<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7052" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7052?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T22:05:56+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17458">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3e6f010dced2767dcf14c2ae9ae50daa.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6c030db6fbd6c7c8262296fecfe177f5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23097">
                  <text>www.mydel~lntfnll.com

NI:A Croaaword Puaale
PHlU.IP

,.....,

ALDIJ\

ON

INSIDE

Keeping track of ·
nature's finest. Cl

Tree dodor sets
out his shingle, 11

Work starts on
first bridge. A2

•=.,

·=. .. "=·
-......
'

.....

TEMPO

140icl ......

Ill Jolll

A I U

1t

II : - ' lllnltl

&amp; • It I

,., l'eddV

-.....

• ..t It &amp; \)
• Q.

unll

"'.""""'rut
..._.""'"'""'*'
"~
N"'"'
~"'
, ...
~

19

57 Kind at

tllll-v
..,..

st :-" PI'"

10 f'ooltabll .. "oy bla•'
eUftlc.t
'"' ''
•"
aa Hllllt1
llflncl .

. . -.A

I&amp;

'*"

ft4ll
,. Qell ctoMr

.,.... .,

19

::...u:

LU!MM

:U

$101-

DOWN

H 1111111
t7 laollal\ged
SO l'ollon-

Sl Dogmt
my

)leftle

U lmpiOy
S7 l'oetiG ado
vwrb
sa Relnah·

BARNEY
THANKE.E
. '. SNUH~ .
I'Ll.. 'TEl.. I- 'EM

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

H Curta and

•1.15

GRADUATION DAY

:I:
argo~
47 SwiM

1 "So ICinQI" 2t llllbiM'I
2 llald"l dYif
- Nolin
palnlet' Paul
ActNM 17 lecurH
41 Ylncomple
IMao
II Touehl
mtnl
4 frta
.;.. pro~
s NewMtancl .............. 1 41 SIWptum
Sl .......
lllciiM_
as
1 ~~~rtll
cant
7
1
SS Mo. mullt·
(2wdl.)
a Era ·
111tt
I N.MII.
U NCAA
ntlghbllr
INinl
10 Plea-t
U Mlldow

medic sq
.operating

s

sa A!IIMV • JimM Raund

w1111
sa ShraMI
11 St-ln · 40 PC "brtln"
......
41 llflnt to
II "WalttbOy"
miller
- Sendlec 43 n
1t:
H

11 JHn•

bird
~1"""!1'-

Designed to
assist medics,
volunteers

~ou \~~

l'rtt&amp; MffiC

BY

YEAH, BABY! Gallla
Academy sprinters Daniel
Roush, left, and Ty Simmons
celebrate their win In the
4x400-meter relay Friday at
the Division II regional track
and field meet In Byesville.

w•~L INtt&amp;ttiT

rtte
fAttTtt" 7 ••• wttAT
"\
ttAPPfNEl&gt;
CO
TO Tttf
CELEBRITY CIPHER

t&gt;fAL7f

by Lull Ctmpoa

ColoiHII)' Cipl\or cryplogramo .,. Crtlll&lt;l from quototlono by fiii'OUI
PfCIIII, pall and prwunl. Each 11111r In lhl clphor lllildl for onolhlr.

TO&lt;Ry'l clut: 0 llqUIII S

·

,.

THE BORN
LOSER
.
-,to:,, rKNe.~

'G
~

~ill:ltk ..
~r l'fo\NO\
me;~w~

MKD

Z ZI

, R D J

U Z H L,

DZINUZOI

WOPJRHN

I I

I0 L0

.

KLO

OJ

ZI

Helena J. Howett, 98
Rex B.. Marrs 84
Carl L~d Miher1 75
B.E. 'Gene' Wellington, 74
Robert C. Fleshman, 74
Willard E. Thomas Sr., 53
George M. Nowlin, 47
Paula Crane 37
Mathew Milfurd Milam
Dttllll, Ali

PZL.JOLRNO , '

~Tile
~DI

-

IOLLNAAO

A 0 .V K

·Weather
Hish: SOsl Low: 60s ·
O.tllll, A2 .

RUSPEU
i

II

12

II

V 0 RH E

I I II I

· Food drive

I

CROWN CITY - Crown
City Post Office customers
participated for the first time
May 11 in the National
Association
.o f
Letter
Carriers' annual food drive.
"The Crown City Post
Office would like to thank all
of its customers for their contriblltions," said Postmaster
Melody Doll. "Thanks to
you, 11 local food pantry now
. has 663 food items for the
needy.
"We look forward to partlc·
ipating in this wonderful pro·
gram again next yeW'," she
added.

Buy, Stll or Tndt
·

lnlht '

.

Index

1

• lullau- 21 ,.._

Suturdoy, June I. 2002 .
In the yeor ahead there will
be plenty or opportunltlet fur
you to JICt Involved In exQit·
ins pro)ccl- or endeavors. AI·
lhOUJh -ome may be •mall,
each will hnve 1urprillnJ polcnllal for bluer and beuer
thinK&amp;.
OE!MINI (May ll ·lune 20)
.. II I• be•t nut 'tu lake what
you hear at sotpcl. Some
people wllh whom you could
1\e deallns m~y be telling you
only what they wan1 you 10
hear or believe. Trust your In·
-tlnctt. Trylna 10 J.lBich up a
broken ronumce? The Allro-'.
Orapli Matchmaker can help

.you undcntand what to do to
make the relatlon1hlp wurk.
Mall 52.75 ·111 Matchmaker.
c/o thl1 newtpa~r P.O. Bllll
17~8. Murray flilt Station,

New York, NY 10156. Be

1ure to 11ate your wdiiC •lJII.
CANCER {June ll·luly 22)
•• Should you find yourself
edJY ur moody at timet, tlt·
pre11 and releut your (Mtra·
110n1. lbi1 can be 1 betttr
than averaae day (or you, 10
don't let them ~lin lhe way.
LEO (July ll·Aua. 22) ••
Y1111 don't have to fill In line
with ·ynur friend• ' plant
frlelldJ If lhey do .1101 •ppeaJ

.
'

Ill you, Don't be reluctant 10
bow ou1 and do your own
thlng. It' a your day, 10 enjoy

'· VIROO. (Au1. 23-Sept. 22)

1

•• Should wmethlnJI lllcky
~M:cur from uut or the blue,
keep rour head and don't let
your frustration• act out of
hand. Your dlanlly and reputallon .are always on the line,
10 protect them.
LIBRA (Se"'. 2J.Oct.l3).
· You'll have plenty of eneral.
and ambition but if you dati 1

have a well-ihouaht Dlltaame
plan. you could 1pln your
wheel1 and ac:compllth very

llule. Make a plan aild follow
(t.
•
SCORPIO (&lt;kt. 24-Nov.

22) ·•• While worklna on a
prctenl endeavor · where
you've been maklns p1opcu,
k:teJl your hotlet and e~pe&lt;;~ao
tlon1 within reasonable

, boundJ. Make ailow~UM:CS for
neaatlve vll'iablet.
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec.21) - What maket you
10 a~alins II 1hat you' re

a-rally IOINOIII whO lives
•~Y the benefit o7 the
doulit. DOII't step out charlcw IIYen fqr a moment. !(eep
lll~mlnd.
.

C}llliCORN (Dec. U·Jen.
(

19) •• AlthouJh you may be
eneraetlc, be careful not to
t~ke on more than you can
handle. Overburdenlna yourtelf could dampen your satll·
faction for what you do ac·

complith.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb.
19) •• Ju11 because the funds
you've been 1iven came from
someone elte's tweat is no
reuon to t()Cnd them frlvolouoly. Mam tal n the same
prudence you have for what ·
you make.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
:ZO) •• If

calendars
Celebrations
Classifteds
Comics
Dear Abby

A5
Cl
02~7

insert
C1
A4

Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports ·
Weather

•

Ni
A2
81-6
A2

C&gt; 2002 Ofllo Volloy ~. ~

River Valley awards.diplomas
Bv M1wu1A RuuiU
MRUSSELLG&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
RIO GRANDE - Fellow
students, purents, fwnily and
friends packed the gymnasium nt the l)niversity of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center Friday
night with cameras, video
recorders and tissues In hand·
to watch 125 River Valley.
High · School gruduutes ·
embark on a new phase of
their lives.
·
Keynote speaker and GaiJin
County Local Schools
Superintendent Charla Evans
warned the students that ''the
feW' of uncertainty can hnve u GmiNQ RIADY - Students prepare to receive their diplocrippling effect on our pursuit mas durin&amp; Friday nights araduatlon ceremony.
of the good II fe.
"In the 'Middle Ages,
European sailors refu.sed to u streetsweeper, he should that as you go out into the
sail very fur south," she said. sweep streets even as wortd in seW'ch of your own
·'They were convinced that Michelangelo painted, or personal visiOn that you will
the middle of the earth was Beethoven composed music, remain in our thoughts, our
ringed with fire, because the or Shakespeare wrote poetry: hearts and our prayers."
Class
of
2002
further south they traveled the He should sweep streets so
hotter the temperature well that all the hosts of heav· Valedi.ctorii\118 were Megan
en and eanh will pause to say, Harrison, Jamie Thevenir,
became.
.
a $reat Jennine White and Elizabeth
"How many of life's hori· here · lived
zons go unexplored because stteetaweeper who did h1s job Preston.
Student8 recognized · for
we fear the uncertainties or well.'
being
in the top I0 percent of
"Graduates,
I
challense
are satisfied to tiQtoe through
the
class
were !farah Joy
life to make it safely to death each of you to take stock of
without seeing what was the gifts that you have been Booth, Jessica Lea Collins,
available to us. Countless dis· given and detennine a per- Heather Dawn o,y, .Traci
coveries await the adventut· sonal vision for yourself. Marie ~y. Betl\any Renee
ous spirit willing to test the ·Having done that, determine Blliou, John Stewart Gill,
a course that will set you .on Megan Elizabeth Harrison,
unknown.
Christine Hood,
the
path to achieve that Amy
· "Martin Luther King once
said; 'If a man Is called to be visloti. Finally, .always know
PIIMIIIIIYHI,AI

$100,000 in
CDBG formula
funds awarded
BY ..... J.RID
8RE£061MVDAILY8EHTINEl.COM

POMEROY Four
Meigs County voluntur fll'C
deplll'tmenu will share in
nearly $100,000 in grant
fundi from the county for
new equipment.

Meigs County commis·
sioners approved six projects for funding through the
Community Development .
Block Orant formula program on Friday.
The county W,llll awarded
S184,000 from the state
through the annual CDBO
program, $17,000 of which
11 set uide for administra·
tion 1nd $17,000 for fair
bouaing programs. The bal·
ance is awarded, at the com·
missioners' di~eretion, for

•omeone In the

household occulonally acll
up, don't let it1plll over 01110
you. Keep your pleuant dis-

petition atlllllil11ell!Y el!CIII·
or perrmion in
"RIES (March 21·Aprill!l)
- You've JOt what it IUel to
~ liCk

handle 1Cd0111 mpon~ibilltles
and JIC!f:olm 11 your belt once
you Jilt irrelevant int.emll out
of r.our mind. Keto your pri·
oritla In lllOd woR:In1 order.

TAUROS (April 20-Mar
20) - There will be plenty of
oppurtunitlu to line yuur
~ke!l with

lllver. Howi1Yer,
elltrava..nce overtakes
you. It C411kl be a problem.

.r

I

J, Aao

RACINE - A new medic
squad. stuffed by paid pnrumedics and emergency
medical technicians, · will
begin operating in Racine
on Sunday, but has beo:n put
in place to serve the entire
county.
·
Gene Lyons, Meigs
County EMS odministnitor,
said the new squud has been
put in place ·to reduce
response time to emergency
calls in the eastern portion
of the county, to alleviute
pressure on voiUJiteer
medics, and to assist the
county's other pnld medic
squad, which operutes from
EMS headquarters . in
Pomeroy.
.
The new squad will be
staffed ut all times from the
former Racine volunteer
emergency squw:l headquarters, provided by the Villal!e
of Racine, but will be diS·
patched from the EMS
headquarters In Pomeroy.
One trained puramedic
and one EMT will staff the
squad 24 hours u duy, seven
days u week, Lyons suid.
Racine no longer operutes
a volunteer squad, but nearby volunteer units in

ON HI!R WAY - 2002 River valley High School graduate Tracl Eddy receives her diploma during
graduation exercises held Friday night at the University of Rio Grande. (MIIIIsala Russell photos)

•

Fire clepartmelits

•

•

lilliAN

BREED41MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SM atory on Pill 11.

~fAVtN

I FRIDAY

I

,.,
nnes

LMnnt

0111111
11 laiiOIII

I.

•

\

,.~

•••••
• u

I

local government pro.tecta. ·
· Fire units m Olive
Township, Pomeroy, Rllci.ne
and Scipio Townahip have
received grant fundins ·
through the program for new
tire ~ui~nt.
Olive Town1hip will
receive $25,000 for 20 set.
or turnout gear and four sets
of breadting equippient for
use by ffrefightel1. The
Racine department was
awarded S:Z5,000 for the

Nnn111 Grull. M

Syracuse. Tuppers Plains
and Reedsville will continue to respond to emergency
calls in addition to the new
medic squud.
'This new service is not
meant to replace volunteer
squuds In the eustem end of
the county, but Is designed
to help provide better coverU8e tn the residents in the
nreu,''· Lyons suid.
"We will . be uble to p~
vide Advunced Life Support
coveruge.
reduce the
response time when calls
from thut purt of the county
come in, and provide asslstunce to volunteers and
those working on the exist· ·
ing medic squad in
Pomeroy," Lyons added.
"It's going to take an
effort between volunteers
and puid staff to make It
work, but those who staff
the volunteer squads are
still running and will con·
tiriue to run, but they're
being run to death ."
·
"The volunteers are great
und we' ll continue 10
depend on them, but we ulso
understand they have lives
and responsibilities of their
own," Lyons said.
Lyons plans an open
house at the new medic
heudquurters in Racine on
June 9 from noon until 4
p.m. The public is invited to
visit the station und meet
the new squad's staff.
Refreshments will be
served.

Summ~r cpmP.Ietion

set for f1re stat1on
.the voters for making it possible," Donnully suid.
GALLIPOLIS
.
The levy i~ also paying
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire for replacement vehicles to
Department's new station GVFD's fleet, including a'
house should be complete . new pumper truck the
this summer, contractors department obtained in
have told the fire chief.
April, allowing OVPD to
'They think If they don't sell ils 1977 pumper for $1 ,
lose any more days to to
the
newly-formed
weather, it should be done Springfield
Township
by mid-July or early Volunteer Fire Department.
August," Fire Chief Bob
The new station includes
Connally Hllid. "Everyth. ing live bays. a bunk room . .the
seems to be right on sched- assistant lire chief's office
ule now.''
and training room, Rupply
The station, neJtl ·to the · and
storage
space,
water treatment plant off restroqms and a dayroom
Chestnllt Street, is being put for the department's 30
up by Blair Builders of members.
Patriot, while a resident
Connally said an open
firefighter's residence near· house is e:o~pected sometime
by is bein$ built by Tri-Mat after the building is comCon.structton of Bidwell and plete and the move from
nearing completion.
Avenue is made.
Both will replace GVFD's Second
The new construction fol•
cutrent quartel'll at the City lows
a . trend in upgraded
Building, which the depart· facilities
for Oallia County
ment Iiiii outgrown. The fire departments
. project is costing 5602,000, City moved into. .itsCrown
new
financed through proceeds quarters in the former
of a Z..mill repiiiCCntent levy
city votert . approved ·in Landon's Market building
in 2000, while Harri50n .
November 2000.
Township's
VFD is gettins ·
"We always like to lake
the opponunity for thanking
BY KIVIN KILLY
KKELLVG&gt;MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

·"•rr• ... ...._•,M

•

Span N loatJiy IJy HJ: r Mr&amp;tral C..W
Uf! Line·Sgnnjng is dedicaMd to providing the highest
quality imaging technc*Jgy at on affo.d. tble rallt.
•

ec.a~id

••ninr
offwrf;
Mery/SJ«:Ja Screening • Abdonwnal Aortic Aneurysm 5aeening
Sq

P•pol Al1•iol Dirme Sa..Vng • Dstr :t 41fiCf'OioMI in 60 woudr

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer~org

Pre-registration is

..

�•

A2

'

1111

Charity

Wolk starts on

Ohio wl IJtltar

IY lWf ... liUIM

DARWIN -A ~ bqiM
on the lint of four bridps mat 1ft (lilt
of the U.S. 33 rei(Ut\01\ pt()Jttt
betv.u11 A.themi and Darwin, heavy
~ulpnitnt tontinue:s to mno~ tarat
amounts of soil and rotk from lbe nar'll
lrandscope.
Wi lh.&amp;m SW\furth, Ohio Dtplartment
of Tnnsportation (ODOT) projeet tl_lll·
nttr, Slid Prid.lY PfOII'e$$ on the f\rst
phase of the i l-mlle project, to ultl·
mlltely link A.thtns and Dilrwin with a
limited access tv."O-IIlllt rolld c:anstruc:ted
on ll four-lillie right-of·~ is "movina
atona quite nicely," and work crews are
curmnly busy with the installation of
bridae piers lncl the Implementation of
erosfon-control lee:hniques.
·
"Cnws an: c:Wftnt!Y busy with the
construc:tlon or the lim of fOur briclaes
that will be put or the overall hiahwa,y
connector project," uld Stanforth.
"RI&amp;fltnow, piers ue beina set fur the
first bridae, which will be located ne11r
State Route 681in Darwin," he said.
"We an: still acldresslna erosion c:on·
trol Issues," llddild Stanforth. "Sinc:e so
much dirt is beina removed, the implementation of the most up-to-dnte erosion
control techniques Is an important put
of this project. We need to rrevent the
deterioration; or slippnae, o. soil at all

0

'

GALLIPOLIS
Holzer
Mtdical Center «lebrtttd 30
yem It its ltckson Plb: location
with an A.nni~rsary Charity Ball.
The e\-ent 1lso · ef\ltd as the offi·
ill kick-off for a capital fund·
raislna c1mpa~n whh an Initial
, 11;0&amp;1 of $1 milhon for the Holter
• Consolldllttd Hellhh Systems
· (HCHS), llcronli!l&amp; to its chairman, Thonu1s E. lbpe.
' The black lie e~nt was chaired
' by M11rianne B. Campbell, u.ecu·
d~ vice !&gt;resident of the Holter

.

:promotional book
IMDU CONITRUCTION - WOrlter&amp; beill'l tonstructiCM'I 01'1 the flr&amp;t of kiur bric!Re&amp;
that are part of the u.s. S3 relocation project between Athena and Darwin.
Aec:ordln&amp; to William Stanforth, ODOT proJect enalnetr, crews lite still focusln&amp; on
the remo111il of tons of soli 11nd rock while lddresslna Important eroalon cont~l

Weet Virginia weather

1

Mortua
Arest

IH one of Oak

IIIICIIIIItl fOr

___ _
------·. ·--

Rates

LOWI

Ianiei' Iandini
rata1ane1 t1rm1. ·

.,
........
..•. ... ,.. =.: ... """'"'

..,...

,_,

-·..,....,_..__

--c..,
12----c..,, ,.,.
·- ,,.,,-n

OAK HILL
BANKI

.*L,.!.=·

&amp;

into Villa11e Profile's Web site
at WWW. vill11geproflle.com,
.., OAL.I.IPOI.IS - Onilin allowing people to· nccess
l.Ounty
Chumber
of dahl about Galli&amp; if they
Commerce ·is working on n hnven 'I hnd access to the
new promotion11l tool For the book.
county and needs your l)elp
"If you or your business is
'Ill mnkinalt n renlity. '
a 2002 cham6er member, you
The chnmber ~ontrllcted will automatically be listed in
with Vlli1111e Profile of Elgill, the directorY." Neal snid, "We
· Ill., n publl~her of communi• are also malting it a c:omtnu·
ty mup~. @Uides, directories, mit)' protile, with lnformu·
banners 11nd calendllfS, for a tion on the industrial park,
full·color publicution about community uttractions nnd
011iiln ·County and chamber relocation Information."
membership that chnmber
Th k 10 It8
N 1
"!rector Lorle Neal said will
e ey
success, ea
P
said, lies In the amount of
·p'\'ovlde 11 more attractive 11d rtl 51· th book
package of information for
ve ng e
can gen·
~ople looking to come to or erate. Thl! more advertising
lluslnelis In Oiiltla C.ounty. . sold allows for the uddillon
.ilo
~ 1
of more pages, which Neal
. ··. V llngl! Profile representn· will fill with the relocation
tlve Oene Hollund, a veteran InFormation and other vital
the news and magulne
business, hus been visiting . data about the county.
. local businesses and organr.
"There's n lot of lnformn·
:utions since early spring tion In our rel®atlon pack·
rounding up advertlslng for a,e," she sllid. "To make sure
,the mngazine·style book, due it s the best marketing tool It
for publication ln October.
call be, Oene hu to sell as
The firm has done similar many palles as he can. We
:bOoks for 11 number of Ohio feel that In the lona run, those
communities
containing who have purchased ads wlll
information about their coun· get their money back in
1tv or town, COYilrln
_8 SUch fncreased buslnen from Vial• .
'copies as buslneu, educat1on, tors."
,hhtory recreation - sub.tects
"l' ve met a lot of good peo·
'utilized In attracting vls1tor8 pie IliOn¥, the wayl" . said
and buainenel to their envi· Holland. 'We're hoi) na that
rons.
with this book, for tl\e tourist
. , VII taae Pronle hu done a aspect, we oan turn day·trl P·
book for Jackson Couniy And pert to Oallla County into
Ia In the process of creatlna ovemlahten."
one ror Lawrence County.
Hoiland can be contacted at
· "I thl k It I00 kl reallv 10 p the chamber at 446-0396, and
'.quality,"n said Neal. ,,'The will be in the co-untv, until
relocation pllllkll&amp;tl of lnfor• mld·June. The copy deadline
•matlon we have now works Is June 27.
•but It's outdated. This will
"I understand thials a small
ilve ua the opportunity to community and people 11111 hit
update and provide lnforma• up ail the tlme, llut If thfs pro·
tion In an attractive pllllkaae, ject can aet &amp;ood word of
which le what we want our mouth, that would be areatln
. county to be."
helpina us meet .our ~oal of
In ilddltlon to the book, all helpina Oaitia County, ' Neal
: of the Information Ia loaded liald.
B't K1111N kiLL't

• 1\KElltotMVOAilrtltiDUNt.COM

.of

in lhts

"Fund-ruiMng eiTorts "ill I.' OO•
tinue in the future to llS~ure the
establishment uf the Institute."
added Cwnpb.!ll,
A number
1b
h

of other events that
h · I' ~0
t
ce e r.ue t e ospttu s • yeurs a
Jack on Pike OCI.' urred. indudmg
· the dedkution or a)tute Historical
Murker in downtown Gallipol is
udju~enl to the Ced;~r Stree.t fudli ·
ty honoring the lute Dr. Churles E.
Hulzer Sr.. founder of the uriginul
Holzer Hospitul.
·

•

•

IYKIIIIDoliOM
1\DOTSONOMYOAI~VTIIIBIJNI!.COM
OAU..IPOUS ~ Thanks
and honors were given
recently ut the volunttet lun·
cheon at Arbors ofOaliipolis.
Eighty·four volunteers
were tn:nted . to music wtd .
ROOd food for their 2,419
Jiouts !!I donated \IIOrk.
Enterlllinrnent wus provid·
ed by Theresa Woods, dlrectot of nursing, und Burb
Forley, admissions coordinu·
tor.

"I thnnk you Iron\ the bot·
htmt for because
you 1111ve the II'IO!lt precious
Rift !hut one Clll\ give, und
ihut Is your tlinc." said Joe
Donchclz, SOUthern Region
directOr of operutions.
"And you gave if freely to
those thnt dc5n 't have much
time left," he said.
. Two volunteers-were given
baskets of Jiit\8 for their tied·
!cation. They were Jeune
Bond with 818 hours, und
Lillian Hurt with 393 houn.
''The lllSt 20 yelli'S we huve
bee!\ blessed with wonderful
volunteem who hnve provid·
ed u quulll)' of life which ·
money cun not buy, the touch
of n hund, 11 smile, a hu1, n
kind word and the greut
church services have been 11
blessing not only to the residents 6ut myself as well,"
said Onll Harilllton, activities
director.
"Life Is Uke n bouquet of
flowers - memories you TOP VOLUNTIIRI - Pictured are Arbors of Gallipolis top volunteers (left) Jeane Bond with 818
aalhcr a long the way und hol.lr'l, lnd Lillian Hurt with 393 hours, at Arbors' annual volunteer luncheon. (Krts Dotson)
each of you will always be
remembered,"ahe lidded.
tom of my

HEALTHY START
OHIO'S HEALTH INSURANCE
OPTION FOR CHILDREN
Health Insurance .
For Your Kids
·. Is Just A Phone Call Away

:Jobless claims drop for
:second straight week
: WASHINOTON (AP) · For 11 1econd •tralaht
week, rewer people filed
new ch1lm1 for unemploy,
. ment lttaurance, but the
: level of claims wa1 11111
; hlah In an indication that
: the job market remain•
• 11 uul•h.
, Claims dropped by a sea·
: 1•on ally udjusted IZ,OOO to
' 410 000 ·the lowell
: ilevel tlnce the middle of
:1March - for the week
: endlnJ May 23, the Labor
; Department _ reported
· Thursday. Claim• had fall·
: en by 3,000 In the prior
: week.
..
h
: "We're soina in tne t 1I t
• direction, JUit way foe;
: tlow" safd cconomilt
: Clifford Waldmi.~ 1 pre•l·
: dent
ol
wal dman

Auoclates. He noted that
even with the recent
declines claims have
remained itubbornly above
the 400,000 R!ark for 10
stralaht weeki.

ll!all.t~~tolls tatttAI!' f'O~~;e
\W.WII'"Z'are~se~ lrome

·--···=
·····••IIL!~. .

Call Today!
992-2117
1-800-992-2608

.... llciiiOnl ''"""noiOOY
1 computll ,....p . ri speclall•t

I

·

T.cMicti suppo
1 MCQunllno icl AcSmlnlttratton
011
1 Eli.Cu\IV~Ici·Mnllnltllatlon

.

I Mtlllcal t "''rnlnlti!'IIIOn
1 Sutlnn ""

Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
\1

\I I

"'

ACICI12141

175 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760 .

ca r
A monthly sel{·exam o{ your akin can help you detect the changes and seck . .
treatment, if neecs1ary. Make note: of ntolca or blem~hes everywhere on your skin
and watch for unwual ch~ges in thclr appearance.
Consult your doctor immediately if a mole or blemish:

•
•
••
••
•

•
•
•
•

,
•
'
•'

,•
•

'

~u~

RUblisher Albom lauds volunteers' dedication to center
~prepare Gallia · ·

. The speaker documented ·
surveys that showed travelers
in 2000 spent $25.7 billion in ·
Ohio, including $9 billion for food,
$7.3 billion in retail, $4.4 billion
in transportation, $2.7 billion
In lodging, and $2.3 billion
In recreation.

_,..,..,. __

&gt;'idoe quality can&lt;.'tr
~gion. "

; ~hamber,

Tourism official lauds Gallia's heritage rol~

••W

~pbell will IICtively oontinue
t'ri·State Foundation's phil an·
thropic effort$ on behalf of the
hospital's Institute for Cancer
Care,. as 11 key pan of the HCHS

strategic plan to enhlln.:e 1\t;alth Columbus provided t~K&gt; entert:~in·
ment.
"Fit\y·two bu ine e and indi·
" h was a moemorabh.' 1!\'tnint
~iduals ~~iously p;utnercd with
with u \'1!1')1 spedal charity focu '.
the hospital for thi 30th said C~~~ttplll.'ll.
Anni~erury Charity Ball 111 three
Tope commented. "We are very
level • platinum ($2,SOO). JOid exdtro about the prospects of the
t$1.000). and silvt'r (~00)," aid capitGI campaign.
.
"The ball is a distinctl\-e wny to
Cllltll)bell.
"All proceeds from the ponsors initiate this endeavor," h~ uddtd.
and tkket donut ions of $50 each or ." It was an evoening 10 long ~mem·
$100 a coople went toward the ber. and for a very sil!nificunt rca·
on, ns we worl.. toward establish·
capita.! c:ampailn." she added.
in1.1
the hospital' Institute for
Wellin.tun's of Sc11tlet Oak~ d
the talennl! for the event und ne Cunl.-er Cure with the lutesll'lluip·
Rick Bruneuo Bund from mcnt available, designed to pro·

care for area resident .

•••

Threat of rain will linger in area

NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

foumt.tlon for Tri.State Health
Care.
She h as umed the challen_.
m raise fundina ~ssaey to • ' t
in the pul\':hase of • new linear
accelerator, an inte1ral piece of
medklll equipment that provides
the enct metsurc of radiation,
precisely controlled, po itioned
lnd •ptllitd m tln«t sites in the

•

lasues. (Tbny M. L.each)
costs."
Stanforth added that current estimates
..
indicate 13 million ~s of dirt has Darwin and Alexlll\der Township Rood . their end or the project.
.
already been moved and that c:rews are 68, just north of Shad~:~, Is scheduled for
The Athens-Darwin llroject is part of
·
· the hu-ger ''Cupiutl Comdort" whic:h aiS!l
still working on removing the remaining lune 2004.
20 million. ·
·
Construction on the second phl\111, includes the RaveMwoou Connector
av THE ASSociATED PRESS
cloudy with a chance ·of The completion date for the project's which
extends from Shade to Athens, 11nd bypasses at both . Nclsonvllle nnd
The National Weather showers and thunderstorms. first phase, which includes a slx·mlle has stllrted
crews begin to concentrate Lancaster.
Service said another cold Lows in the lower 60s. stretch of SuJllll: Two highway between on movingaslqe
nmount!l of dirt from
front will drop to the Ohio Chance of rain 40 percent.
River by Sundly morning. A
Monday... Variably cloudy
few showers and thunder· with a chDnce of showers and
storms will be possible. Lows thunderstorms. Highs in the
will ranae from in the mid mid 80s. Chance of rain 40
60s In the south.
percent.
More clouds will be around
Monday
night... Partly
Sunday. Highs will be in the cloudy. LOws in ttie mid 60s.
•
80s. The front will slowly
Extended forecast:
·
. IY 0Dtl O'DoNNILL
severui hundred vlsiiors. InfO
start back north as a warm
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
T·S CORRESPONDENT
· Onlil polis nnd the county
front Sunday evening and chance of showers and thun· · OALLlPOLIS - "Onlliu
from points throUMhout the
. · · there will be a chance of derstorms from early after· County offers a great experi·
· midwest.
"
Hood
introduced
Ch11rles
·
·showers and thunderstorms noon on. Highs in the mid !~~~ :~eh!~~~~~~t~r~r6 ~~~
Humphreys,
Mnson
County's
through
· midweek. 80s.
'~Temperatures should be at or
Wednesday... Partly cloudy Is an ideal weekend vacation
tourism director, who said
above normal.
with a chance of showers and loc:atlon."
"the secret to success In our ·
Sunrise Sunday will be at thunderstorms. Lows 60 to
That was the thrust of an
urea is to offer more optlo11s
6:04a.m.
65 and highs in the lower 80s. address by Amdir Eylon, aafslhs·
to vlsiton, nnd we lll'tl now
Weather toncut1
Thursday... Partly cloudy tant tourism trector o I e
rendy to partner with both
Sunday... Variabiy cloudy with a chance of sliowers and Ohio
Department
of
. Oalila and Me las counties ·to
with a cliance of ahowen and thunderstorms. Lows 60 to Development, durin&amp; -tho
accomplish thiS aoal." · ·
thunderstorm•. Hiahs 80 to 65 and hiahs near 80.
recent annual meetlna of the
Humphreys acfded that the
85. Northwest winda 5 to 10
Frlday.. :Mostly clear. Lowa Oallia Co1.1nty Convention
trl·county realon combined
mph. Chance of rain 30 per· 55 to 60 and hlah• in the and Visitors Bureau.
"offeta a great deft! ofintet·
cent.
·
lower 80s.
"Our goal In Columbua and
estlna experiences t'tlr vlsi·
S~o~nday
rilaht ... Mostly
your aoal here ·11 to put more more than 1 mtilion calls at ry, lodging, current events tors, and we must work 111 Q
heads In beds becauae Ohio the toll·free nuinber of I· and local events poated free unit to attract these tourlstr."
lies within 500 miles of 60 BOO-BUCKEYE lall year on the event calendar. Hood
President Becky Collins
percent of the nation •a popu· from travelers who were aald that to obtain informll• extended the welcome to the
lation," Eylon 11ld.
lookina for a closer vacation don on the web, anyone with audience, composed of dlrea·
spot
foliowlna Sept. 11.
The
speaker
.
documented
a computer can use vlalt11al· tors and members of the ad vi·
Iunday, June 2
Bob Hood, the visitors cen· iia.com.
surveys that showed travelers
sory committee for this year.
in 2000 spent $25.7 bill!on in ter director, told the audience
A convention of the Ohio She asked each member to
Ohio, Including $9 bililon for the center's web site is oper· Cattlemen '• Association has notify the. visitors center of
food, $7.3 blillon In retail, atlna for out·of·town visitors. been booked for this summer nny activity within the coun·
4.4 billion In transportation 1 The theme Is "Malee Oallia that will attract about 900 ty or the area .that could ·be
2.7 billion in lodaing, ana County Your Deatlnatlon."
·visitors to Oallla Countyt posted on the web site, or-to
2.3 billion In recreation.
· A new brochure has been Hood snld. A number or phone the center with the
This impact survey was printed featuring local hlsto· motorcouch tours will brina information.
. · :
accomplisl\ed through an
accommodation question·
naire at all lodging and camp·
Ina facilities fn the state, as
well as a mail survey to.trav·
elers from across the entire
nation who came to Ohio.
Travelers were aaked
where they went and how
they
spent their money. Their
VA.
apendina directly supported
517,000 jobs . Wlth a payroll
of more than $8 blllion, con·
tributed more than $2 billion
to state taxes, and another .
$1.85 billion in loc:al 1111e1
throughout the state.
"Our new loao, 'Ohio, So
Much to Discover,' will fei·
ture five m~or e\lenta that are
scheduled (or Ohio'• blcen·
tennial In 2003," Eylon said.
"Thete maJor events will
include the lirit fllaht by the
Wright Brothen, ships, a
waaon train across the state,
the Capitol e"ent and the Tall
Staclct in Cincinnati."
"Here in Oallia County,
yo1.1 will celebrate the _pas·
taae of the Lewis and Clark
exPedition here, the official
recoanltion of Oallla II •
county, your French heritage,
the Bob Evan• Farm, the
Delta Queen, and the many
Amish·m8de products that
'
are made and told here," he
added• .
. Eylon uid "that we are
deallnJ
with our ~ic ·
•:m, I •IIII•CIIf:IJI ,...
•
future u thoul~ of baby
,
'
I
boomers who are retirina will
•
-JI.2J
500
3rd
Ave.
·
Oallfpolll
~-0315
ha\le more discretionary
•
~
,'
Income
than
older
pnera,
201 S. Front St. . Oak Hffl 682-7733
Dr;,.,.,.• ....,..,..~
'JIIf.....t..,.. ,':-~ lions, and they will be uek·
'
.......... &lt;p111Jtii¥M,.II 'Rit,_
IJ
J
1111. 12
ina places where they can
...
Eld.13
\lacaUOII
81110RJ friendly JleO':
...
1111.14
pie, aood restaurantt, jood
Onltle . .
mottfs and poinll of interet!
,_
JH.a
·
·
07.10
to
them."
~­
Prior to an antwer and
quettion tulion, Eylon 1aid
••m.zt
_
• ..,• •111 . .. the
statc'f
Touritm
·tJInformation Office received

"'·

~OO~Il't11IIIIJMI!.toN

•

campaign

helps kick off fund-

IY btl Do110t1

~'ISlNTMI..COM

'

.,

,

(h.ngu color or •hape
itcha or otherwise ch~gcs in Knsation
incrcua in heipt or lite
change• itl teXtUre

PLEASANT
·· VALLEY
HOSPITAL

I

�•
•
•

-.

..._L

NATI

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

NAL VIEW

.

' I

,. .

OUR RE·

'

IE

.INS should institute foreign
student tracking posthaste
· • Los Angeles Times. an "Sq{tflwmls
Student Visas:" Most of the nearly ~000 noD•
immigrant forei~nen who tteod u.s. con~
and universities m a given year add greatly to. the
educational experience of American stUd.en •
They nlso bolster . international relation&amp; by
returning to their homel11nds with a better u,......
standing of · how this · nation worn~
Unfortunately. as Sept. t l made clen, the system
; thut oversees foreign students must pve priority
to contending with the h11ndfw who would tab
advantage of this nation's openness to attack it.
Congres ' has belatedly ordered the
Irntnigrution nnd Naturalization Service to
. develop 11n electronic system to keep track of
foreign students.
.
, The INS' Student und Exchange Visitor
lnfonnution System would use n Web-based
database that would link U.S. embassies ud
consulates abroad with every INS port of en~
nnd the 70,000 schools and other institutions eligible to admit foreign students. Lawmakers need
to keep establishment of that system on schedule, making sure it is up und running by the Jan.
l, 2003, deadline.
·
·

....r.

Tt

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THI AISOCIATID PAllS

Today I&amp; SundMy, June 2, the IS3rd day of 200l. There ue.212 days leflln the yev.
Today's Hlghllaht In History:
. On June 2, 1941, baseball's "Iron Horae," Lou Ciehrlg, died
· In New York of a degenerative disease, amyotrophic lateral
· sclerosis.
" On this date:
In ISS I, Maine became the first state to enact a law pro,·· hibitina alcohol.
: In 1886, President Cleveland married Frances Folsom in a
: White House ceremony.
.
In 1897, Mark Twain, 61, was quoted by the New York
Journal as saying from L011don that "the report of my clealh
was an ex.aaaerellon."
In 1924, Congress aranted U.S. citizenship to all American
Indians.
. · .
In 1953, Queen Elizabeth Il of Britain was crowned In
Westminster Abbey, 16 months after the death of her father,
Kina Oeorae VI.
·
In 1966, the U.S. space probe Surveyor 1 landed on the
moon and began ttansmlttina detailed photoarapha of the
•t·
lunar surface.
KJLP~TRICK•s VIBW
In 1975, Vice PreSident Nelson Rockefeller said his commhalon had found no widespread pattem of llleall activities
at the Central Intelligence Agency.
In 1979, Pope John Paul n arrived in his. native Poland on
the first visit l)y a pope to a Communist country;
'W
In 1986, for the fust time, the publlr could watch the proluattce Rulh Bider~~ IUtion, two · yean' DIObllloo... 1\t tllt••t•eweafecwM'dftltlll.t~..
1ceedlngs of thetJ.S. Senate on television as ulx-week ex.perthat
the reaaonina of luatk:O Anfoilln Alabama Supreme Caurt rulecl that The c:ua
110 ~1M·.., lment cif televised seaslons began.
Scalia
''make&amp;
llltTe
sense."
Scalia
uld
~bid 1101 "lnltlllaen~ lllllllllidllro&gt; doe$ 1101
llllilll ~ lAd IMt
· In 1987, President Reagan announced he was nomlnadna
Glnaburll waa ~ In "Implausible 1IIIC!IibiY welvecllll llOnstitiltlonal rl&amp;flt '\:rlmlllll" _.
11ft ~
economist Alan Greenspan to succeed Paul Volcker 11 chairspeculatfon." 0_1~~ chqecf that on to .sill" llld v~r:•tecl both the ~ ofleplllt.b\ Ulillll ~ lht rlaM
. • man of the Federal Reserve Board.
one
point Scalia was simply Incorrect." = I I sen1enee 111\Cl the ~ Of toeolawt p"''y lllauplllltt4.
;: Ten years ago: Blll Clinton officially clinched the
Scalia
sniffed that Glnsbiiri's staUstlcs
Tho illte appealed to the U.S. .~Liin 1101 ~ a Cldlt bowD 1111
: Democratic presidential nomination as he won the aix final
,: primaries of the campaign. In Callfomia, Democrats Dianne
~~~:=t:: t~«.:;'~l
~stMq ltelcl for lbo majodl)'. ~..::..::0:"~:• Feinstein and Barbara Boxe( were nominated to twin U.S. . by the ilme the comliltanll reurea on thlt a alllpel'ldecl~~e~~~~ta, whldl carrie&amp; a rlllt of ~t. Abla lht ~
: · Senate seats. Danish voters rejected the Muastricht union
May 15, the Supreme Coun hlld stanlfi· a threat or wbllequent lmllfiSOIUiltel'll. o1me the fililowt Mlrlndl llllll .. "'l\lil
treaty.
·
·
canily amended the Sixth Amendinent. 1 may not be imlxlled under ihe circum- have • ~ to IJOIIIII!fl, !llld If yw 111'1
:. Five years aao: Timothy McVeigh was convicted of murder
Tho vote was 5-4, Tho c- wu Alabama · stances pre11ent In the Shelton t:lllt. unable 10 atbU IJOIIIII!fl t ltw,et will be
• tllld conspiracy In the Oklahoma City bombing. Conaervadve
v. Shelton, No. 00.1214, a two-bit case Thou&amp;h the defeodltlt had been repealed- appointed ...''Other eaa hive tllllltd 00 ·
: J're•ldent Jacques Chlrac of France, forced to share power
that evolved into an ex.penalvo burden for ly warned of the rl!ks of seJf.repreaenta- a iiaht to COIIJIIIl 11 Untllp or Dl'llllltn•: with Socialists who had routed his pany In national elections, . state cow11.
lion, he had not been formllly oft'ered the me11t. One recent eua ~ U.
:; handed the premiership to former opposition leader Lionel
The facts are of little Interest. LoReed 118SI8tance or coun!Oiatstate ex~. Ifa ~~of all~ Wbo ft1l ultllp
: Jo~ln.
.
.
,.
Shelton wulnvolved In • minor automo- suspended sentence ahould be IICtivatecl while hla dleftt was 011 trial.
: ·One year aao: Nepal's Crown Prince Dlpendra, on life sup·
bile collision with Kenny Campbell, The bl!eause or a violation of the tetn\8 of Now the oue ot LeReed Sbeltt~~l
• port after killing at least eight member~ of the royal family,
accident led to a flstflaht ln which probation. the eft'ecl would be to ftlldaea the Sllth Amendmetlt to a now
: Including his parents, before turning the aun on himself, was
SheiiDII belt up on Campbell. CJwaed Imprison 11 defendant who hid not hlld melillnaJn tem\&amp; ot a Oillpll\dld •
, · named li:lna by Nepal's State Counclf. Actress-comedian
with thlrd.&lt;Jearee assault, a mllldeme11nor, the benefit of counsel. The Sixth tence. Llke It or not. thl Is how lhu
.: Imogene' Coca died in Westport, Conn .• ut aae 92.
Shelton choec to represent himself, thus Amendment. sllid Glnsbu!'JI.Ilnnly, "doe&amp; Conatltutlon P-lw&amp;.
• TOday'• Birthdays: Actor Milo 0' Shea Is 77. Actor Stucy
reaf'llrmlni the adage that a man who not countenance this result.'
.
(Letten to Mr. Kllpatrldt &amp;~~aukl ~
' Keach Is 61. Rock musl.clnn Charlie Watts Is 61. Singer
servea aa lila own lawyer has 11 fool for a At the bottom of their squabble lies the sent In eve or thla lleWiplflet, or by • ·
: · William Ouest (Oladys Knlsht &amp; The Pips) Is 61. Actor . client. Ajury found him sullty. ·
Sixth Amendment. lt saya In relov1111t mall to kllpatll•IOI.11001~)
Charles Hald 11 59. Composer Murvln Ham IIsch is 58. Movie
The judge lmP.Oaed thrs sentence: "30 part, "Jn all criminal prosecution , the JtMiltS I. Kllpo_trid 1.t o CGI~~~~tt~I.Jt p
director Lme Hallstrom Is 56. Actor Jerry Mathers Is 54. ·
dlyuusi)Oilded, $.500 fine, $516.69 rest!· accused shall ei\Joy tiMi right .. . to h11ve UniWlrSOIPNu $:!'11dialtt. .

20% TO

Decision offers signifiCant alteration to 6th Amendment

wr

. ,,

".

•

t

uc.r:

..

lo, •••• '

I•
•

l

'

•

50% 0FF

,.

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

---------HEARING TESTS

Mlttlallt~Mit.._

~ r;~;:!

~

CWf*

Muut UMta ~~
tM ··~ ......

"'**

~Me:=:

~ ""~ QM ..... prklt to

A-..t)wm!l't t.ul*r~
....... t"M ..... .

..... .•. ,....
~

I~ PLUS
AGINCiu_l~

�•

OCA

EFS

•

AI

and lldditional ~
While Much o( Che oode
remai die same. addirians
OOIOCI" sudl subjects as cq&gt;lo-

sives. twn.mables, fire cona new station on Little trol. petro~a~m liquids. fire
offenses illld ii15Wlltion of
8ullslci Road.
key Joct boxes for popeny
As its,_. SlabOII-tW
· llll~ U('.
Gallipolis has llpllro\'ed _,_ owners.
.
"We
put
!hem
~p
to make
siam Mid .tditions to its fire
me
public
sar~.
Donnally
oode.
The City C&lt;mmission gave said. ~There's 110( rmly ~~­
~ and final reading thing in them people can 1
Tuesday to an ordinance live with or have been oomrepealillg the previous oode plying v.ith, and they fo!low
and replacing it 'With updates Ohio guidelines anyway.

S

1a
YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP)
- Germany's World Cup
team played down its
chanoes, warned against
underestimating the opposition, and then trollllOed Saudi
Arabia 8-0.
The root did not match the
shock of Senegal's 1-0 upset
of defending champion
.Pranoe one day earlier in the
opener of the first World Cup
staged in ~sia and in two
oounnies.
But Germany's win was the
most lopsided victory in the
event since Hungary beat El
Salvador 10-1 in 1982.
"We have to stay firmly on
the ground," coach Rudi
Voeller said. "We had a great
performance against a weak
opponent. But you could see
the boys wanted it, every~y took responsibility, they
had great spirit."
. Miroslav Klose scored
three goals in Sapporo,
Japan, as the three-time
champion Germans took the
top spot in Group E. The
group's other two teams,
Cameroon and Ireland, tied
1-1 in Niigata, Japan.
Jon Dahl Tomasson scored
late in each half as Denmark
beat Uruguay 2-1 'in Ulsan,
South Korea. That left
Senegal and Denmark atop
Group A, and France and
Uruguay at the bottom. The
French now have little hope
of advancing without victories over both Denmark and
Uruguay.
The U.S . ieam, which doesn't play until Wednesday
against Poltllgal in Suwon,
South Korea, got a boost
from Senegal's stunner.
"The effort Sene.gal put
forth
was
enormous,"
defender Gregg Berhalter
said. "They stayed organized
and they believed in themselves."
African
champion
Cameroon's tie, -in which it
had to hold off late forays by
Ireland, left the continent's
teams undefeated against
Europeans.

GOiN(I; UP - PrOgress continues on the new station for th,e
Gallipolis Volunteer Are Department, which contractors have
said should be complete by mid-July or early August at the latest. The $602,000 project, including an adjoining hOme for the
resident firefighter, is paid for out of fire replacement levy proceeds. (Kevin Kelly)

The staff and residents at
Rocksptings
Rehabilitation
Otnter would like to express our
~thy and concern regarding
the rrectnt announcement of the.
tloting of ~terans Skilled
Nur.si~ Center. we art hert to.
}NJfJUU support and assistance
arirtg this difficult time.

~_,KSPRINGS

~ABIUTATION CEJrER

An Extendicare"' Facility
Www.extendicare.oom

'GAILUPOUS - Jdhn 'Gee
'&amp;Jadk Ristorioai'Oeilter 's annual membership tea, 'Set fl'll' June
'8 at 2 p.m.,iJ-las beeil&lt;Canoo'le.'l.
f1he se'heduled speakti' ts
unable to .1ttend -doe to 'SIIrge(y.

...,bolnl

GA.W'POUS -

GAUJPOUS · - Eric W.
Skidmore, 23, 686:5 Ohio 160,
Bidwcil, was cited for left of ,
oenter in~ May 27 ·accident on
'6hio '554 investigated by ·the
Ga'llia-Meigs Post of the State
14ig'hway Paool. .
.
;&amp;. report . m Fnday 's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune inoor-

'rtlCtly . ~ave 'the ~itation to .
RonildJ.McWhorter, I~ 2350
Hue~ ~idge !Road, ,_:roWn

740-992-6606
36759 Rocksprings Rd
Pomeroy, OH 45769
~- oppern•it;y provitln- •f..,..icos

River Valley

Melissa Wamsley; Administrator
Nancy Faulisi, Admissions Director

Kyla Lee, Staff~lopment

..

'Gallia City.
'C!ooilty IOiSI:ri&lt;lt. Library ~
-or n-astees 'Will lil'leet 1\:tesday,
~rrne H .at '5 ~.m. -tt &amp;ssaM
Mel'MI'ia'll.ibriity.

seekln1clrls
hoops coaches
CHESHIRE
River
Valley High School is seeking a head girls • basketball
coach and an assistant.
Submit a le.tter of interest
and a resume to Patrick Stout,
Rivet Valley High School,
1428 Little Kyger Rd.,
Cheshire, Ohio, 45620.
Application deadline is
Friday.

.......

ClaJ Ill sl~t
· GAUJrol.iS - '6a'llipo1is .
City O!ln\'iliiss'kin Will il'le(jt i
1\lesday-tt 7\jl.m. fcrlts~lar '
'niOitth\Y meeting Tin the

et,tAN~\.6J

Comt &amp;: Second Streets, Potnetvy, OH 45769

Dianna Lawson, CfS

,..,_.,............. ..
"'--..---·

Call~aa1: (740) 992-2133

BY ANIIIEW CMnat
ACAR'IEJIMII'llM.YTIIIBUNE.COM

BYESVILLE - Friday
was a good day to be a track
and field athlete from GaUia
County at the Division II
East-Southeast . Regional
Champ.ionships hosted by
Meadowbrook High School. .
Fifteen athletes from River
Valley and Gallia Academy
qualified for the Divisio1_1 II
State Track and Fteld
Championships; which will
be held. Friday and Sa~y
at Welcome Stadium m
Dayton.
River Valley's Allan Brown
and Gallia Academy's Sara
Wiseman, Brianna Johnson,
Josh Perry and Ty Simmons
each qualified in two events.
Brown finished second in
the 200-meters and third -in
the 400 to book his passage to
Dayton. His time in the 200
was 22.4 seconds.
He followed tliat performance by setting a River
Valley record in the 400, posting a time of 50.13 seconds,
breaking his own mark of
50.44.
Brown started in Lane 7 in
the 400, a tough position for
runners trying to gain
momentum at the beginning
of the race. ·
"I just wanted to try and
stay ahead," he said. "I was so
far out in the lanes, so I just
had to stay up with the pack.
It's real hard (starting from
the outside lanJl), because you
can't tell where anybody's at
behind you. You' ve just got to
run your hardest and see what
happens."
Brown is the ftrStJllale athlete from River Valley to
· reach the state championships
since Charles Peck qualified
in 1993.

meet

Brown becomes the second
generatioo in bis family to
earn a state meet berth. His
father, Harvey, q_ualified for
the state champtonships in
1971 and
'72 while a
student at

N o r t h

Gallia High
School ,
competing
in the 200meters and
4x200meter relay.
Brown
said
his
goals for
the
state
champio\)Ships are simple.
"I JUSt hope to make my
presence known and see what
I can do," he said.
Wiseman, a sophomore,
qualified for her second state
meet with a walk-away performance in the 3,200-meters
and a solid outing in the
4x800-meter relay.
Wiseman jumped out to a
fast start in the 3,200 and
lapped four runners en route
to a regional meet record time
of 11:07.67. She topped
Southeast disnict rival Abby
Reeser of Circleville by more
than 23 seconds. Reeser
placedsecond in 11:30.76. ·
"I thought that people
would run .out faster the first
lap," Wiseman said. "I was
just going to go out and stay
with them, prepare myself for
state, but I was the one setting
the pace."
Wiseman said her experience at the state meet in 200 I
has prepared her for this
year's challenge.
,
·
"I feel like I can compete at
state this year," she said.
PIUH ... 'D'Ic:k. 82

CAuiSIN' TO THE UNE- River Valley junior /Ill an Brown eases across the finish line In the

40o-meters during the Division II Regional Track and Field Championships held Friday at
Meadowbrook High School In Byesville. Brown qualified for the state championships In the
· 200-meters and 40()-meters by finishing among the top four In each event at Meadowbrook.
He Is one of 15 Gallla County athletes headed for the state meet. (Andrew Carter)

Green Wave rolls over Eastern ·in regional
BY BU1CH CooPER
BCOOPER@MYOAILYTR/8UNE.COM

LANCASTER - What a difference a day can make.
On Friday, Eastern led Newark
Catholic 2-1 in the Division IV,
Region 15 semifinals in the top of the
fifth inning when lightning. struc_k to
delay the garne and the rams hit to
suspend it:
At that point, the Eagles had eight
hits off Newark pitcher Scotty Lake.
When play resumed Saturday, the
Green Wave brought in their ace
pitcher George Biddle and in the seventh, tallied 12 runs off the Eagles in
Newark Catholic's 14-4 victory.
"The kids were swinging that bat real
well " said Eastern head coach Brian
Bol~n of Friday's performance; "It just
seemed like we had a lot of runs to
shO\f for the number of hits we had."
"Eastern (16-5) left nine base run-

.ners stranded in the first four innings.
With a 2-1 lead in the top of the
fifth, Jimmy Hobson was on first
when the game resumed after hitting
a single the day before with no outs.
. The Wave (24-6) managed to load
the bases when Eastern's Ben Holter
failed to field a pop up by Ben
Petticrew, scoring Hobson. Petticrew
was out on the infield fly rule.
Kevin Dolan was 3-for-5, while
o 'usty Laytnn went 2-for,3, Biddle 2for-3 and Hobson 2-for-4.
For Eastern, Jimmie Putman was 3for-4, while Charlie Young and Ben
Holter were each 2-for-4.
The seventh, though, was when
Newark Catholic put the $ante away
as Kevin Dolan led off wnh a single
and Dusty Layton drove him in on a
home run over the left field wall the same location Lake hit his solo
home run in the second inning Friday

for the Green Wave's first run .
When the seventh was over, which
was capped off by a grand slam by
Biddle, Newark Catholic scored 12
runs off of eight hits.
·
The delay might have played some·
role in the loss.
"I don't ·like to make excuses for
anything because I have pride in our
kids, but we did get home about II
o'clock (Friday) night and turned
around and left at 8:30 (Saturday)
morning," said Bolen. "I know that
had to be hard on them, but Newark
Catholic just hit the ball well."
In the bottom of the seventh, Putman
singled imd scored on a Holter holl!e
run with no outs, but Newark Cathohc
reliever Tony Hess shut down · the
Eagles after that to end the gat11e.
The Eagles scored their fll'St run when
Chris Lrons scored on a wild pitch in
the fii'St mning. They scored agam in the

up anclnnetl

•'
'

•

CINCiNNATI (AP) Gary Sheffield homered
twice and drove in fl ve runs
luid Tom Glavine maintained
· his Cincinnati magic as the
1\tlanta Braves routed the
Reds for the second sttaig~t
ilay, 7-l Saturday.
Glavine (9-2) improved to
16-41ifetime at Cincinnati ~
the most wins by any visiting
pitcher at Cinergy Field.
Glavine gave up one run
and five hits in seven innings,
. lowering his NL-leading
ERA to 1.57. He earned his
233rd career victory.
The Braves, who beat
Cincinnati 7-0 Friday,
cruised to their' 12th win in
16 games. Atlanta hit three
hdme runs off Jose Rijo (4' ); making his ftrSt start since
May 23 after skipping a tum.
After Chipper Jones singled to start the second,
Andruw Jones followed with
bis 13th home run of the season.

r

third, with the game tied at 1-all, when
Ken Amsbary nailed a single to center
field, but Hobson had trouble fielding
the ball ~oring Putman.
Newark Catholic defeated Toronto
ih the regional final, 2-0, to earn a
state tournament berth.
Dlv. IV, Reg. 15 Semifinal
at Lanc11ter

Newark Calh.... 01().()10:(12) -14-12-3
Eastern ......... 101·000-2- 4-10-1
Lake, .Biddle (5). Hess (7) and Layton.
Young, Putman (7), Lyons (7) and Ca.
Faulk. WP - Biddle. LP- Young. NCDolan 3-5, 2 runs; Layton 2-3, HR, 2 RBI;
Penlcrew double, 2 runs, 2 RBI; Biddle 25, HR, double, 2 runs, 6 RBI; Lake HR, 2
runs· Hess double; Hobson
2-4, 2 RBI. E
.
- Young 2-4; Putman 3-4, double, 2
runs; Holter 2·4, HR, 2 RBI.

.

.

•
n

Braves cane

S§BV!CES INC

i'iltiin•uvn
OMiion
lhUT NAI'O!Il,.C

County athletes shine at

Sheffield.

Financial
planning \i dte
key to .a sUQCesSfut
. educational experience for your children.
Don t :gamble thdf.fittute i)h :virulent Joans and grants start~ tollege money on your savings today.
Call for :a tee oonsuttation.

RAVMONDJAMFSft

•

SuNDAY's

Ciennans ...
lnw..tda.

roMER.oV - Free spMS
Physitl81s 'Will be -offered .tt tbe
Meigs
Coonty
Health
Departtileilt -on June l4. The
-date was incorrectly reponed in
The Oaily Sentinel.

I ;.t t2.21 J

!.Akers force Game 7
with King~
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON - This is no joke: The former
laughingstocks of the Eastern Conference are
going to the NBA Finals.
Jason Kidd became the first player in 35
years to record three triple-doubles in an NBA
playoff series and the New Jersey Nets finIShed off the Boston Celtics and their disappearing duo of superstars with a 96-88 victory
m Game 6 on Friday night.
· Everyone got quite a laugh last summer
when the Nets acquired Kidd and he boldly
predicted that the perpetually downtrodden
franchise would be able to win 40 games. But
no one is laughing now at the franchise that
won two ABA titles but only one NBA playoff
series prior tn this year.
The Nets are the first team since the 1977-'
.
.
78 Seattle SuperSonics to make it to the Finals
Nm WIN- New Jersay Nets auerd Jason Kldd, bottom, after failing tn qualify for the playoffs the preloses control of ·the ball as Boston Celtlcs guard Kenny .vious season.
Anderson, lett, keeps cover durlnll pme six of the NBA · Kidd was Mr. Everything for the Nets, finEastern Conference finals In Boston Friday. (AP)
ishing with 15 points, 13 rebounds and 13
I

assists. He joined Oscar Robertson (1963) and
Wilt Chamberlain (1967) as the only players
witb three triple-doubles in a series.
Kidd all but clinched the game .with 33.9
seconds left, blowing two kisses to his family
-just as he always does when he shoots foul
shots - and knocking down two free throws
for a 96-88 lead.
Kenyon Martin took his shirt off and
jumped into the arms of a teammate as the
final buzzer sounded, but the rest of the team
didn't celebrate all that much .
LAKERS

106, KINGS 101

LOS ANGELES - Shaquille O'Neal simply wouldn't allow the. Los Angeles Lakers' .
dream of a dynasty to dte at home.
Carrying his teammates on his broad shoulders one more time, O'Neal had 41 points and
17 rebounds as the two-time ~efending champions forced a Game 7 m the Western
Conference finals, beating the . Sacramento
Kings I06-102 Friday night.
With everything from savage dunks and delicate hoo.k shots to a string of I0 strai~ht free
throws, O' Neal wouldn't allow this ep1c playoff series to end early. He went 13-for-17 from
the line, not a remarkable feat for most players - but an indication of just how seriously
O'Neal took this game.

�p . . . . . . , , ..........

•
oasllips in the
.....
dies.. She Dllad fifth ••,.43
~ \e$$ tbP a SltCOIIid

behilld

hi.rfreld

~-~~~~~-~-~~:!~!ID~·~----------------~~~tt~~~:·~l~l!·~p~'~Drt~·~G~T!J~I~II!•~CM~~lt~~~D~~~-~"~~~~~W~-~V~------------_!~::w.~q~~~~·~·~ran~~~·~Pt~gt~~BS!!

~:Hall's

baseball career comes to dose

Uaioft 's

~~.._'th'm~

Kellenre Seilfft. who toot

PI'"'

ftMih.

Bodimer joined NiU:i
M Kinniss..
Stephalli

"Last~ I tiad ofwe~~tu a
fn=dw;+a just awed, but DOW
I Clll
eMil thete l8d c:ompete.lmaat.~toRlaDJ

tilllils

whidl finished in fii\JI plate
in the liM.I. Tlwc team's time

tor mysen, rm just

toiaa.to ao • thin 11111 see
w~~~~.· r e~~~ clo oa lhe tt~~et."
Wia;• qualified far lhe
fiDals of the · 1.600-mctcrs.
but ~ DOl to ND iD lhe
~ fiDal iD Older to toncealnle oa lhe 3,l00.

wasSU3~

River Valley

peted il'l

"I was tbinkina. 'Man. l'm
really tired. I guess it woa 't
be so bad if l don't make It to
state,"' Johnson said. ''Then
when we aot down to the

tum, I thouaht. 'Hey, she's
not even aoina lbat fast I c:an
get her.'
"So. I went after her IIIII I
aot her. If I'd have had about
ll10tber 10 meters, I'd hue
aonen the third place airl.
too.u
Wiseman and Johnson
combined with freshmen
Lindsey Caldwell and
Tiffany Sandert to talco
fourth plate in the 4x800meter may Wednesday, fin·
lshil'la in 10:02.71.
· Perry, Simmons, ·Daniel
Roush and Tom Bose · led
Oallia Academy to a reaional
championship m the 4x400meter rei•Y· The Devils overtook Newcomerstown on the
final le4 to win the title.· ftnishiq m 3:23.01 to set a
school record.
Roush, who nn the tint

at: I 1All THE Mel- Gallla Academy's Sara Wiseman, left.
le&lt;l11'om sttrt to finish in the S,200metei'S durift the OMslon
II reatonal track ana field championships Friday at
MeadoWbrook Hi&amp;h Scllool In Byesville. Wiseman coasted to
victory In 11:07.67 to earn second consec:utMI state ~Met
berth. (Andrew carter)

lea, said he was c:onfident meters. Bose said good preabOut the team's ability to race preparations were the
win the rac:e.
·
kev to the win.
11
"It was pretty competitive,"
Just working bud and
he said. 'Tm sure that I had prac:tic:e payiq off," Bose
the stwer made
[ lcnc l Said. "'We
ik:ed so bud
was in lUst It di~~ look Hke this season,'f.fust had to pay
it. but l lcncw I was, and l off."
~ II( because I wanted
Simmons said he bad no
..-~
doubts about his ability to
And what about reaching reach the state meet in the
the state meet?
100-meters and is optimistic:
"It's the ~test feelina in about his c:hanc:es in Dayton
the world, be said with a after placing third in the
arin· "We're not just aoina. event on Friday. His time was
we're aoinR to compete."
11.21 sec:onds.
PerrY he and llis team-. "[ was real confident...
mateS badJust one goal for Simmons said. "l think I can
~:fa~he'!:.~: "Compete. =~~~~~p eiaht, top five,
Compete to the best." · · . Perry will join district
Peiry, Simmons and Roush rivals Brown and Donte
c:ombiiled with Ryan Hudson Penninaton of South Point at
on Wednesday to set a record the state meet in the 400in the 4x400. That time was meten. Perry placed third
3:34.27. .
~hind Brown in Friday's
Bose ste.P,Ded in as the tiilal, posting a time of 22.72
alternate Frfaay after Hudson seconds.
.
was unable to recover in time
Pennington won the .
from a bard ND in the 800- reaional crown, finishing in
4?
, 1.

wa

quiJifyina
for
Daytoa. ROush's time was
10:38.6. bettering his old
l\'llllt: of 10:41.8..
Senior Jon om was lmlble
to· compete in Friday's 300llltta' himlk!s final due to his
panide*tion
in River
Valley s gr.d~~ttioo c:eremonieS. He set a RVHS
record in the e~t dllring
Wednes1lu's session, fini~
ing in 41.49 sec:oods.
Oill owned the fourth·
flslest time in the reaional
headina into ~·s final
and was considered one. of
the favorites tQ ruth the sfate
thampianships.
.
Oallia
Academy
finished
RUNNIN' fOR DAY'ION - Bnanna Johnson, left., of Gallla tied for llfth in the g_irls team
Academy ana Lindsey W8ld of Falr11ekl Union sprint for the fln- standings with Fairfleld
lsh line In the B()().meters ~- at MeadoWbrook. Johnson Union after amassina . 28
ana Ward fl[llshed emona the to!) fout to quallft for the state ~nts.
~Met this week at Dayton. (Andrew Carter)
Bellaire dominated the
alrls meet, sc:orina 82 points
22.33,
to reaain her form.
to win the regional title. West
"D~ the middle of the Holmes was a distant sec:ond
River Valley clisc:us thlow"
er Harmony Pbillips is bound season, I was ldnd of going with S7.
River Valley scored sht
for Da~ton after finishina down," she said. ''But then
third tn the event at one meet, I just got back up points thanks to Phillips. .
Meadowbrook. She smashed there and i' ust started throwThi:i Gallia Academy b&amp;ys
her personal recortl by nearly lng good. just had a ~ one tied with Claymont frir si11th
10 feet with a toss of 125 feet today, -so that was good.
place. sc:oriq 27 points.
in the event final.
Oallia Academy's Ryan
River Valley scored 14
"We thought it would take Hudson rounds out the list of points to finish in a tie for
a 120.foot throw to get out," Oallians who will compete in 19th place with Moraan and
said RVHS girls coach Mark Dayton this week. He used a West Holmes. Head c:Oath Ed
Cline. "We thought she had haid kick in the final 120 Sayre said tho 14 POints is a
one .in her. We're very meters to grab fourth place in record for River 'Iaiiey boys
pleased."
the BOO-meters, finishing in in a regional meet.
l&gt;hillips, a . sorhomore, 2:00.31, .IS · seconds faster
Fairfield Union edged
reached the regiona in 200 I, than Beaver Local's Jim · Barnesville 38-33 to win the
but fell shon of tbe state Craig for ihe final spot in boys title. South POint was
meet. She said one of her Dayton.
third with 3l.S points. :
goalS this season was to betIn . other action Friday,
The Division [[ State meet
ter her Derforrnanc:e of a year Oallia Academy's Jessica semifinals begin at 4:30p.m.
ago. Ph111ips had to overcome Bodimer just missed qualify- Friday at Dayton's Welco'me
a sluggish period this season ing for the state c:hampi- Stadium.
·

At Mudowbrook High
SChool, Byuvllle

46.32; 3. Katrina Harron, John 15; 19. (tie) RIVER VALLEY, Barnesville, 15.33; 3. Mike
Glann, 46.64i 4. Kallana Morgan, Wast Holmas 14; 22. Danny, Indian Valley, 15.37; 4.
. Seifert, Fairfield Union, 46.71; Coal Grove 13; 23. (lie) St. Jeremiah Reames, Belpre,
Glrle IMm reaulta
5. JESSICA BODIMER, Clairsville, Belmont Union 11 ; 15.43.
'
1. Bellaire 8i!; 2.. Wast GAHS, 47.42.
25. (tie) Newcomerstown, 300M hurdles- 1. Jeremiah
Holmes 57; 3. John Glenn 49; · 4x100
relay
1. Tusky Valley 10.5; 27. New Reamas, Belpre, 15.43; 2.
4. Cambridge 39; 5. (Ill) Meadowbrook, 50.67; 2. Lexington 10; 28. (tie) Brandon Leltnaker, Fairfield
Fairfield Union, GALLIA Steubenville,
50.91;
3. Greenfield McClain, Sandy Union, 4D.63; 3. Mike Denny,
ACADEMY 28; 7. (tie) Claymont, 51.16; 4. John Valley 9; 30. Indian Creak a; Indian Valley, 40.74; 4. Jared
Meadowbrook, Circleville 26; Glenn, 51 .27; 5. GAHS, 51.43. 31. (tie) Cambridge, Logan Chamberlin, Wheelersburg,
9. (tie) St. Clairsville, 4x200
relay
1. El.m 6; 33. .Fairland 5; 34. (tie) 40.79.
Staubenvllla 25; 11. Claymont Steubenvlll,, 1:47.52; 2. St. Buckeye Local, Edison, 4K100
relay
1.
24; 12. (tie) Philo, Warren, Clairsville,
1:47.53;
3. Westfall, Philo 4; 38. (tie) Steubenville, 43.50; 2. Indian
Sheridan 22; 15. Beaver 19; Cambridge, 1:48.44; 4. Hillsboro, Coshocton, West Valley, 44.09; 3. Martina Ferry,
16. (tie) South Point, Fairfield Union, 1:49.91.
Musklgum 3; 41. Portsmouth 44.34; 4. Fairland, 44.62.
Bameavllle 18; 18. Coahocton 4x400 relay - 1. Bellaire, 2; 42. Unloto 1.
4x200 reillY - 1. Gallla
15; 19. Unioto 11; 20. Morgan 4:04.73; West Holmes, 100M
1. Donte Academy (Daniel Roush, Ty
9; 21. (tie) Washington Court 4:05.97; 3. Morgan, 4:10.16; 4. Pennington, South Point, Slmmone, Josh Perry, Tom
Houn, Fairland, Edison, Cambridge, 4:10.40.
11:09; 2. Tyvaughn Harris, Bose),
3:23.01;
2.
Union Local, Martins Ferry 8; 4~800 relay - 1. Wast Claymont, 11 .1 4; 3. Ty Newcomerstown, 3:24.74; 3.
REI. (tie) waverly, Rock Hill, Holmes, 9:47.07; 2. Circleville, Simmons, Gallla Academy, Trl Valley, 3:25.73; 4. Llabon
RIVER · VALLEY,
West 9:54.40; 3. Bellaire, 10:01.65; 11 .21; 4. Jesae Turner, Beaver, 3:26.58.
Muaklngum, Sandy Valley 8.
4. GAHS (B. Johnson, L. Steubenville, 11.35:
4x800
relay
1.
100M- 1. Kayle Johnson, Caldwell, T. Sanderil, S. 200M
1. Donte Barnaavllle, 8:16.36; 2.
Ballalre, 12.58; 2. Porcha Bell, Wiseman), 10:02.71.
Pennington, South Point, Meadowbrook, 8:17.59; 3.
s. Point, 12.62; 3. Katrina High jump - 1. Lindsay 22.33; 2. Allan Brown, River Claymont, 8:22.59; 4. St.
Herron, John Glenn, 12.79; 4. Plccollnl, St. Clairsville, 5-5; 2. Valley, 22.45; 3. Josh Perry, Clairsville, 8:23.53.
Canlaha Johnson, Claymont, Kacle Vavrek, 5·2; 3. Natalae Gallla Academy, 22.72; 4. Joal High jump - 1. Joah
12.81.
Noche, Cambridge, 5·1 ; 4. Roas, Tri Vallay, 22.89.
Voorhaaa, Waverly, 6·4; 2. Pat
200M - 1. Porcha Ball, s. Allsha Hilyard, Fairfield Union, 400M - 1. Johnathan Woods, Beaver Local, 6-4; 3.
Point, 26.30; 2. Canlaha 5·1.
Dunham,
Wheelersburg, John Leater, Steubenville, 6·4:
Johneon, Claymont, 28.51; 3. Pole vault- 1. Triatan Dye, 48.95; 2. Scott Wia er, Beaver . 4. Eric Wallace, Sheridan, 6·4.
1 Brown,
Kayla Johnson, Bellaire, Wl!st Holmes, 9·0; 2. Ashley Local, 49.86; 3. Alan
Pole vault - 1. Ron ·
26.80; 4. Abbie Shook, Philo, Mason, Union Local, 8-3; 3. River Valley, 50.13; 4. Ryan Mulheman, Claymont. 14·8; 2.
a8.98.
Amanda Thompson, John vanDyke, Greenf ield,h50S.59. h chrla Peiroh, Indian Va1 1ehy,
400M - 1. Abbie Shook, Glenn, 8·3; 4. Kaylee Swaney, BOOM - 1. 2ac
m1t , 13·3: 3. · . Luke
H1g ,
Philo, 59.56; 2. Kayle Warren, 8-0.
South Point, 1:57.83; 2. l(rla Cambridge, 13·0; 4. Jonathan
Johnaort. Ballalre, 1:00.34; 3.
Long jump- 1. Paula Ferry, Jones, Morgan, 1:IS8.87C; 3. Roc, Logan Elm, 13·0.
Alexandria Hlnea, John Glenn, Beaver Local, 17·5.25; 2. Heidi Jell Smallwood, 'Wash. ourt Long jump- 1. Kyla Keller,
1:02.02: 4. Queenaater Slchlna, Meadowbrook, 17· Hou·ae, 1:59.63; · 4. Ryan Sheridan, 22·3.5; 2. Dave
McShane,
Steubenville, 2.50; 3. Amy Swigert, Miami , Hudson, Gallla Academy, Thomaa, Union Local, 21·9.5:
"jt:02.03.
Trace, 16·11.50; 4. Janna 2:00600
.31M..
1 ChI Mllll
3C.I I Mllltloh 21M4cGoar4ry, Mltsth.
BOOM - 1. Ruthie Morgan, Wittekind, Warren, 16·8. 75.
1
- . r•
aor, . a rav e,
•. : ,
c
Bameavllle, 2:16.08; 2. Aahlay Shot put-1. Kayle Herron, Fairfield Union, 4:19.73; 2. Brigga, Circleville, 21·10.0.
Dunigan, Cambridge, 2:17.89; John Glenn, 40·10.50; 2. Slevl Chris Perun, Barnesville, Shot put - 1. Mark Bihl,
3. Llndaay Ward, Fairfield Large, Sheridan, 40·0.25; 3. 4:25.98; 3. Mike Coates, Waah. Court Houu, 59-Q.6; 2.
Union, 2:22.11; 4. BRIANNA Stacie Shrider, Warren, 39·9; Sandy Valley, 4:29.58; 4. Jed =~an . ~lck~, Cl~\evllla,NIS3·
JOHNSON, GAHS, 2:22.51.
4. Sarah Arbaugh, Unloto, 38· Perko, BMellalre1; 4C.:3h0i.54M.1111
L' 51; . 152•3r 25 n4g, Adew
1600M 1. Aahlay 1.25.
3200 - . ra
aor, axngton, • . ; . am
Dunigan, Cambridge, s:o8.43; Dlecua _ 1. Kayla Herron, FalrfleldBUnlo n, 11 :47.31; 2, JJed LuDcc~. Ballalreh, 50.5.0.
1 ecua 1 row - . 1.
1 9:52·38: 3· on
2. Katrina Jonaa, Martina John Glenn, 134·8; 2. Brltanl Perko, ellare,
Ferry, 5:10.88; 3. Cally Keeney, Fairland, 128·2; 3. Gerig, Tuaky Valley, W9:154.2 9; J ohnatha n RRiaklnea; Belpre,
1 149•7; 2· a wynn, Coa1
Schneider, Sandy Valley, HARMONY PHILLIPS, RVHS, 4. Craig Arnett,
avery,
IS 18 42' 4 "'•tytnkrom 125·0; 4. Monlaa Auatln, Welt 9:54.64.
Grove, 148·9; 3. Juan Neff, -:::~~=======-=====
: · ' 5·18,.
.
•
Hoi
mea,
•
.
11oM
hurdlaa
1.
Brandon
Meadowbrook, 148.11: . 4. ..
i£i=~==a
118
8
ClrotiVllle, : ·82 ·
·
Leltnakar, Fairfield Union, Daniel Cordle, Coal Grove, CtlllHmSmltlt ·forlttformllliolttutd
3200M - 1. SA A WISE·
15.00; 2. Eric HOUIIhOider, 14e·9.
MAN, QAHS, 11 :07.87; 2.
loya team raeulte
o,u.,Ma
ill!l',j
Abbey Allier, Circleville,
1. Lanoaater Fairfield Union
C "'""'
11 :30. 7e; 3. Aimee Vavrek, 38; 2. Barn11vllle 33:.3. South
Bellaire, 11 :eo. 14; 4. Mlrle Point 31.5; 4. Llabon Beaver
lttoult, Wilt Holmea, 211; 5. lyeavllle Meldowbrook
111:01.01.
28; e. (Ill) QALLIA ACADEM'r',
100M hurdltl - 1. Kaole Urlohlvllle Claymont 27; e.
Vavrek, Bellaire, 14.114; 2. lelpra
25;
8.
(tie)
Dlnlallt Erwin, Colhooton, Wheeleraburg, Dreeden Trl·
1US; 3. Jtuloa Kern1, Rook Valley, Sheridan 2&gt;4; 12.
Hill, 1U9; 4. Sara Pollzllanl, Steubenville 23; 13. Bell lire
Sheridan, 111.oe.
21: 14. Indian Valley 20; 15.
300M hurdlll ..;.. 1. Kaoll Circleville
19.15;
HI.
Vavrek, Bellaire, "5.09; 2. Waahlngto·n Court Houn 18;
Subscrlb1 today • ltff.I..,.H
Krlttlnl Tomlan, Bellaire, 17. (tie) Martine Ferry, Waverly
.
.;;..........;;:1110..,

._...,w...,r•Wo~a•

s.. ,_"WI Si:Md •
1tw --is Qll. ._

• • an.
11 ··~ . . .

1onstorhlt·D-~Itl

.....GIIItallle-.ls$81 . . . . . . do: I 1' )ftS . . . ,. . VII Uo &amp;:lilt WOII.,
.._tO !ll'ltGf' If "'I rt • • end S'llllhn\ Gilts ,, ,,...... 8olt
Pq W..OI*I.s7n.
II. ~$ "0' 1 Ibn fM c:111 • -*in
bebe.MIIIOwllh . . Mt._llll ..
~Boosters
• • al . . . . .
Fw infDnr tor , lllllllll:tl Jlln
Osbome .......... SCIIol'.lltl 44&amp;a11..
RACINE - The Soutwm ll.\hlllll;
Br.io'11t s 1111 111N1 a llll'ilr;Q TJ&amp;I ....
.... 4 in ......... SCIIol'.ll &lt;:at '!Til at 7
p.m. ,.... af dlt'&amp;S and COIIIINri-n.
_, ........ - Ulgld to dlnd. Plans
be tlllld ~ ·~ .._ ,_ Will btgln tor DIKtcllool ,..n ...... s
2:15 pJn. at . . Naanne Cludl Oft
and .._.. nl ss. !*IS olafs 1111 •
RrstA\IIhJII.
The can., is tor boys and girls . . .
~ the llt$l ~ "*d QllCM nut
y.er.
TMct IS a $30 :eglst:tllon lee ~
.
.... 2S and us ....
00;111(4 Galla Al:"*w tllgh SdiOOI
RACINe - 1tw SoUihetn boys and
ot Jim Olbclme at~ flrotelliiSI Qid$ ala :.....wy l)ut..-..r ~ w11
eel
• 111&amp;11&lt;1 lot . . first two 11 ulcs in .bla.
The boys ~ wll star! '-10W,
Monday.U.Hmxn 8:30 to 11:30 and
the QifiS .... wil tUn .... weak 1Iom

an.

•••

.:Denney finishes softball career at URG
.• '
•,.

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

!i1' l!tw. 10 llll ~

• RIO GRANDE - Rio Onncle
Mllrie Denney had a )'tar
remainina to _play
sol\btll in 2003,
had she elec:ted to
do so.. She trltemi
Rio Grande bas a
post-sec:ondary
opt~on
student,
wblc:h meant she
had •some coil~
c:n:dits before she
ever ~topped on
the dtamond Cor
·. · . DIRMJ
the Redwomen.
to
finish her studiesDenney
and talcechose
the walk
· ac:ross the stage at tommenc:ernent
· · May 12, receivin" ·her degree i~
elementary ectlltlt:On.

. ~~:t wasbuiSshhopi.!!.~ would co~
· """"'' 1 e u&lt;..t=u to move on,
••

Rio Gnnde Hetld Coath David ond on the tom) and a triple for the
Pyles said :at the softball ~'s RedWOmen. who finished the )Ur
~-- banq~~et.
16-22. DefeNively. she had her
Denne btttltd same injllrits,. to best sei$0Q, ~gisterina a .941
her shoo~,~ a junior and., to her fieldina ptKenll&amp;t (fil\h on the
bac:k, as a .senior, but stiU posted team).
.
wid numbers and along with Last se•son., Denney had five
freshman Amy Conn i•ve the RBI and sc:oml seven runs while
Redwomen 011e of tho better ey- batting .300 despite missina
stone combinations in the some
games from the shoulder
American Mideast Confertnc:e in
injwy.
She also spilt time bet~
2002
and third base.
Deftney played three seasons on shortstop
Denney
closed out her career
the banks of Racc:oon Cn:et and
with
23
RBI,
34 runs scored and 10
her first year (2000) (her only
injury-free season) was her best dollbles.
yur. The Bidwell .n1tive batted Pyles ,.aw must be :t.bout the t.ISit
·
·
·
'th of replacing the former River
·3""
...,, drivtng
1ft mne ~ns wt
three . dollbles and a tnple. She Valley High School sr.mdout. The
scomlll runs that sc:ason as ~1. task. will not be an easy one as
.In 2002. she batted .• 240 ~~t~th Denney was beginning to regain
her 2000 form and her experience
~B(~hlrJ ~c:u:~:~u~ would have been a valuable asset to
ripping four dollbles (tied for sec:- the Redwomen in 2003.

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

Riverside Senior Golf results

...

.'

: ,·· MASON - Dave Jacoby, the Tuesday for 14 foursomes and a pos- (Mason). Floyd Olapman (Syracuse).
· physical edu&lt;:ation professor from sible 14 points. Fbur new ~yen have Bill Howard (New liaven). and Don
' OiiioUni~,hw!jurnpedouttoan mised the tolal number Of players tti Wilson (Chester). Haske! Jones
·.eight point
in the 20blltiverside 76 for this season.
. (Ripley). Jim L.awn:nce (Syracuse)
· :senior Men's l.elglle. Jracoby .has a The low sare of 61 (-9) was shol andOirroll Norri~ (Syracuse).
. .10011 of 71.S points for the Y'*' CXlDI- by the foursome of Cuzz l..audermih 'I1Ienl was also a tie for founh and
pored to Keith~ the defending (~meroy), Jacoby (Athens). Ed fifth place at 63 (-7) fur the day.
·. c:hllmpion, with 63.S points. ·
Coon (New Haven) and Luther The closest to the pin honors on
•.J 'I'he last two weelts'lellder, Claude Tucker (Mason).
Number 7 went to Willis Olldding of
· . ·Proffitt, is a half-point back at 63 for These was a tie fur second plac:e at FlQier Beach, Fla.. Dewey Smith, a
third place.
·
62 (-8) between two teams I.'OIISisting llO$lal worker 11om Middleport. took
A toiDI of S6 players were on band of \\\xxls (Bradbury). Thny Hupp ihe closest honors on Number 14.

::)1111
lllplO-ftlriM - :1. oa... .-y
11.s

DIV. II REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

••

••

r~

mi&amp;sed

2:22.Sl.

tum.

torbc.,s .... ciCICIIl ........
bllth haugtlllllllft ppSqe .,....,.._
................ 1-4 p.m. -=h

Ovis Roush broke hi own
$dml NC:tlld in the 3,200llllltel' final on Fridly. but

Briaana John.soa O'leiQIIle
a 20-me~et deficit in the fiMl
120 aldas of the 800 tate to
eamller place iD Daytoa. She
o~wered 1m. Flmk of
~ Holmes with a strona
tic:k to finish fourth in

Johnsoa who hasn't c:omtrick IIIII field since
j~or hip, said she -s
Willil'la to aocept fifth plac:e
in the regiOIIll llftlil she
noticed Fuiik IIIII thUd-plate
nmner Lindsey Wud of
Fairfield Union startiq to
fade IS they reached the final

--.::1

1ollnsQft IIIII ~~ It:
on
the &lt;b 1Q()..m;ea ro.lu ..........

r!

BULLETIN BOARD
Glllpels . . E 't liit tts. Cl Alb a • and
s.r.......
. Air .._., ilotllm If Ill
Cialdl
GMli'OUS~Csl. . . IIMifJIS
. . . . . . . . . . . . ..._MD &amp;:lilt . . . • .,.. ,, ..... C!f c.T.
tl . . GAN:wt 91 Hligh$:t l'.lllflll a .. •=• • -.siJO. a.. ll"lbnt
....., ..

• t . Kellh w.a

eu

. ·~~~

SI.S

'•·J. Olludl,_

a.o

·: t.IA'll Glillnd

au

:- .. Hll
•• ) . '!My How

57.0
SI.Q

·: e.lob....,_

su

:• • . AonciiiiiiOWUing
,•lo. HMIIt Atot

.·•

48.5
4t.O

11.JIMIJO- .

41.0

·12. Dlnl WII'~W
U . JackFoll

48.0

1~

Don Aoulll

1S.Cuu~

11. Dewey Smith
11. ktn Wl\lltlll
1• . Dlni(My
11. 1'11¥1 OMpmon
10. Ptul LIOMWTI

to

~

... c.. ..

:;:pllby

.*d.

...,

Southern Hoops .

..

..ble10.141101119-12.

CQst af each c:~q~lil $40 per student-

•thlete
unlla
pntr.glstere:l.
Pegliltralion b1QinS Monday at 7:45.
Families with ftllll'e lhln one eNid 111
Clql wi pay Ill) mo:e than $50 total.

. Soutltdil ....

st.ootout

Eadl::en.-wll beguaranteMia ~
bel end t-SI*t If lftoflgiste:osd.
RtQistrallollatthe door ia.$40 with no
gu&amp;II!IIM af I Shift Of bal•
Fot IU:Ihlr info:ml.lion COIItact Scott

at -.1490 or Ryan Lemley at
SoutM:n High SchDol.

Walfl

.RACINE - Tlie SOuthem High

School gl:ts, baakelbell !Mm and
We:'ldy'a Of ~ . . be apoil$ot'01g
a 1t-t.am varsity gl:la basketba" Shootout Oil June 22 II Soulhem High School
and SoutMm ~ry buildings.
The ahooloul bilglna at 8 a.m. and
guarantets at teaat 11m1e games. Alll
fans CIUIM many af the a...a top girts
tMma COA!PIIIIIQ ln.a toum&amp;mer~t"'tyle

RV boorste:s to ll&amp;eet

CHESHIRE- Tht Piver Vllley High·
Sdlaoiii.INIIlc llooatft meet ThuM&amp;y,
JuM 6th at7 pm In 1hl achool cafeteria.
This it an organizational mslll1lg lot
the nell! ecMol year. 'Ttler. will be an
eltctlon af olftcals and plan&amp; will ..

atmosphe,.. 'lhms Include Belpre, made lor IUndralalng and projects.

Soulh Point, Rl:t ~. SOutheastem, PaiWIII and 111pport1ra af the Raiders

Mo!Qln

Coun~,

Atexalldlr, VInton are encour&amp;Q1C1 to attend.

"""
44.0
44.0
oQ.O
oQ.O
41 .0
41.0

.o.o

·--------------------------------

~!Rio's

Ervin

~t:: Saves

best for last

•' •

BY MMII WIWAMS

•• •

·..

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

: . RIO ORANDE - Rio Grande senior southpaw Jonathan
: ·Ervin finished his college baseball career in 2002. The
• ~ac:kson native saved his best for last. He worked his way into
: head coach Brad Warninmont's startina rotation and was an
: lnte8flll part of the Redmen's dramatic: turnaround from the
: lb}'smal'2001 campaign.
·
;: • Ervin ended the season with a 6·6 record (second on the
dearn in victories) and topped the Rtdmen in strikeouts with
:• •7 in onlY. 46 213 innings: He also posted one save, comin1 in
:: to pick otT a runner to preserve a win at Saint Vincent. The
kedmen finished the year with a 28·26 mark and appeared in
·: the NAJA Reaion IX Thurnarnenl.
: Wlrnlmont stated at the beainnina of the season that Ervin's
: key to sucoess was havina command of his pitches. His words
; were prophetic as Ervin served up only 24 walks to go alona
•: :with the 47 punchouts and consistently pitched ahftd In the
·' .count.
.
.
· The lefty rebounded nicely from the 2001 year in which he
· srruaaled, having an Q-4 rec:ord with an ERAover 11 and only
· 16 sttlkeouts in 33 inninas pitched. Ervin also split time as a
. : designated hitter in 2001. He batted .231 with five RBI, two
: aoublea and 10 runs aco!!=d.
: : In 2000, Ervin was 4·3 in the dual starter/reliever role With
• .30 strikeouts and a career-hlah .54 1/3 innlnas on the hill. He
· 'led the team In appearances with 24.
·
: : The former Jackson lronman appeared in nine aames as 11
: freshman with no rec:ord and o 3.60 ERA with 10 K's in 10
: jnnlnas.
·
·
• ·• Ervin was 10.13 for his career with 103 strikeouts In IS4
: ) nninas with two saves and two complete aames, appearina in
' •89 contests.
:.: The hud·throwlng left· bander Ia one of only two hurlers
: (Jimmy Hall) who afacluate from tho Rtdmen pro~m.
• Ervin received a dearee in Physical Education from Rio

·1999 Pontiac
2002 Buick LeSebre
2002 Buick Century 2001 Chevy Malibu LS
$18,900
$14,899
$11,900
Grand Prix • $12,900

CHOOSE FROM THESE ~IE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
2002 Chevy Priam
........................................................................................... $1 0,800
2002 Iuick Park Avenue
............................ : ..... "~ ....... u ..................................... ; ....... $24,8q0
1187 Oldlmoblle Cutltaa Supreme

.aoo

4 Door, ,.., LOICitcl.- va ................................................. S7

1HI Pontiac Ol'lnd Am .
QT, 'urp~ ...t..............,·....................................................... S8.800
1118 Ford Taurut
........................................................................................... $1,100
11M Chevrolet Cot'lloa
4 CVI. Aueo, Air, N,DOO Mll11 ...........................................4 1800
1•1 Oldlmoblle Delta 11
La•••C~. 1
uu.............. ; ......... t .................... sa.eoo
1188 Pontll~ Tl'lnaAm . ·
llllk. T•Top, VI, Auto. Llllhlr, CD ....................."'"""' •11,100
1'" Chevroltt Corvet1e Coupe
...... 17,000 .......................................................... ~ .... 134,800
1Ht Llnooll't Town Car
UoiUUoninUoolllloUu:nuoo.nuuotounouoouuooou"'''"'"'""'"'.,""~uhou$17 ,100

••••r . . . . . .

1888 Toyota Tacoma 4x4 Ext. Cab ·
........................................................................................... $14,800
1885 OMC 112 Ton
lxt..Clb, VI, Auto, Air, Low MIIH ...................................$8,118

1886 OMC Sonoma Pickup
4 C~l ; Auto, Alr..................................................................$5,885

2000 Cadlllic Eacal1de
LOided, LMther ..............~ .................~.............................. $31.,900

2002 Chevrolet Tracker
Vt, Auto, Air, 4WD, Low Mll..ge.....................................$18,900
1897 Chevy 8·10 Ext. Cab
4WD, VI, I lpMd, Air, Tlll/Crulle, Red .......................... $9,600
19H Chevrolet Silverado
lxL Ceb, 112, 414, Pewler, VI, Auto, Alr......................... $18,900
1897 OMC Suburban
4WD, VI, Auto, Air, L..ther, LT PICkllflll ....................... $18,900
1994 Chevrolet Ext. Cab. 112 Ton
414, IWI, va, Auto, Air ................................................... $8,180

•

'

I

•

I ;

•

�PagelS
•

s ......

--

NASCAR racing is a Johnson fami affair

How about that cold, wet wild turkey season?

•

ll's ..n;.w 1tidley ,

t

.

d

or :..:: ~
4

l

t

lie · ·~' 10 set
k _, 11 nM:s • I It
'E ~
ill_lllla...,llllt-."'
0 • niiots an c e the b'a:tast...
bm ol wikl twhJ$ were llkta ..._
ill&amp; dlit sp~
• _. tlleir a.l*1li lijilm fha 1001 (il.
~ It ' s) i.adiitlt· AsMall •
,on (l _.,.,, Gll:ttrn" • 903
(l,ll&gt;lfi- o'-:':"'1':s ... -f(t."""•'·
-~ -·. - - _, .~,.
Jw
m (751); _. Harisoa-

lWbJ ........... -

. l'w: talbd to Sieeta81 lWtej

•• a n s*ftikdiOblaabinl....,

*"

t

... llle ~week-kill&amp; ~·~•
wllidi , W Mq 1'-. MOst olh
"- W I td the •am~ alld. wtl
~ • ,, b
1ht:ir r' I tldt: .tR aid~ were t o o - i-s.
·-· •• tilllillimlt-~
. ~-~-""' -~
~&amp;OM I a:s.
·
• Tht 0.. l)qwW ol NMwral 711 (189).
&amp;: R-te\' Dl~ of Wildlif'e All ~ 11e pRtirin J.
: cqtOJ-..l ~'tiS~ ill 22..113
Ia Mtip ~DIU\ lliled
.. t dtd wiklllllkt)s
till &amp;Qbblel$. o , ped to '1621ast
~. SlOL n.t's • 1$.2 ptlWil dea
spina. Glftia Couit.Y lui s fiRd

""'}'•a

b• ·

!-Inn

'C;

~·~

..,

1Urteys 1ft so ~ in part$ idefttifiable. At other rimes, it can be
or die state that they 1ft almost ton· Mnl to tell whit son of crittef is
sideftd
nuisance
animal$. cau~ng the problem. But it isawful-

Ditisiw ol Wildlife. "'011 a -

$

-

1'1. Jl12

....._lhe..,

~~~ e\lelltiOlSit.........,.493binls.()Q(ftto llli ~~AI laSt ,ar. .

caxdina

...wildlile vmoa.
;: ~ Di-mioft of Wilcllire '!ad
.. ~ IMldw!l ~~~~
: ~·but it ftSII't ~be.
:
Witlt the~ ol ~ ~
: :.__ to the !lti'SOII., ow bioloti$1$
• · txptatd llMllhtt reconl. yew. "But
::, ~told and nlll)' w,,'"t':~: tt ~t:Stlitttd ~:r ~~oeot. sllkl
- . M1ke Budlik, dlief of ODNR's

Comiot ia to dllt sptll&amp; ll': 1S"'\
i t * ~ '*""ci~ ~m ' . ~
the Wlld ~~ ptlpllllioD 1~ Ohio
to be aboot ~000. IIPPlOD~
30pren:eatlli&amp;IB1hlnlast,spntll.
"Willi the aitby ~ pwt·
ing oonsistmdy, we ~ it 'Was lime

·10 &amp;i~ ~ liD

elt!ft.

Met of

~ . ~ B.taik.
'1llis waS lhe third 1'*' thll turkey

Sometimestheylftblamedfurllidt- lycasytoblametheanimlllyoucan
ill8 out mshly plan~ ~ in actually see in your prdcn, and
fields.
·
IUikeys :are pretty visible: they m::

Jun'

F

reeman

IN lliE OPEN
h\mtioa
Q!Uftty

'Was

open in

e\'tfy

Ohio

during the sprioa scason.

Only S7 of dle stlle's 88 CXlUIIIies
were opea to spring turkey 1\Untioa

in IW!J.
'lhe~ofthewikl tu~ttey
is OllC ol tie a-test oonsenation
wcc•ss stories or the liSt century.
Once all but extinct in die state. wild
turbys were teintroduc:ed to Ohio in
the mid·19SOs by the ODNR
Divisi(lnofWildlif'e:Thefitstspring
turby huntiD&amp; season was opened in
1966. Ohio now has more than
100,000 wild turkeys and they are
pm tnt in all88 counties.

The Olhcr day, while out hunting
grounclhogs.. I Witched I small Dod
Of jlkes
its way ~
._..... or "'--L
~~u· 1lon::siiJ' llt.binb
.... c:om
'
I dosdy wat~
to see if

Worb:p, C _..,

big, and likt ~ and I, they li!(e to
come out dunng the day when ~
CllllllCt\lally s.:e them. So it's ellS)' 10

·

...

th ......,___
at,' ''""""
darn tullteys are enting my crops!"
they ~~the tom. but they when, in fact, some other bird or anicleUiy iJ.1ICftd the ttndet, )'OWII mal is to blame.
:shoots. Whic:h were most likely still On the other hand, I've seen picallf~Chcd to kanels just below the tures of tu~ys taring up straw
soil. These )'OUDI binb ~ly bales (Jft$umably to 8tlllt the seeds
appeamt to be innocently picking . inside), and sometimes they'll sttlll
out bup, weed seeds md "'' grain 11om r~ ot peck vegelllbctwten the rows - ICtually helping &amp;les, but they also eat a l01 or bu~
the fanner.
and caterpillars that can cause senCrows and some rodents will ous damage 10 crops. As a result, the
occasionally pluclt or dig out the j11ry is still out on the turkey's status
new plant to get to the kernel below. as a nuisance animal.
1\afkeys are probably capable of
doing the wne thing, but mostli~ (Jim Fm!fiiiUI i.t wildlifr specialist
ly they are just getting blamed for for the Mrigs Soil and ~rrr
another~tter's a&lt;:tivity.
, C1HtSC!rvatim1 District. Hr can be
Sometimes, where crop damnge IS COIIltlctt!d at (740) 992-4282 or at
. concerned, the culprit is readily jim-/te~lllan@oh. nacd~trt.org)
1 ·

JUmp toUr&lt;: tone USIOO

•

~ ------------------------------------~------------~----------------------••

:,Program teaches outdoor skills to women
.

~

ASHLEY (~- A steldy spina
, nlft ftlling oo · die main IQdae !"*'
notaoinato~ C11o1 Olzeschik'J
. .•.end\~ • slie iftliiiiiiDllld ·a wift.
...1\ina hand of pinochle to lalk about her
~ • first day at the blannual"Bec.unina u
tOIItlbn 'Mlrllln" proaram.
·::·· Dripping ~ she had jllst come
., from • ~on the.~ lrlp ~
., and 'A$ dryi~t ln fttiilt ofl fire.. I
did~
!" Gnltschik said of her
~.first lime
· · lgun.
... She hit five clay pi&amp;eons after learn·
.. ·~ .both eyes.
.,
t wu one of mon: than lOO
.: women paying $150 to take part in the
'•:. Ohio .Department of Wildlife spon... sored event 11 die l65«re Recreation
Unlimited. Participants tinaed in qe
'/,&amp;om 18 to 80. The program was held
~; May 17·19, and a fill session will be in
·

AU. Ct lAIIt - Jessie
Johnson,~ broth... of Winston Cup drl'4tt'
Jimmie Johnion, aN&amp;s a

thumbs up to his family
H he
for hiS
second heat r.ce In his
Blndolero series c:ar 1t
Lowe•s Motor
Speedway. tAP)

'"!)eM

,., October.

.

•:. Now held in 4l states and fi~
Clnadian provinces, the national
"Becoining An Outdoor$ 'Mlmln" program has lllught a wide vllilltl ohkill$
to thousandS o[ women, Including
nearly 2,000 In Ohio since Its Inception

"U"'•gl dtl$ lfORNIII, NIW! liY new things and decided to attend She now goes doer, pheasant, turkey
after 1 friend particlpa~.
and squim:l hul)ting.
.
.
4rt lfUIMrHtg op,ortetnitits
. Aformer Girl Scout leader, she had ·~first time I went squinel hunt.for woftU!II wlto ••nt to lurrt camping experience - sitting around i~ I foum it to be more spiritual ·than
,.........._ .........._,,._.,.. ......
""' rn~, ''"" ~;: "''"" "'"
011tlfoon ln Ifni IN)'S ln II srt.til\f wlam tltm lll'f ftld")'
IULtiliw raNt'~&amp;/'
r-PI ...Mirllll

a

dll DI'A WI Ill

in 1994.
.
Skills illClllde be&amp;innin&amp; canoeing,
sllelm ecolo~, firearms shooting,
wa~ basics, outdoor photogmphy, backylni wildlife aantenlq, and
fishing and hunting basics.
'"1:1'1ioo&amp;h this fl!Ogrllll. ~are promoting oppott:umties fur women who
want to learn how they c:an experience
the outdoors in new ~ in a setting
where there are many positive
rewards," said Dlve Wilson, the
Division of Wildlife's coordinator of
the progrltll.
.
Gn:esc:hik, a sinale mother from
Green near Akron, said she wanted to

a c:ampfire tdl~llJ 1111 Illes until wee being in church. Realizina you are part
hours Of the niaflt - but had never of !he food chain and it is your decision
shotl shotaun or muzzle loading rifle, to take game ~ponsibly was just overboth which were on her weekend whelming," Clrilwell said.
aaenc~a.
Grzeschik also has a great ~pect
'Mary Cardwell's reason for attend- for the outdoors, and her fitst day in

.

ing minored that . of qn:eschik. the program did nothing but heighten
Ccirdwell, a fitst-umer m 1995, that. "Myplansaretoshootashotgun,
became so enthralled with the program mu:u:leloader, go bilding and learn
she return~ each year as I staff mem- about photography. I probably wm
ber.
never go hunting, but the lessons I
A native of Ironton, she now lives in have learned about the. outdoots are
Ann ,t.rbor, Mich. She sits qn.the board invaluable," she said as she shook rain
of both the Ohio and Michigan pro- ftom her hair.
gramsandwasoneoftheorganizetsof She plans to bring 11-year-old
Michigan's fitst program. .
daughter Courtney to a session.
Cardwell, who is a registered nurse, "The wide variety of ou1door skills
said her divorce served as a calllyst "I we teach continues to druw participahad reachbout the program and was . tion ftom many women who do have '
~ust settling my divorce and I thought, inte~ts other than hunting and fishWhy not'?'' she said.
i,,.. Wilson said.
She previously had been camping
ncluding dryinf out playing
and had been a residence camp coun- pinochle in front o a crackling fire
selor during some summets in school. while a spring rain falls outside.

Send us a
picture of YOUR
big game
trohpy!

The Sunday
· Times-Sentinel

:,Reasons to camp _in Ohio
:grounds are plentiful
TME OHIO D£1:¥.A'!MENT Of NATUR~ RESOURCES
fountains throughout; and added a new dual .
· COLUMBUS -The upcoming Memorial sanitary dump station for trailets. Additional
' ·. Day holiday weekend trac,tltionally signals the improvements are scheduled for next year at
... start of Ohio's camping season. And this yc:ar, West.Branch.
;, , c:ampets have more reasons than ever to v1sit Improvements to the campground at
~ , the S7 Ohio State Parks family camparounds1 ~matuning State Park, In Ashtabula County
according to tho Ohio Department ofNatul'll wtll be complete in oommg days, weather perResources (ODNR~.
mining. The Clllllpground will feature upgrad,. "Memorial Day IS the most popular camp· ed sewer and water facilities, as well as 18
:: ina holiday of the year," said Dan West. chief renovated campsites with full-service
:: ofOhio State Parks. "And our camp.rounds hookups offering electric, as well as sewer
:: offer dozens of opportunities for family fun. and wilter on site.
:· We also have two convenient ways to check In addition, four state parks have added to
:· for c:ampslte availability before leaving their Camping Options programs, Camping
: , home.•
·
.Dptions provide equipment to campers who
: • Campina at Ohio State Parks Is still first want to sample the outdoor experience with·
• como, first served. But finding an Ohio State out investing in tents, ·RVs and other gear. A
·: Parks campground with vacancies Ia now as new tepee Is available for rent at John Bryan ·
. easy as visiting the ODNR web site at State Park In Greene County. The tepee,
': Ohfodnr.com any weekd!l)' or by callina toll which sleeps five adults, comes with cooler,
;: free 1·800-BUCnYB. Campsite availability fOII!l sleepma pa~s. cots a lantern, broom and
:• lnfonnation will be updated on the web lite dustpan. Shawnee State Park In Scioto County
every day, Monday tbiou&amp;h FrldJIY..
. has ilso added two tepees to its campground.
. Tlils year, impnwed campat'OIInCia will pet · Bast Harbor State Park In Ottawa County,
! campers at West Branch State Park In Portaae the laraest camparound in the state park sys·
; County and at Wolf Run State Park In Noble tem, now features two deluxe camper cabins.
• County. The fonnerly all prlmill ve 138-slte These cozy &amp;tnlctures sleep four and come
camparound at Wolf Run now features 70 equipped with a small relriferator•. ~icrowave
•: sites with eleolrlcal hookups.
. and coffeepot alona with 11r condttiomng and
~· Phue one of a $2.6 million im~vement a deck. Mohican State Park in Ashland
1: project at West Branch is• now completed and County hu also added arustic camper cabin
the campground Is open for the summer. The with
. basic; sleeplna accommodations and a
. fonnerly all-primitive 103-slte camparound front porch.
. waa closed fast year while workers added . For · Furrller ltlformatlon contact Jean
electricity to SO sites!. conatnlcted two new Bar:/cs, Ohio Statt Parks at (614) 265·7077 or
: ahower houses with nush toilets Clnciuding JIJIIe Bearllard ODNR Media Relation! at
1
one heated shower house); installed drinking (614) 26So6860

f

Date: _ _ _ _ _ __

l·

NameofNominee:-----------------Address:----------------------Graduation Date: _ _ __
A. Please list High School Athletic Accompliahmenta. number of yeara
participation and varsity lettera earned for each aport. Lilt •All League"
"District", "State" and "National" awards. You may use additional paper If
necessary.

B. List all college athletic awards:

• II PTO hpt
4 cylinder, 1000 111'111 dlenlenglnH
with Faatrlme oombuatlon for maximum torque, ·
amoothMJI and low emlellon.
·
·• 8FI2FI manual tranemlaalon with dlfltrantlallock tor ma111mum
efficiency. ''
• Advanced Ferguaon hydraulic ayattm for pi'IOIH
Implement control.
• Oil-cooled disc brakn for extr4' atopplng power and long life
• Teltacoplc 2WD axite.
• Catego.ry·ll 3·polnt hitch with dratt·aenelng top link for faat draft
reapona~.
· ·
• Fltld·foldlng AOPI for low clearance whtn yo.u nted lt.
• Power •tterlng and aprlng-auapenalon 11111 with armreata for
extra c6mfort.
,
·
• Manufacturer'• rated

Nominated by:-----------------~-­
Address:-------- - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - - -

*MASSEY·FERGUSON.

I

;
I
1 :
1

~

'•

.

p llat~lldn·MII• 11a1111 IIIUIICIWIIIIr.AicallaHtiF*'tyout El1l ~uOhtl. N'd, In teo many
"
I
b I 1111, ...
...... GCIOICMW•
...
!• IIIPGIIIIW
N • rnlddly
110111 )Udglllliii.U
. ... petiOli •. ., .l.o
.- r
• cl10 LITI.IO 4 p.m. 10 111'011111 N lon- N WilY f*lga you need to I
~ ICI'Iilboett 11M Wll
· molt harmiUI ullllvloltt 11Y1 from lilY IIIUIU1d Wllllf,
Mliq, Whloll llldl .to lht ntlll
: dlllniiCIInD )'Dill ll!k1. lvtn on I Ia flmlllr Willi Ill ......-: IIIIi pllfwpl molt ~IIPOI11111 rule:
: o10UCtf day and ,.,.._ cl your Know lhl dlpll cllll Willi', IIICI be Don't lily on ollllrl: Taking
'•: natural 1!ik1 lonl, lhall rayt 0111 lWIII cl WIVI don IIWI Ndllln, fll~ lllbiiY lor you!WIIInd olhlll
· • cue piiTilflltnl damlgl, Pf'l'!ll• UlldiiiYIIIIIr ClldfiiRia whln IWimo It tll blldl wlnur. a Mit day
11111 11Q1n0, Mil lllk1 Cllfllllf, U.. milia. NMr IWim Ilona ar Mlldlr far lllftPit. Don, ·l ily on a ._,
, U11111Wi when~ lhl 11.11 aulildll ~IIIIJ'IIId bllllll IJM, ~ W Jlllllnt. 10 Wllllh lhall
1 lf1d tTIIM 1111110 Gl'llfl up wltl I
lwiJI'I In ..... Whlfl otllll D
wllll, LlftDUirda lrt nat
1! 11'111. hat llld IUI'Jtll?lll wtliiiWVII' l';;lt1Nii9 IIICI P1V IIIII IIIon Ill t111allllll,ll1d ft it
- . . ctyoung CDdl0&gt;1clbWIIIr.
IIII(IOt'v
;;. plllh - __
-...on•·'-11111,......_,_
..... ' t.TIIOIIIIDid'IIYton
'"llmmlrl ~ aii!Wdld Wlllfl, cl
In
~-· Gttdllft,
_, .....
,.,,.,.. ...,_,. ·"' ...
• INeicl CIICIIIIhh)VIICIIInall il al ln: OJink pilniY WIVZ Ollldlar• Old'l ~ In 1ft liCit, IGdl1l lludlll IUQIIIIt 1llat
ct Wllllf, jUiol ar ICift cMnlll It b 1n11art On a baltlt Ak• ww a guii'CIId br n:hi ain Ill""'" men

:C"""

-=.far

e_'fw

[
All nomination• are due to the Committee by July 15th each year,
Mall all nomination• c/o Tom Meadows, 15 Portamoutb Road, O.Uipollat,,lO~~H!t1~:~:1
Call 740·446·7570 It you have any a1 .

Is your checking account costinf you money? It pays to check
with Pintar. In addition to eammg intere1t on your checking
account, you'll get:

s,vlmmlfta 11flty tips

'•

bllall dUitng Ill, llal IIUII'IIMf

•t:-IMI)ol.

uultii.I!MIItlokt OIIIIPIItlciWIII';. • ·r llPI UIFIIJI.
"t .• -•Wit
+
· 'Nalall ""'"
·
VIA
I 'II"'
·
,_ Cllllliill - IIICI ,-: Dan't
&amp;4aah01 Willi lfllllmo
.
frtlndl• ftll'iCI
cl Willi'.
• ..... • :: 1IAfl • ot ld'IVIIml Molt diGWI Ill 1111 oaout In qulllllfiOIC.
; you'rl rLAnllllll tot oltM yan:~ pondr .,., on 111.1a1ng Lalli
~·
\.
I

~

"*

11'1•

At Flrstar, you're home free.

ciiiiOflout.rlnolpnllllllldM'Imo
"*' biOCIII. 111111111. Farft ~
r 111.,
dapllld on 10&amp;11A"
da1:l :• Ill fiiOIIal ctlldl••ln Willi:
IIIV Old'lltt'i N child I filii ......

don,

ctiiiOUdlty.

OFrcc Internet Bllllking
0 Free Oteck c.nt

ONo Minimum Balance
0 Competitive lncerat Rate
0 Five Star Service GIWantecd
ONo Monthly Malntwnce Feet
No other account offen you more than Pintar'• Free Checking.
And It'• all backed by o,ur one-of·a·kind Five Star Service
Guarantee. For more information, ltQp by any Pimar branch,
call1,866·2.2.2.·4757 or check u1 out at ffntar.com.

I

�'

-!!a"....

J ~•• ,. ~llttntl

Sunday, June 2. 2002

Pomeroy • Mlddl!port • QeiiiQOIIe. Ohfoo Point P'"ynt WV

Inside:

Celebrations begin on C2

C1
I

ADVICE

Husband
regrets
wasted years
. with wife
2002 CHEVROLET SILVERADO
4 DR EXT CAB 4X4.AIIII

2.002. V&amp;NTURE
EXT LSVAN

7 Passenger seating, front &amp; rear
, Pwr windows, Pwr locks, tilt,
cruise, an~ much morel

MSRP $28,715

*""~ ~ tdcte

r"9111•

VB engine, Auto trans,
Air, Cruise, AM!FM
Stereo, and morel
2
tWJM,J:&amp;eS:;;A tthte

22,998

8
·.

22995

8

•

2002 CHEVROLET
CAVALIERS
'

Air, Rear Spoiler end Morel ·

2002 CHEVROLET
S•10
PICKUPs·
.
.

Air, AM/FM Stereo &amp; morel

Stttttu«J 4t

S~u

10998
'

8

' 10,998

.

. AjM~te

2,002
TRAILBLAZER EXT

1,00

8

E

Keyless entry, Pwr.windows, Pwr locka,
tilt, cruise and morel
One only at thll price...

7,700 miles,

Local Chevy trade-In,
Power windows,
Power locks,

S.le'A«M

tilt, cruise
'

••

•

'97 CHEVY &lt;AMARO
•

•

1

Rear Air,
15 Passenger Seating,
Tilt, Cruise,
Factory Warranty

Low Miles,
Locally Owned

Super Sharp!!
Low Miles

.

Gallipolis Hometown Dealer
·

740~446-3672

'

Chevy :Truck· Moat DIDindlble
Longeef·lutlng, Truckl On 1'hl Rotld

OliNSON 1616 Eastern .Avenue, Gallipolis
CHEVROLET

0! CIIIVROLET EXPRESS VAN

(7 40) 446-3672 .

Call Toll Free! ·
1-800~521-0084

WI\LM

,...-----~-~h-e-be-st_u._u_a_trd_s_ervro_e_o___,

_Abby, I love my beautiful
·w1fe and have never strayed,
but I suspect she will be tno
busy to·miss me much after I
have gone. I am writing this
because I hope other couples
will use the1r time together
more wisely. - LEARNED
TOO LATE IN FORT
WORTH
DEAR LEARNED TOO
LATE: I'm sure your wife
thought that by being
''Superwoman" she was
meeting your needs. How sad
that no one ever told her that
there is far more to bein~ a
§Ood wife than havuig
'whiter whites" and spot-free
dishes.
You and she seem to have
lived parallel lives -always
on the same freeway, but
never in the •arne lane.
Although. it is too late for
you, thiUik you for wanting to
warn other couples for whom
it ill not too late. Peace be
with you.
·
DEAR ABBY: I love my
boyfriend, "Joe," with all my
heart; however, we have a
problem.
communication
Sometimes I feel he is ~k
ing me or doesn't want to
to me. Joe thinks our conver~
sations always lead to an
argument, so he tries to avoid
talking.
Joe recently moved six
hours away, making it even
harder 10 talk. I understand he
may be excited about living
in a .ne~ town, but I feel I
deserve a linlt more respect
than I'm getting. I'd like to
talk to Joe about this, but
every time I call him he
ignores my questions and
practically hangs up~ me.
Abby, how can 1 tmprove
our communication? ALONE BV THE TELEPHONE

DEAR ALONE: I hate to
ilppear negative, but where
dO- you get the idea that this
man is your boyfriend? It's
time to move on, because Joe
already has - physically and
emotiOnally.
· DEAR ABBY: After beiq
'
Pines . . _,..,. a

•

•

2. 21 II

((Ulhen push comes to shove, they (bears) rnn every ·time."
I

•

Blologlat Tom Dotlon when talking about Bleck Beers In the wild.
This bear cub
was found by
Tom Dotson on
one of his
e~ltions Into
th wild to track
the wild Black
Bear In the
West.Vlt1lnla
woods. Dotson
said that bears
now Inhabit
every county In
west VIrginia
and that the
biggest bear
ever caught
weighed In at
· 570 pdunds.
In PennsylVania,
a recent bear
capotured
weighed 720
pounds.
(Submitted)

DEAR ABBY: J am dying
of cancer. For the past few
days, I have been pondering
the wasted years I have spent
with my wife. We never
savored our time together.
. Surely I am at fault, but
from the early days of. our
marriage, my wife was
always "too busy" to sit and
. talk or go for walks. There
was always another load of
clothes or dishes to wash, or
an important phone call to
make.
.
· · When we had children, she
was too busy to go with us to
the playground or church .
Even though I would bathe
the kids and clean up the
bathroom, · she'd follow
behind me and clean it again
·because it wasn't "clean
enough." She wouldn'tlet me
change the baby's diapers
because I "mi~ht not do 'it
right." I couldn t even put the
dishes in the dishwasher correctly - only she could. So,
as yol! can see, I wasn't much
help around the house. As an
attorney, I brought home
· more than enough money to
hire a housekeeper, but no .
one was up to her standards.
She was usually asleep.- -when I left for work. We were
seldom ever awake in bed at
the same time - so we rarely
made love. I don't even know
what time she comes to bed. I
often find her still awake
when I get up in the middle of
the night to go to the bath-

room.

3rd row seating, 270 HP
6 cyl engine, Lellher Interior

I

SPOTLIGHT: Black Bears

Dear

Abby ·

dar. t

•

KEEPING TRACK OF

. '

'

' ..,.

~

f

•

, "'

tt"'Y.''
~

~if

1

.f

'1

i!•

iri''~
. . -~
,; ·,7(~- 1 , ;:.;,.iJ.l 'l j J(!'} ~ .,:, • '
-/ . }.

I'

'T '

•

.L·

' ''J'' -

·

I

•

'

.I

." . ..

jf •

.. •.~

Wildlife o.fficer, ·staff track ·W.'tiz. bear population
.,

BY DNI HIIIM• .

j

"Out of the thousands of nuisance calls I've
DHERMENMYOAILYREGISTER.COM .
·
handl~ in the lastl4 years, only a half-dozon
CCLINTIC WMA ·- Fot have been for livestock. Most of it is for
many years, bears have gotten . sarliage," he said. . .
a bad rap as a bloodthi~ty ' · "Wiien push comes to shove, they (bears)
creature that should be av01d- run ·every time," Dotson .said about black
t
.ed a~. allt!mes.
.
bears. "If) was going ,to_geteaten ur,l'd have
It sa good thmg b1olog1st Tom Dotson never been eaten ·up a long tune. ago. It s a lot of
felt that way.
.
fun."
Dotson, who is the West Virginia Division
Wlien hat)dling nuisance bear complaints,
of Natutal ResoutceS ~ biologist for nine Dol80ll and his team will attempt to lraJ? the
counties 8Dd 12 Wildlife Management Areas animal and relocate it back into the wtlder(WMAs), _l),elped start the sout!Jem bear pro- . nen, Once trapPed, the bear is tranquilized
ject in IJJ99,. • ·
.
· . and data is oollected. The teams use radio
He and his team._~ track of the bear pop- transmitter collars or implant location devices
ulations in·Kfnaw•la. ~ Fayette, Ralei_P. to 1reep track of the bear.
and suqoundi~&amp; ~nt1e~ ~ also.~wer Dill~ ·Ill an att;empt to break ~ of_.associati~g
sance biiiF .¢!&gt;inplain.ra, . ; • ' , , · " . . ~ ~ wtt!l food, Dotson wd his team will
Do~ ~alfed one rmmdent where •
,
using rubber bulleu and ftceeracker-type
near Chiuteston collected week-old bread;'
·
· g devices to scare bean away when
bear sniffed out the cache and entered
' thev enCroach into human habitation.
~·s h~se throu&amp;h a ·basement windoW,
"))ears do not represent a threat to human
n&amp;ht near ·a commcxle.
.
safety," Dotson said. "But that doesn't.mean
When the bear entered, the man was m the you want a wild bear living in your backyard.
process ·Of using the commode and he and the In the lower 48, there have been less than a
bear were. eye-to-eye. Most likely, both were dozen people killed by black bean. We've
very Sllf'PO~ ~ startled bear tore out of the never had an_&gt;:one hurt fiere." .
house, IJII!IShin&amp; nP'I through a wooden door.
Dotson wd that bean now inhabit every
Doraoa wd that p!CCCS of the door were scat- county in West Vtr~ia ~d that the biggest
~ ~CroSS, the road.
bear ever caught we1ghed m at 570 poundl. In
, I. cou~d Sit he~ all day ~tell you a _dozen Pennsylvania, a recent bear capotured
stories like"~at. Dotson ~d about nu!sance weiihed 720 pounds.
.
bear~~··. Smce 1999,we vehandlednghtat
"We've got some bi§ ones here in West
250 1ndiv1duals (bean) an~ captured several Vtrginia," Dotson said. • A world record black
bean more ~ once. Cabtn Cr~k, south of bear was killed near Charleston, though it only
~~.~n . 11 a hotbed of nu1sance com- stood for one year." ·
.
plai
~ said that bears are predatory but He said that some bears are predictable
mostly vegetarians.
1'1 n1 ... .._, Cl

.

•

I
I.

,,.
I
I

�t.tr. Md Mra. Mltthew D. Mllddox

.
•••
...
• •
Timothy lwltnt Md AlmM lfllllllm .

Martin-Saunders engagement
GALLIPOLIS - Dallas
and Mary Ann Martin of
Gallipolis are announcing the
_.engagement of their daughter, Jennifer Ann Martin to
Morgan Hunter Saunders.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Ron and
Cindy Saunders.
The .bride-elect is the
granddaught~r of Okey a~d
Irene Martm and Dons
Holderby and the late Harry
Holderby.
She is a 1998 graduate of
River Valley High School
and 11 200 I gradu11te of tho
University of Rio Grande
with an associates degree in
nursing, to complete a bache·
Iars degree in December,
2()02.
.

She is currently employed
by Holzer Medical Center.
The . prospective · bride·
groom is the Jrandson of
Leon and Juan1ta S11unders
~~nd Louis Shaver and the late
Wayne Shaver.
He is a 1997 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School
and a 2001 graduate of the
University of Rio Grande
with degree in accounting.
He is currently em~loyed
by Oak Hill Financtal of
Jackson, Ohio.
The wedding Is planned for
4:30 p.m. July 20, 2002 at
First
Baptist Church,
Oallipolls, with reception to
follow at Oallipolis Shrine
Club.

Branham~Switzer engagement

Hupp-Norris engagement
RACINE Laura
Theiss-Hupp of Racine
announces the engagement
and upcoming marrfaae of
her daughter, Jody Rayc
Hupp of~aclne, to Darrell
Ryan Norris of Racine.
Norris Is the son of
Darrell and Jan Norris of
Racine.
The prospective bride is 11
1999 graduate of Southern
High School and is pursuing a bachelor of science
degree in early childhood
development at Ohio
University. She is the
granddaughter of Ruby
Hupp of Racine l!'ld the late
Donald Hupp and the late
Charles "Dutchiei" and

Bonnie Theiss.
Norris Is a 1997 graduate
of Southern Hiah School
and is employed by Darrell
Norris
11nd
Son
Greenhouses. He Is the
arandson of Dallas and
Donna Hill of Racine and
Joe and B11rlene Stobart of
Portland, and the lat11 Fritz
Norris.
.
An open church wedding
will be held ut the Racine
United Methodist Church
on June lS. Music will
begin at 5 p.m., with the
ceremony following at 5:30
p.m.
.
A reception will follow at
the Riverside Oolf Course
in Mason, W.Va.

PA.TRIOT- GiwundRuth tlon.
Ann Bl'llnham of Plltriot are
She Is c:lm!l\ti.Y emplo~ .s
announclna the enpaement of the director of flniii\CC and
their daualiter, Aimee Kristine ftnanclal aid at NIT, Cmsslanes,
Branham to Timothy Alan W.Va.
·Switzer.
·
The prospective brl~
The prospective bridearoorn Is the aian!fson of the late Jack
Is the soo Of Larry and 'teresa and Brm. Swlt~M; the late Clint
Switzer of Mt Den, Fla., and lll'td Thelma Lundy; and the late
11m lll'td Joanne OliiSSbury of Vauahn and Thelia Olwbum.
Bidwell.

The brlde-clecf Is the ll!llld·
dauahter of the ate Cltrfs and
Elva Fisher, Fnmces Branham
or Preston burg, KY.• and the late
Ally Bl'llllharil. She is n 1991
Rnlduate of Southwestern Hiah
School and a 1995 and 2002
Rt'llduate of the University or
ltio Onmde with • bllchelor's
degree and a mt1ster of educa·

He is a l!l9S of River ValleY.
and a · 2002 aradullle of
Manhall Unlvcrs1ty.. He Is a
member of Alpha Stamn Phi.
He Is cunently emplo~ by
Counter Drua Un1t, West
Vlrainlo. National Ourud, St
Altians.
·
.The wcddlna Is plllllned for
June 17, 200'2, at Scqrove
Beach, Fla.

CROWN CITY - Keith
and Cindy Anael, .Crown

CI

t y ,

announce
the birth of
their flrat
child,
a
aon, Brady
M a a on
Anael, who
waa born
March 11,
2002, at
. 5:06a.m.
M a a on
welahed 7 pounda, I0 ounces
and was 20" 112 lnchea lona.
Maternal . grandparents are
Dean
and Marilyn Mason of
J8mel lroderlok Jr. and Gamatt llonaouttar
Gallipolis. Maternal areal
grandplll'enta are Thomas and
Geraldine Scott of Gallipolis,
and Ella Mason of Kerr.
Paternal
grandparents
POMEROY - Garnett Laura B. Bonecutter of I unior and Rosemary AnJel
Ellen Bonecutter and James Pomeroy, and the prospective of Crown ~lty.
Patrick Broderick, 1r., both of . groom the son of James v.
Pomeroy, announce their and Becky Broderick of
engagement and upcoming Pomeroy and Gallla County,
~age.
· respectively.
BIDWELL - Bryan and
The prospective bride is the
Wedding plans are incom- · Cassie Brumfield of Bidwell
daughter of Neal D. and plete.
announce the birth of their
son, Joel Nathaniel. Born
March 22, he welahed seven
pounds, nine ouncea and
measured 20 1/2 inches long.
He was welcomed home tiy
his sister Alexandre&amp;, age

.JBonecutter-Broderick engagement

·Brumfield birth

five and brother Brycon, age
three.
Maternal_ arandparenta are
Dean and Frorence Petrie of
v 1 n 10 n ,
Matunal
1 r e 1 1•
arandparenta are the
late Arnold
a n d
Margaret
Smitll of
Bidwell.
Bill and
J e 1 1 1e
Joallrumftald Petrie of
Vinton.
Paternal arandparenta are
Charles
and
Nancy
Brumfield at Crown City.
P
I
d

Settle birth

arandmother Ia Mae
Thivener,
alao . ·.of
Oalllpolh.
'
The aottle wIll be
returnlna to the Statea In
June anll will be at the
Command and Oener'al
Staff Colleae at Port
Leavenworth, Kan.

WBIDBN, Oermanft _
Captain and Mra. Je rey
Settle are announclna the
birth of · their aon,
William Patrick, who Wll
born on March 18b2002,
In
Wolden!.. I ·Opt,
Oermany,
rhe
baby
welahed aeven pounch, McCl1111
five ouncea and fa belna
,
welcomed home by hla
OALUPOLIS- Mllce
alatera Meredith, aaed 12 and Melody McCinu
and Ju1Ia aaed four.
of Oalllpolla are the
William II the flrat proud parenu of a new
arandaon of hla_paternal baby alrl. Molalna Skye
grandparent•, Marllene McCieeu wu born
Settle·Youna
of Sunday, AP.rll 28, 200'2t
Oalllpolia and the late at home. She wolahoa
Luke Settle; and he Ia · 10 JlOUnda, 11 ounCJI
a~eHa~ela~~~-f~:n 1 :!~! alao the flrll arandaon of and 21 112 lnchu. She
Montaomery of Crown Cit)' hh maternal arandpar· wu welcomed by_ ~er
Also the late Vlrainla anCI enu, John and VIckie bla alater, Mlguela.
Harold Brumfield of Crown Wan ken of Port Hood, .
Texu. Hla paternal areal·
Cl
ty.

• · I,\

-•
-.
, Me lftftOUn• - .
..· '
JOuth
.
lrt
,,

'

RAONB-Mr. ml Mrs.Id'fl
~ r:J Racine~ lhe
~ r:J !heir dauglttl!r,
uate of Gadsden State Amy
Jo, to Adam \\\lsley R&lt;Uh.
CoiMIUnity Colltge In
11m
or
Mt aid Mrs. Guy R~
Alabam11 and is now
·l!mPio)'ed a&amp; lln lnfurmatloo oft.&amp;tt Fails.
The · bridt-elt~:t recently
Teclmology
Contracting
Specialist at tht U.S. Marint grad11atl!d with a. degree in
Corps Logistics Base In hearina and speech Sc:ier.:es.
Albany, Ga. The bride lSslsts She attends Ohlo University.
Her li.llnCtl r«entl~ gnduathim in special projects.
oo
from the University of Rio
The couple live In
Sylvester, Oa.
Grande.

the late Ret. U.S.N. Lt. Cmclr.
l.eblnd Webber. Ht is a atad·

birth ·

entrants will be awarded a
recoanltion ribbon. Best of
Shaw, First, Second and
Third place winner'&amp; work
will be displayed throughout
·
the month of July In the
· ·- GALLIPOLIS _ The . FAC's Youth Gallery.
. French Art Colony's youth IU't
"l:om~tltlon:. sponsored by
American .tilectrlc Power,
will take place durlna the
month of July. All IU'twork
needs to be submitted June
11·14 from 10 a.m.·S p.m. . OALt.lPOLIS - Do you
'~nd will be displayed durl\'1 collect paper weights, bears,
' the FAC's "Art: In the Park c:rystal, antiques, bells, ptr.. ex.hlblt, July 6th from 10 fume bottles, etc .. ? The
French Art Colony Is seeldng
l.m.-3 p.m.
'~ The eKhiblt takes place in local collectors for.its August
· _the Oalll!~&lt;;!lil CitY. Park dur- eKhlbit, "The Collector's
ing the River Recreation Comer." The display will run
Feat! val. Students In grades August 4h through the 2.9.
K·l2 are encouraaed to _par- We are asking that local col·
1lclpate in the competitlon. lectors consider loanina
il'here Is no entry fee and stu· apptoxlmately 10·15 items
dents can submit up to three (dependlnll on size) from
·'works. Work will be judaed thefr personal collections to
· In cateaorles defined by put on exhibit for the mottth.
'·grades (K·3, 4·6, 7·9 and 10• 1'2). All hanalna pieces must
' be framed and liave an appro·
·. l'rlate hanaer,
.
· Best of Cate;ory In each
.Jilvlalon will receive a $20
· P!'lze. First, Second and Third
lace winners in each cateao·
· will receive ribbons. All

., competition

.fl

.

Northup is the granddaughter
of Ruth Nonhup of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and the late
Thomas Northup and Rachel
Bissell of Mason, W.Va. and
the late Joe Bissell.
Roosh is the grandson of
Carrie Roush and the late
Lester Roush of Letart Falls,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Findley of Minersville.
An open church wedding in
Racine on August 17 is planned

RIO
GRANDE
Matthew D. Maddox and
Karen A. Lester Maddox eelebrated Stheirdr 30th anniversary on atu ay. .
They were roamed June 8.
1972, in Rio Grande.
The ceremony was conducted by Rev. G. Wallen.
The couple has resided in the

Rio Grande area for the past
28 years.
The couple has one daughter, Angela Belville of
Gallipolis.
h
h
. She o~t~ an open o~se
m recogmllon of the occas1on
at the couple's home on
· Saturday.
·

FRENCH ART COLONY NOTEBOOK

Attention area
colleeton

·Welcome to the world, baby!
Anpl birth

SYLVBSTBR, Ga. .Pamela S. Griffin and
Richard B. Webber weft\ married Mueh IS, 200l, at the
Ponce De Leon Resort In St.
• l).uaustil\\\, Fla.
'4 The bride is the da\!ahter of
· .Bmest Orlffin of Lona
· Bottom alld the late June
Griffin, llnd a graduate of
·'!astern Hlah School. The
• jroom Is tl\e son of Clara
" Webber of Applin;, Ga., and

Maddox 3Oth anniversary

Northup-Roush engagement

Griffin-"Hkbber tvedding

The items will nood to be
dropped oft' the last week in
July. Please call the FAC for
more information at 4463834

FAC summer
ftfNittlmS
r• -•· · ~
OALLlPOLIS '_ The
French Art Colony has
announced Its summer proammmlng. "Summer Safari,"
for children ages 5 to 7 will
take participants on 11 trip to
the jungle and the rainforest
whet'll they will learn of dlf·
ferent animal!! their habitat
and tporeW The three day
worksllop, headed by Lori

Billings, will be held July
22nd·24th from I0 a.m. to
noon. Tuition is $35.00.
"Hey Man, Let's 'flake .A
Look At The 60s," will allow
students, ages 7 to 12, to relive the 1960s. The half-day,
week long camp, will be held
July IS-19 from t to 4 p.m.
This fun-filled week, headed
by lnsttuctors Bridget Haffelt
. aM Julia Roderus, will combine FLN and teaming.
Here's a sneak preview into
the week.... the civil rights
movement, Vietnam. space,
the "Summer of Love' and
more !II Thitlon for the camp
is SSO.

Theater/Improvisational ·
camp, headed by Suzanne
Bapst will be held June 10-'14
from S to 9 p.m. Students
ages 11-14 will learn the
basics of theater - what
makes a scene; what goes
·into character development,
props and more. Students
wilf work with a play and
perform it at the end of the
week.
Creative writing camp will
also be instructed by Suz~nne
Bapst and will be June 24-26
from 1 to 3 p.m. The three
day workshop, open to stu·
dents aged 11-14 will explore
the creative writing process

and teach skills · for better
wl:iting
techniques.
Participants will need to
bring pencils and paper.
Tuition for the workshop is
$30.
•
All workshops/camps must
be pre-registered. Half of the
fee must be paid to secure a
spot in the workshop/camp.
Space is limited. Call the
FAC, 446-3834, for more
information or to pre-register
for the FAC's summer programrning. Please note,
financial assistance is available. All FAC programming
is offered through surpon of
the Ohio Arts Counci .

(

'l

The Bun1111 for
Chlldnll wllh

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · -,

Want Choices??
We Have Cholcesllll

Mldlcal Ha11dlcapt
(BCMH) laavallatilt
10 help hmllltl.

,,

If you•re running around
looking for selection ...

AtfD IOME,.ZMII M IUALZZ.i

\'OU GOULD Ull MOll,

· JO M'LL GIVE YOU
. Oft~D~AFT

I

Living Room Groups
11 Different Companies

Rehabilitation Center

· CIJ., P,m LII::Z·&amp;y. E~ttillll~
. Bwhll11t, lfrul otlm1

OPEN HOUSE

Bedroom Groups ·
10 Different Compan les
~ h11u1 u11,

'

Dining Room
Suites

l1111.riNin &amp;uutt ~bb

111111 othtr jl111 ""'""'·

The staff and reslclentl ot Overbrook llehabllltatlon Center woulclllke to
take this opportunity to Invite the community to come and enJoy a

"Celebration of Life"

7 Branda to ChOOM From'
S.l#tt J;om Alhf4y, Ll••r~.

""W• alto h•v• 3 dlll'trenc btddina
COmPI!!III 10 chooH from IIICh U
S.na, Thtr·..ptdlc, 111d lmptrlll

at Overbrook this Tuesc:lay afternoon from 1pm to 6pni.

''"""'"' """

Refreshments will be served to all who join the celebration.
While at Overbrook, take the opportunity to tour our beeuttful f.ac:lllty
and meet our wonderful staff.
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center currently has
openings for skilled, Intermediate and hospice care.
Long-term, short·term, respite and rel'wlblllt&amp;tton
stays are available. If you have any questions, please
contact our Admissions Director, Donald Vaush.an,
for fuiiher Information.

PUVZLi&amp;i.M

'0 OH' IIUHDI'D 'IM~ FOUl!

fOU WO"k HA~D
FO~ fOUl' MOtftf
10 DOff'T &amp;IR IT AWAt
&amp;iT TO Tlli PIIONi
AHD CALL

U~

TODAY!

tfATUIALLt!
Our new FREE CHECKING account ollowa 'you lo write all the cnlc:ka you need to without
any txctsa activity chargu Find aut mart about our new FREE CHECKING account today.
· Somo r.o~lcfiono apply. .

Call lor the ollict neore1t you. ·
&amp;ank.Sy·Phone 1-800.374-6123
TDD Only 376-7123
email: bonkOptopl•sboncorp.com

'

.I

'I

'

website: www.ptoplesbancorp.com

•
•

�C4
•
•

•

Use ay reams to et go o worry

zy, azy
course also gives the lim-time col-

Have you just gnllluatcd from

yQIS

with

ID IS&amp;10tilte

de&amp;ree or

lege studellt an uri)' introduttion to four yttrs with 1 brdlelor's iJI&amp;ree.
the academit enviroomeftt at col- studetlts must take 1 fWI-timo cftdit
c:oUeao for the summer? Are you an
adult considering png back to col~ wilhout the added SIJeSS of bout load, wbidl is somewhere
beiDa away from home fQr the first betwftn LS and 1&amp;~lours 1 semesleae f~ 1 di:Jree lllcla new c:IRICf?
time. Studems who 11'111)' only be ter.
I fulllold each~
Or are you JUSt ~ for somesoPhomores
or
junion
in
nirh
is.
difficlllt
for many studeDt&amp;..
~ exciting to do this summer?
sc&amp;oolll'llly also :want to take sum- Picking up a cklss. or two ettb sum'Mifta collep tourSeS at your loc:a.l
mer clas$es. This is not only 1 ~ mer can nep you on track to ltaducommunity coUege offers you an
ductive way to spend a summer. but ate with 1 dtg~ee in the nont'll1 time
CU)' way to pt ahead in your eduEDUCATION
would provide 1 signific:ant advan- period or even aractuate ahead of
cational cueer. Let's take a look It
tage Uf!OO entering colleae after Scbeclule. Onduatina • yw ahead
these advantqes.
gmuation
from high school
of schedule c:u save thousands of
One sipific:anl advantage is that
If you are a recent high school
If you hive just come home from dollars in room IIICl baud. not to
some community colleges even
olfer s~ial summer classes where graduate. you may want to take colleae for the summer. you DliJI mention putting you on the path to
the tuition nte is gteatly reduced or advantage of classes such as want to consider taking a summer earning an extellent sallll)' 1 yeu
.
even free. When you consider the English lnd math that are offered at class. Summer offen you the oppor- earlier.
If you ·are an adult con:r.idering
money you can earn at a summer, yOUt loc:a.l community college dur· tunity to take o college course hi an
mg
the
summer.
accelerated
time
period.
Classes
returning
to college. but are orneminimum wqc job and compare
lillY
be
offered
in
your
ll'llljor,
genClasses such as tltes.e transfer to
what heSitant about your dl:cision,
that to the advantages of eaming
college c~t duri11g the summer, any public institution in the state erlll studies or other elective cours- summer is ateat way 10 ease bac:k
you will definitely come out ahead and will give the student a quic:k es. These classes should tnnsfet to into college without IMklng alongby spending your summer at your advantage over the other frcstiman mQSt publit institutions in the st~ate. term commitment. Most summet

hi&amp;b sdlool? Are you home

from

Luanne

.

in their class. Tlking a college

Collins

mma

Bowman

local community college.

Be~

To graduate on time, either two cia ses

have

fewer

NNU.

students

Frenchman was Gallipolis' trst postmaster
.:J

Francois Anaclet d'Hebecoun
wu Gailipolis' first postmaster.tllking the· position in 1794. Prior to
that, Francois had helped deliver
mail from Gallipolis to Limestone,
Ky.• and Gallipolis to Marietta by
CliDOC.

Francois was bom on July 1.
1768, at Epemal, France (in the
province of Champagne). Francois'
father was Joseph Nichlas le
Dossue, Seigneur d' Hebecourt.
squire captain in the Queen's regiment of 1nfantry. Francois' godfather was Lotd Anaclet, the Count of
Bassompierre. In 1768, Francois •
fath~ was a part of the personal
bodyguatd for Marie Antoinette.
As a young boy, Francois was
sent to military school at Brienne
'"'sur I' Ausle. While at the school,
Francois became friends with
Napoleon Bonaparte. The l~ttcr was
lraduated at the same lime that
Francois entered the infantry 1s 1
sub-lieutenant.
In 1790, Francois emigrated

James
Sands
HISTORY
along with several of the noble family from France to Gallipolis. So
depressed was King Louis XVI
about this emigration of noblemen
and women that he was heard to
say: '"They are all going to
Gallipolis. would that l myself WliS
going there with them." Louis XVI
wu killed by~ the guillotlle on Jan.
21, 1793. Marie Antoinette was ·
killed Oct. 16, 1793.
It should be noted that in early
1790, when Francois began contemplating his move to America,
Bonaparte had considered joining

••

.

his classmate. Both had been full of King of France, his nllmethen being
It was about 1800 that Fftncois
ambition and. adventute. They King Louis Philippe. Thlvcling with · petitioned the Spanish goVetnor of
hoped to perform mnny daring feats the duke were several French royal· Looisillfta for permission 10 ao tO
in U.S. At the last momunt. ists and the American o.mblisSildor New Orleans. With his wife and tWO
Bonaparte's relatives persuaded to France. A few days later, this sons. Ferdimmd lllld FrancoiJ
him to change his mind. Nu~leon Sllf!le group wus entenuined at N11poleon, Francois moved te
remained to fulfill his m11itury G~allipolis.
Boul'bon Street in the Ctescent CitY,
career.
Of the many eonvemtions held There he opened a school for bo~.
In 1791, Fnmcois was commis- with the duke on the occasion of hi~ It met witti crowning success w1th
sioned cuptuin of the second regi· visit were those dealinR with how to . many childten of prominent New
ment of militia to the county of make coffee. Mrs. D Hebec:oun 's Orleans families corollina. The
Washington b~ the acting gov~mor c?ffe was pronounced by the future school was soon moved to a I'I\IQiof the Northwest Temtory, kmg as the best he h~ad ever tasted. sion on Burgundy Street in Ne'f
Winthrop Sargent. !twill be remem- · He secret was that she added to the Orle~~ns and IIller to Bayou St. John.
bered that what is now Gullia coffee grounds the yoke of an egg · Francois died on Nov. 22, 1832,
County was a pan of Washington and eggshells ground. into a powder. at the ~~&amp;e of 64. Many of his former
County from 1790 until 1803. One of the French royalty traveling students collected manly to erect f
Galliu became a county when Ohio with the duke suggested thut in his monument in New Orleans to tholf
became u stute; hence Gallia County home in Cb~anres, France, some beloved teacher. But the penoi
will also celebrate its bicentennial women made coffee by dripping it given charge of the money left towa
next year.
through a pi~e of flannel. It should 11long witli the cash and no manu•
Beside.s being the postmuster ul' be noted thut most coffee ,served in ment was ever erected.
Gallipolis, d'Hebec:ourt also ran a Ohio River towns in the 1790s was
(Jawws Sands is a special c:orrr•
smaU store here. By 1798, we find made by boiling. The c:olfee repon- spo~1dt11l for tilt Stmday n111fs!
Francois at Marietta, where he and edly had the consistency of tar, St11ti11tl. Ht ca11 b. eo~ttacttd bz
his wife entertained Louis Philip, especially after several spoonfuls of writiiiB ro 346 Mtadow l.aii'J
Duke of Orleans and the future sugar were added.
Circlevill•, 0/llo 43113.)
•

Craft Barn
features many
events for area
artisatiS

•

CI.IAN-UP AT OUR HOUII- Mrs, Murrey's OVCS Klnderaerten clean-up crew recently helped
spruce up the c:our~erd 1t Gallipolis' Our House Museum. Pictured are, front, from left, Sarah
Schoono'Jer, Kattlyn Beever, Aubrey Lona, Amy Ours. Back, from latt, Alicia Sto'Jer, Jon Michael
Koatlval, Ranjlt Mavt, Scotty Wood, LOIIn Ettmonds, Millie Westfall, (Contributed)

Abstinence only way to avoid health risks
BY Moe" YOINI, B.S.N., R.N. advantages. First, It Is an excelTeenagers make hundreds of lent way to avoid STDs. These
choices every day. Some of the diseases are spread by sexual
choices teens make have dire contact including anal and oral
consequences for their safety sex. STDs can cause luting illand fUture. Among the IIU\ior rtesses, infertility and death.
choices teens face today is the Some cannot be cured. STDs
guestion of whether or not to includl:; genital warts and herl)e sexually active. 'Ieenage pes, ~onorrhea, chlamydia,
sexual act1vity often carries syphlbs, HI:f infection, and
very serious and traaic results, AIDS.In Oaula County for the
such as, teenage pregnancy year 1999, there were approxiand contncting a sexually· · mately 42 individuals ages 15·
tnnsmitted disease (STD). 19 di~osed with Chlamydia.
, -lAbstinence is a very aood way For thts same year, 6 individutel avoid these risks.
als ages 15-19 were diagnosed
What
is
abstinence? with Gonorrhea in Gallia
Abstinence means doing with- County. In the state of Ohio in
out something. Sexuaf absti- 1999, 49 teens ages 13-19 and
nence means not having sex. 1,051 2.().29 year olds were liv·
There are many teaSons teens ina with HIV/AIDS. Not hav·
may decide not to have sex: ing sex is the best way to avoid
you want to wait until you are · sms.
inanied, your parents would be
Avoiding pregnancy is
upset if they found out, you another advantage of sayma no
don't feel ready to raise and to sex. In the United States,
support a child, you don't want more than a million teenage
to get an STD. ·
girls become pregnant each
Saying no to sex has many year. In 1999, Oallia County

Busy summer on tap
at Bob Evans

OHIO VALLEY CHRisnAN

had 74 teenage births (births to
teens ages 13-19). Pregnancy
can change your life. It can
make it hard to finish school or
find a job. The only sure way
to avotd pregnancy is not ·to
have sex. Other advantages to
saying no to sex include keeping moral and religious values
IUld to boost your self-esteem.
Parents, you ciUI help your
child choose sexual absti·
nence.. Start talking with your
child today a~ut sex IUld the
importance of abstinence.
Hearing your point of view
helps your child form · sound
opmions
and
values.
Encourage your child to tallc
· about whatever is on his or her
mind. Also. help your child
understand his or her feelings.
Use teachable moments for
starting a diSClussion with your
child about sex. For example,
useanewsstoryonHIVtodis·
cuss sms, while drivin~ in
the car discuss the respoils1bil·
ities of being a parent. or while

going for a walk discuss ways
to resist peer pressure. Also,
tallc to your teen about the
many risks. of having sexi disease, pregnancy, emotional
pain, loss o( freedom, etc.
Young people who understand
the risks. of sex are more likely
to remain abstinent. Be a good
role model for your tt~en.
Actions speak louder that
words. Healthy relationships
are bilsed on values, such as:
respect, responsibility, trust,
and honesty. The best way to
share these values with your
teen is to live them. The main
thing Is to sta~ involved in
rour child's life. The mote
mvolved you are, the easier it
is to talk about abstinence.
Milke sure your chilli knows
you' II alwa)'S be there no matter what the ~roblem. Listen to
your child w1thout lecturing or
being overly critical. Get
involved in activities that interest your teen. Also, · know
where your child is. Have your

child leave a phone number
when he or she goes somewhete, set a curfew, and give
your child rules about having
friends over when he or she is
alone.
There are also steps teens
can take to malce abstinence a
realistic choice. Teens can
decide how far they are aolna
to go befOte they get into a
ptessure situation. Talk about
your limits with your
boyfriend or ·girlfriend. Don't
use drugs or alcohol. These
substances make it ban:ler to

say no. Oo out in groups to
tike the pressure off. And,
practice saylna no as if you
really mean it.
· .
Remember, ltls never too late
to .abstain from sex. Abstinence
is the only 100 percent sure w,.y
to avoid ptegnancy and STDs.
For more Information on
abstinence, STDs, or pregnan· ·
cy, you may contact the Gallla
County Health Department 11
446·8538.
.
.

.

(Michelle .Young b a nur.M
for th1 Gallla Cou111)1 H~talffl

D•pa111111111.)

River Cities Community Health Coalition

•

ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
who attends Rl ver Valley
Wlanrwlns · · Hlah
Crews nllttld
School, was .nominated
for
this
award by
national award Linda national
In national
a
at the
honor roll
The United States Achieve· school.
She will appear In the
Fem~att,

m e n

The
United
States
Achievement Achievement
has announced Jonathan
Crews of
Patriot hils
been recoa·
nlzed for
academic
achievement
IS a United
States
National
Honor Roll
award win·
• Or.we
ner.
•
Crews,
who attends Southwestern
Element~. will appear In the
United States Acl\levement
~cadeiYIY. official yearbook,
publlsheil nationally.
. • He Is the son· of Roger
Crews of Patriot and Mari11U
Zembry of Oallipolls. The
.•randparet\ts are Mary Crews
-pf Patriot, the late Bobby
Crew• and Marilyn Reapp of
Oalllpolla abel tl\e late Iohn

The
Joint Implant Center
'

~~)Grant Medical Center

DON I WAll
VACCINATE~

. ObioHealth

~ Comnu1lly Aollon ny be IIIII to hllp with:
s,}('(

• Education and
• Reaume and job Interview .
employment training
preparation
• Relocltlon aaelatance • Tuition 111l1tance
within the elite of Ohio • Travel relmbu!'lement
• Car repair 1111111noe
O•III•MIIgl:

1~800-462-5255

Denllt L. M1rtln

(740) 448 1018
Peggy Tru11ell

(740) 992-2222

Better health for the Tri-State.

Hear Revivalist
Dr. B.N. Nichols
june 2 • lOAM (( 6PM
june 3·5 • 7PM

.

~

iolin·tl COli' fol /ota/1(/ll't'
Olltf

/lip

/(t•p((IU'IIIt'lll

First Baptist

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, June 21, 2002.

MIMinilrwllnlpiQt Monly

call (614)

z:n·IU1

Joint
Implant
Surgeone, Inc.

for an lppolntment .. Adolph v. Lomb•rdl, Jr., MD, FACS

.~

..

Ch~roh

. (740) 446·0124

For Initial •valuation• or follow-up YIIIU, Wt offer
office hourt at 2t15 trd Av1nue (acrou from St.
M1ry'1 Holpltal), Huntln1ton, WV.

MIIM
,.................. _.

.

. .1t0~ 4th Avenue
01lllpolle, Ohio 45611
· Atohlt Conn, Putor
Alvle Poll1rd, Auoo. P11tor

•
•'

nre part of n series or leilminll
e11periences . offered ut the
Bob Evuns Crnfl B:~m
throt~hmllthe Summer.
For more information
about the Cruft Bum demon·
strutions or other Bob Evans
Ft~nu · events and llttiviti!ls,
those ,inten:str:d should cull
1!00·994-3276 or visit the
web
site
at
www.bubevuns.com.
The Crurt Ban1 feutures ll
lurgc assortment of line folk
nrt and one-ol~n -kind items
from more than SO cmt\ers.

.

•
•

·Medical professionals providing free
health care answers 8c physician referral

Achievement
Academy
national
yearbook,
publishcCI
announced nt~tlonally.
that Sherry
Weaver Is the daughter of
Woavor of Charlotte
Charles
Bidwell hils Rawlins of ond
Bidwell.
been named arand~nts are Harvey The
~and
a national .Lenora Burnett.of Putrlot and
award win- the late WI llle and Dorothy
ner In for- Conley
of Columbus.
eign
lanauaao.
Weaver,

W..vtr

~m6ry.

"Any lay-off Ill IIHifllltm 011/o 111 WHfllll'flnl• flfHIId be •
rlpplt tffHt ot ltlfl mine flloelnr. C:.H u1, wt'rl 11ft 10 lltlp"
Trl1h McCullOugh, EKeautlvl Dlreator. Communltv Action Agln~~y

t

Academ~.

••

Nurse On Call

te~~cher

RIO GRANDE - The old·
fashioned 11rts of cross stitching nnd quilting will be the
fOtus of fl h~anils-on demonstrations at the Bob Evans
Fann Craft Bam in Rio
Orande in this summer.
Visitors to the Craft Bam t:lln
watch u~s from I0 n.m. to
l p.m., and try the techniqulls
durlna the free sessions.
Crass stitching Is sched·
uled June IS, June 22, June
29, July 4, July 13, A~. 10
and Aua. 24. Quilting wdl. be
demonstrated June 22, July 4,
and AuiJ. 10.
Mary . Dawson,
of
Oalllpolis. willl11ad the cross
stitchlng demonstrations on
Juno IS, June 22. July 4, und
Aua. 10. Mary',\ collection of
tote baas. wall htmainas,
quilts . and bookn'llll'kS hDVII
liean popular · Items at the
Crllft Bam since 1999.
Juanita Rainey, of Rain11y
Day Crafts In Ollllipolls
Ferry, w. Va. will den\on·
strate cross stitching on June
29, July 13 11nd Aua. 24. She
has been a Craft Bam punicipant since the shop opened in
1996.
Quilting will be taught by
Rosalie J:akln. A quiher for

t\'1001 thlln JO )ll)lli'S, Lukin's
c:ral\s include table runners,
place muts m1d various sites
of quilts. Lukin hu.s reeeiwd
two honor11ble mention
~twards in the Wild Thrl~y
Festival Ouilt Show . in
Wellston, 011io, und hus. participated as o. luda'c in the
Jutkson, Ohto, Apple
Festivnl Quilt Show. ller
work hns bcun featured in the
Bob
Ev11ns
Fnrm 's
HonteStl!lld 1nvitntionnt Quilt
Exhibit.
The t:rafl demonstrutious

..

�C6
aii'UR

VIdeo pmes rely on
Eminem CD shovvs
music labels can prosper
or
even with file sharing

lOS ANOB.ES (AP) eat! it "The Return
the
Killet Game- Pin UI.M
With billions of dollm oo
the line, the video guniq
indu try is rtlYing oo bnndbread
or
sales
lind
rnarketina
LOS ANGELES (AP) name recogniiloo to weather
Eminem's re«lfd label Wf&amp; 11.t ln~ a division of
the fll!ing competition
between person;t~ computer
o neNOUs 111boo1 music Uniwrsa!l\lusie Group.
Individual sonas frOm the
systems. Microsof\'s Xbox,
:pl ...tes e~nnibllitina Sillies o!
CD
bec.me
widely
tvailatM
·the rapptr 's latelll CD that tt
Nintendo's GameOlbe and
: ~ttasell
"The Eminem ooline In mid·MlY, .and bool·
Sony's PlayStatioo2.
·Show" nine ~ wty, dis- le~ copies or the cntirt
. Thus. the comi~ ~ar·s
video gaming olfenngs -ruptill&amp; wtll· h11d lt\:ll'hti~~&amp; . Cl)beglll ~~~~on sftel
comers around the same
on display at last wtek's
pllllls.
·
Electronic Entenain~t~ent
8111
the CD hit Sllftll time.
It's impossible to cale~~late
Expo in Los Angeles - m
Memorial Da.y ~~ it
larded with sequels and
:sri II m11ni,Rtd to debm at No. how many sales were lost in
the proces$, Bennan s•id.
movie adaptations.
I in tel'G!tl rime.
lntersrope took a number
Sequels to the inoovative
· Some Industry observers
games "The Leoend of
say the CO's sutteSS in the of stepS to counter tbe impact
Zelda" "Thmb Rafder" ll!ld
face of wloo~ bootie'· of the downloads, beyond
"Black &amp; White" are in the
ging proves that ooline mu~ac moving up the release date,
worla, along with a stack of
'IWo million of the 3 milSW~ppi~~&amp; ~~~ 't crush legat·
lllll\eS bllsed on films li l:e
imate retatl sales and can lion copies of ''The Eminem
:\'Harry Polter," "'Iron" and
actually genen~te better ooa Show" were shipped with •
"lndi:llla Jones." Mall)' s~rt
fur a new reltl!Se.
· compliment:uy ·I&gt;VD thllt
the numer.tls "Il" or "Ill ' in GAME nME .....; This undabl&lt;l hendout from EldOs lntenictl'4e, shOws a screenshot of dl~n~Co
''The jury is still out on featured interviews and live
their titles.
19r Lere Croft in the game ·romb Raider: Angel of Darkness, • the sixth title in the "lOmb
footage
of
Eminem.
how st&amp;nifiC~tntly tile shllring
How importnnt nre such Reidel'" sen~. With billions of dollars on the line, many game makers are retyln&amp; on bfaM.
The record label also pura.:tually· effects record label
franchises to a console's suc- name recognition to weather the ftel't1! four-way competition between personal computer 5YS- .
revenues," snid Michael sued Web sites posting the
cess?
Goodman, a senior music CD, persuading some of
tems. Microsoft's Xbox, Nlntendo's GameCube end Sony's PtavStatlon 2. (AP)
"It's everything," said
them
10
remove
it,
Berman
amalyst with Forrester
·,
ltesenn:h in Boston. "But 10 a said.
Pcnin Kaplan, vice ~si· also plans 10 attract mort of lhe 1980s dodging giUI\e. Chrunber of Sectets" is set to
t.-ertnin tltent, file · shining
But some nnalysts said the
dent for corporate alfmrs at users with a handful of
Xbo~t is also offering TV debut on PS2, Xbolt and PC.
can ntlutllly prime the pump music industry ~-antinues to
Nintendo . or America. Disney-based J!illllCS. Those and movie udaptutions such
Other movie JIUiles in the .
tnke the wrong approach 10
.P._ snles."
"Nintendo is built on a cou· include "KingcJOm Hearts," as the su~atural fighter works include Rqe-Ubi
· pie conterstones, and char- a "Final Fantasy" -style role- "ButTy the Vampirt Sljl'jer:" Soft's "Rocky" for all conSoondScilll, which ¥athers tounter online downlouds.
Web sUrfer$ downloodil!i
sales tfnta from more than
acter fl'anchise is a renlly play game sel in the worlds the beat· 'em-up adventure · soles and PC, .and Vivendi'
17,000 retailers a~ross the mush: files are the same peohuge one and . not to be of Mickey Moose, Peter Pan "Bruce Lee: Quest of the Universal's "The SCO!Plon
Unlted States, said 284,534 ple who go out and buy the
underestimated.''
and the LMe Mermaid; lllld Drngon;" and ''The Thing," King: The Rise of an
The second-place console D'
• s · h " .,....,. 1
copies of "The Eminem CDs, and music comp:~nies
to fuel " tsney s tttc. ' 11 r.~,ue based on director John Akklldian" for GaroeCube
GameCube is hopi"o
Show" were sold nationally need to treat them like cus·
...,
to the upcomtng 8ntmllted Carpenter's 1982 horror and PlayStation 2.
tomers, not criminnls; said
during the long weekend.
more sales with the release film "lito &amp;. Stitch."
c•Lucas rt • the gamin"
, •
"We've never hnd a record Sean Buenen, mannging
of the spin-otT "Super Mario
The high profile of rtm"""'.
Many third-party game division of Lucll8film. as 111so
debut at No. I on the director of Odyssey, a market
Sunshine," u cartoon-style Disney-based chlll'llcters has publishers arc distributing spinning off sevenl games
SoundScan chW'I that hasn't research firm in San
version of "The Legend of made the . entertainment sequels and movie titles from · movie characters,
had the benetit Of II full SiX Fntndsco. .
Zelda," and the futuristic company 8 top partner for across platforms.
including "Indiana Jones and
"It's not a group of pirntes · "Star Folt Adventurts," n video game developers.
daxs or snles behind it." said
Eidos is making "Hitman the Emperor's Tomb" for ·
Mtke Shnlett, chief eJtecutive lQOki~ to sten£," Baenen
hand-to-paw fighter derived
"Everybody is tryina to 2: Silent Assassin" for Xbox. PS2 lllld PC. "Bounty
said. It s 11 aroup of people
of SoundScan.
from the original "Star Fox" crtate 11 trtnd." said lim reletiSe on PS2, Xbox and Hunter" and "The Clone
But lnterscopt Geffen who Willi! more choice and
flyNing,·nregnad~eis also h~ping to Smith, president of Disney PC. Electronic Arts is releas- Wars." both ·inspired by the ·
A&amp;M, the label behind control over the music they
"
"
lnteructtvc. "We combine ing "James Bond 007: film "Star Wars: Episode D
.
Bmlnem, insists that illtJal ' reteive, n
lure more adult a~~mers with stories that people know and NightFirt" on 1111 consoles -Attack of the Clones," are
the gory prequel "Resident .h
· th k
• d and PC, while its sequel being reteased on PS2 and
The early success of "The
copies, made from one of
"vii
0"
and
the
alien
shoot
.
•
·
c
aracters
ey
now,
.n
three closely guitfded m~tster Eminem Show" in the wake
.,
that's what everybody is game "Harry Potter and the OumeCube.
copies sent to manufacturers, of widespread file sharinll
'em-up "Metroid Prime," an looldna for."
nnd bootlegging provides
..purt the release.
update on the 1980s hit sci-fl
After debuting only last
some
understanding
to
an
"I nbsolutely believe thnt
gaOrime~.ln. nl G·-eCube offer- yeur, Xbox still hicks the
the bootlegs nnd downloo(b industry trying to come to
.....
character recognition of
have 11 huge negative ~ffett terms with 11 new market·
ings 1 is year will include Nintendo or the "Tbmb
the cutesy creature puzzler Raider" 11nd "Grand Theft
.·on sales," s~aid Steve Bermnn, pltlce.
"Animal Crossing" and the Auto" franchise games of
'
lnPhternet S
mu ttipt ayedr PSl.
0
11
1
" antasy tar n ne un
However, Microsoft has
11.
franchise aspirations for
PS2, the leading console in manft of its orininal titles,
sales, will feature "Tomb
1 1 "B 1
Th
Unlimited Access
Raider: Anf:l of Darkness," Time
purt cuSweeper,"
ar Y said
nx:kobblee
As' low as $11.95 per Mo. •
the sixth tit e in that series; a Buch. Mtcrosoft's chief
Pmonal E·mall A«&lt;uoit
follow-up to the anti-social Xbox officer.
10 n1ep pet10111l W41b tpa«, lmmedla.. acll~latlon
ildventure "Grnnd Theft
That game features an
Auto Ill" subtitled "Vice anthropomorphized cat thnt
1-888-657-0977
City;" the 3·D role-p,l11ying cle11ns up disturbances in
LMII numbcra lndudc;
aamc "Dark Cloud 2 '·und a time, which enables him to
~'Onsole vtlrsion of the PC hit slow down enemies, freeze
~~~WI~ Mktoft. ._.. UNoft. Gtw;~ Gltlllltlll
"The Sims."
moments and travel back·
'l!flettlnt~tr-. ~ ~Wft .-....mo~ NIMn.,._ ~
llroiM ~ WWIAtMM. ......... o.........
Among Its original games w11rd to stuae multiple
UD nn• . _ . .
·Ill\\ the robot chase "kutchet attacks on villarns.
PlnlltM•Mw••--••tt
no
&amp; Clank" and "The
But Xbox will featur-e 11
...... .., Vllfl1tuaenlllltln""
Getaway,'' a gritty crime few sequels, such as the rac·
•
-lllly ~~~~~~... - .. " " "
snga set in the London ing
gume
"Midtown
:l NIW CD - Michael Valentina bu~ the new 'The Emlnem
uniierworld. ·
Madness 3" and '·'Frogger
Show • co at the Tower Records store In West Hollyt.'ood,
With nearly 30 million Cl 1 " · pd ted v•-lon
units sold worldwide, PS2
IISS c, an u a
.....
Calif. (AP)

*"

Dragon Internet

11

...,.~

-100-10011--

•

•

CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS
BY THE ASSOCIAUD PRESS

Celebrity birthdays for the
week of June 2·8:
June 2: Actor Stacy Keach
is. 61. Dru~t~mer Charlie
Watts of the Rolllna Stones
~~~ 6L Composer Marvin
~amllsch Is 58. Actor Jerry
Mathers ("Leave It TO
. ·Beaver") Is !14. Actor Dennis
:Hays bert ("24") Is 48.
· Comedllln Dana Carvey Is
47. Rapper B·Real of
Cypress Hill is 32.
t:omedhan Wayne .BradY
("Whose Line Is It
..:.,A.n;Y.way?") Is 30. Actress
·Nikki Colt ("Unhappily Ever
:After") is 24. . · ·
• June 3: Actor Tony Curtis
~~ 77. Game show host
thuck Barris ("The Oong
·'Show") Is 73. Slnaer lan
: Hunter Is 63. Singer Suzl
' Qutltro Is 52. Singer Deniece
Williams Is 51. Keyboardlst
.Billy Powell of Lynyrd
Skynyrd Is 50. Actor Scott
. Valentine ("Family Ties") Is
44. Country slnaer Jamie
O'Neal is 34.
June 4: Actor Dennl s
Weaver is 78. Actor Bruce
Dern Is 66. C6untry singer
Freddie Fender Is 65. Actor
Parker Stevenson Is SO.
Singer El DeBarge Is · 41.
Actor Scott Wolf ("Party of
Five") Is 34. Actor Noah
Wyle ("BR") is 31. Bassist
Stefun Lessard of The Dave
Mutthews Band is 28.
Actress Angeli no Jolie Is 27.
June 5: Actor Spalding
Oruy Is 61. SInger Lourie
Anderson Is S5. Drummer

Nlcko McBraln of Iron
Malden Is 48. Singer
Richard
Butler
of
Psychedelic Furs is 46.
Actor Ron Livingston ("The
Practice,"
"Band
of
Brothers") Is 35. Sinaer
Brian McKnight hi · 33.
Singer-actor Mark Wahlberg
Is 31.
June 6: Slnaer-sonawrlter
Oary "US" Bnnds Is 63.
Country slnaer Joe Stampley
Is 59. Actor Robert Bnatund
(Freddie Krueaer) Is 53.
Playwrlaht·actor Harvey
Fierstein Is 48. Actress·
comedian Sandra Bernhard

is 47. Actress Amanda Pays
is 43. R11cord producer
Jimmy lam Is 43. Actor Malt
Casella ("Doogie Howser,
M.D.") Is 35.
June 7: Sinaer Tom Jones
Is 62. Actor Ken Osmond
(Eddie Haskell on "Leave It
Tb Beaver") Is S9.11\lk show
host Jenny Jones Is S6. Actor
Llam Ne11son Is SO. Actor
William Forsythe Is 47.
R11cord producer L.A. Reid
is 46. Muslolan Prince Is 44.
Guitarist Dave Navarro Is
35. Actress Lnrisa Oleynik
("3rd Rock From The Sun,"
"Boy Meets World") Is 21.

12?2

'The Next Big Thing' hits the ters

'Undercover Brother'

......
"*'IMMIWIII'Ia

~ wont you t10 ~

abllllt "UUl4em)~ Brolber-.
a-t""~ •
of
~r tlllt its

••

.=-..

The COMedy abllllt an Afio.

weui~ Ce.dil~~­

ibll-ctriviq. '1Qs.fiuttil
batt l*ftt 1aeot ~~~~to
roo 11\e INdliNltlcm of "'The
MID" oriaiMied in a s.et\e$ of
. atll!Mtecf sbons Oil the
.IMemet.
!:vety ~ ot the
mo\&lt;ie slllrina Eddie
11\d ~ 6y Malcatm D..
Lee ("'The 8tsl Man") btlrs
11\e imprint of tb&amp;t ~II., 11\e
. story tOld in bwst&amp; ~ epiM. ic etdl totnedy.
But "Undefto~ &amp;rother~
is a &amp;at~n-lqth film witll
~ enough mw mlllerial.to
flU a handful ~diM-minute
shorts. In sucll bite-sin
piec:cs. viewed in a jerty
strum on a COOIJIIllw saeen.
the si&amp;ht &amp;IllS llJid i~QSW\t
spoofl111 Qf blad: lUid white ·
s~pes ml&amp;ht stem ed8)'
and amu&amp;ina.
Stretched to fit the big
saeen. it's ti$$ue-paper thin
.and rarely, barely fllnny. The
-'movie oetll.Sion&amp;Uy toaneds
with a clev-er one-liner, bUt it
mostly feels lite empty \\\b
han&amp; time white wwuna tor a
paae to load.
Morciflllly, "U ndm:uver
Brother" runs a short 80 minutes if )'t?\1 skip the end md·
its. whtcll include two bonus
vla;ncttes of the title ehtll'lltte.r
in hipster mode. (Trust us.
you're not missina 1111ythina
by sldppina the cnidits.)
As -underc&lt;~ver Brother,
Oriffin is a flmk-lovina soul
who's a free.lance flahtw fot
the innet-eil)''s downtrodden.
He's aot bi• wheels. a bi&amp;
mcdalfion. till l~s. really
bi&amp; hair 1111d 11 Bi&amp; Gulp he
..,never, ever spills. even when
llis Caddie spins uncontrol·
lably for a block and a half.
Recruited by the clandestine .
B.R.O. T.H.E.R.H .O.O.D.,
Unclerwver Brother joins a
team of qents fl&amp;hdna the
111tl·black jllot of 1 su~vll·
lain known as "'lbe M111"
and his~ lleuten111t, Mr.
.Feather
s Kattu, In eyplcaily I tatlna mode).
. With help from Sistlh Olrl
AunjliiUI Ellis), 'lbe Chief
Chi McBride), Cons~cy
rather (David Chap~le},
Smart
Brother
(Oary
Anthony Wllllams) ud toktn
while Lance (Nell Patrick
Harris), Undercover Brother
tries to foil "The Man '1"
.attempt to "whitewaSh" the

•I
'

onmo

(

·Hollyvvood's offerings for adults are faring well
LOS ANOEI.ES (AP) - ed the mllfbt tooiiJh to let
are a~mpGnyina these atw films ® .quite
brawn oo the hi&amp; sl:ftlm nieely.~
this ummer:
Another hither-minded
Alona with "Spider- film, 11111 llldllptatil)tl l)f
M11n.'' "Star W1n' 1111d Oscar Wilde's
"The
other mammoth action Importance l)f · Beil'l&amp;
movies. Hollywood's busy E~~rMst,'' debllted stronaly
seiiSoo brinas llll unusu1Uy in limited telt~se last
health)! c:rop of smlltrter weeftnd.
films for older adults to
Also «Willi this summer
balllln«&lt; the poptafn flic:\:s are "Divine SKrets l)f the
11imed m1inly 11t viewers in Yll· Va Sisterhood,~ ~an
their tlltnsand lOs.
ensemble women's fUm
Counter-proar11mmina featurina Sudm Bull~.
suc:h films durin&amp; the Ellen 811rstyn, Ashley Judd
~uth-orieated sununer is and MlltQie Smith\ Nioolas
standard HollywoOd prac- Caae 's
"Windtalbrs,"
tlce to keep b&amp;!l~ booinm abOut Nav~o cod_.men
theater-bound. Wlllt's dif· dllrin&amp; World Wlt U: l new
fertnt · this year Is llow three~ollr cut of the
steadily those films are. btloved ltallu
ntm
comlna and how well "Cinema Paradiso"\ the
they'n cllcldq with aucll· · bral!l)' Sundance film
·ettces.
Festlvel
comedy
hit
A m~or new adult "Tldpole," with S~lm\ey
release llu urived each of Weaver;
Steven
pseudo·
thelaat thne weeltettds: the Soderbetah's
ad11ltery
·
tllrlller sequel lfl "sex, Ues and
· "Unfaithful,"
atarrlna vlcleotape " "Filii Flontal,"
Richard Oere and Diane featurina iulll Roberts and
Lane; the Hll&amp;h Otani David Ducl\ovny\ and
ron~antlc c:ornedy "About a "Road to Ptrclltion ' from
Boy"; and the ~ crime "Americ111 Bnuty'l dine·
drtma "Insomnia.' with AI tor Sam Mettdes, l 1930s
Paclno
and · Robin Irish-American inob tale
Williams.
·
with Tom Hanks, Pl11l
Each has scored with Newman and Jude Law.
adlllts 2!1 and older, dnw·
"Here'a ll fll~t~ that you
Ina solid business In a would normally u~t to
movie market dominated see toward the end of the
!IY blockbusters "Spider- year. I'm happy the studio
Man" And "Star Wars: feels confident to let the
Episode II - AttAck of the movie st11nd on Its own two
Clones."
"Insomnia" feet in the middle of sum·
debllted last weekend with mer," Mendes s1ld.
a robust $26. I million,
while "Unflllthful" and
"About a Boy" opened
well and have held up
stronaly In · subsequent
weekends.
"There's been room for 1
lot of different kinds of
films that 11re specifically
directed toward different
audiences," said Jeff
Blake, head of distribution
and marketina for Sony,
which released "SpiderMan." "It seems like the
. blockbusters h•ve ex()lnd·
Bn~ins

~

Healthy Start
Healthy Families
0

Health Care Coverage for .
Ohio's Working Families

The

'

FREE VIDEO
VIII! gw Wit b tp aM• tnuMep· 1
www.lltlltiiOIIIIIIIImllly,lnfo
Lltllthou• AMIIIIIIIy of God
out

Joint Implant Center
Specializing In total
hlp and knee replacement

Stem-. Spl~~' w~~
Dtun1\\\dutudiQ blad:t\1
"Ameri~u 8eu~" and
"Rlllld IQ Pudltion, tsms
with 1\)m Ctul~e \)1\
"Mioorit~
Rtpun," ll
~b!id Qf lttioo 111\d i~.
· ctu1~ pi~ ll ~ Qt the
flltu~ llttust\1 l)f a ~\urdv
he ha&amp; ~t ~ «Wnllt by tt
~yclli ' pnla~ "~ lhlll
llm~ts pOOplt be~ they
cllfi'Y o11t thtir crimes.
"It'~ th~t l't\ftst lind best
«Wbintt1oo - bll, Slltn·
mer. papcun1flln _ bllt it's
also abOut somethina," md
1\lm Rothman, studio cochalman tor 20ih C.tuey
Fox wl\lcl\ is dl&amp;tributiq
"Minontv Report" and II&amp;O
retea.secf''Unf'aitllflat."

Our next clinic dattll Friday, Jlintl4.
call (614)461•11'74 or 1·100·.1'71-4710 for an appolntrntnt.

~~) Grant Med.ical Center
OhloHtalth

.

Mill\," 00 1~ , t:llll ~'""'
st)iidl protlt~aNe ,,~n in ll
Slll\\lliV Cl'\\\\'\lt\1 wltll
~~~pl~h~ 1\\.'tlt\ll llnd dumb
._~.:....,.,,
.
,:~ ·~ ll """" mlllt~
•
'
-~
•
ll~llllllblt ft~t. ~Ill.}"''~·

aduh entertt~u\n\1!111, sllad
Dt.n hlbn11n, htlltd of dl~­
tributlon tw \\VI'\tr B~.
which made "Insomnia...
"'ood mo~lu rise to die
occatlon. It's as simple u

M1111M •
lniltllli 11'111. it1tt lllllll'lilltiMII!t'l 'Ill &amp;0
1ttliiiiUI.a!IWII!diM1tMII'ItlllllMiitTVI'j'M-IIII
II'IIIIMUIIIIP!tltllllt~~-11tl'I'MI'ItelthtM.IMt

Healthy Stan offers no-cost or low-cost health care coverage .
for kids (birth to age 19) and pregnant women.
Healthy Families offers no·cost health care coverage for the .
entire family· parents AND kids.

992-2117
1-800-992-2608
,,

•

8Q " n~~l)' n~ t\i l!loct·
~tet ~tatu~. D11t t~)' a~
.._, ~ t\i ma~~ llnd
mart;et thllq ll $1~ 1'1\IU\t)l\
behe.n\oth s 11til lail ''Spltk-1-

DISH!
wlf.
. . . . . . . ~ ...!d ....

For Initial evaluations or follow-up,_ vlslh for total joint
replacement, we offer offlc• hours at 3554 U.S. Route
60 hst, 81 rbounville, WV.

Al"--t-wi\'1\~ liln~ ~\11.'1\
"\!ni~IIM'Ill."
~and " boot ll

· la!l
"lnoomnlt"

\

.

NIW MOVII- Undercover Brother (EcR!Ie Grlflln), Slateh Girl
(Aunjanue Ellis) and White She Devil (Dinlae Richards) are
r~ady for action In Universal Ploturea "Undercover Brother:
(AP) .

STfiRGfiZERS
(740) 288-74l.\
1·866-660·5600

l
I
I
I

�-

... Cia•

of nudea

.

Ia l

'
terrorism

'~'•••

PHI? . . .

' . _ . , _ .,.,..

Page 01
IRRd J. J

I

J. 2111

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

I
!

I
'·

MIMTMY MOW - Stott Swilih of Tree Care Speclllllst of Southern Ohio checks the circumference of a tree for hla
~~. Swttln Ia 11 eertlllet! albortst who trlea to seve trees Instead of cutting them down, If possible. Swain recently
~ hla bualnesa In Clay Townshll). (Mllllssla Russell)

Tree doctor
·ty MIWIIt' RuuiLL
M!lllsaal«--YOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

OM.Ltrot.IS -

dl~se$ look OOt,
~ ht tuwn.

Ycu em atill count an the
aarne aafe, reliable electric service ·

you'-.e always

enjo~.

Wendy'•

Should you join an
investment club?
when It ~ mtheir home
""l'l\at and others are not.
"Some larae male% will
hlve 11 S~uue mile home
~ ...Uiua.~· Dob&lt;m said.
"Most r-males w\11 have half ·
thlt muoh or les&amp;. Some ~ow3
,au t ltn depend on btl~ In a
eertah\ are11 eveey time.
Dotaon &amp;aid thllt his au ss
reaardln&amp; the state'&amp; bellr
PGP.IIIatlon 111 10,000 to
l 5,000 and arow~~a. Thllt
ha him 111 a dll !))4fla.
·
"W~th the
population
lncnaslna like' It Is, we m~

have mknt 50 m l 00 bean, '

he tald.·"lt'a It terrible waste
of retl)ureu."
Dotson woirld like ttl ~ee
the bcur hunllttll season mod· .
!ned ru help keep beut nun~·
bel'l! In check. Next ycnr ~
SC"SOII wHI col ndde with
detr huntlna und three t1ddl·
tlonnl daYs hnvc been nlldcd
whero huntct'll cun use dog$,
"1'hcro Is so much politics
to wildlife numaaem11nt
these dll}'~." he ntldcd.

'

A rew

1111•••....
...
.....".•.,..
............

01\lo iUtt~rle 0 1\olt• ot'tal'a }'Oil tl\t powtr to tkoo... Wkt!' 111pplltn bttllft\1

,.,

. . . . 11; ....11

U llvt II\ your'"'' }'Oil Ul\ chooat to awilth. to 1 n.w eltcttlc 111pplin or at•y

ltlltllll...... .

with your loctltltctrlc 111111\y. 'alltl\o ·11\mtr wl\at y u thoot~, your cllrtll\1
t lectrle ~tlllty will•tlll dtllvtr ,Our fowtr bttiiiR they will c11ntlnll! _111 llloll\taln

· The~e d11y~. It 8telft8 Invest·
ment t lubs are everywhere. ·
Amy
Some bel:ome nlltlonruly rec·
oanltl\d, but most are .lust
aroups of !\'lends, nelah6ors
or el)·worke~ who aet toaeth·
er on n reaut11r bllsls, Jl&lt;!OI ,
their money 11nd mllke lnve~t•
ment deel81on8. Should YQU
GUEST
eonslder jolnlna suc:h 11 c:lub?
VIEW
lf you dl), yoo may well ·
enloy the eltperlenc:e. After
ntr, lt's 11sothtl aatheri.!\1/.and, . ohoo111 11 club with which
over time, ~u're llkecy to you're comfortable.
\em 11 lot about lnvestll)l.
Guldtllnu on requlrtd
However, before you .loin, eontrlbutlona - There'&amp; no
lnveatlg11te the club II bit. Here "ttandard" contribution for
ue some thlnaa to look for:
lnve1tment clubs. Some cluba
CltariJ. dtftned In\'lit• 11k • $50 1
th ..... th It

·--..... -c--.
a-_,
•

· llf'N. Ml"', TNT,
Cilttloollftil iltlli, .....

'*~-:'.':J:.~~'::t:E
llli\Uf'*tt!f¥'Wt1Mwl~

..................
Dlllt""'
'.

JOHNSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·1182

tht pole~, wlm, and tljlllpmtnt tllat 'btlllf}'OU eleeulclty. Youal\oultl WI\HI\ut to
coli )'ti.Ui' l11ul t leetrlc.utlllty lfyo11r power pta ilut•.So nmtmber, 1\0 fiuuer\vh"
· thule~ yGIIm&amp;ke, rtnauul'td your 11ft, rtllable tlttttle ltl'l&gt;lce will otay the ••me.

To l•arl'l !Mte1 'all er ellek

1·811·010·1314

• Ohloll . . trloCholot.oom

Meaon, Weat VIrginia

(304) 773·5305
•

'

l\1• t nr""""'t ~ "" 1..'"'11~1 in""" br th, "'-~ ~~~ UU II tllll o.;w.IIAMIIll\1 ltf . . t., ~· Ohh1 t)IIIII•NW' tt.liMtl ~p~t 16rtl , ], !tl'lt ,nih~
,.
~tn M ~~ •lft!IW h!.;Jifltilt\lti ·~~~ 'M,I\It\,111 thlwlt llfl'ltMIIri w.\111 . .\filii \hft. ..,..,...,..., • "II· WI M t\IW"'\ffN Mil\• plllt!t-I~MI....

;

mtnt ODJtetlvtl - Make
sure you're oumfortable with
a dub's lnvelltment phllOAO·
phy and risk tolerance; .For
exumple,. one dub might be
willing to uccept n hi11her level
or risk In exchnnge for'potetl·
thtlly 11rcater returns. On the
other hnnd, nnother club may
be mtlre conservative in
nature. It's essel\\inl thnt you

,or ·

mon

uom

e

::ta'
:
:e
~~~~~~~~~ ~~~:
Find out what the required

Glvt Ul I Clll tt (7.0) 441-21.2, ut. 2:1

.

''We nlso have a fenillzatlon and
nutrient system that will help the vigor
and atOwth t&gt;f your trees, iilong With
lhe liblllty the help heal it after an
lniury occlll'll," he added.
"nie second pan to his business1
Swain expllllned, is ~ean':d towlll'll
apPraisals and consultation. These servtces lll'e for anyone who needs to
know the value of a tree for a real estate
appraisal tll' to detennine the vnlue of a
damaged tree,
"We can give a cost of cure or a cost
tO replace 11 tree If it has bt\en dantaged
by nature or man," he said. "This is
done usinaa fol'li\ilt that Is accepted by
both the National and Ohfo B11r
Association, therefore, these figures
will stand up In a coun case If there is
any legal dispute."
Consultations can be done for home·
owners and builders that want to know

dllYs llltd sunllaht have
Cl!rtalnly made a dltretenee In ihe farm
~. Ray l'llt)Witut 11nd billing were 11
high priority Memorllll . weekend,
Pliimeril Were al110 busily planting tleld
corn and so~s froM me Ohio River
to LltkJ Brie. It Is hard to bellew that
only ll days qtl, I'IIL'MI·brellklna ll'llllt·
Ina tem.pel'lltlll'lll ~:~~ullld much ~nster­
llltlon to out lldll's ve~ble arowers.
GUEST VI~
Thmatoes ~ and IWM com
tlelde near ih) Ohio klver survived
the 2002 gowirul llCIISorl from
the cold b!n\pet'!~ u fug rolled In fur
vlsltlna Ohio ~!Itt.: Uruversity tXten·
m· prottct tlie ftelds ~acent to the sion
specialists.
riVer. Tem~ratures !\overed just Reatstrlition
beglrts at 6
with
barely abow ~. In ROme tlelds the tour beginning
·at 6:3v p.m. To
luat ~
of a ft!w lncht8 made nccommodiiie the anticipated crowd,
'!he dl · ce between freeze dam· registration will be at lhe 0' Brien
ap and slll'Vival. Untbrtwlately, LlllV· Fann bam located at 48040 Adams
eral homeowner gardens located In Road, Racine (aJ)l'I'Oximately one
the mld·aectlon of Mela8 Co\U'Ity half mile south of the Racine Locks
were · froZe!\ out tUtd nad to bll 111td 011tn on Ohio 338), The tour will
replanted.
continue rain or shine, This event Is
8
lnteruted In c:ommercl11l vegetable open to the public!w
MOduction? Come et'\loy the Annual
Do
enjo boatl t1 hln
Mela•·Wuhln~n
Counties lki-do In Ohio
II or
'J\!1.~: ~ble Tour, June 12,
Help o your PB!l to clean ~~
Wllrtn

Kneen

=

8.m.,

!i tbl

IH~t~on~ ~~t~~it

Hill .
All\ountltfor the club you're ·
Prot\1191' 1 ttekla, ~ will 11110 tour
Cl)nslderifla. And aak other
IAiowna
ftelda of e lltn 0' Brien
questions, too: can you skip a
Fwm,
11\d
1')' B napr &amp; Sona
month's contl'lbutlbn and still .
Produce. ·
stay In aood standlna? Can
A 1'i\llP o( pro(luctlon methodl
you conti'lbut.e more or· leis
from bare lf61}11;d ~ultlvatlon to .
PIMH • Allly, Dl
bllll!k plastic mulched tleldl wlll be

Have a business news Item?

trees."

Hal

Bowman·
Moore

,,..... c1

b~s, pests an&lt;l
there s n new tree

l

the best tree for the site that is being
developed.
"We have a computer program that
will help with the selection of ttees in
the development, and that will tell us
how to prevent the damage of existing
trees that the builder or homeowner
may want to keep in the landscape.''
Swain said.
.
Other services that Swain offen are
lightening protection, which will proteet the trees that are close to stnlctures
tll' in public areas where people gather,
such as school campuses, golf courses
and city parks . and cabling and braeing, wliich witl help with the structure
and support of the canopy and limbs
that are under stress from weak joints
or excessive weight.
"We also do the tare and trimmlna of
fruit trees to make them as henlthy and
r.roductive as it can be," Swain said.
'This includes both trimming in the
·dormant season and lnl!eCt control In
the growing season.
"We just want to rnake your trees as
henlthy as possible and we will do
everything we can to keep from cuitlng
it down," be added.
Swain can be reaehed by clllling 4462013 or toll free at l-8664DR-TREE.

I

How the weather has changed ·

INVESTING

Bur

"Insect and disease control within a
begins with a system that puts the
control where it is needed most," he
said. "These systems control both lenf
feeders and Insects that feed on the
Interior wood of ttees, along with diseases such as leaf spot, powdery
mildew and anthracnose in landscape
tn!e

Scott Swain of Gallipolis has
annoonced lhe !'PIInl!lR of his new tree
tlre busln118s, Tree Care Specialists of
Soulhem Ohio. He operates the busl•
1\tss nellt the Intersection of Clay
Ch~ ROlld and Ohio :118 with his
~. Barbara.
·
Swllin Is licensed In Ohlu and West
VlrRiftla for lhe application ot Insect
111\dpe~t oontrol, til\d Is ltlllned as an
. lntematlonal Socltty of Arborlculture
Cenlfled ruborist.
·
"Th\s Is a course of study thnt
11\dudes te5tll\il for knowledge, and
Includes ~li1ss ilnd fleldwork experlence," Swain sold. He must obtain 36
hou~ of oontlnuina education each
~to keep his eertftlcatlon.
·
Swain e~tplalned that there .are two.
sides to his tree ~lll'e business. The t\rst
Is the dlqnosls ofdl~s. Insects and
othtr l~url~es thtlt llffect the helllth of a
homleownet's tree, whether lhey an':
n11tlll'lll or 11\M . mlldt\ such as fungi,
tent Cll~lllan, WllOil boars or even
CIII' IICCI~ti and nllturlll dlsaste~.

Olll(llltttrlt 0 1\oitt
1\lwtr Tip No.ltl

out his.

shown. 'tOmatoes, P!!f~ 1\YM
com 111\d melons wll be lhown.
Elt~ct some discussion conellrl\lng
mlll'klltln~ 111\d growi!ta with YQur
neighlxpipa tirrii, trials and triliu\11·

tiona of the 8prlng 2002 LilliiiOII and
expected diseue and ln8ect concerns

m'veJ ·

~~~~~:rb~nY~!rs~
IICheduled for June 16 &amp;om 9 a;m, to

n®Jt,

. The Mei,.s Coun"' R""""llna and
Litter ~tlon ~ili'Tt~ wnt be
coordinating qleart·up sites in
Racine, Pomeroy 111\d Mlddl~.
loin thOusand&amp; ofvoiW'Iteers whO for
a few hours ciCIII\ up a very imp&lt;!!'·
tant )')lin of our envlrorunent, the
Ohio River.
·
· For Individuals, fiunllles or ifOUP8
wlshllli to volW'Iteer, phone 992·
6360 or stop In at the Recyclllli
Office located In the Meigs County

Annex, Mul~ Heljhts, Pomeroy.

Liability w11iver forms are needed
fur all participants.

•

Mosquitoes have arrived this
spring fn vast numben actOrdig to
till! v8rlous homi!Owncrs who hive
called m~ office. After heavy rainl,
eggs hatclt Into larvae that feed upon
o~lc matter found In the water.
A a brief two or three day restina
staat as a pupa, they emerge as adult
mol!'luitoes ready to lltlll't their life
cycle qaln.
Some speci~ onl:t, have one life
cycle per year, while others have
fbur or more. Preventing stan!.H!ti
Wllter nearryour home Is one of the
best control meas\lres ofmosquitoes.
Remove tires, pails, barrels and
rubs that may hold water. Keep ~­
ten clean so they don' t back up with
water. Drain or tlll In tem~
dltchl!s. Repellents containina
OEET1 whether as foams.., lotiona or
aeroeot llpl'llY.• are hl!lpftu as lona u
you are not allqlc to them. OUtdoor
sprays like malathion, carbaryl end
eblorpyrifoa give adult knockdown ·
control but are limited in how IQill
they WQJ;k. aenerally leas than a feW
hours. Remember to follow label
directions on all chemlcala.
Lluvlcides like Bacillus th~cn­
sls Berliner vat. i1raelen111
I'MOS&lt;Wito Dunka) work well to kill
farvae In standi_na water.
. For more lnfoi'mation contact our
office, at 992-6696b and uk for
extension fact sheet 2 S8. ·
(Hal Kneen Is Melg~ CountyOJ
Extension agent for agriculture 'and
natural resources, Ohio State
University.) .
I

I

I

�wv

• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point

Pomeroy•

t!Cribune - Sentinel - 1\.e
CLASSIFIED

•.

-

{

•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egtster
~ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today...

c

Val~rTnxk Driver
llllc.;..s....

, _ ,•!

.O r

Fax To

1112·2157

1

.. ,

ltiJ:to-tnllkwdaswas.""301httl~l
•RIIttilw.._M~~Wt._.._,

.a....-·

I

175-5234

•
For All Your Advwtlalnt NMc11 '

Otfltoe lloevc-4'

n. Amerlclln Corml..nty

Display Ads
All Dleplay 1 I :::I Noon :I

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

•ueln. . . Daye Prior To

Publication
aunctay 018pleya 1100
Thurad•y far aundaya

Cllltlfled ~NetwOrk

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 Worcle, 3 Day•
Over 15 Word• 20¢ Per Word
Ade Muet Be Prepaid

Contact us t.

1-800-821-8139
or visit our website: ·

WNN.Imerlcanccmmunltycltsslfted.com

-

·'
Modem I lA Aplnmenl. I

Domlno't laking appll·
lor managtmtnl
and oalt dri...., Cllllllpollo
and Pomtroy lootllct1a only.
Ajlply In peroon.
cat~n•

WthiYI
lmmedlete
f!lll·tlme

E&gt;eperlonold Satoopareon
- · Mala or Ftmata.
Full or Pl~ llmt. Wt Train
and tumton taadt. onkl VI~
loy Memory Gardtnt.
(740)441-e228
Fltld . Heelih Eduootor pool.'
lion available:
Prater
B.S/B.A. DogrM wltn nlotor·
leal IUCCNI In 11lellmar·
klllng. Rolatl&lt;nanlpa within
healihcart lnduotry critical.
Full·tlma with btnolllo. Ro·
ply with roouma to: Polo
Sommer P.O Boa 1187, Gel·

..,.llpo:;M::•·~O:::h::kl.:4503:::::1:...::--:-

::, _ Care G11Hirt od !ltcomt a lhtrljltulkl
tooter cora glvtr, you will bt
rtlmbuiHO $30-$45 a dey
tor tht caro ol a child In
your homo, you will .-lvo
mlloago rtlmburoomonl &amp;
paid -Ito. Trtlnlngt art
beginning In Juno. Fa.r
mcro Into call OASIS Thera·
pautlc Failor Cara Nflwork,
Albtny, onlo. Tclllrtt: I·
877 ·325·1558

LOCII Company Attall Supervltor. Tna tue·
-lui appli&lt;lnllor tnlt )Ob
mull bt·truotwotlny, a quklk
tnlnktr, cullomtr aarvlca
orlantod, navt good ooon
nandtlng tldllo. and bt ablt
to gtt along watt with otn·
" '· Prtvlout rtltll OXparl·
anct proltlrtd. Mull bt
willing to WO!k Monday thru
Sunday. Sand R....,.. to:
JA·25P, 200 M~ a~:~'·
Point IHttnt,
Local, communlty·batod
nomtcare · organization
aatklng RN'o and Homo
Cart Aldtt to provi!M care
to cllonto to homn
Full and part tlmo pot111ono
avallablo.
Appalachian
Comm10111y VNA, Hotl&gt;lct,
and Health Sorvl&lt;to It In
tntlr 20th year ct providing
high quality homo cora to
lht - ' • ol our """"'
county area. Ont·ytar ractnl clinical oxparionco or
patient cora roquhod. Homo
care txparior&lt;lo preltrrtd
but not raqulrtd, Exotllont
p._plcr program lor nov·
1&lt;1 tlon!toart ....... Com·
ptilllvt oalary ond btnolll
packagt. Appllcallont trt
ovallablt at 30 Horrold Av•
nut, Athena, Ohio or rt·

Girl Soouta·Seal ol Onlo IUI"n!!l may be laxed to

Council, Inc. attko buol·
naoa managar lor lho 2002
camping IHIOn, Juno 13·
Augull 18. Plroon muol ba
datall criontod, •• poolllon
roqulrao rooord kuplng and
Inventory control and man·
lgtmtnl. On tilt rooldont
preterrod. or willlngnan to
wort&lt; a very lltxlblt tohld·
ute tt oommullng. Call 1.
• 7 to
-~•• 7
~~-'
G4 2 ext. or8" amtll
r
more
lntonnatton
backyeoeatotonkl.org

7oi0-B-78. eoe.

==~==~-

NHd 110mt0nt to !)!\
dtl.y lonn, oxp, praltn,d
but not ntcHHfY coli
(740)245·51'11
------PT TH!IIAI'ItT NIIDID
Tnarapltt naodld.
nra a
10 t&gt;tOYi&lt;lt tnaraptu~~o
nrviOM In tnt nome and In
tnt communiiY to -.~y
omollonally d1oturllod Me·
oon County, wv ohlldl'tn
and adolotctnla at rltk 'ol
btlng pltctd oulti!M tl\t
nome. R,ulraa MAin Pay·
c:hology. oclal Work, or
Coun.MIIng, along with II·
con• or llotntt tllglblijly,
tomo lloxlbiNty In hourt u .
WOIII eo travel within tho
county. Exptrionca vllth
lamlly lhtrtPY prtltrrod.
Btnttlio Include: holiday,
vocation, and ol&lt;k ltavo,
pro-raltd htll~h lnauronoo,
40t (k) and mora. Aj)ply In
paroon or Mnd raauma to:
PAI!ITII'tA CENTIA ·
HA/Maoon Co. Thertplll
:1375 Rt.
E
Hunllnoton. WV 257o&amp;
101!/AA
•

a•

eo

N~~;;,~~=E ••.s• TO St'RT

~:14~1"'~er ~. ;::.=:P:u:b::llc::::Sa::'::::•::•::n::::d:::A:::u:::c:::tl::::o:::n::::::;
ANTIQUES&amp;
AnnounCIIMIIt
COLLECTIBLES
AUCTION
BINGO
AMERICAN
FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 6:00PM

ulum
Jnd prolllllonat
1Hii0p!nant actlvlllet
a.vOnllod by tnt Sorvi&lt;t
t:entor: do lnltrntl and II·
·illary bac~round -101\
'tor upcom ng currloutum
1ptQjtett: and nttp 000101·
_...,
natt and dltttlbult ._.,. AIINOI _
. - tor currto~Jtum ~
lin . . . . F I lo

G:t
............ .......................
-·--.nr
--·
...
......,_
-·-·-·

'

~ NtgotlaOit.
..ua,llltlet al: jnt....... locl
·"'Y!Dt ~· Jolin D. Collin-

·zo.

ES

Supe!inlanant,

hit ....... Aol"' ~Wf\1011-

ft'"""' ..

·iintnt-Me!Qt EOUOtttonal
SoMot Ct!\ltf, 107 AtonIIMnatbn-..on
.land A1Hinut, Suitt 108,
oAilltllt, onto 41701. MDII:
"GIIIaD naatt~IIHI' Monday,
Juno 10, aooa.
llle ortQin,or.,YtiMicdonto
.AMESC Ia an e~ual Oppor............"~den ...
,tunlty amptoy..,..ro'Jidtr,

•

]II

Blmll!iiS

'I'RA.tiNl

I

'
.' Golllpolt• ea,_ Col=-

Ji'""" Oi&lt;lt To Homo

.•

IIT~7~~7.

1

214-oo412

·~Ala-IIIO-OS·1274B.
WAN'IID

To Do

.

'"'""""

-I!IIMIIon.•

TtMI Mllllllllllllrwtl not
~nowlttetw IOOIIM
-...~~~~menttfofl'tll

Millo wt11&lt;n r• 111
vlalollan 411 tiMt low. Our

--ho(olly
tn-IIIMtU

Now TaklnQ Appllcallono38 Watt 2 Bedroom Town·
houu Apartmanto, 111cium

-

ctwtlllngt ICI¥tnllld In
thtl MWIPIDir 1ft
a -.... ICjUtl

Water
Stwlgl, Trill\
$310/Mo., 740.4·8·0008.

LEGION
POST417
RUTLAND, OHIO
GUARANTEED
lOA GAME,
OVER 80 PEOPLE
A GAME, OVER H
PEOPLE H.OO A
GAME
STARBURST
$1800.00 AND
COVERALL
MONa WED
DOORS OPEN AT
· 4:30GAMES
START AT 1:30

.., •
"
H88·e74-JOBS

Htlp Wen~

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

MOlt and Ftrntlt Eocont
and Cenctra Wonted. Sort· I"'
oua
tnqutroo
Only.
Better PaY. l ·
(7-4ll)388·tne.
Better Benefits!
McCiurt't Rnllurant now
hiring all 3 loottlcno, lull or
t&gt;ert-lll!lt, pick up appllca·
lion at tccatton &amp; bring btck
balwtan
G:SOam
&amp;
tO·. -~·"'· ""nday
thru •·t·
~
""
urdly.

Better H.UITJ /
Riaht now we arc.
offering a $500 ·
sJan-on bonual .
We also offer:
• Up to $7/hour

• Paid Vacations
• Paid Holidays
• Higher saltll')l :·
with experience

ESTATE AUCnON

JIUANITURI!
ma[llt pclllttr BR aulle, aofa, chalra, end tablee,
hydabed, 3 pc. maple BR aulle,
stand, roll top deek, Duncan Phyla
cldlr
18.9 ct. GE aide by elde
Tac•oen microwave oven, G .E.
lype dtep freezer &amp;

~

Happy Ad

You're • nuna. You work hlrd. You wor~~a.. Not twr)'OM caD
do whit you do. And now, ll'o limo you ~ 10111odllntlblck for lt.

RNe&amp; LPNe
rupca or our ruiclenu and our communiry lhrau&amp;houl our ao.,..., hitlory.
Our laodmhlp Ia 11ablo ond ou1 opporounhl• cornt wioh lho trll'lllllpl

you detervt1

Thank You
I would like to recotnlze and
thank all membert of the vorlou•
Fire DtPGrtmentl for their
1upport and involvement In the
Funerol Service conduded for
John 8. Ridenour.
Brll(e R. Fllher
· Fllher Funerol Hom•
(

\

AUCTIONI!I!R NOTI!: A very good tuotlon. Thll plolure Wll
found In the ettlo. 3xl muet .._,Mueeum pltoea,

DON'T Mill THII ONI!III

.Jim. f•• , 6•••t l~~rt.••
I

Meaan Brooke Burnette
We Love You,
Mom, Dad &amp; Brandon

~~~ .

RICK P£ARSON AUCTION COMPAN·v

Lons·11rm wo, hotplct ondlor 111i~t~d
livlna -rlen" I&gt; proforr.d. Apply
In paton lo: Wlwtoloao Gotd.DI IC

Con C..tor, 5710 Oloatlaf.Y Rl..,
...., Cot......, on ou•. ra.
"'-4,7.0175.
An llt..t Optoanunlry EmJOio7wr

WnmTONft=,A-RD_EN_s

AUCTIONUR RIC:K PURION ri'U
ffl·ltll OR ffi·U4f
r:xecutor: Mannlu Kloea
· " " No: J 1on Mil .. Count~

&amp;CWCmmR
P~JtT • A c:u n
AUIIU/J I.HIIfl)

l•rL.UrJ Huuru•

-oM'*""'..- ......- I

•

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, June 8 • lOAM

I

32 H1ll Davit Road, Thurman, Ohio
711/ca 3S Will from Galllpollll lo

hrflel
"'"""
Llwncblln IIIII llblo,
nawer
piiU, 110 1HO 11111 ·

FUANITURI!

a

Maple table &amp;
chalra w/2 extra leavee,
~ov11ea1, Swivel Rocker, Recliner, CoHee
Table &amp; End Table, Chrome Dlnetle eet,
twin bed, Maple deak &amp; chair, Zenith
con1011 TV, LA tulle, Sylvania alereo,
eleclrlc

d~~~~t~~~~;:~:!~~~;~·~~rk
C

Nu.... 11 "!VbetM..O Gonlo01 It: C... C.11or enjoy oht f...dom and oupporo
of a fomlly-llka ormoopherc. Wc'n a lona-rerm ..,. fadUoy rha~o ettned d10

Cerci of Thtnlca

Publlo 1111 and Auction

County Rd. 17 I
lakl JS Earl from Jaclc1on, follow IIJnl.

*ITI!MI OJISPI!CIAL INTI!RI!ST •

Happy •lrthd•r

...........

I

Tllur~~U~n,follow ll1n1,

HgTwnedSO

Marrissa,
Und84y cl Btu

Public Salt end Auction

ESTATE
AUCTION
Andereonvllle Prleon Camp Sumter Ga. plclure by Thoma•
O'Oee, lete Private IW t 884 CE 8th reg. Maine, Henry Seabert &amp;
BID., Art Litton Warren St, Xvola. on atone by T.J.S. Landis.

From Judy,

DEACONS BENCII, QUEEN ANNE STYut
CIL\IR, ANTIQUE FLOOR LAMP, LARGE
NICELY CARVED MIRROR, OLD PIC1'\IRE
ALBUM ON STAND. MAIUIN SKYNOliR
METAL PAINT SIGN, PURITY JiltED METAL
DISPLAY JIACK, PR. OJI VERY OLD LAWN
JOCKIES 1 GEM BEVERAGE COOLER, Jo.'(JG
BASKET, 1\DV. BOXES, OI.D PAPER 1\DV.
ITEMS, LOCAL ADV. fi'EMS, COUN1'RY
STORE
ADV.
PRINTS,
WATI'WARE
SPo\GIIllm BOWL (APPU:), WA1TWARE
BEAN POT, SEVERAL OLD OIL LAMPS,
MINIATURE LAMP COLLECTION, OLD
PlcnJRitS, MCCOY PI1'CIIER fl BOWL,
VICTORIAN PITCIIER olt BOWL, MISC.
DEPRESSION GLASS, COBi.IJr WELLER
BOWL, WOODEN STIRRUPS, PR. WOOL
. CARDERS, OLD APRONS, 1 OLD PICNIC
IIASICET8 1 NICE GLASS 1'0 . INCLUDE
WESTMORELAND, FENTON, SLAG OI.Allli,
IMPERIAL olt OTHER COLutCTIBLE OI.Allli,
liEN ON TilE NEST COLLECTION, MUCII
MORE TIL\T IS NOT LISTICI) YET""

BY STATE OF OHIO"
CASilOR
APPROVED CHECK ONLY
FOOD SERVED BY LADIES AtJX.
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
ACCIDENTS OR LOST P·ROPERTYI"

1·877-463-6247
ext.1841 •
Help Wanted

Leanna
·Kingery

LONGAIIERGKR1 ALL .AMERICAN LAROE
PITCHER PLUS 111ESE BASKETSt 2000 liAR·
B•QUE BUDDY, 2000 SPICE IT liP (BOTII
BASKETS
WICROCKSI,
199'1
1•11
GENERAl'ION WILID, IHII GRANDMA
BONNIE 2 PIE BASICE1i H,98,_, BitE BASKET
COMBOS, 2001 NA111RAL LARGE MARICET,
IM NA111RAL RED BASKET WILID, 2001
BOARD WALK BASKET COMBO,,

740-245-!IIIQI
"LICENSED &amp; BONDED

to s~t up
an Interview! "

Nifty Fifty

AMVETS BLDG,
!FORMER DAV BLDG)
LOCATED JtJST OFF
BURNETTE RD ON LIBERTY ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO (KA.NA tJGA)

AtJCTIONEERt LESl-IE A. LEMLEY

Cal~ today

Community
Action
Is
seeking . a
Planner/Grant Writer to seek oul, prepare
and submit pro~la for grilni lundl~~g
opportunldes. excellent writing, research
and organizational skills needed. Degree
In marketing, admlnlslratlon, buslnesa or
related field. Experience In a non-profit
preferred. Send resume and three
relerilncea to: ·
PlenneriOrent Writer
Community Aotlon
Box 272, Chelhlre, Oli 45J20.
Cloal
date 6/7/02 EOE

.,

Fottorla,
Fenton,
Gla11, 111
1&lt;ay11n1
plus extra
lamps, flatware,
llnene; window
ltleotlon of coetume
diamond wadding 111,
mora.

llr eOidlllontr, llllld tooll, chalnuw, oomtr llble,
pr lop, IRitrlllnmtnlllbll, Ill FuriiiCI tlt,OOO
1111, tool boiN, drllll, IDIIU ciMit h'ttUr (W... •
d,......_), wnln&amp; Jln 10a1t color, poll and
ptnl1 TV, 1 ani-, p1Ut11 0 oltll!ll'lc lltllll'l,
wblle WHII~ pr ranp wbllt 11101 black,
Ktounort mlcrowa•• white, Maak: Chef IIMttr,
Curtll l'llllla, dlllttt, Whirlpool wuhor ht1Y7 dul7
wblle, Milk Chtl' nfrtpralor whllt h'orll lnt,
eabi!IIU whllt brown maplt, 1 wood end tabiN, I
coll'tt lllllt, bamboo bar etooll 3, counlll' IOjll,
bulclltr block, llln'lll dlnllll table and 6 chtlnt
(chine o1t huleh), new carpel IS wldt .II IIIIIJ 2
monlbl old, IIYIIII room •ull• plote &lt;ouch and·
Ia-~ coll'tt talllti, Zend tablet, iloM lopa, Clltl
WGCitl oltmr Kllllo 3 Iampo, RCA leltrlllon Z,,
VCR, 2 lllllchllll brill Rower piiU, llrtolde 111,
quttn iiiH Wllti' btd wllh mollmrJ, ranll7 wllh
bulltrllf mlmlr, 5 dnw chill, olllllnpa, I 2 pup
•llllt 11101 1111'1'11 Jlkhartll, knick knlckl, hope
chill, Ill lfptll el VCR moYIN, Md)CHWdl eo~

•

lteUbltl, . . . . laltltl,

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY
AUCTIONUR

R"K

PCARION tltU

btQutor: Mennlna Klou
CUI No. UJU 1'1'1111 Co.
7U· UII OR ffl· l447

TCRMI: CASH OR CHECK 11//lD,

Hou11 11 blln1 lorn down, porc/111 will b1
IIIICIIonfd oJ1 and Jldlnf, .
Tll1r1 will b1 fOOd ol drlnk1.
T1rmr: ca11t or approv1d clt1ckr.
Nol riiJH17111blr for loll lllml or acdd1n1M
Flnlllke llaec, Auctioneer • 388·8741
Ownertt Mr. &amp; Mn. Johnny Shephud

I

'I

�Sundty, June 2, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point Plt..lnt, WV

You~

Publlo NoUC.
THI '0LLOWINQ
AJIIIIIJCATIONI
ANI:I/OR VIRIPIII)
COMI'LAINTI Wlllll
RICIIV1~ 1 ANI:I THI
• 'OLLOWING I:IRAn,
' PIIIOPOIII:I, 011
I'INAWL · ACTIONI
IIIII IIIUII:I, IY
T HI
0 HI 0
I!NVIIIONMINTAL
IIIIOTICTION
AGINCY
IOIPA)
LA IT
WIIK .
"ACTIONI"INOLUI:II

'UILIC MIITINOI,
AND AIWUIIICATION
HU.IIINQ RIQUIITI
MUIT II liNT TO:
HIAIIING CLIRK,
OHIO
INVIIIONMI!NTAL
I'IIQTECTION
AQINCY, 1'.0. lOX
1041, COLUMIUI,
OHIO 41211·1041
(TILIPHONI: lt4•
U4·1111), ""NAL
ACT I0 NI '
ARI
ACi'IONI 01' THI
IIIIIIICTOA WHICH o·
Alii I!PI'ICTIVI

~~I'ICA~~~~~ ~PON IIIU:~cM~

. RIPIAL 01' 01111111111
lOTH Ill
THAN
IMIIIIOINCY
01111:11111) ;
THE
IIIUANCI. I:II!NI•L
MODII'ICAT,ION
IIIVOCATION 01'
LICINIII PIIIIMITI
LIAIII, '
'
VA 1111 AN CII, 0 R
CIIIITII'ICATII; ANI:I

o!t

2 Clr g1r1g1
31 H11deon St.

Middleport, Oh

· 740.11112·4103 or 11112.07011

Real E1tate Generll

Rtll !1t1te Gtntrll

batha~"l'~~r~,1:1:~~f~~=-~~
I:IIWITT• Wo have 40 IOrtl ol land with
approx. 1 1lx acre lllld that 11 cltlltd and
btaulllul. Tht r111 18 In wooda. A mull •••
property. Glial 11unllng land a11o. U7,100.00

'
room
kltonen'
dlohwaohor,
Muot - 10 oppr10late 11111 onol
bit uo 1how lito vou. litH
~Oft ,&amp;gil 110r1 thol hal road
lronlegl Along SR 180 ond
Bulovlllo. ldoal lor Rooldonllil or ·
oommorotol. Owntr ulllng below
IPPrtllld YIIUII lt(Q
11.11 Aortl wtlh road lrontago.
LOll Ol PIIIUrt land With llf1411
omount ol woodl. ~tnotng .
County walo avAil. Nlot building
&amp;

..

11117

• :~~~~~~':'SitAL g~ INVIIIIONMINTAL
• I' LA N I
ANI) IOARI:I 01' IIIIVIIWl
, IPIOII'lCATIONI.
IY A PilliON WHO
' "I:IRAI'T ACTIONI" WAI A PAIITY TO A
: Alii
WAITTIN PROCIIDINQ
ITATIMINTI OJI 111'0111!
THI
THI I:IIIIICTOA 01' DIIII!CTO Ill
IV
INVIIIONMINTAL
PILING AN APPIAL
IIROTICTION'I
: jiiiiiiiCTOIII'I)
WITHIN 10 I:IAVI 01'
• NTINT
WITH NOTICI! 01' THI!
: IIIIPICT TO THI! I"INAL
ACTION.
. • IIIUANCI, I:IINIAL, PURIUANi' TO OHIO
IIIIVIII!I:I COl) I
: I TC. OJI A PIIIMIT, IICTION 3748.01, A
. -~~~~N~:ti!~::T~~ PINAL
ACTION
PUIONI
MAY IIIUINQ, DINYINQ,
MOI:I"VINQ,
• UIMIT WRITTIN IIIVOKINQl.
0111
COMMINTI 0111 IIIINIWINII
A
. IIIQUIIT A PUILIC PIIIIMn:, LICINII,
• MlmNO
: . RIQAIII:IINQ I:IRAn 0 Ill
VAIIIIANCI
• ; ACTIONI.
WI'IICH II NOT
•. COMMINTI OA PRICII:III:I IV A
PIIIOPOHI:I ACTION,
: PUILIC MIITINQ MAY II APPU.LID
• . RIQUIITI MUIT II TO THI! I! lilAC BY
; •IUIMITTII:I WITHIN PILING AN APPIAL
· ~IO I:IAYI 01' NOTICI WITHIN 10 I:IAYI 01'
: ~~TI1H.... I)~~~~ IIIUANCI 01' THI
• ;OPOIII:I ACTIONI" JIINAL·ACTION.
:-ARI
WIIITTIN MIIIIUIATC
APPIALI
, ;ITATIMINTI . 01' WITH• II I'ILID
• oTHI OIIIICTOII'I "INVIRONMI!NTAL
; ~~~=:ciT TOW~~~ IIIVIIW APPU.LI
: IIIUANCI, I:IINIAL, COMMIIBION, 238
.,C •':nON
IAIT TOWN ITIIIIIT,
' MOOI rr"
•
IIIOOM
300
: . RIVOCATION..! 0111 COLUMIUI, OHIO
' , AINIWAL ol' A 43al8 A COPY OJI
'·'IIIIMIT, LICINII, THI APPIAL MUIT
0 Ill
VAAIANCI. II II!RVII:I ON THI
: ~=:NTI ANI) IIIIIIICTOR WITHIN I
• RIOUIITI ,011 A I:IAYI AI'TI!R PILING
: IIUILIC MIITINQ THI APPIAL WITH
: RIQARDINQ
A I':J~a:fioN I'OA
=~:·:B1~jW.i~ PIRMITTOINITALL
. WITHIN 10 I:IAYI OJI ::A~ICIII.:i~l~ Q y
NOTICI 01' THI ITATIIIOUTI?
• IIIIOPOIID ACTION. CHIIHIRI OH
• AN AD.IUIIICATION ,ACIUTY
: •HIAAINQ MAY II DIICRIPTION: AIR
, HILD
ON
A .....uc•·:ro
; JtpAOPOIII:I ACTION
I N NO 01•I
A HIARINQ APPUCATION
: ~~~~!T~~N ~= AICIIVID POR
"''ICIIVII:I IV THI PIIIIMIT TO INITALL
. .OllilA WITHIN . 10 ::o~~~I:A~~~NI:I
• I:IAYI OP IIIUANCI I'INAL IIIUANCI!. 0 ,
• 01' THI I'IIOPOIII:I AINIWAL OJI NPI:IU
: ACTION. WIIITTIN PIIIIMIT
=~~~w~ POA IP OIL CO IULK

........
MI8CILLANI!OUI
01P:,::!t~l" NO

PIIIMIT
NO
OPIIOCIOOI 'LI:I
THII I'INAL ACTION
. NOT I'IIICII:III) IV
PROPOIII:I ACTION
ANI:I II
API'I!ALAILI TO
I!RAC.
June a, 2002
Public Notice

v

THII PINAL ACTION
NOT PRI!CII:III:I IV
PIIIOPOII!I:I ACTION
:PNP:ALAILI 1,.'0
lilAC.
GALLIA CO IIUIIIAL
WATIRAI8N
t232 ITATI AOUTI
7 NOIITH
OALLIPOUI
0H
Ill UI
1:1 ATI!
07101/IOOa
IIIICIIVING WATI~I'
OHIO lillY IA
~~~~:r,TION: IIIION
I
MANGAN Ill
~~M~~~O~~ T
NO
DIYOOOII'I:II:I
THI8 FINAL ACTION
NOT PIIIICII:II!I) IV
'ROPOIII:I ACTION
ANI:I l8
API'IALAILI TO
IRAC.
OALUPOUIITI'
tM7 CHATHAM AVI
CW.UPOUI OH
Ill UI
I:IATI
0710t/1002
.
IIII!CIIVING WATIIIII:
OHIO AIVIR
I'ACILITY
I:IIICIIIPTION:
MUNICIPALrrY 1.0.10
MGI:I

ORIIINANCI NO.
02001-47

AN IMIRQINCY
ORIIINANCI10
PIIIOVII:II MOVING
IXPINIII
ANI:I TIMPOIIAIIY
HOUIINQ IXPI!NIII
FOR RICKIY L.
CARTIIII, CrrY
MANAOIIIIIN
TIIAININQ,
01' THI CITY 0'
GALLIPOLII, OHIO

WHIRIAI, tht City
ol Qalllpolla 1111
agr11d to pay tilt
moving IKpenlll lor
1 ont·llmt mova lor
.ht n1wly lppolntld
City Managar In train·
lng, Rickey L. Ctrttr,
to mova to lilt
Galllpolla 11111and
WHIRIAI, the City
1111 1110 promlald to
pay lilt llral 111111 (I)
mcntht of hauling
co111 up to 1 mnl·
mum of 11.100.00;
and
WHI!RIAI, lhl City
M1n1gtr hll rtcom·
mendtclln writing tha

Publlo Notice

Publlo Notice

pnngt of thlt
Ordln1not 11 In
tmergonoy mttlurt
II It II ntOIIIIry lor
the lmmld'-11 Pl'll•
trYitlon ollht publlo
PHct. htllth, 11r.1y
tnll property tnd In
on:ltr to provldt for
tht UIUel opwltlont
o1 tht munlclpll
dlplrtmtntl.
. NOW,
THI!IIIIPOIIII, II IT
ORI:IAINII:I by tht
City Commlaalon of
1111 City ol Gllllpolla,
Ohio:

IICTION 1, Thl1
1ht City of Galllpolle
111111 rtlmburtt
llllokty L, Carter lor
Ill 01 tht COlli Of I
on•Umt move of hll
pereontl tllecte to
tilt Galllpolll erea.
from hit homt In
IIIVerOrtlk, Ohio,
1nd up to 11,aoo.oo
lor the ocet of hll
lloualnt lor the llrat
lllrH monlha of llv•
lng In thl Gllllpolll
lfH ao u to IMI ablt
to 111umt tilt poll•
lion of City Mlnllltr
In trtlnlng lnd tl1tn
on Junt 21, 2002 to
IIIUmt tht poaiiiO!I
of City Mllnattr.
IICTION 2. Thla
0rcttn1not lhlll IMIIn
lull lorat and tlltot
upon Pll~lgt I I Ill
emerr.noy m111urt.
PA II!D: May ae,
2002
·

Public Notice
WHIRIAI, tilt City
Mlnllllf 1111 rtoom•
Gary l'endilrb uch,
mtr1d1d 1ft wrillng1ht
Jtr.. ldtnl of tht p1n1gt or thll
Galllpolla
City llltiOIUtiOft I I 1ft
tmtrgoncy mHeurt
Comml11lon
u It 11 -••ry lor
Tht . loregolnt the lmrnedllta prettr•
Otdlnanct It htrtby v1t1on of tilt publlo
approved II to form.
PHOt, htllth, aaltly
and property and In
l:lougltl Cowltl,
ordtr to provldt lor
Gllllpolla
City tht llmtly complttlon
lolloltor
or tilt proteot.
NOW, THIIIIII'OIIII,
Tile foregolndg IMI II lllllolved by the
Ordlnlnct Ia htrtby City Commlulon of
owtlllld •• to lunda.
tht City of Qalllpolla,
OhiO;
Anntttt M. Lllndlrl,
ltollon 1. That tht
Galllpolle
City City Mlnlgtr II
htrlby lulllorllld to
Auditor
eubmlt bid requtate
lor pevlng lnd atont
Junt a; 2002
--:
' - - - - - - rtplaotmtnt lor the
new llrt 11111on.
Public NotiCI
ltollon a. Thatthlt
llleaclutlon lhiiiiMIIn
RIIOLUTION Nl).
lull lorot and 11110t
111......,.........
lmmtdllltly upon
peaaag1 11 an emtr·
AN I!MIIIIGI!NCY
lltriCY mHeUrt.
RIIOLUTION
. PAIII!I:I: May 21,
AUTHOIIIZII\Q THI
200a
CITY MANAQIA
TO IIIIQUIIT 111:11
ATTIIT:
1'0111 I'AVING AND
ITONI
Anntnt M. Llndtra,
IIIPLACIMINT
Clerk of t11a Ollllpollt
AT THI NIW 1'11111
City comm1111on
ITATION
WHIRU.I, lilt City
of Otlllpolll, Ohio,
Wllhll to hiVt PIV•
lng and etont
rtpllcemlnt 1t tilt
ntw llrt elation; 1ncl

WHIRIAI, It le
ntetlllf"' tO requeat
Anntltt M. Llndtra, bide lor auoh pra)ecl;
Cltrk of lilt Qalllpolla and

ATTI!IT:

Public NoiiCI
Bollcltor
June a. aooa
Public Notlct
OIIIIIINANCI NO.
Q200N4

AN IMI!IIQINCY
OIIIIIINANCI!
AMINIIINQ
ORIIINANCI NO.
G.200W1,
AI AMI!NIIt:l:l IV
ORIIINANCI NO.
G.200NI, ANI:I
IITTING
COMPINIATION

,Oil

APPOINTI!I:I ·
OFI'ICIALI ANI) THI
CLI!IIIK 01' COUIIT
FOR THI CITY 0'
QALLIPOLII, OHIO

Public NoliCI
trnergenoy m11aure
It II -11ry lor
tllllmmldllta llf'llll"
vallon or thl publlo
(IIICe, hHIIh, ealtty
1nd property and In
order lo provldt lor
tht ueual OptFIIIOnl
of tilt municipal
dlplr1manta; and
NOW, THIRII'ORI,
II IT OIII:IAINII) by
lhe City Cornm1111on
ol tht City ol
Galllpolla, OhiO: .
II!CTION 1: Th11
hotlon
2
or
Ordlrutnct No. 02002at whloll rt1de 11
lollowa:
ltctlon a: That tha
City Manegw of th1
City of Galllpolla ,
Ohio, 111111 reollvt 11
oompenaallon tht
IUm Of IIKIY•Ihrtt
Tho.uund Thrtt
Hundrld ,OI1Y-IIvtn
I:IOIIIrt (.i3, U7)
annually, p1y1bl1
bl-kly.
II, ANI:I HERIIV
II, AMINI:II!I) to rtld
llfoiiOWI:
laotlon a: Thattha
City Man1gtr of the
City of Galllpolla,
Ohio, 111111 receive 11
oomptna111on lilt
aum or IIMty·three
Tllounnd Three
Hundrld ,orly·ltvtn
Doll111 (183.347)
II

WHIRIAI, the
Commlallon w111111
to 1mand the 11l1ry
lor tlla City M1n1gtr
lftd Htiblllll I Hllry
lor tht City Man1gtr
.In lralnlnl; and .
WHI!III AI, It le
n1at111ry to 1mtnd
Ordinance No. Oaotla•
at, 11 amendtd by
Ordinance No. 02002·
II, In order to aet
1uoh aomp1naat1on:
1nd
Gill\' Pllldtrboaoh,
WHIRIAI. the City
l'lllldtnt ol tht
Ollllpolll
City M1n1ger 1111 · rtaom•
mtndtd In writing tilt
Commlaalan
pungt Of IIIII Continued on PIIJI S
Thl foregOing Ordinance 11 an
Ordlntnot Ia lleraby
approved 11 to form.
Real E1tate Gener11
l:louglla Cowlta,
Qalllpalla
City

s~-~~eaa,
514 Second Ave., Gulllpullt, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0008 740-441-ll 11
brokertlevan•·moore. com
www.evollt•tnoore.com
'""'""ly IJint'ltbUrll H.nlly ..8.rtiiHf Stt~ulwrn tJhl"

.~,,,

ov,r ,f

Qllftrlftf

t:""'"I'Y"

.Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1818
Bereh L. Evene•Moore, Broker 441·1818
Petrlole Heye· 448·3884 Cere·Ceeey-2415·8430
Cynthie Siciliano· 388·1841
Cendeae
448·7412

Oeael ,.

'""· 12111

LDTII LOTII bOTII Stoning 11
I .4 tore to U pluo acroo. Alo

:

Qrand•

arwa, oountv watar
Affordable! Ownor 11
tii(!UIIIIng on oflot, 111M

avallablo,

NIW PAIIM .LIInNOI 30.8 Aorto
lhll ldjlllnl US QOI,.tllmonl lind,
~li

~~IIIMI!RLY K~~~N

~_2~IIIITYIPTION.·

Publlo Notice

:

llzad room1.

OonvoniMIIy
ullorol Vou will

IPPI!CTIVI! I:IATI.
PUIIIIUANT TO OHIO
fiiVIIII:I COI:II
IICTION 3745.04, A
I'INAL ACTION MAY
II AI'PIALI!I:I TO
THI .
INVIIIONMINTAL
RIVIIW APPIALI
COMMIIIION (I!AAC)

Public Notice
PLANT QALUPOLII
, •• .,.,. IT
'"" ,.,,..
OALUPOLII OH
II I U I
1:1 ATl
071111/ICI02
IIIICIIVINO WATIRI:
OHIO IIIVI!II VIA
l:lrrCH

Public Nu~lce"' h11 Ne""NpupcrN .

·

Right to K.no""• Delivered Right. to Your Door.

110mt1 trld 61dir 2 •otory

hOmo lnctlldld. ut uo ltH you
lbOullhlolllllng. litH
,I'

'

ON TilE RUGE Ofl'IIE Cl'ff
ON FQUK LAMQK t.Q'I'S

Two otury with lull llnlohed buoo n~ent , 1.11
with lur.e ..... front wlnuow. pluo u nrcpluec.
Summer rnom, Clotc to •hureh, hoopitul &amp;.
(ltoeery. NO.l15

room,
Clllilmlo

LONG IOTTOM ·Loolltd 011 I~ 114
on 1111 Ohio l'llvar. Abtlulltul - · river
1~, a oar garage &amp; appro~~lmately

,

No ont hU IIWd 111 nomt line.
remodlfii'IO wu 06ffl~ . 0011'1
mlot IIIII onol Call tor dllelll.

10111. MOilll hll 3 lllclroome, 1
nnlrhtdaniO will\ Oldlt oiOIIt, llriPIIOI
6 lpptllnctl, AIIPIIIIt 0011101 houll
111114 with 1111 llaat. lattarn 1o1100l
Q

DIIIIIOI.

•

~~~~. Ntw
OIIIIJII 111 untt. Low

litH
HURRVI 2 Ttaoto loft, NOh
IIJlpto•. ID ICrto oolllng
115t,OOO.OO pol' koot. ldU hunting
llno, Qritlnfilld rwp, tltTI ·
ACRIAOI LIIYINOI OVIR 4t
of r\1clltly wooGed l8nd
-'tlltlld II ddd tnd JOIId, ldiol lOt
tlllntlng or ntot Qultt ~ 10 build
IIIII ntw hOme. Hutr, on lhlr 6nol

AIKINO 1101,000

••
'

IIIII

ACRIAOII.ItTIHOI .. 1/J ~ wllh Rllld lronllgl, hOmtlltt,
letm land ond ldNI hunting l8nd
tNt It 'djr'f'll to Wryow NIIJonal
POirtll. 0140

.=-Mil.-

a.lYIL

LOTI

ollrrl
'""·

DWniG ' -

~

W?llon
Ill

an
'

'

.

$33,660
I f&gt;l!fii&gt;IJIIIIIIJf\1 11',11111.', ~. IIIIIJI!I,If\llfl!J! f\1 I &lt;JII',I&lt;Ji' HII &lt;JII
IIIII UIIIIII/YII&lt;JW',INIIJIIHIIIIJIII&lt;II •

MEIGS COUNTY

Cltllnd

Cheryl Lemley
UlliHGt

=

"*"

=

-llfdge,-"''Il
II
COil tor'-ltd
- . iniCIIIII

diN

' --

---

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

---"
..
·--

~

1.42 - : . . . - My
•
&amp;Dill. . . . .
oq. II, Ill
w .•
IMng. T111e OM It Jutt _.,.. 10

·

-

-·

•

.~

742·3171
WOHDIIII'UL
=1,.".......
!!!!f?OIO II1TIHCI
~·
-

Henry I. Cllllnd ...........................112•1211
·l hlrrl L. Hlrt.....................·.............742-IM7
Ann• M. Chlpll'lln .........................112o1:111
KlthiNn M. Clellnd ..................... H2ol111
Uu V. Moodllptugh .....................H2o0112

r.

.

I

~

-and

. . . . • llffMI
• ntwtr zo • 40 m1111
Ollagr/tiiOp. l11t.OO
5

-·I

?It •• I IIIII ·······~

�•

SUnday, Juntl, 1002 ·

Pometoy • MlddltpOrt • Qelnpon., Ohio • Point PIHunt, WV

-;~llu~'O~Ilo~t~tot~lot~~ liubllo NotM
-:!·~
;~: ~
PI IIIII~
.............
_ .._·~~....,...
Ill ..... to
ltltll~ 1011!!1:!
w.~•...,..,
"""'••
c.:• .. .._,...a

.. .....

.,..,ttllllr.
lltilliPV payabla
That the Cit•
•
11111111111' Ill lrllnllle
lllall rat~lve Hill•
IIOftlMIOI\ ot l'lftHilt
TII•O"tall"
• " Qotltttra
"
(&amp;11,000) lnnttlll'f,
IIOVIIIIIIIilwlllliro
•tarllnl .l11ly t,
IDOl, 1111 CitY
Mtnlllf
111111
I'IOaiVI In annllll
111ery ol 'lny.. la
TIIOUIIIIG Dolllrt
•
0 I 1n1111a 11'to
~:..0:
lllwllllly,
ICTION 1: Tllll
IIIII Onllnantt 111111
lit In IIIII tortt anel
tltlol I I Ill llftlr&gt;
~tnoy IIIMIIIrt IIICI
lllallllt r.Vnotlvt 10
Jllna 1~ 1001.
..-.e.ID: May 11,
2002

ATTII'I\
Annette M. LIIICIMI,

.

ti!Miy 11011M!\t tor 1.. Clrtw Wlllllt 10
111141141 lor ...
~...., 1.. ,.. -•1·
.,.. • n ,....
5llttlllelptl tttVItMl IteM! tncl

1115111

lncl

1110~

llllltel 0 1 1111
Ordl:llntt 11 en
llft=IIV
-~~
In
19 provlcll
lot 1111 1111111 dally
0 ~ 11111on1 01 lllllnllf·
t anc1
IOvtmllllll
orter
10 f110vltll
lor . 1111 IIIIIIIICIIIto
fl'lletvtllon
ol 1111
pulllle ,_.. 11111111,
llfely ana llfll*\y
ol 1111 olllaonly ol•
Cll~Qal•aalllpolla.
THIIIIPOIIIt II IT
OIIDAINID oy 1111
City Colllml11fon ot
1111 CIIY ot 111111110111,
IIIII ol Ohlot
IMIIOIIt t That
the lollowlne 110•
uona 11t amentlltl 10

1:'

Md 11 IOIIowa:
Clark ol tha City
UCTION 14:

COI!IIIII ..IOII

'"'Citlboaoll,

Annttll M. Landn,
Oalllpolll City
Auditor
Till Ioree oint
Ordlnano1 Ia llaraby
lllPfOVICI 11 to torm.
' Douglll Cowlll,
oalii po111 c IIV
..lleltor-

I

!'Ill LIVY
from IM4l11Q.al 10
., o1o~t0.11
I CTI1i1N 4l:
toTAL llliCIAL
IIIVINUI I'UNQI
u,DIT,UI.It to
.., ,....... 11
~-·-·
IICTION
I .1t
TOTAL
AI'I'IIOPIIIATIONI
lrom 1110111107UI
lo 111 ,141, 74. I.
ltOIICil\1: Tllll
Ordlnlntt ahall blln
tun 10101 and 111101
lmmtdlaltly 11pon
IIOIIII' II In lllllf'
ganoy 11111111"'
,_IIIDt May II,

111.111

Gary
ll~ldtnl at 1111 City
CommlaiiOII
Till toragolndg
Ordlnenoa 11 lllftbV
ctrtllltcl 11 to lttnela.

1

\

...........

....." _

.,.,

• • 111 ol
wrillti'l
1111· •
........
IIIII

llllallltltn " 111
-atf\IY -~~~~
,riltf 19
Ill 0
provldo
tor 11:1 tttllal clllly
oplllllonl of lftlllllo(.
-1
,... tttVI- lncl kl
IIIOW llleiey L,
Cartw 10 llert 1111
poalllon .1 11 n1 t,
IOU.
NOW
THIIIlPOIIIt II IT
IIUOLVIQ or, llll
Cl C
I
I
tllltyCl~rC:.t1/!'!11:,
''
.,...
~1'c~H 1, That
lllokty L. Cartor II
lltrtliy IIIPOIIIIICI
City MiiiiiOf In lllln•
11111111.tnnlne J111111,
IOU
IICTIOH I. That
llloka~ L. Cartor II
lltrllly 111polnteel
City MIIIIIOI tlflo.
~.•. p.m., Junt II,
_
IICTION I, Thll
lluolullon 111111 IIIII
bl In IIIII lorot end
efllot
Pllllll
II Inupon
lllltrltnou
'
IIIIIIIUrt.
2002.-.8110: May II,

ATTIITl
Anllltll M. Llndn
Clerll 011111 Oalllpohe
City C0111m1111011
Gary l'llldlfboiOII,
2001
· Prtlldlnl ol tlla
· _.~_una_a._aoo_a___ ATTII'I'l
01111po111 City
comml1110n
_ Publlo Notloe
• .........;...;;;;.;,;.;;.;.;.;;;;.;,;.;..._ "• 1111......
•"• M' ...,,...,.,
T" 1 I0 ego In g
Clerk ollha Oalllpolll
"
r
The annual raport City commiiiiOII
Orelln1noa II nerally
l'orm Ito .., tor till
IIIPfOvH 11 to lorm.
Kibble l'oundallon, 01~ PlncltrbOIOh
•
larnard V. I' IIIII, Prllldant ot the City Douf 111 Cowlll,
·
Trull" II IVIIIIIIII · Commllllon
011 lpolla City
tor 'ubllo lntpeotlon
eoiiOIIor ·
at arnard V. l'ulll The foregoing
Llw 011101, 111·111 Orelln1no1 11 haraby Junl I, 2001
· Waat ltoond ~~~~ 1_,rovltl 11 to torm
Pomeroy, OH 41711,
dl
t CII
during regular 10001 na 0
ll
llllllnell IIOUII lor I Chlll'llf,
period ol 110 diYI DouCIIII Cowlll,
IUbatquent Ia Q HI 11 1 Cit
publloallon of lhla l~lalt~~ .
y
5101101.
The foregoing
Ill 11, 17, 11, 21, 221 OrdiiiiiiOI II hartiiY
u, a4, 21, aa, so, a, oartllled 11 to lunda
(2002)
eoaorelllll to City
(I) 2, 2002
Charter.
Annette M. Llniara,
Publlo Notloe
QalllpOIII City
OIIDINANCI NO. Auditor
0200241
Junt2,2001
Publlo Notloe
IIIIOLUTION NO.
IIIOOJ-22
ANIMIIIOINCY
IIIlO LUTtON
APIIDINTINO IIICKIY
L;CAIITIII
AITHICITY
MANAQIII 01' THI
I'OIITHI
CITYOP
QALLII'OLII, OHIO
CITYOP
QALUIIOLII; OHIO,
DUIIINQ THI "ICAL WHIIIIAI, lhl City
YIAIIINDINQ
Commllalon of the
QICIMIIIIIt, 2002 City Ol QalllpOIII II
Cltalroue ol lllllQinl•
WHIIIIAI, II II lng llloMy L. Carllr
n101111ry lo emend to lhepoiiUOn of City
Ordlnenae No. 02001- M1n1gtr In training
11, •• amenCIICI IIY lllrtlna.June1, 2002,
Ordlnar:Ge No. 01002· until ~una 10, 10011
It, 11 amenelltl by and
Ordlnanot No, OIOOIIo WHIIIIAe, lhl City
Commlaalon wlahea
=lat~o~ll:::: rr~~ to appoint him City
lain City IUnelli lnel Manaaer tram and
WHtriiiAI, lhll baglnnlnp June 21,

A111 Elt1t1 Qanarel

WOOD .BEJILTY,
INC
446-1066

32LOCtlll' STREI!T

"WHAT ACATCH''

·:nlii-:M.. :-=•,::
• l:: ~

wtiiJtiAI. 1M etty

tltn1111 lilt

-

-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qall~ Ohio • Point PI suant, WV

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4U31

•

'software Ill

I found it in the
Classified Ads.
Place your ad todayI I
'

446-2342
992•2155
A111 Eatet. Oantl'll

REAL ESTATE
Sl,.ee 194!

.A three-jucJae panel Frida.y
SINck down Conare • lhirii
and latest attempt to hleld
children from Internet pom
Nlina that public llbra.ries
cannot be forced to instull
software.that blocks sexual·
ly explicit Web sites.
The federa.l rnel unoni·
mously foun that the
Children's
Internet
Proteotlon Act relies on fil.
terina . proarams that olso
block sites on politics,
health, science and other
topics thut should not be
suppressed.
"Oiven the cNdeness of
filterlna technoloBY. nny
tec:hnolosy protection mea·
sure mandated by CIPA will
nec:esnrily block ticc:ess 10
a sub tantial amount of
speech whose suppression
serves no logitimnte aovem·
mont interest," the judges
wrote.
Three limes since 1996.
Congress has enacted lnws
aimed nt keeping youna·
Siers from seeing rnternet
porn. And all three have
been struck down.
The lntest lnw, sian~d by
President Clinton in 2000,
. was supposed to ao into
• effect July I. It would
: require public libraries
· .fecel ving federal lechnolo·
·ay fu~tds to installlhe filters
on their computers or risk
: loslna that aid. Schools and
: school libraries are still sub·
: ject to the law.
· · Barbara
Comstock:,
spokeswoman for Attorney
, Oeneral John Ashcroft, said
: the Justice Department is
: disappointed and may
: ~peal to the Supreme
. Court.
Conservatives snid lhe
rulina ties the hands of par·
enls trylna to prolect chit·
·. dron. "Tilese 1roups arc
: more conceme with pro·
: vidina access to smut than
. they are protecting child
·_palrons nnd employees,"
""said Ken Connor, president
.of the Family Reseorch
: Council.
•

NEW YORK (AP) - In
the past year, comp11nies
rat~~ing from Whirlpool to
MeDonuld's hlive bl~ the
stronl! U.S. dollar in part for
~appointing eW'tlings. That
ellplunalion mi11ht not wash
much lolliCr - arter years of
dominating other world currencies, the dollar is wetlken·
ing. a trend likely to help
company profits but unlikely
to revive the stock mnrk:et.
"What-·we really need to
see are stronger e11111ings,"
said Ch~~tles While, portfolio
man~er
111
Av:uur
FILTIRING - lntemet users WOI'II at the computers at the Phllll&lt;ltiPhla Public Llb111ry In
ASSOCIIitts. "This will help.
but it's not enough by itself."
Phlllldelp!11a. Three ftdel'lll Jud&amp;t• on Friday threw out 11 ftdel'llllaw that would have forc:td
lndeed, 1110Sianllysts say a
public libraries to equip computers with aortwa~ desl&amp;nlld to block eceeu to lntemet pomoc- ·
decline in the dollar would be
rap!1y. (AP)
·
11 mixed blessing for U.S.
stocks.
The rutin&amp; was welcomed or requlrina a parent to be
The
1996
On the plus side, U.S . corby the American Library present while a child surfs Communicnlions Decency
porntions
with business in
Associalion
11nd
the the Net.
Act, which mnde it n crime
other countries should benefit
American Civil Liberties
The law would have to pul adult·orienled materi·
becnus~he lower the dol111t's
Union, which had .nrgued allowed adults to ask that nl online where children cnn
vulue, the less American
that the In w would make II the filterl!!i technology be llnd it, w.ns declan:d uncon·
products
cost overseas and
touaher for people wilhoul turned off. But the court stitutionni by the Supreme
the more attractive they IIJ'C to
home computets to aet held that some library Court.
foreign buyers.
lnformalion on topics such patrons mlaht be embarThe 1998 Child Online
Also. a company doesn't
as breast cancer and homo· rassed by hnvina to nsk, and Prolec:tion Act required Web
hove to sellns much overseas
sexunlhy, which are some· some librarians may not sites to collect u credit card
to
record the sunte number of
times ncc:idontally blocked have the tecbnical expertise number or other proof of
dollars
in profit us it would
by the filters.
to . comply with such a · age before allowinalntemel
hulie
before.
In other words,
"It Is certainly my hope request.
users -to view material
McDonald's now hns to sell
thnt now thnt Conaress has
Justice
Department deemed
''harmful
lo
fewer
. hamburgers and
Ioken three strikes, it will lawyers had araued thnt minors." A. federal nppeals
Procter &amp; Gamble less deteraet out of the business," lnlemet smut Is so perva· court struck II down as too
11ent
to show the same level
said Stefan Presser, the sive thai protections are broad. The Supreme Coun
of
prollt
in U.S. dollurs us
ACLU's leanl direclor in necessary to keep It away partially upheld lhe law in
they
would
have a yeur ago.
Pennsylvania.
from younasters, and that May but d:d not rule on its
Sut there is u potential
Echolna earlier court the law sfmply calls for consthutlonnlily as a whole.
downside.
A weaker dollar
decisions, tho three·Judge libraries to use lhe same
The challenge to the latest
·mnkes
U.S.
investments less
pnnel wrole that the Internet care in selecting online eon· law was ·heard by 3rd U.S.
nppenling
to
foreign
is an open public forum and tent lhat lhey use for books Circuit Courl or Appeals .
investors.
·
thai any move to exclude and maaazines.
.
Judae Edward R. Becker
In
large
part,
that's
because
certain content must be nar·
They also pointed oullhnt nnd U.S. District Judaes
foreisn investors are con·
rowly tailored.
libraries could 1urn down John t&gt;. Fullum und Harvey
cemed
Jlbl)lll the same things
It said there are less federa.l fundlna If they want Bartle HI.
as
American
investors:
restrictive ways than soft· to provide unfiltered Web
The law contnined liln·
Sluggish business growth
ware fllterina of shioldlna access.
guage sEcifyina that three
here thai no lonaer outpaces
children from Internet porn.
The rulina was lhe latest federal udges would hear
the
rest of lhe world, n lun··
h said those options include In a strlna of setbacks for any chat enges, and thut any
guishing stock mlll'k:et and 11
requlrina parental consent Conaress 1n ils attempts to nppeals from there would
st:ries of nccounling scandals.
before a minor Is allowed to shield
children
from ao directly to the Supreme
The
prospt~ct or more terror·
use lln unflhered computer, Internet porn.
Court.
.
'
ist attacks lhot could further

BULLETIN BOA
Serenity House ·
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800·942·9577

LAND .. .LAND ... LAND ...LAND
CAN'T el·DONI...go out and lind 1 ~1101 01 grouna In :own, OIIVIn 01011 10 town"~"~ bull~ a
~100 lq. II. blOCk bUIICIIrtG With OVII 8~00 lq. It, of lfDCIIPIOIIOtltll lhln ltO,ODU, Cln'l II
Oon111 ao don'J p111 up fht opportunity to buy lhll bar;aln wllh mulllplt uata lor only ~2.500.
High GillOt door will aooommodalt botla, oampera, Alia and Jual aboul anylhlng alta you oan
lhlnk of, 01 Optn ur your own bualnllt. You Oln IYin ran110m1 or Ill ollhl IPIOI OUI. 00 wllll
VOlA went but don' Ill thla great oppc~nunlty pan you byl 0111 Dave tor mort Info.
YOU'LL tiiiiALLY IUII,IIIIIDI.Thll.llna II biiUtlfuland hll aaupe; YIIW In Mty dlriOIIOn.
Only m:nutlllrom town In lhl nun 01 Clrtan lwp. 2110r11 11 a whOia or aplll. Clivi ua 1 oalllor
mort Info. 1111
·
.
OUTITANDINO IUII.OINO IITII ~rom I lo 11 plua 1011 building allta In lhl hllrl ol Green
Twp, &lt;11111 Y)IWI, lomt WOodld, 101111 I miXIUII of WOodland piiiUrl and 1oma hilltop, All
outallndlng. Cloat to hOiphll. Call for priOIIand 0111111. till
0UIIIIndfng hlllll IIIII IDCIIId In 1111 OilY, yll WOOdld I priYIII,, LDCIItd lllhl and ol
lllflanl Orlvt. t •· t 5 1&lt;1111 to bt eul'ltvtd wllh grldual roltd tlllady txoavatld 10 building llltl.
3 to ~ gOod '""' Prlold •t 11 euoo llfN
"The WIOIII" eubCIMIIOII, oil Vanoo ~d.
· lltaullful uHing. Call lodly lor your prlv111
viewing. Pial &amp; oovenanllilltlrlollona 111 on INe
LOU1· 2,0210 IOrtl +I• t3~,100
Lot H· Oavtlopld

-

Lot H• Ut0310rtl +I• 135.100
Lot 14 • loki· to be aavaloptd
LotH • 4,at78torH +I· t37,100
Lot H• 5.3701 l&lt;lrtt +I• 131.100
Lot 1'7 • I.5371110tll +I• 131,100
Lot H • t.o31tll0tll +I• ll,IOO
Lot "" a. 143110rll +1•17 .too
Lot 110 • U0t7 IOrtt +I• 37,100

HOUIII: Monol'rl
111110 4:10 jln!l
1:10 a.m. 10 12
Alltln c. Woocl, lrotter • 441-4123
Kin Morgan,.lraklr • 44Ht71
·
Jaantlll Moarl, • aM-1741
,llrlolall0t1 740-448-1011

• WE AilE EXCITED AIOUT OUil NEW WEia%T&amp;"
PICTUilf5
AVAILAII.e

HEAD START
ENROLLMENT FAIR
Come to lht Gallla Counly Health
Oapartm1nt on Monday, Jun1 3 from
10 am to 3 pm to 11gn your child up
lor H11d Stlrtl Tht Health
Oap1rtment 11 IOOIItd on Jeok1on
Plkt, Galllpolll, Ohio. The fOllowing
agenclll will alto bl lhtll with
InformatiOn tor you and your family:
Htallh Department
WIC
HIIPMtGrow
CommuniiY Aollon Agency
Gllllpolll Ol111r Colleg1
FACTS
Buoklya Hille
OSU EMttnllon Sarvlol
Employment onto•
Join u1 tor good lnformallon, H11d
lllrt enrollment, DOOR PRIZES

Laborer wanted

.''

446·2422

Mlchall P. Hallay Sr. Wll aervad I .
Civil ProiiiOIIon order on 412~1~
by lhe coul'll on blhaH ol LIM L.
Hammond. Thll order 11 QOOd lor
I yeai'l In all 110 111111. Ma.
Hammond II thl IIIII ptiiOn In
QIIHa County 10 IVtr reotlvt an
ordll' ol thll oalbtr. She 11 a110
under Victim Autttanoe Program
and 11 going to the AHomey
Qenerlll Olflollll raprtMnl the
baltlrtd and mentally abu11d
women o1 Gallla Coun~.
hank· You

''

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEAS£ CALL, £.MAIL US OR
STOPJIYTif£ OFFICE MON·FR). 8:30A.M. TO 4:30P.M.
SAT. 8:30A.M. TO'NOON .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

www .wi semanrealestate.com
David WIHman, Qfll, Cflllroklr 448-t5511
l't1 ~
Carolyn ~eeoh, Qfll 441·1007 lonny Qarnee · 448-2707
Hi Jilli,
Robert lruce 448-0121 Alta WIHmln 44H585 Jennifer Sipple 245-8020
. I

{740) 446• 3644

Galllpolla located home health
agency IHklng FT FIN. No
home
health
experience
ntctaaary. Competitive wagea,
health lneurance, and vacation
lime. Apply at 3084 SR 180,
Galllpolla, or phone toll free at ·
1·888·441 •1393.

Family of 4 Special
4 Spaghetti Dinners

· Courtside
Bar &amp; Grill
•

''

Rio Grande
Speedo's

GALLIA COUNTY PRIOE·IN
TOBACCO ASSOC.
ANNUAL TOUR
Charltalcn. Soulh Carolina
AUQUit 7•11, 2002
Charl11lon araa aHractlona I
·lducatlonallourt a• well 1
AlabAma Live In Concert 11
Myrtia Beaoh. Conlacl Galla!
.Galila County Eidtnllon Ofllot
on or bllort July 7, 2002 at
740-448·70071cr more
Information,

Ladles Night
Every Wed.
No Cover Charge
Drink Specials •.
Draft Pitchers
FOR SALE ·
Complete 111 kitchen cablnell
(Cherry color) with counterlop
. . $1,500 .
OllhWieher $50.
740·441·8831
June 3rd, 4th
State Route 218
1 mile above Meroervllle.
Electric ranga 30", !'Y Baan!el,
H1rold DIYII ReeldtnCI

slow business growth is
unother reason to stay nwny.
And because U.S. &lt;k&gt;llllfS
are ii.ISO worth less in other
currencies. foreign investors
stand to lose value when they
cash in their American hold·
ings.
·
· Still, Investors aren't tleeing U.S. :rtarkets the wuy
they did Asia lind Russia 11
few years utto. when those
economies disimegr.ued. But
unulysts say they are looking
elsewhere.
For
some
investors, that means Europe
or other overseas markets.
Others IIJ'C bu~ing gold.
"We are noticing U.S. institutions increiiSing their purchiiSe of overseas IISso:ts. lind
foreign investors are not stepping up to the plate 11s much
:n 1erms of U.S. purchases,"
suid Geoll!e Mugnus. chief
global economist· for UBS
Warbul'l!.
A lot of money is at stnke.
Foreign investors held $1 .69
trillion in U.S. stocks as of
December 2001. the most
recent statistics nvuiluble
from the Federal Reserve.
But for now. lhe prospect
of u sort currency is not
enough to upset financial
m~~tkets. The U.S. dollar is
still ut u relatively high value
by historical stundunis. und.
although foreign investors
might be reducing their exposure, their ulternntives ure
limited. Few other markets
offer as much variety :md stability.
Whut does mutter. unalysts
say, is how companies do. If
companies stW'I maldn11 more
money, investors here and
ubroud will be more inclined
to buy stocks. But with sec·
·ond-quorter earnings reports
more thun u month nwoy, il
will Hkely be tl while before
Woll Street cun rully and keep
ils auins.
·
It wus u down week for ull
the m~~tk:et's m(\jor indexes.

I

.

· Live Orama "LEFT BEHIND"
Faith Valley Churoh
4 112 mi. out Bullavllle Pk.
Sat. ~une 111
7 pm
Sun. June 2nd
8:00
Everyone Welcome

Orlvera license required

YARD SALE
June 3rd &amp;4th
1564 Buck Ridge Ad.

VACANTLOTe
MANY TO CHOOII ,110M .
IIIIICII VAIIY

Weaker dollar may help
profits, but likely vvon't be the
catalyst for a market recovery

PHILADELPHIA (AP)-

&amp;unba!' -Qttme~ .
&amp;enttnel

Allllatat. Oenerll

I

245·0088
$14.95
4 Lasagna Dinners

$19.95
2·16 Inch pizza's

$19.95
Free delivery . Surprlaell
Amy MacKnight Carter
Is over 50
"Really" Better?

'----~HOT OOG AND YARD SALE
813 &amp; 814
9:00 to 4:00
1812 Ea11em Ave. 2 cuchaa,
children'• clothing &amp; figurine•
20th Haner Reunion
Junt 9,2002
10:00.3:00 00
~clniyre Park Gelllpolla, Ohio
Bob VVhlte Sheller Houle fl5
GARAGE SALE
10758 St. Rt. 3215 N. Vlnlon, Oh
Children• clothee, adult clothe•
9·5
~ON • TUE • WED
BERBER CARPET
$5.95 yard
~OLLOHAN CARPET
Orlve 1 little... Save a lot.
448·7444 or 1·877·830·81 82

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION
• 65 or over
• .Billed to Insurance
• Little If no cost
• Free D~llvery
• We do all paperwork

Rio Grande
Speedo's
T-Bone Steak
Dinner
with salad &amp; baked polalo
$9.95
18 Inch pizza $8.95

740-245-0088

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740·446-7283
1·800·468-6844
Come Aide With Us
Gallla Co. SR. Travel
. Group .
Aug, 15th .
La Comtctla Dinner Thealer.
Broadway Show Annie
$58 per person
Slf)l. 91h • 161h
Elghl daya 11ven nllea. Thirteen
m1111. Quebec Clly Island of
Coudrt'a. Tour of Montreal &amp; Nolrt
Oame Blllllca. Wh1l1 walchlng 11
Bay Sl. Calherlne and more
Only $8t9.00
Elghl IIIII lift
Call Senior Reeource Center

446·7000
Gallla Performing Arts
Summer Session
Balle!, Jazz, Balon, Adult
Patty Failure 245·9880
Bee a Part of the Cure
The OVB Employee
Team for the
American Cancer Society
Relay for Life Ia
sponsoring a

Garage Sale
Saturday,
June 8, 2002
Ohio Valley Bank Annex

GIGANTIC
RUMMAGE SALE

Sacred Heart
Church

I

Polnl Pleasant Parish Hall
~onday. Tuesday, VVednesday
June 3, 4 and 5
9:00a.m. • 3:00 p.m.
· Concert Tickets lor Sale
L,ynard Skynard/38 Special
Floor seats Asking $75.00
Call (304) 876·7064
(304) 693·0622

Temporary
Health Insurance
Medical coverage .
when you need it.
• Recently graduated
• Between jobs
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446·8235
1-800·447·8235

8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
All proce.,da to benefll
the Cancer Society

.

I

•

I

'

�, ,,

...

l

•PP

I.' ...

•r na.s 77

.... bt

Jevve Receives award

to

toea man 1ec!Nes promotioil
**•atru
'lWI!t
b

'

'

of

.....

=-==::~
••••

~dalo..

His da~:~&amp;.b.t«. ~
Fields, ~~nd paRnts, J~ ud
Ritt Fiel:d:S, lkU m~ ii.IJ
11\)meroy.
·

·Student loan·rate about
to drop to historic low of
4.06 percent on July 1
at the end

ltr AlluNI

UvtiiSOII
AI&gt; NATIONAl WRlTtR

The ~mt of federul student

IU.Ctio.n

Qf M~. T~ t~t
n\Qt\tl\ WIS.

this,

.
The rate drops ap~ Qilly·
borrowers from already IUs· tl.) Stal'foJd 11nd PLlJS- IWII\s.
. ttuic lows. . tile lJ,S, disbursed M or aftW" J~ I.
Education Department said. . 1998.
On lilly I. intt:t~:sl on govlo~;~l\s obtained ~fQ.IIIl
"l'rnment-b~;~cked
student then cou.ld Ill$() benefit from '
lo~;~ns known liS St11t'ford the lower rates if CQli£Qi!idlil~
IWIIls will automatically fall ed. Thos.e thlnkit~~ oi etlOto 4.06 pen:ent. from S.99 solidatina should lillllmine
pen:ent. The me on the their options, said Sail)'
PLUS IWIIls will drop to 4.86 Stroup. mistlllnt seuetuy
pen:ent, from 6..79 percent. fw pustsewnd~ educatioo.
Statlbrd loilns lll'e tal::en out "These rates, ue ftu the ..
by the student, whllo PLUS whole yeu," she said •
IWIIls. are tal::en out by plU'- Wednesd~tY. "1'hey dl.)n 't .
ents.
need to ruect wtl!ld do h the
The government estimates tlrst da~."
that if tile new nte on the
Repayment . uf Stufftud
Statlord louns remained IWII\s begins silt mooths lll'ler
unchanged, student borrow- groduation. PLUS loans a
ers with a $10.000 balance repaid immedi11tely, like
would save $1,133 over the credit cllld debt.
standllld IO.year repuyment
Nearly 8,000 eolleaes.
plan.
univenities and ¥OCiliono1
Last year's nltcs were tnining schools may take
already the lowest since the part in the federal loan pro7 pen:ent when the student gram. This year, 5.4 million
IWIIl progrlllll began in 1965. &amp;tudents and parents botThe new rates are even rowed an llVCfllle of $3,945
lower than the rate on the in fedetal education loans, 11 .
Pllrkins loans provided to the tot11l of $3!1.6 billion, educa·
neediest students, which a
tion ollicials said.
fixed at S percent ruther than
The ntes are this low
ll&lt;ijusted each year. hrkins because of the combined
-4WIIls are funded jointly by effect of the t.rujedy of the .
· the federul aovernment and Sept. II attllcks and the
Institutions.
recession, said John E.
Stafford and PLUS loans Dean, lobbyist for the
arc made on a variable rate Consumer
Bllnkers
reset each July I, based on Auoci11tion. whose mem ~
short-term interest rates the bers are the laracst commer:
aovernment sets after U.S. ci11i banks In student lend·
Treasury bills 1II'C 1\uctloned lng.
1\iesd~.

!Wills is abQut to f'"l fOf most

·Southem Elementary

academic awards,
honor roll released

.----:...-.:---=:--.

Amy

flom,...D1
?

than the designated amount
Understandable rules

_J:!stme~~b~";'yplcuii;

nave some type of bylaws
that govern their operotlons.
It's worth vour while to
become fllllllliar with these
bylaws, because they cover a
variety of key topics, such as
how the club votes on Investment decisions, how to calculate the wonh of Its ponfolio
and how departlna members
can withdraw their money. If
you're golna to be Investing
your ]111id-earned money with
this club. you'll want to be
quite sure of where your
. money Is golna and how you
· can aet atlt.
· Ea1y aecaa to account
lnformaUon -As an Invest·
ment club member, · you
should be able to get account
Information any time you
want. A club may produce a
"valuation statement" that
· lists the stockl in which the
club Invests, the shares
owned, cost per share, total
return flaurea and other data.
And you should get· a status
~·

repon that shows how mu~:h
you've paid in. how much
rou 've earned, how many
Investment units you own,
the total value of your c:ontributions and your total return
since you've joined the club.
Each tax season. your club
also should provide you with
a Schedule K-1, which lists
your dividends and Cllpilol
gains and losses.
.
Once you're satisfied th11t
you'd be compatible with a
club. and that the club does a
&amp;ood job ofexplolnlng guidelines and keeplna records,
you may well want to join.
But no matter how much you
like the club, and the other
members, keep In mind that
1roup decisions can never
. take the place of investment
advice that's tailored to your
lndlvlduol .needs - and you
· can only get thut from a qual·
lfied, experienced Investment
professional. So. have a aood
time in your club, and work
hard to make sound, well·
informed investment decl·
slons - but stay in touch
with your financial adviser.
(Amy Bowm011·Moorw Is
tht Edward Jon•s l'fprtsln·
tat/VI for th1 Gallipolis a ~'fa.
Sht can bt contacttd at her
of!ict. 990A S11colld Avt.,
&lt;ialllpolls, 441·9441.)

'

lndtx

,........,....., ., Hlfaw'
Uft Unt ScrW\Iflla d.cllta-.1 ~ pro'flcllng 1M hlghttt
quality IMaging ttchnology at an affordoblt mtt,
Spwllwaptfnl;
.
eoro.ld A~/Sirob S«lll'llnQ • Abdomlllal A«&lt;lt A~ Sei'Mrlli\Q

ll-IE PHONE~ WANTS YOJ TO SAY 600t
TO 't'El.EPhfot\e
SERVIa:
PROBLEMS BY CAIJJN(;•..
'
.

~ Mtrial Dl&amp;t&lt;M S«~tnlng • DllKt o&amp;~~apOfOal' .l" 60 ~'
lttmtiM Ja

MEDICAL CENTER
Disoouer the Holzer .O!flerence
www.hol~er.org

Pleaae call

.

'.

I

I

·'

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="466">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9914">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23099">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23098">
              <text>June 2, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5429">
      <name>crane</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4259">
      <name>fleshman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5430">
      <name>howett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5418">
      <name>marrs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2706">
      <name>milam</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3327">
      <name>nowlin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1234">
      <name>wellington</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
