<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7312" 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="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7312?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:49:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17721">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/d2c62366248f584f22238dc735655084.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f252cf48ddda9d9c2e967ad72edc0f7c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23880">
                  <text>•

tmes
461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH .

Eastern

992-2196

So,uthern
~rornado·s~ • BoYs

1-sn-322-6720
www.jerrybibbee .com

Qualitv
Furniture
Good Luck
This Seasonl

St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, OH ·

667-7388
1·800.20()..4005

All Area Teams!
· We recognize your
efforts to be the best
you can.be, and wish
you the best this
season I

Jan. 8
Jan. II
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29
Jan. 31
Feb. 1
Feb. 1
feb. 5
Feb. 8

Middleport
Ohio
"The aree'a beat Hlectlon of

Athletic tootw.r"

. 219 N. SecOnd Ava.
Middleport

•'

WATERfOIID
at Trimble
at Meias
.MILLER
_, fede·f'at ifockina
SOUTH GALLIA
MEIGS
o.u.c. ruarsitY OniYJ
WAHAMA (Reserve OnlyJ
at South Gallia
SOUTHERN

Meiss
"Marauders .. • BoYs
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 27.
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb.3
Feb. 6
Feb. 9
.Feb. 13

I.

IN GEL'S
ELECTRONICS
Radio Shack Dealer"

106 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-2635

T

UINTON COUNTY .
SOUTHERN
MEIGS
at Waterford
•
at Wahama
TRIMBLE
at Miller
at Wellston
at South Gallia
.
FEDERAL HOCKING •
CHESAPEAKE
at Southern
WAHAMA
at Meias

Eastern
"fasles .. • Gir.ls

Good Luck To

•

,Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Ja.n. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
·Jan. 30
Feb. 2
Feb. 3
Feb. 9
Feb. I 0
Feb. 13

Mon, Tues, Wed, Frl 9-5
Thurs 9-12, Sat 9-2:30

at GalliPolis
at Alexander
at Eastern
at Trimble
BELPRE
at Nelsonville-York
IRONTON
WELLSTON
· at Uinton Cou.ntY
RIUER UALLEY
at Waterford
ALEXANDER
EASTERN

Meiss
··Marauders·· • Girls
at Rlve·r UalleY
Jan. 6
Jan. 8· at WeUston
Jan. I 1 at BelPre
Jan. 15 EAST.ERN
Jan; 18 NELSONUILLE·YORK
'
Jan. 22 .at Southern
'
Jan. 25 UINTON COUNTY
Jan. 31 at Eastern
feb. 1 WATERFORD
feb. 5 TRIMBLE
feb.8
at.Alexander

Crow's Family
Re~taurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

228 Main ·St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

992-5432

A~EXANDER

Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 12
Jan. 13
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
Feb. 2
F~b. 9
Feb. 13

at 1:Eastern
atcTrimble
SYMMES UALLEY
MILLER
WAHAMA
FEDERAL HOCKING
at S:outh Gallla
BE !!.PRE
at Waterford
EASJrERN
at &amp;Ymmes UalleY
jl!

Jan. 6
SYMMS.UALLEY
. Jan. 8
TRIMJLE
Jan. II / at MlfJer
Jan. IS
WAHAMA
Jan. 18
at Federal Hockina
'MEIGS, .
Jan. 22
Jan. 25
WATE FORD

...
3'
Feb. 1

at We Jton
f

.

at Bel re
at Eastern
·,..),
,_

feb. 8

l:JI

Oh.io
··sob ··ats••
Dec. 29·30 at AS (HolidaY ClassicJ
Arizota State
·..
Dec. 29
Dec. '30
consllition/ChamPionshiP
Jan. 3
at Ball State ·
KENfl,STATE
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
MIAMI
Jan. 17
at cwntral Michiaan
Jan. 20
AKRON
Jan. 23
NORtHERN ILLINOIS
Jan. 27
at IDffalo
Jan. 31
at.Toledo .
feb. 3
MAISHALL
feb. 7
BOWLING ·GREEN
feb. I o EASfERN MICHIGAN
at.Akron
Feb. 14
Feb. 17
at lftlars~tll
Feb. 21
B¥FFALO
Feb. 24 · a~ Kent State
Feb. ~6
CINfRAL MICHIGAN
Feb. 28
af'Miami
Mar. 5
MAC ChamP. (1st RoundJ
. .I,

BY KIYIN KIUY

949-2210
Syracuse

·

992-6333

Norris
Northup
Dodge,
Inc.
446-0842 or
· Toll-Free
1-80&lt;r446-0842
"You'll Like Our
QuslltyWsy
Of Doing Business"

616 Eastern Avenue ·
(740) 446-3672
Weuae

a

GALLIPOLIS - Winning seven perfect points
. 'il'l state monitoring of its
'service· delivery has made
Gallia
County .
't he
Department of Jobs and
'f:i.mily Services the only
·c ounty in Ohio to win
that distinction.
· The state DJFS also list,ed Gallia's Child Support
;Bureau, part of the local
DJFS operation, among
six counties that achieved
perfect points, local DJFS
Director ·Jerry Barnes
said.
"I have to attribute that
level of performance to
the staff, their concentration on their work and for
doing a good job," he said.
&lt; DJFS, formerly known
~ the Department of
Human
Services,
is
c~~rged with enacting
welfare reform· measures
in Ohio counties, moving
people from puplic assistance into jobs and selfsufficiency. ·
.
··• ''Iempor~ Assistal)ce to
Ne.edy Families (TANF)
money is the primary
funding mechanism for
these initiatives.
· Barnes said the Gallia
office was ranked in the
first DJFS progress ·report
last year, noting . that its
performance "was good,
but not that good."
Performance ratings are
c9nverted into points,
r~ging from 0 to I, with
1 the highest.
The local DJPS scored I
on food stamp payment
accuracy measure, Ohio
Wdrks First ~rk participalion, bWF federal allfamily participation, Early
Start and child support
o'rder establishment. Its
counterparts in the Child
Support Bureau won Is in
foster child placement
moves and finalized adoptions. ·
'

t .

based on originality and
creativity, clarity of expresMIDDLEPORT
sion, use of scientific
Projects ranging in scope method and the knowledge
from "Magnets: Demon- gained through the project.
strating
the
Invisible
"The purpose of the day
Force"
and
"Battery wu to stimulate interest in
Power" to " Is
science, proKibble the Best Eighth grader$ who mote
Thing for Your
research and
Dog" and "Tips received "superior" scientific
ratings displayed knowledge,
on
Smooth
Lips" were on and discussed their and to recogdisplay Thursnize
high
projects with a
day during the
achievement
team ofj~tdges.
Meigs J'v!,iddle
in attaining
School Science
those objecFair.
tives," said science teacher
Eighth graders who Krista Johnson.
received "superior" ratings
One project took a close
displayed and discussed look at mold, and inclu,Iing
their projects with a team the green, furry . stuff on a
of judges. Winners were dish full of month-old .
recognized at a special goulash, bread and pieces
open house and awards of fruit, while others comassembly later in the day.
pared · the worthiness of
Projec~ we~e ~udged by soap and laundry detergent
a team of j&gt;rilfessionals,

-~·....~-~. ~ ·AI ~

---=.

,.

.·
~

.

I.
~

'

. . . . . H:·~ ~:JW~y closer to goal.

'
G

••

~l'

'

;1 , .•

"i1

•

·, I ~·~ •.,()~··~•\' ~ ,

,
. ·
FR(IM STAFF REPORT!; 1
·
"Prospects for being
Executive l;&gt;irector Jean
1
ALLlPOLIS'
bl
Houck
said "this has been a
··.
a e to continue
United Way . of
, .
difficult year for many Unit.•.. ·
' · ' Gallia County's pr~vtdrng ~elp for those ed Ways in addition to our
.• ·
th~rmometer . ..
In need ttt our area
own.
·
charting
progress toward
.look much better now , "Due to termination of
meeting a .125,0p0 .goal ' in,
than just ftw weeks
various government-assis~OQl-02 has moved to ~0 . a 0 altliolt h we still tance programs and the temthe recent update ·,
'g '
'g
,
porary downsizing of some
.~ lu.d~. W'iJters11j' the ·c:un· . .... h11ve
a way to go,
·businesses, emergency needs
1
'I•
f
,
·
.
·
·
.:.\~;w~
·
h
·~
.··'
·
/-J'1·.1
'{'
requests have increased," she
p- Iilii .,o .,.....,.."'e c .ill·"~···
·. ,.,, r··
1
and 'nllii:\.v.mari th't~a'm ·· ; ·•' '~~ ~ucly w.n.r.
added.
, ,
"During periods like this,
paign's ll«;lho~a[y"· i:hal~:nah.' ' . · ' '•
"Prospects for being abl ·. try to ,.~
. eet the commumty s many people learn first - hand
to contim1e providing hel
nee~ ,Jl . really been chat- that, because of United Way's
for those in need in our area' .', lenged: 1 . is year, but. local help, there are places to turn
look much ,~!;Iter noY.r than 'people, businesses and orga- to in times of need," Houck
· · t'o
have ,
be en said. "When I receive
just
, fiew .,.::. wee k s ago, ';~1za
I ~s ..
although we still :have a way 1espondmg, and we ~e hope- request calls for help regard·ful that we will acli1eve our ing various unfortu!'ate situto go," Walters sard.
"The service agencies that ~al," she added.
PleiH . . GNLAI
Pilrcent

'

'

Morning!

' TIME~ENTJNEL STAFF

Plans · {or

a!:cording to Ferman Moon:,
. chairm~n, who last week
a~:cepted .a ·$500 corporate
sponsor. donation
from
farmers Bank.
.
Relay for Life this year will
b,e April 27 and 28 · at the
Eastern Higli School football
trick.
, . :A~n this year,. bank .
f!llployees of Parmen Bank,
under the direction ·ofJoAnn
trisp. will be designing
sonalized luminaries ;_.
~tive candles ne.tled in '. and
Balik 11 acalrl thla :1181" a corporate spoil'
iR decorated paper bap- in lHvM ;...
sor
fOr
the
American
CJ111Cer Soolety'a Relay for Llfl In MeiCt
ell;change for donadohs to
Col,lhty. Paul Reed, benk. president, made 11 $500 donation to
~e society as a part of the
Ferin11n Moore, 'RelaY chllrm~. Hllpl~ with 1he relay 'ere
fUnd-raising project.
JQAnn Crttp, left, 11 bank empiOY,H, and Jenn~r Hnon, the
·The luminaries will be
soclety'alncome cJII\ItloPinent dlhletor, left. (C~•rlemt 'Ha,111cti

"J•

per-

. I

~.

_____.....-·--· .

--· ·- ... ·-- ·-·-- 1

••

...

Gallia, Melp to receive·
emergency funds ·
FROM STAFF REPORTS

tli~ American Cancer Society's ~iguatun: event,· Relay
.fOr, Life, are moving forward,

'

'SUPERIOR' PROJECT- Meigs Middle School eighth gred- ·
er Matthew Krawsczyn discussed his project with judges.
during the school's science fair on Thursday. Krawsczyn wort
a "superior" rating for his project, "Is Kibble the Best Thins_
for Your Dog." (Brian J. Reed photo)
·

'

IY CHARLINI •HOIPUCH
POMEROY -

·

1n

:.Relay for .Life~ pl.ans·

Call Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

.o.\

•0';\

,o :'

',

1

a l&amp;a.-

·t

'

IY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

tp.7ea•4l

Vol. 15, No. 51

Science fair
spurs student
curiosity

_high in
rankings .

252 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, OH

lf

Gallipolis • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 11, 2001

:DJFS
scores

.992-7028

3rd Street, Racine ·

Soutbern
''To·rnado$" • Girls

Jan.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

. : Plllll . . U..,AI

~

•1.15 :

1'

photo)

.

·"'-~"'---~....:._-..;c:... ' ~.

Travis McKJnnlss led Gallla
Academy with 11 points In
Its loss to Warren ·

,,Cl·····
.."
..... ....
12·7

hs 1

"
" rlllt
rnn

Q'h•jp

-,

'•
.;;:.

.•

II *p

--·

M

Dl .

AI

Dl
Cl-1

CHESHIRE - Gallia and
Meigs counties have been
chosen to receive $53,703 to
supplement emergency food
and shelter programs in the
area, beginning in April or
May.
The selection was made by
the National Board, made up
of affiliates of national valuntary organizations · and
chaired by the Federal Emergency Management· Agency
(FEMA). United Way of
America will provide the
·administrative staff and function as fiscal agent for the
project,
Gallia County will. receive
$29 •534 , and Meigs County
$24, 169 ,
said
Sandra
Edwards of Gallia-Meigs .
Community Action Agency.
The board was charged to
...

..-61.

A local board, made
up l!f Galtia and Meigs
citizens, ~.pill determine
how funds a111arded
to tl1e counties are to
be distrib11ted. _
distribute funds appropriated
by Congress to help expand
the capacity of food and
shelter programs in high
need around the country.
A local board, made up of
Gallia and ·Meigs citizens,
will determine how funds
awarded to the counties are
to be distributed among the
emergency food and shelter
programs run by local service organizations.
The local board is responsl' ble "ror recommending
PIMH . . Fundi. A2

�.

.

Sunday, February 11,2001

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

A2 • 6u11-.p a:tmn ·6tltlilttl

•

•·~.Sun---d-·~~·-F~eb~ru~·~~~4,~200~~1--------------~P~o:m:e~r~oy~·~M~Id~d~lepo~~n~·~G:•=I~IIpo~I~I•~·~O~h~lo~P=o~l!m~P=I~e!all~n~t,~WV~--------------~&amp;~u~n~ba~,~~~~~m~r&amp;~·!•~rn~tl~·n~ri~·~P~•!g!e!A3~

_BUCKEYE BRIEFS

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
.•
RIO GRANDE - Gallia
County sheriff's deputies are
investigating the following
incidents:
• An attemped theft and
receiving stolen property incident at the Friendly Mart in
Rio Grande at 3:30 a.m. on
jan.29
• A drive-off without paying
for gas at Little John's No.4 of
Gallipolis Friday at 6:12p.m.
• A theft at the home of
Regina Burris, Gallipolis,
where she reported $280 was
missing Friday around 10:30
a.m.

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County sheriff's deputies
lodged Scott Allen McGuire,
32, 502 Second Ave., Gallipofu, in the Gallia CQunty Jail on
charges of criminal trespassing. &amp;orderly conduct and
two counts of felony assault
on a police officer following
an incident around 12:50 a.m.
Friday in the jail.
Deputies said McGuire, initially charged by Gallipolis
City Police, allegedly milted
being placed into a cell and
bepn fighting with officen, ·
sending two of them deputies Jerry T. Bradley and
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
~ Werry to Holzer County EMS responded to 11
Medical Center' emergency calls for assistance on Friday,
room with minor injuries. bringing the total number of
Both were later treated and rum for the month to 111 and
released.
421 for the year.
McGuire was subdued and
Runs included transports to
put into his cell, deputies said. Holzer Medical Center from
Also placed in jail were Sugar Creek Road, Gavin
Curtis Henkle. 36, Clin- Plant, West College Avenue,
tonville, W.Va., driving under Arbon of Gallipofu (two units
the influence and driving sent), Buck Ridge Road
under suspension; David Ben- (twice) and Ohio 554.
jamin Elkins, 29, 665
Transports were also made
Woodruff Road, Vinton, fail- to St. Mary's Hospital from
ure to appear; Jeremiah J. Par- Wells Run Road, and to
.som, 24, 17880 Ohio 7 South. Pleasant Valley Jiospital from
Crown City, DUI; Stephen Colonial Drive.
·Mark Bird, 42, · Gallipolis
Refusal of treatment was
Ferry, W.Va., thett and resisting noted on a run to ali accident
arrest; and Steven R .
near the Silver Memorial
Meachum, 40, Wellston, DUI.
Bridge, and a run to CliffSide
Drive was cancelled

•

EMS ftlns

Cited by pollee

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by
Gallipolis City Police were
Brian Workman, 20, 2630 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis, window tint violation; and Diana
L. Lambert, 40, 568 Pine Hill
Road, Bidwell, improper
backing.

.Immunizations
scheduled

celled.
The board's next meeting
will be March 19 at 7 p.m. at
53 Shawnee Lane, Gallipofu.

Bloodmobile ·
stops lbursclay

License issued

Fire calls

•

AITest made

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Arthur Allen Tobin Jr., 19,
and
Bethany
LeeAnn
R eynolds, 19, both of ·
Pomeroy.

GALLIPOLIS - To rebuild
its inventory of blood supplies
for the area, Tri-State Red
Cross Blood Services' bloodmobile will be at St. Peter's
Epucopal Church, 541 SecSALEM CENTER - A
ond Ave., Gallipofu, on Thurs12-by-20
foot storage buildday from 11 :30 a.m.-6 p.m.
All area residents are ing owned by Carl Smith of
Salem Township was destroyed
encouraged to donate.
To be a blood donor, indi- by fire late Thursday.
Salem Towmi)ip Fire Chief
viduals must be at least 17,
weigh 105 pounds or more, be Dick Lambert said the storage
in good general health, and building contained over 200
not have donated blood with- Beanie Baby collectibles and a .1
number of other stuffed colin the past 56 days.
lectibles.
Donors can give blood
when taking most medica- · Salem VFD was assisted at
tions, including insulin and the scene by the Rutland Fire
high blood pressure medicine, Department and emergency
if their medical condition is squad. 1Wenty firefighters and
five trucks were at the scene
stable.
For more information, call for an hour.
There were no injuries.
t-800-GIVE-LIFE .

Fire deslroys
building

POINT PLJMSANT, W.Va.
Point Pleasant Police
arrested Tamara Sayre, 34,
Point Pleasant, Thursday at
about 9:26 p.m.
Sayre was stopped on a traffic violation on Viand Street
and charP;ed with third offense
DUI.
.
Sayre was taken to the
Mason County Jail.

1\vo charged

. ' ' .
A Valentines G;ft .
From .Thi! Heart ·

'.
~

th~~·

• •
.'

'.

ewnm,

..

FREE leaded crystal
box with purchase
of figurine.
A $28.50 SRP gift set.

...
I•

•1•111 (Gatpllttly

s"""-.ckd

betes Update and Education
Day has been set for Feb. 16
from 1-3 p.m. near the Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation
Department of Holzer Clinic.
The department is on the
first floor of the Dr. Charles E.
Holzer Jr. Surgery Center of
Holzer Medical Center.
·Insulin users can take
advantage of NOVO PEN 3,
and will also receive a pen at
no charge. The event is sponsored by Novo Nordisk Pharmaceuticals, HMC and Holzer Clinic.
For more information: contact Lori Cremeans at 4465080 or Debbie Barcus at
446-5421.

GLENWOOD, W.Va. - A
Mason County man is behind
bars in Cabell County follow·ing a stand-off with law
enforcement early Thursday.
Danny R. Reynolds, 30,
Glenwood, is charged with
felony wanton endangerment
following the cwo-hour incident on W.Va. 2; near the
Cabell-Mason County line.
He is in jail in lieu of$50,000
bond.
According to a Cabell
County Sheriff's Department
report, deputies began talking
to Reynolds, who had a rifle,
around 2:30 a.m. before he
laid down his gun at 4:30 a.m.
and was taken into custody.
After the incident, deputi~
from .Cabell and Mason counties reportedly found more
• Gt\LLIPOLIS - · State than a dozen weapons, includ- ·
ltep. John A. Carey, R-Well- ing rifles and a 9mrn handgun.
ston, will hold an open door
session on feb. 16 from 8:309:30 a.m. at the Gallia County
Courthouse.
Those with questions or
concerns about state aovernrnent are encouraged to ·
attend.

. With

Lo"""·

41!126!)965

.

.

'

'Fat y: ; valentine to a gi&amp; set that includes
"I'm Completely Suspended With Love," which · ,
will RETIRE on Valentine's Day, and a FREE lea,ded
crystal box. Visit us today for a gift that truly comes .,
from .your heart. But hurry, quantities are .limited. ' ,

..

FRUTH ··.
PHARMACY

.

j

•

CENTERVlU.B -

Rac-

coon 'Ibwnship Crime '\JVatch
will meet 1\tesday ac.7 p.m; in
the former Cmterville EJe..
· mentary School:

. .

GJIIIIII E-.. '"-P. Ia;.
Volir ,. ~""' •rll ~lr.•!"--.ct~~~~ •~ o.diii'I'U£ .

.,

.

··.

.. , ... .!..:

#97060

.. 1'1! ....., £SC.

)

,. ,-. :., .t
,

'· .;jr

'

(

!

I .

j

!. 1hefts report.d

I

1.

..I..
..

I

·t ---------~------~---------~------------duct an annual audit, practice
phase of the program.
•
Under the terms of the non-discrimination, have
•' .
grant from the National demonstrated the capacity to
I
•
fa• ..... A1
Board, local governmental or deliyer ·emergency food
'
private voluntary organiza- andl or shelter programs, and

.

Funds

I

I
•

I

.·I· .

.-

'; agencies

.

to receive these

: funds and any additional
.

• funds available under this

'

'

. 'I

•

19 meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction ·and Mental
Health Services has been can-

••

:l. :

I

Meetlna off
GALLIPOLIS - The Peb.

\

tions chosen to receive funds
must be non-profit, have an
accounting system and con-

6unbap -G:tmf 6mttnd
........*
Reader Services
c-

(IJIPIIIWII)

.,..

'-'·
---pold·
-

PllbiiUod tvay S1iUj, _IU 1\bd AMI.,
o•upoU• 0111o, br m. 01o1o Wto, l'ubUool,.

COrrlctlon Polioy

o.......................... ...

......... tr,.. lllow olu omr Ia a

B l•nd u lleoo4 ciUI

- . , . Olllo ... ollloo.

••111•1

Otlllpoll.

11111111 11

w...-, 1\1 Allodltld Plw. 11111 1M Ohio

lllorJ, ....... - - ot (740) """ ' =rxw~·'
:kadiddmtCORicdOMIDThl
2342 .. ,_,..,, ('7ofl) m-2155. Wa wW
S.atlael, 115 Tblrd /fit.,

.-..., 700r la!tNelloa aa4

coon lkillfnnulld.

••b 1 ._.,.n...
OalllpOI(o,OltloOOI.

llllfiiAY OI&lt;I.Y
~l.U'II

lrCintor•--

___,..._.._

GIIe -

.

Waller &amp;Drver

84011

sets only

OFF

IIYTI8 ·
LIT &amp; IDE 231Mf

Chll

RIDIII
ON SALE

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

MAIL 8UJ8CIIP110NS

Subscribe today.

Jl 'Ntlb. .............................""'"'''"'"""'"'''.$17.30

446-2342

....

the ah:ri~lon.
.

.

-c..c.no,

16 ...................................................151!2
52 WooD. ................................................... I\O!.l&lt;i

Susped held In slaying

; The chi~f didn't disclose the suspect's identity or
:Whether charges had been filed:Wright said the investi~ation was continuing and said further information ·
'Would be released next' week.
••: The chief referred questions to the Cuyahoga County
p rosecutor's office, where a message was left after busijless hours Friday evening.

C OLUMBUS (AP) T he state needs to do a better j ob monitoring foste r
homes and enforcing child
care rules, according to an
audit of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services issued Friday.
Auditor Jim Petro offered
9 1 recommendatio ns to
i!llprove O hio's child welfare
programs. T he audit examined 11 areas of hu man services, includi ng foste r· care
licensing, independent living
programs, child care services,
ch ild care licensing and
adoption services.
The audit recommends
spending $1 2 million to
meet all the recommendations, including $4 millio.n to
meet staffing levels· in
enforcement, licensing and
inspectio n areas. The department has included a number
of staffing positions in its
budget recommended by the

audit.
Jacqueline Romer-Senslcy, director of Job and Family Services, requested the
audit in April 1999, shortly
afte r becoming director. The
department
has already
implemented at least 59 of
the recomme n dations, she
said.
Romer-Sensky has been
criticized repeatedly in the
past few weeks for problems
with the department, but the
audit did not address those
criticisms.
Some lawmakers are con·
cerned about a proposal to
replace 56 walk-in unemployment offi ces with 21
phone centers.
Gov. Bob Taft has abo
o rdered R om er-Sensky to
explain · problems meeting
federal child care requirements. The state faces an $8
million federal fine for not
meeting those requirements.

DAYTON (AP) - Public
employees in five counties say
a robust economy redu ced the
amount of money local governments had to put into a
state retirement pension plan
and that. those savings should
have been returned to workers.
Lawyers for the employees
. filed s!lit Thursday against the
. counties and five cities within
th~m. accusing · the governments of wrongfully holding
on to the funds.
A favorable stock market
helped increase investment

revenues in 1999. It provided
the Ohio Public Employee
R etirement System a windfall
that reduced by 20 percent the
amount cities and counties
would have to contribute to
fund their workers' pensions.
Local governments should
have given that money .to the
employees as part of their
compensation package - but
did't, the lawsuit alleged. In at
least some cases, the local governments put the money back
into the general budget funds,
according to the lawsuit.
"The amount an employer

WASHINGTON (AP) The Pentagon on Friday
backed away from plans ·to
double its sale of a stockpiled
steel-making alloy, heeding .
warnings from an 0 hio company worried that the ' move
would drive down prices.
The only remaining North
American smelter of the alloy
called ferromanganese is
Eramet Marietta Inc. h
employs about 480 people in
Marietta, Ohio.
Dave Oliver, principal
deputy undersecretary of
defense, notified R ep. Ted
Strickland, D-Ohio, . that
50,000 tons of fe rrom a n~
ganese would· be released this
year from the National
Defense Stockpile.
The Pentagon ' previously
had proposed selling 100,000
tons of the alloy, which the
government keeps in a stockpile in · case of a wartime .
buildup of steel production .
Strickland said Eramet is
the largest industrial employer

:ilow

l i -....................................- .......... J109.12

' • ·

"

•

"

./i,a,ciaJ p/a~UeUuj.
J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

530 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
7 40.446.1986
BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUCATION PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING
JamMI. Mon'l..n .. R 11 I ucl """'llntlttv. of-lnd orr.n MCurltles lhi'OU(IIh Wslnut Strwt
lee~ lrpg., MwnMr 'N.UO &amp; 11'¢, J.l. Morrlton l Auoelst .. ll not 1f1ll6attd with ~IS.
(hcUfttltt acttvlltt ~ from I WSS offiCI focet.d 1132~ W. HendlfiOfl Rd.,
Columltul, OH e1~)

Bone Density Testing ........
_jf:vaifa6{e, at

2fofzer CCinic
A Bone DensHDmetry Test is the most practical way to accurately measure the density of your bones . It's also a good
way for your doctor to diagn.ose osteoporos is. It can even
help your doctor track your rate of bone loss.

Bone Density Testing:
• Safe
• Painless
• Non-Invasive
• Lasts only about 10 minutes

Risks for Osteoporosis
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Women who have gon• through menop•u•• •r• .t most rlak.
Smoking
Too much •lcohol
Too ntlll exercise
Too IIIIo colclum (now or •• • child) .
A previous brokiln bonelh•l roaulledfrom • minor Injury
C•rt•ln moelcllllona.auch •• aleroldl (commonly ,..d to lro•l •alhm• &amp; •rthrllls) •nd
lhyrold hormone (W doao b loo high)
'
Eorly monopa,.o (._fore ogo 415)

Ifyou tliini.,you an at risl(for osteoporosis, aiftyour aoctor wlietlier
you sliouiif luwe a 6one aensity test, or ca/I :Jl'oCzerCt:in;c 's &lt;Di4gnost;c
'I'uting Center in t]a!Iipo(i.s at (740)446-5289.

~HOLZER C LINI C

I

.

R~plwle~L

Jim Morrison, Certified Financial Planner

:tw

--C..'-

13 WloD. ...................- ..............................129.2S
16 WloD................................................... Jl6.18

'fO''""

. Pb..~iH'j /,M
j;HriilciaJ ~...

A Ragletered lnvaatment Advlaar

,

•
•
: CLEVELAND (AP) - No
t~arges. will be filed against a
;9&lt;&gt;wntown office worker who
t•rabbed · 1640,000 ~hat fell .
;from :m armored truek and
.
:kept im for two days.
; The three packages of cash .
thad been · missing since
· :wednesday morning, when
: th~ fell out of a back door of
~ ~AT SystemS armored truck
!~t had just lett the Federal
~ ~~;SerVe Bank. of Cleveland to
:!nalte deliveries .
; The truck's door had someopened and closed again,
:she FBI slid. The driver~! a
more blocka before dis- ·
: ~rinB the problem.

Athearn, Atlas,
Bachmann &amp;
Accessories
N \.1Uil

counties.

in Washington County, Ohio,
and the Pentagon decision
avoided "a dark scenariou for
that wmmunity.

..

1in missing
;money

K-Line,

contributes into the employee
pension fund functions as an
additional form of employment compensation for the .
employees;· ·the lawsuit states.
Named as defendants are
the cities ofDayton, Fairborn,
Springfield, Sidney and Piqua,
and the counties of Montgomery, Greene, Clark, Shelby
and Miami. Lawyers who filed
· the complaint asked the
Montgomery County Common Pleas Court to declare it
a class action representing all
public employees in the five

Pentagon decision on alloy
benef1ts Marietta plant ·

..

~S&amp;40.000

Six other residents of the
nursing home in Bellbrook,
about I 0 miles from Dayton,
became ill from the tank
mix-up Dec. 7. Four women
died of nitrogen asphyxiation, .where the brain is
depleted of oxygen.
Authorities said a maintenance worker removed a fitting from an empty oxygen
tank and used it as an
adap ter to connect the
nitrogen tank.
According to the Ohio
Departm ent of Health,
another maintenance worker who took delivery of the
tanks Nov. 29 had set the
nitrogen tank aside because
the fitting looked different.
T he nitrogen tan k had an
oxygen label partially covered by a smaller nitrogen
label, authorities said. Both
employees deny having seen
the nitrogen label.

in five counties want
pension plan fees retumed

I

!Man·retums

XENIA (AP) - A grand
jury handed up indictments
of involuntary manslaughter
and reckless homicide Friday in the deaths of four
nursing home residents ntista kenly · given ni trogen
instead of oxygen.
The Greene County
prosecutor said the indictments were against two
defendants, but he wo uld
not say whether they are
individuals or corporations.
H owever,
Prosecutor
William Schenck said the
grand jury didn't indict rwo
maintenance workers who
had contact with the nitrogen tank that was mistakenly connected to the oxygen
system at the Carriage-byLake nursing home. He said
the indictments also were
not against the . nursing
home administrator or anyone at t.he company that
delivered the nitrogen tank .

~mployees

••

='""ijii;'ij 'Oiii'~i; ;;:;;o·~

·=-.
.
.
.
,.. _

' "'

~orne.

should have ~ voluntary
board ·if they are a private
voluntary organization.
Qualifying organizations
are urged to apply for .the
funds, Edwards said.
Gallia and Meigs cpunties
have distributed Emergency
Food and Shelter funds previously to Gallia-Meigs
CM aJ!,d the Gallia County
Council on Aging. These
agencies were responsible for
providing me:ils · and utility
assistance.

,..,....,
· riaiiiO
tk
_
... periol.
... mar be lmplci!ICMI by '*ual•tbe chlmiOII of

; : CINCINNATI (AP) - High winds blew a 20-foot
~ 'teeple off a northern Kentucky church, caused AirCare
; In Cincinnati to be grounded and limited flights at
; Cincinnati/Northern · Kentucky International airport
~ friday night.
: ! Jim Lott, a National Weather Service meteorologist in
: Wilmington, said wiflds reached 30 mph, with gusts as
:· lligh as 40 mph at the airport in Boone County.
·: ' Dudley Smith, director of air and ground transporta;"Sion at University Hospital, .said pilots decided about
: 1:30 Friday to ground the one heiicopter they use
:between noon and midnight.
·
:· • Although helicopters can fly in winds up to 50 mph,
:high winds are not always good for patients.
;&lt; "We can actually fly now .. . but it was a decision based
~J.IlOre on the condition of the patient than the aircraft,"
:Smith said.
~ ·· Gerald Sandfoss, chief of the Central Campbell Coun:tY Fire District in northern Kentucky, said the wind
;blew a 20-foot steeple off its foundation at Rolling Hills
,. Christian Church. It damaged the roof on the way
.~down, then hit the side of the building and rolled onto
:some power lines facing
27 and landed on the side: walk.
;. ' "If the wires hadn't been there, it would have landed
; i~ traffic," Sandfoss said.
:·· ·The steeple damaged one of the electrical lines, but
.
1Cinergy crews quickly repaired it.
.. : Dave Woodburn, spokesman for Cinergy, said that at 3
1 p 1m., there were 2,400 hquseholds without power in the
Cincinnati area - 2,100 in Ohio and· 300 .in Kentucky.
By 9 p.m., all power had been restored except to about
~PO homes in Clermont County, he said.
· :! The Piqua post of the Ohio .Highway Patrol said an
'empty semitrailer truck was biown into the guard rail
;a1ong Interstate 75 just south of Anna, in ·west-central
;bhio, but there were no injuries.

:m

......- ...... _................................. Sl.IS

""_"',__

.

BAY VILLAGE (AP) -A suspect was arrested Friday
~ the· shooting d~ath of a man whose body was found
• the front yard of a lakefront home in this upscal'e
•
~leveland suburb.
:: Bay Village Police Chief David M. Wright said in a
'news release that an arrest had been made in the death
• Robert Cutler, 34, a roofer from · nearby Fairview
;ct
:Park.
; : His body was found outside a horne overlooking Lake
J?rie on Jan. 4. He had been shot in the head three times.
:: The homeowner saw a truck on the property and
~led police, who found the body near the home and
:iliitially theorized that the victim had fallen while doing
i.{ roof job. The victim hadn't been hired to work at the ·

Glle l'olt .................;.................................. $65.00
llllCU OOPr IIICI

'ht II*) n.. ''S'MI wUIIIOt btl 2 RI

j

.
'.

Dissolution flied

POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Beuie Mae Taylor and
Lawrence J." Taylor, both of .
Middleport.

AKRON (AP) - Prosecutors won't seek the death
renalty i? the third trial of a man charged ~ilh killing
a convemence store owner last year.
. The first two aggravated murder trials of Michael
~ , Roper, 25, .of Akron, ended in hung juries.
, . A third jury might be more willing to convict Rop er
· , 1f the death penalty isn't a possibility, Summit C ounty
Prosecutor She~ri Bevan Walsh said Friday night.
• ·· Instead, prosecutors will seek a life prison term,
•· accordmg to Walsh, who made the decision after meet '. ing with relatives of the victim, Taleb " Tom" Husein, 49,
. of Aleron .
·
·
' ·' Roper, whose trials ended without verdicts O ct. 6 and
Feb. 3, has said he was wrongly accused in a case of mistaken identity.
. . Husein was behind the counter at the Lakeshore
::· Parry Out when a gunman entered and fatally shot him
:: In the face . A friend witnessed the shooting and told
' . Police the attacker was a regular customer.
; The victim's · brother, also an Akron store owner•
txchanged gunfire last month with a holdup man who
. ;.lied and was struck by a car outside. The man died of a
; l!roken neck, but Saleh Husein escaped injury.
..

·-t•

e

I .

'

u.s.

788 North S.Cond Aile ·
Middleport, Ohio 45'780

Sln11llt1d

.

:Death penalty won't be sought

:·. Wind topples church steeple

Clreyvlslt

' .

,

,.

Diabetes update Glenwood man
jailed
GALLIPOLIS - A Dia-

GALLIPOLIS .
Free
immunizations will be provided by the Gallia County
Health Department on Thursday from 4-6 p.m. at the
health department, 499 Jackson Pike.
Chil~n in need of immuGALLIPOLJS - Gallipolis nizations must be accornpavolunteer firefighten respond- nied by a parent or legal
ed to four calls on Pric;lay, gUardian, and bring a current
including:
.
· immunization record with
• A three-aac brush fire at
212 Providence School. Road
vaccine will be available
in Clay 'lbwnship. just after at this clinic.
noon. firefighten were on the · Additional services, such as
scene for 1-1/2 houn.
blood preuui:e cbecka and
• .Elnen 6refipten went to pzegnancy ceats, will be offered
a bnllh fire at SWill Czeek duzina
houn at the
Road u a mutual aid requac health ct.panmea.t.
with the Gllyan 'lbwnshlpVol.unteer fire DepartmeDC ac
6:09p.m.
•
Eleven
SreSahcen
GALLIPoLIS - All who
responded to I billlh lrt IC
RU'l'LAND - A gospel
the G.W.poU. Dnelopmental IIIII in the 1\.io Grande com-•·
~.
3 rnunity choir !'or· the Martin · ling will be held feb. 24, 7
enter pi"'"" lfOWI"" ac 6: 5 Luther Kina Jr. Day PzoPm p.rn~ at the Rutland PteewUI
p.m. PiCt
llrd~"
011 Jan. 16 at 1\.io Gnnde are Baptist Chureh. 'Ilm sroups
•
een
...cen ukecl to attend a praccice on wUI sing and a love ofFering
zesponded to an electrical . feb. 19 at 7 p.m. at New Life will benefit the 11th annual
oudet shonaae at 471 Geora- Lutheran Church.
Bend Area Gospel Jubilee, ·
Czeek Rold at 8:20 p.m.
'
This particular gioup has May 16-20.
hem ulted to ling in Chillicothe on Peb. 24.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Rodney Rodgers, 21 ,
Ravenswood, was arrested
T hursday on warrants Tor
night-time burglary
•
He was arraigned by Magistrate Johnny Reynolds and
was placed on $10,000 bond.
He is still housed in the
Mason County Jail.
Timothy Neville, 19, Point
Pleasant, was also arrested' by
deputies Thursday. He was
arrested for driving revoked,
DUI and driving suspended
for unpaid citations.

Ohio needs to improve Grand jury indicts two
monitoring of child care in nursing home deaths ·

•

Dlagnoatlc Teetlng C•nt•r
00 J•ck •on PI~ •
G0111plla , OH 41M131

uo ..ue~ae

�.

.

Sunday, February 11,2001

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

A2 • 6u11-.p a:tmn ·6tltlilttl

•

•·~.Sun---d-·~~·-F~eb~ru~·~~~4,~200~~1--------------~P~o:m:e~r~oy~·~M~Id~d~lepo~~n~·~G:•=I~IIpo~I~I•~·~O~h~lo~P=o~l!m~P=I~e!all~n~t,~WV~--------------~&amp;~u~n~ba~,~~~~~m~r&amp;~·!•~rn~tl~·n~ri~·~P~•!g!e!A3~

_BUCKEYE BRIEFS

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
.•
RIO GRANDE - Gallia
County sheriff's deputies are
investigating the following
incidents:
• An attemped theft and
receiving stolen property incident at the Friendly Mart in
Rio Grande at 3:30 a.m. on
jan.29
• A drive-off without paying
for gas at Little John's No.4 of
Gallipolis Friday at 6:12p.m.
• A theft at the home of
Regina Burris, Gallipolis,
where she reported $280 was
missing Friday around 10:30
a.m.

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County sheriff's deputies
lodged Scott Allen McGuire,
32, 502 Second Ave., Gallipofu, in the Gallia CQunty Jail on
charges of criminal trespassing. &amp;orderly conduct and
two counts of felony assault
on a police officer following
an incident around 12:50 a.m.
Friday in the jail.
Deputies said McGuire, initially charged by Gallipolis
City Police, allegedly milted
being placed into a cell and
bepn fighting with officen, ·
sending two of them deputies Jerry T. Bradley and
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
~ Werry to Holzer County EMS responded to 11
Medical Center' emergency calls for assistance on Friday,
room with minor injuries. bringing the total number of
Both were later treated and rum for the month to 111 and
released.
421 for the year.
McGuire was subdued and
Runs included transports to
put into his cell, deputies said. Holzer Medical Center from
Also placed in jail were Sugar Creek Road, Gavin
Curtis Henkle. 36, Clin- Plant, West College Avenue,
tonville, W.Va., driving under Arbon of Gallipofu (two units
the influence and driving sent), Buck Ridge Road
under suspension; David Ben- (twice) and Ohio 554.
jamin Elkins, 29, 665
Transports were also made
Woodruff Road, Vinton, fail- to St. Mary's Hospital from
ure to appear; Jeremiah J. Par- Wells Run Road, and to
.som, 24, 17880 Ohio 7 South. Pleasant Valley Jiospital from
Crown City, DUI; Stephen Colonial Drive.
·Mark Bird, 42, · Gallipolis
Refusal of treatment was
Ferry, W.Va., thett and resisting noted on a run to ali accident
arrest; and Steven R .
near the Silver Memorial
Meachum, 40, Wellston, DUI.
Bridge, and a run to CliffSide
Drive was cancelled

•

EMS ftlns

Cited by pollee

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by
Gallipolis City Police were
Brian Workman, 20, 2630 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis, window tint violation; and Diana
L. Lambert, 40, 568 Pine Hill
Road, Bidwell, improper
backing.

.Immunizations
scheduled

celled.
The board's next meeting
will be March 19 at 7 p.m. at
53 Shawnee Lane, Gallipofu.

Bloodmobile ·
stops lbursclay

License issued

Fire calls

•

AITest made

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Arthur Allen Tobin Jr., 19,
and
Bethany
LeeAnn
R eynolds, 19, both of ·
Pomeroy.

GALLIPOLIS - To rebuild
its inventory of blood supplies
for the area, Tri-State Red
Cross Blood Services' bloodmobile will be at St. Peter's
Epucopal Church, 541 SecSALEM CENTER - A
ond Ave., Gallipofu, on Thurs12-by-20
foot storage buildday from 11 :30 a.m.-6 p.m.
All area residents are ing owned by Carl Smith of
Salem Township was destroyed
encouraged to donate.
To be a blood donor, indi- by fire late Thursday.
Salem Towmi)ip Fire Chief
viduals must be at least 17,
weigh 105 pounds or more, be Dick Lambert said the storage
in good general health, and building contained over 200
not have donated blood with- Beanie Baby collectibles and a .1
number of other stuffed colin the past 56 days.
lectibles.
Donors can give blood
when taking most medica- · Salem VFD was assisted at
tions, including insulin and the scene by the Rutland Fire
high blood pressure medicine, Department and emergency
if their medical condition is squad. 1Wenty firefighters and
five trucks were at the scene
stable.
For more information, call for an hour.
There were no injuries.
t-800-GIVE-LIFE .

Fire deslroys
building

POINT PLJMSANT, W.Va.
Point Pleasant Police
arrested Tamara Sayre, 34,
Point Pleasant, Thursday at
about 9:26 p.m.
Sayre was stopped on a traffic violation on Viand Street
and charP;ed with third offense
DUI.
.
Sayre was taken to the
Mason County Jail.

1\vo charged

. ' ' .
A Valentines G;ft .
From .Thi! Heart ·

'.
~

th~~·

• •
.'

'.

ewnm,

..

FREE leaded crystal
box with purchase
of figurine.
A $28.50 SRP gift set.

...
I•

•1•111 (Gatpllttly

s"""-.ckd

betes Update and Education
Day has been set for Feb. 16
from 1-3 p.m. near the Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation
Department of Holzer Clinic.
The department is on the
first floor of the Dr. Charles E.
Holzer Jr. Surgery Center of
Holzer Medical Center.
·Insulin users can take
advantage of NOVO PEN 3,
and will also receive a pen at
no charge. The event is sponsored by Novo Nordisk Pharmaceuticals, HMC and Holzer Clinic.
For more information: contact Lori Cremeans at 4465080 or Debbie Barcus at
446-5421.

GLENWOOD, W.Va. - A
Mason County man is behind
bars in Cabell County follow·ing a stand-off with law
enforcement early Thursday.
Danny R. Reynolds, 30,
Glenwood, is charged with
felony wanton endangerment
following the cwo-hour incident on W.Va. 2; near the
Cabell-Mason County line.
He is in jail in lieu of$50,000
bond.
According to a Cabell
County Sheriff's Department
report, deputies began talking
to Reynolds, who had a rifle,
around 2:30 a.m. before he
laid down his gun at 4:30 a.m.
and was taken into custody.
After the incident, deputi~
from .Cabell and Mason counties reportedly found more
• Gt\LLIPOLIS - · State than a dozen weapons, includ- ·
ltep. John A. Carey, R-Well- ing rifles and a 9mrn handgun.
ston, will hold an open door
session on feb. 16 from 8:309:30 a.m. at the Gallia County
Courthouse.
Those with questions or
concerns about state aovernrnent are encouraged to ·
attend.

. With

Lo"""·

41!126!)965

.

.

'

'Fat y: ; valentine to a gi&amp; set that includes
"I'm Completely Suspended With Love," which · ,
will RETIRE on Valentine's Day, and a FREE lea,ded
crystal box. Visit us today for a gift that truly comes .,
from .your heart. But hurry, quantities are .limited. ' ,

..

FRUTH ··.
PHARMACY

.

j

•

CENTERVlU.B -

Rac-

coon 'Ibwnship Crime '\JVatch
will meet 1\tesday ac.7 p.m; in
the former Cmterville EJe..
· mentary School:

. .

GJIIIIII E-.. '"-P. Ia;.
Volir ,. ~""' •rll ~lr.•!"--.ct~~~~ •~ o.diii'I'U£ .

.,

.

··.

.. , ... .!..:

#97060

.. 1'1! ....., £SC.

)

,. ,-. :., .t
,

'· .;jr

'

(

!

I .

j

!. 1hefts report.d

I

1.

..I..
..

I

·t ---------~------~---------~------------duct an annual audit, practice
phase of the program.
•
Under the terms of the non-discrimination, have
•' .
grant from the National demonstrated the capacity to
I
•
fa• ..... A1
Board, local governmental or deliyer ·emergency food
'
private voluntary organiza- andl or shelter programs, and

.

Funds

I

I
•

I

.·I· .

.-

'; agencies

.

to receive these

: funds and any additional
.

• funds available under this

'

'

. 'I

•

19 meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction ·and Mental
Health Services has been can-

••

:l. :

I

Meetlna off
GALLIPOLIS - The Peb.

\

tions chosen to receive funds
must be non-profit, have an
accounting system and con-

6unbap -G:tmf 6mttnd
........*
Reader Services
c-

(IJIPIIIWII)

.,..

'-'·
---pold·
-

PllbiiUod tvay S1iUj, _IU 1\bd AMI.,
o•upoU• 0111o, br m. 01o1o Wto, l'ubUool,.

COrrlctlon Polioy

o.......................... ...

......... tr,.. lllow olu omr Ia a

B l•nd u lleoo4 ciUI

- . , . Olllo ... ollloo.

••111•1

Otlllpoll.

11111111 11

w...-, 1\1 Allodltld Plw. 11111 1M Ohio

lllorJ, ....... - - ot (740) """ ' =rxw~·'
:kadiddmtCORicdOMIDThl
2342 .. ,_,..,, ('7ofl) m-2155. Wa wW
S.atlael, 115 Tblrd /fit.,

.-..., 700r la!tNelloa aa4

coon lkillfnnulld.

••b 1 ._.,.n...
OalllpOI(o,OltloOOI.

llllfiiAY OI&lt;I.Y
~l.U'II

lrCintor•--

___,..._.._

GIIe -

.

Waller &amp;Drver

84011

sets only

OFF

IIYTI8 ·
LIT &amp; IDE 231Mf

Chll

RIDIII
ON SALE

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

MAIL 8UJ8CIIP110NS

Subscribe today.

Jl 'Ntlb. .............................""'"'''"'"""'"'''.$17.30

446-2342

....

the ah:ri~lon.
.

.

-c..c.no,

16 ...................................................151!2
52 WooD. ................................................... I\O!.l&lt;i

Susped held In slaying

; The chi~f didn't disclose the suspect's identity or
:Whether charges had been filed:Wright said the investi~ation was continuing and said further information ·
'Would be released next' week.
••: The chief referred questions to the Cuyahoga County
p rosecutor's office, where a message was left after busijless hours Friday evening.

C OLUMBUS (AP) T he state needs to do a better j ob monitoring foste r
homes and enforcing child
care rules, according to an
audit of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services issued Friday.
Auditor Jim Petro offered
9 1 recommendatio ns to
i!llprove O hio's child welfare
programs. T he audit examined 11 areas of hu man services, includi ng foste r· care
licensing, independent living
programs, child care services,
ch ild care licensing and
adoption services.
The audit recommends
spending $1 2 million to
meet all the recommendations, including $4 millio.n to
meet staffing levels· in
enforcement, licensing and
inspectio n areas. The department has included a number
of staffing positions in its
budget recommended by the

audit.
Jacqueline Romer-Senslcy, director of Job and Family Services, requested the
audit in April 1999, shortly
afte r becoming director. The
department
has already
implemented at least 59 of
the recomme n dations, she
said.
Romer-Sensky has been
criticized repeatedly in the
past few weeks for problems
with the department, but the
audit did not address those
criticisms.
Some lawmakers are con·
cerned about a proposal to
replace 56 walk-in unemployment offi ces with 21
phone centers.
Gov. Bob Taft has abo
o rdered R om er-Sensky to
explain · problems meeting
federal child care requirements. The state faces an $8
million federal fine for not
meeting those requirements.

DAYTON (AP) - Public
employees in five counties say
a robust economy redu ced the
amount of money local governments had to put into a
state retirement pension plan
and that. those savings should
have been returned to workers.
Lawyers for the employees
. filed s!lit Thursday against the
. counties and five cities within
th~m. accusing · the governments of wrongfully holding
on to the funds.
A favorable stock market
helped increase investment

revenues in 1999. It provided
the Ohio Public Employee
R etirement System a windfall
that reduced by 20 percent the
amount cities and counties
would have to contribute to
fund their workers' pensions.
Local governments should
have given that money .to the
employees as part of their
compensation package - but
did't, the lawsuit alleged. In at
least some cases, the local governments put the money back
into the general budget funds,
according to the lawsuit.
"The amount an employer

WASHINGTON (AP) The Pentagon on Friday
backed away from plans ·to
double its sale of a stockpiled
steel-making alloy, heeding .
warnings from an 0 hio company worried that the ' move
would drive down prices.
The only remaining North
American smelter of the alloy
called ferromanganese is
Eramet Marietta Inc. h
employs about 480 people in
Marietta, Ohio.
Dave Oliver, principal
deputy undersecretary of
defense, notified R ep. Ted
Strickland, D-Ohio, . that
50,000 tons of fe rrom a n~
ganese would· be released this
year from the National
Defense Stockpile.
The Pentagon ' previously
had proposed selling 100,000
tons of the alloy, which the
government keeps in a stockpile in · case of a wartime .
buildup of steel production .
Strickland said Eramet is
the largest industrial employer

:ilow

l i -....................................- .......... J109.12

' • ·

"

•

"

./i,a,ciaJ p/a~UeUuj.
J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

530 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
7 40.446.1986
BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUCATION PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING
JamMI. Mon'l..n .. R 11 I ucl """'llntlttv. of-lnd orr.n MCurltles lhi'OU(IIh Wslnut Strwt
lee~ lrpg., MwnMr 'N.UO &amp; 11'¢, J.l. Morrlton l Auoelst .. ll not 1f1ll6attd with ~IS.
(hcUfttltt acttvlltt ~ from I WSS offiCI focet.d 1132~ W. HendlfiOfl Rd.,
Columltul, OH e1~)

Bone Density Testing ........
_jf:vaifa6{e, at

2fofzer CCinic
A Bone DensHDmetry Test is the most practical way to accurately measure the density of your bones . It's also a good
way for your doctor to diagn.ose osteoporos is. It can even
help your doctor track your rate of bone loss.

Bone Density Testing:
• Safe
• Painless
• Non-Invasive
• Lasts only about 10 minutes

Risks for Osteoporosis
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Women who have gon• through menop•u•• •r• .t most rlak.
Smoking
Too much •lcohol
Too ntlll exercise
Too IIIIo colclum (now or •• • child) .
A previous brokiln bonelh•l roaulledfrom • minor Injury
C•rt•ln moelcllllona.auch •• aleroldl (commonly ,..d to lro•l •alhm• &amp; •rthrllls) •nd
lhyrold hormone (W doao b loo high)
'
Eorly monopa,.o (._fore ogo 415)

Ifyou tliini.,you an at risl(for osteoporosis, aiftyour aoctor wlietlier
you sliouiif luwe a 6one aensity test, or ca/I :Jl'oCzerCt:in;c 's &lt;Di4gnost;c
'I'uting Center in t]a!Iipo(i.s at (740)446-5289.

~HOLZER C LINI C

I

.

R~plwle~L

Jim Morrison, Certified Financial Planner

:tw

--C..'-

13 WloD. ...................- ..............................129.2S
16 WloD................................................... Jl6.18

'fO''""

. Pb..~iH'j /,M
j;HriilciaJ ~...

A Ragletered lnvaatment Advlaar

,

•
•
: CLEVELAND (AP) - No
t~arges. will be filed against a
;9&lt;&gt;wntown office worker who
t•rabbed · 1640,000 ~hat fell .
;from :m armored truek and
.
:kept im for two days.
; The three packages of cash .
thad been · missing since
· :wednesday morning, when
: th~ fell out of a back door of
~ ~AT SystemS armored truck
!~t had just lett the Federal
~ ~~;SerVe Bank. of Cleveland to
:!nalte deliveries .
; The truck's door had someopened and closed again,
:she FBI slid. The driver~! a
more blocka before dis- ·
: ~rinB the problem.

Athearn, Atlas,
Bachmann &amp;
Accessories
N \.1Uil

counties.

in Washington County, Ohio,
and the Pentagon decision
avoided "a dark scenariou for
that wmmunity.

..

1in missing
;money

K-Line,

contributes into the employee
pension fund functions as an
additional form of employment compensation for the .
employees;· ·the lawsuit states.
Named as defendants are
the cities ofDayton, Fairborn,
Springfield, Sidney and Piqua,
and the counties of Montgomery, Greene, Clark, Shelby
and Miami. Lawyers who filed
· the complaint asked the
Montgomery County Common Pleas Court to declare it
a class action representing all
public employees in the five

Pentagon decision on alloy
benef1ts Marietta plant ·

..

~S&amp;40.000

Six other residents of the
nursing home in Bellbrook,
about I 0 miles from Dayton,
became ill from the tank
mix-up Dec. 7. Four women
died of nitrogen asphyxiation, .where the brain is
depleted of oxygen.
Authorities said a maintenance worker removed a fitting from an empty oxygen
tank and used it as an
adap ter to connect the
nitrogen tank.
According to the Ohio
Departm ent of Health,
another maintenance worker who took delivery of the
tanks Nov. 29 had set the
nitrogen tank aside because
the fitting looked different.
T he nitrogen tan k had an
oxygen label partially covered by a smaller nitrogen
label, authorities said. Both
employees deny having seen
the nitrogen label.

in five counties want
pension plan fees retumed

I

!Man·retums

XENIA (AP) - A grand
jury handed up indictments
of involuntary manslaughter
and reckless homicide Friday in the deaths of four
nursing home residents ntista kenly · given ni trogen
instead of oxygen.
The Greene County
prosecutor said the indictments were against two
defendants, but he wo uld
not say whether they are
individuals or corporations.
H owever,
Prosecutor
William Schenck said the
grand jury didn't indict rwo
maintenance workers who
had contact with the nitrogen tank that was mistakenly connected to the oxygen
system at the Carriage-byLake nursing home. He said
the indictments also were
not against the . nursing
home administrator or anyone at t.he company that
delivered the nitrogen tank .

~mployees

••

='""ijii;'ij 'Oiii'~i; ;;:;;o·~

·=-.
.
.
.
,.. _

' "'

~orne.

should have ~ voluntary
board ·if they are a private
voluntary organization.
Qualifying organizations
are urged to apply for .the
funds, Edwards said.
Gallia and Meigs cpunties
have distributed Emergency
Food and Shelter funds previously to Gallia-Meigs
CM aJ!,d the Gallia County
Council on Aging. These
agencies were responsible for
providing me:ils · and utility
assistance.

,..,....,
· riaiiiO
tk
_
... periol.
... mar be lmplci!ICMI by '*ual•tbe chlmiOII of

; : CINCINNATI (AP) - High winds blew a 20-foot
~ 'teeple off a northern Kentucky church, caused AirCare
; In Cincinnati to be grounded and limited flights at
; Cincinnati/Northern · Kentucky International airport
~ friday night.
: ! Jim Lott, a National Weather Service meteorologist in
: Wilmington, said wiflds reached 30 mph, with gusts as
:· lligh as 40 mph at the airport in Boone County.
·: ' Dudley Smith, director of air and ground transporta;"Sion at University Hospital, .said pilots decided about
: 1:30 Friday to ground the one heiicopter they use
:between noon and midnight.
·
:· • Although helicopters can fly in winds up to 50 mph,
:high winds are not always good for patients.
;&lt; "We can actually fly now .. . but it was a decision based
~J.IlOre on the condition of the patient than the aircraft,"
:Smith said.
~ ·· Gerald Sandfoss, chief of the Central Campbell Coun:tY Fire District in northern Kentucky, said the wind
;blew a 20-foot steeple off its foundation at Rolling Hills
,. Christian Church. It damaged the roof on the way
.~down, then hit the side of the building and rolled onto
:some power lines facing
27 and landed on the side: walk.
;. ' "If the wires hadn't been there, it would have landed
; i~ traffic," Sandfoss said.
:·· ·The steeple damaged one of the electrical lines, but
.
1Cinergy crews quickly repaired it.
.. : Dave Woodburn, spokesman for Cinergy, said that at 3
1 p 1m., there were 2,400 hquseholds without power in the
Cincinnati area - 2,100 in Ohio and· 300 .in Kentucky.
By 9 p.m., all power had been restored except to about
~PO homes in Clermont County, he said.
· :! The Piqua post of the Ohio .Highway Patrol said an
'empty semitrailer truck was biown into the guard rail
;a1ong Interstate 75 just south of Anna, in ·west-central
;bhio, but there were no injuries.

:m

......- ...... _................................. Sl.IS

""_"',__

.

BAY VILLAGE (AP) -A suspect was arrested Friday
~ the· shooting d~ath of a man whose body was found
• the front yard of a lakefront home in this upscal'e
•
~leveland suburb.
:: Bay Village Police Chief David M. Wright said in a
'news release that an arrest had been made in the death
• Robert Cutler, 34, a roofer from · nearby Fairview
;ct
:Park.
; : His body was found outside a horne overlooking Lake
J?rie on Jan. 4. He had been shot in the head three times.
:: The homeowner saw a truck on the property and
~led police, who found the body near the home and
:iliitially theorized that the victim had fallen while doing
i.{ roof job. The victim hadn't been hired to work at the ·

Glle l'olt .................;.................................. $65.00
llllCU OOPr IIICI

'ht II*) n.. ''S'MI wUIIIOt btl 2 RI

j

.
'.

Dissolution flied

POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Beuie Mae Taylor and
Lawrence J." Taylor, both of .
Middleport.

AKRON (AP) - Prosecutors won't seek the death
renalty i? the third trial of a man charged ~ilh killing
a convemence store owner last year.
. The first two aggravated murder trials of Michael
~ , Roper, 25, .of Akron, ended in hung juries.
, . A third jury might be more willing to convict Rop er
· , 1f the death penalty isn't a possibility, Summit C ounty
Prosecutor She~ri Bevan Walsh said Friday night.
• ·· Instead, prosecutors will seek a life prison term,
•· accordmg to Walsh, who made the decision after meet '. ing with relatives of the victim, Taleb " Tom" Husein, 49,
. of Aleron .
·
·
' ·' Roper, whose trials ended without verdicts O ct. 6 and
Feb. 3, has said he was wrongly accused in a case of mistaken identity.
. . Husein was behind the counter at the Lakeshore
::· Parry Out when a gunman entered and fatally shot him
:: In the face . A friend witnessed the shooting and told
' . Police the attacker was a regular customer.
; The victim's · brother, also an Akron store owner•
txchanged gunfire last month with a holdup man who
. ;.lied and was struck by a car outside. The man died of a
; l!roken neck, but Saleh Husein escaped injury.
..

·-t•

e

I .

'

u.s.

788 North S.Cond Aile ·
Middleport, Ohio 45'780

Sln11llt1d

.

:Death penalty won't be sought

:·. Wind topples church steeple

Clreyvlslt

' .

,

,.

Diabetes update Glenwood man
jailed
GALLIPOLIS - A Dia-

GALLIPOLIS .
Free
immunizations will be provided by the Gallia County
Health Department on Thursday from 4-6 p.m. at the
health department, 499 Jackson Pike.
Chil~n in need of immuGALLIPOLJS - Gallipolis nizations must be accornpavolunteer firefighten respond- nied by a parent or legal
ed to four calls on Pric;lay, gUardian, and bring a current
including:
.
· immunization record with
• A three-aac brush fire at
212 Providence School. Road
vaccine will be available
in Clay 'lbwnship. just after at this clinic.
noon. firefighten were on the · Additional services, such as
scene for 1-1/2 houn.
blood preuui:e cbecka and
• .Elnen 6refipten went to pzegnancy ceats, will be offered
a bnllh fire at SWill Czeek duzina
houn at the
Road u a mutual aid requac health ct.panmea.t.
with the Gllyan 'lbwnshlpVol.unteer fire DepartmeDC ac
6:09p.m.
•
Eleven
SreSahcen
GALLIPoLIS - All who
responded to I billlh lrt IC
RU'l'LAND - A gospel
the G.W.poU. Dnelopmental IIIII in the 1\.io Grande com-•·
~.
3 rnunity choir !'or· the Martin · ling will be held feb. 24, 7
enter pi"'"" lfOWI"" ac 6: 5 Luther Kina Jr. Day PzoPm p.rn~ at the Rutland PteewUI
p.m. PiCt
llrd~"
011 Jan. 16 at 1\.io Gnnde are Baptist Chureh. 'Ilm sroups
•
een
...cen ukecl to attend a praccice on wUI sing and a love ofFering
zesponded to an electrical . feb. 19 at 7 p.m. at New Life will benefit the 11th annual
oudet shonaae at 471 Geora- Lutheran Church.
Bend Area Gospel Jubilee, ·
Czeek Rold at 8:20 p.m.
'
This particular gioup has May 16-20.
hem ulted to ling in Chillicothe on Peb. 24.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Rodney Rodgers, 21 ,
Ravenswood, was arrested
T hursday on warrants Tor
night-time burglary
•
He was arraigned by Magistrate Johnny Reynolds and
was placed on $10,000 bond.
He is still housed in the
Mason County Jail.
Timothy Neville, 19, Point
Pleasant, was also arrested' by
deputies Thursday. He was
arrested for driving revoked,
DUI and driving suspended
for unpaid citations.

Ohio needs to improve Grand jury indicts two
monitoring of child care in nursing home deaths ·

•

Dlagnoatlc Teetlng C•nt•r
00 J•ck •on PI~ •
G0111plla , OH 41M131

uo ..ue~ae

�Opinion
iunb~

PageA4
Sund•y. Februa.y 11. 2001

1timt5"' Jeattiattl

Point Plea11nt, W.Va.

Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.

COME IN, CD€
IN- W£'LL WATOI
~M&lt;M[(; ••
. PLAY mK VIIOili orft

· R. Shawn L.ewle
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

G,AM£G •••

Utttn to thl Mllor 4U"f w1kDM11. TM1 rhoultl bf J.rr llt.m Jt» wonh. A.U /Murr

i'

we

nWiff' lo •dilint tuul m111t b&lt;r rifttrd and iiKhuk llddrw11 W lflflltotu nutbfr.

No umitnM ltntrs will H pubJUIIH. Ldttt rhotUi lw itt root~ 111$, lllldrwrrU..
isrllllr, noJ JUnon~~liJicr.
·

Th• opir~iom •rfMIItd in tht coluMn NWw.,., tlw co111•nrw of tiN OlrW v.n.,
l'ubliJiritlf Co.'r tditDtjlll bollrd, unlu1 otlrrnrin rtoitd,
/

!
' I·

'

''

l

OUR VIEW
L

Rest easy

'

•

••

. 'J ~

•

•.
"
•

CSX decision to improve
· line is welcome news
CSX Transportation's decision to install heavier, stronger
rail on its, Huntington-Parkersburg ro'u te is welcome news
for the tri-county region, which has dealt with its share of
derailments in the last several years·.
The first IS miles of improved rail has been put down and
the remaining 39 miles is expected to be covered before
summer: Additionally, CSX will put in motion senson at
high densiry crossings, continue daily examinations of rightof-way and maintain a 15-day inspection cycle.
.
Mason County residents will no doubt rest easier when
the work is ·done, but so will folks in Gallia and Meigs.
A November 1998 derailment of a tanker car prompted a
shelter in place for the Point Pleasant-Gallipo)is area for part
of a day, while last September's 14-car pileup at Mason had
its impact on the Bend Area.
CSX took the first step towatd correcting the situation
when it voluntarily lowered the speed of its trains passing
through the area to 10 mph. The railroad's interest in being
a good neighbor and improving its safery record wa.s evident
then, and is going even further now.
The railroad has had a long COilPection with the tri-county and while ~eryice is pretty much limited to the West Virginia side of the river, CSX officials recognize that what they
do is being ·scrutinized by people all along the line.
That's why increasing the speed after the installation is a
concern. CSX isn't giving much thought to allowing trains
to go faster at this point. "We're just concerned about getting the track back up to the maximum authorized speeds ·
they were before," said CSX spokesman Gary Wollenhaupt.
When it comes to that point, we hope CSX will consider
the speed factor at some length.
.
· Everyone realizes the railroad has a timetable to meet and
customers to satisfy, but the folks who live along the lin~
have concerns that have to be weighed before the maximum
speed can be lifted.
.
For their sake, we hope CSX's c4:cision will keep their
safety in mind.

TODAY IN HIS-TORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Feb. 11 ,'the 42nd day of 2001. There are
323 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. It, 1861, President-elect Lincoln departed Springfield, IlL, for Wa.~hington.
·
. .
On this date:
In 1812, Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed a redi.stricting law favoring his party and giving rise to the term "gerrymandering."
·
'
In 1847, American inventor Tho= Alva Edison was born
' in Milan, Ohio.
In 1929, the Lateran-Treaty was signed, with Italy recognizing the independence and sovereignty ofVatican City. .
In 1937, a ·sit-down strike against General Moton ended,
with the company agreeing to recognize the United Automobile Workers Union.
In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin signed the
Yalta Agreement during World War IL
In 1972, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. and Life magazine
canceled plans to publish what had turned out to be a fake
autobiography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes,

I

GUEST VIEW

Proposed partnership idea whose time has come ·
The Ohio Board of Regents has it
right.
For too long, Southern Ohio and certainly all of Appalachia Ohio have been
overlooked - neglected, if you will by the rest of the state. Even with the
focus on the region once provided by
the venerable Wheelersburg · resident
Vern Riffe, the late speaker of the Ohio
House of Representatives, and forlller
Gov. Jim Rhodes, also a native of the
region, Ohioans' know little about
southern or Appalachia Ohio.
Even the dynamic economy of the
past eight years generally failed to trickle down to this forgotten .part of the
. state.
Now the Boatd of Regents wants .t o
do something to begin to change all
that.
Led by Chancellor Rod Chu, who has
often visited in this region, the board is
proposing an Appalachian initiative in
the next state operating budget.
Although only a miniscule' piece of
the entire budget (the Board of Regents
reconuriended $8 million, but the governor's highly constrained budget could
only provide $2.5 million), the
Appalachian N.W Economy Partn~rship
would help to train Appalachian residents to become even more self-sufficient.
A major role for the program would
be to assist Appalachian residents to
develop their own Jobs - largely ecommerce businesses over the Internet.
The approach is a natural one for· the
area. The people who .live here are
fiercely independent, hard-working

Dr.

·Barry
Dorsey
GUEST COUJMNISf

Appalachian Partnership, which will be
coordinated through Ohio University,
individuals will be able to enroll at Rio
Grande, Ohio University, Hocking Col~
lege, etc., to take the courses they need
to get started. Then they will only need
good ideas in order to develop their online businesses.
Will the program get funded?
Although there is no guarantee at thfs
point, with Rep. John Carey, from Wellston, as the new chairman of the House
Finance Committee, and Sen. Doug
White of Manchester, as the new chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
the program's future seems promising.
Perhaps these rwo leaden, who know
aod care deeply about Appalachia Ohio,
will even be able to get the funding back
to the level originally proposed by the
board of regents.
Appalachian· residents want to work.
But with mine closings and the loss of
hundreds of other jobs in various industries, along with threats of a geneial economic downturn throughout Ohio and
the nation, the possibility of landing a
new ,General Moton or Toyota plant ·in
the region is not likely. certainly in tile
short-term.
What better way for the state to help
its people to help themselves than by
providing the impetus for some creative
entrepreneurisml
·
I'm betting the proud and resourceful
residents of Appalachia will accept the

individuals who are willing to make less
money than their big-city counterparts
in order to enjoy the resources found
here: a beautiful envirqnment, a safe, easy
place to raise. children, etc. .
They only need help tb get started .and this is what the boatd of regents
proposes to provide.
Under the Appalachian Partnership
program, which has the strong support'
of Gov. Bob Taft who with First Lady
Hope ha5 an unusual understanding and
affinity for the area (Mrs. Taft, for
instance, celebrated the state's "Make A
Difference Day" at the University of
Rio Grande last October), Fesidents
would receive sufficient training in business and computers to enable them to
begin their businesses on-line.
The possibilities are endless. Already,
there is limited evidence of e-commerce
success in the region, but most potential
entrepreneurs need training to get their
challen~.
businesses underway.
This is where the region's colleges and
(Dr. Borry M. Dorsey is pre5ident of the
universities come into play. With the University of Rio Grande/Rio ·Gronde
financial resources provided · by the Community College.)

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

When the FirstAmendment meets reality

HINTON (AP) -A Connecticut man ha.~ received the
maximum &amp;entence for embezzling $7,000 from a Summen
County children's club while serving :tl. its executive director.
Summers Couqty Circuit Judge Robert Irons said
Christopher S. Hopkins, 30, ofWellingfotd, Conn., had vio~ted a. trust· by tili.n~ the money from the Summen Boys
and G1rls Club m Hmton. He said Hopkins &amp;hould have
been a role model for the children.
'
"They know that he stole their money. They know that
the club closed because he stole their money," Irons said.
Hopkins had pleaded guilty Dec. 19 to two mi&amp;demeanor
counts of embezdement. Irons sentenced Hopkins to one
year in jail on each count and ordered the sentences to be
served consecutively.
.
The embezzlement forced the club to close its doors and
made residents reluctant to support children's activities, said
Dr. Symon Satow,a member of the club's board of directors.
Prosecutors said the embezzlement occurred from February 1995 to July 1997.
H?pkin;; apologize~ to the Summen County community
and Its children for his "unprofeSSional mistakes."

HUNTINGTON (AP) - Gov. Bob Wise hopes to capitalize on California's electricity problems by luring blackout-weary high-tech companies to West Virginia.
The governor said. Friday he is sending !etten to numerous California companies empha.!izing West Virgioa's plentiful electricity supply and low rates, and a.~king them to consider relocating or expanding their operations to the state.
Sin&lt;e deregulating itS electricity market in 1996, Califqrnia has experienced rolling blackouts, power shortages and
escalating prices, which reached an all-time high la•t mmmer.
"There is no shortage of electrical power hCIIe,"Wise's letter states. He also claims the state -.is the country's largest
exporter of electricity, although he did not provide figures.
. Several California-ba.~ed companies already have contacted the Huntington · Area Development Corp., President
Jerry McDonald said.
- "This is a great way to market the state," McDonald said.
"We have some of the cheapest energy costs in the country. ·
Jn California, not only are they faced with rolling blackouts
and energy shortfalls, they are faced with high energy bills.
· "Our .real sales point here is the cost of our energy and the
,reliability of our energy."

Deer making deadly dives
BLUEFIELD,Va. (AP)- It may be time for a new river
sign under the Clyde Bowling Bridge. Something like
"Danger, Falling Deer."
.
, Ever since Pte bridge on state Route 102 w~ dedicated in
March.2000, the Virginia Department offransportation said
&lt;!~~~ ))av,~- l:l~n. a~~~l)g the 712-foot .span from a ne~by
mountain, being frightened by traffic and jumping.
The fall is about 120 feet to the Bluestone River and its

)lanks.
. "I don't know what can be done;'VDOT engineer Frank
Phipp,s said, adding the department ha5 received several
reports of jumping deer. "(The deer) may have been looking for an easier path to go down (the mountain):'
Officials have no idea how many deer have jumped to
their deaths, but the problem was discussed last week in
-Richmond when VDOT Conunissioner Charles D. Nottingham brought it up
, during a meeting with legislaton.
.

Glenville. WW •ye affiliation
GLENVILLE (AP) -Glenville State College's boatd has
authorized discus.sions with West Virginia Univeniry to
_explore a possible affiliation.
•
Thunday's vote was in response to legislation pwed la.~t
year aimed at improvements in higher education.
· The new law calls for the sharing of resources, technology and faculty, and for state univenities to ensure that every
region of th~ state has access to graduate level programs, par. ticularly in teacher education.
"Although these discussions are at a very preliminary
level, we see an outstanding opportunity for GSC students,
faculty arid staff, as well a.~ . the .citizens of central West Virginia, to benefit from a possible affiliation with West Virginia's flagship institution," said Glenville President Thomas
H. Powell.

CHARLESTON (AP) Some process that will be made public," Ring
employees of the former Union Carbide said.
Corp. have received notices that'they will
None of the 400 hourly workers at
not have jobs with Dow Chemical, a Dow's South Charleston plant were laid
company spokesman said.
off Friday, said Dale Martin, a representa"The process started today, and we tive of the International Association of
will not release information on where, or Machinist and Aerospace Workers union.
when, or that kind of thing," Dow The union does not represent salaries
'
spokesman Jerry Ring said Friday.
workers.
"This is a confidential process and we
Earlier in the week, Peter Berner, vice
have said repeatedly that we will treat president of Dow-West Virginia, warned
employees with the utmost respect aod .of layoffs in West Virginia.
dignity that they deserve and this.is not a
Union Carbide employed 2,600 peo-

CHARLESTON (AP) -. The deregulation of the' West Virginia electric
industry likely will not happen this year,
.House Speaker Bob Kiss says.
"ft appears now the decision has been
made to defer a decision," Kiss, D ~
Raleigh, said Thunday.
.
At the end of the 2000 legislative session, there was strong support fof opening up the electricity market to competition, Kis5 said.
All that W:tl left to do was tweak tax
statutes to ensure cities and towns didn't
lose utility tax revenue from deregulation. Deregulation was expected to easi-

HUNTINGTON (AP) Budget cuts and a recognition
that the city will end the fiscal
year with a deficit are part of
Huntington Mayor David
Felinton's plan to deal with a
$1.1 million deficit.
Feliiuon presented his plan
to City Council's administration and finance committee
onThunday.
Six city employees would
lose their jobs under Felinton's propo~al. The inspections
and compliance division
would move. to the Huntington Fire Department, where it
would be overseen · by the
state fire marshal. Other
departments' budgets would
be reduced.
He recommended reducing the amount spent on uniforms, training, office equip~
ment, supplies and books,
sand, gravel and asphalt. .
He also recommended that
several unfilled positions
remain vacant.
Felinton also hopes to gain
$25,000 from monthly Wild
Dawg ·saloon concerts benefiting the city.
He also proposed cutting
back funding to the workers
compensation internal service
fund, selling ambulance stations to Cabell County and
having an anmesty period for
people to pay delinquent
taxes and fees.

'.

.y;c

Mile Wll'l«&lt;ly

$31

P155/8tlA13

P155A13

P185/80R13 ~NW ........... ......... S28.115
P175180R13 XNW .... ................ $29.95
P185/75R14 XNW .................... t32.¥

P185170R14 ....... ...................... $44 .98
P205170R14 ...... ....................... $!52.22
P210/75R14 .............................$53, 1B
P215/60R16 ............. ................$61).68
HURRY QUANTmES LIM1TEO
NO RAIN CHECKS

P195/75R14 XNW .... ................ $33.95

1'236/75R15 XNW ................. ... $41 .115
. '
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

-or.
(, 0 00,•1'1411

INFINITRED

:. •eooo uu
P18S/70R13 P111!1/75R1~
P18S/75A14 P205/70A14
P215170R14

P225/80A18

AVAILABLE
" 45,000 Mile Treadllfe Warranly

(.ooo;!Yuu

Wlngfoot HP
99 SALE

Eagle GT II
75
SALE

SS5

$49

P185/60R14

P185/70R13 AWL

P195/60R15 .......................... ... $60.61
P20S/60A15 ........................... ..588.03
P205/65R15 ...... .......................$89.14

P185/80R14 SSL. .. ·.................... $53.75 I
P195/BOR14
P205/70R14 RW'-. ............ .......1511.75·
R215/70R14 RW, ..................... $81.00
P235/60R14 RW,.............. ....... $84.75
OTHER SIZES AT SIMIUAR SAVINGS

as, ......................s.•.rs

P20S/55R15 .. ... ........................$77.08
P235/55R18 ........................... .. $90. 16

OTHER SIZES AT SIMILAR SAVINGS

c.ooo;truu

WRANG.LER
RADIAL
~~ $
95 SALE

89

ONLY

Wran..,fer RT/S
95 SALE

$98

P235/75R15 S2

fA.

OWL

P245175R16 BS, ......................... .$79.95
P265/75R16 OWL ...................... $143.00
P251l/70A16 OWL.. ................ .... $104.95
OTHE~ SIZES AVAILABLE

P205175R15 P225175A 15
P215/75R15 P235/75A15
ALL TIRES OWL

lUll SIIVKI

'

ONLY

t
II

why

I

S89's ::

$2495 : $41''
~
•

e'::

1

EXPIRES 2/17/01

I

1

I I

BAmRY
:
AS LOW AS
I

I

1 1

I I"'""" oow bnoko ,...,,
&lt;ooondllk&gt;o rolo .. : 1I I
I ~~~~~~:.n.
. tr, 1:;~~h~:;,.rx:
I INCLUDES DRAIN 01.0 COOLANT I INSTALl
I COil. 1~ offlf'Y lddltiQnaJ Pt"- or labor I I UP T02 GAl. OF NEW COOLANT. DOES NOT
I with this coupon. Some VehlcfH 14141 e1 I I
INCWDE EXTENDED Llff COOLANT.
EAtra COlt. Shop fn May Apply.
1·
DtSPOSM.. FEE MAY APPL.Y.

EXPIRES 21\7~1

I I

·: I
1 1
I
I

WITH

EXCHANGE

' '

I

1I
1
I
1

I

~--·-············-1···-···--------··········-····----­
......................................................
: 1811111'11- SERVICE

: IIUUNIII
I
I

I

$5495
•

I

I
1

,

I

: : COMJIUIERIZED au.IIT : : ~ Chlckentl fill :
: : $34ts $49" $Sf" : :
. Poofelli111l 011Ciu~~~t:
I I ~CIIOIT- I I, rhlh....bnod
Only $19'$ I
I

I

Drtlft 014 FlUid. Atpl- fMier Whtrt Appllollllt,

N.w.!.~',_":«;'E:.u~~'*'

I

lntlaH Ntw Pan Oltlctt Whertl A~~. Fll Will'\ ·

c _,
-

(Mil'

·-

I
v.cust V.CUS)
I
•
.
I UMITID WARRANTY 6 MONTHS OR 8,000
I.
MILES WHICHEVER COMES FIRST
I
ADDITIONAL PARTS &amp; LABOA EXTRA
I
EXPIFIES2117!0t
I H0 OTHER OISCOUNTS ~V SMOP FEE MAHPPL\'

II
I
I

I

I

II oll4)to5qtt
•LlGielttt,_. ~·
I I ' ~new filter
• ""'*t IPQ!Icll* 211 101
I I :fnlr*\lll~tr
·~&amp;fillulllldlld.:
I 1 , lnlpCUXIIriOI M9trtt
Wlndlhield ~~ lluid,
I
~
powerlte«ing fttld,
I I
tifl WIW
lrlllllflisaion fluid,
I 1 k'llpectll&amp;pdlon&amp;
antlreeze&amp;lnl'lllltlrel
I I st..ing COITipOIW'II$
lo propll' Pfii'Ufl. .

lnlpKt-

:Chick

.................. ........ . ..... -·
Difpottj'-MtyAppy

iXPIR£12·17.01. MUST ~VE COUI'Otl

I
I

'

OAK HILL

BANKS

500 Jrd /we. Qollipolb. 44fi.0315
201 5. Front St Oak HOI 682-7733
All"'-"' neulljloltoapprovl!l. R-IUIIjloiiO oiMinge whhOuiiiOitce. Payment example: ~
a't100,000 loin would~ In 110 ~y peymtnll o1 ..12.•• 20% down or oqulty
,.qulnd. L0ww dOMI peymenta and lonf Ierma ... IYIIIIbll.

•.

sgges sALE
OTHER SIZES

Huny CluaniOIH UmHtd, No Rain Cl1ockl
75,000 Mile TreadMte W1rranty

c.ooo;!Yuu

EAGLE GA

OHLv

fA.

ONLY

I

rllfiRBIIt:BI

'

REGAn
A
&amp;5.000
00 SALE

. .... ~;;~~-: fiuiti -~.FiLL: fiiiii-60 "Moiiii ·:

1111111 Ill lillY

..
••

tion."

"We ought to be going slow on
deregulation," Wise said, addin g, "I'm not
saying junk it."
Senate Majority Leader Tr um an
Chafin, D-Mingo, said Californi a's woes
have crippled support for deregulation in
West Virginia.
"I expect they will not take it up this
year because of the problems that are
apparent to everyone," Chafin said.
Since deregulating its electr.icity market in 1996, California has experi enced
rolling blackouts, power sh o r~t ge&lt; and
escalating prices, which rea ch ed an alltime high last summer.

f, 0 0111•1'f4U

I

.-

ly pass in this year's legislative session,
which begins Wednesday.
Now, a legislative subcommittee has
hired a consultant to look at the tax
implications of deregulation. The Legislature will not take any action on the
power plan at lea.~t until the consultant is
finished, Kiss said.
·
"I think the cautious approach is the
better approach," said PSC Utilities Division Director David Ellis. The plan will
suffer no damage with the wait, he said.
Gov. Bob Wise said earlier this month
the plan needs "more thought and reflec-

Mayor lays
out plan to
solve city's
problems ·

,,.., ,,..,,

Dear Editor:
.
Why there's so many accidents here? I can't believe ·what I see
every day. Where did these people get their licenses?
Someone just wasn't doing their job. I see people trying to park
if they can't drive in. They can't do it. I se~ people tili.ng curves
on the wrong side of the mad. I see driven way left of cenrer on
a hill.
.
·
.
I can be driving 50 miles per hour and dtivers .are on my
bumper. So close I can't see their license plares. If you'll notice, 70
percem of accidents are rear-end collisions.
.
What do these people expect? Yet when they have ao ac~ident,
they try to blame the other party. Even in heavy traffic, I try to
stay a couple of can'length behind. I try to let others out of the
shopping centers on Route 7 regardless of the horn blowers who
are going nowhere behind me, bumper to bumper.
John W. .Duncan
Vinton

pie in the Kanawha Valley, about 1,800 at
the Tech center, 700 at th e Sou th
Charleston plant and 140 at the Institute
plant
,
Ring said the Kanawha Valley's
finance, information technology and
purcha.~ing units will be moved &lt;to other
Dow locations. The future of the engineering department has not been d_etermined.
Meanwhile,
Dow
on
Fri day
announced it will buy EniChem S.p.A.
of Italy's polyurethanes business.

Deregulation will not happen this year, Kiss says

ORTGAGE
RATES ARE

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Here~

iounba!' 1:imr• -iorntinrl • Page AS

Dow begins consolidation with carbide

Wise wooing power finns
'·

·,•

Porneroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaaent, WV

MOUNTAIN
BRIEFS

•

Galllpona, Ohio • Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

.•

· Sunday, February 11,2001

..

1

:
1
I
I

I·

�Opinion
iunb~

PageA4
Sund•y. Februa.y 11. 2001

1timt5"' Jeattiattl

Point Plea11nt, W.Va.

Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.

COME IN, CD€
IN- W£'LL WATOI
~M&lt;M[(; ••
. PLAY mK VIIOili orft

· R. Shawn L.ewle
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

G,AM£G •••

Utttn to thl Mllor 4U"f w1kDM11. TM1 rhoultl bf J.rr llt.m Jt» wonh. A.U /Murr

i'

we

nWiff' lo •dilint tuul m111t b&lt;r rifttrd and iiKhuk llddrw11 W lflflltotu nutbfr.

No umitnM ltntrs will H pubJUIIH. Ldttt rhotUi lw itt root~ 111$, lllldrwrrU..
isrllllr, noJ JUnon~~liJicr.
·

Th• opir~iom •rfMIItd in tht coluMn NWw.,., tlw co111•nrw of tiN OlrW v.n.,
l'ubliJiritlf Co.'r tditDtjlll bollrd, unlu1 otlrrnrin rtoitd,
/

!
' I·

'

''

l

OUR VIEW
L

Rest easy

'

•

••

. 'J ~

•

•.
"
•

CSX decision to improve
· line is welcome news
CSX Transportation's decision to install heavier, stronger
rail on its, Huntington-Parkersburg ro'u te is welcome news
for the tri-county region, which has dealt with its share of
derailments in the last several years·.
The first IS miles of improved rail has been put down and
the remaining 39 miles is expected to be covered before
summer: Additionally, CSX will put in motion senson at
high densiry crossings, continue daily examinations of rightof-way and maintain a 15-day inspection cycle.
.
Mason County residents will no doubt rest easier when
the work is ·done, but so will folks in Gallia and Meigs.
A November 1998 derailment of a tanker car prompted a
shelter in place for the Point Pleasant-Gallipo)is area for part
of a day, while last September's 14-car pileup at Mason had
its impact on the Bend Area.
CSX took the first step towatd correcting the situation
when it voluntarily lowered the speed of its trains passing
through the area to 10 mph. The railroad's interest in being
a good neighbor and improving its safery record wa.s evident
then, and is going even further now.
The railroad has had a long COilPection with the tri-county and while ~eryice is pretty much limited to the West Virginia side of the river, CSX officials recognize that what they
do is being ·scrutinized by people all along the line.
That's why increasing the speed after the installation is a
concern. CSX isn't giving much thought to allowing trains
to go faster at this point. "We're just concerned about getting the track back up to the maximum authorized speeds ·
they were before," said CSX spokesman Gary Wollenhaupt.
When it comes to that point, we hope CSX will consider
the speed factor at some length.
.
· Everyone realizes the railroad has a timetable to meet and
customers to satisfy, but the folks who live along the lin~
have concerns that have to be weighed before the maximum
speed can be lifted.
.
For their sake, we hope CSX's c4:cision will keep their
safety in mind.

TODAY IN HIS-TORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Feb. 11 ,'the 42nd day of 2001. There are
323 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. It, 1861, President-elect Lincoln departed Springfield, IlL, for Wa.~hington.
·
. .
On this date:
In 1812, Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed a redi.stricting law favoring his party and giving rise to the term "gerrymandering."
·
'
In 1847, American inventor Tho= Alva Edison was born
' in Milan, Ohio.
In 1929, the Lateran-Treaty was signed, with Italy recognizing the independence and sovereignty ofVatican City. .
In 1937, a ·sit-down strike against General Moton ended,
with the company agreeing to recognize the United Automobile Workers Union.
In 1945, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin signed the
Yalta Agreement during World War IL
In 1972, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. and Life magazine
canceled plans to publish what had turned out to be a fake
autobiography of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes,

I

GUEST VIEW

Proposed partnership idea whose time has come ·
The Ohio Board of Regents has it
right.
For too long, Southern Ohio and certainly all of Appalachia Ohio have been
overlooked - neglected, if you will by the rest of the state. Even with the
focus on the region once provided by
the venerable Wheelersburg · resident
Vern Riffe, the late speaker of the Ohio
House of Representatives, and forlller
Gov. Jim Rhodes, also a native of the
region, Ohioans' know little about
southern or Appalachia Ohio.
Even the dynamic economy of the
past eight years generally failed to trickle down to this forgotten .part of the
. state.
Now the Boatd of Regents wants .t o
do something to begin to change all
that.
Led by Chancellor Rod Chu, who has
often visited in this region, the board is
proposing an Appalachian initiative in
the next state operating budget.
Although only a miniscule' piece of
the entire budget (the Board of Regents
reconuriended $8 million, but the governor's highly constrained budget could
only provide $2.5 million), the
Appalachian N.W Economy Partn~rship
would help to train Appalachian residents to become even more self-sufficient.
A major role for the program would
be to assist Appalachian residents to
develop their own Jobs - largely ecommerce businesses over the Internet.
The approach is a natural one for· the
area. The people who .live here are
fiercely independent, hard-working

Dr.

·Barry
Dorsey
GUEST COUJMNISf

Appalachian Partnership, which will be
coordinated through Ohio University,
individuals will be able to enroll at Rio
Grande, Ohio University, Hocking Col~
lege, etc., to take the courses they need
to get started. Then they will only need
good ideas in order to develop their online businesses.
Will the program get funded?
Although there is no guarantee at thfs
point, with Rep. John Carey, from Wellston, as the new chairman of the House
Finance Committee, and Sen. Doug
White of Manchester, as the new chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
the program's future seems promising.
Perhaps these rwo leaden, who know
aod care deeply about Appalachia Ohio,
will even be able to get the funding back
to the level originally proposed by the
board of regents.
Appalachian· residents want to work.
But with mine closings and the loss of
hundreds of other jobs in various industries, along with threats of a geneial economic downturn throughout Ohio and
the nation, the possibility of landing a
new ,General Moton or Toyota plant ·in
the region is not likely. certainly in tile
short-term.
What better way for the state to help
its people to help themselves than by
providing the impetus for some creative
entrepreneurisml
·
I'm betting the proud and resourceful
residents of Appalachia will accept the

individuals who are willing to make less
money than their big-city counterparts
in order to enjoy the resources found
here: a beautiful envirqnment, a safe, easy
place to raise. children, etc. .
They only need help tb get started .and this is what the boatd of regents
proposes to provide.
Under the Appalachian Partnership
program, which has the strong support'
of Gov. Bob Taft who with First Lady
Hope ha5 an unusual understanding and
affinity for the area (Mrs. Taft, for
instance, celebrated the state's "Make A
Difference Day" at the University of
Rio Grande last October), Fesidents
would receive sufficient training in business and computers to enable them to
begin their businesses on-line.
The possibilities are endless. Already,
there is limited evidence of e-commerce
success in the region, but most potential
entrepreneurs need training to get their
challen~.
businesses underway.
This is where the region's colleges and
(Dr. Borry M. Dorsey is pre5ident of the
universities come into play. With the University of Rio Grande/Rio ·Gronde
financial resources provided · by the Community College.)

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

When the FirstAmendment meets reality

HINTON (AP) -A Connecticut man ha.~ received the
maximum &amp;entence for embezzling $7,000 from a Summen
County children's club while serving :tl. its executive director.
Summers Couqty Circuit Judge Robert Irons said
Christopher S. Hopkins, 30, ofWellingfotd, Conn., had vio~ted a. trust· by tili.n~ the money from the Summen Boys
and G1rls Club m Hmton. He said Hopkins &amp;hould have
been a role model for the children.
'
"They know that he stole their money. They know that
the club closed because he stole their money," Irons said.
Hopkins had pleaded guilty Dec. 19 to two mi&amp;demeanor
counts of embezdement. Irons sentenced Hopkins to one
year in jail on each count and ordered the sentences to be
served consecutively.
.
The embezzlement forced the club to close its doors and
made residents reluctant to support children's activities, said
Dr. Symon Satow,a member of the club's board of directors.
Prosecutors said the embezzlement occurred from February 1995 to July 1997.
H?pkin;; apologize~ to the Summen County community
and Its children for his "unprofeSSional mistakes."

HUNTINGTON (AP) - Gov. Bob Wise hopes to capitalize on California's electricity problems by luring blackout-weary high-tech companies to West Virginia.
The governor said. Friday he is sending !etten to numerous California companies empha.!izing West Virgioa's plentiful electricity supply and low rates, and a.~king them to consider relocating or expanding their operations to the state.
Sin&lt;e deregulating itS electricity market in 1996, Califqrnia has experienced rolling blackouts, power shortages and
escalating prices, which reached an all-time high la•t mmmer.
"There is no shortage of electrical power hCIIe,"Wise's letter states. He also claims the state -.is the country's largest
exporter of electricity, although he did not provide figures.
. Several California-ba.~ed companies already have contacted the Huntington · Area Development Corp., President
Jerry McDonald said.
- "This is a great way to market the state," McDonald said.
"We have some of the cheapest energy costs in the country. ·
Jn California, not only are they faced with rolling blackouts
and energy shortfalls, they are faced with high energy bills.
· "Our .real sales point here is the cost of our energy and the
,reliability of our energy."

Deer making deadly dives
BLUEFIELD,Va. (AP)- It may be time for a new river
sign under the Clyde Bowling Bridge. Something like
"Danger, Falling Deer."
.
, Ever since Pte bridge on state Route 102 w~ dedicated in
March.2000, the Virginia Department offransportation said
&lt;!~~~ ))av,~- l:l~n. a~~~l)g the 712-foot .span from a ne~by
mountain, being frightened by traffic and jumping.
The fall is about 120 feet to the Bluestone River and its

)lanks.
. "I don't know what can be done;'VDOT engineer Frank
Phipp,s said, adding the department ha5 received several
reports of jumping deer. "(The deer) may have been looking for an easier path to go down (the mountain):'
Officials have no idea how many deer have jumped to
their deaths, but the problem was discussed last week in
-Richmond when VDOT Conunissioner Charles D. Nottingham brought it up
, during a meeting with legislaton.
.

Glenville. WW •ye affiliation
GLENVILLE (AP) -Glenville State College's boatd has
authorized discus.sions with West Virginia Univeniry to
_explore a possible affiliation.
•
Thunday's vote was in response to legislation pwed la.~t
year aimed at improvements in higher education.
· The new law calls for the sharing of resources, technology and faculty, and for state univenities to ensure that every
region of th~ state has access to graduate level programs, par. ticularly in teacher education.
"Although these discussions are at a very preliminary
level, we see an outstanding opportunity for GSC students,
faculty arid staff, as well a.~ . the .citizens of central West Virginia, to benefit from a possible affiliation with West Virginia's flagship institution," said Glenville President Thomas
H. Powell.

CHARLESTON (AP) Some process that will be made public," Ring
employees of the former Union Carbide said.
Corp. have received notices that'they will
None of the 400 hourly workers at
not have jobs with Dow Chemical, a Dow's South Charleston plant were laid
company spokesman said.
off Friday, said Dale Martin, a representa"The process started today, and we tive of the International Association of
will not release information on where, or Machinist and Aerospace Workers union.
when, or that kind of thing," Dow The union does not represent salaries
'
spokesman Jerry Ring said Friday.
workers.
"This is a confidential process and we
Earlier in the week, Peter Berner, vice
have said repeatedly that we will treat president of Dow-West Virginia, warned
employees with the utmost respect aod .of layoffs in West Virginia.
dignity that they deserve and this.is not a
Union Carbide employed 2,600 peo-

CHARLESTON (AP) -. The deregulation of the' West Virginia electric
industry likely will not happen this year,
.House Speaker Bob Kiss says.
"ft appears now the decision has been
made to defer a decision," Kiss, D ~
Raleigh, said Thunday.
.
At the end of the 2000 legislative session, there was strong support fof opening up the electricity market to competition, Kis5 said.
All that W:tl left to do was tweak tax
statutes to ensure cities and towns didn't
lose utility tax revenue from deregulation. Deregulation was expected to easi-

HUNTINGTON (AP) Budget cuts and a recognition
that the city will end the fiscal
year with a deficit are part of
Huntington Mayor David
Felinton's plan to deal with a
$1.1 million deficit.
Feliiuon presented his plan
to City Council's administration and finance committee
onThunday.
Six city employees would
lose their jobs under Felinton's propo~al. The inspections
and compliance division
would move. to the Huntington Fire Department, where it
would be overseen · by the
state fire marshal. Other
departments' budgets would
be reduced.
He recommended reducing the amount spent on uniforms, training, office equip~
ment, supplies and books,
sand, gravel and asphalt. .
He also recommended that
several unfilled positions
remain vacant.
Felinton also hopes to gain
$25,000 from monthly Wild
Dawg ·saloon concerts benefiting the city.
He also proposed cutting
back funding to the workers
compensation internal service
fund, selling ambulance stations to Cabell County and
having an anmesty period for
people to pay delinquent
taxes and fees.

'.

.y;c

Mile Wll'l«&lt;ly

$31

P155/8tlA13

P155A13

P185/80R13 ~NW ........... ......... S28.115
P175180R13 XNW .... ................ $29.95
P185/75R14 XNW .................... t32.¥

P185170R14 ....... ...................... $44 .98
P205170R14 ...... ....................... $!52.22
P210/75R14 .............................$53, 1B
P215/60R16 ............. ................$61).68
HURRY QUANTmES LIM1TEO
NO RAIN CHECKS

P195/75R14 XNW .... ................ $33.95

1'236/75R15 XNW ................. ... $41 .115
. '
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

-or.
(, 0 00,•1'1411

INFINITRED

:. •eooo uu
P18S/70R13 P111!1/75R1~
P18S/75A14 P205/70A14
P215170R14

P225/80A18

AVAILABLE
" 45,000 Mile Treadllfe Warranly

(.ooo;!Yuu

Wlngfoot HP
99 SALE

Eagle GT II
75
SALE

SS5

$49

P185/60R14

P185/70R13 AWL

P195/60R15 .......................... ... $60.61
P20S/60A15 ........................... ..588.03
P205/65R15 ...... .......................$89.14

P185/80R14 SSL. .. ·.................... $53.75 I
P195/BOR14
P205/70R14 RW'-. ............ .......1511.75·
R215/70R14 RW, ..................... $81.00
P235/60R14 RW,.............. ....... $84.75
OTHER SIZES AT SIMIUAR SAVINGS

as, ......................s.•.rs

P20S/55R15 .. ... ........................$77.08
P235/55R18 ........................... .. $90. 16

OTHER SIZES AT SIMILAR SAVINGS

c.ooo;truu

WRANG.LER
RADIAL
~~ $
95 SALE

89

ONLY

Wran..,fer RT/S
95 SALE

$98

P235/75R15 S2

fA.

OWL

P245175R16 BS, ......................... .$79.95
P265/75R16 OWL ...................... $143.00
P251l/70A16 OWL.. ................ .... $104.95
OTHE~ SIZES AVAILABLE

P205175R15 P225175A 15
P215/75R15 P235/75A15
ALL TIRES OWL

lUll SIIVKI

'

ONLY

t
II

why

I

S89's ::

$2495 : $41''
~
•

e'::

1

EXPIRES 2/17/01

I

1

I I

BAmRY
:
AS LOW AS
I

I

1 1

I I"'""" oow bnoko ,...,,
&lt;ooondllk&gt;o rolo .. : 1I I
I ~~~~~~:.n.
. tr, 1:;~~h~:;,.rx:
I INCLUDES DRAIN 01.0 COOLANT I INSTALl
I COil. 1~ offlf'Y lddltiQnaJ Pt"- or labor I I UP T02 GAl. OF NEW COOLANT. DOES NOT
I with this coupon. Some VehlcfH 14141 e1 I I
INCWDE EXTENDED Llff COOLANT.
EAtra COlt. Shop fn May Apply.
1·
DtSPOSM.. FEE MAY APPL.Y.

EXPIRES 21\7~1

I I

·: I
1 1
I
I

WITH

EXCHANGE

' '

I

1I
1
I
1

I

~--·-············-1···-···--------··········-····----­
......................................................
: 1811111'11- SERVICE

: IIUUNIII
I
I

I

$5495
•

I

I
1

,

I

: : COMJIUIERIZED au.IIT : : ~ Chlckentl fill :
: : $34ts $49" $Sf" : :
. Poofelli111l 011Ciu~~~t:
I I ~CIIOIT- I I, rhlh....bnod
Only $19'$ I
I

I

Drtlft 014 FlUid. Atpl- fMier Whtrt Appllollllt,

N.w.!.~',_":«;'E:.u~~'*'

I

lntlaH Ntw Pan Oltlctt Whertl A~~. Fll Will'\ ·

c _,
-

(Mil'

·-

I
v.cust V.CUS)
I
•
.
I UMITID WARRANTY 6 MONTHS OR 8,000
I.
MILES WHICHEVER COMES FIRST
I
ADDITIONAL PARTS &amp; LABOA EXTRA
I
EXPIFIES2117!0t
I H0 OTHER OISCOUNTS ~V SMOP FEE MAHPPL\'

II
I
I

I

I

II oll4)to5qtt
•LlGielttt,_. ~·
I I ' ~new filter
• ""'*t IPQ!Icll* 211 101
I I :fnlr*\lll~tr
·~&amp;fillulllldlld.:
I 1 , lnlpCUXIIriOI M9trtt
Wlndlhield ~~ lluid,
I
~
powerlte«ing fttld,
I I
tifl WIW
lrlllllflisaion fluid,
I 1 k'llpectll&amp;pdlon&amp;
antlreeze&amp;lnl'lllltlrel
I I st..ing COITipOIW'II$
lo propll' Pfii'Ufl. .

lnlpKt-

:Chick

.................. ........ . ..... -·
Difpottj'-MtyAppy

iXPIR£12·17.01. MUST ~VE COUI'Otl

I
I

'

OAK HILL

BANKS

500 Jrd /we. Qollipolb. 44fi.0315
201 5. Front St Oak HOI 682-7733
All"'-"' neulljloltoapprovl!l. R-IUIIjloiiO oiMinge whhOuiiiOitce. Payment example: ~
a't100,000 loin would~ In 110 ~y peymtnll o1 ..12.•• 20% down or oqulty
,.qulnd. L0ww dOMI peymenta and lonf Ierma ... IYIIIIbll.

•.

sgges sALE
OTHER SIZES

Huny CluaniOIH UmHtd, No Rain Cl1ockl
75,000 Mile TreadMte W1rranty

c.ooo;!Yuu

EAGLE GA

OHLv

fA.

ONLY

I

rllfiRBIIt:BI

'

REGAn
A
&amp;5.000
00 SALE

. .... ~;;~~-: fiuiti -~.FiLL: fiiiii-60 "Moiiii ·:

1111111 Ill lillY

..
••

tion."

"We ought to be going slow on
deregulation," Wise said, addin g, "I'm not
saying junk it."
Senate Majority Leader Tr um an
Chafin, D-Mingo, said Californi a's woes
have crippled support for deregulation in
West Virginia.
"I expect they will not take it up this
year because of the problems that are
apparent to everyone," Chafin said.
Since deregulating its electr.icity market in 1996, California has experi enced
rolling blackouts, power sh o r~t ge&lt; and
escalating prices, which rea ch ed an alltime high last summer.

f, 0 0111•1'f4U

I

.-

ly pass in this year's legislative session,
which begins Wednesday.
Now, a legislative subcommittee has
hired a consultant to look at the tax
implications of deregulation. The Legislature will not take any action on the
power plan at lea.~t until the consultant is
finished, Kiss said.
·
"I think the cautious approach is the
better approach," said PSC Utilities Division Director David Ellis. The plan will
suffer no damage with the wait, he said.
Gov. Bob Wise said earlier this month
the plan needs "more thought and reflec-

Mayor lays
out plan to
solve city's
problems ·

,,.., ,,..,,

Dear Editor:
.
Why there's so many accidents here? I can't believe ·what I see
every day. Where did these people get their licenses?
Someone just wasn't doing their job. I see people trying to park
if they can't drive in. They can't do it. I se~ people tili.ng curves
on the wrong side of the mad. I see driven way left of cenrer on
a hill.
.
·
.
I can be driving 50 miles per hour and dtivers .are on my
bumper. So close I can't see their license plares. If you'll notice, 70
percem of accidents are rear-end collisions.
.
What do these people expect? Yet when they have ao ac~ident,
they try to blame the other party. Even in heavy traffic, I try to
stay a couple of can'length behind. I try to let others out of the
shopping centers on Route 7 regardless of the horn blowers who
are going nowhere behind me, bumper to bumper.
John W. .Duncan
Vinton

pie in the Kanawha Valley, about 1,800 at
the Tech center, 700 at th e Sou th
Charleston plant and 140 at the Institute
plant
,
Ring said the Kanawha Valley's
finance, information technology and
purcha.~ing units will be moved &lt;to other
Dow locations. The future of the engineering department has not been d_etermined.
Meanwhile,
Dow
on
Fri day
announced it will buy EniChem S.p.A.
of Italy's polyurethanes business.

Deregulation will not happen this year, Kiss says

ORTGAGE
RATES ARE

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Here~

iounba!' 1:imr• -iorntinrl • Page AS

Dow begins consolidation with carbide

Wise wooing power finns
'·

·,•

Porneroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaaent, WV

MOUNTAIN
BRIEFS

•

Galllpona, Ohio • Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

.•

· Sunday, February 11,2001

..

1

:
1
I
I

I·

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV ·

Page A8 • &amp;unbap 1Jimtll-&amp;tntintl

.- Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

•

Deaths

.

Fair

I:
'

Donald R. Fents

'

Lewis Edward Henry

DJFS

•
•

••

•

•'

"'••
••
'•

Charles came_ron weekley

•

••

Life

l·.

f

•

. •
:. '~::" ..
·}

' .
'' \ .

;~
I •
I

,

,
:_
,
il.

Kristian Isaiah Wicker

---""'!!'"-.... . . . . .
yoa
yoa

I •

•

t

•'

. I &amp;ftog TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I
I
I
I
: cin Toll Frtt

r.

f
'' I'
'I
'I

:,
rI

'

;.
r•
r•
r~

•

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"We Care For You Like Family"
1

70 Pine Street

OH

(740) 440-7283

your familY.

'

•

i.

,.,.

......

family have

·1

I•

•

----------E HEARING -TESTS

f:.

,.•.•
,•.
••

Slayer will drop appeal
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The man who killed Bill Cosby's
son abruptly dropped his appeal and admitted his guilt, say,• ing it was time for him to "do the right thing."
.. In a handwritten letter to Deputy Attorney General Kyle
Brodie that was released Friday, Mikhail Markhasev, 22, also
• apologized to Ennis Cosby's family for what he called a

to aid quake victims

Edison •pgdam' Mayes Jr.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - An Indiana company is recalling 6,000 pounds of duckling products that may be contarn. ,inated with a bacteria that can cause fatal food poisoning.
J,
The duckling products were distributed Jan. 10 by Serenade Foods Inc. - which also does business as Maple Leaf
" Farms - to restaurants and other food establishments in 11
· states, the U.S. Department of Agriculture satd. Friday.
USDA said the products may be contaminated with Listeria monoc'ytogenes, a strain of bacteria that can cause a
,.: potentially fatal form of food . poisoning. The agency said,
, there have been no reports of illness linked to the recalled
products.
Officials said the company notified the USDA of the vol_unrary recall after tests detected the presence oflisteria.
Recalled are these products:
' • Sysco Imperial partially boned fully cooked roasted
' young duckling halves in 8.25-pound boxes with a box code
of011001.
·
. ~;' • Maple Leaf Farms partially boned roasted young duckling
,; halves in 7.5-pound boxes with a package code of 1010. .
,., All the recalled products bear the number "EST.P-2375"
. inside the USDA seal of inspection.

ADRA scrambles

Goal

)

Nil¥! remain missing after U.S. sub·hits fishing boat

Rain may return Sunday

from,...A1

w;~~n

L

NATION BRIEFS

VALLEY WEATHER

Katie Reed and Pat Dowell,
"How do Crystal Forms
Vary Among Different Solutions and Foundations";
Samantha Pierce and Jenni
'
BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS
en. Low around 30.
(Ivory and Purex were the Young. "The Effect~ of Acid
It will be sunny Sunday with
Extended forecast:
Rain on Things Around
CHESAPEAKE - Donald R. Ferris, 66, Chesapeake, died winners, respectively.)
highs
in
the
low
~.It
will
be
Monday
... Partly cloudy. Hig
Us"; Jilli Young "What's in
' Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington,
The
projects judged
mostly cloudy tonight with a h 45 to 50.
·
Thursday were the top win- Your Water?"; Jenny Bowles,
chance of rain showers.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A ch
'
Aug. 28, 1934 in Chesapeake, son of the late Erskin and ners of 180 total projects "Friction"; Jeffrey Baughman and Heath Nelson, · The springlike conditions ac ance of showers from early afte
, Ella Mae Porter Ferris, he rt!tired from Ensign Electric.
assembled by the eighth
"Electromagnetism
in ross the area Friday were swept rnoon on. Low near 30 and hi
.d grade students.
Surviving are his wife, Doris Massie Ferris; a son, Ge raid D aVI
Travis
Hayes,
away by a fast-moying cold fr gh 50 to 55.
Ryan Frazier and Joe Action";
. (Donna) Ferris of Coal Grove; six daughters, Donna Sue (Greg) Howard received the John "Plants' Reaction to Polluont.
Wednesday. .. Mosdy cloudy
'.. Jarvis of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., Nannette Ferris of Hanging Mora Memorial Award for tion"; Matt Krawsczyn, "Is
Sunrise Sunda'y will be at 7: with a chance of showers. Low
.' Rock, Deborah Lynn (G':'g) Hunt of Vinton, Rebecca Ann the best ro ·ect for their Kibble the Best Thing For
in the upper 30s and high in t
: (C.J.) Ferguson of Proctorville, Bonnte _Lou (Roy Childers) Per- work on p )Caution: Ice Your Dog"; Eric Burnem 30 a.m.Weather forecast:
he lower 50s.
• guson of Las Cruces, N .M ., and Conrue Irene Qohn) Ramey of ."'Ahead."
and Zach Bush, "Mold Tonight...Clear. Low 10 to I
Other students receiving Friend or Foe"; and Megan 4. Light and variable wind.
· Huntington; 14 gnndchilcb;en and five great-grandchildren; two
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A
. sisters, Freda (Ken) Foster of Piketon, and Shirley (Gary) r.tur- superior ratings were Jodi Garnes, "The . Invisible
Sunday. .. Mostly sunny early, chance of showers during the
dock of Chesapeake; and five brothers, Rudolph Ferm, William . Donahue "The Effect of a ForceJJ
with increasing afternoon clou night. Low near 40 and high 5
(Lucille) Fe~ris and Hubert (Wilma) Ferris~ all of Chesapeak~, Music N~ture"; Chet Wigal,
All students recetvmg ds. High 40 to 45. East wind 5 5 to 60.
EuS':ne Perris of Baltimore, Md., and Merrill (Chmtme) Fems "Battery Power"; Renee superior ratings awards will to 10 mph,
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with
of Aid._
,
.
Bailey and Justine . Dowler, represent Meigs Middle
Sunday night .. .Mostly cloud a chance of showers. Low in th
Servtces will be 2 p.m. Monday m Hall Funeral H~me, Proc- "Tips on Smooth Lips"; School at the District Sciy with a chance of rain show- .. e upper 30s and high 45 to 50.
torville, with Elder Roger Maynard and the Rev. Eddie Salmons Ross Well "What? Iron is in ence Day at Ohio Universi•. officiating. Burial will be in Miller Memorial Gardens. Friends My Cere;!"; Michael Davis, ty on March 3. Those receiv• may.call at the funeral home froJp. 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
"The Great Soap Race" ; ing superiors there will
'
. Tucker, Andrew HenDavtd
advance to state competition ..
derson and Ben Hatfield, at Ohio Wesleyan University
·
"The Last Cell Standing"; .in Delaware on April 28 ,
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - · Lewis Edward Henry, 84,
&gt; Gallipolis Ferry, died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 at the home of his
. · daughter.
'
ations one could imagine,"
.; Born May 17,1916 in Hogsett, W.Va., son of the late Andrew
· Wiseman said. "It's hard to
of the United Nations in 1997 .
. · F. and Lula Lanthorn Henry, he was a retired welder from MarFROM STAFF REPORTS
accept but right here in our
ADRA is an independent
. ion Power Shovel, Marion, Ohio, and a member of Pleasant
GALLII?OLIS ·
The
flomPageAl
own community, we have
Adventist Development and humanitarian agency estab'
, Ridge Church at Gallipolis Ferry.
hundreds of people who are .
.
He was also. preceded in death by his wife, Bessie Bell Fife ations, it's heart-warming to
Relief Agency International . lished witl) the specific purpose
from
hunger,
· Henry; a daughter, Lauretta June Henry; two sons, Marion E. know that because our com- suffering
(ADRA) is supplying emer• of individual and community
. Henry and Roy Milton Henry; a brother, Marion Henry; and munity cares, assistance is homelessness, illness, loneli- gency food and shelter for sur- development and disaster relief. ·
ness, or abuse of one kind or vivors of the earthquake in To learn more about ADRA,
two. sisters, Lucille Pearson and Lauretta Mai Moodespaugh.
available."
another.
: • Surviving are two daughters, Juanita (Steve) Weethee and
India and has been assigned a visit irs website at www.adra.org
Wiseman said that while
"We hope people will territory for long-term recon- or call 1-800-931-ADRA to
· Patricia Hughes, both of Gallipolis Ferry; two sons, Joseph no one likes to think about
• (Renee) Henry of Gallipolis Ferry, and Larry (Roselee) Henry needing
request information.
assistance, he's rally behind us in our last struction.
of Columbus; eight grandchildren, seven · great-grandchildren
weeks
of
effort
to
help
For information, contact.
The Jan. 26 quake, measuring
learned during his honorary
and two great-great-grandchildren; and a sister, Alyce N. HoffUnited
Way-funded
agencies
7.9
on
the
Richter
scale,
was
Gloria
Hinson at 388-8655.
chairmanship that "this hapman of Gallipolis.
the
worst
to
hit
India
since
pens more often in our area meet the emergency health
Services will be II a.m. Monday in Pleasant View Church,
August 1950, when an 8.5
than most people would and human-care 'needs of
GallipoliS Ferry, with the Rev. Odell Bush officiating, Burial will
magnitude quake killed more
our commu.nity," he added.
be in Pleasant Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at the Wilcox- guess.
'
For more information, call than 1,500.
"I've
come
face-to-face
en Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., from 7-9 p.m. Sunday,
The latest quake's epicenter
with some of the most trou- the United Way of Gallia
and at the church Monday, one hour prior to services.
.was in the state of Gujarat near
bling, heart-wrenching situ- County office at 446-2442.
the cities of Bhuj and Ahmedabad. Aftershocks on Jan. 28
caused additional damage. Fear- ·
involved in economic and ing for the lives, countless ·num, GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - . Edison "Pudam" Mayes Jr.,
employment development, bers of people are sleeping in
~ 70, Gallipolis Ferry, died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Pleasant Valley
placement and support to the streets. Because of destruc· Hospital.
,
from PapAl
: Born Dec. 31,1930 in Mason,W.Va.,son of the late Edison Sr.
· help place its clients into the tion of communication lines,
• and Vina Ball Mayes, he was a retired farmer. A U.S. Army veterwork force.
bridges, roads and other infraDJFS · received threean, he was a member ofAshton Baptist Church in Ashton, W.Va:
"It's nothing like we had structure, information is hard to
: Surviving are his wife, Berry Gillispie Mayes; two sons, Everett fourths of a point fJr Chil- ever known before," Barne• get,ADRA officials said.
' Roy (Sherry) Mayes of Gallipolis Ferry, :l)ld Ralph Paul Mayes dren in Healthy Start and said. "We have taken on
To make a cash donation to
of Ashton; five grandchildren; three sisters, Beulah (Ronnie) child support collecrions,
additional
responsibilities help with the response to the
; Wright of Ashton, Nancy Deal of Ohio, and Janice Stevens of and a half-point in OWF
and at the same time, never earthquake, call toil-free at 1~Glenwood, W.Va.; and five brothers, Wesley "Bill" (Carol) Mayes · cases dosed with individuals
800-424-ADRA (2372). Addigave up anything."
1and Ralph Paul "Sam" Mayes, both . of Ashton, and Weiman employed.
about
Due to its performance, tional information
Barnes said he was encour: "Cotton",Mayes, Ervin (Doloris) Mayes and Joe (Mary) Mayes,
ADRA's response to the situaaged by the rankings because DJFS is in line for incentive tion can be found on irs website
•all of Glenwood.
.
his staff has coped . with a funding from the state. In the at www.adra.org.
: He was also preceded in death by a sister, Evelyn Thornton.
: Services will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday in ,Deal Funeral Home, new mission and areas not coming year, the local office
An internationally non-gov:I Point Pleasant, W.Va., with. Max Spurlock officiating. Burial
will formerly covered under will be building on its ernmental organization,ADRA
. .
accomplishments,
Barnes is active . in more than 120
' be in Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove, W.Va. Friends may Human Services.
said.
'
·
: call at the funeral home on Sunday noon until the time of serThe department is now
nations. ADRA was grantee!
r •
.
•
'
~ VIces.
general consultive s~tus by the
,.'
Economic and Social Council
''
take the ceremonial first lap,
.
.
and will continpe until noon
i GUYSVILLE - Charles Cameron Weekley. 67, Guysville,
onApril28 .
i died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 at his residence.
.fromPapAI
For the entire 18 hours,
Born Nov. 15, 1933 in Wood County,.W.Va., son of the late
there will be entertainment,
: Thayer and Lena Sams Weekley, he was a former employee of
used to create a path of hope contests and games. Teams are
• Elkem Merals Co.
along tqe track, a11d will· be invited to pitch their tents, ·
; He was a member ofVanderhoof ~aptist Church, Hocking
lighted at dusk to· honor can- set up campsites, bring their
' River Coonhunters and Sportsmen Association, and served on
cer survivOrs and remember grills or coolers, and whatevf the board of directors at Lottridge Community Center.
~~ulat Rlylet all
those who were lost to the . er supplies they want to
: Surviving are three children, Tom E. Qennie) Weekley, Bob Qo)
V U
t&amp;l'iiCUftlt thG
disease .
enjoy the party with a pur: Weekley and Judith (Fred) Clark, all of Guysville (Weekleyville);
t ••
u .today for' glftl thQt
They will 'be left burning pose.
:eight grandchildren and a great-grandson; a brother, Richard
· tay yout liue 11all~gt
throughout the night to
The unique community
; {Linda) Weekley of Coolville; four sisters, Doris Ann Owens of
remind participants of the
Starting at
event has come a long way_
;virginia./ Roberta (Glen) Bonar of Arizona, Sandra (David) .importance
of their contrisince its inception 16 years
;Brentlinger of Lancaster, and Joyce (Chuck) Bonar ofVincent;
Ii4 CT TW ............... 199,00
butions. Last year, 240 lumi~and several nieces and nephews,
ago - from one man, Dr.
............ 1299.00
naries ·were lighted during
: He was also preceded in death by his wife ·o£45 years, Anna
Gordy Klatt, circltng a track
the ceremony.
';;']....,......'499. 00
;Jane Sampson Weekley; three brothers, Sammy, _l'!eal and
in Tacoma, Wash., for 24
Relay !'or Life is ·a team
· 1194 •ulck
:Edward; and three sisters, Barbara Jean, Patricia and Betty. ,
.hours to more than 2,700
Century
participation event. At least
: Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in White · Funeral Home,
•!Mdtd' L.Oir .........
eventS
in
the
U.S
..
one member of each team
:Coolville, with the Rev. Cecil A. Morrison officiating. Burial
Since it started, nearly one-·
walks, runs or strolls around
(740) 982 4443
~will be in Vanderhoof Cem~tery. Friends may call at the funeral ,
eo5 Qenel'lll Hllitlnger
the track for the entire event. half billion dollars have been
' home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Monday.·
·
P•rkway,
Mldd~rt, OH
raised
for
research,
education,
They are organized . by
Houra: Mon-1'11 H
' '
friends, relatives, local busi- . advQcacy, and patient service
Bot 11-3, CloHd B!m
·nesseo, hospitals, schools, propnu.
Relay for Life has been ,
churches and other organizaVINTON - K.ristian isaiah Wicker, son ofWilliam Joseph
tions, a11d the goal is for each described as a "celebration 9f . .
-~
~~~~~-•• Wicker and Angela Denise Terry Wicker ofVinron, was stillborn
.
, ....
vverwwlg_ht?
(
team to raise a minimum of life for .survivt&gt;rs, a memorial
:: Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center. ·
$100 per person.
for loved ones lost, and a rally .
DO
smoke7
·&gt;
:: Surviving in _addition to his parents are a sister,Alliandra Dawn
:rhe kickoff '!"ill be April for 1he commu_nity to tight
Has someone In
:: Wicker; paternal grandparents, William R. and Karen Wicker of
27 .at 6 p.m., when survivors cancer."
had G heart attclck or. stroke? : .
: Coffee County, Ga.; maternal grandparents, Larry and Shirley
··
Doas someone In
,
:: Terry of Vinton; paternal great-grandparents, Mart Wicker of
•; Cc;&gt;ffee County, and Chester and Rhoma Thompson ofWaverly;
yoar
Dlabet-.? •
COUPON
l
~: and five uncles, five aunrs, several nieces, nephews and cousins.
:: Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Sunday at Brush Cemetery,
If Y9CI can answer ya to any Of the · •
:• vinton, with Pastor Terry Hale officiating. · ·
abcrn. " " may "be at rlsli Of a
Arrangements, are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,Vinton.
· heart .a ttock or strok•.
Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by

I

'

Dr. Roblrt Holey: hal r.celvecl s,.clal
· training to lilentlty and treat · ,
the many risk fG!don.

CALl,.

ua.TODAV I"OR A FREE INITlAL I!VALUAllON.

•PPGfntmtnt.~

•
I
•.
•
I'
"Retlucln(l your ,.,.k bf the u-~ted·
I
aeoa ..........n A-n-. Point PI--nt, wv
•S7S.OO Yllue.
I
iNSURANCE PROVIDERS · ·
·
.675•1675
3 04
.. - - - --fiNS..:'ft - - - __ ...._____
...,__________-!"'!"1..
,,

orhtlrlng tilt to - If
IIIII coupon with you for

•

·· ·"great wickedness:'

. ·

, .. · "Although my appeal is in irs beginning stages; I don't
-• ' want to continue with it because it's based on falsehood and
-•~ deceit;' Markhasev's letter read. "I am guilty and I want to do
--:' the right thing:•
·
::- Cosby; 27, was a Columbia University graduate student·
,.;' home for vacation. when he was shot to death while chang~ 1 ing a flat tire near a freeway ramp in January 1997.
~' His family, which was informed of the apology, had no
comment, said Cosby spokesmari Joel Brokaw.
+ •
Markhasev, now serving a life sentence without possibility
of p~le, said he tried to get a message to Cosby's family
.. about a month ago but doesn't believe they received word
,, • that he wanted to confess.
· ~·· "More than anything, I want to apologize to the victim's
~~family," he said. "It's the least I can do afier the great wicked:;.,' ness for which I'm responsible."

...

...
1.. , ..

· Flnt pregnant govemor?

•••
'

""

...

BOSTON (AP)- Lt. Gov. Jane Swift could become the
~ nation's first pregnant go=nor if Gov. Paul Cellucci is
:;.,.approved as ambassador to Canada.
. .
~.·· Cellucci is President Bush's choice for the post, pending a
;.,''final review of his candidacy, administration officials said Fri';.." day. If Cellucci gives up his office to take the job, Swift, a 35".: year..:Old fellow Republican, would automatically become

riJ!CtiJlg gQV¢gt_or.

· ,_

:i..

·.

· :t ..

The National Governor's Association said it could not find
~::another case in which a pregnant woman served as a gover• -' nor. Swift declined to · discuss the possibility of taking the
·"
• . 0 fficc.
:;.J: "I'm not going to engage in •peculation at this point:' said
"' Swift, who captured national headlines wh'en the cam~ paigned in 1998 for lieutenant governor while she was pres~ - nant.
·
Her ciausiiter il 2 yean old, and 1he is expec:tins twins in

t.

~ .June.

~·.

CeUuc:ci alao declined comment, but expressed confidence

'·· . s--•
...
wu,.

.

"~ m

"I would not have ulced Jane Swift to be my lieutenant
:,;~ ~nor if I did not have confidence in her abilities to lead
!..&lt;
•• u
,.,
atate,"he .....
• .
~·. · Holdina the ollice would make Swift the likely Republi~: can 1111bernatorial nominee in 2002.
,
·
'"', But Democntl uid abe would have to overcome low pub~ '•. lie opinion polh stemmillll fiom n~cent ernbamssmenta,
~ ·. includins beintl fined $1,250 by the state Ethics Commiuion
~· last year for asking aides to baby-sit her daughter at her

:;.,

~·: home.
;'

•••
••'

.

'

·

lowe pleads not pllty

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)- Former heavyweight boxing
,1·', champion Riddick Dowe pleaded innocent to charges of
· )· assaulting his wife.
·f After a brief appearance before a judge, Bowe posted
t, $2 500 bail and
released .
~.· · Nassau County police said Bowe, 33, was arrested Thurs~: day morning after officers arrived a.t the couple's Lo11111s1_and
' ' home and found Terri Bowe suffering from cuts and brwses.
~ · She said in a statement to police. that Bowe was "rude and
;., ·uncivilized to ,me. I was afraid .. :'
~t 'Ieb:i Bowe said her hwband grabbed her, twisted her arm,
~- hit her, dragged her and threatened her life.
·
~~ Bowe's lawyer, Robert Y. Altchiler, said he and Bowe
~,: "adamantly deny that thingJ took place the way this young
:,. woman says:' He said she had "absolutely every reason to
~ . make thingS up."
.
·
;;.•,

w_.

'

6unllllp 1Jimrll ·6rntinrl • Page A7

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

HONOLULU (AP) - Rescue crews
held out hope that they would find nine
people who were in a Japanese fishing vessel that sank to the bottom of the Pacific
Ocean afier colliding with a Navy nuclearpOwered attack submarine.
Twenty:six survivors who were stranded-amid the debris and covered with diesel
fuel from the crash were bTQught to shore.
The boat was carrying high school students
who were learning how to fish.
The USS Greeneville came up under
the 180-foot boat, ripping the engine
room open and causing two resounding
booms. Seconds later, water flooded the

vessel, sinking it within minutes, said a reachers and three crew members.
Coast Guard translator describing the FriThe boat, the Ehime Maru, left Japan on
day collision nine miles south ofWaik.iki .
Jan. I 0 to hunt Jr tuna, swordfish and
"Most of the people were below deck shark.
in the rooms or galley," said Petty Officer
The Navy and Coast Guard hoped to
Michael Carr, who interviewed the surfind people clinging to the wreckage. "We
vivors. "After the tights went out, everyone
found some debris earlier today, but no sign
started yelling that the water is coming into
of survivors yet," said Coast Guard
the ship. That's when most of the people
spokesman Lt. Greg Fondran.
we saw started fleeing."
The survivors huddled in three life rafts
The boat carried 2(\crew members, two
teachers and 13 students from the Uwaji- before being rescued. Petry Officer Thomas
ma Fisheries High School in the south- Kron, who was on the Coast Guard pattol
western Japanese state ofEhime. The miss- boat, said the survivors were soaked with
ing included four high school students, two diesel fuel that spilled when the boat sank.

Family stranded for hours

after fatal plane crash

Background checks
reconsidered for reporters

CHARLEVOIX, Mich. (AP)
Surrounded by wreckage
and a stench of aviation fuel,
Mirth Gault and her three chi!- .
dren huddled through the chilly
night and pnyed to be rescued
after their plane crashed on a
Lake Michigan island.
When they saw a small plane
the next morning, the mother
waved a life Yest to attract attention, and they were soon res- .
cued. They were stranded for
about 15 hours.
"When I initially saw the
wreckage, I didn't think there'd
be anybody alive in it," said Rob
McCaskey, co-pilot of a U.S.
Coast Guard helicopter.

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) protesting the decision~ and
Court officials are reconsid- . several newspape~s took simering a requirement that ilar actions.
reporters · undergo criminal
"~ny titizen can go
background checks to cover watch a trial," said Jerry
the trial of a man accwed of Roberts, managing editor of
murdering tlllee tourists at the San Francisco Chronicle.
Yosemite National Park.
"To try and impose some
News editors said the pol- special resrricti(lns and saneicy restricted freedom of the
tions on news organizations
press because it did not apply
to members of the general .. because they're covering a
public who plan to attend trial is a clear violation of the
the trial of Cary Stayner. · protections of a free press."
The
California First
No threats have been
Amendment Coalition, a made on Stayner's life, but
group that promotes free- authorities said they required
dom of the press and open the background checks for
government, sent' a letter secu!ity purposes.

The crash killed two crew
members · and left the family
members injured. They were en
route from Chicago to Beaver
Island, where Gault's husband
Robert was awaiting them,
Lasater said. As . ll..obert
watched, the pla11e flew over
the airport and disappeared
overnight. It crashed on a heavily wooded bluff about a mile
away.
"They knew they would be
rescued . eventually. But they
were very concerned that their
father might think that they
were not going to return,~~
Charkvoix County Sheriff
George Lasater said.

Simpson arrested in road-rage

Auto- Owners Insurance
Life Home
Car Business
.
'

MIAMI (AP) - O.J. Simpson surrendered to authorities
·Friday to face charges that he
reached into a man's car and
pulled off the driver's glasses
during a road-rage argument
in December.
Simpson is charged with
burglary of a car and misdemeanor battery. The charges
carry a combined 16 years
bi:fund bars. But State Attorney Katherine Fernandez
Rundle said Simpson would
probably not serve any time if
convicted.
"The goal here will be to
find some sort of prosrammins or aentence that would
involve learnins how to con1101 oneself, whether it's on
the road or elsewhere," Rundle uid.
Simpson posted $9,000 bail
and was released Jess than two
hours after he walked into a

Miami-Dade County jail at
noon. Attor'ney Yale Galanter
reada statement to the media,
calling the incident "a road
rage misunderstanding."
While ·his attorney was
tall,ing, Simpson signed an
autograph for a woman who .
approached him. He then got
into a car with his lawyers and
left without commenting.
But at a late afternoon
news conference, Simpson
called the alleged altercation a
''non-incident."'
"I don't think .that whatever took place warrants this
much._ attention:' he said.
Motorist Jcfli'ey Pattinson,
55, told police Simpkon
scratched him when he puUed
the glasses off durins the Dec.
4 dispute.
·
Pattinson told police he ·
slammed on his brakes ·and
honked at a sport utility vehi-

de afier he saw the SUV
drive past a stop sign in suburban Kendall, where Simp~
son now lives. Simpson
stopped, got out and walked
toward Pattinson's car, where
they argued, according to Pattinson.

...............
I"

•

I
•

Announcing .

I

CV/1/tJifl CflorlJf &amp;. •
CVII/tJ8fl 9/tJtJrihJidfJ
Are Now Under One Roofl

I

• ·

. • • Come .vl•lt our newly combined •tore •nd • •
find all of your Valentine gift Idea•!
•
Show your •peclal Hm•one how much •
•
you care with a beautiful floral
arrangement or gift ba1ketl
.
•

I ;.
1 .(74oJ

ofop 'By Or Can

245-561~

I
1

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

7u "'- 'A~tt• ;h;te ·
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

114 Court Pomeroy

992-6677

YALINTINI'S DAY

andatrom'•
. ••tVI!t'l.l~'\\.1111'"''

Wll'411

1/2Carat
Dlamand

Ol•ll8rRinl
Wll'lll .

2Caral
Dlamand
OlullerRina
W11'1IDO .

NOW'318 NOW'l96
!Don't ~DrJII-t ?"Dill'

4

Dlamand

OIUII&amp;r ling
Wll1'147

"''Va/en.tbW

VSAVE

30% ON
.IEWELRY

TAWNEY JEWELERS
· 422 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, OH .

.(740) 446-1615
8130-11100 Man-l'rl • 8:304100 8at

.·.
'

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV ·

Page A8 • &amp;unbap 1Jimtll-&amp;tntintl

.- Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

•

Deaths

.

Fair

I:
'

Donald R. Fents

'

Lewis Edward Henry

DJFS

•
•

••

•

•'

"'••
••
'•

Charles came_ron weekley

•

••

Life

l·.

f

•

. •
:. '~::" ..
·}

' .
'' \ .

;~
I •
I

,

,
:_
,
il.

Kristian Isaiah Wicker

---""'!!'"-.... . . . . .
yoa
yoa

I •

•

t

•'

. I &amp;ftog TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I
I
I
I
: cin Toll Frtt

r.

f
'' I'
'I
'I

:,
rI

'

;.
r•
r•
r~

•

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"We Care For You Like Family"
1

70 Pine Street

OH

(740) 440-7283

your familY.

'

•

i.

,.,.

......

family have

·1

I•

•

----------E HEARING -TESTS

f:.

,.•.•
,•.
••

Slayer will drop appeal
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The man who killed Bill Cosby's
son abruptly dropped his appeal and admitted his guilt, say,• ing it was time for him to "do the right thing."
.. In a handwritten letter to Deputy Attorney General Kyle
Brodie that was released Friday, Mikhail Markhasev, 22, also
• apologized to Ennis Cosby's family for what he called a

to aid quake victims

Edison •pgdam' Mayes Jr.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - An Indiana company is recalling 6,000 pounds of duckling products that may be contarn. ,inated with a bacteria that can cause fatal food poisoning.
J,
The duckling products were distributed Jan. 10 by Serenade Foods Inc. - which also does business as Maple Leaf
" Farms - to restaurants and other food establishments in 11
· states, the U.S. Department of Agriculture satd. Friday.
USDA said the products may be contaminated with Listeria monoc'ytogenes, a strain of bacteria that can cause a
,.: potentially fatal form of food . poisoning. The agency said,
, there have been no reports of illness linked to the recalled
products.
Officials said the company notified the USDA of the vol_unrary recall after tests detected the presence oflisteria.
Recalled are these products:
' • Sysco Imperial partially boned fully cooked roasted
' young duckling halves in 8.25-pound boxes with a box code
of011001.
·
. ~;' • Maple Leaf Farms partially boned roasted young duckling
,; halves in 7.5-pound boxes with a package code of 1010. .
,., All the recalled products bear the number "EST.P-2375"
. inside the USDA seal of inspection.

ADRA scrambles

Goal

)

Nil¥! remain missing after U.S. sub·hits fishing boat

Rain may return Sunday

from,...A1

w;~~n

L

NATION BRIEFS

VALLEY WEATHER

Katie Reed and Pat Dowell,
"How do Crystal Forms
Vary Among Different Solutions and Foundations";
Samantha Pierce and Jenni
'
BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS
en. Low around 30.
(Ivory and Purex were the Young. "The Effect~ of Acid
It will be sunny Sunday with
Extended forecast:
Rain on Things Around
CHESAPEAKE - Donald R. Ferris, 66, Chesapeake, died winners, respectively.)
highs
in
the
low
~.It
will
be
Monday
... Partly cloudy. Hig
Us"; Jilli Young "What's in
' Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington,
The
projects judged
mostly cloudy tonight with a h 45 to 50.
·
Thursday were the top win- Your Water?"; Jenny Bowles,
chance of rain showers.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A ch
'
Aug. 28, 1934 in Chesapeake, son of the late Erskin and ners of 180 total projects "Friction"; Jeffrey Baughman and Heath Nelson, · The springlike conditions ac ance of showers from early afte
, Ella Mae Porter Ferris, he rt!tired from Ensign Electric.
assembled by the eighth
"Electromagnetism
in ross the area Friday were swept rnoon on. Low near 30 and hi
.d grade students.
Surviving are his wife, Doris Massie Ferris; a son, Ge raid D aVI
Travis
Hayes,
away by a fast-moying cold fr gh 50 to 55.
Ryan Frazier and Joe Action";
. (Donna) Ferris of Coal Grove; six daughters, Donna Sue (Greg) Howard received the John "Plants' Reaction to Polluont.
Wednesday. .. Mosdy cloudy
'.. Jarvis of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., Nannette Ferris of Hanging Mora Memorial Award for tion"; Matt Krawsczyn, "Is
Sunrise Sunda'y will be at 7: with a chance of showers. Low
.' Rock, Deborah Lynn (G':'g) Hunt of Vinton, Rebecca Ann the best ro ·ect for their Kibble the Best Thing For
in the upper 30s and high in t
: (C.J.) Ferguson of Proctorville, Bonnte _Lou (Roy Childers) Per- work on p )Caution: Ice Your Dog"; Eric Burnem 30 a.m.Weather forecast:
he lower 50s.
• guson of Las Cruces, N .M ., and Conrue Irene Qohn) Ramey of ."'Ahead."
and Zach Bush, "Mold Tonight...Clear. Low 10 to I
Other students receiving Friend or Foe"; and Megan 4. Light and variable wind.
· Huntington; 14 gnndchilcb;en and five great-grandchildren; two
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A
. sisters, Freda (Ken) Foster of Piketon, and Shirley (Gary) r.tur- superior ratings were Jodi Garnes, "The . Invisible
Sunday. .. Mostly sunny early, chance of showers during the
dock of Chesapeake; and five brothers, Rudolph Ferm, William . Donahue "The Effect of a ForceJJ
with increasing afternoon clou night. Low near 40 and high 5
(Lucille) Fe~ris and Hubert (Wilma) Ferris~ all of Chesapeak~, Music N~ture"; Chet Wigal,
All students recetvmg ds. High 40 to 45. East wind 5 5 to 60.
EuS':ne Perris of Baltimore, Md., and Merrill (Chmtme) Fems "Battery Power"; Renee superior ratings awards will to 10 mph,
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with
of Aid._
,
.
Bailey and Justine . Dowler, represent Meigs Middle
Sunday night .. .Mostly cloud a chance of showers. Low in th
Servtces will be 2 p.m. Monday m Hall Funeral H~me, Proc- "Tips on Smooth Lips"; School at the District Sciy with a chance of rain show- .. e upper 30s and high 45 to 50.
torville, with Elder Roger Maynard and the Rev. Eddie Salmons Ross Well "What? Iron is in ence Day at Ohio Universi•. officiating. Burial will be in Miller Memorial Gardens. Friends My Cere;!"; Michael Davis, ty on March 3. Those receiv• may.call at the funeral home froJp. 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
"The Great Soap Race" ; ing superiors there will
'
. Tucker, Andrew HenDavtd
advance to state competition ..
derson and Ben Hatfield, at Ohio Wesleyan University
·
"The Last Cell Standing"; .in Delaware on April 28 ,
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - · Lewis Edward Henry, 84,
&gt; Gallipolis Ferry, died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 at the home of his
. · daughter.
'
ations one could imagine,"
.; Born May 17,1916 in Hogsett, W.Va., son of the late Andrew
· Wiseman said. "It's hard to
of the United Nations in 1997 .
. · F. and Lula Lanthorn Henry, he was a retired welder from MarFROM STAFF REPORTS
accept but right here in our
ADRA is an independent
. ion Power Shovel, Marion, Ohio, and a member of Pleasant
GALLII?OLIS ·
The
flomPageAl
own community, we have
Adventist Development and humanitarian agency estab'
, Ridge Church at Gallipolis Ferry.
hundreds of people who are .
.
He was also. preceded in death by his wife, Bessie Bell Fife ations, it's heart-warming to
Relief Agency International . lished witl) the specific purpose
from
hunger,
· Henry; a daughter, Lauretta June Henry; two sons, Marion E. know that because our com- suffering
(ADRA) is supplying emer• of individual and community
. Henry and Roy Milton Henry; a brother, Marion Henry; and munity cares, assistance is homelessness, illness, loneli- gency food and shelter for sur- development and disaster relief. ·
ness, or abuse of one kind or vivors of the earthquake in To learn more about ADRA,
two. sisters, Lucille Pearson and Lauretta Mai Moodespaugh.
available."
another.
: • Surviving are two daughters, Juanita (Steve) Weethee and
India and has been assigned a visit irs website at www.adra.org
Wiseman said that while
"We hope people will territory for long-term recon- or call 1-800-931-ADRA to
· Patricia Hughes, both of Gallipolis Ferry; two sons, Joseph no one likes to think about
• (Renee) Henry of Gallipolis Ferry, and Larry (Roselee) Henry needing
request information.
assistance, he's rally behind us in our last struction.
of Columbus; eight grandchildren, seven · great-grandchildren
weeks
of
effort
to
help
For information, contact.
The Jan. 26 quake, measuring
learned during his honorary
and two great-great-grandchildren; and a sister, Alyce N. HoffUnited
Way-funded
agencies
7.9
on
the
Richter
scale,
was
Gloria
Hinson at 388-8655.
chairmanship that "this hapman of Gallipolis.
the
worst
to
hit
India
since
pens more often in our area meet the emergency health
Services will be II a.m. Monday in Pleasant View Church,
August 1950, when an 8.5
than most people would and human-care 'needs of
GallipoliS Ferry, with the Rev. Odell Bush officiating, Burial will
magnitude quake killed more
our commu.nity," he added.
be in Pleasant Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at the Wilcox- guess.
'
For more information, call than 1,500.
"I've
come
face-to-face
en Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., from 7-9 p.m. Sunday,
The latest quake's epicenter
with some of the most trou- the United Way of Gallia
and at the church Monday, one hour prior to services.
.was in the state of Gujarat near
bling, heart-wrenching situ- County office at 446-2442.
the cities of Bhuj and Ahmedabad. Aftershocks on Jan. 28
caused additional damage. Fear- ·
involved in economic and ing for the lives, countless ·num, GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - . Edison "Pudam" Mayes Jr.,
employment development, bers of people are sleeping in
~ 70, Gallipolis Ferry, died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Pleasant Valley
placement and support to the streets. Because of destruc· Hospital.
,
from PapAl
: Born Dec. 31,1930 in Mason,W.Va.,son of the late Edison Sr.
· help place its clients into the tion of communication lines,
• and Vina Ball Mayes, he was a retired farmer. A U.S. Army veterwork force.
bridges, roads and other infraDJFS · received threean, he was a member ofAshton Baptist Church in Ashton, W.Va:
"It's nothing like we had structure, information is hard to
: Surviving are his wife, Berry Gillispie Mayes; two sons, Everett fourths of a point fJr Chil- ever known before," Barne• get,ADRA officials said.
' Roy (Sherry) Mayes of Gallipolis Ferry, :l)ld Ralph Paul Mayes dren in Healthy Start and said. "We have taken on
To make a cash donation to
of Ashton; five grandchildren; three sisters, Beulah (Ronnie) child support collecrions,
additional
responsibilities help with the response to the
; Wright of Ashton, Nancy Deal of Ohio, and Janice Stevens of and a half-point in OWF
and at the same time, never earthquake, call toil-free at 1~Glenwood, W.Va.; and five brothers, Wesley "Bill" (Carol) Mayes · cases dosed with individuals
800-424-ADRA (2372). Addigave up anything."
1and Ralph Paul "Sam" Mayes, both . of Ashton, and Weiman employed.
about
Due to its performance, tional information
Barnes said he was encour: "Cotton",Mayes, Ervin (Doloris) Mayes and Joe (Mary) Mayes,
ADRA's response to the situaaged by the rankings because DJFS is in line for incentive tion can be found on irs website
•all of Glenwood.
.
his staff has coped . with a funding from the state. In the at www.adra.org.
: He was also preceded in death by a sister, Evelyn Thornton.
: Services will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday in ,Deal Funeral Home, new mission and areas not coming year, the local office
An internationally non-gov:I Point Pleasant, W.Va., with. Max Spurlock officiating. Burial
will formerly covered under will be building on its ernmental organization,ADRA
. .
accomplishments,
Barnes is active . in more than 120
' be in Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove, W.Va. Friends may Human Services.
said.
'
·
: call at the funeral home on Sunday noon until the time of serThe department is now
nations. ADRA was grantee!
r •
.
•
'
~ VIces.
general consultive s~tus by the
,.'
Economic and Social Council
''
take the ceremonial first lap,
.
.
and will continpe until noon
i GUYSVILLE - Charles Cameron Weekley. 67, Guysville,
onApril28 .
i died Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 at his residence.
.fromPapAI
For the entire 18 hours,
Born Nov. 15, 1933 in Wood County,.W.Va., son of the late
there will be entertainment,
: Thayer and Lena Sams Weekley, he was a former employee of
used to create a path of hope contests and games. Teams are
• Elkem Merals Co.
along tqe track, a11d will· be invited to pitch their tents, ·
; He was a member ofVanderhoof ~aptist Church, Hocking
lighted at dusk to· honor can- set up campsites, bring their
' River Coonhunters and Sportsmen Association, and served on
cer survivOrs and remember grills or coolers, and whatevf the board of directors at Lottridge Community Center.
~~ulat Rlylet all
those who were lost to the . er supplies they want to
: Surviving are three children, Tom E. Qennie) Weekley, Bob Qo)
V U
t&amp;l'iiCUftlt thG
disease .
enjoy the party with a pur: Weekley and Judith (Fred) Clark, all of Guysville (Weekleyville);
t ••
u .today for' glftl thQt
They will 'be left burning pose.
:eight grandchildren and a great-grandson; a brother, Richard
· tay yout liue 11all~gt
throughout the night to
The unique community
; {Linda) Weekley of Coolville; four sisters, Doris Ann Owens of
remind participants of the
Starting at
event has come a long way_
;virginia./ Roberta (Glen) Bonar of Arizona, Sandra (David) .importance
of their contrisince its inception 16 years
;Brentlinger of Lancaster, and Joyce (Chuck) Bonar ofVincent;
Ii4 CT TW ............... 199,00
butions. Last year, 240 lumi~and several nieces and nephews,
ago - from one man, Dr.
............ 1299.00
naries ·were lighted during
: He was also preceded in death by his wife ·o£45 years, Anna
Gordy Klatt, circltng a track
the ceremony.
';;']....,......'499. 00
;Jane Sampson Weekley; three brothers, Sammy, _l'!eal and
in Tacoma, Wash., for 24
Relay !'or Life is ·a team
· 1194 •ulck
:Edward; and three sisters, Barbara Jean, Patricia and Betty. ,
.hours to more than 2,700
Century
participation event. At least
: Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in White · Funeral Home,
•!Mdtd' L.Oir .........
eventS
in
the
U.S
..
one member of each team
:Coolville, with the Rev. Cecil A. Morrison officiating. Burial
Since it started, nearly one-·
walks, runs or strolls around
(740) 982 4443
~will be in Vanderhoof Cem~tery. Friends may call at the funeral ,
eo5 Qenel'lll Hllitlnger
the track for the entire event. half billion dollars have been
' home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Monday.·
·
P•rkway,
Mldd~rt, OH
raised
for
research,
education,
They are organized . by
Houra: Mon-1'11 H
' '
friends, relatives, local busi- . advQcacy, and patient service
Bot 11-3, CloHd B!m
·nesseo, hospitals, schools, propnu.
Relay for Life has been ,
churches and other organizaVINTON - K.ristian isaiah Wicker, son ofWilliam Joseph
tions, a11d the goal is for each described as a "celebration 9f . .
-~
~~~~~-•• Wicker and Angela Denise Terry Wicker ofVinron, was stillborn
.
, ....
vverwwlg_ht?
(
team to raise a minimum of life for .survivt&gt;rs, a memorial
:: Friday, Feb. 9, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center. ·
$100 per person.
for loved ones lost, and a rally .
DO
smoke7
·&gt;
:: Surviving in _addition to his parents are a sister,Alliandra Dawn
:rhe kickoff '!"ill be April for 1he commu_nity to tight
Has someone In
:: Wicker; paternal grandparents, William R. and Karen Wicker of
27 .at 6 p.m., when survivors cancer."
had G heart attclck or. stroke? : .
: Coffee County, Ga.; maternal grandparents, Larry and Shirley
··
Doas someone In
,
:: Terry of Vinton; paternal great-grandparents, Mart Wicker of
•; Cc;&gt;ffee County, and Chester and Rhoma Thompson ofWaverly;
yoar
Dlabet-.? •
COUPON
l
~: and five uncles, five aunrs, several nieces, nephews and cousins.
:: Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Sunday at Brush Cemetery,
If Y9CI can answer ya to any Of the · •
:• vinton, with Pastor Terry Hale officiating. · ·
abcrn. " " may "be at rlsli Of a
Arrangements, are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,Vinton.
· heart .a ttock or strok•.
Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by

I

'

Dr. Roblrt Holey: hal r.celvecl s,.clal
· training to lilentlty and treat · ,
the many risk fG!don.

CALl,.

ua.TODAV I"OR A FREE INITlAL I!VALUAllON.

•PPGfntmtnt.~

•
I
•.
•
I'
"Retlucln(l your ,.,.k bf the u-~ted·
I
aeoa ..........n A-n-. Point PI--nt, wv
•S7S.OO Yllue.
I
iNSURANCE PROVIDERS · ·
·
.675•1675
3 04
.. - - - --fiNS..:'ft - - - __ ...._____
...,__________-!"'!"1..
,,

orhtlrlng tilt to - If
IIIII coupon with you for

•

·· ·"great wickedness:'

. ·

, .. · "Although my appeal is in irs beginning stages; I don't
-• ' want to continue with it because it's based on falsehood and
-•~ deceit;' Markhasev's letter read. "I am guilty and I want to do
--:' the right thing:•
·
::- Cosby; 27, was a Columbia University graduate student·
,.;' home for vacation. when he was shot to death while chang~ 1 ing a flat tire near a freeway ramp in January 1997.
~' His family, which was informed of the apology, had no
comment, said Cosby spokesmari Joel Brokaw.
+ •
Markhasev, now serving a life sentence without possibility
of p~le, said he tried to get a message to Cosby's family
.. about a month ago but doesn't believe they received word
,, • that he wanted to confess.
· ~·· "More than anything, I want to apologize to the victim's
~~family," he said. "It's the least I can do afier the great wicked:;.,' ness for which I'm responsible."

...

...
1.. , ..

· Flnt pregnant govemor?

•••
'

""

...

BOSTON (AP)- Lt. Gov. Jane Swift could become the
~ nation's first pregnant go=nor if Gov. Paul Cellucci is
:;.,.approved as ambassador to Canada.
. .
~.·· Cellucci is President Bush's choice for the post, pending a
;.,''final review of his candidacy, administration officials said Fri';.." day. If Cellucci gives up his office to take the job, Swift, a 35".: year..:Old fellow Republican, would automatically become

riJ!CtiJlg gQV¢gt_or.

· ,_

:i..

·.

· :t ..

The National Governor's Association said it could not find
~::another case in which a pregnant woman served as a gover• -' nor. Swift declined to · discuss the possibility of taking the
·"
• . 0 fficc.
:;.J: "I'm not going to engage in •peculation at this point:' said
"' Swift, who captured national headlines wh'en the cam~ paigned in 1998 for lieutenant governor while she was pres~ - nant.
·
Her ciausiiter il 2 yean old, and 1he is expec:tins twins in

t.

~ .June.

~·.

CeUuc:ci alao declined comment, but expressed confidence

'·· . s--•
...
wu,.

.

"~ m

"I would not have ulced Jane Swift to be my lieutenant
:,;~ ~nor if I did not have confidence in her abilities to lead
!..&lt;
•• u
,.,
atate,"he .....
• .
~·. · Holdina the ollice would make Swift the likely Republi~: can 1111bernatorial nominee in 2002.
,
·
'"', But Democntl uid abe would have to overcome low pub~ '•. lie opinion polh stemmillll fiom n~cent ernbamssmenta,
~ ·. includins beintl fined $1,250 by the state Ethics Commiuion
~· last year for asking aides to baby-sit her daughter at her

:;.,

~·: home.
;'

•••
••'

.

'

·

lowe pleads not pllty

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)- Former heavyweight boxing
,1·', champion Riddick Dowe pleaded innocent to charges of
· )· assaulting his wife.
·f After a brief appearance before a judge, Bowe posted
t, $2 500 bail and
released .
~.· · Nassau County police said Bowe, 33, was arrested Thurs~: day morning after officers arrived a.t the couple's Lo11111s1_and
' ' home and found Terri Bowe suffering from cuts and brwses.
~ · She said in a statement to police. that Bowe was "rude and
;., ·uncivilized to ,me. I was afraid .. :'
~t 'Ieb:i Bowe said her hwband grabbed her, twisted her arm,
~- hit her, dragged her and threatened her life.
·
~~ Bowe's lawyer, Robert Y. Altchiler, said he and Bowe
~,: "adamantly deny that thingJ took place the way this young
:,. woman says:' He said she had "absolutely every reason to
~ . make thingS up."
.
·
;;.•,

w_.

'

6unllllp 1Jimrll ·6rntinrl • Page A7

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

HONOLULU (AP) - Rescue crews
held out hope that they would find nine
people who were in a Japanese fishing vessel that sank to the bottom of the Pacific
Ocean afier colliding with a Navy nuclearpOwered attack submarine.
Twenty:six survivors who were stranded-amid the debris and covered with diesel
fuel from the crash were bTQught to shore.
The boat was carrying high school students
who were learning how to fish.
The USS Greeneville came up under
the 180-foot boat, ripping the engine
room open and causing two resounding
booms. Seconds later, water flooded the

vessel, sinking it within minutes, said a reachers and three crew members.
Coast Guard translator describing the FriThe boat, the Ehime Maru, left Japan on
day collision nine miles south ofWaik.iki .
Jan. I 0 to hunt Jr tuna, swordfish and
"Most of the people were below deck shark.
in the rooms or galley," said Petty Officer
The Navy and Coast Guard hoped to
Michael Carr, who interviewed the surfind people clinging to the wreckage. "We
vivors. "After the tights went out, everyone
found some debris earlier today, but no sign
started yelling that the water is coming into
of survivors yet," said Coast Guard
the ship. That's when most of the people
spokesman Lt. Greg Fondran.
we saw started fleeing."
The survivors huddled in three life rafts
The boat carried 2(\crew members, two
teachers and 13 students from the Uwaji- before being rescued. Petry Officer Thomas
ma Fisheries High School in the south- Kron, who was on the Coast Guard pattol
western Japanese state ofEhime. The miss- boat, said the survivors were soaked with
ing included four high school students, two diesel fuel that spilled when the boat sank.

Family stranded for hours

after fatal plane crash

Background checks
reconsidered for reporters

CHARLEVOIX, Mich. (AP)
Surrounded by wreckage
and a stench of aviation fuel,
Mirth Gault and her three chi!- .
dren huddled through the chilly
night and pnyed to be rescued
after their plane crashed on a
Lake Michigan island.
When they saw a small plane
the next morning, the mother
waved a life Yest to attract attention, and they were soon res- .
cued. They were stranded for
about 15 hours.
"When I initially saw the
wreckage, I didn't think there'd
be anybody alive in it," said Rob
McCaskey, co-pilot of a U.S.
Coast Guard helicopter.

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) protesting the decision~ and
Court officials are reconsid- . several newspape~s took simering a requirement that ilar actions.
reporters · undergo criminal
"~ny titizen can go
background checks to cover watch a trial," said Jerry
the trial of a man accwed of Roberts, managing editor of
murdering tlllee tourists at the San Francisco Chronicle.
Yosemite National Park.
"To try and impose some
News editors said the pol- special resrricti(lns and saneicy restricted freedom of the
tions on news organizations
press because it did not apply
to members of the general .. because they're covering a
public who plan to attend trial is a clear violation of the
the trial of Cary Stayner. · protections of a free press."
The
California First
No threats have been
Amendment Coalition, a made on Stayner's life, but
group that promotes free- authorities said they required
dom of the press and open the background checks for
government, sent' a letter secu!ity purposes.

The crash killed two crew
members · and left the family
members injured. They were en
route from Chicago to Beaver
Island, where Gault's husband
Robert was awaiting them,
Lasater said. As . ll..obert
watched, the pla11e flew over
the airport and disappeared
overnight. It crashed on a heavily wooded bluff about a mile
away.
"They knew they would be
rescued . eventually. But they
were very concerned that their
father might think that they
were not going to return,~~
Charkvoix County Sheriff
George Lasater said.

Simpson arrested in road-rage

Auto- Owners Insurance
Life Home
Car Business
.
'

MIAMI (AP) - O.J. Simpson surrendered to authorities
·Friday to face charges that he
reached into a man's car and
pulled off the driver's glasses
during a road-rage argument
in December.
Simpson is charged with
burglary of a car and misdemeanor battery. The charges
carry a combined 16 years
bi:fund bars. But State Attorney Katherine Fernandez
Rundle said Simpson would
probably not serve any time if
convicted.
"The goal here will be to
find some sort of prosrammins or aentence that would
involve learnins how to con1101 oneself, whether it's on
the road or elsewhere," Rundle uid.
Simpson posted $9,000 bail
and was released Jess than two
hours after he walked into a

Miami-Dade County jail at
noon. Attor'ney Yale Galanter
reada statement to the media,
calling the incident "a road
rage misunderstanding."
While ·his attorney was
tall,ing, Simpson signed an
autograph for a woman who .
approached him. He then got
into a car with his lawyers and
left without commenting.
But at a late afternoon
news conference, Simpson
called the alleged altercation a
''non-incident."'
"I don't think .that whatever took place warrants this
much._ attention:' he said.
Motorist Jcfli'ey Pattinson,
55, told police Simpkon
scratched him when he puUed
the glasses off durins the Dec.
4 dispute.
·
Pattinson told police he ·
slammed on his brakes ·and
honked at a sport utility vehi-

de afier he saw the SUV
drive past a stop sign in suburban Kendall, where Simp~
son now lives. Simpson
stopped, got out and walked
toward Pattinson's car, where
they argued, according to Pattinson.

...............
I"

•

I
•

Announcing .

I

CV/1/tJifl CflorlJf &amp;. •
CVII/tJ8fl 9/tJtJrihJidfJ
Are Now Under One Roofl

I

• ·

. • • Come .vl•lt our newly combined •tore •nd • •
find all of your Valentine gift Idea•!
•
Show your •peclal Hm•one how much •
•
you care with a beautiful floral
arrangement or gift ba1ketl
.
•

I ;.
1 .(74oJ

ofop 'By Or Can

245-561~

I
1

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

7u "'- 'A~tt• ;h;te ·
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

114 Court Pomeroy

992-6677

YALINTINI'S DAY

andatrom'•
. ••tVI!t'l.l~'\\.1111'"''

Wll'411

1/2Carat
Dlamand

Ol•ll8rRinl
Wll'lll .

2Caral
Dlamand
OlullerRina
W11'1IDO .

NOW'318 NOW'l96
!Don't ~DrJII-t ?"Dill'

4

Dlamand

OIUII&amp;r ling
Wll1'147

"''Va/en.tbW

VSAVE

30% ON
.IEWELRY

TAWNEY JEWELERS
· 422 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, OH .

.(740) 446-1615
8130-11100 Man-l'rl • 8:304100 8at

.·.
'

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PIMsant, WV

• , . A I • 6unllap G:imeii-INntinrl

'

'P1esklent's radio address
previews military-theme week
WASHINGTON (AP) -Visiting troops
"and assessing batde readiness, President Bush
)noves out of the capital in the coming week
\o display concern for troop morale and the
effectiveness of combat weapons.
Calling national security his greatest
,responsibility as president, Bush announced
•he will visit soldiers at Fort Stewart, Ga.;
'meet with military reservists in West Virginia; and tour the headquarters of the Joint
·Forces Command in Norfolk, Va.
·
The aim, he said in his weekly radio
address Saturday, is "to signal the priority I
place on our military."
"Our nation's ideals inspire the world, but
our nation's ships and planes and armies must ·
defend these ideals and sustain· our allies and
friends;' the president said.
Bush • earlier directed the PeptagOJ1 to
~iew how the nuclear arsenal might be cut
ill part of a strategy to win allied approval for
a U.S. national defense against ballistic missiles.

!

He also affirmed that he would not ask
Congress for an "early supplemental," or an
add-on to the current $297 billion Pentagon
budget. But that leaves open the prospect
that he will instead seek additional money in
the spring or summer..
In his radio talk, Bush said stealth and
speed will matter more in future military
engagemenu than the size of the force the
nation employs.
"We must make sure that our country,
iuelf, is protected from attack from ballistic
missiles and high-tech terrorisu," he said.
Bush said he will use his visit to F'ort
Stewart on Monday to "announce meaningful increases in funding to improve the lives
of our men and women in uniform." During
the election campaign, Bush pledged tQ add
Sl billion for military pay raises.
·
Visiting Norfolk on Tuesday, the president
plans to take a look at "the next generation
of military weapons."

Sunday, February 11, 2001

Rich's ex~wife gave $450,000 to library
WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Clinton's
library foundation ~ceived an
estimated $450,000 in donations from Denise Rich, the
·ex-wife of a fugitive financier
who received an el~nth­
hour pardon from Clinton, a
Democratic source says. •
The disclosure late Priday
came !tours after a corlgtessional conunittee invejtigating
Clinton's pardon of Marc
Rich decided to subpoena
records from Clinton's piesidentiallibrary fund.
The Democratic source,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity. said the donatioJ)S
did not occur close to the date
of Rich's pardoning. The
Washington Pd$t said threq
payments were made between
July 1998 and May 2000.
The Clinton transition
office referred calls to the

William J. Clinton Presidential Foundation in Little
Rock, Ark. Foundation president Skip Rutherford said,
"We leave disclosure up to the
donor. That's been our policy
from the vety beginning."
In one of his last acts as
president last month, Clinton
pardoned Rich, who has lived
in . Switzerland since just
before he was indicted iJ1 the
United States in 1983 on ·
charges of tax evasion, fraud
and participation in illegal oil
deals with Iran.
The House Government
Reform Conunittee,which is
investigating the pardon, was
told Wednesday by Denise
Rich's lawyer that she had
given the Clinton Presidential
Library Fund an "enormous
sum" of money. Ms. Rich
declined to appear before the
committee, asserting her con-

stitutional protection :against
self-incrimination.
The committee will seek
to subpoena the Clinton
library bank records and Ms.
Rich's bank records and is
contacting the Justice Department to try to give Ms. Rich
immunity so she can be
forced to testifY in front of the
panel, two committee sources
said Friday.
A spokeswoman for Ms.
Rich in New York City
declined to comment.
Republicans also have
noted that Ms. Rich was a
major contributor to the
Democratic Party and to
Hillary Rodharn Clinton's
Senate campaign. The Clinton
White House' and Justice
Qepartment. and Rich's
lawyi:n all have said that nothing illegal was done.

0

Questions raised about .how ·
Ointon White House handled gifts
. WASHINGTON (AP) New questions emerged Fri'
day about
whether
the Clinton

adrninistration mishandled
-'A. sent to
&amp;"~

the .White
House and
whether
some items
the former
president and first lady have
returned were given to them
before he took office.
. The questions came .as the
N ationa! Park Service on
friday released a complete
.
~,nventory of the .household
goods the Clint.ons shipp~
l?ack t~. , ~as~!n~on thts
1-"eek.the liSt was disclose~ a
day after the Park Servtce
co~cluded that 19 items the
Cbntona 'ook ' •with them
were the property of the

•

White House, not personal
gifts they were entitled to
keep.
"Nothing left the White
House at any time without
the approval of the usher's
office or the curator's office,"

..

I

~

-

.

'

'

'

-

r

0 0

&lt;.

'

•

••
••
I

-HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Bciyl

SEOAL
SEO

ALL

Logan
12·1 13-4
Warren
12·1 12·5
Marietta
9-4 11·6
Gatlla Academy
6·7 8·9
Athens
5-8 9·9
PotntPteasant
4-9 4·13
River Valley
3·10 7-12
Jackson
1-12 4·14
Frlclay'a Gamn
warren 52, Gallla Academy 35
Jackson 66, Rtvar Valley 53
Logan 50, Poln1 Pleasant 29
Marietta 69, Athens 63
.
Saturclly'l GalllN .
Gallla Academy at Wheelersburg
Robart c. Byrd at Marietta
warren at Belpre
•
Tu88day'a Gai!IM
.~rtsmoulh al Gallia Academy
togan at Zane$Ville ·
_Roane County at Point Pleasant
Warren at Parkersburg South

TVC

ALL

10.0
5-3
5-5
4-4
2·7
1-8

18-2
8·1 0
8·1 0
5-11
7·9
2·18

TVC

ALL

7·2 1o..a
·~tastem
6·3 14-3
·Waterford
5-4 9-8
'Soulhem
· 5-5 12·7
li'ederal Hocking
3-8 9·9
Miller
2-8 6·12
(#Wins TVC Ohio Division cham·
"Trimble

·~nshlp)

(•CIIn.ched sh11re of TVC Hock·
lhg Division championslilp)
.·
Frldly~a GllrMI
Alexander 54; Meigs 45
Belpre ~. Nelsonville-York 54
EBJiern 59, ~em 50
Federal Hocking 84, Trimble 61
Waterford 73, Miller 55
VInton County 91, Wellston 87,
30T
·.·&gt; ·
'·

Tueaclay'a GamN

ValeQtiQe's Day )ale

1/4 Ct. TOW

HEART

CROSS

PENDANT

PENDANT

114 Ct. Dlamonda TW

(Chllln Not Incl.)

YOUR CHOICE••• '99

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Christian
celebrated homecoming in classic style Friday
with a 69-34 ·victory over Grace Christian.
The win was especially important for the
Defenders, who begin ACSI state playoff
action Monday .at horne against Ridgeville
Christian.
OVC (11-6) had dropped four of its last six
games after a 70-55 loss to Portsmouth East
Thesday, which prompted head coach Greg
;.tkins to go back to the drawing board to
find some answers for his club.

Holcomb

"We didn't think that we'd
played real well in a game
since Jan. 5," Atkins said. "We
told the kids that success is
measured in how high you
bounce after you hit rock
bottom. We felt we bottomed out Tuesday night
against Portsmouth East.
"But we came in and had
a real spirited practice last
· night (Thursday)," Atkins

llluse ••·Defendan, IS

SWEATIN' IT OUT - Gabe Jenkins (left) of OVC scored 15
points in the Defenders win . (Bryan Long photo)

Gooch,

Eastem.
stops
Southem
.

Haggerty
lead OVC

'

Eagles win "·
Battle of Meigs
County

to win

BY Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT i
RACINE - Hittin~

FROI\1 OVP STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Valley Christian rebounded from
a tough loss at Portsmouth
East on Thursday by defeating
Grace .Christian 69-52 Friday.
Sophomore Chelsea Gooch
and freshman
Tessa Hag.gerty combined for 54
points to lead
the Defenders to the
win.
Gooch taltiel!
· '~ 15
points and
Haggerty
added 14 in
the first half
as
the
Defenders
rolled to a
40-25 lead at
the
half.

a

wartn 44 percent from fue
field and 85 percent .from
the line,
11th
ranked
Eastern
soareu to
a 59-50
TVG
Hocking
Division
victory
the

·'

;~ ....-v·•a-..

Warren at Satpre )
·'
Wahama at easrein
Wallfllon at Miller
Wlltarford at Fort Frye

Eastern at Meigs
WSierford at Federal Hocking
Miller at New Lexington
Southern at Symmes Valley
Trimble at Crooksville
Oak Hill at Wellston ·

16 Dlemond

Defenders roll past
Grace Christian, 69-34
BY ANDREW CARTER

. Hocldng Dlvlalon

~ 1intJtr/lefry.

WASHINGTON (AP)Federal. prosccuton filed an
assault charge Friday againsl a
former Int~;rnal Revenue Service employee who allegedly
fired a gun outside the White
House and was shot by a
Sec~t Service officer.
Robert w; Pickett was
charged with assaulting a federal officer, said Channing
phillips, spokesman for the
U.S. attorney's ollice.
' Conviction carries a penal- .
ty of up to 10 yean in jail and
a $250,000 fine.
Pickett will be arraigned in
U.S. District Court, Phillips
said. Prosecuton expect he .
will ~main at George Washington U nivenity Hospital
for treatment through the
· weekend, and will likely face a
:federal magistrate early next
·week.
Pickett, 47, was in good
· condition after a uniformed
Secret Service officer shot
him in the leg Wednesday.
Pickett left a suicide nore
In his vehicle in addition to a
previously disclosed letter to
the IRS that proclaimed, "My
death is on your hands," law
enforcement sources said.
The emerging picture of
pickett depicts a troubled man
who admitted his mental ill~css in lawsuits against the
IRS, yet was able to pus an
instant background check to
buy a gun in his hometoWn of
Evansville, Ind.
The law enfon:ement
,ources, spdking only on
condition of anonymity, said a
JUicide-styJe note WU discovered in Pickett's vehicle,
found at a commuter rail station in Washington's Virginia
suburbs.

SUNDAY'S

#Belpre
Nelsonville· York
'Alexander
Vinton County
Wellston
MfllgS

•
ALL

•

.

Page 81
Sundlly. ,........." 11. 2001

Ohio Dlvl81on

federal officer
'

Spartans top Marauders, Page B2
Prep Hoops Scoreboard, Page ~4
College Hoops, Page B6
Problems with coyotes?, Page BB

TVC

describing a roomful of presents that had been sent to
the White House by heads of
state in honor of Clinton's ·
inauguration in January
1993. "I know on many

occasions it went to them."
Julia Payne, a Clinton
She said that when she
spokeswoman, said Friday
night.
was filling out 'p roper gift
She would not comment forms for logging in presents
on allegations made by Linda sent to the White House, that
Tripp that the Clinton White she was told, in so . many
House mismanaged presi- words: "Take off your Bush .
dential ,donations. Tripp, hat. This . is the Clinton
whose tapes of conversations White House."
· Lewtns
· ..
L
WI'th Moruca
y Ied ·
"They didn't want any
to
p rest'den t
Cl'an ton 's part of that," she said. .
·
h ment, sat'd F n'd ay
tmpeac
Tripp, who worked in the
·ght
"La
Kin L · "
m
on
rry
g tve
Clinton White House for a
that the Clinton White
House did not 'always fill out year and a half, taped her
, the pmper gift....fornu, and cop,versat~ons wi5h Lewipsky
alleged . thai the Clintons tl!at helped lead to Clinton's
kept some gifts for them- impeachtVent. Tripp , was
selves.
fired iom her SIOO,OOO-aI
"Most'of' it''Silfli'l iiiai~' it ,,. year 'politic'al 1ositionj"'on'
to the gift _unif Tri~f.sa!,d, .~naugnrati?n J?ay.

Pickett
charged with
assaulting_

.Inside:

.ALL APPAREL FOR THE FAMIILY,
. ·ALL TOYS,
ALL WINDOW TREATEMNTS

Ohio Valley Christian
11·6
Hannan ·
·
1·6
wahaina
3·11
So\Jih Gallla
3·14
Frldly'a Gamaa
Ohio valley Christian 69, Grace
Christian 34
' Sllturday'a GamN
Wahama at Eastern
Buffalo at Hannan
PoriBmouth East at South Gallla
. llondey'l Ganw
.,\~ Staa Tou1111mant
Rl~a Christian at Ohio Val·
ley Christian
1\laaday'a G - .
Ohio vatley CMstlan at South
Gallla ·
Wlrt County at Wahama
Teays ValleY at Hannan
Glira

•

00

ALL·FINE J
(]EXCLUDING
·WATCHES

0

SEOAL

Frlclay'a Game
aoover 49, Point Pleasant 44
...
•
•
ANI non 11111....
Frldly'a Geme
Qhlo Valley Christian 69, Grace
Qhrisdan 52
Monday'• GalllN
liannan at Wlrt County
l3hlo Vlllay Christian at . South
Gallla
·
, ·
• .
, Tu1iday'1 Game
Wahama 11 Buflalo
·
•
: OHIM Glrll 8ecllonlla

Dlvlllon.
At Rio G~ncla

Feb.14

does Friday night.
Eastern
(14-3,
TVC 6-3)
pulled to
withi~

one F e
of leagueleading
Fllher
Trimble
as a result_of the Tom~ts
loss to Federal Hocldilg
Friday.
.,
Southern '(12-7, TVC j5) .concluded league plfy,
but has a non-league tJlt
left with Symmes Vall~
Tuesday.
,,.
Although the final statistics evened ·out over time,•
the difference in the game·(\

, Han!l~

NO PLACE TO GO - Southern's Garret Kiser (40) finds himself boxed In by Eastern's Joe
Brown (15) and Chris Lyons (13). (Jon Will photo)

P1eua ... Rlva~. B:s
l •

Bille oevils
fall
to
veteran
Warriors
,,
0

BY A-EW CARl'llt·
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS -Warren looked the
part of an SEOAL champion in the second half Friday on iu way to, 52-35
win over Gallia Academy.
.T he Warriors (12-5, SEOAI; 12-1)
rallied from a sluggish lim half to
outscore the Blue, Devils 35-15. in the '
second half and earn the cruciai victo·
1
ry, which a)lowed .t hem to keep. pace
with co-leader Logan in the S.f!OAL
table.
·
Logan (13-4, SEOAL 12-1) defeated
Point Pleasant 5!)-29 Friday.
• .

GalllaAcademy v. Waverly,'8:15
Meigs v. River Vlltey, 8:00

"I think that's what
champions are made
of," Gallia Academy
head
coach
Jim
· Osborne said in regard
to Warren's . performance in the second
half. "And that's what
we're trying to point
out to our guys, that in
McKinnlal another year we'll be a
lot stronger physically
and have more experience to deal with
that.
.
"Four things we put up on the board

,.

Beaver added
· seven poinu ·
in the . first ·
halffor Ohio
Valley Chris~
tian.
Solid
defense
fueled
the
OVC offense
in the first
half.
"We ran
some transition and got
Beaver
some early
buckets," said Ohio Valley
Christian head coach Chip
Haggerty. "We're still working
hard with the girls on playing
some aggressive defense ancj
trying to deny and trap a little
more. We did that last week in
our win (against Wahama). I
think that'll be our success1
using our speed and trying to
trap and get out and run the
floor."
Tabitha Raines kept Grace
in the game with 14 points it!
the first half. She finished
with 28 points altogether, hitting B-of-11 free throws in
the second half.
"We tried to match up on

for our guys after the game were (that
Warren) stepped up defensive pnissure,
forced us shoot even further out or created turnovers, "rebounding was dominant and they played with a lot poise,"
he added. "The seven or eight guys
who played, played together. They have
tremendous experience and it takes a
while to develop that. Their maturation
rate has been about three years coming.
"It's going to take us about another
year or so to get to that level, depending on how hard we work."
The Blue Devils (8-9, SEOAL 6-7)

,........ ovc.as

llluHIHUivlla,B2

·~
•

Feb. 17

Ghamplonehtp, 2:00

Dtvlaloft IV
At AIIIJindlr
l'lb. 14

..
..
,South G•llla v, Symmes valley,
11:15
Waterford v. Miller, 8:00

Feb.11

0

Soulhlm v, G1'81111,11:15
Crook8VIIIa v. Beaver Eutern,
6:00

CORNER

448-2842

0
'

11 MILL STREET, IIDDLEPORT

.992-8250

Pree Parlllat • Pree lift Wn1111l•t
l•(lert Jewelrr 111111r le"loe
011111 1111..100 OIIIJ, ttll•lsll MIIIIIJ,
laii•71DD PriiiiJ1 llllo4tl0 llturiiiJ

fl.,

•

•

Feb.17

South Weblter v. S. GaiHaSymmaa varr.y, 1:00
EaSIIIII
v. Wlltal!ord-Miillr, 2:45
•.

AC818Gulll Alglo.111
AtColumbUI

Feb.11

Ohio valley dhriallan v. TBA,
&amp;:00
'

.-

Free thro,s cany J~ckson past River Valley
BY lluTcH COOPIR
OVI&gt; SPORTS STAFF

JACKSON, - River Valley
and Jackson were two teams
tlying to tum ihei~ respective ·
seasons around befo~ sectionals begin in a couple of
weeks.
, The lronmcn were also, trying to pick up that fint elusive
SEOAL win of the season.
On Fdday, Jackson got that
fi~t league victory with a 66-

---,.'. :'ll
.:.:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_ _ jJ__ ,._.

53 · .decision
over
the
Raiders.
"It
just
comes down
to shooting,
or lack of.. .."
said
River
Valley head
coach Gene
Layton.
With the game tied .45-all
with 5:49 left in the game, a

- --"---·-·--,-·-

Robbie Pugh basket and a
pair of Kyle · Loftus free
throws put the Ironmen up by
four.
Pugh led all scorers with 18
points, while Ryan Tipton
finished with 14 points for the
lro,nmen (4-IS,SEOAL 1-12)
and Eric Evans scored 10.
Craig Payne led River Valley (7-12, SEOAL 3-10) with
17 points, including three 3point goals, while Eric Nolan

---~--

-·.

----~-- - -·

---------

added 12 points and D.J.
Frazee finished with eight.
After a Nolan basket for the
Raiders with 4:46 left in the
game, an Evans shot once
again gave Jackson a four
point advantage, 51-47.
At that point, River Valley's
inability to shoot, especially at
the free throw line began to
show.
Meanwhile, Jackson went
13-for-15 at the charity strip

;

•

in the last four minutes of the
game to pull away with the
.
.
wm.
"It came down to free
throws;• said Layton. "That
was the story of the' game. We
got stuck on 47 and couldn't
score. We start to put them at
the foul line and they made
their free throws down the
stretch."

PluH ... Raldera, IJ

•

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PIMsant, WV

• , . A I • 6unllap G:imeii-INntinrl

'

'P1esklent's radio address
previews military-theme week
WASHINGTON (AP) -Visiting troops
"and assessing batde readiness, President Bush
)noves out of the capital in the coming week
\o display concern for troop morale and the
effectiveness of combat weapons.
Calling national security his greatest
,responsibility as president, Bush announced
•he will visit soldiers at Fort Stewart, Ga.;
'meet with military reservists in West Virginia; and tour the headquarters of the Joint
·Forces Command in Norfolk, Va.
·
The aim, he said in his weekly radio
address Saturday, is "to signal the priority I
place on our military."
"Our nation's ideals inspire the world, but
our nation's ships and planes and armies must ·
defend these ideals and sustain· our allies and
friends;' the president said.
Bush • earlier directed the PeptagOJ1 to
~iew how the nuclear arsenal might be cut
ill part of a strategy to win allied approval for
a U.S. national defense against ballistic missiles.

!

He also affirmed that he would not ask
Congress for an "early supplemental," or an
add-on to the current $297 billion Pentagon
budget. But that leaves open the prospect
that he will instead seek additional money in
the spring or summer..
In his radio talk, Bush said stealth and
speed will matter more in future military
engagemenu than the size of the force the
nation employs.
"We must make sure that our country,
iuelf, is protected from attack from ballistic
missiles and high-tech terrorisu," he said.
Bush said he will use his visit to F'ort
Stewart on Monday to "announce meaningful increases in funding to improve the lives
of our men and women in uniform." During
the election campaign, Bush pledged tQ add
Sl billion for military pay raises.
·
Visiting Norfolk on Tuesday, the president
plans to take a look at "the next generation
of military weapons."

Sunday, February 11, 2001

Rich's ex~wife gave $450,000 to library
WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Clinton's
library foundation ~ceived an
estimated $450,000 in donations from Denise Rich, the
·ex-wife of a fugitive financier
who received an el~nth­
hour pardon from Clinton, a
Democratic source says. •
The disclosure late Priday
came !tours after a corlgtessional conunittee invejtigating
Clinton's pardon of Marc
Rich decided to subpoena
records from Clinton's piesidentiallibrary fund.
The Democratic source,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity. said the donatioJ)S
did not occur close to the date
of Rich's pardoning. The
Washington Pd$t said threq
payments were made between
July 1998 and May 2000.
The Clinton transition
office referred calls to the

William J. Clinton Presidential Foundation in Little
Rock, Ark. Foundation president Skip Rutherford said,
"We leave disclosure up to the
donor. That's been our policy
from the vety beginning."
In one of his last acts as
president last month, Clinton
pardoned Rich, who has lived
in . Switzerland since just
before he was indicted iJ1 the
United States in 1983 on ·
charges of tax evasion, fraud
and participation in illegal oil
deals with Iran.
The House Government
Reform Conunittee,which is
investigating the pardon, was
told Wednesday by Denise
Rich's lawyer that she had
given the Clinton Presidential
Library Fund an "enormous
sum" of money. Ms. Rich
declined to appear before the
committee, asserting her con-

stitutional protection :against
self-incrimination.
The committee will seek
to subpoena the Clinton
library bank records and Ms.
Rich's bank records and is
contacting the Justice Department to try to give Ms. Rich
immunity so she can be
forced to testifY in front of the
panel, two committee sources
said Friday.
A spokeswoman for Ms.
Rich in New York City
declined to comment.
Republicans also have
noted that Ms. Rich was a
major contributor to the
Democratic Party and to
Hillary Rodharn Clinton's
Senate campaign. The Clinton
White House' and Justice
Qepartment. and Rich's
lawyi:n all have said that nothing illegal was done.

0

Questions raised about .how ·
Ointon White House handled gifts
. WASHINGTON (AP) New questions emerged Fri'
day about
whether
the Clinton

adrninistration mishandled
-'A. sent to
&amp;"~

the .White
House and
whether
some items
the former
president and first lady have
returned were given to them
before he took office.
. The questions came .as the
N ationa! Park Service on
friday released a complete
.
~,nventory of the .household
goods the Clint.ons shipp~
l?ack t~. , ~as~!n~on thts
1-"eek.the liSt was disclose~ a
day after the Park Servtce
co~cluded that 19 items the
Cbntona 'ook ' •with them
were the property of the

•

White House, not personal
gifts they were entitled to
keep.
"Nothing left the White
House at any time without
the approval of the usher's
office or the curator's office,"

..

I

~

-

.

'

'

'

-

r

0 0

&lt;.

'

•

••
••
I

-HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Bciyl

SEOAL
SEO

ALL

Logan
12·1 13-4
Warren
12·1 12·5
Marietta
9-4 11·6
Gatlla Academy
6·7 8·9
Athens
5-8 9·9
PotntPteasant
4-9 4·13
River Valley
3·10 7-12
Jackson
1-12 4·14
Frlclay'a Gamn
warren 52, Gallla Academy 35
Jackson 66, Rtvar Valley 53
Logan 50, Poln1 Pleasant 29
Marietta 69, Athens 63
.
Saturclly'l GalllN .
Gallla Academy at Wheelersburg
Robart c. Byrd at Marietta
warren at Belpre
•
Tu88day'a Gai!IM
.~rtsmoulh al Gallia Academy
togan at Zane$Ville ·
_Roane County at Point Pleasant
Warren at Parkersburg South

TVC

ALL

10.0
5-3
5-5
4-4
2·7
1-8

18-2
8·1 0
8·1 0
5-11
7·9
2·18

TVC

ALL

7·2 1o..a
·~tastem
6·3 14-3
·Waterford
5-4 9-8
'Soulhem
· 5-5 12·7
li'ederal Hocking
3-8 9·9
Miller
2-8 6·12
(#Wins TVC Ohio Division cham·
"Trimble

·~nshlp)

(•CIIn.ched sh11re of TVC Hock·
lhg Division championslilp)
.·
Frldly~a GllrMI
Alexander 54; Meigs 45
Belpre ~. Nelsonville-York 54
EBJiern 59, ~em 50
Federal Hocking 84, Trimble 61
Waterford 73, Miller 55
VInton County 91, Wellston 87,
30T
·.·&gt; ·
'·

Tueaclay'a GamN

ValeQtiQe's Day )ale

1/4 Ct. TOW

HEART

CROSS

PENDANT

PENDANT

114 Ct. Dlamonda TW

(Chllln Not Incl.)

YOUR CHOICE••• '99

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Christian
celebrated homecoming in classic style Friday
with a 69-34 ·victory over Grace Christian.
The win was especially important for the
Defenders, who begin ACSI state playoff
action Monday .at horne against Ridgeville
Christian.
OVC (11-6) had dropped four of its last six
games after a 70-55 loss to Portsmouth East
Thesday, which prompted head coach Greg
;.tkins to go back to the drawing board to
find some answers for his club.

Holcomb

"We didn't think that we'd
played real well in a game
since Jan. 5," Atkins said. "We
told the kids that success is
measured in how high you
bounce after you hit rock
bottom. We felt we bottomed out Tuesday night
against Portsmouth East.
"But we came in and had
a real spirited practice last
· night (Thursday)," Atkins

llluse ••·Defendan, IS

SWEATIN' IT OUT - Gabe Jenkins (left) of OVC scored 15
points in the Defenders win . (Bryan Long photo)

Gooch,

Eastem.
stops
Southem
.

Haggerty
lead OVC

'

Eagles win "·
Battle of Meigs
County

to win

BY Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT i
RACINE - Hittin~

FROI\1 OVP STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Valley Christian rebounded from
a tough loss at Portsmouth
East on Thursday by defeating
Grace .Christian 69-52 Friday.
Sophomore Chelsea Gooch
and freshman
Tessa Hag.gerty combined for 54
points to lead
the Defenders to the
win.
Gooch taltiel!
· '~ 15
points and
Haggerty
added 14 in
the first half
as
the
Defenders
rolled to a
40-25 lead at
the
half.

a

wartn 44 percent from fue
field and 85 percent .from
the line,
11th
ranked
Eastern
soareu to
a 59-50
TVG
Hocking
Division
victory
the

·'

;~ ....-v·•a-..

Warren at Satpre )
·'
Wahama at easrein
Wallfllon at Miller
Wlltarford at Fort Frye

Eastern at Meigs
WSierford at Federal Hocking
Miller at New Lexington
Southern at Symmes Valley
Trimble at Crooksville
Oak Hill at Wellston ·

16 Dlemond

Defenders roll past
Grace Christian, 69-34
BY ANDREW CARTER

. Hocldng Dlvlalon

~ 1intJtr/lefry.

WASHINGTON (AP)Federal. prosccuton filed an
assault charge Friday againsl a
former Int~;rnal Revenue Service employee who allegedly
fired a gun outside the White
House and was shot by a
Sec~t Service officer.
Robert w; Pickett was
charged with assaulting a federal officer, said Channing
phillips, spokesman for the
U.S. attorney's ollice.
' Conviction carries a penal- .
ty of up to 10 yean in jail and
a $250,000 fine.
Pickett will be arraigned in
U.S. District Court, Phillips
said. Prosecuton expect he .
will ~main at George Washington U nivenity Hospital
for treatment through the
· weekend, and will likely face a
:federal magistrate early next
·week.
Pickett, 47, was in good
· condition after a uniformed
Secret Service officer shot
him in the leg Wednesday.
Pickett left a suicide nore
In his vehicle in addition to a
previously disclosed letter to
the IRS that proclaimed, "My
death is on your hands," law
enforcement sources said.
The emerging picture of
pickett depicts a troubled man
who admitted his mental ill~css in lawsuits against the
IRS, yet was able to pus an
instant background check to
buy a gun in his hometoWn of
Evansville, Ind.
The law enfon:ement
,ources, spdking only on
condition of anonymity, said a
JUicide-styJe note WU discovered in Pickett's vehicle,
found at a commuter rail station in Washington's Virginia
suburbs.

SUNDAY'S

#Belpre
Nelsonville· York
'Alexander
Vinton County
Wellston
MfllgS

•
ALL

•

.

Page 81
Sundlly. ,........." 11. 2001

Ohio Dlvl81on

federal officer
'

Spartans top Marauders, Page B2
Prep Hoops Scoreboard, Page ~4
College Hoops, Page B6
Problems with coyotes?, Page BB

TVC

describing a roomful of presents that had been sent to
the White House by heads of
state in honor of Clinton's ·
inauguration in January
1993. "I know on many

occasions it went to them."
Julia Payne, a Clinton
She said that when she
spokeswoman, said Friday
night.
was filling out 'p roper gift
She would not comment forms for logging in presents
on allegations made by Linda sent to the White House, that
Tripp that the Clinton White she was told, in so . many
House mismanaged presi- words: "Take off your Bush .
dential ,donations. Tripp, hat. This . is the Clinton
whose tapes of conversations White House."
· Lewtns
· ..
L
WI'th Moruca
y Ied ·
"They didn't want any
to
p rest'den t
Cl'an ton 's part of that," she said. .
·
h ment, sat'd F n'd ay
tmpeac
Tripp, who worked in the
·ght
"La
Kin L · "
m
on
rry
g tve
Clinton White House for a
that the Clinton White
House did not 'always fill out year and a half, taped her
, the pmper gift....fornu, and cop,versat~ons wi5h Lewipsky
alleged . thai the Clintons tl!at helped lead to Clinton's
kept some gifts for them- impeachtVent. Tripp , was
selves.
fired iom her SIOO,OOO-aI
"Most'of' it''Silfli'l iiiai~' it ,,. year 'politic'al 1ositionj"'on'
to the gift _unif Tri~f.sa!,d, .~naugnrati?n J?ay.

Pickett
charged with
assaulting_

.Inside:

.ALL APPAREL FOR THE FAMIILY,
. ·ALL TOYS,
ALL WINDOW TREATEMNTS

Ohio Valley Christian
11·6
Hannan ·
·
1·6
wahaina
3·11
So\Jih Gallla
3·14
Frldly'a Gamaa
Ohio valley Christian 69, Grace
Christian 34
' Sllturday'a GamN
Wahama at Eastern
Buffalo at Hannan
PoriBmouth East at South Gallla
. llondey'l Ganw
.,\~ Staa Tou1111mant
Rl~a Christian at Ohio Val·
ley Christian
1\laaday'a G - .
Ohio vatley CMstlan at South
Gallla ·
Wlrt County at Wahama
Teays ValleY at Hannan
Glira

•

00

ALL·FINE J
(]EXCLUDING
·WATCHES

0

SEOAL

Frlclay'a Game
aoover 49, Point Pleasant 44
...
•
•
ANI non 11111....
Frldly'a Geme
Qhlo Valley Christian 69, Grace
Qhrisdan 52
Monday'• GalllN
liannan at Wlrt County
l3hlo Vlllay Christian at . South
Gallla
·
, ·
• .
, Tu1iday'1 Game
Wahama 11 Buflalo
·
•
: OHIM Glrll 8ecllonlla

Dlvlllon.
At Rio G~ncla

Feb.14

does Friday night.
Eastern
(14-3,
TVC 6-3)
pulled to
withi~

one F e
of leagueleading
Fllher
Trimble
as a result_of the Tom~ts
loss to Federal Hocldilg
Friday.
.,
Southern '(12-7, TVC j5) .concluded league plfy,
but has a non-league tJlt
left with Symmes Vall~
Tuesday.
,,.
Although the final statistics evened ·out over time,•
the difference in the game·(\

, Han!l~

NO PLACE TO GO - Southern's Garret Kiser (40) finds himself boxed In by Eastern's Joe
Brown (15) and Chris Lyons (13). (Jon Will photo)

P1eua ... Rlva~. B:s
l •

Bille oevils
fall
to
veteran
Warriors
,,
0

BY A-EW CARl'llt·
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS -Warren looked the
part of an SEOAL champion in the second half Friday on iu way to, 52-35
win over Gallia Academy.
.T he Warriors (12-5, SEOAI; 12-1)
rallied from a sluggish lim half to
outscore the Blue, Devils 35-15. in the '
second half and earn the cruciai victo·
1
ry, which a)lowed .t hem to keep. pace
with co-leader Logan in the S.f!OAL
table.
·
Logan (13-4, SEOAL 12-1) defeated
Point Pleasant 5!)-29 Friday.
• .

GalllaAcademy v. Waverly,'8:15
Meigs v. River Vlltey, 8:00

"I think that's what
champions are made
of," Gallia Academy
head
coach
Jim
· Osborne said in regard
to Warren's . performance in the second
half. "And that's what
we're trying to point
out to our guys, that in
McKinnlal another year we'll be a
lot stronger physically
and have more experience to deal with
that.
.
"Four things we put up on the board

,.

Beaver added
· seven poinu ·
in the . first ·
halffor Ohio
Valley Chris~
tian.
Solid
defense
fueled
the
OVC offense
in the first
half.
"We ran
some transition and got
Beaver
some early
buckets," said Ohio Valley
Christian head coach Chip
Haggerty. "We're still working
hard with the girls on playing
some aggressive defense ancj
trying to deny and trap a little
more. We did that last week in
our win (against Wahama). I
think that'll be our success1
using our speed and trying to
trap and get out and run the
floor."
Tabitha Raines kept Grace
in the game with 14 points it!
the first half. She finished
with 28 points altogether, hitting B-of-11 free throws in
the second half.
"We tried to match up on

for our guys after the game were (that
Warren) stepped up defensive pnissure,
forced us shoot even further out or created turnovers, "rebounding was dominant and they played with a lot poise,"
he added. "The seven or eight guys
who played, played together. They have
tremendous experience and it takes a
while to develop that. Their maturation
rate has been about three years coming.
"It's going to take us about another
year or so to get to that level, depending on how hard we work."
The Blue Devils (8-9, SEOAL 6-7)

,........ ovc.as

llluHIHUivlla,B2

·~
•

Feb. 17

Ghamplonehtp, 2:00

Dtvlaloft IV
At AIIIJindlr
l'lb. 14

..
..
,South G•llla v, Symmes valley,
11:15
Waterford v. Miller, 8:00

Feb.11

0

Soulhlm v, G1'81111,11:15
Crook8VIIIa v. Beaver Eutern,
6:00

CORNER

448-2842

0
'

11 MILL STREET, IIDDLEPORT

.992-8250

Pree Parlllat • Pree lift Wn1111l•t
l•(lert Jewelrr 111111r le"loe
011111 1111..100 OIIIJ, ttll•lsll MIIIIIJ,
laii•71DD PriiiiJ1 llllo4tl0 llturiiiJ

fl.,

•

•

Feb.17

South Weblter v. S. GaiHaSymmaa varr.y, 1:00
EaSIIIII
v. Wlltal!ord-Miillr, 2:45
•.

AC818Gulll Alglo.111
AtColumbUI

Feb.11

Ohio valley dhriallan v. TBA,
&amp;:00
'

.-

Free thro,s cany J~ckson past River Valley
BY lluTcH COOPIR
OVI&gt; SPORTS STAFF

JACKSON, - River Valley
and Jackson were two teams
tlying to tum ihei~ respective ·
seasons around befo~ sectionals begin in a couple of
weeks.
, The lronmcn were also, trying to pick up that fint elusive
SEOAL win of the season.
On Fdday, Jackson got that
fi~t league victory with a 66-

---,.'. :'ll
.:.:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_ _ jJ__ ,._.

53 · .decision
over
the
Raiders.
"It
just
comes down
to shooting,
or lack of.. .."
said
River
Valley head
coach Gene
Layton.
With the game tied .45-all
with 5:49 left in the game, a

- --"---·-·--,-·-

Robbie Pugh basket and a
pair of Kyle · Loftus free
throws put the Ironmen up by
four.
Pugh led all scorers with 18
points, while Ryan Tipton
finished with 14 points for the
lro,nmen (4-IS,SEOAL 1-12)
and Eric Evans scored 10.
Craig Payne led River Valley (7-12, SEOAL 3-10) with
17 points, including three 3point goals, while Eric Nolan

---~--

-·.

----~-- - -·

---------

added 12 points and D.J.
Frazee finished with eight.
After a Nolan basket for the
Raiders with 4:46 left in the
game, an Evans shot once
again gave Jackson a four
point advantage, 51-47.
At that point, River Valley's
inability to shoot, especially at
the free throw line began to
show.
Meanwhile, Jackson went
13-for-15 at the charity strip

;

•

in the last four minutes of the
game to pull away with the
.
.
wm.
"It came down to free
throws;• said Layton. "That
was the story of the' game. We
got stuck on 47 and couldn't
score. We start to put them at
the foul line and they made
their free throws down the
stretch."

PluH ... Raldera, IJ

•

�'

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

Page B2 • 6anllap 11tmn-6tntind

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunct.y, February 11, 2001

&amp;unba!' 11timell-6enlintl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

PREP BAS.KETBALL

Spartans outgun Marauders in TVC play
IYDAVIHAIIIIII
f1VP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK
SPRINGS
Alexander outscored Meigs
21-1 from the foul line as the
Spartans defeated the Marauden 54-45 at Larry R. Morri. son Gymnasium.
The Spartans hit 21-of-24
from the line, while the
Marauden were one of five
for the evening.
Meigs jumped out on top 62 on a bucket by Derrick
Johnson at the 5:10 mark of
the period. The Spartans bat• ded back and tied the game at
8-all on a free throw by Jason
Warren at the 1 :35 mark.
Johnson gave Meigs a I 0-8
: lead with a short jumper with
5 I seconds left, but Justin
Brooks nailed a 3-pointer
with 24 seconds left to give
the Spartans a 11-10 lead after
one period.
In rhe second period
Alexander built up a I 0-point
lead and took a 29- I 9 lead
with 1:40 left. But the
Marauden started to chip
away at the Spartan lead.
Buckets by Travis Siden and
j. . P. Staats pulled Meigs to·
within 29-23 with 25 seconds
left. After a missed Alexander
shot, Nick Bolin brought the
home town crowd to their

' .

,.'
'
I

feet when he nailed a shot
about two feet beyond the half
court line at the buzzer and
Meigs had pulled to within
29-26 at the hili:
A basket by Bolin to start
the third period puUed Meigs
to within 29-28 at the 6:55
mark. But Alexander went on
a 7-2 ro,m and took a 36-30
lead on a pair of Grigsby free
throws. Alexander held a 3834 lead heading into the final
period.
Grigsby scored to give
Alexander a 40-34 lead to
s~1rted the fourth period. But
once again it was Bolin that
came throw, Bolin connected
on two from long range in ;1
span of 23 seconds and suddenly the game was tied at 40all.
Warren and Bolin traded
buckets and the game was tied
at 42-all with 4:50 left. But
Alexander outscored Meigs
I 2-3 the rest· of the way t&lt;;J
post the win. Alexander in the
fourth period was a perfect
ten of ten including six in a
row by Justin Brooks.
L.C. Grigsby and Brooks led
Alexander with 13 points
each. Warren added I I. The
Spartans hit .15-of-4 I from
the floor for 37 percent,
including 3-of-5 from long

range.
.The Spartans hit 88 percent
from the line (21-of-24) and
had 30 rebounds led by Warren with nine. They had 13
turnovers, five steals led by
Ryan Lawson with two. The
Spartans had nine assists with
Grigsby getting four and La\vson three.
Johnson led M~igs with 17,
he was joined in double figures by Bolin with 14. Meigs
hit 20-of-46 from the floor,
including four of 12 3-pointers for 43 percent. Meigs was
1-for-5 from the line for 20
p,ercent.

Meigs had 12 rebounds led
by Staats with six , Johnson
added fiw. Meigs had nine
turnovers, seven assists led by
Fackler with three. Johnson
had two of the Marauders
three steals.
Meigs played at Vinton
County on Saturday and ends
the regular season at home
Tuesday against Eastern.

HIGH ·FIVE ....:. Jasbn Warren
(right) of Alexander attempts
to block a shot by John Witherell of Meigs In Friday's 'tVC
Ohio Division game between
the Spartans and Marauders.
Alexander won the game, 5445. (Dave Harris photo)

emy with 11 points and five
rebounds. He also had three
.
.assists.
Hill scored eight points and
Dressel added seven. Finney
had four rebounds and three·
assists.
Following
Satufday's
rnatchup with Wheelersburg
(16-1), the ninth pnked team
in the AP Division Ill poll,
the Blue Devils will play host
to Portsmouth Tuesday.
The tina! SEOAL and regular' season game is s~t for Friday at Point Pleasant.
Gallia Academy opens sectional tournament play Tues.
day, Feb. 20 against Vinton
County at South Webster.
Game time is set for 8 p.m.

Devils
from Pllp II

l
1

•
•

•

'.

'.
'

'

played without leading
scorer and rebounder Dustin
Deckard, who is sidelined due
·to the after effects of a concussion.
Despite his absence, Gallia
Academy rallied from a 15-9
deficit in the fint quarter to
lead 20-17 at the half. The
Blue Devils defense held Warren to just two points in the
second quarter.
"We said before the game
that we had nci excuses,"
Osborne said. "These kids can
win with what they've got.
We played very well the first
half, we just couldn't put 32
minutes together."
·
Travis McKinniss . scored
seven consecutive points in
rhe second quarter, including
a 3-pointer, as the Gallipolitans took control of the game.
TJ Hill added six points in
the first halffor GAHS, while
Nick Dressel and David
Finney each knocked down a
3-pointer.
That output offset a pair of
treys by Warren's Curt Morris
in the first quarter, which
helped the Warriors build the
early advantage.
The third quarter was a different story as the Warrio.rs
turned the tables on the Blue
Devils, holding them to just
three points in the pe&lt;iod.
Finney's 3-pointer with I :04
rernaihing was Gallia Academy's lone score.
Warren kept up the defensive pressure in the fourth
quarter, outscoring Gallia
Academy, 23-12. Isaac Ward
scored 10 points in the tina!
quarter for the Warrion.
"We were ·able to run . our
offense in , the finr half,"
Osborne said. "In the second
half, we weren't. The difference was not necessarily us. I
didn't think we were so bad
the second half, but our
catches were farther out and
deflections occurred more
often. Their post play was
more physical with us and we
had to run the offense further
out on the floor.
,
"They kept us (rom getting
into any offensive flow whatsoever. And that's · to their
credit, they made us do that."
Ward and Morris scored 14
points apiece to lead Warren.
Ward finished with a gamehigh six rebounds and three
blocked shots.
Travis Ollon1 added I 2
points and three n:bounds for
Warren. Jeremy Pinkerton
1cored eight points and
g111bbed five rebounds.
McKinniss led Gallia Acad-

TOP SCORER - Gallia Acad·
emy's Travis McKinniss (11)
scores two of his tellm·high
11 points against Warren.
(Doug Shipley photo) .

Gene Johnson of
GENE JOHNSON CHEVY-9LDS
is pleased to announce
.
that
MICHAEL IC. SERGENT
has rejoined the Sales
Staff. Mike comes to
the dealership with
18 yrs. experience.
Mike resides In
,,, ••
,.
. Pt. Pleasant with his
wife Shawn and Is the
father of Brett, Austl,
.
Ashley and Beth.
Mike would like to invite all his previous
customers and friends to call or stop ~Y
the Dealership to su tile full line of
New and Used Vehicles;

Rivals

third quarter. Jonathan Evans
added six points. Matt Neigler
and Chad Hubbard each
notched. five points, Brandon
Hill and Dally Hill had three
apiece and · Matt Warner
added two.
In a pregame ceremony,
Southern paid tribute to its
senior winter sports athletes.
Senior cagen Brandon Hill,
Chad Hubbard, Matt Neigler,
Matt Warner, Jeremy Fisher,
Garret Kiser, Michael Ball,
and · Jonathan Evans all
received honors and played in
their final home game.
Simpson controlled the tip
and was the first to cash in,
hitting a jumper from the key
to give Eastern the first lead,

score just inside the one
minute mark, and Southern
went for the last shot, but had
•
ftNIPIIpB1
it stolen with four se.conds
left .
led to one player, Eastern
Although not reflected in
senior Matt Simpson, whose
the stats, it was Eastern's
• _dontinance set the tempo of
defensive stand and the out: the first half.
standing job they did guard: : At one point, Simpson had
ing Kiser that proved an
• jcored all but five of Eastern's
important role in the victory.
:, lint half points, before ending
No one else was able take
i; lhe half with 13 points. Overover as Southern floundered
,. )ll, the senior leader went 6to a 2-for-13 quarter from the
; for-9 (66 percent) from ehe
field. The horrendous shoot: ~eld, netting 17 points and six
ing turned into Brown
· ..-ebounds.
rebounds and transition buck• .: Senior Joe Brown also proets for the Eagles.
• 01ided a valuable lifeline, scorSimpson drilled two free
·: 4ng five points the first quarter
throws to give Eastern only its
)n a 16-point effort, but his
second lead of the game to
• ~rea test contribution came in 2-0.
start the second frame. South)is 16 rebounds. The crucial
The next six tnin.utes was ern's Warner knotted the
• t!ouble-double gave Brown all Southern. Garret Kiser score at 12-12 with a pair of
control at both ends of the responded with two three his own. Simpson hit a basecourt and spearheaded' the pointers in the first minute of line jumper and a 10-footcr at
Eastern fast break, the dagger play to give So~thern a· 6-2 the line for a 16-12lead, then
that killed the Toranodes advantage. Hindsight reflected Southern regai11ed the lead
comeback in the final round.
that Kiser scored only five on a Hubbard lay-up off a
Junior Chris Lyons finished points the retnaining 31 min - Fisher steal, · and a long 3• the game with 10 points. Gar- utes of the game.
pointer by Evans, 19-16.
; rett Karr added six, and Josh
Simpson
attac ked
Fisher made it 8-2 after an
the
: l{ehl and Chad Nelson each Eastern miss at the 4:47 mark Southern diamond defense,
;:_had five.
when the Eagles called time hitting · the jumper from the
: · : When teammates stumble to regroup. Kiser hit a lane block and' drawing· the fouL
: sbmeone has to pick up the jumper after another Eastern Simpson hit the free throw to
- slack. Several Tornadoes stum- miss, 10-2, then Eastern ral- again tie the game, 19- 19,
bled during Friday's perfor- lied hard in the final two min- then Southern's Whirlwinds
began a sel(cdestructing spiraL
·lnance, but only senior Jeremy utes.
~ :Fisher was able to pick up
Brown, 3lready a prominent
Two tmcial turnovers and
: some of the pieces. Fisher had factor on the boards, hit the several more brick-laden Tor: a 15-point night, while grab- seam twice and drew the fouL nado shots played right into
: -bing six rebounds, three steals, The senior hit two in a row, Eastern's momentum building
. · ~nd adding a couple assists.
then capped a 3-point play to drive. Josh Kehl hit a crucial
. : Garret Kiser, the Southern tighten the score at the I :44 bucket and drew the foul,
~ompleting the 3-point play
~ sharp-shooter, hit double fig- mark.
Simpson then drilled an off and Brown hit another as
ures but was limited to just
balance
3-pointer to tie the Eastern raced to a 25- I 9 lead
~hree second half points in the
••
•••
went on a 9-0 run early in
the second q1,1arter.
River Valley 'e.nds the reg•'
ular
season Feb. I 6 as the
flvmPapBI
•
'.
Raiders play host to War"'
: The Raiders finished 9- ren . .
"We thought that (a win
:Cor-25 (36 percent) at the
:Cree . throw line; compared over Jackson) would have
:to Jackson's 17-23 shooting been a good one to get
:at the foul line .(74 per- going into the tournament," said Layton. "I told
~enl)~ 1•:we got two baskets in. thelfl th~qlJet~ w!'q lot &lt;;&gt;f
;our gym and teams play, positives. We didn't play
:they've got six," said Lay- bad. The shooting tole\ the
'ton. "We're limited to -the story of the game." /
The Raiders open sec·
;,.'mount of shooting that we
~an get in in practice. It tiona! play Feb. 21 against
~bows. We're on and we're Northwest at South Web:Off. Maybe if we can get ster.
:more shooting in practice, · The lronmen travel to
before
:we would be more consisc Marietta Feb. I 6
ending
their
season
at
home
)ent shooters." · .
t Jacks.o n opened the game against Wellston Feb. 17;"
•with a 4-0 lead before a
'"
~air of Craig · Payne 3;POinters put the Raiders on
MY BALL - River Valley
&gt;top 6-4. ·
i Payne finished with eight senior Clark · Walker ,holds
'of his team high 17 points the ball away from a Jack·
son defender in Friday ' s
'• .in the. first quarter.
.
game against the lronmen.
., : River Valley led 18-17 at
Jackson prevailed 66-53 to
~ .the 'end of the opening·
win its first SEOAL contest
;: period, but trailed '30-27 at of the season. (Butch
·: halftime after the Ironmen Cooper photo)

at the half.
Eastern's bigger bodies did
nor allow Southerq the occasional inside bucket, and the
Tornadoes were forced to the
perimeter the entire second
half. All of Southern's 12
points came on 3-pointers in
the third period.
Kiser canned an opening
jumper to tighten the score at
25-22 Eastern, but Kehl hit a
key goal, 27-22. Evans nailed
a 3-pointer for a 27-25 tally as
Southern gave signs of coming back.
The wind was quickly
drained from Southern's sails
when Lyons answered the
Southern charge with a 3pointer of his own, the score
30-25.
That began an 8-0 run for
the Eagles -as Sotuhern
moq1cnrarily went helter
&lt;kdter. Simpson grabbed a
steal in the mix, then Karr
follow~d up with another,
sconng two consecutive
layups in a push that gave
Eastern its biggest lead at 3525.
Southern's last stand came
just when they thought no
more .Indians were coming.
Fisher hit back to back 3pointers to cut the score to
35-31. But two Southern
forced shots and some physi-·
cal inside play turned the ball
over as Eastern finished the
frame on a 6-0 run. Brown,
Simpson and Lyons each
added 2-pointers in' the mix.
Southern dropped to 11
and 13-point deficits early in
the final round, unable to
penetrate the Eastern defense.

Scoring ,just six points on
field goals in the final rpund,
Eastern went I 2-for-15 at the
line to salvage the win.
Brown had seven of those
points, while Lyons added
two and Nelson three.
Southern came back with
one last stand as Hubbard and
Dally Hill hit three pointers
to cut the score to 54-48 with
just under three minutes left.
Eastern converted at the line
and pulled out the 59·50 win.
Eastern hit 17-of-36 overall
from the field, hitting 2-of-1 0
3-.pointers. The Eagles were
23-for-27 at the foul line.
The Eagles grabbed 30
rebounds (Brown 16, Simpson 6), had 10 assists, l3
• turnovers and seven steals
(Karr 3) .
Southern hit 18-of-50
overall , including I 0-of-24 3s.
Southern had 22 rebounds
(Kiser 7, FISher 6). five assists
(Hubbard 2) , . 10 turnovers

and six steals.
Southern goes ro Symmes
Valley Tuesday, while Eastern
hos[ed Wahama Saturday.

SOUTHEAST OHIO'S FIRST
AND ONLY BLUE
OVAL CERTIFIED DEALER

~ . Raiders ·

.

2001 Ford Expedition
lthll .....,, Qdd c:.pt. eMir.. &amp;.MdM, L.MtMr, 2,000 Miles

2000 Mercury Mountaineer

•

VI, Aute1 AIC1 All ......, lnchHIIng Moonr904'

'

2000 Ford F150 Supercab 4x4
1.4, Auto, AIC 1 Tilt. CntiM, All Paww, XLT

XLT, ve, I a.d. AJC, Tilt, GNIM, MYCII Morel

2000 Ford F250 Supercab 4x2

: • .li

~:

XLT 7,1L DleMft a-to. NC, AM/PM C•u, All Power

WINS

....

.

•
•..

..
,.

1999 Lincoln Navigator
vt. Aut., .,.... AJC, All Power . . ..,...,.. l.cNicNd

1999 Ford Wlndatar
VI. A&amp;rta. AJC, THt, CniiH, All Power, 4 Doonl

1999 Ford Mustang GT

I--.. . .

VI. AIM. AIC, Tltt. GruiM, C.... CD. LM4Md

1999 Ford F250 Supercab 4x4

"

T.:M.-

L.w lllloo

1999 Ford F250 lupercab 4x4

.",.

Vtl, Auto. Air CoM, AMII'II

",,

c.,., All ~ '

1999 Ford Explorer

The Sunday 1imes-Sentlnel

•
",.
".,

.•'

,

2000 Ford Ranger Supercab 4x4

4 DMr1 XLT1 W.. a.to. &amp;JC, Tl"' CruiH, Luther, MoNI

1999 Ford F250 lupercab 4x4
T.JL ........ Auto. XLT, LoHect, Only '12.000 Mile•

1999 Ford F150 Supercab 4x4

""

XL, VI. auto. AIC 1 AMIFM c.... Oftlr t1, GOO MI.. ,

1998 Ford Explorer
4 Door, JCLT, Vlt .......

1998 Ford

A/f:t Tilt. Cru .... All ,......lqulpm•nt

Expedltlo~

4x4

. . . . ._,., I.AL, va, A'*'- All PowW1 ..........

1998 Ford Ranger Supercab 4x4
w, Auto, Alii Cend, AlllfM C•••• Loc.. Trlld•

• MF 2318 •
You'll hava a hard time trying to top
the value of a 42· PTO hp MF 2318
tractor. lt'a dealgned to atretch your
dollar while •hrlnklng your workload.
And
for Ia limited time, you oan take
.
advantage of a '71r rebate. Clive
ua a call todayl Thl• Ia a limited
time orr.rl Stop In for a e..t drive
aoon... we are ready to work with
you on a great deal for thl• traotorl

...
•l
•

.

•
;•
'

'•'

*MASSEY FERGUSON"
OlrJiMIIIn, DuMftt

J lm•s farm EquiPment

I

. . . . . . . 1. . . . . . . . . .

OA.

2110 .......n Awtnu• • Galllpoll•, OH 41131

4411777 or

LIAAUTO S

438 St. Rt. 7 N

ExciLLANT PAYM!HT PLAN
GREAT IINIJIITI (INCLUDING DIMO PROGRAM)
WORK AT THI 11 DIAUIIIKIP
. '
Cell TQ Schtdyle
lntiNig:

.

1997 F350 Reg. Cab 4x4
XLT T.SL .....a. Auto, AIC AU fl.ww, Onlr ..._,000 Mil"
1997 F350 Flatbed Dumptruck

--·..--'
1

Oelllpolla

,

1

1997 Ford F350 Supercab 4x2
T.l D1eM1. AUte, AI Poww, DIM Oftly 21.000 Mil"

·

1 ......., ...... AJC

1997 Ford F350 Reg. Cab 4x4

4f0, ,..... AIC, L.Mde4lt Lift 10t, one, ..,aoo MI ...

1997 Ford. SuperDuty 450
J.:t "DieMI, I.,., AhiMIMIM PIMttN. Onlt 81 1000 Mil••

1996 F350 Crew Cab
ou.tly, oMO, Awto, LNMII Ctintur&amp;an c:anv...lon

Tom Peden Country
1-800-8224417. (304) 344-5947

••

4 7 1 - - - •lllploy, WY

--~~--.--.

441o2414

,,

. -..._·
I

L

.

1197 Ford SuperDuty 450 Cab &amp; Chassis

(740) 446·2240 ~HONDA

An

••

XLT, Vt, Auto, Air CoM, Tltt. CNIM, All Pewer

RIVERFRONT HONDA

tellm, and have strong Initiative.

••

...., ,...,

, Wonderful o~poi1unltl• are eve liable In Tom
Peden Countlf. We.lire expanding our facllltl•
and need more ..... people. No experience Ia
required, only a w!lllngneee to l•rn, work aa a

I

1998 F150 .Supercab 4x4 ·

Theyr'e legendary winners on the ·
racetrack. And now you can be a
winner every month with great deals
on every new CBR600 and
CBR929RR. Ride off with.no down
payment*" and low, low monthly payments.• These Deals to
MoVfl On end May 31st, so you'd batter hurry. Because
everyone knows, these Hondas always go fast.

'

"

�'

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

Page B2 • 6anllap 11tmn-6tntind

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunct.y, February 11, 2001

&amp;unba!' 11timell-6enlintl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

PREP BAS.KETBALL

Spartans outgun Marauders in TVC play
IYDAVIHAIIIIII
f1VP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK
SPRINGS
Alexander outscored Meigs
21-1 from the foul line as the
Spartans defeated the Marauden 54-45 at Larry R. Morri. son Gymnasium.
The Spartans hit 21-of-24
from the line, while the
Marauden were one of five
for the evening.
Meigs jumped out on top 62 on a bucket by Derrick
Johnson at the 5:10 mark of
the period. The Spartans bat• ded back and tied the game at
8-all on a free throw by Jason
Warren at the 1 :35 mark.
Johnson gave Meigs a I 0-8
: lead with a short jumper with
5 I seconds left, but Justin
Brooks nailed a 3-pointer
with 24 seconds left to give
the Spartans a 11-10 lead after
one period.
In rhe second period
Alexander built up a I 0-point
lead and took a 29- I 9 lead
with 1:40 left. But the
Marauden started to chip
away at the Spartan lead.
Buckets by Travis Siden and
j. . P. Staats pulled Meigs to·
within 29-23 with 25 seconds
left. After a missed Alexander
shot, Nick Bolin brought the
home town crowd to their

' .

,.'
'
I

feet when he nailed a shot
about two feet beyond the half
court line at the buzzer and
Meigs had pulled to within
29-26 at the hili:
A basket by Bolin to start
the third period puUed Meigs
to within 29-28 at the 6:55
mark. But Alexander went on
a 7-2 ro,m and took a 36-30
lead on a pair of Grigsby free
throws. Alexander held a 3834 lead heading into the final
period.
Grigsby scored to give
Alexander a 40-34 lead to
s~1rted the fourth period. But
once again it was Bolin that
came throw, Bolin connected
on two from long range in ;1
span of 23 seconds and suddenly the game was tied at 40all.
Warren and Bolin traded
buckets and the game was tied
at 42-all with 4:50 left. But
Alexander outscored Meigs
I 2-3 the rest· of the way t&lt;;J
post the win. Alexander in the
fourth period was a perfect
ten of ten including six in a
row by Justin Brooks.
L.C. Grigsby and Brooks led
Alexander with 13 points
each. Warren added I I. The
Spartans hit .15-of-4 I from
the floor for 37 percent,
including 3-of-5 from long

range.
.The Spartans hit 88 percent
from the line (21-of-24) and
had 30 rebounds led by Warren with nine. They had 13
turnovers, five steals led by
Ryan Lawson with two. The
Spartans had nine assists with
Grigsby getting four and La\vson three.
Johnson led M~igs with 17,
he was joined in double figures by Bolin with 14. Meigs
hit 20-of-46 from the floor,
including four of 12 3-pointers for 43 percent. Meigs was
1-for-5 from the line for 20
p,ercent.

Meigs had 12 rebounds led
by Staats with six , Johnson
added fiw. Meigs had nine
turnovers, seven assists led by
Fackler with three. Johnson
had two of the Marauders
three steals.
Meigs played at Vinton
County on Saturday and ends
the regular season at home
Tuesday against Eastern.

HIGH ·FIVE ....:. Jasbn Warren
(right) of Alexander attempts
to block a shot by John Witherell of Meigs In Friday's 'tVC
Ohio Division game between
the Spartans and Marauders.
Alexander won the game, 5445. (Dave Harris photo)

emy with 11 points and five
rebounds. He also had three
.
.assists.
Hill scored eight points and
Dressel added seven. Finney
had four rebounds and three·
assists.
Following
Satufday's
rnatchup with Wheelersburg
(16-1), the ninth pnked team
in the AP Division Ill poll,
the Blue Devils will play host
to Portsmouth Tuesday.
The tina! SEOAL and regular' season game is s~t for Friday at Point Pleasant.
Gallia Academy opens sectional tournament play Tues.
day, Feb. 20 against Vinton
County at South Webster.
Game time is set for 8 p.m.

Devils
from Pllp II

l
1

•
•

•

'.

'.
'

'

played without leading
scorer and rebounder Dustin
Deckard, who is sidelined due
·to the after effects of a concussion.
Despite his absence, Gallia
Academy rallied from a 15-9
deficit in the fint quarter to
lead 20-17 at the half. The
Blue Devils defense held Warren to just two points in the
second quarter.
"We said before the game
that we had nci excuses,"
Osborne said. "These kids can
win with what they've got.
We played very well the first
half, we just couldn't put 32
minutes together."
·
Travis McKinniss . scored
seven consecutive points in
rhe second quarter, including
a 3-pointer, as the Gallipolitans took control of the game.
TJ Hill added six points in
the first halffor GAHS, while
Nick Dressel and David
Finney each knocked down a
3-pointer.
That output offset a pair of
treys by Warren's Curt Morris
in the first quarter, which
helped the Warriors build the
early advantage.
The third quarter was a different story as the Warrio.rs
turned the tables on the Blue
Devils, holding them to just
three points in the pe&lt;iod.
Finney's 3-pointer with I :04
rernaihing was Gallia Academy's lone score.
Warren kept up the defensive pressure in the fourth
quarter, outscoring Gallia
Academy, 23-12. Isaac Ward
scored 10 points in the tina!
quarter for the Warrion.
"We were ·able to run . our
offense in , the finr half,"
Osborne said. "In the second
half, we weren't. The difference was not necessarily us. I
didn't think we were so bad
the second half, but our
catches were farther out and
deflections occurred more
often. Their post play was
more physical with us and we
had to run the offense further
out on the floor.
,
"They kept us (rom getting
into any offensive flow whatsoever. And that's · to their
credit, they made us do that."
Ward and Morris scored 14
points apiece to lead Warren.
Ward finished with a gamehigh six rebounds and three
blocked shots.
Travis Ollon1 added I 2
points and three n:bounds for
Warren. Jeremy Pinkerton
1cored eight points and
g111bbed five rebounds.
McKinniss led Gallia Acad-

TOP SCORER - Gallia Acad·
emy's Travis McKinniss (11)
scores two of his tellm·high
11 points against Warren.
(Doug Shipley photo) .

Gene Johnson of
GENE JOHNSON CHEVY-9LDS
is pleased to announce
.
that
MICHAEL IC. SERGENT
has rejoined the Sales
Staff. Mike comes to
the dealership with
18 yrs. experience.
Mike resides In
,,, ••
,.
. Pt. Pleasant with his
wife Shawn and Is the
father of Brett, Austl,
.
Ashley and Beth.
Mike would like to invite all his previous
customers and friends to call or stop ~Y
the Dealership to su tile full line of
New and Used Vehicles;

Rivals

third quarter. Jonathan Evans
added six points. Matt Neigler
and Chad Hubbard each
notched. five points, Brandon
Hill and Dally Hill had three
apiece and · Matt Warner
added two.
In a pregame ceremony,
Southern paid tribute to its
senior winter sports athletes.
Senior cagen Brandon Hill,
Chad Hubbard, Matt Neigler,
Matt Warner, Jeremy Fisher,
Garret Kiser, Michael Ball,
and · Jonathan Evans all
received honors and played in
their final home game.
Simpson controlled the tip
and was the first to cash in,
hitting a jumper from the key
to give Eastern the first lead,

score just inside the one
minute mark, and Southern
went for the last shot, but had
•
ftNIPIIpB1
it stolen with four se.conds
left .
led to one player, Eastern
Although not reflected in
senior Matt Simpson, whose
the stats, it was Eastern's
• _dontinance set the tempo of
defensive stand and the out: the first half.
standing job they did guard: : At one point, Simpson had
ing Kiser that proved an
• jcored all but five of Eastern's
important role in the victory.
:, lint half points, before ending
No one else was able take
i; lhe half with 13 points. Overover as Southern floundered
,. )ll, the senior leader went 6to a 2-for-13 quarter from the
; for-9 (66 percent) from ehe
field. The horrendous shoot: ~eld, netting 17 points and six
ing turned into Brown
· ..-ebounds.
rebounds and transition buck• .: Senior Joe Brown also proets for the Eagles.
• 01ided a valuable lifeline, scorSimpson drilled two free
·: 4ng five points the first quarter
throws to give Eastern only its
)n a 16-point effort, but his
second lead of the game to
• ~rea test contribution came in 2-0.
start the second frame. South)is 16 rebounds. The crucial
The next six tnin.utes was ern's Warner knotted the
• t!ouble-double gave Brown all Southern. Garret Kiser score at 12-12 with a pair of
control at both ends of the responded with two three his own. Simpson hit a basecourt and spearheaded' the pointers in the first minute of line jumper and a 10-footcr at
Eastern fast break, the dagger play to give So~thern a· 6-2 the line for a 16-12lead, then
that killed the Toranodes advantage. Hindsight reflected Southern regai11ed the lead
comeback in the final round.
that Kiser scored only five on a Hubbard lay-up off a
Junior Chris Lyons finished points the retnaining 31 min - Fisher steal, · and a long 3• the game with 10 points. Gar- utes of the game.
pointer by Evans, 19-16.
; rett Karr added six, and Josh
Simpson
attac ked
Fisher made it 8-2 after an
the
: l{ehl and Chad Nelson each Eastern miss at the 4:47 mark Southern diamond defense,
;:_had five.
when the Eagles called time hitting · the jumper from the
: · : When teammates stumble to regroup. Kiser hit a lane block and' drawing· the fouL
: sbmeone has to pick up the jumper after another Eastern Simpson hit the free throw to
- slack. Several Tornadoes stum- miss, 10-2, then Eastern ral- again tie the game, 19- 19,
bled during Friday's perfor- lied hard in the final two min- then Southern's Whirlwinds
began a sel(cdestructing spiraL
·lnance, but only senior Jeremy utes.
~ :Fisher was able to pick up
Brown, 3lready a prominent
Two tmcial turnovers and
: some of the pieces. Fisher had factor on the boards, hit the several more brick-laden Tor: a 15-point night, while grab- seam twice and drew the fouL nado shots played right into
: -bing six rebounds, three steals, The senior hit two in a row, Eastern's momentum building
. · ~nd adding a couple assists.
then capped a 3-point play to drive. Josh Kehl hit a crucial
. : Garret Kiser, the Southern tighten the score at the I :44 bucket and drew the foul,
~ompleting the 3-point play
~ sharp-shooter, hit double fig- mark.
Simpson then drilled an off and Brown hit another as
ures but was limited to just
balance
3-pointer to tie the Eastern raced to a 25- I 9 lead
~hree second half points in the
••
•••
went on a 9-0 run early in
the second q1,1arter.
River Valley 'e.nds the reg•'
ular
season Feb. I 6 as the
flvmPapBI
•
'.
Raiders play host to War"'
: The Raiders finished 9- ren . .
"We thought that (a win
:Cor-25 (36 percent) at the
:Cree . throw line; compared over Jackson) would have
:to Jackson's 17-23 shooting been a good one to get
:at the foul line .(74 per- going into the tournament," said Layton. "I told
~enl)~ 1•:we got two baskets in. thelfl th~qlJet~ w!'q lot &lt;;&gt;f
;our gym and teams play, positives. We didn't play
:they've got six," said Lay- bad. The shooting tole\ the
'ton. "We're limited to -the story of the game." /
The Raiders open sec·
;,.'mount of shooting that we
~an get in in practice. It tiona! play Feb. 21 against
~bows. We're on and we're Northwest at South Web:Off. Maybe if we can get ster.
:more shooting in practice, · The lronmen travel to
before
:we would be more consisc Marietta Feb. I 6
ending
their
season
at
home
)ent shooters." · .
t Jacks.o n opened the game against Wellston Feb. 17;"
•with a 4-0 lead before a
'"
~air of Craig · Payne 3;POinters put the Raiders on
MY BALL - River Valley
&gt;top 6-4. ·
i Payne finished with eight senior Clark · Walker ,holds
'of his team high 17 points the ball away from a Jack·
son defender in Friday ' s
'• .in the. first quarter.
.
game against the lronmen.
., : River Valley led 18-17 at
Jackson prevailed 66-53 to
~ .the 'end of the opening·
win its first SEOAL contest
;: period, but trailed '30-27 at of the season. (Butch
·: halftime after the Ironmen Cooper photo)

at the half.
Eastern's bigger bodies did
nor allow Southerq the occasional inside bucket, and the
Tornadoes were forced to the
perimeter the entire second
half. All of Southern's 12
points came on 3-pointers in
the third period.
Kiser canned an opening
jumper to tighten the score at
25-22 Eastern, but Kehl hit a
key goal, 27-22. Evans nailed
a 3-pointer for a 27-25 tally as
Southern gave signs of coming back.
The wind was quickly
drained from Southern's sails
when Lyons answered the
Southern charge with a 3pointer of his own, the score
30-25.
That began an 8-0 run for
the Eagles -as Sotuhern
moq1cnrarily went helter
&lt;kdter. Simpson grabbed a
steal in the mix, then Karr
follow~d up with another,
sconng two consecutive
layups in a push that gave
Eastern its biggest lead at 3525.
Southern's last stand came
just when they thought no
more .Indians were coming.
Fisher hit back to back 3pointers to cut the score to
35-31. But two Southern
forced shots and some physi-·
cal inside play turned the ball
over as Eastern finished the
frame on a 6-0 run. Brown,
Simpson and Lyons each
added 2-pointers in' the mix.
Southern dropped to 11
and 13-point deficits early in
the final round, unable to
penetrate the Eastern defense.

Scoring ,just six points on
field goals in the final rpund,
Eastern went I 2-for-15 at the
line to salvage the win.
Brown had seven of those
points, while Lyons added
two and Nelson three.
Southern came back with
one last stand as Hubbard and
Dally Hill hit three pointers
to cut the score to 54-48 with
just under three minutes left.
Eastern converted at the line
and pulled out the 59·50 win.
Eastern hit 17-of-36 overall
from the field, hitting 2-of-1 0
3-.pointers. The Eagles were
23-for-27 at the foul line.
The Eagles grabbed 30
rebounds (Brown 16, Simpson 6), had 10 assists, l3
• turnovers and seven steals
(Karr 3) .
Southern hit 18-of-50
overall , including I 0-of-24 3s.
Southern had 22 rebounds
(Kiser 7, FISher 6). five assists
(Hubbard 2) , . 10 turnovers

and six steals.
Southern goes ro Symmes
Valley Tuesday, while Eastern
hos[ed Wahama Saturday.

SOUTHEAST OHIO'S FIRST
AND ONLY BLUE
OVAL CERTIFIED DEALER

~ . Raiders ·

.

2001 Ford Expedition
lthll .....,, Qdd c:.pt. eMir.. &amp;.MdM, L.MtMr, 2,000 Miles

2000 Mercury Mountaineer

•

VI, Aute1 AIC1 All ......, lnchHIIng Moonr904'

'

2000 Ford F150 Supercab 4x4
1.4, Auto, AIC 1 Tilt. CntiM, All Paww, XLT

XLT, ve, I a.d. AJC, Tilt, GNIM, MYCII Morel

2000 Ford F250 Supercab 4x2

: • .li

~:

XLT 7,1L DleMft a-to. NC, AM/PM C•u, All Power

WINS

....

.

•
•..

..
,.

1999 Lincoln Navigator
vt. Aut., .,.... AJC, All Power . . ..,...,.. l.cNicNd

1999 Ford Wlndatar
VI. A&amp;rta. AJC, THt, CniiH, All Power, 4 Doonl

1999 Ford Mustang GT

I--.. . .

VI. AIM. AIC, Tltt. GruiM, C.... CD. LM4Md

1999 Ford F250 Supercab 4x4

"

T.:M.-

L.w lllloo

1999 Ford F250 lupercab 4x4

.",.

Vtl, Auto. Air CoM, AMII'II

",,

c.,., All ~ '

1999 Ford Explorer

The Sunday 1imes-Sentlnel

•
",.
".,

.•'

,

2000 Ford Ranger Supercab 4x4

4 DMr1 XLT1 W.. a.to. &amp;JC, Tl"' CruiH, Luther, MoNI

1999 Ford F250 lupercab 4x4
T.JL ........ Auto. XLT, LoHect, Only '12.000 Mile•

1999 Ford F150 Supercab 4x4

""

XL, VI. auto. AIC 1 AMIFM c.... Oftlr t1, GOO MI.. ,

1998 Ford Explorer
4 Door, JCLT, Vlt .......

1998 Ford

A/f:t Tilt. Cru .... All ,......lqulpm•nt

Expedltlo~

4x4

. . . . ._,., I.AL, va, A'*'- All PowW1 ..........

1998 Ford Ranger Supercab 4x4
w, Auto, Alii Cend, AlllfM C•••• Loc.. Trlld•

• MF 2318 •
You'll hava a hard time trying to top
the value of a 42· PTO hp MF 2318
tractor. lt'a dealgned to atretch your
dollar while •hrlnklng your workload.
And
for Ia limited time, you oan take
.
advantage of a '71r rebate. Clive
ua a call todayl Thl• Ia a limited
time orr.rl Stop In for a e..t drive
aoon... we are ready to work with
you on a great deal for thl• traotorl

...
•l
•

.

•
;•
'

'•'

*MASSEY FERGUSON"
OlrJiMIIIn, DuMftt

J lm•s farm EquiPment

I

. . . . . . . 1. . . . . . . . . .

OA.

2110 .......n Awtnu• • Galllpoll•, OH 41131

4411777 or

LIAAUTO S

438 St. Rt. 7 N

ExciLLANT PAYM!HT PLAN
GREAT IINIJIITI (INCLUDING DIMO PROGRAM)
WORK AT THI 11 DIAUIIIKIP
. '
Cell TQ Schtdyle
lntiNig:

.

1997 F350 Reg. Cab 4x4
XLT T.SL .....a. Auto, AIC AU fl.ww, Onlr ..._,000 Mil"
1997 F350 Flatbed Dumptruck

--·..--'
1

Oelllpolla

,

1

1997 Ford F350 Supercab 4x2
T.l D1eM1. AUte, AI Poww, DIM Oftly 21.000 Mil"

·

1 ......., ...... AJC

1997 Ford F350 Reg. Cab 4x4

4f0, ,..... AIC, L.Mde4lt Lift 10t, one, ..,aoo MI ...

1997 Ford. SuperDuty 450
J.:t "DieMI, I.,., AhiMIMIM PIMttN. Onlt 81 1000 Mil••

1996 F350 Crew Cab
ou.tly, oMO, Awto, LNMII Ctintur&amp;an c:anv...lon

Tom Peden Country
1-800-8224417. (304) 344-5947

••

4 7 1 - - - •lllploy, WY

--~~--.--.

441o2414

,,

. -..._·
I

L

.

1197 Ford SuperDuty 450 Cab &amp; Chassis

(740) 446·2240 ~HONDA

An

••

XLT, Vt, Auto, Air CoM, Tltt. CNIM, All Pewer

RIVERFRONT HONDA

tellm, and have strong Initiative.

••

...., ,...,

, Wonderful o~poi1unltl• are eve liable In Tom
Peden Countlf. We.lire expanding our facllltl•
and need more ..... people. No experience Ia
required, only a w!lllngneee to l•rn, work aa a

I

1998 F150 .Supercab 4x4 ·

Theyr'e legendary winners on the ·
racetrack. And now you can be a
winner every month with great deals
on every new CBR600 and
CBR929RR. Ride off with.no down
payment*" and low, low monthly payments.• These Deals to
MoVfl On end May 31st, so you'd batter hurry. Because
everyone knows, these Hondas always go fast.

'

"

�•
P-oe B4 • 6anbap «tmn-htind

I.

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

Prep Hoops Scoreboard
Boyo
lootom H, . - 1 0

I:

l\"

1

Ala-r 54, Molga45
Arcanum 58, Newton 51
River Wiley 18
9 13 13 - 53
AIChl&gt;oiP 58, Napoleon 58
Jacloon
17 13 13 13 - 66
Aohtebula Edgewood 81, Pymatur&gt;ng
.
EaS1em (16·4, TVC 10~1- Josh Kohl Vlllty 85
2 1·1 5, Garratt Karr 2 2·2 8, Chris Lyon 3
Altwitla Tuya Valloy 58, Clrolevlllo 54
3-3 10, Joe Brown 3 10.11 16, Mott 51111'·
Atwater Watertoo 89, Rootstown 62
oon 6 4·5 17, Chid Noioon 1 3-5 5. Totals
Avon Loki 58, Amhtral57
17 23·27 59.
Btrbeoton 38, Cuyahogo Folio 35
Batavia 80, Gooi]IOlown 51
Soothem (10·10, TVC 5·51 - Nathen
Btavar Eaatom eo, New Bolton 54
Ma~ln o o~ 0, Brandon Hill1 o-o 3, Chid
Beavercreek 72, Spring. N. 58
Hubbard 2 o-o 5, Matt warner o 2·2 2.
Jeremv Fisher 6 1·2 1S. Dallas Hilt 0..0 3,
Ball&gt;rook 66, Preble Shawnta 55
Garret Kiser 4 0.0 11. Jonathan Evant 2 0Belmon1 Union LOCII 63, Bellaire St.
John's 57
.
0 6. Totals 18 4·5 ~ Belpre M , Nalsonvllle~ Vork M
3-~XJint goals--Eastern 2 (Lyons, Slflll·
son), Southern 10 (Kisar 3, Evans 2, Fish·
Baraa 69, Medina 55
Bartln Hiland 76, Medina CM011an 40
tr 2. B. Hill, Hul&gt;ba«&lt;, D. Hill).
Bexley 57, London 54
JV-5outhem 53, Eastam 46.
Blanche1ter 46, E. Clinton 45
E-Jascm Kimes 9, Alex Sirl1JSOn 9.
S-Jordan Hill 17, JUstin CQnnolly 13,
Bloom-Carroll 62, Clrolo&gt;illt Logan Elm
Brandon Pierce 9.
50
Bloorndlla Elmwood 91, Glbaonburg70
Jackaon 86, River Vall•y 53
Brecksville 53, Midpark 46
Butler 66, Trotwood·Madlson 55
River Valley
18
9 13 13 - 53
Cadiz Hlrrtson Cent. 71, Conotton Val·
JackSon
17 13 13 13 - 66
ley 52
Rive r Valley (7-12, SEOAL 3·10) Crail) Payne 7 0-0 17, Dustin Gibbs 0 0..0
Caldwall71, Fronller 51
CampbeU 68, Youngs. Chlnay 59
.
0, Eric Nolan 5 2·4 12, Jon ~lohan 0 O.Q
Can. Cent. Cath. 70, Youngs. Rayen 54
0, Brandon Mitchem 1 0·0 3, Blakt Mer·
Canal Winchester 86, Hamillon Twp. 41
cum 1 2-8 4, D.J. Frazee 3 2·2 8, Scott
Can11eld 58, Niles 52, OT
Payne 0 1·2 1, Jeremy Peck 2 0·2 4. Totals
Carrollton 62, Alliance Martlngton 47
20 9-25 53.
Jackson (4·14, SEOAL 1-12)- Roeble
Cantown Miami E. 54. Graham 29
Pugh 7 2·2 18, Ryan Tipton 5 3-414, CMo
CadtlrvHI8 51, Greenavlew 31
Centerburg 77, Danville 47
Jones 0 3-A 3, Jerry HarriS 3 0·0 8, Jamie
Callahan 1 o-o 2, Ryan WhlteBida 0 O..Q 0,
Champion 55, Glra«&lt; 51
BraKton Jenkins 0 o-o o. Eric Evans 4'2·5
Chardon NDCL 57, Btdlord Chantl 53
Chesapeake 63, Ironton Rock Hlll25
10, Ketson Mavis 1 1·2 3, Kyle Loftus 2 4·
Chillicothe 66,. Olentangy 63
4 8, Cory Sheppard 0 2·2 2. Totels 23 17·
2366.
Chillicothe Huntington Ross !59, Paint
3·polnt goals-RV 4 (C. Payne 3, Valley 43
Chlll~otha Zane Trace 70, Richmond
Mitchem) , Jackson 3.(Pugh 2, Tlpt.on).
.
. JV-RI'Ver Valley 85, Jackson (9.
Dale SE 39
Cln. Anderson 60, Amelia .(6
J-Cory Sheppard 15. RV-Ouatln
Gibbs 12. Jon Mollohan 12. Jesse Ward
Cln. Cc&gt;traln 70, Cln. Syoamora 47
10, Nick Craycraft 10,
Cln. Flnneytown 57, Cln. Taylor 42
Cln. Glen Este 58, Cln . NW 40
Login 50, Poinl Pltllant 28
Cln. Hughes 70, Cin. Mount Healthy 45
Point Pleasant 13
4 e 6 - 29
Cln. Loveland 79, Kings Mills Klngo 52
Logan
19
9 "13 9 - 50
CJn. Madeira 63. Deer Park 56
Point (4·13, SEOAL 4·9) - Kevin
Cln. Manemont78, Wyoming 60
Zerkle 1 O..Q 2, Nlc Dalton 0 ().0 0, VIllars 4
Cln. Moatler 42, Cln. Elder 41
0~ 8, Stephen Handley 1. 0~ 2, T.J.
Cln. N. CoNtge Hill 84, Landmark Chr.
Deshuk 1 1·2 3, J.P. Simpkin&amp; 0 0~ 0, 55 '
Joey Loomis 6 1·3 13, Brett Powell o 1·2 1.
Cln. Oak Hilla 51, Hamt~on43, OT
Totals: 13 3-7 29.
. Cln. Reading 64, Cln. Indian Hill 55
Logan (13-4, SEOAL 12·1) - Ryan
Cln. Roger Bacon 54. Hamilton Badin
Swinehart 2 0·0 6, Andrew Barrell 1 O..Q 3, 41
JoMny Conrad 9 0.0 19, Jim Bennett 3 3·
Cln. St Xa~ar 59, Cln. La Salle 41
4 9, AleK Penrod o 1·2 1, Joey Conrad· I 2·
Cln. Ton 67, Cln. Alkon 50
2 4, David Montgomery 1 2·2 4, Max
Cln. Westam Hll1s 79, Cln. W~hrow 67
Resler 2 0~ 4. Totals: 19 8·10 50.
Cln. Winton WOOdl 69, Cln. Tuipln 47
Three-point goals-POiol 0, Logan 4
Cln. WOOdwl«&lt;68, Cln. Wa1nul Hills 61
(Swinehart 2, Barrell, Conrad).
Cle. Glenville eo, Ole. East Tech 65
JV--t.ogan 54, Point Pleasant 32.
Cle. His. eo. Euclid 61
PP-Ashley Pyles 8, Hunter Rouoh 8.
Cle. YASJ 57, Can. MoKinloy 55
L-Jason Dicken 12.
Collins W. Reserve 52, New London 47
Cola. Academy 56, Trat o1 Lila 49
Aloander 54. Mtlgo 4S
Colo. Bishop Read)' eo, Nowallc Cath.
Alexander
11 18 ' 9 18 - 54
40
,,
Meigs
10 16 8 11 - 45
Cols. Brookhaven 71, Cots. Mifflin 68
AleJCander (6·10, TVC 5·5) - Mlct\ael
Colo. DeSalts 66, Cola. Ha~ley ~
Hawk 2 2·2 7, L. c . Gngoby 3 6·7 13,
Coli. E. 81, Cc&gt;o. Centennlal40
Justin Brooks 1 1D-10 13, 2ach Lustgarten
Cola. Eastmoor 83, Cols. Briggs 53
0 0~ 0, Ryan lawson 2 2·2 6, Shawn Ball
Cot•. Independence 72, Cola. S. 53
1 0·0 2, Dylan Walker 1 0~ 2, Klllc Crow 0
Cola ..Rtsd)' eo, Ntwallc Cath. •o
o-o 0, Jason Warren s 1·3 11, Totals 15 21·
Cots. W. 84, Cofs. Marlon·FrankNn 6224 54.
Cola. WattBIIOn 67, Aoaecrans 56
Meigs (2·16, TVC 1·6) - J. P. Staats 4
Cola. Welllrig1on 85, Morton Cath. 81;
OoO 8, Adam Bullington 1 0.0 2, Derek
Cols. Whetstone 64, Cots. Linden 54
Johnson 0 0·0 0, Tra...ls Siders 1 0·2 2,
ColumbJana Crestview 58, E. Palestine
Jason Knight 0 0·0 0, Nick Bolin S H 14, 55
Buzzy Fackler 0 0~ 0, Derrick Johnson 8
Columbus Grove 49, Paulding 47
0·1 17, John Wltherell1 0·02. TotalS 20 1·
Conneaut 80, Jefferson 81
5 45.
Convoy Crestview 77, Bluffton 39
3-polnt goals - Alexander 3 (Hawk.
Copley 58, Medina Highland 35
Gngsby, Brooks~. Melgo 4 (Bolin 3, Dtrrk:k
Corttand Lakeview 57, Newton Falls .( 1
Johnson 1).
·
Cary-Rawson 60, Vankle 59
0o11111111on 64, Ansonia 65
Warren 52. Oallla Aeadlmy 35
Day. Colonti Whlta 84, Patteraon 62
Warren
15
2 12 23 - 52
Day. Dunbar 80, Day. Belmont 67
GAHS
9 11
3 12 - 35
Day. Jeff'eraon 85, Middletown Chr. 65
Warren (12·5, SEOAL 12·1) - Curt
Day. Meadowdale n Day. suvera 73
Morris 5 1·2 14, Derek Cole o o-o o. Chrts
Day. Northmont 78, GrHnvlla 5&amp;
Hendricks 0 0-G 0, Aaron Coffman 1 0-Q 2,
· Day. NoMrldge 75, Ealon 61
Matt Nuzum 0 o-2 0, BradVenham 0 2-2 2,
Day. OakwOod 89, Dixie 53
Justin Gum 0 0·0 0, Jer~;tmy Pinkerton 3 2·
De11anco 81, St. Marys Mamorill43
4 a, Travis ouom s O·O 12, Isaac ward e 2·
Delaware 53, Whltehaii·Yeartlng 51
2 14. Totals 21 7·12 52.
Delaware Buckeye Valley 45, Sparta
Gallla Academy (8·9, SEOAL 6·7) Highland 43
Andre Geiger 1 0-Q 2, Travis McKinniss 3
Delaware Chr. 69, Powell Village Acad·
4-4 11, Nick Dressel 3 0·0 7, Donnfe John· emy 35
son 1 o-o 2. Clarke Saunders o o-o o, T.J.
Dole Hardin Northern 58, Van Buren 49
Hill 3 0·0 6, Cody Cal&lt;!well 1 0~ 2,' Ryan
Dover 46, Cambrtdge 37
Matura 0 0·0 o, David Finney 1· o-o 3, Allen
Dublin Coffmart 81, Waaterville S. 64
Skinner 1 0·0 2. Totals 14 4-4 35.
E. Llverpool81, Weltsvlla 39
3·point goals-Warren 3·8 (Morrls),
Elyria 69, Parma Valley Forge 34
Gallla 3·16 (McKinnlss, Dressel, Finney).
Elyria Cath. 75, Holy Neme 61
Rebounds-Warren 26 (Ward 6, Ptnkenon
Felicity 51, HillSbOro 49
5), Gallia 19 (McKtnniss 5, Finney 4).
Findlay !;4, Btnduaky 50, OT
Assists-Warren 12 (Venham 6), Gallla 11
Findlay Heritage
Christian 46,
(Finney, McKinnlss 3). Steals-Warren 5 Zanesville Christian 44
(Pinke~on 2). Gallla 9 (Hill4).
Findlay Llberiy-Bentpn 76, Arcadia 30
JV-Gallla 48, Warren 40.
Flr:JIInds 78, Lorain MldVJew 7.(, OT
G-Ryan Huelson 14, Clarke Saunders
Ftllnldort Adons 35, Piketon 34
12, Anttlony Dey 10. W-Justln Eichinger
Franklin 55, Lemon-Morvoe 40
17 .
Frlnklin Furnace Green 89, Ironton St.
Joa. 29
Ohio Valley 68, Grace 34
Fremont Rosa 60, OreQOn Clay 58
Grace
2
7 10 15 - 34
Ft Loramie (6, Botkln136
OVC
15 25 14 15 - 69
Glhlinna 51, GallOway Westland ~9
Grace ,.... Adam Bowen 0 1·3 1, Joe flncl·
Garrenavllle 74, Mogadore Field 66
ham 1 0·0 2, Stephen Shaner 1 1-4 4, Enck
Ganeva 58. Aahtabula 50
Balli O·O 2, Garrett Mathis 6 1-4 13, Jool1
Ganoa Area 62, Mlllbwy lake 50
Smith 2 0-5 4, Andrew Oonchatz 1 1-8 3,
Germantown Valley VIew 72, Carlile 82
Nathan Brokkt11 D-1 3, Ryan Spurlock 1 oGnadenhuHen India" Valley 58.
0 2. Totals 14 4·25 34 .
Coshoclon 31
·
ovc (11-6) - Jay Jenkins 1 2·4 4,
Granville 54, Mlillrsp9f134
Adam Holcomb 8 2·3 20, Gabe Jen1dns 7
Grovo c~y 53, won\i1Mlon Kllboumo
1~ 15, Dale Taylor 1 2·3 4, Nathan Bow· 42
\, _ :;;::.:--·
man 1 0~ 3, John Polcyn 2 1·2 6, Mike . Gmvopo~ 48, Hllllart1 Dtvtdlon 48
Jenks 3 0-1 6, Brad Bowman 3 0·2 6, ·
Homtnon Roaa 45, ume Mllml38
Nathan Williams 1 0~ 2, Amll Agrawal! 0·
Hamler Patrick Henry 35, tl&gt;erty Center
0 3, Scott Ffans 0 0·2 0. Totals 28 8-19 89. 33
·
3,polnt goals-Grace 2 (Shafter,
Hanoyenon Unl1ed eo, LHIOnla 36
Brokke), OVC 5 (Holcomb 2, N. Bowman,
Ho~land Woyne Trace 78, Tlnora &amp;2
Polcyn, Agrawal). Reboundo-Grace nli,
Heath 66, Sugar Grovo Btmo Union 62
OVC 32 (B. Bowman 8, Frana 5). AsatoHebron LakeWOOd 82, UCklng 11111. 41
Groot o/a, ovc 15 (Hoclomb, B. Bowman ' Hubbe«&lt;47, B100k11eid 40
4). Steals-Grace o/a, OVC 12 (B. Bow·
Hubor Hta. WOyna IO,'Falrbom IS
m1n, Jenks 3) . Turnovers-Grace nle,
Hudton &amp;0 Stow 47
. ovc 13.
Hunting vi11oy unlvoraity ae, Kllk141
Huron 82, Mllln Edllon 47
Qlrto
Jaokoon Btl, Chlohlra River V.Hty e3
Ohio Vallay II, Qr- II
Joromotvllle HDIIdalt 7•. Alttman 41
Gract
12 13 18 11 - &amp;2
Johnetown NoMrtdga 11, Ulloa 36
ovc
21 19 17 12 - 68
JOhnllown•Monrot te, Ellt KnoKIO
Graca (12·5)-, Tabitha Ralneo10 8·11
Klllda 112, Mll141r CitY 110
28, Morlu Jayne .1 4-5 8, Elloha Joyce 0 2·
Kent R - 67, 'Ravtnna37
· a 2, Bt111anr Wlillam1 2 2·3 8, suun
Kenton U, Elida 12
' Wlll&gt;t 1 2-ll 4, Ertn Portar 3 o~ e. Totllo
Konton Rldao .70, Tooumuh 62
.
: 17111-27&amp;2.
Ktttorlng Afftr 61, l'urooll Mt11an 31
, Ohio Vlllley (10-61- Kelooy Salisbury o
LakeWOOd 91. Edwllrd ez, L11c1w00d 31
• o-o o, Hallie ca~er 2 0·1 4, Hannan Lanclallor Fal~lllld Union 62, Amanda·
; Boavor 3 3·3 9, Taou Haggerty 11 2·2 24, Cluroreok aa
, Sorah Janklna 0 0.0 0, Chaloao Gooch 11
Lancaltor Flohor Catholic 42, Now
1 3-4 30, Aimee Augu111n 1 OoO 2. T01alt 28 Albeny 37
' 8·10 89.
Looliffllllurg LaBrao 10, Kinamon Btd'
3·polnt goals-Grace 0, OVC S gor 66
Reboundo-Gract o/a, OVC 28
Labenon 76, Norwood 52
.
, Beaver 10. Gooch 8). AniiCI-Graco o/a,
Lowto10Wn Indian Lak' 79, T~ad e3
• VO 16 (Gooch 10). Staaii-Graco o/a,
Uberty TWp ..Lakota Eaot 158, W. Ohoitar
• OVC 14 (Gooch, Haggerty 4) . Tumovaro- Lakoll w. !2
; Qraoe rVa, OVC 13.
Liberty Union 74, Licking H11. e3 .
Licking Co. Ohr. 68, S11aklnah Ohr. Btl
• H-rt Hoover 49, Poln1 PIHH111 44
Lime Cent. Oath. 5!, Ft Rooovary 43
• HoDYer
15 18
9
9 ~ 4G
Lima Shawnoo 77, Lima Btth ee
: Point
14 10 7 13 - 44
Llnoly (W.Va.) lnotltu11 86, Hudoon
,
Herbe~ Hoover (6·12)-Amanda Smith
WRA65
•. 31·2 7. Hillary Hardman 2 7·12 13, Aahlet
LllbOn Beaver LDc:al /83, lndfan Crttk
' Taylor 3 2·8 8, Maley Herron 0 1-4 1, 58
' Angela Johnson. 3 7·1 0 15, Mlchalla With·
Logan 50, Point Plaalant (W. 110.1 21
: row 2 1·1 5. Ashley Jarrett 0 0·1 0, Klra
Lorain Southview 83, Footorta 57
• Richardson 0 0.() 0. Totals 13 19-38 48.
LoulsviUe 56, Can. S. 48
Lowellville S8, Berlin Center Weatem
j)oint Pleasant (3· 17)- Bridget Nibert 8
' 1-5 13, Krlsrin Drain 2 3·5 7. Jtnnlfer RlltiVt 44
; Adkins 2 0·0 5, Miranda Durst 1 2-2 4, AshLucAivllte Vllley 73, Scioto McDermott
• ley Thomas 1 O.Q 2, Amber Keeter 1 1·2 3, NW42
• Jennie Wilson 5 o-o 10.'Totals18 7-1344.
Lyndhurat Bruah 61, Kenston 55
3·point goals-HH 4 (Ha«&lt;man 2, JOM·
Macedonia No«&lt;onlo Btl, Solon 84
, son 2), PP 1 (Adklna). Reboun~H o/a,
MldiSOn·Pialnl 46, Wo11 Jo11araon 44
, PP 32 (Nibe~ 12). As~oto--HH o/a, PP
Magnolia Sand)' VIllar 10, TuiCirowao
• nlo. Steals-HH o/,jl, PP 14 (Drain 4). Vllloy49
.
' Malvam 55, TUICiriWas Ctn1. Ca1h. 43
• Tumovers-HH rv'a, PP 10.
Mantfield Sr. 78, VermiHon Sfil .
Ohio High School Boyo llu~OIHI1
Mana11ald 81. Po1or 54, t.oroin Cath. 40
Frlday'o Rooulll
Mantua Oraetwood 81, S1raotaboro 47
· Akr. Buchtel 59, Akr. Eaal 56
Manon Local 58, St. Henry 34
,•
Akr. Centr11I-Howar 82, Akr. Ellet 82
Mariette 89, Alhant 63
Al&lt;r. Gartlald 55, AAr. Konmora 42
Manon Elgin 87, Mlal)11 Traco83
Akr. Groan 58, Lodl CioVIrt111 43
Mar1oll P11esant 77, Cardlngton·Lincoln
Akr. Mancheater 85, E. Can. ! 1
ee
Akr. Spring. 53, Canal Fu~on NW 52
Marton River YaHay 58, Richwood N.

Union 53
Morysvil1e 58, Mount Vernon 56
Muon
Harrlaon 56
Mannion CMstlan 63, Cit. Htll10ge
CMollan 59
·
MassUion Jackson 61, Can. 11mken 33
Massillon Perry 41, Unlontov.n Lake 40
Masoillon waalllngton 57, Louls~ne St.
Thomas Aquinas 39
McArthur VInton County 91, Wellston
87, 30T
MCComb 80, Arlington 42
McConnelsviHe Morgan 55, Thomvtne
Sheridan 38
.
Mentor 69, Shaker Hts. 65, OT
Montor lake Cath. 81 , Trln~y 58
Metamora Evergreen 83, Mon!peller 61
Miami VaUey 58. Troy Christian 40
Miamisburg 72, Carroll 60
Middlefield Cardlnal65, Kl~land 5,1
Middletown 59, Cln. Princeton 55
Mkldletown Fenwick 54, Day. Edge·
wood 44
Middletown Madison 51, BI'OOkvllle 37
Milford 47. Fairfield 44
MUion:l Center Fairbanks BO, Meehan·
~aburg 70
Milton-Union 53, Tlpp City Tippecanoe
48
Minerva 61, Belo'lt W. Branch 58
Mln&amp;ler 60, New Bremen 42
Monroeville 68, Ashland Crestview 81
Morral Ridgedale 58, Gallon Northmor
43
.
~t. Gftead 65, Mansfield Temple Christ·
ian 80
N. Can. Hoover 60, Wooster 50
N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 77, Mineral
Ridge 64
N. Lima S. Range 58, McDonald !'i1
N. Olmsted 59, Rocky River 42
N. Royanon 75, Brunswick 72
Navarre Fairless 46, Massillon Tuslaw
42
'
.
.
New Concord John Glenn 70,
Zanesville w. Musklngum tlQ
New LIMington 53, Warsaw River VltW
50, OT
New Middletown Spring. 94, Vienna
Mathews 48
New Parts Nallonal Trall65, Bradford 38
New Philadelphia 53, Byesville Mead·
ov.t&gt;rook 37
Naw Richmond 89, Clermont Northeast·
om 87, OT
New Rlegel66, Carey 61
Newark 56,. Lancaster 49
Nawbury eo, Berkshire 55
Northside Christian 63, Lima Ohr. 49
Norwalk St. Paul BB, Ashland Mapleton
63
Oak Harbor 69, Sandusky Parkins 49
OlmS1ed Falls 68, Fall'llew 38
Orange 84, West Geauga 52
Oregon Strltch 73, Emmanuel Baptist
64
Orrville 69, Marion Harding 58
O!Well Grand Valley 62, Hawken 59
Otttwa-Giandort eo, Wapakoneta 52
Ottoville 82, Continental 55
Oxford Talawanda 61, W. Carrolhon 56
Palnasvl~e Ha!Vey 62, A$111abula Har·
bar 56
Palnel\lille Rlveflllde 69, Eastlak$ N. 45
Pandora-GII&gt;oa 59, Leipsic 30
Parma Padua 63; Cle. Cent. Cath. 61
Perry 94, Aurora 51
Parr;aburg 68, Holland Sprtng. 37 .
Philo 69, Oraaden Trt'Valloy 57
·
Plckel'lngton 57, Westervljle N. 55
Pltaburg Franklin-Monroe 63, Mississinewa Volley 59
Plymouth 64, Greenwich S . Cent. 46
Poland 79, Salem 52
Po~ Clinton 71, Clyde 54
Portsmouth E. 62, Portsmoutt'l Notre
Dame 51
·

a..

Rttd$VIIIo Ea11em 59, Racine Soo1hem

50

Rlplor 73, Wool Union 45
Ripley R!&gt;ley-Unlon-Lewis-Huntlngton
73, W. Union 45
Rocldord Parkway 69, Coktwater 64
Rou101d 52, Bowling Grean 44, OT
Runta 54, Anna 51
S. Charteaton SE 611, Waynesv!He 53
S. Webolar 79, Oak Hill so

Saine'lftlt Soo1110m 60, Lisbon 54
Sandusky St. Mary's 78, Margaretta 59
Sarahs~lle Shenadoah 75, Shadyside
68

•e

seaman N. Adams as, Latham Weslem

Sebring 69, Columbiana 49
Sldnsy Fal~wn 57. Jackson Contar 47
Spencerville 66, Allen E. 67
·
Spring. Cath. Cont. 66, Versailles 57
Spring. NE 64, Enon Greenon 56
Sprtngl&gt;oro 78, Day. Stebbins 35
Stewart Federal Hocking 84, Glouster
Trimble 61
Stmngevllle 74, N. Ridgeville •1
$1Mhllra 56. Ho"""nd 52
Sunbury Big Walnut 75, Col&amp;. Franklin
Hts. 45
Swanton -'4, Bryan 38
Syc~more Mohawt&lt; 52, Fostoria S1.
Wendelln 42
Sylvania Northvlew 54, Maumee 37
Tallmadge 60, Norton 45
Thomas WMhlngton 67, Reynoldsburg
50
11pp City Bethel 79, Tri-County N. 42
Tol. Christian 73, Danbury 54 · ·
Tc&gt;. Libbey 106, Tol. Woodwa«&lt;64
Tol. Scott 53, Tot. Sta~ 44
Tol. St. Francis 63, Tot Bowsher 61
Tol. St. John's 72, Tot Rogers 49
Tc&gt;. Wa~t 75, Tc&gt;. Cent. Cath. 69, 20T
Tol. Whitmer 58, Lorain Admiral King 53
Tontogany Otsego 88, Pemberville
Eas1wood 83
Troy 56. Piqua 40
Uppor Artlng&gt;on 56, Hilliard Dartly 46
Urbana 59, Bellefontaine 58
Van Wert 85, Celina 40
Van Wen Unc:olnvlew 78. Ada 43
Vincent Warren 52, Gallipolis 35
. W. Alexandria Twin ValleyS.
Tn-VII·
llge 68
W. Liberty-Salem 74, Riverside 51
WadawoM 61, Rlol111eld Revera 43
Warren Hartling 72, Boa«&lt;man 69, OT
Warrensville HI&amp;. 94, Gartleld Hts. 74
Washington C.H. 53, Grandview 35
Waterto«&lt; 73, Hemlock Millar 55
Wauseon 76, Delta 43
Waverly 55, Mlnlort151, OT
Wayneofltld-Goohan eo, Ridgemont 63
Wellington 71, Avon 80
Westlake 51, Bay VIllage Bay 40
Whotltraburg 66, Portsmouth W. 51
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 51,
Southview 45, OT
Wlcldlffa 75, Chagrtn Fall&amp; 53
WIHiamaburg 70, Bethel·Tale 65, OT
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 67 ,
Po~smouth Clay 59
Wlmlngton 64, Goshen 44
.
Wooster Trtway 65, Medina Buckeye 47
Wo~hlng1on Chrl011an 72, Frederick·
town 64
Xenia 54, Kettering Fairmont 48
Yellow Springs. 95, Xenia CMstlan 25
Young•. Mooney 75, Young&amp;. Ursuline
54
Youngs. Wilson 79, Wlrran JFK 66
Zantlvllle 67, Wheeling fN, Ya.) Pallc
64

eo,

Calvary Chltstian 66, Chris~an Center
Academy 17
Cia. r=:ast Tech 60, Cia. Kennedy 26
Cots. MIHKn 64, Cc&gt;s. W 44
Columbia 58, Rlcllmond Hts. 19
Dublin Coffman 58, wastervUe S. 40
Elyna FBCS 62, Orango Chr. 14
Falrpon Harbor Harding 36, Lo«&lt;stov.n
31
Galloway Westland 45, Gahanna 38
Grove City 68, WOI1hlngton Kilbourne
58
Hilliard Dafby 43, Upper Arlington 37
Hillla«&lt; t&gt;a~dson 58, Groveport37
Lancaster 57, Nawartc 35
Maplewood 69, Cle. His. lutheran East
40
'
Mt. Vernon 54, Marysville 38
Reynoldsburg 50, Thomas Wo~hlngton
47
Rocky River Lutheran West 5 I, Cuya·
l1oga HIS. 39
Shelby 52, Gallon 14
Southington Chalker 69, Thompson
Ledgemont 30
Sunbury Big Walnut 74 , Cols. Franklin
Hts. 67
'
Willard 55, Upper Sandusky 50
Welt VIrginia Prep Btsktlbtll
Frkfay'l Scorel
Glrl1
Big Creek 49, Matewan 38
Blue11eld 50, Oak Hill41
Bndgepon 55, Grafton 52 (OTI
Buffalo 48, Guyan Valley 45
Calvary 63, Union 30
capital 11 . SoUth Charleston 29
Clay-Battelle 55, Bishop Donahue 21
East Fairmont 59, Buckhannon·Upshur
30
Fairmont Senior 82, Elkins 33
George Washington 43, Spring Valley

38
Hampshire 70, Frankton 48
Harman 46, Trinity 18
Herbert Hoover 49, Point Pleasant 44
Jefferson 58, Martinsburg 54
Moorefield 4?, East Hartly 42
·Mount View 61. Tug Valley 48
Musselman 61, Berkeley Springs SO
Nicholas County 66, Princeton 49
Nitro 60, Huntington 48
Qak Glen 69, MagnoMa 45
Ohio Valley Christian 69, Grace Christ·
lan 52
Padan City 76, Hundred 32
Pendleton 60, Blue Ridge Va. 24
Philip Barbour 61 , Liberty Harrison 59

'
Pom11roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11, 2001

Smith's departure could help MU's Chapman
Robe~

C. Byld 51, Lincoln 35
Scon 78, Chapmanvtlo 24
Sllaonvilla eo, HIM 2•
l';ga~s Yalley 49, WebS1er 43
unlveraity 59, Preston 47
WyOming East 55, Marter Chrildln 51

Beth Havan

Boyo

CMa~an

74, Fllr HtV.n
Chrtl1iln 67
·
BuffalO 59, Hamlin 54
Burel165, Ballcatoy Sprlngo 56
Cabal Midland 77, Hunllngloo 53
Chapmanville 77, Hano 66
•
Clay County eo. WI~ County 70
·
Clay-Battelle 73, Blahop Donahue 70
Edison, Ohio 77, Oak Olen 47
Elk Valay Christian eo, Calvary Baptist
57
Fayetteville 64, Midland Trail 44
George Washington 89, Hurricane H
Hancock, Md. 59, Paw Paw 57
,
James Monroe 58, Greenbrier Welt 64
John Marshall 107, Bucktyt Loool,
Ohio 43
,
Unsly 68, Westem Reserve Academy,
Ohio 65
Madonna 82, Cameron 85
Marsh Fori&lt; 84, Montcalm 82
Meadow Bridge 65, Covington Boys
Home, Va. 40
Mount VIew 64, Man 47
Musselman 80, K8yser 47 · ·
Oak 'Hill 62, Greenbfier East 57
Ocoona 92, Balleysvllle 48
Paril;ersburg $outh 64, Parkeraburg 62
~etersburg 72, Moorefield 50
Pocat\ontas County 79, Webster Coun·
ty 47
Princeton 63, Bluefield 159
· Rainelle Christian 102, Emmanuel
Christian 53
Ravenswood 58. Partcersburg Catholic
54
Riverside 79, Ripley 51
Shody Spring 87, lndependonce 56
Sherman 65, Duval62
South Chariaoton 72, Sprtng Vallay 61
South Harrison 8\ Notre .carrie 48
·
summer&amp; CoiJnty 63, Ubony Raleigh 56
Tucker County 46, Southem, Md. 41
Tyler Consolkialad 61, Yal!ey Wetzel 37
Union 53, Calvary, Md. 40
Valley Fayette 69, Sissonville 63
Weir 56, Brooke 55
WIHiamstown 68, St. Marys 30
Wln11eld 57, Poca 41
Woodrow Wilson 66, Logan 58
Zaneovllle, Ohio 67, Wheeling Pallc 54

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) -The abrupt retirement
of all-pro Robert Smith could
give former Marshall running
back Doug Chapman a chance
, at significant playing time for
the Minnesota Vikings.
Chapman was drafted by the
Vikings in the third round a
yeat ago but never played a
down in his rookie season.
Chapman's thinks about the
opportunity given Vikings
quarterback Daunte Culpep. per; who didn't play as a rookie in 1999. Culpepper made
the Pro Bowl .at quarterback

•

this season.
"I talked to Daunte about
that a lot last season, and now,
quicker than I expected, I'll
get il chance to show what he
did last season," Chapman said
Thursday from his home in
Chestetfield, Va. "I knew this
chance would happen, but not
this soon .... I didn't expect

this."
Veteran
backup
Moe
Williams and Chapman are
likely to compete for Smith's
job heading into training
camp. The Vikings likely will
go looking for a veteran free

agent.
Chapman spoke with coach
Dennis Green on Thursday
and was told he will be given
a chance to earn playing time.
"Coach. Green is confident I
can play, and so am !," Chapman said. "Nothing will be
given to me, but that's' life in
the NFL. Just because Robert
isn't here any longer doesn't
mean I'll play. But I will be
given an opportunity, and
that's all! can ask. In my eyes,
the door is open."
Chapman rushed for 4,239
yards and 55 touchdowns in

four seasons. Like Smith,
Chapman showed he could
catch the ball in college.
" ! think I ca n be a good
back in the NFL, but I'm not
going to be another Robert
Smitli," Chapman said. " I
think I'm a . different player.
Robert was a unique player
and a special player. I enjoyed
learning from him for a season
and I watched him closely
because I knew I'd someday
~et the opportunity to take off
. where he left."
I

Defenders

Gabe Jenkins had nine of He also had four assists.
much better now going into
his IS points in the first' two
'"Brad really controlled Monday's game than I wou ld
periods. He finished with a practice last night," Atkins have- had we not come out
Bl
team-best eight rebounds.
said. "And I thought he did this way. If we'd have come
"Gabe
really
stepped
his
the sante thing tonight in the out flat again tonigqt , I probI
added. "They worked hard, game up up tonight," said game."
ably would have losr sleep
we were together and we had Atkins. "It seemed to be
John Polcyn and Mike again .all this weekend."
. a real team effort in practice, jumping about three inches Jenks scored six points each.
, and had great attitudes, and it . higher than usual to get Jay Jenkins and l Dole Taylor
" bled over into the game. We rebounds ."
had four poinls each, and
tell them that you play the
The huge lead gave Atkins Nathan Williams added two
way you practice, and that's the opportunity to give his poinrs for the Defenders.
Problems Getting Your Car loan Approved?
Garrett Mathis was the lone
what we did tonight, we had a entire roster ample playing
Call Us Today!
. real spirited effort."
time and all but one Defend- Grace player in double figures
er got his name on the score with 13 points. Stephen ShafA spirited effort, indeed.
The Defenders rolled to a sheet. One of the highlights fer and Jo!h Smith had four
15-2 advantage after one of the game came late in the points each.
quart.er of play and extended fourth quarter when reserve
Atkins said his club's perfortheir lead to 40-9 at the half. Amit Agrawal drained a 3- · mance. came at just the right
Adam Holcomb scored 18 of pointer for his only basket of time with the. playoff game
his game-high 20 points in the night.
against a ·cough Ridgeville
Ca//24 hours a day!
lhe first half, including 16 in
Fellow reserve Nathan Christian side set for' Monday
Get your credit problems
lhe second quarter.
Bowman also had a 3-pointer at 5 p.m. at the aves gym.
reversed RIGHT NOW!
: "Adam's starting to find his and Scott Frans collected five OVC defeated Ridgeville
earlier this season.
;:tange," Atkins said . . "He's rebounds.
···we didn't think it was too
'struggled all year with his
Senior Brad Bowman had
shot. But he had 16 points in six points and matched Jenk- late to get it turned back
the second quarter, so I think ins with a team-high eight around the way we needed
=be's on.1'
rebounds for the Defenders. to," Atkins said. "But I feel

Mtunba!' lltimr• -6rnhnd • Page 85

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS .
Subscribe today.
675-1333

2150 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 446·9777 or (740) 446·2464

Over 100 Used Tractors In · Stock!

from Page

Massey Ferguson
375
245
383
250
255

390
2404x4
283

2111
231

150
285
135
275.
50.

ForJI/NH
5610 4X4
3000
3800
1520

New start

2000
2800

4600
7740
1820
192G

4000
1220

ACIAGCO ALLIS
8060

5870
8690
185

0-12

1w:!~t!t~!}

6080

.m
310C·TLB

4430

4010
3020

3020
310A·TLB

WHITE/OLIVER
*HG88 CRAWLER*
1 OWNEFII
37 -4X4

1·80~866-371 3

•
•

Ohio High SChOOl Qlrll Bookt1blll
F~dlv'a Raaulll
B~lewe

88 1 Norwalk 39

Brooklyn S9, Baaohwood ~9

Congratulations, ,_

I

·I.; .

:III .
I '

'

.

,/

•

'

'

Jim Walker
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy·Oids
has announced
that Jim Walker
has earned
Salesman of the ·
Month for
January.
VYING FOR CONTROL - OVC's Kelsey Salisbury (4) goes
after the loose ball during the Defenders 69-52 victory over
:Grace Christian Friday night. (Bryan Long photo)

1816 Eastern Ave.
Galllpolle, OH

ovc

446-3672

from Page Bl
, that Raines girl and play
·same box-and-one on her
:'and ·some triangle·and~two," .
.Haggerty said. "She played
:well. We matched :ressa and
'Chels up on her. But, it cook
-a litde bit out of them on
4efense and we got a Hide less
:production on offense."
·
~ Raines was the lone. Grace
:player to reach double digits.
: The Defenders outscored
'·Grace 29-27 in the second
:half to hang on for the much:needed victory. Gooch added
, 15 points in the final two
·periods
and
Haggerty
;pumped
10 points in the ·
:.second half.·
Gooch connected on 1 1,: of-20 shots from the field,
;·including 5-of-7 . 3-pl&gt;int
; attempts. She grabbed eight
· rebounds and li:d the Defend- .
:.crs with 10 assists and fou~
~teals .
· : Haggerty hit 1 l~of-22 field
Joal attempts. S~e had four
:tebounds, four asSISts and four
' steals.
:' Beaver chipped ,in nine
points and collected a , gaim~­
high I0 rebounds. ~he ~l!o
llad three steals,
·:
.: "We got a really ·strong
tpme out of Hannah," Hag-

: gooch).

\

• MF 271 and MF 281 •

in

· Check out8 the great a'avlnt• available ·
on th••• 1!'1'· and 81 PTO hp MF tractor• ·
with Perkins Filatram• engine• •nd efficient BF/2R tranamlaalona. tor a
limited time only. you can get a 'Tso•
rebate. Give us a call today... thla Ia a
limited time offer! Get more for your
money, and pay. even . •••• right now,
with an MF 271 or MF 281 ·tractor. 8H
ua for a tHt drivel

*MASSEY FERGUSON"

J1m·s

f i'rm ·fquJPment

h,tern AVWIUe • Clalllpolla1 OH 41131
(740) 441 1777 or (740) 441-2~

2110

•

.v

\

gerty said. "I'm glad to see
that here toward the end of
the season."
Hallie Carter 'scored four
points and had two assists and
two steals for ave. Aimee '
Augustin had two points and
one rebound. Sarah Jenkins
grabbed three rebounds and
Kelsey Salisbury had two
rebounds.
·
. "Keb,ey and Hallie, Sarah
and Aimee all played strong,"
· Haggerty said. "It's nice to see
the younger players doing so

well."

1

Besides the 28-point performance by Raines, Grace
got · six points apiece from
Bethany Williams, Marisa.
Jayne and Erin Porter, and
four points from S11san
Wiebe. Elisha Joyce scored
two points: .
Ohio Valley Christiall (I 06) played without the services
of freshman gtiard Alyssa Zirille, who 'was sidelined with
the flu. '
"It's tough right now," said
Haggerty. "We do11't have a
lot of subs to give some girl!
some rest."
· The befe11ders· open postseasdn play Friday at Liberty
Christian in. Columbus. Their
opponent has yet be determined.
ave plays at county ' rival
South Gallia Monday.

Delta 88Loaded, Leathar ......................$7,200
1996 Ford Explorer ......................................... $10,450
' " ' 5-10 Blazer................................;...........$15,600 1997 Camaro...................................................$10,880
1999 5Rvwado LWB 2WD PU ........................ $18,950 1999 Oldsmobile Alero ............ :.........;........... $11,950
1993 5-10 Blazer................................'............. $.5, 950 .1998 Cadillac Devllla ............... :.: ................... $19,950
1991 chevrolat Conversion Van ...................... $3,950 1999 Lumlrta .................................................. $11,400
1998 J-10 Plckup ..................................... :...... $8,850 1999 Pontiac Grand Am ..........,..................... $10,850
1996 Geo Tradcer 4WD .................................. $6,875 2000 Impala ................................................. $15,525
1999 Pontiac Montana van .......................... $19,950 2000 Regal....................................................$16,8·80
1997 Oldsmobll8 Sllhouett&amp; Van ...................$14,800 1999 Century ................................................. $10,900
1997 Yukon Stock IP427 Green ................... $19,850 1998 Cavalier...................................... :........... $7,750
1994 Chrysler Concorde ................................. $5,200
1999 Ford TauNs ........................................... $11,900

to

.'

.I

�•
P-oe B4 • 6anbap «tmn-htind

I.

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

Prep Hoops Scoreboard
Boyo
lootom H, . - 1 0

I:

l\"

1

Ala-r 54, Molga45
Arcanum 58, Newton 51
River Wiley 18
9 13 13 - 53
AIChl&gt;oiP 58, Napoleon 58
Jacloon
17 13 13 13 - 66
Aohtebula Edgewood 81, Pymatur&gt;ng
.
EaS1em (16·4, TVC 10~1- Josh Kohl Vlllty 85
2 1·1 5, Garratt Karr 2 2·2 8, Chris Lyon 3
Altwitla Tuya Valloy 58, Clrolevlllo 54
3-3 10, Joe Brown 3 10.11 16, Mott 51111'·
Atwater Watertoo 89, Rootstown 62
oon 6 4·5 17, Chid Noioon 1 3-5 5. Totals
Avon Loki 58, Amhtral57
17 23·27 59.
Btrbeoton 38, Cuyahogo Folio 35
Batavia 80, Gooi]IOlown 51
Soothem (10·10, TVC 5·51 - Nathen
Btavar Eaatom eo, New Bolton 54
Ma~ln o o~ 0, Brandon Hill1 o-o 3, Chid
Beavercreek 72, Spring. N. 58
Hubbard 2 o-o 5, Matt warner o 2·2 2.
Jeremv Fisher 6 1·2 1S. Dallas Hilt 0..0 3,
Ball&gt;rook 66, Preble Shawnta 55
Garret Kiser 4 0.0 11. Jonathan Evant 2 0Belmon1 Union LOCII 63, Bellaire St.
John's 57
.
0 6. Totals 18 4·5 ~ Belpre M , Nalsonvllle~ Vork M
3-~XJint goals--Eastern 2 (Lyons, Slflll·
son), Southern 10 (Kisar 3, Evans 2, Fish·
Baraa 69, Medina 55
Bartln Hiland 76, Medina CM011an 40
tr 2. B. Hill, Hul&gt;ba«&lt;, D. Hill).
Bexley 57, London 54
JV-5outhem 53, Eastam 46.
Blanche1ter 46, E. Clinton 45
E-Jascm Kimes 9, Alex Sirl1JSOn 9.
S-Jordan Hill 17, JUstin CQnnolly 13,
Bloom-Carroll 62, Clrolo&gt;illt Logan Elm
Brandon Pierce 9.
50
Bloorndlla Elmwood 91, Glbaonburg70
Jackaon 86, River Vall•y 53
Brecksville 53, Midpark 46
Butler 66, Trotwood·Madlson 55
River Valley
18
9 13 13 - 53
Cadiz Hlrrtson Cent. 71, Conotton Val·
JackSon
17 13 13 13 - 66
ley 52
Rive r Valley (7-12, SEOAL 3·10) Crail) Payne 7 0-0 17, Dustin Gibbs 0 0..0
Caldwall71, Fronller 51
CampbeU 68, Youngs. Chlnay 59
.
0, Eric Nolan 5 2·4 12, Jon ~lohan 0 O.Q
Can. Cent. Cath. 70, Youngs. Rayen 54
0, Brandon Mitchem 1 0·0 3, Blakt Mer·
Canal Winchester 86, Hamillon Twp. 41
cum 1 2-8 4, D.J. Frazee 3 2·2 8, Scott
Can11eld 58, Niles 52, OT
Payne 0 1·2 1, Jeremy Peck 2 0·2 4. Totals
Carrollton 62, Alliance Martlngton 47
20 9-25 53.
Jackson (4·14, SEOAL 1-12)- Roeble
Cantown Miami E. 54. Graham 29
Pugh 7 2·2 18, Ryan Tipton 5 3-414, CMo
CadtlrvHI8 51, Greenavlew 31
Centerburg 77, Danville 47
Jones 0 3-A 3, Jerry HarriS 3 0·0 8, Jamie
Callahan 1 o-o 2, Ryan WhlteBida 0 O..Q 0,
Champion 55, Glra«&lt; 51
BraKton Jenkins 0 o-o o. Eric Evans 4'2·5
Chardon NDCL 57, Btdlord Chantl 53
Chesapeake 63, Ironton Rock Hlll25
10, Ketson Mavis 1 1·2 3, Kyle Loftus 2 4·
Chillicothe 66,. Olentangy 63
4 8, Cory Sheppard 0 2·2 2. Totels 23 17·
2366.
Chillicothe Huntington Ross !59, Paint
3·polnt goals-RV 4 (C. Payne 3, Valley 43
Chlll~otha Zane Trace 70, Richmond
Mitchem) , Jackson 3.(Pugh 2, Tlpt.on).
.
. JV-RI'Ver Valley 85, Jackson (9.
Dale SE 39
Cln. Anderson 60, Amelia .(6
J-Cory Sheppard 15. RV-Ouatln
Gibbs 12. Jon Mollohan 12. Jesse Ward
Cln. Cc&gt;traln 70, Cln. Syoamora 47
10, Nick Craycraft 10,
Cln. Flnneytown 57, Cln. Taylor 42
Cln. Glen Este 58, Cln . NW 40
Login 50, Poinl Pltllant 28
Cln. Hughes 70, Cin. Mount Healthy 45
Point Pleasant 13
4 e 6 - 29
Cln. Loveland 79, Kings Mills Klngo 52
Logan
19
9 "13 9 - 50
CJn. Madeira 63. Deer Park 56
Point (4·13, SEOAL 4·9) - Kevin
Cln. Manemont78, Wyoming 60
Zerkle 1 O..Q 2, Nlc Dalton 0 ().0 0, VIllars 4
Cln. Moatler 42, Cln. Elder 41
0~ 8, Stephen Handley 1. 0~ 2, T.J.
Cln. N. CoNtge Hill 84, Landmark Chr.
Deshuk 1 1·2 3, J.P. Simpkin&amp; 0 0~ 0, 55 '
Joey Loomis 6 1·3 13, Brett Powell o 1·2 1.
Cln. Oak Hilla 51, Hamt~on43, OT
Totals: 13 3-7 29.
. Cln. Reading 64, Cln. Indian Hill 55
Logan (13-4, SEOAL 12·1) - Ryan
Cln. Roger Bacon 54. Hamilton Badin
Swinehart 2 0·0 6, Andrew Barrell 1 O..Q 3, 41
JoMny Conrad 9 0.0 19, Jim Bennett 3 3·
Cln. St Xa~ar 59, Cln. La Salle 41
4 9, AleK Penrod o 1·2 1, Joey Conrad· I 2·
Cln. Ton 67, Cln. Alkon 50
2 4, David Montgomery 1 2·2 4, Max
Cln. Westam Hll1s 79, Cln. W~hrow 67
Resler 2 0~ 4. Totals: 19 8·10 50.
Cln. Winton WOOdl 69, Cln. Tuipln 47
Three-point goals-POiol 0, Logan 4
Cln. WOOdwl«&lt;68, Cln. Wa1nul Hills 61
(Swinehart 2, Barrell, Conrad).
Cle. Glenville eo, Ole. East Tech 65
JV--t.ogan 54, Point Pleasant 32.
Cle. His. eo. Euclid 61
PP-Ashley Pyles 8, Hunter Rouoh 8.
Cle. YASJ 57, Can. MoKinloy 55
L-Jason Dicken 12.
Collins W. Reserve 52, New London 47
Cola. Academy 56, Trat o1 Lila 49
Aloander 54. Mtlgo 4S
Colo. Bishop Read)' eo, Nowallc Cath.
Alexander
11 18 ' 9 18 - 54
40
,,
Meigs
10 16 8 11 - 45
Cols. Brookhaven 71, Cots. Mifflin 68
AleJCander (6·10, TVC 5·5) - Mlct\ael
Colo. DeSalts 66, Cola. Ha~ley ~
Hawk 2 2·2 7, L. c . Gngoby 3 6·7 13,
Coli. E. 81, Cc&gt;o. Centennlal40
Justin Brooks 1 1D-10 13, 2ach Lustgarten
Cola. Eastmoor 83, Cols. Briggs 53
0 0~ 0, Ryan lawson 2 2·2 6, Shawn Ball
Cot•. Independence 72, Cola. S. 53
1 0·0 2, Dylan Walker 1 0~ 2, Klllc Crow 0
Cola ..Rtsd)' eo, Ntwallc Cath. •o
o-o 0, Jason Warren s 1·3 11, Totals 15 21·
Cots. W. 84, Cofs. Marlon·FrankNn 6224 54.
Cola. WattBIIOn 67, Aoaecrans 56
Meigs (2·16, TVC 1·6) - J. P. Staats 4
Cola. Welllrig1on 85, Morton Cath. 81;
OoO 8, Adam Bullington 1 0.0 2, Derek
Cols. Whetstone 64, Cots. Linden 54
Johnson 0 0·0 0, Tra...ls Siders 1 0·2 2,
ColumbJana Crestview 58, E. Palestine
Jason Knight 0 0·0 0, Nick Bolin S H 14, 55
Buzzy Fackler 0 0~ 0, Derrick Johnson 8
Columbus Grove 49, Paulding 47
0·1 17, John Wltherell1 0·02. TotalS 20 1·
Conneaut 80, Jefferson 81
5 45.
Convoy Crestview 77, Bluffton 39
3-polnt goals - Alexander 3 (Hawk.
Copley 58, Medina Highland 35
Gngsby, Brooks~. Melgo 4 (Bolin 3, Dtrrk:k
Corttand Lakeview 57, Newton Falls .( 1
Johnson 1).
·
Cary-Rawson 60, Vankle 59
0o11111111on 64, Ansonia 65
Warren 52. Oallla Aeadlmy 35
Day. Colonti Whlta 84, Patteraon 62
Warren
15
2 12 23 - 52
Day. Dunbar 80, Day. Belmont 67
GAHS
9 11
3 12 - 35
Day. Jeff'eraon 85, Middletown Chr. 65
Warren (12·5, SEOAL 12·1) - Curt
Day. Meadowdale n Day. suvera 73
Morris 5 1·2 14, Derek Cole o o-o o. Chrts
Day. Northmont 78, GrHnvlla 5&amp;
Hendricks 0 0-G 0, Aaron Coffman 1 0-Q 2,
· Day. NoMrldge 75, Ealon 61
Matt Nuzum 0 o-2 0, BradVenham 0 2-2 2,
Day. OakwOod 89, Dixie 53
Justin Gum 0 0·0 0, Jer~;tmy Pinkerton 3 2·
De11anco 81, St. Marys Mamorill43
4 a, Travis ouom s O·O 12, Isaac ward e 2·
Delaware 53, Whltehaii·Yeartlng 51
2 14. Totals 21 7·12 52.
Delaware Buckeye Valley 45, Sparta
Gallla Academy (8·9, SEOAL 6·7) Highland 43
Andre Geiger 1 0-Q 2, Travis McKinniss 3
Delaware Chr. 69, Powell Village Acad·
4-4 11, Nick Dressel 3 0·0 7, Donnfe John· emy 35
son 1 o-o 2. Clarke Saunders o o-o o, T.J.
Dole Hardin Northern 58, Van Buren 49
Hill 3 0·0 6, Cody Cal&lt;!well 1 0~ 2,' Ryan
Dover 46, Cambrtdge 37
Matura 0 0·0 o, David Finney 1· o-o 3, Allen
Dublin Coffmart 81, Waaterville S. 64
Skinner 1 0·0 2. Totals 14 4-4 35.
E. Llverpool81, Weltsvlla 39
3·point goals-Warren 3·8 (Morrls),
Elyria 69, Parma Valley Forge 34
Gallla 3·16 (McKinnlss, Dressel, Finney).
Elyria Cath. 75, Holy Neme 61
Rebounds-Warren 26 (Ward 6, Ptnkenon
Felicity 51, HillSbOro 49
5), Gallia 19 (McKtnniss 5, Finney 4).
Findlay !;4, Btnduaky 50, OT
Assists-Warren 12 (Venham 6), Gallla 11
Findlay Heritage
Christian 46,
(Finney, McKinnlss 3). Steals-Warren 5 Zanesville Christian 44
(Pinke~on 2). Gallla 9 (Hill4).
Findlay Llberiy-Bentpn 76, Arcadia 30
JV-Gallla 48, Warren 40.
Flr:JIInds 78, Lorain MldVJew 7.(, OT
G-Ryan Huelson 14, Clarke Saunders
Ftllnldort Adons 35, Piketon 34
12, Anttlony Dey 10. W-Justln Eichinger
Franklin 55, Lemon-Morvoe 40
17 .
Frlnklin Furnace Green 89, Ironton St.
Joa. 29
Ohio Valley 68, Grace 34
Fremont Rosa 60, OreQOn Clay 58
Grace
2
7 10 15 - 34
Ft Loramie (6, Botkln136
OVC
15 25 14 15 - 69
Glhlinna 51, GallOway Westland ~9
Grace ,.... Adam Bowen 0 1·3 1, Joe flncl·
Garrenavllle 74, Mogadore Field 66
ham 1 0·0 2, Stephen Shaner 1 1-4 4, Enck
Ganeva 58. Aahtabula 50
Balli O·O 2, Garrett Mathis 6 1-4 13, Jool1
Ganoa Area 62, Mlllbwy lake 50
Smith 2 0-5 4, Andrew Oonchatz 1 1-8 3,
Germantown Valley VIew 72, Carlile 82
Nathan Brokkt11 D-1 3, Ryan Spurlock 1 oGnadenhuHen India" Valley 58.
0 2. Totals 14 4·25 34 .
Coshoclon 31
·
ovc (11-6) - Jay Jenkins 1 2·4 4,
Granville 54, Mlillrsp9f134
Adam Holcomb 8 2·3 20, Gabe Jen1dns 7
Grovo c~y 53, won\i1Mlon Kllboumo
1~ 15, Dale Taylor 1 2·3 4, Nathan Bow· 42
\, _ :;;::.:--·
man 1 0~ 3, John Polcyn 2 1·2 6, Mike . Gmvopo~ 48, Hllllart1 Dtvtdlon 48
Jenks 3 0-1 6, Brad Bowman 3 0·2 6, ·
Homtnon Roaa 45, ume Mllml38
Nathan Williams 1 0~ 2, Amll Agrawal! 0·
Hamler Patrick Henry 35, tl&gt;erty Center
0 3, Scott Ffans 0 0·2 0. Totals 28 8-19 89. 33
·
3,polnt goals-Grace 2 (Shafter,
Hanoyenon Unl1ed eo, LHIOnla 36
Brokke), OVC 5 (Holcomb 2, N. Bowman,
Ho~land Woyne Trace 78, Tlnora &amp;2
Polcyn, Agrawal). Reboundo-Grace nli,
Heath 66, Sugar Grovo Btmo Union 62
OVC 32 (B. Bowman 8, Frana 5). AsatoHebron LakeWOOd 82, UCklng 11111. 41
Groot o/a, ovc 15 (Hoclomb, B. Bowman ' Hubbe«&lt;47, B100k11eid 40
4). Steals-Grace o/a, OVC 12 (B. Bow·
Hubor Hta. WOyna IO,'Falrbom IS
m1n, Jenks 3) . Turnovers-Grace nle,
Hudton &amp;0 Stow 47
. ovc 13.
Hunting vi11oy unlvoraity ae, Kllk141
Huron 82, Mllln Edllon 47
Qlrto
Jaokoon Btl, Chlohlra River V.Hty e3
Ohio Vallay II, Qr- II
Joromotvllle HDIIdalt 7•. Alttman 41
Gract
12 13 18 11 - &amp;2
Johnetown NoMrtdga 11, Ulloa 36
ovc
21 19 17 12 - 68
JOhnllown•Monrot te, Ellt KnoKIO
Graca (12·5)-, Tabitha Ralneo10 8·11
Klllda 112, Mll141r CitY 110
28, Morlu Jayne .1 4-5 8, Elloha Joyce 0 2·
Kent R - 67, 'Ravtnna37
· a 2, Bt111anr Wlillam1 2 2·3 8, suun
Kenton U, Elida 12
' Wlll&gt;t 1 2-ll 4, Ertn Portar 3 o~ e. Totllo
Konton Rldao .70, Tooumuh 62
.
: 17111-27&amp;2.
Ktttorlng Afftr 61, l'urooll Mt11an 31
, Ohio Vlllley (10-61- Kelooy Salisbury o
LakeWOOd 91. Edwllrd ez, L11c1w00d 31
• o-o o, Hallie ca~er 2 0·1 4, Hannan Lanclallor Fal~lllld Union 62, Amanda·
; Boavor 3 3·3 9, Taou Haggerty 11 2·2 24, Cluroreok aa
, Sorah Janklna 0 0.0 0, Chaloao Gooch 11
Lancaltor Flohor Catholic 42, Now
1 3-4 30, Aimee Augu111n 1 OoO 2. T01alt 28 Albeny 37
' 8·10 89.
Looliffllllurg LaBrao 10, Kinamon Btd'
3·polnt goals-Grace 0, OVC S gor 66
Reboundo-Gract o/a, OVC 28
Labenon 76, Norwood 52
.
, Beaver 10. Gooch 8). AniiCI-Graco o/a,
Lowto10Wn Indian Lak' 79, T~ad e3
• VO 16 (Gooch 10). Staaii-Graco o/a,
Uberty TWp ..Lakota Eaot 158, W. Ohoitar
• OVC 14 (Gooch, Haggerty 4) . Tumovaro- Lakoll w. !2
; Qraoe rVa, OVC 13.
Liberty Union 74, Licking H11. e3 .
Licking Co. Ohr. 68, S11aklnah Ohr. Btl
• H-rt Hoover 49, Poln1 PIHH111 44
Lime Cent. Oath. 5!, Ft Rooovary 43
• HoDYer
15 18
9
9 ~ 4G
Lima Shawnoo 77, Lima Btth ee
: Point
14 10 7 13 - 44
Llnoly (W.Va.) lnotltu11 86, Hudoon
,
Herbe~ Hoover (6·12)-Amanda Smith
WRA65
•. 31·2 7. Hillary Hardman 2 7·12 13, Aahlet
LllbOn Beaver LDc:al /83, lndfan Crttk
' Taylor 3 2·8 8, Maley Herron 0 1-4 1, 58
' Angela Johnson. 3 7·1 0 15, Mlchalla With·
Logan 50, Point Plaalant (W. 110.1 21
: row 2 1·1 5. Ashley Jarrett 0 0·1 0, Klra
Lorain Southview 83, Footorta 57
• Richardson 0 0.() 0. Totals 13 19-38 48.
LoulsviUe 56, Can. S. 48
Lowellville S8, Berlin Center Weatem
j)oint Pleasant (3· 17)- Bridget Nibert 8
' 1-5 13, Krlsrin Drain 2 3·5 7. Jtnnlfer RlltiVt 44
; Adkins 2 0·0 5, Miranda Durst 1 2-2 4, AshLucAivllte Vllley 73, Scioto McDermott
• ley Thomas 1 O.Q 2, Amber Keeter 1 1·2 3, NW42
• Jennie Wilson 5 o-o 10.'Totals18 7-1344.
Lyndhurat Bruah 61, Kenston 55
3·point goals-HH 4 (Ha«&lt;man 2, JOM·
Macedonia No«&lt;onlo Btl, Solon 84
, son 2), PP 1 (Adklna). Reboun~H o/a,
MldiSOn·Pialnl 46, Wo11 Jo11araon 44
, PP 32 (Nibe~ 12). As~oto--HH o/a, PP
Magnolia Sand)' VIllar 10, TuiCirowao
• nlo. Steals-HH o/,jl, PP 14 (Drain 4). Vllloy49
.
' Malvam 55, TUICiriWas Ctn1. Ca1h. 43
• Tumovers-HH rv'a, PP 10.
Mantfield Sr. 78, VermiHon Sfil .
Ohio High School Boyo llu~OIHI1
Mana11ald 81. Po1or 54, t.oroin Cath. 40
Frlday'o Rooulll
Mantua Oraetwood 81, S1raotaboro 47
· Akr. Buchtel 59, Akr. Eaal 56
Manon Local 58, St. Henry 34
,•
Akr. Centr11I-Howar 82, Akr. Ellet 82
Mariette 89, Alhant 63
Al&lt;r. Gartlald 55, AAr. Konmora 42
Manon Elgin 87, Mlal)11 Traco83
Akr. Groan 58, Lodl CioVIrt111 43
Mar1oll P11esant 77, Cardlngton·Lincoln
Akr. Mancheater 85, E. Can. ! 1
ee
Akr. Spring. 53, Canal Fu~on NW 52
Marton River YaHay 58, Richwood N.

Union 53
Morysvil1e 58, Mount Vernon 56
Muon
Harrlaon 56
Mannion CMstlan 63, Cit. Htll10ge
CMollan 59
·
MassUion Jackson 61, Can. 11mken 33
Massillon Perry 41, Unlontov.n Lake 40
Masoillon waalllngton 57, Louls~ne St.
Thomas Aquinas 39
McArthur VInton County 91, Wellston
87, 30T
MCComb 80, Arlington 42
McConnelsviHe Morgan 55, Thomvtne
Sheridan 38
.
Mentor 69, Shaker Hts. 65, OT
Montor lake Cath. 81 , Trln~y 58
Metamora Evergreen 83, Mon!peller 61
Miami VaUey 58. Troy Christian 40
Miamisburg 72, Carroll 60
Middlefield Cardlnal65, Kl~land 5,1
Middletown 59, Cln. Princeton 55
Mkldletown Fenwick 54, Day. Edge·
wood 44
Middletown Madison 51, BI'OOkvllle 37
Milford 47. Fairfield 44
MUion:l Center Fairbanks BO, Meehan·
~aburg 70
Milton-Union 53, Tlpp City Tippecanoe
48
Minerva 61, Belo'lt W. Branch 58
Mln&amp;ler 60, New Bremen 42
Monroeville 68, Ashland Crestview 81
Morral Ridgedale 58, Gallon Northmor
43
.
~t. Gftead 65, Mansfield Temple Christ·
ian 80
N. Can. Hoover 60, Wooster 50
N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 77, Mineral
Ridge 64
N. Lima S. Range 58, McDonald !'i1
N. Olmsted 59, Rocky River 42
N. Royanon 75, Brunswick 72
Navarre Fairless 46, Massillon Tuslaw
42
'
.
.
New Concord John Glenn 70,
Zanesville w. Musklngum tlQ
New LIMington 53, Warsaw River VltW
50, OT
New Middletown Spring. 94, Vienna
Mathews 48
New Parts Nallonal Trall65, Bradford 38
New Philadelphia 53, Byesville Mead·
ov.t&gt;rook 37
Naw Richmond 89, Clermont Northeast·
om 87, OT
New Rlegel66, Carey 61
Newark 56,. Lancaster 49
Nawbury eo, Berkshire 55
Northside Christian 63, Lima Ohr. 49
Norwalk St. Paul BB, Ashland Mapleton
63
Oak Harbor 69, Sandusky Parkins 49
OlmS1ed Falls 68, Fall'llew 38
Orange 84, West Geauga 52
Oregon Strltch 73, Emmanuel Baptist
64
Orrville 69, Marion Harding 58
O!Well Grand Valley 62, Hawken 59
Otttwa-Giandort eo, Wapakoneta 52
Ottoville 82, Continental 55
Oxford Talawanda 61, W. Carrolhon 56
Palnasvl~e Ha!Vey 62, A$111abula Har·
bar 56
Palnel\lille Rlveflllde 69, Eastlak$ N. 45
Pandora-GII&gt;oa 59, Leipsic 30
Parma Padua 63; Cle. Cent. Cath. 61
Perry 94, Aurora 51
Parr;aburg 68, Holland Sprtng. 37 .
Philo 69, Oraaden Trt'Valloy 57
·
Plckel'lngton 57, Westervljle N. 55
Pltaburg Franklin-Monroe 63, Mississinewa Volley 59
Plymouth 64, Greenwich S . Cent. 46
Poland 79, Salem 52
Po~ Clinton 71, Clyde 54
Portsmouth E. 62, Portsmoutt'l Notre
Dame 51
·

a..

Rttd$VIIIo Ea11em 59, Racine Soo1hem

50

Rlplor 73, Wool Union 45
Ripley R!&gt;ley-Unlon-Lewis-Huntlngton
73, W. Union 45
Rocldord Parkway 69, Coktwater 64
Rou101d 52, Bowling Grean 44, OT
Runta 54, Anna 51
S. Charteaton SE 611, Waynesv!He 53
S. Webolar 79, Oak Hill so

Saine'lftlt Soo1110m 60, Lisbon 54
Sandusky St. Mary's 78, Margaretta 59
Sarahs~lle Shenadoah 75, Shadyside
68

•e

seaman N. Adams as, Latham Weslem

Sebring 69, Columbiana 49
Sldnsy Fal~wn 57. Jackson Contar 47
Spencerville 66, Allen E. 67
·
Spring. Cath. Cont. 66, Versailles 57
Spring. NE 64, Enon Greenon 56
Sprtngl&gt;oro 78, Day. Stebbins 35
Stewart Federal Hocking 84, Glouster
Trimble 61
Stmngevllle 74, N. Ridgeville •1
$1Mhllra 56. Ho"""nd 52
Sunbury Big Walnut 75, Col&amp;. Franklin
Hts. 45
Swanton -'4, Bryan 38
Syc~more Mohawt&lt; 52, Fostoria S1.
Wendelln 42
Sylvania Northvlew 54, Maumee 37
Tallmadge 60, Norton 45
Thomas WMhlngton 67, Reynoldsburg
50
11pp City Bethel 79, Tri-County N. 42
Tol. Christian 73, Danbury 54 · ·
Tc&gt;. Libbey 106, Tol. Woodwa«&lt;64
Tol. Scott 53, Tot. Sta~ 44
Tol. St. Francis 63, Tot Bowsher 61
Tol. St. John's 72, Tot Rogers 49
Tc&gt;. Wa~t 75, Tc&gt;. Cent. Cath. 69, 20T
Tol. Whitmer 58, Lorain Admiral King 53
Tontogany Otsego 88, Pemberville
Eas1wood 83
Troy 56. Piqua 40
Uppor Artlng&gt;on 56, Hilliard Dartly 46
Urbana 59, Bellefontaine 58
Van Wert 85, Celina 40
Van Wen Unc:olnvlew 78. Ada 43
Vincent Warren 52, Gallipolis 35
. W. Alexandria Twin ValleyS.
Tn-VII·
llge 68
W. Liberty-Salem 74, Riverside 51
WadawoM 61, Rlol111eld Revera 43
Warren Hartling 72, Boa«&lt;man 69, OT
Warrensville HI&amp;. 94, Gartleld Hts. 74
Washington C.H. 53, Grandview 35
Waterto«&lt; 73, Hemlock Millar 55
Wauseon 76, Delta 43
Waverly 55, Mlnlort151, OT
Wayneofltld-Goohan eo, Ridgemont 63
Wellington 71, Avon 80
Westlake 51, Bay VIllage Bay 40
Whotltraburg 66, Portsmouth W. 51
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 51,
Southview 45, OT
Wlcldlffa 75, Chagrtn Fall&amp; 53
WIHiamaburg 70, Bethel·Tale 65, OT
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 67 ,
Po~smouth Clay 59
Wlmlngton 64, Goshen 44
.
Wooster Trtway 65, Medina Buckeye 47
Wo~hlng1on Chrl011an 72, Frederick·
town 64
Xenia 54, Kettering Fairmont 48
Yellow Springs. 95, Xenia CMstlan 25
Young•. Mooney 75, Young&amp;. Ursuline
54
Youngs. Wilson 79, Wlrran JFK 66
Zantlvllle 67, Wheeling fN, Ya.) Pallc
64

eo,

Calvary Chltstian 66, Chris~an Center
Academy 17
Cia. r=:ast Tech 60, Cia. Kennedy 26
Cots. MIHKn 64, Cc&gt;s. W 44
Columbia 58, Rlcllmond Hts. 19
Dublin Coffman 58, wastervUe S. 40
Elyna FBCS 62, Orango Chr. 14
Falrpon Harbor Harding 36, Lo«&lt;stov.n
31
Galloway Westland 45, Gahanna 38
Grove City 68, WOI1hlngton Kilbourne
58
Hilliard Dafby 43, Upper Arlington 37
Hillla«&lt; t&gt;a~dson 58, Groveport37
Lancaster 57, Nawartc 35
Maplewood 69, Cle. His. lutheran East
40
'
Mt. Vernon 54, Marysville 38
Reynoldsburg 50, Thomas Wo~hlngton
47
Rocky River Lutheran West 5 I, Cuya·
l1oga HIS. 39
Shelby 52, Gallon 14
Southington Chalker 69, Thompson
Ledgemont 30
Sunbury Big Walnut 74 , Cols. Franklin
Hts. 67
'
Willard 55, Upper Sandusky 50
Welt VIrginia Prep Btsktlbtll
Frkfay'l Scorel
Glrl1
Big Creek 49, Matewan 38
Blue11eld 50, Oak Hill41
Bndgepon 55, Grafton 52 (OTI
Buffalo 48, Guyan Valley 45
Calvary 63, Union 30
capital 11 . SoUth Charleston 29
Clay-Battelle 55, Bishop Donahue 21
East Fairmont 59, Buckhannon·Upshur
30
Fairmont Senior 82, Elkins 33
George Washington 43, Spring Valley

38
Hampshire 70, Frankton 48
Harman 46, Trinity 18
Herbert Hoover 49, Point Pleasant 44
Jefferson 58, Martinsburg 54
Moorefield 4?, East Hartly 42
·Mount View 61. Tug Valley 48
Musselman 61, Berkeley Springs SO
Nicholas County 66, Princeton 49
Nitro 60, Huntington 48
Qak Glen 69, MagnoMa 45
Ohio Valley Christian 69, Grace Christ·
lan 52
Padan City 76, Hundred 32
Pendleton 60, Blue Ridge Va. 24
Philip Barbour 61 , Liberty Harrison 59

'
Pom11roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11, 2001

Smith's departure could help MU's Chapman
Robe~

C. Byld 51, Lincoln 35
Scon 78, Chapmanvtlo 24
Sllaonvilla eo, HIM 2•
l';ga~s Yalley 49, WebS1er 43
unlveraity 59, Preston 47
WyOming East 55, Marter Chrildln 51

Beth Havan

Boyo

CMa~an

74, Fllr HtV.n
Chrtl1iln 67
·
BuffalO 59, Hamlin 54
Burel165, Ballcatoy Sprlngo 56
Cabal Midland 77, Hunllngloo 53
Chapmanville 77, Hano 66
•
Clay County eo. WI~ County 70
·
Clay-Battelle 73, Blahop Donahue 70
Edison, Ohio 77, Oak Olen 47
Elk Valay Christian eo, Calvary Baptist
57
Fayetteville 64, Midland Trail 44
George Washington 89, Hurricane H
Hancock, Md. 59, Paw Paw 57
,
James Monroe 58, Greenbrier Welt 64
John Marshall 107, Bucktyt Loool,
Ohio 43
,
Unsly 68, Westem Reserve Academy,
Ohio 65
Madonna 82, Cameron 85
Marsh Fori&lt; 84, Montcalm 82
Meadow Bridge 65, Covington Boys
Home, Va. 40
Mount VIew 64, Man 47
Musselman 80, K8yser 47 · ·
Oak 'Hill 62, Greenbfier East 57
Ocoona 92, Balleysvllle 48
Paril;ersburg $outh 64, Parkeraburg 62
~etersburg 72, Moorefield 50
Pocat\ontas County 79, Webster Coun·
ty 47
Princeton 63, Bluefield 159
· Rainelle Christian 102, Emmanuel
Christian 53
Ravenswood 58. Partcersburg Catholic
54
Riverside 79, Ripley 51
Shody Spring 87, lndependonce 56
Sherman 65, Duval62
South Chariaoton 72, Sprtng Vallay 61
South Harrison 8\ Notre .carrie 48
·
summer&amp; CoiJnty 63, Ubony Raleigh 56
Tucker County 46, Southem, Md. 41
Tyler Consolkialad 61, Yal!ey Wetzel 37
Union 53, Calvary, Md. 40
Valley Fayette 69, Sissonville 63
Weir 56, Brooke 55
WIHiamstown 68, St. Marys 30
Wln11eld 57, Poca 41
Woodrow Wilson 66, Logan 58
Zaneovllle, Ohio 67, Wheeling Pallc 54

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) -The abrupt retirement
of all-pro Robert Smith could
give former Marshall running
back Doug Chapman a chance
, at significant playing time for
the Minnesota Vikings.
Chapman was drafted by the
Vikings in the third round a
yeat ago but never played a
down in his rookie season.
Chapman's thinks about the
opportunity given Vikings
quarterback Daunte Culpep. per; who didn't play as a rookie in 1999. Culpepper made
the Pro Bowl .at quarterback

•

this season.
"I talked to Daunte about
that a lot last season, and now,
quicker than I expected, I'll
get il chance to show what he
did last season," Chapman said
Thursday from his home in
Chestetfield, Va. "I knew this
chance would happen, but not
this soon .... I didn't expect

this."
Veteran
backup
Moe
Williams and Chapman are
likely to compete for Smith's
job heading into training
camp. The Vikings likely will
go looking for a veteran free

agent.
Chapman spoke with coach
Dennis Green on Thursday
and was told he will be given
a chance to earn playing time.
"Coach. Green is confident I
can play, and so am !," Chapman said. "Nothing will be
given to me, but that's' life in
the NFL. Just because Robert
isn't here any longer doesn't
mean I'll play. But I will be
given an opportunity, and
that's all! can ask. In my eyes,
the door is open."
Chapman rushed for 4,239
yards and 55 touchdowns in

four seasons. Like Smith,
Chapman showed he could
catch the ball in college.
" ! think I ca n be a good
back in the NFL, but I'm not
going to be another Robert
Smitli," Chapman said. " I
think I'm a . different player.
Robert was a unique player
and a special player. I enjoyed
learning from him for a season
and I watched him closely
because I knew I'd someday
~et the opportunity to take off
. where he left."
I

Defenders

Gabe Jenkins had nine of He also had four assists.
much better now going into
his IS points in the first' two
'"Brad really controlled Monday's game than I wou ld
periods. He finished with a practice last night," Atkins have- had we not come out
Bl
team-best eight rebounds.
said. "And I thought he did this way. If we'd have come
"Gabe
really
stepped
his
the sante thing tonight in the out flat again tonigqt , I probI
added. "They worked hard, game up up tonight," said game."
ably would have losr sleep
we were together and we had Atkins. "It seemed to be
John Polcyn and Mike again .all this weekend."
. a real team effort in practice, jumping about three inches Jenks scored six points each.
, and had great attitudes, and it . higher than usual to get Jay Jenkins and l Dole Taylor
" bled over into the game. We rebounds ."
had four poinls each, and
tell them that you play the
The huge lead gave Atkins Nathan Williams added two
way you practice, and that's the opportunity to give his poinrs for the Defenders.
Problems Getting Your Car loan Approved?
Garrett Mathis was the lone
what we did tonight, we had a entire roster ample playing
Call Us Today!
. real spirited effort."
time and all but one Defend- Grace player in double figures
er got his name on the score with 13 points. Stephen ShafA spirited effort, indeed.
The Defenders rolled to a sheet. One of the highlights fer and Jo!h Smith had four
15-2 advantage after one of the game came late in the points each.
quart.er of play and extended fourth quarter when reserve
Atkins said his club's perfortheir lead to 40-9 at the half. Amit Agrawal drained a 3- · mance. came at just the right
Adam Holcomb scored 18 of pointer for his only basket of time with the. playoff game
his game-high 20 points in the night.
against a ·cough Ridgeville
Ca//24 hours a day!
lhe first half, including 16 in
Fellow reserve Nathan Christian side set for' Monday
Get your credit problems
lhe second quarter.
Bowman also had a 3-pointer at 5 p.m. at the aves gym.
reversed RIGHT NOW!
: "Adam's starting to find his and Scott Frans collected five OVC defeated Ridgeville
earlier this season.
;:tange," Atkins said . . "He's rebounds.
···we didn't think it was too
'struggled all year with his
Senior Brad Bowman had
shot. But he had 16 points in six points and matched Jenk- late to get it turned back
the second quarter, so I think ins with a team-high eight around the way we needed
=be's on.1'
rebounds for the Defenders. to," Atkins said. "But I feel

Mtunba!' lltimr• -6rnhnd • Page 85

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS .
Subscribe today.
675-1333

2150 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 446·9777 or (740) 446·2464

Over 100 Used Tractors In · Stock!

from Page

Massey Ferguson
375
245
383
250
255

390
2404x4
283

2111
231

150
285
135
275.
50.

ForJI/NH
5610 4X4
3000
3800
1520

New start

2000
2800

4600
7740
1820
192G

4000
1220

ACIAGCO ALLIS
8060

5870
8690
185

0-12

1w:!~t!t~!}

6080

.m
310C·TLB

4430

4010
3020

3020
310A·TLB

WHITE/OLIVER
*HG88 CRAWLER*
1 OWNEFII
37 -4X4

1·80~866-371 3

•
•

Ohio High SChOOl Qlrll Bookt1blll
F~dlv'a Raaulll
B~lewe

88 1 Norwalk 39

Brooklyn S9, Baaohwood ~9

Congratulations, ,_

I

·I.; .

:III .
I '

'

.

,/

•

'

'

Jim Walker
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy·Oids
has announced
that Jim Walker
has earned
Salesman of the ·
Month for
January.
VYING FOR CONTROL - OVC's Kelsey Salisbury (4) goes
after the loose ball during the Defenders 69-52 victory over
:Grace Christian Friday night. (Bryan Long photo)

1816 Eastern Ave.
Galllpolle, OH

ovc

446-3672

from Page Bl
, that Raines girl and play
·same box-and-one on her
:'and ·some triangle·and~two," .
.Haggerty said. "She played
:well. We matched :ressa and
'Chels up on her. But, it cook
-a litde bit out of them on
4efense and we got a Hide less
:production on offense."
·
~ Raines was the lone. Grace
:player to reach double digits.
: The Defenders outscored
'·Grace 29-27 in the second
:half to hang on for the much:needed victory. Gooch added
, 15 points in the final two
·periods
and
Haggerty
;pumped
10 points in the ·
:.second half.·
Gooch connected on 1 1,: of-20 shots from the field,
;·including 5-of-7 . 3-pl&gt;int
; attempts. She grabbed eight
· rebounds and li:d the Defend- .
:.crs with 10 assists and fou~
~teals .
· : Haggerty hit 1 l~of-22 field
Joal attempts. S~e had four
:tebounds, four asSISts and four
' steals.
:' Beaver chipped ,in nine
points and collected a , gaim~­
high I0 rebounds. ~he ~l!o
llad three steals,
·:
.: "We got a really ·strong
tpme out of Hannah," Hag-

: gooch).

\

• MF 271 and MF 281 •

in

· Check out8 the great a'avlnt• available ·
on th••• 1!'1'· and 81 PTO hp MF tractor• ·
with Perkins Filatram• engine• •nd efficient BF/2R tranamlaalona. tor a
limited time only. you can get a 'Tso•
rebate. Give us a call today... thla Ia a
limited time offer! Get more for your
money, and pay. even . •••• right now,
with an MF 271 or MF 281 ·tractor. 8H
ua for a tHt drivel

*MASSEY FERGUSON"

J1m·s

f i'rm ·fquJPment

h,tern AVWIUe • Clalllpolla1 OH 41131
(740) 441 1777 or (740) 441-2~

2110

•

.v

\

gerty said. "I'm glad to see
that here toward the end of
the season."
Hallie Carter 'scored four
points and had two assists and
two steals for ave. Aimee '
Augustin had two points and
one rebound. Sarah Jenkins
grabbed three rebounds and
Kelsey Salisbury had two
rebounds.
·
. "Keb,ey and Hallie, Sarah
and Aimee all played strong,"
· Haggerty said. "It's nice to see
the younger players doing so

well."

1

Besides the 28-point performance by Raines, Grace
got · six points apiece from
Bethany Williams, Marisa.
Jayne and Erin Porter, and
four points from S11san
Wiebe. Elisha Joyce scored
two points: .
Ohio Valley Christiall (I 06) played without the services
of freshman gtiard Alyssa Zirille, who 'was sidelined with
the flu. '
"It's tough right now," said
Haggerty. "We do11't have a
lot of subs to give some girl!
some rest."
· The befe11ders· open postseasdn play Friday at Liberty
Christian in. Columbus. Their
opponent has yet be determined.
ave plays at county ' rival
South Gallia Monday.

Delta 88Loaded, Leathar ......................$7,200
1996 Ford Explorer ......................................... $10,450
' " ' 5-10 Blazer................................;...........$15,600 1997 Camaro...................................................$10,880
1999 5Rvwado LWB 2WD PU ........................ $18,950 1999 Oldsmobile Alero ............ :.........;........... $11,950
1993 5-10 Blazer................................'............. $.5, 950 .1998 Cadillac Devllla ............... :.: ................... $19,950
1991 chevrolat Conversion Van ...................... $3,950 1999 Lumlrta .................................................. $11,400
1998 J-10 Plckup ..................................... :...... $8,850 1999 Pontiac Grand Am ..........,..................... $10,850
1996 Geo Tradcer 4WD .................................. $6,875 2000 Impala ................................................. $15,525
1999 Pontiac Montana van .......................... $19,950 2000 Regal....................................................$16,8·80
1997 Oldsmobll8 Sllhouett&amp; Van ...................$14,800 1999 Century ................................................. $10,900
1997 Yukon Stock IP427 Green ................... $19,850 1998 Cavalier...................................... :........... $7,750
1994 Chrysler Concorde ................................. $5,200
1999 Ford TauNs ........................................... $11,900

to

.'

.I

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl..unt, WV

P8ga B6 • 6unba!' 'tlime•·6entintl

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

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

itunba!' lE:imr• -&amp;entind • Page 87

•

PREP BASKETBALL
•

Chi

r

ins bury

•

Orake 68, ll~nols St. 59
SW Mlssouh St. 89, S. lllnols 70
Wichita St. 82, Evansville 69

Big Blacks, 50-29
.

BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

"Just because they're pressing, it doesn't mean you have
to go 100 miles an hour. That
plays right into their hands,
but they do a good job and
they deserve to be atop the
league," Blain added.
In the second, both teams
went cold, but Logan out
scored Point 9-4 to take a 2817 lead into the half.
A 13-6 third quarter by ·
logan finally put the game
out of Point Pleasant's reach.
"I told them at halftime that

points and 10 rebounds. Villars
added eight.
J.P. Simpkins disqed out .four
assists for the Big Blacks.
Point (4-9 SEOAL, 4-13)
will play host to Roane
County Tuesday
On Feb. 16, the Big Blacks
will close out SEOAL play by
playing host to Gallia Academy.
logan (13-4, SEOAl 12-1)
remains in a tie with Warren
for first place in the SEOAl
tide ra ce. W~rren (12-5,
SEOAL 12-1) defeated Gallia
Academy 52-35 Friday to
keep the tide race in a dead
heat.

LOGAN - Logan's pressure defense and a 19-point
performance by senior Johnny
' Conrad propelled the Chieftains to a 50-29 victory over
·Point Pleasant Friday
Logan exploded to a L1St 60 lead after the Big Bbcks
turned the ball: over on their
firsr three trips down the floor.
, Joey Conrad scored all four of
his points in the first two min. utes and was helped by a pair
of three-pointers from Ryan our offen~e stunk,' said Blai'n.
STARS OF TOMORROW- These seven athletes from Will Power Tumbling in Gallipolis will com,
Swinehart and a single treJ by "Then I went in at the end of
pete at the Stars of Tomorrow national championships In Miami, Fla., this month. Front row,
Andrew Barrell.
the game. and I said the second
left to right, Stephanie Jarvis, James DeNapoli, Raymond Cousins and Tessie Richards. Back
Point finally broke the seal half that our offense really
row, left to right, Dianna Jarvis, Tiffany Mynes and Sarah Belcher. (Agnes Hapka photo)
on their hoop on a lob to Joey stunk.
Loomis, who would score the
"What I'm getting at there,.------------------------------~--------------,
first 11 points ofthe game for is our unforced mistakes. w~
. the Big Blacks. No other had passes go through hands,
Point player scored until dribbling off feet, passing the
Casey Villars hit a layup just ball into the corner when they
before the buzzer.
are trapping. We know. better
Despite the efforts of the than that."
Point inside game, the Big
Point hit 13-of-40 field goal
Blacks trailed 19-13 at the first attempts. logan . hit 19-of-57
buzzer.
attempts.
"Joey had our first 11, and
logan hit four treys, while
we knew that wasn't gonna the Big Blacks failed to hit any
· last," said Point coach Richie from outside the arc.
· Blain, "because they went into
Point won the battle of the
· some zone, they went into glass 27-25.
some h3lf court stuff, and it
Jim Bennet followed Contook us out of that
rad by scoring nine points.
"The pressure did not cause Both Bennett and Johnny
a lot of turnovers as far · as Conrad hauled in six boards.
them forcing turnoverS," said Johnny Conrad also blocked
'' Blain. "It forced us to do. five shots.
things that got us away from
Ryan Swinehart added SIX
, what was working, with Joey points for Logan.
· and with stepping up in some
Loomis led Point with 13'
1

Everything You Need
In A Checki Account

..."''
'

Toclay's Scoreboard

,.

.I

seams.

Lady Knights

·'

_,, &lt;·r ."

SOUTHWEST

NBA
E11tern Conference
AHanllc Dfvlalon
·w L Pet GB
Philadelphia
36 14 .720
Now York
29 18 .617 5 112
Miami
30 20 .600
5
:.. Orlando
25 23 .521
1o
·., Boston
22 27 .449 13 112
• · NewJ8n1ey
17 34 .333 19 112
:::...waahlngton
12 37 .245 23 112
•- ~
Centr•l Division

'

~ . PMiwaukee

WLPctGB

29 18 .817
.,.... Toronto
28 23 .53 1
4
::Charlolla
25 25 .510
5
- Indiana
21 · 27 .438 8 112
•~Cleveland
20 27 .426
·9
: Detroit
19 31 .380 11 112
_. .Atlanta
16 33 .327
14
...· Chicago
8 42 ·.125 23112
•"
Wett•rn Conf.,enca
Mldwaat Dlvlalon
o.
WLPctGB
•· "'Utah
32 15 .681
· :,:San Antonio
31
18 ' .seo
1
oo..Minnoscta
32 18 .640 1 112
•Dallas
31
19 .620 2 112
:oe.nver
27 24 .529
7
• !HOUSton
25 25 .500 8 1/2
Vaf'ICQuver
13 36 .265
20
PICiflc DIYIIIOn
WLPciOB
" · Portland
35 15 .700
,' ,:-sacramento
31
15 .674
2
L.A. Lakera
31
16 .560 2 112
Phoenl&lt;
28 20 .583
6
Seatllo
28 24 .538
8
L.A. Cllppa"
15 34 .320
19
Goldan Stale
15 33 .313
19
Sunday'a Oama
•AII·Star Game at Washington, 6 p.m .

:"*

·

Houston 75, Southern Miss. 53
TCU 71, SMU 83
Tulsa 91 , UMKC 36
FAR WEST
Cal Poly·SLO 78, UC San1a Barbara 70
Hawaii 68, Fresno Sl49
Long Beach St 7•. UC Irvine 65
Montana St. 64, Sacramento St. 60
Pacific 92, Cal St.-Fullerton 49
Pepperdlne 85, San Diego 53
Por11and 79, San Francisco 68
San Jose St 78, Nevada 75
Santa Clara 69, Loyola Marfmount 63
51. Mary's, Cal. 83, Gonzaga so
Weber St. 59, E. Washlng1on 50

Mtn'l College B11kttball
Frld•y•a Score•

EAST
Brown 60, Columbia 59
Comell73, Yala 70
Dartmouth 57, Princeton 56
DreKel80, Hartford 71
Harvard 77, Ponn 82
Hofstra 73, Vennont 60
Manhattan 67, Rider 61
SOUTH
Wlnll1rop 87, Radford 85
FAR WEST
Gonzaga 84, San Francisco 92
· Portland 83, St. Mary's, Cal. 74
Wom.n'a Coll~t~t lllktlblll
Friday'• Score•

EAST
Canlslus 62, lone 59
Colurrtlla 60, Brown 48
Cornall 92. Yala 57
Dartmouth 65, Princeton 48
Duquesne 45, Rhode Island 42
Manhlnan 81, Niagara ee
Penn 65, HIINard 51
St. Joseph's 62, St. Bonaventure 52
Temple 69, George Washington 62
SOUTH
East Carolina ee, George Maaon 55
James Madl10n 60, N1C.·WIImlngton 48
Memphis 71, Saint Loula 58
·
Tulane 70, Soull1 Flo!lcll52
UAB 89, N.C. Chal10tla 81

MIDWEST

Creighton 85, lnd-.na Sl. .~l .

Ohio AP Boye Bltkltball Polls
How They Farod
COLUMBUS (AP)- How the top teams
in the Associated Press boys high school
basketball poll did this week:
DtYfSION f
No.1 Gels. Brookhaven (19-0) def. Cots.
Northland 111·7-', def. Cola. Mifflin 71·68.
No.2 Cleve. St. Ignatius (14·1) plays
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit Saturday.
No.3 Cin. Winton Woods (18-Q) def. Cin.
Northwest 100·42, def. Cin. Turpin 69-47,
plays Cln. Hughes.
No.4 Tol. Ubbey (18·1) ~ef. Tol. Wood·
ward 106-64.
.
No.5 Mansfield Sr. (16-1) def. Vermilion
75·59.
No.e Masslllon Perry (15·1) def. Union·
town Lake 41·40, plays Massillon WashIngton Saturday.
·
·
No.7 Tol. St. John's ( 15·2) def. Tot
Rogers 72·49.
No.8 Cln. $1. Xovler (15-4) del. Cln .
LaSalle 59·41.
No.9 E. Uverpool (14·3) dol. Wallsvflle
81·39, plays Olmeted Falls Saturday.
No. 10 Mentor (15-2) del. Parma HIS.
Valley Forge 101-80, def. Shaker Hts. 6965, OT.
DIVISION If
No.1 WooaterT~way (1Hl) del. M&amp;dlna
Buckeye 85-47, plays Creaton Norwayne
Salurday.
·
No.2 WHiard (17-&lt;l) del. Norwal&lt; 87-52,
plays Bellevue Saturday.
No.3 Kotlo~ng AHer (17·1) daf. Cln.
Roger Bacon 59·55. del. Cln Purcell Ma~­
an 51·39.
No.4 Tallmadga (17-&lt;l) plays Norton 60·
45.
No.5 Oltawa·Giandort (18·1) del.
.Wapakoneta 80·52, plays Paulding Saturday.
No.8 WUhlnglon COurt HOusa (15·1)
def. Circleville Logan Elm ao-44, def.
Gl8ndvfaw HIS. 53-35, plays Wilmington
Saturday.
No.7 Warrensville Halghla (15·1) dal.
Parma 110·78, del. Ga~leld His. 94-74,
plays Parma Saturday.
No.8 Cola. DeSales (18·1) del. Newark
Calh. 97-84, del. Cols. Hartlay 68·50.
No.9 Conneaut (1-'·1) def. JeHerson BQ81.
No.10 Painesville Harvey (16~1) def.
Madison 80-49; del. Ashtabula Harbor 82-

58.

No.3 Morral Ridgedale (,8-0) def.
Gallon Northmor 58·43 .
No.4 · Jeromesville Hillsdale (17-0) del .
Rittman 74-49.
No.5 Chesapeake (17-1) del. Ironton
Rq&lt;:k Hill 63-25.
No.6 Tontogany Otsego (16-0) del.
Elmore Woodmore 72-69, 20T, def. Pemberville EaSIWOOd 68-63.
No.7 Casstown Miami East (16·11 del.
St. Paris Graham 54·29, plays Fairlawn
Saturday.
No.8 Haviland Wayne Trace (15·1) dol.
Defiance Tinora 76·52, plays Convoy
Crestview Saturday.
No.9 Wheelersburg (16-1) del. Minford
70-65, def. Ponsmoulh West 66-Si. plays
Oalllpolis Gall!a Academy Saturday.
No.10 WiCkliffe (15·1) del. Chagrin Falls
75-53.
DIVISION IV
No.1 Marla Stein Marton Local (16·1)
def. St . Henry 58·34 , plays Arcanum Satu rday.
.
No.2 Cin. Hills Chr. Acad. (15-1) def.
Hammon New Miami 82·32. plays Cin.
Country Day ppd., moisture on the Hoor.
No.3 Cedarville (17-1) def. Johnstown
Greenevlew 51 -31, plays E. Clinton Saturday.
'No.4 Lancaster Fisher Cath. (16·2) def.
New Albany 42-37.
No.5 S. Charleston Sout,heasterf1 (16-2)
del. Waynesville 66·53.
·
No.6 Bristolville BristOl (13·1} plays
Southington Satur(lay.
No.7 Cin . country Day-(16·1) def. Lock·
land 8~27 , plays Cln. Hills Christian Acad·
emy, ppd., moisture on the tloor.
No.e Minster (14-3) del. New Bremen
60-42.
No.9 Centerburg (13,5) lost to Johnstown Northridge 75·65, del. Danville 7747, plays Cardington Saturday.
No.10 11pp City Bethal .(1 4·4) del. Tn·
County N. 79-42.
Junior High Bllk"biU
Fr.. hmen Boy•
Oallla Acodomy aa, Jacklon 27
GAHs-Tommy Bose 21 , Tom Frazier 7,
Eric Taylor 2, Nathan Wood 2.
Ollila Acadtmy 54. Molga 34
G-Tommy Bose 21 , Eric Taylor 15, Tom
Frazier a, Joey Grah~m 6, Nick Craft 4..

011111 Academy 3i, W•rren 38
G-Tommy Bose 18, Nick Crah 11, Eric
Taylor ?1Joe Graham 2.
lth Gr1de Boy•
Kygar CrHk 64, VInton 47
KC-chrls Roush 16, Semakl Corflas 15,
·colby Reese 11 , Darren Clark 10, Justin '
Halfhill 8, Jon ·aaus 2, Drew Henson 2.
V-Terry MiraclE! 18, Josh Oliver 12, Josh
fvturphy 11, Andrew Clark 4, Dustin Jeflers
2.
· Southweattrn 38, W1h8m1 :Z8
SW-5teva Harder 20, Carl Wolfe 1B.
Waheuna-Oale Keathley 7, Dale MeDon·
aid 7.
Kyg~r

CrMk 70, H111n1n Tree• 55

KC-Colly Reese 21l. Chns Roush 13,

, DIVISION II
Somakl Corllas12, Darren Clark 10, Juslln
No.1 Akron St. Vlncent.St. Mary (14·1) HallhMI 4, Ar1hur Wrltesel 2, Jon Gaus 1.
ptaya Akron Hoban Sunday.
HT-chris Temple 27, Geraki Cade 10,
Nc.2 Flndiy Ubo'll;·Benton (17-0) del. Brandon Nolan 9, Jake Whiteman 8,
, .~~·adll !8:30,;!~~. "')!On ~l!i,.Y·.- ,,.~.!.T~~ F~l.kH .
,
o -

'

I

'•

..

~

W L TOL Phi
29 15 10 0 68
30 19 4 1 85
24 15 12 2 52
24218157
16 31 5 4 42

5epl. 2 - Soulhem 500, Danlnglon,
S.C.
Sept. a - Chevrolet Monte Carie 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshire 300,
Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 23- MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Two points lor a win, one point fOf a tie and
5ept 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas City.
ovenime lOss.
Kan.
·
Friday·• GamH
OCt. 7 - UAW-GM Ouality 500, Con Bidwell-Porter 55 , Southwestern 39
Atlanta 5, Boston 1
cord, N.C.
8-P-cha~ie Nlbart 22. K~e Tlpton 11.
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2
OCt. 14 - Old Dominion 500, Mar·
Derek Sm!th 10.
l!nsvllle, Va.
N.Y. Rangers 4, Florida2
SW-Steve Harder 19, Trace Fraley' 10.
Minnesota 2, Dallas 1
· Oct. 21 -Alabama 500, TaJiadega, Ala.
Calgary 5, Colorado 3
OCt. 28 - Checker Auto Pans SOOk,
7th Grade Boy•
Phoenix 2, Edmonton 0
Avondale, At1z.
Kyger Crftk 76, Vln1on 38
Washington 4, Anaheim 3
Nov. 4 - P:op Secret Microwave 400,
KG-Michael Taylor 28, Paul Grubbs 12,
Saturd•y's G1mn
Rockingham, N.C.
Elias EllioH a, Nathan Mollohan 8.
New Jersey at Pittsburgh , 2 p.m.
Nov. 11 - PeMZcHI 400, Homestead,
Buffalo at onawa. 7 p.m.
Fla.
Harsn1n Trace 48, Bldw.II.Porter 45
Tampa Say at Boston. 1 p.m.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.
HT-Cw1ls Waugh 24, Andrew Chapman Aorida at Atlanta , 7 p.m.
11, Jay Waugh 4, Aaron Pauley 4, Bemie Detroi1 al Toronto, 7 p.m.
Fulks 3, Seth Williamson 2.
N.Y. Islanders at Momreal, 7 p.m .
1
8-P-Cody Edwards 14, Ronny Burns 13. · Nashville al Columbus, 7:30p.m.
St . Louis at Colorado, 8:30p.m.
BASEBALL
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 _p.m.
Bidwell-Porter SO, Southwestern 35
American L..gue
8-P- Ronny Burns 15, Cody Edwards 12, Chicago at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
DETROIT TIGERS-Agreed to terms
Justin Nolan 12.
Washington at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
wHI'1 SS ·oelvl Cruz on a one-year contract .
SW-Cory Ehman 16, Man Elliott 10.
Sundey'l Gam11
MINNESOTA TVVIN9-Agreed to terms
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 1 p.m.
willl LHP Eric Milton on a four-yt.ar con Hannan Tr1ce 71, Kyger Creek 42
PiHsburgh al Minnesota, 2 p.m.
tract
·
HT- Andrew Chapman 24, Curtis Waugh Montreal at Buffalo, 7 p._
m.
NEW YORK YANKEE8-Agreod to
20, Bemle Fulks 11, Jessie McComas 7. St. Louis at Dallas, 8 p.m.
terms with $5 Derek Jeter on a 10·year
Seth Williamson 7, Jay Waugh 2.
Carolina at Anaheim, a p.m.
contract
KC-Paul Grubbs t 5.
Chicago at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to lerms
with OF Gabe Kapler on a three -year con Glrlo
tract, RHP Darwin Cublllan and RHP
Bldweii-Poner 28, Southwestern 13
NASCAA Wlnaton Cup S.rlea
Jonathan Johnson on one-year contracts,
B-P-Oyanna Eggleton 6, Leslie Ward 5.
and OF Curtis Goodwin on a minor league
SW-Megan Spears 7, Lindsey ThaKton 4.
The '2001 NASCAR Winston Cup contract
schedule, and 2000 driver polnl standings:
TORONTO BLUE JAY8-Agreed tp
·1 Fe!&gt;. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona terms with RHP Kelvlm Escobar on a oneBeach, Fla.
year contract.
'---~---''---"----'
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, RockingN1tlon11 Uague
NHL
ham, N.C.
CINCINNATI REDS-Agreed to terms
Eaatarn Confertnct
March 4 - UAW-DalmlerChryster 400, with C Man Walbeck on a minor league
Atlantic Dlvltlon
Las Vegas.contract.
March 11 -Cracker Barret 500, Hampw L TOL Pia
FLORIDA MARLINs-Named Mike
New Jersey
28 13 10 2 &amp;8
ton , Ga.
Veeck consultant.
Phl!adelphla
26 18 9 1 56
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Agreod to
Pittsburgh
400, Da~lnglon, S.C.
26 19 e 2 60
terms with RHP Roben Person on a one·N.Y. Rangers
22 29 3 1 48
March 25 - Food City 500, Brlslol, year contract.
N.Y. Islanders
14 32 5 3 36
Tenr'l.
.
ST. LOUIS CAROINALS-Agre&amp;d lo
Northtlll Dlvltlon
Apnl 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort Worth, terms with INF Craig Paquette on a onew L TOL Pit
Texas . .
year contract.
Ottawa
29 15 8 1 87
Aprll8- VIrginia 500, Maninsvllle, Va.
FOOTBALL
Toronto
25 19 7 4 63
Apnl 22 - Talladega 500. Talladega,
National Football League
Buffalo
27 20 5 1 60
Ala.
CINCINNATI BENGAL$-Signad G
Boston
23 21 8 5 57
April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Anthony Byrd to a two-year contract.
Montreal
18 29 5 3 44
Fontana, Cslif.
CLEVELAND BROWN$-Nam&amp;d Steve .
Southeaat Olvlelon
May 5- Pontiac EJ&lt;cttement 400, Ak:h· Hagen tight ends coach and Pete Garcia
w L TOL Plt
monel, Va.
assistant coach.
Washington
26 19 9 1 52
May 27 - Coca...Cola 600, Concord,
DETROIT LION$-Nam&amp;d Glann Pires
Carolina
24 21 6 2 58
N.C.
EAGLE $-Sign ad OT
Atlanta
17 27 9 2 45
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover,
Florida
13 28 8 7 41
Dal.
Joe Wong and WR Kenny Mitchell to twoTampa Bay
15 32 5 3 36
Juno 10- Kman 400, Brook~n. Mich. year contract&amp;.
Wtattrn COnfe... nca
June 17- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Nam&amp;d
Centrll Division
June 24 - Dodge/Save Mart 350, Jason Tarver quality control coach.
w L TOL Pta
Sonoma, Calif.
HOCKEY
St. Lou is
35 11 6 2 78
July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach,
National Hockty League
Detroit
32 16 4 4 72
Fla.
NHL-5uspended San Jose Shar1c:s FMI
Nashville
24 24 7 2 57
July 15 - Chlcagoland, 400, Joliet, Ill.
Owen Nolan lor 11 games for a blow to the
22 ·25 5 2 51
Chicago
July 22 - New England 300, loudon, head ol Dalla&amp; Stars AW Grant Marshall
Columbus
17 27 6 4 44
N.H.
during a Feb. 1 game.
Northwest Dlvl1l0n
July 29 - Pennsyl\lanla 500, .Long
ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCKS..:.Asslgned
w L TOL Pto
Pond.
D Sergei Vyshadkevlch to Clncinnatt of the
ColoradO
35 11 8 1 79
Au(J. s- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
AHL.
Vancouver
28 18 5 4 65
Aug. 12- Global Crossing at the Glen,
ATLANTA TtiRASHER$-Acqulrad F
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
·
Edmonton
25 23 8 1 59
ladlslav Kahn from the Anahelm Mighty
Calgary
19 21 io 4 52
Aug. 19 - Pepa1400, Brooklyn, Mk:h.
Ducks for 0 Sergei \Jvsl'ledkevlch and Q
Minnesota
20 23 8 3 51
Aug. 25 -The Nlgh1 Race 500, Bristol, Scon LangkOw. AC1ivated LW Toml Kallio
Pacific Oivlelon
lrom Injured reserve.
·
Tenn.
Kyg..- Creek 56, Hennan 35
KG-Chris Roush 14, Colby Reese 11,
Darren Clartl: 10, JOn Gaus 6, Justin
HalfhiH 5, Arthur Wri1esel 5, Drew Henson
3, Semakl Corilas 2.
H- DUion Sabolsky 17, Adam Lester 9,
Chartle Adams 3, Dustin Stover 3, T.J.
Brumliekl2, Alan Dye 1.

San Jose
Dallas
Phoenb:
Los Angeles
Anaheim

ITRANSAcnoNs

HOCKEY ,.

Nn~~~~~t~~;z

fall-to Hoover
FROM OVP ST~FF REPORTS

A
.

t. '

~

'

:

' .

POINT PLEASANT
The. Point Pleasant girls basketball team outscored Her- ·
bert Hoover 13-9 in the
fourth quarter, but it wasn't
enough.
The Huskies defeated the
Knights, 49-44, in Point Pleasant's final home game of the
season.
Jennifer Adkins tied the
score with a 3-point goal at
41-all with two minutes left in
the game before Hoover
regained control of the game.
Herbert Hoover led 31-24
at halftime after Hoover's
Hillary Hardman connected
on a pair of second quarter 3point goals.
Hardman finished with 13
points, whiie Angela Johnson
led the Huskies (5-12) with
15 points.
Bridget Nibert led the
Knights (3-17} with 13 points.
Jennie Wilson added 10
points for Point Pleasant,

while Kristin Drain scored
seven points.
Hoover jumped out·to a 4031 advantage at the end of thethird quarter, leading by as
many as 16 points.
The Knights then held the
Huskies scoreless for · eight
minutes over a period lasting
.from the end of the third
quarter to the beginning of
the fourth.
Point Pleasant hauled in 32
team rebounds, led by .Nibert
with 12. Adkins hauled in five
boards for the. Knights.
The Knights finished with
14 steals as Drain led Point
with four.
Nibert and Miranda· Durst
each had three steals for the
Knights.
Point was 18-for-63 (29
percent) shooting from th~
floor.
Point Pleasant finishes its
regular season Feb. 16 at
Roane Counr;,.

I

I
llflnd New 2001 Pontiac
Slldlrl Sun I SoiiiCI

Five Account Choices • Free Debit Card • ATM Access • 24-Hour Access by Phone
Easy-to-Read Statements with Check Imaging • 58 Convenient Locations
~

The right checking account C!ln be the perfect tool to help you manage your
money. With a City National Bank checking account, yoo'll get more f~rures,
more options and mor~ service. At 58 locations throughout West Virginia and
Ohio. Do more with your checking account... at City National Bank.
'

111, * 120,
•"-Sunroof
• AII/FM CD Sylllm

• .RNr Spoiler

Blind New 2001 Pontiac
Az1ec·SRV All Wlleel Drive

Brand New 2001 CheVy
S.Serlel LS Extended Cab

Brand New 2001 Chevy
SIIYerldo Ext Cab 4Door 4x4

* 122,950*

~5 '' 550*

123,95

Blind New 2001
Chevy lmplla LS Sedln

v.e "-

• 3800
• p - W'•odowa • Loeb
•Klw*t Entry, 11ft • CnUI

Automatic
Entry, CD Syatem
&amp; Crulle

Automatic, Air Conditioning
.
CD Syatern, Alum. Wheell
lllt &amp; CruiM

·'

Redmen edge Geneva
BEAVER FALLS, Pa. - A
couple of not-so-average Joes
led · the University of Rio
Grande to a 62-59 victory
over Geneva College in
American Mideast Conference play Friday.
Joe Delaney had 11 points
and Joe Mmin added 10
points off the bench to pace
Rio Grande (20-8, AMC 114) to the win.
Delaney hit 4-of-5 field
goal attemp~ for the Redmen, while Martin knocked
down 3-of-6 shots from the
field and hit ~of-6 foul shots.
Adam Gladieux countered
with II points for the Golden
Tornadoes (17-10, AMC 10-

6), while teammate Jeremy
Sheffield tallied 10 points and
a team-high six rebounds.
The Redmen's bench outgunned the Geneva reserves
24-21 with Martin's 10 leading the way Mufutau Ibrahim
led the Geneva bench with
nine points .
Scott Davis had eight points
and Jason .Beller and Chris
Ballenger added seven points
each·for the Redmen.
Mike Marshall of Rio
Grande collected a game-high
eight rebounds.
Rio Grande played at Point
Park Saturday, and will play
host to Ohio Domincan Tues,day.

• AMIFM Stereo, lllt

131,950*

• Keyle11 Entry, CD
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lock•
Front &amp; Rear Heat &amp; Air

"

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

FROM OVP SfAFF REPORTS

• Vortec v-a· Power

• Automatic, Air Condlllonilg

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LS 4 Door 41C4

....

CMineut

... @J

• .. tl ... .., .......r

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl..unt, WV

P8ga B6 • 6unba!' 'tlime•·6entintl

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

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

itunba!' lE:imr• -&amp;entind • Page 87

•

PREP BASKETBALL
•

Chi

r

ins bury

•

Orake 68, ll~nols St. 59
SW Mlssouh St. 89, S. lllnols 70
Wichita St. 82, Evansville 69

Big Blacks, 50-29
.

BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

"Just because they're pressing, it doesn't mean you have
to go 100 miles an hour. That
plays right into their hands,
but they do a good job and
they deserve to be atop the
league," Blain added.
In the second, both teams
went cold, but Logan out
scored Point 9-4 to take a 2817 lead into the half.
A 13-6 third quarter by ·
logan finally put the game
out of Point Pleasant's reach.
"I told them at halftime that

points and 10 rebounds. Villars
added eight.
J.P. Simpkins disqed out .four
assists for the Big Blacks.
Point (4-9 SEOAL, 4-13)
will play host to Roane
County Tuesday
On Feb. 16, the Big Blacks
will close out SEOAL play by
playing host to Gallia Academy.
logan (13-4, SEOAl 12-1)
remains in a tie with Warren
for first place in the SEOAl
tide ra ce. W~rren (12-5,
SEOAL 12-1) defeated Gallia
Academy 52-35 Friday to
keep the tide race in a dead
heat.

LOGAN - Logan's pressure defense and a 19-point
performance by senior Johnny
' Conrad propelled the Chieftains to a 50-29 victory over
·Point Pleasant Friday
Logan exploded to a L1St 60 lead after the Big Bbcks
turned the ball: over on their
firsr three trips down the floor.
, Joey Conrad scored all four of
his points in the first two min. utes and was helped by a pair
of three-pointers from Ryan our offen~e stunk,' said Blai'n.
STARS OF TOMORROW- These seven athletes from Will Power Tumbling in Gallipolis will com,
Swinehart and a single treJ by "Then I went in at the end of
pete at the Stars of Tomorrow national championships In Miami, Fla., this month. Front row,
Andrew Barrell.
the game. and I said the second
left to right, Stephanie Jarvis, James DeNapoli, Raymond Cousins and Tessie Richards. Back
Point finally broke the seal half that our offense really
row, left to right, Dianna Jarvis, Tiffany Mynes and Sarah Belcher. (Agnes Hapka photo)
on their hoop on a lob to Joey stunk.
Loomis, who would score the
"What I'm getting at there,.------------------------------~--------------,
first 11 points ofthe game for is our unforced mistakes. w~
. the Big Blacks. No other had passes go through hands,
Point player scored until dribbling off feet, passing the
Casey Villars hit a layup just ball into the corner when they
before the buzzer.
are trapping. We know. better
Despite the efforts of the than that."
Point inside game, the Big
Point hit 13-of-40 field goal
Blacks trailed 19-13 at the first attempts. logan . hit 19-of-57
buzzer.
attempts.
"Joey had our first 11, and
logan hit four treys, while
we knew that wasn't gonna the Big Blacks failed to hit any
· last," said Point coach Richie from outside the arc.
· Blain, "because they went into
Point won the battle of the
· some zone, they went into glass 27-25.
some h3lf court stuff, and it
Jim Bennet followed Contook us out of that
rad by scoring nine points.
"The pressure did not cause Both Bennett and Johnny
a lot of turnovers as far · as Conrad hauled in six boards.
them forcing turnoverS," said Johnny Conrad also blocked
'' Blain. "It forced us to do. five shots.
things that got us away from
Ryan Swinehart added SIX
, what was working, with Joey points for Logan.
· and with stepping up in some
Loomis led Point with 13'
1

Everything You Need
In A Checki Account

..."''
'

Toclay's Scoreboard

,.

.I

seams.

Lady Knights

·'

_,, &lt;·r ."

SOUTHWEST

NBA
E11tern Conference
AHanllc Dfvlalon
·w L Pet GB
Philadelphia
36 14 .720
Now York
29 18 .617 5 112
Miami
30 20 .600
5
:.. Orlando
25 23 .521
1o
·., Boston
22 27 .449 13 112
• · NewJ8n1ey
17 34 .333 19 112
:::...waahlngton
12 37 .245 23 112
•- ~
Centr•l Division

'

~ . PMiwaukee

WLPctGB

29 18 .817
.,.... Toronto
28 23 .53 1
4
::Charlolla
25 25 .510
5
- Indiana
21 · 27 .438 8 112
•~Cleveland
20 27 .426
·9
: Detroit
19 31 .380 11 112
_. .Atlanta
16 33 .327
14
...· Chicago
8 42 ·.125 23112
•"
Wett•rn Conf.,enca
Mldwaat Dlvlalon
o.
WLPctGB
•· "'Utah
32 15 .681
· :,:San Antonio
31
18 ' .seo
1
oo..Minnoscta
32 18 .640 1 112
•Dallas
31
19 .620 2 112
:oe.nver
27 24 .529
7
• !HOUSton
25 25 .500 8 1/2
Vaf'ICQuver
13 36 .265
20
PICiflc DIYIIIOn
WLPciOB
" · Portland
35 15 .700
,' ,:-sacramento
31
15 .674
2
L.A. Lakera
31
16 .560 2 112
Phoenl&lt;
28 20 .583
6
Seatllo
28 24 .538
8
L.A. Cllppa"
15 34 .320
19
Goldan Stale
15 33 .313
19
Sunday'a Oama
•AII·Star Game at Washington, 6 p.m .

:"*

·

Houston 75, Southern Miss. 53
TCU 71, SMU 83
Tulsa 91 , UMKC 36
FAR WEST
Cal Poly·SLO 78, UC San1a Barbara 70
Hawaii 68, Fresno Sl49
Long Beach St 7•. UC Irvine 65
Montana St. 64, Sacramento St. 60
Pacific 92, Cal St.-Fullerton 49
Pepperdlne 85, San Diego 53
Por11and 79, San Francisco 68
San Jose St 78, Nevada 75
Santa Clara 69, Loyola Marfmount 63
51. Mary's, Cal. 83, Gonzaga so
Weber St. 59, E. Washlng1on 50

Mtn'l College B11kttball
Frld•y•a Score•

EAST
Brown 60, Columbia 59
Comell73, Yala 70
Dartmouth 57, Princeton 56
DreKel80, Hartford 71
Harvard 77, Ponn 82
Hofstra 73, Vennont 60
Manhattan 67, Rider 61
SOUTH
Wlnll1rop 87, Radford 85
FAR WEST
Gonzaga 84, San Francisco 92
· Portland 83, St. Mary's, Cal. 74
Wom.n'a Coll~t~t lllktlblll
Friday'• Score•

EAST
Canlslus 62, lone 59
Colurrtlla 60, Brown 48
Cornall 92. Yala 57
Dartmouth 65, Princeton 48
Duquesne 45, Rhode Island 42
Manhlnan 81, Niagara ee
Penn 65, HIINard 51
St. Joseph's 62, St. Bonaventure 52
Temple 69, George Washington 62
SOUTH
East Carolina ee, George Maaon 55
James Madl10n 60, N1C.·WIImlngton 48
Memphis 71, Saint Loula 58
·
Tulane 70, Soull1 Flo!lcll52
UAB 89, N.C. Chal10tla 81

MIDWEST

Creighton 85, lnd-.na Sl. .~l .

Ohio AP Boye Bltkltball Polls
How They Farod
COLUMBUS (AP)- How the top teams
in the Associated Press boys high school
basketball poll did this week:
DtYfSION f
No.1 Gels. Brookhaven (19-0) def. Cots.
Northland 111·7-', def. Cola. Mifflin 71·68.
No.2 Cleve. St. Ignatius (14·1) plays
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit Saturday.
No.3 Cin. Winton Woods (18-Q) def. Cin.
Northwest 100·42, def. Cin. Turpin 69-47,
plays Cln. Hughes.
No.4 Tol. Ubbey (18·1) ~ef. Tol. Wood·
ward 106-64.
.
No.5 Mansfield Sr. (16-1) def. Vermilion
75·59.
No.e Masslllon Perry (15·1) def. Union·
town Lake 41·40, plays Massillon WashIngton Saturday.
·
·
No.7 Tol. St. John's ( 15·2) def. Tot
Rogers 72·49.
No.8 Cln. $1. Xovler (15-4) del. Cln .
LaSalle 59·41.
No.9 E. Uverpool (14·3) dol. Wallsvflle
81·39, plays Olmeted Falls Saturday.
No. 10 Mentor (15-2) del. Parma HIS.
Valley Forge 101-80, def. Shaker Hts. 6965, OT.
DIVISION If
No.1 WooaterT~way (1Hl) del. M&amp;dlna
Buckeye 85-47, plays Creaton Norwayne
Salurday.
·
No.2 WHiard (17-&lt;l) del. Norwal&lt; 87-52,
plays Bellevue Saturday.
No.3 Kotlo~ng AHer (17·1) daf. Cln.
Roger Bacon 59·55. del. Cln Purcell Ma~­
an 51·39.
No.4 Tallmadga (17-&lt;l) plays Norton 60·
45.
No.5 Oltawa·Giandort (18·1) del.
.Wapakoneta 80·52, plays Paulding Saturday.
No.8 WUhlnglon COurt HOusa (15·1)
def. Circleville Logan Elm ao-44, def.
Gl8ndvfaw HIS. 53-35, plays Wilmington
Saturday.
No.7 Warrensville Halghla (15·1) dal.
Parma 110·78, del. Ga~leld His. 94-74,
plays Parma Saturday.
No.8 Cola. DeSales (18·1) del. Newark
Calh. 97-84, del. Cols. Hartlay 68·50.
No.9 Conneaut (1-'·1) def. JeHerson BQ81.
No.10 Painesville Harvey (16~1) def.
Madison 80-49; del. Ashtabula Harbor 82-

58.

No.3 Morral Ridgedale (,8-0) def.
Gallon Northmor 58·43 .
No.4 · Jeromesville Hillsdale (17-0) del .
Rittman 74-49.
No.5 Chesapeake (17-1) del. Ironton
Rq&lt;:k Hill 63-25.
No.6 Tontogany Otsego (16-0) del.
Elmore Woodmore 72-69, 20T, def. Pemberville EaSIWOOd 68-63.
No.7 Casstown Miami East (16·11 del.
St. Paris Graham 54·29, plays Fairlawn
Saturday.
No.8 Haviland Wayne Trace (15·1) dol.
Defiance Tinora 76·52, plays Convoy
Crestview Saturday.
No.9 Wheelersburg (16-1) del. Minford
70-65, def. Ponsmoulh West 66-Si. plays
Oalllpolis Gall!a Academy Saturday.
No.10 WiCkliffe (15·1) del. Chagrin Falls
75-53.
DIVISION IV
No.1 Marla Stein Marton Local (16·1)
def. St . Henry 58·34 , plays Arcanum Satu rday.
.
No.2 Cin. Hills Chr. Acad. (15-1) def.
Hammon New Miami 82·32. plays Cin.
Country Day ppd., moisture on the Hoor.
No.3 Cedarville (17-1) def. Johnstown
Greenevlew 51 -31, plays E. Clinton Saturday.
'No.4 Lancaster Fisher Cath. (16·2) def.
New Albany 42-37.
No.5 S. Charleston Sout,heasterf1 (16-2)
del. Waynesville 66·53.
·
No.6 Bristolville BristOl (13·1} plays
Southington Satur(lay.
No.7 Cin . country Day-(16·1) def. Lock·
land 8~27 , plays Cln. Hills Christian Acad·
emy, ppd., moisture on the tloor.
No.e Minster (14-3) del. New Bremen
60-42.
No.9 Centerburg (13,5) lost to Johnstown Northridge 75·65, del. Danville 7747, plays Cardington Saturday.
No.10 11pp City Bethal .(1 4·4) del. Tn·
County N. 79-42.
Junior High Bllk"biU
Fr.. hmen Boy•
Oallla Acodomy aa, Jacklon 27
GAHs-Tommy Bose 21 , Tom Frazier 7,
Eric Taylor 2, Nathan Wood 2.
Ollila Acadtmy 54. Molga 34
G-Tommy Bose 21 , Eric Taylor 15, Tom
Frazier a, Joey Grah~m 6, Nick Craft 4..

011111 Academy 3i, W•rren 38
G-Tommy Bose 18, Nick Crah 11, Eric
Taylor ?1Joe Graham 2.
lth Gr1de Boy•
Kygar CrHk 64, VInton 47
KC-chrls Roush 16, Semakl Corflas 15,
·colby Reese 11 , Darren Clark 10, Justin '
Halfhill 8, Jon ·aaus 2, Drew Henson 2.
V-Terry MiraclE! 18, Josh Oliver 12, Josh
fvturphy 11, Andrew Clark 4, Dustin Jeflers
2.
· Southweattrn 38, W1h8m1 :Z8
SW-5teva Harder 20, Carl Wolfe 1B.
Waheuna-Oale Keathley 7, Dale MeDon·
aid 7.
Kyg~r

CrMk 70, H111n1n Tree• 55

KC-Colly Reese 21l. Chns Roush 13,

, DIVISION II
Somakl Corllas12, Darren Clark 10, Juslln
No.1 Akron St. Vlncent.St. Mary (14·1) HallhMI 4, Ar1hur Wrltesel 2, Jon Gaus 1.
ptaya Akron Hoban Sunday.
HT-chris Temple 27, Geraki Cade 10,
Nc.2 Flndiy Ubo'll;·Benton (17-0) del. Brandon Nolan 9, Jake Whiteman 8,
, .~~·adll !8:30,;!~~. "')!On ~l!i,.Y·.- ,,.~.!.T~~ F~l.kH .
,
o -

'

I

'•

..

~

W L TOL Phi
29 15 10 0 68
30 19 4 1 85
24 15 12 2 52
24218157
16 31 5 4 42

5epl. 2 - Soulhem 500, Danlnglon,
S.C.
Sept. a - Chevrolet Monte Carie 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshire 300,
Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 23- MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Two points lor a win, one point fOf a tie and
5ept 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas City.
ovenime lOss.
Kan.
·
Friday·• GamH
OCt. 7 - UAW-GM Ouality 500, Con Bidwell-Porter 55 , Southwestern 39
Atlanta 5, Boston 1
cord, N.C.
8-P-cha~ie Nlbart 22. K~e Tlpton 11.
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2
OCt. 14 - Old Dominion 500, Mar·
Derek Sm!th 10.
l!nsvllle, Va.
N.Y. Rangers 4, Florida2
SW-Steve Harder 19, Trace Fraley' 10.
Minnesota 2, Dallas 1
· Oct. 21 -Alabama 500, TaJiadega, Ala.
Calgary 5, Colorado 3
OCt. 28 - Checker Auto Pans SOOk,
7th Grade Boy•
Phoenix 2, Edmonton 0
Avondale, At1z.
Kyger Crftk 76, Vln1on 38
Washington 4, Anaheim 3
Nov. 4 - P:op Secret Microwave 400,
KG-Michael Taylor 28, Paul Grubbs 12,
Saturd•y's G1mn
Rockingham, N.C.
Elias EllioH a, Nathan Mollohan 8.
New Jersey at Pittsburgh , 2 p.m.
Nov. 11 - PeMZcHI 400, Homestead,
Buffalo at onawa. 7 p.m.
Fla.
Harsn1n Trace 48, Bldw.II.Porter 45
Tampa Say at Boston. 1 p.m.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.
HT-Cw1ls Waugh 24, Andrew Chapman Aorida at Atlanta , 7 p.m.
11, Jay Waugh 4, Aaron Pauley 4, Bemie Detroi1 al Toronto, 7 p.m.
Fulks 3, Seth Williamson 2.
N.Y. Islanders at Momreal, 7 p.m .
1
8-P-Cody Edwards 14, Ronny Burns 13. · Nashville al Columbus, 7:30p.m.
St . Louis at Colorado, 8:30p.m.
BASEBALL
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 _p.m.
Bidwell-Porter SO, Southwestern 35
American L..gue
8-P- Ronny Burns 15, Cody Edwards 12, Chicago at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
DETROIT TIGERS-Agreed to terms
Justin Nolan 12.
Washington at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
wHI'1 SS ·oelvl Cruz on a one-year contract .
SW-Cory Ehman 16, Man Elliott 10.
Sundey'l Gam11
MINNESOTA TVVIN9-Agreed to terms
New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 1 p.m.
willl LHP Eric Milton on a four-yt.ar con Hannan Tr1ce 71, Kyger Creek 42
PiHsburgh al Minnesota, 2 p.m.
tract
·
HT- Andrew Chapman 24, Curtis Waugh Montreal at Buffalo, 7 p._
m.
NEW YORK YANKEE8-Agreod to
20, Bemle Fulks 11, Jessie McComas 7. St. Louis at Dallas, 8 p.m.
terms with $5 Derek Jeter on a 10·year
Seth Williamson 7, Jay Waugh 2.
Carolina at Anaheim, a p.m.
contract
KC-Paul Grubbs t 5.
Chicago at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to lerms
with OF Gabe Kapler on a three -year con Glrlo
tract, RHP Darwin Cublllan and RHP
Bldweii-Poner 28, Southwestern 13
NASCAA Wlnaton Cup S.rlea
Jonathan Johnson on one-year contracts,
B-P-Oyanna Eggleton 6, Leslie Ward 5.
and OF Curtis Goodwin on a minor league
SW-Megan Spears 7, Lindsey ThaKton 4.
The '2001 NASCAR Winston Cup contract
schedule, and 2000 driver polnl standings:
TORONTO BLUE JAY8-Agreed tp
·1 Fe!&gt;. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona terms with RHP Kelvlm Escobar on a oneBeach, Fla.
year contract.
'---~---''---"----'
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, RockingN1tlon11 Uague
NHL
ham, N.C.
CINCINNATI REDS-Agreed to terms
Eaatarn Confertnct
March 4 - UAW-DalmlerChryster 400, with C Man Walbeck on a minor league
Atlantic Dlvltlon
Las Vegas.contract.
March 11 -Cracker Barret 500, Hampw L TOL Pia
FLORIDA MARLINs-Named Mike
New Jersey
28 13 10 2 &amp;8
ton , Ga.
Veeck consultant.
Phl!adelphla
26 18 9 1 56
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Agreod to
Pittsburgh
400, Da~lnglon, S.C.
26 19 e 2 60
terms with RHP Roben Person on a one·N.Y. Rangers
22 29 3 1 48
March 25 - Food City 500, Brlslol, year contract.
N.Y. Islanders
14 32 5 3 36
Tenr'l.
.
ST. LOUIS CAROINALS-Agre&amp;d lo
Northtlll Dlvltlon
Apnl 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort Worth, terms with INF Craig Paquette on a onew L TOL Pit
Texas . .
year contract.
Ottawa
29 15 8 1 87
Aprll8- VIrginia 500, Maninsvllle, Va.
FOOTBALL
Toronto
25 19 7 4 63
Apnl 22 - Talladega 500. Talladega,
National Football League
Buffalo
27 20 5 1 60
Ala.
CINCINNATI BENGAL$-Signad G
Boston
23 21 8 5 57
April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Anthony Byrd to a two-year contract.
Montreal
18 29 5 3 44
Fontana, Cslif.
CLEVELAND BROWN$-Nam&amp;d Steve .
Southeaat Olvlelon
May 5- Pontiac EJ&lt;cttement 400, Ak:h· Hagen tight ends coach and Pete Garcia
w L TOL Plt
monel, Va.
assistant coach.
Washington
26 19 9 1 52
May 27 - Coca...Cola 600, Concord,
DETROIT LION$-Nam&amp;d Glann Pires
Carolina
24 21 6 2 58
N.C.
EAGLE $-Sign ad OT
Atlanta
17 27 9 2 45
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover,
Florida
13 28 8 7 41
Dal.
Joe Wong and WR Kenny Mitchell to twoTampa Bay
15 32 5 3 36
Juno 10- Kman 400, Brook~n. Mich. year contract&amp;.
Wtattrn COnfe... nca
June 17- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Nam&amp;d
Centrll Division
June 24 - Dodge/Save Mart 350, Jason Tarver quality control coach.
w L TOL Pta
Sonoma, Calif.
HOCKEY
St. Lou is
35 11 6 2 78
July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach,
National Hockty League
Detroit
32 16 4 4 72
Fla.
NHL-5uspended San Jose Shar1c:s FMI
Nashville
24 24 7 2 57
July 15 - Chlcagoland, 400, Joliet, Ill.
Owen Nolan lor 11 games for a blow to the
22 ·25 5 2 51
Chicago
July 22 - New England 300, loudon, head ol Dalla&amp; Stars AW Grant Marshall
Columbus
17 27 6 4 44
N.H.
during a Feb. 1 game.
Northwest Dlvl1l0n
July 29 - Pennsyl\lanla 500, .Long
ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCKS..:.Asslgned
w L TOL Pto
Pond.
D Sergei Vyshadkevlch to Clncinnatt of the
ColoradO
35 11 8 1 79
Au(J. s- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
AHL.
Vancouver
28 18 5 4 65
Aug. 12- Global Crossing at the Glen,
ATLANTA TtiRASHER$-Acqulrad F
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
·
Edmonton
25 23 8 1 59
ladlslav Kahn from the Anahelm Mighty
Calgary
19 21 io 4 52
Aug. 19 - Pepa1400, Brooklyn, Mk:h.
Ducks for 0 Sergei \Jvsl'ledkevlch and Q
Minnesota
20 23 8 3 51
Aug. 25 -The Nlgh1 Race 500, Bristol, Scon LangkOw. AC1ivated LW Toml Kallio
Pacific Oivlelon
lrom Injured reserve.
·
Tenn.
Kyg..- Creek 56, Hennan 35
KG-Chris Roush 14, Colby Reese 11,
Darren Clartl: 10, JOn Gaus 6, Justin
HalfhiH 5, Arthur Wri1esel 5, Drew Henson
3, Semakl Corilas 2.
H- DUion Sabolsky 17, Adam Lester 9,
Chartle Adams 3, Dustin Stover 3, T.J.
Brumliekl2, Alan Dye 1.

San Jose
Dallas
Phoenb:
Los Angeles
Anaheim

ITRANSAcnoNs

HOCKEY ,.

Nn~~~~~t~~;z

fall-to Hoover
FROM OVP ST~FF REPORTS

A
.

t. '

~

'

:

' .

POINT PLEASANT
The. Point Pleasant girls basketball team outscored Her- ·
bert Hoover 13-9 in the
fourth quarter, but it wasn't
enough.
The Huskies defeated the
Knights, 49-44, in Point Pleasant's final home game of the
season.
Jennifer Adkins tied the
score with a 3-point goal at
41-all with two minutes left in
the game before Hoover
regained control of the game.
Herbert Hoover led 31-24
at halftime after Hoover's
Hillary Hardman connected
on a pair of second quarter 3point goals.
Hardman finished with 13
points, whiie Angela Johnson
led the Huskies (5-12) with
15 points.
Bridget Nibert led the
Knights (3-17} with 13 points.
Jennie Wilson added 10
points for Point Pleasant,

while Kristin Drain scored
seven points.
Hoover jumped out·to a 4031 advantage at the end of thethird quarter, leading by as
many as 16 points.
The Knights then held the
Huskies scoreless for · eight
minutes over a period lasting
.from the end of the third
quarter to the beginning of
the fourth.
Point Pleasant hauled in 32
team rebounds, led by .Nibert
with 12. Adkins hauled in five
boards for the. Knights.
The Knights finished with
14 steals as Drain led Point
with four.
Nibert and Miranda· Durst
each had three steals for the
Knights.
Point was 18-for-63 (29
percent) shooting from th~
floor.
Point Pleasant finishes its
regular season Feb. 16 at
Roane Counr;,.

I

I
llflnd New 2001 Pontiac
Slldlrl Sun I SoiiiCI

Five Account Choices • Free Debit Card • ATM Access • 24-Hour Access by Phone
Easy-to-Read Statements with Check Imaging • 58 Convenient Locations
~

The right checking account C!ln be the perfect tool to help you manage your
money. With a City National Bank checking account, yoo'll get more f~rures,
more options and mor~ service. At 58 locations throughout West Virginia and
Ohio. Do more with your checking account... at City National Bank.
'

111, * 120,
•"-Sunroof
• AII/FM CD Sylllm

• .RNr Spoiler

Blind New 2001 Pontiac
Az1ec·SRV All Wlleel Drive

Brand New 2001 CheVy
S.Serlel LS Extended Cab

Brand New 2001 Chevy
SIIYerldo Ext Cab 4Door 4x4

* 122,950*

~5 '' 550*

123,95

Blind New 2001
Chevy lmplla LS Sedln

v.e "-

• 3800
• p - W'•odowa • Loeb
•Klw*t Entry, 11ft • CnUI

Automatic
Entry, CD Syatem
&amp; Crulle

Automatic, Air Conditioning
.
CD Syatern, Alum. Wheell
lllt &amp; CruiM

·'

Redmen edge Geneva
BEAVER FALLS, Pa. - A
couple of not-so-average Joes
led · the University of Rio
Grande to a 62-59 victory
over Geneva College in
American Mideast Conference play Friday.
Joe Delaney had 11 points
and Joe Mmin added 10
points off the bench to pace
Rio Grande (20-8, AMC 114) to the win.
Delaney hit 4-of-5 field
goal attemp~ for the Redmen, while Martin knocked
down 3-of-6 shots from the
field and hit ~of-6 foul shots.
Adam Gladieux countered
with II points for the Golden
Tornadoes (17-10, AMC 10-

6), while teammate Jeremy
Sheffield tallied 10 points and
a team-high six rebounds.
The Redmen's bench outgunned the Geneva reserves
24-21 with Martin's 10 leading the way Mufutau Ibrahim
led the Geneva bench with
nine points .
Scott Davis had eight points
and Jason .Beller and Chris
Ballenger added seven points
each·for the Redmen.
Mike Marshall of Rio
Grande collected a game-high
eight rebounds.
Rio Grande played at Point
Park Saturday, and will play
host to Ohio Domincan Tues,day.

• AMIFM Stereo, lllt

131,950*

• Keyle11 Entry, CD
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lock•
Front &amp; Rear Heat &amp; Air

"

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

FROM OVP SfAFF REPORTS

• Vortec v-a· Power

• Automatic, Air Condlllonilg

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LS 4 Door 41C4

....

CMineut

... @J

• .. tl ... .., .......r

�Page 88

Outdoors
Ohio DNR too ercoyote control seminar

Sunday, Febnary 11,2001

..

I

Having problenu with coyotes?
A coyote control seminar will be
held Monday, March 12 at Hocking
College in Nelsonville.
The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Wildlife is
sponsoril)g a seminar on the Ohio
Cooperative Livestock Protection
Program on that day, from 2 p.m. to
4 p.m. at John Light Hall, Room
JL195.
Eric Householder, biological 'technician and Charles "Chip" Lovell,
wildlife biologist for the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services (APHIS) Wildlife Services, will
cover the following topics: Predator
. Kill Identification and Integrated
Wildlife Management Techniques co

Reduce Livestock Losses ~ethaL and
non-lethal methods) .
The seminar is free and open to
the public.
·
Thursday is the deadline to order
ODNR Division of Wildlife food
plot packets for this year.
This year, the Division of Wildlife
is offering seven-pound packets of
IN THE OPEN
mixed seed including sunflowe·r,
sorghum, millet and buckwheat.
Each packet will plant a quarter of an varies annually, so not everyone will
acre.
receive the food plot materials.
Food plots play an important role
As a general rule, the Division of
in wildlife management for the Wildlife recommends planting one
landowner, especially in areas where acre of food plot seed per 20 acres of
few other sources of food are avail- habitat, and adding a minimum of
able.
200 pounds of fertilizer (12-12-12 or
The supply of seed is limited and

Jim
Freeman

Page Cl
Sund8y, . . . . .ry II, 2001

spruce, 25 for $11, and periwinkle
and crown vetch ground covers, 25
for $11.
For information about Meigs
SWCD tree packets or co receive an
order form, call 740-992-4282.
The. deadline to order trees is
March 19.
Most soil and water conservation
districts throughout the state sell
trees, so residents .in Gallia and other
counties should call their respective
soil and water. conservation districts
for more details.
Oim Freeman is wildlife specialist ·
for the Meigs SWCD. He can be
·reached at 740-992-4282 or at jimfreeman@oh. nacdnet.org.)

similar analysis) per acre offood plot.
Food plots should be at least a ·
quarter of an acre in size, although
larger food plots up to five acres are
preferred, and placed next to good
winter cover.
This year, the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is offering a
wildlife/hardwood packet along with
its annual tree sales.
The wildlife/hardwood packet
includes rwo each of the following
trees for, $11: sugar maple, sweet
gum, Chinese chestnut, river bircp
and Zumi crabapple:
In addition, the Meigs SWCD has
its traditional conifer offerings
including white pine, Scotch pine,
Colorado blue spruce and Norway

IN CHE.SHIRE

R~,· AMING
Dear

Abby
ADVICE

Hunter~

wife
: gets loaded
··, for bear
' DEAR ABBY: I am a loving
father of rwo boys and have been hap-

BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) Rubber gloves, Fur~lined
parka. Insulated boots.
Fishing pole and bucket of
bait.
Even the introspective winter fisherman leave a curious
trail when they're out on the
ice.
They pursue their finned
prey along glassy pools during
the coldest days of the year.
Those who like their winter

Those who don't, can't even
begin to understand it.
And though our season in
southern West Virginia is not
as long as in the northern
regions of the country, ice
fishermen here are just as dedicated as their Yankee neighbars.
The motivation remains the
same wherever you are. .
Often, it's just to get out on
the ice and spend time prob-

I

a · jigger
of ing
the depths for .piscatorial
sports with
masochism
and have
yet to try
cuisine.
Ice fishing are missing what · Probably the most common
could be a thrilling adventure. target is fish, although a vast
The chilly toes and frigid . number of sportsmen declare
fingers come first followed by they're happy just to get away
che shivers and a strong need for awhile.
Some anglers prefer to travto be elsewhere.
Still, ice fishing often yields el in schools while others are
a larger catch than open water loners. In most cases, a fisherangling:
man's IQ is not detrimental to
Ice fishing is one of those this ability to catch fish.
'things in life with litde middle
Lures that imitate minnows
ground.
or other aquatic life forms
Those who like it, love it.
seem to be most effective, but

there are those who swear by
other items such as mice,
chicken's feet, marshmallows,
bologna, jalapeno · peppers,
calf's tongue, and fatback.
Anglers going for larger prey
should expand their offering
proportionately.
Even though cold water
slows a fish's metabolism, a big
fish occasionally goes searching for a big meal.
Therefore, match your bait

size to the hugeness of your
fish species.
A fully grown rooster or
smallish pig could be your best
choice for the stupendous
denizens of the deep; those
colossallunkers unlikely to be
enticed by tidbits smaller than
an average-size dog.
Again, keeping in mind the
slower metabolism of the fish,
do not jerk the inducement
around too quickly.

•··•. Allow

•

the bait to frolic
freely in the icy water until
you feel -a ponderous tug on
your line.
Some other things to keep
in mind while on the ice:
Most ice-fishing accidents
Clll!le from slipping, falling
b~ckward and hitting the head
- ,).lOt breaking through thin
ic.,.., An angler should never
jump up and down in the ice
to attract fish.

If you know nothing about
the sport, go mit and watch it
for a while. There's not much
an ice fisherman can hide
when he's fishing in a four to
six-inch circle.
When fishing on near zero
days, take along a jug of cheap
wine and watch it. When ice
crystals turn the wi'n e to slush,
it's time to quit. Grab your
gear and head home.

·----------------------'""!·',-------------------,
21 states plus D.C.
.,
••
No roaming charges.
No long distance cha
,~

1995.
Hunting and fishing licenses
cost $15 each. Those younger
~han IS pay S8 for hunting
~jcenses while fishing permits

that, Speck said.
·Speck thinks it would make
more sense to have ' smaller
and more frequent fee increases so that prices would keep
up wfth inflation and create a
slow growth.
Besides the fees, the wildlife
management agency receives
money from sales of specialty
license plates, donations that
Ohioans can make when they
me their state income tax
return, and federal funds.
The state had been spending
about $1 million a year on the
free licenses for seniors and
received about $1.2 million
from a federal matching fund.
Adding , to the costs is an
.increase in the number of
anglers who are retired and
eligible for the free licenses,
Speck said.
About 331,000 free fishing
and hunting licenses were
given out in 1998, according
to the natural resources
department.
That number does not
include the free dee'r, turkey
and duck hunting permits that
are issued to older Ohioans

-

__ ...

.~

'

·--

.....
.

~

:Change may come later.
; "In order to serve anglers
•
,an db unters, we're
now going
to need to ask the senior citizells to pay something," he
laid.
.
.
1 It will be too late to increase
fishing licr:nse fees for 2001,
.but incn:asr:s could come after
•
I

••

think many outdoor enthusiasts would balk at paying a littie more for their licenses.
"As long as it's not too
ridiculd
· us," she said. "I don't
chink a dollar or two could
hurt anybody.
"I think the honest ones
\vould still buy the licenses,"
she said.

- -------- ·----- ·--

"The

._

..-

.,

i

WMIIII THEY IIIIDT- A popular gathering place In Cheshire Is Dee: nle' s Plua Place.
1
I

it's '•too far." :

: As far as I'm concerned, no distance
is "too far" if you care. She has offered
to pay fur the gas, but they still refuse.
: Are there agencies !Mt will pick up
people and take them to their doctor's
office? -A FRIEND IN CHICA-

Go

: DEAR · FRIEND: What you are
l:lescribing is a form of elder abuse.

Current Customers- Call. us at 1-888-BUY-USCC to take advantage of these new' rates,
.
••

Plus, get a
Noki.a 5185i
with earpiece for
only $19~95

US.We Cellular.
connect with you:
.

Nolcio 51851

I

~nd older pay $8 or less for an

,... ~;. ''f~

of personal time devoted to hunting
fishing is not a lot to ask, Whether
will admit it to herself or not,
wife's l)ehavior is controlling. By
pielting a fight with you she ensures
you go, your pleasure will be
.
lessened.
·
Since you feel that the arguments
are serious, by all means tallt to a
counselor before the problems esca. !at~: further. You could both benefit by
going, but if your wife continues to
minimize the importance of this issue,
go without her. You will gain valuable
insight.
'
, DEAR ABBY: What do you think
of a family who refuses ' 't o take their
92-year-old grandmother to the doctor for her yearly checkup? They say

.

..
: Speck
·Leeyear.
Steele, manager ofThe r-==~=~~::~~~~::::--~~-:-~ ~;::;~r:=~:-=:====:=~::::::.---.:1
......... U.S.C.....,,
4010RhadiiAYI.,
;are
free. said the department each
may recommend that those 66 · Tackle Box in Toledo, doesn't
ltlla I Eaot
. . 154
1304)622·2331
1140141W722
·.annual license. But he said that

•

HUBBY
DEAR HUBBY: Eight days a }'ear

..

TOLEDO (AP) - The
state is considering increasing
the fees for hunting and fish,ing licenses and eliminating
:free licenses for older Ohioans
because of budget cuts.
~. Gov. Bob Taft's proposed
budget no longer would reim· burse the Ohio Division of
·Wildlife for free licensCJ given
to people older than 6.5.
The division would lose
'$4.2 million in state and fed~ral funds ovet the next two
-years,
, "If the budget stays as intro~uced, we'll have to entertain
~ modest increase;' said Sam
:Specie, dire,c tor of the Ohio
t&gt;epartmeilt
of
Natural
J!,.esourceS&lt;
~ "l would be surprised if it
was even a few dollars;• he said
fi\!esday.
The money from licenses
;u:counts for much of the
:wildlife division's budget. The
fees haven't changed since

YEARS OF SERVICE- Longtime employee Melinda Beaver has been with Deenle's Pizza Place since Its opening 15 years ago In Cheshire.
(Krls Dotson photos)
·
·
·

me.

'

Ohio Division of
Wildlife considers
·fee
hikes for
.
·.hunting &amp; fishing

pily married for six years. However,
my wife and I are having a serious
conflict.
: !love to fish and hunt. About eight
times a year, I take a trip to hunt or
fish. The trip usually lasts from one
afternoon until the next evening. I am
gone about 32 hours. This infuriates
Illy Wife. We argue every time l get
ready to go. This is the only thing we
argue about, but the arguments are
serious and affect both of us adverse!~ .
' ·Abby, I try to be the best father and
hinband I know how. I spend almost
every day of the week with my famibr· We go places together all the time.
We are both Christians and take our
~hildren to church every week.
· ·I have offered to go to counseling
io see if we could get some help. She
Says it's not ne.cessary because the
problem isn't that big. I can't help but
believe that our problem is about
inbre than just a question of hunting
:lnd fishing. I feel she wants to control
She says she jmt misses me. She
·agrees that I spend more time with
\he family than most husbands do. I
do this out of.love.
.',,
Am I wrong? Should l offer to give
~li ,$¥~li9Wie.s?.Js.~ wrong for me io
go hunting and fishing on occasion?
Ab~ would never neglect my family. Any advice you can offer will be.
appreciated.
KENTUCKY

'

..

Cli•1111 U.S. C..,llr, 750 l'lll1lm Avt, 1740)702-4872
~r~~w'-'-·&amp;"·-,
~"~-.17'"'1'"....
{
"'-·
,...,. """" ..
~....... '"' ,......,
. . . 220ThlrdSt., (304)136·9311
,..._ 17 Mlddlttown Rd., lloull73,1304)3&amp;3-1811
•- - USCCW:I-M:rtKiotl2145E-.Avtnuo (74014411061
:«
•
o11c11soo Clmlc 1'11111. 408 E. Huron.I1401281-001B '
The CellW Glaup, eo-Uids Mol. Z55-n31
llli;DIIua Morgantown Commons, 1518 M:llllold.I3041113-Z39
llli;uuaa 14SoolliMc...tl'lllf.Choolllllllldgtlld,,l30411..2410
e~•

'-C..

I'll
'
21:1 SciaiD 1'1111.1740)31i5-0068
•··• 1, l'lnt-1211 .......... Dr 1'"'1'"'....
I
••• 812Nor111Side,_,l304111z.lt22
w...e, usee WII-Msrt liDIII. tuOWnt Emn1l ~. (740)&amp;41.oo&amp;9
WIIIIDII' 11 :
Blcldsy, lkdllllllllllr, Clerktboq, Flimont. Grafton. Jscbon.
~ """..,_ N:w llol1o!1. Oil Hll. ~. Sumrnnwilo
~-eo"""'""" IUSIII -.IMIIdo
candlnllnCVIIIolllsuponrsq•t.

•••

I

Ill....,.

'

•-

Forvaur-••""'"'

""'
...,

__ ___
.,.

-

••

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

Notify the doctor's office. They
ihould be able to contact a local
agency that assists . seniors and others
!Nh!&gt; q\lalify for (fee or law-cost
~portation to medical appointments.
.
; P.S. Since her family is unwilling to
ptonitor the health of their aged
pdmothe~,. it's possible. that she
should be VISited by a soc1al worker
from 'time to time.

'·'

o'-~

t'~o ·I·.J

.'

''

'

,

k

f

;, ...

~

-

'

(I

'I

best-kept secret in
Cheshire is that we are a good
Christian community with loving family neighborhoods;' said
Odella.
"We'vt never had smut or violence," she added. ·
Harold mentioned prominent
people of the past who made
contributions to the community,
like Dr. Charles Ely, who was a
doctor whir bent over backwards
to accommodate his pati.ents in
the 1800s. Mayor Reese currently resides in his ,old house.
Then there is blacksmith Billy
Gnpes. "He could make anything," said Odella.
"He was one of the finest men
God ever put on this earth;' she
added .
Fred Mulford built the major- ,
ity of houses in Cheshire back in
the 1920s and apparently had a
(ondness for boat racing.
Ed Swisher owned a great deal
of land in the community and
besides farming, he delivered
milk "in the glas bottlc;s;• said
Odella, laughing.
ln 1927, Cheshire got electricity and Harold himself was the
. tint person to open the main
valve and provide gas to the village. He was also mayor.
"He never said no to any, thing;' said his adoring wife.
The Macks, as well as many
other Cheshire residents, are ·
proud of their village, welcoming
by nature and believing, as
Harold does, "I wouldn't w.ant to
ever live anywhere else."

l

·Quick
cookiril:'go~fcheeSe and ~lieddar sandwiches
.
'

.

coll~on

dam House, , $29.95), a
8 bread dices: 112-inch thick, from a
; Cheese Sandwiches, perhaps put together by Gourmet~·· ,
b
ftC ed
grilled, are
obvioUs ~boice when edi
. ·con a(•reCipes. which, are ·quiCk.;. . 4
"'".1 olltco
1_
it comeJ to making a C.St m.eal. l\l)d euy ' ·,~bugh ' for the ' 1. .t·,''ed '' • r . . '
', , . ·
but
i~ doesn't ·'haV~; P.J be ,,a liu1l , among Ull to~ ,. ' , .~ Y ,, ~,,t6.W..~, Inves •
I
'
.
.
ch01ce.
·
·· 1
·The c:l!oiee, r111ge·: liom 'lilllrtY Pq!heat .btoil~, ' • '' . .·:·
: If you're looking for encourap- . one-dish dirmm tor all
to a' . ~ tolll!lh~ vinegar, mustard,
lnenr to try sometliing a little dii£er- variety ' of altel'natives, accent~-; and !Salt
.p epper to ~a:. then
ent, consider Wlrm Goat Cheese, menu .and maca. ·
' , · whisk in 2 tableapoons oil. 'Ibss beeu
~eet and Arilgula Sandwiches. Or,
• 1!llnn 0.1 Cbuoe, BMI ,: '' . wiih this Vinaigre~.
.
_. ~ *-lwiU. ,
ArralJse bread on a large baking
imagine bow good a Grilled Ched!far and Bacon on Raisin Bread can
~ teoopciOnl.!;:'.'"!:':.~
shee~ and brush with remaining
•
tnlpOj&gt;n
-~on
WUO&lt;ON
·
••
tab!
il "···- .th sal d
taste. Both made in minutes!
Salt IDrl Jlepper tO taoie
·
'
espoon
_.....n WI
t an
, These ~ty variations are·featured
3 tlbletp00111 oljve oil ' , ,
\1:~'. 1 1~per and broi16 inches mm heat 1
in ·~GI)Ittlll.t ;Every DIY" (Rant~ to 15-ouncH:I~t,oliced.beea,~. 10 1~ minulei, · Or until edges are
i
~ ' 'i
...
'
,1•.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PAESS

an

"'f·;e'
COIIJ!:i:k
J&gt;'o:.fo::f.;; ..;,..

ieason.,

,

.ti

____,.,·.."-". .· 4: t

ana

°·

...

'
On a large she~t of w.ax paper, but. ,ter r:me side of each raisin bread sli,:e,
and turn dices aver. Arrange Cheddar
art unbuttered sides ofbn:alj and top
4 slices with bacon.
remaining
bre~d onto·bilc:pn.
Heat a n:Qnstitk skillet 011er moderate heat until hot and cook $alld1
wiches in batches, pressing lightly
1
' Grllloid Chsrlrl.. oad Bacon
with a metal spatula, until undenides
i
1111 ltalolll a-d
are golden, about I minute. Thrn
' 3 tabletpoono unsalted butter, 10tiened
sandwiches over and cook, pressing
8 slices nisin bread
]~ powi4 thinly sliced extn-sh&amp;fp Cheddar lightly, until undersides are golden
,8 bocOI\ ollceo, cooked until crisp and and cheese is melted, about 1 minute.
Makes 4 sandwiches .
drainedonpaportoweh
~
.

Jlden". Remove 4 slices fiom oven.
~
' rn remai,njng 4 slices Qvet on bak.•
sheet an.d spread.thickly,wjth goat
f eae. , ll~il :t:. rpinute '!'ore ' and
uJ P,iates, 'Ibp gear cheese
~th' diainell beets, onion, arugula~
and i:emalning bread, toasted !ideS up.·
i
4 sandwiChes.
.

FliP

Makes

,,

�Page 88

Outdoors
Ohio DNR too ercoyote control seminar

Sunday, Febnary 11,2001

..

I

Having problenu with coyotes?
A coyote control seminar will be
held Monday, March 12 at Hocking
College in Nelsonville.
The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Wildlife is
sponsoril)g a seminar on the Ohio
Cooperative Livestock Protection
Program on that day, from 2 p.m. to
4 p.m. at John Light Hall, Room
JL195.
Eric Householder, biological 'technician and Charles "Chip" Lovell,
wildlife biologist for the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services (APHIS) Wildlife Services, will
cover the following topics: Predator
. Kill Identification and Integrated
Wildlife Management Techniques co

Reduce Livestock Losses ~ethaL and
non-lethal methods) .
The seminar is free and open to
the public.
·
Thursday is the deadline to order
ODNR Division of Wildlife food
plot packets for this year.
This year, the Division of Wildlife
is offering seven-pound packets of
IN THE OPEN
mixed seed including sunflowe·r,
sorghum, millet and buckwheat.
Each packet will plant a quarter of an varies annually, so not everyone will
acre.
receive the food plot materials.
Food plots play an important role
As a general rule, the Division of
in wildlife management for the Wildlife recommends planting one
landowner, especially in areas where acre of food plot seed per 20 acres of
few other sources of food are avail- habitat, and adding a minimum of
able.
200 pounds of fertilizer (12-12-12 or
The supply of seed is limited and

Jim
Freeman

Page Cl
Sund8y, . . . . .ry II, 2001

spruce, 25 for $11, and periwinkle
and crown vetch ground covers, 25
for $11.
For information about Meigs
SWCD tree packets or co receive an
order form, call 740-992-4282.
The. deadline to order trees is
March 19.
Most soil and water conservation
districts throughout the state sell
trees, so residents .in Gallia and other
counties should call their respective
soil and water. conservation districts
for more details.
Oim Freeman is wildlife specialist ·
for the Meigs SWCD. He can be
·reached at 740-992-4282 or at jimfreeman@oh. nacdnet.org.)

similar analysis) per acre offood plot.
Food plots should be at least a ·
quarter of an acre in size, although
larger food plots up to five acres are
preferred, and placed next to good
winter cover.
This year, the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is offering a
wildlife/hardwood packet along with
its annual tree sales.
The wildlife/hardwood packet
includes rwo each of the following
trees for, $11: sugar maple, sweet
gum, Chinese chestnut, river bircp
and Zumi crabapple:
In addition, the Meigs SWCD has
its traditional conifer offerings
including white pine, Scotch pine,
Colorado blue spruce and Norway

IN CHE.SHIRE

R~,· AMING
Dear

Abby
ADVICE

Hunter~

wife
: gets loaded
··, for bear
' DEAR ABBY: I am a loving
father of rwo boys and have been hap-

BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) Rubber gloves, Fur~lined
parka. Insulated boots.
Fishing pole and bucket of
bait.
Even the introspective winter fisherman leave a curious
trail when they're out on the
ice.
They pursue their finned
prey along glassy pools during
the coldest days of the year.
Those who like their winter

Those who don't, can't even
begin to understand it.
And though our season in
southern West Virginia is not
as long as in the northern
regions of the country, ice
fishermen here are just as dedicated as their Yankee neighbars.
The motivation remains the
same wherever you are. .
Often, it's just to get out on
the ice and spend time prob-

I

a · jigger
of ing
the depths for .piscatorial
sports with
masochism
and have
yet to try
cuisine.
Ice fishing are missing what · Probably the most common
could be a thrilling adventure. target is fish, although a vast
The chilly toes and frigid . number of sportsmen declare
fingers come first followed by they're happy just to get away
che shivers and a strong need for awhile.
Some anglers prefer to travto be elsewhere.
Still, ice fishing often yields el in schools while others are
a larger catch than open water loners. In most cases, a fisherangling:
man's IQ is not detrimental to
Ice fishing is one of those this ability to catch fish.
'things in life with litde middle
Lures that imitate minnows
ground.
or other aquatic life forms
Those who like it, love it.
seem to be most effective, but

there are those who swear by
other items such as mice,
chicken's feet, marshmallows,
bologna, jalapeno · peppers,
calf's tongue, and fatback.
Anglers going for larger prey
should expand their offering
proportionately.
Even though cold water
slows a fish's metabolism, a big
fish occasionally goes searching for a big meal.
Therefore, match your bait

size to the hugeness of your
fish species.
A fully grown rooster or
smallish pig could be your best
choice for the stupendous
denizens of the deep; those
colossallunkers unlikely to be
enticed by tidbits smaller than
an average-size dog.
Again, keeping in mind the
slower metabolism of the fish,
do not jerk the inducement
around too quickly.

•··•. Allow

•

the bait to frolic
freely in the icy water until
you feel -a ponderous tug on
your line.
Some other things to keep
in mind while on the ice:
Most ice-fishing accidents
Clll!le from slipping, falling
b~ckward and hitting the head
- ,).lOt breaking through thin
ic.,.., An angler should never
jump up and down in the ice
to attract fish.

If you know nothing about
the sport, go mit and watch it
for a while. There's not much
an ice fisherman can hide
when he's fishing in a four to
six-inch circle.
When fishing on near zero
days, take along a jug of cheap
wine and watch it. When ice
crystals turn the wi'n e to slush,
it's time to quit. Grab your
gear and head home.

·----------------------'""!·',-------------------,
21 states plus D.C.
.,
••
No roaming charges.
No long distance cha
,~

1995.
Hunting and fishing licenses
cost $15 each. Those younger
~han IS pay S8 for hunting
~jcenses while fishing permits

that, Speck said.
·Speck thinks it would make
more sense to have ' smaller
and more frequent fee increases so that prices would keep
up wfth inflation and create a
slow growth.
Besides the fees, the wildlife
management agency receives
money from sales of specialty
license plates, donations that
Ohioans can make when they
me their state income tax
return, and federal funds.
The state had been spending
about $1 million a year on the
free licenses for seniors and
received about $1.2 million
from a federal matching fund.
Adding , to the costs is an
.increase in the number of
anglers who are retired and
eligible for the free licenses,
Speck said.
About 331,000 free fishing
and hunting licenses were
given out in 1998, according
to the natural resources
department.
That number does not
include the free dee'r, turkey
and duck hunting permits that
are issued to older Ohioans

-

__ ...

.~

'

·--

.....
.

~

:Change may come later.
; "In order to serve anglers
•
,an db unters, we're
now going
to need to ask the senior citizells to pay something," he
laid.
.
.
1 It will be too late to increase
fishing licr:nse fees for 2001,
.but incn:asr:s could come after
•
I

••

think many outdoor enthusiasts would balk at paying a littie more for their licenses.
"As long as it's not too
ridiculd
· us," she said. "I don't
chink a dollar or two could
hurt anybody.
"I think the honest ones
\vould still buy the licenses,"
she said.

- -------- ·----- ·--

"The

._

..-

.,

i

WMIIII THEY IIIIDT- A popular gathering place In Cheshire Is Dee: nle' s Plua Place.
1
I

it's '•too far." :

: As far as I'm concerned, no distance
is "too far" if you care. She has offered
to pay fur the gas, but they still refuse.
: Are there agencies !Mt will pick up
people and take them to their doctor's
office? -A FRIEND IN CHICA-

Go

: DEAR · FRIEND: What you are
l:lescribing is a form of elder abuse.

Current Customers- Call. us at 1-888-BUY-USCC to take advantage of these new' rates,
.
••

Plus, get a
Noki.a 5185i
with earpiece for
only $19~95

US.We Cellular.
connect with you:
.

Nolcio 51851

I

~nd older pay $8 or less for an

,... ~;. ''f~

of personal time devoted to hunting
fishing is not a lot to ask, Whether
will admit it to herself or not,
wife's l)ehavior is controlling. By
pielting a fight with you she ensures
you go, your pleasure will be
.
lessened.
·
Since you feel that the arguments
are serious, by all means tallt to a
counselor before the problems esca. !at~: further. You could both benefit by
going, but if your wife continues to
minimize the importance of this issue,
go without her. You will gain valuable
insight.
'
, DEAR ABBY: What do you think
of a family who refuses ' 't o take their
92-year-old grandmother to the doctor for her yearly checkup? They say

.

..
: Speck
·Leeyear.
Steele, manager ofThe r-==~=~~::~~~~::::--~~-:-~ ~;::;~r:=~:-=:====:=~::::::.---.:1
......... U.S.C.....,,
4010RhadiiAYI.,
;are
free. said the department each
may recommend that those 66 · Tackle Box in Toledo, doesn't
ltlla I Eaot
. . 154
1304)622·2331
1140141W722
·.annual license. But he said that

•

HUBBY
DEAR HUBBY: Eight days a }'ear

..

TOLEDO (AP) - The
state is considering increasing
the fees for hunting and fish,ing licenses and eliminating
:free licenses for older Ohioans
because of budget cuts.
~. Gov. Bob Taft's proposed
budget no longer would reim· burse the Ohio Division of
·Wildlife for free licensCJ given
to people older than 6.5.
The division would lose
'$4.2 million in state and fed~ral funds ovet the next two
-years,
, "If the budget stays as intro~uced, we'll have to entertain
~ modest increase;' said Sam
:Specie, dire,c tor of the Ohio
t&gt;epartmeilt
of
Natural
J!,.esourceS&lt;
~ "l would be surprised if it
was even a few dollars;• he said
fi\!esday.
The money from licenses
;u:counts for much of the
:wildlife division's budget. The
fees haven't changed since

YEARS OF SERVICE- Longtime employee Melinda Beaver has been with Deenle's Pizza Place since Its opening 15 years ago In Cheshire.
(Krls Dotson photos)
·
·
·

me.

'

Ohio Division of
Wildlife considers
·fee
hikes for
.
·.hunting &amp; fishing

pily married for six years. However,
my wife and I are having a serious
conflict.
: !love to fish and hunt. About eight
times a year, I take a trip to hunt or
fish. The trip usually lasts from one
afternoon until the next evening. I am
gone about 32 hours. This infuriates
Illy Wife. We argue every time l get
ready to go. This is the only thing we
argue about, but the arguments are
serious and affect both of us adverse!~ .
' ·Abby, I try to be the best father and
hinband I know how. I spend almost
every day of the week with my famibr· We go places together all the time.
We are both Christians and take our
~hildren to church every week.
· ·I have offered to go to counseling
io see if we could get some help. She
Says it's not ne.cessary because the
problem isn't that big. I can't help but
believe that our problem is about
inbre than just a question of hunting
:lnd fishing. I feel she wants to control
She says she jmt misses me. She
·agrees that I spend more time with
\he family than most husbands do. I
do this out of.love.
.',,
Am I wrong? Should l offer to give
~li ,$¥~li9Wie.s?.Js.~ wrong for me io
go hunting and fishing on occasion?
Ab~ would never neglect my family. Any advice you can offer will be.
appreciated.
KENTUCKY

'

..

Cli•1111 U.S. C..,llr, 750 l'lll1lm Avt, 1740)702-4872
~r~~w'-'-·&amp;"·-,
~"~-.17'"'1'"....
{
"'-·
,...,. """" ..
~....... '"' ,......,
. . . 220ThlrdSt., (304)136·9311
,..._ 17 Mlddlttown Rd., lloull73,1304)3&amp;3-1811
•- - USCCW:I-M:rtKiotl2145E-.Avtnuo (74014411061
:«
•
o11c11soo Clmlc 1'11111. 408 E. Huron.I1401281-001B '
The CellW Glaup, eo-Uids Mol. Z55-n31
llli;DIIua Morgantown Commons, 1518 M:llllold.I3041113-Z39
llli;uuaa 14SoolliMc...tl'lllf.Choolllllllldgtlld,,l30411..2410
e~•

'-C..

I'll
'
21:1 SciaiD 1'1111.1740)31i5-0068
•··• 1, l'lnt-1211 .......... Dr 1'"'1'"'....
I
••• 812Nor111Side,_,l304111z.lt22
w...e, usee WII-Msrt liDIII. tuOWnt Emn1l ~. (740)&amp;41.oo&amp;9
WIIIIDII' 11 :
Blcldsy, lkdllllllllllr, Clerktboq, Flimont. Grafton. Jscbon.
~ """..,_ N:w llol1o!1. Oil Hll. ~. Sumrnnwilo
~-eo"""'""" IUSIII -.IMIIdo
candlnllnCVIIIolllsuponrsq•t.

•••

I

Ill....,.

'

•-

Forvaur-••""'"'

""'
...,

__ ___
.,.

-

••

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

Notify the doctor's office. They
ihould be able to contact a local
agency that assists . seniors and others
!Nh!&gt; q\lalify for (fee or law-cost
~portation to medical appointments.
.
; P.S. Since her family is unwilling to
ptonitor the health of their aged
pdmothe~,. it's possible. that she
should be VISited by a soc1al worker
from 'time to time.

'·'

o'-~

t'~o ·I·.J

.'

''

'

,

k

f

;, ...

~

-

'

(I

'I

best-kept secret in
Cheshire is that we are a good
Christian community with loving family neighborhoods;' said
Odella.
"We'vt never had smut or violence," she added. ·
Harold mentioned prominent
people of the past who made
contributions to the community,
like Dr. Charles Ely, who was a
doctor whir bent over backwards
to accommodate his pati.ents in
the 1800s. Mayor Reese currently resides in his ,old house.
Then there is blacksmith Billy
Gnpes. "He could make anything," said Odella.
"He was one of the finest men
God ever put on this earth;' she
added .
Fred Mulford built the major- ,
ity of houses in Cheshire back in
the 1920s and apparently had a
(ondness for boat racing.
Ed Swisher owned a great deal
of land in the community and
besides farming, he delivered
milk "in the glas bottlc;s;• said
Odella, laughing.
ln 1927, Cheshire got electricity and Harold himself was the
. tint person to open the main
valve and provide gas to the village. He was also mayor.
"He never said no to any, thing;' said his adoring wife.
The Macks, as well as many
other Cheshire residents, are ·
proud of their village, welcoming
by nature and believing, as
Harold does, "I wouldn't w.ant to
ever live anywhere else."

l

·Quick
cookiril:'go~fcheeSe and ~lieddar sandwiches
.
'

.

coll~on

dam House, , $29.95), a
8 bread dices: 112-inch thick, from a
; Cheese Sandwiches, perhaps put together by Gourmet~·· ,
b
ftC ed
grilled, are
obvioUs ~boice when edi
. ·con a(•reCipes. which, are ·quiCk.;. . 4
"'".1 olltco
1_
it comeJ to making a C.St m.eal. l\l)d euy ' ·,~bugh ' for the ' 1. .t·,''ed '' • r . . '
', , . ·
but
i~ doesn't ·'haV~; P.J be ,,a liu1l , among Ull to~ ,. ' , .~ Y ,, ~,,t6.W..~, Inves •
I
'
.
.
ch01ce.
·
·· 1
·The c:l!oiee, r111ge·: liom 'lilllrtY Pq!heat .btoil~, ' • '' . .·:·
: If you're looking for encourap- . one-dish dirmm tor all
to a' . ~ tolll!lh~ vinegar, mustard,
lnenr to try sometliing a little dii£er- variety ' of altel'natives, accent~-; and !Salt
.p epper to ~a:. then
ent, consider Wlrm Goat Cheese, menu .and maca. ·
' , · whisk in 2 tableapoons oil. 'Ibss beeu
~eet and Arilgula Sandwiches. Or,
• 1!llnn 0.1 Cbuoe, BMI ,: '' . wiih this Vinaigre~.
.
_. ~ *-lwiU. ,
ArralJse bread on a large baking
imagine bow good a Grilled Ched!far and Bacon on Raisin Bread can
~ teoopciOnl.!;:'.'"!:':.~
shee~ and brush with remaining
•
tnlpOj&gt;n
-~on
WUO&lt;ON
·
••
tab!
il "···- .th sal d
taste. Both made in minutes!
Salt IDrl Jlepper tO taoie
·
'
espoon
_.....n WI
t an
, These ~ty variations are·featured
3 tlbletp00111 oljve oil ' , ,
\1:~'. 1 1~per and broi16 inches mm heat 1
in ·~GI)Ittlll.t ;Every DIY" (Rant~ to 15-ouncH:I~t,oliced.beea,~. 10 1~ minulei, · Or until edges are
i
~ ' 'i
...
'
,1•.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PAESS

an

"'f·;e'
COIIJ!:i:k
J&gt;'o:.fo::f.;; ..;,..

ieason.,

,

.ti

____,.,·.."-". .· 4: t

ana

°·

...

'
On a large she~t of w.ax paper, but. ,ter r:me side of each raisin bread sli,:e,
and turn dices aver. Arrange Cheddar
art unbuttered sides ofbn:alj and top
4 slices with bacon.
remaining
bre~d onto·bilc:pn.
Heat a n:Qnstitk skillet 011er moderate heat until hot and cook $alld1
wiches in batches, pressing lightly
1
' Grllloid Chsrlrl.. oad Bacon
with a metal spatula, until undenides
i
1111 ltalolll a-d
are golden, about I minute. Thrn
' 3 tabletpoono unsalted butter, 10tiened
sandwiches over and cook, pressing
8 slices nisin bread
]~ powi4 thinly sliced extn-sh&amp;fp Cheddar lightly, until undersides are golden
,8 bocOI\ ollceo, cooked until crisp and and cheese is melted, about 1 minute.
Makes 4 sandwiches .
drainedonpaportoweh
~
.

Jlden". Remove 4 slices fiom oven.
~
' rn remai,njng 4 slices Qvet on bak.•
sheet an.d spread.thickly,wjth goat
f eae. , ll~il :t:. rpinute '!'ore ' and
uJ P,iates, 'Ibp gear cheese
~th' diainell beets, onion, arugula~
and i:emalning bread, toasted !ideS up.·
i
4 sandwiChes.
.

FliP

Makes

,,

�'

..

Sunday, Februery 11, 2001

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point PIM..nt, WV

Raymond DelleFave and Michelle Michael

Adkins-Brown engagement

Michael-DelleFave engagement

GALLIPOLISMs.'
Rebecca Adkins of Columbus,
Mr. Randall Adkins, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ch~des Jay Brown, :1!1
: of Gallipolis, are pie~ to
~ ann9unce the engage!l).ent and
~ upcoming marriage · of their
~ children, Elizabeth Ann Adkins
~ · and Charles Jel'!'miah Brown.. ·
:
The · bride-elect is a 1996
'
: graduate of Gallia . Academy
~ High 'Schobl and will graduate
• with a Bachelor of Science
Degree in Elementary Education in June of 200 I from the
University of Rio Grande. She

'

•

js currendy employed by Bob
Evans Restaurants.
The groom-elect is a 1994
graduate of OhiO Valley Christian School and a 1999 graduate of the uom:rsity of Rio
Grande with a Bachelor of Sci'
ence Degree in· .Biology ·and
Chemistry. Ne , is ' ~urrendy
empldyed by the Village of Rio
Grande.
The wedding ceremony will
take place at First Baptist
Church of Gallipolis on Saturday, March 17 at 5 p.m.
·

McQuaid Academy and the
RIO GRANDE
Michelle Suzanne Michael State University of New
and Raymond Michael York at Buffalo in 1998
Dellefave announce their with dual degrees in Elecengagement and approach- trical Engineering and Psying wedding.
.
· chology. He is currently
Michelle, ~ Rio Grande
completing
a
Masters
resident, is a graduate of
Degree in Systems EngiGalli a . Academy and the
neering at Cornell UniverOhio Northern University
in the class· of 1999. She is a sity in Ithaca, NY, and_ is
registered pharmacist cur- employed · by Lockheed
rently employed with Fruth Martin Defense Contractors .
Pharmacy in Gallipolis.
A private ceremony is
Raymond, a.· Rochester,
NY native, graduated from planned for June.

•

•••

,.

r

I

G.l}LLIA CALENDAR

'

I
I

:•

Sunday, February 11

.

POINT PLEASANT - Tri-Coonty
· Group Narcotics Anonymous meeting,
: 7J30 p.m., 611 Viand Slreet. Use side
J

Valley. Youth Workers AIIIIOCiation will
hold thelr monthly meeting 817 p.m. at
lhe Willing Heart Outreach for Christ.
For information, call 446· 73n.

' entrance.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Academy
High School 2001 rruslcal parent-stuADDISON
Preaching
service
• and Addison Freewill Baptist Church, dent orientation meeting for 71M 2th
6 p.m. with Rick Ban:uo preaching.
grade studenll
pa,.,ta will bt
· held In 1he choir room at 6 p,m.
GALLIPOLIS - Col/ntrytldl Blpo
tlst Chapel wHI bt wetchlng 'Left ' GALLIPOLIS GAHS' Choir
Behind' at e::JO p.m. Frn mol/It 111d Bqoaltra mnHng In tht choir room.
• aneck1. S.R•. 100, Pill Holztr Mtdletl
Center. call 4MI•11411o! lnformltion.
Wedlltldly, !'lllrUiry 14
GALLIPOLIS - Grltf lupport
GALLIPOLIII - HOlzer ' Mtdlcll Group 11'111\t at noon at tho HOIIdiV
Centtr Ollbi11Q Bupgort G~p wtll Inn,
m~~tt !rem 2•4 p.m. In thll hoiDIIII'I
Thul'lidly; ,tbr
11
Prtnllh 500 room. c:.ll 4MI•5311 for
lnlermatton or to rt;llltr. .
POINT PWWIT !7n·Collnty
Group Nlrcotlol ~ motting,
Monday. JIUioulry 12
7:30 p.m., 111 VIand 8trt11. UH 11cf1
GALLIPOLIS ..,.. JQhn GOt BliCk tntr•noa .
Historical Ctntar Ia Oj)tn from 8 a.m.·
2 p.m&lt;
'
'
GALLIPOLIS - AudiUont lor .
GAHS mutloollor8·11 grldte, 7 p.m.
'
Tuttdty, "-bru."Y 13
POINT PLEASA~ - The Ohio
Frldoy, February 11

•'

am

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Parkinson
A card shower will be held for Alber·
support group wiA have lwo speakers •ta Thornton who will be' eelebniting
from Holzer Medical Center. FoctJs will her 751h blllhday Feb. 20. cards may
be on preventing ridglty of movemen~ be sent to: 51 Chillicothe Road, Gal2 p.m. In 11\e library of Graee Un~ed
Methodist Church, 600 Second Ave. lipolis, OH 45631.
For Information, call 446·0808.
Revival
GALLIPOLIS- A Dlabat" Updeta
POINT PLEASANT, W.VI. and Ecluc:atlon Day will takt=act Relllv-' HNtcel at Ufellne Apoetol~
from 1-3 p.m. near the C.
• Church, Feb. 13 and 14, 7 p.m. night·
mcnary Rthlb 0e!l'rtmtnt of
Ztr
Clinic, ICCittd an tnt flrat ~r or tnt ly, with Brotl1er Jam11 0wtn1 from
Wtl1 Union, Ohio.
Chlrltl 1!. HQ!ztr Surgery Otntar

a

1'1111 Commttnlly C.lendlr 11
pullllllltd II I lrtl II!YIOt to non-

no charge, Thllvtnt.ll aponiOitd IIY
NOYa Nordllk Phlrmaotutlctll, HMO
1nd HQ!zlr CliniC. For Information, clel
..e.aoeo or ti*MIM.

JifOIII f'OUIII Wllhllll to IIIIIOUnOt
mllllnll IIIII epwlll ftlnll, 1'1111
oellncllr 11 not . .,.,_ to pi'Oo
.111011 Hill or fund l'llllrl crt •nv
IVJM,Itlmt 11'1 prlnllllll.,...

C11d lllowtrl
A oard 111ow1r It ~ntd for Mlbtl
Adlclnt who will ctltbratt htr e31d

plmlltland oannot btrgull'llllltll

lo run •

birthday FtbNifY 2,5. C.rdt may bt

"*""' nuinller crt diVa·

.

ness."

.•

Cotton and others believe
stiffer laws are needed,; to
preserve Mississippi's Z06
historically significant cemeteries. Under the cur¢nt
law, cou nty boards )re
authorized to maintain %he
cemeteries, if there is fuOding to do so.
:
That clause is one rea{on
so many cen1eteries ' ani! in
disrepair, says Elbert 1-Iilli~,
director of the stat~ Depvctment of Archives and Hi~o.
ry.
·!
"I just don't think it's '!:asible for local goverm1ij,znts
to be expected to approP,riate the funding.~' Hi!U~rd
HilliArd is among the supporters of proposed legislati.on before the current session of the Mississippi Legislature that would authorize
sheriffs to use inmate labor
to keep the graveyards in top ·
condition.
State Rep. Tyrone Ellis,
D-Starkville, is the authof of
the bill he believes will solve
the pr;,blem of forlorn
cemeteries. The bill paised
the House with an amendment
allowing
couhty
supervisors to get the
inmates from the jail at their
own discretion . .It is now
headed to a Senate comrtuttee.
Ellis says the plight1of the
Odd Fellows Cemetery in
his hometown was the
impetus of his push for
· action.
,
The ·Odd Fellows Cemetery·is the only black gra,veyard within the ' .StarkVille
city limits, says Ray Self, 9ne
of five cemetery association
members.

l

II II j ' I • I' ' (\ ~

I

IIIII

nnt to: 83e HOf!IYIUOkle Rold,
·chlahlrt, Ohio 45620.

IAt Wyngate of Gallipolis I'
..·

Sunday, February 11
1
12:00 p.m. to 2:00p.m.
1
Get Out Of The Cold!! '
I· ·~tO,p By For a Bowi of Hot Chili a11d I

THE BRIDAL
.DIRECTORY

Wynpte is a SIIIU Liefnsld
U11lng Conununily .

a.tll..aC..
I Or Morolllltdo't a
. Oroamo Twllt fl'lll
FNI Wielding C:O.UIIIIIon
Aj&gt;pl.

By: Delei.Nr

740-245-5499
IIIIIIMHWfblllf:

I
Jttuelr!' 6tore'
YINII' ~,... _ ,

''""" ""··-

a 55151 i
Clla.J . .Da
Till ttl Ill 'IIIII

.

~

.

~

'

. .. ...

~..

.....

"

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

0

.McKinster- Wray wedding

0

..

BIRTHDAYS

'

(AP) Entertainm!'nt
. :highlights during the week of
feb. U-17:
, . .
• In 1964, The Beatles performed their lint United
States concert, at the Calise'
um in Washington.
' In 1967, police raided the
English country home , of
Rolling Stones guitarist Keith
Richards in a search for drugs.
Singer Mick Jagger was there
at the .ti1:ne. They were
charged three month &lt; later.
• In 1970, singer Joni
¥itchell announced · he1 .
retirement from live pcrfor- .
mances, She was back to ,
cloing s,hows within the year.
, In 1972, David Bowie first
performed as "Ziggy Stardust" at a show in Tollworth,
England.
.
,
Also in 1972, Led Zeppelin
had to cancel a concert in
Singapore after ~thorities
would not let the group off
lhe ' plane b~cause of their .
lOng hair .

~lark'•

L ----- --

'

'CELEBRITY

iD~e., ••~4

' '

-

:adtfaaJa...,

11/ut,U,.,

For More Information, Please
Call 740-441-9633
•
or ,
1
Just Stop By

POMEROY Crystal Bottom. She is employed as a
Joy Hutc hins and Michael cashier for Crac ker Barrel in
Paul Johnson were married North Fort Myers .
,.
The groom, formerly of
on Nov. 18 at the Caloosa
Congregational of Jehovah's Baltimore, Md., is an employ•&lt; VINTON - Nicole Rene attendants wore matchin g • Witnesses in N o rth Fort ee of Advanced Plastics Mfg.
in Cape Coral.
' McKinster and Donald Craig tuxedos with matching vests Myers, Fla.
Following the ceremony a
The bride is the daughter
Wray were united in marriage and ties. They all wore buron January 6, 2001 at 2:30 gundy rose boutineres. The of Paul and Diane Root dinner and dance reception
. · p.m. at Fellowship Chapel in best man was Keith Skidmore, Hutchins and Cape Coral, was held at the Waterford
_ • Vinton. The bride is the brother of the groom. Ushers Fla., formerly of Long Bok Ballroom in Cape Coral and
. · daughter ·of Linda White of were Travis Wray and Brian tom, and the granddaughter th e couple honeymooned on
of Dolores Hartness of Long a Caribbean Cruise.
:. .Worthington . The groom is Hall, cousins of the groom.
· the son of Donald L. W ray, of
The bride's mother wore a
, "Frown Cit)!. and Becky Skid- navy blue dress and a bur.. . more, of Bidwell.
gundy, gold and green. cor· Rev. Elmer Geiser per- . sage. The groom's mother
,., formed the double ring cere- wore a hunter green dress and
(AP) Feb. 11: Actor is 68. Actor George Segal
many. The bride was escorted a burgundy, · gold and green
Leslie
Nielsen
is 75. Actress ("Just Shoot Me") is 67.
down the aisle by her brother corsage.
Louise
("Gilligan's Singer-1nusician-actor Peter
Howard Wellington, uncle Tina
;Steve McGaffee and 'was
: given in marriage by her of the groom, was in charge Isl and") is 67. Actor Burt Tork ofThe Monkees is 59.
Reynolds is 65. Musician Ser- Actress Carol Lynley is 59.
of of the music for the cere·: mother.
gio Mendes is 60. Actress Actress Stockard Channing is
; The
bride wore
·
.
. h , ah white
d al
many. An d rea and Jenmfer
saun gown. w1t
alsl cat
e r d- . ,T,
lli gt
h
1 Carey Lowell is 40. Singer 57. Talk show host Jerry
·
·
we n on eac sang a so o
Sheryl Crow is 39.ActressJen- Springer is '57. Singer Peter
l ength tram, 1ace eeves, an · r
th
1 M
' d
d
· h l\ 1 Th
•or
e coup e.
egan nifer Aniston ("Friends") is Gabriel is 51. Musician Peter
e ur ·.
·
·
f "h
· ' ab ·orne 1 ·w1t year1 s.
il vve 11 mgton, cou11n o , e 32. Singer D'Angelo }s 27. ·. Hook of New Order and Joy
""'· n!ie
'
d basoh wore a • ace hve
groom, att end e d t h e guestSm¥:-actres_s Brandy ( Moe- · Division is 45. Singer Henry
. rna e y t e grooms mot er. b k
00
sha ) " 22. Smg,er K&lt;:lly Row- Rollins is 40. Actress Kelly Hu
"" ;ihe carried a bouquet of bur.
' · gundy roses with gold and
Following the ceremony a land _of D-:;uny s Child IS 20.
("Martial Law") is 33. Actress
hunter green ribbons. The reception was held in the fel Feb. L. Mov1c d~rector Mena Suvan , 22 .
maid-of-honor and brides- lowship room at the church. A Franco Zeffirelli is 78. Sports: maids wore street length three-tier cake, baked by the caster Joe Garagiola is 75.
: dresses of crushed burgundy g·room 's grandmother, M ae Musician Ray Manzarek of
: velour, and carried burgundy Wellington and decorated by The Doors is 62.ActressJoan\)
: long stemmed roses and gold, the groom's mother, was na Kerns is · 48 . Actor-talk
: burgundy and hunter green served· by the groom's aunts, show host Arsenio Hall is 46.
• ribbons. The maid-of-honor Vickie Wellington, Bcattrice Singer Chynna Phillips of
I was a cousin of the groom, Hale, and Robin Wellington. :Wilson Phillips is 33. Musician
; Amanda Tobert. Bridesmaids
The groom's mother also Jim Crceggan of Barenakt'd
: were Andrea and Jennifer arranged all of the flowers for Ladies is 31. Actress Christina
: Wellington, also cousins of the wedding.
Ricci is 21.
· The couple will reside in
: rhe groom. The flower girls
l'eb. 13: Actress Kim Novak
: were Sarah W ray, goddaughter Gallipolis.
-of the groom, and Hannah
McGaffee, niece of the bride.
: The flower girls wore ivory
'and hunter green dresses and
', carried white lace baskets
' ~ith flowers matching the
bride's bouquet. Carrying the
'bride's train was · Allison
·Porter, friend of the bride and
:Sroom. She '!"ore a dress
matching the flower girls. She
wore a cors&lt;~ge of burgundy
· ,rose buds.
:, The groom wore a black
' ,.tuxedo with a burgundy vest
· and bow-de. The groom's

Donald Craig and Nicole Rene Wray

'•

Fresh Home Made Dinner Rolls ·

I Special Singing &amp; Musical Entertainment I
I

Hutchins-Johnson wedding

••

•

•
'

. ... -

• • •

• • • · ·· · ·· · ~

•• - ...... . ...... ~· · ----- ....- - .. .... . .. . ~. "1 '• •f '

· - ~ -J

.... , .. .

GALLIPOLIS For
most people, work satisfaction is closely related to life
satisfaction. That's because
we spend · a big part of our
day working. Our work has
a major impact on our personal identity, sense of purpose, ~nd lifestyle.
.
If you want to make your
investnlt!nt in work 1nore
fulfilling, consider these
suggestions:
Identify why you work.
There may be several reasons - survi:val, personal
challenge, social contact or
intellectual
stimulation.
Most jobs won't meet all of
your needs.
. But for a job to be fulfilling, it must satisfy some of
your basic needs. If it doesn 't, it may begin to drain
you, rather than energize
· you. And remember, what
you want out of a job can
c han ge over time.
Alter your job so that it
fulfills more of your needs.
Major change may not be
easy or within your co ntrol. But often you make
small changes that will
enhance your satisfaction.
Example: Whenever possible, shuffie the order of
tasks or balance the routine
ones with more stimulating
ones.
Decide why you can be
satisfied with your job
right now. Identify the
advantages of your particu-

Becky
Collins

lar job (i.e., pay; location,
benefits) . No job is perfect
and there will always be
days when you feel frustrated or bored. Avoid
wasting energy grumbling
about minor irritants in
your job if it is, in fact,
meeting many of your
needs.
Look for fulfillment in
your personal life. Sometitnes you can take the
edge otf your job frustratiop by getting som'e of
your noeds met outside the
work setting.
Example: if the relationships at work are characterized by conflict, make sure
that you build supportive
friendships outside your
work world. Volunteer
work may also strc tch your
unused skills.

(Becky Co flil1 5 is Ga/lia
Couwy :&lt;; J:.£,.·tcmhm d)!Ciff for
fo111ily a11d cous rmtcr sciences,
Ohio State Uni11mity )

Gallia County Health Department
Prenatal Oinlc

FREE ~nancy Tesls Also Avall4ble

Take care of youlltlf and your unborn child.

\}•
!/fnd I Love You

I Love you my sweet £ove,
.
Jrfore tfi.an tfie spicy vegetarian foods,
!And my ten tfiousand Indian attachments
Of various caliber threads;
!And I £ove you,
More than tfie medicine, the poetry or tfie art:
· !And even more tfi.an tfie sfiiningstars
Of my skies, my adorable cubs.

lll'.!llllltl tltl /\11
(

Michael Paul and Crystal Joy Johnson

.•
,•

says.

TAWNEY STUDIO
G~SECONDAYE., GALLIPOLIS

Fulfilling work
related to life
satiifaction

centuries ago;' Cotton ~­
"Once the church is aBandoned, and there's no 'one
there every Sunday to koep
it up, it reverts to wilder-

Let Ul copy your old family pholoi.
Specllla 2·5x7'e for $14.115. Rtg $19.95.
SAVE $5.001 We Ilea do peMpOrt plloloe,
ldtnltllcllllon photoe and one day MMcl 0!1
photoltnl•hlng. Watch Batterlll lnlllllld
wiiHe you welt.

or

HMC, lntulln IIHII oan tiki lldVIr1'
t1a1 a! • dtmantiiiUan or tht NOVO
PIN 3, and wtn lito ractlvt I pen It

en House I·

.. . ·ll

VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP)
- Briars, brambles and litter
for decades hid the grave
sites at Asbury Cemetery,
robbing the dead of their last
earthly possession - their
identity.
The tombstones that dot
the nearly 200-year-old
cemetery in· rural Warren
County, not far from the
Mississippi River, were not
visible even to those who
lived nearby.
The plight of Asbury is
not uncommon in Mississippi and across the South .Tiny
plots are too often the victims of neglect and development, dependent on concerned citizens · or private
· groups to cpme to their rescue.
At Asbury, Gordon Cotton and other members of
the
Vicksburg-Warren
County Historical Society
worked on · weekends for
several years' to clean up the
property.
11
lt was a chain .saw job,"
Cotto,n says. "When
remote cemetery is not
before the. eyes of the public
on a daily basis, anything can
happen.''
Cotton, the curator of the
Old Vicksburg Museum, easily rattles olf Asbury's historical &amp;ignificance.
Lying in the graveyard, he
saY,, is Jeffei-son Nailer, the
man who .defeated Jefferson
Davis ~or the Legislature
before · Davis became president of the Confederacy. A
few feet away are the graves
of the first couple in Mississippi to join the Methodist
Church in 1800 .
Historical society members still maintain the 2-acre
site, but Cotton bemoans the
plight of other cemeteries in
·
the state.
"These are little family
graveyards and old church
cemeteries th·at were started

6unlla!? 1limtf -6tnlinrl • Page C3

FAMILY COLUMN

Weddings

Some states searching
for ways to preserve
abandoned cemeteries

Charla• Jeremiah·Brown and EliZabeth Ann Adklna

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point PleeNnt, WV

Sunday, February 11,2001

Designed for your ·
lifestyle, your tastes,
your schedule.

'

q

•'

I

'

\}

~

Join Now
for I/ 2 off!'

I £ove you my sweetest Love, .
More tfian tfi.e blooming camellias,
'Tfie cornflowers, tfie carnations, tfie forget-me-nots;
!And I £ove you.
'Even more tfian tfi.e red, red roses ofJune;
i'for you are tfie red, red rose blooming yearlong
In the effervescence of my deepest fieart . .

1·888-3-FLORINEI
www.888·3·florlne.com

j

GALLII'OLIS
St Pltor's Episcopal Church
541 Second Avenue
TUE 6:00 pm • WED 9:30 am

,.

•Jfalesfi fpatel

JACKSON
Comfort Inn •.605 Eost Main
MON 6:JD pm • SAT 9:30 am
HIDOLIPOKT
Church oil Ooritt • 437 Moln 5trHt
THUI\ 6:00 pm

I J:.ove you my darling £ove,
:More tfian tfie wanntfi of
afireplace on an arctic winter nigfit, .
!And the cfiann of moonbeams caressing
. 'Tfie graceful river near peaceful 'Racine;
!And I £ove you,
, \} :More tfian the fiills, tfie woods; tfie autumn winds;
W
YCnd even more tfian tfi.e beauty of tfie
t'
'Bend of tfi.e river at alluring !Apple 9rove.

Compliments Of
Fiorino Mark

.JVick.ol :Marie rprovezis

'•

!/fdrilirer of'Poetry

·'(),
•
&lt;'

·•·

I.

•

�'

..

Sunday, Februery 11, 2001

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point PIM..nt, WV

Raymond DelleFave and Michelle Michael

Adkins-Brown engagement

Michael-DelleFave engagement

GALLIPOLISMs.'
Rebecca Adkins of Columbus,
Mr. Randall Adkins, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ch~des Jay Brown, :1!1
: of Gallipolis, are pie~ to
~ ann9unce the engage!l).ent and
~ upcoming marriage · of their
~ children, Elizabeth Ann Adkins
~ · and Charles Jel'!'miah Brown.. ·
:
The · bride-elect is a 1996
'
: graduate of Gallia . Academy
~ High 'Schobl and will graduate
• with a Bachelor of Science
Degree in Elementary Education in June of 200 I from the
University of Rio Grande. She

'

•

js currendy employed by Bob
Evans Restaurants.
The groom-elect is a 1994
graduate of OhiO Valley Christian School and a 1999 graduate of the uom:rsity of Rio
Grande with a Bachelor of Sci'
ence Degree in· .Biology ·and
Chemistry. Ne , is ' ~urrendy
empldyed by the Village of Rio
Grande.
The wedding ceremony will
take place at First Baptist
Church of Gallipolis on Saturday, March 17 at 5 p.m.
·

McQuaid Academy and the
RIO GRANDE
Michelle Suzanne Michael State University of New
and Raymond Michael York at Buffalo in 1998
Dellefave announce their with dual degrees in Elecengagement and approach- trical Engineering and Psying wedding.
.
· chology. He is currently
Michelle, ~ Rio Grande
completing
a
Masters
resident, is a graduate of
Degree in Systems EngiGalli a . Academy and the
neering at Cornell UniverOhio Northern University
in the class· of 1999. She is a sity in Ithaca, NY, and_ is
registered pharmacist cur- employed · by Lockheed
rently employed with Fruth Martin Defense Contractors .
Pharmacy in Gallipolis.
A private ceremony is
Raymond, a.· Rochester,
NY native, graduated from planned for June.

•

•••

,.

r

I

G.l}LLIA CALENDAR

'

I
I

:•

Sunday, February 11

.

POINT PLEASANT - Tri-Coonty
· Group Narcotics Anonymous meeting,
: 7J30 p.m., 611 Viand Slreet. Use side
J

Valley. Youth Workers AIIIIOCiation will
hold thelr monthly meeting 817 p.m. at
lhe Willing Heart Outreach for Christ.
For information, call 446· 73n.

' entrance.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Academy
High School 2001 rruslcal parent-stuADDISON
Preaching
service
• and Addison Freewill Baptist Church, dent orientation meeting for 71M 2th
6 p.m. with Rick Ban:uo preaching.
grade studenll
pa,.,ta will bt
· held In 1he choir room at 6 p,m.
GALLIPOLIS - Col/ntrytldl Blpo
tlst Chapel wHI bt wetchlng 'Left ' GALLIPOLIS GAHS' Choir
Behind' at e::JO p.m. Frn mol/It 111d Bqoaltra mnHng In tht choir room.
• aneck1. S.R•. 100, Pill Holztr Mtdletl
Center. call 4MI•11411o! lnformltion.
Wedlltldly, !'lllrUiry 14
GALLIPOLIS - Grltf lupport
GALLIPOLIII - HOlzer ' Mtdlcll Group 11'111\t at noon at tho HOIIdiV
Centtr Ollbi11Q Bupgort G~p wtll Inn,
m~~tt !rem 2•4 p.m. In thll hoiDIIII'I
Thul'lidly; ,tbr
11
Prtnllh 500 room. c:.ll 4MI•5311 for
lnlermatton or to rt;llltr. .
POINT PWWIT !7n·Collnty
Group Nlrcotlol ~ motting,
Monday. JIUioulry 12
7:30 p.m., 111 VIand 8trt11. UH 11cf1
GALLIPOLIS ..,.. JQhn GOt BliCk tntr•noa .
Historical Ctntar Ia Oj)tn from 8 a.m.·
2 p.m&lt;
'
'
GALLIPOLIS - AudiUont lor .
GAHS mutloollor8·11 grldte, 7 p.m.
'
Tuttdty, "-bru."Y 13
POINT PLEASA~ - The Ohio
Frldoy, February 11

•'

am

I

GALLIPOLIS - The Parkinson
A card shower will be held for Alber·
support group wiA have lwo speakers •ta Thornton who will be' eelebniting
from Holzer Medical Center. FoctJs will her 751h blllhday Feb. 20. cards may
be on preventing ridglty of movemen~ be sent to: 51 Chillicothe Road, Gal2 p.m. In 11\e library of Graee Un~ed
Methodist Church, 600 Second Ave. lipolis, OH 45631.
For Information, call 446·0808.
Revival
GALLIPOLIS- A Dlabat" Updeta
POINT PLEASANT, W.VI. and Ecluc:atlon Day will takt=act Relllv-' HNtcel at Ufellne Apoetol~
from 1-3 p.m. near the C.
• Church, Feb. 13 and 14, 7 p.m. night·
mcnary Rthlb 0e!l'rtmtnt of
Ztr
Clinic, ICCittd an tnt flrat ~r or tnt ly, with Brotl1er Jam11 0wtn1 from
Wtl1 Union, Ohio.
Chlrltl 1!. HQ!ztr Surgery Otntar

a

1'1111 Commttnlly C.lendlr 11
pullllllltd II I lrtl II!YIOt to non-

no charge, Thllvtnt.ll aponiOitd IIY
NOYa Nordllk Phlrmaotutlctll, HMO
1nd HQ!zlr CliniC. For Information, clel
..e.aoeo or ti*MIM.

JifOIII f'OUIII Wllhllll to IIIIIOUnOt
mllllnll IIIII epwlll ftlnll, 1'1111
oellncllr 11 not . .,.,_ to pi'Oo
.111011 Hill or fund l'llllrl crt •nv
IVJM,Itlmt 11'1 prlnllllll.,...

C11d lllowtrl
A oard 111ow1r It ~ntd for Mlbtl
Adlclnt who will ctltbratt htr e31d

plmlltland oannot btrgull'llllltll

lo run •

birthday FtbNifY 2,5. C.rdt may bt

"*""' nuinller crt diVa·

.

ness."

.•

Cotton and others believe
stiffer laws are needed,; to
preserve Mississippi's Z06
historically significant cemeteries. Under the cur¢nt
law, cou nty boards )re
authorized to maintain %he
cemeteries, if there is fuOding to do so.
:
That clause is one rea{on
so many cen1eteries ' ani! in
disrepair, says Elbert 1-Iilli~,
director of the stat~ Depvctment of Archives and Hi~o.
ry.
·!
"I just don't think it's '!:asible for local goverm1ij,znts
to be expected to approP,riate the funding.~' Hi!U~rd
HilliArd is among the supporters of proposed legislati.on before the current session of the Mississippi Legislature that would authorize
sheriffs to use inmate labor
to keep the graveyards in top ·
condition.
State Rep. Tyrone Ellis,
D-Starkville, is the authof of
the bill he believes will solve
the pr;,blem of forlorn
cemeteries. The bill paised
the House with an amendment
allowing
couhty
supervisors to get the
inmates from the jail at their
own discretion . .It is now
headed to a Senate comrtuttee.
Ellis says the plight1of the
Odd Fellows Cemetery in
his hometown was the
impetus of his push for
· action.
,
The ·Odd Fellows Cemetery·is the only black gra,veyard within the ' .StarkVille
city limits, says Ray Self, 9ne
of five cemetery association
members.

l

II II j ' I • I' ' (\ ~

I

IIIII

nnt to: 83e HOf!IYIUOkle Rold,
·chlahlrt, Ohio 45620.

IAt Wyngate of Gallipolis I'
..·

Sunday, February 11
1
12:00 p.m. to 2:00p.m.
1
Get Out Of The Cold!! '
I· ·~tO,p By For a Bowi of Hot Chili a11d I

THE BRIDAL
.DIRECTORY

Wynpte is a SIIIU Liefnsld
U11lng Conununily .

a.tll..aC..
I Or Morolllltdo't a
. Oroamo Twllt fl'lll
FNI Wielding C:O.UIIIIIon
Aj&gt;pl.

By: Delei.Nr

740-245-5499
IIIIIIMHWfblllf:

I
Jttuelr!' 6tore'
YINII' ~,... _ ,

''""" ""··-

a 55151 i
Clla.J . .Da
Till ttl Ill 'IIIII

.

~

.

~

'

. .. ...

~..

.....

"

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

0

.McKinster- Wray wedding

0

..

BIRTHDAYS

'

(AP) Entertainm!'nt
. :highlights during the week of
feb. U-17:
, . .
• In 1964, The Beatles performed their lint United
States concert, at the Calise'
um in Washington.
' In 1967, police raided the
English country home , of
Rolling Stones guitarist Keith
Richards in a search for drugs.
Singer Mick Jagger was there
at the .ti1:ne. They were
charged three month &lt; later.
• In 1970, singer Joni
¥itchell announced · he1 .
retirement from live pcrfor- .
mances, She was back to ,
cloing s,hows within the year.
, In 1972, David Bowie first
performed as "Ziggy Stardust" at a show in Tollworth,
England.
.
,
Also in 1972, Led Zeppelin
had to cancel a concert in
Singapore after ~thorities
would not let the group off
lhe ' plane b~cause of their .
lOng hair .

~lark'•

L ----- --

'

'CELEBRITY

iD~e., ••~4

' '

-

:adtfaaJa...,

11/ut,U,.,

For More Information, Please
Call 740-441-9633
•
or ,
1
Just Stop By

POMEROY Crystal Bottom. She is employed as a
Joy Hutc hins and Michael cashier for Crac ker Barrel in
Paul Johnson were married North Fort Myers .
,.
The groom, formerly of
on Nov. 18 at the Caloosa
Congregational of Jehovah's Baltimore, Md., is an employ•&lt; VINTON - Nicole Rene attendants wore matchin g • Witnesses in N o rth Fort ee of Advanced Plastics Mfg.
in Cape Coral.
' McKinster and Donald Craig tuxedos with matching vests Myers, Fla.
Following the ceremony a
The bride is the daughter
Wray were united in marriage and ties. They all wore buron January 6, 2001 at 2:30 gundy rose boutineres. The of Paul and Diane Root dinner and dance reception
. · p.m. at Fellowship Chapel in best man was Keith Skidmore, Hutchins and Cape Coral, was held at the Waterford
_ • Vinton. The bride is the brother of the groom. Ushers Fla., formerly of Long Bok Ballroom in Cape Coral and
. · daughter ·of Linda White of were Travis Wray and Brian tom, and the granddaughter th e couple honeymooned on
of Dolores Hartness of Long a Caribbean Cruise.
:. .Worthington . The groom is Hall, cousins of the groom.
· the son of Donald L. W ray, of
The bride's mother wore a
, "Frown Cit)!. and Becky Skid- navy blue dress and a bur.. . more, of Bidwell.
gundy, gold and green. cor· Rev. Elmer Geiser per- . sage. The groom's mother
,., formed the double ring cere- wore a hunter green dress and
(AP) Feb. 11: Actor is 68. Actor George Segal
many. The bride was escorted a burgundy, · gold and green
Leslie
Nielsen
is 75. Actress ("Just Shoot Me") is 67.
down the aisle by her brother corsage.
Louise
("Gilligan's Singer-1nusician-actor Peter
Howard Wellington, uncle Tina
;Steve McGaffee and 'was
: given in marriage by her of the groom, was in charge Isl and") is 67. Actor Burt Tork ofThe Monkees is 59.
Reynolds is 65. Musician Ser- Actress Carol Lynley is 59.
of of the music for the cere·: mother.
gio Mendes is 60. Actress Actress Stockard Channing is
; The
bride wore
·
.
. h , ah white
d al
many. An d rea and Jenmfer
saun gown. w1t
alsl cat
e r d- . ,T,
lli gt
h
1 Carey Lowell is 40. Singer 57. Talk show host Jerry
·
·
we n on eac sang a so o
Sheryl Crow is 39.ActressJen- Springer is '57. Singer Peter
l ength tram, 1ace eeves, an · r
th
1 M
' d
d
· h l\ 1 Th
•or
e coup e.
egan nifer Aniston ("Friends") is Gabriel is 51. Musician Peter
e ur ·.
·
·
f "h
· ' ab ·orne 1 ·w1t year1 s.
il vve 11 mgton, cou11n o , e 32. Singer D'Angelo }s 27. ·. Hook of New Order and Joy
""'· n!ie
'
d basoh wore a • ace hve
groom, att end e d t h e guestSm¥:-actres_s Brandy ( Moe- · Division is 45. Singer Henry
. rna e y t e grooms mot er. b k
00
sha ) " 22. Smg,er K&lt;:lly Row- Rollins is 40. Actress Kelly Hu
"" ;ihe carried a bouquet of bur.
' · gundy roses with gold and
Following the ceremony a land _of D-:;uny s Child IS 20.
("Martial Law") is 33. Actress
hunter green ribbons. The reception was held in the fel Feb. L. Mov1c d~rector Mena Suvan , 22 .
maid-of-honor and brides- lowship room at the church. A Franco Zeffirelli is 78. Sports: maids wore street length three-tier cake, baked by the caster Joe Garagiola is 75.
: dresses of crushed burgundy g·room 's grandmother, M ae Musician Ray Manzarek of
: velour, and carried burgundy Wellington and decorated by The Doors is 62.ActressJoan\)
: long stemmed roses and gold, the groom's mother, was na Kerns is · 48 . Actor-talk
: burgundy and hunter green served· by the groom's aunts, show host Arsenio Hall is 46.
• ribbons. The maid-of-honor Vickie Wellington, Bcattrice Singer Chynna Phillips of
I was a cousin of the groom, Hale, and Robin Wellington. :Wilson Phillips is 33. Musician
; Amanda Tobert. Bridesmaids
The groom's mother also Jim Crceggan of Barenakt'd
: were Andrea and Jennifer arranged all of the flowers for Ladies is 31. Actress Christina
: Wellington, also cousins of the wedding.
Ricci is 21.
· The couple will reside in
: rhe groom. The flower girls
l'eb. 13: Actress Kim Novak
: were Sarah W ray, goddaughter Gallipolis.
-of the groom, and Hannah
McGaffee, niece of the bride.
: The flower girls wore ivory
'and hunter green dresses and
', carried white lace baskets
' ~ith flowers matching the
bride's bouquet. Carrying the
'bride's train was · Allison
·Porter, friend of the bride and
:Sroom. She '!"ore a dress
matching the flower girls. She
wore a cors&lt;~ge of burgundy
· ,rose buds.
:, The groom wore a black
' ,.tuxedo with a burgundy vest
· and bow-de. The groom's

Donald Craig and Nicole Rene Wray

'•

Fresh Home Made Dinner Rolls ·

I Special Singing &amp; Musical Entertainment I
I

Hutchins-Johnson wedding

••

•

•
'

. ... -

• • •

• • • · ·· · ·· · ~

•• - ...... . ...... ~· · ----- ....- - .. .... . .. . ~. "1 '• •f '

· - ~ -J

.... , .. .

GALLIPOLIS For
most people, work satisfaction is closely related to life
satisfaction. That's because
we spend · a big part of our
day working. Our work has
a major impact on our personal identity, sense of purpose, ~nd lifestyle.
.
If you want to make your
investnlt!nt in work 1nore
fulfilling, consider these
suggestions:
Identify why you work.
There may be several reasons - survi:val, personal
challenge, social contact or
intellectual
stimulation.
Most jobs won't meet all of
your needs.
. But for a job to be fulfilling, it must satisfy some of
your basic needs. If it doesn 't, it may begin to drain
you, rather than energize
· you. And remember, what
you want out of a job can
c han ge over time.
Alter your job so that it
fulfills more of your needs.
Major change may not be
easy or within your co ntrol. But often you make
small changes that will
enhance your satisfaction.
Example: Whenever possible, shuffie the order of
tasks or balance the routine
ones with more stimulating
ones.
Decide why you can be
satisfied with your job
right now. Identify the
advantages of your particu-

Becky
Collins

lar job (i.e., pay; location,
benefits) . No job is perfect
and there will always be
days when you feel frustrated or bored. Avoid
wasting energy grumbling
about minor irritants in
your job if it is, in fact,
meeting many of your
needs.
Look for fulfillment in
your personal life. Sometitnes you can take the
edge otf your job frustratiop by getting som'e of
your noeds met outside the
work setting.
Example: if the relationships at work are characterized by conflict, make sure
that you build supportive
friendships outside your
work world. Volunteer
work may also strc tch your
unused skills.

(Becky Co flil1 5 is Ga/lia
Couwy :&lt;; J:.£,.·tcmhm d)!Ciff for
fo111ily a11d cous rmtcr sciences,
Ohio State Uni11mity )

Gallia County Health Department
Prenatal Oinlc

FREE ~nancy Tesls Also Avall4ble

Take care of youlltlf and your unborn child.

\}•
!/fnd I Love You

I Love you my sweet £ove,
.
Jrfore tfi.an tfie spicy vegetarian foods,
!And my ten tfiousand Indian attachments
Of various caliber threads;
!And I £ove you,
More than tfie medicine, the poetry or tfie art:
· !And even more tfi.an tfie sfiiningstars
Of my skies, my adorable cubs.

lll'.!llllltl tltl /\11
(

Michael Paul and Crystal Joy Johnson

.•
,•

says.

TAWNEY STUDIO
G~SECONDAYE., GALLIPOLIS

Fulfilling work
related to life
satiifaction

centuries ago;' Cotton ~­
"Once the church is aBandoned, and there's no 'one
there every Sunday to koep
it up, it reverts to wilder-

Let Ul copy your old family pholoi.
Specllla 2·5x7'e for $14.115. Rtg $19.95.
SAVE $5.001 We Ilea do peMpOrt plloloe,
ldtnltllcllllon photoe and one day MMcl 0!1
photoltnl•hlng. Watch Batterlll lnlllllld
wiiHe you welt.

or

HMC, lntulln IIHII oan tiki lldVIr1'
t1a1 a! • dtmantiiiUan or tht NOVO
PIN 3, and wtn lito ractlvt I pen It

en House I·

.. . ·ll

VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP)
- Briars, brambles and litter
for decades hid the grave
sites at Asbury Cemetery,
robbing the dead of their last
earthly possession - their
identity.
The tombstones that dot
the nearly 200-year-old
cemetery in· rural Warren
County, not far from the
Mississippi River, were not
visible even to those who
lived nearby.
The plight of Asbury is
not uncommon in Mississippi and across the South .Tiny
plots are too often the victims of neglect and development, dependent on concerned citizens · or private
· groups to cpme to their rescue.
At Asbury, Gordon Cotton and other members of
the
Vicksburg-Warren
County Historical Society
worked on · weekends for
several years' to clean up the
property.
11
lt was a chain .saw job,"
Cotto,n says. "When
remote cemetery is not
before the. eyes of the public
on a daily basis, anything can
happen.''
Cotton, the curator of the
Old Vicksburg Museum, easily rattles olf Asbury's historical &amp;ignificance.
Lying in the graveyard, he
saY,, is Jeffei-son Nailer, the
man who .defeated Jefferson
Davis ~or the Legislature
before · Davis became president of the Confederacy. A
few feet away are the graves
of the first couple in Mississippi to join the Methodist
Church in 1800 .
Historical society members still maintain the 2-acre
site, but Cotton bemoans the
plight of other cemeteries in
·
the state.
"These are little family
graveyards and old church
cemeteries th·at were started

6unlla!? 1limtf -6tnlinrl • Page C3

FAMILY COLUMN

Weddings

Some states searching
for ways to preserve
abandoned cemeteries

Charla• Jeremiah·Brown and EliZabeth Ann Adklna

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point PleeNnt, WV

Sunday, February 11,2001

Designed for your ·
lifestyle, your tastes,
your schedule.

'

q

•'

I

'

\}

~

Join Now
for I/ 2 off!'

I £ove you my sweetest Love, .
More tfian tfi.e blooming camellias,
'Tfie cornflowers, tfie carnations, tfie forget-me-nots;
!And I £ove you.
'Even more tfian tfi.e red, red roses ofJune;
i'for you are tfie red, red rose blooming yearlong
In the effervescence of my deepest fieart . .

1·888-3-FLORINEI
www.888·3·florlne.com

j

GALLII'OLIS
St Pltor's Episcopal Church
541 Second Avenue
TUE 6:00 pm • WED 9:30 am

,.

•Jfalesfi fpatel

JACKSON
Comfort Inn •.605 Eost Main
MON 6:JD pm • SAT 9:30 am
HIDOLIPOKT
Church oil Ooritt • 437 Moln 5trHt
THUI\ 6:00 pm

I J:.ove you my darling £ove,
:More tfian tfie wanntfi of
afireplace on an arctic winter nigfit, .
!And the cfiann of moonbeams caressing
. 'Tfie graceful river near peaceful 'Racine;
!And I £ove you,
, \} :More tfian the fiills, tfie woods; tfie autumn winds;
W
YCnd even more tfian tfi.e beauty of tfie
t'
'Bend of tfi.e river at alluring !Apple 9rove.

Compliments Of
Fiorino Mark

.JVick.ol :Marie rprovezis

'•

!/fdrilirer of'Poetry

·'(),
•
&lt;'

·•·

I.

•

�Page C4 • a.unbap l!:ime• ·a.entintl

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

. Sunday, February 11, 2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

I
.

l
./

1
Charles and LaVera Yeager

'I

Yeager 5Oth anniversary

I

MASON - C harles and They are the parents of two
· La Vera Yeager will observe children, Sally (Ralph) Ross
· their 50th wedding anniver- and Marty (Susan) Yeager, and
sary at an open reception have eight grandchildren and .
· hosted by their children to be
two great-grandchildren.
held Sunday, Feb. 18, 2 to 4
The . couple has requested
· p.m., at the Mason United
that gifts be omitted but that
. Methodist Church.
their
friends and . relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Yeager were
married on Feb. 17, 1951 on come by and reminisce with
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. them about the past 50 years. ·

Safety tips from the
USDA ·for slow cookers
(AP) Susan Conley,
director of education for the
Food Safety and lnsp,ction
Service of the USDA,
reminds cooks that the
USDA offers advice on using
a slow cooker.
Among the USDA's safety
tips are these:
-Make sure your hands,
the cooker, work area and
utensils are clean . .
· -Keep perishable foods
refrigerated until you are
· ready to use them. You can
: cut items up ahead of time,
: but store meat and vegetables
: separate from each other in
: the refrigerator. ·
' . - Defrost meat or poultry
· before putting it in the slow
cooker.
-Select foods with a high
moisture content such as
· soups, stews or spaghetti

'

sauce.

.
:
;
:
·
:
:
:
·
:
:
:

-Fill the cooker no less
than half full and no more
than two-thirds full. Vegetables cook more slowly than
meat and poultry in a slow
cooker so the vegetables
should be placed around the
bottom and side of the pot.
-Do not usc a slow
cooker for a roast or whole
chicken, because the food
will cook so slowly it may

remain in the bacterial danger zone for too long.
-Keep the slow cooker's
lid on, removing .it only to
stir the food or to check for
doneness.
· -If the power goes out
when you are not home,
throw the food out. !f you
are at home, cook the food
immediately by some other
means S\Ich as a gas stove, on
the outdoor grill or at a
house where · the power is
on . If the food was completely cooked before the
power · went out, the food
should remain safe up to two
hours in the cooker with the
'
power off.
-Store leftovers in shallow covered containers and
refrigerate . within two hours
after cooking. Reheating
leftovers in a slow cooker is
not recommended. However, cooked food can be
brought to steaming on th.e
stove top or in the
microwave and then put in
the preheated cooker to keep
it hot for serving.
For more information, on
· the Web:

lb the 1920 Gallia County census,
only four African-American persons
are listed as living in Huntington
Township: Andy, Charity and Elizabeth Stratton and Peter Bunce, who
is technicaUy )isted as a mulatto. Mr.
Bunce may have boen the first black
undertaker in Gallia history. He was
• an associate for the Buder Funeral
· :Parlor in Vinton. Most likely, the
;1920 census taker failed to count
.;most of the blacks living in a small
.:·community called Shiloh in section
:&gt;21 of Huntington Township.
: We know there had to be at least
50 or 60 persons in that community
in 1919 for in that year the Gallipoli~ Bulletin newspaper even carried a
regular column detailing the news of
the Shiloh community.According to
; the b~ok, "Gallia County One
: J3-oom Schools, The Cradle Years,"
• ,):he school for blacks at Shiloh was
: )till in existence at least until 1922.
' :And there was also a Shiloh Baptist
:,Church until at least the '1920's. ·
. In a 1919 Gallip'olis Bulletin we
·read: "The Sunday School at Shiloh
· ·is progressing nicely with a good
· attendance under the direction of
· Mrs. Almira Leach."
· ' In the book on Gallia's one room
'schools, it says: "The word Shiloh
means the name Jesus (Genesis
· -49. 10). We doq't know the exact
· year the school was closed, but we
: know that Roy Huntley bought the
·. ;building and moved i.t to his farm.
· +I.e used the lumber to help build a
•
-barn, which is still standing."
: ; Most likely, the Shiloh communi; "ty grew up around the time of the
::civil War. By 1880 there were some
::123 black persons in Huntington
:rownship. The ce~SIJS taker in 1880
•!actually recorded 31 blacks and 88

CORPORATE SPONSORS - Robert Daniel; left, Holzer Clinic
administrator, and LaMar Wyse, right, Holzer Medical Center
'president and CEO, were recognized for their corporate spon·
sorship in support of the American Cancer Society's Relay for
Life. Each organization was presented a special relay plaque
designed and made by Relay for Life committee member
Sharon Brown.

http:/ /www.fsis.usda.gov/oa
/pubs/slocookr. htm/

MONDAY
. MIDDLEPORT..:.. DAV Chaptar
53, dinner at 6:30p.m. meeting at 7
p.m. Monday at the hall.
TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ealtam
Band Boosters, band room, Tussday, 7:30 p,in. Parents urged to
anend.
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Rock Springs Fairgrounds lair
board olllce.

Antiqu~s

CiHto

thicken and Beans ·

uiVI~!UN

•

AWARD W!NNER

•

•
••

20('!!:~

:: (AP) - Used with a little
(orethought, a slow cooker
·'an be a great time-saver. It's
a4o eminently suitable for
'making the healthful, low-fat
soups and stews that are wel:aome family fare at this tim~

SPJClAL AWARD - Tt,le Gal- Wuerch, Bonnie McFarland'·
li a County Relay for Life com- chairperson, Gladys Grant,
mittee was recently present· Jenni Dovyak and Kathi Na~.
1
· ~·
/•1'
' t JJ' (J
ed a special award for their.
efforts In the 2000 Relay for ·
Life. Pictured with. the special banner are .Gallia County
Relay for Life committee
members, left to right, Addle

~fyear.

; :·· ~~.Hearty foo~s, such. as
· b.eans, are especially su1ted
•4&gt;r these cooking methods;'
:~ys prolific cookbo'ok writer
:~ue Spider, "because they
:add the full-bodied flavor
:and rich texture we associate
; with all-in-ane meals."
Slow cookers, also known
• as crock pots, cook food for
:between about 5 to 12
:pours. Often you can go
:away and leave the cooking
: to the pot. Check the manu;. facturer's manual, since
; cooking times may vary with
; different brands.
.• This brightly seasoned
: recipe is one to try for a cold
:day:
,!\sian-Spiced
Chicken and ·Beans

DON'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

RACINE - Racine Board o.f
Public Affairs. Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.,
mun~lpal building .

MIDDLEPORT -

Women's

..
• All size extra long
for added oom10t1

your body.-

CHESTER - Cheater Township trueteea, Tuesday, 7 p.m. town
hall at Chostar.
The Community C.lendtlr It
publlahtd a• a free Hnlce Ia
nan-praftt groupe wt1hlni Ill ·
announce mMtlnga- apecl.l
-18. The calendar 11 'not

FLAIR
I

cllllgllld Ia P,amo11 Alii ar

fund rill- af any type. lteme

FURNITURE

are prlnlld only •• •P- per·

DESIGN

Ill. Z. Gllllpello Ferey, WV

675-ll7l

Annual Heart Fair

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Dlatrtct's
regular meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, February 14,2001
8:00 am - 4:00pm
French 500 Room
Special Screening W Blood Pressure Screenings ·
W Cholesterol &amp; Glucose

Sponsored liy the
Holzer Medical Center ·
Wellness Depa~tment
·and Critical Care Unit

•
'''

.f
'

•••

'r

I

Winter
At Both 'ic.\tlons.

Pleasant &amp;

1u% off Storewide
save up to 50% on Selected

,.
I

~

••

•

''

•

Kiplin Shoe

Rt•.J Bypcw
Point Pleasant, WV

304-175-7870
Mon-Sot8-7Sun 1-1

·'

..

(11 am - 4 pm) - Non Fasting .
W Body Fat Analysis
• Nutrition Services
W Stress Management
• "Ask the Pharmacist"
• American Heart Association.
Representatives
• Cardiac Catbeteration Info

•

300 2ndAwGoWpoU1, OH

740-.... 1-8010
Mon l Frll'.l0-8 Tue, Wtd, Thun 1:30·1
Sot. 9:30-5:00 SundayCioltd

SHILOH-- This map from the book, 'Gallia County One Room Schools, The
Cradle Years,' shows the one room schools in Huntington Township . In sec·
tion 21 was located the African American school named Shiloh. There was
also a church called Shiloh in this community.
1919 · as was the chicken business.
One resident was selling chickens for
$2 each. Another had 21 hens and
had made $35 in selling eggs in just
three months.
"Mrs . Mitty Pounds was made to
cry and laugh for joy last friday
when her son, Bundy Pounds ,
stepped in, whom she was not

expectitlg frmn overseas . in France.

Bundy is one who has been to the
front in several battles. He .never
halted or faltered but trusted in his
God, a soldier among soldiers. Hurrah for Bundy' May God bless
him."(Bulletin) Both Mitty and
Bundy Pounds are buried in the
Shiloh Cemetery.

Do not '0/ or drink for the 12 hours.
prior to )'OlD' schtdtded screening
taU medication.

l•ll IIIHlt 111111111.111•'11

'dllh· II · I;.

( llll t l \ \ t l l l l i ' ' ' ) ' l ' ·illlllilll

j

\I,

11(-·1111 l l t l

,1,,
'\j,

II

t)

Reflecting on current
styles, Rybczynski says, "Have
you noticed how many young
architects arc using tensioned
wires as balusters in stair and
balcony railings? Or bare polished concr~te for floors? Or
covering buildings with zinc,
or titanium, and other unusu;ai metals? These are all examples of how fashioi1 makes
itself felt in architecture."
Rybczynski approves of a

trend to intelligent planning,
as exemplified in the exclusive
·community of Windsor in
Vero ~each, on the central
east co~st of Florida.
It includes a shift toward
pedestrian villages, planned
for people rather than for
·cars. Windsor demonstrates
this idea with shell rock roads
and narrow lanes and garages
discreetly out of main view.
"Windsor is not a true

\;~~~~·~"t
0~~
\f.G f\)f.G
..
~

torn down, tbl! mo[ive ma.y

be expediency or crass commercialism. but it may also be
a desire for something new.
This is as true of buildings as
· it .is of women's hats," he

;:.c,\t-~ttt- t»\)' 0~~··

(Preparation 1'5· minutes,
Recipe from Bean Educa: cooking time 5 1/2 to 6
.tion Ill Awareness Network.
: hours)
For more recipes and
1/2 cup dry-packaged
'
~ navy beans or 15-ounce can online cookbook, on the
·navy beans, rinsed, drained
Web;
. 112 cup dry"packaged
http:/ /wwwamericanred beans or 1,5 -ounce 'can . bean.org/
. . ·red beans, rinsed, drained
1 pound boneless ;kiPJess
·chicken breast, cut into I /2·inch cubes
3 large carrots, diagonally
sliced 1 .
, • 2 to 3 teaspoons minced .
: garlic, to taste .
;
2 to 3 teaspoons minced
;,. ginger root or 1 to 2 teaspoon gro11nd ginger, to taste ·.
14
I /2-ounce ' can
reduced-sodium
fat-free
chicken broth ·
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon crushed red
pepper
2 to 3 tablespoons
This is why the Holzer
Hotline
reduced-sodium soy sauce
4 cups cooked rice
is staffed with a specially trained
Sliced green onions and
Holzer Medical fenter Registered Nurse
tops, 'for garnish
6 am until!" am, 1days a week .
Chopped peanuts, for garnish
If using dry-packaged
:
, -beans: In large saucepan,
: place navy and red beans and
cover with 2 inches water;
}ieat to boiling; ;let boil,
..41A: your physician about medication concerns
'uncovered, for 2 to 3 min:; utes. Remove fran~ heat,
' • cover and set aside for at least
: 1 hour and up to 4: hours .

is

unique,

being a collection of second
and third homes for extremely wealthy people. I think the
buildings themselves are very
handsome. In addition, the
town plan, by Andres Duariy
&amp; Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,
creates a sense of urbanity that
rivals tlw of'St. Augustine buildings clo~e to streets,
overhanging balconies, cou rtyard gardens," he says.
·

LANE
FACTORY ·
AUTHORIZED
REPEATOF A
SELLOUT!

•

writes.

Witold R ybczyrrski (VEEtold
Rib-CHIN-ski)
is
known for his opinions about
the kind of houses and community structures that people
create and how they infuse
them with meaning.
Rybczynski, Martin and
Margy Meyerson professor of
urbanism at Wharion/University of Pennsylvania, established this 'reputation in a
series of notable books,
includi11g "Home: A Short
History of an Idea (1986),"
and "The Most . Beautiful
House in the World" (!989),
which describes how he per~onally constructed his own
house - a reaction to decrees
of mass builders. ·

community. It

~ \;'b.~e
BUY ONE FOR

•499
GET THE OTHER
ONE FREE!!

.

_. __'

'
.................. ,.,law _ _ ,..,.do
PKANTOM Hille • ~ RooUr FIKitnlr
Tredlllontl oomiDit ftftltJ .looked to good. Tht

..........

....

YOUR

GAHOBUSTEA Htcle-A-C.. IH Rol:ktr Atcllr.r
Tht• Hkft.A-Chafn rKIIntr I• comlng·out wllh •

CHOICE

IANQI FMturing I dttp!W ptddeod '*k with thltf
lltitchln;.lattt pllow trm1 lnd I ltlldt boX ..at. So
llkt • IOid w 11t DM ·a.~ e1c ,,. '"'·

on

DON'T NEED TWO RECUNERS ... BRING A FRIEND AND SHARE THE SAVINGS!

BUY ONE FOR

BUY ONE FOR

$599

$699

We;re Looking Out for YOU!

"

FOR THIS SPECIAL .
SCREENING; YOU MUST
PRE-REGISTER QY 4 PM ON
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13th.
CALL 446-SJIJ.
Free and Open to the P11blk • Door Prius
SCREENING INCLUDES A
Staffed by: Holzer Medical Cenler, Gall/a County
11-HOUR FA§T BEFOREHAND Health Department tJnd Buc~ H/14 Career Center.

Drain soaking water and
rinse beans.
If using canned beans:
Omit above step,
1
Place beans, chicken, carrots, garlic, ginger and .1 1/4
cups chicken broth in slow
cooker; stir well. Cover and
cook on low until beans are
tender, 5 112 to 6 hours. ·
Turn slow cooker to high.
Combine cornstarch with
remaining 1/2 cup chicken
broth and stir into mixture in
cooker; stir in crushed red
pepper. Cover and cook
until thickened, a~out 30
minutes. Stir in .soy -sauce.
Serve over rice; sprinkle
with green onions and
peanuts.
Makes 6 servings, about 1
1/2 cups each.
Nutrition · information
per serving: 375 cal., 3 g fat,
56 g carbo., 285 mg sodium,
3'J g pro., 10 g dietary fiber,
46 mg chol.

(AP) -. The homes people
live in evolved out of simple
need or grand design, or both,
then were inevitably polished
by the urge to change.
Buildings are subject to the
satne whims as last season's
argii'es Wit&lt;;&gt;ld
. hemline,
Rybczynski in his '1ipcoming,
tenth book, "The Look of
Arc :utecture" ($25 hardcover,
May 24, 2001, Oxford University Pres!), which compares
architecture to fashion.
"When old buildings arc

Holzer Health Hotline

1

•

One-'R.oom Scfiools

Home: Houses evolve out of necessity and style

~ian-Spiced ,

Subscribe today!

POINT. PLEASANT - Revival
mill and cannot Ill gultanttld
services at Lifeline Apoatollc • to Ill prlnlld a apeaiHc number
Church,,Tuesday and Wednesday,
af daya. . ·
7 p.m. nlghtiy. James Owena, Weal
Union, speaker.

J{untington 'Towrlship

James
Sands

•

MEIGS CALENDAR
Bible study, Abundant Grace
Church, Middleport, Tuesday, 9
a.m. for women of all denoCJ1\IIatlone.

often talked about his 'through ticket' to heaven.
In reading Anderson's obituary
from the old Vinton Leader we note
that quite a number of the former
residents of Shiloh who came to
Anderson's funeral were then living
in Nelsonville. where they worked
in the brick factories or on the railroad. No doubt th e community of
Shiloh died out because the · land
mulattos, By 1900 almost all of the could no longer sustain a farm fampersons listed as mulatto in 1880 ily. The younger persons moved to
were listed as black in the 1900 cen- the city to find jobs.
sus. In the 1900 census there are
The week of Anderson's death, a
about 90 African Americans lisied in big Republican rally was held at the
Huntington Township, most of Shiloh schoolhouse where Rev. I.V.
whom were in the Shiloh conunu- Bryant spoke about the virtues of
nity.
William Howard Taft, then running
In the book on one room schools, for president .
it gives the family names of the stuMost of the r&lt;sidents of the Shiloh
dents who attended Shiloh: Ander- community from 1§so to I 900 are
son, Haley, Hawk, Howell , Long, listed as farmt!rs . John Bivens was a
Pounds and Scott. Among the early blacksmith and th ere were a few coal
settlers in 'the Shiloh community miners .. Most off the older residents
would mclude Jack Pounds . He was in 1900 rc·cordcd being born in
born in 1 !:!30 in Pennsylvania but either Ohio or Virginia. Some inemcame to Ohio just before the Civil bers of the Stratton · f.1111ily were
War. The five Apdcrson brothers born in Tennessee and a Mrs . Howcame to Oh10 in the late 18-+0's from ell was born in Mississippi .
Virginia and eventually settled at
In reading thc· 1919 column of
Shiloh.
Shiloh news we note that a Rev.
Christopher Columbus Anderson Tompkins came to Shiloh as a mis\Vas bor.n in 1825 and died in 1908 sionary speaker. He was a native of
and is buried in the small Shiloh South Africa. He ami the church hit
cemetery. He and bis wife Patsy, also it off so well Rev. Tompkins agreed .
born in Virginia, lived long. enough to become the pastor of the church.
to have five children; 36 grandchil"This is th ~ 25th day of March and
dren, ·a nd 21 great grandchildren, sc:arcely any winter. Mr. Ground
many of whom grew up in the Hog can fool all the people part of
Shiloh community. According to the the time and part of the people all
obituary of the man called 'Uncle the time, but he can't fool aU (he
Lum', "There was never a time too people all the time."(Shiloh column
busy but what he held family prayer Bulletin)
or the weather too bad but what he
We note that horseshoe pitching
attended church." Mr. Anderson was taken real serious at Shiloh in

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

.

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ce\abra·
lion of 15th annlverAry ol Poet
9053, VFW; post and auxiliary
members and their families, Sunday, 1 p.m.

6unb4!' llimrl-6entind • Page CS

Remembering the history of the Shiloh community

Gallia County Relay for Life
committee hosts ceremony
GALLIPOLISThe
Bo,nnie McFarland, RNC,
Gallia County Relay for BSN, director of wellness at
Life committee hosted a HMC, and chairperson for
kick-off luncheon and the Gallia County Relay for
recognition ceremony Tues- Life, presented special
day, Feb. 6, in the French awards to the organizations .
500 room of Holzer Med- who sponsored relay in
ical Center. Fifty attended 2000. Holzer Clinic, reprethis premiere actlvtty in sented oy Robert Daniel,
Gallia County's history with administrator; and Holzer
Relay for Life.
Medical Center, represented
Relay for Life, the signa- by LaMar Wyse, president
ture event of the American and CEO, corporate spanCancer Society, is a unique sors for the 2000 event,
community happening that received special plaques
allows participants from all designed and made by Relay
walks of · life including for Life committee member
patients, medical support Sharon Brown. Also recog. staff, corporations, civic nized were additional sponorgimizations, churches and · sors, Ohio Valley Bank, repcommunity volunteers to · resented by Kyla Carpenter; l
join together in the fight and GKN Sinter Metals ,
against cancer. Always in represented by Sherri TayGallia County during June, lor. Also assisting with the
this year's Relay for Life will ·presentation were Jenni
be held June 22 - 23, 2001 Dovyak and Kathi Nagy,
at the Gallipolis City Park.
Relay for Life committee
Tuesday's luncheon and members .
Jennifer Hamon, income
recognition ceremony ·provided an opportunity to development director of the
honor those who supported South Central .Office of the
Relay for Life .in 2000. American Cancer Society,
Serving as Master of Cere- spoke about their role in the
monies was Steve Rein- Relay. for Life, as well as
hardt, honorary chair for the share .a video presentation
2001 Relay 'for Life. After an entitled, "Caroline's Mirainvocation by Rev. Arthur cle." After the program, repC. Lund, director of chap- resentatives from the Amerlaincy s'e rvices at Holzer ican Cancer Society were
Medical Center and the available to answer questions
luncheon, Alice A. Grickos- about relay.
ki, M.D., 'general surgeon at
"Relay for Life is a special
Holzer Medical Center and happening that we want to
Holzer Clinic, spoke about, see grow each year," McFar"What Relay for Life means land said. "Tuesday's event
to Galli a County." Past relay · allowed us to officially
experiences in the county thank the people who prowere shared and an ·invita- vided the wonderful suption extended to join this port we had throughout the
year's
festivities.
Also community during last
announ~ed . was a special year's Relay for Life. We
awarq the Gallia County appreciate all of-our sponU nit received after their · sors and join with them in
2000 relay. They accom- , the fig~t. to find a cure .£or
plished a
20 percent cancer."
increase in dollars raised
Teams are stiij needed for
from the previous year, and this year's ·relay. If you are
v;ere one of 15 counties in interested or have questions,
the state to receive the please call McFarland . at
(740) 446-5679.
award.

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

1-800-462-5255

,,

••

"

·auY ONE FOR

•799
GET 'rHE OTHER
ONE FREE!!

·-·--- --.
.-of

-IIOCKIJI
one ....

RICLIIIII

11rg1 ~ 11m1 and 11tliell roll •t. Two moiOI'
' ~ lnd
atmllol'....

MASSAGE

.

Quality Furniture Plus, Inc.

' . . lien tor dttalll.

42123 Stele Rt. 7 • Box 250 • Tuppera Plaine, OH 45783 • Acro11 from Fermer• Bank

(740) 667·7388 •1-800-200-4005 • Mon-Thurs 9to 5, Friday 9 to 6, Saturday 9-4
•

�Page C4 • a.unbap l!:ime• ·a.entintl

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

. Sunday, February 11, 2001

Sunday, February 11,2001

I
.

l
./

1
Charles and LaVera Yeager

'I

Yeager 5Oth anniversary

I

MASON - C harles and They are the parents of two
· La Vera Yeager will observe children, Sally (Ralph) Ross
· their 50th wedding anniver- and Marty (Susan) Yeager, and
sary at an open reception have eight grandchildren and .
· hosted by their children to be
two great-grandchildren.
held Sunday, Feb. 18, 2 to 4
The . couple has requested
· p.m., at the Mason United
that gifts be omitted but that
. Methodist Church.
their
friends and . relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Yeager were
married on Feb. 17, 1951 on come by and reminisce with
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. them about the past 50 years. ·

Safety tips from the
USDA ·for slow cookers
(AP) Susan Conley,
director of education for the
Food Safety and lnsp,ction
Service of the USDA,
reminds cooks that the
USDA offers advice on using
a slow cooker.
Among the USDA's safety
tips are these:
-Make sure your hands,
the cooker, work area and
utensils are clean . .
· -Keep perishable foods
refrigerated until you are
· ready to use them. You can
: cut items up ahead of time,
: but store meat and vegetables
: separate from each other in
: the refrigerator. ·
' . - Defrost meat or poultry
· before putting it in the slow
cooker.
-Select foods with a high
moisture content such as
· soups, stews or spaghetti

'

sauce.

.
:
;
:
·
:
:
:
·
:
:
:

-Fill the cooker no less
than half full and no more
than two-thirds full. Vegetables cook more slowly than
meat and poultry in a slow
cooker so the vegetables
should be placed around the
bottom and side of the pot.
-Do not usc a slow
cooker for a roast or whole
chicken, because the food
will cook so slowly it may

remain in the bacterial danger zone for too long.
-Keep the slow cooker's
lid on, removing .it only to
stir the food or to check for
doneness.
· -If the power goes out
when you are not home,
throw the food out. !f you
are at home, cook the food
immediately by some other
means S\Ich as a gas stove, on
the outdoor grill or at a
house where · the power is
on . If the food was completely cooked before the
power · went out, the food
should remain safe up to two
hours in the cooker with the
'
power off.
-Store leftovers in shallow covered containers and
refrigerate . within two hours
after cooking. Reheating
leftovers in a slow cooker is
not recommended. However, cooked food can be
brought to steaming on th.e
stove top or in the
microwave and then put in
the preheated cooker to keep
it hot for serving.
For more information, on
· the Web:

lb the 1920 Gallia County census,
only four African-American persons
are listed as living in Huntington
Township: Andy, Charity and Elizabeth Stratton and Peter Bunce, who
is technicaUy )isted as a mulatto. Mr.
Bunce may have boen the first black
undertaker in Gallia history. He was
• an associate for the Buder Funeral
· :Parlor in Vinton. Most likely, the
;1920 census taker failed to count
.;most of the blacks living in a small
.:·community called Shiloh in section
:&gt;21 of Huntington Township.
: We know there had to be at least
50 or 60 persons in that community
in 1919 for in that year the Gallipoli~ Bulletin newspaper even carried a
regular column detailing the news of
the Shiloh community.According to
; the b~ok, "Gallia County One
: J3-oom Schools, The Cradle Years,"
• ,):he school for blacks at Shiloh was
: )till in existence at least until 1922.
' :And there was also a Shiloh Baptist
:,Church until at least the '1920's. ·
. In a 1919 Gallip'olis Bulletin we
·read: "The Sunday School at Shiloh
· ·is progressing nicely with a good
· attendance under the direction of
· Mrs. Almira Leach."
· ' In the book on Gallia's one room
'schools, it says: "The word Shiloh
means the name Jesus (Genesis
· -49. 10). We doq't know the exact
· year the school was closed, but we
: know that Roy Huntley bought the
·. ;building and moved i.t to his farm.
· +I.e used the lumber to help build a
•
-barn, which is still standing."
: ; Most likely, the Shiloh communi; "ty grew up around the time of the
::civil War. By 1880 there were some
::123 black persons in Huntington
:rownship. The ce~SIJS taker in 1880
•!actually recorded 31 blacks and 88

CORPORATE SPONSORS - Robert Daniel; left, Holzer Clinic
administrator, and LaMar Wyse, right, Holzer Medical Center
'president and CEO, were recognized for their corporate spon·
sorship in support of the American Cancer Society's Relay for
Life. Each organization was presented a special relay plaque
designed and made by Relay for Life committee member
Sharon Brown.

http:/ /www.fsis.usda.gov/oa
/pubs/slocookr. htm/

MONDAY
. MIDDLEPORT..:.. DAV Chaptar
53, dinner at 6:30p.m. meeting at 7
p.m. Monday at the hall.
TUESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ealtam
Band Boosters, band room, Tussday, 7:30 p,in. Parents urged to
anend.
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Rock Springs Fairgrounds lair
board olllce.

Antiqu~s

CiHto

thicken and Beans ·

uiVI~!UN

•

AWARD W!NNER

•

•
••

20('!!:~

:: (AP) - Used with a little
(orethought, a slow cooker
·'an be a great time-saver. It's
a4o eminently suitable for
'making the healthful, low-fat
soups and stews that are wel:aome family fare at this tim~

SPJClAL AWARD - Tt,le Gal- Wuerch, Bonnie McFarland'·
li a County Relay for Life com- chairperson, Gladys Grant,
mittee was recently present· Jenni Dovyak and Kathi Na~.
1
· ~·
/•1'
' t JJ' (J
ed a special award for their.
efforts In the 2000 Relay for ·
Life. Pictured with. the special banner are .Gallia County
Relay for Life committee
members, left to right, Addle

~fyear.

; :·· ~~.Hearty foo~s, such. as
· b.eans, are especially su1ted
•4&gt;r these cooking methods;'
:~ys prolific cookbo'ok writer
:~ue Spider, "because they
:add the full-bodied flavor
:and rich texture we associate
; with all-in-ane meals."
Slow cookers, also known
• as crock pots, cook food for
:between about 5 to 12
:pours. Often you can go
:away and leave the cooking
: to the pot. Check the manu;. facturer's manual, since
; cooking times may vary with
; different brands.
.• This brightly seasoned
: recipe is one to try for a cold
:day:
,!\sian-Spiced
Chicken and ·Beans

DON'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

RACINE - Racine Board o.f
Public Affairs. Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.,
mun~lpal building .

MIDDLEPORT -

Women's

..
• All size extra long
for added oom10t1

your body.-

CHESTER - Cheater Township trueteea, Tuesday, 7 p.m. town
hall at Chostar.
The Community C.lendtlr It
publlahtd a• a free Hnlce Ia
nan-praftt groupe wt1hlni Ill ·
announce mMtlnga- apecl.l
-18. The calendar 11 'not

FLAIR
I

cllllgllld Ia P,amo11 Alii ar

fund rill- af any type. lteme

FURNITURE

are prlnlld only •• •P- per·

DESIGN

Ill. Z. Gllllpello Ferey, WV

675-ll7l

Annual Heart Fair

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Dlatrtct's
regular meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, February 14,2001
8:00 am - 4:00pm
French 500 Room
Special Screening W Blood Pressure Screenings ·
W Cholesterol &amp; Glucose

Sponsored liy the
Holzer Medical Center ·
Wellness Depa~tment
·and Critical Care Unit

•
'''

.f
'

•••

'r

I

Winter
At Both 'ic.\tlons.

Pleasant &amp;

1u% off Storewide
save up to 50% on Selected

,.
I

~

••

•

''

•

Kiplin Shoe

Rt•.J Bypcw
Point Pleasant, WV

304-175-7870
Mon-Sot8-7Sun 1-1

·'

..

(11 am - 4 pm) - Non Fasting .
W Body Fat Analysis
• Nutrition Services
W Stress Management
• "Ask the Pharmacist"
• American Heart Association.
Representatives
• Cardiac Catbeteration Info

•

300 2ndAwGoWpoU1, OH

740-.... 1-8010
Mon l Frll'.l0-8 Tue, Wtd, Thun 1:30·1
Sot. 9:30-5:00 SundayCioltd

SHILOH-- This map from the book, 'Gallia County One Room Schools, The
Cradle Years,' shows the one room schools in Huntington Township . In sec·
tion 21 was located the African American school named Shiloh. There was
also a church called Shiloh in this community.
1919 · as was the chicken business.
One resident was selling chickens for
$2 each. Another had 21 hens and
had made $35 in selling eggs in just
three months.
"Mrs . Mitty Pounds was made to
cry and laugh for joy last friday
when her son, Bundy Pounds ,
stepped in, whom she was not

expectitlg frmn overseas . in France.

Bundy is one who has been to the
front in several battles. He .never
halted or faltered but trusted in his
God, a soldier among soldiers. Hurrah for Bundy' May God bless
him."(Bulletin) Both Mitty and
Bundy Pounds are buried in the
Shiloh Cemetery.

Do not '0/ or drink for the 12 hours.
prior to )'OlD' schtdtded screening
taU medication.

l•ll IIIHlt 111111111.111•'11

'dllh· II · I;.

( llll t l \ \ t l l l l i ' ' ' ) ' l ' ·illlllilll

j

\I,

11(-·1111 l l t l

,1,,
'\j,

II

t)

Reflecting on current
styles, Rybczynski says, "Have
you noticed how many young
architects arc using tensioned
wires as balusters in stair and
balcony railings? Or bare polished concr~te for floors? Or
covering buildings with zinc,
or titanium, and other unusu;ai metals? These are all examples of how fashioi1 makes
itself felt in architecture."
Rybczynski approves of a

trend to intelligent planning,
as exemplified in the exclusive
·community of Windsor in
Vero ~each, on the central
east co~st of Florida.
It includes a shift toward
pedestrian villages, planned
for people rather than for
·cars. Windsor demonstrates
this idea with shell rock roads
and narrow lanes and garages
discreetly out of main view.
"Windsor is not a true

\;~~~~·~"t
0~~
\f.G f\)f.G
..
~

torn down, tbl! mo[ive ma.y

be expediency or crass commercialism. but it may also be
a desire for something new.
This is as true of buildings as
· it .is of women's hats," he

;:.c,\t-~ttt- t»\)' 0~~··

(Preparation 1'5· minutes,
Recipe from Bean Educa: cooking time 5 1/2 to 6
.tion Ill Awareness Network.
: hours)
For more recipes and
1/2 cup dry-packaged
'
~ navy beans or 15-ounce can online cookbook, on the
·navy beans, rinsed, drained
Web;
. 112 cup dry"packaged
http:/ /wwwamericanred beans or 1,5 -ounce 'can . bean.org/
. . ·red beans, rinsed, drained
1 pound boneless ;kiPJess
·chicken breast, cut into I /2·inch cubes
3 large carrots, diagonally
sliced 1 .
, • 2 to 3 teaspoons minced .
: garlic, to taste .
;
2 to 3 teaspoons minced
;,. ginger root or 1 to 2 teaspoon gro11nd ginger, to taste ·.
14
I /2-ounce ' can
reduced-sodium
fat-free
chicken broth ·
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon crushed red
pepper
2 to 3 tablespoons
This is why the Holzer
Hotline
reduced-sodium soy sauce
4 cups cooked rice
is staffed with a specially trained
Sliced green onions and
Holzer Medical fenter Registered Nurse
tops, 'for garnish
6 am until!" am, 1days a week .
Chopped peanuts, for garnish
If using dry-packaged
:
, -beans: In large saucepan,
: place navy and red beans and
cover with 2 inches water;
}ieat to boiling; ;let boil,
..41A: your physician about medication concerns
'uncovered, for 2 to 3 min:; utes. Remove fran~ heat,
' • cover and set aside for at least
: 1 hour and up to 4: hours .

is

unique,

being a collection of second
and third homes for extremely wealthy people. I think the
buildings themselves are very
handsome. In addition, the
town plan, by Andres Duariy
&amp; Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,
creates a sense of urbanity that
rivals tlw of'St. Augustine buildings clo~e to streets,
overhanging balconies, cou rtyard gardens," he says.
·

LANE
FACTORY ·
AUTHORIZED
REPEATOF A
SELLOUT!

•

writes.

Witold R ybczyrrski (VEEtold
Rib-CHIN-ski)
is
known for his opinions about
the kind of houses and community structures that people
create and how they infuse
them with meaning.
Rybczynski, Martin and
Margy Meyerson professor of
urbanism at Wharion/University of Pennsylvania, established this 'reputation in a
series of notable books,
includi11g "Home: A Short
History of an Idea (1986),"
and "The Most . Beautiful
House in the World" (!989),
which describes how he per~onally constructed his own
house - a reaction to decrees
of mass builders. ·

community. It

~ \;'b.~e
BUY ONE FOR

•499
GET THE OTHER
ONE FREE!!

.

_. __'

'
.................. ,.,law _ _ ,..,.do
PKANTOM Hille • ~ RooUr FIKitnlr
Tredlllontl oomiDit ftftltJ .looked to good. Tht

..........

....

YOUR

GAHOBUSTEA Htcle-A-C.. IH Rol:ktr Atcllr.r
Tht• Hkft.A-Chafn rKIIntr I• comlng·out wllh •

CHOICE

IANQI FMturing I dttp!W ptddeod '*k with thltf
lltitchln;.lattt pllow trm1 lnd I ltlldt boX ..at. So
llkt • IOid w 11t DM ·a.~ e1c ,,. '"'·

on

DON'T NEED TWO RECUNERS ... BRING A FRIEND AND SHARE THE SAVINGS!

BUY ONE FOR

BUY ONE FOR

$599

$699

We;re Looking Out for YOU!

"

FOR THIS SPECIAL .
SCREENING; YOU MUST
PRE-REGISTER QY 4 PM ON
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13th.
CALL 446-SJIJ.
Free and Open to the P11blk • Door Prius
SCREENING INCLUDES A
Staffed by: Holzer Medical Cenler, Gall/a County
11-HOUR FA§T BEFOREHAND Health Department tJnd Buc~ H/14 Career Center.

Drain soaking water and
rinse beans.
If using canned beans:
Omit above step,
1
Place beans, chicken, carrots, garlic, ginger and .1 1/4
cups chicken broth in slow
cooker; stir well. Cover and
cook on low until beans are
tender, 5 112 to 6 hours. ·
Turn slow cooker to high.
Combine cornstarch with
remaining 1/2 cup chicken
broth and stir into mixture in
cooker; stir in crushed red
pepper. Cover and cook
until thickened, a~out 30
minutes. Stir in .soy -sauce.
Serve over rice; sprinkle
with green onions and
peanuts.
Makes 6 servings, about 1
1/2 cups each.
Nutrition · information
per serving: 375 cal., 3 g fat,
56 g carbo., 285 mg sodium,
3'J g pro., 10 g dietary fiber,
46 mg chol.

(AP) -. The homes people
live in evolved out of simple
need or grand design, or both,
then were inevitably polished
by the urge to change.
Buildings are subject to the
satne whims as last season's
argii'es Wit&lt;;&gt;ld
. hemline,
Rybczynski in his '1ipcoming,
tenth book, "The Look of
Arc :utecture" ($25 hardcover,
May 24, 2001, Oxford University Pres!), which compares
architecture to fashion.
"When old buildings arc

Holzer Health Hotline

1

•

One-'R.oom Scfiools

Home: Houses evolve out of necessity and style

~ian-Spiced ,

Subscribe today!

POINT. PLEASANT - Revival
mill and cannot Ill gultanttld
services at Lifeline Apoatollc • to Ill prlnlld a apeaiHc number
Church,,Tuesday and Wednesday,
af daya. . ·
7 p.m. nlghtiy. James Owena, Weal
Union, speaker.

J{untington 'Towrlship

James
Sands

•

MEIGS CALENDAR
Bible study, Abundant Grace
Church, Middleport, Tuesday, 9
a.m. for women of all denoCJ1\IIatlone.

often talked about his 'through ticket' to heaven.
In reading Anderson's obituary
from the old Vinton Leader we note
that quite a number of the former
residents of Shiloh who came to
Anderson's funeral were then living
in Nelsonville. where they worked
in the brick factories or on the railroad. No doubt th e community of
Shiloh died out because the · land
mulattos, By 1900 almost all of the could no longer sustain a farm fampersons listed as mulatto in 1880 ily. The younger persons moved to
were listed as black in the 1900 cen- the city to find jobs.
sus. In the 1900 census there are
The week of Anderson's death, a
about 90 African Americans lisied in big Republican rally was held at the
Huntington Township, most of Shiloh schoolhouse where Rev. I.V.
whom were in the Shiloh conunu- Bryant spoke about the virtues of
nity.
William Howard Taft, then running
In the book on one room schools, for president .
it gives the family names of the stuMost of the r&lt;sidents of the Shiloh
dents who attended Shiloh: Ander- community from 1§so to I 900 are
son, Haley, Hawk, Howell , Long, listed as farmt!rs . John Bivens was a
Pounds and Scott. Among the early blacksmith and th ere were a few coal
settlers in 'the Shiloh community miners .. Most off the older residents
would mclude Jack Pounds . He was in 1900 rc·cordcd being born in
born in 1 !:!30 in Pennsylvania but either Ohio or Virginia. Some inemcame to Ohio just before the Civil bers of the Stratton · f.1111ily were
War. The five Apdcrson brothers born in Tennessee and a Mrs . Howcame to Oh10 in the late 18-+0's from ell was born in Mississippi .
Virginia and eventually settled at
In reading thc· 1919 column of
Shiloh.
Shiloh news we note that a Rev.
Christopher Columbus Anderson Tompkins came to Shiloh as a mis\Vas bor.n in 1825 and died in 1908 sionary speaker. He was a native of
and is buried in the small Shiloh South Africa. He ami the church hit
cemetery. He and bis wife Patsy, also it off so well Rev. Tompkins agreed .
born in Virginia, lived long. enough to become the pastor of the church.
to have five children; 36 grandchil"This is th ~ 25th day of March and
dren, ·a nd 21 great grandchildren, sc:arcely any winter. Mr. Ground
many of whom grew up in the Hog can fool all the people part of
Shiloh community. According to the the time and part of the people all
obituary of the man called 'Uncle the time, but he can't fool aU (he
Lum', "There was never a time too people all the time."(Shiloh column
busy but what he held family prayer Bulletin)
or the weather too bad but what he
We note that horseshoe pitching
attended church." Mr. Anderson was taken real serious at Shiloh in

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

.

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ce\abra·
lion of 15th annlverAry ol Poet
9053, VFW; post and auxiliary
members and their families, Sunday, 1 p.m.

6unb4!' llimrl-6entind • Page CS

Remembering the history of the Shiloh community

Gallia County Relay for Life
committee hosts ceremony
GALLIPOLISThe
Bo,nnie McFarland, RNC,
Gallia County Relay for BSN, director of wellness at
Life committee hosted a HMC, and chairperson for
kick-off luncheon and the Gallia County Relay for
recognition ceremony Tues- Life, presented special
day, Feb. 6, in the French awards to the organizations .
500 room of Holzer Med- who sponsored relay in
ical Center. Fifty attended 2000. Holzer Clinic, reprethis premiere actlvtty in sented oy Robert Daniel,
Gallia County's history with administrator; and Holzer
Relay for Life.
Medical Center, represented
Relay for Life, the signa- by LaMar Wyse, president
ture event of the American and CEO, corporate spanCancer Society, is a unique sors for the 2000 event,
community happening that received special plaques
allows participants from all designed and made by Relay
walks of · life including for Life committee member
patients, medical support Sharon Brown. Also recog. staff, corporations, civic nized were additional sponorgimizations, churches and · sors, Ohio Valley Bank, repcommunity volunteers to · resented by Kyla Carpenter; l
join together in the fight and GKN Sinter Metals ,
against cancer. Always in represented by Sherri TayGallia County during June, lor. Also assisting with the
this year's Relay for Life will ·presentation were Jenni
be held June 22 - 23, 2001 Dovyak and Kathi Nagy,
at the Gallipolis City Park.
Relay for Life committee
Tuesday's luncheon and members .
Jennifer Hamon, income
recognition ceremony ·provided an opportunity to development director of the
honor those who supported South Central .Office of the
Relay for Life .in 2000. American Cancer Society,
Serving as Master of Cere- spoke about their role in the
monies was Steve Rein- Relay. for Life, as well as
hardt, honorary chair for the share .a video presentation
2001 Relay 'for Life. After an entitled, "Caroline's Mirainvocation by Rev. Arthur cle." After the program, repC. Lund, director of chap- resentatives from the Amerlaincy s'e rvices at Holzer ican Cancer Society were
Medical Center and the available to answer questions
luncheon, Alice A. Grickos- about relay.
ki, M.D., 'general surgeon at
"Relay for Life is a special
Holzer Medical Center and happening that we want to
Holzer Clinic, spoke about, see grow each year," McFar"What Relay for Life means land said. "Tuesday's event
to Galli a County." Past relay · allowed us to officially
experiences in the county thank the people who prowere shared and an ·invita- vided the wonderful suption extended to join this port we had throughout the
year's
festivities.
Also community during last
announ~ed . was a special year's Relay for Life. We
awarq the Gallia County appreciate all of-our sponU nit received after their · sors and join with them in
2000 relay. They accom- , the fig~t. to find a cure .£or
plished a
20 percent cancer."
increase in dollars raised
Teams are stiij needed for
from the previous year, and this year's ·relay. If you are
v;ere one of 15 counties in interested or have questions,
the state to receive the please call McFarland . at
(740) 446-5679.
award.

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

1-800-462-5255

,,

••

"

·auY ONE FOR

•799
GET 'rHE OTHER
ONE FREE!!

·-·--- --.
.-of

-IIOCKIJI
one ....

RICLIIIII

11rg1 ~ 11m1 and 11tliell roll •t. Two moiOI'
' ~ lnd
atmllol'....

MASSAGE

.

Quality Furniture Plus, Inc.

' . . lien tor dttalll.

42123 Stele Rt. 7 • Box 250 • Tuppera Plaine, OH 45783 • Acro11 from Fermer• Bank

(740) 667·7388 •1-800-200-4005 • Mon-Thurs 9to 5, Friday 9 to 6, Saturday 9-4
•

�Page C6 • &amp;unlla!' l!:imtll -&amp;entintl

I

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

Sunday, February 11, 2001
Sunday, February 11, 2001

.~:Holzer Medical Center's -Heart Fair.slatecl for Valentine's
.

,.

GALLIPOLIS In conjunc. tion with February as American
: Heart Month, Holzer Medical
; Center's annual Heart Fair will
take place on Valentine's Day,
~·Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2001, from 8
:~ a.m. until 4 p.m. in the hospital's
' ;French 500 room. The event is free
::and open to the public.
:; Screenings will include blood
:• pressure, non-fasting glucose and
•'
c
. etc.
·!cholesterol,
body 12t
ana l yStS,
:• Information
regarding CPR,
~ ! nutr~tion, stress, physical activity,
' • cardiac catheterization and smoking will be available as well. A
:; pharmacist will be on-hand to
~·anSwer quest1ons or concerns, as
:! \vell as representatives from the
·i American Heart Association .
·, A special lipid profile· froe
, screening will be available from 8. 11 a.m. Wednesday. The lipid pro; file measure s total cholesterol,
· HDL (good cholesterol), LDL (bad
cholesterol) and triglycerides. To

!i

!

•

partiCipate in this special screening, you must pre- registe r by 4
p.m . on Tuesday, Feb. 13 by calling
446-5313 . The screening includes
a 12-hour fast beforehand so those
wl'io register for this special
screening are asked to not eat or
drink for the 12 hours prior to
their scheduled screening, except
water and necessary medications.
The Heart Fait, co-chaired by
Faye Hammond, RN , Bonnie
McFarland, RNC, BSN, and Pam
Samons, LPN, is sponsored by the
Medical Center's Wellness Department and Critical Care Unit. The
Fair will be staffed by Holzer
Medical Center employees, the
Gallia Cou~ty Health Department
and Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The theme for American Heart
Month 2001 is "Be Prepared for
Cardiac Emergencies ... The American H~art Association reports the
following 1~1ost comn1on warning
signals of ;1 heart a-tta ck : LJI1COn1-

:Internet open$ world
.. of infonnation to
~iaurora
borealis fans
,.
•

~

.

"'• ANCHORAGE, Alaska
.
:; (AP) - The Internet 1s
' ' opening up a world of
~: infornution to astronomy
buffs and scientists who are
~using satellite data to get a
:: good look at the Northern
Lights.
,
The National Oceanic
:! and Atmospheric Admin is~ tration has four polar-orbit! ing satellites equipped with
! the Space Environment
:Monitor (SEM). Aboard the
;sEM-2 is the Total Energy
:Detector, which is actually
; eight detectors that count
:charged particles moving
Earth.
••.. toward
Internet users also are
~availing . themselves of
t NASA's Polar Satellite,
I which has a small camera
iblled
the
Ultraviolet
: rmager that takes pictures of
: the aurora's !lltraviolet light.
· The images are updated
.every seven n1inutes on the
:world Wide Web when the
'satellite is in contact with
the Earth.
Amateu i astronomers say
the data now available on
the Internet is taking the
'guesswork out of one of
nature's wonders. The information is letting thein kn.a w
when it makes sense to bundle up, venture out in freez~
ing temperatures and .drive
to ren1ote locations to view
the aurora borealis.
The NOAA satellites
download information to a
\-acking station at Gilmore
treek northeast of Fairbanks as often as every 105
minutes. The information is
sent by satellite to a NOAA

1

1

computer facility in suburban Washington, D.C., and
fr.a m there to NOAA's
Space Environment Center
in Boulder, Colo.
David Evans, an SEC scientist in Boulder, said the
whole process takes about
45 minutes. Downloaded
images of the au'rora ovals
on the North and South
poles show up on the Web
about once every hour.
.
Evans said downloading
th~ information began four
years ago and the Web site
has becpme increasingly
popular. Between 2,000 and
4,000 Internet users access
the SEC's Web site daily, and ,
that number increases to
more than 10,000 users a
day whep solar storms are
predicted:
Amateur
astronomer
Richard
Pellessier
of
Anchorage said before he
began \ISing the Web he .
bundled up mot'e often to
drive beyond the ciry lights,
only to be disappointed by a
weak display or none at all.
"I've been using the
lnte~ net products, especially
the dowi1loaded satellite
pictures and n1easure1nt:nts.
for about two years now," he·
said. "I just want to know if
it ~s going to tnake sense to
go ou t tonight or not."
The· au1;0ra borealis is
caused by solar disturba nces
that produce the electrically
charged particles that move
toward Earth at 900,000 ·
mph. The larger the solar
disturbance, the. more likely
an awesome display.
&gt;

'

fortable pressure, fullness, squeezing or pain in the center of the
chest lasting more than a few minutes : pain spreading to the shoulders, neck or arms; and chest discomfort with lightheadedness,
fainting, sweating, nausea or shortness of breath . Less common
warning signs of a heart attack
include: atypical chest pain, stomach or abdominal pain; nausea or
. dizziness; shortness of breath and
difficulty ·breathing; unexplained
anxiety, weakness or fatigue; and
palpitations, cold sweats or paleness. The AHA also reports that
coronary heart disease is Anlt!rica's
number one killer. ·
For information on this year's
Heart Heallh Fair, please call the
Holzer Medical Center's Wellness
Deparnnenpt (740) 446-5679.

Day

Greenthumb classes
....~-:offered to seniors at URG

-·.

•
RIO
GRANDE - Area by a Greenthumb project
.
..
~..: seruar Cttlzens can now gain
instructor, will be held in a
~ computer training and job
new computer lab on the
~ skills through a special class Rio Grande campus drat
~ being offered at the Univerwill feature at least 12 new
t sity of Rio Grande/Rio computers .
.,. Grande Community ColThe two-week course
:;: lege.
begins on Monday, Feb. 19
:.: Greenthumb Employment
and continues thrtiugh Fri=::Services is a statewide grant: ·- funded program that is day, March 2. The course
sessions are held for four
:. offering the free classes at ·
Rio Grande to area residents hours each day. The classes
t who meet certain income are free and open to anyone
l guidelines and want to learn over the age of 55 who
t;:more about computers so meets certain)ncome guide!!"they can use them in their lines.
The classes will give the
. ,. present or future employstudents information · on
~ ment.
computer programs that are
&lt; . "The goal is to give them
",basic computer skills," said used to write documents,
~,jerry Mossbarger, director of keep data on spreadsheets
the Berry Center for Eco- and do oiher tasks that the
nomic Development at Rio students can use at home or
Grande. The Berry Center is 111
future
employment
coordinating the program opportunities.
ilong with the Crossroads
For information, call a
program at' Rio Grande. The representative of the Green, _class, which is being taught . thumb project at 286-6242.

.r

PREPARING FOR HEART FAIR ...... Holzer Medical Center Heart Fair Planning
committee members plan for Wednesday's Heart Fair at the hospltal:s
french 500 room. Pictured , left to right, are Pam Samons, LPN, Bonn1e
Mcfarland, RNC, BSN, and Faye Hammond, RN. The annual fair will take
place from 8 .a.m. 4 p.m. For information, call Mcfarland at (7 40) 4465679.

Rio Grande's SIFE team teach skills in area schools
RIO GRANDE - Students and contmue through Friday,
at the University of Rio Feb. 16.
The relaxed courses are
Grande/Rio Grande Cm1ununity College are busy teaching designed to teach the srudents
senior citizens computer skills simple things like turning ?n
and teaching area eleinenrary computers, logging onto com- 1
and junior high school studentl&gt; purer ;-ystems, calling up programs so they can type letters
business skills.
The Rio Grande students are and other documents, saving
all part of the Students In Free their documents and re-opening
Enterprise (SIFE) program on their documents.
"It's just very basic," said
campus. As part of the program,
. the students learn about busin.,; Smith, who also serves as the
and free enterprise and also par- project coordinator for the
ticipate in community service Berry Center at Rio Grande.
projects to share their knowl- Around 20 students are currently taking the class.
edge with area. residents.
"Half of them have never
The computer skills project is
bringing ~rea residents to the even turned on a computer,"
Rio Grande campus to learn said Mossbarger, who also serves
basic computer · skills. SIFE as the director of the Berry
member Steven Cornett is lead- Center for Economic Developing the d:isses, wh,ile other ment at Rio Grande. Many of
members of the SIFE team and the students were initially worSIFE co-advisors Jerry Moss- ried that they would damage the
barger and Carol Smith also computers or they would just
hel~ with the classes. The Area get confused on the computet.,
Agency Ol) Aging helped pro- but those worried quickly dissi- ,
mote ·and organize the Class ses- pated for the seniors.
The first classes got the stusions.
The · computer classes are dentl&gt; used to the computers, the
being held 0 n Fridays from second introduced them to the
Internet arid the Feb. 16 class
noon until! p.m.
They srarted on Friday, Fe~. 2 will focus on e-mail.

"We have had a lot of positive questions such as 11 What is mass
feedback," Smith said. The stu- production?"
The SIFE smdents kicked off
dents in the class include two
members who retired from their their "Who Wants To Be In
work with American Electric Business" · contests during the
Power (AEP) the same week · week ofJan. 29 through Feb. 2,
that they started, the class, and which was "'Teach A Child
the Rev. W.·Luther Tracy, a Rio About Business Week." The
Grande resident and minister SIF.E students enjoyed the pp;,who raught philosophy at Rio sentations so much that they are
Grande for several years.
now continuing them at :II'C•
Area residents who would like schools.
to rake part in the Feb. 16 sesTh~ contests and the clasSes
sion, or in future classes raught for senior citizens both serve as ~
by SIFE members can caiJ. the few of the community service
'
Berry Center at 245-7367 for
projects that the SIFE members
information.
lead every year. Thr Rio Granlle
; The SIFE '!lembers have also
SIFE chapter is c~nliimq\]Sly
been traveling to sc)1ools
rated in national -~pnrests as one
throughout Gallia Count)' to
t~ach students in grades K-8 of the top SlFE chapre~ in rJte
.country due in part to .its ~­
al&gt;out business and economics.
The SIFE members created a bers' participation in a variety &lt;&gt;f
1e for the studentl&gt; that is community service projJ!~ "lld
fashioned after the "Who Wants their knowledge ofbu5iness and
' ·
To Be A Millionaire?" TV free enterprise.
~eshow. At area schools, the
SlfE members . are hosti11g
"Who Wants To Be., Iri Bu:;i-.
n~ss?" The members heist the .
quiz contests for teams in are:i
schools and ask · the students

...

''

I

I

:

!

•
l

•

&amp;unba!' l!:imtf -&amp;tntintl • Page C7

Local nurses named to advisory groups
GALLIPOLIS Four
Southeastern Ohio nurses
have been selected to participate in each of the four advisory groul" for. the Ohio
Board of Nursing located in
Columbus. The Ohio Board
of Nursing is responsible for
the oversight of nursing practice in the state. Registered
nurses from Holzer Medical
Center and the University of
Rio Grande/Holzer College
of Nursing provide input to
the board.
Nurses appointed to the
advisory groups include
Holzer
Medical
Center
employees April McLain, RN,
MBA, chief nurse ~xecutive;
Marsha Rodgers, RN, C,
BSN, education coordinator;·
and Lennie'.Davis, RN, MSN,
CNAA, director of education.
In addition, Donna Mitchell,
Ph.D., RN, CNS, chair of the
Holzet School of Nursing at
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College, was also
appointed to an advisory
group.
McLain is a member of the
advisory group on nursing
practice. This group addresses
and provides input inro. the
major practice issues that significantly impact. the regulation of nursing.

Rodgers is an alternate to
the advisory group on continuing competency, which
develops strategies and rationale to assess knowledge and
skill level of nurses returning
to practice.
Davis has been appointed to
the advisory group on continuing education. This advisory
group addresses the major
continuing education issues
that significantly impact the
· regulation of nursing and provides · input0 to .the board
regarding current continuing
education issues.
Mitchell is a member of the
advisory group on nursing
education. This group performs an in-depth review of
proposed .
curriculum
changes, additions of courses
or new education progranw
They also address and provide
input W the board regarding
education issues that significantly impact the regulation
of nursing education programs.
Davis said, "I feel we are
most fortunate in Southeastern Ohio tci have nurses
selected for t~ese groups. This
gives us representation. in
Columbus on the iss11es that
face nursing ~oday.· I am
pleased to be a member of
one of the groups and think it

NEW APPOINTEES - Recently app!1inted to serve on advisory groups for the Ohio Board of Nursing were, left to right
Donna Mitchell, Ph.D., RN , CNS; Lennie Davis, RN, MSN,
CNAA; Marsha Rodgers, RN , C, BSN; and April McLain, RN,
MBA .
,.

is beneficial to have Rio and
Holzer represented. Meetings
are held at various times
throughout the year and it

keeps us abreast of what is
going on at the state level
which impacts patient care at
our regional level.''

Concert slated for March 27
ASHLAND, Ky. - Dr. Ralph

.•..'
••

•

Janet Miller was recently honored and presented with an
appreciation gift for twenty years of service at the Area
Agency on Aging District 7. Janet works in the fiscal depart~:ment as an Account II. Pictured are Miller and Execl{tl~.
Director .Pamela K. Matura, both with the Area Agency on
: : Aging District 7, inc.

I:

the lliMA Entertainer of the
Stanley &amp; the Clinch Mountain Year, five yem running. He is a
Boys along with Del McCoury musician of the highest caliber,
and the Del McCoury Band and his distinguished band is as
will team up for one show only versatile an outfit as one could
at The Paramount Arts Center ever imagine.
This concert is sponsored by
in Ashland, KY
Budweiser
and is presented by
Stanley is a six-time Grammy
nominee and the winner of the the all-volunteer Troubadour
Library of Congress 'Living Concert Series, on Tuesday,
Legend' medal He is one of the March 27 at 8 p.m. Ticketl&gt; are
last living founders. of this ·dis- $14.50, $19.50, and $24.50
ticdy American art form. Stanley (gold circle), and are on sale now
is known for his dynamic banjo at the Paramount Arts Center,
style and his particularly high, '1300 Winchester Ave., in Ashland The box office telephone
lonesome vocals.
Del McCoury has been voted number is 606-324-3175.

.,·-... __~-------/"""'"--------~~Free
Colora.do blue spruce tree~ available
....••
::: Ten free Colorado blue spruce trees will be
tgivcn to each person who joim the National
::Arbor Day Foundation during february

...•·:ZOO!.

:: The· free

tree! are pm of the nonpralit
:.Foundation's Tree! for Amorlca campaiiJil.
:: Colorado blue spruce• luve i!lvcr blue·
::greet\ color and a · compact conical shape.
~They can be u1ed as individual ornamentals,
~ an energy-saving windbreak, a privacy screen,
::or as living Christmas trees.
:: The trees will be shipped postpaid at the
. :tright time for planting betwe.en March land
· .. May 31 with enclosed plantmg mstructlons. ·
: The six to twelve inch trees are guaranteed to
grow, or they will be replaced free of charge.
...
'

l

Colorado blm~ spruces hai'C silver
blue-green color and a fQIIIpact
conlcal1hape. They call be used a1 _
individual oruamtntall, an
energy-saving Jlrindlmlfk,

a Jlrltiacy .tcreen, QY as
living Christmas trees.

With a Horrie ~ty Line
ofCredit
from
First
3!, we'll do
•
but pack your b~

To beconle a member of the foundation
and receive the free trees, send a &amp;10 contribution io: Ten Free Colorado Blue Spruce
Trees, National Arbor Day Foundation, 100
Arbor Avenue, Nebraska City, NE 68410, by
February 28, 2001.

~

~

1UHAT Z'OES

FLASHBACKS

I

20 y~rs' service

&lt;•

CELEBRITY
In 1972, John Lenno'n and
Yoko Ono began a week as. coho:;,ts of Mike Douglas' television talk show.
In 1975, Cher's musical variety series debuted on CBS. It
ran until 1976.
In 1982, a 300-pound market
on the grave of Lynyrd Skynyrd
'nger Ronnie Van Zant was
stolen from an Orange Park,
Aa., cemetecy. Police found it
two wee~ later in a dry· river
bed.
In 1988, in Hollywood, Aa.,
a 12-year-old fan of Motley
Crue set his legs on fire while
trying to imirate a stunt in the
group's ·"Live Wire" video.
In 1996, the Artist Formerly
Known As Prince married
· &lt;lancer Maytc Garcia ·in Minneapolis.
In 1997, Michael Jackson .
and wife Debbie Ro\ve became
parents to a son named Prince.
In 2000, Darva Conger married Rick Rockwell on the Fox
TV show "Who Wants To
Marry A Multimillionaire." Fox
later learned an ex-girlfriend
accused Ro·ckwcll of hitting
her, and Conger asked for an
annulment less than a we•k
· later.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

r
t

(!oM PASSION
~AVE70

Z,o U'ITH

....
~

;:••
••'t

..•
...•• .

......

"'ft.

#f\V£~

t!HOOSING

Get a great rate backed by our
exclusive Five Star Service Guarantee. ~Glly

Apoa? .

••

••
•••
..
•

%

1\l'lt

Home improvements. Tuition. A dream \1l&lt;•tion. All
yours with a Firstar EquiLinc" Home Equity !.inc: of
Credit. All a&lt; an introductory in«m&lt; r.nc vou 'U lo\'c.
And all backed with banking's highest le\~1 of rustomer
scmce-guarantced. To apply, e&gt;lll-800-75-MONEY,
log onto www.fuotar.com, or stop by any Finrar branch.
'

RRSfAR

Bank Without Bmmdaries
.

I

HOLZER SENIOR CARE CENTER
,.,.

380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

'(740) .446-5001

-fDKl

•

�Page C6 • &amp;unlla!' l!:imtll -&amp;entintl

I

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

Sunday, February 11, 2001
Sunday, February 11, 2001

.~:Holzer Medical Center's -Heart Fair.slatecl for Valentine's
.

,.

GALLIPOLIS In conjunc. tion with February as American
: Heart Month, Holzer Medical
; Center's annual Heart Fair will
take place on Valentine's Day,
~·Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2001, from 8
:~ a.m. until 4 p.m. in the hospital's
' ;French 500 room. The event is free
::and open to the public.
:; Screenings will include blood
:• pressure, non-fasting glucose and
•'
c
. etc.
·!cholesterol,
body 12t
ana l yStS,
:• Information
regarding CPR,
~ ! nutr~tion, stress, physical activity,
' • cardiac catheterization and smoking will be available as well. A
:; pharmacist will be on-hand to
~·anSwer quest1ons or concerns, as
:! \vell as representatives from the
·i American Heart Association .
·, A special lipid profile· froe
, screening will be available from 8. 11 a.m. Wednesday. The lipid pro; file measure s total cholesterol,
· HDL (good cholesterol), LDL (bad
cholesterol) and triglycerides. To

!i

!

•

partiCipate in this special screening, you must pre- registe r by 4
p.m . on Tuesday, Feb. 13 by calling
446-5313 . The screening includes
a 12-hour fast beforehand so those
wl'io register for this special
screening are asked to not eat or
drink for the 12 hours prior to
their scheduled screening, except
water and necessary medications.
The Heart Fait, co-chaired by
Faye Hammond, RN , Bonnie
McFarland, RNC, BSN, and Pam
Samons, LPN, is sponsored by the
Medical Center's Wellness Department and Critical Care Unit. The
Fair will be staffed by Holzer
Medical Center employees, the
Gallia Cou~ty Health Department
and Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The theme for American Heart
Month 2001 is "Be Prepared for
Cardiac Emergencies ... The American H~art Association reports the
following 1~1ost comn1on warning
signals of ;1 heart a-tta ck : LJI1COn1-

:Internet open$ world
.. of infonnation to
~iaurora
borealis fans
,.
•

~

.

"'• ANCHORAGE, Alaska
.
:; (AP) - The Internet 1s
' ' opening up a world of
~: infornution to astronomy
buffs and scientists who are
~using satellite data to get a
:: good look at the Northern
Lights.
,
The National Oceanic
:! and Atmospheric Admin is~ tration has four polar-orbit! ing satellites equipped with
! the Space Environment
:Monitor (SEM). Aboard the
;sEM-2 is the Total Energy
:Detector, which is actually
; eight detectors that count
:charged particles moving
Earth.
••.. toward
Internet users also are
~availing . themselves of
t NASA's Polar Satellite,
I which has a small camera
iblled
the
Ultraviolet
: rmager that takes pictures of
: the aurora's !lltraviolet light.
· The images are updated
.every seven n1inutes on the
:world Wide Web when the
'satellite is in contact with
the Earth.
Amateu i astronomers say
the data now available on
the Internet is taking the
'guesswork out of one of
nature's wonders. The information is letting thein kn.a w
when it makes sense to bundle up, venture out in freez~
ing temperatures and .drive
to ren1ote locations to view
the aurora borealis.
The NOAA satellites
download information to a
\-acking station at Gilmore
treek northeast of Fairbanks as often as every 105
minutes. The information is
sent by satellite to a NOAA

1

1

computer facility in suburban Washington, D.C., and
fr.a m there to NOAA's
Space Environment Center
in Boulder, Colo.
David Evans, an SEC scientist in Boulder, said the
whole process takes about
45 minutes. Downloaded
images of the au'rora ovals
on the North and South
poles show up on the Web
about once every hour.
.
Evans said downloading
th~ information began four
years ago and the Web site
has becpme increasingly
popular. Between 2,000 and
4,000 Internet users access
the SEC's Web site daily, and ,
that number increases to
more than 10,000 users a
day whep solar storms are
predicted:
Amateur
astronomer
Richard
Pellessier
of
Anchorage said before he
began \ISing the Web he .
bundled up mot'e often to
drive beyond the ciry lights,
only to be disappointed by a
weak display or none at all.
"I've been using the
lnte~ net products, especially
the dowi1loaded satellite
pictures and n1easure1nt:nts.
for about two years now," he·
said. "I just want to know if
it ~s going to tnake sense to
go ou t tonight or not."
The· au1;0ra borealis is
caused by solar disturba nces
that produce the electrically
charged particles that move
toward Earth at 900,000 ·
mph. The larger the solar
disturbance, the. more likely
an awesome display.
&gt;

'

fortable pressure, fullness, squeezing or pain in the center of the
chest lasting more than a few minutes : pain spreading to the shoulders, neck or arms; and chest discomfort with lightheadedness,
fainting, sweating, nausea or shortness of breath . Less common
warning signs of a heart attack
include: atypical chest pain, stomach or abdominal pain; nausea or
. dizziness; shortness of breath and
difficulty ·breathing; unexplained
anxiety, weakness or fatigue; and
palpitations, cold sweats or paleness. The AHA also reports that
coronary heart disease is Anlt!rica's
number one killer. ·
For information on this year's
Heart Heallh Fair, please call the
Holzer Medical Center's Wellness
Deparnnenpt (740) 446-5679.

Day

Greenthumb classes
....~-:offered to seniors at URG

-·.

•
RIO
GRANDE - Area by a Greenthumb project
.
..
~..: seruar Cttlzens can now gain
instructor, will be held in a
~ computer training and job
new computer lab on the
~ skills through a special class Rio Grande campus drat
~ being offered at the Univerwill feature at least 12 new
t sity of Rio Grande/Rio computers .
.,. Grande Community ColThe two-week course
:;: lege.
begins on Monday, Feb. 19
:.: Greenthumb Employment
and continues thrtiugh Fri=::Services is a statewide grant: ·- funded program that is day, March 2. The course
sessions are held for four
:. offering the free classes at ·
Rio Grande to area residents hours each day. The classes
t who meet certain income are free and open to anyone
l guidelines and want to learn over the age of 55 who
t;:more about computers so meets certain)ncome guide!!"they can use them in their lines.
The classes will give the
. ,. present or future employstudents information · on
~ ment.
computer programs that are
&lt; . "The goal is to give them
",basic computer skills," said used to write documents,
~,jerry Mossbarger, director of keep data on spreadsheets
the Berry Center for Eco- and do oiher tasks that the
nomic Development at Rio students can use at home or
Grande. The Berry Center is 111
future
employment
coordinating the program opportunities.
ilong with the Crossroads
For information, call a
program at' Rio Grande. The representative of the Green, _class, which is being taught . thumb project at 286-6242.

.r

PREPARING FOR HEART FAIR ...... Holzer Medical Center Heart Fair Planning
committee members plan for Wednesday's Heart Fair at the hospltal:s
french 500 room. Pictured , left to right, are Pam Samons, LPN, Bonn1e
Mcfarland, RNC, BSN, and Faye Hammond, RN. The annual fair will take
place from 8 .a.m. 4 p.m. For information, call Mcfarland at (7 40) 4465679.

Rio Grande's SIFE team teach skills in area schools
RIO GRANDE - Students and contmue through Friday,
at the University of Rio Feb. 16.
The relaxed courses are
Grande/Rio Grande Cm1ununity College are busy teaching designed to teach the srudents
senior citizens computer skills simple things like turning ?n
and teaching area eleinenrary computers, logging onto com- 1
and junior high school studentl&gt; purer ;-ystems, calling up programs so they can type letters
business skills.
The Rio Grande students are and other documents, saving
all part of the Students In Free their documents and re-opening
Enterprise (SIFE) program on their documents.
"It's just very basic," said
campus. As part of the program,
. the students learn about busin.,; Smith, who also serves as the
and free enterprise and also par- project coordinator for the
ticipate in community service Berry Center at Rio Grande.
projects to share their knowl- Around 20 students are currently taking the class.
edge with area. residents.
"Half of them have never
The computer skills project is
bringing ~rea residents to the even turned on a computer,"
Rio Grande campus to learn said Mossbarger, who also serves
basic computer · skills. SIFE as the director of the Berry
member Steven Cornett is lead- Center for Economic Developing the d:isses, wh,ile other ment at Rio Grande. Many of
members of the SIFE team and the students were initially worSIFE co-advisors Jerry Moss- ried that they would damage the
barger and Carol Smith also computers or they would just
hel~ with the classes. The Area get confused on the computet.,
Agency Ol) Aging helped pro- but those worried quickly dissi- ,
mote ·and organize the Class ses- pated for the seniors.
The first classes got the stusions.
The · computer classes are dentl&gt; used to the computers, the
being held 0 n Fridays from second introduced them to the
Internet arid the Feb. 16 class
noon until! p.m.
They srarted on Friday, Fe~. 2 will focus on e-mail.

"We have had a lot of positive questions such as 11 What is mass
feedback," Smith said. The stu- production?"
The SIFE smdents kicked off
dents in the class include two
members who retired from their their "Who Wants To Be In
work with American Electric Business" · contests during the
Power (AEP) the same week · week ofJan. 29 through Feb. 2,
that they started, the class, and which was "'Teach A Child
the Rev. W.·Luther Tracy, a Rio About Business Week." The
Grande resident and minister SIF.E students enjoyed the pp;,who raught philosophy at Rio sentations so much that they are
Grande for several years.
now continuing them at :II'C•
Area residents who would like schools.
to rake part in the Feb. 16 sesTh~ contests and the clasSes
sion, or in future classes raught for senior citizens both serve as ~
by SIFE members can caiJ. the few of the community service
'
Berry Center at 245-7367 for
projects that the SIFE members
information.
lead every year. Thr Rio Granlle
; The SIFE '!lembers have also
SIFE chapter is c~nliimq\]Sly
been traveling to sc)1ools
rated in national -~pnrests as one
throughout Gallia Count)' to
t~ach students in grades K-8 of the top SlFE chapre~ in rJte
.country due in part to .its ~­
al&gt;out business and economics.
The SIFE members created a bers' participation in a variety &lt;&gt;f
1e for the studentl&gt; that is community service projJ!~ "lld
fashioned after the "Who Wants their knowledge ofbu5iness and
' ·
To Be A Millionaire?" TV free enterprise.
~eshow. At area schools, the
SlfE members . are hosti11g
"Who Wants To Be., Iri Bu:;i-.
n~ss?" The members heist the .
quiz contests for teams in are:i
schools and ask · the students

...

''

I

I

:

!

•
l

•

&amp;unba!' l!:imtf -&amp;tntintl • Page C7

Local nurses named to advisory groups
GALLIPOLIS Four
Southeastern Ohio nurses
have been selected to participate in each of the four advisory groul" for. the Ohio
Board of Nursing located in
Columbus. The Ohio Board
of Nursing is responsible for
the oversight of nursing practice in the state. Registered
nurses from Holzer Medical
Center and the University of
Rio Grande/Holzer College
of Nursing provide input to
the board.
Nurses appointed to the
advisory groups include
Holzer
Medical
Center
employees April McLain, RN,
MBA, chief nurse ~xecutive;
Marsha Rodgers, RN, C,
BSN, education coordinator;·
and Lennie'.Davis, RN, MSN,
CNAA, director of education.
In addition, Donna Mitchell,
Ph.D., RN, CNS, chair of the
Holzet School of Nursing at
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College, was also
appointed to an advisory
group.
McLain is a member of the
advisory group on nursing
practice. This group addresses
and provides input inro. the
major practice issues that significantly impact. the regulation of nursing.

Rodgers is an alternate to
the advisory group on continuing competency, which
develops strategies and rationale to assess knowledge and
skill level of nurses returning
to practice.
Davis has been appointed to
the advisory group on continuing education. This advisory
group addresses the major
continuing education issues
that significantly impact the
· regulation of nursing and provides · input0 to .the board
regarding current continuing
education issues.
Mitchell is a member of the
advisory group on nursing
education. This group performs an in-depth review of
proposed .
curriculum
changes, additions of courses
or new education progranw
They also address and provide
input W the board regarding
education issues that significantly impact the regulation
of nursing education programs.
Davis said, "I feel we are
most fortunate in Southeastern Ohio tci have nurses
selected for t~ese groups. This
gives us representation. in
Columbus on the iss11es that
face nursing ~oday.· I am
pleased to be a member of
one of the groups and think it

NEW APPOINTEES - Recently app!1inted to serve on advisory groups for the Ohio Board of Nursing were, left to right
Donna Mitchell, Ph.D., RN , CNS; Lennie Davis, RN, MSN,
CNAA; Marsha Rodgers, RN , C, BSN; and April McLain, RN,
MBA .
,.

is beneficial to have Rio and
Holzer represented. Meetings
are held at various times
throughout the year and it

keeps us abreast of what is
going on at the state level
which impacts patient care at
our regional level.''

Concert slated for March 27
ASHLAND, Ky. - Dr. Ralph

.•..'
••

•

Janet Miller was recently honored and presented with an
appreciation gift for twenty years of service at the Area
Agency on Aging District 7. Janet works in the fiscal depart~:ment as an Account II. Pictured are Miller and Execl{tl~.
Director .Pamela K. Matura, both with the Area Agency on
: : Aging District 7, inc.

I:

the lliMA Entertainer of the
Stanley &amp; the Clinch Mountain Year, five yem running. He is a
Boys along with Del McCoury musician of the highest caliber,
and the Del McCoury Band and his distinguished band is as
will team up for one show only versatile an outfit as one could
at The Paramount Arts Center ever imagine.
This concert is sponsored by
in Ashland, KY
Budweiser
and is presented by
Stanley is a six-time Grammy
nominee and the winner of the the all-volunteer Troubadour
Library of Congress 'Living Concert Series, on Tuesday,
Legend' medal He is one of the March 27 at 8 p.m. Ticketl&gt; are
last living founders. of this ·dis- $14.50, $19.50, and $24.50
ticdy American art form. Stanley (gold circle), and are on sale now
is known for his dynamic banjo at the Paramount Arts Center,
style and his particularly high, '1300 Winchester Ave., in Ashland The box office telephone
lonesome vocals.
Del McCoury has been voted number is 606-324-3175.

.,·-... __~-------/"""'"--------~~Free
Colora.do blue spruce tree~ available
....••
::: Ten free Colorado blue spruce trees will be
tgivcn to each person who joim the National
::Arbor Day Foundation during february

...•·:ZOO!.

:: The· free

tree! are pm of the nonpralit
:.Foundation's Tree! for Amorlca campaiiJil.
:: Colorado blue spruce• luve i!lvcr blue·
::greet\ color and a · compact conical shape.
~They can be u1ed as individual ornamentals,
~ an energy-saving windbreak, a privacy screen,
::or as living Christmas trees.
:: The trees will be shipped postpaid at the
. :tright time for planting betwe.en March land
· .. May 31 with enclosed plantmg mstructlons. ·
: The six to twelve inch trees are guaranteed to
grow, or they will be replaced free of charge.
...
'

l

Colorado blm~ spruces hai'C silver
blue-green color and a fQIIIpact
conlcal1hape. They call be used a1 _
individual oruamtntall, an
energy-saving Jlrindlmlfk,

a Jlrltiacy .tcreen, QY as
living Christmas trees.

With a Horrie ~ty Line
ofCredit
from
First
3!, we'll do
•
but pack your b~

To beconle a member of the foundation
and receive the free trees, send a &amp;10 contribution io: Ten Free Colorado Blue Spruce
Trees, National Arbor Day Foundation, 100
Arbor Avenue, Nebraska City, NE 68410, by
February 28, 2001.

~

~

1UHAT Z'OES

FLASHBACKS

I

20 y~rs' service

&lt;•

CELEBRITY
In 1972, John Lenno'n and
Yoko Ono began a week as. coho:;,ts of Mike Douglas' television talk show.
In 1975, Cher's musical variety series debuted on CBS. It
ran until 1976.
In 1982, a 300-pound market
on the grave of Lynyrd Skynyrd
'nger Ronnie Van Zant was
stolen from an Orange Park,
Aa., cemetecy. Police found it
two wee~ later in a dry· river
bed.
In 1988, in Hollywood, Aa.,
a 12-year-old fan of Motley
Crue set his legs on fire while
trying to imirate a stunt in the
group's ·"Live Wire" video.
In 1996, the Artist Formerly
Known As Prince married
· &lt;lancer Maytc Garcia ·in Minneapolis.
In 1997, Michael Jackson .
and wife Debbie Ro\ve became
parents to a son named Prince.
In 2000, Darva Conger married Rick Rockwell on the Fox
TV show "Who Wants To
Marry A Multimillionaire." Fox
later learned an ex-girlfriend
accused Ro·ckwcll of hitting
her, and Conger asked for an
annulment less than a we•k
· later.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

r
t

(!oM PASSION
~AVE70

Z,o U'ITH

....
~

;:••
••'t

..•
...•• .

......

"'ft.

#f\V£~

t!HOOSING

Get a great rate backed by our
exclusive Five Star Service Guarantee. ~Glly

Apoa? .

••

••
•••
..
•

%

1\l'lt

Home improvements. Tuition. A dream \1l&lt;•tion. All
yours with a Firstar EquiLinc" Home Equity !.inc: of
Credit. All a&lt; an introductory in«m&lt; r.nc vou 'U lo\'c.
And all backed with banking's highest le\~1 of rustomer
scmce-guarantced. To apply, e&gt;lll-800-75-MONEY,
log onto www.fuotar.com, or stop by any Finrar branch.
'

RRSfAR

Bank Without Bmmdaries
.

I

HOLZER SENIOR CARE CENTER
,.,.

380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

'(740) .446-5001

-fDKl

•

�.r

•'
•

I

'•

-

••

•

•

•

•
11,2001 :

Ohio· Point

C8 • 6adq 1JIIItll· htl11tl

Page Dl
,SUIM'ey. Folm'"Y 11. 2111

l

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

This chart shows how local stocks of interest ptrjormed ltut week. 1
Each day:. closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.
1•
.

'

WhatS going on at yourcominlinity hospitals?

MON. TUE. WED.
44\'.

Hospital System

'

THU.

Store

an.organic twist

I

FRI.
48

Herbs take over
150-year-old store
BY liliAN

J.

RIID

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

UTLAND -

The Rutland
Department Store is a country
store with an organic twist.
Since
James
Birchfield
assumed ownership of the
150-year-old mercantile, and Maureen Burns
bought the building and moved her own business into a quiet corner of the rambling store,
the business has taken on an interesting face,
maintaining its old-fashioned sensibilities
while meeting the changing needs of area
consumers.
, .
In fact, in some ways, the store is ahead of its
time when compared to many area retaiUmtlers. '
Birchfield stocks his store with grocery sta;ples:
bread, milk, bologna and soft drinks, Adding to .the ,
general store atmosphere is an extensive hardware

I'IIIHIM......_DI
•

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL
f
Dlllylil Support Group
Bilby Care a..
Tuesday, Februaiy '13, ~8 p.m.
GeDelal baby care, feeding,
~ and safety tips for
'
pirei!IS-Io-beand
grandparents-lo-be.
(304) 526-BABY

'Medk:alion Inlaaclioos:
Side effects to watch for in a
dialysis patiellt'
Thursday, Februaty 22,
2:3(}.3:30p.m.
Cal (304) 526-2000, ext. 3093
and Ilk for Dealle BoudreaiL

~.\I

Mary's Hospital

Diabetes Support Group Meelillg .
Tuesday, Feb. 20, 7 p.m.
Topic: 'The Link Between
Diabetes and Heart Disease'
Presented by Cindy Soltes,

Yoga for Beghmen
Every Tuesday, 6-7:30 p.m.

St Maly's Hospital School
of Nursing Gym

(3114) 523-61&amp;

Exerc~ Physiologist

StMary's Hospital Room 2109
(304) 526-1216

Arthritis Support Group
Every second Thursday, 2 p.m.
SL Maly's Hospital Room 2109
(3o4) 526-1216

'CPR TniDlng
-~y. Martli 6 &amp; 20,
. _I;~ p.m. 4 p.m.
7

il!easantValley Wellness Calter,
Aerobics Room

$fW!eSsion .
.
(3Q4) 675- 4340, Ext. 2002
'l

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
· Buxton Conference Room

. (3114) 675-7997

Anbrltls Support Group
Thursday,·March 8, 3 p.m.
PICasanl Valley Wcllness Center,
Multipurpose Room
(304) 675 8639

Pea plea

MEDICS
Thesday, February 13, 7 p.m. .
·~.·Marc~. 13, Tp.nl. ·' ·· ' l'f { nt Vlllley lliiii(MIII'
7

!llhllngOs es
IDtrodudioll to Reild a..
'111tmday, IW. Z2. (j p.m. t~
~;..
' • &lt;; ~·
I
Bnzlftiedi;1J a.
Tuesday, Febnlaty 20
. $10 per pmon, CEUs available
JOIIIIn Diabetes CMter's
5:3(}.7:30p.m.
Tuesday, Februaly 27,
Blood Drive
. MCNeill Conference Room
StMary's Hospital Room 2101
5-Star Prognm
6-Sp.m. .
(3114) 675-4340, EJt..tm
Future big brolbers and sisters
~y. Msn:h 22, 110011 • 6p.m.
•. I
I
, Pleasant Valley Wehs Calter,
toUt the iilllletllity unl~ watch a CertifiCd IactatiOII coosu1l8nta · · · (304) 757..o775,p '· . .. .~• .. "· ,, Moodays (I;QII.fw ~". 1
meeting dates) 2 • 3:30p.m. or
Wines Grief Support GrouP 1Multipwpose Room
videotape about sibling rivalry . . teach Our breastfeeding class.
6- 7:30p.m.
Start Snw1 Smoking ·
Thursday, Februaiy 15,6:30 p.m. (304) 675- 7222
and learn to care for 1bc new
(3114) 526-BABY
This program will introduce you
c
donPrognm
~ursday, March 15, 6:30 p.m..
baby. Bring a baby doll to
to
the
Joslin
Di8betes
Calter
and
The next session begins .
J.\'artley Conference Room
Aerobics
practice holding, feeding and
Slllrina Support Group
its five key points of diabetrs
March 7 at I p.m.
~)675-7400
Moodays and Wednesdays, 5:30p.m.
diapering.
Monday, Matth 5, 5 p.m.
management .monitoring, meal
For more information or to
Tuesdays and Thwsdays, 6 p.m. .
Ql
(3114) 526-BABY
Meets 1bc first Morxlay
planning, medicatimis, exercise,
pre-register for class, call
PIWant Valley Wellness Center,
Hrart to Hrart
and risk reduction. $5 per persOn.
of eacb month.
St Mary's Hospital
Thursday, February 15, 7 9p.m.
Multipurpose Room .
Infant CPR 0..
Sbarin8 is for' 'Iii-State woinen Cardiac Rthabilitation Services Open to the public. Physician
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, $2/members or $3Jnon..ntetnbels
refeml not necessary.
526-ll53
Tuesday, Felxua!y 20, 6 p.m.
who have been diagnosed with
(3114) 675-7222
-Multipurpose Room
SL Ma!y's Hospital, Room 102A
' Pam!ts/paudpaientJ.to-be IR
gynecologic Canca-s.
(304) 675- 4340, Ext. 2082
'
(304)526-11363
welcome and will receive a
Cabell Huntingtoo Hospital
'Jli.Cbl .
Support Group .
· catificate of at!t:ntlam:.
Room G403 otJ 1bc attium
Aph ds.A-riah&amp;:
Every Monday, 7 p.m.
'Ill Qd for BrJ!mm
Evay Oilier Friday
• (304) 526-BABY
(304) 526-2'1!17
Stroke Supped Group
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center,
Call for meeting dates and times. Mondays and 'numidays,
TUesday, Pebruary 20, 1p.m.
Multipurpose Room
.
6:30-7:30 p.m.
(304) 526-1810
Tuesday, Man:b,20, I p.m.
$5/session
.Cblldblrtb Educatloa a..
$1 per class
FOI' • • of Cabell
'"•
. . (304) 675-7222
RebabiJitali&lt;m Center
: Choose ooe: Fiv~week evening H•hlnatmlbpllt~'s
. Depl '011 Support Group .
St Mary's Hospital School
Room
. course begins Februaty 19,
Evay Tucsday; 7 p.m.
MolheriBiby Sult8l 1114
ofNwsing Gym .
Sand HiD Road
Dlahetes Support Group
(3114) 52U6'70
St Mary's Hospital Room 2101
. 5-9p.m.
Nwa),plraeall
(304) 675- 5250
Every Thesday, 9 • 11:30 a.m.
(304) 52U001
Cabell Huntington HOipital
(304) 526-BABY.
PJeasant Valley Wellness Center,
Self·Referral Ma!!ll1Milflllby
: Private Dining Room 6
Ahlcli!W'I
Group
'·'Carca tlti' Cancer .
Mulli!mPo&amp;e Room
Monday • Friday, 9 a.m.- 5p.m.
. Clll 526-BABY to nJ 1•.
f'rt.DIIl7* Fftaldon
. Thesday, FebntaiY, 20, 7 p.m.
(304) 675- 4340, Ext. 2004
Support Group
(304) 526-1492
: OR
fU dloee who have been
Thesday, Marcb 20, 7p.m.
Evay IICCOIId and fourth
· All-day course
diagnnvd with kidney disea11e
1\Jeaday, 5 p.m.
Pleasailt Valley
TOPS
WelabtiA.Plvtllam :
. Sa!urday, February 17,
requiriDg dialysis, CHH's
St Miry's Hospital Room 6144
Rehabilitmion Center
Every 1\Jeaday, 6:30 p.m.
('lllke Olr PcluDdl s fiy)
. 8a.m.· p.m.
Dialysis Center otJm liD'
(304) 526-1037
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, :
Every Tuesday, 4:30 • 6 p.m:
Sand HiD Road
'
dialysis mratm popm.
: Cabdl Hnnri"8f00 Holpita1
$20 regisl!alim fee .
"
. (304) 675-5236, Elt.13113
Muitipupo8e Room
'
• Private Dining'R!Jom 6 .
Cal (304)~2000, ext. 31193 .
StM.y'sH~
(304) 675-7222
6th floor Claslroom
IIIII Ilk for DeDile IIGudrau.
c-to I atn Bnllt Cancer
· CII526-BABY to 1 - I
&amp;.won
Group . .
(740) 643-%163
.
'
MoOOay, Pebruary 26, 7 p.m.
MoOOay, March 26, 7 p.m.

J11mes Birchfield 'owns the busj:
ness ar\d Maureen Burns owns the building, but
· she uses a comer of the Rutland Department Store
for her own thriving tea and herb operation. The
building was built In the 1920s, but the business
. dates back to Rathburn's of the mid 19th century.
TEAMWORK .-

--

rn&gt;uld you like to see a stock ofiD&lt;al intmstlisted?
1
if so, contact News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446:2342, ext. 23. 1

7

INVESTING

SIMPLE way to
save for retirement

eoomnc:e

s...,.....

s

7

: GALLIPOLIS -A relative
: newcomer to the retirement
,plan market, the SIMPLE
• plan can be a cost-effective
retirement planning alterna• tive for small employers and
· their. employees.
·- A SIMPLE plan consists of
a deferral program for eligible employees, along with a
matching · contribution by
employers.
An eligible employer is
defined as an employer that ·
· has no more than 100
employees that received at
•least $5,000 in compensation
from the employer in the
preceding calendar year. And
·. an employer maintaining a
. SIMPLE plan may not main: tain any other ·qualified
. retirement plal1 in which
"employs · currently receive·
- benefits.
- · Employers may either
-· establish a SIMPLE 401 (k)
· plan in which contributions
·· are made into a trust
· account, or SIMPLE retire, ment accounts, in which
contributions are made into
• · IRA accounts.
While the two types of
. ·plan arrangements are similar
: · with regard to contributions,
'

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
the SIMPLE 401 (k) places
considerably more burden
for reporting and disclosure
on both the employer and
the custodian of the plan
assets. For this reason, many
employers favor the SIMPLE
•
,
IRA plan,
Employees are eligible to
make deferrals ifithey receive
at least $5,000 in compensation .from their employ~r
during any two preceding
years and they are reasonably
expected to receive at least
$5,000 in compensation for
.the current year.
They can defer up to
$6,000 (indexed) with no set
maximum percen.tage of
compensation and must elect
to defer a specified percentage of compensation as ,

Have • business news

·.
-- ·--·----

••

Gift •

I

.•

,....... ..,

._? ·

Cllllt (740) Ul 2M2, ut. D
~.(

Bug$, beetles and roaches:
·common problems

s'*

HIRIAL
Mauree~ Burns ot'the
Tea Co. Is
pictured at the display of dried herbs and herbal products at Rut·
land Department Store. Burns bases the company at the store,
Including her retail outlet as well as the shipping operation. (Brian
J. Reed photos)

1

lAdE-

Important livestock
program Monday

POMEROY -· Bugs,
bugs and more bugs.
Already the phones are
ringing concerning the
discovery and movement
ofbug:s in the home. Boxelder bugs, lady beetles
and cockroaches have
made the list this past
week. I predict they are
soon to be joined by termite . and ant questions
within the next couple
weeks.
.
Outside on fruit and
wild cherry trees, homeowners are discovering a
blackish-brown foam-like
substance encircling pencil size stems which are
the egg masses. of the
Eastern Tent Caterpillar,
due to hatch in late
March.
Ohio State University
Extension lias informa. tiona! sheers available to
the homeowner that
explain the bug's life
cycle,, food requirements,
\loth biological · and
. chemical control . measures and explanation of
. any possible health haz:·lards.
.
These publications can
be picked up at the extension office from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Over the
next several weeks, each
insect pest will be briefly
discussed in this column.

GALLIPOLIS - Since.
Inland Products eliminated
its livestock disposal service
years ago, livestock producers .
in this area have struggled
Hal
with the issue of safe and
. Kneen
convenient disposal of
deceased livestock.
Every producer has their
GUEST..,E.W
owri method, however, the
state would prefer that li.ve·awakened from its hiberstock owners follow the
nation site just under the
same proven method of
bark of a piece of firecomposting.
wood.
The term "composting" is
Fortunately, the Woods
traditionally associated with
Cockroach does not
yard and household scraps,
breed indoors and is just
oti:en used as a soil amendas anxious as you are to
ment after decomposition. A
get out of the house. If
similar process can be used to
you are finding more than
speed the decomposition of
one or two cockroaches,
dead livestock, a process
you need to worry
known as composting livewhether you have an
stock mortalities.
infestation of breeding
This is a legal and safe,
cockroaches. .
above-ground
burial process
There are several types
that kills pathogens and
of cockroaches: American,
essentially converts deceased
Oriental, Brownbanded
livestock
into a stable comand German. Each type is
more prone to exist under
post mixtu"'.
·
Th'is ni~thod allows procertain conditions. ·
. ducers to manage a natural
The./unerican and Oriprocess of decomposition,
ental types like more
When done correctly, comhumid sites. The Brownbanded type likes to feed
posting will generate little, if'
on starches and glues and
any odor, flies, or other nuilives in warm areas of the
sances such as scavenger
home including electrical
wildlife. This process can be
appliances, walls and ceil- · used for any type of liveings.
stock, keeping in· mind that
The German cockroach
larger livestock such as catde
is the most common type
will take longer to decoma~d is found frequently in
pose than .smaller livestock
kitchens and bathrooms.
such as po.ultry.
Cleanliness
is
important
To help producers with
An occasional cockin
controlling
these
pests.
this issue, OSU Extension is
roach may be · found in
In
apartment
complexoffering a one-evening comeven the cleanest of
es,
the
entire
structure
posting livestock mortalities
l].omes. Winter-time disneeds
to
be
under
a
deancertification course.
covery of a single cockup
program
and
pesticide
The meeting will be Monroach may be the result of
control
program
as
the
day
from 7-9:30 p.m. at C.H.
bringing in logs that had
pest
will
travel
between
McKenzie Agricultural Cenan overwintering Woods
ter in Gallipolis. For $5, the
C::ockroach prematurely

•••

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

t

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

certification will take just 21/2 to three hours, and participating producers will take
home a reference manual
and receive a formal certificate in the mail.
This meeting will ' inform
producers about the principles and operation of CQmposting, and offer guidelines
for site · selection, design
options and facility sizing.
Other topics will include
management of the compost
facility, adding additional
livestock to the site, the natural pro~esses that prevent
disease, rules and regulations,
and ~e ec9npmics of composting.
In addition to notes on the
topics .covered, the takehome manual includes facility sizing and death loss estimation worksheets to assist
producers with calculations
for their farm.
No livestock producer is
immune to death losses; thus
·this program has something
to offer every livestock
owner.
If .you would like to
attend, please call the OSU
Exteruion office at 446-7007
on Monday and have the
receptionist add your name
to the list of participanrs.
Ag new1 .
If you miued .l'esticide

........,.,.,.;-..

,.

\

...

\

....

'

�.r

•'
•

I

'•

-

••

•

•

•

•
11,2001 :

Ohio· Point

C8 • 6adq 1JIIItll· htl11tl

Page Dl
,SUIM'ey. Folm'"Y 11. 2111

l

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

This chart shows how local stocks of interest ptrjormed ltut week. 1
Each day:. closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.
1•
.

'

WhatS going on at yourcominlinity hospitals?

MON. TUE. WED.
44\'.

Hospital System

'

THU.

Store

an.organic twist

I

FRI.
48

Herbs take over
150-year-old store
BY liliAN

J.

RIID

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

UTLAND -

The Rutland
Department Store is a country
store with an organic twist.
Since
James
Birchfield
assumed ownership of the
150-year-old mercantile, and Maureen Burns
bought the building and moved her own business into a quiet corner of the rambling store,
the business has taken on an interesting face,
maintaining its old-fashioned sensibilities
while meeting the changing needs of area
consumers.
, .
In fact, in some ways, the store is ahead of its
time when compared to many area retaiUmtlers. '
Birchfield stocks his store with grocery sta;ples:
bread, milk, bologna and soft drinks, Adding to .the ,
general store atmosphere is an extensive hardware

I'IIIHIM......_DI
•

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL
f
Dlllylil Support Group
Bilby Care a..
Tuesday, Februaiy '13, ~8 p.m.
GeDelal baby care, feeding,
~ and safety tips for
'
pirei!IS-Io-beand
grandparents-lo-be.
(304) 526-BABY

'Medk:alion Inlaaclioos:
Side effects to watch for in a
dialysis patiellt'
Thursday, Februaty 22,
2:3(}.3:30p.m.
Cal (304) 526-2000, ext. 3093
and Ilk for Dealle BoudreaiL

~.\I

Mary's Hospital

Diabetes Support Group Meelillg .
Tuesday, Feb. 20, 7 p.m.
Topic: 'The Link Between
Diabetes and Heart Disease'
Presented by Cindy Soltes,

Yoga for Beghmen
Every Tuesday, 6-7:30 p.m.

St Maly's Hospital School
of Nursing Gym

(3114) 523-61&amp;

Exerc~ Physiologist

StMary's Hospital Room 2109
(304) 526-1216

Arthritis Support Group
Every second Thursday, 2 p.m.
SL Maly's Hospital Room 2109
(3o4) 526-1216

'CPR TniDlng
-~y. Martli 6 &amp; 20,
. _I;~ p.m. 4 p.m.
7

il!easantValley Wellness Calter,
Aerobics Room

$fW!eSsion .
.
(3Q4) 675- 4340, Ext. 2002
'l

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
· Buxton Conference Room

. (3114) 675-7997

Anbrltls Support Group
Thursday,·March 8, 3 p.m.
PICasanl Valley Wcllness Center,
Multipurpose Room
(304) 675 8639

Pea plea

MEDICS
Thesday, February 13, 7 p.m. .
·~.·Marc~. 13, Tp.nl. ·' ·· ' l'f { nt Vlllley lliiii(MIII'
7

!llhllngOs es
IDtrodudioll to Reild a..
'111tmday, IW. Z2. (j p.m. t~
~;..
' • &lt;; ~·
I
Bnzlftiedi;1J a.
Tuesday, Febnlaty 20
. $10 per pmon, CEUs available
JOIIIIn Diabetes CMter's
5:3(}.7:30p.m.
Tuesday, Februaly 27,
Blood Drive
. MCNeill Conference Room
StMary's Hospital Room 2101
5-Star Prognm
6-Sp.m. .
(3114) 675-4340, EJt..tm
Future big brolbers and sisters
~y. Msn:h 22, 110011 • 6p.m.
•. I
I
, Pleasant Valley Wehs Calter,
toUt the iilllletllity unl~ watch a CertifiCd IactatiOII coosu1l8nta · · · (304) 757..o775,p '· . .. .~• .. "· ,, Moodays (I;QII.fw ~". 1
meeting dates) 2 • 3:30p.m. or
Wines Grief Support GrouP 1Multipwpose Room
videotape about sibling rivalry . . teach Our breastfeeding class.
6- 7:30p.m.
Start Snw1 Smoking ·
Thursday, Februaiy 15,6:30 p.m. (304) 675- 7222
and learn to care for 1bc new
(3114) 526-BABY
This program will introduce you
c
donPrognm
~ursday, March 15, 6:30 p.m..
baby. Bring a baby doll to
to
the
Joslin
Di8betes
Calter
and
The next session begins .
J.\'artley Conference Room
Aerobics
practice holding, feeding and
Slllrina Support Group
its five key points of diabetrs
March 7 at I p.m.
~)675-7400
Moodays and Wednesdays, 5:30p.m.
diapering.
Monday, Matth 5, 5 p.m.
management .monitoring, meal
For more information or to
Tuesdays and Thwsdays, 6 p.m. .
Ql
(3114) 526-BABY
Meets 1bc first Morxlay
planning, medicatimis, exercise,
pre-register for class, call
PIWant Valley Wellness Center,
Hrart to Hrart
and risk reduction. $5 per persOn.
of eacb month.
St Mary's Hospital
Thursday, February 15, 7 9p.m.
Multipurpose Room .
Infant CPR 0..
Sbarin8 is for' 'Iii-State woinen Cardiac Rthabilitation Services Open to the public. Physician
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, $2/members or $3Jnon..ntetnbels
refeml not necessary.
526-ll53
Tuesday, Felxua!y 20, 6 p.m.
who have been diagnosed with
(3114) 675-7222
-Multipurpose Room
SL Ma!y's Hospital, Room 102A
' Pam!ts/paudpaientJ.to-be IR
gynecologic Canca-s.
(304) 675- 4340, Ext. 2082
'
(304)526-11363
welcome and will receive a
Cabell Huntingtoo Hospital
'Jli.Cbl .
Support Group .
· catificate of at!t:ntlam:.
Room G403 otJ 1bc attium
Aph ds.A-riah&amp;:
Every Monday, 7 p.m.
'Ill Qd for BrJ!mm
Evay Oilier Friday
• (304) 526-BABY
(304) 526-2'1!17
Stroke Supped Group
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center,
Call for meeting dates and times. Mondays and 'numidays,
TUesday, Pebruary 20, 1p.m.
Multipurpose Room
.
6:30-7:30 p.m.
(304) 526-1810
Tuesday, Man:b,20, I p.m.
$5/session
.Cblldblrtb Educatloa a..
$1 per class
FOI' • • of Cabell
'"•
. . (304) 675-7222
RebabiJitali&lt;m Center
: Choose ooe: Fiv~week evening H•hlnatmlbpllt~'s
. Depl '011 Support Group .
St Mary's Hospital School
Room
. course begins Februaty 19,
Evay Tucsday; 7 p.m.
MolheriBiby Sult8l 1114
ofNwsing Gym .
Sand HiD Road
Dlahetes Support Group
(3114) 52U6'70
St Mary's Hospital Room 2101
. 5-9p.m.
Nwa),plraeall
(304) 675- 5250
Every Thesday, 9 • 11:30 a.m.
(304) 52U001
Cabell Huntington HOipital
(304) 526-BABY.
PJeasant Valley Wellness Center,
Self·Referral Ma!!ll1Milflllby
: Private Dining Room 6
Ahlcli!W'I
Group
'·'Carca tlti' Cancer .
Mulli!mPo&amp;e Room
Monday • Friday, 9 a.m.- 5p.m.
. Clll 526-BABY to nJ 1•.
f'rt.DIIl7* Fftaldon
. Thesday, FebntaiY, 20, 7 p.m.
(304) 675- 4340, Ext. 2004
Support Group
(304) 526-1492
: OR
fU dloee who have been
Thesday, Marcb 20, 7p.m.
Evay IICCOIId and fourth
· All-day course
diagnnvd with kidney disea11e
1\Jeaday, 5 p.m.
Pleasailt Valley
TOPS
WelabtiA.Plvtllam :
. Sa!urday, February 17,
requiriDg dialysis, CHH's
St Miry's Hospital Room 6144
Rehabilitmion Center
Every 1\Jeaday, 6:30 p.m.
('lllke Olr PcluDdl s fiy)
. 8a.m.· p.m.
Dialysis Center otJm liD'
(304) 526-1037
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, :
Every Tuesday, 4:30 • 6 p.m:
Sand HiD Road
'
dialysis mratm popm.
: Cabdl Hnnri"8f00 Holpita1
$20 regisl!alim fee .
"
. (304) 675-5236, Elt.13113
Muitipupo8e Room
'
• Private Dining'R!Jom 6 .
Cal (304)~2000, ext. 31193 .
StM.y'sH~
(304) 675-7222
6th floor Claslroom
IIIII Ilk for DeDile IIGudrau.
c-to I atn Bnllt Cancer
· CII526-BABY to 1 - I
&amp;.won
Group . .
(740) 643-%163
.
'
MoOOay, Pebruary 26, 7 p.m.
MoOOay, March 26, 7 p.m.

J11mes Birchfield 'owns the busj:
ness ar\d Maureen Burns owns the building, but
· she uses a comer of the Rutland Department Store
for her own thriving tea and herb operation. The
building was built In the 1920s, but the business
. dates back to Rathburn's of the mid 19th century.
TEAMWORK .-

--

rn&gt;uld you like to see a stock ofiD&lt;al intmstlisted?
1
if so, contact News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446:2342, ext. 23. 1

7

INVESTING

SIMPLE way to
save for retirement

eoomnc:e

s...,.....

s

7

: GALLIPOLIS -A relative
: newcomer to the retirement
,plan market, the SIMPLE
• plan can be a cost-effective
retirement planning alterna• tive for small employers and
· their. employees.
·- A SIMPLE plan consists of
a deferral program for eligible employees, along with a
matching · contribution by
employers.
An eligible employer is
defined as an employer that ·
· has no more than 100
employees that received at
•least $5,000 in compensation
from the employer in the
preceding calendar year. And
·. an employer maintaining a
. SIMPLE plan may not main: tain any other ·qualified
. retirement plal1 in which
"employs · currently receive·
- benefits.
- · Employers may either
-· establish a SIMPLE 401 (k)
· plan in which contributions
·· are made into a trust
· account, or SIMPLE retire, ment accounts, in which
contributions are made into
• · IRA accounts.
While the two types of
. ·plan arrangements are similar
: · with regard to contributions,
'

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
the SIMPLE 401 (k) places
considerably more burden
for reporting and disclosure
on both the employer and
the custodian of the plan
assets. For this reason, many
employers favor the SIMPLE
•
,
IRA plan,
Employees are eligible to
make deferrals ifithey receive
at least $5,000 in compensation .from their employ~r
during any two preceding
years and they are reasonably
expected to receive at least
$5,000 in compensation for
.the current year.
They can defer up to
$6,000 (indexed) with no set
maximum percen.tage of
compensation and must elect
to defer a specified percentage of compensation as ,

Have • business news

·.
-- ·--·----

••

Gift •

I

.•

,....... ..,

._? ·

Cllllt (740) Ul 2M2, ut. D
~.(

Bug$, beetles and roaches:
·common problems

s'*

HIRIAL
Mauree~ Burns ot'the
Tea Co. Is
pictured at the display of dried herbs and herbal products at Rut·
land Department Store. Burns bases the company at the store,
Including her retail outlet as well as the shipping operation. (Brian
J. Reed photos)

1

lAdE-

Important livestock
program Monday

POMEROY -· Bugs,
bugs and more bugs.
Already the phones are
ringing concerning the
discovery and movement
ofbug:s in the home. Boxelder bugs, lady beetles
and cockroaches have
made the list this past
week. I predict they are
soon to be joined by termite . and ant questions
within the next couple
weeks.
.
Outside on fruit and
wild cherry trees, homeowners are discovering a
blackish-brown foam-like
substance encircling pencil size stems which are
the egg masses. of the
Eastern Tent Caterpillar,
due to hatch in late
March.
Ohio State University
Extension lias informa. tiona! sheers available to
the homeowner that
explain the bug's life
cycle,, food requirements,
\loth biological · and
. chemical control . measures and explanation of
. any possible health haz:·lards.
.
These publications can
be picked up at the extension office from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Over the
next several weeks, each
insect pest will be briefly
discussed in this column.

GALLIPOLIS - Since.
Inland Products eliminated
its livestock disposal service
years ago, livestock producers .
in this area have struggled
Hal
with the issue of safe and
. Kneen
convenient disposal of
deceased livestock.
Every producer has their
GUEST..,E.W
owri method, however, the
state would prefer that li.ve·awakened from its hiberstock owners follow the
nation site just under the
same proven method of
bark of a piece of firecomposting.
wood.
The term "composting" is
Fortunately, the Woods
traditionally associated with
Cockroach does not
yard and household scraps,
breed indoors and is just
oti:en used as a soil amendas anxious as you are to
ment after decomposition. A
get out of the house. If
similar process can be used to
you are finding more than
speed the decomposition of
one or two cockroaches,
dead livestock, a process
you need to worry
known as composting livewhether you have an
stock mortalities.
infestation of breeding
This is a legal and safe,
cockroaches. .
above-ground
burial process
There are several types
that kills pathogens and
of cockroaches: American,
essentially converts deceased
Oriental, Brownbanded
livestock
into a stable comand German. Each type is
more prone to exist under
post mixtu"'.
·
Th'is ni~thod allows procertain conditions. ·
. ducers to manage a natural
The./unerican and Oriprocess of decomposition,
ental types like more
When done correctly, comhumid sites. The Brownbanded type likes to feed
posting will generate little, if'
on starches and glues and
any odor, flies, or other nuilives in warm areas of the
sances such as scavenger
home including electrical
wildlife. This process can be
appliances, walls and ceil- · used for any type of liveings.
stock, keeping in· mind that
The German cockroach
larger livestock such as catde
is the most common type
will take longer to decoma~d is found frequently in
pose than .smaller livestock
kitchens and bathrooms.
such as po.ultry.
Cleanliness
is
important
To help producers with
An occasional cockin
controlling
these
pests.
this issue, OSU Extension is
roach may be · found in
In
apartment
complexoffering a one-evening comeven the cleanest of
es,
the
entire
structure
posting livestock mortalities
l].omes. Winter-time disneeds
to
be
under
a
deancertification course.
covery of a single cockup
program
and
pesticide
The meeting will be Monroach may be the result of
control
program
as
the
day
from 7-9:30 p.m. at C.H.
bringing in logs that had
pest
will
travel
between
McKenzie Agricultural Cenan overwintering Woods
ter in Gallipolis. For $5, the
C::ockroach prematurely

•••

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

t

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

certification will take just 21/2 to three hours, and participating producers will take
home a reference manual
and receive a formal certificate in the mail.
This meeting will ' inform
producers about the principles and operation of CQmposting, and offer guidelines
for site · selection, design
options and facility sizing.
Other topics will include
management of the compost
facility, adding additional
livestock to the site, the natural pro~esses that prevent
disease, rules and regulations,
and ~e ec9npmics of composting.
In addition to notes on the
topics .covered, the takehome manual includes facility sizing and death loss estimation worksheets to assist
producers with calculations
for their farm.
No livestock producer is
immune to death losses; thus
·this program has something
to offer every livestock
owner.
If .you would like to
attend, please call the OSU
Exteruion office at 446-7007
on Monday and have the
receptionist add your name
to the list of participanrs.
Ag new1 .
If you miued .l'esticide

........,.,.,.;-..

,.

\

...

\

....

'

�Sunday, February

11,2001

Wantld
•FEDERAL PDITAL JOBI"

.. Qp

to $18 .8S hour, Hiring for
:aoo1, free call for •ppllcatlonlex·
JfTIInlllon information Ftdtrll
fre·Full Benefit&amp;. 1·800-59850&lt;1 exten11on 1~15 (7am·9pm

~S.T.)

:"• FED!~AL PO STAL JOII"

-TO ..... l'hrlh ~
9 West Stimson. All'll&lt;ll
740-592·11142

LOST: Children's Pot, farge Whlta 80

r.ciet .. l'oul'ld, Yllrd .....,
lillct Wanled To Do Adl

START OATI~&gt;;G TONtGHTI
Have run mooUng oligiOIO linQios

Muat Bl Plfd In AdVInce.

In your area. Call for more infor·
maUon . t-800-ROMANCE. e•l .

ROMANCE eKI. 1621 ·

Quality clothing and household

WOULD THE stay at hOme mom

1736.

thai wanlo to earn $500·$700 a
month call me 0 1-888-836-M82
ASAP. I tos.t your nurnoer.

Items. $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

TRIBUNE QfAQUNE:

2:00p.m. the day batON
eel lelo run. Sunday a
........,._ _.,..__ 00
~-r ...,...,, 2:
p.m.
Frkley
IENDNEt; OfADUNE •.

1:00 p.m. the day~
.
'
the ad leto run.
Sunday &amp; Monday edllloft
1:00 p.m. Friday .
·

BIG~

QFADUNI:

2 deye ~*ora the ad II to
run by 4:30p.m. Saturday
a Monday ttdttlon· 4:30
"Oelldllnee

ANNOUNC EMEN TS

FREESEARctil
www.SINGLES.eom

Start daung tonight! Play 1M Ohio
Dating Game. Con toU ''" 1·800·

Card of Thanka:
;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;

THE FAMILY OF

lab, In The Ambrosia &amp; Grter Fld
Area. Witn Collar And Chain. Answers To Theodora. Pleas• Call

(304)675-7689

.

9:()0-5:30.

40

Giveaway

To Good Home In The Country, 3
Year Old Male Mix Medium Size
Oog, loves Children, Swimming &amp;

Auction
and Flee Market

Frances Geraldine Burcham
Would like to thank all of those
trrande who tent tlowere, food, or
carda. Speclel· thanka to Weugh-,
Halley-Wood Funeral Home and to all
ataff'a and Dr. Abel at Arbora and tor
their love end cering of our mother
and wife. To Rev. Ralph Workman,
thanks tor the conaollng meaaage
from your htart. Your klndnna will
always bt remembtrtd.

Mommy, you have bltn
gone from ua two ytlrl,
but God Hid It wu time to Ill with Dlddy.
knoW you 11'1 happy with him. You will Ill
with ua alwaya, alwaya.

ters from home. No experience
necessary. FTI PT. Help needed
Immediately.' Call 'Sundance DIS·
trlbutora' 1·800·889·3449 EX·

TENSION 22 (24 ius).

l 'loal -40 lba In Juat 2 t-~ton th a ,
l,.:ose 5 To 100 + l bt.\ Gain Ener·
gy, Rl8ultt Cluarantttdl Earn

J:M~e,

S!ID0-$1ooo Part Tln)o From Yo~r
(800)582·!!7!7

pm.. ~. A

Gold Rlnga.

U.S. Currency,1 ~1

Second

Absolutely· Free lnlo
Earn Oflllne Income
$2.000· $5,000/mo,
WOf'io:FromHomeCot.oom
ACCESS : A center for Counul·
lng , EdueaUon, And Social Serv·
Ices fs accepting applications for
til e poaf tlons of Th erapis t and
CSP/ Ca se Manager In GaUl&amp;,
Jacl\aon and Meigs Counties.

•
.~

.

THERAPIST: Qualllled appllcanla

wHI haw a minimum ot a master'a
degree In paychology, counseling
or related tltlc::l.' l,.lcen sed fn the
SIBil Of OhiO as a LISW, LSP, or
LPCC with e~tpe rlence working fn
a community mental health seturv
wit~ Children. Licensed Ph .D fn

.,

• 101'

$987. 85 WE EKLY! Processing
HUD/FHA Mortgage Refunds. No

A""""•· Golllpolls, 741).448-2842.
Fi ll hllch aysttm to fix Farmalls
Super A, 100, 130, 140, will pay
for call, 740-987-5875.

Experience Required . For FREE

psychology Pralerred
CSP/ CASE MANAGER : Thlo

Information Call 1-80D-SOH832

e.d. 1300.

position ~rovl des case manage·
men t ser'f'lce s Including service
coordinalf on, referral se rvi ces
and horne 'f'fslts to at risk children
and families : Primary work set·
lings will be In the schools and fn
clients' homes. Focu1 wm be on
Children and/or adolescents with
multiple difficulties lncludln9 be·
havforal probtems, mental healtt1
and substance abu se Issues, SO·
cfal maladjustment, academic un·
deracht tvament, tru ancy, leg al
Problems and other fsaues. Quail·
fled appl lcanta will havt a mlnf·
mum ot a Bachelor'• degre e or
equ ivalent e ~tperlen~e In so.cl al
work, paycflology or ielated field.
LSW Wi th t ltperlence fn ca se
management with at risk popula·
tkln preferred .

'"ACC ESS TO A COMPUTER?

Put It to workl $2Sfhr.·$7511'1r. FTI

PT. FREE Info. 800·871·804! ext
601 www.lahomeblz.com

,(,(J &amp;

Wanted

Ho,mo.

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
?.

Claire
Boao

On tul lldt*Y

CASHIER/

Fllbrulry8,1NII

Shift Manaeer

Fib. 124, 1810,

LoVed itiKI

$9.23 ~ $12.23/lfour

mlutdby
hla family.

'ull end plft·llllll polltlone avellebla.
Cornplelelrltlnlng provided with ftexlble hoone.
·
· Eam up to $15 /hour.
l"ullttme poelllane oller bonellt peokege which
lnol- Madloii/Den!OII/~1 KJPd Veoetlone.
CALL TODAY... START TOMORROVII

w.ttt· 7b IHI Wlrh Tn• LOI'd. .0 l1N',.. ,
· Ago O(t I'Wn'll•l)' ,.,• .,.,.,

Would llkl·to tblnk
-.yona far their
ldndnnl, Jll'l\'lrl,

frllndelllp, food.

tlouuaia~NI

If' uta Goulet only brlna aaaln.
tM
w• took for arant-.ct
Wf1•n to he•r vour voice
w~ Juat a o•ll •way
Wh•t we•ct atv• fOr Juet aome ·
tlima to·••v the thlnaa
.
Th.t: allppecl our mlncla
There•a eo muoh now, we'd
r-uv nu to
But we ..,utcl never ao back wn•n
• W• did the thiN~• ~ did baok th•n
W•'ll 8tare thoee preoloua
.,
m.morl- In our mlncla

llln- a dlllll.
Specllllllllilllld the
POIIIII'OY EMS, Holar

~~-·Paul'•

·lndlvldutl doelllrt,

. Ho!Dr Blnlor Cln
Cenllr, Wlugii-HIIIay-

WOOd Funnl Home In
G11HpoUa, Rev. J111111
Btmlokl olthe Christ
Epi~Church
lnPt.PieulnL
Your klncl-11

IPP4i:··

GI'ICt Elch, Paul
Elch,Suun
a 8111 EIOh

••Y

" , Wa"ll

•nd

~what

FUll-'" .... lad. . Major Moillool, Daota1, One- Vocation
l!lor 6 mont111, ,Short ~
'llorrn piub~:: Sk:li Oa)l. 1'mQa11 •
lityo ud six N.u...l l!olldayo !"': -·
n1 JAd •·&lt;101 K Pflru '
Flexible sclledulc with 1 "Can Do atdllldii11Moufh lnliaina il provldcct'
and arecr promotkm poulbilftiel are pouiblc

•n

you lnettll.al

Lo"'

t~ ua
try to .._
.!
We o•n be, and w•lk the path
that you have left IH!hlnd
The little thlnga that •-m eo •m•U

YOU: OoiJIJAdi"' CuoiOmor Scrvloo, Moo'llion JAd' Comm- 10

Ia now like gold In memory•• vault
We oherleh every ona that we h•v• of you
Now we oan and reaagnlttM p•rt you played to ahapa
Our llv... often • - n In th• thing• we do
In Qod"a d-Ian and ma•t•r pl•n
He aaw the hurting
H•••Dfm•n
Aa we would -v goodbye

•ut

'Jtamwott lad l'trformulcc.Acanle: Cah. c..trol, dllclcMopcr~don ot111e
CISll rqillm a)'llem. c:lcaninellld 'ID:kirw mcn:bandilc. M~ be lble 10
wodl bctwml6om-9pm. HiP Sd1ool DlpfomoarOED requil&lt;cl. Coodidlr&lt;J

Help Wanted

HOLZER EXTRA CARE

Drlvera : ONLINE APPLICA·
TIONS. Fk'M:J !he bttt driving jobs
or star! a high paying career now.
Our placement prol•sslonata wilt
make landing your job easy. 877·
893·20G6 www.hookup.comldrfv·

....

nk: seeking Flegfstered Nurse tor
full lime position coordinating
developmental clinics . Aesponsl·
bll ltfes Include : home visita, de't'e!opme(llal screenings, clinic
coordfnaflon, and case manage·
ment ot services for families .
Qualifications: Bacflalors degree
In Nursing preferred. Applicant
must possess a curren t license
trom the Ohio Board of Nursing ,
and have experience In Pediatrics wi th empnasfs .on children
with apecfal needa and develop·
mental asse11ma nts. Reliable ·
transpOIIatlon II reQUired. S8lary;
Commensurate wllh experience.
Please submit a leiter or Interest
and re sume to: John 0. Costanzo,
Sup trlnlendent , A.t hens· Melgs
Educational Service Center, 507
FllchiBnd Ave nue, Suite t 108,
Oil

Drivers : P.A.M. Transport No ex·
parlance needed . 2 week paid
COL training. Great pay! $34,0001
yr, yea·r plus ru u be11efits &amp; pafd
train ing. Drivers based In Mid·
west. 1·877·230·6002 . Sunday
8am-4pm . Monday 7am-6pm ,
Tue-Frl7am·4pm.

DRIVING CAREERS START
HERE! We Need Over 300 Entry
Level Drivers Th iS Month. No Ex·
perlence Required. WE FlepreStlnt Over .40 TrUcking Compa·
nles. Vou Choose Which One .
Tul! lon Assistance A'f'allable For
Inexperienced. COL DELIV ERS

2001. Equal Opportunity Employ·
er/Provlder.

CNH, HHA, Certllled Homemakers
Needed To Provide In Ho'Me
Serv ices For Th e Elderly &amp; Olsa·
bled In Th e Mason, New Haven ,
West Columbia Area . Call 1·888·

453-4992
Construction Coordinator For Ca·
bit Syllem; Aeaportslble For Co·
~rdf n atlng Construction Erforts
Through In-hou se And Contract
Labor For New And Rebuild Pro·
)ects. Must HEwe CATV System
Operation s Work Experlerace .
And CATV Cons tru ction w or k
Experience. Excellent Benellt
Package. Please Submit Resume
To : Charter Commun icat ions ,
1"1 0 Jefferson Blvd .. Point 'Pleas·
ant, WV 2!5!50 Attn:Kurt Leach:
man. No Phone Calls Please .

we' ll be togeth•r onoa again

Announcamant

........

CONSOUDA E SILLS
•LOW RATES
• NO UP·FRONT
FEES
• BAD CREDIT OK
• BANKRUPTCY
ACCEpTED
•SAME DAY
APPROVAL

5955

Ortver· Earn up to $.3..1mlles to

stort Full Oenerna package. Aa·
afgned convent ional you drive

• CALL TOLL·FREE

1-860-227-88811

be the ••m• with

Research/Planning
Specialist Position:

Clot~•a gra~

Heaven•• .w•.t•r with you ther•
S'c #;
4l'p ,...
"ll ; t t ......, ,...._
~-...... &lt;c
~ ...e ~t~~.tt. ..~k....,...._

·-'*• --v-

Rnponllble fo~ developing end Implementing
Oeosrephlc lnformltlon Syatem (GIS)
mapping, dluemlnetlng ceneua date, providing
raiMI'Ch raport, Including elltlltlce, tablll end
graphlee for OVRDC memtbrt .end atllfl •• well
11 mtjor rtportt end plene. Altoclatl't or
Blchtlor't Degrtt In geography, geology, tocltl
tcllnct or planning with 11 lttlt one y11r of QIS
and rtlllrch experience or education; or en
equivalent combination of educellon end
·experience.
Excellent bonefllt. packegt
Including Public l!mplove-' Altlrement System
(PEAS). Annual 1111ry range S23,11CJ0.128,500.

AaenoY'•

Submll ' cover leater end rttume with thrat
proflltlonel rtfertnctt to Alllttlnt Director,
Ohio V.lley Regional Dlvtlopment Cominlellon,
P.O. Box 728, Wtverly, OH 45880 or FAX (740)
847-3488 by 4:30 p.m. on Wtdntay, Ftbruery

21,2001.

.

.

Mf'!H

·An~~.....,.,...

110

I

Sell Avon. Free Start-up Fee . Call

(740)448-3351l

Public

AUCTION
January 15, 2001 • 6:00 p.in.
97 Beech Str. .t, Middleport, OH

Watch For Signsl
Due to the c:loalng of a long time
bualneaa In the community
"CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON"

Announcement

One Stop Shopping

Contact us at:

We have been asked to •••• the
f~llowlngltems at auction:

For All Your Advertising Needs

PoaUng Date: February 2, 2001

.

I

or visit our website:

1-800·7114-8558

www.americancommunltyclassifled.com

1985 Chrysler Dodge
Cargo Van. 1985
Truck w/ Topper,
moving truck, 2 Golf

TIM Unlvnlty ol Rio Grande 1e llldiog appllcltlonator
two lull lime Ollllplll pollOI olftCirt. fiMponelbllltiM

Include the proiiCiton olthe unlwrtlly'e fllciNtln lnd
property ~ the enforCimlnl Ot publl1heil UnlwNI!y
r.gulellone lncl Other elite ancl federal laws.
~tor the pollllon lnotudla high eohool

.

'

,,

copy of OPOTA cenlfloellon and of lllrM
rtfe-l*ora
the
dlldilne
of
February
18,
2001, to:
.
,_
'
'
.

Phyllle Maaon, SPHR
Director of Human Retourcea
University of Rio Grandt
P.O. Box 1100, Rio Grande, OH ~784

..
•.

·-·

IIIli lllfla Ull If Ill re u ·

1~0114

.

1

.

Resume To P.O. Box 55 . Point.
Pleasant, w-125550
BookkHper wanted, 20 hOura per
week, ~lnlmum 5 years experl·
enct, tccountt receivable , ac·
counts payable I data ilntry. For
more lnlormatlon call Alex at 740·

843-9422.

NOnCE OF POSnlON VACANCY

CarHr Opportunities For LPN's.

Top Of Tht Scale Wasta· $11 .00

:1'

•

•,1

,.

....

JOB OPENINGS

~~T~H~I!~·E~~~~~AllQOMPANY
haa lmmadlata opanlnga lit Ita food manutaoturlng facility 1,:,
appllcanta muM hava knowtadga and axperlanoe In · a manuf•oturlng
to work any ahlft, and pci•••• tha following quolltl":

Start Pay With Shlll lrterentlal ,
Experllfice Pay1 Bonua, Program
&amp; Extr«Mty GoOd Health _ , .
Joint Comm. Accredlbtd 100 S.d
Facility. Come Jol~ Our Team .

POSITION: Public Health Nurae I
DUTII!B: Project Dlractor for lha Cardiovascular

Hsilth Project Grant
'
TYPE OF POSITION: Part-time (21 hours per week)
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's degree In
Slop By For APIIIICatlon And
nursing from an accredited school of nursing or an
Schldu~d lnlt.rvltw. Scenic hllll
Aaeoclete'a Degree/Diploma R.N. with 2 yeara
Nursing Center, 311 BuckrldQt
Rd. BldWtll, Ohio. 'T~t Afzllelm- l;e•:perilenlie. Currently licensed In the Stale of Ohio as
eroExporto' EOfi. .
R.
Must hold a valid Ohio driver's license.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
'
DATI! AVAILABLE: February 26, 2001
e•oellent Income. Easr claims
RATE OF PAY ANQ BENEFITS: Public Health Nurse I
procenlng. FuU training. Home·
pey as par Gallla County Heatth Department .salary
PC required . Call Phyolclan &amp;
Healthcar• D•Velopm•nta tqll·
structure. See Nursing Director for sllrtlng rile
,,. and
1rae 1-800-n2-!!933oxt.2010.
CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS!
DATE OF POSnNO: February 8, ~1

Work from Homt. Ltall·order/ln·

•
· troubiMhoOt 240-410 volt - r dlatrlbutlon ecjulpment· both AC and DC motor• ·
-rtera - h 118 VOlt -ntrol and -ntrol dev!OH auoh . . p - •YM' and proximity awltchaa '
• Ability to , _ electrical ooham.aoe
·
• Knowladp of PLC'a Ia d . .lrobla
• Ona YM• of algabr• Ia daelrect
• Two Y••ra •1-rlolan expert•noe or aqutvatant aduoMiori In alaotrloal ttatct
. • Poeltlona wttl btl on ,....net anct·thlrd thlfta
.
• Pay rata 111.110 to 8t1JIIper hour (piua ahlft dltferantlal), Clapandtng on experlenoa
• Thla te • union hourly poottton
i

FREE ESTIMATES
FREE 10 YR WARRANTY

ESTATE

.AUCTION

Billing Clerk For Medical Equipment 'Company. Pleue Submit

'

bto willing

Total Year Round Comfort

AVON! LOOKING FOR A HIGH·
ER INCOME? More flex iOio

266·2950.

,,

FAX (740) 245-411011
~
. EMAIL :::~lo.tdu ~
~ ... a..t
. Buy In EtJUc.tJon

................ feriHI &lt;01 Molorl .....ciiiMdiN,

Bate.a Bros. Amusement Co . fs
looking tor Individuals to travel lor
the 2001 itason. Muat be at
least 18 yrs. · Contact ua at 740·

,

IN--..UU .....

,.......ID.

Phone1 1740)

talk. 1-800-942-4053.

..

•wteltlaiU'IMM '

u...... I I 7'173 A WV
nzoOMe or~ (7'40) HZs710J
TermiJ c._.. or PMII wltlt
...t

Attenti on: Work From Home,

houra? Independen ce? AVON
has whit ycu're looking lor. let's

lduOitlon or equlvltlent. Bulc law lnlorcement
tntlnlng II required. OPOTA Oll'tlflOitlon nece...ry.
lluat blevelleble too; evening and/or weekend ~hlfll.

All oendklllll lhould aubmlla current rtaume 1nc1

H!ltlfhlyt"

NOT•• I now have my Wee~ Vl,.lnl8 IIcon...
AuctlonHJI Billy ll. Goble, Jr.

$500· $1!00 Mo. Part Tlmt,
$2000· $7500 + Mo. Full .Time.
Paid Vacallona, (888)852-7501
AVON! All Areaal To Buy or
Shwtoy Spears, 304-675-1429.

ttrnoc. &amp;1,200-18.800 PT~. FrH
fnformoUon (414) 2110-8800
www.horne-bu--oyo·

toma.com

DI!ADUNI! FOR ACCEPTANCE OF APPL,ICAnONS
WITH AI!SUMI!: February 16, ·2001 by the close of
business. Submit to
Dlrsctor.

at
on
33
In Maaon, WV. We have moved the eltate
of H&amp;l!tn Conley from Pt. Plaaaant, WV to
tha Auction Center In Maaon, WV and will
be aalllng .t he following ...
FURNITURE
Outltttndlna 8 PC. mlth. OR aulte wlcurvtd front china
cibllllf, carved sofa, Qunn Ann colfn flblc. mlth •
slant front dak. 5 PC. maPle cannon, ball POitar BR
aulta. cedar chat. hllda·bed, RCA remole control
console TV. zenith .console 11dlo rmahJ, 2 tnltchlna
wtna beck chairs. mah. drumflblc. barrel beck chair,
tniPie flbie l- 4 chairs. maPle corner cabinet. J llcldtr
blc:k chairs. old trunb- camel back It flat. 4 PC. cut
Iron Porch 111, Ulct. ~aMe. lancv metal Patio HI. G.E.
20.8 C.f. retrlllnlor. G,f. 30" ranae. Sara cold 11101
UPrltht freezer, MIJIIU Wllhll' It

fenton, Hull art Pitcher w2·5 1/2", SmcuH china.
milk IIUS. Pink delirenlon, Plllttera. Cambrldft. candle
holders. cut 11asa. Hummels. J bo1111 of aneck seta.
Homer Lauahlln lllralnla Roae. 2 old ~~tllow crodll. •

110
•

. GENERAL MERCHANDISE &amp; FOOD MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

'

slava. 8ernard Prints. sev. books· Lincoln Boclk·
We are looking for bright, energetic Individuals who are Interested In a M:rn:~;:::~:l Children's books throulh Golden Windows It others.
old CltnerU, Old Pllltlnl Carda. beautifUl tilted mirror,
career with lha notions largest employer. We ofler competitive salaries;
1195 Lonacnberaer small Purac. Ia. aPaker, quilts.
benllflle, profit el)arlng, a 401 (k) savings plan, asaoclate merch~lae disCount
an aseoclate stock purc:ha81 program. If you are looking for a strong, arowlntal coatume 11111!111'11. llnnena. cookware. antique P!IOio
albums. candellbnl, luana toY train ilatlon. Marx.
company with trtmendoue opportunlttea for career-minded people '¥!d. heve
BrlciM It
HI, Strombecker raclnl IIIII W/CII'I.
,
Iron ketde,
lwteHr, na loU. hand tODII. nrd

~=:::fU.~~w;t~~~fEul

~--~-----r------~~
Send resumes to:
WAL-MART DISTRICT OFFI~E

'
I

en

,

fllllollury _.,.,. ~ellont h"l"' eera IHnen.., IIIPaMri!Mion eenl, 1111111 veo~on and holleleye
,.nalen 1111n,
·
•

-

•

..•

ATTENTION: DEBRA MAYS
12504 U.S. RT. 60
ASHLAND , KY 41105
1-(606) 928-6760
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

IS AN
·I

A public auction will be held to disperse of ths Ohio
University Surplus Items. NOTE: Each quarter Is a
completely new batch of surplus Hems lo be sold . ALL
ITEMS ARE SOLD AS. IS/ NO GUARANTEE I NO
RETURNS. VIsit the WEB site lor a complele lisling
www.laciiHies.ohtou .edu cllok on Moving and Surplus,
Surplus Inventory In Stock Items.- Preview the week
740-593· 0463 lor an appo intmenl.
Rt 33/50 to Athens to AT 682 Exit, go
Richland Avenue, turn left at the Ridges

. :1 - -800-82~ : ·8,139

1

Earn Online Income

648-21!3.
'

Public Sale and Auction

Front desklblllfng· positive, energetic, pu nctual person wanted to
work fn doctor's omca. Insurance
or billi ng eKperlence beneficia l.
Appl y fn person· Meig s County
Chiroprac tic CKnlc, 96 3 General
Hartinger next to Middleport pool.

FT. Free lnrormatlon. www.tht·
dreamexpress.cam Pnone (800}

.

PARENTS DREAM I Stay Home .
Processing Clai ms from home. Earn Money. Set your own hours .
Provided .
VIsit:
$15·545/Hrl Established company Tra ining
seeks people . Training Provided. www.homewithklds.com
Must own PC. 1·800·935· 131 1 x
206

NEEDED 59 people to lost 30 lba.
by April 1f. Brand new, just patenl·
edl 1 lost 23 lbs In 1 montl'll 800.
570·9628 or www.bsllm4111e.com

E-Commerct $1000 -$7 000 PT/

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
CAMPUS POUCE OFFICER

OWNA COMPUTER?

Put ft to wort earn $25.-$75/hr/Ptl
Fl . 1·888·671-9690~t650
www.adebtfreeyou ,oom

provided
. PC req . Potenllal
yr l 1·800·240-1548
exl. GOK/
121 ,~IiiiiPiiP9.fti~~~=~~~~~~;;;;;;;;
www.epsmed.net. BBB Member

www.pcpaya.com

Help Wanted

Now Hiring All Positions &amp; Hours .
Apptv At Golden Corral In Gal·
lip(His

OWN A COMPUTER? Put il to
workt $399·14999 PT.IFT, Fret
Delafls. www.91 t success.com

MEDICAL: Data Entry/Home Typ -

Ist (30+WPM) FT/PT Training

ER? WOrk trom hOme. Meii·Order/

We aura ml•• you, lite will never

our atrangth r•malna
W• aura m l - you but

MEDICAL BILLING : No uper i·
en ce needed . FTIPT. Training
provided, PC Required . Must
Type 30+ WPM. Up to S60Kiyr. 1·
800-750·8766
ext
520
www.medds.com

ATTENTION: OWN A COMPUT·

110

you not n ....
•aoh paaalna day haa brouatn: muon pain

MEDICAL BILLING : No exper l·
ence needed. FTIPT. Training
provided . PC Fleq, Must type 30+
WPM. to 60K/yr. 1·800·240..1548
e•t. 201 www.epsmed.net

Netded Motor Aoule Drivers In
The Gatllpolla To Crown Citv &amp;
Route 1 Area . Dally De li very 3
Hours, Sunday 3 112 Hours, Ap·
pro•fmately $1200 Profit A Month.
Con tact David Arthur (304)526·
2824

$9.00illr. (740)388-961!6

888-220-8956

£~&gt;£'AliA-

HELP! Own a computer? 'Work
trom home! mafl·oreder/E.Com·
men:a. 1·8Q0.296-o&amp;97 Ot
ouraweetsuccess.com

WV 25504 or Fax 1304)522·36\2

(304)52e-2824

For Garbage Colleclfon: Mu st
Have COL's, With E ~t pa r l e nc e ,
Call For Interview, Starting Pay,

Dancers, Top Dollar. (304)875;

www.cashweelthmore.com

$500· $7SOO/month

cell-ed By 2126/01
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

hce In Point Pleasant, Experience
Preferrad Plaue Send Rasume
To: P.O. Bolt 857 , Barbounv 111t,

Overbrook Centet is now accept·
fng applications lor pari Ume
STNA't ror 12 flour shifts. If you
are Interested In becoming part of
a winning team, please contact
Jackie Newsome. ADON at 740·
992-6472 lor more Information.

267-3944, x138.

The American Community
Advertising Network

Phone: 1-800-920-8860

Grounds Keeper Wanted For
Weekly Lawn Care. For More In·
!ormation Calt (740)446- 9840 Extension 220 Bids Must Be Re·

LPN Or MA Noodfd f&lt;&gt;r Busy 01·

Nuded Motor Route Drlvtra In
Tht Point Pleasant Area. Dally
Otllvery 3 Hours, Sunday 3 112
Hours, Appro•fmately $1200 Prof·
It A Monrh . Contact Davi(J Artbur

producls al home. No ••parlence
necessary. Call toll free 1·800·

$4 50· $1 500 Par Month, Part·
lima: $ ~000 · 54500 Par Montn
Full-limo. 1-800·582·4756
ATTENTION
Wort&lt; From Home
$25175 Hour MaU Ordor.

li ATTlNtidJi:

GOVT. POSTAL JOBS UP lo
$38,748/YR. NOW HIRING FOR
2001 PERMANENT STATUS .
FREE CALL FOR APPLICA·
TION·EXAMINATION INFOA·
MATION . FEDERAL HIRE-FULL
BENEFITS. 1-800·418·0712.
42 . 0~0 RETIRING AS OF JANU·
ARV 1, 2001 . FREE AEGISTAA·
TION.BONUS. ALL LINES OPEN
24 HOURS. WWW.GOVER·
NMENTPOSTAUOBS.ORG

Someone To Tear Down 2· Story
House In Rio Grande For Materl·
all , Next To Trfnlly Baptllt
Church.(7&lt;10)24$-&lt;ll 34

110 Help Wanted

Medical Insurance Billing. Need·
ed lmmedlatelyl Home computer
needed. FRE E Internet , 1··8 00·

EOE, MIF.

Attention Work From Home ,

100 JackiOn Pike, Gatnl»ona, OM 45831

Government Job1 $11 .00
$33.00 per hour potent&amp;l l. Pa 1d
Training/ Full Benefits. For more
lnlormallon call 1·888·67-4·9150
.... 3234.

1-800-394-2405.
EARN $25,000 TO $50,000/YR.

Typlng ...Great Payl CALL 1·800·
795-0380 Ex1201 (24hra)

n lnJtrtllad. contact;
VIcki NOttingham, Holzer Extra Care
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

110 Help Wanted

f1 0

Wanted

291·4e83 Oeptl 109
EASY WORK! Greal payl Earn
De adline: Friday, Fe bruary 16,.
SSOQ plus a week assembling

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEil Crafla,

Nllcltd lmmtdlettly. Personal Care Aldea,
and Sitters (til ahlfta) for Holzer Extra Care
to work ·1n the ~alllatJeckaonJMelga County
areaa. Excellent wage and benefit package.

110

&amp; u nba!' t!:imt!l· &amp;tnlinel • Page

Athans. Ohio 45701. Application

Toy s, Jewelry, Wood, Sewfng 1

mull be 18 y11. or older 10 apply.

to thaa. aa d - r
,.-lth our t.mlly •nd trlanda

But wwlth

hr potentiaL Processing claims fa
easyl Training provided . CALL 1·

tara.com

We Bolli Ha'llfl So Muc~ 10 Ol!erl
R,..,., .,.lJth, brll•o., """~ ...

••v•

Paul Elch

888·565-5197 .... 642.
\)LAIMS PROCESSORI $20·$40/

Ridgeway, 420 E. Main Street , home . $1500 Sign-on Bones w/
Jackson, OH 45840
· 1yr. Flatl&gt;ed Expor~ncll Call 800·
441-4271 Ex1. WET292
ACCESS II an AA/EEO Emplojor
ANYONE CAN 00 ITI $25·$75/ Help wanted ln adult group home,
HR· PT/FT. Worl&lt; at hOmt · 1-800· day and night ahlh, call 740·992·
374·8491 . www.ThlnkB igDof- 5023.

(Including full benefits)

1•1rfteld Blazer• ..Jr.

'Me /d•fli,

lnttrllltd appllcanla may sand
resume to: ACCESS, ~ttn :: Clara

1-800-929-5753
110

lnl arnet U11ra Wanted
Sl!Doo-$5000/mo

www.a-commt&gt;lz.nol

1605 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WOR KING FOR THE GOVERN·
MENT FROM HOME PARTTIME. NO EXPE RI ENCE RE·
QUIRED. 1·800·748·57 1S Ext.

Wanted to Buy

M.T.S. Coin Shop ,

/

4384
$450·$1000 WEEKLY Mailing Ill·

(740)256-8989

Absolute :rop Dollar: U.S. Sliver,
Gold Coins, Proofte1s, Diamonds,

.

ERS 1-Boo-260·029-1.
ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO

370 11 ·1438 Stan tmmedlaltly,

Fllver sl de Auction Bern, Sale
Every Satu rdaY' Nlgflt at ep.m.,
Auclioneer Raymond Jo hnao n

90

parlance needed! Quick COL
training program available. Earn
$30,000 + 111 year. COL DELIV·

5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH, TN .

nJ-&amp;785 Or 304-n:l-5447.

commerce. $500·$7000 mo. PT/
FT !rom home . Full training . Free
booklet
· 920·924·8400.
www.ActtleveOreams.com

Cilnlo Coordfnator/Nurafng Cast

brochures! SaHsractlon Guar·
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies pro·
'f'idedl Aush Self·Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT

Flick Pearrton Aucllon Company,
ru11 lime auctfontlr. complete
auction
service.
Licensed
188,0fl fo &amp; West VIrg inia, 304·

hr potential. Processing claims Is
euyl Training provided . CALL 1-

343 DRIVERS NEEDEOII No ex- Manager: rural development elf·

Help Wented
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400

Bridge. (740)886-2288

Rldeo In Car. (304)675-3656

INTERN~TIONAL
COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wllh Mall Order/E·

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! S2D-S40/

C.S.T.)

110

AUCTION Every Satu rday 6pm,
TrucklOads Of New &amp; Used Items
From Se't'eral States Selling To
The Public &amp; Dealers. One Piece,
Dozena &amp; Case Lot a. Gary
Bowe n. Au ctioneer ·Proctor'f'llle.
Ohio Flea Market, Just Acrou
Huntington, WV 31st Street

110 Hel Wanted

· ~01, 1rtt call for appllcatlonltx· Class A CCL Driver Wanted. ~
¥'11natton information federal Years OTR Experience. Call
Hfra· Full Bentlltl. 1·800·598· (740)388-8331 Leave Name &amp;
4Mo4 lltltnafon 1518 (7am-9pm Number

..

EMPLOYMENT
SfRVICES

110

to $18 .6!1 hour, Hiring for 988-523-4417 ..~ 884.

~lip

'

Pomer oy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

!i\

Boll

Auction conducted by
Rick PeBrson Auction Co. #66
773-5785 or 773-5447
Executor: Ellis E. Conley
TEAMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

14

lOC)LS I
•
, • 11 1111 Rig id 535 Pipe
cutter, Delta Table Saw, Craftsman Bandsaw, Craftsman
Joiner, DeWalt B&amp;D Panel Saw, Cincinnati Milling
Machine, Miter saw, Large Bridgeport floor model drlll
press, Walker Pug Mill clay machine, Miller Welder (120
walls), 2· Briggs &amp; Strallon Vanguard 16hp, V-twin
generators (72/75 hours), Crosley 12 gallon Humidifier,
West Bend Ultra Humidifier, Toastmasler Ultrasonic
Humidifier, Lannox forced air furnace,
piping, large
corrtahl,er.
motors.
NOTE:
many GiiliwEIY 2000
compulers, Deii·Optlplex GM+5133 Computer,
Data
Computer &amp; Hard Drive, Ber-noulli Computer, many
Macintosh llsl &amp; 6100 &amp; 7100 &amp; Cuadra 610 &amp; Performs
6214CD computers, Printonlx printer on wheels, Complot
CPS plotter, HP Dra'!';ft~P~ro~P~Iu~s~~~~; Pioneer LD-V4400
.!:i
Typewriters.
(To be sold alter
ii~~~p~~~~~~,,.:
27' color TV's, Quaser
;
combo, Magnavox Astro-Sonlc console
stereo,
Record player, Old Zenith radio, HPB409C
auto netwOrk analyzer, Hitachi FP-21 Video camera with
case &amp; tripod, Sony V0-5000 sarles VCRs, Magnavox
VCR, JVC CR-4700 VCRs w/cases &amp; chargers,
Panasontc 8' &amp;25' video projector, 3-Bell &amp;Howell 16mm
Fllmo sound, electric •snake" pipe cleaner, Audlotronics
152 S-2 cassette deck, Mansfield 8mm portable edllor,
Mlcroter IIXE &amp; HP Jet Plus scanners, Floor Model
Copiers, Canon NP 3050, Rlcho FT 5540, Canon
NP3725,
machine.

I: ~ :

j

OF IIC£ f OU IPMf ~J r /1. f IJH tJI '-'H INC S
3 metal
flreproof cabinets, melallaleral file cabinets, 2 &amp; 3 .dr. file
cabinets, fila cart on wheels, several nice wood desks,
metal office &amp; dorm desks, metal &amp; wood stools, lots of
wood tables, 40+ new wood table tapa, wood. shelving
unll (needs put together), metal shelving unlls, metal
storage cablnet1, metal 3-dr arttsl cabinet, large wood
map cabinet, over 200 vinyl/cushion wood lrame chairs,
181 of 30 metal frame chairs lots of other chairs,
Very large assortment of
tumHure Including: 21 seta of wood twin headboards, 35+
twin bed aprlnge, 30+ nice dressers &amp; night stands. 1·
white Prov. style bedroom sulte, many cushioned love
&amp;Hts wtlh wood lrame9 and chairs to match, various end
tables (1-marllte top), tots of wOOd padded chairs, lots of
other chalrl, several wood round tables, 42" round wood
kllchen table w/6 chairs, nice maple reel. dining table w/
4 chairs·, l;&gt;uncan Phyffe table, glass top wrought Iron
patto table w/3 chairs. wood 2-door glass cabinet, small
wood bench.
White/Whirlpool electric ranges,
Kenmore/Roper/Westtrighouse refrigerators, older Phllco
!!!!!g!!!~ Sunbeam gas grill.
·
large wood looms, assortment of
WalchiiS, large Wood &amp; metal mailboxes W/
Illata, sled, 2·sats of loot lockers w/keys, other lockers,
wood top metal Work bench, 7'x32" wood doors, 58" metal
food tray cart, 8'x4' chalkboard on stand, 8+ wall mount
challlboards, vinyl exam table, stalnleaa steel double sink,
lots of Inside llghlllxturea, HI of 23 outaide llghl fixtures ,
large outalde light pole globes, 6·5 gallon buckets,
Offenae floor slrlpper, basketballs, aet of 6 .hockey
20 boxes of children 's toys &amp; other ~ems.
or check w/ poslllve ID payable to Ohio
MC, VISA, &amp; OIICOver will be aooepted.
Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of
funds available. Not responsible for loss or accidents.
Food will

Surplus Inventory In Stock Items)
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
PH: 740·592-4310 or 800·419-9122

'

03

�Sunday, February

11,2001

Wantld
•FEDERAL PDITAL JOBI"

.. Qp

to $18 .8S hour, Hiring for
:aoo1, free call for •ppllcatlonlex·
JfTIInlllon information Ftdtrll
fre·Full Benefit&amp;. 1·800-59850&lt;1 exten11on 1~15 (7am·9pm

~S.T.)

:"• FED!~AL PO STAL JOII"

-TO ..... l'hrlh ~
9 West Stimson. All'll&lt;ll
740-592·11142

LOST: Children's Pot, farge Whlta 80

r.ciet .. l'oul'ld, Yllrd .....,
lillct Wanled To Do Adl

START OATI~&gt;;G TONtGHTI
Have run mooUng oligiOIO linQios

Muat Bl Plfd In AdVInce.

In your area. Call for more infor·
maUon . t-800-ROMANCE. e•l .

ROMANCE eKI. 1621 ·

Quality clothing and household

WOULD THE stay at hOme mom

1736.

thai wanlo to earn $500·$700 a
month call me 0 1-888-836-M82
ASAP. I tos.t your nurnoer.

Items. $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

TRIBUNE QfAQUNE:

2:00p.m. the day batON
eel lelo run. Sunday a
........,._ _.,..__ 00
~-r ...,...,, 2:
p.m.
Frkley
IENDNEt; OfADUNE •.

1:00 p.m. the day~
.
'
the ad leto run.
Sunday &amp; Monday edllloft
1:00 p.m. Friday .
·

BIG~

QFADUNI:

2 deye ~*ora the ad II to
run by 4:30p.m. Saturday
a Monday ttdttlon· 4:30
"Oelldllnee

ANNOUNC EMEN TS

FREESEARctil
www.SINGLES.eom

Start daung tonight! Play 1M Ohio
Dating Game. Con toU ''" 1·800·

Card of Thanka:
;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;

THE FAMILY OF

lab, In The Ambrosia &amp; Grter Fld
Area. Witn Collar And Chain. Answers To Theodora. Pleas• Call

(304)675-7689

.

9:()0-5:30.

40

Giveaway

To Good Home In The Country, 3
Year Old Male Mix Medium Size
Oog, loves Children, Swimming &amp;

Auction
and Flee Market

Frances Geraldine Burcham
Would like to thank all of those
trrande who tent tlowere, food, or
carda. Speclel· thanka to Weugh-,
Halley-Wood Funeral Home and to all
ataff'a and Dr. Abel at Arbora and tor
their love end cering of our mother
and wife. To Rev. Ralph Workman,
thanks tor the conaollng meaaage
from your htart. Your klndnna will
always bt remembtrtd.

Mommy, you have bltn
gone from ua two ytlrl,
but God Hid It wu time to Ill with Dlddy.
knoW you 11'1 happy with him. You will Ill
with ua alwaya, alwaya.

ters from home. No experience
necessary. FTI PT. Help needed
Immediately.' Call 'Sundance DIS·
trlbutora' 1·800·889·3449 EX·

TENSION 22 (24 ius).

l 'loal -40 lba In Juat 2 t-~ton th a ,
l,.:ose 5 To 100 + l bt.\ Gain Ener·
gy, Rl8ultt Cluarantttdl Earn

J:M~e,

S!ID0-$1ooo Part Tln)o From Yo~r
(800)582·!!7!7

pm.. ~. A

Gold Rlnga.

U.S. Currency,1 ~1

Second

Absolutely· Free lnlo
Earn Oflllne Income
$2.000· $5,000/mo,
WOf'io:FromHomeCot.oom
ACCESS : A center for Counul·
lng , EdueaUon, And Social Serv·
Ices fs accepting applications for
til e poaf tlons of Th erapis t and
CSP/ Ca se Manager In GaUl&amp;,
Jacl\aon and Meigs Counties.

•
.~

.

THERAPIST: Qualllled appllcanla

wHI haw a minimum ot a master'a
degree In paychology, counseling
or related tltlc::l.' l,.lcen sed fn the
SIBil Of OhiO as a LISW, LSP, or
LPCC with e~tpe rlence working fn
a community mental health seturv
wit~ Children. Licensed Ph .D fn

.,

• 101'

$987. 85 WE EKLY! Processing
HUD/FHA Mortgage Refunds. No

A""""•· Golllpolls, 741).448-2842.
Fi ll hllch aysttm to fix Farmalls
Super A, 100, 130, 140, will pay
for call, 740-987-5875.

Experience Required . For FREE

psychology Pralerred
CSP/ CASE MANAGER : Thlo

Information Call 1-80D-SOH832

e.d. 1300.

position ~rovl des case manage·
men t ser'f'lce s Including service
coordinalf on, referral se rvi ces
and horne 'f'fslts to at risk children
and families : Primary work set·
lings will be In the schools and fn
clients' homes. Focu1 wm be on
Children and/or adolescents with
multiple difficulties lncludln9 be·
havforal probtems, mental healtt1
and substance abu se Issues, SO·
cfal maladjustment, academic un·
deracht tvament, tru ancy, leg al
Problems and other fsaues. Quail·
fled appl lcanta will havt a mlnf·
mum ot a Bachelor'• degre e or
equ ivalent e ~tperlen~e In so.cl al
work, paycflology or ielated field.
LSW Wi th t ltperlence fn ca se
management with at risk popula·
tkln preferred .

'"ACC ESS TO A COMPUTER?

Put It to workl $2Sfhr.·$7511'1r. FTI

PT. FREE Info. 800·871·804! ext
601 www.lahomeblz.com

,(,(J &amp;

Wanted

Ho,mo.

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
?.

Claire
Boao

On tul lldt*Y

CASHIER/

Fllbrulry8,1NII

Shift Manaeer

Fib. 124, 1810,

LoVed itiKI

$9.23 ~ $12.23/lfour

mlutdby
hla family.

'ull end plft·llllll polltlone avellebla.
Cornplelelrltlnlng provided with ftexlble hoone.
·
· Eam up to $15 /hour.
l"ullttme poelllane oller bonellt peokege which
lnol- Madloii/Den!OII/~1 KJPd Veoetlone.
CALL TODAY... START TOMORROVII

w.ttt· 7b IHI Wlrh Tn• LOI'd. .0 l1N',.. ,
· Ago O(t I'Wn'll•l)' ,.,• .,.,.,

Would llkl·to tblnk
-.yona far their
ldndnnl, Jll'l\'lrl,

frllndelllp, food.

tlouuaia~NI

If' uta Goulet only brlna aaaln.
tM
w• took for arant-.ct
Wf1•n to he•r vour voice
w~ Juat a o•ll •way
Wh•t we•ct atv• fOr Juet aome ·
tlima to·••v the thlnaa
.
Th.t: allppecl our mlncla
There•a eo muoh now, we'd
r-uv nu to
But we ..,utcl never ao back wn•n
• W• did the thiN~• ~ did baok th•n
W•'ll 8tare thoee preoloua
.,
m.morl- In our mlncla

llln- a dlllll.
Specllllllllilllld the
POIIIII'OY EMS, Holar

~~-·Paul'•

·lndlvldutl doelllrt,

. Ho!Dr Blnlor Cln
Cenllr, Wlugii-HIIIay-

WOOd Funnl Home In
G11HpoUa, Rev. J111111
Btmlokl olthe Christ
Epi~Church
lnPt.PieulnL
Your klncl-11

IPP4i:··

GI'ICt Elch, Paul
Elch,Suun
a 8111 EIOh

••Y

" , Wa"ll

•nd

~what

FUll-'" .... lad. . Major Moillool, Daota1, One- Vocation
l!lor 6 mont111, ,Short ~
'llorrn piub~:: Sk:li Oa)l. 1'mQa11 •
lityo ud six N.u...l l!olldayo !"': -·
n1 JAd •·&lt;101 K Pflru '
Flexible sclledulc with 1 "Can Do atdllldii11Moufh lnliaina il provldcct'
and arecr promotkm poulbilftiel are pouiblc

•n

you lnettll.al

Lo"'

t~ ua
try to .._
.!
We o•n be, and w•lk the path
that you have left IH!hlnd
The little thlnga that •-m eo •m•U

YOU: OoiJIJAdi"' CuoiOmor Scrvloo, Moo'llion JAd' Comm- 10

Ia now like gold In memory•• vault
We oherleh every ona that we h•v• of you
Now we oan and reaagnlttM p•rt you played to ahapa
Our llv... often • - n In th• thing• we do
In Qod"a d-Ian and ma•t•r pl•n
He aaw the hurting
H•••Dfm•n
Aa we would -v goodbye

•ut

'Jtamwott lad l'trformulcc.Acanle: Cah. c..trol, dllclcMopcr~don ot111e
CISll rqillm a)'llem. c:lcaninellld 'ID:kirw mcn:bandilc. M~ be lble 10
wodl bctwml6om-9pm. HiP Sd1ool DlpfomoarOED requil&lt;cl. Coodidlr&lt;J

Help Wanted

HOLZER EXTRA CARE

Drlvera : ONLINE APPLICA·
TIONS. Fk'M:J !he bttt driving jobs
or star! a high paying career now.
Our placement prol•sslonata wilt
make landing your job easy. 877·
893·20G6 www.hookup.comldrfv·

....

nk: seeking Flegfstered Nurse tor
full lime position coordinating
developmental clinics . Aesponsl·
bll ltfes Include : home visita, de't'e!opme(llal screenings, clinic
coordfnaflon, and case manage·
ment ot services for families .
Qualifications: Bacflalors degree
In Nursing preferred. Applicant
must possess a curren t license
trom the Ohio Board of Nursing ,
and have experience In Pediatrics wi th empnasfs .on children
with apecfal needa and develop·
mental asse11ma nts. Reliable ·
transpOIIatlon II reQUired. S8lary;
Commensurate wllh experience.
Please submit a leiter or Interest
and re sume to: John 0. Costanzo,
Sup trlnlendent , A.t hens· Melgs
Educational Service Center, 507
FllchiBnd Ave nue, Suite t 108,
Oil

Drivers : P.A.M. Transport No ex·
parlance needed . 2 week paid
COL training. Great pay! $34,0001
yr, yea·r plus ru u be11efits &amp; pafd
train ing. Drivers based In Mid·
west. 1·877·230·6002 . Sunday
8am-4pm . Monday 7am-6pm ,
Tue-Frl7am·4pm.

DRIVING CAREERS START
HERE! We Need Over 300 Entry
Level Drivers Th iS Month. No Ex·
perlence Required. WE FlepreStlnt Over .40 TrUcking Compa·
nles. Vou Choose Which One .
Tul! lon Assistance A'f'allable For
Inexperienced. COL DELIV ERS

2001. Equal Opportunity Employ·
er/Provlder.

CNH, HHA, Certllled Homemakers
Needed To Provide In Ho'Me
Serv ices For Th e Elderly &amp; Olsa·
bled In Th e Mason, New Haven ,
West Columbia Area . Call 1·888·

453-4992
Construction Coordinator For Ca·
bit Syllem; Aeaportslble For Co·
~rdf n atlng Construction Erforts
Through In-hou se And Contract
Labor For New And Rebuild Pro·
)ects. Must HEwe CATV System
Operation s Work Experlerace .
And CATV Cons tru ction w or k
Experience. Excellent Benellt
Package. Please Submit Resume
To : Charter Commun icat ions ,
1"1 0 Jefferson Blvd .. Point 'Pleas·
ant, WV 2!5!50 Attn:Kurt Leach:
man. No Phone Calls Please .

we' ll be togeth•r onoa again

Announcamant

........

CONSOUDA E SILLS
•LOW RATES
• NO UP·FRONT
FEES
• BAD CREDIT OK
• BANKRUPTCY
ACCEpTED
•SAME DAY
APPROVAL

5955

Ortver· Earn up to $.3..1mlles to

stort Full Oenerna package. Aa·
afgned convent ional you drive

• CALL TOLL·FREE

1-860-227-88811

be the ••m• with

Research/Planning
Specialist Position:

Clot~•a gra~

Heaven•• .w•.t•r with you ther•
S'c #;
4l'p ,...
"ll ; t t ......, ,...._
~-...... &lt;c
~ ...e ~t~~.tt. ..~k....,...._

·-'*• --v-

Rnponllble fo~ developing end Implementing
Oeosrephlc lnformltlon Syatem (GIS)
mapping, dluemlnetlng ceneua date, providing
raiMI'Ch raport, Including elltlltlce, tablll end
graphlee for OVRDC memtbrt .end atllfl •• well
11 mtjor rtportt end plene. Altoclatl't or
Blchtlor't Degrtt In geography, geology, tocltl
tcllnct or planning with 11 lttlt one y11r of QIS
and rtlllrch experience or education; or en
equivalent combination of educellon end
·experience.
Excellent bonefllt. packegt
Including Public l!mplove-' Altlrement System
(PEAS). Annual 1111ry range S23,11CJ0.128,500.

AaenoY'•

Submll ' cover leater end rttume with thrat
proflltlonel rtfertnctt to Alllttlnt Director,
Ohio V.lley Regional Dlvtlopment Cominlellon,
P.O. Box 728, Wtverly, OH 45880 or FAX (740)
847-3488 by 4:30 p.m. on Wtdntay, Ftbruery

21,2001.

.

.

Mf'!H

·An~~.....,.,...

110

I

Sell Avon. Free Start-up Fee . Call

(740)448-3351l

Public

AUCTION
January 15, 2001 • 6:00 p.in.
97 Beech Str. .t, Middleport, OH

Watch For Signsl
Due to the c:loalng of a long time
bualneaa In the community
"CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON"

Announcement

One Stop Shopping

Contact us at:

We have been asked to •••• the
f~llowlngltems at auction:

For All Your Advertising Needs

PoaUng Date: February 2, 2001

.

I

or visit our website:

1-800·7114-8558

www.americancommunltyclassifled.com

1985 Chrysler Dodge
Cargo Van. 1985
Truck w/ Topper,
moving truck, 2 Golf

TIM Unlvnlty ol Rio Grande 1e llldiog appllcltlonator
two lull lime Ollllplll pollOI olftCirt. fiMponelbllltiM

Include the proiiCiton olthe unlwrtlly'e fllciNtln lnd
property ~ the enforCimlnl Ot publl1heil UnlwNI!y
r.gulellone lncl Other elite ancl federal laws.
~tor the pollllon lnotudla high eohool

.

'

,,

copy of OPOTA cenlfloellon and of lllrM
rtfe-l*ora
the
dlldilne
of
February
18,
2001, to:
.
,_
'
'
.

Phyllle Maaon, SPHR
Director of Human Retourcea
University of Rio Grandt
P.O. Box 1100, Rio Grande, OH ~784

..
•.

·-·

IIIli lllfla Ull If Ill re u ·

1~0114

.

1

.

Resume To P.O. Box 55 . Point.
Pleasant, w-125550
BookkHper wanted, 20 hOura per
week, ~lnlmum 5 years experl·
enct, tccountt receivable , ac·
counts payable I data ilntry. For
more lnlormatlon call Alex at 740·

843-9422.

NOnCE OF POSnlON VACANCY

CarHr Opportunities For LPN's.

Top Of Tht Scale Wasta· $11 .00

:1'

•

•,1

,.

....

JOB OPENINGS

~~T~H~I!~·E~~~~~AllQOMPANY
haa lmmadlata opanlnga lit Ita food manutaoturlng facility 1,:,
appllcanta muM hava knowtadga and axperlanoe In · a manuf•oturlng
to work any ahlft, and pci•••• tha following quolltl":

Start Pay With Shlll lrterentlal ,
Experllfice Pay1 Bonua, Program
&amp; Extr«Mty GoOd Health _ , .
Joint Comm. Accredlbtd 100 S.d
Facility. Come Jol~ Our Team .

POSITION: Public Health Nurae I
DUTII!B: Project Dlractor for lha Cardiovascular

Hsilth Project Grant
'
TYPE OF POSITION: Part-time (21 hours per week)
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's degree In
Slop By For APIIIICatlon And
nursing from an accredited school of nursing or an
Schldu~d lnlt.rvltw. Scenic hllll
Aaeoclete'a Degree/Diploma R.N. with 2 yeara
Nursing Center, 311 BuckrldQt
Rd. BldWtll, Ohio. 'T~t Afzllelm- l;e•:perilenlie. Currently licensed In the Stale of Ohio as
eroExporto' EOfi. .
R.
Must hold a valid Ohio driver's license.
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
'
DATI! AVAILABLE: February 26, 2001
e•oellent Income. Easr claims
RATE OF PAY ANQ BENEFITS: Public Health Nurse I
procenlng. FuU training. Home·
pey as par Gallla County Heatth Department .salary
PC required . Call Phyolclan &amp;
Healthcar• D•Velopm•nta tqll·
structure. See Nursing Director for sllrtlng rile
,,. and
1rae 1-800-n2-!!933oxt.2010.
CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS!
DATE OF POSnNO: February 8, ~1

Work from Homt. Ltall·order/ln·

•
· troubiMhoOt 240-410 volt - r dlatrlbutlon ecjulpment· both AC and DC motor• ·
-rtera - h 118 VOlt -ntrol and -ntrol dev!OH auoh . . p - •YM' and proximity awltchaa '
• Ability to , _ electrical ooham.aoe
·
• Knowladp of PLC'a Ia d . .lrobla
• Ona YM• of algabr• Ia daelrect
• Two Y••ra •1-rlolan expert•noe or aqutvatant aduoMiori In alaotrloal ttatct
. • Poeltlona wttl btl on ,....net anct·thlrd thlfta
.
• Pay rata 111.110 to 8t1JIIper hour (piua ahlft dltferantlal), Clapandtng on experlenoa
• Thla te • union hourly poottton
i

FREE ESTIMATES
FREE 10 YR WARRANTY

ESTATE

.AUCTION

Billing Clerk For Medical Equipment 'Company. Pleue Submit

'

bto willing

Total Year Round Comfort

AVON! LOOKING FOR A HIGH·
ER INCOME? More flex iOio

266·2950.

,,

FAX (740) 245-411011
~
. EMAIL :::~lo.tdu ~
~ ... a..t
. Buy In EtJUc.tJon

................ feriHI &lt;01 Molorl .....ciiiMdiN,

Bate.a Bros. Amusement Co . fs
looking tor Individuals to travel lor
the 2001 itason. Muat be at
least 18 yrs. · Contact ua at 740·

,

IN--..UU .....

,.......ID.

Phone1 1740)

talk. 1-800-942-4053.

..

•wteltlaiU'IMM '

u...... I I 7'173 A WV
nzoOMe or~ (7'40) HZs710J
TermiJ c._.. or PMII wltlt
...t

Attenti on: Work From Home,

houra? Independen ce? AVON
has whit ycu're looking lor. let's

lduOitlon or equlvltlent. Bulc law lnlorcement
tntlnlng II required. OPOTA Oll'tlflOitlon nece...ry.
lluat blevelleble too; evening and/or weekend ~hlfll.

All oendklllll lhould aubmlla current rtaume 1nc1

H!ltlfhlyt"

NOT•• I now have my Wee~ Vl,.lnl8 IIcon...
AuctlonHJI Billy ll. Goble, Jr.

$500· $1!00 Mo. Part Tlmt,
$2000· $7500 + Mo. Full .Time.
Paid Vacallona, (888)852-7501
AVON! All Areaal To Buy or
Shwtoy Spears, 304-675-1429.

ttrnoc. &amp;1,200-18.800 PT~. FrH
fnformoUon (414) 2110-8800
www.horne-bu--oyo·

toma.com

DI!ADUNI! FOR ACCEPTANCE OF APPL,ICAnONS
WITH AI!SUMI!: February 16, ·2001 by the close of
business. Submit to
Dlrsctor.

at
on
33
In Maaon, WV. We have moved the eltate
of H&amp;l!tn Conley from Pt. Plaaaant, WV to
tha Auction Center In Maaon, WV and will
be aalllng .t he following ...
FURNITURE
Outltttndlna 8 PC. mlth. OR aulte wlcurvtd front china
cibllllf, carved sofa, Qunn Ann colfn flblc. mlth •
slant front dak. 5 PC. maPle cannon, ball POitar BR
aulta. cedar chat. hllda·bed, RCA remole control
console TV. zenith .console 11dlo rmahJ, 2 tnltchlna
wtna beck chairs. mah. drumflblc. barrel beck chair,
tniPie flbie l- 4 chairs. maPle corner cabinet. J llcldtr
blc:k chairs. old trunb- camel back It flat. 4 PC. cut
Iron Porch 111, Ulct. ~aMe. lancv metal Patio HI. G.E.
20.8 C.f. retrlllnlor. G,f. 30" ranae. Sara cold 11101
UPrltht freezer, MIJIIU Wllhll' It

fenton, Hull art Pitcher w2·5 1/2", SmcuH china.
milk IIUS. Pink delirenlon, Plllttera. Cambrldft. candle
holders. cut 11asa. Hummels. J bo1111 of aneck seta.
Homer Lauahlln lllralnla Roae. 2 old ~~tllow crodll. •

110
•

. GENERAL MERCHANDISE &amp; FOOD MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

'

slava. 8ernard Prints. sev. books· Lincoln Boclk·
We are looking for bright, energetic Individuals who are Interested In a M:rn:~;:::~:l Children's books throulh Golden Windows It others.
old CltnerU, Old Pllltlnl Carda. beautifUl tilted mirror,
career with lha notions largest employer. We ofler competitive salaries;
1195 Lonacnberaer small Purac. Ia. aPaker, quilts.
benllflle, profit el)arlng, a 401 (k) savings plan, asaoclate merch~lae disCount
an aseoclate stock purc:ha81 program. If you are looking for a strong, arowlntal coatume 11111!111'11. llnnena. cookware. antique P!IOio
albums. candellbnl, luana toY train ilatlon. Marx.
company with trtmendoue opportunlttea for career-minded people '¥!d. heve
BrlciM It
HI, Strombecker raclnl IIIII W/CII'I.
,
Iron ketde,
lwteHr, na loU. hand tODII. nrd

~=:::fU.~~w;t~~~fEul

~--~-----r------~~
Send resumes to:
WAL-MART DISTRICT OFFI~E

'
I

en

,

fllllollury _.,.,. ~ellont h"l"' eera IHnen.., IIIPaMri!Mion eenl, 1111111 veo~on and holleleye
,.nalen 1111n,
·
•

-

•

..•

ATTENTION: DEBRA MAYS
12504 U.S. RT. 60
ASHLAND , KY 41105
1-(606) 928-6760
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

IS AN
·I

A public auction will be held to disperse of ths Ohio
University Surplus Items. NOTE: Each quarter Is a
completely new batch of surplus Hems lo be sold . ALL
ITEMS ARE SOLD AS. IS/ NO GUARANTEE I NO
RETURNS. VIsit the WEB site lor a complele lisling
www.laciiHies.ohtou .edu cllok on Moving and Surplus,
Surplus Inventory In Stock Items.- Preview the week
740-593· 0463 lor an appo intmenl.
Rt 33/50 to Athens to AT 682 Exit, go
Richland Avenue, turn left at the Ridges

. :1 - -800-82~ : ·8,139

1

Earn Online Income

648-21!3.
'

Public Sale and Auction

Front desklblllfng· positive, energetic, pu nctual person wanted to
work fn doctor's omca. Insurance
or billi ng eKperlence beneficia l.
Appl y fn person· Meig s County
Chiroprac tic CKnlc, 96 3 General
Hartinger next to Middleport pool.

FT. Free lnrormatlon. www.tht·
dreamexpress.cam Pnone (800}

.

PARENTS DREAM I Stay Home .
Processing Clai ms from home. Earn Money. Set your own hours .
Provided .
VIsit:
$15·545/Hrl Established company Tra ining
seeks people . Training Provided. www.homewithklds.com
Must own PC. 1·800·935· 131 1 x
206

NEEDED 59 people to lost 30 lba.
by April 1f. Brand new, just patenl·
edl 1 lost 23 lbs In 1 montl'll 800.
570·9628 or www.bsllm4111e.com

E-Commerct $1000 -$7 000 PT/

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
CAMPUS POUCE OFFICER

OWNA COMPUTER?

Put ft to wort earn $25.-$75/hr/Ptl
Fl . 1·888·671-9690~t650
www.adebtfreeyou ,oom

provided
. PC req . Potenllal
yr l 1·800·240-1548
exl. GOK/
121 ,~IiiiiPiiP9.fti~~~=~~~~~~;;;;;;;;
www.epsmed.net. BBB Member

www.pcpaya.com

Help Wanted

Now Hiring All Positions &amp; Hours .
Apptv At Golden Corral In Gal·
lip(His

OWN A COMPUTER? Put il to
workt $399·14999 PT.IFT, Fret
Delafls. www.91 t success.com

MEDICAL: Data Entry/Home Typ -

Ist (30+WPM) FT/PT Training

ER? WOrk trom hOme. Meii·Order/

We aura ml•• you, lite will never

our atrangth r•malna
W• aura m l - you but

MEDICAL BILLING : No uper i·
en ce needed . FTIPT. Training
provided, PC Required . Must
Type 30+ WPM. Up to S60Kiyr. 1·
800-750·8766
ext
520
www.medds.com

ATTENTION: OWN A COMPUT·

110

you not n ....
•aoh paaalna day haa brouatn: muon pain

MEDICAL BILLING : No exper l·
ence needed. FTIPT. Training
provided . PC Fleq, Must type 30+
WPM. to 60K/yr. 1·800·240..1548
e•t. 201 www.epsmed.net

Netded Motor Aoule Drivers In
The Gatllpolla To Crown Citv &amp;
Route 1 Area . Dally De li very 3
Hours, Sunday 3 112 Hours, Ap·
pro•fmately $1200 Profit A Month.
Con tact David Arthur (304)526·
2824

$9.00illr. (740)388-961!6

888-220-8956

£~&gt;£'AliA-

HELP! Own a computer? 'Work
trom home! mafl·oreder/E.Com·
men:a. 1·8Q0.296-o&amp;97 Ot
ouraweetsuccess.com

WV 25504 or Fax 1304)522·36\2

(304)52e-2824

For Garbage Colleclfon: Mu st
Have COL's, With E ~t pa r l e nc e ,
Call For Interview, Starting Pay,

Dancers, Top Dollar. (304)875;

www.cashweelthmore.com

$500· $7SOO/month

cell-ed By 2126/01
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

hce In Point Pleasant, Experience
Preferrad Plaue Send Rasume
To: P.O. Bolt 857 , Barbounv 111t,

Overbrook Centet is now accept·
fng applications lor pari Ume
STNA't ror 12 flour shifts. If you
are Interested In becoming part of
a winning team, please contact
Jackie Newsome. ADON at 740·
992-6472 lor more Information.

267-3944, x138.

The American Community
Advertising Network

Phone: 1-800-920-8860

Grounds Keeper Wanted For
Weekly Lawn Care. For More In·
!ormation Calt (740)446- 9840 Extension 220 Bids Must Be Re·

LPN Or MA Noodfd f&lt;&gt;r Busy 01·

Nuded Motor Route Drlvtra In
Tht Point Pleasant Area. Dally
Otllvery 3 Hours, Sunday 3 112
Hours, Appro•fmately $1200 Prof·
It A Monrh . Contact Davi(J Artbur

producls al home. No ••parlence
necessary. Call toll free 1·800·

$4 50· $1 500 Par Month, Part·
lima: $ ~000 · 54500 Par Montn
Full-limo. 1-800·582·4756
ATTENTION
Wort&lt; From Home
$25175 Hour MaU Ordor.

li ATTlNtidJi:

GOVT. POSTAL JOBS UP lo
$38,748/YR. NOW HIRING FOR
2001 PERMANENT STATUS .
FREE CALL FOR APPLICA·
TION·EXAMINATION INFOA·
MATION . FEDERAL HIRE-FULL
BENEFITS. 1-800·418·0712.
42 . 0~0 RETIRING AS OF JANU·
ARV 1, 2001 . FREE AEGISTAA·
TION.BONUS. ALL LINES OPEN
24 HOURS. WWW.GOVER·
NMENTPOSTAUOBS.ORG

Someone To Tear Down 2· Story
House In Rio Grande For Materl·
all , Next To Trfnlly Baptllt
Church.(7&lt;10)24$-&lt;ll 34

110 Help Wanted

Medical Insurance Billing. Need·
ed lmmedlatelyl Home computer
needed. FRE E Internet , 1··8 00·

EOE, MIF.

Attention Work From Home ,

100 JackiOn Pike, Gatnl»ona, OM 45831

Government Job1 $11 .00
$33.00 per hour potent&amp;l l. Pa 1d
Training/ Full Benefits. For more
lnlormallon call 1·888·67-4·9150
.... 3234.

1-800-394-2405.
EARN $25,000 TO $50,000/YR.

Typlng ...Great Payl CALL 1·800·
795-0380 Ex1201 (24hra)

n lnJtrtllad. contact;
VIcki NOttingham, Holzer Extra Care
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

110 Help Wanted

f1 0

Wanted

291·4e83 Oeptl 109
EASY WORK! Greal payl Earn
De adline: Friday, Fe bruary 16,.
SSOQ plus a week assembling

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEil Crafla,

Nllcltd lmmtdlettly. Personal Care Aldea,
and Sitters (til ahlfta) for Holzer Extra Care
to work ·1n the ~alllatJeckaonJMelga County
areaa. Excellent wage and benefit package.

110

&amp; u nba!' t!:imt!l· &amp;tnlinel • Page

Athans. Ohio 45701. Application

Toy s, Jewelry, Wood, Sewfng 1

mull be 18 y11. or older 10 apply.

to thaa. aa d - r
,.-lth our t.mlly •nd trlanda

But wwlth

hr potentiaL Processing claims fa
easyl Training provided . CALL 1·

tara.com

We Bolli Ha'llfl So Muc~ 10 Ol!erl
R,..,., .,.lJth, brll•o., """~ ...

••v•

Paul Elch

888·565-5197 .... 642.
\)LAIMS PROCESSORI $20·$40/

Ridgeway, 420 E. Main Street , home . $1500 Sign-on Bones w/
Jackson, OH 45840
· 1yr. Flatl&gt;ed Expor~ncll Call 800·
441-4271 Ex1. WET292
ACCESS II an AA/EEO Emplojor
ANYONE CAN 00 ITI $25·$75/ Help wanted ln adult group home,
HR· PT/FT. Worl&lt; at hOmt · 1-800· day and night ahlh, call 740·992·
374·8491 . www.ThlnkB igDof- 5023.

(Including full benefits)

1•1rfteld Blazer• ..Jr.

'Me /d•fli,

lnttrllltd appllcanla may sand
resume to: ACCESS, ~ttn :: Clara

1-800-929-5753
110

lnl arnet U11ra Wanted
Sl!Doo-$5000/mo

www.a-commt&gt;lz.nol

1605 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WOR KING FOR THE GOVERN·
MENT FROM HOME PARTTIME. NO EXPE RI ENCE RE·
QUIRED. 1·800·748·57 1S Ext.

Wanted to Buy

M.T.S. Coin Shop ,

/

4384
$450·$1000 WEEKLY Mailing Ill·

(740)256-8989

Absolute :rop Dollar: U.S. Sliver,
Gold Coins, Proofte1s, Diamonds,

.

ERS 1-Boo-260·029-1.
ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO

370 11 ·1438 Stan tmmedlaltly,

Fllver sl de Auction Bern, Sale
Every Satu rdaY' Nlgflt at ep.m.,
Auclioneer Raymond Jo hnao n

90

parlance needed! Quick COL
training program available. Earn
$30,000 + 111 year. COL DELIV·

5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH, TN .

nJ-&amp;785 Or 304-n:l-5447.

commerce. $500·$7000 mo. PT/
FT !rom home . Full training . Free
booklet
· 920·924·8400.
www.ActtleveOreams.com

Cilnlo Coordfnator/Nurafng Cast

brochures! SaHsractlon Guar·
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies pro·
'f'idedl Aush Self·Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT

Flick Pearrton Aucllon Company,
ru11 lime auctfontlr. complete
auction
service.
Licensed
188,0fl fo &amp; West VIrg inia, 304·

hr potential. Processing claims Is
euyl Training provided . CALL 1-

343 DRIVERS NEEDEOII No ex- Manager: rural development elf·

Help Wented
$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400

Bridge. (740)886-2288

Rldeo In Car. (304)675-3656

INTERN~TIONAL
COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wllh Mall Order/E·

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! S2D-S40/

C.S.T.)

110

AUCTION Every Satu rday 6pm,
TrucklOads Of New &amp; Used Items
From Se't'eral States Selling To
The Public &amp; Dealers. One Piece,
Dozena &amp; Case Lot a. Gary
Bowe n. Au ctioneer ·Proctor'f'llle.
Ohio Flea Market, Just Acrou
Huntington, WV 31st Street

110 Hel Wanted

· ~01, 1rtt call for appllcatlonltx· Class A CCL Driver Wanted. ~
¥'11natton information federal Years OTR Experience. Call
Hfra· Full Bentlltl. 1·800·598· (740)388-8331 Leave Name &amp;
4Mo4 lltltnafon 1518 (7am-9pm Number

..

EMPLOYMENT
SfRVICES

110

to $18 .6!1 hour, Hiring for 988-523-4417 ..~ 884.

~lip

'

Pomer oy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

!i\

Boll

Auction conducted by
Rick PeBrson Auction Co. #66
773-5785 or 773-5447
Executor: Ellis E. Conley
TEAMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

14

lOC)LS I
•
, • 11 1111 Rig id 535 Pipe
cutter, Delta Table Saw, Craftsman Bandsaw, Craftsman
Joiner, DeWalt B&amp;D Panel Saw, Cincinnati Milling
Machine, Miter saw, Large Bridgeport floor model drlll
press, Walker Pug Mill clay machine, Miller Welder (120
walls), 2· Briggs &amp; Strallon Vanguard 16hp, V-twin
generators (72/75 hours), Crosley 12 gallon Humidifier,
West Bend Ultra Humidifier, Toastmasler Ultrasonic
Humidifier, Lannox forced air furnace,
piping, large
corrtahl,er.
motors.
NOTE:
many GiiliwEIY 2000
compulers, Deii·Optlplex GM+5133 Computer,
Data
Computer &amp; Hard Drive, Ber-noulli Computer, many
Macintosh llsl &amp; 6100 &amp; 7100 &amp; Cuadra 610 &amp; Performs
6214CD computers, Printonlx printer on wheels, Complot
CPS plotter, HP Dra'!';ft~P~ro~P~Iu~s~~~~; Pioneer LD-V4400
.!:i
Typewriters.
(To be sold alter
ii~~~p~~~~~~,,.:
27' color TV's, Quaser
;
combo, Magnavox Astro-Sonlc console
stereo,
Record player, Old Zenith radio, HPB409C
auto netwOrk analyzer, Hitachi FP-21 Video camera with
case &amp; tripod, Sony V0-5000 sarles VCRs, Magnavox
VCR, JVC CR-4700 VCRs w/cases &amp; chargers,
Panasontc 8' &amp;25' video projector, 3-Bell &amp;Howell 16mm
Fllmo sound, electric •snake" pipe cleaner, Audlotronics
152 S-2 cassette deck, Mansfield 8mm portable edllor,
Mlcroter IIXE &amp; HP Jet Plus scanners, Floor Model
Copiers, Canon NP 3050, Rlcho FT 5540, Canon
NP3725,
machine.

I: ~ :

j

OF IIC£ f OU IPMf ~J r /1. f IJH tJI '-'H INC S
3 metal
flreproof cabinets, melallaleral file cabinets, 2 &amp; 3 .dr. file
cabinets, fila cart on wheels, several nice wood desks,
metal office &amp; dorm desks, metal &amp; wood stools, lots of
wood tables, 40+ new wood table tapa, wood. shelving
unll (needs put together), metal shelving unlls, metal
storage cablnet1, metal 3-dr arttsl cabinet, large wood
map cabinet, over 200 vinyl/cushion wood lrame chairs,
181 of 30 metal frame chairs lots of other chairs,
Very large assortment of
tumHure Including: 21 seta of wood twin headboards, 35+
twin bed aprlnge, 30+ nice dressers &amp; night stands. 1·
white Prov. style bedroom sulte, many cushioned love
&amp;Hts wtlh wood lrame9 and chairs to match, various end
tables (1-marllte top), tots of wOOd padded chairs, lots of
other chalrl, several wood round tables, 42" round wood
kllchen table w/6 chairs, nice maple reel. dining table w/
4 chairs·, l;&gt;uncan Phyffe table, glass top wrought Iron
patto table w/3 chairs. wood 2-door glass cabinet, small
wood bench.
White/Whirlpool electric ranges,
Kenmore/Roper/Westtrighouse refrigerators, older Phllco
!!!!!g!!!~ Sunbeam gas grill.
·
large wood looms, assortment of
WalchiiS, large Wood &amp; metal mailboxes W/
Illata, sled, 2·sats of loot lockers w/keys, other lockers,
wood top metal Work bench, 7'x32" wood doors, 58" metal
food tray cart, 8'x4' chalkboard on stand, 8+ wall mount
challlboards, vinyl exam table, stalnleaa steel double sink,
lots of Inside llghlllxturea, HI of 23 outaide llghl fixtures ,
large outalde light pole globes, 6·5 gallon buckets,
Offenae floor slrlpper, basketballs, aet of 6 .hockey
20 boxes of children 's toys &amp; other ~ems.
or check w/ poslllve ID payable to Ohio
MC, VISA, &amp; OIICOver will be aooepted.
Checks over $1000 must have bank authorization of
funds available. Not responsible for loss or accidents.
Food will

Surplus Inventory In Stock Items)
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
PH: 740·592-4310 or 800·419-9122

'

03

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plu•nt, WV

hge 04. 6unbap l!:lmrf-6entinrl

•

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, F•bnl•ry 11,2001

- ~~~:::;:;:::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~§:~;;:;~~§§~~~F=~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~;=~~1~~==~Sc~h;oo~l;,====~110 Help wanted
110 Hel Wanted •
110 Help Wanted
110 Help Wanted
110 Help Wlnted
110 Help Wanted
lnltructlon
WE HAVE EXI'o\NDEDI
tnloCitlon ~ t)IMatd to

announce that w havt ~
a new cal-cenlllr at ow
10ca110n " Gatlopotla. Ohio.

we ,_ olfor odq&lt;lionat caopportunttlts 1o&lt; one&lt;getic, poatvve, goal-minded applicants In

w

Non-profit Division.

You can eam up 10 $7b&gt;ur and
week!)' bOnuses.

We also otl&amp;r Medical benefits
and Paid Vacations! Holidays
Call Us Today

For An Interview!

1-8811-237·5342 Ext. 2211
YOU NEED A JOBWE NEED GOOD PEOPLE II '
NOW HIRING
BRAND NEW OFFICE
Hourly WaQe GuarantHd
(BMus Program' in Effect)

EMPLOYEES PAID WEEKLY
Men and Women NfNided to do
Tflltp/'JOM Operator Work br
Radio Station PromodOnt
Homllmakffrs Work Whlls

CnJ!dlfn In Scllcol

tiN-HOUSE DAY CARE
tF/T l PIT TIME OPENINGS
t PAID VACATION &amp; BENEFIT
PACK
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED·
PAID TRAINING PROGRAM

COLLEGE &amp; HIGH.SCHOOL
STUDENTS WELCOME
APPLY IN PERSON AT:
424 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT. WV
MONDAY FEBRUARY 12th
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 13111
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 141h

9:ooam To 3:00pm
OR
5:00pm To 9:00pm
Ask tor Ms. Hammond

URGENTLY NEEDED· ptaama
donors, earn $35 to $45 lor 2 or 3
nours weekly. Call Sera-Tee, 740·

592·6651 .

The Atnena ·Mtlgs Educational
$tl\llce C.nttr hal an opening In
thl CHEERS Alhltnl

County Early

Intervention Prooram, 11 Early
Start/Early Intervention Set viet
Coordi nator.
Qualification a:
Bachelor's degree In Early Child·
hood Ectueatlon, Family Studies,
Nuliing. or related field . Must be
eligible lor MROD El Certlflcall~.
and nave tllptrlenet servmg
chiktren birth to three with dlsabititles, and to provide coordlnaHon, ,
developmental assessments and
support to the farr.lty In the hOme.
Sa lary: Commensurate with ax·
perlence. Please submit letter ol
Interest and resume to: Jotln D.
Costanzo.
Superintendent,
Athens· Melgs Educatio nal Serv·
Ice Center, 507 Richland Avenue,
Suite *108, Athens. OhiO 45701 .
Api)Ucatlon Deadline : Friday, February 16. 2001. Equal Oppor,unl·
ty Empio¥er!Provider.

Wa,.ed

Home &amp; Gar!len Pany Otsignm.
Hand Made Ponary, Unique~eessorles, CandiH, Garden

Ware, Ottlgner Quall1y PlciUroa.
No Delivery, No Inventory. No
Quotas. Set Your Own Hours.
High COmmiSSIOn, Ask Abou1
'll&gt;ur Potentially Free Stanor Kk·
Ptu&amp; Added Bonus. Call For Ot·
1alli. (740l886·9997(740l3n·
9397.
Warehouse Person lor Cable
System, Responsible For ¥ain·
talnlng Secure Inventory Storage
And Con1rol. Perform Duties As·
soclated With Storage, Shipping
And Reeel~lng Of EQuipment And
Supplies. Experience A Plus. EKcellent Benefit Package. Please
Submit Resume To Charter Com·
municatlons, 1410 Jefferson

Tht Melgt County Soard of Mtn.

Ttlt Melgt County Counell on
Ag'"cJ, Inc., 1 privati, not-tcw-prottt

tal Retardation and Developmental OlsablliU.s is seeking quahtied
appliCants lot the totlowlng ILJDstllute poSitions:

WE AftE HINNG

work with eligible children birth
through two and their ramllltl .
Bachelor'S degree In education,
nursing, social work, psychotogy,
home economic&amp; communication
or an aliad health field with a concentrauon In child development

preterred.
Teacher, teacher aide, bus andf
or van driver, health services coordlnator {AN or LPN). habilitation
and workshop specialist (adult
program) vehicle aide, cook.
contract services position avail•
able tor • reader/guide to work
with Individual with visual Impair·
mants. Experience with braille,

orientation and moeNI I ) ' -·

Slbmh resume bV February 16 ,
2001 to;
sc~··~'""tnd 1r111
Carleton ,......,..n ... """
us

Na ....._,
No Fundrlltlngl

W. Also Offrer:

POSTAL. JOSS to 111.351ht. •
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 .60lhr. In~

•FuUBlnttitt

eludes benefits . No e~~:perience
nfcessary. For application and
exam info, call t·800-S92·7054
x208 M-F 8:30am-5:00pm.

•Weekly PII'J'Chtck
•Paid Vacation
eRedremtntPian
•Professional Atmospl'ltre

lnloCitlon Mo-~
Cotp0f81lon C.nwntty Hoo
-~ Potlllono Op'ent

140

El(l. t9tt

cata Entry Operators.

lndua1riol.
L0911 Stcretary/ Pllratogal,
Payableo/ RocolvobiH,
RtcopiiOnlaL Stcretarlll.
WOrd Procouo...

STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE
$5CO·S7000/month. PT/FT. Com·

ForAppolnamtnt

8611-873·3693.

Anentlon Rental &amp; home Owners,
All Phast&amp; Of Home Repair, No

Job Too Big Or Small (304l675·
7738
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill juat call

Couple In Allltltd Living TYpe
Situation. For Mort lntormatlon.

(Careers Close To Home)

C81(304)67e-7690

CatiToda'/174(1.446-4367,
HIO(I-214·0452,
Reg t90-05-t2748.

Mount's Tree Service "The Tr••
Professlonlll" Bucket Truck
Service· Top- Trim· Removal·
Stump Grinding. Fr" Estimates,
Fully Insured. Workert Comp,
Bidwell, Ohio. Call &amp; Save. 1-aoo-

150

Please Call (304)3?2·-4018

plat8 training. Free lnlormatlon.
www.c reetlme .com. Toll free 1·

180 Wanted To Do

Schools
Instruction

836·9568 (740l388-9648 Owntr:
Rick Mount.

Oua!Uy house cleanings, Ttte
Best Bonded, Protesalonal, ' Rell·

affordable, comprehensive. legal
tratnlng a\nce _ 189~. FREE Cata·

1 131 or 1·888·781·2412, email: ..

log: 800·826·9228 , w&lt;tte : P.O. Box
70t449, Dallas. TX 75370 NA or
http://www.9fackStonelaw.com

llshed Vending Route . Will seu by
2112. Under SSK minimum lnVflst·
ment required . Excellent Monthly
Prolll Potential. Finance Ava il-

AMAZING FACTSitl Internet
grew 3800% last year. Cash In on
this Incred ible opportunllv today!
No selling. Training provided . No
a•perience needed. Investment
reQuired. Tol l free 1·866-557·

55tS.

ARE 'IOU CONNECTED? INTER·
NET USERS WA~TEDI $25·$75/

Will do t&gt;abyttnlng In my home, all
3 ahilta, ont· $\0.00. two· $1,,
meals Included, 741).949·2483.

$500 ·$50 ,000. Cash grants (Unsecured loads) . Bad cred1t OK,
personal deDt. college tultJon .
business , mortgage down payments, Inventions. Tolt free 1·866·
484·3462 exl. 003.

A Country Crallsman February
Special : tO% Off Hoosier Cabi·
nets , Pie Safes Ete . Come See
Our Showroom &amp; Save 10% On
Any Purchase. (304)74:3--1 100

(304)743·1 100

230

CASH LOANS

Professional
Services

aolldat lont Cut payments up to
60% . Same day appro~all 1·877-

consolidate your b illa into one
monthly payment. Redut:e inter ut, avoid late charges &amp; 1101)
narassment . LJcenstd fDonded
Non-protlt 800·289·6331 e•t t5
www.goldcoastcc com

CONSOLIDATE

day! 800·551 · 9057 ~~~t.
www.tand.com

i800l

QAIL BELVILL£.................................. 441 1201

TRISH INVDER.................................-441-1411
JOHNNIE RU88EU...........................x7-GIH
DAVID BNVDER ..~.............................. oi41-MII

Reduced to $174,900, now's the time to make
this outstandingly . melntained and decorated
home yours. Located In a · quiet family
neighborhood conveniently located to town, you
will be Impressed from the moment you atep
Into the formal entry open to the large formal LR
&amp;. DR, large cort eat-In kitchen with lots of
cabinets &amp; countertop space with access to the
multi-level deck, 4 BAs, 2 baths, plus potential
downstairs for a 5th BR &amp; 3rd bath), large FR
with fireplace, 2 car garage, above ground pool
with decking &amp; professional landscaping
completes this outstanding property. Call today
for your private viewing. 1622

OUR WEB PAGE 18:WWW.v11mtlhruleetata.com
e-mail: vtarMIMtate@~net. nel

wjnew

blrQaln with a
3 BR, balll, gas
gas FP, full baml, !lllagt.
and bo linll to call 446-68011

(tied 1/4, (Jilt At

carpet

amen~et.

a

1~800-585-7101 or 446-7101

Russell D . Wood, Broker 446-4618
Judy DeWiU .............................. 441-0262
Cheryl Lemley
742·31'71
J. Merrill Carter ............: ............379-2!84
D
Alh ·
................................. 379·9209
Tammie DeWill. ........... :............ 245-0022
· ~~~elh k;~t;;;;y:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::24S-S855
Rulh Barr.................. ,.......................446-0722

bedrooms, family room, heal

HOMES? Then lhlt Is 1 rnuol
.... large tlztd roomt, living
room, equipped kHchon, 3
bedroomo. 2 batllo. foyer,
laundry.
Elclenllvoly
- -... which tnctudao roof
roptace~.
windoWs.
hOidlntl'cootlng,
and
more.
Dellc:hed- garage and IIOrlgt
building. EXptcllng a titgt prloo,
NOI Try Me,~.DO: Wltltln a law
min- of lhopplng and town.

I

3 Bedroom. 2-1f2 batns, 2 Fireplaces. 2 Car Garage . Mu ch
Mora . Close To Everyt hi ng ,

$2000 ·$5000,

$90,000 Call (740l44t...0310

-nol

pump, lllaChad 2 car gorll!l'·
Lots of updatao hera. call t()llay

to take a peek tne&lt;lt1 ,120112
LDDK11
. THE

OUTUIII ...BUT WAIT UNTIL

YOU I l l THE INIIDII MUll
take a cloaor look ovorall\0 lite quality lhallhll homt hU ..
orr.r. To tell ycu a lillie helt - ·
-led wttlt lilt
lloonng, 1o1t of 011r
boaUIIful Olk alalr OBit ltadlna
_ , to family room, 3
bedi'OOml, 2 bdw, one car built·
In gngo plut dNchod ,2 · car
gariiQI, tnctoled rur pordl,
doc~ng on raor. MUll oatiiO view
tlttmtl-

oabt-.

CDNTEIIIPDRARY Home titling
on over 2 acm. Loll of room on
lite lntldo tool Llrge living room
with 111' ctllng, ·"'!Ill«

WE AAE TALKING lu.IDII
RI!DUCT1DH HIRI!t RIAIIY...
..., S20,01101 o..ner mtonl
· Ouallty homt
lowmaintenance.
Bricktltllllat
ranch
wml 4 bedroomo, format living
room, atep-tavlng kJlchon, family
room whh firoptace, ""'r 2,000
square fHI of living apaco. 2 car

==
:::r. ..:=n.: -

2-,:;,:.
room, taunclry, 2 ng.•-~·
•
--~~="""'· and morot
•.
.
1 - BR 141 ••• 11/2111oty homt
COft1lllole w111t 3 bedroomt, living
room, kitchen, ~ Iron!
pordl, blocklap drive. -

--.bom,ll&gt;edand -

lolldt mort raotlng on 2 """
11\11. Prlvateahowlnga ...catiiO Ml
up yourot 12050
111-11-8-T 8-loLo-1.11 NEID TO

=·

IETTLE EITATEI OYitl country

Hltlng with
!doll for tho
paraon w110 lkOito l&gt;llnl(cr-to
public hunting and .ftlhlng .....l.
3 bedroomt, 2 ballla, Iorge living room, formal dining lf\d
kHchon with lite 11'111 room
alltd. Florida room on front,

~..'!L ~on
of -,::·
' ..

and litfhon
In dl~ room
room.
Uvlng room 11at ~roptace with
plower. Home hU newer lorelei air
nolural gas furnace. Gmt
Locatio(&gt; I

1173 R!DUC!D PRICE-117
.... cloaolo new Fwy., holplfat,
ahop otr. water, gaa, 18'Mfr.
Adlofr*lg Plnteraol
Nuralng
HQrnl.
1120 8lato Rt. 27t In tnt
.2 br.,

NEW LUXURY WHITE BRICK
HOME Located In a prestigious
area inAft!reen
l
. .i M

FORECLOSED GDV'T HOMES!
SO OA LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING I CALL I·
800-501 · 1777 ext 9813.

Ha lf Acre , 3 Bedroo.m House. 1
Bedroom Apartme nt Beneath .
Two Po le Barns, Close To Town.

(740)448-'4782

Real Log Homes , Free lnforma-

ton. Call (740l55B-2393

888·604·1444 Exi. 1220.

J.

\

•

l

'n'I·Lnel borne lots of
charm and chancier. 3
BRa, Z baths, formal LR.
&amp; Dlnlna, Complete
kitchen.
Larae F.R.,
Finished basement.
Stonae bulldlna. Coli lor
an 1ppolntmtnt today!
No.%91

designed oak cabinets. Lg.
dining room, S m&lt;\i-c BRs. 3
additional bath11, Fireplace in
the LR. Charmina entry
w/stain:ase leading to 2nd
level. Laundry room on the

main leve l .
Finished
basement, Detached 2 car
garaJe. On 3.35 landscaped
or plants &amp;

machine shop wllh all lhe
equipment Other building has
a mullilude of possible uses.
Look lnlo both or one o1
these- Be your Own Bossi
124 Butternut Ave. Great potential at

bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, plastered
walls, hardwood floor In dining room,
fireplace, garbage disposal, over-sized
heated
with 6 person SPA/HOT TUB.
A
For Sale By Owner.
By
• Call 740-992-6268

!33 ARBUCKLE ROAD •
Enjoy the BEST OF BOTH.
From your front porch view
the beautiful
side,
Walk in and view

acres m/1. Lots

Real Estate General

private
i &amp; bath on the
main floor. 2 more bedrooms
2nd level. 4th bedroom, 3
full baths. Full basement
w/poured walls. 2 car garage.
All setting on 4 acres m/1. in
a custom. built horne. Green
Elementary. Shown by

appointment.

Middleport, OH
JUST OF MORNING STAR· Here'a lovely 3 bedroom home
that Is just 10 years old. All on one floor and has a heal
pump. There is a 1 1
and is sitting on 1.7 acres
in a quiet country i

sale· one

us an ollerl
g~~.!~~~~ Great 4 BR .
to move! Lei us talk to
about this onel

FOURTH AVENUE . 2 story
lsi level and a 3rd on the 2nd. LR, dining room,
lkilche:n, pantry. LBundry room on tlle main level.

~~:~;::;~;~~ basement w/outside entrance. BaCk porch.
garage 15x25, lg back yard 44x174. This
has a one DR apartment upstairs with outside
. Shown
·
only. NO. 226

Call today
for your quote!

from

H&lt;Rti
......s .. 4
,....
W/Skyllghl &amp;
calhedral c~ling, dining rm., living
rm .. convenient kit., oak cabinets, 1337&amp;

800 4589990
LOOK AT THIIIIII

1at floor launct,Y, Master sulle. on Bedroom 2 bath ranch over

''

•'

.
. '"

-

•

.

"t
~'

'

13355 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. II you like
lndtvlduatlty--here H tat 3,029 sq.
ft. more or teas, 3 bedrmo .. 2 1/2
bathe, Kit., LAm, OHk:e rm., and
mu~h more. Wrap porch ftont &amp; 2
tldtt. 167 Acres 11\11. AoNng

baaament with 2 car finished famtty room. Home Ills
2 tv:. 11\11 In Honnan
Sdloola. Jull mlnulel
downtown Galllpols. Thlo
laalureo a. beau11ful le~ilocapedl
lawn, wood pella! llove
canlral air. Looaled lull off
Llck Rd. on Mabla Dr. In

www. upplo9

(Ofll

=;;~;~:;;~j

t

II

NEW
W/pool. .. located on 1 acre m~. this home offers 3 BAs,
baths. LA , DR, kitchen (Great cabinets). 1/2 basemen! w/1
car garage. Cedar siding. Pool Is fenced and has nice roc&gt;mlrl

located .near

Some Restrictions.

$S9,000

NO. lZ3

ST· A 3 to 4 bedroom nome wHh newer windows.
Has an equipped kitchen and laundry room. Has a heal pump
with central air, frool porch and sits on a large lot. $38,000

f/6e~~ .
514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
7 40-446..0008
7 40-441-llll
evanemoo@zoorrlnet.net
www.evane-moore.com
Formerly Blackburn Realty
·
".'i.Aro,,inttr Southern Ohio For Over A Quarter Century" "'"'on'

Fled Lot tiles, 2 ntca pondl.
Land It moot all ctoan &amp; 1188 oomt
fencing. Etectrlc &amp; lrolllree Wiler
In the Dam. Feed tot ttteo.
Formeny uatd for · Veal calf
operation.

TAYLORS DRIVE· A bl·level with a basemen! making a tri·
level. Newer home at the end of a road and Is very private.
Has 2 bedrooms, and· could have an~ther. Has 4.56 acres,
an outbuilding lhatls really cute with a porch . A must see at

z(,I4H4,-1H&lt;uvee ~~

&amp;

[B

RkJ

Grande. Appointment Only. Call
Smltlt 740·448 6808.

PLEASANT HILL ROAJ&gt;.

2.00 mil acres more or
Green Elementary Schools.

deck tying It lo Ihe house. Total electtic plus wood burner
bsml. You must see to appreciate lhis exceptionally
hamel Com aln and let us
for this house.

I Jollnnlo
lodiOV Ulrl., appointment.
Lot for OIObtle ~--·1
located 2808 SA n5. 1 acre 11\11.
$12,500.00
, _ 1'111 1o1 located on Clorl&lt;
Cllaptl Rd. and Sluon Rd. 2 1011
1 ac. mora or 1101. $19.!100
•

up,
porch on 111
"' gas fumaot, hot
Wiler ~k &amp; roof. Prlct Ia low.

beautiful whlle stone fireplace and glass all the way .to the
top ollhe cathedral ceiling. Has 5 bedrooms, 3 balhs, family
room, dining area, and a baaullful kllchen. There is lots ol
slorage. a 2 car garage, and a security syslem. Now
A Muot See at $1,8,900

drywall

everywhere

Inside.

Greal starter home or

rental properly.

$18,900.00

11018 Elegant In-town living can bl
found In thla 4 BA 2 1/2 BA two story
colonial style home. With beautiful
tanctacaplng , taatetully decorated formal
!Mng room and dining room, cozy family
room with fireplace. one car detached
garage and the extra 1toragespace of the
full baaement. In town living Is juat •
phone '"'llli away.

living
lhlt Ia the
houu youl Wltlt almo114,000 square
fetl ol Hvlng O!*&gt;e, . Which lnctudtl 8
be&lt;lroomo and 4 t&gt;alhl, thll honfa relit
an an ovtrelZtd corner lot

In

"'"'"""' and

• ~..,._. :1-4 ~-·•· a.a
I bltltl ' 2 oar llttiChttl-...,_..,end
lfPlllfor
.,~........., _ .
moral
lm"*'llll r n ron
Call com.,.--..
helal-.

UNBEU!:VABlE VIEW· Sitting atop Riverview Drive is lhls
one story home lhat has a sunken living room wilh a big

newer

Galllpalll near

-·;,p:,

MAIN ST· A 1 1/2 story home with aluminum siding, and hlis
2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, balh, and laundiY room
downstairs, and 2 small bedrooms upslairs. has a nice view .
ollhe Ohio River. $18,000

ANNE STREET. A one slory home with vinyl siding, newer
windows and a .part basement. A really cute new home with
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, and siHing on approx. 3/4 acre. Mas

$45,000
~ LAND LOlli 01' LAND44.240 AC. on 8ond Hollow Rd. •
water tap. HuniJng 1 .Oklllft.
$44,000 01 olfar.

Brick &amp; ~nyt 8 BR, 2 BA l1oml on
pri\llle 1 aero 101. Family room,
living room w/llrtptaca, DA, ond
tarvo u1111ty room In th~ one with 1ull
blltrnent. AIIICiled 2 car garage
and dtllched 2 car garage u wtll
could bo UMd for atoragt. P 1or a quick tale. sae.ooo

:-.

LDOKINO 1'011 A LOT'/ Hn .,.
.2 Iota wllh ~-and
ttwagt avdaltta. Not for a lila
prlct. $14,!100 for litem boll! onil
owner 1o ~ your . - .
110711
eo IIICII mm... t1t1a 11 ttte
place you ought "' btl ToQ a
ptlk llllklt and ' you~ ....
ROomy 1112 lii!'V ,... w1111
formal....., and diMta room •
1a tarvo 111n1y loam

ls.I740I245-5606

11

Pasture 8nd 3 Large Barna

112100

Immaculate \QIMI
ranch
are ready lo deal. Kl1ehen with
tatand and epjJiancot, 3
bedroomt, 2 batltl, 1o,.t dining
or family room.IMng room, utility.
. Ova&lt; 1800 oq. ft. of living .,..,..
·OWners are wUIIng to maka thllr
toto ba ""'*"" olio'• gllln. C8JI
tOCIIyl 111104
PRICE DIIOPPED 1:1,0001
Rernod- ranch home roallng
on over t acre treed level lot.
Uvlng room with ftr,ptoc., 1ormot
dining area, 2 full batllo, 3
be&lt;lroomt, family room, 11oe1

Prlct tnctudol lrwtn!Ory. Call
Jc&gt;hnrtlt 387-ti3ZI or 446 esoe.
, _ • 3027 St. Rl. 141 In
Cenl...ry. Looaled lite road from
School thll
bath
with lui

3 Bedroom. 2 Bath Beautiful Home
On 5 Acres, Reduced To

Consolidation to $200,000 . Bad
Credit , No Credi t. Credit cards,
Mortgages, Etc .... Financial lnlor·
mallon Systems, Inc. Toii· Frae : 1-

businesses for

IYRUCYWIII

or Uneal Foot

COnllnuou• operation since 1986.

pump, attoched .2 oar gorll!l'·
Lots of updlln hele. Coli IOCIIy
to lake a peek lnsldel120112

~~

Ooollly,......,

11111oor InclUding a super t&gt;atlt rrn.
&amp; clooel. 4 Bedrms., 2 batlta on
2nd llonr. 2-4'&gt;&lt;24' family rrn.
approx. 4,000 sq. ft. Boau11ful 3
acre MIL ravlned lot and live
stream. It would pe my pleasure to
show you. Virginia 446·6808
CAARVDUT IUBIN!IS
·
end CONVIN•NCa IITDR&amp;
I'DR I.U... New alorm oyllem.
Building bulft to . - COde.

by calling 1or on
appr.
witt ba glad ll1al on over 1 acre treld
you did. Be one of the firat to Uvl,.;i room with fireplace,
dining area, 2 fu! Dlllhl, 3
view this nice sized ranch home

... ""ALACHCAN"

VIne St.

Log Home
Building Compontnt•

- . 171 ldoma Tlall· 'JYcoon
~ 2 l.olo $12,800 oooll. Mobile
hojme, building &amp; to1 $15,000 all for
1:13.000
N001
OWN
YOUR OWN
IUIINE88 No lnllallon tn tttlt pnce
11 It telling btiOW value.
E l - lloral thop &amp; !arming
111dt· Evtryll1ng goes for one low
pllct. ~lntment only. VIrginia
ue 1101.

$36,995. Realtor (304l576·3056

3056

AREA· Very nice
spill enlry home In good NEW i"iiiiiiiiir.
neighborhood. 2 car garage. Beautifully redecorated &amp;
Large lot. 4 ·BR , 2 Bath, LR, carpeted from lop lo bottom I
DR. Kll, Deck. let tls show BR, 2 baths, LI, DR,
Kll.,
youthlslinetodayl
U\ly Am,
sml.
POMEROY· Baker ·Rd •• 11 W&lt;lodworkl Do ble lol. G,.aragel
you are looking for wooded &amp; carporl. Must see
acreage and a really nice apprecfatel Priced to sell.
home, look at this 9 acres for appointment.
m/1. Jus! one mile off SR 33. REDUCED • Mlddltpo"·
3 BA, 2 bath, LA, DR, Kll, Extra nlce home! 4 BR, 2 1/2
Ully Am. Additional 16 x 40 baths, 2 car gar .. Pool w/auto
bldg. Privale .
cover &amp; cleaner. heated. All
RACINE· Classic 3 BR nome. fenced In for lois of privacy.
Nice selling. Nice lor. Several Many, many extras! Let us
fireplaces &amp; .manels. High show you this one al your
woodwork. LA, DR , FA, kit convenience.
w/appll. HP &amp; AC. Bsml. Call MIDDLEPORT·
rtghl away- thols one won't comfortable 4 BR
lasllong.
very good condlllon :
Lot ol
oppo"unltlel· CA .
Wwell·lns
could ba Rem- Appliances. Alum.
·238 Walnut Comer lot.
360 S RACINE· GREAT BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES!
Two

EXTRA MONEY?? Work !rom

103.~00

www .BIG-BEND REALTY .COM
B't B~ ~ , 1~ee,

1·886·562·3345

~ Bedroom, , Bath Home- 3 Miles
east Of leon On Highway 62 ,

3 Bedroom, 2 Batl1 , 2 Car Garage,
Beautiful Brick Home , Gall ipolis
Ferry, $99,000. Realtor (304)575-

to

home around your schedule pari
time/ lull lime. Excellent income!

CITY LOT 43' x t70'

-

CC3

LO~LY TWO STORY
HOME DECORATED AS
PREITY AS A DOLL
HOUSE • Features a
SPACIOUS BEDROOM
SUITE W/ St'l"rtNti ROOM
&amp; BATH. ON THE MAIN
LEVEL. Wife approved
kitchen w/ l ots of custom

Earn S500 lo $900 per week In
your bathrobe &amp; slippers. Great
opportunity to secure your future.
Low Investment . 1·900-272-0193.
awesomaarnlng.com

. 448-eeoe

located 39

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

(740l36B-9t5t

Farm House On Mount Tailor In
Vinton 3 Bedroom. Could Be 4
Bedroom . Hard Wood Floors.
Partly Remodeled New Sldlng, 81g
Garage W1th Overhead. Old barn,
:2 BUildings Well 01 Rul'al Water,
Pond, Strawberry Paten, Fruit
Trees . Cellar. B1g Vard, Good
Garden , lots Of Flo wers. &amp;,ell As

Attention: work !rom home, up to

dryer, newly remodeled Dllth.
Private yard wnence . .Call VLS

Real Eatata General

ADVANCE

$73,000, 3 Bedroom 1·1 12 Bath .
Wpod Floors , Gas Fireplace,
Garage . 1 47 Acres Must See

$1 19.000· Realty (304l576·3056

S25.00·$7S.OO/ hr. PT/FT. Intel·

range. dishwasher, refrlg, washer,

(740) 446;.a644

111

FREEl L1Cf750005.

It

1400t A THING OF BEAUTY ISA
JOY FOREVER. 4 Bedrm, brick, 1
1/2 baths, full basement, garage,
format DR &amp; LA, k~. 3 lovaty
bedrrns and Dllth w/DIIIcony on
2nd, finished 3rd floor. This home
Immaculate

EARLYPAY.

$2S.00·$75.110/)1' PTIFT. MAIL
ORDER'catltoll·lree t-877·965. 6739.

Ate. 50 Quality loc's. local Super
Income 800·277·9424 24 Hrs.

is

No olhce vis•t necessary. Up to
$500 Instantly. Call toll lree 1-8TI·

Attention: Work from ·home, up to

HALLMARK Style Greeting Card

throughout. Lots or

SO DOWN HOMESI GOV'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

75 Est LocaHono. (Locall Proven
Income. 800-900-3470.

1·600.6t3•5694.

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.

310 Homes for Sale

1-800·338-()()20 ext 9811

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY77

WAY

E•t.

· 310 Homes lor Sale

769-8168.

ATTN; Work from home! Up

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 1111101

64t·9757 ,

REAL ESTATE

RATING. 1·888·811-o902.

www.debtccs.org {Non-Profit)

us.com

140

YOUR

6unbap QI:imt• -6entintl • Page 05

Prole..lonal
Services ·

CREDIT PROBlEMS ? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREOIT, BANKRUPTCY.
LAWSUITS, JVOGMENTS. AAA

OUT OF DEBTl Reduce monthly
payments. Pay one bill!month.
EASV to get started . Financial
Freedom Chr istian Counseling,

800-774·9069 www.wealthy-r-

Flatbed. Michigan City, IN Call to-

23o

ARE '!OUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can

$2S .00·$75.00/hr. PT/FT. Call

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Prole1slonal
Services

A Country Craftsman, Stripp 1ng ,
Rt~fin lshl ng , caning, Repai rs &amp;
Upho lstery. After Hotlday Special·
Save 10% On Rellnlshlng Work .

Start Your Business Today...
Prime Shopp ing Center Spaca
Available At Allordab le Rate .
Spring Val ley Plaza, Call 74D-446·
0101.

$$ NEED A LOAN? Try debt con-

HA·PTIFT. w-ww.BeBossFree.com

doubledOeurekanet.com

Real E1t11te General

Spring is just around tl'le corner.
Spring Into action with Tandem
Transport Corp. OTR Regional

-t1 2 car

xeo

ACIIIAQI ... 30 -

nyt loll of t41.000 Ill 141 Cliill'*' - .
h\lnllng tend. Cult ronohllyla l1oml with IN!ng
Hari1lon Townalilp. S3Q,IIOO.OO . room, dining ...... - · bllll,
111101
.
~llllrioa
~·
moralntOI

._

llutiAitl
Will Mtabllhld
In GaNI!loRa fOIIdy for
you to Moinma Joe'a
~•
1o _ _,
l\4&amp;1ooN ~ve --~"'
1or you. E~ta right
doWn 10 lite "'-"'G'·
(Ownar Ia kaeptng ont oabl~~
El1ln - · II lilmlllort and
- · t&gt;'l1)111rtg In ttte atort.
Tlill will . . - I (Ifill ohlnct
1or you to 'II your own ,11011' to
don, ttl ft go. CoiiiiiUy.

over.

FOR MORE LISTINGS STOP BY AND PICI&lt; UP A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR
BOOKLET OR GIVE US A CALL &amp; WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE TODAY!
I

room, IMng room, 2 enclosed porches
anything, and 2 half balhs. Has lie own
,
newer central air, and a big fenced In side yard. $45,000.00

are concrete

"' - v... 1111 In

'

I

and are lntulllad. l'lrat 30
foot of floor It 8 ln. thick ,and
rtmalndor 11 4in and all wMh rtbar
~n~comont. tills would makt
flrtll
offlct · 1toraga or
notghbofh!lod
butlnoat. Call today

WNfT HlLP WITH IDMI

CLDIING
CDITI?
Thon
DOnllder lttllng lhlt Hlltr lltlp
y&lt;1IJ buy tills well maintained
ronoh homt. Equipped ~llclltn. 3
bedroomt, larao levtt lawn with
INH , _ anll nrubl. Mull -. lilt
appreclato tltll homtl Mow IntO
lmmtellallly. 11011

Hiiiii:TciN iTiiiiirr • A 1'I• etory home

many
Wiler, HWar
, with· all ltnoa
ltNict and a

wcodt. .k11a1

I..Lt'..LEIGS COUNTY

(

447-7869.

able/ GOOd Credit. -(888) 270·
2t6e-

SS$ NEED CASH7? WE pay
c.asn for remaming payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annu l·
!lest Senltmentsl lmmedrale
Ouotea!ll "Nobody beats our pric es.• Nat ional Contracl Buyers
(800) 490·0731 e~~ot. 101 www na ·
tionalcontractbuyers .com

230

now.org toll ~aa 886·311-1954.

Attn : Kurl Leachman. No Phone

Newer 2 story, 4 bedroom, 2 bath1
large closets, fireplace, convenient
kitchen, large basement &amp; family
room, 2 car oversized garage.l
appliances stay, approximately 2,20u
ft. on 2+ acres In Green Townahlp.
'7''"'
Appraisal 1167,000,

•

fro nt door with in hoursl New, vir·
tually-unknown
business .
www.homewealthonllne .com/robert
smith . listen to 3-mlnute mes·
sage at 1· 800- 404· 1475 ax!.
197428. Tnen calltoll-lree 1·86Ei ·

A+ M&amp;M MAASINESTLE Estab·

Profe11lonel
Services

net/ma ll order www.money4u-

Calls Please. EOE MIF

THII
HOME
APPI!AIJNQ
ON

MONEY DELIVERED TD you'

the otlerlng.

able, call evenings (740l256-

Blvd .. Point Ptoaoant, WV 25SSO.

111

with over 8.7 acrea. L.arge alzed
living room with woodburning
fireplace, kitchen with dining
area, 3 BAs, 2 batha, full
ba:aement, large sized &lt;leek and
1100\11 ground pool wHh deCking.

startup.com

AT&amp;T-MCI PAYPHONE ROUTES

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home study, approved,

230

MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In·
come potential No exptntnct
necessary. Free lnlormaiJon &amp;
CO·AOM . Investment from $2495.
Financing available. (800) 322·
1 13S EXT 050 www.business -

283-3860 11&lt;1. t338(2( hrs l

recommends tnat you do business wilh people you know, and
NOT to land money through the
mail until you have Investigated

Mature Couple lnterelltd In C.r·
lng For Non Bed Fut Elderly

a.wtpatlo cor- Cot•

C81 Ut Today' For
"" lnllrvltw:
1·866~75-7223

Business
Training

antead . Free Supplies. 1-800·

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Bu1inet1
Opportunity

Hershey's pra·stcurtd routes
available In limited areast Mini·
mum lnveatmtnl under S!'iK .
EarnlngrJ over $9SK one yr I ·
988·745-55!52 . 24 hrs.

$3000 weektyt M~tLING •oo
BROCHURES AT HOME! Guar·

BRIOGE STATE UNIVERSITY t·
B00-9$&lt;-831e.

30H7~-111!i7.

Accounting Clorl&lt;,
Admlnlarlatlvt Aulltantl,

yracu&amp;8 , h 4"n 9

QUICt&lt;LV, bachelors , Mattera,
Ooctoratt. bV corrttpondenct
based upon prior education and
atlort study courH. For FREE In·
formation book1tl phone C.t.M·

210

Bu1lne11
Opportunity

EARN '!OUR COlLEGE DE.GREE

Postal Jobs $48 ,323.00 yr. Now
nlrlng- No experience-paid tralnlng- great benefits. call 7 days
800-429-3660 e•t. J-365.

'lbu C.n Earn Up To $7~r.
And WttkfV Bonu&amp;es.

. Un lttd Talent Staffing Service
Acceptlng Application&amp; For:

131 6'ga,S:O1~~ltreet
S
•

210

The Mason County Shelter. High
School Graduate, Valid WV Orlv·
ers Llct!'llt With Good Driving
Records, 1 Year Aelated Exptrl·
ence Send Resume, Cover lei·
ter, Relerencll ; SCAC , orrector
Of HR , 540 5th Avenue, Hunting·
ton, WV 25701

lnfoCtllton II C~dy Adding
To Our~"-' Sllft. 'tt&gt;u
Coulci.Hifp Ua Ncrutt
~unMen On 8ehiH Of NonProfit Organlladonl.

'01·C·3 agency, Ia accepting
rHumes lor the potition of Flte~l
A11lstant . Quallrteallont Include
an Auoclatt Degree In bUll·
nell , economic• or aCc:ountlng
with a mlnl~m of 2 .,...,.. t~Ptri·
tnce and above averaga com·
puter akiltl Including law;wlldge of
natworklng, computer main·
tenance and all duties UIOdaled
whh the oversight or Management
Information System&amp;. Dutltl In·
clud• assisting the Fiscal Olrector in maintaining financial
recorda and related data, and aH
necessary documentation. data
entry and financ ial reports In
compliance with the Agency's
Grant Management System and
coordination of agency's computer systems. Interested appllcante
should call Darla Haw~. Human
Resource Director, 112 ! . Meinorial Orlwl, Pomeroy, OH 740·8822t 61. An EOE and Provldlr.

ear tv tnter~entlon sp•ctati 1 t to

Team Member Po•lllon Open At

FINAN CIAL

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

..

for-.-.000
CDIIMIRCIAL LOT ON
Ill 7 .77 .... 11\11.
Btautlful oqulped Clayton Mobile
Homt 11114 3 bedrm., 2 batllo, 14'
X 77', 2 polt bamt, and ' trlllor
ttoragt. Call for more tntormouon.
VL8
•
13377 OREA~ ITARTIR "OME
or lnvtllmlm f'Optrly. Thta
lovely two btdroom one end one
haW batlt COitligt WOuld be jUit
rlgl1t 11 a atortor or retlrtmOIII
home. Wlh on taltn kMchon and
living room k ·Ia
enough
tptca. Priced lo HI II $37,600. attachod
Call today lhlo one won~ lllllong. 11 park llk~nu .-ICI pond
.
&amp; gazebO. VLS
'
, _ , Spth ~ Hom• on a HILl. cloto 10 town. 1 btdroomt. 2
botltl. Thla hOfTlt It lor a Mr. "Fbc 11". Call for an appotntmtm.

I""'

COiiniiY colonial ~~ near !Itt

SA 3S lntar&lt;&gt;hlnge near Rio Grande, this
counlly muterptece 11 aurrounded by
IP)tndld &gt;1owa of rolling meadows oulllde
-.nd I cozy hOmey fellllng Inside, Inside you
· .,. ~ by a frlf(1dty wstcomt of
lllleful decor, plush llonnng, cherry

"!'flY.

pr1vatt country
mtnufal Iron! SR 7. Thlt
contrallloel and air, lfCUrlty tyl1tm
a new aboVe ground pOol. With lnttrtll
refal at a 3 year tow why rtm7 Call
today for t~Caotlocallon.

135'

$24,900

molding, eotld pane~ · doort ~ an enOrmoul

12041 5.3 ac(es In Charolals

m111tr bed and batlt on tn. matn litvtl.

Lake area.

ovefllzed Jaouul tub, built In 001met1c

to
oull
Cute 3 bedroom batlt home.wllh 1 1/2
car garage and a lui . biHmtlll. Col

LANDI LANDI LANDI
110eD City lot 52' x

vanity,
cherry
po,.,,
formal

12081 9 .125 acres In Green

biHmlnt wHh a nnlahld recrHIIOnllamlly

1208812-14 acres overlooking

firtplaca turrounded by outtom
- · p11\111e ocreened In
cuolom cherry k~chen cablnell,
dining room . format R~ng room,
Itt'" bedroomo ond a full t&gt;ath upalalro,
room with a lull batltroom. The owner hat
prlolld lhe homt wkh 2 · ""'" 11\11 II
t2211;000 bul may be willing to 11011 11 much
u :115·30 ActH tulrOUndlng lite nome. Colt
for t!*&gt;l1lc locallont and lull detolll.

Twp
110117 145 acres near Rio
Grande
the Ohio Valley near Rio
Grande

MINERSVILLE • Mobile home only • A 1'995 Norris mobile
nome that has had euperlor care with newer carpet In living
room and dining room. Has 2 bedrooms, a newer A/C and
heal pump, all underpinning, and fronl deck. Large rooms.

$17,900.00
UNCOLN ST· Mlddtepon· A 2 atory brick hme wnh big
stone accents on lhe corner. Thera are 3 bedrooms , dining
room, kkcnen, 1 112 baths, a larga garage with an al\ached
carport. Has new carpel In some rooms. $74,000
BUZZARD DEN ROAD • A place In the counlryll Approx
60 acres of baautilulland and a two·story frame home wilh 9
rooms. Has 6 bedrooms, 2 1/2 balhs, and 2 garage6. One
garage Is a 3 car and lhe olher Ia a 2 car. Also has a big
bam and a pond .
$150,000.00

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................992·5692
JERRY SPAADUNQ .................................. 949..2131

CHARMELE SPRADLINQ ...........................948-2131

Visit us online at www.Evans-Moore.com
"

BETTY JO COLLINS ................................... 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................992-3056

OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2886
I

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plu•nt, WV

hge 04. 6unbap l!:lmrf-6entinrl

•

Sunday, February 11,2001

Sunday, F•bnl•ry 11,2001

- ~~~:::;:;:::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~§:~;;:;~~§§~~~F=~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~;=~~1~~==~Sc~h;oo~l;,====~110 Help wanted
110 Hel Wanted •
110 Help Wanted
110 Help Wanted
110 Help Wlnted
110 Help Wanted
lnltructlon
WE HAVE EXI'o\NDEDI
tnloCitlon ~ t)IMatd to

announce that w havt ~
a new cal-cenlllr at ow
10ca110n " Gatlopotla. Ohio.

we ,_ olfor odq&lt;lionat caopportunttlts 1o&lt; one&lt;getic, poatvve, goal-minded applicants In

w

Non-profit Division.

You can eam up 10 $7b&gt;ur and
week!)' bOnuses.

We also otl&amp;r Medical benefits
and Paid Vacations! Holidays
Call Us Today

For An Interview!

1-8811-237·5342 Ext. 2211
YOU NEED A JOBWE NEED GOOD PEOPLE II '
NOW HIRING
BRAND NEW OFFICE
Hourly WaQe GuarantHd
(BMus Program' in Effect)

EMPLOYEES PAID WEEKLY
Men and Women NfNided to do
Tflltp/'JOM Operator Work br
Radio Station PromodOnt
Homllmakffrs Work Whlls

CnJ!dlfn In Scllcol

tiN-HOUSE DAY CARE
tF/T l PIT TIME OPENINGS
t PAID VACATION &amp; BENEFIT
PACK
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED·
PAID TRAINING PROGRAM

COLLEGE &amp; HIGH.SCHOOL
STUDENTS WELCOME
APPLY IN PERSON AT:
424 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT. WV
MONDAY FEBRUARY 12th
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 13111
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 141h

9:ooam To 3:00pm
OR
5:00pm To 9:00pm
Ask tor Ms. Hammond

URGENTLY NEEDED· ptaama
donors, earn $35 to $45 lor 2 or 3
nours weekly. Call Sera-Tee, 740·

592·6651 .

The Atnena ·Mtlgs Educational
$tl\llce C.nttr hal an opening In
thl CHEERS Alhltnl

County Early

Intervention Prooram, 11 Early
Start/Early Intervention Set viet
Coordi nator.
Qualification a:
Bachelor's degree In Early Child·
hood Ectueatlon, Family Studies,
Nuliing. or related field . Must be
eligible lor MROD El Certlflcall~.
and nave tllptrlenet servmg
chiktren birth to three with dlsabititles, and to provide coordlnaHon, ,
developmental assessments and
support to the farr.lty In the hOme.
Sa lary: Commensurate with ax·
perlence. Please submit letter ol
Interest and resume to: Jotln D.
Costanzo.
Superintendent,
Athens· Melgs Educatio nal Serv·
Ice Center, 507 Richland Avenue,
Suite *108, Athens. OhiO 45701 .
Api)Ucatlon Deadline : Friday, February 16. 2001. Equal Oppor,unl·
ty Empio¥er!Provider.

Wa,.ed

Home &amp; Gar!len Pany Otsignm.
Hand Made Ponary, Unique~eessorles, CandiH, Garden

Ware, Ottlgner Quall1y PlciUroa.
No Delivery, No Inventory. No
Quotas. Set Your Own Hours.
High COmmiSSIOn, Ask Abou1
'll&gt;ur Potentially Free Stanor Kk·
Ptu&amp; Added Bonus. Call For Ot·
1alli. (740l886·9997(740l3n·
9397.
Warehouse Person lor Cable
System, Responsible For ¥ain·
talnlng Secure Inventory Storage
And Con1rol. Perform Duties As·
soclated With Storage, Shipping
And Reeel~lng Of EQuipment And
Supplies. Experience A Plus. EKcellent Benefit Package. Please
Submit Resume To Charter Com·
municatlons, 1410 Jefferson

Tht Melgt County Soard of Mtn.

Ttlt Melgt County Counell on
Ag'"cJ, Inc., 1 privati, not-tcw-prottt

tal Retardation and Developmental OlsablliU.s is seeking quahtied
appliCants lot the totlowlng ILJDstllute poSitions:

WE AftE HINNG

work with eligible children birth
through two and their ramllltl .
Bachelor'S degree In education,
nursing, social work, psychotogy,
home economic&amp; communication
or an aliad health field with a concentrauon In child development

preterred.
Teacher, teacher aide, bus andf
or van driver, health services coordlnator {AN or LPN). habilitation
and workshop specialist (adult
program) vehicle aide, cook.
contract services position avail•
able tor • reader/guide to work
with Individual with visual Impair·
mants. Experience with braille,

orientation and moeNI I ) ' -·

Slbmh resume bV February 16 ,
2001 to;
sc~··~'""tnd 1r111
Carleton ,......,..n ... """
us

Na ....._,
No Fundrlltlngl

W. Also Offrer:

POSTAL. JOSS to 111.351ht. •
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 .60lhr. In~

•FuUBlnttitt

eludes benefits . No e~~:perience
nfcessary. For application and
exam info, call t·800-S92·7054
x208 M-F 8:30am-5:00pm.

•Weekly PII'J'Chtck
•Paid Vacation
eRedremtntPian
•Professional Atmospl'ltre

lnloCitlon Mo-~
Cotp0f81lon C.nwntty Hoo
-~ Potlllono Op'ent

140

El(l. t9tt

cata Entry Operators.

lndua1riol.
L0911 Stcretary/ Pllratogal,
Payableo/ RocolvobiH,
RtcopiiOnlaL Stcretarlll.
WOrd Procouo...

STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE
$5CO·S7000/month. PT/FT. Com·

ForAppolnamtnt

8611-873·3693.

Anentlon Rental &amp; home Owners,
All Phast&amp; Of Home Repair, No

Job Too Big Or Small (304l675·
7738
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill juat call

Couple In Allltltd Living TYpe
Situation. For Mort lntormatlon.

(Careers Close To Home)

C81(304)67e-7690

CatiToda'/174(1.446-4367,
HIO(I-214·0452,
Reg t90-05-t2748.

Mount's Tree Service "The Tr••
Professlonlll" Bucket Truck
Service· Top- Trim· Removal·
Stump Grinding. Fr" Estimates,
Fully Insured. Workert Comp,
Bidwell, Ohio. Call &amp; Save. 1-aoo-

150

Please Call (304)3?2·-4018

plat8 training. Free lnlormatlon.
www.c reetlme .com. Toll free 1·

180 Wanted To Do

Schools
Instruction

836·9568 (740l388-9648 Owntr:
Rick Mount.

Oua!Uy house cleanings, Ttte
Best Bonded, Protesalonal, ' Rell·

affordable, comprehensive. legal
tratnlng a\nce _ 189~. FREE Cata·

1 131 or 1·888·781·2412, email: ..

log: 800·826·9228 , w&lt;tte : P.O. Box
70t449, Dallas. TX 75370 NA or
http://www.9fackStonelaw.com

llshed Vending Route . Will seu by
2112. Under SSK minimum lnVflst·
ment required . Excellent Monthly
Prolll Potential. Finance Ava il-

AMAZING FACTSitl Internet
grew 3800% last year. Cash In on
this Incred ible opportunllv today!
No selling. Training provided . No
a•perience needed. Investment
reQuired. Tol l free 1·866-557·

55tS.

ARE 'IOU CONNECTED? INTER·
NET USERS WA~TEDI $25·$75/

Will do t&gt;abyttnlng In my home, all
3 ahilta, ont· $\0.00. two· $1,,
meals Included, 741).949·2483.

$500 ·$50 ,000. Cash grants (Unsecured loads) . Bad cred1t OK,
personal deDt. college tultJon .
business , mortgage down payments, Inventions. Tolt free 1·866·
484·3462 exl. 003.

A Country Crallsman February
Special : tO% Off Hoosier Cabi·
nets , Pie Safes Ete . Come See
Our Showroom &amp; Save 10% On
Any Purchase. (304)74:3--1 100

(304)743·1 100

230

CASH LOANS

Professional
Services

aolldat lont Cut payments up to
60% . Same day appro~all 1·877-

consolidate your b illa into one
monthly payment. Redut:e inter ut, avoid late charges &amp; 1101)
narassment . LJcenstd fDonded
Non-protlt 800·289·6331 e•t t5
www.goldcoastcc com

CONSOLIDATE

day! 800·551 · 9057 ~~~t.
www.tand.com

i800l

QAIL BELVILL£.................................. 441 1201

TRISH INVDER.................................-441-1411
JOHNNIE RU88EU...........................x7-GIH
DAVID BNVDER ..~.............................. oi41-MII

Reduced to $174,900, now's the time to make
this outstandingly . melntained and decorated
home yours. Located In a · quiet family
neighborhood conveniently located to town, you
will be Impressed from the moment you atep
Into the formal entry open to the large formal LR
&amp;. DR, large cort eat-In kitchen with lots of
cabinets &amp; countertop space with access to the
multi-level deck, 4 BAs, 2 baths, plus potential
downstairs for a 5th BR &amp; 3rd bath), large FR
with fireplace, 2 car garage, above ground pool
with decking &amp; professional landscaping
completes this outstanding property. Call today
for your private viewing. 1622

OUR WEB PAGE 18:WWW.v11mtlhruleetata.com
e-mail: vtarMIMtate@~net. nel

wjnew

blrQaln with a
3 BR, balll, gas
gas FP, full baml, !lllagt.
and bo linll to call 446-68011

(tied 1/4, (Jilt At

carpet

amen~et.

a

1~800-585-7101 or 446-7101

Russell D . Wood, Broker 446-4618
Judy DeWiU .............................. 441-0262
Cheryl Lemley
742·31'71
J. Merrill Carter ............: ............379-2!84
D
Alh ·
................................. 379·9209
Tammie DeWill. ........... :............ 245-0022
· ~~~elh k;~t;;;;y:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::24S-S855
Rulh Barr.................. ,.......................446-0722

bedrooms, family room, heal

HOMES? Then lhlt Is 1 rnuol
.... large tlztd roomt, living
room, equipped kHchon, 3
bedroomo. 2 batllo. foyer,
laundry.
Elclenllvoly
- -... which tnctudao roof
roptace~.
windoWs.
hOidlntl'cootlng,
and
more.
Dellc:hed- garage and IIOrlgt
building. EXptcllng a titgt prloo,
NOI Try Me,~.DO: Wltltln a law
min- of lhopplng and town.

I

3 Bedroom. 2-1f2 batns, 2 Fireplaces. 2 Car Garage . Mu ch
Mora . Close To Everyt hi ng ,

$2000 ·$5000,

$90,000 Call (740l44t...0310

-nol

pump, lllaChad 2 car gorll!l'·
Lots of updatao hera. call t()llay

to take a peek tne&lt;lt1 ,120112
LDDK11
. THE

OUTUIII ...BUT WAIT UNTIL

YOU I l l THE INIIDII MUll
take a cloaor look ovorall\0 lite quality lhallhll homt hU ..
orr.r. To tell ycu a lillie helt - ·
-led wttlt lilt
lloonng, 1o1t of 011r
boaUIIful Olk alalr OBit ltadlna
_ , to family room, 3
bedi'OOml, 2 bdw, one car built·
In gngo plut dNchod ,2 · car
gariiQI, tnctoled rur pordl,
doc~ng on raor. MUll oatiiO view
tlttmtl-

oabt-.

CDNTEIIIPDRARY Home titling
on over 2 acm. Loll of room on
lite lntldo tool Llrge living room
with 111' ctllng, ·"'!Ill«

WE AAE TALKING lu.IDII
RI!DUCT1DH HIRI!t RIAIIY...
..., S20,01101 o..ner mtonl
· Ouallty homt
lowmaintenance.
Bricktltllllat
ranch
wml 4 bedroomo, format living
room, atep-tavlng kJlchon, family
room whh firoptace, ""'r 2,000
square fHI of living apaco. 2 car

==
:::r. ..:=n.: -

2-,:;,:.
room, taunclry, 2 ng.•-~·
•
--~~="""'· and morot
•.
.
1 - BR 141 ••• 11/2111oty homt
COft1lllole w111t 3 bedroomt, living
room, kitchen, ~ Iron!
pordl, blocklap drive. -

--.bom,ll&gt;edand -

lolldt mort raotlng on 2 """
11\11. Prlvateahowlnga ...catiiO Ml
up yourot 12050
111-11-8-T 8-loLo-1.11 NEID TO

=·

IETTLE EITATEI OYitl country

Hltlng with
!doll for tho
paraon w110 lkOito l&gt;llnl(cr-to
public hunting and .ftlhlng .....l.
3 bedroomt, 2 ballla, Iorge living room, formal dining lf\d
kHchon with lite 11'111 room
alltd. Florida room on front,

~..'!L ~on
of -,::·
' ..

and litfhon
In dl~ room
room.
Uvlng room 11at ~roptace with
plower. Home hU newer lorelei air
nolural gas furnace. Gmt
Locatio(&gt; I

1173 R!DUC!D PRICE-117
.... cloaolo new Fwy., holplfat,
ahop otr. water, gaa, 18'Mfr.
Adlofr*lg Plnteraol
Nuralng
HQrnl.
1120 8lato Rt. 27t In tnt
.2 br.,

NEW LUXURY WHITE BRICK
HOME Located In a prestigious
area inAft!reen
l
. .i M

FORECLOSED GDV'T HOMES!
SO OA LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING I CALL I·
800-501 · 1777 ext 9813.

Ha lf Acre , 3 Bedroo.m House. 1
Bedroom Apartme nt Beneath .
Two Po le Barns, Close To Town.

(740)448-'4782

Real Log Homes , Free lnforma-

ton. Call (740l55B-2393

888·604·1444 Exi. 1220.

J.

\

•

l

'n'I·Lnel borne lots of
charm and chancier. 3
BRa, Z baths, formal LR.
&amp; Dlnlna, Complete
kitchen.
Larae F.R.,
Finished basement.
Stonae bulldlna. Coli lor
an 1ppolntmtnt today!
No.%91

designed oak cabinets. Lg.
dining room, S m&lt;\i-c BRs. 3
additional bath11, Fireplace in
the LR. Charmina entry
w/stain:ase leading to 2nd
level. Laundry room on the

main leve l .
Finished
basement, Detached 2 car
garaJe. On 3.35 landscaped
or plants &amp;

machine shop wllh all lhe
equipment Other building has
a mullilude of possible uses.
Look lnlo both or one o1
these- Be your Own Bossi
124 Butternut Ave. Great potential at

bedrooms, 2 baths, central air, plastered
walls, hardwood floor In dining room,
fireplace, garbage disposal, over-sized
heated
with 6 person SPA/HOT TUB.
A
For Sale By Owner.
By
• Call 740-992-6268

!33 ARBUCKLE ROAD •
Enjoy the BEST OF BOTH.
From your front porch view
the beautiful
side,
Walk in and view

acres m/1. Lots

Real Estate General

private
i &amp; bath on the
main floor. 2 more bedrooms
2nd level. 4th bedroom, 3
full baths. Full basement
w/poured walls. 2 car garage.
All setting on 4 acres m/1. in
a custom. built horne. Green
Elementary. Shown by

appointment.

Middleport, OH
JUST OF MORNING STAR· Here'a lovely 3 bedroom home
that Is just 10 years old. All on one floor and has a heal
pump. There is a 1 1
and is sitting on 1.7 acres
in a quiet country i

sale· one

us an ollerl
g~~.!~~~~ Great 4 BR .
to move! Lei us talk to
about this onel

FOURTH AVENUE . 2 story
lsi level and a 3rd on the 2nd. LR, dining room,
lkilche:n, pantry. LBundry room on tlle main level.

~~:~;::;~;~~ basement w/outside entrance. BaCk porch.
garage 15x25, lg back yard 44x174. This
has a one DR apartment upstairs with outside
. Shown
·
only. NO. 226

Call today
for your quote!

from

H&lt;Rti
......s .. 4
,....
W/Skyllghl &amp;
calhedral c~ling, dining rm., living
rm .. convenient kit., oak cabinets, 1337&amp;

800 4589990
LOOK AT THIIIIII

1at floor launct,Y, Master sulle. on Bedroom 2 bath ranch over

''

•'

.
. '"

-

•

.

"t
~'

'

13355 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. II you like
lndtvlduatlty--here H tat 3,029 sq.
ft. more or teas, 3 bedrmo .. 2 1/2
bathe, Kit., LAm, OHk:e rm., and
mu~h more. Wrap porch ftont &amp; 2
tldtt. 167 Acres 11\11. AoNng

baaament with 2 car finished famtty room. Home Ills
2 tv:. 11\11 In Honnan
Sdloola. Jull mlnulel
downtown Galllpols. Thlo
laalureo a. beau11ful le~ilocapedl
lawn, wood pella! llove
canlral air. Looaled lull off
Llck Rd. on Mabla Dr. In

www. upplo9

(Ofll

=;;~;~:;;~j

t

II

NEW
W/pool. .. located on 1 acre m~. this home offers 3 BAs,
baths. LA , DR, kitchen (Great cabinets). 1/2 basemen! w/1
car garage. Cedar siding. Pool Is fenced and has nice roc&gt;mlrl

located .near

Some Restrictions.

$S9,000

NO. lZ3

ST· A 3 to 4 bedroom nome wHh newer windows.
Has an equipped kitchen and laundry room. Has a heal pump
with central air, frool porch and sits on a large lot. $38,000

f/6e~~ .
514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
7 40-446..0008
7 40-441-llll
evanemoo@zoorrlnet.net
www.evane-moore.com
Formerly Blackburn Realty
·
".'i.Aro,,inttr Southern Ohio For Over A Quarter Century" "'"'on'

Fled Lot tiles, 2 ntca pondl.
Land It moot all ctoan &amp; 1188 oomt
fencing. Etectrlc &amp; lrolllree Wiler
In the Dam. Feed tot ttteo.
Formeny uatd for · Veal calf
operation.

TAYLORS DRIVE· A bl·level with a basemen! making a tri·
level. Newer home at the end of a road and Is very private.
Has 2 bedrooms, and· could have an~ther. Has 4.56 acres,
an outbuilding lhatls really cute with a porch . A must see at

z(,I4H4,-1H&lt;uvee ~~

&amp;

[B

RkJ

Grande. Appointment Only. Call
Smltlt 740·448 6808.

PLEASANT HILL ROAJ&gt;.

2.00 mil acres more or
Green Elementary Schools.

deck tying It lo Ihe house. Total electtic plus wood burner
bsml. You must see to appreciate lhis exceptionally
hamel Com aln and let us
for this house.

I Jollnnlo
lodiOV Ulrl., appointment.
Lot for OIObtle ~--·1
located 2808 SA n5. 1 acre 11\11.
$12,500.00
, _ 1'111 1o1 located on Clorl&lt;
Cllaptl Rd. and Sluon Rd. 2 1011
1 ac. mora or 1101. $19.!100
•

up,
porch on 111
"' gas fumaot, hot
Wiler ~k &amp; roof. Prlct Ia low.

beautiful whlle stone fireplace and glass all the way .to the
top ollhe cathedral ceiling. Has 5 bedrooms, 3 balhs, family
room, dining area, and a baaullful kllchen. There is lots ol
slorage. a 2 car garage, and a security syslem. Now
A Muot See at $1,8,900

drywall

everywhere

Inside.

Greal starter home or

rental properly.

$18,900.00

11018 Elegant In-town living can bl
found In thla 4 BA 2 1/2 BA two story
colonial style home. With beautiful
tanctacaplng , taatetully decorated formal
!Mng room and dining room, cozy family
room with fireplace. one car detached
garage and the extra 1toragespace of the
full baaement. In town living Is juat •
phone '"'llli away.

living
lhlt Ia the
houu youl Wltlt almo114,000 square
fetl ol Hvlng O!*&gt;e, . Which lnctudtl 8
be&lt;lroomo and 4 t&gt;alhl, thll honfa relit
an an ovtrelZtd corner lot

In

"'"'"""' and

• ~..,._. :1-4 ~-·•· a.a
I bltltl ' 2 oar llttiChttl-...,_..,end
lfPlllfor
.,~........., _ .
moral
lm"*'llll r n ron
Call com.,.--..
helal-.

UNBEU!:VABlE VIEW· Sitting atop Riverview Drive is lhls
one story home lhat has a sunken living room wilh a big

newer

Galllpalll near

-·;,p:,

MAIN ST· A 1 1/2 story home with aluminum siding, and hlis
2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, balh, and laundiY room
downstairs, and 2 small bedrooms upslairs. has a nice view .
ollhe Ohio River. $18,000

ANNE STREET. A one slory home with vinyl siding, newer
windows and a .part basement. A really cute new home with
3 bedrooms, 1 bath, and siHing on approx. 3/4 acre. Mas

$45,000
~ LAND LOlli 01' LAND44.240 AC. on 8ond Hollow Rd. •
water tap. HuniJng 1 .Oklllft.
$44,000 01 olfar.

Brick &amp; ~nyt 8 BR, 2 BA l1oml on
pri\llle 1 aero 101. Family room,
living room w/llrtptaca, DA, ond
tarvo u1111ty room In th~ one with 1ull
blltrnent. AIIICiled 2 car garage
and dtllched 2 car garage u wtll
could bo UMd for atoragt. P 1or a quick tale. sae.ooo

:-.

LDOKINO 1'011 A LOT'/ Hn .,.
.2 Iota wllh ~-and
ttwagt avdaltta. Not for a lila
prlct. $14,!100 for litem boll! onil
owner 1o ~ your . - .
110711
eo IIICII mm... t1t1a 11 ttte
place you ought "' btl ToQ a
ptlk llllklt and ' you~ ....
ROomy 1112 lii!'V ,... w1111
formal....., and diMta room •
1a tarvo 111n1y loam

ls.I740I245-5606

11

Pasture 8nd 3 Large Barna

112100

Immaculate \QIMI
ranch
are ready lo deal. Kl1ehen with
tatand and epjJiancot, 3
bedroomt, 2 batltl, 1o,.t dining
or family room.IMng room, utility.
. Ova&lt; 1800 oq. ft. of living .,..,..
·OWners are wUIIng to maka thllr
toto ba ""'*"" olio'• gllln. C8JI
tOCIIyl 111104
PRICE DIIOPPED 1:1,0001
Rernod- ranch home roallng
on over t acre treed level lot.
Uvlng room with ftr,ptoc., 1ormot
dining area, 2 full batllo, 3
be&lt;lroomt, family room, 11oe1

Prlct tnctudol lrwtn!Ory. Call
Jc&gt;hnrtlt 387-ti3ZI or 446 esoe.
, _ • 3027 St. Rl. 141 In
Cenl...ry. Looaled lite road from
School thll
bath
with lui

3 Bedroom. 2 Bath Beautiful Home
On 5 Acres, Reduced To

Consolidation to $200,000 . Bad
Credit , No Credi t. Credit cards,
Mortgages, Etc .... Financial lnlor·
mallon Systems, Inc. Toii· Frae : 1-

businesses for

IYRUCYWIII

or Uneal Foot

COnllnuou• operation since 1986.

pump, attoched .2 oar gorll!l'·
Lots of updlln hele. Coli IOCIIy
to lake a peek lnsldel120112

~~

Ooollly,......,

11111oor InclUding a super t&gt;atlt rrn.
&amp; clooel. 4 Bedrms., 2 batlta on
2nd llonr. 2-4'&gt;&lt;24' family rrn.
approx. 4,000 sq. ft. Boau11ful 3
acre MIL ravlned lot and live
stream. It would pe my pleasure to
show you. Virginia 446·6808
CAARVDUT IUBIN!IS
·
end CONVIN•NCa IITDR&amp;
I'DR I.U... New alorm oyllem.
Building bulft to . - COde.

by calling 1or on
appr.
witt ba glad ll1al on over 1 acre treld
you did. Be one of the firat to Uvl,.;i room with fireplace,
dining area, 2 fu! Dlllhl, 3
view this nice sized ranch home

... ""ALACHCAN"

VIne St.

Log Home
Building Compontnt•

- . 171 ldoma Tlall· 'JYcoon
~ 2 l.olo $12,800 oooll. Mobile
hojme, building &amp; to1 $15,000 all for
1:13.000
N001
OWN
YOUR OWN
IUIINE88 No lnllallon tn tttlt pnce
11 It telling btiOW value.
E l - lloral thop &amp; !arming
111dt· Evtryll1ng goes for one low
pllct. ~lntment only. VIrginia
ue 1101.

$36,995. Realtor (304l576·3056

3056

AREA· Very nice
spill enlry home In good NEW i"iiiiiiiiir.
neighborhood. 2 car garage. Beautifully redecorated &amp;
Large lot. 4 ·BR , 2 Bath, LR, carpeted from lop lo bottom I
DR. Kll, Deck. let tls show BR, 2 baths, LI, DR,
Kll.,
youthlslinetodayl
U\ly Am,
sml.
POMEROY· Baker ·Rd •• 11 W&lt;lodworkl Do ble lol. G,.aragel
you are looking for wooded &amp; carporl. Must see
acreage and a really nice apprecfatel Priced to sell.
home, look at this 9 acres for appointment.
m/1. Jus! one mile off SR 33. REDUCED • Mlddltpo"·
3 BA, 2 bath, LA, DR, Kll, Extra nlce home! 4 BR, 2 1/2
Ully Am. Additional 16 x 40 baths, 2 car gar .. Pool w/auto
bldg. Privale .
cover &amp; cleaner. heated. All
RACINE· Classic 3 BR nome. fenced In for lois of privacy.
Nice selling. Nice lor. Several Many, many extras! Let us
fireplaces &amp; .manels. High show you this one al your
woodwork. LA, DR , FA, kit convenience.
w/appll. HP &amp; AC. Bsml. Call MIDDLEPORT·
rtghl away- thols one won't comfortable 4 BR
lasllong.
very good condlllon :
Lot ol
oppo"unltlel· CA .
Wwell·lns
could ba Rem- Appliances. Alum.
·238 Walnut Comer lot.
360 S RACINE· GREAT BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES!
Two

EXTRA MONEY?? Work !rom

103.~00

www .BIG-BEND REALTY .COM
B't B~ ~ , 1~ee,

1·886·562·3345

~ Bedroom, , Bath Home- 3 Miles
east Of leon On Highway 62 ,

3 Bedroom, 2 Batl1 , 2 Car Garage,
Beautiful Brick Home , Gall ipolis
Ferry, $99,000. Realtor (304)575-

to

home around your schedule pari
time/ lull lime. Excellent income!

CITY LOT 43' x t70'

-

CC3

LO~LY TWO STORY
HOME DECORATED AS
PREITY AS A DOLL
HOUSE • Features a
SPACIOUS BEDROOM
SUITE W/ St'l"rtNti ROOM
&amp; BATH. ON THE MAIN
LEVEL. Wife approved
kitchen w/ l ots of custom

Earn S500 lo $900 per week In
your bathrobe &amp; slippers. Great
opportunity to secure your future.
Low Investment . 1·900-272-0193.
awesomaarnlng.com

. 448-eeoe

located 39

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

(740l36B-9t5t

Farm House On Mount Tailor In
Vinton 3 Bedroom. Could Be 4
Bedroom . Hard Wood Floors.
Partly Remodeled New Sldlng, 81g
Garage W1th Overhead. Old barn,
:2 BUildings Well 01 Rul'al Water,
Pond, Strawberry Paten, Fruit
Trees . Cellar. B1g Vard, Good
Garden , lots Of Flo wers. &amp;,ell As

Attention: work !rom home, up to

dryer, newly remodeled Dllth.
Private yard wnence . .Call VLS

Real Eatata General

ADVANCE

$73,000, 3 Bedroom 1·1 12 Bath .
Wpod Floors , Gas Fireplace,
Garage . 1 47 Acres Must See

$1 19.000· Realty (304l576·3056

S25.00·$7S.OO/ hr. PT/FT. Intel·

range. dishwasher, refrlg, washer,

(740) 446;.a644

111

FREEl L1Cf750005.

It

1400t A THING OF BEAUTY ISA
JOY FOREVER. 4 Bedrm, brick, 1
1/2 baths, full basement, garage,
format DR &amp; LA, k~. 3 lovaty
bedrrns and Dllth w/DIIIcony on
2nd, finished 3rd floor. This home
Immaculate

EARLYPAY.

$2S.00·$75.110/)1' PTIFT. MAIL
ORDER'catltoll·lree t-877·965. 6739.

Ate. 50 Quality loc's. local Super
Income 800·277·9424 24 Hrs.

is

No olhce vis•t necessary. Up to
$500 Instantly. Call toll lree 1-8TI·

Attention: Work from ·home, up to

HALLMARK Style Greeting Card

throughout. Lots or

SO DOWN HOMESI GOV'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

75 Est LocaHono. (Locall Proven
Income. 800-900-3470.

1·600.6t3•5694.

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.

310 Homes for Sale

1-800·338-()()20 ext 9811

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY77

WAY

E•t.

· 310 Homes lor Sale

769-8168.

ATTN; Work from home! Up

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 1111101

64t·9757 ,

REAL ESTATE

RATING. 1·888·811-o902.

www.debtccs.org {Non-Profit)

us.com

140

YOUR

6unbap QI:imt• -6entintl • Page 05

Prole..lonal
Services ·

CREDIT PROBlEMS ? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREOIT, BANKRUPTCY.
LAWSUITS, JVOGMENTS. AAA

OUT OF DEBTl Reduce monthly
payments. Pay one bill!month.
EASV to get started . Financial
Freedom Chr istian Counseling,

800-774·9069 www.wealthy-r-

Flatbed. Michigan City, IN Call to-

23o

ARE '!OUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can

$2S .00·$75.00/hr. PT/FT. Call

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Prole1slonal
Services

A Country Craftsman, Stripp 1ng ,
Rt~fin lshl ng , caning, Repai rs &amp;
Upho lstery. After Hotlday Special·
Save 10% On Rellnlshlng Work .

Start Your Business Today...
Prime Shopp ing Center Spaca
Available At Allordab le Rate .
Spring Val ley Plaza, Call 74D-446·
0101.

$$ NEED A LOAN? Try debt con-

HA·PTIFT. w-ww.BeBossFree.com

doubledOeurekanet.com

Real E1t11te General

Spring is just around tl'le corner.
Spring Into action with Tandem
Transport Corp. OTR Regional

-t1 2 car

xeo

ACIIIAQI ... 30 -

nyt loll of t41.000 Ill 141 Cliill'*' - .
h\lnllng tend. Cult ronohllyla l1oml with IN!ng
Hari1lon Townalilp. S3Q,IIOO.OO . room, dining ...... - · bllll,
111101
.
~llllrioa
~·
moralntOI

._

llutiAitl
Will Mtabllhld
In GaNI!loRa fOIIdy for
you to Moinma Joe'a
~•
1o _ _,
l\4&amp;1ooN ~ve --~"'
1or you. E~ta right
doWn 10 lite "'-"'G'·
(Ownar Ia kaeptng ont oabl~~
El1ln - · II lilmlllort and
- · t&gt;'l1)111rtg In ttte atort.
Tlill will . . - I (Ifill ohlnct
1or you to 'II your own ,11011' to
don, ttl ft go. CoiiiiiUy.

over.

FOR MORE LISTINGS STOP BY AND PICI&lt; UP A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR
BOOKLET OR GIVE US A CALL &amp; WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE TODAY!
I

room, IMng room, 2 enclosed porches
anything, and 2 half balhs. Has lie own
,
newer central air, and a big fenced In side yard. $45,000.00

are concrete

"' - v... 1111 In

'

I

and are lntulllad. l'lrat 30
foot of floor It 8 ln. thick ,and
rtmalndor 11 4in and all wMh rtbar
~n~comont. tills would makt
flrtll
offlct · 1toraga or
notghbofh!lod
butlnoat. Call today

WNfT HlLP WITH IDMI

CLDIING
CDITI?
Thon
DOnllder lttllng lhlt Hlltr lltlp
y&lt;1IJ buy tills well maintained
ronoh homt. Equipped ~llclltn. 3
bedroomt, larao levtt lawn with
INH , _ anll nrubl. Mull -. lilt
appreclato tltll homtl Mow IntO
lmmtellallly. 11011

Hiiiii:TciN iTiiiiirr • A 1'I• etory home

many
Wiler, HWar
, with· all ltnoa
ltNict and a

wcodt. .k11a1

I..Lt'..LEIGS COUNTY

(

447-7869.

able/ GOOd Credit. -(888) 270·
2t6e-

SS$ NEED CASH7? WE pay
c.asn for remaming payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annu l·
!lest Senltmentsl lmmedrale
Ouotea!ll "Nobody beats our pric es.• Nat ional Contracl Buyers
(800) 490·0731 e~~ot. 101 www na ·
tionalcontractbuyers .com

230

now.org toll ~aa 886·311-1954.

Attn : Kurl Leachman. No Phone

Newer 2 story, 4 bedroom, 2 bath1
large closets, fireplace, convenient
kitchen, large basement &amp; family
room, 2 car oversized garage.l
appliances stay, approximately 2,20u
ft. on 2+ acres In Green Townahlp.
'7''"'
Appraisal 1167,000,

•

fro nt door with in hoursl New, vir·
tually-unknown
business .
www.homewealthonllne .com/robert
smith . listen to 3-mlnute mes·
sage at 1· 800- 404· 1475 ax!.
197428. Tnen calltoll-lree 1·86Ei ·

A+ M&amp;M MAASINESTLE Estab·

Profe11lonel
Services

net/ma ll order www.money4u-

Calls Please. EOE MIF

THII
HOME
APPI!AIJNQ
ON

MONEY DELIVERED TD you'

the otlerlng.

able, call evenings (740l256-

Blvd .. Point Ptoaoant, WV 25SSO.

111

with over 8.7 acrea. L.arge alzed
living room with woodburning
fireplace, kitchen with dining
area, 3 BAs, 2 batha, full
ba:aement, large sized &lt;leek and
1100\11 ground pool wHh deCking.

startup.com

AT&amp;T-MCI PAYPHONE ROUTES

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home study, approved,

230

MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In·
come potential No exptntnct
necessary. Free lnlormaiJon &amp;
CO·AOM . Investment from $2495.
Financing available. (800) 322·
1 13S EXT 050 www.business -

283-3860 11&lt;1. t338(2( hrs l

recommends tnat you do business wilh people you know, and
NOT to land money through the
mail until you have Investigated

Mature Couple lnterelltd In C.r·
lng For Non Bed Fut Elderly

a.wtpatlo cor- Cot•

C81 Ut Today' For
"" lnllrvltw:
1·866~75-7223

Business
Training

antead . Free Supplies. 1-800·

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Bu1inet1
Opportunity

Hershey's pra·stcurtd routes
available In limited areast Mini·
mum lnveatmtnl under S!'iK .
EarnlngrJ over $9SK one yr I ·
988·745-55!52 . 24 hrs.

$3000 weektyt M~tLING •oo
BROCHURES AT HOME! Guar·

BRIOGE STATE UNIVERSITY t·
B00-9$&lt;-831e.

30H7~-111!i7.

Accounting Clorl&lt;,
Admlnlarlatlvt Aulltantl,

yracu&amp;8 , h 4"n 9

QUICt&lt;LV, bachelors , Mattera,
Ooctoratt. bV corrttpondenct
based upon prior education and
atlort study courH. For FREE In·
formation book1tl phone C.t.M·

210

Bu1lne11
Opportunity

EARN '!OUR COlLEGE DE.GREE

Postal Jobs $48 ,323.00 yr. Now
nlrlng- No experience-paid tralnlng- great benefits. call 7 days
800-429-3660 e•t. J-365.

'lbu C.n Earn Up To $7~r.
And WttkfV Bonu&amp;es.

. Un lttd Talent Staffing Service
Acceptlng Application&amp; For:

131 6'ga,S:O1~~ltreet
S
•

210

The Mason County Shelter. High
School Graduate, Valid WV Orlv·
ers Llct!'llt With Good Driving
Records, 1 Year Aelated Exptrl·
ence Send Resume, Cover lei·
ter, Relerencll ; SCAC , orrector
Of HR , 540 5th Avenue, Hunting·
ton, WV 25701

lnfoCtllton II C~dy Adding
To Our~"-' Sllft. 'tt&gt;u
Coulci.Hifp Ua Ncrutt
~unMen On 8ehiH Of NonProfit Organlladonl.

'01·C·3 agency, Ia accepting
rHumes lor the potition of Flte~l
A11lstant . Quallrteallont Include
an Auoclatt Degree In bUll·
nell , economic• or aCc:ountlng
with a mlnl~m of 2 .,...,.. t~Ptri·
tnce and above averaga com·
puter akiltl Including law;wlldge of
natworklng, computer main·
tenance and all duties UIOdaled
whh the oversight or Management
Information System&amp;. Dutltl In·
clud• assisting the Fiscal Olrector in maintaining financial
recorda and related data, and aH
necessary documentation. data
entry and financ ial reports In
compliance with the Agency's
Grant Management System and
coordination of agency's computer systems. Interested appllcante
should call Darla Haw~. Human
Resource Director, 112 ! . Meinorial Orlwl, Pomeroy, OH 740·8822t 61. An EOE and Provldlr.

ear tv tnter~entlon sp•ctati 1 t to

Team Member Po•lllon Open At

FINAN CIAL

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

..

for-.-.000
CDIIMIRCIAL LOT ON
Ill 7 .77 .... 11\11.
Btautlful oqulped Clayton Mobile
Homt 11114 3 bedrm., 2 batllo, 14'
X 77', 2 polt bamt, and ' trlllor
ttoragt. Call for more tntormouon.
VL8
•
13377 OREA~ ITARTIR "OME
or lnvtllmlm f'Optrly. Thta
lovely two btdroom one end one
haW batlt COitligt WOuld be jUit
rlgl1t 11 a atortor or retlrtmOIII
home. Wlh on taltn kMchon and
living room k ·Ia
enough
tptca. Priced lo HI II $37,600. attachod
Call today lhlo one won~ lllllong. 11 park llk~nu .-ICI pond
.
&amp; gazebO. VLS
'
, _ , Spth ~ Hom• on a HILl. cloto 10 town. 1 btdroomt. 2
botltl. Thla hOfTlt It lor a Mr. "Fbc 11". Call for an appotntmtm.

I""'

COiiniiY colonial ~~ near !Itt

SA 3S lntar&lt;&gt;hlnge near Rio Grande, this
counlly muterptece 11 aurrounded by
IP)tndld &gt;1owa of rolling meadows oulllde
-.nd I cozy hOmey fellllng Inside, Inside you
· .,. ~ by a frlf(1dty wstcomt of
lllleful decor, plush llonnng, cherry

"!'flY.

pr1vatt country
mtnufal Iron! SR 7. Thlt
contrallloel and air, lfCUrlty tyl1tm
a new aboVe ground pOol. With lnttrtll
refal at a 3 year tow why rtm7 Call
today for t~Caotlocallon.

135'

$24,900

molding, eotld pane~ · doort ~ an enOrmoul

12041 5.3 ac(es In Charolals

m111tr bed and batlt on tn. matn litvtl.

Lake area.

ovefllzed Jaouul tub, built In 001met1c

to
oull
Cute 3 bedroom batlt home.wllh 1 1/2
car garage and a lui . biHmtlll. Col

LANDI LANDI LANDI
110eD City lot 52' x

vanity,
cherry
po,.,,
formal

12081 9 .125 acres In Green

biHmlnt wHh a nnlahld recrHIIOnllamlly

1208812-14 acres overlooking

firtplaca turrounded by outtom
- · p11\111e ocreened In
cuolom cherry k~chen cablnell,
dining room . format R~ng room,
Itt'" bedroomo ond a full t&gt;ath upalalro,
room with a lull batltroom. The owner hat
prlolld lhe homt wkh 2 · ""'" 11\11 II
t2211;000 bul may be willing to 11011 11 much
u :115·30 ActH tulrOUndlng lite nome. Colt
for t!*&gt;l1lc locallont and lull detolll.

Twp
110117 145 acres near Rio
Grande
the Ohio Valley near Rio
Grande

MINERSVILLE • Mobile home only • A 1'995 Norris mobile
nome that has had euperlor care with newer carpet In living
room and dining room. Has 2 bedrooms, a newer A/C and
heal pump, all underpinning, and fronl deck. Large rooms.

$17,900.00
UNCOLN ST· Mlddtepon· A 2 atory brick hme wnh big
stone accents on lhe corner. Thera are 3 bedrooms , dining
room, kkcnen, 1 112 baths, a larga garage with an al\ached
carport. Has new carpel In some rooms. $74,000
BUZZARD DEN ROAD • A place In the counlryll Approx
60 acres of baautilulland and a two·story frame home wilh 9
rooms. Has 6 bedrooms, 2 1/2 balhs, and 2 garage6. One
garage Is a 3 car and lhe olher Ia a 2 car. Also has a big
bam and a pond .
$150,000.00

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................992·5692
JERRY SPAADUNQ .................................. 949..2131

CHARMELE SPRADLINQ ...........................948-2131

Visit us online at www.Evans-Moore.com
"

BETTY JO COLLINS ................................... 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................992-3056

OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2886
I

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

Pqe D6 • 6unbap Q:imri -6rntinrl
310 Home• for Sale

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
DOUBLE YOUR INCOME Tu

Selling Our Small Modern Masnry
Wlrue r Home Ne ll lakeland,
Florida. Betwnn Busch Gardens
And Disney World, Corner Lo t
132ll75 Feet Chain link Fence.
Water Well, Septic Tank 2 Aluminum Out Bu11dtnQS. Prb $39,000·
For Pictures And Information Call
• • Owners R.e. And Oaisy Knolls Sr.
In EvenlhQ Gallipolis (740)4462917 Florida Number (863)665·

'· 0623
• • . Small 2 Bed room House fo r Sale
. • On Ci ty 01 F'oint Pleasant
- ' $28,000 Will Consider Owner Fi·

5·i27
iio4iii9_ _ _,
, ..najjiiinciiingiiiio.!iii304iiil)flii7ii

' .,I
' ·!'

.d

.' i

:I

1\11 10~ ft11te lld\l0t11slng In
this newspaper Ia aubject to
tho FodeiOI Fair Houalng N;t

' !
•j

Refund : Purctlast a new nome
and lor a limited trme we will dOU·
ble your income tax refund up to
$2000.00. That's right, turn
$2000.00 Into $4000.00 w1fh your
purchase! we will atso ha ndle
you r tu tiling for FRE E here at
RNerda!e Homes Call 740-385·

4367.
Factory Goof 32K80 $\0,000 Dis·
count only $1000 .00 Down, De·
livery, and setup pa1d by Factory
1·800-691·6777
Final Days. Nation wide Inventory
ReducHon! (304)736-3409

to JOvtrtiae •any preference,
llmltallon or discrimination
based on race, color, religiOn,
oex familial Slatus or national
origin. or lifO/ tnten11oo to
make lifO/ such pn!!orenco,
limbtion or discrimination. •

'•1'

j

•

_,::.:;,~t-Ie

' I

lnformod thl1 all dwelling&amp;
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale

' ' .,.,.,__,.....,'""',...,-.....,-:---,*Nice• 1995 Skyline 3 Bedroom
, 2 Bath $14,000 OBO (304)675· 6055
·
· 14x70 Southern Dream, tree Oe·
livery free Setup ont~ $999? 1·

. (740)446-1773

1 -3 Bedrooms Fo re closed
Homes From $199/Mo.. 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Deta ils ,
800-319-3323 Eat. 1709.
1 BA Hou se In GaiUpolll. $2501
mo. S200 Deposit. No Pets. References Require d. Call Alter

5:00pm.l7401446-9342
2·3 BA 110use on l incoln A.ve.,
Homes tead Realty, Ask far Nan-

20!H/2 Popu lar Street, 2 Bed ·
room, Full Basement. $275+ De·

Must Sell! 16x80
Make 2 Payments &amp; Move In!
1·800·691 -6777

posH. t3041675-3230
29R, unfurnished house, 507 112
2nd St. , New Haven . (30 4)675·
3469.

3 Bedroom, 2. Bath, Full Base·
menl, c amp Con l e~ Area, $300+

New 14 It wide $499 . down on ly
$199. per mon. call now 1-800·

OopoSil(304l6_7.:.5·.:.32..:3_0 _ __

691-6777.

3 Bedroom , With Deposit. No

New 16ft. wide $499 . per mon .
only $270. per mon . call now t •

800·691·6777.

.

New dou ble wide 3 br. 2 ba.
$998.00 down cmly $295 . pe r

mon.callnrm 1·800·691·6777.
New Fleetwooci14K70 $16,999.00
3 Bedroom- 2 Bath . 1:877·777 ·

4170
877-777·4170.

ONLY $99 5.00 DOWN and
$199.58 a mon1h moves you Into
a new 3 bedroom/2 bath home .
Cal l for details. 740-385-4367.
Utility Bills Getting Most 01 Your
Paycheck! Call (740)446- 3093
For VOur New Home Today.

340

Pe1S, I304)1l75-2749

House lor rent In country, with big
yard, 5 min. from New Haven 304·

682·3970.

BusineSs and
Buildings

Apartments'
for Rent

posit Required 17401441 - 1519
-4 60 First A11enue. 1 Bedroom
Apa rtmen ts, $285 + Oa magt
Deposit, Re ferences Required ,

1740)1)86-4531 .
For rent· one bedroom furnished
apartment In Middleport, call 740·

992-5231.
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart ments, Clean , No Pels, No SmokIng, References &amp; Oepoail At·
quired. Utl lilleB Furnished .
Ga l!l a Manor Apartments. Now
Accepling Applications For 1 BR ,
HUO. Subsidized Apartments For
Elderly And Hand lcappecl. Equal
Housing Opportunity. (7-40)«8-

4639
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bldfoom
apartments at Village Manor and
Alversicte Aparlments In Middle·
por t. From $273·$336 . Call 740992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltieS.
North Third, Middleport· one bed·
room furnished apartment &amp; one
bedroom unfurnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references, no pets,

740·992·0165.
Now Taklflg Appllcatlons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa rtments, Includes Water
Sewage, TraSh , $325/Mo., 740-

446·0008.

1105

One bedroom apartment &amp; 3 bed·
room mobile home, no pets, 740-

Pilot Program Renters Needed .
Pilot Program, Renters Needed ,

304·736·7295.
Ouallty 2 Bedroom House , nice
Neighborhood, Gallipolis Area,
$4001mo. + Deposit &amp; Reference.

15611468·3581

420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

14x70 With 24 Foot Expando
$325/month + Oeposlt &amp; Refe'r ence In The Camp Conley Area

1304 )fl75-5477

490

992·5858.

es Aequlrctd 1740)446- 4425 Or

1740)446--3936
2nd Floor. Spacious, 3 Bedroom,
Unfurn ished Apartment In VIctor·
lan House On CitY Park. HVAC .
Olf StrHI Parking. $425fmo. Plus
Utultles. Security And Key De ·
posit Required . No Pets. Ae fer·

onceo Roq1Jrod.(740l446-4425
MERCHANDISE

Houaehold
Good1

Pewter (O r e ~ ) Ktnmorw Washer
&amp; Dryer S150 Stl: Kenmore
WaBher $85; Hotpolnt Dryer. Llkt
Nt w $75 ; Ktlvln ator Dryer $60;

1740)446-9066
Singe r Uphol stery Sewing Ma·
chine, Good Condition, Bullon
Machine With Cutters, Dies And

Mol&lt;ls i 11 00.(740J256.U50

Used

Furni tu re

For

Sale

17401 .. 6-8275 Or (740}4481004 Anyllmo

Waterbed With Six Orawera And
Storage Area Underneat h, Plus
Nice Headboard. Call (740)446e373 Anytime

Whir lpool Washer $95, Kenmore
510
Household
Dryer $7 5, GE . Hea vy Duty
Washer S150 . Washer &amp; Dryer.
Goods
Like New $205, Electric Range
3 Piece Livin g Room Sui te And $125 . GE Gas Range , Like New
$225. Frost Free Refrige rator
Da)'bed. I740l44&amp;-2350
$150, Apartment Size Dryer $95:
Appliances ;
Reconditioned
Upright Freezer $195 , All Ap·
Washers, Or~ers , 'Ranges, Refri·
pllances Guaranteed ,~ kaggs
gratora. Up To 90 Days Guar· • Appliances. 76 Vine Street , Galli·
anteed! We Sell Naw Maytag Ap. .polls. Ohlo.(740)446-7398
pliances , French City May1ag ,

3121
Tara TownhOuse APtHiments,
Very SpacioOs, 2 Bedrooms, 2

2000, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Central
Air. T.Oownect· Underpinned. Setup In Old Town Mobile Home
Park . lot 1 $18 ,500 Firm.

37.5 Acres Of Bottom La:nct, 112
Woodland On Sandhill Roadl Re·
duced To $55,000- Realtor

FREE ElECTRICITYIIIIIII
TIRED OF HIGH ELECTRIC
BILLS? How about no electric
bills! Sound too good to be true??
For our Information packed video
call 1·666·385· 1212 (toll free) or
hnp://www.lreeenergypage.com

Buy or, sell. Alverlns Antiques ,
1124 Etll Main on SR 124 E. Po·

FREE grant mona~ &amp; alternatlv'
Federal funding! Education, hous·
lng purchaS8/repalrs, debts. busl·
ness. invintors, writer/artists.
Guaranteed . 1·666·519·2775 or
www.grants-dot-com.com

W.ashera, dryers, rafrlgara10rl,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
VIne Street, Call 7-40· 446-7398,

1-888·818·0128.
Kenmore Ultra Wash Dishwasher

5200 (304)1l75-5no

meroy, 740.992·2526 or 740.992·
1!539. Russ Moore, owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

toni Condition. $125. l74.0l3888128After5pm

Mollohan Carpets &amp; Ful(\iture,
New 2 piece Llvlngrooni Suite,
$299. Recliner $199 . Sale On

Carpet In Stocl&lt;. 200 C~~Jyhapel
Road, Porter, Ohk&gt; 17401-·p113

Fk&gt;ors, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Cer·

Main Street Fumlture

peted. Adult Poot &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Pets.
Lease Plus Security O'eposit Re quired , Days: 740-446 ·3 481;
Evenings : 740·367· 0502, 740-

13041675-1422

5t 5 Main Street, ~lnt Pleasant
NeW &amp; Used Fumiture
New· 2 Piece Uvingroom Suites,

$399. Buy, 5ell, Trade.

(304J576·Jo56
7 Prime Acres , Jerry 's Run Rd.

91 Sunshine Slnglewide, 16x80, 3 (304)575·2494
Bedroom, 2 Full Bath , Washer/
Dryer $14,900 . Far More lnforma· ' land· 3· 113 restricted acres with
lion 1740}379-2133 17401379- stocked pond , Gr een Valley
9236
Drive, Gallia County, 3 miles trom
Holler, $28,000 , call 740-992 ·
Double Wide! Only $28.900.001
6440.
28x52 Free Delivery &amp; Set

1·668·926·9696

'I'
'

.-:

·"

-.,
::.•:

·""
'
',,

,,
'

'

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The

Acer computer. 4 112 hard drive,
11• monitor, printer, $700, 740·

. 992·2179.

AMAZING IIETABILtSII Break
Trough!!! lose 10·200 Lbs. Easy,
Quick . fatt Dr~matlc Aesl.llls,
tOO% Natural, Doctor Recommended .
Free
Sampfes:

17401441-1962
AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Fae10rv Direct \

Plano Or. 740·446·4525
HardwoOd

For

Sale .

Call

17401386-8267 Or 174013888264
(7401256-1102

(\

AERATION MOTORS

NOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinyl' Skirting , Coors, Windows , Anchors , Water He~ters .
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Furnaces s. Heat Pumps . Bennetts
Mobile Harne Supply, 74,0·4469416 www.orvb.com/bennett

Call Today 1·800·842·1310
www . np. etsa~s .eom

I'

JET

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Oall Ron Evans, t -800-537-9528.·

Excellent Service
Flexible Flnanclnl) Availabla
Home /Commercial Units
. FREE Color Catalog

·"

IBM Computer, Price, $150,

mud Rl&lt;lgo.l304l675-5958

440

',,

ATTENTION Prom Drei s· 'Morl·

Color, $20.1740)446-7553.

....

,,
.,

'' '.

··.

REAL ESTATE
St11~e 1943

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·

nished and unfurnished, securi t~
deposit required 1 ·no pets , 740-

992·2218.

1 Bedroom Apartmenl , Slove, Refrigerator
Included .
Call

540 Ml•cellineous
Merchandise

NEW AND USED STEEL. Steel
Beams, Pipe Rebar For COncrete.
Angle, Channel, FJat Bar, Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;

~.

,I

Walkwaya. l&amp;L S;rap Motlls
(7401446-7300

.....•
...
,'..

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·

EAS· Almost ~eryone approved
w'lth SO down! Low monthl~ pav·
mentsl1·800-817·3476 ext. 330.

,,

machine. Mil·
' cabinet both

o'

EQIW.HO. .II

Thla

lovely
home offers fo""el
LA &amp; OR, FR, 3-4 BRs, 2 b8111s;
sun room, eat-In kitchen. large

LENDER
&lt;

OFFICE

with workshop situated on
maturely landscaped 1 acre lot,
m/1. Beautiful original woodworl&lt;.
Combine todey'a IOWSI' Interest

992-2259

rate and owners willingness to

pfctUre on our
$114,9001211

.•.·..

...
~

•', , ..

SR 124 • Middleport• A 1987, 3 IIR
mobile home In good condition. located on
a level one acre parcel of ground. Front &amp;
rear deck, plus a large garage/WOrkshop
and two sheds tor storage. ASKING
fo\4,800

120.000
APPLE GROVE· River front lot· 150' river frontage. Great camplng and bQatlng lol. Lot runs
lrom SR 338 to the river. Agent owned. ASKING 120,000
RACINE· A commercial building located on 3rd Street. One stOIY block buildlng on approx. 50 x
100 level lot. Add!llonal rear parking. Publlc water. electric, and sewage on site. Has been uaad
a church
and
shop. Great for small bllslneas office or meellng room.
andaeethis.
room

Large commercial bullding. Greal aooesaib!elocatlon on
7.
work area. Customer parking. Apj
. ~ere, 8100 aw. ft . bulldlng.
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259

Sherrl 'L Hart .................................. 742·2357
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191

'

1995 Monte Carlo 234, Air, THt.
Cruise, All Power, Leather , Red,

$5700.

(7401256- 9103

(740~172

1995

Nlssan

200

(304)379·2328

or

SXXE ,

1996 Dodge Intrepid ES, Candy
Apple Red, '-•ather, Loeded, Below Book Value, Best Offer Over

"''
'\ ,
"'
~· ·
.l··"~­
,v

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252 · 17401379-2218
Scnwlll Drl\'0, Bullalo, NY 14225. ':':':"".-":-:'---:--FREE Information 1·800·578· 630
Llveatock
t 383 EXT. 200-U

Size 2 Prom Gown, Powder Slue,

1 Large Hampatllre· Boar. Fair
Pigs Rea~y Soon! Firat Coma,

Coratt Top, Baii ·Gown Bottom, Flrs1 Sorva. (740l2Se-&amp;ote Call
~ought April 2000 0 Brltlanys ·Evonlnga.
$300.13041682·2235
2·112 Yar Old Angus Registered

Smsll chicken eggs 20C par do· BUI(140)441-1718

..

zen or $6 per case , Gary

MIChaal'l, 740·985·3956.

1'1110mlno Stallion
Mg.AQHA11N
Wantod· Uled Dish Network TV 15'3' H.H. World Champlon,lm·
Syllomo, tor Info call 740·949· pr011lw Bloodline Nil&lt;l W.IIOm
311t5....., moaoaga.
Ptoaourt. HOllar. Barrota, Standlr&gt;;~ Stud Foo, $250, (304)e7S·
t(latorllno Special: 3/4 200 PSI 6440
$21 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Per 100: All Brm Com· 640
Hay &amp; Grain ·
""""'" Fllllnga In StOCk
liON EVANS ENTERPRISES Good Mlxod Hay Starting ·At
Jockaon. Dnlo. 1.aoo-537·9528
$1.50 A Bait. Dolo no Jackaon
Building
W~· (304l875·t743(740l44e550

"'
••
lofo;,

.......
~"J

-·
~

... ..,..

Supplles
Hay For Sale calll304)e75-7217
Block, brick, sewer plpoJ, wind·
owe, lintels, etc . Claude Wlntera, Hay for sate square bates 1 mile
RIO Grandt, OH Call740·245· onR! 2 N.304-e7!-4889
5::.1;.: 2; ;1·---'---:----! Largo Roll Balta ol Hay $15.' Do·
510 . Pets for Sale
lively Available, (740)44&amp;-t~

6unbap 11timei · 6entind • Page 07

voluntary and confidential
environmental
assurance
program for all major livestock species: sheep, beef and
dairy cattle, swine and poultry.
It prov\ded livestock producers with information that
will help them identify and
address key management

./'"\

.•••~"'

.,,.
r ·' ~

Additional topics

include the
developments of au
etlvironmentalJrlan,
reg11lations and
iriformation

011

cost-siJare programs.
issues affecting environmental quality.
It also helps livestock producers profitably manage
environmental challenges
critically important to the
success of the business, and
effectively assess how farmstead practices affect water
quality.
Program
curriculum
includes an introduction on
the importance of a sound
environment to the livestock
industry, an on-farm inventory to rate environmental
priorities on individual
farms, and key environmental management education
on nutrients, facilities, a1r

•-' "'&lt;

. ·"...

.

1988 Chevy 4xot, Auto, Air, Very

Nice Truck $5000 OBO (3041675·
3824
1988 Ford Bronco 11, 4x4, Runs
Good, New Tires , S2400 .

(740}381Hl780 After 6pm.

1988 International school bus,
large capacity, OT 6 cyL diesel
engine, auto, h~draullc brakes.
28,000 GVW, very good condll~n.

$4,650. 740-992·5551 .

t989 Bronco IJ 4x4, black with
gray Interior, excellent condition
Inside and out, needs nothing,

just drl'lon, $4900 oao. 741).992·
2932.
199t Chevy G20 Custom Van.

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1995 Ford F·150 Extended Cab

4x4, $14 ,000
17401992-1640
1304)675-6515

(7401441...()113 .

740

840

Motorcycles

1997 Kawasaki KXSO, Never
Raced . Runs Good . $1200,

8~

Vottawagon Rabbit. Dlooet. 4

Door, Standard, 1"4,000 Miles,

$1500. Call Aller 5pm. (74012455948

85 Buick Century, Auto Good

CondiUon, $800; 88 Honda Ac·

I74012111Hi146
1998 Harley Davison Softail
CUstom. 2500 Miles, Thousands
In HO Extras, flu&amp; All Originals

$17,750 OBO (7401446-9268

99 Polaris 500 Scrambler. Alot Of
Extras, $4800; 96 Honda 300 EX,
Racing Plastic And Pipe, $2500

080 17401441- 1349
760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Tires· Almost New (used 1,000
miles); Gooelyear Trackers 2351
75/R15, Matching Set Of 4, Cost .

$300, sell lor $175 174014419385

Miles.l304)fl75·3249

unconditional lifetime guaran1ee.
local references turnl shed . Es·
tabllshed 1975. CaK 24 _Hrs. (740)

446·0870, 1-800·267·0576. Rog-

Aesld.entlal or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs. Master Li·
censed eleclrlclan . RldenGur
Electrical, WV000306 , 304·675·
1786.

Public NOtice

ers Waterproofing.
CS.C General Home Maintenance- Painting . vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows , balhs,
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chel. 740·992·

6323.

.

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repa irs
done, free estimates , lifetime
guarantee . 14~rs on job experi·

ence.l304l695·3887.

VALENTINE SPECIAL
Good February 14·18
Candlelight Dinner For Two
Dinner will be delivered and catered
Call K&amp;L Catering

I

Mom and Me Class
lor boys ages 2·4 yrs.
Instrument Lessons and
Adult Jazz Classi!S at
THE ART SCHOOL

The Gellla County
Commlaelonoro mooting
achoduled tor Thuroday,
Fobruary· 15, 2001, hao
bun
ch·a nged
to
Wtdnllday, Fobruary t4,
2001 oo that tho board and
county admlnlllrator may
ettond • meeting In
Columbue.

---

Flbruary 11, 2001

1991 OLDSMOBILE

Auto Insurance
Monthly Payments
. Problems with your driving
record; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's Issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

Cutlass Calais S
2 Ooor.4 cyl, auto,
one owner, air,
85,000 miles
$3900

LOST between Syracuse &amp;
Racine· Gray &amp; Whits male
with yellow collar.
Child's pet
Call 949·3233 or 949-3900

cord, 5 Speed GOod Condition,

$1500: (7401256-900!1
87 Cadillac 2 Door, 68.000 Miles,
Loadod .' $2~0 OBO (74014411349
91 Sunblrd, $1500 OBO, No'Odo
r.ttnor Repalr.(740}387- 7893
93 Buick Park Avo., loaded,
looks &amp; Runs Great, $5500

IT....... Trimming

arid Removal
Contact Eric Blackburn
446-2422

Firewood for sale

(740)44&amp;...()744

94 Spirit, 4 Cylinder, Auto. Air.
Caeaette, Fresh Paint, 82 ,000

Mlloa, $2900 OBO. 174012511233

96 Buick loSabro, 3.8, V-6 En·
gino, 84.000 Mllta, Burgandy, 4
Door, All Power, Good Condition,

(7401448 4225

.

97 Blazer, Automatic, CD Player,
4x4, Gold Colo'r, Great Condition,

011.ono·• llrNm lttoD. &lt;11t0mtno

111'1 Old I Cutllli, tun I ION.
NW Ml'll, ..,, ?C 1111110,

II 4d ,., lale, lt,OOO 010
g40111f·1111

1111 Tovoll Corolla Motor Ap·
proxlmllt! 100,000 Mllae.
(140)141 11114

11000, (?oiOM*'1 07

carne

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Work. Drivable. Solid Body, 2

II ,.,d Tr~k~' W~111 Ort••·

1M7 c - COfl!lmy, , ...ooo
MUll. l'tuno
Qo!Hf CoiiCI!•
tlort 11100. (140
,...

Superior Plumbing And Home
Maintenance. We Do All Repairs
On Homes Inside AnCI Out, Carpentry, Floors , Kitchen s, Baths.

Door hslch. $300.1740)441-8217

1100.1..... 11···

IM·Im.

Condition. $1 uoo . (74014469256

Home
Improvements

79 Mustang, 6 Cylll'lcler, 4 Speed, ·
Runs Good. Needs Transmlnion

AKO lloottter,a Collie '""'
lUll/ Wltl!l 1110. (UO)III-

1111 CldlliiO, 4 dr. ndon. 140·

1990 Winnebago Motor Home,
low Mileage , 38 ,000 Miles , Self
Contained, Sleeps 6 ElCcellent

810

1998 Chevy Lumina, automatic,

'II Cltlvy Mtllbu, v... ru1t ''"
orltllftl Plflt lront end dlmqe,

flullll!oodltl Oocl!tr IPift!ll ,..
pill, 1110.111111. (140)4~1 •••
P'ure Ired looglo Puppltl Por
..it. WHft Pol)frt. lloody To ao.
Cttll(740):11f.t111
l'toglttortd ounnounae And
lc~ntulor. e~ct1 1 wormoa.

Call

1998 Fbrd Wlndstar GL Loaded ,
$13,500 . call Atter 4:30pm .

COUNTRYSIDE
BAPTIST CHAPEL
will be watching the

1100.1'1'4011

moviBon

Sunday,
February .11th
at 6:30p.m.
Everyone Welcome
&amp; Bring a Friend!
FREE MOVIE &amp; SNACKS!
845 Skidmore Road
3.5 miles out SR 160 ·
paat Holzer

Electronic Tax Filing
Get your refund In as
little as 2 days •
. 448·8727

4

II OftiYY 4WD, 110 Au!omollo

730 Yan1 l 4-WDI
1114 ,ord ,uo 4l4 , 4 tpou.
Plot lad, 100 I C~t~or, llun1

-·MillO

1'1'4013

71

740-245-5633

LEFT BEHIND
,.

.

'

OBO.

·Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

air, loaded, $8750, 741l-949-2203.

moo

tt41

790

· reducing problems: enhancing relationships and enriching an image, .LEAP will
accomplish its primary
objective: to promote sustainability by seeking profliable environmental situations,"he added.
UpcomiO:g local" LEAP
training sessions be held as
follows (Please contact the
coordinatinfg agency for
additional information.):
• Feb. 20, 9:30a.m.: Agricultural and Family Center,
Ashland (Roger Amos/ Ashland County, 419-281-242)
• Feb. 20, 9 a.m.: Kidron
(Eric Shultz, Wayne SWCD,
330-262-2836)

$1895 To $51195. COOK 110·
TORS 1740)446...Q103

Straw: Bright Wire n. Strew Year $14,000 (7401387...()240
'Round Dotlvory ·&amp; Votumo Dll·
count AvaJial)ll. Heritage Farm. 99 Chevy Metro, Coli (740)9920092 01'(7401992-7284
(304)875-5724.
CARS $29/MONTHI POliCE IM·
THANSPORTATiotJ
POUNDS &amp; REPO'SI HONDA,
CHEVY, 24 MO'S 0 tU% FOR
Jack Russell Terrier. His Hict All
liSTINGS! CAll t·I00·94t·
Shota, $200. (7401379-2822
710 Autoo lor Salo
8n71xt C-9814,
e Jack Russell Rtgllttrtd Pup·
ploi, $250. No ChiCk&amp; Accop!ld. $0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM· CARS FROM $500 • Pollet lm•
POUNDS I REPOSI HONDA'S, pounda l tax aeltUrll. Hondaa,
(740~2.
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. lOW AS Uti Ctlevyt, Fordt, &amp; more. For list·
t Wook AKC Chlntoo P~g Pup·. MO'S eta.&amp;%. FOR liSTINGS, lngo, colt nowl 1•800·118·3001
ploo, $300 080 (740)441...QI1!2
CALL t•I00·41t·0050 o•t. C· 0111. AOIO.
H12
.
AKC Blliltl Hound, Molt, 5
720 Truokl tor Sole
Monlho Old, Houao Broko, uoo, UOO· ICAAS FROII UOOI Tttl
(740,...1eM
ropooooaotona I polloo lm· ·1871 Ford· Supor CoD Plck·up
poundo. Hondlo, l'orOa, CIIIYY'a, 'ltuck, iiOII v... (740)111 1030 .
AMC Qcldon llttrltvll Pupplu l)uollt, loall. IIV'i 6 mora. Par
P1m1111 Only, Ull, (140)251· llal!nga oall 1·100·111·1111 ltU Ford Aangor, 4 C~llnaor,
11M
Automatlo, Plbo/'llllll Toppor,
1. . .1.
'
0ooc1 Condition.
(140l44fAMC Moll Yorklt, Will II lxtrt '11 Chovy, lwo doon '10 'ord, 11 1IAIIIr a,tn
1111111, 1~011 wormoa. V.ry lov- two aoor; 110 CIH IIUIIdour, 4able, &lt;lrtat '•r YaltnUnt'l llh, 1111' Dlldlt; 1o40o141....

All Dot lriiCII, 1110-44t·t101.

$5!500.(3041895-3874

730

quality, odor and conununity
relations.
Additional topics include
the developments of an
environmental plan, regulations and information on
cost-share p.rograms.
"By participating in LEAP,
producers will learn that
doing the right thing results
in doing things right. That
kind of knowledge gives
producers the power to
operate and grow their business with environmental
assurance, · 'confidence and
security," said David White,
OLC executive director.
"By increasing confidence, . improving profits,

Like Now, 92K $2895; 1995 S-10

4 Auolrlllan Shepherd Pupa, Rod
&amp; Whlto Morloa, Sl• Weak O!d.
Roady For Valentine Day,
(740)99~7 Anyllmo
5 Monlh Old Aogtatored Miniature

Commorclol lot !ocot.d next
to Ohio RIWr Plaa wtth

"

Phone (304)895- 3874

gine, Transmission, Brakes,
Shades, Tie Rods, Ball Joints, ;Ex·
haust System. Rear Door. Paint

Very Good Condition, 90,000

t997 Lumina $5295; 1984 Buick

".

('04,.1410

I

tnttrnatlonal 240 John Deere M
With Equipmant. Riding Lawn
Mowers, John Deere Baler For

wanted To Buy: Tractor With
Front End Loader. 30·45 HP.

1'1'40)11M111

m

610 Farm Equipment

more options. Manufacturer of
sawmills, edgers and &amp;kidders:

•.w,

40) 446·3644

Miles. Good Condltlon, $6500.

. (304)875·5770

$7!500.1740)441.Q135

~ermato 2000. larger capaclllll,

$137,000.- '

CRS Broker 441 1811
Carolyn Watch, GRI 441·1007
Sonny Garnea 441-2707
Robert~ Ul 0121 Rltlt WIMIMn· 441 1811
David WIMman, GRI,

Offer Over FIIOO. (740l441.Q135
1995 Ford Probe SE, 84,ooo

Service Center, State Route 87,
Point Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road,

.,
. I

www.wisemanrealestate.com

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Sharp, Below Book Value , Best

1-800-29HJ098.
Sawmm $3,795 . New Super Lum·

·?
l· t"

..."

Prlood II •100,1109. Coli lor

Turbo. 300HP, AWD, High Milos,

nacoo. If You Don't Call Uo Wo Till, a Point Hllch, 540 RPM PTO,
Bo1h Looel (7401446-8308 &amp; Diesel, 188 Hrs, $8500. Koelera

. ,.,.

-IIL1121

1991 Dodge Stealth, AIT, Twin

Rhino Farm Dozer, 6' Blade, Hyd

•''

Town 2600 sq. ft. plus a full
nearly completely ftnllhod
bllement.
0\ltllll'ldlng
woodwork (maple, cherry,
knottY pine). lMgl roomo. 6
BRa. 3 bathe. lnground pool.
Excollent condition. $225,000
11t3

Loaded. S8000 oeo

Pumps, l.P. &amp; Natural Gas F.ur·

•W

approx. 140 ft. al rood
rrom.go on iEIIIIIm ""-"·

350 TPI; Rebuilt motor and transmission, T~ Tops, Completely.

$4395. Cara And Trucks From

-,,'.;.,
,.

. llpocloul llrlok Ranch In

1989 Ford Escort LX, 81 ,000 ·1987 4:.4 Ranger, Automatic, AJC
with topper. $1650 OBO l740l ,
GOod, Soundt GOod, $2000 OBO, 446-7730
(740l38&amp;C9325
1987 Ford Bronco 4WO, com·
1989 Pontiac Trans Am GTA 1 plolely Rebuln, 6 Cylinder. 300 En·

miles, 4 cyJ., Good on Gaa. Look&amp;: .

:,:l304c:....:.l5:..7..:.e·..:.28:..1.::2~----­

,

GALLIPOLIS Livestock and poultry producers
in Ohio will be provided
with the opportunity to take
a proactive approach in
blending sound production
e~onomics with concern
about environmental quality
by attending and participated in one of eight Livestock
Environmental Assurance
Program · (LEAP) training
sess1ons.
LEAP was developed by
Ohio Livestock Coalition
(OLC) in cooperation with
Ohio State University.
Extension, Menke Consulting, Ohio Department of
Natural Resources Division
of Soil and Water Conservation, Natural Resources
Conservation
Service
(NRCS), Ohio EPA and
various commodity and
farm organizations.
It is closely 111odeled after
a similar program developed
by the National Pork Producers Council.
By participating in LEAP,
livestock and poultry producers will be eligible to
receive cost-share assistance
grants available through their
SWCD office, and earn
points for Environmental
Quality Incentive Program
(EQIP) assistance.
LEAP is a statewide, free,

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Autos tor Sale

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl He11

--

balement, 3 flroplace8, 2 ear
II*S!JO, In-ground pool, 4 t/2
....... nv1. located only
;nlnutoa from toWn ln the city
od1ool ayatom. Prtcod at

o

Century $389!; ·1988 Astra Van,

~··
A Lot to Ollwr With
11111 ~
..wall Cll'ld for

ENTERPRISE ROA~ust minutes from town. Three bedr6oms, newer
shingle roof, aerator septic, public water. Cute home, immediate posise!~Sionl

7·;

Settir w/culllvators, $300 Each,
Excellent
Condition,
Call

'!~ ....

brlci&lt; rii'ICh on.tng 3 BRa, 2
112 batho, LA open to dining
• area, FA, O'VII' ' 1400 . sq. ft.

For Show. Call (7401387.:0240

Row Corn Plantar, t Row Tobacco

I

PORTLAND
BUFFINGTON
LANDI"G· An executive subdivision
daalgned tor horae lOvers and
boaterat · You won'l believe the
features. Access to the baautHul Ohio
for boat lovers, 100' boat dock, · riding
ring , picnic sheller, riding Ilana &amp;
much mora. Certaln r81111cUone apply.
Lot prices and acreage vary
according to tho particular amenru.s.
Call for more details.

they'll still prefer to dabble.
"We don't have any conviction in the market right
now, not even in defensive
sectors," said Dickson , the
analyst at Scott &amp; Stringfel.low.
For example, he said, the
market is wondering if drug
stocks, which have had a
strong run up since late last
year, can stand to go higher
or whether they are overvalued. Stocks like Merck and
Johnson &amp; Johnson have
been mostly advancing- yet
also retreating somewhat.
"The stock market has
traded within a reasonably
tight range, awaiting a catalyst to get it going;• said Ackerman of Fahnestock.
One factor that could help
induce investors to bid the
market higher is that the bulk
of fourth-quarter earnings
reports have been released ..
Another impetus for a rally
could be the year's third
interest rate cut, a move the
Federal Reserve i.s expected
to make when it meets in
March .
But despite two rate cuts
· so far this year, the market
has failed to sustain upward
momentum for long. Consider that the Nasdaq rallied
in January, gaining as much as
15 percent, after the Fed
lowered rates.

OliVer 1 Row Corn Picker, JD ..

. ..m..

low
brtck ranch
offers LA with f~eplaee,
'dining area wllh beautiful
wood floor open to 11rge
kHchon, 3 BRa. 1 1/2 baths,
plus full baoement olfarlng
huge FR w~ ~replaCe and
c:au :ntlo
bar area. 2 Cit' garage, 1r1 In·
Rlghl"ll Cozy and well ground pool and convenient
maintained In- and out, loctlon. Priced at $142,000.
this home otfera LR Q~M~n to
kitchen and dining area, 3
BRa, 2 balhl, llrge. privata
back patio, 2 car dataohod
gara(JO plua 12 x t B, tti0111!J0
bu!ldlng on ,IIII)&lt;OX. 112 oae
lot. Priced at $1111,800, thll
the right home

Profeaslonal OJ Karaoke System.
Great Sound, With CO's, Ready

90% Gas
, 12 Seer

.,.,

website.

Musical
Instruments

Pick-up, Phono(740l387-o397

deal, thla juat might be the time
this home yours. Priced
at
111803
·

home on 1
faaturea
large LR with fireplace, largo
eat-In kltchon, FR, 3 BRa and
a ton of room In the full
b-ment. Great location.
Green achoOia. See Interior

570

Massey Ferguson 8' Disk, 3 Point

1o

Unlimited
Beautiful 2.59 acre
looaled at 41780 Po,nert)v
Pike boats over 2300 sq.
plus I full partially ~nllhed
buement. Spacious rooms,
storage galore and newer
furnace ond cantril llr. Homo
otfero LA. OR, 5·8 IIRs, FR,
oat-In kitchen, t full bath and
2 hllf bathe. Cal Carolyn for
mora
complete
details.
$t21
1011

pies, 6 Week Old, 2115101 , $100
Each.l740l245-5597

Parts Only. 13041458-1050 Allor
6pm

"

laundry/mud room, 1 car garage

Pets lor Sale

UKC Registered Rat Tarrier f'up·

(740)441H308, t-800-291-&lt;1098

··'
.,.

R~&gt;H(:

580

New &amp; Used Electric And Gas
FurnaceS For Sale . Call For Slz·
lnllallalion
Available ,
es-

(7401446-2563

G:t·

WV

'

.-.

Apartments
for Rent

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaant,

str.ltegy of selling off tech in
favor of the relative safety of
blue chip sectors.
A litany of evidence Friday of just how much the
economy has weakened sent
the Nasdaq down 91.09,
accounting for about half its
weekly loss. Reports· of possible layoffs al Dell Computer, a Wall Street Journal
report of a government
investigation into accounting
irregularities at Lucent Technologies and Motorola's plans
to cut as many as 4,000 jobs
created the last minute selloff.
Friday's bad tech news followed disappointing earnings
issued late Tuesday by Cisco
Systenu.
"The week has been
heavy on disappointment,
particularly the Cisco shock
that sent a shiver through
Nasdaq and disappointing
news on Dell and Lucent ...
Right now the only strategy
is to sit tight, shepherd some
cash and stay somewhat
defensive," said Alan ·Acker·
man, executive vice president
of Fahnestock &amp; Co.
Analysts say investors likely will continue to seek safety in safer havens like drug,
consumer, financial and utility stocks. But rather than
make grand buys in these socalled defensive sectors,

NEW YORK (AP) - AJ
investors weaved in and out
of blue chip and technology
stocks this past week, their
quick changes might have
hinted of big happenings on
Wall Street.
In reality, they made no
major commitments. The
market's recent direction has
been more sideways than up
as investors rapidly and frequently changed their minds
about what was the best
strategy.
"You are seeing a lot of
sector rotation. Very rapid
sector rotation," said Richard
A. Dickson, a technical analyst at Scott &amp; Stringfellow
Inc. in Richmond, Va. "People are still confused about
what their outlook should
be. Should they be in defensive sectors? Should they get
back in tech?"
Indecision will continue
to dominate the market for a
while longer, analysts said.
Investors are. putting off
making big moves until they
· see the sluggish economy
and disappointing corporate
profits show signs of substantial improvement.
Given that the market
ended this past week down
on bad technology news,
analysts
expect
some
investors to at least temporarily return to their recent

Lea•. Colo r- Aub ergine (L ight
Sm o ke~-la v endar ). Paid $145,
Worn Once · Size 18/20, Sell For
$1 00. Shoes si ze 9 112. Same

12 piece antique furniture, such
as old walt phone , secretary, 4
drawer oak file cabinet. round oak
table, plus 5 nice guns, call 304·
882-2711 . New Haven.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage·
3 Acres At The Bottom 01 Red·

Nk:e Truck .(740 l2~365

For Sa le: Reconditioned wash·
ers. dryers anG refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jackson Avenue, (304)675-7388.

OS.

$95,900,(304)675·1618

For Sa le Or Trade: Fibe rglass
Truck Topper, Sm all Tk . Upright
Freezer, 3208 Cat. 13 Speed 86
lnternaUonal Cummins, 9 Speed,

530

GOOD USED APPLI.ANOES

Antiques

COMPUTERS: WE FINANC E
DELL CO MP UTERS I Even wil n
less than perfect cr edit! 1-800·
477·9016. Code AC7. www.omc·
solutions.com
EZPETR X.COM. Save up to 50%
on ALL pet medications and supplies, Including Hearlgard, lnttr·
cep tor, Fron tline, morelll FREE
SHIPPING . Order online www.EzpetRx.com 1 ·800-8~· 1427

11,2001

Investors spend week quickly. LEAP training sessions
getting in and out of tech
offered to livestock producers

CAlL AND RECEIVE FREE EX·
OTIC VACATION wtth acti..,allon.
Fret sat eltlte television tystem!
Free installauont 1-871·235·5669
code ac.

74Q.4!6·n9o.

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga . We
Sell Grave Monuments And Vas·

Church Building wilh Pars.onage
tor sate, boated in Point Pleasant,
Good Nei ghborhood , asking

510

Sunday, February

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Magic Chef Electric Stove, Excel·

River Bend P-lace Now Accepting
Applications for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment for Elderly
and Disabled , EOE , (304)882·

446·0101 .

ForLease

1600 Sq. Feet, Beautif ully Ae·
stored 2nd Ftoo r1 3 Bedroom
Apanme nt, 1 1/28 att'll, livi ng/
Dining Room. Rear Otel&lt;. HVAC.
Downtown Gallipolis. All Modern
Amenities. $600/mo. Security And
Key Deposits. No Pets. Referenc-

1740)446-1 51 9

$475 Month 3 Bedroom Hous&amp;,
Ga lli polis Ferry Area (304)675·

(304)736-7295

New
Fleetwoo d,
16x80,
s19,999.00, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 1·

2000 Oakwood mobile home,
threa bedroom , two bath, must
saM. 740-985·411 2.

13041675-4035

410 Houses lor Rent

Lot model cleara nce . choic e of
heat pump or central air with any
home, check us out were dealing,
Col e's Mobile Homes, US 50
East, Athens, Oh.

888-928·3426

199'6 141172 Norris, Asking
. $17,000. Two Bedroom, Two Bath,
· All Appliances l~uded . Must Be
Moved . If Interested Call

RENTALS

4024

•· ·-----l!!!!!l'_..q
opportunity basis.

1 Bedroom Near Holzer, Eeonomlcal Gas healing. WID Hook up ,
$279 00 Plus Ulilitlea. Lease, De·

cy. (304}675·5540 or (304lS75·

whlc:hlslnvtolationofth8
law.Ourreedersarehereby

.,I

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't Have Land? We Dolt! Hurry
Only 10 lOis Lo}1. 304-736·7295.

736·3409

This newspaper will not

..

440

limi te d Or No Cred il ? Gove rn ·
ment Bank Finance Only At Oakwood In BarbourS-ville . WV 30 4-

or 1968 which makoa n Hf0981

·~

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Sunday, February 11,200~.

WV

For More
Information ...

Mane Designers Full
Service Salon is proud to
introduce a Spa Service
for your hands and feet.
Treat your Valentine or
yourself to this wonderful
manicure and pedicure
combination.
Call Mane Designers at
446·2933 for details and
schedule your
appointment. Gift
Certificates available and
special ratee apply.

Public Welcome
Gallia County
Conservation ·
meeting Wednesday,
February 14,
Dinner at 6:30 pm

ANQ!LACCOUNTING
,or ComP~~~tr, ProlalliOnlllndlvldual
1nd lullnMI Tilt prei)llrttlon
ASK US ABOUT
!~!CTAONIC l"ILING
731Seoond Av1.
,..e-11877

446-2342 or

'

..

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

Pqe D6 • 6unbap Q:imri -6rntinrl
310 Home• for Sale

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
DOUBLE YOUR INCOME Tu

Selling Our Small Modern Masnry
Wlrue r Home Ne ll lakeland,
Florida. Betwnn Busch Gardens
And Disney World, Corner Lo t
132ll75 Feet Chain link Fence.
Water Well, Septic Tank 2 Aluminum Out Bu11dtnQS. Prb $39,000·
For Pictures And Information Call
• • Owners R.e. And Oaisy Knolls Sr.
In EvenlhQ Gallipolis (740)4462917 Florida Number (863)665·

'· 0623
• • . Small 2 Bed room House fo r Sale
. • On Ci ty 01 F'oint Pleasant
- ' $28,000 Will Consider Owner Fi·

5·i27
iio4iii9_ _ _,
, ..najjiiinciiingiiiio.!iii304iiil)flii7ii

' .,I
' ·!'

.d

.' i

:I

1\11 10~ ft11te lld\l0t11slng In
this newspaper Ia aubject to
tho FodeiOI Fair Houalng N;t

' !
•j

Refund : Purctlast a new nome
and lor a limited trme we will dOU·
ble your income tax refund up to
$2000.00. That's right, turn
$2000.00 Into $4000.00 w1fh your
purchase! we will atso ha ndle
you r tu tiling for FRE E here at
RNerda!e Homes Call 740-385·

4367.
Factory Goof 32K80 $\0,000 Dis·
count only $1000 .00 Down, De·
livery, and setup pa1d by Factory
1·800-691·6777
Final Days. Nation wide Inventory
ReducHon! (304)736-3409

to JOvtrtiae •any preference,
llmltallon or discrimination
based on race, color, religiOn,
oex familial Slatus or national
origin. or lifO/ tnten11oo to
make lifO/ such pn!!orenco,
limbtion or discrimination. •

'•1'

j

•

_,::.:;,~t-Ie

' I

lnformod thl1 all dwelling&amp;
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale

' ' .,.,.,__,.....,'""',...,-.....,-:---,*Nice• 1995 Skyline 3 Bedroom
, 2 Bath $14,000 OBO (304)675· 6055
·
· 14x70 Southern Dream, tree Oe·
livery free Setup ont~ $999? 1·

. (740)446-1773

1 -3 Bedrooms Fo re closed
Homes From $199/Mo.. 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Deta ils ,
800-319-3323 Eat. 1709.
1 BA Hou se In GaiUpolll. $2501
mo. S200 Deposit. No Pets. References Require d. Call Alter

5:00pm.l7401446-9342
2·3 BA 110use on l incoln A.ve.,
Homes tead Realty, Ask far Nan-

20!H/2 Popu lar Street, 2 Bed ·
room, Full Basement. $275+ De·

Must Sell! 16x80
Make 2 Payments &amp; Move In!
1·800·691 -6777

posH. t3041675-3230
29R, unfurnished house, 507 112
2nd St. , New Haven . (30 4)675·
3469.

3 Bedroom, 2. Bath, Full Base·
menl, c amp Con l e~ Area, $300+

New 14 It wide $499 . down on ly
$199. per mon. call now 1-800·

OopoSil(304l6_7.:.5·.:.32..:3_0 _ __

691-6777.

3 Bedroom , With Deposit. No

New 16ft. wide $499 . per mon .
only $270. per mon . call now t •

800·691·6777.

.

New dou ble wide 3 br. 2 ba.
$998.00 down cmly $295 . pe r

mon.callnrm 1·800·691·6777.
New Fleetwooci14K70 $16,999.00
3 Bedroom- 2 Bath . 1:877·777 ·

4170
877-777·4170.

ONLY $99 5.00 DOWN and
$199.58 a mon1h moves you Into
a new 3 bedroom/2 bath home .
Cal l for details. 740-385-4367.
Utility Bills Getting Most 01 Your
Paycheck! Call (740)446- 3093
For VOur New Home Today.

340

Pe1S, I304)1l75-2749

House lor rent In country, with big
yard, 5 min. from New Haven 304·

682·3970.

BusineSs and
Buildings

Apartments'
for Rent

posit Required 17401441 - 1519
-4 60 First A11enue. 1 Bedroom
Apa rtmen ts, $285 + Oa magt
Deposit, Re ferences Required ,

1740)1)86-4531 .
For rent· one bedroom furnished
apartment In Middleport, call 740·

992-5231.
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart ments, Clean , No Pels, No SmokIng, References &amp; Oepoail At·
quired. Utl lilleB Furnished .
Ga l!l a Manor Apartments. Now
Accepling Applications For 1 BR ,
HUO. Subsidized Apartments For
Elderly And Hand lcappecl. Equal
Housing Opportunity. (7-40)«8-

4639
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bldfoom
apartments at Village Manor and
Alversicte Aparlments In Middle·
por t. From $273·$336 . Call 740992·5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltieS.
North Third, Middleport· one bed·
room furnished apartment &amp; one
bedroom unfurnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references, no pets,

740·992·0165.
Now Taklflg Appllcatlons - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa rtments, Includes Water
Sewage, TraSh , $325/Mo., 740-

446·0008.

1105

One bedroom apartment &amp; 3 bed·
room mobile home, no pets, 740-

Pilot Program Renters Needed .
Pilot Program, Renters Needed ,

304·736·7295.
Ouallty 2 Bedroom House , nice
Neighborhood, Gallipolis Area,
$4001mo. + Deposit &amp; Reference.

15611468·3581

420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

14x70 With 24 Foot Expando
$325/month + Oeposlt &amp; Refe'r ence In The Camp Conley Area

1304 )fl75-5477

490

992·5858.

es Aequlrctd 1740)446- 4425 Or

1740)446--3936
2nd Floor. Spacious, 3 Bedroom,
Unfurn ished Apartment In VIctor·
lan House On CitY Park. HVAC .
Olf StrHI Parking. $425fmo. Plus
Utultles. Security And Key De ·
posit Required . No Pets. Ae fer·

onceo Roq1Jrod.(740l446-4425
MERCHANDISE

Houaehold
Good1

Pewter (O r e ~ ) Ktnmorw Washer
&amp; Dryer S150 Stl: Kenmore
WaBher $85; Hotpolnt Dryer. Llkt
Nt w $75 ; Ktlvln ator Dryer $60;

1740)446-9066
Singe r Uphol stery Sewing Ma·
chine, Good Condition, Bullon
Machine With Cutters, Dies And

Mol&lt;ls i 11 00.(740J256.U50

Used

Furni tu re

For

Sale

17401 .. 6-8275 Or (740}4481004 Anyllmo

Waterbed With Six Orawera And
Storage Area Underneat h, Plus
Nice Headboard. Call (740)446e373 Anytime

Whir lpool Washer $95, Kenmore
510
Household
Dryer $7 5, GE . Hea vy Duty
Washer S150 . Washer &amp; Dryer.
Goods
Like New $205, Electric Range
3 Piece Livin g Room Sui te And $125 . GE Gas Range , Like New
$225. Frost Free Refrige rator
Da)'bed. I740l44&amp;-2350
$150, Apartment Size Dryer $95:
Appliances ;
Reconditioned
Upright Freezer $195 , All Ap·
Washers, Or~ers , 'Ranges, Refri·
pllances Guaranteed ,~ kaggs
gratora. Up To 90 Days Guar· • Appliances. 76 Vine Street , Galli·
anteed! We Sell Naw Maytag Ap. .polls. Ohlo.(740)446-7398
pliances , French City May1ag ,

3121
Tara TownhOuse APtHiments,
Very SpacioOs, 2 Bedrooms, 2

2000, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Central
Air. T.Oownect· Underpinned. Setup In Old Town Mobile Home
Park . lot 1 $18 ,500 Firm.

37.5 Acres Of Bottom La:nct, 112
Woodland On Sandhill Roadl Re·
duced To $55,000- Realtor

FREE ElECTRICITYIIIIIII
TIRED OF HIGH ELECTRIC
BILLS? How about no electric
bills! Sound too good to be true??
For our Information packed video
call 1·666·385· 1212 (toll free) or
hnp://www.lreeenergypage.com

Buy or, sell. Alverlns Antiques ,
1124 Etll Main on SR 124 E. Po·

FREE grant mona~ &amp; alternatlv'
Federal funding! Education, hous·
lng purchaS8/repalrs, debts. busl·
ness. invintors, writer/artists.
Guaranteed . 1·666·519·2775 or
www.grants-dot-com.com

W.ashera, dryers, rafrlgara10rl,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
VIne Street, Call 7-40· 446-7398,

1-888·818·0128.
Kenmore Ultra Wash Dishwasher

5200 (304)1l75-5no

meroy, 740.992·2526 or 740.992·
1!539. Russ Moore, owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

toni Condition. $125. l74.0l3888128After5pm

Mollohan Carpets &amp; Ful(\iture,
New 2 piece Llvlngrooni Suite,
$299. Recliner $199 . Sale On

Carpet In Stocl&lt;. 200 C~~Jyhapel
Road, Porter, Ohk&gt; 17401-·p113

Fk&gt;ors, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Cer·

Main Street Fumlture

peted. Adult Poot &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Pets.
Lease Plus Security O'eposit Re quired , Days: 740-446 ·3 481;
Evenings : 740·367· 0502, 740-

13041675-1422

5t 5 Main Street, ~lnt Pleasant
NeW &amp; Used Fumiture
New· 2 Piece Uvingroom Suites,

$399. Buy, 5ell, Trade.

(304J576·Jo56
7 Prime Acres , Jerry 's Run Rd.

91 Sunshine Slnglewide, 16x80, 3 (304)575·2494
Bedroom, 2 Full Bath , Washer/
Dryer $14,900 . Far More lnforma· ' land· 3· 113 restricted acres with
lion 1740}379-2133 17401379- stocked pond , Gr een Valley
9236
Drive, Gallia County, 3 miles trom
Holler, $28,000 , call 740-992 ·
Double Wide! Only $28.900.001
6440.
28x52 Free Delivery &amp; Set

1·668·926·9696

'I'
'

.-:

·"

-.,
::.•:

·""
'
',,

,,
'

'

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The

Acer computer. 4 112 hard drive,
11• monitor, printer, $700, 740·

. 992·2179.

AMAZING IIETABILtSII Break
Trough!!! lose 10·200 Lbs. Easy,
Quick . fatt Dr~matlc Aesl.llls,
tOO% Natural, Doctor Recommended .
Free
Sampfes:

17401441-1962
AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Fae10rv Direct \

Plano Or. 740·446·4525
HardwoOd

For

Sale .

Call

17401386-8267 Or 174013888264
(7401256-1102

(\

AERATION MOTORS

NOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinyl' Skirting , Coors, Windows , Anchors , Water He~ters .
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Furnaces s. Heat Pumps . Bennetts
Mobile Harne Supply, 74,0·4469416 www.orvb.com/bennett

Call Today 1·800·842·1310
www . np. etsa~s .eom

I'

JET

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Oall Ron Evans, t -800-537-9528.·

Excellent Service
Flexible Flnanclnl) Availabla
Home /Commercial Units
. FREE Color Catalog

·"

IBM Computer, Price, $150,

mud Rl&lt;lgo.l304l675-5958

440

',,

ATTENTION Prom Drei s· 'Morl·

Color, $20.1740)446-7553.

....

,,
.,

'' '.

··.

REAL ESTATE
St11~e 1943

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·

nished and unfurnished, securi t~
deposit required 1 ·no pets , 740-

992·2218.

1 Bedroom Apartmenl , Slove, Refrigerator
Included .
Call

540 Ml•cellineous
Merchandise

NEW AND USED STEEL. Steel
Beams, Pipe Rebar For COncrete.
Angle, Channel, FJat Bar, Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;

~.

,I

Walkwaya. l&amp;L S;rap Motlls
(7401446-7300

.....•
...
,'..

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·

EAS· Almost ~eryone approved
w'lth SO down! Low monthl~ pav·
mentsl1·800-817·3476 ext. 330.

,,

machine. Mil·
' cabinet both

o'

EQIW.HO. .II

Thla

lovely
home offers fo""el
LA &amp; OR, FR, 3-4 BRs, 2 b8111s;
sun room, eat-In kitchen. large

LENDER
&lt;

OFFICE

with workshop situated on
maturely landscaped 1 acre lot,
m/1. Beautiful original woodworl&lt;.
Combine todey'a IOWSI' Interest

992-2259

rate and owners willingness to

pfctUre on our
$114,9001211

.•.·..

...
~

•', , ..

SR 124 • Middleport• A 1987, 3 IIR
mobile home In good condition. located on
a level one acre parcel of ground. Front &amp;
rear deck, plus a large garage/WOrkshop
and two sheds tor storage. ASKING
fo\4,800

120.000
APPLE GROVE· River front lot· 150' river frontage. Great camplng and bQatlng lol. Lot runs
lrom SR 338 to the river. Agent owned. ASKING 120,000
RACINE· A commercial building located on 3rd Street. One stOIY block buildlng on approx. 50 x
100 level lot. Add!llonal rear parking. Publlc water. electric, and sewage on site. Has been uaad
a church
and
shop. Great for small bllslneas office or meellng room.
andaeethis.
room

Large commercial bullding. Greal aooesaib!elocatlon on
7.
work area. Customer parking. Apj
. ~ere, 8100 aw. ft . bulldlng.
Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259

Sherrl 'L Hart .................................. 742·2357
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191

'

1995 Monte Carlo 234, Air, THt.
Cruise, All Power, Leather , Red,

$5700.

(7401256- 9103

(740~172

1995

Nlssan

200

(304)379·2328

or

SXXE ,

1996 Dodge Intrepid ES, Candy
Apple Red, '-•ather, Loeded, Below Book Value, Best Offer Over

"''
'\ ,
"'
~· ·
.l··"~­
,v

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252 · 17401379-2218
Scnwlll Drl\'0, Bullalo, NY 14225. ':':':"".-":-:'---:--FREE Information 1·800·578· 630
Llveatock
t 383 EXT. 200-U

Size 2 Prom Gown, Powder Slue,

1 Large Hampatllre· Boar. Fair
Pigs Rea~y Soon! Firat Coma,

Coratt Top, Baii ·Gown Bottom, Flrs1 Sorva. (740l2Se-&amp;ote Call
~ought April 2000 0 Brltlanys ·Evonlnga.
$300.13041682·2235
2·112 Yar Old Angus Registered

Smsll chicken eggs 20C par do· BUI(140)441-1718

..

zen or $6 per case , Gary

MIChaal'l, 740·985·3956.

1'1110mlno Stallion
Mg.AQHA11N
Wantod· Uled Dish Network TV 15'3' H.H. World Champlon,lm·
Syllomo, tor Info call 740·949· pr011lw Bloodline Nil&lt;l W.IIOm
311t5....., moaoaga.
Ptoaourt. HOllar. Barrota, Standlr&gt;;~ Stud Foo, $250, (304)e7S·
t(latorllno Special: 3/4 200 PSI 6440
$21 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Per 100: All Brm Com· 640
Hay &amp; Grain ·
""""'" Fllllnga In StOCk
liON EVANS ENTERPRISES Good Mlxod Hay Starting ·At
Jockaon. Dnlo. 1.aoo-537·9528
$1.50 A Bait. Dolo no Jackaon
Building
W~· (304l875·t743(740l44e550

"'
••
lofo;,

.......
~"J

-·
~

... ..,..

Supplles
Hay For Sale calll304)e75-7217
Block, brick, sewer plpoJ, wind·
owe, lintels, etc . Claude Wlntera, Hay for sate square bates 1 mile
RIO Grandt, OH Call740·245· onR! 2 N.304-e7!-4889
5::.1;.: 2; ;1·---'---:----! Largo Roll Balta ol Hay $15.' Do·
510 . Pets for Sale
lively Available, (740)44&amp;-t~

6unbap 11timei · 6entind • Page 07

voluntary and confidential
environmental
assurance
program for all major livestock species: sheep, beef and
dairy cattle, swine and poultry.
It prov\ded livestock producers with information that
will help them identify and
address key management

./'"\

.•••~"'

.,,.
r ·' ~

Additional topics

include the
developments of au
etlvironmentalJrlan,
reg11lations and
iriformation

011

cost-siJare programs.
issues affecting environmental quality.
It also helps livestock producers profitably manage
environmental challenges
critically important to the
success of the business, and
effectively assess how farmstead practices affect water
quality.
Program
curriculum
includes an introduction on
the importance of a sound
environment to the livestock
industry, an on-farm inventory to rate environmental
priorities on individual
farms, and key environmental management education
on nutrients, facilities, a1r

•-' "'&lt;

. ·"...

.

1988 Chevy 4xot, Auto, Air, Very

Nice Truck $5000 OBO (3041675·
3824
1988 Ford Bronco 11, 4x4, Runs
Good, New Tires , S2400 .

(740}381Hl780 After 6pm.

1988 International school bus,
large capacity, OT 6 cyL diesel
engine, auto, h~draullc brakes.
28,000 GVW, very good condll~n.

$4,650. 740-992·5551 .

t989 Bronco IJ 4x4, black with
gray Interior, excellent condition
Inside and out, needs nothing,

just drl'lon, $4900 oao. 741).992·
2932.
199t Chevy G20 Custom Van.

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1995 Ford F·150 Extended Cab

4x4, $14 ,000
17401992-1640
1304)675-6515

(7401441...()113 .

740

840

Motorcycles

1997 Kawasaki KXSO, Never
Raced . Runs Good . $1200,

8~

Vottawagon Rabbit. Dlooet. 4

Door, Standard, 1"4,000 Miles,

$1500. Call Aller 5pm. (74012455948

85 Buick Century, Auto Good

CondiUon, $800; 88 Honda Ac·

I74012111Hi146
1998 Harley Davison Softail
CUstom. 2500 Miles, Thousands
In HO Extras, flu&amp; All Originals

$17,750 OBO (7401446-9268

99 Polaris 500 Scrambler. Alot Of
Extras, $4800; 96 Honda 300 EX,
Racing Plastic And Pipe, $2500

080 17401441- 1349
760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Tires· Almost New (used 1,000
miles); Gooelyear Trackers 2351
75/R15, Matching Set Of 4, Cost .

$300, sell lor $175 174014419385

Miles.l304)fl75·3249

unconditional lifetime guaran1ee.
local references turnl shed . Es·
tabllshed 1975. CaK 24 _Hrs. (740)

446·0870, 1-800·267·0576. Rog-

Aesld.entlal or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs. Master Li·
censed eleclrlclan . RldenGur
Electrical, WV000306 , 304·675·
1786.

Public NOtice

ers Waterproofing.
CS.C General Home Maintenance- Painting . vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows , balhs,
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chel. 740·992·

6323.

.

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repa irs
done, free estimates , lifetime
guarantee . 14~rs on job experi·

ence.l304l695·3887.

VALENTINE SPECIAL
Good February 14·18
Candlelight Dinner For Two
Dinner will be delivered and catered
Call K&amp;L Catering

I

Mom and Me Class
lor boys ages 2·4 yrs.
Instrument Lessons and
Adult Jazz Classi!S at
THE ART SCHOOL

The Gellla County
Commlaelonoro mooting
achoduled tor Thuroday,
Fobruary· 15, 2001, hao
bun
ch·a nged
to
Wtdnllday, Fobruary t4,
2001 oo that tho board and
county admlnlllrator may
ettond • meeting In
Columbue.

---

Flbruary 11, 2001

1991 OLDSMOBILE

Auto Insurance
Monthly Payments
. Problems with your driving
record; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's Issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

Cutlass Calais S
2 Ooor.4 cyl, auto,
one owner, air,
85,000 miles
$3900

LOST between Syracuse &amp;
Racine· Gray &amp; Whits male
with yellow collar.
Child's pet
Call 949·3233 or 949-3900

cord, 5 Speed GOod Condition,

$1500: (7401256-900!1
87 Cadillac 2 Door, 68.000 Miles,
Loadod .' $2~0 OBO (74014411349
91 Sunblrd, $1500 OBO, No'Odo
r.ttnor Repalr.(740}387- 7893
93 Buick Park Avo., loaded,
looks &amp; Runs Great, $5500

IT....... Trimming

arid Removal
Contact Eric Blackburn
446-2422

Firewood for sale

(740)44&amp;...()744

94 Spirit, 4 Cylinder, Auto. Air.
Caeaette, Fresh Paint, 82 ,000

Mlloa, $2900 OBO. 174012511233

96 Buick loSabro, 3.8, V-6 En·
gino, 84.000 Mllta, Burgandy, 4
Door, All Power, Good Condition,

(7401448 4225

.

97 Blazer, Automatic, CD Player,
4x4, Gold Colo'r, Great Condition,

011.ono·• llrNm lttoD. &lt;11t0mtno

111'1 Old I Cutllli, tun I ION.
NW Ml'll, ..,, ?C 1111110,

II 4d ,., lale, lt,OOO 010
g40111f·1111

1111 Tovoll Corolla Motor Ap·
proxlmllt! 100,000 Mllae.
(140)141 11114

11000, (?oiOM*'1 07

carne

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Work. Drivable. Solid Body, 2

II ,.,d Tr~k~' W~111 Ort••·

1M7 c - COfl!lmy, , ...ooo
MUll. l'tuno
Qo!Hf CoiiCI!•
tlort 11100. (140
,...

Superior Plumbing And Home
Maintenance. We Do All Repairs
On Homes Inside AnCI Out, Carpentry, Floors , Kitchen s, Baths.

Door hslch. $300.1740)441-8217

1100.1..... 11···

IM·Im.

Condition. $1 uoo . (74014469256

Home
Improvements

79 Mustang, 6 Cylll'lcler, 4 Speed, ·
Runs Good. Needs Transmlnion

AKO lloottter,a Collie '""'
lUll/ Wltl!l 1110. (UO)III-

1111 CldlliiO, 4 dr. ndon. 140·

1990 Winnebago Motor Home,
low Mileage , 38 ,000 Miles , Self
Contained, Sleeps 6 ElCcellent

810

1998 Chevy Lumina, automatic,

'II Cltlvy Mtllbu, v... ru1t ''"
orltllftl Plflt lront end dlmqe,

flullll!oodltl Oocl!tr IPift!ll ,..
pill, 1110.111111. (140)4~1 •••
P'ure Ired looglo Puppltl Por
..it. WHft Pol)frt. lloody To ao.
Cttll(740):11f.t111
l'toglttortd ounnounae And
lc~ntulor. e~ct1 1 wormoa.

Call

1998 Fbrd Wlndstar GL Loaded ,
$13,500 . call Atter 4:30pm .

COUNTRYSIDE
BAPTIST CHAPEL
will be watching the

1100.1'1'4011

moviBon

Sunday,
February .11th
at 6:30p.m.
Everyone Welcome
&amp; Bring a Friend!
FREE MOVIE &amp; SNACKS!
845 Skidmore Road
3.5 miles out SR 160 ·
paat Holzer

Electronic Tax Filing
Get your refund In as
little as 2 days •
. 448·8727

4

II OftiYY 4WD, 110 Au!omollo

730 Yan1 l 4-WDI
1114 ,ord ,uo 4l4 , 4 tpou.
Plot lad, 100 I C~t~or, llun1

-·MillO

1'1'4013

71

740-245-5633

LEFT BEHIND
,.

.

'

OBO.

·Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

air, loaded, $8750, 741l-949-2203.

moo

tt41

790

· reducing problems: enhancing relationships and enriching an image, .LEAP will
accomplish its primary
objective: to promote sustainability by seeking profliable environmental situations,"he added.
UpcomiO:g local" LEAP
training sessions be held as
follows (Please contact the
coordinatinfg agency for
additional information.):
• Feb. 20, 9:30a.m.: Agricultural and Family Center,
Ashland (Roger Amos/ Ashland County, 419-281-242)
• Feb. 20, 9 a.m.: Kidron
(Eric Shultz, Wayne SWCD,
330-262-2836)

$1895 To $51195. COOK 110·
TORS 1740)446...Q103

Straw: Bright Wire n. Strew Year $14,000 (7401387...()240
'Round Dotlvory ·&amp; Votumo Dll·
count AvaJial)ll. Heritage Farm. 99 Chevy Metro, Coli (740)9920092 01'(7401992-7284
(304)875-5724.
CARS $29/MONTHI POliCE IM·
THANSPORTATiotJ
POUNDS &amp; REPO'SI HONDA,
CHEVY, 24 MO'S 0 tU% FOR
Jack Russell Terrier. His Hict All
liSTINGS! CAll t·I00·94t·
Shota, $200. (7401379-2822
710 Autoo lor Salo
8n71xt C-9814,
e Jack Russell Rtgllttrtd Pup·
ploi, $250. No ChiCk&amp; Accop!ld. $0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM· CARS FROM $500 • Pollet lm•
POUNDS I REPOSI HONDA'S, pounda l tax aeltUrll. Hondaa,
(740~2.
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. lOW AS Uti Ctlevyt, Fordt, &amp; more. For list·
t Wook AKC Chlntoo P~g Pup·. MO'S eta.&amp;%. FOR liSTINGS, lngo, colt nowl 1•800·118·3001
ploo, $300 080 (740)441...QI1!2
CALL t•I00·41t·0050 o•t. C· 0111. AOIO.
H12
.
AKC Blliltl Hound, Molt, 5
720 Truokl tor Sole
Monlho Old, Houao Broko, uoo, UOO· ICAAS FROII UOOI Tttl
(740,...1eM
ropooooaotona I polloo lm· ·1871 Ford· Supor CoD Plck·up
poundo. Hondlo, l'orOa, CIIIYY'a, 'ltuck, iiOII v... (740)111 1030 .
AMC Qcldon llttrltvll Pupplu l)uollt, loall. IIV'i 6 mora. Par
P1m1111 Only, Ull, (140)251· llal!nga oall 1·100·111·1111 ltU Ford Aangor, 4 C~llnaor,
11M
Automatlo, Plbo/'llllll Toppor,
1. . .1.
'
0ooc1 Condition.
(140l44fAMC Moll Yorklt, Will II lxtrt '11 Chovy, lwo doon '10 'ord, 11 1IAIIIr a,tn
1111111, 1~011 wormoa. V.ry lov- two aoor; 110 CIH IIUIIdour, 4able, &lt;lrtat '•r YaltnUnt'l llh, 1111' Dlldlt; 1o40o141....

All Dot lriiCII, 1110-44t·t101.

$5!500.(3041895-3874

730

quality, odor and conununity
relations.
Additional topics include
the developments of an
environmental plan, regulations and information on
cost-share p.rograms.
"By participating in LEAP,
producers will learn that
doing the right thing results
in doing things right. That
kind of knowledge gives
producers the power to
operate and grow their business with environmental
assurance, · 'confidence and
security," said David White,
OLC executive director.
"By increasing confidence, . improving profits,

Like Now, 92K $2895; 1995 S-10

4 Auolrlllan Shepherd Pupa, Rod
&amp; Whlto Morloa, Sl• Weak O!d.
Roady For Valentine Day,
(740)99~7 Anyllmo
5 Monlh Old Aogtatored Miniature

Commorclol lot !ocot.d next
to Ohio RIWr Plaa wtth

"

Phone (304)895- 3874

gine, Transmission, Brakes,
Shades, Tie Rods, Ball Joints, ;Ex·
haust System. Rear Door. Paint

Very Good Condition, 90,000

t997 Lumina $5295; 1984 Buick

".

('04,.1410

I

tnttrnatlonal 240 John Deere M
With Equipmant. Riding Lawn
Mowers, John Deere Baler For

wanted To Buy: Tractor With
Front End Loader. 30·45 HP.

1'1'40)11M111

m

610 Farm Equipment

more options. Manufacturer of
sawmills, edgers and &amp;kidders:

•.w,

40) 446·3644

Miles. Good Condltlon, $6500.

. (304)875·5770

$7!500.1740)441.Q135

~ermato 2000. larger capaclllll,

$137,000.- '

CRS Broker 441 1811
Carolyn Watch, GRI 441·1007
Sonny Garnea 441-2707
Robert~ Ul 0121 Rltlt WIMIMn· 441 1811
David WIMman, GRI,

Offer Over FIIOO. (740l441.Q135
1995 Ford Probe SE, 84,ooo

Service Center, State Route 87,
Point Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road,

.,
. I

www.wisemanrealestate.com

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Sharp, Below Book Value , Best

1-800-29HJ098.
Sawmm $3,795 . New Super Lum·

·?
l· t"

..."

Prlood II •100,1109. Coli lor

Turbo. 300HP, AWD, High Milos,

nacoo. If You Don't Call Uo Wo Till, a Point Hllch, 540 RPM PTO,
Bo1h Looel (7401446-8308 &amp; Diesel, 188 Hrs, $8500. Koelera

. ,.,.

-IIL1121

1991 Dodge Stealth, AIT, Twin

Rhino Farm Dozer, 6' Blade, Hyd

•''

Town 2600 sq. ft. plus a full
nearly completely ftnllhod
bllement.
0\ltllll'ldlng
woodwork (maple, cherry,
knottY pine). lMgl roomo. 6
BRa. 3 bathe. lnground pool.
Excollent condition. $225,000
11t3

Loaded. S8000 oeo

Pumps, l.P. &amp; Natural Gas F.ur·

•W

approx. 140 ft. al rood
rrom.go on iEIIIIIm ""-"·

350 TPI; Rebuilt motor and transmission, T~ Tops, Completely.

$4395. Cara And Trucks From

-,,'.;.,
,.

. llpocloul llrlok Ranch In

1989 Ford Escort LX, 81 ,000 ·1987 4:.4 Ranger, Automatic, AJC
with topper. $1650 OBO l740l ,
GOod, Soundt GOod, $2000 OBO, 446-7730
(740l38&amp;C9325
1987 Ford Bronco 4WO, com·
1989 Pontiac Trans Am GTA 1 plolely Rebuln, 6 Cylinder. 300 En·

miles, 4 cyJ., Good on Gaa. Look&amp;: .

:,:l304c:....:.l5:..7..:.e·..:.28:..1.::2~----­

,

GALLIPOLIS Livestock and poultry producers
in Ohio will be provided
with the opportunity to take
a proactive approach in
blending sound production
e~onomics with concern
about environmental quality
by attending and participated in one of eight Livestock
Environmental Assurance
Program · (LEAP) training
sess1ons.
LEAP was developed by
Ohio Livestock Coalition
(OLC) in cooperation with
Ohio State University.
Extension, Menke Consulting, Ohio Department of
Natural Resources Division
of Soil and Water Conservation, Natural Resources
Conservation
Service
(NRCS), Ohio EPA and
various commodity and
farm organizations.
It is closely 111odeled after
a similar program developed
by the National Pork Producers Council.
By participating in LEAP,
livestock and poultry producers will be eligible to
receive cost-share assistance
grants available through their
SWCD office, and earn
points for Environmental
Quality Incentive Program
(EQIP) assistance.
LEAP is a statewide, free,

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Autos tor Sale

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl He11

--

balement, 3 flroplace8, 2 ear
II*S!JO, In-ground pool, 4 t/2
....... nv1. located only
;nlnutoa from toWn ln the city
od1ool ayatom. Prtcod at

o

Century $389!; ·1988 Astra Van,

~··
A Lot to Ollwr With
11111 ~
..wall Cll'ld for

ENTERPRISE ROA~ust minutes from town. Three bedr6oms, newer
shingle roof, aerator septic, public water. Cute home, immediate posise!~Sionl

7·;

Settir w/culllvators, $300 Each,
Excellent
Condition,
Call

'!~ ....

brlci&lt; rii'ICh on.tng 3 BRa, 2
112 batho, LA open to dining
• area, FA, O'VII' ' 1400 . sq. ft.

For Show. Call (7401387.:0240

Row Corn Plantar, t Row Tobacco

I

PORTLAND
BUFFINGTON
LANDI"G· An executive subdivision
daalgned tor horae lOvers and
boaterat · You won'l believe the
features. Access to the baautHul Ohio
for boat lovers, 100' boat dock, · riding
ring , picnic sheller, riding Ilana &amp;
much mora. Certaln r81111cUone apply.
Lot prices and acreage vary
according to tho particular amenru.s.
Call for more details.

they'll still prefer to dabble.
"We don't have any conviction in the market right
now, not even in defensive
sectors," said Dickson , the
analyst at Scott &amp; Stringfel.low.
For example, he said, the
market is wondering if drug
stocks, which have had a
strong run up since late last
year, can stand to go higher
or whether they are overvalued. Stocks like Merck and
Johnson &amp; Johnson have
been mostly advancing- yet
also retreating somewhat.
"The stock market has
traded within a reasonably
tight range, awaiting a catalyst to get it going;• said Ackerman of Fahnestock.
One factor that could help
induce investors to bid the
market higher is that the bulk
of fourth-quarter earnings
reports have been released ..
Another impetus for a rally
could be the year's third
interest rate cut, a move the
Federal Reserve i.s expected
to make when it meets in
March .
But despite two rate cuts
· so far this year, the market
has failed to sustain upward
momentum for long. Consider that the Nasdaq rallied
in January, gaining as much as
15 percent, after the Fed
lowered rates.

OliVer 1 Row Corn Picker, JD ..

. ..m..

low
brtck ranch
offers LA with f~eplaee,
'dining area wllh beautiful
wood floor open to 11rge
kHchon, 3 BRa. 1 1/2 baths,
plus full baoement olfarlng
huge FR w~ ~replaCe and
c:au :ntlo
bar area. 2 Cit' garage, 1r1 In·
Rlghl"ll Cozy and well ground pool and convenient
maintained In- and out, loctlon. Priced at $142,000.
this home otfera LR Q~M~n to
kitchen and dining area, 3
BRa, 2 balhl, llrge. privata
back patio, 2 car dataohod
gara(JO plua 12 x t B, tti0111!J0
bu!ldlng on ,IIII)&lt;OX. 112 oae
lot. Priced at $1111,800, thll
the right home

Profeaslonal OJ Karaoke System.
Great Sound, With CO's, Ready

90% Gas
, 12 Seer

.,.,

website.

Musical
Instruments

Pick-up, Phono(740l387-o397

deal, thla juat might be the time
this home yours. Priced
at
111803
·

home on 1
faaturea
large LR with fireplace, largo
eat-In kltchon, FR, 3 BRa and
a ton of room In the full
b-ment. Great location.
Green achoOia. See Interior

570

Massey Ferguson 8' Disk, 3 Point

1o

Unlimited
Beautiful 2.59 acre
looaled at 41780 Po,nert)v
Pike boats over 2300 sq.
plus I full partially ~nllhed
buement. Spacious rooms,
storage galore and newer
furnace ond cantril llr. Homo
otfero LA. OR, 5·8 IIRs, FR,
oat-In kitchen, t full bath and
2 hllf bathe. Cal Carolyn for
mora
complete
details.
$t21
1011

pies, 6 Week Old, 2115101 , $100
Each.l740l245-5597

Parts Only. 13041458-1050 Allor
6pm

"

laundry/mud room, 1 car garage

Pets lor Sale

UKC Registered Rat Tarrier f'up·

(740)441H308, t-800-291-&lt;1098

··'
.,.

R~&gt;H(:

580

New &amp; Used Electric And Gas
FurnaceS For Sale . Call For Slz·
lnllallalion
Available ,
es-

(7401446-2563

G:t·

WV

'

.-.

Apartments
for Rent

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaant,

str.ltegy of selling off tech in
favor of the relative safety of
blue chip sectors.
A litany of evidence Friday of just how much the
economy has weakened sent
the Nasdaq down 91.09,
accounting for about half its
weekly loss. Reports· of possible layoffs al Dell Computer, a Wall Street Journal
report of a government
investigation into accounting
irregularities at Lucent Technologies and Motorola's plans
to cut as many as 4,000 jobs
created the last minute selloff.
Friday's bad tech news followed disappointing earnings
issued late Tuesday by Cisco
Systenu.
"The week has been
heavy on disappointment,
particularly the Cisco shock
that sent a shiver through
Nasdaq and disappointing
news on Dell and Lucent ...
Right now the only strategy
is to sit tight, shepherd some
cash and stay somewhat
defensive," said Alan ·Acker·
man, executive vice president
of Fahnestock &amp; Co.
Analysts say investors likely will continue to seek safety in safer havens like drug,
consumer, financial and utility stocks. But rather than
make grand buys in these socalled defensive sectors,

NEW YORK (AP) - AJ
investors weaved in and out
of blue chip and technology
stocks this past week, their
quick changes might have
hinted of big happenings on
Wall Street.
In reality, they made no
major commitments. The
market's recent direction has
been more sideways than up
as investors rapidly and frequently changed their minds
about what was the best
strategy.
"You are seeing a lot of
sector rotation. Very rapid
sector rotation," said Richard
A. Dickson, a technical analyst at Scott &amp; Stringfellow
Inc. in Richmond, Va. "People are still confused about
what their outlook should
be. Should they be in defensive sectors? Should they get
back in tech?"
Indecision will continue
to dominate the market for a
while longer, analysts said.
Investors are. putting off
making big moves until they
· see the sluggish economy
and disappointing corporate
profits show signs of substantial improvement.
Given that the market
ended this past week down
on bad technology news,
analysts
expect
some
investors to at least temporarily return to their recent

Lea•. Colo r- Aub ergine (L ight
Sm o ke~-la v endar ). Paid $145,
Worn Once · Size 18/20, Sell For
$1 00. Shoes si ze 9 112. Same

12 piece antique furniture, such
as old walt phone , secretary, 4
drawer oak file cabinet. round oak
table, plus 5 nice guns, call 304·
882-2711 . New Haven.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage·
3 Acres At The Bottom 01 Red·

Nk:e Truck .(740 l2~365

For Sa le: Reconditioned wash·
ers. dryers anG refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jackson Avenue, (304)675-7388.

OS.

$95,900,(304)675·1618

For Sa le Or Trade: Fibe rglass
Truck Topper, Sm all Tk . Upright
Freezer, 3208 Cat. 13 Speed 86
lnternaUonal Cummins, 9 Speed,

530

GOOD USED APPLI.ANOES

Antiques

COMPUTERS: WE FINANC E
DELL CO MP UTERS I Even wil n
less than perfect cr edit! 1-800·
477·9016. Code AC7. www.omc·
solutions.com
EZPETR X.COM. Save up to 50%
on ALL pet medications and supplies, Including Hearlgard, lnttr·
cep tor, Fron tline, morelll FREE
SHIPPING . Order online www.EzpetRx.com 1 ·800-8~· 1427

11,2001

Investors spend week quickly. LEAP training sessions
getting in and out of tech
offered to livestock producers

CAlL AND RECEIVE FREE EX·
OTIC VACATION wtth acti..,allon.
Fret sat eltlte television tystem!
Free installauont 1-871·235·5669
code ac.

74Q.4!6·n9o.

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga . We
Sell Grave Monuments And Vas·

Church Building wilh Pars.onage
tor sate, boated in Point Pleasant,
Good Nei ghborhood , asking

510

Sunday, February

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Magic Chef Electric Stove, Excel·

River Bend P-lace Now Accepting
Applications for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment for Elderly
and Disabled , EOE , (304)882·

446·0101 .

ForLease

1600 Sq. Feet, Beautif ully Ae·
stored 2nd Ftoo r1 3 Bedroom
Apanme nt, 1 1/28 att'll, livi ng/
Dining Room. Rear Otel&lt;. HVAC.
Downtown Gallipolis. All Modern
Amenities. $600/mo. Security And
Key Deposits. No Pets. Referenc-

1740)446-1 51 9

$475 Month 3 Bedroom Hous&amp;,
Ga lli polis Ferry Area (304)675·

(304)736-7295

New
Fleetwoo d,
16x80,
s19,999.00, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 1·

2000 Oakwood mobile home,
threa bedroom , two bath, must
saM. 740-985·411 2.

13041675-4035

410 Houses lor Rent

Lot model cleara nce . choic e of
heat pump or central air with any
home, check us out were dealing,
Col e's Mobile Homes, US 50
East, Athens, Oh.

888-928·3426

199'6 141172 Norris, Asking
. $17,000. Two Bedroom, Two Bath,
· All Appliances l~uded . Must Be
Moved . If Interested Call

RENTALS

4024

•· ·-----l!!!!!l'_..q
opportunity basis.

1 Bedroom Near Holzer, Eeonomlcal Gas healing. WID Hook up ,
$279 00 Plus Ulilitlea. Lease, De·

cy. (304}675·5540 or (304lS75·

whlc:hlslnvtolationofth8
law.Ourreedersarehereby

.,I

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't Have Land? We Dolt! Hurry
Only 10 lOis Lo}1. 304-736·7295.

736·3409

This newspaper will not

..

440

limi te d Or No Cred il ? Gove rn ·
ment Bank Finance Only At Oakwood In BarbourS-ville . WV 30 4-

or 1968 which makoa n Hf0981

·~

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Sunday, February 11,200~.

WV

For More
Information ...

Mane Designers Full
Service Salon is proud to
introduce a Spa Service
for your hands and feet.
Treat your Valentine or
yourself to this wonderful
manicure and pedicure
combination.
Call Mane Designers at
446·2933 for details and
schedule your
appointment. Gift
Certificates available and
special ratee apply.

Public Welcome
Gallia County
Conservation ·
meeting Wednesday,
February 14,
Dinner at 6:30 pm

ANQ!LACCOUNTING
,or ComP~~~tr, ProlalliOnlllndlvldual
1nd lullnMI Tilt prei)llrttlon
ASK US ABOUT
!~!CTAONIC l"ILING
731Seoond Av1.
,..e-11877

446-2342 or

'

..

�•• •

•

•

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl....nt, WY
•

Helbs

•

.spearrnint-tlavored blend of
herbal teas with warming
qualities, is a new product
which has sold well during
,..D1
the cold and Ou season.
lint. Video rentals occupy an
The Herbal Sage operation
'ilsle.
is not only a business enterBut this store is different. prise, but also a learning
rilexc to the white-enameled experience for Burns and
meat case is a wall of shelves
her customers.
filled with comfrey . and
"I have a large selection of
jiatchouli and goldensea.l,
herbs here, and people who
.attd scores of other orgatuc
come in to look or buy edulterbs.
cate
me, and they educate
~ Upstairs, where for years
1pe Rathburn family sold · my customers. That's part of
hats and wallpaper, is a vin- what mak~ it so rewarding,"
tage clothing store, which Burns said.
Burns
purchased
the
,Burns brought with her from
building,
located
on
the
cor.Cleveland.
· The herbs are the basis for ner of Main and Salem
the Herbal Sage Tea Co., the streets, in 1997, shordy after
business which puts bread on she arrived in Meigs County
the Burns table. Her compa- from Cleveland.
•ny supplies bulk teas _;_
Since then, she has seen
dn.my custom made -herbs, the business adapt to the
· :Organic juices, tinctures and changing needs of the 21st
:essential oilS and other prod- century shopper, while
.ucts which serve a growing maintaining a level of permarket interested in organic
sonal attention that is now
products and alternative
virtually unheard of.
medicines.
If her sizable offering of
· Her .blended herbal teas
ship to a great number of herbs does not meet the
•l)!tailers around the country, needs of a customer, Burns
s,o me bearing the buyers' qn order virtually any herb
p,rivate labels. Her sales, to a needed.
Birchfield can also special
great extent, are fueled by
. the Internet, but her prod- order almost anything for a
ucts are fueled by Burns' customer, too, including
creative karma.
organic products such as cof' "It's the creative process fee and produce.
that gives me the most satisThe convenient location
faction,'' Burns said.
of the place, hours of 8 a.m.
· Burns increasingly finds to 7 p.m. Monday through
:herself consulting with locals Saturday, and the courteous
'· seeking an alternative to era- help chat Birchfield and
' ditional medicines, and Burns have behind their
while she herself does not
counters, are, in a way. a
.~ffer medical advice, she is
:happy to prepare the herbal throwback co the 19th cencompounds and teas that tury.when the .store wa5 first

own

·customers request:
·: ·The herbs used are herbs
which, Burns said, have been
u'sed traditionally as remedies
for common ailments. For
~lcamplc, her ne-N Warming
Cold
Care
Blend, a·

opFed.
:
" any yean ago," Burns
sai , "the Rathburn family
called this 'the store with the
friendly people,' and you
know ... I think that's atill
true ...

•• • •
'. . ..
Moreover,
part1c1pants
who withdraw SIMPLE
plan · contributions during
fnwn,..D1
the two-year period beginning on their initial particiopposed to a dollar amount. pation date will be assessed a
· The employer is required 25 percent penalty taX.
~o make a fully vested conA SIMPLE plan distribu~
tributed by either:
tion may be rolled over to a
' • Matching elective deferregular IRA account, but
;rals dollar-for-dollar up to 3
only after the e!llployee has
:percent or
in a SIMPLE plan for at
.,
" ''• .M aking a 2 percent conir'Wution
to all eligible least two years.
Iii-:"' ...
This article is meant to
:employees, regardlen of
!elective salary deferral, who provide an overview of the
;received $5,000 in coinpen- basic provisions of the SIM)atioil from the employer in PLE plan. For. more complete understanding of these
;that year.
: Employees are allowed to plans and potential implica- .
:terminate deferrals at any. tions for your business,
~ime during the year. But be speak to your financial advi,nindful that participants sor.
aar Caldwell i• a· certified
wlio cake withdrawals from
•
•
;a SIMP~ plan prior to age fittaHcial plan11er at Rllymond
;59- V:l! are generally subject Jame5 Fina11cial Str~icej, 441
~o the same 10 percent early S-econd A~t., Gallipoli5, 446;withdrawal penalty applica- 2125 or 1-800-487-2129,
lbl~l:o IR,.As.
member NASD and S/PC.) ·

~ ··

'

Sunday, February 11,2001

"'1,.
...
· schedu eel

GALLIPOLIS - A program on proper nutrition and
care of 4-H beef projects to
provide Beef Quality Assurance
recertification for
exhibiton will be held Feb.
21 at 7 p.m. in the C.H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center.
This will be an informational session for all individuals who plan to show breeding heifers, market steen and
feeder calves at the upcoming
Gallia County Junior Fair.
The program will cover
such topics as feeding, nutrition, health, vaccinations,
withdrawal times, finishing
weightS and environment, as
well as good production
practices involved in Beef
Quality Assurance.
Tammy Shiffleit, a senior
majoring in animal and poultry science at Virginia Tech,
will present the program as
par't of an . internship with
OSU Extension and Champion Hill Farms.
,
Gallia County Extension
Service
welcomes
and
encourages all 2001 junior
fair . exhibitors to participate
in the program. For more
information, or to obtain a
Oyer, call the OSU Extension
Office at 446-7007. ·

Kneen .

1

.

. Weekly
.
livestock report

Producers
Inc. market
fro~t~ Gallipolis
for salesreport
conducted on Wednesday.
..
Feeder Cattle-Higher
200-300# St. $105-$117
Hf. $90-$99, 325-450# St.
$92-$104 Hf. $83-$99 475-

11me for CAUV

625# st. ss0-$?2 Hf. $77$84 650-800# St. $76-$92
·Hf. $72-$78.
Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/Fleshed $42$47; Medium/Lean $37-$41; ·
Thin/Light $30-$35; Bulls
$48-$59.
Back To The Farm:
Cow/CalfPain $675~$850;
Bred Cows $560-$720; Baby
Calves $35-$160; Goats $17$145.
Upcoming specials:
Herd bull leasing ~
available. High quality Ang\.s
bulls.
Call the office at 446-9696.

renewals
GALLIPOLIS GaUia
County farmen using Current Agricultural Use Valuation (CAUV) to establish
their land value for tax purposes need to file their
renewal form at their county
auditor's office before the first
Monday in March that
CAUV designation.
Gallia
County
Farm
Bureau President Paul Shoe~
maker of Cheshire said "get a
quote about the importance
of farmers renewing their

(

~--------~~'!!""----------.

The
J o.r·nt Implant
Center

~ur

Joint

next 'clinic date II .

,Implant

Surgeons, Inc.
,. Frtctay; February 23.
Call (814) 22NI331 for an
appointment.
Robert A. F1d1, MP, FACS

Am• STORES

Cooper lire
says more .
cuts coming
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) Cooper Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
reported Friday that its
fourth-quarter net income
dropped by 80 perci:nt, or
$25 million, because of costs
associated with a restructuring plan announced in Octo~ t

Without those charges, the
tire maker's earnings would
have dropped by just 6 percent, or $2 million.
Cooper also on Friday
announced more job cuis· at
four plants, but did not say
where they would occur.

.

Racine Southern FFA notes, As
Eastern takes down Wahama, Bl

Tuesday

Hlp: 50s; Low: 40S
Details, A3

'•

for tht; tesa.
:
Attention all greenhouse '
operaton and vegetable ;
CAUV within the allotted
ft• ..... DI
growers who already have l
time to avoid having their
their private pesticide applica- '
land assessed at market value
apartments.
For
further
infortor's license, do you need ,
rather than agricultural use
mation,
please
contact
our
value."
three hours of recertification ;
office.
CAUV renewal needs to be
hours?
:
done within the time
• • •
Receive three hours of !
allowed, to avoid recoupme11t
Are you a farmer, vegetable training by attending a recerof the previous three sa~ grower or greenhouse operatification class developed 1
that will assessed on the cui'.; tor needing a private pe!ticide
especially
for your pesticide •
rent taxes.
application license?
The CAUV system allows
The Ohio Department of classifications. The class will :
farme~· land to be assesse~ . Agriculture will be giving be given Thesday .at the Meigs :
based on its agricultural value, Southern Ohio residents an County Extens1on Office, :·
rather than its speculative opportunity to take the test Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, :
:
market value.
' locally on feb. 27 at 6 p.m. at starting at 6 p,m..
Find
out
about
FQPA
!
· The Gallia County Farm the Meigs County Extension
Bureau will be working Gal- Office located at Mulberty (Food Quality Protection ;
lia County Auditor Larry M· Heights, Pomeroy. Ohio, next Act), our most common. pests :·
, of 2(){j(), techniques to look :
Betz to ensure that farmers to Holzer Meigs Clinic.
are informed about CAW
If you plan to take the test, for pests bcfme you bring out !
and that the renewal process ·· please call 992-6696 to make the spray rig and how to uti- :
moves smoothly.
·
, reservations. We need a mini- lize the reference material :
For more information• mum number of test takers to available to you to inalce bet- :
about CAUV, the renewal" have the test given in our ter 'crop management deci- ,
process or n~w .applications: county.
sions.
and how to sign up, ~otact ' To assist test takers, the
If you haven't already :
Betz at 446-4612, or the Gal- Meigs County Extension
signed
up, please call 992- '
lia County Farm Bureau Office will be offering a twoOffice at 231 · Broadway Sr.,Jo- hour re'l[iew class from 6-8 6696 call so sufficient hand- i
Jackson, at 1-800-777-9226.
p.m. on Feb. 20 at our office. outs may be available. .
(Hal Kneen is Mtig• Counry ~
! We will review basic pesticide
•
use, reading pesticide labels, Extemion agent for agritulturr •
~personal protective equip- and·natural re5ources, Ohio State '
. , ment use and · how to study Vnivmity.)
:
GALLIPOLIS - United

4-H

·

'•

•

BRIEFCASE

ber.

•

•
I
\

'

l

Melp County's

February 12, 2001

entine

Hontetown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vplume 51 , Number 18 0

so Cenh

Vinton
County
planning
park

GED test
changing
in 2001

McARTHUR (AP) Officials plan to break
gro und this spring for Vinton County's first industrial park.
Liko other southeast
Ohio counties, Vinton may
find it cakes marketing and
patience to fill it.
Construction at the
200-acre area along state
Route 93 will cost $1.7
million, but there's a belief
the cost will be worth it in
a county with the state's
highest
unemployment
rate at 12.6 percent.
"We think it's going to
be a boost to the county,"
county
Commissioner
Michael Bledsoe said. "We
need a boost bad."
Industrial parks else.!.
where in the state are so
numerous that the Ohio
Department of Development doesn't keep track of
them. ·But they are a novelty in remote and undeveloped areas such as Vinton
County.
"Having some sort (of
industrial park) is the key
to attracting' attention to
your area. It's the minimum
to play' in the game," said
,..-,~·~ Steve)~fjley; asenior econ- ~
omist with the Ohio
Department of Development.
.
The county is working
with the Ohio Department
of Transportation to add
passing lanes on U.S. 50
arid Route 93, but they
concede that roads are the
biggest obstacle to drawing
businesses. For this reason,
they're aiffiing their sales
pitch ·at companies that
don't require daily truck
shipments. ·
· The county hopes to
draw light-manufacturing
businesses such as plasticinjection molding, elestrical parts, medical supplies
or sheet-metal fabrication.
"We'd take anything,''
Bledsoe said. "I don't think
we're going to be real
choosy."
.
Ken Reed, tile county's
development director, said
he regatds the industrial
park as a good idea regardless of how long it takes to
fill it.
"The land isn't generat-·
ing any revenue for the
county now," he .sat'd. "I t 's
just being. mowed for the.

,..... -

Monday

Bv TONY M.

system," waiting until the
individual
passes
the
MIDDLEPORT
remaining sections so that
Those wanting to complete the best of all scores can be
their high school equiva- combined for the "final"
lency exam should do so total test score.
before the upcoming year.
Brewer said that individBecause the General uals taking the test should
Educational Development be aware that December
(GED) Testing Service will 2001 will be · the cutoff
release a new and com- point. fot combining scores
pletely redesigned battery on sections of the present
of tests at the
test.
beginning of
Like the existing
Joan ·
2002,
the
Myers,
G,.ED
exam, the trew
Meigs
administralor
GED test will
County
with
the
measure lvhat
Adult Basic
Ohio
and Literacy
stlldetlts should
Department
Education
of
Education,
learn through a
(ABLE) Prosaid candiJ01ir-yea r higlt
gram is offerdates
who
school course of
ing assistance
have
not
, for
those
study in reading,
passed
the
who have yet
current GED
writitJg, social
to complete
tests by the
studies, science,
the current
cutoff point
and mathematics. will
GED format.
lose
Like
the
credit for all
existing exam, the new passing scores .they have
· GED test will measure received and will have to
. what students should learn cake all sections of the test ·
through a four-year high agam.
Myers said those who
school course of study in
retding, writing, social have not passed all parts of
studies, science, and mathc- the GED should retake the
matics.
exams before the new tests
However, the 2002 test are introduced because
will have more open-ended · scores from the present test,
questions, fewer multiple and the 2002 test are
choice questions and a incompatible and cannot be
math section that requires combined.
use of a calculator. ·
Local AULE instructors
Carol Brewer, coordina- will be assisti ng test takers
tor of the ABLE Program, as well as administering
said that many adults have various . practice tests to
already passed sections of assess student readiness for
the 2001 test but do not the official test, which will
have a composite score for be given on April 11 - 12;
passing the entire test.
June 27-28 and Oct. 24-25,
Those scores are "in the
Pluse see GED, A3
LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

REGULAR ROUTINE - Maxine and Bill Little have a dally date with the cardia-riders and other
exercise equipment In the Meigs County Senior Center fitness room. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

~

great way to start the.day'
.
'

Bv CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

P

OMEROY "A
great way to start a ·
day" is how Maxine
Little describes her
daily exerc.ise workout in the
fitness room at the Senior Citizens Center.
She likes to refer to a sign
which hangs there with a quotation from the writings .o f
George Bernard Shaw. "We do
not cease to play because we
grow old. We grow old because.
we cease to play."
While for some exercise

Not only dot'S sire enjoy
the hour she .&lt;pew{&lt;
ou the l'l11ipmet1t ll'rllr
lur lwslland, Bill, •lf
flcr side, fmt she mjo)'S
the .fellowship with
·other e.w'YCiscrs.
might not. be considered play,
for Maxine it falls ihto that category.
Not only does she enjoy the
hour she spends on the equipment with her husband, Bill, at
her sid~, but she enjoys the fel-

lowship with other exercisers.
And all the while she thinks of
it as "play"- that which keeps
one from growing old.
Maxine, retired from Holzer
Hospital, has a longtime interest ·in maintaining a healthy
· life~tyle. She has been exercising for years.
Her husband, on the other
hand, didn't start until after he
retired from Kaiser and developed some health problems.
Followed heart surgery in 1999
he began ~ rehabilitation program through the Holzer Clin-

Pt..u- Exercl•e. Al

Appalachia office funding alarms rural advoc8tes
I

COLUMBUS (AP) . - . After
receiving· a $4.3 million budget hike
a year ago, the Governor's Office. of
Appalachia would get no increases
over the next two years under Gov.
Bob Taft's budget.
The proposal alarms advocates of
distressed areas who say they expected at least marginal increases.
"It's very frustrating. The problems
are so deep in the Appalachia,n part of
. Ohio," said June l{o)ley, president of

Pllrkt. Al

Tlfe rlj]ice receillt'd $5 mi/Uou ;, 2000 &lt;JIId ·ll'ould i&gt;!l?f the
same ammmtjor each of tilt' "~'·"' trvo ywrs 1wdn Taft's
·
· budget, the tightt'st' iu 11 daade.
the Appalachian Center for Economic Networks in Athens. "It's going to
take some considerable investment to
turn this area around."
Establishedin 1988 to help Ohio's
29 Appalachian counties with economic development, the office .Pro~

motes the area's projects, coordi nates
planning, disburses grants and acts as
a liaison to other resources. The
region posts consistently high unemployment rates compared with
national and state averages.
· The office received $5 million in

2000 and would get the same amount
for each of the next two years under
Taft's budget, the tightest in a decade.
Joy Padgett, the office's 'director,
said her budget increased considerably in 2000 because Taft promised
that the state would match federal
grants from the Appalachian R egional Comrnission for at least three
years.
Taft's budget reflects that promise,
Padgett said .

.

.

Officials don't like Underground Railroad museum design
CINCINNATI (AP) -Two months
after architects unveiled plans for the
National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, city· and Ct!unty officials
are now joining the · criticism of the
design.
City Councilman Jim Tarbell says he
hasn't found anyone who likes the
exterior.
"My' concern is this will be the centerpiece, the jewel of our riverfront;' he
said. "(The d~sign) has nothing to do
with what is going on i'}side, which is
. . "
'
mspmng.
The museum will commemorate
the system of secret routes and hiding
places 1tsed to smuggle slaves to freedom in the northern states. There were
several stops in Cincinnati.
'
The design consists of three buildings representing freedom, courage and
the cooperation needed to support
freedom . movements, project leaders

.

.

.

"The design .fer tlte (new) Contm1porary Art~ Center ';s·
intemationally ~fclaimed. Uf need the same type of d~sign
i[f(Jr tlte Freedom Cmter. ''
.,

\'1'

said when plans were \ introduced in
November. Gl&lt;!5s passagqways link the
buildings, which featu~ undulating
walls and rop&amp;. ·
,
Building materials in pde stop.e, to
symbolize the rugged nature of the
slaves' strqggle for freedom, and wood
in warm tones intended to make the
building an inviting landmark along the
city's Ohio .River shore.
"My only hope is we get something
people ate truly impressed with;' said
Hamilton County Col1ll'l).issioner Todd
Portune. "The ·design for the (new)
Contemporary Arts Center is internationally acclaimed. We need 'the same
I

..

-

f

--'---·- .- ----

••

predesign award. But only about half
the project's funds were allocated for
the buildings, since organizers wanted
the main focus to be the exhibits.
The city contributed $6 million to
the $100 million-plus project. So far,
about $62 million has been raised.
type of design for the Freedom Cen- Other large contributors include
ter."
'
Hamilton County, the state ofOh 10,
Ernest Britton; Freedom Center Procter &amp; Gamble · and Federated
spokesman, said the design was meant Deparrment Stores.
·
to evoke the spirit of 1800s safe houses.
"The Freedom Center wants to have
· ' '"fhere~ never been any interttion a world-class building ... but architccon our patt to create,any grand specta- ture is not our main program," Susan
de;• he said. "Spectacular places were Redman-Rengstorf, the museum's.
the homes of slave masters. Our design assistant development director, told The
team went all over the country visiting Cincinnati Post.
·
the simple places that were a part of the
City Manager John Shirey must
Underground Railroad:'
approve the design. Shirey says he's
Freedom Center officials said the waiting for a recommendation from the
design- by Indianapolis-based Black- · city's urban design review board. Boatd
burn Architects - has received letters Chairman Lee Carter said the plans still
of support from architects and won a are a work in progress.

...

Today's

-Sentinel
l Sedlo;q _. 1l .....

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
62-4

65
A4
A3

61.3-4,6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pid&lt; 3: &amp;.9-5; Pid&lt; 4: !HHI-2
Super l.ollo: J.l7·:9-37-41-42

Kicker. 9-9-3-7-1-4

W.VA.
Daily 3: 7-3-9 Daily 4: 1-2-1-8
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="449">
    <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="9891">
                <text>02. February</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="23882">
            <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="23881">
              <text>February 11, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="33">
      <name>ferris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="780">
      <name>henry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="176">
      <name>mayes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2736">
      <name>weekley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5520">
      <name>wicker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
