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•

''

Clnclo- (Doo-re W) • St.~

NallonoiLNguo
£.111

Rookie Ben Weber pitched
The big numbers keep three scoreless innings as the
stacking up for Aaron Sele and Angels ended the Twins' fourthe Seattle Mariners. ·
game wmmng streak. He
Sele posted his I OOth career struck out Denny H ocking
victory, and the Mariners won with the bases loaded to end
their eighth -in a row, beating the 1Oth.
the Baltimore Orioles - 2-1
Red Sox 11, Blue jays 5
Thursday night at Safeco
Jason Varitek hit a solo
Field.
homer and a two-run single as
Sele (8-0) leads the league in Boston beat Toronto at Skyvictories. He is the first Dome.
Mariners pitcher to open a
The Red Sox rallied for four
season · with eight straight runs 1n the eighth inning,
w1ns.
capped by Variteks single, for
The ·Mariners head into an 8-5 lead.
June with a 40-12 n:cord Manny Ramirez broke an 0they're already assured of for-14 slump with a · two-run
going into July with a winning homer for Boston.
mark, too. The last team in the
Athletits 10,
majors to do so wdl after 52
Devil Rays 1
games was the 1955 Brooklyn
Jaso n Giambi honiered
Dodgers.
twice and drow in four runs
The Mariners beat Balti- ttl lead Oakland owr visiting
more fi&gt;r the lOth straight Tampa Bay.
tim~. Edgar Martinez hit a sacTerrence -Long and Migud
rifice fly and John Olt·rud had Tejada also homered for the
an RBI single for a 2-0 lead in 'Athletics, who _scored 15 runs
the third inning.
a day earlier against the Devil
Cal Ripken homered in the R ays. Giambi had eight RBls
in rhe three"game serit!s.
Orioles' seventh.
"I left a fastball in the midWinner Tim Hudson gJvc
die of the plate and Cal's been up four hits in eight innin~.
'around long enpugh not to ·
Royals-8, Rangers 2
miss it," Sde said. "I didn't
Rey Sanchez extended his
have much breathing room hitting streak to a career-high
before the home run and I 18 games, gomg 4-for-5 as
didn't have much breathing Kansas City won at Texas.
room after it, either."
Sanchez has the longest curSele left in the eighth, and rent hitting streak m the
Olerud preserved the lead majors, and the best ever'by a
later in the inning by fielding Royals shortstop. He is batting
Brady Anderson's grounder to .372 (29-for-78) during the
first base and throwing out · streak.
Melvin Mora at the plate.
Angels 5,1\vins 4
NAT I Q N A L
Pinch-hitter Scott Spiezio
singled home the winning run
in the 12th inning, lifting Anaheim over visiting Minnesota.
Torborg loses in Expos'
The Angels loaded the bases
debut
with no outs, and Spiezio, batWhile the Montreal Expos
ting for Glenallen Hill, lofted a got off to a stumbling start
fly ball over the drawn-in out- under JetfTorborg, the Florida
field.
Marlins looked positively

,_.,..

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LE A G U E

'

I

FftMJ, June 1, 2001

AROUIN D THE DIAMOND

Sele, Mariners strike again

'I
'

Pa-geBC

Baseball

The Qaily Sentinel

AlloNa

Florida
. New Yol1&lt;

LPcL
18 .654

G8

26
25

26
27
32

.500

8

.481
.407

9
13
14

22

Monln181

33 .389
c.ntr'll
WlPctQB

21

Chicago

31
29

St louis
Milwaukee
Houston

Clnclnnoti
Plttsbu'llh

W
34

20

28

23
24

26
20

25
32

17 34
Wool

.609
.558

2 112

.538 3112
.510
5
.315 11112

.333

14

WLPCIG8
Anzona
31
22 • .585
Los Angeles
30 23 .568
1
San Diego
27 26 .509
4
Colorado
26 27 .491
5
San Fran&lt;isoo 26 27 ·.491
5

Tlnnday'a GamM

Hous1qn 8, San Diego 4.
Florida 5, N.Y. IAets 3
PhUadelphla 5, Montreal 2

F-r··-

Milwaukee 6, St Louis 2

AIIanta (BUfi&lt;etl 3-4) at Pittsbu'!lh (Rncflie
0-6), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mots (Gonzalez 1-2) al Florida
(Ciement2-4), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Chen 1·3) at Montreal
{Reames 2·7), 7:05p.m . ·
Chicago Cubs (Wood 3-4) al MllwaukeA

(Haynes 5·S), 8:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Prokopec 6--1) at Houston _

(Kio 7-3~ 1:10 p.m.
Son Francisco (RUOMr &lt;1-6) at Cdorado
(Cha&lt;on 3-1 ), 9:o5 p.m.
Son Diego (Wlllatns 5-3) OIMzonl
(Scllilling 8-1), 10o06 p.m.

s.turdly'•-

&lt;--

Cinc- ~ o-:q 81 St. l.otl'rio 7-3L 1:15 p.m.
·
Los Anglliel (OreiiOrt 3-3) • (OswaH 2· 1), 4:05 p.m.
san Franclsco (Ortl.t 7·3) at Colorado

D), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Giilvine 5-3) at Pittsburgh (011·

vares 2·5), 7:05 p.m.
Chleago Cuba (Tajllri M) at Milwaukee
(Rigdoo 3-2), 7:o5p.m.
Phladelphlo (Wolf 4-4) at Montreal
(Armas Jr. 5-5), 7:o5 p.m.
Son Diego (Eaton 8-3) at Arizona (Ander·
son 2-3), 10:05 p.m.

ToroniO
Battlmore
Tampa Bay

26
24
15

Minnesota
Cleveland

ConltM
W
L
34 17
33 17

De1tolt
Chicago
Kansas City

22
20
20

(Eianon 4-4), 8:05p.m .

27
28
38

28
30

33

.491
.462

08

.283

4
5 112
15

Pet

ae

.667
.660
112
.440 1~ 1/2
.400 13 112
.377
15

West

L
12

.7119

28

26

.500

24
19

28. .482

33

.365

G8
14
18
21

~·l&lt;anua City
8 , Tarat 2

=

Ooldlnd 10, T - Bay 1
-

11. ToroniO 5

~~:::"'"SOx, ppd., rain

3-2), 10o06 p.m.
Konlall City (DultJin 3-3) It AnohMn
(SchootlO\ooio 3-4), IO:OSp.m.
'

SPORTS

MONEY

Home, garden
tour in Mason Co.

Bucks,Sixers

Special care
deans up

•

•

BASEBALL TIWIIACllONS

_.._..

'

. FriUY'•-

r~re-y DEVIL RAYS .~&lt;l~Vatad 1J.

(Boahrle 2-3), 8:05p.m.
Minnesota (Santana !HI) at Te... (Giym

1-4), B:35p.m.

BaltimOre (Ponson 2·3) at oakland (HereIlia 3·5), 9:35p.m .
Tampa Bay (Rol&lt;ar ~~at Seattle (Moyer
8·11, 10:05 p.m .
Kanoaa City (SUppan 2-4)at Anaheim
(Valdes 2·3), 10:05 p.m.

Satunlay'o C-nd (Colon .W) • N.Y. Y o (Ciamon•6-1), 1:15p.m.
Boston (Wakeliek12{)) at Toronto (Hamil·
loo 2·3), 4:05p .m.

-

IMtUO

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-MCIUIPOOV.-ID
aNc::-TlllEDS SIQMd -

por........'-· -·
0111a '*' ,
••HiuH
to Louie- of lhli
I.Mguo.
•

AGRICULTURE

~

MONTREAL EXPO$-Fired FeflpeAiouj
manager. Named Jd Toll&gt;otg . . . , _,
and algned him to a lhree·yaar contract

SAN DIEGO PAORE5-Acll\lated RHP
Cartton LDewer lrom lhe 80-&lt;lay cllabled,
llsl and optioned him to POIIIand of lh8'

toJ

PCL. Optioned LHP Jimmy Osting
Mobile of lhe Soulhem League. Sont LHP
Baltimore (Towers 1-1} at Oakland (Zilo 3- Dave Maurer and INF Adam Riggs out--;
41, 4:05p.m.
right 10 Portland. Transtened UiP Sterllng'
Detroit (Sparks 4· 5) at Chicago White Sow HitchCOCk trom the 15~ to tt\e SQ...day dl$.·
(Biddle 1-4), 7:05p.m.
abled lilll Purchaud the comtact ol RHI\
Minnesota (Radke 7-1 1at Texas «Rogers
Rudy Seanez from La~e Elsinore of the:
C8lilomia league.
~
3·3), 8:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Rupe 2-4) al Seanle (Abbon
•

&lt;

•

urt
arvest
Standing water
mined root
crops, agent says

PREPARING- River Valley High School graduating seniors get
ready for commencement exercises Friday night at the Unlver•

BY MILI.IIIIA Rtl•e •

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

took the
fust step Fri,day into
"AWliQle New World"- the
"theme of gtaduation exen:ises
;tt the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Cpmmu~
hity College's Lyne Center.
Superintendent Robert Lanning welcomed and thanked
parents and fa!nily membi:rs
for their supp"ort of the 111
graduates throughout the
years.
."Tomorrow marks the
beginning of a new · part of

.,
"
'

·who

about

to

BY MicHELE CA111D

·-.....
•••

..•

-..
.."•
-·•
w
•

their

' OXMOOR VALLEY

GRAND NATIONAL.

HAMPTON COVE

SILVER LAKES

HN~t.,.ille

A~t~timlft/GIIds4m

B;,.,.;...,..,.

O,.IIWA"""""

54 HOLES

38 HOLES

84 . HOL~S

54 HOLES

,,

CAMBRIAN RIDGE

HIGHLAND OAKS

MAGNOLIA GROVE

CAPITOL. HIL..L..

M16it.

Prwn.ille

I!U HoLts

s.4 HOLilB

Gru••illl
36 HOLI.I

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t~:~bmligp:i

CQuificda

Comi'l

EdiWrja!s
Cbilu1ria
SRgitl
Sl!:ltkl

ROBERT ThENT ONES
GOLF

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~

ALABAMA'S
'&lt;

Diana Riddie, RN, MSN, admin·'' TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF
istrator and nursing -director ot the
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - In Mason County Health Department,
a unanimous decision, the Mason · said the :new regulation will go into
County Board of Health has effect 90 days after Wednesday's vote.
·appro~ the second draft of a Clean
Masoii · County joins about 47
Indoor Air Regulapon, meaning the counties in West Virginia with dean
county's restaurants and other public . indoor air regulations. Riddle · sai~
,areas will have to become mostly the health department is s1eeking
funding through the Tobacco P.rcc
.smoke-free.

vention Program to purchase signs
for business owners.
The regulation has drawn praise
and complaints throughout the
county. The bo_ard's initial regulation
draft was revised following comments from the public and .the second draft was approved without any
additional changes.
t[nder the new regulation, res tau-

'

&lt;

rants will designate a minimum of
75 percent of the seating area for
non-smokers, as well as limiting
smoking in grocery stores, elevators,
restrooms and retail stores, except in
areas not open to the public.
Newly .constructed restaurants, or
major modifications to · c:xisting
restaurants, must comply ·with the
smoking area requirements upon

n

brag

scores.

P111111H RVHS,AI

&lt;

only · ones
love

her
l'' musk:al selection as a high
school student
Friday night at
the University of
Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Comrn\1·
nity COllege's
Lyne Center.

"Most of these farmers are
going .to have to mow off
their crop, put some of it
away as lower-quality hay,
and hope that the second
and thitd, and in the case of
alfalfa, the fourtp cutting
will be of a good quality;' he
BY BRIAN J. REED
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF
said.
POMEROY While
Although poorer quality
township trustees and other hay can be fed to some
elected officials are focusing stock, dairy cattle and other
on damage to roads and cui· animals cannot eat i~.
verts, May's heavy rains have
The small-time home
caused concern for local grower has also experienced
farmers, too.
some problems with crops,
Hal
many of which will be inedKneen,
ible.
Meigs
"We've heatd from a lot of
County's
homeowners who say that
Ohio State their vegetables were left in
University
standing water, .and we
. Extension
strongly suggest that those
agent forJ-,V~'.•bl~ · 'i'.t •. be . ea~n,
because of contamination,"
and natural Kneen said,
resources,
"This is especially true of
said
that the . root crops, like radishes
standing water has contami- and beets and leafY crops like
nated root crops, robbed lettuce and cabbage,... he
farming soil of nitrogen, and added.
Fall cabbage or other fall
caused serious erosion prob!ems.
crops should not be affected,
"The creek and Ohio according to Kneen, but any
River flooding has affected vegetable which is to be harlow-lying areas; and hay vested soon should be avoidcrops especially," Kneen said. ed.
"The hay - and alfalfa "The biggest problem for
have been contaminated the commercial growers
with dirt and that affect&lt; the
quality."
PluMSH5tomls,A2

Mason health board votes to dear the air .in county

~

the

life;: Lanning told the
graduates. "Set ext,-emely high
goals for }'tlllrielf." ·
""
The ~'fif~rians.ioidie
2001 class each .gave. a short
speech.
T.R. Edwards said the closeness he felt as · a student at
River Valley was a special quality.
"The hustle · and bustle
s6metimes takes away from the
important things such as
friendships;' ,Edwards said. "In
the beginning, we were like
playdough, each color pack.. aged _in its own individual container and noW- we are like that
)'llUt

~=~J~~
River
'
School

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&lt;

slty of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College's Lyne Center. (MIIIIssia Russell photos)

R\/HS seniors step into 'new world'
GRANbE-

aren't

me

Boslon (CUtillo 5·3) at Tomnto (Pants 34), 7!05 p.m.
. TEXAS RANGERs-Recalled UiP OougPCL
ClaY•nd {FlnloiJ 4-4) 01 N.Y. Y o - Davis Irom Oklahoma of lhe
C~ o-s~ 7:05p.m. ·
.
Optioned UiP Aamn IAyebiD Otdahoma,
Detroll (IAIIdcl3-5) 81 Chlc:ago WNte SO•
·
'

flMES.SENTINEL STAFF .

Golfers

•

tmes

SEAT!l.E MARINERS 1'locod UiP
'
Norm CNIIIIOn m the 1S&lt;Iay clp-lial:
- L H P Brian F-IRlm Tocoma

L_------------------------------------------------------~,
I
. inspired by Tony Perez.
changed his mind and agreed you the gam.,, I made an error season after undergoing shout-'
The Expos, who fin:d man- to manage Florida for the rest and it cost us the game. I take der surgery.
'
ager Felipe Alou earlier in the of the season.
Peterson
pitched
five
full responsibility for that."
day and replaced him with
The Marlins improved to 3McGuire hit the Marlins' innings and earned his . fir5t
Torborg, fell behind when 1 under Perez.
second pinch-hit slam of the victory 111 the maJors smc.i
Philadelphia's Doug Glanville
Pinch-hitter
Ryan season, joining C:harles John- Sept. 26, 1999. He helped:
homered on the second pitch McGuire's grand ~lam lifted son.
himself by hitting an RB •
of the game Thursday night
the Marlins.
McGuire,
who
briefly double during a six-run sec~
First baseman Lee Stevens'
Alou was the winningest played for the Mets last season, ond ioniug.
:
error with two outs m the and longest-serving manager connected off Turk Wendell
Astros 8, Padres 4 · •
ninth mnmg allowed three in Expos' histoty. But with the for his first home run of the · Pit'cher Shane Reynold~
runs to score, g1vmg the team struggling, Torborg was season.
homered and Vinny Castilla'
Phillies a 5-2 victory at picked to take over.
Mike Piazza hit a 469-foot went 4-for-4 as Houston took.
Olympic Stadium.
It was 2-all m the ninth drive into the upper deck, the advantage of Adam Eaton'(
The
last~place
Expos when the Phillies loaded the 10th-longest home run at Pro odd injury to win at Satr
'
dropped to 21-33. Even so, bases with no outs. Mter Pat Player Stadium to account for _D 1ego.
--,•
Torborg stayed upbeat.
Burrell and Gary Bennett the Mets' first run.
Eaton was supposed to pitch
"I was really impressed with struck out, Marlon Anderson
Brewers 6, Cardinals 2 for the Padres, but accidentally,
the way our guys kept work- hit a sharp grounder that got
Kyle Peterson won for the stabbed himself in the stomach
ing at it, putting pressure on past Stevens and rolled into first time since 1999, as. Mil~ with a small knife while open-'
their pitchers," he said. "They the right-field corner.
waukee once again beat St. ing a plastic package.
••
kept coniing back in tough
"I missed it," Stevens said. "It Louis at Busch Stadium.
Eaton, w~o leads San Diego
situations. I liked what I've cost us three runs and co~t us
The Brewers outscored the with six wins, needed two
seen ."
the game. Nobody feels worse Cardinals 24-3 in winning for stitches to dose the cut. He
The Marlins, meanwhile, about it than I do, that's for the third straight day.
was held out as a precaution,
rallied for five runs in the sev- sure. It's kind of like hitting.
Peterson, called up from and Wascar Serrano started on
enth inning and beat the New When you do it at the right Triple-A Indianapolis on Sat- a short notice.
York Mets 5-3. A few hours time, it's not a big deal. If you urday to replace the injured
before
gametime, · Perez do it at the wrong time,lt costs Jamev Wright, missed all oflast

We love it when people say
nice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top ·50 golf
destinations in the world!
And in its current Places to
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trail's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4'/z.
No_t bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And aU of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
.service.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

gotoGame7

Run Jol1noon IR1m the 1S&lt;Iay Hat Plocad SS Feb Martinez on the 15dey clpbled lis~ relll&gt;OCIMIID May 28. !

Anaheim 5 . - . 4, 12 innings

(Neagle 4·2), 4:05p.m. ·
N .Y. Mots (letter 2·3) at Floricla (Smith 3-

-I.Mguo
Eaat
W
L Pet.
Boston
20 22 .569
New Yol'k
20 22 .569

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Low: !101
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~~URF'~ UP!

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C lOOt Ohio Volley Publishint Co.

construction or change, Riddle said.
Non-smoking areas will be designated so patrons are not required to
pass through .smoking areas on a
routine basis, but o;,..,ners of an establishment may declare the entire
establishment non-smoking.
If any dispute arises, the health

PleiiH 1M Smoklnlr A2

Gallia voters decide.local races .this fall
fall's ballot.
The deadline for candidacy petitions
GALLIPOLIS
-Sandwiched and· ballot issues is 4 p.m . on Aug. 23.
between la'ft year's presidential 'election Board of Elections Director Jeff Halley
1
and a set of county offices to decide .in said school board and township trustee
·2002, Gallia eounty voters will still go to races require signatures of 25 valid registhe polls th, November to decide local -tered voters, while village council hoperaces.
.
fuls need I 0 signatures for their petitions.
School board seats, as well as township
Candidates must pay a $30 fee when
and municip~ elections are set for this fitirig.
BY KEVIN KELLY

TIMES.SENTINE( STAFF

Halley urged ~andidates to become
familiar with directions included in a
pamphlet provided by Ohio Secretary of
State]. Kenneth Blackwell before circulating petitions. The pamphlet is provid- .
ed by the boatd to each interested candidate.
"Being familiar with the guide prevents future problems or disqualifica-

PIHHIMRICII,AI

Beca-,e W. Is Always Wosll1

I

Alabama's Robert Trent Jonea Golf Trail 378 holes!of world-class golf on eight sites

•

· The 7th Annual National .Cancer Survivors Day Picnic
·
Sunday, June 3, 2001. 1:00- 3:00p.m.

1.800.949.4444
lVIIIW. rljgolf COlli

Bob Evans Fanns picnic Shelter, Rio Gronde• - good food, door prizes, and lo~ of hvgs.

Open Co any cancer survivor, their family and friBnds. Come celebrate life! Supported by
Holzer Meclical Center, Holzer Clinic, Pharmaceutical Companies and rhe Community
'Tallo! the road ~ from the res&lt;aurant.
&lt;

•

.,

(

.,

·. Discover the Holzer
Difference.
I

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�.
I
,•_db_~-~------------~~!C!i~l~lt_
__________________!~~·~«r!~~··~·~·,~·~lH~J
~.~

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__v_tr._•_•_us_-_.__

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Developmental Center client&gt;,
staff and community will extend !heir thanks to State Rep.
John A. Cuey. R -WeUston. in a ceremony set for Monday at 6
p.m. in !he City Park.
Catty will be ~ogniud for his suppon and work wilh the
Ohio Dcpanmenr of Menal Rewd:ation/Dewlopmenul Disabilities budget.

11eeplalllinl

GALLIPOLIS - VFW Post 4464 will plant a Dwigbt D.
Eisenhower green ash to honor World War II veterans at Holzer Senior Care Center at I 0:30 a.m. Tuesday.
The tree was donated by Wai-Mm. The public is encouraged
to attend. Main speaker will be the Rev. John Jackson. .

COOLVILLE -Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has
issued a boil advisory forTroy Township in Athens County _for
the following areu: beginning atTR 158 (Rowley Lant!) gomg
north on both sides of Ohio 7 to the Coolville mterchange,
West Hornsby Road, Rowley Lane, Old Seven Road, and Brister Road on the Ohio 7 end.
CustOmers affected should boil !heir cooking and drinking
water for three minutes before its is consumed. Water samples
will be taken and results will be made public.
The advisory was issued because of the repair of a mainline
leak.
'
·

•

RIO GRANDE - State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, DBourneville, will be speaker at the joint meeting of the GalliaVinton EducationaJ Service Center on June 14 in Room 155
of the Resource Building at Buckeye HiUs Career Center.
A reception is set for 6:30p.m., and the meeting startS at 7.

Markets to open ·
POINT PLEASi\NT, W.Va. - Farmer's markets in Mason
. County will open for the season this week.
Big Bend Farmer's Market starts Tuesday at I 0 a.m. across
from Fielder's Hardware in New Haven. Point Pleasant's market, under the Bartow Jones Bridge on First Street, starts June
9 at 8 a.m., and at 8 a.m. beginning July 11 .
The Sweet Corn Festival is July 21 in Point Pleasant. For
more information,_call Bill Riebel at 304-675-2067.

I

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Stonns

away, and mui:h more has
been evaporated into the air,
as nitrogen gas," Kneen said.
"A lot of that nitrogen will
AI
have to 6e reapplied."
seems to be wetness:' .Kneen · As much as a foot to a fooisaid. "This causes poor and-a-half of soil has eroded
growth, and some of the . from commercial fields, especially along the banks of
plants will not mature."
But farmers, Kneen said, are Leading Creek" and in the
also faced with two other Ohio River bottom lands,
problems: the loss of nitrogen much of which, Kneen said, is
through evaporation, and ero~ easily avoided by the placesion of soils due to the heavy ment of grass waterways
when soil is tilled.
rains.
"These farmers have, in
This spring's cold, wet
most cases; applied enough weather has affected local
nitrogen to their soil to last crops in other ways too.
"All of this standing. water
for the growing tea$0n, but ,
much of thilt ha1 been washed hurts the roots system, and

from Pa&amp;e

concerns of the non-smoker
. shall be given precedence,
.according to .the regulation.
For enclosed places of
employment, it is the responsibility of the employers to
provide smoke-free areas for
non- smoking
employees
within the facilities to ·the
maximum extent possible, but
emplo~rs are not required to
incur any expense to make
structural or any other physical modifications in providing
the are~ .
The regulation requires the
employer to adopt, implement, make known and maintain a smoking policy. The
policy must include, at a minimum, the following requirements: any employee shall

have the right to designate his .
or her work areas as nonsmoking and post the same
with appropriate signs and in
any dispute, the health concerns of the nonsmoker shall
be given precedence.
Areas not subject to smoking restrictions, but posting of
designated smoking areas will
be required, include bars, private residences (except when
·-.used as child care or health
care facilit)r), hotel and motel
rooms rented to guests, retail
tobacco stores, conference or
meeting rooms or public
assembly rooms or hotels,
motels and fraternal organizations while being used for
private functions, a private,
enclosed office workplace
accompanied by only one
person or exclusively by
smokers and family owned
and operated businesses.
Smoking regulations are

6ullbap -11tfntd 6mtfnel
Reader Services
Corrdon Polley
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acconll. IIJ" klow of 11 error lo a
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Siullllr-nmu Se"th•el. 825 Tlllrd Ave.,
Odllpollo,Oitlo 00 I. .

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fiiJNDA.Y ONLY
!IJIICIUmON MATES
., Carrter• MaW Raitt

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tbe lllbtcrtpdoft period. ~blcrlptlon 111e chtnae•
may be l11plr:mcnted br charwl•J the durtl~oa of
the lllblaiptlon,

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MAIL SIJIISCRIPTIONS
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fu.:.e.

~

Attom
. ey questions evidence

'b.'

MARION (AP) -Evidence linking a ma.n to the death of
a 7-year-old girl doesn't add up, said a defense attorney who ·
believes police quickly latched onto the man as a defendant and
then made the evidence fit. .
Robert Wilson questio ned why Barty Satta would dump the
· BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
midnight, then partial clearing. body of Bobbie Jo Barry so · close to his home and why he
The National Weather Ser- Low 50 co 55.West \vind to to would put the body in a sleeping bag with his name on it.
"Unless you \vanted to get caught. or unless somebody wants
vice says a cold front will push 15 mph. Chance of rain 30
east of the area tonight, but the percent.
you to get caught,'' Wilson told the jury before it began deliberating
the case Friday afternoon.
chance fo~ rain showers will
Sunday... Partly cloudy. High
linger.
Jurors deliberated about six hours Friday but did not reach a
near 70. West wind I 0 to 15
SANDUSKY (AP) - Firelands Regional Health . System
· Lows tonight will be in tht! mph.
verdict. They will resume about 9 a.m. Saturday after being announced it will take control of a neighboring hospital by
50s.
August.
·
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy. sequestered at a motel.
Weak high pressure will Low in the lower 50s.
Firelands officials said Thursday that they have no plans to
bring dry weather Sunday.
Extended forecast:
clbse
l'rovidence Hospital, but they would not say whether
~
Highs "\"ill be in the mid to
there will be any job cuts.
Monday... Mostly
cloudy
upper 60s.
MINGO (AP) -A man was shot and killed in front of his
with a chance of showers. High
Some departments could be consolidated, said George
home early Friday, the first killing in rural Champaign County M ylander, chairn1an of the board fo r Firelands Regional Health
A warm fiont will move into in the mid 70s.
·
the region on Monday, with
Tuesday. ..Showers and thun- since 1997.
System.
The body of Rex Allen "Ricky" Hecker Jr., 24, was found by
showers and thundemorms derstorms likely. Low in the
"None of that has been determined, but I can rell you a top
returning. The
unsettled · )ower 60s. High in the lower a family member early Friday in front of his home in this vil- priority of both sides is to protect employee j obs," said Co nnie
lage of about 100 people 40 miles northwest of Columbus..
weather will continue through 80s.
Lamb, director of co mmunity relations for Providence HospiSheriff David Deskins said it appeared Heskins died of an tal.
niidweek, with daytime temWednesday... Still a' chance of
peratures in the 60s and 70s showeB. Low near 60. High in unknown number of gunshot wounds. An autopsy will be performed.
¥1d lows in the upper 40s and the lower 70s.
There were no eyewitnesses, but Deskins said neighbors
50s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
: Sunset will be at 8:55. Sun- Low in the lower 50s and high thought they heard popping sounds and a vehicle w ith a loud
exhaust about the time of the shooting.
rise Sunday is 6:04 a.m.
in the upper 60s.
·
Weather forecast:
- Friday... Partly · cloudy. Low
: Tonight ...A chance of show- in the mid 40s :ind high 70 to
or thunderstorms until 75.
ALLIANCE (AP) - Firefighters battled wi nd-swept flames
for about six hours Friday before containing a fire at a warehouse! complex where Little Tikes toys were. stored.
.,..
i I
One firefighter suffered four broken ribs and another had a
. : DAYTON (AP) -The Cold War will be the focils'ofari Air hand injury in pr~-dawn blaze that heavily damaged the Railway Transfer and Storage compl ex in Lexington Township,
force Museum expansion to be completed by 2003.
Museum officials and supporters broke ground Friday for a located between Canton an d Youngstown .
About 40 percent of the 250,000-square foot warehouse
new 190,000-square-foot buildin~ .
.
: • The building will be similar in size and shape to the muse- C&lt;;lm plex was used by a manuf.1 cturer to store boxed cays before
um 's Modern Flight Hangar and will be known as the Eugene shipping.
Fire companies from Stark Cpunty and two adja cent co untlt'S
Kettering Gallery in honor qf the first chainnan of the nonprofit Air Force Museum Foundation's board of tru stees. The battled c'he fire. At one point, a tram cut fire hoses se t across rails.

CAPtoiLLeet
GALLIPOLIS. FERRY,WVa. - Gallipolis Ferry Communi.•
ty Advisory Panel (CAP), 7 p.m., at Akzo Nobel auditorium . .

.

One Stop Shop
For Tannll)g ·
Beds!

""'

home

Fire hits warehouse complex

ers

Cold war ~us Of expa,n~ion ·

Girl suffocates in car window

:Activists marching in.Cincy to protest
!police treatment of African Americans

Start

..,; CINCINNATI

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

,.

Family Size .

*Monthly Income
Guidelines
2------------····-$1,452
. 3--------········-$1,829

"

·&lt;

4 ••••••••••••••••• $2,207
5 ·············-··· $2.,584
6···············--$2,962

I
·I

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

,.
,'

*Monthly .Income
Guidelines

'

.,'

2-················$1,935
3 ··················$2,439
..

4·················Sl,M2

5 ·---~·-··•••••••• $3,445
6 •••••••••••~--~-- $3,949

••

f,

••
•••

~

••-

1 f,

~

•
~

• Even It yaur flmlly'e Income 11 higher, yc;»u may •Ill be able
to get frel Hnlthy Stllrt coverage fOr your k~de.

CaU now for more Information.

992·2117 .or Toll Free 1-800-992-2608
·'

(AP) ~
iOrganizers of a march
:protesting the fatal shooting
:of.an unarmed black man by a
f !.vhite police officer vow to
!keep racial justice issues
:l&gt;efore the community.
:: "We call for policies which
:).viii treat all people . with
:tespect," said Dan La .Botz, a
'l &gt;vhite University of Cincin1nati history professor · who
ihelped organize Saturday's
:March for Justice.
': Three hundred to 1,000
'.:people
were expected for the
:2.5-rnile march from down'town's Fountain Square to
Laurel Park, within blocks of
police headqu.arters.
i: Marchers who say blacks
:~re mistreated by police in
:cincinnati also will pass the
: ~Dey in ·the Over-the-Rhine
ineighborhood where Timoihy Thomas , 19, was shot
i\pril 7.
.
1: The shooting touched off
lihree nights of riots, and a

.

Without Credible Insurance
Family Size

WB'i'B making

s

·'

With Credible Insurance

Charter school ·
busting at seams

J

T·SIOmll

· foundation was formed in 1960.
: "It's our way of recognizing a family that has spent 40 years
advancing. the institution," said retired Maj. Ge n. C harl es Mercalf, the museum's director. Several m embers of the Kettering
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A 2-yea r-old girl who died when
· family took part in the groundbreaking.
her head got caught in an SUV 's powe r window was in a vehi-

primarily
self- regulating
through social pre11ure, but
the enforcement of this proposed regulation is the ultimate responsibility of the
Mason
County
Health
Department .
It is the responsibility of any
owner, operatOr, manager or
other person of any establishment · regulated by the policy
to inform persons violating
the regulation.
Any person who violates
any provision of this regulation is guilty of an infraction
as posed by the health department sanitarian.
The first infraction results
in a written warning, the second violation results in a $25
firie, the third within a 12month period is a SSO fine
and a fine between SSO anp
S1 00 shall be levied for each
additional violation of this
regulation within a 12-month·

AKRON (AP) - A forprofit company's charter
school has enrolled lnore students than it has computers
for, bu t is permitted to do so
because the students attend
the school in shifts,.the Ohio
D~partment of J::du cation
said.
The Life Skills Center of
Akron, a high sc hool where
students learn on compu ter;,
was designed for about 297
students, buc had an .enrollmi.mt of 764 students in Se ptember, accotding to department reco rds. The sc hool
receives $4,780 in taxpayer
money per student.

Shown

Man shot in front

1-"

should report it to his office
so that it can be reported to
the .U .S. Farm Service
Agency, in the event that
assistance is made available.
A 50-percent loss is generally required before assistance
is available, he said, but farmers should still report damage,
Fox said.

~

Hospital sold to neighbor

Poslponecl

this spring's cold temperatures
and standing water make the
plants more disease prone;'
Kneen said. "With all this
rain, protective · fungicides,
which help prevent disease in
tomatoes, could not be
applied."
" Other ·crops, like melons,
which could be replanted,
will probably be harvested
late, and that means that the
price can be affected because
of competition from farmers
in northern Ohio," Kneen
said.
David Fox, Meigs County's
Farm Service agent, said
Thunday that farmers who
have experienced any Jon

gener;illy arc marryin g and having children later.
She said couples may also be choosi ng
to have fewer children so they will ha\•e
time and money for other things- ma tt"rial goods, Vdcations, ere.
Aud Ghem &gt;did fanuhcs. wtth yo ung
chi!Jn.:'n typic:l.lly c hoose co )Jvc in che
suburbs, noc rura l villages, because of easy
access to shopping and schools.
The southeastern Ohio vi llage of
Stafford has only one child under age 5
among its 86 residents. And a half dozen
other Ohio villages only have two residents under age 5, census figures showed.
Elgin is a small town 's small town.Th~re
are onl y six houses on the main dra g. and
one of them is for sale. A leisurely drive
through the vilbge takes seconds.

clc equipped with a sofc ty switch that di sables the windows, but
it was not in use, the Ross County sheriff said.
Destany Sprouse was pronmmced dead at Adena · R egional
Medical Center after she was taken there Wednesday night . An
autopsy showed that her air passages and the large w &lt;&gt;d s that
supplied blood to her brain had been shut ofT, said Michael
Ratliff, an investigator for the Russ County coron er's office .
"She basically was suffocated by the ca r window;· Ratliff said.
Sheriff R onald Nichols said no one is certain how the accident happened.

pry conditions for Sunday

•

Hounchange

Induction IJeld

in the number of babies born in Ohio in
the past 10 yearS, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures . !n 1990, children
. under 5 accounted for 7.2 percent of the
population. A decade larcr, they made up
only 6.6 percent.
.
Jack Dustin. dicector .of the Crnrcr for
Urban and Public Affairs at Wright State
University in Dayton, said th e decline
might be due to many Ohioans of childbearing age being drawn ro the West and
South .
" It has to do \vith the fact that young
people ace migrating ... for" employment
opportunities," Dustin said.
Rosemary Gliem, director of Ohio
State University's Data Center, which dissentinates detnographi c infortllanon, Sa1d
another f..1ctor may be h\.'Causc wom~n

Inc.

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department will
offer a childhood immutiization clinic on Tuesday from 1-7
p.m. at the office on East Memorial Drive.
_
The child's shot records must be provided, and each child
shpuld be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.

PORTSMOUTH - Shawnee State University chapter of
Phi Eta Sigma National Honor Society inducted 115 top students at its recent induction ceremony, including several from

GALLIPOLIS -A scrap tire collection day has been set by

fromP'qiA1

:/",

Plan clinic

•

ELGIN -The s;Yings in the vilbge
park sit strangely still these days, moving
only with the breeze.
With a population of 50, this northwest
Ohio fanning conuimnity is one of the
tiniest in the state. And it is also among villages with the fewest children under age 5.
There are only two: a 2- and 4-year-old.
That compares to 12 in 1990.
Summer Ellis, who is expecting in
August, is concerned about finding playmates for her baby.
''I'm probably going to have . co pby
with him • lot;' said Ellis, 22.
Elgin's declining baby · population
reflects the statewide trend.
There has been a 3.8 percent decceose

I• - lsman! •

GALLIPOLIS - French Art Colony, 530 FiBt Ave., is offerPOINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Mason County Public
ing a series of cooking classes startif!g June 16.
Library
in Point Pleasant will change hours of operation beginCarol Bates of Point Pleasant, W.Va .• is instructor for the
classes, geared for children ages 7-13. Hands-on sessions will ning Monday. Tlie library will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
int.roduce children to recipe reading, nutrition and other fac- Monday through Friday.
Evening hours will resume on Sept. 4. ·
toB in tb£ cooking process - set-up and clean-up.
On Monday, children may sign up for the summer reading
Childr?n. will bring home food made in class for all family
prognm,
which begins June.25.The prognm will offer fun and
members co taste.
The classes will be held Saturdays from 10-11:30 a.m. Tuition children will be eligible for prizes By reading. All events are free
is $15 per session. Classes include "Grandma's Favorites," June and open to the public.
16; "Desserts;"june 23; and "Picnic Style Food," June 30.
To pre-register, call the FAC at 446- 3834. Financial assistance
· is available. All FAC prognmming is offered through support of
'
'·
MASON, W.Va. - Mason Town Council has postponed its
the Ohio Arts Council.
June 12 meeting until June 14 at 7 p.m.
:·

Tire collection

Smokln1

BYJAMESHAASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GALLIPOLIS ·- Gallia County Health Department and
French Town Veterinary Clinic are offering a rabies vaccination
clinic on june 9 at the health department, 499 Jackson Pike.
Information about rabies will be free of charge. Vaccinations
will be $5 per animal (cat or dog). Bring previous vaccination
records, if av:ailiible.
All animals must be leashed.
For more information, call the health department at 4412018.

Cooking dasses

Shoemaker to speak June 14

Census: Babies not booming in Ohio

-~J..-.3

Advisory"issued

Toumame11t June 9

.•

Ohio Weather

Vaccinations set

GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by
the Gallia County Health Department at 499 Jackson Pike on ·
June 7 from 4-6 p.m.
,..J
.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Wal-Mart archery tourChildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by
a parent or legal guardian, and bring a current immunization nament has been set for June 9 from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. at
Turkey Run Arche,.Y, Sand Hill Road.
recoJ:ll with them.
Prizes and novelty shoots will be offered. T here are seven
Additional services, such as blood pressure checks and preg·
. nancy tests, will .be offered during the evening hours at the classes, with three ·prizes awarded in each class.
For
more
information.
call
304-675-40()0.
health department.

PageA3
Sunct.y. June :s. 2001

the Gallia County H~th Department for June 9 fiom 10 a.m. !he immediate area.
•
•
The
society
recognizes
academic
achiewmenn
of
student&gt;.
until 2:30 p.m. behind !he Gallia County Health Department,
To be a member. a smdcnt must have a minimum 3.5 gn~e
499 Jackson Pike.
Fees will be St for car tires, $2 for ttuck tires and 50 cents point avenge.
..
.
Area
students
inducted
were
Elinbeth
Brisker,
Oak
Hill;
for motorcycle, ATV and bwn tractor tires. There is a limit of
Jonda Carpenter,Waterloo; Michael Gillispie, FrazieB Bono~,
20 tires per load.
Fore more information, contact Zane A. Beegle, RS, at 441- W.Va.; Charles Miller, Rio Grmcle; Ashley Rawson, Pomt
Pleasant,W.Va.; and John Shriver, Gallipolis.
2943.

Tollonorc.rey

I

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•

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'·
• •\0'1.1'"

•
•

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few was needed to restore
order. There were more than
800 arrem during the assaults,
store looting and arsons.
Officer Stephen Roach, 27,
told his union that he felt
threatened . by Thomas, who
was wanted on 14 misdemean or warrants and fled the
officer by running into a dark
alley.
Roach faces trial later this
year on misdemeanor charges
of negligent . homicide and
obstructing official business.
Thomas' mother, Angela
Leisure, said she hoped the
march would help Cincinnati
recover from the unrest.
"I have strong faith in this
march "because it promotes
peace;· Leisure said. "With
everybody working together,
that can happen, especially if
you do it all through prayer."
The march had been
planned for weeks. Organizers
said it would include dozens
of monitors along the route

check.
Police said they hoped the
march would be peaceful, but
were prepared to deal with
any problems chat occurred.
There was concern people
from outside the city could
cause trouble.
Some of the protesters
marching Saturday have filed
a lawsuit · in federal court,
accusing Cincinnati police of
shooting them with pelletfilled crowd control beanbags
for no reason "during the April
riots.

andmuch motBI
For fast, friendly
service on your
next loan, see
Peggy Watson
In Gallipolis.

Auto- Owners Insurance

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Gallipolis

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Developmental Center client&gt;,
staff and community will extend !heir thanks to State Rep.
John A. Cuey. R -WeUston. in a ceremony set for Monday at 6
p.m. in !he City Park.
Catty will be ~ogniud for his suppon and work wilh the
Ohio Dcpanmenr of Menal Rewd:ation/Dewlopmenul Disabilities budget.

11eeplalllinl

GALLIPOLIS - VFW Post 4464 will plant a Dwigbt D.
Eisenhower green ash to honor World War II veterans at Holzer Senior Care Center at I 0:30 a.m. Tuesday.
The tree was donated by Wai-Mm. The public is encouraged
to attend. Main speaker will be the Rev. John Jackson. .

COOLVILLE -Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District has
issued a boil advisory forTroy Township in Athens County _for
the following areu: beginning atTR 158 (Rowley Lant!) gomg
north on both sides of Ohio 7 to the Coolville mterchange,
West Hornsby Road, Rowley Lane, Old Seven Road, and Brister Road on the Ohio 7 end.
CustOmers affected should boil !heir cooking and drinking
water for three minutes before its is consumed. Water samples
will be taken and results will be made public.
The advisory was issued because of the repair of a mainline
leak.
'
·

•

RIO GRANDE - State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, DBourneville, will be speaker at the joint meeting of the GalliaVinton EducationaJ Service Center on June 14 in Room 155
of the Resource Building at Buckeye HiUs Career Center.
A reception is set for 6:30p.m., and the meeting startS at 7.

Markets to open ·
POINT PLEASi\NT, W.Va. - Farmer's markets in Mason
. County will open for the season this week.
Big Bend Farmer's Market starts Tuesday at I 0 a.m. across
from Fielder's Hardware in New Haven. Point Pleasant's market, under the Bartow Jones Bridge on First Street, starts June
9 at 8 a.m., and at 8 a.m. beginning July 11 .
The Sweet Corn Festival is July 21 in Point Pleasant. For
more information,_call Bill Riebel at 304-675-2067.

I

'

'I

.'

Stonns

away, and mui:h more has
been evaporated into the air,
as nitrogen gas," Kneen said.
"A lot of that nitrogen will
AI
have to 6e reapplied."
seems to be wetness:' .Kneen · As much as a foot to a fooisaid. "This causes poor and-a-half of soil has eroded
growth, and some of the . from commercial fields, especially along the banks of
plants will not mature."
But farmers, Kneen said, are Leading Creek" and in the
also faced with two other Ohio River bottom lands,
problems: the loss of nitrogen much of which, Kneen said, is
through evaporation, and ero~ easily avoided by the placesion of soils due to the heavy ment of grass waterways
when soil is tilled.
rains.
"These farmers have, in
This spring's cold, wet
most cases; applied enough weather has affected local
nitrogen to their soil to last crops in other ways too.
"All of this standing. water
for the growing tea$0n, but ,
much of thilt ha1 been washed hurts the roots system, and

from Pa&amp;e

concerns of the non-smoker
. shall be given precedence,
.according to .the regulation.
For enclosed places of
employment, it is the responsibility of the employers to
provide smoke-free areas for
non- smoking
employees
within the facilities to ·the
maximum extent possible, but
emplo~rs are not required to
incur any expense to make
structural or any other physical modifications in providing
the are~ .
The regulation requires the
employer to adopt, implement, make known and maintain a smoking policy. The
policy must include, at a minimum, the following requirements: any employee shall

have the right to designate his .
or her work areas as nonsmoking and post the same
with appropriate signs and in
any dispute, the health concerns of the nonsmoker shall
be given precedence.
Areas not subject to smoking restrictions, but posting of
designated smoking areas will
be required, include bars, private residences (except when
·-.used as child care or health
care facilit)r), hotel and motel
rooms rented to guests, retail
tobacco stores, conference or
meeting rooms or public
assembly rooms or hotels,
motels and fraternal organizations while being used for
private functions, a private,
enclosed office workplace
accompanied by only one
person or exclusively by
smokers and family owned
and operated businesses.
Smoking regulations are

6ullbap -11tfntd 6mtfnel
Reader Services
Corrdon Polley
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Siullllr-nmu Se"th•el. 825 Tlllrd Ave.,
Odllpollo,Oitlo 00 I. .

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fiiJNDA.Y ONLY
!IJIICIUmON MATES
., Carrter• MaW Raitt

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tbe lllbtcrtpdoft period. ~blcrlptlon 111e chtnae•
may be l11plr:mcnted br charwl•J the durtl~oa of
the lllblaiptlon,

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MAIL SIJIISCRIPTIONS
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l2W..U. .................................................... $109.72

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Attom
. ey questions evidence

'b.'

MARION (AP) -Evidence linking a ma.n to the death of
a 7-year-old girl doesn't add up, said a defense attorney who ·
believes police quickly latched onto the man as a defendant and
then made the evidence fit. .
Robert Wilson questio ned why Barty Satta would dump the
· BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
midnight, then partial clearing. body of Bobbie Jo Barry so · close to his home and why he
The National Weather Ser- Low 50 co 55.West \vind to to would put the body in a sleeping bag with his name on it.
"Unless you \vanted to get caught. or unless somebody wants
vice says a cold front will push 15 mph. Chance of rain 30
east of the area tonight, but the percent.
you to get caught,'' Wilson told the jury before it began deliberating
the case Friday afternoon.
chance fo~ rain showers will
Sunday... Partly cloudy. High
linger.
Jurors deliberated about six hours Friday but did not reach a
near 70. West wind I 0 to 15
SANDUSKY (AP) - Firelands Regional Health . System
· Lows tonight will be in tht! mph.
verdict. They will resume about 9 a.m. Saturday after being announced it will take control of a neighboring hospital by
50s.
August.
·
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy. sequestered at a motel.
Weak high pressure will Low in the lower 50s.
Firelands officials said Thursday that they have no plans to
bring dry weather Sunday.
Extended forecast:
clbse
l'rovidence Hospital, but they would not say whether
~
Highs "\"ill be in the mid to
there will be any job cuts.
Monday... Mostly
cloudy
upper 60s.
MINGO (AP) -A man was shot and killed in front of his
with a chance of showers. High
Some departments could be consolidated, said George
home early Friday, the first killing in rural Champaign County M ylander, chairn1an of the board fo r Firelands Regional Health
A warm fiont will move into in the mid 70s.
·
the region on Monday, with
Tuesday. ..Showers and thun- since 1997.
System.
The body of Rex Allen "Ricky" Hecker Jr., 24, was found by
showers and thundemorms derstorms likely. Low in the
"None of that has been determined, but I can rell you a top
returning. The
unsettled · )ower 60s. High in the lower a family member early Friday in front of his home in this vil- priority of both sides is to protect employee j obs," said Co nnie
lage of about 100 people 40 miles northwest of Columbus..
weather will continue through 80s.
Lamb, director of co mmunity relations for Providence HospiSheriff David Deskins said it appeared Heskins died of an tal.
niidweek, with daytime temWednesday... Still a' chance of
peratures in the 60s and 70s showeB. Low near 60. High in unknown number of gunshot wounds. An autopsy will be performed.
¥1d lows in the upper 40s and the lower 70s.
There were no eyewitnesses, but Deskins said neighbors
50s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
: Sunset will be at 8:55. Sun- Low in the lower 50s and high thought they heard popping sounds and a vehicle w ith a loud
exhaust about the time of the shooting.
rise Sunday is 6:04 a.m.
in the upper 60s.
·
Weather forecast:
- Friday... Partly · cloudy. Low
: Tonight ...A chance of show- in the mid 40s :ind high 70 to
or thunderstorms until 75.
ALLIANCE (AP) - Firefighters battled wi nd-swept flames
for about six hours Friday before containing a fire at a warehouse! complex where Little Tikes toys were. stored.
.,..
i I
One firefighter suffered four broken ribs and another had a
. : DAYTON (AP) -The Cold War will be the focils'ofari Air hand injury in pr~-dawn blaze that heavily damaged the Railway Transfer and Storage compl ex in Lexington Township,
force Museum expansion to be completed by 2003.
Museum officials and supporters broke ground Friday for a located between Canton an d Youngstown .
About 40 percent of the 250,000-square foot warehouse
new 190,000-square-foot buildin~ .
.
: • The building will be similar in size and shape to the muse- C&lt;;lm plex was used by a manuf.1 cturer to store boxed cays before
um 's Modern Flight Hangar and will be known as the Eugene shipping.
Fire companies from Stark Cpunty and two adja cent co untlt'S
Kettering Gallery in honor qf the first chainnan of the nonprofit Air Force Museum Foundation's board of tru stees. The battled c'he fire. At one point, a tram cut fire hoses se t across rails.

CAPtoiLLeet
GALLIPOLIS. FERRY,WVa. - Gallipolis Ferry Communi.•
ty Advisory Panel (CAP), 7 p.m., at Akzo Nobel auditorium . .

.

One Stop Shop
For Tannll)g ·
Beds!

""'

home

Fire hits warehouse complex

ers

Cold war ~us Of expa,n~ion ·

Girl suffocates in car window

:Activists marching in.Cincy to protest
!police treatment of African Americans

Start

..,; CINCINNATI

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

,.

Family Size .

*Monthly Income
Guidelines
2------------····-$1,452
. 3--------········-$1,829

"

·&lt;

4 ••••••••••••••••• $2,207
5 ·············-··· $2.,584
6···············--$2,962

I
·I

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

,.
,'

*Monthly .Income
Guidelines

'

.,'

2-················$1,935
3 ··················$2,439
..

4·················Sl,M2

5 ·---~·-··•••••••• $3,445
6 •••••••••••~--~-- $3,949

••

f,

••
•••

~

••-

1 f,

~

•
~

• Even It yaur flmlly'e Income 11 higher, yc;»u may •Ill be able
to get frel Hnlthy Stllrt coverage fOr your k~de.

CaU now for more Information.

992·2117 .or Toll Free 1-800-992-2608
·'

(AP) ~
iOrganizers of a march
:protesting the fatal shooting
:of.an unarmed black man by a
f !.vhite police officer vow to
!keep racial justice issues
:l&gt;efore the community.
:: "We call for policies which
:).viii treat all people . with
:tespect," said Dan La .Botz, a
'l &gt;vhite University of Cincin1nati history professor · who
ihelped organize Saturday's
:March for Justice.
': Three hundred to 1,000
'.:people
were expected for the
:2.5-rnile march from down'town's Fountain Square to
Laurel Park, within blocks of
police headqu.arters.
i: Marchers who say blacks
:~re mistreated by police in
:cincinnati also will pass the
: ~Dey in ·the Over-the-Rhine
ineighborhood where Timoihy Thomas , 19, was shot
i\pril 7.
.
1: The shooting touched off
lihree nights of riots, and a

.

Without Credible Insurance
Family Size

WB'i'B making

s

·'

With Credible Insurance

Charter school ·
busting at seams

J

T·SIOmll

· foundation was formed in 1960.
: "It's our way of recognizing a family that has spent 40 years
advancing. the institution," said retired Maj. Ge n. C harl es Mercalf, the museum's director. Several m embers of the Kettering
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A 2-yea r-old girl who died when
· family took part in the groundbreaking.
her head got caught in an SUV 's powe r window was in a vehi-

primarily
self- regulating
through social pre11ure, but
the enforcement of this proposed regulation is the ultimate responsibility of the
Mason
County
Health
Department .
It is the responsibility of any
owner, operatOr, manager or
other person of any establishment · regulated by the policy
to inform persons violating
the regulation.
Any person who violates
any provision of this regulation is guilty of an infraction
as posed by the health department sanitarian.
The first infraction results
in a written warning, the second violation results in a $25
firie, the third within a 12month period is a SSO fine
and a fine between SSO anp
S1 00 shall be levied for each
additional violation of this
regulation within a 12-month·

AKRON (AP) - A forprofit company's charter
school has enrolled lnore students than it has computers
for, bu t is permitted to do so
because the students attend
the school in shifts,.the Ohio
D~partment of J::du cation
said.
The Life Skills Center of
Akron, a high sc hool where
students learn on compu ter;,
was designed for about 297
students, buc had an .enrollmi.mt of 764 students in Se ptember, accotding to department reco rds. The sc hool
receives $4,780 in taxpayer
money per student.

Shown

Man shot in front

1-"

should report it to his office
so that it can be reported to
the .U .S. Farm Service
Agency, in the event that
assistance is made available.
A 50-percent loss is generally required before assistance
is available, he said, but farmers should still report damage,
Fox said.

~

Hospital sold to neighbor

Poslponecl

this spring's cold temperatures
and standing water make the
plants more disease prone;'
Kneen said. "With all this
rain, protective · fungicides,
which help prevent disease in
tomatoes, could not be
applied."
" Other ·crops, like melons,
which could be replanted,
will probably be harvested
late, and that means that the
price can be affected because
of competition from farmers
in northern Ohio," Kneen
said.
David Fox, Meigs County's
Farm Service agent, said
Thunday that farmers who
have experienced any Jon

gener;illy arc marryin g and having children later.
She said couples may also be choosi ng
to have fewer children so they will ha\•e
time and money for other things- ma tt"rial goods, Vdcations, ere.
Aud Ghem &gt;did fanuhcs. wtth yo ung
chi!Jn.:'n typic:l.lly c hoose co )Jvc in che
suburbs, noc rura l villages, because of easy
access to shopping and schools.
The southeastern Ohio vi llage of
Stafford has only one child under age 5
among its 86 residents. And a half dozen
other Ohio villages only have two residents under age 5, census figures showed.
Elgin is a small town 's small town.Th~re
are onl y six houses on the main dra g. and
one of them is for sale. A leisurely drive
through the vilbge takes seconds.

clc equipped with a sofc ty switch that di sables the windows, but
it was not in use, the Ross County sheriff said.
Destany Sprouse was pronmmced dead at Adena · R egional
Medical Center after she was taken there Wednesday night . An
autopsy showed that her air passages and the large w &lt;&gt;d s that
supplied blood to her brain had been shut ofT, said Michael
Ratliff, an investigator for the Russ County coron er's office .
"She basically was suffocated by the ca r window;· Ratliff said.
Sheriff R onald Nichols said no one is certain how the accident happened.

pry conditions for Sunday

•

Hounchange

Induction IJeld

in the number of babies born in Ohio in
the past 10 yearS, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures . !n 1990, children
. under 5 accounted for 7.2 percent of the
population. A decade larcr, they made up
only 6.6 percent.
.
Jack Dustin. dicector .of the Crnrcr for
Urban and Public Affairs at Wright State
University in Dayton, said th e decline
might be due to many Ohioans of childbearing age being drawn ro the West and
South .
" It has to do \vith the fact that young
people ace migrating ... for" employment
opportunities," Dustin said.
Rosemary Gliem, director of Ohio
State University's Data Center, which dissentinates detnographi c infortllanon, Sa1d
another f..1ctor may be h\.'Causc wom~n

Inc.

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department will
offer a childhood immutiization clinic on Tuesday from 1-7
p.m. at the office on East Memorial Drive.
_
The child's shot records must be provided, and each child
shpuld be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.

PORTSMOUTH - Shawnee State University chapter of
Phi Eta Sigma National Honor Society inducted 115 top students at its recent induction ceremony, including several from

GALLIPOLIS -A scrap tire collection day has been set by

fromP'qiA1

:/",

Plan clinic

•

ELGIN -The s;Yings in the vilbge
park sit strangely still these days, moving
only with the breeze.
With a population of 50, this northwest
Ohio fanning conuimnity is one of the
tiniest in the state. And it is also among villages with the fewest children under age 5.
There are only two: a 2- and 4-year-old.
That compares to 12 in 1990.
Summer Ellis, who is expecting in
August, is concerned about finding playmates for her baby.
''I'm probably going to have . co pby
with him • lot;' said Ellis, 22.
Elgin's declining baby · population
reflects the statewide trend.
There has been a 3.8 percent decceose

I• - lsman! •

GALLIPOLIS - French Art Colony, 530 FiBt Ave., is offerPOINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Mason County Public
ing a series of cooking classes startif!g June 16.
Library
in Point Pleasant will change hours of operation beginCarol Bates of Point Pleasant, W.Va .• is instructor for the
classes, geared for children ages 7-13. Hands-on sessions will ning Monday. Tlie library will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
int.roduce children to recipe reading, nutrition and other fac- Monday through Friday.
Evening hours will resume on Sept. 4. ·
toB in tb£ cooking process - set-up and clean-up.
On Monday, children may sign up for the summer reading
Childr?n. will bring home food made in class for all family
prognm,
which begins June.25.The prognm will offer fun and
members co taste.
The classes will be held Saturdays from 10-11:30 a.m. Tuition children will be eligible for prizes By reading. All events are free
is $15 per session. Classes include "Grandma's Favorites," June and open to the public.
16; "Desserts;"june 23; and "Picnic Style Food," June 30.
To pre-register, call the FAC at 446- 3834. Financial assistance
· is available. All FAC prognmming is offered through support of
'
'·
MASON, W.Va. - Mason Town Council has postponed its
the Ohio Arts Council.
June 12 meeting until June 14 at 7 p.m.
:·

Tire collection

Smokln1

BYJAMESHAASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GALLIPOLIS ·- Gallia County Health Department and
French Town Veterinary Clinic are offering a rabies vaccination
clinic on june 9 at the health department, 499 Jackson Pike.
Information about rabies will be free of charge. Vaccinations
will be $5 per animal (cat or dog). Bring previous vaccination
records, if av:ailiible.
All animals must be leashed.
For more information, call the health department at 4412018.

Cooking dasses

Shoemaker to speak June 14

Census: Babies not booming in Ohio

-~J..-.3

Advisory"issued

Toumame11t June 9

.•

Ohio Weather

Vaccinations set

GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by
the Gallia County Health Department at 499 Jackson Pike on ·
June 7 from 4-6 p.m.
,..J
.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Wal-Mart archery tourChildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by
a parent or legal guardian, and bring a current immunization nament has been set for June 9 from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. at
Turkey Run Arche,.Y, Sand Hill Road.
recoJ:ll with them.
Prizes and novelty shoots will be offered. T here are seven
Additional services, such as blood pressure checks and preg·
. nancy tests, will .be offered during the evening hours at the classes, with three ·prizes awarded in each class.
For
more
information.
call
304-675-40()0.
health department.

PageA3
Sunct.y. June :s. 2001

the Gallia County H~th Department for June 9 fiom 10 a.m. !he immediate area.
•
•
The
society
recognizes
academic
achiewmenn
of
student&gt;.
until 2:30 p.m. behind !he Gallia County Health Department,
To be a member. a smdcnt must have a minimum 3.5 gn~e
499 Jackson Pike.
Fees will be St for car tires, $2 for ttuck tires and 50 cents point avenge.
..
.
Area
students
inducted
were
Elinbeth
Brisker,
Oak
Hill;
for motorcycle, ATV and bwn tractor tires. There is a limit of
Jonda Carpenter,Waterloo; Michael Gillispie, FrazieB Bono~,
20 tires per load.
Fore more information, contact Zane A. Beegle, RS, at 441- W.Va.; Charles Miller, Rio Grmcle; Ashley Rawson, Pomt
Pleasant,W.Va.; and John Shriver, Gallipolis.
2943.

Tollonorc.rey

I

•

••
•

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'·
• •\0'1.1'"

•
•

•'

~

•

l

few was needed to restore
order. There were more than
800 arrem during the assaults,
store looting and arsons.
Officer Stephen Roach, 27,
told his union that he felt
threatened . by Thomas, who
was wanted on 14 misdemean or warrants and fled the
officer by running into a dark
alley.
Roach faces trial later this
year on misdemeanor charges
of negligent . homicide and
obstructing official business.
Thomas' mother, Angela
Leisure, said she hoped the
march would help Cincinnati
recover from the unrest.
"I have strong faith in this
march "because it promotes
peace;· Leisure said. "With
everybody working together,
that can happen, especially if
you do it all through prayer."
The march had been
planned for weeks. Organizers
said it would include dozens
of monitors along the route

check.
Police said they hoped the
march would be peaceful, but
were prepared to deal with
any problems chat occurred.
There was concern people
from outside the city could
cause trouble.
Some of the protesters
marching Saturday have filed
a lawsuit · in federal court,
accusing Cincinnati police of
shooting them with pelletfilled crowd control beanbags
for no reason "during the April
riots.

andmuch motBI
For fast, friendly
service on your
next loan, see
Peggy Watson
In Gallipolis.

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Gallipolis

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~-~unb_av...;..._'~im_e._-,_,_•m_•ttt_ _ _....:W=-=.. .:::!!e~S!:.,;t~Vi::...:lflt__n.;;;;.;i;.;;.,;a;.;;;.·__ _ _ __ .;. s·~·.,.; .; ;:.~;,.....;,; ,;,;!;. ; .:~·~!~
----:sunday,
Special session called for flood relief
.~:nw7.:es~
· t~Vml~rg:;oln::-;l~a~w~e~at:::h~e~r

,

June 3

•

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.: AccuWealheP forecast for da

conditions, low ·

lempet'atures

BY RAIIDY COI.IMM

will deal with legislative redistricting and
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
resolving differences over the state's new
CHAIUESTON - The Legislature family court setup in sessions later !his
will meet later this month to appropriate year, he said.
. money for flood relief and higher educa"The Legislature was in ses.&lt;ion for 70
tion, a Wise administration official said days, and most of these folks need to make
Friday.
·
a living. The governor at this point does-The special legislative session will · be . n't feel !he need to call the Legislature in
held in conjunction with interim ·com- to deal with contentious issues;' Burdetre
mittee mcetin~ scheduled for June 10- said.
12, said Keith Burdette, Gov. Bob Wise'$
"The issues that will bring a lot of
legislative director.
·debate- such as family court - can wait
"We're not yet sure which day it will for another day. Right now. let's deal with
take place, but it will be sometime during things everyone agrees on."
the June interims. And we expect it to be
Wise administration officials are still ttya short special session," Burdette said.
ing to determine how much money will
The special session issue will likely be· be needed to pay for flood relief, Burdette
quick because !he issues wiD be noncon- said.
troversial, Burdette said. The Legislature
Between $1 million and $2 million is

Glllllpolll, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio

Point Plnnnt, W.Va.

OttO

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Charlet w. Govey
Publl8her

R. Shawn Lewla
ll1neglng EdHor
l*ne~HIII

Larry Boyer
Advertl•lng M8nllger

Conlloll•r

"""",.,;,. - - -' n., _ _

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-toonr. - · - · -

(

OUR VIEW

_&amp;~loy

Ren

'•

•

..

The Bush administration has released its proposal for a
national energy policy in the wake of continuing concerns
about the cost and · availability of gas, electtic and other
resources that tnake the world go around,
Critics believe the plan still allows for a dependence on oil.
This is not surprising since the president comes from an oilproducing state.
But in reality, with global society and economics geared to
oil usage, there won't be a change in that situation until the
world becomes less dependent on fossil fuels. When that will
happen •.if ever, we don't know.
What is positive is that coal has a place in the plan - perhaps not as big a role as some fol.ks would like, but it's there.
· The coal industry's backers tell us we have centuries of coal
reserves left in the U.S, At least !hat's one advantage we have
ovet OPEC. But while no way has been found to make coal
into auto fuel, it does provide a ready source for generating
electricity.
In California and New York, that notion may be too little,
·too late given the problems customers have e;q,erienced and
will continue to see this summer. But the scramble to provide
power to those states has propelled coal back into a competi. tive and profitable position. ,
If we're to cheer anything about the energy situation, it's put
miners and those who support the industry back to work. The
outlook for the future may be brightet if the White House plan·
allows coal a larger share of the solution.
Since coal is something we seem to have in abundance and technology allows it to be burned cleanet than it once was
- there is reason to believe the resurgence may continue. For
West Virginia and southern Ohio, which have looked to coal as
an economic factor for almost two centuries, !hat's good news.
Coal may never .reach the heights it once held as an energy
source, but as one that can b~ readily renewed,, we can take
some comfort in knowing it will be !here when needed.

Today is Sunday, June 3, the 154th day of 2001. There are
211 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 3, 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat:' by Ernest
Lawrence Thayer, was first published, in !he San Francisco
Daily Examiner. .
On this date:
In 1621, the Dutch West India Company received a charter
for New Netherlands- now known~ New York.
In 1808,Jefferson Davis- the first and only president of the
Confederacy - was born in Christian County, Ky.
In 1937, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the
British ·throne, married Wallis Warfield Simpson in Monts,
France.
In 1948, the 200-inch reflecting telescope at the Palomar
Mountain Observatory in California was dedicated.
In 1963, Pope john XXIII died at the age of81. He was succeeded by Pope Paul VI.
In 1965, asttonaut Edward White became the first American
to ·~walk" in space, during the flight .of Gemini 4,
In 1968, pop artist Andy Warhol was shot and critically
wounded in his New York film studio, known as The Factory,
byValerie Solanas, an actress and self-styled militant feminist.
In 1981, Pope John Paul II left a Rome hO!pital and
returned to the Vatican three weeks after the attempt on his life.
In 1989, Chinese army troops began their sweep of Beijing
to crush student-led pro-democracy demonstrations.
In 1989, Iran's spiritualleader,Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, died.
Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II, visiting the Polish city of
Kielce, indirectly criticized abortion, appealing to his listenen
to "prevent further destruction of the Polish family." The
. Mount Unzen volcano in southern Japan erupted, killing about
40 people.
Five years ago: The FBI pulled the plug on electricity at the ·
Freemen ranch in Montana in an attempt to persuade the
occupants to negotiate an end to the 71-day-old standoff. During joint war games in the Pacific, a Japanese destroyer mistakenly shot down an American attack plane; rwo U.S. Navy aviators ejected safely.
One year ago: President Clinton held talks in Moscow with
Russian President Vladimir Putin on topics including missile
defense. Former Treasury Secretary and onetime "energy czar"
William Simon died in Santa Barbara, Cali£, at age 72. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 76. Musidan Boots
· Randolph is 74. TV producer Chuck Barris is 72. Rock singer
Ian Hunter (MottThe Hoople) is 62. Musician Too Slim (Riders in the Sky) is 53. Singer Suzi Quatto is 51. Singer Deneice
·
·
Williams is 50.
)

Rain

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.·.••• W.Va. man gets death penalty
·.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PAEBB

.

5nowetS T-storms

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TODAY IN HISTORY

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Coal gets share of solution
to energy shortages
t

C 2001 AccuWelllher, Inc.

,,

eral Hospital vorcd 64-21 on Friday to reject representation by bond on a first-degree sexual assault charge.
the United Steelworkers of America.
. Zakaib denied both requ ests.
Hospital officials praise d the vote. .
.

'fl k'
t d
a tng a s an
Dear Editor:
The recent media coverage of the
settlement of the election complaint
Ted Strickland filed against me during
last year's congressional election has
deprived your readers of the full set of
facts. The following information will
hopefully set the record straight.
Nearly two years ago, my represen- .
tative in Congress, Ted StriCkland,
embarrassed me and other Sixth District residents when he voted "present" on House Resolution 107. This
resolution condemned an article published in a journal of the American
Psychological Association suggesting
that "sexual relations between an ·
adult and a willing child may not be
harmful 1~ the child."
.
While the House of Represenlalives voted 355-0 in . favor of House
Resolution 107, 13 representatives,
including Ted Strickland, voted "present."
Throughout my campaign for
Congress, my staff and volunteers distributed thousands of "pink slips"
· informing the voters of Mr. Strickland's inexcusable vote on this resolu·tion. In an obvious attetnpt to grab
headlines less than a \\reek before the
election, Strickland announced to the
media that he had filed a complaint
against me with the Ohio Elections
Commission.

(I found out later that the complaint
To this day, the campaign stands by
wasn't filed until long after the elec- the Statement, and I stand by it also.
tion.)
Some have questioned why I settled
The complaint alleged that I made the case. In a perfect world I have
all h
a false campaign statement in a letter would fought the complaint
t e
that was sent by me to campaign vol- way to the .United States Supreme
unteers (not to the general public). In Court. However, my attorney fees
the letter, I stated very clearly my . were mounting quickly, and, despite
opinion of Ted Strickland's ·failure to my personal desire to continue the
take a stand against child molestation case and defend our position, I ultiby voting "present" on House Reso- mately decided that it was not fair to
lution 107. I. stand by that letter.
ask my campaign supporters to pay to
Initially, in exchange for dropping defend a frivolous lawsuit when I was
the complaint, Ted Strickland presented the opportunity to resolve
demanded that I publicly apologize it as I did.
for making the statements in that let- · Our founding fathers envisioned a
ter. I refused, standing by the state- first Amendment that would not
ment.
. •
. .
only prohibit restraints on . public
Apparendy realizmg the friVolity of debate on political issues, . but also
continuing to pursue his complaint, encourage public debate.
Strickland then offered to dismiss the
It is a sad day in America when
complaint against me personally . in politicians like Ted Strickland (and
exchange for my campa~gn making pathetically biased bureaucrats like
what essentially amounted to, in the Ohio Elections Commission member
context of a criminal case, a plea of Judith Shearer) attempt to squelch
"no contest," with a specific request our right to ~riticize their actions,
from Strickland that no public repri- especially 'when their actions involve
mand be issued by the Elections something as serious as failing to conCommission.
demn child molestation.
Despite the obvious favorability of · Mr. Strickland has said that he
theie terms, I was only willing to leaves me in the uncomfortable posiagree to them under one condition cion of having to live with my own
that the . setdement specifically conscience. My question is, where
state · that my campaign wa~ not was Ted Strickland's conscience when
admitting any liability for .the state- he voted on HR 107?
ments about Strickland's voting
Michael Azinger
record.
Marietta ·

'HARDBALL'

First teacher Cheney has blown the test
BY CHill MA'nHIWI

out with !he Russians and all ~e rest of where his political' problems lie. He
those countries who want to keep the needs to focus on the wallflowers as well
ABM treaty.
as the Big Men on Campus. He needs to
In congressional relations, the First stop sending "Dick Cheney" to t,alk to
Teacher puts forti) the same method: our senators, Hagel urgently advises, and go
W?-Y or the highway. If you can ram a taX. himself, armed personally with the polibill. thro.ugh Congress, you do ttl If you . cy knowledge to do the job. .
can. do 1~ once, you ca~ ~o 11 agam and
Hap he fathomed Jim Jeffords' deepagam, wtth energy, ~trategtc defense, and felt committnent to renewable energy
whatever. else you U need to wm m sources, Bush might have connected
2004.
.
. .
. .
wit!). the wavering Vermonter.
The defecnon ofJtm Jeffords dtsplays
Perhaps because he didn't, the New
the weakness m the Cheney method. It Englander who recently comprised the
ts all push and n? pull. It e;q,lotts the zeal party's leftward flank now sits with the
of the countrys . conservative base but Democrats.The quintet of GOP moderfails to lure recrmts.
h
· 1 d d a rd
A goo d teach er wou ld h ave sh own S
ates t at fonce
me
u e Jeuo
Ar1r.en
p
. 1 s,Ch
1 .
the new president his need for remedial fe~~r ~ el~nd ~~Ia, bnc~ n
a.e~
1
0
0
work. One reason candidate George W.
e . s an • . y~pla nowe an

The atrentive parent spould always
know the teacher. That's especially ttue
when the student is president of the
United States.
So let's talk about Dick Cheney and
what tie's been teaching our boy.
· fir assignment .was to tutt;&gt;r
y ung Ge' e on whom to pick for his
vice presid t. He taught him the evils
of picking Republican moderate who
was either pro-choice or anti-Star Wars.
Relishing the Jesson, Bush picked someone who was pleasandy pro-life and
fanatically pro-SDI.
.
Having assumed the VP's job. Cheney
· d h"ts more v1"tal posttton
· · as
has retame
First Teacher. From that catbird's seat, his
influence spans as wide as his curriculum. His classes run the gamut from Bu~h lost the New Hampshire primary
defense to energy to How To Maintain last year was that he failed to talk subGood Relations With Congress.
. stance with the voters. My own fifthStarting- with Proper Vice Presid~ntial grade ·daughter noticed that after watchSelection, the lesson plans have been inS' him speak one Sunday afternoon. .
predictable. Bush is . taught to rely on . Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska critiDick Cheney for his thinking, his strate-. cized Bush last week for doing the same
gy, his counsel. Indeed, the vice president with members of the Senate, trying to
is to be his prime surrogate.
woo them with good ole boy. malarkey.
Cheney says to focus the Bush ener- Instead of mastering the material, Hagel
gy program on more drilling, more says, Bush relies on nicknaming and
refineries, more pipelines and less whin- towel-snapping.
.
ing from !he EPA. Bush proves the perThe charm that worked so well on
fect student, exclaiming with enthusiasm part-time Texas legislators in Austin does
what he finds written in his modest set not work .so well in Washingt(/n.
of notes.
To build support among _tlle fullCheney teaches the ideology of time, year-round career professionals in
strategic defense with the same gustQ. the U.S.' Senate, the president needs to
The United States should simply duke it dig deep enough into !he issues to know

Su~~ ~ollmsf0~M~ne,ts now ~ qua~et.

. e oss 0 t e enate maJonty 0 en
a timely lesson on the weakness of th~
Cheney method J~St as the Democrats
loss ~f Congress m 1994 was a t~ely
warnmg on _the weakness of the Htllary
Rodha~ Chnton method ofhealth care.
Each rehed too greatly ?n .the presu~ed
mental and moral supenonty of the proponent.
The question !hat lingered during
this week of Bush's long-overdue visit to ·
California is whether the student president has absorbed it.
(Chris Matthews, a 'l')alional/y syndicated
columttist for tlte San Francisco Cltronicle, is
host &lt;if"Hardball" on CNBC and !rfSNBC
cqble channels. The 1999 edirion &lt;if "Hard·
ball" was published by Toucmto11e Books.)

Sl Mary's targets strokes

"The 'no union ' vote is good news for our patie-ntS and for

the community we serve," Chief Executive Officer Patsy Hardy
53~

.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Texas law left jurors only two
"Working together as a team is dearly what is best for our
.·options for convicted murderer Robert Springsteen: life in patients. I'm pleased that the nursing staff has come to this' deci.prison or death by lethal injection.
'
Sion."
- They chose death.
Springsteen, 26, was sentenced Friday to die for the shooting .
death of 13-year-old Amy Ayers during a robbery that erupted
·
CHARLESTON (AP)- ScateTreasurer John Perdue is coninto carnage on Dec. 6., 1991.
Ayers, Eliza Hope Thomas, 17, and sisters Jennifer and Sara!). sidering•whether the title U.S. Representative fits him.
Harbison. 17 and 15, all were killed at the shop. The girl&gt; were · Perdue said he will decide by late summer whether to seek
bound, gagged and shot in the head before the store was set on the Democratic nomination for the 2nd Congressional District
fire.
seat now held by Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va .
Capito narrowly defeated Democrat Jim Humphreys last year
to replace Gov. Bo.b Wise in Congress. Humphreys, who spent
more than $6 million on his campaign, has already said he
KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - University of Tennessee Presi- inte.nds to. run ~gain.
'dentJ.Wade Gilley resigned Friday after just two years in.office,
Although Capito has also said she intends to seek re-election,
'citing health and personal reasons.
"I haven't really put much thought into who will run against
.. Last week, Johnnie Amonette, vice chairwoman of the UT me."
·Board of Trustees, sent a memo to fellow trustees to quash
rumors that Gilley planned to resign.
But Friday, she read a letter that Gilley sent to the board saying he had decided over the past couple of weeks that he wantMOUNDSVILLE (AP) - Relatives of an 18-year-old
ed to resign.
Ca\fleron woman who died last week of meningitis say their
-. "As .you know;for the past several months,! have been under loss is not a threat to public health.
"My other daughter works at a bank, and I don't want peo'a doctor's care for several medical conditions and now find it
'necessary to resign my position," Gilley wrote .
ple thinking that they're going to get sick and die because she
touches their money," said Lou Ann Lemmons, the mother of
Lauren Jo Lemmons, who died of bacterial meningitis May 24 .
··~
,,
The Marshall Counry Health Department also is trying to
PRINCETON, (AP) - It wasn't your everyday heist: Broa~ downplay fears .
· "People ne'ed tc:i' understanq that there are different cypes of
cdaylight. i;'Jo money. No bank vaults. No ·guns.
But for rwo determined dognappers, the Mercer County ,meningitis," Marshall Co.unty Health Administrator Ronda
. ,Animal Shelter had the loot they were looking for- their pit Francis said Friday.
,bulls.. .
'
"They just walked in, went straight to the back and opened
the cages," said Terry Dobbins, the shelter's director and coun' ty humane officer.
MONTGOMERY (AP) -The cause of a fire that caused $1
· "One male grabbed one··dog by the throat and the other male million in damage to three Montgomery businesses and several
apartntents remains classified as undetermined.
-grabbed the ocher dog and put it under his arm."

Perdue Casts eye on Congress

OUR READERS' VIEWS

available for use this fiscal year. which ends
June 30, administration officials said .
Beyond that, the state would have to tap
into its Rainy Day Fund. About $79 million is available through the fund, but the
Legislature must approve all withdrawals.
The Legislature also is looking for
between $3 million and S4 million for
colleges and universities, Senate President
Earl Ray Tomblin, D-Logan, said.
Lawnukers passed a bill in April that
appropriated $756 raises for state employees. Legislative leaders have said they were
under the impression employees at colleges and universities were not included in
the bill, but Wise said those employees
should be considered.
The Legislature hopes to provide
money for the raises, Tomblin has said.

Gilley resign$ at Tennessee

HUNTINGTON (AP) - St. Mary's Hos pital has become
the first facility in West Virginia to offer Operation Scroke in an
effort to educate the public about strokes .
The event, scheduled for I p.m. co 5 p.m. Monday,'is pan of
a national initiative with the Ameri can Stroke Association, a

division of the American Hean Association .
The public education campaign will emphasize how to
reduce the risks of strokes. Special emergency personnel training wiU also be offered.
Hospital officials ·say only about 25 percent of the 'public
know the signs of a stroke. Those 'signs include : numbness or
weakness on one side of the body; difficulty speaking, seeing or
walking; or a sudden severe headache.

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Family says not to fear

TAWNEY STUDIO
424SECOHDAYE., GALLIPOLIS

Officers arreSt docm_ap SUSpects

·

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•

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'

"&lt;The

Joint Implant
· · Center .

·No cause found for blaze

~~unless we can get tnort! infonuation we consider this a
1

'Engineers eye bridge move

closed . investigation," Assistant State Fire Marshal Anthony
Domingo said Thursday.
The fire started about 2:30 a.m. April 28 in the ,Fountain
Building.
Montgomery firefighters rescued seven people trapped in the
burning building using aerial ladders. No one was seriously
inJured. ·

, MILTON (AP) - Engineers hope that neither telephone
li.nes or branches will keep them from moving a 125-year-old
_covered bridge Monday to its new resting place. ·
The 14-foot-wide, 115-foot-long bridge is being moved to
;the West Virginia Pumpkin Festival grounds where it will even. tually span a lake.
The original arch and trusses, which have the most historic
den~ecl
·.value, will be loaded onto a flatbed trailer and pushed backward
CHARLESTON (AP) -A Cabell Counry man suspected in
,along the one-mile trek. After it arrives at it's new home, the
a string of rapes in Kanawha, Cabell and Putnam counties won't
bridge will be renovated.
·
The structure had been closed to traffic for a number of years be getting out ·of jail anytime soon.
Cha.rles Edward Wood, 39, of
and was moved off it's original site in 1997.
Milton , asked Kanawha County
Circuit Judge Paul · Zakaib on
Thursday to set bond on a kidHURRICANE (AP) - Registered nurses at Putnam Gen- napping charge and w reduce

Bond

for rape susped

For Initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we nff•·••
tiours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
pine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
·

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, f-\ay 25.

Surgeons, Inc.

Call (614) 221~6331

for an appointment.

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

Putnam nurses reject union·

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----:sunday,
Special session called for flood relief
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June 3

•

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.: AccuWealheP forecast for da

conditions, low ·

lempet'atures

BY RAIIDY COI.IMM

will deal with legislative redistricting and
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
resolving differences over the state's new
CHAIUESTON - The Legislature family court setup in sessions later !his
will meet later this month to appropriate year, he said.
. money for flood relief and higher educa"The Legislature was in ses.&lt;ion for 70
tion, a Wise administration official said days, and most of these folks need to make
Friday.
·
a living. The governor at this point does-The special legislative session will · be . n't feel !he need to call the Legislature in
held in conjunction with interim ·com- to deal with contentious issues;' Burdetre
mittee mcetin~ scheduled for June 10- said.
12, said Keith Burdette, Gov. Bob Wise'$
"The issues that will bring a lot of
legislative director.
·debate- such as family court - can wait
"We're not yet sure which day it will for another day. Right now. let's deal with
take place, but it will be sometime during things everyone agrees on."
the June interims. And we expect it to be
Wise administration officials are still ttya short special session," Burdette said.
ing to determine how much money will
The special session issue will likely be· be needed to pay for flood relief, Burdette
quick because !he issues wiD be noncon- said.
troversial, Burdette said. The Legislature
Between $1 million and $2 million is

Glllllpolll, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio

Point Plnnnt, W.Va.

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Charlet w. Govey
Publl8her

R. Shawn Lewla
ll1neglng EdHor
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OUR VIEW

_&amp;~loy

Ren

'•

•

..

The Bush administration has released its proposal for a
national energy policy in the wake of continuing concerns
about the cost and · availability of gas, electtic and other
resources that tnake the world go around,
Critics believe the plan still allows for a dependence on oil.
This is not surprising since the president comes from an oilproducing state.
But in reality, with global society and economics geared to
oil usage, there won't be a change in that situation until the
world becomes less dependent on fossil fuels. When that will
happen •.if ever, we don't know.
What is positive is that coal has a place in the plan - perhaps not as big a role as some fol.ks would like, but it's there.
· The coal industry's backers tell us we have centuries of coal
reserves left in the U.S, At least !hat's one advantage we have
ovet OPEC. But while no way has been found to make coal
into auto fuel, it does provide a ready source for generating
electricity.
In California and New York, that notion may be too little,
·too late given the problems customers have e;q,erienced and
will continue to see this summer. But the scramble to provide
power to those states has propelled coal back into a competi. tive and profitable position. ,
If we're to cheer anything about the energy situation, it's put
miners and those who support the industry back to work. The
outlook for the future may be brightet if the White House plan·
allows coal a larger share of the solution.
Since coal is something we seem to have in abundance and technology allows it to be burned cleanet than it once was
- there is reason to believe the resurgence may continue. For
West Virginia and southern Ohio, which have looked to coal as
an economic factor for almost two centuries, !hat's good news.
Coal may never .reach the heights it once held as an energy
source, but as one that can b~ readily renewed,, we can take
some comfort in knowing it will be !here when needed.

Today is Sunday, June 3, the 154th day of 2001. There are
211 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 3, 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat:' by Ernest
Lawrence Thayer, was first published, in !he San Francisco
Daily Examiner. .
On this date:
In 1621, the Dutch West India Company received a charter
for New Netherlands- now known~ New York.
In 1808,Jefferson Davis- the first and only president of the
Confederacy - was born in Christian County, Ky.
In 1937, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the
British ·throne, married Wallis Warfield Simpson in Monts,
France.
In 1948, the 200-inch reflecting telescope at the Palomar
Mountain Observatory in California was dedicated.
In 1963, Pope john XXIII died at the age of81. He was succeeded by Pope Paul VI.
In 1965, asttonaut Edward White became the first American
to ·~walk" in space, during the flight .of Gemini 4,
In 1968, pop artist Andy Warhol was shot and critically
wounded in his New York film studio, known as The Factory,
byValerie Solanas, an actress and self-styled militant feminist.
In 1981, Pope John Paul II left a Rome hO!pital and
returned to the Vatican three weeks after the attempt on his life.
In 1989, Chinese army troops began their sweep of Beijing
to crush student-led pro-democracy demonstrations.
In 1989, Iran's spiritualleader,Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, died.
Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II, visiting the Polish city of
Kielce, indirectly criticized abortion, appealing to his listenen
to "prevent further destruction of the Polish family." The
. Mount Unzen volcano in southern Japan erupted, killing about
40 people.
Five years ago: The FBI pulled the plug on electricity at the ·
Freemen ranch in Montana in an attempt to persuade the
occupants to negotiate an end to the 71-day-old standoff. During joint war games in the Pacific, a Japanese destroyer mistakenly shot down an American attack plane; rwo U.S. Navy aviators ejected safely.
One year ago: President Clinton held talks in Moscow with
Russian President Vladimir Putin on topics including missile
defense. Former Treasury Secretary and onetime "energy czar"
William Simon died in Santa Barbara, Cali£, at age 72. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 76. Musidan Boots
· Randolph is 74. TV producer Chuck Barris is 72. Rock singer
Ian Hunter (MottThe Hoople) is 62. Musician Too Slim (Riders in the Sky) is 53. Singer Suzi Quatto is 51. Singer Deneice
·
·
Williams is 50.
)

Rain

Funts

'

Snow

let

.·.••• W.Va. man gets death penalty
·.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PAEBB

.

5nowetS T-storms

•

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Coal gets share of solution
to energy shortages
t

C 2001 AccuWelllher, Inc.

,,

eral Hospital vorcd 64-21 on Friday to reject representation by bond on a first-degree sexual assault charge.
the United Steelworkers of America.
. Zakaib denied both requ ests.
Hospital officials praise d the vote. .
.

'fl k'
t d
a tng a s an
Dear Editor:
The recent media coverage of the
settlement of the election complaint
Ted Strickland filed against me during
last year's congressional election has
deprived your readers of the full set of
facts. The following information will
hopefully set the record straight.
Nearly two years ago, my represen- .
tative in Congress, Ted StriCkland,
embarrassed me and other Sixth District residents when he voted "present" on House Resolution 107. This
resolution condemned an article published in a journal of the American
Psychological Association suggesting
that "sexual relations between an ·
adult and a willing child may not be
harmful 1~ the child."
.
While the House of Represenlalives voted 355-0 in . favor of House
Resolution 107, 13 representatives,
including Ted Strickland, voted "present."
Throughout my campaign for
Congress, my staff and volunteers distributed thousands of "pink slips"
· informing the voters of Mr. Strickland's inexcusable vote on this resolu·tion. In an obvious attetnpt to grab
headlines less than a \\reek before the
election, Strickland announced to the
media that he had filed a complaint
against me with the Ohio Elections
Commission.

(I found out later that the complaint
To this day, the campaign stands by
wasn't filed until long after the elec- the Statement, and I stand by it also.
tion.)
Some have questioned why I settled
The complaint alleged that I made the case. In a perfect world I have
all h
a false campaign statement in a letter would fought the complaint
t e
that was sent by me to campaign vol- way to the .United States Supreme
unteers (not to the general public). In Court. However, my attorney fees
the letter, I stated very clearly my . were mounting quickly, and, despite
opinion of Ted Strickland's ·failure to my personal desire to continue the
take a stand against child molestation case and defend our position, I ultiby voting "present" on House Reso- mately decided that it was not fair to
lution 107. I. stand by that letter.
ask my campaign supporters to pay to
Initially, in exchange for dropping defend a frivolous lawsuit when I was
the complaint, Ted Strickland presented the opportunity to resolve
demanded that I publicly apologize it as I did.
for making the statements in that let- · Our founding fathers envisioned a
ter. I refused, standing by the state- first Amendment that would not
ment.
. •
. .
only prohibit restraints on . public
Apparendy realizmg the friVolity of debate on political issues, . but also
continuing to pursue his complaint, encourage public debate.
Strickland then offered to dismiss the
It is a sad day in America when
complaint against me personally . in politicians like Ted Strickland (and
exchange for my campa~gn making pathetically biased bureaucrats like
what essentially amounted to, in the Ohio Elections Commission member
context of a criminal case, a plea of Judith Shearer) attempt to squelch
"no contest," with a specific request our right to ~riticize their actions,
from Strickland that no public repri- especially 'when their actions involve
mand be issued by the Elections something as serious as failing to conCommission.
demn child molestation.
Despite the obvious favorability of · Mr. Strickland has said that he
theie terms, I was only willing to leaves me in the uncomfortable posiagree to them under one condition cion of having to live with my own
that the . setdement specifically conscience. My question is, where
state · that my campaign wa~ not was Ted Strickland's conscience when
admitting any liability for .the state- he voted on HR 107?
ments about Strickland's voting
Michael Azinger
record.
Marietta ·

'HARDBALL'

First teacher Cheney has blown the test
BY CHill MA'nHIWI

out with !he Russians and all ~e rest of where his political' problems lie. He
those countries who want to keep the needs to focus on the wallflowers as well
ABM treaty.
as the Big Men on Campus. He needs to
In congressional relations, the First stop sending "Dick Cheney" to t,alk to
Teacher puts forti) the same method: our senators, Hagel urgently advises, and go
W?-Y or the highway. If you can ram a taX. himself, armed personally with the polibill. thro.ugh Congress, you do ttl If you . cy knowledge to do the job. .
can. do 1~ once, you ca~ ~o 11 agam and
Hap he fathomed Jim Jeffords' deepagam, wtth energy, ~trategtc defense, and felt committnent to renewable energy
whatever. else you U need to wm m sources, Bush might have connected
2004.
.
. .
. .
wit!). the wavering Vermonter.
The defecnon ofJtm Jeffords dtsplays
Perhaps because he didn't, the New
the weakness m the Cheney method. It Englander who recently comprised the
ts all push and n? pull. It e;q,lotts the zeal party's leftward flank now sits with the
of the countrys . conservative base but Democrats.The quintet of GOP moderfails to lure recrmts.
h
· 1 d d a rd
A goo d teach er wou ld h ave sh own S
ates t at fonce
me
u e Jeuo
Ar1r.en
p
. 1 s,Ch
1 .
the new president his need for remedial fe~~r ~ el~nd ~~Ia, bnc~ n
a.e~
1
0
0
work. One reason candidate George W.
e . s an • . y~pla nowe an

The atrentive parent spould always
know the teacher. That's especially ttue
when the student is president of the
United States.
So let's talk about Dick Cheney and
what tie's been teaching our boy.
· fir assignment .was to tutt;&gt;r
y ung Ge' e on whom to pick for his
vice presid t. He taught him the evils
of picking Republican moderate who
was either pro-choice or anti-Star Wars.
Relishing the Jesson, Bush picked someone who was pleasandy pro-life and
fanatically pro-SDI.
.
Having assumed the VP's job. Cheney
· d h"ts more v1"tal posttton
· · as
has retame
First Teacher. From that catbird's seat, his
influence spans as wide as his curriculum. His classes run the gamut from Bu~h lost the New Hampshire primary
defense to energy to How To Maintain last year was that he failed to talk subGood Relations With Congress.
. stance with the voters. My own fifthStarting- with Proper Vice Presid~ntial grade ·daughter noticed that after watchSelection, the lesson plans have been inS' him speak one Sunday afternoon. .
predictable. Bush is . taught to rely on . Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska critiDick Cheney for his thinking, his strate-. cized Bush last week for doing the same
gy, his counsel. Indeed, the vice president with members of the Senate, trying to
is to be his prime surrogate.
woo them with good ole boy. malarkey.
Cheney says to focus the Bush ener- Instead of mastering the material, Hagel
gy program on more drilling, more says, Bush relies on nicknaming and
refineries, more pipelines and less whin- towel-snapping.
.
ing from !he EPA. Bush proves the perThe charm that worked so well on
fect student, exclaiming with enthusiasm part-time Texas legislators in Austin does
what he finds written in his modest set not work .so well in Washingt(/n.
of notes.
To build support among _tlle fullCheney teaches the ideology of time, year-round career professionals in
strategic defense with the same gustQ. the U.S.' Senate, the president needs to
The United States should simply duke it dig deep enough into !he issues to know

Su~~ ~ollmsf0~M~ne,ts now ~ qua~et.

. e oss 0 t e enate maJonty 0 en
a timely lesson on the weakness of th~
Cheney method J~St as the Democrats
loss ~f Congress m 1994 was a t~ely
warnmg on _the weakness of the Htllary
Rodha~ Chnton method ofhealth care.
Each rehed too greatly ?n .the presu~ed
mental and moral supenonty of the proponent.
The question !hat lingered during
this week of Bush's long-overdue visit to ·
California is whether the student president has absorbed it.
(Chris Matthews, a 'l')alional/y syndicated
columttist for tlte San Francisco Cltronicle, is
host &lt;if"Hardball" on CNBC and !rfSNBC
cqble channels. The 1999 edirion &lt;if "Hard·
ball" was published by Toucmto11e Books.)

Sl Mary's targets strokes

"The 'no union ' vote is good news for our patie-ntS and for

the community we serve," Chief Executive Officer Patsy Hardy
53~

.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Texas law left jurors only two
"Working together as a team is dearly what is best for our
.·options for convicted murderer Robert Springsteen: life in patients. I'm pleased that the nursing staff has come to this' deci.prison or death by lethal injection.
'
Sion."
- They chose death.
Springsteen, 26, was sentenced Friday to die for the shooting .
death of 13-year-old Amy Ayers during a robbery that erupted
·
CHARLESTON (AP)- ScateTreasurer John Perdue is coninto carnage on Dec. 6., 1991.
Ayers, Eliza Hope Thomas, 17, and sisters Jennifer and Sara!). sidering•whether the title U.S. Representative fits him.
Harbison. 17 and 15, all were killed at the shop. The girl&gt; were · Perdue said he will decide by late summer whether to seek
bound, gagged and shot in the head before the store was set on the Democratic nomination for the 2nd Congressional District
fire.
seat now held by Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va .
Capito narrowly defeated Democrat Jim Humphreys last year
to replace Gov. Bo.b Wise in Congress. Humphreys, who spent
more than $6 million on his campaign, has already said he
KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - University of Tennessee Presi- inte.nds to. run ~gain.
'dentJ.Wade Gilley resigned Friday after just two years in.office,
Although Capito has also said she intends to seek re-election,
'citing health and personal reasons.
"I haven't really put much thought into who will run against
.. Last week, Johnnie Amonette, vice chairwoman of the UT me."
·Board of Trustees, sent a memo to fellow trustees to quash
rumors that Gilley planned to resign.
But Friday, she read a letter that Gilley sent to the board saying he had decided over the past couple of weeks that he wantMOUNDSVILLE (AP) - Relatives of an 18-year-old
ed to resign.
Ca\fleron woman who died last week of meningitis say their
-. "As .you know;for the past several months,! have been under loss is not a threat to public health.
"My other daughter works at a bank, and I don't want peo'a doctor's care for several medical conditions and now find it
'necessary to resign my position," Gilley wrote .
ple thinking that they're going to get sick and die because she
touches their money," said Lou Ann Lemmons, the mother of
Lauren Jo Lemmons, who died of bacterial meningitis May 24 .
··~
,,
The Marshall Counry Health Department also is trying to
PRINCETON, (AP) - It wasn't your everyday heist: Broa~ downplay fears .
· "People ne'ed tc:i' understanq that there are different cypes of
cdaylight. i;'Jo money. No bank vaults. No ·guns.
But for rwo determined dognappers, the Mercer County ,meningitis," Marshall Co.unty Health Administrator Ronda
. ,Animal Shelter had the loot they were looking for- their pit Francis said Friday.
,bulls.. .
'
"They just walked in, went straight to the back and opened
the cages," said Terry Dobbins, the shelter's director and coun' ty humane officer.
MONTGOMERY (AP) -The cause of a fire that caused $1
· "One male grabbed one··dog by the throat and the other male million in damage to three Montgomery businesses and several
apartntents remains classified as undetermined.
-grabbed the ocher dog and put it under his arm."

Perdue Casts eye on Congress

OUR READERS' VIEWS

available for use this fiscal year. which ends
June 30, administration officials said .
Beyond that, the state would have to tap
into its Rainy Day Fund. About $79 million is available through the fund, but the
Legislature must approve all withdrawals.
The Legislature also is looking for
between $3 million and S4 million for
colleges and universities, Senate President
Earl Ray Tomblin, D-Logan, said.
Lawnukers passed a bill in April that
appropriated $756 raises for state employees. Legislative leaders have said they were
under the impression employees at colleges and universities were not included in
the bill, but Wise said those employees
should be considered.
The Legislature hopes to provide
money for the raises, Tomblin has said.

Gilley resign$ at Tennessee

HUNTINGTON (AP) - St. Mary's Hos pital has become
the first facility in West Virginia to offer Operation Scroke in an
effort to educate the public about strokes .
The event, scheduled for I p.m. co 5 p.m. Monday,'is pan of
a national initiative with the Ameri can Stroke Association, a

division of the American Hean Association .
The public education campaign will emphasize how to
reduce the risks of strokes. Special emergency personnel training wiU also be offered.
Hospital officials ·say only about 25 percent of the 'public
know the signs of a stroke. Those 'signs include : numbness or
weakness on one side of the body; difficulty speaking, seeing or
walking; or a sudden severe headache.

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Family says not to fear

TAWNEY STUDIO
424SECOHDAYE., GALLIPOLIS

Officers arreSt docm_ap SUSpects

·

'I

,

•

..

'

"&lt;The

Joint Implant
· · Center .

·No cause found for blaze

~~unless we can get tnort! infonuation we consider this a
1

'Engineers eye bridge move

closed . investigation," Assistant State Fire Marshal Anthony
Domingo said Thursday.
The fire started about 2:30 a.m. April 28 in the ,Fountain
Building.
Montgomery firefighters rescued seven people trapped in the
burning building using aerial ladders. No one was seriously
inJured. ·

, MILTON (AP) - Engineers hope that neither telephone
li.nes or branches will keep them from moving a 125-year-old
_covered bridge Monday to its new resting place. ·
The 14-foot-wide, 115-foot-long bridge is being moved to
;the West Virginia Pumpkin Festival grounds where it will even. tually span a lake.
The original arch and trusses, which have the most historic
den~ecl
·.value, will be loaded onto a flatbed trailer and pushed backward
CHARLESTON (AP) -A Cabell Counry man suspected in
,along the one-mile trek. After it arrives at it's new home, the
a string of rapes in Kanawha, Cabell and Putnam counties won't
bridge will be renovated.
·
The structure had been closed to traffic for a number of years be getting out ·of jail anytime soon.
Cha.rles Edward Wood, 39, of
and was moved off it's original site in 1997.
Milton , asked Kanawha County
Circuit Judge Paul · Zakaib on
Thursday to set bond on a kidHURRICANE (AP) - Registered nurses at Putnam Gen- napping charge and w reduce

Bond

for rape susped

For Initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we nff•·••
tiours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
pine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
·

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, f-\ay 25.

Surgeons, Inc.

Call (614) 221~6331

for an appointment.

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

Putnam nurses reject union·

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl. .rnnt, WV

Ja11tes11n•tt
PATRIOT -James Barrett, 75, Patriot, died Friday, June I,
2001 at his residence.
Born Dec. 7, 1925 in Lincoln County, WVa., son of the late
Byrd Barrett, and Garnett Queen Barrett of Kenova, WVa., he
was a retired coal miner.
A U.S. Army veteran ofWorldWar II, he was a member ofRio
Grande Church of Christ.
_
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Marie Hall
Barrett, whom he married March 19, 1947 in Mingo County,
WVa.; three sons,Jerry (Nina) Barrett ofiUgland,WVa.,Jarnes D.
Barrett of Langsville, and Charles R . (Marcie) Barrett of Long
Bottom; a daughter, Patricia (Robert) Estep of Glenn Fork,WVa.;
10 grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; five brothers, Cecil Barrett ofYpsilanti, Mich., He.bert
Barrett of Kenova, Monroe Barrett of Milan, Mich., Byrd "Bud"
Barrett Jr. of Harts Creek, WVa., and Hezz Barrett of Sandusky;
and two sisters, Florie Dempsey of Harts Creek, and Flossie Wallace of Columbus.
He was also preceded in death by a brother, John Barrett.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Willis Funeral Home, with
Evangelist James Farley officiating. Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral hmite from 6-9
· p.m. Sunday.

Lynn L Boston
LETART, W.Va.- Lynn L Boston, 86, Letart, died Friday, June
I, 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Sept. 10, 1914 in Letart, son of the late John D. and Florida Frances Shirley Boston, he was a farmer and steelworker for
Wheeling SteeL
He was a member of the Civilian Conservation Corps in the
Forestry Program, and a U.S. Army veteran, Infantry Division, '
from 1941-45 in Panama.
He was also preceded in death by four sisters, Dorothy Ruth ·
Pauley, Elinor Layne, Nellie Boston and Ernestine Jones; and two
brothers, WilliamS. "Bill" Boston and James B. Boston.
Surviving are a brother, Joseph Boston of Letart; three sisters,
Blanche Howard of Gainesville, Fla., Nancy Slavin of Ripley,
WVa., and Sally Litchfield ofMason,WVa.; and several nieces and
nephews.
·
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Letart Evergreen
Cemetery, with Pastor George Weirick officiating. There will be
no visitation. Arrangements are by Foglesong Funeral Home.
Military services will be conducted by Stewart-Johnson VFW
Post 9926 and Smith-Cape hart American Legion Post 140.

.•

Lillie Hubbard
MIDDLEPORT -

Lillie Hubbard, 91, Middleport, died Fri-

RVHS
from Pap Al
young child who took the
seperate colon and molded
them into a special color friendship."
Chelsea DeGarmo thanked
her classmates for being themselves.
"It is now time to n1ove on

and seperate ounel\res, to test
our skills in the real world;' she
said. "You, the class of 2Q01,
have made such and impact on
my life, thank you for being
who you are."
Aaron Walker asked his fellow graduates to "not lose sight
of their spirituality:'
"I feel fortunate and wish
you all the luck in the world."
he said. "Thank you, and thank
God."
Nick Fisher asked his classmates to push themselves and
not to settle for only what's
good enough, while Cara
Rocchi issued a challenge to
her fellow graduates, .
"No matter where you are
or who you are around, be
yourself, be an individual.
Don't try to be someone you're
not;' she said.
Devin George, who was
accepted to the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, N.Y.,
thanked God and his parentS,
and left the crowd with one last
remark: "Go Army:•
Celeste Harrington was recognized for perfect attendance
throughout high school, and a
total of over $610,000 in scholarships were awarded fo.r this
year's class.
Those students iwarded with
honon diplomas were: Christen Baird, Betl)aney Bryant,
;---

Sunday, June 3, 2001

da)\June 1, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Gallipolis Boat Oub.
.
.
In addition to his parents, he wu preceded m death by his
Born Oct. 10, 1909 in Longdale, wv~ .. daughter of the late
Linley and Sarah Virginia Oliver Hart, she was a homenuker, and first wife, Betty Reed Davis; and a brother, Jesse Woodrow
. .
Davis.
a member of Middleport First Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Patty Saunden Davis of Gallipolis; a
Surviving are two daughten, Mary (Stephen) Toth of Burlington, Conn.• and Linda (Everett) Foreman of Sheffield Lake; a son, Robert L. Davis of Gallipolis; a daughter, Brenda ~uss­
daughter-in-law, George~n Grimm of Kent; eight grandchil~n. baum of Columbus; three gnndchildren, Robert S. Dms of
three stepgrandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren; and several Lexington, Kentucky. Timothy L. Davis of Gallipolis_, and Jesse
Daniel Nussbaum of Columbus; three great--grandchildren; and
nieces and nephews.
She w2s also preceded in death by her husband, Harold Hub- three sis ten, Margaret J. Waugh of Gallipolis, Maxine Rusk of
.
bard; her son, Ralph Grimm; two stepsons, Harold Hubbard and .Bidwell, and Tbelma Harrington of Gallipolis.
will
be
11
a.m.
on
Monday,
June
4,
2001
1.11
WaughServices
Bill Hubbard; and four brothers and a sister.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in Fisher-Acree Funeral Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with Pastor Joseph Godwin offi~
Home, Middleport, with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. ciating. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery. Fnends
Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may may call at the funeral home on Sunday, June 3, 2001 from 69p.m.
·
·
call at the funeral home from 6--9 p.m. Monday.
A military flag presentation will be conducted at the cemetery by Gallia County veterans organio;ations:
In lieu of flowen, contributions can be made to Holzer Hos.
.
IRONTON -Wanda Jean Morris. 71, Ironton, died Friday, pice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Pallbearers
will
be
Robert
S.
Davis,
Timothy
L.
DaVIs,
Carl
June 1, 2001 at the home of her daughter, following an extended
Beaver, James Johnston, Mike Harrin~on and Tom Saunden of
illness.
Born Oct. 31 , 1929 in Lawrence County,dau&amp;hter of the late Toledo.
Honorary pallbearers are Joe Shrader, Lee Ardrey, Kenny
Henry and.Alberta Nance Reed, she was a homemaker, and a
member of Campbell Chapel Freewill Baptist Church . .
Siden and Jerry Rusk.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, David M. Morris, on June 5, 1996; a daughter, Donna Massie; rwo brothers,
Charles and John David Reed; and a sister, Mary Hockenberry.
Gaflia County Local
Surviving are a daughter, Bonnie (Larry) Scott of Ironton; two
Board of Education
sons, David (Brend1) Morris and James (fanuny) Morris, bOth of
Kitts Hill; I 0 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; and two
will l1ave tl11ee seats
f1omP11pAI
sisten, Louella Turvey of Coal Grove, and Bertha Stumbo of Gal11p, now held by Mel
lipolis.
tions," he said. ~we'd like to
el and
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in Phillips Funeral Home, Iron- let everyone run and let the Carter, Fred De_
ton, with the Rev. Bob Bradley and Paul Cox officiating. Burial voters decide, but the candi- John Payne. 1ivo seats
will be in Woodland Cemetery. Friends may call at rhe funeral dates have to follow the rules
lire to be decided on
home from 5-9 p.m. Sunday:
first."
the Gallipolis City
Nearly 40 petitions have
Board of Ed11cation,
been_ taken out by potential
candidates; Halley said, but
currently ocatpied by
only a few were filed as of last
Lynn Angell-Queen
week. The majority of petitions taken out were for
and Dr. Timothy
trustee races.
Kyger.
Voters will choose two
trustees this ·year in each of
GALLIPOLIS - Harold Lee Davis, 80, of Gallipolis, died Gallia's 15 .tow!}ships, while tion, along with Sam Davis,
Friday, June 1, 2001 at his residence.
.
the number of council races Caroll K. Snowden and DouHe was born June 28, 1921 in Gallipolis, to the late George vary among the five villages.
glas J. Wetherholt.
They edged out two other
Ernie Davis and Lenna Mae Saunders Davis.
Gallia County Local Board
A U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II, he owned a cab ser- of Education will have three · candidates, Frank Edward
vice in Lancaster before returning to Gallipolis, where he seats up, now held by Mel Braxton Jr. and Forrest
worked as the service manager for Gallipolis Motor Comp~ny Carter, Fred Deel and John Ramey;. in the May 8 primary.
and later for Gene Johnson Chevrolet.
Payne. Two seats are to be . The unofficial count gave
He was a member of the First Baptist Church and attended decided on the Gallipolis City Davis 200 votes and Ramey
Fellowship Baptist Church. He was a life member ofVFW Post Board of Education, currendy 198.
No. 4464, a member of Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107, andthe occupied by Lynn Angell.,
During the official · count
last
week - which included
Queen and. Dr. Timothy
provisional ballots not countKyger.
Three positions on the Gal- ed the night of the election
Nicholas Fisher, Candice Fra- Dianne Fraley, Tiffany Nicole Frazee,
ley, Devin George, Lindsay . Derrick Lee George, Devin Keith lia-Vinton Educational Ser- - Davis had a one-vote lead
. George, Nicholas A. George, Christoover Ramey, Halley said.
Nida, Nicholas George, Cecilia pher Philip Gilbert, Megan AM God· vice Center Governing Board
Goett, Celeste Harrington, win, Cecilia Mae Goeft, Forrest S. Gre· will also appear on the ballot.
One is from Vinton Connry.
Narhan
Harvey,. Monica
Mabolllne Hamilton,
Helms, William Keefer, Amy . Celeste Eugenia Harrington, Langston The othen are in Gallia and
Lundy, Michael Macomber, Gerard Deray Harvey, Nathan Harvey, are held by Terry Halley and
Monica Shay Helms. casey James Penny Justice.
Jennifer Mclain, Julia Mollo- Hockman, Christopher Ryan Holstein,
Halley said petitions for the
han, Justin Mulholand, Eric Emily Ann Hood, Heather Elaine
ESC
Board require 50 signaNolan, Josh Mills, Robert Jones, Ronald Paul Jones Jr., Camilla
Jean Justic8. Tyson Coyatte Justice, tures.
Northup, Craig. Payne, Jeremy WlUiam Travis Keefer, Samantha Ann
Pee)&lt;, Cara Rocchi, Erin Saly- Kemper, Heather Lynette Lambert, ·In Gallipolis, voters chose
ers, Lindsay Smith, Michael Holle Ann Langford, Amanda Mae nominees for three seats on
Lawson, Amy Sue Lundy. Michael AWin
Caleb Tipton, Aaron Walker, Macomber, Brandle Jo Marcum, Fell· the City Commission appearClark .Walker, Christopher cia Marie Maskew, Christopher M. ing on the Nov. 6 ballot.
Incumbents Dr. Gene
w.atts, James w.ll·
d Massle,JesslcaAnnMcGulre,Jennijer
e mgton an
Ann Mclain, Joshua Alan Mills. llna Abels, Bob Marchi and CelesMariah Wood.
Marte Mohler, Jula Marie MollOhan,
Subject area honored ·stu- Justin R. Muiholalld, Nlcholai Anthony tine:Skinner are seeking. elecdents included Cara Butcher, Mutloland, Krystal Lynn Murphy;
Beau Alon Nicl1ola, Lindsay Kay
English; Hollie Langford, fine Nlda, Eric Date Nolan. Robert Blake
arts; Nathan Harvey, mathe- Nor1hup. Craig Lae Payne, Jeremy
maries; Bethaney Bryant, sci- Ray Peck, Amanda Faye Phillips,
Cllarles F. phlllpa Jr., Shannon Rankin
ence; and Erin Salyers, social (In memory), Juatin R. Rice, Tlmolhy
studies.
Mk:llael ~ Rlchardlon. Thoma
Jacob
Riehle. Alicia Bfynn Riedel,
Th e cIass of 2001 inc Iuded:
Rachel Nicole Rife, cara Rochella
Joanna Lea Amos, Nathaniel Paul Rocchi, Erin Elizabe1h s.tyen, Sara
Atherton, Christen .Lee Baird, E~c Ma~e .Saunders, carrie Elizabeth
wayne Baker, Usa Renee Baas, L8e Saxon, Michael 1M Saxon, Brian
Ann Bertdey, Rachel Shontell Beny, Seooy, Brttany Lynn Settles, Mlchaal
Julia Ann Booth, Bethaney Nicola Loran Shato, Stacey Elzabeth Shiflet.
Bryant, Matthew S. Bums. Cera Eliza· Andrea Lyn Sims, Llnc:tny Marte
beth Butcher, ~ Joel Bynum, Tina Smith, Monica Lynn SrYVth, Sun B.

Cara Butcher, Devan Cottrell,
Chelsea
DeGarmo, T.R.
Edwards, Nick Fisher, Aaron
Walker, Candice Fraley, Tiffany
Frazee, Devin George, Celeste
Harrington, Hollie Langford,
Amanda Lawson, Jtdia Mollohan , Cynthia Ward, Lindsay
Nida, Eric Nolan, Craig Payne,
Cara Rocchi, Erin Salyers,
Lindsay Smith and Chris Watts.
The top I 0 peJXent of the
class includes Chelsea DeGarmo, T.R. Edwards, Nick Fisher,
Devin George, Cara Rocchi,
Lindsay Nida, Aaron Walker,
Candice Fraley, Craig Payne,
Lindsay Smith, Christen Baird,
Bethaney Biyant, Chris Watts,
Cara Butcher, Holly Langford,
. Julia Mollohan; Erin Salyen,
Eric Nolan and Cynthia Ward.
Twelfth-grade proficiency
honorees included Joanna
Amos, Nathan Atherton,
Christen Baird, Lee Ann
Berkley, Bethaney Bryant,
Matthew Burns Cara Butcher,
Devan
Cottrell, Chelsea
DeGarmo, T.R. Edwards,
Nicholas Fisher, Candice Fra- LOUisa catdWell, Aaron Ray C&amp;rroll, Sowards; .
Ryan Stidham, J~ Sllple\oo1;
ley, .Devin George, Megan JuN Danlalle Chlldr989, Juri'! Joaeph
Cleland,
Cha~es
R.
Conklt
Jr
..
Devan
Jared
Allan Taylor, Michael Caleb TipGodwin, Cecilia Goett, Celese
Rae Cottrell, Randy Lee Cox, Keith ton, Mill:hell Gfenn unroe, Aaron Scali
Harrington, Nathan Harvey, Alan Davies, Misty Dawn Davis, , Walker, James Cliuk Walker, Cynlhla
Monica He~s, Hollie Lang- Chelsea Gall DeGarmo, James Wes- · Lara Ward. Clvlstopher Edward Wltll,
DeLong. Melissa Sue Danny, 1&lt;118- Maranda J. Weddington, Jameto
ford, Amanda Lawson, Amy ley
na Rae Dobbins, llmothy Ryan ,Matthew WtiHn.gton, Sonya LauiM
Lundy, Jennifer McLain, Julia rl&lt;dwards, Lyndsay Nicole Eure*, Erika Wells, Usa MarieWhite. Mar1lh L&lt;UM
Mollohan, Justin Mulholand, Jean Eutsler, Nicholas Lee Ashar, • Wood and Pllrlcll Chrllllen VInce.
Nicholas Mulholnad, Lindsay Candace Lorena Fitch, Candice
Nida, Eric Nolan, Robert
Northup. Craig Payne, Cara
Rocchi, Erin Salyen, Lindsay
Smith, Aaron Walker, Clark
Walker, Christopher Watts,
James Wellington, and Cynthia ·
Ward.
~
Honors proficiency students
·
.HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMI';NT
recognized were Joanna Amos,
"We Care For
Family"
Nathaine Atherton, Christen
. You Like
'
Baird, Lisa Bass, Bethaney
70 Pine Street
(740) 448-7283
Bryant, Matthew Burns, Cara
•
OH
Edwards,
Butcher,. T.R.

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TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) lsrael called off its self-declared
policy of restraint Saturday.just
hours after a suicide bomber
killed 17 young Israelis and
wounded 90 outside a Tel Aviv
disco in the bloodiest terror
attack in five ye~rsAll but one of those killed
and many of the wounded
were recent immigrants from
the former Soviet Union.
The Israeli Cabinet said after
a seven- hour emergency ses, sian - an extremely rare
occurrence on the Jewish Sabbath - that it held Palestinian
leader Vasser Arafat direcrly
responsible for Friday night's
blast and other terror attacks.
In the Wesr Bank town of
Ramallah, Arafat said he was
ready to work for an "immediate and un conditional ceasefire;' but did not say what steps
he was prepared to take.
· Israeli Cabjnet ministers dismissed the offer, saying they
would not take it seriously
unless Arafat arrested Islamic
militants and reined in his

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) Ohio Gov. Bob Taft has
~sked U.S. Secretary of
Transportation
Norman
Mineta for help ending the
two- month
strike
by
Comair pilots.
In a telephone call Friday,
Taft urged Mineta to take a
leadership role in getting
both sides back to negotiations.
"The Comair strike is
having an adverse effect on
southwest Ohio, and it is
time to bring both parties to
the table to end the strike as
quickly as possible," Taft said
in a statement. "The strike
has caused layoffi, disrupted
flight •schedules and hurt

Orlando, Fla.
There has been no contact
betweerf the company and
the Comair branch of the
Air Line Pilots Association
since May 12, when the
. pilots
overw'helmingly
rejected a proposed settle~
ment crafted by the National Mediation Board.
Spokesmen for Comair's
1,350 pilots said the board's
proposal fell short of the
union's demands for a company-paid retirement program, higher salaries, shorter
length of on-dury shifts, and
longer rest intervals between
werk shifts.
Earlier this week, leaders
of the Northern Kentucky
regio nal c&lt;;&gt;rnrnerce."
Chamber of Conunerce and
Comair, based at the Greater Cincinnati ChamC incinnati/ Northern Ken- ber of Commerce said they
tucky .International Airport, were asking rheir members
has been shut down since to \Vrite letters to tnembers
pilots \vent on strike March of Congress and President
26 . The regional airline also Bush
urgmg
Mineta's
operat ed a flight hub in involvement in the strike.'

WASHINGTON (AP) ·For the fint time in eight
months, the nation's unemployment rate improved slightly, dipping to 4.4 percent last
'month. But factory workers
suffered a 1Oth consecntive cut
in jobs, and anaiy5ts said the
weak economy will send
un.employment upward again.
May's unemployment rate
,was down 0.1 percentage point
from April's 2 112-year high of
4.5 percent, the Labor Depart,ment said Friday. The decline
'surprised analysts but did not
boost optimism that the worst
economic days are over.'
(f;:;'i'The~•. .are. douds,,oo •..the
horizon," Labor Secretary ·
Elaine Chao said. ·
On Wall Street, after declin- ·
""ing through most of the morn-

Tel Aviv

18

•

'

CHASE - An Israeli border police officer chases a man who
was throwing stones ~t Muslim worshippers in a mosque Saturday near the spot where 17 Israelis died in Tel Aviv. (AP)

St!curity forces.
The Israe li Cabi11et said in a
statement it would take all
actions · necessary to pro tect
Israeli citizens. but did not
elaborate.
Last week. Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon had

Policy Research. "But equally
important is the fact that there
is very little strength elsewhere
to offiet this weakness."
The National Association of
Purchasing Management said
Friday that its factory index
continued to show recession
conditions in manufacturing
with a reading of 42.1 in May,
dm.Vn from 43.2 in April. Any
reading below 50 is an indication that manufacturing is contracting.
Chao said the country still
needed a lift from the $1.35
trillion, l 0-year tax cut that
President Bush is to sign into
law next ~eek. r
· The government will be
mailing out tax rebate checks
of up to S600 per family starting next month.

ing, the Dow Jones industrial
average changed direction at
midday and dosed up 78.47
points.
Though fewer people seekingjobs were o.u t of work last
month, businesses overall cut
19,000 jobs, following a much
bigger reduction of 182,000
workers in April. The April cut
was the biggest since the country struggled to pull out of
recession a decade ago.
Manufacturing companies
shed 124,000 jobs last month,
the largest payroll reducti~n so
far in that sector, which has lost
alinost a half million jobs this
year. .,
.
Manufacruring "still does not
appear to have hit bottom;' said
Dean Baker, an economist at
the Center for Economic and

de~lared a unilater~l cease-fire,
saying that Isra eli troo ps
would not

initiate an io ns

against the Palestinians, only
respond when lives were
threatened.
Asked ab~ ut the truce,
Transport Minister Eph,raim

Sneh told The Associated Press
thar "there is no cease-fire
because we are under attack."
Other Cabinet ministers
said Israel did not plan to target Arafat directly or recapture
areas under Palestinian control.
In the West Bank and Gaza
Strip, the Palestinian Authority
ordered its employees to leave
their offices, fearing Israeli air
srrikes. In the past, Israel
shelled Palestinian security
insrallations, but not civilian ·
offices.
In the town of Nablus,
where an Israeli air raid last
month killed 11 policemen,
residents were urged to stay
indoors.

Israel sealed off Palestinian
towns and villages in the West
Bank, 'barr ing residents from
enterin g and leaving. In Gaza ,
Palestinian fishcnne n were
ordered to return to shore , as

Israeli patrol boats enforced a
sea blockade. Israel also dosed
crossings from the Palestinian
areas to Egypt and Gaza .

Shoe Co.

Jobless rate showing modest
improvement; factory jobs dowil

Obituaries

&amp;unllap 1tim8·&amp;rnlind • Page A7

Suidde

endin-g Comair strike

Races

Harold Lee Davis

Pometoy •Middleport • Glllllpolls, Ohio • Point Plearant, WV

Taft.asks for help in

Wanda Jean Monis

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

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

t'Dennis'
f creator

OSE

~; Ketcham ·
~ dies 81

at

•

•

ornE

Fooalands Class of 2001

Congratulations to a great graduating class. we,re ver,y proud
of your accomplishments, and we have great expectations that
you will distinguish yourselves In the (Uture as well.
Our best wishes to you all.

;

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Marcus Hamilton was
~ waiting for workers to repair
'• the fax machine so he could
send. his latest sketches to
·~ Hank Ketcham for his
approval when the call came:
l:The creator of America's
l favorite 5-year-old towheaded tornado had died. ·
"He's really been like a
second father
to me. He's
directed my
life for the
last
eight
years," s;~id
Hamilton, of
Charlotte,
r.
N.C .., who
II
began draw~ ing "Dermis the Menace" for
Ketcham in 1994.
Ketcham, 81, died Friday at
his home . in Pebble Bea~h
· after suffenng from heart disease and cancer. He had
.. · stopped drawing Sunday panels in the mid-1980s and
retired from weekday sketches
in 1994.
Though his assistants handled the bulk of the work
after that, Ketcham still oversaw the feature daily by fax.
"He ,~ind of liRe God,
you know he 's. there but you
didn't see him," said Ron Ferdinand, who also works on
the strip with Hamilton .
"Right up until the end he
.i!nii-·1Nas still editing."
In March, Ketcham's panels
celebrated 50 years of publi•cation -- running in 1,000
newspapers, 48 countries and
19 ianguages.
·

t-

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...t..'

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Point Pleaunt High
School
onwtft. Rivera Foodland

River \IIlley High School

Food land

•

.. loeal~ d{()lferlMrl
e"/f(/f(fJ.I(!'tf -!f;"'t4
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l.

P+ M • an.., 1111711· Aestisd

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl. .rnnt, WV

Ja11tes11n•tt
PATRIOT -James Barrett, 75, Patriot, died Friday, June I,
2001 at his residence.
Born Dec. 7, 1925 in Lincoln County, WVa., son of the late
Byrd Barrett, and Garnett Queen Barrett of Kenova, WVa., he
was a retired coal miner.
A U.S. Army veteran ofWorldWar II, he was a member ofRio
Grande Church of Christ.
_
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Marie Hall
Barrett, whom he married March 19, 1947 in Mingo County,
WVa.; three sons,Jerry (Nina) Barrett ofiUgland,WVa.,Jarnes D.
Barrett of Langsville, and Charles R . (Marcie) Barrett of Long
Bottom; a daughter, Patricia (Robert) Estep of Glenn Fork,WVa.;
10 grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; five brothers, Cecil Barrett ofYpsilanti, Mich., He.bert
Barrett of Kenova, Monroe Barrett of Milan, Mich., Byrd "Bud"
Barrett Jr. of Harts Creek, WVa., and Hezz Barrett of Sandusky;
and two sisters, Florie Dempsey of Harts Creek, and Flossie Wallace of Columbus.
He was also preceded in death by a brother, John Barrett.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Willis Funeral Home, with
Evangelist James Farley officiating. Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral hmite from 6-9
· p.m. Sunday.

Lynn L Boston
LETART, W.Va.- Lynn L Boston, 86, Letart, died Friday, June
I, 2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Sept. 10, 1914 in Letart, son of the late John D. and Florida Frances Shirley Boston, he was a farmer and steelworker for
Wheeling SteeL
He was a member of the Civilian Conservation Corps in the
Forestry Program, and a U.S. Army veteran, Infantry Division, '
from 1941-45 in Panama.
He was also preceded in death by four sisters, Dorothy Ruth ·
Pauley, Elinor Layne, Nellie Boston and Ernestine Jones; and two
brothers, WilliamS. "Bill" Boston and James B. Boston.
Surviving are a brother, Joseph Boston of Letart; three sisters,
Blanche Howard of Gainesville, Fla., Nancy Slavin of Ripley,
WVa., and Sally Litchfield ofMason,WVa.; and several nieces and
nephews.
·
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Letart Evergreen
Cemetery, with Pastor George Weirick officiating. There will be
no visitation. Arrangements are by Foglesong Funeral Home.
Military services will be conducted by Stewart-Johnson VFW
Post 9926 and Smith-Cape hart American Legion Post 140.

.•

Lillie Hubbard
MIDDLEPORT -

Lillie Hubbard, 91, Middleport, died Fri-

RVHS
from Pap Al
young child who took the
seperate colon and molded
them into a special color friendship."
Chelsea DeGarmo thanked
her classmates for being themselves.
"It is now time to n1ove on

and seperate ounel\res, to test
our skills in the real world;' she
said. "You, the class of 2Q01,
have made such and impact on
my life, thank you for being
who you are."
Aaron Walker asked his fellow graduates to "not lose sight
of their spirituality:'
"I feel fortunate and wish
you all the luck in the world."
he said. "Thank you, and thank
God."
Nick Fisher asked his classmates to push themselves and
not to settle for only what's
good enough, while Cara
Rocchi issued a challenge to
her fellow graduates, .
"No matter where you are
or who you are around, be
yourself, be an individual.
Don't try to be someone you're
not;' she said.
Devin George, who was
accepted to the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, N.Y.,
thanked God and his parentS,
and left the crowd with one last
remark: "Go Army:•
Celeste Harrington was recognized for perfect attendance
throughout high school, and a
total of over $610,000 in scholarships were awarded fo.r this
year's class.
Those students iwarded with
honon diplomas were: Christen Baird, Betl)aney Bryant,
;---

Sunday, June 3, 2001

da)\June 1, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Gallipolis Boat Oub.
.
.
In addition to his parents, he wu preceded m death by his
Born Oct. 10, 1909 in Longdale, wv~ .. daughter of the late
Linley and Sarah Virginia Oliver Hart, she was a homenuker, and first wife, Betty Reed Davis; and a brother, Jesse Woodrow
. .
Davis.
a member of Middleport First Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Patty Saunden Davis of Gallipolis; a
Surviving are two daughten, Mary (Stephen) Toth of Burlington, Conn.• and Linda (Everett) Foreman of Sheffield Lake; a son, Robert L. Davis of Gallipolis; a daughter, Brenda ~uss­
daughter-in-law, George~n Grimm of Kent; eight grandchil~n. baum of Columbus; three gnndchildren, Robert S. Dms of
three stepgrandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren; and several Lexington, Kentucky. Timothy L. Davis of Gallipolis_, and Jesse
Daniel Nussbaum of Columbus; three great--grandchildren; and
nieces and nephews.
She w2s also preceded in death by her husband, Harold Hub- three sis ten, Margaret J. Waugh of Gallipolis, Maxine Rusk of
.
bard; her son, Ralph Grimm; two stepsons, Harold Hubbard and .Bidwell, and Tbelma Harrington of Gallipolis.
will
be
11
a.m.
on
Monday,
June
4,
2001
1.11
WaughServices
Bill Hubbard; and four brothers and a sister.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in Fisher-Acree Funeral Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with Pastor Joseph Godwin offi~
Home, Middleport, with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. ciating. Burial will follow in Mound Hill Cemetery. Fnends
Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may may call at the funeral home on Sunday, June 3, 2001 from 69p.m.
·
·
call at the funeral home from 6--9 p.m. Monday.
A military flag presentation will be conducted at the cemetery by Gallia County veterans organio;ations:
In lieu of flowen, contributions can be made to Holzer Hos.
.
IRONTON -Wanda Jean Morris. 71, Ironton, died Friday, pice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Pallbearers
will
be
Robert
S.
Davis,
Timothy
L.
DaVIs,
Carl
June 1, 2001 at the home of her daughter, following an extended
Beaver, James Johnston, Mike Harrin~on and Tom Saunden of
illness.
Born Oct. 31 , 1929 in Lawrence County,dau&amp;hter of the late Toledo.
Honorary pallbearers are Joe Shrader, Lee Ardrey, Kenny
Henry and.Alberta Nance Reed, she was a homemaker, and a
member of Campbell Chapel Freewill Baptist Church . .
Siden and Jerry Rusk.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, David M. Morris, on June 5, 1996; a daughter, Donna Massie; rwo brothers,
Charles and John David Reed; and a sister, Mary Hockenberry.
Gaflia County Local
Surviving are a daughter, Bonnie (Larry) Scott of Ironton; two
Board of Education
sons, David (Brend1) Morris and James (fanuny) Morris, bOth of
Kitts Hill; I 0 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; and two
will l1ave tl11ee seats
f1omP11pAI
sisten, Louella Turvey of Coal Grove, and Bertha Stumbo of Gal11p, now held by Mel
lipolis.
tions," he said. ~we'd like to
el and
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in Phillips Funeral Home, Iron- let everyone run and let the Carter, Fred De_
ton, with the Rev. Bob Bradley and Paul Cox officiating. Burial voters decide, but the candi- John Payne. 1ivo seats
will be in Woodland Cemetery. Friends may call at rhe funeral dates have to follow the rules
lire to be decided on
home from 5-9 p.m. Sunday:
first."
the Gallipolis City
Nearly 40 petitions have
Board of Ed11cation,
been_ taken out by potential
candidates; Halley said, but
currently ocatpied by
only a few were filed as of last
Lynn Angell-Queen
week. The majority of petitions taken out were for
and Dr. Timothy
trustee races.
Kyger.
Voters will choose two
trustees this ·year in each of
GALLIPOLIS - Harold Lee Davis, 80, of Gallipolis, died Gallia's 15 .tow!}ships, while tion, along with Sam Davis,
Friday, June 1, 2001 at his residence.
.
the number of council races Caroll K. Snowden and DouHe was born June 28, 1921 in Gallipolis, to the late George vary among the five villages.
glas J. Wetherholt.
They edged out two other
Ernie Davis and Lenna Mae Saunders Davis.
Gallia County Local Board
A U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II, he owned a cab ser- of Education will have three · candidates, Frank Edward
vice in Lancaster before returning to Gallipolis, where he seats up, now held by Mel Braxton Jr. and Forrest
worked as the service manager for Gallipolis Motor Comp~ny Carter, Fred Deel and John Ramey;. in the May 8 primary.
and later for Gene Johnson Chevrolet.
Payne. Two seats are to be . The unofficial count gave
He was a member of the First Baptist Church and attended decided on the Gallipolis City Davis 200 votes and Ramey
Fellowship Baptist Church. He was a life member ofVFW Post Board of Education, currendy 198.
No. 4464, a member of Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107, andthe occupied by Lynn Angell.,
During the official · count
last
week - which included
Queen and. Dr. Timothy
provisional ballots not countKyger.
Three positions on the Gal- ed the night of the election
Nicholas Fisher, Candice Fra- Dianne Fraley, Tiffany Nicole Frazee,
ley, Devin George, Lindsay . Derrick Lee George, Devin Keith lia-Vinton Educational Ser- - Davis had a one-vote lead
. George, Nicholas A. George, Christoover Ramey, Halley said.
Nida, Nicholas George, Cecilia pher Philip Gilbert, Megan AM God· vice Center Governing Board
Goett, Celeste Harrington, win, Cecilia Mae Goeft, Forrest S. Gre· will also appear on the ballot.
One is from Vinton Connry.
Narhan
Harvey,. Monica
Mabolllne Hamilton,
Helms, William Keefer, Amy . Celeste Eugenia Harrington, Langston The othen are in Gallia and
Lundy, Michael Macomber, Gerard Deray Harvey, Nathan Harvey, are held by Terry Halley and
Monica Shay Helms. casey James Penny Justice.
Jennifer Mclain, Julia Mollo- Hockman, Christopher Ryan Holstein,
Halley said petitions for the
han, Justin Mulholand, Eric Emily Ann Hood, Heather Elaine
ESC
Board require 50 signaNolan, Josh Mills, Robert Jones, Ronald Paul Jones Jr., Camilla
Jean Justic8. Tyson Coyatte Justice, tures.
Northup, Craig. Payne, Jeremy WlUiam Travis Keefer, Samantha Ann
Pee)&lt;, Cara Rocchi, Erin Saly- Kemper, Heather Lynette Lambert, ·In Gallipolis, voters chose
ers, Lindsay Smith, Michael Holle Ann Langford, Amanda Mae nominees for three seats on
Lawson, Amy Sue Lundy. Michael AWin
Caleb Tipton, Aaron Walker, Macomber, Brandle Jo Marcum, Fell· the City Commission appearClark .Walker, Christopher cia Marie Maskew, Christopher M. ing on the Nov. 6 ballot.
Incumbents Dr. Gene
w.atts, James w.ll·
d Massle,JesslcaAnnMcGulre,Jennijer
e mgton an
Ann Mclain, Joshua Alan Mills. llna Abels, Bob Marchi and CelesMariah Wood.
Marte Mohler, Jula Marie MollOhan,
Subject area honored ·stu- Justin R. Muiholalld, Nlcholai Anthony tine:Skinner are seeking. elecdents included Cara Butcher, Mutloland, Krystal Lynn Murphy;
Beau Alon Nicl1ola, Lindsay Kay
English; Hollie Langford, fine Nlda, Eric Date Nolan. Robert Blake
arts; Nathan Harvey, mathe- Nor1hup. Craig Lae Payne, Jeremy
maries; Bethaney Bryant, sci- Ray Peck, Amanda Faye Phillips,
Cllarles F. phlllpa Jr., Shannon Rankin
ence; and Erin Salyers, social (In memory), Juatin R. Rice, Tlmolhy
studies.
Mk:llael ~ Rlchardlon. Thoma
Jacob
Riehle. Alicia Bfynn Riedel,
Th e cIass of 2001 inc Iuded:
Rachel Nicole Rife, cara Rochella
Joanna Lea Amos, Nathaniel Paul Rocchi, Erin Elizabe1h s.tyen, Sara
Atherton, Christen .Lee Baird, E~c Ma~e .Saunders, carrie Elizabeth
wayne Baker, Usa Renee Baas, L8e Saxon, Michael 1M Saxon, Brian
Ann Bertdey, Rachel Shontell Beny, Seooy, Brttany Lynn Settles, Mlchaal
Julia Ann Booth, Bethaney Nicola Loran Shato, Stacey Elzabeth Shiflet.
Bryant, Matthew S. Bums. Cera Eliza· Andrea Lyn Sims, Llnc:tny Marte
beth Butcher, ~ Joel Bynum, Tina Smith, Monica Lynn SrYVth, Sun B.

Cara Butcher, Devan Cottrell,
Chelsea
DeGarmo, T.R.
Edwards, Nick Fisher, Aaron
Walker, Candice Fraley, Tiffany
Frazee, Devin George, Celeste
Harrington, Hollie Langford,
Amanda Lawson, Jtdia Mollohan , Cynthia Ward, Lindsay
Nida, Eric Nolan, Craig Payne,
Cara Rocchi, Erin Salyers,
Lindsay Smith and Chris Watts.
The top I 0 peJXent of the
class includes Chelsea DeGarmo, T.R. Edwards, Nick Fisher,
Devin George, Cara Rocchi,
Lindsay Nida, Aaron Walker,
Candice Fraley, Craig Payne,
Lindsay Smith, Christen Baird,
Bethaney Biyant, Chris Watts,
Cara Butcher, Holly Langford,
. Julia Mollohan; Erin Salyen,
Eric Nolan and Cynthia Ward.
Twelfth-grade proficiency
honorees included Joanna
Amos, Nathan Atherton,
Christen Baird, Lee Ann
Berkley, Bethaney Bryant,
Matthew Burns Cara Butcher,
Devan
Cottrell, Chelsea
DeGarmo, T.R. Edwards,
Nicholas Fisher, Candice Fra- LOUisa catdWell, Aaron Ray C&amp;rroll, Sowards; .
Ryan Stidham, J~ Sllple\oo1;
ley, .Devin George, Megan JuN Danlalle Chlldr989, Juri'! Joaeph
Cleland,
Cha~es
R.
Conklt
Jr
..
Devan
Jared
Allan Taylor, Michael Caleb TipGodwin, Cecilia Goett, Celese
Rae Cottrell, Randy Lee Cox, Keith ton, Mill:hell Gfenn unroe, Aaron Scali
Harrington, Nathan Harvey, Alan Davies, Misty Dawn Davis, , Walker, James Cliuk Walker, Cynlhla
Monica He~s, Hollie Lang- Chelsea Gall DeGarmo, James Wes- · Lara Ward. Clvlstopher Edward Wltll,
DeLong. Melissa Sue Danny, 1&lt;118- Maranda J. Weddington, Jameto
ford, Amanda Lawson, Amy ley
na Rae Dobbins, llmothy Ryan ,Matthew WtiHn.gton, Sonya LauiM
Lundy, Jennifer McLain, Julia rl&lt;dwards, Lyndsay Nicole Eure*, Erika Wells, Usa MarieWhite. Mar1lh L&lt;UM
Mollohan, Justin Mulholand, Jean Eutsler, Nicholas Lee Ashar, • Wood and Pllrlcll Chrllllen VInce.
Nicholas Mulholnad, Lindsay Candace Lorena Fitch, Candice
Nida, Eric Nolan, Robert
Northup. Craig Payne, Cara
Rocchi, Erin Salyen, Lindsay
Smith, Aaron Walker, Clark
Walker, Christopher Watts,
James Wellington, and Cynthia ·
Ward.
~
Honors proficiency students
·
.HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMI';NT
recognized were Joanna Amos,
"We Care For
Family"
Nathaine Atherton, Christen
. You Like
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TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) lsrael called off its self-declared
policy of restraint Saturday.just
hours after a suicide bomber
killed 17 young Israelis and
wounded 90 outside a Tel Aviv
disco in the bloodiest terror
attack in five ye~rsAll but one of those killed
and many of the wounded
were recent immigrants from
the former Soviet Union.
The Israeli Cabinet said after
a seven- hour emergency ses, sian - an extremely rare
occurrence on the Jewish Sabbath - that it held Palestinian
leader Vasser Arafat direcrly
responsible for Friday night's
blast and other terror attacks.
In the Wesr Bank town of
Ramallah, Arafat said he was
ready to work for an "immediate and un conditional ceasefire;' but did not say what steps
he was prepared to take.
· Israeli Cabjnet ministers dismissed the offer, saying they
would not take it seriously
unless Arafat arrested Islamic
militants and reined in his

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) Ohio Gov. Bob Taft has
~sked U.S. Secretary of
Transportation
Norman
Mineta for help ending the
two- month
strike
by
Comair pilots.
In a telephone call Friday,
Taft urged Mineta to take a
leadership role in getting
both sides back to negotiations.
"The Comair strike is
having an adverse effect on
southwest Ohio, and it is
time to bring both parties to
the table to end the strike as
quickly as possible," Taft said
in a statement. "The strike
has caused layoffi, disrupted
flight •schedules and hurt

Orlando, Fla.
There has been no contact
betweerf the company and
the Comair branch of the
Air Line Pilots Association
since May 12, when the
. pilots
overw'helmingly
rejected a proposed settle~
ment crafted by the National Mediation Board.
Spokesmen for Comair's
1,350 pilots said the board's
proposal fell short of the
union's demands for a company-paid retirement program, higher salaries, shorter
length of on-dury shifts, and
longer rest intervals between
werk shifts.
Earlier this week, leaders
of the Northern Kentucky
regio nal c&lt;;&gt;rnrnerce."
Chamber of Conunerce and
Comair, based at the Greater Cincinnati ChamC incinnati/ Northern Ken- ber of Commerce said they
tucky .International Airport, were asking rheir members
has been shut down since to \Vrite letters to tnembers
pilots \vent on strike March of Congress and President
26 . The regional airline also Bush
urgmg
Mineta's
operat ed a flight hub in involvement in the strike.'

WASHINGTON (AP) ·For the fint time in eight
months, the nation's unemployment rate improved slightly, dipping to 4.4 percent last
'month. But factory workers
suffered a 1Oth consecntive cut
in jobs, and anaiy5ts said the
weak economy will send
un.employment upward again.
May's unemployment rate
,was down 0.1 percentage point
from April's 2 112-year high of
4.5 percent, the Labor Depart,ment said Friday. The decline
'surprised analysts but did not
boost optimism that the worst
economic days are over.'
(f;:;'i'The~•. .are. douds,,oo •..the
horizon," Labor Secretary ·
Elaine Chao said. ·
On Wall Street, after declin- ·
""ing through most of the morn-

Tel Aviv

18

•

'

CHASE - An Israeli border police officer chases a man who
was throwing stones ~t Muslim worshippers in a mosque Saturday near the spot where 17 Israelis died in Tel Aviv. (AP)

St!curity forces.
The Israe li Cabi11et said in a
statement it would take all
actions · necessary to pro tect
Israeli citizens. but did not
elaborate.
Last week. Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon had

Policy Research. "But equally
important is the fact that there
is very little strength elsewhere
to offiet this weakness."
The National Association of
Purchasing Management said
Friday that its factory index
continued to show recession
conditions in manufacturing
with a reading of 42.1 in May,
dm.Vn from 43.2 in April. Any
reading below 50 is an indication that manufacturing is contracting.
Chao said the country still
needed a lift from the $1.35
trillion, l 0-year tax cut that
President Bush is to sign into
law next ~eek. r
· The government will be
mailing out tax rebate checks
of up to S600 per family starting next month.

ing, the Dow Jones industrial
average changed direction at
midday and dosed up 78.47
points.
Though fewer people seekingjobs were o.u t of work last
month, businesses overall cut
19,000 jobs, following a much
bigger reduction of 182,000
workers in April. The April cut
was the biggest since the country struggled to pull out of
recession a decade ago.
Manufacturing companies
shed 124,000 jobs last month,
the largest payroll reducti~n so
far in that sector, which has lost
alinost a half million jobs this
year. .,
.
Manufacruring "still does not
appear to have hit bottom;' said
Dean Baker, an economist at
the Center for Economic and

de~lared a unilater~l cease-fire,
saying that Isra eli troo ps
would not

initiate an io ns

against the Palestinians, only
respond when lives were
threatened.
Asked ab~ ut the truce,
Transport Minister Eph,raim

Sneh told The Associated Press
thar "there is no cease-fire
because we are under attack."
Other Cabinet ministers
said Israel did not plan to target Arafat directly or recapture
areas under Palestinian control.
In the West Bank and Gaza
Strip, the Palestinian Authority
ordered its employees to leave
their offices, fearing Israeli air
srrikes. In the past, Israel
shelled Palestinian security
insrallations, but not civilian ·
offices.
In the town of Nablus,
where an Israeli air raid last
month killed 11 policemen,
residents were urged to stay
indoors.

Israel sealed off Palestinian
towns and villages in the West
Bank, 'barr ing residents from
enterin g and leaving. In Gaza ,
Palestinian fishcnne n were
ordered to return to shore , as

Israeli patrol boats enforced a
sea blockade. Israel also dosed
crossings from the Palestinian
areas to Egypt and Gaza .

Shoe Co.

Jobless rate showing modest
improvement; factory jobs dowil

Obituaries

&amp;unllap 1tim8·&amp;rnlind • Page A7

Suidde

endin-g Comair strike

Races

Harold Lee Davis

Pometoy •Middleport • Glllllpolls, Ohio • Point Plearant, WV

Taft.asks for help in

Wanda Jean Monis

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

t'Dennis'
f creator

OSE

~; Ketcham ·
~ dies 81

at

•

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ornE

Fooalands Class of 2001

Congratulations to a great graduating class. we,re ver,y proud
of your accomplishments, and we have great expectations that
you will distinguish yourselves In the (Uture as well.
Our best wishes to you all.

;

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Marcus Hamilton was
~ waiting for workers to repair
'• the fax machine so he could
send. his latest sketches to
·~ Hank Ketcham for his
approval when the call came:
l:The creator of America's
l favorite 5-year-old towheaded tornado had died. ·
"He's really been like a
second father
to me. He's
directed my
life for the
last
eight
years," s;~id
Hamilton, of
Charlotte,
r.
N.C .., who
II
began draw~ ing "Dermis the Menace" for
Ketcham in 1994.
Ketcham, 81, died Friday at
his home . in Pebble Bea~h
· after suffenng from heart disease and cancer. He had
.. · stopped drawing Sunday panels in the mid-1980s and
retired from weekday sketches
in 1994.
Though his assistants handled the bulk of the work
after that, Ketcham still oversaw the feature daily by fax.
"He ,~ind of liRe God,
you know he 's. there but you
didn't see him," said Ron Ferdinand, who also works on
the strip with Hamilton .
"Right up until the end he
.i!nii-·1Nas still editing."
In March, Ketcham's panels
celebrated 50 years of publi•cation -- running in 1,000
newspapers, 48 countries and
19 ianguages.
·

t-

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Point Pleaunt High
School
onwtft. Rivera Foodland

River \IIlley High School

Food land

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�Page AI

Nation • World
No apology f1w11 Bush staff
WASHINGTON (AP) -

President Bush's spokesman said

Friday there will be no apology to former Clinton administration aides for :illegations of pr:mks and vandalism as the White
House changed hands. .
Asked about a letter signed by former Clinton aides seeking
an apology, White House spokesman Ari Aeischer said: "No
apology is merited. They are well-advised to leave it alone."
Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., scheduled a news conference
at the White House gate Friday to deliver the letter, which follows an investigation of the matter by the General Accounting
Office, Congress' investigative arm.
The GAO concluded that "there was no proof of anything
matching the :illegations" by identified White House _officials
who said they were greeted by damaged offices and eqmpment.
Former Clinton aides said the GAO's findings vindicated them.

Presidentw Cheney detail assets
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush has socked away
more than Sl million for his twin daughters while Vice President Dick Cheney has at least that much sitting in a single
checking account.
.
·
. Financial disclosure reports reviewed Friday by The Associated Press showed that Bush, who saw his salary more than
quadruple in January from $78,678 as Te&gt;&lt;as governor to
$400,000 as president, holds total assets worth between S8 million and S19 miUion.
Cheney, who came to the White House after being chief
executive at Halliburton Co., an oil services firm, has assers with
his wife of at least S20 m..iUion and possibly as much as $69 million:-Two of their four checking accounrs show balances of
more than $100,000. The Cbeneys report a balance of between
Sl million and S5 million on one joint checking account with
Northern Trust Bank.
Lynne Cheney, the first vice president's wife to hold a paid
private j\)b, works at a Washington think tank and sits on several corporate boards, including those of American Express and
Reader's Digest.

ATAT plans rate increase

••

Serd"" JuM ,, 2111

lawyer says McVeigh has reason-to live
BY REX W. HII'PE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - Preparing
for his execution at the hands of the
government he despises, Timothy
McVeigh gave fellow death row inmates
everything he owned, arranged for his
body to be torned over to family members and readied himself for what some
saw as martyrdOm.
He sat ·in his stuffy 8-by-1 0-foot cell
and waited.
Then he learned cif an FBI error, saw
a chink in the government's umor. Now
instead of waiting to die, the man convicted of killing 168 people in the Oklahoma City bombing has found a reason
to live.
"I would say he has some new

resolve;' said . attorney Robert Nigh,
who described his client's demeanor
after a meeting in the federal prison here
Thursday.•
McVeigh's attorneys have filed court
papers in Denver and now . await a
Wednesday hearing to argue for a stay of
McVeigh's June 11 execution. They say
they need more time to review thousands of documenrs the FBI failed to
turn over during McVeigh's 1997 trial,
and they hope to show that the. government's mistake coyld mean a new trial.
The decision stands in stark contrast to
McVeigh's previous stance.
In December, he asked that all appeals
be dropped and his death be scheduled
quickly.Among the possessions he handed oyer to feUow inmates was his fan,

prized in death row cells without air
conditioning.
·
,
As early as Thursday morning, _when
be met with Nigh and attorney Richant
Burr at the U.S. Penitentiary; he had yet
to decide whether to seek: a stay or move
forward with the execution.
. "H~ had prepared himself psychologi- ·
cally and emotionally;• Nigh said. "He
had prepared himself to die."
.
.
According to an online journal by fellow death row inmate David Hammer,
McVeigh had been in a "soldier" mode
while getting ready for his lethal injection, ~n keeping his bed made up ~itary style. Hammer, who is friends With
McVeigh, wrote that the 6-foot-2 Gulf
War veteran had slimmed down to 157
pounds, giving his &amp;ce a drawn look. ·.

they're quitting their jobs aqd taking to the open road.
· "We don't have to live by the alarm clock anymore," said
Linda Burns, who bought the winning ticket in Wednesday's
Powerball drawing wort\! $6 I. 9 million at the Pitrsville PDQ
Texaco station in Holden.
The game, headquartered in Des Moines, Iowa, is played in
Arizona, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware,
Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Oregon , Rhode Island, South Dakota, Wisconsin and West Vir.

Since then, California's population has grown more ·than 13
percent.
·
With a nip, a tuck - and the occasional angry rip of a bust- ·
ed seam - · the nation's most populous state is finding out what
it's like to choke on success.
·
"It's too crowded here now;' says Jerry Knoester, founder of
a support group for long-distance commuters. "The populatio?
in California has just skyrocked. It's crowded m the CIIles, Its
crowded on the highways. There's no elbow room any more."

g•~~~ jackpot·was the second largest in ·Missouri history. A St.

Beating victim gets Jail time

Charles woman won $69 million in 1995.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A man who was beaten by poli'e
last summer in an arrest caught on videotape and broadcast
worldwide was sentenced Friday to 18 years in prison for a
crime spree committed in the two weeks prior to his arrest. ·
'T m sorry to the city of Philadelphia and the &amp;milies of the
people affected," Thomas Jones said in court.
Jones, 31, pleaded guilty in March to carjacking, robbery,
assault, reckless endangerment and drug charges. He could have
faced a sentence of 1.27 to 255 years.

Boom pushes Calif. population

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Every weekday before dawn,
engineer Martin Wuest drives 82 miles to his job in Silicon ValWASHINGTON (AP)- AT&amp;T is increasing irs long-disley. He and his family fled San Jose for the life of"super-comtance rates for more than 28 million customers who subscribe
muters" I 0 years ago, driven out by rising housing prices as tens
to the company's basic plan .
.
of thousands of people poured in.
The increase bY the nation's biggest carrier, with some 60
million subscribers total, takes effect July I and involves basic
rate customers - those who don't pay a minimum fee for calling plans.
·
Under the change, basic plan subscribers will pay 25 cenrsup from 22.5 cenrs - per minute for long-distance calls from
7 p.m. to7 a.m. on weeknighrs; on weekdays, between 7 a.m . .
and 7 p.m., the rate goes up from 29.5 cents to 30 cents. each ·
minute.Weekend calls will cost 16 cents per minute- up from
·
14.5 cenrs.
Subscribers who opt for a basic plan that has the same rate all
the time will be charged 17.5 cenrs per minute~ The cost was
previously 16 cenrs per minute.

•

'

Seven hospitals have agreed to pay
SS niillion to setde claims that they charged federal health care
programs for surgical procedures using experimental cardiac
·
devices, the Justice Department said Friday.
The devices had· not been approved for marketing by the
Food and Drug Administration when the procedures were performed between 191'17 and 1994, the department said.
Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., will pay $2.8
million. The Healthcare Co., which operated hospitals in California,Arizona and Florida th~t perfornied the procedures, will
pay $1.9 miijion. South Miami Hospital will pa'y:$450,000 and
Mt. Sinai Hospital in Miami \viU pay $26 7,17 4, the department
said.
· .
The government previously entered into s&lt;!trlements with
other hospitals engaged in similar conduct, resulting in payments of almost $13 million.

. inc1u9es 300 anytime mrnut~s anq 2:000 nigh~ &amp;weekend
minutes with a new one-year service agreement

'•

get a Nokia 252c.
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Wood

HIGHLIGHTS

signs with

West ·
Liberty ,
• HUNTINGTON (AP) Marshall and Troy State have
signe~ a three-year footb:ill
agreement.
· The deal announced Friday ·
i!'cludes games at Marshall in
2002 and . 2004 and at Troy
State in 2003.
. Troy State, a member of the
Division 1-AA Southland
Eootb:ill League the past five
~asons, will spend the 200 I
S!'ason as a Division 1-A
school.
, The TrojanS will play as an
ill-dependent and have games
scheduled against Nebraska,
Mississippi State, Miami (Fla.)
and Maryland this fall.
; Marsh:ill defeated Troy State
ih the 1993 Division 1-AA
playoffi and d11ring the 1998
J:!:S\llar season.
With the addition of Troy
State to the 2002 schedule,
Marshall will have seven
~orne games next year.

GALLIPOLIS -· Recent
Gallia Academy graduate Clayton Wood has decided that he
will wrestle coUegia~ely at West
Liberty . (West Virginia) State
College in next year.
In his career at Gallia Academy, wood was a four-year let•
terman in wresding. In 2001,
he was the
SEOAL runner-up in the
189~pnund

ROUGHED UP- Cincinnati Reds pitching coach Don Gullet tries to settle down his pitcher Brian Reith after giving up two
home runs in the second Inning aglnst the St. Louis Cardinals while catcher Kelly Stinnett and Sean Casey look on Saturday at Busch Stadium In St. LoUis ••Reith went one and two thirds Innings giving up six earned runs on five hits. (AP)

ST LOUIS (AP) -J.D. Drew hit
his career-high 19th home. run and
stole home, leading Ma~ Morris and
the St. Louis Cardinals over the
Cincinnati Reds 8-5 Saturday.
Ray Lankford homered, doubled
and drove in four ·r uns as the Cardinals
ended ·their long~t losing streak of the
season at·four. The Reds have lost nine
. of 11.
Morris (8-3), who had been leading
the NL with a 2.47 ERA, won for the
. seve~th tithe in eight decisions.
Moriis allowed four earned runs in
5 1-3 innings, and left with a 2,76 '
ERA.
Gene Stechschulte pitched . a score- ·

MCC looking to
change name
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The MCC doe5n't Want to be
confused'·with the MVC, the
MAC and especially the oiher
MCC. ·
The Midwestern Collegiate
Conference is expected to
:iJ]nounce Monday it's chang~
ing its name to the Horizon
League, The Indianapolis Star
reported Friday. .
,
The new name, which was
proposed by a lnariteting firm,
is an a(teJllpt to ·differenti~te j
the MCC from other confer:
ences in the region: the MissQuri Valley, the Mid-American and the Mid-Continent,
the Star said.
: League commissioner Jon
teCrone would not con,fir!Jl
tb.e new name.
: It's 'not the 'first time the
. !~ague will change its name. It
formed in 1979 as the Mid- '
western City Conference. The
name chahged to the Midwestern Collegiate in 1985. .
: The MCC Will expand to
rune schools. J!lly 1 ·· when
Youngstown State joins. Tlie
dther members are Butler,
I:letroit, ,Cleveland . Sta.te,
Wright State, Illinois-Chicago, Loyola of Chkago, Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Wisoonsin-Green
.
.-Bay.

.

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -A Centerview couple who
have worked "their wh.ole lives," laid claim to a nearly $62 million Powerball jackpot Friday, and said- surprise, surp,rise -

In Pt. Plea~ant, if you have received a
, door tag saying the upgrade in your area is
complete, you may be contacted by a
Charter contractor to exchange your
current equipment, or you can take it into
your local office and receive the new
digital equipment. If you currently receive
premium channels without a converter, the
SA digital box will now be required to
continue to receive our quality premium
services. If you do currently subscribe to a
premium service, the SA box will now
provide additional channels of that same
service, at no extra charge. If you do not
already enjoy Charter Digital, call 1-800800-CABLE and get installed so you can
enjoy·digital programming.

SUNOO's

·-··

'

(

.
I

1C With i new lWo-Yfilr

service l!&amp;reement and
available on rate plans
$35 and higher.

PageBl
Slrdey, lme J. 2001

er,

Prize winners taking to road

· ON OR AFTER JUNE 1, 2001 THE
PREMIUM CHANNELS OF HBO,
SHOWTIME, CINEMAX, , THE
MOVIE
CHANNEL,
AND
STARZ/ENCORE WILL ONLY BE
AVAILABLE ON CHARTER'S NEW
DIGITAL SA SET·TOP BOX.

NASCAR schedule, Page B7
Outdoors: In the Open, Page 88

· NEWARK, NJ. (AP)
Defensive end J~rerniah Parkwho is accus.ed with .his .
girlfriend
of aggravated
manslaughter in the death of
her 4-year-old son, was waived
lly the New York Gianrs.
As a rookie last season, Parker appeared in just four games
last season, mosdy on special
teams; and did not record a
.'" ·tactile. .the ~5. 270-pound
Parker was the Gianrs seventhround draft choice in 2000
fiom th.e U Diversity of California.

,$36. 90/mo.

\VA,WI~9.TON (AP) -

82

Parker released
by Giants

2,300 minutes per
.·month for only

Hospitals -:each settlement

ll'naav ~ basebaU roundup, Page
ft'r~•m bags to pitches, Page BJ

super leisure rate plans

• phone directory stores up
to 75 names and numbers
• available In a variety
of colors
plans Include:
·caller ID
• call waiting
. ' usee Message center'" w1ce mail ·

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tal-free from
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•

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tus. cellular

1-888-~yY-USCC

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·

.

t'

I

..'

'

ford ·homered.
.• ,.
Michael Tucker hit J a two-run
homer in the second, following a walk
by Sean Casey in the second.
Drew and Marrero homered in the
bottom of the second.
The Reds scored another
in the
third on a double-play grounder by
Deion Sanders. ·
The Cardinals made it18-3 with tWo
runs in the fifth.
Lankford hit an RBI double, and
another run scored when catcher
Kelly Stinnett .dropped a throw for an
error.
·
·
Alex Ochoa do!lble1 in two runs in
the Reds' sixth.

run

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Philadelphia and
Milwaukee are· going to Game 7 with both ·
Ray Allen and Allen Iverson playing their
best basketb:ill of the series.
Allen tied an NBA playoff record with riine
3-pojnters and had his own personal 17-0
run as dte Bucks held off a stunning rally led
by lverson .to defeat the 76ers 110-100 Friday
night.
.
'''We are· going to win this series Sunday. We
won't let them win . in our building," 76ers
center Dikembe Mutombo said.
Mutombo made a similar guarantee wh~n
the 76ers went to a seventh game in the conference semifinals, and he turned out to be
correGt when Toronto's Vince• Carter missed
the final shot of that game.
·

If this series also comes down to a final
shot, .chances are that Iverson or Allen will be
taking it.
.
Both players showed in Game 6 that they
are capable of taking over.
Hitting four consecutive . 3-point shots,
Allen scored 19 straight Milwaukee points
over the final 5 112 tninutes of the first quarter and the first I 1/,2 minutes of the second.
Seventeen of those' points went unanswered ·
·by the Sixers as the Bucks turned a 16-15
lead into a 33-15 edge.
Allen had 25 points at halftime, 31 before
the second half was two minutes old and 41
when he was finished. His . nine 3-pointers

PluH SH Bucki, 84

WHO'S BALL?- Philadelphia's Allen Iverson (3) and Milwaukee's Sam Cassell fight for the loose ball. (AP)

Azinger leads, Singh, Woods, Garcia-in pursuit

~~s:~/ay

Feinoonl, Grifton, Jocbon,
0o1&lt; H•, Prinmon, Sumnmvlllt
KlkdMI .... IIcllllll

S1lffurd Dr., (3041487-3855 · .
13041872~922 '
•
900 West Emmk AVIIIUI, l7401947-oo69 \

less ni:ntf'for hi!' ~on,f..
.
Lankf~rd's 13th home . run capped a
four-run first inning off Brian Reith
.(0-3). He allowed six runs on five hirs
and two. walks in 1 2-3 innings.
Reith lost 2-0 to the Cardinals last
Sunday.
The Cardinals scored their first run
as Drew stole borne as part of a double steal with Craig Paquette. It was
the first Drew had stolen home in his
major league career. . ·
Drew. became the first Cardinals'
player to steal home since Eli Marerro
did it against Pitrsburgh on April 13,
1999.
After ·a walk to Albert Pujols, Lank-

Monseau commented that
Wood had very good high
school coaching, as he was
noted to be ·doing things that
most wrestlers learn in their
freshman year of coUege.
Wood was coached by Matt
Warden during his four. years
~ng for rhe Blt!.cr·,~,
Wood aJso lettered three
times in football and one year
in track at Gallia Academy. He
was an all-SEOAL pick in
football his senior season and
earned the team's Most Valuable Offensive Lineman trophy.
The Blue Devils qualified
for the football playoffi in bOth
ofWood's final two semns.
Hilltopper football coach
Bob Eaton has expressed inter_est in seeing Wood play football at West Lib, but Wood is ·
still undecided a:bout playing
· two sports in college.

Bucks, SIXers to Game 7

.

: GALLiPoLIS - The Gallipolis Area Girls Basketball
G:amp will be held from
Monday through Thursday
from 1-4 p.m. at the Gallia
Academy gym. The camp is
fbr grades 4-9 fiom all area
sehools.
. .
· There will be a$60 nonre-.
fundable registration fee.
· Contact Gallia AcadJ:my
girls coach Kim A&lt;Qtins for
more information.

•

status.

. ~s help send·

:Gallipolis lilts.

We connect with you~

5,8-5

· dass, falling
to a competitor
who
placed at the
West Virginia
state
wrestling
Wood
tourney. He
was also the 2001 sectional
champ and a three-time district qualifier.
At WLSC, ~e will compete
under the tutelage of Dr. Vincent Monseau, the Hilltoppers:
head coach. Monseau has
coached 67 all-American
wrestlers in his 28 years of collegiate coaching. The 2001
West Lib grapplers finished
eighth in the nation in NCAA
Division II · and had five
wrestlers earn all-American

r

a 54-hole . event or not,"
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) Twice in its 25 years, the Woods said after finishing a
Memorial Tournament has 69 in near darkness Friday
been shortened to Sf boles by that left him ~o shots back of
.Azinger and one behind
·. incl~ment weather.
If that happens a third time, Singh through tWO rounds of
tWo-time defending champi- the Memorial.
"I needed to get myself into
on Tiger Woods feels he's in .a
prime spot to overtake former · position w~ere J dido 't have
Memorial . winners Paul too many shots to make up if
'Azinger artd Vijay Singh.
. it was a 54-bole event."
Azinger, who won the 1993
"Frotu what I've been told,
the weather's not supposed to Me111orial by holing a bunker
be good . (Saturday) and we shot on the 72nd green, foldon't know if it's going to be Io\veii'a first-round 68 with a

·S- under-par 67 to stand at 9under 135. Singh, wil)ner of
the last Memorial to be shortened to 54 holes in 1997, had
the claV's lowest round with a
66 and was .a shot back at 136.
Woqds, Chris Smith and
Sergio Garcia were at 135.
Gar*ia, who won his first
tour event m:o weeks ago at
the Colonial, didn·'t blanche
when he found out he would
be grouped with Woods m
the ~1ird round.
·Told he wouldn't have to

look far to keep an eye on. tees to try to. get the third
Woods, Garcia grinned and round completed.
said, "He won 't have to look
Azinger soared to the top
far to know what t'm doing, spot by stringing together five
too."
birdies down the stretch .
A two-hour . suspension of None of his birdie putts were
play Friday m&lt;;&gt;rning because longer than 12 feet.
o( a downpour prevented
"1 hit my irons laser-beam
three players from completing accurate,"r he said. ·"To keep
their secpnd rounds.They will playing well I'm going to
finish on Saturday morning . have io hh a few more fair- just .about the time more ways. I still have sm,ne work to
rain is expected. After the cut, do. I'm not totally dialed· in
the fi eld will go off in three- but it was obviously very
somes fiom the first and 1Ot~ good ."

�Page AI

Nation • World
No apology f1w11 Bush staff
WASHINGTON (AP) -

President Bush's spokesman said

Friday there will be no apology to former Clinton administration aides for :illegations of pr:mks and vandalism as the White
House changed hands. .
Asked about a letter signed by former Clinton aides seeking
an apology, White House spokesman Ari Aeischer said: "No
apology is merited. They are well-advised to leave it alone."
Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., scheduled a news conference
at the White House gate Friday to deliver the letter, which follows an investigation of the matter by the General Accounting
Office, Congress' investigative arm.
The GAO concluded that "there was no proof of anything
matching the :illegations" by identified White House _officials
who said they were greeted by damaged offices and eqmpment.
Former Clinton aides said the GAO's findings vindicated them.

Presidentw Cheney detail assets
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush has socked away
more than Sl million for his twin daughters while Vice President Dick Cheney has at least that much sitting in a single
checking account.
.
·
. Financial disclosure reports reviewed Friday by The Associated Press showed that Bush, who saw his salary more than
quadruple in January from $78,678 as Te&gt;&lt;as governor to
$400,000 as president, holds total assets worth between S8 million and S19 miUion.
Cheney, who came to the White House after being chief
executive at Halliburton Co., an oil services firm, has assers with
his wife of at least S20 m..iUion and possibly as much as $69 million:-Two of their four checking accounrs show balances of
more than $100,000. The Cbeneys report a balance of between
Sl million and S5 million on one joint checking account with
Northern Trust Bank.
Lynne Cheney, the first vice president's wife to hold a paid
private j\)b, works at a Washington think tank and sits on several corporate boards, including those of American Express and
Reader's Digest.

ATAT plans rate increase

••

Serd"" JuM ,, 2111

lawyer says McVeigh has reason-to live
BY REX W. HII'PE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - Preparing
for his execution at the hands of the
government he despises, Timothy
McVeigh gave fellow death row inmates
everything he owned, arranged for his
body to be torned over to family members and readied himself for what some
saw as martyrdOm.
He sat ·in his stuffy 8-by-1 0-foot cell
and waited.
Then he learned cif an FBI error, saw
a chink in the government's umor. Now
instead of waiting to die, the man convicted of killing 168 people in the Oklahoma City bombing has found a reason
to live.
"I would say he has some new

resolve;' said . attorney Robert Nigh,
who described his client's demeanor
after a meeting in the federal prison here
Thursday.•
McVeigh's attorneys have filed court
papers in Denver and now . await a
Wednesday hearing to argue for a stay of
McVeigh's June 11 execution. They say
they need more time to review thousands of documenrs the FBI failed to
turn over during McVeigh's 1997 trial,
and they hope to show that the. government's mistake coyld mean a new trial.
The decision stands in stark contrast to
McVeigh's previous stance.
In December, he asked that all appeals
be dropped and his death be scheduled
quickly.Among the possessions he handed oyer to feUow inmates was his fan,

prized in death row cells without air
conditioning.
·
,
As early as Thursday morning, _when
be met with Nigh and attorney Richant
Burr at the U.S. Penitentiary; he had yet
to decide whether to seek: a stay or move
forward with the execution.
. "H~ had prepared himself psychologi- ·
cally and emotionally;• Nigh said. "He
had prepared himself to die."
.
.
According to an online journal by fellow death row inmate David Hammer,
McVeigh had been in a "soldier" mode
while getting ready for his lethal injection, ~n keeping his bed made up ~itary style. Hammer, who is friends With
McVeigh, wrote that the 6-foot-2 Gulf
War veteran had slimmed down to 157
pounds, giving his &amp;ce a drawn look. ·.

they're quitting their jobs aqd taking to the open road.
· "We don't have to live by the alarm clock anymore," said
Linda Burns, who bought the winning ticket in Wednesday's
Powerball drawing wort\! $6 I. 9 million at the Pitrsville PDQ
Texaco station in Holden.
The game, headquartered in Des Moines, Iowa, is played in
Arizona, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware,
Indiana, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Oregon , Rhode Island, South Dakota, Wisconsin and West Vir.

Since then, California's population has grown more ·than 13
percent.
·
With a nip, a tuck - and the occasional angry rip of a bust- ·
ed seam - · the nation's most populous state is finding out what
it's like to choke on success.
·
"It's too crowded here now;' says Jerry Knoester, founder of
a support group for long-distance commuters. "The populatio?
in California has just skyrocked. It's crowded m the CIIles, Its
crowded on the highways. There's no elbow room any more."

g•~~~ jackpot·was the second largest in ·Missouri history. A St.

Beating victim gets Jail time

Charles woman won $69 million in 1995.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A man who was beaten by poli'e
last summer in an arrest caught on videotape and broadcast
worldwide was sentenced Friday to 18 years in prison for a
crime spree committed in the two weeks prior to his arrest. ·
'T m sorry to the city of Philadelphia and the &amp;milies of the
people affected," Thomas Jones said in court.
Jones, 31, pleaded guilty in March to carjacking, robbery,
assault, reckless endangerment and drug charges. He could have
faced a sentence of 1.27 to 255 years.

Boom pushes Calif. population

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Every weekday before dawn,
engineer Martin Wuest drives 82 miles to his job in Silicon ValWASHINGTON (AP)- AT&amp;T is increasing irs long-disley. He and his family fled San Jose for the life of"super-comtance rates for more than 28 million customers who subscribe
muters" I 0 years ago, driven out by rising housing prices as tens
to the company's basic plan .
.
of thousands of people poured in.
The increase bY the nation's biggest carrier, with some 60
million subscribers total, takes effect July I and involves basic
rate customers - those who don't pay a minimum fee for calling plans.
·
Under the change, basic plan subscribers will pay 25 cenrsup from 22.5 cenrs - per minute for long-distance calls from
7 p.m. to7 a.m. on weeknighrs; on weekdays, between 7 a.m . .
and 7 p.m., the rate goes up from 29.5 cents to 30 cents. each ·
minute.Weekend calls will cost 16 cents per minute- up from
·
14.5 cenrs.
Subscribers who opt for a basic plan that has the same rate all
the time will be charged 17.5 cenrs per minute~ The cost was
previously 16 cenrs per minute.

•

'

Seven hospitals have agreed to pay
SS niillion to setde claims that they charged federal health care
programs for surgical procedures using experimental cardiac
·
devices, the Justice Department said Friday.
The devices had· not been approved for marketing by the
Food and Drug Administration when the procedures were performed between 191'17 and 1994, the department said.
Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., will pay $2.8
million. The Healthcare Co., which operated hospitals in California,Arizona and Florida th~t perfornied the procedures, will
pay $1.9 miijion. South Miami Hospital will pa'y:$450,000 and
Mt. Sinai Hospital in Miami \viU pay $26 7,17 4, the department
said.
· .
The government previously entered into s&lt;!trlements with
other hospitals engaged in similar conduct, resulting in payments of almost $13 million.

. inc1u9es 300 anytime mrnut~s anq 2:000 nigh~ &amp;weekend
minutes with a new one-year service agreement

'•

get a Nokia 252c.
for only 1¢.

'''\k

\l&amp;'i.

~,.,
Dl..taiC.Itle..

Wood

HIGHLIGHTS

signs with

West ·
Liberty ,
• HUNTINGTON (AP) Marshall and Troy State have
signe~ a three-year footb:ill
agreement.
· The deal announced Friday ·
i!'cludes games at Marshall in
2002 and . 2004 and at Troy
State in 2003.
. Troy State, a member of the
Division 1-AA Southland
Eootb:ill League the past five
~asons, will spend the 200 I
S!'ason as a Division 1-A
school.
, The TrojanS will play as an
ill-dependent and have games
scheduled against Nebraska,
Mississippi State, Miami (Fla.)
and Maryland this fall.
; Marsh:ill defeated Troy State
ih the 1993 Division 1-AA
playoffi and d11ring the 1998
J:!:S\llar season.
With the addition of Troy
State to the 2002 schedule,
Marshall will have seven
~orne games next year.

GALLIPOLIS -· Recent
Gallia Academy graduate Clayton Wood has decided that he
will wrestle coUegia~ely at West
Liberty . (West Virginia) State
College in next year.
In his career at Gallia Academy, wood was a four-year let•
terman in wresding. In 2001,
he was the
SEOAL runner-up in the
189~pnund

ROUGHED UP- Cincinnati Reds pitching coach Don Gullet tries to settle down his pitcher Brian Reith after giving up two
home runs in the second Inning aglnst the St. Louis Cardinals while catcher Kelly Stinnett and Sean Casey look on Saturday at Busch Stadium In St. LoUis ••Reith went one and two thirds Innings giving up six earned runs on five hits. (AP)

ST LOUIS (AP) -J.D. Drew hit
his career-high 19th home. run and
stole home, leading Ma~ Morris and
the St. Louis Cardinals over the
Cincinnati Reds 8-5 Saturday.
Ray Lankford homered, doubled
and drove in four ·r uns as the Cardinals
ended ·their long~t losing streak of the
season at·four. The Reds have lost nine
. of 11.
Morris (8-3), who had been leading
the NL with a 2.47 ERA, won for the
. seve~th tithe in eight decisions.
Moriis allowed four earned runs in
5 1-3 innings, and left with a 2,76 '
ERA.
Gene Stechschulte pitched . a score- ·

MCC looking to
change name
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The MCC doe5n't Want to be
confused'·with the MVC, the
MAC and especially the oiher
MCC. ·
The Midwestern Collegiate
Conference is expected to
:iJ]nounce Monday it's chang~
ing its name to the Horizon
League, The Indianapolis Star
reported Friday. .
,
The new name, which was
proposed by a lnariteting firm,
is an a(teJllpt to ·differenti~te j
the MCC from other confer:
ences in the region: the MissQuri Valley, the Mid-American and the Mid-Continent,
the Star said.
: League commissioner Jon
teCrone would not con,fir!Jl
tb.e new name.
: It's 'not the 'first time the
. !~ague will change its name. It
formed in 1979 as the Mid- '
western City Conference. The
name chahged to the Midwestern Collegiate in 1985. .
: The MCC Will expand to
rune schools. J!lly 1 ·· when
Youngstown State joins. Tlie
dther members are Butler,
I:letroit, ,Cleveland . Sta.te,
Wright State, Illinois-Chicago, Loyola of Chkago, Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Wisoonsin-Green
.
.-Bay.

.

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -A Centerview couple who
have worked "their wh.ole lives," laid claim to a nearly $62 million Powerball jackpot Friday, and said- surprise, surp,rise -

In Pt. Plea~ant, if you have received a
, door tag saying the upgrade in your area is
complete, you may be contacted by a
Charter contractor to exchange your
current equipment, or you can take it into
your local office and receive the new
digital equipment. If you currently receive
premium channels without a converter, the
SA digital box will now be required to
continue to receive our quality premium
services. If you do currently subscribe to a
premium service, the SA box will now
provide additional channels of that same
service, at no extra charge. If you do not
already enjoy Charter Digital, call 1-800800-CABLE and get installed so you can
enjoy·digital programming.

SUNOO's

·-··

'

(

.
I

1C With i new lWo-Yfilr

service l!&amp;reement and
available on rate plans
$35 and higher.

PageBl
Slrdey, lme J. 2001

er,

Prize winners taking to road

· ON OR AFTER JUNE 1, 2001 THE
PREMIUM CHANNELS OF HBO,
SHOWTIME, CINEMAX, , THE
MOVIE
CHANNEL,
AND
STARZ/ENCORE WILL ONLY BE
AVAILABLE ON CHARTER'S NEW
DIGITAL SA SET·TOP BOX.

NASCAR schedule, Page B7
Outdoors: In the Open, Page 88

· NEWARK, NJ. (AP)
Defensive end J~rerniah Parkwho is accus.ed with .his .
girlfriend
of aggravated
manslaughter in the death of
her 4-year-old son, was waived
lly the New York Gianrs.
As a rookie last season, Parker appeared in just four games
last season, mosdy on special
teams; and did not record a
.'" ·tactile. .the ~5. 270-pound
Parker was the Gianrs seventhround draft choice in 2000
fiom th.e U Diversity of California.

,$36. 90/mo.

\VA,WI~9.TON (AP) -

82

Parker released
by Giants

2,300 minutes per
.·month for only

Hospitals -:each settlement

ll'naav ~ basebaU roundup, Page
ft'r~•m bags to pitches, Page BJ

super leisure rate plans

• phone directory stores up
to 75 names and numbers
• available In a variety
of colors
plans Include:
·caller ID
• call waiting
. ' usee Message center'" w1ce mail ·

u,s.

cai~V1't\'t11ef'e l'tfllt1 the
tal-free from
~home rate caiQ crea. tAsit ~local

us. cebr" store for delalls.

•

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

tus. cellular

1-888-~yY-USCC

uscellwar.com

·

.

t'

I

..'

'

ford ·homered.
.• ,.
Michael Tucker hit J a two-run
homer in the second, following a walk
by Sean Casey in the second.
Drew and Marrero homered in the
bottom of the second.
The Reds scored another
in the
third on a double-play grounder by
Deion Sanders. ·
The Cardinals made it18-3 with tWo
runs in the fifth.
Lankford hit an RBI double, and
another run scored when catcher
Kelly Stinnett .dropped a throw for an
error.
·
·
Alex Ochoa do!lble1 in two runs in
the Reds' sixth.

run

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Philadelphia and
Milwaukee are· going to Game 7 with both ·
Ray Allen and Allen Iverson playing their
best basketb:ill of the series.
Allen tied an NBA playoff record with riine
3-pojnters and had his own personal 17-0
run as dte Bucks held off a stunning rally led
by lverson .to defeat the 76ers 110-100 Friday
night.
.
'''We are· going to win this series Sunday. We
won't let them win . in our building," 76ers
center Dikembe Mutombo said.
Mutombo made a similar guarantee wh~n
the 76ers went to a seventh game in the conference semifinals, and he turned out to be
correGt when Toronto's Vince• Carter missed
the final shot of that game.
·

If this series also comes down to a final
shot, .chances are that Iverson or Allen will be
taking it.
.
Both players showed in Game 6 that they
are capable of taking over.
Hitting four consecutive . 3-point shots,
Allen scored 19 straight Milwaukee points
over the final 5 112 tninutes of the first quarter and the first I 1/,2 minutes of the second.
Seventeen of those' points went unanswered ·
·by the Sixers as the Bucks turned a 16-15
lead into a 33-15 edge.
Allen had 25 points at halftime, 31 before
the second half was two minutes old and 41
when he was finished. His . nine 3-pointers

PluH SH Bucki, 84

WHO'S BALL?- Philadelphia's Allen Iverson (3) and Milwaukee's Sam Cassell fight for the loose ball. (AP)

Azinger leads, Singh, Woods, Garcia-in pursuit

~~s:~/ay

Feinoonl, Grifton, Jocbon,
0o1&lt; H•, Prinmon, Sumnmvlllt
KlkdMI .... IIcllllll

S1lffurd Dr., (3041487-3855 · .
13041872~922 '
•
900 West Emmk AVIIIUI, l7401947-oo69 \

less ni:ntf'for hi!' ~on,f..
.
Lankf~rd's 13th home . run capped a
four-run first inning off Brian Reith
.(0-3). He allowed six runs on five hirs
and two. walks in 1 2-3 innings.
Reith lost 2-0 to the Cardinals last
Sunday.
The Cardinals scored their first run
as Drew stole borne as part of a double steal with Craig Paquette. It was
the first Drew had stolen home in his
major league career. . ·
Drew. became the first Cardinals'
player to steal home since Eli Marerro
did it against Pitrsburgh on April 13,
1999.
After ·a walk to Albert Pujols, Lank-

Monseau commented that
Wood had very good high
school coaching, as he was
noted to be ·doing things that
most wrestlers learn in their
freshman year of coUege.
Wood was coached by Matt
Warden during his four. years
~ng for rhe Blt!.cr·,~,
Wood aJso lettered three
times in football and one year
in track at Gallia Academy. He
was an all-SEOAL pick in
football his senior season and
earned the team's Most Valuable Offensive Lineman trophy.
The Blue Devils qualified
for the football playoffi in bOth
ofWood's final two semns.
Hilltopper football coach
Bob Eaton has expressed inter_est in seeing Wood play football at West Lib, but Wood is ·
still undecided a:bout playing
· two sports in college.

Bucks, SIXers to Game 7

.

: GALLiPoLIS - The Gallipolis Area Girls Basketball
G:amp will be held from
Monday through Thursday
from 1-4 p.m. at the Gallia
Academy gym. The camp is
fbr grades 4-9 fiom all area
sehools.
. .
· There will be a$60 nonre-.
fundable registration fee.
· Contact Gallia AcadJ:my
girls coach Kim A&lt;Qtins for
more information.

•

status.

. ~s help send·

:Gallipolis lilts.

We connect with you~

5,8-5

· dass, falling
to a competitor
who
placed at the
West Virginia
state
wrestling
Wood
tourney. He
was also the 2001 sectional
champ and a three-time district qualifier.
At WLSC, ~e will compete
under the tutelage of Dr. Vincent Monseau, the Hilltoppers:
head coach. Monseau has
coached 67 all-American
wrestlers in his 28 years of collegiate coaching. The 2001
West Lib grapplers finished
eighth in the nation in NCAA
Division II · and had five
wrestlers earn all-American

r

a 54-hole . event or not,"
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) Twice in its 25 years, the Woods said after finishing a
Memorial Tournament has 69 in near darkness Friday
been shortened to Sf boles by that left him ~o shots back of
.Azinger and one behind
·. incl~ment weather.
If that happens a third time, Singh through tWO rounds of
tWo-time defending champi- the Memorial.
"I needed to get myself into
on Tiger Woods feels he's in .a
prime spot to overtake former · position w~ere J dido 't have
Memorial . winners Paul too many shots to make up if
'Azinger artd Vijay Singh.
. it was a 54-bole event."
Azinger, who won the 1993
"Frotu what I've been told,
the weather's not supposed to Me111orial by holing a bunker
be good . (Saturday) and we shot on the 72nd green, foldon't know if it's going to be Io\veii'a first-round 68 with a

·S- under-par 67 to stand at 9under 135. Singh, wil)ner of
the last Memorial to be shortened to 54 holes in 1997, had
the claV's lowest round with a
66 and was .a shot back at 136.
Woqds, Chris Smith and
Sergio Garcia were at 135.
Gar*ia, who won his first
tour event m:o weeks ago at
the Colonial, didn·'t blanche
when he found out he would
be grouped with Woods m
the ~1ird round.
·Told he wouldn't have to

look far to keep an eye on. tees to try to. get the third
Woods, Garcia grinned and round completed.
said, "He won 't have to look
Azinger soared to the top
far to know what t'm doing, spot by stringing together five
too."
birdies down the stretch .
A two-hour . suspension of None of his birdie putts were
play Friday m&lt;;&gt;rning because longer than 12 feet.
o( a downpour prevented
"1 hit my irons laser-beam
three players from completing accurate,"r he said. ·"To keep
their secpnd rounds.They will playing well I'm going to
finish on Saturday morning . have io hh a few more fair- just .about the time more ways. I still have sm,ne work to
rain is expected. After the cut, do. I'm not totally dialed· in
the fi eld will go off in three- but it was obviously very
somes fiom the first and 1Ot~ good ."

�t;unba~

Page 82

Baseball

1timtS -&amp;tntinel

.s....y, dune 3, 2G01

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiHpolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

&amp;unbal' C!:irnr5 -&amp;rntmrl • Page 83

s.etllf, Ju• :s. 2801

I SPECIALS

'

Cubs,.Bonds streak
into June, Hidal o lifts
Astros over Do gers
BY Tl1E ASSOCIATED PRESS

straight win.
·
The Expos lost their second
str:aight under new manager
JeffTorborg. Montreal (21-34)
is last in the NL East, 15 games
behind the division-leading
Phillies.
Bruce Chen (2-3) aUowed
four hits and one run in seven
innings as Philadelphia won
for the 1Oth time in 11 games.
Britt Reames (2-8) lost his
eighth straight start.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

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Houston

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•
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(P-11-3~ 1:05 p.m.

Orioles 8,
Athletics

Marlins 5

Red Sox&amp;r
BlueJays4

White Sox J.

Braves Sr
Pirates 1

•

-(Sparks 3·2) .. ~ Whl•
Sox ~ 1-4), 2:05 p.m.
•
Minnesota (Millon 5-3} at Texu
1.--o :W), 3:05 p.m.
City (S..ZUki 2-3} at Analleijn
(OitiZ 3-&lt;1), 4:05 p.m.
•
Blllmore ( - 5-4) at 0eklolld
(Ucla 0-4}, 4:05p.m.
•
Boy tSturtH ~l • Saatle
(Gart:ia ~}. 4:35 p.m.
·
'

ftpuso

Mariner$ ••
Devil Rays 4

Astros 10.
Dodgen I
Richard Hidalgo hit a lead. off home run off Mike Fetters .
(1-1) in the bottom of the
ninth inning, lifting Houston
over Los Angeles.
Hidalgo went 4-for-5 with a
pair of RBI singles. Octavia
Dotd (2-3) pitched the final
two innings for. the victory.

Phlllles 1J.
Expos 2
Johnny Estrada, Bobby
Abreu and Scott Rolen each
drove in three runs to lead visiting Philadelphia to its fifth

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The White Sox have wd,n
seven of eight.

'IWins 10,
Rangen7
•

Torii
Hunter,
battiJlg
cleanup for the first time in lqs
career, hit RBI singles ih bo~
of
Minnesota's · five-r\!11
•
innings.
.
The Twins arrived in Texas
.
fi
I
at 6:30 a.m. a ter an extrainfiing loss at Anah~im. They
went right to work, scoring
five times in the first inning. :
Doug Mientkiewicz, Brian
Buchanan and AJ. Pie!'Z)'Ilski
also drove in two runs each for
Minnesota.

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Wa.hcr

NEW INPIAN- Roy Smith was bagging groceries two years ago. Now, he's a pitcher for the Cleveland !ndians. (AP)

FROM. BAGS TO PITCHES
.

Angels 7.
Royals 1
lsmael Valdes pit(hed a sixhitter for his lint AL complete
game as Anaheim stopped visiting Kansas Cjty.
Troy Glaus homered and
drove in three runs for . the
Angels. Jeff DaVanon, caU¢d
up .from Triple-A Salt Lake
after DH GlenaUen HiD was
put ·on waivers before the .
game, added a two-run
homer.
Rey Sanchez stretched the
majors' longest hitting streak
to 19 games with a single fllr
the Royals.

Bv ToM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

CLEVELAN@ (AP} •+Roy Smith's strange ,nip to
~he big leagues veered down
· the produce aisle, past the
meat department and straight
· through the check-out line.
Two years ago, Smith was
bagging groceries in a Florida
supermarket and considering
bagging hi s dream of one day
pitching in the major leagues .
Last week, the 25~year-old
walked into the Cleveland
lndians' clubhouse at Jacobs
Field for the first time. A few
1lays later, , he made his big
le~gue debut against the New
)'ork Yankees on wobbly
knees.
; "Wh~n I got here I walked
tround and looked at aU the
lockers and saw the names, .
;.nd then I saw' mine," Smith
laid. "It's amazing, Unreal. It's
hard to believe it's me."
t Smith
came
out
of
:nowhere, just as the basebaU
}eems to with his sneaky, sideJirm delivery.
• Smith, who discovered his
unique delivery almost by
$Ccident, MS made all those
:bag boys at Publix and the
:guys at Jato's Pizza back in
:Pinellas· Park, Fla., believe
j:lreams can come true.
; "I know guys have had
s ougher roads than me," said
Jhe 6-foot-6 Smith, who also
.'!lclivered pizzas, worked as .an
11partment complex secunty
~ard and futniture · salesman
oi.n the off-season. "I'm just
•
•

thankful I'm getting the before opening day.
chance."
While at Triple-A Buffalo,
Smith's 31l13png'journey to '' 1Sirii'th worked ''oh slowirlg
the Indians began in 1999 on down his delivery. and finethe final day of spring training tuning his mechanics. Whatfor the St. Paul Saints of the ever he did worked to near
independent
Northern perfection .
League.
In 16 dominating appearHe had already been ances for the Bisons, Smith
released by the Seattle had five saves and a 0.68
Mariners after four rather ERA . He didn't allow a run in
unimpressive seasons in their one 22-inning stretch and had
organization and was contem- struck out nin e straight hitters
plating quitting baseball for when he was told by Buffalo
goo~ and going to college.
manager Eric Wedge that the
But that day, Smith, who has Indians wanted hun.
also undergone s11rgeries on
When · Smith first heard he
his shoulder an'CI back, pic ked was comipg to Cleveland, he
up a ball and fired it to the called ju~t. about everyone he
catc hel' side-arnled- just for knew, including a coupl e budfun.
dies still working b·ack at the
He and his' manager, Marty grocery. store.
Scott, looked at each other 1 "I was speechless;' he said.
arid immediately . knew they ''.I tried to caD my parents 10
were 011 to something special. times but I think they were
"It's like I was born to on-line. When I finally told
them, they called back five
throw that way," he said.
Before signing a minor- times to make sure it was
league contract with the Iridi- real." ·
ans prior' to !ast season, Smith
Smith warmed up but wasenroUed 'for classes at a. com- n 't used for three games
munity college j1;1st in case the before he ,finally made . his
basebaU thing didn't pan out. major league debut last weekHowever, he pitched well , end against the Yankees, enterenough at the club's Single ing in the fifth inning to
and Double-A levels (7-3, relieve rookie C. C. Sabathta.
2.34 ERA, 0 homers in 100
As the buUpen door swung
innings) to get a spring train"- open, Smith burst through
· ing invitation from the Indi- apd sprinted to the mound as
am this year.
·
his mind filled with tho11ghts
The lan,ky right-hanper, of where else he had come
who always 'seems to be srnil- 'from.
.
ing,.was lthe biggest surprise ·o f
"For a second, I was thmkcamp and didn't get . set\1' ing my family ts at home
dowri to the minors until just watching m~ .on Tv,'' he satd.

"Just for a split second, I was
thinking, 'This is the big
leagues."'
It took just five pitches to
Scott. Brosius for reality to set
111 .

"Strike one, th en four
straight balls," he said. " It was
pretty ugly."
Stllith, though , lll &lt;m~gcd to
hang on for 2 1-3 innings
against the defending World
Series clumpion s, allowin g
four runs with four walks .
Still, he' came away encouraged .
"They weren't real!}' smacking me around," he said. "And
I didn 't have my best stuff,
and , it was the Yankees."
Smith got his second taste
Of the big leagues on Sunday
in Detroit. He was less nervous and had more control
while striking out six Tigers in
four innings .
·
On Tuesday, the Indians
optioned him to Buffalo only
because their overworked
bullpen needed a fresh arm.
"Roy Smith is going to
pitch again in the big leagues,"
Indians manager Charlie
Manuel said. "The only thing
.he needs is more experience
and to get comfortable here.
It's just that circumstances dictated that we had to send him
back now."
Pitching for the Indians isn't
the only job Smith wiD return
to this year. Once the season's
over, he '11 work at Jato's again,
slicing pepperonis and delivering ptzzas.

'

\Indians place Finley on disabled .list

l.af'F

Cafacilr
"'~'·lc

Hea\')' Du1y
Dr)'Of

.

'

Help ua w•loome Richard·
Allen to ApPIIIachlen nre,,
Auletant Manager. He
hopee to ... hie former
.!!!!~~!!. and frlenda.

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer
•

r.,....

Dllmonclbac:ks 4,
Pldtes2
Curt Schilling became base- ·
baD's first nine-game winner,
an,d J!IY BeD went 4-for-4 with .
a homer off Woody Williams
(4-4) as host Arizona won its
seventh ~traight.
Schilling (9-1), who flirted
with a perfect game in San
Diego last Saturday, had a
much tougher night against
the Padres this time, aUowing
two · runs · and nine hits in
seven innings.
Ben Davis, booed for breaking up Schilling's bid last week
with a bunt in the eighth
inning, had two hits.

GENE JoHNSON

Y-

llatunloY•-

n.

Giants 11.
Rockies l

CHEVROLET~ O~DSMOBILE

KoNMCityANhllin.....

s

ALRoundup

.

C.

The st2rt of 3 new month
.fllfT
~
AU- (Smoltl 1-2) at Pllnburgh
3\
29 24
did nothing to slow down
(AMefOOn3-l}, t :35p.m.
4\
.431 12~
28 25
.412 13~
P11iadetphla (llall &amp;0) at Mo!IIOOI
5
27 25
either the . Chicago Cubs or
.370 16
(YOSIIii 1-2), 1:35 p.m.
21 32 .396
ClncimaU
San Francisco's Barry Bonds.
Ctlcago QD (TIMIIIIZ 3-3) 11 ...
15
17 35 .327
Pitltllurgh
•
L l'lct GB
- ( - 5 - 4 }. 2:05p.m.
-Di*lon
Kerry Wood led the Cubs to
., 12 .77.
w L Pel GB
los ArVOIH (Gajplo 1-3) al their 11th str:aight win 26 27 .491
15
._,.,
(Bottonliold 2-4), 2:35 p.m. •
Cloldoncl
32 22 .593
25 28 .472 16
San Froncioco (Ga- t-3} II Coi2
Los Allgetes
30 24 .556
Chicago's longest streak in 31
19 ,3 1 .358 2i
T ogs
Oilldo (Aotacio 4-5), 3;05 p.m.
27 v _50()
5
San Diego
yean
San F1311Cisoo
27 27 .500
5
N.Y. (Appiof 3-5) a t - (Buf·
F~onett 3-2}. 4:05p.m.
26 28 .481
6
~
striking out
-.n&amp;, - 4. 111nrWlgs
San Diego (Jarvil 3-t) at Alflono
10 and hitCtevelond 7, N.Y. Yank- 4, 5 ~
(Johnson 5-4), • :35 p.m.
.
Fridoy'oCincinnati (Bett 1){1) at St. Loolo lnrWlgs, noln
.
•
ting a rwoAtlanta 5. Pittsburgh t
CNcogo Wlite Sox 3. Deboit 0
(MottiiOWS 2-1), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets 11 , Florida 5
run single in
- 1 0, Touo7
Philadelphia 13, Montreal 2
mhUll 8, Olktand 4
a 4-3 victory Friday night at
Houston 10, Los Angeles 9
- 8. T-IIof4
Ct*ago CubS 4 , Milwaukee 3
Milwaukee.
- 7. Kanoos City 1
Cincinnati s , St Louis 1
"We expect m come out
San Francisco 11, Colorado 7
CIO¥o1lnd II N.Y. Y.-s,late
Arizona 4 . San Diego 2
and \Yin to1norrow,u Wood
-.nat 'llHoiWi&gt;, lote
8 •Srore at Ollciand. late
said. "That's just the way it's
Cincimati at St. l.ouia. tate
going for us lately. We're playMichael Tucker snapped out
ing good basebaU and we're of a 9-for-58 slump 'vith a pair
going to keep it up, We're of RBI singles, driving home
Sabathia (6-2) pitched at ninth straight game.
doing what it takes to win baD the tiebrealcing run off Darryl left thumb by Jason KendaU's
Boone, second in the league
line-drive single. X-rays were Yankee Stadium for the first
games."
Kile (7-4) in the eighth inning negative.
with 53 RB!s, had three hits at
tinte.
So is Bonds. He hit his 29th as Cincinnati ended a four"I didn't think it was going Safeco Field.
Todd
Ritchie
(0-7)
became
home run and drew three game losing streak.
In a game between the
the first Pirates' pitcher to start to be that big of a deal, but
walks as San Francisco ended a
The Reds were coming off a a season \vith seven straight then I got out there and I was teams with the best .and wont
three-game losing streak with 6-22 mark in May, their worst
losses since Jose DeLeon in pretty nervous," the 20-)iear- records in the majors, the
a 11-7 victory at Colorado.
month since 1952.The Cardi- 1985.
Mariners (41-12) matched
old rookie said.
Bonds, who had a major nals have lost four in a row at
Ricardo Rincon recorded their longest winning stteak of
league record 17 home runs in home, totaling four runs, after
his first S3Ve of the season, the season.
May. hit a two-run shot in the winning nine straight at Busch
Bryan Relcar (0-7) took the
the fifth inning for
pitching
third inning for his 14th in his Stadium.
the Indians. The game: was loss as Tampa Bay feU to 15last 15 games. Bonds' 29
C.C. Sabathia stuck around
caUed after a wait of 1 hour, 21 39.
homen in 54 games is the
just long e~ough to win on a
minutes.
fastest start in major league
wet night at Yankee Stadium.
The Indians were busy off
,
history.
Roberto Alomar and Ellis
4.
the
field, too. They activated
"We won, and that is aU that
Burks homered, and Marty
pitcher Charles Nagy arid outmatters," . Bonds said. "Right
Tsuyoshi Shinjo, Robin Cordova hit a go-ahead single
Jeff Conine hit a three-run
now, I am just playing to win Ventura and Rey Ordonez as the Cleveland Indians beat .fielder Kenny Lofton from the
homer in the seventh inning,
games, and not hitting in a drove in two runs apiece as the New York Yankees 7-4 Fri- disabled list before the game.
and Baltimore won at Oakhome run contest."
New York snapped a four- day night in a game shortened
land to end a four-game losing
Chicago has foUowed an game skid,
.
to 5 I /2 innings by rain.
streak.
eight-game skid by posting its
Host Florida lost for the first
In an official scoring oddity,
After Jason Giambi's threelongest winning streak since time in four games and fell to Sabathia· got the , victory
run homer put the A's ahead
an 11-gamer April 14-27, 3-2 under manager Tony despite pitching orlly four
Jason Varitek and Dante in the sixth, Conine connect1970.
Perez.
innings as the starter. UsoaUy,
Bichette hit RBI singles in the ed off Jim Mecir.
Wood (4-4), who struck out
Dicky
Gonzalez
(2-2) the minimum is five innings.
Giambi 's 14th home run of
11th inning at SkyDome as
14 and aUowed one hit in a 1- aUowed six hits and five runs · The ruling is aUowed in
Boston won its third str:aight the season .was his fourth m
0 win last Friday, aUowed rwo in seven innings for his first games in which the o.pposing
game.
. three games.
runs and five hits in 6 1-3 win in almost a month. ·
team bats only five times.
Toronto loaded the. bases
innings to win his third
"Luck of the draw," Sabathia
with one out in the 1Oth, but
straight game.
said.
Derek ~owe got . Darrin
He also hit a two-run single
The rule had not been Fletcher to ground into a dou- ·
in the fOurth off Jimmy
applied in the majors since
ble play. The Blue Jays have
Haynes (5-6) to make it 4-0.
Larry LuebbeJ:S got a fourMark Buehrle beat Detroit
lost f1ve of six.
Chipper Jones homered and inning victory for St. Louis on
for the third tirrie this season,
tripled before leaving because Oct. 3, 1999, according to the
pitching Chicago to a win at
of a thumb injury, leading Elias Sports Bureau. The last
Comiskey Park.
John Burkett (4-4) and Atlanta AL pitcher todo it was Richie
Six days after beating the
to a win at Pittsburgh.
Lewis, who went 4 1-3
with his first major
'Tigers
Benito Santiago went 3-forJones exited in the eighth iQnings for Baltimore on July
Bret Boone drove in three league shutout, Buehrle gave
5 with two doubles and three inning after being hit in the 31,1992.
more runs, and Seattle won its up four hits in 7 2-3 innings.
RB!s, Armando Rios hit a
three-run homer and Rich
Aurilia had a two-run shot for
San Francisco.
Kitk Rueter (5-6), who
hadn't won . since May 1,0,
allowed six runs and sevet;~ hits
in 6 2-3 innings.
Neifi Perez and Larry Walker homered for Colorado. ·
Shawn Chacon (3-2) was
roughed up for seven runs in
five innings.

Reds 5,
cardinals 1

'

.. ChiCOgO- Sox.lo..
-11Toas.lale
,..,.,. lilY .. Saolllt. lote

.. ,• •, lAIIIUe

NEW YORK (AP) -The Cleveland
.Indians placed Chuck finley on the· 15:day disabled ,list with neck spasms Satur:day, a d~y after he missed his ~tart against
:the New York Yankees.
: The '3 8-year-old left-bander has been
;bothered by muscle spasms in his upper
'b k nd neck the past three weeks and
aca
. has
pitched only into the second inning
of his last three starts.
IOL\V0
: To replace Finley, the Indians rec~U~d
• :right-hander Jake Westbrook fmm Tnplef. Buffala. ' Charles Nagy, who came off
. the disabled list Friday, will make his firsr
;cart of the season Sunday against the Yan!tees. ,
..
·
_
The ·I ndians said Finley has returned tO
••

•
•

h

Cleveland and will ·be examined Monday
by team physician Dr. Louis Keppler.
This is the first time Finley has been
pl~ced on the PL since 1997 and the fifth
time in his career he has been sidelined
by an inj11ry.
·
. ·
"This has been bothering him," Indians
manager Charlie Manuel said. " We need
· to find out ,exact1y w h'
at s wrong Wlt' h
Finley. I don t want 1htm to
pttchmg
. keep
II
~Q.d go down for a· ong time.
·
Cleveland activated N agy and outfielder Kenny Lofton from the dt~abled hst
Friday and thtrd baseman Travts Fryman
on Saturday.
. .
.
PoUo)vlllg a ratn-shortenesl 7-4 wm.
over the Yankees, the lnd1 ans also ttaded

outfielder Jacob Cruz to the Colorado
Ro~kies for a pair of minor leaguers catcher Josh Bard and outfielder Jody
Gerut.
·
After scratchi ng Finley from Friday's
start, the Indi ans had hoped he would be
able to pitch Sunday, a day after Bartolo
Colon (4-5) was 10 f.1cc Roger Ckmcns
(5-l).
'
Finley, whose place in the rotation was
.taken by Tookie f..C. Sabathia, mi ssed a
start May 11 bedmc uf neck and shotdder problems, th en pitched seven shu tout
il111ings th e next day agai1~s t Tampa fhy.
Since then, he is 0-2 wit!~ a 19.73 ERA
in three starts, droppin g him to 4-4 with
a (i .1 0 ERA overall.
·1

...

•

CHIVY

�t;unba~

Page 82

Baseball

1timtS -&amp;tntinel

.s....y, dune 3, 2G01

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiHpolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

&amp;unbal' C!:irnr5 -&amp;rntmrl • Page 83

s.etllf, Ju• :s. 2801

I SPECIALS

'

Cubs,.Bonds streak
into June, Hidal o lifts
Astros over Do gers
BY Tl1E ASSOCIATED PRESS

straight win.
·
The Expos lost their second
str:aight under new manager
JeffTorborg. Montreal (21-34)
is last in the NL East, 15 games
behind the division-leading
Phillies.
Bruce Chen (2-3) aUowed
four hits and one run in seven
innings as Philadelphia won
for the 1Oth time in 11 games.
Britt Reames (2-8) lost his
eighth straight start.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

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Houston

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Orioles 8,
Athletics

Marlins 5

Red Sox&amp;r
BlueJays4

White Sox J.

Braves Sr
Pirates 1

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-(Sparks 3·2) .. ~ Whl•
Sox ~ 1-4), 2:05 p.m.
•
Minnesota (Millon 5-3} at Texu
1.--o :W), 3:05 p.m.
City (S..ZUki 2-3} at Analleijn
(OitiZ 3-&lt;1), 4:05 p.m.
•
Blllmore ( - 5-4) at 0eklolld
(Ucla 0-4}, 4:05p.m.
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(Gart:ia ~}. 4:35 p.m.
·
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Mariner$ ••
Devil Rays 4

Astros 10.
Dodgen I
Richard Hidalgo hit a lead. off home run off Mike Fetters .
(1-1) in the bottom of the
ninth inning, lifting Houston
over Los Angeles.
Hidalgo went 4-for-5 with a
pair of RBI singles. Octavia
Dotd (2-3) pitched the final
two innings for. the victory.

Phlllles 1J.
Expos 2
Johnny Estrada, Bobby
Abreu and Scott Rolen each
drove in three runs to lead visiting Philadelphia to its fifth

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The White Sox have wd,n
seven of eight.

'IWins 10,
Rangen7
•

Torii
Hunter,
battiJlg
cleanup for the first time in lqs
career, hit RBI singles ih bo~
of
Minnesota's · five-r\!11
•
innings.
.
The Twins arrived in Texas
.
fi
I
at 6:30 a.m. a ter an extrainfiing loss at Anah~im. They
went right to work, scoring
five times in the first inning. :
Doug Mientkiewicz, Brian
Buchanan and AJ. Pie!'Z)'Ilski
also drove in two runs each for
Minnesota.

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NEW INPIAN- Roy Smith was bagging groceries two years ago. Now, he's a pitcher for the Cleveland !ndians. (AP)

FROM. BAGS TO PITCHES
.

Angels 7.
Royals 1
lsmael Valdes pit(hed a sixhitter for his lint AL complete
game as Anaheim stopped visiting Kansas Cjty.
Troy Glaus homered and
drove in three runs for . the
Angels. Jeff DaVanon, caU¢d
up .from Triple-A Salt Lake
after DH GlenaUen HiD was
put ·on waivers before the .
game, added a two-run
homer.
Rey Sanchez stretched the
majors' longest hitting streak
to 19 games with a single fllr
the Royals.

Bv ToM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

CLEVELAN@ (AP} •+Roy Smith's strange ,nip to
~he big leagues veered down
· the produce aisle, past the
meat department and straight
· through the check-out line.
Two years ago, Smith was
bagging groceries in a Florida
supermarket and considering
bagging hi s dream of one day
pitching in the major leagues .
Last week, the 25~year-old
walked into the Cleveland
lndians' clubhouse at Jacobs
Field for the first time. A few
1lays later, , he made his big
le~gue debut against the New
)'ork Yankees on wobbly
knees.
; "Wh~n I got here I walked
tround and looked at aU the
lockers and saw the names, .
;.nd then I saw' mine," Smith
laid. "It's amazing, Unreal. It's
hard to believe it's me."
t Smith
came
out
of
:nowhere, just as the basebaU
}eems to with his sneaky, sideJirm delivery.
• Smith, who discovered his
unique delivery almost by
$Ccident, MS made all those
:bag boys at Publix and the
:guys at Jato's Pizza back in
:Pinellas· Park, Fla., believe
j:lreams can come true.
; "I know guys have had
s ougher roads than me," said
Jhe 6-foot-6 Smith, who also
.'!lclivered pizzas, worked as .an
11partment complex secunty
~ard and futniture · salesman
oi.n the off-season. "I'm just
•
•

thankful I'm getting the before opening day.
chance."
While at Triple-A Buffalo,
Smith's 31l13png'journey to '' 1Sirii'th worked ''oh slowirlg
the Indians began in 1999 on down his delivery. and finethe final day of spring training tuning his mechanics. Whatfor the St. Paul Saints of the ever he did worked to near
independent
Northern perfection .
League.
In 16 dominating appearHe had already been ances for the Bisons, Smith
released by the Seattle had five saves and a 0.68
Mariners after four rather ERA . He didn't allow a run in
unimpressive seasons in their one 22-inning stretch and had
organization and was contem- struck out nin e straight hitters
plating quitting baseball for when he was told by Buffalo
goo~ and going to college.
manager Eric Wedge that the
But that day, Smith, who has Indians wanted hun.
also undergone s11rgeries on
When · Smith first heard he
his shoulder an'CI back, pic ked was comipg to Cleveland, he
up a ball and fired it to the called ju~t. about everyone he
catc hel' side-arnled- just for knew, including a coupl e budfun.
dies still working b·ack at the
He and his' manager, Marty grocery. store.
Scott, looked at each other 1 "I was speechless;' he said.
arid immediately . knew they ''.I tried to caD my parents 10
were 011 to something special. times but I think they were
"It's like I was born to on-line. When I finally told
them, they called back five
throw that way," he said.
Before signing a minor- times to make sure it was
league contract with the Iridi- real." ·
ans prior' to !ast season, Smith
Smith warmed up but wasenroUed 'for classes at a. com- n 't used for three games
munity college j1;1st in case the before he ,finally made . his
basebaU thing didn't pan out. major league debut last weekHowever, he pitched well , end against the Yankees, enterenough at the club's Single ing in the fifth inning to
and Double-A levels (7-3, relieve rookie C. C. Sabathta.
2.34 ERA, 0 homers in 100
As the buUpen door swung
innings) to get a spring train"- open, Smith burst through
· ing invitation from the Indi- apd sprinted to the mound as
am this year.
·
his mind filled with tho11ghts
The lan,ky right-hanper, of where else he had come
who always 'seems to be srnil- 'from.
.
ing,.was lthe biggest surprise ·o f
"For a second, I was thmkcamp and didn't get . set\1' ing my family ts at home
dowri to the minors until just watching m~ .on Tv,'' he satd.

"Just for a split second, I was
thinking, 'This is the big
leagues."'
It took just five pitches to
Scott. Brosius for reality to set
111 .

"Strike one, th en four
straight balls," he said. " It was
pretty ugly."
Stllith, though , lll &lt;m~gcd to
hang on for 2 1-3 innings
against the defending World
Series clumpion s, allowin g
four runs with four walks .
Still, he' came away encouraged .
"They weren't real!}' smacking me around," he said. "And
I didn 't have my best stuff,
and , it was the Yankees."
Smith got his second taste
Of the big leagues on Sunday
in Detroit. He was less nervous and had more control
while striking out six Tigers in
four innings .
·
On Tuesday, the Indians
optioned him to Buffalo only
because their overworked
bullpen needed a fresh arm.
"Roy Smith is going to
pitch again in the big leagues,"
Indians manager Charlie
Manuel said. "The only thing
.he needs is more experience
and to get comfortable here.
It's just that circumstances dictated that we had to send him
back now."
Pitching for the Indians isn't
the only job Smith wiD return
to this year. Once the season's
over, he '11 work at Jato's again,
slicing pepperonis and delivering ptzzas.

'

\Indians place Finley on disabled .list

l.af'F

Cafacilr
"'~'·lc

Hea\')' Du1y
Dr)'Of

.

'

Help ua w•loome Richard·
Allen to ApPIIIachlen nre,,
Auletant Manager. He
hopee to ... hie former
.!!!!~~!!. and frlenda.

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer
•

r.,....

Dllmonclbac:ks 4,
Pldtes2
Curt Schilling became base- ·
baD's first nine-game winner,
an,d J!IY BeD went 4-for-4 with .
a homer off Woody Williams
(4-4) as host Arizona won its
seventh ~traight.
Schilling (9-1), who flirted
with a perfect game in San
Diego last Saturday, had a
much tougher night against
the Padres this time, aUowing
two · runs · and nine hits in
seven innings.
Ben Davis, booed for breaking up Schilling's bid last week
with a bunt in the eighth
inning, had two hits.

GENE JoHNSON

Y-

llatunloY•-

n.

Giants 11.
Rockies l

CHEVROLET~ O~DSMOBILE

KoNMCityANhllin.....

s

ALRoundup

.

C.

The st2rt of 3 new month
.fllfT
~
AU- (Smoltl 1-2) at Pllnburgh
3\
29 24
did nothing to slow down
(AMefOOn3-l}, t :35p.m.
4\
.431 12~
28 25
.412 13~
P11iadetphla (llall &amp;0) at Mo!IIOOI
5
27 25
either the . Chicago Cubs or
.370 16
(YOSIIii 1-2), 1:35 p.m.
21 32 .396
ClncimaU
San Francisco's Barry Bonds.
Ctlcago QD (TIMIIIIZ 3-3) 11 ...
15
17 35 .327
Pitltllurgh
•
L l'lct GB
- ( - 5 - 4 }. 2:05p.m.
-Di*lon
Kerry Wood led the Cubs to
., 12 .77.
w L Pel GB
los ArVOIH (Gajplo 1-3) al their 11th str:aight win 26 27 .491
15
._,.,
(Bottonliold 2-4), 2:35 p.m. •
Cloldoncl
32 22 .593
25 28 .472 16
San Froncioco (Ga- t-3} II Coi2
Los Allgetes
30 24 .556
Chicago's longest streak in 31
19 ,3 1 .358 2i
T ogs
Oilldo (Aotacio 4-5), 3;05 p.m.
27 v _50()
5
San Diego
yean
San F1311Cisoo
27 27 .500
5
N.Y. (Appiof 3-5) a t - (Buf·
F~onett 3-2}. 4:05p.m.
26 28 .481
6
~
striking out
-.n&amp;, - 4. 111nrWlgs
San Diego (Jarvil 3-t) at Alflono
10 and hitCtevelond 7, N.Y. Yank- 4, 5 ~
(Johnson 5-4), • :35 p.m.
.
Fridoy'oCincinnati (Bett 1){1) at St. Loolo lnrWlgs, noln
.
•
ting a rwoAtlanta 5. Pittsburgh t
CNcogo Wlite Sox 3. Deboit 0
(MottiiOWS 2-1), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets 11 , Florida 5
run single in
- 1 0, Touo7
Philadelphia 13, Montreal 2
mhUll 8, Olktand 4
a 4-3 victory Friday night at
Houston 10, Los Angeles 9
- 8. T-IIof4
Ct*ago CubS 4 , Milwaukee 3
Milwaukee.
- 7. Kanoos City 1
Cincinnati s , St Louis 1
"We expect m come out
San Francisco 11, Colorado 7
CIO¥o1lnd II N.Y. Y.-s,late
Arizona 4 . San Diego 2
and \Yin to1norrow,u Wood
-.nat 'llHoiWi&gt;, lote
8 •Srore at Ollciand. late
said. "That's just the way it's
Cincimati at St. l.ouia. tate
going for us lately. We're playMichael Tucker snapped out
ing good basebaU and we're of a 9-for-58 slump 'vith a pair
going to keep it up, We're of RBI singles, driving home
Sabathia (6-2) pitched at ninth straight game.
doing what it takes to win baD the tiebrealcing run off Darryl left thumb by Jason KendaU's
Boone, second in the league
line-drive single. X-rays were Yankee Stadium for the first
games."
Kile (7-4) in the eighth inning negative.
with 53 RB!s, had three hits at
tinte.
So is Bonds. He hit his 29th as Cincinnati ended a four"I didn't think it was going Safeco Field.
Todd
Ritchie
(0-7)
became
home run and drew three game losing streak.
In a game between the
the first Pirates' pitcher to start to be that big of a deal, but
walks as San Francisco ended a
The Reds were coming off a a season \vith seven straight then I got out there and I was teams with the best .and wont
three-game losing streak with 6-22 mark in May, their worst
losses since Jose DeLeon in pretty nervous," the 20-)iear- records in the majors, the
a 11-7 victory at Colorado.
month since 1952.The Cardi- 1985.
Mariners (41-12) matched
old rookie said.
Bonds, who had a major nals have lost four in a row at
Ricardo Rincon recorded their longest winning stteak of
league record 17 home runs in home, totaling four runs, after
his first S3Ve of the season, the season.
May. hit a two-run shot in the winning nine straight at Busch
Bryan Relcar (0-7) took the
the fifth inning for
pitching
third inning for his 14th in his Stadium.
the Indians. The game: was loss as Tampa Bay feU to 15last 15 games. Bonds' 29
C.C. Sabathia stuck around
caUed after a wait of 1 hour, 21 39.
homen in 54 games is the
just long e~ough to win on a
minutes.
fastest start in major league
wet night at Yankee Stadium.
The Indians were busy off
,
history.
Roberto Alomar and Ellis
4.
the
field, too. They activated
"We won, and that is aU that
Burks homered, and Marty
pitcher Charles Nagy arid outmatters," . Bonds said. "Right
Tsuyoshi Shinjo, Robin Cordova hit a go-ahead single
Jeff Conine hit a three-run
now, I am just playing to win Ventura and Rey Ordonez as the Cleveland Indians beat .fielder Kenny Lofton from the
homer in the seventh inning,
games, and not hitting in a drove in two runs apiece as the New York Yankees 7-4 Fri- disabled list before the game.
and Baltimore won at Oakhome run contest."
New York snapped a four- day night in a game shortened
land to end a four-game losing
Chicago has foUowed an game skid,
.
to 5 I /2 innings by rain.
streak.
eight-game skid by posting its
Host Florida lost for the first
In an official scoring oddity,
After Jason Giambi's threelongest winning streak since time in four games and fell to Sabathia· got the , victory
run homer put the A's ahead
an 11-gamer April 14-27, 3-2 under manager Tony despite pitching orlly four
Jason Varitek and Dante in the sixth, Conine connect1970.
Perez.
innings as the starter. UsoaUy,
Bichette hit RBI singles in the ed off Jim Mecir.
Wood (4-4), who struck out
Dicky
Gonzalez
(2-2) the minimum is five innings.
Giambi 's 14th home run of
11th inning at SkyDome as
14 and aUowed one hit in a 1- aUowed six hits and five runs · The ruling is aUowed in
Boston won its third str:aight the season .was his fourth m
0 win last Friday, aUowed rwo in seven innings for his first games in which the o.pposing
game.
. three games.
runs and five hits in 6 1-3 win in almost a month. ·
team bats only five times.
Toronto loaded the. bases
innings to win his third
"Luck of the draw," Sabathia
with one out in the 1Oth, but
straight game.
said.
Derek ~owe got . Darrin
He also hit a two-run single
The rule had not been Fletcher to ground into a dou- ·
in the fOurth off Jimmy
applied in the majors since
ble play. The Blue Jays have
Haynes (5-6) to make it 4-0.
Larry LuebbeJ:S got a fourMark Buehrle beat Detroit
lost f1ve of six.
Chipper Jones homered and inning victory for St. Louis on
for the third tirrie this season,
tripled before leaving because Oct. 3, 1999, according to the
pitching Chicago to a win at
of a thumb injury, leading Elias Sports Bureau. The last
Comiskey Park.
John Burkett (4-4) and Atlanta AL pitcher todo it was Richie
Six days after beating the
to a win at Pittsburgh.
Lewis, who went 4 1-3
with his first major
'Tigers
Benito Santiago went 3-forJones exited in the eighth iQnings for Baltimore on July
Bret Boone drove in three league shutout, Buehrle gave
5 with two doubles and three inning after being hit in the 31,1992.
more runs, and Seattle won its up four hits in 7 2-3 innings.
RB!s, Armando Rios hit a
three-run homer and Rich
Aurilia had a two-run shot for
San Francisco.
Kitk Rueter (5-6), who
hadn't won . since May 1,0,
allowed six runs and sevet;~ hits
in 6 2-3 innings.
Neifi Perez and Larry Walker homered for Colorado. ·
Shawn Chacon (3-2) was
roughed up for seven runs in
five innings.

Reds 5,
cardinals 1

'

.. ChiCOgO- Sox.lo..
-11Toas.lale
,..,.,. lilY .. Saolllt. lote

.. ,• •, lAIIIUe

NEW YORK (AP) -The Cleveland
.Indians placed Chuck finley on the· 15:day disabled ,list with neck spasms Satur:day, a d~y after he missed his ~tart against
:the New York Yankees.
: The '3 8-year-old left-bander has been
;bothered by muscle spasms in his upper
'b k nd neck the past three weeks and
aca
. has
pitched only into the second inning
of his last three starts.
IOL\V0
: To replace Finley, the Indians rec~U~d
• :right-hander Jake Westbrook fmm Tnplef. Buffala. ' Charles Nagy, who came off
. the disabled list Friday, will make his firsr
;cart of the season Sunday against the Yan!tees. ,
..
·
_
The ·I ndians said Finley has returned tO
••

•
•

h

Cleveland and will ·be examined Monday
by team physician Dr. Louis Keppler.
This is the first time Finley has been
pl~ced on the PL since 1997 and the fifth
time in his career he has been sidelined
by an inj11ry.
·
. ·
"This has been bothering him," Indians
manager Charlie Manuel said. " We need
· to find out ,exact1y w h'
at s wrong Wlt' h
Finley. I don t want 1htm to
pttchmg
. keep
II
~Q.d go down for a· ong time.
·
Cleveland activated N agy and outfielder Kenny Lofton from the dt~abled hst
Friday and thtrd baseman Travts Fryman
on Saturday.
. .
.
PoUo)vlllg a ratn-shortenesl 7-4 wm.
over the Yankees, the lnd1 ans also ttaded

outfielder Jacob Cruz to the Colorado
Ro~kies for a pair of minor leaguers catcher Josh Bard and outfielder Jody
Gerut.
·
After scratchi ng Finley from Friday's
start, the Indi ans had hoped he would be
able to pitch Sunday, a day after Bartolo
Colon (4-5) was 10 f.1cc Roger Ckmcns
(5-l).
'
Finley, whose place in the rotation was
.taken by Tookie f..C. Sabathia, mi ssed a
start May 11 bedmc uf neck and shotdder problems, th en pitched seven shu tout
il111ings th e next day agai1~s t Tampa fhy.
Since then, he is 0-2 wit!~ a 19.73 ERA
in three starts, droppin g him to 4-4 with
a (i .1 0 ERA overall.
·1

...

•

CHIVY

�•

\

Sunct.y, June 3, 2001

PomeiOf •llllld"lpiJit • 0 l''lpal8, Ofllo 0 Point Pl.. lnt, WV

OHIO STATE
BASEBALL TOURNEY

Marian Pleasant
defeats Zane Trace
COLUMBUS (AP) Marion Pleasant scored
seven runs on eight hits,
including. two RBis from
· Adam Hesler, m a 7-1
blowout of Chillicothe
Zane Trace in a state baseball tournament Division
III semifinal Friday.
Heavy rams at . Ohio
State's Bill Davis Stadium
delayed tilt game by more
than 2 112 hours.
After a scoreless first
inning, the Spartans scored
three runs in the second
and made it 4-0 in 'the sixth
on one of Hesler's RBls.
The Pioneen scored their
only run in the sixth on a
Jordan Baker RBI single.
Marion scored three
more runs in the seventh
for the win. They will face
eitherYoungstown Unuline
or Millbury Lake in Saturday's championship.

•

Cincinnati Country Day
beat Windham 9-1 in a
Division IV state baseball
semifinal Friday.
Country Day plays Toledo Otuw.a Hills, which beat
Lancaster Fisher Catholic
3-2 in the other semifinal
Friday, for the •tate championship on Saturday.
Country Day (29-3)
scored twice in the tint
inning when Duty doubled
and scored on a triple by
Smith, who then scored on
an error.
Country Day broke up
the. game \vith six runs on
four hits in the third.
Wright drove in two runs
with a single and Duty
knocked in two runs on a
suicide squeeze bunt.
Windham (16-7) si:ored
its only run on a single by
Zack Burns in the seventh
mmng.

Youngs. Ursuline 6,
Millbury Lake 1

Tot. Ottawa Hills 3,
Lan. Fisher Cath. 2, 8

John Angelo struck out
mne batten and Steve
Stroney drove in the gamewinner as Youngstown
Ursuline beat Millbury
Lake 6-1 in a state baseball
tournament Division Ill
semifinal Friday.
'Angelo (7 -2) faced 27
batters and allowed just
three hits and one unearned
run over seven innings.
The Flyers' only run
came in the second inning
when Kyle Scharer scored
on a throwing error.

Bryan Rhoads hit a twoout RBI-single in the bottom of the eighth inning to
lead Toledo Ottaw.a Hills to
a 3-2 win over Lancaster
Fisher Catholic on Friday
in a Division IV semifinal
of the state baseball tournament.
Phil Mattingly scored on
a passed ball for Ottawa
Hills in the second and
Mike Zangara added an
RBI-single in the fourth.
Fisher Catholic scored on
Pat Rice's RBI-double in
the fo'u rth and Anthony
Division IV
Gressick's RBI-triple in the
Cin. Country Day 9,
sixth.
•
Windham 1
Dan Jamieson gave up
two runs, one earned, on
Roman Duty and Tyler four hits and two Wol!b,
Wright drove in two rUns striking out 13 m eight
ap1ece and Brett Smith innings for the win.
scored three runs as

•

•'

MASON, W.Va. - Jimmy .
Gress and Norma Stanley
were division \vinners at the
GO Roush Memorial Golf
tournament held on Memorial · Day at Riverside Golf
Course.
Gress won the 45-player
men's division \vith rounds of
57 and 67 (124 total) to finish
ahead of Shawn Fowler (129)
and Bob Blessing (134).
Stanley won the women's
division with scores of 71-1\6
(137) to defeat Darlene Sisk,
who played rounds of 68 and
72 over the tourney's 36 holes.
The tournament is held
annually in· memory of Grant
0 Roush, the father and
grandfather of the Riverside
course · owners. He was a
home builder in the Bend
Area for yean with the G.O.
Roush and Sons Company.

NBA

BV lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It took Alan Webb only 3
minutes, 53.43 seconds to
become a track and field phenomenon.
That was the rime Webb
clocked in the rriile Sunday at
the Prefontaine Classic in
Eugene, Ore., turning a prestigious track and field meet
into his own coming-out
party.
' "I knew it would get me a
tittle more attention, but I
·d idn't think it would be quite
· as bad as it's · been," the 18. year-old Webb said.
Webb smashed Jim Ryun's
'36-year-old national record
for a mile by a high school
.:runner by nearly two seconds, and stole the headlines
despite finishing fifth in a race
that Morocco's Hicham El
.Guerrouj won in 3:49.92, the
fastest mile ever on U.S. soil.
· "It's been kind of a whirlwind," Webb ' said Thursday,
the day before setting his
·sights on the state 800-meter
:record in the Virginia High
·School League's state track
.and field championships.
On Monday, a photo of
Webb appeared on the front
'" page ofThe New York Times.
"The next day, after a detour

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) Laken, led by Abdul-Jabbar had an advene effect on that of the Heat, the team Riley
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbat didn't and Magic Johnson, who weqt year's tea~. After sweeping now coaches. ''I'm trying to

always like what he saw when on to Jose in the NBA Finals to
he w.atched Shaquille O'Neal the Detroit Pistons in four
on th'e basketball court two straight games.
yean ago.
Abdul-Jabbat foresees a difO'Neal lacked leadership, ferent ending for this yeat's
the NBA 's career leading scor- Laken.
er said shordy before the San
"They tUrned it up at the
Antonio Spun swept the Lak- right time," he said. " Now,
en from the second round of they're set to make their mark
in the record books. I think
the 1999 NBA Playoffi.
Now it's the Laken who are they have a good shot at it.
Should the Laken sweep the
sweeping opponents, and
Abdul-Jabbar's opinion has finals, which begin Wednesday
changed.
night at Staples Center against
"At that point, he just was- Milwaukee or Philadelphia,
n 't leading the team the way he . they'll become the tint team to
is nO\v," the fanner La.ken star go through the postseason with
said of O'Neal's play rwo years a perfect record. ·
ago.
"We · swept through the
"He hadn't mastered some playoffs, only trouble is, _we got
of ihe finer points of ~he game. swept in the finals," Abdul-JabIt made them vulnerable; He bar noted. "I'm sorry we ~idn't
couldn't play at the end of the have a chance to be at our best
game, he couldn't get fouled and compete with the Pistons."
(and make ~e throws). It's not
The day before those finals
the situation now. ·
began, starter.· Byron Scott
"He's really stepped up in injured his left hamstring in a
that area. It's very effective," rebounding drill. That took .his
Abdul-Jabbar said this week. 20 points per game out of the
"That's one of the most impor- lineup.
tant aspects in playing the
Johnson suffered the same
game."
injury in the· third quarter of
Led by the 29-year-old Game 2, and the Laken' bid for
O'Neal arid 22-year-old Kobe a third straight championship
Bryant, the Lakers are only the was over. •
second team to open the playAbdul-Jabbar said he has
offi with 1 1 straight wins.
wondered whether Pat Riley's
The other was the 1989 coaching strategy might have

think at what level you could
'rationally question what Pat
did.
"I think the tact that they
were in the finals so many .
rimes speaks for itself. You
don't take one part of a coaching philosophy and say: 'Is it
right or wrong?'You take the
whole package."
The Lakers beat the Boston
Celrics 4-2 in the 1987 finals
and Detroit 4- 3 the following
year
become the fint NBA
team to repeat as champions
since 1969.
"They were shooting for a
three-peat, we had to ,fight the
mental mindset of them playing not to lose," said Bertka,
who worked for the Lakers
from 1968-74 and again as an
assistant coach for the last 20
years. "Pat \Vas very aware of
the injury situation. We had
days off up there. He wanted to
avoid any complacency.
"We went into the playoffi
on a roll, which is the way Pat
liked it."
Similarly, the current Laken
won their final eight regularseason games and haven't lo;t
since April 1.
"They should be getting fitted for some diamond rings
pretty soon," Abdul-Jabbar
said.
.,

Portland, Seattle and Phoenix,
the Laken had rime on their
hands, just like this year.
So the two-time defending
champions traveled some 100
miles north to Santa Barbara to
practice, something they had
'done before.
Longtime Lakers announcer
Chick · Hearn referred to the
trip this week as "a little boot
camp.".
"Whether it was too hard or
not, he gets the blame," Hearn
said of Riley. "If they win the
championship, he gets the
credit."
Abdul-Jabbar said Hearn
raised a valid question .
"Technically, Pat has to take
the blame, he had the reins;·
Abdul-Jabbar said. "He's not
responsible for the guys getting
hurt, but is it possible that he
trained us past the point where.
. guys could make it through the
playoffs without getting hurt?
"I'm not throwing stones at
Pat, he had to call it as he saw
it."
Two assistant coaches from
that team, Bill Bertka and
Randy Pfund, quickly came to
·
Riley's defense.
"We were in the finals in
seven of eight years," Pfund
said from Miami, where he is
president and general manager

.

ro

Public Notice ·

Suzanne Olesko had two
hits and scored the go-ahead
run on a throwing error as
Poland Seminary beat Richmond Edison 6-5 Friday to

Public Notice

r.

Keystone shuts out Portsmouth We~t, 3-0

Division U
Poland Seminary 6,
Richmond !Edison 5

home to Reston, Va., there
were limousine rides and
appearances ori all three network morning TV shows.
The aftermath has included
live · spots on CNN, a guest
spot on a national radio show
and features in Sports lllustrated, People, TV Guide,
running magazines and virtually all of the media around
the Washington area.
The 5-foot-9. 140-pound
Webb has barely had time to
enjoy his remarkable performance in which he surged
past elite runners on a blistering final lap in front of a
wildly cheering crowd of
11.221.
·
1n the mi.nds of many, it was
just the ·beginning of what
the IS- year-old senior from
South Lakes High School can
do -and will do - for track
and field in the United States.
"We've been waiting for
this;' Runner's World magazine worldwide publisher
George A. Hirsch said of
Webb's race, noting that many
·high school runners have
approached the four-minutemile barrier, but none has
cracked it since Marty
Liquori in 1967.

than flva working
daye before the
eurvay blglna. T1ll
requaet muat alao
· lntormatlon Interview IndiCate the nature of
•.with the Joint the Information to IMI
Commlaalon'e flald provided at the
reprwenlltlvea at tha lntar.iaw.
Such
lima of the eurvay. raqueata ahould be
. Information
addrauad to:
ra .. nted at the
Dlvlalon
•of
ntervlew will be Accreditation
carefully evaluated Openlllone,
tor relevance to the Organization Ulllon,
accreclllatlon
Joint Commlalon on
proc11a. Requeata Aocradltallon of
;tor
a
public tt.althcare
Information Interview · Organltatlona, One
mull be made In R_....nca
wr111ng and llhoukl be Boulevard, QakrboOk
. aant to tha Joint T..,._, IL80181.
Commleelon no latar
Th•
Jo Int

.

advance to the Division ll
state softball championship
game.
Olesko. !ell C!l.f tb.e ~ll\b .
inning with a single, moved to
second when the left fielder
misplayed the ball and
to
third
on
advanced
Stephanie Russell's sacrifice
·
bunt.
Richmond Edison (23-6)
catcher Holly Cline then tried
to pick off Olesko, but her
throw to third was wild and
Olesko scored to give Poland
Seminary (25-6) a 5-4 lead.
· Olesko · went 2-for-4 with
two runs scored. Sarah KniU
(21-4) allowed five · runs

Ohio • Point Plnunt, WV

iouiN!' CJi..n -6tntiatl • Pege B5

to New York City on his w.ay

ContiNMdllom Page D8
Information about
auch manara may ·
raq11111 a public

OHIO STATE SOFTBALL TOURNEY

'Dull's two-run single in the
fourth inning off Jennifer
Dornbusch gave Man~hester
(27 ~6) a 3-0 lead. . •-~ .
Rafhcl llyers scored Manchester's tint run when she
walked in the third inning,
stole second and third and
scored on a wild pitch.

Pomero~ •llklcl1polt • Glllllpolls,

Prep miler's big splash
brings
a wave of attention
..

Shaq's postseason pia wins · '
praise from Kareem A dui~Jabbar

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) Brittney Robinson pitched a
complete game two-hitter and
l;aGrange. Keystone reached
the .Division Ill state softball
championship game by beating Portsmouth West 3-0 in a
semifinal Friday.
Robinson (21-4) allowed
only Jessica Brickey's single in
the second inning and Katie
Gunroe's double in fourth.
She struck out three and
walked two.
. MEN'S DIVISION:
Keystone (23-4) got all its
l.Jimmy Gress, New Haven
runs in the third, with Robin124; 2. Shawn Fowler, Mason
son delivering, the first blow.
129; 3. Bob Blessing, Point
Her RBI double made it 1-0,
Pleasant _134; 4. Jimmy Stew- and Keystone added runs on
art, Pt. Pleasant 135; 5. Curtis
an error and a wild pitch.
Roush, West Columbia 137;6. ' Ashley Keen (1 5-3) allowed
Larry Bunger, Chester (Ohio) three runs - two earned 138; 7. Jason Warren, Albany on three hits in six innings for
(Ohio) 140; 8. John Blanken- Portsmouth West (25-7). She
ship, Gallipolis 141; 9. Sean walked one and struck out
Hughes, Gallipolis Ferry 141: five.
10. Gary Roush, Mason 141;
11. Gary Richards, New
Akr. Manchester 3, ·
Haven 141 ; 12. Carl Cline,
Arcanum 0
Mason 142; 13. Jeff Goebel,
Gallipolis · 142; 14. Tony
Stacie Swa'n pitched a twoDugan, Pomeroy 142.
hitter and Beth Dull drove in
two runs as Akron Manchester
WOMEN"S DIVISION:
beat
Arcanum 3-0 'Friday in a
1. Norma Stanley, Mason
13 7; 2. Darlene Sisk, New Division III state softball semiHaven 1 40; 3. Diana Bodkin, final.
Letart, 144; 4. Mary Gress, • Swain (25-5) walked one
batter and struck out 13,
Letart 147.

Crees, Stanley win at Roush
Memorial tournament

Sundlly, June 3, 2001

four earned - on 12 hits in
seven innings for Poland Scminary.
..
. . • .., '• -~.. •.
Lima Bath 4, . .
Belle. Benjamin Logan 0
Grace Luginbuhl pitched a
one-hitter, struck out 14 batters, stole a base, and drove in
the game-winni'ng run as
Lima Bath beat Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 4-1 Friday in
a Division II state softball
semifinal.
Luginbuhl (24-3) had a nohitter through 5 1-3 innings
until Alicia Pearson's single up
the middle.

Gallia Community Action
Agency located at
322 Second Avenue is
moving to its new locatioo
at 420 Silver Bridge
Plaza.
Both offices will be closed
Monday, June 4, 2001 for
the move.
Anyone needing
emergency assistance
may phone the central
office at
367-7342./
'

Courtside Bar &amp; Grill's
"SURVIVOR WEEKEND"

Friday June 8th &amp;
Saturday June 9th
Survivor Games start at
11 :00 pm each night.
"Dress for the adventure;
you might not survive!
65and Over
Hyou are currenUy paying for
Albuterol, "puflels", etc, call us
to find out how to get your
medication covered by

Insurance. ·

Auto Insurance
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BOWMAN'S HOMECAAE

•

Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving
record; OUt's speeding
tickets, etc.
same Day SA-22's issued.

740-446-7283

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

·

446-1960

HORIZON
CONSTRUCTION

1525 Easlem Ave.
Marlboro
$25.1 0 ctn ·
Virginia Slims
$25.1 o ctn
Palllment
$25.1 octn
Camals
$25.1 octn
Winston
$25.1 o ctn
Kools
$23.09 ctn
Pall Mall
$19.52 ctn
Vice Roy $17.52 ctn- S2.oo coupon
Red Man
$20.99 ctn
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Morgan
$12.49 ctn
Sou1hem Pride · $13.99 ctn
U.S.A. Gold
$15.79 ctn
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$15.79 ctn
· While supplies last

Public Notice
Commlaalon will
acknowledge euch
requeete In wr111ng or
by telephone and will
Inform
the
organization of the
requeet for any
lntervlaw.
The
organization will, In
turn, notify the
Interviewee of tha
dale, lime and place
. olthe melting.
Thla nolle• Ia
poelld In accordance
with the Joint
CommiHion'a

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TOLL FREE (866) 556-6900
Ucansed &amp; Insured
Serving the Ohio Valley with """' 75
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Sam &amp; Mindy Smnh, Owners

FAT BOYZ PIZZA
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Pentecostal Church
INSIDE SALE
New, used, Lots of misc.
803 S. 3rd Middleport
June 8·9 10-4

requlrementa.
Uay27,2001
June 3, 10, 17, 24,
2001

Summer Fun Camp ·
Gymnastics,
Crafts, etc.
June 4- August 24th
M, T &amp;Th
10am-2 pm
Ages 3 yr- 12 yr. $150
Mon.
Call us! 441-1570
Assorted Flowers Baskets
&amp; Flats.$3.00 ea.
Paul Hill Greenhouses

Letart Falls, Ohio

call for a quote.

Brown Insurance Agency

SMOKIN ROB'S

Will Power
Tumbling

A Big thank You to
Jay Cremeans &amp;Cremeans
Funeral Chapel for their
personal &amp; thoughtful
servicesduring the recent
loss of our mother.
Margaret 0. Smith

St. Martin's
Lutheran Church
Homecoming German
Ridge Road

Sunday, June 17
Potluck Dinner
at 1:00 p.m .

The family of
Margaret Smith would like
to thank everyone for the
flowers, cards, food and
thoughtfulness.

'• .

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Full Size Conversion Van

825'9

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Bucks

'•

'

flamPIIp81
tied the NBA record set ·by
Rex Chapman of Phoenix in
1997 and matched by Carter
against the 76ers on May 11.
The Bucks improved to 30 this postseason when facing
elimination, but they had to
withstand an astounding
show by Iverson as he scored
26 of his 46 points in the
fourth quarter. .
Iverson finished three
points shy of the NBA record
for most points in a quarter
set by Sleepy Floyd of Golden State in 1987.
"We probably lost control
of him for the first time in
the series in the second half,"
Milwaukee coach George
Karl said. "He had more confidence in the · second half
than he's had probably all
. series."

•

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Sunct.y, June 3, 2001

PomeiOf •llllld"lpiJit • 0 l''lpal8, Ofllo 0 Point Pl.. lnt, WV

OHIO STATE
BASEBALL TOURNEY

Marian Pleasant
defeats Zane Trace
COLUMBUS (AP) Marion Pleasant scored
seven runs on eight hits,
including. two RBis from
· Adam Hesler, m a 7-1
blowout of Chillicothe
Zane Trace in a state baseball tournament Division
III semifinal Friday.
Heavy rams at . Ohio
State's Bill Davis Stadium
delayed tilt game by more
than 2 112 hours.
After a scoreless first
inning, the Spartans scored
three runs in the second
and made it 4-0 in 'the sixth
on one of Hesler's RBls.
The Pioneen scored their
only run in the sixth on a
Jordan Baker RBI single.
Marion scored three
more runs in the seventh
for the win. They will face
eitherYoungstown Unuline
or Millbury Lake in Saturday's championship.

•

Cincinnati Country Day
beat Windham 9-1 in a
Division IV state baseball
semifinal Friday.
Country Day plays Toledo Otuw.a Hills, which beat
Lancaster Fisher Catholic
3-2 in the other semifinal
Friday, for the •tate championship on Saturday.
Country Day (29-3)
scored twice in the tint
inning when Duty doubled
and scored on a triple by
Smith, who then scored on
an error.
Country Day broke up
the. game \vith six runs on
four hits in the third.
Wright drove in two runs
with a single and Duty
knocked in two runs on a
suicide squeeze bunt.
Windham (16-7) si:ored
its only run on a single by
Zack Burns in the seventh
mmng.

Youngs. Ursuline 6,
Millbury Lake 1

Tot. Ottawa Hills 3,
Lan. Fisher Cath. 2, 8

John Angelo struck out
mne batten and Steve
Stroney drove in the gamewinner as Youngstown
Ursuline beat Millbury
Lake 6-1 in a state baseball
tournament Division Ill
semifinal Friday.
'Angelo (7 -2) faced 27
batters and allowed just
three hits and one unearned
run over seven innings.
The Flyers' only run
came in the second inning
when Kyle Scharer scored
on a throwing error.

Bryan Rhoads hit a twoout RBI-single in the bottom of the eighth inning to
lead Toledo Ottaw.a Hills to
a 3-2 win over Lancaster
Fisher Catholic on Friday
in a Division IV semifinal
of the state baseball tournament.
Phil Mattingly scored on
a passed ball for Ottawa
Hills in the second and
Mike Zangara added an
RBI-single in the fourth.
Fisher Catholic scored on
Pat Rice's RBI-double in
the fo'u rth and Anthony
Division IV
Gressick's RBI-triple in the
Cin. Country Day 9,
sixth.
•
Windham 1
Dan Jamieson gave up
two runs, one earned, on
Roman Duty and Tyler four hits and two Wol!b,
Wright drove in two rUns striking out 13 m eight
ap1ece and Brett Smith innings for the win.
scored three runs as

•

•'

MASON, W.Va. - Jimmy .
Gress and Norma Stanley
were division \vinners at the
GO Roush Memorial Golf
tournament held on Memorial · Day at Riverside Golf
Course.
Gress won the 45-player
men's division \vith rounds of
57 and 67 (124 total) to finish
ahead of Shawn Fowler (129)
and Bob Blessing (134).
Stanley won the women's
division with scores of 71-1\6
(137) to defeat Darlene Sisk,
who played rounds of 68 and
72 over the tourney's 36 holes.
The tournament is held
annually in· memory of Grant
0 Roush, the father and
grandfather of the Riverside
course · owners. He was a
home builder in the Bend
Area for yean with the G.O.
Roush and Sons Company.

NBA

BV lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It took Alan Webb only 3
minutes, 53.43 seconds to
become a track and field phenomenon.
That was the rime Webb
clocked in the rriile Sunday at
the Prefontaine Classic in
Eugene, Ore., turning a prestigious track and field meet
into his own coming-out
party.
' "I knew it would get me a
tittle more attention, but I
·d idn't think it would be quite
· as bad as it's · been," the 18. year-old Webb said.
Webb smashed Jim Ryun's
'36-year-old national record
for a mile by a high school
.:runner by nearly two seconds, and stole the headlines
despite finishing fifth in a race
that Morocco's Hicham El
.Guerrouj won in 3:49.92, the
fastest mile ever on U.S. soil.
· "It's been kind of a whirlwind," Webb ' said Thursday,
the day before setting his
·sights on the state 800-meter
:record in the Virginia High
·School League's state track
.and field championships.
On Monday, a photo of
Webb appeared on the front
'" page ofThe New York Times.
"The next day, after a detour

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) Laken, led by Abdul-Jabbar had an advene effect on that of the Heat, the team Riley
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbat didn't and Magic Johnson, who weqt year's tea~. After sweeping now coaches. ''I'm trying to

always like what he saw when on to Jose in the NBA Finals to
he w.atched Shaquille O'Neal the Detroit Pistons in four
on th'e basketball court two straight games.
yean ago.
Abdul-Jabbat foresees a difO'Neal lacked leadership, ferent ending for this yeat's
the NBA 's career leading scor- Laken.
er said shordy before the San
"They tUrned it up at the
Antonio Spun swept the Lak- right time," he said. " Now,
en from the second round of they're set to make their mark
in the record books. I think
the 1999 NBA Playoffi.
Now it's the Laken who are they have a good shot at it.
Should the Laken sweep the
sweeping opponents, and
Abdul-Jabbar's opinion has finals, which begin Wednesday
changed.
night at Staples Center against
"At that point, he just was- Milwaukee or Philadelphia,
n 't leading the team the way he . they'll become the tint team to
is nO\v," the fanner La.ken star go through the postseason with
said of O'Neal's play rwo years a perfect record. ·
ago.
"We · swept through the
"He hadn't mastered some playoffs, only trouble is, _we got
of ihe finer points of ~he game. swept in the finals," Abdul-JabIt made them vulnerable; He bar noted. "I'm sorry we ~idn't
couldn't play at the end of the have a chance to be at our best
game, he couldn't get fouled and compete with the Pistons."
(and make ~e throws). It's not
The day before those finals
the situation now. ·
began, starter.· Byron Scott
"He's really stepped up in injured his left hamstring in a
that area. It's very effective," rebounding drill. That took .his
Abdul-Jabbar said this week. 20 points per game out of the
"That's one of the most impor- lineup.
tant aspects in playing the
Johnson suffered the same
game."
injury in the· third quarter of
Led by the 29-year-old Game 2, and the Laken' bid for
O'Neal arid 22-year-old Kobe a third straight championship
Bryant, the Lakers are only the was over. •
second team to open the playAbdul-Jabbar said he has
offi with 1 1 straight wins.
wondered whether Pat Riley's
The other was the 1989 coaching strategy might have

think at what level you could
'rationally question what Pat
did.
"I think the tact that they
were in the finals so many .
rimes speaks for itself. You
don't take one part of a coaching philosophy and say: 'Is it
right or wrong?'You take the
whole package."
The Lakers beat the Boston
Celrics 4-2 in the 1987 finals
and Detroit 4- 3 the following
year
become the fint NBA
team to repeat as champions
since 1969.
"They were shooting for a
three-peat, we had to ,fight the
mental mindset of them playing not to lose," said Bertka,
who worked for the Lakers
from 1968-74 and again as an
assistant coach for the last 20
years. "Pat \Vas very aware of
the injury situation. We had
days off up there. He wanted to
avoid any complacency.
"We went into the playoffi
on a roll, which is the way Pat
liked it."
Similarly, the current Laken
won their final eight regularseason games and haven't lo;t
since April 1.
"They should be getting fitted for some diamond rings
pretty soon," Abdul-Jabbar
said.
.,

Portland, Seattle and Phoenix,
the Laken had rime on their
hands, just like this year.
So the two-time defending
champions traveled some 100
miles north to Santa Barbara to
practice, something they had
'done before.
Longtime Lakers announcer
Chick · Hearn referred to the
trip this week as "a little boot
camp.".
"Whether it was too hard or
not, he gets the blame," Hearn
said of Riley. "If they win the
championship, he gets the
credit."
Abdul-Jabbar said Hearn
raised a valid question .
"Technically, Pat has to take
the blame, he had the reins;·
Abdul-Jabbar said. "He's not
responsible for the guys getting
hurt, but is it possible that he
trained us past the point where.
. guys could make it through the
playoffs without getting hurt?
"I'm not throwing stones at
Pat, he had to call it as he saw
it."
Two assistant coaches from
that team, Bill Bertka and
Randy Pfund, quickly came to
·
Riley's defense.
"We were in the finals in
seven of eight years," Pfund
said from Miami, where he is
president and general manager

.

ro

Public Notice ·

Suzanne Olesko had two
hits and scored the go-ahead
run on a throwing error as
Poland Seminary beat Richmond Edison 6-5 Friday to

Public Notice

r.

Keystone shuts out Portsmouth We~t, 3-0

Division U
Poland Seminary 6,
Richmond !Edison 5

home to Reston, Va., there
were limousine rides and
appearances ori all three network morning TV shows.
The aftermath has included
live · spots on CNN, a guest
spot on a national radio show
and features in Sports lllustrated, People, TV Guide,
running magazines and virtually all of the media around
the Washington area.
The 5-foot-9. 140-pound
Webb has barely had time to
enjoy his remarkable performance in which he surged
past elite runners on a blistering final lap in front of a
wildly cheering crowd of
11.221.
·
1n the mi.nds of many, it was
just the ·beginning of what
the IS- year-old senior from
South Lakes High School can
do -and will do - for track
and field in the United States.
"We've been waiting for
this;' Runner's World magazine worldwide publisher
George A. Hirsch said of
Webb's race, noting that many
·high school runners have
approached the four-minutemile barrier, but none has
cracked it since Marty
Liquori in 1967.

than flva working
daye before the
eurvay blglna. T1ll
requaet muat alao
· lntormatlon Interview IndiCate the nature of
•.with the Joint the Information to IMI
Commlaalon'e flald provided at the
reprwenlltlvea at tha lntar.iaw.
Such
lima of the eurvay. raqueata ahould be
. Information
addrauad to:
ra .. nted at the
Dlvlalon
•of
ntervlew will be Accreditation
carefully evaluated Openlllone,
tor relevance to the Organization Ulllon,
accreclllatlon
Joint Commlalon on
proc11a. Requeata Aocradltallon of
;tor
a
public tt.althcare
Information Interview · Organltatlona, One
mull be made In R_....nca
wr111ng and llhoukl be Boulevard, QakrboOk
. aant to tha Joint T..,._, IL80181.
Commleelon no latar
Th•
Jo Int

.

advance to the Division ll
state softball championship
game.
Olesko. !ell C!l.f tb.e ~ll\b .
inning with a single, moved to
second when the left fielder
misplayed the ball and
to
third
on
advanced
Stephanie Russell's sacrifice
·
bunt.
Richmond Edison (23-6)
catcher Holly Cline then tried
to pick off Olesko, but her
throw to third was wild and
Olesko scored to give Poland
Seminary (25-6) a 5-4 lead.
· Olesko · went 2-for-4 with
two runs scored. Sarah KniU
(21-4) allowed five · runs

Ohio • Point Plnunt, WV

iouiN!' CJi..n -6tntiatl • Pege B5

to New York City on his w.ay

ContiNMdllom Page D8
Information about
auch manara may ·
raq11111 a public

OHIO STATE SOFTBALL TOURNEY

'Dull's two-run single in the
fourth inning off Jennifer
Dornbusch gave Man~hester
(27 ~6) a 3-0 lead. . •-~ .
Rafhcl llyers scored Manchester's tint run when she
walked in the third inning,
stole second and third and
scored on a wild pitch.

Pomero~ •llklcl1polt • Glllllpolls,

Prep miler's big splash
brings
a wave of attention
..

Shaq's postseason pia wins · '
praise from Kareem A dui~Jabbar

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) Brittney Robinson pitched a
complete game two-hitter and
l;aGrange. Keystone reached
the .Division Ill state softball
championship game by beating Portsmouth West 3-0 in a
semifinal Friday.
Robinson (21-4) allowed
only Jessica Brickey's single in
the second inning and Katie
Gunroe's double in fourth.
She struck out three and
walked two.
. MEN'S DIVISION:
Keystone (23-4) got all its
l.Jimmy Gress, New Haven
runs in the third, with Robin124; 2. Shawn Fowler, Mason
son delivering, the first blow.
129; 3. Bob Blessing, Point
Her RBI double made it 1-0,
Pleasant _134; 4. Jimmy Stew- and Keystone added runs on
art, Pt. Pleasant 135; 5. Curtis
an error and a wild pitch.
Roush, West Columbia 137;6. ' Ashley Keen (1 5-3) allowed
Larry Bunger, Chester (Ohio) three runs - two earned 138; 7. Jason Warren, Albany on three hits in six innings for
(Ohio) 140; 8. John Blanken- Portsmouth West (25-7). She
ship, Gallipolis 141; 9. Sean walked one and struck out
Hughes, Gallipolis Ferry 141: five.
10. Gary Roush, Mason 141;
11. Gary Richards, New
Akr. Manchester 3, ·
Haven 141 ; 12. Carl Cline,
Arcanum 0
Mason 142; 13. Jeff Goebel,
Gallipolis · 142; 14. Tony
Stacie Swa'n pitched a twoDugan, Pomeroy 142.
hitter and Beth Dull drove in
two runs as Akron Manchester
WOMEN"S DIVISION:
beat
Arcanum 3-0 'Friday in a
1. Norma Stanley, Mason
13 7; 2. Darlene Sisk, New Division III state softball semiHaven 1 40; 3. Diana Bodkin, final.
Letart, 144; 4. Mary Gress, • Swain (25-5) walked one
batter and struck out 13,
Letart 147.

Crees, Stanley win at Roush
Memorial tournament

Sundlly, June 3, 2001

four earned - on 12 hits in
seven innings for Poland Scminary.
..
. . • .., '• -~.. •.
Lima Bath 4, . .
Belle. Benjamin Logan 0
Grace Luginbuhl pitched a
one-hitter, struck out 14 batters, stole a base, and drove in
the game-winni'ng run as
Lima Bath beat Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 4-1 Friday in
a Division II state softball
semifinal.
Luginbuhl (24-3) had a nohitter through 5 1-3 innings
until Alicia Pearson's single up
the middle.

Gallia Community Action
Agency located at
322 Second Avenue is
moving to its new locatioo
at 420 Silver Bridge
Plaza.
Both offices will be closed
Monday, June 4, 2001 for
the move.
Anyone needing
emergency assistance
may phone the central
office at
367-7342./
'

Courtside Bar &amp; Grill's
"SURVIVOR WEEKEND"

Friday June 8th &amp;
Saturday June 9th
Survivor Games start at
11 :00 pm each night.
"Dress for the adventure;
you might not survive!
65and Over
Hyou are currenUy paying for
Albuterol, "puflels", etc, call us
to find out how to get your
medication covered by

Insurance. ·

Auto Insurance
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BOWMAN'S HOMECAAE

•

Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving
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same Day SA-22's issued.

740-446-7283

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

·

446-1960

HORIZON
CONSTRUCTION

1525 Easlem Ave.
Marlboro
$25.1 0 ctn ·
Virginia Slims
$25.1 o ctn
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Camals
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Winston
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Kools
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Pall Mall
$19.52 ctn
Vice Roy $17.52 ctn- S2.oo coupon
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$20.99 ctn
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Morgan
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$15.79 ctn
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$15.79 ctn
· While supplies last

Public Notice
Commlaalon will
acknowledge euch
requeete In wr111ng or
by telephone and will
Inform
the
organization of the
requeet for any
lntervlaw.
The
organization will, In
turn, notify the
Interviewee of tha
dale, lime and place
. olthe melting.
Thla nolle• Ia
poelld In accordance
with the Joint
CommiHion'a

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Pentecostal Church
INSIDE SALE
New, used, Lots of misc.
803 S. 3rd Middleport
June 8·9 10-4

requlrementa.
Uay27,2001
June 3, 10, 17, 24,
2001

Summer Fun Camp ·
Gymnastics,
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June 4- August 24th
M, T &amp;Th
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Call us! 441-1570
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&amp; Flats.$3.00 ea.
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call for a quote.

Brown Insurance Agency

SMOKIN ROB'S

Will Power
Tumbling

A Big thank You to
Jay Cremeans &amp;Cremeans
Funeral Chapel for their
personal &amp; thoughtful
servicesduring the recent
loss of our mother.
Margaret 0. Smith

St. Martin's
Lutheran Church
Homecoming German
Ridge Road

Sunday, June 17
Potluck Dinner
at 1:00 p.m .

The family of
Margaret Smith would like
to thank everyone for the
flowers, cards, food and
thoughtfulness.

'• .

\

•

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Brand New 2001 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

825'9

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• V-8 P&lt;&gt;Mr, Alum.
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Bucks

'•

'

flamPIIp81
tied the NBA record set ·by
Rex Chapman of Phoenix in
1997 and matched by Carter
against the 76ers on May 11.
The Bucks improved to 30 this postseason when facing
elimination, but they had to
withstand an astounding
show by Iverson as he scored
26 of his 46 points in the
fourth quarter. .
Iverson finished three
points shy of the NBA record
for most points in a quarter
set by Sleepy Floyd of Golden State in 1987.
"We probably lost control
of him for the first time in
the series in the second half,"
Milwaukee coach George
Karl said. "He had more confidence in the · second half
than he's had probably all
. series."

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�~. June 3, 2001

Pomtwoy •llldiiiRQrt • GIIIHpola., Ohio • Point Pill lint, WV

fOr enjoyment. Firing up fans can be hazardous for costumed characters

schedule . . results
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup schedule (winn_ers in parentheses)

The question comes frequendy to Junie Donlavey,
perhaps the most durable alsoran in the history of any sport:
Why do you keep doing it
when you never, ever win?
The 77-year-old car owner
can't help but laugh. Actually,
he did win once, by default,
20 years ago at Dover Downs
International
Speedway,
where he hopes to race again
Sunday in the MBNA Platinum 400.
Donlavey remembers there
wasn't much celebrating after
Jody Ridley took the checkered flag in the 1981 MasonDixon 500 - one of 811
races since 1950 for the team
based in Richmond a. Ridley
was running third ut several
lap own when aders Neil
Bonne and Ca Yarborough
blew th ·r e · es.
"That took the edge off of
us winning, to tell you the
truth," Donlavey said. "I
understand you take a win
anyway you can get it, but I
didn't enjoy it."
Asked to show the trophy
from that victory, Donlavey
smiled, and his eyes twinkled.
But the look on his face' suggested embarrassment.
·~1 gave it to a friend," he
said with a chuckle.
Actually, there is litde room
for
more · trophies
in
Donlavey's modest office, not
with all the lifetime achievement hardware he's accumulated.
There's th~; Spirit of Ford
Award, a large Steuben crystal
eagle and the automa~er's
highest racing honor; the
Myers Brothers Award from
the National Motorsports
Press Association; the H. Clay
Earles Award from Martinsville Speedway, and others.
"This one here means a lot,"
Donlavey said, retrieving the
crystal Earles award· he
received in ApriL "Do you
know how many of these they

Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla.
(Michael Wahrip)
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rockingham, N.C.
(Stave Park)
.
Minch 4 - UAW-DalmlerChrysler 400, Las Vegas.
(Jeff Gordoil)
March 11 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton, Ga.
(Kevin Harvick)
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Dartington, S.C. (Dale Jarrett)
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott
Sadler)
.
April 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort Worth, Texas. (Dale
Jarrett)
April 8 - Virginia 500, Martinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - TaHadega 500, Talladega, Ala. (Bobby
•
Hamilton)
·April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana,
(Rusty Wallace)
·
May 5 - Pontiac Excitement 400, Richmond, Va.
(Tony Stewart)
May 27- Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Jeff Burton)
.
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
June 10- Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
June 17- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 24- DodgefSave Mart 350, Sono..ma. Calif.
July 7- Pepsl400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
July 15 - Tropicana, 400, Joliet, Ill.
July 22- New England 300, Loudon, N.H.
July 29- Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400; Indianapolis.
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at the Glen; Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 19- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. 2 - Southam 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 8 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Richmond,
Va.
Sept. 16- New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Sept. 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 7 - .UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 14- Old Dominion 500, Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 21 -Alabama 500, Talladega.
Oct. 28- Checker Auto Parts 500k, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 4- Pop Secret Microwave 400, Rockingham,
N.C.
~
Nov. 11 -,- Pennzoil 400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.

Oliver
Stancli11p
. As of June I
1. Dale Jarrett, 1,701.

2. Jeff Gor!lon. 1,626.

RACING VlTERAN - At 7.7 ~ars-old, Junie Donlavey still
racong 10 the fun of it. (AP)

3. RusiY Wallace, 1,623.
4. Johnny Benson, 1,583.
.5. Ricky Rudd, 1,557.
6. Tony Stewart, 1,552.
7. Sterling Martin, 1,544.
8. Steve Park, 1,484.
9. Bobby HamiHon, 1,400.
10. 0. Earnhardt Jr., 1,390.
11 . Kevin Harvick, 1,379.
12. Bobby Labonte, 1.362~
13. Matt Kenseth, 1,322.
14. Jimmy Spencer, 1,321 .
15. Elliott Sadler, 1,274.
16. Bill Elliott. 1,273.
17. Jeny Nadeau, 1,268.
18. Mark Martin, 1,254.
19. Ward Burton, 1,241.
20. Kurt Busch, 1,223.

have given out? Just two. An&lt;;l sport likes Joe Weatherly, Fred
Bill France got the first one." Lorenzen, David Pearson,
But Donlavey has never Benny Parsons and Buddy
been in racing for the glory or Baker. But nuny of those rides 1
the money.
wc!re one-race or short-stint
" I'm more of a people per- deals after their days of starson," he said, sitting back in a dom.
Donlavey's real legacy is
big leather chair in his office.
"I've had a very good life and developing young drivers.
21. Jeff Burton, 1,220.
made enough friends for 10 Among those who came to
· 22. Ken Schrader, 1,:!15.
lifetimes."
the No. 90 Ford, established
23. Teny Labonte, 1, 182.
And that, Donlavey said, has themselves and moved on are
made his racing career a win- Ricky Rudd and Ken Schrad24. Jeref!lY Mayfletd, .1.180• .
er, the last of three Dunlavey
ning proposition.
25. Mike Skinner, 1,1 03.
"If you get into this game drivers to be Rookie of the
26. Michael Waltrip, 1,086.
and the only thing that satisfies Year. ·
you is winning the race, you'll · Like
Rudd,
Schrader · 27. Joe Nemechek, 1,061.
have a lot of bad days," he. said. became a winner elsewhere,
28. Robert Pressley, 1,043. ·
"The good Lord let · me but he still counts some of his
29. Dave Blaney, 1,041,.
understand that."
achievements driving for
30. Ricky Craven, 1,022
Car owners like' Donlavey Donlavey as his . career high
were once the staple of points.
31. Stacy Compton, 9!7.
NASCAR. In the era before
"In 1987 we went to Day32. John Andretti, 970.
megabucks sponsorship rr.ade tona, and when we qualified
33. Ron Hornaday, 939.
qualifying difficult for the third, the whole garage area
have-nots, they filled out fields was just thrilled for Mr.
34. Brett Bodine, 935. 1
and occasionally were com- Donlavey," Schrader said.
35. Mike Wallace, 929.
"then we won the 125-mile
petitive.
36. Casey Atwood, 914.
"If it hadn't been for him race, beat Bill ·EIIiott by a coo37. Todd Bodine, 807.
and some other guys, I don't pie of inches, and it . was so
know
where
NASCAR neat to go into your first Win38. Jason Leffler, 804.
would be," said Bobby King, ston Cup Victory Lane with
39. Buckshot Jones, 714.
Dunlavey's crew chief.
Junie ... and to see how the
40.. Kenny Wallace, 673.
Donlavey's roster of 69 dri- other teams acknowledged ·
.
vers includes greats of the that victory for him.
••
,.

.
•

·WEST VIRG.INIA STATE BASEBALL TOURNAMENT

·Lo_gan wins back-to-back state titles, beats Jefferson 5- i:
CHARLESTON (AP) - Logan
baseball coach Roger Gertz is nicknamed "The Big Minus" due to his
"It was a little eerie. I had a good
constant worrying.
He was in a different mood Friday feeling, and I'm normally not that
night while heading to Watt Powell way," Gertz said.
"The kids were loos~. They hit the
Park for the Class AAA champiball
extremely well in batting praconship game with Jefferson.

CLASS

&amp;unbp ~imtt -&amp;tntintl • Page 87

MASCOT IN DANGER

2001 NASU.R VAlllton CUp

•

.

Pomeroy • lllddlepart • Glilllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

,

NASCAR

••

.8undlly, June 3, 2001

AAA

tice. They had fun, and it carried
over to here. They were ready to
play."
.
Logan's Brandon Ch~mbers had
three singles and pitched a th~ee- hit­
ter to lead the defending champion
Wildcats to a 5-1 victory over Jefferson.

'
Chambers . struck out 10 and
walked one. He didn't allow a runner .p ast first base after the first ·
Inning. He also drove in a· run.
· "Usually in big ga.mes I feel nervous, but ·1 didn't feel nervous at aiL
I looked a! it as another game to
play," Chambers said. "My change up,

I thre\v It a lot for strike!. I hardly
ever throw it. I threw it I 0 or ll
times tonight. I think that pitch·
w6rked a lot for me."
.'
· Logaq (32-3) won its second
straight championship the same way
it did over Jefferson last year - by
capitalizing on mistakes.

Gilmer Cou11ty wins in extra innings ·
Generals end Frankfort's 30 game .
r------,----.__,
winning streak in Class AA title game
C LA SS A ·.
!cLAss AAI

CHARLESTON (A.P)
Matt Brown and Brett Hodgdon made sure Frankfort didhe struck out three and
n't get its 30th straight victory:
Brown threw a five-hitter walked three - but he often
and Hodgdon had three hits as got ahead in the strike count
Winfield beat Frankfort 3-2 and WllS able to make FrankFriday for the Class AA state fort's batters chase offspeed
championship at Watt Powell pitches.
Park.
Frankfort had eight players
Winfield pounded out 11 hitting .300 or higher.
·hits in earning its first state
"I think we were taking the
championship sit~ce 1985.
fastball too much," said Frank"I've never been this happy fort coach Tim Foley. "He was
in IllY life:• said Hodgdon, throwing· the fastball on the
Winfield's right fielder.
first and second pitch and getA few minutes earlier, · ting ahead of our hitters."
Hodgdon wasn't so cheerfuL
Yet Foley said his team's
His throwing error in the sev- three errors were the differenth inning allowed Frankfort ence in the game.
to close to within one run.
l)obiijj;QCitingfoU!cirloiUiAijpro;;e(
Hodgdon got his redemp- · ·If
Call Us-Today!
tion when he hustled down
the right-ijeld line to catch the
final out.
'Twas hoping that last out
would come to me," he said.
After l~sing its season opener, Frankfort won 29 straight
www.newstalt.gllay...com
games entering the · champiCall 24 hours aday!
onship. Winfield coach Steve
Get your credit problems
Hensley said his team didn't
reversed RIGHT NOW/
talk about the streak before the
game.
owe were just worried .
about getting 21 outs and giving ourselves the best chance
to win," he said.
Brown wasn't overpowering

Newst~rt

1-aoo-a.m3

gave them two
un~arned runs: We might still
be playing," he said.
Winfield (34-6) broke a 1-1
tie in the fourth inning on
Greg Arvidson's RBI single
and added a run in the fifth on
Jonathan Meadows' infield single off Frankfort starter Jeremy
Rice.
·
In the seventh, Frankfort's
Mike Hutchinson doubled
with one out, advanced to
third on a fly out and scored.
on the same play when Hodgdon overthrew third base.

CHARLESTON (AP) Gilmer County's Justin
Townsend crossed first base
after clinching the state Class
A baseball title, sprang into
the air and pointed at the
sky.
·
Somewhere, he knew
coach David Jafiie was getting a Gatoradc bath.

"That

A year a r Ja
died on
• the field, the Titans have their
first state championship.
Thwnsend pitched a com.:
plete game and hit a two-out
RBI single in the eighth
inning to-lift Gilmer County

to a 4-3 victory over Fayet- ·
teville on Friday at Watt
Poweij Park.
"I was l)ervous as soon as I ..
got up there. You know you
got to hit the ball," said
Townsend, a sophomore. "I
felt like my coach was with
me. I just felt like he helped
me hit that ball."

fl8l

. BALTIMORE (AP) - Talce it
from the folks inside those huge.
fUzzy . heads and big, floppy feet:
J&gt;rancmg around at ball games in
furry costumes is not ol)}y . hot
work, it's dangerous.
More than half of the 48 profes~ional sports mascots who respond~d to a ~ohns Hopkins University
survey satd they had suffered heatielated illnesses fiom performing.
; Many also reported injuries rangmg from serious knee damage to .
lower back pain.
·; "You can't believe how many
&gt;-vays mascots get injured," said Dr.
:Edward McFarland, the senior
author of the study and director of
~ports medicine and shoulder
:~urgery at Hopkins..
.•: The study didn't turn up any life:t hreatening injuries but plenty of
l&gt;nusual ones, McFarland said.
~ One mascot was hit by a cameralift truck and hurt his knee. Anoth~r one was tackled by a football
?.layer during a game and broke his
~humb.

I There was even one mascot struck
~y a player swinging a bat in the ondeck circle during the Litde League
\W orld Series.
: "The youngster took a warmup
$wing and bonked him in the head,"
McFarland said.
·
t Baltimore Orioles mascot Brom~ey Lowe, a study participant, lost a
~ection of his finger last year when a
~ teel door shut on it while he was in
tostume. Lowe has witnessed even
Forse injuries among his colleagues.
1 "There's been everything from
~roken bones to accidentally being
~et on fire," he said.
: Baltimore Ravens mascot Greg
Black said he understands how acci:dents can happen .tc;&gt; costumed char1'acters.
.
·
:. "The vision's pretty bad," said
iBlack,AKA Poe the Raven. "There's
~always moving objects around you."
Mcfarland said his research was

FLYING HIGH NOW- NFL Mascots run up the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum in Philadelphia in this March 28 file photo. More than half of the
48 professional sports mascots who responded to a Johns Hopkins University survey said they had suffered heat·related illnes~es frpm performing._Many
also reported Injuries ranging from serious knee damage to lower back pain . (AP)
·

inspired by an injury last year to the
mascot for the now-defunct Baltimore BayRunners minor-league
basketball team. The green dragon
mascot tore a knee ligament when
he fell awkwardly while doing an
air-guitar routine.
"I was impressed meeting him
and talking with him ... by how hard
he worked and how treacherous :it
was doing the things he did in a big
costume," McFarland said.
Mcfarland also knew that another Orioles mascot was hurt in 1999
when a fan pushed him over the .
outfield Wall at Camden Yards. John
]. Krownapple suffered a broken le.ft
ankle and a bruised right heel after
falling 15 feet to the field.

Hopkins mailed surveys to 70
professional football, baseball and
basketball mascots.
Twenty-eight of the 48 who
responded reported suffering heatrelated illnesses. Half were treated
with intravenous fluids and one was
hospitalized. ·
Lowe said he twice has needed
ambulance treatment after performing in parades . Outing games, he
can sweat off 10 p_ounds in his bird
outfit, which is "hot on a cold day."
The mascots respondii_~g to the
survey reported 179 injuries . More
than half of those were to the lower
half of the body, with knees the
most commonly injured area. Twenty-two of the injuries required

surgery:
BasketbaU mascots had the highest
injury rate, at 4. 9 injuries per 1,000
performances, the study found. By
comparison, male college gymnasts
have a rate of 5 injuries per 1,000
practices or competitions.
McFarland said the results suggest
that changes are needed to make life
safer for costumed creatures cavorting on sidelines and in stands.
Outfits could be made of lighter
materials to reduce the risk of heatrelated illness and could .be designed
to allow freer foot movement to
lessen the chance of leg and ankle
mJunes.
But some risks will persist.
McFarland said he has seen a ten-

dency among fans, especially children, to hit mascots. He recalled a
Hopkins lacrosse team mascot having to cut short a conversation and
walk away from a crowd of boys
surrounding him.
"these litde boys were all pummeling the mascot at about the level
you don 't want to be pummeled,"
he said.
McFarland hopes the Hopkins
study will remind fans that a human
being · is underneath the fur or
feathers.
"The mascots are taught to portray themselves as larger than life;·
he said. "I think a lot of people forget there's someone inside that unifornl."

'

'

:Rio Express,_c,orripetes,.at ·calu016us meet
COLUMBUS - The Rio METER DASH - Marlcie JUMP- Elijah Maher 5TH, McCabe 2ND, 17.08.75"
BOYS BANTAM SHOT
Express track club competed Carter 8TH, 32.3; Alexandria 12'06.75"
YOUTH
GIRLS
LONG
PUT
- Nate Allison 5TH,
in its first meet May 20 at the West 24TH, 35. 9; Rachel
JUMP - Felicia Close 1ST, 17.01.25"; Nathaniel Gordon
.Columbus Track and Field Whittington 17TH, 33.9
Cla;sic, a USA Track and Filed
YOUTH
GIRLS
200 15'10.7·5''; Caitlin Jenkins 4TH, 17'09 :00"; Hubbell
. Smith 8TH. 11 '07 .75" .
sanctioned event
METER DASH Felicia 4TH,13'07.0"
YOUTH
BOYS
LONG
BOYS · YOUTH SHOT
Over 400 athletes from 21 Close 4TH,28 .3; CaitlinJenkJUMP - Jeff Howell 8TH , PUT - Jeff Howell 2ND,
clubs from Ohio, Michigan, ins NT
21'.00.75" .
Kentu cky ~nd Illinois particiYOUTH . BOYS
200 12'00.5"
GIRLS
SUB-BANTAM
BOYS
SUB-BANTAM
{)a ted in youth, senior, and METER DASH -Jeff How. 2 Dr, Auto, BliCk, Tilt, CruiH, Power
Sunroof, PWIL, AII/FM/Coiii/CD,
SHOT PUT - · Kaidyn SPRINT
MEDLEY
masters division.
ell NT
StiCker "LOADED", Spollor
,
100/ 100/200/400 Logan
to place
SUB~BANTAM
GIRLS Robert 1ST, 9'10.25"
1 Expre·ss members
BOYS
SUB-BANTAM . Allison, C hristopher Gordon,
included:
400 METER ·. DASH 199a CHEVY CAVALIER- 2 Dr., white, auto, olr, S 'l'l.~
SHOT
PUT
- Christopher Boeing Smith, Bryson Adkins
.. YOUTH
GIRLS
100 LoganAlliso.n 23RD,I:52.1
AJIVFM/Coss, Rear defrost, SHARP! ...................• .
METER LOW HURDLES ' SUB-BANTAM BOYS 400 Gordon 4TH, 6'11.25" ; M 3RD.
•HIY!i FORD MUSTANG - Red, Auto, Air, Tilt,
· The Rio Express is a not- Felecia Close 3RD, 16.3
METER DASH Peyton Boeing Smith 3RD, 7'09.00"
Cruise, PW.._L, Power seal, AM/FM/Coss., S 995
GIRLS BANTAM SHOT for-profit o rga nization and is
, YOUTH
BOYS
100 Adkins 17TH, 1:41.1; Brianna
VERY SHARP I........................................... •••••••••
PUT - •. Brittany Burnett coached and supported by
~METER LOW HURDLES West 14TH,1:25.7
11CIG7F0RD CONTOUR- 4 Door, Blue,Auto,Air,s6 495
;....;.. JeffHoweU 4TH, 21.3
BANTAM . GIRLS 400 3RD, 15'1 07.75"; Ashley volunteers .
TIH, Cruise, PL, Rear Defrost, Alloy Rlms........... .r
'
, ·suB-BANTAM
GIRLS METER DASH .- . Lauren
998 CHEVY CAVAUER- 4 Doo~uto, S 995
~100 METER DASH- Pey- Adkins 13TH, 1:37.1; Brea
Air, AM!FM/Coss, rear defrost, "NICE RIDE" ......1
•.ton Adkins 23RD,20.4; Bnan- Close lOTH, 1:26.3
998 CHEVY CAVALIER - 4 Door, Teal blue,
::na West 31ST, 22.6; Kaidyn
BANTAM BOYS 400
Auto, Air, AM/FM/Coss., Rear defrost, s 995
iRoberts 26TH, 21.4
METER. DASH ·Jeff
39,000 miles .................................................../
,. SUB-BANTAM BOYS 100 Bryant 10TH,1:20.1;Ezechiel
993 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB 4X4 - Red, XLT, WAS u ,s
~ METER DASH - Logan Maher 13TH, 1:23.8; Hubell ·
Auto, Air, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Con., ......;,.., .
!Allison 24TH, 21.6; Christo- Smith 19TH, 1:31.6
Bedllner, Slldln9 rear window, Alloy rims, s 995
:lpher Gordon 25TH, 21.7; M.
MIDGET GIRLS 400
SUPER $HARP ..................................................1
METER DASH - Alexan\Boeing Smith 17TH, 19·.0
993 BUICK PARK AVENUE- Teat 9reen, 4 Door,
995
~ BANTAM GIRLS 100 dria West 14TH,I:25.7
Auto, Air, Fully Loaded, SUPER NICE ... ;..............(
1 METER DASH Alexis
MIDGET
BOYS
400
1995 GEO TRACKER- Red, 5 speed, Air, ~ower
;..c;eiger 5TH, 14.9; Ashley . METER DASH Elijah
steerln9 &amp; power brakes, AM/FM Coss. '4,995
Yl\l..tcCabe 12TH, 16.5
Maher 9TH, 1:13.7
SUPER SHARPI ..................................................
~ BANTAM BOYS I 00 . GIRLS BANTAM · . 800 ·
994 MERCURY TOPAZ - 2 Door, white, Auto, I 495
;"METER DASH Bryson METER RUN Lauren
Air, AM/FM/Coss, Rear Defrost .........................~
~dkins 24TH, 17.4; Nate Alii- Adkins 5TH, 3:38.1 ·
995 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM- 4 Dr., Blue, Auto, 13 995
1,on· 22ND,16.7; Nathaniel · BOYS BANTAM 800
Air, Tilt, Cruise, MVfM/Coss., Rear Defrost ......1
3~ordon 21.3; Beau Whaley METER RUN -Jeff Bryant
992 FORD ESCORT - 2 Dr. Red, Auto, Air, 13 495
)'..12TH, 15.8
5TH, 2:55.1; Ezechiel Maher
AM/FM/Cass, Rear Defrost ...••..........•......•......•. l
MIDGET GIRLS tOO 8TH, 3:13.6
,
JJ.1ETER DASH Markie
MIDGET
GIRLS 800
992 FORD ESCORT- 2 Dr., Block, Auto, Air,
995
AM/FM/Cass., Rear Defrost.............................. !
'f'Carter, NT; Rachel Whitting- METER RUN Caitlin .
• 480cc'Brlggs &amp; Stratton Twin-Cylinder
~on NT
Jenkins 5TH, 3:10.5
989 FORD MUSTANG- 2 Dr, Blue, 5 Speed, Air,
· r MIDGET BoYs 100 MIDGET BOYS soo
OHV Engine ·
. Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Coss, Alloy12,495
. MvtETER DASH - Elijah METER RUN -Elijah
Wheels ........................................................... .
•1000
Bed Capacity
~t--taher 12TH, 15.3
. Maher 8TH, 3:03.1
994 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER- 7 Pass., Auto, Air,
• 9 Foot turning Radius
.
::X, YOUTH GIRLS .100 GIRLS BANTAM LONG
Till, Cruise, PL&amp;W, Rear defrost, s5 995
• Unlqu• Torsional Pivot Joint Greatly
'JtvlETER DASH Felicia JUMP - Lauren Adkms,
AM/FM/Coss., Roof Rack ••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••!
&gt;JI;:lose 2ND, 13.9;CaitlinJenk- FOUL; , Bmt~ny . Burnett,
lmpro\'t• Traction
1993 Geo Metro - 4 Door, Red, Auto, Air,
, s 7TH 14.2
·
2ND, 1102.75. ; Brea Close,
· AM/FM/Cass, GreaiQossaverl ........................ ..
00
5
~nYOUTH BOYS 100 3RD,10'09.25";Alexis Geiger,
988 CHEVY 1500 - Ton, 2 Tone Paint, LonG s 995
~ETER DASH- Jeff How- 1ST. 12' 09.5'';_ Ashley
a.d ................................... ~ .............................l
• · II 6TH 14.5
.·
McCabe, 4TH, 9'09.5~'
988 MERCURY SABLE :.. Ton, o4 Dr., Auto, Air, I If 995
BANTAM GIRLS ~00
BOYS BANTAM LONG
Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/1M/Con, Nice Ride! ...... /
:;METER · DASH Alexis JYMP Bryso(l . Adkms
:CCeiger 2ND 32.5; Brittany 5TH, 7'08.5"; Nathamel Gor":'Burnett 18TH 35.9; Brea don 7TH, 5'04.75"; Ezechiel
"!close 22ND, 38:5 .
Maher 4TH, 9'!0.2~:·: Beau
/2 mile above Pomeroy Maaon Bridge, Pomeroy, OhioI
• ._~; BANTAM BOYS 200 Whaley 3RD, 11 03.5
':"METER DASH - Nate Alii- · MIDGET GIRLS LONG
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Pomtwoy •llldiiiRQrt • GIIIHpola., Ohio • Point Pill lint, WV

fOr enjoyment. Firing up fans can be hazardous for costumed characters

schedule . . results
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup schedule (winn_ers in parentheses)

The question comes frequendy to Junie Donlavey,
perhaps the most durable alsoran in the history of any sport:
Why do you keep doing it
when you never, ever win?
The 77-year-old car owner
can't help but laugh. Actually,
he did win once, by default,
20 years ago at Dover Downs
International
Speedway,
where he hopes to race again
Sunday in the MBNA Platinum 400.
Donlavey remembers there
wasn't much celebrating after
Jody Ridley took the checkered flag in the 1981 MasonDixon 500 - one of 811
races since 1950 for the team
based in Richmond a. Ridley
was running third ut several
lap own when aders Neil
Bonne and Ca Yarborough
blew th ·r e · es.
"That took the edge off of
us winning, to tell you the
truth," Donlavey said. "I
understand you take a win
anyway you can get it, but I
didn't enjoy it."
Asked to show the trophy
from that victory, Donlavey
smiled, and his eyes twinkled.
But the look on his face' suggested embarrassment.
·~1 gave it to a friend," he
said with a chuckle.
Actually, there is litde room
for
more · trophies
in
Donlavey's modest office, not
with all the lifetime achievement hardware he's accumulated.
There's th~; Spirit of Ford
Award, a large Steuben crystal
eagle and the automa~er's
highest racing honor; the
Myers Brothers Award from
the National Motorsports
Press Association; the H. Clay
Earles Award from Martinsville Speedway, and others.
"This one here means a lot,"
Donlavey said, retrieving the
crystal Earles award· he
received in ApriL "Do you
know how many of these they

Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla.
(Michael Wahrip)
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rockingham, N.C.
(Stave Park)
.
Minch 4 - UAW-DalmlerChrysler 400, Las Vegas.
(Jeff Gordoil)
March 11 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton, Ga.
(Kevin Harvick)
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Dartington, S.C. (Dale Jarrett)
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott
Sadler)
.
April 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort Worth, Texas. (Dale
Jarrett)
April 8 - Virginia 500, Martinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - TaHadega 500, Talladega, Ala. (Bobby
•
Hamilton)
·April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana,
(Rusty Wallace)
·
May 5 - Pontiac Excitement 400, Richmond, Va.
(Tony Stewart)
May 27- Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Jeff Burton)
.
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
June 10- Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
June 17- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 24- DodgefSave Mart 350, Sono..ma. Calif.
July 7- Pepsl400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
July 15 - Tropicana, 400, Joliet, Ill.
July 22- New England 300, Loudon, N.H.
July 29- Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400; Indianapolis.
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at the Glen; Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 19- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. 2 - Southam 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 8 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Richmond,
Va.
Sept. 16- New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Sept. 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 7 - .UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 14- Old Dominion 500, Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 21 -Alabama 500, Talladega.
Oct. 28- Checker Auto Parts 500k, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 4- Pop Secret Microwave 400, Rockingham,
N.C.
~
Nov. 11 -,- Pennzoil 400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.

Oliver
Stancli11p
. As of June I
1. Dale Jarrett, 1,701.

2. Jeff Gor!lon. 1,626.

RACING VlTERAN - At 7.7 ~ars-old, Junie Donlavey still
racong 10 the fun of it. (AP)

3. RusiY Wallace, 1,623.
4. Johnny Benson, 1,583.
.5. Ricky Rudd, 1,557.
6. Tony Stewart, 1,552.
7. Sterling Martin, 1,544.
8. Steve Park, 1,484.
9. Bobby HamiHon, 1,400.
10. 0. Earnhardt Jr., 1,390.
11 . Kevin Harvick, 1,379.
12. Bobby Labonte, 1.362~
13. Matt Kenseth, 1,322.
14. Jimmy Spencer, 1,321 .
15. Elliott Sadler, 1,274.
16. Bill Elliott. 1,273.
17. Jeny Nadeau, 1,268.
18. Mark Martin, 1,254.
19. Ward Burton, 1,241.
20. Kurt Busch, 1,223.

have given out? Just two. An&lt;;l sport likes Joe Weatherly, Fred
Bill France got the first one." Lorenzen, David Pearson,
But Donlavey has never Benny Parsons and Buddy
been in racing for the glory or Baker. But nuny of those rides 1
the money.
wc!re one-race or short-stint
" I'm more of a people per- deals after their days of starson," he said, sitting back in a dom.
Donlavey's real legacy is
big leather chair in his office.
"I've had a very good life and developing young drivers.
21. Jeff Burton, 1,220.
made enough friends for 10 Among those who came to
· 22. Ken Schrader, 1,:!15.
lifetimes."
the No. 90 Ford, established
23. Teny Labonte, 1, 182.
And that, Donlavey said, has themselves and moved on are
made his racing career a win- Ricky Rudd and Ken Schrad24. Jeref!lY Mayfletd, .1.180• .
er, the last of three Dunlavey
ning proposition.
25. Mike Skinner, 1,1 03.
"If you get into this game drivers to be Rookie of the
26. Michael Waltrip, 1,086.
and the only thing that satisfies Year. ·
you is winning the race, you'll · Like
Rudd,
Schrader · 27. Joe Nemechek, 1,061.
have a lot of bad days," he. said. became a winner elsewhere,
28. Robert Pressley, 1,043. ·
"The good Lord let · me but he still counts some of his
29. Dave Blaney, 1,041,.
understand that."
achievements driving for
30. Ricky Craven, 1,022
Car owners like' Donlavey Donlavey as his . career high
were once the staple of points.
31. Stacy Compton, 9!7.
NASCAR. In the era before
"In 1987 we went to Day32. John Andretti, 970.
megabucks sponsorship rr.ade tona, and when we qualified
33. Ron Hornaday, 939.
qualifying difficult for the third, the whole garage area
have-nots, they filled out fields was just thrilled for Mr.
34. Brett Bodine, 935. 1
and occasionally were com- Donlavey," Schrader said.
35. Mike Wallace, 929.
"then we won the 125-mile
petitive.
36. Casey Atwood, 914.
"If it hadn't been for him race, beat Bill ·EIIiott by a coo37. Todd Bodine, 807.
and some other guys, I don't pie of inches, and it . was so
know
where
NASCAR neat to go into your first Win38. Jason Leffler, 804.
would be," said Bobby King, ston Cup Victory Lane with
39. Buckshot Jones, 714.
Dunlavey's crew chief.
Junie ... and to see how the
40.. Kenny Wallace, 673.
Donlavey's roster of 69 dri- other teams acknowledged ·
.
vers includes greats of the that victory for him.
••
,.

.
•

·WEST VIRG.INIA STATE BASEBALL TOURNAMENT

·Lo_gan wins back-to-back state titles, beats Jefferson 5- i:
CHARLESTON (AP) - Logan
baseball coach Roger Gertz is nicknamed "The Big Minus" due to his
"It was a little eerie. I had a good
constant worrying.
He was in a different mood Friday feeling, and I'm normally not that
night while heading to Watt Powell way," Gertz said.
"The kids were loos~. They hit the
Park for the Class AAA champiball
extremely well in batting praconship game with Jefferson.

CLASS

&amp;unbp ~imtt -&amp;tntintl • Page 87

MASCOT IN DANGER

2001 NASU.R VAlllton CUp

•

.

Pomeroy • lllddlepart • Glilllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

,

NASCAR

••

.8undlly, June 3, 2001

AAA

tice. They had fun, and it carried
over to here. They were ready to
play."
.
Logan's Brandon Ch~mbers had
three singles and pitched a th~ee- hit­
ter to lead the defending champion
Wildcats to a 5-1 victory over Jefferson.

'
Chambers . struck out 10 and
walked one. He didn't allow a runner .p ast first base after the first ·
Inning. He also drove in a· run.
· "Usually in big ga.mes I feel nervous, but ·1 didn't feel nervous at aiL
I looked a! it as another game to
play," Chambers said. "My change up,

I thre\v It a lot for strike!. I hardly
ever throw it. I threw it I 0 or ll
times tonight. I think that pitch·
w6rked a lot for me."
.'
· Logaq (32-3) won its second
straight championship the same way
it did over Jefferson last year - by
capitalizing on mistakes.

Gilmer Cou11ty wins in extra innings ·
Generals end Frankfort's 30 game .
r------,----.__,
winning streak in Class AA title game
C LA SS A ·.
!cLAss AAI

CHARLESTON (A.P)
Matt Brown and Brett Hodgdon made sure Frankfort didhe struck out three and
n't get its 30th straight victory:
Brown threw a five-hitter walked three - but he often
and Hodgdon had three hits as got ahead in the strike count
Winfield beat Frankfort 3-2 and WllS able to make FrankFriday for the Class AA state fort's batters chase offspeed
championship at Watt Powell pitches.
Park.
Frankfort had eight players
Winfield pounded out 11 hitting .300 or higher.
·hits in earning its first state
"I think we were taking the
championship sit~ce 1985.
fastball too much," said Frank"I've never been this happy fort coach Tim Foley. "He was
in IllY life:• said Hodgdon, throwing· the fastball on the
Winfield's right fielder.
first and second pitch and getA few minutes earlier, · ting ahead of our hitters."
Hodgdon wasn't so cheerfuL
Yet Foley said his team's
His throwing error in the sev- three errors were the differenth inning allowed Frankfort ence in the game.
to close to within one run.
l)obiijj;QCitingfoU!cirloiUiAijpro;;e(
Hodgdon got his redemp- · ·If
Call Us-Today!
tion when he hustled down
the right-ijeld line to catch the
final out.
'Twas hoping that last out
would come to me," he said.
After l~sing its season opener, Frankfort won 29 straight
www.newstalt.gllay...com
games entering the · champiCall 24 hours aday!
onship. Winfield coach Steve
Get your credit problems
Hensley said his team didn't
reversed RIGHT NOW/
talk about the streak before the
game.
owe were just worried .
about getting 21 outs and giving ourselves the best chance
to win," he said.
Brown wasn't overpowering

Newst~rt

1-aoo-a.m3

gave them two
un~arned runs: We might still
be playing," he said.
Winfield (34-6) broke a 1-1
tie in the fourth inning on
Greg Arvidson's RBI single
and added a run in the fifth on
Jonathan Meadows' infield single off Frankfort starter Jeremy
Rice.
·
In the seventh, Frankfort's
Mike Hutchinson doubled
with one out, advanced to
third on a fly out and scored.
on the same play when Hodgdon overthrew third base.

CHARLESTON (AP) Gilmer County's Justin
Townsend crossed first base
after clinching the state Class
A baseball title, sprang into
the air and pointed at the
sky.
·
Somewhere, he knew
coach David Jafiie was getting a Gatoradc bath.

"That

A year a r Ja
died on
• the field, the Titans have their
first state championship.
Thwnsend pitched a com.:
plete game and hit a two-out
RBI single in the eighth
inning to-lift Gilmer County

to a 4-3 victory over Fayet- ·
teville on Friday at Watt
Poweij Park.
"I was l)ervous as soon as I ..
got up there. You know you
got to hit the ball," said
Townsend, a sophomore. "I
felt like my coach was with
me. I just felt like he helped
me hit that ball."

fl8l

. BALTIMORE (AP) - Talce it
from the folks inside those huge.
fUzzy . heads and big, floppy feet:
J&gt;rancmg around at ball games in
furry costumes is not ol)}y . hot
work, it's dangerous.
More than half of the 48 profes~ional sports mascots who respond~d to a ~ohns Hopkins University
survey satd they had suffered heatielated illnesses fiom performing.
; Many also reported injuries rangmg from serious knee damage to .
lower back pain.
·; "You can't believe how many
&gt;-vays mascots get injured," said Dr.
:Edward McFarland, the senior
author of the study and director of
~ports medicine and shoulder
:~urgery at Hopkins..
.•: The study didn't turn up any life:t hreatening injuries but plenty of
l&gt;nusual ones, McFarland said.
~ One mascot was hit by a cameralift truck and hurt his knee. Anoth~r one was tackled by a football
?.layer during a game and broke his
~humb.

I There was even one mascot struck
~y a player swinging a bat in the ondeck circle during the Litde League
\W orld Series.
: "The youngster took a warmup
$wing and bonked him in the head,"
McFarland said.
·
t Baltimore Orioles mascot Brom~ey Lowe, a study participant, lost a
~ection of his finger last year when a
~ teel door shut on it while he was in
tostume. Lowe has witnessed even
Forse injuries among his colleagues.
1 "There's been everything from
~roken bones to accidentally being
~et on fire," he said.
: Baltimore Ravens mascot Greg
Black said he understands how acci:dents can happen .tc;&gt; costumed char1'acters.
.
·
:. "The vision's pretty bad," said
iBlack,AKA Poe the Raven. "There's
~always moving objects around you."
Mcfarland said his research was

FLYING HIGH NOW- NFL Mascots run up the steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum in Philadelphia in this March 28 file photo. More than half of the
48 professional sports mascots who responded to a Johns Hopkins University survey said they had suffered heat·related illnes~es frpm performing._Many
also reported Injuries ranging from serious knee damage to lower back pain . (AP)
·

inspired by an injury last year to the
mascot for the now-defunct Baltimore BayRunners minor-league
basketball team. The green dragon
mascot tore a knee ligament when
he fell awkwardly while doing an
air-guitar routine.
"I was impressed meeting him
and talking with him ... by how hard
he worked and how treacherous :it
was doing the things he did in a big
costume," McFarland said.
Mcfarland also knew that another Orioles mascot was hurt in 1999
when a fan pushed him over the .
outfield Wall at Camden Yards. John
]. Krownapple suffered a broken le.ft
ankle and a bruised right heel after
falling 15 feet to the field.

Hopkins mailed surveys to 70
professional football, baseball and
basketball mascots.
Twenty-eight of the 48 who
responded reported suffering heatrelated illnesses. Half were treated
with intravenous fluids and one was
hospitalized. ·
Lowe said he twice has needed
ambulance treatment after performing in parades . Outing games, he
can sweat off 10 p_ounds in his bird
outfit, which is "hot on a cold day."
The mascots respondii_~g to the
survey reported 179 injuries . More
than half of those were to the lower
half of the body, with knees the
most commonly injured area. Twenty-two of the injuries required

surgery:
BasketbaU mascots had the highest
injury rate, at 4. 9 injuries per 1,000
performances, the study found. By
comparison, male college gymnasts
have a rate of 5 injuries per 1,000
practices or competitions.
McFarland said the results suggest
that changes are needed to make life
safer for costumed creatures cavorting on sidelines and in stands.
Outfits could be made of lighter
materials to reduce the risk of heatrelated illness and could .be designed
to allow freer foot movement to
lessen the chance of leg and ankle
mJunes.
But some risks will persist.
McFarland said he has seen a ten-

dency among fans, especially children, to hit mascots. He recalled a
Hopkins lacrosse team mascot having to cut short a conversation and
walk away from a crowd of boys
surrounding him.
"these litde boys were all pummeling the mascot at about the level
you don 't want to be pummeled,"
he said.
McFarland hopes the Hopkins
study will remind fans that a human
being · is underneath the fur or
feathers.
"The mascots are taught to portray themselves as larger than life;·
he said. "I think a lot of people forget there's someone inside that unifornl."

'

'

:Rio Express,_c,orripetes,.at ·calu016us meet
COLUMBUS - The Rio METER DASH - Marlcie JUMP- Elijah Maher 5TH, McCabe 2ND, 17.08.75"
BOYS BANTAM SHOT
Express track club competed Carter 8TH, 32.3; Alexandria 12'06.75"
YOUTH
GIRLS
LONG
PUT
- Nate Allison 5TH,
in its first meet May 20 at the West 24TH, 35. 9; Rachel
JUMP - Felicia Close 1ST, 17.01.25"; Nathaniel Gordon
.Columbus Track and Field Whittington 17TH, 33.9
Cla;sic, a USA Track and Filed
YOUTH
GIRLS
200 15'10.7·5''; Caitlin Jenkins 4TH, 17'09 :00"; Hubbell
. Smith 8TH. 11 '07 .75" .
sanctioned event
METER DASH Felicia 4TH,13'07.0"
YOUTH
BOYS
LONG
BOYS · YOUTH SHOT
Over 400 athletes from 21 Close 4TH,28 .3; CaitlinJenkJUMP - Jeff Howell 8TH , PUT - Jeff Howell 2ND,
clubs from Ohio, Michigan, ins NT
21'.00.75" .
Kentu cky ~nd Illinois particiYOUTH . BOYS
200 12'00.5"
GIRLS
SUB-BANTAM
BOYS
SUB-BANTAM
{)a ted in youth, senior, and METER DASH -Jeff How. 2 Dr, Auto, BliCk, Tilt, CruiH, Power
Sunroof, PWIL, AII/FM/Coiii/CD,
SHOT PUT - · Kaidyn SPRINT
MEDLEY
masters division.
ell NT
StiCker "LOADED", Spollor
,
100/ 100/200/400 Logan
to place
SUB~BANTAM
GIRLS Robert 1ST, 9'10.25"
1 Expre·ss members
BOYS
SUB-BANTAM . Allison, C hristopher Gordon,
included:
400 METER ·. DASH 199a CHEVY CAVALIER- 2 Dr., white, auto, olr, S 'l'l.~
SHOT
PUT
- Christopher Boeing Smith, Bryson Adkins
.. YOUTH
GIRLS
100 LoganAlliso.n 23RD,I:52.1
AJIVFM/Coss, Rear defrost, SHARP! ...................• .
METER LOW HURDLES ' SUB-BANTAM BOYS 400 Gordon 4TH, 6'11.25" ; M 3RD.
•HIY!i FORD MUSTANG - Red, Auto, Air, Tilt,
· The Rio Express is a not- Felecia Close 3RD, 16.3
METER DASH Peyton Boeing Smith 3RD, 7'09.00"
Cruise, PW.._L, Power seal, AM/FM/Coss., S 995
GIRLS BANTAM SHOT for-profit o rga nization and is
, YOUTH
BOYS
100 Adkins 17TH, 1:41.1; Brianna
VERY SHARP I........................................... •••••••••
PUT - •. Brittany Burnett coached and supported by
~METER LOW HURDLES West 14TH,1:25.7
11CIG7F0RD CONTOUR- 4 Door, Blue,Auto,Air,s6 495
;....;.. JeffHoweU 4TH, 21.3
BANTAM . GIRLS 400 3RD, 15'1 07.75"; Ashley volunteers .
TIH, Cruise, PL, Rear Defrost, Alloy Rlms........... .r
'
, ·suB-BANTAM
GIRLS METER DASH .- . Lauren
998 CHEVY CAVAUER- 4 Doo~uto, S 995
~100 METER DASH- Pey- Adkins 13TH, 1:37.1; Brea
Air, AM!FM/Coss, rear defrost, "NICE RIDE" ......1
•.ton Adkins 23RD,20.4; Bnan- Close lOTH, 1:26.3
998 CHEVY CAVALIER - 4 Door, Teal blue,
::na West 31ST, 22.6; Kaidyn
BANTAM BOYS 400
Auto, Air, AM/FM/Coss., Rear defrost, s 995
iRoberts 26TH, 21.4
METER. DASH ·Jeff
39,000 miles .................................................../
,. SUB-BANTAM BOYS 100 Bryant 10TH,1:20.1;Ezechiel
993 FORD RANGER SUPERCAB 4X4 - Red, XLT, WAS u ,s
~ METER DASH - Logan Maher 13TH, 1:23.8; Hubell ·
Auto, Air, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Con., ......;,.., .
!Allison 24TH, 21.6; Christo- Smith 19TH, 1:31.6
Bedllner, Slldln9 rear window, Alloy rims, s 995
:lpher Gordon 25TH, 21.7; M.
MIDGET GIRLS 400
SUPER $HARP ..................................................1
METER DASH - Alexan\Boeing Smith 17TH, 19·.0
993 BUICK PARK AVENUE- Teat 9reen, 4 Door,
995
~ BANTAM GIRLS 100 dria West 14TH,I:25.7
Auto, Air, Fully Loaded, SUPER NICE ... ;..............(
1 METER DASH Alexis
MIDGET
BOYS
400
1995 GEO TRACKER- Red, 5 speed, Air, ~ower
;..c;eiger 5TH, 14.9; Ashley . METER DASH Elijah
steerln9 &amp; power brakes, AM/FM Coss. '4,995
Yl\l..tcCabe 12TH, 16.5
Maher 9TH, 1:13.7
SUPER SHARPI ..................................................
~ BANTAM BOYS I 00 . GIRLS BANTAM · . 800 ·
994 MERCURY TOPAZ - 2 Door, white, Auto, I 495
;"METER DASH Bryson METER RUN Lauren
Air, AM/FM/Coss, Rear Defrost .........................~
~dkins 24TH, 17.4; Nate Alii- Adkins 5TH, 3:38.1 ·
995 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM- 4 Dr., Blue, Auto, 13 995
1,on· 22ND,16.7; Nathaniel · BOYS BANTAM 800
Air, Tilt, Cruise, MVfM/Coss., Rear Defrost ......1
3~ordon 21.3; Beau Whaley METER RUN -Jeff Bryant
992 FORD ESCORT - 2 Dr. Red, Auto, Air, 13 495
)'..12TH, 15.8
5TH, 2:55.1; Ezechiel Maher
AM/FM/Cass, Rear Defrost ...••..........•......•......•. l
MIDGET GIRLS tOO 8TH, 3:13.6
,
JJ.1ETER DASH Markie
MIDGET
GIRLS 800
992 FORD ESCORT- 2 Dr., Block, Auto, Air,
995
AM/FM/Cass., Rear Defrost.............................. !
'f'Carter, NT; Rachel Whitting- METER RUN Caitlin .
• 480cc'Brlggs &amp; Stratton Twin-Cylinder
~on NT
Jenkins 5TH, 3:10.5
989 FORD MUSTANG- 2 Dr, Blue, 5 Speed, Air,
· r MIDGET BoYs 100 MIDGET BOYS soo
OHV Engine ·
. Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Coss, Alloy12,495
. MvtETER DASH - Elijah METER RUN -Elijah
Wheels ........................................................... .
•1000
Bed Capacity
~t--taher 12TH, 15.3
. Maher 8TH, 3:03.1
994 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER- 7 Pass., Auto, Air,
• 9 Foot turning Radius
.
::X, YOUTH GIRLS .100 GIRLS BANTAM LONG
Till, Cruise, PL&amp;W, Rear defrost, s5 995
• Unlqu• Torsional Pivot Joint Greatly
'JtvlETER DASH Felicia JUMP - Lauren Adkms,
AM/FM/Coss., Roof Rack ••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••!
&gt;JI;:lose 2ND, 13.9;CaitlinJenk- FOUL; , Bmt~ny . Burnett,
lmpro\'t• Traction
1993 Geo Metro - 4 Door, Red, Auto, Air,
, s 7TH 14.2
·
2ND, 1102.75. ; Brea Close,
· AM/FM/Cass, GreaiQossaverl ........................ ..
00
5
~nYOUTH BOYS 100 3RD,10'09.25";Alexis Geiger,
988 CHEVY 1500 - Ton, 2 Tone Paint, LonG s 995
~ETER DASH- Jeff How- 1ST. 12' 09.5'';_ Ashley
a.d ................................... ~ .............................l
• · II 6TH 14.5
.·
McCabe, 4TH, 9'09.5~'
988 MERCURY SABLE :.. Ton, o4 Dr., Auto, Air, I If 995
BANTAM GIRLS ~00
BOYS BANTAM LONG
Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, AM/1M/Con, Nice Ride! ...... /
:;METER · DASH Alexis JYMP Bryso(l . Adkms
:CCeiger 2ND 32.5; Brittany 5TH, 7'08.5"; Nathamel Gor":'Burnett 18TH 35.9; Brea don 7TH, 5'04.75"; Ezechiel
"!close 22ND, 38:5 .
Maher 4TH, 9'!0.2~:·: Beau
/2 mile above Pomeroy Maaon Bridge, Pomeroy, OhioI
• ._~; BANTAM BOYS 200 Whaley 3RD, 11 03.5
':"METER DASH - Nate Alii- · MIDGET GIRLS LONG
Juat acron from Speedway. Bank financing now
::\on 22ND, 36.6; Hubbell JUMP Mark1e Cart_er
avellable, your laat atop car ehop.
ltate
Route
148
•
Che•tt~r,
OH
'..,Smither 29TH, 38.9; Beau. ~RD. 11'11.0"; ~ache!, Whit•
Family owned end operated
tington 4TH,I007 .75
f:Whaley IOTH,33 .7 · ,
. MIDGET GIRLS . 200
MIDGET BOYS LONG

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�•

.-

Outdoon

-

Page 88

Inside:

S1Mci8J, JuM J, 2111

Ceklmuions, Awes C2-7

PageC1

Filter strips can provide win-win for farmers, environment
The weather, as we all blow, i.!
unpredictable at best. We never seem
to blow just what's in store. Here in
southeastern Ohio there's an old saying: "If you don't like the weather,
~~ five minutes and it'll change. •
Farmers, of coune, are involved in
a livelihood strongly dependent on
weather: too dry, too wet, too cold,
too hot, hail, thunderstorms, wind
gusts, all influence the success of this
year's crop. ·
Some yean it's all a farmer can do
just to get a tractor in the field to get
a crop in the ground; other yean, it
tnay be so dry that. it's not worth
· planting anything. In some years, like
this one, you ;eem to get a little bit of
everything.
Another old saying goes, "You
can't do anything about the weath. er." Ho,vever, for sonte landowner~.
there may be options that soften
Mother Nature's punches and uke
some of the risk out of farming, and ·
help the environment and wildlife, to
boot.
For instance, in some parts of the
country, farmers are very familiar
with the Continuous Conservaiion
Reserve Program, a federal program
that encourages farmers, through
annual rental payments and other
incentives, to itnplentent conservation practices along streams and

oiher small bodies of water.
ural Resources Conservation SerThe Conseiv;ltion Reserve Provice, each acre under CRP contract
reduces erosion by an average of 19
gram has its roots in the Soil Bank
tons of topsoil a year. This improvei
Act of1956.At that time, with memories of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s
the quality of water in streams,lakrs,
still fresh, the nation sought to prelffi
and other bodies of water. Sediment,
vent repeating the mistakes that had
by the way, is perhaps dte largest sinhelped cause that great disaster.
gle polluta.nt found in Ohio streams
Recognizing that eroding cropland
these days.
had to be protected, and seeking to
IN THE OPEN
Both programs also encourage
head ·off the destructive. effects of
coVers of natural grasses a~d other
overproduction of major crops, Con- landowners located wil:hin the Lead~' plantings, with the specific aim of
gress authorized the USDA to enter ing Creek watershed may be eligible sheltering and feeding as great a variinto long-term conservation con- to participate in the Leading Creek ety of wildlife as p05sible.
tracts with producers and landown- Improvement Program which, like
Alth~ugh n~any farmets feel they
ers. The department shared the cost CRP, pays farmers an annual rental are do1ng more than enough to help
of converting cropland from produc- payment for installing grass or tree wildlife, judging from the number of
tion to protective vegetative cover.
filter strips along streams or practical- wildlife crop damage complaints,
Undcr Continuous CRP. row crop ly any other concentrated flow area. buffer strips help a \vide variety of
farmers have the option of installing For more information about that birds and animals particularly indudgrass filter strips or tree filter strips program, call me at ihc Meigs Soil ing the beloved .Bobwhite Quail,
along streams fcu a 10- to 15-ycar and Water Conservation District at which has been suffering in Ohio
period. Cost share payments arc 992-4282.
since the late 1970s.
available also for planting grasses and
A benefit of the Leading Creek
·So what's in it for the landowner?
trees in the filter strips. Marginal pas- . hnprovcmcm Program is that filter For one thing, filter strips .often take
cures ca n be enrolled in Continuous strips planted to grass can be harvest- the t]IOst flood-prone land out of
C RP by planting tree filter strips.
ed for hay or .silage until Aug. 15. active production and guarantee an
Thc incentives and rental payment! Grasses in CRP or Continuous CRP ·annual payment for .t hat land, taking
made to f.1rmcrs vary depending on .filter strips may not be harvested. In some of the risk out of far!fling.
the. amount of land entered into both programs, livestock must be rfired of fighting the annual spring
Continu(,lUS C RP and on other fac- excluded from the. filter strip.
flash floods? Tired of wasting diesel
tors.Your fi•st call for more informaThe main purpose behind CRP fuel' Sign it up!
·
tion should be to your counry Farm and the Leading Creek Improvement
For example, a farmer who signs
Service Agency office.
Project filter strips is to improve up a filter strip under the Leading
M~igs , Gallia and Athens county water quality. According to ihe Nat- Creek Improvement Project may

J·

Freeman

5

receive a S500 per acre sign-up
bonus with an annual rent21 payment
ofS100 per year for 15 years to proteet a stream or· oiher waterway.
That's money the farmer receives
regardless of the weather: flood,
drought, hail, wind, insect!, wildlife, it
doesn't matter.
In addition, filter strips planted to
trees can be viewed as ·a long-term
savings account as ihe trees within
the filter strip eventually reach economic maturity.
In some parts, landowners ha~
even found ways to keep the\r
"reserved" land in production in a
manner consi.!tent with the CRP
goals. Some landowners raise pheas.ant or others birds and use their gr~
filter strips, planted into switchgrass
or some other native, warm seaso~
species, as hunting preserves. .Big and
small game hunting, primitive camP:.
ing, fishing and hiking are all acceptable land use practices for filter strips.
Filier strips are just one of thl'
.·many ways landowners can help pro;teet the environment and our precious natural resources.
aim
Freeman
is
wildlife

small

.CHARLESTON, WVa.Bass fishing doesn't have to
be a high-horsepower game . .
Televised bass tournaments
have convinced viewers that
every bass boat needs a 250horsepower motor to speed
anglers to their favorite fishing holes. While that might
be true on the sprawling lakes
that dot the Deep South, it's
· anything but true on the
small impoundments that
punctuate West Virginia's
landscape.
On many Mountain State
.takes, in fact, bass fishermen
catch more than their share
despite a state-imposed 10horsepower limit on motor
me.
"Some of our restrictedhorsepower lakes are among
the better bass · fisheries we
have," says ·Bert Pierce, the
Division
of
Natural
Resources' assistant .:hief iR
charge of warmwater fishcries.
Four 9f those lakes lie
"' ithin a 45- mile radius of
downtown Charleston Upper Mud River Lake in
Lincoln Coumy; and Elk
Fork; 0' Brien and Woodrum
lakes in Jackson County.
· All · of them are relatively
small waters, 217 to 280 acres
in size . Pierce says their lack
of size is what prompted
DNR officials to impose
horsepower restrictions.
."Most of them follow the

courses of small creeks, so
they tend to be long and na~­
row," he explains .
"In a narrow impoundment, wave action from passing boats doesn't have much
room to spread out and
weaken, so it tends to cause a
lot of shoreline disturbance
and erosion .
"Also, we wanted people to
be able to use canoes an.d
rO\~boats without fear of
being swamped by big, fastmoving boats. So we imposed
the horsepower · restrictions
to minimize environmental
and aesthetic disturbance on
those small, imimate waters."
Horsepower aside, anglers'
ability to. catch bigger-thannormal bass is what sets the
four lakes apart from most
others .
Catch-and-release
regulations help keep trophy
bass abundant and available to
fishermen.
"Without
ca tch-andrelease regulations, young
lakes tend to go boom-andbust within . a few years,"
Pierce · says. "Bass tend to
grow fast during the first few
y~ars when the lake 's nutrient
base is at iis highest, then
. slack off later as conditions
settle down . By imposing
catch-and-release,
we've
extended the boom."
Each of the four impoundments offers anglers differerlt
options from the others different structure, different

scenery, or different water
clarity.
In fact, the lone feature
common to all is consistent
bass fishing.
The ·newest of the fopr
lakes, Elk Fork was s~ocked
with bass just after it was
filled three years ago. Scott
Morrison, the DNR's district
fisheries biologist for Jackson
County, says those bass have
grown quickly.
".By last year, they were
running 10 to 12 inches long,
with a few 16-inch fish being
caught," he says.
"This year, I suspect we'll
be seeing a few 18-inch bass,
with most of them running
in the I 0- to 14-inch range."
Like many small impoundments designed ··for flood
control, Elk Fork wasn't
cleared of trees and vegctation before it was filled . Bass
have thrived amid all that
flooded cover, and the
impoundment's relative clarity makes it an · angler's
delight.
"It's
shallower
than
Woodrum or O'Brien, ·and
for that reason it's probably a
little easier to fish," Morrison
says. ·"Though it do'esn 't look
large , it's actually the biggest
of the Jackson County lakes
at 280 acres."
On the other hand,
O'Brien Lake is the smallest
of the Jackson County
impoundments at 217 acres,

ADVICE

Y~ prisoner in

real jail tells .teen
to count blessings

DI!All ABBY: . Yeaterday
was my 20dt ~ Aren't
birthdays supposed to be happy
occasions? Well, if you're in jail
and on your W7:f to prison like .
me, maybe not.
"Prisoner in Reno, Nev."
thinks she's got it bad at home
because her parents VIIOn't let
her out much. She · should
remember this: There is always
someone who has it worse
than she has. Her parents an:
overprotective because they
love her. Even though I'm
locked up, my parents still care
for me.They're worried sick.
Let me ask you this, "Prisoner" - do your parena search
you before and after you leave
your room? Do they inake you
ear nasty food you VIIOuldn't
give your worst enemy? Do
they routinely search your
room? What I'm trying to say
is, count your blessings.
You ended your letter by
asking, "What should I do?"
Well, I'm on a pne-way trip
down a roa&lt;l that leads
nowhere. Now tell me, what
. should I do? -'- INMATE

•

i:
boats, but produce big fish ~

but it consistently produces
the biggest bass.
"I don't think it actually
has more big bass than
Woodrum, but p·e ople seem
to be able to ca.t ch · them
more easily," Morrison says.
Part of the reason is water
clarity. O 'Brien's waters are
seldom clear. In fact, they
tend to run somewhere
between murky· and muddy.
"At O'Brien, you're doing
pretty well when you can see
· 2 feet dqwri into the ·water,"
Morrison
says.
"At
Woodrum, you can usually
see down 8 feet or more."
That lack of clarity gives
the lake's bass a sense of security they wouldn't have in
clearer water and they. tend to
hover closer to the sulface.
"With the fish so :dose to
the surface, they 're more
available to fishermen," Mornson says.
Woodrum Lake looks like a
bass fisherman's idea of heaven.

...

ON A DBAD ENJ)
DEAR INMATE: I don~t .
know w~ you did tO reeeivt.
a prison sentence, but it's possi- ·
ble that yoll sj)Qukl feel lucky
IDi:Je.. ~ Si'nCI! ¥011 asked . what you
should d!l, I strll!lgl.y "'1!11"'1
you follow .all prison rult£ to
the letter, do not believe every-

June 9 tour shows off some
of Point Pleasant~ best
FIIOM STAfF REPORTS

OINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A bam in
downtown Point Pleasant? A fonnal English style garden on Jelfenon Avenue? A
rose maven's beautifully tended collection
of roses, an historic home built in 1834,
an attorney's office that reflects the early
history of the area and a wonderful new home can all
be seen June 9 when the Mason County Community Educational Outreach Service Council has the hi. annual Home and Garden Tour.

-

'
'
'

.,

'

The law office of Mwgrave and Musgrave, 627 Main St., the
home of Stephen Williarnson, 707 Main St., ihe holne of Bob
and Teresa Schoonover, 2623 Jefferson Ave., ih~ garden of Ernie
and Nancy Bowser, 2621 Jefferson Ave., and the rose garden of
Lowell and Arlene Cook, 2614 Jefferson Ave., all of Point Pleasant, are listed on this year's Home and Garden Tour.
The tour Will be beld June 9, betw=l the hoiU't oll md 5
p.m. CoS!: of the entire tour is $5 and tickets Ilia)' be pun:hased
at any hornet, or garden on the tour. Signs will mark the homes
to be visited.
Following an: brief descriptions of all the homes and gardens
to be toured:
Muagraw and Muagrave blw office
The law office of Musgrave and Musgrave is located at 6Tl
Main St. Raymond G. Musgrave purchased the property in
' 1995. It had been a residence before he renovated it into his
present law office.
He is a third genention lawyer. His grandfather, Frederick G.
Musgrave, began · practice in Point Pleasant in
1901. Raymond's faiher, Raymond Frederick
Musgrave, served as Mason County prosecutor.
The law office is an attractive, twostory, cut cement block building. It has sevetal leaded glass windows and antique
doors. The carpeted downstairs has three
rooms and an entry lobby.
You will see many antiques, some that have been passed
down fiom Raymond's faiher and grandfather. These include a
pre-Civil War roll top desk, a judge's bench, leaded glass bookcases, Globe office furnishings, pictures, clock$, a ladies Queen
Anne writing desk and many more items of interest.
Mr. Musgrave and his . wife, Twila, have added a personal
touch to the walls, floor and furnishings in five yean of renovations.
Willi1U11SOD home
.
. To begin renovating his house at 707 Main St., Stephen
Williamson moved it back 26 feet &amp;om the street. This was
only the beginning of a year-and-a half-project, during
which joists were straightened and a spacious basement
with a fireplace and greenhouse were added.
Stephen, his mother Mary, Fowler and fout
Jack Russell terriers share the home ihat was built in
1837 on the original land grant to James Lewis,
Esquire.
To visit ihe house is to visit Point Pleasant,
says Stephen, as so many fixtures and furnish- .
ings salvaged fiom other old homes and
businesses are used. Also used an: many
family pieces and old china handed down .
through Mary's family:
·
. · All woodwork i.! in keeping
wiih the original home with 10-

'
.

; , .r •

'

thing you hear fiom the other
inmates, and take any classes
that are offered to improve

yourself. ,
Even under these difficult
cin:umstances, you still have
control
how "happy" your
future birthdays can.be.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have a beautiful 3. year-old daughter I'll call Bonnie. She's the result of artificial
insemination, as my husband is .
IJrulble to. father a child. Our
litde girl is our pride and joy:
We cannot decide if or how to
tell Bonnie that my·husband is
not her biological father.
it
·necessary to teH her at all, and
if so, when and how? My fear
is that Bonnie will reject her
dad if she finds out.
I am assuining ihere VIIOuld
. be no health-related need fur
our daughter to know,. as
semen donors are supposed to
be screened fof inherited diseases, bot I guess you never

aver

Is

Remodel
theldtchen

know.

Located In Stewart, Ohio, 4 mllea off Rt. 50 &amp; Rt. 32 County Road 53

My feminine intuition tells
, me we should tell · her the
· truth. I know ihere must be a
lot of parents out there who
have dealt with this issue - or
will face it in ihe future. f
would appreciate any input L
can get.
Please don't use my name.
Very few people know that my
husband did not father ollr
daughter. .Just sign me ...
FLORIDA AJOM
~

·lACING ON FRIDAY NIGHTS

You can do it all du1 fng our

FOR LAIE MODELS, AMU MODIFIID,

ALL·IN•ONE·
Loan SaleI

STRIIT STOCKS, PURl STOCKS, AND Dwu• CARS

Bquf~

Enduro And Demoll~erbys
On Special Sundays And Holidays. .·

);iEiR PU&gt;RIDA.MOM: .

My feririnine intuition -

Grtat Family Entertalnmentl

PIMH- Gllfthn. Cl

and

common sense- tells me that
daughtet: 5\tould be told.
rou stated tl)at ''very few people know the truth." When .
more than two people know a
!eCretl it~ usually no lo11ger a
secret. It's better that she hear it
fiom you and your hus~d.
. ,. Your . daughter should be
told when she is old enough to
llrKilmtand the meclwtics and
all of the implications of artifi~tklii'- including
'2iid ,'fi!ustration of
· ~~ your , iJwn child and
be~-unable to have one.
~ Jt:Dtar Abby, .is written by

yO.Ur

Gates Open at 5pm Friday Night
General Admlsalon: $10.00 Adults • Children under 12 FREE

OAK HILL

BANKS

(

BMklnfl 1n Yow s..c Imerut

3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
201 5. Front St., Oak Hill, 682-7733
500
I

LMTED 1W OFFER. All loono IUbject to IIPPI'OV8I. *lntntt II generally deductible
, If the loon II MCUred by 'f'l'J! Nildeuce. teNuit your tax adYIIor for detllls.
1
• I

\

J. Bl1

Abby

specialist I waters/red cO&lt;Jrdinator for tlrr
Meigs S&lt;&gt;il at1d I«Jtcr Comcrvation Di}.trict. He can be contacted at (740) .992.4282
or
at
)infrccman@olr .mudnct.ol}l.)
,

•
•
Long, narrow arms reach Lake's is now. Then there was
:
back into hollows framed by a problem with the dam.
Workers for the Natural.
steep.-sided hills. Deep, clear
water floods the slender Resource Conservation Ser...
coves. Sunken trees are everj- vice, which
built
the
where.
impoundment, drained 83:
The problem is that percent of the lake's volume
Woodrum's bass aren't always to work on the structure.
"We didn't lose 83 percent
as cooperative as anglers
would like.
of the bass . that had been
" Woodrum gets a lot of stocked, but there was a
m
the fishing
fishing pressure, and the fish decline
Mike.
are ·pretty finicky," Morrison nonetheless," says
says. "Because the water is so Hoeft, the DNR fisheries
clear, the bass often go · deep. biologist responsible for Lin ~
Getting ·to them amid all that coin Counry. "When the lak~
timber can be pretty diffi- r~turned to its full level, fish~
cUlt."
ing wasn't as good as it was
.,
Even though potential before."
snags are everywhere, MorriFortunately for anglersr
son recommends using rela- Hoeft believes the setback
tiwly light line and small, was temporary.
finesse-type lures. "Soft ,plas."It should return to. where;
tic lures and tube baits usual- it was befofl' the drawdown;
ly work ·better than some of maybe even as soon as · this '
the heavier hardware," he spring," ~e says. "It won't be ' ·
says.
the best in the state by fu, but
At the Upper Mud River it should be pretty decent." · :
"
two springs ago, the fishing
,.
was as "hot" as Elk Fork ·

I

Dear

SPORT FISHING

Area impoundments

• .,. J

. th1 .

Pa1f.liM f Phillips. dnd daughl(r
'·'
·

]e~ Phillips.

.r

'
f!'..........

'-'

'l!r

&lt;';'--

. ·•',

•·

Gallia County_WIC encourages proper nutrition
'

GALLIPOLIS .:.._: G:illia . County, .r bon~ longer and thicker and making children should not eat too much fat .
Follow the food pyramid to feed
, Health' 'Department WI(; (~inen, · more blood as their brains get larger.
There· are three main building .your child, bearing in mind that
infants· and ~hUdren) · Pfl)gtam
encourages mothen to follow; certain blocks In food: proteins to bu~d and child-size portions are smaller than
guidelines in feeding iheir young repair body cellS - these are found adult ones. Meats, 2-3 servings; fruits,
children.
·
in meat, chicken, turkey, fish, beans 2 servings; vegetables, 3 servings;
Young bodies.. have nutritional · and egg1; carbohydrates to give chi- milk, 2-3 servings; fats and sweets,
needs greater than adults as their bo4- dren energy and add fiber - these limit these.
Children need foods fiom ·each
ied an: changing at a far greater pace.· . are found· in vegetables, fruits and
'I)tey are adding inches, putting on grains; fatS which are important in the group on a regular basis. They may
pounds, emlatging musclea, malting development of nerves. However, not eat all 6f them each day, but they

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

o
4 .... ...

It

),

should eat all of them over a period
of a few days to a week.
It is preferred ihat children eat
more fruit vegetables and grains as
these add fiber to their diet. Such
items as bread, rice, cereals fall into
this group and ar!! desirable. Some fats
are needed, but these must be kept
under control. Those fats from plants
are better for children as they a unsat-

PIIIIe-WIC..CI

..

.

'·

�•

.-

Outdoon

-

Page 88

Inside:

S1Mci8J, JuM J, 2111

Ceklmuions, Awes C2-7

PageC1

Filter strips can provide win-win for farmers, environment
The weather, as we all blow, i.!
unpredictable at best. We never seem
to blow just what's in store. Here in
southeastern Ohio there's an old saying: "If you don't like the weather,
~~ five minutes and it'll change. •
Farmers, of coune, are involved in
a livelihood strongly dependent on
weather: too dry, too wet, too cold,
too hot, hail, thunderstorms, wind
gusts, all influence the success of this
year's crop. ·
Some yean it's all a farmer can do
just to get a tractor in the field to get
a crop in the ground; other yean, it
tnay be so dry that. it's not worth
· planting anything. In some years, like
this one, you ;eem to get a little bit of
everything.
Another old saying goes, "You
can't do anything about the weath. er." Ho,vever, for sonte landowner~.
there may be options that soften
Mother Nature's punches and uke
some of the risk out of farming, and ·
help the environment and wildlife, to
boot.
For instance, in some parts of the
country, farmers are very familiar
with the Continuous Conservaiion
Reserve Program, a federal program
that encourages farmers, through
annual rental payments and other
incentives, to itnplentent conservation practices along streams and

oiher small bodies of water.
ural Resources Conservation SerThe Conseiv;ltion Reserve Provice, each acre under CRP contract
reduces erosion by an average of 19
gram has its roots in the Soil Bank
tons of topsoil a year. This improvei
Act of1956.At that time, with memories of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s
the quality of water in streams,lakrs,
still fresh, the nation sought to prelffi
and other bodies of water. Sediment,
vent repeating the mistakes that had
by the way, is perhaps dte largest sinhelped cause that great disaster.
gle polluta.nt found in Ohio streams
Recognizing that eroding cropland
these days.
had to be protected, and seeking to
IN THE OPEN
Both programs also encourage
head ·off the destructive. effects of
coVers of natural grasses a~d other
overproduction of major crops, Con- landowners located wil:hin the Lead~' plantings, with the specific aim of
gress authorized the USDA to enter ing Creek watershed may be eligible sheltering and feeding as great a variinto long-term conservation con- to participate in the Leading Creek ety of wildlife as p05sible.
tracts with producers and landown- Improvement Program which, like
Alth~ugh n~any farmets feel they
ers. The department shared the cost CRP, pays farmers an annual rental are do1ng more than enough to help
of converting cropland from produc- payment for installing grass or tree wildlife, judging from the number of
tion to protective vegetative cover.
filter strips along streams or practical- wildlife crop damage complaints,
Undcr Continuous CRP. row crop ly any other concentrated flow area. buffer strips help a \vide variety of
farmers have the option of installing For more information about that birds and animals particularly indudgrass filter strips or tree filter strips program, call me at ihc Meigs Soil ing the beloved .Bobwhite Quail,
along streams fcu a 10- to 15-ycar and Water Conservation District at which has been suffering in Ohio
period. Cost share payments arc 992-4282.
since the late 1970s.
available also for planting grasses and
A benefit of the Leading Creek
·So what's in it for the landowner?
trees in the filter strips. Marginal pas- . hnprovcmcm Program is that filter For one thing, filter strips .often take
cures ca n be enrolled in Continuous strips planted to grass can be harvest- the t]IOst flood-prone land out of
C RP by planting tree filter strips.
ed for hay or .silage until Aug. 15. active production and guarantee an
Thc incentives and rental payment! Grasses in CRP or Continuous CRP ·annual payment for .t hat land, taking
made to f.1rmcrs vary depending on .filter strips may not be harvested. In some of the risk out of far!fling.
the. amount of land entered into both programs, livestock must be rfired of fighting the annual spring
Continu(,lUS C RP and on other fac- excluded from the. filter strip.
flash floods? Tired of wasting diesel
tors.Your fi•st call for more informaThe main purpose behind CRP fuel' Sign it up!
·
tion should be to your counry Farm and the Leading Creek Improvement
For example, a farmer who signs
Service Agency office.
Project filter strips is to improve up a filter strip under the Leading
M~igs , Gallia and Athens county water quality. According to ihe Nat- Creek Improvement Project may

J·

Freeman

5

receive a S500 per acre sign-up
bonus with an annual rent21 payment
ofS100 per year for 15 years to proteet a stream or· oiher waterway.
That's money the farmer receives
regardless of the weather: flood,
drought, hail, wind, insect!, wildlife, it
doesn't matter.
In addition, filter strips planted to
trees can be viewed as ·a long-term
savings account as ihe trees within
the filter strip eventually reach economic maturity.
In some parts, landowners ha~
even found ways to keep the\r
"reserved" land in production in a
manner consi.!tent with the CRP
goals. Some landowners raise pheas.ant or others birds and use their gr~
filter strips, planted into switchgrass
or some other native, warm seaso~
species, as hunting preserves. .Big and
small game hunting, primitive camP:.
ing, fishing and hiking are all acceptable land use practices for filter strips.
Filier strips are just one of thl'
.·many ways landowners can help pro;teet the environment and our precious natural resources.
aim
Freeman
is
wildlife

small

.CHARLESTON, WVa.Bass fishing doesn't have to
be a high-horsepower game . .
Televised bass tournaments
have convinced viewers that
every bass boat needs a 250horsepower motor to speed
anglers to their favorite fishing holes. While that might
be true on the sprawling lakes
that dot the Deep South, it's
· anything but true on the
small impoundments that
punctuate West Virginia's
landscape.
On many Mountain State
.takes, in fact, bass fishermen
catch more than their share
despite a state-imposed 10horsepower limit on motor
me.
"Some of our restrictedhorsepower lakes are among
the better bass · fisheries we
have," says ·Bert Pierce, the
Division
of
Natural
Resources' assistant .:hief iR
charge of warmwater fishcries.
Four 9f those lakes lie
"' ithin a 45- mile radius of
downtown Charleston Upper Mud River Lake in
Lincoln Coumy; and Elk
Fork; 0' Brien and Woodrum
lakes in Jackson County.
· All · of them are relatively
small waters, 217 to 280 acres
in size . Pierce says their lack
of size is what prompted
DNR officials to impose
horsepower restrictions.
."Most of them follow the

courses of small creeks, so
they tend to be long and na~­
row," he explains .
"In a narrow impoundment, wave action from passing boats doesn't have much
room to spread out and
weaken, so it tends to cause a
lot of shoreline disturbance
and erosion .
"Also, we wanted people to
be able to use canoes an.d
rO\~boats without fear of
being swamped by big, fastmoving boats. So we imposed
the horsepower · restrictions
to minimize environmental
and aesthetic disturbance on
those small, imimate waters."
Horsepower aside, anglers'
ability to. catch bigger-thannormal bass is what sets the
four lakes apart from most
others .
Catch-and-release
regulations help keep trophy
bass abundant and available to
fishermen.
"Without
ca tch-andrelease regulations, young
lakes tend to go boom-andbust within . a few years,"
Pierce · says. "Bass tend to
grow fast during the first few
y~ars when the lake 's nutrient
base is at iis highest, then
. slack off later as conditions
settle down . By imposing
catch-and-release,
we've
extended the boom."
Each of the four impoundments offers anglers differerlt
options from the others different structure, different

scenery, or different water
clarity.
In fact, the lone feature
common to all is consistent
bass fishing.
The ·newest of the fopr
lakes, Elk Fork was s~ocked
with bass just after it was
filled three years ago. Scott
Morrison, the DNR's district
fisheries biologist for Jackson
County, says those bass have
grown quickly.
".By last year, they were
running 10 to 12 inches long,
with a few 16-inch fish being
caught," he says.
"This year, I suspect we'll
be seeing a few 18-inch bass,
with most of them running
in the I 0- to 14-inch range."
Like many small impoundments designed ··for flood
control, Elk Fork wasn't
cleared of trees and vegctation before it was filled . Bass
have thrived amid all that
flooded cover, and the
impoundment's relative clarity makes it an · angler's
delight.
"It's
shallower
than
Woodrum or O'Brien, ·and
for that reason it's probably a
little easier to fish," Morrison
says. ·"Though it do'esn 't look
large , it's actually the biggest
of the Jackson County lakes
at 280 acres."
On the other hand,
O'Brien Lake is the smallest
of the Jackson County
impoundments at 217 acres,

ADVICE

Y~ prisoner in

real jail tells .teen
to count blessings

DI!All ABBY: . Yeaterday
was my 20dt ~ Aren't
birthdays supposed to be happy
occasions? Well, if you're in jail
and on your W7:f to prison like .
me, maybe not.
"Prisoner in Reno, Nev."
thinks she's got it bad at home
because her parents VIIOn't let
her out much. She · should
remember this: There is always
someone who has it worse
than she has. Her parents an:
overprotective because they
love her. Even though I'm
locked up, my parents still care
for me.They're worried sick.
Let me ask you this, "Prisoner" - do your parena search
you before and after you leave
your room? Do they inake you
ear nasty food you VIIOuldn't
give your worst enemy? Do
they routinely search your
room? What I'm trying to say
is, count your blessings.
You ended your letter by
asking, "What should I do?"
Well, I'm on a pne-way trip
down a roa&lt;l that leads
nowhere. Now tell me, what
. should I do? -'- INMATE

•

i:
boats, but produce big fish ~

but it consistently produces
the biggest bass.
"I don't think it actually
has more big bass than
Woodrum, but p·e ople seem
to be able to ca.t ch · them
more easily," Morrison says.
Part of the reason is water
clarity. O 'Brien's waters are
seldom clear. In fact, they
tend to run somewhere
between murky· and muddy.
"At O'Brien, you're doing
pretty well when you can see
· 2 feet dqwri into the ·water,"
Morrison
says.
"At
Woodrum, you can usually
see down 8 feet or more."
That lack of clarity gives
the lake's bass a sense of security they wouldn't have in
clearer water and they. tend to
hover closer to the sulface.
"With the fish so :dose to
the surface, they 're more
available to fishermen," Mornson says.
Woodrum Lake looks like a
bass fisherman's idea of heaven.

...

ON A DBAD ENJ)
DEAR INMATE: I don~t .
know w~ you did tO reeeivt.
a prison sentence, but it's possi- ·
ble that yoll sj)Qukl feel lucky
IDi:Je.. ~ Si'nCI! ¥011 asked . what you
should d!l, I strll!lgl.y "'1!11"'1
you follow .all prison rult£ to
the letter, do not believe every-

June 9 tour shows off some
of Point Pleasant~ best
FIIOM STAfF REPORTS

OINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A bam in
downtown Point Pleasant? A fonnal English style garden on Jelfenon Avenue? A
rose maven's beautifully tended collection
of roses, an historic home built in 1834,
an attorney's office that reflects the early
history of the area and a wonderful new home can all
be seen June 9 when the Mason County Community Educational Outreach Service Council has the hi. annual Home and Garden Tour.

-

'
'
'

.,

'

The law office of Mwgrave and Musgrave, 627 Main St., the
home of Stephen Williarnson, 707 Main St., ihe holne of Bob
and Teresa Schoonover, 2623 Jefferson Ave., ih~ garden of Ernie
and Nancy Bowser, 2621 Jefferson Ave., and the rose garden of
Lowell and Arlene Cook, 2614 Jefferson Ave., all of Point Pleasant, are listed on this year's Home and Garden Tour.
The tour Will be beld June 9, betw=l the hoiU't oll md 5
p.m. CoS!: of the entire tour is $5 and tickets Ilia)' be pun:hased
at any hornet, or garden on the tour. Signs will mark the homes
to be visited.
Following an: brief descriptions of all the homes and gardens
to be toured:
Muagraw and Muagrave blw office
The law office of Musgrave and Musgrave is located at 6Tl
Main St. Raymond G. Musgrave purchased the property in
' 1995. It had been a residence before he renovated it into his
present law office.
He is a third genention lawyer. His grandfather, Frederick G.
Musgrave, began · practice in Point Pleasant in
1901. Raymond's faiher, Raymond Frederick
Musgrave, served as Mason County prosecutor.
The law office is an attractive, twostory, cut cement block building. It has sevetal leaded glass windows and antique
doors. The carpeted downstairs has three
rooms and an entry lobby.
You will see many antiques, some that have been passed
down fiom Raymond's faiher and grandfather. These include a
pre-Civil War roll top desk, a judge's bench, leaded glass bookcases, Globe office furnishings, pictures, clock$, a ladies Queen
Anne writing desk and many more items of interest.
Mr. Musgrave and his . wife, Twila, have added a personal
touch to the walls, floor and furnishings in five yean of renovations.
Willi1U11SOD home
.
. To begin renovating his house at 707 Main St., Stephen
Williamson moved it back 26 feet &amp;om the street. This was
only the beginning of a year-and-a half-project, during
which joists were straightened and a spacious basement
with a fireplace and greenhouse were added.
Stephen, his mother Mary, Fowler and fout
Jack Russell terriers share the home ihat was built in
1837 on the original land grant to James Lewis,
Esquire.
To visit ihe house is to visit Point Pleasant,
says Stephen, as so many fixtures and furnish- .
ings salvaged fiom other old homes and
businesses are used. Also used an: many
family pieces and old china handed down .
through Mary's family:
·
. · All woodwork i.! in keeping
wiih the original home with 10-

'
.

; , .r •

'

thing you hear fiom the other
inmates, and take any classes
that are offered to improve

yourself. ,
Even under these difficult
cin:umstances, you still have
control
how "happy" your
future birthdays can.be.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have a beautiful 3. year-old daughter I'll call Bonnie. She's the result of artificial
insemination, as my husband is .
IJrulble to. father a child. Our
litde girl is our pride and joy:
We cannot decide if or how to
tell Bonnie that my·husband is
not her biological father.
it
·necessary to teH her at all, and
if so, when and how? My fear
is that Bonnie will reject her
dad if she finds out.
I am assuining ihere VIIOuld
. be no health-related need fur
our daughter to know,. as
semen donors are supposed to
be screened fof inherited diseases, bot I guess you never

aver

Is

Remodel
theldtchen

know.

Located In Stewart, Ohio, 4 mllea off Rt. 50 &amp; Rt. 32 County Road 53

My feminine intuition tells
, me we should tell · her the
· truth. I know ihere must be a
lot of parents out there who
have dealt with this issue - or
will face it in ihe future. f
would appreciate any input L
can get.
Please don't use my name.
Very few people know that my
husband did not father ollr
daughter. .Just sign me ...
FLORIDA AJOM
~

·lACING ON FRIDAY NIGHTS

You can do it all du1 fng our

FOR LAIE MODELS, AMU MODIFIID,

ALL·IN•ONE·
Loan SaleI

STRIIT STOCKS, PURl STOCKS, AND Dwu• CARS

Bquf~

Enduro And Demoll~erbys
On Special Sundays And Holidays. .·

);iEiR PU&gt;RIDA.MOM: .

My feririnine intuition -

Grtat Family Entertalnmentl

PIMH- Gllfthn. Cl

and

common sense- tells me that
daughtet: 5\tould be told.
rou stated tl)at ''very few people know the truth." When .
more than two people know a
!eCretl it~ usually no lo11ger a
secret. It's better that she hear it
fiom you and your hus~d.
. ,. Your . daughter should be
told when she is old enough to
llrKilmtand the meclwtics and
all of the implications of artifi~tklii'- including
'2iid ,'fi!ustration of
· ~~ your , iJwn child and
be~-unable to have one.
~ Jt:Dtar Abby, .is written by

yO.Ur

Gates Open at 5pm Friday Night
General Admlsalon: $10.00 Adults • Children under 12 FREE

OAK HILL

BANKS

(

BMklnfl 1n Yow s..c Imerut

3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
201 5. Front St., Oak Hill, 682-7733
500
I

LMTED 1W OFFER. All loono IUbject to IIPPI'OV8I. *lntntt II generally deductible
, If the loon II MCUred by 'f'l'J! Nildeuce. teNuit your tax adYIIor for detllls.
1
• I

\

J. Bl1

Abby

specialist I waters/red cO&lt;Jrdinator for tlrr
Meigs S&lt;&gt;il at1d I«Jtcr Comcrvation Di}.trict. He can be contacted at (740) .992.4282
or
at
)infrccman@olr .mudnct.ol}l.)
,

•
•
Long, narrow arms reach Lake's is now. Then there was
:
back into hollows framed by a problem with the dam.
Workers for the Natural.
steep.-sided hills. Deep, clear
water floods the slender Resource Conservation Ser...
coves. Sunken trees are everj- vice, which
built
the
where.
impoundment, drained 83:
The problem is that percent of the lake's volume
Woodrum's bass aren't always to work on the structure.
"We didn't lose 83 percent
as cooperative as anglers
would like.
of the bass . that had been
" Woodrum gets a lot of stocked, but there was a
m
the fishing
fishing pressure, and the fish decline
Mike.
are ·pretty finicky," Morrison nonetheless," says
says. "Because the water is so Hoeft, the DNR fisheries
clear, the bass often go · deep. biologist responsible for Lin ~
Getting ·to them amid all that coin Counry. "When the lak~
timber can be pretty diffi- r~turned to its full level, fish~
cUlt."
ing wasn't as good as it was
.,
Even though potential before."
snags are everywhere, MorriFortunately for anglersr
son recommends using rela- Hoeft believes the setback
tiwly light line and small, was temporary.
finesse-type lures. "Soft ,plas."It should return to. where;
tic lures and tube baits usual- it was befofl' the drawdown;
ly work ·better than some of maybe even as soon as · this '
the heavier hardware," he spring," ~e says. "It won't be ' ·
says.
the best in the state by fu, but
At the Upper Mud River it should be pretty decent." · :
"
two springs ago, the fishing
,.
was as "hot" as Elk Fork ·

I

Dear

SPORT FISHING

Area impoundments

• .,. J

. th1 .

Pa1f.liM f Phillips. dnd daughl(r
'·'
·

]e~ Phillips.

.r

'
f!'..........

'-'

'l!r

&lt;';'--

. ·•',

•·

Gallia County_WIC encourages proper nutrition
'

GALLIPOLIS .:.._: G:illia . County, .r bon~ longer and thicker and making children should not eat too much fat .
Follow the food pyramid to feed
, Health' 'Department WI(; (~inen, · more blood as their brains get larger.
There· are three main building .your child, bearing in mind that
infants· and ~hUdren) · Pfl)gtam
encourages mothen to follow; certain blocks In food: proteins to bu~d and child-size portions are smaller than
guidelines in feeding iheir young repair body cellS - these are found adult ones. Meats, 2-3 servings; fruits,
children.
·
in meat, chicken, turkey, fish, beans 2 servings; vegetables, 3 servings;
Young bodies.. have nutritional · and egg1; carbohydrates to give chi- milk, 2-3 servings; fats and sweets,
needs greater than adults as their bo4- dren energy and add fiber - these limit these.
Children need foods fiom ·each
ied an: changing at a far greater pace.· . are found· in vegetables, fruits and
'I)tey are adding inches, putting on grains; fatS which are important in the group on a regular basis. They may
pounds, emlatging musclea, malting development of nerves. However, not eat all 6f them each day, but they

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

o
4 .... ...

It

),

should eat all of them over a period
of a few days to a week.
It is preferred ihat children eat
more fruit vegetables and grains as
these add fiber to their diet. Such
items as bread, rice, cereals fall into
this group and ar!! desirable. Some fats
are needed, but these must be kept
under control. Those fats from plants
are better for children as they a unsat-

PIIIIe-WIC..CI

..

.

'·

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

Sunday, June 3, 2001

S&amp;Jrmy. June 3, 2001

Pomeroy • 111

• G8111poll8, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

;~~Celebrations

Celebrations ·

&amp;unba!' ~imti·tkntinrl• hge C3

urs Bono
WASHINGTON (AP) with White House Deputy
Bono took a bre:~k 6om his Chief of StaffJoshua Bolten.
b2nd's "Elevation" tour to stop
"We have an ongoing disat the White House and speak -cussion here with people in the
with a presidential adviser White House about the AIDS
about AIDS in Africa and the issue and .Africa. It's very, very
debt of the world's poorest important to this president and
countries.
the administration," said Bono,
The lead singer of the Irish whose real nam e is Paul Hewrock band U2 praised congres- son.
sional support for efforts to
cancel debts of poor countries
around the world.
"The most extraordinary
thing about debt cancellation is
that it was a bipanisan effort,"
Bono said Friday after meeting

•

~eaatna

Cllanas

&amp;y
Penny Lorraine Aelker and Patrick Alan Newland

Brooke Ashley WitHams and Donald Edward Vaughan Jr.

Melissa Sabol and JBJ McKelvey

Williams- Ulughan engagement

Sabol-McKelvey engagement

MIDDLEPORT - Barbara Williams of Middlepon. and
Richard Williams of Pomeroy announce the engagement and
· forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Brooke Ashley, to
Donald Edward Vaughan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Doll.lld E.
Vaughan of Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 2000 graduate of Meigs High ·School
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Arlie Hager of Coolville announces
the engagement of her daughter, Hester Rena, to Harold 'Lee and currently attends Ohio University in Athens.
Her fiance is a I 996 graduate of Meigs !-figh School, and a
Alexander, son of Anna May Sarchet ofWest lafayette.
2000
graduate of Miami University with a degree in marketThe open church wedding is planned for July 22 at I :30 p.m.
at New Hope United Methodist C hurch, logan. A reception ing and human resource management. He is employed with
Belpre City Schools.
'"ill follow atthe lzaak Walton Hall, Blosser Road, Logan.
A June 23 wedding is being planned at the Middlej&gt;on ,
Church of Christ.
Hester R. Hager and Harold L Alexander

Hager-Alexander engagement

''

Aeiker-Newland engagement

I

I

-'

SYRACUSE - Mr.·and Mrs. James ,Sabol of Medina and
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey of Syracuse announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their children, Me lissa Marie Sabol and Jay Patrick McKelvey.
McKelvey is the grandson of Hazel McKelvey of Pmtland,
and the late William McKelvey, and the late Genevieve apd
George Schneider of Syracuse.
·. '
The bride-elect graduated in 1996 from Padua Francis.c:in
High School, Parma, and received a degree in health cducati3n
from Miami Unive~ity.
Her fiance graduated in 1996 from Southern High School
, and from Miami University with a degree in systems analYsfs.
He is employed by Eli Lilly in -Indianapolis as a systems analys't.
The wedding will be July 14 at 2:30 at the Holy Marrfr
Catholic Church in Medina.
·
.

Smith anniversary

'',

~ . ~CINE - Mr. and Mrs. Don P. Smith of 48164 Ohio 124,
Racme, will celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary on June
,11.
" They. were married in Sparta, N.C., on June I 1, 1971, by
Fmt Bapnst Church Pastor Michael J. Sepaugh.
,. ~rs. Snuth lS the daughter of Betty Wilson and the )ate Carl
W~on Sr. Don 1S the son of Donna Jean and Dan Smith of
Rac~ne. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have three sons, Jerry and Paul of
. Racme, and David of Collins, Ohio.
·
In celebration of the occasion, the couple plan a trip.

.

Bird-Roberts engagement ·· ·:1
RACINE - Bill and Judy Bird and Bill and Kay Rober~

Amber Kaye Bird and Charles W. Roberts Jr.

. all of Racine, announce the engagement and forthcoming rni~f ·
riage of their children, Amber Kaye Bird and Charles '1Chudo1
William Roberts Jr.
·;
,T he bride-elect is a 1998 graduate of Southern High Schoo~
and employed at Wendy's in Pomeroy. Her maternal grandpar7
ents are Emma Lee of Racine and the late Harold W Bir&lt;\.
Paternal grandparents are the late Grace and Everett Roush; :
Her fiance is a 1997 graduate of Southern High School a~d 1
employed at Wendy's in Pomeroy. His maternal grandpare!ltJ
are the late Thomas and Goldie Roberts. Paternal grandparensk
are Ayward and Mae Jones of Racine.
:
The wedding will be June 23 at 4:3'0 p.m. at the Racine Pen~
tecostal Assembly Church on Ohio 124, Racine. A receptio~
will foUow at Racine American Legion Post 602. The custom
of open church will be observed.

.. '

eoMPASSION

"

~

50% OFF

8HOOSING

Free •
'

A f-oe?

• MINI BLINDS
• . PLEATED SHADES
• WOOD BLINDS
PROFESSIONAL
INSTALLATION!
·RC"ilrt cnt anl or Contmcrc1al

CarDet SAVE .

flv dyna~JliC

.

20%·25%·

resident care and services.

HOLZER SENIOR CARE CENTER
380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

j

•

can

Buy A
OUEEDSize

Size Price!

"it never felt intrusive."

"It's a very simple effect but
one that's not been used
before;' the 28-year-old actor
reUs the magazine. "I look like
rubber, like I'm spray-painted.
But you can always see me, and
I can do everything. I'm not
· Max Hea&lt;!room."

.

. NEW YORK (AP) -The
beginning of Leelee Sobieski
·a nd Paul Walker's friendship
:W..n't exactly smooth.
O.D.
: "1 knew someone he
worked with, someone who's
~ connected;' Sobieski told
~M magazine's Love issue, on ·
One of the most common questions eye doctors are asked Is.
n&lt;;wsstands through October.
'How oRen should I get my eyes examined?" It depends. Your
"So he thought I was a big
past eye history, an.d whether you wear glasses or contact
HoUywood-connected chick. l!ertses determine. In large part, how often you need to have your
f&gt;nd I thought he was a sutfer
checked.

Dr. A. Jackson Balles

Frequency of Eye Exams

Most eye doctors would agree most children should be seen
: But they learned first
a nrst exam by age three, sooner If there Is a problem.• For
:impressions aren't every1hing.
of us under forty with a prescription, exams should occur
Walker said they became
annually. If contacts or glasses aren't necessary, every two
friends while re-shooting
kenes for 'joy Ride;' due in fyears should be sufficient. After forty, though, your body stands
!heaters later this year. ·
greater chance of devehiplog health and eye problems. like
; In the fum, W.1lker goes on a IGI1~uc~~ma.. Therefore. these folks should be seen once every
foad trip to see ·Sobieski, the ltw,elve months barring any eye or health problems.
~rl of his dreams. The trip
Thes.e are just guidelines, If you've been seeing your eye
takes a dark turn after Walker
ai.d his brotlm (Steve Zahn) ldO&lt;ctor regularly, continue dolrig so. He knows your eyes best.
allows you and your optometrist Ill best plan examinations
rlay a practical joke on a true ka timely basis.
ef over il CB radJO.
: Sobieski, 18, has appeared in ·
~peep lmpact," "Eyes Wide
Shut" and "Here on Earth."
A. Jackson Balles O.D.
Walker's f.Jms include "She'sAU
.224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
That" and "Varsity Blues."

Dr.

.(740) 446-5001

Dow You

Because we have a nurse on duty 24-.hours a day as well
as a~ound th.e clock personal assistants, I Wyngate can .
prov~d~ nu~smg care when needed along with medication
adm1n1strat1on and a host of other services .

~ ~ "
lAuue.

Mohawk • World • Milliken

740-441-2950
For More Information.

His previous films include
Law compares the process of 1997's "Gatt.1ca" and 1999's
·creaiillg-hls mechanical charac~ . "The Talented Mr.·Ripley.''
terln the upcoming fllm·"li:L
Artificial lnteUigence " to
building a robot.
"When we started, I kept
picturing this geek in a workshop, building me," law says in
the Jun e issue of Premiere
magazine. "Then l realized I
was the geek. I was the guy
building me, programming my
brain, deciding how emotion al,
how expressive he could be."
"A.L" is a Pin occhio-hkc
f.1ble about a boy robot (Haley
Joel Osmem) who lon g&gt;i for
low.
.
The film, directed by Steven
Spielberg; required Law to
spend three hours a day being
made up, though the actor said

: Leelee Sobieski
:and
Paul Walker
•

SAVE i20% • 25%
•DRAPERY
• SHEERS
• VEROSOLS

.

'

Window Treatments

Z'o 1UITH

.

: POMEROY - Homer and Irene Baxter of 315 Mechanic
k, Pomeroy, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on
June 10 with an open reception at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center, 1-4: p.m.
' They were married on June 9,1951 in Syracuse by the Rev.
'"!are St.John. They are the parents of two daughters, lisa loar
Pomeroy and Anna Baxter of Springfield, and have three
grandchildren, Ricky, Heather and Samantha. ·
.·
·
: The couple requests that gifts b~ omitted.
-

pf

Chairs, Loveseats, ·and Recliners

71AvE7o

Mr. and Mrs. Homer ·aaxter

Baxter anniver~ary

ALL SOFAS 30%

Call your Health care Provider or
the Gallia County Health
Department at

You're worried about Dad. But he
doesn't want or need a nursing ho~e.
Now there's a real altemative.

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED!

1UHAT t'OES

Children NMd 80% of

their v•cclne\fqnt In the
nrwt two years Of life. .

NEW YORK (AP) -Jude

In an effort to provide our
readership with current
news, t~e Sunday Times-Sen· ·
tine! will not accept weddings after 90 days from the
date of the event.
· ·
Weddings submitted after
the 90·day deadline will
appear durmg the week in
The Daily Sentinel, Point
Pleasant Register .and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.

HARRISONVILLE -. Bral)(!y L Corterili and David L.
Slisher announce their upcoming marriage to take place on
June 16 at the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church in Harnsonvillc.
The bride-elect is the daughter ofWayne and Brenda Cotterill of Harrisonville, and her fiance is the son of Roland and
Helen Slisher of Athens.
A reception will follow at the Scipio Volunteer Fire Department in Harrisonville.

--1': ..,.

Set for ft full

Jude Law

POUCIES
Cotterill-Slisher engagement

TUPPERS PLAINS- Penny lorraine Aeiker and Patrick
Alan N ewland are anno!Jncing their engagement and forthconung n1arnage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Cindy Aciker of Ponieroy.
and the late Pat Ae1ker of Reedsville.
She is a 1994 graduate of Eastern High School, a I 998 graduate of Ohio University. where she received a bachelor of science degree in hearing and speech science, and a 2000 graduate of Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, where she
received a master of science degree in communication disorders.
She is . currently employed as a certified speech-language
pathologiSt at Manetta Memorial HospitaL
· Her fi:'n~e is the son of Dennis and Helen Newland ofTuppers Plams. He IS a 1994 graduate of Eastern High School, and
a 1?99 graduate of the University of Rio Grande, where he
received a bachelor of science degree in education.
He is currendy employed as a science teacher at Eastern
High School.
The couple will eJ~change vows at an open ceremony on July
22 at 6:30p.m. beach side at Garden City Beach, S.C., with a
reception immediately following. Upon the couple's return, an
open reception will be held at the Newland residence on Aug ..·
4 at 5:30 p.m.

---

JIRT(ARVEo•

,.

·~·

Mos! people do not need continuous 24-hour- a-day ·
nursmg care ~ut only sporadic or episodic nursing and a
lot of supportive care. Wyngate is licensed to provide
these services in homelike, residential surroundings.
We.hope you will consider Wyngate of Gallipolis, the
area's newest choice in long term healthcare.
Please call us for more information. We are here to
care for the elderly and their families. We can help
you and yours.

street address

Wf'glfft
OF GALLIPOLIS

city

slate

zip

phone number
VWA02

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 441-9633

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

Sunday, June 3, 2001

S&amp;Jrmy. June 3, 2001

Pomeroy • 111

• G8111poll8, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

;~~Celebrations

Celebrations ·

&amp;unba!' ~imti·tkntinrl• hge C3

urs Bono
WASHINGTON (AP) with White House Deputy
Bono took a bre:~k 6om his Chief of StaffJoshua Bolten.
b2nd's "Elevation" tour to stop
"We have an ongoing disat the White House and speak -cussion here with people in the
with a presidential adviser White House about the AIDS
about AIDS in Africa and the issue and .Africa. It's very, very
debt of the world's poorest important to this president and
countries.
the administration," said Bono,
The lead singer of the Irish whose real nam e is Paul Hewrock band U2 praised congres- son.
sional support for efforts to
cancel debts of poor countries
around the world.
"The most extraordinary
thing about debt cancellation is
that it was a bipanisan effort,"
Bono said Friday after meeting

•

~eaatna

Cllanas

&amp;y
Penny Lorraine Aelker and Patrick Alan Newland

Brooke Ashley WitHams and Donald Edward Vaughan Jr.

Melissa Sabol and JBJ McKelvey

Williams- Ulughan engagement

Sabol-McKelvey engagement

MIDDLEPORT - Barbara Williams of Middlepon. and
Richard Williams of Pomeroy announce the engagement and
· forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Brooke Ashley, to
Donald Edward Vaughan Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Doll.lld E.
Vaughan of Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 2000 graduate of Meigs High ·School
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Arlie Hager of Coolville announces
the engagement of her daughter, Hester Rena, to Harold 'Lee and currently attends Ohio University in Athens.
Her fiance is a I 996 graduate of Meigs !-figh School, and a
Alexander, son of Anna May Sarchet ofWest lafayette.
2000
graduate of Miami University with a degree in marketThe open church wedding is planned for July 22 at I :30 p.m.
at New Hope United Methodist C hurch, logan. A reception ing and human resource management. He is employed with
Belpre City Schools.
'"ill follow atthe lzaak Walton Hall, Blosser Road, Logan.
A June 23 wedding is being planned at the Middlej&gt;on ,
Church of Christ.
Hester R. Hager and Harold L Alexander

Hager-Alexander engagement

''

Aeiker-Newland engagement

I

I

-'

SYRACUSE - Mr.·and Mrs. James ,Sabol of Medina and
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey of Syracuse announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their children, Me lissa Marie Sabol and Jay Patrick McKelvey.
McKelvey is the grandson of Hazel McKelvey of Pmtland,
and the late William McKelvey, and the late Genevieve apd
George Schneider of Syracuse.
·. '
The bride-elect graduated in 1996 from Padua Francis.c:in
High School, Parma, and received a degree in health cducati3n
from Miami Unive~ity.
Her fiance graduated in 1996 from Southern High School
, and from Miami University with a degree in systems analYsfs.
He is employed by Eli Lilly in -Indianapolis as a systems analys't.
The wedding will be July 14 at 2:30 at the Holy Marrfr
Catholic Church in Medina.
·
.

Smith anniversary

'',

~ . ~CINE - Mr. and Mrs. Don P. Smith of 48164 Ohio 124,
Racme, will celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary on June
,11.
" They. were married in Sparta, N.C., on June I 1, 1971, by
Fmt Bapnst Church Pastor Michael J. Sepaugh.
,. ~rs. Snuth lS the daughter of Betty Wilson and the )ate Carl
W~on Sr. Don 1S the son of Donna Jean and Dan Smith of
Rac~ne. Mr. and Mrs. Smith have three sons, Jerry and Paul of
. Racme, and David of Collins, Ohio.
·
In celebration of the occasion, the couple plan a trip.

.

Bird-Roberts engagement ·· ·:1
RACINE - Bill and Judy Bird and Bill and Kay Rober~

Amber Kaye Bird and Charles W. Roberts Jr.

. all of Racine, announce the engagement and forthcoming rni~f ·
riage of their children, Amber Kaye Bird and Charles '1Chudo1
William Roberts Jr.
·;
,T he bride-elect is a 1998 graduate of Southern High Schoo~
and employed at Wendy's in Pomeroy. Her maternal grandpar7
ents are Emma Lee of Racine and the late Harold W Bir&lt;\.
Paternal grandparents are the late Grace and Everett Roush; :
Her fiance is a 1997 graduate of Southern High School a~d 1
employed at Wendy's in Pomeroy. His maternal grandpare!ltJ
are the late Thomas and Goldie Roberts. Paternal grandparensk
are Ayward and Mae Jones of Racine.
:
The wedding will be June 23 at 4:3'0 p.m. at the Racine Pen~
tecostal Assembly Church on Ohio 124, Racine. A receptio~
will foUow at Racine American Legion Post 602. The custom
of open church will be observed.

.. '

eoMPASSION

"

~

50% OFF

8HOOSING

Free •
'

A f-oe?

• MINI BLINDS
• . PLEATED SHADES
• WOOD BLINDS
PROFESSIONAL
INSTALLATION!
·RC"ilrt cnt anl or Contmcrc1al

CarDet SAVE .

flv dyna~JliC

.

20%·25%·

resident care and services.

HOLZER SENIOR CARE CENTER
380 Colonial Drive • Bidwell, OH 45614

j

•

can

Buy A
OUEEDSize

Size Price!

"it never felt intrusive."

"It's a very simple effect but
one that's not been used
before;' the 28-year-old actor
reUs the magazine. "I look like
rubber, like I'm spray-painted.
But you can always see me, and
I can do everything. I'm not
· Max Hea&lt;!room."

.

. NEW YORK (AP) -The
beginning of Leelee Sobieski
·a nd Paul Walker's friendship
:W..n't exactly smooth.
O.D.
: "1 knew someone he
worked with, someone who's
~ connected;' Sobieski told
~M magazine's Love issue, on ·
One of the most common questions eye doctors are asked Is.
n&lt;;wsstands through October.
'How oRen should I get my eyes examined?" It depends. Your
"So he thought I was a big
past eye history, an.d whether you wear glasses or contact
HoUywood-connected chick. l!ertses determine. In large part, how often you need to have your
f&gt;nd I thought he was a sutfer
checked.

Dr. A. Jackson Balles

Frequency of Eye Exams

Most eye doctors would agree most children should be seen
: But they learned first
a nrst exam by age three, sooner If there Is a problem.• For
:impressions aren't every1hing.
of us under forty with a prescription, exams should occur
Walker said they became
annually. If contacts or glasses aren't necessary, every two
friends while re-shooting
kenes for 'joy Ride;' due in fyears should be sufficient. After forty, though, your body stands
!heaters later this year. ·
greater chance of devehiplog health and eye problems. like
; In the fum, W.1lker goes on a IGI1~uc~~ma.. Therefore. these folks should be seen once every
foad trip to see ·Sobieski, the ltw,elve months barring any eye or health problems.
~rl of his dreams. The trip
Thes.e are just guidelines, If you've been seeing your eye
takes a dark turn after Walker
ai.d his brotlm (Steve Zahn) ldO&lt;ctor regularly, continue dolrig so. He knows your eyes best.
allows you and your optometrist Ill best plan examinations
rlay a practical joke on a true ka timely basis.
ef over il CB radJO.
: Sobieski, 18, has appeared in ·
~peep lmpact," "Eyes Wide
Shut" and "Here on Earth."
A. Jackson Balles O.D.
Walker's f.Jms include "She'sAU
.224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
That" and "Varsity Blues."

Dr.

.(740) 446-5001

Dow You

Because we have a nurse on duty 24-.hours a day as well
as a~ound th.e clock personal assistants, I Wyngate can .
prov~d~ nu~smg care when needed along with medication
adm1n1strat1on and a host of other services .

~ ~ "
lAuue.

Mohawk • World • Milliken

740-441-2950
For More Information.

His previous films include
Law compares the process of 1997's "Gatt.1ca" and 1999's
·creaiillg-hls mechanical charac~ . "The Talented Mr.·Ripley.''
terln the upcoming fllm·"li:L
Artificial lnteUigence " to
building a robot.
"When we started, I kept
picturing this geek in a workshop, building me," law says in
the Jun e issue of Premiere
magazine. "Then l realized I
was the geek. I was the guy
building me, programming my
brain, deciding how emotion al,
how expressive he could be."
"A.L" is a Pin occhio-hkc
f.1ble about a boy robot (Haley
Joel Osmem) who lon g&gt;i for
low.
.
The film, directed by Steven
Spielberg; required Law to
spend three hours a day being
made up, though the actor said

: Leelee Sobieski
:and
Paul Walker
•

SAVE i20% • 25%
•DRAPERY
• SHEERS
• VEROSOLS

.

'

Window Treatments

Z'o 1UITH

.

: POMEROY - Homer and Irene Baxter of 315 Mechanic
k, Pomeroy, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on
June 10 with an open reception at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center, 1-4: p.m.
' They were married on June 9,1951 in Syracuse by the Rev.
'"!are St.John. They are the parents of two daughters, lisa loar
Pomeroy and Anna Baxter of Springfield, and have three
grandchildren, Ricky, Heather and Samantha. ·
.·
·
: The couple requests that gifts b~ omitted.
-

pf

Chairs, Loveseats, ·and Recliners

71AvE7o

Mr. and Mrs. Homer ·aaxter

Baxter anniver~ary

ALL SOFAS 30%

Call your Health care Provider or
the Gallia County Health
Department at

You're worried about Dad. But he
doesn't want or need a nursing ho~e.
Now there's a real altemative.

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED!

1UHAT t'OES

Children NMd 80% of

their v•cclne\fqnt In the
nrwt two years Of life. .

NEW YORK (AP) -Jude

In an effort to provide our
readership with current
news, t~e Sunday Times-Sen· ·
tine! will not accept weddings after 90 days from the
date of the event.
· ·
Weddings submitted after
the 90·day deadline will
appear durmg the week in
The Daily Sentinel, Point
Pleasant Register .and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.

HARRISONVILLE -. Bral)(!y L Corterili and David L.
Slisher announce their upcoming marriage to take place on
June 16 at the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church in Harnsonvillc.
The bride-elect is the daughter ofWayne and Brenda Cotterill of Harrisonville, and her fiance is the son of Roland and
Helen Slisher of Athens.
A reception will follow at the Scipio Volunteer Fire Department in Harrisonville.

--1': ..,.

Set for ft full

Jude Law

POUCIES
Cotterill-Slisher engagement

TUPPERS PLAINS- Penny lorraine Aeiker and Patrick
Alan N ewland are anno!Jncing their engagement and forthconung n1arnage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Cindy Aciker of Ponieroy.
and the late Pat Ae1ker of Reedsville.
She is a 1994 graduate of Eastern High School, a I 998 graduate of Ohio University. where she received a bachelor of science degree in hearing and speech science, and a 2000 graduate of Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, where she
received a master of science degree in communication disorders.
She is . currently employed as a certified speech-language
pathologiSt at Manetta Memorial HospitaL
· Her fi:'n~e is the son of Dennis and Helen Newland ofTuppers Plams. He IS a 1994 graduate of Eastern High School, and
a 1?99 graduate of the University of Rio Grande, where he
received a bachelor of science degree in education.
He is currendy employed as a science teacher at Eastern
High School.
The couple will eJ~change vows at an open ceremony on July
22 at 6:30p.m. beach side at Garden City Beach, S.C., with a
reception immediately following. Upon the couple's return, an
open reception will be held at the Newland residence on Aug ..·
4 at 5:30 p.m.

---

JIRT(ARVEo•

,.

·~·

Mos! people do not need continuous 24-hour- a-day ·
nursmg care ~ut only sporadic or episodic nursing and a
lot of supportive care. Wyngate is licensed to provide
these services in homelike, residential surroundings.
We.hope you will consider Wyngate of Gallipolis, the
area's newest choice in long term healthcare.
Please call us for more information. We are here to
care for the elderly and their families. We can help
you and yours.

street address

Wf'glfft
OF GALLIPOLIS

city

slate

zip

phone number
VWA02

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 441-9633

�SunUy, June 3, 2001

Sunday, June 3, 2001

PoiMroy • Middleport • G8lllpoh, Ohio • Point Pln"lnt, WV

•

••*1' «iiiiH'-&amp;entiatl• Page C5

Pomeroy • MiddJ1port • Gallipolis. Ohio • Point Phuant, WV

Pleasant Valley Hospital salutes the graduates« our~~ 8oanl ofTIUSfeeS and medical staf[

••
•
•

•'

I

D

A

.

.•

. '•
I

•
•
•
•

j

I

D

I 1

J

I

\""--~

•

••

••
••
•

•

•

•

Jason· Ball and

Melinda Gooldln and Blllyjoe Fornash

. David Thomas and Monica McKinney

•
•
••

Stacl Lee

McKinney- Thomas engagement

Gooldin-Fornash engagement

Lee-Ball engagement

POINT PLEASANT - Monica Renee McKinney and
David Carl Thomas announce their forthcoming marriage.
Monica is the daughter of Roger and Winot1a McKinney of Point Pleasant. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy McKinney and Mary Wilcoxen of Point Pleasant. Monica is a graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
She received an Associate Degree in Legal Assisting from
Marshall University and is currently working toward a
Court R eporting Degree.
David is the son of Lowell and Debbie Thomas of Point
Pleasant. He is the grandson of Wandalene Vickers and
Erma Thomas of Oak Hill, Ohio. David is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and received his Bachelor of
Pharmacy degree from West Virginia University. He 1s
employed by Wal-Mart as a Ph;umacist in Mason . .

GALLIPOLIS -- Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gooldin of Gallipolis
an nounce the engagement of their daughter, Melinda Sue, to
.Billyjoe Fornash ofCohimbus, Ohio.
Melinda is a 1992 graduate of Gallia Academy High School.
and a 2000 graduate of the University of Rio Grande, where
she received an associate degree in business. She is currently
employed with Ohio Valley Home Health Inc., Gallipolis,
working in accounting.
Billxjoe is the son of Lyndia Fornash and the late William
Albert Fornash. He is a 1983 graduate of Philip Barbour High
School, Philippi, WVa. Billr.joe graduated in 1995 fiom West
Virginia Business College, Clarksburg, where he received a
paralegal degree. He is currently employed with .B irmex Contact Services, Columbus, Ohio.
The wedding ceremony will be held at Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, on July 14 at 2:30 p.m. The gracious custom of
an open church wedding will be observed.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY -- Allen and Beverly Lee of Gallipolis
Ferry and David and Klrla Ball of Ashton announce the engagemcm and forthcoming marriage of their children, Staci Nicole
Lee and Jason David Ball.
Staci is a 19% graduate of Point Pleasant High School and a
2001 graduate of Marshall University's College of Nursing. She is
employed in the lmensive Care Unit at St. Mary's Hospital.
Jason is a 1991 graduate of Hannan High SchooL He is the
owner/ manager of Ashton Food Market in Ashton.
The gracious custom of an open church wedding will be celebrated Sarurday,June 9, at 5:30p.m. at Faith Gospel Church, Gallipolis Ferry. Music will begin at 5 p.m.
The couple will reside in Ashton.

Qrislepller L Errett
Poim PICISIIII High School
Sou of
DiMe Errett
Baldi llforMiol Senica

I

Max
Tawney _
GUEST VIEW
same time. My friend Fisal saved me
by telling them I could not talk to
them at that time because I had to
catch a plane that was waiting on
me, and I had to leave right then .
Fisal rushed me om of the building
and we had a gooq laugh . I -offered

Na!UIItl Jacob ReyBolds
Point Plclsant High School
Sou of
TMuReyaelds
Surcery Strvkes

Justia KiDC
Point Pleasant High School
Sou of
Sandra Kiag
P~ysicia• Pradiee Services

him a $20, but he would not take it,
so we had a handshake and hug, and
we both went our way. What a lucky
day that was - I will always remember it.
· I sure would like to travel again to ·
foreign countries. I will say I have
had a very happy life and have traveled· to 72 foreign countries. It was
an education for me and I hope you
e 1~oy my articles. I am trying to
write a book about my travels, but it
is a big job!
When I visit a foreign country, I
go to their bank and buy some of
their money to bring back to the
United States. I have a fairly large .
· amount' of foreign nwney that I haw

Jesse Tbonlft
Point Pleasant High School
Son of
Larry II Lillda Tbornton
.Env. Strvkn &amp; Nunlag Services

collected over the years and I sure
like to show it. I give a lot of it to
some of my good friends. If you
would like to see some of it, stop in
at my store at 422 Second Ave.,_in
Gallipolis.
Many people have told me they
enjoyed my articles and I appreciate
that. I also have many large photos
hanging in my store, and you are
welcome to come in and see them.
Also I have thousands of dollars in
foreign money that I have collected
you can stop and see it at the Historical Society at 416 Second Ave., and
you can see that beautiful money.
I've always tried to be nice to people in other countries, and tnany

Robert L Plllpln-ey, II
Point Pleasant High School
Nephew of
Valerie Walten
·?•niDIServlca
.

Daughter of
Lisa Tllorlt
1\ysicin Pl'ldice Servica

LttA.HtiUn

AIWey Sallaz

Point Pleasant High School
Daughter of
Sui'OI Hasuw
Nunil&amp; Stnicn

Point Pltasant High School
Dauglner of

Mkbel SbJio

c•ris WattS

IltckySallu

Nuniq Strvka

J1101 D. Wlillilpol
Point Pkaot High School
Sou of
.Uz ' Jte WWtlilctH
HIS .t H-.Mediral t:qllip•e•l

J'ai&amp;t WIIIJ
University of Rio Gtande

Daughter of
T.. w...,
Emn• e•lll Serricts

. · .mal your annauncemeails to:
news@mydailytribune.com OR neiNS@mydailyregister.com
OR news@mydailysentinel.com

Traveling to 72 foreign countries has been an education
GALLiPOLIS -In 1982, when I
was in Saudi Arabia, I met a man by
the name of Fisal Hamza. He was the
bodyguard of a very rich Arabian. I
talked to him·for a very .long time, as
he could speak 'English.
He invited me to have lunch with .·
him and several other rich sultans
who lived in Saudi Arabia. No way
. would I turn that downr It ~as a free
meal with some very wealthy and
powerful men! My frien&lt;;l introduced ·
me to the sultans, and they thought I
was a rich oil man from the United
States - I dictn't tell them I waK~'t.
After lunch, three sultans came up
to talk to me about the oil business,
but they all tried to talk to me at the

Rely D. Tllorwe
Point Pleasant High School

Eric A. Mllltr
Point Pleasanl High Scbool.
Sou of
Catby Mllltr
Buiacss Servkn

times I give them an American coin,
which seems to please them.
I also have always liked to travel
alone, because I can change my travel plans without upsetting someone
else's plans. If! want to stay longer in
a place, or if I want to leave earlier, it
is no problem for anyone.
. My travel days are over. I will soon
be 88 and I can't hit the roads like I
used back in the good ole days, but I
surely did see the world and met
some beautiful people. I am fortunate to be an American .
(Longtime Gallipolis businessman
Max Tawney &lt;JCcasionally submits articles
011 his lra!'cls am/ rccollcctit&gt;I!S &lt;!f Gal.
hpolis and Gtillia C.•rmty.) ·

Eril B. SiiiiiS
Point Pleasant High School
Daughter of
LaaMcGriG
SaiJCry Servica ·

Alieia Kersey
Point Pleasant High School

Daughter of
Lall Kersey
Pllyslciaa Pl'ICtice Senices

River Valley High School
Son of
Jeaait SUio
Naniq Senien

River Valley High School
Son of
Tom WattS
hviroamenlal Services

BRY Peaf!QD
Wahama High School
Daughter of
Saybra Peanon
Support Stnica

LeahY.Bma
Wahama High School
. Daughter of
Rebecu Brown
Naniq Stnices

JodiEnin
University of Rio Grande
Daughter of
Debbie Rouh
Pun:buiag Services

Kim Wattenon .
Hannan High School
Granddaughter of
V"wla Ellb
PVil Ausili~ry

Tasha Nicole·Hope Absten
Christ Academy ·
Daughter of
Jo•n &amp; Robin Absten
COC &amp; Materials Managemenl

Thomas Holbrook
. S)'llll11es Valley High School
Son of
Alice Holbrook
Nuning Services

..

0'

RKMI Rift
River Valley High School

J1101 Powell

Daughter of
Gary Rife
Surcery Stnica

River Valley High School
Grandson of
Dine Hood
Corporate Dtvelopme1t

Briana Jo RicbJnls
Wahama High School
Daughter of
Bn:nda V"~eken
Nuning Services

Kim Blake
Wahama High School
·Niece of
Dorotby Blake
Nuniq Services

Joai Lee Jonlal
Wahama High School
Granddaughter of
Rose Jordao
Food Strviees

David Allen North
. Crallia Academy
Nephew of
Sheala Thomas
Radiology Services

Jessica Carter
Gallia Academy
Niece of
Ruth Thomas-Upton
Nursiq Services

David Downing
God's Bible S~hool
SOn of
Joyce D011'ning
Nursing Services

J~~~e~

P. Sillpldll
Point Pleasant High School
Son of
Debbie Simpldu ·
1\ysieian Pnctlce St~es ·

'

Additloul Sallies

ToGradllllla
PVBE•~:

I Vickie Keefer
Marshall University
Nmii&amp;Strvica
I Carrie s.pt'IMr
MmhilllUnivenity
Ho.e Haii Servlm

- --Gregory S. Smith
Marshall University
Son of !
Cindy Smith
Laboratory Services

5tephaoie Gardaer
Marshall University
Currently a
PVH Employee
Nuning Senices

Tammy H01res
University of Rio Grande
Currendy a
PVH Employee
Nuniag Services

i

I

"

1La11Keney
Marshall University
Pbysiciaa Practice Semen

.f
/l"J "

• •

Pleasant Valley Hospital

I

C1Uie M. Bry11t

Gallia Academy
Daughter of
Carla Bryaat
Laboratory Stni~

·Member, Genesis Hospital System

Michelle Henaeo
Symmes Valley High School
Reoognized by
Alice Holbrook
N1ning Services

,.

'

"

'··

Joey Baker
West Virginia University
Son of
Betty Baker
Nursing Admiaistration

Clyde &amp; Julie (St. .•uJ ~pence
WVU School of ·~,m\acy
Son·in·law &amp; Daughter of
Marcie Smilh
Nursing Services

Nick Ab~len
Point Plcas:m! IliY! S:!::~!
Son of John Absteo
· &amp; S\epson of
Robin Absten ·

· Meli~~a Smitb
.\p jJalachian Bible College
Daughter-in·law of
Martie Smith
Nursing Services

�SunUy, June 3, 2001

Sunday, June 3, 2001

PoiMroy • Middleport • G8lllpoh, Ohio • Point Pln"lnt, WV

•

••*1' «iiiiH'-&amp;entiatl• Page C5

Pomeroy • MiddJ1port • Gallipolis. Ohio • Point Phuant, WV

Pleasant Valley Hospital salutes the graduates« our~~ 8oanl ofTIUSfeeS and medical staf[

••
•
•

•'

I

D

A

.

.•

. '•
I

•
•
•
•

j

I

D

I 1

J

I

\""--~

•

••

••
••
•

•

•

•

Jason· Ball and

Melinda Gooldln and Blllyjoe Fornash

. David Thomas and Monica McKinney

•
•
••

Stacl Lee

McKinney- Thomas engagement

Gooldin-Fornash engagement

Lee-Ball engagement

POINT PLEASANT - Monica Renee McKinney and
David Carl Thomas announce their forthcoming marriage.
Monica is the daughter of Roger and Winot1a McKinney of Point Pleasant. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy McKinney and Mary Wilcoxen of Point Pleasant. Monica is a graduate of Point Pleasant High School.
She received an Associate Degree in Legal Assisting from
Marshall University and is currently working toward a
Court R eporting Degree.
David is the son of Lowell and Debbie Thomas of Point
Pleasant. He is the grandson of Wandalene Vickers and
Erma Thomas of Oak Hill, Ohio. David is a graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and received his Bachelor of
Pharmacy degree from West Virginia University. He 1s
employed by Wal-Mart as a Ph;umacist in Mason . .

GALLIPOLIS -- Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gooldin of Gallipolis
an nounce the engagement of their daughter, Melinda Sue, to
.Billyjoe Fornash ofCohimbus, Ohio.
Melinda is a 1992 graduate of Gallia Academy High School.
and a 2000 graduate of the University of Rio Grande, where
she received an associate degree in business. She is currently
employed with Ohio Valley Home Health Inc., Gallipolis,
working in accounting.
Billxjoe is the son of Lyndia Fornash and the late William
Albert Fornash. He is a 1983 graduate of Philip Barbour High
School, Philippi, WVa. Billr.joe graduated in 1995 fiom West
Virginia Business College, Clarksburg, where he received a
paralegal degree. He is currently employed with .B irmex Contact Services, Columbus, Ohio.
The wedding ceremony will be held at Addison Freewill
Baptist Church, on July 14 at 2:30 p.m. The gracious custom of
an open church wedding will be observed.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY -- Allen and Beverly Lee of Gallipolis
Ferry and David and Klrla Ball of Ashton announce the engagemcm and forthcoming marriage of their children, Staci Nicole
Lee and Jason David Ball.
Staci is a 19% graduate of Point Pleasant High School and a
2001 graduate of Marshall University's College of Nursing. She is
employed in the lmensive Care Unit at St. Mary's Hospital.
Jason is a 1991 graduate of Hannan High SchooL He is the
owner/ manager of Ashton Food Market in Ashton.
The gracious custom of an open church wedding will be celebrated Sarurday,June 9, at 5:30p.m. at Faith Gospel Church, Gallipolis Ferry. Music will begin at 5 p.m.
The couple will reside in Ashton.

Qrislepller L Errett
Poim PICISIIII High School
Sou of
DiMe Errett
Baldi llforMiol Senica

I

Max
Tawney _
GUEST VIEW
same time. My friend Fisal saved me
by telling them I could not talk to
them at that time because I had to
catch a plane that was waiting on
me, and I had to leave right then .
Fisal rushed me om of the building
and we had a gooq laugh . I -offered

Na!UIItl Jacob ReyBolds
Point Plclsant High School
Sou of
TMuReyaelds
Surcery Strvkes

Justia KiDC
Point Pleasant High School
Sou of
Sandra Kiag
P~ysicia• Pradiee Services

him a $20, but he would not take it,
so we had a handshake and hug, and
we both went our way. What a lucky
day that was - I will always remember it.
· I sure would like to travel again to ·
foreign countries. I will say I have
had a very happy life and have traveled· to 72 foreign countries. It was
an education for me and I hope you
e 1~oy my articles. I am trying to
write a book about my travels, but it
is a big job!
When I visit a foreign country, I
go to their bank and buy some of
their money to bring back to the
United States. I have a fairly large .
· amount' of foreign nwney that I haw

Jesse Tbonlft
Point Pleasant High School
Son of
Larry II Lillda Tbornton
.Env. Strvkn &amp; Nunlag Services

collected over the years and I sure
like to show it. I give a lot of it to
some of my good friends. If you
would like to see some of it, stop in
at my store at 422 Second Ave.,_in
Gallipolis.
Many people have told me they
enjoyed my articles and I appreciate
that. I also have many large photos
hanging in my store, and you are
welcome to come in and see them.
Also I have thousands of dollars in
foreign money that I have collected
you can stop and see it at the Historical Society at 416 Second Ave., and
you can see that beautiful money.
I've always tried to be nice to people in other countries, and tnany

Robert L Plllpln-ey, II
Point Pleasant High School
Nephew of
Valerie Walten
·?•niDIServlca
.

Daughter of
Lisa Tllorlt
1\ysicin Pl'ldice Servica

LttA.HtiUn

AIWey Sallaz

Point Pleasant High School
Daughter of
Sui'OI Hasuw
Nunil&amp; Stnicn

Point Pltasant High School
Dauglner of

Mkbel SbJio

c•ris WattS

IltckySallu

Nuniq Strvka

J1101 D. Wlillilpol
Point Pkaot High School
Sou of
.Uz ' Jte WWtlilctH
HIS .t H-.Mediral t:qllip•e•l

J'ai&amp;t WIIIJ
University of Rio Gtande

Daughter of
T.. w...,
Emn• e•lll Serricts

. · .mal your annauncemeails to:
news@mydailytribune.com OR neiNS@mydailyregister.com
OR news@mydailysentinel.com

Traveling to 72 foreign countries has been an education
GALLiPOLIS -In 1982, when I
was in Saudi Arabia, I met a man by
the name of Fisal Hamza. He was the
bodyguard of a very rich Arabian. I
talked to him·for a very .long time, as
he could speak 'English.
He invited me to have lunch with .·
him and several other rich sultans
who lived in Saudi Arabia. No way
. would I turn that downr It ~as a free
meal with some very wealthy and
powerful men! My frien&lt;;l introduced ·
me to the sultans, and they thought I
was a rich oil man from the United
States - I dictn't tell them I waK~'t.
After lunch, three sultans came up
to talk to me about the oil business,
but they all tried to talk to me at the

Rely D. Tllorwe
Point Pleasant High School

Eric A. Mllltr
Point Pleasanl High Scbool.
Sou of
Catby Mllltr
Buiacss Servkn

times I give them an American coin,
which seems to please them.
I also have always liked to travel
alone, because I can change my travel plans without upsetting someone
else's plans. If! want to stay longer in
a place, or if I want to leave earlier, it
is no problem for anyone.
. My travel days are over. I will soon
be 88 and I can't hit the roads like I
used back in the good ole days, but I
surely did see the world and met
some beautiful people. I am fortunate to be an American .
(Longtime Gallipolis businessman
Max Tawney &lt;JCcasionally submits articles
011 his lra!'cls am/ rccollcctit&gt;I!S &lt;!f Gal.
hpolis and Gtillia C.•rmty.) ·

Eril B. SiiiiiS
Point Pleasant High School
Daughter of
LaaMcGriG
SaiJCry Servica ·

Alieia Kersey
Point Pleasant High School

Daughter of
Lall Kersey
Pllyslciaa Pl'ICtice Senices

River Valley High School
Son of
Jeaait SUio
Naniq Senien

River Valley High School
Son of
Tom WattS
hviroamenlal Services

BRY Peaf!QD
Wahama High School
Daughter of
Saybra Peanon
Support Stnica

LeahY.Bma
Wahama High School
. Daughter of
Rebecu Brown
Naniq Stnices

JodiEnin
University of Rio Grande
Daughter of
Debbie Rouh
Pun:buiag Services

Kim Wattenon .
Hannan High School
Granddaughter of
V"wla Ellb
PVil Ausili~ry

Tasha Nicole·Hope Absten
Christ Academy ·
Daughter of
Jo•n &amp; Robin Absten
COC &amp; Materials Managemenl

Thomas Holbrook
. S)'llll11es Valley High School
Son of
Alice Holbrook
Nuning Services

..

0'

RKMI Rift
River Valley High School

J1101 Powell

Daughter of
Gary Rife
Surcery Stnica

River Valley High School
Grandson of
Dine Hood
Corporate Dtvelopme1t

Briana Jo RicbJnls
Wahama High School
Daughter of
Bn:nda V"~eken
Nuning Services

Kim Blake
Wahama High School
·Niece of
Dorotby Blake
Nuniq Services

Joai Lee Jonlal
Wahama High School
Granddaughter of
Rose Jordao
Food Strviees

David Allen North
. Crallia Academy
Nephew of
Sheala Thomas
Radiology Services

Jessica Carter
Gallia Academy
Niece of
Ruth Thomas-Upton
Nursiq Services

David Downing
God's Bible S~hool
SOn of
Joyce D011'ning
Nursing Services

J~~~e~

P. Sillpldll
Point Pleasant High School
Son of
Debbie Simpldu ·
1\ysieian Pnctlce St~es ·

'

Additloul Sallies

ToGradllllla
PVBE•~:

I Vickie Keefer
Marshall University
Nmii&amp;Strvica
I Carrie s.pt'IMr
MmhilllUnivenity
Ho.e Haii Servlm

- --Gregory S. Smith
Marshall University
Son of !
Cindy Smith
Laboratory Services

5tephaoie Gardaer
Marshall University
Currently a
PVH Employee
Nuning Senices

Tammy H01res
University of Rio Grande
Currendy a
PVH Employee
Nuniag Services

i

I

"

1La11Keney
Marshall University
Pbysiciaa Practice Semen

.f
/l"J "

• •

Pleasant Valley Hospital

I

C1Uie M. Bry11t

Gallia Academy
Daughter of
Carla Bryaat
Laboratory Stni~

·Member, Genesis Hospital System

Michelle Henaeo
Symmes Valley High School
Reoognized by
Alice Holbrook
N1ning Services

,.

'

"

'··

Joey Baker
West Virginia University
Son of
Betty Baker
Nursing Admiaistration

Clyde &amp; Julie (St. .•uJ ~pence
WVU School of ·~,m\acy
Son·in·law &amp; Daughter of
Marcie Smilh
Nursing Services

Nick Ab~len
Point Plcas:m! IliY! S:!::~!
Son of John Absteo
· &amp; S\epson of
Robin Absten ·

· Meli~~a Smitb
.\p jJalachian Bible College
Daughter-in·law of
Martie Smith
Nursing Services

�.... ce ••

a

pa:fiiH 6tlllilld

SoodaY. June 3, 2001

Sunct.y, June 3. 2001

~ •lllddl1polt • Gr~~FGia, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Mason
SUNDAY,June3

Ollce.

POINT PL.EASNfT- Point P1111 C
Hgh Sctoooi111Wa1on. 4 p.m.

POINT P.EASANT- Millen Cotny
Fair Boan1. 7 p.m.

APPLE GROVE- Mayas Famly wi1
sing aUtl IM19 Cluch. 7 p.m.

TUESDAY, " - 5
LETART- HELP Diet Class. l.eB1
Cormuity Cenlar. V/tlgiHII 11om

LETART- Molhers Day a1d Fllfas
Day IXMin!d dish dnner at l.eB1

5:30 10 6 p.m. loloiied by shOII

Community Cenlar, , p.m. Meal,
lllble teMc:a a1d oollee lumished.

rneetilig.

Fl.ATROCK -.Cloling c1oaet r;v.
away ewry T.-y at Good Shop-

GAL.UPOLIS, Ohio-~ service at Alklson Freewil B8pliSt
Cluch. 6 p.m. - Rick Ben::us
pua l81g .

.•

heR! U.M. Olurctt, Flalrock,

1 p.m.

9 a,m. to

POINTP..EASANT - Clolhing s;ve

GAL.UPOLIS FERRY - Ovlstian
II
ogers, Mount Cannel Church,
6p.m.

awayewryT.-y, toa.m. tonocn
at POOl Pleasant Presbylarian

LEON - Peularost Sarvtce, Emwood Connu1ity Church, Tribble
Road, with Pastor Ray Dewitt. ComRUlion and special singing by
Mercy-Jan and Slacy, 9:30 a.m.
Cover dish elmer after, For lnlormatioo call 895-8713.

MASON- Conmnty cancer Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason lJrilad
Melhlxist Church. All area cancer
patients, famiies and caregivers invit-

aum. 811 n

Main. Clo1t*'!l contributions apprecialed.

ed.

HENDERSON - Une daix:ing. HenNEW HAVEN McCoy wi!l sing
derson Community Building, with
at New Haven United Methodist
· inslructor Dawn Halstead. Beginners
Church in lhe worship service. 9:45
6 p.m. and adv~ 7 p.m.

Tim

Delmar and Coral Alexander

CourtneJ Markham and Nick Abedi

Markham-Abedi engagement

Lcng:...Scott ~ngagement
GALLI PO US -

Howell-Ziemnik engagement

Randall and Suzy Long of Gallipolis an:

POINT PLEASANT - Larry and Judy M ark.ham of Point
announcing the forthcomin g marriage of their daughter, ' Pleasant announce the forthcoming marriage of their daugh· Stephanie · Nicole, to Harreld Christian Scott, son of Barbara ter. Courtney Markham, to Nick Abedi, son of Drs. Cyrus and
M . Scott and the late Hury D. Scott Sr. of Gallipolis.
Jaleh Abedi of Raleigh , N .C.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Gallia Academy High
The bride-dect, a graduate of Point Pleasant High School,
School, and will complete her degree in education next y~ear at attended Denison University and is currently a thini-year medthe University of Rio Grande.
ical student at West Virginia University.
She is employed at French City Child Care as a children's
The groom-elect, a graduate of Hurricane High School and
services provider.
.
West Virginia University, is a third-year medical student at West
The bridegroom is a graduate of GAHS and the University Virginia University:
of Rio Grande, with a bachelor of science degree in education.
The open church ceremony will· be Saturday, June 16, at
He also received his MA in fine arts and education from Rio Trinity United M ethodist C hurch in Point Pleasant at 5:30
Grande.
p.m. The reception will immediately follow at Point Pleasant
H e is employed as a sixth-grade teacher at Washingron Ele- Moose Lodg&lt;!.
mentary in Gallipolis.
The couple will exchange vows in an open ceremony ·at
Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis on Jl,lly 21, 2001
at 3 p.m. The Rev. Melvin Freeman and the groom's brother,
the Rev. Harry Scott Jr. , wiU he officiating the ceremony

GALLIPOLIS - Rick and' Jeri Howell of Gallipolis are ·
announcing the e ngag&lt;!ment of their daughter. Kristin Jane
Howell, to Daniel A. Ziem.nik, son of Richani and Linda
Ziemnik. of Bay Village, Ohio.
The bride- to-he is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and ·a 2000 graduate of Tiffin Unive rsity, where she
received a BBA.
She is currendy employed as a personNel officer with Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court IN Cleveland.
The prospective groom is a 1995 graduate of Bay Village
High School and a 1999 graduate ofTiffin University, where
he received his BBA.
Hi: is employed by Proforma of Independence, Ohio.
The open church wedding will be held at Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis on June 23, 2001 at 3:30p.m.

e-mail your a1111ouncements to:

news@mydailybibune.com OR news@mydailyregister.com OR news@mydailysentinel.com

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Teen Choir of
Middleport Church of Christ to perfonn 'Where Jesus Is' at Bradbury
Church ol Christ, 10:30 a.m., and at
Alhens Church of Christ, 7 p.m.
MORNING STAR- George Holter
Jr. family reunion, 1 p.m., ~of
Jim and Karen Holter Werry, Court
Street Road. Barbecued chicken
and ham. table service provided.
Bting photos. stories, coveied dish.
949-2746 for informalion.

j

'''

MONDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP- Colum·
bla Township Trustees. Monday.
7:30 p.m., fire station.

Meigs

LETART FALLS- Letart Township
Trustees. 5 p.m .• Monday. at office
building.
SYRACUSE - Sut)on Township
Trustees. regular monlhly meeting.
Monday, 7:30 p.m .. Syracuse Vii··
!age Hall.
POMEROY - Meigs Band Boosters. 6:30 p.m.. Monday, at Meigs
County annex. AU new band parents
should attend and participate Jn
planning for summer band events.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, will hold a
regular meeting on Monday at 7:30

p.m . All officers are urged to attend.

CHESHIRE - Emmaus gathering.
7:30 p.m.. Cheshire United
Methodist Church.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.• home
of Cieri&lt; Osie Follrod.

POMEROY - Fraternal Order of
Eagles auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.,
Pageville town hall.

POMEROY - Childhood immUnization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Meigs County Health Department.
Parent or guardian must accompany
child and provide shot records.

The Community Car.ndlr • publllhecl . . . ,... H!VIce to non- .
prallt gr~ wllhlng to_.._
ITMdiiGS. and epacr.lewnta. The
calen!W 11 not dlllgned to pro-

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Township

type.......... prlntld only u

mote saln or funcklr-. pleny
space permits.

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township
Trustees. regular meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. at township office on
JoppaRoad.
·

Mr. and Mrs. William Wlsemandle

··Wisemandle anniversary

Alexander anniversary

BIDWELL - WiUiam and Julia (Burke) Wisemandle of BidweD celebrnted 1heir 60th wedding anniversary on May 31 ,

MASON - Dehnar and Coral Alexander will be guests of
honor at an open house celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary.
The event wiU be held Sunday, June 10, from 2 to 4 p:m. at
Mason United Methodist Church. The couple requests no gifts.

Sllllcllly, June 3
BIDWELL- Ramie Nicholas wiN be
guest Sjl Buker at Bidwel United .
Methodlsl Church, 10:45 a.m.

ADDISON- Thera wi1 be.a
preaching service at Addison
Freewill Bapti&amp;l Church at 6. p.m.
with f:lick Barcus preaching.
MERCERVILLE - The Rev. Charlie
Cremeans will p.--:h at Canaan
Mlsslooary Baptist Church. 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- Preparatian lor
Childbirth, 2 p.m., Holzer Madlcal
Center French 500 Room.
PORTER - The Rev. lucian Nelson will preach at Clark Chapel
Chureh. 7 p.m.
BIDWELL- Hornealll)lng at White
Oak Baptist Church. Andrew Parsons will preach at the morning aer' vice and Eternity '(flU Sing at lhe ·
evening \l&amp;rvlce. ·
LECTA- Horneoomlng at Okay
Chapa!. with the Rev. John Paul
Patterson p.--:hlng the morning
service and the Rev. Jack Rankin
preaching in lhe afternoon. Special
singing. Baskat dinner at noon.

2001.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiseman die have two daughters, W. Jean Wray
and JoAnn McGraw of BidweU; and six grandchildren and 13
great-grandchildren .
·

.Gallia-

CROWN CITY - Forgival4 wil be
'!fnging at Crown City Methodist
Church at 7 p.m.

VINTON - Fellowaltip Cl8pel wi1
be having its l1orne&lt;:oninu with
guest spealcar Pastor Robert Tctten
preacting. and apecl8l mualc by

Samar oll'ralae. Everyone wel-

Wldnn day, June 6

PATRIOT- Memarlal aervlce at

PORTER- Porter Trinity United
Melhodlst Church women will meet
at 1 p.m. at the ciiiJ'ch.

White Cemetery Church, White
· Cemetery Road, 10:45 a.m. P1AIIIc
welcome.
Moncllly, J - 4
CHESHIRe- Emmaus galherlng,
7:30 p.m., Cheshire Unl18d

Mathodet Church.

T.-cllly, J - 5
GALLIPOLIS - HQizer Clinic
Retireea lunch, noon, Down Undar
Restaurant.
·
.a--.._, ..

·l'huradlly, June 7

.son.

,

Frtcllly, June 8
GALLIPOLIS - Songlest at New
Ule Church ol God, Airport Road
(behind CarOuest Auto Plllfs), 7
p.m .• w1t1 N11w Horizons from Barboursvlle. W.Va. Relreshments
: llllliad. • -

.

GALLIPOLIS - Gellla Academy· ·
High School Choir Booatara, 6 p.m .,

choir room.

.

ADDISON- Prayer meeting at
Addill!lll Freewill Baptist Church.
· 7:30 p.m .. with Don Estep preachIng.

JACKSON- Muftl.cciUnty " ' and Pralae, 7 p.m., End Tfma .Harvest Church, U.S. 35 aouth of Jack-

·

Sundily, Jun• 10
ADDISON - Preaching service at
~aon Freewill Baptist Church. 6
p.m.. with Rick Barcus preaching. ·
Revlvela
EVER.G REEN- Revival at Ever-

Card Showers
A card shower and open house Is
being held IQr Edna Stang as she
celebrates her 86111 birthday on June
9,.2-4 p.m. at Scenic Hills Nursing
Home, 311 Buckridge Rood, Bidwell,
Ohio 45614. Open house given by
daughters Helen McGuire and
Rosemary Harris.
A card showar is being held lor
Juanila Bias, who Is recuperating
from surgery. C8rds can be sent to
her at Room 226, Holzer Medical
Center, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631.
A card shower Is being held lor
Mabie M. Haley, who will celebrate
her birthday June 10. cards can be
sent to her at 254 lanes Branch
Road, Crown City, Ohio 45623.
Vacation Bible School ·
VBS at Gallipolis Church of Christ in
Christian Union June 4·8, 6·8 p.m..
for ages 2 to eighth grade. wilh Pastor Chris Meenach and dummy. For
more information, call446-7119 .

Holzer Home Care celebr~ting 30th anniversary

®
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
IU UICI
Spaghetti Dinner/Auction Fundraiser
Friday, June 1
For more information call:
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1379

HnrttoHnrt
Thursday, June 21, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Mult~purpose Room
(304)6754340,Ed. 2003
'
CPR H11...._,. Provider
(With expired cards)
\
Tuesday, June 26, 8 a.m.
Pleas!Wlt Vatley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
(304)675-4340,Ed.2003

CPit 1n1t1 wotur Cllll
Saturday &amp; Sunday, June 9 &amp; 10
8 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Mid Ohio Valley Center
(304)675-4340,Ext.1555

.......... lupportlrellp
Monday, June 11, 6 p.m.
-Pleasant Valley Hospital
Education Offtee
(3o4) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

C

ID 1 1111 ll'lllt C•IOef

....... Drt lroup
Cancelled for June and July.
Fot more Information call:
(304) 675-7997

Dlllbetel OUtpetlent C1•111
Tuesday, June 12, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Pleasant Vc!lley Hospital
Buxton Room
(304)675-4340, Ext.2004

Now open at 8 a.m.
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

~·.aupport Group

A•robl£1

GALLIPOLIS Holzer are accredited by the Joint · ing growth of the agency.
Angela McCausland, RN ,
Home Care of Holzer Medical Commission on Accreditation
·center is celebrating its 30th of Healthcarc Organizations, former associate director of
and arc certified by Medicare nursing at HMC, chairs the
anniversary during June 2001.
committee. Members include
" Holzer Home Care's ongo- and Medicaid.
the .R ev. Jim Bernacki, Car"It
is
a
privilege
to
·
work
ing rich tradition k.eeps families
together by delivering high- with such a dedicated, compe- leton, Tom Childs, SaUy Darst,
quality care in the comfort of tent home care staff who truly · Dr. Renuk.a Kandula, R ebecca
. patients' own homes, said care about the patients," said Nelson, Marie Richanis, Dow ·
LaMar Wyse, president and Connie Carleton, RN, BSN, Saunders, Nancy Smith, Rose
director of Holzer Home Care Stoney, Earl Walters, Lyletta
chief executive officer.
Vance and Kevin Yeag&lt;!r.
"We are proud of the dedi- of Holzer Medical Center.
Holzer Home Care of Holz"As we celebr:~te our 30th
cated Holzer Home Care
employees who provide this anniversary, I want to thank the . - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . _ ,
outstanding ' service to our community for allowing us to
community and congratulate provide service to their loved
them on 30 years of service;' ones in their homes. We have
· made home care services availhe added. ·
·
, Patients of aU ages arc cared able to thousands of people
for by Holzer Home Care. Ser- over the years, and each one
vices provided include skiUed has been special to us." ·
A Home Health Professional
nursing; therapies (physical,
speech pathology and occupa- Advisory Committee, made up
tional); and home care aides of members of the community
and hospital staff, work closely
·when ordered by a physican.
Holzer Home Care's services with Carleton in the conrinu- ~~~5~~~~~~~~

Tuesday, June 18, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hili Road
(304)675-5236, Ext.1383

DR. BOWERS
TO RETIRE
ON JUNE 30, 2001

Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
' (304) 675-7222

WI..,. Grief luiiPOI't Clrotlp

Thursday, June 21, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

Pradeep Kandula, MD

... Room DMcln&amp; , .. Chi,

K.K Lee, MD

.............. ~·rolllol
. Cancelled for summer.

QUALITY FURNITUIE PLUS

421:.:3 State Route 7 • Thppers Plains, OH 45783 • 1-800..200-4005 or (740) 667-7388

.,

·Hours: Mon - Thurs 9-5 Fri
'·

Sat 9-4
-' ·I

I

,.,

'

G. Wilson Bowers, MD will retire on June 30, 2001. If you
are a patient of Dr. Bowers please call our PediatriC
Department at (740) 446-5371 to select a new Pediatric
Physicians.
Please choose one of the following
Pediatric Physicians:

..

liiiiS

er Medical Center o bserves
office hours between 8 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m., and can be
reached by callii1g 446-5301.

County Health Department
Prenatal Clinic

Pl•••nt V8lley Welllllll c..e...

HOLZER
CLINIC

Joseph Y. Li, MD

90.JACK.SON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631
(740) 446-5371

Monique M. Sherri~l, MD

Leigh Ann Meeks, MD

)

'

"

Adult Support Group, t p.m. Fort
Randolph Community Room, bid.
123. No tee. For more informatioo
call 675-4968.
POINT PLEASANT- Quilts 'N'
Things, Mason County Courthouse
Amex. 9:30 a.m. Embroidery kits
available lor ss.
eat oo1 tor lunct1.

POINT PLEASANT - Alcoholics
Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., 611 Vl8nd Sl
Use si!le entrance of casey Law

w•

Let the good times roU!
WE JUST RETIJRNED FROM AWOI'IDERFUL I
DAY TOUR WHIOI INCLUDED A SEVEN
DAY CRUISE FROM NEW YORK TO BERMUDA ON
CELEBRITY'S "HORIZON". THE PASTEL COWRED HOMES,
PINK SAND BEACHES (FORMED BY THE CRUSHED CORAL
MI·XING WITH THE SAND) AND THE WONDERFUL SHADED
OF TURQUOISE, AQUA, AND BLUE GREEN OF THE WATERS
GAVE POST CARD VIEWS. THE LUXURY SHIP PROVIDED
GREAT FOOD BY A WORLD FAMOUS CHEF, FANTASTIC
ENTERTAINMENT AND OUR CONGENIAL GROUP HAD A
GREAT TIME. UPON ARRIVAL BACK IN NEW YORK HARBOR
WE WERE MET WITH A GUIDE AND MOTORCOACH AND
TOURED NEW YORK, TAKING A WONDERFUL
THROUGH CENTRAL PARK AND ADMIRING THE FWWERS,
VISITED OTHER POINTS OF INTEREST INCLU;;D,IENI[)GJ)IISNTi. I
3
PATRICKS CATHEDRAL WHERE A BEAUTIFUL w
WAS TAKING PLACE, HAD LUNCH IN OIINATOWN, A'"'"
LATER THAT AFTERNOON CHECKED INTO 1HE
MILLENNIUM HOTEL, HAD DINNER AT THE VIEW,
REVOLVING ROOF·TOP RESTAURANT AND HAD FRONT
ROW SEATS FOR THE BROADWAY AWARD-WINNING
ME KATE". AFTER A LEISURELY MORNING IN NEW w 'uov I
WE FLEW BACK TO CINCINNATI AND MO,TOIICOAOIED I
HOME. AFANTASTICADVENTURE!I!
APRIL FOUND US TOURING HARPERS FERRY AND
ANTIETAM BATTLEFIELD WITH OVERNIGHT
SHEPHERDSTOWN AND DINNER AT THE
BAVARIAN INN. NEXT MORNING WE CONTINUED ON
WASHINGTON, D.C. WHERE WE ENJOYED THE
CHERRY BLOSSOMS IN FULL BLOOM. FOLLOI\\W~~ING~G~~~~~~
ON THE MARINA WE TOOK AN EVENING Il
TOUR OF THE MAJOR MONUMENTS. NEXT DAY WE WERE
MET AT THE CAPITOL BY A REPRESENTATIVE OF
SHELLY CAPITO'S OFFICE FOR AN ESCORTED TOUR. AVt~rT I
TO ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY, A
CANDLELIGHT TOUR OF MOUNT VERNON, A LUNCHEON
CRUISE ON THE 'BEAUTIFUL NEW GLASS ENCLOSED ntu•vr.r
COMPLETE WITH A DANCE BAND AND WONDERFUL FOOD I
SERVED IN TOP NOTCH STYLE, AND AFfER MQRE TOURING,
WE ENDED THE THREE DAY VISIT TO D.C. WITH A LUNCH
AT GADSY TAVERN IN ALEXANDRIA, VA. ·A FAVORITE
OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S.
NOW WE ARE PACKING FOR OUR MUCH AWAITED__T0,
r.Uu'RTI
TO MACKINAC ISLAND IN MICHIGAN AND A TWO "' 1
STAY AT THE WORLD'S LARGEST S1NME·~ HOTEL, THE
GRAND HOTEL. NOTHING MOTORIZED IS PERMI'ITED ON
THE ISLAND SO WE SAIL TO THE DOCK WHERE WE ARE
MET BY A HORSE AND CARRIAGE TAXI AND TAKEN TO OUR
HOTEL. THE HOTEL WAS THE SETIING OF THE MOVIE
"SOMEWHERE IN TIME" STARRING CHRISTOPHER REEVE
AND JANE SEYMOUR IN THE 70'S. EACH YEAR A REUNION
IN OCI'OBER IS HELD TO COMMEMORATE THE POPULAR
MOVIE- A ROOM IS SET ASIDE IN THE HOTEL WITH
REMEMBRANCES OF THE MOVIE. I ALWAYS SHOW THE
MOVIE ON THE MOTORCOACH ENROUTE TO THE ISLAND
EACH TIME WE VISIT. ANOTHER HORSE DRAWN WAGON
WILL TAKE US bN ACOMPLETE TOUR OF THE ISLAND ON
OUR SECOND DAY THERE WITH STOPS AT THE FORT AS
WELL AS DOWNTOWN SHOPS. THE LILAC FESTIVAL IS IN
PROGRESS AND THE FUDGE SHOPS MIXED WITH THE
SWEET SMELL OF THE BLOOMING FLOWERS AND THE
RELAXING CUP-CLOP OF THE HORSES GIVE A TOTAL
RELAXING EXPERIENCE. .ON OUR WAY TO THE HOTEL WE
WILL OVERNIGHT
THE FIRST NIGHT
IN
DEARBORN/DETROIT AREA TO VISIT THE FORD MUSEUM
AND HAVE A PRIVATE TOUR AND DINNER AT THE HENRY
FORD HOME. ON THE WAY BACK HOME WE WILL
OVERNIGHT AT FRANKENMUTH A BAVARIAN TOWN WHICH
FEATURES THE WORLD'S LARGEST CHRISTMAS TREE SHOP,
BRONNERS.
IN JULY WE WILL HAVE A ONE DAY TRIP TO CINCINNATI
TO SEE THE REDS PLAY THE CLEVELAND INDIANS ON
SATURDAY, JI:JLY 19. ON JULY 19-20 OUR GRANDPARENTS
OVERNIGHT TRIP TO THE COLUMBUS AREA IS SCHEDULED
WITH A TRAIN RIDE, VISITS TO THE ICE CREAM AND
PEANUT BUTIER FACTORIES, OVERNIGHT IN COLUMBUS
WITH DINNER AT THE SPAGHETII WAREHOUSE. NEXT DAY
WE WILL SPEND AT THE ZOO BEFORE RETURNING HOME.
THIS TOUR IS FOR GRANDPARENTS AND FRIENDS- IF YOU
WOULD LIKE TO JOIN US FOR THIS TIP OR THE BALLGAME,
CALL ME SOON AT 674· 1028. HOPE ALL OF YOU HJ\V.t.t
TRAVEL IN YOUR PLANS THIS SUMMER-GET OUT AND .....

I

...LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

Richard J. Mendieta, MD

P110plet Cholclll I OMIIon ol City NI!IOnal Blnlo;,
Mlmblf FDIC.

' vf!t~

MARY FOWLER,
PEOPLES CHOICE DIRECTOR

I
I

POINT PLEASANT - Branches

MONDAY, June 4
SOUTHSIDE- Chubs weight loss
support group, Southside Comnuni1y
Center. weigh-Ins 5:30 to 6 p.m. fol.
lowed by a short meeting.

green Comml.llity Church, Sprifllifteld Townhouse, May 28-June 1. 7
p.m. nlghtiy. Preaching by Matthew
Henry and Joe Woodall, and special
singing nightiy.

GALLIPOLIS - AI-Anon and Al-ATeen, 8 p.m., St Peter's Episcopal
Church.
·

come.

' :..0

a_m_

�.... ce ••

a

pa:fiiH 6tlllilld

SoodaY. June 3, 2001

Sunct.y, June 3. 2001

~ •lllddl1polt • Gr~~FGia, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Mason
SUNDAY,June3

Ollce.

POINT PL.EASNfT- Point P1111 C
Hgh Sctoooi111Wa1on. 4 p.m.

POINT P.EASANT- Millen Cotny
Fair Boan1. 7 p.m.

APPLE GROVE- Mayas Famly wi1
sing aUtl IM19 Cluch. 7 p.m.

TUESDAY, " - 5
LETART- HELP Diet Class. l.eB1
Cormuity Cenlar. V/tlgiHII 11om

LETART- Molhers Day a1d Fllfas
Day IXMin!d dish dnner at l.eB1

5:30 10 6 p.m. loloiied by shOII

Community Cenlar, , p.m. Meal,
lllble teMc:a a1d oollee lumished.

rneetilig.

Fl.ATROCK -.Cloling c1oaet r;v.
away ewry T.-y at Good Shop-

GAL.UPOLIS, Ohio-~ service at Alklson Freewil B8pliSt
Cluch. 6 p.m. - Rick Ben::us
pua l81g .

.•

heR! U.M. Olurctt, Flalrock,

1 p.m.

9 a,m. to

POINTP..EASANT - Clolhing s;ve

GAL.UPOLIS FERRY - Ovlstian
II
ogers, Mount Cannel Church,
6p.m.

awayewryT.-y, toa.m. tonocn
at POOl Pleasant Presbylarian

LEON - Peularost Sarvtce, Emwood Connu1ity Church, Tribble
Road, with Pastor Ray Dewitt. ComRUlion and special singing by
Mercy-Jan and Slacy, 9:30 a.m.
Cover dish elmer after, For lnlormatioo call 895-8713.

MASON- Conmnty cancer Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason lJrilad
Melhlxist Church. All area cancer
patients, famiies and caregivers invit-

aum. 811 n

Main. Clo1t*'!l contributions apprecialed.

ed.

HENDERSON - Une daix:ing. HenNEW HAVEN McCoy wi!l sing
derson Community Building, with
at New Haven United Methodist
· inslructor Dawn Halstead. Beginners
Church in lhe worship service. 9:45
6 p.m. and adv~ 7 p.m.

Tim

Delmar and Coral Alexander

CourtneJ Markham and Nick Abedi

Markham-Abedi engagement

Lcng:...Scott ~ngagement
GALLI PO US -

Howell-Ziemnik engagement

Randall and Suzy Long of Gallipolis an:

POINT PLEASANT - Larry and Judy M ark.ham of Point
announcing the forthcomin g marriage of their daughter, ' Pleasant announce the forthcoming marriage of their daugh· Stephanie · Nicole, to Harreld Christian Scott, son of Barbara ter. Courtney Markham, to Nick Abedi, son of Drs. Cyrus and
M . Scott and the late Hury D. Scott Sr. of Gallipolis.
Jaleh Abedi of Raleigh , N .C.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Gallia Academy High
The bride-dect, a graduate of Point Pleasant High School,
School, and will complete her degree in education next y~ear at attended Denison University and is currently a thini-year medthe University of Rio Grande.
ical student at West Virginia University.
She is employed at French City Child Care as a children's
The groom-elect, a graduate of Hurricane High School and
services provider.
.
West Virginia University, is a third-year medical student at West
The bridegroom is a graduate of GAHS and the University Virginia University:
of Rio Grande, with a bachelor of science degree in education.
The open church ceremony will· be Saturday, June 16, at
He also received his MA in fine arts and education from Rio Trinity United M ethodist C hurch in Point Pleasant at 5:30
Grande.
p.m. The reception will immediately follow at Point Pleasant
H e is employed as a sixth-grade teacher at Washingron Ele- Moose Lodg&lt;!.
mentary in Gallipolis.
The couple will exchange vows in an open ceremony ·at
Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis on Jl,lly 21, 2001
at 3 p.m. The Rev. Melvin Freeman and the groom's brother,
the Rev. Harry Scott Jr. , wiU he officiating the ceremony

GALLIPOLIS - Rick and' Jeri Howell of Gallipolis are ·
announcing the e ngag&lt;!ment of their daughter. Kristin Jane
Howell, to Daniel A. Ziem.nik, son of Richani and Linda
Ziemnik. of Bay Village, Ohio.
The bride- to-he is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and ·a 2000 graduate of Tiffin Unive rsity, where she
received a BBA.
She is currendy employed as a personNel officer with Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court IN Cleveland.
The prospective groom is a 1995 graduate of Bay Village
High School and a 1999 graduate ofTiffin University, where
he received his BBA.
Hi: is employed by Proforma of Independence, Ohio.
The open church wedding will be held at Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis on June 23, 2001 at 3:30p.m.

e-mail your a1111ouncements to:

news@mydailybibune.com OR news@mydailyregister.com OR news@mydailysentinel.com

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Teen Choir of
Middleport Church of Christ to perfonn 'Where Jesus Is' at Bradbury
Church ol Christ, 10:30 a.m., and at
Alhens Church of Christ, 7 p.m.
MORNING STAR- George Holter
Jr. family reunion, 1 p.m., ~of
Jim and Karen Holter Werry, Court
Street Road. Barbecued chicken
and ham. table service provided.
Bting photos. stories, coveied dish.
949-2746 for informalion.

j

'''

MONDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP- Colum·
bla Township Trustees. Monday.
7:30 p.m., fire station.

Meigs

LETART FALLS- Letart Township
Trustees. 5 p.m .• Monday. at office
building.
SYRACUSE - Sut)on Township
Trustees. regular monlhly meeting.
Monday, 7:30 p.m .. Syracuse Vii··
!age Hall.
POMEROY - Meigs Band Boosters. 6:30 p.m.. Monday, at Meigs
County annex. AU new band parents
should attend and participate Jn
planning for summer band events.
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, will hold a
regular meeting on Monday at 7:30

p.m . All officers are urged to attend.

CHESHIRE - Emmaus gathering.
7:30 p.m.. Cheshire United
Methodist Church.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.• home
of Cieri&lt; Osie Follrod.

POMEROY - Fraternal Order of
Eagles auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.,
Pageville town hall.

POMEROY - Childhood immUnization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Meigs County Health Department.
Parent or guardian must accompany
child and provide shot records.

The Community Car.ndlr • publllhecl . . . ,... H!VIce to non- .
prallt gr~ wllhlng to_.._
ITMdiiGS. and epacr.lewnta. The
calen!W 11 not dlllgned to pro-

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Township

type.......... prlntld only u

mote saln or funcklr-. pleny
space permits.

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township
Trustees. regular meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. at township office on
JoppaRoad.
·

Mr. and Mrs. William Wlsemandle

··Wisemandle anniversary

Alexander anniversary

BIDWELL - WiUiam and Julia (Burke) Wisemandle of BidweD celebrnted 1heir 60th wedding anniversary on May 31 ,

MASON - Dehnar and Coral Alexander will be guests of
honor at an open house celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary.
The event wiU be held Sunday, June 10, from 2 to 4 p:m. at
Mason United Methodist Church. The couple requests no gifts.

Sllllcllly, June 3
BIDWELL- Ramie Nicholas wiN be
guest Sjl Buker at Bidwel United .
Methodlsl Church, 10:45 a.m.

ADDISON- Thera wi1 be.a
preaching service at Addison
Freewill Bapti&amp;l Church at 6. p.m.
with f:lick Barcus preaching.
MERCERVILLE - The Rev. Charlie
Cremeans will p.--:h at Canaan
Mlsslooary Baptist Church. 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS- Preparatian lor
Childbirth, 2 p.m., Holzer Madlcal
Center French 500 Room.
PORTER - The Rev. lucian Nelson will preach at Clark Chapel
Chureh. 7 p.m.
BIDWELL- Hornealll)lng at White
Oak Baptist Church. Andrew Parsons will preach at the morning aer' vice and Eternity '(flU Sing at lhe ·
evening \l&amp;rvlce. ·
LECTA- Horneoomlng at Okay
Chapa!. with the Rev. John Paul
Patterson p.--:hlng the morning
service and the Rev. Jack Rankin
preaching in lhe afternoon. Special
singing. Baskat dinner at noon.

2001.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiseman die have two daughters, W. Jean Wray
and JoAnn McGraw of BidweU; and six grandchildren and 13
great-grandchildren .
·

.Gallia-

CROWN CITY - Forgival4 wil be
'!fnging at Crown City Methodist
Church at 7 p.m.

VINTON - Fellowaltip Cl8pel wi1
be having its l1orne&lt;:oninu with
guest spealcar Pastor Robert Tctten
preacting. and apecl8l mualc by

Samar oll'ralae. Everyone wel-

Wldnn day, June 6

PATRIOT- Memarlal aervlce at

PORTER- Porter Trinity United
Melhodlst Church women will meet
at 1 p.m. at the ciiiJ'ch.

White Cemetery Church, White
· Cemetery Road, 10:45 a.m. P1AIIIc
welcome.
Moncllly, J - 4
CHESHIRe- Emmaus galherlng,
7:30 p.m., Cheshire Unl18d

Mathodet Church.

T.-cllly, J - 5
GALLIPOLIS - HQizer Clinic
Retireea lunch, noon, Down Undar
Restaurant.
·
.a--.._, ..

·l'huradlly, June 7

.son.

,

Frtcllly, June 8
GALLIPOLIS - Songlest at New
Ule Church ol God, Airport Road
(behind CarOuest Auto Plllfs), 7
p.m .• w1t1 N11w Horizons from Barboursvlle. W.Va. Relreshments
: llllliad. • -

.

GALLIPOLIS - Gellla Academy· ·
High School Choir Booatara, 6 p.m .,

choir room.

.

ADDISON- Prayer meeting at
Addill!lll Freewill Baptist Church.
· 7:30 p.m .. with Don Estep preachIng.

JACKSON- Muftl.cciUnty " ' and Pralae, 7 p.m., End Tfma .Harvest Church, U.S. 35 aouth of Jack-

·

Sundily, Jun• 10
ADDISON - Preaching service at
~aon Freewill Baptist Church. 6
p.m.. with Rick Barcus preaching. ·
Revlvela
EVER.G REEN- Revival at Ever-

Card Showers
A card shower and open house Is
being held IQr Edna Stang as she
celebrates her 86111 birthday on June
9,.2-4 p.m. at Scenic Hills Nursing
Home, 311 Buckridge Rood, Bidwell,
Ohio 45614. Open house given by
daughters Helen McGuire and
Rosemary Harris.
A card showar is being held lor
Juanila Bias, who Is recuperating
from surgery. C8rds can be sent to
her at Room 226, Holzer Medical
Center, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631.
A card shower Is being held lor
Mabie M. Haley, who will celebrate
her birthday June 10. cards can be
sent to her at 254 lanes Branch
Road, Crown City, Ohio 45623.
Vacation Bible School ·
VBS at Gallipolis Church of Christ in
Christian Union June 4·8, 6·8 p.m..
for ages 2 to eighth grade. wilh Pastor Chris Meenach and dummy. For
more information, call446-7119 .

Holzer Home Care celebr~ting 30th anniversary

®
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
IU UICI
Spaghetti Dinner/Auction Fundraiser
Friday, June 1
For more information call:
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1379

HnrttoHnrt
Thursday, June 21, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Mult~purpose Room
(304)6754340,Ed. 2003
'
CPR H11...._,. Provider
(With expired cards)
\
Tuesday, June 26, 8 a.m.
Pleas!Wlt Vatley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
(304)675-4340,Ed.2003

CPit 1n1t1 wotur Cllll
Saturday &amp; Sunday, June 9 &amp; 10
8 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Mid Ohio Valley Center
(304)675-4340,Ext.1555

.......... lupportlrellp
Monday, June 11, 6 p.m.
-Pleasant Valley Hospital
Education Offtee
(3o4) 675-4340, Ext. 2004

C

ID 1 1111 ll'lllt C•IOef

....... Drt lroup
Cancelled for June and July.
Fot more Information call:
(304) 675-7997

Dlllbetel OUtpetlent C1•111
Tuesday, June 12, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Pleasant Vc!lley Hospital
Buxton Room
(304)675-4340, Ext.2004

Now open at 8 a.m.
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

~·.aupport Group

A•robl£1

GALLIPOLIS Holzer are accredited by the Joint · ing growth of the agency.
Angela McCausland, RN ,
Home Care of Holzer Medical Commission on Accreditation
·center is celebrating its 30th of Healthcarc Organizations, former associate director of
and arc certified by Medicare nursing at HMC, chairs the
anniversary during June 2001.
committee. Members include
" Holzer Home Care's ongo- and Medicaid.
the .R ev. Jim Bernacki, Car"It
is
a
privilege
to
·
work
ing rich tradition k.eeps families
together by delivering high- with such a dedicated, compe- leton, Tom Childs, SaUy Darst,
quality care in the comfort of tent home care staff who truly · Dr. Renuk.a Kandula, R ebecca
. patients' own homes, said care about the patients," said Nelson, Marie Richanis, Dow ·
LaMar Wyse, president and Connie Carleton, RN, BSN, Saunders, Nancy Smith, Rose
director of Holzer Home Care Stoney, Earl Walters, Lyletta
chief executive officer.
Vance and Kevin Yeag&lt;!r.
"We are proud of the dedi- of Holzer Medical Center.
Holzer Home Care of Holz"As we celebr:~te our 30th
cated Holzer Home Care
employees who provide this anniversary, I want to thank the . - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . _ ,
outstanding ' service to our community for allowing us to
community and congratulate provide service to their loved
them on 30 years of service;' ones in their homes. We have
· made home care services availhe added. ·
·
, Patients of aU ages arc cared able to thousands of people
for by Holzer Home Care. Ser- over the years, and each one
vices provided include skiUed has been special to us." ·
A Home Health Professional
nursing; therapies (physical,
speech pathology and occupa- Advisory Committee, made up
tional); and home care aides of members of the community
and hospital staff, work closely
·when ordered by a physican.
Holzer Home Care's services with Carleton in the conrinu- ~~~5~~~~~~~~

Tuesday, June 18, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hili Road
(304)675-5236, Ext.1383

DR. BOWERS
TO RETIRE
ON JUNE 30, 2001

Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
' (304) 675-7222

WI..,. Grief luiiPOI't Clrotlp

Thursday, June 21, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Conference Room
(304) 675-7400

Pradeep Kandula, MD

... Room DMcln&amp; , .. Chi,

K.K Lee, MD

.............. ~·rolllol
. Cancelled for summer.

QUALITY FURNITUIE PLUS

421:.:3 State Route 7 • Thppers Plains, OH 45783 • 1-800..200-4005 or (740) 667-7388

.,

·Hours: Mon - Thurs 9-5 Fri
'·

Sat 9-4
-' ·I

I

,.,

'

G. Wilson Bowers, MD will retire on June 30, 2001. If you
are a patient of Dr. Bowers please call our PediatriC
Department at (740) 446-5371 to select a new Pediatric
Physicians.
Please choose one of the following
Pediatric Physicians:

..

liiiiS

er Medical Center o bserves
office hours between 8 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m., and can be
reached by callii1g 446-5301.

County Health Department
Prenatal Clinic

Pl•••nt V8lley Welllllll c..e...

HOLZER
CLINIC

Joseph Y. Li, MD

90.JACK.SON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631
(740) 446-5371

Monique M. Sherri~l, MD

Leigh Ann Meeks, MD

)

'

"

Adult Support Group, t p.m. Fort
Randolph Community Room, bid.
123. No tee. For more informatioo
call 675-4968.
POINT PLEASANT- Quilts 'N'
Things, Mason County Courthouse
Amex. 9:30 a.m. Embroidery kits
available lor ss.
eat oo1 tor lunct1.

POINT PLEASANT - Alcoholics
Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., 611 Vl8nd Sl
Use si!le entrance of casey Law

w•

Let the good times roU!
WE JUST RETIJRNED FROM AWOI'IDERFUL I
DAY TOUR WHIOI INCLUDED A SEVEN
DAY CRUISE FROM NEW YORK TO BERMUDA ON
CELEBRITY'S "HORIZON". THE PASTEL COWRED HOMES,
PINK SAND BEACHES (FORMED BY THE CRUSHED CORAL
MI·XING WITH THE SAND) AND THE WONDERFUL SHADED
OF TURQUOISE, AQUA, AND BLUE GREEN OF THE WATERS
GAVE POST CARD VIEWS. THE LUXURY SHIP PROVIDED
GREAT FOOD BY A WORLD FAMOUS CHEF, FANTASTIC
ENTERTAINMENT AND OUR CONGENIAL GROUP HAD A
GREAT TIME. UPON ARRIVAL BACK IN NEW YORK HARBOR
WE WERE MET WITH A GUIDE AND MOTORCOACH AND
TOURED NEW YORK, TAKING A WONDERFUL
THROUGH CENTRAL PARK AND ADMIRING THE FWWERS,
VISITED OTHER POINTS OF INTEREST INCLU;;D,IENI[)GJ)IISNTi. I
3
PATRICKS CATHEDRAL WHERE A BEAUTIFUL w
WAS TAKING PLACE, HAD LUNCH IN OIINATOWN, A'"'"
LATER THAT AFTERNOON CHECKED INTO 1HE
MILLENNIUM HOTEL, HAD DINNER AT THE VIEW,
REVOLVING ROOF·TOP RESTAURANT AND HAD FRONT
ROW SEATS FOR THE BROADWAY AWARD-WINNING
ME KATE". AFTER A LEISURELY MORNING IN NEW w 'uov I
WE FLEW BACK TO CINCINNATI AND MO,TOIICOAOIED I
HOME. AFANTASTICADVENTURE!I!
APRIL FOUND US TOURING HARPERS FERRY AND
ANTIETAM BATTLEFIELD WITH OVERNIGHT
SHEPHERDSTOWN AND DINNER AT THE
BAVARIAN INN. NEXT MORNING WE CONTINUED ON
WASHINGTON, D.C. WHERE WE ENJOYED THE
CHERRY BLOSSOMS IN FULL BLOOM. FOLLOI\\W~~ING~G~~~~~~
ON THE MARINA WE TOOK AN EVENING Il
TOUR OF THE MAJOR MONUMENTS. NEXT DAY WE WERE
MET AT THE CAPITOL BY A REPRESENTATIVE OF
SHELLY CAPITO'S OFFICE FOR AN ESCORTED TOUR. AVt~rT I
TO ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY, A
CANDLELIGHT TOUR OF MOUNT VERNON, A LUNCHEON
CRUISE ON THE 'BEAUTIFUL NEW GLASS ENCLOSED ntu•vr.r
COMPLETE WITH A DANCE BAND AND WONDERFUL FOOD I
SERVED IN TOP NOTCH STYLE, AND AFfER MQRE TOURING,
WE ENDED THE THREE DAY VISIT TO D.C. WITH A LUNCH
AT GADSY TAVERN IN ALEXANDRIA, VA. ·A FAVORITE
OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S.
NOW WE ARE PACKING FOR OUR MUCH AWAITED__T0,
r.Uu'RTI
TO MACKINAC ISLAND IN MICHIGAN AND A TWO "' 1
STAY AT THE WORLD'S LARGEST S1NME·~ HOTEL, THE
GRAND HOTEL. NOTHING MOTORIZED IS PERMI'ITED ON
THE ISLAND SO WE SAIL TO THE DOCK WHERE WE ARE
MET BY A HORSE AND CARRIAGE TAXI AND TAKEN TO OUR
HOTEL. THE HOTEL WAS THE SETIING OF THE MOVIE
"SOMEWHERE IN TIME" STARRING CHRISTOPHER REEVE
AND JANE SEYMOUR IN THE 70'S. EACH YEAR A REUNION
IN OCI'OBER IS HELD TO COMMEMORATE THE POPULAR
MOVIE- A ROOM IS SET ASIDE IN THE HOTEL WITH
REMEMBRANCES OF THE MOVIE. I ALWAYS SHOW THE
MOVIE ON THE MOTORCOACH ENROUTE TO THE ISLAND
EACH TIME WE VISIT. ANOTHER HORSE DRAWN WAGON
WILL TAKE US bN ACOMPLETE TOUR OF THE ISLAND ON
OUR SECOND DAY THERE WITH STOPS AT THE FORT AS
WELL AS DOWNTOWN SHOPS. THE LILAC FESTIVAL IS IN
PROGRESS AND THE FUDGE SHOPS MIXED WITH THE
SWEET SMELL OF THE BLOOMING FLOWERS AND THE
RELAXING CUP-CLOP OF THE HORSES GIVE A TOTAL
RELAXING EXPERIENCE. .ON OUR WAY TO THE HOTEL WE
WILL OVERNIGHT
THE FIRST NIGHT
IN
DEARBORN/DETROIT AREA TO VISIT THE FORD MUSEUM
AND HAVE A PRIVATE TOUR AND DINNER AT THE HENRY
FORD HOME. ON THE WAY BACK HOME WE WILL
OVERNIGHT AT FRANKENMUTH A BAVARIAN TOWN WHICH
FEATURES THE WORLD'S LARGEST CHRISTMAS TREE SHOP,
BRONNERS.
IN JULY WE WILL HAVE A ONE DAY TRIP TO CINCINNATI
TO SEE THE REDS PLAY THE CLEVELAND INDIANS ON
SATURDAY, JI:JLY 19. ON JULY 19-20 OUR GRANDPARENTS
OVERNIGHT TRIP TO THE COLUMBUS AREA IS SCHEDULED
WITH A TRAIN RIDE, VISITS TO THE ICE CREAM AND
PEANUT BUTIER FACTORIES, OVERNIGHT IN COLUMBUS
WITH DINNER AT THE SPAGHETII WAREHOUSE. NEXT DAY
WE WILL SPEND AT THE ZOO BEFORE RETURNING HOME.
THIS TOUR IS FOR GRANDPARENTS AND FRIENDS- IF YOU
WOULD LIKE TO JOIN US FOR THIS TIP OR THE BALLGAME,
CALL ME SOON AT 674· 1028. HOPE ALL OF YOU HJ\V.t.t
TRAVEL IN YOUR PLANS THIS SUMMER-GET OUT AND .....

I

...LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

Richard J. Mendieta, MD

P110plet Cholclll I OMIIon ol City NI!IOnal Blnlo;,
Mlmblf FDIC.

' vf!t~

MARY FOWLER,
PEOPLES CHOICE DIRECTOR

I
I

POINT PLEASANT - Branches

MONDAY, June 4
SOUTHSIDE- Chubs weight loss
support group, Southside Comnuni1y
Center. weigh-Ins 5:30 to 6 p.m. fol.
lowed by a short meeting.

green Comml.llity Church, Sprifllifteld Townhouse, May 28-June 1. 7
p.m. nlghtiy. Preaching by Matthew
Henry and Joe Woodall, and special
singing nightiy.

GALLIPOLIS - AI-Anon and Al-ATeen, 8 p.m., St Peter's Episcopal
Church.
·

come.

' :..0

a_m_

�··-··
Pameloy • lllktl1port • Gr'lpallr, Ohio· Point Phrllnt, WY

incb oak woodwotk trim and
roseues. The kitchen cabinets
are made fiom attic Oooring
md ldt in the natur.U coloring
of forest gmwn pine.The dining room and a bedroom have
distinctive pan ceilings in the
scyle of the period. Rich deep
colors on the walls provide a
sttilcing backdrop for the
•woodwork and furnishings.
Stephen is quite know!edgeable of old customs and
hlbits that the house gives
evidtnce to and has many stories to share that illwtrate an
earlier vnty of life. The renavation is dedicated by Stephen
to his &amp;ther, the late Charles
E. "Honey" Fowler Jr., who
was very fond of the house.
Schoonover bouse
Te~sa
and
Bob

Schoon011er's two-StOry, pink
brick home features a recessed
fiont entry. Built in 199S, the
home has gleaming hardwood
and tiling throughoJ t. A balcony in the upsuirs hallway
overlooks the living room,
which has a catbedr.al ceiling.
The design of the house
~ chosen to best lake ady1ntage of the shape of the lot.
The length ·of the property
allows for a unique backy.ml
with a garden bouse, a footbridge, fish pond and brick
· walks. The ganlen house W2S
adapted fioni an old building
with an overhanging roof
which now provides for shaded seating and telantion.
Mystery barn?
Have you seen the mystery
barn? It is located in the
downtown area of Point
Pleasant. On the Home and
Garden Tour, you will find out
about this barn and the people
who shared it. A CEOS mem-

ber. dressed in late 19th century clothing, will be on hand.
She will have her mille pan
ready to millt the cow... bUt
instead, she will share the history of the land, the barn and
its owners.
Bowser garden
A wonderful surprise awaits
all who enter Ernie and
Nancy Bowser's garden on
Jefferson Avenue. Rosy brick
paving, inset with planting
beds and a central an:hed pergola catch the t:yt:. Fountains
and a wide water&amp;ll falling
into a pool are noticed. ..
A closer look brings the
shrubs, trees and plants to
attention. Mungo pine, rosy
glow barberry, Korean • and
English boxwood, a blue gray
cypress and cedar Adantica
grow there. Ro5es, day lilies
an.d other plants light the
paths and perimeters. A wonderful iceberg ~se climbs a
trellis. The Oash of · brighdy

colorrd fuh' in the pool
deligbt the t:yt:.
Starting with practically a
bare lot in 1995, Ernie
designed and built the garden
you see today. Owner of
Bowl;er's Garden Center for
20 yean, Ernie seems to have
all green thumbs and fingers.
He credits his grandmother,
Mary Bowser, who grew and
sold box woodS in the Point
Pleasant area for his early
interest in gardening. Ernie
grows descendants of his
grandmotherUs English box
wood in his present.gatden.
Living next~oor is Bob
and Teresa Sc
n011er, the
Bowser's daugh and son-inlaw. The Scboo11011ers have
adopted the same style of
paving and pla\lting which
gives both gardebS il unified
and spacious appearance.
Cook rose garden
Mr.
Lincoln,
Ingrid
Bergman, Fortune Teller, John

officer

Arlene serYCS as an
of the Pleasant Valley Hospitf
Auxiliary and recendy w*
recognized as an outstanding
volunteer of the year. She
takes roses to patients who are
without family or need a li~
A~nue.
extra cheering. Lowell is a
On a lot backed by a cow- retirrd school teacher
ering Canadian hemlock
taught vo-ag at Point PleasaJ!C
hedge, Lowell grows more
than 30 beautiful roses, High School.
--.•
including some Tropicanas
Mason County CEOS is ~
that are mote than 35 years
countywide
organizati"~~:
old.
Roses muSt Oourisb to gain whose purpose is cducati~
a place in their garden. Any and community service. P~
rose that ~·t live up to ceeds fiom the Home an4expectations is ruthlessly Ganlen Tour will go to su~
uptooted and cast out. A very port the five libraries in tilt
special rose that grows in the county.
Cook's backyard is a rambling
For mote informatioa
....
rose that was planted as a surabout the tour, contact theprise by his mother 35 years
West Virginia Extensi
ago. His mother had an antazing way with piants, Lowell Office at 304-675-0&amp;88 ·
says, and one can see that tal- . Berty Farmer at ~04-67
ent was passed on to her son. S199 ..

Kennedy, T ropicana Tea, Floribuoda? Names of famous penpk, names of drinks? No! In
, this case, these arr the names
and types of·roses found in
Lowell andAdene Cook's well
groomed yard on Jefferion

Inside:

CWsifitd ads, ~ 2-7

1
Sa AIIJ, IIIII J, 2111

anJ

·-

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
17tis chart sltows how loctll .rtock.s of iltt4rut ~ lost MWk.
Each day's closing jig~~JU are pmvitkd by Advut of Gallipolis.

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.
50'1.

FRI.
49

&gt;

for families to ~t together.
Children are more likely to
eat. well if the example is set
lnMIPIIp:Cl
by parents and other family
members.
urated fats.
Excessive eating and a dii:t
Canola, olive, saffiower or high in fats and sugar may
corn oil are better .for young lead to obesity later life with
children than butter or short- all the corresponding health
ening.
problems.
Children love to make
WIC is a supplemental food
choices. II helps to give them
and nutrition program for
choices of the same type of
women who are pregnant,.
foods so that they receive the
nursing a child, recendy gave
corrrct nutrients. Children
also like to eat small quantities birth, have an infant or a child
more often. A little bit eaten up to age five.
Applicants must meet eligse~~Cral times adds up to larger
quantities at the end of the ilibilty guidelines. Income for
day. They ate curious and like a family of two cannot exceed
to try ;,ew things. Add new $1, 750; family of four, $2, 722;
family of five, $3,187; family
items to the menu gradually.
of
six, $3,653.
Meals are an opportunity

WIC

BILL HALEY

Comets still rockin'
decades after hit record.
the anthem•of rock 'n'·roll.• "
·L ARGO, Fla. (AP) They make up "The OrigiNearly half a century after the
ever-famous "Rock Around nal Comets;• alorig with guithe Clock" helped give birth tarist Franny Beecher, 79, of.
.to rock 'n' roll, original band Norristown, Pa. Beecher, who
members from Bill Haley and played with Benny GoodHis Comets are still rock.in'.
man's swing band in the late
The musicians, now in their 1940s, joined Haley in 1954
60s and 70s, may be slowed by as lead.electric guitar after the
age, but these retirees still have untimely death of original
the beat.
guitarist Oamiy Cedrone.
"We were the band that
"My reward for recording
created the sound," says Mar- "Rock Around the Clock"
shall Lyde, at 67 the youngest was $41. 25.. That 'was the
of the group known as "The musician's scale for a three-' ·
Original Comets."
hour recording session then,"
"When people say, 'You Lytle says.
sound just like Bill Haley's
The band had rehearsed
Colt1ets; I say, 'That's who we "Rock Around the Clock" in
are'"
.
.
Haley's basement. When they
Lyde, on bass, still does his got to the studio, the producsignature high-energy perfor- er pushed "Thirteen Women"
mance of the mid-1950s. He as the A side of the Decc.a
jumps and stands on the 20- record. Haley and His Comets
pound fiddle and hurls it into spent 2 I /2 hours on that
the air during concerts.
song. They had' to do the
Today, he owns a home arrangement first, then the
decor shop with his wife, recording.
Jeanne, in Largo, nearTampa,
With only 30 minutes left
and gets together with his
on the schedule they recorded
bandrnates for concert tours
"Rock Around the Clock" as
in the United States and
the B side in two quick takes.
Europe several times a year.
"It didn't take off right
His desk in a corner of the
away;•. Lyde says. "The J;CCOrd
store is like a shrine to rock
was put out promoting 'Thir'n' roll. On the Wall, there are
teen Women."'
gold records, signed pho"Shake, Rattle and Roll,"
tographs and pictures of the
group, .then and now. There's recorded at a second session
also an orange ·banner reading ·became a hit first.
In 1955, "Rock Around the
~You're .never too ' old to
'9(k." and a copY of a 1955 Clock" was picked as the tide
llier (rom a Tulsa, Okla., con- track for the teen rebel movie
c~r~ 'tba.t .has Haley and the "The Blackboard Jungle"
Comeq headlining, with Elvis after a producer heard the
song blaring from his teenPmley as just another act.
, , It doesn't take much coax-• age daughter's bedroom. · ·
The rest is l,ristory.
ing to ge~ Lyde to break into
song and start snapping his
fingers and tapping his feet.
"Rock 'n' roll is the fountain of youth," says drummer
Dick Richards~ 77, of Ocean
City, N.J. "You get oil stage,
see all those people out there,
it ntakes you 18, 19 years old
again. I don't know anything
that can beat that high."
Lyde, Richarils, saK player
Joey Ambrose, 6 7, of Las
Vegas, and keyboard artis.t
johnny Grande, 71, of ·'
Nashville, Tenn., all were
members of Haley's band
when they recorded "Reick
Around the Clock."The 1954
recording went on to beco~1e

.

Women.ministers battle to hold on in Baptist church~
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) When the Rev. Carolyn Hale
came to minister at Sav;mnah's
Memorial Baptist Church, a
group of men walked O)lt. In
Kentucky, Wyndee E. Hoibrook was told she "had no
business" being a campus minister because of her gender.
Female Southern Baptist
ministell have always faced
obstacles in the consetvative ·
denomination, but things have
been even more uncomfortable for about 1,600 clergywomen after the Southern
Baptist Convention passed a
statement of faith.last year saying women should not serve as
pastors.
"It's hard When you have
men who think )'OU shouldn't
be able to preach God's word
because you're a women," ·
Holbrook said. "All of a sudden here I am, having devoted
most of my adult life to the
church and a group· of people
come along and say I can't do
my job because I am a
WQnw!. What am I'supp.;sed
to do?'Work at a drive~tbru?"
The statement is not binding on congregations, but it

ro

has increased tension . in her and other girls become
chun:hes,especiallithe 100 or more involved with the
so led by women.,Some of the church.
churches have ~d to sever
"As long as I was volunteerties ~th the SB~ Southern ing, 1 was very richly affirmed
Baptists are the nation's largest in the church," she said. "But
Protestant denomin~tion, with
when I joined the seminary. I
15.9 million members.
Last . November,' Georgia was suddenly suspect."
Baptists voted to affirm the
James Merritt, president of
Southern Baptist Corwention the Southern Baptist Convenbelief statement
against tion, said he has no problem
women pastors, shrugging off · with women working at a
criticism fiom former Ptesi- church, as long as the position
dent Jimmy Carter and others. doesn't involVe preaching,
Florida, Tennessee and Merritt suggests that women
Louisiana Baptists also voted
in favor of the creed. North
Carolina's delegates passed a
carefully worded resol1,1tion
reaffirming their commitment
to the national convention.
'ii•lliiiliij
South Carolina Baptists left
the issue off their agenda
entirrly.
Holbrook said she's worried
that Kentucky, which put off
votirig on the statement until
November, will echo the decision of most other SOuthern
states. · ' '
,.
· GroWing up in LoUisville,
Holbrook said · family and
church members encouraged ~~~~!.!!~g!~!J! =:::.I

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NEW FEATURE- Special Care Cleaning Service of Gallipolis has added a new feature to Its operation - dry cleaning.
Cleaning Is done on location, except for leather Items, which are sent to a professional leather cleaner (MIIIIssla Russell photo)
·
·

I Care··cleans up'

Ia!!

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

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Govemment sued to :
prevent abuse of horse

SHELBYVILLE, Tenn. weight to its back legs.
(AP) -· Nodding its head in
"I would say it's a similar
synch with its steps. the Ten- outlook to cockfighting;•
nessee walking horse seems said Robin Lohnes, executo glide around the ring as it tive director of the watchstrides with a graceful, high- dog group, Trainers continue
stepping gait. ·
· the practice because "my
1
"To me it's just poetry in dad did it, my granddad. did
motion," said Bob Cherry, it."
executive director of the . Kenny Smith, , ' a board
Tennessee Walking Horse member of the Kentucky
Breeders' and 'Exhibitors' Walking Horse Association,
Association based near this said 't he comparison shows
town ·SO miles south of the group's cultural bias
Nashville.
against walking \lorse co,m Few question the beauty, petitions; which a~e primarbut many question the price ily in the South.
some horses pay for that
prize-,winnirig gait
The American Horse Protection Association is suing
the U.S. Department of
Agriculture for ceding too
much authority · to the
industry to regulate itself
against abuses, specifically a
practice called soring.
Soring involves 'irritating
a horse's forelegs, typically
with chemicals such as mustard oil or diesel fuel, to
. enhance their natural gait.
The horse raises its front ·
legs high to take pressure off
painful areas and sh,ifts its

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Coming Soon
To Point Pleasant
Charter Communications ·" '~.
Will Bring You The
Outdoor ·Channel
"

1-800-800-CABLE

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DR. IOEU. • DR. SINGH

10-A AIRPoRT ROAD '

G.uuPous, OJUO

446-0100
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Know how to take
your lumps

...'I
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INVESTIN ·G

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We are your solu.tion.

992-2168

l#uld you like to see a stC~tk of I«AI interest listed?
if so, wntact Ntw$ Editor Kevin Ktlly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

.

963 GI!NEJw.IIARTJNGER PwY.
POMJ!ROY, OHiO

GALLIPOLIS - In 2001,
those who are about to retir!!
or change jobs, or whose
employer is' terminating the
company ,retirement plan, may
be eligible to receive a "lump
sum distribution" as defined in
the Internal Revenue Code. ·
GUEST .
Such a distribution may be
VIEW
substantial and may represent
the cornerstone of their retirement securicy. So it is impor- special tax treatment of totant for them to consider their . year ·averaging or capital gains
options carefully before mak- treatment and pay a lower tax
ing a decision l'!!gardiog distri- rate than usual on the distribution. Otherwise, the ·distribubutions.
· Basically, they are &amp;ced with tion will be taxed ·a t its orditwo rnain 6ptions. Should they nary tax rate.
Their second option is roll
take their distribution and pay
the
distribution over to a traditaxes now? Should they roll
their distribution over into a tional IRA rollover account.
rollover Individual Retirement This alternative assures that
assets will continue to achieve
Account (IRA)?
If they decide not to roll the tax deferral and work to prodistribution over into a tradi- vide for their retirement.
.tiona! IRA account, they will Under current IRS regulapay taxes in the year they tions, an individual need not
receive the distribution and begin receiving distributions
have the remainder to invest as from his/her traditional IRA
until reaching age 70-1/2.
they please.
Here are some rollover facts
The main benefit of paying
taxes on the distribution now to keep in mind. when faced
is that they may be eligible for

Jay
Caldwell

,........ ..,.•

Have a business news Item?

Give us • Clllllt (740) 448 2342. ext. 23
J)

their equipment, as well a few items that do not need to be dry
employees.
cleaned.
.
almost 20
"It took us about a year-and-a-half
GALLIPOLIS
- After
·h
f
Barry is· also proud of the fact that
Care
to set the equipment . up," he said. everything is done on location, except
years, · t e sowner
· oG arySpecial
B
h
Cl eanmg erv1ce,
arry, as "Bernice (Ellis), who was at Cardi.
··
h" b ·
leather items which are shipped to a
added a new d11tlenslon
to IS us•- nal's, is now with us, and she knows a professional leather cleaner.
·
.
·
ness - dry c1eamng.
great deal ab()ut dry cleaning."
"We do formal drrsses such as wedI n addin.on t o his spec1·at·1zed c1eanSo far, the business has done quite
·ng
sern·c es, B arry
· b egan dry cJeamng
·
l
we11, Barry said, and Special Care is ding dresses, suits, shirts, skirts and
in April to fill a void within his com- planning on opening uP a drop-off blouses, as well as how~h~~d ite':'"
pa~y. ,
,
.
.
location downtown, as well as begin- /u~h as ~l~~kets ,a nd C!JI~s, , ?e ·~d.
Bi151cally, we go mto a )lome that ning a pick up day in the tri-county. 1
We JUst want •to thl'nk-tlie Ji~ le
hllS had firr, smoke or. OoOd dan\age,
"We want custom~ri to call 'the!" '/l:\f the commbhJty
tHeir sofi. Ort
pack the~ ~ut and restore. the home," office and we will have one day a o~er the years, a!ld we hope that t ey
Barry sa1d. We had to ship all of the , week set aside for pick- up," Barry w11l connnue to trust us Wlth their
~lothing and furniture items to Hu.nt- said. "We are also hoping to expand personal items," he added. "We try to
mgton to be cleaned, and that was JUSt . into Jackson County next year."
keep up with the latest technology ·in
not economical for us anymore."
Barry, who has been certified as a dry cleaning and specialty cleaning,
After Cardinal Dry Cleaners went Master Restorator and Master Clean- and I think that goes a long way in
, out of business, .B arry acquired all of er, also offers laundering services for pleasing the customer."
BY MIWIIIA RUIIELL

POOLS AND

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get involved with presch~
ministry, church clubs anti
Sunday school lessons.
"Our stance is not the poliC:
ically correct stance ro ta~
and it doesn't go along wid!
'"
what modern. day . peopll::
. would" advocate. It's not goitfli
to · make us popular;• h~ said::
"Women just don't make rti
qualifications, but that doesq'l;
mean they can't fulfill othe
roles.
7:
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Programs offer.new
produce ideas .
POMEROY Are
you looking for new ideas
in growing and marketing
produce? Ohio State Uni. versity Extension is coHal
sponsoring two progratm
for farm marketers and
Kneen
sweet corn growers.
June 19 from 4 to 8
p.m.,join the Sweet Corn
GUEST \lEW
Tour in Southwest Ohio
at Fulton Farms; Troy,
Travel westward to ,
Brentlinger's
Farm, Wilmington to Stokes
Springfield; and DeVoe's Fruit Farm. This grain
Farm, Xenia.
farm is transitioning into
This event is sponsored 1 a fruit farm, emphasizing
by the Ohio State Uni- berry production. Some
versity Extension Veg- areas of interest will be
etable 'learn and focuses the transition pro\=ess,
on integrated pest (weed, producing raspberries on
scale,
insect and disease) man- a
commercial
agement to improve sweet mechanical harvesting of
corn quality. Meet Ohio's berries and . marketing
experMI in sweet corn pro- strategies they use for the
duqion fiom both the large volume they pro, growers and university duce.
·
Stokes have also started
standppint. For further
information, call 992- a . small-scale processing
6696.
fafility where they add
Tlie Direct Agricultural value to their berries by
Marketing Association of freezing them and then
Ohio's (DAMA.) aimual selling them throughout
Farm Market Tour is.June the year.
19 and 20 in South ~en.The third stop will be
tra1 Ohio,
the Ohio State University
This year, the tour starts Centers at Piketon. Get
on Thesday evening with a acquainted .. with
the
barbecue and tour of the research facillttes for berry
Hirsch Fruit Fatm in · production and horticuiChillicothe. This 100 tural crops for the small
year-old family farm scale producers of Ohio.
retails and wholesales a Learn about !he marketwide variety of apples, ing. and business resources
nectarines, peaches and available to area f~mers.
berry · crops. Climb on
The last stop will be at
board a bus the next the Bambndge Produce·
morning June 20 and Auction, where many
·head no'rth to Rhoads small scale producers sell
Farm Market in . Cir- their fruit, vegetables and
deville.
PIIM8 ... KIIHII, Dl
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Control bagworms now
GALLIPOLIS -Because
the Eastern Tent Caterpillar
of last month is often mislabeled as a "bagworm," many
believe that the season is
over. ·Although the tent
caterpillar season is over, the
true bagworm season has
just begun.
Bagworms are actually the
insects ·responsible for those
br;own cocoons many of us
have hanging from our evergreen trees in August. These
worms hatch in late May.
and feed on evergreen plant
material until late summer,
when almost overnight they
form cocoons frOm evergreen needles.
These cocoons completely
protect the worm inside
fiom any type of pesticide.
Therefore, the time to spray
for bagworms is now, just
after hatching. It is also
advisable to make a second
insecticide application in
July to assure complete control.
Repeated bagworm ~arn­
ings in June and July fail to
reach aU homeowners. Thus
the homeo~ners who call in
August and September
wanting a quick solution to
the problem are disappointed to learn that easy chemical solutions do not exist.
After the worms have
formed the bags, picking
them off the tree by hand is
the only remedy, and may
not be practical in some sitnation~. However, removal
of the bags is a warranted
control method because the
eggs encased in the sack will
over-winter on the tree,
hatch in the spring, and
cause a larger problem the
following year.
Homeowners wa.ntin~ to

.'

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

avoid this · laborious process
cim .spray their evergreen
trees now with an insecticide labeled for evergreens
such as Sevin liquid or
Malathion.
Read and follow all label
instructions and always we
the necessary protective
equipment. Remember that
the pesticide is likely to setde back on the applicator '
during overhead applications.. thus . headgear and
long sleeves is important. To
obtain a fact sheet on . bagworms and· .their control,
please call the OSU Extension Office at 446-7007.
Ag newa
Blue mold confirmed
in Kentucky on May 30 in
Clark and Fayette counties,
about150 miles fiom Gallipolis.
Producers should be on
· the lookout for suspicious
symptoms. For those who
wish to treat their transplants
with fungicides may use
Dithane or Carbamate (Ferbam) in the float systems
according to label. Dithane
or Acrobat MZ may be used
on field set tobacco, according to label.
Do not use Actigatd on
field 1set tobacco until the
plant bud has reached 18 ·
inches in height.
·

PIMJJ ... IIymu,DI

�··-··
Pameloy • lllktl1port • Gr'lpallr, Ohio· Point Phrllnt, WY

incb oak woodwotk trim and
roseues. The kitchen cabinets
are made fiom attic Oooring
md ldt in the natur.U coloring
of forest gmwn pine.The dining room and a bedroom have
distinctive pan ceilings in the
scyle of the period. Rich deep
colors on the walls provide a
sttilcing backdrop for the
•woodwork and furnishings.
Stephen is quite know!edgeable of old customs and
hlbits that the house gives
evidtnce to and has many stories to share that illwtrate an
earlier vnty of life. The renavation is dedicated by Stephen
to his &amp;ther, the late Charles
E. "Honey" Fowler Jr., who
was very fond of the house.
Schoonover bouse
Te~sa
and
Bob

Schoon011er's two-StOry, pink
brick home features a recessed
fiont entry. Built in 199S, the
home has gleaming hardwood
and tiling throughoJ t. A balcony in the upsuirs hallway
overlooks the living room,
which has a catbedr.al ceiling.
The design of the house
~ chosen to best lake ady1ntage of the shape of the lot.
The length ·of the property
allows for a unique backy.ml
with a garden bouse, a footbridge, fish pond and brick
· walks. The ganlen house W2S
adapted fioni an old building
with an overhanging roof
which now provides for shaded seating and telantion.
Mystery barn?
Have you seen the mystery
barn? It is located in the
downtown area of Point
Pleasant. On the Home and
Garden Tour, you will find out
about this barn and the people
who shared it. A CEOS mem-

ber. dressed in late 19th century clothing, will be on hand.
She will have her mille pan
ready to millt the cow... bUt
instead, she will share the history of the land, the barn and
its owners.
Bowser garden
A wonderful surprise awaits
all who enter Ernie and
Nancy Bowser's garden on
Jefferson Avenue. Rosy brick
paving, inset with planting
beds and a central an:hed pergola catch the t:yt:. Fountains
and a wide water&amp;ll falling
into a pool are noticed. ..
A closer look brings the
shrubs, trees and plants to
attention. Mungo pine, rosy
glow barberry, Korean • and
English boxwood, a blue gray
cypress and cedar Adantica
grow there. Ro5es, day lilies
an.d other plants light the
paths and perimeters. A wonderful iceberg ~se climbs a
trellis. The Oash of · brighdy

colorrd fuh' in the pool
deligbt the t:yt:.
Starting with practically a
bare lot in 1995, Ernie
designed and built the garden
you see today. Owner of
Bowl;er's Garden Center for
20 yean, Ernie seems to have
all green thumbs and fingers.
He credits his grandmother,
Mary Bowser, who grew and
sold box woodS in the Point
Pleasant area for his early
interest in gardening. Ernie
grows descendants of his
grandmotherUs English box
wood in his present.gatden.
Living next~oor is Bob
and Teresa Sc
n011er, the
Bowser's daugh and son-inlaw. The Scboo11011ers have
adopted the same style of
paving and pla\lting which
gives both gardebS il unified
and spacious appearance.
Cook rose garden
Mr.
Lincoln,
Ingrid
Bergman, Fortune Teller, John

officer

Arlene serYCS as an
of the Pleasant Valley Hospitf
Auxiliary and recendy w*
recognized as an outstanding
volunteer of the year. She
takes roses to patients who are
without family or need a li~
A~nue.
extra cheering. Lowell is a
On a lot backed by a cow- retirrd school teacher
ering Canadian hemlock
taught vo-ag at Point PleasaJ!C
hedge, Lowell grows more
than 30 beautiful roses, High School.
--.•
including some Tropicanas
Mason County CEOS is ~
that are mote than 35 years
countywide
organizati"~~:
old.
Roses muSt Oourisb to gain whose purpose is cducati~
a place in their garden. Any and community service. P~
rose that ~·t live up to ceeds fiom the Home an4expectations is ruthlessly Ganlen Tour will go to su~
uptooted and cast out. A very port the five libraries in tilt
special rose that grows in the county.
Cook's backyard is a rambling
For mote informatioa
....
rose that was planted as a surabout the tour, contact theprise by his mother 35 years
West Virginia Extensi
ago. His mother had an antazing way with piants, Lowell Office at 304-675-0&amp;88 ·
says, and one can see that tal- . Berty Farmer at ~04-67
ent was passed on to her son. S199 ..

Kennedy, T ropicana Tea, Floribuoda? Names of famous penpk, names of drinks? No! In
, this case, these arr the names
and types of·roses found in
Lowell andAdene Cook's well
groomed yard on Jefferion

Inside:

CWsifitd ads, ~ 2-7

1
Sa AIIJ, IIIII J, 2111

anJ

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THE WEEK IN STOCKS
17tis chart sltows how loctll .rtock.s of iltt4rut ~ lost MWk.
Each day's closing jig~~JU are pmvitkd by Advut of Gallipolis.

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.
50'1.

FRI.
49

&gt;

for families to ~t together.
Children are more likely to
eat. well if the example is set
lnMIPIIp:Cl
by parents and other family
members.
urated fats.
Excessive eating and a dii:t
Canola, olive, saffiower or high in fats and sugar may
corn oil are better .for young lead to obesity later life with
children than butter or short- all the corresponding health
ening.
problems.
Children love to make
WIC is a supplemental food
choices. II helps to give them
and nutrition program for
choices of the same type of
women who are pregnant,.
foods so that they receive the
nursing a child, recendy gave
corrrct nutrients. Children
also like to eat small quantities birth, have an infant or a child
more often. A little bit eaten up to age five.
Applicants must meet eligse~~Cral times adds up to larger
quantities at the end of the ilibilty guidelines. Income for
day. They ate curious and like a family of two cannot exceed
to try ;,ew things. Add new $1, 750; family of four, $2, 722;
family of five, $3,187; family
items to the menu gradually.
of
six, $3,653.
Meals are an opportunity

WIC

BILL HALEY

Comets still rockin'
decades after hit record.
the anthem•of rock 'n'·roll.• "
·L ARGO, Fla. (AP) They make up "The OrigiNearly half a century after the
ever-famous "Rock Around nal Comets;• alorig with guithe Clock" helped give birth tarist Franny Beecher, 79, of.
.to rock 'n' roll, original band Norristown, Pa. Beecher, who
members from Bill Haley and played with Benny GoodHis Comets are still rock.in'.
man's swing band in the late
The musicians, now in their 1940s, joined Haley in 1954
60s and 70s, may be slowed by as lead.electric guitar after the
age, but these retirees still have untimely death of original
the beat.
guitarist Oamiy Cedrone.
"We were the band that
"My reward for recording
created the sound," says Mar- "Rock Around the Clock"
shall Lyde, at 67 the youngest was $41. 25.. That 'was the
of the group known as "The musician's scale for a three-' ·
Original Comets."
hour recording session then,"
"When people say, 'You Lytle says.
sound just like Bill Haley's
The band had rehearsed
Colt1ets; I say, 'That's who we "Rock Around the Clock" in
are'"
.
.
Haley's basement. When they
Lyde, on bass, still does his got to the studio, the producsignature high-energy perfor- er pushed "Thirteen Women"
mance of the mid-1950s. He as the A side of the Decc.a
jumps and stands on the 20- record. Haley and His Comets
pound fiddle and hurls it into spent 2 I /2 hours on that
the air during concerts.
song. They had' to do the
Today, he owns a home arrangement first, then the
decor shop with his wife, recording.
Jeanne, in Largo, nearTampa,
With only 30 minutes left
and gets together with his
on the schedule they recorded
bandrnates for concert tours
"Rock Around the Clock" as
in the United States and
the B side in two quick takes.
Europe several times a year.
"It didn't take off right
His desk in a corner of the
away;•. Lyde says. "The J;CCOrd
store is like a shrine to rock
was put out promoting 'Thir'n' roll. On the Wall, there are
teen Women."'
gold records, signed pho"Shake, Rattle and Roll,"
tographs and pictures of the
group, .then and now. There's recorded at a second session
also an orange ·banner reading ·became a hit first.
In 1955, "Rock Around the
~You're .never too ' old to
'9(k." and a copY of a 1955 Clock" was picked as the tide
llier (rom a Tulsa, Okla., con- track for the teen rebel movie
c~r~ 'tba.t .has Haley and the "The Blackboard Jungle"
Comeq headlining, with Elvis after a producer heard the
song blaring from his teenPmley as just another act.
, , It doesn't take much coax-• age daughter's bedroom. · ·
The rest is l,ristory.
ing to ge~ Lyde to break into
song and start snapping his
fingers and tapping his feet.
"Rock 'n' roll is the fountain of youth," says drummer
Dick Richards~ 77, of Ocean
City, N.J. "You get oil stage,
see all those people out there,
it ntakes you 18, 19 years old
again. I don't know anything
that can beat that high."
Lyde, Richarils, saK player
Joey Ambrose, 6 7, of Las
Vegas, and keyboard artis.t
johnny Grande, 71, of ·'
Nashville, Tenn., all were
members of Haley's band
when they recorded "Reick
Around the Clock."The 1954
recording went on to beco~1e

.

Women.ministers battle to hold on in Baptist church~
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) When the Rev. Carolyn Hale
came to minister at Sav;mnah's
Memorial Baptist Church, a
group of men walked O)lt. In
Kentucky, Wyndee E. Hoibrook was told she "had no
business" being a campus minister because of her gender.
Female Southern Baptist
ministell have always faced
obstacles in the consetvative ·
denomination, but things have
been even more uncomfortable for about 1,600 clergywomen after the Southern
Baptist Convention passed a
statement of faith.last year saying women should not serve as
pastors.
"It's hard When you have
men who think )'OU shouldn't
be able to preach God's word
because you're a women," ·
Holbrook said. "All of a sudden here I am, having devoted
most of my adult life to the
church and a group· of people
come along and say I can't do
my job because I am a
WQnw!. What am I'supp.;sed
to do?'Work at a drive~tbru?"
The statement is not binding on congregations, but it

ro

has increased tension . in her and other girls become
chun:hes,especiallithe 100 or more involved with the
so led by women.,Some of the church.
churches have ~d to sever
"As long as I was volunteerties ~th the SB~ Southern ing, 1 was very richly affirmed
Baptists are the nation's largest in the church," she said. "But
Protestant denomin~tion, with
when I joined the seminary. I
15.9 million members.
Last . November,' Georgia was suddenly suspect."
Baptists voted to affirm the
James Merritt, president of
Southern Baptist Corwention the Southern Baptist Convenbelief statement
against tion, said he has no problem
women pastors, shrugging off · with women working at a
criticism fiom former Ptesi- church, as long as the position
dent Jimmy Carter and others. doesn't involVe preaching,
Florida, Tennessee and Merritt suggests that women
Louisiana Baptists also voted
in favor of the creed. North
Carolina's delegates passed a
carefully worded resol1,1tion
reaffirming their commitment
to the national convention.
'ii•lliiiliij
South Carolina Baptists left
the issue off their agenda
entirrly.
Holbrook said she's worried
that Kentucky, which put off
votirig on the statement until
November, will echo the decision of most other SOuthern
states. · ' '
,.
· GroWing up in LoUisville,
Holbrook said · family and
church members encouraged ~~~~!.!!~g!~!J! =:::.I

'

. ~.

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•

NEW FEATURE- Special Care Cleaning Service of Gallipolis has added a new feature to Its operation - dry cleaning.
Cleaning Is done on location, except for leather Items, which are sent to a professional leather cleaner (MIIIIssla Russell photo)
·
·

I Care··cleans up'

Ia!!

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

.
'

.,

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

Govemment sued to :
prevent abuse of horse

SHELBYVILLE, Tenn. weight to its back legs.
(AP) -· Nodding its head in
"I would say it's a similar
synch with its steps. the Ten- outlook to cockfighting;•
nessee walking horse seems said Robin Lohnes, executo glide around the ring as it tive director of the watchstrides with a graceful, high- dog group, Trainers continue
stepping gait. ·
· the practice because "my
1
"To me it's just poetry in dad did it, my granddad. did
motion," said Bob Cherry, it."
executive director of the . Kenny Smith, , ' a board
Tennessee Walking Horse member of the Kentucky
Breeders' and 'Exhibitors' Walking Horse Association,
Association based near this said 't he comparison shows
town ·SO miles south of the group's cultural bias
Nashville.
against walking \lorse co,m Few question the beauty, petitions; which a~e primarbut many question the price ily in the South.
some horses pay for that
prize-,winnirig gait
The American Horse Protection Association is suing
the U.S. Department of
Agriculture for ceding too
much authority · to the
industry to regulate itself
against abuses, specifically a
practice called soring.
Soring involves 'irritating
a horse's forelegs, typically
with chemicals such as mustard oil or diesel fuel, to
. enhance their natural gait.
The horse raises its front ·
legs high to take pressure off
painful areas and sh,ifts its

'

•

''
Coming Soon
To Point Pleasant
Charter Communications ·" '~.
Will Bring You The
Outdoor ·Channel
"

1-800-800-CABLE

'

.........

DR. IOEU. • DR. SINGH

10-A AIRPoRT ROAD '

G.uuPous, OJUO

446-0100
'

·,

Know how to take
your lumps

...'I
''

'
...

'

INVESTIN ·G

"'

We are your solu.tion.

992-2168

l#uld you like to see a stC~tk of I«AI interest listed?
if so, wntact Ntw$ Editor Kevin Ktlly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

.

963 GI!NEJw.IIARTJNGER PwY.
POMJ!ROY, OHiO

GALLIPOLIS - In 2001,
those who are about to retir!!
or change jobs, or whose
employer is' terminating the
company ,retirement plan, may
be eligible to receive a "lump
sum distribution" as defined in
the Internal Revenue Code. ·
GUEST .
Such a distribution may be
VIEW
substantial and may represent
the cornerstone of their retirement securicy. So it is impor- special tax treatment of totant for them to consider their . year ·averaging or capital gains
options carefully before mak- treatment and pay a lower tax
ing a decision l'!!gardiog distri- rate than usual on the distribution. Otherwise, the ·distribubutions.
· Basically, they are &amp;ced with tion will be taxed ·a t its orditwo rnain 6ptions. Should they nary tax rate.
Their second option is roll
take their distribution and pay
the
distribution over to a traditaxes now? Should they roll
their distribution over into a tional IRA rollover account.
rollover Individual Retirement This alternative assures that
assets will continue to achieve
Account (IRA)?
If they decide not to roll the tax deferral and work to prodistribution over into a tradi- vide for their retirement.
.tiona! IRA account, they will Under current IRS regulapay taxes in the year they tions, an individual need not
receive the distribution and begin receiving distributions
have the remainder to invest as from his/her traditional IRA
until reaching age 70-1/2.
they please.
Here are some rollover facts
The main benefit of paying
taxes on the distribution now to keep in mind. when faced
is that they may be eligible for

Jay
Caldwell

,........ ..,.•

Have a business news Item?

Give us • Clllllt (740) 448 2342. ext. 23
J)

their equipment, as well a few items that do not need to be dry
employees.
cleaned.
.
almost 20
"It took us about a year-and-a-half
GALLIPOLIS
- After
·h
f
Barry is· also proud of the fact that
Care
to set the equipment . up," he said. everything is done on location, except
years, · t e sowner
· oG arySpecial
B
h
Cl eanmg erv1ce,
arry, as "Bernice (Ellis), who was at Cardi.
··
h" b ·
leather items which are shipped to a
added a new d11tlenslon
to IS us•- nal's, is now with us, and she knows a professional leather cleaner.
·
.
·
ness - dry c1eamng.
great deal ab()ut dry cleaning."
"We do formal drrsses such as wedI n addin.on t o his spec1·at·1zed c1eanSo far, the business has done quite
·ng
sern·c es, B arry
· b egan dry cJeamng
·
l
we11, Barry said, and Special Care is ding dresses, suits, shirts, skirts and
in April to fill a void within his com- planning on opening uP a drop-off blouses, as well as how~h~~d ite':'"
pa~y. ,
,
.
.
location downtown, as well as begin- /u~h as ~l~~kets ,a nd C!JI~s, , ?e ·~d.
Bi151cally, we go mto a )lome that ning a pick up day in the tri-county. 1
We JUst want •to thl'nk-tlie Ji~ le
hllS had firr, smoke or. OoOd dan\age,
"We want custom~ri to call 'the!" '/l:\f the commbhJty
tHeir sofi. Ort
pack the~ ~ut and restore. the home," office and we will have one day a o~er the years, a!ld we hope that t ey
Barry sa1d. We had to ship all of the , week set aside for pick- up," Barry w11l connnue to trust us Wlth their
~lothing and furniture items to Hu.nt- said. "We are also hoping to expand personal items," he added. "We try to
mgton to be cleaned, and that was JUSt . into Jackson County next year."
keep up with the latest technology ·in
not economical for us anymore."
Barry, who has been certified as a dry cleaning and specialty cleaning,
After Cardinal Dry Cleaners went Master Restorator and Master Clean- and I think that goes a long way in
, out of business, .B arry acquired all of er, also offers laundering services for pleasing the customer."
BY MIWIIIA RUIIELL

POOLS AND

-

.:.

get involved with presch~
ministry, church clubs anti
Sunday school lessons.
"Our stance is not the poliC:
ically correct stance ro ta~
and it doesn't go along wid!
'"
what modern. day . peopll::
. would" advocate. It's not goitfli
to · make us popular;• h~ said::
"Women just don't make rti
qualifications, but that doesq'l;
mean they can't fulfill othe
roles.
7:
""'

Ij

J 't

fOr

l

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

Programs offer.new
produce ideas .
POMEROY Are
you looking for new ideas
in growing and marketing
produce? Ohio State Uni. versity Extension is coHal
sponsoring two progratm
for farm marketers and
Kneen
sweet corn growers.
June 19 from 4 to 8
p.m.,join the Sweet Corn
GUEST \lEW
Tour in Southwest Ohio
at Fulton Farms; Troy,
Travel westward to ,
Brentlinger's
Farm, Wilmington to Stokes
Springfield; and DeVoe's Fruit Farm. This grain
Farm, Xenia.
farm is transitioning into
This event is sponsored 1 a fruit farm, emphasizing
by the Ohio State Uni- berry production. Some
versity Extension Veg- areas of interest will be
etable 'learn and focuses the transition pro\=ess,
on integrated pest (weed, producing raspberries on
scale,
insect and disease) man- a
commercial
agement to improve sweet mechanical harvesting of
corn quality. Meet Ohio's berries and . marketing
experMI in sweet corn pro- strategies they use for the
duqion fiom both the large volume they pro, growers and university duce.
·
Stokes have also started
standppint. For further
information, call 992- a . small-scale processing
6696.
fafility where they add
Tlie Direct Agricultural value to their berries by
Marketing Association of freezing them and then
Ohio's (DAMA.) aimual selling them throughout
Farm Market Tour is.June the year.
19 and 20 in South ~en.The third stop will be
tra1 Ohio,
the Ohio State University
This year, the tour starts Centers at Piketon. Get
on Thesday evening with a acquainted .. with
the
barbecue and tour of the research facillttes for berry
Hirsch Fruit Fatm in · production and horticuiChillicothe. This 100 tural crops for the small
year-old family farm scale producers of Ohio.
retails and wholesales a Learn about !he marketwide variety of apples, ing. and business resources
nectarines, peaches and available to area f~mers.
berry · crops. Climb on
The last stop will be at
board a bus the next the Bambndge Produce·
morning June 20 and Auction, where many
·head no'rth to Rhoads small scale producers sell
Farm Market in . Cir- their fruit, vegetables and
deville.
PIIM8 ... KIIHII, Dl
"

I ,

I

f

Control bagworms now
GALLIPOLIS -Because
the Eastern Tent Caterpillar
of last month is often mislabeled as a "bagworm," many
believe that the season is
over. ·Although the tent
caterpillar season is over, the
true bagworm season has
just begun.
Bagworms are actually the
insects ·responsible for those
br;own cocoons many of us
have hanging from our evergreen trees in August. These
worms hatch in late May.
and feed on evergreen plant
material until late summer,
when almost overnight they
form cocoons frOm evergreen needles.
These cocoons completely
protect the worm inside
fiom any type of pesticide.
Therefore, the time to spray
for bagworms is now, just
after hatching. It is also
advisable to make a second
insecticide application in
July to assure complete control.
Repeated bagworm ~arn­
ings in June and July fail to
reach aU homeowners. Thus
the homeo~ners who call in
August and September
wanting a quick solution to
the problem are disappointed to learn that easy chemical solutions do not exist.
After the worms have
formed the bags, picking
them off the tree by hand is
the only remedy, and may
not be practical in some sitnation~. However, removal
of the bags is a warranted
control method because the
eggs encased in the sack will
over-winter on the tree,
hatch in the spring, and
cause a larger problem the
following year.
Homeowners wa.ntin~ to

.'

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

avoid this · laborious process
cim .spray their evergreen
trees now with an insecticide labeled for evergreens
such as Sevin liquid or
Malathion.
Read and follow all label
instructions and always we
the necessary protective
equipment. Remember that
the pesticide is likely to setde back on the applicator '
during overhead applications.. thus . headgear and
long sleeves is important. To
obtain a fact sheet on . bagworms and· .their control,
please call the OSU Extension Office at 446-7007.
Ag newa
Blue mold confirmed
in Kentucky on May 30 in
Clark and Fayette counties,
about150 miles fiom Gallipolis.
Producers should be on
· the lookout for suspicious
symptoms. For those who
wish to treat their transplants
with fungicides may use
Dithane or Carbamate (Ferbam) in the float systems
according to label. Dithane
or Acrobat MZ may be used
on field set tobacco, according to label.
Do not use Actigatd on
field 1set tobacco until the
plant bud has reached 18 ·
inches in height.
·

PIMJJ ... IIymu,DI

�Sundey, June 3, 2001
••
: We are
• County

•1*1·~

-

o..

Sf"'· IC [_ S

Full-time
Permanent
Positions
Available

HelpWanted
S1200 WEEI&lt;LY POSSIBLE PflO.
2:1111 p.m.
CESSING 400 Inquiry En........
tlt. .CIIIIlo run.
. FtM- I pujlllioo, 7 wb, 2 m. 4 I,
ao Homo. Euy Worll. Call 1.aoo.
-.olayed-2:00 p.m. -~-g&lt;l(ld
7M-2027- (24tn)
I llil.,..lllill, --3145
You will be 11111klng
Unwood Drive, Sheela'. Table, "OWN ACOMPUTER? PUT IT
fuildl'lllalng calls on
- d Your Child F01 AGrnl Clotloao. Etc.
TO WORKf• UP TD SZ1H7a lilt
6c:l!ool Yur With KIHena. To A
blhalf of cun.nt
3 Family, Inside Garage, PT/fT 1 • •.-n~
. . .cila to run.
Goad-·Col (740)441-1707 lArge
AlpUbllcen party
Lota 01- Bualnna Ctollllng, $2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
II andtrv I dillon 1:00 p.m.
Slzto 9·10 ThiU 20, Baby Clothea,
70
YardSale
Houlthold
wears.
some
Furnl·
brochureal
Satlafacllon
Guar·
1
- and currwnt
Frlclly.
turo, Slate Route 325 S, Outoido antoadl Pootega &amp; Suppllta pr..
RlpUbllcen party
"P"T'B grew n:z·
Rio Grande, Starting June Sth· vldedl Rush Self-Addressed
ttl
Gallipolis
candidates.
July
30111, 931Jmo.5:30
~~~~~~~,.~~
Rill .., 4:30 p.m.
&amp; VIcinity
$7.00 per hour
Moving Solo· 9 MillO Out 218, 7011-1438 Start tmmeclalely.
• lllollllel' IIIII OII.
3
Fllllily Yonl S.. June Ill, 2nd, •th 6 51h, Everything
'l1llnMy.
I2,000
WEEKLY!
Mailing
oo
4
2&amp;3, 8·5pm, Grenctvlew Helghta,
Rlu• bonua and
"D II ill,_ ..llljlct to
brochureel Satitfactlon
Golllpalla, Ohio, Route 1110. L&lt;&gt;ve ~ Go/
• overtime
chel. . . . . ID ltollclap"
&amp; Lorge Sola. eer.. Upright Satuidoy, June 2nd, 7am To ?IJ antoadl Poatage &amp;
vldedl Ruoh
Large Tool Box, Knick Knacks, Wakllillcl, 111 Ever, Lola 01
arampa&lt;t
We offer: Set
Toole, (New) Canning Jiua, Everything!
5,80k1,
TN
Lornpo.
echedulae, Full
i\ IIII IJ'I'JC U.1 t II I,,
Pomeroy,
azorH438. Siar11nmad~ ·
3 Family Yard Sale, 148 Lila
Middleport
lo!IO.OO·SI ,000.00 WEEKLY bentflta, Holiday pay,
Drlva, Addlaon Ohio. Saturday
&amp;
VIcinity
Malting Littell From Homo. No P11d YICitlona, Every
2nd, tam·5pm &amp; Sunday 3rd,
nece111ry. FT/PT.
Baby Clothn. Houaa· s f8mly yanr - . Juno 5111 &amp; IIIII, eXRtrfenct
Halp Naaded lmmedlalttyt Call Friday and saturday ofl
FREE SEAACHI
1111 Fourth Stroot, Now Haven,
'SUNDANCE DISTRIBUTORS' 1· Welldy bonua, WMidy
- .SINGLES.com
Friday, Saturday, &amp; Sunday, Ducanl-000,
-o4255EXT81.(24HRS.)
paycheck lnd IIIOI'elll
FREE SEARCH!
Mm·1 , 1/4 Mila Out Route 211,
Lola 01 Klda Clothaa, Boyl/ Gl~l 5114 Uncotn, Mlddtapon (Pea~ &amp; 1828 WEEKLY mailing lellara
- .siNCiLES.com
- ) . er.lt, e/01 , floW, a.11, crafl from home. Full or part·tlme. Nt&gt; 1 888 237-5342
START DATING TONIGHT! lnllni· 10Yen
Items, furniture , houaewaree,
nperltnee ntcMIIfY. Euyt My
Have lun mHIIng eligible alnglaa
-~clotlolng.
ho.ulll Call u.s. Digeat1·117·
ext. 2301
· In your area. Tall-free 1·800~
52Q.II071 a• hour~·
ROMANCE, ext. 9'135
Garage Ilia· Ewing roaldenco, 1.:=:::::;::;;:;;~;;;;
300 Fou~ St-. Pomeroy, Ohio II
Why walt? Start meatlng Ohio
4571111, Mon. 1/4, Tuaa., 11/11, 8am·
LOOK I NO
slngleo 1onlgh1 1·800·785·2823
4prn, .
IXI18.21.
Huge multifamily garage aalo,
FOR A
30 Announcementa
Juno 8·8, Court Stretl Rd .. off
Momlngalar, ra1n, thine. ·
CHANGE?
A~entlon~ l'am doing gene•lour
242 Third Avenue
•
of the Koenig 6 Kraeuter/Krlder
·June 2·3, moving eale, Hysell
Galllpolla, OH 4S831
famll~. need Information, I can be
Run, household ltema, tools,
· reached at my E-Mail addreu,
knick-knacks, gotdfilh , rain or
$987.~EEKLYI Procoaalng
l1191alnas@aol.com
shine.
HUD/FH.t. Mortgage Aolunda. No
New To You Thrift Shoppo
E&gt;&lt;Potlence Required. FREE lnlor·
Juna 4 65, IIIH family yard lalo,
9 West srtmson. Athena
mellon Call 1·600·501·8832 elll.
3 miltl out 554 from red light in
740.592·1842
1300 www.projectralund.corri
Chethlte, clothing all alze1, air
'
Quality clolhlng and houoehold
condltlonar,
mloc. ~-.
lnfoCialon
haa
what
Items. $1 .00 bag sale every
"ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
Thursday. Monday thru Saturdav
Put R to Workl ~25/hr·$75/ltr. FTI
Large ..... June 1' 2, 3, 4,
you
are
looking
fori
9:00-6:00.
PT. FREE Info. 888·837·7128
trucker over the road equipment
Stov8, Pill Sola &amp;End
T - . Choir, TreadmiU, Clolhn.
hOUIIhOid lloma, Etc. June 8&amp;
11411. 5 1 - OriYo
Juno lsi, 2nd a 3rd, 91m·? :130

110

2.,. .,.,_ ......

:::':.C·

iiiC::

..

···c··
Ill II

0

...

To Be

Happy Ad

FIFTY!?!
Oh, Well...

---:-=---_..;.-'
In Memory
M

n emory

~
o1

David Cantrell

.._ 1, 1.m.JUM3, , . .

I mill your Iough,
your1mlle
The twinkle In your eye.
I ml111he time• we
1harec:t togelher
And regret not having
the chance to 10y
goodbye.
You'll alway1 be In my
heart and on my mind.

b.

Love.
~ Aunl

.J
...:Jfi

In Memory

and tomethlng for everybody
else, Stewart l..anD Muon,

Ralner/Hud1on Garage sale,
Tackervllle Rd., Racine, June .Cth,
5•h. trunk, .furniture, microwave,
collecllblas, misc.

Rutland Now Lima Ad, 1 4/10

miln N'. June 4, 5, e, five families.

Yard sale Hubbards', 4-5, Racine
take county road 28 to McKenzie

Ridge follow olgno.

Pt. Plt1unt
&amp; VIcinity
Gigantic Yard Sal• Friday l Sat·
urday, June lsi &amp; 2nd, Routa 62
North Above Wost Columbia La·
kin Hoapllot Cleaning Building,
Antlquee, Glaeaware, Clothing,
And Toyo.

www.dtakehockjeyOaarlhllnk.nel

We offer:
• Up to $7/hour +
weekly bonu1ea
• Full time ahlft with
Friday and Saturday
off
• Full b8naflta
• WHkly paycheck
• Paid vacation
, • Paid holldaya
• 'Rstlrement plan

Call TODAY for
an lntervlewl

Auction
and Flea Market
Auction $undty Juno 3rd, 2pm,

80

1ree cookout, hamburgers , hot
dogs to all buyera Iota of new &amp;

.Ul8d Hemt, 740-892·9273.

Country Corner Flea · Market

1·866-475·7223
ext. 1901
or
Vlalt our Gallipolis
location at
242 Third Avenue
Galllpolla, OH

open, Thurs., F~ .. Sat., Sun.. 1011
of goodleo, Torch, Oh. 740·687·
Rick Pearaon Auction Company,

June 2, 1956 • Feb. 19, 1999

186,0hlo &amp; Welt VIrginia, 304·
773·5785 Or 304·773-5447.
90 Wanted to Buy

Houdlne today on
your birthday.

'M, 7r•t·~
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s.,efel

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'Itt~"' •""' ., do

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~

"-·ut do~¥ ....

~.....u--.

'lr-ut.,....

f---4d Cf'U.Hlf .

"--·

"-· • • ....C'/M41

We will remember
the good dmes
And the happy
memories Of you.
You will always be
on our hearts
And minds undl we
meet again .
Love,
Your wife Mary
Your children, and
gr andchlldren

Card of Thanks
The Family
Webster Dewitt
would like to express our
heartfelt gratitude to all of you
who showed us kindness, love
and support in so many waya
during the Ulness and recent

death of our beloved husband,
father, and grandfather, who left
us to be with God nine days
bcfo~

his 9151 birthday.

A spedalthanks &amp;oes out to the

Holzer Home Heallb COle team
· espcc:ially Maudie Spry and
1ulie Wamsley · and to the
doctor~ and staff at.Scenlc Hills
Nunlna: Center who made Jlia
Ill)' there 11 comfonable ••

)

poulblo for him and hl1 family
Amlllloa 11- we'" aatded you.
Amillion dm• we'" crted.
If love c.ld ha., saved you
You aever woald hlft died.
l.a lire WI loYed JOU daeriJ
Ia daatll we love yollaUU.
In our lleartno rou hold I place,
That DD DDI 1111 ~ft flU.
It bnoke out burlto to IDH you,
Butrou did aot ao alone.
For (W1 uf uo weal wllb you
The tla God took au home.

Yes you can•••
Make a
difference!
lnfoclolon employees help
11111ke a dltrereace In
thousands of lives around
the world every day. We
otrer a &amp;real learnln11
environment with
experienced employees on
hand to help at alltlme1.
We are always loo~nl! for
new Communicators to
handle fundralslng calls
1by phone throuxh a
computedzed dialer
system.
Full-time
Perinanent
·Positions Available

www...,u, L~lr com

...ACCESS TO ACOUPUTJ:R7
Put • to Wartnl 82111hr·S1511tr. PT/
FT. FREE Info. 881·887·4184
wuu ~ IUon B'l com

O'BLSNBSS

IJt-1411
tn.oom

"*'
P&lt;lllllon, then oubmlla

lor
': Ill _.,.......
1 JUU . .
I J In

www.ThinkBigDol·

&amp;!Mfl'- Myrelpp Septer II IC·

coptin{opplk:allons lor all lhifta,
We orfef ex~llenl benefitl that
lncludl Htalth lnturance, 40tK,
Life lnauranco, compotHiva wag.

_..,.,lllaa

- EaatllalnSINot
Nurliifl CeJ1IIr

"" Ilion aaz oom

"

~. Ohio
..UMMIII WORK• ...12 Baae/
(740)887-301111
A!IIJL• ~ .-...! '01 HS
EOE
'
Graduatll, "l:ntry Level Svc/
aoloa. Conditione Apply. Open· Art You Connected? learn
lngo Throughout T~'Stato Area, How To Earn Onllno Income!
(304)552-40!4
$2, 175· $3875 Poi llonth.

raoumo lo tho addreaa
bo-byJI.r!afS,200I.
Community Action Ia -lng 11o0
llborera for tho Waothorlzatlon
.,..., Thla Ia a ~ 1u0poaHion. Send or dotlver naoume
and referencea to GMCAA, 11•
11n11on s. Edwatda, 11010 N. Slate
Route 7, Chnhlro, Ohio 45820
byti-15-0I.GMCMiaonEOE. .
Crow Mambar, 25·30 houra - · Mondoy lllru Friday. ,.pjjij
In P8f10n at W
. G. GrinaOra 120
Wool Union Stroet Athonl OH
41701 .

•

'

'

Driv.,. noadad 1o .,...,.,., cero
10 &amp; lrom auctlono, call 740-1112·
11088 I0.1Hio&gt;t1L

...,-..WI

www.wkb1tt.identl.~

ad.

. . ..-=. .-

~.
740·185·3328, Mr. Dory!
Well,

www.

A JOB ·FOR YOU II DRIVERS AAE YOU' cONNECTED?
NEEDED NOWIII E•p'd Colli·
USERS WANTED!
800·851·2353 No lxporlonco7 INTERNET
~R·PT/FT
No Problaml 14 Day CDL· 10 WWN,~rN.ODm
.'
Down Financing LIFETIME JOB
PLACEMENTIII CALL TODAY I· ""' yoU ·look~ior lliio "-'"nl·
aoo 4.48 n n ·
ty to Join a winning ttam and be·
.....
pert ol .... lllowlnCI ABBOWTELY FREE INFO
cart
lntluauy7
Scerilc HHII Null·
I-Uonlng
Center Ia ollorlng Nuroo Aide
12000.1f1000/1n
Training Cluon monthly. II 11 a
www.HOiiitllbiz.nlt
75 hour courto, tailing lor 11
daya. Manday lhrough Friday
ACHIEVE THE AMERICAN 8:30
10 4:30. Thla Ia a great op.
DREAMIHIGh
Wyou
i11U11 Pollnllal.
- · - f'T/
at portunllyl The ne&gt;d clau will be·
homo.
Income
gin In July. Stop by loday lor an
FT. Full1'rU!Ing. Free Booklll. 1· appllcellon
or cantecl Stophinla
tll(l.337-Kempor, lnatructor, at (740)44f. '
7130
ACHIEVE THE AMERICAN
DREAM! II you wort&lt;, work at ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES Ia chango 'our '
home. High lncomo Potential. PT/ lllolll
PT/FT at home. 820·L24·
FT. 11111 Tralnlrig. FJH Bookllt. 1·
8400. wwwkhlaYoDrMma.com
1100.337-5320
www.k•IICII-IIdlr.com
ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
ACTORS/MOOELSI Notwork Hlr· 10 MINUTES ·to chango your
lng all ages! No Experience lifo?? PTIFT at home. 920·924·

cal lnaunlnce Biting, 1m.
mGI , 4'1 Home Comput8r NMd·
od. FREE lnter~ot. 1·800·281·

...ttent

Public Sale and Auction

8400. -k1111¥a01eama.com

"' http://WWW.modllrep.cam/
'T1m5880

Church planl•t or organllt need·
ad lor HOpe 8lplllt Church, Gront

Phone: 1·38D·II13·10il Dept.

Hanger Proathollcl &amp; Orthot1c1 Technician. Houro Ate Fleklble,
Sell&lt;a Ol!lc:e PolloMol For Gall~ Poy 8ued On El&lt;pao11noa. Band
potll, Ol1lce Facility Lllcadon. [)u. Reaume a Roleroncoa To: C&amp;C
llnlndude R«:opplon, Schadul· Eloctronk: Repair, 407 3rd A¥1·
lng, lnauranco BlUing. COmputer ,.,.,.~,~-~&gt;la~DH~4~583~1!...___
·Offlco Uaago Required. Plaoae - ' 4 4
Calll-5811-~1 Or Fu R•
- t o (7411)353 411118

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FOR SALE

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FIMIJ,- 8,1:30 ••m.
8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35)
Ohio

eee Good Sole with Nice Vorlety ofltems •••

oMOI www.qulckcaahnow.com/

ER

Locotecl at 824' South Second In Mldldle~tJ
Ohio. 11'111 11 the personal property of the
0.01'98 A. Ebersback.

JOBS

"HOUSEHOLD''

·S6-S7/HR

''

I

. ;• •

ThomaiYIIIe 4 pC:. bedroom sulte,t2 pc .
bedroom suite, 2 pc.llvlno room suite,
Emerson portable TV&amp;. stand, Table&amp;. chairs,
Imperial refriQeratar, Melal double wardrobe,
Couch, Round coffee table, Desh &amp;. Chair, bed,
ChHt ofDrawet 1, Lamps, Odd Choirs, Golllp
bench, Misc. Dlihes, Rocker, Stands, Pots &amp;
Pans, lrrtCIU n191, Step stool, Fire Kino mlxlno
bowl, Eureka Bravo uprtoht iwHper, Pipe
stand &amp; other Items.
.~
"MISCELLANEOUS"
Porcllswtno, ~~truck topper, 2 sets of oolf
dubs, Push mower, HI-wheel mower, Four
atrlno trimmers, oqs can, Tool chest, Misc.
tools, Lawn chairs, Fons, Electric heater, Shop
Vac&amp;etc•••
JOHN EBERSaACK - Exe- Ca .. l317 89
DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER- Ot,Jo 11344 WV

fasg lndHr work·
nexlble hours .
full/part Hme hillY! .
.Positions fllUng
quickly!!
1-818-974-JOBS

MEDICAL SOCIAL
SERVICE ASSISTANT

1515

·cash e PosHJve ID • Refreshments Available
"ttooiiBpontlble tora«&lt;tlents or lou of property' .

4808. www.qulckcalhnow.com/

Jambagan

ATTENTION:

WORK FROM HOME

·up 10
~
MAIL ORDER (886)821.(1888
AVONI All Areaal To Buy or Sell.
Shi~ey Spea11, 304·875-1429.
AVON· Looking lor higher In ·.
come? More flexible hours? lnde·
pondenca? AVON hat what
you're looking for. Ltt't talk.
(118)581-21188.
' BeYourOwnBooll
-ll-5egaln
EamUpTo
I

H

Ns.oo. m.oo.~~r f'T/FT

130(l.MOOO/M0

PTIFT
f oiOO.e1().0705

WNN.CBihNowAndForeviiJ.com

Be Your Own boul
. NavorN.t.galn
Earn Up 10~$11000/MO
1·80CHI111'0705

www.CaahNowflndForevar.com
CALL NOWI Work From Homo.
$300·t1500+PT/mo. $2000·
UOOO+FT/mo. Call1·600·225·
7849.
.
excellent Income. Ea1y claims

Public Salt 1nd Auction

PUBliC AUCTION

~ATURDAY, JUNE 9 ·10:oO'A.M.
· NEI::.SONVILLE; OHIO
.

l

~=~lo:tmoving from the area, Robert Todd will offer 1he
Items to be eold al public auction. Mr Todd did
work In hie garage for many yaara. DIRECTIONS:

''Miiii~isii;

n

In Naalonvllle, lum on Chestnut Slree1, behind
gaa llatlon/atore lurn on Seine S1ree1 to 1214

Street, Wa1ch lor llgM.

·

proctttlng.OPPORTUNITY!
Full training. Home·
CAREER
Earn&amp;
PC required. Call Physician
Htalthclrt Developments toll"" 1.fl00.772-111133 EXT 2070
·CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
tKCtlltnt Income. Eaay clalml
proc1111ng. Full·tralnlng. Homa·
PC required. Call Physician &amp;
Haalthcart Developmenta 1011·~88
H00.77H933 Ext. 2070
CHOOSE
YOUR
OWN
HOUAS...Work From Homa.Mall·
Order/Internet $1500·$4500 PT/
FT. Freo Information. (414) 280·
1544 IWIW.IIII,.....•ICCitd.com

CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS ...
Worlc From Home. Maii·Ordarlln·
tarnal $150·$4500 PT/FT. Frae
Information. (414)210·&amp;544
-.hllpnu....ccead.com
EARN J25().$500 per dayl Fill out
nocelll"'· Call1·888·397·1905.

Very nice oak secretory with oolley, China
cabinet, very ·nice oak hi-boy, Oak wash
stand, 4 door oak file cabinet, Round ook
table, Poplar rope bed, Civil war era Shot
pouch, Nice 5 , Gal. wooden ch'u rn,
Frtertdshlp sompler, V'ry nlc' ~~lion of
' ~~'wore, Gl'een ond Slue ~roCks,
early basket, Fenton olass, PoHern Gloss
In mony colors, Depression olau, Oil
lomps, Old dishes &amp; hond palnled china,
Iron s~JIIets, Sad Irons, Misc. old tools,
Adv." Items, Graniteware, Old kitchen
Items, Stands, Choirs, Early bird caoe,
Copper two bowl sink, Don Brldoe tennis
racket, Charley McCarthy dummy, Stone
tars, Cookie jars, Blue &amp;. White
pitcher/bowl, many oood box" Jots, too
much more to list!
~

AUCTIONE.ER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740·388·0823 (HOME) OR
740-245-.9 866 (BARN) ·
"UCENSEDin BDMDED BY STATE OF OHIO''
CASH/ APPROVED CHECK ONLY
GOODFOOD

"MOTRESPO~QLEFORACCIDEMTSORLOST

PROPERTY!"

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thl1 Ia the peraonal property of R.R. "Wick"
Durlt. Located from St. Rt. 124 Just ealt of
Racine, Ohio , take Beahan Rd. (Co. Rd. 28)
to Bald Knob - Stlveravllle Rd. C 31; go
approx. 4 mllea to Durst Rd.; go approx. 1/2
mile to houae on left.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Flat wall cabinet, Chiffrobe, Glass top stand,
Showcase, Office chair, Sled, stands, Stone jar,
Iron bed, Tpols, (Kitchen cabinet w/ flour bin bad shape)
,
School seat, Kayson Fine China Japan ~
"HOUSEHOLD"
Recliner, 6 drawer chest, Dresser, Couch, End
tables, Zenith console TV, Drake Satellite,
Lamps, Bed, dressers, Chest of Drawers,
Stands, Gibson Refrigerator, Table &amp; Chairs,
Hardwick gas range, Mise Chairs, Lots of Unen,
Misc. Pots, pans &amp; dishes, Kenmore automatic
washer, etc.
, : ... ; •• ...:'Ml$C~.LLANEOUS"
Gordon Laughea&lt;! Pennefortes Piano, Step
Jaddsr, old books, File cabinet, Coleman cooler,
Foot locker, Misc. tools, Hand truck, Battery
chargers, Aluminum ladder, Shop Smilh, Weed
eaters, Cable, Wheelbarrows, Lawn chairs &amp;
furniture, Fans, glider &amp; camcorder...
OWNER: ROBERT V. DURST
DAN SMITH· Auctioneer Ohio #1344 WV
#515

'

CASH • POSITIVE 10 • REFRESHMENTS t
"Not reaponelble for accldenta or loae ol propertlf''
Public Sala and Auction

ESTATE

AUCTION
P.M.
Located at the Auction Centsr on
Rt. 33 In Mason, WV. Will be Belling an eatata
from Athans, Oh. Along with 2 local partial

RaJ nice Hoveround batterY wheel chair Paid · over
S6.000.I.ooks brand new.
~URNITURf

Baattful CherrY roP&amp; bed. bautlful French love seat,
oak bed, antique droP leaf lable, 12-tln Pie sate. antique
floor lamPs. couch. wlllll back chair, recliner Plus olher
chairs. coffee table,. oak tables. new home sewlna
machine In Cabinet, metal cabinets. Hoi Point 19.1 cu.
fl. side bl' aide refrlarator. hiiVII dutll RoPer washer,

ext. 2201

DH45840

Own"~""'"
. To_,

STORE EQUIPMENT

I.....------.:..AUCTION
Loctdecl 1 mile north a1 Pl. Ple111nt on At. 112. Will
be ... ling 1he titan equl~ a1 the former Save
A Lot Food Slore.

4 BurroWibs cbecklllla. 5 I. Tee M2300 Scanner
SYStem. Aasortment of 214 drawer file cabinets.
misc. office daka f4J. ISIOrted Hollan scala.
cash tills/and drawers. mati11 food Picture mural$
for wall decor, aast. waterfall sblle banana tables
4116, 1·5' diameter banana table. 1-4· 2-tler
banana table. Ult. cue waterfall tabla. a·
baker~~ dlul111. a· cand11 blnsl'llllreJ. 5K 16' oak
sallld bar. 5' selfserve Eurostllle donut case. 5'
Pastrll case. refrllerated rotatlna cake cue misc.
set of swln~na alum. doors. conVDOr If stands.
13 stock carts. asst. clarette racks, video taPe
roakJ comPartment. wooden baker's table J' K
I0'. new bulk cand11 diSPenser. liS$t. Ice machine
bins If Parts. like new 6' 2-door bill Ice
merchandiser. s· triPle deck oven/Pizza oven GE.
assJ chicken Preuure fMrs (Parts), aut.· proof
boxes fPariiJ. 1·5' cuttlna table. 1·4' cutt1n1 table.
1-Hobart saw. 1-Hoban sllcer, I·SS 3-bowt sink.
4' Hussman hotfoods case. aPProx. 12' x 12'
cooker. ust. meat Platter carta. 8-door master
built freezer case. 36. 'Mer mot else. 25 door
'Mer foozen food case. 6' x 14' HII$SIIlan Produce
Island, 24' Hassman dalfll case. 12' Hussman
smoked mot, a door walldn milk cooler aPProx.
14' x 24•, 24' Hussman meat case. 24' Huasman
Produce case w/mlrrors. aast. lots of uied
conduit, man11 other Items

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773-5785 or 773-5447
OWNER: Robel Eastman
TERMS: CASH Oh CHECK WITH 10. MUST HAVE
BANK LETTER OF CREDIT UNLESS KNOWN TO
At,JCTION CO.

Public Salt and Auction

ESTATE [(
REAL ESTATE

AUCTION

SA

Located at #3 foster St. 'In Mason. wv.
rlaht behind the car w.a sh. Will be selllnll
the
Kroehler
PC. con
r11
• suite.
Mersmen deak, .end tables, Zenith remote
control console TV. Zenith 19" color TV,
bookcase, 3 PC. dlnet set, two PC. barrel
back chair. Basset 3Pc. B.R. suite, 3 PC.
walnut bookcase bead board BR suite.
wardrob
mah. dresser. Slnur sewlnll
machln
new.
Canister s .
or
w
fenton
basket-bell, flllurlnes. oil lamPs. lamPs.
Stonewa
Oak sew
· 2 sets
of flatware. Vltamaster electric treadmill.
kitchen aPPliances, linens. cookware.
books, Christmas decorations, Iron
skillets. ruiiS, Kerosene heater. rod If
reels. tackle box. few nrd tools. alum.
ext. ladder, MTO 8 H.P. rldlnll mower If

110 Help wanted

U ,liZ" hllh Plus other old dolls. antique mirror 8r
Pictures. wooden salllllll $hOP model "Old Iron Sides",
I.L amount of books. ·cook books. comPlete set of How-

• Set Schedule
• Weekly Bonus
• Overtime
Encouraaed
• Every Friday and
Saturday orr
• Paid Vacation
Every 6 Months
• Seven Paid
Holiday•

1-888-237-5342

Dally-·

forme from home. No experience

To EIICIIC;IOPedlas. li. amount of aood box lots Plus

Call now to schedule an
Interview:

•ome knowledge of carptintry.

.................. holpU, aand
......,.10 The
PO
Box m-oe, Poonllioy, Olo.

Needed Experleraced Crew for
SeHing and Finlahing Soctionll
~- Bend ""'*'8 lobn II o
and tlq)erience to: Southern
Hamn. PO Bow: 821, JacliiiOft,

I ;l;" ; K . -

•

.,

ATTENTION: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up to $500·$2500 port
time. Full·tralnlng. 1·800·879·

pan----·

Maintenance Ptrton wanted tor

,,

""8

......_.

LJceniOd ~ t.ooldng For
Http. Elpartenco NOll N.-oary
(304)m-t835

110 Help 'We11lld
-(740)4411
7 ~To
Bel Awn Col
'358
'

...................
.,.....,c., ...... _

--C"':'-----In Need Of An Experienced TV

$87,000.00

Slreot, Mlddlopon. Sunday only
ANYONE CAN DO ITI S25/S75/ am&amp; pm - · 740-774-8433.
HR·FT·FT. WORK AT HOME· 1·
IIQOo37._1
www.Thlnld!lgDolarl.com

Help Wantlld

Ho•••orkera Needed $835
Weekly Procoaalnf M~llj Eaayl
1
No ~·"*
Col

-.---.com

nudedl Work in your areal

110

......~.com

-[)apt. 11011
.
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS 1-tOO«&lt;Z-872eEld2070.Z4tn
HELPI Work IJom homel Mal..,.· 11 you hevo 10 to 75 pounda to
der/E-Commooco. $522+- PT lou, we pay you 111. Hl88·237·
SHI00·$4000/Wk FT. .Amaz· 0381
ingGoala.oom (1100) 272-!1843

Income . PC required. 1·

888-44H7730&gt;d.222.

7oiG«7-etm.

Church with Parsonage
·and 7 Acres

ATTENTibN: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up to $50(1.~,300 pan.
lime. Full·tralnlng. 1'·600·878·

O'BLENNES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL bas
an Immediate part·tlme opening In the Soc:lal
Services · Department.
The quallfted
candidate will be licensed by the Ohio
Counselo" . and
Social Work Board.
Experience as a social worker in a health care
environment Is reqqlred. We offer a very
competitive salary range, comprehensive
benefit package, Individualized orientation, as
well as excellent education ilnd other related
benefits.
Applications can be picked up in
Human Resources
55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio
592-9227
EOE

... ........,, f.74().992.(1388.

FREE lntotnll, 1·800·211 · llti•...;.,kn-·

at::: I

AIIYOIII CAll DO ITI 121nS711/
HJI.I'I'/FT, WOlf&lt; ot hOfne. , _

lor advlli1COin
-ACCESS TO ACOMPUTJ:R? .. and
Put ' to Wot!&lt;l 12Mor·S75/11. PT/ mant . If you art a team player
FT. FREE Info. II00-87to8045 ex!. who eniOYI worlltng wHIIIIle II·
eo1 www.Wo• tHr com
doily, ~ apply In bel·
w-11-4 or call Diane Harlni,
...ACCESS TO ACOIIPUTER7 RN, Ohclti' DlfUitog.
Put Mto WOII&lt;I 12Mor·f1511l . PT/
FT. FREE Info. 881·887·•18•

110 Help Wanted

full time auctioneer, complete
auction
atrvlce.
Llcenaed

Gold Cclno, Procloots, Dlamondol,
Gold Ringo, U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Coin snop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-448-2842.

Put I to PUor-475. PT/FT.
FREE tniD. 8Mifl3.0732

toGIIa~~~g-. LlC

3091 .

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Sliver.

DelmarQyde
"Houdini" Cook

ASSEMBLY AT .HOM Ell Crallo,
Typlng ...G1eat Payl CALL J.fiO(l.
785-0380 Exll 201 .(24hl8)

...ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

day -.Spm, -~. eam.apm.

I and PD1a111 good··=0:.:10pt=t..:1=011:.._____ ,1835_,.,fii'OC .....
'YPtne
akllo.
You
....,
_
,
r:aavt No e r • " " -·
With lllt.publlo: Md bo ovalable EAAN 125,tJOO.IfiO,OOO/yr,lladl· Coll-1Q0..4110o!H50Z41n.

Toya, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,

Large Garage Sale, 3/4 Miles Out .

87 On Laft, June 1ol· 3rd

who moota

110 Help 'Wel1111d
110 Help W.1111d
110 Help ·ortatasd
110 HelpW&amp;Ihlt
Medicol biHing Aaoi....,t """OCI
DRIVERS: Paid 2 WHI&lt; CDL Harris StHkhouao - Hiring. MIIQI COUNTY COMPANY . o y t FT/PT Will Train. EJc.
Trolnlng. No _..,,.. naadad. (304)f75-m5
leAl
-IIQUITJ:
OPENIIIOI
In adient income. PC required. 1 ~
!3A4~00T/yr. plua Full benoiKa.
thit area. No e)(l)erienee neen· ... 448 1773 Elrl. 222
c. .m . ranaporl. Drivara beNd
Head vanity Volleyball Coach ,
Medical Biling Alslatant naedad
Itt Mid JU 1--ln-230«102. sun- Math T - (7·12 Corlificdolo),
· - 11200
, . - 1 month
10 start
dlaoely,
to lmmo·
otart, aalarie• •• per Malter Agr••·
. o y l FT/PT Will Tllin. Ex·

· the lollo:!"9 roquiremonta, then EARN 125,tJOO.IfiO,OOO/yr. Mad~
)IIOlH .. darour..-po. c a t - - . g. -Jmo
- ..
m«l lyf Ccmpular - ·

=P~I~ ~~lao-~"""'

t E'.\PLOYf.\ EtJT

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

... Jary. lr you •r• an
: and r~trldly Pilton

6auap ltitDH • 6talintl • Page 03

Pomeroy • lll~dlsport • GIIUipolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

ilatkllllit Ul. •••lllllllltl.tllllllllll
"""""""""'.i
I I itlll,llllllallllna
(IIJIIIIllrotllfdJU- •:

Press. Delta 16" scroll saw. Trl Star 4" belt and 6"
diK. sander, Penncraft drill Press, Buffalo 4"
croll/slide ,vise. Fenner 12 volt hYdraulic motor. BirD
Quantum Pro, 1 114" circular saw. Della universal
·wet/drY arlnder. Dalllon 1/J H.P. Electric motor, metal
storue bOK full of nuts 8r bolts, storaQe chest wiPullout
drawers. dremel rouler 8r drill Press attachments.
a~~tetlllne hoses. ouies, torches. small air
comPressor. wood Planes. 112 drive Sk Sockets. end
wrenches. Craltsman sockets. and much more.

riiiUI4 ........ II Ill .....

1\o!sldllt

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

P.O. llll!lll•lullflal, 1181111 • Rl: ..IIW!II

773-5785 or 773-5447
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

Eqol """"""E. .lllllll

'•

REAL ESTATE WILL BE OFFERED
AT 12:00 NOON

Nice home consistl·u ol L.R .. kitchen.
famllll room, bath room. 2 bedrpoms If
1aundr11 room with carPort. out bulldlnll.
Vln111 If brick sldlnll, attic. new heat
PUmP. Sets on a 60 x 105 lot m/1. Real
estate belnll sold as Is with owners
confirmation-reserve. Vlew.lnll will be held
on frldn. June 8 from 10:00 am to 2:00
Pm or call.

-AUCTION CONDUaED BY
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
304·773·1781 OR 304·773·1447
Co Executors: Vlrglnle Darst
&amp; Worthy Rogers
Terms: Cash Pr check with 10.
Terms on real estate 10% down on sale
dav nPn refundable. Balance due In 30 da11
or at closlnl.
·
,,

· ~

�Sundey, June 3, 2001
••
: We are
• County

•1*1·~

-

o..

Sf"'· IC [_ S

Full-time
Permanent
Positions
Available

HelpWanted
S1200 WEEI&lt;LY POSSIBLE PflO.
2:1111 p.m.
CESSING 400 Inquiry En........
tlt. .CIIIIlo run.
. FtM- I pujlllioo, 7 wb, 2 m. 4 I,
ao Homo. Euy Worll. Call 1.aoo.
-.olayed-2:00 p.m. -~-g&lt;l(ld
7M-2027- (24tn)
I llil.,..lllill, --3145
You will be 11111klng
Unwood Drive, Sheela'. Table, "OWN ACOMPUTER? PUT IT
fuildl'lllalng calls on
- d Your Child F01 AGrnl Clotloao. Etc.
TO WORKf• UP TD SZ1H7a lilt
6c:l!ool Yur With KIHena. To A
blhalf of cun.nt
3 Family, Inside Garage, PT/fT 1 • •.-n~
. . .cila to run.
Goad-·Col (740)441-1707 lArge
AlpUbllcen party
Lota 01- Bualnna Ctollllng, $2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
II andtrv I dillon 1:00 p.m.
Slzto 9·10 ThiU 20, Baby Clothea,
70
YardSale
Houlthold
wears.
some
Furnl·
brochureal
Satlafacllon
Guar·
1
- and currwnt
Frlclly.
turo, Slate Route 325 S, Outoido antoadl Pootega &amp; Suppllta pr..
RlpUbllcen party
"P"T'B grew n:z·
Rio Grande, Starting June Sth· vldedl Rush Self-Addressed
ttl
Gallipolis
candidates.
July
30111, 931Jmo.5:30
~~~~~~~,.~~
Rill .., 4:30 p.m.
&amp; VIcinity
$7.00 per hour
Moving Solo· 9 MillO Out 218, 7011-1438 Start tmmeclalely.
• lllollllel' IIIII OII.
3
Fllllily Yonl S.. June Ill, 2nd, •th 6 51h, Everything
'l1llnMy.
I2,000
WEEKLY!
Mailing
oo
4
2&amp;3, 8·5pm, Grenctvlew Helghta,
Rlu• bonua and
"D II ill,_ ..llljlct to
brochureel Satitfactlon
Golllpalla, Ohio, Route 1110. L&lt;&gt;ve ~ Go/
• overtime
chel. . . . . ID ltollclap"
&amp; Lorge Sola. eer.. Upright Satuidoy, June 2nd, 7am To ?IJ antoadl Poatage &amp;
vldedl Ruoh
Large Tool Box, Knick Knacks, Wakllillcl, 111 Ever, Lola 01
arampa&lt;t
We offer: Set
Toole, (New) Canning Jiua, Everything!
5,80k1,
TN
Lornpo.
echedulae, Full
i\ IIII IJ'I'JC U.1 t II I,,
Pomeroy,
azorH438. Siar11nmad~ ·
3 Family Yard Sale, 148 Lila
Middleport
lo!IO.OO·SI ,000.00 WEEKLY bentflta, Holiday pay,
Drlva, Addlaon Ohio. Saturday
&amp;
VIcinity
Malting Littell From Homo. No P11d YICitlona, Every
2nd, tam·5pm &amp; Sunday 3rd,
nece111ry. FT/PT.
Baby Clothn. Houaa· s f8mly yanr - . Juno 5111 &amp; IIIII, eXRtrfenct
Halp Naaded lmmedlalttyt Call Friday and saturday ofl
FREE SEAACHI
1111 Fourth Stroot, Now Haven,
'SUNDANCE DISTRIBUTORS' 1· Welldy bonua, WMidy
- .SINGLES.com
Friday, Saturday, &amp; Sunday, Ducanl-000,
-o4255EXT81.(24HRS.)
paycheck lnd IIIOI'elll
FREE SEARCH!
Mm·1 , 1/4 Mila Out Route 211,
Lola 01 Klda Clothaa, Boyl/ Gl~l 5114 Uncotn, Mlddtapon (Pea~ &amp; 1828 WEEKLY mailing lellara
- .siNCiLES.com
- ) . er.lt, e/01 , floW, a.11, crafl from home. Full or part·tlme. Nt&gt; 1 888 237-5342
START DATING TONIGHT! lnllni· 10Yen
Items, furniture , houaewaree,
nperltnee ntcMIIfY. Euyt My
Have lun mHIIng eligible alnglaa
-~clotlolng.
ho.ulll Call u.s. Digeat1·117·
ext. 2301
· In your area. Tall-free 1·800~
52Q.II071 a• hour~·
ROMANCE, ext. 9'135
Garage Ilia· Ewing roaldenco, 1.:=:::::;::;;:;;~;;;;
300 Fou~ St-. Pomeroy, Ohio II
Why walt? Start meatlng Ohio
4571111, Mon. 1/4, Tuaa., 11/11, 8am·
LOOK I NO
slngleo 1onlgh1 1·800·785·2823
4prn, .
IXI18.21.
Huge multifamily garage aalo,
FOR A
30 Announcementa
Juno 8·8, Court Stretl Rd .. off
Momlngalar, ra1n, thine. ·
CHANGE?
A~entlon~ l'am doing gene•lour
242 Third Avenue
•
of the Koenig 6 Kraeuter/Krlder
·June 2·3, moving eale, Hysell
Galllpolla, OH 4S831
famll~. need Information, I can be
Run, household ltema, tools,
· reached at my E-Mail addreu,
knick-knacks, gotdfilh , rain or
$987.~EEKLYI Procoaalng
l1191alnas@aol.com
shine.
HUD/FH.t. Mortgage Aolunda. No
New To You Thrift Shoppo
E&gt;&lt;Potlence Required. FREE lnlor·
Juna 4 65, IIIH family yard lalo,
9 West srtmson. Athena
mellon Call 1·600·501·8832 elll.
3 miltl out 554 from red light in
740.592·1842
1300 www.projectralund.corri
Chethlte, clothing all alze1, air
'
Quality clolhlng and houoehold
condltlonar,
mloc. ~-.
lnfoCialon
haa
what
Items. $1 .00 bag sale every
"ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
Thursday. Monday thru Saturdav
Put R to Workl ~25/hr·$75/ltr. FTI
Large ..... June 1' 2, 3, 4,
you
are
looking
fori
9:00-6:00.
PT. FREE Info. 888·837·7128
trucker over the road equipment
Stov8, Pill Sola &amp;End
T - . Choir, TreadmiU, Clolhn.
hOUIIhOid lloma, Etc. June 8&amp;
11411. 5 1 - OriYo
Juno lsi, 2nd a 3rd, 91m·? :130

110

2.,. .,.,_ ......

:::':.C·

iiiC::

..

···c··
Ill II

0

...

To Be

Happy Ad

FIFTY!?!
Oh, Well...

---:-=---_..;.-'
In Memory
M

n emory

~
o1

David Cantrell

.._ 1, 1.m.JUM3, , . .

I mill your Iough,
your1mlle
The twinkle In your eye.
I ml111he time• we
1harec:t togelher
And regret not having
the chance to 10y
goodbye.
You'll alway1 be In my
heart and on my mind.

b.

Love.
~ Aunl

.J
...:Jfi

In Memory

and tomethlng for everybody
else, Stewart l..anD Muon,

Ralner/Hud1on Garage sale,
Tackervllle Rd., Racine, June .Cth,
5•h. trunk, .furniture, microwave,
collecllblas, misc.

Rutland Now Lima Ad, 1 4/10

miln N'. June 4, 5, e, five families.

Yard sale Hubbards', 4-5, Racine
take county road 28 to McKenzie

Ridge follow olgno.

Pt. Plt1unt
&amp; VIcinity
Gigantic Yard Sal• Friday l Sat·
urday, June lsi &amp; 2nd, Routa 62
North Above Wost Columbia La·
kin Hoapllot Cleaning Building,
Antlquee, Glaeaware, Clothing,
And Toyo.

www.dtakehockjeyOaarlhllnk.nel

We offer:
• Up to $7/hour +
weekly bonu1ea
• Full time ahlft with
Friday and Saturday
off
• Full b8naflta
• WHkly paycheck
• Paid vacation
, • Paid holldaya
• 'Rstlrement plan

Call TODAY for
an lntervlewl

Auction
and Flea Market
Auction $undty Juno 3rd, 2pm,

80

1ree cookout, hamburgers , hot
dogs to all buyera Iota of new &amp;

.Ul8d Hemt, 740-892·9273.

Country Corner Flea · Market

1·866-475·7223
ext. 1901
or
Vlalt our Gallipolis
location at
242 Third Avenue
Galllpolla, OH

open, Thurs., F~ .. Sat., Sun.. 1011
of goodleo, Torch, Oh. 740·687·
Rick Pearaon Auction Company,

June 2, 1956 • Feb. 19, 1999

186,0hlo &amp; Welt VIrginia, 304·
773·5785 Or 304·773-5447.
90 Wanted to Buy

Houdlne today on
your birthday.

'M, 7r•t·~
'''""
~~etc
s.,efel

1f ,..¥'. ...,. ...,.·
'Itt~"' •""' ., do

t.-.

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"-·ut do~¥ ....

~.....u--.

'lr-ut.,....

f---4d Cf'U.Hlf .

"--·

"-· • • ....C'/M41

We will remember
the good dmes
And the happy
memories Of you.
You will always be
on our hearts
And minds undl we
meet again .
Love,
Your wife Mary
Your children, and
gr andchlldren

Card of Thanks
The Family
Webster Dewitt
would like to express our
heartfelt gratitude to all of you
who showed us kindness, love
and support in so many waya
during the Ulness and recent

death of our beloved husband,
father, and grandfather, who left
us to be with God nine days
bcfo~

his 9151 birthday.

A spedalthanks &amp;oes out to the

Holzer Home Heallb COle team
· espcc:ially Maudie Spry and
1ulie Wamsley · and to the
doctor~ and staff at.Scenlc Hills
Nunlna: Center who made Jlia
Ill)' there 11 comfonable ••

)

poulblo for him and hl1 family
Amlllloa 11- we'" aatded you.
Amillion dm• we'" crted.
If love c.ld ha., saved you
You aever woald hlft died.
l.a lire WI loYed JOU daeriJ
Ia daatll we love yollaUU.
In our lleartno rou hold I place,
That DD DDI 1111 ~ft flU.
It bnoke out burlto to IDH you,
Butrou did aot ao alone.
For (W1 uf uo weal wllb you
The tla God took au home.

Yes you can•••
Make a
difference!
lnfoclolon employees help
11111ke a dltrereace In
thousands of lives around
the world every day. We
otrer a &amp;real learnln11
environment with
experienced employees on
hand to help at alltlme1.
We are always loo~nl! for
new Communicators to
handle fundralslng calls
1by phone throuxh a
computedzed dialer
system.
Full-time
Perinanent
·Positions Available

www...,u, L~lr com

...ACCESS TO ACOUPUTJ:R7
Put • to Wartnl 82111hr·S1511tr. PT/
FT. FREE Info. 881·887·4184
wuu ~ IUon B'l com

O'BLSNBSS

IJt-1411
tn.oom

"*'
P&lt;lllllon, then oubmlla

lor
': Ill _.,.......
1 JUU . .
I J In

www.ThinkBigDol·

&amp;!Mfl'- Myrelpp Septer II IC·

coptin{opplk:allons lor all lhifta,
We orfef ex~llenl benefitl that
lncludl Htalth lnturance, 40tK,
Life lnauranco, compotHiva wag.

_..,.,lllaa

- EaatllalnSINot
Nurliifl CeJ1IIr

"" Ilion aaz oom

"

~. Ohio
..UMMIII WORK• ...12 Baae/
(740)887-301111
A!IIJL• ~ .-...! '01 HS
EOE
'
Graduatll, "l:ntry Level Svc/
aoloa. Conditione Apply. Open· Art You Connected? learn
lngo Throughout T~'Stato Area, How To Earn Onllno Income!
(304)552-40!4
$2, 175· $3875 Poi llonth.

raoumo lo tho addreaa
bo-byJI.r!afS,200I.
Community Action Ia -lng 11o0
llborera for tho Waothorlzatlon
.,..., Thla Ia a ~ 1u0poaHion. Send or dotlver naoume
and referencea to GMCAA, 11•
11n11on s. Edwatda, 11010 N. Slate
Route 7, Chnhlro, Ohio 45820
byti-15-0I.GMCMiaonEOE. .
Crow Mambar, 25·30 houra - · Mondoy lllru Friday. ,.pjjij
In P8f10n at W
. G. GrinaOra 120
Wool Union Stroet Athonl OH
41701 .

•

'

'

Driv.,. noadad 1o .,...,.,., cero
10 &amp; lrom auctlono, call 740-1112·
11088 I0.1Hio&gt;t1L

...,-..WI

www.wkb1tt.identl.~

ad.

. . ..-=. .-

~.
740·185·3328, Mr. Dory!
Well,

www.

A JOB ·FOR YOU II DRIVERS AAE YOU' cONNECTED?
NEEDED NOWIII E•p'd Colli·
USERS WANTED!
800·851·2353 No lxporlonco7 INTERNET
~R·PT/FT
No Problaml 14 Day CDL· 10 WWN,~rN.ODm
.'
Down Financing LIFETIME JOB
PLACEMENTIII CALL TODAY I· ""' yoU ·look~ior lliio "-'"nl·
aoo 4.48 n n ·
ty to Join a winning ttam and be·
.....
pert ol .... lllowlnCI ABBOWTELY FREE INFO
cart
lntluauy7
Scerilc HHII Null·
I-Uonlng
Center Ia ollorlng Nuroo Aide
12000.1f1000/1n
Training Cluon monthly. II 11 a
www.HOiiitllbiz.nlt
75 hour courto, tailing lor 11
daya. Manday lhrough Friday
ACHIEVE THE AMERICAN 8:30
10 4:30. Thla Ia a great op.
DREAMIHIGh
Wyou
i11U11 Pollnllal.
- · - f'T/
at portunllyl The ne&gt;d clau will be·
homo.
Income
gin In July. Stop by loday lor an
FT. Full1'rU!Ing. Free Booklll. 1· appllcellon
or cantecl Stophinla
tll(l.337-Kempor, lnatructor, at (740)44f. '
7130
ACHIEVE THE AMERICAN
DREAM! II you wort&lt;, work at ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES Ia chango 'our '
home. High lncomo Potential. PT/ lllolll
PT/FT at home. 820·L24·
FT. 11111 Tralnlrig. FJH Bookllt. 1·
8400. wwwkhlaYoDrMma.com
1100.337-5320
www.k•IICII-IIdlr.com
ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
ACTORS/MOOELSI Notwork Hlr· 10 MINUTES ·to chango your
lng all ages! No Experience lifo?? PTIFT at home. 920·924·

cal lnaunlnce Biting, 1m.
mGI , 4'1 Home Comput8r NMd·
od. FREE lnter~ot. 1·800·281·

...ttent

Public Sale and Auction

8400. -k1111¥a01eama.com

"' http://WWW.modllrep.cam/
'T1m5880

Church planl•t or organllt need·
ad lor HOpe 8lplllt Church, Gront

Phone: 1·38D·II13·10il Dept.

Hanger Proathollcl &amp; Orthot1c1 Technician. Houro Ate Fleklble,
Sell&lt;a Ol!lc:e PolloMol For Gall~ Poy 8ued On El&lt;pao11noa. Band
potll, Ol1lce Facility Lllcadon. [)u. Reaume a Roleroncoa To: C&amp;C
llnlndude R«:opplon, Schadul· Eloctronk: Repair, 407 3rd A¥1·
lng, lnauranco BlUing. COmputer ,.,.,.~,~-~&gt;la~DH~4~583~1!...___
·Offlco Uaago Required. Plaoae - ' 4 4
Calll-5811-~1 Or Fu R•
- t o (7411)353 411118

....... -.c..·: ,-.
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-...........
....-...,.
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......._,

~~~~~~~--

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... llilo .. _ _

FOR SALE

-·

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,

IIDIIE&amp;

llrnll

FIMIJ,- 8,1:30 ••m.
8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35)
Ohio

eee Good Sole with Nice Vorlety ofltems •••

oMOI www.qulckcaahnow.com/

ER

Locotecl at 824' South Second In Mldldle~tJ
Ohio. 11'111 11 the personal property of the
0.01'98 A. Ebersback.

JOBS

"HOUSEHOLD''

·S6-S7/HR

''

I

. ;• •

ThomaiYIIIe 4 pC:. bedroom sulte,t2 pc .
bedroom suite, 2 pc.llvlno room suite,
Emerson portable TV&amp;. stand, Table&amp;. chairs,
Imperial refriQeratar, Melal double wardrobe,
Couch, Round coffee table, Desh &amp;. Chair, bed,
ChHt ofDrawet 1, Lamps, Odd Choirs, Golllp
bench, Misc. Dlihes, Rocker, Stands, Pots &amp;
Pans, lrrtCIU n191, Step stool, Fire Kino mlxlno
bowl, Eureka Bravo uprtoht iwHper, Pipe
stand &amp; other Items.
.~
"MISCELLANEOUS"
Porcllswtno, ~~truck topper, 2 sets of oolf
dubs, Push mower, HI-wheel mower, Four
atrlno trimmers, oqs can, Tool chest, Misc.
tools, Lawn chairs, Fons, Electric heater, Shop
Vac&amp;etc•••
JOHN EBERSaACK - Exe- Ca .. l317 89
DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER- Ot,Jo 11344 WV

fasg lndHr work·
nexlble hours .
full/part Hme hillY! .
.Positions fllUng
quickly!!
1-818-974-JOBS

MEDICAL SOCIAL
SERVICE ASSISTANT

1515

·cash e PosHJve ID • Refreshments Available
"ttooiiBpontlble tora«&lt;tlents or lou of property' .

4808. www.qulckcalhnow.com/

Jambagan

ATTENTION:

WORK FROM HOME

·up 10
~
MAIL ORDER (886)821.(1888
AVONI All Areaal To Buy or Sell.
Shi~ey Spea11, 304·875-1429.
AVON· Looking lor higher In ·.
come? More flexible hours? lnde·
pondenca? AVON hat what
you're looking for. Ltt't talk.
(118)581-21188.
' BeYourOwnBooll
-ll-5egaln
EamUpTo
I

H

Ns.oo. m.oo.~~r f'T/FT

130(l.MOOO/M0

PTIFT
f oiOO.e1().0705

WNN.CBihNowAndForeviiJ.com

Be Your Own boul
. NavorN.t.galn
Earn Up 10~$11000/MO
1·80CHI111'0705

www.CaahNowflndForevar.com
CALL NOWI Work From Homo.
$300·t1500+PT/mo. $2000·
UOOO+FT/mo. Call1·600·225·
7849.
.
excellent Income. Ea1y claims

Public Salt 1nd Auction

PUBliC AUCTION

~ATURDAY, JUNE 9 ·10:oO'A.M.
· NEI::.SONVILLE; OHIO
.

l

~=~lo:tmoving from the area, Robert Todd will offer 1he
Items to be eold al public auction. Mr Todd did
work In hie garage for many yaara. DIRECTIONS:

''Miiii~isii;

n

In Naalonvllle, lum on Chestnut Slree1, behind
gaa llatlon/atore lurn on Seine S1ree1 to 1214

Street, Wa1ch lor llgM.

·

proctttlng.OPPORTUNITY!
Full training. Home·
CAREER
Earn&amp;
PC required. Call Physician
Htalthclrt Developments toll"" 1.fl00.772-111133 EXT 2070
·CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
tKCtlltnt Income. Eaay clalml
proc1111ng. Full·tralnlng. Homa·
PC required. Call Physician &amp;
Haalthcart Developmenta 1011·~88
H00.77H933 Ext. 2070
CHOOSE
YOUR
OWN
HOUAS...Work From Homa.Mall·
Order/Internet $1500·$4500 PT/
FT. Freo Information. (414) 280·
1544 IWIW.IIII,.....•ICCitd.com

CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS ...
Worlc From Home. Maii·Ordarlln·
tarnal $150·$4500 PT/FT. Frae
Information. (414)210·&amp;544
-.hllpnu....ccead.com
EARN J25().$500 per dayl Fill out
nocelll"'· Call1·888·397·1905.

Very nice oak secretory with oolley, China
cabinet, very ·nice oak hi-boy, Oak wash
stand, 4 door oak file cabinet, Round ook
table, Poplar rope bed, Civil war era Shot
pouch, Nice 5 , Gal. wooden ch'u rn,
Frtertdshlp sompler, V'ry nlc' ~~lion of
' ~~'wore, Gl'een ond Slue ~roCks,
early basket, Fenton olass, PoHern Gloss
In mony colors, Depression olau, Oil
lomps, Old dishes &amp; hond palnled china,
Iron s~JIIets, Sad Irons, Misc. old tools,
Adv." Items, Graniteware, Old kitchen
Items, Stands, Choirs, Early bird caoe,
Copper two bowl sink, Don Brldoe tennis
racket, Charley McCarthy dummy, Stone
tars, Cookie jars, Blue &amp;. White
pitcher/bowl, many oood box" Jots, too
much more to list!
~

AUCTIONE.ER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740·388·0823 (HOME) OR
740-245-.9 866 (BARN) ·
"UCENSEDin BDMDED BY STATE OF OHIO''
CASH/ APPROVED CHECK ONLY
GOODFOOD

"MOTRESPO~QLEFORACCIDEMTSORLOST

PROPERTY!"

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thl1 Ia the peraonal property of R.R. "Wick"
Durlt. Located from St. Rt. 124 Just ealt of
Racine, Ohio , take Beahan Rd. (Co. Rd. 28)
to Bald Knob - Stlveravllle Rd. C 31; go
approx. 4 mllea to Durst Rd.; go approx. 1/2
mile to houae on left.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Flat wall cabinet, Chiffrobe, Glass top stand,
Showcase, Office chair, Sled, stands, Stone jar,
Iron bed, Tpols, (Kitchen cabinet w/ flour bin bad shape)
,
School seat, Kayson Fine China Japan ~
"HOUSEHOLD"
Recliner, 6 drawer chest, Dresser, Couch, End
tables, Zenith console TV, Drake Satellite,
Lamps, Bed, dressers, Chest of Drawers,
Stands, Gibson Refrigerator, Table &amp; Chairs,
Hardwick gas range, Mise Chairs, Lots of Unen,
Misc. Pots, pans &amp; dishes, Kenmore automatic
washer, etc.
, : ... ; •• ...:'Ml$C~.LLANEOUS"
Gordon Laughea&lt;! Pennefortes Piano, Step
Jaddsr, old books, File cabinet, Coleman cooler,
Foot locker, Misc. tools, Hand truck, Battery
chargers, Aluminum ladder, Shop Smilh, Weed
eaters, Cable, Wheelbarrows, Lawn chairs &amp;
furniture, Fans, glider &amp; camcorder...
OWNER: ROBERT V. DURST
DAN SMITH· Auctioneer Ohio #1344 WV
#515

'

CASH • POSITIVE 10 • REFRESHMENTS t
"Not reaponelble for accldenta or loae ol propertlf''
Public Sala and Auction

ESTATE

AUCTION
P.M.
Located at the Auction Centsr on
Rt. 33 In Mason, WV. Will be Belling an eatata
from Athans, Oh. Along with 2 local partial

RaJ nice Hoveround batterY wheel chair Paid · over
S6.000.I.ooks brand new.
~URNITURf

Baattful CherrY roP&amp; bed. bautlful French love seat,
oak bed, antique droP leaf lable, 12-tln Pie sate. antique
floor lamPs. couch. wlllll back chair, recliner Plus olher
chairs. coffee table,. oak tables. new home sewlna
machine In Cabinet, metal cabinets. Hoi Point 19.1 cu.
fl. side bl' aide refrlarator. hiiVII dutll RoPer washer,

ext. 2201

DH45840

Own"~""'"
. To_,

STORE EQUIPMENT

I.....------.:..AUCTION
Loctdecl 1 mile north a1 Pl. Ple111nt on At. 112. Will
be ... ling 1he titan equl~ a1 the former Save
A Lot Food Slore.

4 BurroWibs cbecklllla. 5 I. Tee M2300 Scanner
SYStem. Aasortment of 214 drawer file cabinets.
misc. office daka f4J. ISIOrted Hollan scala.
cash tills/and drawers. mati11 food Picture mural$
for wall decor, aast. waterfall sblle banana tables
4116, 1·5' diameter banana table. 1-4· 2-tler
banana table. Ult. cue waterfall tabla. a·
baker~~ dlul111. a· cand11 blnsl'llllreJ. 5K 16' oak
sallld bar. 5' selfserve Eurostllle donut case. 5'
Pastrll case. refrllerated rotatlna cake cue misc.
set of swln~na alum. doors. conVDOr If stands.
13 stock carts. asst. clarette racks, video taPe
roakJ comPartment. wooden baker's table J' K
I0'. new bulk cand11 diSPenser. liS$t. Ice machine
bins If Parts. like new 6' 2-door bill Ice
merchandiser. s· triPle deck oven/Pizza oven GE.
assJ chicken Preuure fMrs (Parts), aut.· proof
boxes fPariiJ. 1·5' cuttlna table. 1·4' cutt1n1 table.
1-Hobart saw. 1-Hoban sllcer, I·SS 3-bowt sink.
4' Hussman hotfoods case. aPProx. 12' x 12'
cooker. ust. meat Platter carta. 8-door master
built freezer case. 36. 'Mer mot else. 25 door
'Mer foozen food case. 6' x 14' HII$SIIlan Produce
Island, 24' Hassman dalfll case. 12' Hussman
smoked mot, a door walldn milk cooler aPProx.
14' x 24•, 24' Hussman meat case. 24' Huasman
Produce case w/mlrrors. aast. lots of uied
conduit, man11 other Items

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773-5785 or 773-5447
OWNER: Robel Eastman
TERMS: CASH Oh CHECK WITH 10. MUST HAVE
BANK LETTER OF CREDIT UNLESS KNOWN TO
At,JCTION CO.

Public Salt and Auction

ESTATE [(
REAL ESTATE

AUCTION

SA

Located at #3 foster St. 'In Mason. wv.
rlaht behind the car w.a sh. Will be selllnll
the
Kroehler
PC. con
r11
• suite.
Mersmen deak, .end tables, Zenith remote
control console TV. Zenith 19" color TV,
bookcase, 3 PC. dlnet set, two PC. barrel
back chair. Basset 3Pc. B.R. suite, 3 PC.
walnut bookcase bead board BR suite.
wardrob
mah. dresser. Slnur sewlnll
machln
new.
Canister s .
or
w
fenton
basket-bell, flllurlnes. oil lamPs. lamPs.
Stonewa
Oak sew
· 2 sets
of flatware. Vltamaster electric treadmill.
kitchen aPPliances, linens. cookware.
books, Christmas decorations, Iron
skillets. ruiiS, Kerosene heater. rod If
reels. tackle box. few nrd tools. alum.
ext. ladder, MTO 8 H.P. rldlnll mower If

110 Help wanted

U ,liZ" hllh Plus other old dolls. antique mirror 8r
Pictures. wooden salllllll $hOP model "Old Iron Sides",
I.L amount of books. ·cook books. comPlete set of How-

• Set Schedule
• Weekly Bonus
• Overtime
Encouraaed
• Every Friday and
Saturday orr
• Paid Vacation
Every 6 Months
• Seven Paid
Holiday•

1-888-237-5342

Dally-·

forme from home. No experience

To EIICIIC;IOPedlas. li. amount of aood box lots Plus

Call now to schedule an
Interview:

•ome knowledge of carptintry.

.................. holpU, aand
......,.10 The
PO
Box m-oe, Poonllioy, Olo.

Needed Experleraced Crew for
SeHing and Finlahing Soctionll
~- Bend ""'*'8 lobn II o
and tlq)erience to: Southern
Hamn. PO Bow: 821, JacliiiOft,

I ;l;" ; K . -

•

.,

ATTENTION: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up to $500·$2500 port
time. Full·tralnlng. 1·800·879·

pan----·

Maintenance Ptrton wanted tor

,,

""8

......_.

LJceniOd ~ t.ooldng For
Http. Elpartenco NOll N.-oary
(304)m-t835

110 Help 'We11lld
-(740)4411
7 ~To
Bel Awn Col
'358
'

...................
.,.....,c., ...... _

--C"':'-----In Need Of An Experienced TV

$87,000.00

Slreot, Mlddlopon. Sunday only
ANYONE CAN DO ITI S25/S75/ am&amp; pm - · 740-774-8433.
HR·FT·FT. WORK AT HOME· 1·
IIQOo37._1
www.Thlnld!lgDolarl.com

Help Wantlld

Ho•••orkera Needed $835
Weekly Procoaalnf M~llj Eaayl
1
No ~·"*
Col

-.---.com

nudedl Work in your areal

110

......~.com

-[)apt. 11011
.
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS 1-tOO«&lt;Z-872eEld2070.Z4tn
HELPI Work IJom homel Mal..,.· 11 you hevo 10 to 75 pounda to
der/E-Commooco. $522+- PT lou, we pay you 111. Hl88·237·
SHI00·$4000/Wk FT. .Amaz· 0381
ingGoala.oom (1100) 272-!1843

Income . PC required. 1·

888-44H7730&gt;d.222.

7oiG«7-etm.

Church with Parsonage
·and 7 Acres

ATTENTibN: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up to $50(1.~,300 pan.
lime. Full·tralnlng. 1'·600·878·

O'BLENNES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL bas
an Immediate part·tlme opening In the Soc:lal
Services · Department.
The quallfted
candidate will be licensed by the Ohio
Counselo" . and
Social Work Board.
Experience as a social worker in a health care
environment Is reqqlred. We offer a very
competitive salary range, comprehensive
benefit package, Individualized orientation, as
well as excellent education ilnd other related
benefits.
Applications can be picked up in
Human Resources
55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio
592-9227
EOE

... ........,, f.74().992.(1388.

FREE lntotnll, 1·800·211 · llti•...;.,kn-·

at::: I

AIIYOIII CAll DO ITI 121nS711/
HJI.I'I'/FT, WOlf&lt; ot hOfne. , _

lor advlli1COin
-ACCESS TO ACOMPUTJ:R? .. and
Put ' to Wot!&lt;l 12Mor·S75/11. PT/ mant . If you art a team player
FT. FREE Info. II00-87to8045 ex!. who eniOYI worlltng wHIIIIle II·
eo1 www.Wo• tHr com
doily, ~ apply In bel·
w-11-4 or call Diane Harlni,
...ACCESS TO ACOIIPUTER7 RN, Ohclti' DlfUitog.
Put Mto WOII&lt;I 12Mor·f1511l . PT/
FT. FREE Info. 881·887·•18•

110 Help Wanted

full time auctioneer, complete
auction
atrvlce.
Llcenaed

Gold Cclno, Procloots, Dlamondol,
Gold Ringo, U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Coin snop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-448-2842.

Put I to PUor-475. PT/FT.
FREE tniD. 8Mifl3.0732

toGIIa~~~g-. LlC

3091 .

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Sliver.

DelmarQyde
"Houdini" Cook

ASSEMBLY AT .HOM Ell Crallo,
Typlng ...G1eat Payl CALL J.fiO(l.
785-0380 Exll 201 .(24hl8)

...ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?

day -.Spm, -~. eam.apm.

I and PD1a111 good··=0:.:10pt=t..:1=011:.._____ ,1835_,.,fii'OC .....
'YPtne
akllo.
You
....,
_
,
r:aavt No e r • " " -·
With lllt.publlo: Md bo ovalable EAAN 125,tJOO.IfiO,OOO/yr,lladl· Coll-1Q0..4110o!H50Z41n.

Toya, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,

Large Garage Sale, 3/4 Miles Out .

87 On Laft, June 1ol· 3rd

who moota

110 Help 'Wel1111d
110 Help W.1111d
110 Help ·ortatasd
110 HelpW&amp;Ihlt
Medicol biHing Aaoi....,t """OCI
DRIVERS: Paid 2 WHI&lt; CDL Harris StHkhouao - Hiring. MIIQI COUNTY COMPANY . o y t FT/PT Will Train. EJc.
Trolnlng. No _..,,.. naadad. (304)f75-m5
leAl
-IIQUITJ:
OPENIIIOI
In adient income. PC required. 1 ~
!3A4~00T/yr. plua Full benoiKa.
thit area. No e)(l)erienee neen· ... 448 1773 Elrl. 222
c. .m . ranaporl. Drivara beNd
Head vanity Volleyball Coach ,
Medical Biling Alslatant naedad
Itt Mid JU 1--ln-230«102. sun- Math T - (7·12 Corlificdolo),
· - 11200
, . - 1 month
10 start
dlaoely,
to lmmo·
otart, aalarie• •• per Malter Agr••·
. o y l FT/PT Will Tllin. Ex·

· the lollo:!"9 roquiremonta, then EARN 125,tJOO.IfiO,OOO/yr. Mad~
)IIOlH .. darour..-po. c a t - - . g. -Jmo
- ..
m«l lyf Ccmpular - ·

=P~I~ ~~lao-~"""'

t E'.\PLOYf.\ EtJT

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

... Jary. lr you •r• an
: and r~trldly Pilton

6auap ltitDH • 6talintl • Page 03

Pomeroy • lll~dlsport • GIIUipolls, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

ilatkllllit Ul. •••lllllllltl.tllllllllll
"""""""""'.i
I I itlll,llllllallllna
(IIJIIIIllrotllfdJU- •:

Press. Delta 16" scroll saw. Trl Star 4" belt and 6"
diK. sander, Penncraft drill Press, Buffalo 4"
croll/slide ,vise. Fenner 12 volt hYdraulic motor. BirD
Quantum Pro, 1 114" circular saw. Della universal
·wet/drY arlnder. Dalllon 1/J H.P. Electric motor, metal
storue bOK full of nuts 8r bolts, storaQe chest wiPullout
drawers. dremel rouler 8r drill Press attachments.
a~~tetlllne hoses. ouies, torches. small air
comPressor. wood Planes. 112 drive Sk Sockets. end
wrenches. Craltsman sockets. and much more.

riiiUI4 ........ II Ill .....

1\o!sldllt

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

P.O. llll!lll•lullflal, 1181111 • Rl: ..IIW!II

773-5785 or 773-5447
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

Eqol """"""E. .lllllll

'•

REAL ESTATE WILL BE OFFERED
AT 12:00 NOON

Nice home consistl·u ol L.R .. kitchen.
famllll room, bath room. 2 bedrpoms If
1aundr11 room with carPort. out bulldlnll.
Vln111 If brick sldlnll, attic. new heat
PUmP. Sets on a 60 x 105 lot m/1. Real
estate belnll sold as Is with owners
confirmation-reserve. Vlew.lnll will be held
on frldn. June 8 from 10:00 am to 2:00
Pm or call.

-AUCTION CONDUaED BY
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
304·773·1781 OR 304·773·1447
Co Executors: Vlrglnle Darst
&amp; Worthy Rogers
Terms: Cash Pr check with 10.
Terms on real estate 10% down on sale
dav nPn refundable. Balance due In 30 da11
or at closlnl.
·
,,

· ~

�Sunday, June 3, 2001

PoiMioy • llldcllpctt • Gdlpolle, Ohio • Point Ph II .... WV
Help w.....

110

.,.,LIWLIItNN

I

6

,.

-MINiglooaAr.nOir

__ ..,.A
a: . ._
c77 •

-

aan.- And . e

s ma..1ta

'* ,..,.

Holidlyl.

.

• You- Llka to ConbbM

To OUr

s.-.a A11n1oCillon In

G..., oil, S e n d - - To:

Alln:Sam325 Spinglldo Dr.
· A1cton. OH 44333
Or Emil To:

......

Silo N:;

lnloCioion.com

-·~

Health Agency. Good

712 Second
Gaiflpollo, OH 4513t

I~
Me~Utiftt. ~e

niiMIIp

. . . . . vwblll . . .

-•lcallon

wrltlon
oklllo.
Mldicald. -icare Md MDS
llftow'la'Dt. and IMiktJIIng ....
(boll ... . . . . ,. I.SW
wHh ~In .._Term

c.nr
ll'eloned
- -·
C) 'Pad
C. •gllulnot
I piMie
COft-'

- Relll
Ful-llml.
Bone'
...
~
... - e
d.
A~PtY At ':cr tr'll Furniture, No
151
Third
Avonue,..Oalllpolia.
Colo.Af14'11
'

Piannld Parenthood Of Soulh·
Ohio Hao An OporWig F« A
Pon-time Nuru Praclitloner For
Ita 8tt11 In Ao11, Jackson And
011111 Counttll. Sallry fllntl It
$21.00 To $27.00 An Hout On E.,.rtence. Candidate Muot
Be Commllled To The Rlpfoducllon Haollll 01 uon And Women
And Maintain A Pro-choice Phi·
laaophy. Send Cover l.ener And

Skllla Wilh Ail Phoo" Of
llealdentlol Remodeling Work,
· Siding, Windows, Carpentry,
Daclca, Car Porta, Finish Worlc,
Framing, Etc:. The Person We
Are Looking For Should Work

Well With Otllero, Be Able
To
lhlnk On 'IDur
Fill
&amp;· Make Good Job Decialona.
Experienced Appllcantt Should
Have Good References , Tools,

po~cr,

-

·- · 1 •740-fft-

cal

II

1 ' 1o

The-

up6i

I' ..

Mull be Microaafl -111, data
. muot,
and
~
lalophOIIO. 5 yttnr mini-

mum experience. For interview
coli 740-143 · 1248 or 740·803·
1422.1w/i.lor- arT,...,.

at
P...- SIIMI,
Utddllporl,
tacl333
Clllrll
·
Olio&lt;l51ell. 7-.e472.
The Southern Local Schaal Diatrict has the following INChing

pqoitlano available lor tht 2001 ·

zOoz rchoot

210

.Coed!.,_-

c--..- al?llon-

.., Art ' , wlftd Daz ' s ••r
.., D' t filii I • be accepdng
bidl lroM " s!llra' ,...,...,.,. for
Supported Uvlnt
All
blda rnual be .......,IUid lo 1M

a.m.-.

Coadl, Girls' ...... Sdlool . tanllll*yW Coach, Girl&amp;' Mid·
dll .......btl Coadl G1rlo
- - Volleyball Coacll arid
Bukotblll
Girts' lllddfe Cooch
1hal 20111 -2002 _.. AIPII'
VOiid
Ohio 1llclling cerlificate and far
coaching POiitlont muat meet
tequir- of Ohio

"""'-to
- bt-

Clloolln. 01*1 by June 12, 2001
4:GOprn• .....b y - . 174013177311. "Tho- c--..~ al
MAIDD 11 an Equll OpporlunHy

tor

e.•...,..

*nut

-a

Truck Drlvor, HazUat CDL URequired. HaiJj -...too
Ulloa Radlua. Call t-100·3417!118 Exlt41 Or,.,. For ....

2 0 0 2 - yoar. - f o o l·
ball, junior high f - H. voraHy
.....,.,..., rneniO volteybatt, junior ll1gh vo1teybalt. oiglrlh graM
boyt - I l l, junior high girlo
-etbati, reserve boys baakll·
..... r....... girlo ballce1ball. ...
ooltball, varllily clloerlaadlng advitor. All applicants must
POIHII or acquire a 1ports

lllodlclne certllicate ond a CPR
COld. First c:onoidolatlon must ba
given to oppllcanls pouaulng a
-.~ng cerlillcala. Phone (740)
- - for furlllor lnlormation.
Pltlll Hnd Inquires to Mr.

Reel Estate G..,.,..

Gllac'*'

-

Buslnesa
Tl'llnlng
0 'M: •• c::.e. Collgl

&lt;CA-eoro CioN To '-1
Col Tadoy! 740-446-4317,
I-«J0.2t4-0452,
Roo M).GS.127411.

Eqo.- ()pportunlly Er1'1l10y01.

Freeilnco Engllall Riding inl1rUC&gt;
tor, $15/ Hour. Call Agou 0
(740j44Hl114

. .ad . ..
-JWu

Georgoa Portabfe s--ill, _ ,
haul your loQa to tho mill jull cal

For - - II&gt;DUI finding a
••ld'lirM. IIINW.bilon.cant
WAHT£0 n PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 .... In 30 days1

Announc 1 ntMI

RtldrttAml

Community

Organization
thankS all whO
supPOifta their
yanl Sllle In any
Wfi,Y. $2,000 WIIS
aaatatothe
schohlrshlp fUnd.

.&amp;.. "'"'ALACHHAN"

Your SUpPOrt WIIS

Rnl Eltll1e Genlral

IYIICUIII

mrtly aPfH'«Iated

Loe.._

,__.,.7Gar-

230

ProfUIIonal

s.rvlcls

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
GUll 1o&lt; .--inlng paymtnts on
Propeny Sold! llor1gagealtiest Settlements! Immediate

a.-m 'Nobody -

.... pn.;.

11. • National Contract Buyert

SSJNEt:D CASH??? II ' you've
eold property on land contract
and are receiving payments. I'U
buy 1lioM PIJIIIOiillllor Cllh! lm·
mediate quotnl (Nick) 1008752 011., ....394-1317.

ns-

Mid- Ohio Valley Truck
Driver Training ·

Total Year Round Comfort
FREE ES'nMATES
FREE 11)YR WARRANTY

COL Certification 5 Week Course
MOI'i &amp; Frl 7 : 00-3:30 WeekeOd
Clasae• Sat &amp; Sun 8 :00-4:30 12 weeks
Financing and Funding
'
Available Baaed On Eligibility ,
'"Job pi~JUN~ment on Class A training• .

F l tJA tKIAL

UO'niERS &amp; OTHERS! Earn e.-

210

Income
-"""Il """'
home
around
your· schedule
PT/FT.
1·
100-313--.

Bullnest
Opportunity

Contact Ed Adams 1·800-648-3695
373-3966

SI ,OOO WEEKLYI Wort&lt; at homo PARTY HOSTII Make Great

HJUonnanunaaareer

441.0114 1-800-498-0076

proct81ing automotive pamphlettl No experience! Weekly

paychocbl Everything ouppliedl

recommend&amp; 1hat you do buainttl wilh people you know, and

Announcement

Announcement

ftc.oft'WnettcJid_ fi'M CCM.IftMiing.

l n g-.
- $30. ,.
- COIJ!IHllng.
·.
Free
Coil -D-74211orviil
wwwl'tU at m.com

Money Having Fun Partiet at
Home. No Investment. Call For

ng

Free lnformatiorl1·100-825·72t3
"'ernal1tapltl@o&gt;o:ito.CX1111

For All Your Advertising Needs

PAIITY HOSTI! Make groat monINOTICEl
ey
having 1un palliea .. hOmo. No
OHIO VAU.EY PUBUSHING CO.

ForUCI Run Sportsmen
ub Gun Shoat a.n.nt
ShrlnersAII proceed•
go Ia Burnt &amp; Crippled
child....
.
8undly, JUIMI 3rd
12
n

WOW! I - 20 . .. In 30 cl.ys!
So cart yout Aft natural . doctor

(100) 4SI0-0731 ... 101 ....,_...
~

.. -

THE FIIANCHISE NETWORK.

~1957.

to appNCiale.
Additional land avCIIIabt.

Rnl Estate General

•

TliE F1W1CH1SE NElWOIIK. lor

Mutt -

Houro- l,londay- Friday 8·5.
(740)-14

llio

lhOH Hrioua about finding &amp;

HIOO-M1-3175.

256-6837

Eam

p,.,...., - -

........... SoJperinlendln!, .

_ . . _ _, Box176,
- · Ohio 45nl . SLSD 11 on

Pleaae Apply At: Christian's
Conattuctlon , Inc., U03 Eutem
Avanue , Gallipolis, OH. Office

_

h

Tho Soutllem Local Schaal Dil·
lrlet hu lho lollawino caoclling
available fw tho 200t - ·

!!82-t .

IC • •

*Trawl
·e. WeblltaSuppaft
Ycu own
and Trovll Dis-

140

UptaStUI!ottr.
Hk1ng For 2001

MPCJIQt.llvlng quarfMI.
2 CGr
~·
Wolbltop will lOft.
1/2 bath.
4 otMr bulldlnga.

And Reliable Transportation. We R..,..: ........... 311 FUchlond
Are An Eatabllahed Compony, Avenue, Athono, Ohio 4570t
WOrt&lt; II Local, Pay Is Baaed On EOE.
Elcplrtonce. IncentiVe eonu... &amp;
viiCIIIIon llme. If You lvo L.oaklng
For A Long Term. Slable Work,

~

_ , A T - 'J

BusineN
()ppom.w,lty

7- -1-

COU&lt;IIO/Pirts. Nominal Stonup
t -181·81111-1 . or
COati
-.Em+ , Fn11• b1•,c:om

taclllll Buddey, ~
Sc:llool Diolricl, P.O.
ea. 272, PariiOIOj, 01*&gt;.

URGENTLY NEEDED- ptaoma

210

W - As csive Aaf•.nc. Materi-

Mllgio local

donora, . . , S45 111 1811 b 2 ar 3
"""" ~. Col -.Toe, 7«~­

Bl 111111

Stert Your Bvain'" Today...
P.- ShOJII&gt;ing Center Space
AvaUable At AHordable Rate.
Sp01g _ , l'llza. Cal
0101 .

7

for eporta medicine and CPR.
Pti'Hfta int8rnted ehould con-

·-··balhl

'IN-.

Peraon. Permanen1, Full·tlme
PoaHion, Requires Exceptional

. $31101-ta-•por

COfftPIIRY

tWp W. 1J II

w-.

s--'-JData Entry Speclallal

,..,;d.O,. ........ -

Ql\IPWi.
2 ~ .... tlrwplac•ln
loving !0011'1. All oak
~ ii..IOr. tlnllhed
baum..it w1111 bath and
ldlchln COUld.,.

plete mobile lnaurance exama,

Immediate Hire For The Flight

I 1tit11

h'C'Iaval-

apac.., pond, flulln...

blood drowa I EKG'a. Fu rt·
aumtiO: 304-Te8-tll4 Ot moll to:
Piilonnll, PO box 145. Dunbar,

fOIIEIIAN P08ITIOII

-

~

.....,II

--·--81'
1
7,
-10-

01*1.

Jilek home on 26+ GCfW.
Two mobile home

Pill time poolllon ovoiloble in
Mllgt ' Gdil ~. to - -

A.vanue,

~•

031$.

FOR SALE

alo~.cam

Bonofila, Wages. Hourt. Coli
Tadoy At (740)~·31!08 Or
Viall

liOn lnd

*"'·

STUDIMTI,

.IIIWl G:iltd 6t1tind • Page D5

Pclnaoy • lllddl I ! • GeJflpolis, Ohio • Point PtiiUnt, WV

The Uelgt . . _ lcllaal dlolricl
llnglo to ... In
• curt'tlfttty teeldng aappll r ..
from certlllod opptlcanta 1o&lt; AI· and care fOf 1·1 •••ld•nta. ln... tll.lry.
lloltllly - . . Coach (2 . . . , _ , &amp; poafUona), Reserve Football Call for an interview. 740·112·
Coadl 1038t
•••llrn&amp;7pn.
C2 paoltlano), 7th I 8th Orado
WOIIK-~
F-.M Coach, Boys' .....,...,
I2H15/ hr PTI FT
llaakOII&gt;all Coach, Bays' 11th
ll•ueevciiOrderiiO
t:ll '
Gt8de PNJcMblll Coach, Wru....,Jncon•ldcltw•aa:m
Uing Coach,- W-ing

... t 'Palilbi
t-~ Eld. 201111
7orn-7piiC8T

Exclllenl OpportunHy For A OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO
Raglltrred Nurae In Gallla And WOfiKI $251175 I * hour. PT/fT
Melga Countle• With Growing t-IOO.ua-1114 01 HO our- ,

Home

Aegilllttd o.mat Jot~gienltt

Ooon I P.C.? Pit l l o - For a
lrM cOli: IOIH2t 51R13 0t

~lnfoCililn.com

111M OUr -

_

-·

1705.

rectM·ol Socill . . .,,

No_...,...

ln1oCilion ~Corp.

tor_,_

~

"
' - Clli1.-.Y4- PO.IIl Jabp Ml,:123.00 yr. tll0"
1111."
3:134
hlrlnt· No~ lralnlng- groat beneiHa, coli 7 daya
CJu:raiWi•ll POI&amp;II .lobi .
Up 10 I11.35Mr. Hiring for 2001 100-42t-31e0 lXI. J·58e. FREE
INFORMATION
&amp;en•~•·
I-J2&amp;.1083 Exll!OOO
POSTAL JOBS· Up lo $11.351
7orn-7piiCST
..... Hiring lor 200t . Plid trllnOWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO lng. FuN-.
WORK. S25111S lie&lt; ..... PT/fT ....-. Col ...... 7....7pm. 1-~.1200.
1·10011811t.tor . . cu
-IIICICIWquan

lnduding HeiMh, Ute,
40tK, lvwl Palcl _ , And

POSTAL JOtS. UP 10 III.IIJI

"110

..... Hlmg
Palol- nHdod far pwt-11.,. 11C11oo1
lng. Full .... ani&amp;. Cal Ill- "'"""'"· call daya 7.007 --7..... 1 -·721-- • -217&amp; or evening~, 7441·112·

inl NWI&amp; b' .......... fll Dl-

cao.. ..... Jolla

~

110 Hllp Wb11111

O.Wbr=*~la-_...

Postal.- Ml,323.00 yr. hiring· No -'"&lt;OCI plld troinllt.IJ0.$33.00 I * hour poleollltl. int- orlfl blnelltt, clll 7 daya
3 1111. J.315.
Paid Trllnlng/Full _.HI. For IOIH2t

I e'

Olin

.......

WOAMATION

ooa-.
Sllong ........... ...
C'.ormaricalicw, And
aflfp .
1nloCIIion

""" Wwll d

,,._... Sabat&amp;MI' Cou 1111 •
Pon·time I Fu..11.... FieWart Schedule. COli 0VUG
(7401441 9'II f« ~- oiow •

POITAL JOII 141,323.00 YR.
hlrlng·NO e....rlonci -Pald
traln~tlii·Grlll HnlfHa.• CIII 7 .
=-~ IN0-42t-3180 ..... J-588

To t5~. Cllln1And
....... 1&lt;1-' lgio lvwl .....
""""' Wiling.

110

"*"

1.aw11 Mil ; ••• To Add Ta
Our ..., In 0.. , . . .
7

Help V:&amp;llllf

- - -. NoinVMI·

11-.g-F«er.y.

c:..r.

110

fUUBliiRUIH co. Dnct- POSTAL JDI8 141,323,00 YR.
llirlnt·No -lenco-Pild
n1
··ry. CaH 100-..2· ltalftint-Grlll
HneiHa. COli 7
tml !:AI
• • ...... IJon. doyo: 100 ta I I' 101.: J.3l5 •
liM-~·

LICI't . . 11111ee..

Clll

....___,
I lf1
~·;_

110

Suncl.y, June 3, 2001

The Ameflcan
Community
·Advertising Network

Investment caJI for free lnforma·

tion t-800·825·7213 or email
llsplrlf@llocilo.com
NOT 10 l8t1d money through 1ho
mall umll you have lnveatlgated PEPSIICOKE/FRITO
LAY
1hal offering.
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE. BE YOUR OWN BOSS. ·
UALL CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Eotlib· CREASE YOUR INCOME "NOW.
!lolled Vending Route. Will ao11 by SMALL INVESTMENTIEXCEL81181200t . U•der $9K minimum LI;NT PROFITS. t -800-731-7233
lnveelmeilt requ i{ed. f:xcellant
EXT. 2203.

Announcement

GALLIA COUNTY COMMiSSIONERS
SPECIAL MEETING NOTICE
The Gallla County Commissioners will hold a
special meetlllCJ on June 5, 200 I beqlnnlno at
10:00a.m. In the GaiDa Counly Courthouse,
first floor Commissioners Office.
The purpose of this meetlnCJ Is to discuss
contract Issues far the Bidwell/ Porter Sewer
·ProJect with Aelds ExcovaUnCJ, Inc., General
Canb actor; URS, ProJect Engineer; AdaUiy &amp;
Deposit Company of Maryland, ProJect
Bondln9 Campany, and the Gallla Caunly
Commissioners.
The bulk af this meetlnt will be conducted In
Executive Session as It Is conlract related.
Gallla CounlyCammlssloners

Prorll Potential. Finance Avail able/Good Credit. Toll Free••..

· Coirtact us st:

1-800-821-8139
or vlsil our website :

Reel Eltll1e General

(888) 270-21AMAZING OPPOIITUNITYI In ·

11~ rCJJ'. t"r./ ,J.P

ternet Casino, Poker &amp; Sport•·
book Complete turnkey ttans ar
$35,000. High income potential.
YNM.magellanl.oom Call Toll Free

'-"P'~.

446•6806

1·886-na-2998.
CASH NOW Payday Loan Franchile. Earn St0,000·$20,000 por

958 Clark Chapel lid.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

month . complete turnkey. Full
Training. No expe~lence needed.

invl!llment Required.
www.cashnow-usa.com Ton tree

t ·lll·n&amp;-2998

~

~· \:tlm~UlDl
~ .1CJ:J, ~-te

'-::7fetT,C
ranch(t}Office;,.w. '

*

8

23 locust St.

Gallipolis, Unl~

fn

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRO..IABMITH,BROKER .....--..... 448 1101
GAIL BELVILLE........................- ........ 448 I 'Ill
TRIIH BNYDER..............- .................. A4t-M51
JOHNNIE IIUSSELL......- ..................317o0323
DAVID 8NYDEII ..............................,... 441OUR WEB PAGE IS,-

.Y1omlth•eal-to.c:om

•"'""' ,_tale@ZDOIMOI.ne~

45631

DOWNSIZED DISMISSED LAID·
OFF FIRED. Ale you prepared for
an (lbrupt change in your life? t·

888-736-6727

... d•• Cot11p11M11ft

..........

Quail) ~,_..

Call today I .
for your quote.

.·

510.SecondAvenue

.,

more than what meers the eye.
Look for you11elfl Wginia 446·
6806.
.

1943

on one floor. Cornea with 3 bedroom8, 2 ~the, a dining
room, &amp; a oun room. There Ia an allllched 1112 car garage,
and a newer 30.40 pole bam that has a concre1e 11001' and 2
attached sheds. Home Ia handicap aceeeelble. All Of this Is
silting on just over an acre Of newly chain llnkld fencing.
Hae a lot Of landlcaplng and Ia really nice. 1121,100.00

FOR MORE INFOilMAllON 'lYE US A CALL

l:mollll

Stt~ee

PORTLAND- A well bul~ briclc home with hardwood 11oore all

GalllpoUa, OH 415631

... ~_..-.,. ,...., ~ ·,..U--~,...

.REAL ESTATE

· Middleport, OH

(740) 446-7101

"""'·-

.Af&lt;,oHo~r.-, ... ~ ,..._;c. ·~

.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

HOME klca1od on Hedgewood
Drive, 314 bodraamo. 2 balho.
"'outilul cab!- in equipped
kitchen, living room, forrt:~al dining
' room. family room, til ., floor
11unctry, rur ............ aiiiChed
gngo, and outbuilding. There is

Reel Estate General

108

800458 9990

11

Generel

2515 KERR ROAD
Ranch style home neat1ec1 on 12 plus acres
land wl1h frontage alont Kerr Road.
1.5 baths, baHment, 2 car
OCII'Goe. Mull come and see the resl.

-

LOC:GIIGonl
prlvale 8 acre, rn/1, Httlng, you
wil flnd this lovely Cepe Cad
home featuring a~:-~ grea1
room
wllh
urning
fireplace, formal OR. go..mat
kitchen with eating area
ove~ooking the pond, 5 BRs, 3
balha. upslalrs sitting area, 2
car garage ond above ground
pool $235.000 toe01

the bullntll for you,
redlalor
Of different metalt, fabrtca..::P., and
Of
welding equipment,
, and
machine work. A growing butlneN
In income each year. It comoa· with approx.
, large '14 1/2 foot tall building that Ia about 2 yeara
Is 40 K 60. Alao another older building. Mobile home
nocNC-~tp,, alao. Selling because of health reaeone. MOll

BUSIIUS

~-~~~

companloa use our aer:-tce. 11811,000.00

13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
hOme w/4 BAl. 2 balho, kit. Lll.
OR, porclloo, partial besemorrt.
Priced ~ghl· ... !!lit Oulllanding
offer! Vacant. ready to welcome
VLS 446-8808

I
lhe clljll A1 lhe end of
COttonL.ane, you:ll flnd this
apacioua trl-level home that
ofters wonderful privacy, while
not sacrificing convenlcne. 4-5
BR home wnh 3 baths, LR,
FA, media roomand
pool. t3 acres Include
and crek fronlage.
!~':'·~~ 1132
.

and dtii8Ched 2 carr 1~~~:1
could be uaed lor 11
Prtc!!d for a qu~k sale. 155,000

-

i
roof t999, 4 BR, 2.5 SA.
garage,
vinyl
siding.
neighborhood. Needs tome
but priced right at STI,IOO
1331111 CITY LOT 43' •
localed 39 VIne Sl.

Yl

740-446-0008 740-441-1111
.
. evllllllmoo.zoomnet.qet www.ev~·moo~.co~
,Joe A. Moor-Broker 441·1818
Sarah L. Eva"e-Moore, Broker 441·1818
Patricia HayaCar• Caaey-248·843Q .

you're looking for a 1p8Cioua
home where everyone can
have their own space, this Is
111 3600 sq. ft . Includes 5 BRa
ond 3 balhll. And irs all on
one ~oor planl Huge
bedroom lhat'a

UNCOLH HILL· A one a1ory home with a large L-ehapecl
living rQOm, dining room, kllchen, big bedroom, and a bath
on one floor and the baeemenl Ia all flnilhed with
3 bedrooms, ,kllchen, lamlly room, and one bath. There 11
approKimately 5.9 acroa with moat laying nice 1\nd a view of
the Pomeroy Bridge and Walmarl.
ASKlNQ t131S,OOO.OD

SOUTH SIXTH STREET • A Pig 2
home with 3 to 4
bedrooms, dining room, 1'/• bathe,
porch 'and .
sitting on a nice lot. Has an upstairs
downetalre healing
and cooling system. There Ia a 3/4 ~ant and a nice
front sitting porCh.
Home hae french doore, a pretty
ftr,place, ate.
. 141,000;00

r"'
'
~·

approx.

I

sq. ft. of living area · Prlvocy?
Loss
of
maturing ·formal LA and OR
convenience? High costs lor a
wllh fireplace, kitchen wllh
lot of land? Maybe these are
eating area open lo FR. 4 BAs
some maintenance coats for a
and 3 full balha altualed in a
long driveway? Maybe these
lovely cduntry setting In the
are some trade offs you have
Rio Grande area. Priced at
10 make with some proportles,
. 1125
bul not lhis rambling ranch .
"' Located on the edge of town,
this home Is · very convenient
for schools and shopping. With
over 3000 sq. ft. ol living
· space, you'li enjoy the open
floor plan and large windows. 4

+:~=:~=
A

I !hit roomy
ae 5 BRa
hll 3 baths.
Nt20,DOO.
Over 2000 sq. ft. of living L
space. Foaturee . alao include .
large LR, eal·in kitchen wllh
dining area, dock and 2 cor

RACINE • At lhe edge ol town Ia. a ~r1ICI place lor your
mobile home or double wlda, or build a new home. Approx
1/2 acre lot with Ullltloa aVIIlable.
lte.OOO.OO

BAs, 3 lull belhs, LR , DR, den
and large FR, also an enclosed
porch.
Newly
remodeled
kitchen wnh ellracUve oak
cablnels. 3 fireplaces . 2 car
~age . $t59,900 1211

2 balhAT
ranch over lull
E:::~.LOOK
wilh 2 car garage and

Large bodmama,

-·

ciolet.

you

New Uetlng Brick Ranch wMh
Full Baatment 4 BR home
'with large kitchen, dining area,
LA and 3 bathe. Huge waik·oUI
b-mtnl perfacllor Fll. Large
patio &amp; t 7 acre lot wHh
rllt utility 2 · car attached
~age plus 2 cer detached.
1150 ,000 111 4

112m PIIICI IIIDUCID C:OO.nlty
lhlfno 10 townl BMIItlflli
roNing m e - and ·goraeoue
vltwo ... only part of thai """"""'
will! 1t&gt;11 4 BR 2 811 cua1o111 I tT.2
atory llome on 11+ - . Spaclouo
lll·ln k"cllen, pM1111y flnllhod
walk-out .... mtnl, 3 car Qll'lat
lnd wrop IIOUnd poroh, and f1olda
with flncint 1halt could bl Ulld to
corrol your anllnalo. REDUCED TO
12011,000.

111011
1100'1
Cllarmerl
Hardwood flooring, e BR, 3 BA.
3t78 aq. ft. of living ...... &amp; 2
car at11Ched gllr'OQI. PLUS 2 BR
t SA Q8raQO opertment with
blloony. A rtai GEMII100,000

120118 Newly ramocllled 2 otory hOme w/3 BR's, 2 baths. PerfiCI
lor oomeone lool&lt;lnt for 1
good dlt!i. Being oold wey uncter
thai oppraiaalvalue. Hurry, lhit one
won1 lullongl 589,000,

Alltnllon hWMtOtll Thrta
hOmn on lhnll adfOinlng . loll
within cHy ilm"•· Handyman
ftlodod ...opply lor 1hal joO II
159.000.

ina
quill In-town neighborhood. Low
maintenance, ·
conveniently
lo&lt;alod, lllrd wood lloorl,
updaled khcllon lnd bath,
and lull

LAND LISTING S

11080 V.oilnl lot In town. 12073- 11 e acral of
$24,900
baauflful Iandi 3 pond1,
11017 Commarollll'foiMrtyl and 1 112 ttory home.
145 acres 'm/1 near Rio Grandi. PRICE REDUCED
12057 VACANT Lot In GrHn ftDII. LOTSI Frontage
Twp.
on SR 554 and Wood111111l
' 12081 '9.125 scree m/1 In Gr1111 Road . Raalrlcllona .
townehlp.
•12,500 each
12088- 12· 14 Acreo m/1 ftOtl. V-nt Lind· 85

L!ADINQ CREEK RD • Here'o a 48.8 ICrt parcel Of land
wllh many building anoa on both aldoa Of the road, bolh lldoa
Of the railroad, and bordera the crMk. BeaUIHullaylng home
altee. There Ia also woods for hunting. '
· ' •

overlooking Ohio Vallay
acre~ o Hidden Vallay
12071 - 80 Acraa m/1 near Rio Drlva, Iota of road
Granda
frontagel
12072· 263 acrea m/1 Off of
Stale Route 218.

)

.I

tS,.

,,•

LIVABLE HOME FOR
MONEY. $I 25,000.00 VLS

THE

14014 KINO SIZE FAMILY HOME
Greal 2 sty.. 4 bedrma.. 2 I /2
baths, formal Lll &amp; DR; Fam Am.
wJbrlck fireplace, all large rms., 13'
x 25' master bedrm. w/bath. 2 car

attached garaga. t .25 Ac mil
'St40,000. Addhlonal lot available.
VLS
~

',, ,, t
1,; 1 ~

"' ~

.
-

rA

:......

J

~

'

~·
/, , .

•1

"

1

commercia l. Priced @ 165.000

BRs, 1 bath. nice above
ground pool. oust in time 10
enjoy the upcoming summer
days) located on .66 of an
acre. m/1, and priced to sell at
only $61 ,500. lifO

DELUXE
4 bedrms,
,
garage &amp; 2 ac mil. Immaculate
condiilon 2000 aq. ft. &amp; to enjoy
family like. to luMost, Large rma,
through out· flroptace in Lll. olty
iighta, beautiful k~chon. Sun
porch w/Window walla. Gao &amp;
alec. heat, central air &amp; lovely
corpol. Green School1. This one
woo worth wailing for, just a
phone call away. VLS 44ll-tl808
MAKE OFFER
14022 Wotoh tho Rlwr from yur
backyard? Enjoy the view from
your boat dock or back deck." this
1+ ac mil wnh a 2 ~R t bath
mobile home/Vacation camper Is

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Willman, GRir CRS Broker 448-9555
carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garn11 446-2707
Robert Bruce 448-0621 Rita Wl1eman 446-11555

,

IIOtne 3
t
with basement.
on
aclot and @Intersection of Sl. Rl.
160 &amp; 554. Owner has remodeled
hOme and put naw roof on
garnoetworksllap. May also be

usect
ill a don/FA, cozy kilehen, 3

t acre lot,
aome prlvacy,
gardsn
apot or a great
f« lho
klda 10 pity. Home boasta a
very nice khchen whh oak
ceblnota, lola ol counter
space, bar area and pantry,
ail opon to 1 dining aroi/FR
wllh vaulted ceiling, formal
LR 3 BRI &amp; 2 batha, newer
caipet lhroughout. Prlpod at
$S9,900. HOI
·

.. .

dining rm ., living rm., family rm.,
with nreptace., Patio, above
ground pool, 2 car attached
garage and basement.. VERY

14017 Located 3113 111. ca~al
I L. Smith 740·446·6806.
2

Before shopping for your New Address... stop by ours:

l

I

All
HIVO To Do Ia UOVII
lnl
Taotefuiiy
remodeled
ltarllng In t999 to present.
This lovely oflordable home
olla" Lll wllh open dining and
kitchen area, pleaaont and
sunny FR. 3 BRa. t 1/2 batho,
1 car garage and nice deck
maktl thio property a lovely
place to call llorne. Priced 11
only $105,000. C.ll1oclay lhtn
alart paclcing . 1117
.

J

.

operation. Located near Rio
Grande. Appointment Only. call

area or could

H'l a
Not too M..chtt

~

, - :.~..

n:J11 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. II you like
lndlvlduoiity .. hore n lsi 3,029 ""·
ft. more or leBa, 3 bedrms., 2 1/2
balha, Kit., LFim, Office rm., and
much 11101e. Wrap porch front &amp; 2
aldoa. 167 Acres mil. Roiling
Peature and 3 Largo Sarno &amp;
Feed Lot sites, 2 nice ponds.
Land Is most all clean &amp; has some
flowers but make sure to 6ook at
this. Call Johnnie al 367·0323 fencing. Electrlc &amp; troslfree water
In the bam. Feed lot sites.
today for an appointment.
·Formerly used for Veal calf

In good,
LA,

Flnlellod parllal buamem, n1c.
Iron! porclllnd a cemem patio In

.

car
nice
TLC 140011 .A FEW MINUTES OF
YOUR nME COULD PAY OFFI
View this lovely all bfk:k home
t70' wllhree bedrooms, 2 baths, forma l

finished family room. Homo sits on
2 Ac. mil in Hlnnan Trace Schools.
Jual minutes 1rom downtown
Gallipolis. This !lome featuree a
baaulilul landocaped lawn, wood
pallet 1110ve and central air.
Located juet off Rock Lick Rd. on
Mabie Dr. In nice nllghborhood.
Have a garden and raise some

gs::~~il
· Vlllley
auality
locallor)
In
area. SffS,DOO
112

Brick &amp; vinyl 6 BR, 2 SA IIOtne
private 1 ·acre lot. Family
IMng room w/flreplace, DR.
ia1ge UIIIH, 1oom In lhls one
luU basemen!. Altachod 2

aa well

.jl4 Second Ave., GallipoU., Ohio 45631@4

Fo,_rly B""'lrl&gt;""' II..,. "So..... Sa......m 0/U, For O..r .t Q"""•r Co..-,"

-~~I

juot tlla thing lor stress. May be
room for ·a garden. Located at
7~83 St. At. 7 South and priced at

40) 446·.3644

$59,500

140111 COMMERCIAL LOT· INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulaviiie
Jackson Pk. GaiHpolls. OH Comer · Pk. 3 bedrm. 3 bath living quarters .
AJso tS: x 32' ga•age plus 30' , 20
iol wilh groat potential.
bUilding 112 ac. ol land. good sales
ioc. Prtced to sell. VLS

Lovely homt on tho BeauiJJua
Ohio Rlverl This home has been
completely remodeled . All has
been done wlthlnthe last four yrs.
New roof, lntulated windows, new

BY THE OHIO
lovely brick &amp; Vl!'lyl
w/omall priCe. Beautilul ollk
ctblnols W/bar. Formal Lll &amp; DR, 3
bed"l\S, 1 lull bath &amp; 2 haH baths.
Bonus
of
a
mother·ln·law
apartment w/LR, kit, 1 BR &amp; balh.

NC &amp; furnace, ail new appliances,
central Vac . s~atem . Home hB&amp; full
basement w/WOI1&lt;sh0p. New guest
cabin cloaor lo rtvor, but above
flood plain. back yard lenced.
.Panoramic vlsw of the Ohio river

AN appliances stay. Enjoy the view from elmost all rooms and catHn. A

of tho Ohio River w/a boat dock
close by. Huge 4 car garage &amp;
cement dliveway. Wort&lt;shop lnthe
garage. It's time 10r action. ShoWn
by appointment.

pa1adi"

for boating &amp; fiohlng.

Priced for quick sale,

1873

REDUCED

PRICE- t 17

acres close to new Fwy., hOspital,
shop ctr. water," gas, sewer.
Adjoining Pinecrest Nurs!ng Heme.

14023 OUT POSSUM TROT RD. You'll lind a g1oa1 immaculsto 2 bedrm; I bath mobil&amp; home, shingle root,
deck, out·buiidings for
, 1
land thal1oolo &amp; also t5 Ac I'M w/flsiJing pond. Whala nice sot to
bUild or sub·divide.
Cali VLSmlth

.,

�Sunday, June 3, 2001

PoiMioy • llldcllpctt • Gdlpolle, Ohio • Point Ph II .... WV
Help w.....

110

.,.,LIWLIItNN

I

6

,.

-MINiglooaAr.nOir

__ ..,.A
a: . ._
c77 •

-

aan.- And . e

s ma..1ta

'* ,..,.

Holidlyl.

.

• You- Llka to ConbbM

To OUr

s.-.a A11n1oCillon In

G..., oil, S e n d - - To:

Alln:Sam325 Spinglldo Dr.
· A1cton. OH 44333
Or Emil To:

......

Silo N:;

lnloCioion.com

-·~

Health Agency. Good

712 Second
Gaiflpollo, OH 4513t

I~
Me~Utiftt. ~e

niiMIIp

. . . . . vwblll . . .

-•lcallon

wrltlon
oklllo.
Mldicald. -icare Md MDS
llftow'la'Dt. and IMiktJIIng ....
(boll ... . . . . ,. I.SW
wHh ~In .._Term

c.nr
ll'eloned
- -·
C) 'Pad
C. •gllulnot
I piMie
COft-'

- Relll
Ful-llml.
Bone'
...
~
... - e
d.
A~PtY At ':cr tr'll Furniture, No
151
Third
Avonue,..Oalllpolia.
Colo.Af14'11
'

Piannld Parenthood Of Soulh·
Ohio Hao An OporWig F« A
Pon-time Nuru Praclitloner For
Ita 8tt11 In Ao11, Jackson And
011111 Counttll. Sallry fllntl It
$21.00 To $27.00 An Hout On E.,.rtence. Candidate Muot
Be Commllled To The Rlpfoducllon Haollll 01 uon And Women
And Maintain A Pro-choice Phi·
laaophy. Send Cover l.ener And

Skllla Wilh Ail Phoo" Of
llealdentlol Remodeling Work,
· Siding, Windows, Carpentry,
Daclca, Car Porta, Finish Worlc,
Framing, Etc:. The Person We
Are Looking For Should Work

Well With Otllero, Be Able
To
lhlnk On 'IDur
Fill
&amp;· Make Good Job Decialona.
Experienced Appllcantt Should
Have Good References , Tools,

po~cr,

-

·- · 1 •740-fft-

cal

II

1 ' 1o

The-

up6i

I' ..

Mull be Microaafl -111, data
. muot,
and
~
lalophOIIO. 5 yttnr mini-

mum experience. For interview
coli 740-143 · 1248 or 740·803·
1422.1w/i.lor- arT,...,.

at
P...- SIIMI,
Utddllporl,
tacl333
Clllrll
·
Olio&lt;l51ell. 7-.e472.
The Southern Local Schaal Diatrict has the following INChing

pqoitlano available lor tht 2001 ·

zOoz rchoot

210

.Coed!.,_-

c--..- al?llon-

.., Art ' , wlftd Daz ' s ••r
.., D' t filii I • be accepdng
bidl lroM " s!llra' ,...,...,.,. for
Supported Uvlnt
All
blda rnual be .......,IUid lo 1M

a.m.-.

Coadl, Girls' ...... Sdlool . tanllll*yW Coach, Girl&amp;' Mid·
dll .......btl Coadl G1rlo
- - Volleyball Coacll arid
Bukotblll
Girts' lllddfe Cooch
1hal 20111 -2002 _.. AIPII'
VOiid
Ohio 1llclling cerlificate and far
coaching POiitlont muat meet
tequir- of Ohio

"""'-to
- bt-

Clloolln. 01*1 by June 12, 2001
4:GOprn• .....b y - . 174013177311. "Tho- c--..~ al
MAIDD 11 an Equll OpporlunHy

tor

e.•...,..

*nut

-a

Truck Drlvor, HazUat CDL URequired. HaiJj -...too
Ulloa Radlua. Call t-100·3417!118 Exlt41 Or,.,. For ....

2 0 0 2 - yoar. - f o o l·
ball, junior high f - H. voraHy
.....,.,..., rneniO volteybatt, junior ll1gh vo1teybalt. oiglrlh graM
boyt - I l l, junior high girlo
-etbati, reserve boys baakll·
..... r....... girlo ballce1ball. ...
ooltball, varllily clloerlaadlng advitor. All applicants must
POIHII or acquire a 1ports

lllodlclne certllicate ond a CPR
COld. First c:onoidolatlon must ba
given to oppllcanls pouaulng a
-.~ng cerlillcala. Phone (740)
- - for furlllor lnlormation.
Pltlll Hnd Inquires to Mr.

Reel Estate G..,.,..

Gllac'*'

-

Buslnesa
Tl'llnlng
0 'M: •• c::.e. Collgl

&lt;CA-eoro CioN To '-1
Col Tadoy! 740-446-4317,
I-«J0.2t4-0452,
Roo M).GS.127411.

Eqo.- ()pportunlly Er1'1l10y01.

Freeilnco Engllall Riding inl1rUC&gt;
tor, $15/ Hour. Call Agou 0
(740j44Hl114

. .ad . ..
-JWu

Georgoa Portabfe s--ill, _ ,
haul your loQa to tho mill jull cal

For - - II&gt;DUI finding a
••ld'lirM. IIINW.bilon.cant
WAHT£0 n PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 .... In 30 days1

Announc 1 ntMI

RtldrttAml

Community

Organization
thankS all whO
supPOifta their
yanl Sllle In any
Wfi,Y. $2,000 WIIS
aaatatothe
schohlrshlp fUnd.

.&amp;.. "'"'ALACHHAN"

Your SUpPOrt WIIS

Rnl Eltll1e Genlral

IYIICUIII

mrtly aPfH'«Iated

Loe.._

,__.,.7Gar-

230

ProfUIIonal

s.rvlcls

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
GUll 1o&lt; .--inlng paymtnts on
Propeny Sold! llor1gagealtiest Settlements! Immediate

a.-m 'Nobody -

.... pn.;.

11. • National Contract Buyert

SSJNEt:D CASH??? II ' you've
eold property on land contract
and are receiving payments. I'U
buy 1lioM PIJIIIOiillllor Cllh! lm·
mediate quotnl (Nick) 1008752 011., ....394-1317.

ns-

Mid- Ohio Valley Truck
Driver Training ·

Total Year Round Comfort
FREE ES'nMATES
FREE 11)YR WARRANTY

COL Certification 5 Week Course
MOI'i &amp; Frl 7 : 00-3:30 WeekeOd
Clasae• Sat &amp; Sun 8 :00-4:30 12 weeks
Financing and Funding
'
Available Baaed On Eligibility ,
'"Job pi~JUN~ment on Class A training• .

F l tJA tKIAL

UO'niERS &amp; OTHERS! Earn e.-

210

Income
-"""Il """'
home
around
your· schedule
PT/FT.
1·
100-313--.

Bullnest
Opportunity

Contact Ed Adams 1·800-648-3695
373-3966

SI ,OOO WEEKLYI Wort&lt; at homo PARTY HOSTII Make Great

HJUonnanunaaareer

441.0114 1-800-498-0076

proct81ing automotive pamphlettl No experience! Weekly

paychocbl Everything ouppliedl

recommend&amp; 1hat you do buainttl wilh people you know, and

Announcement

Announcement

ftc.oft'WnettcJid_ fi'M CCM.IftMiing.

l n g-.
- $30. ,.
- COIJ!IHllng.
·.
Free
Coil -D-74211orviil
wwwl'tU at m.com

Money Having Fun Partiet at
Home. No Investment. Call For

ng

Free lnformatiorl1·100-825·72t3
"'ernal1tapltl@o&gt;o:ito.CX1111

For All Your Advertising Needs

PAIITY HOSTI! Make groat monINOTICEl
ey
having 1un palliea .. hOmo. No
OHIO VAU.EY PUBUSHING CO.

ForUCI Run Sportsmen
ub Gun Shoat a.n.nt
ShrlnersAII proceed•
go Ia Burnt &amp; Crippled
child....
.
8undly, JUIMI 3rd
12
n

WOW! I - 20 . .. In 30 cl.ys!
So cart yout Aft natural . doctor

(100) 4SI0-0731 ... 101 ....,_...
~

.. -

THE FIIANCHISE NETWORK.

~1957.

to appNCiale.
Additional land avCIIIabt.

Rnl Estate General

•

TliE F1W1CH1SE NElWOIIK. lor

Mutt -

Houro- l,londay- Friday 8·5.
(740)-14

llio

lhOH Hrioua about finding &amp;

HIOO-M1-3175.

256-6837

Eam

p,.,...., - -

........... SoJperinlendln!, .

_ . . _ _, Box176,
- · Ohio 45nl . SLSD 11 on

Pleaae Apply At: Christian's
Conattuctlon , Inc., U03 Eutem
Avanue , Gallipolis, OH. Office

_

h

Tho Soutllem Local Schaal Dil·
lrlet hu lho lollawino caoclling
available fw tho 200t - ·

!!82-t .

IC • •

*Trawl
·e. WeblltaSuppaft
Ycu own
and Trovll Dis-

140

UptaStUI!ottr.
Hk1ng For 2001

MPCJIQt.llvlng quarfMI.
2 CGr
~·
Wolbltop will lOft.
1/2 bath.
4 otMr bulldlnga.

And Reliable Transportation. We R..,..: ........... 311 FUchlond
Are An Eatabllahed Compony, Avenue, Athono, Ohio 4570t
WOrt&lt; II Local, Pay Is Baaed On EOE.
Elcplrtonce. IncentiVe eonu... &amp;
viiCIIIIon llme. If You lvo L.oaklng
For A Long Term. Slable Work,

~

_ , A T - 'J

BusineN
()ppom.w,lty

7- -1-

COU&lt;IIO/Pirts. Nominal Stonup
t -181·81111-1 . or
COati
-.Em+ , Fn11• b1•,c:om

taclllll Buddey, ~
Sc:llool Diolricl, P.O.
ea. 272, PariiOIOj, 01*&gt;.

URGENTLY NEEDED- ptaoma

210

W - As csive Aaf•.nc. Materi-

Mllgio local

donora, . . , S45 111 1811 b 2 ar 3
"""" ~. Col -.Toe, 7«~­

Bl 111111

Stert Your Bvain'" Today...
P.- ShOJII&gt;ing Center Space
AvaUable At AHordable Rate.
Sp01g _ , l'llza. Cal
0101 .

7

for eporta medicine and CPR.
Pti'Hfta int8rnted ehould con-

·-··balhl

'IN-.

Peraon. Permanen1, Full·tlme
PoaHion, Requires Exceptional

. $31101-ta-•por

COfftPIIRY

tWp W. 1J II

w-.

s--'-JData Entry Speclallal

,..,;d.O,. ........ -

Ql\IPWi.
2 ~ .... tlrwplac•ln
loving !0011'1. All oak
~ ii..IOr. tlnllhed
baum..it w1111 bath and
ldlchln COUld.,.

plete mobile lnaurance exama,

Immediate Hire For The Flight

I 1tit11

h'C'Iaval-

apac.., pond, flulln...

blood drowa I EKG'a. Fu rt·
aumtiO: 304-Te8-tll4 Ot moll to:
Piilonnll, PO box 145. Dunbar,

fOIIEIIAN P08ITIOII

-

~

.....,II

--·--81'
1
7,
-10-

01*1.

Jilek home on 26+ GCfW.
Two mobile home

Pill time poolllon ovoiloble in
Mllgt ' Gdil ~. to - -

A.vanue,

~•

031$.

FOR SALE

alo~.cam

Bonofila, Wages. Hourt. Coli
Tadoy At (740)~·31!08 Or
Viall

liOn lnd

*"'·

STUDIMTI,

.IIIWl G:iltd 6t1tind • Page D5

Pclnaoy • lllddl I ! • GeJflpolis, Ohio • Point PtiiUnt, WV

The Uelgt . . _ lcllaal dlolricl
llnglo to ... In
• curt'tlfttty teeldng aappll r ..
from certlllod opptlcanta 1o&lt; AI· and care fOf 1·1 •••ld•nta. ln... tll.lry.
lloltllly - . . Coach (2 . . . , _ , &amp; poafUona), Reserve Football Call for an interview. 740·112·
Coadl 1038t
•••llrn&amp;7pn.
C2 paoltlano), 7th I 8th Orado
WOIIK-~
F-.M Coach, Boys' .....,...,
I2H15/ hr PTI FT
llaakOII&gt;all Coach, Bays' 11th
ll•ueevciiOrderiiO
t:ll '
Gt8de PNJcMblll Coach, Wru....,Jncon•ldcltw•aa:m
Uing Coach,- W-ing

... t 'Palilbi
t-~ Eld. 201111
7orn-7piiC8T

Exclllenl OpportunHy For A OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO
Raglltrred Nurae In Gallla And WOfiKI $251175 I * hour. PT/fT
Melga Countle• With Growing t-IOO.ua-1114 01 HO our- ,

Home

Aegilllttd o.mat Jot~gienltt

Ooon I P.C.? Pit l l o - For a
lrM cOli: IOIH2t 51R13 0t

~lnfoCililn.com

111M OUr -

_

-·

1705.

rectM·ol Socill . . .,,

No_...,...

ln1oCilion ~Corp.

tor_,_

~

"
' - Clli1.-.Y4- PO.IIl Jabp Ml,:123.00 yr. tll0"
1111."
3:134
hlrlnt· No~ lralnlng- groat beneiHa, coli 7 daya
CJu:raiWi•ll POI&amp;II .lobi .
Up 10 I11.35Mr. Hiring for 2001 100-42t-31e0 lXI. J·58e. FREE
INFORMATION
&amp;en•~•·
I-J2&amp;.1083 Exll!OOO
POSTAL JOBS· Up lo $11.351
7orn-7piiCST
..... Hiring lor 200t . Plid trllnOWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO lng. FuN-.
WORK. S25111S lie&lt; ..... PT/fT ....-. Col ...... 7....7pm. 1-~.1200.
1·10011811t.tor . . cu
-IIICICIWquan

lnduding HeiMh, Ute,
40tK, lvwl Palcl _ , And

POSTAL JOtS. UP 10 III.IIJI

"110

..... Hlmg
Palol- nHdod far pwt-11.,. 11C11oo1
lng. Full .... ani&amp;. Cal Ill- "'"""'"· call daya 7.007 --7..... 1 -·721-- • -217&amp; or evening~, 7441·112·

inl NWI&amp; b' .......... fll Dl-

cao.. ..... Jolla

~

110 Hllp Wb11111

O.Wbr=*~la-_...

Postal.- Ml,323.00 yr. hiring· No -'"&lt;OCI plld troinllt.IJ0.$33.00 I * hour poleollltl. int- orlfl blnelltt, clll 7 daya
3 1111. J.315.
Paid Trllnlng/Full _.HI. For IOIH2t

I e'

Olin

.......

WOAMATION

ooa-.
Sllong ........... ...
C'.ormaricalicw, And
aflfp .
1nloCIIion

""" Wwll d

,,._... Sabat&amp;MI' Cou 1111 •
Pon·time I Fu..11.... FieWart Schedule. COli 0VUG
(7401441 9'II f« ~- oiow •

POITAL JOII 141,323.00 YR.
hlrlng·NO e....rlonci -Pald
traln~tlii·Grlll HnlfHa.• CIII 7 .
=-~ IN0-42t-3180 ..... J-588

To t5~. Cllln1And
....... 1&lt;1-' lgio lvwl .....
""""' Wiling.

110

"*"

1.aw11 Mil ; ••• To Add Ta
Our ..., In 0.. , . . .
7

Help V:&amp;llllf

- - -. NoinVMI·

11-.g-F«er.y.

c:..r.

110

fUUBliiRUIH co. Dnct- POSTAL JDI8 141,323,00 YR.
llirlnt·No -lenco-Pild
n1
··ry. CaH 100-..2· ltalftint-Grlll
HneiHa. COli 7
tml !:AI
• • ...... IJon. doyo: 100 ta I I' 101.: J.3l5 •
liM-~·

LICI't . . 11111ee..

Clll

....___,
I lf1
~·;_

110

Suncl.y, June 3, 2001

The Ameflcan
Community
·Advertising Network

Investment caJI for free lnforma·

tion t-800·825·7213 or email
llsplrlf@llocilo.com
NOT 10 l8t1d money through 1ho
mall umll you have lnveatlgated PEPSIICOKE/FRITO
LAY
1hal offering.
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE. BE YOUR OWN BOSS. ·
UALL CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Eotlib· CREASE YOUR INCOME "NOW.
!lolled Vending Route. Will ao11 by SMALL INVESTMENTIEXCEL81181200t . U•der $9K minimum LI;NT PROFITS. t -800-731-7233
lnveelmeilt requ i{ed. f:xcellant
EXT. 2203.

Announcement

GALLIA COUNTY COMMiSSIONERS
SPECIAL MEETING NOTICE
The Gallla County Commissioners will hold a
special meetlllCJ on June 5, 200 I beqlnnlno at
10:00a.m. In the GaiDa Counly Courthouse,
first floor Commissioners Office.
The purpose of this meetlnCJ Is to discuss
contract Issues far the Bidwell/ Porter Sewer
·ProJect with Aelds ExcovaUnCJ, Inc., General
Canb actor; URS, ProJect Engineer; AdaUiy &amp;
Deposit Company of Maryland, ProJect
Bondln9 Campany, and the Gallla Caunly
Commissioners.
The bulk af this meetlnt will be conducted In
Executive Session as It Is conlract related.
Gallla CounlyCammlssloners

Prorll Potential. Finance Avail able/Good Credit. Toll Free••..

· Coirtact us st:

1-800-821-8139
or vlsil our website :

Reel Eltll1e General

(888) 270-21AMAZING OPPOIITUNITYI In ·

11~ rCJJ'. t"r./ ,J.P

ternet Casino, Poker &amp; Sport•·
book Complete turnkey ttans ar
$35,000. High income potential.
YNM.magellanl.oom Call Toll Free

'-"P'~.

446•6806

1·886-na-2998.
CASH NOW Payday Loan Franchile. Earn St0,000·$20,000 por

958 Clark Chapel lid.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

month . complete turnkey. Full
Training. No expe~lence needed.

invl!llment Required.
www.cashnow-usa.com Ton tree

t ·lll·n&amp;-2998

~

~· \:tlm~UlDl
~ .1CJ:J, ~-te

'-::7fetT,C
ranch(t}Office;,.w. '

*

8

23 locust St.

Gallipolis, Unl~

fn

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRO..IABMITH,BROKER .....--..... 448 1101
GAIL BELVILLE........................- ........ 448 I 'Ill
TRIIH BNYDER..............- .................. A4t-M51
JOHNNIE IIUSSELL......- ..................317o0323
DAVID 8NYDEII ..............................,... 441OUR WEB PAGE IS,-

.Y1omlth•eal-to.c:om

•"'""' ,_tale@ZDOIMOI.ne~

45631

DOWNSIZED DISMISSED LAID·
OFF FIRED. Ale you prepared for
an (lbrupt change in your life? t·

888-736-6727

... d•• Cot11p11M11ft

..........

Quail) ~,_..

Call today I .
for your quote.

.·

510.SecondAvenue

.,

more than what meers the eye.
Look for you11elfl Wginia 446·
6806.
.

1943

on one floor. Cornea with 3 bedroom8, 2 ~the, a dining
room, &amp; a oun room. There Ia an allllched 1112 car garage,
and a newer 30.40 pole bam that has a concre1e 11001' and 2
attached sheds. Home Ia handicap aceeeelble. All Of this Is
silting on just over an acre Of newly chain llnkld fencing.
Hae a lot Of landlcaplng and Ia really nice. 1121,100.00

FOR MORE INFOilMAllON 'lYE US A CALL

l:mollll

Stt~ee

PORTLAND- A well bul~ briclc home with hardwood 11oore all

GalllpoUa, OH 415631

... ~_..-.,. ,...., ~ ·,..U--~,...

.REAL ESTATE

· Middleport, OH

(740) 446-7101

"""'·-

.Af&lt;,oHo~r.-, ... ~ ,..._;c. ·~

.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

HOME klca1od on Hedgewood
Drive, 314 bodraamo. 2 balho.
"'outilul cab!- in equipped
kitchen, living room, forrt:~al dining
' room. family room, til ., floor
11unctry, rur ............ aiiiChed
gngo, and outbuilding. There is

Reel Estate General

108

800458 9990

11

Generel

2515 KERR ROAD
Ranch style home neat1ec1 on 12 plus acres
land wl1h frontage alont Kerr Road.
1.5 baths, baHment, 2 car
OCII'Goe. Mull come and see the resl.

-

LOC:GIIGonl
prlvale 8 acre, rn/1, Httlng, you
wil flnd this lovely Cepe Cad
home featuring a~:-~ grea1
room
wllh
urning
fireplace, formal OR. go..mat
kitchen with eating area
ove~ooking the pond, 5 BRs, 3
balha. upslalrs sitting area, 2
car garage ond above ground
pool $235.000 toe01

the bullntll for you,
redlalor
Of different metalt, fabrtca..::P., and
Of
welding equipment,
, and
machine work. A growing butlneN
In income each year. It comoa· with approx.
, large '14 1/2 foot tall building that Ia about 2 yeara
Is 40 K 60. Alao another older building. Mobile home
nocNC-~tp,, alao. Selling because of health reaeone. MOll

BUSIIUS

~-~~~

companloa use our aer:-tce. 11811,000.00

13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
hOme w/4 BAl. 2 balho, kit. Lll.
OR, porclloo, partial besemorrt.
Priced ~ghl· ... !!lit Oulllanding
offer! Vacant. ready to welcome
VLS 446-8808

I
lhe clljll A1 lhe end of
COttonL.ane, you:ll flnd this
apacioua trl-level home that
ofters wonderful privacy, while
not sacrificing convenlcne. 4-5
BR home wnh 3 baths, LR,
FA, media roomand
pool. t3 acres Include
and crek fronlage.
!~':'·~~ 1132
.

and dtii8Ched 2 carr 1~~~:1
could be uaed lor 11
Prtc!!d for a qu~k sale. 155,000

-

i
roof t999, 4 BR, 2.5 SA.
garage,
vinyl
siding.
neighborhood. Needs tome
but priced right at STI,IOO
1331111 CITY LOT 43' •
localed 39 VIne Sl.

Yl

740-446-0008 740-441-1111
.
. evllllllmoo.zoomnet.qet www.ev~·moo~.co~
,Joe A. Moor-Broker 441·1818
Sarah L. Eva"e-Moore, Broker 441·1818
Patricia HayaCar• Caaey-248·843Q .

you're looking for a 1p8Cioua
home where everyone can
have their own space, this Is
111 3600 sq. ft . Includes 5 BRa
ond 3 balhll. And irs all on
one ~oor planl Huge
bedroom lhat'a

UNCOLH HILL· A one a1ory home with a large L-ehapecl
living rQOm, dining room, kllchen, big bedroom, and a bath
on one floor and the baeemenl Ia all flnilhed with
3 bedrooms, ,kllchen, lamlly room, and one bath. There 11
approKimately 5.9 acroa with moat laying nice 1\nd a view of
the Pomeroy Bridge and Walmarl.
ASKlNQ t131S,OOO.OD

SOUTH SIXTH STREET • A Pig 2
home with 3 to 4
bedrooms, dining room, 1'/• bathe,
porch 'and .
sitting on a nice lot. Has an upstairs
downetalre healing
and cooling system. There Ia a 3/4 ~ant and a nice
front sitting porCh.
Home hae french doore, a pretty
ftr,place, ate.
. 141,000;00

r"'
'
~·

approx.

I

sq. ft. of living area · Prlvocy?
Loss
of
maturing ·formal LA and OR
convenience? High costs lor a
wllh fireplace, kitchen wllh
lot of land? Maybe these are
eating area open lo FR. 4 BAs
some maintenance coats for a
and 3 full balha altualed in a
long driveway? Maybe these
lovely cduntry setting In the
are some trade offs you have
Rio Grande area. Priced at
10 make with some proportles,
. 1125
bul not lhis rambling ranch .
"' Located on the edge of town,
this home Is · very convenient
for schools and shopping. With
over 3000 sq. ft. ol living
· space, you'li enjoy the open
floor plan and large windows. 4

+:~=:~=
A

I !hit roomy
ae 5 BRa
hll 3 baths.
Nt20,DOO.
Over 2000 sq. ft. of living L
space. Foaturee . alao include .
large LR, eal·in kitchen wllh
dining area, dock and 2 cor

RACINE • At lhe edge ol town Ia. a ~r1ICI place lor your
mobile home or double wlda, or build a new home. Approx
1/2 acre lot with Ullltloa aVIIlable.
lte.OOO.OO

BAs, 3 lull belhs, LR , DR, den
and large FR, also an enclosed
porch.
Newly
remodeled
kitchen wnh ellracUve oak
cablnels. 3 fireplaces . 2 car
~age . $t59,900 1211

2 balhAT
ranch over lull
E:::~.LOOK
wilh 2 car garage and

Large bodmama,

-·

ciolet.

you

New Uetlng Brick Ranch wMh
Full Baatment 4 BR home
'with large kitchen, dining area,
LA and 3 bathe. Huge waik·oUI
b-mtnl perfacllor Fll. Large
patio &amp; t 7 acre lot wHh
rllt utility 2 · car attached
~age plus 2 cer detached.
1150 ,000 111 4

112m PIIICI IIIDUCID C:OO.nlty
lhlfno 10 townl BMIItlflli
roNing m e - and ·goraeoue
vltwo ... only part of thai """"""'
will! 1t&gt;11 4 BR 2 811 cua1o111 I tT.2
atory llome on 11+ - . Spaclouo
lll·ln k"cllen, pM1111y flnllhod
walk-out .... mtnl, 3 car Qll'lat
lnd wrop IIOUnd poroh, and f1olda
with flncint 1halt could bl Ulld to
corrol your anllnalo. REDUCED TO
12011,000.

111011
1100'1
Cllarmerl
Hardwood flooring, e BR, 3 BA.
3t78 aq. ft. of living ...... &amp; 2
car at11Ched gllr'OQI. PLUS 2 BR
t SA Q8raQO opertment with
blloony. A rtai GEMII100,000

120118 Newly ramocllled 2 otory hOme w/3 BR's, 2 baths. PerfiCI
lor oomeone lool&lt;lnt for 1
good dlt!i. Being oold wey uncter
thai oppraiaalvalue. Hurry, lhit one
won1 lullongl 589,000,

Alltnllon hWMtOtll Thrta
hOmn on lhnll adfOinlng . loll
within cHy ilm"•· Handyman
ftlodod ...opply lor 1hal joO II
159.000.

ina
quill In-town neighborhood. Low
maintenance, ·
conveniently
lo&lt;alod, lllrd wood lloorl,
updaled khcllon lnd bath,
and lull

LAND LISTING S

11080 V.oilnl lot In town. 12073- 11 e acral of
$24,900
baauflful Iandi 3 pond1,
11017 Commarollll'foiMrtyl and 1 112 ttory home.
145 acres 'm/1 near Rio Grandi. PRICE REDUCED
12057 VACANT Lot In GrHn ftDII. LOTSI Frontage
Twp.
on SR 554 and Wood111111l
' 12081 '9.125 scree m/1 In Gr1111 Road . Raalrlcllona .
townehlp.
•12,500 each
12088- 12· 14 Acreo m/1 ftOtl. V-nt Lind· 85

L!ADINQ CREEK RD • Here'o a 48.8 ICrt parcel Of land
wllh many building anoa on both aldoa Of the road, bolh lldoa
Of the railroad, and bordera the crMk. BeaUIHullaylng home
altee. There Ia also woods for hunting. '
· ' •

overlooking Ohio Vallay
acre~ o Hidden Vallay
12071 - 80 Acraa m/1 near Rio Drlva, Iota of road
Granda
frontagel
12072· 263 acrea m/1 Off of
Stale Route 218.

)

.I

tS,.

,,•

LIVABLE HOME FOR
MONEY. $I 25,000.00 VLS

THE

14014 KINO SIZE FAMILY HOME
Greal 2 sty.. 4 bedrma.. 2 I /2
baths, formal Lll &amp; DR; Fam Am.
wJbrlck fireplace, all large rms., 13'
x 25' master bedrm. w/bath. 2 car

attached garaga. t .25 Ac mil
'St40,000. Addhlonal lot available.
VLS
~

',, ,, t
1,; 1 ~

"' ~

.
-

rA

:......

J

~

'

~·
/, , .

•1

"

1

commercia l. Priced @ 165.000

BRs, 1 bath. nice above
ground pool. oust in time 10
enjoy the upcoming summer
days) located on .66 of an
acre. m/1, and priced to sell at
only $61 ,500. lifO

DELUXE
4 bedrms,
,
garage &amp; 2 ac mil. Immaculate
condiilon 2000 aq. ft. &amp; to enjoy
family like. to luMost, Large rma,
through out· flroptace in Lll. olty
iighta, beautiful k~chon. Sun
porch w/Window walla. Gao &amp;
alec. heat, central air &amp; lovely
corpol. Green School1. This one
woo worth wailing for, just a
phone call away. VLS 44ll-tl808
MAKE OFFER
14022 Wotoh tho Rlwr from yur
backyard? Enjoy the view from
your boat dock or back deck." this
1+ ac mil wnh a 2 ~R t bath
mobile home/Vacation camper Is

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Willman, GRir CRS Broker 448-9555
carolyn Waach, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Garn11 446-2707
Robert Bruce 448-0621 Rita Wl1eman 446-11555

,

IIOtne 3
t
with basement.
on
aclot and @Intersection of Sl. Rl.
160 &amp; 554. Owner has remodeled
hOme and put naw roof on
garnoetworksllap. May also be

usect
ill a don/FA, cozy kilehen, 3

t acre lot,
aome prlvacy,
gardsn
apot or a great
f« lho
klda 10 pity. Home boasta a
very nice khchen whh oak
ceblnota, lola ol counter
space, bar area and pantry,
ail opon to 1 dining aroi/FR
wllh vaulted ceiling, formal
LR 3 BRI &amp; 2 batha, newer
caipet lhroughout. Prlpod at
$S9,900. HOI
·

.. .

dining rm ., living rm., family rm.,
with nreptace., Patio, above
ground pool, 2 car attached
garage and basement.. VERY

14017 Located 3113 111. ca~al
I L. Smith 740·446·6806.
2

Before shopping for your New Address... stop by ours:

l

I

All
HIVO To Do Ia UOVII
lnl
Taotefuiiy
remodeled
ltarllng In t999 to present.
This lovely oflordable home
olla" Lll wllh open dining and
kitchen area, pleaaont and
sunny FR. 3 BRa. t 1/2 batho,
1 car garage and nice deck
maktl thio property a lovely
place to call llorne. Priced 11
only $105,000. C.ll1oclay lhtn
alart paclcing . 1117
.

J

.

operation. Located near Rio
Grande. Appointment Only. call

area or could

H'l a
Not too M..chtt

~

, - :.~..

n:J11 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. II you like
lndlvlduoiity .. hore n lsi 3,029 ""·
ft. more or leBa, 3 bedrms., 2 1/2
balha, Kit., LFim, Office rm., and
much 11101e. Wrap porch front &amp; 2
aldoa. 167 Acres mil. Roiling
Peature and 3 Largo Sarno &amp;
Feed Lot sites, 2 nice ponds.
Land Is most all clean &amp; has some
flowers but make sure to 6ook at
this. Call Johnnie al 367·0323 fencing. Electrlc &amp; troslfree water
In the bam. Feed lot sites.
today for an appointment.
·Formerly used for Veal calf

In good,
LA,

Flnlellod parllal buamem, n1c.
Iron! porclllnd a cemem patio In

.

car
nice
TLC 140011 .A FEW MINUTES OF
YOUR nME COULD PAY OFFI
View this lovely all bfk:k home
t70' wllhree bedrooms, 2 baths, forma l

finished family room. Homo sits on
2 Ac. mil in Hlnnan Trace Schools.
Jual minutes 1rom downtown
Gallipolis. This !lome featuree a
baaulilul landocaped lawn, wood
pallet 1110ve and central air.
Located juet off Rock Lick Rd. on
Mabie Dr. In nice nllghborhood.
Have a garden and raise some

gs::~~il
· Vlllley
auality
locallor)
In
area. SffS,DOO
112

Brick &amp; vinyl 6 BR, 2 SA IIOtne
private 1 ·acre lot. Family
IMng room w/flreplace, DR.
ia1ge UIIIH, 1oom In lhls one
luU basemen!. Altachod 2

aa well

.jl4 Second Ave., GallipoU., Ohio 45631@4

Fo,_rly B""'lrl&gt;""' II..,. "So..... Sa......m 0/U, For O..r .t Q"""•r Co..-,"

-~~I

juot tlla thing lor stress. May be
room for ·a garden. Located at
7~83 St. At. 7 South and priced at

40) 446·.3644

$59,500

140111 COMMERCIAL LOT· INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulaviiie
Jackson Pk. GaiHpolls. OH Comer · Pk. 3 bedrm. 3 bath living quarters .
AJso tS: x 32' ga•age plus 30' , 20
iol wilh groat potential.
bUilding 112 ac. ol land. good sales
ioc. Prtced to sell. VLS

Lovely homt on tho BeauiJJua
Ohio Rlverl This home has been
completely remodeled . All has
been done wlthlnthe last four yrs.
New roof, lntulated windows, new

BY THE OHIO
lovely brick &amp; Vl!'lyl
w/omall priCe. Beautilul ollk
ctblnols W/bar. Formal Lll &amp; DR, 3
bed"l\S, 1 lull bath &amp; 2 haH baths.
Bonus
of
a
mother·ln·law
apartment w/LR, kit, 1 BR &amp; balh.

NC &amp; furnace, ail new appliances,
central Vac . s~atem . Home hB&amp; full
basement w/WOI1&lt;sh0p. New guest
cabin cloaor lo rtvor, but above
flood plain. back yard lenced.
.Panoramic vlsw of the Ohio river

AN appliances stay. Enjoy the view from elmost all rooms and catHn. A

of tho Ohio River w/a boat dock
close by. Huge 4 car garage &amp;
cement dliveway. Wort&lt;shop lnthe
garage. It's time 10r action. ShoWn
by appointment.

pa1adi"

for boating &amp; fiohlng.

Priced for quick sale,

1873

REDUCED

PRICE- t 17

acres close to new Fwy., hOspital,
shop ctr. water," gas, sewer.
Adjoining Pinecrest Nurs!ng Heme.

14023 OUT POSSUM TROT RD. You'll lind a g1oa1 immaculsto 2 bedrm; I bath mobil&amp; home, shingle root,
deck, out·buiidings for
, 1
land thal1oolo &amp; also t5 Ac I'M w/flsiJing pond. Whala nice sot to
bUild or sub·divide.
Cali VLSmlth

.,

�•

SUnd8Y....... 3, 2001

Pomeroy· Middleport o Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pltiu.d, WV
320 lioblle Hamil

310 HCIIIIM for Sale
FORECLOSED GOY'T HOliES!
$0 OR LOW DOWNI TAX
AEPO'S &amp; IIANKIIUPTCIESI OK

Aaooaoo9crd..1 2 -

CREDm FOR I..ISTlHG! CALL

... u - S ; - . . paymenta; Raglaterod/
1306.
.Co.; cal CAl • 18&amp;-687·

AlE 'lOUR CREDIT CNID BUS
OVERIM C MIHG YOU 11 fREE

can
eoniOiklate your llifla Into one ,
DEBT CONSOUDAnON

1-

IDD-Slll·1 mliil.8113.

- . - . , DOWIU OW
100*' IEa.IRnY /Ill?

FORECLOSED HOUEI Tax liepool lbnkrupldaal HUD, VA,
FHA. and ~ ., No Oown

·-582-33'$

8uyaral Calf for Uttings 11110-21~ (Eoot. H-7111)

Paymenn Portac:t tor F'ost rome

NoFae~Wo'MII

fi'NIIII•t payment Reduce inter·
eat. Avoid late chargas l Stop
haruamant. UconHd/Bonded.

310 Homes for Sale
to DOWN HOMES! GOV'T

CASH 8Y PHONE. Gat $tOO to
S50D r.u day! "--o*ed; Chad!ing Ac&lt;ount/Job/Accelllo Fax.
An Equal Opponunity Landor.

CMIOn, HlrlCiyman, Church, sso.ooo Milke Offer,
(304J875-te18

&amp;

Houae For Sate In M11on.
(3DI)T13-5112B
in City, Appnox. t40(). sq ft,
t t/2 Iota, good neighborhood,

BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

Olw......-..,py.
_ ......... 1111500.can

·-221-'NT/

t~ml8t1

Cll&amp;-9pm.(7«J111B 3342

to

MEDICAL BIWNG U!tlinoiled income potential. No experience
F
·
&amp;
neceaeary. rte lnformal•on
CD-ROY. Investment lor SZ•95.
Financing available. (800) 3221139. EXT 050
. ·

DOWN HOliESt GOV'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY D()WNI OK
CAEOITJ FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1.-o.331..CJ020 • 8811

cAsH BY PHONE. Gal $100 to
S50D r.u diJI Required: in"' Account/Job/Acceu to Fax,
o
Aft Equal Opportunitr Lender.
• Other requirement~ apply.
- .-...soo.oom 1·1188·229·
7877

to

DOWN HOIIEII No credH
OKI HUD, VA. FHA. Cal lor list·

_ _ .....,.

1~:"~-.h:..IOI"m--::"_u•
~=-.-'::_:. -:::,::8'::.:
••
- - 58 12 u

18 3 5

iogs. HIOG-50t-tm.._9818.

CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
' OAC. FR1111112.500-$125.0110 1111
AY~W~g~t tate. OnH1our approyal.
Cd F.C.C.S. lOU·free 1-188-605-

3 bedroom. 2 bath calhedral eel·
inga throughout, county wa1er,
heat pump. 740-742-244&lt;1 day-

100" remodeled house in Po~. great price, must He. will
eonaide( land contract. 7&lt;10-898-

3379
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
OAC. From 112.500-$125,000! 1111
A - -. 0na-11our appmval.
C.U F.C C S toa fr• 1-118--1053379 • ' • •
•

8783.
3 Bedroom, 1·1/2 8alh, All
Electric, 2200 Square Foot, 2 ·
Apartments, Good CCndnlon, At
2403 Mount Vernon Avenue.
- . r , (301)895 3825

"'*"

1-;;~·
7~40-;;7~42;-~t80;7;..;·;·~·~...~-~;
- - 3 Bodloom. 2 car garage, 600ft, Oak lloorlng, Grand·
view Heighto. (30')937·211115

I :_:::::..:.,::c,=:.::--=;..:.::'
=--=::::-::::Nice throe bedroom cape cod.
basement, garage. fireplace.
country eettlng, TPC water,
Sdloola. 740-992-8347.

CONSOLIDATE YOUR
WAY OUT OF DE1m

3 Bedroom on Route 2, (304)875-

-.., moniN'f - --

3 bedroom, I 112 bath, FANG lur·
Route 7 South, .Newer. Larger
nace, C/a, Tupper• ptaina water,
Home. verr Nice. Conslde.r
half basement, garagel•torage · Trade-in, (740))41&gt;0!'8'-81188
building, new septic, beautiful lriiiiii~..;----view, 74CHI9Nl0114. .

5332

Par one~. EASY to
get IIBited. ~ F,..;lom

(NOn-Prolt)

By Owner- Cape Cod. Formal

FREE MONEY FORM IRSII Call
l-227-0086tor-.

:=::::=:..1

LUMP SUM CASH NOW • We
Suy ttructured Insurance SeHiaments, Insurance Annuities. Lottery a Casino Jackpot Winnings,

Suet !plta'&lt;es Prizes.

www.ppicash.com Beat Prices.

Col PP1 @IJDD-435-3248 &gt;&lt;49
CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Reduce monthlv
. Pa 11 one bill/monlh.
P a~~ments
'
,
EASY to got started. Financial

Fr"dom Christian C.ouneeling,

80D· 84t·9757,

ext.

.

..

ctwllliM~.

(BOO) 141-11757 eoot CC3

FREE MONEY FORII! IRSII Call
__tor-::=:::=·
-t _a88_227_-0086

CC3

www.deblcca.org (non-profit)
01vorca 5150

~95
FREE information!
Bankrooptcy n/a in TNiKY
Divorte$150
Bankruptcy $tes
Adoption 11225
Not do-ft·yourull-kitl
. CALL 1-800-303-1170
FREE inlormatlonl
8anknoptcy n/a in lNJKY

P•cua•·

Lot modo! ct.....,..,
-~~
1125. tor 2000
. - oinglel, s poe tinglol-go b)' !My 31. no.- ,
oonable offer retvud. - .
_ , taltlong, to ...,In
Cole'a Mobile Homea Alhena
Ollio, 0pon 11-W. ._7, ~II.,
lHI. Sat. IQ.5.

.......

- - .. our.--.e.

u=.= - n

~·!,.-And.,_
~t~B88~-~~30~28~:-:"':""-:'--18111-e777.
t974 - . . 2·3 bad....,., ..... 740-1185 3855 $4tiOO.

...,....

All"""-~ in

paprr II aubject 10
the F - Fair Housing Act
I illegal
. . n&amp;\U

.,,_which-

to~'llnypoolooatoce:

fimllallonordiacrtmlnation
based on·
religion.

race. -...

--atalul. -

orl!;n. or any'- to
make ant such poaleoance,
limitation 01 llscrimination.'

2 Story HOuse, 2 Or 3 Bedroom,
Full Basement. City Schools.
0.250' Acres 01 Clean Land,

This ilewspaper will nol
knowingly accept
advertisen.utornealoatate
whlclt lain violation a1 the
law. Our mad'"" are hereby

$35,0IIO. (740)448-0265

informed that alldwellinga

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES I
$0 OR LOW DOWN I TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITJ FOR USTINGI CALL!BD0-50t ·tm old. 9813.

adver1isadinllilsare available on an equal ...
OJ)Ii(X1Unily baala.

~N:-n-:1-:-4-::Wida:::-:--.--:3--:Bed~:-,.,.,.-m-.::On-:-ly
o~ F
D&amp; ~- Up
" · -· . . . _ . y •
1188928~

F....,_ T-....

t982 t4X70
2
t
pump &amp; ale. 17.500. 740.591-

IIIJ
~

Aio -

y,y

Total E - . Centro1 Alr. Setup

Mull Go. Only 111,990. Fleet·

On A Privat• Rented Lot. woOd Homes, ProciOn~ille, Toll
(740)44t-1304
Fnoa I 888 588 0187

1994 Redman t4x70 Trolar Wilh N- 2001 Fla-ood only
3Acrat Flat Land. Rio Grand• '$148.48 par month. Call Nikki
Bidwell Area. (740)245-2222 7~.
Aalq 135 000
d
br
b
•
Ns'!"o dOuoo
" ~!.' wl •, 3 12:-..2 • •
1911111- Skyline- · 8 ~·
...,wn on Y ·~- par
Electric Hoa~ CIA. Vlnyt Sldi111J, mon. cal .... t-t-e777.

~

S~h~in~g~lo~d~R~oo:-l::,
-M
-:-u_•_
• _ M-::-ov
-:o:-.
(740)418 1301

28x8D 3 Or 4 Bedroom. Only
$305.00 Per Month 8.1111" Fixed

STOP REIITIIICIII OWII FOR
1

"'"""""'~~-~~·~t~-~9211
~3~1~211~-:- 1

74 Buddy t2x80 mobile home. in
good condHion, 8/C, 2 bedroom,
oehlga-. 740 11811 3583.
Contuaed? Don't 8a- Call Oakwood- Galllpofla. Seat Prlcea.
Best Service, Belt Poaplt. HYou
See And Ad You Like· Call Ual

Factory Goof 32&gt;080 $10,000 Discount only $1000.00 Dv.n, Do·
paid by Factory

.\~~p

Anal Days, Nationwide inventory
Reductlco)l (30')73tls3409
Limited Or No Credit? Governmont 8ao.k Finance Only AI Oalowooer In "BorbouraviNo, WV 304·

7311-34011.
Lot model clearance, uva up to
$8,825 with any homo, check ua
out were dealing, Coto'a Mobile
Homes, US 50 EIIII,AIIiens, Oh.
New Double Wide. $195 Per
Month! 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath. Free
Delivery &amp; Sot-up. t -888·828·

lESSI $0., ~ llcMnl 01&lt; ~

...,_
-1 • 1777
F.,.•__
.,.. -~-•t 1 ~
ElCL 11821

Could 8e
~

H1.uo 11mt. $3t.DOOI

I 340 Busl~ ind

S32,1100. 1jcoonl.IM
14 - . 118,1110.
..... Co.- T - Pllin-·· 7 ~ "-,.,..
11om, $23,500 Or 11 - ·
118
c.r - . • SIZ.OOO Or 13 111,000.
- · - 5-113,500.
- . ,, 9 - 18.5001

llvH -

for rent In

=

No Peta. _ . T . 441-Dtet.

1122. (30'1875-4144Mor5pm.

LAND FOR SALE:
Unbeliavable
ArizllnaiTht
__
_...,._

P8r1&lt;.

740-

440

ty 1n AmoricaJLarge 1 acre"*·
$llll{rnC&gt;

I .... 2 lledluOIII -Lrllilll; U•
nilhed and unlumlolleit, oecuri1y
depoail required, no· pets, 7409112-2218.

(MII95 total) t hour from Tucson.

Ooll, hilling, trolls, lakaa. Porlecl
• ....... 4500 fl. ..... lltiMI, II*&gt;
taculllt vlewl. Deal direct w/developar &amp; aavo. Money back
- -· Free literature. Coli 1·
800412-8103 OP" tor
mo11age. No aateaperaon will
cal.

t Bedroom Apallrnan1, Relfltllra·
tor, Range, A/C lnctudod, 11289
Plua Dapoal
&amp; Rolerence. HUD
Approved.
(740)441-1511

Don,-

t br.. 11220 month plua u!iiillal
:;
3RI St. - . 740-

•-dad

m.:•·

410 Hou1e1 for Rent

·3

Bedroom•

Foreclosed

~I

...,.,

3 Bedroom .Houao In Syracuao,
Ohio, $450/ Month HUD Ap·
proved
(304)875-5332
or
(740)992-lll8 "'"" odil only

Apanmonta, 1108 W. College
Slrllllt, Rio Grande, Ohio. 1 &amp; 2
Bodrooma, Kitchen Furnlrhed,
Water Paid. lAundry Facllllloa.
Contr1J
AJr. . Appi- C...
Be
Picked Up · Between
&amp;:DOom I 8:00pm. Locallon:
Roldo 325 In Rio Grandt,
Ohio TDDf
(411)528-04&amp;8
Olllcel (740)245- 1170. Equal
Houalng Opponunlty. Handl·
capped tlcc ttiltle

for-- - .

,_

WatlW

Fo......, 4x4,
(7401118 2147

l'l1nol ~-·ear-

Piulllapoolt,(304J875.573:1

(740)441-tDZI

_,_ --

Nc-

l.aaw''

r

No

Aots•or.

~---

~. No Poll.
lng,·
Reterencao
1 DepotH Re·
quired. Ulill!ioa Furniohad.

......

-

-FumiLn

!3D')f75-1422
515Main-_Pmt-

Gracioua living. t .... 211ed111dli
aparlmenta at Voitaga Manor....
Rivlrslde Apartnoeitts In Mldde- I
pon. From $278-$348. Call 740- Wuhlr $115, Cryer $115, Range
992·5084. Equal ""'~'"" n...-. $11~. Refrigerator IID5, Small
...,__
· - -.. ..,.....
cheettypelrMzer lt25, -~
Dryer Sot S250, Window 11/C
Now Taking Appllcatlona- 35 1150, Skogga Appliance. 71
Wilt 2 Bedroom Townhou•• Vilnd St. (740)+1f-73118
Apartments. Include• Water 520
Sporting

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

..,.a a+

----

Recently Renovated . 2.000
Square Foot, 3 Bedroom Plua
~. 1850/ Month, Downtown
Galllpolla,
Contact
Kelty

....

l~t.-rExtC18t7

-

S. .age. Trash, 1350/Mo .. 7401160008

__.....,.

-

&amp; Uooaol FumiLn
- 2 -IJvlngrcom SUilae.
S31e. Buy, Sail, T -.

(740)448-1518

44 "~agnum Augor. 1'- -khawk•
Still In Box. $325.00; 357 AuQtr
Wfth Hollier &amp; Sheila, 8325.00
(740):145-11112
5

(74QIU8 11811
530
AntiqueS
Tora Townhou11 Aplrtmonta,
Very Spacloua. 2 Bodrooma, 2 Buy or ooll. Rlvorlno Anllqull,
Flaora, CA. 1 tf2 111111. FUIIJ car- 11:14 Etr4
8R 1:14 E. flo.
poled, AduH Pool &amp; Baby POOl, - · 740-912-2528 01' 740-992·
Pallo, Start 1388/Mo. No Pall, . 18311. IUe - .. ·

et,OOO SACK 2 Ton Air Condl·
- · 2 Ton Col, 1
Bat. Inotllled, 112,2115, 11,000 Blck,
11295· Not Pricl. F- EIIUoo I .
For QuotH On Olhlr
II You Don~ Call Uo, Wo

uno

can

8-.

-

460 Space

Rent

Trailer Lot Fo, Rent, Ashton
Area, (30')743-0719

1-800-5DI· ImE&gt;CLIIII

_...,.._I~

l:"c:"'tcfo'w~.:t 1
1~~•t -

~ -17
--Beautiful Whho Allred Angelo
Wadding Dr-. Size 14, Draea.
·Vail &amp; c~notlno, Make OHer,
(740)2A5-6705,

MOIIIIE-OWNEIIS

Huge inventory, Dllalunt Pricel,
On VInyl Skining, Doora, .Wind·
owa. Ancho,., Water Heate;e.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Perla, Fur·
nee.. _a Htat Pumps. Bennette
Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·

Compact Proaario Deaktop
Cllmpultr,•tooo
733 ,......,..__,7
MHZ. -

.w,m_,.

,,_,..__ _

11411-.orvb.-

COMPUTERS:
WE Evan
FINANCE
DELL
COMPUTERS!
wll.h

IIEW AIID USED STEEL Slut

'!!-,!'1~n t;:!'!'_.!!•dltl t -100·

~"~ u.

·Channel,
Pipe - FFlat
a rBar,
Ccncrote,
Anglo,
Stoat
Grating For .Dralna. Drlvewaya &amp;

........

- -

~-

Coppar .Wiro For Making Crafta,
Collpo4)875-4834
Dog - · Coot. St70, Wit Bali
For etOO. (740)111 30411

•za

460

0&lt;(7~

Real Estate General

(740)448-7300 .

PETCARERX.COM Savo up to
!lOll on ALL pet madlcatlone and
auppllae, Including Heortgoml, In·
ll&lt;captor, Frontline, mcrall FREE
SHIPPINO. 0n1or online - .Pat·
c..RX.comt-800 IU 1427.

Organ, •100; :t Ploca -.ad,

connect Box. 150. Kitchen Tabla,
• Chalra, It DO. (740)387-08!10
Dr (740)387-7272

~ Maytag,.,27or. et25. ; Call
- · · Gorlicto ,_.4)871-8253

RacondHioned Washer &amp; Dryera,
$100 Each. A/C, !1,000 To 23,000
BTU FO&lt; Sale, ~lng At $75.00.
Thompson Appliance R_opair,
3407 Jackacn Avenue, (304)675·
7318

eyl Never Repay. All Wonllwhllo
Aequaats Considered. MUll be
G'- Out to Avoid Taxaa. Fund·
lng lor Edueotton, Hcualng Bull·
neoa, Travel, Dabtl, Artl and

More. - .granll-dot-com.coxn I·
!fOG-242-03113 E&gt;CL-

RIIIII!HTlAL NOliE OWHER8 :
Tappan HI Effici ency 90" Gsa
Furnaces. OU Furnaces. t2 Seer
Heat Pump I Air Conditioning

Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, t •
800-872-5987 www.oovb.com/ben·
nett

7295

Real Estate Genaral

STEEL BUILDINGS : 5 Only 3)
25x30, 2)45x90, Must Move Now!
Selling lor Balance Owed t -100482·7930 x-t2
Stunning Dlnette .Set W/4 Cl\aft &amp;
Glasa fop Table. Black w/Gold

Tnm. excen,nt Condition.

Price, $229.00, Sale Price, $50.00
(304)175-8583

Soil
Top
(740)44t --1161 9

Waterline Special: · 3/4 200 PSI
$21 .115 Per tOO; t• 200 PSI
$37.00 Par tOO; Ail Brua Com_ . , . Flttlnge In Slock
'

-.Ohio,

ROil I!VAIII ENTI!RPRIIEI

550

OFFICE

992

:510

.,,

OrL.aavaAifll

Hau11hold

. Goodl

Building

ALL STEEL IUILDt.s
FiiCIDiy

cr.,.r-.

1-

Small

.50X100,
, _ . Wit
Hold. 8ll&gt;2DD
-·
BOx120,
Best Ollo!f - W I Ray

'"' gao-·

Ll.'f: ')

f(Jf,r'

610 Fann Equipment
On New Jam
Deere Ulower ConditiOners And
Baler• With John Deere Credit
Approv... 'Call ll&lt; Stop By Nowll
CarmicQel'l Farm &amp; Lawn

.,. Al•clll

(7&gt;10)448-2412 t ·BDO !iiU 1111
t1181 14ft, 2 -

-toad tnl-

er with tack and dr..a room.
(740)311H!azo

2 Row Holland Carouul Toboa:o
24t2· Uted t -

- (740)448-

Gravoly Riding Trodar, tll-0 f'nl.

AKC ShoHie pupa, Iris, bl blacka,
sable/white. vet checked. cham·
pion linea, $350. 740-989-1085.

Boston Terrier To Mate With

lalm.

Gallipolis, Ohio (740)440-

2412

NH 418 Dlac Sine. Uaod Le11
than . ZOO Acroa , St0,50D.
(304)137·3438 Daya (3J)4)582-

5747 ...........

Uvntock

· Sale, Letart. WV (304)895·3318,

-.nyrellnna.com

Umoualn yearUng bulla, two left.
$800 1 $900; 2 112 year old
buckakln gelding, $900; 740-898-

2785.
Miniature donkeys, 740-892·

2480.

1140

Hay I Grain

Hay &amp; Bright Wire roo Stnlw, Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Oil·
count Available. Heritage Farm.

Fartlllzer

$0 OOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS 11291
MO, 24 MO'S @t9.8"- FOR
USTINGS, CALL 1-800·451-1)050
ext. C-9812

NEW USTING • POIIIROY latJ'el Street.
vacant lot, 45X133+ .
Immediate
poaeesslon.
ASKING 135,000.

Strawberries, You Pick- We Pick.
Tavtor'a Berry Patch, 2884 Kerr.
Road . Open 8-8 Monday, Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8-4 Saturday,
Cloled Sunday. (740)245-9047

FLATWOODS ROAD I'A great location, 21/2
aorea of ground nicely landacape.d ,
3. bedrooms, 2 baths. A ITIIInutactured hOme
on a full basement with an attached, large 2
car garage. Front sitting porch, large Cleek,
The home Ia In good condition with new
carpet plus a fireplace.
ASKING 182,000

r.&gt;liW::M·' ,.,. 1

$0 DOWrl CARSI POLICE IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $29/
MO, 24 MO'S @19.9% . FOR
LISnNGS, CALL 1·800·451-0050
Bid. C-9812
1879 Jeep CJ·5, now body, new
motor, too many 8)(tras to list ,
nice, $4800 OBO, 740-1192-3798.
1979

~lncoln

Vorsallloa. 48,000

Actual Mllei, EKceUent Condition,
. $4000, (740)368-0884 Or (740)
387- 7885

44 BEECH STREET
IMPRESSED IS WHAT YOU
WILL BE WHEN YOU VIEW

·

THIS BEAUTIFUL BAN£H!

REDUCED
COMMERCIAL
Sycamore Streot ... iarge
story
building with oil street parking.
Previously
used •
floral
buslneu, mey be just right lor the
buSirHt18 at your choice. CaH ue
lor cmpleto listlngl 12044

Not only is
the location as
situated near hospital
church, · etc. OVersized
car
attached garage, living room,
&amp; lonnai dining area, 1 1/2 baths,
a bedrooms &amp; more. Easy ro COIIMERCIAIJINVE8TMENT
maintain
level
lot.
Quick Commercial building with 3
pouellion herell2053
apartments Snd · business rental.
acres rn/1 Iota of goodinconne. t.lt24
I
hunting land. ATTENTION!
HUNTERS
&amp;
Township. $30,000.00 NATURE LOYERSI Approx. 54
acres ot mostly all wood land w~h
nice meadow. Wlklllfa galore.
Loll of rood lrontage and adjoins
Wyne National Forrest. 112125
12014
100
Charry
SlrHL..$88,500 One ot tho batt
views In Galllpols lromtha poroh
of this 1 1/2 etory heme. Uving
loading deck. · room. dining or family room, over
• 3·5 acres of 2 acres.
acceu. Correct
aereage to be
. bv suovey. 545,000.

NEW LISTING
Attnictive village home·
in Pomeroy.
2
~~~
bedroom, I bath ranch
with attached garage.
Near hospital. JUST
I ~~~l;R8 WILL
I'
LOSS
$64,000

I

TO MAKE
SOMEONE
QAINI • WANT SOLO

Immaculate

NEW

FARMI Approx.
fencing, hourae
bam, shop, storage building and

4,

1998

, Iorge k~chen

appliances open

acral, pond,

roomy 2

iamlly room, formal living
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
laundry. over 1800 sq. ft. ot llvlng
space. 112104

1885 Okla Regency. 88.000 - -

tltli-25211-

11181 Ford EaD1 , 2 - · 75,000
mllea, $5500, 740-992-510!1,
Chapman, 2315 Sixth St .. Syra·

......

eon-

t999 Mlala, Soft Top
vanlble, Black With Tan Top ,
Laadw Interior, I ,700 MIN, Au·
tomatlc.
Loeded,
Pramlum
Wh- I Sttroo. Tllaft-ganl Sya-.1122.000 (814)1~
2000 Cavalier, 2 Door. AM/FM
(740)441-0337

2DDD Chryoter 300 M, BDOD milal,
sunrool, loaded, leather Interior,
740-992-11587.
2000 Chryaltr Sebring LXI, Sun·
root. l..oadad, Extra Shoup, Exeatlent Condition. 115.800 Arm,
(740)388 9780AIIIf8pm.

can

2000 ·VW Beetle, Red, Auto
Transm1111on, .Tu,bo, Sunroof,
l.Hihlr - · Showooom Condition, Garage Kopt, $17,900. 2000
Bonnavllla SSEI, Loaded, Sunroof,
CD, Leather Seats, Cuttom
Wheels, Showroom Condition ,
Garage Kept, 123.900. (740)4402927
74 Chevy Nova. 1 Owner, 350/
350, 48,000 Milos, Needa Pain!,
$2500 080 (740)379:2708 .

88 Pontiac Bonneville. 4.3 liter
VB. 4 Door, Good CondUion, M•
chanlc Owned And Babied.
S3000, (740) 448 9951 kelly
88 Ford F250, $2500 , Dodge
ES, V-11, CD, Tint, PW, PD.
Alanm, $3500, (740)245--6797
81 Nloaan Max, Top Condition,
$3500 (304)875·8t32 (304)87!1·

11144
93 Dodge Spirit, • Door. A/C.
Auto, 143,0110 Mllal, $1400 080
(740)44&amp;-4754

114 camaro Z-28, 350 LTI angina,
auto, pw, pi, T-topa, Base sound
ayetem, 70,000 mlle1; garage
kept, excellent shape, $9,500,
740-949-11161 .

Buy hem pay here. low down payments. ·no credit checks, M&amp;J

Auto, VInton, Oh .. 740-388-9893.

CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI ._NDA'S,
CHEVY. 24 MD'S @t9.9". FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1·800· 941 sm EXT. c -9814,
·
CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY. 24 MD'S @19.9". FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1· 800-941 ·
~m EXT. c-9814.
Uvoly'a Auto Salea- 11185 dodge
BOO Convertible, Auto. $900;
19113 Mercury Topaz, 5· 8paed,
$1200; 1988 Ford Eacort GL,
Auto, $350; 1990 Ford Eacort LX,
Auto, $700; 1991 Chevy Lumina,
Auto, $1400; 1985 Chevy Cavalier, Auto, $100; 1987 Pontiac
Grand Am, Auto, 1900 1885 Pon·
tlac Pareteene WS, Auto, $800; ·
1888 Chevy Cavalier, Auto, $450;
1987 Plyinoulh Voyager, Auto,
1600; 1988 Chevy G·20. Van.
Aldo, $t200. 1978 Chevy G-30 t •
Ton Van, Auto, $2000. 1973 lntanalional Bus, 5 Speed, 88 P•·
sanger. $800; Call (740)3889303 Monday, Tliru Friday 8am5pm. Saturday 9am- t pm, Cioaed
Sunday.

story home. Large

k~chln

ahd dlanlng I(Oa,
basement. 2 ·baths. and more.
112tte
.

1989 3/4 ton Chevy picf&lt;up. 2 wd.,
740-992-2482.
1977 GMC Siarra 8500, V-B 427,

remodelec:l,

room,

family

WILL

room,

·convenient location. , _

TiDY..

Ranch home with 2
bedrocma, IMng room, dining and
kitchen. Plus 14 x 70 mobile home
in excallent cohd~lon, PI'PI•ooaoaonr.tlotty

used u a 'l'ntal· Lola allrultrwH
and landscaping. 112123
o1201e
NOT · JUST
A
RANCH ..CONTEMPORARY
styled heme s~uatold en 2 pluo
acres. Large living rccm with
cathedral calling, larga muter
bedroom and beth, lamly room,
Iota ot decking on lront. Much
more to OilY. call tor lilting detallal

1099 Tacdora Avi. Chick II
Outl Quick pouoollon. Nice
corn• lot &amp; 3 bedroom, 1 1/2
beth homo with overalzed garage
and lull buemont. 12115

Pomeroy. A .&lt;! YMI' Old two atory Randall ,
Hor1111 wnh 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 '/o
baths. 12X18 deck, HP/CA and ceiHng
fans. 1'/• acrn, nice garden areL Very
nice home. Owner hes reloca1ed and
wants lhla sOlei.
ASKING S71,000.

SR' 124

LOTS OF HOUSE FOR THE
MONEY! Like new Cape Cod
home with lull rear dorrl!ei o«ering

more space upstairs. 3 BR, 2
balhs, 1ormal LR, 1oyer, FA and

Is

formal dining area, larga sized
decking area, large sized decking
on rear, over 2 acre lot and much
morel OWNERS RELOCAnNG
SAID "SELL NOW'!
12094

1

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
MIDDLEPORT. Older home with
charm and great lOCation near
school, grocery, etc. Lots Q:f room
here for 1he family. give Cheryl a
call for more details. 112110

•
•
•
•
•
•

Quality Neighborhood • Green Schools
Convenient LocaHon
Large Living Room
Formal Dining Room
Approx 2800 square feet
Four bedrooms
• 3 Baths
• 2 Car Gatage
• Wonderful back yarel wllh In-ground pool
• MulH-level Dock
• 16X22 Outbuilding· tor workshop
• Proteulonallandacaped lol
· •
ent10nce

• ~PLE

GROVE SUI!IDMIION
OHIO I!IVEA FRONTAGE • Approximately
acre Iota • 1
to choose from. · G111at
C$11lj)!n~ Iota. Call tOday more details.
· ASKING f20,000.

o·

tOr

I

"
~MEROY ·Coulo be ollica ilfl'Ce, could b8 a home. you decide. S8118(1 rooma, 2+ bathe on
a main street, 2 car garage,·Could be a f8!1lshow place; .Out·ot flood ,ASKING teS,OOO
PRICE REDUCED 5 RUTLAND· Tl11s affordable B room, 3-4 bedroom hOme hu many new
repairs and Is 80 allordable thai your payment would be cheaper than rent Home ails on a
level double lot on maln route .. Easy access to everything.
REDUCED TO $24,500.
POMEROY • Commercial Investment Prime location In Pomeroy. lt Js never too late to meke
the dream of owning your own business come true. The haro work hu been done, h Iii an
established ,G ravely &amp; Snapper setvlce and sales wllh stock and equipment, building and
ground included. Drop In or call tar detaHs on this deal.

ALSO •.•

POMEROY· Much more. room
here than you Imagine!
oownslalra haa LR w/FP, Kit, nma
Bath BR . Office. Upllalrs II I W/8f1P., 3 :,jj~~iiiti,ioot ...
iarg~ Dermer bedroom that could bldg. AIIIOI' ~
be 21 FuM basement that lncludH BROADWAY
enough room for 2 cal'l and could
.
be 2 roomo . ,Loto· of atoragal =•~ca..';.:.,..

$45,000

'

·

17,087 actual miles, 13850, 740·
1192-1 508 or 740·543·5104.
1980 Chevy 4x4, Short Bed ,

$3,700. call (304)882-3028
1888 Ford Ranger, 4 cylinder, e
speed, new tires, $800, 740-812·

3679 after 5:30pm.

1

1988 Silverado 4x4, Ooodwrench,
350 Englr\e And Tranamiatlon,
$3895; t995 S-10, $4395; 111112
S-10, $2795 ; t989 S-10, $24115;
1981
Geo
Tracker,
4•4.
Automatic,
$2195.
COOK
MOTORS (740)4411-0103
19114 Ranger XLT. 4 cyt.: 5 apd ..

ale, $4 , too; t 987 Dodge Dakota,
4 cyi., 5 sp., no rust $t,195, 740992·3394 weekdays . 740 -7&lt;23020.
t9118 Ford Rangsr PU , 40,000
Mlieo, $3700 ; 1885 Gee Tracker,
$2!100 ; 1983 S· tO PU, $2300;
1114 Chevy Work Van, $1700;
t984 Dodgs Carovan, 11800;
1882 Dodga Dakotl, E ~llnded
Cab, 4x4; 1894 Dakota, VI, Auto
&amp; Air, B&amp;D Auto Slill. Hlghwly
180 (740)44HBB5

• 213 IR, ~blth: LA.

VANCI ROAD· BIIUtllul newar Mid 40''1.
country hOmo looatad on ' t aero
·
mJI, 3 BR, 2 lltllht, LR, DR, Kit,
f/ 2 lllmt, w/garago. lnground
p~ol. NIOI tilting. Cadlr I I =·
PAICI RIDUCID TO 1110

,

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR
A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY

Tandem axle, straight truck,

FEATURES:
atory

Seo,OOO.OOI Cliy Uvlng with lots·of convenience. ONe floor _plan ranch whh bailment. 3 Bad rooms, t
baths, carport nlcelevello!. Quick Pcesesslonl 112112

THIS HOME HAS HAD LOTS
OF TLC. Skualed on a llnle over
one acre it featurs. 3 bedrooms ,
living room, kitchen and bath.
The home
a Windsor home
with vinyl siding, shingle roo~.
thermo windows and attached
carport. Call today great location
on Texas
Road,
Eastem
Schools. Asking $47,00012120

STS tby De-

Loran) black wlblaek leather interior. chrome wheels, sunroof.
loaded, needs engine, atking
$5,000, 740·843.·!it04 or 740·
9112-t5011.

720 Truckl for Sale

kitchen with extra cablne1 space

NEW LISTING
VACANT LAND
I I acres situated in
Cheshire Township.
. Mostly WOoded.
ASKING $20,000

.1993 ford Taurus GL, 4 dr.. Iota
ot optlona, vary good condHion,
3.0 V-8, a real good buy, $3200,
740'9112-87tll.

Casaette, CO, Power Sunroof,
Crulaa, TIH, 2t,OOO MIIH, $!1.500

710 Auto• for Sale

Strawborrioa, Pick Your Own. CaQ
Claude Winters, (740)24H12t

(740)258 118111·

Mlolloy ForgUIOII 255, Rune Ex- · tt19 GriUid Prix BT, WhHo , 4
- . (30')675-1178 .
.
oleo&lt;. 24.500 milt, CD, wei cared
for, (740)441-02tl, (740)511·
Maaaoy Forguaeon 12 Square 7110
Bator, S50D; Vermeer 80S B
1991 Maroon Monti Cerlo LS.
Round
- ·Urillann
111100; CD
- :140
Holland
Rake, $750,
Dlac. Ukt N . . Condition, Lolli Miles,
$12,000 (740)448-3117
MQMr. I3BDO: (30')178-2579

1Q8 .

5

1810 Chevy Cavalier, 4 Ooor•

Auto, Ak, Good Condition. 5tl50

·Achieve,'
atandanllhill.
1997
Olda
• dr., S35DD:
red, 60,000

TRM~SPORTATION

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

t - Honda, 5 .......,, 40 MPG,

VSD, (1411)24Het2

John Deere Compact Tractor•
11om 20 to 48 HP. 5.11!1, 80 me ft.
nanclng available with JD credll
approval. Carmichael's Farm I

Planll. Tllank You For Your Suai;
nasa . Call Danny Dewhu,atLaavo Meaaago (304)895. 3740
ll&lt; (304)895-3789

740-992-9823..

cru-.

1 - C&amp;nwc, 8
T·ToP,
11,000 Original MUll, $2200
(740)3N-«174

- - oondftion, $9,995, 740-

580

AKC Registered Baaaen Hound
Pupplea. 1st ShOll And Wormed.
2 POI'Iian Kittens. (740)387· 7705

11111 8ulck 1Mab11, 80,000

- · Good Clean Car, l..oadad

casalonal VGC. 50 Inch Mower,
Declc Snow Blade, Cllollnl, Manu• •SZBDO. (740!+1f-1785

Ho·ree/ Colt Breaking/ Training.
Registered Quarter Jforses For ·

3 CKC AduH Chllouahua'a, (1) 1·
112 &amp; 2 Year Olda. 11 DO Each.
Phcna (740)387- 7854

szoo.

1885 c.M1iC -

Real Eatate General

12010

NEW LISTING
Eastern School District.
channing homes -----.,,
St. Rt. 7. Three
bedroom, I bath on 10 .
acres, newly renovated.
Second home good for
efficiency rental
· or business shop.
ASKING $96,000.

t'o

-,~PFL [.·~

1130

Pets for Sale

civytler I .&amp;troft, 4 Door,
Engine -~ Run. Evarythlng
Ella Goad,
Col (740)4410t99
S25DDOBO. (740)411 IDZZ

Fi.R',I

Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245·
512t.

(304)875-4534

to spac&lt;ouo lormal
and dining area,
kHchen, family room
oversized
master
with pa11D area that
ingroudn pool, master
3 additional bedrooms and
Approx. 2 acres, concrete
drive. To much to
In this ad call for an

Appoirllmtrt1, H

owo, llntela, eto. Claude Winters,

Model L Hammond Organ. Call

NEW L!~;tiNG • Hera Ia a rea.l deal!
A 1997 manufactured home, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, ' living room, kitchen; laundry,
carpet, equipped knchen, C/A, all In like new
conditione Home muet b8 moved 10 your lot. .
.
ASKING $30,000.

For
No An. . .r.
.._II
• (7401441-1231

Yilrd Mana Tractor, 8aclchco. 50'
Mowing Dock, 3 Point Hhch, All'
Hjdlaullc, !30')882-3170

Block,. brick, sewer pip... wlnd-

2 Window llr oondltlonorl, I netu·

Appllancea:
RecondHionad
Washora, Dryora. FhingH, Relri·
. grators, Up To 90 Days Guarenteedl We Sell N. . Maytag Appliances, French City ilayiag,
740-448-7795.

NEW LISTING ~
Just outside of town. 3
BR, 2 bath home on 7
acres with rec. room and
garage. Well built ranch
with 2 porches on front
and 2 smaller porches in
back. Circular drive.
Owner built.
ONLY $130,000.

Broker

1-800-537-11528

Suppll•

580

Wendi R. Miller

Sale

For Authentic Atrowtteadi In
Golia And-~- Call

Tobacco Plants· Ord~:tr .Now To
Guaranteo Early Spring Plantlnga.
Increase Allotment• Mean Extra

1st ADVANCE FREEl

s:Bruce Teaford

For

t-

710 Autos for Sale

For Sale Dr Tracto Antique
BoHIII &amp; Jara And Old ltoml,

(304)875-5724.
Chain Unk Fence Kennel, tOxt2
8 Feet High, $150, 2 Small Dog
Houaea,
(304)875·8132 · 850 Seld &amp;
(304)875-1844

I

Lk:11750005

740-992-3325

.

rv sa

NEED AN EARLY PAVDAYII
Up to
lnalanlly by phone!

NEW LJST!NG
Nice building space •
approximately 4 acres
just outside of Racine.
Nice level spot.
OWNER WANTS
$10,700 per acre.

Original

Female. Call 9a.m Till 7pin,
(740)388 0382

Estate G!(!eral

Privata PrOperty And New Doubl. .ldo, One Payment. (304)738-

Please Call (304)675-8803 Anytime

PrHture Treated Deck. 10'x24'
$700. Paid Sl500; 200 Amp Dlacannact Box, I tOO, I 00 Amp Dta.

•eo

gel,_--

Equlpmant

- 5 5 Gallon Dnomo
&amp; Ring, 17.00 e.cto. L&amp;L

UJI
*""'-

Willi

Doak, '1150; Bodroo111 Group,
ft75; Cauch &amp; ~ w~.
PO; Barrel Chalro,
Each;
Wood D11k1,
Each;Pump

1o Inch Crattoman Radial Arm I"-"-~=-'--"----­
Saw, Good Condition Phone FREE HEAT! Ozarkt lnlormatlon
(740)411 8481
.HOw 10
Jlleal.
lr!g It! I 11811 508-2701
for Rani
t91l8 Y - 1 Big 8alf 350. H/L
range Transm1111on. Excellent
Equipment
Rental. Dozer, Condition, 847 Adual Milal; 19114 FREE HEATI Dzlorkt lnlomoaUon·
-IOQOIINe'-wlloout-~~~ct~r:~~~ctor Mercury ToPaz. Good Work Car, ing
Mll-8118-5011-2701.
1500 ll&lt; Best Oller; 18,000 BTU,
Window Air Conditioner, .Call
490
Forl.alle
(30')875-8515- Spon.
Beautilll,tBDOSq.Foet, Reaknd 2 Jooger tndullrlal Air ccmproaReal
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
aara:
1
Runs
Good,
Hu
meDistrict. Ideal For Profesalonal lor. The Olhtr Ia In Parlli, But 11
Couple. AU ~odern Amenities. 3 Rabulldable, SBOD Both; 4 Horae
Bedrooms; Spacloua Uvlng; t-112 Gooaenack Trailer, $1500; ApBaths, Roar Deck. HVAC. $800/ prox. 40 Railroad tleoo, SB.OO e.cto;
mo. Plus Utilities. Security And 380 Ford Englna And Trtnamil·
Key llepceH. No Pete. Roleroncea
· 75 ........ Runa S3DD:
Rtquirod. (740)448-.4425 Or -Detm11
D*al Englnl Runt Good,
(740)448-3938
S550; Antique Double Tub Wull·
lng Machine- Falrbanko And
MERCHMWISE
Morse, $300; CIN (740)448--8728
Dr (740)371-9047 After 5:00pm

Apanmonll For Rent, UIIIHioa
Paid, Fumllhed, (740)44S:...519

SUper I.JJm-

ProdUCII Or Request Cataloga.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
llapalred, &amp; Rebuilt in stock.
Cal Ron Evene, t-800-537-11528. .

. _ 1800.00

Homes 0.. FrM govammant l prlvole Mon·

Both LCH1 -

Baclroom,
Stove Speciality t-740 448 8308 t-800&amp;
Refrigerator
Furnlllhed. 29t -0086
Water Fumtahed, S3DD/mc. 1150
10 DOWII_..
Dolpcait, (740)«8-99lllt
No Cmdli OK! HUD, VA,
FHA. Col tor Llltlnge.
for
!Jpa!alrs, 2

13,11111i. -

••?

-liiiJ'""~&amp;~
- - · ~-Colltor•--

Furnlahod 2 &amp; 3 Room ••an-

-

bermalt
2000, la!D"f
--·
mora
opliona.
Manufactu,tr
of
. aawmilla. edgfll and tkidderl.

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Orio&gt;o, 8ullalo, NY 14225.
trli&lt;e. -glua body, lhp, eftctrtc start englnt. battery. · FREE lntormatlon t -100· 571·
1383 EXT. 200-IJ
value
· II25QO,
.........uking
paint, - $1500
lldUit.
or
SOCIAL SECURITY OISABIUTY
Claim Deniad'l We Spacilliza In
- - · 7--30711.
Grulob'o Plano- Tuning &amp; Repolos. appeala and Hearings. FREE
Pretia
Need Tuntd? cal The CONSULTATION. Benetn Team
Services , Inc. Toll -free: 1·888Pilno Or. 740 448 1525
836 1052
lndoopandoto• Horbalile ~.
Coli For Product ll&lt; Opportunity. Stanley HOme Product• And
Fuller Brush Available. To Order
(740)441 -1982

Holpoint Ken01oro Wuhera, · Anno OI ·G,_ Geblao and Tho
Whirlpool Amana Dryers, All continuing 110ry Factory s.ated
-$50 each. (740)111 Inti
VHS Movlu $14.99+S&amp;H. Call
Toll FrH t ·111111-8245 (PIGTAIL)

Laoge Hotpolnt Cloel1 F -. 20
Cllbic Feet (lluytr - ) 11200.

.

ttl9. 14too.

For Sale
orTISdl

Oo-cart replica of fQ'a etreat

&amp; SanitaUon Paid, $325/ Month

8879.

• available. "4 1nlmum inve&amp;tment ·
$4800. Annual potential earnings
over SSOK Toll -Free 1-866 -7877712 24hrs.

"500

Ironia

appl-.atortBR.
.
I!UD . . ._
llpt tor_.,.
............. EOH. (301)875- .

MIM/MARS Established routes .

1-1177-EARYPA~

av-

- --Commarcial-·

lWin_..__ ......."'

Dlpoolt, Plul ~- Ro'l • .,..
Allquhd. (740)448-3117

3428

FIND REAL ANSWERS ABOUT
ANY ISSUESII You've tried the
rest. now try the bait, 1-900-7454829 or t -888-573-3846 $3.99/
min 18+

·

Chrllty'a FamNr Living, 33140
lMno Rd.. llol!anol, ONo, 740742·7-. AP8o1niant. ....... and

44&amp;-0tOt.

IA::II::'ord-:-ab:-:la-'-::Hou-'-11:-ng-.--:~~:--ld::-ey~vr.w=-

as.ooo.

1250, 3 Dr._ D11- szo. 450

Wuhara, dryera, rlfriileratora, ·
rangn. S~ Apfiliancu, 71
VIne Strool, l:ill 740-4411-7381,
1~11-11121.

::,':d~~~~o=4:r:
~~~4~0~Miftle~~c:•~H~ra~n=•:a;us;;==-~::
F": l:
Evonlnge: 740·387-0502, 740·
Mllchand...
Bad. 1180; Oak Twine w/Choell

2 BR Upatalra Apt on 2nd Ava.,
~ - - .$300o'mo. S3DD

tlr - · Big Horn, T Tall I othora, wll trade for gun,
7-7244.
.

GOOD UHD APPUAIICII

-on

1 - . , Fumlehed EfticloiiC), All
UIIIIHn Paid. Shared Bath, 91 I
Second Avenue, Galllpolla, OH
S1.2$'n0. (740)UI 38~5

Full Glall Patio Doora S'xiD"

25BI. EquaiHauoing~.

ahop &amp; movih . Call 740-448-

Private Erlbwlce, No Palo,

8aluliful River 1/iew Ideal For I
Or 2 Peapla, Asfsa.,. Olpoeit,

dryora and rlfrlgllr-..
Thompacna Apj&gt;iiiJICI. 8407

540 Mlsoeltar-.us
llarchandlsa

........ - . (3DIJ875-73a

- -lo

Orio&gt;o- 1»71o -

Deluxe I Bedroom Apanmant

2 Bedroom Located On Jacbon
pike, (740)441-9DSD Aller 5pm
(740)24558110

era,

540 111-*llneous
llncNndiH
11200. Fual Oil Sl&lt;lcl Tank ft 00.
Uahotanr Interior Ooor1 S5.
-l'un!II .... EJeclrlcFurnace

-

t4xl0, 2 BR. W&amp;D, A/C, No 1'111,
Rt 211, Aeferencea, 1300/~.
(740)258-1044 Available June
111

lor aalo, 241 Salem Stroot, Ru- ;
Ollio.
ca1 740-742. 1092 Sunaot Drive, Very Good
2572. Good Income.
Condition. Dapallt &amp; Releroncaa
~- No Palo. call (740!+1f()Haft bultdlng lnedMirilllviiO,
_4E11;8;;;;H;;;;;,-Q;iij;jj;ji;
Ill· .. 11/C, COVIll
""""""· - • 2
,
tnglln, $3DlVmo.,Bt4-878-t&amp;8t.
~=;:.:'.;:pc;;..\.:":::
Lots
NO PETS (7~1-t519
·-..t3 Acree With Booutilul Lak~ 3 bedroom home Mlneravllia
View Sitos $50,000. tB Acres area, river view, ratorancoa ro·
Wfth Large Lake, .Mobile Home qulred, ~n required, nc poll,
With Add On $71,500. Gall Ia 740-992-mT -llpm.
County On Blacktop Road,
(7ot0)3118-8878 .
2 Lola, Zoned Commen:iool, Wfthin
Tho Village Dl Rio Grande .
(740)245 511158

NMded,

Hom••

-

Homes From St!IMoloJ., 4" Down,
3D y..,. el'8.5% A!'fl Far I.Jot.

.I Ac-

-

-

420 Mobile
for Rent

Juol • .... al lhe ponllll
• . a'*· Cal,.,., b'niiiPiand
1o11ngo1 0wrw tinMCiltl

=--:::=--=-upat~al-:-,.;.....IIPI-d':'.n-..,~,, , iogs,. 800-3t~ Ext 1709.

350

AI
r=n

-O!'.no.-,7-.-.

.ooo.

t

Bulldl
IISJS

UHd

(740)215

Pilol Prag,..., Renttrl
304-138-niS.

a.,'rOMIIHp,llom ~-On

STOP REIITIIIQII OWII FOR LOOking To Buy A New Homo?
LESSI $0 ar ~ llcMnl 01&lt; ~
Lond7 We Delli Huny
~=logs Coli HI00-511':1777 , Only 10Lalll.lll,304-138-72115.
Used Secllonlil· H F - o d.
24X41. 3 BodiOOII• 2 Bolli. Good
CO dtti
F
h City H
. n on, rene
ornaa,
Getlpoh, Ollio (74ll)ll6 03411

t 00111 . . . . . . flo Olinde.

4 8

-· ,__ ......
~l--$11,500ar:l4

z.wo _,, z.ro -

Haullhold

510

SUDQET PRICEI AT JACII·
1011 ESTATES, 52 Waatwood

~

-

0

Rant
17.:=-::::::-:-::~a.~aa~ds~~=
BEAUTlfUL AI'AIITIIEJITS AT For Sale: R - WUh-

~ In
CouNry -...., • - Will
:;::' : , " : " :S:,al:o~
• ~ ~ -ooo.
-

Pomeroy olllddleport. Glllpolls, Ohio Point Pleuant., wv

for

7-1-~

c:..-

~

440

u:..-

-"'*"· largo--._ Nonly
. . t8 ft. 1499. Pff mon. -llgiiiiJOliiOIIY-""'·
11270. per mon. cal! now 1c41992
0-13;g;~ar~7~-;;,~-~;
· ;;;;:7jii;;~~-~-em.
R::i ':u:"",:Poi~
Stiyho, ~ Bodloorn, t Bdl, N- 2000 t4llll0 Fronl Kltellan, - . -only. (30')875-

1444

Excellent Location On Route 180
Between Gallipolis And Holzer
Hospllat. 3 Bedrooms, Bath. L.img
Room, Famiy Room. Kib;hen Wdh
Appliancaa, Full Size Baatrnent,
24x24 Finished Garage, .8 xt0
Wood Storage Building, CiA &amp;
Gal Heal. Excellent Neighborhood . Too Much To Mention.
Roady To Move Into. Call For "P·
poinbiJejll (740)448 8548

pn~y

furnace, nn hoi ontlf tonll. cal 1
-

410 tlcM.I.- for fiMt

31 a --

Mull aell ttl5 ShuH ISlliO,
~11811~821~30~211~-:---::-~::---::--·llledlocm, 2 bllh. E
4 ..,..._
18 Wide. Ont• $195.00 Per -Co11Cber)1. 780-3115 1987.
•
t4 ..;cs. 1499. - .
••w•
· ·o $199. per,_, call now 1·100-

.:..(7_40l..:.:-B--":-;3I--:illl:ro3-:=::-:-=:=:
Country Living- Plcll Your Dream
Homo &amp; We'll Set It Up Dn A
BNiditul 5 Acre Tract, ~G...,.,.._ (740)416 '093

Living Room And Dining With
H a - Floora. Large Kitchen.
laundry- Main Floor. 2 Miles
From City. Graen Set-.
Lots 01 Extra's Call Evoninga,
g:~784' DaYJ 1740) 448-

Walking Dislance To Town, ·

Not do-1-yououll-kitl
CALL 1-800-303-1170

to Down For Good Cuatom.,.
On Land· Home
Oll&lt;•ood· Galtipolil, (140)....._
3013
141 2000 Model Singles~Save Tllouaancta. Ftaetwo&lt;&gt;d
Homos 01 Proc:tonrille, Tol F -.
t 1181151115 0187
t4x70 ~--·- ft.Nlll,lrH De~·- .. ~
livtlfJ lree Setup only 191195 1-

5

G - llaiglol&gt;ot._, Good Con-

Not..!'lo8.100-2814133t E&gt;CL 15.

--·011

one-

for Sale

SUnday. June 3, 2001

LONG HOLLOW ROAD • ACREAGE. • Approximately 105 'a cres. This proparty hes 1118 feel
being secluded with a wooded selling.. Just minutes off Route 33. Thla property hes
p~rfecl spot tor thai new home, hunting cabin, or just place to enjoy the outdoors. Drive
lhiS one and check It out!
ASKING $88,000.

a

EYeryone In the whole family will ftnd aomethlngla 10ve
otloulln thl: •rrawllng ranch. W~h approximately 2100
aquare teet o living apaoa that lncludaa • tledrooma,
and 3 bolha. It will occommoc:lole evan lorgar lamlllea.
lntarlor tooluraa Include aunken living room, formal
Cllnlng room with wood tlutne., tamnv room and more.
One vlall and you ' ll deflnllely tie lmprened with the
nelghbothooc:l, the location. and the houae. Call tor
more Jnrormatlon otto aet up an appolnlmenl.

~ealty, Inc.

Heory E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259
·Sherrl L. Hart.........~ ........................ 742·2357
Anna 'M. Chapman ......... :............... 992-2818
K•thleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-'6191

'

87 8-10, Ntw TlrH, &amp;looolcl, N. ..
tr Motor, N11ds loQy Work.
Runa Good, $1500 (304)875·

5384

730 Vint &amp; 4-WDI
1977 Ford ••4 Short Bod, 381
Engl1ne . Auto , Big Tlrtt, Rune
Nice, $800 (740)2• ~•5 221 Or
(740)44t - t1M9

PRICED TO SELL AT $169,000
740-446-3139
"

1881 Oodge Dakota, !Ktendod
Cab, 11,000 Mlill, Po- Statr·
ing, 11/C, AM/FMICD, V-8, Under
Warranty, ·118,000 (140)4412883 Allor 5pm

·'

I

�•

SUnd8Y....... 3, 2001

Pomeroy· Middleport o Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pltiu.d, WV
320 lioblle Hamil

310 HCIIIIM for Sale
FORECLOSED GOY'T HOliES!
$0 OR LOW DOWNI TAX
AEPO'S &amp; IIANKIIUPTCIESI OK

Aaooaoo9crd..1 2 -

CREDm FOR I..ISTlHG! CALL

... u - S ; - . . paymenta; Raglaterod/
1306.
.Co.; cal CAl • 18&amp;-687·

AlE 'lOUR CREDIT CNID BUS
OVERIM C MIHG YOU 11 fREE

can
eoniOiklate your llifla Into one ,
DEBT CONSOUDAnON

1-

IDD-Slll·1 mliil.8113.

- . - . , DOWIU OW
100*' IEa.IRnY /Ill?

FORECLOSED HOUEI Tax liepool lbnkrupldaal HUD, VA,
FHA. and ~ ., No Oown

·-582-33'$

8uyaral Calf for Uttings 11110-21~ (Eoot. H-7111)

Paymenn Portac:t tor F'ost rome

NoFae~Wo'MII

fi'NIIII•t payment Reduce inter·
eat. Avoid late chargas l Stop
haruamant. UconHd/Bonded.

310 Homes for Sale
to DOWN HOMES! GOV'T

CASH 8Y PHONE. Gat $tOO to
S50D r.u day! "--o*ed; Chad!ing Ac&lt;ount/Job/Accelllo Fax.
An Equal Opponunity Landor.

CMIOn, HlrlCiyman, Church, sso.ooo Milke Offer,
(304J875-te18

&amp;

Houae For Sate In M11on.
(3DI)T13-5112B
in City, Appnox. t40(). sq ft,
t t/2 Iota, good neighborhood,

BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

Olw......-..,py.
_ ......... 1111500.can

·-221-'NT/

t~ml8t1

Cll&amp;-9pm.(7«J111B 3342

to

MEDICAL BIWNG U!tlinoiled income potential. No experience
F
·
&amp;
neceaeary. rte lnformal•on
CD-ROY. Investment lor SZ•95.
Financing available. (800) 3221139. EXT 050
. ·

DOWN HOliESt GOV'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY D()WNI OK
CAEOITJ FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1.-o.331..CJ020 • 8811

cAsH BY PHONE. Gal $100 to
S50D r.u diJI Required: in"' Account/Job/Acceu to Fax,
o
Aft Equal Opportunitr Lender.
• Other requirement~ apply.
- .-...soo.oom 1·1188·229·
7877

to

DOWN HOIIEII No credH
OKI HUD, VA. FHA. Cal lor list·

_ _ .....,.

1~:"~-.h:..IOI"m--::"_u•
~=-.-'::_:. -:::,::8'::.:
••
- - 58 12 u

18 3 5

iogs. HIOG-50t-tm.._9818.

CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
' OAC. FR1111112.500-$125.0110 1111
AY~W~g~t tate. OnH1our approyal.
Cd F.C.C.S. lOU·free 1-188-605-

3 bedroom. 2 bath calhedral eel·
inga throughout, county wa1er,
heat pump. 740-742-244&lt;1 day-

100" remodeled house in Po~. great price, must He. will
eonaide( land contract. 7&lt;10-898-

3379
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
OAC. From 112.500-$125,000! 1111
A - -. 0na-11our appmval.
C.U F.C C S toa fr• 1-118--1053379 • ' • •
•

8783.
3 Bedroom, 1·1/2 8alh, All
Electric, 2200 Square Foot, 2 ·
Apartments, Good CCndnlon, At
2403 Mount Vernon Avenue.
- . r , (301)895 3825

"'*"

1-;;~·
7~40-;;7~42;-~t80;7;..;·;·~·~...~-~;
- - 3 Bodloom. 2 car garage, 600ft, Oak lloorlng, Grand·
view Heighto. (30')937·211115

I :_:::::..:.,::c,=:.::--=;..:.::'
=--=::::-::::Nice throe bedroom cape cod.
basement, garage. fireplace.
country eettlng, TPC water,
Sdloola. 740-992-8347.

CONSOLIDATE YOUR
WAY OUT OF DE1m

3 Bedroom on Route 2, (304)875-

-.., moniN'f - --

3 bedroom, I 112 bath, FANG lur·
Route 7 South, .Newer. Larger
nace, C/a, Tupper• ptaina water,
Home. verr Nice. Conslde.r
half basement, garagel•torage · Trade-in, (740))41&gt;0!'8'-81188
building, new septic, beautiful lriiiiii~..;----view, 74CHI9Nl0114. .

5332

Par one~. EASY to
get IIBited. ~ F,..;lom

(NOn-Prolt)

By Owner- Cape Cod. Formal

FREE MONEY FORM IRSII Call
l-227-0086tor-.

:=::::=:..1

LUMP SUM CASH NOW • We
Suy ttructured Insurance SeHiaments, Insurance Annuities. Lottery a Casino Jackpot Winnings,

Suet !plta'&lt;es Prizes.

www.ppicash.com Beat Prices.

Col PP1 @IJDD-435-3248 &gt;&lt;49
CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Reduce monthlv
. Pa 11 one bill/monlh.
P a~~ments
'
,
EASY to got started. Financial

Fr"dom Christian C.ouneeling,

80D· 84t·9757,

ext.

.

..

ctwllliM~.

(BOO) 141-11757 eoot CC3

FREE MONEY FORII! IRSII Call
__tor-::=:::=·
-t _a88_227_-0086

CC3

www.deblcca.org (non-profit)
01vorca 5150

~95
FREE information!
Bankrooptcy n/a in TNiKY
Divorte$150
Bankruptcy $tes
Adoption 11225
Not do-ft·yourull-kitl
. CALL 1-800-303-1170
FREE inlormatlonl
8anknoptcy n/a in lNJKY

P•cua•·

Lot modo! ct.....,..,
-~~
1125. tor 2000
. - oinglel, s poe tinglol-go b)' !My 31. no.- ,
oonable offer retvud. - .
_ , taltlong, to ...,In
Cole'a Mobile Homea Alhena
Ollio, 0pon 11-W. ._7, ~II.,
lHI. Sat. IQ.5.

.......

- - .. our.--.e.

u=.= - n

~·!,.-And.,_
~t~B88~-~~30~28~:-:"':""-:'--18111-e777.
t974 - . . 2·3 bad....,., ..... 740-1185 3855 $4tiOO.

...,....

All"""-~ in

paprr II aubject 10
the F - Fair Housing Act
I illegal
. . n&amp;\U

.,,_which-

to~'llnypoolooatoce:

fimllallonordiacrtmlnation
based on·
religion.

race. -...

--atalul. -

orl!;n. or any'- to
make ant such poaleoance,
limitation 01 llscrimination.'

2 Story HOuse, 2 Or 3 Bedroom,
Full Basement. City Schools.
0.250' Acres 01 Clean Land,

This ilewspaper will nol
knowingly accept
advertisen.utornealoatate
whlclt lain violation a1 the
law. Our mad'"" are hereby

$35,0IIO. (740)448-0265

informed that alldwellinga

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES I
$0 OR LOW DOWN I TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITJ FOR USTINGI CALL!BD0-50t ·tm old. 9813.

adver1isadinllilsare available on an equal ...
OJ)Ii(X1Unily baala.

~N:-n-:1-:-4-::Wida:::-:--.--:3--:Bed~:-,.,.,.-m-.::On-:-ly
o~ F
D&amp; ~- Up
" · -· . . . _ . y •
1188928~

F....,_ T-....

t982 t4X70
2
t
pump &amp; ale. 17.500. 740.591-

IIIJ
~

Aio -

y,y

Total E - . Centro1 Alr. Setup

Mull Go. Only 111,990. Fleet·

On A Privat• Rented Lot. woOd Homes, ProciOn~ille, Toll
(740)44t-1304
Fnoa I 888 588 0187

1994 Redman t4x70 Trolar Wilh N- 2001 Fla-ood only
3Acrat Flat Land. Rio Grand• '$148.48 par month. Call Nikki
Bidwell Area. (740)245-2222 7~.
Aalq 135 000
d
br
b
•
Ns'!"o dOuoo
" ~!.' wl •, 3 12:-..2 • •
1911111- Skyline- · 8 ~·
...,wn on Y ·~- par
Electric Hoa~ CIA. Vlnyt Sldi111J, mon. cal .... t-t-e777.

~

S~h~in~g~lo~d~R~oo:-l::,
-M
-:-u_•_
• _ M-::-ov
-:o:-.
(740)418 1301

28x8D 3 Or 4 Bedroom. Only
$305.00 Per Month 8.1111" Fixed

STOP REIITIIICIII OWII FOR
1

"'"""""'~~-~~·~t~-~9211
~3~1~211~-:- 1

74 Buddy t2x80 mobile home. in
good condHion, 8/C, 2 bedroom,
oehlga-. 740 11811 3583.
Contuaed? Don't 8a- Call Oakwood- Galllpofla. Seat Prlcea.
Best Service, Belt Poaplt. HYou
See And Ad You Like· Call Ual

Factory Goof 32&gt;080 $10,000 Discount only $1000.00 Dv.n, Do·
paid by Factory

.\~~p

Anal Days, Nationwide inventory
Reductlco)l (30')73tls3409
Limited Or No Credit? Governmont 8ao.k Finance Only AI Oalowooer In "BorbouraviNo, WV 304·

7311-34011.
Lot model clearance, uva up to
$8,825 with any homo, check ua
out were dealing, Coto'a Mobile
Homes, US 50 EIIII,AIIiens, Oh.
New Double Wide. $195 Per
Month! 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath. Free
Delivery &amp; Sot-up. t -888·828·

lESSI $0., ~ llcMnl 01&lt; ~

...,_
-1 • 1777
F.,.•__
.,.. -~-•t 1 ~
ElCL 11821

Could 8e
~

H1.uo 11mt. $3t.DOOI

I 340 Busl~ ind

S32,1100. 1jcoonl.IM
14 - . 118,1110.
..... Co.- T - Pllin-·· 7 ~ "-,.,..
11om, $23,500 Or 11 - ·
118
c.r - . • SIZ.OOO Or 13 111,000.
- · - 5-113,500.
- . ,, 9 - 18.5001

llvH -

for rent In

=

No Peta. _ . T . 441-Dtet.

1122. (30'1875-4144Mor5pm.

LAND FOR SALE:
Unbeliavable
ArizllnaiTht
__
_...,._

P8r1&lt;.

740-

440

ty 1n AmoricaJLarge 1 acre"*·
$llll{rnC&gt;

I .... 2 lledluOIII -Lrllilll; U•
nilhed and unlumlolleit, oecuri1y
depoail required, no· pets, 7409112-2218.

(MII95 total) t hour from Tucson.

Ooll, hilling, trolls, lakaa. Porlecl
• ....... 4500 fl. ..... lltiMI, II*&gt;
taculllt vlewl. Deal direct w/developar &amp; aavo. Money back
- -· Free literature. Coli 1·
800412-8103 OP" tor
mo11age. No aateaperaon will
cal.

t Bedroom Apallrnan1, Relfltllra·
tor, Range, A/C lnctudod, 11289
Plua Dapoal
&amp; Rolerence. HUD
Approved.
(740)441-1511

Don,-

t br.. 11220 month plua u!iiillal
:;
3RI St. - . 740-

•-dad

m.:•·

410 Hou1e1 for Rent

·3

Bedroom•

Foreclosed

~I

...,.,

3 Bedroom .Houao In Syracuao,
Ohio, $450/ Month HUD Ap·
proved
(304)875-5332
or
(740)992-lll8 "'"" odil only

Apanmonta, 1108 W. College
Slrllllt, Rio Grande, Ohio. 1 &amp; 2
Bodrooma, Kitchen Furnlrhed,
Water Paid. lAundry Facllllloa.
Contr1J
AJr. . Appi- C...
Be
Picked Up · Between
&amp;:DOom I 8:00pm. Locallon:
Roldo 325 In Rio Grandt,
Ohio TDDf
(411)528-04&amp;8
Olllcel (740)245- 1170. Equal
Houalng Opponunlty. Handl·
capped tlcc ttiltle

for-- - .

,_

WatlW

Fo......, 4x4,
(7401118 2147

l'l1nol ~-·ear-

Piulllapoolt,(304J875.573:1

(740)441-tDZI

_,_ --

Nc-

l.aaw''

r

No

Aots•or.

~---

~. No Poll.
lng,·
Reterencao
1 DepotH Re·
quired. Ulill!ioa Furniohad.

......

-

-FumiLn

!3D')f75-1422
515Main-_Pmt-

Gracioua living. t .... 211ed111dli
aparlmenta at Voitaga Manor....
Rivlrslde Apartnoeitts In Mldde- I
pon. From $278-$348. Call 740- Wuhlr $115, Cryer $115, Range
992·5084. Equal ""'~'"" n...-. $11~. Refrigerator IID5, Small
...,__
· - -.. ..,.....
cheettypelrMzer lt25, -~
Dryer Sot S250, Window 11/C
Now Taking Appllcatlona- 35 1150, Skogga Appliance. 71
Wilt 2 Bedroom Townhou•• Vilnd St. (740)+1f-73118
Apartments. Include• Water 520
Sporting

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

..,.a a+

----

Recently Renovated . 2.000
Square Foot, 3 Bedroom Plua
~. 1850/ Month, Downtown
Galllpolla,
Contact
Kelty

....

l~t.-rExtC18t7

-

S. .age. Trash, 1350/Mo .. 7401160008

__.....,.

-

&amp; Uooaol FumiLn
- 2 -IJvlngrcom SUilae.
S31e. Buy, Sail, T -.

(740)448-1518

44 "~agnum Augor. 1'- -khawk•
Still In Box. $325.00; 357 AuQtr
Wfth Hollier &amp; Sheila, 8325.00
(740):145-11112
5

(74QIU8 11811
530
AntiqueS
Tora Townhou11 Aplrtmonta,
Very Spacloua. 2 Bodrooma, 2 Buy or ooll. Rlvorlno Anllqull,
Flaora, CA. 1 tf2 111111. FUIIJ car- 11:14 Etr4
8R 1:14 E. flo.
poled, AduH Pool &amp; Baby POOl, - · 740-912-2528 01' 740-992·
Pallo, Start 1388/Mo. No Pall, . 18311. IUe - .. ·

et,OOO SACK 2 Ton Air Condl·
- · 2 Ton Col, 1
Bat. Inotllled, 112,2115, 11,000 Blck,
11295· Not Pricl. F- EIIUoo I .
For QuotH On Olhlr
II You Don~ Call Uo, Wo

uno

can

8-.

-

460 Space

Rent

Trailer Lot Fo, Rent, Ashton
Area, (30')743-0719

1-800-5DI· ImE&gt;CLIIII

_...,.._I~

l:"c:"'tcfo'w~.:t 1
1~~•t -

~ -17
--Beautiful Whho Allred Angelo
Wadding Dr-. Size 14, Draea.
·Vail &amp; c~notlno, Make OHer,
(740)2A5-6705,

MOIIIIE-OWNEIIS

Huge inventory, Dllalunt Pricel,
On VInyl Skining, Doora, .Wind·
owa. Ancho,., Water Heate;e.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Perla, Fur·
nee.. _a Htat Pumps. Bennette
Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·

Compact Proaario Deaktop
Cllmpultr,•tooo
733 ,......,..__,7
MHZ. -

.w,m_,.

,,_,..__ _

11411-.orvb.-

COMPUTERS:
WE Evan
FINANCE
DELL
COMPUTERS!
wll.h

IIEW AIID USED STEEL Slut

'!!-,!'1~n t;:!'!'_.!!•dltl t -100·

~"~ u.

·Channel,
Pipe - FFlat
a rBar,
Ccncrote,
Anglo,
Stoat
Grating For .Dralna. Drlvewaya &amp;

........

- -

~-

Coppar .Wiro For Making Crafta,
Collpo4)875-4834
Dog - · Coot. St70, Wit Bali
For etOO. (740)111 30411

•za

460

0&lt;(7~

Real Estate General

(740)448-7300 .

PETCARERX.COM Savo up to
!lOll on ALL pet madlcatlone and
auppllae, Including Heortgoml, In·
ll&lt;captor, Frontline, mcrall FREE
SHIPPINO. 0n1or online - .Pat·
c..RX.comt-800 IU 1427.

Organ, •100; :t Ploca -.ad,

connect Box. 150. Kitchen Tabla,
• Chalra, It DO. (740)387-08!10
Dr (740)387-7272

~ Maytag,.,27or. et25. ; Call
- · · Gorlicto ,_.4)871-8253

RacondHioned Washer &amp; Dryera,
$100 Each. A/C, !1,000 To 23,000
BTU FO&lt; Sale, ~lng At $75.00.
Thompson Appliance R_opair,
3407 Jackacn Avenue, (304)675·
7318

eyl Never Repay. All Wonllwhllo
Aequaats Considered. MUll be
G'- Out to Avoid Taxaa. Fund·
lng lor Edueotton, Hcualng Bull·
neoa, Travel, Dabtl, Artl and

More. - .granll-dot-com.coxn I·
!fOG-242-03113 E&gt;CL-

RIIIII!HTlAL NOliE OWHER8 :
Tappan HI Effici ency 90" Gsa
Furnaces. OU Furnaces. t2 Seer
Heat Pump I Air Conditioning

Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, t •
800-872-5987 www.oovb.com/ben·
nett

7295

Real Estate Genaral

STEEL BUILDINGS : 5 Only 3)
25x30, 2)45x90, Must Move Now!
Selling lor Balance Owed t -100482·7930 x-t2
Stunning Dlnette .Set W/4 Cl\aft &amp;
Glasa fop Table. Black w/Gold

Tnm. excen,nt Condition.

Price, $229.00, Sale Price, $50.00
(304)175-8583

Soil
Top
(740)44t --1161 9

Waterline Special: · 3/4 200 PSI
$21 .115 Per tOO; t• 200 PSI
$37.00 Par tOO; Ail Brua Com_ . , . Flttlnge In Slock
'

-.Ohio,

ROil I!VAIII ENTI!RPRIIEI

550

OFFICE

992

:510

.,,

OrL.aavaAifll

Hau11hold

. Goodl

Building

ALL STEEL IUILDt.s
FiiCIDiy

cr.,.r-.

1-

Small

.50X100,
, _ . Wit
Hold. 8ll&gt;2DD
-·
BOx120,
Best Ollo!f - W I Ray

'"' gao-·

Ll.'f: ')

f(Jf,r'

610 Fann Equipment
On New Jam
Deere Ulower ConditiOners And
Baler• With John Deere Credit
Approv... 'Call ll&lt; Stop By Nowll
CarmicQel'l Farm &amp; Lawn

.,. Al•clll

(7&gt;10)448-2412 t ·BDO !iiU 1111
t1181 14ft, 2 -

-toad tnl-

er with tack and dr..a room.
(740)311H!azo

2 Row Holland Carouul Toboa:o
24t2· Uted t -

- (740)448-

Gravoly Riding Trodar, tll-0 f'nl.

AKC ShoHie pupa, Iris, bl blacka,
sable/white. vet checked. cham·
pion linea, $350. 740-989-1085.

Boston Terrier To Mate With

lalm.

Gallipolis, Ohio (740)440-

2412

NH 418 Dlac Sine. Uaod Le11
than . ZOO Acroa , St0,50D.
(304)137·3438 Daya (3J)4)582-

5747 ...........

Uvntock

· Sale, Letart. WV (304)895·3318,

-.nyrellnna.com

Umoualn yearUng bulla, two left.
$800 1 $900; 2 112 year old
buckakln gelding, $900; 740-898-

2785.
Miniature donkeys, 740-892·

2480.

1140

Hay I Grain

Hay &amp; Bright Wire roo Stnlw, Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Oil·
count Available. Heritage Farm.

Fartlllzer

$0 OOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS 11291
MO, 24 MO'S @t9.8"- FOR
USTINGS, CALL 1-800·451-1)050
ext. C-9812

NEW USTING • POIIIROY latJ'el Street.
vacant lot, 45X133+ .
Immediate
poaeesslon.
ASKING 135,000.

Strawberries, You Pick- We Pick.
Tavtor'a Berry Patch, 2884 Kerr.
Road . Open 8-8 Monday, Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8-4 Saturday,
Cloled Sunday. (740)245-9047

FLATWOODS ROAD I'A great location, 21/2
aorea of ground nicely landacape.d ,
3. bedrooms, 2 baths. A ITIIInutactured hOme
on a full basement with an attached, large 2
car garage. Front sitting porch, large Cleek,
The home Ia In good condition with new
carpet plus a fireplace.
ASKING 182,000

r.&gt;liW::M·' ,.,. 1

$0 DOWrl CARSI POLICE IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $29/
MO, 24 MO'S @19.9% . FOR
LISnNGS, CALL 1·800·451-0050
Bid. C-9812
1879 Jeep CJ·5, now body, new
motor, too many 8)(tras to list ,
nice, $4800 OBO, 740-1192-3798.
1979

~lncoln

Vorsallloa. 48,000

Actual Mllei, EKceUent Condition,
. $4000, (740)368-0884 Or (740)
387- 7885

44 BEECH STREET
IMPRESSED IS WHAT YOU
WILL BE WHEN YOU VIEW

·

THIS BEAUTIFUL BAN£H!

REDUCED
COMMERCIAL
Sycamore Streot ... iarge
story
building with oil street parking.
Previously
used •
floral
buslneu, mey be just right lor the
buSirHt18 at your choice. CaH ue
lor cmpleto listlngl 12044

Not only is
the location as
situated near hospital
church, · etc. OVersized
car
attached garage, living room,
&amp; lonnai dining area, 1 1/2 baths,
a bedrooms &amp; more. Easy ro COIIMERCIAIJINVE8TMENT
maintain
level
lot.
Quick Commercial building with 3
pouellion herell2053
apartments Snd · business rental.
acres rn/1 Iota of goodinconne. t.lt24
I
hunting land. ATTENTION!
HUNTERS
&amp;
Township. $30,000.00 NATURE LOYERSI Approx. 54
acres ot mostly all wood land w~h
nice meadow. Wlklllfa galore.
Loll of rood lrontage and adjoins
Wyne National Forrest. 112125
12014
100
Charry
SlrHL..$88,500 One ot tho batt
views In Galllpols lromtha poroh
of this 1 1/2 etory heme. Uving
loading deck. · room. dining or family room, over
• 3·5 acres of 2 acres.
acceu. Correct
aereage to be
. bv suovey. 545,000.

NEW LISTING
Attnictive village home·
in Pomeroy.
2
~~~
bedroom, I bath ranch
with attached garage.
Near hospital. JUST
I ~~~l;R8 WILL
I'
LOSS
$64,000

I

TO MAKE
SOMEONE
QAINI • WANT SOLO

Immaculate

NEW

FARMI Approx.
fencing, hourae
bam, shop, storage building and

4,

1998

, Iorge k~chen

appliances open

acral, pond,

roomy 2

iamlly room, formal living
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
laundry. over 1800 sq. ft. ot llvlng
space. 112104

1885 Okla Regency. 88.000 - -

tltli-25211-

11181 Ford EaD1 , 2 - · 75,000
mllea, $5500, 740-992-510!1,
Chapman, 2315 Sixth St .. Syra·

......

eon-

t999 Mlala, Soft Top
vanlble, Black With Tan Top ,
Laadw Interior, I ,700 MIN, Au·
tomatlc.
Loeded,
Pramlum
Wh- I Sttroo. Tllaft-ganl Sya-.1122.000 (814)1~
2000 Cavalier, 2 Door. AM/FM
(740)441-0337

2DDD Chryoter 300 M, BDOD milal,
sunrool, loaded, leather Interior,
740-992-11587.
2000 Chryaltr Sebring LXI, Sun·
root. l..oadad, Extra Shoup, Exeatlent Condition. 115.800 Arm,
(740)388 9780AIIIf8pm.

can

2000 ·VW Beetle, Red, Auto
Transm1111on, .Tu,bo, Sunroof,
l.Hihlr - · Showooom Condition, Garage Kopt, $17,900. 2000
Bonnavllla SSEI, Loaded, Sunroof,
CD, Leather Seats, Cuttom
Wheels, Showroom Condition ,
Garage Kept, 123.900. (740)4402927
74 Chevy Nova. 1 Owner, 350/
350, 48,000 Milos, Needa Pain!,
$2500 080 (740)379:2708 .

88 Pontiac Bonneville. 4.3 liter
VB. 4 Door, Good CondUion, M•
chanlc Owned And Babied.
S3000, (740) 448 9951 kelly
88 Ford F250, $2500 , Dodge
ES, V-11, CD, Tint, PW, PD.
Alanm, $3500, (740)245--6797
81 Nloaan Max, Top Condition,
$3500 (304)875·8t32 (304)87!1·

11144
93 Dodge Spirit, • Door. A/C.
Auto, 143,0110 Mllal, $1400 080
(740)44&amp;-4754

114 camaro Z-28, 350 LTI angina,
auto, pw, pi, T-topa, Base sound
ayetem, 70,000 mlle1; garage
kept, excellent shape, $9,500,
740-949-11161 .

Buy hem pay here. low down payments. ·no credit checks, M&amp;J

Auto, VInton, Oh .. 740-388-9893.

CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI ._NDA'S,
CHEVY. 24 MD'S @t9.9". FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1·800· 941 sm EXT. c -9814,
·
CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY. 24 MD'S @19.9". FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1· 800-941 ·
~m EXT. c-9814.
Uvoly'a Auto Salea- 11185 dodge
BOO Convertible, Auto. $900;
19113 Mercury Topaz, 5· 8paed,
$1200; 1988 Ford Eacort GL,
Auto, $350; 1990 Ford Eacort LX,
Auto, $700; 1991 Chevy Lumina,
Auto, $1400; 1985 Chevy Cavalier, Auto, $100; 1987 Pontiac
Grand Am, Auto, 1900 1885 Pon·
tlac Pareteene WS, Auto, $800; ·
1888 Chevy Cavalier, Auto, $450;
1987 Plyinoulh Voyager, Auto,
1600; 1988 Chevy G·20. Van.
Aldo, $t200. 1978 Chevy G-30 t •
Ton Van, Auto, $2000. 1973 lntanalional Bus, 5 Speed, 88 P•·
sanger. $800; Call (740)3889303 Monday, Tliru Friday 8am5pm. Saturday 9am- t pm, Cioaed
Sunday.

story home. Large

k~chln

ahd dlanlng I(Oa,
basement. 2 ·baths. and more.
112tte
.

1989 3/4 ton Chevy picf&lt;up. 2 wd.,
740-992-2482.
1977 GMC Siarra 8500, V-B 427,

remodelec:l,

room,

family

WILL

room,

·convenient location. , _

TiDY..

Ranch home with 2
bedrocma, IMng room, dining and
kitchen. Plus 14 x 70 mobile home
in excallent cohd~lon, PI'PI•ooaoaonr.tlotty

used u a 'l'ntal· Lola allrultrwH
and landscaping. 112123
o1201e
NOT · JUST
A
RANCH ..CONTEMPORARY
styled heme s~uatold en 2 pluo
acres. Large living rccm with
cathedral calling, larga muter
bedroom and beth, lamly room,
Iota ot decking on lront. Much
more to OilY. call tor lilting detallal

1099 Tacdora Avi. Chick II
Outl Quick pouoollon. Nice
corn• lot &amp; 3 bedroom, 1 1/2
beth homo with overalzed garage
and lull buemont. 12115

Pomeroy. A .&lt;! YMI' Old two atory Randall ,
Hor1111 wnh 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 '/o
baths. 12X18 deck, HP/CA and ceiHng
fans. 1'/• acrn, nice garden areL Very
nice home. Owner hes reloca1ed and
wants lhla sOlei.
ASKING S71,000.

SR' 124

LOTS OF HOUSE FOR THE
MONEY! Like new Cape Cod
home with lull rear dorrl!ei o«ering

more space upstairs. 3 BR, 2
balhs, 1ormal LR, 1oyer, FA and

Is

formal dining area, larga sized
decking area, large sized decking
on rear, over 2 acre lot and much
morel OWNERS RELOCAnNG
SAID "SELL NOW'!
12094

1

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
MIDDLEPORT. Older home with
charm and great lOCation near
school, grocery, etc. Lots Q:f room
here for 1he family. give Cheryl a
call for more details. 112110

•
•
•
•
•
•

Quality Neighborhood • Green Schools
Convenient LocaHon
Large Living Room
Formal Dining Room
Approx 2800 square feet
Four bedrooms
• 3 Baths
• 2 Car Gatage
• Wonderful back yarel wllh In-ground pool
• MulH-level Dock
• 16X22 Outbuilding· tor workshop
• Proteulonallandacaped lol
· •
ent10nce

• ~PLE

GROVE SUI!IDMIION
OHIO I!IVEA FRONTAGE • Approximately
acre Iota • 1
to choose from. · G111at
C$11lj)!n~ Iota. Call tOday more details.
· ASKING f20,000.

o·

tOr

I

"
~MEROY ·Coulo be ollica ilfl'Ce, could b8 a home. you decide. S8118(1 rooma, 2+ bathe on
a main street, 2 car garage,·Could be a f8!1lshow place; .Out·ot flood ,ASKING teS,OOO
PRICE REDUCED 5 RUTLAND· Tl11s affordable B room, 3-4 bedroom hOme hu many new
repairs and Is 80 allordable thai your payment would be cheaper than rent Home ails on a
level double lot on maln route .. Easy access to everything.
REDUCED TO $24,500.
POMEROY • Commercial Investment Prime location In Pomeroy. lt Js never too late to meke
the dream of owning your own business come true. The haro work hu been done, h Iii an
established ,G ravely &amp; Snapper setvlce and sales wllh stock and equipment, building and
ground included. Drop In or call tar detaHs on this deal.

ALSO •.•

POMEROY· Much more. room
here than you Imagine!
oownslalra haa LR w/FP, Kit, nma
Bath BR . Office. Upllalrs II I W/8f1P., 3 :,jj~~iiiti,ioot ...
iarg~ Dermer bedroom that could bldg. AIIIOI' ~
be 21 FuM basement that lncludH BROADWAY
enough room for 2 cal'l and could
.
be 2 roomo . ,Loto· of atoragal =•~ca..';.:.,..

$45,000

'

·

17,087 actual miles, 13850, 740·
1192-1 508 or 740·543·5104.
1980 Chevy 4x4, Short Bed ,

$3,700. call (304)882-3028
1888 Ford Ranger, 4 cylinder, e
speed, new tires, $800, 740-812·

3679 after 5:30pm.

1

1988 Silverado 4x4, Ooodwrench,
350 Englr\e And Tranamiatlon,
$3895; t995 S-10, $4395; 111112
S-10, $2795 ; t989 S-10, $24115;
1981
Geo
Tracker,
4•4.
Automatic,
$2195.
COOK
MOTORS (740)4411-0103
19114 Ranger XLT. 4 cyt.: 5 apd ..

ale, $4 , too; t 987 Dodge Dakota,
4 cyi., 5 sp., no rust $t,195, 740992·3394 weekdays . 740 -7&lt;23020.
t9118 Ford Rangsr PU , 40,000
Mlieo, $3700 ; 1885 Gee Tracker,
$2!100 ; 1983 S· tO PU, $2300;
1114 Chevy Work Van, $1700;
t984 Dodgs Carovan, 11800;
1882 Dodga Dakotl, E ~llnded
Cab, 4x4; 1894 Dakota, VI, Auto
&amp; Air, B&amp;D Auto Slill. Hlghwly
180 (740)44HBB5

• 213 IR, ~blth: LA.

VANCI ROAD· BIIUtllul newar Mid 40''1.
country hOmo looatad on ' t aero
·
mJI, 3 BR, 2 lltllht, LR, DR, Kit,
f/ 2 lllmt, w/garago. lnground
p~ol. NIOI tilting. Cadlr I I =·
PAICI RIDUCID TO 1110

,

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR
A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET'

MEIGS COUNTY

Tandem axle, straight truck,

FEATURES:
atory

Seo,OOO.OOI Cliy Uvlng with lots·of convenience. ONe floor _plan ranch whh bailment. 3 Bad rooms, t
baths, carport nlcelevello!. Quick Pcesesslonl 112112

THIS HOME HAS HAD LOTS
OF TLC. Skualed on a llnle over
one acre it featurs. 3 bedrooms ,
living room, kitchen and bath.
The home
a Windsor home
with vinyl siding, shingle roo~.
thermo windows and attached
carport. Call today great location
on Texas
Road,
Eastem
Schools. Asking $47,00012120

STS tby De-

Loran) black wlblaek leather interior. chrome wheels, sunroof.
loaded, needs engine, atking
$5,000, 740·843.·!it04 or 740·
9112-t5011.

720 Truckl for Sale

kitchen with extra cablne1 space

NEW LISTING
VACANT LAND
I I acres situated in
Cheshire Township.
. Mostly WOoded.
ASKING $20,000

.1993 ford Taurus GL, 4 dr.. Iota
ot optlona, vary good condHion,
3.0 V-8, a real good buy, $3200,
740'9112-87tll.

Casaette, CO, Power Sunroof,
Crulaa, TIH, 2t,OOO MIIH, $!1.500

710 Auto• for Sale

Strawborrioa, Pick Your Own. CaQ
Claude Winters, (740)24H12t

(740)258 118111·

Mlolloy ForgUIOII 255, Rune Ex- · tt19 GriUid Prix BT, WhHo , 4
- . (30')675-1178 .
.
oleo&lt;. 24.500 milt, CD, wei cared
for, (740)441-02tl, (740)511·
Maaaoy Forguaeon 12 Square 7110
Bator, S50D; Vermeer 80S B
1991 Maroon Monti Cerlo LS.
Round
- ·Urillann
111100; CD
- :140
Holland
Rake, $750,
Dlac. Ukt N . . Condition, Lolli Miles,
$12,000 (740)448-3117
MQMr. I3BDO: (30')178-2579

1Q8 .

5

1810 Chevy Cavalier, 4 Ooor•

Auto, Ak, Good Condition. 5tl50

·Achieve,'
atandanllhill.
1997
Olda
• dr., S35DD:
red, 60,000

TRM~SPORTATION

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

t - Honda, 5 .......,, 40 MPG,

VSD, (1411)24Het2

John Deere Compact Tractor•
11om 20 to 48 HP. 5.11!1, 80 me ft.
nanclng available with JD credll
approval. Carmichael's Farm I

Planll. Tllank You For Your Suai;
nasa . Call Danny Dewhu,atLaavo Meaaago (304)895. 3740
ll&lt; (304)895-3789

740-992-9823..

cru-.

1 - C&amp;nwc, 8
T·ToP,
11,000 Original MUll, $2200
(740)3N-«174

- - oondftion, $9,995, 740-

580

AKC Registered Baaaen Hound
Pupplea. 1st ShOll And Wormed.
2 POI'Iian Kittens. (740)387· 7705

11111 8ulck 1Mab11, 80,000

- · Good Clean Car, l..oadad

casalonal VGC. 50 Inch Mower,
Declc Snow Blade, Cllollnl, Manu• •SZBDO. (740!+1f-1785

Ho·ree/ Colt Breaking/ Training.
Registered Quarter Jforses For ·

3 CKC AduH Chllouahua'a, (1) 1·
112 &amp; 2 Year Olda. 11 DO Each.
Phcna (740)387- 7854

szoo.

1885 c.M1iC -

Real Eatate General

12010

NEW LISTING
Eastern School District.
channing homes -----.,,
St. Rt. 7. Three
bedroom, I bath on 10 .
acres, newly renovated.
Second home good for
efficiency rental
· or business shop.
ASKING $96,000.

t'o

-,~PFL [.·~

1130

Pets for Sale

civytler I .&amp;troft, 4 Door,
Engine -~ Run. Evarythlng
Ella Goad,
Col (740)4410t99
S25DDOBO. (740)411 IDZZ

Fi.R',I

Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245·
512t.

(304)875-4534

to spac&lt;ouo lormal
and dining area,
kHchen, family room
oversized
master
with pa11D area that
ingroudn pool, master
3 additional bedrooms and
Approx. 2 acres, concrete
drive. To much to
In this ad call for an

Appoirllmtrt1, H

owo, llntela, eto. Claude Winters,

Model L Hammond Organ. Call

NEW L!~;tiNG • Hera Ia a rea.l deal!
A 1997 manufactured home, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, ' living room, kitchen; laundry,
carpet, equipped knchen, C/A, all In like new
conditione Home muet b8 moved 10 your lot. .
.
ASKING $30,000.

For
No An. . .r.
.._II
• (7401441-1231

Yilrd Mana Tractor, 8aclchco. 50'
Mowing Dock, 3 Point Hhch, All'
Hjdlaullc, !30')882-3170

Block,. brick, sewer pip... wlnd-

2 Window llr oondltlonorl, I netu·

Appllancea:
RecondHionad
Washora, Dryora. FhingH, Relri·
. grators, Up To 90 Days Guarenteedl We Sell N. . Maytag Appliances, French City ilayiag,
740-448-7795.

NEW LISTING ~
Just outside of town. 3
BR, 2 bath home on 7
acres with rec. room and
garage. Well built ranch
with 2 porches on front
and 2 smaller porches in
back. Circular drive.
Owner built.
ONLY $130,000.

Broker

1-800-537-11528

Suppll•

580

Wendi R. Miller

Sale

For Authentic Atrowtteadi In
Golia And-~- Call

Tobacco Plants· Ord~:tr .Now To
Guaranteo Early Spring Plantlnga.
Increase Allotment• Mean Extra

1st ADVANCE FREEl

s:Bruce Teaford

For

t-

710 Autos for Sale

For Sale Dr Tracto Antique
BoHIII &amp; Jara And Old ltoml,

(304)875-5724.
Chain Unk Fence Kennel, tOxt2
8 Feet High, $150, 2 Small Dog
Houaea,
(304)875·8132 · 850 Seld &amp;
(304)875-1844

I

Lk:11750005

740-992-3325

.

rv sa

NEED AN EARLY PAVDAYII
Up to
lnalanlly by phone!

NEW LJST!NG
Nice building space •
approximately 4 acres
just outside of Racine.
Nice level spot.
OWNER WANTS
$10,700 per acre.

Original

Female. Call 9a.m Till 7pin,
(740)388 0382

Estate G!(!eral

Privata PrOperty And New Doubl. .ldo, One Payment. (304)738-

Please Call (304)675-8803 Anytime

PrHture Treated Deck. 10'x24'
$700. Paid Sl500; 200 Amp Dlacannact Box, I tOO, I 00 Amp Dta.

•eo

gel,_--

Equlpmant

- 5 5 Gallon Dnomo
&amp; Ring, 17.00 e.cto. L&amp;L

UJI
*""'-

Willi

Doak, '1150; Bodroo111 Group,
ft75; Cauch &amp; ~ w~.
PO; Barrel Chalro,
Each;
Wood D11k1,
Each;Pump

1o Inch Crattoman Radial Arm I"-"-~=-'--"----­
Saw, Good Condition Phone FREE HEAT! Ozarkt lnlormatlon
(740)411 8481
.HOw 10
Jlleal.
lr!g It! I 11811 508-2701
for Rani
t91l8 Y - 1 Big 8alf 350. H/L
range Transm1111on. Excellent
Equipment
Rental. Dozer, Condition, 847 Adual Milal; 19114 FREE HEATI Dzlorkt lnlomoaUon·
-IOQOIINe'-wlloout-~~~ct~r:~~~ctor Mercury ToPaz. Good Work Car, ing
Mll-8118-5011-2701.
1500 ll&lt; Best Oller; 18,000 BTU,
Window Air Conditioner, .Call
490
Forl.alle
(30')875-8515- Spon.
Beautilll,tBDOSq.Foet, Reaknd 2 Jooger tndullrlal Air ccmproaReal
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
aara:
1
Runs
Good,
Hu
meDistrict. Ideal For Profesalonal lor. The Olhtr Ia In Parlli, But 11
Couple. AU ~odern Amenities. 3 Rabulldable, SBOD Both; 4 Horae
Bedrooms; Spacloua Uvlng; t-112 Gooaenack Trailer, $1500; ApBaths, Roar Deck. HVAC. $800/ prox. 40 Railroad tleoo, SB.OO e.cto;
mo. Plus Utilities. Security And 380 Ford Englna And Trtnamil·
Key llepceH. No Pete. Roleroncea
· 75 ........ Runa S3DD:
Rtquirod. (740)448-.4425 Or -Detm11
D*al Englnl Runt Good,
(740)448-3938
S550; Antique Double Tub Wull·
lng Machine- Falrbanko And
MERCHMWISE
Morse, $300; CIN (740)448--8728
Dr (740)371-9047 After 5:00pm

Apanmonll For Rent, UIIIHioa
Paid, Fumllhed, (740)44S:...519

SUper I.JJm-

ProdUCII Or Request Cataloga.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
llapalred, &amp; Rebuilt in stock.
Cal Ron Evene, t-800-537-11528. .

. _ 1800.00

Homes 0.. FrM govammant l prlvole Mon·

Both LCH1 -

Baclroom,
Stove Speciality t-740 448 8308 t-800&amp;
Refrigerator
Furnlllhed. 29t -0086
Water Fumtahed, S3DD/mc. 1150
10 DOWII_..
Dolpcait, (740)«8-99lllt
No Cmdli OK! HUD, VA,
FHA. Col tor Llltlnge.
for
!Jpa!alrs, 2

13,11111i. -

••?

-liiiJ'""~&amp;~
- - · ~-Colltor•--

Furnlahod 2 &amp; 3 Room ••an-

-

bermalt
2000, la!D"f
--·
mora
opliona.
Manufactu,tr
of
. aawmilla. edgfll and tkidderl.

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Orio&gt;o, 8ullalo, NY 14225.
trli&lt;e. -glua body, lhp, eftctrtc start englnt. battery. · FREE lntormatlon t -100· 571·
1383 EXT. 200-IJ
value
· II25QO,
.........uking
paint, - $1500
lldUit.
or
SOCIAL SECURITY OISABIUTY
Claim Deniad'l We Spacilliza In
- - · 7--30711.
Grulob'o Plano- Tuning &amp; Repolos. appeala and Hearings. FREE
Pretia
Need Tuntd? cal The CONSULTATION. Benetn Team
Services , Inc. Toll -free: 1·888Pilno Or. 740 448 1525
836 1052
lndoopandoto• Horbalile ~.
Coli For Product ll&lt; Opportunity. Stanley HOme Product• And
Fuller Brush Available. To Order
(740)441 -1982

Holpoint Ken01oro Wuhera, · Anno OI ·G,_ Geblao and Tho
Whirlpool Amana Dryers, All continuing 110ry Factory s.ated
-$50 each. (740)111 Inti
VHS Movlu $14.99+S&amp;H. Call
Toll FrH t ·111111-8245 (PIGTAIL)

Laoge Hotpolnt Cloel1 F -. 20
Cllbic Feet (lluytr - ) 11200.

.

ttl9. 14too.

For Sale
orTISdl

Oo-cart replica of fQ'a etreat

&amp; SanitaUon Paid, $325/ Month

8879.

• available. "4 1nlmum inve&amp;tment ·
$4800. Annual potential earnings
over SSOK Toll -Free 1-866 -7877712 24hrs.

"500

Ironia

appl-.atortBR.
.
I!UD . . ._
llpt tor_.,.
............. EOH. (301)875- .

MIM/MARS Established routes .

1-1177-EARYPA~

av-

- --Commarcial-·

lWin_..__ ......."'

Dlpoolt, Plul ~- Ro'l • .,..
Allquhd. (740)448-3117

3428

FIND REAL ANSWERS ABOUT
ANY ISSUESII You've tried the
rest. now try the bait, 1-900-7454829 or t -888-573-3846 $3.99/
min 18+

·

Chrllty'a FamNr Living, 33140
lMno Rd.. llol!anol, ONo, 740742·7-. AP8o1niant. ....... and

44&amp;-0tOt.

IA::II::'ord-:-ab:-:la-'-::Hou-'-11:-ng-.--:~~:--ld::-ey~vr.w=-

as.ooo.

1250, 3 Dr._ D11- szo. 450

Wuhara, dryera, rlfriileratora, ·
rangn. S~ Apfiliancu, 71
VIne Strool, l:ill 740-4411-7381,
1~11-11121.

::,':d~~~~o=4:r:
~~~4~0~Miftle~~c:•~H~ra~n=•:a;us;;==-~::
F": l:
Evonlnge: 740·387-0502, 740·
Mllchand...
Bad. 1180; Oak Twine w/Choell

2 BR Upatalra Apt on 2nd Ava.,
~ - - .$300o'mo. S3DD

tlr - · Big Horn, T Tall I othora, wll trade for gun,
7-7244.
.

GOOD UHD APPUAIICII

-on

1 - . , Fumlehed EfticloiiC), All
UIIIIHn Paid. Shared Bath, 91 I
Second Avenue, Galllpolla, OH
S1.2$'n0. (740)UI 38~5

Full Glall Patio Doora S'xiD"

25BI. EquaiHauoing~.

ahop &amp; movih . Call 740-448-

Private Erlbwlce, No Palo,

8aluliful River 1/iew Ideal For I
Or 2 Peapla, Asfsa.,. Olpoeit,

dryora and rlfrlgllr-..
Thompacna Apj&gt;iiiJICI. 8407

540 Mlsoeltar-.us
llarchandlsa

........ - . (3DIJ875-73a

- -lo

Orio&gt;o- 1»71o -

Deluxe I Bedroom Apanmant

2 Bedroom Located On Jacbon
pike, (740)441-9DSD Aller 5pm
(740)24558110

era,

540 111-*llneous
llncNndiH
11200. Fual Oil Sl&lt;lcl Tank ft 00.
Uahotanr Interior Ooor1 S5.
-l'un!II .... EJeclrlcFurnace

-

t4xl0, 2 BR. W&amp;D, A/C, No 1'111,
Rt 211, Aeferencea, 1300/~.
(740)258-1044 Available June
111

lor aalo, 241 Salem Stroot, Ru- ;
Ollio.
ca1 740-742. 1092 Sunaot Drive, Very Good
2572. Good Income.
Condition. Dapallt &amp; Releroncaa
~- No Palo. call (740!+1f()Haft bultdlng lnedMirilllviiO,
_4E11;8;;;;H;;;;;,-Q;iij;jj;ji;
Ill· .. 11/C, COVIll
""""""· - • 2
,
tnglln, $3DlVmo.,Bt4-878-t&amp;8t.
~=;:.:'.;:pc;;..\.:":::
Lots
NO PETS (7~1-t519
·-..t3 Acree With Booutilul Lak~ 3 bedroom home Mlneravllia
View Sitos $50,000. tB Acres area, river view, ratorancoa ro·
Wfth Large Lake, .Mobile Home qulred, ~n required, nc poll,
With Add On $71,500. Gall Ia 740-992-mT -llpm.
County On Blacktop Road,
(7ot0)3118-8878 .
2 Lola, Zoned Commen:iool, Wfthin
Tho Village Dl Rio Grande .
(740)245 511158

NMded,

Hom••

-

Homes From St!IMoloJ., 4" Down,
3D y..,. el'8.5% A!'fl Far I.Jot.

.I Ac-

-

-

420 Mobile
for Rent

Juol • .... al lhe ponllll
• . a'*· Cal,.,., b'niiiPiand
1o11ngo1 0wrw tinMCiltl

=--:::=--=-upat~al-:-,.;.....IIPI-d':'.n-..,~,, , iogs,. 800-3t~ Ext 1709.

350

AI
r=n

-O!'.no.-,7-.-.

.ooo.

t

Bulldl
IISJS

UHd

(740)215

Pilol Prag,..., Renttrl
304-138-niS.

a.,'rOMIIHp,llom ~-On

STOP REIITIIIQII OWII FOR LOOking To Buy A New Homo?
LESSI $0 ar ~ llcMnl 01&lt; ~
Lond7 We Delli Huny
~=logs Coli HI00-511':1777 , Only 10Lalll.lll,304-138-72115.
Used Secllonlil· H F - o d.
24X41. 3 BodiOOII• 2 Bolli. Good
CO dtti
F
h City H
. n on, rene
ornaa,
Getlpoh, Ollio (74ll)ll6 03411

t 00111 . . . . . . flo Olinde.

4 8

-· ,__ ......
~l--$11,500ar:l4

z.wo _,, z.ro -

Haullhold

510

SUDQET PRICEI AT JACII·
1011 ESTATES, 52 Waatwood

~

-

0

Rant
17.:=-::::::-:-::~a.~aa~ds~~=
BEAUTlfUL AI'AIITIIEJITS AT For Sale: R - WUh-

~ In
CouNry -...., • - Will
:;::' : , " : " :S:,al:o~
• ~ ~ -ooo.
-

Pomeroy olllddleport. Glllpolls, Ohio Point Pleuant., wv

for

7-1-~

c:..-

~

440

u:..-

-"'*"· largo--._ Nonly
. . t8 ft. 1499. Pff mon. -llgiiiiJOliiOIIY-""'·
11270. per mon. cal! now 1c41992
0-13;g;~ar~7~-;;,~-~;
· ;;;;:7jii;;~~-~-em.
R::i ':u:"",:Poi~
Stiyho, ~ Bodloorn, t Bdl, N- 2000 t4llll0 Fronl Kltellan, - . -only. (30')875-

1444

Excellent Location On Route 180
Between Gallipolis And Holzer
Hospllat. 3 Bedrooms, Bath. L.img
Room, Famiy Room. Kib;hen Wdh
Appliancaa, Full Size Baatrnent,
24x24 Finished Garage, .8 xt0
Wood Storage Building, CiA &amp;
Gal Heal. Excellent Neighborhood . Too Much To Mention.
Roady To Move Into. Call For "P·
poinbiJejll (740)448 8548

pn~y

furnace, nn hoi ontlf tonll. cal 1
-

410 tlcM.I.- for fiMt

31 a --

Mull aell ttl5 ShuH ISlliO,
~11811~821~30~211~-:---::-~::---::--·llledlocm, 2 bllh. E
4 ..,..._
18 Wide. Ont• $195.00 Per -Co11Cber)1. 780-3115 1987.
•
t4 ..;cs. 1499. - .
••w•
· ·o $199. per,_, call now 1·100-

.:..(7_40l..:.:-B--":-;3I--:illl:ro3-:=::-:-=:=:
Country Living- Plcll Your Dream
Homo &amp; We'll Set It Up Dn A
BNiditul 5 Acre Tract, ~G...,.,.._ (740)416 '093

Living Room And Dining With
H a - Floora. Large Kitchen.
laundry- Main Floor. 2 Miles
From City. Graen Set-.
Lots 01 Extra's Call Evoninga,
g:~784' DaYJ 1740) 448-

Walking Dislance To Town, ·

Not do-1-yououll-kitl
CALL 1-800-303-1170

to Down For Good Cuatom.,.
On Land· Home
Oll&lt;•ood· Galtipolil, (140)....._
3013
141 2000 Model Singles~Save Tllouaancta. Ftaetwo&lt;&gt;d
Homos 01 Proc:tonrille, Tol F -.
t 1181151115 0187
t4x70 ~--·- ft.Nlll,lrH De~·- .. ~
livtlfJ lree Setup only 191195 1-

5

G - llaiglol&gt;ot._, Good Con-

Not..!'lo8.100-2814133t E&gt;CL 15.

--·011

one-

for Sale

SUnday. June 3, 2001

LONG HOLLOW ROAD • ACREAGE. • Approximately 105 'a cres. This proparty hes 1118 feel
being secluded with a wooded selling.. Just minutes off Route 33. Thla property hes
p~rfecl spot tor thai new home, hunting cabin, or just place to enjoy the outdoors. Drive
lhiS one and check It out!
ASKING $88,000.

a

EYeryone In the whole family will ftnd aomethlngla 10ve
otloulln thl: •rrawllng ranch. W~h approximately 2100
aquare teet o living apaoa that lncludaa • tledrooma,
and 3 bolha. It will occommoc:lole evan lorgar lamlllea.
lntarlor tooluraa Include aunken living room, formal
Cllnlng room with wood tlutne., tamnv room and more.
One vlall and you ' ll deflnllely tie lmprened with the
nelghbothooc:l, the location. and the houae. Call tor
more Jnrormatlon otto aet up an appolnlmenl.

~ealty, Inc.

Heory E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259
·Sherrl L. Hart.........~ ........................ 742·2357
Anna 'M. Chapman ......... :............... 992-2818
K•thleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-'6191

'

87 8-10, Ntw TlrH, &amp;looolcl, N. ..
tr Motor, N11ds loQy Work.
Runa Good, $1500 (304)875·

5384

730 Vint &amp; 4-WDI
1977 Ford ••4 Short Bod, 381
Engl1ne . Auto , Big Tlrtt, Rune
Nice, $800 (740)2• ~•5 221 Or
(740)44t - t1M9

PRICED TO SELL AT $169,000
740-446-3139
"

1881 Oodge Dakota, !Ktendod
Cab, 11,000 Mlill, Po- Statr·
ing, 11/C, AM/FMICD, V-8, Under
Warranty, ·118,000 (140)4412883 Allor 5pm

·'

I

�I

•

~

• Middleport • o.tllpoll•, Ohio • Point PI• 1mt. wv

Kneen

June. Tbis allows for the creation of new buds to develop
this summer for next year's

Lu• ...

growth.

at least this year, especially if
the distribution, they can be
nutsc:dge has been a problem
put in directly (e.g., employer
in prior years. Corn and soystock).
fhNIIr.pDI
• Distributions can be made
bean growers may escape
DI
from a traditional IRA
nutsedge problems if ,t hey
with
this
decision:
'
rollover account at any time greenhouse products through
planted Roundup Ready
Only
60
days
are
allowed
·
•
after age 59-1/2 ~of peual- the auction process.
hybrids.
fiom
the
receipt
of
a
lump
For reservations before June
ty,just like a contributory traPepper growers are caught
12, please call John Ellerman
without a labeled herbicide 'sum distribution to roll over ditioual IRA.
all
but
your
after-tax
contriThe . traditional
IRA at the Centeq at Piketon, 1for nutsedge with the excepbutions.
roUover account provides an 800-297- 2072. Per person
tion of Dual ll, which
• All pre-tax contribotions opportunity to continue . cost is $65.
requires the purchase of a sp'and all earnings from the
•••
building assets during workciallabel fiom the Ohio Vegemployer's qualified plan in
A multitude of homeowning years while continuing_to
etable Grower's Association.
the future may be rolled over.
defer income tax until ·begin- ers have caUed in concerning
Corn replant decbion1
• Regardless of whether it is
pruning of shrubs and trees.
should be made carefully. Call deductible, it is still possible to ning to receive distributions.
The best time to prune is
This continued growth
the office if you would like a make an annual $2,000 IRA
fact sheet on the considera- contribution to a traditional could mean the difference during their dormant growth
between living-simply and liv- period in early spring. Light
tions for corn replant deci- IRA rollover account.
pruning (one to two inch
sions.
However, mixing regular ing well during " golden
(Jmniftr L. Byrnrs is C,.l/ia traditional IRA contributions years." Of course, before limbs) after spring growth
Cormty~ Exteilsior~ ager~l for with the rollover balance will deciding which strategy b~st may be done to open fruit
a~rimlturc a11d natural rrsourccs,
prohibit rolling the distribu- meets set objectives, it is a and Oowering trees for better
Olrio Stair U11iwnity.)
tion back into another good idea to consult financial air circulation. Prune ' evergreen trees (pines, spruce and
. employer's qualified plan in and tax advisors.
(Jay Caldwell rs a certified firs) after new spring growth
the future.
• With a contributory tradi- }illallcial plamrer at Raymor~d has fuUy developed in late ·
tional IRA. only cash can be James Fi11aucial Scrvues, 441
put in, but with a rollover tra- &amp;cc&gt;lld Ave., Gallipolis, 446ditional IRA, if non-cash 2125 or 1-800-487-2129,
assets are received as part of mcm~r NASD atod SIPC).

Jay

For the current blue mold
forecast, please consult the
bulletin board at the nearest
cooperating business: Altizer's
Farm Supply in Thur!Ran,
Pope and Pope in Lecta, S &amp;
L Mini Mart in Mercerville,
and Owsley's in Crown City.
Row crop producer•:
~ of nutsedge.The ~oat­
ing on the nutsc:dge rhizomes
tha$ prohibits growth in dry
~ W2S surely dissolved by
the recent rains, thus Wi! can
eipc:ct to see plenty of the
"swamp grass" as it is commonly called:
Tobacco producers dedicated to Prowl for weed control
may want to consider Spartan

Wai-Mart shareholden
hear the future
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP)
-Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s annual shareholders meeting opened
Friday morning with a promise
fiom the president of WalMarts online division a
more accessible and customerfriencDy Wal-Mart of the future.
Online President and CEO
Jeanne Jackson said Wai-Matt's
on line division has 20 percent
mon:: customers than · a year
ago. She promised that custOmers would eventually be
able to · re6ll prescriptions
online, having their medicine
ready and waiting for them
upon arriv.al at their local WalMart.
Also on its way is Wai-Mart's
own Internet service. The division has been working with
America Online to develop a
SYJtem that would include
instant messaging,Jackson said

SPO

SUndlly, June 3, 2001

Drastic tree limb removal,
such as lopping off 20 to 3()...
feet tree trunks or entire trees,
shouJd·be done by professionals who have the prop~J
equipment and the liabilityinsurance in case of an acedent.
Topping of trees is not rec-,
ommended by Ohio State
University Extension Specialists as it ' creates numerouS
branches to sprout out. Thii
dense cover provides ideal fall
cover for Oocks of black birds
within one to two years.
Look to remove trees ·
entirely and . replace with
...
smaller . growmg trees mol!
ideal to the space limitations.
.

"We're about easy access to
more Wal-Mart," she said.
Wal-Mart had a rough
spt:.ing, posting a mere 4 percent earnings iocrease for irs
first quarter. The company
blamed bad weather as much as
a slowing economy for the dip
in earnings, though it said double-digit growth will not likely
return until the second half of
the year. For irs fourth quarter
last year, Wal-Mart earnings
were up 4. 7 percent.
Wal-Mart president and
CEO Lee Scott said in a letter
to shareholders in advance of
Friday's annual meeting that
unemployment worries mean
more business. Shoppers hunting for bargains will inci:easingly look to Wal-Mart, and all the
company has to do is stock
what people want and continue
offering discounts.

Lawn care company to
move back to Marysville
MARYSVILLE (AP) The Scotts Co. is moving its
headquarters
back
to
Marysville, two years after the
lawn and garden giant relocated to Columbus. •
The move involves about
60 senior staff and should be
completed by Oct. 1, Mike
Kelty, Scotts vice chairman,
told the Marysville JournalTribune for a story Friday:·
He said the move will allow
the .manager~ to more effectively run the company,
founded in 1868.
"Now that the company

has the space available in one ,
location in Marysville, , it
makes sense to bring our
team together and . take
advantage of operational and
planning efficiencie.i;• Kelty
said.
•
Scotts' move to Columbus
in 1999 came during a period
of rapid growth when it ran
out of space in MarysviUe.
The company paid $300 million to .buy Montsanto Co.'s
lawn-care
unit,
which
includes Ortho pesticides,
after a 1995 merger with
Miracle-Gro.

WASHINGTON (AP) . The battle intensified Thursday
between former business partners Btidgestone!Firestone Irtc.
and Ford Motor Co., with the
tire-maker asking the government to investigate the safety of
Ford's Explorer SUV.
Bridgestone/Firestone CEO
John Lampe met with Transportation Secretary Norman
Mineta and presented bim a
lengthy repot;t claiming the
world's best-selling sp6rt utility
vehicle has a ste~g problem
that contributed · to iollovers
Ford has bbmed on faulty Fire- ·
stone tires.
"When tires fail, either fiom a
tread separation or a road hazard
or other causes, drivers should
be able to pull over, nc:t roU

Mllp County"s
so

f9

.

w"11w rn~datlys~ntrn~l &lt;om

•

Speak .
Out

Helping Shriners

State funding
cuts el inate
local programs .

What summer movie, if
any,.are you looking
forward to seeing?
Adam
l(gwecztn,

'-oy.l

want lo wa1Ch

12PRC-DR

"Moulin
Rouge"
because you
really don~
see big-budget
muslcals anymore. It oontains a very

•,

over:· Lampe said in a statement
released after the meeting. "The
Explorer does not appear
give the driver that margin ~
safety to make it to the side al
the. road and change the tire." ;!:
NHTSA spokesman Rat"
Tyson would not comment on
the information presented
except to say it was under
review.
A call to Ford seeking com;ment was not immediately
returned.
Dennis Guenther, a mechan~
ical engineering professor at
Ohio State University who
wrote the report for the com;pany, said he tested the steering
in the Explorer and two simila!:
SUVs: the Jeep Cherokee and
the Chevy Blazer.

Hometown News,.per

Middleport. Pomeroy Ohio

cenb ·June 4. 2001 ·Vol. 51. No.ln

~

,.

Monday

•

(Hal Kmxn is Mcij!s Coumy'i
Extension aj/ent for aj!riculru~
and 11atural resources, Olrio Swii
Uniwrsity.)
~.

Firestone

:Tiger wins for third straight year, a1

81.100 BI !lui modern-dly SOUndtrack set against an older-tYPe
Blo!y background.

Margie

Cll1Wrtght,
Clifton, W.Va.:
'Peart Harbor.·
The previews
that I've seen
look very real·
istic. l feel that
the realism
displayed in
the moVie wiN
give the viewer
a better under·
Slandlng ol what 1ttose indivldu·
als muSI have exparisnced dur·
ing such a lrsglc time in Amari·
can history.

. . .llllllr'".!-r Barb .
Woodyard,
P-oy:l
know that my
son really
· wants to see

.

.

CINCINNATI (AP) Procter &amp; Gamble Co. and
media company Viacom Inc.
announced an advertising deal
Thursday that will give the
consumer products giant
access to teens, blacks and
other specific broadcast audiences.
The $300 million agreement is another way for P&amp;G
to make good on its gpal to
build sales of its biggest
brands, said analyst William

.

....,.. .

Public NoUce
Oalll1 County l.ocll
lohoole will aco1pt
llllld llkll for alloclll
end 111111ra1• 'lllldof,

::..~~~=. 11:~.~~~~

llklllllllll be I'IOIIIMcl
In IO!Iordanoe with
law on or before 12
o'oloolc noon, Moncl-v
.hint 11, 2001. On lhl
..,_ IIIIDIIoned data
all bid a •hall ba
opened 1nd r11d
alOud. Any lntel'llled

~p= 1118nd.

.ifh.

1te4 Ford Aorottar Extended
Cab Mtnlvan XLT, 83,000 mllll,
loaded, V·l automatic, te&amp;OO,
7-7-1100.
.
1te5 Ford F·150 XLT, 4•4.
Fled, Fully Loaded, Ex·
..ltoir\1 Condition, low mllel,
Pltotd,l1!).100 (740)1U-72711

Auto P1rta l
Acce. .ort••

1N7 PlyMouth Voyager. Now
Tlrtl, New Alternator; Runt
Good: NHda llrake Work: MOO.
(740t248 1141

Art You Looking For EnglnH Or
Tranam1111one? Give Ma A Call
1417-01518.

, •, Budget Priced Tr1nantl11lan•
All Typee, Acceaa To Over
· 10,000 Trlntmlttlona, Tranafer
Caato, 740·245·5877, Cell: 338·
3181.
-.,

~.

' 790

campera ..

1871 travel Mate Camper, 17
Foot, SeK Conlalnod, Slttpl
I, A/C, Great Shape, 11400
Negotiable, (304)576-2753

(740)-12

Motorcycle•

1882 Coleman Plonoor Pop·up
~.
51- 7, With Sink,
2 Stovto, Canopy, Llghll, Spore
, The, Great Condition, 12500.
' (304)812-21118After l!pm

1tel lionda 450 Foreman S 4·
whtlltr, Yllllow/ Black 4WO,
Good Condition, $3eOO After 5pm,

C*)IU-3873

1811 Honda VTR, tOOOF 9upor·
hawll, 2 ltothera Racing Plptl,
;Mklng
(304)773-eees

24' Homet 'uto' 2001 Model, U~e
. Ntw, Frtnell City Homeo, GIIIIIPO·
Ill, Ohio (740)448-9340

eeooo·

.

2000 Harioy David- ~tttr,
mint oondltlon, chrome yellow, low
mille, """-· 74l).lili2·15128.
N Ooldwlng 11500, atrvlcld &amp;
reedy 10 go, uklng 17500, muet
-to IIJP - · 741).1182.0287. ·
Kawuakl 400 4x4 Prarle, Auto,
Radiator Coolad, e monthe old,
l4tOO original coat 11300,

28' 1995 Dutchmen camper with
expendo, $10,000 llrm, 740·1192·
7738.
'
2000 twenty-one foot Suntracker
pontoon boat, 80 hp. engine, all

aluminum conauucllon, no wood

deck, trallar w/brakes, live well,
depth·llnder, tilt &amp; trim, 4 ewlvol
""''· am/lm cuo .. l~e )atlcets &amp;
everything you need to go boatIng &amp; flal"llng, 1111 thaf'! 25 hrs.
u... 741).742-'ISGe.

f!04li1H11t1

710 IICNita &amp; M'otol'l
forSIIe

75 Apache MHO, New Goar Bo•·
ee, Roady to ClcJ. NICe $1395, Day
(740)245·5211:
Evenlnge
.( 740)«e-n53

2 ~I Jet Ski, 1100 zxl And
1100 *lie, 31 Houra Each, Double
Aluminum, Ltland Trailer lnclud·
ed. 110,000 Ntgollable, Call
~~):1111-1230 Or (740)388-

(

·I

(

BET, UPN, TV Land, Paramount Television, King World
and Comedy Central.
In return,Viacom gets a bigger share of P&amp;G 's generous
broadcast advertising spending, plus the possibility of a
long-term business. relationship with one of the nation's
largest TV advertisers.
Viac01i1's kuo\Vledge about
the broadcast audiences it
reaches will complement
P&amp;G's marketing expertise,

'\,

.

•

Steele said.
..
"What Viacom brings is not
only a method of distribution,
but an intimate knowledge of
who's watching these channels," he said.
The deal marks one. of the
firs.t times a major media company has dealt directly with' a
big advertiser to sell a package
of ad opportunities across such
a large number of properties. ·

It is a one- year agreement,
but the companies expect that
it will be extended' if it meets
their , expectations, P&amp;G
spokesnian To_llj MiUikin said
Thursday.
The deal will · allow P &amp;G
'
greater access to target programnting it wants .to market
irs ptoducrs, including cable,
channels that attract teen~age
audiences and BET, which

..

.!

includes the Black ·Entertaiqnient Television network and
"
publishing, radio and. Internet

ventures.

t,

'

P&amp;G co.uld ain) ppdu&lt;;jS
includihg Cover Girl cosmetics and hair care producu
including Pantene ·and Hea~
and Shoulders at the te~:'r_l
audiences Viacom serves, Mijliki.n said.
~
~

Point Pleft.

1nt, W. VII.:
'What women
Want" Is com·
lng out on
Video and k
would like to
see It when It ·
becomes avail·
able at the
video store.
·· Mel Gibson is a fine aCIOr and 1
enjoy watching his films.
Becky ROUih,

accredlllttlon 1urvey
of Holzer Medlcll
Centar • JackiDD on
June 21-21, 200t.
Tht pui'JIIIII of the
1urvey will be to
evaluate
the
organlatlon'l
compliance with
nationally
ellablllhad Joint
Cornmlulon
Standtrdl.
The
IUIVty l'lllllllt Will be
uaed to dettrmlne
whtlhtr, and ·tha
condltlonl under
which aceredltallon
ahould ba awarded

Pomaroy:

'

the organization.

Joint Commlaelon
etandarda daal with
organiDtlonlll quality
Of Clrl ltiUel and
fha aafety of the
envlranmant In which
cart le provided.
Anyone believing
thll 1M or 1h1 hal
partlntnt and valid
Continued on Page 511

1

Home
lmprovemlnta

IAIEIIINT
WATIFIPIIOOFIIIO
Unconditional ftfttlme guarantH.
Local references turnlahed. El· ·
llbl- 187S. Col 24 H11. (740)
448·0870, 1·800·287·0571. Aog·
... WalfiP'OOIIng.
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenenco- Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doora, win-., bathe,
mobile home repair and mont. For
free ee11m111 call Chet, 740·1192·
8323.
Llvlngaton'l Baument Water
Proofing , all baaemll,t,repain
done, free estimates, lifetime ·
guarantee. 14yra on job experience. (304)8115-31187.

840 Electrical. and
Refrlgll'ltlon
Realdenllol or commercial Wlrtng,

new aervk:e or repalra. Muter U·
cenaed electrlcl1n. Ridenour
Eleclrlcal, WV000308, 304..75·
1788.

'

'

*

ThBre is a rell·
glous film com·
lng out called
'Revelation'
and I would
very much like

.

'

.

SERVICES

810

Charter Communications will ·
be upgrading the cable system·
starting ' wit~ the·Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport, OH areas.
You may be contacted by a
Charter contractor to
exchange. your current
equipm'e nt and receive the
new digital equipment. .
Watch for more information
as we move into your area!
I

.

1·800-800-CABLE ·

They were at every supermarket In the Bend Area over the weekend; collecting for the char·
ltles of the Shrlners of Ohio. Local shrlners distributed their familiar Informational tabloid and
- collecte~ dona~lons fOr, the· Sllrlners' burn.hospltitl$....22,of-wb~,prQVida free car8 , tq .chjl: ,
~fen Ul~CM!r 18 with bums, orthopedic prOblems and 'BJ)inal cord Injuries. At 'Krogsr, Tamml
Kennedy and her daughter, Mscenzle, both ''of Rutland, wera happy to help local Shrlners
Ambas~adorWalter Manley of Tuppers Plai?s reach his goal. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·

Ott"-

.. Bllllkenehlp,

Public Notice

MOtorHomn

15 Chtvy Altro Van. 1750

'

Public Notice

Information mll'f be The Rio Orand;
obtained II the OtnCI Board of Public Afllll'l
of 1111 Trea1urw 230 monthly mtetlng will
Shawnee
Lana, be held llludcw Ju111
Oalllpolll, Oh 48131. . 11111111 p.m. 1
RID
L The1 Oe8111a County Grande Munlclp•l
oc1
oard of llulldlng. Tht lllllllng
Education rlllrVII II open to the public.
the right to accept or J - 3 2001
.l'lleot any or, all bldl. ___
•_....__ __
Don
Ho 1com II· ~
l'l'll....r,
a alii a
·pubHc Notice
· County l..ooll Bohool1. --:T:-:h,-,--...,J~o-:'1-n~t
June.1, 3, II, 2001
Com minion on
Accreditation of
Public Notice
HMIIhclra
Organization• will
conduct
an
, 780

to

I

Steele of Bane .o f America
Securities 'i n San Francisco.
"Big brands need big exposure, and Viacom is a big
entertainment
company,"
Steele said.
The Cincinnati-based company will be able to advertise
products from Cover Girl cos. metics to Tide detergent on
12 Viacom 'television properties in the United States: CBS,
MTV, MTV2, VHl, Nickelodeon/Nick at Nite, CMT,

Public Notice

. HCmCi"To BIDOI!RB

740

•

already has
the Shrek
refrigerator
magnets. From
what I hear,
..
•·
the animation
lntti8ftlm 18 e~rv lnd "
18 ~a must·-·

to-~ .

.
Watching the

niovle and o
comparing It to,
whsl's going
on In the wo~d makes one
aware of wh.at's In the Bible.

Many say schools are the
right :Place to teach values
COLUMBUS (AP) - No
longer are reading, writing,
math and science the only
leSsons taught in schools.
Teachers also are promoting
respect, Jpndness, fairness and
other values. in classrooms.
It's called "character education," a movement that in the
past decade has grown steadily with both the federal and
state governments awarding
J11illions of dollars in grants to
schools for programs that
instill valut!s in students.
At the heart of character
education is the idea· that
children should be taught the
values society expects them to

lip: 701
Low:IOI

ladl'(s

Sentinel
2 Sedlona- 12 .....

Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comjq
Editorials
Oqituarjes
Sports
Weather

Details, A2

Lotteries

A5 OHIO
82-4 Pldl3: 3.().1; Pkk 4: 1).448
85

Meigs County, which total
over $1.4 million in 18month contracts, include
programs in local schools
and p~:~blic agencie~ . Those
contracts will be discontinBY BRIAN J. REEO
ued July · 1 because of stateSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
level funding curs.
MIDDLEPORT
At Thursday's meeting ~f
Statewide cuts in one com" the Meigs County Commisponent of Ohio's welfare-to- sioners, Department of Job
work program wiU effective- and Family Ser~ces Director
ly elintinate a number of M1ke SwiSher sa1d that while
· a nu~ber of ·:good ,proMeigs County projects.
The Ohio Legislature grams Wlll be ehmmated, all
recently cut funding for the agencies whrch. adm1mster
Temporary Assistance to the programs m quemon
Needy Families/ Prevention, were aware that funding was
Retention and Cantin- guaranteed for only 18
gency's
Development mon~hs, and that those agenReserve .program, which cres .were advised as soon as
funds projects designed to poss1ble of the pending cuts.
The local PRC-DR funds
directly or indirectly help
residents make the transition operate the foUoWlng .Profrom · the welfare rolls ro grams:
• Mid Valley Christian
work . ·
In 1998, TANF was imple- School Tutoring and Summented to take the place of mer Events program, which
cash assistance to the poor. operates after-school tutorAlong with setting lifetime mg and "Super Saturday"
limits on cash assistance, and "Family Fun Night'.'
TANF gave broad discretion activities, including educato boards of county .commis- tiona! field trips, craft activisioners in developing pro- ttes, and movies.
• "Math Counts" in Meigs
grams whi ch help residents
find employment.
County public sdwols, an
PRC- DR programs. in
PIHH sae PRC/DI. AJ

programs to end
june 30

'Shrsk.~He

PMi-Viacom ad deal ·provides

--l.ataD:

11·19-2&amp;32-34-36

ICIJa. 5+7·1.,5-6
A3 W.VA.
81.3-4 o.ly 3: 2..g.a .,.., 4: 2·5-9-0
A2 e 2001 Ohio v~~~oy Pub!'t"'a cu.

With pre.uure on
schools to boost student

achievement, should
they also be responsible
for teaching kids
morality. ·
hold when they leave school
and enter "the real world."
With pressure on schools to
boost student achievement,
should they also be responsi&amp;le for teaching kids morality
when churches and families
for years have been expected
to do. so?
Many say yes, arguing that
school violence over the past

few years - including the
killing of 12 students and one
teacher in Columbine in
spring 1999 - have forced
schools to take a more a,ctive ·
role in teaching values.
Schools didn't have to do
that decades ago because .
other groups churches,
families, communities
took on that responsibility,
said Stewart Muszynski, .
founder of Project Love:
Remember the Children
Foundation. The Clevelandbased nonprofit group that
teaches teen-ager to promote
kindness in their schools.

Rural areas tough
for HIV sufferers
COLUMBUS (AP) Living with AIDS is hard for
anyone, but an Ohio University researcher says it can
be particularly devastating
for people in rural areas
because they're less likely to
· have support nearby.
"A lot of people thi1ik
that if we can develop better
me.d ications and we can
keep people alive better,
then we've solved all the
problems, but I don't think
that's th e case at all," said
Timothy Heckman, .an assis.· tant psychology professor at
the university in Athens.
11

There

are

instances

where an individual .is the
only person in the community who is living with the
disease," said Heckman, who
grew up in rural Pennsylvania and has been researching .

AiDS since 1993.
"We hear from people
who are severely discriminated against. And that, more
than anything else, affects
their overall quality of life."
Three years 'i nto a fouryear, S1.3 million project
funded by the National
Institutes of Mental Health,
Heckman
and
fellow
researchers in 10 states have
found alarming rates of
depression and suicidal
thoughts among people living with AiDS in rural areas.
Preliminary results of the
study- which includes 201 ·
people, about 80 of them
from rural Ohio - show
that as AIDS continues to
spread in rural areas, too few
resources are there to help
patients cope mentally and

Pluse sae HIV, AJ

Change in Senate control slows Bush's plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -The shift to
a Democratic majority in the Senate has
put the brakes on President Bush's hopes
for quick action on his energy proposals
as Democrats revamp the Republican bill
that was racing toward a Senate vote this
summer.
With soaring gasoline prices and a West
Coast wrestling with blackouts and
record .high electricity costs, energy
remains a top priority on Capitol Hill.

But with Democrats
now holding
50-49
majority and control of
the Senate's agenda
with a senator's resignation from the GOI~
the Republi can bill is
being overhaul ed with
less emphasis on production and more on
ways to boost conser-

a

vation and energy efficiency.
])cmo crats plan to press for more
short-term measures, such as dramatically
boosting money to help low-income
families pay their electricity and natural
gas bills.
They have called for $2 billion more
this year and $3.4 billion next year for the
low-in come energy .assistance fund. In
Bush,AJ

,Celebrating 30 ·years
· of Home Care.

A WIRED WORLD

COM.AN~

..

,#

Dlift81 Cabla

.'

Holzer Home Care of Holzer Medical
Center is celebrating 30 years of service
to our com!llu~ity. ,
'
For more information on ·Home Core service~, ·
call (740) 446·5301

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

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