16. New this year is
a prograln camp on June 17 •
19 and a junior high team
camp will be held June 20·
22.
The program camp 1s

designed to keep the entire
program (freshmen-varsity)
together. Teams will go
through funqam_!:ntal .s~a- .
tions and be . given pracuce
sessions as well as a double
elimination ovenime tourna·
ment and a championship
tournament. The program
camp and the jumor :high
team camp · cost $170 per
player. The junior varsity
and varsity team camp costs
$110 per player.
All campers will be

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•

�PoiMfoy • Ukkltpon • Qa lpotrs, Ohio • Point PIHunt. wv

•

•'

....

em

I

•

.- -

w

I

•

6
13
20
27

MeigS
at Alexander
SoUthtm
at Chesapeake
October
4 at Coal Grove
11 Roc?t Hill
18 South Point
25 Fairland

•t~onb•

13 Parl PPIMIS!lllnll'l\ W 'A,

lOIIJid!UI
27 taill?a

.. atwanw.

,, at PoftsltCiifth

18 , . . . .
25

For ......

login

..,_.san

N1t?
August "
30 R~mttlllla~ WV..

27 at Winfield, w.'Ia.

.Mtlp
August
:!3 at G Ilia Academy
30 Athens ·

Ol:toblr
atlogan
atJackson
Wanen
Athens

OPEN
Roane County, w.va.

Albina
August
23 .Nelsonvtn.Yolk
30 atMeigs

6 Alexander
13 Marietta
20 atwanen
27 Jaci\Son

23
30

6
13

October
Portsmouth
atlogan
at Gahla Academy
at Point Pleasant, w.va.

Jacklon
Auguat
23 at Wellston
30 atwa~
September
6 Vinton County
13 at logan
20 Gallla~
'27 at Athens
Octoblf
4
Marietta
11 Point Pleasant, w. va.
18 St. Bemard Roger Bacon
25 Warren

20
27
4
t1
18
25

23 lllew Lexington
30 at Nelsonville-York
September
6 at Zanesville
13 Jackson
20 at Columbus De Sales
27 Warren
October
4 Point Pleasant, W.Va.
11 Athens
18 at Marietta
25 at Gallla Academy

Mlr!tttl
Auguat
23 Morgan
30 at Cambridge
September
6 Greenville, Pa.
13 · at Athens
20 Point Pleasant, W.Va.
27 at Gallla Academy
Octabtr
4 at Jackson
11 Warren
16 Logan
25 at Parkersburg South, W.Va.
WlrTIQ

Auguat
23 · Belpre
31 at Steubenville Catholic
September
6 Parke !Iburg South, Va.
13 at Mount Vemon
20 Athena
27 at Logan
Oclfftoblll'-'
4 Qallia.Academy
11 at Marietta
18 II Point Pleasant, W.Va.
25 at Jaokaon

w.

4

11
18
25

. 30

6
13
20
27
4
11
18
25

23
30

6
13
20
27
4

11
18
25

23
30

6
13
20
27

4
11
18
25

23
30

6
13
20
27
4
11
18
26

NtltOnvlllt=Yar!c
August
at Athens
Logan
September
at Fairfield Union .
at Minford
Trimble
at Vinton County
October
at Meigs
Wellston ·
at Belpre
Ale)(ander

c

23 .
30
8
13

20

H
E

27
4

11
18
25

D

23 Fort Frye
30 at Wahama, w.va.
September
7 at Portsmouth Sclotovllle

23
.30
6

13
20
27

4
11
i 18
26

u:

4
11

· 18
25

Auguat
at Wheelersburg
at South Point ·
September
Gallla Academy

23

30
6
13
20
27

4
11
18
25

4
12

Otk Hill (SOC)
AugUII
at Minford
Unloto ·
September
at Rook Hill
Wellston
at Symmes Valley
Portsmouth Notre Dame
October
at Portsmouth Soiotovllll
Lucasville Valley

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11
18
25

23
30 .

6
13
20
27

4
11
18
25

23
30

WtttrfOrd
August
Shenandoah
at South Gallla
September"
Frontier
at Fort Frye
Wahama, W.Va.
at Miller
October
at Trimble
Southern
Eastem
at Federal Hocking

at Portamouth
at Alexandria Campbell, Ky.
Ashland Paul Blazer, Ky.
OCtober
4 Covington Holmes, Ky.
11 OPEN
18 Columbus De Salas
25 Belfry, Ky.

13
20
2?

4

ntmblt
• Auguat
at Zanesville Maysville
Alexander
September
Southeastem Ross
at Portsmouth Notre Dame
at Nelsonville·York
at Eastem
October
Waterford
Federal Hocking
at Southam
at Millar

13
20
27

6

Ironton

23

6
14
20
27

Southern
Augult
at Berne Union
at Symmes Valley
September
South Gallla
Wahama, W.Va.
at River Valley
Federal Hocking
October
Miller
at Waterford
Trimble
at Eastern

.6
13
20
27

Auguat
23 at Alexander
30 al MillerspOrt
September
6 Bema Union
14 at Zanesville Rosecrans
20 at South Gallla
27 Waterford
October
4
at Southam
11 at Eastem
18 Federal Hocking
·25 Trimble

23
30

Cot! t"i.rlm
Auguat
at Piketon
Gallia Academy
September
at Green
at Vinton County
Cincinnati Harmony
Rock Hill
October
River Valley
at Fairland
at Chesapeake
South Point

23
30
Miller

E11ttrn
Auguat .
South Gallia
at Fort Frye
September
at Wahama, W.Va.
Meigs
at Belpre
Trimble
October
at Federal Hocking
Miller
at Waterford
Southam

30

18
25

4
Eastem
I 1 · at Trimble
18 at Miller
25 Waterford

River Valley
September
at Waverly
at Oak Hili
Rock Hill
at Meigs
October
· -at Belpre
at Nelsonville·York
Ale)(ander
Vinton County

23

11

OctOber

Wellston
August

South GaUlt
Auguat
11.1 Eastem
Waterford
September
at Southam
aiSymmesValley
Millar
Parkersburg Cath., W.Va.
October
Buffalo, W.va.
at Wahama, W.Va.
Hannan, W.Va.
at ~uyan Valley, W.Va.

4

13 Belpre
20 Ale)(ander
27 at Southam

Hocking Division

August
atWarren
Williamstown, W.Va.
September
Fort Frye
at Federal Hocking
Eastam
at Alexander
October
Wellston
at Vinton County
Nelsonville· York
at Meigs

5

August

Augult
at South Point
at Roc?t Hill
September
at Jackson
Coal Grove
Chesapeake
NeiSOfl\11119· York
October
at Alexander
Belpre
Meigs
at Wellston .

23 Jackson

Alt!!tndtr
Auguat
Miller
,
at Trimble
September
at Athens
River Valley
at Federal Hocking
Belpre
October
Vinton County
Meigs ·
at Wellston
at Nelsonville· York

Btlprt

l?Qin
Auguat

I

. 13
20
27

6
t River vauev
13 at Eastem
20 Fairland
27 Wellston
October
4 Nelsonlrilla- York
11 at Ale~tander
18 at Vinton County
25 Belpre

SIS.Hpll oi MTmbafob•

4
11
18
.25

6

. . Slptwnber

Nt«.lovwiiMTmlb••

1
8

23
30

6
13
20
27

Ftdlrgl Hoc!slng

Vlntpn County

Ohio Dlylslon

to .. ~

Cbtypttkt
Auguat
at Portsmouth
at Wayne, W.Va.
September
Symmes Valley
Wavar1y
at Vinton County
River Valley
October
Fairland ·
at South Point
Coal Grove
at Rock Hill

23
30

Tri-Valley Conference

Sq:taru•
6 Sisson•ill, w:va.
13 .. Gala NMJ&amp;moJ

&lt;t
11
'18
25

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Sitting in a hauler at
Richmond
International
: Raceway, Eddie Wood was
. asked about the future of his
: team. The answer came
quickly and seemed to surprise even him.
,
"I hope we are sittint~ here a
year from now," he satd.
: More than 50 years after
. · Glen Wood started the Wood
· Brothers Racing team, the
organization that's won 97
races and is among the pio. neers of stock car racing is
: bein~ threatened by the
: sport s enonnous growth.
: Elliott Sadler, a promising
. 27-year-old driver in his
fourth season in the WOods •
famed No. 21 Ford, wants out
. his contract, reportedly to
: take big money elsewhere.
: But Eddie Wood and broth·
er Len said they'll keep
Sadler in their car for the rest
of the season, and they will
surviv~, as they have through
past cnses.
·
. "We've had so many ends
:of the world, . but then it
·always works out," Eddie
Wood said, recalling when
Dale Jarrett and others made
plans to leave the team at season's end.
Sadler last week accepted
:blame for the team's strug: gles, saying he felt he had let
·the Woods down and suggest·
ing a change would be best
for him and the team~
Eddie Wood said while he •d
heard r1:1mors about Sadler
being pursued and wasn't
:totally blindsided, he's not
:ready to find someone new.
· "We don't even know who
we need to talk to. We weren't
looking for a driver, and if
you're not looking for a dri·
vet, you don't know what's
out there because you don't
'care. Now, we're paying
·attention," he said.
: In an age when one-car
:teams are having a tough time
surviving, the Wood brothers
have experienced something
of a revival, despite their troubles. Teaming up with Jack
.Roush for engines and other
:assistance has helped, and
•Sadler's lone victory ende&lt;l a
:nine-year drought in 2000.
The Woods also are widely
respected in the Winston Cup
garage.
. "This sport, unfortunately,
:is being driven by money,"
:said Ricky Rudd, the last of
:the highly successful single-

September

Sip! ; l!m

6

Wood Brothers' future
clouded by Sadler's request

RlytrYIIIU
Auguat
23 at Sou?hellsttm Rcss
30 at Wellston

...

l3 "'QS
30 • CoM Glole
•

6
13
20
27

4
11
18
25

18 · at Green
25 ' Cln. County SummH Day
Symmta Vt!lty (SOC)
AugUit
23 Huntington R011
30 Southam
September

8

atCha~BP&amp;~ke

13

South Gallla
Oak Hill
at Green

20
27

Fairland
August
Portsmollth West
Minford
September
OPEN
at Tolsla
at Meigs
South Point
October
at Chesapeake
Coal Grove
at Rock Hill
at River Valley

l

Soytb point
· Augutt
Vinton County
Ironton
September
at Wayne, W.Va.
OPEN
Northwest
at Fairland
October
Rock Hill
Chesapeake
at River Valley
at. Coal Grove

~ Nadeau

October
at Lucasville Valley
12 · at Portsmouth Noll&amp; D.ame
18 at Portsmouth Solotovtlle
25 New Miami

•••

NOTE: Wahame and Hannan
SChedules Wll18 not available.

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(740) 992-1182
Maeon, Wtet VIrginia

(304) 773-5305
· - --- --

----

Sundey, M.y 12, 2002

SCHEDULES AND STANDINGS

'

The 2002 NASCAR Winston CuP.
Aug. 11 - Sirius Satellite Radio at The
schedule (winners In parentheses) anC:t Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
driver ~nl standings:
·
· Aug. 18- Pepsi 4D,9.~.~rooldyn, Mich.
Feb. 17 - Da~ 500, Daytona Aug. 24 - Sharpie OU!'.r.Prisfol1 Tenn.
Btach,
Fla.
(Ward
Sept. 1 - Southam ::JUU, Danlngton,
Burton,
S.C.
Feb. 24 Subw~
'Sept. 7 - Chevy Monte Carlo 400
400, Rockingham, N.c. Richmond, Va.
'
(Matt Kensetll)
Sept. 15 - New Hampshire 300,
March 3 UAW· Loudon, N.H.
.
DalmlerChrysler 4001 Las
Sept. 22 - . MBNA America 400,
Vegas. (Sterling Manin) Dover, Del.
•
.
March 10 - MBNA
Sept. 29 - Protection One 400,
America 500, Hampton, Kansas City, Kan.
Ga. (Tony Stewart)
Oct. 6 - EA Sports 500, Talladega,
March 17 - Carolina Ala.
·
.
Marlin
Dodge Dealers 400.
Oct. 13 - UAW·GM Quality 500
Martin)
Darljhgt&lt;&gt;n. S.C. (Sterling Concord, N.C.
·
'
20 Martinsville 500
Oct.
MarCtt 24 - Food City 500, Bristol, Martinsville, Va.
'
1ienn. (Kurt Busch)
Oct.
27 .:..,. NAPA 500, Hampton. Ga.
Aoril 8 - SamiunaiRa&lt;floShack 500, · Nov. 3 Pop Secret 400,
Fort Worth, Texas, (M'att Kenseth)
Rockingham, N.C.
14 - VlrglniJl 500, Martfnsvllle.
Nov. lO- Checker Auto Parts 500K
(
LJU)orrte)
Avondale, Ariz.
•
'
Aori 21 ..... Aaron's499, Talladega, Ala.
· ~ov.
17 Homestead 400,
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.) ..
·
Homestead, Fla. ·
April 28 - NA~A Auto Pa"' 500,
Fontan~ Calif. (Jimmie Johnson)
·
Driver Standings
May .. - Pontiac Excitement 400,
1.
Sterling
Marlin
1,645.
Rlchmond. (Tony Stewart)
2. Matt Kenseth
1,513.
May 26 - coca-cola 800, Concord,
3. Kurt Busch
1,454.
N
1,452.
June 2 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, · 4. Mark Martin
5.
Rusty
Wallace
1
,442.
Dtl.
6.
Jeff
Gordon
1
,429.
~une 9 - Pocono 500, Long Pond,
7. Jimmie Johnson
1,422.
· Pa.
.
8. Tony Stewart
1,394.
June 16 - Michigan' 400, Brooklyn,
9. Jeff Burton
1,343.
Mich.
. ·
10. Ricky Rudd
1,330.
June 23 - Dodge/Save Malt 350,
11.
Bill
Elliott
·
1,299.
Sonoma. 0 allf. ••
.
12.
Dale
Earnl)ardt
Jr.
1,288.
. July 6 - Pepsi 4QO, Daytona ~ach, .
Fla..
·
. .
13. Ryan Newman
1,206.
14. Ward Burton
1, 198. .
July 14 - Tropicana 400 Cicero, Ill. ·
1,1 77.
July 21 - New England 30o, Loudon, ,15. Dale Jarrett
· 16. Ricky Craven ·
1,164.
N.H.
17. Terry Labonte
1, 153.
July , 28 - Pennsylvania 500, Long
18. Micfiael Waltrip
1,1 47.
Porld.
19. JeremY, Mayfield
1, 130.
Aug. 4 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
•
20. Jimmy 'spencer
1,129.

.c.

WANTS OUT - Elliott Sadler, of Emporia, Va.. waits out the
rain delay of the. Pontiac Excitement 400 Winston Cup Race
at the Richmond International Raceway In Richmond, Va.,
Saturday May 4, 2002. Sadler, a promising young driver In his
fourth season driving the Wood Brothers' famed No. 21 Ford,
has asked to be released from his contract after this season,
reportedly to take big money elsewhere.
car teams who finally shut
down his operation and joined
Robert Yates Racing for the
2000 season.
"If the Wood brothers had
some of the sponsorship dollars some of these other teams
have, they'd probably win 10
races a year. They can operate
a race team a· lot cheaper !han
most people can because they
know so much_ about their
cars and they make a lot of
their own stuff. ·
"They're fighting that battle
as many car owners are
doing." .
Kyle Petty knows the battle.
He drove the Wood brothers'
car from 1985, When Eddie
and Len took over operation
of the team, through 1988,
earninj! the first two Winston
Cup vtctories of his career in
the No. 21.
Petty now runs much of
Petty Enterprises' three-car
Winston Cup team, which has

replacement is found. .
The Winston Cup series
heads next week to Lowe's
Motor Speedway in Concord,
N.C., where Nadeau has tradi·
tionally run well.
But Nadeau said it was time
to p,art ways.
' I was very unhappy and

. Nemechek
to drive
replacementis expected
driver, but
Joe .
· ihe No. 25 Chevrolet on an
interim basis. Nemechek has
been out of a pennanent job
since Haas-Outer Motorsports
closed shop earlier this season
after sponsorship problems.
:; "It may be in our best inter·
: ests not to name a pennanent
: replacement until the end of the
· Beason, when we have a clearer
:picture of who mi~t be avail-

-able," Hendrick S8ld.

Page 85

enjoyed something of a resurgence this season. He said the
same kind of turnaround is
possible for the Wood
Brothers team.
"They've been building
back for the last' four or five
years. It doesn't happen
overnight," he said. • And
they'll be back where they
win a lot of races and at the
place where they were once,
but it's going to take a little
time, and maybe Elliott does:
n't see that he has the time."
For the Wood brothers, who
consider Sadler a member of
the family and have said that
they will only release him if
they can find suitable sitU!!·
tions for all concerned, the
building must continue.
It's what they have done
from their shop in Stuart for
50 years.
"The challenge.'' Eddie
Wood said, "is just to stay in
~t." .

.'Fin4 all ·jlour
'
..
raang news tn .
the Tribune,
Register, and
Sentinel

335 S. Church Street, Ripley, WV
Across Froni Ripley High ·school

IEimS UP Tl $3,111•1ARS AS LOW IS 1.1%

••

1-800·665;.3060 or (304) 372·2901

released by Hendrick

CHARLOITE, N.C. (AP)
-· Jerry Nadeau was released
from his contract with
Hendrick Motorsports on
Wednesday, leaving a team that
-has drivers Jeff Gordon, Terry
Labonte and Jimmie Johnson.
, Team
president
John
Hendrick did not name a

4

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

'

.

•'

NASCAR

SUndlly, May 12,2002

: Nadeau might not be out of
: 'Work for long. He's in discus: sion with MBV Motors~ to
: fill in for Johnny Benson in The
• Winston Open next week at
: Lowe's Motor Speedway.
· Benson was lnjured during
the Busch rue in Riclunolld,
Va., last week and missed
. Sunday's W'IDSton Cup rue.
: Nemecllek filled in for him.
:· "Right now I plan to sit in the
• stands at Charlotte, but that
: could chailge," Nadeal.i ll&amp;id.
· . The 31-year-old Nadeau
scored the only win of his
Winston Cup career in Atlanta
. in November 2000, at the end
i of his fust full season with
: Hendrick. .
· This season, Nadeau is 28th
: in the series standings with one
~I 0 finish in 11 starts. Since
joming Hendriclc. Nadeau bas
seven top-fives and IS top-lOs
. In 81 starts.
: The team repiiiCed crew chief
· Tony Furr three races ago, and
: ken Howes, director of compe·
., tition at Hendriclc. bas been Frll·
ing in until a penn anent

they were, too," he said. "The
Hendricks are good people and
you don't want anyone
mvolved to be unhappy, so I
said, 'Maybe I need to go.' Now
is as ~ood a time as any. They
can thmk about what they want
to do and I can start looking at
my options."

rr.===============$~

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
Will be closed

Moy _14-18

DUE TO ILLNESS
The Store Will Soon Be Closins

AND -~METI'M~ WE f'f.ALI'2.£

tGU 'GULD UJi MGili,

-~

WE•Lt. Gl't'f. \'OU

Ot1SDSAFT PSZ,ZLiG''M

TO Otft IIUffD,iD TJ:Mi~ FGU~l f

We Need Anyone Who Has
Equipment That Is Waltln1 To Be
Fixed. Or Has Been Fixed Already•
· To Pick Up As Soon As Possible
STORE WILL .BE OPEN

tOU WORk HARD
FOil tOUR MOHit
JO .DOtf'T GJVf. n AWAt
Gi.' '0 'Hi. PHOHi. ·

Monday. May 20. 8AM-3PM
Tuesday. May 21 -Thursday. May 23.
B:30AM·1PM
Friday 8AM-5PM
· Will be closed May 25
Until Further Notice

THANK YOU FOI YEAIS Of SUStNESS AND SUI'POIT

Ridenour Supply
State Route 248 • (740) 985-3308

AND

~LL U~

Peoples

Bank.

tfATURALLt!

Our new FREE CHECKING account allows you to write all !he checks you need to wilhout
any excess actlvily chorg.s. find out more about our new FREE CHECKING account today.
SooN rollictlon• apply.

Call for the office neoresl you.
.

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email: bankOpeopltsbaneorp.cam

TDDOnly 376-7123

website: www.peoplesboncorp.com

r

--.--· -

TODAt!

----------~------- --- - ~----------~--------------------------------~~~--~---------­
·.
•
•

�Pa.B6

Suncllly. May i'i. 2002

&amp;n.·leutiuel

An Arctic Caribou hunt

)

t

KIANA, Alaska (AP) •• It was early Nellie's special fare at the lodge.
Solitude seekers can go as we did, on self.
.SqAem~ but already the spongy tundra was
·Urlped m reds and rusts wlule trees lining the guided hunts from a rented A-frame 10 miles
JCobuk River wore showy yellows and golds. upriver, or via drop-off float !rips.
: Daytime hiahs were running in the 40s and Three of us comprised our hunting l*l&gt;':
~ chill, wirKI-whipped rain uneningly found Mark Hamilton, president of the University of
:UJC seams in our layers of cold-weather gear. Alaska; Martha Stewart, the university's direc·
•, It was full autunur in the Arctic, and hun· tor of fedenll relations, based in Washington,
:dredsofthousandsofcariboufromtheWestem D.C., and me. I was a writer baseil in
·Arctic herd were on the move, migrating from ~nchorage.
· lheir calving grounds in Northwest Alaska to
Hamilton is a retired Army ~ ~neral, a
Jheir winter range hundreds of miles to the West Point grad comfortable with a nile in his
.5outh. It's by far the largest barren ground cari· hands and at case in the wilderness. Stewart at
:boo migration in Alaska.
. another time had been a public health nurse and
: ~e their predecessors through the ages, the then a newspaper publisher at Kotzebue. She
animals were running a hu3e gantlet, trying to did everything there from running dog teams to
~~e the grizzly bears, umber wolves, and flying emergency medical missions. Now she
•ubs1stence and sport hunters who lined in was our outfitter and organizer- and back on
lvait
·
familiar ground.
·
·
: They were moving in bands numbering from The hunt started slowly, with no animals
three to 300. They'd emerge suddenly from the spotted the fii'St day. But things picked up
trees, hooves clattering across the rocky bars . quickly the following morning, when .a few
,before plun~tlg into the water.
·
animals crossed over. Soon a few became
: You didn t need binoculars on this hunt; you scores, and it became a matter of decidin~
cimply needed ears. Caribou have hollow-hair which animal we'd stalk and then ·try to beat 1t
hides and large, concave hooves that act as pad· to the anticipated crossing point.
Zlles. They swim high and fast. Their antlers in The odds were about even we'd wind up
.silhouette resemble the forks of a spiny tree within rille range. The caribou were easily
:where the limbs divide from the trunk.
spooked. They'd often return to the opposite
: Caribou are the only member of the deer shore with the sound of a boat motor. Or they'd
family where both sexes grow antlers. Some of wait nervously for some other animals to show
the bulls carry racks so large that they extend up.
l'ully down their backs when they lift their In our case, we guessed right. When we final·
.heads to snort. This time.of year, the bulls are ly put our rifles down, it was after firing three
1JS showy as the vegetation. Their antlers are shots and downing three caribou. All were
-:'rubbed free of velvet and the white rings on young bulls. We were meat hunters and not
their necks and rumps gleam through the mists mterested in trophy racks.
·
of a dwindling dayhght.
.
We skinned and quartered the caribou along
. The lnupiat Eskimos who make up this land, the river's edge, dropping the lean red sections
!'bout 30 miles north of the Arctic Circle, rely into mesh bags for the lug up to our rented
on caribou meat to carry them through the lon3, cabin. None of the shots had been longer than
harsh winters. Entire families wait in the1r 65 yards. None of the carries exceeded 40
skiffs along the shoreline of the Kobuk River yards. Weatherwise and otherwise, it was an
for the animals to work their way into the water extraordinarily easy hunt by Alaska standards. ·
before choosing tl,ose they need for their Nonresident hunters in that'region of Alaska
larders. It's all business for these subsistence are allowed· to take five caribou per year.
hunters, who generally bring home enough Nonresident hunting licenses run $85 .
meat to satisfy the protein requirements of Nonresident caribou tags cost $325 per animal.
everyone in the roadless villages. That includes Factor in the lodge, guiding, meals and other
native elders grown too frail to hunt.
services, and you're looking at another $500
Visit11rs observing . the Marquis of per day or more per person.
Queensbury rules of spon hunting- fair chase ·But where else can you see thousands of cari·
- try to guess .were the animals will cross and bou answering the timeless call of the seasons
· · wait for them there.
and moving relentlessly southward, grazing as
: Caribou are stout animals. An average bull they go?
weighs anywhere from 350 to 400 pounds.
And all in pulsing color.
Most females run anywhere from 175 to 225
pounds. That's a lot of cholesterol-free meat on On tht Web: hltp:llwww.alarlu:wrudoon.com/KIDna
the hoof.
Alaska has more than 30 free-ranging caribou herds, numbering about a million animals.
· ''The Western Arctic herd, with 400· to
450,000 animals, is by far the largest," says
Bruce Bartley, a spokesman for the state
Pepartment of Fish and Game in Anchorage.
~'1bey 're more than twice the size of the next
largest, the Mulchatna herd."
'
." The Western Arctic herd ranges across the
enti~e Northwest quadrant of Alaska, including
port•ons of the North Slope. The fall mi$!ation
llan see them moving upwards of 500 m1les, to
lhe southern edge of the Seward Peninsula.
llartley says.
: The Kiana (pronounced Kl-ann-uh) Lodge
:sits squarely .in the middle of this migration.
9uests can do their hun!ing within easy walk·
Ill§ distance of the mass1ve log building.
'That makes it a special op~rtunity for
handicapped or disabled hunters, ' says Lorry
Schuerch, the easygoing Eskimo who OW!IS
Jllld operates 'the lodge with his wife, Nellie.
:"We try to tailor each trip to whatever each
·hunter wants.to do and the way they want to do

How to rook
.,. your carioou

it..,

The Inches In size are being caught on
red worms, meat wotml, and wax
worms flshad at 3 to 4 fool deplhe
- ~of Natural Resources. off the gtavel ball.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
·
OHIO RIVER
:uu Ru~ (WellltOn City Wlldlffe Olflc:n
In Monroe, Galfia,
•Raaarvoll', VIntOn Countvl - and Lawrence oountlel
reportlhal
.:~ .,.. expet1enclng falr to

·-~=~l~~Oh~

·• =.•uoc ass ral88 for channet
.~.and~
•
• Chlu\l'l8t calflsh are taking

:

·· !iMTIP and~'~~ on the

!~lien shoreline
'• ll'HI•.~bass anglers

"'ih8--

:·.,.. llllna r--- baltB and 6uzz
. bllta. Wllh
water tern'
: Dlt'IIIUres, bass ~y begin moving
. loward the lhaltoW water areas
. and Initiate spawning bY the end ol
the month. Water leVelil are slight: ly above notmal due to reCent

J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

-rllns.

8 to 11 lnch8ll In lilzB,
~ on chaiiPIU&amp;e
· and
twill8r tails or milinbwll
• flthtid at deplhe ol 2 to 8 feel.
• Ball are hilling In the shallows on
• Miller worms 8nd spinners, 'M1ite
• cat1111t .,.. hlltina c:tilcken ·liYer or
.: f1il:lll aallfietl. fiihed on the bot·

'• tom

A Registered Investment Advisor ·
Jim Morrl.on, Certified Financial Planner

530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

.

:: =:.!rwater
r:.~Jfr:fl
~=~;
condition

: Me!

• ~ I8POII good nl.lll'1belw ol
: Clt~Rllll being caught on jiga

BUSINESS PL.Jo.HNING
EDUCATION PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING

lllilied around lhe brUih plies on
. . . iiOUih ilhonl.

:;~ =.~) - p=~

=·

• COl idilion II cloudy and 1101111111
;- wilh ten'IP8rature around 67

~eaa.

P011\11!.
slow.
:•, ....
Someimlllbusate
ca~
Ballso
are on the nests
In
.. on emd eplnnetll.
up to 8

..
I

•

740.446.1986

Is Clear.

: FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) wolves in Denali Parle for the for tourists,'' Anderson said.
• - Uke the tourists who hope last 36 yean ud whose "We manqe wolves as 1 pop: to see ~m, wolves In Denali research is funded by the ani· ulation of wildlife in an
: National Park and Preserve mal~riahts .....up Friends of ecosystem.
.
I come and go.
Animals, c~ied the death "What we see here is the
The average life CXJI!!lllnCy ''predictable."
natural ebb and flow of the
; for a wolf in Denal1 Park is Both Haber and Joslin dynamics of the wolf popula·
: three years. About a quarter of scolded the park service for lion," he said.
·
'
• the approximately 100 wololes · allowina anothtr pack of While the -·loss of the
: that inhabit the 6-million acre wolves to be wiped out, which Sanctuary Pack may seem
: park die each year.
ruined prime vtewina op~r· like bad news for the thou·
' They starve. They ·ge't !unities for tourists and vllu· sands of tourists who flock to
1 kicked by nioose. They drown
able research opportunities the park each year lit hopes of
: in rivers. They get buried in for scientists.
seeina a wolf, that may not be
: avalanches.
They used the death of the the case. There is already
: The number one cause of last Sanctuary wolf as a rally· another wolf pack in place to
:death for Denali Park wolves, ing cry for a bluer no-hunt· replace the Sanctuary wolves,
1 thouah,
is Denali Park ing and no-trapping buffer Anderson pointed out.
: wolves. 'You might say it's a that would protect wolves The Mount Margaret Pack,
: wolf·eat-wolf world. Of the from wandering outside the a Jroup of four wolves,
: 20 to 2S wolves that die each northeast comer of the park w ged its way between the
: year In the park, about half are where they are legal same for territories of the Toklat and
: killed bY other wolves.
trappei'S and hunters in the Sanctuary packs a year ago
; "We've had several packs nearby communities of Healy and appears ready to succeed
: die out due to starvation or and Denali Park, which sit on the Sanctuary Pack as the lat·
being killed off by . other the northern boundary of the est residents of the area
: wolves;'' biologist Layne park.
around the park entrance.
: Adams, who heads the park's The Alaska Board of Game "They actually did the same
: wolf research proaram, said. last year established a 90· thinJ tbe Sanctuary wolves
: "By and large the most impor· square-mile no-hunting, no· did, said Adams, the 'biolo' tant factor when it comes to trapping area northeast of the gist. "They started out as a
• wolf mortality in the park Is park to protect the Toklat pair and squeezed In between
, other wolves.
Pack, but animal protection the (Toklat) and Headquarters
: "In any given year in Denali aroups attendina a recent packs and it now loo'ki like
· a wolf has four times the Board of Oame meetina In they're expandina their terri: t:hance of being killed by Fairbanks pushed for a larger tory Into the east.
: another wolf than a·trapper or buffer to protect the "This is what wolves do,"
: hunter."
Sanctuary Pac'k's territory. he said.
·
: Yet, when the last-known The game board, however,
The Sanctuary Pack Is the
: member of the Sanctuary wolf took no action on the propos· third pack of wolves In the
pack was killed in a trap just al.
last 20 years to be erased from
; outside the park's northeast "We need to do more for the northeast comer of the
: boundary this sprina, the these viewable wolves we park, where they were seen
state's w~f watchdogs have," Joslin said. "The cost regularly . by tourists who
howled in protest.
of a wolf pelt is nothing com· drive the first 15 miles of the
The Sanctuary wolves, pared to the value these DenaU Park Road, the only
along with the East Fork or wolves hold for the tens of part of the 90-mlle road open
Toklat Pack, were the only thousands of people that 10 to to the public.
two packs that were regularly the park."
·
Prior to . the Sanctuary
seen by thousands of tourists "All wolves are not the wolves, the Headquarters
who travel into Alaska's most same," Joslin said. ·
. Pack roamed the same area
famous park each year.
He cited the Toklat wolves, for II years. It, too, was even·
The Sanctuary Pack was which have roamed the park tually wiped out by a trapper
wiped out due to several fac· road area around the Toklat when the wolves wandered
ton. The male leader of the River for the last 62 yeart and outside the park boundaries
pack was killed by a moose are perhaps the most-viewed and were caught In llleaally
'1tnd the alpha female was wolf pack In the world, as an set snares. Before the
killed two months later after example.
Headquarters Pack, the
belna
tranquilized
by "The Toklat wolves' value Savage Pack inhabited the
researchers. TWo of the three runs into millions of dollars a area near the park entrance for
remaining pups disappeared year," Joslin said. "A lot of more than two decades. Haber
and the last pup, a 22-month· people 1e1 to see them fairly contends ita demise was the
old female wearina a . radio closely.
. . . result of huntlns.,
.·
collar, was the one cauaht In a Bllt J!ark superintendent Whether or not the Mount
trap.
Paul Anderson said the park is Mara are t Pack will offer
''For the price' of a pelt or not meant to be a zoo and 1 tourists the same kind of
two, what a waste," .aafd Paul buffer is not needed tc&gt; protect viewing opportunities the
Joslin, executive director of the park's 100 or so wolves or three previous packs did I• up
the Alaska Wildlife Alliance, provide Increased vlewlna for debate. Haber and Joslin
In a eulogy to the Sanctuary opponuniliea. The population contend that it takes time for
wolves.
.
Ia healthy and tlhowa no sians wolves to become condiWildllfe btologlst Gordon of decline, he said.
tioned to the rumble of busea
Haber, who lias tracked
"We don't manage wolves .and the sight of camera-toting

lACK FOR MORE-

Sandusky resident
Waldo Porter, formerly
of Gallipolis; balled
this big bird · his second In nine days · on
May 7 while hunting
just north of the
Gallipolis Locks and
Dam near Eureka. This
turkey wel&amp;hs 21
pounds and has 11/4
spurs and an 11 3/4
· Inch beard. This was
the first double-tag
·Porter had purchased,
and Ironically, the last
one the 66-year old will
be required to pur·
chase. Tha retired GM
plant worker, who
brought his wife beck to
Gallipolis with him after
last weekend· s trophy,
had triple bypass·
sur&amp;ery several years
ago and says, •t feel
like 1 did .20 years
ago. • Porter returns to
Gallle County to hunt
turkey and deer each
year. (Dan Polcyn).

Outdoors Notebook: All for Love
· BY THE ASSOCIATED

~RESS

. A society grande dame puts on her best
fine~ for a charity ball. Your neighbor bakes
cookies or makes sandwiches to raise money
for a good cause. . ·
But Jeff Alt encountered sore feet, bad
weather, wild animals, a skunk bedmate
marginal cleanliness and other adventures t~
hike the entire 2, 160 miles of the
Appalachian Trail, all to raise money for the
S.unshine Home in Maumee, Ohio.
Ail's brother Aaron, who has cerebral
palsy, lives at Sunshine.
·
"A Walk for Sunshine" (Dreams Shared
Publications, $14.95 paperback) is his
account of his 147-day odyssey. He tells
about how he made friends with fellow hik·
ers and others along the trail, tried to court
his future wife, and what happens when a
trail-thin and hungry hiker comes to town
and meets up with J{rispy Kreme doughnuts.
His hike raised more than the $10,000 tar·
get to buy communications devices and other
equipment to improve life for Sunshine's
residents. And it was a life-altering ex,eeri·
ence for him, he says. "I learned that hfe is
as simple or as complicated as you make it. I
had chosen to simplify my life to include my
family, friends, and the mountains." .

MUIR'S INSIGHTS

John Muir, who campaigned in the late
19th century for establishment of Yosemite
National Park, recorded his observations and
spiritual reactions to the outdoors life as a
writer as well as a conservationist.
·
Now Chris Highland has collected many
of these inspirational passages into a small
book to carry with you on the trail.
"Meditations of John Muir: Nature's
Temple" (Wilderness Press, $11.95 paper·
back) matches the excerpts with .writings
from oJher thinkers and .spiritual te~tts. ,
. LE..,RNING TO KAVAK

BOLTON LANDING, N.Y. (AP) Novices can learn to paddle on their own
through the Kayaking 101 course taught
June 11·13 on Litke George waters by the
Lake George Kayak Co. in partnership with
the Sagamore reson.
·
The course costs $475 per person, double
~cupancy. Equipment and guides are furnished and the package includes an evening
!ntrodu~tion after check-in, a f11ll day of .
mstrucllon on land and on water, a practice
paddle the following day, two nights' accom·
modations, lunch on instruction day, and
breakfast each day.
.

TROPHY GALLERY
••

••

•t

l•

.

•
'
••

I
'•

"I get 11lot ofsatisfoedon In being tzble 16 lulp
tlu peopk ofthi&amp; areo. oehlne their .f/luutcilll
goab•••• our cwwmen are abo ourfrktuh tUUI
neighbon, 10 we work extr111uud for them."

I

!

TURKIY KILL - Zach
Schwab,
11, Middleport,
'
f
poHI with hll first-ever
turkey
kill. Schwab, the lOll
I
·; of Pegy Story, baged the

l[" '~ ..~e.=~~~~~5~~~~S~~=~-:·:~

turkey Tuellday

momlna In

Cheater TOWIIIhlp.
(Tony M. LeiCh)

ldll"lll{

CREDIT APPLICATIONI

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~ We're Your Bank for CifeMl

1

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(F,:IJ) Farmers Bank
·,

NO

Iiiii I

1 r J 1 , 1r 11 l 1 ''' t. 1 1

llltOI.tltCIIILWII..

with his podd•o&amp;bfer, Randy

--.

II 11

,Ill! \• II 1\11(

1tl71'0111iiii'LOIIIII4U'*I7......... . ,.,.

In .his liJial1' rime Randy eajoys fishinJ, hunliliJ and ATV ridinJ, but of coune the time he
eDJil)'J the 01011 is dJat speal playiDJ
.
.

••

JJ I! , I

pllrk service's priorities ..
"Wolves normally are very
shy animals and are r11rely
seen: we've got something
special now going on in
Denali," he said. "You get on
thut bus and you hove a reaiis~
tic chance of seeing wolve•
up close. It's so lmponant to
try and protect that interest." .

1•01.11t_.,_ ...... ... ..... ...,. . •ut

In lddiriooto his many responsibilitiel wilh the bank, Rlndy hal
an Ktive lifet~yle. He tW many hobbiel and is involved wilb v.-1·
ous urpnization1. lie beloap 10 both ihe Merchants Associlllion
and the GallipoliJ Chamber of Conunen:e. He Is a member ot the
Middleport Cbllldl of Cbrisc. , . hu alto been iavol~ed ia the
MeiJI CouQiy Rotary Club for six years, where he has held v.-1·
ous offlces iocludin&amp; President, VM:e-President and Treuum.

Member FDIC

' I

lfJ

trapping and huntinf Is
allowed In sections o the
park. It's not the park service's Intention to condition
wolves for tourists, he said.
""' •
h
h bi
"e re not ~re to a tuate
wildlife, that's not our pur·
pose," Anderson said.
Joslin, though, thinks mak·
ina wildlife, especially
wolves, more viewable. to
tourists should be one of the

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211
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211

Randy enjoys worldn1 wid! people and helpin1 them 1e1 what they '
need from their bankln1 experienu. Randy 1111 worked ptedomi·
IWidy in the area of eommen:iaJ lendlnJ and ruJ esw. 1n Sune
2001 Randy wu promofcd 10 ANilllnl VM:e-l'miclent and moved
from our Pdmetoy branch to our Gallipolis bnlx:h.

feels lhat blnkin&amp; iJ a -..io:c:, tlw
wbm JII'OIIidcd COIII!dfy can rt.'llly
help individuals out

' I'IIICII AND
PAYMINTI
CLIAIILYMAIIKID
ON WINDIHIILD

·

..

I

•

tc&gt;urists.
"It took four years for those
(Sanctuary) wolves to learn
the same patterns that made
the (Headquarters) ~ack so
viewable," Haber sa1d. "It's
how they occupy the space
that matters. They have to
learn the hunting routes and
the denning routes.
''Those l'actors determine
how they're seen by visltoi'S,"
he said. "Those details are
learned."
No one knows how long It
will take the Mount Margaret
Pack to become accustomed
to people so they can be
viewed as the Sanctuary,
Headquarters and Savaae
packs were before them,
Joslin said.
"It may take years to get to
that stase," said Joilin.
"Ev~ry time a pack ~tarts to
figlll'CI It out we lose them."
Bill Anderson, the park
superintendent, said viewing
opP9rtunilles for wolves ana
n lldli~e a1ong the park
ot er w
road are much the same tOday
as they were 10 or 1.5 years
aao, even thouah subsistence

'1"

'

Meet Randy Hays, Farmers Bank's
Gallipolis Assistant Vice-President.

Alaskan
wolves, auch 11 thla aray
wolf pup, are competln&amp; for
terrttor)' In the Denali
National Perk, and many
wolvea are starved or killed
by rtval pee~• aeekln&amp; to
become eatebllahed In the
perk. (AP)
IUIIVIVOII -

'at7

f
'I

Randy hal been In the banldnJ bulinets
for 22 yean. He lilarled his weer In
Gallipolis where he worked ror five
years. He al10 worked for banks in Middleport, Marietta, and AlhenJ
before joiniiiJ the Fumm Billie 1e1m in 1994.

""""~ p;:::;;.

: ellck-ups. and

:· :£$
are

,flU, _,.

ju.a,.ciliJ ~...
R~~: J

... botloli1 from the 1100111. ~
-=JW hfttlna on ninnows 6U8D8rided
· under a bobber near brush piles,

: : ="~'=~~
·• IIMiiP8!illln aiiUid 62 dagrlles.

liver condltlonl are lltlll very high
and IWift with large debrtl lleld8
making filhing and boating dangeroua. AddllloniJ l'linl ellpiiCIId
lhfl week ehould keep Ieveii high
lind muddy.

PlaNClltf ""'

: typical calflsh balta. such 88

•

.

Southeast Ohio Fishing Report

: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

,Wolves greatest threat to other Denali Park wolves

Your Friends
&amp; Nei bors

: What isn't advertised is the cultural enrich·
inent available while on the trips - lessons
fcarned from centuries of hunting and fish inI! in
ijte Arctic. Also unadvertised are the little
:touches enriching the experience - cooked
idng crab delivered to . your rented cabin or

:.

TROPHY GALLERY

'1M

TIMHoop~or

•••••,.,.1ft of tM ...,....

�.,
,.

Inside:

.

Celebrations begin on C2

PlpC1

s ••••.,. ..., 12. 2112

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

.Adoptive mom
salutes birth ·
mom for giving
up her child

96 Chrysler LHS, Loaded
This one has all the goodies!

DEAR ABBY: 1\ver\ty years
ago I decided to place my child
for adoption. I was 19, unmarried, and did not have the means
to support a ba~,
Your Mother s Day column
that year included a tribute to
mothers who unselfishly placed
their children for adoption, I cut
it OUt and have carried it in my
wullet ever since. I know other ·
birth mothers would also find
eomfort from reading it Would
you consider printing it again?
JULIANA IN BOISE
IDAHO
'
DEAR JULIANA: With
pl~'ii ABBY: 1 hope you
will use mv letter on Mother's
&lt;.
Day
as
a
tribute
to those brave,
unselfish mothers
who have
placed their babies for adoption.
I am a new mother whose
heart is overflowin~ with btitude to a 15-year-o d girl! ave
never seen. I understand that
she is a beautiful, intelligent
person who became preg!l8Jlt
accidentally and decided on her
own
thatlifeherthan
baby
have
a better
sheshould
was able
to
provide, so she agreed to allow
her baby to be adopted.
As soon as our son is able to
understand,
1 shall tell him
about his "real" mother and
·· w,hat"II'~CO!ira..:...;l\ .........,.. she

· 97 Plymouth Breeze
$UJper $aver, Air, Good Car

95 Jeep
Cherokee
Must See!I Like Newt!

%Monte Carlo LS
Leather, CD, Loaded

98 Neon Sport Car
Gas Saver

95 Chevy Astro Conv.
Loaded, AWD, MJNTII

96 Chevy SlO Blazer LT,
Alum. Wheels, Air, V6, 4X4

99 Chevy S·lQ Ext Cab
Local Trade, 53K mDn

98 Dodge Dakota
Super Clean, Must See!

83 111 ton Dodge Ram
4X4, VB, Good Shape

97 Jeep Wrangler
•K Mlln

SEVERAL MORE vEHICLES Tl CHOOSE FROM IIIlER 810,000111

.ND1H111t

ro,,,

Just test-drive any vehicle in stock and you could win. Drawit)g at 4pm, May 18th, 2002.
All process In ad do not Include tax &amp; tHie and are based on a r credit.

OWNER: MIKE NO:trrHUP ·

SALEs MANAGER: PETE SOMBRVILLE

fiVE STIR SALES TEAM .
ALAN DURST - NEIL·PIEPER ·····- jOE· Tiu!S-r·-- ]AMIEADAMSDN --··,
LARRY PIERCE

jOHN SAUNDERS

jOHN BENNETT

Yzew theie Cllrl and aa our

~-

" · ·~

ROB BRIGHT

the web at .

252 Upper River Road

Hannan senior does double-time
before heading to Lexington

CUSTOMIR SERVICE-oRIENTED - Jessica Bias, a senior at Hannan High
School who will enter the University of Kentucky's pre-med program this fall,
takes an order during an evening shift during spring break, Bias Is currently
working two part-time jobs In hopes of saving up some money befora leaving
for Lexington, Ky. (Dan AQklns photos)

BY DAN ADKINa
OADI\INSOMYOAILYREGISTER,COM

PPLE GROVE, W.Va. - Some may comAlain of the complacency of
· today's youth, but Jessica Bias of Hannan igh School is out to prove
them wrong, Bias, a senior Wildcat and the daughter of Charles and
Rhonda Tolliver of Apple Grove, has made good use of her high school
years, participating in varsity basketball, varsity cheerleading, track and
field, and the golf club,
She has also been involved in the newspaper, yearbook, Junior-Senior Prom
Committee, Students Against Drunk Driving, Future Homemakers of America, was
a member of the Local School Improvement Committee, attended SCORES, and was
a member of the math and science team at Hannan,
·
Now B1as
· has rece1ve
· d co nfiumabon
· th at she has been accepted into the University
of Kentucky's pre-med program. UK was her first choice for her college education
after she went to a basketball camp a few ~ears ago,
.
From th!lre, she hopes to go on and reahze her
dream of becoming a pedilltrician.
"I didn't always want to be a doctor," she
said. "I wanted to be a teacher at one point, but
then these past couple of years, I've wanted to go
into medicme," Bias said. "I just always wanted to
be around people, helping them,"
B1as
· cite
· d her younger brothers and s1sters
· · as
one of the reasons for her wanting to enter
pediatrics,
"I have two sisters and one brother,
· exc hange stuan d we ·ve got two ~ore1gn
denll! right now," Bias said.
"'
· stud!;!lQ}osefbhm~nn and
exchange
• .
,e""""P, ...... .,..... .
Pedro Sant08r ·Bill&amp;' "broth.ett,''.•are:also
IS.
seniors at Hannan. Lehm3nn and Santos
In the meantime, I pray daily
also have stayed active this school year,
for her well·being and good forhelping out as athletic assistallts to the
tune. Sign me- BLESSED
schoof's. football and basketball proDEAR BLESSED: Thank
grams.
you for an &amp;ppmptiate letter for
With such a crowded house and busy
Mother's Day. I~ that placschedule, though, Bias said she still maning a child fQf adoption for his
ages to find time to squeeze studying into
or her owr\ good is the ultimate
her schedule.
in unselfishness. God bless
"1 stay up until sometimes 3 o'clock in the
thDW~B~~ ~Y· mother
morning studying," Bias said. "And this week,
.
where I've worked all week, this Saturday and
just fmished reciting the same
Sunday I'm going to have to stay UI? all night l?robably."
speech she gives every year as
For now, thougb, Bias is putting m double-ume to hold down
Mother's Day approaches. It
jobs at Dairy Queen in Milton and Camden Park in Huntington to
begins, "Now please don't
h.elp her pay some of her expenses at UK. She has also applied for a
throw your money away·on a
number of scholarships, but doesn't know if any have been awarded to her
gift f?,r me ... 1 doiJ't need a
yet
,
·
ihirig.
Bias and her family will be moving to Kentucky in June, closer to her grandAbby, I know my mother
mother, but not close enough that Bias will be able to stay at home while attend·
doesn't "need" anything, but 1
in§ college.
enjoy giving her presents, and it
'They're not moving really close to the college, tlley're an hour or two away,
takes the pleasure out of it for
so I'm goin$ to have to Jive in the dorms," Bias said ..
me when she dis~lays this aniBias has hved in Mason County since she was 10 years old and admits that,
tude. I wish you d tell mothers
although she looks forward to graduation, she will m1ss her friends at Hannan.
· that children of aU ages enjoy
As Bias sets to cl~se a chapter in her life, she had a few words of wisdom
giving gifts on Mother's Day,
for the students just entering bigh school, and planning to enter college, '
so please accept them gracious. "Keep up ~our grades in the ninth and tenth grade because they mean
lyA.UG-HTERS0MEBODY'~
something. Right now I have a total GPA of 3.5, but it could have been more.
D.DEAR DAUGHTER·. "our
It could be 4.0 if I would have kept up my grades in the ninth and tenth
........._. atti"•"a .
·ad_ ~ grade," Bias said.
·
" .,--.man
, Yo:-.:""t.::;: -~. S~wou
·· . •'~ld•,, · ·' · "I .oould, l!.f!.y~ ~~arshiJ!i, but for ~t ~()j~sbips yo~ have-to.
"'""' m•ru"'' • ""
have 3.75 or a 4.0 grade pomt average," she sa1d.
·
probably prefer that you use the
She would also recommend tllat underclassmen take advantage of as
money to buy something for
many of the extra-curricular activities as possible.
yourself. However, that doesn't
"Do as much as possible because when you graduate, it's all going to
mean Mother's Day should not
be over with," Bias said. "I'm going to miss basketball the most 6ecause
be celebrated with a gift.
tbe girls are likefamily because I've been with them for all four years."
This year, write your mother
a Jetter telling her how much
you love her and what lifelessons you have learned from
bel' example. I'm sure if you do
so, she )Viii treasure it as long as
she lives.
DEAR ABBY: What is the
significance of wearing a single
BY .,.,_,_ PCII'I
Exposure to the sun's ultraviolet The SPP of a wet T-shirt may be no
carnation on Mother's Day?Soon it will be that time. of year (UV) rays appears to be the most higher than 1-3.
ft,OWERCHILD
l Get a hat with a wide brim to
again when we will be busy with out- important factor in the development
DEAR CHILD:A~CMna­
protect
the head and neck, which are
of
skin
cancer.
Skin
cancer
is
largely
door
activities
and
enjoyinJ
summer
tion is worn to signify that one's
common
sites for sk.in cancers to
vacations.
We
need
to
think
about
preventable
when
sun
protection
modler is living. Awhite carnaoccur from the sun's UV rays. A hat
ways to protect ourselves and family measures are consistently used.
tion signifa that one's mother
with a four-inch brim provides the
from
the
sun's
harmful
rays
not
only
However,
about
70
percent
of
isd«avd
most protection. If a baseball cap is
in
the
spring
and
summer
months,
but
Americans
do
not
proteCt
themselves
There should also be an idenfrom
the
sun's
dangerous
rays.
1be
worn,
sunscreen with a sun protection
year·round.
tifying flower worn by those
May is · Skin Ca!!C# Awareness Centers for Disease Control and factor (SPF) of at least!~ should also
mothers who choose motherMonth
and ia dediclted to make peo- Prevention have J?r.OVided five simple. be used to ~ the ears and neck.
hood by raising a foster child.
4. Grab s
s to protect the tender
ple
aware
of how to reduce their risk StepS to assist With skin cancer. pre~ a child or raising a
vention that should be practiced year skin around the eyes and reduce the
and ?.Cvent Kin cancer.
Did
you
know
that
lk.in
cancer
is
round.
risk of developing cataracts. Look for
a special~ in hraven
the
ltiO$l
oomrnon
fonn
of
cancer
in
l.
Seek
shade
under
a
tree,
beach
sunglasses
that block as close to I00
awaits those mochers wl!o
the United Slates? According to the umbn:lla, tent, or other shelter espe- percent of both UVA and UVB rays
cholie a child with an "imp«American Cancer Society, umore cially if outdoor activities are as possible. Wrap-around lenses are
fection." knowing that children
than
1 million new cases of basal cell unavoidable during midday when ideal because they keep UV rays
with physical or mertal chaland
squamout
ceO carcinoma and an UV rays are the llll'Ongest and do the from hittinJ the sides of the eye•.
lenges not only have special
additional 51,400 new cases of most damage (10 a.m.- 4 p.m.).
5. Rub 1t on. Sunscreen and lip
needs. but also ~ a supermali
· melanpma were diagnoled
2. Cover up with a shirt, beach balm with SPF IS or hi~ and both
abundance of Jove, llllder5tandin ~In 2002, it is estimated that cover-up, pants or other clothing to UVA and UVB ·protectlon should be
ing and palicnce.
about 2,200 people will die of 11011- proteCt e11posed skin - the tighter used whenever a person spends time
Pauline. PhiUips and her
the fabric weave, the better, Be aware outdoorl, To be effective, sunscreen
melanoma lk.in ~."
daughter Jeonne Phillips shan1
So how do we. not become one of that most fabrics lose about a third of n«ds to be generously applied 30
the psei.Ulanym Abigail Van
these
statislics?
Prevention I · their sun-proleCtive ability when wet. minutes before going outdoors and
Buren.

ONI! FOR YOU,
TWO FOR ME

-Jessica
Bias helps out
some co-workers by adding
together the
Ingredients for
a milkshake for
a drlve·thru
order. Bias has
workeo ·e~the

,,c---,-._

Milton Dairy
Queen for a little
more than a
month now.

Protecting yourselfftom skin cancer

We MHVIce all maka &amp; model• (80() f4f.OB42)
,,,,DSCS'S'''C'''''''''BCC',PIF'F''ssC'',,,,,pSSFss$8:$C'CS3',sssnsssfi8',,5,5,,CT

•95

•

Oil Change.
with Filter
:.

order.

!

•

•

•

Wldi,_.VIPM ' •

and

We're

ways to
baas.

alWays

1n1

Check This Out!II

.95

1 '\

01&amp; filar Change
AotaMTINI
CompuW lab a All4 TINs

TopOff&amp;Ot1ckAI...e.

_
..
··-

I ~Moe Hcul: lam to 5pm w1 ..1. . . .
'

I

- ---- ---

t'

~

"

reapplied throughout the day at least
every two hours. es~ially after
swimming or exerc1sing. Infants
should remain out of the sun for the
first si" months of life.
Sunscreen may be used on infants
starting at sill months of age. The
sunscreen should be water-resistant
or waterproof to withstand perspira·
tion or swimming. The tenninology
related to skin cancer and sun protection could be .confusing to.many. ,
Several of us have heard of UVA
and UVB rays, but what e"actly do
they mean? Ultraviolet B Radiation
(UVB) is also known as the buming
rays that produce sunburn and have
long been considered the main cause
of akin cancer. Ultraviolet A
Radiation (UVA) has also been
referred to as the aging rays and are
long-wave rays thl\t penetrate the '
sk.in more deeply than UVB, they add
tci UVB's damaging effects, promot-

PI•- -

.

c...cer, ce
'

�••

the River

~ ~: lmaPio llislna $16,500 lhlln )'lid ,
~.

::Bot RAW -

lhat't the Racine

·~ t'onallmity OQlanlr.adon -

i~•jlllllhMIIfterthe pdse~ .

l~~ e~~~bas ~
i&amp;luthem ~School ~

Charlene
Hoeflich

1Wolfe throoah the ~ of her
Oirls. PaUline b years was an
•Avon ~tltiVe and alWi}'S had

COMMUNITY

This )"'IIII''' yanl sale~~ a
!&amp;Mt
b6ost fu5M the estate of Pauline

!b4

ll lot of Sttltk M

hand.

RACO dinner on May 28 at the
l..eglon hall.

•••

' Those produc:ts and some ocher
lf you were ooe or the people who
new lhlnas which she had never worn
br usecl were ,alven by Chris to haven't yet competed the coiO(edal
RA.OO to he sofd fur the benefit of cancer screening kit you receiVed at
the Farmers Blnk educ:ational pro1tbe scholii'Shlp fund In her memory.
iThe Items brought in m1&gt;1t than gram last month, Norma 1brres, is
:n.ooo. Pauline, such a Riving per- encouraging you to do so and get the
test kit to the Health Deparuilent for
•son, would haVe been so Pleased.

• This year, nine scholmhips of analysis.
If, however, you've decided not to
.~500 each will be presented at a

KERR- Manha L. Bevan
of Kerr is announcina the
. enaaaement and upcoming
Jlllrrtallc of her daughter,
Amy Kristeen Bevan to Joel
Edward Ja11ers of Gallipolis..
The prospective bride·
groom is the son of Robin
and Steve lagers of
Gallipolis. ·
The bride-elect is a 199S
graduate of River Valley
High School and is currently

Hash-Greene engagement

employed by Head Star\ as a
BIDWELL - Bei\Jamin
teacher.
Hash of Bidwell and K11thryn
The prospective bride· · Huh of Middleport are
groom is a· 1996 graduate of announ~ing the ena~~pJliOnt
River Valley Hiah School, is . of thetr daughter, Lucey
currenU~ attending Marshall Shruuel Hash to John Thomns
Unlverstty and Is 11111ployed Greene of Oalllpoli .
by Prestera.
The prospect! ve brideThe June I. 2002, weddlna groom Is the son of Mary
will be at Grace United Greene nnd Leon Greene,
Methodist .
Chun:h, both of Gallipolis.
Oalllpolis.
The bride-elect is u 1998 of

River Valley fliah School,
and Is due to araduale from
the University of Rio Grande
this May, 2002.
The prospectIve bridegroom Is II 1996 aracluale of
Onllla Ac11demy · and Is
employed by OKN Sinter
Metals, Gallipolis.
.
The wedding Is set for June
8, 2002, 111 Shrine Club,
Bulavllle Pike.

Martin-Carpenter wedding
SUGARLAND, fe)(u ·Lana Martin . and . Chris
Carpenter were united In
mi!Tlap Mmh .3, 2002, at
St. Laurence Clthollc Church
In Sugarland, Tllxas.
· ThO bride Is the daughter of
Aaron and Jennlftr Mllflln of
Sugirland, and the aroom Is
the son of Steve and Lesa
Carpenter of New Haven,
W.Va.
The Rev. Father · Dan ·
Warden perfonned the cere·
tnony. Pianist was Ann
Kon!kowskl, and musical
selection were presented by
Mary Thompson. A soeclal
sona, "It's YOur Love,'~' -was
aana by the groom to the
bride.
Matron of honor was
Claudia Ray, sister of t~e
bride. Bridesmaid was
Theresa Bratton, and the
flower girls were Christen
Lola Ray and Caitlin Lily
Ray, nietos of the bride.
Best man waa Joahua
Carpenter, brother of the

Today~

I

groom.

Groomsman was
Gabriel Scott, cousin of the
pm. Ushers w~ Nathan
(Tower) Lain and Jason
Bratton,
,
Gui~st book attendants wtn1
VIcki Mendoza and Carrie
Holman, and reader of the
scriptures
was
FareD
McCord.
,
,
Lana g_raduated from South
Thus Colltllo of Law In
Houston, 'Thluts, and currem·
ly works as an attorney for
Baker and Beck, PC, In
Conroe, Tllxas.
Chris graduated frotn
Marshtll · University and
works as an enalneer for
TETRA TechnoJoglllt hi
Conroe, where the couple
reside.
:
Family, friends and nelab:
bon are Invited to attend a
reception to honor the couple
on Satllrday, May 25, at 4
p.m. In the banquet room at
Rl venlde Gold Club, Mason1

vv.v..

.

13.2002

Yard sales.help pay ·or college

Ill

Bevan:fagers engagement

PapO

• ·Do rou want an eltdting career In
-l:oday s fast paced, ltigh·tech
offices? How about the ¢xcltlng
opponunlty to work In a doctor's
lawyer'a or other · professional
11ffice? tf you need the skills
.required to obtain one of these
demanding careers, then consider
an associate degree .In one of the
Qffice Technology fields available
at your local community college.
, ·Today's offices are more complex
~han offices of the pnst. The everchanging technology has created 11
d~mand for lndl v1iluals who are
~killed In a variety of areas in not
!jAiy the traditional word-process·
Ina, but are knowledaeable In such
clqmplelt Sl,lbjects as ilatabase man·
agement, Sl!readsheet creation, and
~?I!Chltlon of other specific comput·
er software programs.
'l' The office environment Is the
heartbeat of the organization and It

'

p.m. after which Karl Russell will
Gloria said the competition was
speak, and Junior and Rita White, keen and the judges ''tasted and
Ralph Cooke and Coleen Brickles retasted her chili," but gave the grand
wilf provide music.
prize to a ravioli/dandelion recipe.
Adinner will be held at the Modem This was Gloria's second time to
Woodmen hall with serving from I to enter the dandelion contest. and she's
5 p.m. AU of the money raised will be already looldng forward to next year.
matched up to $2,~00 by ~odem After all, "third time's a chann."
Woodmen International w1th the
Meanwhile, Gloria has received
entire amount to be donated to ihe wOld that she took second place in
Mei~s Count:}' Emergency .Medical the Colavita Romance Recipe
Servtce.
Contest with her Sweet Tango
It's always an enjoyable day with Chicken and Pasta dish and is eagermany who have relatives buried in ly awaiting an "Italian Feast' gift basthe old cemetery returning for the ket.
.
celebration -a reunion ofsons,
A contest junkie, Gloria has won
dozens of contests, including lots of
•••
While Gloria Herdman's "Chicken cash, a car, and computers. but says
Dandy Chili with Greendeliciious she's still worlcing on that "elusive
Cream" wasn't a winner with the cruise" the last of the four Cs for
judges at the Ninth Annual which sweepstakers strive. · . .
Dandelion MayFest Cookoff last
(Charlene Hoeflich is general
weekend, it did receive rave reviews manager of 11te Daily Sentinel i11
from the tasting audience.
Pomeroy.)

o tees are high tech

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VIEW
offers many challenges and opportunities. Successful office staff need to
be able to adapt to the constantly
chan~ing wort( enyironment. An
assoctate degree an an Office
Technology field can help you man·
age these changes successfully. Let's
look at a few of the specific program
concentrations that you can enroll in
under Office Technology.
.
If you want to work in the med·

•

use the screening materials. then
she's asking thai they be returned so
they can be used by others. About
100 kits were diSiributed and only
about half have been returned to testing.
She noted that of those returned
three were abnonnal an~ ~ J?OOpie were referred to the1t phystctans
for further testing.
·
There's no fee involved in the testing and it's really .an easy way to
·screen for colorectal Cf111Cer which if ·
diagnosed early enough is lleatable.
It's not too late to use the test kit · .
•••
Memorial Day is always a big day
in the small village of Burlingham
and this year will be no exc~ptlon.The 112th annual celebration will
be held at the old church built in
1888. The honor guard of FeeneyBennett Post 39, American Legion,
will be there to open the program at I

ical field, but direct patient care is
not your cup of tea, then consider
the Medical Office Tecbnolog~ pro·
gram. If you have ever vis1ted a
doctor's office and had to complete
insurance forms. you are aware of
the enormous amount of detailed
paperwork and documentation that
is generated in a hospital or medical
facility. Comple~t details and ~roce­
dures must be documented m the
. patient's medical records; insurance
companies must be billed for the
services that are rendered , and
records of past and future treatments must be kept. · ·
Doctor's medical notes must be
carefully transcribed and placed into
the patient's records. All of this paperworlc must be kept in an efficient and
organized manner. With classes such
as medical terminology and medical
transcription, this associate degree
will qutckly put you on your way to

organizing a medical office.
If you would like working in a
challenging legal office with a new
situation every day, then consider the
Legal Office Asststant program. If
you have ever hired an attorney, you ·
know that tons of paperwork is generated for each legal case that is being
prepared. The office assistant must
transcribe legal briefs ruid other documents and keep all of these documents organized into legal case files.
Because the Legal Office
Assistant works with all aspects of a
case, from preparation to conclusian, they are essential to successful
attome~s and successful legal cases.
By takmg courses in legal machine .
transcription and shorthand, this
program will provide the necessary
training to become u competent and
resourceful legal assistant.
If rou ~not sure that you want to
spectalize, but want to earn a good

salary. consider an Administrative
Office Assistant program. This
allows the students the opportunity
to work in any field they choose.
Almost every office, from the auto
parts store to the community colle!!e,
needs administrative office assts·
tants. This program is designed to
provide the student with the skills
necessary to pelform a variety of
administrative and clerical duties
that
necessary to run and mainlain efficient organizations.
.
As you can see, there are many
opportunities within the Office
Technology programs to further
your career. Call your local commu·
nity college today and learn how to
put college .in your future ,
(Luanne Rase Bowman is vice
president for financial and administrative affairs at Rio Grande
Community College. P.O. Box 326,
Rio Grande, .Ohio 45674, 245-7236.)

are

.

••
' I

Pelemepay

Amlllr N. llooklton oncl Mlohlll Wrltt

Mr. IIIII Mro, Jim Goonen

Coonen 50th anniversary

1

·.

GALLIPOLIS - 11m and
Jackie Coonen were married
"'Ma)' 10, 1952lnAicron, They
celebrated their 50th weddlna
annlvenary thla week with
mall at St. Loula Catholic
Church, followed by dinner
at The Down Under
Reataurant. Their four chil·
dren, Lyn Ford of Danville,
Calif,, Connie Moraan of
Westerville, Rene Cox of
Hilliard, and·Mike CoonelrOf
WIIIiamsbura. were there to
honor their parents and cele·
brate the happy day,

·J- ,"- :
I·

The cou~le haa 11 arand·
children Jetr Ponl and 'David
Moraan of Oa, Brian and
Scott Ford of Calif., Chrlaten
Blddleatone, Ben Moraan,
Loaan and Natalie Cox,
Nathan, Andrew and Zachary
Coonen.
Jim Ia retired from
Ooodyear as plant manager
and Jackie from ODC as a
aocial worker, C_u_ry-entl~.
~Jackle'"lervti us alloeen'ff~
The Our House Museum and
Ia an ombudsman for the
agina in the State of Ohio.

Blackston- Wyatt engagement
POMEROY - Chriaty de~e In reapiratory therapy.
Blac:katon of Pomeroy ani! She Ia employed at O'Bieneu
Bruce and Pam Blackaton of MemorlafHoapltai In Athena,
Pomeroy announce the
The gi'oom-eleot Ia a 1!1!18
enaaaement and upcomlna araduate of Mela• Hlah
marrlaae ·of their dauahter, School and Ia employed at
Amber Nlchole, to Mfchael OKN Sinter Metals In
\Vyatt, aon of Terry and Kathy Oalllpolla.
Wyatt of Pomeroy, and
An outdoor weddlna Will
Brenda and Keith Phnlln of take place at the home of
Middleport.
Harota Blackston at 36160
The bride-elect Is 11 2C)QO _Rockaprln&amp;!..,Rc~acUl.n May ..,.
.-graduaie - of" Melp 'Ht~lt 25',-21J02;'A ~"eceptlon wiii'TolSchool and will graduate 1n low at RoyKI Oak Reaort,
June from Wash ina ton State Fami ly and friend I of the cou·
Community College with a pie are Invited to attend.

I

I

hOO

Dwndr •ey Yth

J:OOI'M

Pillllllf "Ontllr410k

i01DOAM

"Sumelumefummlrtlme"
'""'"' IMtfllll

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t:OOI'M
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f:OOI'M

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Dwflht ..... latlll"-11

"VounJ It H11rt•
iO:OOAM

0-IIMI Thlnp
Outdoor Wtlntr llt11t
Motoroyoll riMt wllll till

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MrtOn Duflltlllt Olltlopl OltiM
Tom Dot~eJind hit
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MM•Jio, Mulo, II1CI DIIIH"
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BANKING
CONVENIENCE

INTRODUCING
NEW LOBBY HOURS
MONDAY-FRIDAY
9AM•3PM
,. .,- ~ SATURDAY ,. -·
9AM-NOON
DRIVE·THRU HOURS
MONDAY-FRIDAY
9AM·SPM
' .
SATURDAY
9AM·1PM

VETERANS MEMORIAL
SKILLED NURSING CENTER

992-2104

C•uwnulltr ReotpUon
Rul•uut,......

tnsur~ •• Wft

·- --

Employee Pot tuck
10:00 Dana (Hymn Sing)
I :30 Doa ahow
5:00 Pamlly Picnic with Biil Crane

115~

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

i0:10AM

... \- t .....,...~~

· "Wh, ;you ""' ct~rwtlfor •ntl c•rwtl llhDul"

IM•llftiiiiiMI Ctunty OommllliiiMft
IWt'fiOII lpulclf Jtck . _ from WOWK TYoJJ

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· -~ ~ TJ)uNCiiY· 5/16102- r - ·--·

Mav 13- 17, 2002

i0'.41AM
:U:DOAM
:U:UAM
U:DOI'M

7:00PM

Wedat1dty1 4JISJ02
Rlueleap!Sbprta dey
(Employee cake walk 10-4)
10:00 Wheelchair race (atat'f?)
10:30 Wheelchllir race (residents)
1:30 Home made Ice cream
6:00 Pllarlm Calvary Church

National Nursing Home Week Schedule

O,.n41it llenltNict !If Mldllllport MIJif .....,

f:OOIIM

FOR YOUR

9:30 Gardening with chlldi'Cn from Head Start
1:00 Pood Blnao with Becky
2:00 Bible
with Jan

MnMr MeyQ
"AmerloM Prlcle D•r"

U;OCNW

10:00. 2:00 Open Houae/Health Pal~
2:30 Balloon Llunch ·

l.adiM Pit lp the FICJ

"A ~elebration of Seasons"

JO:DOAM
»AIAM

SYRACUSE BRANCH
Friday, May 17th • 3 to 6 PM

Tueedty, IJl 4102
-Bmplqyu Trlyla pey tpjOO • 4tQQ)

Friday. $/17/02

tJ~"J!4'oot R~haJifltat/ol( ·e~l(t~!4'

!O:lOAM

9:30 R11ldent Rl1h11 Blnao
1:30 Root beer noata (aoolal)
6:30 Bla Bend Cloaaen

\

�Sundlly, ..., 12, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • GMilpolla, Ohio • Point Plaasll'lt. WV

• Sunday. May 12, 2002

...

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plx•nt, WV

. Sun safety begins at home

May i~ Mental Health Month
• .,..., Au
•

:

•
!

'

t.fa.y i.s Menial Hedli Manth.
Meullllllllllh i.s cle1iMd u '"'he Ill* whaein a Jle.ISOR is
wdl ~" Good tneNil heallh is ac:ambinllicm OfchemQI ballnta. JICISiUUII expel lela: IIIII aenedcs.
Apooblemm any ana~ Ill of those . _ Clll cause a mr:ntal biUh mobleln (menell illnl::ss). 1'btn ue IIUIIIIIOIB t;ypes ·
· or menta~'iin:u. Schilqllnnla. clepession. ~ ~
sleep disoldels, allllldiolt deficit clbclder. pca4l'lllmllic Slless
disoldet,llld~di.SOidtisnjusufow.
. ln fiCt. nma1 illnl::ss arret. one eu1 or five A.meritanS.
(This fialftS CUI to Wild 2.3 million pcqlle in lha Sill!: of

m 111 ya,t ~ SOII'IfJOl1lll yoo kDow could be deal·
.Ohio.)
withThis
mental illMM.
.
. ~y tiJres peqlle Who n having llllllllll heahh problems

do IKl seale~ help. This Clll bo duo to mm,y differ..
l!rtt ihinas: , . of ''de syMn." laclc of initilli~ lhay do nat

: realim llten is I problei'n. IIISII(e of where to ao. IIIII fw or

beiDa labeled .
Tlils felt of~~~~~ If by friends andlar flmiJy is l bia
· llKiblem within the
of mental healdt. The WOldS "nliJnlal
illness" Clll cause imlaes of Slllight jllcbls utd pllienls

lotkcd}a~ roans to come to mind. These imo&amp;es often
keep poople from aettin&amp; services.

They dO not Willi to be •ssociallld with such things. The truth

Slleena R. Levtllne 1nd Christopher A. Moore

Mr. 1nd Mn. Timothy Stn.R

William P. Davlelll'lll Lull J. w.tl

I.eveline-Moore engagement

Fortney-Sellers wedding

Vfkll-Davis engagement

REEDSVILLE - Amber
The
bride-elect
and
Jeff and Linda Leveline
Marie
Fortney and Timothy
prospective
bridegroom
are
and Rick and Debbie Moore
Jay'
Sellers
were united in
currently
students
at
Hocking
wish to announce the engagemarriage on Feb. 2. 2002, at
. ment and upcoming marriage College .
the
Belpre Church of Christ.
of their children Sheena R.
The service will take place
The
bride is the daughter of
Leveline to Christopher A. on June 8 at 8 p.m. in
.Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Lee
Fairfield at Crystal Palace.
-Moore.
Fortney of Reedsville. The
groom is the son of Kim
Lemley of Rockp&lt;irt,W.Va .•
and Tim Sellers
of
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The matron of honor was
. Jessica Abbott of Logan. Lisa
Stethem of Chester served as
ihe bridesmaid. Chantal
Barnhart, cousin of the bride,
was the flower girl. ·
Brian Sellers, brother of the
groom, was best man. Jeremy
Sandy was groomsman.
Adam Sanders, cousin of the
bride, and Josh Sellers,

cousin of the groom. were
ushers. Zachary Connolly,
cousin of the bride, was ring
bearer.
A reception at the church
followed the ceremony. ·
The bride is a 1997 gruduute of Eastern High School
and a 1999 graduate of
Hocking College. She is
employed us u systems analyst
at
Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
The groom is a 1994 graduate .of Parkersburg South
High School and a 1999
graduate of West Virginia
University. He is employed
as a project manager at
Charter Communications.
After a wedding trip to the
Poconos, the couple live in
Parkersburg.

Fellowship Baptist
Church to have ·
summer intern .·
Mr. 1nd Mrt.

GALLIPOLIS
school class, c'allin'g, hasFellowship
· Baptist pital visits, preac~i~g,
Church, on McCormick teachina and other mtnlS·
Road, present Derick terial responsibilities. The
Rollf Blrron
Scudder as its student · purpose of a summer
intern for the summer.
tnternsbip is to help -min Presently, scudder is a isterial students gain a
resident of Philadelphia, wide variety of experience
Pennsylvania and a third · in the practical learning
are Lori Barron of year ministerial student at environment of a church,
Gallipolis,
· Debbie Bob Jones ~niversity. in outside of ordinary classMitcliell of Athens and 1 South €arohna. Grawmg room instruction.
Craig Barron of New up
in
inner
city
If you would like to
Marshfield.
Philadelphia, an active know more about more
The couple has four member of Bethel Chapel about Derick Scudder. or
grandchildren and one and winner of the . Pro- Fellowship Baptist's sumgreat-grandchild.
Teen.
lnternat!onal
h
(a
nallo_nal mer programs, call t e
Fam.l'ly and friends are Sco.rm_g
or
cordially invited to join Ch
. rtstlan _yout h organeza- church
visit at at600446-7044,
McCormick
the couple on June 15, liOn), he IS well equtpped Ro"d (behind Thomas Do
2002, from 3-6 p.m. at for his summer in
"
Lake Hope Lodge for a Gallipolis.
It Center).

Barron 5Oth anniversary
Roger and Marilyn
Barron will be celebrat1ng their 50th anniversary
on June 14, 2002. They
were miuried at the
Christian church in New
Marshfield on June 14,
1952, by Rev. James
Horner. A reception followed the ceremony at
_Lake
Hope
Lodge
(Sycamore Room).
.
Marilyn is the daughter
of the late Rev. Miles and
Gladys Hoon and Roger
is the son of the late
Joseph
and
Nettie
Barron . Their children

- .' ~- '

~· ,~

50th
anniversary
tion given
by their'receP,chtl·
dren. ~equesting no gifts,
just come and enjoy the
afternoon .

Scudder's
responsibilities
this summer
will
include working with
teenagers, Vacation Bible
School, teaching a Sunday

CHESTER - Russell and
Linda Well of Chester
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Leah Juneth,
to William Patrick Davis. son
of Bill and Corky Davis of
Syracuse;.
.
· The bride-elect is u gT!lduute of Easlem High School,
class of 2000, and will complete her training at Hocking
College in June. She is a

is dtat the mental healih S)'Siem is very diffeteni lblm theso
images. ·Wilh now nclicatiOns 111111 therapy pnlRI1Ill'!ll, two 011t .
ortliree people who seek professional menllil hOelth asSistance
aet better.
.
'
..
Whllt can you do if someOne you know is having mentul
health difficulties?
First of all, ccluc:~ yourself nboutavnilable rnentlll heliJth

serw:eTh·
•IS WI
P:ollv~
'-'1 •'-• · ' --•
~lv.:l )'00 a pIICC tO,..,
""""to ClUor· VISit.

member of the American
Dietetic Association.
Her fiance is a 1992 graduate of Southern Local high
School and Nonhwestem
University in 1995. He is
employed
lit Tri-Stllle
Sterling Ford. Cincinnoti.
'I'he wedding will take
place in June at the home~ of
the bride-elect's parents.

&amp;.AA;W

•

•

SC1:'Via1 providers of ~till health assistance n available.
Here in Gallia and Meigs counties, thcle is Woadland
Centers l.nc:., 446-5500 or 1-800-2.52-SSs.t ~. ei'ICOUJ'o
age others to learn the truth about menllll illness mld current
lrellttnent methods. .Information is available from local service
providers. the library, the l.ntcnttlt, rutd the Gllllia.J~­
M~ BOII!d of Alcohol, Drua Addiction, 1\nd Menml Health
SerVICeS. 446-3022.
. .
Mental illness is a problem that c:lllt otfea llli)'One at llllytime.
By becoming lnfomied, you can be pn:oruecl to help someone
you care 11bout ~ maybe even )'OUI'Silrf. Fear and misunderstanding are the l~~~gCSt barriers to mental health care.
If you would like I"IIOre information, please cllll Woodland
Centets at 446-SSOO or the Oallia.Jucltson-Mcigs Borud of
Alcohol, Dnlg Addiction, and Menml Health SerVices nt 4463022.
.
(Marissa Fulk Is contllllllllty edt!cator for GalllaJackson -Meig_s Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction a11d ·
Melltal Healt/1 Sc!lviclls.)
·

Do I ·Need Bifocals? .
Have you noticed that nearby objects and reading
material aren't as clear as they used to be? Are .you
having to hold the newspaper farther from your eyes just
to make the print sharper? If so . . you may have
"presbyopia." the optical condition requiring readlnQ
glasses or bifocals. As baby boomers aae and get Into
their forties, inllllons or Americans find themselves
needln&amp; s()me help up close.
Presbyopia Is normaL Often, Individuals with
presbyopia will first notice that extra lighting or holding
objects farther away Is needed for good vlsl&lt;~n. This Is
caused by a hardening or the lens. which makes It more
dlfncult for eye muscles to change lens shape. Clear
vision up close Is brought about by the lens becoming
thicker. This unavoidable condition will occur sooner In
farsighted people because some or their rocuslnR ability
Is already needed just to make far away obJects clear.
Convex. or plus. lenses easily solve presbyopia by doing
some of the· work for the eyes. So remember, If your
arms seem too short. see your optometrist.

Our Members

·Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Have an· Appetite

224 K Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

for

. . ..,ummero .

•

•
•

. . , . ,:~'-, -rl2th Annua~ ~u --o:,,. ,_ .

-.

c"?r;:;.: i

.

years experience in appliance sales

WE SELb QliAUTf--MAJOR BRANDs-"-"

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~~~~~GOSPEL Jl/11.

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V

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Wednesday, May 15 ·Sunday May 19

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5 BIG DHYS *** OUER 70 GROUPS 6 SOLOISTS

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•
•
•

Historical West VIrginia State Farm Museum .
(singing from an outdoor open pavilion)
May 15. l002-- 6:00pm Ill?? (Only) Open Talent (limit 1 songs) register. on arrival
May 16, 2002-· 3:00pm Ill?? ••Kevin Spencer &amp; Friends &amp; Jody Brown Indian Farplly
&amp;More
May 17, 2002-- 3:00pm til?? ••Melody Trio, Singing Echoes, Haire Family &amp; many more
May 18. 2002 •• II :00 am til?? ..J.B. &amp; Barbara Spencer, The Freemans, The Browder&amp;
&amp; Many, Many more
May 19 •• 9_:30 am Morning Worship with Evan&amp;ellst John Elswick Singing by McDaniel Trio
and Nichols Family
May 19 •• 1:00 pm Standing Tall, The Browden &amp; Pre11chlni1 by Calvln'Ray Evans

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JACKSON
Comfort Inn • 605 Euc Main
MON 6:30 pm • SAT 9:30 am

MIDDLIPORT
Church of Chrllt • 437 Main Street

THUR. 6:00 pm
tt.......~ .................

Maio 1 1 2 - - ......... -

'liZ otr""" •IPI- 1M !lot-., fw,
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...,.....,.,..,.,WCICHfWIII"OCMiillt,.,..,
If

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=

think ofskin Clltter u OCN'in the~ )'lllts tllld a brim thit sltadts the eyes.IIIOIIt ofttn in people or
lil'e. Limit outdoor ikles ofthe flee utd t.:k ofthe
sldn 1011e. it ckivelclps on play
during 10 a.m. to 4 ntdt, tlnd lllllb sure he or she
skin lypeS IIIII tokn In p.m. - hooTS wben ultt.violet wem it in the slUt. B1sebiU
auty 1980s, -.ve didn't even fact, darktr $kin may hide rv.ys are the most intense. A aps 11re good r:Qver for the ~
~·lie lha ldoa of sun pro- someorlhl auty wamin&amp; si&amp;ns aooc1 rule of thumb for children ana nose. but do nothina to
tectioit. It wun 't called "sun- of cucer, alJowina lhe disew ind lldults alibds to avoid shade thtl em IIIII slcles utd
screen" (to potett yoo from to pqress IUnhti and maklnR direct sunlight when yolir shad- back of lhe ~k. And with our
the sll\'s hirmfill ~), but the troatment Iller on mare dif. ow Is shorter !han you are. national ob5ession wilh blse"sun llnnina lation" (to hdp ficult.
When outdoors during midday, · ball caps, it's not surprising that.
.act .that skin as dark u pmible .Most A.mcricans n:cel..-e 80 hell!. children find wdy SflOIS most ~ appear on the
- the oftlc:iallro(lhY Of swn- percen' of their lifetimo sun to play.
~k near the ear. A wlderrer fun). Jn fttet lt WIS tom- ~ure ~ lhe aae of 18.
~ly sun sc:Nen with nn brimmed hilt will help rover
rnonplace for teenqe girls to Most forms of skin cancer SPP of lS or higher regulitrly. these areas.
lather ther!ISelves up_ '!flth baby result fl'Om a se~ bum Apply 30 minutes belbrii ;oing
When possible, haVe d\11·
otl and lay in the m1e111ny sun to reteiwd u a Child or during the out. ff possible, and renpply iT dren wear shins witlt sleeYe$,
"fry." SOme of ~ most teen ~ Skin cells were children are in Wllter or sweat- especially to cover the llpP.el'
poignant memories of beach dama&amp;ed from the bum utd ina. Somtl varieties of sun- bai:k lUld shoulders where ihll
vacations is or the miserable contiriued to remain 11 ''welt ~ are for sensitive skin. suri hits lfiOll: diredly. Finally,
sufferina that lC.'COIII(IIIIi a link." Si~ sun dllmii&amp;C Is Olhl:rs come in bright colors, as a pMMt, be ll aood role
bad siUITiwn. This is alepcy I cumulative o'IV the years1con· suchasbluoorpurple.Notonly model. When you are in the
don't want to pus on to my tin~ sun exposure and ount· nre the bright IXllors fun fur sun, wear 11 brolld brim hat tlnd
daughter. Not only becAuse it's lng further dunages these kids, but they mnlic it easier to sunscreen, too. These tips
painful, but because it can also alrudy weak skin cells. see where the loti011 has bel.m aren't just for kids and llBTCilts
be very hllrmfu.l.
Eventually, lhe d~~m~~gC is so applied. Have yo" ever missed . . but M)'OOO who soends iirne In
Skin cancer is intteasina at gmt that the skin cells cannot tlllit spot on the top of your foot the sun - especially those who
an alanning ntte in the UnTted fuend lind skin cancer devel- only to seen renlly 1'00, swollen work in it all day like fllrmers
and blistel'lld t\1\m in the show- or !Xlnstruction workers.
States. Some estimates suaaest ops.
thllt one in fi~ Americans will
(B!!d:y Colli11s is . Gallia
Giv.:~ your child a legacy of er that eVl!lli"l!1 And take nott~
lfevelop skin c11ncer during Sun safety by helping nim or of the expimuon date on the Coo11ty ~ BxteiiSioo ~~gem for
their lifetime. Yet, it's one of her develop good sun ~­ bottle.. Discanl sunscreen .after jilmily mid ooltsumtr sci·
the most preventable types of tlon habits Wly in lil\i. Here thllt dute.
ellce!:lt-oomrunity ckvelop~~~ent,
CllllCet. Although we common- are a lew ideas to reduce sun
Get your child 11 fun hat with Ol!io Stare Unlverslly.)

c:hlnaed

''SHINE ON''

fi()LZER !E!VI()R OIIRE OEIITER
The names of the people below are the "Stars" that represent the Holzer
Difference at Holzer Senior Care Canter. Their dally commlttmant to caring
for the realdenta have largely contributed to the success of the facility,
which Ia exemplified through exceptional surveys from the Ohio Department
of Health and the Five-Star rating from Haalthgrade, Inc. Aa part of
· celebrating National Nursing Home Week, beginning today May 12th,.
Administrator Tareaa Aemy honora her team of Healthcare aasoclatea who
positively Impact the llvaa of Seniors
In Gallla and surrounding countlea.
.

.

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

=========================
Over

Ita~ &lt;U Ideas about
SUI\ ClqiOSUI'e
0\'tll' lh8
put 20 ~ Wlitlt 1 was a
~ ID b lale 19'10$ utd

Boy,

�C7
't

Hany
fens must walt a little longer Mariah Carey gets own
for more ·news about the boy wizard · label deal after signing
• LONDON (AP) - Fans eagerly
'awaltina what ha~pens next to Harrx
Potter probably wtfl have to wait until
next year.
The fifth Installment In the wildly
.successful series of novels ahout the
:teen-age wizard and his friends had
·been eltpected to fly into stores this
summer, but a spokeswoman ror J.K.
Rowling said Thursday that the author
is unlikely to finish writing before the
end of the yenr.
- Rowling is still working on "Hurrr,
Potier and the Order or the Phoeni~.'
,and it might not be published un,lil
· 2003, spokeswoman Rebecca Salt su1d.
• "It could be this year and it could be
' ne~tt year," Salt said . .
She denied there had ever been a
·specific deadline and rejected an&gt;.: sug:gestlon that Rowllng was suffering
:from writer's block. ·
: However, Rosamund Deluhey. a
·spokeswoman for Bloomsbury pub: Ushen, said the next book still could
'hit ·the shelves later this year. Delahey

with lsland/Def Jam

the novels in the summer since the previous ones have been published in
all her other albums on the
July.
NEW YORK (AP)
Tbe first, "Harry Potter and . the · Mariah Carey, who received label, a division of Sony.
However, Carey became
Philosopher's Stone," published in the
. a $28 million buyout after
United States as "Harry Potter and the
delivering one flop album disenchanted with Sony after
. for Virgin Records, has her divorce from Sony
Sorcerer's Stone," came out in 1997.
signed a new deal with Music President Tommy
The next three followed at the rate of
lsland/Def Jam that includes Mottola, who had $uided her
-one a year.
.
her own label, it was career as prestdent of
There was no book last year, but fans
Columbia.
announced
Wednesday.
were treated instead to the film version
She left Columbia last
The multi-platinum star
of the first installment.
has been without a !'abel year and signed with Virgi.n
Rowling has promised to write a
since
January,- when EMI, m a much-hyped multitotal of seven books, one for each year
Virgin's parent company, album deal reported to be
that Harry spends at Hogwarts School.
dropped her · contract after worth as much.as $100 mil·
The series chronicles .the boy's advenher only disc for the label, lion. Her first disc, "Glitter."
tures at a boarding school for wizards
was to be the soundtrack of
"Glitter," was a poor seller.
as he battles his nemesis, the evil sorher
film project of the same
Since the split, several
cerer Voldemort.
companies were reportedly name, her first starring role.
Britain is gearing up for another bout
However, her career took n
biddmg to sign the Grarnmyof Pottermania'with Friday's video and
disastrous
turn: After diswinning singer, one of the
DVD release of the Potter movie.
most successful artists of all playing erratic behavior in
Experts predict it will be the biggest
time, with hits such as public, Carey was hospital·
seller of all time, smashing the previ"Vision of Love,'' "Hero," · tzed for an emotional break·
ous record held by "Titanic."
down in August. She
"Funtusy" and "Emotions."
"Despite offers from many dropped out of the public
of our comp,etitors, we are eye, and both her disc and
delighted that Mariah has the movie were commercial
chosen Island as the place to failures.
In January, EMI, Virgin's
begin the next phase of her
parent
company, paid $28
unprecedented career," said
million
to void her contract.
Lyor Cohen, president and
Since. she had received $21
CEO of lsland/Def Jam.
· The company is home to million when she was
stars su~:;h us Jay-Z, Willie signed, Carey got $49 mil·
Nelson, Ryan Adams, Ja lion for delivering one
Rule and Ashanti. It is part album.
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Kazan is 62. Country singer K.T.
Blair said Carey was in
of Universal Music Group,
Celebrity birthdays for the week Oslin is 60. Singer-songwriter
~ood
spirits and "doing just
which
is
owned
by
the
conof May 12-18:
.
Brian Eno is 54. Actor Chazz
mcredibly
well."
glomerate
Vivendi
May 12: Actress Katharine Palminteri is 51. Singer Prince Be
He said she was not conUniversal.
Hepburn is 95 . Composer Burt of PM Dawn is 32. Actor David
cerned
that her recent trou·
Carey
has
already
begun
Bacharach is 73. Talk show host Charvet ("Melrose Place") is 30.
b1es
would
hurt her career.
recording her new disc, said
Tom Snyder is 66. Comedian Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler ("The
She
has
a
new film with
Jerry Blair, a former execuGeorge Carlin is 65. Singer Steve Sopranos") is 21.
tive at Columbia Records Oscar-winner Mira Sorvino, ·
Winwood is 54. Singer Billy
May 16: Actor Pierce Brosnan is
who has worked with Carey titled "Wise Girls." The film
Squier Is 52. Actor Gabriel Byrne 49. Actress Debra Winger is 47.
is 52. Country singer Ki1t Brooks Actress Mare Winningham is 43. '• since the inception of her debuted at the Sundance film
festival, and will be shown
career. .
.
of Brooks &amp; Dunn is 47. Actor Singer Janet Jackson is 36. Actress
"The record she's working in the ·fall. on HBO, Blair
Ving Rhames is 41. Actor Emilio Tracey Gold is 33. Actor David
· .
on is going to be a real wide- said.
Estevez is 40. Actor Jason Biggs Boreanaz ("Buffy The Vampire
He said Carey's new label,
appeal record," Blair . told
("American Pie") is 24.
. Slayer," "Angel") is 31. Guitarist
as
yet unnamed, would focus
The Associated Press.
May 13: Actress Bea Arthur is Simon Katz of Jamiroquai is 31.
on
her, but would eventually
''There's no artist who is as
76. Actor Harvey Keitel is 63. Actress Tori Spelling is 29.
successful a ~lobal artist. include other artists. Carey
Actor Franklin Ajaye is 53. Singer
May
17:
Actor-director
Dennis
There
is no arttst that has as has also created a media
Stevie Wonder is 52, Country
Hopper
is
66.
Actor
Bill
Paxton
is
wide. range of commercial company to handle publishsinger Lari White is 37. Singer
47.
Actor-comedian
Bob
Saget
is
ing, fih'l_l production and
appeal."
·
Darius Rucker of Hootie and the
46.
Singer
Enya
is
41.
Musician
.
Blair declined to put a other proJects.
Blowfish is 36. Actress Samantha
Trent
Reznor
of
Nine
Inch
Nails
is
·"Setting
up
this
company
Morton "Sweet and Lowdown") is
financial fi~ure on the new
37. Singer Jordan Knight (New
deal. Carey s spokeswoman for her is really suaranteeing
25.
said the singer would not be her legacy," Blwr said.
May 14: Movie producer Geo~e Kids on the Block) is 32. Actor
Hill
Harper
("City
.of
Angels")
is
•••
Lucas is ·. 58. Musician Davtd
available to comment. ·
29.
On
the
Net:
Carey, 32, was an immediB~rne (Talking Heads) is SO.
May
18:
Actor
Robert
Morse
is
Official Mariah Carey
Dtrector Robert Zemeckis is SO.
ate commercial success
71.
Actor
Dwayne
Hickman
("The
Web
site: http://www.man- ·
when she ·made her selfActor Tim Roth is 41. Guitarist
ahcarey.com
·
Many
Loves
of
Dobie
Gillis")
is
C.C. DeVille of Poison is 40.
titled debut for Columbia
Actress Cate Blanchett is 33. 68. Singer Joe Bonsall of the 0~
Records in 1990. The album
Singer Danny Wood of New Kids Ridge Boys is 54. Keyboardist
went multi-platinum, as did
Rick
Wakeman
of
Yes
is
53.
on tbe Block is 33. Singer Shanice
Country singer George Strait is 50.
is 29,
May 15: Counterculture icon Singer-actress Martika is 33.
Wavy Gravy is 66. Singer Trini· Comedian Tina Fey ("Saturday
Lopez is 65. Actress-singer Lainie Night Live") is 32.

said a British publication date will be
announced as soon as Rowling provides a finished manuscriP,t.
"J.K. Rowling is happtly writing a
new book, and we anticipate publishing later this year," she said.
Meanwhile, Judy Corman -spokeswoman
for · New
York-based
Scholastic, which publishes the Potter
books in the United States .;,__said she
e~pects the fifth installment to come
out during its 2003 fiscal year, which
begins in June 2002.
·
''There is a process, once we get it in
house, or editing, desil!ning the coyer
and getting it on the pnnting presses,"
Corman said. "I understand her fans
are eager, as we are, but J. K. Row ling
writes substantial books, and they are ·
not turned out as small novellas. Her
lust book was over 740 pa~es."
Bookshops around Bntam have been
inundated with calls from people eager
to find out when they can get their
hands on the next book.
Potter fans are used to snapping up

•

CELEBRITY NEWS

That Was the
Week That Was
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Entertainment highlights during the
week of May 12-18:
In 1955, a riot broke out at an Elvis
. Presley concert in Jac~sonville, Fla. It was
the· first time trouble wus reported at one ·
of his concerts.
In 1963, Bob Dylan refused to appear on
"The Ed Sullivan Show" because CBS
would not allow him to sing "Talking John
, Birch Society Blues."
In 1971, Mick Jagger married Bianca
Perez Morena de Macias In St. Tropez, .
France. They are now divorced.
. In 1980,-Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes
of The Buggies joined the rock band Yes.
They replaced Jon Anderson and Rick
Wakeman.
In 1985, Bruce Springsteen and actress
Julianne Phillips got married in Oregon on
her blnhday. They divorced in 1988, and
Springsteen later married his backup
singer, Patti Sciulfn. · .
In 1988, Michael Jackson made the lop
of The New York Times best-seller list
with his autobiography, "Moon walker." .
In 1996, actress Melanie Griffith mar·
rled actor Antonio Bnnderas In London.
In 1997, Sylvester Stallone married
Jennifer Flavitt in London.
In 1998, the last episode of "Seinfeld"
aired on NBC.
.
Also in 1998, the last episode of
"Murohy Brown" aired on CBS.
.
In 1000, Prince announced he was dropping the unpronounceable symbol for his
name and going back to being called
Prince .

Celebrity Birthdays

Outd0015:·Arctic Clrlbou
KIANA, Alaska (AP)- It
was early September but
already the Spolll)' tundta
was draped in reds end rusts
while trees Unina the Kobuk
River wore showy yellows
and aotds.

Dartime highs wete runnina In the 40s and the chlll,
wind-whipped rain unen•
ingly found the seams in 0111'
layers of cold-weather aear.
It was full autumn in the
Arctic, and hundreds of
thousands of caribou from
the · Western Arctic herd
were on the move, migratina
from their' calving grounds
in Northwest Alaska to their
winter range hundreds of
miles to the South. It's by far
the largest barren ground
caribou migration in Alaska.
Like their predecessors
through the ages, the .animals were running a huge
gantlet, tcying to dod$e the
grizzly bears,
ttmber
wolves, and subsistence and
sport hunters who lined in
walt.
They were moving in
bands numbering from three
to 300. They'd emerge sud-

dcoly ftom the trees, hoo~
ICI'QSS the rocty
bus before piWI&amp;ina into !he
water.
You didn't Med blnocu.lus on this hllllt; yau simply
needecl ears. Cll'i.bou hlve
hollow-hair hides end lazae,
concave hoOves · ~ ect as
paddles. They swim h!Ab
and fast. The.ii antlcn. in sllhouette resemble the forks
of a spiny tne when the
limbs divida from the trunk.
Caribou are the only member of !he deer family whele
both sexes arow antlen.
Some of the bulls carry
racks .so large that the_y
extend fully down thcu
backs when they lift their
heads to
This time of
year, the bulls are as showy
as the vegetation. Their
1111tlen are rubbed he of
velvet and the white r,inas on
their necks and rumps aleam
through the mists of a dwindling day!~'ht.
.
The Inu at Eskimos who
make up ·s land. about 30
miles north of the Arctic
Circle, rely on caribou me.at
to carry them throuah the

clltteriJia

snort.

~· hllsh winteA. Enlile
fllllilies wait bl their skiff$
Ilona the sbclreliDe of the
KobUk River for the animals
to -wart their WI)' into the
water before cllaoSina those
they need for their lardeft.
It's all business for the$e
Sllbsistence' hunws. who
aenorally bri.na home
enou4" meat !0 Satisfy the
PfOt"lll reqwrements of
ev• 'liiO in the roaclless viJ..
Jq, ~ That includes ~live
elden arown too frail to
hunt.
Visitors obsCNin&amp; the
Marquis of Queensbur1
rules of sport huntina - f&amp;~r
chase - II)' to guess were
the animals will cross and
wait for them there.
Caribou are stout animals.
An av~ bull weiahs anywhere from 3.50 to 400
pounds. Most females run
anywhele from .17.5 to 22.5
pounds. That's a lot of cholesterol-free meat on the
hoof.
Alaska has more than 30
ftee.ranging caribou herds,
numberina about a mlllion
animals.

. .J

:Outdoors: Big-Tree Hunters
MOUNT
RAINIER
NATIONAL PARK, Wash.
(AP) - His friends call him
Lorax, after the Dr. Seuss char. acter who battles to save the
forest, but Robert Van P\!lt just
, sees himself as a guy whose
, favorite pastime is hunting for
• bilz trees.
, ~I'm what you rniaht call a
mutant," Van Pelt says.
. ''n'eehunting is more of an
. obSessio!l than a hobby."
Van Pelt, a research associ·
.:,ate in forestry ecology for the
·'University of Washiniton and
: Evergreen State CoUege, is
• one of many IRe nuts whose
idea of agood time is trelckin&amp;
miles into a forest to find the
next big tree.
"There are some tree hobby·
lsts that make it their goal simply to find the bluest tree just
to satisfy their ctirl01ity," 111)'1
Nate S~nson, a ~
ecoloaiat ror the United Slllel

foot sequoia in California's

Sequoia National Park.
Nicknamed
''General
Sherman" in 1879, the slant
sec:t'K!ia is about 30 feet across at 1ts base.
Van Pelt aot hooked in 198.5,
when he left Wisconsin to the Pacific Coast's forests .
While working in the Olympic:
National Park, he learned ~
Washlnaton had the worid's
largest lcnown grand .fir almost 7 feet in diameter and
231 feet tall. But when he
found the tree, it was dead.
That led Van Pelt to c:oordi·
1111e a Washington State Big
Tree Registry, where the
dimensions of the siate's A MAN AND Hll TRD biaest and tallest trees. as Reeearcher and hobbylet
weJI II the finder's illlne, 1111 Robert Vlln Pelt Ia dwarfed
by a 500.Ytti'Oid, :aee-toot
llated.
Besld11 his reaearch In ooualaa fir In the northwttt
Wuhinaton van Pelt'• work oorntr of Mount Rtlnltr
hu t11ctn
all over the National Park In wunlnaton.
United
to Cwda 11111 Vln Ptlt,t trt•huntlnl
even Auatralla, · whiJI he tntiiUIIIIt WhO rtiUitrl~
•Oeolostcal SliMy.
: Peoj)le have ilwaya been recenUy camped out in IIII'Chll out apeolmtna of
: lntoreated In bla tree~. Tilt Tumarila'a NClOid ~ vtr~ larll or old lf'Owtha,
, . 01111 It 'Mollblckar.' (AP)
: world'a Jaraeat ttw II a 275- tree, which 111111\ll'ld

him

s•

Outdoors: Wolf Versus Wolf
FAIRBANKS. Al&amp;U:a (AP) t'IHOo what ll wute," said Paul
-1-Jke the towists who lMlpt Joslin. elttclltl'Ve di~ of
to see them, ~ in Denlli the Altl.\ko. wtldli~ Allloce.

National Put and Prtiefve in 11 eutou lQ the Sllnwi!II'Y
wolves.
·
10-Wildlife
blok!tl~t
Guldoo
The averaae llfb ~
cy for • wolfln Denalihrt Is Haber, whQ hll tm.ted
tliree yews. About l QU&amp;l'ler w~ in Denali Pvtt fur the
of the approJtima.tely 100 l1sl 345 years · tlnd whQse
wolves. thO.t inh.o.btt the 6-mil· reseudl: is 1\lnded by the ani·
lion ac:re park die each yellf, mo.l-ril,hts &amp;roup ~ of
They starve. They aet Animlils, ulle:d · 11\e duth
kicked b1 moose. They ·~cto.ble.'' ·
Both Htlber o.nd Jl»..in
drown In rivers. They ·tet
$Colded tht p8l'k servi~ for
buried in avalanches.
Tho number one cause of allowfn&amp; ant:~ther po.cl: Qf
death for Donali Plitt wolvu. waives to be wi(!Qd ®1,
though, is ~l)all Park whld\ ru~~ pri~ \'iewina
wolves. You mlaht ~ it's ll opportuntlles for tourists 11nd
wolf-eat-wolf wQrld. Of the valuable researdl oppottunl·
20 to 2S wolves that die ellch tics for sciontlsts.
Thoy used the de11th Qf the
yelll' in the. p&amp;l'k; about half
last
Sall(tUIIr)' wolf tiS ll rt\lly·
are killed by Olher woh•es,
"We've lit~d sevo.ral pllC}:s in&amp; cry for " bift« ntwumt·
die out due to stllrllation or i!'a and ntrtfllppin&amp; buffer
boina killed off by other th11t would protkl wulves
wolves." bioloai&amp;~ Layne t'i'om wanderina outside the
Adams. who heads the p!ll'k's northetl.\t 1.'00\e.r of the park
wolf research proanun. said. where they W'l:l lll¥111 &amp;time for
"By and huge the most trappers and huntttS in tho
important factor when it ncllrby oonununilies t:~f Healy
comes to wolf mortality in and Denali Park, which sit on
the non.hem boundru-y Qf the
the j)W'k is other wolves.
"In any given year in park.
The Alaska Boord of Game
Denali t1 wolf ht~s four tim!IS
l11st
year esttiblished u \lOthe chance of being I:Uild by
~other wolf than a tropper Ot squt~ie-mile no-hunting. natropplna nrea northe11st of the
hunter."
Yet, when the lnst·known pttrk tt:l protect the Toklnt
momber of the Sonctuu.ry Puck, but nnimul protktion
wolf pKk WIIS klliOO in D trap groups 11ttcndiog n recent
· just outside the pw-k 's north· Boord of Oumo m®tini in
east boundacy thls spring, the
state's wolf wntchdoss
howled in protest.
The Sanc:tuory wolves •
11lona with the Eust Fork or
Thklat Pack. were the only
two pucks thut were reaulurly
seen by thousnnds of tourists
who trove! into Alt1sk11's must
famous park each yelll'.
· The Sanctuary Pack wus
wiped out due to several factors. The male leader of the
pack was killed by moose
and the alpha female w11s
killed two months IIIIer after
being
tranquilized
by
researchers. Two of the three
remaining pups disappeared
· and the last pup, a 22-month·
old female wearina a radio
collar, was the one oauaht In
CQI'M end

a

atr~.

-"Por the price of a pelt or

•

•

:Rolling Stones announce yet another world tour

.J

~

.

.

.

.

NEW YORK (AP) - The concert trade magazine.
Jagger about a 1972 com- get tickets to see them."
your body.
Rolling Stones staged an
"Any year that they have ment - made "a couple of
Bongiovanni said unlike
;eye-popping specta~le that toured, they have produced years after I was born," she some aging rock bands, the
•drew fans and medta from the biggest tour of that year," noted - that he would Stones are able to outsell
rather die than still be more contemporary bands
:around the globe- and they said Bongiovanni.
:haven't even gone on tour
This time around, the band singing "Satisfaction" at age because of "their ability to
still stay vibrant and not be a
:yet.
will play clubs as well as 40.
"How old are you going to classic rock act that just goes
The rockm, whose tours stadiums and arenas.
'have been among the top•
Jag~er, Keith Richards, be and when are you going through the motions for a
•. ~ .: aroMins~ , conctr~s . ,- &amp;.11-Ct,--.-C h~rhe Wall~an!!,.RQn,Wood to _get slcb,~f.!t?':!--•he nskedc .... great. payday.!!-- -~
"Who knows if we're
Tour promoter Mtchael
;announced another Jaunt looked as if they were havgoing
to
do
'Satisfaction'
on
Cohlsaid
tickets for the first
:around the world in ing plenty of fun even before
IIATIHIU tAT I - 1:10 I 1:10
·arandiose fashion Tuesday, the news conference began. this tour?" retorted the 58- few dates will go on sale this
week. Prices .will range from .
:circling New York's sprawl· The foursome' boarded the year·old.
About
300
fans
turned
out
$50
to $100.
:lng Van Cortlandt Park in a blimp at the park and circled
for
a
chance
to
see
!he
legAmong
the opening acts:
yellow blimp emblazoned the area for about IS minutes
endary band, which formed Sheryl Crow, No Doubt,
with their red tongue trude- before landing.
·
Buddy Guy and Jonny Lang.
!mark;
They had even more fun at in 1962.
: "We had a very Interesting the news conference, crack"I wanted to be able to say
. ~rat-time experience on the i ng jokes as reporters asked' that I saw their blimp come
:airship," Mlck Jagger sold questions. .
down," said . Kathleen
:after emerging from the
When one asked if they Wieblack, who came from
blimp. ;.We had a really would do any songs from the suburban Long Island to the Yltll QUI Wfll Sill to gill hllult!M·
,goo(l time on it."
·past, Richards said: ''The set BronK.
www.tlghlhou••••mllly.lnto
; The tour, their first since list is a bit down the road. It
"I've seen the last three
LlfhlhouM A111mbly of God
•their top-grossing 1999 tour, just depends if we can tours," said Richard Bell,
Stall ROUII110
who traveled from upstate
:will mark the band'a 40th remember them.''
:anniversary. lt will kick off
One reporter reminded New York. "Hopefully I will
:on Sept. ~ in Boston.
I \'Ill hM.,.., l!lljar ............. "11-ll ....... " ..........,.. so
· When uked why the band
fll.n, 122.11 , _ . wol lilt !'Ill• FE ,....lV ..,.IMIII' 1111
wu headinJ out once again .
IIIII FE 811cPrll Iaiii Nullion IM8II' 1111~ lhol'u1218 ..... IIIII o
- they haven't even begun
,.. prlco ...... ~··•IMitl
:workina on new material for
;the album - Jagger joked:
·"Either we stay at home and
become pillars of the com·
munity, or we go out and
lour. We couldn't really find
any 4.:ommunitie1 that still
. needed pillar•."
· The tour is expected to
rake in millions of dollars.
The Stones already hold the
record for the highest-grost·
ing concert tour ever with
(740) 288-7413
· -............... - .•...
their 1994 tour, whi.ch
1-866-660-5600
---~- .
~---~-~. ---,.......
brouJht In Sl21.2 million,
~------~-·
,.....r..-......,
..11,....
...
... ,..................
,.._ ..
,__,flllllllllllo....,_,
....
,......,_...
-. .... - 116111111_
_............
_ ..JINIIIII ......
according · to
Gary
..,..._
. Bongiovanni of Pollstar, a

c"" .-,

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.
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'

117!

Ohio Valley Christian School •s Kindergarten offers parents:
A Biblical-foundation for learning
Outstanding phonics-based reading program
.Positive social interaction.

Special 25th Ann'v••UJ Da.coaat

2002·2003 Kl•dergartea
students receive a 25" &amp;co•••t
oa taldon (aave $740).
Tht Ohio Vlllley ChNtlln 8cllool rtCI\lb lind ldmlll Rldlntl olll!y ,_, oolor. or tlhnlc ~ to II
,_. ~IJQM, 1"19••-. llld IIOMiu. In ~t 1, tht ICiiaGf -MI not~ an 1M blelt
_,, oolor, or llhnlc origin In thtlldtl*illli1lou 11111 .cluc~t;c 1111"19.,. lind etiMiicaleldrlioulltoiNr
ICIMIIM. Fur1htliilllll, lt.IChocll II not lnlliidld 10 ~ 111 llllmllvl to court or «&lt;mlnlilhiiYIIIQIIIC)I
ordnd, or PliJIJc ICiiaGf ~ lnNIIItd ~

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

�'
'.

,.....,.

Inside:

hwbq G..· Jeidhcel

••

Classified uds~ Pages D2~

BOOK REVIEW

Page D1

David Brock disavovvs the right's stuff

Sund.y. ~ 12. 2002

•
•

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
MON. TUI. W!D.

11nk OM

THU.

FRI.

3ue

Boblv•n•

I

City Holding

·18.82

19.20

II).~

10

· · IN CHARGE- Jeff Cox practices his swing at Indian Creek Golf off U.S. 35 between Centerville and Rio Grande. Cox
has recently been named gener.al manager of the operation, owned by Steve Betz and open for the season since April.
(Kevin Kelly)

Indian Creek Golf gets new manager

Gannttt

A trio of books for armchair sailors
&lt;

BY KEVIN KILL\'
KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GKNL.V

CENTERVILLE - Jeff Cox, a
longtime fixture of the local bowling
scene, found in recent years he also
had a liking for golf.
·
That and his association with Indian
Creek GOlf has led to a new job for
the Gallipolis-area resident - as
Indian Creek's general manager.
Cox wlll mana~e Indian Creek's
driving range, mimature golf and pro
shop for owner Steve Betz. as Betz
ursues his other business interests,
r.ncluding billboards and auctioneering. For Cox, who's helped Betz with
the range's o~ration for the last sev·
eral summers in addition to 13 years
helping operate Skyline Lanes, the
new positron fits as well as a pair of
golfing gloves.
"In the summertime, golf is the big
thing,'' he said. "It's a great thing for
kids to do, to come out and play
miniature golf, hit11olf balls and learn
to play. And I enJOY working with
people because I'm a people person."
Working at Skyline, Cox. discov·

.

Itt NOMMN N. lhowN

~

and vlrtuou&amp; man
IIP.plltd ln~lllaet\llt
11Stlktrk'a ·lllanch The and lnilustry to allevlatt
True
and
Straqt his lonellntss while he was
Advtnturee ot the Ral stranded on an bland for
Robln1on
. Cruaot" more than 20 ~an.
(Harcourt, 2•6 paps, $2•)
Hla real· life model,
by D111n1 Souhllmf. ·
Aluander Selkirk, was 11
• 11'fhe Jtoatl~ Brotllelt boorish, violent and untd•
The Extraordinary Trut ucated drunk. He waa
tory or Ill EJahtetftth• abandoned In t704 on Juan
C:antur)' Ship and Ita Fernandet, a tiny laltnd
Carp
or Female 300 miles ·west of CbUt,
C:onvtcta" (Hyperlon, 236 11fter 1111\ltrlll violent quarpqes, $23.9!) by Sliin rels with the eaptaln ofThe
Reu.
Cinque Purts, the &amp;hlp on
"The VO)'IIt or the which he wa&amp; aorvlna.
C:etalpat A Ptrtloua . Four yean of hardshfp ·
Journe1 and Six lrlall whllt mwoned . did llttlo
Rebtla
Eacape
to to Improve him morally or
freedom" (Carroll ' A ·phlloaophlcally.
Oraf, 39t pqea, $26) by
Souhaml
aucclnctl~
Peter F. Sttvena ~
deacrlbea Selklrk'allft anil
"'
~onalltr, and narrates In
The sea, Ita ahlpa 11\d Its · rich detal how cnndltlona
aallon are vlalted In each were aboard ship In the
of three new and worth· 18th century: It wan l\ard1
while nonftotlon booka.
&amp;hllatly life overshadowea
In "Selkirk'&amp; bland," l'ly the ever-present flak of
Brltlah author Diana death. Yet men continued
Souhaml puta II poetic to ao to ..., . fuelud by
rocua on the story of the hopea of plunaerlftl f'llbled
man who Inspired Daniel Spanish treaaure aalleona.
Defoe's nctloul castaway, Few ever found wealth.
Roblnaon Crusoe.
Selkirk shipped out
Crusoe waa a naturally qaln from Bnaland a few
1'011 AP Wlllt~Y NAl\IIIH

WhO

yean tl\er t~tlna rt&amp;Cued
tmd died at &amp;ea at 4L
Soullaml, wht' &amp;1*\t three
month$ on Juan Ftmandta1
wtltt&amp; lJIP.ftClltlwly lna
lyrically about It&amp; beauty
and aolltudt, lts flOfii lind
fltuna, and It&amp; his~.
"Tht FIOiltlftl Brothtl"
Is about the Lidy Julllln,
which, In July 1'789Lut
aal\ from Bn.lland far NIW
South
Wile&amp;
(now
Auatralla) with 240
women who .had been
found aullty of mostly
Pllt!Y crimea.
Oreal Brltah\, which
lona had Ill\ lnefftGtive
penal ayatem, found a w11
to prevent overorowdlftl
Ita prlaana: ship felons to
Ita colonlea. ln[tlally, oon·
viet&amp; were aent to America,
but !hit atoDDICl after the
United Stites became
Independent.
Abortive
attempta were made to
aend convicts to Africa.
Later, the land Down
Under, which had been
qpened by Capt. Jamea .
Cook and other explorera,
seemed Bnaland'a btat
aolutlon' to rid It of Its
crlmlnala.

All

L1nd11!nd

"M1 _..,."' loulllttft tMIIo or Wilt Wfllnle 101M • •
,.,. tflllet tl fM IIIIINt Mllnf. Cllut, . . . INft fO lltlpM
'Tilth ~~ btclltlvt blttlliOI, Communily ~ All'f\C~
• Raaumt and JOb lnttNitw
training
prepar•tlon
• Atlocltloro Ullttancl • TUition 1111atanct
Within N IIIII of Ol'llo • Tl'lvtl relmburaemant
•.Car rapalr IMIIIInct
tmplo~ant

taiii..Mtlte•

, , . , 441 1011

MII M

P!iQ.NIHII

11M .._llllpiiiMI!IIf

Dtnln L.. Marlin

(7• ) lla.nn~c;;-~~~:~.:~~·~·~·~·~·~

•

hart

.....

Windy'•

37.75

3?.ea

· 31.48 · · 37.8&lt;4

FREE!
Cookbook

FREE!
Cookbook
When
youQet
your free

hearlno
test In
May at •••

Advanced Hearing Center
1122 Jackson Pike • Sprin8 Valley Plaza • Gallipoli~·. Ohio

Call (740) 441·1971 Ior

-

434-4194
J

'

.

.: '

Avoid these common ·
-investment mistakes

............
I

"

.------. ''There's still a lot
of room for growlh
in this area in the
golfing Industry. ·
The Interest In the
game is sllll very
good."
industry," said Betz. "The interest in
the game is still very good."
Indian Creek generally opens in
April and is in operation until
October. Currently, its hours, Monday
. through Sunday, are 2 p.m. until dusk
on weekdays and noon until dusk on
weekends. The driving range is open
all day with a coin-operated ball dispenser.
:
Betz advised that expanded hours
are possible as daylight becomes
longer, "and if the weather cooperates."
·
More details on Indian Creek are
available by calling 245-5747.

Buy mom flowers

Have you for~otten a
gift for Mother s Day?
Redeem yourself with a
gift of plants, whether it
be a hanging basket,
perennial plant, potted
plant, shrub, tree or flat
of annuals.
.
Local retailers are
stocked with a wide
GUESTVIEW
assortment of plants.
Most moms would also into the air when they
'appreciate .some help in dry out and land on the
the digging up the flower apple leaves. lnfe~tion
bed or hole for the shrub takes only six hours.
or tree. Remember that Severe infestations will
proper preparation of the cause excessive leaf drop
You may think that the fate
planting site is probably and adversely affect tree
of your Investments probably
the second most impor- growth
and ·yield.
hinges on the whims of .the
tant
ltell\
for
plant
surControl
measures
mnrket. But that's not strictly
vlval, the most Important include cutting down
the case. By avoiding some
is buying a healthy plant. wild red cedar plants,
common mistakes, you can go
Amend the soil with planting disease-resistant
Amy
a lona way toward lnetelli!lng
organic
matter (peat trees or spraying crabapyour chalice~ for ·long-term
Buwman·Moore
moss, leaf mulch, aged 1 pies and apple trees with
su~.:ess .
mariure, aged sawdust). funginex.
.. ·
· Of course, everyone makes
GUEST VIEW
Make sure the site is well
Note that many other
Investments that, ror one rea·
drain«;d. Choose the right trees, especially oaks and
son or nnother, just don't
'plant for the 'site' keeping maples may have galls
. work out. You may not be portfolio.
in mind, does the plant growing on them. If the
able to prevtnt that type of
• Don't try to "time" the
"mistake." But there are plen· market. If you always knew
like sun or shade, does it galls are on the leaves,
ty of steps you can .take to when to "buy low and sell
prefer soli that is wet or. normally little needs . to
avoid slsnlficatit errors. high," then you'd undoubted- 1 ry, and Is the plant short be done as the gall does
Consider these suggestions:
or tall?
not hurt the plant, it just
ly become rich. But nobody
• Don't chase performance. can relllly predict when the
•••
has strange looking
We'd all like to own those market - or even an lndlvld·
.'' Jlav6 you noticed on leaves.
"hot" stocks - the ones that ual stock - bas reached a
our eastern red cedar
However, galls on
suddenly take off and clll'ry peak or valley. Therefore, It ·
eally a ·juniper) falls branches may need to be
the promise of blaaalns In Itt• makes little sense to base an
'With
orange/ye low pruned off, thus reducing
tie tlme. Yet, by the time most investment strateiY on efforts
aelatlnous
arm-like the possible infestation
people tum thelr attention to a to time the market. You'll do
structures
projecting
of more branches and
so-called hot stock, lt may flit better by "dollar•COIIIvef•
from
them?
This
is
the
trees. A local resident
already be coollna off. Instead aalna" - that ts, puttina In
aall of the cedar apple asked for iden,tification
of ehas.lna these supposed slz· the same llfiiOUnt of money, at
rust fungus1The brightly of the horned gall on a
zlets, look for aOOd, solid
colored aqns are really pin o1k tree. This gall
stocks that fit welt Into your
,
the sporehorns which was form....
a
apread when dry the two-year life cycle of a
cedar-apple rust spores tiny wasp. If in doubt,
HIYII bualneaa MWtltem? .
onto the alternative host bring a sample into the
tree leaves of crabapp.les Meigs County Extensio11
Glw .. I Cllllt (1.0) 448-2142, Gt. 21
and apples.
office. lust remember to
The fun1us spores float label the sample and

INVESTING

jill I

___

Pl'lll"'ltt

• EdiiOltlon and

DISH!

W!f
!!~-~r.~e; ~.:=

150.93

(iJ Col'nnldV Aallon may .. 1111110 '*P wllh:

Clncer

pllrformlna frequent skin
checks, and vlaltlna your doctor. r.aullll'ly.
For mort lnformlltlon,
ftomPqiCI
please coll,tact your health
11!1 akin cancen, wrlnkllna, care provider or tile 011\la
blotohlnl! · and prtmature Coilnly Health Department at
181!18 Of lhe lkin,
I
7~1 ·29SO.
Overall, bolh forma of UV
(DH1111tJ l'oPf Is a p11blic
Gill have h11t111ful eff'ecta 11\d
itNrtt at tht OtJIIIa
may not become vlalble for ~IIlith
CON/tty
Hffllllt Dfpartmtllt.)
many yem. Many believe
that tannlna becla are aate.
Sun tampa and tannlna beda
ahould alao be avoided
becauae they alve off ulttavl·
.,olet 11pht that can lncreue the
rlak o akin cancer.
Now that we know how to
protect ounelvea from the
aun'a dll'llqlna ~·· we alao
muat learn hOw to examine
our lkln to Improve chancea
ot prevention. It Ia Important
to bl aw~~:t~ of birthmark•,
molea 111&lt;1 blemlahea 10 that
you know what they look like
ind recoanlze If any chanaea
occur. We noecl to examTne
our entire body, lncludlna
acalp and between our toea I
sran• to look for are
chanaea In &amp;Ill, texture,
ahape, and color of blomlahoa
or a aore that dooa not heal. IF
you find any chanaea, see
~our health care provider.
s22'1'1
AIIO, durlna reaulllt chock·
upa, uk your doctor to check
your akin.
Skin cancer can be prevent·
~=
a
eel. Do not toraet to lake the
aDDIODI'Iate 1111p1 to prevent
tlifa d'eadly dlaeaae by wear·
Ina dry protective clothlna,
·applylnaaunacroen reaularly,

llo.32

ered numerous bowlers also played
golf.
·
· "It was my bowling buddies who
talked me into trying golf. in facl, the
first time I ever played was while I
was attending a bowling tournament,"
he said.
·
In addition to managing the ran~e,
Coli. said he would set people up wtth
golfing lessons with Betz and lend a
hand in that direction himself.
"I'll help anyone l can help in
learning to play," Cox said.
ln its pro shop, Indian Creek offers
Taylor-made and other manufactured
clubs, new and used. Custom club fitting is also available, as well as
regrlpplng and reshaping.
The addition of Cox is another step
in Indian Creek's expansion since its
opening in September 1995. Over the
rears, Indian Creek has gone beyond
tis original shooting range to include
the .5,000-square-foot pro shop and
miniature golf.
"There's still a lot of room for
growth in this area in the golfing

Hal
Kneen

leave a name, address
and phone number to
contact you. For further
information on cedar
apple rust, ask for
Extension fact sheet
3024 by calling 992·
6696.

•••

Are you lo~king to
develop income · from
your field and forest
land? Plan to attend the
fourth - .,.. -, annuah
Landowners Conference
being held June 8 and 9
at Camp Oty·Okwa in
Hocking Hills. This twoday event includes work~
shops covering agriculture, land stewardship,
herbs and business
development.
Topics
include
." L i v e s t o c k
Management," "Basic ·
Beekeeping," "Organic
Farming," "Specialty
Crops,"
"Wild
Stimulated Ginseng."'
"Specialty Mushrooms,"
"Orcharding Basics,''
"Chicken
Tractor
Basics," "Praising the
Pawpaw" and many m.;&gt;re
in small business de vel opment.
Cost is $9' pei: person
and includes registration,
five meals, and lodging ·
in bunkhouses. For more ·
information
contact
Rural Action at 767-2090
or
forestry@ruralac·
tion.org.
·.
(Hal Kneen is Meigt •·
CountyOs
Extension
agent for agriculture
and natural resources,
Ohio
State
University.)

No roses .in
first-quarter
returns
BY DIAN VUJOVJCH
NEWSPAPER EDUCATION
ASSOCIATION

The fund performance
numbers are ·out and the
picture they painl is apretty bland one.
According to Lipper, the
average stock fund was
0. 78' percent for the first
quarter of 2002. While
that's nothing to crow
about, far more of the var·
ious fund types scored
positive rather than negative returns. And that's
good news.
Top performers among
U.S. Diversified Equity
Funds were the small-cap
value funds; they were·up
on average 8.7 percent. .
Behind them were midcap value funds, up 6.39 ·
percent. The biggest losmg category? Mid-cap
growth funds. They were
off on average 3.86 percent.
Move into the Sector
Fund arena and it was natural resources funds that
lead the way. Of the 76
funds making up that category, the average performance of those funds was
a positive 11 .27 percent.
The biggest loses among
Sector Funds were
telecommunication funds
-down well over 18 percent. As for the average
tor Feild, it was down
.2 percent.
If you'd started the year
by investing in any World
Equity Funds, kudos to ·
you. The average fund in
,. ................ 11

.'

�D2 • i&gt;an~ap Q:imef -iotntinrl

====Pomtf'o:::;~y~·~M~Idd:leport=~·~~~~Ohlo Point PleeHnt, WV -=====;n~~~-ll~1~·m~tf~·~IN~nl~ln~ri;•~~~D3~

H'
Hw.wAN'Im I~r·~Har~..
f ~tt

W.·:\NI1D-_.J ._..Ha.P-·w.·---··1111P-·W·i\N11111--

•S.

or

E

Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

!
r

Includes
Up To
over 15
Ads

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

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. ATTENTION: Pallento ot Dr. ohlp Queen's Pageonl. All
Uoonllght EI!Corts. Full ~n~ ~:~~~:7tv~y;::: ~~n. E~~p~f r~el::soh~
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ancl ProfNiional ard ConH· coronary Artery Olaeaae, day June 8
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Pantoo.
6pm·
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bites and Ant~oagutotlon.
Our office onoro on otto X·
Why wall? Start mooting Ray, EKG, Ultrasound of
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frtt 1-800-766·2623 ext Telling, and Coronary Ar·

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Call
r;,fonna·
tlon and entry packet
"Note: This pogeant Is noi
affiliated with tho Scipio
Townohlp Firemen's Feotl·
'llln any way.

r

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F nd· M I Sabi..Whh
s:ttle In ~~moray are:
Call to Identify &amp; PaY lor ad.
74().992-7761

"EA""'

Heart Monitoring. 24 Hour
Blood Preoourt Monitoring,
Streao Echo- EKG Compre- 2 sheep, 4ucata. 5 rabbhl,
• honolve Lob Testing on lrtt to good homoo. call of·

Buy, Sell or Trade
. In the

CLASSIFIEDS!

Slle For Appointment Con· ter 6:00 or leave measage.

kiUena:

In Memory

to the sweetest
Mother that ever

special place In our
there for us ·no
· matter what. We
mills and love her
very much.

In Memory of

Wilma
Maxine
Houck

MaeDunt
on
Mother'• Day
4-l6-l4 • 3-3·99
Although we

"'-· t- ?MI4

Would Uketol!lve our

Jtan of pla:YIDI buketbaD, LMI
nera bad oeorecl :W polnta
veryllnlpmo. her
pmoumelhll
Wubialtoa wltb
polaU. S.. ba

HE ONLY TAKES
THE BEST
God saw she was .

geUing tlfed, and a
cure was nollo he.

So he pul His arms
around her, and

. whispered,

polalltlal7

"Come with

work

me".

With lear·filled eyes
we watched her,
suffer and !aile
away. Allhoulli we
loved her deeply, we
could not make

her llay.

Happy Ad

A colden heart
stopped healln1,

To Lori Hockman ·
lumpo, b,..IHo, 1ncl olltdr... too. Whot.,er

thanks and

apprtdallon to
everyone who tent

ame rour wa,y, you made lllhrou&amp;h. The
woman yaa ..-e. 10111e only with to be~
.

Gradulll"' &lt;011... ot 1 ~ .... moehtr or three.
Mol"' d....,_.. t""' thet 7.., doolnd. 1r
1'* only kntWiht meny thllyoo"velnoplnd.
· lelt w1lhet ll whet we' rt•ndlq JOUr
~..,

••J•

your1radulllon •net lllppr
Molher'oDorl

"" dtt{ &amp;

eltt... .

'""'"'..,,,...,,

ACUTII
AT4

ANDA
I:D.&amp;.L

A

HAPPY

BIRTHDAY
MARII

10 BUY

US

01c1. r....

BrittAny a. Brett

n you

"""

C~rrtno

Children and

GrandchUdren

MOTHER
.

THERE IS NO LOVE LIKE AMOTHER'S LOVE,
SO BRIGliT SO PURl! AFLAME.
mERE IS NO SWEETI!R SOUND ON EARTH
AS HER BELOVI!D NAMI!.
THERE IS NO SUNSHINE LIKE HF-R SMILE,
NO ARMS LIKE HI!R'STO HOLD.
NO TOUCH SO TENDER AND SO DEAlt.

, NO HI!ART or PURER GOLD., ·
GOD TOOK THE SUNSHINE FROM mE SKIJI.S

AND MADE mE LOVE LIGHT IN HER EYES,
PROM HEAVENLY FLOWERS HE TOOK THE DEW
AND MADE HER TEARS liNS;EL.;;EPIS
BVHJILTTR,Ut
UPON AROCK HI!R PAlm n 1
WITH ANGEL PIIAYI!Rli HI!R iiREAm HE nu,w,
AND Wlm HIS LOVE MADE HI!RS DEVINE
BUT BF.ST OF ALL, HE MADE HI!R MINE.

THE MI.W RED SMALl. FAMILY

11ft

PlfiOnl

"''

lm....,'·""
.,....,,.,.
full-time
cuatomer .
. .rvlct """ltlon
.. -

opening• In our
main OftiC.,
Succnaful
applicant. muat
bt people
Orftnltd, tnjoy

Ralph Durst

S-12-12 • S·S·OO

Happy Birthday

Dad!
Sadly mlued by
Children and
Grandd.ildren

The Board of Park Commlssionera of the 0.0 .

Della Ann
Newland

his

on

on..,1 wanlttl- 23 or ofd. conaldlrttlon,
.~r. drug ooroon, nc COL, 1 tllnd
OOOd drMng reocn:t, hHith I'
~111 avoilablo, paid va·
'Oitlon, cal t·BOP·Mt-81113.

thrH (3) reltr.ncH to Mra.

l'lrk Dlltrlcl

In Loving
Memory Of

In Memory of

Thlsls our second
Mother's Day
without you. We
miBII your humor
and your wl!ldom.
Not a day 1oe1 by
without Ul thlnkln1
about you. We feel
you watc:hlna over
us, be with

........

ua alwaya.

...... AN,.
~. ·r~u4 ~

Help Wanted

HEAD COOK
NEEDED
'11111 openlD&amp; II ICJI'm .,..._ potlUou.
Experlmu preferred, We an a 70 bed ioal-teral
· c:an nunln&amp; I.CWiy. U you an qualllled, pleue
apply In penon 111
Holzer Senior Care Center

Happy
Mother'• Day,
Mom
Sadly mi,..d by

10

would llko to mako I of Varloul ooclo....... mlo

In Memory

380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

'=====::':":-:::"'::':':'-="'=====

-

Help Wanted

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANTS NEEDED
II you are a Slltte 'Jated Nunln&amp; AulalaDt loolllai
for ,.n.·llme employment, we banaa ap
for
you. Wt are I 70 bed loaa•term tare lllll'liDI
ladllty dtdleated to quaUty ean fCJI' our noldmllt.

d"'

Pleut apply In penon bol-llle boun of

lAM ; 4PM Mtlltday lbru Friday al:
Holzer Senior Care Center
380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

.

!All ............... .....,..,

Help Wanted

Mcintyre Pork Dbaictls oeekin1 t DlreCIOr lo serve
as Chief Administrative Officer to direct the total
administration, plannina, manaaemeat and .
operotlons of. lhe countywide Pork· Dlslrlcl, In
accordance with lhe policies. by-laws established
and authorized by the Park Board and In compllonce
with tho Ohio Revised Code Chapter 1545. The
Director is responsible for Admlnlstrallon. Budaet
Monaaemenl. lnvostmonll, Accountln1 ond Oranl
Writina. establishina vision and otrateilc\plannlna,
lmplementadon ond periodic revisions of Dlotrict
Maoter Pions, land acqulsllion, plonnlna, dcsi1n,
development ond expansion or public j)ltlcl •1141
focilhies, Pork M1n11ement ond operations;
supervision of full ·tlme coroor and pori-limo
souonol employees, District sponsored prolflmi
and spe&lt;:iol events. Director works cooporall.v.ly
lltd coordlnstes joint lnteraaency pi'Op'alnl .wlth
County elected officlols, polllical sub-cllvlsi.onsl
community leadcnhip ond orpnlzotlonsl formln•
portnerohlps. provldlni technlcol auillance and
support lo benefit and provide services lo Oallli
County reoldonu. Requirement~ : Graduation front
an accr.edited colleae or university with a bachelor's
dearee In Park Administration, Nllural Resourees,
Horticulture, Forestry, Public Admlnlstrotion or
Related Field. Minimum five yean of propulvoly
responsible upcrlence In Park Manaaement;
Maintenance, ond Lon1 Rlnp Plannlna. Proven:
experience In commun lty · leaderahlp,:
communicoll.ons, public relations and ~uildlnl'
partnenhips. Certified Park ond RecreadoO::
Profe11lonal (CPRPI prefened. Open unlil Filled;
For complele Job deoeriptlon and appllcatlo..
requirefDenll contacl 1he 0.0. Mclnlyre Park:

PDIASIS

THIS

NEED MONEY?

CAll NOW

518 Seeoacl Aveaue
GIIUpolll, Oblo45631-1219
by 5:00 p.lil., Wec!'- 1day, May 15, ·
2002.

'-t-U.. p

Announeement

ng
For All Your
Advertl1lng Need•

--.-rr
Contact Us At:

1·800·821·8139
AMouncement

I

,

Help

JIPiri•" .....

1-an-483·8247
ext.1841

Buckeye Community Senlcel
P.O.Box604
Juklon, OH 45640
Deadline ror applkuu: 5/1!102

...,Ow•• nftJ.....,.,.

••

ldUDIIIDniiMPtrltnot:
FIVI Yllrl t-ltncl In an
lndullnat oroottl oontrola
envlronmant (Including
PLCo)ll roqulrad. Minimum
two-year lachnlcal dagrtt
In
tltotrontoo uolng program·
moblologlc controlttra "'
equivalent 11 a mull. Ahigh
tohoot diploma or GED lo
roqulrtd. Alton Bradley
oqulprnant expa~onca · lt rt•
qulrtd. Barvo control
IXPIM·

Inca taaplut.

!!!y,

..._I

W1ntec1

W _....,

CORP.

Entry Legal
Management

'·

Atteil Saito Cltrk, 'UII or
Pa,.tlmt. Plclt-up IPPiica·
tlon II Swtthtr a LohH

=

Ph111maoy,
Pomeroy, OttJoMain ltrlll,

~::;. ~'t!':e

...... Mourt. !ltncl R'Humt
to: 1(1N Horman Ad. GIJ!tp.
alia, OH 4M31.

Are you lookina for an excltlna and

Pleasant Valley Hospl~

111.....

Ia Mlllt ClutJ, U

!!diNI t~sbiiiiOED. Yllkl drt..... . _ ; , - . .
, ....... drlolal
s....
..........ae'M,rwawvws .,....,, ._.

rrwnl.

llrong commltintnt to dlvtr•

INFOCISION MANAGEMENT

·

RATE WILL BB BASED ON BXPI!RU!NCI! ·

'filliP

llootrtotano. Individual mull
=.~~· 10 train and to
tho olactrlclono In dally lrou•
. bloollootlng of plont oqulp-

a

•r

Help wamec~

widll ......................

oommuntcatton lltllltln 01•
dtrtotnttrlocowllhbcth
plont portonntt lnd mon•
agernont on tochnlcallo·
autt. Thlolndlvldual muot

Raaumtt will bo rtvlowtd
tnd a Otntral Milia ropr•
1tntallvt will contacl you II
you aroltlteltd for fu~htr
conltdoralton. No phont
atilt ~ • ..,. Olnarll Millo
Ia 111 Equal Emplojlmant
Opponuntty Emplojltr w1t11

,-:=:;;==,....=P=:•:"=...,====~

.....,.,

lrsnc.'rrt

lnfoCilion

I

.......

Jlallltrtt'rJ(kt . . .2...,lltMII)

e~Wellent bcnefill inc:ludln&amp; heallh,

~srt

I

r..u....

...

send your resume

Alu'orl, OH 44333
Or .... to H lllllrtc10r0~ "
Vili1 our web litolllnfoCia....,

M/1!01!

'

POiillon= -

eli

eee

c»

•-•-•

a..

'O:.im

'"""'nil

=

I

MUD C0Dtt IWIDID

'11ft opantng II 101 on 1tt.rnoon IIOIIbQn. E•Ptf*,..
proltrlod, Wt trt a 70 bod
ionOttrm Qfft f1U!11nD 11•
oltlly. It you art (!llt"'*t,
ploaae IIDDiv I n - "
HOLZlA SINIOR CARl
CEN'ftA
310 Colonial Drtvo
lidwttt, OttiG 4111114
An tq~~~~ ~ 1111p1oyor

'NYII!IIII o1 GatllpOIII
A~IOtiltt&lt;l Attalttd Living

HluWo\HIDI

~~~~~~~~
ITA11 1U11D NUIIIIMO
A....'fANTt NllDID

W you lrt I IIIIa 'ha1od

Nufllllll lllllillll\1 -lng

101 pan-"mt tm!IIIWmtnt.
WI -11\opantng IOiyou
Wt lrt a 70 bod IOnQ·ttrm

COli"""""' tiOillly d~c~Ut•

td 10 quality ..,.. 101 our
-

fllllliY

panon Dt~'"~
11ou1t ot
thiUa001111'ndiY

i'IHat

•.tt...,.,

1!1

Holltr Stnlor Call

c.ntor

310 Colonltl Dr
llolldlt&gt;t Aallatanll CNA ltdwoll, Ohio 411114
An E~ual C!ltlort~ Em·
Wyng~~tt ot Gotttpolll """ PIO~
poaltlonl IYIIIIbtt lor PI~ ~~~~~--tlmt nuftlng aoallllntt T1la Lccat HOillt HHith IIQinOy
~UIIIIItG lfipltcant muit be new nlring ler tu~·tlmt RN.
obit to · work all thlht Preltr holM htiltth ~i*l·
Wv!lpot~ prov1dta • tun,..; onco but net
Wt
tlailblo onvlronmont, 11 ontr compttltl¥~ Wltlll,
you 1rt ln-ltG In !Oinlng hHtth lnauronca, ond a
our grH\ 1Hm ot tn'llliOY• tritndly WOrk llf!lOI!&gt;nero.
HI, I)IHat ltop by Wyngo Pltattlllq.Uirtll Fomtly S.
1111\ :100 Btllrwood Dri¥~, nlor Core, tnc , Ut Twill
10 compltto on lootlcttlon, AYI., Oolllpotll, 011 or Hnd
NG 'Ilona cano litioatt.
reouma to: FlO Do• 707,
Otlllpofil, QH ·~831 , ~or
an
appoint mont
caM
:~NJ!-:oro ~~~~~ ~10)44t· t377. Alto hiring
,60 por -ti tor I or 3 trltroonaiCirtAtdll,no t•·
hourt -•• Cltll 810 Llf PI net naciiii\Y. AQOncy
Plllml
7•0·SOR~ wllllraln, EO!.
8881,
.
Comrn\INty

,...,,..ry.

ond txptrltncl. PIHit grem Including mt&lt;l~
o:::lnlng lrd ••~::
IUbmlt 11111&lt; ot lnlolttl, re- dtntol, 4011(, VICIIIOn .,d I ot ' In ~ ~llml!l I·
oumo, rttaroncu, OOPI cf panllon, Appty I n - ,.. "
tartt 1 rtoumo
tranoorlpt ord oulltrlt ctrtltl• tlly:
to~
. ~ 0 CAO:,tln&amp;O. Su·
cola to JoM o. Coatar110. IIUftlllltl Waatt ....,,...
sct ••7tz,1~h. !nd"' 1 ·Mtloa
Suporln1tndtnt, At~ano• Pttatt rtltt" DIIL•HotHI
, w n"' ~ Avtnut,
Mt1Qo ESC. 507 R~hllnd auw LDntJ. Ad
Suitt tt oa, Athtno, Ohio
Avtnuo, Sullo l1Q8, Ath· Wanoton, OH 4UU
:s70tF~~~ 1 'r
ona, Ohk&gt;4!701 . "Wtlcl·
EOE
T~~ AME~C I y 4,! i
lion dltdllnt: May 24,
I en qua
2002. Tht AMESC II In Lntto Cotnra to now hlr!nQ Oppo~unlty &amp;mptoyorl~ro·
E~ull Opponut11ty Employ• Dollvory D~va ... ln·Siort vldar.
ariProvldtr.
Partennll, 1nd aloo Mon· · ~~-....,.---Tha Athtni·MIIga Educt• agamont. Ftaxlbla houro Mala lnd Famalt Eacorta ---::""'":'":':"'-::-:""--:-:---::---tlonat Str'llco tanlar 11 with highly compotltlvo pay.' and Dancero went~. Str!·
PubliC Stlt tnd Auction
ttaklng 1 Spaclet Educatlor~ Coonajoln the Fun I "WWI 11 ouo
lnqulrao
Only.
Parent Mentor. Rtlponll• tho Cl•lllpollo Little caa11 rt (740133S·t 7RR.
bllltlll' Act 11 • 1111 .~ ~ Tbdavt
- ·
twotn · portnll ot -·
l~tclal
nttdo children, aducotoro,
lrd dlotrlct poroon·
Public Salt end Auction
no: provtdl lntonnotlon, ,..
tarrat. and oupport oorvlcto
to partnto: croftnllt and
conduct ln-11rvlct tor PI·
rtnto and tduootoro. Ou•"·
llcatlono: Mull bl 1 portnl
ot • child wllh • dlttl&gt;lllty
who II axptrlenoad with,
lnd knowltdQIIbla obcut
-111 aducallorl ltr'l~tl:
good lntttptroonal, oral,
and wrtlton communication
oklllo roqulrod; ability lo
work tvanlngo and wook·
tndl cltllroble: pretoronoo
given to thelt with current
trolnlng In IIIII lnd ltdtrll
mondatae
rtglrdlng thac"ll·
~ucatlon hondloor,~•d
"
drtn and ootoblo td oon·
11011 with txllllng apaclal
oducatlon lnrtratl groupo.
Salary: Btltd on training
trd oxporlonca. Submit Ill·
tor ollntorHI ond r01umo to
John D. Cootonlo, Suparln·
ttndtnt,
Athtnt·Molgo
ESC, &amp;07 RIOhlond Avtnut,
Public Bale and Auction
Sulta •toe, Athtnt, Ohio 11'1!!!!'=!!\li~~!!!!~!!"!!!""!!!!"""!!!'!"!!!'!!!!!'!!~
5701
4
~lint: ·MoyA~~lleetlon
lld· ·
24, 2002. Tht
AMESC to on Equol Opper·
tunny lmployorl~rovldtr.

=·

Public Bale •nd Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
Monday, May 13, 2002
4 'T 5•30 PM.
/'Jr.
• .

.IIEVERrniiNG GOES I
Bring your Truck's

s.tto.,

PUBLIC
'AUCTION

Moocllspau11h's Auction House
Torch, Ohio
We havo been eommltoloaed to ,.y tbo over-1toek
ltotnf from Bourn Lumber In Ch.. lor, Oldo, ond
JllftODII properly of 1 local tlnclur frotn MorloUa.
ll1rLDII't0 truPPLIICIJt ntw wall Clblnt1J 1 t'lllllf diiJIJ, whMfllwtj,
lllkllqiiDifl, _.,.wild..,., mfK, ICrttNI, tloultllnllllhll, lltlld
01k ttalr Mllnllltn, PIN t.rnla.,la. 4 r1l. 11Nr11vr !u I~J. 1rtd
kttln1011.
MIIC• fLind &amp;lilt, 1m.. abtMu, adl'lwlf n11111 tlllhMII cltldu
la)(ltll "UI), Ptrd l'fllotUhir, lddl 1011, Dftkt rhlll'lt IHII,IIII
tUM calM!!, llfll"• mm llahll, docttn otrk•
rollnlfiJ, INid loti,.....
·
NOTJh WI wUI abo hl¥1 11NK11 JO.• plltll 11t nld Npilrlbll

""'-'Itt. (_.,

rurNt•r~ &lt;u rtuJM~),

Moodl1pauah Auctloneerlna Servlce1
AuctloMit'l IJII Moollll,.ulh Ohio UrtMI ""·'

Apprtntkt .41ttlonffrl Todd Moodltltllllt! Otllt l,kfll'lli\IOOOOtl

1Jn•41 lldllottdld In hiVIH'IfiiM tilllf OIOf111. WV

'l'trnw• cuh or aood Chf(k wllh proper 10 .
llttrfllllut~tnl8

lnftnn1$11t111 (740) ftt•U3! (hmllf)
1740J _.,...,.. (tutbon ltouH)

MOVING AUCTION
FRIDAY, MAY 17
6:00PM

AMVETS BLDG. (FORMER DAV
BLDG.) OFF BURNETTE RD. ON
LIBERTY ST. KANAUGA, 01110
(GALLIPOLIS) .
MRS, ELDON WEURCH OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS SOLD HER
HOME AND MOST ITEMS
BELONGED TO HER AND HER
LATE HUSBAND ELDON. ALSO
SOME OTHER ADDITIONS ....

1 0' table IIIW
Crall1man 8
compre110r,
commercial,

·g~i~~~~~

1 , bell aander,

Upright air
295 A.M.P.
&amp;more.

B.C.S. model
wlbulh hog
lhreddtr, 30'
blade, 11 hp

DEIK II CIIAII, GOSSIP BENCI!1 PIANO
STANDS, Cllr;ST OP
DRAWEIIII, END TAIL!&gt; SOFA II CIIAI~

IIENCII~,.!LANT

~'3t~~.lJ~~~rTtM:·rAC.~N~~~J"M

more.

TABLE 6 ' CIIAIRS DESK WITIIIIVTCII
AND IIIELV£11 PliNTEl TABI,ELJILE
CAIINET, SEWING MACIIINE, COuLL£
Dlllt£1, M.I TAL
COOKWA~1
SILVERWARE, BOOKS CAST 1101'1
DVTOHOVEN, PORCElAIN DOLLS,

ftJIA~:a'oER ltl"c~~~~ M&amp;YA'Th~

DOLL IIOVSE FVINITtJIE, IIOME
INTIIIOI ITEM1 1• NICE TIIIMIL!
COLLETION 6 CABII'I&amp;T... LOTS OF
IMALL HOVIEHOLD I1'IMJ ....
TOOL81 MISC. MECHANIC TOOUI,

LAJlOE AMOUNT OF IMALL HAND

TOOLI, LARGE AMOUNT OF CARDEN

~~A~l!l~l'fnflll k~~B~~l

~,~.Mtr~~~~\f,.'t,~Wn
~t'Jtkb~';. ~.:~~IIJ~J .~,~~

TIJ-EL IIV. IOXII OF HAIDWAII
ITII:M~ tiYDJlAVLIC FLOOR JACK_,

~~~L ~i'1:¥;Jf.t.:PA~Aftr~:~.

UIWIIINI. IIIATII. VTILI1'Y TKAIU!

AVCTION£1111 LUUIA. LIMLEV

740·%45·9868

l't'z .,,_

(JM)fJJ.fW

s-

H.tuWAN!m

umo,,.

lnl"oClrlon Me•·-1 Corp.
Alta: S.m GMktl
3%5 Sprlnplde Dr.

APPLY IN PBU0N OR CALL
A.... ad •.DON '

Oo._,olil and Mtnougo LitDIIIVIII,
TEMPORARY HELP
11o John&amp;
art t0of&lt;1ng
·
N 10 .D
101 _ ,, tlarol-lng, Rumplta 11ao Q101H!1 10 ~ QltitWCiorlclt help nttdtd
Atttablt ll'l'llllt. Comot&amp; """ of ~ Mllon'l at tho Odla.Jacltlon Cour1o
1M WtrQta and llonu•. lno llr9ttl ~Ia -'dtrl of =P~rM Strm. Agtr\0~.
~
W. Mtd 1 ., tlcUIMet tlllt"'-'
1111. dodllllltod.,...
but,.,. roqul!t&lt;l N&gt;~ A111ano-Mo!Qe !duca· pte and ClllftMty 11aw an plloatlontt w1• be roctNI1I 11
lionltSaNitl Clntlrtlao an ~ ...~ 101 a tho Gt"la·~•- ~~""
antic(paloel
LOid on.,..
SaNitl ~ Q1b ttl
101 1 Mul11·~nGic
Jackton flikl. ·Room ; 111
" -· $atatY:
• 0!1 Ttla poroon wo hlrt wilt GttllpOIII,
(740~41:
7 ""~' 1100 nooil ~""
tralntnQ and • • - Ht.\y Opat'ala a to
111 ~ lola~ 17 1001
~D, ~-of
10 comt~llll
• ""''"· o - USD.tii'SAIItn
-··
_..-.1nttr111
Supa!lnplltlrtq~tlrlclclooEqual
-1.
AtMrla•loltiQI lion tnd rnotnllllft · - pc!lunlty !mllir&gt;Ytr
ESC. 607 RlcNand 11-. lanloua- ......... A.'
Suitt *108. Athena. Ohio QUIItmentalnoludo • Clan Tho Atherlalolal Educa
46701 . "WtiOitlon \Jttd• I CD~. et -111 w-o o1 tlo!lll Strv~o ~tntar I~
tint: Mal'
20011. lilt 11111 ana hi¥~ a olton _ ,. p-~-·
AMESC tt. on Equal ~ dlllltntJ rtCOrG llil&gt;lt or tttt -~~,;;;;;"
tuntty E~r/Pfolltdtr.
with ro DUI'a Of tUapan· lion , Mall ,1' ""'--·
alono) lor the Ioii i yo~,_ :
o: C "
T11a Athtno·MtiQI E&lt;luoo· Muot aloo bo obit 10 11ti ~~~:,~ocrK trt~lol1 ':;"p'
ijonol Str&lt;lct tenter II 7stbi:IOQ.&amp;OO limn 1 do;;
lion Crt• ~ 100
PI0 1.. 1111·
-ing two StYtro llthtY.
· 01
tn ..... t w"' 6 •~
lor ~ndicatllltd '18ohtro. Wt Ollar an _ , ...,.. ly EducttiOn of the Hindi·
Salal'f: SattCI 'on training ponaatlon lnd benttlta
coppad V.ltdlllon. $alary:

f16

W/COVER TOP, MtiCH MOllE NOT

to:

.......,, 'lew

.......

401 K.

plld v,ttcalion ond bolidayJ,

w

'lftlr!ltll,..,.."'-,

o«en monthly boniUU and

al , , . , . , lg

IN.l"'lfaa .. .,_,...Full. . I I
....

chlllenslna career? lnfoCi•ion Manaaemenl
Corp.' it tukins lndivldualt for enlry·level Auction
manapment to add to our learn at the ·
Oallipolit location. Rerpontibilitiet Include
t!Wtllinc a !lam ol 10 to 20 people. client
and propam knowlldte. llld rome report
wriUna. Qualified candidalel mut1 have 1 4Y""r
dearee. IUOtiJ
ln~e~perronal.
CQIRRIUI1icalion, and leadership tklllt.

If )'OU would like to c:ontribule lo our SIICUII

1t1

ftrlout ouaiOmtl llrvlct
marlcotlng lnG ldmlntllrt:
tlvl function • Apf)tlctntt
muat tlaw ••callont organ!.
utlonlllllllll and 111a lblllty
to wort&lt; wotltntltpancllntty.

!MIIIIflllhl'llill· ·
would you nkl 10 help 1
The 'Erlglnttrln(l Controlo child In Mtd? Ycu'll-l¥~
Tlchnlclon Ia roaponllblo up to l1085.oo monthlY 11,
lor o~ly dlrecllng~malnt• lmburttmtnt lor Hell child
- o n tnttrumtnttllon, ptactln your homa 11 wall
PLC proctll oontrotl, and 11 the gratlllcollon ot holp·
tlatitrtcat equipment to tn· lng • child. If ycu ore on
IUrt ttlat tht oqulpmtnt Ia 01\10 lllldtnt and would
In
Mkt
proper operating oondltlon. tc find OUI tbcut blcomlng
lncllvlduol muot work with oloator parent colt:
••
t• ong;-.,ng,
1-"
~-lri nt ~•d•t
ma.~gornon
"'"
• no
aparaflono and tlioctrtcal
(740llti~HO or
porocnntl 10 maintain and
1-l?l'olt)oNICCO
troubltthoot exllllng oqutp.
mont, 11 wttl •• providing MoCIUII'I Alltaurant now
ouppon on tho dtvalopmtnt hl~ng oil Glocatlcno, lull or
and lnltollotlon cl now proo• pa~·llmt, pick up opplloo•
111 and utility oontrot and
lion 11 ~atlon I bring bock
lnttrumtntatlon eyatoma
Dttwttn
R:31lom
I
'
tO:OOim, Monday tllru Sat•
lltlll.l:
urday.
Wltlt 11j.11 td dlracllon, thlt
Individual will oonduct main·
ttnonct and training pa~
talnlng tllo PLC prooaal
oonlrol, lnllrumtntatlon,

I:Jtnarat Mille
2403 8. PenneytvanlaAvt.
Wtlltton, Ohio 4illlt2 ·
Ann: At....,..ENG TECH

•

I'OIU'ONI AVAILAIIU1
IN·!Wtlloaoaadhr.,._
LPN • 1'1111 U.., hot ..... aad hrDI-.

bnlwtt Mfl'llfl1l.
·~~a~~~o In II 1
1 lldll co •
~a ••td4J Md , .
...fldltrrl

na

nttlta. Primary llaponaiblllly
II to ,_roll lnd devtiol&gt;
~II lor grant oppoi1Uo
nttltl 1 0 1 - progromo:
IHill In tdtntltytng - .
- - ovoltablt, and

"'* ~OIICI

FJl~.PWANnll

Wt offer compolltlvo waga
paoklga, Including madlcal
Public Slle and Auction .
and dental be,.tlto, pro·
-;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
10rlptlon pion, paid vacation ,
ond holtdlya, panalon plan,
401(KI plan, and profit thlr·
lng plan. Salary commtniU•
relt with ••pantnco.

to ...... with ........ wl.. mmtal ~ In.
pltaoant, btnadlu mvlro....m. Houn: 410:30pm Frt;I1Uaai-6:4Spra Sal; .f lm.tpm Son.
No n....- n
,. Wo o«er pold tnlalrfl
aJoac wllb aa · nctllml bendlu ,......... No
unll.,.. or ..un..tloo roqalnd, HIP 8dlotl
Dlplom&amp;IGED, Yllkl drl••'• u - IIIII 11rrN
y_.. pad ddolalnptrltace J'fqiiiNd, s~;
$7.01/br.s-t-to:
.
Buckeye Community Servlca
'

EOE

. . . M !!phil

TOll~FIEE

WANTED:
.
Direct care assistant :

IPJeu.t Yaltoy Nuntoa oad llchllliUiadoo Ceoru 11 a
d)'llllllkl l.ortf·lml .... fldtily tbu prcMdoo
latennedlaM oad skilled C... uodl to noklratt. .
Come jolo out bMIIb en Cllp•ludoa whore we ·
pnwlde eMfllellct

WANTED:

!"'"'no

aubmlt ruumH to:·

Minimum of high school diploma
or GED required.

omce or

a:-

CLEARIASIS' datt
:'nc~~~~':h~~.ndl·
mull he"i tlftctl-.

11111s llllliiMIJ"" ...,.,
IV InN;
• ... -

1·811~25·8221

mainlenance lines, etc.

40-hour work week wilh benefit packaJe
Applications may be picked up at the
City Maupr

.,

:r.:,~:.\0-!~~:fl

inslallalion of waler and sewer
Help Wanted

brlncll 011101 - " "
Oleftt•lll!:~,lllltMM
Jonee.
- .
-peil..-111
_edWt"'
, benlltlt
lndw.
• _
B ._._ .. ......,. In _....., prthanoiw online trolrtlnQ
so ...,.._ .....,... progrom, dIn an~
admlnlotroHon, potloy lnd ty 11\at'a righl 1n Got·
~=llh,
tlpollo, OH.
IIY&gt;
fltkl. wit11 two
~,.~~~pa~~ tn
Branch 0111ot AtlrntnltllaiOf.
"" gran
am -vttop. TltlllH
mont, proltrlttl. OR. S.
- - " - I n tueYou'll t\ltlport the ln'fltt•
oaaafu1 tlfllnl writing,.. · · mont ,.p,._toijft 1
qullld: lbiHI)o to -roll contrlbutt 10 111a...,.... of
and .devtlo!&gt; gro~t opponu· your otftca. Dutltl Include

Ouollllad candtdlteo lhoutd ·

' - " Oppc

The Cily nf Gallipolis is seckina
qualified applicants for the position of
Plumber•. Duties will consisl of

en~tsse

,.,l

. - - · --·
pat'"'

paid rttpj11 , ''""*""oro -'1 t11a - ·
1'01
MOlt ... --~ 'TIItrl· V.!llty. Grawlt\. llmilttl
poutlc '-Call~. partntrtNp ~tloa.
Att&gt;any. 01110. lbll ""' 1· Ttlat'a Wtlat yoU'~ ltnd II 1

··~~~;;;;;;;:=:::::::.__. . .;., ~~i=~~~~1:~r!t'~r~~wm

===:;;He::;:lp::::;W::;a=n:;::tecl:;:::====

Deadllae ror appllcanu: 5/13/02

PLUMBER

. IMT'I· Werle for • groat or·
gantzotlontll Plnkarton II
mw hiring tor the Buftalo
W\1 liN. Ycu mutt hevt
,EMT·B quallllcatk&gt;no: Above
av:c warnr.uo paid In•
nl ormo ond
: tura .
, training provldad. Pttut
, apply at: 1032 12th Strttt
• Wtlt, Huntington, wv
' 2!704 or call t ·800·241·
; ,464, EOEIWI'/DIF
~-----,
Http want~ caring tor tho
' E•parltncld Roottro I La· tldtrly, Darot Group Homo,
• bcrero N -. Mull tlavt new paying mlnlmum waOt
: hand toolo ond tronopono· '1IW thlho: ?om·Gpm, 71m:
, lion.
(7~01330'0805, 5pm, 3pm·ttprn, ttpm·
, (7.40)378-0071
7om, caii740·H2-8023.
'
'
' '
Announcement

Disllict, Oallla County Courchouse, II Locusi:
. Stteet, Oalllpolis, Ohio 4!631. (740) 446·4612, m:
256.

P.O. Box604
J.eklon, OH 45640

-101

We Jove you!

r,:a· ·,

lllroctor, 0.0. Mclltlyn

10 our hearta.

Dial Up Success With
lnfoCisionl

401

I

WANm&gt;

~

~~ (;ountlf/SIItt
u.lng tht
l.ocallluto Racycltf looklnc
h
• ,101 txl*ltl'*' PI""" wt1fi
p one,
•trong knowttclgl of
computer
de.
• parlll. lolln11nurn of a cor
Ylloplng plana to moot
Como - why .,..,. No 1
: oxparianca. ManaooX:~
llttl'ltt, and
thou nttdl. Salary: . 1 on FORTUNEe mogulnt'a
, ColnmuntcatiOniCcrnputtr
tnJOyworklng
SoiO,QOQ,plutviCIIIOn, . 20011Notot"100Bai1Com·
lkllll • pt~~~: AaD1Y at "'
alok,
panlta to Werle tor" In Amo~
ltrld IHUmt to: Abtir•o Auto
With numbtl'l,
and paroonalltlvt: hHith, loa. Appty onllnt at
Pa~ •• PO Box t2S, Rk&gt; Poaltlon 0-1'1 dental, and vlalon lnouranca www.-rdjontL-rttro
nw
evallobtt, 4058 rttl'-"' Or, llnG)'t!Ur rooumt to:
• Grandt oH 411174
,
'
.
•
all COmpany
pltn. Dtadllnt tor owllca•
!~of&lt;! Jonoa
.
' Dependabtt, Rtoponolblt
btnaflta
lion to Juna 9. aooa. SUbmit
Attn: L0·18602·GAL
· Sinor In my homo otter
reauma ond ,.toronco to: IUS JJ Motley Mtrncritt Or.
Including
Human Roaourou
St Louta, 1.40 83131
• oohool a oummtr wHk·
Aroa ,t.goncy on Aging
F..: lllle-860-40H
• dayo. Tori/Addloon aroa.
(7•0IM7·7tll2
h11ltli and lift
ototdel7.
tnc.
E·malt: com
Fila URG ·PO BoM 600
aiontltO.kldall
DfltVIIta l!IUCKII
lnaurlnct, 401k,
Rio Groncte, Ohio 4se74
Eoe ·
~ UIIN IMI IUCKIII
ld
tl
www jlhongtooo7 org
18 Day COL T,.lnlng
~ YICI On,
Equal Qppo~unlty Emi&gt;tovtr
NICCO
. Job Ptaotmont Altlotonco
tnd pal'lonal
Th0 p
ofF 1
lolako 'l'ht Monoy
POIITION AVAILAI~I
ower •m ty
YOU DmMitll
day1. for
INOINIIIttNGI
PDI'flll 'AIIINll
Con 1-IIN11l
amploymtnt
. CON'fltOLI TICHNICIAN
NIIDID

Top OOitar· U S dlfttrtnct whllt you worlc beokgroundo. Valid Drtvo,.
Sllvtr. GOld Colno 'pro(,1: coil ·1-888·237·~342 .,,: l~ontt, hlgl1 tohoot diploma
Dlamondo • Gold 2301.
·
01 oqulvolont. Reoumt I'Oth
1011

In Memory

are alway• clote

Call Us, We Can Helpl
• $500 Sign-on bonus
• Up to $7/hour
• Weekly paycheciks
• Paid training
• Higher salary with
experience

Ill., F-1 o\ Frl4MI

To Attn· John Hunter At
(8t4)224~73e, No Phonl
Ybu can mako a dlffoftnco ;Ca='::.''.:.:Pitl=tt::.·- - - HCh day, knowing that the
work you oro dOing right Community Action II - ·
htrt In Galllpotla, OH 11 lng on Intake Speclalllt to
. helping Amortoano acrooo work wit~ ~'7~ p:otho notion upltold the Con~'1:it".
llltutlon.
-~lllyorga"~!11 twi'" 1 1·

Help Wanted

are apart,
thoughta of you

hard·worldnJ hands
put to rest. God.
broke our hearb to
prove 10 111, He only
lakcl the bal.
~.

r

mont nghto?

t04 N. 31'&lt;1. Street. Muon, M.l"s.' Coin Shop, 181 S:,: AVONIAIIA-1 To Buy or Edwordo, Galllo MtlgaCM.
wv behind lmperlot nre
and Avenue Galllpotlo 740. Sttl: Shl~oy Sptaro, 304• 6010 N. Stott Routt 7,
•
87~·1429.
Chtohlrt, Ohio 45&amp;20 ~Y
446•2842 •
•
5113102. GMCM II EOE.

In Memory

The family pj

Florence
Barrett

Tiera Lambert

wart, call Iron. farm tooto.
Lilting Info. at
odklnoauctlon.corn.
Larry Aclklno t13e pltatt
caN (30&lt;1)733-1265

YARD SALE Mi,y 10·11·12 Rln '1

J••lc•

She was always

~

AN'Im . -

I-~It

Although we are
apart, thoughu
of you are
always close to
our hearu.

In Memory

Geiii'OCOIIIIlztd by her P""'DII, fllllllly
&amp;: trltadllor lUella great Job !alter Z

.
·
YARD SALEPI: PLEAsANT

every day
spedlllorua.
You wen there
throuah lhtlood dayo
and baddayo.
Time hasn'l yel
healed the ache in our
hearts lor you.
Your lo•lng chlldr~n,

broupl food, pve
·donaUo111, who bad
ouch ldnd words,
eompalllon, prayen,
and cared 10 mudl
durl"'the l01s ol our
Wlte, Mother, and
Grandnwlher.
Thanb dfOin from
th&lt;llouck 1't11110yl ·

Elen~eotarystudent

••

wn mowers, hoganv Furnllurt. Stone· tectlng your 2nd amend· After 1 v..r. Fax Attume

90th Birthday

In Memory

cardl, nowen,

year

·

tor our mother.
This lrJ your apeclal
day, but )'ou mlde

DDn, Dlb &amp;

was, who will
always have a

In Memory

·

•

Dearest Mom,
We were 10 blea&lt;d
lo have you

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

How Precious Bre The
Sweet memories

r

Smith

On Mother's Day

ffiavtUOOO

lo

Lydia

NevaM.
Grimm

bearts and lives.

Sale.

Donate Val'&lt;! Sale Leftovers:
Shop at yard oate prlcoo.
ReUse tnduatnea, Albany +
Athena.
740·698·8200

3/whlle.

In Memory Of

max 0, Dauls

Yard

I

In Memory

Dear rather
Bnd Grandfather

. G.m.Jl'OLIS

r

at tntorttt to: The Doll• New Orteans trtp, Athena -:740::..:·992.::=::--7::=2::::85:_-:---c~• County gro!JI), July 29-Aug. :c
~·llntl, PO Bolli 729-20, 3, tor more Information can Young kittens, rree to a
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
good home, litter trained.
740.594.2706
740·643·5286

In ffiemorv Of Our

•

.
Antiquo Auellon Sat Ma 1116 HaP W
·I Fullotimt Malnttnonco
RACO $(:holorohlpa Yard I8th. 101m. 816 Ma.m. R~
At Twin RW.ro Towilr
•
Frezlt,. Bottoni. Loll ot An· ·
~~~~~;:.':~
Y
2'30
L8
'
Y
tlquo,
Ook,
Walnut
and
Ma·
Art
you
MnOUI
lbOut pro- Option, And Pold Vaoatlon .
9

Drive acrooo bad, ~~ llneno, ~~~trom Oomlnoo. Saby Stu", ~oro, hoel ' pons.,~ 10 0i
Clothes, Varlouo lizeo and 1no· ~ Apuml,
~
more, Saturday, May 11th . .:,try. 1 ~0 ~ibt um 1 ~"·
9om.
Thlnto ~~r tC , ' \ m ~Koth HM :~ ~Jrt;.
4
YARD SALEZlrk1~9-2031 . '
JloMERoyJMmou;; .

C· f Boer Carry Out
k ~"'"
101 IIIIo, Chaster Township, 05.03-02
oc , 1 .,...r, 1 . yellow.
MtiQI County, aend loners ::::::::::;::::..______ Dog, female, part Chow.

In Memoiy

I:0"·,~·~~ ~~l~rlcM~ac~:

/11 Lovi11g Mtmory Of

1 Clarence Ray DeWitt will ::89:::5:..1- - - - - not be responsible tor any Free
permit debto othsr thin my own · llbt

YARD SALE-

Wallwocd

In Memory

home In Count~. (740)446·

1011 Caplan &amp; Asaoclates, 1-

e~~~

www.reuaelnduatrlea.org

Aro you tlrtd of thole ha~- tact Medical Plaza, 938 740·9.49·2682
using phone catlo? Don t State Route 160 , GoiUpotia,
know where 10 tum? Cell &amp; Ohio at 17401448. 9620
4 year old Shelly, Neutered,
tlrd out your options, Bran·
All Shots to date.. To good
1188-899-2974.

rn~

YARD&amp;l£

. Multi-Family

Loat: Black and tan mix
breed dog. Union Campground New Haven area.
Ploaoe Call (304)882-3395

Gl·~·~•y

tery Evaluatkln. 24 Hour.

Free Yerd Sele Slgnl
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per- Wor-d
Must Be Prepeld

w. hive

l

r

1

• - - - _,

l

·

&amp;

'*

~-~ ft~":.'s·

-Ilona o1 111a

; bfanch, p!OV1de ...__10
• CUIICmtt - · a n d focui
:-. ~
~
~... -.~
•N --~·: • bni II .... II ,_ dlpco.
, • ) ~ loluat ..htbit
•• IwloroNp eklllt and hlw
•: a!Qnlllclifll tlCPtlltnce In
.l&gt;tlnk. ortdlt uolon, 01 •'llnanoiat tnatltutton '' ,...
:4\llltll. Exetlllont compan.
lt!lon and - . , inc:fud.
' lng htltth lnaurallOI ond
101 (1&lt;). Pltltt Hnd ,..
oume to· Ott&lt; Hlt1 aan~o.~.
: AHn: HUman Rttou~o:
! PO ... 1111, Jac1&lt;1on, OH
• 46e40, EOE, lollfl/0/V

Or Fax To (740) 992,2157 .

Oe-ad'~~e.4"

.. ,-..

=~
' ,_,

-=:r,·AI~·~-~~

(304) 675·1333
Your Ad, flrribune(740)446-2342 Sentinel (740) 992-2156 l\egister
Or Fax To (304) 4178-5234

.

·

• __ _, -....-

: Glwq ......... .....
heo ~ -fll&gt;poiiU'*Y
In ""' McMtoui off1oe
far •!rito:-r::"~".....

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

TOday...

, _ C.. ............ S$ ACT IIOWII WOi11 !!om
od • . . . , _ . homo, PTIFl "" boOttltt.
~~~!0\1.,. be 1~
,..,,..,._ ..,..1146 I do~ -· -~
101 11la cart of I In

• ---..... -....
.

·-HIU-·W·f\N'I~UI;..I ~':!!!t~IW~\-VAIImll
__

C.UII OUPftOVEDCIIECK ON!f
fOOD fiiYED JY LADII!I AUX.
"NO'I' IRII'ONIIIU FOI.
ACCIDENTS 01. UJST 1'1.01'1!./ITYI"

OWNER. Ruth ~~~'V

••••NEXT SALE: ESTATE SALE
SAT. JUNE I • WATCH PA.,:R FOR
LOCATION AND LISTING !I !I.
'

SHAMROCK AUCTION II!RVICI!
AUCTIONI!I!R: Pet ll!erldan ·
AHitll&lt;ta AuetJo&gt;wr• Chrlt Pral«

£,.~. Slwnt~OIOI .com

PH: 740-112-4310 or 800-'1H122
www.tn.mt~IOnl

,,
•

com

RICK PfARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIOIICU llleK PCAIIIOII ri'U
UJ.ftU 011 rtJ.f44t
OWNU: 011. CINOV II EIIIIL IIUIC
TCIIMI: CAlli 011 'HECK wno.

�Sunday, May 12, 2002

• Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pl....nt, WV

iiiiS&amp;:
ACUAGI!

t
2 - · 33475 8llloy Run
Ad .. off ONo 12&gt;1, 112 milo
01 7, water a
IIOI)I1o . . . . In, 110,900,
oxeollent building lito,
(11:17)3118.025&amp;

Booutllul -

hoUtt

Iota, ~ 112, ! 112 or 5 ICIM.
1.7 milot OUI SR 218. Call
'"" 8:00pm. (740)448·

7585

ld\1'1'

1 -3 l!edroomo Forectottd
From 1199/Mo .. 4%
:oown, so Years at 8.5%
.APR . For Uotlngo, 800-319·3323 Ext 1709.
Homlo

MeiDl C9.· So. ol CoolVIlle,

eocroo. St3 ooo or 8 aom.

Carr Ad., 18
aaru, 123~ 000 or l!i acre•
with otollo, bamo, Sl!9,800t
Rutland, loot onol 9 ooreo.

-'1.500.

18.0001

200214x70
3bed/2bth

WE HAVE

SOLD SOLD SOLD

(740) 385-4367
Jutt 1 lew ol. the parcels
available. Call . now lor
mlip1, and other listings.

OWnor llnanclng with lllght
proporty mtr1cup.

lnter18ctlon
of US 33 &amp;
5115
Juat South
of Logan

M·F 8:30.8,

MIDALE
HOMES

2 Loti, 314 ooro oach,
Sat 11•8, ·
Roady to build on . North Cl _ .. S
&lt;lallla Eototoo on Thel10 ~:!:
· o~·~-~~u~n~~!!!l==!!!l!!!l!!!l==!!!l!!!l!!!!i
Rd . (740)«11·1400

----~R~.-a~I~E~~~a~w~a~.-n-.~,.~~-----

Reel Eetete General

Call or stop by our office tor a tree Quality Homes Guiae til (()/OJ:
'

e~114--11ttatvee ~ea~t,
514 Second Ave., Galllpolbo, Ohio 45631-0994
7 40-446-0008 7 40-441-1111
brokerSevano•moore.com
www.evana-moore.com

Ill \ I I "- I \ I I

Wanlld to ao . Wttkly jjijp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Olelnlng Ot l!t·WUkiV.
IIOM&amp;'j
Havo rtllltnott It nnald.
,T1.. 5.. ,,
(740i«8·1131
L._...~ft~"lii""'l-,1
Will do Lawn mowing,
painting, IOO omtr OOtJ )Ofil t 18 South Park Drive &lt;II
Otll 304•713 , 5034 , m lor Story, with baoemenl, lront
Pluttv,
pOrCh, tear bl•levol dtok,
::::!::12~------ abcvo
uround
pool
Will proolllrt wooh ''""'"'· (304i818· 1f4B
trlllltl, lnd dtCkl . 0811
441 ·4138 Ilk lor Ron or 3 B8droont on ~outt · it,
ltiVt l'ftiiNQt.
i:l041018·&amp;33i
3 bodroom , 2 bath briCk
tilnch an 1\8 Nat aorti,
ll '\ \'\l/\1
;;:=::;====~ nowtr Cdr!lft aM vln)l, 'lull
iB 8
bUtl'fttnl ( pantally ltntin·
USINWl!l
1!1), HeW IPPIIAI1C108, 2 Cit
~-OI'IIiiii'Oiiiii.M'I•\JNilliirrv.-,.1 ~tragi, Rt 33 abovo Now
.,
Ravtn al14·882·i!IIU1
U AT&amp;T Paypllono ROuttl 3 bodrocm, 2 both, 2 cor at•
U Prlmt LOCI! 81111. llrolt tAchod g~rraga , I oora coun·
Atturn.
(800)800·0170 lry oottlng, Flvo ~Oinll Pom•
m._IH_A_a______ urov aru. m&amp;.ooo. 740·
992•8048 .
. INQTIOII
CHIC VALI.I V PU81.1 SH· 3 bodroom, · In Mltldlo!l&lt;ln,
!Nil CO. rtoommondo that call Tom Andmon 11111
you CIO bullnllo w11n pooplt ;;.:
8tl;...
"'. ';.1
:14
...-'0"'
)9.;.
92;,;•3:.:.34..:8_.__
1116
you know,
NOT IOlind 31iR HOUit wltn I.FI, KIIOM•
money through thl mail untrl 10 &amp; Satn. New lldlng, Wtn..
you havt lnvoollglflod tho dowe and roo!. On oorntr
olltrlng.
101 In Morcorvlllo. (740)Q88·
1278

I

i

r

PIIICI IIIDUCIDI Low
Mllntontnoo Homol 3 BR 1 B!l
with newer:· wlndowi, •ldlng,
ln•utanon, lumace, tool, central

alr

conditioning

MS,IIOO.

Modtrn RAnoh ... Open kltohfn &amp; family
room. Breakf&amp;ll nook with skylights.
Va~ltad . ceiling
In Living Room.
Outelandlng Oe.ok &amp; Landscaping lor
privata oul-door anjoymen&lt;. Aaklng

51119.900
DIRICTION8: Take SA 180 pasl the
hOIIlltal. Turn 1111 onto Whit• Road, just
HaHtltl Carpet Mill Outlet. Follow

and

carpet

Ful"'ttttrly Blndtlmrn ReniJy

OV~~:~~ !rom I poacolul
OOUnll')(
m
hill
top. 4 BA and 3 BA, opoclou1
great room avartooklng tha

a
6 ~i'J&amp;r4

*

Branch OHicl
23 Looult 91.
Galllpclit, Ohio

4111J31

YIIIOINIA IMITH, IIIOKI .. "'""""""« ..hOe
GAIL .ILVILLI11iUII11UIIUIIIUU"II•"""'441·12DI
TRIIH INVDIR ....... w .... u . ..................441.t411

JOHNNIIRUIMI.L ........................... ti7-032J
DAVID IN'IOI"uoounu;muuuuwwuuu..1•NII

your
wor1d?
to thlo homo
tucked away on privata
Charolaio Llko. Nloe 4 I!R 3 IIA
r - oldod homo whh 2 car
attachld grrrage and privati
dedk OYIMOCklng tht lake.
.114,ell0

oorwenttm 10 tvtrytnta 1n 10'1111,

VIrginia L. llmllh 44WIGt
14041 LOOKING '011 THI
QIIIATIIT LOOATION lor 1 now
harlla. 3 lOti, 1 10, IICh m/1, ~Oldy
IOf OOMIII~Ion . 8UIVt\'ed &amp;
Qrldtcl, Htalih Oapt, approved.
!Mated In Orton fwp , Al)f!ro• · 8
mt ltom town on 9!1 888.
~ltlrlotlvo oovonantlapply. VLS.
14021- IUILDINQ LOT Ill SU 6
MITOHILL liD. 1 Ao m/1 undtr
110.000 YLI
HOMIIH

1.01'1 .

diHlorlll!l ttol'ftl
tmtnldllll IIOIIIIIIOn.
IONUI TO IUVIIII 1095 8kyllnt
!Millie homo, u · I 80' Included In
tnt 1111. 2 btdrmt, 1 bath, "'·In
kll., IOYtly 1.", waonor, drytr, rongo
&amp; rot. varyltllng Ia lmr!lflllulato. t
Ao ~ 01 Will l.llndiOapld Qroundo.
2 oulbulldln~ ~a an 11111 taoll
Call VLI 44 1 ,
14017 LOGiitd iiU Mt. Clrmtl
lid. 3 Dldtoom, 2 baiMI, O!DAA
OONTBMPO~AAV HOMI Oak
kltontnt. oeram ~ tile In klt011tn &amp;
blft1l, NI W OAAP!T ttrrougn OUt,
niUUII dtoot. 5• ACRES WI.
1105.000. Trllh or DIYI

w~ l

MIVf

.

:=go~vAfNf.~ ei~..,N,~=

OHIIHIIII AIIIA Old ll~p
IlliG. MOO par aora. tez
1 .,.,_ · Orttt
lor hunting or
roorNIIOn. Alao 14 aorH mil
INHfflftii'OIII on 11'17.
.4041 ~It lioN 1.11 I At m/1
1111 ,IIINnt VllJ.y lid. 117,000.

IALI. Now alarm tyttam. fltAIIdlng
bUill 10 ltttt OOUt. ComtnUOi/t
otliiiiiOn llnat tiN. Pnat
tncludn lrwintory. Call .ronnnta
387·0:123 or 44!·U08.
loiOIII COMMIIIOIAL Lllf ON Ill
1 NOIITH• ,TI Of tn lOri, lletul~ul
oqulpl!td ClaytGn mobllt llclmt, I
1" f batna, 1 1101t lltma ana
littler
Call 1111 lu~Nir
lniOtl'ftliiOtl. 'i'LI

CLASSIFIEDSI

·1 and 2 bedroom apart:l'l'ltnte, fumlahed and unlur.nllihtd, -urlty deposit ra·

WWW.WISEMANREALESTATE.COM

oqulnod, no polo, 740·992·
:2218.

:1 Bedroom, Kltchtn, Both.
Living Room, Nloo, Porter
Artt. (740)387-7015
·1 BR In Alo ()randt, 1 block
Jorm collage, UtHitleo Paid, ·
:S3751mo. $200 dopoalt.
~740)1!89·8-405

·1 BR, Stove/ Aotrlgorator.
-waoher/Dryor. Hook-Up,
;S289/mo. (740)441·1519.

I9&amp;;90o·.

IP1'Qimmont now to sea tho
lilT! a - Olltring HOIIMI
Warrontyl

a

lralh,

~!W

2.4 ICtal

reata tNa

,person.

2 BA home with ootid 8 panol
dooro, lolt ol hardwood flooring, lmmoculololy kopl wall
Smith custom kitchen and 2 car 31A31A rolltdrlftch on3

orown molding and pookal doora.
Boautllully londooapad lol thai runs
all lha way to lha river. You'v•
1aan thl r11t, · IChtdula your

11w1r

-480 tot !lvo., 1 BR.
1285/mo. pluo $285 dam·
Ogt dtpollt. (740)886~531,
(304)638·4531 .
~partmont Av1111bl1 Now.
. Rivor9tnd PIIOI, Now Ha·
· ·ven, WI/ new aooopttng apj&gt;llcatlono lor HUO-oubol·
·.alztd, 1 b1droorn apart·
.mant. Utllllltl Included Call
·(304)882·3121 Apartment
avollabtt JUNE 1, 2002 tor
qutlllltd oonlorldloaOied

privata acres mil Juat minutes
Localad In Porter area. from town. Formal living room,

rtmodottd kitchen, largo
dlnlng/lamlly room addlllon with
wor1clng
tlra~laoo
and
1Cr8enad·ln poroh, two ~r

atlaohtd garage and a 28 x 32
two car detached garage.
'PL.US 1 n~o 32 x 48 molal pole
building With water and tloctrlc.
All tor only $16!,000.

• ·tnl!l: vtlntnt'ICI ODr•.Ciorfl

coty
you can

In lhe

~740)378-6111

OUFI WBB ~!IG! ll:www.vtlmllhffot•ollte.oarfl

now
.., - · ~ :: ··~ l rel,

e

Buy, Sell or Trade

-month rent, rent lncludtl

114011 IN TOWN A'ANTMINT
,011 IIINT Nftly dl&lt;lOtlltd 2
btdrmt., bath, t(lulppld kloohon,
largo L. Nm. wlhar&lt;lwood llooro,
oontrol air. Vou will btl our~rlotd
IIOW unululily good IHII apt, II 1116

·~,a~~=~ ~:~~ o':'~i

·At(lulrld. HUD approvtd.
•(740)2t54HI718 or (740)&lt;441 ..
:0583

:water,

a loYtlooroo rNII WtY nloe 3 BA

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKI!B THE DIFFERENCE

2 bedroom mobllt homo for
rent , no polo, (740)992·
5858

'2 bedroom, 2 otory aport·
lor flnl In SYracuee,
·1200 dtp()alt, 1330 per

In~

ground pool And pool hoult greet
lor entertaining. New hotl pump &amp;
lurnacel •115.000

19Uil Norrlo 14x72. 2 BR, 2
FuN Both, Shower, Lots ol
ooblnato, CIA, Daek, Extra
Nk:t. No Polo. Partially Fur·
·nlahtd· optlontt. Country·
'Ciott to hoopltal, City
BohOOII. (740)44e·1 082

1

~740)446·1519

Furnlohed Efficiency, All
Utllltlu Paid. Share Both,
1150/mo. 919 Stcond Ave.
.(740)446·3945
)lraoloua living. 1 and 2

.bedroom .apartment• at VII·

iago Maner and Rtvoroldt
JIPartmonto In Mlddla!l&lt;lrt.
From 1278·$348. Coli 740·
992·5084. Equal Houalng
Oililartunltleo.

GROVE IICAD· A nice place In the
country, Has approx. B acres with a btautllul
1BxBO mobile home made by Redman. Thare
are 3 bedroom&amp;, 2 baths, and I• total electric.
Comee with a 2 oar garage, above
I

Honoyauckle Hllll Apart·

and even a canln In the wooda.

VInton. Two 11ory home wllh lroa
lliaded yard bordorlng btaulltul

4nd

Allbooon Creak, 3·4 BA, 2 BA,
aM

m.ooo.

modarn

Moderate

Eatate General

WOOD HEJUTf,
INC
·
446·1066

31 LOcuST STREET

,, eo .

oar garage ptuo SO x 40 workohop
garoga with bath a heat. Loll

mort, call lor comptttt llstlng.

neutrtl

t

room. 3 bedroomo ond 2 balno. 2
car

atta&lt;:hed

garage,

proto10tonally lon&lt;tecapod. City
IChOOII. You Wilt ralily llkO thlo

onel Call now 10 lthldule an
appolntmenl . 121t8

NEW LI~TINOI LOTI! 4 oorao
up, mootly al woodtct owner will
oonalder atlllng on land conb'ltCt.

121103
'

.. ~

II,'''

Bedroom ranch
room~

situated on a
1.8 acre lo1. Living room,

·dining area. kitchtn. 1.5 bathe. 16
x 20 otorago ahed. S83,m.oo
121

J

'

•. ,

'

:

.

IlLLER LOW!II!O THI PIIICI
CN THII DUALITY IIIICK
rttANCHEIII 2 Car onachtd
garago, Iorge lormat living room &amp;
dining, lamlly room. OVtraiZid
matter tulle, l)lul 3 lddlllona t

bedroomo, 2.5 baoho, 1tvo1
approx. 2 acre lot. Mull: IH to
appreciate thl1 one t 12011

MICDLEPORT • Thlt home hal a large
kitchen, a dining room, living room, and a bath
downatalra. Tho encloaed back porch can bt
usod as a laundry room, " haa an extra
4 btdroomt.
convenience. Upatalrs you
There Ia a nice big porch out
In back.
Approx. 41 acrea
fra,_ bam W/lliHa.
WOtkahop with lof1, atorag• shed
&amp; dtlaohod garogt. Aoctntly

HOURS: Mon-Frll:30 am
a.m. to 12
Allin C. Wood, Broltlr • 448-4523
Ken Morgan, 8roklr • 44U071
JNnettt Moorw, • 251-1746
Patricia Roae 740-4N-10el

I

romodtttd 1,5 otory homo with
muot 10111 AI&lt;~UIIIIIng
now kltchtn, largo dining, don, 8 OWnar'o
oltorlll 3-4 bedroom ranch wloh
btdroornl, 2.5 batno, very nlcoly
L·ohopod kltcnon,
living &amp;,
dt&lt;:ortted. Muot to
dining room, large tam!ly room or.
opproclala elf tht omonltln thrrt
4th bedroom. Dtta on&lt;t otroet
oornn with tnlo proporty. 12111
ull 11 tho edgt ol town . Foneld
n rear
rawnl
lmmtd lt~e
IOMITHINQ ,011 IVIAVONI
poo1011tont t2tl2
Hllll...nlct IOYOI appro• . .77
10r1 lot tor tho kldo to play, 1 ACIIIAGI LilTING! 14 1121&lt;lrtl
roomy 4 bedroom 2 bath mil with rood trontogo, homllltt,
brlotrlvlnyt oldtd ronoh tor tf1t Mrs. t1mo lind ona ldo11 hunting land
1116 tar tf1t Mr. o 24 x 38 moltl thtt 11 od)aoont to Wayno Notional
goregt wllt1 17 H. Oiling. AI thll Forraat. 12140
oonvtnlontty loolltd atott to
CONVINIINCI 0' CITY LIVINOI
ry, oohooto and l'ftlnutn !rom
Ita!. lUPER REDUCTION IN JJI TIMO AVINUII Nlct 2 ttory
PRICI MAMII IT EVEN homo with plontv ot room to ttvt. •
MORE !IPPEALINOI 184.800 BR, LA, tamlly room, kKcnon,
f~tr, butment, off .a.rHt parking.
12t84 '
LOTI! Llltlt II any oxoovltlng Enclottd front porch ond rnortl
1001
ntt&lt;ltdl Manul- .d101
I OJ! /IIHJ I IION/1 1 II'.! IN(, :, X.INHlllMIIIION C/11 L OJ! ~; ToP BY fOil II
fill I lllllll II Y 110M I S IN COl OR /lOOK I f T'

l

• WE ARE EXCITED AIOUT OUR NEW WEI SITE"
PICTURES AND :t:NFORMAltON

JUST O,F HAPPY HOLLOW IIOAD •
A ~ btdroam home with one bath on 1 d81d
end road. Hat a nawer rool, Ire•
and tltl
on a 1.5aore 101. ·
JUST

ttoraae.

~

Vl.l

'""'tv

1 41MoM111t, Nt,OOO
I&lt;IOola IJCIDMOIIIIIOAO oftoro a

nMie lltal1tr homo, IIOdrOGml, lg.
L.!l., rcttolttn, Uti!Hy room, Cttlct or
lrd bedroom... rta~111 baNrtllnt,
11101 lltdroont, o)ON( •nd Othfl
112 lOll mil,
.... ,000. NHdt work Ia
...... tNt Ill lnvallrnant Of
_,_homo. root lltG

1:100

-·-•r-.
u•

bedrooma upetalra along wllh
bonua room and more l Attached 2

•

kitchen with newer tile flooring
dlahwaat1er, nice alzed llvlng

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4!631

HIIO rtAIUI.OUI IAIIOAINIIrJGtt I l'lltyt I Ill, I lA I10ml on
flllvllf l 1010 fOl,
rOOM ,
ltvin(l 100111 . W~lrtf)IIOt, Dill, Inti
ltftt utiNty room tn i~ll t111t WI!~ lUll
IMtatl'ft«'', AtiiOhtd 2 01r Qllrtgt
W HtiOIIttl 2 011 glr10f It Will
COUld lie UNd 101 IIIIIIOt• ~-

w:.-A~ ~~e~~ng.
tt
..ut

living room. family room. tormot

dining are~. dtn, kllchln, master
bedroom on main level, 2

N!W
THAN
2,100 oq . ft. Mvlng opoco. 5

POMEROY· A 1'/• atory home with vinyl aiding,
upper and lower Iron! porch, partly finished
basement, and a rear deck. Hu 3 to 4
btdroomi, 1 bath, with kiiChen and living room
down. Great starter home or rental oroDintv.

income.

~eal

1181 It your own .bota wtth
lhll prapootyl Thll llollng hu a
lot ID offer: plenty ol offlto olnglng In tht lruH Ireta In
1pioe1 lull baHmanl, •toraga In your baok yordl Thla Wllll·ktf)l
tf1t rear ot the building, gao hom• on 2 aorn may btl ex1otly
· totced air htat 1116 ooourlty Whof vou art looking tori Somt
appNance1,
laWn
oy-.tm. All tntt tor o good pnco. Jurni!Urt,
rnowtrt, and a nugo kllztr will
&lt;live uta oaN lodayl
otoyl 2 bedroorno with • olntng
I!MttOtol . ' " - ' ' room thll could be 1 third.
lnYIIIOf'll Eltllltlilltd Mobile 181,800.
Homo Parte! Onct·lr&gt;a•llft-tlmo
opportunity, Mljot colh flow!
CALL POA DETAILS.

new

aec:tlonal home that 'a not
cramped for space. Over t ,800
~ · h. Includes Mvlng &amp; family

lor kids.

"Equal Houolng Opportunity.
]740)446·3344. TOOt 1·
$00-780-0750.

kltchan.

. acraa

odga ot town. Like now... toyar,

PI~E

.Orlvo bthlnd HlghwtY PI•
&lt;rot Pool on JoekiOn Pike. 1
"Bidroom now Avallablt.
:Rent otarto 1240/mo. Low

1111 In tNI quill Yllltgt o1

CAPI

FANTASTIC VIEW· Words cannot riAoocrllbal
how beautiful the view le lrom thil Al••el\tlevvl
rooms , dining
room.
h1Hy
Drive homo. Tnla one story noma hu a ·~;~~:;
equipped kltehan with breaklllt
living room with a big btautllul white
araa, 3 bedroomo a 2 tull t&gt;atha.
II replace and glass all the way to the top ol
Lorge 10' 40 covertd dock. 2 oar
cathedral ceiling and glaaa window• on 2 ~:~~~~~~~ . detached garage , with extra
Hao 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, lamlly room, d
storage, concrete drive and morel
Agtt ownodt 12202
area, and a boautllul kitchen . There Ia Iota
storage a 2 car garage, and a securl1y syatom.
·
Owner wanll an ollerlll Sl 70,800.00

ofurnlohed 3 roorna &amp; bath,
'Clean. No Poto, Retereneo
;,
deposit
required.

ment1 toceted on COionlel

office

THIS SPRING, AND IT HAS JUST
BEGUN! PLUS WITH THE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE
CHESHIRE BUV·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 YOU! ·

~m.m

now QUALITY BUILT homt on

cy~ ~ r~"""'
058 Cllrll Chlptl Ra.
Bldwtll, Ohio 4&amp;814

Se,•ln,- Souah~rn Ohio fi'or Over A. Qunrler Cent11ry.,

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441·1818
Sereh L. Evane•Moore, Broker 441·1818
Patricia Heye· 448·3884 Cere Ceeey-245-9430
Cynthie Siciliano- 388·1841
·
Cendeoe
448·7~4~12=-----------~

. Fleal Eatate General

.
446•680
·

11

Home Technicians

•

POMEROY • A . .vin room home with
4 btdroorna. 1 bath, and hat a lulltraNment.
A 1'1• atory lrame home with ntwer roof.
wlndowt, and aiding. Hat 1 lront and rtar
J)OfCh anc11111 on approx. u IICftl. PG.OOO

c.rr Vlrglr'rll

II WHIIII

.............
14011 GUYAH ~. 10 Mr.. mil on T¥1p. Ad. 2 ~rnl In Mod
lfi!IIH. 2 01111-. Hill"' 1116 NatiiO. Gtlal llunttflg (/( gti•I •WIV. JR

I!VI!II DAI!AM 01' OWNING YOUII
IUIINIU? • Wtl, htrt . II your cha.nctr. I
A growing pizza bualntN 11 ready lor
•liP right up lt1d llkt over. Comet
OYinl, mlxtr, lllcert, HVIIII
lrttztr. Too many Item• to
with Ill fiXIUrtl, equipment
otock. Owntrt will help lf'llln
Call for mono cleUrllo.·

ft12

MEIGS C
,IIICI IIIOUCIDI 1212 DUIKY
ITJIIITI 14UQO Cozy 2 bedroom
ranch wlattaohtd CIIJIOI1 . •root &amp; moral Coli Chtryt tor . on
appolntrnant to HI IIIII ontl ~171
MIOOLII'OIIT. Otdtr homo w\111
chamo 1n&lt;1 g&lt;ttt IOootlon nMr
· grooory, .., L.olo ot rilorn
""- tor tho tomtty.,Oivt Charyl •
caN for,_. dttiJit. •110

DOTTIE TUANEA, lrokel'....... .lt:l-tll2
JERI~Y 8PRAOLINQ ....................2131

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL. £.MAIL US O.R

STOP BY THE OFFICE MON· FRI. 8:30A.M. TO 4:30P.M.
SAT. 8:30A.M. TO NOON

•

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

Jll 112 N. lrd ltrHL Ont 111orV

rolttd ror'&lt;&gt;h, 2 bedroom•. liVIng
roam. kltohtn &amp; bath, gorogo,
lllto!nant Prlotd ~ 134,000
121M
IAITIIIN LOCAL ICIIOOLI, thtl
3 - - Wlndtor homo htl hod
lo4l ot tender loving ooro. VInyl
o~r~nu.
thtrmo dOublt
hung
ohlnQto root. lnd oorport.
Sltuttld on f.07 aoraa 11 Ttxtt
Aold ptlotd It 144.000.00 12114

fllr-.

�PUBLIC
NOTICE

hbk Notkts In Newspapers.
~ .....t lQ Know, Dtll'ftnd ltipt to Your
Door.

· Mit.till"

catCharolcds Lake

May19,2002
•••
••
•'•
•

'

tlG· Dl Clllnllls llllt 111M

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

'••
•••
'

need,·close
home, in the

6ntlap-~hnd·6enthttl

Classifteds
44~2342
R•l Eatata Gtntl'll

R•l latata GtMI'III

992·2155

6unbap ·Gtime6entinel

Rtll latata Oennl

Shop

REAL ESTATE.
Su.u 1949

•

Classifieds

the

446-2342

992-2155

classlfledsl

BULLETIN BOA

. Real Eatate General

Serenity House

'

ltNtl VICtims Of domtatlo
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800·942·9577

OFFICE

992-2259

FOOD GIVEAWAY

When: May 16, 2002
Time: 10:00 • .?
Living Water Church
8SIII&lt;arr Ad.
Spontored By:
AayoiHope
Plllll brt boXII
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FOR ANIMAL LOVERS
LOOII Will tltablllhld clog
grooming butlnttl lor aalt.
Large year round cllenltlt.
Excellent reputation with all
local vtttrtnarltna, All
· aqulpmtnt auppllll &amp; training
Included. For moralrilormatlon
Call
. 740.448·0752

laautlhll . home ntttltd In lht
pinta near Chtattr. Juat off SR 7
taay aootat to Parktraburg·
MarltHa. Thla apHt entry home h11
7 rooma, 3 badrooma, family room,
t-jP/C~, tnolond aun room, built In
garage, TPC water, E11ttrn aohool
aletrlot . Make appointment to Ill
thla ontl
1110,000
I two atory home hat
baatmtnt and front &amp; rear porohta.
oonvtnltnt lccatlon.
AIKINQ

on

NIW LIITINOI e:so Mill lt. t '/, ltory frame wllh 2
Front lilting porch, rtar pttlo aru and a
"'rtlablt wfth the 1111 ot1ha homa. Thla may be
lor

••

IIRint- An oid41r mobile home with addltlona thet

bath, and lnoludtl tht .&amp;0 aort ·lot with
POSSESIIION1
.

lAND lAND lAND lAND

Lllllgtvlll.. Comer lot of ..8I&amp; aort with il t 872 t a x eo mobllt home.
Alto a 24 x 410 .lllriQt. publlo
,
OWNER H~S MOVED ~NO
WANTS THIS IIOLOII liking •~a.uuu
rr'l THI IILLIHQ TIM I Ofl YIAIIIII WI HAVI IUYIIII WI NIID
LIITINQIIIII CONTACT OUII O,ICI 011 ONI 0~ OUII AQINTI"
YOU HAVI A HOMI THAT YOU WANT TO IlLLI OUT 01' TOWN
I'OLK DON'T KNOW THI ARIA .... THIY COMITO THI IIIAL
IITATI OI'I'ICI I'IIIIT•• LIT Ul DIIIICT THIM TO YOUII HOMI
LilT WITH CLILAND IIIALTY, INC.

HAI'I'Y MOTHERS DAY TO ALL OUR MOMS AND TO
ALL OF THE MOMS OUT THERE.! ENjOY YOUR DAYI
Henry E. Cleltnd ...........................11112·2251
Sherrl L. Htrt ..................................742·2357
Ann• M. Chtpmtn ......................... llll2·53111
KlthiNn M. Clel1nd ..................... 11112-11111
uu Moodlep•ugh ..................... 11112·05112
Clel1nd
lric.
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Before lhopplng for your New Addre11 ... 1top by our1:

Graduation tlmt Ia 11m01t htrtl
Don't fOI'Qtl to order
your 01ke from
THE BAKE SHOP

(740) 446•3644
.

NEBULIZER.
MEDICATION

EXTERMITAL TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL.
"The Beilin Peat Control &amp;
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•65 or over
• Billed to Insurance
• Little If no cost
• Free Delivery
• We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740·446·7283
1·800·458·6844

(740) 446·2801

O'DELL. LUMBER
Drylock Waterproofing
Basement Paint $18.99 gal.
81 VIne St. 4-48·1278
834 E. Main St. 992·!5600

Old Fashioned Tent Revival
May 13·17
7 pm
State Rt. 233 at Gallla
(Beside Fire Station) with
Evangelist DAVId Fra;ree
Special Singing Nightly:
Men· May 13· Proclaim
Tues.· Gospel Bluegrais Boys
Wed. • Church Family Singers
1525 Eastern Avenue
Thurs.· Headed Home
Frt.· Forgiven Four
New Grizzly Snuff
Pastor Cline Rawlins and
Gallla Baptist Churoh Invite you
lor a wonderful week
Cougar Snuff BIG1 F to joinol us
praise and worship.
For more lnfonnatlon
Call 3711·2139
Surveon Gtneral'a Wamiflo: OIQirtht ·

Public Welcome
Fund Raiser for

Smokln' Rob's

Don Holcomb
May 17, 2002 .
Bob Evan's Itt Sheller House
8:00 p • 9:00 pm
Entertainment Baokroada Band
Roast Turkey Dinner
. $20.00 per person
Speaker: Mike Shoen1aker

.99¢

$1.79

1mo~• oont11n1 oarllOn mono~lllil

Wanted: Sllklng donation or
purchaat of a mld·tlzt
refrigerator for a Vlttnam
Vltttanl COhCIIIIon tfllllr
Call7o40•371J·2342

~========~

Sunday, May 19th
Gospel Lighthouse
·Church
Spacial Guest Singers
Momlng Worship Service
10:30
Aahlay Searle rrom Akron,
Ohio
Evening Service 7:00
Simply Rejoice from
Blacksburg, Georgia

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Do you have a local
agent to help you?
Call tor a quote.
· Ronnie Lynoh

5th Annual
Lynch Agency
Lions Club Golf The
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Scramble
446-8235
June 20
1·800·447·8235
1:30 T·off

NURSING
HOME
INSURANCE
If you ever netd long ttrm
ctre, would paying lor It be a
problem lor you?
A 10 year ratt guarantet Ia
available on mott pollclea.
Aonnlt Lynch
The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avtnue
Gtlllpolla, Ohio

Great Food and Prizes

Deadline Ia June 18.
.

Contact
Bob Htnnety 448·2531
Chrlt Homer 441·111711
Mark Dillon 448·2208

740·258·1084

www .wisemanreolestate.com
Dtvld Wlatmtn, QAI, CAl Broker 441-11111
rtl ~
Carolyn Witch, QAI 441·1007 lonny Otrntl 44fo2707
Hi JiJiiL
Robert Bruce 44Ht21 Altt WIHmtn 441-tlll Jen.,lfer llpplt 241-1020

Htad Start Optn Enrollment
81QN UP NOW FOA NE&gt;CT FALL!
GALLIA COUNTY
MAY 1~ WOODI.AND SIT!
10am·2pnt&amp; o4·8pm
MAY 1-4 OI.AY SIT!
1Oam·2pm &amp; o4·8pm
MEIGS COUNTY
MAY 1-4 HII.ANO ROAD
Slit 1Olm·Bpm
MAV 18 GINQIAIAEAO HOUSI
101m·Bpm
Pl..lt Dring your ohlld't:
• Shot ntoOrdl
• Ourttnt 1II month lncofl'lt
lnlormttiOII
• loolalltourlty oaraa
• Mldlall aard /t,~neuranoe .
Jnrormaton

17th MII'CirvllleiHannan Trace
ALUMNI DINNEFI
May25, 2002
For l'lltrvallonl,
Mltglrtt Myera 4-411·0827

I

446·8235 .
1·800·-447·8235

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

Vacation Rental Condo
2 BR, 2 Bath
across from the ocean
North Myrtle Beach
•

740·446·865 7

OUR HOUSE MUSEUM
432 1st Avenue
Open Weekends In May
Sat 10·4 • Sun 1·4
Available lor Parties, Dinners,
Meetings, Weddings.
Receptions, etc,
By arrangement 740·446·0586
or 1·800·752·2618
Save 30% to 40%
Direct Mill Pricing
12ft. 13ft &amp; 1511 wide carpet
. Free estimates.
Easy Financing
MOLLOHAN CARPET
446·7444 1·877·830·9162
Drive-A, Little Save· Alot

CONCERT
at
Bldweii·Porter Elementary
Saturday, May 18 7 p.m.
The Vinton Baptist Church
Praise Band
plus Ordinary People
and Proclaim
Proceeds will be deposited In th
Andrew Eleam Account at the Ohl
Valley Bank to help Andrew·
family wllh - expense• during hi .
upcoming heart 1urgery.

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL
Speedos of Rio Grande

245-0088 .
T·Bone Steak Dinner

$8.95 .
Lasagna or Spaghetti

$5.95
Fish Dinner $4.95
All dinners Include 2 aide
dishes.
Mom galla free piece ol pitt

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ae • • tnr ~ • •• alllli.t

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stllclcs in which lhey wn
invtStliiJ. ~y didn't koow
tilt pnxlllttS. llild they didn't
appreciate 1M risks lnvol'ltd.
That's why it's always a
aood idea to buy what yw
inow. Before investina in a
company, make sure you
andmtand Its produ&lt;:ts, lts
fl"?Spects. the outlook f,tv its
mdustry and other key f~~e­
ton.
• Doll 't go it wane. It's
htud to beeome an astute
investor on your own. That's
why you may want to work ·
with a tlnandal J)rofessional
-someone who'knows your
risk tolerance and time hori·
aon, and who can help yo11
understand how your vllriws
investments can work
toaether to help you .ll&lt;lhieve
your objectives.
·
By followiiiJ these basic
auidellnes, you may not
tiecome 11 world-renowned
investor but you may
avoid a lot of those "pot·
holes" that trip up so many
people enroute to their 'lona·
term aoaJs. Ultimately, your
Investment suC\.-ess will be
closely connected to the
number of mistakes you
don't make.

. flaenAmy
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reaulir tiiiiQ intervals. in ll
diversified mile of Invest·

...!ments.

Dollar-cost av~Wgina ean
. reduce · your overall invest·
ment costs lind help smooth
some of the volatiht~ of the
marltet: however, thts tech·
nique Cllnnot assure 11 profit
and does not protect IIIJainst
loss in declining markets.
• Avoid ·~umpina in and
out" of stocks. A lot of people truly enjoy buyina and
sellins stocks. But frequent
stock trading has two m!llor
drawbacks. First, it's ~xpen·
.sive: You 'II rack up a lot of
commissions b~ constantly
buying and selhng. Second,
there's no evidence that
heavy tradlna can improve
.,your portfolio's performance. On the contrary, you
may well do better by buyina
hl&amp;h·qU!IIily stocks and hold·
ina them for the lona term.
• Buy what you know. A
· few yearr 1110, many
investors aot cuuaht up in the
technolo&amp;Y stoclc "craze."
They were attracted by
rllpidly rising stock prices,
.but, In most cases. they did
not fully understand the

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Retums

around, accordlna to the
Investment
Company
Institute, the mutual fund
industry's' trade ussociation.
f1omP1pD1
By year end 2000, the num·
hi
1 f 2 a
ber of domestic BTFs had
I s aroup na 0 I di erent arown to " llnd &amp;lobal/lnterfund types was up 3·8 per· national BTFs totaled 2•.
cent,
"
The fund t~pe that took . · Today, there are many more
home the aold In this cateao- and come with br11nd names
ry was in fact aold runils. like !Shares, SPDRs and
They moved ahead. on aver- streetTRACKS.
.
ge, over 35 percent. Next in
HIII'Oid Evensky, chairman
..111
1
k 15 of Evensky, Brown &amp; Katz,
ne
were
emera
na
mar
e wealth mana~ers In· Cor•l
funds, up 12.2 percent; then
"
Pacific elt·Japan funds, up Oables,. Fla., s a big fan of11.98 percent; and Latin Exchange Trnded Funds. He
American funds, ahead 9.4 likes th.em for a numbet· of
reasons.
".IIETFs provide~ 11
perce nt. .
.
d
All but one of tHe Mixed· aoo comp ment to 11 port.o·
Equity Funds aroup .showed no because you Clln quickly .
positive returns - albeit the target a particular sector of
economy, or. the world,
1trld es ahead were ti ny and the
tha~ou'
d like to be invested
averaaed · 0.26 percent.
Balanced target maturity ln. en, lnvestlnaln then!' Is
funds were the losers In that very cost efficient, tax effl·
pack- they were down 0.62 clent, and you can move In
percent: Olobal Flexible and out or them quickly if
Portfolio Funds, the winners, you need to,'' he explains.
up slightly over I percent on · On the downside Bvensky
average.
says they aren't rlaht for
Leaving the o~n-end anyone using 11 dollar-cost·
mut.ual fund arena and mov· averasln~ investment strate·
Ins into Exchanae Traded IY· That s because buying a
if'unds, (ETFsl, you'll find little at a time means paying
performance there was bot· stock cammlsslon prices
ter, but only by a hair as the with every new purchose.
averase BTF w11s up 1.82 "They arc more expensive
percent during the first guar- thun funds If you are doing a
tcr. (E11change traded funds lot of small purchase&amp;. But, If
are Investment companies you're inveatlna for a long
. whose shares trade like period of time. the~ are
atocks do, on the exchanges, extremely inexpensive. '
and thus those shares can be
As for·the risks, of course
bouaht and sold all throuah· · they've got them. And, aiven
out the day.)
that the~e baskets of atocks
If you're lookin11 for the basically combine to form
hot ones, the top tl'iree ETFs various Indcxea, that sector
were iSharcs:MSCI S. representation mean• that
Korea, It's total retum was a there's likely to be more
poaitive 29.9 percent; volaiility that what yoU'd .
ISharet:Mexico Free, up find In a more divenlfled
17.07 percent; and, !Shares: portfolio. Then aaatn, Index·
Auatria, ahead 11.~ percent, type funds have often out·
Loaen Included !Shares: performed active manaaed
OS Network Idx, down portfolloa. So, once aailn,
19.41
percent: there are no guarantees, only
ttreetTRACKS: MS Internet, opJ)Ortunltles.
off 14 percent: .and, !Shares
(Dian Vujovlch 14 a nation·
Dow US Telecom, down 10 ally syndlcoted mutual fund
tar thla year, 16.2 percent. columnist, author, .and P.Ub·
ETP• are becomlna more lilhtr of an tdur:otlonal fund
and more popular. ln 1993, mutual Wtb 11111: www.all·
there wu one dome1tlc ETF boutfunduqm.)
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Melp Hl&amp;t1 School ltlldtn\1 rtmtt"blrtd two of their owt\ who Wllfl! kiUI!tl In an automobile
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IIWI'I. l.llldlty Balin, diUil\ttf of 81t!lt .1\d Cimlllll BOIIt\, Willi a junior at Melgl!l High School,
aflfl Brad Runyon, 1011 ofetnny end Kll'l Runyon tmd Julie Petera, was a fl'eahmtin, The plant·
ln&amp;a were the project of tilt junior oteaa. Pl~llltd dolrt 11 little groomlnR on one or the trees
l'tfdty Ire \I'll CIIU othctfl, !YOm lift, HlU'IIIIh WOOIII'O, Allltl)n Wlllillmson, Brook Bolin •nd
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US.We .Cellular
connect with

Win net of Out111ndln1 Ou1tomer leN~• Allllrd
- WIIIIW RtWfw Mqallnt

membership

ReclneG
reviews

•

litom.·

Februnry, Ron 8urks, n din·
icnl rounselot for the center,
·
'
nppenred on The Montel
center UntqUe Williums Show.
Now, 11 new vldw pmjeo:t,
,
,
desl~l\ed to ''edUC\100, - pre· .
vent nnd rehubilitate" Is In
1v IMAM J. Rao
the works, At the heart or
a"EEDrt t.IV1&gt;t-.1LYSWT1tlEI..et:JIIN the video presenmtion is a
component,
ALBANY_ "I came here recovery
feeling sick and brnln dead. desl~ned to capture the
Now, 1 an\ I!Oinj~ home and respected
Wellspring
feel like I'm rendy to live nppmt~~h ttltrentlng cult surRtlllln.~·
vlvors for use by victhns
Helplnt~ cuh ~urvlvors who ~tre unable to trove\ to
tranform f'l'oll\ ho~less 10 Meigs t'ountY- l'or personal
ho~ful Is the go 11 t of treatment.
Wellsprln11. Retreat 1111d Allother aspec1 of the pre"
Resoul'\,'e Center. Nestled 111 sentation Is designed to help
one or Meigs County's I\IQSI protessiunnh understand
remote oorners, Wellspring nnd counsel their patients
Is the United Stares' only who nre t\:lrmer cult victims.
resldentlnl trentment pm· The video proJect is under
llflllll fur the survlwrs of the direction ol Lit Shaw, n
cults, nnd the t-enter Is see· cult survivor advocate at
IIIII lll'l:lWing numbers or Wellspring.
clients.
. "I want 111 put u t\1ce · on
Lust yellt, Wellspring the problem; Shaw said.
trenred a reeul'&lt;l·number !12 "We cull only treat a number
cult survivors, Those dlents of' people cnch year, but
came !'rom nround th11 ~:oun· there arc millions of cult
try and around the world, victims out rherc, The video
uml l't!r the t11'!1t time, t'eder· project is goin!! to 1-euch out
ul funding helped pny the to people whn '-'Ould never,
blHs for clients' extended in their wildest dreams,
stnys at the center.
come to Welbprlng!'
Dr, Pnul Mnrtln, the pro- For those cult survivors
grnrn's director illld a cult who can mnke It to
survivor himself, said the Wellsprintt. anhltensive but
country's cult pmblem - 11 ~ml'orting pmgrmn awaits.
probl~m whlch continues to A plcluresque lodge serves
pltiJ!Ue sudety at nil socio· as a hom~ awuy frori\ home
economic levels, education· for those who remain truu·
111 leveh nnd family bnek· matlted und uncet'taltl abt1ut
grounds, continues to be n h
1
·
·
serious and life·threntenin" t e1r post-cu t expertem.,-es,
e nnd u trained stall of'.counproblem.
"Our rocord number of se1on prov ldes answer~ to· .
clients lust yellf undel'!lcores questions ubout returning to
lit\! In the "rent world,"
the t'uct thut the cult problern Dawn Jenkins is the lutest
Is still here, and lt's not
~olny 11 way. And It certainly addition to the Wellspring
underscores the fuel that we stntl', u counselor who sees a
huven'lgone nwav either.
special cttlllnll In the needs
"One thin&amp; welre thrilled of women who ure tryinll to
nbollt Is thllt hlst ye11r, we recover l'rom their eltperi·
didn't tum anybody away ellces In cults,
· b\ltnuse of lack of funds . "Our Influence Is gmw· ·
I
.lng" Murtln suld. "We're .
Th I n I
.of ~~s~:ry.r,st nour 6 yeurs hlp\ng more clients. We're
Mnrtln hilS appeared on 11 nble to protlut.-e this video
number of natlonnl tele.vl· project. We're definitely
slon programs Including moving un und branching
Nlyhtllne, to ti\scuss cults out. And we're going to be
like the Branch Ouvldlans doing things this yellf thnt
- sc.weral of whom sur- have never been done
vlved their ordeul by vlsitlnll before."
. Wellsprln&amp;
only weeks "I' 111 quite excited ubout
before their fellow cult whnt we're going to be doing
members died ill ThlliiS. lu In the future."

Cult treatment

(Amy Bowma11·Moort Is

th1 Gallipolis ana rtprtstn·
tot/vet for Edward IoiilS

Wellspring treats
recorCI numbers

RACINB - A lively tlll\\llll~lun 1)11 11 wide
r11n1111 ur leyl~lutlva 188111!11 lnoludlny lhll Sool~l
S~urlty llygtem 111\tl thll ptl~tqe l'lltif luc~llllt
hlahll;hteil la~t wttk'8 m elllll! ot R11~:lne
Ol'llnae 11t the Olllt OMvt htill.
Memhtn fll!88etlli re8olutlon 118klllllhllt all
memben tlf Coli1JI'I!8M be 8Ubjeet tu flli 81\MI
retirement My~tem 118 tho8e ourrently tenl'tllled
In Stll.llal St\~urlty, llnd th11t th11 •y•t il1 be
11hana tl to 11 "retirement syate1n r11tl\er thlln a
tu" 1o k p It sound and lmpl'tlvt retlreea'
llloomoa.
·
According to Kl!llh Ashley, lealal•tlv•
ehlllrlftllfl, oont:el'l\ ov r the eurrenl Soolal
' Seeurlty ~y8t m Willi bl'tlught tu lhl noor Ill
reaponae to retent ll!lllllclll l.lommeNhlla
which point uut th11 dll'Fertl\tl In bllnents for
trltmben or Conattsi! and oelal Securl~

reolplenta.

au.

JiiiiiH IH RICint. AI

H01pltal Week

.

1...,41

They ret'u~e to be 11 purl of the current Soclul
Security systen\ due to the smull Income It
11\!lll!tntes for retlrel!~, 5nhl Ashley, and lnstend
el\,loy 11 prlvnte system thut puys fur better
bet\cl1ts.Concem wns ex pressed by the 0 rangers
about What Is aolnif to hoJ)pen when the
"bliby bootncr~". 1nuny of whom nre nbuut to
retire, begin tu druw bcncflts.
·
A.~hley reported .thut 11s of now no word hus
bl!en rwelved t'rum the Cont~resslonul ropre·
8enMlon regarding the OI'J!Unl~ntlon's opposl·
tlon ttllht lm:reklse In po~tut~e rutcs.
OI81.\U881!tl by Pntty Dyer, Meigs Cuunty
deputy muster, was the furm bill cul'i'llntly
Utlili!r llullillderutioll In Conyress, nml the ney·
atlv11 renectlon un consch.mtlou~ farmers
l'l!illlltlna !rom lh~ btld publicity or 13uckeye

May 12·18

Ce/el,ralfng ~0 Yeart on Jaclc1011 Pilce
Wl1d like to recognize thoae who makt

uac llular.com
,,

. Holzer Medical Center auch a apec:lal
place ·IM.Itaff, Thla week, and every wttk,

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you help u"'iniOlCithe difference to those we serve.

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'

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

..... ....-.

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  </tagContainer>
</item>
